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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038611_0001"/>
id<lb/>
Casual Dance<lb/>
lh student body is invited to st-<lb/>
ead "? ,Ft "s Casual" dance, Wednes-<lb/>
October 29. The Cavaliers will fur-<lb/>
Eastarolinian<lb/>
Bombings<lb/>
See page two for the BA8T CARO-<lb/>
LINIAN'S viewo on recent bombings<lb/>
that have taken place throughout the<lb/>
South.<lb/>
 ' X A L<lb/>
East Carol 1 n a C o 11 e ge<lb/>
REEi;LErN. C. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1958<lb/>
Number 5<lb/>
tudents Hail Homecoming As Biggest In ECC History<lb/>
Senators Vote<lb/>
To Increase<lb/>
Activity Fee<lb/>
i arolina's Joe rlolmei latereepta<lb/>
nit The Bit s won !-?.<lb/>
WCC pass in Saturday's Home<lb/>
Advisory Council Begins<lb/>
Functions On November 3<lb/>
tut of Student Govern-<lb/>
i t Dean's Advisory Council<lb/>
at into full operation on<lb/>
. L968. The meeting will<lb/>
 i tiret Monday in every<lb/>
4 OQ p.m. in the Library<lb/>
Thf Council will he<lb/>
1 ail preaidenta of B<lb/>
a<lb/>
Md organisations, clubs, and<lb/>
I e on the Last Carolina<lb/>
t e implementation of the<lb/>
thi there was still an<lb/>
ced by many presidents<lb/>
grooM like to have their<lb/>
.  by the Student Govern-<lb/>
! the general administra-<lb/>
. i Working in close<lb/>
wit leai. Jenkins the<lb/>
, , deal ol the college, and<lb/>
! e implementation of the Ad-<lb/>
I wineil, all the recognised<lb/>
on ampus will have the op-<lb/>
 tj to seek answers related<lb/>
, or the policy of<lb/>
college a-  shota.<lb/>
If ike lataiaa, resident<lb/>
 I Government Association,<lb/>
 ! I feel that SB effective Ad-<lb/>
. i mukU will prove of immense<lb/>
. the rodent body, 1<lb/>
. organizational<lb/>
which will stress .proper and efficient<lb/>
of the duties of the various offices on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Katsias added that this will be an<lb/>
effective way for the various groups<lb/>
to formulate the over-all policy of<lb/>
tie student body. It is expected that<lb/>
mese seventy campus leaders will be<lb/>
m attendance f.u the Eire Adviaoay<lb/>
Council meeting which eriU he held<lb/>
on November 3.<lb/>
Withey Promises<lb/>
Exciting Play<lb/>
Student Senators Monday night<lb/>
void their support of a bill in-<lb/>
creasing the student activity ifee<lb/>
from $11.00 to $15.00 per quarter. This<lb/>
bill had been passed by unanimous<lb/>
ote at the preceding Senate meeting<lb/>
on October 13. In Monday night's<lb/>
meeting it was stressed that all Sen-<lb/>
ate members strive to bring to the<lb/>
students the reason for this increase.<lb/>
Various spenkers discussed how the<lb/>
increase would enable the Budget<lb/>
Committee to better satisfy the fi-<lb/>
nancial needs of the various organi-<lb/>
zations on campus. Bubba Driver,<lb/>
s, caking for the bill, said, "1 feel<lb/>
that t'e increase is necessary if the<lb/>
campus is to grow. It should be<lb/>
brought to the students how the<lb/>
organisation obtain their appropri-<lb/>
ations and where it comes from<lb/>
It was brought out by Herky De-1<lb/>
Stout that the Budget Committee<lb/>
receives approximately two-thirds of<lb/>
the activity fee with which to ap-<lb/>
propriate funds to all campus organi-<lb/>
zations with the exception of the<lb/>
Athletic Association, which receives<lb/>
the other third.<lb/>
President Mike Katsias stated that<lb/>
after approval by the Student Senate<lb/>
the bill will come before the stu-<lb/>
dent body for a campus-wide vote.<lb/>
If passed, it would then have to be<lb/>
approved by tie Bonrd of Trustees<lb/>
and could possibly go into effect in<lb/>
the fall of 1959.<lb/>
The Student Senate also voted its<lb/>
approval of the appointment of a<lb/>
! committee to look into the possibility<lb/>
1 of unlimited cuts for seniors. Un-<lb/>
limited was defined as being re-<lb/>
quited to attend only the seventy-<lb/>
five percent of class time required<lb/>
by state supported schools. The voiced<lb/>
opinion of many Student Senators<lb/>
was that Seniors in college are ma-<lb/>
ture enough to be able to judge for<lb/>
t emselves the class time necessary<lb/>
for the mastery of the subject matter.<lb/>
VJ58 Homecoming Uueen Jimi McDaniel (right) chats wit<lb/>
Wall during Saturday's crowning. The two girls are sisl.rs<lb/>
I: former Queen Carol,<lb/>
I Events Chairman Jimmy<lb/>
(All photos by Bob Harper)<lb/>
Student Executives Will Convene<lb/>
Here To Evaluate U5NS A Theme;<lb/>
Fifty Representatives Expected<lb/>
Convening on campus October 24-25 to begin preparations .for the con- campus, during their attendance<lb/>
will be student body presidents and ference which open, with regist.a<lb/>
deans of the member schools of the<lb/>
Carolinas-Virginia region of the<lb/>
United States National Student Asso-<lb/>
ciation. Among the outstanding col-<lb/>
leges which will be represented at<lb/>
this conference are Womans College,<lb/>
University of South Carolina, N. C.<lb/>
State. Rollins, Queens, and Sweet-<lb/>
briar.<lb/>
Attending the conference, which<lb/>
has as its theme "Intellectual Climate<lb/>
on the College Campus will be an<lb/>
Bil<lb/>
tion tomorrow afternoon. Mr. Werner<lb/>
is a 1958 graduate of Trinty College<lb/>
in Hartford. Connecticut, where he<lb/>
majored in English and philosophy.<lb/>
He served as editor-in-chief el the<lb/>
Trinty Tripod, a member of Campus<lb/>
( best, and on the committee for the<lb/>
revision of Trinity's Senate consti-<lb/>
tution. He is a membei of Phi Kappa<lb/>
Psi fraternity.<lb/>
"This is strictly a work conference<lb/>
aimed at a thorough discussion and<lb/>
As a<lb/>
ing at<lb/>
summer<lb/>
result of the excellent show-<lb/>
the N.S.A. conference this<lb/>
at Ohio-Wesleyan Universi-<lb/>
expected group of fifty delegates, evaluation of the conference theme.<lb/>
the<lb/>
of the<lb/>
is the theme<lb/>
The Admirable<lb/>
clubs and<lb/>
trateraitj presidents the opportunity<lb/>
 being thoroughly informed of the<lb/>
 programs being conducted by<lb/>
Student Government and the<lb/>
 fo, the welfare of the stu-<lb/>
(h h m oiinion it would<lb/>
outstSAdiag communication<lb/>
Student Government is busily<lb/>
,t ork planning to hold a few<lb/>
, seminars, aimed at assist-<lb/>
i organisations on cam<lb/>
x iss4ership eeminar la being<lb/>
o, tart winter quarters,<lb/>
Council To Choose<lb/>
Maid 01 Cotton<lb/>
Maul of Cotton will visit<lb/>
Bermuda next summer for the<lb/>
 htM rtobnl tour, the Na-<lb/>
, M , ottoa Coun. ,1 announced to-<lb/>
n,e Cotton Council reports that<lb/>
e-t war's Maid Will be the first to<lb/>
visit both Bermuda and Nassau and<lb/>
teta the I Helen Undon<lb/>
of Hunttagton, Tenn King Cotton<lb/>
7 emi-a.y. spent the Easter<lb/>
beUday. in Bermuda. Iwhita Fa-<lb/>
trieta Anne i owden of Raleigh, NC,<lb/>
opened her 1956 tow  the Ba"<lb/>
hamas. ,<lb/>
The search is now officially under<lb/>
to find the young beauty who<lb/>
industry<lb/>
vvay<lb/>
Crkhtoa says, "There must<lb/>
always be a master and servants in<lb/>
ll civilized communities, my lady,<lb/>
for it is natural, and whatever is<lb/>
natural is right This<lb/>
of J. M. Barrie's<lb/>
Crichton<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse, pre-<lb/>
senting the play on October 29, 30,<lb/>
and 31, has UmA Barrie an incom-<lb/>
parable playwright technically.<lb/>
Scarcely ft 80000 in 'Crichton' has no<lb/>
surprise; these surprises come like<lb/>
flashes of inspiration, illuminating<lb/>
the heart and mind of a character<lb/>
ays J. A. Withey, director.<lb/>
Critical comments oil past pro-<lb/>
ductions of the play have been most<lb/>
favorable. A. B. Walklcy termed it<lb/>
"as delightful a play as the English<lb/>
stage lias produced while Mackail<lb/>
thought that this was "an entertain-<lb/>
ment with something in it for every-<lb/>
one who thought or felt, or had a<lb/>
senae of humor, a sense of pathos, an<lb/>
, p,citation of life, or an eye<lb/>
beauty<lb/>
The "return to nature" takes place<lb/>
when the central characters are cast<lb/>
i ben   tropical island in the<lb/>
second act. Many will remember that<lb/>
an island provided an important set<lb/>
ting for another Barrie playPeter<lb/>
Pan' It is with tin change of en<lb/>
rironment that master become serv-<lb/>
ants and servents masters.<lb/>
Thee has always been controversy<lb/>
,vei the ending of the play. A well-<lb/>
known novelist meeting Barrie a day<lb/>
at two after the opening of 'The<lb/>
idmirable Crichton" urged that as<lb/>
he hal set himself a problem in psy-<lb/>
c ology he should not have evaded<lb/>
 solution that involved the ascendency<lb/>
of the stronger mind. Crichton,<lb/>
novelist argued, should come out on<lb/>
top. Barrie half agreed but said that<lb/>
the audience wouldn't stand for it<lb/>
The comic castaways will work out<lb/>
 destiny un t e McG.ums Auditor-<lb/>
ium stage of the ECC campus on<lb/>
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday,<lb/>
October 29, 30, and 81, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sponsorship by the East Carolina<lb/>
College Student Government Asso-<lb/>
Queen Resigns<lb/>
Homecoming Queen Jimi Mc-<lb/>
Daniel has resigned her poeition.<lb/>
See next weeks paper for the<lb/>
explanation.<lb/>
The discussions will be centered<lb/>
around the misconception that social<lb/>
status should have prestige above in-<lb/>
tellectual status. Incoming freshmen<lb/>
are aware of this idea and in their<lb/>
quest for status they adopt those<lb/>
.aloes necessary for achievement and<lb/>
in turn pass t. at tradition on to sub-<lb/>
sequent classes.<lb/>
Special guest and conference lead-<lb/>
er, Mr. Fred Werner, Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Vice President of the<lb/>
stated S.G.A. President Mike Katsias.<lb/>
Herky DeStout is working as co-<lb/>
ordinator of the entire conference, and<lb/>
Katsias and other S.G.A. personnel<lb/>
ne making final plans.<lb/>
The conference discussions will be<lb/>
held on the second floor of Joyner<lb/>
Memorial Library, and that floor will<lb/>
I e closed to everyone except dele-<lb/>
gates and press observers. The con-<lb/>
ference is expected to continue until<lb/>
late Saturday evening; and some con-<lb/>
NLSjA will arrive on campus today ference participants will be housed on<lb/>
ty. the East Carolina S. G. A. was<lb/>
selected to play host to the initial<lb/>
conference for this region.<lb/>
Among S.G.A. personnel who helped<lb/>
with the plan tec the conference are<lb/>
the members of the External Affairs<lb/>
Committee under the leadership of<lb/>
Herky DeStout: Derry Walker, Vice<lb/>
Chairman, Pete Finegan, Jane Chand-<lb/>
ler, and Sam Stowe.<lb/>
US.N.S.A. is the country's largest<lb/>
non-partisan representative student<lb/>
organization. Over one million stu-<lb/>
dents in almost 400 colleges and uni-<lb/>
eisitics aie represented in U.S.<lb/>
N.S.A. through their democratically-<lb/>
elected student governments. Found-<lb/>
d in 1941, it is dedicated to the in-<lb/>
cleased responsibility and participa-<lb/>
tion of students in the American edu-<lb/>
atioiial community. It is the largest<lb/>
national union of students<lb/>
world.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Cavaliers To Perform Here October 29<lb/>
One of the hottest musical combos entertainers ever to 1<lb/>
perform here, a dance sponsored by the Pi Kappa<lb/>
to play in this section of the South<lb/>
will furnish the rhythm for the forth-<lb/>
coming Intrafraternity Council spon-<lb/>
sored dance here October 29.<lb/>
The Cavaliers, an eight-piece Negro<lb/>
aggregation which is under contract<lb/>
10 Decca Records, have been signed<lb/>
to perform for the informal mid-<lb/>
week dance.<lb/>
It will make the third time the Cav-<lb/>
aliers have played at East Carolina<lb/>
function<lb/>
Their first appearance was sponsored<lb/>
here this summer by the ECC summer<lb/>
school Student Government Associaf<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Led by manager Roscoe Norfleet,<lb/>
the Cavaliers specialize in rock-and-<lb/>
roll, rhythm-blues music, as well as<lb/>
more standard work. The group is<lb/>
to record "Jumping at the Pi Kappa<lb/>
Ball" for Decca in the near future.<lb/>
The song was composed and written<lb/>
s. They were the first Negro I by the Cavaliers last year following<lb/>
Alpha fraternity here.<lb/>
The group has played frequently<lb/>
for UNC fraternities and they per-<lb/>
formed at the Nags Head Casino this<lb/>
summer. There are two high school<lb/>
music teachers in the combo.<lb/>
All students are invited to attend<lb/>
the dance October 29; tickets can be<lb/>
obtained from any fraternity mem-<lb/>
ber. The ticketh are priced at 50 cents<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Hodges Makes<lb/>
History At ECC<lb/>
travel for tho cotton<lb/>
in 1969. Twenty finalists, selected<lb/>
from individual applications and inlciation permits students to be ad<lb/>
state contests, will come to Memphis 1 miUd upon presentation of their<lb/>
for two daya of contest finale, De-ltD caTds General admission coat<lb/>
cember 29, 80. (one dollar.<lb/>
For the first time in the history<lb/>
of East Carolina College, Governor<lb/>
Luther Hodges held his weekly news<lb/>
conference here Thursday in Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
This news conference was the last<lb/>
i a series of conferences held in dif-<lb/>
ferent parts of the state. The first<lb/>
was held in Charlotte the second in<lb/>
Ishcvilta. The purpose of these out<lb/>
,f the capitol conferences is to ac-<lb/>
quaint tl e working press of the state<lb/>
ith the governors news conferences.<lb/>
The news conference was opened<lb/>
by Dave WThichard, editor of Green-<lb/>
ville's DAILY REFLECTOR. Which-<lb/>
 welcomed Governor Hodges, his<lb/>
ovate secretary, Ed .Rankin, and<lb/>
radio, television, and newspaper men<lb/>
He also stated that Eastern N. C.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Nu<lb/>
Sweeps Honors;<lb/>
Jimi McDaniel<lb/>
Chosen Queen<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
A record number of fans, alumni,<lb/>
and students invaded East Carolina<lb/>
College Saturday to inaugurate the<lb/>
biggest and most impressive Home-<lb/>
coming Weekend in the history of the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Festivities were initiated Saturday<lb/>
morning with the longest and most<lb/>
colorful parade yet staged in Green-<lb/>
ville. Forty-four girls representing<lb/>
various campus organizations and<lb/>
residence halls were spaced between<lb/>
five bands, twelve floats, East Caro-<lb/>
lina's big dog "Buc and a truck-<lb/>
load of fraternity boys who tied<lb/>
themselves to the end of the parade.<lb/>
Making an appearance in the pa-<lb/>
rade was Miss North Carolina, Miss<lb/>
Betty Lane Evans, who plans to<lb/>
enter school here next quarter when<lb/>
her job of being a Miss America<lb/>
finalist eases a bit.<lb/>
Miss Carol McDaniel, the 1968<lb/>
Homecoming Queen, rode in the honor<lb/>
spot in the parade. Her sister, Jimi,<lb/>
crowned the 1969 Queen at the foot-<lb/>
ball game later Saturday, occupied a<lb/>
spot farther back.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Nu made a clean<lb/>
sweep of honors in the float and<lb/>
Queen departments. The fraternity<lb/>
sponsored Jimi McDaniel and also<lb/>
created the giant locomotive float<lb/>
which won the parade prize and<lb/>
trophy.<lb/>
Runner-up in the Queen catagory<lb/>
was Miss Gayle Davenport. Winners<lb/>
of second and third places in the<lb/>
float contest were Theta Chi and<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
A record-breaking turnout of 8,600<lb/>
jammed ECC stadium to watch Coach<lb/>
Jack Boone's Pirates slam Western<lb/>
Carolina 18-7 and retain first place<lb/>
in the North State Conference.<lb/>
Halftime festivities included a<lb/>
Cinema-radie-television-juke box take-<lb/>
off by the ECC marching band, and<lb/>
aerial fireworks.<lb/>
Following the ballgame, several or-<lb/>
ganizations conducted open house for<lb/>
alumni and students.<lb/>
Saturday night, Claude ThornhiU'a<lb/>
orchestra periormed at the Home-<lb/>
coming dance at Wright Building.<lb/>
Campus fraternities also sponsored<lb/>
several separate dances Saturday<lb/>
nigfot.<lb/>
Members of the Homecoming Com-<lb/>
mittee planning and producing the<lb/>
1958 event were headed by Dr. James<lb/>
W. Butler, representing the College<lb/>
and Jimmie E. Wall, of Raleigh, of<lb/>
the Student Government Association<lb/>
Special Events Committee.<lb/>
The faculty members included Her-<lb/>
bert L. Carter, W. H. Durham, Dr.<lb/>
Louise Greer, Dr. H. C. Haynes,<lb/>
Howard PorteT, Dr. Mary Lois Staton,<lb/>
Mrs. Susie Webb, and Miss Vernie<lb/>
Wilder.<lb/>
SGtA members were Charlie Gregg,<lb/>
parade marshal, Miss Jerri Mills, dec-<lb/>
orations; Miss Betty L. McCauley,<lb/>
sponsors.<lb/>
the<lb/>
Course Teaches<lb/>
Camping Skills<lb/>
A new course, Physical Education<lb/>
265 "Camping Techniques has w-<lb/>
Whichard, then introduced Ed Ran-lcently been added to the Physicsl<lb/>
I body ia invited.<lb/>
kin, who gave the general rules fol-<lb/>
owed by the working press in the<lb/>
Governors regular conferences. Ran-<lb/>
kin then turned the conference over<lb/>
to Hodges.<lb/>
H.idpes said that he was very glad<lb/>
to he holding tl is news confernece in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and at East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
The governors first announcements<lb/>
were two new appointments: Dr.<lb/>
Eugene A. Hargrove, General Super-<lb/>
intendent of the N. C. Hospital Board<lb/>
of Control was appointed a member<lb/>
of the State Advisory Council to<lb/>
N. C Medical Care Commission sad<lb/>
also a member of the Governors Co-<lb/>
ordinating Committee on the Ageing.<lb/>
Dr. Hargrove will fill the<lb/>
created by the death of Dr.<lb/>
W. Murdockv<lb/>
Education department. The -purpose<lb/>
of the course is to acquire skills in<lb/>
simple outdoor living. Twenty men<lb/>
and women are enrolled in the class<lb/>
this quarter and are receiving their<lb/>
instruction from Dr. J. O. Miller.<lb/>
The highlight of the course 19 s<lb/>
actual camping trip. During -the, trip<lb/>
the students will put into use the tech-<lb/>
niques learned in class. Tnis year tim<lb/>
trip has been planned to Camp Croa-<lb/>
tan in Croatan. National Forest for<lb/>
two days, October ai-Novemhar 1.<lb/>
The success of the trip depends up-<lb/>
on the students themselves,<lb/>
from the camping skills<lb/>
cookery, canoeing, Itadkrsit, tooi-<lb/>
craft, and fishing, they leant afeQP<lb/>
the outdoors in a natural letting-<lb/>
They obtain vsioashie iifilgBga Ia<lb/>
<pb facs="00038611_0002"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, <lb/>
rfVi<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Communists Hurt South<lb/>
The recent dynamiting of the Jewish<lb/>
Temple in Atlanta makes a total of four anti-<lb/>
Semetie blastings in the South this year.<lb/>
Damage amounting to over $200,000 was<lb/>
caused.<lb/>
These actions, along with the dynamiting<lb/>
of an integrated school in Clinton, Tennesee,<lb/>
are most obviously the work of ruthlessir-<lb/>
responsible criminals. It is a known fact<lb/>
that the bombing in Clinton was the work<lb/>
of professionals.<lb/>
Regardless of their feelings on the inte-<lb/>
gration-segregation issue, the peoples of the<lb/>
South do nut condone such acts of violence<lb/>
and stupidity. The Civil War was finished<lb/>
long ao. Southerners have learned that the<lb/>
fight can be won only with ballots and not<lb/>
with weapons. Southerners do not want vio-<lb/>
lence. Jynamite, and criminal rebellion.<lb/>
The dynamiters of the Temple in At-<lb/>
lanta had the audacity to refer to themselves<lb/>
in a note as "the Confederate underground<lb/>
This is an insult of the highest degree to our<lb/>
noble ancestors who fought in the "last war<lb/>
between gentlemen" for a just and rightful<lb/>
Editorially<lb/>
Speaking<lb/>
By KATHRYN JOHNSON<lb/>
Homecoming was stupendous!<lb/>
Sc (.in! s, ii it reached its highest peak<lb/>
and the Pirates won. The suitcases<lb/>
were left under the bed, the campus<lb/>
was full of its own students 'plus<lb/>
alumni, the floats were better than<lb/>
ever, and the McDaniel girls kept<lb/>
the title of Homecoming Queen in<lb/>
the family.<lb/>
Campus Greeks added much to<lb/>
Homecoming. They made the parade<lb/>
bigger and better, sat en mass at the<lb/>
bail game and kept it alive with<lb/>
cheering and j hit, and had parties<lb/>
galore.<lb/>
Jimmy Wall and his Homecoming<lb/>
Committee worked hard and accom-<lb/>
plished much. The dance was packed<lb/>
and Claude Thornhill was smooth.<lb/>
Joy Jordan and the cheerleaders<lb/>
were in top shape and they along<lb/>
Acts such as these can only bring the with the pirate Tommy Ragland made<lb/>
cause. .<lb/>
word Confederate into ill-repute. Certainly<lb/>
no Southerner could want this.<lb/>
It is our beliefour firm beliefthat<lb/>
the recent bombings which have shaken the<lb/>
South during the past few weeks are the<lb/>
work of Communists intent upon stirring<lb/>
up hatred and more violence between the<lb/>
peoples of our country, both White and Black,<lb/>
Northern md Southern, and of all religions.<lb/>
the cheers really cheers and not just<lb/>
precision movements and cut phrases.<lb/>
The pre-game and half-time shows<lb/>
were most entertaining; the band<lb/>
worked hard and deserves much credit<lb/>
for its fine work.<lb/>
Faculty members who did back-<lb/>
mound work for homecoming as a<lb/>
whole were Herbert L. Carter, W. A.<lb/>
Durham, Dr. Louise Greer, Dr. H. C.<lb/>
Thev ire attempts to discredit the South Hayoes, Howard Porter, Dr. Mary<lb/>
and the nation in the eyes of the outside<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Certainly the South can gain nothing<lb/>
but disfavor bv bombing Jewish faith cent-<lb/>
ers. The Jews have decided how they stand<lb/>
on the integration-segregation issue, but so has<lb/>
every other leading religion or sect. Why<lb/>
terrorism to Jews There is no link here<lb/>
which would call for Southern action such<lb/>
as that shown.<lb/>
We realize that anytime anything is done<lb/>
which is derogatory to America or any sec-<lb/>
tion of our country it is usually blamed on<lb/>
the Communists. However, there seems to<lb/>
he no other answer to the bombings.<lb/>
The bombings are most assuredly the<lb/>
work of Communists, well-schemed, well-car-<lb/>
ried out. aimed at the destroying of attempts<lb/>
of both Northerners and Southerners to work<lb/>
out the meblem of integration together and<lb/>
aimed at discrediting the country in the eyes<lb/>
of the rest of the world.<lb/>
Faculty Avoid Socials<lb/>
Every school dance or function must<lb/>
have chaperoms. It is a general rule that<lb/>
these chaperones must be faculty members.<lb/>
Finding faculty members to serve as chape-<lb/>
rones is becoming exceedingly difficult. Few<lb/>
are willing to give up one weekend night to<lb/>
attend a dance.<lb/>
Of course there are a few who never<lb/>
turn down a student when he asks them to<lb/>
chaperone. These ld faithfuls are seen at<lb/>
dance after dance. They seem to enjoy them-<lb/>
selves and we enjoy having them, however,<lb/>
it seems that there should be others willing<lb/>
to assist.<lb/>
Dancing and mixing with one's students,<lb/>
could be an enjoyable thing. It is a wonder<lb/>
that so many professors avoid dances as<lb/>
thev would the plague.<lb/>
Staton, Mrs. Susie Webb, and Miss<lb/>
Vernie Wilder. They, too, are to be<lb/>
commended for their work.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Nu really racked up.<lb/>
Their sponsor won the Homecoming<lb/>
Queen title and their float copped<lb/>
first place. Nice work boys. Their<lb/>
float also won first place last year<lb/>
and the year before that.<lb/>
'Jumpin' At Pi Kappa<lb/>
Ball'<lb/>
Cussin iT Discussin<lb/>
Yea, Though I Stagger<lb/>
Bii She of the Tribe of Lilly Known a Nane$<lb/>
(With apologies to Mike Morgan and<lb/>
'The Miuni Herald")<lb/>
Culture And Captain Nemo Refutes Hank Snow<lb/>
Don Christian of the Cavaliers<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 Preas 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 3, 1879.<lb/>
JoAnne Parks<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson<lb/>
EDITOR -<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Assistant Editors<lb/>
Co-Sports Editors<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Cartoonists<lb/>
Proofreading: Staff<lb/>
Billy Arnold<lb/>
Derry Walker, Pat Harvey<lb/>
Johnny Hudson, Bill Boyd<lb/>
 Bob Harper<lb/>
Billy Arnold, Dirry Walker<lb/>
G.ven Johnson, Shirley Lewis<lb/>
News Staff Betty Maynor, Pat Farmer, Wilma<lb/>
Pait, Libby Williams, Jackie Linville, Claudia<lb/>
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/>
Womer's Circulation Staff Jo Ann Baker,<lb/>
Carolyn Baxley, Jean Capps, Nancy Cox, Emily<lb/>
Currin, Sara Elkins, Judy Cay, Shirley Gay, Jack<lb/>
The Cavaliers played for a Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Alpha tarty Friday night. They<lb/>
are tops, the best rhythm and blues<lb/>
group in North Carolina. Well be<lb/>
looking forward to seeing and hear-<lb/>
ing them October 29 when they again<lb/>
grace our campus for a mid-week in-<lb/>
formal dance.<lb/>
Incidentally, the Cavaliers have re-<lb/>
cently written a song titled "Jump-<lb/>
ing at the Pi Kappa Ball" which they<lb/>
are to record for Decca soon. They<lb/>
wrote it last year when they played<lb/>
for a Pika party.<lb/>
The Lamda Chi's had a hot combo<lb/>
fiom the campus playing at their<lb/>
Saturday night party. Hope to hear<lb/>
more from them soon.<lb/>
While speaking of fraternities, the<lb/>
Theta Chi pledge helped in insert<lb/>
middle pages for this six page issue.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha pledges made<lb/>
several fine paper racks which will<lb/>
aid us in distributing papers to day<lb/>
students and faculty members. They<lb/>
will be placed in the major buildings<lb/>
on campus. Thanks to our campus<lb/>
Greeks!<lb/>
Our mascot Buc" has done mucih<lb/>
for school spirit and moral. The sum-<lb/>
mer school administration led by<lb/>
Jo! nny Hudson and Clinton LeGette<lb/>
had a fine idee and they did not stop<lb/>
until they accomplished their aim.<lb/>
"Buc" symbolised strength, speed,<lb/>
nd friendliness. And he is friendly!<lb/>
We like our big puppy dog.<lb/>
As aforementioned the floats were<lb/>
tups this year. One of the fraterni-<lb/>
ties was having trouble recruiting<lb/>
workers so one of the boys began<lb/>
dating different girls and getting them<lb/>
to work on the float each night.<lb/>
When passing through the soda shop<lb/>
we heard a little freshman remark,<lb/>
"I worked on that damn float every<lb/>
night for a week and he didn't even<lb/>
ask me for a date for homecoming<lb/>
Well, so goes it.<lb/>
And then there was the boy who<lb/>
was cheering so loudly that he lost<lb/>
his tooth at the ball game. He later<lb/>
Signs of culture pop up in the<lb/>
strangest places! The Sunday foot-<lb/>
ball game between the Washington<lb/>
Redskins and the Green Bay Packers,<lb/>
which was televised in this- area, had<lb/>
for its half-time entertainment the<lb/>
National Symphony Orchestra of<lb/>
Washington, D. C. conducted by<lb/>
the very ca, able Dr. Mitchell. They<lb/>
played the well-known "Blue Danube<lb/>
Waltz " Bugler's Holiday which<lb/>
featured the trumpet section, and a<lb/>
symphonic arrangement of "Hail- to<lb/>
the Redskins<lb/>
Quite a show for 50,000 spectators.<lb/>
Yet, as I watched the performance, I<lb/>
wondered how many of those present<lb/>
would attend a formal concert by the<lb/>
orchestra. Perhaps the greatest sin-<lb/>
gle factor deterrent to a real appre-<lb/>
ciation of what is labeled "good"<lb/>
music is the lack of proper orienta-<lb/>
tion. It would be too much to expect<lb/>
of an individual raised on the warb-<lb/>
lings of Hank Snow, etc etc to sud-<lb/>
denly become obsessed with the com-<lb/>
positions of the likes of Beethoven,<lb/>
By HUGH AGEE<lb/>
etc etc. (Although, it may surprise<lb/>
you to know that there are some who<lb/>
enjoy hillbilly and classical music.<lb/>
Very few, however.)<lb/>
What can be done to raise the level<lb/>
of appreciation of the American pub-<lb/>
lic? The answer lies, as it often does,<lb/>
in the school. Not the college, but in<lb/>
the public s-hools. This is not an<lb/>
api eal for music education, as such;<lb/>
it is merely an opinion to be digested<lb/>
or discarded.<lb/>
While on the subject of music, have<lb/>
you ever been curious about the Cap-<lb/>
tain Nemo of Austin Building? I<lb/>
make reference to the unseen musician<lb/>
who is heard practicing every day on<lb/>
the organ in the auditorium. The com-<lb/>
position that rumbles through the<lb/>
halls and classrooms is "Tumlut in<lb/>
the Praetorium" from the Passion<lb/>
Symphony by Maleingreau, a con-<lb/>
temporary French composer. It is this<lb/>
piece that particularly reminds me<lb/>
uf the stormy personality of the Jules<lb/>
Verne character. Another composition<lb/>
heard often is "Fantasia and Fugue<lb/>
in G Minor" by Bach.<lb/>
campus. Recently, a poem was re-<lb/>
ceived through the mail by THE<lb/>
RKBKL. It is a wonderful poem, and<lb/>
the magazine editor would be only<lb/>
too happy to print it. But there's a<lb/>
catch. The poem is written in Eliza-<lb/>
bethan language and structured after<lb/>
the fashion of the Elizabethan poets.<lb/>
It was signed Francis Montcorbier,<lb/>
Box 408. A careful check revealed<lb/>
II at there is no Francis Montcorbier<lb/>
listed for Box 408 or as a student<lb/>
of the college. Further, the poem has<lb/>
been examined by competent members<lb/>
of the English faculty. It was con-<lb/>
cluded that no student -unless an<lb/>
unusual student or an Elizabethan<lb/>
thiefcould have written it. The ed-<lb/>
itor of THE REBEL says that he<lb/>
appreciates a joke, but if the poem<lb/>
is an honest effort, he'd welcome<lb/>
the chance to talk to the individual<lb/>
behind Francis Montcorbier.<lb/>
1 might add, for the benefit of<lb/>
the free lance detectives, that a letter<lb/>
was vvritten to Francis asking him<lb/>
to come forth. A later check of Box<lb/>
4i revealed that Francis had gotten<lb/>
his letter, for he left the empty en-<lb/>
velope in the box. Who is hiding be-<lb/>
hind Francis Montcorbriej?<lb/>
And it came to pass that a thing of great<lb/>
marvel did happen unto the Land of the Suit.<lb/>
case<lb/>
Yealong shall it be enscribed in our<lb/>
scroll and its telling shall be kept bright it<lb/>
those places where the second drink is.n the<lb/>
house.<lb/>
For 'tis even as if the politician sitteth<lb/>
down to eat at banquet refuseth t)o makr as<lb/>
after dinner speech.<lb/>
Or that the East Carolina Piraei cop-<lb/>
pt-th a Conference Championship.<lb/>
Now tnerefre it came to pass that a<lb/>
courier did bring from the Land of the Alum<lb/>
iii many epistles to the Land of the Suitcase,<lb/>
epistles which did bear lad tidings of great<lb/>
parties.<lb/>
Thus did I anoint my head with oil, call<lb/>
for a short beer, and cry out unto my room-<lb/>
mate :<lb/>
"Lo, the Weekend -of the Homecon.<lb/>
is upon us and the suitcases shall remain<lb/>
opened under the bed, for the wine eel la.<lb/>
stocked and the sax and the drums 1<lb/>
pour forth background music<lb/>
And a vision did appear unto mine e<lb/>
of the School Spirit clad in raiment of Pu;<lb/>
and Gold and the Spirit spake, saying:<lb/>
"Make a joyful noise unto the football<lb/>
team, all ye fans, for the time is at hand and<lb/>
the Alma Mater is with thee<lb/>
Know ye that it came to pass ma<lb/>
chariots did c meth before our abodetin<lb/>
two-tone chariots, laden with chrome fin<lb/>
and those from the Land of the Alumni ai<lb/>
I did say onto them words of welcome. Even<lb/>
did I bid them to enter.<lb/>
Then my heart trembled and there wenl<lb/>
forth from my mouth cries and shrieks Ye1<lb/>
I did fall upon the floor and best my hea<lb/>
for my friends were double and mj pall<lb/>
was single, but I said unto them:<lb/>
"Lo, trou art tired frm journeying<lb/>
the two-t ne chariot with the chrome fins<lb/>
and thou shalt sleep in mine and mine room<lb/>
mate's beds whilst we repose on the floor<lb/>
And the eldest saith nack: "Nay<lb/>
"Nay? asketh I.<lb/>
"Nay: ' saith she.<lb/>
And as I cast covetous eyes upon her<lb/>
two-tone chariot, she explained unto me:<lb/>
"For we shall abide in the inn where we<lb/>
mav lift up our noses unto the handbok and<lb/>
make joyful m.ises unto Bacchus<lb/>
Yea, and the multitude did remain on<lb/>
campus and many heads were anointed with<lb/>
brew. And for once the suitcases remained<lb/>
under the beds and there was great rejoicing<lb/>
throughout the land.<lb/>
Alfred Was A Rover<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
Labor Omnia-No<lb/>
Harris, Janie Harris, Kay Hood, Jean Horton,<lb/>
Deanne Johnson, Dot Jones, Ma May Johnson, iound it among the rubble under the<lb/>
Irvene Jones, Babs Moore, Carole Rankin, Gayle bleachers.<lb/>
Swinson<lb/>
Men's (Circulation Manager &amp;m Trlc<lb/>
Men s drculition Staff  Billy Nye, Robert Greene<lb/>
Advisors Miss Mary Greene, Mrs. Mary Goodman<lb/>
Printed by Renfrew Printing Co Greenville, N. C<lb/>
)FFIC5 on the second floor of Wright BuHding<lb/>
)hene, all departments, 6101, extension 64<lb/>
We're looking forward to the Stu-<lb/>
dent Body Presidents' and Deans'<lb/>
Conference which will convene on our<lb/>
campus this weekend. We're hoping<lb/>
to see many familiar faces who wire<lb/>
at the NSA conference this summer.<lb/>
This should be an interesting event.<lb/>
By BOB HARPER<lb/>
During the storm<lb/>
a prickly cuckle<lb/>
burr formed and<lb/>
developed in<lb/>
the belly of<lb/>
the virtuous<lb/>
Neophyte.<lb/>
As the storm<lb/>
raged and the<lb/>
rains swept down<lb/>
in wind strong<lb/>
torrental sheets<lb/>
the conscientious<lb/>
figure stood<lb/>
deluded<lb/>
against antipathetic<lb/>
and vituperative<lb/>
demands from a<lb/>
belligerent hand<lb/>
to endure the<lb/>
sharpning obsticle<lb/>
which projected<lb/>
spears of violent<lb/>
pain throughout<lb/>
a subjudged<lb/>
system.<lb/>
When the storm<lb/>
ceased to ravish<lb/>
the Neophyte stood<lb/>
denuded<lb/>
and stigmatized<lb/>
with a prevailing<lb/>
thorny element<lb/>
that win melt<lb/>
with intransigent<lb/>
stones.<lb/>
There's an unsolved mystery on<lb/>
Brains vs. Personality<lb/>
'Who's Who What's That<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
"Round and round we go, where we<lb/>
stop.  no one knows If anyone<lb/>
bothered to skim over this fascinat-<lb/>
ing page a few weeks ago he probab-<lb/>
ly noted a mention of a fairly com-<lb/>
mon word, "Rounded which was<lb/>
blown up to be the biggest headache<lb/>
for many of us well-rounded (ahaI<lb/>
there it is again) individuals since our<lb/>
mothers explained to us that pneu-<lb/>
monia did not begin with an N.<lb/>
At this appropriate time I would<lb/>
consider it a welcome aspect for my<lb/>
overly-stuffed ego, to quote one<lb/>
James Deese of the John Hopkins<lb/>
University. Mr. Deese must have<lb/>
undoubtedly been on a lost weekend<lb/>
and had lost all his bearings with<lb/>
mass conformity when he said:  . .<lb/>
. . . Those who enjoy the distinction<lb/>
of being in Who's Who had, on the<lb/>
average, higher college grades than<lb/>
those who do not Of course, we<lb/>
are to assume that these characters<lb/>
spent 24 hours per day behind<lb/>
closed doors studying the presidents<lb/>
of the United States. That is the<lb/>
leason those brain-children were<lb/>
selectedthey knew their pres-<lb/>
idents. Now understand this. . . 1 like<lb/>
presidents. I'm even prepared to Ad-<lb/>
mit that they are necessary (in a<lb/>
weak moment.) in fact, 1 rather enjoy<lb/>
holding a citizenship in the U. S.<lb/>
Why? Well, we have freedom of<lb/>
speech for one thing. That is if we<lb/>
are fortunate enough to have a few<lb/>
thoughts stashed away in some corner<lb/>
(away from the presidents) of oar<lb/>
highly populated brain.<lb/>
As far as cocktail parties go, they<lb/>
are few and too far between lor my<lb/>
enjoyment. The last one I had the<lb/>
pleasure to attend held such intel-<lb/>
ligent coversations as, "Do you<lb/>
really believe Marilyn Monroe can<lb/>
play the part of Lady Macbeth? and<lb/>
"Why did WUstler's mother want<lb/>
her profile painted since she had<lb/>
such a ridiculously ugly nose<lb/>
There's nothing like a few quick-<lb/>
witted thoughts to keep one awake at<lb/>
night.<lb/>
But wait! we're going off into a<lb/>
foolish tangent, which must be ended<lb/>
immediately. Since one must conform<lb/>
to these rules already set up by  .<lb/>
(wlio in the heck did establish these<lb/>
lousy customs?). I'm afraid everyone<lb/>
will have to be satisfied with what he<lb/>
has in college. . . text books.<lb/>
So forget those silly ideas about<lb/>
expanding your little talents here<lb/>
and there, because you're not need-<lb/>
ed. Stick to that room of yours, after<lb/>
all four blank walls does give a home<lb/>
atmosphere. Study industriously,<lb/>
make ones in all your classes and<lb/>
then when you graduate and your<lb/>
friends or . . . should it be acquaint-<lb/>
ces . . . ask what you did in college you<lb/>
 an look them straight in the eye<lb/>
and shout triumphetly "Young man,<lb/>
I studied from the time I brushed<lb/>
my teeth at daybreak until the time<lb/>
I turned off the dim light at night. . .<lb/>
not just one day out of a week but<lb/>
six and seven . . . for four years.<lb/>
To this overwhelming statement<lb/>
the wide-eyed and excited young man<lb/>
yelled, "Well, what did you accom-<lb/>
pliah?"<lb/>
And the college graduate exclaims,<lb/>
with stars in his eyes and a ten-ineh<lb/>
grin on his face, "why  I learned<lb/>
the presidents of the United States<lb/>
. . . What else? WHEE1<lb/>
So, in conclusion, I would like to<lb/>
use this brief paragraph to illustrate<lb/>
This is a dog story.<lb/>
Once there was a dog named Alfred<lb/>
Bottom and he belonged to a family near<lb/>
Burlington. Alfred did most of the things<lb/>
that dogs do and he enjoyed a full and happy<lb/>
life.<lb/>
He romped in the scattered grass fields<lb/>
and stole bones from smaller dogs and growled<lb/>
at people who passed by the family house<lb/>
along the dirt road leading to town.<lb/>
Every Saturday night Alfred would go<lb/>
into town and drink beer with some of his<lb/>
buddies and talk about bitches and bones<lb/>
and parking meters.<lb/>
Sometimes, Alfred would get drunk and<lb/>
bit? somebody on the way home.<lb/>
Once, he was arrested for loitering and<lb/>
tossed in the dog pound and his family had to<lb/>
come bail him out. But that was not usual.<lb/>
When he was seven months old, Alfred<lb/>
began to get the wanderlust. He would lie<lb/>
n the font porch and listen to the train<lb/>
whistle in the distance and see visions of<lb/>
open fields and strange trees and wind-<lb/>
hushed forests and alleys. He would watch<lb/>
the cars pass on the endless road and yearn<lb/>
to gallop past the gate, to race, his nose wet in<lb/>
the wind, toward the un, to feel his paws<lb/>
on unscratched earth.<lb/>
Then, one day, one of the kids stepped on<lb/>
his tail and he yelped and scampered under<lb/>
trv huuse and out the other side and cleared<lb/>
the fence in one great leap. He thundered<lb/>
across the iield, barreling through the stiff-<lb/>
dried cornstalks, cutting them down like<lb/>
match-stick trees.<lb/>
He hitched a ride with a fruit truck<lb/>
bound for the west coast. He ate herbs and<lb/>
wild berries and sneaked an occasional apple<lb/>
from the back of the truck when the driver<lb/>
stopped for coffee, along the way, and slept<lb/>
under the rear wheels at night.<lb/>
When he arrived in Los Angeles, he got<lb/>
a job leauing a blind man who eventually<lb/>
got run over by a bus, and then joined up<lb/>
with a band of singing gypsies on the way<lb/>
to Birtchtown, Illinois.<lb/>
On the way, he met a bitch in Joplin, Mo,<lb/>
and they were married and had three litters.<lb/>
But Alfred was jealous and it didn't last<lb/>
They were divorced some weeks later and he<lb/>
traveled with the Goat Man back down to-<lb/>
ward North Carolina. The Gtoat Man fed him<lb/>
and<lb/>
tin cans and milk and gave him a place to<lb/>
my opinions of what college should sleep and, in return, Alfred kept the goats in<lb/>
provide for its students. One can make line and bit trouble-makers who tried to steal<lb/>
good grades and try his hand in postcards.<lb/>
extra-currkular activities. "They said He died of cholera before he could get<lb/>
it couldn't be done"  NONSENSE l back to Burlington.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038611_0003"/><lb/>
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  x Goape. Mr. Brad Tbeatra a May T and &amp;. Siate tee<lb/>
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Bible" by Reee aai Bearislee will ke<lb/>
t-7 a- x it.mi 1 probabie tbat oae af tbe Uai-e- <lb/>
M- Mar a<lb/>
ABearXg - '<lb/>
SGA Plans Revii<lb/>
OF Campus Groi<lb/>
To Judge Worth<lb/>
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1 a corcecy AS YOU LIKE njFamA <lb/>
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dies will t pexfotaaai tais pear. . ir<lb/>
la addstioa. tbe Hi, t Stjaaaaf<lb/>
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nrataaa<lb/>
uu-eajfi.4 -<lb/>
Editor 01 REBEL Announces Plans<lb/>
For Publication Of Magazine;<lb/>
flew Format, 32 Pages Expected<lb/>
ECC Class Ranks<lb/>
High In Event<lb/>
A prasiaeat<lb/>
s la preseat<lb/>
i iAji. iaa- <lb/>
: <lb/>
aad <lb/>
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class kE aecoantiaf placed eiaiitb ia<lb/>
tbe CaBaga Ditrisioa of the Natiaaal<lb/>
- Contest sponsored ky<lb/>
It Tary. a pubiicatioo of<lb/>
eosaiMUiist ardi te Mrs<lb/>
g of Greec-rdle.<lb/>
Mr Brad-ier has keen itrewtor if<lb/>
jjtj aet uea at Eas: Caraaias<lb/>
Couece jw 1T He a .AJaaa: MOVie SCBeCIUle<lb/>
f tbe Haavaauliea Dw.4.or. of tbe<lb/>
college, a mb,r of tie departmeat Ortober -4 p <lb/>
bafel comauttee. He kakb atyaea Neaember  -eabe pitch iaportioaal to tbe aaigkt :n t e Stodeat Gaaar<lb/>
frvta Atlaaiic CagJatAap  vbe, 14 -lu Nortr F-ederick- f tbe black aartjaa af tbe letter tbe Wngbt BoiWbisg .<lb/>
Wdsoa. N C; :k, Lmerty of TT T Hdls of Borne seei. Tes pitcbes are traaskated f Ortober i. . sr<lb/>
aod Cokimiiia Uawersity. raaaeaaaar - <lb/>
.r .   . .   - - r<lb/>
r . -V  X, I aaam<lb/>
Tbe probe contains two tiay Uajkts<lb/>
sad a leas tbat projects aa iaaage of<lb/>
tbe prated letter apoa a row af. f tbe<lb/>
pbotocelU. Each pbateceti, wbea it: factaal<lb/>
t" kiack. acts bke tbe key of ma f 'jMed above<lb/>
Arass Edectrk orgaa to tarn oa aa aacBla- tbe oftcers<lb/>
JLfJkaf taa ia tbe cbass-s to geaarate a spe- Tbese revse-<lb/>
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Kappa Sigrma Nu's Winning Fioat<lb/>
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aad any atader<lb/>
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terested ia working oa boom<lb/>
sboold coatct Hage Agee.<lb/>
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Bit editor, baa a taff<lb/>
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a freaaaaaa<lb/>
eirk, assistant to tbe<lb/>
Buc And The Pirate<lb/>
RFBRL was<lb/>
receiTed witk<lb/>
-rsthasiasm than was expected<lb/>
v published last year.<lb/>
ear there has been muck more<lb/>
Ae sa.d that they<lb/>
maternal mea cooperation from<lb/>
took paktia'ers abwat the book re-<lb/>
. . fioweeer. tbe staff was H-<lb/>
.7ecaatad kntaaat tbey recaired so<lb/>
taw letters froaa atadents and facial-<lb/>
-oncer<lb/>
" iwaiatirr witk tw-rsty-two col-<lb/>
seges, THE REBEL ass started a<lb/>
rmjem to esckaage btarary maga-<lb/>
i these schools- Greenville<lb/>
have<lb/>
aam a Ba book, and THE<lb/>
IfX B B<lb/>
la<lb/>
raaascwt.5 are<lb/>
aiGree-McGrBw-HdL according to ffl-<lb/>
aceaated for the wEdl' -"ru- 6<lb/>
ieadliBe to samktt - iaiiai ny the department<lb/>
an education on the campna.<lb/>
e F. White cf the faculty was<lb/>
:r of the class.<lb/>
Tie contest is tn annual event bl<lb/>
- edocat tonal progTaai sponsored<lb/>
the publishing company. In it<lb/>
students throaghout the United?<lb/>
es compete for honors,<lb/>
recognition of their high stand-<lb/>
Lng in the coolest. East Carolina ac-<lb/>
tBftg students received a Priw<lb/>
School Banner, now on display u<lb/>
Room 201, Wright haildiag. As in<lb/>
ructor. Miss White was awarded<lb/>
fountain pen.<lb/>
dent contestants at East Cam-<lb/>
illa who received eertMhtates<lb/>
oarticipatioa in the com<lb/>
Archie H. Bennett, Joseph B. Cahnoa,<lb/>
J. Lavelle Colemsn. Barbar<lb/>
nfton. Charles W. LVyson,<lb/>
Psj Dirvin Edararda.<lb/>
Others were William Baase, 1<lb/>
Lou Fleming. Emma Lou Haidhhj<lb/>
William C Hunter, Jknthoay P. o<lb/>
Uatis. Bobby R- Setter, Tony C<lb/>
! Vpchurch. and Franklin C WkH<lb/>
rtificates and pins went to<lb/>
higk-ranking studeaU: John J<lb/>
i.icky. James Hardy, rtrieia Hams.<lb/>
Mary E. Hawkins, George Tarneav<lb/>
land Keanetk<lb/>
t Every year that<lb/>
Sirma Jia kas<lb/>
<pb facs="00038611_0004"/><lb/>
i HI<lb/>
PAGE FOLK<lb/>
E A S T C A<lb/>
.  i ii i <lb/>
<lb/>
Baby Bucs Make Home Debut<lb/>
econd Win Of Season; Lambda Chi Alphas<lb/>
w<lb/>
By Varsity flub<lb/>
Fraternity League For<lb/>
<lb/>
Ueorgi ' Uaughfc<lb/>
K ap p<lb/>
Alpl<lb/>
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Coat-1 I Smil Hi<lb/>
Have A Cookie<lb/>
Kill<lb/>
love.<lb/>
that t! ev a<lb/>
ill be m<lb/>
tion I'm a top <lb/>
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Si  Had<lb/>
12 w<lb/>
between them<lb/>
hile McPherson<lb/>
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,1 the 13 Scoring<lb/>
the othei<lb/>
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k VVhitfieki.<lb/>
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Delta Sigma<lb/>
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Kept liiem uli<lb/>
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and t hen proceeded to 3tave<lb/>
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to 13. <lb/>
iPOl i e<lb/>
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and manager Jim Metz<lb/>
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thev  ere in on<lb/>
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has but two games<lb/>
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int' '   -  the<lb/>
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  i.  i ere as ' <lb/>
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I.am W 1. Pet. ,<lb/>
Ml ria 5 2 .71-1<lb/>
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will<lb/>
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4 4 i,UV .<lb/>
3 5 7<lb/>
ii 7 000<lb/>
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Up . I is i .l.i hi til<lb/>
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Iii, pul theti tin taini winning Mii-ak ori<lb/>
tPhoto t.v Mill Muyd) posted a 5 1 record.<lb/>
Ai i n.hr<lb/>
Don i.i lit hi i. poi ted .ii i he last si. nt <lb/>
t.ir chartered buses to ll.ki -t-i- being worked<lb/>
I e last winning team at East t(J , ik(.  ,m  h (l;  u.tr <lb/>
i vas in 1954 when they wonWt,  tha,     , ,((11  Ul  ,<lb/>
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and lost four. The 1V53 club<lb/>
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Ill  ' . . <lb/>
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THEY SAID IT COULDN'T BE DONE - BUT TODAYS LM GIVES YOU-<lb/>
de Wake I  ' ' V 1 We Una<lb/>
after three si  I<lb/>
aven't iii I<lb/>
la<lb/>
1'  .  , by i t<lb/>
finally do s el v olf t.acl are<lb/>
Cataw ba over 1 by 7; If ie Ma<lb/>
.  v  -  el '  " .<lb/>
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t ane foj M <lb/>
Western arolina its Lei Khyne We rali n<lb/>
-hiiul be hea favorites but int some reason re afraid ol this<lb/>
have potentials.<lb/>
I.jM .ii i.l.n i u.t-r Newberrj hv l  i 11 . Speight,<lb/>
I nine tu mil along n high gear.<lb/>
THPY SAID IT COULDN'T Bl DONE!<lb/>
,<lb/>
-<lb/>
1<lb/>
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DON'T SETTLE FOR ONE WITHOUT THE OTHER!<lb/>
Change to LfM and get 'em both. Such an improved filter and more taste! Better<lb/>
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; : $<lb/>
LITTLE KNOWN FACTS ABOUT<lb/>
I)IAM01)H<lb/>
Sf5;i<lb/>
<lb/>
'iiv'<lb/>
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INNOCENT!<lb/>
GUILTY!<lb/>
PACK<lb/>
OR<lb/>
BOX<lb/>
<lb/>
LIGHT INTO THAT LIVE MODERN FLAVOR!<lb/>
r<lb/>
 UUUETT 4 MYERS TOSAWttO CO 1<lb/>
EGEND says that in ancient dgmen1<lb/>
the accused was innocent if the diamon<lb/>
shone brightly, guilty if the gam was do!<lb/>
Today, diamonds are scientifically cot l<lb/>
"trap" light rays and produce fire, and w<lb/>
know that when these diamonds are dull, it .<lb/>
only because they are duty aA u how t<lb/>
clean your rings safely<lb/>
IF YOU OON'T KNOW DIAMONDS -KNOW 0UR JEWELS<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS,<lb/>
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Ji u elers  Diamond Spt ciah <lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
 wfi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038611_0005"/><lb/>
A en rOBER S3, 1958<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
fiAGE FIVE<lb/>
Carolina Bows: Pirates Tackle Newberry Away<lb/>
Hug Homecoming Crowd Sees Bob Perry<lb/>
Explode For His Seventh TD In Five Games<lb/>
s Boone's Gridders Win I-7 Over Catamounts<lb/>
Speight Back In Action After Injury<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
crowd of approx- fumble on the second play of the ball<lb/>
tball fans witnessed game. The EC forward wall held<lb/>
hait'ba k, score his them on their own 20 yard line where<lb/>
i; five game, as<lb/>
ti lassed and out<lb/>
lined Western Caro<lb/>
la ! Sat ui da) b) an<lb/>
Facl H ione's<lb/>
the toi i id North -<lb/>
I e Pirates<lb/>
Theji<lb/>
loss eom-<lb/>
Pre byterian<lb/>
test of the<lb/>
x i onl inues To Star<lb/>
ovt in the<lb/>
I  les t lead <lb/>
rD'a His fust<lb/>
 sweep around<lb/>
end in the second<lb/>
I :i-d bj<lb/>
 n Cata nount i<lb/>
I few mo- ;<lb/>
.aids t<lb/>
 , down came on<lb/>
I   Holmes passing<lb/>
late in<lb/>
a ter,<lb/>
- Had Speed, Defense<lb/>
c quarterback,<lb/>
 . opt ion and short<lb/>
  , Ba t I arolina<lb/>
 not I now this.<lb/>
. i . opei but<lb/>
, tire Wp '' 'e :t<lb/>
extent 1 be I ata<lb/>
I down during and the<lb/>
the hall the <lb/>
i compiled but of playii<lb/>
 first down. A few<lb/>
thej were toned to punt. T e two<lb/>
North Ut Conference clubs then<lb/>
warped fourth down situations<lb/>
t w u  without eithei making a big<lb/>
threat t score. Quarterback Ralph<lb/>
hit left end toward "Iug"<lb/>
1 ale v 11, a !0 at d aei tal in the<lb/>
middle of tin- first quarter but Beale<lb/>
caught it out of she end zone and it<lb/>
ruled incomplete. East Carolina<lb/>
Iced up it- third first down oi the<lb/>
quartet on  ll yard sprint b half-<lb/>
back Lee Atkinson when the teams<lb/>
 ap ed goals.<lb/>
EC Scores Twice<lb/>
Joe Holmes was forced to punt his<lb/>
team out of danger on a fourth down<lb/>
situation early in t: e second quarter<lb/>
. t the ball to the Cats 14<lb/>
irard stripe. Cooper could not get<lb/>
his WC club on the march, kicked out<lb/>
to the East Carolina SO yard line.<lb/>
East Carolina took over and the<lb/>
; i; e was set for the first score of<lb/>
. contest. Still nursing a Lot in-<lb/>
 all-conference James Speight<lb/>
ately put the Hues dee into<lb/>
Western Carolina territory with two<lb/>
or 1 ee Atkinson moved the<lb/>
ball to WC'i 7 yard line and Perrj<lb/>
took a pitch out from Zehring to go<lb/>
, i lei i end and into Ibe end<lb/>
.Miie for a Tl The Bueg could not<lb/>
mptete the pass foi the extia points<lb/>
Arnold Isaacs and Jamie Wilks found<lb/>
running room in the Pirates defensive<lb/>
unit. They marched deep into Buc<lb/>
ten dory but failed to get beyond the<lb/>
18 yard liue. The stubborn Cullowee,<lb/>
 team again moved into EC ter-<lb/>
i torj after the Pirates gained two<lb/>
First d.w;i and could not score.<lb/>
Fumbles Hurt<lb/>
Alter Perry went 28 yards into<lb/>
atamount territory, Zehriag fumbl-<lb/>
d n a roll out attempt to pass and<lb/>
eeovered it. George Turner kicked<lb/>
iut to tlie WC i yard marker as the<lb/>
lock indicated the end of the third<lb/>
luarter.<lb/>
With East Carolina in possession<lb/>
Kwiatkowski, Bass Ready<lb/>
col<lb/>
i i e - tood at  u in favoi<lb/>
ome team with 6 minutes<lb/>
 time left until the half,<lb/>
fast minutes saw WC fad<lb/>
avid Thomas, Billam. to<lb/>
and Howard Beale at the<lb/>
attack to<lb/>
jam any<lb/>
kickoff.<lb/>
ass to t<lb/>
yardage after receiving<lb/>
Then (ev attempted<lb/>
, tatfback, Tom Broad-<lb/>
ed  <lb/>
ok, water in the right flat. Perry came<lb/>
 Davia and out of nowhere to intercept the hall<lb/>
ninated the inside and again raeed to the end one<lb/>
p  . re unit without a hand on him. Phe bucs<lb/>
krched into Western could not make the extra point on <lb/>
th<lb/>
end David Thomas could not hold<lb/>
onto ne of Zehring's completed pas-<lb/>
i and fumbled it on the 35 yard<lb/>
line. Substitute quarterback Tobe<lb/>
Childres made good use of the break<lb/>
and immediately hit halfback Tom<lb/>
Broadwater with a 52 yard pass<lb/>
which sent Broadwater scampering<lb/>
eyond the reach of the Buc second-<lb/>
ary to the goal line. Cecil Smith<lb/>
made good his attempt to kick the<lb/>
extra point and Western Carolina<lb/>
wag quickly in contention again.<lb/>
Zehring got 1 is squad on the move<lb/>
again with less than four minutes left<lb/>
to play but Ed Emory's recovering<lb/>
f a Catamount fumble led Bob Co-<lb/>
oper to hasten his action on the<lb/>
t series of WC down Emory and<lb/>
Glenn Bass caught Cooper on his<lb/>
own 10 yard line a  attempted to<lb/>
i ml a pass on a fourth down situation.<lb/>
Zehring promptly found end Joe<lb/>
Holmes in the end zone and hit him<lb/>
with an 8 yard touchodwn aerial.<lb/>
For the third time in the evening the<lb/>
pirates couk. not make good their<lb/>
xtra oiat try. The contest ended<lb/>
with WC in possession.<lb/>
East Carolina will go outside of the<lb/>
conference again for the second time<lb/>
Saturday's Non-Conference Clash<lb/>
Should Find Sues In Good Shape<lb/>
Setting up two East (arolina touchdowns with 55 yards rushing in<lb/>
imlv four attempts at carrying the ball was James Speight, fleet footed full-<lb/>
back on the Buc team. Speight has seen little action this season due to an<lb/>
ankle injury but his running ability in the Western Carolina contest was ex-<lb/>
cellent and the all-confertnce halfback choice for last year will see much<lb/>
action against Newoerry this coming Saturday night. Boone has been em-<lb/>
ploying Speight at the fullback slot this season with much success.<lb/>
k Jim Speight, half<lb/>
 and t e passing<lb/>
I Perry of course<lb/>
e a ' <lb/>
Bucs ki.k Off<lb/>
a<lb/>
kkkofi onl<lb/>
un attempt and as , gun sounded thi, season next week. They will meet<lb/>
the half the homecoming erowd roat , Newberry ollege team of<lb/>
ed to the I2i lead compiled by<lb/>
 squad.<lb/>
East Carolina received and quickly<lb/>
gave<lb/>
Newberry, South Carolina there<lb/>
There were no serious injuries in<lb/>
the Western Carolina tilt am Jack<lb/>
Boone's eleven will be out to chalk<lb/>
et-<lb/>
No Undefeated Teams In League<lb/>
i on downs to open the<lb/>
Henry third quarter of play. T en the WC up their fifth win against one<lb/>
to offense began to clidl as Hooey Bass, back.<lb/>
It Was A Busy Evening For The League Leading Pirates<lb/>
Umstead Hall Upsets<lb/>
River Rats In Loop Play<lb/>
DORM KB Don Haskins' up-and- few minutes of the game decided the<lb/>
over Memorial S.adlum here 1 Surda, evening -hen K Carolina hoated<lb/>
,  L. I. a.o,pl for a short gain Ihrough the WC line.omin . to block before the Catamount b<lb/>
k , terita I  IN"   hlfb'ck Ch,rlie Bi,hP (N' 10  t'0ra8 "P<lb/>
I tit pl.t V<lb/>
W4 $<lb/>
rV<lb/>
s r-jpmm<lb/>
Vthe photo belo. Bhop (No. 10, can be 8ee fumbling the pigskin which ,s M  It<lb/>
w the Waahington, N C" athlete's first fumble of the season. Getting ready to pounce on the Ml - -<lb/>
ratified Western Carotin. ,Uyer To th, eltreme ght is Perry who also apotted the fumble an M<lb/>
M recover it. Bishop w returnin, . punt when the fumble took place and th Western "PJ<lb/>
U and WC was deep fa EC territory. The, did not score on the mistake though a. J" Boone aqdI rtUI <lb/>
out on the long end of an w.7 8core 0 tQ bc we for Bi6hop, his teammates and the Pirate i<lb/>
when the gun finally sounded the end of the gumm. CPh0tM J<lb/>
coming Umstead Hall football team<lb/>
r.mght off a last minute effort on<lb/>
the pmrt of Doug Watts' River Hats<lb/>
Team to knock the Rats out of the<lb/>
undefeated ranks with a 27-23 upset<lb/>
victory last Thursday on the intra-<lb/>
mural field.<lb/>
The loss now leaves the RR squad<lb/>
with a record of 6-1 which is still<lb/>
solid enough to put them in an al-<lb/>
most .mathematical position to take<lb/>
their league crown. Before the Um-<lb/>
stead Hall encounter the River Rats<lb/>
had beaten the Falcons by a 25 to<lb/>
14 margin last Wednesday.<lb/>
In the UH contest Jack Medley<lb/>
iraa the one man show in the scor-<lb/>
,ng department. Medley came up<lb/>
with two touchdowns while team<lb/>
mates Ronald Field and manager<lb/>
Haskins tad one each. Field also<lb/>
had two extra points and Ricky<lb/>
Baldree had one. Dean Robbins,<lb/>
George Williams, AH Vaughn, Joel<lb/>
Cong and Doug Watts all figured<lb/>
strongly in the scoring of the Rats'<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Umstead lost to the Country<lb/>
Gentlemen last Wednesday though<lb/>
by a score of 39 to fi. It was one of<lb/>
those days when everything the<lb/>
Gents did was right and everything<lb/>
that Haskins' club did was wrong.<lb/>
In the scoring department were six<lb/>
different players. Wally Cockerell<lb/>
had seven points, Bob Metatee had<lb/>
six, Carrol C,eddesand Sonny Gilli-<lb/>
kan six each while Warren Gaines<lb/>
and Clint LeGette came up witb<lb/>
 even joints apiece. The win by the<lb/>
Gents helped them to keep pace<lb/>
with Umstead and the t.wo teams<lb/>
are presently tied with each other<lb/>
for the second place position in the<lb/>
league standings.<lb/>
Tre Falcons of Bert May didn't<lb/>
'are so bad for their week's work.<lb/>
They came up with 2 wins against 1<lb/>
loss during the week. As mentioned<lb/>
above they were beaten by Umstead<lb/>
Hall, but they rolled over the ROTC<lb/>
group by a 37 to 6 margin and de-<lb/>
feated the Rebel Rousers by a slim<lb/>
21 to 14 score. Dominating play for<lb/>
those two games were Bert May, Ken<lb/>
Barlow, Bob King, FTed Barthlo-<lb/>
mew, Mack Seymour and Johnny Al-<lb/>
pine. Calvin Mills made the lone<lb/>
touchdown for the ROTC six.<lb/>
The last contest of the week in<lb/>
Dormitory League action found the<lb/>
Rebel Rousers rolling over the ROTC<lb/>
:n. -and-tuck contest. R. L. Edwards<lb/>
and Ace Symrell scored the two<lb/>
TD's for the Reserve Officers Train-<lb/>
 Corp team managed by Bill<lb/>
Ward. No statistics were available on<lb/>
the scoring of the Rebel Rousers.<lb/>
The River Rats are definitely fa-<lb/>
vorites to cop the Dorm League<lb/>
title and then defeat the winning<lb/>
re, resentatives from the Fraternity<lb/>
League for the college touch foot-<lb/>
ball trophy to be awarded by the<lb/>
EC Intramural Association. Ten<lb/>
games each will complete the 1958<lb/>
intramural football schedule jlay<lb/>
in addition to the playoffs.<lb/>
Student Intramural Director Bill<lb/>
Boyd announced that a meeting will<lb/>
r,e held to work out plans for a<lb/>
possible banquet which may be given<lb/>
to the top two teams in each<lb/>
leaugue, but stated fu'ther that plans<lb/>
are incomplete at this time, and a<lb/>
definite announcement will be made<lb/>
next week concerning t. e banquet or<lb/>
possibly hosting an intramural team<lb/>
from Wake Forest or N. C. State.<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone will carry his<lb/>
North State leaders down south this<lb/>
week-end when the Bucs run up<lb/>
against Newberry College in New-<lb/>
erry. The tilt will be a non-confer-<lb/>
ence affair.<lb/>
Boone is expected to have his club<lb/>
at almost full strength when Sat-<lb/>
urday gets here. The Pirates are ex-<lb/>
pected to dp stronger for their South<lb/>
Carolina foe than at any other time<lb/>
si'ce the season o ener.<lb/>
Speight To Return<lb/>
James Speight, All-Conference<lb/>
fullback, is one of the main reasons<lb/>
that HOC is expected to be stronger.<lb/>
The hard-running junior is expected<lb/>
o he in the starting line-up for the<lb/>
first time since the opening of the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Greenville native has been<lb/>
nursing a foot injury but saw action<lb/>
this past Saturday against Western<lb/>
Carolina and reeled off 55 yards in<lb/>
four carries. "I had my foot taped<lb/>
md it feit real good said Speight.<lb/>
P, r e was also pleased with ihis<lb/>
Rollback's return. "We feel Jame is<lb/>
ready to help us out nowit is only<lb/>
i matter of retting him back in<lb/>
rane cited Boone.<lb/>
Glenn Bass, so; homore halfback,<lb/>
w I tackle Henry Kwiatkowski are<lb/>
t'  expected to be ready for full<lb/>
duty this week. Bass wa,s injured in<lb/>
any  eason also but should be ready<lb/>
for the Indians. Kwiatkowski was in-<lb/>
jure, i against Elon but saw action<lb/>
against Western Carolina and will<lb/>
be ready to go full steam against<lb/>
Newberry.<lb/>
Although t'e outer-state clash has<lb/>
little significance to the North State<lb/>
race, Boone will try to revenge a de-<lb/>
feat administered by Newberry last<lb/>
season, and also an earlier defeat by<lb/>
mother Little Three school, Presby-<lb/>
terian. The Blue Hose toppled the<lb/>
Bucs J4-16 for ECC's only loss in<lb/>
five starts.<lb/>
Upset The Citadel<lb/>
Newberry opened the season with<lb/>
an upset uver The Citadel which gave<lb/>
indications that they have another<lb/>
strong club. The Indians led Catawba<lb/>
I for three quarters before stalling in<lb/>
I the final period.<lb/>
Coach Harvey Kirkland has con-<lb/>
tinuously produced strong clubs and<lb/>
the Indians will have a big advantage<lb/>
on playing at home.<lb/>
The starting lineup for East Caro-<lb/>
lina is expected to be as follows:<lb/>
Bill Cain and Randell Holmes at ends,<lb/>
Henry Kwiatkowski and Charles Cook<lb/>
at tackles, Ed Emory and Wayne<lb/>
Davis at the guards, and Charles<lb/>
Gordon at center.<lb/>
In the ECC backfield will be Bobby<lb/>
Perry and Lee Atkinson at the half-<lb/>
back slots, James Speight at fullback,<lb/>
and Ralph Zehring at quarterback.<lb/>
The Pirates will rely heavily on<lb/>
their strong forward wall. Headed by<lb/>
Ed Emory, the line gave up only one<lb/>
first down and 30 yards rushing in<lb/>
the first half against WCC.<lb/>
Tournament Begins<lb/>
For Chess Players<lb/>
All chess players are invited to<lb/>
play in the coming East Carolina<lb/>
College Union quarterly tournament<lb/>
sponsored by the games committee<lb/>
of the College Union Student Board.<lb/>
Plans have been made to begin<lb/>
the tournament on October 27. In<lb/>
tie past the tournament has been<lb/>
divided into one for the faculty and<lb/>
one for the students. If enough par-<lb/>
ticipants sign up this quarter the<lb/>
system will continue in this man-<lb/>
ner, tine may sign up in the College<lb/>
Union office or on the poster on the<lb/>
bulletin board.<lb/>
Captain George Patterson of the<lb/>
AFROTC staff, was last year's<lb/>
faculty winner, while Javier Cicero<lb/>
was the student winner.<lb/>
Football Tonight!<lb/>
East Carolina's JV squad will<lb/>
play hv.t to Fork Union tonight<lb/>
at college stadium. The Varsity<lb/>
Club will sponsor the contest. Ad-<lb/>
mission for adults is $1.00 and<lb/>
.50 for students. Game time is<lb/>
8:00 P. M.<lb/>
BIRTH<lb/>
DEFECTS<lb/>
NfWr;i' NEW hope<lb/>
Preparing Equipment For Newberry Hit<lb/>
Bug Cagers Open<lb/>
Here On Dec. 5<lb/>
by<lb/>
East Carolina College basketball<lb/>
schedule for 1958-59 his been re-<lb/>
leased by Dr. N. M. Jorgensen, di-<lb/>
rector of at' letics, with nine games<lb/>
at home and eight away appealing on<lb/>
the card.<lb/>
The Bucs open with Guilford Col-<lb/>
lege there on Saturday, November 29.<lb/>
The first home game slates the Bucs<lb/>
Dd the Catawba College Indians in<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium on Friday,<lb/>
December 5. TV.e schedule for the<lb/>
season:<lb/>
Nov. 29, Guilford. Guilford College;<lb/>
Dec. 5, Catawba, Greenville; 9, High<lb/>
Point College, High Point; 12 Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne, Greenville; 18, Newberry,<lb/>
Creep vile; Jan. 5, Appalachian,<lb/>
Boone; 10, Eion College, Elon; 15,<lb/>
Guilford, Greenville; 17, Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne, Hickory; 19 Western Caro-<lb/>
lina College, Cullowhee; 30, Western<lb/>
Carolina, Greenville; Feb. 2, Appa-<lb/>
lachian, Greenville; 5, Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian College, Greenville; 11, Catawba,<lb/>
Salisbury; 14; M.0"?;<lb/>
slim 14 to 12 score. The last High Point, Greenville; 21, Atlanta<lb/>
Seen above is Mr. Howard Black, manager of the East Carolina gym<lb/>
and all football equipment. Mr. Black is shown packing away some of this<lb/>
equipment in preparation for the Bur's road trip to Newtierry Friday. Keep-<lb/>
ing the equipment in top shape is a big responsibility and Black, aided by<lb/>
the football managers, has a full time job from the beginning of the aeaaoa<lb/>
until a month after the last football game is played. He u a native of<lb/>
Burlington, N. C. (  "<lb/>
Christian, Wilson.<lb/>
Feb. 26-28, North State Conference<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter officially<lb/>
opened basketball practice on Oc-<lb/>
tober 15, with 23 candidates re-<lb/>
porting. Among the candidates for<lb/>
the varsity squad were 9<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038611_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE SIX<lb/>
EAST CABOLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER a, j<lb/>
h<lb/>
Star of "Lost Colony Professor's Wife<lb/>
May Participate In Student Productions<lb/>
Working with the LOST COLONY,<lb/>
studying, keeping house and raising<lb/>
a child are a few of the many things<lb/>
Mrs. Lois Garren has to do. Mrs. Gar-<lb/>
ren is an English major here at East<lb/>
Carolina. She plans to get her Masters<lb/>
Degree in English. "I'm not sure what<lb/>
I'll do yet answered Mrs. Garren<lb/>
when asked about teaching.<lb/>
Mrs. Garren has been with the<lb/>
LOST COLONY for four years. "I<lb/>
was dancing in New York when the<lb/>
choreograi her in tie LOST COLONY,<lb/>
asked me to try out for their pro-<lb/>
duction Summer before last she<lb/>
worked in Williamsburg, Virginia in<lb/>
Common Glory" and "The Found-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
Mrs. Garren was born in Buffalo,<lb/>
New York and has two brothers, one<lb/>
older and one younger than she. Her<lb/>
father is a businessman in Buffalo.<lb/>
Before coming south Mrs. Garren<lb/>
worked for NBC in New York and<lb/>
stared in two educational movies<lb/>
tor the Britannica Encyclopedia Com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
When she went to work for the<lb/>
LOST COLONY she worked as an In-<lb/>
dian Dancer, costume assistant, as-<lb/>
sistant choreographer and lead under-<lb/>
study. Last year she starred as Elea-<lb/>
nor Dare in the production.<lb/>
Here in Greenville she .has starred<lb/>
m the Greenville Little Theatre's<lb/>
"Still the Mountain Wind "If the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse has a<lb/>
Shakespearen play this spring or<lb/>
next year I shall probably try out for<lb/>
a part she replied when asked if<lb/>
she ever intended to try out for one<lb/>
of our plays.<lb/>
8-<lb/>
Lois Garren studies a script. Her daughter looks on.<lb/>
Needs Commands<lb/>
AFROTC Drill<lb/>
Robert L. Needs of Rt. 1, Beaufort,<lb/>
has been appointed Commander of<lb/>
the Honorary Drill Team of the East<lb/>
Carolina College Air Force ROTC<lb/>
and will hold the position during the<lb/>
fall quarter. He holds the rank of<lb/>
Cadet Captain and is serving as<lb/>
Drill Team Commander for the sec-<lb/>
ond time.<lb/>
The Honorary Drill Team of the<lb/>
college AFROTC is composed of the<lb/>
Commander and thirty cadets chosen<lb/>
for their skill in precision drill<lb/>
maneuvers.<lb/>
The group headed by Cadet Capt.<lb/>
Needs represented the college AF-<lb/>
ROTC Saturday in a parade honoring<lb/>
returning alumni to the campus<lb/>
for Homeconrng Day. That afternoon<lb/>
at 1:30 in a show on the athletic<lb/>
field preceding the East Carolina-<lb/>
Western Carolina football game, the<lb/>
Drill Team executed the Queen<lb/>
Ann Salute.<lb/>
Research Council To Aid<lb/>
Fondation In Fellowship Work<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
TO ALL STUDENTS WHO HAVE<lb/>
RECEIVED SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Many of you students who have re-<lb/>
ceived scholarship from the college<lb/>
and from otner sources apparently<lb/>
have never thanked the donors. Please<lb/>
do this! Some of you have scholar-<lb/>
ships amounting to $500 a year, and<lb/>
the person who made these possible<lb/>
has never heard from you. Please<lb/>
don't appear .ungrateful.<lb/>
J. D. Messick, President.<lb/>
The National Academy of Sciences-<lb/>
National Research Council will again<lb/>
assist th National Science Founda-<lb/>
dation with its enghth regular pre-<lb/>
doctoral and postdoctoral fellowship<lb/>
programs for scientific study during<lb/>
the 195U-1960 academic year.<lb/>
The evaluation of each candidate's<lb/>
application is made by the Academy-<lb/>
Research 'Council selection pannels<lb/>
and boards. The National Science<lb/>
Foundation will make the final<lb/>
selection of the Fellows and will<lb/>
announce the awards on March IB,<lb/>
1959.<lb/>
These fellowships are open only<lb/>
to citizens of the United States and<lb/>
are awarded solely on the basis of<lb/>
ability. The National Science Founda-<lb/>
tion has announced . . . fellowships<lb/>
will be awarded in the mathematical,<lb/>
physical, medical, biological and<lb/>
engineering sciences, including an-<lb/>
thropology, psycology (excluding<lb/>
clinical psychology), am from the<lb/>
following social sciences, were they<lb/>
conform to accept standards of scien-<lb/>
tific inquiry by fulfilling the require-<lb/>
ments of the basic scientific method<lb/>
as to objectivity, verifiability and<lb/>
generality: geography, mathematical<lb/>
economics, econometrics, demography,<lb/>
information and communication<lb/>
theory, experimental and quantitative<lb/>
sociology and the history and phi-<lb/>
losophy of science. Also included are<lb/>
interdisciplinary fields which are<lb/>
comprised of overlaping fields among<lb/>
two or more sciences<lb/>
Graduate fellowships are available<lb/>
to those who are working toward<lb/>
the masters' or doctoral degrees in<lb/>
the first, intermediate or terminal<lb/>
year of graduate study. College sen-<lb/>
iors who expect to receive a baccalaur-<lb/>
eate degree during the 1968-59 aca-<lb/>
demic year are also eligible to apply.<lb/>
All applicants for graduate (pre-<lb/>
doctoral) awards will be required to<lb/>
take an examination designed to test<lb/>
scientific aptitude and achievement.<lb/>
This examination, administrated by<lb/>
the Educational Testing Service, will<lb/>
be given on Janurary 19, 1959 at<lb/>
designated centers throughout the<lb/>
United States and certain foreign<lb/>
countries. ,<lb/>
The annual stipends for graduate<lb/>
Fellows are as follows: $1800 for<lb/>
the first year; $2000 for the inter-<lb/>
mediate year; and $2200 for the term-<lb/>
inal year. The annual stipend for<lb/>
postdoctoral Fellows is $4500. De-<lb/>
I endency allowances will be made to<lb/>
married Fellows. Tuition, laboratory<lb/>
fees and limited travel allowances will<lb/>
also be provided.<lb/>
Further information and applica-<lb/>
tion materials may be obtained from<lb/>
the Fellowship Office, National Acad-<lb/>
emy of Sciences-National Research<lb/>
Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue,<lb/>
N.W Washington 25, D.C. The dead-<lb/>
line for the receipt of applications for<lb/>
regular postdoctoral fellowships is<lb/>
December 22, 1958 and for the grad-<lb/>
uate fellowships, January 6, 1959.<lb/>
EC Alumnus Work<lb/>
In Far-Off Places<lb/>
News of former students at East<lb/>
Carolina College who are doing edu-<lb/>
cational work in far-off places and<lb/>
of others connected with the school<lb/>
reached the campus last week in a<lb/>
letter to Miss Emma L. Hooper of<lb/>
the English Department from Dr.<lb/>
Annie Laurie Brinkiey Keyes, a grad-<lb/>
uate of the two-year normal Class of<lb/>
1927.<lb/>
Dr. Keyes is connected with the U.S.<lb/>
Operations Mission to the Philippines,<lb/>
a program of the International Co-<lb/>
operation Administration. She was<lb/>
winner of the East Carolina Alumni<lb/>
Association Award to an Outstanding<lb/>
Graduate in 1945. Her husband Lyn-<lb/>
ford L. Keyes is with the World Health<lb/>
Organization.<lb/>
On a tour of duty to Cambodia with<lb/>
the Health Division of USOM, Dr.<lb/>
Keyes renewed acquaintanceship wjth<lb/>
the Dr. Ronald J. Slay and met his<lb/>
wife the former Katherine Kyzer of<lb/>
Greenville, an East Carolina graduate<lb/>
of 1943.<lb/>
Dr. Slay, a Duke graduate, is the<lb/>
son of the late Dr. J. R. Slay, who<lb/>
served as the head of the science<lb/>
department at the college here and<lb/>
later as registrar and for whom<lb/>
Slay Dormitory for men is named.<lb/>
In Cambodia on a two-year appoint-<lb/>
ment, Dr. Ronald J. Slay is doing,<lb/>
according to Dr. Keyes, "a stunning<lb/>
job" as Secondary Education Advi-<lb/>
sor in the Education and Community<lb/>
Development Program of the United<lb/>
Operations Mission there. As a Stu-<lb/>
dent teacher in the East Carolina la-<lb/>
boratory school, Dr. Keyes knew Dr.<lb/>
Slay, then a fourth grader.<lb/>
While on an educational tour of<lb/>
Formosa, Dr. Keyes saw ,in use in a<lb/>
Baptist ehurch there an organ given<lb/>
by friends in memory of Miss<lb/>
Lois V. Gorrell, who for many years<lb/>
was a teacher of violin and piano at<lb/>
East Carolina and under whom Dr.<lb/>
Keyes studied.<lb/>
Among Dr. Keyes' circle of friends<lb/>
in Manila, she wrote, are Frank E.<lb/>
Briley, East Carolina student from<lb/>
Greenville and a graduate of State<lb/>
College, and his wife, the former<lb/>
Ethel Stephenson of Willow Springs.<lb/>
Samuel Becket<lb/>
Novel Acclaimed<lb/>
By U. S. Critics<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
Music Students Form Club<lb/>
Samuel Beckett is an Irish-<lb/>
man, born in Dublin, who was<lb/>
graduated from Trinity College,<lb/>
lives in Paris and writes in<lb/>
French. His early career brought<lb/>
him together with another self-<lb/>
exiled Irishman, James Joyce,<lb/>
who became a close friend.<lb/>
His play, "Waiting For Godot<lb/>
opened in Paris in 1953 and was<lb/>
met with tremendous acclaim<lb/>
and has since successfully played<lb/>
in many countries, including a<lb/>
well received Broadway produc-<lb/>
tion. According to the publisher<lb/>
the play leads its best-seller list.<lb/>
Off-Broadway production groups,<lb/>
Including drama departments at<lb/>
leading universities have pro-<lb/>
duced the provocative and intri-<lb/>
guing stage work. It is of great<lb/>
significance that the San Fran-<lb/>
cisco theater group chosen by<lb/>
the State Department to repre-<lb/>
sent the United States at the<lb/>
Brussels World's Fair, presented<lb/>
the Beckett drama rather than<lb/>
one by an American writer.<lb/>
One of the literary events of<lb/>
the 1958-59 season is the publica-<lb/>
tion of the long awaited novel,<lb/>
"The UnnamaWe" for the first<lb/>
time in this country. Published<lb/>
by Grove Press, New York, "The<lb/>
Unnamable" is the third book of<lb/>
Beckett's postwar trilogy. The<lb/>
others are "Moiloy and "Malone<lb/>
Dies and ail were originally<lb/>
written in French. Tht trilogy<lb/>
has established an important<lb/>
place for Beckett in the French<lb/>
literary world. The publishing<lb/>
firm announces that the new<lb/>
book will be available in both<lb/>
U and paperback editions.<lb/>
A student chapter of the Music<lb/>
Educators National Association has<lb/>
been organized at East Carolina<lb/>
College with a membership of twenty<lb/>
students in the department of music.<lb/>
Frances Johnson of Roanoke Ra-<lb/>
pids has been chosen as president of<lb/>
the campus chapter. Wolfgang<lb/>
Fetsch, fatuity member of the de-<lb/>
partment, i .serving as advisor.<lb/>
Other student officers are Carolyn<lb/>
llinton of Zrtiuion, vice president;<lb/>
'leoldine Matthews of Erwin, secre-<lb/>
tary; and LaMarr Hadley of Wilson,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
The purpose of the organization is<lb/>
o fostei interest in music and music<lb/>
ducatioj and to plan arid cany out<lb/>
R ; rogram of activities toward I<lb/>
end.<lb/>
Classblower at Science Meeting<lb/>
At its regular monthly meeting<lb/>
October 14, the Science Club had as<lb/>
guest speaker D. E. Sampson, Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina glassblower.<lb/>
Mr. Sam; son demonstrated his work<lb/>
before a large crowd of members and<lb/>
guests. As doorj.rizes he gave several<lb/>
small items which he had made.<lb/>
In November Tommy Hudson, vice<lb/>
president of the club, will talk about<lb/>
his summer work at the U. S. Fish-<lb/>
eries at Beaufort, N. C.<lb/>
Kaj.pa Sigma Nu has announced the<lb/>
names of thirteen upperclassmen<lb/>
who are pledging their fraternity this<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Those pledging are Kelly Kee, Jack<lb/>
McCann, Joe Taft, Mark Gupton, Jake<lb/>
Smith, Larry Tysinger, and Allan<lb/>
Gardner.<lb/>
Others are Lavern Christi, Danny<lb/>
V'isinar, Craig Held, Gene Woods, Tom<lb/>
Carson and Warren Gaines.<lb/>
Alumnus in War College<lb/>
The Navy Department has an-<lb/>
nounced that Li. Commander William<lb/>
Green of Crossnore, N .C, is now<lb/>
attending the U. S. Naval War Col-<lb/>
lege in Newport, Rhode Island. He<lb/>
wes previously Commanding Officer<lb/>
of U.S-S. Tabberer based at Phila-<lb/>
delphia.<lb/>
Green entered East Carolina in<lb/>
1141. Wiie here he served j pf<lb/>
dent of the Men's Judiciary and ,<lb/>
was etwsrn "Who's Who In Afnricn<lb/>
Colleges and Universities" jtl j<lb/>
Btee his graduaGori, he t m<lb/>
ticipated in the Okinwan (J<lb/>
ra Paige<lb/>
and in the occupation of Korea i<lb/>
Japan. He was decorated for out-<lb/>
standing lerviee.<lb/>
Students in the cdasses of Ur R<lb/>
E. ClSWN -pent Octobei 14 on ,<lb/>
geography neid trip on p&amp;<lb/>
Penrnsah<lb/>
Thirty-ail student- and the t.<lb/>
trueter traveled by Trailwaj bu<lb/>
through Terra Ceia, widely ki,<lb/>
or the Dutch flowei grov <lb/>
12,000 MM fan of A. D<lb/>
Here a visit and tour arranged<lb/>
.Mi. Swindell gave Students ,poor-<lb/>
tunity to observe V e farm, h<lb/>
b the largest in North I arohtts.<lb/>
The group then went to Lake Mat<lb/>
tamiiskeet, where the US. WU<lb/>
Refuge Manager, Willie Gaboon<lb/>
a ed the Burs- of his organinatka<lb/>
and showed slides of the local w.id<lb/>
life. After a dinne t the 1<lb/>
the students traveled to Pett<lb/>
State lk near Cresweli. To<lb/>
Hampton, State Park Range;<lb/>
rected a tour uf the old plant<lb/>
located within the Park.<lb/>
Music Students Organize New Club<lb/>
David Dooiittle of Rocking<lb/>
senior at East Carolina College, bai<lb/>
been chosen as president of a<lb/>
oranized student branch of the V<lb/>
Educators National Conference. <lb/>
bers ip is open to anyone in the 1<lb/>
field who is interested in music edn-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
Professor Earl Beach, director af<lb/>
the department of music, assisted tht<lb/>
tudents in organizing the group. H<lb/>
is now serving as president of th<lb/>
Southeastern District of the MEN'<lb/>
Student officers of the campji<lb/>
organization, in addiCon to Mr. Doo-<lb/>
iittle, are Franklin Bullard, Greens-<lb/>
boro, vice president; Mariam Thom,<lb/>
Wallingford, Pa secretary; and Juan<lb/>
Kt.Jy. Kannapolis, treasurer.<lb/>
Now.  .all America sees the one tttafs truly new!<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY STORE<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
Fine Meats and Groceries<lb/>
All the Latest Top Hit<lb/>
Records<lb/>
Still at th Same Old Price<lb/>
92c<lb/>
Music Gifts<lb/>
JOHNSON'S<lb/>
at Five Points<lb/>
next to<lb/>
Mary Ann Soda Shop<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA  We<lb/>
Love You For Beating Elon<lb/>
And Western Carolina!<lb/>
In Celebration You Can See<lb/>
One of The Best Shows of The<lb/>
Year For Only<lb/>
35c<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/>
Dia 7630<lb/>
f<lb/>
 .  '4<lb/>
"DAMN YANKEES"<lb/>
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Tab Hunter - GTwen Verdon<lb/>
TUES.  WED.<lb/>
October 28-29<lb/>
Please Be Sure and Bring<lb/>
This Coupon With You.<lb/>
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'59 CHEVROLET<lb/>
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