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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038617_0001"/>
Election Protest<lb/>
Hm signers of the protest<lb/>
. iure in thv recent sctivi-<lb/>
afpeared betore the SGA<lb/>
.?utuil Monday night. See<lb/>
out psge.<lb/>
Easttarolinian,<lb/>
East Carolina College LAaJ<lb/>
'Kiss Me Kate' Tryouts<lb/>
Tryouts for "Kis Me Kate this<lb/>
musical production, will be<lb/>
January 8 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
. Singers, dancers, and actors<lb/>
are needed in the cast.<lb/>
E<lb/>
HiKlllltfi<lb/>
vXXIV<lb/>
REENVILLE, N. . THURSDAY. DECEMBER 18, 1958<lb/>
Number 11<lb/>
flerry Christmas! Ha<lb/>
 II<lb/>
y New<lb/>
ear!<lb/>
ow Breaks<lb/>
5 Record As<lb/>
Provides<lb/>
Wright Circle Dons Winter Robes<lb/>
II V<lb/>
U<lb/>
lu! Change<lb/>
RRl VLKFR<lb/>
. r Nature<lb/>
a North Caro-<lb/>
behind a<lb/>
Pitt Coun-<lb/>
 ither equal-<lb/>
v storms<lb/>
1927, when 20<lb/>
: n Greenville<lb/>
. ae-<lb/>
aade<lb/>
fusieJ .osed<lb/>
stabliahnienta,<lb/>
.ok and<lb/>
sights in and<lb/>
imp<lb/>
not, as a<lb/>
 (vantage<lb/>
: . lass outs.<lb/>
and fly-<lb/>
t i<lb/>
ted despite<lb/>
ersonnel I<lb/>
" so, r asleep.<lb/>
:ed on<lb/>
irere Miinor.<lb/>
. , nowed<lb/>
collisions<lb/>
 . . . -treets.<lb/>
 ot.<lb/>
. carefully,<lb/>
w ondt- rlai id p roved<lb/>
I was<lb/>
Ragan, Harper Hand<lb/>
Protest To Committee<lb/>
At  call meeting of the Executive last year's student directory was i directory at the time.<lb/>
Council of the Student Government<lb/>
Association Monday night, the formal<lb/>
protest against procedures in Wright<lb/>
Precint in the recently activity fee<lb/>
vote were reviewed.<lb/>
On hand to present their case were<lb/>
Fred Ragan and Stan Harper, two<lb/>
signers of the written protest. Mr.<lb/>
Ragan stated that he was not against<lb/>
The activity fee raise, but that he<lb/>
used to check off names.<lb/>
4. No one supervised the distribu-<lb/>
tion of ballots. The ballots are de-<lb/>
posit in the line of traffic of persons<lb/>
.roing to the voting stalls, thus con-<lb/>
fusion.<lb/>
It is on belief that a democracy<lb/>
must sta. : on fact, net doubt and<lb/>
confusion. The efficiency of the elec-<lb/>
and members of his group were i yon procedure can only be proven by<lb/>
against rocedures in Wright Precint<lb/>
at the time of the voting.<lb/>
Signed by (Ragan, Harper, Don<lb/>
Dunson, Alonzo Glenn Rowell, and<lb/>
Thomas Lee. the document is as fol- oieve. if a democracy is long to<lb/>
lows: ! " 'nre, it must welcome an examina-<lb/>
close look at the records. We feel<lb/>
that the records must be examined<lb/>
nVr that nil students may be<lb/>
nssnred of a fair election. For, we<lb/>
tl<lb/>
The effects of Green<lb/>
familiar cimpus spot<lb/>
ea&amp;Uybe seen above as 15 inches of snow cover<lb/>
IFC Stages Rush Veek '" W<lb/>
r i I rL i Annual Concert<lb/>
ror Local Chapters MH ft, ECC<lb/>
A joint meeting in Austin Auuito-<lb/>
East Carolina College's<lb/>
 i Rush Week, December S, with<lb/>
the five social fraternities partici-<lb/>
pating.<lb/>
Janus Teachey, IFC<lb/>
 lente will<lb/>
into ny-Jopend the meeting with a brief dis<lb/>
 ; and so !t wa ussion 0f fraternities, afUrwhich, he<lb/>
tudent introduced tec cnapter presi<lb/>
. uition: "I want<lb/>
tertamment Com-<lb/>
,v; 1 believe every-<lb/>
enjoying it<lb/>
eter road something<lb/>
grees when one<lb/>
obtai tail digging<lb/>
Cm stead's parking<lb/>
I other students<lb/>
: and told him not to<lb/>
hit car from the ice<lb/>
- travel was nearly<lb/>
The owner of the car<lb/>
l he removed a<lb/>
of ice from his auto's<lb/>
tied: 'But I've got<lb/>
it; I've got to get my<lb/>
a sad<lb/>
etty things, the won-<lb/>
irted fading away as the<lb/>
Pitt County, and<lb/>
nd a sure footing<lb/>
i re. The white<lb/>
ay. but we'll remem-<lb/>
 so mo regret-<lb/>
it was a change,<lb/>
cheerfully.<lb/>
,ents to the "Rushees present.<lb/>
The Rushees" received informa-<lb/>
tion regarding the week's activities,<lb/>
and were told of tne rules set up for<lb/>
chem during the iush period. About<lb/>
fifty men registered as candidates<lb/>
foi fraternities.<lb/>
On Tuesday and Wednesday nights<lb/>
of Rush Week, the various chapters<lb/>
were hosts to the interested candi-<lb/>
dates at their respective chapter<lb/>
rooms. These informal "smokers" en-<lb/>
abled the members of the chapters<lb/>
und the "Rushees" to become acquain-<lb/>
ted and discuss fraternities in gen-<lb/>
eral.<lb/>
Thurada night, the chapters of-<lb/>
fered more social entertainment in<lb/>
the form of dances, parties, and<lb/>
other gatherings. The week ended<lb/>
lay night at 12 p.m and "si-<lb/>
lent period" resumed.<lb/>
Bids, or membership invitations,<lb/>
were mailed Friday, and were to be<lb/>
returned to the IFC office by Mon-<lb/>
day f this week.<lb/>
Members of the Interfraternity<lb/>
Council who were instrumental in<lb/>
President, planning and carrying out Rush Week<lb/>
proceedings are James Teachey, pres-<lb/>
ident; Tommy Ragland, Vice Piesi-<lb/>
ient; Billy Wallace, Secretary, Her-<lb/>
man Marshburn, Treasurer.<lb/>
"Considering the comparatively<lb/>
small number of 'rushees' who parti-<lb/>
cipated, we believe our week was<lb/>
quite successful President Teachey<lb/>
commented. "We (profited much from<lb/>
this, our second formal Rush Week,<lb/>
und anticipate making the next even<lb/>
better<lb/>
Magazine Lauds<lb/>
Richard Todd<lb/>
The I hapel Chair of Last Carolina<lb/>
College a; peared Tuesday night in<lb/>
i concert of Christmas music at 6:30<lb/>
p.m in the Austin auditorium. The<lb/>
group of thirty' men an'1, women sang<lb/>
under the direction of Or. Hjortsvang<lb/>
of the department of music.<lb/>
The program included also<lb/>
Scriptural readings appropriate to the<lb/>
"hristraaa season. Cleveland J. Brad-<lb/>
ner, Jr director of religious activi-<lb/>
ties, was the reader.<lb/>
The Chapel Choir is a group of<lb/>
student vocalists who give a .program<lb/>
of music each Tuesday at Chapel ser-<lb/>
at the college. Herbert Joyner,<lb/>
organist and senior from Henderson,<lb/>
s accompanist.<lb/>
Selections announced for Tuesday's<lb/>
"We in this protest are not propos-<lb/>
ing the indictment of the honor of<lb/>
anybody connected with the election<lb/>
committee. It is our contention that<lb/>
faulty election procedures may give<lb/>
-ay to irregularities in voting.<lb/>
Upon hearing that some of the<lb/>
students enrolled at ECC had voted<lb/>
more than once during the election<lb/>
concerning the raise in student ac-<lb/>
tivity feea check was made as to<lb/>
how the voting procedure was con-<lb/>
ducted and the following discrepan-<lb/>
cies were noted:<lb/>
1. The would-be-voter and the voter<lb/>
move over the same limited area<lb/>
resulting in confusion to aiministrat-<lb/>
ora and voters.<lb/>
'J. There is no check of the identity<lb/>
rf the person voting. Since different<lb/>
veople man the rolls, there is the pos-<lb/>
;1 ilitv that a person may vote num-<lb/>
erous times using another name each<lb/>
time.<lb/>
3. There is the possibility that a<lb/>
person who does not attend school<lb/>
may vote because of the fact that<lb/>
Lion of its.records by its citizens<lb/>
Tn answers to numbers 1 and 4 of<lb/>
'  protest, elections chairman Caro-<lb/>
1 -r vcock admitted that roll holders<lb/>
had grown lax. At the beginning of<lb/>
ue year they were instructed to<lb/>
hand over the ballots to persons as<lb/>
they were cleared; however some poll<lb/>
officials merely place the ballots on<lb/>
the counter for students to pick-up<lb/>
When asked if the voting records<lb/>
would stand up under scrutiny, Miss<lb/>
Aycock answered no. Mike Katsias,<lb/>
SGA : resident asserted that our vot-<lb/>
ing records had never been flawless<lb/>
enough to stand up under scrutiny.<lb/>
1; v as the concensus of the ex-<lb/>
ecutive council members that since<lb/>
the election was wide-open for ir-<lb/>
regularities, that a re-vote would be<lb/>
in order. Put without proof of an<lb/>
irregularity having taken place, they<lb/>
were powerless to suggest a re-vote.<lb/>
Mr. Ragan had notorized statement<lb/>
of someone who was not a student<lb/>
ho voted. Because the person ex-<lb/>
ects to re-enter East Carolina soon,<lb/>
Ragan was reluctant to turn over<lb/>
the statement until he found out<lb/>
how it would affect the signee.<lb/>
The case has been referred to the<lb/>
 dvisory Board, which is made up<lb/>
of three students chosen by the<lb/>
resident of the SGA and three fac-<lb/>
dty members chosen by the president<lb/>
of the college. The college president<lb/>
as they went to vote. It would have and the SGA president are ex-offu-io<lb/>
hPen possible in the confusion for members of the Board<lb/>
some dishonest person to pick up<lb/>
more than one ballot or for a non-<lb/>
student t0 pick-up a ballot.<lb/>
In answer to number three, Miss<lb/>
Aycock stated that student directories<lb/>
were usually used to check-off would-<lb/>
be voter's names as a means of<lb/>
tegistration. However, this years<lb/>
directories had not been printed at<lb/>
the tuna of the vote, so last year's<lb/>
had to be used. To hasten voting<lb/>
between classes and to facilitate mat-<lb/>
ters, poll officials took down the name<lb/>
cf the person who wanted to vote<lb/>
and did not check it in the student<lb/>
Members chosen for the Board are<lb/>
students Don Griffin. Martha Wilson,<lb/>
and Wade Sessons, and faculty ir.em-<lb/>
ers Don Umstead, James Tucker, and<lb/>
Leo Jenkins.<lb/>
Scheduled to meet after the I<lb/>
days, the Hoard will decide (1) to have<lb/>
 revote or (2) that insufficient evi-<lb/>
dence has been lodged. If Ragan<lb/>
decides to present his notarized state-<lb/>
ment, it would be the clincher that<lb/>
would make a re-vote necessary<lb/>
stated Katsias. "If he does not, then<lb/>
Ae have no evidence<lb/>
Singers Honor Christmas Season<lb/>
The College Singers presented their j Basses are: Kenneth Ginn and Al-<lb/>
anrual program of Christina an- fre(j Krekeler.<lb/>
thems and carols from many lands Selections chosen for the program<lb/>
December 9. in Music Hall. .  , ru ov,v,<lb/>
include English, French, Scotch,<lb/>
Number Speaks<lb/>
An<lb/>
The College Singers are a group of<lb/>
rogram included works by Bach and (ten student who are chosen for their<lb/>
n,<lb/>
n n;<lb/>
less Teacher<lb/>
s Chapter<lb/>
mega Pi<lb/>
Students See<lb/>
illy Exhibits<lb/>
In Austin<lb/>
!<lb/>
Nan ! Lilly of<lb/>
now exhibiting<lb/>
Irej V Dem sey, national<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi business<lb/>
te  ity, went to States-<lb/>
weekeBd to install a<lb/>
:mization at Geor-<lb/>
I ollege there.<lb/>
tar, Delta Iota of Pi<lb/>
raise the total in the<lb/>
 ; Dr. 8. L. Tourney, head<lb/>
education department<lb/>
is Teachers College, will act<lb/>
1 Dei . one of the nutstand-<lb/>
buainess in this coun-<lb/>
ted in Who's Who in Ameri-<lb/>
tion. Her publications in tha<lb/>
education include<lb/>
artic.e appearing in the "UBEA<lb/>
Forum" for February, 1959, and in<lb/>
the current issue of the "National<lb/>
Business Education Quarterly<lb/>
The East Csrolina College Beta<lb/>
Kappa Chapter of Pi Omega Pi. of<lb/>
feich Dr. Dempsey is a nponsor, has<lb/>
three times within the last six years<lb/>
bwn cited as an outstanding chapter<lb/>
kH United States,<lb/>
Miami. Florida,<lb/>
her work as a<lb/>
-t ident artist in the gallery of the de-<lb/>
partment of art in the Austin build-<lb/>
ing. She is one of a group of senior<lb/>
majors in art sleeted to stage one-<lb/>
msn shows before graduation.<lb/>
Mfisa I lily's exhibition is made u<lb/>
of oil paintings. She is a student of<lb/>
John Gordon of the -ollege faculty,<lb/>
vh.o recently was one of five artists<lb/>
in this state to receive prizes in the<lb/>
North Carolina Annual Artists' Com-<lb/>
et ition in Raleigh.<lb/>
Before entering East Carolina Col-<lb/>
. . , she was graduated from the<lb/>
Mgh setoool in New Bern, N. C Miss<lb/>
Lilly is scheduled to complete her<lb/>
wort at ECC at the end of the win-<lb/>
ter quarter in February.<lb/>
She has participated in a number<lb/>
f student activities at the college<lb/>
here. She is past president of the<lb/>
Art Club, made up of students spe-<lb/>
cializing in work in the department<lb/>
of art; art editor of the student li-<lb/>
terary magazine THE REBEL; a<lb/>
columnist on the staff of the student<lb/>
newspaper the EAST CAROLINIAN;<lb/>
and a member of the Interreligious<lb/>
Council of the college<lb/>
Dr. Richard C. Todd, faculty mem-<lb/>
er was represented in the Decem-<lb/>
ber i-sue ot ths GEORGIA REVIEW<lb/>
.y an article on "C. G. Memmirger<lb/>
nd the Confederate Treasury De-<lb/>
artment Dr. Todd is professor of<lb/>
History in the department of social<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
The "Georgia Review :i scholarly<lb/>
ournal. is a quarterly published by<lb/>
the Vnivedty of Georgia Press at<lb/>
Mhens. This appeared December 15.<lb/>
Dr. Tod'i article deals with the<lb/>
work of Memminger as Secretary of<lb/>
?:he Treasury. Confederate States of<lb/>
Vmerica. The methods of finance<lb/>
viheh Memminger recommended and<lb/>
the degree of success or failure with<lb/>
which he met personnel and admini-<lb/>
tr-tive nvob'ems of Confederate fi-<lb/>
ance make iv a major part of the<lb/>
ussion.<lb/>
Memminger, Dr. Todd points out,<lb/>
.is the first important government<lb/>
nffteial In this country to employ wo-<lb/>
man in government jobs. His last days<lb/>
were spent in this state at his home<lb/>
in Flac Rock. <lb/>
Dr. Todd is the author of CON-<lb/>
FEDKHATE FIWNCF. a studv<lb/>
v1 ieh received the If IS Simon Baruch<lb/>
Ul iversity Prize as an -lutstanding.<lb/>
work on Southern history.<lb/>
Pergolesi and a number of carols<lb/>
'rom various countries, 'Silent Night,<lb/>
Holy Night" in an arrangement by<lb/>
Gruber was sung by Choir and<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
Mnra FagrffV<lb/>
Directories Here<lb/>
Campus Directories may be<lb/>
purchased from the College<lb/>
Union for 50c<lb/>
talent and aoility as musicians. They<lb/>
sing under the direction of Dan E.<lb/>
Vornholt of the ?ollege department<lb/>
of music.<lb/>
'Members of the group are: sopra-<lb/>
nos Marjorie Kennedy, Mary Lee<lb/>
1 awrence, Doiothy McCleary.<lb/>
Altos are: Martha Ann Davis,<lb/>
Nancy W. Harris, and Larita Umph-<lb/>
lett.<lb/>
Tenors are: Francis Swanson, and<lb/>
Bobby Wilson.<lb/>
Swiss, Welsh, and other carols; "In<lb/>
Dulci Jubilo" by de Pearsall and<lb/>
"Night Journey of the Wise Men" by<lb/>
Morgan; and a group of hymns and<lb/>
carols to be sung together by the<lb/>
College Sinee-s and the audience.<lb/>
As a special attraction of the pro-<lb/>
gram, a string quartet fn resented<lb/>
Chirstmas music. Members were<lb/>
Donald H. Hayes, violin, and Janelle<lb/>
Lovette, cello; Mrs. Nicholette Fetsch,<lb/>
viola, and F. Richard Atkinson, vio-<lb/>
lin.<lb/>
Nature Adds Color To Campus<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Western Michigan University.<lb/>
Kalamazoo, has several positions<lb/>
open in guidance and educational<lb/>
psychology for exchange profes-<lb/>
sors next summer. Any college<lb/>
leacher interested In going to<lb/>
Kalamazoo for the summer may<lb/>
write to Dr. R. S. Strolle, Hesd<lb/>
of the Sdiool of Educstion, Wes-<lb/>
tern Michigsn University, Kala-<lb/>
mazoo, Michigan.<lb/>
J. D. Messick, President J used for sled rides<lb/>
Co-ed Csrole Hsgen surveys the sparkling<lb/>
State Senator Robert L. Humber<lb/>
ind Frank M. Wooten, member of the<lb/>
House of Representatives, met with<lb/>
h group of faculty members Decem-<lb/>
ber 8. to discuss various topics re-<lb/>
lating to higher education in the<lb/>
tate. particularly matters relating<lb/>
to the welfare and progress of the<lb/>
college here.<lb/>
The program was conducted in-<lb/>
formally. During the session the leg-<lb/>
islators answered a series of ques-<lb/>
tions posed by members of the au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
Th Humber placed emphasis on<lb/>
"intimate nersonal contact" as the<lb/>
vost effective way for the individual<lb/>
tn make his needs, his wants, and his<lb/>
orfc o" view known to the legisla-<lb/>
tor. Mr. Wooten added that the su<lb/>
ort of alumni. Boards of Trustees,<lb/>
ve North Carolina Education Asso-<lb/>
-Mifion, and other individuals and<lb/>
T-rons would nrove heTnful to edu-<lb/>
ator! in nresentinor thir is to<lb/>
nrv.Kr! of the General Assembly.<lb/>
' Beth legislators indicated the need<lb/>
r nip, salaries for teachers. Mr.<lb/>
WTootn reminded his audience, how-<lb/>
'er. tht higher salaries will probab-<lb/>
lv mean mo1 taxes. Those  eonle<lb/>
u-ho " ih to eain additional financial<lb/>
nnoort should in turn be nrenared<lb/>
 o ) m ort some program<lb/>
r tn-tion whih would raise the<lb/>
nc-ov "unds, he said.<lb/>
"TosoherV Mr. Humber maintain-<lb/>
.t. "should not have to battle for re-<lb/>
I "oomition "nd reward every two years.<lb/>
1 eHtors should be champions of<lb/>
v. infnrpsts of teachers. They should<lb/>
tattle rnr fiP greatest cause in mo-<lb/>
rem society- -education<lb/>
Vho.r topics of interest in higher<lb/>
"ducation which received attention<lb/>
-ere standardization of salaries in<lb/>
tate institutions of higher learning,<lb/>
"revision of sabbatical years for fa-<lb/>
Hv members, adequate funds for<lb/>
tfttvel expenses for those participat-<lb/>
ing in the work of educational meet-<lb/>
drifts on the hdl behind Gsrrett Dorm, which wss lster taga and conventions, and provision<lb/>
(Daily Reflector Photo) j of fundf to farther research work.<lb/>
pjj-gjjj<lb/>
V  :(.   : k   i<lb/>
wigttgLjggUMagm<lb/>
<pb facs="00038617_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, DfiCEMhR 18<lb/>
 1958<lb/>
Rapid Speed Ends Life A Yuletide Tale<lb/>
V<lb/>
( lasses were over. Christmas holidays<lb/>
had begun. Students packed their suitcases<lb/>
nd began the long trek homeward. They<lb/>
were inxieua to get home to Christmas shop<lb/>
t begin the festivities.<lb/>
A group of students headed toward<lb/>
Charlotte. They had a long way to go. The<lb/>
roads were good. There was little traffic.<lb/>
They huri led along, picking up speed when<lb/>
they c mlu. A car came towards them and the<lb/>
driver blinked his lights indicating that there<lb/>
w;is u whammy or a patrolman up ahead. The<lb/>
students -lowed down.<lb/>
Later they regained their -original speed.<lb/>
The students in the back seat turned around<lb/>
to peer Intermittently out the back window<lb/>
to make sure no cop was in sight. They kept<lb/>
a good watch.<lb/>
The students were making good time.<lb/>
They drove faster and faster.<lb/>
In the woods at the edge of the road a<lb/>
trolman kept his lonely vigil. His job to<lb/>
apprenend all speeders, to try to protect those<lb/>
 ho risk their lives and the lives of others by<lb/>
bi eaking the law.<lb/>
lie saw them speed past, cursed under<lb/>
his breath, and started his car. He came out<lb/>
of thi wovds onto the highway. Two cars<lb/>
were now between him and the speeding stu-<lb/>
dents. He gunned his motor. He tried to catch<lb/>
them.<lb/>
He passed the two cars and looked in<lb/>
vain for the carload of students. They must<lb/>
be far ahead. He drove faster and faster.<lb/>
Then he saw them. Before he reached<lb/>
them he called for an ambulance. But medical<lb/>
aid would do these students no ood.<lb/>
The car was overturned in a ditch just<lb/>
the r ad. Four students lay deaddead<lb/>
bj their own hands, their carelessness. The<lb/>
patrolman had been too late. The speeding<lb/>
r had missed the curve.<lb/>
Fires Cause Awareness<lb/>
The recent fire at Our Lady of the An-<lb/>
gels School in Chicago in which close to 100<lb/>
children and several nuns perished or were<lb/>
s riously injured has caused school officials<lb/>
all over ihe nation to be more aware of the<lb/>
possibilities of fires in their own schools.<lb/>
Some schools have set-up rigid fire pre-<lb/>
vent! n procedures such as fire drills. Some<lb/>
havo turned their fire prevention program<lb/>
r to the capable hands of the city fire de-<lb/>
partments.<lb/>
East Carolina has been lucky thus far;<lb/>
we have had no large fires. For this reason<lb/>
we have grown lax. Cigarettes are thrown in<lb/>
trash cans outside of classrooms. Although<lb/>
these cans were placed there for cigarettes,<lb/>
y .ro often mistaken for waste cans and<lb/>
usually filled with paper.<lb/>
.lthuugh there is a rule against smoking<lb/>
in classrooms, many teachers allow it.<lb/>
There are no fire drills at East Carolina<lb/>
in any buildings. There seems to be no fire<lb/>
prevent 71 program whatever.<lb/>
What would happen if a fire broke out<lb/>
in Austin Building? Would the many stu-<lb/>
dents and professors on the top floor perish<lb/>
did those in Chicago? Or would we be<lb/>
lucky? Who wants to take such a chance?<lb/>
Students should be made aware of the<lb/>
dangers of fires here on campus. They should<lb/>
 row what to do if a fire broke out in any<lb/>
building on campus, especially Austin. We<lb/>
uld have a fire prevention program. We<lb/>
should obey fire prevention rules. We should<lb/>
have fire prevention rules.<lb/>
Dean Ruth White reports that there has<lb/>
been talk of having fire drills in the women's<lb/>
dormitories. This is good. This is wise. When<lb/>
over 100 persons are housed in one building,<lb/>
the possibilities of a fire pose a great danger<lb/>
to all concerned. A fire drill would not be<lb/>
silly, elementary, or childish; it is essential.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Xarac changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1962.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Intercollegiate Press<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Enter as Second-class matter December 3, 1925 at<lb/>
-he U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb/>
the act of March 8, 1879.<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
JoAnne Parks<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Associate Editors<lb/>
To-Sports Editors<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Cooy Editor<lb/>
Cartoonists<lb/>
 Derry Welker<lb/>
Billy Arnold, Pat Harvey<lb/>
Johnny Hudson, Bill Boyd<lb/>
 Bob Harper<lb/>
 Jean Ann Watere<lb/>
Billy Arnold, D rrv Walker<lb/>
Columnists James Corbet, Derry Walker, Billy<lb/>
Arnold, Nancy Lilly, Bob Harper, Pat Harvey,<lb/>
Tom Jackson<lb/>
Xew Staff Betty Maynor, Pat Fanner, Wilma<lb/>
Fait, Libby Williams, Jackie Linville, Claudia<lb/>
Tod, Log Whiting, Tom Jackson, Bonnie Rut-<lb/>
!edge, Pat Keel,<lb/>
Proofreading Staff . Gwen Johnson, Shirley Lewie,<lb/>
Marcel;? Vogel, Jean Ann Watort, Melborne<lb/>
Prigen.<lb/>
Women's Circulation Manager Susan Ballance<lb/>
Werner's Circulation Staff  Jo Ann Baker,<lb/>
Carolyn Baxley, Jean Capps, Nancy Cox, Emily<lb/>
Lurrin, Sara Elkins, Judy Gay, Shirley Gay, Jack<lb/>
Harris, Janie Harris, Kay Hood, Joan Horton,<lb/>
Deanne Johnson, Dot Jones, Ida May Johnson,<lb/>
Irvene Jones, Babs Moore, Carole Rankin, Gayle<lb/>
Swinson<lb/>
Men's Circulation Manager  .. Jamei Trice<lb/>
Men's Circulation Staff Billy Nye, Robert Greene<lb/>
Theta Chi pledgee<lb/>
By BETTY JEAN MOBLEY<lb/>
The Christmas is symbolic of some-<lb/>
thing different, to almost every per-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
As a child grows older, some of the<lb/>
fantasy of Christmas departs for-<lb/>
ever. Christmas morning, neverthe-<lb/>
less, is still very exciting. The older<lb/>
hoys anil qirls also look forward to<lb/>
annual Chiistmas plays, drawing<lb/>
names, Christmas carols, and school<lb/>
and church parties. Christmas in-<lb/>
cludes getting out of school, picking<lb/>
out pecans, eating sweets, and stay-<lb/>
ing iv; late. They also wish for a<lb/>
white Christmas and a present from<lb/>
1 special friend.<lb/>
To sophisticated young adults the<lb/>
yuletide season is a gay social whirl.<lb/>
New clothes, fancy parties, cashmere<lb/>
sweaters and misletoe constitute the<lb/>
holiday season. Friends are home<lb/>
from school; there are long mornings<lb/>
just meant for late sleepers and long<lb/>
nights made for gaity and fun.<lb/>
For those who have been away too<lb/>
long, Christmas is the time for that<lb/>
visit back home. The serviceman, the<lb/>
career girl, and the favorite nephew<lb/>
return to old friends and relatives.<lb/>
To them Christmas denotes renewed<lb/>
friendships quiet evenings, small<lb/>
parties, and fine food.<lb/>
Christmas signifies love and giving<lb/>
for most parents. Those that help<lb/>
Santa for the first time received a<lb/>
special thrill from their giving. On<lb/>
Chiistmas morning parents exclaim<lb/>
with mock suprises at Santa's gifts.<lb/>
The rewards derived from watching<lb/>
shining faces are significant of the<lb/>
yuletide season to many parents.<lb/>
Unhappily Christmas is a burden to<lb/>
sumo people. The harried house wife<lb/>
has extra work at Christmas time.<lb/>
There are more cooking and cleaning,<lb/>
too much company, and children<lb/>
underfoot. Christmas represents use-<lb/>
less delay to some businessmen. They<lb/>
dislike office parties and begrudge<lb/>
Christmas bonuses. Hardheaded pub-<lb/>
lic servants scorn the Christmas spirit<lb/>
that stimulates the annual rush.<lb/>
The story about the Williams<lb/>
family illustrates how Christmas is<lb/>
celebrated by many neople. On a<lb/>
rireay Christmas Eve, the Williams'<lb/>
were eating the last of their scanty<lb/>
provisions. There was no joy in the<lb/>
carts of this desolate group.<lb/>
Suddenly, a handsome man burst<lb/>
into the room and cried, "David, I<lb/>
am your long losf brother Ed. Come<lb/>
with me and you shall never want<lb/>
again Ed had been in Europe for<lb/>
many years, and there he had became<lb/>
very wealthy. The only thing he did<lb/>
not have was the love and warmth of<lb/>
a home. He promised David he would<lb/>
supply his family's every need in<lb/>
return for their love.<lb/>
Under the generous agreement of<lb/>
Uncle Ed, the Williams' became a<lb/>
very influential family. One summer<lb/>
day. ten and one-half years after the<lb/>
fateful Christmas, a lady who had<lb/>
known the Williamses during their<lb/>
poverty came to call.<lb/>
"You know Mrs. Williams said<lb/>
"that David and Ed are in business<lb/>
together. Uncle Ed furnishes all the<lb/>
ca tial and does most of the import-<lb/>
ant work, but David handles all the<lb/>
moneythat is, the projects. I de-<lb/>
dare, the girls keep me so busy when<lb/>
they're home from 3chool chatted<lb/>
Mrs. Williams. "They have to buy so<lb/>
many clothes and entertain so much<lb/>
it's almost a burden. By the way,<lb/>
we're having a little celebration today<lb/>
in honor of Uncle Ed's birthday.<lb/>
Won't you join us?"<lb/>
Seated at a beautifully set table,<lb/>
the humble woman noticed that the<lb/>
guest of honor was not present.<lb/>
"Where is Uncle Ed?" she asked.<lb/>
Mrs Williams stammered and then<lb/>
explained , "Well, you see, the table<lb/>
only seats fourteen so there's really<lb/>
no room. Anyway, Uncle Ed doesn't<lb/>
mind<lb/>
Aa the family wished each other<lb/>
1 merry time on Uncle Ed's birthday<lb/>
?nd opened the gifts they had ex-<lb/>
changed, the kind visitor stared in<lb/>
amazement. "Are there no gifts for<lb/>
Uncle Ed?' She asked.<lb/>
Of course, we have gifts for Uncle<lb/>
Ed answered Mrs. Williams. Yes-<lb/>
terday I bought some handkerchiefs<lb/>
for only a quarter piece that look<lb/>
hwt like linen. I got some ties for<lb/>
bfif price because they were soiled a<lb/>
little. Uncle Ed won't know the dif-<lb/>
ference<lb/>
This story does seem a little far-<lb/>
fetched; but to condemn the Wfl-<lb/>
Jbmses is to condem one's self. Wtoea<lb/>
man was poor and helpless, Christ<lb/>
came on the first Christmas night to<lb/>
make those who accept the Word<lb/>
joint heirs with him in his heavenly<lb/>
Kingdom. Through His mercy and<lb/>
goodness Mankind's spiritual needs<lb/>
sre fulfilled and his heavenly home<lb/>
assured. Yet, at Christmas, the time<lb/>
of his birth, Christ it crowded out<lb/>
Season's Greeting's<lb/>
AU$ff0dr you kt ?$<lb/>
Tituy<lb/>
DEATH Provides Tears<lb/>
SALESMAN Reviewed As Best Play In Years<lb/>
Last week several hundred persons<lb/>
with the : emains of tears on their<lb/>
faces left McGinnis Auditorium pos-<lb/>
sessed with a feeling mingled with<lb/>
depression and excitment. The pre-<lb/>
sentation they witnessed was not<lb/>
merely a play to be discussed and<lb/>
remembered for only a few weeks.<lb/>
DEATH OF A SALESMAN will be<lb/>
talked about today, tomorrow, and<lb/>
many years following because, in a<lb/>
matter of few words, it was "jure<lb/>
gold For the first time this review-<lb/>
er Is qualified in saying that DEATH<lb/>
was superb, a little word that is over-<lb/>
used in most cases, but in particular<lb/>
instance it i? the only adjective that<lb/>
describes the play's entirety.<lb/>
"Bubba" Driver has always per-<lb/>
formed excellently on the EC stage,<lb/>
but Saturday night his flawless in-<lb/>
terpretation of Arthur Millers prized<lb/>
character, Willy the salesman, marks<lb/>
the most 15 riceless acting that I have<lb/>
ever watched on this campus. He<lb/>
changed cnaracter with the ease of a<lb/>
trooper and held the audiences' at-<lb/>
tention from the time he hovered onto<lb/>
the stage until his quick exit. The<lb/>
fact that he was portraying a char-<lb/>
acter elapsed, Mr. Driver WAS Willy.<lb/>
When Willy died, a part of the audi-<lb/>
ence seemed to die with him.<lb/>
Driver does not deserve just or-<lb/>
chids, he should be awarded an entire<lb/>
collection of orchids and the gold<lb/>
metal for the best actor of the year.<lb/>
And following in his footsteps,<lb/>
another ; erformer goes down in East<lb/>
Carolina's history, Leigh Dobson.<lb/>
Leigh, in the part of Linda, Willy's<lb/>
wife, surprised everyone in her first<lb/>
dramatic role. The almost perfection<lb/>
of her portrayal was in itself a mir-<lb/>
acle, but to describe the feeling she<lb/>
must have possessed is beyond words.<lb/>
Her laughter, her screams and her<lb/>
tears were that of a woman who<lb/>
worship; ed her husband with undy-<lb/>
ing love. Over Willy's grave Miss<lb/>
Dobson brought tears to the stone-<lb/>
face and placed a lump in the throat<lb/>
of each viewer. Along with the ter-<lb/>
rific Mr. Driver, Leigh Dobson also<lb/>
takes her place with the cream of the<lb/>
crop.<lb/>
Jim Roper, a newcomer to the play-<lb/>
house, and Bill Haislip. to be remem-<lb/>
bered for ADMIRABLE CRICHTON,<lb/>
Vere commendable in the roles of the<lb/>
two beloved sons. Jim, not only looked<lb/>
his part, but played it with the air of<lb/>
a professional. Bill as the he-man<lb/>
boy in the past wasn't quite as be-<lb/>
lievable as he was in the role of the<lb/>
casanova, in which he seemed very<lb/>
competent.<lb/>
Larry Craven and Charles Jenkins,<lb/>
father and son, were the comical<lb/>
characters of the play. Larry handled<lb/>
his satrical lines confidently and even<lb/>
looked typical with a cigar poking<lb/>
out of his mouth. Unlike Mr. Haislip,<lb/>
Charles Jenkins projected better as<lb/>
the young bookworm in the past. In<lb/>
the present looked fairly ridiculous<lb/>
with a bottle of scotch in his paw,<lb/>
but he looked more like a business-<lb/>
man than anyone save Bob Johnson,<lb/>
who stole a few lines from Willy, as<lb/>
the practical businessman who is mi-<lb/>
nus a heart.<lb/>
"The Woman" could easily have<lb/>
been the best character part, but<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
Lib Townsend wasn't quite seductive<lb/>
enough in her black slip. Her roman-<lb/>
tic scenes were entirely too stiff to<lb/>
grasp the proper mood. About the<lb/>
only attribute she occupied was her<lb/>
blood curdling laughter.<lb/>
Merle Kelly with his smooth man-<lb/>
ner and striking looks seemed to do-<lb/>
minate the stiige for a few moments<lb/>
ufter every entrance. Only when Willy<lb/>
orated did Mr. Kelly lose his stand-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The rest of the supporting cast<lb/>
were good in their respective roles<lb/>
and should he congratulated for their<lb/>
job well done.<lb/>
Paul Minnis of the art department<lb/>
designed the sets and congratulations<lb/>
are extended to him and his accom-<lb/>
plices for their part in setting the<lb/>
atmosphere for the play.<lb/>
Dr. J. A. Withey deserves a hand<lb/>
of thanks for making this play a suc-<lb/>
cess it was. Dr. Withey did a beauti-<lb/>
ful job of directing. The rest of the<lb/>
staff composed of the different com-<lb/>
mittees, and R. T. Rickert, technical<lb/>
director; Pat Baker, stage manager,<lb/>
end Janice Saunders, assistant stage<lb/>
manager, also take special mention<lb/>
for their necessary roles capably<lb/>
done.<lb/>
Mail; Sympathetic, Scolding<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Jack and Jill went up the hill as<lb/>
the story goes.<lb/>
It was the first time they had been<lb/>
p thp 'ill since they had spent their<lb/>
previous 17 years in the cradle, and<lb/>
:t few years in the lower classifica-<lb/>
tions of indocrination. It was a first<lb/>
anil they were stricken with a horrible<lb/>
ease of nerves. And rightly so for the<lb/>
hill was steep and they were tired<lb/>
after such a hard climb for "goodies'<lb/>
through the halls of learning.<lb/>
But despite this fact both became<lb/>
reconciled to the fact they were "out<lb/>
of their league After a while both<lb/>
became adjusted to their surround-<lb/>
ings' and started to branch out into<lb/>
the extra-curricular world around<lb/>
them.<lb/>
There were trying times but Jack<lb/>
and Jill had the guts to withstand the<lb/>
situations that engulfed them. You<lb/>
see both were editors of the college<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
And it was an honor! So they<lb/>
thought.<lb/>
But they were wrong. You see be-<lb/>
cause they were misled during their<lb/>
early years of indoctrination. They<lb/>
wore led to believe that freedom of<lb/>
the press existed on the hill.<lb/>
They were definitely wrong.<lb/>
As the story goes Jack and Jill<lb/>
tumbled down the hill in a fashion.<lb/>
Everett Parker<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
The story "On Detecting Commun-<lb/>
ists" by a "Transplanted Yankee"<lb/>
should have been called "Phillup<lb/>
Space for that is about all it did.<lb/>
But "Transplanted Yankee" is really<lb/>
a MAN! He states he has received<lb/>
much of his education from the South<lb/>
"through her generosity with schol-<lb/>
arship s, fellowships, etc and his<lb/>
present monthly paycheck.<lb/>
About 90 of the Southern people<lb/>
oppose Communism and race-mixing.<lb/>
Did somebody say something about a<lb/>
a "bad conscience?" Nuff sod!<lb/>
Seems like "Transplanted Xnke"<lb/>
doesn't care for that Nasty Old Pro-<lb/>
fessor who talked about those nice,<lb/>
parity-waist "Reds' (Communists to<lb/>
you) who spread interracial-and left-<lb/>
wing, radical propaganda through<lb/>
some college and university Founda-<lb/>
tions and their lecturers, "liberal (?)"<lb/>
professors, "liberal" text-booka, etc.<lb/>
It seems like the Nasty Old Pro-<lb/>
fessor documented his evidence, which<lb/>
should satisfy any aspiring young<lb/>
Ph.D or other "egg-heads<lb/>
Now we Southerners like Yankees<lb/>
even transplanted ones. In two<lb/>
World Wars and the Korean mess<lb/>
kicked up by those heavenly people<lb/>
called Communists, many of us fought<lb/>
side by side with Yankees. We found<lb/>
them first-class fighting men and<lb/>
buddies, as our grandpappies did in<lb/>
1861-65. But we Southerners like<lb/>
Yankees (AND SOUTHERNERS)<lb/>
who believe in the Red, White, and<lb/>
L!uenot just, the Red, Black, and<lb/>
Tan.<lb/>
We hope to hear more from "Trans-<lb/>
lanted Yankee" and his kind. A<lb/>
leader of the newly organized state-<lb/>
wide States' Rights organization here<lb/>
in North Carolina said he hoped they<lb/>
would go on writing and talking. It's<lb/>
increasing the party membership,<lb/>
and will make wonderful reading for<lb/>
the folks back home along about state<lb/>
election time. Out there in the coun-<lb/>
try the folks retain some quaint, old-<lb/>
fashioned American ideas about free<lb/>
speech, free press, free assembly,<lb/>
etcideas abandoned by most of<lb/>
our city newspapers, radio, and tele-<lb/>
vision stations. Such American ideas<lb/>
as are contained in the Bill of Rights<lb/>
were never held by Communists or<lb/>
their fellow-travelers and the so-called<lb/>
"liberals(?) There are liberals of<lb/>
the old Voltaire school who believe<lb/>
as Voltaire is reputed to have said<lb/>
of the Church of his day: "I detest<lb/>
and abhor everything you teach, but<lb/>
I will die for your right to teach it<lb/>
SUCH TRUE LIBERALS DO NOT<lb/>
WRITE OR OTHERWISE PRES-<lb/>
SURE TELEVISION STATION<lb/>
OWNERS TO SUPPRESS CRITIC-<lb/>
ISM OF COMMUNISM AND RACE-<lb/>
MBXrNG IN OUR PUBLIC<lb/>
SCHOOLS OVER THEIR STA-<lb/>
TIONS! We also hope that our edu-<lb/>
cational institutions do not fall into<lb/>
this way of suppressing the thinking<lb/>
and free expression of their facul-<lb/>
ties and students ON ANY SIDE OF<lb/>
A QUESTION!<lb/>
I will bet my recMxfce hound<lb/>
(German 'police dog) against "Trans-<lb/>
planted Yankee's" thin dime that he<lb/>
could lick the Christmas stuffing out<lb/>
of that Nasty Old Professor who<lb/>
talked against those nice "Reds IF<lb/>
he would only meet the professor in<lb/>
a public debate. Maybe the Trana-<lb/>
planted Yankee" is a mite afraid of<lb/>
the Old Professor's two six guns. Now<lb/>
we all know that in TV Western<lb/>
(Continued on Page 4)<lb/>
Spirit Ingredients<lb/>
Get A School; Stir<lb/>
Spirit Slowly; Add<lb/>
Fertilizer Carefully<lb/>
By DERRY WALKER<lb/>
Many people get fed up hear,<lb/>
t!k about school spirit.<lb/>
I do too.<lb/>
In the first place, it seems jrou are ob<lb/>
sunoosed to hive spirit on certain occ<lb/>
like ball games, pep rallies, etc. You're sup-<lb/>
nosed to turn it on like a beer tap and get<lb/>
dnmk off it when special events occur. It's<lb/>
n esthetic sensation of unity that comes and<lb/>
poea like  Veze from the cean. bo it seems<lb/>
Jjct 1 say this much: some people ia<lb/>
?i'is srhool ire trying to do overnight the<lb/>
thin it toek other colleges and univi<lb/>
vears and years to do. They say thai<lb/>
a orcat. bijr. brawling southern college that<lb/>
ranks with the "big four that H<lb/>
"big foir" -my longer, it's the "big fi<lb/>
That's cute. The only thing big about<lb/>
this scho ! is the enrollment, and I<lb/>
onb' increased in the last few years S<lb/>
we b ve a "ood curriculum here, and<lb/>
'tnr all the time, and you'd better<lb/>
that a graduate of this school with a B. S.<lb/>
Degree is a mighty desirable fellow VYHERE-<lb/>
FVER he 'vnts to teach, but that's ai<lb/>
story; re-tTed, but another story.<lb/>
It's like this: it would be nice if ev<lb/>
erm could un flrvn to the refreshment stand<lb/>
t hall game, and get a few cans of school<lb/>
ei iit. ge high, and stait yelling all<lb/>
the nlace for the mighty fine football<lb/>
ers we have, or for the boys on the basl<lb/>
ball court who are trying hard, but it<lb/>
thf t easy.<lb/>
Yu know how long it takes a tree<lb/>
prow tall and handsome. You know thai<lb/>
the tree grows, limbs appear on its trunk:<lb/>
the limbs aren't just stuck on the sides<lb/>
the tee by some beneficient botany enthus-<lb/>
iast after it has reached a certain height,<lb/>
they just GROW BY THEMSELVES<lb/>
times goes by. Try to make the tree grow<lb/>
faster by spreading too much rich manure<lb/>
around its roots, and the young sapling will<lb/>
burn itself up, because it just wasn't meant<lb/>
to grow that way.<lb/>
This is just as true with a college, or<lb/>
anything else. It takes time. The limb of<lb/>
sch ol spirit will grow in this college: it w<lb/>
be long, but it won't be tomorrow, either.<lb/>
If the students of this, or any colK<lb/>
ars f nd of their school, that's fine. And.<lb/>
like the students of any school, they won't<lb/>
accepts gifts, the sun, the moon, and stars<lb/>
rf they don't want them. That's their privi-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Frattnties aren't the answer, clubs<lb/>
aren't the answer, the SGA isn't the tool<lb/>
that will build school spirit either; no one<lb/>
thing is. It takes ALL of these things, plus<lb/>
a change of faces here and there, and other<lb/>
modifications.<lb/>
In the end, it all depends on time; blood.<lb/>
sweat, and YEARS.<lb/>
Night Before Xmas<lb/>
Brings Joy, Cops<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
If I were a Beat Generation Man, which<lb/>
I'm not, I'd probably look forward to Christ-<lb/>
mas something like this:<lb/>
T'was the night before Christmas<lb/>
And all through The House<lb/>
Everybody was stirring drinks<lb/>
And getting high and passing<lb/>
out and all that.<lb/>
The stockings were hung along<lb/>
With the rest of The Girls<lb/>
And there was entertainment.<lb/>
The iight was burning on<lb/>
The front porch with care in<lb/>
Hopes that some customers would<lb/>
Drop in, but after a while we<lb/>
Figured everybody was either<lb/>
Home with their wives or kids<lb/>
Or else absent or something.<lb/>
I was passed out with a beer<lb/>
In the head with visions of<lb/>
dolls dancing in The Ocean<lb/>
When all of a sudden I<lb/>
Heard quite a clatter.<lb/>
I jumped up and screamed:<lb/>
"What is the matter?"<lb/>
A fat man came yelling<lb/>
"A raid! There's a raid<lb/>
I tolu him to be quiet that<lb/>
I was fed up with it all and<lb/>
He 34d okay he would.<lb/>
But a cop came in swinging<lb/>
A big stick around and hitting<lb/>
People and all that.<lb/>
He put his finger beaide his<lb/>
Nose and Snorted and Laughed<lb/>
And with a twinkle of his<lb/>
Eye He swung at me I said<lb/>
"Stop you fool. It ia Christmas<lb/>
Eve<lb/>
Then He called his cops in:<lb/>
"Come Ralph, Come Johnny, Come<lb/>
fcam and Harry; On Pete, On<lb/>
Larry, On Oscar and Nixon<lb/>
I heard them exclaim as I<lb/>
Ran out of sight, "Come hack.<lb/>
You fool<lb/>
And I fell down and broke my<lb/>
leg in the snow.<lb/>
y<lb/>
<pb facs="00038617_0003"/><lb/>
DEC LMbfcR la. 195b<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Carolina Drops Two NSC Games In Hectic Week<lb/>
SPORTS CHATTER<lb/>
By BILL BOYD<lb/>
Cary Native<lb/>
National Champ<lb/>
dents at the East C uolina-l.enoir Khyne basketball contest<lb/>
t rn a- im pondering h loach' Howard Porter, trailing<lb/>
ighl points with i-i iht minutes of playing lime to go. re-<lb/>
Vdaats ii' Kl after be hit two straight field goals and Nick<lb/>
i- beginning to find his shooting eye.<lb/>
rase, "Anyone can be  Monday morning quarter-<lb/>
. but it is hard to fully understand such strata-<lb/>
liege on December 9th, it was the same old<lb/>
 time left in the contest the "Pox" removed at least<lb/>
. d bj the time they were back m the contest<lb/>
 units or more. By the time it was all over<lb/>
76 with our Pirates on the short end. We no<lb/>
nference play. With players such as Nick<lb/>
dimv. Ik. Ridduk. Jess Carry, Joe Plaster. Don Smith<lb/>
StarreM dis ig tin- potential ability of the best<lb/>
a a ways get oUI teeth kicked in by the<lb/>
 get whip-<lb/>
ytime. Of<lb/>
It n the fact thai<lb/>
tting vith<lb/>
' gW<lb/>
I to a<lb/>
 e last<lb/>
irt tilt, but<lb/>
 I fan i<lb/>
 .lams andj<lb/>
 the all<lb/>
Nid<lb/>
Adams at!<lb/>
ints'<lb/>
FOX Porter<lb/>
&amp; imk<lb/>
 -tmk m neck a out this time in making opinion-<lb/>
then lt tm of paper do wi have here if one can-<lb/>
, ii as !i evs tit 1 realise that  few well 'hosen words<lb/>
is Had. by many, but students have<lb/>
 . have been known I i Becond guess. I have<lb/>
vitl eluctance that I print this but firmly<lb/>
Bob Sawyer, Greensboro senior, was one of the big meo in last<lb/>
week's clos loss to Carolina. Sawyer is a backstroker.<lb/>
Charlie Adams, senior guard, will be a starter tonight when ECC<lb/>
plays host to Newlvrry.<lb/>
ss<lb/>
Lose To Carolina<lb/>
<lb/>
Jim Mallory<lb/>
.ina. with the basketball team we<lb/>
,  . H is sp  it on the . art of the<lb/>
 more encouragement when they are<lb/>
 i rame, an ! perhaps it is ESS "tr.eV-<lb/>
l  si cere anticipation that every student<lb/>
j in t ie East Cat liua gymnasium<lb/>
Newberry gets underway tonight. We<lb/>
way. yell out heads off, and to coin another phrase.<lb/>
i ar hall rth to a well deserved iclory over this<lb/>
I i.  ti am<lb/>
Around 'he Campus<lb/>
 a fim job in promoting a high school<lb/>
tean again this year. Not only does it . give many<lb/>
    ,  earn some good money for<lb/>
they develop a<lb/>
st mding of the game<lb/>
able aid to them<lb/>
ich the sport.<lb/>
tseba coach, has<lb/>
llcLaurin, Chailie<lb/>
son, Dean Robhins,<lb/>
ug Watts. Harry<lb/>
I i many others<lb/>
Mi Jack Edwards.<lb/>
 Stokes High<lb/>
. expressed his belief<lb/>
I top notch<lb/>
Mallory's group. He<lb/>
ffi iated by Bill Altman and John Jones was as well<lb/>
et. Keo; op the good work fellows!<lb/>
Swimmers Plagued by Injuries<lb/>
fact 'hat Bob Sawyer is still nursing a weak ankle<lb/>
 ea lie) in the fall, that Tom Tucker, a 200 yard breast<lb/>
some libs broker in an auto accident also this fall, and<lb/>
 the aquateam has a fractured finger, UNC's<lb/>
 Pat Kary was almost biting his nails in the Pirate-Tarheel<lb/>
 wek. Ktst CaroKna could have tied the powerful Raleigh<lb/>
 .v at win hut tould not quite make it. The 50-36 score<lb/>
D you compare it with the 60-18 margin that UNC dumped<lb/>
: 'a merman.<lb/>
Spotlighting Intramurals<lb/>
Mr. farl Sw'tn and John Spoon are going to be two busy men<lb/>
ter. Over 25 teams have entered the intramural basket-<lb/>
: - e the gym em be allocated to the program two nights<lb/>
ring to be flayed at 6, 7, 8. 9, and 10 P. M. on each<lb/>
 There are going to be some mighty tired intramural of-<lb/>
ing .are of this tnrrid schedule. There is no other way<lb/>
another gym in the surrounding<lb/>
it i The Women's Recreation<lb/>
hi certainly entitled to have the<lb/>
;e care of its program also.<lb/>
: grams alone are specific and<lb/>
 examples that our college will almost<lb/>
nave another gym in the next few<lb/>
in order to give the students leisure time<lb/>
they expect. Any male students par-<lb/>
tn the intramural program this<lb/>
should endeavor to aid Smith and<lb/>
It took the verj Last race of the Conference loam in Raleigh tonight<lb/>
last Wednesday in College Martinets Buca will be all out<lb/>
rial Poo! for the Lhj <lb/>
Carolina Swim Team to turn<lb/>
0 improve themselves.<lb/>
The summaries for the ECC-UNC<lb/>
swim meet are as follows:<lb/>
i Martinez's lrj - fc relay (VNC) Time:<lb/>
tes by a 50-36 score. ' <lb/>
i . 100 vard 1  t le e i-nt ' , ,  i<lb/>
1  ,  l. Bob Huntei 2. Sam Douglas 3.<lb/>
ok ice the Bw sto ! an excel-<lb/>
' '  ndv Dodson<lb/>
 , nee of tieing tne R ileigh nsi<lb/>
1. Tom Guerrant<lb/>
It<lb/>
lie that another relay,<lb/>
?20 d free atyleTime<lb/>
it " fV BIOI <lb/>
400 aid . also kept LC s<lb/>
01 taking the meet. With<lb/>
these two relays in hand, the Tarheel<lb/>
of i ourse dominated the meet at<lb/>
the  ning and end but aftei the<lb/>
; few moments of the opening re-j<lb/>
2:17.5<lb/>
Harry Bloon (UNC) 2. Bob Con-<lb/>
nollj (ECC) S, Dave Garrison (ECC)<lb/>
50 'd free stleTime 24.4<lb/>
I. Hirnt Nash (UNC) 2. Jake Smith<lb/>
(El 3. Joe Kalkhurst (UNC)<lb/>
High Dive <lb/>
I Ken Mi iyette (ECC -245.1 pts)<lb/>
! Glenn Dyer (ECC205.5 pts) 3.<lb/>
Cashwell (CNC161.8<lb/>
Rudy (INC153.S pts)<lb/>
' (til d free style: 56.0<lb/>
ts) 4.<lb/>
Ire <lb/>
Nash (UNC) 2. Jim Meads<lb/>
I cc  Barney Alder (ECC)<lb/>
'mi v ,i back strokeTime 2:26.7<lb/>
 Sawyer (ECC) ind Bob Hunt-<lb/>
(UNC) (Dead Heat) 3. Harvey<lb/>
Hamrick (UNC<lb/>
ay until the finish of Lhe lasl it was<lb/>
ent si<lb/>
Mkiyette Tops in Diving<lb/>
K. n fuiyette no1 out 215.1<lb/>
. . gh diving department<lb/>
 i one i) that event ind<lb/>
 .: mm ite I ileni Dj ei w as i econd<lb/>
- ith 205.5 oints. This was the oi !<lb/>
event that the Piratea were able to<lb/>
, 'i t  so or 1 place positions<lb/>
t in 200 yard breast stroke<lb/>
. . ,t ick M I anr. and  m Tucker<lb/>
tok a first and Becond. B"b Sawyer,<lb/>
still favoring a previoualy bi"ken<lb/>
ankle, tui  . a<lb/>
cond nn"n01' l" 'a'1. u 'I; j1 .FCC  Chuck Wrye (UNC)<lb/>
dead heat with North Carolina s Bob ,rvn Tim-<lb/>
 oftn 100 vd free stvle rela (I M lime<lb/>
H mter lo.i first pla - , in the -0<lb/>
card back stroke.<lb/>
Taking Becond phots for East<lb/>
'arolina during Coo non conference<lb/>
match were Bob Conrfnllj in the 220<lb/>
110 yd free<lb/>
' Harry Bh<lb/>
rani (UNC)<lb/>
ttyleTime: 5:4.3<lb/>
m (UNC) 2. Tom Gur<lb/>
5. Tom C nnolly (ECC<lb/>
. ?00 vd breast stroktTime: 2:43.0<lb/>
2 minutes. 26. i<lb/>
Bears Crush Bugs<lb/>
!n Loop Tilt<lb/>
For the third consecutive season,<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne overcame the Memorial<lb/>
Gym "jinx as they handed East<lb/>
Carolina a 75-60 ticking last Friday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Sharked by the floor-play of little<lb/>
T mmy SeJari, All-Stater last sea-<lb/>
son, the visitors took a quick 7-0 lead<lb/>
in the opening minutes and' were<lb/>
nvvvi- headed. Charlie Adams, vete-<lb/>
ran Pirate guard, hit successive jump<lb/>
-hots to cut the lead to 12-9 but that<lb/>
was the closest the Bucs were to get.<lb/>
Dick W'hitis was the scorer for the<lb/>
lefend i g conference champs an he<lb/>
icked up 2 oints. Joe Ladd. rug-<lb/>
, o i center, proved to be the bi dif-<lb/>
 ference in the game. The former<lb/>
1 Wake Forest star and W'hitis con-<lb/>
trolled the backboards much to I<lb/>
ir rise of everybody.<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter's big men-<lb/>
Don Smith. Joe Plaster, and Dave<lb/>
 rett were never able to show too<lb/>
': strength under the boards.<lb/>
  rett, a freshman starter, was able<lb/>
! Hs own part of the time b '<lb/>
the end, it amounted to the re-<lb/>
of Ladd a the victory mar-<lb/>
 crin.<lb/>
longer playing in '<lb/>
shadows of his brother Tony, a for-<lb/>
ei Lenoir Rhyne star, kept the Pi-<lb/>
tes off-balance most of the night<lb/>
with his alert ball-handling. The sen-<lb/>
ior captain tossed in 11 points to ai i<lb/>
in the victory production.<lb/>
' harlie Adams and Nick Nichols<lb/>
vd hot moment- for the Piral<lb/>
hut not ei ough of them. Nichols had<lb/>
bad first half but came back strong<lb/>
  second half to finish ir uith<lb/>
' ' points. FK has 61 points for the<lb/>
: -on.<lb/>
East Carolina was behind at half-<lb/>
e and stayed that way most of the<lb/>
half with their closest margin<lb/>
beii  ine points.<lb/>
For Coach Billy Wells, it was his<lb/>
9isi conference victory since takintr<lb/>
 last season. He has yet t<lb/>
' r a d U at in conference play.<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne ended a 50 home<lb/>
winning streak of FTTnl onn<lb/>
..ro m ie nu.i aterfmnwai "n<lb/>
mrial Gym two years ago. Prior<lb/>
 , - r dpfeat, FCC had lost to U. of<lb/>
N rth Carolina in the dedication<lb/>
came.<lb/>
i<lb/>
3:41.2<lb/>
Rai dj<lb/>
Hod<lb/>
son<lb/>
Brent Nash 3,<lb/>
Harry Bloom 4. Joe Kalhurst<lb/>
uc<lb/>
free style. Dyei in the high dive,<lb/>
, . Meades in the 100 yard free j<lb/>
style, Tom Tucker at the 200 yard<lb/>
reast stroke even and Jake Smith<lb/>
in the 50 yard free atjle.<lb/>
Upset anticipations have been j<lb/>
aroused and when Fast Carolina<lb/>
The above picture shows the Pirates in action. They will be seeking<lb/>
,n number three a-jainst Newber.y tonight.<lb/>
Soon after Christmas. Macy"s in<lb/>
Neu York had a visi' from a boy<lb/>
"torning a large doll, which he trad-<lb/>
ed toi an arsenal of water pistols.<lb/>
"Who on earth would give you a<lb/>
doll he was asked. "My uncle he<lb/>
rej lied patiently. "He always does.<lb/>
He thinks I'm a niece<lb/>
(The Reader's Digest)<lb/>
 husband gave his wife a bath-<lb/>
M.be for Christmas because, he told<lb/>
hex as she unwrapped it, "the mo-<lb/>
ment the salesgirl pulled it out, I<lb/>
could see you in it With an affec-<lb/>
tionate hug his wife explained why:<lb/>
she had been wearing one just like<lb/>
tor two years.<lb/>
(The Readers Digest)<lb/>
0 . in anv way p<lb/>
John Spoone<lb/>
ossible. These men cannot<lb/>
Lhe program successful without a gicat<lb/>
lt.al eration from members concerning<lb/>
men things as meetings, paying strict attention<lb/>
i, keeping team scores, aiding in<lb/>
publicity, etc<lb/>
John Hudson and myself, along with' our entire staff, sincerely<lb/>
wish each and everyone of you a Merry Christmas whether you love to<lb/>
tball atch basketball or simply like a good game of cheaa.<lb/>
Coach Ray Martinet<lb/>
Wealthy Detroit matron to friend:<lb/>
! gaVe my husband a Cadillac for<lb/>
tmas so I woludnt have any-<lb/>
.it  to wiap.<lb/>
(The Reader's Digest)<lb/>
Prepare for The Coming Responsibilities<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Security<lb/>
Savings<lb/>
Military Service<lb/>
Retirement<lb/>
With Th<lb/>
State Life Insurance Company's<lb/>
Student Representative<lb/>
Gene Baker<lb/>
Phone 2066<lb/>
Campus Box: 791<lb/>
City Box: 696<lb/>
je Assists<lb/>
!n ftua! AFROTC<lb/>
rod Project<lb/>
I  'arolina College students do-<lb/>
nated 13y pints of blood during a<lb/>
visit to the campus by a bloodmcbile<lb/>
"mm th.e Tidewater District, of the<lb/>
American Red Cross.<lb/>
Recruiting dono-s and assisting<lb/>
with arrangements foi the Biocd-<lb/>
nobile visit is an annual project of<lb/>
the Cadet Corps of the Air Force<lb/>
! ROTjC.  apt. Robert YV. Vining of the<lb/>
1-ROTC staff assisted cadets in<lb/>
their activities.<lb/>
Members of fraternities and soro-<lb/>
rities on the campus participated in<lb/>
the program Tuesday by serving cof-<lb/>
fee to donors. The Pi Kap.a Alpha<lb/>
fraternity, headed by Thomas A. Far-<lb/>
low, received recognition as the cam-<lb/>
pus organization having the largest<lb/>
number of donors.<lb/>
OPPORTUNITY IN SELLING<lb/>
FOR LOCAL STUDENTS<lb/>
A Utah publishing firm, erpanding distribution<lb/>
in thi- are?, is seeking several local college stu-<lb/>
dents, qualified in sales and promotion, to sell and<lb/>
distribute a new lint of accounting forms to local<lb/>
'wholesale and retail businesses, stationery stores,<lb/>
banks, etc.<lb/>
This is an opportunity to work with a progres-<lb/>
sive - mpany that has a unique and necessary<lb/>
product to providt the american small business<lb/>
mun.<lb/>
This offer should appeal to busy college stu-<lb/>
dents that cannot work regular hours, since you<lb/>
may a 'range your own sales schedule. Students<lb/>
in Utah and Idaho have averaged $3.00 per hour<lb/>
for their efforts. Moreover, once your original<lb/>
contacts are made, you receive the same commis-<lb/>
skn on reorder business.<lb/>
APPLY TO:<lb/>
T. LELAND SHREEVE CO.<lb/>
2538 Van Buren Avenue<lb/>
'Ogden, Utah<lb/>
<pb facs="00038617_0004"/><lb/>
- -<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THUK&amp;UAY, DKCKMUKK 18, iy6s<lb/>
Jack Frost At Work<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
Fraternities, Sororities<lb/>
Entertain Members, Children<lb/>
Students Decorate Union<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Nu Entertains Children<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Nu social fraternity<lb/>
gave a party for underprivileged<lb/>
hi.dren December 16 at Aarvis Mem-<lb/>
orial Methodist Church. The Sal-<lb/>
vation Army furnished names of 35<lb/>
children. Each fraternity member<lb/>
drew a name and gave the child a<lb/>
gift.<lb/>
Drinks and cookies were served and<lb/>
bags of candy and fruit were given<lb/>
to each child.<lb/>
Approximately 100 people attended<lb/>
Members of the Baptiat Student<lb/>
Union of Stateoilege, Raleigh, vis-<lb/>
ited the Bajtist Student Center here<lb/>
December 13, and participated in a<lb/>
program of good fellowship arranged<lb/>
In their honor by officers and mem-<lb/>
bers of 'the ECC Baptist Student<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Ap, roximately 25 State College<lb/>
students attended a dinner and a so-<lb/>
cial hour at the Center and went<lb/>
Christmas ca'oling in Greenville with<lb/>
BSU members at East Carolina. The<lb/>
visitors from State College Included<lb/>
During the snowstrom last week Wright Circle<lb/>
. ampus into a winter wonderland.<lb/>
nd froze over exhibiting Jack Frost's art in turning<lb/>
including children, fraternity bro- I George Drown, BSU president, and<lb/>
thcrs, dates, and Santa Claus, Glenn Leroy Richardson. BSU director.<lb/>
 The visit of the State College stu-<lb/>
1hurch- ' lents to East Carolian will be follow-<lb/>
I'hi Beta Chi Gives Party ;fl in the spring by a trip to the Ra<lb/>
TV Classes Continue;<lb/>
Four Courses Added<lb/>
Carolina College is continuing women are enrolled in "Mathematics<lb/>
the .vinter quarter its program! f Finance. Dr. John Reynolds, in-<lb/>
tion bv closed-circuit tele- .tractor, has as assistants Martin<lb/>
G ddsworth of the faculty and Deloris<lb/>
Johnson and Shirley Hunt, graduate<lb/>
Ragland Assumes<lb/>
!FC Position<lb/>
- re included in<lb/>
now in progress, one in<lb/>
 , ; an ants of business,<lb/>
. mathematics, ;nd home eco-<lb/>
ics.<lb/>
ction by closed-circuit tele-<lb/>
n was introduced at the college in<lb/>
. ev when courses were offered<lb/>
eshman orientation, science, En-<lb/>
I social studies. An appro-<lb/>
ition of S75.000 from the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly provided<lb/>
funds for the purchase and installa-<lb/>
the equipment in the campus<lb/>
io and in classrooms used in the<lb/>
ram.<lb/>
ea are conducted on an ex-<lb/>
It- al basis and the results will<lb/>
assistants.<lb/>
"Introduction to Business a<lb/>
course on the freshman level, is also<lb/>
a new offering on the televised pro-<lb/>
gram. The fifty students who are en-<lb/>
rolled arc receiving instruction from<lb/>
Harold McGrath. Paige Parker is<lb/>
graduate assistant in .harge of the<lb/>
classroom.<lb/>
"Home Nursing" is the first TV<lb/>
course to he offered by the depart-<lb/>
1 home economics. Class work<lb/>
includes a seiies of ten filmed broad-<lb/>
oasts provided by the American Red<lb/>
Cross, lectures by Mabel Doughterty,<lb/>
and practical application of principles<lb/>
idied and evaluated over a two-1 by students working in the classroom,<lb/>
period. Dr. Corinne Rickert of "English Composition a freshman<lb/>
Phi Heta Chi Soro.ity, of which<lb/>
Vaiy lee Lawrence, is president, is<lb/>
-iving a Christmas Party for se-<lb/>
veral of the underpriviledged child-<lb/>
en in Greenville. Each member is<lb/>
buying a small gift to present to the<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Charles W. Reynolds,<lb/>
advisors of Phi Beta Chi, invited the<lb/>
sorority to have the party at their<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi To Attend Meet<lb/>
Beta Kappa Chapter of Pi Omega<lb/>
PI, honorary business fraternity, met<lb/>
for its regular monthly business<lb/>
meeting at the Y Hut on December<lb/>
!. Dr. Audrey Dempscy reported on<lb/>
tans for attending the national con-<lb/>
ontion of the fraternity in Chicago<lb/>
during the Christmas holidays.<lb/>
Julia Kendall and Amelita Thomp-<lb/>
son are the official delegates from<lb/>
Beta Kappa. There is a possibility<lb/>
that other students will attend. Dr.<lb/>
sey, who is the national presi-<lb/>
dent of the organization, will also<lb/>
college he will act as chairman ! .mrnd the convention.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Cadets Receive Awards<lb/>
Lt. Col. Edward J. Maloney, Pro-<lb/>
I fessor of Air icience, presented ten<lb/>
Thomas H. Ragland, has begun his<lb/>
duties as vice president of the Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Council at East Carolina<lb/>
College. He replaces George L.<lb/>
Slaughter. Jr who resigned.<lb/>
Ragland, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E.<lb/>
Ragland of Plymouth, is a member<lb/>
of the Kappa Sigma Nu social frat-<lb/>
ernity and serves as chaplain of the<lb/>
group. In 1956-1957 he was president<lb/>
of the freshman class. He is now<lb/>
ai hamentarmn of the Student Go-<lb/>
vernment Association.<lb/>
On the Interfraternity Council of<lb/>
the<lb/>
of the social committee, the judiciary<lb/>
committee, and the publicity commi-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
The Dterfraternitv Council is made<lb/>
up of representatives of the five so- AFROTC cadets Pr-Pee flight wings<lb/>
fraternities on the college cam-1 at a cermony in Austin Auditorium<lb/>
pus: Kappa Sigma Nu, Lambda Chi i December 11. In order to receive this<lb/>
loijrh campus made by Baptist stu-<lb/>
dents at the college here.<lb/>
BSU members at East Carolina<lb/>
who planning Saturday's program of<lb/>
events include Carolyn Tripp, presi-<lb/>
dent; Betty Lou Martin, Sandra Jen-<lb/>
nette, and Shirley Mozingo.<lb/>
ISC Fetes Members<lb/>
This week the Inter-Sorority coun-<lb/>
cil sponsored a tea for the members<lb/>
of the eight campus sororities. This<lb/>
was the first social event in which<lb/>
the ISC has taken part.<lb/>
Marty Kellam, ISC social chairman,<lb/>
Mong with social chairmen of the<lb/>
sororities presided over the affair and<lb/>
made all the arrangements for re-<lb/>
freshments and decoration. These<lb/>
members were: Eleanor Bowden, Del-<lb/>
ta Sigma Chi; Barbara McCoy, Lam-<lb/>
bda Tau; Jaye Finnigan, Pi Kappa;<lb/>
Keith Wilder, Kappa Phi Epsilon;<lb/>
Joyce Muston, Zeta Psi Alpha; Betty<lb/>
Lou Pierce. Delta Chi; Kathryn<lb/>
Grumpier, Pi Betta Chr, and Vivian,<lb/>
Lockhart, Kappa Delta Kappa.<lb/>
The main purpose for having this<lb/>
arty, which was held in the Alumni<lb/>
building, wis to meet the members of<lb/>
various sororities. Each sorority<lb/>
member wore name tags to identify<lb/>
their respective sororities.<lb/>
HSHMBBSMoOV BWBBBWBBVBHHBVBBVBBlBBBBBBBBKBBV - SBBBBBBWBBSa. BSSSSSSSSBBBSHBft SBSSV SWBSS BBBSS! ssssi<lb/>
Miss Cynthia Mendenhail. College Union director, and three student<lb/>
attempt to untangle tree lights at the decoration party December 10.<lb/>
Fleming Reports Increase<lb/>
In Foreign Language Study<lb/>
The foreign language department<lb/>
is showing an increase this i;chool<lb/>
year in offerings, number of students,<lb/>
and number of faculty members. En-<lb/>
rolled in the department are 322 men<lb/>
and women who are taking courses in<lb/>
French, Spanish, German, and Rus-<lb/>
lan, according to department head,<lb/>
James L. Fleming.<lb/>
A new course in Russian, offered<lb/>
this winter for the first time, is being<lb/>
attended by 12 students who are be-<lb/>
ginning their study of the language.<lb/>
Plans are to include a follow-up<lb/>
course during the spring quarter.<lb/>
German for beginners was taught<lb/>
at the college during the fall quar-<lb/>
ter for the first time in a number of<lb/>
years. A continuation course is now<lb/>
being given. Enrollment in German<lb/>
.lasses is now 47 students.<lb/>
French and Spanish, which have<lb/>
loon included in the college curricu-<lb/>
fac<lb/>
jltv Is director of closed-cir- course,<lb/>
, television. ' j and'is mcftlWtl Hi ft p<lb/>
Mathematics of Finance a course ter-quarter schedule of TV courses,<lb/>
ihomores, is the first televised I Eight sections of freshmen, with 161<lb/>
e offered hv the depart-1 students enrolled, are now being<lb/>
of mathematics. It is also one; taught by nine instructors who parti-<lb/>
first TV courses in which! cipate in broadcasts and by class-<lb/>
ber of students are being room teachers who assist students in<lb/>
a single instructor. drill work and in application of prin-<lb/>
roximately a hundred men and I ciples.<lb/>
Lambie Entertains Phi Omicron<lb/>
. tt cadet mm be  senior. He .- f 0nf J j<lb/>
ish Composition a fresnman and Theta Chi. Among its purposes mustass J<lb/>
was taught daring the Fall I are promotion of th iaftSJS  training and he must successfully l?" after the Me.<lb/>
!um for many years, ha<lb/>
naents, respectively, of 117 and 1<lb/>
students. Many of these stodenl<lb/>
majors in the department of f<lb/>
languages and will become tea<lb/>
f these subjects in the publi<lb/>
Te faculty of the<lb/>
gusges department was increa<lb/>
bchoo term from loui to<lb/>
bers. included, in addition t.j Mr. I<lb/>
img, are Mrs. fargu <lb/>
Roy Prince, and three i c<lb/>
ihe stafl, Robert R.<lb/>
Gertrude Giaf and Erie<lb/>
whom began work at the collet<lb/>
1 September.<lb/>
Kail<lb/>
4fce" associated fraternities<lb/>
ana encouragement of cooperation be-<lb/>
tween them in their relationship with<lb/>
the faculty, the student body, and<lb/>
administration of the college and with<lb/>
the public. The grou.i sponsors a<lb/>
Rush Week, now in progress and a<lb/>
Creek Week during the period when<lb/>
lew members are initiated.<lb/>
omplete summer camp.<lb/>
The cadets are Eugene M. Brown,<lb/>
Thomas A. Farlow, Thomas R. Gain-<lb/>
er, Charles C Hoffman, and Jack<lb/>
Keobberling<lb/>
hie at her apartment after the "Mes-<lb/>
siah" on Sunday, December 13. She<lb/>
served punch, cookies, cake, and nuts<lb/>
which were made by her. After a so-<lb/>
cial hour gifts were exchanged by<lb/>
Others are William 0. Meacham, members of the club<lb/>
C ilvin E. Mills, John P. Spoone, Leo<lb/>
W. Thacker, Jr and Eugene L. Whit-<lb/>
field, i<lb/>
TOP TV-Th Dinah Shore Chevy Show-Sunda,<lb/>
Pert E one Chevy Sr.cwroom-weeUy on ABC-TV.<lb/>
College Union Party Host<lb/>
The fifth annual Christmas deco-<lb/>
rating party was given at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Wednesday, December 10,<lb/>
at 7:00. The party, as always, was<lb/>
open to students.<lb/>
Assisting Ethelyn Maxwell, chair-<lb/>
man of the social committee, were<lb/>
Alice Bailey, lounge; Dorothy Smith,<lb/>
dance area; Carol White, bulletin<lb/>
hoard; and Doris Shamel, refresh-<lb/>
ments. The party was supervised by<lb/>
Mrs. Yvonne Smith, assistant recrea-<lb/>
tion director of the Student Union.<lb/>
Faculty Pianist<lb/>
Plays At Recital<lb/>
Selections by Scarlatti, Hindemith,<lb/>
and Chopin made up the program<lb/>
presented in McGinnie auditorium<lb/>
December 15, by Dr. Wolfgang<lb/>
Fttsch, faculty member. The pianist<lb/>
appeared under the sponsorship of<lb/>
the department of musk in a recital<lb/>
open to the public.<lb/>
Dr. Fetsch became known to a<lb/>
large audience in the eastern section<lb/>
of the state when he appeared No-<lb/>
vember 30 on the East Carolina pro-<lb/>
gram "Let's Go to College broad-<lb/>
cast over Channel 9.<lb/>
Monday's program opened with<lb/>
four sonatas by Scarlatti. The third<lb/>
sonata by the modern composer Paul<lb/>
Hindemith followed.<lb/>
(Continued from Page 2)<lb/>
the villain always offers to loan I<lb/>
hero a six gun so they can have a<lb/>
fair fight! I jn I at the Old Pi<lb/>
fesa d do that very thing.<lb/>
way, why doesn't ' T. Y find (<lb/>
for himself? Or maybe "Transpla:<lb/>
ed Yankee" feels that it is better I<lb/>
fight from the safety of the print<lb/>
age rather than meet the Old Pro-<lb/>
fessor in a public debate. The I<lb/>
States' Rights group here in<lb/>
Carolina would like to stage this de-<lb/>
bate. Complete freedom of spe-<lb/>
will be guaranteed to both sides.<lb/>
I fear East Carolina College can't<lb/>
long claim to have the first gen.<lb/>
"Commie-detector" in the State. Next<lb/>
state election time thousands of<lb/>
"Commie-detectors" will be walking<lb/>
into voting booths and register<lb/>
their detection of ultra-red and ultra-<lb/>
black. After that, as the song says.<lb/>
"There'll Be Some Changes Made<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
"The Nasty Old Profe?5 r<lb/>
Dr. Earle LeDaron<lb/>
The b-door 9-passenger Kingsirood iciih rear-facing back seat and automatic rear window<lb/>
Be our guest for a pleasure test . . .<lb/>
THIS IS THE ONE FOR WAGONS! 1950 CHEVY<lb/>
Chevrolet's five stunning<lb/>
new station wagons for 959<lb/>
are shaped to the new<lb/>
American taste with fresh,<lb/>
fine Slimline design. And<lb/>
they9 re beautifully practical<lb/>
with roomier, quieter<lb/>
Bodies by Fisher, an even<lb/>
smoother rid, new ease of<lb/>
liandUng!<lb/>
Wagons were never more beautiful or<lb/>
dutiful. From low-set headlights to<lb/>
wing-shaped tailgate, these '59 Chev-<lb/>
rolets are as sweet looking as anything<lb/>
on wheels. They're just about the<lb/>
handiest things on wheels, toofrom<lb/>
their overhead-curving windshield to<lb/>
their longer, wider load platform.<lb/>
Besides additional cargo space, you<lb/>
also get added seating room (4 inches<lb/>
more in front, over 3 inches In back).<lb/>
And you'll find such other practical<lb/>
advantages as new easy-ratio item-<lb/>
ing, Safety Plate Glass all around,<lb/>
bigger, safer brakes, smoother-ban-<lb/>
ever Full Coil suspension and a roll-<lb/>
down rear window (electrically oper-<lb/>
ated as standard equipment on the<lb/>
9-passenger Kingswood). Your dealer's<lb/>
waiting now with all the details on<lb/>
why this yearmow than<lb/>
Chevy's the one for wagons.<lb/>
Eckersley Names<lb/>
Browning State<lb/>
F Chairman<lb/>
Dr. E. R. Browning, director of the<lb/>
department of business, has been ap-<lb/>
pointed North Carolina state chair-<lb/>
man of the International Society for<lb/>
Business Education. The appointment<lb/>
was made by Dr. Ann L. Eckersley,<lb/>
President of the United States Chap-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Dr. Browning states that the pri-<lb/>
mary purpose of the International<lb/>
Society for Business Education is to<lb/>
ring the world into the business<lb/>
dassroom. The organization will hold<lb/>
ts annual meeting in February in<lb/>
Chicago. Dr. Browning will appear<lb/>
on the program as a group discussion<lb/>
oader. The subject will be "Weaving<lb/>
World Understanding Into the So-<lb/>
ial Business Areas<lb/>
The Society has a wide range of<lb/>
nembership among business teachers<lb/>
and business executives in North<lb/>
Carolina. The international organiza-<lb/>
tion has an excellent record of ac-<lb/>
complishment in promoting world<lb/>
i nder standings.<lb/>
Pika Rush Week Dance<lb/>
Last Thursday night Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity played boat to<lb/>
rusheee at a dance at the Greenville Country Club. This was one of the<lb/>
many activities each fraternity had planned for the week.<lb/>
t<lb/>
now-see the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's!<lb/>
manufacture<lb/>
no. no <lb/>
l<lb/>
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