<?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="00038650_0001"/>
Read Page Two<lb/>
Set- editorial column on page two<lb/>
for editor's views on important world<lb/>
happenings. Also featured on page<lb/>
(ho i- a rev.ew of the recent Flay-<lb/>
hu.- production of "Anne Frank.<lb/>
Eastfarolinian<lb/>
Volume XXXV<lb/>
Nest Cites Points<lb/>
Of Discussion In<lb/>
Committee Meeting<lb/>
 tmittee, made up of students<lb/>
lit) members, originated<lb/>
 joint efforts of the Stu-<lb/>
rernment Association and Ad-<lb/>
s, met for the first time<lb/>
k, to begin their study of I<lb/>
the campus.<lb/>
first move, Barney West,<lb/>
 . and author of the study<lb/>
ttee plan, was elected to serve<lb/>
chairman of the commit-<lb/>
s composed of seven stu-<lb/>
; five faculty members.<lb/>
hed as to the results<lb/>
nitial meeting, West stated<lb/>
v e first talked out the prob-<lb/>
ng to determine whether or<lb/>
premise was correct, and if<lb/>
e was a lot of cheating going on<lb/>
East Carolina. West added,<lb/>
 i to accept the fact that<lb/>
- a problem with cheating here,<lb/>
no there, with the know-<lb/>
mind that the problem is no<lb/>
re than it is at other<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
Pirates Play AC Tonight<lb/>
ECC Pirates will play Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College in Wilson tonight<lb/>
as tlvey seek to continue their present<lb/>
winning streak.<lb/>
xc<lb/>
(IRKKNVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1960<lb/>
Number 15<lb/>
Scene From Coming Ballet<lb/>
v<lb/>
v.<lb/>
oasixed that the first<lb/>
 the i-ommktee was largely<lb/>
with discussion about the<lb/>
li as fox solutions and<lb/>
action to he followed in<lb/>
 the situation. "We re-<lb/>
sail West, "that some<lb/>
la aid the cause of<lb/>
 it -till boils down to the<lb/>
is lacking in student<lb/>
: acceptance of respon-<lb/>
-! words, if a student<lb/>
. he is not going to<lb/>
g to West, one of the solu-<lb/>
gested by members of the<lb/>
was an indoctrination<lb/>
with the basic belief in<lb/>
i the problem actually lies<lb/>
i ater himself, but the<lb/>
who condones the<lb/>
ints at the indoctrination<lb/>
;ded such courses of<lb/>
is articles in the student<lb/>
to increase student<lb/>
- f the problem, dormitory<lb/>
is, and campus-wide anaem-<lb/>
ias the problem.<lb/>
 West stated, "It is<lb/>
completely stamp out<lb/>
it our basic concern is<lb/>
le of the students towards<lb/>
They see it, they know it<lb/>
they turn the other way.<lb/>
irn in our report to the<lb/>
.ernment Association, in<lb/>
ave specifics, and not<lb/>
i scussion<lb/>
<lb/>
i r ?.<lb/>
sx: <lb/>
nj<lb/>
Ballet<lb/>
Company Plans<lb/>
errormance Mon<lb/>
Perf<lb/>
day<lb/>
The American Ballet Center Com-1 which Jeffrey is famous.<lb/>
.<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE<lb/>
Melvin V. Buck, director of<lb/>
ng, reports that rooms are<lb/>
vailable in the dormatories<lb/>
for those students who wish to<lb/>
in next quarter. Interested<lb/>
tone should contact the hous-<lb/>
g office on the second floor of<lb/>
Administration Building.<lb/>
puny, one of the newest and most<lb/>
highly praised dance groups in this<lb/>
country, will appear on campus Feb-<lb/>
ruary 8 under the sponsorship of the<lb/>
college Entertainment Committee.<lb/>
The program is scheduled for 8:15<lb/>
p.m. in the Wright auditorium.<lb/>
Requests for tickets, already be-<lb/>
ing received, indicate that the ballet<lb/>
company will attract a laige audi-<lb/>
ence from many localities in this<lb/>
section of the state.<lb/>
The American Ballet Center Com-<lb/>
pany founded in 1959 under the spon-<lb/>
sorship of its .school, New York's fam-<lb/>
ed American Ballet Center, is mak-<lb/>
ing its transcontinental debut this<lb/>
season. Robert Jeffrey, brillant young<lb/>
American choregrapher, is artistic<lb/>
director of the company, which will<lb/>
appear here with a corps of twenty-<lb/>
five top dancers and an orchestra.<lb/>
Jeffrey has won fame as director<lb/>
and chief choreographer of the Rob-<lb/>
ert Jeffrey Theatre Ballet, the New<lb/>
York City Opera, .and of a large num-<lb/>
ber of television and stage produc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The program at East Carolina will<lb/>
include, among other works, a classic<lb/>
"white" ballet, several of the famous<lb/>
classic pas de deux, and at least one<lb/>
of the "froth .and frolic" works for<lb/>
Among the ballets to be presented<lb/>
in the company's present tour will<lb/>
Im Jeffrey's "Pos des Deesses dance<lb/>
of the goddesses, which the choreo-<lb/>
rapher staged for the famed Ballet<lb/>
Rambert in London, and which be-<lb/>
came the first modern American work<lb/>
tn be (Lanced behind the Iron Curtain<lb/>
when the Rambert Company made<lb/>
its highly successful tour of China.<lb/>
Tickets to the performance may<lb/>
be purchased in the Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium before the program Feb. 8 or<lb/>
may be bought from Dr. James W.<lb/>
Butler, business manager of the En-<lb/>
tertainment Series. The price of ad-<lb/>
mission is $L Students and faculty<lb/>
will be admitted free upon presenta-<lb/>
tion of I. I), cards.<lb/>
Danforth Sponsors<lb/>
Wiebe As Lecturer<lb/>
Dr. Gerhart D. Wiebe of New York<lb/>
City, a partner in Elmo Roper and<lb/>
Associates will be the seventh lec-<lb/>
turer in the Danforth Lecture Series<lb/>
here on campus. His three lectures<lb/>
will be on "Obsolescene in American<lb/>
Culture They will be held Monday,<lb/>
Tuesday, and Wednesday, February<lb/>
o, 9, and 10.<lb/>
The lectures for Monday and Tues-<lb/>
day will be held in Austin Auditori-<lb/>
um, and the Wednesday night lecture<lb/>
ill be held in the Joyner Library<lb/>
auditorium. They are all scheduled<lb/>
tor 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Wiebe will also speak Monday<lb/>
at 1:00 p.m. in Austin Auditorium on<lb/>
the importance of controversy in<lb/>
social control.<lb/>
Dr. Wiebe holds graduate degrees<lb/>
from Ohio State University and has<lb/>
served there as a member of the<lb/>
faculty in the Bureau of Education-<lb/>
al Research. Before he became a part-<lb/>
ner in the Roper Association, he was<lb/>
research psychologist and assistant<lb/>
to the president of the Columbia<lb/>
Rr adcasting System.<lb/>
He is a member of the American<lb/>
Marketing Association and the Ame-<lb/>
rican Psychological Association, and<lb/>
is a past president of the American<lb/>
Association for Public Opinion Re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
This lecture series will serve as<lb/>
 study program for the Pitt County<lb/>
Parent-Teacher Association.<lb/>
Nichols Announces<lb/>
Prom Entertainers<lb/>
For Annual Event<lb/>
East Carolinian Editor Wins<lb/>
Scholarship To NY Conference<lb/>
ryn Johnson, editor of the<lb/>
i as! Carolinian, has been chosen by<lb/>
- committee from the Over-<lb/>
hib as a scholarship par-<lb/>
 . the Student Editors' Con-<lb/>
n International Affairs,<lb/>
ference, which is co-spon-<lb/>
 the Overseas Press Club and<lb/>
U.S. National Student Associa-<lb/>
. :i: take place February 19-22<lb/>
e overseas Press Club in New<lb/>
' ay.<lb/>
 - B. Cans, National Affairs<lb/>
 ce President of USNSA and for-<lb/>
editor of the Daily Tar Heel<lb/>
-ays that the purposes of the<lb/>
erence are:<lb/>
 increase the student editor's<lb/>
tanding of the requirements,<lb/>
iques and philosophy of over-<lb/>
news coverage,<lb/>
(2) to broaden his grasp of the tech-<lb/>
and requirements of domestic<lb/>
ting of foreign news on the<lb/>
 iergnaduate and professional lev-<lb/>
els,<lb/>
(3) to find a more effective prep-<lb/>
aration for journalism as a career<lb/>
through practical discussion with<lb/>
leading professionals,<lb/>
(4) to evaluate the student's own<lb/>
terformance as an editor by meeting<lb/>
with others who have the same goals<lb/>
and responsibilities,<lb/>
(5) to broaden his scope of knowl-<lb/>
edge on current international news-<lb/>
making events.<lb/>
Each student editor attending the<lb/>
nference could pick two sections<lb/>
KATHRYN JOHNSON<lb/>
ship winner.<lb/>
scholar-<lb/>
of the world to study throughout the<lb/>
week-end. Miss Johnson selected La-<lb/>
tin America and Subsahara Africa.<lb/>
Among the many important per-<lb/>
sons to speak at the conference will<lb/>
be Senators Hubert H. Humphrey<lb/>
and John F. Kennedy, columnist Bob<lb/>
Considine, former Under Secretary<lb/>
of the United Nations and Chilean<lb/>
Delegate to the General Assembly<lb/>
Benjamin Cohen, and editor of Life<lb/>
Magazine, Bill Gray. Foreign cor-<lb/>
respondents from all leading New<lb/>
York City newspapers will also be<lb/>
present.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
WINTER GRADUATES<lb/>
Uke Armstrong, editor of the<lb/>
Buccaneer, announces that all<lb/>
seniors graduating at the end<lb/>
of Winter quarter, should come by<lb/>
the Buccaneer office, and sign<lb/>
up, in order that their names<lb/>
may he put on a mailing list to<lb/>
receive an annual. A charge of<lb/>
three dollars is required for each<lb/>
quarter following graduation that<lb/>
the student is not in school to<lb/>
cover the cost of the individual<lb/>
yearbook.<lb/>
'Who's Who' Taps<lb/>
Veteran Librarian<lb/>
Wendell W. Smiley, librarian at<lb/>
Bast Carolina College, will be in-<lb/>
cluded among those listed in the<lb/>
1960-1061 edition of "Who's Who in<lb/>
America one of the most widely<lb/>
known and used reference works pub-<lb/>
lished in the United States.<lb/>
"Who's WTho in America a Mar-<lb/>
que's publication, was founded in<lb/>
1887 and Has continuously followed<lb/>
high standards in making available<lb/>
formation about "men and women<lb/>
in all lines of useful and reputable<lb/>
achievement Through the years<lb/>
those listed in it have been uniform-<lb/>
lv, according to the publisher, about<lb/>
three in ten thousand of this coun-<lb/>
try's population.<lb/>
Mr. Smiley has been librarian at<lb/>
Fast Carolina since 1943. During his<lb/>
years at the college the library has<lb/>
grown phenomenally. In 1955 the<lb/>
Joyner Memorial Library was com-<lb/>
pleted and provided new headquar-<lb/>
ters for book collections and library<lb/>
services and for the department of<lb/>
library science. The college closed<lb/>
circuit TV studios and the college<lb/>
radio station WWWS are both locat-<lb/>
ed in the Joyner Library and are op-<lb/>
erated under Mr. Smiley's supervi-<lb/>
sion. The number of volumes in the<lb/>
book collections is now approximately<lb/>
140,000, and a library staff of 18<lb/>
people works under Mr. Smiley's dir-<lb/>
ection.<lb/>
Frankie Lester<lb/>
Junior Class President Bill Nichols<lb/>
has announced that contracts have<lb/>
been signed with Frankie Lester and<lb/>
the Billy May Hand for this year's<lb/>
Junior-Senior dance on Friday,<lb/>
April 22, at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Frankie Lester, the vocalist for<lb/>
the dance, has sung with the Tommy<lb/>
Dorsey orchestra and later joined<lb/>
the Hal Mclntyre band. He was<lb/>
vocalist with the Buddy Murrow or-<lb/>
chestra after the war. I,ester is under<lb/>
contract with R.C.A. but is more<lb/>
famous for his dance band work than<lb/>
his recording career. Lester is now<lb/>
ermanent vocalist with the Billy<lb/>
May Band.<lb/>
The Billy May Hand is famous for<lb/>
its "boisterous, fresh, and humor-<lb/>
ous approach" to popular music. The<lb/>
band is very popular with college<lb/>
campuses throughout the country.<lb/>
Bill Nichols, who is overall chair-<lb/>
man of the Junior-Senior, expressed<lb/>
great satisfaction at getting the<lb/>
Billy May organization for the an-<lb/>
nual dance. "We think everything's<lb/>
just ideal said Bill. "We're getting<lb/>
things organized now and we're sure<lb/>
that will be the biggest Junior-Senior<lb/>
we've ever had<lb/>
Officials To Attend<lb/>
EC Sorority Induction<lb/>
Sorority guests on campus this<lb/>
week-end will come from as far south<lb/>
as Florida, as far north as New<lb/>
York and as far west as Seattle,<lb/>
Washington. Among the sorority of-<lb/>
ficials present will be three national<lb/>
presidents.<lb/>
These national presidents include<lb/>
Maxine Blake, Seattle, Washington,<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi; Mrs. Elizabeth Dyer,<lb/>
Cincinnati Ohio, Chi Omega; and<lb/>
Mrs. Frederick -Morse, Charlottes-<lb/>
ville, Virginia, Kappa Delta.<lb/>
In addition to the members of the<lb/>
sororities on campus, who will be in-<lb/>
stalled, there will also be honor ini-<lb/>
tiates from this area who will be-<lb/>
come members of the various sorori-<lb/>
ties Many of the honor initiates are<lb/>
women who are prominent in civic,<lb/>
ieligious, and social affairs in Green-<lb/>
ville, and as Ruth White commented,<lb/>
 . . will definitely be an asset to the<lb/>
sororities<lb/>
Each sorority is completing plans<lb/>
for activities during the week-end<lb/>
and also is making final arrange-<lb/>
ments for meeting places and guests'<lb/>
accommodations.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
The installation service of the Del-<lb/>
ta Omieron colony of Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
will take place at the Christian<lb/>
Church in Greenville with the ban-<lb/>
quet following at the Elks Club. Am-<lb/>
ong national officials attending the<lb/>
installation activities are Miss Max-<lb/>
ine Blake, Seattle, Washington, na-<lb/>
tional president and Mrs. Russell Al-<lb/>
ien, Knoxville, Tennessee, second vice<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Alpha Omieron Pi<lb/>
Attending installation services of<lb/>
the Zeta Psi colony of Alpha Omi-<lb/>
eron .Pi, will be national officers,<lb/>
Mrs. Leland N. Allen, Montgomery,<lb/>
Alabama, first vice president and<lb/>
By BETTY MAYNOR<lb/>
Mrs. David Beauchamp, Nashville rant<lb/>
Tennessee, second vice president. In-<lb/>
stallation services will be held at the<lb/>
home of Mrs. James Poindexter, a<lb/>
Greenville alumnae, with the banquet<lb/>
to follow at the Rotary Club.<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Memorial Baptist Church will be<lb/>
the scene of the installation of the<lb/>
Delta Alpha colony of Alpha Phi,<lb/>
and the banquet will take place at<lb/>
Respess Brothers Resturant. Visit-<lb/>
ing national officers of Alpha Phi in-<lb/>
clude Mrs. H. C. Hoefer, Tully, New-<lb/>
York, first vice president, and Mrs.<lb/>
Fred L. Davis, Detroit, Michigan,<lb/>
director of expansion.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
The banquet and installation serv-<lb/>
ices of the Camma Phi colony of<lb/>
 Xi Delta will both take place<lb/>
t the Moose Lodge in Greenville.<lb/>
National officials present for these<lb/>
activities will include Mrs. A. Law-<lb/>
ence Flenner, Wilmington, Delware,<lb/>
econd vice president, and Mrs. Ro-<lb/>
ert F. Wikell, .Miami, Florida, dir-<lb/>
ect i of expansion.<lb/>
Chi Omega<lb/>
fn addition to their national presi-<lb/>
dent, Elizabeth Dyer, the Rho Zeta<lb/>
colony of Chi Omega will also have<lb/>
as their guest Mrs. LaRue Bowker,<lb/>
Little Rock, Arkansas, national trea-<lb/>
surer. Both the installation and the<lb/>
banquet will take place at St. James<lb/>
Methodist Church.<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
The Zeta Lambda colony of Delta<lb/>
Zeta will be hostess to national offi-<lb/>
cers Mrs. Jonathan Varty, Garden<lb/>
City, New York, treasurer, and Mrs.<lb/>
George Haven Des Moines, Iowa,<lb/>
college chapter administrator. Instal-<lb/>
lation services for this colony will<lb/>
be held at the Episcopal Church, with Point, Lynchburg College,<lb/>
the banquet following at Silo Restu- and the Universit of <lb/>
Kappa Delta<lb/>
National guests of the Gamma Sig-<lb/>
ma colony of Kappa Delta will in-<lb/>
clude Mrs. Frederick Morse. Char-<lb/>
lottesville, Virginia, president, Mrs.<lb/>
Kenneth Gallagher, Stillwater, Ok-<lb/>
lahoma, national chapterian, and<lb/>
Mrs. Julia Ober, Norfolk, Virginia,<lb/>
area advisor for the National Pan-<lb/>
belh )! (ku)ncil. Installation<lb/>
i-es for the Kappa Delta<lb/>
take place at the P terian<lb/>
Church with the banquet folowing<lb/>
at the parish hous I I e E<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sima<lb/>
ing insta lation .<lb/>
Gamma Beta colony of Sig<lb/>
Sigma will have as guests oi<lb/>
Mrs. Robertson Page. Dougla I<lb/>
New York, delegate to the National<lb/>
ellenic Council and Mis. Luther<lb/>
M. Lee, ( imbia, Soul Ca Una,<lb/>
rational alumnae advisor. <lb/>
lation servi res j I<lb/>
take place in the Winterville ' I<lb/>
tian Church with the banquet<lb/>
low in at the Gi<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Other Activities<lb/>
On Sunday afternoon from three<lb/>
: five, the City Panellenic <lb/>
of Greenville will honor the newly<lb/>
initiated chapters with a tea in Gar-<lb/>
ret Hall. Four hundred invitations<lb/>
have been issued and and<lb/>
staff members, presidents of all cam-<lb/>
pua organisations, and - ard mem-<lb/>
bers were invited.<lb/>
Collegiate truest from sor-<lb/>
ority chapters will attend the instal-<lb/>
lation activities. Some of the colleges<lb/>
to be represented are Duke, High<lb/>
Queens,<lb/>
land.<lb/>
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE<lb/>
Periods ClassesPeriods Exams<lb/>
MeetHeld<lb/>
Wednesday,February 24<lb/>
History 50, 516 and 7<lb/>
98 and 9<lb/>
Thursday,February 25<lb/>
11 and 2<lb/>
23 and 4<lb/>
36 and 7<lb/>
5 8 and 9<lb/>
Friday, February 26<lb/>
4I and 2<lb/>
63 and 4<lb/>
76 and 7<lb/>
88 and 9<lb/>
NifihtClasses<lb/>
Monday nightFeb. 226:30-9:00<lb/>
Tuesday nightFeb. 236:30-9:00<lb/>
Wednesday nightFeb. 246:30-9 :M<lb/>
Thursday nightFeb. 256:30-9:00<lb/>
Friday nightFeb. 266:30-9:00<lb/>
Clinic Features<lb/>
Noted Director<lb/>
The 1960 All-State Band Clinic,<lb/>
Eastern Division meeting at the col-<lb/>
lege February 5-6, will bring to the<lb/>
campus as music director Dr. Lucien<lb/>
Cailliet, musical director of G. Le-<lb/>
bVmc Corporation, Kenosha, Wis-<lb/>
consin. As special lecturer-demon-<lb/>
strator, Earl Slocum of the Music<lb/>
Departpent of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina will also be here.<lb/>
More than 90 selected student mu-<lb/>
sicians representing 27 high schools<lb/>
in Eastern Carolina will attend the<lb/>
clinic. They will receive instruction<lb/>
from -experienced teachers and band<lb/>
directors from the college faculty and<lb/>
from public schools of the state. As<lb/>
members of-the Clinic Band, the stu-<lb/>
dents appear in .a public concert<lb/>
Saturday night February 6 in the<lb/>
Wright Auditorium. Herbert L. Car-<lb/>
ter, director of bands at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College, is in charge of arrange-<lb/>
ments for the two-day event.<lb/>
Dr. Cailliet has spent many years<lb/>
vvith the Philadelphia Orchestra un-<lb/>
der Leopold Stokowski and Eugene<lb/>
Ormandy, where he w.as engaged as<lb/>
bass clarinetist and arranger. He<lb/>
served on the faculty of the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Southern California as<lb/>
Professor of music and conductor of<lb/>
the orchestra and band. He has also<lb/>
Saturday night, February 6, in the<lb/>
Russe de Monte Carlo.<lb/>
Dr. Cailliet has over a hundred<lb/>
published compositions for orchestra<lb/>
and band in the catalogs of various<lb/>
publishers. His writings include a<lb/>
ireatise on orchestration, and band<lb/>
arranging, and in recent years, he<lb/>
has composed, arranged and con-<lb/>
ducted- many motion picture scores.<lb/>
He did the orchestration for the mo-<lb/>
tion picture The Ten Command-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
At the Clinic, Dr. Cailliet will or-<lb/>
ganize the Clinic Rand, rehearse with<lb/>
members, and act as conductor at<lb/>
Saturday's concert. He will also be<lb/>
guest conductor of the EOC College<lb/>
Band on Friday night and will con-<lb/>
duct a works 'written by Richard<lb/>
Wagner and transcribed by Dr. Cail-<lb/>
liet, "Elsa's Procession to the Ca-<lb/>
thedral -  .<lb/>
Mr. Slocum, who is nationally<lb/>
known as a performer -and clinician<lb/>
of the ftytsjjjuT corilet two flute<lb/>
clinics for" 'pireetors and students.<lb/>
As a special event of the Clinic,<lb/>
the East Carolina Concert Band with<lb/>
Herbert Carter as conductor, will<lb/>
present a public concert February 5,<lb/>
at 8:00 p.m. in,the MoGinnis Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
EC Band Presents Concert<lb/>
Friday Night In McGinnis<lb/>
The East Carolina College Band, for Trumpet by Johann N. Ham-<lb/>
under the direction of Herbert Car- mel. She will be accompanied by the<lb/>
ter of the Music Department, will' Land.<lb/>
present the annual Winter Concert<lb/>
Friday night at 8:00 p.m. in Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Audintorium. The concert<lb/>
will be in honor of members of the<lb/>
Eastern Division of the AA-State<lb/>
Band Clinic, which will be held on<lb/>
campus this weekend.<lb/>
Dr. Lucien Cailliet, musical direc-<lb/>
tor of the G. LebLanc Corporation,<lb/>
Kenosha, Wisconsin, will be here as<lb/>
guest" conductor, conducting "Elsa's<lb/>
Procession to the Cathedral from<lb/>
Lohengrin' which was written by<lb/>
Richard Wagner and transcribed by<lb/>
Dr. Cailliet.<lb/>
Trumpet soloist for the evening<lb/>
will be Gayle Eaker of Drexel, who<lb/>
will perform the "Hummel Concerto<lb/>
Te band aril! also feature Steve<lb/>
Clements from Raleigh, on Timpani.<lb/>
He will solo or. "Timpat by Robert<lb/>
L. Leist.<lb/>
Other numbers the band will per-<lb/>
form are: "Praeludium and Allegro<lb/>
? new work by Vittorio Ciannini; and<lb/>
the "Chester Overture by William<lb/>
Scttuman. By a recent survey this<lb/>
number has been played by more<lb/>
college bands than any orher work.<lb/>
Also on the program is "Procession<lb/>
of Nobles by Rimsky-Korsakov.<lb/>
These selections plus several<lb/>
lighter numbers are included in the<lb/>
concerts which the band will play<lb/>
while on tour February 10-14.<lb/>
There will be no admission charge.<lb/>
-3T UHIII.iM.WW.III<lb/>
STEVE CLEMENTS  to solo on Timpani at band concert.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038650_0002"/><lb/>
THURSDAY. FEhkl A<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
IAST dAROLtNlAH<lb/>
RY<lb/>
eas<lb/>
De Gaulle Triumphs<lb/>
In Algerian Crisis<lb/>
The people of France as well as several<lb/>
thousands of Moslems in Algiers forgot po-<lb/>
litical differences of the moment and staunch-<lb/>
ly hacked President Charles De Gaulle on<lb/>
his stand on the Algerian situation.<lb/>
In the eight day crisis, friction and<lb/>
secondary problems were pushed back as the<lb/>
French people realized that if General De<lb/>
Gaulle were unable to keep his historic pledge<lb/>
to the people of Algeria, not only the chief<lb/>
of state, but also the country of France,<lb/>
would lost' face in the eyes of the world.<lb/>
De Gaulle has pledged that after a cease-<lb/>
tire Algeria would be able to choose freely<lb/>
its political future, even if that meant se-<lb/>
session from France with full independence.<lb/>
Throughout the eight days of rioting waged<lb/>
by insurgents who fought to "keep Algiers<lb/>
French De Gaulle did not budge an inch<lb/>
from his original plan.<lb/>
"We will fight to the end the rebels<lb/>
screamed. But they had not reckoned on the<lb/>
inner-strength of De Gaulle or the strength<lb/>
of his backing. Monday, the group yielded<lb/>
to the unbending alternatives t f their Presi-<lb/>
dent and surrendered. Popular support for<lb/>
the rebels had already begun to wane.<lb/>
A ring of "They shall not pass" was<lb/>
resounded in the President's statement, "It<lb/>
is 1 who carry the destiny of the nation (and)<lb/>
I must therefore be obeyed by every soldier<lb/>
He claimed the insurrectional riot was "a<lb/>
blow against France He would stand fast,<lb/>
he declared, because "if I failed in my task,<lb/>
the unity, prestige, and destiny of France<lb/>
would be compromised  I shall do my<lb/>
''"<lb/>
So. in this short but most important<lb/>
trial of strength, De Gaulle, the symbol of<lb/>
the France which has a newly elevated posi-<lb/>
tion in world affairs, has won out. And<lb/>
France has gained renewed prestige in the<lb/>
eyes of the world.<lb/>
Stern Policies Needed<lb/>
By US Against Castro<lb/>
The President of the United States<lb/>
turned the other cheek" in his restatement<lb/>
of U. S. noninterventionist policy in its re-<lb/>
lations with Cuba, and of its cordial, friendly<lb/>
relationship with the Cuban people. This was<lb/>
Eisenhower's answer to the insults from<lb/>
Castro and his cohorts.<lb/>
The President expressed "increasing con-<lb/>
cern" over "the tendency of spokesmen of<lb/>
the Cuban Government, including Prime<lb/>
Minister Castro, to create the illusion of ag-<lb/>
gressive acts and conspiratorial activities . . .<lb/>
attributed to United States officials or agen-<lb/>
cies<lb/>
But he also made it quite clear that<lb/>
Washington will not make reprisals and<lb/>
that the Cuban people are still held in "great<lb/>
ffection<lb/>
The U. S. Government has bent over<lb/>
backwards in trying to get along with Dr.<lb/>
Castro. We have smiled and shut our ears<lb/>
while he hurled abuses and outright insults<lb/>
at the U. S. We have not made loud enough<lb/>
our protest against the manner in which ex-<lb/>
propriation of American property is being<lb/>
carried out without written guarantee of<lb/>
adequate payment.<lb/>
Although we still contend that cutting<lb/>
the Cuban sugar ujnota is not the answer,<lb/>
we think that the President will have to be<lb/>
more firm when dealing with Castro. We have<lb/>
suddenly become very tired of having the<lb/>
name and reputation of our country made<lb/>
a butt of by the red-tinged Prime Minister<lb/>
of the small island republic.<lb/>
:<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Columbia Scholastic Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Intercollegiate .Press<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1926 at<lb/>
the U. S. Post Office, Greenville, N. C, under<lb/>
the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson JoAnne Parks<lb/>
Managing Editor Pat Harvey<lb/>
Associate Editor  Tom Jackson<lb/>
News Editor Roy Martin<lb/>
Feature Editor Betty Maynor<lb/>
Sports Editor Johnny Hudson<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor .  Leonard Lao<lb/>
Sporfs Staff Merle Summers, Norman Kilpatrick<lb/>
Reporters Evelyn Crutchfield, Marcel Vogel,<lb/>
Charlotte Donat, Jim Trice, Gwen Johnson, Patsy<lb/>
Elliott, Lucille Coulbourn, Judy Stott, Jasper<lb/>
Jones, Anne Francis Allen<lb/>
Columnists Mike Katsias, Marcelle Vogel,<lb/>
Tom Jackson, Derry Walker, Pat Harvey, Roy<lb/>
Martin, Jasper Jones<lb/>
Proofreading Editor  Gwen Johnson<lb/>
Proofreading Staff Lynda Simmons, Judy Stott,<lb/>
Marcelle Vogel, Jasper Jones, Mikki Cox, Kay<lb/>
Guthrie, Evelyn Crutchfield, Patsy Elliott, Jane<lb/>
Berryman, Sue Sparkman, Dawn Reaves, Chick<lb/>
Lancaster, Patsy Jackson<lb/>
Women's Circulation Manager  Susan Ballance<lb/>
Men's Circulation Manager  Jim Trice<lb/>
Men's Circulation StaffWayne Morton, Theta<lb/>
Chi Pledges<lb/>
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS<lb/>
itX WE CANTT PKCW0T6 TH' WOIE fACUUTY-eET ME A LIST Of<lb/>
THe TEACHER WO OWN A HOME, HAVE A LAK6E FAMltV A JO<lb/>
CANl'T AFFORD TO WOvf AWAY.<lb/>
Hitler's 'Twisted Cross' Comes<lb/>
Alive Again To Facinate Youth<lb/>
By ROY<lb/>
Recently, Americans were shocked<lb/>
to learn, in the course of investiga-<lb/>
tion concerning a syngagoue bombing<lb/>
in Kansas City, the existence of a<lb/>
neo-Nazi youth party in two Kansas<lb/>
City High Schools.<lb/>
Authorities estimated that from<lb/>
forty to eighty boys at the two<lb/>
schools were members of a Nordic<lb/>
Reich group. It was also disclosed<lb/>
that members of the club had in<lb/>
their possession such things as Nazi<lb/>
uniforms, swastika armbands, med-<lb/>
als, and other items attributed to<lb/>
Nazism.<lb/>
Officers also found several letters<lb/>
containing such statements as "Our<lb/>
founder is tAdolf Hitler. The war<lb/>
ended in 1945. The ideas of national<lb/>
socialism have not died Evidence<lb/>
was also found of the merger of the<lb/>
two school parties in another note<lb/>
which stated, "Our party is joining<lb/>
with the National Socialist German<lb/>
Workers's party that is based at<lb/>
Southeast High<lb/>
When matters such as this come<lb/>
to the attention of people, immediate-<lb/>
ly they want to know, why? "Why"<lb/>
i a word that has plagued the peo-<lb/>
ple of the world throughout the ages.<lb/>
More often than not, the why of<lb/>
things and occurances remains a mys-<lb/>
tery. Is the same true in this case?<lb/>
Can it be explained why young peo-<lb/>
ple, and American young people, at<lb/>
that, should band themselves togeth-<lb/>
er into such an organization against<lb/>
which, perhaps, their fathers fought<lb/>
and died?<lb/>
Although this matter is one of the<lb/>
most serious ever to confront the<lb/>
parents of America, perhaps, .actual-<lb/>
ly the youths involved are not to<lb/>
blame themselves. They were never<lb/>
acquainted with the horror of Nazism<lb/>
 the concentration camps, tbe op-<lb/>
ression, and the stench of bodies piled<lb/>
up like cordwood for the Nazi crema-<lb/>
tories, which some Americans came<lb/>
in contact with in Germany during<lb/>
World War II.<lb/>
These young people cannot be ex-<lb/>
cused for what they have done, and<lb/>
doubtless some punishment will be<lb/>
inflicted. Perhaps the greatest thing<lb/>
they deserve, however, is understand-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Having traveled the same road that<lb/>
tese young people are traveling<lb/>
now, we can say that growing up is<lb/>
a complicated process, and many<lb/>
times there are those who never<lb/>
make the grade as far as being<lb/>
"grown up" is concerned.<lb/>
The years of youth are questioning<lb/>
ones, a time when personalities are<lb/>
molded, with convictions and beliefs<lb/>
being turned in for newer models.<lb/>
They are also periods of searching<lb/>
MARTIN<lb/>
. . . for what? Anything is the ans-<lb/>
wer to that, anything to believe in,<lb/>
anything to stand for, and then again,<lb/>
the answer oraws a question mark.<lb/>
To analyze the motivations of hu-<lb/>
mans is impossible. But many things<lb/>
can be discovered by observing the<lb/>
majority, which sometimes shows<lb/>
that people are prone to idolize, to<lb/>
martyrize other people and their<lb/>
philosophies because they have an<lb/>
intriguing appearance or they just<lb/>
simply create a fascination, which<lb/>
subsequently leads to an unconscious<lb/>
compulsion to follow.<lb/>
The members of this organization<lb/>
in Kansas City are no different from<lb/>
the Germany of World War II, they<lb/>
the "suckers Like a Sunday school<lb/>
teacher in a crap game, they have<lb/>
been sucked in by the ravings of a<lb/>
psychotic Austrian housepainter, and<lb/>
his "twisted cross which has caused<lb/>
many a man to wish he had never<lb/>
been born.<lb/>
Dramas Cast Approved;<lb/>
Freshman Takes Honors<lb/>
The East Carol<lb/>
duction of<lb/>
Frank" was<lb/>
tive this group has given. This Pu-<lb/>
litzer Prize winning play has been<lb/>
a success in almost all of its produc-<lb/>
tions, notablv the 1956 New York<lb/>
production and the one in Berlin a -haiactei-izatioi<lb/>
little later.<lb/>
The EjC. players were equal to the<lb/>
play's demands in most respects, and<lb/>
they conveyed the very human and<lb/>
intimate aspects of the drama with<lb/>
unusual success. The more jubilant<lb/>
and optimistic scenes were, in gen-<lb/>
eral, the best. The touching Ghan-<lb/>
ukah celebration was especially mem -<lb/>
orable.<lb/>
The Anne Frank of Susan Trues-<lb/>
dale, a freshman playing her first<lb/>
important Playhouse role, was beau-<lb/>
tifully done. The difficult task of<lb/>
portraying an adolescent confronted<lb/>
with the many unusual problems<lb/>
which were Anne Frank's would have<lb/>
thwarted many a less capable ac-<lb/>
tress. Her essentially girlish inter-<lb/>
pretation was realistic and appeal-<lb/>
ing, and her many beautiful and of-<lb/>
ten whimsical lines and speeches were<lb/>
integral parts of a sensitively creat-<lb/>
ed role. The Playhouse is fortunate<lb/>
that Miss Truesdale is a freshman<lb/>
and will be in more future produc-<lb/>
tions (we hope).<lb/>
Ben Avery, who portrayed Mr.<lb/>
Frank, was also excellent. Special<lb/>
piaise must go to him for his con-<lb/>
sistent articulateness. "Undoubtedly,<lb/>
Snow Story<lb/>
seemed perfect. Jim Rop<lb/>
Van Daan was almost a rn.tr h for<lb/>
Doming Jenkins. He aroused enough<lb/>
contempt for himself toJ-<lb/>
thoroughly teuev<lb/>
Joanne Eagles as Margot Frank<lb/>
was very good. ne observer remark-<lb/>
ed that her interpretation of Margot<lb/>
was "more assertive and far mure<lb/>
re.H.tk than the original Margot to<lb/>
lh, New York production. DOT<lb/>
Robbta, as Mieo was also su-ce8sfu .<lb/>
.d GeraW Ha.old was satisfrtur<lb/>
as Mr. Kraler.<lb/>
David Thrift, as Dr. Dussel, the<lb/>
bothersome dentist who moves in<lb/>
with the Franks Later in the play,<lb/>
was funny, but little else. He ran<lb/>
.linshod over many of his lines, and<lb/>
w heard him say "brang" instead of<lb/>
"bring" along with a number of<lb/>
other mispronunciations. His concep-<lb/>
tion of this part had little in com-<lb/>
mon wi the Dr. Dussel in the Good-<lb/>
rich-Hackett novel.<lb/>
Highlights of the play were the<lb/>
aforementioned Chanukah scene; the<lb/>
emotionally complex scene in which<lb/>
Anne has a nightmare and wants<lb/>
only her father's comforting words<lb/>
(Ben Avery and Leigh Dobson were<lb/>
both terrific here); and the climac-<lb/>
tic moment when Miep bursts into<lb/>
the room with news of the Normandy<lb/>
Invasion. The famous final scene<lb/>
this contributed more than anything when the Gestapo come seemed a lit-<lb/>
else to his success. Leigh Dobson, as tie weak.<lb/>
Mrs. Frank, performed with the skill The sets were easily the best we've<lb/>
and insight that we expected of her. ever seen for anything on this cam-<lb/>
Albert Turner, who played Peter, pus. They were functional as well as<lb/>
Anne's first love, was successful in interesting. The audience seemed to<lb/>
portraying a shy, adolescent boy. He be actually in the cramped Amster-<lb/>
also conveyed to the audience his pa- dam apartment, and the opportunity<lb/>
thetic shame and distress at his par- of observing the actions of everyone<lb/>
ent's lack of character and feeling at all timts, whether they were all<lb/>
for others. His relationship to Anne directly involved with the drama at<lb/>
Frank was a different matter, how- the moment or not, was exciting in-<lb/>
ever, .and the scene between he and deed. Other stage effects were of the<lb/>
Anne in his room didn't come off as it same quality.<lb/>
Lastly, we must congratulate Dr.<lb/>
J. A. Withey who has created a co-<lb/>
herent production and done a really<lb/>
beautiful job of inspiring his ac-<lb/>
that is unusual in college productions,<lb/>
unusual in college productions.<lb/>
should have. Mr. Turner also seemed<lb/>
a little large for the part, but this<lb/>
is quibbling.<lb/>
Doming Jenkins was a delight as<lb/>
the cynical and superficial Mrs. Van<lb/>
Daan. She bit right in to this juicy<lb/>
Jim Gillikin, Ronnie Knouse Hold Lead Roles<lb/>
In Opera Theatre Production 'The Medium9<lb/>
So far science has not figured out<lb/>
how a man can tell what a woman is<lb/>
thinking by listening to what she's<lb/>
saying.<lb/>
(The Reader's Digest)<lb/>
A sense of humor is what makes you<lb/>
laugh at something which would<lb/>
make you mad if it happened to you.<lb/>
(The Reader's Digest)<lb/>
James Gillikin of Greenville, and<lb/>
Ronnie Knouse of Winston-Salem<lb/>
have both had much acting and mu-<lb/>
sical experience before taking the<lb/>
roles of Toby and Mr. Gobineau in<lb/>
the latest Opera Theatre production<lb/>
of The Medium.<lb/>
The Medium, to be presented in<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium on February<lb/>
20 and 21, is the tragedy of a wo-<lb/>
man, Baba, caught between two<lb/>
worlds, a world of reality which she<lb/>
cannot wholly comprehend, and a<lb/>
supernatural world which she can-<lb/>
not believe.<lb/>
Toby, portrayed by Jim Gillikin,<lb/>
is the enigmatic mute boy, whom she<lb/>
adopted, who seems to hide within<lb/>
his silence the answer to Baba's<lb/>
startling and unanswerable question.<lb/>
Ronnie Knouse, as Mr. Gobineau,<lb/>
visits Baba in an attempt to see his<lb/>
dead son once again.<lb/>
lAl a senior in high school, Ronnie<lb/>
Knouse received many honors with<lb/>
his musical and acting talent. He<lb/>
was awarded first place in the Senior<lb/>
High School Soloist (national), and<lb/>
.actors (state) contest. He also won<lb/>
first place in the National Music<lb/>
Clubs of America Contest (State &amp;<lb/>
National), and first place in the<lb/>
National Womens Club Contest<lb/>
(state).<lb/>
Besides the many awards he has<lb/>
won, Knouse was also soloist for<lb/>
Kermit Hunters' Thy Kingdom Come,<lb/>
in Salem, Virginia, and he portrayed<lb/>
Daniel Boone in the outdoor drama<lb/>
Horn In The Weat. He also had the<lb/>
lead of "Ketzel in last year's Opera<lb/>
Theatre production of The Bartered<lb/>
Bride, and was the lead character in<lb/>
the freshman play The Old Lady<lb/>
Shows Her Metals. Knouse was also<lb/>
soloist for the EC Choir last year.<lb/>
Jim Gillikin, an experienced dancer,<lb/>
has had his education and training<lb/>
at Chowan College, University of<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
North Carolina, June Taylor School<lb/>
of Dance, New York City; Pasadena<lb/>
Playhouse Associates, New York<lb/>
City; Shell Playhouse, New York<lb/>
City; and the Musical Arena Theatre<lb/>
Association, New York City. He has<lb/>
also had experience at the Rye Music<lb/>
Theatre, Rye, New York; Air Force<lb/>
Special Services, France and Ger-<lb/>
many; .and at East Carolina.<lb/>
(Gillikin has also been in such<lb/>
musical productions as: Ki9s Me<lb/>
Kate, Fanny, Damn Yankees, Fin-<lb/>
nian's Rainbow, Show Boat, Carousel,<lb/>
Brigadoon, Silk Stockings, Dark of<lb/>
the Moon, Oklahoma, and Desert<lb/>
Song. Gillikin choreographed the<lb/>
spring musical Kiss Me Kate last<lb/>
year, and is teaching modern dance<lb/>
and jazz in preparation for the spring<lb/>
production of Annie, Get Your Gun.<lb/>
Having played the part of Toby<lb/>
before at Chapel Hill, Gillikin said,<lb/>
"Toby affords the actor-dancer a<lb/>
wonderful opportunity to show the<lb/>
best of his abilities. Any part which<lb/>
has to be sustained throughout with-<lb/>
out voice is a tremendous challenge<lb/>
to the actor He added, "I am veiy<lb/>
happy to be able to play the role<lb/>
again<lb/>
Gillikin commented, "This is one<lb/>
of the finest vocal groups I have<lb/>
ever worked with. The show is be-<lb/>
ginning to jell and by opening I<lb/>
am sure it will freeze the audience<lb/>
to their seats He added, "I am<lb/>
enjoying working with Dr. Rickert.<lb/>
He shows a great deal of talent and<lb/>
imagination<lb/>
Other members of the cast for<lb/>
The Medium are: Jane Murray, Mar-<lb/>
tha Bnadner, Alison Moss, Ann Dar-<lb/>
den. Other members are: Jeanne<lb/>
Peterson, Jessamine Hiatt, and Caro-<lb/>
lyn Elam.<lb/>
Music director for The Medium is<lb/>
Paul Hickfan, director of the Opera<lb/>
Theatre, and Robert Rickert of the<lb/>
English Department is the dramatic<lb/>
director for the opera. The sets for<lb/>
the production are being designed<lb/>
by John Gordon of the Art Depart-<lb/>
ment faculty.<lb/>
Donald Hayes, director of the ECC<lb/>
orchestra, will conduct the opera<lb/>
orchestra. This is the first year that<lb/>
the orchestra will accompany the<lb/>
opera theatre and its production.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Devises<lb/>
New Medical Method<lb/>
Patients who have suffered from a<lb/>
sudden ripping off of adhesive tape<lb/>
dressings or bandages "will be grate-<lb/>
ful, according to the medical jourm<lb/>
GP, for a new technique devised by<lb/>
Dr. Lucile H. Charles of the English<lb/>
department of- East Carolina Callege.<lb/>
In an article in the January issue<lb/>
of GP, publication of the American<lb/>
Academy of General Practice, Dr.<lb/>
Charles describes the method which<lb/>
"consists not in speedily pulling the<lb/>
tape away from the patient, but rath-<lb/>
er slowly removing the patient from<lb/>
the tape The discussion is illustrat-<lb/>
ed with drawings illustrating the<lb/>
wrong way and the correct and pain-<lb/>
less way of going about the job.<lb/>
"With the thumb and the index<lb/>
finger of one hand Dr. Charles's<lb/>
article directs, "gently lift a comer<lb/>
of the adhesive tape . . . With the<lb/>
fingers of the other hand, gently<lb/>
and slowly press the skin that is<lb/>
just beneath the tape, away from the<lb/>
tape and toward the center of the<lb/>
dressing or bandage . . . and con-<lb/>
tinue the process until the adhesive<lb/>
has been entirely removed.<lb/>
Dr. Charles's method is slated for<lb/>
discussion in the medical columns<lb/>
of forthcoming issues of Cosmopoli-<lb/>
an, Every Woman's, Family Circle,<lb/>
the American Weekly, and Chatelaine<lb/>
of Canada.<lb/>
Unusual Object Attracts<lb/>
Perplexed Individual<lb/>
By DERBY WALKER<lb/>
after a<lb/>
I seldom tell this -<lb/>
few people ever believe it.<lb/>
Last fear, when snow<lb/>
where, my car ran out ol ,<lb/>
skirts of Greenville. Mj<lb/>
o'clock and freah snow wb<lb/>
tei downward again. 1<lb/>
not try to find an open fi<lb/>
late hour: instead, 1 would<lb/>
return for my car in the<lb/>
I got ut of the<lb/>
eiuht inches of snow. M<lb/>
feu steps and I ;<lb/>
out the wind I <lb/>
as 1 crunched al<lb/>
s. If names for having<lb/>
passed by a house I d<lb/>
I should stop and ask to<lb/>
As I stared at th<lb/>
living room window. I<lb/>
odd sound behind and abo<lb/>
the snow and squinted<lb/>
sound. I heard a dull <lb/>
what similar to throat .<lb/>
s emed to come from the<lb/>
plexed, I -trained hard r to s<lb/>
multitude of white flak  <lb/>
sound grew louder and th<lb/>
resembling two thin 81<lb/>
Some kind of aircr :<lb/>
tainly nothing I had<lb/>
When the<lb/>
of me. the airborne<lb/>
Large, perhaps thirl<lb/>
saucer-shaped. But th <lb/>
be snow Hind, thought<lb/>
along until it was almosl<lb/>
and I stumbled a<lb/>
in the front yard ot the I<lb/>
but I crawled into it, I<lb/>
a bit angry in the pn<lb/>
The Terrier and I got aa<lb/>
we could under thos<lb/>
and we stuck out r<lb/>
door. The craft had<lb/>
ther- above the dogh .<lb/>
manufacturing the<lb/>
breathing sound. Then.<lb/>
r opened at the botton<lb/>
vealing a portion I<lb/>
by an t rie acqua light that<lb/>
snow.<lb/>
1 was too bewikh re I I<lb/>
The terrier was too. Wl il<lb/>
garbled  "es drifted do i I<lb/>
"They are more into<lb/>
pected a voice said.<lb/>
"We have underest<lb/>
learned we were coming<lb/>
gun covering themselves<lb/>
material<lb/>
"We must return. .<lb/>
them off guard later ere i<lb/>
I ran all the way home,<lb/>
don't know what becam. I I<lb/>
(Worthy 2d prize Bu<lb/>
' ' -<lb/>
<lb/>
li<lb/>
Problem Needs Airing<lb/>
By TOM JACKi<lb/>
Recently the EAST CA LINIAN has -<lb/>
criticized for "airing dirt<lb/>
its stand taken on the can - "  <lb/>
uation. This criticism, f: itudeotl<lb/>
faculty alike, is not without sound read-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
They (those who criticise SM '<lb/>
criticism on the fact that th-<lb/>
paper is circulated off campus and in <lb/>
instances could be bad publicit<lb/>
This is true. Our student nev. -<lb/>
times circulated to off campus<lb/>
However, this is no reas<lb/>
down the news or to withh<lb/>
a bad situation exists ' -<lb/>
be made known. Not on!<lb/>
but to the whole of East Cai<lb/>
audience. Those who art-<lb/>
school deserve to know 0 hat is 8 -<lb/>
here. Those who are not int rested<lb/>
care what is going on. So we feel tW<lb/>
news should be printed.<lb/>
If the students on this can:<lb/>
honest then people should know abc-<lb/>
They should be told agai<lb/>
again until thev get sensitive enough.<lb/>
tired enough of"hearing it to I 3<lb/>
Not only should the students<lb/>
but their parents, the ones whi re t<lb/>
the bills in most ca- tould know it<lb/>
The President should know it. The Board J<lb/>
Trustees and the Board of Higher E<lb/>
tion should know it. The legislature ar.<lb/>
governor should know it too.<lb/>
If ECC is a diploma mill, - - <lb/>
plomas to the ones who prove to be the craf-<lb/>
tiest, the most dishonest, those of lo<lb/>
character, and to those of least integntj<lb/>
the ones who are supporting this school sWjJ<lb/>
know  so they can either cause enotf;<lb/>
pressure to get better results, or turn tlie-<lb/>
efforts in a more productive direction.<lb/>
If East Caolina College is the epjt<lb/>
of medocricy, (as it has been called) it <lb/>
remain such until enough people get exert<lb/>
ullt to do something. ifl<lb/>
This intellectual enviroment here A <lb/>
Part, the fault of the students, but they w<lb/>
not alone in the guilt. H<lb/>
And what about the student from J- ;<lb/>
Kose High School who recently said ECC .<lb/>
much easier than high school, or the cww;<lb/>
administrator who commented, "SomtiJ<lb/>
I wonder if there is enough challenge for vf<lb/>
bright at East Carolina<lb/>
<lb/>
c<lb/>
fc<lb/>
t<lb/>
c<lb/>
J<lb/>
c<lb/>
<lb/>
c<lb/>
I -1<lb/>
'<lb/>
 sen<lb/>
Wgggti -<lb/>
" <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038650_0003"/><lb/>
UtftSDAY,<lb/>
FEBRUARY 4, i960<lb/>
(1 News<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Union To Sponsor<lb/>
Designing Contest<lb/>
MtMidenhalK Recreational<lb/>
the College Union, has<lb/>
.tt the QRJ will sponsor<lb/>
test fo the best original<lb/>
 i brochure cover.<lb/>
$19 will be presented<lb/>
M ho designs the cover,<lb/>
or modern style,<lb/>
trays the purpose of<lb/>
Vi ,eai  leaflet explaining the<lb/>
se, facilities, and its<lb/>
sent to incoming fresh-<lb/>
ta in also available to<lb/>
ta who are interested in<lb/>
node ui of the Col-<lb/>
riaory board, staff,<lb/>
tnmitteea will judge<lb/>
k submitted,<lb/>
for submitting an<lb/>
. contest is April 15.<lb/>
may be obtained<lb/>
. Ann Rankin or from<lb/>
Union office in Wright<lb/>
l-ion committee<lb/>
 : incorporate the<lb/>
El I students in the<lb/>
 the brochure. As well<lb/>
for BOC students,<lb/>
on requested by<lb/>
 samples are dis-<lb/>
al and national<lb/>
 the Association of<lb/>
a Miss Mendenhall<lb/>
t v<lb/>
;i IND FOUND SERVICE<lb/>
Kund items turned into the<lb/>
College Union Lost and Found<lb/>
Department will be held for two<lb/>
weeks, after which time they will<lb/>
he returned to finder or will be<lb/>
subject to sale.<lb/>
NATIONAL BRUXJE TOURNEY<lb/>
The College Union urRes aU bridjfe<lb/>
'layers to polish up on their playing.<lb/>
The National Intercollegiate Bridge<lb/>
Tournament, sponsored by the Asso-<lb/>
ciation of College Unions, is sched-<lb/>
uled to be played in the TV Room of<lb/>
the College Union on February 16,<lb/>
at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
This tournament is nation-wide,<lb/>
with approximately 126 colleges and<lb/>
universities competing for bridge<lb/>
honors. Each school entering this du-<lb/>
plicate contract bridge tournament<lb/>
will play a set of 18 prepared hands<lb/>
in a single session. Prizes in the<lb/>
form of trophies and certificates will<lb/>
be awarded to the winners.<lb/>
WHITE ELEPHANT' SALE<lb/>
A "white elephant' sale will<lb/>
be conducted February 23 in the<lb/>
TV Room from 8:30 p.m. to<lb/>
10:00 p.m. All unclaimed found<lb/>
items will be auctioned off, Cyn-<lb/>
thia Mendenhall, Recreational<lb/>
Director announces.<lb/>
SOCIAL ROOM AVAILABLE<lb/>
A lounge is now available on<lb/>
the third floor of the Wright<lb/>
Building. The room may be re-<lb/>
served through the office of the<lb/>
College Union to be used for<lb/>
campus organiation social func-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
i ik'<lb/>
v Author of "I Wat a Teen-age DwarfThe Many<lb/>
Lorn of Dobie GilHt etc.)<lb/>
COMMITTEES: AN AGONIZING REAPPRAISAL<lb/>
hoee of you who stay out of your student government<lb/>
iso you believe the committee system is just an excuse for<lb/>
 d, let me cite an example to prove that a committee,<lb/>
erly led aud directed, can be a great force for good.<lb/>
Last week the Student Council met at the Duluth College of<lb/>
ry Medicine and Belles-Lettres to discuss purchasing a<lb/>
doormat for the students union. It was, I assure you, a<lb/>
: .te problem because Sherwin K. Sigafoos, janitor of the<lb/>
tenta uniou. threatened flatly to quit unless a new doormat<lb/>
illed immediately. "I'm sick and tired of mopping<lb/>
dirty old floor said Mr. Sigafoos, sobbing convulsively.<lb/>
Sigafoos, once a jolly outgoing sort, has been crying almost<lb/>
lily since the recent death of his pet wart hog who had been<lb/>
. DStant companion for 22 years. Actually, Mr. Sigafoos is<lb/>
h better off without the wart hog, who tusked him viciously<lb/>
 once a day, but a companionship of 22 years is, I aup-<lb/>
 not lightly relinquished. The college tried to give Mr.<lb/>
Sigai 08 a new wart hoga frisky little fellow with floppy ears<lb/>
and waggly tail-but Mr. Sigafoos only turned his back and<lb/>
cried the harder.)<lb/>
f5r55<lb/>
Web MmwtfZiM&amp;ttM<lb/>
But I digress. The Student Council met, discussed the door-<lb/>
mat for eight or ten hours, and then referred it to a committee.<lb/>
There were some who scoffed then and said nothing would ever<lb/>
be heard of the doormat again, but they reckoned without<lb/>
Invictup Millstone.<lb/>
Invictue Millstone, chairman of the doormat committee, waa<lb/>
a man of action-ZitA and lean and keen and, natural, a<lb/>
smoker of Marlboro Cigarettea. Why do I say <lb/>
Because, dear friends, active men and active women don t have<lb/>
time to fuss and fumble and experiment with cigarettea. rbey<lb/>
need to be sure their cigarettes will never fail thexn-that the<lb/>
flavor will alwavs be mild and mellow-that the filter will<lb/>
alwavs filter-that the pack will always be soft or flip-top. In<lb/>
short, they need to be sure it's Marlboro-dependable, con-<lb/>
stant, tried and true Marlboro. Smoke one. You U see.<lb/>
Well air, Invictus Millstone chaired his doormat wuuttee<lb/>
with such vigor and dispatch that, when the Student Councd<lb/>
met only one week later, he was able to nee and deliver the<lb/>
following recommendations:<lb/>
1. That the college build new schools of J, <lb/>
engineering, tropical medicine, Indc-Germanic languages, and<lb/>
millinery. . <lb/>
2. That the college drop football, put a roof '<lb/>
and turn it into a low-cost housing project for marned student<lb/>
3. That the college raise faculty salaries by 5000 per year<lb/>
4. That the college secede from the United States.<lb/>
5. That the question of a doormat for the student, union be<lb/>
referred to a subcommittee.<lb/>
jjUrf tAik about Che committee<lb/>
So let us hear no more defeatist taut aoouv <lb/>
aystem. It eon be made to work!<lb/>
 <lb/>
.re. you jutt nemd tour-It. miMmr  " JfarltW.<lb/>
it mou like mildnett but you don t  '" '<lb/>
titter cigarettePhilip MorrkU <lb/>
T Sponsors Panel<lb/>
DiscussionsTonight<lb/>
A panel of students presenting<lb/>
their views on race relations will<lb/>
begin a series of three discussions<lb/>
on racial tensions tonight at 6:30<lb/>
p.m. The discussions are sponsored<lb/>
by the YMCA and YWCA.<lb/>
Beginning with this rogram and<lb/>
continuing each Thursday night<lb/>
through February 18, different per-<lb/>
sons will be discussing one of the<lb/>
most timely problems of today.<lb/>
Besides the panel of students, in<lb/>
the weeks that follow, there will be<lb/>
members of the faculty, and persons<lb/>
closely assosciated with the college,<lb/>
as well as some outstanding and<lb/>
well known person to speak on the<lb/>
various subjects.<lb/>
In sponsoring these discussions<lb/>
the Y hopes to help EC students<lb/>
come to a better understanding of<lb/>
this problem as well as to give them<lb/>
a chance to express their views, a<lb/>
spokesman for the Y aaid.<lb/>
Walter T. Worthingrton<lb/>
Master Sergeant Walter T. Worth-<lb/>
ington has been picked from the Basic<lb/>
Corp. of the AFROTC as the Dis-<lb/>
tinguished Cadet of the Month.<lb/>
Judged on appearance, drill perform<lb/>
European Tour Receives Many<lb/>
Applications; Much Support<lb/>
The Grand Circle Tour of Europe,<lb/>
sponsored by East Carolina College,<lb/>
has already received much enthusi-<lb/>
asm and support, Myrtle B. Clark,<lb/>
director, says.<lb/>
The trip, which will include<lb/>
thirty-four days of summer tour-<lb/>
ing through Scotland, England, the<lb/>
Netherlands, Belgium, Germany,<lb/>
Switzerland Austria, Italy and<lb/>
France, wi.l offer nine quarter hours<lb/>
of graduate or undergraduate credit.<lb/>
Mrs. Clark said, "The purpose of<lb/>
the trip is to offer education, en-<lb/>
joyment, and increased professional<lb/>
proficiency<lb/>
Among the persons planning to go<lb/>
are Closs Jennette, Jenette McClain,<lb/>
Jessie Mercer, Frances Jennette, and<lb/>
Kathleen Johnson, all of Elizabeth<lb/>
City.<lb/>
Others are Margaret Iewis, Betsy<lb/>
Film Will Tett<lb/>
Story Of News,<lb/>
Work In Paper<lb/>
"Assignment: Mankind a docu-<lb/>
mentary color film about a day in<lb/>
the life of the Christian Science<lb/>
ance, and knowledge of the Air I Redding, Helen Fisher, Jackie House,<lb/>
Force, such a cadet is chosen monthly Hetty Thomas, Ruth Clark, Carol<lb/>
Worthington, a physical education Bailey, Jessie Taylor, Mary Twining,<lb/>
major from La Grange, will receive<lb/>
a free flight at the Greenville Air-<lb/>
port.<lb/>
Missionary Speaks<lb/>
In Mission Series<lb/>
The Reverend Edward Winckley<lb/>
Dorothy Brinson, and Tony Brand-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
Three faculty members are ac-<lb/>
tompaning the group. They are F.<lb/>
A. Dade, Ruby Edens, and Lily Carr.<lb/>
Also Mrs. Roy Cox, of Winterville,<lb/>
and Venetia Cox are going on the<lb/>
tour which has drawn an application<lb/>
from as far as Naples, Florida, from<lb/>
Mrs. Carl G. Pfeiffer.<lb/>
Mrs. Clark has announced that<lb/>
there is still enough space on the<lb/>
boat for more applications. Persons<lb/>
interested may contact Mrs. Clark<lb/>
.t the Wahl-Coates School, or see<lb/>
Dr. Ralph Brimley's office in the<lb/>
Alumni Building.<lb/>
Monitor, will be presented on campus 0f the Anglican Church, South<lb/>
February 7. Africa, will be in Greenville, Febru-<lb/>
With a musical score by Louis<lb/>
Appleboum, the film follows the<lb/>
flow of news as gathered by a global<lb/>
staff, shaped by conferences in Bos-<lb/>
ton, and transformed through edi-<lb/>
tor, il processes in a completed news-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
The script was written by John<lb/>
Beaufort and the film directed by<lb/>
Jack Alexander.<lb/>
Mrs. Robert K. Stuart, college ad-<lb/>
visor for the Christian Science col-<lb/>
lege group and representatives of the<lb/>
Christian Science Monitor for Green-<lb/>
ville, says that the Monitor's theme,<lb/>
"To bless all mankind has been<lb/>
captured in this film.<lb/>
The Christian Science group on<lb/>
campus, sponsors of the film, in-<lb/>
vite all interested students and<lb/>
faculty members to see the film<lb/>
February 7: at 7:45 p.m. in the audi-<lb/>
oorium of the Joyner Memorial Li-<lb/>
brary. The film runs twenty-eight<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
ary 7, 8, and 9, and will speak at<lb/>
The Saint Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
on the "Mission of Christian Heal-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
'Reverend Winckley, though a Lon-<lb/>
doner, has spent a number of years<lb/>
in missionary work in South Africa.<lb/>
Serving as Chaplain to the South<lb/>
African Church Railway Mission, he<lb/>
traveled 70,000 miles in three years<lb/>
with six European and five non-<lb/>
European churches under his charge.<lb/>
In 1944, Winckley was commission-<lb/>
ed to work full time in the Church's<lb/>
Ministry of Healing, and established<lb/>
the first Healing Home in South<lb/>
Africa. He was directly responsible<lb/>
for the Kearsney Healing House at<lb/>
Natal and Ekuphibseveni, the first<lb/>
Missionary Home of Divine Healing<lb/>
for Africans. Kearsney is the largest<lb/>
healing community in the world. Rev-<lb/>
erend Winckley is at present on his<lb/>
second tour of Healing Missions in<lb/>
this country.<lb/>
Grant Continues<lb/>
LeConte Research<lb/>
Dr. Joseph N. LeConte, Professor<lb/>
of Chemistry at East Carolina, has<lb/>
leceived his second research grant<lb/>
from the Research Corporation of<lb/>
America, and is continuing his work<lb/>
with Paracymine compounds.<lb/>
LeConte received this second grant<lb/>
in the summer of 1959, after doing<lb/>
research the previous year by means<lb/>
of the initial grant awarded by the<lb/>
Research Corporation.<lb/>
According to Dr. LeConte, Para-<lb/>
cymine is a compound found in the<lb/>
waste products of paper making,<lb/>
Loth from spruce and pine woods.<lb/>
LeConte became interested in the<lb/>
chemistry of this compound while<lb/>
pursuing his Ph.D. degree at the<lb/>
University of North Carolina, under<lb/>
the guidance of the late Dr. AJvin S.<lb/>
Wheeler, who first interested him in<lb/>
the study of the compound.<lb/>
This year's grant has enabled the<lb/>
purchase of chemicals and equipment<lb/>
for the research program carried on<lb/>
by LeConte. The grant also makes<lb/>
possible Che granting of a senior re-<lb/>
search stipend. Last year's recipient<lb/>
was Giles L. Martin, senior chemistry<lb/>
student. Durwood White, another<lb/>
senior, has received the guant for<lb/>
the current year of research.<lb/>
Dean Points Out<lb/>
Absence Rules<lb/>
James B. Mallory, Dean of Men,<lb/>
reported this week that students<lb/>
should become familiar with the col-<lb/>
lege rules relating to class absences<lb/>
in order to save time for themselves<lb/>
as well as the Dean's Office in get-<lb/>
ting these absences excused.<lb/>
"The free cuts given to a stu-<lb/>
dent said Mallory, are to give the<lb/>
individual student a leeway for the<lb/>
unexpected things which come up<lb/>
each quarter.<lb/>
"Too many students are abusing<lb/>
their cuts by taking them all when<lb/>
they are not needed. Then when the<lb/>
free cuts run out and an unforseen<lb/>
circumstance does arise, the students<lb/>
expect us to excuse them. Naturally<lb/>
we can not do this since we have al-<lb/>
ready made allowances for such<lb/>
matters by giving them a number of<lb/>
free cuts in advance<lb/>
To clarify class absence regula-<lb/>
tions the Dean quoted from the col-<lb/>
lege Catalog, "Absences from class<lb/>
will be excused for the following<lb/>
reasons only: (1) Illness of the Stu-<lb/>
dent . . . , (2) Death of a member<lb/>
of the student's immediate family,<lb/>
and (3)- Representation of the col-<lb/>
lege or a campus organization in an<lb/>
.activity that is recognized by the<lb/>
administration when such represen-<lb/>
tation is reported to the college by<lb/>
a member of the faculty<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Feb. 4: Beginners' Bridge Class, Col-<lb/>
lege Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
"JANUS" as March of Dimes<lb/>
Benefit Performance, Moose Club,<lb/>
by Pioneer Players  Open to the<lb/>
Public, Admission $1.00, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 5: Eastern District Band Clinic,<lb/>
Wright Aud Free Movie: "I'd<lb/>
Climb the Highest Mountain<lb/>
Austin Aud 7:00 p.m. ECC Band<lb/>
Concert, McGinnis, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 6: Basketball Game: ECC vs<lb/>
Pfeiffer, Gym 8:00 p.m. Concert<lb/>
by Clinic Band, Wright Aud 8:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 6 College Union Committee<lb/>
Meeting, TV Room, 6:30 p. m.<lb/>
Danforth Lecture: Gerhardt Wiebe,<lb/>
Lib. Aud 7:30 p.m. Entertainment<lb/>
Series: American Ballet Center of<lb/>
New York, Wright Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 9: Men's Doubles Table Tennis<lb/>
Tournament, College Union, 6:30 p.<lb/>
m. Danforth Lecture: Gerhardt<lb/>
Wiebe, Lib. Aud 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 10: Duplicate Bridge, CoUege<lb/>
Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m. Dan-<lb/>
forth Lecture: Gerhardt Wiebe,<lb/>
Lib. Aud 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 11: Beginners' Bridge Class,<lb/>
College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Feb. 12: Movie: "Blue Angel Au-<lb/>
stin Aud 7:00 p.m. FBLA Val-<lb/>
entine Dance, Wright Aud 8:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
An antique is an object that has<lb/>
made a round trip to the attic.<lb/>
(The Reader's Digest)<lb/>
LUCKY STRIKE presents<lb/>
3XjNvTrL.Fnoo<lb/>
BAFFLING BLOT<lb/>
FAILS TO FAZE FROODI<lb/>
(see below)<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: Every night for the past<lb/>
two weeks I've dreamt that I am being<lb/>
pursued by a beautiful girl in a Bikini<lb/>
who wants one of my Luckies. Just as<lb/>
she catches me, I wake up. How can<lb/>
1 prevent this? Puzzled<lb/>
Dear Puzzled: Go to bed a few minutes<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
i0t to o<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: I am the ugliest guy on<lb/>
campus. My face looks like 90 miles of<lb/>
bad road. When I go to a party someone<lb/>
always steals my date. I worry about<lb/>
this. Can you help me? Loveless<lb/>
Dear Loveless: Take heart. Any girl<lb/>
who would go out with you isn't worth<lb/>
worrying about.<lb/>
101 0l 10<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: I think this ink blot<lb/>
looks just like rabbit ears. My friends<lb/>
say I'm nuts. What think? Bugs<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: I have invited three<lb/>
girls to the dance this Saturday. How do<lb/>
1 get out of this mess? Uptha Creek<lb/>
Dear Mr. Creek: Tell two of them to<lb/>
dance with each other until you cut in.<lb/>
(0 0- t0<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: 1 have been dating one<lb/>
girl but 1 am so good-looking and so<lb/>
popular that I have decided to spread<lb/>
myself around a little more. What should<lb/>
I do about this girl? Dashing<lb/>
Dear Dashing: Tell her the good news.<lb/>
0 0 0<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: My roommate always<lb/>
wears my clothes. What should I do?<lb/>
Put Upon<lb/>
Dr. Frood, Fh.T.T.<lb/>
Dear Put Upon: Cover yourself and<lb/>
stay indoors.<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: My mother and my<lb/>
brother don't like my boy friend, but my<lb/>
father and my sister do. His father and<lb/>
two brothers don't like me, but his<lb/>
mother and his other brother do. What<lb/>
should I do? Miss Muddle<lb/>
Dear Miss Muddle: Tell your father to<lb/>
talk to your mother and tell your sister to<lb/>
talk to your brother. Then tell your boy<lb/>
friend's mother to talk to his father and<lb/>
tell his brother to talk to his brothers. If<lb/>
that doesn't work, then talk to your<lb/>
mother and brother yourself. Maybe they<lb/>
know something you don't know.<lb/>
Dear Bugs: It's yew friends who are<lb/>
nets. Those ere clearly rabbit ears. And<lb/>
the long shape extending down Is the<lb/>
rabbit's trunk.<lb/>
Oi. re. . .<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS SMOKE<lb/>
MORE LUCKIES THAN<lb/>
ANY OTHER REGULAR!<lb/>
When it comes to choosing their regular smoke,<lb/>
college students head right for fine tobacco.<lb/>
Result: Lucky Strike tops every other regular<lb/>
sold. Lucky's taste beats all the rest because<lb/>
L.S.M.F.T Lucky Strike means fine tobacco.<lb/>
TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTERI<lb/>
Product of eXjwmWmmWm $&amp; tfrnepmey -&amp;cm u mmr middle<lb/>
News In Brief<lb/>
Students who desire to take<lb/>
the proficiency swimming test<lb/>
which is a requirement for gradu-<lb/>
ation may do so during periods<lb/>
7 and 8 on Thursday and Friday,<lb/>
February 25 and 26.<lb/>
SECONDARY MAJORS<lb/>
Secondary majors planning to<lb/>
do student teaching next fall<lb/>
may apply to their departmental<lb/>
supervisors during the week of<lb/>
preregistration and until 4:30<lb/>
p.m. March 9, announces J. L.<lb/>
Oppelt, director of student teach-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
ELEMENTARY MAJORS<lb/>
Elementary majors planning<lb/>
to do student teaching Fall<lb/>
Quarter will complete their ap-<lb/>
plications during the first class<lb/>
meeting of Ed. 339, Spring Quar-<lb/>
ter under the direction of Dr.<lb/>
Keith D. Holmes or Dr. Ruth<lb/>
Modlin, announces J. L. Oppelt,<lb/>
Director of Student teaching.<lb/>
PSYCHOLOGY CLUB TO MEET<lb/>
The East Carolina Psychology<lb/>
Club will hold its next regular meet-<lb/>
ing on February 8 in Rawls No. 106.<lb/>
Meeting time will be 4:00 p.m The<lb/>
program will include reports by<lb/>
members Sam Hudson and Charles<lb/>
Dyson on research they have recent-<lb/>
iy completed.<lb/>
The club has set up a psychology<lb/>
library, open to all club members,<lb/>
vhich has material of interest in<lb/>
many areas of psychology that are<lb/>
not usually covered in detail by the<lb/>
regular academic courses.<lb/>
PAINTING DISAPPEARS<lb/>
A painting belonging to J. C.<lb/>
Merrltt was reported missing<lb/>
from Rawls 301 sometime last<lb/>
week. In order to graduate, Mer-<lb/>
ritt must find and exhibit the<lb/>
painting. A $5.00 reward is of-<lb/>
fered by Meritt for information<lb/>
leading to its recovery.<lb/>
Starts FRIDAY, Feb. 5<lb/>
GARY TONY<lb/>
GRANT-CURTIS<lb/>
mw.bt<lb/>
-r-u<lb/>
w-<lb/>
OPERATION4<lb/>
PETTICOAT'<lb/>
in Eaetman COLOR<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
Delicious Food<lb/>
Served 24 Hours<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00038650_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY.<lb/>
FEBRt<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
E<lb/>
Pirate Tankmen Host Strong Florida;<lb/>
ECC-ACC Rivalry Tonight At WUson<lb/>
mm tr   t , aith and his r<lb/>
AST CAftOtlNlAM<lb/>
 p I<lb/>
By LEONARD LAO<lb/>
Tonight at 8:00 pjn. in Memorial<lb/>
Pool, the DC swimming team will<lb/>
play host to a strong University of<lb/>
Florida team. The boys from the<lb/>
sunshine state will invade Greenville<lb/>
in hopes of sweeping a match from<lb/>
the Bucs in route to their upcoming<lb/>
contest with the Tar Heel tankmen<lb/>
of the University of North Carolina.<lb/>
The Florida team, one of the best in<lb/>
the schools history, is the only team<lb/>
who has been able to defeat the<lb/>
strong University of North arolina<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Pirate swimming coach Ray Mar-<lb/>
tinez is very optimistic concerning<lb/>
the engagement with Florida. The<lb/>
Martinezmen have proved that they<lb/>
will be no pushover. Earlier in the<lb/>
season, the Buc swimmers met Caro-<lb/>
lina, Atlanta Coast Conference<lb/>
champions, and lost by the slimmest<lb/>
of marginsone point.<lb/>
The Pirate underwatermen have<lb/>
been tremendously handicapped in<lb/>
the past few weeks with injuries and<lb/>
illnesses. Team co-captain and free-<lb/>
style artist Jake Smith missed the<lb/>
exciting meet with the Tar Heels be-<lb/>
cause of the flu. Another outstanding<lb/>
performer, Jack McCann, who is<lb/>
currently undefeated in the breast-<lb/>
stroke, has also been hampered with<lb/>
an illness. Coach Martinez has been<lb/>
working these two boys out in the<lb/>
past and he is confident that they<lb/>
will be on tap for the Florida con-<lb/>
test.<lb/>
A win for the Pirate contingent<lb/>
over the strong University of Flor-<lb/>
ida boys would be a definite upset.<lb/>
But Martinez has a good squad. Also<lb/>
expected to share in a possible upset<lb/>
win are Tommy Carroll, Bob Con-<lb/>
nolly, Jeff Faucette, Jimmy Meads,<lb/>
Butch Edwards, Glenn Dyer, Bob<lb/>
Kingery, and Tommy Tucker.<lb/>
The EC-University of Florida<lb/>
contest was originally scheduled for<lb/>
tomorrow night, but upon the re-<lb/>
quest of the Florida coach, the meet<lb/>
was moved up to tonight.<lb/>
Pirate Courtmen Sweep Two<lb/>
Wins From WCC, Apps<lb/>
Resulting to spasmodic offensive<lb/>
patterns, the East Carolina basket-<lb/>
ball team ground out two more of<lb/>
it's "grudge" wins over Western<lb/>
Carolina and Appalachian.<lb/>
Friday night, the Pirates, led by<lb/>
Ike Riddick, swamped the Cata-<lb/>
mounts of WCC to the tune of 80-52,<lb/>
to avenge the 74-73 overtime loss to<lb/>
WC at Cullowhee. Paced by Riddick,<lb/>
cnce again, the Bucs came back to<lb/>
their stomping grounds on Monday<lb/>
to drop Appalachian by a score of<lb/>
Sl-73.<lb/>
Earlier in the season, the Pirates<lb/>
took defeats from Western Carolina,<lb/>
Appalachin, Lenoir Rhyne, and High<lb/>
Point. Since that time, the ever-im-<lb/>
proving Bucs have won "revenge"<lb/>
contests from all but High Point.<lb/>
They will be next on the EC "grudge"<lb/>
list when the Pirate hardwoodmen<lb/>
journey to High Point on February<lb/>
17.<lb/>
Riddick, the EC "Bread and Butter<lb/>
man was the center of attraction<lb/>
in both wins. He bucketed 22 points<lb/>
against WC, and then came back to<lb/>
garner 33 against the Mountaineers.<lb/>
The scrappy Greenvillite kept the<lb/>
crowd on the edge of their seats with<lb/>
his startling drives and outside shots.<lb/>
Against the Apps, Riddick hit on<lb/>
12 out of 16 shots from the floor<lb/>
for an amazing 76 accuracy. Scor-<lb/>
ing on numerous layups on the Pi-<lb/>
rate fast break, which is something<lb/>
to behold in itself, Riddick also<lb/>
dropped 9 out of 10 tosses from the<lb/>
charity line.<lb/>
Trying to overcome a 41-26 half-<lb/>
time deficit, the Apps were game.<lb/>
Several times it looked as though<lb/>
the mountain boys were going to pull<lb/>
i: out of the fire, but their efforts<lb/>
were to no avail.<lb/>
Two all-Conference selections, Don<lb/>
King and Rick Howe, joined forces<lb/>
to cut the EC lead to 46-40 with 13<lb/>
minutes on the clock. But Cotton<lb/>
Clayton and Benny Bowes added<lb/>
three points to the Pirate cause to<lb/>
put EC ahead by nine points.<lb/>
Howe and King again cut the lead<lb/>
to four points, but this time, it was<lb/>
Riddick, who started the fire. Picking<lb/>
up a couple of loose balls, Riddick<lb/>
widened the margin to 12 points.<lb/>
Refusing to give up, the Apps nar-<lb/>
rowed the lead to 8 points, where it<lb/>
remained until the final gun sounded.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
RATE'J<lb/>
DEN<lb/>
By JOHNNY HUDSON<lb/>
ence<lb/>
boosted EC into<lb/>
North State loop,<lb/>
ference candidate<lb/>
3E K1DE . . . Cottonlay ton hitches a ride for a layup against Ap-<lb/>
palachian Monday night. The Pirates defeated the Apps to gain third place<lb/>
in the loop standings.<lb/>
Lead<lb/>
Play<lb/>
ers Resume<lb/>
In Intramurals<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith and hi. Pj<lb/>
basketball team journey to Wilson<lb/>
tonight to battle with <lb/>
lantic Christian College. It <lb/>
meeting of these two eastern teams<lb/>
should prove to be an exciting con-<lb/>
test for local fans.<lb/>
The Bucs, riding high on succes-<lb/>
sive defeats over Western Carolina<lb/>
and Appa'achian, boast a 7-4 confer-<lb/>
mark. The wM over Appalachian<lb/>
third place in the<lb/>
Led by All-Con-<lb/>
Ike Riddick, that<lb/>
, will be out to close<lb/>
the gap between themselves and<lb/>
seconf place High Point. Riddick.<lb/>
who poured in 33 points against Ap-<lb/>
palachian, is the big gun on the EC<lb/>
quad. His superb hackcourt play<lb/>
along with his ability to drive, has<lb/>
distinguished him as one of the bet-<lb/>
ter players in the North State Con-<lb/>
ference. He leads the Buc scorers<lb/>
with a 24.2 average in 17 games.<lb/>
The Bulldogs of Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian are trying to recover from the<lb/>
loss of freshman starter, Jerry Fritz.<lb/>
Fritz was one of ACC's leading<lb/>
scorers, but was lost at mid-semes-<lb/>
ter due to his scholastic average. But<lb/>
the Bulldogs are not to be sneezed<lb/>
at. They hold a 3-6 won-loat confer-<lb/>
ence record, including an impressive<lb/>
win over Western Carolina. They are<lb/>
tough on their own floor and will be<lb/>
particularly out to upset the Pirate<lb/>
apple-cart.<lb/>
As usual, there will probably be<lb/>
a host of East Carolina fans attend-<lb/>
ing this riwilry, and if this contest<lb/>
has the air of excitement that is<lb/>
usually prevalent when these two<lb/>
teams meet, the fans should get more<lb/>
than their money's worth.<lb/>
Barring last minute changes, the<lb/>
starting Pirate quint should be com-<lb/>
posed of RkWick and "Cotton" Clay-<lb/>
ton at guards, Don Smith and Lacy<lb/>
West at forwards, and Benny Bowes<lb/>
at center.<lb/>
1M"4HM <lb/>
-Look out Lenoir Rhyne and High Point That tRe .<lb/>
would have caused the walls of Memorial Gymnasium U , Mond?<lb/>
thlrJ place<lb/>
in tJ<lb/>
CAMP COUNSELORS TO MEET<lb/>
Students interested<lb/>
camp counselors are<lb/>
By MERLE SUMMERS<lb/>
in becoming<lb/>
invited to a<lb/>
meeting in the gymnasium February<lb/>
8 at 4:30 p.m. Sponsored by the<lb/>
Women's Recreation Association, a<lb/>
Camp Club will be organized.<lb/>
Openings in organizational and<lb/>
private camps will be discussed at<lb/>
this first meeting. The club will also<lb/>
aid interested students in making ap-<lb/>
plications for jobs and in finding<lb/>
jobs at camps.<lb/>
Gay Hogan, instructor in the Phys-<lb/>
ical Education Department, reports<lb/>
that if there is enough student re-<lb/>
sponse further meetings will be con-<lb/>
ducted to discuss camping problems<lb/>
and techniques. The club will re-<lb/>
quire no dues. Interested students<lb/>
should contact Miss Hogan or attend<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
The Girls' Intramural Basketball<lb/>
season is well under way with Rags-<lb/>
dale and Garrett leading League I<lb/>
;md League II respectively.<lb/>
Ragsdale has taken over the un-<lb/>
disputed lead in League I by winning<lb/>
a squeaker from Jarvis in two over-<lb/>
time periods, 56-54. "Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma now looks to be the strongest<lb/>
torori y team in the race stated<lb/>
Miss Gny Hogan, faculty advisor to<lb/>
the WRA.<lb/>
Each team will play every team in<lb/>
their respective league to determine<lb/>
which two teams will represent their<lb/>
league in the campus championship.<lb/>
The top two teams in each league<lb/>
will play in a single or double elimin-<lb/>
ation tournament to determine the<lb/>
campus championship.<lb/>
The standings as of January 28<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
League I<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Ragsdale   3<lb/>
Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Won Lost<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
btgma<lb/>
Jj.rvis <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Woman's Hall<lb/>
Leaue II<lb/>
Garrett  2 0<lb/>
Kappa Delta  1 0<lb/>
Fleming  1 1<lb/>
Slay- 1 1<lb/>
Day S udents  1 2<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi  0 2<lb/>
Sigma Nu, the Rocking Robins, and<lb/>
Rico's All Stars, all have identical<lb/>
7-0 won-lost records, to lead their<lb/>
tespective leagues in the boy's intra-<lb/>
murals.<lb/>
Fraternity League<lb/>
Pirates Close Gap<lb/>
Or LR, High Point<lb/>
SOCIAL MATHEMATICS 488-489<lb/>
Making After-Hours Count<lb/>
Prof. Tangent<lb/>
Principles of Accounting. Accounting for time<lb/>
not spent on dates by males using ordinary<lb/>
hair tonics. Accounting for rime well spent on<lb/>
dates by males using 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic.<lb/>
Dr. Frightwig's Theorem (water hairdust-<lb/>
mop hair). Proof that 'Vaseline Hair Tonic<lb/>
replaces oil that water removes, makes men's<lb/>
hair irresistible to women. Application of proof<lb/>
by application of 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic. For<lb/>
students who have taken Applied Magnetism<lb/>
405-406 but do not intend to spend weekends<lb/>
studying.<lb/>
Materials: oni 4 ov bottU 'VasiUne Hair Tome<lb/>
Vaseline<lb/>
HAIR<lb/>
TONIC<lb/>
the<lb/>
and Conditions<lb/>
Watiiral Way<lb/>
7<lb/>
5<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
7<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
it's clear,<lb/>
it's clean,<lb/>
it's<lb/>
Vaseline4<lb/>
HAIR TONIC<lb/>
Team<lb/>
Sigma Nu<lb/>
Lambda Chi  <lb/>
Kappa Alpha .<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha <lb/>
Theta Chi <lb/>
Sig Eps<lb/>
Delta' Sigma Pi <lb/>
Independent League<lb/>
League I<lb/>
Rocking Robins <lb/>
Hobo's <lb/>
Warriors<lb/>
Speedsers <lb/>
Cavaliers<lb/>
Hot Rodders  2<lb/>
The Freshmen  2<lb/>
Kinky Dinks  0<lb/>
League II<lb/>
Rico's All Stars  7<lb/>
Bombers 5<lb/>
Scots 8<lb/>
Westminster Fellowship 4<lb/>
GoofAftfs 2<lb/>
Veterans  0<lb/>
The schedule includes:<lb/>
February 8, 1960<lb/>
Sig Eps vs. Theta Chi<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pi vs. Lambda Chi<lb/>
Sigma Nu vs. Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Cavaliers vs. Hot Rodders<lb/>
Hobo's vs. Speedsters<lb/>
Warriors vs. The Freshmen<lb/>
Rinky Dinks vs. Rocking<lb/>
Robins<lb/>
Rico's vs. Veterans<lb/>
Bombers vs. Westminster<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Goof-offs vs. Veterans<lb/>
February 10, 1060<lb/>
Scots vs. Veterans<lb/>
Rico's All Stars vs. West-<lb/>
minster Fellowship<lb/>
Bombers vs. Goof-offs<lb/>
Rinky Dinks vs. The Freshmen<lb/>
Speedsters vs. Cavaliers<lb/>
Rocking Robins<lb/>
Hobo's vs. Hot Rodders<lb/>
IKappa Alpha vs. Pi Kappa<lb/>
Aipha<lb/>
Sig Eps vs. Delta Sigma Pi<lb/>
Lambda Chi vs. Sigma Nn<lb/>
Picking .a North State winner is<lb/>
like finding a needle in the haystack<lb/>
and the situation changes very little<lb/>
as the teams head into the final<lb/>
stretch of te regular season activity.<lb/>
Better balanced than in many a<lb/>
year, North State clubs continue to<lb/>
roll along with a new leader almost<lb/>
every week. Lenoir Rhyne's 74-66 win<lb/>
over High Point Saturday night vaul-<lb/>
ted the Bears into the top spot ahead<lb/>
of the Panthers.<lb/>
Although Lenoir Ryne And High<lb/>
Point lead the pack, Catawba and<lb/>
East Carolina have caused the big-<lb/>
gest rumble in recent weeks. Off to<lb/>
a slow start this season, Catawba has<lb/>
moved up the North State ladder<lb/>
bet Carolina poured it on Appalachian to capture<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
vor the rest of the season, it  Katie-Bar-The-Door for<lb/>
from the eastern belt are going to be hard to sink. Three 3traiirht Jg<lb/>
s x victories in the last seven games have given senbes pienty J<lb/>
Jo drop the label of "darkhorses from the East Carolina pri JJ<lb/>
Thev now rank he Bucs as title contenders and by tmnmm ,<lb/>
local five iriy rank among the tournament favorites. ' t<lb/>
Ike Riddick gets better every game and si <lb/>
Conference and All-Stata honors. The Greenville i<lb/>
the best that this corner has seen in the conference, axehrfhg ,<lb/>
Cot on Clayton, Don Smith, Lacy West, and Berry Bowes W<lb/>
worth their weight in gold. The four, along with R. k <lb/>
knit quintet. They get better with experience and there h fc . <lb/>
believe tha. they wont be in the main scuffle come toumai<lb/>
Dispite the recent success of the Bucs, there has -<lb/>
of luring weaknesses. First, the club is still lacking I i I<lb/>
take JUlgl fti the backboards. Bowes, Clayton, Smitr sad We3- are<lb/>
rebounders but have to scrap for every loose ball. Bowes, , &amp;<lb/>
been real tough in the pivot for Coach Earl Smr aclu the bj . <lb/>
many of his competitors.<lb/>
Second, the club is faced with a defini e dep-<lb/>
is the only experience reserve and he has not seen a great<lb/>
Most of te bench is made up of freshmen and Smith ban  .rt pp,<lb/>
ity to use them in many games. His depth problem has taker a Ided ixp<lb/>
in recent weeks when injuries and illness cutting a deep gash. Dasw<lb/>
rett, 6-6 center, has been lost for an indefini e period and Fred Feefe a.<lb/>
Fornes, and Me! Boyette didn't dress for Mondays g <lb/>
Coach Earl Smith has done a tremendous joh t<lb/>
club this season. Ike Riddick was the only returnee bol -aalT<lb/>
took his left-overs, added a few freshmen, and tossed -<lb/>
for a formidable ball club. Few expected to see te B<lb/>
fast even fewer would be surprised now to see Smi r. "oae-yesi vaaon<lb/>
capture the forthcoming tournament. Though the head BMMter, fa<lb/>
has not supplied all the brain work and sweat. Coach V, i ar: <lb/>
his first year here, has helped te Pirate cause asids .<lb/>
As far as Coach Ray Martinez is concerned, his toE<lb/>
for his swimmers. The defending NAIA champion- asset the 1<lb/>
in one of the few night meets of the season.<lb/>
The meet was originally scheduled for Friday bit -va ssssaj <lb/>
request of Florida officials. The Gators match strokes srita Car; u <lb/>
Saturday and wanted a little more time before fm <lb/>
with the Tar Heels.<lb/>
Florida is undefeated this season although kdsi :i. .<lb/>
club is weaker. Last season it halted Carolina's long-time winning ttra<lb/>
and was the only team to edge the nationally-ranked Ta. I att<lb/>
Jack MaCann is still undefeated this season Msgfc<lb/>
of Glenn Dyer and Bob Kingrey have been alnv y<lb/>
Jake Smith, Jeff Faucette, Tommy Carroll, B .<lb/>
Tucker are a few of the other cogs that push the . - -t<lb/>
Two national champions in three years is a .  . <lb/>
school. The 1960 club doesn't have the depth of a Ma<lb/>
has been very successful in utilizing his talents to tie - ".<lb/>
boys deserve a following so try and take in the meet I night<lb/>
Ed Emory, All-State tackle and one of the most active r:<lb/>
the Varsity Club, is afraid that the Alumni-Varsity game - - eaos<lb/>
plugs this spring.<lb/>
Wi.h a smile that spreads from ear to ear, Err. ry<lb/>
will be the year that the Varsity meets its match. Ed r. mm<lb/>
other Alumni spokesman such as Lee Atkinson, James Speit isi<lb/>
Zehring.<lb/>
Recent years have seen the Alumni boast of then1 many takat<lb/>
each time finish on the short end. Yet, they appear to be bursting <lb/>
seams with former stars this yearthe best collection yet. The pat<lb/>
which is scheduled for February 20th, should be a thriUer ar I i if of<lb/>
dents a glimpse of the I960 grid forces.<lb/>
One of te feature concerns of Emory and his Varsity brothers asm<lb/>
selling of tickets for the classics. Let's se: aside the next west m Bd BaejH<lb/>
week so everybody buy a ticket from the "mau-mau How sheet Ik<lb/>
Won Lost J steadily since Christmas and sounded<lb/>
0:00<lb/>
7:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
0:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
6:00<lb/>
:00<lb/>
8:00<lb/>
9:00<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
warning once again Saturday night,<lb/>
disposing of Elon 92-69. The Indians<lb/>
have posted wins over High Point<lb/>
and Appalachian.<lb/>
East Carolina has seen its fresh-<lb/>
men come of age and the Bucs have<lb/>
surged into fourth place with five<lb/>
victories in their last six games. In-<lb/>
cluded in the winning skein has been<lb/>
a triumph over Lenoir Rhyne in<lb/>
Hickory.<lb/>
Taking the biggest slide this past<lb/>
veek was defending champion West-<lb/>
ern Carolina. The Oats found the<lb/>
eastern domain of East Carolina and<lb/>
Atlantic Christian nothin like their<lb/>
mountain hideout, losing a couple of<lb/>
games on their road trip.<lb/>
The loop has a number of feature<lb/>
games on tap for this week and tbe<lb/>
complexion of the race is subject to<lb/>
form an almost new picture when<lb/>
the final dust dies down Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith and his battlers<lb/>
journey to Wilson Thursday night<lb/>
for a tradition-laden game with arch-<lb/>
rival Atlantic Christian.<lb/>
The Apps, wtth a busy week ahead,<lb/>
wind up their week's activity Satur-<lb/>
day night, hosting Lenoir Rhyne.<lb/>
Giant-killer Catawba gets another<lb/>
shot at the "big dogs meeting<lb/>
High Point Saturday.<lb/>
NORTH STATE CONFERENCE<lb/>
Kilpatrick Cops No. 1 Spot<lb/>
n Mens Singles Tournament'<lb/>
Coaf.An<lb/>
W LW L<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne  8 212 7<lb/>
High Point7 210 2<lb/>
East Carolina  7 411 <lb/>
Appalachian  6 412 5<lb/>
Catawba  6 412 8<lb/>
Western Carolina 6 611 9<lb/>
Elon Christian  3 67 11<lb/>
Atlantic Christian 8 612 10<lb/>
Guilford0 101 11<lb/>
Games this weekThursday, East<lb/>
Carolina at ACC; Saturday, Catawba<lb/>
at High Point, Elon at WCC, Lenoir<lb/>
Rhyne at Appalachian, Guilford at<lb/>
ACC, Pfeiffer at Ernst Carolina.<lb/>
Norman Kilpatrick hit his way<lb/>
through the defense of Charles<lb/>
Munn to win the championship in<lb/>
the finals of the Winter Quarter<lb/>
Men's Singles Table Tennis Tourna-<lb/>
ment, conducted January 27 in the<lb/>
College Union.<lb/>
Kilpatrick's steady backhand and<lb/>
forehand drives, and quick backhand<lb/>
flicks, pierced Munn's blocking da-<lb/>
tense, 21-10, 21-18, 21-11. Kilpat-<lb/>
rick's fast moving attack was in<lb/>
trouble only in the second game<lb/>
when Munn's well placed block shots<lb/>
forced Kilpatrick to miss four back-<lb/>
hand drives in a row, to tie the score<lb/>
 13-all. However, Kilpatrick slowed<lb/>
the pace of his attack and finally<lb/>
took the game 21-18.<lb/>
Muim, making his second straight<lb/>
appearance in the men's finals, had<lb/>
to win his semi-final match the hard<lb/>
way again, as he stopped Zuill Bailey's<lb/>
hard hitting backhand attack 25-28,<lb/>
17-21, 27-26, 21-12. The tourney's<lb/>
most tense play found Bailey lead-<lb/>
ing 2 to 1, and 26-24 in the fourth<lb/>
rame, when Munn hit two forehand<lb/>
kill shots through Bailey's defense,<lb/>
and then forced him to miss a block<lb/>
shot, to win 27-26. In the final game,<lb/>
Munn's steady play waa too much<lb/>
for the 1969 doubles champion, aa<lb/>
Munn took the match 21-12.<lb/>
In the other semi-final play, Kil-<lb/>
patrick and Charles Holliday ax-<lb/>
changed drives and counter-drives<lb/>
in a good looking match, which saw<lb/>
Kilpatrick forced hack on defense<lb/>
16-20 feet from the table several<lb/>
times. The champion finally won 21-<lb/>
L4,n?i'12' 21-18 b hitti thro<lb/>
Hobday's backhand defense. The ab-<lb/>
ense of Fall Quarter Champion Dee<lb/>
Riddick gave the semi-finaliat an<lb/>
easier draw than expected, but the<lb/>
tourney nevertheless had the largest<lb/>
draw of any men's<lb/>
nament held in over a<lb/>
Other top tournament<lb/>
were Bailey's a . U wk <lb/>
the chop defense ,f Albert Df<lb/>
and Munn's 21-11. 16-21. 21-121<lb/>
tory over Hubert Leggstt. The ia!<lb/>
play of Davis had jjiver. him  !3-<lb/>
lead in his final game with Bj-PJ<lb/>
when Bailey used a series  I<lb/>
topspin lobs, which f reed D9<lb/>
try enough inaccurate forettij<lb/>
smashes to win the rarre tad si3<lb/>
21-17, for Baiky. Another c<lb/>
match was Jame Prar.ton's &amp;<lb/>
of Steve Beck, 9-21, 21-18. 21-1 <lb/>
first round play.<lb/>
Enrl Marshbur- ' th con<lb/>
tions event over Ra Watson ',<lb/>
23-21, after havi i <lb/>
Sammy Watson in the ?err<lb/>
21-16. 7-21. 21-15 Marshbffl <lb/>
lost his reg es match to<lb/>
vis, 21-10, 27-25.<lb/>
WR SCHEDULE<lb/>
February 4<lb/>
Kapp Delta vs. Cotten-S0 <lb/>
Wilson vs. Woman's Hall-8<lb/>
Extramural team wil! p!F<lb/>
College at 7:00 p. m.<lb/>
February 9<lb/>
Alpha Phi vs. Tri Sigma- J I<lb/>
Delta Zeta vs. Ragsdale8:W r I<lb/>
Delta Zeta vs. Ragsdale <lb/>
Kappa Delta vs. Fleming-0" <lb/>
9:00 P-<lb/>
Cssfl<lb/>
Slay vs. Day Student<lb/>
Extramural team wffl Vy<lb/>
bell at 6:30 p. m.<lb/>
February U<lb/>
Sky vs. Fleming7:00 p. <lb/>
Garrett vs. Kappa Delta r<lb/>
Jarvis vs. Wilson7:00 p- <lb/>
Delta Zeta vs. Tri Kga-31 p<lb/>
February 1<lb/>
Tri Sigma vs. Wilson-?- P f <lb/>
Jarvis vs. Woman's H11  l<lb/>
Fleming vs. Day Student <lb/>
Garrett. vs. otten 7:30 P- <lb/>
February H <lb/>
Jarvis vs. Alpha Phi-7:00 P-<lb/>
iiiiCm<lb/>
' . mimmlkt<lb/>

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