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            <mods:title>East Carolinian, October 16, 1958</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</mods:abstract>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">19581016</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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          <dc:title>East Carolinian, October 16, 1958</dc:title>
          <dc:description>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</dc:description>
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          <dc:date>19581016</dc:date>
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          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
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                <pb facs="00038610_tn_0001" />
.<lb />
Southern Prejudice<lb />
), ihoniHs F. Pettigrew, of Harvard,<lb />
W,U sneak on southern prejudice here,<lb />
and Wednesday nights neit<lb />
Easrtaroiimawm<lb />
No.l<lb />
Boooe's ECC Pirates will<lb />
Homecoming game with West-<lb />
irday as the No. 1<lb />
State Conference.<lb />
un WX1V<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
"gREENVILLK. N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958<lb />
cHI0LLEBE<lb />
Number 4<lb />
Honorary Fraternity Council Officers<lb />
Hhnuh Jeaeaa, president of the newly organited Hoaorary-I'rofeaa-<lb />
,i rrateruttj Pimssil looks oer the charter with Purvis Boyette. vice<lb />
sidenl mi Joyce Pierce, treasurer.<lb />
Jessup Elected Head<lb />
Of New Frat Council<lb />
500 To Attend<lb />
High School<lb />
Conference<lb />
With the aim of attracting "qua-<lb />
lity" students to East Carolina, a<lb />
igfe school conference will meet hers<lb />
on Janurary 16 and 17. About 500<lb />
hiph school students from this part<lb />
.f t e state will attend.<lb />
The purposes of this conference<lb />
re to attract the "quality type<lb />
student and to lure these students to<lb />
attend East Carolina. By "quality"<lb />
students, the Student Government<lb />
Association means student leaders,<lb />
students who earn good grades, edi-<lb />
tors of high school publications, and<lb />
club presidents.<lb />
Workshops conducted by E. C. C.<lb />
students will be conducted in four<lb />
irsaa. T1 ey are student government,<lb />
fine arts, publications, and educa-<lb />
tion. This conference will give official<lb />
coinpus organizations an opportunity<lb />
to display their talents before an<lb />
interested audience brought here for<lb />
t! at purpose.<lb />
Initial letters concerning the con-<lb />
 tosses will be sent out next week<lb />
,90 that the amount of interested can<lb />
! be determined. The S. G. A. and the<lb />
committee in charge of it are hoping<lb />
I for very favorable responses. It is the<lb />
first conference of this scope ever<lb />
attempted by East Carolina S. G. A.<lb />
Serving on the committee in charge<lb />
of the conference are: Charles You-<lb />
nians, John Hudson, Gloria Holfer,<lb />
and Mike Katsias. Faculty members<lb />
are Dean White; Dean Tucker; Dr.<lb />
Jones, education department; Dr.<lb />
Home, education department; Dr.<lb />
Holt, registrar; and Dr. Carter, edu-<lb />
cation department.<lb />
Mike Katsias, president of S. G. A<lb />
stated. "This project of the S. G. A.<lb />
i as been in the dream and talk stage<lb />
Thomas F. Pettigrew<lb />
Homecoming Features<lb />
Thornhill, Miss N. C.<lb />
"We are hoping for one of the most which will participate in the parade<lb />
Pettigrew Will<lb />
Lecture Here<lb />
 Segregation<lb />
Dr. Thomas F. Pettigrew, assistant<lb />
professor of social psychology at<lb />
Harvard University, will speak twice<lb />
it East Carolina October 21-22 on the<lb />
reneral theme of "Southern Pre-<lb />
judice<lb />
Dr. Pettigrew is a native of Rich-<lb />
mond. Va and a graduate of the<lb />
University of Virginia. Two years<lb />
airo he held the position of assistant<lb />
professor of sychology at the Uni-<lb />
versity of North Carolina.<lb />
successful Homecoming celebrations<lb />
the school has ever seen commented<lb />
Homecoming chairman Jimmy Wall<lb />
vn an interview concerning the ECC<lb />
affair, October 18-20.<lb />
Wall stated that a full schedule of<lb />
activities is being planned for the re-<lb />
cord number of returning alumni and<lb />
friends expected to be in Greenville<lb />
for the event. Included among the<lb />
activities are the Homecoming dance<lb />
featuring the orchestra of Claude<lb />
Thornhill, a football game between<lb />
East Carolina and Western Carolina,<lb />
the annual bonfire and parade.<lb />
On Friday night, at 6:30, the week-<lb />
end will be officially underway as<lb />
the student body gathers for a bon-<lb />
fire and pep rally, after which the<lb />
collegians will provide music for an<lb />
informal dance in Wright Auditorium<lb />
from 8 p.m until 12 p.m.<lb />
Returning alumni and friends will<lb />
are East Carolina's large group, the<lb />
Robersonville band, the Plymouth<lb />
band, the Ayden-WinterviUe band,<lb />
and the Greenville band. Three of<lb />
the directors, Joseph Sschest of Ro-<lb />
bersonville, James Page of Plymouth,<lb />
and Boyd Elliot of the Ayden-Win-<lb />
leivilie. band are returning alumni.<lb />
Preceding the afternoon football<lb />
game, ECC Band Director Herbert<lb />
Carter will present the four visiting<lb />
irigh school bands in a pre-game<lb />
program in College Stadium sche-<lb />
duled for 1:30 p.m.<lb />
Immediately before the tilt be-<lb />
tween ECC and WCC, the Home-<lb />
coming Queen for this year will be<lb />
announced. At 4:30, following the<lb />
game, the College Union will sponsor<lb />
an open house, to which all alumni<lb />
and students are invited. The CU<lb />
open house will follow that held by<lb />
begin registering Saturday morning the Business Education Department<lb />
in the Alumni-Faculty Building, in the Y Hut at 4:00 o'clock.<lb />
Saturday's festivities will culmi-<lb />
nate at the Homecoming Dance, at<lb />
which the new Homecoming Queen<lb />
will be presented. Those present will<lb />
hear the music of Claude Thornhill<lb />
and orchstra, and his vocalist, Diana<lb />
Hunter. The Dance is scheduled to<lb />
Through Saturday, a series of open<lb />
house and fraternity affairs, a buffet<lb />
luncheon, and other welcoming events<lb />
will be sponsored by various campus<lb />
organizations. At ten o'clock on Sa-<lb />
turday morning, a variety of floats,<lb />
marching bands, and a number of<lb />
student body and administration re-<lb />
presentatives will form a line and<lb />
begin a parade on Fifth Street which<lb />
downtown<lb />
Claude Thornhill and his band will<lb />
be featured at the Homecoming<lb />
Dance.<lb />
will continue through<lb />
Dr. Pettigrew will speak October Greenville before returning to cam<lb />
Blamh Jessup from Eliza-<lb />
 C, will head the newly<lb />
ed HonerntJ -Professional Fra-<lb />
. inci during the 1958-59<lb />
ti At a meeting of the<lb />
last Thuisday, October <lb />
J?sstt was elected presideut;<lb />
1. Boette from Raleigh,<lb />
rsktent; Amelita Thompson<lb />
Cerrs Gerao, secretary; and<lb />
Annette PtStet fiom Rocky<lb />
.usurer.<lb />
m t its constitution, the<lb />
Profession! Fraternity<lb />
t Last Carolina shall "co-<lb />
, Um act ities of the several<lb />
sad professional fratern<lb />
and impress and piomote<lb />
temk aspect of college life<lb />
i atetnitiea that have already<lb />
th eeaatil'B constitution are<lb />
 Date Tau, Chi Beta Phi'<lb />
I 1: eta Upsilon, Kappa Delta<lb />
Mu Alpha. Pi Omega Pi.<lb />
M A!pha Iota. Sigma Pi Alpha,<lb />
hu Sigma. Three other fraterni-<lb />
Alpha Phi Omega, Delta Sigma<lb />
Phi Omicronare also studying<lb />
e prospects of future membership.<lb />
ft fulfill the purpose of the con-<lb />
ation, which will be presented to<lb />
21 on "The Nature of Southern Pre-<lb />
judice and the Process of Desegre-<lb />
gation Lectures will take place in<lb />
the Joyner Memorial Library and are<lb />
scheduled for 8 o. ra. Tickets may be<lb />
pus. Among the marching bands<lb />
North Carolina<lb />
Directing the events for Home-<lb />
coming are Dr. James Butler, along<lb />
with a staff of students, faculty, and<lb />
administrative co-workers, including<lb />
the Student Government Homecoming<lb />
Committee Chairman, Jimmy Wall.<lb />
The East Carolina Playhouse will<lb />
also hold open house in its new Green<lb />
begin at eight o'clock and will end 1 Room, immediately following the ball<lb />
at twelve.<lb />
Among the celebrities expected to<lb />
appear for this week-end's actions,<lb />
is Greenville's own Miss Betty Lane<lb />
Evans, who now reigns as "Miss<lb />
the Student Government Association<lb />
October 27, the council has already<lb />
begun to plan certain activities that<lb />
it will sponser each year. One of<lb />
the.e projects after it is established<lb />
will continue throughout the entire<lb />
year. Upper classmen who would like<lb />
to coach review classes in their re-<lb />
spective departments will be able to<lb />
under the auspices of the Honorary-<lb />
Professional Fraternity Council.<lb />
High sclnolastic standing may be<lb />
emphasized through a banquet for<lb />
scholarship students on campus. At<lb />
this banquet the various fraternities<lb />
will be introduced, and their activi-<lb />
ties explained in order to acquaint<lb />
ihe heaoi students with, their various<lb />
departments' honor group.<lb />
The council also has laid tentative<lb />
plans for an Academic Emphasis<lb />
Week, and negotiations are now un-<lb />
derway to obtain a permanent site.<lb />
All these campus wide projects will<lb />
be entered into by the Honorary- Pro-<lb />
fessional Fraternity students at East<lb />
Carolina College. These students<lb />
number nearly 300 at the present<lb />
time.<lb />
since spring of last year but now oDUined free of charge after October<lb />
with the assistance of capable faculty L1 .. : .?<lb />
advisors and hard working S. G. A<lb />
personnel, it apjears about to<lb />
come a reality<lb />
be-<lb />
Gilikin Wins<lb />
Frosh Runoff<lb />
This weeks run-off was the final<lb />
vote ard third run-off for the offices<lb />
of president and vie1 president. Ray-<lb />
mond Paul Gillikin 1 . the count with<lb />
227 votes over Ronald Knouse's 190<lb />
and has taken over the presidents<lb />
position. Joseph Pake, who tallied for<lb />
223 votes, defeated Jacqueline Lowery<lb />
with Itl votes for the vice-presi-<lb />
dency.<lb />
These officers will lead the Fresh-<lb />
man class along with the previously<lb />
selected: Judy Hearne, secretary;<lb />
Betty Weeks, treasurer; Samuel<lb />
Stowe, man senator and Jane Chand-<lb />
ler, woman senator.<lb />
IS at the Public Relations Office at<lb />
the college.<lb />
Dr. Pettigrew is the second of<lb />
seven outstanding authorities sched-<lb />
v.led to appear at the college during<lb />
the (.resent school year under the<lb />
sponsorship of the Danforth Foun-<lb />
dation Project. Dr. John G. Gillin,<lb />
professor of anthropology at the<lb />
University of North Carolina, began<lb />
the series with lectures October 7-8.<lb />
Or. Gerald Johnson, noted editor and<lb />
author, 111 speak November 11-12.<lb />
In his work as a social psychologist,<lb />
Dr. Pettigrew has undertaken three<lb />
major field studies, including a study<lb />
of Southern anti-Negro prejudice. He<lb />
has investigated also the nature of<lb />
anti-African attitudes in the Union of<lb />
South Africa and the role of the<lb />
Little Rock ministry during racial<lb />
crisis. During the past two years a<lb />
number of articles based on these<lb />
studies have appeared in British and<lb />
American magazines. ,<lb />
Cavaliers To Perform<lb />
At Semi-Formal Dance<lb />
A leading rhythm-and-blues musical group, ITHE CAVA-<lb />
LIERS, have been signed to entertain at the first Interfraternity<lb />
Coumil dance of the 1958 school session, October 29.<lb />
The dance will be a semi-formal affair sponsored by the<lb />
IFC in conjunction with the EAST CAROLINIAN. George<lb />
Slaughter, chairman of the Social committee of the IFC, is in<lb />
charge of the arrangements. The Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity is<lb />
handling all publicity details.<lb />
Tickets for the dance will be made available October 22,<lb />
and may be obtained from any fraternity man. They will also<lb />
be made available at the College Union.<lb />
The CAVALIERS are one of Eastern North Carolina's<lb />
top Negro rhythm groups. They set a precident at East Caro-<lb />
lina this summer when they became the first Negro entertainers<lb />
ever to perform here. They have performed for several fraterni-<lb />
ty dances and parties and were featured as a main attraction<lb />
during the 1958 summer school session.<lb />
Summer School SGA President Johnny Hudson commented<lb />
that the group was "well-received here this summer and were<lb />
I thinkby far the best dance group we've had here in a long<lb />
time <lb />
game, Saturday afternoon.<lb />
Cast Complete<lb />
For Playhouse<lb />
Presentation<lb />
Frat Selects<lb />
Butler To Post<lb />
Dr. James W. Butler, assistant<lb />
i,i uf public relations at East<lb />
a College, has been appointed<lb />
.at tonal presidential representative of<lb />
Alpha P i Omega service fra-<lb />
tj He has been advisor of the<lb />
pa Cpsilon Chapter of the or-<lb />
iaattea aa the csmpus here since it<lb />
i altered in 1953.<lb />
William S. Roth of Raleigh, nat-<lb />
al Alpha Phi Omega president)<lb />
n nee August. 1958, is a member of<lb />
gfeaff of the Oceoneechee Council<lb />
 i Boy Scouts of America.<lb />
Dr. Butlers duties ss national presi-<lb />
sntial representative will include<lb />
motion of the welfare of the fra-<lb />
ternity by counseling chapters in<lb />
Mrviet projects, pledge programs and<lb />
t er activities.<lb />
The Kappa Upsilon Chapter here<lb />
ka an organisation of approximately<lb />
SS members headed by John B. Dunn,<lb />
Williamston senior. During the school<lb />
year the chapter carries out a aetn-<lb />
lr of service projects, including a<lb />
clean-up campaign for the campus,<lb />
staging a collage carnival, aad a<lb />
Christmas party, presenting a trophy<lb />
to mi oatatandmg football player on<lb />
the B8 Carolina team, and helping<lb />
with ?"ous ctiTiii at the Boy<lb />
Scouts oi America.<lb />
First To Register Now Teaching At ECC<lb />
By BETTY MAYNOR<lb />
-When we arrived in Greenville,<lb />
we were conveyed to the college in<lb />
an old surry drawn by two black<lb />
horses, for which service we paid<lb />
the t.uge sum of one quarter. The<lb />
cement boxes had not been cleared<lb />
away, and we trudged over rough<lb />
ground in an effort to get to the<lb />
dormitory thus related Dr. Pattie<lb />
Simmons Dowell of her experiences<lb />
upon arrival at East Carolina Teach-<lb />
ers College in 1907, the year the col-<lb />
lege was established.<lb />
Upon establishment of East Caro-<lb />
lina Teachers College in 1907, 194<lb />
girls and 19 boys enrolled. Psttie<lb />
Simmons Dowell of Williamston, at<lb />
hej- own request, was the first stu-<lb />
dent to register; and thus began her<lb />
educational career which eventually<lb />
culminated at the college where it<lb />
began. .<lb />
Dr. Dowell, who is at present on<lb />
the faculty of the Education Depart-<lb />
ment, was the first East Carolina<lb />
Teachers College student to be grant-<lb />
cj the B.S. and MA- Degrees; one<lb />
of which she received from Ps.body<lb />
College snd the othr from North<lb />
Carolina Stats College. She also has<lb />
l her Ed-D from New York University.<lb />
In sddition to being the t stu-<lb />
dent to register and to receive a<lb />
diploma, Dr. Dowell also has quite a<lb />
few "first" to her credit. She was the<lb />
receive the Alumni Award, presented<lb />
in recognition of outstanding work<lb />
first president of the Young Wemen'al and notable contribBtion to<lb />
Christian Association, the first to psrtioulsr field.<lb />
receive the coveted achievement Dr. Dowell, since her graduation<lb />
award, snd the first graduate to<lb />
from HC.T.C, has shown more than<lb />
an active interest in the Alumni<lb />
Association; and during the years<lb />
19S8-24, she was prteudeat of <lb />
association. She also organized and<lb />
was president of the Raleigh branch<lb />
of tie East Carolina Teachers Col-<lb />
lege Alumni Association.<lb />
During her years in the field of<lb />
education, Dr. Dowell has held many<lb />
positions which include: grade teach-<lb />
er, supervisor, a member of the staff<lb />
of the Department of Teacher Train-<lb />
ing for North Carolina, school princ-<lb />
ipal, critic teacher, and college pro-<lb />
fessor. Along with her work, Dr.<lb />
Dowell is a member of professional<lb />
organizations on the local, county,<lb />
and national levels.<lb />
In connection with her work as an<lb />
educator, Dr. Dowell has received<lb />
recognition from many colleges and<lb />
universities. She has conducted ex-<lb />
jperiments which have benefited not<lb />
only her personal knowledge in cer-<lb />
tain areas, but which have also aided<lb />
other educators as well.<lb />
In addition to the many other<lb />
accomplishments, Dr. Dowell is an<lb />
experienced author. She has to her<lb />
credit many articles which have ap-<lb />
peared in current magazines; some<lb />
of these articles include: "Education-<lb />
al Progress Through Television<lb />
"Russian Propaganda "Art on the<lb />
Pre-school Lereland many others<lb />
too numerous to mention. In the line<lb />
of books, Dr. Dowel! is the author<lb />
of such books, ss Teaching Artta-<lb />
fmetk in Elementary Schools, Tie<lb />
Curriculum in Actiea, aad Creative<lb />
Art In Elementary<lb />
MUM To Present<lb />
British Comedy<lb />
Benefit Show<lb />
"Man Alive a London stage co-<lb />
medy hit by John Dighton, will be<lb />
presented in McGinnis Auditorium<lb />
Nov. 13 and 14 by the Greenville<lb />
Little Theater and American Asso-<lb />
ciation of University Women. Last<lb />
year's production, a mystery, was<lb />
Agatha Christi's, "The Mousetrap<lb />
Proceeds will benefit the BCC Fo-<lb />
reign Study Scholarship Fund esta-<lb />
blished by the local branch of the<lb />
American Association of University<lb />
Women.<lb />
Beatrice Chauncey, who assisted<lb />
in the production of this play in the<lb />
American stage premiere at Flat<lb />
Rock Playhouse, Fist Rock, N. C<lb />
in August, will direct "Man Alive.M<lb />
Miss Chauncey has been seen as an<lb />
actress in many Little Theater and<lb />
college faculty productions in the<lb />
past eight years.<lb />
The Greenville A.A.U.W (through<lb />
plays and other money-raisins; ac-<lb />
tivities,) hss already made possible<lb />
the awarding of two scholarships to<lb />
East Carolina College students. Ana<lb />
Mayo, foreign language major from<lb />
Plymouth, N. 0 spent the summer<lb />
of 1957 studying in Paris, France,<lb />
as the first recipient of a scholar-<lb />
' ship from the A.A.U.W. fSBd.<lb />
Five males and six females have<lb />
been cast in "The Admiral Crichton<lb />
which is being presented October 80<lb />
through November 1. This will mark<lb />
the East Carolina Playhouse's first<lb />
major production this season.<lb />
The plot of this fantastic modern<lb />
play written by J. M. Barrie is con-<lb />
cerned with an aristocratic English<lb />
family who find themselves revert-<lb />
ing to the stage of nature when<lb />
they are shipwrecked on a desert<lb />
island. While there their former but-<lb />
ler, Crichton, is made king of hia<lb />
employers.<lb />
1903 designated its first appearance<lb />
on the New York stage. It was first<lb />
produced at the Duke of York's<lb />
theatre of London in 1902.<lb />
'Crichton" is divided into four<lb />
acts, two of which take place in the<lb />
home of the nobility, Earl of Loam,<lb />
with the second and third enacted<lb />
on the desert island.<lb />
The perfect butler, Crichton, played<lb />
by Merle Kelly is the leading charac-<lb />
ter. This ideal man is quite satis-<lb />
fied with his present role and feela<lb />
that it is a truly noble one. But in<lb />
the second act the present position<lb />
is changed to a more important and<lb />
necessary one.<lb />
The role of Lady Mary is tackled<lb />
by Genia Trulove. This Lady is the<lb />
eldest and the laziest of three dau-<lb />
ghters.<lb />
Concluding the three leading<lb />
characters is Leigh Dobson in the<lb />
role of Tweeney, who also believes<lb />
Crichton to be the most perfect man<lb />
in all England.<lb />
REBEL Seeks<lb />
New Budget<lb />
A publications Board meeting last<lb />
weekend resulted in a resolution ad-<lb />
vising THE REBEC, campus Literary<lb />
magazine, to re-submit its budget<lb />
request to the SGA Budget Com-<lb />
mittee for possible reconsideration.<lb />
Members of the Board, walking<lb />
with the Rebel Editor Bryan Har-<lb />
rison, recommended the same pro-<lb />
cedure be worked out by the SGA aad<lb />
the Budget Committee which<lb />
guarantee the magazine<lb />
finances to publish three issues this<lb />
school session.<lb />
SGA President Mike Katsias, who<lb />
attended the Board Meeting,<lb />
mented that he felt the Budget<lb />
mittee end the SGA should be<lb />
to "make an exception" in the<lb />
of THE REBEL and "arrange aoae-<lb />
thing" to insure th life of the aVt-<lb />
established<lb /><pb facs="00038610_tn_0002" /><lb />
PAGE TWO<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
THURSDAY, OCTOBER i6( m<lb />
Principles Lost<lb />
The American press has sold itself out.<lb />
It has sold itself out to the advertiser and to<lb />
the readers. It has sold itself out for money.<lb />
It has sold itself out by way of the<lb />
screaming headlines which announce a rape<lb />
or murder to attract readers. It has sold out<lb />
via editorials which incite emotions. It has<lb />
sold out through the comic strips, the cross-<lb />
word puzzles, the sales gimmicks, and the<lb />
large headline. It has sold out by its depravity.<lb />
It has sold itself out by its inaccurate<lb />
renorting and slanted stories. It has sold it-<lb />
self out by printing in big headlines a story,<lb />
and printing in little headlines its reaction.<lb />
It has sold itself out to man's depravity.<lb />
It has abdicated its position and function.<lb />
Its function in society and as the leader<lb />
in the communications industry must be to<lb />
educate, to stimulate, to make men think.<lb />
It must broaden one's scope rather than<lb />
narrow it. It must think in terms of the pos-<lb />
sibilities of man rather than the depravity of<lb />
man.<lb />
It must present the information of what<lb />
the world is doing to the reader making him<lb />
fully aware of his own importance in an ever<lb />
changing world which is growing smaller<lb />
by the day; an awareness of which is neces-<lb />
sary to protect people from annihilation.<lb />
It must think in terms of the why's<lb />
rather than only in terms of the who's and<lb />
what's. It must have cognizance of the impor-<lb />
tant meanings in things rather than striving<lb />
for catchy phraseology.<lb />
It must strive for accuracy, for in a<lb />
world where the printed or spoken word can<lb />
firing action, misinformation can be catastro-<lb />
phic.<lb />
It must prioritize so that a murder or<lb />
rape is not more important than a concert or<lb />
literary work, so that the police chief's dis-<lb />
honesty is not more important than the inept-<lb />
nesa of foreign policy administration, and so<lb />
that the town news does not make a person<lb />
loose sight of his obligations to a world<lb />
community.<lb />
It must place emphasis on personal<lb />
handling of each item of information so that<lb />
its truth can be ascertained before it ever sees<lb />
print. It must further try to interpret the<lb />
why's of the event, in order that the reader<lb />
can have background.<lb />
Its editorials must stimulate without ex-<lb />
citing. They must appeal to the mind rather<lb />
than playing on the emotions. The editorials<lb />
should place the events and ideas of the day<lb />
into a franuwork, so that in turn can serve, as<lb />
Socrates did. as a midwife to the ideas of<lb />
others.<lb />
The medium of the press should be open<lb />
to the public, but should not be subject to the<lb />
dictates of the public. It should instead lead<lb />
the public to think for themselves, rather<lb />
than trying to control the public through the<lb />
daily line of drivel it pours through its pages.<lb />
A paper can exist under these operating<lb />
programs. It can flourish. The New York<lb />
Times does not need to be sensational. It pre-<lb />
sents the news accurately and completely.<lb />
Its editorial page is open to the ideas of others,<lb />
and although its editorial policy limits the<lb />
range of speculation, a broader editorial policy<lb />
would not mean the extinction of a paper as a<lb />
business enterprise.<lb />
To report accurately, to interpert cor-<lb />
"rectly. to stimulate without inciting, to seek<lb />
knowledge, to promote understanding to edu-<lb />
cate above allthese are the goals of the<lb />
press.<lb />
The goals are not only unreached now,<lb />
'but not attempted by most papers. In the fail-<lb />
ure of the communications industry in gen-<lb />
eral, and the press in particular lies the decay<lb />
of an aware public. It is reflected by the de-<lb />
cisions of the people on matters political, but<lb />
it i- further reflected in the public's actions,<lb />
thoughts, and speech.<lb />
The press has abdicated. All is not lost.<lb />
It can assume its proper role. It is hoped<lb />
that it will.<lb />
DAILY TARHEEL<lb />
UNC Chapel Hill, N.C.<lb />
East Carolinian<lb />
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb />
Greenville, North Carolina<lb />
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb />
Member<lb />
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb />
Associated Collegiate Press<lb />
Intercolltgiate Press<lb />
North State Conference Press Association<lb />
Enter as second-class matter December 8, 1926 at<lb />
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb />
the act of March 3, 1879.<lb />
Kathryn Johnson<lb />
EDITOR<lb />
Marti Martin<lb />
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb />
 Billy Arnold<lb />
Derry Walker, Pat Harvey<lb />
Johnny Hudson, Bill Boyd<lb />
Bob Harper<lb />
Billy Arnold, D.rry Walker<lb />
Don Griffin, Tom Jackson,<lb />
Managing Editor<lb />
Assistant Editors<lb />
Co-Sports Editors<lb />
Photographer<lb />
Cartoonists<lb />
Proofreading Staff<lb />
Melborne Prigen<lb />
 News Staff Betty Maynor, Evelyn Crutchfield,<lb />
Libby Williams, Jackie Lynville, Claudia Todd<lb />
Columnists James Corbet, Derry Walker, Billy<lb />
Arnold, Nancy Lilly, Bob Harper, Pat Harvey,<lb />
Tom Jackson<lb />
Women's Circulation Manager Susan Ballance<lb />
Men's Circulation Manager Jim Trice<lb />
. Editorial Staff James Corbett, Derry Walker,<lb />
Billy Arnold, Nancy Lilly, Bob Harper Pat Harvey<lb />
Advisors Miss Mary Greene, Mrs. Mary Goodman<lb />
Printed by Renfrew Printing Co Greenville, N. C.<lb />
FICES on the second floor of Wright Building<lb />
fcone, all departments, 6101, extension 64<lb />
Editorially<lb />
Speaking<lb />
By KATHRYN JOHNSON<lb />
In December 1967, the EAST<lb />
CAROLINIAN suggested in an edi-<lb />
torial t. at this college was missing<lb />
out on much good entertainment by<lb />
i ot being allowed to have Negroes<lb />
perform on this campus. The editor<lb />
declared that such noted performers<lb />
as "Good Will Ambassadors" Louis<lb />
Armstrong could play for the same<lb />
price as less famous bands we have<lb />
had. The concensus was that he was<lb />
right.<lb />
Last spring the Board of Trustees<lb />
approved Negro entertainment on this<lb />
campus. In the summer session this<lb />
past summer the first group of Ne-<lb />
gro preformers appeared here. They<lb />
were "T e Cavaliers outstanding<lb />
rhythm and blues group in Eastern<lb />
North Carolina.<lb />
The students welcomed this media<lb />
of entertainment which was some-<lb />
thing entirely new for East Carolina.<lb />
Summer School President Johnny<lb />
Hudson said, "This wasin my<lb />
opinionthe best dance we've had<lb />
since I've been here<lb />
Now the Cavaliers are recording<lb />
tais also. October 29 they will again<lb />
appear on our campus at a dance<lb />
open to the student body. The Inter-<lb />
fraternity Council is sponsoring the<lb />
dance.<lb />
The Dialectic Senate at UNC unan-<lb />
amously passed a resolution favoring<lb />
the abolition of all state stipulations<lb />
establishing racial criteria for the<lb />
legality of marriage. In other words,<lb />
thej are not opposed to interracial<lb />
marriage.<lb />
The same night the Philanthropic<lb />
Society voted down capital punish-<lb />
ment. Ry the way, in the past four<lb />
years only three men have been<lb />
executed in North Carolina.<lb />
The same week that these noble<lb />
resolutions were pased THE DAILY<lb />
TARHEEL, UNC campus publication,<lb />
i.tried a front page story saying<lb />
that all the pay telephones would be<lb />
removed from the University Library<lb />
due to the fact that the men had<lb />
been using the booths as latr'nes. . .<lb />
Carolina men going to the "John" in<lb />
a phone booth. And wasn't it just<lb />
lat eai that a group of Carolina<lb />
boys sid tat they did not want to<lb />
he liaternally associated with the<lb />
hoys from East Carolina because<lb />
they were among other things, un-<lb />
couth. Well, well, who is calling whom<lb />
uncouth?<lb />
The merchants of Greenville should<lb />
be praised for tie fine support they<lb />
have given East Carolina thus far.<lb />
Because of them, we almost made the<lb />
train trip to Eton. Some merchants<lb />
I ought many tickets and then turned<lb />
t em back in to be given to students<lb />
who could not afford to make the trip.<lb />
THESE should be the merchants<lb />
that BOC students support. THEY<lb />
s upport us.<lb />
Speaking of merchants. . .Why not<lb />
have a student chosen by the Student<lb />
Senate or Executive Council of the<lb />
9GA to represent the students of<lb />
BCC as an ex-officio member of the<lb />
.Merchants' Association. He could<lb />
offer the students' viewpoints on<lb />
many matters to the Association and<lb />
bring back the merchants' views and<lb />
opinions to the students through tha<lb />
Student Senate<lb />
The position would not only be<lb />
good for the students and the Asso-<lb />
ciation, but it would afford the stu-<lb />
dent representative valuable ex-<lb />
perience in seeing leading business<lb />
men at work and in working with<lb />
them.<lb />
The students who got caught in<lb />
the campus check had better vote<lb />
foi the Honor System if it ever comes<lb />
ap again. This is the only way we<lb />
can rid the campus of such nonsense.<lb />
If we have an honor system then<lb />
students would be on their honor.<lb />
Surely they would be trusted.<lb />
Maybe we are being unfair. This<lb />
may be be the only method by<lb />
which the counselors and ad-<lb />
ministration in charge of wo-<lb />
men can enforce their rules, the<lb />
nly way they can make sure that<lb />
women obey them.<lb />
Thoughtful notes. . .Amos Guth-<lb />
ridge, attorney at law for the pro-<lb />
secution Capital Citizens Council in<lb />
Little iRock, said money would be<lb />
laised for private facilities "if our<lb />
would-be federal masters insist on<lb />
destroying our public schools<lb />
In Richmond, Vice Mayor Robert J.<lb />
Heberle said in a letter to Eisenhower<lb />
that he did not consider the court's<lb />
lecent opinions as the law of tha<lb />
land, but rather as an attempt to<lb />
change the law of the land.<lb />
"You cannot be fundamentally<lb />
honest if you ask mo as a public<lb />
official to aid in the conversion of<lb />
our good schools into the disgrace-<lb />
ful mess which exists in your Wash-<lb />
ington schools he wrote. The Wash-<lb />
ington schools have been integrated<lb />
for several years.<lb /><lb />
Campus Checks Collar Co-eds' Character<lb />
Farmer Peison McSnerson had<lb />
an apple orchard in front of which<lb />
an elegant paved road had been con-<lb />
structed. McSnerson didn't mind<lb />
their building the road a bit, since<lb />
it helped prevent erosion in the<lb />
trees nearest it, and his only con-<lb />
dition before allowing the right-of-<lb />
way through his land was that the<lb />
travelers would leave his apples<lb />
lone.<lb />
Now these travelers ventured forth<lb />
on the elegant road for various<lb />
reasons; some because of family tra-<lb />
ditions, some for personal reasons,<lb />
and some came along just for the trip;<lb />
all considered the road a better means<lb />
of progress in the world. Naturally,<lb />
since this means of travel was open<lb />
only to an exclusive group, a cost,<lb />
sometimes called tuition was imposed,<lb />
Every three months the travelers<lb />
paid these costs in advance, and<lb />
thereafter had to maintain a certain<lb />
speed or be forced to discon-<lb />
tinue their trip.<lb />
Since these people were told, when<lb />
they first began traveling the road,<lb />
that they were adult they resented<lb />
the rule against stealing apples, for<lb />
it restricted their independent feel-<lb />
ngs, and as a result, they occasionally<lb />
stole some of the fruit, just to re-<lb />
assert their mature conceptions of<lb />
themselves. Farmer McSnerson cus-<lb />
sed.<lb />
Far East Report<lb />
By DERRY WALKER<lb />
Person was a busy man, and didn't<lb />
have time to run frequently to the<lb />
edge of the road to see if his trees<lb />
were being ravished, so he solved<lb />
his problem another way. He In-<lb />
structed his sons, Lukey, Beelzebub,<lb />
and Jonah to guard them. Now these<lb />
three were busy too, consequently,<lb />
the apple-stealers often went un-<lb />
checked.<lb />
Then too, Person was partial to<lb />
t 8 men travelers; they could grab<lb />
a helluva lot of apples and he didn't<lb />
care much; but man alive, just let<lb />
a girl swipe ONE, and how McSner-<lb />
son would steam!<lb />
As aforementioned, Person and<lb />
sons were terribly busy running the<lb />
I'arm, so consequently their efforts to<lb />
enforce the apple-stealing were a<lb />
meager but macabre few. About once<lb />
every three months, the sons would<lb />
load their shotguns and acquire a<lb />
hiding place in the bushes next to<lb />
the road, and wait for someone to<lb />
steal apples. Remembering their dad's<lb />
partiality to boys, the sons waited for<lb />
a girLor a group of girls to reach<lb />
for the fruit, then blazed away at<lb />
them.<lb />
Results: the travelers resented<lb />
more than ever farmer McSnerson and<lb />
his sons;the girls, since their were<lb />
favorite targets of the buckshot, be-<lb />
gan seizing every opportunity to nab<lb />
the forbidden apples; no victories<lb />
wen won, and plenty of 'prestige<lb />
was lost. ,<lb />
Now we know a rule is a rule<lb />
is a rule; but how on God's green<lb />
earth can anyone respect a rule<lb />
wi.en enforced in this manner? Sup-<lb />
pose the laws against stealing and<lb />
murded were enforced in such an<lb />
inconsistant manner? How many<lb />
people would take a chance against<lb />
being punished for one of these<lb />
crimes that would not under our<lb />
present law enforcement? Quite a<lb />
few, I make bold to say.<lb />
I know that when the majority of<lb />
girls at East Carolina College become<lb />
mothers and send their daughters to<lb />
school, they'll want rules and restric-<lb />
tions governing them too, because<lb />
they'll love them and want them pro-<lb />
tected as their mothers do. That's<lb />
because t-ey are HUMAN BEINGS,<lb />
and as such, will err occasionally.<lb />
Campus checks are fine when and if<lb />
they are consistent, and the rules<lb />
which necessitate them will be re-<lb />
spected and abided by far more<lb />
effeciently than they are now if<lb />
they are set up on a regular basis.<lb />
One can tempt human beings easily<lb />
by allowing a necessary dicipline to<lb />
lag; enforce the same dicipline on a<lb />
fair and regular basis, and apple-<lb />
stealers will gradually fade away.<lb />
Reds Reveise Formosan War Wrangle<lb />
Just as the Formosan conflict was<lb />
beginning to reach its highest peak a<lb />
few days ago, the Chinese Reds<lb />
suddenly did an about-face and con-<lb />
verted the war of guns into a war<lb />
of words. By announcing a cease-fire<lb />
on the Nationalists held islands of<lb />
Matsu and Quemoy, they scored one<lb />
of the biggest suprises and possibly<lb />
one of the biggest propaganda vic-<lb />
tories of the year.<lb />
Throughout the country, suprised<lb />
Americans are still asking why the<lb />
Communists stand was reversed so<lb />
unexpectedly. And as of now, the<lb />
many questions have not produced a<lb />
definite satisfactory answer. The re-<lb />
actions have been extremely varied,<lb />
with some observers claiming a vic-<lb />
tory for the Communists while others<lb />
see it as an unquestionable defeat<lb />
for John Foster Dulles and nig For-<lb />
eign Policy. Despite the great number<lb />
who see it as a great victory or an<lb />
earth-shaking defeat for America, it<lb />
becomes quite clear, after all the<lb />
elements have been considered, that<lb />
neither the United States or Red<lb />
China can claim much of a victory or<lb />
fear much of a loss.<lb />
The reason behind the Communist<lb />
reversal in policy are hazy and<lb />
difficult to pinpoint. One important<lb />
reason undoubtly was to give the<lb />
Red China's plan of appealing to the<lb />
Nationalist people for peace talks a<lb />
chance to succeed.<lb />
Immediately following the cease-<lb />
fire announcement the Chinese Com-<lb />
munist Defense Minister addressed<lb />
a message over the head of National-<lb />
ist Chief Chiang Kai-shek directly to<lb />
By JAMES M. CORBETT<lb />
the people, cailing for peace talks<lb />
between the two Chinese countries.<lb />
Chiang had presistantly refused to<lb />
enter into such talks with Red China.<lb />
The failure of the Red blockade<lb />
fc.iempts to cut off supplies s to the<lb />
small islands is another possible ex-<lb />
planation. It is doubtful that this<lb />
failure alone was the deciding factor<lb />
in the cease-fire decision, but it was<lb />
equally inconceivable that a cease-<lb />
fire would have been called had the<lb />
Red succeeded in their blockade at-<lb />
tempts.<lb />
Abstract Reflections<lb />
Red China apperently had more<lb />
tangible reaaons for preferring a<lb />
cease-fire than the U. S but the<lb />
announcement was received nowhere<lb />
with more enthusiasm than in Wash-<lb />
ington. This indicated that the U. S.<lb />
Officials were growing increasingly<lb />
skeptical of their position in the<lb />
tense crises. Many spokesmen were<lb />
relieved because they felt at least<lb />
the stage had been set which would<lb />
allow both nations to make face-<lb />
saving exit, thus averting a war<lb />
that neither side wants.<lb />
Gals Lose In Flashlight Battle<lb />
Cussin n' Discussin'<lb />
Uniqueness IS Popularity<lb />
Hi, NANCY LILLY<lb />
Mm- jreara ago the intellecl he<lb />
creative tl.inker were looked up to <lb />
they were different. The recent tread waj<lb />
to Ignore them because they hciv different<lb />
Now liiey B0U3 he publicized ami pi<lb />
der microscopes :ni analysed<lb />
are different It they become snccei fu <lb />
have their lnmes meiiunefl on i  the public<lb />
mm pats them on the back and give be<lb />
a lollipop is though they ar ,jd<lb />
children who bring h me good report ca<lb />
Hut the young ones who have do jucci<lb />
 hopei and dreams and a star, are lool<lb />
a kance b the suspicious eyes  conformi-<lb />
ty and t Id in its mouth that the<lb />
in life is to be average. The to<lb />
 cape often proves so exhausting .<lb />
means becomes the end. and when the strug-<lb />
gle is over the star has become lost and for-<lb />
gotten.<lb />
The East Carolina High School Squad<lb />
for the Protection of Southern Womanhood<lb />
staged their annual flashlight-waving, q<lb />
t ion-snapping convention last week. Act<lb />
lv. it wasn't too bad. Several freshmaj<lb />
sneaked in undetectedthe searching<lb />
forgot to check the car ashtrays. Oh<lb />
there's nothing like a good old-fas<lb />
game of cops and r -bbers to keep little mi<lb />
and bodies alert!<lb />
Those of us who have seen the facti<lb />
art exhibits in the past couple of years<lb />
familiar with the work of Dr. W. B. G<lb />
Mr. John Gordon, and Mr. Francis Xeel. We<lb />
now have three new members on the<lb />
iacuity, and they are all extremely<lb />
represented in the current exhibit at <lb />
brary. Dr. Bruce Carter's drawing and pr.<lb />
give a gentleness and poignancy to a ral<lb />
harsh subjectthe soldier, and Mr. 'I<lb />
Flowers demonstrates a great deal of sensi<lb />
tivity in his sculpture. Most fascinating<lb />
me (since I am particularly interested in the<lb />
field of painting) are the water colors  f<lb />
Mr. Paul Minnis. I'm not an art criti<lb />
don't know enough about the subjectbut<lb />
personally think Minnis' work is excel:<lb />
He has a new and different approach to<lb />
medium that appeals to me.<lb />
Here's something from John Steinbeck's<lb />
"Burning Bright""With all our horrors ana<lb />
our faults, mewhere m us there is a si<lb />
ing<lb />
Portrait Of A Prof<lb />
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb />
By TOM JACKSON<lb />
Well girls, it looks like the Mafia<lb />
finally struck. Certainly hope you<lb />
didn't get into too much trouble.<lb />
You freshmen girls can't say we<lb />
didn't tell you so because we did.<lb />
After all, each one of you has a cop?<lb />
of the KEY and it is chock-full of<lb />
rules and regulations which you should<lb />
have learned by now.<lb />
I guess you just arent properly<lb />
disciplined. I mean, if you ask a<lb />
Uarine PPC for the third general<lb />
order, he could snap it out" immediate-<lb />
ly; but 111 bet none of you could tell<lb />
me what Article IV, section 2 of the<lb />
student government constitution is<lb />
concerned with (if you want to look<lb />
it up, it is on page 66 in the KEY).<lb />
There is no excuse for you upper-<lb />
classmen who got. caught. You should<lb />
have been in your rooms reading<lb />
Paine's "Common Sense or "Second<lb />
Essay on Government" by Locke. (In<lb />
case none of you have read these,<lb />
they are an about inalienable rights,<lb />
life, liberty, pursuit of happiness, and<lb />
stuff like that.)<lb />
Since none of you girlg haVe the<lb />
nerve to revolt against this tyranny<lb />
you have to put up with, you could<lb />
at least organize an underground.<lb />
Then maybe you would have a little<lb />
warning before the attack.<lb />
You could hang lanterns in the<lb />
cupola of the Austin building. You<lb />
know, "one if by land, two if by sea<lb />
The homecoming floats are almost<lb />
finished, and warehouses in which<lb />
they are being built look like grotes-<lb />
que fairylands. Scraps of crepe paper<lb />
and bits of glittering tinsel litter the<lb />
dusty floors of the dark gloomy<lb />
building.<lb />
When I first started to school here in<lb />
lii54 I had a class under one of the most<lb />
stimulating professors I've ever met. He was<lb />
a strange little man, eccentric, funny and<lb />
pitiful at the same time.<lb />
He stood four-feet-five, had a moon red<lb />
face, and his hair was silverfish grey. He<lb />
walked with a quick humpbacked gait, like<lb />
a groundhog in a hurry, and he always car<lb />
lied a large satchel brief case in which he<lb />
supposedly kept a bottle of whiskey.<lb />
The students, including myself, regarded<lb />
the man with awe. He was a dramatic speak-<lb />
er, althougn his voice was whiney, scratchy,<lb />
like water sprinkling against a tin roof. He<lb />
would grip a copy of English Literature in<lb />
his fist, bellow to the ceiling with a great<lb />
heaving of arms and knotted tie, and turn<lb />
upon his class like a wolf"And what does<lb />
that line mean. Mr. Arnold?"<lb />
He once brought a dead green snake to<lb />
class and, ins great round face grotesque in<lb />
genuine sorrow announced that he had found<lb />
it cutside. "We must give it Christian burial<lb />
he said. He raised a finger and whinned to<lb />
the ceding: "We must say our words and<lb />
by it in the sod with a marker. Or give it<lb />
a decent burial at sea in Tar River<lb />
Once, when we were studying Medevil<lb />
writings, he stalked about the classroom with<lb />
a yardstick in his hand, slashing at the air as<lb />
if chopping up naughty knights and dragons.<lb />
He approached one boy, hit him on the head<lb />
with the stick, and said. "I knight thee Sir<lb />
Luke Alexander. Rise and go forth in the<lb />
cause of chivalry<lb />
The professor wore glasses which he<lb />
pulled on and off during the heat of oratory.<lb />
Sometimes, in the frenzy of recitation he<lb />
would leap up, dash his glasses into the floor<lb />
or the desk cr the wall, and march on shout<lb />
ing his lyrics.<lb />
One day he smashed his glasses into the<lb />
desk and shattered them. He stopped looked<lb />
increaulously at the class and said, "Mv God,<lb />
I have broken my glasses<lb />
He could be seen often walking about the<lb />
campus or uptown his satchel i hand, gazing<lb />
2aSSnyon ht Ltrees and bdta with<lb />
a grin on his puffed red face, oblivious of<lb />
naossomf &amp; " to n,sel7or per'<lb />
ntPCOuldSser demn COmns which only<lb />
manyHrumaoSrfriSSedthat - Tre were<lb />
S?st porXr TCermng nis dismissal. The<lb />
chair one tl S Ws that he leaP on a<lb />
t miu !j , " hls sanity.<lb />
because hi mS L S?1 a one in tht eourse<lb />
oTtopof mv tf 5 that the  tha Z<lb />
fathers y ad W3S an oW fnend of his<lb /><pb facs="00038610_tn_0003" /><lb />
:hv<lb />
rSDAY. OCTOBER 18, 1968<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
PAGE TH&amp;EH<lb />
ucs Seek Third NS Win At Expense Of Western Carolina<lb />
Jack Boo tie's Club Now A Definite Contender<lb />
tor The Conference Championship This Year<lb />
4b<lb />
Emory One Of The Top Linemen For EC<lb />
v surprise clubs in the<lb />
Si.itt. East Carolina and cross-<lb />
,t Western Carolina, clash<lb />
Saturday afternoon with<lb />
in the conference at stake.<lb />
i itamouata proved that they<lb />
. , leckoned with last fall<lb />
. gulled several late season<lb />
, 1<lb />
Dan<lb /><lb />
maun, the forces of<lb />
Robinson have been<lb />
in<lb />
id<lb />
t<lb />
to<lb />
ui<lb />
lit<lb />
11<lb />
"6<lb />
le<lb />
a<lb />
le<lb />
illy season favorites and<lb />
 Uved up to pre-season<lb />
conference foes.<lb />
ta toppled Appalachian in<lb />
-tart and then had<lb />
, tot a tie last week-end<lb />
I atawte Tims, their eon-<lb />
nark for the season Koing<lb />
gal irday'i rame is 1-0-1.<lb />
 Carolina  been a big sur-<lb />
, , wins in their first<lb />
After emerging with only<lb />
tax) mMg and no con-<lb />
vince 1956, the Bucs<lb />
, m ob top of the stand-<lb />
n unblemished 2-0 mark.<lb />
k BooM will have sever-<lb />
, s ;t. advantage, hi  ia favor<lb />
I the Cats will rate as fa-<lb />
st experts. The under-<lb />
, . be nothing new for the<lb />
ia the have been in every<lb />
far.<lb />
almost indentical club which handed<lb />
BOC a 20-7 setback last season. Bob<lb />
t paper, regarded as one of the top<lb />
signal callers in tie loop, sparks a<lb />
strong running game for the Cats.<lb />
Backing Cooper in the backfield<lb />
will be a couple of veterans, Boogy<lb />
Bass and Arnold Isaacs, at halfbacks,<lb />
and Jamie Wilkes at fullback.<lb />
The biggest problem of Boone will<lb />
be his injury list which has no less<lb />
than six regulars sidelined. Several<lb />
key players were injured last week<lb />
against Elon and has caused the Buc<lb />
ead mentor to shuffle his personnel.<lb />
Co-captain Lynn Bamett and<lb />
tackle Henry Kwiatkowski are pro-<lb />
bably out for the homecoming game<lb />
and it is doubtful that halfback<lb />
Glenn Bass and All-Conference full-<lb />
back James Speight will be ready.<lb />
On the good side of the picture,<lb />
Boon, will be ready to cut loose with<lb />
his reliable scooters, Bobby Perry<lb />
and Lee Atkinson. Quarterback Ralph,<lb />
Zehring will also be expected to take<lb />
to tie air come Saturday afternoon.<lb />
Coach Boone's line has been re-<lb />
ceiving plenty of praise recently and<lb />
has been regarded by many as the<lb />
best defensive line in the history of<lb />
the schoul. Pacing the forward wall<lb />
has been All-Conference candidate,<lb />
Ed Emory, Charles Cook, Wayne<lb />
Davis, 0 aries Gordon, Bill Cain,<lb />
Randell Holmes, and the two recent<lb />
injuries, Henry Kwiatkowski and<lb />
Lynn Barnett.<lb />
A capacity crowd is expected to<lb />
jam College Stadium Saturday after-<lb />
noon for the homecoming tilt. A<lb />
parade is slated for 10:00 Saturday<lb />
morning and then pre-game activities<lb />
will begin at 1:30 which will include<lb />
the crowning of the homecoming<lb />
queen. Kick-off time will be 2:00.<lb />
Now Has Five TD's For Season<lb />
Perry Again Stars In Pirate s<lb />
14-6 Win Over Elon College<lb />
Lust Carolina came out from half<lb />
"bThomecoaiilH for East (time like a roaring bull this past<lb />
and Boon has established<lb />
d on this date since his<lb />
m 1952. The young tutor<lb />
ega<lb />
 only one homecoming<lb />
d this came last year to Elon.<lb />
ta have been victims of<lb />
kte Stew" on three different<lb />
Boone will<lb />
. - homecoming<lb />
a . er factor in his favor.<lb />
a Carolina has been able to<lb />
I Boone-coached club only once<lb />
attempts. However, the cross-<lb />
tors lead 10-9 in a series<lb />
tttM back to 1936.<lb />
, .stern club will bring in an<lb />
CU Student Board<lb />
Revises Old Rules<lb />
On Table Tennis<lb />
Saturday and then preceeded to knock<lb />
off Lion's high-ranking Christians<lb />
14-6. The win kei t the Pirate's loop<lb />
record unblimished and gave Coach<lb />
Boone and his club top spot in the<lb />
loopthe first time in many years<lb />
tor ECC<lb />
A couple of halfbacks, Lee Atkin-<lb />
son and Bobby Perry, and guard Ed<lb />
Emory keyed the winthe third for<lb />
f e pirates in four starts.<lb />
Perry, the Greenville scooter, scored<lb />
both tallies for the Piratesone on<lb />
a pass from Zehring and then later a<lb />
43 yard dash which sewed the tilt up.<lb />
Prry took Zehring's first toss on the<lb />
two yard line.<lb />
East Carolina reached the Christ-<lb />
ians territory on the last play of the<lb />
half when Jerry Carpenter passed to<lb />
Pat Draughon, a play covering 56<lb />
yards- giving the Pirates possession<lb />
on the Elon 20, but there was not<lb />
time for another play.<lb />
Big Ed Emory knocked some life<lb />
out of the Christians early in the<lb />
second half as he ended a Christian<lb />
threat by intercepting a Maidon pass.<lb />
The husky guard lateraled off to<lb />
Ralph Zehring who scooted 54 yards<lb />
behind good interference before being<lb />
brought down on the Elon 16. A<lb />
lourth down run by Perry was inches<lb />
short of a first down and the Bucs<lb />
lost the ball on the Elon eight but the<lb />
hristians were pushed back against<lb /><lb />
i<lb /><lb />
PIRAT E'S<lb />
DEN<lb />
By JOHNNY HUDSON<lb />
Running at Western Carolina's gridiron club this Saturday afternoon<lb />
will be 205 pound Edward Emory. Emory will again be at his familiar guard<lb />
slot when the homecoming affair takes place. He was a dominant factor<lb />
in the line play against Elon last week. The 20 year old college junior <lb />
third year of Pirate football play and is a JTl<lb />
(Staff Photo by Harper)<lb />
in his<lb />
Carolina<lb />
The Intramural Round-Up<lb />
.image and then zig-zaggheir goai line for the first time<lb />
22 yards for the touch<lb />
ed his WSJ<lb />
down. His second TD saw three de-<lb />
enders touch him at the line of<lb />
scrimmage but after that Perry out-<lb />
ran the remaining Christians.<lb />
Atkinson, the fleet New Bern<lb />
broke through the Elon line<lb />
hunks of yardage and<lb />
Student Board<lb />
senior,<lb />
I for ma<lb />
c t i ? I'nion<lb />
evised its rules concerning the<lb />
i tennis tournaments.<lb />
e important points of this re-<lb />
 as follows:<lb />
Quarterly tournaments will be<lb />
 us before).<lb />
The winner and the runner-up<lb />
R be eliminated from parti-<lb />
cipation in other quarterly<lb />
tournament! during the year<lb />
BOC finally took command at the<lb />
i petting of the fourth period. The<lb />
Pirates moved into scoring territory<lb />
when 'pass interference was called<lb />
on the Elon 22. The following play<lb />
Zehring threw a screen pass to Perry<lb />
who scooted the distance.<lb />
up the game by scooting off-tackle<lb />
Later in the period, Perry sewed<lb />
up tl e game by scooting off tackle<lb />
and 43 yards for a touchdown. The<lb />
spark was taken out of the Christ-<lb />
ans and all they could do was hold<lb />
the score down.<lb />
Coach Jack Boone was pleased<lb />
played a top-notch defensive game<lb />
as well.<lb />
Emorv, a junior guard from Lan-<lb />
caster, was all over the field for the<lb />
Bucs. He tossed Elon runners for<lb />
constant losses and ended a Elon<lb />
drive with a pass interception. An<lb />
ll-Conference candidate, Emory ith his ciubs' victory over his alma the win for manager Gerald Hasty s<lb />
played his best game since enrolling mater. "We were slow starting butteam CnarUe Shields, Wilbur New-<lb />
ark it was apparent that we wanted to<lb />
were definitely  : v, caonnd half commented<lb />
nd dominated<lb />
Gearld Hasty and Mike Uzzel scor-<lb />
ed all of TheU Chi's points in the<lb />
victory that left LCA with a record<lb />
of 3 wins and 1 loss although several<lb />
cancellations of previous games have<lb />
to be made up.<lb />
Kappa Sigma NU played two<lb />
games last week and split with Theta<lb />
Chi and Delta Sig, winning over the j<lb />
Delta Sig squad but loosing to the<lb />
In<lb />
up and coming Theta Chi group.<lb />
at ECC.<lb />
The Christians<lb />
,ud robin tournament oflip for the game a<lb />
the opening half. Sparked o<lb />
these 3 winners and 3 runners-<lb />
will be held during the<lb />
Spring quarter to determine<lb />
the yearly champion.<lb />
Awards- gold medals for quar-<lb />
terly winners, silver medals<lb />
for quarterly runner-ups, tro-<lb />
pfaiea for the first three year-<lb />
ly winners and bronze medals<lb />
for the three yearly runners-up<lb />
1 Novice single events will be<lb />
part of each quarterly tourna<lb />
ment. The games committee of<lb />
the CCSB will decide if per-<lb />
sons who sign up to participate I<lb />
in the novice tournament are<lb />
of novice ability. The winners<lb />
of these tournaments will be<lb />
awarded a trophy and will then<lb />
no longer be eligible for novice<lb />
play Tte runner-up of eacn no-<lb />
v re tournament will be allowed<lb />
U enter the other novice<lb />
tournaments. He will not re-<lb />
ceive an award for the runner<lb />
up position.<lb />
I In the event that a finalist in<lb />
the regular yearly tournament<lb />
, unable to participate, the<lb />
person with the best record<lb />
in all three quarterly tourna-<lb />
 ;n he eligible to com-<lb />
ments will oe eiiKi<lb />
plete the six participants <lb />
the yearly ranking round ro-<lb />
bin tournament.<lb />
The new rules were accepted by<lb />
the board after three separate com-<lb />
ittees had held a meeting to decide<lb />
the Union's new policy. Tjri<lb />
were also two Board meetings before<lb />
the rules were accepted by a ma-<lb />
jority of the group.<lb />
The committee vHch worked out<lb />
the final revisions was headed by<lb />
Cayle Clapp, a senior from Green-<lb />
ville. Working with her were Carol<lb />
White, a Greenville sophomoTe,<lb />
Buddy Mangum, a senior from Caro-<lb />
lina Beach, and Betty Faye Moore,<lb />
 sophomore from Raleigh.<lb />
Ronnie Stephens, a junior from<lb />
Fayetteville and Norman Kilpatrick<lb />
a junior from Greenville were invited<lb />
 voice their opinions on the major<lb />
points in the discuaaiou.<lb />
wii in the second half comm<lb />
Boone.<lb />
quarterback Charlie Maidon, Elon<lb />
kept the ball in ECC territory until<lb />
the last play of the half. The Christ-<lb />
ians were in scoring territory no<lb />
less than five times but on each oc-<lb />
casion except one the EOC defensive<lb />
line was unmovable once pushed up<lb />
againse their goal line.<lb />
Coach Sid Varney's club did finally<lb />
hit paydirt early in the second period<lb />
when Joe Delgais dived over from the<lb />
STANDINGS<lb />
The officials standings in the Dorm-<lb />
itory and Fraternity Leagues of in-<lb />
tramural football play as of Monday<lb />
are:<lb />
Dorm League<lb />
man, Jim Bell and Jim Turner all<lb />
scored six points each to make up<lb />
-their end of the 24 to 13 score. Craig<lb />
Reid and Kelly Kee had a touchdown<lb />
I apiece for Kappa Sigma Nu while<lb />
manager Dixie Hobgood gathered the<lb />
extra point.<lb />
In KSN's encounter with Delta Sig<lb />
the final score was 25 to 6. Craig<lb />
Reid and Dave Thompson led the way<lb />
-  <lb />
in<lb />
n<lb />
Teams<lb />
River Rats<lb />
Umstead Hall<lb />
Country Gentlemen<lb />
Falcons<lb />
?Rebel Rousers<lb />
ROTC<lb />
W<lb />
5<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
2<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
L<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
2<lb />
3<lb />
4<lb />
5<lb />
Pet.<lb />
1.000<lb />
.760<lb />
.600<lb />
.400<lb />
.333<lb />
.000<lb />
with George Langston scoring<lb />
The press box at Elon was an interesting one to observe this past<lb />
week-end. Scouts from Western Carolina, Lenoir Bihyne, CaUwba, and<lb />
Guiliord were on hind. Mr. Luther Byrd, sports publicity director at Eton,<lb />
was greeting everyone and predicting a Elon victory.<lb />
In talking with a Catawba scout, Byrd was disappointed that the<lb />
Indians only tied Western Carolina. "I was hoping that CaUwba and Ap-<lb />
palachian would win and then there would b no undefeated clubs left in<lb />
the conference stated Bi rd. It was a general conception by tte Bon sport<lb />
writers and also the outsiders that Elon would stomp the Pirate club.<lb />
Continuously throughout the first half, tha Elon supporters were<lb />
throwing praises at various players, as the Christians rolled to a 6-0 win.<lb />
But in the second half, it was a different story as the Bucs wore out the<lb />
Elon club and struck for two final period touchdowns. The press box was<lb />
a little quieter as tne game came to a close although tfcere was some con-<lb />
cern over a pass interference play which was one of the turning points of<lb />
the game. The PA announcer got in the last word as he announced the frnal<lb />
score: Elon 6 East Carolina Teachers College 14 (a low blow).<lb />
Indiana Have Bitter Tale<lb />
A couple of Catawba "die-hards" were on hand giving reasons for<lb />
I ECC upset two weeks ago. It seems that the Indians stayed in ECC territory<lb />
but jut couldn't store due to the fumbles. (I guess they threw out the<lb />
breaks they received on two bad snaps which resulted in blocked kicks<lb />
and also the goal-line stands put up by the Bucs.)<lb />
Another rumor floating around concerning the ECC-Catawba foot-<lb />
hall game relates to the halftime show. According to reports, the half-<lb />
time "lasted much too long and Catawba wasn't prepared for it. It was a<lb />
big blow to their moral, having to stand on the field and watoh the fire-<lb />
works when they were so "fired-up<lb />
But every loser must have his "crying towel" and we have donned ours<lb />
ofien in the past. Let's just hope that we don't have to pull it out this<lb />
season.<lb />
"Choo-Choo" Failed<lb />
The train trip which was scheduled to run to Elon this past week-<lb />
end was a big flop. After a hard time, Atlantic Coast line were able to ar-<lb />
range tl e chartered train. They had to receive permission from the Southern<lb />
Railways to come into Greenville as no other tracks run through here<lb />
A stipulant in the permission granted was that at least 450 tickets must<lb />
be sold.  <lb />
This did not see-i outrageous at the time but when the selling ttme<lb />
came the story was a little different. The band took care of 125 but else-<lb />
where the tickets were hard to sell. Merchants downtown chipped in and<lb />
bought many tickets but the response from the students was poor.<lb />
Last vear, the train trip to the U. of Riohmond-EOC game was a big<lb />
success and highlighted the football season. It was a shame that not 450<lb />
students had enough interest to go. It seems that too many were more<lb />
concerned with one of the Big Four games.<lb />
bda week the Country Gentlemen turned ,t doe8 s0und tough tosay "1 went to the Duke-Baylor game this<lb />
week " The only suggestion that this columnist could make to those more<lb />
interested in the Big Four than ECC, is that you transfer U one of these<lb />
schools.<lb />
Who Wants Winning Team<lb />
Last year, everyone g.ipped about losing. There was little interest<lb />
in 'ut-of-town games. Everybody sa:d that if we had a winmngLJj<lb />
would get a large following. Yet, the team is winning but the following<lb />
or school spirit hasn't picked up too much.<lb />
There was a peppy crowd at Elon, the closest away game, but the<lb />
support was poor considering the sire of the ECC student body  ;<lb />
prune, of the game. Only one cheerleader was scene  ?g<lb />
Tor our "Pirate" were on hand. It seems that something is .clung "<lb />
The girl students have a problem in the fact that they eant get back<lb />
in the dorm when coming back iom the game. It seems that some kind<lb />
of arrangements should be made to delete this conflict.<lb />
Getting back to the train trip, this would have been a good jester<lb />
for the frats on campus to support. Only Kappa Sigma Nu gave heavy sup-<lb />
po.t toward the trip Headed by prexy Lyle Cooper, the   <lb />
car rented. Its' good to know that at least one group is behind the team.<lb />
Odds And Ends In Sports<lb />
Co-Captain Lynn Barnett is having a tough season. Th.veteran cen-<lb />
ter has been injured most of the season. He was re-injured this pas week<lb />
agVnst Elon but not until h. threw the key block for Bobby Perry s first<lb />
touchwn gallop . . Ed Emory, rugged guard, played his best game of<lb />
tt season fhis p'ast Saturday. The Lancaster S. C. junior raS as a song<lb />
All-Conference contender . . - Len.ir Rhyne has scouted EOC three times<lb />
Lambda Chi Alpha, River Rats<lb />
Pace Intramural Loop Action<lb />
TheU Chi's defeating the Lam<lb />
Chi Alpha squad was th big upset in back the Falcons by a score of 34 to<lb />
the Fraternity League last week<lb />
18 as Wally Cockrell's team continu-<lb />
ed to remain in the top bracket of<lb />
league standings next' tu the River<lb />
Rats.<lb />
The Country Gentlemen and Fal-<lb />
cona went at it again last Thursday<lb />
and gave it all they had from the<lb />
looks of C e Pcore. It finally came out<lb />
20 to 18 with the Falcons on the long<lb />
end. It was the second loss for the<lb />
gents who have fallen down since<lb />
the<lb />
they lost several star players to<lb />
.ollege basketball practice. Bert May's<lb />
Falcons now boast a 2-3 record and<lb />
will be out to even or better it this<lb />
week.<lb />
The figure "50" again proved to<lb />
be unlucky for the ROTC crew in<lb />
their second game of the week- This<lb />
time it was the Rebel Rousers who<lb />
handed them a setback by an almost<lb />
identical score of 55 to 0.<lb />
Leonard Lao, Portsmouth,<lb />
native had 14 points in the rout but<lb />
Foster Morse, another Portsmouth<lb />
Va.<lb />
Denotes teams that have t least<lb />
one forfeit on their record.<lb />
Fraternity League<lb />
W<lb />
Teams<lb />
lambda Chi Alpha<lb />
Kappa Sigma Nu<lb />
Pi Kapa Alpha<lb />
'?Theta Chi<lb />
Ielta Sigma Pi<lb />
Sigma Rho Phi<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
L<lb />
1<lb />
2<lb />
2<lb />
2<lb />
S<lb />
3<lb />
Pet.<lb />
.760<lb />
.600<lb />
.600<lb />
.500<lb />
.400<lb />
.000<lb />
?Denotes teams that have at least<lb />
one forfeit on their record.<lb />
Notice!<lb />
Pre-game Festivities for ta.<lb />
EC-WCC gam. will befin at 1:30<lb />
m. Saturday and game time<lb />
P-<lb />
is 2 p<lb />
EOC has made two bowl appear-<lb />
ances, losing both. Clarion State of<lb />
Pa. defeated ECC 17-7 in the Lion.<lb />
Bowl snd Morris-Harvey took a 12-0<lb />
decision in the 1964 Elks Bowl.<lb />
lone touchdown for his Delta Sig<lb />
team. <lb />
In Sigma Rho Phi's game with Pi<lb />
Kappa Alpha, PKA came out on top<lb />
with a one point 13 to 14 edge.<lb />
Charlie Pugh and center Cedric John-<lb />
son did all the scoring for PKA to<lb />
ace their team to the win.<lb />
Thus with another week of action<lb />
past, Lambda Ohi Alpha still was on<lb />
top with Kappa Sigma Nu right<lb />
behind. The standing will show a<lb />
great deal of clange by next week<lb />
though as many cancellations were<lb />
to be made up this week in addition to<lb />
four regular games being played.<lb />
Five Dorm League<lb />
Games Last Week<lb />
Five big games highlighted the<lb />
intramural picture last week in the<lb />
Dormitory League where the River<lb />
Rats, managed by Doug Watts, con-<lb />
tinued to win and again remain un-<lb />
defeated when the week's action was<lb />
completed.<lb />
Watts' crew now has an impressive<lb />
5-0 record in all games and the<lb />
closest competitor is Umstead Hall<lb />
which has a record of 3-1.<lb />
One of the games which the RR<lb />
boster Morse,   All-Uonierence cumcuui .    - -. om tJis<lb />
boy scored 16 points. Buddy Martin thug far The Pirates have been rated underdogs m every gameJSbu<lb />
also got into the touchdown act with season enry Kwiatkowski, sophomore tackle, received a couple of<lb />
got<lb />
12 points.<lb />
These ames concla-led the weeks<lb />
action but the standings will again<lb />
be changed quite a bit when this week<lb />
ends as there are six games on tap<lb />
nt the present time.<lb />
JV's Net 12-7 Victory<lb />
Over Chowan College<lb />
On Roebuck's Passing<lb />
Coach Earl Smith took the JV<lb />
squad to Chowan College last Thurs-<lb />
, day night where the Baby Bucs spot-<lb />
Ited Chowan seven points and then<lb />
scored two touchdowns to win by a<lb />
12-7 margin.<lb />
Both teams came close to scoring<lb />
during the first quarter but a brilliant<lb />
67 yard run by Tommy Matthews was<lb />
the closest the Pirates could come to<lb />
scoring as penalises cut short a drive:<lb />
following Matthews run.<lb />
East Carolina attempted to kick<lb />
on a fourth down situation while deep<lb />
in their own territory in the second<lb />
quarter. The kicker could not get<lb />
it away in time and Chowan took over<lb />
wa by forfeit as the Rebel lon EC's 16 yard line and promptly<lb />
. scored. The extra point was good and<lb />
cracked ribs Saturday and my be out for the WOC game.<lb />
Predictions Of The Week<lb />
No comment on last week as our choices were only -<lb />
Villanova over Wake Forest by 7; Upset here. We picked Deacs right<lb />
nl' Notra Dame over Duke by 7; The Big Blue has messed us up .v.ry<lb />
time but not this time. -<lb />
N C. State over William and Mary by 13; Pack "up" one weekand<lb />
then town" the nxt. Time for th.m to catch the Indians on up date.<lb />
St ite rooters still recall upset of last season.<lb />
Carolina over Maryland by 8; Tar Heels have too much power for<lb />
Te,ps. Sunny Jim was upset Vast season by same team but this time h.<lb />
his them in his own back-yard. .<lb />
tTavidson over Carson Newman by 13; "Dole's Dogs" rip Virginia<lb />
ClU,V Lenoir Rhyne over Guilford by 12; Bears wear out the stubborn<lb />
Quakers . . . continue to eye fourth straight crown.<lb />
Presbyterian over Elon by 20; Pirate, made Christians "easy-pickings'<lb />
ff B1UCafawb. ove. Appalachian by 13; Indians  -J-<lb />
tiage lost in their last two encounters. Biggers c.n still boast of the bif-<lb />
rest line in the conference.<lb />
 Et Orolin. ove, WUrn Mk by 1; Thi, w 11 to. I <lb />
for the Bu .nd . win i. p.tl, M    Homln "" <lb />
aid Pirates.<lb />
Rouser team could not put six men<lb />
on the field due to a last minute<lb />
the part of several<lb />
One of the five officials on the East<lb />
Carolina intram-ral offkiating team<lb />
 fm,er Pirate fullback Bob May-<lb />
Mi '" c M.ynurd will starters role<lb />
ard of Carey, N.C. ayna<lb />
Henrv Kwiatkowski, regular Uckl examination on  " M"7d<lb />
 v K.H t Villanova key players. The hapless RUtc squau<lb />
ayed freshman ball at keyj, y fay .<lb />
played <lb />
and then in service before coming<lb />
EOC. He rapidly worked<lb />
into<lb />
graduate this -rtr ?V<lb />
do graduate work. Hi. fr offteUt<lb />
ing team member, at. Cartfn Tb-<lb />
au" Matthew Lyl Cooper, 4n<lb />
Daughtridge, and Bob Powers.<lb />
(Phato by m Boyd)<lb />
James Faircloth, tackl. of tto<lb />
1957 club, is finishing up work on his<lb />
B. S. degree this yr and  also<lb />
coaching junior high tell in Grm-<lb />
viUe.<lb />
score of 68-0 as George Williams,<lb />
former EC baseball hurler now play-<lb />
ing pro ball during the hardball<lb />
season, scored 14 big points. Two of<lb />
his team mates also got into the<lb />
double figure bracket. They were Red<lb />
'Flash" Gainey and Joel Long.<lb />
In the first of two encounters last<lb />
the score stood at the end of the<lb />
second quarter at 7-0 in favor of the<lb />
home club. It was during thia almost<lb />
oisasterious quarter that Chowan was<lb />
in EC territory two times in addition<lb />
to.tfe scoring play. On one occasion<lb />
they were on the Buc four yard line<lb />
and on the six yard marker on an-<lb />
other. It was the JV defensive line<lb />
that held here. Guards Dallis Hol-<lb />
lingsworth and Clayton Piland domi-<lb />
nated the goal line stand with muck<lb />
help from tackle Larry Godwin and<lb />
line backer Joe Honeycnt.<lb />
The Pirate offense got down to<lb />
business when the third quarter rol-<lb />
led around. After receiving the kick-<lb />
off the Buc squad marched a total of<lb />
60 yards to hit paydirt. The final<lb />
run for th. touchdown was mad. by<lb />
Mac Roebuck, flashy quarterback of<lb />
Greenville High School fam Roo-<lb />
buck went over on a plunge from tha<lb />
one yard line but the hard running of<lb />
halfbacks Tom Simmons d Tommy<lb />
Matthews along with fullback Stelvin<lb />
Riff put the Bucs in tfettar fe4 to<lb />
go" position. An attompt was<lb />
to<lb />
run the extra point but it was no<lb />
good.<lb />
Chowan could not score in tte<lb />
third nor fourth quarters but tte<lb />
Baby Bucs added six more point, in<lb />
the fourth when Roebuck again engi-<lb />
neered a drive that netted 43 yards<lb />
and a touchdown made by MatttewV<lb />
three yard plunge.<lb />
During this 43 yard advance tte<lb />
junior squad took to the air time snd<lb />
time again as ends Joe Loftia sad<lb />
Charlie Vaughn gathered in -<lb />
hock passes. The extra point te?<lb />
was no good and tte final scops<lb />
stood as it did than. It to 7 in fswa?<lb />
of East Carolina.<lb /><pb facs="00038610_tn_0004" /><lb />
PAGE FOUR<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
THURSDAY, OCTOBER i6j <lb />
Best Decorated Dorm<lb />
To Receive IAC Trophy<lb />
Tr.e Industrial Arts Club of East<lb />
Carolina College will award a bronze<lb />
tiophy to the most attractively de-<lb />
corated campus dormitory on Home-<lb />
coming Day for Alumni, Saturday,<lb />
October 18. Students liviaig in resi-<lb />
dence halls at trie college are now<lb />
enthusiastically working on plans<lb />
and preparations for the competition,<lb />
an annual event.<lb />
The trophy will be the second to be<lb />
provided by the Industrial Arts Club<lb />
for the Homecoming celebration. The<lb />
first went in 1951, 1962, and<lb />
167 to Jarvis Hall, where it has now<lb />
been permanently placed.<lb />
The eight-year project of the In-<lb />
dustrial Aits Club has the purpose<lb />
of creating school spirit through<lb />
competition and of giving the campus<lb />
a gala atmosphere for returning<lb />
alumni.<lb />
The Club, made up of students ma-<lb />
joring in the department of Industrial<lb />
arts, now has a membership of more<lb />
than 80 students. Robert E. Reid of<lb />
Greenville heads the organization as<lb />
president.<lb />
B. S. U. Sponsors<lb />
Homecoming Fete<lb />
Two hundred alumni, spouses, and<lb />
students are ex pet ted to attend the<lb />
Baptist Studnet Union Alumni Home-<lb />
coming Fete on October 18, at the<lb />
B. S. U. center.<lb />
Festivities will begin with a five<lb />
o'clock assembly for fellowship and<lb />
uorship in the B. S. U. chapel where<lb />
the alumni will introduce themselves,<lb />
stating their residence and occu-<lb />
pation.<lb />
Following will be a abort vesper<lb />
service. Dr. Bruce Whitaker, Presi-<lb />
dent of Chowan College, Mufreesboro,<lb />
has been invited to be the speaker.<lb />
Immediately after vespers at 5:45<lb />
P. M. a buffet supper will be served.<lb />
A reservation fee of $1.00 must be<lb />
paid by today for the supper.<lb />
Babysitting service will be pro-<lb />
vided by the B. S. U. for alumni<lb />
parents. ,<lb />
The homecoming arrangements<lb />
committee consists of Wade Parker,<lb />
Judy Green, Jean Joyner, Gwen<lb />
Williamson and Carolyn Hinton.<lb />
B. S. U. president Carolyn Tripp<lb />
has appointed an advisory committee<lb />
of alumni who has informed the<lb />
homecoming arrangements committee<lb />
as to what arrangements are to be<lb />
made. Members of the committee are<lb />
George and Dot Branch Ipock, Tren-<lb />
ton; Leo and Ann Carawan Bishop,<lb />
Mufreesboro; and Jim and Anne<lb />
Helton Briley, Greenville.<lb />
This is the first time the B. S. U.<lb />
has sponsored an alumni homecoming.<lb />
Hayes Orchestra Leader<lb />
Donald H. Hayes will act as con-<lb />
ductor of the East Carolina College<lb />
Orchestra during the present school<lb />
year. A faculty member of the de-<lb />
partment of music at the college, Mr.<lb />
Hayes has beta concert master of<lb />
the orchestra for the past five year<lb />
lie has just been appointed to di-<lb />
rect the ensemble by Dr. Earl<lb />
Beach, head of tt.e department of<lb />
music. Arrangements lor the year's<lb />
work are now in the making. The<lb />
1958-1959 program will include study<lb />
rehearsals, and public appearances on<lb />
the campus and elsew 'hers, according<lb />
to present plans.<lb />
The East t'aroiina College Orches-<lb />
tra is composed of students, faculty<lb />
members, and instrumentalists from<lb />
Greenville and other localities in the<lb />
eastern part of the state. A sixty-<lb />
membesr organization, it has been di-<lb />
rected for the past seven years by Dr.<lb />
Kenneth N. Cuthbert, who resigned<lb />
last summer as head of the depart-<lb />
ment of music.<lb />
During the fall quarter, the orches-<lb />
tra will rehearse on Monday night<lb />
of each week at 7:30 in the band and<lb />
orchestra Room of Muic Hall.<lb />
The fii t concert of the year is<lb />
rcheduled for December 9. String<lb />
players are in demand and are urged<lb />
to join the ensemble.<lb />
Hall Assumes AFROTC Duties<lb />
Carlton (i. Hall, Wilmington, N. C,<lb />
has begun his duties as commanding<lb />
officer of the 600th Air Force ROTC<lb />
Cadet Group at Fast t'aroiina Col-<lb />
lege. He has the rank of Cadet<lb />
Lieutenant Colonel. A senior at the<lb />
college, Hall is specializing in the<lb />
social studies and mathematics and<lb />
is slated tor graduation in Feburary,<lb />
1969. Before entering East Carolina,<lb />
ne had four years of service in the<lb />
C. S. Air Force, 1951-1955.<lb />
Foreign Students to Lead Discussion<lb />
There will be an English Club<lb />
meeting Thursday October 16, at<lb />
7:00 p. m. in Austin 208.<lb />
The program will be conducted by<lb />
a pannel of foreign students. These<lb />
students will discuss their impres-<lb />
sions of American Literature and<lb />
American Languages.<lb />
Anyone interested in the English<lb />
Language is invited to attend.<lb />
Baptists Organize Library<lb />
A leading room for the 1400 Bap-<lb />
tist Students at East Carolina College<lb />
is now being organized at the Bap-<lb />
tist Student Center on East Eighth<lb />
Street in Greenville.<lb />
A library of Biblical reference<lb />
works and of books relating the<lb />
Christian faith to various fields of<lb />
academic study has begun and will<lb />
he available U B. S. U. members and<lb />
their guests at the Center, Baptist<lb />
Student Director Gloria Blanton haa<lb />
announced.<lb />
The reading room, now being readi-<lb />
ed for use, contains shelves, tables,<lb />
reading lamps, a collection of books.<lb />
A aura of $100 from an anonymous<lb />
donor has been used to redecorate<lb />
and equip the room. Further work<lb />
is being carried on by BSU members<lb />
at East Carolina, with Devone West<lb />
of Roseboro and Thomas Hudson of<lb />
Dunn as foreman.<lb />
A,,<lb />
We Specialize in Casual Hair Styling<lb />
for College Coeds<lb />
FRIENDLY BEAUTY SHOP<lb />
117 W. 4th Street Dial 2668<lb />
and -<lb />
SUBURBAN BEAUTY SALON<lb />
E 10th Street Ext. Colonial Heights<lb />
Dial 7630<lb /><lb />
. i<lb />
m-mj;jl.ti r " ' <lb />
Western Carolina Catamounts Invade ECC S2g2ffi<lb />
or tsum mmm hm<lb />
Km<lb />
ECC Band Salutes Show Business<lb />
In Show Scheduled For Homecoming<lb />
"Enteitainment in Musk' will be<lb />
t e theme of the F.  C. Band's<lb />
Homecoming half-time bIiow Satur-<lb />
'ay at ths Western Carolina foot-<lb />
tall . The "Mairnintf PirsteB'<lb />
will sate C.e field from the East<lb />
:M,al hi a double company front criss-<lb />
cross. Ten proceeding down field<lb />
to the tune .if Seventy-Six Trom-<lb />
bones" from the "Music Man the<lb />
salute will k into the top five of<lb />
the yc.ii 'Bridge over the River<lb />
Kai In I.ridge formation, the<lb />
band will back up the majorettes with<lb />
thfl musical theme of this movie.<lb />
G anting the scene to TV, the<lb />
"Marching Pirates will outline the<lb />
rofile of Alfred Hitchcock, TV<lb />
mystery man, playing his character-<lb />
istic music. Further into the realm<lb />
of mystery ornes Paladin, and<lb />
"Have (am Will Travel As the<lb />
band plays background music, Jack<lb />
Paladin stalks a deadly killer to a<lb />
lucl of the fastest draw.<lb />
T an moving to the lighter sie<lb />
 f entertainment the band will out-<lb />
ine a record facing the North bleach-<lb />
ers and playing the "Patrica" Cha-<lb />
Cha featuring Gayle Davenport in<lb />
Ian. e With an b<lb />
cord will rfcance t u t-a pot jic<lb />
while steam ises frog J<lb />
the famu:i- K dan i . j.<lb />
CeUafiaas, ariij plaj th Tea fa<lb />
Two" Cha-t ha.<lb />
Then to the to, sad<lb />
the band will foim fl <lb />
piay the current tune, "He. Bii idog<lb />
Again the majorette- win b tkl<lb />
featured action. He?  , <lb />
North bleacheis tft btB I brsl<lb />
into a giant A and to the traafc<lb />
of "Auld Lang Sne salute the<lb />
Alumni of East Carolina CoUssj<lb />
Back to the student tide the March-<lb />
 rig Pirates" w-li close the show with<lb />
"Queen Anne EC and Alma Mater'<lb />
This show and all ui ows<lb />
that the baiai present<lb />
of the band rnaneuvei tt<lb />
headed hy Dirsetoi Herbert Carter<lb />
ol hami tudent - i in u,<lb />
committee I eai aie drum majors<lb />
Bobby Kli.vahger and Jim Bam,<lb />
majorette ( ! Davonyort, pre<lb />
Binds rice-president John<lb />
Lowers sseretary Pat Lays,<lb />
tree ttrsj Becky Crouch, an<lb />
 j-ii'ht<lb />
Graf Will Instruct Russian<lb />
Russian will be offered during the<lb />
winter quarter as a new course in the<lb />
department of foreign languages. A<lb />
.lass for beginners will be open on<lb />
December 1, nnd a second course will<lb />
LUCKY DOtiVX'C's mascot, Buc, a Great Dane puppy, sill be on hand this weekend when a pack of WCC I follow in the spring quarter, accord-<lb />
CatB invade Greenville for the 1958 ECC Homecoming football game. The Pirates rank first in the North State<lb />
Conference at present with a 2-0 record.<lb />
Civil Service Offers Wider<lb />
Vocation Placement System<lb />
This fall the United States Civil<lb />
Service announced a new Federal<lb />
Service Entrance Examination. This<lb />
is the examination through which the<lb />
Federal government provides for its<lb />
annual intake of college graduates<lb />
into most occupational fields in the<lb />
competitive civil service other than<lb />
the engineering and scientific pro-<lb />
fessions.<lb />
The new examination for the pre-<lb />
sent academic year is available in<lb />
your placement office. The announce-<lb />
ment gives such details on I he re-<lb />
vised examination as how to apply,<lb />
the written test dates, qualifications<lb />
required, and the career fields open<lb />
to students.<lb />
The last Congress increased the<lb />
Federal pay scale making it pos-<lb />
sible to pay higher starting salaries<lb />
now than in the past. The starting<lb />
salary tot  student with a bachelor's<lb />
degree and no experience will range<lb />
j from $4,041) to $4,980 per annum.<lb />
Under this years recruiting plan,<lb />
students with a B average or who are J<lb />
in the upper -5 percent of their class ;<lb />
: nd who make higher scores on the<lb />
v.ntLen examination, will be quali-<lb />
iied loi consideration by employing<lb />
agencies at the higher salary.<lb />
All persons who attain final eli-<lb />
gibility in the Management Intern<lb />
portion of the examination will be<lb />
qualified for considsratioa at $4,80<lb />
psi annum, Management Intern eli-<lb />
giblea who. in addition to a bachelor's<lb />
degree have one year of graduate<lb />
study oi qualifying experience, will<lb />
be qualified for consideration at<lb />
$6,986 per annum.<lb />
Students See<lb />
New Art Display<lb />
Works by the six faculty members<lb />
who teach in the department of art<lb />
are now on display in the Joyner<lb />
Memorial Liberary on the campus.<lb />
Represented in the current show are<lb />
Jr. Wellington B. Gray, director of<lb />
the department; Francis Lee Neel,<lb />
Thomas Flowers, John Gordon, Dr.<lb />
Bruce Garter, and Paul Minnis.<lb />
The purpose of this exhibition is<lb />
twofold: to show the professional<lb />
status and creative achievement of<lb />
the art faculty and to introduce to<lb />
those interested in art three new<lb />
members of the staff, Dr. Catrer,<lb />
Mr. Minnis, and Mr. Flowers.<lb />
A broad range of media and style<lb />
characterises: the show. On display<lb />
are oil paintings, watercolors, sculp-<lb />
ture, ceramics, and the graphic arts.<lb />
ing tu plans, Director James L. Flem-<lb />
ing of the department has announced.<lb />
Kach course will carry five hours of<lb />
college credit.<lb />
lit. Gertrude Runge Graf, who<lb />
joined East Carolina faculty this fall,<lb />
will serve as instructor in Russian.<lb />
A native of Czechoslovakia, she arriv-<lb />
ed in this country in late summer to<lb />
j take up her duties at the college here.<lb />
Dr. Graf is a graduate of ths<lb />
 University of Leipzig, from which<lb />
I she holds a doctrate in Germanic-<lb />
Salvic-Romance Languages. She lias<lb />
All the Latest Top Hit<lb />
Records<lb />
Still at ths Same Old Price<lb />
92c<lb />
Music Gifts<lb />
JOHNSON'S<lb />
at Five Points<lb />
next to<lb />
Mary Ann Sda Shop<lb />
studied alaj at the I'nivera.t. of<lb />
Maryland Extension D  ,n<lb />
Munich.<lb />
Russian is the second tangnag<lb />
be added this school year to<lb />
foreign language program. Beg<lb />
German is being taught this fa<lb />
the first time, and ir.dicat.<lb />
that continuation courses will be<lb />
fared daring the remainder of " <lb />
school year.<lb />
Eric Franz Graf, graduate ol<lb />
I nivej-it, of Munich and candi I<lb />
loi the doctorate at the Unm<lb />
of Zurich, is teaching the Gem.a<lb />
course. He is the husband of Dr. Gia<lb />
Starts TUESDAY, OCT. 21st<lb />
HB BtG6m l&amp;g<lb />
BOLDEST. BES<lb />
BUYER<lb />
HN<lb />
VIDAL<lb />
w,<lb />
I<lb />
PITT Theatre<lb />
THEY SAID IT COULDN'T BE DONE - BUT TODAYS LM GIVES Y0U-<lb />
LITTLE KNOWN FACTS ABOUT<lb />
DIAMONDS<lb />
Puff<lb />
by<lb />
puff<lb />
tars<lb />
-<lb />
KV&amp;i<lb />
INNOCENT!<lb />
They said it couldn't be done until the<lb />
Wright Brothers flew this plane for 59 sec-<lb />
onds in 1909. Today flying is so much a part<lb />
of modern life that 40 American colleges<lb />
offer regular flying courses, many of them<lb />
for degree credit.<lb />
ore taste<lb />
PONT SETTLE FOR ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER!<lb />
Change to LM and get 'em both. Such an improved filter and more taste! Better<lb />
taste than in any other cigarette. Yes, today's LM combines these two essentials<lb />
of modern smoking enjoyment - less tars and more taste-in one great cigarette.<lb />
GUILTY!<lb />
EGEND $ay$ that in ancient judgments<lb />
ths accutsd wat innocsnt if ths diamond<lb />
shons brightly, guilty if the gem was dull<lb />
Today, diamonds are scisntifically cut to<lb />
"trap" light rays and producs "firs and we (<lb />
know that when these diamonds are dull, it is<lb />
only because they are dirty Ask us how to<lb />
clean your rings safsly.<lb />
IF YOU DON'T KNOW DIAMONDS-KNOW YOUR JEWELER<lb />
LAUTARES BROS.<lb />
Certified Gemologist - Registered<lb />
Jewelers - Diamond Specialists<lb />
414 Evans Street<lb />
'4<lb />
TV i<lb />
W <lb />
niri x<lb />
Y'oM<lb />
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uier.tl<lb />
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Nvv(<lb />
t<lb />
M<lb />
Aadt<lb />
corns<lb />
reii<lb />
iraU<lb />
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Wj<lb />
"s-n<lb />
tfiatl<lb />
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CartS<lb />
rsH<lb />
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vali<lb />
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Or,<lb />
the <lb />
bsa<lb />
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a-H<lb />
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tol<lb />
of<lb />
I<lb />
 1958 Hqobtt ft Myww Tobacco Co.<lb />
 '(  . - '<lb /></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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