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            <mods:title>East Carolinian, April 14, 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">19600414</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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          <dc:title>East Carolinian, April 14, 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>19600414</dc:date>
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                <pb facs="00038658_tn_0001" />
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Keys Missing<lb />
 small I award is offered for the<lb />
r.turn ot a white blazer which has<lb />
kev to ih I ai Carolinian offices in<lb />
jn j.Hkit PI return items to the<lb />
taper offices in N right building.<lb />
Easttarolinian<lb />
XXXV<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C THURSJJAyT APRIL 14, 1960<lb />
Student Government Stages First Annual<lb />
Staff To Meet<lb />
All members of the East Carolinian<lb />
staff are reminded of an important<lb />
staff meeting in Wright 201 on Thurs-<lb />
day, April 21. Non staff members who<lb />
are interested in newspaper work are<lb />
urged to attend.<lb />
Banquet Installs Newly-Elected Offi<lb />
B? BETTY M YNOR<lb />
SG banquet, honoring<lb />
f the l9o. M<lb />
at Res<lb />
" Monday night.<lb />
u  tiring president,<lb />
of ceremonies and<lb />
mbers of the BGA<lb />
administered<lb />
' Jim Speight who<lb />
 : hia term of of-<lb /><lb />
ed president com-<lb />
I  xpress just<lb />
mesna to me. 1<lb />
  - '  pe ; le who<lb />
. ampaignhtg dur-<lb />
 - soon sa I of-<lb />
' presidency I<lb />
tori -i the plat-<lb />
l presented during the<lb />
 1 have some<lb />
will : i  with the ap-<lb />
 stud nt govern-<lb />
hi ed Dr. Leo W.<lb />
1 'of the college.<lb />
ttted about the retiring<lb />
remarked, "I want<lb />
- SGA foi the diligent<lb />
en I was a candid-<lb />
residency I the college<lb />
ei ei baring a had<lb />
nment . . . I'm eery<lb />
f more Student Gov-<lb />
ome. I believe<lb />
iW make their own<lb />
mes we don't think<lb />
that all students are.<lb />
bate scholarship. The<lb />
tain percentage of<lb />
 Students, ffcc-<lb />
n owe a debt<lb />
" North Carolina. . <lb />
see if we<lb />
work which our re-<lb />
ty 1 " state requires. . .<lb />
 knew that his ideal<lb />
icracy would re-<lb />
 lea of education. We<lb />
r.iny as possible.<lb />
' feel that there should be<lb />
 applications to E. :<lb />
ther college. . . <lb />
. ays going to 1 e<lb />
education is g ing<lb />
manner in which<lb />
ege ; accepted. Therefore.<lb />
.mi' on your behalf when<lb />
caa of the Si; A "<lb />
le within the college<lb />
! within the state are<lb />
 be cause of your eol-<lb />
V example of this may be<lb />
the college at-<lb />
hase land adjacent to<lb />
r future growth. T" e<lb />
: : have the money to<lb />
so I called on<lb />
icers<lb />
MU S; PRESIDENT Jim Speight receives the official gavel from<lb />
unlgotag Student Government President Dallas Wells during installation<lb />
n i monies this n eek.<lb />
s mo ut the board members, trustees,<lb />
 sted friends of the college.<lb />
person ipproacbed readily a-<lb />
i to contribute for this purpose.<lb />
This is the tyie of support you as<lb />
bers of the SGA will receive, if<lb />
you work together to improve your<lb /><lb />
"I sincerely hope that each one of<lb />
you, through the organizations which<lb />
 resent, will do all you can to<lb />
promote student enthusiasm for the<lb />
ation in May. For the sake of<lb />
the dignitaries and other guests we<lb />
will have on campus, we want them<lb />
to see, not the "jerkwater" small col-<lb />
lege they might expect, hut the large<lb />
t thai we can provide,<lb />
will be eatly surprised to see<lb />
the  the influence will<lb />
carry back to the legislature. We<lb />
must show them that we are on our<lb />
to i greater and biggei East<lb />
Carolina<lb />
Following Dr. Jenkins remarks,<lb />
the other officers were sworn ir<lb />
Jim Speight Bidy Nichols. Barbara<lb />
 Charlie Munn, Bobby Ward<lb />
and Gloria Hofler took the oath of<lb />
office.<lb />
Dallas Wells introduced the guests<lb />
at the banquet which included: Dr.<lb />
and lira Leo Jenkins, Dr. and Mrs.<lb />
es II. Tucker, Dr. and Mrs. Clin-<lb />
ton Prewette, Mrs. Agnes Barrett,<lb />
Miss Ruth White.<lb />
Dallas Wells also commented, "I<lb />
d like to t xtend special recog-<lb />
nition to Barney West for the work<lb />
he has done to aid me this year<lb />
SGA committee heads San Ewell,<lb />
Frosty Smith, and Annette McDonald<lb />
were recognized and praised for a<lb />
i b well done. Retiring officers were<lb />
recognized and offered comments to<lb />
newly installed officers.<lb />
Dallas Wells offered closing com-<lb />
ments concerning his past term of<lb />
office and offered a special thanks<lb />
the administration of the college<lb />
for the advice and help given him.<lb />
The banquet closed with the group<lb />
singing of the alma mater.<lb />
Applications Hint<lb />
Record Enrollment<lb />
prospects fer a record attendance<lb />
of new students here during the 1960-<lb />
1961 term are indicated by applica-<lb />
tions for admission now being receiv-<lb />
ed in the registrar's office.<lb />
A comparison of the 1959 and the<lb />
I960 totals on April 8, of each of the<lb />
two years shows that 539 more stu-<lb />
 Is have thei' applications i :i file<lb />
this year than Last year. Dr. John<lb />
Home, registrar, stated this week.<lb />
Ry April 8, 1958, 363 men and 7S9<lb />
women had sent in applications to<lb />
the registrar's office. Of these, 32<lb />
had withdrawn, leaving a total of<lb />
1120, Dr. Home said.<lb />
A count on April 8, this year re-<lb />
peals that, after 86 withdrawals, 1659<lb />
talents have applied for .admission.<lb />
The total number of applicants among<lb />
men is 734. on increase of 371 over<lb />
last year's figure. Women who have<lb />
applied this year total 961 as com-<lb />
pared to 7S9 in 1959, the figures<lb />
shewing an increase of 172.<lb />
EC Freshman Wins Beauty Title<lb />
Caldwell Speaks<lb />
In Danforth Series<lb />
Chancellor John T. Caldwell of<lb />
North Carolina State College stated<lb />
that "the most dangerous obsoles-<lb />
i ence in the world today is that of<lb />
ideas" here last week. Discussing<lb />
"Change and Obsolescence he ap-<lb />
peared on the Danforth Lecture ser-<lb />
ies.<lb />
"Change and Obsolescence Dr.<lb />
Ca dwell said, "occur in the realm of<lb />
things, in the realm of social ar-<lb />
rangements, an i in the realm of ideas<lb />
They are most observable in things<lb />
and in social arrangements<lb />
In all the business of change and<lb />
obsolescence, however, he pointed out,<lb />
"the really important thing  is<lb />
that ideas are at the root of it "<lb />
Idea be said, are basic.<lb />
Discussing the various reasons why<lb />
men cling to obsolete ideas, he point-<lb />
ed out that while we are usually ob-<lb />
jective about the obsolescence factor<lb />
in the ease of things, understanding<lb />
of obsolescence in the realm of soc-<lb />
ial and political affairs is more dif-<lb />
ficulty to arrive at.<lb />
"Even in the field of education<lb />
he said, "we indulge in end discus-<lb />
sions and polemics largelv because<lb />
poof of obsolescence is so hard to<lb />
come by and change is more difficult<lb />
than not changing<lb />
He challenged students and teach-<lb />
ers to keep their thinking "critical<lb />
and unfettered The most precious<lb />
of human rights, he declared, is "the<lb />
right to know and learn and criticize<lb />
The true college or university he<lb />
continued, is "dedicated to conserv-<lb />
ing this right" and to "passing on<lb />
to each generation the heritage of<lb />
the past<lb />
Concluding his address, he advised,<lb />
"Yon can defend yourself and your<lb />
country against obsolescence of ideas.<lb />
This defence must be main .  nr<lb />
own consciousness. Tt requires the<lb />
energetic and honest effort of your<lb />
mind to advance its frontiers contin-<lb />
ually<lb />
President Leo W. Jennins intro-<lb />
duced Dr. Ca'dwell to his audience.<lb />
Sanford Says Education Should Be Primary Aim<lb />
irial candidate Terry San-<lb />
t - conference in Grsen<lb />
afternoon, that educa-<lb />
ild be the primary objective<lb />
I ment at this time.<lb />
Fay dteville attorney, and<lb />
f ar contenders for the<lb />
ination, subject to the<lb />
primary, outlined a tri-<lb />
 which placed education<lb />
 -t position. The other<lb />
of t'e triangle were agri-<lb />
 : industry, which are the<lb />
I - of the tat e. <lb />
I testi tied as to where addi-<lb />
idi for improvements of the<lb />
tern in North Caro-<lb />
tuM be k rived. Sanford sa;d<lb />
- hard to tell at this time<lb />
I educational improve-<lb />
. i be drawn because it was<lb />
" to tax time. Sanford conclud-<lb />
eommenta on the inquiry by<lb />
 g that next fall would be the<lb />
tell, after total tax revenues<lb />
i icertaJned.<lb />
Sanford was also asked, concerning<lb />
n. if he would be in favor of<lb />
sting the General Assembly for<lb />
tional taxes for the improve-<lb />
iucation. Sanford replied,<lb />
 certainly would. I don't see<lb />
 can build a better state, un-<lb />
lea f a second-rate educa-<lb />
ional system is gone Sanford fur-<lb />
rontended that, "Nationwide, our<lb />
 ducational system is rated in the<lb />
ten. To improve our eduea-<lb />
ftl lysteea, we need a long-range<lb />
ram, at least ten years, in which<lb />
lita for the top Sanford conchH-<lb />
- i by declaring, "This is not a pauper<lb />
ind there is no reason why we<lb />
i annot have one of the best educa-<lb />
tional systems !n the nation, but it<lb />
a ill take a long period of time to<lb />
attain such a system<lb />
Sanford added, "In reference to the<lb />
By ROY MARTIN<lb />
think that it is a fine thing. We need<lb />
to keep on doing this. This is the<lb />
type of thing we need to do over<lb />
and over  to continually strive<lb />
to bettei our educational system<lb />
When asked if he favored central-<lb />
isation of the state's educational sys-<lb />
tem around the Greater University,<lb />
Sanford answered that he would not<lb />
be i favor of -aitting down the poten-<lb />
tial of any school because the Uni-<lb />
versity had established itself. He add-<lb />
ed, however, "One of the most thrill-<lb />
ing things t i me is how the two<lb />
schools in the west (Western Caro-<lb />
ina and Appalachian) and East Coro-<lb />
lina have developed their surround-<lb />
ing areas Sanford also said that we<lb />
must not allow our state educational<lb />
system overlap too much, but that<lb />
we do not want any of our smaller<lb />
schools to be forced to take a back<lb />
?eat.<lb />
Concerning the probability of a<lb />
future increase in teacher pay, and<lb />
how soon this could come about, San-<lb />
ford said. "We can not speak in per-<lb />
centages yet. However, there is an<lb />
immediate need for a substantial<lb />
teacher pay raise. Many of our teach-<lb />
ing graduates ire leaving the state<lb />
for teaching positions elsewhere. I<lb />
understand about 50 of them are<lb />
leaving. Not next year, but in our<lb />
long-range plan we need to bring in-<lb />
to the teaching profession in this<lb />
state an adequate number of quali-<lb />
fied people. Right now I would say a<lb />
15 pay increase is the immediate<lb />
minimum<lb />
Concluding his comments, Sanford,<lb />
speaking in ielation to the recent<lb />
wave of sit-down strikes, stated that<lb />
it was a constitutional right of the<lb />
private businessman to select his own<lb />
customers. Sanford also said that it<lb />
was the right of the private business-<lb />
nu n. if they desired, to require their<lb />
customers to wear blue shirts. "I am<lb />
with North Carolina's Pearsall Plan,<lb />
which many states have adopted.<lb />
Massive resistance is not the answer,<lb />
but the North Carolina plan, and let-<lb />
ting the respective communities han-<lb />
dle the problem is the best plan if we<lb />
i stav with it<lb />
GUBERNATORIAL CANDIDATE<lb />
Terry Sanford who said at s press<lb />
rriculum study underway now, T conference this week that education should be the state's first objective.<lb />
Frat Council Meets<lb />
Here April 21-22<lb />
The National Council of Pi Omega<lb />
Pi, national honorary business educa-<lb />
tion fraternity, will be the guests of<lb />
East Carolina, college department of<lb />
business, and the Beta Kappa Chap-<lb />
ter of Pi Omega Pi for their annual<lb />
spring council meeting April 21-24.<lb />
Dr. James T. Plan ford of Iowa<lb />
State Teachers College, Cedar Pa'ls,<lb />
Iowa, is national president of the<lb />
honor fraternity. He will preside over<lb />
all the sessions, which will be held in<lb />
the conference room in Raw! Build-<lb />
ing.<lb />
Mary Elizabeth Ifasaad is the presi-<lb />
dent of Beta Kappa chapter of Pi<lb />
Omega Pi. The chapter will entertain<lb />
the council members at dinner on<lb />
Friday, April 22.<lb />
Among items on the agenda for<lb />
the meeting will be to complete plans<lb />
for the bjennial convention of Pi<lb />
Omega .Pi, which will be in Chicago<lb />
in December, 1960.<lb />
The council will also review the<lb />
chapter activity reports presented in<lb />
competition for the National Chap-<lb />
ter Award and will arrange for the<lb />
presentation of the trophy to the chap-<lb />
ted judged outstanding among the<lb />
108 chapters of the fraternity. The<lb />
award was won in 1959 by Alpha Phi<lb />
Chapter of Duquesne University.<lb />
Beta Kappa Chapter has received the<lb />
award in 1952, 1955 and 1957.<lb />
In addition to President Blanford,<lb />
oter members of the National Coun-<lb />
cil are: Dr. Marie C. Vilhauer, vice<lb />
president, from Southeast Missouri<lb />
State College, Cape Girardeau. Mis-<lb />
souri; Dr. Ralf Thomas, treasurer,<lb />
Head of Depatmcnt of Business Ed-<lb />
rcation, Kansas State College, Pitts-<lb />
burg, Kenan; Dr. Alice Marjorie Har-<lb />
rison, secretary-historian, Michigan<lb />
State University, East Lansing, Mich-<lb />
igan; Mrs. Hulda Vaaler Barton, or-<lb />
ganizer, University of South Dakota,<lb />
Vermillion, South Dakota; Dr. Edna<lb />
Barbour, editor. North Illinois Uni-<lb />
versity, De Kalb, Illinois; Miss Jan-<lb />
et Glidden, national student represen-<lb />
tative, .a senior at Colorado State Col-<lb />
lege, Greeley, Colorado; and Dr. Au-<lb />
drey V. Dempsey, past president,<lb />
East Carolina College.<lb />
Sandra Wrenn Emerges Winner<lb />
In 'Miss Greenville7 Pageant<lb />
Sandra Expresses<lb />
Winning Happiness<lb />
Lovely Sandra Wrenn, the new<lb />
"Miss Greenville" who was spon-<lb />
sored by Sijrma, Sigma. Sigma sor-<lb />
ority said her first thought after the<lb />
announcement was "not for the glory<lb />
that the honor would bring me, but<lb />
the honor of representing the people<lb />
of Greenville, and of making my sor-<lb />
i (ity sisters proud of me<lb />
Hours after the contest, Sandra<lb />
ommented, "It hasn't hit me, yet<lb />
Her first reactions on hein named<lb />
the winner of the contest,  . . could<lb />
not be described. It was the most<lb />
wonderful feeling. I felt as if I were<lb />
in another wo, Id she exclaimed.<lb />
"With all sincerity, I really had no<lb />
idea that I would win. The most won-<lb />
derful feeling of all was standing be-<lb />
fore all the citizens of Greenville,<lb />
knowing I would represent them ri<lb />
the Mis- North Caroiaa contest she<lb />
aided.<lb />
Sandra, an eighteen year old Fresh-<lb />
man with blond hoir and blue eyes,<lb />
is a French major. She is the daugh-<lb />
ter of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wrenn of<lb />
Cedar Grove, North Carolina and a<lb />
graduate of Aycock High School.<lb />
While in bign school, Sandra was<lb />
Homecoming Queen and a district<lb />
winner in the Dairy Princess Contest<lb />
Some of her activities included: Beta<lb />
Club, president; public speaking;<lb />
basketball captain; glee club; cheer-<lb />
leader; class officer; serretary of<lb />
Future Homemakers of America. She<lb />
was finalist in the state F. C. X. Essay<lb />
Coiitest.<lb />
SbsmNsv i Piesb.vterian. is an active<lb />
member in her church. She served as<lb />
president of the Presbyterian Youth<lb />
Fellowship for two years and sang in<lb />
he church choir.<lb />
For the contest, Sandra wore a<lb />
white evening dress with a round,<lb />
ace neckline. It had a full skirt with<lb />
a "southern belle" effect. In the swim<lb />
suit division of the contest, she donned<lb />
a plain black swim suit with a "dar-<lb />
' " low cut back.<lb />
In the swim suit, Sandra revealed<lb />
a 24'36" figure. She weighs 124<lb />
"Minds and is 5'7" tall.<lb />
Sandra presented an original skit,<lb />
"A Man Can't Win in the talent<lb />
division of the contest. The skit told<lb />
how she won her man as she schemed<lb />
her way through Spain, France, and<lb />
back to Dixie. The skit involved<lb />
three changes of costumes. ,<lb />
When asked the first question for<lb />
the finalists, "What kind of a man<lb />
would you marry? Sandra replied<lb />
calmly, "I would marry a man who<lb />
is kind, one who is understanding, and<lb />
one who has similar religious beliefs<lb />
to mine. And if he's just a little bit<lb />
like my dad, T don't think 111 have<lb />
my trouble.<lb />
To the second question, "What<lb />
would you do if someone gave you a<lb />
million dollars? she answered,<lb />
"First, I would provide funds for my<lb />
parents to retire. Second, I would con-<lb />
Mibute to the mental health institu-<lb />
tions, and third, I would build a house<lb />
for my sorority sisters in Sigma, Sig-<lb />
ma, Sigma<lb />
As Miss Greenville, Sandra will re-<lb />
ceive a cocktail dress, a street en-<lb />
semble, a swim suit, an 11x14 portrait,<lb />
a hat, satin evening slippers, shoes<lb />
and matching bag, a complexion kit,<lb />
and luggage.<lb />
SANDRA WRENN . . . An East Carolina freshman who captured the 19(30-<lb />
61 "li-s Greenville" titU h r- last week when she competed with 9 other<lb />
beauties in the annual event.<lb />
Sandra Wrenn, an ECC freshman, sored by Delta Zeta; Sharon Burt.<lb />
rowned tfiss Oreenville 1961 sponsored by Alpha Xi Delta, and<lb />
:ght in Wright Audi-<lb />
Nichols Notes Plans<lb />
Junior Class President Bill Ni-<lb />
chols made final announcements<lb />
this week concerning plans for the<lb />
Junior-Senior dance which will<lb />
take place from 8:00-11:30 in<lb />
Wright Auditorium April 22.<lb />
Nichols reminds all students<lb />
who are planning to attend the<lb />
dance, which features the Billy<lb />
May orchestra with Frankie Les-<lb />
ter, vocalist, thst dress for the<lb />
occasion will be formsl.<lb />
The decoration theme was an-<lb />
nounced as "A Night In Oriental<lb />
Gardens" and the class officers<lb />
have asked that persons interested<lb />
in helping decorate for the affair<lb />
to come to Wright building on<lb />
Tuesday night, April 19. Accord-<lb />
ing to the officers, many helpers<lb />
are needed.<lb />
last Thursdaj<lb />
torium.<lb />
The 18 year old Cedar Grove girl<lb />
was chosen from 10 contestants par-<lb />
ticipating in the contest which was<lb />
sponsored by the Greenville Junior<lb />
Chamber of Commerce.<lb />
1 tie five-foot, seven-inch blond<lb />
was sponsored in the contest by h"r<lb />
sorority, Sigma Sigma Sigma and<lb />
was crowned by last year's contest<lb />
winner, Alice Ann Home.<lb />
Contestants In the event were judg-<lb />
ed following three appearances; swim<lb />
suit, evening sown, and talent com-<lb />
petition. v<lb />
Judy Lynn Kingsmore was named<lb />
first runner up in the contest and<lb />
Mary Lee Lawrence was second run-<lb />
ner Up.<lb />
In addition to the Miss Greenville<lb />
title, the Winii.o received the offi-<lb />
cial trophy and a bouquet of red<lb />
roses.<lb />
She wfll also receive a $200 scholar-<lb />
ship to ECC, a cocktail dress, a street<lb />
ensemble, a swim suit, an 11 by 14<lb />
photo portrait, a hat, satin evening<lb />
slippers, shoes and matching bag, a<lb />
complexion kit, and luggage.<lb />
Other contestants in the pageant<lb />
"ere: Sandra Moon, sponsored by Al-<lb />
pha Delta; Barbara Jean Jones, spon-<lb />
Rachel Spivey, sponsored by Chi<lb />
Omega.<lb />
Also in the contest were Elizabeth<lb />
Rogers, representing Alpha Omi-<lb />
cron .Pi; Lana Bonr.er, sponsored by<lb />
the Civitan Club; and Mary Ellen<lb />
Brown who was sponsored by tht Ki-<lb />
wanis club.<lb />
Judges for the contest were Judi<lb />
Klipfel who is Miss North Carolina<lb />
i960, Sam Whitehurst, and Dr. Sid-<lb />
ney Christian.<lb />
The new Miss Greenville, will rep-<lb />
resent the town in the Miss North<lb />
Carolina beauty pageant in Julv.<lb />
Symphony Concert<lb />
The North Carolina Sympohny<lb />
Orchestra, under the direction of<lb />
Benjamin Swalin, will present a con-<lb />
cert in the Rocky Mount Senior High<lb />
School Auditorium at 8:00 p.m on<lb />
Thursday, April 21.<lb />
The sixty-member orchestra will<lb />
feature Wolfgang Fetsch, and East<lb />
Carolina faculty member, as guest<lb />
piano soloist. Dr. Fetsch is the 1959-<lb />
1960 Symphony Auditions soloist and<lb />
will perform the "Grieg Piano Con-<lb />
certo in A minor. Opus, 16<lb />
Chemistry Student<lb />
Betty Derrick, freshman science major, has been awarded "A<lb />
book of Chemistry and Physics' by the Chemical Rubber Company. She was<lb />
recipient of this award berause of her top score on a competitive chemistry<lb />
examination administered on the college campus. Her paper will be sub-<lb />
mitted for national competition. Miss Derrick is the daughter of Mr and<lb />
Mrs. J. O. Derrick, faculty members. <lb />
UT<lb /><pb facs="00038658_tn_0002" /><lb />
PAGE TWO<lb />
Staff Commends Wells<lb />
To Jim Speight, recently elected StJA<lb />
President, who took office following cere-<lb />
monies at the SGA banquet Monday night,<lb />
we offer our congratulations, and pledge<lb />
our support to his new administration, in<lb />
hopes that they will bring to the campus<lb />
next year a STRONGER student government.<lb />
And to Dallas Wells, outgoing SGA<lb />
President, we express our thanks for a job<lb />
 ell done. Wells has done an outstanding job.<lb />
This is especially true when one considers<lb />
the circumstances under which he worked.<lb />
We hope the new administration will see a<lb />
much more active senate and student body<lb />
Aith mor cooperation than Wells received.<lb />
Organizations Shy<lb />
Away From Public Eye<lb />
There are various organizations as well<lb />
as individuals, on campus who persistently<lb />
attempt to withhold news from the public.<lb />
Giving feeble excuses of "none of your<lb />
siness or "we don't want bad publicity<lb />
iv "someone could get hurt if this gets in<lb />
the paper they clam up like a box turtle<lb />
when a reporter comes near.<lb />
These organizations, by withholding<lb />
news, are leaving themselves open to much<lb />
sm. Many people hold that groups meet-<lb />
ing in secret are either trying to pull some-<lb />
time over on the public, have policies which<lb />
 can not defend should they become<lb />
known, or are discussing matters that are<lb />
trite to the point of embarrassment.<lb />
Two such organizations to date are the<lb />
ciariea and the Panhellenic Council.<lb />
Both of these organizations have failed<lb />
in attempts to give good excuses for their<lb />
closed meetings and last week some of the<lb />
: vidual sorority members were beginning<lb />
wonder why. At least three of them talked<lb />
this is an indication that many more<lb />
inking, but not talking yet.<lb />
Soon, very soon, we feel that the indi-<lb />
viduals on campus will wake up to the fact<lb />
that they control their various organizations<lb />
. . . not ice-versa.<lb />
When enough rumors start circulating,<lb />
an-1 the stink" gets so bad everyone on cam-<lb />
pus will know, these members will start such<lb />
a how that it will be heard by outsiders as<lb />
as the groups officers.<lb />
Frese members, not necessary presi-<lb />
nd vice-presidents, but the dues pay-<lb />
ing, meeting attending, members who never<lb />
much, will bring about the change.<lb />
A  only hope they haven't yet been<lb />
bluffed to the point that they can't thing for<lb />
mselves. If this has happened, or ever<lb />
happens, all is lost.<lb />
AST CABOEINIAN<lb />
THURSDAY, APRIL<lb /><lb />
c<lb />
NSA Meets; EC Absent<lb />
The thirteenth national student Con-<lb />
of the United States National Student<lb />
Association will meet from August 22 to<lb />
September 1 of I960. Too had East Carolina<lb />
1 not be represented. We remember the<lb />
day- wren Kcr could sit on this Congress<lb />
with other schools in the nation and express<lb />
her opinion on integration or academic stan-<lb />
dards, or educational policies, or etc. . . .<lb />
Unfortunately, East Carolina is no long-<lb />
er a member of this organization. Last year<lb />
meone yelled "commie and another ans-<lb />
wered "red infiltrated and in what could<lb />
well be an SGA record breaker a vote was<lb />
called and "pow" we were out. The student<lb />
body never knew about it until it was all over<lb />
. . . too bad.<lb />
Wonder how many students would be<lb />
interested in knowing the facts about this<lb />
organization? Wonder how many are famil-<lb />
iar with the fact that it was a scapegoat dur-<lb />
ing the McCarthy er;i? Wonder how many<lb />
gullible souls have swallowed bad propagan-<lb />
da about it without ever investigating?<lb />
The recently elected SGA President has<lb />
to look into the matter of future USNSA af-<lb />
filiation. We only hope the student body will<lb />
follow suit and make themselves a little more<lb />
informed on an issue which is of utmost im-<lb />
portance to them.<lb />
East Carolinian<lb />
Published by I denti 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 />
Jo Anne Parks<lb />
Managing Editor<lb />
Associate Editor<lb />
Campus Editor<lb />
Sports Editor<lb />
News Editor<lb />
Feature Editor<lb />
Assistant Sports Editor<lb />
Pat Harvey<lb />
Roy Martin<lb />
Betty Maynor<lb />
Leonard Lao<lb />
Jasper Jones<lb />
Marcelle Vogel<lb />
Merle Summers<lb />
Sports Staff Norman Ki!patrick, Jerry Nance<lb />
Photographer Skip Wamsley<lb />
Cartoonist Jay Arledge<lb />
Corresponding Secretary Patsy Elliott<lb />
Proofreading Director Gwen Johnson<lb />
Proofreading Staff Lynda Simmons, Jasper Jones,<lb />
Patsy Elliott, Sue Sparkman, Chick Lancaster,<lb />
Jerry Nance, Burleigh Hill, Freddie Skinner<lb />
Reporters Evelyn Crutchfield, Marcelle Vogel,<lb />
Charlotte Donat, Gwen Johnson, Patsy Elliott,<lb />
Jasper Jones, Anne Francis Allen, Bob Goodwin,<lb />
Sue Sparkman, Sam Hudson<lb />
Columnists Mike Katsias, Marcelle Vogel,<lb />
Derry Walker, Pat Harvey, Roy Martin, Jasper<lb />
Jones<lb />
Women's Circulation Manager Susan Ballance<lb />
Men's Circulation Manager Carlyle Humphrey<lb />
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb />
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.<lb />
LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS<lb />
- <lb />
AS SEEN BY '<lb />
u<lb />
X ?.<lb />
$J&amp;h<lb />
$SjfF<lb />
IgeftRVg <lb />
Teacher Criticizes College Big Words Change Life<lb />
K'<lb />
'$<lb />
Hi UMt6<lb />
UMeltiC9mfut'<lb />
gpnjpa,<lb />
1&amp; Tr<lb />
o<lb />
jfe mmtoM<lb />
' J<lb />
S-22<lb />
Kn Garde<lb />
. call<lb />
Sure, They Drink In Beauty!<lb />
Horror<lb />
Word from Wilmington<lb />
is that all is rot well among mem-<lb />
bers of the Wilmington Azalea Fes-<lb />
tival, Inc. It seems that some of the<lb />
members feel that sex is being em-<lb />
phasized rather than the Azaleas . . .<lb />
Perhaps some of you who make the<lb />
annual pilgrimage better and tell<lb />
those disturbed members that when<lb />
you g to the Festival, you spend<lb />
the entire week-end drinking in the<lb />
beauty of the glorious Azalea . . .<lb />
Is it true Have the PiKA's<lb />
lost their "Dream Girl" to Lambda<lb />
Chi? It seems that Lambda Chi is<lb />
really gloating over this fact. But<lb />
PiKA, bless'em, still know how to<lb />
separate the men from the boys . . .<lb />
North Carolina made national<lb />
headlines this past week, when a<lb />
Hendersonville justice of the peace<lb />
tied the knot for Remington heiress,<lb />
Gamble Benedict and Romanian-brn<lb />
Andre Porumbeanu. How wondeiful<lb />
ist he, to be a party to the party<lb />
of the first part in an internationally<lb />
discussed romance. . .<lb />
A topic of campus discussion la<lb />
the E.C.C. sandwiches being sold by<lb />
soda shop. . . It seems that one<lb />
1 as to he on the verge of starvation<lb />
before purchasing said sandwich to<lb />
devour.<lb />
Has anyone noticed the spring beau-<lb />
ty of our campus. The trees are he-<lb />
i'inning to show that first teasing<lb />
glimpse of greenery and the flowers<lb />
are tempting the sun with their hazy<lb />
huv of pink, white, yellow, and pur-<lb />
ple . . . Just a short walk around the<lb />
campus should give one the soul soar-<lb />
ing ambition to do wonders in the<lb />
classroom.<lb />
Of all things . . . Heard the editor<lb />
of the campus literary magazine<lb />
humming "And They Called It Pup-<lb />
py Love Does this mean that his<lb />
Speight Extends<lb />
ireciation For<lb />
Election Support<lb />
Dear Editor,<lb />
I would like to express my sincere<lb />
appreciation to the students for their<lb />
support in the past SGA election. I<lb />
feel that with a continuation of sup-<lb />
port and participation, much can be<lb />
contributed towards the betterment<lb />
of our Student Government Associa-<lb />
tion.<lb />
I have seen some very worth-while<lb />
programs that were initiated in past<lb />
administrations and I would like to<lb />
ee them continued.<lb />
I am looking forward to taking of-<lb />
fice because I have other worth-<lb />
while projects in mind that T feel<lb />
would benefit the student body.<lb />
I plan to work, to the best of my<lb />
hility, toward the accomplishment<lb />
of my platform goals and toward a<lb />
better, all-round Student Government<lb />
Association.<lb />
I am looking forward to working<lb />
for the students and with the stu-<lb />
dents. I want them to feel welcome<lb />
in the SGA office at any time.<lb />
Sincerely,<lb />
Jim Speight<lb />
By PAT FARMER<lb />
love for the Hebe! has reached ma-<lb />
turity0 Seriously though, Mr. Wil-<lb />
liams has made a fine editor this year<lb />
and has worked diligently to produce<lb />
I magazine worthy of the student<lb />
body. <lb />
Spring Holidays begin tomorrow<lb />
take care and drive safely . . . After<lb />
all, the life you save may be mine. . .<lb />
No Comment.<lb />
(DPS) Not satisfied with finding<lb />
thai students "go to college because<lb />
it's the thing to do and that a "col-<lb />
lege degree has become a H. $ to<lb />
most students David Boroff, the<lb />
Brooklyn College English instructor<lb />
who has recently been criticizing<lb />
American education, has now leveled<lb />
his sights at the faculties, curricula,<lb />
and administrations of America<lb />
colleges and universities.<lb />
In an article in Harper's Magazine:<lb />
"American Colleges: What Their<lb />
( atah.gues Never Tell You Boroff<lb />
observed that "college professors and<lb />
students are actors in a vast comedy;<lb />
mad travesty of solemn ritual,<lb />
wasted time, and trumped up claims<lb />
Basing his findings on a two-year<lb />
study of a dozen campuses, where<lb />
he talked with residents, deans, pro-<lb />
fessors and students, Boroff found<lb />
fault w;th much of America's higher<lb />
educational institutions.<lb />
From scholarly journals to extra-<lb />
curricular activities, from professors<lb />
to students, and from administrators<lb />
ti, curriculums, Boroff concluded that<lb />
colleges can be divided into two<lb />
categories; "those which we might<lb />
adolescent reservations, fenced<lb />
off from serious adult concerns, ind<lb />
those which represent a transition to<lb />
adulthood<lb />
Pertaining to curriculum and teach-<lb />
ing, Boroff complained about the<lb />
scarcity of new ideas, depth and<lb />
readth. "Talk to students and you<lb />
can compile a bleak anthology of<lb />
boredom, inertia, and ineptness among<lb />
teacher<lb />
To combat the creeping lethargy<lb />
that encompasses faculty, Boroff sug-<lb />
pested establishing visiting professor-<lb />
ships or lectureships for talented out-<lb />
siders, like bu siness men, journalist,<lb />
oi trade-union people.<lb />
fe<lb />
A<lb />
Also, he proposes more seminars<lb />
for the exchange of ideas and teams<lb />
of teachers handling the same class<lb />
in opposition to each other. In this<lb />
manner, Boroff hopes to stimulate<lb />
not only students, but also stagnant<lb />
professors.<lb />
Boroff was very critical of pro-<lb />
isors and their "rage to publish<lb />
I the writer termed it: "There is,<lb />
no doubt, an organic connection be-<lb />
tween first-hand scholarship and<lb />
teaching. There can be a special ex-<lb />
( itement for the student in contact<lb />
m ith a mind working on the frontiers<lb />
of knowledge. On the other hand,<lb />
there has to b" a halt to the trivi-il-<lb />
ization of scholarship, the rage to<lb />
ibiish These journals Boroff term-<lb />
ed "a floodtide of the dull and re<lb />
titive an expanse of spirit in a waste<lb />
of footnotes<lb />
An important point in BorofTs<lb />
criticism was that the basic skills<lb />
should be taught in high school, and<lb />
that the arts should be the domain<lb />
of the college instead of what is now<lb />
j.n inadequate combination of both.<lb />
On extra-curricular activities, Bo-<lb />
roff commented that "the brash im-<lb />
I erialism of personal services and<lb />
tudent activities strive to dominate<lb />
the students' private and social like<lb />
. . . The administration lays down<lb />
the ground rules and acts as um-<lb />
pire foi the nursery games Boroff<lb />
contracted today's "organized fun"<lb />
with the horseplay of the twenties.<lb />
He said "at least the hellraisers<lb />
then were autonomous. Their infanta<lb />
ism wasn't sponsored by the adminis-<lb />
tration<lb />
"We aie no v in a position to try<lb />
to leap for excellence Boroff con-<lb />
cludes. "We have the students; we<lb />
 retJ have the teachers. All we need<lb />
is the will<lb />
Japanese Flower Arrangements<lb />
Decorations Express Oriental Culture<lb />
Appi<lb />
(EDITORS NOTE: This article is<lb />
the second of a three part series in<lb />
which the author, an excange student<lb />
from Japan, gives some explanation<lb />
of the character of Japanese culture.<lb />
This week he has written an analogy<lb />
to explain the spirit and meaning in-<lb />
volved in flower arrangement.)<lb />
By HIDEO K US AM A<lb />
In Japan, flower arrangement has<lb />
been developed as the indoor decora-<lb />
tion of architectures which are seen<lb />
through the history of Shinden Zu-<lb />
luri (house for the noble) in Heian<lb />
era, of Shoin Zukuri (house for sam-<lb />
urai) in Muromachi era and of So-<lb />
An Tea Room in Edo era.<lb />
Our interests in beautiful floweis<lb />
that comfort our minds must be the<lb />
same in any country. That flowers<lb />
blooming naturally in the field parti-<lb />
cularly .attract our attentions. Never-<lb />
theless, people used to pick them<lb />
up te arrange at home. Why?<lb />
So far as the Japanese flower ar-<lb />
rangement is concerned we can find<lb />
the answer in the following three<lb />
elements.<lb />
1. We have something that is not<lb />
satisfied in the natural beauty only.<lb />
Z. We are hoping to open the mys-<lb />
tic door of the nature and to see<lb />
what it is.<lb />
 We have a creative spirit hoping<lb />
to express the nature in our better<lb />
ideas. In other words<lb />
(1) is our desire to seek the truth<lb />
which refers to the science.<lb />
(2) is our desire to seek the good-<lb />
will which refers to the morality.<lb />
(3) is our deeire to seek the beau-<lb />
ty which refers to the arts.<lb />
Flowers have thus been arranged<lb />
in Japan.<lb />
The Appeal of Flowers<lb />
(As the guidance to appreciate the<lb />
oriental culture)<lb />
One evening four centuries ago in<lb />
Japan a young samurai was passing<lb />
an ancient pond surrounded by for-<lb />
ests on his way to his castle. He sud-<lb />
denly realized something, a light<lb />
winking before him, rrfomentarily he<lb />
.ssumed a posture of self-defense on<lb />
his horse and watched carefully<lb />
whether it was an enemy or not.<lb />
When the light flashed again he<lb />
jumped to the ground and prepared<lb />
to attack the stranger with a sharp<lb />
sword in his hand.<lb />
In the light of the beautiful Aug-<lb />
ist moon he dimly glimpsed a naked<lb />
little child playing in the water a-<lb />
round the root of a big fallen tree.<lb />
In the next moment, he realized that<lb />
this was not a human child but a fairy<lb />
of a<lb />
just<lb />
i pot<lb />
pine tree altough it was in fact<lb />
a branch growing up from a<lb />
of a fallen giant tree.<lb />
The samurai understood that the<lb />
spirit of the old tree was still living<lb />
and sined jewel-like at night which<lb />
for a while enveloped him into a<lb />
fairy's world.<lb />
The old pine tree fallen before him<lb />
must have been the king of the forest<lb />
through centuries, he decided to take<lb />
the new branch with him to is cas-<lb />
tle.<lb />
Hideyosi Tojrotomf, lord of the<lb />
castle was very glad to find the un-<lb />
expected gift from the samurai. The<lb />
lord hoped<lb />
matei ia at<lb />
to arrange the unusual<lb />
his Tokonoma, the best<lb />
I MHMHHHI<lb />
Typical<lb />
Culture.<lb />
Expression of Japanese<lb />
portion of the tea room reserved for<lb />
the hanging scroll and the flower ar-<lb />
rangement.<lb />
First, the chief arranger of the<lb />
castle was called before the lord. He<lb />
cheerfully tried to arrange the mater-<lb />
ial in his way as he had done for a<lb />
long time. However, he realized that<lb />
the pine branch was too vigorous to<lb />
obey his harsh hands. He hurried a<lb />
little, the more he did, the more vio-<lb />
lently the pine challenged the master<lb />
and at last he was forced to go away<lb />
in disappointment.<lb />
Several more arrangers were call-<lb />
ed and tried to arrange one by one<lb />
kit none of them could do satisfac-<lb />
' (i ily. The vigorous pine never obeyed<lb />
he man-made rules. The story was<lb />
spread out fro n castle town to castle<lb />
town.<lb />
After seven! days a young mm<lb />
appeared at the castle and offered<lb />
service. The man had a crew cut,<lb />
wore a black coat and was recog-<lb />
nized at a glance his purpose for<lb />
coming.<lb />
ruing before the lord, he bowed<lb />
-iiently, then his heart was strictly<lb />
rmonized with that of the people<lb />
and materials i iside of the tea room.<lb />
In his prayers, the young man faced<lb />
 pine hianch and touched it.<lb />
The pine began to move as if it<lb />
were in the forest, leaf to leaf,<lb />
branch to branch. The great fantasy<lb />
rreated by them had begun to unfold<lb />
throughout the room, which recalled<lb />
u thousand stories, happy and sad,<lb />
ich had happened to it in the for-<lb />
est.<lb />
No one could realize when he left<lb />
the flower, for his heart was com-<lb />
pletely harmonized with that of the<lb />
 inc. The harmony was also seen<lb />
among the people and everything<lb />
ii side of the room.<lb />
Hideyoshi, the famous feudal lord<lb />
rejoiced that he offered himself to<lb />
be the patron of the young arranger<lb />
whose name is Sen-NoRikkyu, the<lb />
great master of the tea ceremony who<lb />
opened the way to today's Cha-no-yu<lb />
(tea ceremony) vulture.<lb />
This is the expression of the basic<lb />
spirit to appreciate the oriental cul-<lb />
ture. How it is possible for the Cha-<lb />
i o-yu culture to contribute more<lb />
progressive and democratic leader-<lb />
ship for the future Japan and world<lb />
in this coming space age will be de-<lb />
scribed in the next series.<lb />
Lost And Found<lb />
DOST AND FOUND<lb />
Dean Mai lory announced this<lb />
week that several books and an<lb />
umbrella have been turned in to<lb />
his office. The owner can claim<lb />
the lost articles by identifying<lb />
them.<lb />
"The art of conversation is prob-<lb />
ably languishing because nobody<lb />
nowdays has time to listenD. O.<lb />
Flynn.<lb />
"Some students drink at the foun-<lb />
tain of knowledge. Others just far-<lb />
gleBaptist &amp; Reflector.<lb />
Hit ROY MARTIX<lb />
This u the saga of gno Mekn<lb />
Igno was born in a dirty little towseaj<lb />
ed Jacov, right smack in the middi<lb />
Russian Ukraine just before the B<lb />
came to power.<lb />
Igno pfw up rerj f I<lb />
fed were bigger than thoa<lb />
and sisters. His brothers and<lb />
shoes, lined with sable to <lb />
frostbite which could cam r'<lb />
leg if it was had enough. Ig<lb />
any shoes for his feel becausi<lb />
and sisters had spent a<lb />
shoe money for their H- ha : .<lb />
Egno's feel were alwaj<lb />
they would yet - col<lb />
He stood it for awrile, but tl<lb />
OH a plan whereby he could<lb />
It really wasn't a plan .<lb />
sort of came to Igno iu1 . .<lb />
ther was sitting in a chaii<lb />
comfortable, so Igiu<lb />
began to carry out his plan.<lb />
He did hand<lb />
a cartwheel or two. His 1 I<lb />
his expression Seeing I<lb />
wouldn't work. Igno<lb />
if I read t Father lik<lb />
Maybe that would d<lb />
So Igno picked up i<lb />
written by a great phi<lb />
and began to read. The big w<lb />
falter and stop sometime<lb />
hard as he could. He had '<lb />
realize that no matter how <lb />
he ua as smart as the<lb />
served a pair of shoes isl ke<lb />
After Igno had <lb />
father's eyes began to tal<lb />
u ith the bitf feet t bel<lb />
would read a page, then lool<lb />
man in the chair and smi<lb />
between paragraphs.<lb />
Suddenly, Igno'a fat:  . I<lb />
out of the bouse. Awhile Uter,<lb />
with a package under his am <lb />
up when his father  I<lb />
caught the package when fa<lb />
to him.<lb />
Itfno opened the packa.<lb />
pair of shoes, just like hi thers and<lb />
ters wore. He was happy.<lb />
Igno saw that his plan ha : .<lb />
so he went through life doing r<lb />
and cartwheels, and reading<lb />
all the people with whom he cam<lb />
He was a fairly successful mai<lb />
One day however, gi<lb />
was out of money, and it<lb />
more handsprings, cartwheels e1<lb />
to live as he had been living.<lb />
He left his house, and wenl . I<lb />
the rich man who lived on the<lb />
in and began to perform for tin<lb />
he would benefit as he had -<lb />
before.<lb />
In the midst of a hands<lb />
a p.iin in his chest, and blav<lb />
were cold too  .<lb />
Prof Steps Too Far<lb />
By DERRY WALKER<lb />
A biology professor at the Univi<lb />
Illinois was fired last week for expressing<lb />
an opinion in the school new-<lb />
attempting to be reinstated, and I<lb />
involves the old controversial issue<lb />
freedom of speech.<lb />
It seems that the professor, Le<lb />
Ph. D wrote a letter to the<lb />
paper. Th Daily Mini, that o<lb />
comment among others: "A mutua<lb />
factory sexual experience would i:e<lb />
the need for many hours of frustratii<lb />
ting and lead to a much happier and<lb />
lasting marriage among our young :<lb />
The whole letter advocated pre-marital re-<lb />
lations, and supported its argument wit<lb />
"students who limit themselves to pet<lb />
may indicate an extreme degree of or.<lb />
washing by our religious and civil author.<lb />
in the name of virtue and purity<lb />
It's true that in this country we have<lb />
privilege of talking and writing as we pie<lb />
and this is certainly a gift A gift that cost<lb />
us a couple of centuries, a few billion lives<lb />
and enough gold to fill the state of South<lb />
Carolina. And when a man who has two dec-<lb />
ades of education behind his brow, a position<lb />
in front of a college classroom, a wife and<lb />
three children, and a comfortable home, can't<lb />
combine his intelligence, experience, and<lb />
sense of responsibility to formulate the ideas<lb />
that a tobacco cropper recognizes as common<lb />
sense, it's time to give the country back to<lb />
Chief Wahoo.<lb />
Dr. David Henry, President of the Uni-<lb />
ersity, in a letter to the Dean said: "I con-<lb />
sider Professor Koch's letter a grave breach<lb />
of academic responsibility. The views ex-<lb />
pressed are offensive and repugnant, con-<lb />
trary to commonly accepted standards of<lb />
morality, and their public espusal may be<lb />
interpreted as encouragement of immoral<lb />
behavior<lb />
The good Dr. Henry didn't say enough;<lb />
at least we didn't hear it if he did. Maybe<lb />
someday, the cultural pattern of the United<lb />
states will be in agreement with Koch'9<lb />
views, but I doubt it.<lb />
We get right ashamed when we see some-<lb />
one use (damn) good newspaper space for<lb />
expressing an idea like that. There are<lb />
enough troubles around us right now to last<lb />
this country the rest of the century. Right<lb />
?T7i Y a011 unity is at the Iowest ebb in <lb />
United States, when we look up to the people<lb />
m higher stations to direct us and keep the<lb />
country moving, a University egghead tells<lb />
us that it's o. k. for young people to rent<lb />
motel rooms.<lb />
 -<lb />
ii<lb /><pb facs="00038658_tn_0003" /><lb />
RSPAY. APRIL lj 1SHSQ<lb />
Vv'insberg<lb />
For Work<lb />
H JASPER JONES<lb />
M, : i P. Winsberg, who has<lb />
 iwarded a fellowship<lb />
, it-in-aki for a year of itudy<lb />
America, considers this hon-<lb />
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
PAGE<lb />
R<lb />
c<lb />
Of<lb />
it<lb />
Dr<lb />
en<lb />
the Social Science Research<lb />
an early climax to his<lb />
tdemic work in geography.<lb />
Win sherd's work will be a<lb />
Jewish agricultural col-<lb />
ffhich ivti been in existence<lb />
wars of the Nineteenth<lb />
when anti-Semitic feeling<lb />
adt of Jevs from East-<lb />
Argentina. Their set-<lb />
made possible by Baron<lb />
Hirseh, who bought ap-<lb />
1.500,000 acres of land<lb />
em in Argentina.<lb />
study says Dr. Winsberg,<lb />
encompass three of my major<lb />
rural economy and geo-<lb />
atin American study, and<lb />
illy interested in these<lb />
i st- of my common heri-<lb />
 he adds. "My grand-<lb />
g to America during the<lb />
:ogromas which drove<lb />
Lithuania, Estonia,<lb />
other European coun-<lb />
l<lb />
eceives<lb />
In South<lb />
Dr. Winsberg was born in Chicago<lb />
Conservative Jewish parents.<lb />
His mother died when he was young,<lb />
and when he was five years old his<lb />
father moved the family to Wood-<lb />
stock, Illinois, a dairying community<lb />
sixty miles from Chicago. Here Dr<lb />
Winsberg attended Todd School, a<lb />
private secondary school.<lb />
At the University 0f Illinois, Dr.<lb />
Winsberg received the degrees of<lb />
B. S. ond M. S and he later re-<lb />
ceived his Ph. D. at the University<lb />
of Florida. He did research on agri-<lb />
culture in the Isle of Pines for his<lb />
doctorate.<lb />
A faculty member at East Carolina<lb />
since 1958, Dr. Winsberg is known to<lb />
students and faculty as an advocate<lb />
of higher academic standards and<lb />
more interest In cultural events. He<lb />
states that he has "especially en-<lb />
joyed playing a role in the fight for<lb />
increased academic standards through<lb />
work in the A.A.U.P. and the Dan-<lb />
forth Foundation<lb />
Dr. Winsberg, who will be leaving<lb />
in August for hi year in Argentina<lb />
adds: "To receive a Social Science<lb />
Research Council grant is perhaps<lb />
one of the greater academic honors<lb />
that has been bestowed upon me.<lb />
tudy Grant<lb />
Am<lb />
erica<lb />
Dr. Winsberg<lb />
Normally grants of this nature are<lb />
given to much more mature schol-<lb />
ars. I sincerely hope that I will be<lb />
able to justify the confidence that<lb />
the Council has shown in me. I know<lb />
I will return to East Carolina much<lb />
mort enlightened as to the problems<lb />
of Latin America. I hope this will<lb />
add much to my course in the geo-<lb />
graphy of South America<lb />
April Events<lb />
I 1 K.Hster<lb />
asswork resumes<lb />
  Match: EOC vs. Atlantic<lb />
.iii. 1:00 p.m.<lb />
Baseball Game: Wake Fo-<lb />
tegc Field, 8:00 p.m.<lb />
Quarter Table Tennis<lb />
t, College Union, 6:30<lb />
tainment Series: Carlos<lb />
Guitarist, Wright And<lb />
f Glamour' Announces Selection<lb />
Of Nation's Best Dressed Co-eds<lb />
ng<lb />
V.<lb />
.m.<lb />
 ge Union Studen<lb />
wr. t:30 p.m.<lb />
- of Table Tenms<lb />
 ,C l'ege Union, 6:30<lb />
Beginners' Bridge Class, College<lb />
TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb />
 Junior-Senior Dance, Billy<lb />
Wright Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb />
Tennis Match: 2nd Annual<lb />
oa Championship, All Day<lb />
M v. "Best of Everything<lb />
Aud 7:00 p.m.<lb />
bershop Quartet and Dixie<lb />
- v. featuring Greensboro Quar-<lb />
Wright Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb />
26Duplicate Bridge, College<lb />
m TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb />
forth Lecture: Dr. Frank<lb />
tam, Austin Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb />
26- SQA Musical, "Annie Get<lb />
: Gun McGinnis, 8:00 p.m.<lb />
27 -Bloudmobile, Wright Bldg.<lb />
9GA Musical, "Annie Get Your<lb />
McGinnis, 8:00 p.m.<lb />
28 Beginners' Bridge Class,<lb />
iege Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb />
- Musical, Annie Get Yonr<lb />
McGinnis, 8:00 p.m.<lb />
Co lege Union Committee Meet-<lb />
; 6 :3fl p.m.<lb />
English druggist, John Walker.<lb />
the first friction match in<lb />
The results of Glamour Incorporat-<lb />
ing Charm's fourth annual "10 Best<lb />
Dressed College Girls in America<lb />
contest were anminced recently by<lb />
Kathleen Aston Casey. Editor-in-<lb />
Chief.<lb />
The ten outstanding young college<lb />
women selected by the magazine for<lb />
best-dressed honors are: Barbara Al-<lb />
ien, UCLA Los Angeles, California;<lb />
Norma Collier, Wilson College, Cham-<lb />
lersburg, Pennsylvania; Janet Day,<lb />
Hood College, Frederick, Maryland;<lb />
Jean Edmond, Purdue University,<lb />
West Lafayette, Indiana; Laura Ham-<lb />
mock, Randolph-Macon, Lynchburg,<lb />
Virginia; Carol Housenick, Blooms-<lb />
burg State College, Bloomsburg,<lb />
Pennsylvania; Eliza Kellogg, Rad-<lb />
eliffe College, Cambridge, Massachu-<lb />
setts; Elizabeth Newsom, Pembroke<lb />
College, Providence, Rhode Island;<lb />
Marilynn Smith, University of Wis-<lb />
consin, Madison, Wisconsin; Mary<lb />
Elizabeth Spoon, Converse College,<lb />
Snartanburg, South Carolina.<lb />
To help Glamour find these young<lb />
women, hundreds of colleges across<lb />
the country and in Canada conduct-<lb />
ed on-campus contests to select their<lb />
best dressed girl.<lb />
The judging points used in both<lb />
the on-campus competitions and by<lb />
the Glamour editors were: 1. Good<lb />
figure, beautiful posture. 2. Clean,<lb />
shining, well-kept hair. 3. Imagination<lb />
in managing a clothes budget. 4. Good<lb />
groomingnot just neat but impec-<lb />
cable. 5. Appropriate campus look<lb />
(she's in line with local customs).<lb />
6 A clear understanding of her<lb />
fashion type. 7. Individuality in her<lb />
use of fashion color, accessories. 8. A<lb />
workable wardrobe plan. 9. A neat<lb />
way with make-up (enough to look<lb />
pretty, not overdone). 10. Appropri-<lb />
atenot rah rah look for off cam-<lb />
these points, photographs of each of<lb />
the local winners in an on-campus<lb />
daytime outfit, an off-campus day-<lb />
time outfit, a date dress and an entry<lb />
form were sent to the magazine.<lb />
The ten winners will be featured<lb />
prominently in the August College Is-<lb />
sue of Glamour Incorporating Charm<lb />
and in June will be flown to New<lb />
York via American Airlines for a<lb />
two week visit as Glamour's guests.<lb />
Everett Announces<lb />
Winners In Recent<lb />
Science Exhibition<lb />
Winners in the Northeastern Dis-<lb />
trict Science Fair, held here, have<lb />
been announced by Dr. Grover Ever-<lb />
ett of the college science faculty, dir-<lb />
ector of the fair.<lb />
Students chosen in preliminary<lb />
contests in twenty-two counties of<lb />
the state exhibited their projects at<lb />
the college Friday, April 1, in the<lb />
Wright building. A large number of<lb />
visitors saw the exhibition during<lb />
the day.<lb />
Five winners in the Senior Physi-<lb />
cal Science Division, Dr. Everett an-<lb />
nounced, became eligible to compete<lb />
in the State Science Fair at State<lb />
College Raleigh, April 15-16. Charles<lb />
Lee Kling of Washington, top win-<lb />
ner in this division, received a slide<lb />
rule for his project showing the lub-<lb />
rication qualities of graphite at vari-<lb />
ous altitudes.<lb />
The four other students whose pro-<lb />
jects in the physical sciences were<lb />
judged best are Jerry Causey of Grif-<lb />
ton, Robert Foster, Jr of Kinston,<lb />
Tommy Henderson of Greenville, and<lb />
Anne Briley of Greenville.<lb />
Jerry Atkinson of Kinston headed<lb />
award winners in the Senior Biolog-<lb />
ical Science Division and received a<lb />
microscope in recognition of his<lb />
achievement. His project showed the<lb />
value of gibberellic acid in plant<lb />
growth.<lb />
Other winners in this category, all<lb />
of whom became eligible to compete<lb />
in the State Science Fair, are Ben<lb />
lfo(e of Farmville, Alice Skinner of<lb />
Ayaen, Andrew Kilpatrick of Green-<lb />
ville, and Julie Ann Doolittle of<lb />
Kinston. v<lb />
In the Junior Physical Science Di-<lb />
vision, for students in grades seven<lb />
through nine, winners are Chuck<lb />
Wright of Washington, Robert Trip-<lb />
lett of Grifton, and Sammy Dewar<lb />
of Bethel.<lb />
Top honors in the Junior Biological<lb />
'Miss Pitt County'<lb />
News In Brief<lb />
Among the many festivities planned<lb />
for the June trip are Glamour's an- I Science Division went to Mary Langs-<lb />
pus occasions.<lb />
To enable Glamour to judge on I Charm<lb />
nual College Fashion Show for 500<lb />
retailers and a gala Cotillion for the<lb />
Benefit of the Institute of Interna-<lb />
tional Education at the Waldorf As-<lb />
toria on June 2nd. The Cotillion will<lb />
be preceded by a dinner given by the<lb />
staff of the Princeton Tiger in honor<lb />
of the "10 Best Dressed College<lb />
Girls<lb />
In her announcement, Mrs. Casey<lb />
also stated that so many of the young<lb />
women entered in the contest were<lb />
so truly outstanding that the selec-<lb />
tion of ten Honorable Mention win-<lb />
ners were made. They are: Gail Aber-<lb />
nethy, University of Mississippi, Uni-<lb />
versity, Mississippi; Judith Babing-<lb />
ton, Texas Woman's University, Den-<lb />
ton, Texas; Mary Parker Coulter,<lb />
Mississippi State College for Women,<lb />
Columbus, Mississippi; Toodie Green,<lb />
Connecticut College, New London,<lb />
Connecticut; Betty Ann Marcum, Uni-<lb />
versity of Kentucky, Lexington, Ken-<lb />
tucky; Susan Morris, College of Notre<lb />
Dame, Baltimore, Maryland; I?.ihel<lb />
Nicole, Good Council College, White<lb />
Plains, New York; Sally Ann Ricker.<lb />
Centenary College for Women, Hac-<lb />
kettstown, New Jersey; Mary Roeck-<lb />
ner, University of Dayton, Dayton,<lb />
Ohio; Jane Rubel, College Misericor-<lb />
dia, Dallas, Pennsylvania.<lb />
Plans are being made to feature<lb />
the Honorabe Mention winners in a<lb />
fall issue of Glamour Incorporating<lb />
ton and Corinne Jackson of Winter-<lb />
ville, Jack Cummings and Neal<lb />
Adams of Rocky Mount, and Wilson<lb />
Clark, Jr of Kinston.<lb />
Awards presented to the two sen-<lb />
ior winners were donated by the<lb />
Eastern North Carolina section of the<lb />
American Chemical Society.<lb />
Rebecca Parker Represents National 4-H<lb />
Clubs; Meets Veep In Report To Nation<lb />
Rebecca Parker, an EC coed from senate had a "5?<lb />
confusion they all finished their meal<lb />
: N. C. recently was one of<lb />
M national 4-H club members to<lb />
Bt the 4-H Club report to the<lb /><lb />
The five day trip was a whirlwind<lb />
do, and people to meet,<lb />
timed the vivacious 4-H'er.<lb />
"One of the most exciting events of<lb />
was meeting and chatting<lb />
Vice President Nixon said<lb />
Becky They met him in his formal<lb />
in the capitol, where he had<lb />
ecial trip from the White<lb />
House to visit with the 4-H'ers, t<lb />
least this is what we think she<lb />
ai.<lb />
"I presented Mr. Nixon with a copy<lb />
the 4-H report said Becky, which<lb />
passed on to the TimUOVK <lb />
riginally intended for the Pre-<lb />
sident, but he had just returned from<lb />
Sooth American tour, and the<lb />
proap was unable to see him.<lb />
"I was very impressed with Mr.<lb />
n commented Becky. "He was<lb />
wry nice, and very interested in u<lb />
end the 4-H program<lb />
Besides visiting with the Vice Pre-<lb />
sident, the group met and visited<lb />
with congressmen, senators, and<lb />
' ther top officials. "Dining with the<lb />
Senators and congreaanitm fWM <lb />
fcwn districts was fun exclaimed<lb />
Becky, "but the Civil (Rights issue was<lb />
eoing on and during our luncheon<lb />
the house had three roll calls, nd the<lb />
Some of the people they met while<lb />
on the trip were Mr. C. M. Ferguson,<lb />
Administrator of Federal Extension<lb />
Service; Ass't. Secretary of Agricul-<lb />
ture Patterson; and Sec. of Agricul-<lb />
ture Ezra Taft Benson.<lb />
Press Conferences were common on<lb />
this trip, and the group was interview-<lb />
ed by reporters from The Evening<lb />
Star, the Washington Post, and the<lb />
local Detroit papers, and also Seven-<lb />
mgton, D. C. the group was flown by<lb />
Dupont's (one of their sponsors) pri-<lb />
vate plane to Wilmington, Delaware,<lb />
and then to Detroit, Michigan. "The<lb />
plane was beautiful commented<lb />
Pecky, "with cushioned arm chairs,<lb />
-ofas, and dadios Here also, in Del-<lb />
aware, and Detroit, the club members<lb />
gave their 4-H report.<lb />
Becky, who has been very active<lb />
in club work all her life, believes that<lb />
the 4-H club is one means of prevent-<lb />
ing juvenile delinquency. "Everyone<lb />
needs something worthwhile to do,<lb />
teen Mayazme.<lb />
During the trip the 4-H members to have a feeling of being needed,<lb />
iooeared in several panel discussions said Becky, "and I believe that 4-H<lb />
at luncheons, and over TV and radio, is one conclusion. 4-H is full of res-<lb />
After their four day stay in Wash- ponsibilities and helps one to develop<lb />
his mental, social, spiritual, and<lb />
physical needs<lb />
"This trip was one which I wouldn't<lb />
exchange for anything exclaimed<lb />
Becky, "and I'll always remember it<lb />
as one of the nicest experiences of<lb />
my life<lb />
PLACEMENT BUREAU-<lb />
GRADUATES AND<lb />
FORMER GRADUATES<lb />
Representatives from the fol-<lb />
lowing school systems and firm<lb />
will be on campus after Easter<lb />
Holidays to interview interested<lb />
students. If you would like to talk<lb />
with one or more of these repre-<lb />
sentatives, please come to the<lb />
Placement Bureau and sign up for<lb />
an interview by 4:30 p.m Thurs-<lb />
day, April 14.<lb />
TEACHING:<lb />
Williamsburg  James City<lb />
County, VirginiaPrimary, Gra-<lb />
mmar, Elementary Music, Elem-<lb />
entary Librarian.<lb />
Queen Anne's County, Mary-<lb />
landPrimary, Grammar, Busi-<lb />
ness, Industrial Arts, Mathema-<lb />
tics, Science.<lb />
Southampton County, Virginia<lb />
Primary, Grammar, Business,<lb />
English, Girls Physical Ed Coach<lb />
(Football and Baseball), Science<lb />
(Chemistry and or Physics).<lb />
Snow Hill, North Carolina-<lb />
Home Economics, Science.<lb />
Leaksville, North Carolina<lb />
Primary, Grammar, English,<lb />
Home Economics, Science<lb />
Cecil County Schools, Mary-<lb />
landPrimary, English, Span-<lb />
ish, Home Economics, Industrial<lb />
Arts, Band, Public School Music,<lb />
Girls Physical Ed MathSci-<lb />
ence, English-Social Studies.<lb />
NONTEACHING:<lb />
North Carolina Theatres,<lb />
Greensboro, North CarolinaIn-<lb />
terested in young men for man-<lb />
agement. (Descriptive literature<lb />
available in Placement Bureau.)<lb />
OFFICE HOURS OF THE<lb />
PLACEMENT BUREAU:<lb />
Monday through Friday, 8:30<lb />
a.m. to 12:00-1:30 p.m. to 4:30<lb />
p.m Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 12.<lb />
James H. Tucker, Director<lb />
"Miss Pitt County" . . . Barbara<lb />
Ann Ellis of Faison. East Carolina<lb />
freshman, was chosen to represent<lb />
Pitt County in the Miss North Caro-<lb />
lina Pageant to be held in Charlotte<lb />
in July. Miss Ellis, in winning the<lb />
title conveyed by the second annual<lb />
Miss Pitt County Pageant, gave as<lb />
her talent, a dramatic skit, entitled<lb />
"Our Town by Thornton Wilder.<lb />
Peggy Wood, another East Carolina<lb />
freshman, was runner-up in the con-<lb />
test.<lb />
Air Society Taps<lb />
Eleven Members<lb />
Eleven cadets in the Air Force<lb />
ROTC detachment have been select-<lb />
ed as members of the unit of the<lb />
Arnold Air Society here. Cadet Capt.<lb />
James G. Stone was chosen as presi-<lb />
dent of the organization in an elec-<lb />
tion held this week.<lb />
The society is a professional hon-<lb />
orary service organization of ad-<lb />
vanced-course AF ROTC cadets from<lb />
188 of the nation's colleges and uni-<lb />
versities. Its objectives are: to pro-<lb />
mote American citizenship in an air<lb />
age; to advance the support of air<lb />
power; and to further the purpose,<lb />
mission, traditions, and concept of<lb />
the U.S. Air Force for national se-<lb />
curity.<lb />
New members at East Carolina are<lb />
Brace J. Worrell, Sanders Wilson<lb />
Grady, Harry E. Smith Jr. Edward J.<lb />
FaireM, James G. Stone, Wilson<lb />
Thomas Arnold, Walter T. Worthing-<lb />
ton, Kenneth G. Alexander, Murry E.<lb />
Hodges, Lendy C. Edwards, and Lew-<lb />
is James J. Favrell.<lb />
Fifteen other advanced-course<lb />
I adets of the East Carolina AF ROTC<lb />
who are affiliated with the Arnold<lb />
Air Society are Linwood C. Johnson,<lb />
Melvin Paul Edwards, Dennis Marion<lb />
Biggs, Robert Louis Needs, Glenn<lb />
Charles Dyer, and Thomas T. Turn-<lb />
.er.<lb />
Others are Willard K. Baker Kirby<lb />
Putnel Branch, Henry A. Leeuwen-<lb />
burg, Jr Frank E. Grayiel, Jerry Nel-<lb />
cn Black, Harry P. Bayley, William<lb />
 Taylor, Volney L. Christie, and<lb />
Robert C. Brown.<lb />
BAND GIVES CONCERT<lb />
The College fifty-student Varsity<lb />
Rand was presented by the depart-<lb />
ment of music Sunday in its annual<lb />
spring concert.<lb />
Playing under the direction of<lb />
Thomas W. Miller of the college fac-<lb />
ulty, the group performed in the Mc-<lb />
Ginnis Auditorium.<lb />
The band, organized by Mr. Miller<lb />
and now in its second year, is made<lb />
up of students who play for pleasure<lb />
and the benefits derived from re-<lb />
hearsing and performing together.<lb />
Last spring the ensemble appeared<lb />
;n .i lawn concert at the college.<lb />
Featured with the band in Sunday's<lb />
concert was a brass quartet composed<lb />
of Thomas Spry, James C. Burns, Jr<lb />
M. Jerry Liles, and Francis Swanson.<lb />
The group played William McRae's<lb />
Scherzando and Edmund Haines'<lb />
Toccata and, with band accompani-<lb />
ment, Acton E. Ostling's concert<lb />
march "Parading the Brasses<lb />
Other numbers in the program in-<lb />
cluded excerpts from Wagner's Die<lb />
Meistersinger; March and Chorale by<lb />
the contemporary composer Robert<lb />
Wash burn; Overture in Classical Style<lb />
by Charles Carter, resident composer<lb />
at Florida State; and a number of spi-<lb />
PROFESSOR WRITES ARTICLE<lb />
Dr. Pattie Simmons Dowell, pro-<lb />
fessor of education, is a contributor<lb />
to the current issue of the NBA<lb />
Journal, official publication of the<lb />
National Education Association.<lb />
Dr. DowelVs article "How To Make<lb />
the Elementary Classroom an Attrac-<lb />
tive Learning Workshop" points out<lb />
that the classroom environment<lb />
should be carefully planned in order<lb />
to provide a proper setting for the<lb />
instructional program. She gives a<lb />
r umber of practical suggestions for<lb />
making the working atmosphere one<lb />
of stimulation and challenge.<lb />
Dr. Dowell has been a faculty mem-<lb />
ber of East Carolina since 1968. Pre-<lb />
viously she taught at Winthrop Col-<lb />
lege, Rock Hill, S. C, and at Missis-<lb />
sippi Southern College in Hatties-<lb />
burg. An alumna of East Carolina,<lb />
she was the first student to register<lb />
when the college was opened to stu-<lb />
dents and the first to receive a di-<lb />
ploma.<lb />
WORKSHOP AROUSES INTEREST<lb />
The East Carolina Geography Work-<lb />
shop held Saturday, April 2, brought<lb />
to the campus 60 superintendents,<lb />
principals, and teachers from schools<lb />
all over eastern North Carolina. This<lb />
nted marches and several light, nop , ,<lb />
.    workshop was the first of its kind<lb />
ular compositions.<lb />
NOTICE<lb />
The Creasy K. Proctor Chap-<lb />
ter, Order of De Moley would<lb />
like to have the names of all Sen-<lb />
ior De Molays at East Carolina<lb />
as well as anv members at large.<lb />
Old members should contact Ro-<lb />
bert Wichard. Master Counselor<lb />
al PI. 2-5272.<lb />
All Masons, at the college, and<lb />
any members of the De Molay<lb />
are invited to meetings at the<lb />
Lodge Hall, on Fifth Street ev-<lb />
ery second aud fourth Tuesday<lb />
night at 7:00.<lb />
Robert Whichard<lb />
Master Counselor.<lb />
Assembly Views<lb />
Problems Facing<lb />
World Of Today<lb />
We may not agree with wrat you<lb />
say, but we'll die laughing at your<lb />
right to say it.Staff<lb />
Liverworts are believed to be the<lb />
first pVints that ever lived on land.<lb />
Just because we think you think<lb />
we don't know what we're doing,<lb />
don't think we don't think we dont<lb />
 either.Staff.<lb />
Choirs Give Program<lb />
Of Easter Music<lb />
As a special event of the Easter<lb />
season, the C'tapel Choir and the<lb />
Women's Choir presented a program<lb />
of music Tuesday, April 12 in Austin<lb />
auditorium.<lb />
Gordon Johnson of the music fa-<lb />
culty directed the two groups at the<lb />
song service. Accompanists were Ed-<lb />
ward E. Carraway and Burleigh<lb />
Hill, organists, and William Wolfs,<lb />
pianist.<lb />
The Chapel Choir sang Randall<lb />
Thompson's "The Last Words of<lb />
David "Crucifixus from Bach's B<lb />
minor Mass, "Resurrection" by Gor-<lb />
don Young, and the spiritual "My<lb />
Lord What a Morning<lb />
(UPS) Suspension of nuclear tests,<lb />
reunification of Germany, and cen-<lb />
sorship of France and the USSR were<lb />
three of over 70 major issues debated<lb />
.at the sixth annual Little United Na-<lb />
tions Assembly last month at In-<lb />
diana University. Over 300 students<lb />
from 29 midwestern schools, including<lb />
a record 31 students from the College,<lb />
attended the two-day meeting.<lb />
The delegotes spent most of Friday<lb />
in special sessions of the Security<lb />
Council, World Court, and the Econo-<lb />
mic, Political and Trusteeship Com-<lb />
mittees.<lb />
The entire group assembled Sat-<lb />
urday afternoon for a marathon Gen-<lb />
eral (Assembly session. When the<lb />
meeting adjourned close to midnight<lb />
slightly less than half the resolutions<lb />
drawn up had actually come before<lb />
the group.<lb />
Highlights of the Assembly were a<lb />
spontaneous demonstration led by<lb />
Oberlin College sophomore John Bis-<lb />
hop (representing Cuba) protesting<lb />
USSAR repression of the Hungarian<lb />
revolt, and a dramatic interruption of<lb />
the proceedings by a mock commun-<lb />
ique from the UN Commander in the<lb />
Middle East reporting Israeli aggres-<lb />
sion.<lb />
STUDENTS GIVE RECITALS<lb />
Mary Craig Daughtridge of Scot-<lb />
land Neck, sophomore at East Caro-<lb />
ina College, was presented in recital<lb />
by the department of music at 8 p.m.<lb />
Monday in Austin Auditorium.<lb />
Miss Daught'idge is majoring in<lb />
music at the college and is working<lb />
toward the bachelor- of music degree.<lb />
She is studying piano under Eliza-<lb />
beth Drake of the faculty.<lb />
Selections on Miss Daughtridge's<lb />
program Monday included Mozart's<lb />
Sonata in B flat, Brahms' Rhapsody<lb />
in G minor, Grieg's To Spring, and<lb />
works by Beethoven, Chopin, and<lb />
Rachmaninoff.<lb />
Senior Plays<lb />
Teddy Fountain, Jr was presented<lb />
by the college music department in<lb />
a recital of works for the piano Thurs-<lb />
day, April 7, at 3 p.m. in the Austin<lb />
auditorium.<lb />
Selections chosen by Mr. Fountain<lb />
for his senior recital included Brahms'<lb />
Ballade in D Minor, opus 10, No. 1; a<lb />
Mozart rondo; three preludes by Cho-<lb />
in; and Leschetizky's Intermezzo in<lb />
0 laves, opus 44, no. 4.<lb />
Cal Paper Voices<lb />
Opinions In Wake<lb />
Of Resignation<lb />
(ACP)  Southern California's<lb />
Dailey Trojan comments that the<lb />
problem of "publish or perish"re-<lb />
cently brought to Southern Cal's at-<lb />
tention by resignation of a philoso-<lb />
phy instructoris ' ignoring geogra-<lb />
phical national and international<lb />
boundaries<lb />
The Trojan goes on to note that<lb />
criticisms and statements on the sit-<lb />
uation appear daily in newspapers<lb />
and magazines as educators, writers<lb />
and the general public attempt to<lb />
understand and solve the problem.<lb />
David Boroff, writing in Harper's<lb />
Magazine in 1958, noted that the<lb />
Harvard faculty was "full of glamor<lb />
boys of the academic world<lb />
He listed such names as ATchibaM<lb />
MacLeish and Hairy Levin in litera-<lb />
ture, Paul Tillich in theology, and<lb />
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr. and Crane<lb />
Brinton in history. Boroff then added,<lb />
and the pressure to producepublish<lb />
.r perish!is as cruel at Harbard<lb />
as anywhere<lb />
Earl McGrath, in a pamphlet put<lb />
out by the Teacher's College of Col-<lb />
umbia University, "The Graduate<lb />
School and the Decline of Liberal<lb />
Education says that liberal educa-<lb />
tion has been almost destroyed by<lb />
the vogue for research and by the<lb />
growth of great graduate schools<lb />
which brought it about.<lb />
Liberal education has been replaced<lb />
by a strait-laced academic education<lb />
which emphasizes research ratheT<lb />
than teaching and written communi-<lb />
cations rather than organized class-<lb />
room lectures, he says.<lb />
In a New York Times article, "Too<lb />
Many College Teachers Don't Teach<lb />
last February, John Q. Academesis,<lb />
an anonymous faculty professor, says<lb />
that it is almost an insult to he call-<lb />
ed a teacher today.<lb />
He says that two "academic smears"<lb />
take place.<lb />
"There is the suggestion that in<lb />
being a good teacher, a professor is<lb />
idealistic, devoted to young people,<lb />
loves his work and therefore is not<lb />
interested in salary and recognition<lb />
as his research colleague is he says.<lb />
"At the same time, there is also the<lb />
implication that since he is a good<lb />
teacher, he is not a great scholar,<lb />
that he does not have the interests<lb />
of true scholarship, that he cannot do<lb />
research and that he is not interested<lb />
in the frontiers of knowledge, but<lb />
 only in teaching it to young people <lb />
held here.<lb />
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, president<lb />
of East Carolina, opened the session<lb />
?:nd welcomed the delegates. He<lb />
stressed the importance of geograph-<lb />
ic training in our schools, and de-<lb />
plored the lack of interest in the sub-<lb />
ject as shown by school administra-<lb />
tors and teachers.<lb />
Other participants included Homer<lb />
Lassiter of the State Department of<lb />
Public Instructions, Dr. Henry J.<lb />
Warman of the Geography school at<lb />
Clark University, Worcester, Massa-<lb />
chusetts, Dr. J. Sullivan Gibson of<lb />
the department of Geography, Uni-<lb />
versity of North Carolina, and mem-<lb />
bers of the East Carolina faculty.<lb />
The workshop members had an op-<lb />
portunity to examine an exhibit of<lb />
textbooks, maps, globes, filmstrips,<lb />
and other teaching aids arranged by<lb />
the Geography Department.<lb />
Dr. Henry J, Warman, present on<lb />
the campus through the courtesy of<lb />
the Danforth Foundation and the Col-<lb />
lege, commented on the seeming ap-<lb />
athy of school administrators and<lb />
teachers in this area towards an op-<lb />
portunity such as the workshop of-<lb />
fered. He said that o session of the<lb />
type and caliber would have attracted<lb />
hundreds in his own state of Massa-<lb />
chusetts.<lb />
j . - . . -X- v V<lb />
J -ymmmm?<lb />
!<lb />
This airplane is actually a flying<lb />
classroom. The course taught in it<lb />
is Air Navigation, under real con-<lb />
ditions. The students are young<lb />
men who have been selected as pos-<lb />
sible future leaders of the Aero<lb />
space Team. Graduation after 32<lb />
weeks of training will win each of<lb />
the students the honored silver<lb />
wings of an Air Force Navigator<lb />
and an Officer's Commission.<lb />
For certain young men, this<lb />
training can open the way to a<lb />
bright career of executive poten-<lb />
tial. Right now the Air Force is<lb />
scoring impressive technological<lb />
advances in the fields of naviga-<lb />
tion, guidance and tracking, elec-<lb />
tronics and radar. And here is<lb />
where its highly trained and expe-<lb />
rienced Navigators will be expected<lb />
to take over command positions of.<lb />
increasing responsibility.<lb />
To qualify for Navigator train<lb />
ing as an Aviation Cadet, you must<lb />
be between 19 and 26single,<lb />
healthy and intelligent. And you<lb />
must want to build an exciting,<lb />
interesting career in the Aerospace<lb />
Age. If you think you measure up,1<lb />
we'd like to talk to you at the near-<lb />
est Air Force Recruiting Office.1<lb />
Or clip and mail this coupon.<lb />
There's a place for tomorrow's<lb />
leaders on the -y- T l<lb />
Aerospace Team. <lb />
Air rorce<lb />
mem<lb />
teat nh, TfimimTtM . s. t.<lb />
I m IwtwM It me 2SVV  cttfcwi<lb />
Of HM U. 5. Mt  SttR SBHtl f<lb />
L<lb />
SHEET.<lb />
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tmtMmmnmmMmmmmim<lb /><pb facs="00038658_tn_0004" /><lb />
THURSDAY, APRIL i4 <lb />
PAG FOUK<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
IIIII1MM<lb />
Pirate One-Two Punch Stops<lb />
Crayton Pitches<lb />
EC's Fifteenth<lb />
Straight MS Win<lb />
Larry Crayton chalked up his<lb />
fourth straight v;in against no losses<lb />
Monday afternoon as the Pirates made<lb />
a successful bid in their conference<lb />
opener. Western Carolina's Cata-<lb />
mounts pot a .rood look at what is in<lb />
store for conference foes when they<lb />
face the Pirate squad.<lb />
Crayton struck out thirteen bar-<lb />
ters and had a no hitter going for<lb />
himself for four and one-third inn-<lb />
ings before a scratch single was hit<lb />
between first nd second bases.<lb />
The Pirates banged out nine hits<lb />
off losing pitcher Jerry Casky. All-<lb />
Conference short shop Glenn Bass<lb />
banged out two hits in four trips to<lb />
the plate, one of which was a double<lb />
down the left field line. The only<lb />
other extra base blow came off the<lb />
bat of centerfielder Wally Cockrell.<lb />
The southpaw batter cracked one<lb />
over the centerfielder's head to come<lb />
into second base standing up. Catch-<lb />
er Charlie Johnson got his first hit<lb />
against the Catamounts when he rap-<lb />
ped two singles.<lb />
Jerry Carpenter, the team's leader<lb />
in the runs batted in department,<lb />
kept up his knack for hitting with<lb />
men on board as he added two more<lb />
KBI's to his total.<lb />
The Pirates were scheduled to com-<lb />
I lete the series with Western Caro-<lb />
lina on Tuesday with sophomore right-<lb />
hander Johnny Ellen in line for the<lb />
pitching chores.<lb />
East Carolina ab r<lb />
Gaylord, 2b  . 3 0<lb />
Duffer, 2b  1 0<lb />
Casteloe, 3b  3 0<lb />
Hart, 8b1 0<lb />
Cockrell, cf 3 3<lb />
Pierce, If 4 1<lb />
Martin, 6 1<lb />
Bass, ss 4 2<lb />
Carpenter, rf  2 0<lb />
Kynum, rf 1 0<lb />
Johnson, c  5 0<lb />
Crayton, p  0 1<lb />
Eotals 32 8<lb />
Track Team Drops<lb />
Two Meets On Road<lb />
The East Carolina College track<lb />
team was beaten by the Norfolk di-<lb />
vision of William and Mary by a<lb />
score of 114 to 19.<lb />
The William and Mary Braves<lb />
proved to be too much for the visiting<lb />
Pirates as they took first place in<lb />
every event.<lb />
1.ending East Carolina's point-get-<lb />
ters were Cedric Johnson .and Richard<lb />
Stevens with 4 points and 3 points<lb />
respectively. Other Pirates to score<lb />
were T. C. Godwin and Ron Knouse,<lb />
with 2 points each and Sonny Bas-<lb />
singer. Marshal LaFavor, Ken Hurst,<lb />
Mac Seymore, .and Buddy Welch each<lb />
with one point.<lb />
Later in the week, the freshman<lb />
iayden Pirates lost to the Newport<lb />
News Apprentice School team by the<lb />
score of 76-49. Richard Stevens was<lb />
the leading point-getter.<lb />
(h Campus<lb />
with<lb />
Maxhukan<lb />
ojHens AndJVCC<lb />
(Author of "I Was a 7'ten-age Dwarf, "The Many<lb />
Loves of Dobie (jillis etc.)<lb />
COLLEGE: THE FOE OF EDUCATION<lb />
In your quest for a college decree, are you becoming a narrow<lb />
specialist, or are you being educated in the broad, cla-ssical<lb />
sense of tl xonV! Una question is being :isk d today by many<lb />
serious peopleincluding my barber, my jKnliatrist, and my<lb />
little dog Spot anil it would be well t seek an answer.<lb />
Let us examine our souls. Are we becoming experts only in<lb />
the confined area of our major or does our knowledge range<lb />
far and wide? Do we, for example, know who fought in the<lb />
battle of Salamis, or Kant's cpi-temologv, or Planck's constant,<lb />
or the voyage of the Beagle, or Palestrina's cantatas, or what<lb />
Wordsworth was doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey?<lb />
If we do not. we are turning, alas, into socialists. What,<lb />
then, can we do to escape this strait jacket, to broaden our<lb />
vistas, lengthen our horizons, to become, in short, educated?<lb />
Well sir. the first thing we must do is throw away our curricula.<lb />
Tomorrow, instead of going to the same old classes, let us try<lb />
something new. It us think of college, not as a rigid discipline,<lb />
but as a kind of vast smorgasbord, with all kinds of tempting<lb />
intellectual tidbits to sample and savor. Let us dive in. Let<lb />
our pent-up appetites roam and snatch where they will.<lb />
let u$ wme tf? &amp;fc.<lb />
We will start the day with a stimulating seminar in Hittite<lb />
artifacts. Then we will go over to marine biology and spend a<lb />
happy hour with the mollusks. Then we will open our pores by<lb />
drilling with the ROTC for a spell. Then we'll go over to journal-<lb />
ism and scramble a font of Bodoui. Then we'll go to the medical<lb />
school and palpate a few spleens. Then we'll go to home<lb />
economics and have lunch.<lb />
And between classes we'll smoke Marlboro Cigarettes. This,<lb />
let me emphasize, is not an added fillip to the broadening of our<lb />
education; it is an essential. To learn to live richly and well is<lb />
an imj)ortant part of education, and Marlboros are an important<lb />
part of living richly and well. Do you think flavor went out<lb />
when filters came in? Well, ha-ha, the joke is on you. Marlboro,<lb />
with its Selectrate filter, delivers flavor in full measure, flavor<lb />
without stint or compromise, flavor that wrinkled care derides,<lb />
flavor holding both its sides. This triumph of the tobacconist's<lb />
art comes to you in soft pack or flip-top box and can be lighted<lb />
with match, lighter, candle, Welsbach mantle, or by rubbing<lb />
two small Indians together.<lb />
When we have embarked on this new regimenor, more ac-<lb />
curately, lack of regimenwe will soon be studded with culture<lb />
like a ham with cloves. When strangers accost us on the street<lb />
and say, "What was Wordsworth doing ten miles above Tintern<lb />
Abbey? we will no longer slink away in silent abashment. We<lb />
will reply loud and clear:<lb />
"As any truly educated person knows, Wordsworth, Shelley,<lb />
and Keats used to go the Widdicombe Fair every year for the<lb />
xetry-writing contests and three-legged races, both of which<lb />
they enjoyed wildly. Well sir, imagine their chagrin when they<lb />
arrived at the Fair in 1776 and learned that Oliver Cromwell,<lb />
jittery because Guy Fawkes had just invented the spinning<lb />
jenny, had canceled all public gatherings, including the Widdi-<lb />
combe Fair and Liverpool. Shelley was so upset that he<lb />
drowned himself in the Bay of Naples, Keats went to London<lb />
and became Samuel Johnson, and Wordsworth ran blindly into<lb />
the forest until he collapsed in a heap ten miles above Tintern<lb />
Abbey. There he lay for several years, sobbing and kicking his<lb />
little fat legs. At length, peace returned to him. He composed<lb />
himseh and, noticing for the first time the beauty of the forest<lb />
around him, he wrote Joyce Kilmer's immortal Trees  And<lb />
that, smartypants, is what Wordsworth was doing ten miles<lb />
above Tintern Abbey  " "<lb /><lb />
Poets and peasants alike know that It you like mildness but<lb />
you don't like Alters, you can't do better than Marlboro'<lb />
companion cigarettePhilip Morris,<lb />
JOHNNY ELLEN<lb />
EC Players Dominate City<lb />
Table Tennis Tournament<lb />
East Carolina players dominated<lb />
the Creenvifle City Table Tennis<lb />
Tournament, held April 5 and 8 in<lb />
the College Union.<lb />
In the finals of the Men's Singles<lb />
event East Carolina champion Nor-<lb />
man Kilpatrick hit his way through<lb />
the defense of fellow student Nelson<lb />
Tugwell, by scores of 21-13, 21-12.<lb />
Kilpatrick defeated Albert Davis 21-<lb />
16, 21-17 in a hard fought match,<lb />
while Tugwell finally chopped and<lb />
hit bis way through the spin serves<lb />
and wristed drives of Charles Holli-<lb />
day in the semi-finals.<lb />
East Carolina champions Holliday-<lb />
Kilpatrick then won the Men's Dou-<lb />
bles title by defeating Tugwell-Davis<lb />
21-18, 21-14 in the finals of that event.<lb />
The alEast Carolina Women's Sin-<lb />
gles finals saw Rosalie Blankenship's<lb />
defensive play stop the hard fore-<lb />
hand drives of Ramona Kilpatrick<lb />
in a good match, 21-14, 21-23, 21-18.<lb />
William Stancil won the Intermedi-<lb />
ate Singles championship, for play-<lb />
ers 16-18 years of age, by hitting<lb />
through the blocking defense of Sam<lb />
Watson of East Carolina, 17-21, 21-<lb />
19, jl-15 in the finals. However, Wat-<lb />
t.n came back, teamed with Ray<lb />
Watson, to win the Intermediate<lb />
Doubles play, by defeating Stancil-<lb />
Andrew Kilpatrick in a very tense<lb />
final match, 21-15, 17-21, 21-19.<lb />
Other winners were Robbie Powell<lb />
in the Junior Singles event (under<lb />
16 years of age) and Denny Hardee-<lb />
J. G. Proctor in the Junior Doubles.<lb />
Norman Kilpatrick, Charles Holliday,<lb />
Sam Watson, Ray Watson, Rosalie<lb />
Blankenship, and Ramona Kilpatrick<lb />
will represent the College Union in<lb />
the Eastern North Carolina District<lb />
Table Tennis Tournament to be held<lb />
in Wilmington on April 23.<lb />
Ellen Chalks Op<lb />
Initial Victory<lb />
Righthander, Johnny Ellen won his<lb />
first and East Carolina's fifth gme<lb />
of the season Friday afternoon when<lb />
he pitched the Pirates to a 2-1 win<lb />
over non-conference foe Delaware<lb />
University.<lb />
Ellen was touched for seven bits<lb />
in his first complete game of tne<lb />
season, but was stingy when it came<lb />
to handing out runs.<lb />
It took only three men in the first<lb />
inning to produce the needed number<lb />
of runs for Ellen and the veteran<lb />
moundsman preserved the lead, gam-<lb />
ing strength as the game progressed.<lb />
Mickey Duffer, getting his first start-<lb />
ing nod at the second base position, led<lb />
off the bottom half of the first inn-<lb />
ing for EC by working Delaware<lb />
starter Dick Broadbent, for a walk.<lb />
Wilbur Casteloe singled and Wally<lb />
Cockrell scored both runners with a<lb />
double to center field.<lb />
The Pirates loaded the bases once<lb />
gain in the first frame, but a strike-<lb />
out by Jerry Carpenter and Burl Mor-<lb />
ris' long fly to right field retired the<lb />
side.<lb />
Karl Frantz, who is headed for the<lb />
Philadelphia Phillies chain as soon as<lb />
the current season is over, poked a<lb />
home run out of College Field in the<lb />
third inning to account for Dela-<lb />
ware's lone tally.<lb />
Delaware made its biggest threat<lb />
in the second when they loaded the<lb />
bases on a couple of walks and a hit<lb />
batsman. Ellen retired the side by<lb />
forcing lead-off man Dave Beiner to<lb />
pop-up to the first baseman.<lb />
East Carolina kept its fires burn-<lb />
ing often in the early innings, but<lb />
were unable to score after the first.<lb />
In winning their fourth game the Bucs<lb />
eft 11 men stranded on the base<lb />
paths.<lb />
Glenn Bass had a couple of in-<lb />
field singles to lead the Pirates at<lb />
the plate.<lb />
Gary Herbert and Frantz led the<lb />
Blue Hen at the plate. Herbert had<lb />
a double and two singles. Frantz did<lb />
the most damage with his towering<lb />
homer.<lb />
I R A T E'S<lb />
P<lb />
DEN<lb />
By LEONARD LAO<lb />
Delaware ab<lb />
T'einner, cf 4<lb />
Herbert, 2b  4<lb />
Frantz, ss 3<lb />
Reihm, 3b 4<lb />
Lukk, c 3<lb />
Green lb .4<lb />
White, If  2<lb />
Coombs, rf 4<lb />
Broadbent, p 2<lb />
Swartz 1<lb />
Notals 31<lb />
East Carolina ab<lb />
Duffer, 2b 4<lb />
Castelloe, 3b  2<lb />
Cockrell, 3b . 4<lb />
Pierce, If<lb />
Martin, lb<lb />
Bass, ss<lb />
Carpenter, rf<lb />
Morris, c<lb />
Ellen, p<lb />
Totals<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
4<lb />
4<lb />
3<lb />
3<lb />
32<lb />
r<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
r<lb />
1<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
h<lb />
0<lb />
3<lb />
2<lb />
1<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
8<lb />
h<lb />
1<lb />
1<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
6<lb />
e<lb />
0<lb />
9<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
e<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
9<lb />
Stan Jones, a graduate of East Carolina College and a <lb />
promoter while a .student here, is now coachmg the grappling sport fit JJ<lb />
folk Catholic HH School Norfolk, Virgin and  doing a superb job of i<lb />
In the Atlantic Toast Olymp Trials held last week-end in Norfoll<lb />
rwo of his boys made very bright showings ,n the elnmr a '<lb />
H, Forbes, a senior was defeated by . Ge.m.n Nationa. ChampUm, ,<lb />
t took the numher two wrestler in the NCAA to beat otfhomore Mike<lb />
ll(!i(oMKr3tulationS to Stan Jones<lb />
First Over Delaware<lb />
For the first time since East Carolina has been playing the Uraver<lb />
rf Dels tre he Pirates came out on top last Thursday. Then the cnN<lb />
Bu.s turned a.ound to defeat the Blue Hens aain on Friday to ,eep <lb />
grid<lb />
The EC &amp;xems$M room was a happy place for F -s. Bu<lb />
nrobably the lappiest guy around was little Larry Crayton <lb />
livery the number one Pirate pitcher made, there were !a3t <lb />
game in his head. Tremendous underdogs in last season's f <lb />
to the Delaware team .as though Oach Jim Mallory<lb />
game away when he put a freshman un the mound. But it wasn't fog befor,<lb />
Crayton established himself with the Blue Hens. For four <lb />
Pirate southpaw pitched his heart oat. Finally V, <lb />
of darkness. If there was one player on the field wr<lb />
proud that day it was Crayton. But he an't. Sure. h.<lb />
hadn't won either. When the fans told the lefthander to "Ket 'am ant year'<lb />
they had no idea how much that was on Crayton's mind.<lb />
The day -ame last Thursday. And it was Crayton's day Do B<lb />
you look at it. The canny hurler retired fifteen straight De a atten<lb />
between the third and the eighth innings. Crayton even led the pirates H<lb />
plate. He cracked out two singles and drove in two run- <lb />
own win. The win gave Crayton a 4 and 0 record. The Pirates have won<lb />
five games with the other win credited to anothet sophom i<lb />
Ellen gave u pseven hits in his first win against Delaware. The firebi<lb />
rigthander has a one and one record with his defeat coming at I n<lb />
Yale University of the Ivy League.<lb />
SPORTS SHORTS . . . All-Conference leftfielder Gary I<lb />
his first game without a hit Friday against Delaware. The burly :<lb />
failed to connect in three trips to the plate . . . The P:r;r<lb />
game winning streak on the line when they played host to ferenet<lb />
Western Carolina on Monday. The victory skein is against N'<lb />
Conference teams . . . Second baseman, Mickey Duffer got a crark at<lb />
ing the keystone against Delaware on Friday when he replace<lb />
Spencer Gaylord. Duffer turned in a commendable performs<lb />
afternoon, banging out a single in three trips to the plate <lb />
struck out six Blue Hens in a winning cause, retiring the side in the<lb />
on strikes  Be on the look-out for another frontli- - :e ?<lb />
rate mound staff in lefthander, Kenny Snyder. The freshman . i ha<lb />
a fine high school record behind him, giving up no earned<lb />
year. Buc fans got a glimpse of Snyder against Yale whei<lb />
innings. Snyder fared six men and struck out four of them.<lb />
SCIENTIFIC ADVANCES 801-802<lb />
Progress of Women (toward men)<lb />
Dr. Allure<lb />
Magnetism of men who use ordinary hair tonics studied. Conclusion:<lb />
barely existent. Magnetism of men who use 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic stud-<lb />
ied. Conclusion not yet established since test cases being held captive<lb />
by neighboring sorority. Examination of alcohol tonics and sticky hair<lb />
creams (rubber gloves recommended for this class). Result: repelled<lb />
women. Frequent use of water on hair cited: this practice deemed<lb />
harmless because 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic mollifies its drying effect.<lb />
Female Appraisal of Contemporary Male. Conclusion: Student body<lb />
O. K. if student head kept date-worthy with 'Vaseline' Hair Tonic.<lb />
Materials: one 4 oz. bottle of'Vaseline' Hair Tonic<lb />
RBI LEADER . . . Senior right fielder Jerry Carpenter is leading the Pirtt<lb />
baseball team in the runs-batted-in department so far this season. Carpeater,<lb />
in his second season as Coach Jim Mallory s regular right fielder, is the es&amp;<lb />
senior on the team.<lb />
"Making a sacrifice nowadays of-<lb />
ten means doing without things oar<lb />
parents never hadTit-Bits, Lon-<lb />
don.<lb />
"It is just human nature that do-<lb />
ing right would be more fun if it<lb />
were wrongMuncie Evening Press.<lb />
Delicious Food<lb />
Served 24 Hours<lb />
Air Conditioned<lb />
CAROLINA<lb />
GRILL<lb />
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dtektam<lb />
CHARLIE JOHNSON  on of !<lb />
Pirates two frontline catchers, b<lb />
oat his first hits Monday again "<lb />
fcreaee fee, Western Caroima. JJ<lb />
wm had a pair of siBftes ia five trip<lb />
BUT<lb />
MiliwmmniMnim'Hift'i<lb />
i a<lb />
mSmmm<lb />
HRBHHHHHHHHI<lb /></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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