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            <mods:title>East Carolinian, April 7, 1960</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:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">19600407</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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          <dc:title>East Carolinian, April 7, 1960</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>19600407</dc:date>
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          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
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Bids<lb />
gtafetttfl van pick up bids to the<lb />
lnni1-Senior dance on Monday,<lb />
,1 u, in the College Union.<lb />
pni<lb />
Easttarolinian<lb />
Panhellenic Council<lb />
See page two for editorial con-<lb />
cerning recent developments in the<lb />
newly organized Panhellenic Council.<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
XXXV<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY. APRIL 7, 1960<lb />
Number 22<lb />
n<lb />
n Williams<lb />
Beauty Pageant<lb />
Announces Contest W<lb />
tfoant, sponsored by<lb />
( 'amber of Commerce.<lb />
trill be held tonight at<lb />
Wright Auditorium. Ad-<lb />
be fifty cents.<lb />
will be vying for the<lb />
lizabeth Rogers, a fresh-<lb />
a Greenville native who<lb />
, t Alpha Omicron Pi.<lb />
will present for her<lb />
a baton and dance routine.<lb />
Wreni , native of Cedar<lb />
i iresent Sigma, Sigma,<lb />
eshman, Miss Wrenn has<lb />
her talent, a dramatic<lb />
. nia lass from Drakes<lb />
 kmgsmore is sponsor-<lb />
Delta. Miss Kings-<lb />
 EXXJ, will perform<lb />
 dance number.<lb />
peting will be Sandra<lb />
Graham, N.C a junior,<lb />
! I Carolina College's I Moon will present a dramatic comedy<lb />
I skit. Sponsoring Delta Zeta will be<lb />
Barbara Jean Jones, a junior from<lb />
Raleigh who will give a dramatic<lb />
skit. Sharon Hurt, a junior from<lb />
Omaha, Nebraska will represent Al-<lb />
pha Xi Delta. For her talent, Miss<lb />
Hurt will present modern art with<lb />
modern jazz. A junior from Tarboro,<lb />
who will represent Alpha Phi, is<lb />
Mary Lee Lawrence. Miss Law-<lb />
tenee will aing. Rachel Spivey, a<lb />
sophomore from Hertford sponsored<lb />
by Chi Omega will give as her talent,<lb />
n dramatic skit.<lb />
Also in the contest will be Lana<lb />
Bonner, a freshman from Greenville,<lb />
who will present a baton twirling<lb />
routine, and Mary Brown, a junior<lb />
from Jackson, who will give a drama-<lb />
tic skit.<lb />
I ast year's winner was Miss Alice<lb />
Anne Home from Tabor City. Miss<lb />
ml Alpha Delta Pi. Miss Home will crown the 1960 winner.<lb />
White Sanies Freshmen Counselors;<lb />
!r!s To Serve Dorms Next Year<lb />
Student counselors who will act as<lb />
'Big Sisters" to freshman girls next<lb />
year have been announced by Ruth<lb />
White, Dean of Women.<lb />
Student counselors in Ragsdale<lb />
Hall are Trudy Anderson, Tina Bag-<lb />
well, Ann Campbell, Peggy Cart-<lb />
wright, Sandra Cobb, Mary Ann Con-<lb />
drey, Dee Davis, Frances Foster, Sue<lb />
Gretchen Gallagher, Judy Harrison,<lb />
and Pat Hughes.<lb />
Completing the list are Mabel Cau-<lb />
ley Jones, Wynne Lindsey, Edith Mal-<lb />
lard. Mary Ann Mayo, Phyllis Nash,<lb /><lb />
lK<lb />
Teacher Represents NEA<lb />
At White House Conference<lb />
Phyllis Oliver, Marie Price, Ellie<lb />
Speokman, and Tilly West.<lb />
Serving Gotten Hall are Beatrice<lb />
Barrett, Fran Gannon, Nancy Cog-<lb />
gins, Patsy Col'ier, Anne Creech, Judy<lb />
Cullifer, Peggy Daniels, Mary John<lb />
Best, Anne DeVane, Gwen Dickens,<lb />
Ernestine Edwards, Barbara Ellis,<lb />
Martha Ellis, Gloria Faireloth, Becky<lb />
(ilia lynch, Celia May, Jane Page,<lb />
Lou Ann Randolph, Dawn Reaves,<lb />
Ann Marie Riddick, Freddie Skinner,<lb />
Judy Smith, Betty Lou Spruill, Sylvia<lb />
Wal'ace, Kaye Williams, and Peggy<lb />
Wood.<lb />
Woman's Hall counselors are Lynda<lb />
Ann Simmons and Signa Faye Rob-<lb />
erts.<lb />
Umstead Hall will be a freshmen<lb />
girls' dorm next year. Students serv-<lb />
ing as counselors for these girls are<lb />
Ann Frances Allen, Jo Ann Ballance,<lb />
Judy Berry, Nancy Berry, Wynda<lb />
Chappall, Jo Ann Collins, Ola Darden,<lb />
Betty Derrick, Gail Elkins, Peggie El-<lb />
liot, Carolista Fletcher, Ann Fortes-<lb />
cue, Diana Foster, Jackie Grady, and<lb />
Opal Hall.<lb />
Completing he list are Jackie<lb />
Hammond, Martha Hart, Lynda Gayl"<lb />
Johnson, Edrua Gray Jones, DeEtta<lb />
Jordan, Delores Jordan, Vickie Lee,<lb />
Martha Lyon, Linda Mann, Emily Lou<lb />
Alexander Becomes First To Win Prize<lb />
Offered By Literary Magazine; Story<lb />
To Be Featured In Spring Edition<lb />
m<lb />
conference event. Miss Straws repre-<lb />
sented college nrofessors in the area<lb />
of teacher education. The purpose of<lb />
the meeting was to consider the impli-<lb />
cations of the White House Confer-<lb />
ence recommendations for home eco-<lb />
nomics programs and also the Ame-<lb />
esenting the National: rioan Home Economic Association's<lb />
Association's Department role in relation to implementing and<lb />
Economies, of which she is1 sharing with all members the find-<lb />
ident ings of the conference<lb />
once brought to the<lb />
tal 6,690 delegates from<lb />
and 500 international<lb />
n. resident teacher edu-<lb />
me economics depart-<lb />
the Golden Anni-<lb />
ite House conference on<lb />
Youth in Washington,<lb />
27- April 1.<lb />
awn was one of two<lb />
Lou Forbes, Linda Harvel, Audrey Moore, Martha Sherrill, Judy Simp<lb />
Horoman and Linda Marie Johnson, son, Jeanette Turner, Ellen West, and<lb />
Others are Mary Jo Lancaster, Pris- Brenda Wheless.<lb />
VA Urges Policy Record Check<lb />
G. I. insurance policyholders, some pendency and indemnity compensa-<lb />
six million strong, are urged by the j tion, and accrued benefits.<lb />
Veterans Administration to check<lb />
their records to be sure that their<lb />
beneficiaries are up to<lb />
uinced program was direct-<lb />
 "vo pronged" approach;<lb />
of young peoplethe en-<lb />
and the personal and in-<lb />
gfiS! Straws participated!<lb />
m on "Moving Toward Ma- <lb />
and was a member of a<lb />
tshop dealing with early adole-<lb />
ence<lb />
V i<lb />
eting scheduled as a post-<lb />
Sewell To Speak<lb />
Milton Singletary. President of<lb />
the local Young Democrat's Club,<lb />
announced this week that Mal-<lb />
colm Sewell. candidate for env-<lb />
ernor of North Carolina, will<lb />
speak in Austin Auditorium<lb />
April 13 at 8:00.<lb />
The YDC is sponsoring the<lb />
speech and invites all students to<lb />
attend.<lb />
Alumni Committee Introduces<lb />
Program Of Events For May 21<lb />
v at East Carolina, sche- Class of 1930, Class of 1925, Clnss<lb />
May 21. will include a varied, of 1920, Class of 1915, and Class of<lb />
f events just announced<lb />
 ing committee appointed<lb />
Y. Fr.azelle of Kenansville,<lb />
of the college Alumni Asso-<lb />
ition will ba in the Alumni<lb />
from 9.30 a.m. until 10:30<lb />
ness meeting of the en-<lb />
ni Association will be held<lb />
30 a.m. in the auditorium -f<lb />
;ing. The annual alumni<lb />
take place in the New<lb />
. Hall at 12:30 p.m. with<lb />
 Leo W. Jenkins as prin-<lb />
eaker.<lb />
i will be at 2:00 p.m. for<lb />
ing classes: Class of 1959,<lb />
1956, C'ass of 1950, Class of<lb />
45, I asa of 1940. Class of 1935,<lb />
1911. Presidents and members of<lb />
these classes have been asked to con-<lb />
tact their classmates for these re-<lb />
unions.<lb />
Dr. and Mrs. Jenkins will enter-<lb />
tain the alumni and other friends at<lb />
a tea from 3:00 p.m. until 5:00 p.m.<lb />
at the president's home.<lb />
Club To Meet, Elect<lb />
The East Carolina Psychology<lb />
Club will hold its next regular<lb />
meeting on Monday, April 11, in<lb />
Rawl No. 105 at 4 P.M. A pro-<lb />
gram will be presented and of-<lb />
ficers for the next school year<lb />
will be elected during this meet-<lb />
ing.<lb />
designate<lb />
date.<lb />
The law gives GI policyholders<lb />
the light to change their benefici-<lb />
aries at any time without the con-<lb />
sent of the prior beneficiaries. But<lb />
unless the change is officially made,<lb />
no choice is given to the VA but to<lb />
pay the claim to the beneficiary of<lb />
record.<lb />
Carelessness in designating beae-<lb />
n.i.ks may result in undesired<lb />
consequences, the VA pointed out.<lb />
n example is the veteran who des-<lb />
ignated his wife a beneficiary. She<lb />
divorced him, and he subsequently<lb />
a a' tied again and raised a family.<lb />
Should he neglect to change his des-<lb />
ignated beneficiary before he dies,<lb />
: is insurance may be paid to his<lb />
former wife, and his widow and chil-<lb />
dren will receive nothing.<lb />
Pi icyholders also have several<lb />
afferent options as to how the in-<lb />
Biirance shall be paid. Explanation<lb />
f these options can be obtained by<lb />
c.ntacting any VA office.<lb />
Congress has liberalized the def-<lb />
inition of an "adopted child" of a<lb />
veteran eligible to receive benefits<lb />
administered by the Veterans Admin-<lb />
istration.<lb />
If at the time of the veteran's<lb />
death, the child was living in the<lb />
veteran's household, and if the child<lb />
is legally adopted by the veteran's<lb />
surviving spouse within two years<lb />
after the veteran's death, he or she<lb />
IS considered to he the veteran's<lb />
adopted child, the VA explained.<lb />
Formerly, the adopted proceedings<lb />
bad to be completed before the vet-<lb />
eran's death for the child to be el-<lb />
igfble for any of the benefits, in-<lb />
cluding compensation, pension, war<lb />
orphans educational assistance, de-<lb />
If at the time of the veteran's<lb />
death, however, the child was re-<lb />
ceiving regular contributions toward<lb />
its support from an individual other<lb />
than the veteran or his spouse, or<lb />
from any public or private welfare<lb />
organization, then the child may not<lb />
be recognized as the veteran's le-<lb />
gally adopted child, the VA explained.<lb />
Dan Williams, editor of the campus<lb />
literary magazine, announced this<lb />
week that Elf reth Alexander, a senior<lb />
here, has been declared winner of a<lb />
writing contest sponsored by The<lb />
Rebel.<lb />
Miss Alexander's short story will<lb />
be featured in the Spring issue of<lb />
The Rebel and she will receive a cash<lb />
prize.<lb />
Denyse Draper was awarded second<lb />
place and honorable mention was<lb />
awarded Talmadge Williamson and<lb />
Myra Pittman.<lb />
MissAlexander's story, "Thinking<lb />
is a character study in first person<lb />
and involves the thoughts going on<lb />
in a young girl's mind while she at-<lb />
tends a dance.<lb />
At the present time, Miss Alex-<lb />
ander, who is a graduate of Roper<lb />
high school, is student teaching in<lb />
Farmville. She is majoring in busi-<lb />
ness and is a member of Pi Omega<lb />
Pi and a former vice president of<lb />
the English club.<lb />
Her permanent hobbies are as she<lb />
says, "reading, painting, and making<lb />
up stories . . . not fibs, but fiction<lb />
To these, she also adds seasonal<lb />
hobbies.<lb />
"Every spring 1 love to bottom<lb />
plow or disk on our farm. I really get<lb />
rejuvenated when I see freshly plow-<lb />
ed earth, all dark and moist, turning<lb />
from under curved, metal discs while<lb />
pulls swoop and swerve overhead<lb />
said Miss Alexander.<lb />
Hemingway, Tolstoy, Slaughter, de<lb />
Maupassant, de Ba'zac, Chekhov,<lb />
and Thurber are .a few of her favo-<lb />
rite authors.<lb />
"The Bib'e, of course stated Miss<lb />
Alexander, "can never be surpassed<lb />
as Ear as rhythm and wisdom is con-<lb />
cerned<lb />
Miss Alexander will graduate from<lb />
East Carolina in May; but at the<lb />
present time, her plans for the future ELFRETH ALEXANDER . . . prize<lb />
are indefinite. I winning story writer for the 'Rebel<lb />
Dean To Address Epsilon Pi Tau<lb />
Dr. Robert L. Holt. Dean of In- Carolina industrial arts department<lb />
faculty member, will be initiated,<lb />
along with other fraternity candi-<lb />
dates into this group.<lb />
Slated to attend this event with<lb />
Dr. Holt and Mr. Leith will be Dr.<lb />
Kenneth L. Bing, Industrial Arts De-<lb />
partment Chairman, who is also a<lb />
Duke Invites Pierce<lb />
For Special Reading<lb />
Of Newest Novel<lb />
Baptist Meet Names<lb />
New Missionaries<lb />
Extraction, has been invited to speak<lb />
at the annual banquet of the Epsiion<lb />
Pi Tau Fraternity at N. C. State Col-<lb />
lege on Saturday, April 9.<lb />
Topic of the address by Dr. Holt<lb />
will be "Opportunities for Service in<lb />
Industrial Arts<lb />
Epsilon . i Tau is an honorary pro- member of the fraternity.<lb />
fessional industrial arts and indus-<lb />
trial vocational education fraternity<lb />
with chapters over the United States<lb />
and Canada. The State CoHege Frater-<lb />
nity is the only chartered chapter in<lb />
North Carolina.<lb />
Prior to the banquet in the Col-<lb />
lege Union, Mr. Robert Leith, East<lb />
Three North Carolina student sum-<lb />
mer missionaries to Jamaica and<lb />
Ghana, lAtf rica were appointed recent-<lb />
ly at a meeting of the Missions Coin- m  D1 '<lb />
ttec ot the State Baptist Student Jf ISC Oil Sill i Idll<lb />
Charges Develop<lb />
Universities Pool<lb />
Facilities For<lb />
Italian Students<lb />
Mr. Ovid Pierce, member of the<lb />
English faculty here, will read from<lb />
his forthcoming book. On A Lonesome<lb />
Porch, in a literary forum at Duke<lb />
University this afternoon. The read-<lb />
in will be at 3:00.<lb />
The forum will include readings<lb />
and discussions by several contemp-<lb />
orary .authors and poets and is held<lb />
in conjunction with the monthly lit-<lb />
erary magazine of Duke, the Archives.<lb />
Pierce who is a graduate of the<lb />
class of 1982 at Duke, will also par-<lb />
ticipate in a discussion of student<lb />
stories at S:15 tonight. Others tak-<lb />
ing part in the program are Helen<lb />
Revington, Mac Hyman, and Lod-<lb />
vik Hartley.<lb />
mi<lb />
Union Officer's Council, according to<lb />
Nancy C. Alford, Missions chairman<lb />
of the BSU at East Carolina College.<lb />
The students chosen are Anne<lb />
Strickland, Duke University; John-<lb />
j son Clinard, University of North<lb />
Carolina; and Jean Southerland,<lb />
School of Nursing at the University<lb />
of North Carolina. They will be spon-<lb />
sored by student gifts through LIS-<lb />
TEN (Love Impels Sacrifice Toward<lb />
Every Need) fund.<lb />
Students in approximately thirty<lb />
North Carolina colleges and univer-<lb />
sities give mission gifts through the<lb />
(UPS)To answer teacher candi-<lb />
date charges of "too much time be-<lb />
hind the desk, not enough time in<lb />
front of it the School of Education<lb />
at the University of Wisconsin has<lb />
introduced a program known as the<lb />
"plan<lb />
The plan means that the student<lb />
UPS  Eight U. S. universities,<lb />
nave announced a cooperative pro-<lb />
gram that reviews the tradition of<lb />
the "wandering scho'ar<lb />
Under the program, participating<lb />
schools will pool their faculty and re-<lb />
search facilities for students of Ital-<lb />
ian language and literature. Ph.D.<lb />
candidates will study for three years,<lb />
each year at a different university.<lb />
Prof. Bernard Weinberg, chairman<lb />
of the University of Chicago Depart-<lb />
their required education credits in<lb />
practice teaching and observation in<lb />
the classrooms of nearby schools. A<lb />
"block" of time will be spent in high<lb />
school classrooms, then students will<lb />
BSU LISTEN movement to sponsor I go back to University courses at the<lb />
ummer workers each year, to help close of the term for evaluation ses<lb />
teachers wi'l be spending more of ment of Romance Languages and Lit-<lb />
CIT Sponsors Dance<lb />
Friday night, April 8, 1960, the<lb />
College Unun will sponsor a<lb />
barn-combo dance in Wright Au-<lb />
ditorium. Th" dance will last from<lb />
8:00-11:00 p.m. There will be<lb />
square and round dancing. The<lb />
entire student body is invited.<lb />
Japanese Tea Ceremony Is Big Part Of Cahanoyu Cultural Heritage<lb />
provid food and tools especially for<lb />
refugees and disaster victims, to pro-<lb />
vide scholarships in countries where<lb />
Christians are in a minority, to help<lb />
World Student Christian Federation<lb />
projects, and to aid other causes.<lb />
LISTEN Week was observed by<lb />
local Baptist students March 14-20.<lb />
Students give up a meal, or part of<lb />
ne, during this week in order to give<lb />
some money for world needs. There is<lb />
usually a program of information and<lb />
education during this week, and sche-<lb />
duled meetings at the Baptist Center<lb />
are preceded by LISTEN emphasis.<lb />
Jim Baucom, student summer mis-<lb />
sionary to Jamaica in 1959, will<lb />
speak at Forum Monday, March 21,<lb />
at the Baptist Center on Eightn<lb />
Street.<lb />
ions. Textbook techniques and actual<lb />
teaching experience will thus be<lb />
more closely tied together.<lb />
In a full time block plan a student<lb />
will be in the high school seven to<lb />
eight hours each day for 35 days; a<lb />
total of 245-280 hours of teaching and<lb />
observation. An alternate block plan,<lb />
placing students in classrooms half<lb />
days for 10 weeks, is also available<lb />
for those who have course conflicts.<lb />
Students in several academic areas<lb />
:ue now enrolled in the plan and all<lb />
teaching fields are expected to be<lb />
included in the program by 1961.<lb />
eratures and originator of the pro-<lb />
gram, said: "The distinguished profes-<lb />
sors of Italian language and litera-<lb />
ture are scattered throughout the<lb />
country today. The situation is much<lb />
the same as it was centuries ago<lb />
when European students would have<lb />
to roam from one university to an-<lb />
other to complete their education in<lb />
certain studies. Our program will<lb />
make it possible for students to come<lb />
in contact with the best minds in the<lb />
field<lb />
The inter-university program places<lb />
the candidate in three different in-<lb />
stitutions and provides a more com-<lb />
plete and diversified program in Ital-<lb />
ian studies than would be possible at<lb />
any one university, Weinberg added.<lb />
The degree will be granted by the<lb />
institution under whose guidance the<lb />
student writes his dissertation.<lb />
B) HIDEO K US AM A<lb />
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the first<lb />
I ee article series in which<lb />
thor, an exchange student<lb />
will attempt to intro-<lb />
 e representative culture of<lb />
. and to make its ultimate<lb />
icter with an example which<lb />
help in the appreciation of col-<lb />
oriental cultures as well as to<lb />
ite conditions of moral valua-<lb />
authorized by the Japanese tra-<lb />
ditional cultures, comparing with<lb />
 of western countries.)<lb />
( HA-NO-YU CULTURE<lb />
I hanoyu is a remarkable manner<lb />
green tea and generally translated<lb />
pmony which is only lately<lb />
n to study by western scholars<lb />
be representative study of orien-<lb />
m.<lb />
.noyu, on taking tea manners,<lb />
i synthetic system of culture that<lb />
we ran scarcely find in any other dis-<lb />
trict of the world. Some records re-<lb />
main in .ancient China and India that<lb />
they had taken a green tea in the al-<lb />
most same ways but none of them<lb />
could reach the field of a systematic<lb />
culture.<lb />
Nearly seven hundred years ago,<lb />
TEAHOUSE .   Buildings of this<lb />
type are numerous in Japan.<lb />
in the Muromachi era, the basic style<lb />
of tea ceremony was almost estab-<lb />
lished by some intellectual Buddhist<lb />
preachers and the way was open to<lb />
today's ceremony by Sen-no-Rikkyu<lb />
whose patron was Hideyoshi Toyoto-<lb />
mi, famous feudal lord in the six-<lb />
teenth century.<lb />
Since the chanoyu became popular<lb />
among Samurai, social leaders of<lb />
that time, according to the develop-<lb />
ment of the arts of architecture in<lb />
houses and tea gardens, it aas<lb />
 developed as the central spirit<lb />
if P.amurai, as the aristocratic cul-<lb />
ture and at last as the synthetic<lb />
ystem of culture in which today we<lb />
can find arts, philosophy, morality<lb />
ind also some religious elements.<lb />
We can see fine arts in architec-<lb />
tures of tea houses and tea gardens<lb />
and in equipments used for tea cere-<lb />
rvonv. and philosophy in the mental<lb />
r tercfae of tea ceremony.<lb />
The character of chief features of<lb />
the culture is possible to describe in<lb />
-ovpn elements: unbalance, simple-<lb />
ness. nobleness, naturality, mystery,<lb />
non-mundane and silentness, which<lb />
will be described more later, consti-<lb />
tute a creative spirit called "mn"<lb />
that reaches a climax, but does not<lb />
end.<lb />
It is to love the unfinished because<lb />
it is the way to the complete. We<lb />
are exercised through tea ceremony<lb />
to energy to rebuild the complete<lb />
and to make our minds to create ev-<lb />
erything. It makes us grow into the<lb />
existence of nature and makes us<lb />
face the real from the place beyond<lb />
the existence of ourselves but of the<lb />
nature.<lb />
Each manner of the tea ceremony<lb />
in te.a room and in tea garden is<lb />
well organized for the mental har-<lb />
mony of each people at the ceremony,<lb />
in there people learn how to enter-<lb />
tain the guest warmly and naturally<lb />
at any time.<lb />
Tea ceremony itself involves the<lb />
moral training and some religious<lb />
elements, for through the manners<lb />
we try to achieve moral virtue al-<lb />
ways in our daily lives at home at<lb />
anywhere.<lb />
The chanoyu culture is, more or<lb />
less, inflecting to the Japanese do-<lb />
mestic arts such as flower arrange-<lb />
ment, Noh play, Kabuki play, classic-<lb />
dance and also to typical sports such<lb />
as Judo .and Kendo. It means that<lb />
the inflections of tea ceremony cov-<lb />
ers most of all Japanese life man-<lb />
ners and customs.<lb />
A long time ago, the tea ceremony<lb />
was for the people in the high society<lb />
but today it is to develop as the na-<lb />
tional art for the people of each<lb />
class and of each generation. That<lb />
is the typical expression of the chan-<lb />
oyu culture which I must describe in<lb />
the next series with an example.<lb />
Hureau Offers Chance<lb />
For Teaching Career<lb />
A representative from the<lb />
Jackson, Michigan, schools will<lb />
be on campus April 11, to inter-<lb />
view interested students. Please<lb />
come to the Placement Bureau<lb />
and sign up for an interview by<lb />
April 8, if you would care to talk<lb />
with this representative. He is<lb />
interested in all elementary<lb />
grades, special education, and<lb />
elementary school librarian.<lb />
James H. Tucker, Director<lb />
Student Personnel and Placement<lb />
JrSr. Notice<lb />
Juniors and Seniors are re-<lb />
minded by Bill Nichols, Junior<lb />
Class President, that the annual<lb />
Junior-Senior Dance will be Ap-<lb />
ril 22. Those planning to attend<lb />
should make arrangements to<lb />
rent or borrow formal clothing<lb />
if they do not have it available.<lb />
Billy May orchestra, starring<lb />
Frankte Lester, vocalist, will pro-<lb />
vide music for the event.<lb />
KAPPA DELTA OFFICERS . . . Pictured above are the newly elected<lb />
officers who will serve Kappa Delta Sorority for the coming year.<lb />
On the back row are: Ann Kopley, treasurer; and Rebecca Singleton,<lb />
membership chairman. In the foreground are right to left: Barbara<lb />
Schwab, secretary; Jean Hardy, president; and Betty Bennett, vice pres-<lb />
ident.<lb />
if I.-r.r mri M-wmmmMmmmjSi<lb />
aaaaaaaj<lb /><pb facs="00038657_tn_0002" /><lb />
PAGE TWO<lb />
Council Searches<lb />
For New Advisor<lb />
It appears that the Panhellenic Council<lb />
is having its troubles too.<lb />
A recent controversy within the council<lb />
concerning changes in a proposed constitu-<lb />
tion for tne group has resulted in the resigna-<lb />
tion of its advisor and the elimination of the<lb />
whole constitution.<lb />
The story goes (in an unofficial sort of<lb />
way since reporters have been denied in-<lb />
formation concerning this on various oc-<lb />
casions) that a constitution, written prim-<lb />
arily by Dean White who was advisor to the<lb />
group at that time, was submitted to the<lb />
council for its revision or approval. At the<lb />
meeting when the constitution was submit-<lb />
ted no revisions were proposed.<lb />
However, sometime later a constitution-<lb />
al committee meeting was called and several<lb />
changes were proposed for the constitution.<lb />
The advisor was not notified of this meeting<lb />
and consequently was not present.<lb />
At the following meeting the revised<lb />
constitution was presented and adopted.<lb />
The primary change which had caused<lb />
the confusion was one which stipulated that<lb />
the advisor to the council would not be a<lb />
mom her of any one of the represented sor-<lb />
orities. Dean White, the advisor at that time,<lb />
is a member of Kappa Delta (which is one<lb />
of the represented sororities).<lb />
At this time we understand Dean White<lb />
asked the reason for the amendment and re-<lb />
ceived in answer a charge that she, as a mem-<lb />
ber of Kappa Delta, was in a position to<lb />
show favoritism.<lb />
According to our reports however, the<lb />
accusation was not backed up by any ex-<lb />
amples of past favoritism.<lb />
This series of events resulted in quite a<lb />
bit of controversy and hard feelings among<lb />
the sorority girls as well as Dean White.<lb />
Most of the Kappa Delta members as<lb />
well as some members of other sororities felt<lb />
that an injustice had been done<lb />
on the<lb />
other hand the other faction of the group<lb />
felt they were being thwarted in their ef-<lb />
forts to provide a fair and unbiased constitu-<lb />
tion. Take this situation and add a few per-<lb />
sonal grudges, lots of misunderstanding, and<lb />
a pinch of hardheadedness and you have he<lb />
recipe for the Panhellenic's first major prob-<lb />
lem in their short history.<lb />
Once the problem was there everyone<lb />
had suggestions for its solution . . . some<lb />
good and some not so good. Many of the girls<lb />
st their temper and more than one shed<lb />
tears over the matter.<lb />
Then at a meeting last week further<lb />
developments arose. Dean White resigned as<lb />
advisor to the group, the council voted to<lb />
completely disregard the first constitution<lb />
and a letter from President Jenkins was<lb />
read to the group.<lb />
The letter, addressed to Dean White,<lb />
read,  . . your suggestion that the women<lb />
elect a faculty member as their advisor is<lb />
approved. As Dean of Women, yoi are re-<lb />
sponsible, of course, for the general super-<lb />
vision of all sororities. This includes the<lb />
responsibility to the national offices of these<lb />
groups in such things as rushing, pledging,<lb />
bidding and the colonization.<lb />
"A copy of the minutes of each meet-<lb />
ing should be sent to you so that you may<lb />
be fully informed at all times regarding the<lb />
activities <lb />
"I know that you share my enthusiasm<lb />
for sororities and feel as I do that they are<lb />
a distinct asset to our campus life<lb />
This week the girls are looking for a<lb />
new advisor to replace Dean White, who has<lb />
agreed to remain in office until a replace-<lb />
ment can be found.<lb />
They have also started working on a<lb />
new constitution. appears they are trying<lb />
to get their affairs in order as rapidly as<lb />
possible.<lb />
8AST OASOCINfXH<lb />
Returns To Normal;<lb />
Campus<lb />
Sandwich Sickens Starving<lb />
Anyone For Skiing?<lb />
Ballplayer Gets Boo<lb />
I<lb />
Psychiatrist Gives Statistics<lb />
mm<lb />
Elections endjabbering ceases<lb />
everybody returns to light arguments<lb />
such as "Who's going to be our next<lb />
presidentNixon or Kennedy?   <lb />
Half the campus disappeared last<lb />
weekend and made an appearance in<lb />
Wilmington. The other half got lost<lb />
on the way, but both had a blast<lb />
or so they heard.<lb />
Sad story: A poor, poor college<lb />
student who sells used shoestrings<lb />
and drinking straws to stay in<lb />
school walks into the soda shop and<lb />
purchases his one meal for the day<lb />
a chicken salad sandwich. He mois-<lb />
tens his lips, darts secretively to a<lb />
corner, unwraps his possession and<lb />
quickly takes a bite. Slowly he pulls<lb />
the sandwich away from his mouth,<lb />
t?nd examines its contentschicken<lb />
gristle, celery, mayonnaise, and sev-<lb />
eral foreign objects. He then re-<lb />
wraps the sandwich, deposits it in the<lb />
garbage disposal  shedding four<lb />
tears in the processand walks to-<lb />
ward the door. His thoughts: "To-<lb />
morrow 111 get a ham salad<lb />
Garrett Hall was the object of at-<lb />
tention last week as 1500 girls tried<lb />
to find .an empty room for next year.<lb />
According to my understanding, this<lb />
dorm is for seniors, but is always<lb />
iialf-filled by underclassmen. No<lb />
one's griping, but what's the strategy<lb />
used in managing this little project?<lb />
A group of boys holding guns<lb />
march around the campus, observers<lb />
snicker, marchers hide their faces,<lb />
hut win a marching contest. So, who<lb />
feels the sillier?<lb />
Elvis has returned and, true to<lb />
form, absence makes the teenage<lb />
hearts grow fonder. He's been in the<lb />
states for about two weeks and he's<lb />
already copped another golden re-<lb />
cord. Sinatra and Presley are plan-<lb />
ning a TV spectacular soon. A duet<lb />
fchould mix much like<lb />
By PAT HARVEY<lb />
bv these two<lb />
ham smothered by more ham.<lb />
The Panhellenic Council continues<lb />
their meetings, but no one voices<lb />
pinions except the president (parlia-<lb />
mentary procedure, where are you?)<lb />
Everyone's wondering if the counc,<lb />
will be a hit (ding) or a miss (plunk).<lb />
Don't forget to see the Miss Green-<lb />
ville Pageant tonight . . . start -<lb />
tending classes more than twice per<lb />
week .  make your plans for a trip<lb />
to Hollywood-Yul Brynner has got-<lb />
ten a divorce  go over and straigh-<lb />
ten out the Annie Get Your Gun cast<lb />
they need a'l the help they can<lb />
muster up) .  . write a letter to the<lb />
editor if you dont like something-<lb />
well, most anything.<lb />
By DERRY WALKER<lb />
After "On the Beach "<lb />
and -Mh<lb />
Ion we wonder if there i any<lb />
ter how many improvement- ai' . JV<lb />
machines, man remain the same Z<lb />
basic human drives thai e<lb />
every day are the same<lb />
in the big men who control our coubk<lb />
our ballistic missiles. They are no<lb />
from us; they can make n too<lb />
College Life Makes Modern Students Neurotic<lb />
UPSCollege life is not the worry-<lb />
free, good time it is believed to be<lb />
by most people, claims Dr. Melvin L.<lb />
Seller, University of Michigan psy-<lb />
hiatrist.<lb />
In an article in the American Med-<lb />
ical Association. Archives of Psychia-<lb />
try, Dr. Selzer said that few people<lb />
are aware of mentally disturbing<lb />
problems from which many college<lb />
students suffer. Responsible for the<lb />
public's lack of knowledge on this<lb />
subject is the myth that everyone in<lb />
college is having a wonderful time<lb />
and that campus life is a series of<lb />
parties and games attended by a care-<lb />
free and irresponsible student body,<lb />
states Dr. Selzer.<lb />
He commented that because of this<lb />
myth many of the students problems<lb />
are attributed to "social "academic '<lb />
and "family" factors instead of to<lb />
symptoms of emotional illness.<lb />
En Garde, By Pat Farmer<lb />
Dr. Selzer found that roughly eight<lb />
percent of the total student body<lb />
visits the psychology clinic annually.<lb />
This .approximation also applies to<lb />
the University, according to Dr. Paul<lb />
F. S.hrode, director of the Student<lb />
Health Clinic. Dr. Schrode commented<lb />
that there is most likely a myth about<lb />
college life hut it isn't as serious as<lb />
Dr. Selzer has stated.<lb />
He feels that the student does<lb />
have mental disorders such as an-<lb />
i'ties and frustrations, but they are<lb />
overshadowed by the good times to<lb />
be had.<lb />
Of 506 students interviewed at<lb />
Michigan, 35.4 percent were deemed<lb />
tc be psychoneurotic, 24.5 percent had<lb />
personality disorders, and 21.7 per-<lb />
cent were schizophrenics. Figures<lb />
such as these are not available for<lb />
the University but Dr. Schrode says<lb />
many of the students who go to the<lb />
Upperclassmen Show Signs Of<lb />
Hectic Weekend At Festival<lb />
After a hectic weekend of view-<lb />
ing the Azaleas in Wilmington, col-<lb />
WWWS and E. T. Rogers . . . E. T.<lb />
mental health clinic and the regular<lb />
clinic "have nothing wrong with<lb />
them<lb />
'Organization Man'<lb />
Conies To Campus<lb />
Dear Editor:<lb />
The day of the non-partisan ele-<lb />
ment of a college campus is apparent-<lb />
ly coming to a close. The era of the<lb />
"organization man" has finally come<lb />
to the East Carolina College campus,<lb />
and heralding its arrival was a recent<lb />
announcement in the March 28th edi-<lb />
tion of the Greenville Daily Reflector<lb />
to the effect that four faculty mem-<lb />
bers, which included the College Pre-<lb />
sident and the Director of Religious<lb />
iActivities, were inducted into one of<lb />
the campus social fraternities.<lb />
As a student at East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege, I feel there is a question of<lb />
ethics involved here, and that per-<lb />
sons in these responsible places should<lb />
not take such partisan stands as to<lb />
accept or embrace one social or ethnic<lb />
group in this manner.<lb />
Let me pose a hypothetical question<lb />
Variety Marks New<lb />
Fashions For Ladies<lb />
By BETSY ORR<lb />
Attention, women! Tall, short;<lb />
skinny, chubby; blonde, brunette cr<lb />
redheadthe fashions this spring of<lb />
1960 include colors and styles which<lb />
will interest every woman. The big<lb />
word is VAiRIETY. Just like a beau-<lb />
tiful spring bouquet are the clothe3<lb />
this year  a combination of many<lb />
colors .and many shapes.<lb />
When one looks at the colors any-<lb />
thing goes; from the contrasting<lb />
black and white to the new smoky<lb />
tones such as "no color" green, bet-<lb />
ter known as clay. The traditional<lb />
pastels occupy r spot in tht bouquet.<lb />
Prints, as well as solid colors, hold<lb />
a welcome place in the spring parade.<lb />
Turning to fabrics, one sees that<lb />
the lightweight materials are finding<lb />
their way into the women's world of<lb />
spring. Silk and dacron are especially<lb />
papular this year.<lb />
If one cannot find variety in color<lb />
or fabrics, then she will surely find<lb />
it in the styles. There are sheaths and<lb />
full skirts with gathers or pleats;<lb />
there are puffed sleeves and straight<lb />
sleeves. The "tres jolie" jumper is<lb />
back this year with  take your<lb />
choice!a full skirt or a fitted one.<lb />
N'on-chemise fans will be glad to<lb />
know that the waistline is back. It<lb />
is definitely at its natural level again,<lb />
belted or defined by a midriff styling.<lb />
Wide, horizontal necklines are here<lb />
again. There is also the wide collar.<lb />
On special addition to the fashions<lb />
is the short jacket over the dress.<lb />
If variety really is the spice of<lb />
life, then every woman can add to<lb />
the zest by dressing individually,<lb />
and, at the same time she can be in<lb />
style!<lb />
Another Azalea Fed<lb />
The tales told are wide tad Varied (<lb />
best I heard went like this: a gram<lb />
ball player from one of th<lb />
the cottage on the beach, rented b<lb />
fraternity. Having grown<lb />
I by<lb />
be<lb />
y of f'<lb />
loaders and party-crashers one'<lb />
brother had stationed himse f at<lb />
and was giving the "bum's rush" i<lb />
era. When the ballplayer<lb />
door, he looked around tl fllJr?<lb />
for a door that led to a room c p<lb />
three or four sleeping gij , "p'<lb />
of some of the brothers "Wait <lb />
now the self-appointed<lb />
said. "I'm going in there th<lb />
in a pompous tone, and he ic<lb />
The brother, not in the least<lb />
growled, "Well you go bounce<lb />
some place else He did.<lb />
The campus was peaceful :<lb />
the Festival week-end. th,<lb />
were made by pieces of per that turr<lb />
along gently in the breeze. Di.sn aved ma<lb />
SETtL! WUmj" event,<lb />
they had landed on the wrong<lb />
Greenville again realized that th<lb />
spends a lot of money.<lb />
It won't be long befor<lb />
will be breaking out the boat<lb />
water is warming up and the land<lb />
Pamlico u beginning to vawn<lb />
its muscles in the warm sun<lb />
traffic will move from the hi<lb />
waterway.<lb />
Board Hires $9000 Man<lb />
Change People? Ha!<lb />
By ROY MART1S<lb />
Monday morning following tl<lb />
festival weekend was quite an am<lb />
around campus. A visitor that did<lb />
any better would swear with b<lb />
that this was, primarily a zombi, cokey.<lb />
There were people walking gin<lb />
everywhere you turned, trying not to make<lb />
any noise with their feet. In other .<lb />
there were a visible lot of bloodshot eyes<lb />
sunburned backs . . . another Azalea I<lb />
val had taken its toll.<lb />
legians returned to campus with sun-<lb />
We wish them luck and sincerely hope bued noses, aching heads, and emp<lb />
IS<lb />
one of these people who plays for you pleaseWill people in the high<lb />
that this first crisis doesn't prove to be their<lb />
downfall. Any group as voung as this needs<lb />
guidance to fill in for their lack of experi-<lb />
ence.<lb />
We challenge them to work . . . and work<lb />
hard, to cooperate, and to keep in mind their<lb />
objectives as they go about the tasks ahead<lb />
 to not mistake their means for their ends classmen who attended the Festival .<lb />
. . . and to remember that every question has<lb />
two sides.<lb />
And as a parting remark we remind<lb />
them that the truth is never as bad as the<lb />
imagination of an uninformed public.<lb />
ty bottles . . . Monday's classes were<lb />
met with eagerness by the ones who<lb />
remained on campus this past week-<lb />
end. Understand that instructors were<lb />
warning freshmen to be as quiet as<lb />
possible in class . . . This they said,<lb />
would show respect for all upper-<lb />
f. contented .audience<lb />
like we say MOO<lb />
You know,<lb />
East Carolinian<lb />
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb />
Greenville, North Carolina<lb />
Member<lb />
Associated Collegiate Press<lb />
North State Conference Press Association<lb />
EDITOR<lb />
Tom Jackson<lb />
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb />
JoAnne Parks<lb />
Managing Editor  pat Harvey<lb />
Associate Editor  Roy Martin<lb />
Campus Editor  Betty Maynor<lb />
Sports Editor  Leonard Lao<lb />
News Editor Jasper Jones<lb />
Feature Editor  Marcelle Vogel<lb />
Assistant Sports Editor Merle Summers<lb />
Sports Staff Norman Kilpatrick, Jerry Nance<lb />
Photographer Skip Wamsley<lb />
Cartoonist   jay Arledge<lb />
Corresponding Secretary  Patsy Elliott to et out an( vote n yur class<lb />
Proofreading Director  Gwen Johnson elections   . The young man who is<lb />
Proofreading Staff . Lynda Simmons, Jasper Jones, favored to win the Senior Class elec-<lb />
Ratsy Elliott, Sue Sparkman, Chick Lancaster,<lb />
Jerry Nance, Burleigh Hill, Freddie Skinner<lb />
Women's Circulation Manager Susan Ballance<lb />
Men's Circulation Manager Carlyle Humphrey<lb />
Overheard one of the campus philo-<lb />
sophers say that the suitcase given<lb />
as "the prize" at the College Union<lb />
Carnival was a stereotype of this<lb />
school  Noting the deserted cam-<lb />
pus, not only this weekend, but other<lb />
weekends, he could be right . . .Af-<lb />
ter al it would make a practical gift<lb />
for a member of this student body . .<lb />
Our beloved governor, Luther H<lb />
has recommended restoring welfare<lb />
funds to help the needy old and dis-<lb />
abled . . . Such a charming man, this<lb />
governor of ours, how fortunate we<lb />
are to lose him  Of course, his<lb />
successor will have quite a bit to do<lb />
in order to match his example  I<lb />
wonder if he will speak with a "cul-<lb />
tured southern accent"<lb />
Roses to the brothers of PiKA for<lb />
laving the wise judgment to pledge a<lb />
Virginia native, Woodie Jennings . . .<lb />
Mr. Jennings not only exemplifies the<lb />
term gentleman, he is one<lb />
Now that SGA elections are over,<lb />
class elections begin  Be sure<lb />
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb />
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.<lb />
tion is JESSE POWELL. Jesse is <lb />
native of Greenville and is quite cap-<lb />
able for the office . . . Understand<lb />
that he is bubbling with ideas to give<lb />
the Senior Class a stronger voice in<lb />
student affairs . . .<lb />
Holmes Issues Book<lb />
On Language Arts<lb />
Dr. Keith D. Holmes of the educa-<lb />
tion department has just issued a<lb />
second publication in his "How To"<lb />
series of works on the language arts.<lb />
"Teacher Edition: Student Guide to<lb />
Language Skills" is a follow-up of Dr.<lb />
Holmes' "Student Guide to Language<lb />
Fkills designed to aid students and<lb />
now in use in 36 states in this coun-<lb />
try and in Cuba and Puerto Rico.<lb />
Dr. Holmes is also author of "70<lb />
Steps to Vocabulary Power" and other<lb />
works on education. He is now prepar-<lb />
ing for publication in late 1960 his<lb />
"Beginners Visual-Phonie Original<lb />
'Reading Program Dr. Holmes'<lb />
works are published by Education<lb />
Service Publications of Greenville.<lb />
Dr. Holmes' recently published<lb />
work combines material in his "Stu-<lb />
dent Guide" with a wealth of prac-<lb />
tice exercises to facilitate the work<lb />
of teachers and parents in efforts to<lb />
aid students from the fourth grade<lb />
through college level in improving<lb />
their language skills.<lb />
Dr. Holmes has been a faculty<lb />
member here since 1961. As director<lb />
of the Reading Laboratory and Clinic,<lb />
he has arranged a series of annual<lb />
conferences on reading which each<lb />
summer have had an attendence of<lb />
several hundred teachers in this state.<lb />
He is a graduate of Oswego, N.Y<lb />
Teachers College, holds the master's<lb />
places of responsibility which are<lb />
aligned with certain social groups at<lb />
this school be able to resist the subtle<lb />
persuasion of the LF.C, or in more<lb />
personal matters, the insistant per-<lb />
suasion of his own "chosen few<lb />
I do not wish to say that social<lb />
fraternities are bad or that they<lb />
shou'd be abolished in any way. I<lb />
merely would like to pomt up certain<lb />
possible implications.<lb />
Sincerely,<lb />
Tom Hopkins<lb />
20 OustT  WH A MM. 1KUT, CHUtUf. 10U<lb />
m H.OO MC you T XjOO wmtw of root<lb />
nur euwMiukv tony yovjf.to<lb />
Humorous Incidents<lb />
An Air Force man, spending the<lb />
night on the base, went to the li-<lb />
brary to write letters. The assis-<lb />
tant librarian was a gorgeous young<lb />
WAF, and the young man made sep-<lb />
arate trips to her desk to ask for<lb />
stationery, pen, an envelope, so that<lb />
he could look her over from stem to<lb />
stem. On his fourth trip the WAF<lb />
quickly handed him a stamp.<lb />
'Tou're a mind reader he said.<lb />
"If I were she replied, "You'd be<lb />
court-martialed<lb />
With the Azalea Festival behind the<lb />
campus populace, we all look forward no<lb />
to the coming spring, (supposedly here).<lb />
. The JaPanese Cherrv Trees beside Raw:<lb />
building have already begun to bloom, also<lb />
the newly-set-out array of flowers around<lb />
thje Wright Circle pond. Everywhere you<lb />
turn there are convertibles with tops down<lb />
cruising with people hanging out all over the<lb />
place.<lb />
It is a wonder with all this rain that<lb />
those people don't get wet.<lb />
LITTLE MAN ON. CAMPUS<lb />
degree from Columbia University and<lb />
Be sure to set your radio dial for the Ph.D. from Cornell University.<lb />
, We saw in the paper the other day where<lb />
the Board of Conservation and Development<lb />
had hired a man to serve as head man of<lb />
North Carolina's industry hunting program.<lb />
It's nice to know that the program is in<lb />
nSLof such an officer, and at a salary of<lb />
jyooo per year. Now all this hunter will have<lb />
to do is ride around in the one of the six<lb />
Uodge automobiles that the C &amp; D bought<lb />
at a cost of approximately $2700 each and<lb />
smile at industrialists, while the educational<lb />
system grins and bears it.<lb />
s fsismsmSj<lb />
BHBCe 9odcff&amp;&amp;gS2<lb />
Have you ever stopped to think what a<lb />
world this would be if people tried to under-<lb />
stand and put up with one another.<lb />
For example, there would be no threat<lb />
of nuclear war from Russia and Red China.<lb />
mere would be no hard feelings held by any<lb />
country for another and everything would<lb />
go smooth as silk.<lb />
o ?ple are the primary source of un-<lb />
rest. They are ambitious, and don't care who<lb />
iney step on to get what they want. Would<lb />
not it be great if those who are saying that<lb />
iney are persecuted would shut up and try<lb />
to work out their problems sensibly to the<lb />
best advantage of all concerned?<lb />
 PePle don't seem to recognize the fact<lb />
wiat everybody has a mind of their own. and<lb />
Jfe motivated by the thoughts completely<lb />
different from the fellow next door.<lb />
, The re are many more exampieg that can<lb />
oe cited To change these things for the bet-<lb />
ter would be quite a trick, wouldn't it? You<lb />
can dream though.<lb />
mIMm<lb />
 '<lb />
BJBS<lb />
"<lb />
awsswiiwfe&amp;  <lb />
uflhi<lb /><pb facs="00038657_tn_0003" /><lb />
APRIL<lb />
I960<lb />
it<lb />
K A's Attend 'Old South<lb />
ledges of Kappa<lb />
g with their dates<lb />
the other five Kappa<lb />
t North Carolina in<lb />
kend for th. tradi-<lb />
Ball.<lb />
in<lb />
oar<lb />
I<lb />
I anc<lb />
ifrW.<lb />
"red<lb />
11 K'<lb /><lb />
now<lb />
tawl<lb />
also<lb />
und<lb />
you<lb />
jown<lb />
the<lb />
that<lb />
iere<lb />
lent<lb />
of<lb />
ram<lb />
in<lb />
of<lb />
rve<lb />
six<lb />
rht<lb />
Hid<lb />
knal<lb />
It a<lb />
ta-<lb />
lent<lb />
Ilia<lb />
iny<lb />
ild<lb />
m-<lb />
rho<lb />
ild<lb />
iat<lb />
W<lb />
the<lb />
irt<lb />
id<lb />
- a yearly<lb />
which all the Kappa<lb />
 e Smith Province<lb />
festivities in<lb />
-  ei n manner. The<lb />
a beards m did<lb />
11 Partici-<lb />
ate uniforms for<lb />
the Festivities<lb />
i Rl o Chapter of East<lb />
  i ivate pai<lb />
I m the Jef-<lb />
Sat n day will he<lb />
ade. AM the<lb />
re marching units<lb />
R i hmond s Monu-<lb />
is Mis<lb />
The<lb />
Wh<lb />
er<lb />
hapt<lb />
! ic<lb />
in<lb />
  units 0f each chapter and<lb />
a convertible carrying each chapters<lb />
Kappa Alpha Rose" and two spon-<lb />
hls ' Camilla Rho "Rose"<lb />
Mary Elizabeth Gardner.<lb />
sponsors are Miss Joyce B.it-<lb />
ihelor and Mrs. Henry Vansant.<lb />
After the secession there will be a<lb />
tail party at the Jefferson Hotel.<lb />
en the cocktail party and din-<lb />
are finished, a dance Including<lb />
from the University of<lb />
nond, Hampton-Sidney, Randolph<lb />
Macon, and the North Carolina chan-<lb />
ters will be he,I. Music for the dance<lb />
will be furniahed by the "Virginians<lb />
t the intermission the "Kappa<lb />
lpha Roses" from each chapter will<lb />
be presented and a "Rose" to repre-<lb />
sent in a national contest the Smith<lb />
Province will be picked.<lb />
The brothers and pledges of Bast<lb />
Carolina participating in the event<lb />
this year are: Jack Beale, C. J.<lb />
Browne, Chuck Gordon, Wilbur Parks,<lb />
 a11 Jackson's Jimmy On<lb />
te at Robert<lb />
i Mr. Lee's<lb />
Also<lb />
 a secession i<lb />
u hich the group<lb />
n the Union.<lb />
ade up of the<lb />
'ens, George Turner, Boh<lb />
Raines, Henry Vansant, VV.it Draug-<lb />
' en, and Jim Speight.<lb />
included are Wayne White-<lb />
head, Robert Frank, Harold Marlowe,<lb />
Jaj W. Tardy. Raymond Gillikin.<lb />
Harvey Godfrey, Ray Gartner, Fred<lb />
tfrs. Rebecca Starkey<lb />
East Carolina Graduate Enjoys<lb />
Duties As Assistant Registrar<lb />
M RCELLE VOGEL<lb />
 . lei I - and helping<lb />
iblems is one of<lb />
 . it Rebecca Stsr-<lb />
    gistrar. "Part<lb />
best she said,<lb />
king with the<lb />
 : help and bene-<lb />
my biggest re-<lb />
 nts feel freer<lb />
ve been here<lb />
Starkey modestly<lb />
three regis-<lb />
ast two years, but<lb />
as Dr. Holt dub-<lb />
. arm and friendly<lb />
: I a, Mrs. Starkey<lb />
ills when she was<lb />
When her father.<lb />
ister, died leaving a<lb />
ix small children, the<lb />
 rave them a home.<lb />
liege made it pos-<lb />
 children to receive<lb />
 ion.<lb />
married to M. L.<lb />
iffice manager of<lb />
edit rporation in<lb />
 is s native of Green-<lb />
 a degree in gram-<lb />
 from East Carolina<lb />
taughi grades 5 through<lb />
D North Carolina.<lb />
ir, cause of the short -<lb />
Mrs. Starkey worked in<lb />
Bans in Greenville. She<lb />
work there only for<lb />
il "liked it so much" that<lb />
:ked there for five<lb />
k Mrs. Starkey be-<lb />
' Vj' as cashier in Mr.<lb />
little girl, Rebecca Mar-<lb />
 came back to the<lb />
I t a Job in the registra-<lb />
She became Assistant<lb />
in 1953.<lb />
key's job as Ass't Reg-<lb />
the evaluation of<lb />
ients to EC from<lb />
Checking records and<lb />
 unseiing with stu-<lb />
 I that East Carolina is<lb />
in this section, comp-<lb />
at can get out grades<lb />
tratioa day. This means<lb />
 day and night between<lb />
weeks after the regulsr<lb />
lay, registration is open<lb />
ie students. They must<lb />
 'light, which means that<lb />
ion office must be open.<lb />
of my job is not veiy<lb />
lbs said.<lb />
i -ecretary of my own,<lb />
i en a lifesaver to me said<lb />
tarkey. She is Mrs. Sarah Chap-<lb />
husband is a student here.<lb />
time employees work<lb />
istrari office. "T enjoy<lb />
Starkev<lb />
"More and more students applying<lb />
for admittance say that their moth-<lb />
ers or fathers came here. They want<lb />
to keep up the family tradition<lb />
commented Mrs. Starkey.<lb />
"I feel like the little high school<lb />
senior who wrote, "I want to be com-<lb />
mitted to yonr institution; I feel that<lb />
I've been committed she said.<lb />
"When you have a job and a home<lb />
to take care of said Mrs. Starkey,<lb />
"you don't have much time for out-<lb />
side interests, but in my spare time<lb />
I like to read and play the piano<lb />
She is a member of the Aries Book<lb />
Club in Greenville, and teaches an<lb />
adult Sunday School Class at Jar-<lb />
vis Memorial Methodist Church.<lb />
Faculty Attends<lb />
Industrial Arts<lb />
Spring Meeting<lb />
Five members of the Industrial Arts<lb />
Department represented East Caro-<lb />
lina at the spring meeting of the<lb />
North Carolina Council on Industrial<lb />
Arts Teacher Education on Saturday,<lb />
April 2, at Western Carotins College<lb />
in Cuilowhee.<lb />
Those attending from the college<lb />
were: Dr. Kenneth L. Bing, Depart-<lb />
ment Chairman, Dr. Thomas J. Haig-<lb />
nood, Mr. Robert Lefts, Mr. Rob-<lb />
trt C. Paysinger, an 1 Mr. Carroll W.<lb />
Smith.<lb />
Also attending the meeting were<lb />
industrial arts teacher educators<lb />
from N. C. State, Appalachian State<lb />
Teachers College, and Western Caro-<lb />
lina College.<lb />
The morning session was led by<lb />
Dr. Ivan Hosteler, N. C. State Col-<lb />
lege, Permanent Chairman of the<lb />
Council. Topic for the morning dis-<lb />
i ussion was "Skills and Techniques<lb />
with that many people n Industrial Arts Versus Principles<lb />
and Understandings<lb />
Following a hjnch in the new cafe-<lb />
teria on the col'ege campus, the group<lb />
visited the facilities of the college<lb />
industrial arts department. The after-<lb />
noon session of the council heard the<lb />
presentation of the Western Carolina<lb />
industrial art? curriculum by Dr.<lb />
Rodney Leftwich, Departmental<lb />
Chairman.<lb />
The staff of the Western Carolina<lb />
Industrial Arts Department served<lb />
as hosts to the group.<lb />
Daniels, Sam Magill, Wade Boden-<lb />
beimer, and Earl Riddick.<lb />
Others are John Owens, Marshall<lb />
j.efavor, Jim Bass, M. H. Pridgen,<lb />
Pob Jackson, George Magus, Bob<lb />
Gregson, John Gaines, Jim Kirkland,<lb />
George Scott, Richard Hodges, Bill<lb />
Maasey, Bryce Cummings, and David<lb />
Gaines.<lb />
BA8T CAROLINIAN<lb />
Workshop Analyzes<lb />
Aims Of Geography<lb />
Here Last Weekend<lb />
Gallery Exhibits<lb />
Classic Art Work<lb />
For Rest Of Month<lb />
"Modern Masters traveling gra-<lb />
phic art exhibition from de Cinque,<lb />
Philadelphia, on display at East Car-<lb />
o'ina through the remainder of thu<lb />
month, is attracting R large number<lb />
of visitors to the third-floor art gal-<lb />
lery in Rawl Building at the college.<lb />
Eege.<lb />
Original etchings, lithographs,<lb />
woodcuts, and aquatints by a number<lb />
of the most famous -artists of mod-<lb />
ern times are included in the exhibi-<lb />
tion. Represented in the show are<lb />
Cezanne. Daumier, Matisse, Picasso,<lb />
Lurcat, Erni, Manet, and others.<lb />
Among the 56 works included in<lb />
the exhibition are "Champs Elysee-<lb />
Puis" by Bonnard and "Bord du Lac"<lb />
and "Canards dans l'Eau" by Morisot,<lb />
etchings; seven colored lithographs<lb />
by Matisse; two woodcuts and sev-<lb />
eral lithographs by Picasso; a Utril-<lb />
!o lithograph, "Movlin de la Galette<lb />
three aquatints by Roulat; and other<lb />
works of equal interest.<lb />
its permanent col'ection the<lb />
department of art at the college has<lb />
acquired by purchase several of the<lb />
graphics included in the exhibition.<lb />
All works on display are offered for<lb />
sale by de Cinque and may be bought<lb />
here through arrangements with the<lb />
department of art. Prices range from<lb />
$5 to $50.<lb />
Those who wish to see the originals<lb />
in graphic art are invited to visit the<lb />
college art gallerv.<lb />
Aims of geography in general edu-<lb />
cation were reviewed and analyzed at<lb />
a workshop here Saturday.<lb />
A large number of public school<lb />
teachers of geography and the social<lb />
studies in Eastern North Carolina at-<lb />
tended a meeting .at 9:30 a.m. in the<lb />
Joyner Library and a luncheon at 1<lb />
n.m. in the East Dining Hall.<lb />
Dr. Henry J. Warman of the Gradu-<lb />
ate School of Geography at Clark<lb />
University, Worcester, Mass spoke<lb />
at the morning session on "The Geo-<lb />
graphy Wheel" and 0n "Teaching<lb />
about the Weather" and at the<lb />
'uneheon on "The Ever-Widening<lb />
Way<lb />
The morning program included <lb />
such as maps, globes, slides, and<lb />
filmstrips by Dr. H. P. Milstead, di-<lb />
rector, and Herbert Carlton and Dr.<lb />
Cramer, all of the East Carolina geo-<lb />
graphy department.<lb />
Dr. Morton Winsberg, East Caro-<lb />
lina professor, presented a demon-<lb />
stration over closed-circuit TV of<lb />
"Landforms in Centra! American<lb />
Geography. ' Other faculty members<lb />
from the college geography depart-<lb />
ment who appeared as speakers on<lb />
the morning program were Dr. Jean<lb />
Lowry, Dr. D. R. Petterson, and Dr.<lb />
George Martin.<lb />
Visiting speakers and their topics<lb />
included Dr. J. Sullivan Gibson of the<lb />
University of North Carolina, "Im-<lb />
portance of Soils in the Geography<lb />
Class and Herbert Lassiter, asso-<lb />
ciate. Division of Elementary and<lb />
Secondary Instruction in North Caro-<lb />
lina, "Geography and the Social<lb />
Studies Curriculum<lb />
Dr. Robert Lee Humber of Green-<lb />
ville, state senator from Pitt County,<lb />
conducted a panel discussion on "Geo-<lb />
graphy's Role in the Secondary<lb />
School Panelists were Mrs. LaRue<lb />
Evans, supervisor in the Ayden High<lb />
School, and speakers on the work-<lb />
shop program.<lb />
Those attending the workshop were<lb />
welcomed Saturday morning by Pre-<lb />
sident Leo W. Jenkins and were guests<lb />
of the college at the luncheon.<lb />
PAGE THREE<lb />
Campus News In Brief<lb />
Student NEA Elects New Offi<lb />
Sigma Pi Alpha Initiates Fift<lb />
icers;<lb />
een<lb />
'Tremendous Bargain'<lb />
Various Tours To Carry Students<lb />
To European Countries, Hawaii<lb />
r.as<lb />
Mrs. Starkey, "and they are all<lb />
esant and helpful people to work<lb />
1 ve enjoyed watching the college<lb />
 " commented Mrs. Starkey.<lb />
' Miss Mattie Scoville, work-<lb />
 -eretary in the registrar's<lb />
 til she retired. Mrs. Starkey<lb />
 veil her saying that "the<lb />
of everyone here is to have<lb />
illment of 1000 students at E<lb />
there are over 4,000 enrolled.<lb />
tctically everywhere I go, peo-<lb />
' the EC sticker on the car and<lb />
1 have a friend or dsughter st<lb />
I've enjoyed watching the<lb />
"f the college spread, as well<lb />
 the higher calibre students that<lb />
are coming in she added.<lb />
"Every politician should have two<lb />
special hats  one to toss into the<lb />
ring, the other to talk through <lb />
Indianapolis Times.<lb />
The Foreign Language Department<lb />
received information on a thirty-<lb />
ay tour of Europe for students which<lb />
will be sponsored by the University<lb />
of Munich, Germany for $500 per<lb />
person. The tour will begin on June<lb />
11, I960.<lb />
The tour will cover the following<lb />
countries: Germany, Austria, Ita'y,<lb />
Fiance, Belgium, and the Nether-<lb />
lands. There will be stayovers in all<lb />
major cities with an extra three days<lb />
in Paris.<lb />
The $500 fee will cover plane fare<lb />
from New York to Nuremberg, Ger-<lb />
many and hack; the thirty-day travel<lb />
tour by buses; room and board in<lb />
selected hotels; city tours and ad-<lb />
mittance to museums, theatres, and<lb />
art exhibitions; and also tips and<lb />
guide charges. European students<lb />
will accompany the group through the<lb />
entire trip.<lb />
Dr. Sue Matz of the Foreign<lb />
Language Department commenting on<lb />
the trip, said that the tour was a<lb />
"tremendous bargain She added<lb />
that "the cost of the entire tour is<lb />
comparable to the price of a third-<lb />
class ticket on a commercial airline<lb />
for .a round trip<lb />
The tour will leave from New York<lb />
on June 27, 1960. The application<lb />
deadline is April 29, 1960. Students<lb />
who are interested may contact the<lb />
Foreign Iangunge Department.<lb />
Jets To Carry Students<lb />
To Hawaii<lb />
Dr. Robert E. Cralle announced re-<lb />
cently that students enrolled in the<lb />
University Study Tours summer pro-<lb />
gram to the University of Hawaii<lb />
this year, will fly to Honolulu, via<lb />
either Pan American or United Air<lb />
Lines Jets.<lb />
Last week, according to Dr. Cralle,<lb />
assignment of the Douglas DC-8 snd<lb />
Boeing 707 equipment has been made<lb />
to the University Study Tour pro-<lb />
gram. The modern giants will trans-<lb />
port from the West Coast large num-<lb />
bers of summer school students who<lb />
plan to attend the University of<lb />
Hawaii summer session.<lb />
"Honolulu is now only four and a<lb />
half hours from the mainland aboard<lb />
one of these jets says Dr. Cralle,<lb />
"and they make the old piston type<lb />
plane appear as an 'ancient schoon-<lb />
er Actually, the modern jet covers<lb />
in one hour as much distance as a<lb />
modern steamship does in twenty<lb />
tour'<lb />
Because of the popularity of the<lb />
Hawaiian summer session, both trans-<lb />
portation and living accommodations<lb />
in Hawaii are at a premium. In-<lb />
dividuals who might desire to attend<lb />
the summer session may obtain fur-<lb />
ther information by writing Dr.<lb />
Cralle at 2275 Mission Street. San<lb />
Francisco, California.<lb />
Special Two Month<lb />
European Tour<lb />
On June 20th a special tour for<lb />
college students will leave New York<lb />
aboard the SS Waterman for 61 days<lb />
through Europe visiting Holland,<lb />
Germany, Switzerland, Italy, Monaco,<lb />
Fnance, England and Belgium.<lb />
This completely new and different<lb />
idea in college tours has been an-<lb />
nounced by Bachelor Party Tours,<lb />
Inc of New York, specialists in<lb />
travel for single persons. Their con-<lb />
cept of travel is to offer a well bal-<lb />
anced prognam of sightseeing, leisure<lb />
time and special evening activities<lb />
which include a party at a Student<lb />
Inn in Heidelberg, a Tyrolean eve-<lb />
ning, a Swiss Fondue Party, a Pub<lb />
Crawl in London and many others.<lb />
The escorted tour is priced from<lb />
$1298. This is the first college tour<lb />
offered by Bachelor Party Tours,<lb />
Inc. who will operate a total of 275<lb />
tours to all areas of the world with<lb />
separate series of varying age levels<lb />
including Young Bachelor Party<lb />
Tours to Mexico, Puerto Rico, Virgin<lb />
Islands and Europe for persons in<lb />
their twenties and early thirties. Full<lb />
particulars may be obtained from<lb />
your local travel agent or by writ-<lb />
ing to Bachelor P.rty Tours, Inc<lb />
444 Madison Avenue, New York 22,<lb />
N. Y.<lb />
Lambie Represents<lb />
N. C. At Conference<lb />
Ruth Lambie, director of the Nurs-<lb />
ery School in the home economics de-<lb />
partment, will attend the Eleventh<lb />
Annual Conference of the Southern<lb />
Association on Children under Six as<lb />
representative from North Carolina<lb />
on the Board of the organization.<lb />
At the meeting she will act as<lb />
chairman of a sectional meeting on<lb />
"Let's Improve Our Schools<lb />
The conference will take place at<lb />
Miami Beach, Florida, .April 20-23. It<lb />
will bring together representatives<lb />
from thirteen states for discussion of<lb />
the education and welfare of the pre-<lb />
school child.<lb />
The SAOUS has more than forty<lb />
members in North Carolina. The N.C.<lb />
Kindergarten Association recently be-<lb />
came affiliated with the regional<lb />
organisation.<lb />
NEA officers for 1960-61 elected<lb />
at the March 30th meeting include Jo<lb />
Ann Tell, president; Norma Lee<lb />
Johnson, vice president; Myra Skin-<lb />
ner, recording secretary; and Libby<lb />
Williams, corresponding secretary.<lb />
Others are Wayne Forbes, treasur-<lb />
1 er; Fay Bunch, assistant treasurer;<lb />
Janet Pate, historian; and publica-<lb />
tions, Gwen Johnson.<lb />
The NEA members will meet with<lb />
the 'Atlantic Christian NEA mem-<lb />
bers in Wilson for a combined meet-<lb />
ing on April 28.<lb />
The next NEA meeting will be<lb />
April 20 in Rawl building, room 130.<lb />
Installation of officers will be held.<lb />
The East Carolina NBA chapter is<lb />
the second oldest in North Carolina.<lb />
Campus Calendar<lb />
April 7Beginners' Bridge Class, Col-<lb />
lege Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb />
-JCC Beauty Pageant, Wright Aud.<lb />
8:00 p.m.<lb />
April 8Baseball Game: ECC vs<lb />
Delaware, College Field, 3:00 p.m<lb />
College Union Barn Dance.<lb />
Wright Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb />
April 9Movie: "Another Time,<lb />
Another Place Austin Aud 7:00<lb />
p. m.<lb />
April 11Baseball Game: ECC vs.<lb />
Western Carolina, College Field,<lb />
1:00<lb />
Duplicate Bridge, College Union<lb />
TV Room 7:00 p. m.<lb />
-Sophomore Piano Recital, Craig<lb />
Daughtridge, Austin And 8:00<lb />
April 12Baseball Game: ECC vs.<lb />
Western Carolina, College Fie! 1,<lb />
3 :00<lb />
April 13Track Meet: ECC vs. N.<lb />
C. State 3:30 p.m.<lb />
April 14Spring Holidays Begin,<lb />
5:00 p.m.<lb />
CU Offers Prize<lb />
A prize of ten dollars is hein'<lb />
offered by the College Union to<lb />
the student who draws the best<lb />
brochure exemplifying the pur-<lb />
pose, facilities, and program of<lb />
our College Union.<lb />
The drawing will be used on<lb />
the informative pamphlets issued<lb />
te new students in our attempt<lb />
to reveal the functions of our<lb />
union.<lb />
Members of the College Union<lb />
Advisory Board will serve as<lb />
judges for the contest.<lb />
Entries should be submitted to<lb />
the Recreation Area Office in the<lb />
College Union. Deadline: April<lb />
15. 1960.<lb />
Lassiter Serves<lb />
As New President<lb />
Of Baptist Union<lb />
Sue E. Lassiter will serve during<lb />
the 1960-191 term as president of<lb />
the Baptist Student Union, the larg-<lb />
est denominational organization on<lb />
IVUlipilS.<lb />
Miss Lassiter is now editor of rtThe<lb />
Key monthly publication of the col-<lb />
lege BSU and publicity chairman of<lb />
the state organization. Last year she<lb />
was secretary of hd class and re-<lb />
presented sophomores at May Day<lb />
Exercises. She is a member of the<lb />
YWCA and the college chapters of<lb />
the Association of Childhood Educa-<lb />
tion and the Alpha Delta Pi social<lb />
sorority.<lb />
Other officers, who will head activ-<lb />
ities of the BSU during the next<lb />
school year, are Mary Lu Nicholson,<lb />
vice president; Peggy Wynne, cor-<lb />
lesponding secretary; Carolyn Davis,<lb />
recording secretary; Jackie Grady,<lb />
editor of "The Key and Randall<lb />
Peacock, treasurer.<lb />
Heads of committees for 1960-1961<lb />
are William Rainey, missions; Amos<lb />
Johnson, audio-visual materials;<lb />
Alice Frost Smith, devotional services;<lb />
Karen Best, publicity; Annie Marie<lb />
Riddick, Baptist Student Center; Do-<lb />
rothy M. Flynn, social events; Shir-<lb />
ey Mozingo, forums; Carolyn Hinton,<lb />
music; and iAnn Wright, enlistment.<lb />
Dorm Rooms<lb />
Men students now living in the<lb />
dormitory who wish to reserve<lb />
their rooms for Fall quarter 1960,<lb />
should do so at the Housing Of-<lb />
fice on the dates indicated below:<lb />
Jones Hall residentsApril 6<lb />
through April 8, 1960.<lb />
Urn stead Hall residentsApril<lb />
9 through April 12, 1960.<lb />
All men dormitory students<lb />
will be housed on the southeast<lb />
campus beginning Fall quarter<lb />
1960. If there are particular<lb />
rooms desired in Jones Hall, re-<lb />
servations should be made as soon<lb />
as possible within the dates given<lb />
above.<lb />
Melvin V. Back<lb />
Students Join Frat<lb />
Fifteen students have been initiat-<lb />
ed as new members of Sigma Pi Al-<lb />
pha, national honorary foreign lan-<lb />
guages fraternity . Each of those<lb />
chosen as members has completed<lb />
twenty hours of work and establish-<lb />
ed a high academic record in the<lb />
college department of foreign lan-<lb />
guages.<lb />
The Sigma Pi Alpha initiates are<lb />
Jacqueline Hunter Asbell, Elizabeth<lb />
D. Reaves, Catherine Claire Pippin,<lb />
Woodrow W. Davis, Jasper Jones Jr<lb />
Julia I Anthony, Walker Lee Allen<lb />
Billie Andrea Lamm, and Naomi<lb />
Carolyn Gibbs.<lb />
Others are Ann Lind'ey Sugg, Lin-<lb />
oa Faye Mann, Mary Evelyn Mau-<lb />
rey, Martha Lou Sherrill, Patricia<lb />
Ann K'liott. and Peggy Joyce Elliott.<lb />
Officers Installed<lb />
The Delta Omicron chapter of Al-<lb />
pha Delta Pi sorority installed their<lb />
hers for the 1900-41 year Moil-<lb />
ay night .March 2H in<lb />
at the Alumni building.<lb />
The newly installed officers in-<lb />
clude: Nancy Gwynn, President; Jean<lb />
Capps, Vice-President; Sandy Moon,<lb />
Recording Secretary; Camilla Hend-<lb />
erson, Corresponding Secretary;<lb />
Jean Simmons, Treasurer; Sue Las-<lb />
siter, Chaplain; Lillian Moye, Report-<lb />
er; Lynn Crouch, Registrar; and<lb />
Jimi McDaniel, Guard.<lb />
Alpha Delta Pi<lb />
Entertains At Tea<lb />
Alpha Delta Pi sorority honored<lb />
the newly elected officers of all so-<lb />
cial sororities on campus at a tea<lb />
Monday, April fourth.<lb />
Guests were greeted by President<lb />
Nancy Gwynn.<lb />
Refreshments of punch, party cakes<lb />
and nuts were served. Jean Capps,<lb />
Vice President of Alpha Delta Pi<lb />
presided at the punch bowl.<lb />
Goodbyes were said by Jean Sim-<lb />
mons, Treasurer and Camilla Hend-<lb />
ceremony trson, Corresponding Secretary.<lb />
Misinformation Exists Concerning<lb />
Rewards For Those Living Abroad<lb />
There is a great deal of misinfor- $5,300 to $7,000.<lb />
mation about rewards that accrue to<lb />
young men who decide to live and<lb />
work abroad, according to Dr. Ca<lb />
. Sauer, President of the American<lb />
institute for Foreign Trade.<lb />
"If you mention the subject of a<lb />
areei abroad to most young men,<lb />
they conjure u an image of sway-<lb />
ing palm trees, house boys, and a<lb />
'ife i f elegant luxury. Or perhaps<lb />
they think of themselves in terms of<lb />
a continental hon vivant, the center<lb />
of a fascinating intrigue in one of<lb />
the so-called gay capitals of the<lb />
world he said.<lb />
"Nothing could be further from<lb />
'  truth. In reality. Americans rep-<lb />
resenting United States business<lb />
firms or government agencies abroad<lb />
find themselves in much the same<lb />
ition as they would be in at home<lb />
with one exception. Their jobs<lb />
will be even more demanding and<lb />
will call for a greater sense of re-<lb />
-ponsibility. r many cases, major<lb />
decisions will be np to them. Some-<lb />
times the nearest person with whom<lb />
they could consult is several thou-<lb />
sand miles away.<lb />
"There are (-wards, however, which<lb />
ore both tangible and intangible. In<lb />
this latter category is the satisfac-<lb />
tion that come with the conviction<lb />
that one is making a definite per-<lb />
sona contribution by participation<lb />
in those activities which will increase<lb />
foreign regard for the United States<lb />
and the American people<lb />
Recently, the Institute, which has<lb />
been training young Americans for<lb />
positions in foreign countries for<lb />
fourteen rears, conducted a survey<lb />
of its several hundred graduates in<lb />
72 different countries of the world<lb />
to determine some of the tangible<lb />
rewards.<lb />
"As a result of this survey, we can<lb />
nmc answer a prospective student's<lb />
most frequent question: 'What are<lb />
the rewards of the training I will<lb />
receive at the American Institute<lb />
for Foreign Trade?' " Dr. Sauer said.<lb />
"Here are some data, based on aver-<lb />
age performances as reported to us<lb />
by men who have graduated from<lb />
Thunderbird, as the school is more<lb />
familiarly known<lb />
1. Seventy-five percent of each re-<lb />
cent graduating class were helped<lb />
to place themselves in positions in<lb />
international commerce by the time<lb />
of their graduation. Most of the bal-<lb />
ance normally found places in simi-<lb />
lar positions within a period of 90<lb />
days.<lb />
2. Starting salaries range from<lb />
3. Training periods in the United<lb />
States range from rare cases of dir-<lb />
ect assignment abroad to a five-year<lb />
oriod in this country. The average<lb />
training program in the United<lb />
States is 18 months in length.<lb />
4. Normal increments in salary,<lb />
based on performance, are given dur-<lb />
:nr training periods.<lb />
5. Regular merit reviews are giv-<lb />
fn. normally leading to substantial<lb />
ncreases in salary annually. Average<lb />
 1,000 per year increases in base sal-<lb />
aries were revealed in salary sur-<lb />
veys made of our graduates overseas<lb />
on the tenth anniversary of their<lb />
irraduation.<lb />
S. Fringe benefits for personnel<lb />
stationed overseas usually include<lb />
the following:<lb />
Where living conditions justify a<lb />
Inferential, the Cost of Living Al-<lb />
lowances rate may range from 10<lb />
to 25 percent of base salary.<lb />
In most cases there are liberal<lb />
hos.pitalization and insurance plans.<lb />
Normally, educational allowances<lb />
:re given for children.<lb />
Travel per diem is given for the<lb />
employee and all members of his<lb />
family.<lb />
Thunderbird<lb />
American Institute for<lb />
Foreign Trade, .Phoenix, Ariz.<lb />
Iianel Choir Presents<lb />
Easter Sunrise Service<lb />
The Chapel Choir assisted by the<lb />
Womens Choi us will present an<lb />
Easter Service on April 12, at 6:110<lb />
a.m. The choirs, under the direction<lb />
f Gordon Johnson of the music<lb />
faculty, will present thei service in<lb />
Austin Auditorium.<lb />
.Performing music from various<lb />
periods, unaccompanied plain song to<lb />
0th century music, the Chapel<lb />
Choir's program will include: "Last<lb />
Words of David by Randall Thomp-<lb />
son; "Crucifixus from B Minor<lb />
Mass by Bach; "Resurrection by a<lb />
20th century composer Gordon Young;<lb />
and "My Lord What a Morning a<lb />
Spiritual.<lb />
The Womens Chorus will present<lb />
a duet from the Bach contata Number<lb />
i entitled "Christ Lay in the Bonds<lb />
of Death<lb />
The men's section of the choir will<lb />
also sing a selection.<lb />
Accompanists for the choirs will<lb />
be Edward Carraway and Burleigh<lb />
Hill, organists, and William Wolfe,<lb />
pianist.<lb />
VARSITY BAND MEMBERS . . . Pictured above are Johnny Respess.<lb />
president of the band; Lyti Cox, secretary-treasurer; and vice president Joe<lb />
Flake, who will be some of the participants i the Varsity Band's annual<lb />
Spring Concert to be staged at 4Kb) Sunday afternoon in McGinna Audi-<lb />
torium. Their program will consist of contemporary pieces, marches sn4<lb />
several classical numbers. A special feature of the performance will be a<lb />
number by William McRae entitled "Scherzando This number will feature<lb />
the Phi Mu Alpha Brass Quartet with band accompaniment.<lb />
w58it<lb /><pb facs="00038657_tn_0004" /><lb />
PAGE POUR<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
Bucs Battle Delaware<lb />
Diamondmen Today<lb />
B LEONARD LAO<lb />
Coach Jim Mallory takes liis Pirate<lb />
baseball team into action this after-<lb />
noon against Delaware University<lb />
in another non-conference battle at<lb />
ege Stadium. The northerners are<lb />
here for a doubleheader with EC.<lb />
The East Carolina baseballers ate<lb />
out to extend their winning record to<lb />
three. At present the Bucs have a 3-1<lb />
lost slate, with their defeat com-<lb />
al tl e hands of the Bulldogs -f<lb />
Yale University by a 12 score. The<lb />
Pirates opened their season with a<lb />
victory over Yale. Sophomore pitcher,<lb />
Larry Crayton gave up five hits ami<lb />
two runs in his and EC's first win.<lb />
Another sophomore. Johnny Ellen,<lb />
absorbed the loss to Yale.<lb />
T e Pirates bounced back into the<lb />
win column last week when they<lb />
ked off Washington and Lee<lb />
 on the one-hit pitching'<lb />
 nee of southpaw Crayton.<lb />
The ittle fastballer had a perfect<lb />
ing up until the sixth in-<lb />
 ing when the Generals' Park Gil-<lb />
e hit a single between the first<lb />
and second basemen. Only one other<lb />
tter was able to tret the hall out<lb />
nfield, r pop-up to right field-<lb />
Jerry Carpenter.<lb />
Hut Crayton pitching was not the<lb />
righl pa I of the game. The<lb />
tes banged out eleven hits and<lb />
ed seven big runs across the<lb />
plate while Crayton was dishing up<lb />
  against the Generals. AU-<lb />
 left fielder. Gary Pierce<lb />
' ' ' led swinging his big bat for<lb />
Pi lt s, gathering three hits in<lb />
ffii ial trips to the plate,<lb />
e basted a towering two-run<lb />
  the first stanza that brought<lb />
sparse crowd to its feet. All-<lb />
tstop, llenn Bass and<lb />
 :   ' I Wallj Cockrell banged<lb />
 : il les for the Pirates<lb />
Pr starting pitcher for I<lb />
noon's contest will be Crayton,<lb />
en 1 an I ling the mound chores<lb />
tomori ow. Ctaytoi owns both of the<lb />
Pirati vi tories and has yet to suf-<lb />
hia first defeat. Ellen will be out<lb />
 ' '  wii col in. with his only<lb />
loss  I the hands of Yale.<lb />
Tl e Pirates will open their confer-<lb />
ence schedule on Monday when they<lb />
THIRD BASEMAN . . . Wilbur Casteiee is seen taking a swing at the ball<lb />
against Washington and Lee last week. The lanky hot-corner man will be<lb />
in the Pirate lineup this afternoon when the Bucs play host to Delaware.<lb />
Pirate Golfers Sport<lb />
New Coach; Same Team<lb />
l n ler the direction of new coach,<lb />
George Tucker, the East Carolina<lb />
golf team was scheduled to get its<lb />
season under way on Tuesday when<lb />
; iej were to play host to defending<lb />
conference champion Elon.<lb />
Ti ker, an assistant coach on the<lb />
ite football staff, made his first<lb />
stab at coaching the spring sport a<lb />
hearty success when his linkers de-<lb />
feated the Greenville Country Club<lb />
in an exhibition match by a<lb />
of 14 to 121<lb />
Setting the pace in the Pirates<lb />
nit ial win were the only returning<lb />
letterraen, Don Conley and Paul Good-<lb />
win. Conley turned in a 72 n the IS<lb />
hole Greenville course, while Good-<lb />
win was right on his bee's with 75<lb />
strokes.<lb />
 ouch Tucker, in commenting on<lb />
the outlook for the season, was higl<lb />
ly optimistic. "We should have a<lb />
play host t Western Carolina Col-<lb />
in a two-game series. Coach Ma<lb />
lory's boy- will be out to continue<lb />
winning ways over conference<lb />
tl ey sported a perfect record<lb />
ast season against North State Con-<lb />
ence competition.<lb />
good year. We finished third in the<lb />
conference Last year and didn't lose<lb />
anyone. ' If the early victory over<lb />
the Greenville team is any indication<lb />
of what the Pirates will look ike this<lb />
season, then they certainly seem to<lb />
be leaded for a successful year.<lb />
Along with Conley and Goodwin,<lb />
the only other squad member that is<lb />
returning is Mike Romanin, who saw<lb />
some action last season. Leading a<lb />
 of new pro peets are Bill Gut fi-<lb />
ne, Steve Pulp, and John Eelton.<lb />
A' present Coach Tucker has an<lb />
i ighl game schedule, but he has sev-<lb />
i ': " n dates. He has planned to<lb />
with Atlantic Christian Col-<lb />
re occasions.<lb />
The East Carolina Golf schedule:<lb />
 E on, here; April 7. Guilford,<lb />
 ' ! April 11. Open; April 12, Open;<lb />
x 19, A.( here; April 21, A.<lb />
'   I i e; April 25, open: April 26,<lb />
Open; April 28, Open; Api i! 29, Op- :<lb />
tn; .May 2, Pfeiffer, here; May 5,<lb />
Elon, there; May 6, Pfeiffer, there;<lb />
May 9, Guilford, there; May 12, Op-<lb />
en; May 13, 0 en; May 16 and 17<lb />
x rtl State Conference Golf tourna-<lb />
at St; : mount in Greensbo o,<lb />
X. C.<lb />
Kilpatrick Cops<lb />
Spring Quarter<lb />
Tournament Title<lb />
Norman Kilpatrick defeated Bob<lb />
Gilden in the finals of the Spring<lb />
Quarter men's singles table tennis<lb />
tournament, held March 29 in the<lb />
1 'ollege Union.<lb />
By hammering his way through<lb />
Gilden's defense from 15-20 feet back<lb />
he table with his forehand and<lb />
,el hand drives, Kilpatrick came out<lb />
f-r top in scores of 21-fi, 21-9, 219.<lb />
' I'Mti.k had defeated Ted Iassiter<lb />
the semi-finals 21-11, 21-15, 21-10<lb />
ii his forehand smashes.<lb />
Gilden used his spin defense and<lb />
forehand kill shots to defeat Bowie<lb />
Martin 21-15, 21-12, and 21-9 in the<lb />
other semi-final event.<lb />
Martin had created much surprise<lb />
he made his way to the semi-<lb />
fiivils, as he had stopped favored<lb />
Hobby Hutchins 21-12, 21-18 in the<lb />
irsl round, and then upset second<lb />
eeded Charles Hol'iday in the quarter<lb />
finals, 11-21, 21-17, 26-24. In this<lb />
match Martin's left-handed forehand<lb />
drives finally broke up Holiday's<lb />
backhand and forehand attack and<lb />
tricky side spin serves, after Holliday<lb />
had taken the first game easily.<lb />
Gilden, whose best play before this<lb />
rnament had been to reach the<lb />
matter-finals of the Fall Quarter<lb />
to irney, won a very tense match<lb />
from novice champion Nelson Tugwc'l<lb />
ir the quarter-final 21-10, 15-21,<lb />
21-19. In this match Gilden's back-<lb />
snd drives and forehand smash<lb />
were just enough to take the<lb />
fin il two points of the match from<lb />
ell's (hop defense and forehand<lb />
 rives.<lb />
In early matches Albert Davis won<lb />
the longest game of the tournament<lb />
when he defeated Neil Seid 30-28.<lb />
Gildei defeated Sam Watson 21-19<lb />
13-21, 21-14. Watson then came back<lb />
I  reach the finals of the conso'a-<lb />
ons event, before losing to Bobby<lb />
Hutchins 21-18, 23-21.<lb />
While Kilpatrick, the Winter Quar-<lb />
i hampion, Gilden, and Lassiter<lb />
ad been favored to reach the semi-<lb />
fin -Is. Martin, who only a few weeks<lb />
ago lost in the quarterly novice tour-<lb />
ent, became the first unseated<lb />
player to progress so far in a men's<lb />
ingles event this season.<lb />
THURSDAY, APRIL<lb /><lb />
?<lb />
i<lb />
PIRAT E' S<lb />
D E N<lb />
By LEONARD LAO<lb />
 Hogan Announces<lb />
 Rules For Co-Rec<lb />
I Wieht Activities<lb />
Ghost Charge Haunts<lb />
Lucky Strike's Dr. Frood<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: l am writing m term<lb />
paper and would like to know how the<lb />
average professor differentiates between<lb />
research and plagiarism?<lb />
Lit. Major<lb />
Dear Lit: Pfcg.hr lim is when you copy<lb />
our paper from a hook. Research is when<lb />
you cop our paper from more than<lb />
one book.<lb />
?<lb /><lb />
?<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: I was shocked when<lb />
I read o ghostwriting turns preparing<lb />
term papers For certain college students.<lb />
But I was doubl) horrified, upset and<lb />
stunned when I heard a rumor that you,<lb />
Dr. I rood, also use a ghost. Tell me it<lb />
isn t so. Doctor.<lb />
Jacob Martey<lb />
Dear Jacob: I categorically den our<lb />
accusation. I do not use. nor hae I ever<lb />
used, a ghost to write this column. I admit,<lb />
however, that when confronted with cer-<lb />
tain difficult student problems. I hac<lb />
called upon im late departed I nele<lb />
l'urd for adice and counsel.<lb />
o<lb />
&amp;<lb />
o<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: I have just been in-<lb />
formed that there are oer 100 brands of<lb />
cigarettes on the market today. Why so<lb />
ma<lb />
ny<lb />
Harvey  Wamerdam<lb />
Dear Harvey: Conceivably, there are<lb />
100 people in the country who do not<lb />
smoke Luckics.<lb />
 r. c.<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: 1 am a sophomore ho<lb />
hasfinall) mastered even syllable of the<lb />
Whiffenpoof Song. To my chagrin. I<lb />
have just discovered that I am not at-<lb />
tending Yale. An suggestions?<lb />
Jivy Leaguer<lb />
Dear Jivy: lake it, man, lake it!<lb />
&amp; 4? ?<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: I have just completed<lb />
my doctorate thesis on "The Socio-<lb />
Politico-Religio-I couomico Assets of<lb />
Tribal Development inentral Africa,<lb />
1805-loW I believe m work has im-<lb />
mense popular appeal and would like to<lb />
have it published in pocket-book form.<lb />
How does one go about doing this?<lb />
Ethetbert PingbanA<lb />
Dear Ethelbert: One changes the title to<lb />
"Love-Starved in Mau Mau Land<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood: I<lb />
am going nutsnuts.<lb />
I tell you! tring to<lb />
solve this puzzle.<lb />
Please! What is the<lb />
secret?<lb />
Puzzled<lb />
Dear Puzzled:<lb />
Th.se who thought that uaall i  P<lb />
with larger institutions .honld haw quit, i m<lb />
When the N A I h AH-Stai team <lb />
Champions it was regarded  one of tl I the<lb />
year. Actually, it wasn't as big an upset u<lb />
If a faithful basketball fan  '<lb />
which he though could compete in any tournament, I Rawer would<lb />
ably run something ike this: Cii We I <lb />
Would teams such as Southwesl TV i ' ' ' <lb />
NO. And why wouldnt they be named? are <lb />
college teams' or 'They arenl even in the N "A . I "T <lb />
compete with the larger school<lb />
Well, not only did they i<lb />
vhools. hut they went on to defeat the<lb />
resentative of the bigger collegt  of the N.CjA-A.<lb />
Even the professionals are e of the fact 1 I  I<lb />
tion's top-notch ball players are on t  rare<lb />
occasion when i small college playej i on I . .iraft li-<lb />
Crayton Hurls (in- Hitter<lb />
Lany Craj ton, better ki "Pun<lb />
his second win against no  " out Weshingl<lb />
and Lee's Generals to the turn I 7-0. T to get oi<lb />
one hit off the stocky southpaw,  single th frame. It was<lb />
that same inning that i rayton encountered his only serious trouble for I<lb />
day. After l'ark Gilmore bang d t  Ed  ror<lb />
and a wa k loaded the bases wif I Taking thi . to his own hand,<lb />
Crayton settled to the task oi cutting down th I atting<lb />
order on a strikeout, a pop-up to second trikeout 1<lb />
tire the side. From there on in the fireball ing <lb />
control of the wear Washington and i<lb />
The Pirates slammed o it eleven hits off<lb />
nenter. Leading the Bucs it 1 leftf<lb />
Gary Pierce. The burly outfielder had a perfect<lb />
out three hits in three tri  i' ip his second I<lb />
bagger of the year with  drive I eared t<lb />
mom to spare Hi homes cami the I inning with one tean<lb />
aboard. Later in the game, Pier  the indicati m that he was point'<lb />
to get another home run, left field line, curved<lb />
foul. Instead, Pierce had to for a single.<lb />
Crayton s win over Was I Lee p Pirates <lb />
their second win of the em to Craytoi<lb />
.SPORTS SHORTS  . Burl M - rted<lb />
came a-rainst the (, and it in ;<lb />
masked man banged out a singli I . . Ven runs a<lb />
the plate . . . When the Pirate Dp<lb />
of last week against Yale I diversity, the crowd thai ,e eonto<lb />
(nearly rw)) probably smashed all pn is attendant Ft lo<lb />
as though the baseball team was finally going to get  support. Brf<lb />
when the Bucs went into battle with Washington and Lee 0n Friday,<lb />
picture looked quite a bit different. The tands sembled a liqo<lb />
store during the Prohibition Days f  , ISS&amp;b. The announcer didnt<lb />
even need bis microphi batting and<lb />
what the score was . . . One f acfa M . n<lb />
has been sidelined with an an <lb />
during an indoor practice tessi n last  . fr<lb />
a couple of weeks. Wyatt, s th, Virginia<lb />
pitcher in high school, but impre  I Mi I . with his bat and 'he 1<lb />
tutor switched him to the outfield. . Th I <lb />
home again on April  rj, ,  . Mallory<lb />
and four.<lb />
H<lb />
; T.<lb />
Ragsdalc Grabs<lb />
irls Intramural<lb />
hoys wi 1 be o it to chalk ui<lb /><lb />
&amp;<lb />
&amp;<lb />
Dear Dr. Frood. I didnt make the crew<lb />
because 1 get seasick. I couldn't make<lb />
the baseball team because the resin<lb />
bag gives mc a rash. I was kicked off the<lb />
track team because cinders kept getting<lb />
in my eye. And I had to drop tennis<lb />
because 1 get vertigo watching the ball<lb />
co back and forth. What can a great<lb />
athlete like myself do now?<lb />
Sig Lee<lb />
Dear Sig: Why don't you expose over-<lb />
emphasis of college athletics in a leading<lb />
national magazine?<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.TLucky Strike means fine tobacco.<lb />
-<lb /><lb />
1<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />
'<lb />
V'<lb /><lb />
TAKING THINGS EASY<lb />
Martin.<lb />
betw<lb />
een inninjrs i ECm first sacker Jimmy<lb />
TOBACCO AND TASTE TOO FINE TO FILTER!<lb />
Product of dmJmmmmm JSCmmJ&amp;pmm-?3bCmm is our middle mm<lb />
' I " ! rEACHl<lb />
1 "i w  hen a stu :<lb />
eater i- in session 1<lb />
Hi) ; 'Tii- () (j'i '<lb />
r) ni teacher wil<lb />
:i- BSUal  ith th.<lb />
pl ions :<lb />
1 - Si odent teacher<lb />
in dormitori -<lb />
hoa ses)  hi -h ill <lb />
Friday, nril 15, and M<lb />
ril 19, m i! nt be riisir.<lb />
re part to the stndk I<lb />
center, (n th. w dates.<lb />
 Student t. will net<lb />
be reaaired te r- p<lb />
n! (earning rentei Satar-<lb />
daj Vpril 9, the d th !  <lb />
ht  ' iMinations nn rapus.<lb />
"Man<lb />
before, and<lb />
a lies Ruffing.<lb />
Because You Asked For Them<lb />
INTRODUCING<lb />
BASS "WEEJUNS"<lb />
Brown $14.95<lb />
Black<lb />
Co-ed Styles Available By Special Order<lb />
$11.95<lb />
ZZZ EAST riFTH 8TRCCT<lb />
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED"<lb />
Starts FrL pril th<lb />
IN COLOR<lb />
Vul Bryniter<lb />
(ina lllobriffida<lb />
in<lb />
"SOLOMON and<lb />
SHEBA"<lb />
TuesWed Apr. 12-13<lb />
One of the creat motion picture<lb />
of our time <lb />
Ing-mar Bergman's<lb />
Strawberries"<lb />
"Wild<lb />
At Regular Popular Prices!<lb />
MATINEE NIGHT<lb />
50c 60c<lb />
PIT Theatre<lb />
i<lb />
i<lb />
in<lb /><lb />
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Tier<lb /><lb />
sayil<lb />
I<lb />
- j Mflkwwaia n - iwmimi<lb />
111<lb />
an<lb /><lb />
i<lb /></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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