<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038622_0001"/>
poet To Speak<lb/>
Ji '<lb/>
Hmi Puliter Prite winner<lb/>
t.egtn a series of<lb/>
ih nig hi under the<lb/>
Oanfurth Foundation<lb/>
nit-<lb/>
on<lb/>
cam I<lb/>
EasW<lb/>
rjg<lb/>
Bucs Seek Sixth Win<lb/>
When the Pirate. battle Elon College<lb/>
.Saturday night they will be seeking their<lb/>
sixth straight win. Game time is 8:eu<lb/>
in Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1959<lb/>
Number 16<lb/>
Viereck Will Discussl hslillls<lb/>
Problems, Literature A" S"ste" <lb/>
I<lb/>
the<lb/>
I<lb/>
I eak on the<lb/>
reserving In-<lb/>
i Machii t ce" Mon-<lb/>
the Library<lb/>
he a read-<lb/>
mentary<lb/>
elal implica-<lb/>
ln Firope:<lb/>
6a will be<lb/>
rt Wednes-<lb/>
. f hi-<lb/>
i illege. He is<lb/>
 on his-<lb/>
ln IS49 he won<lb/>
 his book of<lb/>
rum<lb/>
en other<lb/>
I 'irst-rate<lb/>
Among PETER VIERECK .<lb/>
From Hay night.<lb/>
8? Bormitorte<lb/>
Three Err dormitories are now<lb/>
equip H so receive transmissions<lb/>
from WWW'S. Campus Radio, through<lb/>
radio sets that do not have to be FM.<lb/>
Cotten, Jarvis, and Fleming Dorm-<lb/>
itories now have the necessary equip-<lb/>
ment to pick up the closed-circuit<lb/>
HI radio signals transmitted from<lb/>
' ovner Library. Jimmy Kirkland,<lb/>
i-nsident of WWWS Radio, reports<lb/>
Playhouse Gives Totting<lb/>
Shed' In McGinnis Tonight<lb/>
The Playhouse will resent the<lb/>
second performance of "The Pott-<lb/>
ing Shed" in Mcdinnis Auditorium<lb/>
tonight at 8:00 o'clock. The play, a<lb/>
three act mystery drama, began a<lb/>
three night run last night.<lb/>
The third major production for the<lb/>
Playhouse this year, the play is<lb/>
resident of WWWS Radio, retorts. . h SUPport (lf Spiritual<lb/>
"The equipment we've installed Fmphasis VVt.ek. Last night's per-<lb/>
as designed and built by Lawrence was f0u0wed by a critical<lb/>
. to speak Mon<lb/>
'Conservation<lb/>
!  Cnad-<lb/>
 r Amer-<lb/>
rupy the annual chair in American<lb/>
poetry and civilisation at the Uni-<lb/>
, n, versitv of Florence, Italy, on a Ful-<lb/>
i pring for Dr.<lb/>
 e campus an- bright grant.<lb/>
 recent issue Under the auspices of the George<lb/>
; V REVIEW con- FUiston Poetry Foundation, he de-<lb/>
rtiek OB "The livered a seriB of lectures tn 1956<lb/>
b e. They at the University of Clncinati. He<lb/>
THE REBEL  ent the summer of 1968 in Europe<lb/>
tin. doing research on modern cultural<lb/>
G lggen- history on a Rockerfeller travel grant.<lb/>
1949 and Other than formal lectures. Dr.<lb/>
 the first Viereck will visit classrooms and<lb/>
iliti in Europe informal sessions. Dr. Frank U<lb/>
second, he Hoskins of the English Depart-<lb/>
,t idy Nine- ment will head the committee. Dr.<lb/>
 v (story. Hubert Coleman of the Social Studies<lb/>
he lectured Department and Bryan Harrison,<lb/>
He spent rart editor of THE RE-BEL. will also<lb/>
sor to oc- serve on the committee.<lb/>
Rehr, our chief engineer. It has been<lb/>
in expensive operation, and a time-<lb/>
consuming ordeal, but we now have<lb/>
the most difficult task behind us; that<lb/>
installed and working. Now we're hop-<lb/>
ing to raise more money so that we<lb/>
may have the remainder of the dorm-<lb/>
itories included in the system<lb/>
Kirkland says.<lb/>
KirkVind reports that the jobs<lb/>
lone by Behr and Wendell W. Smi-<lb/>
ley. WWWS Technical Advisor, were<lb/>
lone most efficiently and the task,<lb/>
when compared to other colleges<lb/>
vith similar systems, was done well<lb/>
considering the limited amount of<lb/>
funds available for the project.<lb/>
"Systems similar to ours at other<lb/>
colleges have cost, in some instances,<lb/>
upwards of $2,000, "Kirkland says,<lb/>
"and we built our equipment and in-<lb/>
stalled it with only $228 donated for<lb/>
'his purpose by Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity, this contribution has been<lb/>
spent, and we're hoping now that the<lb/>
GA will give us some financial sup-<lb/>
o,t so that we may complete our<lb/>
work<lb/>
Kirkland comments that his staff<lb/>
moored only lf, and that, "we<lb/>
'come anyone interested in parti-<lb/>
ipating in radio work, especially<lb/>
formance was followed by a critical<lb/>
discussion led by Cleveland J. Brad-<lb/>
i,er, .Jr Religious Director for the<lb/>
College. Others on the pannel in-<lb/>
cluded Mr. James Warren, Director<lb/>
of Religious Drama, Scarritt College;<lb/>
Rev. W. W. Finlator; Dr. James<lb/>
Poindexter; and Mr. Ovid W. Pierce<lb/>
of the English Department.<lb/>
The lay has a spiritual theme.<lb/>
It bod a successful stage history.<lb/>
It was first produced on Broadway<lb/>
in the 1986-67 season and later in<lb/>
London. U was chosen on the "Ten<lb/>
Best Plays" of that season.<lb/>
"The Potting Shed" is the story<lb/>
of James Callifer, the son of a re-<lb/>
 owned atheist, who has suffered a<lb/>
!BpM of memory and is rejected by<lb/>
hts family. Merle Kelly, who also<lb/>
played the lead in "The Admirable<lb/>
Criehton" earlier this year, is doing<lb/>
the role of James.<lb/>
Other principles in the cast include<lb/>
Mary Margaret Kelly as Sara Cal-<lb/>
jf . lames' wife; Shirley Dixon as<lb/>
Mis. Callifer, his mother; and Sylvia<lb/>
Huston as Anne Callifer, his niece.<lb/>
Also appearing are Bill Haislip,<lb/>
Leigh Dobson, and Del Driver.<lb/>
SSm -The M. M- U u,  U. pi .r.  JETVES<lb/>
Sylvia Ruston, and Mary Margaret Kelly<lb/>
Student Council Plans<lb/>
Many Improvements<lb/>
i a 1Jt,o nft in<lb/>
temporary British novelist and movie formance Saturday night,<lb/>
writei Most of his dramatic wort I addition to I ese performances,<lb/>
,mu(es film scenario the Playhouse is making arrange-<lb/>
The college ; layers will take the ents to take the play on tour. A<lb/>
erformance to State College for dramatized preview of the play was<lb/>
the Drama Festival tomorrow night, given on "Lets (Jo To College on<lb/>
i , ,i-v"r TV ?Vio on dnririav<lb/>
The campus' production is directed ani, will return with the final per- WNCT-TV tins past Sunday<lb/>
b Associate Director, of the Play-<lb/>
where technical aspects are concern-<lb/>
house. Dr<lb/>
Robert L. Rickert. In<lb/>
eo.<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
liege De-<lb/>
a of which<lb/>
irected to-<lb/>
venient st<lb/>
and to<lb/>
 mdards.<lb/>
 tive fi m<lb/>
. General As-<lb/>
The Campus Radio president added<lb/>
that many new nighttime programs<lb/>
were in the making, and that the<lb/>
jtaff was very interested in knowing<lb/>
what types of programs the students<lb/>
desired. One program recently ini-<lb/>
, Itiated, has a "request-type" format,<lb/>
,nd is titled. "Dedicated To You<lb/>
Kirkland. in his comments, sub-<lb/>
mitted a request that those students<lb/>
in AM-equipved dorms set thier ra-<lb/>
dio dials on 91.8 and judge the new<lb/>
vttempts at better listening the sta-<lb/>
tion is now making.<lb/>
"We want the students to eritize<lb/>
l, so that we may better our work<lb/>
charge of Technical Direction was<lb/>
Dr. J. A Withey, Director of the<lb/>
Playbouse. The Stage Manage, for<lb/>
 , , !a i Doris Bobbins.<lb/>
Graham Greene is s famous con-<lb/>
in education.<lb/>
establishment of scholarships for stu<lb/>
ients; encouraging greater interest<lb/>
among alumni groups; snd working<lb/>
toward improvement of scholastic<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
President John D. Messick. discus-<lb/>
sing the Council commended the plan<lb/>
of organising a group of interested<lb/>
Fisher, Gentry<lb/>
deceive Future<lb/>
Teacher H(ws<lb/>
a speaker at' students desirous of building a better dt,ternllne their likes and dis-<lb/>
which rogram at the college.<lb/>
t new "The plan he said, "is a whole-<lb/>
some and an ambitious one.<lb/>
BI1U sja, .- <lb/>
likes he said, "because when they're<lb/>
happy, so are we<lb/>
50 re. resentatives<lb/>
na counties<lb/>
students on the<lb/>
group of students working for tne<lb/>
general good of the college will be<lb/>
able to further the development of the<lb/>
mcil as school in many ways.<lb/>
ship will<lb/>
ish to join.<lb/>
ment Associa<lb/>
hope he added, "that one of<lb/>
the major objectives of the Council<lb/>
will be the recruitment for enroll-<lb/>
Vice President I ment at East Carolina of students<lb/>
 . W. Jen- ! 0f high academic standards.<lb/>
- a program of<lb/>
 let way.<lb/>
Council will be<lb/>
n of the<lb/>
.ncil now being<lb/>
.i-ing the col-<lb/>
nen. legis-<lb/>
terested In edu-<lb/>
s pec i ally<lb/>
for careers<lb/>
SGA Office Hours<lb/>
Monday-Friday4:00-6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday10:00-12:00 s.m.<lb/>
Other hours will be srrsnged<lb/>
by appointment.<lb/>
11 msil concerning SGA mat-<lb/>
ten. .hould be msiled to Box 1120.<lb/>
E.C.C,<lb/>
Mth Department To Hear<lb/>
Johnson Speak This Week<lb/>
Music Features<lb/>
Drake, Perry<lb/>
Elizabeth Drake and George E<lb/>
Perry, faculty members of the De-<lb/>
partment of Music, will appear in a<lb/>
recital of works for two pianos Sun-<lb/>
day at 3:00 p.m. in the Austin Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Seven selections will make up their<lb/>
program, which includes works by<lb/>
classic, Romantic, and modern com-<lb/>
posers. Among numbers presented<lb/>
will be "Melody" from "Orpheus" by<lb/>
Cluck; "Andante and Variations<lb/>
op 46. by Schumann; "Tears second<lb/>
movement from Rachmaninoff's "Suite<lb/>
for two Pianos op. 5; and "Les-<lb/>
ginka from "Gayne Ballet by<lb/>
Khachaturisn.<lb/>
For several yearB Miss Drake and<lb/>
Mr Perry have presented annual<lb/>
two-piano recitals at the college and<lb/>
in towns and cities in various parts<lb/>
of the state. They appeared last week<lb/>
at St. Mary's Junior College m<lb/>
Coleman Gentry and Nancy Fisher<lb/>
rve been chosen Mr. and Miss Re-<lb/>
resentative Future Teacher from<lb/>
he Robert H. Wright Chapter of<lb/>
future Teachers. They will repre-<lb/>
Ptrl Essl Carolina College at the<lb/>
Future Teacher Spring Convention<lb/>
at Asheville in March.<lb/>
Miss Fisher, a grammar education<lb/>
major, attended Charlotte College<lb/>
before transferring to East Carolina.<lb/>
 While there, she participated in Bt-DR. FINLATOR AND DR. WENC.ER<lb/>
'overnment activities, served as<lb/>
cheerleader and marshal, was a<lb/>
member of the Writer's Club and<lb/>
Radio Worksho; . and served as edi-<lb/>
tor of the annual. Since entering<lb/>
East Carolina, she has participated<lb/>
in the A. C. E. and Student N. E. A.<lb/>
Her immediate plans include teach-<lb/>
ing next year in the Charlotte schools<lb/>
vith particular emphasis upon edu<lb/>
Spiritual Emphasis speakers.<lb/>
Finlator Heads List For<lb/>
Spiritual Emphasis Week<lb/>
s we lend ourselves as instru- performances last night. After the<lb/>
ments of God's mercy, we take open erformance. Mr. Warren, an alum-<lb/>
 n' rwp and' nus led a panel discussion on the<lb/>
cation of the mentally retarded, with .selves some of God s grace ana bus, J <lb/>
FBLA Will Crown<lb/>
Council Queen<lb/>
At Annual Dance<lb/>
Merle Coanefl, recently chosen<lb/>
Queen of Hearis, will reign over the<lb/>
annual Valentine dance Saturday<lb/>
night in Wright Auditorium at sight<lb/>
o'clock.<lb/>
Miss Council was chosen queen by<lb/>
the Future Business Leaders of<lb/>
America over a numbar of other con-<lb/>
tenders. Her crowning will highlight<lb/>
the dance. The queen's attendants<lb/>
are Pat Hedspath, Elizabeth Yow,<lb/>
Pat Shearing, and Diana Moore, all<lb/>
of whom are business majors.<lb/>
Th Valentine dance, presented by<lb/>
the FBLA. is a semi-formal affair<lb/>
and will feature the music of the<lb/>
Cavaliers.<lb/>
The Cavaliers, a rhythm and blues<lb/>
comho from here in Greenville, have<lb/>
' played over Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
, and on several occasions have enter-<lb/>
tained social functions on campus<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
They are the first Negro group<lb/>
ever to have played for a campus<lb/>
t unction.<lb/>
FBLA decorations chairman, Pat<lb/>
Hedspath has announced a special<lb/>
red and white Valentine theme will<lb/>
he carried out in the decoration of<lb/>
the auditorium. Creating the ball-<lb/>
room effect will be a large red heart,<lb/>
which will set the stage for the<lb/>
crowning of the queen.<lb/>
Alton Finch, Jane White, and Nor-<lb/>
man H. Cameron, FBLA advisors, will<lb/>
chaerone the dance.<lb/>
General admission will be one dol-<lb/>
wbom she has bad previous exper-<lb/>
ience.<lb/>
Mr. Gentry lias been equally out-<lb/>
standing in college activities. He at-<lb/>
tended the Universities of North<lb/>
His beauty stated Rev. W. W. Rn-<lb/>
lator, who is the principal speaker<lb/>
for Spiritual Emphasis week, dur-<lb/>
ing his address in Austin this week.<lb/>
tended tne univeisiwes u   ,<lb/>
Carolina and Hawaii, Honolulu, be- As the first a eaker of a series o<lb/>
fore coming to East Carolina. Acti- six meetings, Dr. Finlator maden<lb/>
i E. Johnson, associate i School Algebra to Modem Algebra<lb/>
thematic, and author at 4:30 p. m. and "Vector l- .  'Ients this year<lb/>
ookl and articles, phvical amj Mathematical" at 7:30 Kaieign.   Corjew include WHU'S WttU ajmuiw oxw- wnai; OH -<lb/>
vities include Phi Delta Kappa, Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi, member Executive Coun-<lb/>
cil Baptist Student Union, Science<lb/>
Club, local chapter president of<lb/>
S.N.E.A. His scholastic achievements<lb/>
include WHO'S WHO AMONG STU<lb/>
inspirational talk on the text "Let<lb/>
the Beautv of the Lord our God be<lb/>
upon us<lb/>
The theme of the week's program<lb/>
is "Complete Committment  So<lb/>
What?" Spiritual Envphasis Week is<lb/>
play's religious implications and li-<lb/>
terary values. Participants were Mr.<lb/>
Finlator, and James Poindexter and<lb/>
Ovid W. Pierce, faculty members.<lb/>
Other performances of the 'play are<lb/>
cheduled for tonight and Saturday<lb/>
at 8 p. m in the McGinnis audi-<lb/>
torium. '<lb/>
lar.<lb/>
s<lb/>
from Elementary Calculus" at 2 p. m.<lb/>
and "The Algebra Program in Col<lb/>
legs" at 4:S0 p. m.<lb/>
a dinner st 8:80 p. m. tonight in the'<lb/>
He is s Ph. D. graduate of the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin, where he<lb/>
begsn his career as an Instructor In<lb/>
1941. He has served also as mathe-<lb/>
atician in the geophysical labors<lb/>
m eanspui Thursdsy and<lb/>
ay<lb/>
Dr. Johnson's visit to the campui<lb/>
 ltd by the MPthematks As-<lb/>
, n of America and subsidised<lb/>
National s-ience Foundation.<lb/>
Dr. David R. Davis, director of the<lb/>
Da at of Mathematics, Is In<lb/>
rge of local arrangements.<lb/>
Ipr.ts and faculty members of<lb/>
Mathematics Department at the<lb/>
ege snd a number of teachera of<lb/>
mathematics in the eastern part o ' " rn'taie titut and<lb/>
the tate will attend Dr. Johnson's tory of ths CarntfW n"" <lb/>
lecturl, ,11 of which will take -placaUs assistant profssaor of '<lb/>
in th7aud iorium of the Joyner Mn- tics st Mount HolyokeConegenc.<lb/>
nrtal library The public is tafHed 1947 he has been a faculty member<lb/>
t attend U Swith CM' Ammf mtthtm-<lb/>
times of meetings aTelticisns, he is well known for his re-<lb/>
lursdsy, "T'rom High'search work and publications.<lb/>
' d l rc.rX"8 weekly land UMVBRBITMS. Mr. Gentry<lb/>
,p.r.nc,n M' ,t(.mplat. eer.l year, of tewh-<lb/>
television program Let s uo<lb/>
College Sunday. February 22, at<lb/>
ig exi erience before graduate work<lb/>
to be done preferably at George Pea-<lb/>
i-i in" -   ,<lb/>
tures and informal discussions with<lb/>
students, faculty members and guests<lb/>
a group of speakers well-known i"<lb/>
the fields of religion, education and<lb/>
VU -- .  l tf <lb/>
body College for Teachers. He also, business.<lb/>
is a grammar education major. Included in the of spea<lb/>
a dinner at 6:80 p. m. Unight in tne 1 , vr " u graduate of the is a grammar education major. inciuueu  - - - -<lb/>
;ring Hsll on the campus. fc, - Inbo. .<lb/>
Sr 2ZfIwtt sident fo-la8t yearand Jay<lb/>
the Julliard School of Music  -  knaf(ir from Camobell.<lb/>
Lloyd Allen, transfer from Campbell<lb/>
Composing the committee for se-<lb/>
York. She has also studied with the<lb/>
noted pianists and teachers James<lb/>
Friskin. Robert Goldsand. and Claudio<lb/>
KrKr Perry received hi. educationlma Hooper, past advisor; Dr. John<lb/>
Mr. rerry '"w  r,  p. r.nrha Jonaa. co-<lb/>
lantic Christian College; Chaplain<lb/>
R. C. Archer of Seymour-Johnson<lb/>
Air Force Base in Goldsboro; P. Cr-<lb/>
letio'n'of" Mr. snd Miss RepresenU ter Williams. Raleigh cWtect:<lb/>
tive Future Teacher were Miss Em-1 James Warren, director of religious<lb/>
 i t thTurritf of WiT-lHorn snd Dr. Douglas Jones, co-<lb/>
n music at the umversiT-y oi   i , .  ,  n thti Edu-<lb/>
consin and the Wisconsin School of advisors; Dr JSd Cart-J the Edu<lb/>
Music and has done additional study cation T'JU<lb/>
with Olga Conu. and Rudolph Serkin. and Don Griffui, .A JnTSd<lb/>
He is a member of the American tives; CUnton Davis chairman, and<lb/>
I Guild of Organists. ' Wayne Forbes, secrsUry.<lb/>
drama at Scaritt College in Nashville.<lb/>
Tennessee; and the Rev. John Drake<lb/>
of St. Paul's Epiacoial Church in<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
"The Potting Shed a mystery<lb/>
drama with religious theme by Gra-<lb/>
ham Greene opened a scheduled 3<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
NOTICE TO SENIORS<lb/>
Senior Class president Coy<lb/>
Harris has announced that sen-<lb/>
iors who want to order invita-<lb/>
tions should see him in Umatesd<lb/>
.135 or Elizabeth Bowmon in<lb/>
Garrett this week.<lb/>
WORLD DAY OF PRAYER<lb/>
World Day of Prayer, spon-<lb/>
sored by United Church Women,<lb/>
will be observed Friday morn-<lb/>
ing, February 13. at 11 o'clock<lb/>
at Jarvis Memorial Methodist<lb/>
Church. Dr. George P. Douglas,<lb/>
member of the Social Stadias<lb/>
Department, will speak on tha<lb/>
theme, "Lord. I Believe<lb/>
Enrollment Tops<lb/>
All EC Records<lb/>
A report from the office of the<lb/>
Registrar shows that East Carolina<lb/>
College now has an enrollment of<lb/>
5057. Of this number 3569 are taJt<lb/>
ing courses on the campus and U<lb/>
are taking extension courses.<lb/>
figures top past records.<lb/>
At the resent time there are 7t<lb/>
classes taught off camanis in II<lb/>
centers in the state. An estimated<lb/>
77 additional classes will be added<lb/>
in tha remainder of the 1968-lali<lb/>
session.<lb/>
Of the total enrollment 2717 stu-<lb/>
dents are preparing for careers i<lb/>
education. There are 566 csndidatea<lb/>
fee the liberal arts degree and It<lb/>
for the bachelor of muafc degree.<lb/>
Ninety-foUr percent of the student<lb/>
body are North Carolinians while<lb/>
thoae from other states aumebr 1M.<lb/>
Included among full-time students en<lb/>
the campus are 1046 freshmen, 7W<lb/>
sophomores, 672 juniors, 760 seniors,<lb/>
and 73 graduate students.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038622_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CABOuIuaN<lb/>
THURSLAY, FEBRl -r:<lb/>
Despite Constant Rift<lb/>
Rumors, Khrusckev's<lb/>
fok Remains Steadfast<lb/>
With tho climax of the 21st Communist<lb/>
Party Cong HUM last week in Moscow, little<lb/>
doubt remains anywhere that 64-year-old<lb/>
Nikita Khruschev commands firmly the Com-<lb/>
munist Part) in Russia. From the moment he<lb/>
lauched his colossal six-hour speech to open<lb/>
the Congress until the last word of his final<lb/>
speech which ended it. the affair was strictly<lb/>
one-man show.<lb/>
By the simple process of elimination,<lb/>
Khruschev has climbed from an obscure party<lb/>
official at the time of Stalin's death to a<lb/>
sitiott of virtually unchallenged leadership.<lb/>
The years in between saw one potential con-<lb/>
tender for his crown after another get the<lb/>
axe. some to the extent of loosing their lives.<lb/>
Only a few days ago. two more once promi-<lb/>
nent members of his government, ex-eco-<lb/>
nomic advisors Mikhail G. Pervukhim and<lb/>
Maxim Z. Saburov, were branded as anti-<lb/>
party and cast out.<lb/>
Standing before nearly 1300 Commun-<lb/>
ists delegates to deliver his opening speech,<lb/>
Kruschev displayed poise and confidence<lb/>
ely shown by him before. His proposals<lb/>
ere received enthusisastically. so much so<lb/>
that his speech was halted 67 times by out-<lb/>
bursts of applause. He specifically promised<lb/>
tter housing, more food, more money, and<lb/>
less work. All these met with wholehearted<lb/>
approval, and many Russian citizens as well<lb/>
as delegates, left convinced his promises<lb/>
would be fullfilled.<lb/>
Despite abundant evidence of unity with-<lb/>
in the ranks of the Russian Communist at the<lb/>
Congress, the failure of Red China's Mao<lb/>
Tse-tung to attend shows a trouble spot else-<lb/>
where. All has not been well between the<lb/>
Communist states recently, and some West-<lb/>
ern observers interpret his absence as a<lb/>
widening of the split.<lb/>
Prom the time Khruschev first became<lb/>
communist ruler, a steady flow of reports<lb/>
relating rifts in the Red hierarchy have been<lb/>
received by the West. Some were based on<lb/>
facts, others on rummers. Each one, however,<lb/>
kept the West's hopes alive that internal<lb/>
! uggles would weaken the Communists. So<lb/>
far very little evidence of these hopes ma-<lb/>
terializing has been seen. And gathering<lb/>
from the reaction to the Premier's plans and<lb/>
proposals received during the meeting, the<lb/>
chances for noticeable friction in the future<lb/>
seems remote.<lb/>
Thousands Read About<lb/>
Brotherhood, But Many<lb/>
Fail To Practice It<lb/>
The National Conference of Christians<lb/>
and Jews sponsors National Brotherhood<lb/>
Week February 15 through 22. Thousands of<lb/>
people will read editorials and go to lectures<lb/>
concerning Brotherhood.<lb/>
Thousands of people will probably think<lb/>
to themselvesall people are equal, all people<lb/>
are brothers, all mankind has a basic dignity.<lb/>
Thousands of people will fail to practice<lb/>
what they hear, read, and agree with.<lb/>
Thousands of people will be confused<lb/>
when we declare that we are all brothers<lb/>
under God. but then do not accept them<lb/>
nich.<lb/>
one editor has statedand perhaps he<lb/>
is rightthat it is the failure to practice<lb/>
brotherhood that makes its emphasis vital,<lb/>
that makes it necessarv to have Brotherhood<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1962.<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Intercollegiate Press<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Enter as second-class matter December 3, 1925 at<lb/>
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb/>
the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
I.<lb/>
Do It Yourself<lb/>
Psychoanalysis<lb/>
By BOB HARPER<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY TEST<lb/>
I. let's pretend tihat Dr. Prut<lb/>
turned you into a little boy rat and<lb/>
put you all alone in a cage and<lb/>
didn't give you anything to eat<lb/>
ui drink for twenty-four hours.<lb/>
At the end of that time, which of<lb/>
tVe would you like best to get<lb/>
youi needle-sharp claws on?<lb/>
a. a pan of water<lb/>
b. a hunk of cheese<lb/>
c. your mommy rat<lb/>
d. a girl rat<lb/>
e. Dr. Prutt<lb/>
 A sychopath who has an Oedipus<lb/>
complex coupled with strong<lb/>
masochistic tendencies is most<lb/>
accurately referred to as:<lb/>
a screwey<lb/>
b. loney<lb/>
C. tiehed in the haid, like<lb/>
i. all of these<lb/>
 Sigmuad Freud:<lb/>
a. wore a beard<lb/>
b. had a bad mind<lb/>
c. was quite anoyed at people<lb/>
crude who called him Frude<lb/>
d. none of these<lb/>
In i particular distribution curve<lb/>
the mean is to the right of the<lb/>
median which is to the left of<lb/>
the mode, even though the stand-<lb/>
ard distribution is small. This<lb/>
means:<lb/>
a. very little<lb/>
b, nothing<lb/>
c not a dang thing<lb/>
d. all of these<lb/>
Which of the following state-<lb/>
ments is a dirty, rotten lie?<lb/>
a. Rats are fun.<lb/>
b. Psychologists are smarter<lb/>
than anybody.<lb/>
c. Dreams really mean a lot.<lb/>
d. The well-systematized, infall-<lb/>
ibly realiable SCIENCE of<lb/>
psychology is nothing more<lb/>
than mere ordinary "com-<lb/>
mon sense<lb/>
If you were the dog Pavlov used<lb/>
in his famous conditioning ex-<lb/>
periment, what would you have<lb/>
done when old Ivan rang that<lb/>
bell in your ear?<lb/>
B. silivate<lb/>
b. propagate<lb/>
c. micturate<lb/>
1. regurgitate<lb/>
Suppose you were a Freudian<lb/>
Mvhoanalyst and a gorgeous<lb/>
blond walked into your office and<lb/>
when she took off her overcoat<lb/>
she was absolutely naked. What<lb/>
would you do?<lb/>
a. turn on my tachistoacope<lb/>
b. give her a Rorschach<lb/>
c. ask her to take a T. A. T.<lb/>
o test her Galvanic Skin Re-<lb/>
sponse<lb/>
none of the above<lb/>
Typical Problems<lb/>
New Found Urge<lb/>
Kid Makes Debut<lb/>
in $econ) Place<lb/>
Bit DERRY WALKER<lb/>
Little Known About Plavhouse<lb/>
Dispite Outstanding Productions<lb/>
The extra-curricular activities at<lb/>
East Carolina College are numerous<lb/>
as one can see by looking at the hand-<lb/>
book or reading about the news of<lb/>
these organizations in the newspaper.<lb/>
There is one of these organizations<lb/>
about which little is known except<lb/>
.hat they produce plays at different<lb/>
times during the year. This organize.<lb/>
tion about which I steak is the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
For the past several years, under<lb/>
such capable leadership as that shown<lb/>
'y Dr. Joseph Withey. The Playhouse<lb/>
has strived to produce plays "of cul-<lb/>
tural ami educational worth" for the<lb/>
students of the college, and to give<lb/>
every student that has a desire, the<lb/>
opportunity to work in these produc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
To quote a few of the productions<lb/>
of the f;ast years, one can immediate-<lb/>
ly recognize the outstanding plays of<lb/>
our time. PYGMALION, from which<lb/>
the Btory of the hit musical, MY FAIR<lb/>
Nobodies Leave Old Life<lb/>
By DELANO DRIVER<lb/>
LADY was taken, DARKNESS AT<lb/>
NOON. MB ROBERTS, TEAHOUSE<lb/>
OF THE AUGUST MOON, DETEC-<lb/>
TIVE STORY. STATE OF THE<lb/>
UNION. BLYTH SPIRIT, and<lb/>
DEATH OF A SALESMAN have all<lb/>
Braced the boards at ECC.<lb/>
At first giance one may say that<lb/>
this isn't anything to wave flags<lb/>
kbout, but when one stops to consi-<lb/>
der that a major in dramatics is not<lb/>
even offered at ECC then he can see<lb/>
that East Carolina is holding its own<lb/>
in the state with those who are known<lb/>
for their outstanding drama depart-<lb/>
ments. (Why don't we have a drama<lb/>
major here anyway?)<lb/>
The activities of the Playhouse do<lb/>
ot stop with the three-act plays. All<lb/>
during the year members of the<lb/>
Playhouse, seeking an outlet for their<lb/>
love of drama, participate in one-act<lb/>
plays for experimental purposes and<lb/>
to draw constructive criticism from<lb/>
reputable sources in order to improve<lb/>
their acting and increase their know-<lb/>
ledge about the theatre. These op-<lb/>
portunities compensate for the lack of<lb/>
courses in theatre.<lb/>
This year the playhouse was given<lb/>
n additional director in Mr. Robert T.<lb/>
Rickert. Mr. Rickert and Dr. Withey<lb/>
give valuable training to the students<lb/>
vhat want to increase their knowledge<lb/>
f the theatre whether they plan to<lb/>
se it as teachers or in further work<lb/>
towards a  jiessional career in the<lb/>
theatre.<lb/>
With the support of the students<lb/>
 ho compose the audiences, (just as<lb/>
mu 'h h part of any play as the act-<lb/>
ors), the i layhouse can continue to<lb/>
produce plays for the education and<lb/>
enjoyment of the college and commu-<lb/>
nity. Whether one likes deep drama,<lb/>
light love stories, confused plots, or<lb/>
just plain belly laughs, you are able<lb/>
to find them in the plays produced on<lb/>
'his campus and maybe if in the fu-<lb/>
ture  department In drama is added,<lb/>
the field will open up ten fold. Three<lb/>
-heers towards ECs own drama de-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
Tb" I rA wa jubilant; he had a reason<lb/>
to i f For- the very first time he was driv.<lb/>
;" his father's ctr down main street He<lb/>
fpl like evervone on the sunny sidi waa<lb/>
watching him as he sat behind th<lb/>
steering wheel of that $4,000 Chr<lb/>
He rolled the window down and rested<lb/>
his arm on the the door and the returning<lb/>
soring sun warmed hh skin through the<lb/>
sweater he wore. He eyed each side of the<lb/>
street cautiously in quick glances, trying to<lb/>
pp if any of his buddies were in sighl H<lb/>
"nted someone to notice him. H<lb/>
rHow off iust oroud. Only i few mil<lb/>
IVr. fhe officer at the court-house<lb/>
 "fled hhn a slip of paper, an op<lb/>
'iense, or something like thut, and <lb/>
v"l driven his father back to his ji<lb/>
business. That was when his dad had -aid:<lb/>
"o on, son: drive iround awh -ou<lb/>
b'bp. but be sure you pick me u;<lb/>
thirty Then he had smiled, turned around,<lb/>
  alkeri away. Just like that. lb- knew<lb/>
th-t he had the finest old man anywhere.<lb/>
So there he was. Riht on main<lb/>
listening to three hundred and fifty<lb/>
breathing gently under the hood, re<lb/>
respond when the stop-light turned<lb/>
Tt wa then the far-away look in h<lb/>
' ded and he realized they were foeu<lb/>
the crome tailpipe extensions jutting<lb/>
from under the bumper of the Ford u<lb/>
of him. He heard them rumble gently<lb/>
rear end of the Ford squatted and m<lb/>
forward. He recognized the guy driving. H<lb/>
was that tall fellow who hung around<lb/>
filling station and who talked about car and<lb/>
motors and who could leave whom or.<lb/>
"take-off The guy who talked about run-<lb/>
ning a hundred and five in second gear.<lb/>
He followed the Ford as it cruised away<lb/>
from town, through the residental disti I<lb/>
nd aimed for a rural road that led to a<lb/>
township ten miles away. He saw he guy cock<lb/>
his head and look in the rear view mirror,<lb/>
and he saw the puffs of fumes swirl from<lb/>
Ford's exhausts as it suddenly burst ahead.<lb/>
The kid followed; he didn't know why. but he<lb/>
did, and he mashed the Chrysler's accelerat-<lb/>
or fiercely to the floorboard.<lb/>
He saw the trees and the rocks beside<lb/>
the road flip by as the horses began to growl,<lb/>
and he heard the safety buzzer vibrating<lb/>
the speedometer climbed past the point indi-<lb/>
cated by his father on the dial under the<lb/>
dash. He was looking at the speedometer<lb/>
when the bridge railing tore through the<lb/>
bumper, ripped the grill, and lunged through<lb/>
the radiator, and a steel casement lifted the<lb/>
motor up and sent it whirling along over a<lb/>
muddy embankment.<lb/>
His father walked home at five-thirty<lb/>
Love's Labor Lost<lb/>
By BILLY ARNOLD<lb/>
Hell, -o-o "DTabbies This is Lou-<lb/>
ella. your friend and mine, bringing<lb/>
you everything about anybody who's<lb/>
NOBODY.<lb/>
Rut before we knock off a bit of<lb/>
hullabulla about the old-fashioned<lb/>
jrirls and the second class Blobs, our<lb/>
sponsor who rays me mad money,<lb/>
gives you an opportunity, to write<lb/>
that 5000 word term paper on "Will<lb/>
( ollege Ever Replace Living?<lb/>
while he orates about, "Pink Pills<lb/>
For Pale People<lb/>
Thank you, Louella dahling. Stu-<lb/>
dents, do you find yourself looking<lb/>
more and more like a genuine rep-<lb/>
lica of Casper the ghost? Remember<lb/>
rhe first step toward being a some-<lb/>
body is having that radiant shade of<lb/>
skin.<lb/>
Our product, "Pink Pills for Pale<lb/>
Peole can put color into your<lb/>
cheeks, that is if you're not particular<lb/>
about the coIot; and can give you a<lb/>
reason for getting up in the morn-<lb/>
ing . . . pink pills are tasty with a<lb/>
breakfast of flapjacks and beer<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
. Kathryn Johnson<lb/>
EDTTOR<lb/>
JoAnne Parks<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Associate Editors<lb/>
CO-Sports Editors<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
News Staff<lb/>
Deny Walker<lb/>
Billy Arnold, Pat Harvey<lb/>
Johnny Hudson, Bill Boyd<lb/>
Bob Harper<lb/>
Betty Maynor, Libby Williams,<lb/>
Jackie Linville, Bob Whiting, Tom Jackson,<lb/>
Bonnie Rutledge, Pat Keel, Jean Ann Waters,<lb/>
Evelyn Crutchfield, Bryan Harrison, James<lb/>
Trice, Bob Whiting<lb/>
Sports writers Norman Kilpatrick, Robert Greene<lb/>
folumnists James Corbet, Derry Walker, Billy<lb/>
 Arnold. Nancy Lilly. Bob Harper, Pat Harvey,<lb/>
Tom Jackson. Jean Ann Waters, Bryan Harrison<lb/>
Proofreading Staff  Gwen Johnson, Marcelle<lb/>
Vogel, Jean Ann Waters, Melbome Prlgen, Jane<lb/>
 Berryman, Bob Johnson, Don Griffin<lb/>
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Tele-hone, all departments, 6101, extension G4<lb/>
i in i i i i ii <lb/>
.Opmionu expressed on the editorial page are<lb/>
those of the editorial staff and do not neoseaarlly<lb/>
reflect the views of the faculty, adnriniatratjaay or<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
ren. She is survived by two Bons. 63<lb/>
grandchildren and her mother.<lb/>
SatisfiedCopy down the following<lb/>
info and you're on your way to a<lb/>
better standing in society. Just send<lb/>
16 cents to Pink .Pills for Pale People,<lb/>
Box 398674222&amp;, Goober 89635, Tex-<lb/>
as.<lb/>
Unfortunately, time is running out<lb/>
and I don't have time to tell you<lb/>
about the latest meeting of the Bub-<lb/>
blegum society. I can hear the merry<lb/>
chant of my theme song . . . "Get<lb/>
off the air, you <lb/>
Mims Displays Art<lb/>
Work In Austin<lb/>
By JANE BERRYMAN<lb/>
Thomas E. Mims is now present-<lb/>
ing his senior exhibit in watercolors<lb/>
on the second floor of Austin. Water-<lb/>
colors seems to be the medium he<lb/>
Just follow the following simple -prefers, although he has also excell-<lb/>
ed in oils, sculpture, and ceramics.<lb/>
The paintings now on display are of<lb/>
an excellent quality and reveal a<lb/>
remarkably original technique.<lb/>
Included in the exhibit are "Just<lb/>
Before Spring colorful farm<lb/>
scene; "Moonlit Allay "Moitalng<lb/>
Sea two studies of chimneys fall-<lb/>
ing into ruin; and "Industrial Re-<lb/>
volution a scene from the machine<lb/>
age.<lb/>
Tom has studied art at East Caro-<lb/>
lina since 1956 whan he changed his<lb/>
major from English. He plans to<lb/>
graduate in May with a BS degree in<lb/>
Art Education. He has acted as vice<lb/>
president and president of the Art<lb/>
Club, an organisation in which he<lb/>
is very active.<lb/>
"Painting to ma is a matter of<lb/>
experimentation states Tom. "The<lb/>
value of one painting, as it concerns<lb/>
the painter, can be determined only<lb/>
by what it reveals to him about his<lb/>
Mr. Nuff Comments On<lb/>
Closed-Circuit Television<lb/>
Harry High-School has been at it<lb/>
with the fireworks again this week.<lb/>
We're hoping hell explode one of<lb/>
them in his hand one night soon.<lb/>
By TOM JACKSON<lb/>
Student government leaders report<lb/>
the new SGA constitution is "coming<lb/>
along fine" and should be finished<lb/>
by the first of next quarter. We all<lb/>
wonder just how powerful this new<lb/>
constitution will be. Maybe, just may-<lb/>
be  it will be much better. On<lb/>
the other hand it could be just an-<lb/>
other farce. We'll all have to wait<lb/>
and see.<lb/>
Anyway why dont we all find<lb/>
out what is in it and vote for or<lb/>
aeainst it, whichever we want. After<lb/>
all it is our right. And if no one<lb/>
feels democratic, then do it "just<lb/>
for kicks<lb/>
items and you're on your way to start<lb/>
living again.<lb/>
(1) Take 15 pills every odd hour<lb/>
and 14 every even houT.<lb/>
(2) Be sure to drink a shot of wa-<lb/>
ter with each pill or your throat will<lb/>
suffer damage and expansion.<lb/>
(3) Cut each pill into four parts<lb/>
so that you will have little trouble<lb/>
stuffintr them into your mouth.<lb/>
(4 Before taking each pill make<lb/>
swre that our motto, "Return to Para-<lb/>
dise anrl steer clear of Happy's fun-<lb/>
eral parlor with PP'S is written in<lb/>
Creek on each pill.<lb/>
Our addicts seldom die young, only<lb/>
on e in a fracus does anyone get the<lb/>
call; here the truth is stated in the<lb/>
obituary of one of our short-time<lb/>
users: Mrs. T. S. Sputnik, wife of the<lb/>
famous inventor of drinking straws,<lb/>
died yesterday at the age of 184 when<lb/>
she fell into a gorher hole while run-<lb/>
ning the Statue of Liberty play in<lb/>
Those of you who missed the<lb/>
"Caine Mutiny Court Martial miss-<lb/>
ed an excellent production. There<lb/>
was only one weak character in the<lb/>
cast, but that was accounted for by<lb/>
the fact that it was his first time<lb/>
on stage, and too, he loosned up a<lb/>
bit as the play got underwoy.<lb/>
"The Bartender's Guide" is on<lb/>
sale at the newstand up town for<lb/>
those who didn't have one. Better<lb/>
get it now, the Azalea festival will<lb/>
soon be here.<lb/>
a game with a few of her grandchild- field 0f study at M<lb/>
Wonder how commercials would<lb/>
work on CCTV. Not for products,<lb/>
hut for items in which students are<lb/>
interested. They could go something<lb/>
like this;<lb/>
Announcer"Fellow students, do<lb/>
you feel tired, run down, listless?<lb/>
If so your answer lies in your phy-<lb/>
sical condition. Sign up today for<lb/>
physical education course 107,<lb/>
taught next quarter on OCTV each<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday at 11:00.<lb/>
Listen to Mr. Unhappy Nuff, a<lb/>
student who took this course last<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Mr. Nuff"friends, I felt tired,<lb/>
mn down, listless, than I signed up<lb/>
for P. E. 107 on OCTV. Now I feel<lb/>
rested, built up, and exuberant You<lb/>
see, not only did I take an interest<lb/>
in, and enjoy that P. E. course on<lb/>
television, but ft also gave ma time<lb/>
to sit around and rest up. None of<lb/>
that running around and exercising<lb/>
that ordinary, old fashioned P. B.<lb/>
courses have.<lb/>
As a special added attraction to<lb/>
this course. I became very intimate<lb/>
with the girl who sat beside me.<lb/>
We even held hands when the lights<lb/>
dimmed down, and the TV set capt-<lb/>
ured the interest of the moderator.<lb/>
I'm signing up for another course<lb/>
just like it next chance I get, because<lb/>
ordinary, old fashioned classes just<lb/>
don't have the kicks that TV class<lb/>
does, and they are intimate tool<lb/>
You can be sura  if its OCTV.<lb/>
To The Editor<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
In answer to David Thompson's<lb/>
article last week, concerning my letter<lb/>
to you, I would like to apologise to<lb/>
him and to fraternities and sororities<lb/>
members. I did not anticipate in cut-<lb/>
ting fraternities or sororities. I be-<lb/>
lieve in that fraternltiea and sorori-<lb/>
ties stand for and also think that<lb/>
they are the life and backbone of an<lb/>
educational institution.<lb/>
My letter waa directed to toe giri<lb/>
whom in the letter Bob Lewis wrote,<lb/>
referred to non-fraternity man as<lb/>
nobodies. I am very sorry if wf litter<lb/>
was inadequately worded and indi-<lb/>
cated sororities and<lb/>
Sincerely yours,<lb/>
He wasn't a very big man on campus.<lb/>
It wasn't that people didn't like him; he was<lb/>
really a kind of likable guy.<lb/>
It's just that he seldom talked to anybody.<lb/>
He wasn't a very good mixer and just felt<lb/>
more at ease in his own room, listening to the<lb/>
radio, reading maybe. And he felt even better<lb/>
when his roommate wasn't around.<lb/>
To begin with, he had a complex about<lb/>
the way he looked. He was short and skinny<lb/>
and had a bird-like chest. He had weak eyes<lb/>
and had to wear glasses, and they worried him<lb/>
to death because the rims kept getting in his<lb/>
way. He was very nervous and sensitive about<lb/>
things like glasses rims.<lb/>
He did all right in his classes. He made<lb/>
fair grades and usually managed to answer<lb/>
questions when somebody asked him some-<lb/>
thing. He even had a sort of smiling, nodding<lb/>
ecquaintance with a girl in his History 50<lb/>
class. She was sort of ugly though, like a<lb/>
horse or a camel; he ever could figure which.<lb/>
A camel, I guess.<lb/>
One time at a ballgame, one of the play-<lb/>
ers kicked a wild ball that went into the<lb/>
stands and hit him in the forehead. Every-<lb/>
body, of course, turned around and looked<lb/>
and then laughed because he had a red welt<lb/>
in the middle of his head. He got up and left<lb/>
at half time because the bruise had swollen<lb/>
3nd started pulling his eyes together toward<lb/>
his nose. He felt like dying of humiliation.<lb/>
When he was a junior, he met this girl<lb/>
in a science class who sat across the table<lb/>
from him and they became friends. She waa<lb/>
very nice to him and very pretty and she was<lb/>
engaged to a business major named Fitts.<lb/>
They shared a telescope ad though pretty girls<lb/>
usually made him gag from fright, he soon<lb/>
managed to speak to her openlyeven cas-<lb/>
ually. Usually about bugs and worms and<lb/>
things. But, anyway, he talked.<lb/>
She had the kindest, most understanding<lb/>
brown eyes, he thought, and she seemed to<lb/>
look inside him when they talked. Even about<lb/>
worms. He had a sort of aching fondness for<lb/>
her.<lb/>
But when the quarter ended he didn't see<lb/>
her again. She was engaged anyway, of<lb/>
course.<lb/>
And he knew she didn't really love him<lb/>
to begin with.<lb/>
When the grades came out between quar-<lb/>
ters and he got a two, he went back to his<lb/>
room and cried. He told his roommate that<lb/>
his mother died.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038622_0003"/><lb/>
RviuY Faanu-vjiY a, .<lb/>
-s i a<lb/>
r raCT" ;<lb/>
Former SGA President Umstead<lb/>
Assume Position As Instructor<lb/>
t a ST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 99<lb/>
-Sac<lb/>
Mystery Scene Includes Old<lb/>
House, Frightened Man<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
By BETTY MAYNOB<lb/>
uber of the fac- school years, Mr. Umstead said,<lb/>
Business Department "There seems to be less school spirit<lb/>
ad has now assumed now than there was then, and the<lb/>
I osition, Mr. Umstead said, "Advanc-<lb/>
 ed courses attract the more interest-<lb/>
. itructer in the de-<lb/>
v tch he received an<lb/>
i tudent in 1956. It<lb/>
school year 1955-<lb/>
Mr. Umstead served as<lb/>
Student Government<lb/>
ed accounting students, and I enjoy<lb/>
Mr. Umstead<lb/>
pid National Test<lb/>
Public Accountants,<lb/>
ification through<lb/>
I PA Examiners.<lb/>
I I PA certifica-<lb/>
arorked as an<lb/>
in Goldsboro,<lb/>
ame to East<lb/>
 i faculty of<lb/>
 nent. He ; re-<lb/>
ses in advanced<lb/>
,ide income tax<lb/>
stons<lb/>
e vave been only<lb/>
is graduation,<lb/>
. Mr I'mstead<lb/>
olicies and<lb/>
.19.<lb/>
- ssion of the<lb/>
iparison<lb/>
 luring his<lb/>
students do not seem to have as much<lb/>
interest in their studies, or in the<lb/>
content of their work, as they did a<lb/>
few years ago<lb/>
In connection with social activities<lb/>
then, Mr. Umstead commented,<lb/>
"There was small demand for fra-<lb/>
ternities when I was here as a stu-<lb/>
dent; people were not particularly<lb/>
interested in tnem<lb/>
As far as the policies of the school<lb/>
are concerned, Mr. Umstead stated,<lb/>
"There has evidently been a radical<lb/>
change in the structure of the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Associationa<lb/>
change which has been needed within<lb/>
the organization. The new represent-<lb/>
ative body known as the Senate, was<lb/>
a barely needed addition to the SGA"<lb/>
When commenting on the present<lb/>
newspaier, Mr. Umstead said, "I like<lb/>
the frankness of the staff, and in<lb/>
answering to the recent criticism,<lb/>
they seem to have justified their<lb/>
actioas. I also feel that too much<lb/>
space in the paper is reserved for<lb/>
fraternities, they should be subord-<lb/>
inated to the interests of the school<lb/>
In commenting on his present<lb/>
working with these advanced stu-<lb/>
dents, rather than with basic courses.<lb/>
These courses offer more room for<lb/>
individuality<lb/>
While a student at East Carolina,<lb/>
Mr. Umstead met and married a<lb/>
former student. He and his wife<lb/>
Joan and their three children, two<lb/>
girls and one boy, now live in<lb/>
ureenville. <lb/>
Hotels Sponsor<lb/>
Tours To Puerto<lb/>
Rico, San Juan<lb/>
(t is night. A man walk along the<lb/>
path, carrying a bowt of water.<lb/>
Above, the sky is moonlight and spat-<lb/>
tered with clouds that race across<lb/>
it. The scattering shadows move in<lb/>
anil out the bare-branched trees,<lb/>
accenting their grotesque shapes.<lb/>
The wind is cold, and involuntar-<lb/>
ily, the man shivers. For some rea-<lb/>
son, he is suddenly afraid. He tries<lb/>
to force himself to go on, but a<lb/>
branch abruptly brushes his face,<lb/>
and in fear he turns and runs.<lb/>
Minutes later, he stops . . . and<lb/>
finds he is still clutching the bowl.<lb/>
He gasps for breath; his throat<lb/>
feels raw. Cold beads of perspira-<lb/>
tion appear on his forehead. He<lb/>
tries to calm himself, and rests his<lb/>
cheek against the cool rough bark of<lb/>
a nearby tree.<lb/>
It's silly for me to be afraid like<lb/>
this; I've got to calm down. But the<lb/>
minute she asks me to take the<lb/>
water to the dog in the potting shed,<lb/>
I was afraid, as if I knew there was<lb/>
someone waiting for me out there<lb/>
 or something.<lb/>
I should've known better than to<lb/>
come here; nothing's changed. Even<lb/>
the fact that father's dead hasn't<lb/>
changed anything. A stranger in my<lb/>
own home . . . why 1 What have I<lb/>
ever done? Why does everyone hate<lb/>
me so? Why can't 1 remember?<lb/>
Everyone else can remember their<lb/>
childhood . . . why can't I? Anne<lb/>
said she heard the gardener say that<lb/>
it oral something awful that hap-<lb/>
pened in the potting shed when I<lb/>
was a little boy. 'Poor Master<lb/>
James he said. What was it?"<lb/>
With a sigh, he straightened, and<lb/>
louke-d art the large old house ahead<lb/>
of him. It was dark, save for one<lb/>
light. Through the French windows<lb/>
he could see his mother reading.<lb/>
"Mother, why won't anyone tell<lb/>
me what happened?" he thought.<lb/>
"What did I do all those years ago<lb/>
that was so horrible?" Then with a<lb/>
movement of decision, he stepped<lb/>
forward. "She must tell me. I must<lb/>
know why I'm afraid of the Potting<lb/>
Shed And he walked into the house.<lb/>
What happened? Come to see the<lb/>
: OTTLNi; SHED, presented this<lb/>
eek, by the East Carolina Play-<lb/>
house. One night has already past.<lb/>
Only two more performances will<lb/>
be given. Curtain time is 8 p.m. to-<lb/>
night and Saturday night.<lb/>
Methodist Minister Speaks;<lb/>
Dyson Explains Budget Plan<lb/>
The Reverend W. M. Wells, the<lb/>
state director for the Methodist Stu-<lb/>
dent Movement, will speak at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center February<lb/>
23 from 6:15 to 7:15 p. m.<lb/>
Maimej Chandler, director of the<lb/>
student center, invites all students<lb/>
to hear Reverend Wells discuss "The<lb/>
. hutch On The Campus<lb/>
"Many of the Methodist students<lb/>
in this area know Reverend Wells.<lb/>
We are sure that those who don't<lb/>
know him will enjoy him just as<lb/>
much commented Miss Chandler.<lb/>
in the gymnasium after the swim<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
'Bartered Bride Contributes<lb/>
New Type Of Enjoyment<lb/>
By MARCEL VOGUL<lb/>
 Bride the recent i rdeton, was very good as the shy but<lb/>
 . Kat Carolina OpeTa energetic type, who very openly<lb/>
seated February j shows his emotions.<lb/>
at y ia Auditorium to Ken Killebrew was a hit as the<lb/>
e audience. This rinripal comedian. He set a lively<lb/>
to real- mood whenever he appeared on stage.<lb/>
 -tiaity that this The lead characters of Marie and<lb/>
r in the way of her lover, Jenik, were in the capable<lb/>
naaeat. hands of Rose Rich, Ann Darden,<lb/>
faculty member and Jerry Powell. Rose acted the<lb/>
tment, did an ex- part of Marie, Monday night, and<lb/>
ng this out- Ann portrayed Marie, Tuesday night.<lb/>
- . production. A great They all had fine sinpring voices, and<lb/>
 vas show, and all a better cast for leads would be hard<lb/>
ive their part to find. The lesser roles were equally<lb/>
it. They all appeared well done.<lb/>
lete knowledge of the The singing-chorus was well bal-<lb/>
quently they didn't anced and well trained, and the duo-<lb/>
much on the di-i ianists and the recordings were ex-<lb/>
cellent accompaniments. They fur-<lb/>
e of the entire cast nished fine background music through-<lb/>
out the entire opera.<lb/>
The artistic dancing, the eye-catch-<lb/>
ing costumes, and the colorful setting<lb/>
all contributed to the final polished<lb/>
effect, and the knowledge of a job<lb/>
well done. Everything combined, con-<lb/>
appeared on tributed to one of the best musical<lb/>
productions that East Carolina has<lb/>
Vashek the sim-1 had in years.<lb/>
Junior Class Meets<lb/>
Money-making projects for<lb/>
Club Presidents Meet<lb/>
Plans concerning the budget of<lb/>
student funds were discussed Janu-<lb/>
ary 2 at the Dean's Advisory Coun-<lb/>
cil. The (Council is composed of the<lb/>
presidents of all campus organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Charlie Dyson, assistant treasurer,<lb/>
explained that the new budget plans<lb/>
would involve a bookkeeping system<lb/>
in order to prevent any organisa-<lb/>
Ition from spending more that its<lb/>
. <lb/>
College Weeks will be introduced in<lb/>
San Juan, Purto Rico, this year dur-<lb/>
ing March and April. They are being<lb/>
sponsored by the Commonwealth<lb/>
Government, major hotels and all<lb/>
airlines serving Purto Rico.<lb/>
Participating hotels are the Caribe<lb/>
Hilton, Condado Beach, La Concha,<lb/>
La Rada and the San Juan Intercon-<lb/>
tinental.<lb/>
The College Week package tours<lb/>
nave been arranged by the Rogal<lb/>
Travel Service of Harrisburg, Penn<lb/>
which will act as wholesaler for the<lb/>
package, and will be available to<lb/>
college students through 3700 travel<lb/>
agents.<lb/>
The seven days and six nights Thomas J. Haigwood, associate<lb/>
package is priced at $199, which in-U rofessor of industrial arts here, has<lb/>
eludes round trip Economy Class I completed work for the degree of<lb/>
and fare from New York, hotel room doctor of education in industrial arts<lb/>
Modified American Plan (breakfast at Pennsylvania State<lb/>
Musical Recital<lb/>
Scheduled Son<lb/>
Haigwood Finishes<lb/>
Work For Degree<lb/>
and dinner), airport transfers, hotel The degree was conferred at recent<lb/>
lable. Ronnie Knouse<lb/>
rtirable portrayal of Keral,<lb/>
arriape-broker. He<lb/>
Bd feel the part. His<lb/>
. voice along with evi-<lb/>
ng skill, cultivated the au<lb/>
he<lb/>
gratuities and five special events<lb/>
Events include a Lechonada (pig<lb/>
roast) and beach party at the Con-<lb/>
dado Beach Hotel, a nightclub party<lb/>
at the Caribe Hilton, a Government-<lb/>
sponsortd picnic on the Beach of the<lb/>
San Juan Intercontinental, a special<lb/>
dinner at La Concha, and an aquacade<lb/>
buffet dinner and election of College<lb/>
Weeks Queen at the San Juan Inter-<lb/>
continental.<lb/>
The College Weeks will run from<lb/>
March 15 to April 5.<lb/>
I DELICIOUS<lb/>
I FOOD<lb/>
? 24 HOURS<lb/>
graduation exercises at the uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
Dr. Haigwood has been a member<lb/>
of the East Carolina faculty since<lb/>
September, 1958. Before coming here,<lb/>
he taught in the Sparta, Laurlnburg,<lb/>
and Charlotte high school: in this<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Dr. Haigwood holds the j osition of<lb/>
secretary-treasurer of the North<lb/>
Carolina Industrial Arts Association<lb/>
A special recital introducing Edgar<lb/>
Allen and William S. Newman, ar-<lb/>
tistic members of the Music Depart-<lb/>
ment of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina, will be given on Sunday,<lb/>
February 22, at 4:00 p.m. in Mc-<lb/>
Cinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Mr. Allen, who plays the violin,<lb/>
and Dr. Newman, who is featured on<lb/>
the piano, are both fine musicians.<lb/>
Dr. Newman has appeared often as<lb/>
soloist with the orchestra and in<lb/>
recital in Boston, Cleveland, New<lb/>
York, Seattle, Chicago, Washington,<lb/>
and other large cities.<lb/>
A native of Wilkes County, N. C,<lb/>
he is a graduate of Appalachian State<lb/>
Teachers College at Boone and re-<lb/>
ceived the master's degree in edu-<lb/>
cation at State College, Raleigh.<lb/>
As first violinist of the Raleigh<lb/>
String Quartet, the University String<lb/>
Quartet and the University Trio, and<lb/>
the Alden String Trio, Mr. Allen has<lb/>
ap; eared in many localities of the<lb/>
Carolinas and Georgia.<lb/>
Junior-Senior Prom this spring were<lb/>
discussed at a junior class meeting<lb/>
February 3 in Flanagan Auditorium.<lb/>
These projects include selling hot<lb/>
dogs to the student body and giving<lb/>
a "Junior Jump" in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium February 20.<lb/>
Mike Katsias, SGA president,<lb/>
talked to the group on the responsi-<lb/>
bilities of a student on this campus.<lb/>
Resolutions concerning the Student<lb/>
Government and class participation<lb/>
were introduced.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi Meets<lb/>
Beta Kappa chapter of Pi Omega<lb/>
Pi, national honorary business fra-<lb/>
ternity, held its reqular monthly<lb/>
meeting' in the small cafeterial on<lb/>
February 10. Following the meeting,<lb/>
there was a Founder's Day coke<lb/>
arty to entertain business majors<lb/>
who may become candidates for mem-<lb/>
rshir in Pi Omega Pi in the future.<lb/>
quota. Under this program each club<lb/>
would have an accurate account of<lb/>
its budget at the end of each month.<lb/>
Organizations will be allowed to<lb/>
charge merchandise at Greenville<lb/>
?-ores which are members of the<lb/>
Pirate's Club.<lb/>
The Council also considered the<lb/>
possibility of setting up a promo-<lb/>
tional council to take charge of ap-<lb/>
pealing to state legislators to herp<lb/>
secure allotments for the college.<lb/>
Approximately three students from<lb/>
each county would contact their leg-<lb/>
islators personnally.<lb/>
Dean Leo W. Jenkins announced<lb/>
that an evaluation of the college's<lb/>
professors could be made again this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Hta Sigma Chi Pledges<lb/>
I) Its Sigma Chi social sorority<lb/>
received its quota of thirteen pledges<lb/>
during rush week. The pledges are<lb/>
P.ecky Blue, Mary Alyce Sellers, Sue<lb/>
Holland, Jean Coleman, and Irish<lb/>
Stuart<lb/>
Others are Nancy Britt, Kay Mc-<lb/>
Lawhorn, Miriam Stephenson, Netti<lb/>
Atkins. Janice Hinson, Sonia Azam,<lb/>
F.velyn Johnson, and Glenda John-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Sorority Fetes Teams<lb/>
Delta Sigma Chi social sorority is<lb/>
entertaining the VMI and ECC swim-<lb/>
ming teams Friday night at a social<lb/>
Insurance Jobs<lb/>
Mr. F. K. Gill, Regional<lb/>
ployment manager. Nationwide<lb/>
Insurance Company, Raleigh, N.<lb/>
( will be in the Curriculum<lb/>
Laboratory (Room 215) Jeyaer<lb/>
Library, at 7:30 p.m. on Fehre-<lb/>
ary 17 to interview persons wma<lb/>
sre interested in securing em-<lb/>
ployment in various passes of<lb/>
insurance work.<lb/>
Attention Juniors<lb/>
The Junior Class will meet to-<lb/>
night at 7:00 in room lit in Aus-<lb/>
tin Auditorium. Junior Class pres-<lb/>
ident Wade Sesaoms urges ail<lb/>
Juniors to be present.<lb/>
KARRIS GROCERY STORE<lb/>
East Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
Fine Meats and Groceries<lb/>
Lunch at 65c<lb/>
<lb/>
1CAR0LINA!<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
ngish CANINE CASANOVA<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Touch system or hunt-and-peck<lb/>
Results are perfect with<lb/>
EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND<lb/>
Typewriter Paper<lb/>
W hatenrer vnur typing<lb/>
talents, vnu can turn out<lb/>
looking work the<lb/>
firsi time, with Eaton <lb/>
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Reason why; Corrasable has<lb/>
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without " trace. Just the flick<lb/>
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STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
FEBRUARY 13th<lb/>
I N G R I D<lb/>
BERGMAN<lb/>
Curt Jurgens<lb/>
Robert Donst<lb/>
la<lb/>
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English: ANGRY ALGEBRA TEACHER<lb/>
Thinklish translation: This fellow reads<lb/>
nothing but the phone book (numbers<lb/>
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rhythmthe only dessert he'll eat is pi.<lb/>
When it comes to smoking, he's 100 for<lb/>
Luckies. Enjoying the honest taste of fine<lb/>
tobacco, he's a fairly agreeable fellow.<lb/>
But the second he misplaces a decimal (or<lb/>
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CorrSsabie is available in several weight  from onion<lb/>
kin to heavy bond. In handy 100-theet packets and W0-<lb/>
neat ream boxes. A fine quality paper for oil your typed<lb/>
assignments Only Eaton makes erasable Co"aeab0.<lb/>
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PVWnVSeUB<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
TBUMDAY, FEBfttAJIY If, gej<lb/>
Win Over Elon Would Give 10-4 Conference Record<lb/>
'Lme Wolf9 Pirate Swim Team<lb/>
Has Scheduling Difficulties<lb/>
By NANCY KELLY<lb/>
The East Carolina swimming team determination ami credit is the Nat-<lb/>
recently returned from two swim- ional Association Intercollegiate<lb/>
ming meets in Georgia. The team Athletics shimming championships <lb/>
competed uith the University of held in Ballstate, Indiana each year,<lb/>
Emory University, and Martinez said. Two years ago the<lb/>
- jently won both meets. They team won first place. Last year the<lb/>
iga ' the University of Mi- tea fourth with North Cen-<lb/>
-k-nd. 0 taking firt place. Mar-<lb/>
 swimming team is tins a:d "The team is far better<lb/>
-n:zed in tne North State this year than last year. There has<lb/>
 In fact it is the only been a great deal of improvement,<lb/>
swimming team in the conference. There are two national champions<lb/>
Ray Martin, East Carolina's swim- n the team now. Ken Midyette is<lb/>
ming coach, said "although both  nal living champion, and<lb/>
Western a and Arpalachlan B rfei is the national back-<lb/>
have ben  t, there is no "  ' Beth are seniors<lb/>
lea.iershr. I  organized swim- I - aptains of the<lb/>
g teams. Therefore, ECC has to swimming team this year<lb/>
 pete against National Collegiate Next year the team will swim<lb/>
Athlette Association teams at their under more difficulties. It will have<lb/>
convenience, with no conference to meet<lb/>
Bob Sawyer and Ken Midyette<lb/>
;it involved<lb/>
Me also said the biggest<lb/>
 is with scheduling meets.<lb/>
"Southern Conference teams won't<lb/>
swim against us, only V. M. I Con-<lb/>
- swimming team<lb/>
which means no freshmen will be<lb/>
able to swim on the team.<lb/>
Martines said he is getting paid<lb/>
 tching, not for coaching; all<lb/>
imes directly from the<lb/>
a full class schedule<lb/>
hii  all the way to the Uni- -very day. but T feel that caching<lb/>
vers Miami last weekend where he com-<lb/>
they copped win number three at<lb/>
Porter's Team Rated As Heavv<lb/>
Favorites In Saturday's Tilt<lb/>
East Carolina, currently the hot-<lb/>
test team in the North State Con-<lb/>
ference, continues its bid for top<lb/>
honors in the conference this Satur-<lb/>
niffht when the Bucs meet Elon<lb/>
rida team's expense.<lb/>
Tr . thing that gives the team<lb/>
Record Holder<lb/>
He mentioned there are r.o schol-<lb/>
- ffered for swimming, only<lb/>
tball, and baseball.<lb/>
I- thai the boys swim for the<lb/>
enjoyment of the sport, not for<lb/>
 reward. IFS. During<lb/>
swimming seas n, the team practices<lb/>
at If- sei irs each day.<lb/>
The iwin g eaaoo ends in mid-<lb/>
h. The largest and most ta-<lb/>
int meet of the season will be<lb/>
held 1 i ' 5:n0 p.m. February 13<lb/>
 it V. M. I.<lb/>
WRA News<lb/>
Distance Runner Foster Morse from<lb/>
I'nrt-mouth, Va holds the mile and<lb/>
two mile records for EC's North-<lb/>
State Champion Track Team. Morse<lb/>
and other Pirate tracksters are work-<lb/>
ing out indoors in preparation for<lb/>
Hill McDonald's forthcoming<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Cn-captains Claudine Hodgin<lb/>
and Janice Edwards hit for 20<lb/>
points each last Thursday even-<lb/>
ing in leading the ECC Women<lb/>
Recreation Association girls to<lb/>
a 48 to 36 win over Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College.<lb/>
On Tuesday night the WRA<lb/>
squad won a game over Watt's<lb/>
Hospital School of Nursing in<lb/>
Durham by a 69 to 46 score. It<lb/>
as again the combination of<lb/>
Hodgin and Edwards that paced<lb/>
the team. Edwards scored 29<lb/>
points and Hodgin had 19.<lb/>
The WRA girls will travel to<lb/>
Raleigh next Tuesday night for<lb/>
a game with the Nurses of Rex<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
National NAIA Backstroke Champion Bob Sawyer and Diver Ken<lb/>
Midyette, another NAIA National record holder, ere co-captains on Ray<lb/>
Martinez's 195S-59 swim squad. Sawyer and Midyette have been consis-<lb/>
tent point makers in helping to establish EC's preeent 3-2 record.<lb/>
iNational Student Association<lb/>
Offering Travel For Students<lb/>
This summer the United States, During the two week stay in Israel<lb/>
Student Association is ofthe group will spend five days living<lb/>
;n Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Fat Carolina opened its' weeks<lb/>
activity last night, meeting Catawba<lb/>
a'isbury.<lb/>
Ron, lighting for a berth in this<lb/>
vears tournament, started ECC on<lb/>
their recent victory spurt as the<lb/>
hritians bowed with ease about<lb/>
three weeks ago. Coach Doc Mathis<lb/>
is in a rebuilding stage and this<lb/>
r has been a lean one for the<lb/>
tian.<lb/>
Coach Howard Porter is expected<lb/>
 i ?o with the five men which hsve<lb/>
'jb up the North State<lb/>
)er. Charlie Adam" and Ike Rid-<lb/>
' k are slated for the guard spots,<lb/>
Nick Nichols and Jessel Curry at<lb/>
forwards, and Joe Piaster at center.<lb/>
Reserve strength has been a prob-<lb/>
len most of the season but should<lb/>
be stronger during the final stretch.<lb/>
Don Smith, sophomore forward, has<lb/>
returned after laying-out a couple<lb/>
t week due to an illness. Charles<lb/>
I wi. Benny Bowes, and Dennis<lb/>
D'Briee have also shown the ability<lb/>
1 to take over under fire.<lb/>
T" e Pirates will floor a well-<lb/>
vVanced club with adequate height <lb/>
and plenty of scoring power. Paced<lb/>
by Charlie Adams 16.1 average the<lb/>
Pirates have four of their starters<lb/>
in double figures and Joe Plaster,<lb/>
the fifth man, is just under the<lb/>
mark with a 9.9 mark.<lb/>
Captain Nick Nichols and Joe<lb/>
Plaster have led the Pirates in re-<lb/>
bounds, both averaging better than<lb/>
10 per game. East Carolina has been<lb/>
a varied travel program.<lb/>
NSA's Educational Travel, Inc is a<lb/>
non-profit organization offering bud-<lb/>
 tonrt from $749 to $1045, all in-<lb/>
: an 80 day trip.<lb/>
Tie students traveling with NSA<lb/>
t ted tnt sixteen or seventeen<lb/>
with a family on a "kibbutz a co-<lb/>
o erative work camp. They will be<lb/>
expected to work with the people in<lb/>
order to get to know the Israelites<lb/>
;irst-hand.<lb/>
Both Christian and Jewish sights<lb/>
will be visited in the Holy Land. The<lb/>
able to control the board against<lb/>
most of their oiponents and this<lb/>
has been a big factor in their recent<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Tony Carcaterri, All-State foot-<lb/>
ball end, has been the Christians<lb/>
ader this season along with Gfl-<lb/>
I Watts, senior guard. The Chris-<lb/>
tians have played slow ball most of<lb/>
-jrprised the entire con-<lb/>
eaea recently with a upset victory<lb/>
over High Point, a pre-season favor-<lb/>
ite.<lb/>
Top ACC 76-55<lb/>
aatk Christian gave East Caro-<lb/>
lenty at trouble for ore half<lb/>
'  Thursday evening but Charlie<lb/>
tdanu and crew pulled away in the<lb/>
eond half to reg ' eir seventh<lb/>
oaference victory of "ason in<lb/>
l walk-away 76-65.<lb/>
Adams, the Cary senior, continued<lb/>
his hot pace by baggig 27 peiets,<lb/>
igh for the season. M : A the<lb/>
tocky guard's points came on jump<lb/>
ta from 18-20 feet out.<lb/>
Bob Whaley, ACC's big scorer,<lb/>
ke t the Bulldogs in close range dur-<lb/>
ing the opening half with his canny<lb/>
-hand jump shot. The Kinston<lb/>
thre tallied 18 points in the open-<lb/>
half but cooled down after inter-<lb/>
egistered only 22 points<lb/>
the night.<lb/>
The ret Rug of Nick Nichols and<lb/>
T e Plaster ke-1 East Carolina in<lb/>
control of the game most of the way<lb/>
 ey snagged 31 rebounds between<lb/>
East Carolina increased their<lb/>
th place grip with a 7-4 record<lb/>
and et aim toward third-place High<lb/>
Pirates have a return<lb/>
  s Panthers, here, Feb-<lb/>
17.<lb/>
mtries for the summer, rather students will also have an opportu<lb/>
 lelect few carefully.<lb/>
to Russia, Po-<lb/>
St andanavia i now being<lb/>
rganized. The It 'lay program visits<lb/>
, Denmark, Norway, Sweden,<lb/>
R issia, Poland, Austria, and<lb/>
d and is limited to 25 stu-<lb/>
T te toot is now half-filled. The<lb/>
'inclusive price of the tour cover-<lb/>
 ine transportation, three meals daily,<lb/>
all ighl leei kg, guides, lodging, bal-<lb/>
 I and i era tickets, etc is $1100.<lb/>
A tour to Israel and Western Eu-<lb/>
is being offered for the second<lb/>
time. On board ship there will be<lb/>
i an orientation program concerning<lb/>
iife in Israel.<lb/>
nity to s. eak with various leaders in<lb/>
the government concerning the many<lb/>
problems that this young nation faces.<lb/>
The tour continues to Greece, Italy,<lb/>
Se ltzerland, France, and England.<lb/>
Special interest tours, such as the<lb/>
Festivals of Art and Music and the<lb/>
"Drive-it-Yourself" Volkswagon tour<lb/>
are also being offered. For the stu-<lb/>
dents who wish to spend less the<lb/>
Hobo tour, which travels by bus<lb/>
throughout Europe, is being offered<lb/>
$850.<lb/>
For further information write to<lb/>
USNSA Educational Travel, In .<lb/>
701 Seventh Avenue, New York 36.<lb/>
N. Y.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA COLLEGE<lb/>
RECORD: Won 9 Lost 5<lb/>
(does not include games against non-college Competition.)<lb/>
HA ME G FGA FGM PEC FTA FTM PEC TP AVE<lb/>
Adams, Charlie<lb/>
Nichols, Nick<lb/>
Rkidick. Dxe<lb/>
Curry, Jessel<lb/>
Plaster, Joe<lb/>
14 220<lb/>
14 160<lb/>
14 132<lb/>
14 128<lb/>
14 104<lb/>
90 40r<lb/>
62 39 <lb/>
66 50'e<lb/>
56 U"c<lb/>
48 47e<lb/>
63<lb/>
60<lb/>
49<lb/>
46<lb/>
63<lb/>
55 87 235 16.1<lb/>
49 82 173 12.4<lb/>
33 67 15 11A<lb/>
34 74 146 10.4<lb/>
42 87 138 9.9<lb/>
Intramural Play<lb/>
In Final Week<lb/>
b.v sonan gbe<lb/>
gave<lb/>
last Monday and<lb/>
T . rsdaj : kept its -<lb/>
ea I the week.<lb/>
A full u .3 being met -<lb/>
I.a-f NTest -f Action<lb/>
f reg<lb/>
<lb/>
In "A" Divisic:<lb/>
Bombs<lb/>
Only an<lb/>
<lb/>
Bombers en<lb/>
Last<lb/>
aw the B<lb/>
 "<lb/>
"  il<lb/>
<lb/>
78-4 '<lb/>
f I I Goats.<lb/>
Robin- W .itching Bombers<lb/>
<lb/>
fa els<lb/>
<lb/>
P . Spent ins, Pur<lb/>
 Uigels this<lb/>
The <lb/>
i 7-a <lb/>
with a 46-4-4 eet <lb/>
Angels.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Defeats Kappa Alpha<lb/>
A. good tan t<lb/>
-  . - <lb/>
-<lb/>
and Kaa Alpha.<lb/>
tea- -<lb/>
g  KA's and the<lb/>
<lb/>
Ida Chi. The art e&amp;<lb/>
ther Frat bast<lb/>
.1 championship.<lb/>
Plans for the Intramural basket-<lb/>
bal <lb/>
the Ir.tr<lb/>
-<lb/>
date.<lb/>
GYM OPEN ON SATURDAYS<lb/>
John Spoone, Student Direc-<lb/>
tor of Intramurals. said that the<lb/>
gymnasium would be open for<lb/>
recreational basketball on Satur-<lb/>
days from 10 A.M. until 4 P.M.<lb/>
Webb And Bowes . . . Ma See Action<lb/>
GOES AND<lb/>
GOES AND<lb/>
GOES ON A GALLON !<lb/>
LETTERMAN END OMMITTED<lb/>
Th EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
sincerely regrets the ommission<lb/>
of Pirate football end David<lb/>
Thomas from the list of letter-<lb/>
men recently published on this<lb/>
page. Thomas, a 6 foot, 185<lb/>
pound junior from Lawrence,<lb/>
Kansas, was a regular at the end<lb/>
slot on Coach Boones '58 squad<lb/>
and also won his letter as an<lb/>
end on the 1957 team. He is ex-<lb/>
pec ted to be on the starting list<lb/>
again this fall.<lb/>
Gel MflLDROOT<lb/>
CREAM-OIL Charlie!<lb/>
Bismynr !r-Door Sedan shorn the Fisher Body beauty of Chevrolet's lowest priced serin for '5f.<lb/>
CHEVY'S NEW HI -THRIFT 6<lb/>
extra pep it gives you for pwetnt and climbing hill-<lb/>
is due to higher torque at normal<lb/>
More miles are back in a gallon of regular-grade<lb/>
gasup to 10 moreand Chevy's new Hi-Thrift<lb/>
6 engine puts them there. It also gives you more<lb/>
"git' in the speeds you drive the most.<lb/>
Here's an engine that always seems able to coax extra<lb/>
miles out of a tank of regular-grade gas. In fact, if you're<lb/>
one of those drivers who keep tab on things like gaa<lb/>
mileage, you'll soon see for yourself that this new Hi-<lb/>
Thrift 6 gets up to 10 more miles a gallon.<lb/>
Another thing youTI like about this 135-h.p. 6 is the<lb/>
nowsee the wider selection of models at your local authorized Chevrolet dealer's!<lb/>
MANUFACTURER UCKNSK N. HO<lb/>
It may be hard to believe anytntng that looks a<lb/>
moves like this '69 Chary can be anca a stickler for<lb/>
economy. Butwhether yon pick the Ill-Thrift 6 or a<lb/>
vim-packed V8this is just<lb/>
one more reason Chevy's<lb/>
the car that's wanted for all<lb/>
its worth. Stop by your<lb/>
dealer's and see. The smart switch is to the'59 Chevy I<lb/>
C. Columbus, world traveler, says:<lb/>
"My hair looks great since I dis-<lb/>
covered Wildroot<lb/>
n<lb/>
Just s little Wt<lb/>
of Wild root<lb/>
amlWOWi<lb/>
 -<lb/>
Don Webb (No. 54) and Benny Bowes (No. 40) are shown as<lb/>
Webb dumps in two points for the Pirates in a recent conference game with<lb/>
Guilford. These two Pirate reserves may see action when East Carolina<lb/>
hosts Elon here Saturday night in another North State dash.<lb/>
-Kwwwwwwwwwwwweeeeeeaeeeeosseaeesoewaaaaaea iHttttttttHirttttHh<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
Why buy from us when there are so many other sources?<lb/>
First of all, we are one of the few Certified Gemologist firms<lb/>
in the United States.<lb/>
Next, we buy newly cut, unset diamonds directly from a diamond<lb/>
cutter. This means that we eliminate two middlemen: the broker, and<lb/>
wholesaler.<lb/>
, And then, our prices are much below the retoil average. In fact,<lb/>
our prices are below the regrular wholesale price,<lb/>
These are the reasons people buy diamonds from us. And, these<lb/>
are the reasons why we have never had a dueatitfied diamond customer.<lb/>
LAUTAREJ5 BROS.<lb/>
"Diamond Specialists<lb/>
Registered Jeweler - Certified Gemologist<lb/>
waaaeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaiwAAaoAAaaaaaaft aaaaaaaaaaaaaaftww<lb/>
NHWre. A a iriclti<lb/>

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