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            <mods:title>East Carolinian, July 30, 1959</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</mods:abstract>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">1784</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">19590730</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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                <mods:title>East Carolinian</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>East Carolinian, July 30, 1959</dc:title>
          <dc:description>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</dc:description>
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          <dc:date>19590730</dc:date>
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          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
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          <dc:identifier>38635</dc:identifier>
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                <pb facs="00038635_tn_0001" />
Election Of SS Queen<lb />
vti<lb />
gkctw"<lb />
II <lb />
for Summer School Queen<lb />
hfld Tuesday. The winner will<lb />
 annoum-<lb />
tni at the summer school<lb />
Xl Friday night<lb />
Easttarolinian<lb />
Softball Playoffs<lb />
The top four softball teams c<lb />
for the intramural championship after<lb />
the regular season which ends August<lb />
6.<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1959<lb />
Driving Range<lb />
Declares Tree<lb />
Day" For ECC<lb />
Next Thursday<lb />
ECC's Dottie McEwen<lb />
Named fMiss Congeniality'<lb />
Number 30<lb />
N,  lay will be<lb />
Greenville<lb />
ECC Free<lb />
Coif and<lb />
owner of the local driv<lb />
. mia -rf course,<lb />
I est Carolina sta-<lb />
ll earth will be ad-<lb />
facilities froo.<lb />
v increase his staff for<lb />
 Thursday and free<lb />
be administered to those<lb />
u' with the game<lb />
1<lb />
frame that young and<lb />
alike, can enjoy<lb />
hope all the kids will<lb />
1 don't wars if they've<lb />
 hall<lb />
Mye has given free<lb />
s to EC students, both<lb />
1,1 in classes. He does<lb />
 of love for the sport.<lb />
iff is composed of East<lb />
nts or graduates.<lb />
Day" will he open to<lb />
 - during the day and<lb />
thai golf is the<lb />
mg port in America<lb />
that it is by far the<lb />
ipant's outdoor sport.<lb />
to those who do not<lb />
it golf that there<lb />
embarrassment, and he<lb />
. "old pros" and nov-<lb />
advantages of "Free<lb />
ge is located on the<lb />
Fast Craolina's own Dottie Mc-<lb />
Ewen, current Miss Wilmington, was<lb />
named "Miss Congeniality" in the<lb />
Miss North Carolina Pageant recent-<lb />
ly. Dottie, a senior at ECC, was also<lb />
named "Miss Congeniality" in the<lb />
"Miss Wilmington" Pageant. This is<lb />
the first time in the history of the<lb />
pageant that both awards have been<lb />
given to the same girl. Previously,<lb />
the winning of the "Miss Congenality"<lb />
award was not in the top three. A<lb />
new pageant ruling this year changed<lb />
it.<lb />
Dottie said about being "Miss Con-<lb />
iality of N. C Passing the In-<lb />
spection of the judges is quite an<lb />
honor, but passing the inspection of<lb />
81 girls is very thrilling. I still don't<lb />
understand how I got it<lb />
Dottie's talent in the "Miss Wil-<lb />
n ington" pageant was a comedy skit<lb />
to the song, "I Enjoy Being A Girl"<lb />
from FLOWER DRUM SONG. She<lb />
said "I stuck to comedy in the State<lb />
pageant where I did a comedy panto-<lb />
niinc. It was a "Red Skelton" type of<lb />
pantomine showing the begining of a<lb />
a day for a hobo One of the most<lb />
exciting things about the pageant to<lb />
Hie was meeting and talking to Mary<lb />
Ann Mobley, "Miss America of 1959<lb />
she added "Mary Ann was there the<lb />
entire time and is one of the most<lb />
natural and likeable persons I have<lb />
ever met.<lb />
"The most thrilling time for me<lb />
came Saturday night when I was an-<lb />
nounced as the winner of the "Miss<lb />
Congeniality award. It is one of the<lb />
top honors of the pageant. Along<lb />
with the title I receive a trophy and<lb />
$.500 scholarship. I also receive a<lb />
$'200 scholarship for winning the Wil-<lb />
mington pageant.<lb />
Dottie plans to return to ECC this<lb />
fall and hopes to graduate next<lb />
spring with a major in Home Econo-<lb />
mics. While at ECC she has been a<lb />
class officer, cheerleader, marshal,<lb />
C. U. board member, "Y" cabinet<lb />
member, a member of the Westmins-<lb />
ter Fellowship, and the Home Eco-<lb />
nomic Club. She has also represented<lb />
the College Union in Homecoming one<lb />
year. She is a member of the Pi Kap-<lb />
pa sorority. This year she will be<lb />
loading the cheering squad.<lb />
"I'm extremely happy that I en-<lb />
tered the Pageant because I can<lb />
think of no other place you can earn<lb />
$500, meet around 200 wonderful<lb />
people; and have such a grand time<lb />
in only 3 weeks Dottie exclaimed.<lb />
ler Queen To BkLI<lb />
Week End In W<lb />
Faculty Members To Leave; New<lb />
Ones To Be Added For Fall<lb />
CANDIDATES . .<lb />
Bryan, Wilson Hall.<lb />
for Summer School Queen: Jackie Byrd, Sigma Epsilon; Janet Arnold, WWWS; Jo Ann<lb />
-V,i<lb />
a ay.<lb />
Douglas Observes<lb />
Wld Institute<lb />
V Douglas, Director of the<lb />
atlon project at East<lb />
ge, was an observer<lb />
A : Affairs Institute to be<lb />
Blue Ridge Assembly<lb />
Black Mountain July 24,<lb />
i<lb /><lb />
SMS<lb />
lb said this week that<lb />
the Danforth Foundation<lb />
eries at East Carolina Col-<lb />
1969-60 college year are<lb />
ing developed and the speakers to<lb />
tneed later. Douglas has par-<lb />
J  institutes of this type for<lb />
Information has just been released<lb />
on present members of East Carolina<lb />
faculty that are leaving and on new<lb />
members coming next fall.<lb />
Thomas E. Flowers of the Art<lb />
Department is leaving to become<lb />
head of the Art Department of Fur-<lb />
imm College, in South Carolina, and<lb />
new members in the Art Department<lb />
are Wesley Crawley from Oregon,<lb />
and Metz T. Gordley from Missouri.<lb />
In the Business department Donald<lb />
Cm stead is the only one leaving, and I<lb />
Nelly E. Dry ami Grace Silvers, both<lb />
from Greenville, are among the ad-<lb />
ditions, together with James Hudson<lb />
Bourdon. Mr. Bearden has just re-<lb />
ceived his Master's degree at East<lb />
Carolina.<lb />
Robert Nossen and Hermine Cara-<lb />
way are joining the English faculty.<lb />
Mr. Nossen is from Texas and Miss<lb />
Caraway is now working on her<lb />
doctorate at the University of North<lb />
Carolina. Two positions in this de-<lb />
partment remain unfilled. Leaving<lb />
are Harry Goldgar, Frank Hoskins,<lb />
who becomes head of the English<lb />
Campus Radio Station WWWS Marks Progress;<lb />
Hopes For Future Goal To Be Realized<lb />
Vn"v" Dr. Douglas conducted Department at Newberry College, in<lb />
 . '   i  c r-nrnlina Ruth Copland, who<lb />
op in Family Life skills. Be- j South Carolina;<lb />
teatinae through July 28, and be-<lb />
ing on August 1 he will conduct<lb />
ksaop on Family Problems. This<lb />
. rkshop is designed for teach-<lb />
velfare workers, ministers and<lb />
i-terested in the field of hu-<lb />
relations.<lb />
Ruth Copland, who<lb />
t leave of absence for further<lb />
studies; and Emma L. Hooper, who<lb />
is retiring.<lb />
There is one vacancy in the Educa-<lb />
tion Department, still to be filled.<lb />
Mrs. Sue Matz is the new member<lb />
in our Foreign Language Depart-<lb />
ment.<lb />
In the Physical Education Depart-<lb />
ment, Betty Russell is to replace<lb />
Janie S. Archer, who is on leave of<lb />
absence for a year. Charles DeShaw<lb />
is leaving, and George Tucker is to<lb />
replace James B. Mallory as assist-<lb />
ant football coach. Mr. Tucker is an<lb />
East Carolina graduate. Another new<lb />
faculty member is Glen P. Reeder,<lb />
who will also act as counselor for<lb />
one of the men's dormitories.<lb />
Carroll W. Smith will be with the<lb />
Industrial Arts Department. Mr.<lb />
Smith has been working on his<lb />
Master's degree at North Carolina<lb />
State College.<lb />
Clarence Monk of the Mathematics<lb />
Department is leaving to teach at<lb />
the University of Richmond. Another<lb />
member of this department, Martin<lb />
.Goldsworth, is on a one year leave<lb />
of absence. New members are Shirley<lb />
Harris, from Texas; Pauline Low-<lb />
man, also from Texas; and Herbert<lb />
R. Smith, from Baltimore, Md.<lb />
The only addition in the Music<lb />
Department is Gordon Johnson. Mr.<lb />
Johnson is from- Michigan.<lb />
Members of the Psychology Depart-<lb />
ment who are leaving are Julia D.<lb />
Marshall and Robert L. Ormsby.<lb />
Hubert C. Haynes is retiring. Among<lb />
the new members are Charles Stan-<lb />
ley Harris and Elsie Dotson, both<lb />
from Texas, and Donald Irvine. One<lb />
vacancy remains unfilled.<lb />
Coming to work in the Science De-<lb />
partment are Graham Davis, an East<lb />
Carolina graduate who has been in<lb />
Hawaii with the United States De-<lb />
partment of Agriculture, and Shep-<lb />
ard Mazor Faber, from Gainesville,<lb />
Florida. Leaving are Nancy B. Elia-<lb />
son and Lyle F. Plymale.<lb />
The Social Studies Department ex-<lb />
pects four new members: Albert<lb />
Diket, from Texas; John C. Ellen,<lb />
from Dillon, South Carolina; Horton<lb />
W. Emerson, from Georgia; and<lb />
Harold Goldstein, from Clark Uni-<lb />
versity. Clifton H. Johnson, James<lb />
LaPoe, Stanley Todd Lowry and<lb />
Progress highlighted the events at<lb />
Campus Radio Station WWWS dur-<lb />
ing the summer sessions this year.<lb />
Money totaling over $500 was appro-<lb />
priated by the Summer School Stu-<lb />
dent Government Association for the<lb />
purpose of improving and expanding<lb />
Campus Radio's present broadcast<lb />
equipment, and enlarging the record<lb />
libraries of 45's and L-P's.<lb />
The College Union Dance Party,<lb />
which was initiated last spring by<lb />
station manager, Jim Kirkland, and<lb />
assisted by J. Wayne Johnson during<lb />
the Spring Quarter and Rudd L. Jen-<lb />
sen and E. T. Rogers during the<lb />
Summer sessions, has been a source<lb />
of Friday night entertainment this<lb />
summer, as it is the only event which<lb />
has been regularly scheduled by the<lb />
Student Government Association,<lb />
working with the staff. Part of the<lb />
money appropriated by the SGA went<lb />
for the repair of the remote broad-<lb />
cast equipment used in presenting<lb />
this program from the patio of the<lb />
college union each Friday night.<lb />
Sponsored time sometimes known<lb />
as commercial time, was instituted<lb />
on a regular basis this summer by<lb />
Frank Grayiel, Business Manager of<lb />
the Compus Radio Station. Money ta-<lb />
ken in from advertising is used for<lb />
the improvement of the station's fa-<lb />
cilities, as well as enlarging the pre-<lb />
music library. Much of the "sold"<lb />
time was done on a "swap" basis<lb />
with the local merchants in which the<lb />
merchants gave campus radio ma-<lb />
terials in return for campus radio's<lb />
advertising service.<lb />
Along with the innovation of spon-<lb />
sored time, Campus Radio then began<lb />
operating on Sunday evenings for a<lb />
short while, and now has increased<lb />
Sunday time to three hours of broad-<lb />
casting.<lb />
Special events, headed by Rudd Jen-<lb />
sen, was another major item on Cam-<lb />
pus Radio this summer. The pro-<lb />
grams of interest with Dr. Messick<lb />
and Dr. Jenkins were continued, and<lb />
a special week of programs with<lb />
Dean White were added. When the<lb />
High School Science Institute arrived<lb />
for three weeks, Jensen was there to<lb />
greet them with a tape recorder.<lb />
Plans now for interviews with the<lb />
Summer Music Campers are complete<lb />
and this week will mark the close of<lb />
these interviews. Newsworthy items<lb />
such as interviews with Doug Clark<lb />
and his combo and interviews with<lb />
the members of the Dave Burbeck<lb />
Quartet also highlighted the work of<lb />
the special events department.<lb />
Campus Radio was fortunate in re-<lb />
ceiving a lend-lease gift of a Gates<lb />
Sound Truck, for use during the next<lb />
school year. This equipment will be<lb />
Buc, Loveahle Campus Mascot,<lb />
To Observe First Birthday<lb />
By BRYAN HARRISON<lb />
In a couple of weeks Buc, the col-<lb />
lege mascot, will observe the first<lb />
anniversary of his arrival on the<lb />
campus.<lb />
It was an exciting day, when Buc<lb />
me. A big crowd gathered outside<lb />
L.<lb />
HCCANEER Editor Uke Armstrong and Photographer Jim Kirkland get<lb />
 Yearbook underway during the summer.<lb />
Parle LeBaron are the members who<lb />
are not returning to ECC. George<lb />
Pasti is on a leave of absence for<lb />
one year.<lb />
George Cook of the English De-<lb />
partment and Mr. Monroe of Indus-<lb />
trial Arts have had their lesve of<lb />
absence extended for one more year. I<lb />
Dr. Cook will remain in Germany,<lb />
teaching, and Mr. Monroe will con-<lb />
tinue to work on his doctorate.<lb />
dene Lanier, an East Carolina<lb />
graduate, will join the faculty as<lb />
librarian.<lb />
The Wahl-Coates Training School<lb />
has also been subject to change in<lb />
its faculty. Louise Galphin is re-<lb />
tiring and Mildred Pate is leaving.<lb />
Ruby Hard, who has up to now been<lb />
at Peabody College, in Nashville,<lb />
Tennessee, is taking over one of the<lb />
2nd grade classes.<lb />
Lt. Col. Edward J. Maloney, Sgt.<lb />
H. H. Justice and Oapt. GeoTge Pat-<lb />
terson, all of the ROTC program at<lb />
East Carolina are leaving, and it is<lb />
still unknown who will replace them.<lb />
Lt. Col. Maloney is going to Seattle,<lb />
Washington, and Capt. .Patterson is<lb />
leaving for Germany.<lb />
the College Union when his owner let<lb />
him out of the station wagon.<lb />
Johnny Hudson, who was president<lb />
of the SGA, and Clint LeGette, who<lb />
headed the committee to acquire a<lb />
mascot, and a host of other students<lb />
were on hand to shake the great<lb />
(lane's paw.<lb />
The first thing the boys did was<lb />
take him out to Dora's and buy him<lb />
a beer. Buc lapped it up and we all<lb />
cheered.<lb />
At the time Buc was only four<lb />
months old and he weighed only 50<lb />
pounds. He was shy and his feet<lb />
were wobby and he was afraid to<lb />
walk up the steps leading from the<lb />
college union to the SGA office.<lb />
He spent his first night here in<lb />
Slay Hall much to the delight of the<lb />
other students who showered Buc with<lb />
too much attention. He spent a lot of<lb />
nights in Johnny Hudson's room.<lb />
Buc was well-loved from the very<lb />
first. He could be seen taking walks<lb />
with his many trainers. The first<lb />
trainer was Hugh Giles, who gave<lb />
Buc his first walks, started his diet,<lb />
and took care of him at the first<lb />
football game.<lb />
Buc had a difficult time getting<lb />
used to football. First attempts to<lb />
teach him to run out with the team<lb />
were unsuccessful. And when the<lb />
crowd cheered Buc dived for safety<lb />
under the grandstand.<lb />
Buc loved the cheerleaders. They<lb />
petted him and fed him peanuts. Once<lb />
he had his picture taken with Betty<lb />
Lane Evans, who was then Miss<lb />
North Carolina.<lb />
Buc's house was constructed shortly<lb />
before his arrival; his pen shortly<lb />
after. From all appearances, the mas-<lb />
cot has outgrown his living quarters.<lb />
His present trainer, Ronnie Knouse,<lb />
says that Buc now weighs 135 pounds,<lb />
and when he stands up he measures<lb />
6 feet 8 inches.<lb />
The big great dane eats six cans<lb />
of dog food a day, 2 pounds of dry<lb />
meal, and drinks two pails of water.<lb />
Ronnie says, "Buc walks me at least<lb />
a mile a day. He goes further than<lb />
that<lb />
When Buc first arrived, he couldnt<lb />
be trusted off the leash. One of his<lb />
trainers, Bob Connelly taught him to<lb />
go on the loose.<lb />
Once some of the students became<lb />
concerned over Buc during the big<lb />
snowfall last winter. Howard Black<lb />
received several phone calls from<lb />
students urging him to take him<lb />
indoors.<lb />
But Buc was right at home in the<lb />
snow, moreso in fact, than in the<lb />
present humid weather.<lb />
Buc has always been a souTce of<lb />
pleasure to the students. He has<lb />
been known to take an ice cream cone<lb />
right out of a coed's hand, and to<lb />
knock a grown man down when play-<lb />
fully jumping up on him.<lb />
Buc is a year and four months<lb />
old, happy and content, still playful<lb />
as a puppy. He is the first mascot<lb />
and a great credit to the school.<lb />
used to feed programs to WWWS<lb />
FM, the educational section of Cam-<lb />
pus Radio.<lb />
"So far as plans for next year go,<lb />
attempts to merge with the college<lb />
Radio Corp to handle national ad-<lb />
vertisments are being made. It is<lb />
hoped that the College Radio Corp<lb />
will be able to furnish the school with<lb />
a news machine, so that the students<lb />
operated radio station will be able<lb />
to keep the students up to date on<lb />
all of the latest world events. ORC<lb />
is also attempting to bargain with<lb />
national advertisers to sponsor away<lb />
football games, that will be played<lb />
by the Pirates during the 59-60 foot-<lb />
ball season.<lb />
Present Station Manager Jim Kirk-<lb />
land, is making arrangements with<lb />
SGA for paid positions on the staff<lb />
of the radio station next year, and<lb />
hopes that Rudd Jensen, who will<lb />
act as Station Manager for the first<lb />
of the coming school year, will fol-<lb />
low through on these plans. Kirk-<lb />
land is leaving the Radio Station<lb />
September 8, to assume a new posi-<lb />
tion opened by the Publications Board<lb />
as Photograhy Editor of the BUC-<lb />
CANEER, college annual.<lb />
Kirkland stated that he has hopes<lb />
that the completion of the installa-<lb />
tion of Jones Hall for reception will<lb />
be complete by the first of the 1959-<lb />
60 school year. "It's been a lot of<lb />
fun working with the staff of this<lb />
very industrious group. Without a<lb />
doubt, Campus Radio will become one<lb />
of the more outstanding service or-<lb />
ganization on the Campus of East<lb />
Carolina Kirkland stated.<lb />
Election To Be<lb />
Held Tuesday<lb />
One of four lovely co-eds will be<lb />
crowned Queen of Summer School<lb />
August 7, at the annual summer<lb />
school dance.<lb />
Jo Ann Bryan, Janet Arnold, Syl-<lb />
via Capps, and Jackie Byrd have been<lb />
nominated by campus organizations<lb />
to contend for "queen of the hop<lb />
"The Rhythmaires a 5-piece cam-<lb />
pus combo managed by Jack Pindell,<lb />
will play for the annual affair when<lb />
it gets under way at 8:00 in Wright<lb />
Auditorium.<lb />
Nancy Harris, 1958 Summer School<lb />
Queen, will crown the new queen at<lb />
the intermission ceremonies. Miss<lb />
Harris was sponsored by Theta Chi<lb />
fraternity last summer.<lb />
Jo Ann Bryan, the daughter of Mr.<lb />
and Mrs. H. C. Bryan of Grantham,<lb />
is sponsored by Wilson Hall. Pre-<lb />
sent secretary of the SGA, an office<lb />
she has held for a year, she is 20<lb />
years old, a senior, and a major in<lb />
English. Miss Bryan was Wayne<lb />
County Dairy Princess in 1957 and<lb />
a member of Kappa Delta Kappa.<lb />
Janet Arnold, a junior art major,<lb />
was one of the finalists in the Miss<lb />
Greenville Pageant last spring. She<lb />
is 19 years old and the daughter of<lb />
Mr. and Mrs. James A. Arnold of<lb />
Raleigh. A member of Kappa Phi<lb />
Epsilon, she is being sponsored by<lb />
WWWS, Campus Radio.<lb />
Sylvia Capps, who was Delta Sig-<lb />
ma Rho's (now Lambda Chi Alpha)<lb />
"Christmas Queen" in 1957, was nom-<lb />
inated by Cotton Hall. A junior prim-<lb />
ary education major, she is the<lb />
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Amos<lb />
Capps of Warrenton. She represent<lb />
Pi Kappa sorority on the ISC.<lb />
Jackie Byrd, who has been the<lb />
sweetheart of both Phi Sigma Pi and<lb />
Phi Mu Alpha, is being sponsored<lb />
by Sigma Epsilon social fraternity.<lb />
She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.<lb />
Goodwin Byrd of Windsor and a<lb />
senior primary education major. Miss<lb />
Byrd is 21 years old and was a mem-<lb />
ber of last spring's May Court. A<lb />
member of Delta Sigma Ghi, she ia<lb />
president of the ISC and a college<lb />
marshal.<lb />
"The Rhythmaires" include Frank<lb />
Wilson, Ted Beach, E1. W. Lee, Keith<lb />
Dobbins, and Jack Pindell. Dance<lb />
Elections Committee Chairman Don<lb />
Griffin states that this band, al-<lb />
though composed of EC students, has<lb />
had a variety of experience and has<lb />
played for many occasions.<lb />
"I think this is probably the fin-<lb />
est collegt combo we could get. One<lb />
of the best I've heard anywhere<lb />
said Griffin.<lb />
NOTICE<lb />
SGA President Bobbie Kennedy<lb />
has announced her office hoars<lb />
as follows: 10-12:00 a.m.Mon-<lb />
day through Friday, 3-4rO p..<lb />
Monday through; Friday.<lb />
BUC<lb />
. One year old.<lb />
HgafljMNimMMiMHiMm<lb /><pb facs="00038635_tn_0002" /><lb />
FAOU TWO<lb />
BAST CABOLIN I AK<lb />
An Educational Bargain<lb />
We Americans are often criticized for<lb />
not appreciating all that we have. This accu-<lb />
sation is true, of course, human nature being<lb />
such as it is, but it has made the United<lb />
States one of the most hated countries in the<lb />
world.<lb />
Human nature or not, there is no ex-<lb />
cuse for ingratitude.<lb />
Take, for example, East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege. It is a small school, insignificant against<lb />
the multitude of other colleges and univer-<lb />
sities, but important, nonetheless, to a small<lb />
group of students in eastern North Carolina.<lb />
ECC offers an educational bargain. The<lb />
people who go there have no money to waste<lb />
on expensive schooling. They are here to get<lb />
an education and get it fast before the money<lb />
runs out or the tobacco crop fails. Yet there<lb />
are some who would criticize this school.<lb />
Once in a while there is a misfit, some<lb />
guy who wants the advantages of a larger<lb />
school without paying for it. He tries to re-<lb />
form. He tries to set up political parties in<lb />
the SOA. to think up ways to entertain the<lb />
students to keep them on campus on the<lb />
weekends, to make ECC a "big time" school.<lb />
It won't work. It will not work until a<lb />
completely different class of students inha-<lb />
bits East Carolina College. The students here<lb />
are intersted in getting an education and<lb />
little else. They go home every weekend main-<lb />
lv because they must. There is the farm, the<lb />
family business, or another job. To stay in<lb />
school they have to go home.<lb />
Therefore, because there is nothing any-<lb />
one can do about existing conditions at ECC,<lb />
be grateful for what there is and stop grip-<lb />
ing.<lb />
Is Bobbie 0. K.?<lb />
The question has been raised: is Bobbie<lb />
Kennedy qualified to be President of the<lb />
SGA? A'J<lb />
The answer is unquestionably, yes.<lb />
Although the constitution states that a<lb />
student must be at least a third quarter jun-<lb />
ior to run for president, we must remind the<lb />
frustrated office seekers and constitutional<lb />
hair-splitters that Miss Kennedy did not run<lb />
for president, but for vice president, an of-<lb />
fice which does not carry that particular<lb />
qualification.<lb />
Also the constitution plainly states that<lb />
the vice president succeeds the president in<lb />
case of his withdrawal.<lb />
Miss Kennedy is not only legally quali-<lb />
fied to be president, but she is far more able<lb />
than any of the recent "they also rans" who<lb />
are now raising the fuss. What's more she's<lb />
a lot better looking than any of them.<lb />
What Miss Kennedy plans to do or will as<lb />
president remains to be seen, but we feel<lb />
that most of the student body will enjoy<lb />
watching her do it, rather than listening to<lb />
weary old political harangue of the dissap-<lb />
pointed office-seekers.<lb />
East Carolinian<lb />
Name changed from TECO ECHO November 7, 1952.<lb />
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb />
Greenville, North Carolina<lb />
Member<lb />
Columbia Scholastic Press Associatien<lb />
Associated Collegiate Presa<lb />
Intercollegiate Preis<lb />
North State Conference Press Association<lb />
Enter as second-class matter December 8, 1MB <lb />
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, mnder<lb />
the act of March 3, 1879. <lb />
Gwen Johnson<lb />
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb />
Jean Ann Waters<lb />
EDITOR<lb />
Bryan Harrison<lb />
 Sherald Ward<lb />
Norman Kilpatrick, Nam<lb />
Jimmy Kirkland<lb />
. Larry Bliaard<lb />
Managing Editor V<lb />
Sports Editor <lb />
Sports Reporters <lb />
Young Park<lb />
Photographer -<lb />
Cartoonist <lb />
News Staff Marcelle Vogel, Bob Johnson,<lb />
Alice Coriolano, Leigh Dobson.<lb />
Columnists   Bryan Harrison, Bob<lb />
Harper, Marcelle Vogel, Alice Coriolano, Leigh<lb />
Dobson, James Corbett, Tom Jackson.<lb />
Proofreading Staff Jane Berryman, Don Griffin,<lb />
Gwen Johnson, Marcelle Vogel, Bob Johnson,<lb />
Alice Coriolano, Leigh Dobson, Bobbie Kennedy,<lb />
Jenny Cooke, Jim Kirkland<lb />
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Buildin<lb />
Telephone, all departments, 6101, extaaeJoa 64<lb />
From the "Rubayait of Omar Khayam<lb />
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb />
Motes on; nor all your piety nor wit,<lb />
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line.<lb />
Kor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb />
translated by E. Fitegerald,<lb />
East Carolina College is a co-educational college<lb />
maintained by the State of North Carolina for the<lb />
purpose of giving young men and women W<lb />
that will enable them to earn a Bachelor  "<lb />
s Bachelor of Arts, a Bachelor f Mu81ci.r. <lb />
of Arts degree. The physical plant of the U<lb />
consist of approximately 130 acres and 26 1buUdings<lb />
appropriate to the work of the college EnUment<lb />
for the 1967-68 school year i8 in excof ITOOafld<lb />
includes students from nearly all of North Carolina a<lb />
100 caunties and adjoining state. .-<lb />
A aound general education program te offered<lb />
a, the foundation on which fJSLSSi<lb />
be baaed. Pre-professional training and S"<lb />
Sience are also available. Students may take work<lb />
uTthe following fields: Art E"0"?!?<lb />
Education English, Foreign Language, ogrPjy,<lb />
SSkh and Physical Education Home mgjgg<lb />
Industrial Arts, Library Science. Mathematics.;<lb />
Avchology, Science, and Social Studies. An Air<lb />
Force R$TC unit located at the college provide! an<lb />
oooortunity for men, upon graduation, to o JFm:<lb />
3KS3 a Second Lieutenants in the Air Forea<lb />
after wnkn they may enter flight training aao asm<lb />
their wtaga. armfttion y obtained by writ-<lb />
TaI RegtoEwt Carolina College, <lb />
C. <lb />
Editorially Speaking<lb />
Summer Camp Is<lb />
Subtle Ad For<lb />
East Carolina<lb />
By JEAN ANN WATERS<lb />
East Carolina College's biggest ad-<lb />
vertising project will end its second<lb />
and last week Sunday with a big bang<lb />
and a concert. The annual Music<lb />
Camp attracts several hundred high<lb />
school students per year and the num-<lb />
ber increases steadily.<lb />
These students, who in general<lb />
have not made up their minds about<lb />
which college they will attend or<lb />
even thought about it, for that mat-<lb />
ter, are silently brainwashed during<lb />
their stay here. The very sublety of<lb />
the campaign is its strongest factor.<lb />
The main advantage is that most<lb />
of them have never seen a college<lb />
before, so East Carolina has the jump<lb />
on other institutions in the state.<lb />
Next, most of them come from small<lb />
town or county schools. They see our<lb />
larjye, new library, our air-conditioned<lb />
band and choral rooms, and our mo-<lb />
dern classrooms. They get a taste of<lb />
the freedom of college life. Oh yes,<lb />
don't kid yourself. You have a darn<lb />
sight more freedom now that you did<lb />
in high school.<lb />
This place looks mighty good to<lb />
them. This college is big enough to be<lb />
important, but small enough to main-<lb />
tain the small town atmosphere. They<lb />
like it here, and they remember that<lb />
they liked it when the time comes to<lb />
thoose a college.<lb />
The older campers, judging the<lb />
school by the Music Department, look<lb />
for competance in instructors, ade-<lb />
quacy of facilities, and departmental<lb />
standards. They have a chance to<lb />
work with the various teachers, see<lb />
if they like them, see how much they<lb />
learn under them. The instructors<lb />
must be on their toes for they can<lb />
influence the campers for or against<lb />
ECC.<lb />
Meanwhile, the teachers are survey-<lb />
ing the current crop of campers for<lb />
potential talent, which they hope to<lb />
lure into the ECC Music Department,<lb />
eventually.<lb />
The summer music camp is de-<lb />
finitely a valuable program to East<lb />
Carolina and it will benefit the col-<lb />
lege in many ways.<lb />
Being loyal members of the ECC<lb />
student body, we up here in the EAST<lb />
CAROLINIAN office will grit our<lb />
teeth; try to ignore the trumpets on<lb />
one side of us, the clarinets on the<lb />
other, and the band below; and think<lb />
of what this din is doing for dear<lb />
old EC in the way of free publicity,<lb />
and not what it is doing to our poor<lb />
shattered minds.<lb />
Which brings to mind a sign on<lb />
our wall which reads, "Just because<lb />
we think you think we don't know<lb />
what we're doing, don't think we<lb />
don't think we don't either<lb />
We hear that Aladar Ecsedy, the<lb />
sad-eyed Hungarian pianist who gave<lb />
a concert here last Wednesday night,<lb />
had reason to be gloomy. After pa-<lb />
tiently listening to his performance<lb />
of 12 variations on "Twinkle, Twinkle<lb />
Little Star the greater part of his<lb />
audience left. The remaining few<lb />
must have been children or asleep.<lb />
The arboretum is finally bowing<lb />
to progress. It is said that a wing<lb />
is being built onto the new classroom<lb />
building on the frontier of the aT-<lb />
boreturn and soon the road from<lb />
Jones Dormitory will be extended<lb />
across it. The football field, I sup-<lb />
pose, will be the last to go.<lb />
The international political scene<lb />
isn't as peaceful as that of the col-<lb />
lege. Although our Student Govern-<lb />
ment Association has done little more<lb />
than appropriate money, one. person<lb />
seems to be getting things done.<lb />
Throe cheers for the biggest sur-<lb />
prise of the yean(Richard Nixon.<lb />
He and Krushchev really had it out<lb />
and strangely enough each claims<lb />
that he wasn't offended by the out-<lb />
burst. Nixon with one eye on the<lb />
presidential nomination seems to<lb />
have accomplished more in a few<lb />
days than the Geneva Conference<lb />
did in weeks.<lb />
Herter, too, seems to be doing an<lb />
excellent job of not taking any fool-<lb />
ishness from the Russian delegates.<lb />
Let's hope he can prevent them<lb />
from making fools of us again.<lb />
Since this is the final paper of the<lb />
summer, I would like to take thia op-<lb />
portunity to thank my poor, over-<lb />
worked staff who have been under<lb />
terrific strain and pressure fc; ix<lb />
hectic weeks. This handful of students<lb />
has worked long hours, each drift"<lb />
much more than his ehare. To one<lb />
and all a sincere "Thank you.M<lb />
&amp;7A<lb />
Columnist's Swan Song<lb />
I've Been Hanging Around Too Long<lb />
Motion Picture Schedule<lb />
August 4Life Begins at 17.<lb />
August 6The Goddess.<lb />
August 11-Rally (Round the Flag.<lb />
August 18From Hare to Har-<lb />
nity.<lb />
August 18The Story of Bather<lb />
Coatello.<lb />
Movies in Austin Auditorium 7:80<lb />
p.m on data announced East Caro-<lb />
lina Collage Entertainment Gem-<lb />
This makes my 32nd column for<lb />
the EAST CAROLINIAN. I've writ-<lb />
ten twice that many features, a<lb />
couple of dozen editorials, and well<lb />
over a huundred news stories.<lb />
I've written out and I'm ready to<lb />
go. As the song says, "I've been<lb />
hanging around this old town too<lb />
long<lb />
I've worked for five different edi-<lb />
tors, four of them women, whom I've<lb />
never gotten along with. I've seen<lb />
seven SGA presidents come and go.<lb />
My favorite editor was Jimmy Fer-<lb />
rell. Bald-headed at twenty-two, he<lb />
worried constantly, refused to agree<lb />
with me on everything from how to<lb />
write a column to what constituted<lb />
good drama.<lb />
He knew how to run a newspaper.<lb />
He was a journalistic dictator. His<lb />
word was law and you did what he<lb />
said or took a powder. A mild-man-<lb />
nered person, he ruled the EAST<lb />
CAROLINIAN with an iron fist.<lb />
He was an avid supporter of Ed-<lb />
die Dennis when he ran for president<lb />
against Jimmy Phelps. He told the<lb />
staff we would vote for Dennis or<lb />
else. We all went out and voted for<lb />
Phelps, but never told him.<lb />
Ferrell put out the best BAST<lb />
CAROLINIAN in the school's history.<lb />
He knew how to write and he knew<lb />
how to teach others to write. I learn-<lb />
ed everything I ever knew about<lb />
uewspaper from Jimmy Ferrel. I<lb />
only hope I've been a credit to him.<lb />
Oliver Williams was on that staff,<lb />
too. Oliver is Sunday editor of the<lb />
Rocky Mount Telegram now. If he<lb />
continues in journalism, he will be a ,<lb />
great success.<lb />
Those were the good old days,<lb />
when the college was a happy place,<lb />
the pre-old-yellow days.<lb />
My favorite SGA president was<lb />
Johnny Hudson. He was President<lb />
last summer. He did more for the<lb />
school in one summer than all the<lb />
other six that I've Been did in three<lb />
and half years.<lb />
Johnny was a real screwball. He<lb />
was the last guy on earth that you<lb />
would think was an executive. Every-<lb />
thing he did, he did with color and<lb />
humor. I learned a lot about politics<lb />
from Johnny, and a lot about living<lb />
too.<lb />
Johnny was a rare diplomat. He<lb />
knew how to get the administration<lb />
to go along with him. He never got<lb />
Dean White to say yes on Bermuda<lb />
shorts and he never got Raleigh's<lb />
Mayor Enloe to give East Carolina<lb />
students a discount at Pitt theatre.<lb />
But he got the school a wonderful<lb />
mascot and achieved a brilliant re-<lb />
cord in student government, and had<lb />
a lot fun doing it. ,<lb />
My favorite actor and actress were<lb />
Bubba Driver and Alice Ann Home.<lb />
Bubba Driver was a great performer,<lb />
offstage as well as on.<lb />
If you ever had a party, you would<lb />
 ant to invite Bubba. He would whip<lb />
ouv the uke or the bongo drums and<lb />
 jnd more Uke Harry Belafonte than<lb />
Harry Belafonte did. He was a na-<lb />
tural wit, always laughing and smil-<lb />
ing and acting. I never heard an un-<lb />
kind word said about Bubba.<lb />
Alice Ann Home was simply the<lb />
greatest I wrote a feature on her<lb />
when I waa a sophomore and it was<lb />
the best I ever wrote. Her everyday<lb />
conversation waa as lyrical as the<lb />
By BRYAN HARRISON<lb />
best of modern poetry.<lb />
Alice Ann played many roles, but<lb />
there was no sham about her. She<lb />
was a natural born actress who kept<lb />
you laughing every minute you were<lb />
with her, and to talk with her five<lb />
minutes put you in a good mood for<lb />
the rest of the day.<lb />
After this summer they will all<lb />
be gone. They were great kids. All<lb />
of them made a real and solid con-<lb />
tribution to this school. They put<lb />
everything they had into it and they<lb />
got everything there was to get out<lb />
of it. They will all go far, and East<lb />
Carolina is a better place for their<lb />
having been here.<lb />
There are a few more who have<lb />
left their mark. One of the biggest<lb />
was the one made by Billy Arnold,<lb />
who left last winter and got drafted.<lb />
Billy was one of those rare human<lb />
beings who only come along once in<lb />
a great while. He wrote twice as<lb />
many columns for the EAST CARO-<lb />
LINIAN as I did, and drew a car-<lb />
toon almost every week for four<lb />
years. Many people picked up the<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN just to see one<lb />
of his cartoons.<lb />
Billy could draw a cartoon, with<lb />
that peculiar Arnoldian flavor with<lb />
exhuberant characters, subtle wit, and<lb />
gentle satire, in four minutes. I have<lb />
never seen better cartoons in any<lb />
college newspaper.<lb />
Billy was always writing. He wrote<lb />
short stories between classes, never<lb />
satisfied with any of them. He would<lb />
start novels and give them up. He<lb />
could write a clever poem off the top<lb />
of his head.<lb />
He was one of the best-natured<lb />
people you could ever meet. A smile<lb />
in his eyes, quiet-spoken, sloppily<lb />
dressed, he said he was a member<lb />
of the dirty shirt school of writers.<lb />
Billy was sports editor of the<lb />
DAILY REFLECTOR, and later re-<lb />
porter, the whole time he was in col-<lb />
lege. Over here he always held down<lb />
some editorial job on the EAST<lb />
CAROLINIAN and he was co-editor<lb />
of THE REBEL and one of its found-<lb />
ers.<lb />
Billy had a strange spirit. He al-<lb />
ways reminded me of Ben in Look<lb />
Homeward, Angel, a book which he<lb />
dearly loved. When he left, he took<lb />
a lot of East Carolina with him.<lb />
My favorite campus character is<lb />
Harold Leary. A good-natured, but<lb />
sometimes hot-headed Irishman, he<lb />
is undoubtedly one of the funniest<lb />
people I've ever met, and one of the<lb />
best at heart.<lb />
Harold has been here as long aa I<lb />
have and will be here after I'm gone.<lb />
You can see him in the soda shop,<lb />
probably in Bermudas, joking with<lb />
every good looking babe that cornea<lb />
along.<lb />
His conversation is usually mixed<lb />
with a little German, which he<lb />
learned in "Krautland a little<lb />
"ECTC" slang, which he lets fly with<lb />
s slight stutter.<lb />
Since I've been in college I've had<lb />
13 roommates. I cant even remem-<lb />
ber some of their namea. I gueaa my<lb />
favorite one is the one I've roomed<lb />
with longest. His name is Bobby<lb />
Wells,<lb />
Wells is a great practical joker.<lb />
He puta shaving lather in my tooth-<lb />
paste, and honey in my roll-on d<lb />
oderant. Once I had a date with a<lb />
girl, and he set every clock in the<lb />
house up, and I arrived two hours<lb />
early thinking I was twenty minutes<lb />
late.<lb />
I guess over a hundred different<lb />
soda shop girls have served me cof-<lb />
fee in the mornings. There is only<lb />
one who has been working back there<lb />
as long as I've been here and I don't<lb />
know her name.<lb />
Considering everything, I guess my<lb />
favorite soda shop girl was Johnise<lb />
Hardesty, who always smiled at me<lb />
and everybody else even when the<lb />
mob got thickest.<lb />
Then there was that mad wild,<lb />
happy crowdthe rebels. A grand-<lb />
spirited crew, they knew how to<lb />
work hard and play hard. You could<lb />
see them in the "little box" that was<lb />
the iRebel office, seated on desks and<lb />
chairs and tables getting the maga-<lb />
zine out, or you could see them in<lb />
the Varsity, getting pleasantly in<lb />
shape for the next issue, or over at<lb />
Mr. Pierce's place, getting educated:<lb />
Dave Lane, Nancy Davis, Billy<lb />
Arnold, Hugh Agee, Judy Bishop, Bob<lb />
Harper, Nancy Lilly, Marty Kellam,<lb />
Pat Smith, Tom Mims, Nelson Dud-<lb />
ley, Mary Marshbourne, Woody Davis,<lb />
Annette Willoughby, Betty Vic Gas-<lb />
kins, John Filicky, Robert L. Harper,<lb />
Sandra Mills, Rachel Steinbeck, John<lb />
Butler, Mary Margaret Kelly, and<lb />
Joe Swartz.<lb />
Then the campus politicians must<lb />
be mentioned. Mike Katsias, Jimmy<lb />
Phelps, Bobby Hall (an old antago-<lb />
nist, who goes, but somehow always<lb />
pops back up), Bulldog Dyson, and<lb />
Eddie Dennis. Most of them are gone<lb />
now, too.<lb />
My favorite campus politician was<lb />
Stan Harper. A man who usually<lb />
stayed in the background and con-<lb />
trolled voters like a puppeteer, Stan<lb />
was the brain trust behind the re-<lb />
cent Dallas Wells campaign. Every<lb />
technique, every gimmick, every<lb />
method known to college elections,<lb />
Stan explored.<lb />
Last spring's presidential battle<lb />
was the most colorful event to hit<lb />
the campus in many a year. A burro<lb />
pulled a cart full of Dallas Wells<lb />
and pretty girls over the campus, a<lb />
new Cadillac and an A model Ford,<lb />
hanging effigies, a flood of propa-<lb />
ganda testified to his political genius,<lb />
and every girl he could reach wore<lb />
a flower on her blouse.<lb />
He was only interested in results,<lb />
and both his co-workers and his op-<lb />
ponents knew the meaning of hard<lb />
work as a result of his shrewd plan-<lb />
ning.<lb />
I'm ready to go. I've seen enough<lb />
now. And most of these people have<lb />
heard everything I've got to say.<lb />
I went in the new classroom build-<lb />
ing the other day, and it felt cold<lb />
and strange and too scientific I have<lb />
a fondness for warm old Austin with<lb />
its crazy corridors and familiar worn<lb />
stairways. The halls echo the names<lb />
of many forgotten faces and absorbs<lb />
the lost voices of all the successes<lb />
and failure of fifty years of growing<lb />
and learning.<lb />
I'm ready to go. All that I have<lb />
known here is passing on and I've<lb />
exhausted what this great place can<lb />
do or me and I have worn out all my<lb />
words singing its praises.<lb />
THURSDAY, JULY SO, 19w<lb />
James B. Mailory<lb />
The EAST CAROLINIAN feels that th<lb />
college made a wise choice, one which wi<lb />
prove popular, when they appointed Jam<lb />
B. Mailory Dean of Men.<lb />
The friendly, well-liked baseball coac<lb />
h3s been here six years. He is well-known<lb />
and respected by the men students on cam-<lb />
pus. It is a fine thing when the college does<lb />
not have to look for people off the campus to<lb />
fill administrative vacancies when they can<lb />
be filled by capable members of our own tea-<lb />
ching staff.<lb />
Already Coach Mailory has approached<lb />
his new job in the best collegiate spirit when<lb />
he stated that he was not going to wait for<lb />
the students to come to him with probh-<lb />
but will try his best to approach the studentd<lb />
as a friend, so that they will feel free to come<lb />
to him whenever they need him.<lb />
He will have the toughest of tough job<lb />
It will require tact, courage, and intelligence.<lb />
Here is a "hats off to" Jim Mailoryand<lb />
good luck!<lb />
A Low-Water Mark<lb />
East Carolina has reached the lcw-wa<lb />
mark in school spirit. Out of well over a doz-<lb />
en organizations on campus who could nomi-<lb />
nate some co-ed to run for summer school<lb />
queen, four have chosen to do so.<lb />
Although we feel that any one of tkese<lb />
four could carry the honor with grace, we<lb />
believe that there are many more girls on<lb />
campus who could successfully enter the com-<lb />
petition. '<lb />
We hope this is not an indication of stu-<lb />
dent enthusiasm over the summer school<lb />
dance. If so, there will probably be too few<lb />
people there to hold the dance.<lb />
When students on this campus feel like<lb />
supporting a dance, they can do it in grand<lb />
fashion. We hope that many turn out at the<lb />
dance and see the queen crowned.<lb />
The Luckless Legion<lb />
More than 2,800,000 Americans were<lb />
drafted into the Luckless Legion of automo-<lb />
bile casualties in 1958.<lb />
In its annual highway safety booklet en-<lb />
titled "The Luckless Legion The Travelers<lb />
Insurance Companies pointed out. "This is an<lb />
army of suffering humanity which grows<lb />
more rapidly each year. It is made up of the<lb />
injured and the dead, the heedless and the<lb />
innocent, the young and the old. Since the<lb />
automobile first appeared on the American<lb />
scene, these ranks of the crippled and the<lb />
dead have included more than 60,000,000 or<lb />
us<lb />
The Luckless Legion is a silent, haunted<lb />
army. We erect no monuments to it. No grim<lb />
reminders mar the sleek beauty of the roads<lb />
and highways which are its field of battle.<lb />
A newspaper headlines, perhaps, marks the<lb />
induction of the latest recruit. Then silence.<lb />
Silent suffering. A lifetime of pain. Or the<lb />
silent memories of those who mourn when the<lb />
dead are laid to rest.<lb />
There were 36,700 men, women and child-<lb />
ren numbered among the dead of the Luck-<lb />
less Legion during the past year. For every<lb />
fatality there were 77 people who suffered<lb />
painful injuries. Hour by hour and day by<lb />
day, this total climbed until it reached the<lb />
staggering total of 2,825,000.<lb />
Injuries during the past yea rose 12 per<lb />
centtwice the rate of increase for the pre-<lb />
vious year. In the rising curve of injuries lies<lb />
the greatest waste of property and human<lb />
resources in our nation. Behind the lines of<lb />
our efforts toward national progress, the<lb />
Luckless Legion stands as a vast fifth column.<lb />
Statistics, pledges and slogans do not<lb />
seem to change us. Something more is needed.<lb />
During 1959, the Luckless Legion will be<lb />
meeting in our communityon a stretch of<lb />
highway, in a hospital room, in the morgue.<lb />
You alone will know when the meeting<lb />
time is near. In the temptation to bear down<lb />
a little harder on the gas, to beat the dark-<lb />
ness home, to test yoor reflexes when they<lb />
are dulled by sleep or alcohol, to jay-walk on<lb />
crowded streets, to forget caution when wea-<lb />
ther and road conditions are bad. During<lb />
1959, every time you are behind the wheel of<lb />
a car, remember that the Luckless Legion is<lb />
looking for recruits. Don't be one.<lb />
Adieu<lb />
It has already been a long hot summer.<lb />
The "Hot Nuts" have come and gone.<lb />
Dave Brubeck was here again. Campus poli-<lb />
ticians were lazy. (We'll blame it on the<lb />
heat.) Too much was said of Earl Long.<lb />
But next fall, the fireworks will start<lb />
again. The EAST CAROLINIAN will have<lb />
some news to print and their reporters can<lb />
dig facts and quit writing fiction.<lb />
e<lb />
 a<lb />
ft 1<lb />
4 a<lb />
OS<lb />
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tioa<lb />
lai<lb />
hire<lb />
b'<lb />
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btf<lb />
Subs<lb />
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thiel<lb />
all<lb />
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&amp;<lb />
Dir<lb />
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4<lb />
This is our last issue, and so<lb />
Ann, Bryan, Gwen, Sherald, Marcelle, Alke,<lb />
and Nam Youngwish you all a<lb />
end-of-summer and a happy<lb /><pb facs="00038635_tn_0003" /><lb />
THTKSPAY. JULY SO,<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
SPORTS<lb />
CHATTER<lb />
BY SHERALD WARD<lb />
At ro along through life with its many joys and sorrows do<lb />
 what life is all about? Is it just another game in whkh<lb />
l a winner and one who has to lose? Is life worth living, are<lb />
vita tho type of game you are playing? Sooner or later we<lb />
airwat these great questions for time is fleeting and the<lb />
time are slipping down slowly but surely. From our midst this<lb />
ed a man who had everything to live for and yet the end<lb />
tec him.<lb />
Whei M look back over our past life are we satisfied with what<lb />
are we sorry for the things that we have left undone. Surely<lb />
 r n la consider that life is short here on earth and we<lb />
use of every available minute of it. Such to me was the life<lb />
 whom w? mentioned earlier, none other than the former<lb />
vanity of North Carolina. Jim Tatum. This name is known<lb />
 as one who has played the game of life to the finish but<lb />
Iriag forward to many years of life. With a look to the future<lb />
i i for 1955 there was probably the desire to have a winning<lb />
I aJBM mater. But his life came to an end here on earth and<lb />
 the matter of the final analysis, was the Great Athletic Di-<lb />
ad with his game? Just as each of us have to answer to some-<lb />
an we are, whether He be the Big Coach or the Man Upstairs<lb />
.ha ays the answer which has to come.<lb />
 affords much to all of us just as it did to Jim Tatum and do<lb />
 advantage of it as The Captain would have us take every<lb />
at ia offered us on the field of life. There are times in all<lb />
I when things look dark, and then that ray of sunshine comes<lb />
aad then comes joy. Surely this was true in Coach Tatum s life<lb />
I true in all lives. There must have been times when Jim must<lb />
ugfet about this idea of living and dying. With confidence he must<lb />
M fea fight on because he was associated with a game that is<lb />
-ame where it is a constant fight to see who can win in the<lb />
1 hope that it has been your happy priviledge to be a member of<lb />
in which everyone has given it his best and given you the joy<lb />
aing. If football is your sport then you know something of what<lb />
 any Jim has been through as a player as well as a coach.<lb />
Then comes the question of whether or not we have given the game<lb />
I We feel that Mr. Tatum gave a great deal to the great Amen-<lb />
ta and did much to foster this great sport. Will someone be<lb />
Ante that you gave your best while being a member of this team<lb />
aU find ourselves a part? Did you carry out your assignment,<lb />
eking the right man, or carrying the ball through the right hole?<lb />
us have had times when the way was not open but when we hit<lb />
e the hole was. Half the battle is won when we decide that<lb />
nan who tries is always the one who scores the touchdowns. Big<lb />
have learned this along way back as a young football player<lb />
- ita Carolina. This we all need to learn for it is the secret to a<lb />
some life which is fruitful to all.<lb />
year some of us made resolutions which we decided that needed<lb />
gad in our lives, and I hope that all of us kept them. In con-<lb />
af the law of average, there must be a few of us did not do<lb />
that we decided. Then comes the thousand and one reasons for not<lb />
I what we were going to do. So let us have a new purpose in mind<lb />
rk for the time when we will be called before the Great Athletic<lb />
- just as Jim Tatum has done.<lb />
Society of Buccaneers<lb />
w many of us would like to see East Carolina College have a<lb />
r athletic program? Now that all of you have voiced your opinion<lb />
u work together for the good of the teams. There is an organization<lb />
i h has been formed which is dedicated to that puropse which is for<lb />
imai and other interested parties who want to see East Carolina grow.<lb />
Dr. Leo Jenkins has stated that over 300 letters have been sent out<lb />
vh should inform many of this great way of helping out. The next<lb />
eeting will be on Homecoming Day after the Game so that all who are<lb />
n ted can attend and give their opinions.<lb />
The purpose of this organization is to join the man and the college<lb />
at together in fellowship. There are no officers but each year one is<lb />
- ected as the Chief Buccaneer.<lb />
In case you are sincerely interested in helping you can gain more<lb />
formation by seeing Dr. Jenkins. There are no dues and the only require-<lb />
et is that you have a sincere desire to help.<lb />
Summer Schedule<lb />
Twelve games with a playoff will be the type of play as the second<lb />
summer session intramural softball schedule gets under way. At the end<lb />
f this there will be a playoff between the top teams. Teams entered<lb />
are the Virginians managed by Sherald Ward, as well as the Diamond<lb />
Bandits who played in the first round. A new team is the Scoffers as<lb />
are the Has Beens. Now East Carolina has the Yankees for they have<lb />
-ntered, along with the old Bombers. We have a new team in the Barons<lb />
hich probably will use some of the players that were used by other teams<lb />
n the first quarter.<lb />
The schedule is as follows:<lb />
SECOND SUMMER SESSION INTRAMURAL SOFTBALL<lb />
SCHEDULE (Male Students)<lb />
Each team in the league (7) will play each other twice or a total<lb />
t twelve games. The top four teams will have a playoff for the champion-<lb />
ship. No. 1 team will play No. 4 team and No. 2 team will play No. 3<lb />
team in a two-out-of-three series for the championship.<lb />
Tuesday, July 21<lb />
The Scoffers vs. Has Beens (2 games) Shack<lb />
Diamond Bandits vs. Virginians (2 games) Best<lb />
Wednesday, July 22<lb />
Bombers vs. Barons (2 games) Best<lb />
ECC Yankees vs. Virginians (2 games) Shack<lb />
Thursday, July 23<lb />
The Scoffers vs. Barons (2 games) Shack<lb />
Diamond Bandits vs. Bombers (2 games) Best<lb />
Monday, July 27<lb />
Has Beens vs. Barons (2 I Best<lb />
ECC Yankees vs. Bombers (2  Shack<lb />
Tuesday, July 28<lb />
The Scoffers vs. Diamond Bandits (2 games) Shack<lb />
Virginiana vs. Bombers 2  Beat<lb />
Wednesday, July 29<lb />
Has Beens vs. Diamond Bandita (2 ges) Best<lb />
EOC Yankees vs. The Scoffers (2 games) Shack<lb />
Thursday, July 3t<lb />
Barons vs. Diamond Bandits 2 games) Shack<lb />
Virginians Tft. The Scoffers (2 games) Best<lb />
Monday, August S<lb />
Has B  BCC Ynkees 2 games) Best<lb />
va. The Scoffers (2 games) Shack<lb />
Tuesday, August 4<lb />
Which Twin Has The Tony?<lb />
Virginians, Diamond Bandits<lb />
Split Double-Header In Play<lb />
Last week in the intramural lea ginians and came victors by the scores<lb />
gue the Diamond Bandits managed of 1M 22.3. So Walker t 3<lb />
by Kelly Kee, took on Sherald Ward's '<lb />
Virginians and each team came out<lb />
with one loss and one win. The<lb />
scores would make you think it was<lb />
football for they were, 21-17, 15-11.<lb />
The Scoffers, managed by John<lb />
Phillips, split with the Has Beens,<lb />
managed by Don Harris and Charlie<lb />
Adams. The scores were 6-2, 9-8. The<lb />
Bombers under Jay Alphin took on<lb />
the Barons under Dick Gerrish did<lb />
just like the others, with scores of<lb />
9-2, 6-5. All these games were play-<lb />
ed on Monday.<lb />
Tuesday The ECC Yankees, man-<lb />
aged by Ed Emory took on the Vir-<lb />
for 4 in the first, and 2 for 3 in the<lb />
second.<lb />
The Diamond Bandits took on the<lb />
Bombers and found the Bombers to<lb />
be too much for they were beat 19-6,<lb />
28-B. The Barons were victims of the<lb />
Scoffers to the tune of 17-10, 6-3.<lb />
TeamWonLost<lb />
Bombers40<lb />
ECC Yankees20<lb />
Scoffers31<lb />
Has Beens11<lb />
Diamond Bandits13<lb />
Virginians13<lb />
Barons04<lb />
Mexican Bullfighting Often<lb />
Unappreciated By Americans<lb />
By CLAUDIO ARMENDARIZ<lb />
CU BIKES, are among the many activities offered this summer. Here<lb />
the Carr twins, Carolyn and Marilyn, and Bob Church pause in front of<lb />
tl.v Union Building.<lb />
Billy Widgeon Former Captain<lb />
At AC Works Toward M. A.<lb />
By SHERALD WARD<lb />
(Editor's Note: This is the third<lb />
in a series of articles pertaining to<lb />
at! letes of colleges other than East<lb />
Carolina who are now doinjr graduate<lb />
work here.)<lb />
William B. Widgeon is one that<lb />
along with his love and admiration<lb />
for East Carolina still holds dear to<lb />
his memory the days at his other<lb />
alma mater. For it was there in his<lb />
ndergraduate days that the early<lb />
processes of learning came about.<lb />
When one has two schools which<lb />
have helped him along the way there<lb />
is always the threat that one might<lb />
give him more to give in life than the<lb />
other. However, in the case at point,<lb />
each school has ptayed an important<lb />
part in the total job.<lb />
Hailing from Newport, North Caro-<lb />
lina where he attended high school<lb />
and elementary schools, William was<lb />
a valuable asset to his community.<lb />
While in Newport High School he<lb />
played baseball and basketball, being<lb />
elected Captain of the basketball<lb />
team his Junior year.<lb />
After enrolling at Atlantic Chris-<lb />
tian College in Wilson, North Caro-<lb />
lina Mr. Widgeon made quite a name<lb />
for himself on the hardwoods as well<lb />
as on the diamond. In his sophomore<lb />
year he was voted the most valuable<lb />
player in the tournament. Then in<lb />
liis Junior year the honor of being<lb />
elected Captain came his way.<lb />
Receiving his B. A. Degree from<lb />
this college, Coach Widgeon took the<lb />
coaching duties at Bailey, North Caro-<lb />
lina where his girls' basketball team<lb />
went undefeated. His boys basketball<lb />
team did not do quite as well but his<lb />
baseball team had some good teams<lb />
losing by low scores.<lb />
Our man of the hour has a helping<lb />
hand for during his college days he<lb />
courted and married the former Miss<lb />
Sylvia Allsbrook who holds a B. A.<lb />
Decree and teaches the second grade<lb />
in Bailey.<lb />
This summer while working on his<lb />
M. A. he finds time to be a member<lb />
of the Has Beens in the Intramural<lb />
Softball League.<lb />
Campus Confucius Tells Of<lb />
Oriental Confusion<lb />
By NAM Y. PARK<lb />
Confucius was by no means non- authority. He taught that life must<lb />
theistic, but he was a rationalist who I he vigorous and positive, carried on<lb />
favored a practical conservatism. Un- j with balance and moderation, and the<lb />
. . , , avoidance of all extremes.<lb />
der his code the dayls duties and the , iji. rtj ; jj <lb />
.    . ,  Confucianism today is regarded as<lb />
individuals station in life were care<lb />
Many people have heard about bull-<lb />
fighting but they have very little<lb />
knowledge concerning this important<lb />
sport in Mexico. The average Ameri-<lb />
can has the idea that bullfighting is<lb />
a gruesome sport which should not<lb />
e allowed. In case you had a chance<lb />
to see a bullfight there is the possi-<lb />
bility that you would not enjoy it as<lb />
there is a large percentage of<lb />
Americans who see bullfighting but<lb />
do not enjoy this sport which is so<lb />
every day to the Mexican people. But<lb />
this stems from the lack of knowl-<lb />
edge of this entertainment which so<lb />
fascinates the Mexican people and<lb />
continues to be their number one<lb />
form of entertainment.<lb />
Even as a little boy there is inbred<lb />
the desire to become the famous Ma-<lb />
tador just as every young Ameri-<lb />
can boy has a desire to be like his<lb />
favorite athlete. The young Mexican<lb />
boy starts out early to work toward<lb />
that end. Many boys around the age<lb />
of eight or ten can be seen playing<lb />
bullfight with every car which passes<lb />
by in the streets of any town in<lb />
Mexico.<lb />
All the while he is thinking of the<lb />
day when he will enter the arena<lb />
and face the bull. Hearing the cheer-<lb />
ing crowds as they wave to him from<lb />
the stands is normal and average for<lb />
the little Mexican of the street.<lb />
Dreaming of the day when a fair<lb />
young damsel will toss him a rose<lb />
when he has beaten the bull.<lb />
Crowds throng to the bullfights and<lb />
the young ones are there to cheer<lb />
their favorite as he meets up with<lb />
El Toro. Questions are fired by the<lb />
young ones as they try to find out<lb />
some more information which will<lb />
help them along the way. Many carry<lb />
the swords of the Matador and do<lb />
what ever he wishes.<lb />
Holding high the desire to be a<lb />
Matador tends to leave some as they<lb />
reach a more mature age just as we<lb />
have seen our desire to become a<lb />
professional football player as just<lb />
one of pipe dreams fade away. But<lb />
there are many who continue and<lb />
work for the most part as extras at<lb />
the rings around the country waiting<lb />
for the day when they can get a big<lb />
break. This comes in the form of a<lb />
chance to fight in a small town where<lb />
the bulls are small and the people<lb />
aren't as avid fans as they are in the<lb />
large cities.<lb />
Each Matador has his own style<lb />
of fighting and then it comes his<lb />
turn to fight where the crowds are<lb />
large and the young senoritas are<lb />
beautiful. Working hard and doing<lb />
his best pays off for the young man<lb />
in many ways as well as the glory<lb />
he receives in the ring.<lb />
Later as he has reached that pin-<lb />
acle of success and to the cheers of<lb />
120,000 people he enters the ring of<lb />
Mexico City for now his boyhood<lb />
dreams have come true. As he fights<lb />
the bull the cheers get louder for<lb />
now is drawing near the time when<lb />
he finishes the bull and the battle is<lb />
won, not only in the ring, but a<lb />
battle of life has been won for the<lb />
life long ambition has been obtained,<lb />
that of fighting the bull in the great<lb />
ring at Mexico City.<lb />
CU Activities<lb />
3:99<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:99<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
fully prescribed. Like Buddha, he was<lb />
intensely practical, and as with Budd-<lb />
ha, he avoided speculative issues. He<lb />
stressed the importance of ethics.<lb />
Confucianism has much in common<lb />
with Buddhism in its emphasis on<lb />
compassion and gentleness, but type<lb />
of Buddhism that entered Asia in-<lb />
cluded precise teaching about the<lb />
future life with its heaven and hells,<lb />
whereas Confucianism is completely<lb />
silent about a hereafter.<lb />
To Confucius the whole duty of<lb />
man consisted in preserving the right<lb />
relationship toward his fellow human<lb />
being. He was intensely conservative,<lb />
and inculcated a great respect for<lb />
tjjjob vs. BCC Yankees<lb />
Virginian" ? Has Beens<lb />
Bandits vs. EOC<lb />
vs. Has Beens<lb />
?a. Virginians<lb />
Yankees<lb />
Thursday,<lb />
(2 games)<lb />
August S<lb />
(2 games)<lb />
(2 games)<lb />
August ft<lb />
t<lb />
Shack<lb />
Best<lb />
Shack<lb />
Best<lb />
Shack<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
3:00<lb />
8:00<lb />
8:00<lb />
SUMMER<lb />
CLEARANCE<lb />
SALE<lb />
Or More<lb />
Reduction on Both<lb />
Ladies &amp; M ens Wear<lb />
The College Shop<lb />
222 E. 5th Street<lb />
"Charge Accounts Invited"<lb />
more educational than religious in<lb />
nature. It was the basis of education<lb />
of the noble class and a subject for<lb />
examination. On the other hand,<lb />
Buddhism is a tolerant belief, and the<lb />
previously prevailing Shamanism and<lb />
the native Deism had a good deal of<lb />
influence on Buddhism practices. At<lb />
the present time, Buddhism occupies<lb />
an important position'not so much<lb />
through numerical strength as<lb />
through the influence it exerts over<lb />
important members of community.<lb />
The College Union will continue<lb />
its program of special activities in<lb />
the remaining weeks of the summer<lb />
session with a college table tennis<lb />
tournament to be held July 29, a<lb />
duplicate bridge tourney August 3,<lb />
and a bingo-ice cream party August<lb />
5.<lb />
Other events scheduled are a water-<lb />
melon party August 12, and a talent<lb />
show August 13. Deadline for entries<lb />
in the talent show is August 7. Au-<lb />
gust 14 a social bridge party will be<lb />
held, and August 17, Gene Lusk's<lb />
combo will wind up the summer<lb />
dance entertainment with a combo<lb />
dance.<lb />
All these events are offered to<lb />
East Carolina students at no charge<lb />
and everyone is invited to attend.<lb />
WHATS YOUR LINE?" If you<lb />
are talented and are willing to per-<lb />
form, stop in the College Union of-<lb />
fice and sign up for the Talent Show<lb />
to be held in Austin Auditorium, Au-<lb />
gust 13, at 7:00 p.m preceding the<lb />
movie.<lb />
The College Union committee mem-<lb />
bers who are planning and staging<lb />
recreation events for the summer,<lb />
plan to arrange a show giving the<lb />
summer school talent an opportunity<lb />
to compete for prizes. Prizes con-<lb />
sist of $10.00, first place, $5.00 se-<lb />
cond place, and $2.50 third place.<lb />
If you can dance, play a harmonica,<lb />
whistle, juggle, twirl a baton, play<lb />
the piano, sing, or "what-have-you<lb />
come on.<lb />
Sign up in the College Union office.<lb />
Deadline for signing up is Friday<lb />
August 7.<lb />
Sonny Walker b<lb />
A Credit To His<lb />
Alma Mater<lb />
By SHERALD WARD<lb />
(Editor's Note: This is the fifth<lb />
of series of articles dealing with<lb />
former outstanding athletes of East<lb />
Carolina College who are now doing<lb />
graduate work.)<lb />
Has it been your pleasure to know<lb />
a personable young man here at East<lb />
Carolina in the past few years who<lb />
prefers to be called "Sonny"? If so it<lb />
i likely that that young man is none<lb />
other than Wilmer D. "Sonny" Wal-<lb />
ker, who has the delightful ability<lb />
to get along with lots of people.<lb />
Claiming Plymouth, North Carolina<lb />
as his home and attending high school<lb />
started this young man on his way<lb />
in life. Before he graduated in 1958<lb />
from high school he found time to<lb />
play football, basketball and baseball.<lb />
Then he entered East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege where he was very active in the<lb />
intramural leagues having a team<lb />
of his own known as the "Bootleg-<lb />
gers Most of this team were boys<lb />
from Plymouth and that area and<lb />
they had teams in all the intramural<lb />
sports. This team won one of the<lb />
football leagues in active play at<lb />
times they were in contention and<lb />
were two leagues at the time. At all<lb />
fielded good teams.<lb />
"Sonny" found time for other<lb />
things in college besides sports. Hs<lb />
was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha<lb />
Fraternity and was a charter mem-<lb />
ber of this group, along with being<lb />
a member of Alpha Phi Omega, which<lb />
is a service fraternity, being social<lb />
chairman for both.<lb />
Gaining his B. S. Degree in 1957<lb />
in Health and Physical Education<lb />
while taking partin other forms of<lb />
college life such as a member of the<lb />
East Carolina Band as a drummer.<lb />
Another form of music he partici-<lb />
pated in was the Glee Club.<lb />
Taking his first job at Benson,<lb />
then his second year as coach at<lb />
Sunbury High School where he coach-<lb />
ed basketball and baseball. His team<lb />
was second in the county and Coach<lb />
Walker was proud of his boys and<lb />
their play.<lb />
Sonny will receive his Masters<lb />
Degree at the end of summer school<lb />
and as yet has not signed s contract<lb />
for the coming year but is in the<lb />
market for a good position. Along<lb />
with this young man will come a<lb />
second teacher for he is engaged to<lb />
Miss Alene Watson who also holds<lb />
a B. S. Degree from. East Carolina<lb />
College. His parents are Mr. and Mrs.<lb />
W. D. Walker of Plymouth, North<lb />
Carolina.<lb />
There were 24,830 pedestrians in-<lb />
jured crossing intersections with the<lb />
signal in their favor during 1958 in<lb />
the United States.<lb />
Studies by The Travelers Insurance<lb />
Companies show that driver error<lb />
caused 85 per cent of the highway<lb />
accidents in 1958.<lb />
HONOR, GLORY, DUTY<lb />
Yon are honored as a nurse and respected at an officer<lb />
when yon Join die Navy Nurse Corps. And as a Navy<lb />
Nurse you hove a chance to practice nursing in all its<lb />
phnaoa. fog for men and<lb />
women of Che Navy and<lb />
their families. There ie a<lb />
chance, too, to get into such<lb />
fields as aviation and atomic<lb />
medicine. Be-<lb />
come a Navy<lb />
Nurse and in-<lb />
crease your<lb />
professional<lb />
progress.<lb />
join the<lb />
NAVY NURSE CORPS<lb />
GARRIS GROCERY STORE<lb />
East Fifth and Cotanche<lb />
FINE MEATS AND GROCERIES<lb />
I emits YOU A CHAHCg<lb />
to rOMJMm TMMWWl<lb /><lb />
MOBB THAN<lb />
60 Mr Trmb jftjftft<lb />
MM t Mfthtnt ftil HClM<lb />
f mMi gsssssal<lb />
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to <lb />
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4A4M.fJ9JWMJftt<lb />
losnjfc Irons fMasnsm. assvs' asssi<lb />
assMaV dMgt faW fasf ast 1<lb />
mmmmmjb wxs w spbf sow asjaa<lb />
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I<lb /><pb facs="00038635_tn_0004" /><lb />
JAM FOUR<lb />
EAST CAB9LINIAN<lb />
THURSDAY, JULY 30, 1951<lb />
Regular East Carolihian Staff Works At<lb />
Various Jobs During The Summer Months<lb />
By MARY JANE SMITH<lb />
What do journalists do in the sum-<lb />
mer? Let's take a look at the regu-<lb />
lar term EAST CAROLINIAN staff.<lb />
Editor Kathryn Johnson is assis-<lb />
tant head counselor at a swank sum-<lb />
mer camp in the Adirondacks in New<lb />
York State. She has met many in-<lb />
teresting people, she says. One of<lb />
them was the granddaughter of for-<lb />
mer Cuban President Batista.<lb />
"Anything can happen at Moss<lb />
Lake she sighed. One day, accord-<lb />
ing to Kathryn, a counselor was pre-<lb />
paring to give a demonstration on<lb />
how to make a fast getaway in a<lb />
canoe. He jumped into the craft and<lb />
began paddling madly, but his pro-<lb />
gress was abruptly arrested when<lb />
technics of jumping into a canoe for her uncle to follow, wh as she<lb />
from a 25-foot tower without going says, "After going to school all those<lb />
through the bottom of the canoe,<lb />
forgot to allow for a slight breeze<lb />
which rippled the lake, and after<lb />
lecturing for some minutes at the<lb />
top of the tower, he leaped without<lb />
looking and ended up waist deep in<lb />
you know what.<lb />
Speaking of soft jobs (that's the<lb />
way it looks from the outside, any-<lb />
way), Derry Walker, Managing Edi<lb />
years, he certainly should know more<lb />
than they do about taking care of<lb />
their dog<lb />
The only one of the old crowd to<lb />
continue using his newspaper exper-<lb />
ience is Johnny Hudson, Sports Edi-<lb />
tor, who is now Sports Editor for the<lb />
DAILY REFLECTOR. Johnny is<lb />
also working at the Greenville Golf<lb />
tor, has one. As night clerk at the jianjrt. and attending summer school<lb />
elegant Oceana Motel at Atlantic<lb />
beach, he gets down to the beach<lb />
BAND CAMPERS . - . Diane Snakenburg, Kay Year by, Doris Hobbins, and Jo Anne Overcash.<lb />
Teresa Saieed, ECC Graduate<lb />
Holds 'Miss Boating' Title<lb />
By ALICE CORIOLANO<lb />
Tereasa Saieed, an employee in<lb />
the registrar's office, has just been<lb />
awarded the national title of "Miss<lb />
Boating" for her skill and obedience<lb />
of safety laws while piloting a boat.<lb />
This award is given by the Nation-<lb />
al Small Craft Club, of which the<lb />
main branch is in New England. The<lb />
Argonaut, a recently formed boating<lb />
club here in Greenville, of which<lb />
Miss Saieed is a member, is an off- <lb />
shoot of the branch in New England.<lb />
A "Miss Boating' is elected monthly<lb />
from April to August by clubs all<lb />
along the eastern coast, and data<lb />
OD the elected is sent up to New<lb />
England where a national "Miss<lb />
Boating is chosen<lb />
It hasn't been too long since she<lb />
joined the Argonaut, Miss Saieed<lb />
id, ami for the first time she has<lb />
taken up boating as a hobby. The<lb />
club owns two motor boats and a<lb />
von teen foot sailboat, which some<lb />
of the members of the club are now<lb />
vering with fiberglass. This will<lb />
make the boat fireproof, waterproof,<lb />
and shockproof. In this boat, 3 or 4<lb />
members of the club are planning to<lb />
, to Portsmouth and the Outer<lb />
Hanks.<lb />
The club also owns a hydroplane,<lb />
but Miss Saieed has not yet ex-<lb />
perimented with it.<lb />
Miss Saieed graduated from East<lb />
Carolina in 1983. She started off<lb />
with a double major in Social Stud-<lb />
ies and business. Later on, changing<lb />
her mind, she decided to drop busi-<lb />
ness and minor in English. When<lb />
she graduated, along with a BS in<lb />
Social Studies she received a two-<lb />
year business course certificate for<lb />
 '  "  <lb />
Conference On<lb />
Alcoholism To Be<lb />
Given Thursday<lb />
A conference at East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege on the topic of "Alcoholism and<lb />
the Home" will take place next<lb />
Thursday, with the Rev. Roy B. Bar-<lb />
ham, chaplain at the Alcoholic Re-<lb />
habilitation Center, Butner, N. C, as<lb />
guest speaker.<lb />
The conference is to be directed by<lb />
Dr. George A. Douglas, professor of<lb />
Family Life and director of the Dan-<lb />
forth Foundation here.<lb />
This is the second summer con-<lb />
ference on Family Life sponsored by<lb />
the Family Life Program at the Col-<lb />
lege. Last year's conference suggest-<lb />
ed the topic which will be discussed<lb />
this year.<lb />
Mr. Barham has been associated<lb />
with the Center at Butner since 1951.<lb />
A native of Johnston County, Bar-<lb />
ham graduated from Atlantic Chris-<lb />
tian College and took his divinity de-<lb />
gree at Vanderbilt University. He<lb />
pursued graduate studies in Social<lb />
Ethics at Boston University and the<lb />
University of North Carolina and in<lb />
Alcohol Studies at Yale.<lb />
Professor Douglas first became ac-<lb />
quainted with the Rev. Mr. Barham<lb />
many years ago at meetings in Fam-<lb />
ily Life sponsored by the North Caro-<lb />
lina Council of Churches. Barham has<lb />
become recognized as an effective<lb />
worker with alcoholics and as a chal-<lb />
lenging interpreter of the implica-<lb />
tions of alcoholism, Dr. Douglas says.<lb />
Barham is responsible for religious<lb />
counseling on an individual and group<lb />
basis at Butner.<lb />
The conference will be held in the<lb />
Library Auditorium of the College.<lb />
Registration will begin at 9 o'clock<lb />
a.m. and the session will include a<lb />
question-answer period. The confer-<lb />
ence closes at 12:30 p.m.<lb />
the courses she already taken.<lb />
As president of the women day<lb />
students she was a member of SGA.<lb />
She was also a member of the Wo-<lb />
men's Judiciary, FTA, and the Mixed<lb />
Chorus, which is now called the Col-<lb />
lege Choir.<lb />
When she left school she was em-<lb />
ployed by the State Budget Bureau<lb />
in Raleigh. After working with them<lb />
for four and a half years, she worked<lb />
for a private architectural firm in<lb />
Washington, D. C for almost a year,<lb />
after which she came back to Green-<lb />
ville, her hometown. She joined the<lb />
East Carolina staff last January,<lb />
and is classified as a stenographer,<lb />
although at the present she is most-<lb />
ly occupied with grades, quality<lb />
points, ami number of hours of each<lb />
student.<lb />
Ecsedy Reveals<lb />
Adept Technique<lb />
At ECC Concert<lb />
every day. He has his own room,<lb />
complete with TV set and air-condi-<lb />
tioning.<lb />
Business Manager JoAnne Parks is<lb />
re reached the end of the rope he had acting as receptionist, nurse, maid,<lb />
forgotten to untie. The same unfortu<lb />
nate man, while demonstrating the<lb />
MISS BOATING . . . Teresa Saieed.<lb />
Motor vehicle accidents killed<lb />
36,700 and injured 2,825,000 on U. S.<lb />
highways during 1958.<lb />
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb />
Aladar Ecsedy, a young Hungar-<lb />
ian pianist, recently presented a pro-<lb />
gram of classics for the Summer<lb />
School students. Ecsedy performed<lb />
a very acceptable concert, and re-<lb />
vealed a dynamic, as well as a facile,<lb />
te hnique. He was in complete control<lb />
of his fingers throughout the con-<lb />
cert. His interpretations, especially<lb />
of the children's numbers, were in-<lb />
dividual, but most explanatory. In<lb />
spite of the extreme heat and his<lb />
woolen evening clothes, he was gra-<lb />
cious in the reception of the appro-<lb />
val of the audience.<lb />
Ecsedy was born in Hungary, where<lb />
he spent his childhood. His father,<lb />
a Presbyterian minister and a vio-<lb />
linist, started Ecsedy playing the<lb />
piano at the age of six. Ecsedy, how-<lb />
ever, hated to practice, but his fa-<lb />
ther kept him at it. Finally, when<lb />
he was about 16, Ecsedy really be-<lb />
came interested in the piano. Then<lb />
it was hard to tear him away from<lb />
practicing.<lb />
Ecsedy met his lovely wife during<lb />
a concert tour of Canada. They now<lb />
have two small daughters who usual-<lb />
'y travel with him on tour.<lb />
Ecsedy attended the University of<lb />
Budapest, and then received a schol-<lb />
arship to study in Finland. He was<lb />
awarded the Jean Sibelius ring there.<lb />
He has presented concerts in<lb />
Sweden, Denmark, Norway, Switzer-<lb />
land, Belgium, Luxembourg, Germany,<lb />
Italy and Hungary, as well as ap-<lb />
pearing in 48 of the States, and the<lb />
major cities of Canada.<lb />
His advice to young pianists, is,<lb />
"It is not the amount of practice<lb />
you do, but how you go about it. If<lb />
you are not interested in playing,<lb />
no amount of practice will make you<lb />
a good musician<lb />
CU Contributes<lb />
Much Enjoyment<lb />
To SS Students<lb />
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb />
The College Union has done much<lb />
this summer to add to the entertain-<lb />
ment and enjoyment of the Summer<lb />
School students.<lb />
The numerous watermelon cuttings<lb />
they had were always looked forward<lb />
to by the students. The hot days<lb />
never seemed so bad if there was a<lb />
watermelon cutting in the afternoon<lb />
to break the heat. Another cutting is<lb />
scheduled for Tuesday the 18th at<lb />
3:00 p.m.<lb />
The bingo and bridge parties given<lb />
in the evenings are another of the<lb />
CU's accomplishments. Every Wed-<lb />
nesday evening at 7:30 a beginner<lb />
bridge class is also held. On the 5th<lb />
of August another bingo party is<lb />
planned, and on the 14th there will<lb />
be a bridge-party.<lb />
This summer for the first time,<lb />
the OU sponsored an invitational ta-<lb />
ble tennis tournament, which con-<lb />
sisted of players from 3 states.<lb />
On Sundays the swimming pool is<lb />
open to everyone for recreational<lb />
swimming from 2:30 to 4:30. This<lb />
and what-have-you for her veterina<lb />
rian uncle. Her biggest complaint is<lb />
people who leave implicit instructions<lb />
event will precede the evening movie<lb />
in Austin. Any one with talent is<lb />
urged to sign up as soon as possible.<lb />
Events lined up for the fall in-<lb />
clude the 5th Birthday Party of the<lb />
College Union, the annual Freshman<lb />
Open House, a Homecoming program,<lb />
a Christmas decorating party, a car-<lb />
nival, combo dances, and various<lb />
tournaments. A senior night and a<lb />
Foreign Student tea are also being<lb />
planned.<lb />
at ECC.<lb />
Former Co-Sports Editor Bill Boyd<lb />
has joined the ranks of thoso taken<lb />
 torn M by the Army.<lb />
Gwen Johnson is slaving away as<lb />
Summer School EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
lJusiness Manager, and Tom Jackson<lb />
lias forsaken his job in a pickle fac-<lb />
tory for another on the tobacco mar-<lb />
ket.<lb />
Messick Chosen<lb />
Member-At-Large<lb />
Of Boy Scouts<lb />
John D. Messick, president of Kst<lb />
Carolina College, has been elected<lb />
member-at-large of the National<lb />
Council of the Boy Scouts of Ameri-<lb />
ea by action of this group at its 4jthl<lb />
annual meeting in San Francisco.j<lb />
Announcement of the election was<lb />
received from Chief Scout Executive<lb />
Arthur A. Schuck.<lb />
Dr. Me irk is an active member1<lb />
of the   ive committee of the<lb />
Ka-t Carolina Council of the B y<lb />
Seouts of America and has served as<lb />
dent of the Council for two<lb />
years. In other areas of service he<lb />
as been a member of the Council<lb />
committee on finance, ;<lb />
;io!i jr, and is now a member of a<lb />
leve. t committee for long-<lb />
lange planning.<lb />
In 1956; more than 4<lb />
 . traffic injuries result<lb />
.end accidents.<lb />
Traffic Accidents<lb />
Cause Many Deaths,<lb />
Injuries In '58<lb />
Traffic accidents on U. S. high-<lb />
ways during 1958 caused more than<lb />
2,825,000 injuries although deaths de-<lb />
creased five per cent, according to<lb />
statistics compiled by The Travelers<lb />
Insurance Companies.<lb />
The record number of injuries re-<lb />
presented a 12 per cent increase dur-<lb />
ing the year over the 1957 totals<lb />
more than twice the percentage in-<lb />
crease of a year ago.<lb />
Highway deaths for the year total-<lb />
ed 36,700. Travelers estimated that<lb />
for every highway fatality there were<lb />
77 injuries.<lb />
During the past year drivers under<lb />
The last combo dance will be from I 26 were involved in 27.1 per cent of<lb />
7:30 to 10:15 on Monday the 17th. all fatal accidents and more than 20<lb />
per cent of non-fatal crashes, the re-<lb />
port pointed out. This record was<lb />
compiled by a group which consti-<lb />
tutes at best only 14 per cent of all<lb />
licensed drivers, the report empha-<lb />
is another CU project. This summer<lb />
they also purchased a tandem or a<lb />
"bicycle built for two Now there<lb />
are five bicycles for the students use.<lb />
Gene Lusk and his combo will fur-<lb />
nish the music.<lb />
Also coming up on the CU calen-<lb />
dar is the Talent Show scheduled for<lb />
Thursday the 13th at 7:00. This<lb />
MARILYN CARR . . . enjoys new Bermuda privileges<lb />
We Will<lb />
Speed was blamed for more than<lb />
40 per cent of the traffic deaths and<lb />
injuries in the U. S. during 1958.<lb />
Drivers under 25 years of age were<lb />
involved in 27 per cent of the fatal<lb />
accidents in 1958.<lb />
The Travelers Insurance Companies<lb />
studies show that exceeding the speed<lb />
limit caused 12,770 deaths and 980,000<lb />
injuries during 1958 on our highways.<lb />
Cars that did not have the right<lb />
of way injured 608,400 and killed<lb />
3,890 persons on U. S. Highways in<lb />
1958.<lb />
"That horn-blonr behind me got my goat<lb />
Even good, drivers<lb />
can be forced, into accidents! A<lb />
hill-climbing truck ahead and a parade of honkers behind<lb />
can try your patience. A tailgater with blazing lights can<lb />
make you boil. But don't let them push you into a rash<lb />
move. Traffic accidents killed 37,000 people last year. Who<lb />
knows how many died because some good driver let another<lb />
pressure him into taking a foolish chance? Don't let anger<lb />
force you to risk livesyours or others!<lb />
A BUCKET OF BALLS TO HIT ANB A ROUND OF MINIATURE GOLF<lb />
Absolutely Free - No Strings Attached<lb />
ANYTIME FROM 1:00 TO 9:00 P. M.<lb />
Thursday, August 6th<lb />
We Furnish Everything<lb />
Free Instruction<lb />
Published in an effort to save lives, in cooperation<lb />
. with the National Safety Council and The Advertising Council. .<lb />
Greenville Golf Range<lb />
Miniature Golf Course<lb />
Ayden Hyway (South 11) Opposite Country Club<lb />
You Must Present Your I. B. Card<lb />
- " '<lb /></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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