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<pb facs="00038684_0001"/>
lm-<lb/>
i&amp;r-<lb/>
Of<lb/>
Departmental Meetings<lb/>
Quarterly departmental meeting<lb/>
will be conducted tonight in various<lb/>
buildings according to your major.<lb/>
Easttarolinia<lb/>
ilume XXXVI<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JANUARY 12, 1961<lb/>
Sorority Rush Begins Monday;<lb/>
Entertainment Planned For Rushees<lb/>
Formal rush for the eight<lb/>
tie:<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
lay night, January 16. Partici-<lb/>
u in rush week will be Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta Pi,<lb/>
By PATSY ELLIOTT<lb/>
sorori- Group B will stage its parties on<lb/>
underway Tuesday and Thursday nights; both<lb/>
groups entertain Friday night.<lb/>
Schedules for the rush parties and<lb/>
the procedure for rushing and bid-<lb/>
ding have been distributed to the<lb/>
various groups and rushees.<lb/>
The sight sororities have been<lb/>
grouped for parties as follows:<lb/>
Group A<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta: Monday, Cotton<lb/>
Parlor; Wednesday, Social Room<lb/>
Qt s:i, Delta Zeta, Alpha<lb/>
Chi Omega, Alpha Omkron Pi, Kappa<lb/>
De ta, Alpha Phi. and Sigma Sigma<lb/>
y e eight sororities have been di-<lb/>
 into two groups, A and B.<lb/>
 will entertain the rushees on<lb/>
an i Wednesday nights;<lb/>
Buccaneer Announ<lb/>
I<lb/>
Letter Contest<lb/>
fid Page 2tbr news on the Letter<lb/>
he Editd Contest.<lb/>
Number 14<lb/>
PANHELLEN1C OFFU EKS: (pictured left to right) Ann Sugg, vice-<lb/>
pr.sidtnt: Carol Rankin. rush chairman; and Jaye Finnegan, president, plan<lb/>
raah proceedings.<lb/>
Wright, and Friday, Cafeteria (East).<lb/>
Delta Zeta: Monday, Social Room<lb/>
 Wright; Wednesday, Cafeteria<lb/>
(East); and Friday, Garrett Base-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi: Monday, Cafeteria<lb/>
(East); Wednesday, Garrett Base-<lb/>
ment; and Friday, Alumni Bldg.<lb/>
Chi Omega: Monday, Garrett Base-<lb/>
ment; Wednesday, Alumni Bldg and<lb/>
Friday, Y Hut.<lb/>
Group B<lb/>
lAlpha Omicron Pi: Tuesday, Cot-<lb/>
ton Parlor; Thursday, Social Room<lb/>
(Wright); and Friday, Cafeteria.<lb/>
Kappa Delta: Tuesday, Social,<lb/>
Room (Wright); Thursday, Cafeteria<lb/>
(East); and Friday, Garrett Base-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Alpha Phi: Tuesday, Cafeteria<lb/>
(East); Thursday, Garrett Base-<lb/>
ment, and Friday, Alumni Bldg.<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma: Tuesday,<lb/>
Garrett Basement; Thursday, Alumni<lb/>
Bldg and Friday, Y Hut.<lb/>
On Friday, January 20, following<lb/>
the last rush parties, rushees will go<lb/>
to the Panhellenic Room to sign<lb/>
preferences. From the time of the<lb/>
last rush party until Saturday at<lb/>
1:00 p.m rushees and sorority wom-<lb/>
er will observe a period of silence.<lb/>
Rushees will pick up their bids<lb/>
Saturday at 1:00 p.m. in the Pan-<lb/>
hellenic Room.<lb/>
Carol Rankin, Panhellenic rush<lb/>
chairman, stated earlier this week,<lb/>
"After many hours of planning and<lb/>
meeting with various rush commit-<lb/>
tees, we are looking forward to a<lb/>
successful formal rush week<lb/>
Dismissal Action Taken, Resulting<lb/>
From Pre-Christmas Incident<lb/>
Three East Carolina students were<lb/>
dismissed and two more were "per-<lb/>
mitted to withdraw" in action taken<lb/>
by college authorities resulting from<lb/>
'Rebel' Sponsors<lb/>
Writing Contest;<lb/>
To Offer Prize<lb/>
Jenkins Addresses State Groups;<lb/>
Urges Responsibility, Interest<lb/>
EC student literary magazine<lb/>
Ri he is conducting for the sec-<lb/>
 ar a writing contest with the<lb/>
I of discovering, encouraging.<lb/>
.nizing talent on the campus.<lb/>
 y Martin, Jr editor, has an-<lb/>
! that the contest is open to<lb/>
i lents at the college and that<lb/>
- will be made to authors of<lb/>
rt story, essay, and poem.<lb/>
ers-iup will receive honorable<lb/>
-i. The winning selections will<lb/>
-hod in the spring issue of<lb/>
A short-story contest was held last<lb/>
the first time by "The Rebel"<lb/>
rreated considerable interest<lb/>
writing. Elfreth Alexan-<lb/>
senior and now a secretary<lb/>
ffiee of President Leo W. Jen-<lb/>
  - winner.<lb/>
The Rebel" was first published<lb/>
e cimpus in the spring quarter<lb/>
- mi. since then, has been is-<lb/>
each quarter of the regular<lb/>
 - ar under the sponsorship of<lb/>
Government Association.<lb/>
gnixed as one of the outstanding<lb/>
m literary magazines in colleges<lb/>
A-ersities of the state, "The<lb/>
includes in its contents short<lb/>
 -. essays, poems, book reviews,<lb/>
and other creative work by stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
A special attraction of the maga-<lb/>
rins has been exclusive interviews<lb/>
the noted North Carolina authors<lb/>
Paul Green and Harry Golden<lb/>
Peter Viereck, Pulitzer<lb/>
Ring poet.<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins, address-<lb/>
ing members of the Tau Beta Pi As-<lb/>
sociation, national engineering honor<lb/>
society, at N.C. State College, Raleigh,<lb/>
Friday night, Jan. 6, challenged his<lb/>
audience of engineers and student<lb/>
engineers not only to use their tal-<lb/>
ents and training in the technical as-<lb/>
pects of modern life but also to con-<lb/>
cern themselves more actively than<lb/>
at present with such problems of so-<lb/>
ciety as education, health and politics.<lb/>
He addressed the Tau Beta Pi As-<lb/>
sociation at a banquet at the State<lb/>
College Union.<lb/>
You have contributed Dr.Jenkins<lb/>
told the engineers, "to freeing a<lb/>
considerable proportion of man's<lb/>
available energies previously concen-<lb/>
trated on providing the barest nec-<lb/>
essities of existence; but you have<lb/>
done mighty little in assisting him<lb/>
ir his attempt to live in this new en-<lb/>
vironment.<lb/>
"You must help us from unconsci-<lb/>
ously becoming the servant of your<lb/>
technical progress. You realize, of<lb/>
course, that technical progress may<lb/>
not be identical with the progress of<lb/>
man. We may well witness through<lb/>
your efforts progress in the machines<lb/>
you make, but little progress in man<lb/>
himself<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins urged Tau Beta Pi<lb/>
members to exert efforts to end the<lb/>
present looseness with which the<lb/>
term engineers" is used to designate<lb/>
people in many trades and callings.<lb/>
A loss of status results, he said, from<lb/>
misuse of the word.<lb/>
Discussing the engineer's "apparent<lb/>
inferiority complex in the area of cul-<lb/>
ture Dr. Jenkins state that the im-<lb/>
age of the engineer as a "rough and<lb/>
tough uncultured character has be-<lb/>
come traditional and that the enginer-<lb/>
or's preoccupation with technical to<lb/>
the exclusion of other activities prob-<lb/>
ably is a result of pioneer-frontier<lb/>
distrust of the specialist. Engineers are<lb/>
unfair to themselves, he said, in al-<lb/>
lowing these impressions to persist.<lb/>
Since engineers "have been re-<lb/>
sponsible for changing our world<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins said it seems only right<lb/>
that they should "assume an equal<lb/>
responsibility in helping us run this<lb/>
new world<lb/>
He urged a more active interest<lb/>
and participation by engineers in po-<lb/>
litical affairs, in edueation, in health<lb/>
and sanitation problems, in cultural<lb/>
activities, and in other areas affecting<lb/>
man's welfare and progress.<lb/>
a Dec. 15 incident allegedly organ-<lb/>
ized as a panty raid.<lb/>
Names of the five students, desig-<lb/>
nated as the "ringleaders" in organ-<lb/>
izing the pre-holiday disturbance<lb/>
were not released.<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, EC president,<lb/>
stated that he acted to dismiss the<lb/>
trio in accordance with a recom-<lb/>
mendation from Dean James B. Mal-<lb/>
lory's office following conferences<lb/>
with students there.<lb/>
In addition to the five organizers,<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins said, 12 more men stu-<lb/>
dents, all residents of Jones Hall,<lb/>
were handed "various types of dis-<lb/>
ciplinary action but were allowed to<lb/>
remain at the college.<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins said all 17 students<lb/>
involved in the action claimed the<lb/>
December incident was nothing more<lb/>
than a Christmas carol serenade at<lb/>
Umstead Hall.<lb/>
He added "the people involved<lb/>
were also required to make payment<lb/>
for damage to two windows and one<lb/>
door damaged in the "serenade<lb/>
F. D. Duncan, vice-president and<lb/>
business manager of the college said<lb/>
the damage was done to Umstead<lb/>
Hall and amounted t about $100.<lb/>
A heavy, cold nain the night of the<lb/>
attempted raid, authorities felt,<lb/>
helped thwart the effort that at-<lb/>
tracted students in numbers esti-<lb/>
mated by various officials from 25<lb/>
to 200. Most authorities, Dr. Jenkins<lb/>
noted seemed convinced a panty raid<lb/>
had been planned.<lb/>
Greenville and EOC police officers<lb/>
converged on the scene and took six<lb/>
of the boisterous students into<lb/>
custody.<lb/>
They were taken to Greenville<lb/>
Police Headquarters and released in<lb/>
the morning hours Dec. 16. No<lb/>
charges were lodged against the<lb/>
students at the local police depart-<lb/>
ment. Mallory and ECC Police Chief<lb/>
Johnnie Harrell effected the student's<lb/>
release and escorted them back to the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The day following the incident, Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins reported he had gone to the<lb/>
campus about 12:30 a.m. and re-<lb/>
mained for about one hour. "While<lb/>
1 was there he said, "nothing really<lb/>
developed He added that he sub-<lb/>
sequently went to Jones Hall and<lb/>
found no evidence of "any organized<lb/>
effort<lb/>
"The boys over at Jonea were ap-<lb/>
parently quite surprised by my visit<lb/>
he noted at that time.<lb/>
Julianne Cannon<lb/>
Mitchell Stars In Playhouse's<lb/>
Current Play, 'Night Must FalV<lb/>
and<lb/>
Prize<lb/>
BEACH GETS POST<lb/>
Prof. Earl E. Beach, director of<lb/>
the department of music, has been<lb/>
elected as a member of the Board of<lb/>
Directors of the American Associa-<lb/>
tion of College and University Con-<lb/>
cert Managers. He will serve for a<lb/>
three-year term.<lb/>
Sig Ep Colony Acquires House<lb/>
Members of the Sigma Eipsilott<lb/>
v of Sigma Phi Epsilon, latest<lb/>
- rial fraternity at East Carolina<lb/>
-ge to acquire a house, are sub-<lb/>
g the former Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
'ralHrnity hotase at 526 Cotanehe<lb/>
Street, Greenville.<lb/>
The college chapter of Pi KPP<lb/>
Alpha recently purchased, a brick<lb/>
heme on East Fifth Street opposite<lb/>
the West Campus at Bast Carolina.<lb/>
George J. Coltrane, Jr of Kerners-<lb/>
villa, vice president and houae mana-<lb/>
ger of Sigma Phi Epsilon, has an-<lb/>
nounced that repairs and redecora-<lb/>
tion of the house are in progress.<lb/>
The Sigma Epsilon Colony of Sig-<lb/>
ma Phi Epsilon was founded s <lb/>
Carolina in February, l&amp;, BJJLJ<lb/>
associate member o Itor-i "<lb/>
nity Council. The colony U P<lb/>
to become a chapter of the Natio<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity in AP<lb/>
of this<lb/>
Fifteen of the members are now<lb/>
living there. Members are planning<lb/>
an open house for their parents and<lb/>
friends when work on the house is<lb/>
completed.<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Effective as of Monday, January<lb/>
9 announcements will no longer be<lb/>
read in class. Bulletin boards have<lb/>
been placed at various areas on cam-<lb/>
pus to eliminate this time consuming<lb/>
task The location of these bulletin<lb/>
boards are in the music building, the<lb/>
gym, the library, Austin, Rawl, Flan-<lb/>
agan, Graham, and the College Union.<lb/>
The administration would like to<lb/>
stress that each student is held re-<lb/>
poneible for checking these buUetm<lb/>
Reception Honors<lb/>
Business Head<lb/>
The Silver Anniversary of the found-<lb/>
ing of the department of business edu-<lb/>
cation here and its growth into the<lb/>
present School of Business was cele-<lb/>
brated by a reception honoring Dr.<lb/>
Elmer R. Browning, director of the<lb/>
School of Business, and Mrs. Brown-<lb/>
ing, January 2, in Rawl building.<lb/>
The reception was given by Misses<lb/>
Lena Ellis and Velma Lowe, and Dr.<lb/>
Audrey Dempsey.<lb/>
It marked the completion of twenty-<lb/>
five years of work and of growth in<lb/>
the department, which was established<lb/>
on the campus January 1, 1936, under<lb/>
the direction of Dr. Browning assisted<lb/>
by Miss Maude Adams, now a retired<lb/>
associate of Woman's College, Greens-<lb/>
boro.<lb/>
Around 120 guests were invited for<lb/>
the occasion, including officers of the<lb/>
administration at the college, direct-<lb/>
ors of departments on the campus,<lb/>
retired faculty members, and form-<lb/>
er members of the college who were<lb/>
teaching here at the time the depart-<lb/>
ment was established.<lb/>
A teacher training school in the<lb/>
field of business, the department was<lb/>
located for five years in Austin build-<lb/>
ing on the third floor and for several<lb/>
years in the Flanagan building. Later<lb/>
new courses were added in manage<lb/>
Theatre Presents<lb/>
Menotti's Opera<lb/>
The College Opera Theatre, organi-<lb/>
zation of student vocalists, will pre-<lb/>
sent as their second production for<lb/>
the 1960-1961 term Gian-Carlo Men-<lb/>
otti's "The Old Maid and the Thief<lb/>
director Paul Hickfang has announced.<lb/>
The opera will be presented in two<lb/>
performances on Jan. 20 and Jan. 21<lb/>
at 8:15 p.m. in the McGinnis audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
The double cast, which provides a<lb/>
different group of singers for each<lb/>
performance, is made up of Alison<lb/>
Moss and Betsy Hancock, portraying<lb/>
Leatitia; Martha Bradner and Jessa-<lb/>
mine Hiatt playing the (part of Miss<lb/>
Todd, the old maid; and .Peter Johl<lb/>
and Jerry Teachey portraying Bob.<lb/>
The part of Miss Pinkerson will be<lb/>
jlayed by Amn Harden and Patricia<lb/>
Roberts.<lb/>
"The Old Maid and the Thief Mr.<lb/>
Hickfang stated, "is a light-textured<lb/>
comic opera, with a clever plot, and<lb/>
the music is delightful<lb/>
The opera will be directed by Dr.<lb/>
Robert Rickert of the English depart-<lb/>
ment, acting director of the Play-<lb/>
house. Mr. Hickfang will be the mus-<lb/>
sical director.<lb/>
Doug Mitchell will play the leading<lb/>
role of Dan, the ingratiating person-<lb/>
ality-lad with the secret passion for<lb/>
killing women, in the Playhouse's pre-<lb/>
sentation of the famous melodrama,<lb/>
' Night Must Fall which will be<lb/>
presented February 9-11.<lb/>
This character of the debonair bell-<lb/>
hop with a psychopathic penchant for<lb/>
murder, was acted in both the New<lb/>
York and London productions by Em-<lb/>
lyn Williams, author of the hit melo-<lb/>
drama.<lb/>
Both of these productions, and also<lb/>
the movie version in which Robert<lb/>
Montgomery was the homieidally-<lb/>
inclined young man, established this<lb/>
play as one of the most unforgettable<lb/>
melodramas of modern times.<lb/>
As the elderly Mrs. Bramson, one<lb/>
of the killer's intended and unsuspect-<lb/>
ing victims, Doming Jenkins will be<lb/>
seen in a role played on both stage<lb/>
and screen by the late Dame May<lb/>
Whitty. It is the character of the<lb/>
cranky Mrs. Bramson who, charmed<lb/>
by the guileful Dan, takes him in to<lb/>
her Essex bungalow to work for and<lb/>
flatter her.<lb/>
Karen Best will be seen as Olivia,<lb/>
the old woman's niece who, guessing<lb/>
Dan's connections with sudden death,<lb/>
nevertheless so fascinated by him<lb/>
that she saves him from being ap-<lb/>
prehended. The play is as much a<lb/>
study of Olivia's terror-struck mind<lb/>
as it is of the criminal's. Like a bird<lb/>
hypnotized by a snake that intends<lb/>
death, Olivia is caught in a net that<lb/>
in partly repulsion, partly attraction<lb/>
toward the murderer.<lb/>
Not intended as a mystery play,<lb/>
"Night Must Fall" is as replete with<lb/>
shivers, shudders and suspense as any<lb/>
"who-done-it? havijng been de-<lb/>
scribed by one New York critic as<lb/>
"a shocker, wholesale in its horrors,<lb/>
and a blood-curdler for fair Though<lb/>
the audience knows the killer's iden-<lb/>
tity from the start, the play's sus-<lb/>
pense is in the fascination of watch-<lb/>
ing the other characters as they re-<lb/>
act to the gradual realization that a<lb/>
monster at large is living with them<lb/>
under their very roof; the fascina-<lb/>
tion of seeing gradually revealed the<lb/>
killer's inability to feel anything for<lb/>
people except a lust to destroy them.<lb/>
One of the impressive facets of the<lb/>
play is the egomaniac's dilemma of<lb/>
wanting to boast of the cleverness of<lb/>
his homicides, without being caught.<lb/>
Gannon Selected<lb/>
By Kingston Trio<lb/>
Julaine Cannon, sponsored by Sig-<lb/>
ma Phi Epsilon, has been chosen as<lb/>
the 1961 Buccaneer Queen, announced<lb/>
Buccaneer Editor Buddy Kilpatrick<lb/>
this week.<lb/>
Miss Cannon, one of five finalists,<lb/>
'was chosen by the popular vocal<lb/>
group, The Kingston Trio. "By ask-<lb/>
ing the Kingston Trio to select the<lb/>
Queen said Buddy, "we hope that<lb/>
it will create more student interest<lb/>
in the queen and in the yearbook<lb/>
"This is the second year that a<lb/>
Buccaneer Queen has been selected<lb/>
continued Buddy, "and we hope to<lb/>
continue having this as an annual<lb/>
event<lb/>
The other finalists were: Jay<lb/>
Moore Soles, Delta Sigma Pi; Betty<lb/>
Lane Evans, Pi Kappa Alpha; Mary<lb/>
Elizabeth Gardner, Kappa Alpha,<lb/>
and Barbara Ann Ellis, Theta Chi.<lb/>
Julaine, a junior from Ayden, is<lb/>
a primary education major. She is<lb/>
also a member of the Delta Zeta sor-<lb/>
ority.<lb/>
The queen will be presented a tro-<lb/>
phy at the annual spring banquet of<lb/>
the Buccaneer staff, and her picture<lb/>
will appear in the yearbook.<lb/>
is<lb/>
Civil Service Exam<lb/>
Scheduled For Feb. 1<lb/>
A Civil Service Examination will<lb/>
be given on campus Saturday, Feb-<lb/>
luary 11, in the North Dining Hall.<lb/>
The deadline for Juniors and Seniors<lb/>
to file applications to take this ex-<lb/>
amination is January 26.<lb/>
Forms for making application may<lb/>
be secured at the Placement Office,<lb/>
room 203 in the Administration Build-<lb/>
ing, any day during the regular hours.<lb/>
Students taking and passing the<lb/>
examination are not obligated, but<lb/>
qualified for government work.<lb/>
The Civil Service Examination is<lb/>
given regularly six times a year at<lb/>
places designated by the government.<lb/>
"Greenville is not one of the regular<lb/>
Locations for the test, but should<lb/>
enough students turn out to take this<lb/>
test, in the future, Greenville could<lb/>
be a regular location for the exami-<lb/>
nation according to Jack Edwards,<lb/>
Director of Placements.<lb/>
Paintings Exhibit<lb/>
Tradition Theme<lb/>
Lucille Coulbourn, a senior here, is<lb/>
presently exhibiting her paintings in<lb/>
the Kate Lewis Gallery in Rawl build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The art show is sponsored by the<lb/>
East Carolina art department as one<lb/>
of a 1960-1961 series of exhibitions by<lb/>
talented seniors. It will be open to the<lb/>
public through January 14.<lb/>
Miss Coulbourn's wtork indicates<lb/>
her interest in traditional painting.<lb/>
Most of it is slanted toward realism<lb/>
or impressions of the visual world.<lb/>
Included among paintings on dis-<lb/>
play are two realistic still lifes, an<lb/>
impressionistic still life done in gold-<lb/>
en tones, two compositional studies.<lb/>
Miss Coulbourn, who is majoring in<lb/>
art and minoring in English, is presi-<lb/>
dent of the Alpha Xi Delta social sor-<lb/>
ority and a staff member of the col-<lb/>
lege radio station WWWS.<lb/>
SGA Announces<lb/>
Final Plans For<lb/>
Amendment Vote<lb/>
At it's repular weekly meeting<lb/>
Monday night the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association announced final<lb/>
plans for a vote on a proposed<lb/>
amendment to the S.G.A. constitu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The proposed amendment, which<lb/>
will be voted on by the student body<lb/>
January 26 provides, "The accused<lb/>
may appeal any decision of the stu-<lb/>
dent judiciary to a Discipline Com-<lb/>
mittee composed of both faculty and<lb/>
students<lb/>
The polls will be open to vote on<lb/>
the amendment from 9:00 a.m. until<lb/>
4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Another amendment to the con-<lb/>
stitution was voted down in the pre-<lb/>
liminary stages by the student sen-<lb/>
ate. If passed, it would have been<lb/>
included in the January 26 vote by<lb/>
the student body, and would have<lb/>
rovided a SGA constitutional in-<lb/>
terpretive committee made up of<lb/>
representatives from the student<lb/>
body and the faculty.<lb/>
In other business, SGA President,<lb/>
Jim Speight, appointed two new com-<lb/>
mittees. One will investigate the pos-<lb/>
sibility of athletic cards for EC stu-<lb/>
dents. The other new committee is<lb/>
designated to coordinate and stimu-<lb/>
late cultural entertainment on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
SGA Treasurer, Charlie Munn, an-<lb/>
nounced a meeting of the Budget<lb/>
Committee January 16 at 6:16 in the<lb/>
Library Auditorium.<lb/>
The student senate is scheduled to<lb/>
take a test on .Parliamentary pro-<lb/>
cedure January 16. Members of the<lb/>
senate received study guides to use<lb/>
in preparation for this test.<lb/>
Luther Gillon To Present<lb/>
Clarinet Recital Sunday<lb/>
Music for the clarinet will be fea- J Upon graduation he plans, to teach<lb/>
boards each day and no excuses will<lb/>
be accepted for not attending an an- ment, business administration, mar-<lb/>
nounced meeting or test. ' keting, and account<lb/>
Mr. Harry Rainey (left) preeesta trophy to<lb/>
for the student who has contributed moat to the<lb/>
mately 109 students attended the annual Christaaa Party for all the Stu-<lb/>
dent Stores enptoyees.<lb/>
tured Sunday, Jan. 15, in a recital<lb/>
here by Luther Gillon, a pupil of<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter of the college mu-<lb/>
sic department.<lb/>
He is one of a small group of<lb/>
students selected by faculty mem-<lb/>
bers of the department to appear<lb/>
during 1960-61 in a series of "honors"<lb/>
recitals by talented seniors.<lb/>
The program will take place at<lb/>
3:30 p.m. in the McGinnis auditorium<lb/>
on the campus and will be open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
Carolyn Hinton, pianist, will ac-<lb/>
company Mr. Gillon. Mrs. Alison<lb/>
Hearae Moss, soprano, will appear<lb/>
with the clarinetist in Schubert's "Der<lb/>
HiV auf dem Felsen<lb/>
While at East Carolina, Mr. Gillon<lb/>
has been a member of both the March-<lb/>
ing and the Concert Bands. He is<lb/>
past president of the College Orches-<lb/>
tra, and leader of the college dance<lb/>
band, The Collegians. He is also a<lb/>
member of Phi Mu Alpha, profes-<lb/>
sional music fraternity for<lb/>
band in the Charlotte area.<lb/>
ECC Students Enter<lb/>
Teaching: Program<lb/>
The College student teaching pro-<lb/>
gram for the winter quarter includes<lb/>
233 seniors who are conducting<lb/>
classes in more than thirtyM&amp;ree<lb/>
public schools in Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
Eighty are doing work in the pri-<lb/>
mary and grammar grades, 140 in<lb/>
high schools, and thirteen are teach-<lb/>
ing either art or music at all grade<lb/>
levels.<lb/>
Of the total number of students<lb/>
participating in the program 220 are<lb/>
from North Carolina, and thirteen<lb/>
are from other states.<lb/>
Assignments of seniors at the col-<lb/>
lege who are now gaining experi-<lb/>
erce as classroom instructors have<lb/>
bev- announced by Dr. J. L. Oppelfr,<lb/>
director of student<lb/>
<pb facs="00038684_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUARY<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
12-1<lb/>
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indent!<lb/>
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led at I<lb/>
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.here ar<lb/>
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The sixte<lb/>
Epsilofi<lb/>
'ity on<lb/>
Gamma Beti<lb/>
to ope<lb/>
La? yea<lb/>
Delta .eta<lb/>
to isters f<lb/>
Jane (ham<lb/>
Zeta<lb/>
Delta Ze<lb/>
established<lb/>
ipus in Feb<lb/>
01 ity. Lam<lb/>
Lambda Cl<lb/>
The Zeti<lb/>
of 129 coll<lb/>
Ulnae chap<lb/>
tablished s<lb/>
in in 190S<lb/>
ford, Ohio,<lb/>
eludes 40<lb/>
thers Clu<lb/>
the United<lb/>
Delta Z<lb/>
e-ntther in<lb/>
to promott<lb/>
Campus Phenomenon<lb/>
Receives Poor Treatment<lb/>
Recently East Carolina witnessed an age<lb/>
old campus phenomenon made famous across<lb/>
the state a few years ago by North Carolina<lb/>
State College. The act to which we refer is<lb/>
the panty raid that occurred just be-<lb/>
fore the Christmas holidays.<lb/>
Since the beginning of co-educational in-<lb/>
stitutions (perhaps even before this) panty<lb/>
raids have occurred from time to time with<lb/>
varing degrees of success. They never start<lb/>
out to be harmful or destructive, but occasion-<lb/>
ally they get out of hand. This happened at<lb/>
Bast Carolina.<lb/>
According to our reports some of the<lb/>
spirited group became a little too spirited.<lb/>
The result was a few extremely dangerous<lb/>
minutes for some of the girls in the dormi-<lb/>
tory and considerable damage to the build-<lb/>
ing. Those responsible (according to college<lb/>
authorities) were caught and punished. Some<lb/>
w ere even asked to leave school.<lb/>
Now we understand the damage to the<lb/>
building was not extensive . . . nevertheless<lb/>
it was damage. Any student who thoughtlessly<lb/>
damages any of the facilities on campus, es-<lb/>
pecially in a case like this, should have to<lb/>
pay for them in one way or another. Obvious-<lb/>
ly we cannot have students tearing the place<lb/>
apart when they feel so inclined.<lb/>
We have heard, also, that a couple of<lb/>
dangerous situations developed during the<lb/>
excitement. For example, reports say a brick<lb/>
(or bricks) was thrown through one of the<lb/>
windows into a dormitory room. Now even<lb/>
a freshman should be able to see the foolish-<lb/>
ness and danger in that. Someone could have<lb/>
been seriously hurt. Those responsible for<lb/>
such an act should be dealt with accordingly<lb/>
. . . and they were (according to college au-<lb/>
thorities).<lb/>
.Many have expressed dissatisfaction with<lb/>
the decisions of the authorities in this case.<lb/>
However, the facts are: some students were<lb/>
endangered, some damage was done, and some<lb/>
responsible were punished.<lb/>
There is only one question in our minds<lb/>
concerning this case. The question is one of<lb/>
procedure.<lb/>
In the past it has been customary for ju-<lb/>
dicial procedure to be carried out by an or-<lb/>
ganized, duly constituted body such as the<lb/>
Men's Judiciary, the Women's Judiciary, or<lb/>
the Discipline Committee. In this case, how-<lb/>
ever, no such procedure was followed. We<lb/>
wonder why.<lb/>
All of us realize the absolute authority<lb/>
of the college president. We realize he may<lb/>
delegate this power to meet any whim as long<lb/>
as he doesn't overstep these whims exercised<lb/>
by the Board of Trustees and the people of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
We realize the Discipline Committee ex-<lb/>
ists because he wants it to. We also realize<lb/>
any decision made by the Student Government<lb/>
Association or any of its branches, such as<lb/>
the .Judiciaries, may be overruled by him. In<lb/>
short, his power concerning matters of the<lb/>
college is practically absolute.<lb/>
In this case the president apparently<lb/>
elected to let his administrators (Deans, etc.)<lb/>
act as investigating police officers, accusers,<lb/>
jury, and judge. None of the usual college<lb/>
bodies were employed (according to an ad-<lb/>
ministration spokesman).<lb/>
One administrator said this was due to<lb/>
the time element. According to him there was<lb/>
not enough time to call a meeting of these<lb/>
official judicial bodies before the holidays.<lb/>
So  it was handled very efficiently by<lb/>
members of the administration.<lb/>
Presently there are other governments<lb/>
in the world (and East Carolina may be con-<lb/>
sidered a little government in a sense) who<lb/>
operates in the same way. However, this con-<lb/>
cept is not widely accepted by those of us who<lb/>
believe in a democratic society.<lb/>
We do not condemn the president or the<lb/>
administration for punishing those students<lb/>
who deserved it. However, we do question<lb/>
their procedure. We do feel the student body<lb/>
and the college would have benefited from<lb/>
a decision made by an organized judicial body<lb/>
after a complete investigation. We have heard<lb/>
it is sometimes hard to determine exactly who<lb/>
is responsible for damage when only a few<lb/>
members of a mob commit an unbecoming<lb/>
act.<lb/>
Justice has probably been served, but de-<lb/>
mocracy has not.<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Tress Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Tom Jackson<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Jo Anne Parks<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Associate Editor<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Pat Harvey<lb/>
. Patsy Elliott<lb/>
Richard Boyd<lb/>
Marcelle Vogel<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor B. D. Mills<lb/>
Photographers Grover Smithwick, Jim Kirkiand<lb/>
Photographer Assistant George Hathaway<lb/>
Cartoonist Gale Hammond, Jay Arledge<lb/>
Subscription Director Melba Rhue<lb/>
Exchange Manager Selba Mortis<lb/>
Proofreading Director  Jane Ipock<lb/>
Columnists Marcelle Vogcl, Patsy Elliott, Pat<lb/>
Farmer, Pat Harvey, Roy Martin, Jasper Jones,<lb/>
Jim Stingley, Kay McLawhon, J. Mathers<lb/>
Reporters Marcelle Vogel, Patsy<lb/>
Elliott, Jasper Jones, Sue Sparkman, Jim Stingley,<lb/>
Jane Kivett, Mollie Lewis, Lewis Latham, Merle<lb/>
Summers, Ruth Johnson, Sylvia Vick, Dee Smith<lb/>
Women's Circulation Manager Freddie Skinner<lb/>
en's Circulation Manager Gariyle Humphrey<lb/>
IS on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb/>
all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 864.<lb/>
Aged Creep Away<lb/>
Old Year Sees Expansion On EC Campus<lb/>
In the midst of confusion, gaiety,<lb/>
and singers of Auld Lang Syne, the<lb/>
iaged and worn mam bearing the<lb/>
name of 1960 crept away almost two<lb/>
weeks ago. He stole away under the<lb/>
black rain. But he lingered just long<lb/>
enough to talk with us a while and<lb/>
tell us that he'd seen many things<lb/>
happen to us. We'd grown! Expanded.<lb/>
And then he began to recount the<lb/>
things he remembered so well, as if<lb/>
they all happened in a single day.<lb/>
"You started big in January he<lb/>
said, "elected a new president, Dr.<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins, to replace Dr. John<lb/>
D. Messick who had served you loyally<lb/>
and well.<lb/>
"After a fall colonization period,<lb/>
the eight local sororities were induct-<lb/>
ed into national organization in<lb/>
February.<lb/>
"iAibout the same time 'frat house<lb/>
fever' caught on among the fraterni-<lb/>
ties. Purchase of the Lambda Chi<lb/>
ALpha house led the way for other<lb/>
purchases during the year.<lb/>
Oh, in March he chuckled a<lb/>
columnist's attack on disturbances in<lb/>
Austin Building brought about a rul-<lb/>
ing from the president that the mon-<lb/>
strous organ located in the auditor-<lb/>
ium would be played using only 1<lb/>
string or 1 flute stop through periods<lb/>
1-8.<lb/>
"The first annual IFC-Panhel<lb/>
(iance became a reality and a success.<lb/>
'Perhaps April and May were too<lb/>
full of Azaleas and Jamborees for<lb/>
notable occurrences other than the<lb/>
impressive inauguration of your<lb/>
president. This attracted many visi-<lb/>
tors and VI Ps to the camipus and<lb/>
showed the result of much prepara-<lb/>
Nations To Trade<lb/>
Teenage Citizens<lb/>
"You can't realize how wrong you<lb/>
are about other people until you see<lb/>
ior yourself<lb/>
This statement by a German ex-<lb/>
change student in the United States,<lb/>
expresses one of the guiding prin-<lb/>
ciples behind what a January Read-<lb/>
er's Digest article calls "one of the<lb/>
most remarkable educational experi-<lb/>
ments ever launched<lb/>
Under the programor, more cor-<lb/>
rectly, series of programsthis coun-<lb/>
try will send about 1300 teen-agers<lb/>
abroad this year. Similarly, some<lb/>
30d youngsters from 50 nations will<lb/>
come here. These "friendship am-<lb/>
bassadors" will spend some ten<lb/>
months a . ay from home, studying in<lb/>
foreign schools, living in foreign<lb/>
homes, learning foreign customs and<lb/>
finding foreign friends.<lb/>
If past experience holds true, they<lb/>
will return home with many of their<lb/>
preconceptions drastically altered and<lb/>
with new appreciation of the prob-<lb/>
lems of international misunderstand-<lb/>
ing and the rewards of international<lb/>
friendship.<lb/>
The exchange programs are in the<lb/>
hands of five private agencies: the<lb/>
American Field Service, American<lb/>
Friends Service Committee, Inter-<lb/>
national Christian Youth Exchange,<lb/>
National Catholic Welfare Confer-<lb/>
ence and the Michigan Council of<lb/>
("hurches. These groups help screen<lb/>
applicants, trying to select students<lb/>
who are intelligent, outgoing and<lb/>
adaptable.in short, potential lea-<lb/>
ders. iAs Car as possible, student tem-<lb/>
peraments are matched to those of<lb/>
the families who'll be their hosts dur-<lb/>
ing their stay abroad.<lb/>
Costs of the program vary, but<lb/>
average $1000 for the ten months.<lb/>
For U.S. students going abroad grants<lb/>
are available; often they cover the<lb/>
entire cost.<lb/>
Job Opportunities<lb/>
Three representatives from the<lb/>
the Federal Government will be<lb/>
available Monday, January 16, from<lb/>
1:00-5:00 in the afternoon in the<lb/>
Wright Auditorium to discuss with<lb/>
any interested student career op-<lb/>
portunities in the federal govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Mr. N. A. Avers, District Man-<lb/>
ager of Social Security Adminis-<lb/>
tration in Rocky Mount, end his as-<lb/>
sistants recruit not only for their<lb/>
division but for all divisions of the<lb/>
federal government.<lb/>
Avers will welcome the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to discuss government ca-<lb/>
reers with any student.<lb/>
B. C Goet To College!<lb/>
By PATSY ELLIOTT<lb/>
tion by the Inauguration Committee.<lb/>
"September brought you all to-<lb/>
gether again, even in greater num-<lb/>
ber. You experienced a record-break-<lb/>
ing enrollment with 554 students<lb/>
over last years total. Donna and Ken-<lb/>
nedy, both took the campus by storm,<lb/>
becoming experiences to remember.<lb/>
"In September, Katherine Salle<lb/>
became the first student to be en-<lb/>
rolled in EC's newly established<lb/>
nursing program. Students noted a<lb/>
change from the registrar's office<lb/>
in the gading system, from numerals<lb/>
to letters.<lb/>
"A great month for senders with<lb/>
a 2 average . . . October was the<lb/>
time when the Policies Committee<lb/>
granted these chosen ones unlimited<lb/>
cuts.<lb/>
"In this season the campus was<lb/>
pleasantly adorned with the 'black<lb/>
nude' who graced the entrance of<lb/>
Rawl building. And sad it was to see<lb/>
her leave.<lb/>
"Women students progressed in<lb/>
their desire for more freedom when<lb/>
in November, the requirement for<lb/>
women to have their date cards ap-<lb/>
proved was lifted.<lb/>
"Registration changes occurred in<lb/>
December when students began to<lb/>
register alphabetically. December was<lb/>
the month when an important step<lb/>
was taken by Sigma Sigma sorority<lb/>
with the purchase of the first soror-<lb/>
ity house at EC<lb/>
That's all he had time to tell us for<lb/>
the new year anxiously hurried him<lb/>
on his journey. Hating to leave old<lb/>
friends and familiar places, and with<lb/>
a sad look of departure on his face<lb/>
he left to join his elders in the place<lb/>
that old years stay.<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS<lb/>
Why. fepA, von piwt tell m vt?u map a pate;<lb/>
Equality Efforts Mount<lb/>
(UPS) Efforts to end local discri-<lb/>
minatory practices are mounting at<lb/>
colleges uinl universities across the<lb/>
countly and new civil tights action<lb/>
loops continue to form.<lb/>
University of Texas students held<lb/>
peaceful demonstrations before five<lb/>
non-integrated restaurants and the<lb/>
Texas Theater last week. More than<lb/>
100 white and Negro students dem-<lb/>
onstrated at the theater Friday and<lb/>
Saturday evening (Dec. 2 &amp; 3). The<lb/>
students passed out cards prepared<lb/>
by the University Religious Council<lb/>
stating "I will continue to patronize<lb/>
this establishment if it is integrated<lb/>
in an effort to convince owners that<lb/>
they would not be economically hurt<lb/>
by integrating.<lb/>
Wilson College (Chambersburg,<lb/>
Pa.) student council approved a policy<lb/>
to boycott the Penn-Wilson, &amp; local<lb/>
restaurant as long as it practices ra-<lb/>
cial discrimination, and the faculty<lb/>
has authorized the appointment of a<lb/>
faculty committee on civil rights to<lb/>
work with the student government.<lb/>
Roosevelt University (Chicago)<lb/>
student senate voted last month to<lb/>
send letters protesting their civil<lb/>
rights policies to Governor Ernest<lb/>
Vandiver of Georgia and Mayor Wil-<lb/>
liam Hartsfield of Atlanta.<lb/>
Colleges United for Racial Equality<lb/>
(CURE) was formed in late October<lb/>
to coordinate New York area campus<lb/>
civil rights activities. Participating<lb/>
are students from Barnard, Colum-<lb/>
bia, New York University, Queens<lb/>
and City College of New York. Proj-<lb/>
ects Include picketing at Woolworths<lb/>
?nd publishing a civil rights news-<lb/>
letter.<lb/>
The recently reactivated Human<lb/>
Relations Commission of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Minnesota Student Associa-<lb/>
tion is studying University policies in<lb/>
various areas including admissions,<lb/>
scholarships, employment and hous-<lb/>
ing. The Commission also plans a<lb/>
campaign to bring campus discrimin-<lb/>
ation problems to the attention of the<lb/>
entire student body.<lb/>
The University of Wisconsin Stu-<lb/>
dent Council on Civil Rights and the<lb/>
Wisconsin Student Association Hu-<lb/>
man Relations Commission are in-<lb/>
vestigating discriminatory problems<lb/>
n Madison.<lb/>
Over 70 students attended a con-<lb/>
ference in Ithaca, New York last week<lb/>
end (Dec. 2 A 3) sponsored by the<lb/>
Cornell Committee Against Segrega-<lb/>
tion designed to "educate, direct and<lb/>
strengthen students in the fight<lb/>
against segregation<lb/>
The Chicago Youth Committee on<lb/>
Civil Rights is planning a series of<lb/>
demonstrations to protest what they<lb/>
consider the Board of Education's<lb/>
lack of concern over segregation in<lb/>
Chicago. In addition, the committee<lb/>
plans to testify at the board's budget<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
Qualified persons interested in<lb/>
running for the editorship of the<lb/>
East Carolinian (term to begin<lb/>
spring quarter 1961) should sub-<lb/>
mit a letter of application to Dr.<lb/>
James H. Tucker, Chairman of<lb/>
the Publications board.<lb/>
The Huebner Foundation has re-<lb/>
cently announced a program of fel-<lb/>
lowship and scholarship grants<lb/>
which are being made available to<lb/>
qualified college students this year.<lb/>
The grants are being made for<lb/>
advanced study in an insurance<lb/>
teaching career at the collegiate<lb/>
level. Interested students are asked<lb/>
to contact Dr. James H. Tucker.<lb/>
1he Old lurwzrt.<lb/>
6r<lb/>
There's nothing wrong<lb/>
with the younger generation<lb/>
that the older generation<lb/>
didn't outgrow<lb/>
rum FiaaT instructor<lb/>
1H FIRST FRATEKNiTV.<lb/>
!<lb/>
World Threatened<lb/>
By lll-Mannered<lb/>
Communist Leader<lb/>
By JIM STINGLEY, JB.<lb/>
Twenty some years ago a small<lb/>
man with an odd-looking mustache<lb/>
nd a high, fanatic voice stood above<lb/>
a meeting place and screamed to nis<lb/>
people and his troops, "Tonight we<lb/>
crnquer Poland! Tomorrow the<lb/>
World<lb/>
Today a short, fat, and ill-man-<lb/>
nered little man. may be saying, To-<lb/>
night we conquer Laos! Tomorrow<lb/>
ihe World This man is Nikita Khru-<lb/>
shchev, leader of the communistic and<lb/>
undemocratic U.S.S.R. He's the man<lb/>
who came to America with false<lb/>
smiles and scheming plans. He'3 the<lb/>
cne who made a mockery of the high-<lb/>
ly important Summit Conference.<lb/>
And, if the course of events doesn't<lb/>
change quickly, he will be the one<lb/>
who leads the world into a war that<lb/>
can have only one end, that being<lb/>
almost total world destruction.<lb/>
One might say that this has no-<lb/>
thing to do with this college's activities<lb/>
and that it is merely wasted space<lb/>
in this paper. If this were true, this<lb/>
writer would certainly dwell on an-<lb/>
other subject. The sad thing about<lb/>
it is that it is not true. This campus<lb/>
has many students who are in the<lb/>
AFROTC, the Marine Corps Reserve,<lb/>
The PLC, The National Guard, and<lb/>
the Army reserve. These students<lb/>
would be the first to go in case of<lb/>
an emergency. Those men eligible for<lb/>
the draft would follow in close suc-<lb/>
cession. These are all students of<lb/>
EOC. They are concerned.<lb/>
What can we do to protect our na-<lb/>
tion from war? Perhaps pray, per-<lb/>
haps nothing, all we can do is wait,<lb/>
and hope, and pray. Wait, and hope,<lb/>
and pray that there won't be another<lb/>
Pearl Harbor, another Hiroshima, or<lb/>
another Bataan.<lb/>
Do you know the cruelness and<lb/>
coldness of war? I dont, but this<lb/>
campus's library has some material<lb/>
that might help one to learn. Go there<lb/>
and check out the Marine Corps' ac-<lb/>
counts of the Second World War in<lb/>
the Pacific. You 11 see pictures of<lb/>
bodies, real bodies, American bodies,<lb/>
lying face down in the sand. There<lb/>
are pictures of hundreds of dead ci-<lb/>
vilians piled in ditches, of two-month-<lb/>
old babies left to die, and many more<lb/>
vivid and gruesome accounts of what<lb/>
did happen there and what could hap-<lb/>
pen here in America.<lb/>
Soon our country will have a new<lb/>
man as its leader. May God guide<lb/>
and direct his moves, may he be<lb/>
granted the necessary wisdom to help<lb/>
keep this world from war, and may<lb/>
he always find America supporting<lb/>
him. These are truly the times that<lb/>
try men's souls.<lb/>
Professor Cites<lb/>
'Art As Experience'<lb/>
In Art Publication<lb/>
The December issue of the quarter-<lb/>
ly "Journal of Aesthetics and Art<lb/>
Criticism" contains an article by Dr.<lb/>
Leon Jacobson, assistant professor<lb/>
of art here. The article is entitled,<lb/>
"Art as Experience and American<lb/>
Visual Art Today<lb/>
Dr. Jacobson contrasts John Dew-<lb/>
ey's philosophy of art in his "Art<lb/>
as Experience published in 19S4,<lb/>
with the nature of American visual<lb/>
art production in the post-war period.<lb/>
1945-1962.<lb/>
The article demonstrates that the<lb/>
practical meaning of Dewey's "Art<lb/>
as Experience" lies m its requirement<lb/>
that artists produce visual works of<lb/>
art containing at least some object<lb/>
depiction. Dr. Jacobson says that this<lb/>
insistence runs counter to the phil-<lb/>
osophy of art of American visual ar-<lb/>
tists, as revealed in the massive non-<lb/>
objective art practice of that period,<lb/>
a practice wihkh is still the dominant<lb/>
one in the United States.<lb/>
Because "Ant as Experience" is, by<lb/>
Dewey's own avowal, the heart of his<lb/>
philosophy, the article concludes with<lb/>
observations regarding Dewey's phil-<lb/>
osophic point of view.<lb/>
Oddball Unappreciated<lb/>
Contentment Wins Out<lb/>
By ROY MART IX<lb/>
During the holidays we were talking<lb/>
an alumnus of East Carolina, and m ?<lb/>
course of the conversation we learned an j?<lb/>
teresting fact.<lb/>
According to this gentleman, during rh<lb/>
CKs there existed here on the earnpua<lb/>
cieties, devoted to thought. These aa<lb/>
were composed of students and faculty<lb/>
the names for these groups came from mS<lb/>
of thought, such as Emerson, Poe and 2S<lb/>
Much has been said about the i.itelW<lb/>
ual life here. That subject has been &amp;iacm<lb/>
time after time. However, when the di<lb/>
sions end it is always upon a sour note <lb/>
body cares. We are content to In  <lb/>
little glass houses, live tor the wee<lb/>
wail at exam time, and after four years'<lb/>
grab our diplomas and run. Th.  JJJ<lb/>
in a majority of instances, but the<lb/>
is leaning more and more in that direct<lb/>
This campus needs to revive groups aucj<lb/>
as the societies which existed during the 30<lb/>
But they cannot be sponsored by he g<lb/>
be a service project for some fratei<lb/>
sorority, nor can they be organized<lb/>
competitive basis. These troop<lb/>
formed by people who are interest <lb/>
thing besides what they must memor ze for<lb/>
their coming exam. When they meet :hl<lb/>
groups should shut out the van<lb/>
campus life. They should concern t<lb/>
with their own thoughts, and the :<lb/>
of those around them, having no n<lb/>
about their subjects of discuss!<lb/>
Education does not come sole<lb/>
printed pages of a textbook. Li. <lb/>
education. We cannot take what a<lb/>
says in a book as fact, and atop at thai<lb/>
We must question his right to spe.<lb/>
Somebody has to care before<lb/>
can be done about a more distinc<lb/>
phere for learning here. East Ca<lb/>
some of the finest young mind.<lb/>
within its confines. These mi"nda<lb/>
be allowed to be stereotyped bv it<lb/>
society.<lb/>
East Carolina could have socie<lb/>
as we have mentioned. There is an<lb/>
for such activity as this, simply be<lb/>
is none here now. But the question arija<lb/>
. . . how many people would not participate<lb/>
because they were afraid that their<lb/>
might laugh at them and call them oddball"<lb/>
Joy's The Word<lb/>
'An Afternoon In May'<lb/>
By PAT FARMER<lb/>
2? College Commended<lb/>
TlSLXTfrV<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
East Caroinian<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Dear Sir:<lb/>
May I use this medium to express<lb/>
wr sincere appreciation to those<lb/>
students and faculty members of East<lb/>
Carolina College who gave ao gen-<lb/>
erously of their time and money m<lb/>
cooperating with onr agency to help<lb/>
insure a happier Holiday Season for<lb/>
many persons who otherwise would<lb/>
have had a very dreary Christinas,<lb/>
-uch a spirit makes our work much<lb/>
more pleasant throughout the re-<lb/>
mainder of the year.<lb/>
We wish all of you success sod<lb/>
happiness in the future.<lb/>
Sinceraly yours,<lb/>
J- S. Grimes BX<lb/>
After four years of frustration-<lb/>
aches, hangevers, and moments  f brief<lb/>
pleasure, there are those in our midst who<lb/>
proudly wear the title of "college senior:<lb/>
But, as with other rewards society gives,<lb/>
being a senior carries a certain restrictions<lb/>
and privileges.<lb/>
Being a senior is restrictive in that one<lb/>
has to concentrate the major portion of hu<lb/>
time on his studieswhich he did not haw<lb/>
to do the preceding three years. The debon-<lb/>
air youth has to forfeit pleasurable activities<lb/>
lor interviews with his advisors, prospective<lb/>
employers, and his roommate.<lb/>
But then with these restrictions comes<lb/>
the knowledge that he has reached a pin-<lb/>
nacle in his scholastic battle. He feels satis-<lb/>
raction in the realization that he is supposed-<lb/>
ly better equipped for the future than his<lb/>
friends who fell by the wayside. Jov grips<lb/>
mm by the shoulder as he dreams of that<lb/>
afternoon in May when he will receive his<lb/>
diploma.<lb/>
And on certain afternoons in the late<lb/>
lu u early winter he is saddened by the<lb/>
tnought of leaving the familiar, homey, sur-<lb/>
roundings of his college campus and dormi-<lb/>
tory room. The youth is burdened by the<lb/>
unbearable knowledge that he will not only<lb/>
leave "his home away from home but will<lb/>
also leave those towers of overwhelming in-<lb/>
tellecthis instructors. But then the world<lb/>
is bathed in the light of his golden smile as<lb/>
he realizes that these men have given him<lb/>
deeper insight into the problems of the world.<lb/>
ABd on life goes for the college senior.<lb/>
baddened, with stooped shoulders, the youth<lb/>
resolves to spend the remaining months of<lb/>
his senior year in the company of his corn-<lb/>
ratesdesperately seeking the last remain-<lb/>
ing moments of collegiate brotherhood.<lb/>
Unmatched Generosity<lb/>
From the Nashville Banner<lb/>
Did you realize? The Federal Govern-<lb/>
ment's cash intake since 1927 has multiplied<lb/>
27 times and the public's spendable income<lb/>
(after taxes) is only four times as great as<lb/>
it was 88 years ago.<lb/>
And while Washington was getting more<lb/>
and mare, state and local revenueon a<lb/>
national basis has risen but five times U<lb/>
revel of 1927. <lb/>
Since, in theory, at least, we "govern<lb/>
ourselves it is appallingly apparent that<lb/>
we feel that the Federal Government can<lb/>
spend our money more effectively than we<lb/>
can ourselves.<lb/>
with this issue, tw letters frees<lb/>
the "Letters T The Editor comma will be se-<lb/>
teted as outstanding each month by the edi-<lb/>
torial staff of the East Carolinian. The .<lb/>
suhsaitting the beat two wiB receive a free<lb/>
ten  Tareyten cigarettes each.<lb/>
Letters wfil be selested en the basis of<lb/>
ity in thought.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038684_0003"/><lb/>
 vV 12, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
960 Witnesses Changing Face Of Campus<lb/>
<lb/>
"Man<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
' building, and Legislature meet in Januarj. o it<lb/>
" where the meals are V1 ' be Five hi i month before we<lb/>
I- ,  i,  s ki ov hov mm h fte i un : rid n<lb/>
 . imi<lb/>
"  " ition<lb/>
a rid I'oonis.<lb/>
n e i hape! i  to be financed by in-<lb/>
donation: Inyone may buy<lb/>
i where the men's dorms are built, stantly building new buildings and the E.C. campu is a renewal project<lb/>
Mr. I un. an said, 'This was the last making additions to buildings already which i , rig carried out in Wright<lb/>
 Bibilitj to gel land adjacent to in use continued Mr. Duncan, "manj ircle. The wrk, which is 1 be com-<lb/>
matruetion a brick for ten dollars l.ach donor's the campus, ll we had not bought it capitol in irovements are still need- pleted sometime next<lb/>
Efforts aie al o being made to se name will be listed in a book which we would have bea cut completely ed. V e have requested seven million i implete r raping and a<lb/>
ire donations foi the construction will I" placed in the vestibule. Dr. off from expansion because we are dollars tor additions and improve- new fountain for the cir -<lb/>
f ' s'I.ui.ikmi ihapel on the East l ki is said, "We hope it will be already cul off on three sides We t;ents to the physical plant, in the Collegi  ials have commented<lb/>
' N" ,UK i Carolina Campus. The chapel is to b built bj students, alumni, and people are concerned with a long range ex- budget to be considered by the 1961 it will m ,f the most beautifsl<lb/>
with new an inter-denominational centei for throughout the state. The various pension prognam he added. Legislature.<lb/>
111 ftir condit  unit, new religious activities. student governments will be able to "Despite the fact that we are con- The<lb/>
' a cafeteria Tentative plans are for the brick contribute to this goal<lb/>
v ; '. i luan ding to in aci on the mall In the Spring of 1959 the college<lb/>
v  bu  . ntei i  the ca  p i Plai purcrvi ed 44 additional acre- of land<lb/>
. and include seatin arranu "oi 500 at $141.660 cat I I of the 14th<lb/>
r'u- ' ' ifeteria was people, an of)  the Director of tre a d beyond the Norfolk South-<lb/>
at th beginning Keligii . and other offices irn R itl I neai the 35 acre<lb/>
. i . I960.<lb/>
in i g a when<lb/>
most recent face Lifting to the ivorl .<lb/>
<lb/>
 'll undei<lb/>
een the b I ones<lb/>
, A 1<lb/>
pinning he Pall<lb/>
New H . pied<lb/>
I960 Fall<lb/>
I . two men' ,<lb/>
i<lb/>
r e have<lb/>
ut h H la<lb/>
" ksement<lb/>
.i itmi<lb/>
i<lb/>
n, ocate<lb/>
are<lb/>
la I tend<lb/>
ave ; em<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
nan mm<lb/>
i<lb/>
Gnahan H iw<lb/>
 i i w<lb/>
 ;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i mstead Dormilorv<lb/>
Out of two formerl.N male dorms being converted for the use of female students living there.<lb/>
Jones Dormitr . . . One d two new dorms housing 20 male student;<lb/>
located on th new South campus.<lb/>
Graham Building . . . More classrooms for a growing student body.<lb/>
st I<lb/>
troject of the experienced architects.<lb/>
h Mok Hall Ainu v<lb/>
. More space, with modern facilities.<lb/>
North Cafeteria . . . Better equipped, comfortable, and a pleasing atmosphere.<lb/>
The Infirmary Annex . . . With room<lb/>
for 30 more sick students.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038684_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
PAGE POUR<lb/>
JANUARY 12. <lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
<lb/>
Gamm<lb/>
Sigma Sign<lb/>
N th Can<lb/>
:ded at &amp;<lb/>
1959. fro<lb/>
tnal initi<lb/>
5. 1960.<lb/>
Purple and<lb/>
Tri Sigma. T<lb/>
d indente<lb/>
pear;?. The ?o<lb/>
pie violet. Tr:<lb/>
fu Uni<lb/>
Sigma Sigi<lb/>
nded at L<lb/>
le, Virginia<lb/>
.iy there are<lb/>
 r the badj<lb/>
The sixtee<lb/>
Phi Epsilon<lb/>
sorority on <lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
ority to opei<lb/>
Last yea<lb/>
Delta Zetas<lb/>
to sisters a<lb/>
Jane (hand<lb/>
Zeta<lb/>
Delta Zet<lb/>
established<lb/>
ipus in Febi<lb/>
ority, Lamt<lb/>
Lambda Ch<lb/>
The Zeta<lb/>
of 129 coll<lb/>
mnae chapt<lb/>
tablished si<lb/>
ing in 1902<lb/>
ford, Ohio,<lb/>
eludes 40,6<lb/>
thcrs' Glut<lb/>
the United<lb/>
Delta Ze<lb/>
antther in<lb/>
to promote<lb/>
tare of its<lb/>
plans for j<lb/>
tkm. High<lb/>
larship, p<lb/>
threes, to!<lb/>
1 tf<lb/>
Teacher Addn<lb/>
Browning Society<lb/>
Dr. Louise Greer, English professor<lb/>
here has accepted an invitation to ftp-<lb/>
pear as speaker April 8, before the<lb/>
Rosfcon, Mass Browning Society.<lb/>
She will discuss the story behind her<lb/>
book "Browning and America<lb/>
The Boston Browning Society was<lb/>
organized December 8, 1886, by a<lb/>
group of admirers of Robert Brown-<lb/>
ing and has met regularly since that<lb/>
time for study and discussion of the<lb/>
poet's works.<lb/>
For 1960-1961, seventy-fifth anni-<lb/>
ersary of the founding of the so-<lb/>
ciety, programs have been scheduled,<lb/>
including addresses by such Brown-<lb/>
ing scholars as Dr. Greer and Dr.<lb/>
William 0. DeVane, dean and pro-<lb/>
fessor of English at Yale University.<lb/>
Dr. Greer's book 'Browning and<lb/>
America (published by the University<lb/>
of North Carolina Press in 1952, has<lb/>
received international recognition as<lb/>
a major contribution to Browning<lb/>
scholarship. It deals with the poet's<lb/>
relationships with many noted Amer-<lb/>
icans, the publication of his works<lb/>
in America, his literary reputation<lb/>
in this country, and the influence of<lb/>
Browning upon American culture.<lb/>
TV Manager Urges<lb/>
New Ideas, Plans<lb/>
A. Hartwell Campbell, general man-<lb/>
ager of television station WNCT,<lb/>
Greenville, was the featured speaker<lb/>
at the December meeting of the East<lb/>
Carolina Chapter of the Society for<lb/>
Advancement of Management.<lb/>
SAM is the recognized national<lb/>
professional organization of manage-<lb/>
ment in industry, commerce, govern-<lb/>
ment, and education and the pioneer<lb/>
in management philosophy.<lb/>
The basis for a successful promo-<lb/>
tion, Mr. Gamtpbell said, is a seedbed<lb/>
of ideas. These ideas come from dif-<lb/>
ferent sources, he explained, by en-<lb/>
gagement in mental thought and by<lb/>
putting together the obvious. Ideas,<lb/>
he continued, are like icebergs; they<lb/>
are larger than they appear and all<lb/>
aspects cannot be seen. To be suc-<lb/>
cessful, he said, ideas must fill a<lb/>
need and stand the test of knowledge<lb/>
and judgment.<lb/>
After the idea, a plan is the next<lb/>
step in promotion, he stated. A plan<lb/>
to be put into operation takes time,<lb/>
must be sold to all people concerned,<lb/>
and takes capital and organization, he<lb/>
asserted.<lb/>
To have a successful promotion, Mr.<lb/>
Campbell concluded, the promoter<lb/>
must be concerned with its benefits<lb/>
to others. A successful promoter can-<lb/>
not be an individual who is primarily<lb/>
concerned only for himself.<lb/>
Europe Offers Summer<lb/>
Courses To U. S. Students<lb/>
Four British and two Austrian sum-<lb/>
mer schools are offering special six-<lb/>
week courses to American undergrad-<lb/>
uate and graduate students in July<lb/>
and August, 1961, it was announced<lb/>
by the Institute of International Edu-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
Under the British University Sum-<lb/>
mer Schools program students can ap-<lb/>
ply for study at one of four schools,<lb/>
each concentrating on a. particular<lb/>
subject and period. At Stratford-<lb/>
on-Avon the subject will be Eliza-<lb/>
bethan drama; at the University of<lb/>
London the course will be the study<lb/>
of English literature, art and music<lb/>
of the 17th and 18th centuries, using<lb/>
materials preserved in London's<lb/>
buildings, gnlleries and records; at<lb/>
Oxford the subject will be English<lb/>
history, literature and the arts from<lb/>
1870 to the present. The theme of the<lb/>
Edinburgh School will be the politi-<lb/>
cal and economic history, philosophy<lb/>
and literature of Britain from 1569<lb/>
to 1789. Although the courses are<lb/>
designed for graduate students, un-<lb/>
dergraduates in their last two years<lb/>
at a university will be considered<lb/>
The inclusive charge for board, resi-<lb/>
dence and tuition for six-weeks at<lb/>
each of the four British summer<lb/>
schools is L90 (approximately $254).<lb/>
A limited number of full and half<lb/>
scholarships are available to under-<lb/>
graduates and graduates in this pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Both Austrian summer schools in-<lb/>
clude in their program the opportun-<lb/>
ity to attend performances at Salz-<lb/>
burg's famed music festival. The<lb/>
Salzburg Summer School stresses<lb/>
the German language and requires<lb/>
that all students enroll in a language<lb/>
course. Other courses foreign pol-<lb/>
icy. Austrian Literature, European<lb/>
music and history of Austrian art<lb/>
will be taught in English. The fee for<lb/>
the entire six-week program, which<lb/>
includes registration fee, room, board,<lb/>
tuition, examination fees, several<lb/>
conducted tours, and three Salzburg:<lb/>
Festival tickets, is $225. A few full<lb/>
scholarships are available and a half-<lb/>
term program is offered for a fee of<lb/>
$135. Applicants for the SalzbuTg<lb/>
Summer School may be 18-40 years of<lb/>
Rev. Ottaway Plans<lb/>
Confirmation Classes<lb/>
Reverend Richard N. Ottaway,<lb/>
Rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
and college chaplain, announced today<lb/>
that a series of confirmation classes<lb/>
will soon begin.<lb/>
Any student interested in being<lb/>
confirmed or attending the classes,<lb/>
should contact Reverend Ottaway as<lb/>
soon as possible.<lb/>
A meeting time suitable tc all par-<lb/>
ticipants will be arranged.<lb/>
age and must have completed at least<lb/>
one year of college by June, 1961.<lb/>
The University of Vienna, offering<lb/>
summer courses at its St. Wolfgang<lb/>
Campus near Salzburg, combines<lb/>
study with outdoor life at a mountain<lb/>
lake. Its aim is to enable English-<lb/>
speaking students to become acquaint-<lb/>
ed with Austrian educational and so-<lb/>
cial values. Courses being offered in-<lb/>
clude German language, liberal arts,<lb/>
law and political science, and physical<lb/>
education. General eligibility for ei-<lb/>
ther a three or six-week program is<lb/>
determined by at least two years of<lb/>
college study, but applicants for cer-<lb/>
tain courses must meet other specific<lb/>
prerequisites.<lb/>
The fee for the full six-week pro-<lb/>
gram, including tuition, maintenance,<lb/>
tours and excursions, and attendance<lb/>
at the Salzburg Festival is $250, with<lb/>
an optional four-day trip to Vienna<lb/>
costing $30. A few scholarships cov-<lb/>
ering partial or full fees are avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
Applications for both the British<lb/>
and Austrian programs may be ob-<lb/>
tained from the Information and<lb/>
Counseling Division, Institute of In-<lb/>
ternational Education, 1 East 67th<lb/>
St New York 21, New York, or from<lb/>
one of the Institute's regional offices.<lb/>
British summer school scholarship ap-<lb/>
plications must be received before<lb/>
March 1, 1961, and admission appli-<lb/>
cations before March 31. Scholarship<lb/>
applications for Austrian schools<lb/>
must be returned by March 1, and<lb/>
admission applications by May 1.<lb/>
Collegiate Groups To Compete<lb/>
In 1961 Jazz Festival In April<lb/>
Two years ago jazz enthusiasts at<lb/>
Notre Dame initiated Collegiate Jazz<lb/>
Festival because they wanted to give<lb/>
college jazz a chance to be heard. It<lb/>
rose quickly from a regional Mid-<lb/>
Western jazz meet to a nation-wide<lb/>
festival. CJF received enthusiastic<lb/>
response from college jazz musicians<lb/>
and fans, as well as the music indus-<lb/>
try as a whole. Now, as Collegiate<lb/>
Jazz Festival enters its third year,<lb/>
reports have it that it will be even<lb/>
bigger and better than in the past.<lb/>
Collegiate Jazz Festival 1961 will<lb/>
encompass a "New Dimension in<lb/>
College Jazz Notre Dame's Jazz<lb/>
Festival Committee reports that next<lb/>
spring on the weekend of April 21-<lb/>
22 fans will be treated to a "brand<lb/>
caw edition of competitive college<lb/>
jazz at Notre Dame Plans include<lb/>
more prizes, wider publicity, bigger<lb/>
audiences, and a new concept in pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Between 25 and 30 college groups<lb/>
from all over the nation will compete<lb/>
for top honors and prizes in the Notre<lb/>
Dame fieldhouse. Instruments will be<lb/>
awarded to the winning soloists, with<lb/>
the best over-ail soloist receiving a<lb/>
scholarship to the Berklee School of<lb/>
Music in Boston. The top big band<lb/>
and combo, in addition to special ar-<lb/>
tangements by the Berklee School<lb/>
faculty, wiM receive scholarships to<lb/>
the Stan Kenton Clinics of the Na-<lb/>
tional Stage Band Gamp. The over-all<lb/>
champion group of the festival will<lb/>
take back to their campus for one<lb/>
year a huge loving cup donated by<lb/>
Associated Booking Corporation.<lb/>
Following CJF 1961 CapKol Rec-<lb/>
ords will release an LP recorded dur-<lb/>
ing the finals. Judges will be three<lb/>
renowned jazz musicians and two men<lb/>
closely associated with jazz. A chance<lb/>
to meet the judges will be given the<lb/>
musicians at one oil the informal<lb/>
get-togethers during the festival.<lb/>
To further guarantee the success<lb/>
of Collegiate Jazz Festival, such men<lb/>
as Stan Kenton, Duke Ellington,<lb/>
Steve Allen and Herman Kenin, plus<lb/>
many other notables, have agreed to<lb/>
act in an advisory capacity for CJF<lb/>
1901. r 9<lb/>
The deadline for applying to CJF<lb/>
1961 is February 10, 1961. Groups<lb/>
wishing to apply should write for<lb/>
application blanks and information!<lb/>
to: Collegiate Jazz Festival 1961, Box<lb/>
536, University of Notre Dame, No-<lb/>
tre Dame, Indiana.<lb/>
CJF gives college jazz musicians a<lb/>
unique opportunity to achieve pub-<lb/>
licity for themselves and their group.<lb/>
Last year the festival was covered<lb/>
by Time, Down Beat, Saturday Eve-<lb/>
ning Post, and Jazz Review. NBCs<lb/>
Monitor broadcast portions of CJF<lb/>
nationwide. Plans this year promise<lb/>
to surpass even this, it is reported.<lb/>
The festival promises to be a worth-<lb/>
while undertaking for jazz musicians<lb/>
and fans alike. Already this year it<lb/>
has received enthuiastic response.<lb/>
.All in all Collegiate Jazz Festival<lb/>
should be a great swing into spring.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Tan. 12: Departmental Meetings<lb/>
Jan. 13: Movie: "House of Usher<lb/>
Vincent Price, Austin Aud 7:00.<lb/>
Jan. 15: Senior Honor Recital: Luther<lb/>
Gillon, Clarinet, McGinnis, 3:30.<lb/>
Jan. 16: Duplicate Bridge, College<lb/>
Union TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 19: College Union Meeting, 3rd<lb/>
floor social room, Wright, 6:30<lb/>
p.m. Beginner's Bridge Class,<lb/>
College Union TV Room, 7:00 p.<lb/>
m. Chess Tournament Play, Col-<lb/>
lege Union TV Room, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 20: Movie: "Samson and Delilah<lb/>
Victor Mature, Austin Aud 7:00<lb/>
p.m. Opera Workshop Perform-<lb/>
ance: "The Old Maid and The<lb/>
Thief McGinnis Aud 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
APO White Ball, Wright Aud<lb/>
8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan, 21: Basketball Game: ECC vs<lb/>
Pfieffer, Gym. 8:00 p.m. Opera<lb/>
Workshop Performance: "The<lb/>
Old Maid and The Thief Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Aud 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 23: College Lecture Club, Lib.<lb/>
Aud 4:00 p.m. College Family<lb/>
Life Discussion GroupsTheme:<lb/>
"Marriage for Better or Worse<lb/>
Duplicate Bridge, College Union<lb/>
TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 24: College Family Life Discus-<lb/>
sion GroupsTheme: "Marriage<lb/>
for Better or Worse<lb/>
Jan. 25: Brass Choir Concert, Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan, 26: College Union Student Board<lb/>
Meeting, 3rd floor social room,<lb/>
Wright, 6:30 p.m. Beginner's<lb/>
Bridge Class, College Union TV<lb/>
Room, 7:00 p.m. Chess Tourna-<lb/>
ment Play, College Union TV<lb/>
Room, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
When washing windows, a little<lb/>
vinegar added to the water will give<lb/>
them a brilliant polish.<lb/>
Interest on the national debt costs<lb/>
$1,084,400 an hour.<lb/>
Valentine Dance<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 11<lb/>
8:00-11:45 P. M.<lb/>
"Come and vote for the Valentine<lb/>
Queen of 1961"<lb/>
Music by the<lb/>
Collegians Combo<lb/>
Dress will be Semi-Formal<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Per<lb/>
Couple<lb/>
Tickets are on sale by members of<lb/>
the F.B.L.A. and will be sold at<lb/>
the door.<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Chapter of the Future<lb/>
Business Leaders of<lb/>
America<lb/>
Delta Initiates<lb/>
Twelve E.C. girls were recently<lb/>
initiated into East Carolina's Gamma<lb/>
Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta Sor-<lb/>
ority, in ceremonies held at the first<lb/>
Presbyterian Church of Greenville.<lb/>
. A banquet honoring the initiates<lb/>
took place in the East Dining Hall on<lb/>
the college campus. Of special inter-<lb/>
est at the social event was the pres-<lb/>
entation to Sallie Ann Wallace, of a<lb/>
gift of silver recognizing her as the<lb/>
"Outstanding Pledge" of the group.<lb/>
Katherine Raynor of Greenville acted<lb/>
as president of the pledge class.<lb/>
Other new members of the Gamma<lb/>
Sigma Chapter of Kappa Delta are<lb/>
Mildred Elizabeth Derrick, Sylvia<lb/>
Kay Dawkins, Susan Roberts, Re-<lb/>
becca Narron, Dorothy Spence, Mary<lb/>
Hazel Moore, Elizabeth -Rich, Judith<lb/>
Lambert, Frances Foster, and Mitzi<lb/>
K. Oden.<lb/>
Ohio State Teacher<lb/>
Sketches Imaginary<lb/>
College Professor<lb/>
From the Ohio State Lantern<lb/>
(Editors Note: This editorial was<lb/>
written by Charles Wheeler, assist-<lb/>
ant professor of English at Ohio<lb/>
State).<lb/>
Wynken, Blynken and Nod are the<lb/>
names I shall give to the three pro-<lb/>
fessors on this campus whose por-<lb/>
traits are briefly sketched here. The<lb/>
men are fictitious but not imaginary.<lb/>
By a long-standing tacit agreement,<lb/>
every student who enrolls in one of<lb/>
Professor Wynken's courses is spot-<lb/>
ted a "C" to begin with and only in<lb/>
cases of flagrant absence or failure<lb/>
to turn in assigned, written work is<lb/>
there any danger of a lower grade.<lb/>
"A's" and "B's" are common. Pro-<lb/>
fessor Wynken is not a fool: he knows<lb/>
that his students, by and large, are<lb/>
nothing to get excited about, but he<lb/>
is a kindly man who believes in live-<lb/>
and-let-live. He is also a great sports<lb/>
fan and is unsparing in his criticism<lb/>
of sloppy playing on the football<lb/>
field. Luckily for his peace of mind,<lb/>
our athletic department enforces the<lb/>
(highest standards of performance.<lb/>
Professor Blynken is not the drool-<lb/>
ing petty sadist portrayed in Little<lb/>
Man on Campus but he manages to<lb/>
harass his students quite effectively<lb/>
by simply being obtuse to their feel-<lb/>
ings. He never stops to make sure<lb/>
that his assignments nave been un-<lb/>
derstood after he gives them. When<lb/>
he lectures, he goes so rapidly that<lb/>
note-takers are left hopelessly be-<lb/>
hind, and when he holds a class dis-<lb/>
cussion it usually turns out to be a<lb/>
tete-a-tete between himself and some<lb/>
favored student. He adheres to his<lb/>
office hours so literally that he is<lb/>
almost inaccessible. Though he in-<lb/>
sists that papers be turned in on<lb/>
time, he never returns them when he<lb/>
promised. He habitually comes into<lb/>
class late and then' holds it with his<lb/>
glittering eye until 30 seconds before<lb/>
the final bell for the next hour. He<lb/>
is a very prominent man in his field.<lb/>
Professor Nod is not a boring lec-<lb/>
turer, droning over dog-eared lecture<lb/>
notes compiled twenty years ago. His<lb/>
method is entirely different. It may<lb/>
le called "teaching the text that is<lb/>
sitting in front of the class and re-<lb/>
citing the text out loud, with interpo-<lb/>
lated comments, while the students<lb/>
slump, numb and disgusted, working<lb/>
on their arithmetic under pretense of<lb/>
reading the Lantern. He never as-<lb/>
signs papers that require more than<lb/>
a sentence or two of consecutive ori-<lb/>
ginal writing, and the papers are re-<lb/>
turned bearing grades but no marks<lb/>
or comments on their faults. He will<lb/>
ass illiterate writing if the techni-<lb/>
cal content is satisfactory. He is very<lb/>
fond of multiple choice tests, though<lb/>
now and then he will extend himself<lb/>
by giving a short-answer test to see<lb/>
how well the students have memor-<lb/>
ized 'facts" (a word that he would<lb/>
never dream of putting in quotation<lb/>
marks). He believes that his courses<lb/>
are intellectually demanding.<lb/>
These men are faculty failures.<lb/>
They are not localized in any one de-<lb/>
partment or collegethey can be<lb/>
found all over the campus. Perhaps<lb/>
we faculty members might tarn, for<lb/>
a change, from criticizing' the short-<lb/>
comings of our students to consider-<lb/>
ing how far short we fall of meet-<lb/>
ing the challenge that they present.<lb/>
This challenge is not only in their<lb/>
numbers: it is in their seriousness,<lb/>
their receptivity, their candor, it is<lb/>
in their woeful inexperience, their<lb/>
confused aims, their clumsiness at<lb/>
abstract best in us. We cannot suc-<lb/>
ceed with less.<lb/>
Executive Discusses Program For<lb/>
Financial Support Of Education<lb/>
 ' .   inoWimr ton Drofessorshioe hav k.<lb/>
"The support of higher education<lb/>
by business and industry is no longer<lb/>
an option but a necessity accord-<lb/>
ing to the chief executive of the na-<lb/>
tion's largest textile company.<lb/>
Spencer Love, Chairman and Presi-<lb/>
dent of Burlington Industries, makes<lb/>
the statement in his foreward to a<lb/>
new brochure, "A Program for Aid<lb/>
to Education just published by the<lb/>
Burlington Industries Foundation.<lb/>
The booklet outlines a comprehensive<lb/>
program for financial support of<lb/>
higher education sponsored by the<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
"The direction our civilization will<lb/>
take is dependent upon the ability of<lb/>
our educational institutions to train<lb/>
young men and women for their re-<lb/>
sponsibilities as tomorrow's leaders j<lb/>
Mr. Love states. "If we are to con- ;<lb/>
tinue to press the attack on poverty,<lb/>
ignorance and disease, we must use<lb/>
all available means to improve our<lb/>
educational processes<lb/>
The Burlington Industries Founda-<lb/>
tion, established in 1943, set forth a<lb/>
formal Aid to Education program in<lb/>
1955. It has now been expanded to<lb/>
include eight major phases:<lb/>
1. Matched Employee GivingGifts<lb/>
of employees and directors to educa-<lb/>
tional institutions are matched up<lb/>
to $2,500 per person per year.<lb/>
2. Educational LoansOver 1,000<lb/>
Kurlington employees and their chil-<lb/>
dren have received Foundation loans<lb/>
to assist them in obtaining a higher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
3. Matched TuitionUnrestricted<lb/>
grants are made each year to the<lb/>
schools selected by Burlington Educa-<lb/>
tional Loan Fund students. These<lb/>
grants are equal to the tuition fees,<lb/>
but do not exceed $500 per student.<lb/>
4. Scholarships  Scholarship of<lb/>
$1,000 each are awarded by 16 insti-<lb/>
tutions to junior and senior students,<lb/>
payable $500 annually. The 16 col-<lb/>
leges and universities are located in<lb/>
eight states: North Carolina, South<lb/>
Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, Geor-<lb/>
gia, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts and<lb/>
Alabama. Other scholarships are<lb/>
made sPi.H.fle,d,<lb/>
business<lb/>
5. Matched<lb/>
Schools which<lb/>
scholarships<lb/>
amount to use<lb/>
6. Fellowships<lb/>
  ?tinn and nursing-<lb/>
M"lhlp GranU-<lb/>
aWard unrestricted<lb/>
also receive an identical<lb/>
as they wish.<lb/>
 J. Spencer Love<lb/>
made available at<lb/>
(Z tu.he.stem eduction .net<lb/>
tutions.<lb/>
7. Professorship<lb/>
-Several Burling-<lb/>
ton professorships have been .<lb/>
feW of busine88 <lb/>
lished in the<lb/>
ministration, textiles and tume<lb/>
romics.<lb/>
8. Direct GrantsGrants an.<lb/>
to assist a major financial nay<lb/>
to further the cause of educat l<lb/>
a fieW of study or research.<lb/>
Burlington's Foundation hag a.<lb/>
neled more than $3,000,000 into <lb/>
educational field since a w. ,<lb/>
hshed.<lb/>
CU Begins Work On Mardi Gras Carnival<lb/>
The College Union's Annual Spring $3.00 for pnaa-givm, a<lb/>
Carnival is being changed this year P- OrganizaUons P:an, <lb/>
Mardi Gras Carnival and will<lb/>
to the<lb/>
be held on Thursday, February 14.<lb/>
1961 in the College Union Lounge.<lb/>
As in past years, all campus clubs<lb/>
and organizations are invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the carnival which is spon-<lb/>
sored by the Special Projects Com-<lb/>
mittee of the C.U. Student Board.<lb/>
The carnival is planned to provide<lb/>
entertainment for the students, fac-<lb/>
ulty, staff and families, and to help<lb/>
organizations on campus earn some<lb/>
extra money and good publicity.<lb/>
Organizations which are interested<lb/>
in participating in the carnival, are<lb/>
asked to send a representative to the<lb/>
general organizational meeting Thurs-<lb/>
day, January 12, in the College Union<lb/>
TV Room at 8:30 p.m. At this time,<lb/>
instructions, entry fees and regula-<lb/>
tions will be discussed, and organi-<lb/>
zations may apply for booth space.<lb/>
Since booth space is limited, it will<lb/>
not be reserved until the entry fee of<lb/>
ties where no prizes are j<lb/>
reserve space .and do not pay tc<lb/>
try fee. Spaces will be reserved ob,<lb/>
first come first servf bv.<lb/>
Graduate Receives<lb/>
Commission In Marines<lb/>
Haywood T. Paul, a former<lb/>
student, was corr. B jjjj.<lb/>
Second Lieutenant on December M<lb/>
upon graduation fir 12-Wf<lb/>
Officers Candidate Course at the V.<lb/>
rine Corps School. Quactico, V<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
He is now attending the 26-wf<lb/>
Hasic School requirec of al! ;?<lb/>
c mmissioned Marine Officers, tpei<lb/>
completion of the advanced count,<lb/>
he will be .assigned a Marine Corpi<lb/>
organization for duty or to uwti<lb/>
ol for further trail<lb/>
He married the former Miss ft.<lb/>
tricia Owens of 526 E Strife S-<lb/>
Washington, N.C.<lb/>
Delicious Food<lb/>
Served 24 Hours<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
To see how paint will look when<lb/>
on, brush a stroke or two on a white<lb/>
ink blotter.<lb/>
SMITH'S MOTEL<lb/>
45 Air Conditioned Rooms<lb/>
Room Phones - T. V.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOL<lb/>
Phone PLaza 8-1126<lb/>
Parents and Guest of College<lb/>
Students Welcome<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
with<lb/>
MaxShukan<lb/>
(Author of "I Wa a Tten-age Dwarf "The Many<lb/>
Loves of Dobie Gillis etc.)<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
JERRY LEWIS<lb/>
in<lb/>
'CINDERFELLA'<lb/>
(IN TECHNICOLOR)<lb/>
Co-Starring<lb/>
Anna Maria<lb/>
Alberghetti<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
Adults<lb/>
High School and College<lb/>
Students <lb/>
Children under 12<lb/>
70c<lb/>
60c<lb/>
20c<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
Phone PL 2-7649<lb/>
(Watch For Big Con-<lb/>
test To Start Soon)<lb/>
Some<lb/>
women<lb/>
never give<lb/>
a name<lb/>
just<lb/>
a<lb/>
phone<lb/>
number!<lb/>
BUtterfield <lb/>
M-G-M Presents John O'Hara's Best-SeNer<lb/>
In CinemaSeope and METROCOLOft -Watch for HI<lb/>
Starring<lb/>
ELIZABETH TAYLOR<lb/>
Eddie Fisher - Laurence Harvey<lb/>
Starts FRIDAY Jan. 13<lb/>
At The PITT Theatre<lb/>
19C1: YEAR OF DECISION<lb/>
Well sir, here we are in 1961, which shows every ign of being<lb/>
quite a distinguished year. First off. it is the only year<lb/>
1951 which begins and ends with the Figure 1. Of course. whai<lb/>
it comes to Figure 1's, 1961, though distinguished, can bald <lb/>
compare with 1911, which, most people agree, had  'o,<lb/>
but three Figure l's! This, 111 wager, is a record that  -ind<lb/>
for at least two hundred years!<lb/>
1911 was, incidentally, notable for many other thing It<lb/>
was, for example, the year in which the New York Giants played<lb/>
the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series. As we all know,<lb/>
the New York Giants have since moved to San Francisco and<lb/>
the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. There is a movement<lb/>
afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoenixthe city, not the<lb/>
baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would of course move to<lb/>
Chicago. It is felt that the change would be broadening for<lb/>
i of both cities. Many Chicago folks, for example, have<lb/>
an iguana. Many Phoenix folks, on the other hand,<lb/>
have never seen a frostbite.<lb/>
There are, of course, certain difficulties attending a municipal<lb/>
shift of this six. For instance, to move Chicago you aiso 11<lb/>
to move Lake Michigan. This, in itself, present no great prob-<lb/>
lem, what with modern scientific advances like electronics and<lb/>
the French cuff. But if you will look at your map, you<lb/>
that Lake Michigan is connected to all the other Great Lake<lb/>
which in turn are connected to the St. Lawrence Seaway, wuck<lb/>
'? J"?j" opted to the Atlantic CWi. You start draofoc<lb/>
iaae Michigan to Phoenix and, willy-mllv, vou'll be dragging<lb/>
aflj0t other stuff too. This would make "our British allies<lb/>
temMj cross, and I can't say as I bUme them. I mean, put<lb/>
yourself in the pUce. What if, for example, you were a Bnush<lb/>
w"raman who had been saving and scrimping all vear for <lb/>
SPy Bright0n Beach' thenrhen vou got to<lb/>
taBeach, wkh vour<lb/>
Lambeth Wiir? " nothin to do all day but dance the<lb/>
NATOnminded! yu may be sure, would not make yon<lb/>
PhoerdT! L?"168 to  "idents of Chicago and<lb/>
au3L "a bite, but I<lb/>
m i , Phocmcians-is it too big a price to pay<lb/>
all of<lb/>
am sure<lb/>
that if<lb/>
for<lb/>
 you wp make the right decision.<lb/>
Phoen  aw4ane&amp;4r0,Sttte,l CW' iguana-ndden<lb/>
Americana! x"MaPeU1 New Havea-are first and foremost<lb/>
aewlt ittTW1 7" kin rf 161. our new year. And<lb/>
 fine. nw,nlT Ph in Marlboro whea<lb/>
you light <lb/>
The flavor is such that ag<lb/>
Mariboto never pails, new<lb/>
erette,ea "T !e. Each pack, ea<lb/>
tMaiflS. yoogMaaovwaaam that you are<lb/>
flr smoker!<lb/>
JJyHfaSS; evidently into 196L<lb/>
 join our hit eaer BMB tfaw" W0'<lb/>
"W tfcinliidt into a brave tamaao<lb/>
r <lb/>
m<lb/>
  .  : <lb/>
<pb facs="00038684_0005"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUAJtY If, 1961<lb/>
Stages Party<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
EC Organizations Comolete<lb/>
Projects For Needy Children<lb/>
ral of Beat Carolina's social C<lb/>
were in charge of pur-<lb/>
Lasater, Betty H. Lane, and Sue<lb/>
rnittea ami sororities have car- C Sparknian<lb/>
,t during Jeifa fim H?OZ<lb/>
, . .umnl at making i hristmas! Members of the Delta Z<lb/>
j time for needy children and<lb/>
Members of Sigma Nu fraternity,<lb/>
operation with the Welfare De-<lb/>
ment here, collected about 300<lb/>
i for distribution to needy<lb/>
ies The fraternity also joined<lb/>
, Sa"vation Army in staging a<lb/>
 underprivileged children.<lb/>
Moiritt headed the project<lb/>
l fraternity.<lb/>
Chi Omeea sorority and the<lb/>
Sigma PI fraternity also en-<lb/>
it a children's party. Jean<lb/>
Zeta so-<lb/>
rority carried out for the third con-<lb/>
secutive year a project providing food,<lb/>
clothing, and gifts for a needy family<lb/>
ir. C.reenville. Julia A. Moser, chair-<lb/>
man. Sallie A. Morris, and Sylvia<lb/>
Ann Hoyle composed the committee<lb/>
on arrangements for the sorority.<lb/>
Instead of exchanging gifts with<lb/>
each other, Alpha Phi sisters ar-<lb/>
ranged to provide food, clothing, and<lb/>
children's toys for a family of five<lb/>
in Greenville and to entertain the<lb/>
beneficiaries of their Christmas<lb/>
1 reject at a party.<lb/>
Grad To Address Club<lb/>
a i Kawis, homo economist<lb/>
 rginia Electric and Power<lb/>
Rapids, will speak at<lb/>
I of home economics students<lb/>
night. Sin- will discuss her<lb/>
 Vanities offered in<lb/>
ai areas of service to home eco-<lb/>
neeting will bring together<lb/>
enta and faculty members of<lb/>
economics deportment. It<lb/>
place at 7.HO p.m. in the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
I i  rig inally from Rob-<lb/>
l. was graduated at East<lb/>
in 1964. While attending EC<lb/>
- a member of the Home Eco-<lb/>
Clttb, the home economics<lb/>
v iety Phi Omicron. and other<lb/>
-animations.<lb/>
Soprano Performs<lb/>
In Recital Here<lb/>
Mary Costa, soprano artist re-<lb/>
garded by top critics and managers<lb/>
at one of the brightest discoveries of<lb/>
the decade, appeared in a recital here,<lb/>
Monday night in the Wright audi-<lb/>
tor him.<lb/>
The program was included on the<lb/>
1960-61 College Entertainment Series.<lb/>
Triumphs in London and with the<lb/>
San Francisco Opera during the past<lb/>
two seasons led to Miss iCosta's sign-<lb/>
ing to a $250,000 contract by im-<lb/>
presario S. Hurok and to appearances<lb/>
last Spring on such top television<lb/>
programs as Dinah Shore Chevy Show<lb/>
and the Frank Sinatra Show.<lb/>
This fall Miss Costa returned to<lb/>
the San Francisco Opera to sing<lb/>
such roles as Violetta in "La Tra-<lb/>
iata Micaela in "Carmen" and<lb/>
Pespina in "Cosi Fan Tutte. In Lon-<lb/>
lon her performances in Leonard<lb/>
Bernstein's "Candide" and with the<lb/>
Glyndebourne Opera Festival cre-<lb/>
ated a sensation.<lb/>
Born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and<lb/>
educated in Southern California, Miss<lb/>
Costa is married to Hollywood pro-<lb/>
ducer-writer Frank Tashlin. She first<lb/>
won prominence when she was chosen<lb/>
by Walt Disney to sing and speak the<lb/>
voice of ' The Sleeping Beauty" in<lb/>
tie recent i'eatiUe-dength cartoon.<lb/>
Jack Benny encouraged her to study<lb/>
seriously for opera and introduced<lb/>
her as a singer to television audi-<lb/>
ences in an aria from "Madame<lb/>
Butterfly<lb/>
Public Schools Receive Benefit<lb/>
Campus Testing Center Expands Service<lb/>
The Testing Center at East Carolina , trance examinations of the Education- examination and the merit examina-<lb/>
College is 'being expanded and serv-<lb/>
ices to Eastern North Carolina are<lb/>
being improved.<lb/>
Dr. Frank A. Scott, director of the<lb/>
Testing Center, states that by next<lb/>
year students from the eastern part<lb/>
of the state will no longer have to<lb/>
travel as far .as Raleigh or Chapel<lb/>
Hill to take special examinations<lb/>
required for graduate studies and<lb/>
fellowship grants.<lb/>
Public schools will be benefited, he<lb/>
stated, as they will now be able to<lb/>
Obtain scoring services from the col-<lb/>
lege for those tests using IBM ma-<lb/>
chine scoring answer sheets.<lb/>
The testing services performed by<lb/>
the testing center are varied. The<lb/>
center will administer the college en-<lb/>
al Testing Service and those of the<lb/>
American College Testing Program.<lb/>
The Graduate Record Eramination<lb/>
and the Miller Analogy Test, which<lb/>
are required for admission to many<lb/>
graduate schools and for fellowship<lb/>
grants, will also be administered at<lb/>
the center. Until the present time<lb/>
eastern North Carolina college stu-<lb/>
dents had to travel to Raleigh, Chaipel<lb/>
Hill or Richmond, Va in order to<lb/>
take these tests.<lb/>
Also the high school equivalent<lb/>
tions of neighboring states are given<lb/>
at the center on request as an added<lb/>
function of the center.<lb/>
Public Schools will be benefited by<lb/>
the test scoring services, Dr. Scott<lb/>
said. The schools in eastern North<lb/>
'Carolina now have to send their test<lb/>
answer sheets to Chapel Hill or out<lb/>
of the State in order for them to be<lb/>
machine scored. Through a local serv-<lb/>
ice of this type, it is hoped that the<lb/>
schools will be benefited in terms of<lb/>
t:me and economy.<lb/>
EC Band Participates<lb/>
The East Carolina Marching Band<lb/>
represented the college on Thursday<lb/>
in the Inaugural Parade in Raleigh.<lb/>
The parade, in honor of the new<lb/>
governor of N.C was 92 units long.<lb/>
There were 29 high school and col-<lb/>
lege bands in the parade, and 63<lb/>
military units.<lb/>
Said Herbert Carter, director of<lb/>
bands at EC, "This is one of the<lb/>
most successful parades we have ever<lb/>
.played. We received many fine com-<lb/>
ments and appreciate every one of<lb/>
them He added, "We are certainly<lb/>
proud of the band<lb/>
Committee Sets Conference For<lb/>
'Dating, Engagement, Marriage'<lb/>
The East Carolina administration<lb/>
aid the Faculty Committee on Family<lb/>
Life will sponsor a college conference<lb/>
of "Dating, Engagement and Mar-<lb/>
uiage" here January 23 and 24.<lb/>
The two day conference has as its<lb/>
theme Marriage . . . for better or<lb/>
Worse and will include speeches and<lb/>
informal talks by Mrs. Ethel Nash,<lb/>
Family Life Specialist from the De-<lb/>
partment of Preventative Medicine<lb/>
Sigma Nu Fraternity Displays Gifts.<lb/>
Young Dem's Plan<lb/>
Dance, Reception<lb/>
For Inauguration<lb/>
reception and special pa-<lb/>
I have been arranged dur-<lb/>
1961 Inaugural period for<lb/>
I the Young Democratic<lb/>
t America, Raymond Jaeob-<lb/>
Chairman of Young Democrats<lb/>
gural Festivities Committee and<lb/>
the District of Columbia<lb/>
 rat?, announced this<lb/>
taas f Meyer Davis and<lb/>
Herman have been engaged<lb/>
for the dance from 9 p.m. to<lb/>
I a.m. on January 18 in the Grand<lb/>
of the Mayflower hotel in<lb/>
-ton. Also on the program is<lb/>
Brothers Four singing quartet.<lb/>
I plans call for President-<lb/>
 F. Kennedy and Mrs. Ken-<lb/>
 I Vice President-elect Lyndon<lb/>
n and Mrs. Johnson to at-<lb/>
 e dance.<lb/>
 will be preceded by a<lb/>
ng Democrats reception in the<lb/>
ilia Room of the Mayflower ho-<lb/>
7 p.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
rations are being mailed to<lb/>
Young Democrats throughout<lb/>
  untry offering tickets to the<lb/>
reception, and special Young<lb/>
ts seats for the Inaugural<lb/>
n January 20 for $10 per per-<lb/>
No individual tickets to the dance<lb/>
reception will go on public sale.<lb/>
Opportunities Open<lb/>
For Summer Jobs<lb/>
HE Offers Graduate Study<lb/>
Awards In Poland, Rumania<lb/>
EC Students Hear<lb/>
State Professor<lb/>
Arthur Kelman, professor of<lb/>
thology at North Carolina<lb/>
 ge, Raleigh, was guest<lb/>
speaker here yesterday for a series<lb/>
talks and lectures.<lb/>
i idreu to the Student Science<lb/>
Wednesday was on "The In-<lb/>
ce of Plant Disease on Human<lb/>
Attai<lb/>
Tonight, in McGinnis auditorium at<lb/>
" p.m. Dr. Kelman will speak to the<lb/>
ce Departmental Meeting on<lb/>
rents of Chance in Biological<lb/>
 arch<lb/>
 A participant in the visiting<lb/>
scientists program of the American<lb/>
of Biological Sciences, Dr.<lb/>
Kelman is visiting East Carolina<lb/>
under the sponsorship of the Student<lb/>
Science Club. While on the campus,<lb/>
he will visit several biology classes<lb/>
and present informal talks.<lb/>
Dr. Kelman received his B. S. de-<lb/>
gree at the University of Rhode<lb/>
nd in 1941. At North Carolina<lb/>
State College, Raleigh, he received<lb/>
i M.S. degree in 1946, and the<lb/>
Ph.D degree in 1949. His major field<lb/>
of research is bacterial diseases of<lb/>
plants.<lb/>
A member of the Sigm Xi, Pni<lb/>
Kappa Phi, and the Phi Sigma f<lb/>
ernities, he is also a member of the<lb/>
ociety of American Bacteriologists,<lb/>
the Societv for General Micro-biology<lb/>
and the American Phytopethological<lb/>
Society. .<lb/>
Grover Smithwick, president of t&amp;<lb/>
Student Science Ckab, extends an in-<lb/>
Station to any interested persons<lb/>
Opportunities available for stu-<lb/>
dents who want to be of service dur-<lb/>
ing the coming summer months are<lb/>
numerous. according to Dwight<lb/>
Ficklin, Director f the Baptist Stu-<lb/>
dent Union.<lb/>
Most jobs are truly service ones;<lb/>
but a few pay enough to enable stu-<lb/>
dents to save some money for next<lb/>
year, he explained.<lb/>
Through Listen, the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Baptist Student Union Mission<lb/>
Program, one student, preferably a<lb/>
man, will be sent to Alaska to work<lb/>
June 10-August 20. Another student<lb/>
will be sent to Illinois to work un-<lb/>
der the direction of the Home Mis-<lb/>
sion Board. A man student will be<lb/>
sent to participate in a European<lb/>
work camp, and, if this student can<lb/>
find other than Listen funds, a student<lb/>
nurse will also be sent to Ghana, West<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
There will be no remuneration for<lb/>
any of these jobs. Applications must<lb/>
be in by January 25.<lb/>
800 student summer missionaries<lb/>
will be appointed by the Home Mis-<lb/>
sion Board to serve for ten weeks.<lb/>
They will serve in various areas of<lb/>
the United States, working with dif-<lb/>
ferent language and racial groups.<lb/>
Remuneration for this work is $250<lb/>
for the ten week period, and, in most<lb/>
cases, room and board. Applications<lb/>
must be in by February 1.<lb/>
In this state students may serve on<lb/>
one of the Youth Evangelism Teams.<lb/>
Lach team is composed of four mem-<lb/>
bers, and girls may fill any of the<lb/>
positions except that of preacher.<lb/>
Teams, which may work a week in<lb/>
one church, four days in another, a<lb/>
weekend in a third, or help still an-<lb/>
other with a youth retreat over a<lb/>
weekend, are composed of a preacher,<lb/>
a music director, a coordinator, and<lb/>
a recreation leader. Applications for<lb/>
this work must be in by March 20.<lb/>
Also in this state, students may<lb/>
rork with a local church, in Vacation<lb/>
Bible School, and as assistants to<lb/>
Associational missionaries. Applica-<lb/>
tions for these, accompanied by a<lb/>
2 in. No. 2 gloss print, must reach<lb/>
the Student Department office in<lb/>
Raleigh by February 20. They will<lb/>
be featured in an issue of the Bibli-<lb/>
cal Recorder so that interested pas-<lb/>
tors may contact the students. Those<lb/>
students desiring to work on the staff<lb/>
of the assemblies at Ridgecrest at<lb/>
Glorieta, Caswell or Fruitland, or<lb/>
with the Sunday School or Training<lb/>
Union Departments should write di-<lb/>
rectly to the person in charge.<lb/>
Fellowships for graduate study in<lb/>
Rumanian and Polish universities are<lb/>
being offered to American students<lb/>
for the academic year 1961-62, it was<lb/>
announced by the Institute of Inter-<lb/>
national Education. Applications must<lb/>
be filed by January 15, 1961.<lb/>
The Rumanian and Polish govern-<lb/>
ments have offered the fellowships<lb/>
part of exchange arrangements<lb/>
as<lb/>
with the United States, and included<lb/>
are tuition and monthly stipends for<lb/>
living expenses. The Polish govern-<lb/>
ment will also offer living accommo-<lb/>
dations on the university campuses<lb/>
and medical care to those who axe<lb/>
ranted scholarships for study in<lb/>
that country.<lb/>
The U.S. Rumania arrangement<lb/>
Mipplements the awards with travel<lb/>
grants, offered by the U.S. Govern-<lb/>
ment, and covering the costs of round<lb/>
trip travel. 25 lbs. excess baggage<lb/>
and an allowance for several days of<lb/>
pre-departure orientation activities<lb/>
in Washington, D.C. Similar grants<lb/>
will be made for several recipients of<lb/>
Polish fellowships who have at least<lb/>
a Master's degree.<lb/>
Administered by the HE, the a-<lb/>
wards are open to both men and wom-<lb/>
en, in any field of study. Candidates<lb/>
must be at least 21 years old, U.S.<lb/>
citizens, and must have the necessary<lb/>
knowledge of the country's language.<lb/>
While married persons may apply, no<lb/>
funds will be available for depend-<lb/>
ents' support.<lb/>
Applicants for the Rumanian schol-<lb/>
arships should have at least one year<lb/>
of graduate training, and a Bache-<lb/>
lor's degree is required of candidates<lb/>
for the Polish awards.<lb/>
Application forms may be obtained<lb/>
from the Institute of International<lb/>
Education, 1 East 67 St New York<lb/>
21, N.Y or from one of the Insti-<lb/>
tute's Regional Offices.<lb/>
U.S. student exchange programs<lb/>
with Rumania and Poland opened<lb/>
with the current academic year.<lb/>
Young people from both countries<lb/>
are now studying in the United States<lb/>
and American students are in Ru-<lb/>
manian universities for the first time.<lb/>
at Bowman Gray School of Medicine.<lb/>
Also on the agenda for the con-<lb/>
ference are individual consultations<lb/>
and conferences as well as programs<lb/>
held in conjunction with campus re-<lb/>
ligious organizations.<lb/>
Plans for the conference are not<lb/>
complete this week, but Publicity Di-<lb/>
rector, Mr. Francis Pyne, announced<lb/>
earlier this week that a complete<lb/>
schedule should be ready in a few<lb/>
days. He commented, "Mrs. Nash is<lb/>
an outstanding personality in her<lb/>
field. We are looking forward to en-<lb/>
thusiastic support and representa-<lb/>
tion. It will be a good opportunity for<lb/>
the students to meet with her in-<lb/>
formally to discuss their individual<lb/>
problems. That will be one of the<lb/>
r-iost important parts of the pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Magazine Features<lb/>
Former Student<lb/>
On Recent Cover<lb/>
Nancy Harris, EC student who is<lb/>
studying this year in Prance on a'<lb/>
Rotary International scholarship is<lb/>
cover girl on the current issue of<lb/>
"The Adelphean quarterly publica-<lb/>
tion of the Alpha Delta Pi social<lb/>
sorority. She is a member of the<lb/>
Delta Omicron chapter of the national<lb/>
organiation.<lb/>
Miss Harris, according to an arti-<lb/>
cle in the magazine on her back-<lb/>
ground and program abroad, "this<lb/>
year has the challenging task of ex-<lb/>
plaining the United States to the<lb/>
French  in French<lb/>
She is now studying at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Grenoble in the foothills<lb/>
of the Alps in Southern France.<lb/>
Her chief areas of study, "The<lb/>
Adelphean" states, are French and<lb/>
European civilization. She will not<lb/>
take examinations, nor be a degree<lb/>
student the article continues. "Chief<lb/>
purpose of her $2700 grant is to gain<lb/>
understanding of the social and eco-<lb/>
nomic way of living in France, and<lb/>
demonstrate the American way of<lb/>
life to the people in the Grenoble<lb/>
area<lb/>
At Grenoble Miss Harris is living<lb/>
in the home of a French family and<lb/>
is making frequent appearances as<lb/>
speaker at Rotary Club meetings.<lb/>
She received the master's degree<lb/>
last May at East Carolina. During<lb/>
her college years here she acted as<lb/>
religious education director for the<lb/>
Eighth Street Christian Church. Last<lb/>
year she represented the college at<lb/>
the National Y.W.CjAi. Conference at<lb/>
Urbana, 111.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha Fraternity selects<lb/>
officers: Sherrill Norman (pictured<lb/>
above), President; Jerry Wilkins.<lb/>
Vice-President; Keith Hobbs, Secre-<lb/>
tary; James Loftin, House Manager;<lb/>
Bobby Edwards, Treasurer; John Cut-<lb/>
ler, Sergeant-at-Arms; and Blarney<lb/>
Tanner, Historian.<lb/>
Two Coeds Attend<lb/>
business Convention<lb/>
Two EC students, Mary Elizabeth<lb/>
Massad and Betty Ann Brown, rep-<lb/>
resented the Beta Kappa Chapter of<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi at the national conven-<lb/>
tion in Chicago, December 27-29.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi is a national honor-<lb/>
ary business education fraternity for<lb/>
those students who are outstanding<lb/>
in scholarship and leadership.<lb/>
While in Chicago, the two coeds<lb/>
attended the National Business Tea-<lb/>
chers convention, where they had op-<lb/>
portunities to talk with leading edu-<lb/>
cators and authors in the field of<lb/>
business education.<lb/>
Initiates Honored<lb/>
The Delta Alpha Chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Phi Sorority initiated thirteen women<lb/>
students Saturday, at the Memorial<lb/>
Baptist Church in Greenville.<lb/>
lAffter the initiation a banquet<lb/>
honoring the new members was given<lb/>
at the Cinderella Restaurant.<lb/>
The Delta Alpha Chapter was<lb/>
pledged at East Carolina November<lb/>
21, 1959.<lb/>
The oldest covered bridge still<lb/>
standing is at Lucerne, Switzerland.<lb/>
It was built in 1338.<lb/>
DuFroqD !S<lb/>
Speech LISs!<lb/>
Club Elects Officers<lb/>
James Ballance was recently elected<lb/>
'president of the EJC. English Club,<lb/>
an organisation of students who are<lb/>
majors or minors in English.<lb/>
Mr. Ballance is an English major<lb/>
and a social studies minor. He is a<lb/>
member of Phi Sigma Pi, honorary<lb/>
fraternity for men in education, and<lb/>
on the staff of WWWS, campus radio.<lb/>
His name has appeared a number of<lb/>
times on the Dean's List of Superior<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
Other officers elected are: Cherry<lb/>
Putreal, vice president; Jeannette<lb/>
New, secretary-treasurer; and Sylvia<lb/>
Dawkins, publicity chairman.<lb/>
Dr Hemiine Caraway is faculty<lb/>
"t Ldviaor of the group.<lb/>
who wish to attend tonight's meeting. J<lb/>
Students Release<lb/>
Science Journal<lb/>
The first issue of "The East Caro-<lb/>
lina College Science Journal" for the<lb/>
current school year has just appear-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The publication, sponsored 'by the<lb/>
student Science Club and the college<lb/>
chapter of Chi Beta Phi, national hon-<lb/>
orary science fraternity, is now being<lb/>
distributed to students, faculty mem-<lb/>
bers, and alumni of the science de-<lb/>
partment, and to other interested peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
Barbara Manning acted as chair-<lb/>
man of the committee in charge of<lb/>
preparing the journal for publication.<lb/>
Nine other students who worked<lb/>
with Miss Manning and Dr. Robert<lb/>
Haubrich, faculty representative, en<lb/>
the committee are Dirk S. Dixon,<lb/>
president of Chi Beta Phi; Grover<lb/>
Smithwick, president of the Science<lb/>
Club; iRebecca Hill; Phyllis Dudley;<lb/>
ToAnn Parks; Carolyn Pierce; Mari-<lb/>
lyn Buck; Donald Wilson; and Fred<lb/>
Johns.<lb/>
The current issue of the journal<lb/>
is a 19-page mimeographed publica-<lb/>
tion. Contents include materials by<lb/>
both students and faeulty members<lb/>
arranged under the headings Scien-<lb/>
tific Thought, The Science Depart-<lb/>
ment, Research, and Book Reviews.<lb/>
News of activities of the Science Club<lb/>
and Ohi Beta Phi and of alumni mem-<lb/>
bers of the science department is also<lb/>
among contents of the publication.<lb/>
MAKE MONEY! Dr. Frood is unable to answer letter<lb/>
from perplexed student. Your help needed. Lucky Strike<lb/>
will pay $200 for best reply to this letter:<lb/>
New York plants predoce 92 per<lb/>
cent of all the fur coats made in the<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
"Living in the past has one thing<lb/>
in its favor. It's cheaperlrit.<lb/>
Dear Dr. Frood: How can a man such as yourself be so<lb/>
wrong so often, so stupid so consistently and yet,at<lb/>
the same time, have the intelligence, good sense and<lb/>
outstanding good taste to smoke, enjoy and recommend<lb/>
the world's finest cigaretteLucky Strike?<lb/>
Perplexed<lb/>
If you were Dr. Frood, how would you answer this letter? Send us your answer in 50 words<lb/>
or less. Try to think as Frood thinks, feel as Frood feels. For instance, his answer might be<lb/>
"HAVEN'T YOU EVER HEARD OF SCHIZOPHRENIA?1 You can do better. AU entries<lb/>
will be judged on the basis of humor, originality and style (it should be Froodian). Lucky<lb/>
Strike, the regular cigarette college students prefer, will pay $200 to the student who, in the<lb/>
opinion of our judges, sends the best answer to the letter above. All entries must be poet-<lb/>
marked no later than March 1, 1961. Lean back, light up a Lucky and THINK FROOD.<lb/>
Mail your letter to Lucky Strike, P. O. Box 15F, Mount Vernon 10, New York. Enclose name,<lb/>
address, college or university and class.<lb/>
CHANGE TO LUCKIES and get some taste for a change!<lb/>
j<lb/>
furn,<lb/>
Produdof J&amp;Uan JviMo-imy4K Jv&amp;M-uvr mMkvmm<lb/>
  ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00038684_0006"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUARY i2<lb/>
FOUR<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
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Chand<lb/>
leta<lb/>
kdta Zei<lb/>
iblished<lb/>
in Febi<lb/>
y. Lam'<lb/>
ibda Ch<lb/>
ie Zet<lb/>
129 colli<lb/>
he chap<lb/>
lished s<lb/>
in 1902<lb/>
Ohio,<lb/>
les 40,1<lb/>
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U nited<lb/>
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jromot<lb/>
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High<lb/>
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SPORTS<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
By RICHARD BOYD<lb/>
iCage Pirates Have Peculiar Past<lb/>
Now that the holidays are behind us we can look in to the past<lb/>
which seemed to be a peculiar one Dor East Carolina's Pirates. The Buc<lb/>
five showed outstanding capabilities during the pre-Christmas campaign<lb/>
on some occasions, but the talented crew were as cold as the December<lb/>
weather during several of these contests. The narrow escape at Pfeiffer<lb/>
and the ragged play during the High Point contest were indications that<lb/>
the Pirates needed improvement on their floor game.<lb/>
However, on the optimistic side of the fence, the Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
contest was an example of a championship team being processed by coach<lb/>
Earl Smith. Brilliant shooting, marvelous passing, excellent teamwork,<lb/>
.and great determination aided the thumping of a favored Bear quint<lb/>
prior to the contest. Don Smith poured 33 .points through the hoops during<lb/>
the night<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne Could Be Tough Next Time<lb/>
These games have been an indication of the type of team most ob-<lb/>
servers feel that the Pirates will have during future contests. The next<lb/>
cage team should be a problem for the Bucs. Lenoir Rhyne's Bears will<lb/>
be invaded by the Bast Carolina five Saturday night, and the Pirates<lb/>
will be seeking to repeat their previous showing against the Hickory school.<lb/>
However, on the other hand the home team should really be "up"<lb/>
for the league encounter. Lenoir Rhyne is a team capable of beating some<lb/>
fine college teams in the "big time" bracket on a given night, although<lb/>
the Bears failed to impress even the narrow-minded observer during the<lb/>
Greenville encounter with the Buc five.<lb/>
Pirates Come Home<lb/>
The Pirates return next Saturday night against troublesome Pfeif-<lb/>
fer, the youngest entry in North State circles. However, the Bucs can<lb/>
remember how the home team almost upset the highly touted Pirates during<lb/>
a previous engagement. Pfeiftier upset Atlantic Christian on the latter's<lb/>
home court last week so Coach Earl Smith will net be taking the game<lb/>
lightly.<lb/>
North Carolina Demonstrates Powerful Basketball Teams<lb/>
Switching to statewide basketball, we find some of the better teams<lb/>
in the country here in the state of North Carolina. The Big Four con-<lb/>
tinues year after year to give national recognition to this state on the<lb/>
Winter court. Probably the top small college in the state is Belmount Abbey<lb/>
a team who lost to third ranked St. Bonaventure of New York by only<lb/>
three points last week. The New York college is ranked above Carolina<lb/>
and Duke, and lost only by one point to Ohio State in their holiday tour-<lb/>
nament at Madison Square Garden by a 58-57 margin. This is an indication<lb/>
of the Belmount Abbey potential. The North Carolina school is not on<lb/>
the East Carolina schedule, but would it not be nice to see this small state<lb/>
power in action in Greenville?<lb/>
The Citadel On The Move<lb/>
Speaking of strong teams, the same Citadel team who trimmed the<lb/>
Pirates 99-83 in Charleston during December are one of the teams to beat<lb/>
in Southern Conference competition. A victory oveT West Virginia has<lb/>
been one of the many accomplishments that has been flulfilled by Coach<lb/>
Mel. Thompson's Cadets.<lb/>
Speight and Bass Honored<lb/>
Football is still on the sports scene at this late date. Two great<lb/>
Last Carolina stars have been honored lately. Glenn Bass the 1960 star<lb/>
was honored as the outstanding small college back during the December<lb/>
26 All-American Bowl at Tucson. Arizona. Second Lieutenant James<lb/>
Speight, a great star for the Pirates through 1959 was recently honored<lb/>
in Washington, D.C. as the outstanding service football player of 1960.<lb/>
Innemural Mishappening<lb/>
An unfortunate accident recently occurred in an intramural volleyball<lb/>
contest. Charley Smith, a Sophomore (physical education major is now<lb/>
hobbling on crutches due to falling and suffering torn ligaments in his<lb/>
leg. Let us hope that Charley's leg heals and he returns to .activity in<lb/>
intramural competition.<lb/>
There have been very ew accidents of this nature during the<lb/>
intermural year, and a well-rounded program continues to exist under<lb/>
the direction of faculty director Wendell Car and student director Ray<lb/>
Moxingo.<lb/>
Pirates Travel To LR Saturday<lb/>
Glenn Bass Outstanding In Bowl 0j,<lb/>
INDEPENDENT BASKETBALL LEAGUE<lb/>
DOUBLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Game 1Country Gentlemen vs. Goof OffsJan. 48:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 2Scotts vs. Winner Game No. 1Jan. 117:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 3-AVyatt Earps vs. Raiders-Jan. 117:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 4Penn-Del-Mars Vs. Day Student FiveJan. 118:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 5ROTC v? lmost StarsJan. 169:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 6Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Gaime No. 3Jan. 1610:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 7Loser Game No. 4 vs. Loser Game No. 5Jan. 180:00 P. M-<lb/>
Game 8Winner Game No. 6 vs. Loser Game No. 2Jan. 189:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 9Winner Game No. 2 vs. Winner Game No. 3Jan. 288:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 10Winner Game No. 4 vs. Winner Game No. 5Jan. 238:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 11Winner Game No. 7 vs. Loser Game No. 9Jan. 259:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 12Winner Game No. 8 vs. Loser Game No. 10Jan. 256:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 13Winner Game No. 9 vs. Winner Game No. 10Feb. 17:00 P.M.<lb/>
Game 14Winner Game No. 11 vs. Winner Game No. 12Feb. 17:00 P.M.<lb/>
Game 15?Winner Game No. 14 vs. Loser Game No. 13Feb. 19:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 16(Winner Game No. 15 vs. Winner Game No. 13Feb. 67:00 P.M.<lb/>
'Game 17Winner Game 16 vs. Loser Game No. 16Feb. 69:00 P. M.<lb/>
"This would occur only if the winner of game No. 15 should win game No. 16<lb/>
The first and second place teams in this league will participate in the<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNIAJMENT starting Feb. 8, 1961.<lb/>
JONES DORM BASKETBALL LEAGUE<lb/>
DOUBLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Game 13rd Fl. West Wing vs. 1st Fl. East Wing-Jan. 46:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 22nd Fl. West Wing vs. 3rd Fl. East Wing-Jan. 118:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 8 2nd Fl. East Wing vs. Winner Game No. 1Jan. 119:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 44th Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 2Jan. 169:20 P. M.<lb/>
Game 5Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Game No. 4Jan. 187:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 6Loser Game No. 2 vs. Loser Game No. 3Jan 18.10:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 7Winner Game No. 3 vs. Winner Game No. 4Jan. 237:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 8Loser Game No. 5 vs. Loser Game No. 6Jan. 267:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 9Loser Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 8Feb. 110:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 10Winner Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 9Feb. 68:00 P. M.<lb/>
?Game 11Winner Game 10 vs. Loser Game No. 10Feb. 610:00 P. M.<lb/>
This would occur only if the winner of game No. 7 should lose game No. 10<lb/>
The first and second place teams in this league will participate in the<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT starting Feb. 8, 1961<lb/>
NEW DORM BASKETBALL LEAGUE<lb/>
DOUBLE ELIMINATION TOURNAMENT<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Game 11st Fl. East Wing vs. 4th Fl. East WingJan. 48:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 22nd Fl. East Wing vs. 4th Fl. West WingJan. 46:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 32nd Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 1Jan. 1110:00 P.M.<lb/>
Game 43rd Fl. West Wing vs. Winner Game No. 2Jan. 167:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 5Loser Game No. 1 vs. Loser Game No. 4Jan 168:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 6Loser Game No. 2 vs. Loser Game No. 3Jan. 187:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 7Winner Game No. 3 vs. Winner Game No. 4Jan. 237:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 8Winner Game No. 5 vs. Winner Ganie No. 6Jan. 2310:00 P. M.<lb/>
Gpvme 9Loser Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 8Jan. 257:00 P. M.<lb/>
Game 10Winner Game No. 7 vs. Winner Game No. 9Feb. 13:00 PJf.<lb/>
Gaane 11Winner Game No. 10 vs. Loser Game No. 10Feb. 68:00 P.M.<lb/>
?This would occur only if the winner of game No. 7 should lose game No. 10<lb/>
The first .and second place teams in this league will participate in the<lb/>
ALL-CAMPUS TOURNAMENT starting Feb. 8, 191<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith's talented Pirate<lb/>
crew has five home games, and five<lb/>
away contest left during the regu-<lb/>
lar 1960-61 carrupaig-n. Led by Cap-<lb/>
tain Don Smith and Cotton Clayton<lb/>
the Bucs take to the road Saturday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Lenior Rhyne's pesky Bears should<lb/>
offer the Pirates stiff opposition in<lb/>
the .Hickory battle. 'Cast Carolina<lb/>
rested the hot and cold LR quint<lb/>
during their last meeting in Green-<lb/>
ville. However, the Bears will be<lb/>
"up" for this encounter and possess<lb/>
a powerful five on a given night.<lb/>
High scoring Don Smith and Lacy<lb/>
West will probably start at their for-<lb/>
ward positions for the Bucs, either<lb/>
rangy Ben Bowers or huskie Bill<lb/>
Otte will get the call from Coach<lb/>
Earl Smith at the pivot slot, while<lb/>
outside men Cotton Clayton and<lb/>
Charley Lewis will be likely starters<lb/>
at tlie tw i guard post.<lb/>
WC Maybe Rough<lb/>
Western Carolina opy ses the Pi-<lb/>
rates in the former's gym on Janu-<lb/>
ary 16. The Bucs have not as yet<lb/>
played the Catamounts this season,<lb/>
but Coach Earl Smith is expected to<lb/>
have his hands full.<lb/>
Four Game Homestand<lb/>
ECC returns home next Saturday<lb/>
night with an engagement with<lb/>
Pfeiffer College. This will open a<lb/>
four game homestand for the Buc<lb/>
five. The Pfeiffer contest will be fol-<lb/>
lowed by Western Carolina's Cata-<lb/>
mounts, Appalachain's A.pps, and At-<lb/>
lantic Christian.<lb/>
Pfeiffer Stronger<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith's charges<lb/>
squeezed out a victory over Pfeiffer<lb/>
on the losers home court early in<lb/>
December. The latter team has been<lb/>
getting stronger as the season prog-<lb/>
resses, and could give Don Smith,<lb/>
Cotton Clayton and Company a run<lb/>
for their money.<lb/>
Large Crowd Anticipated<lb/>
Three tough contests follow the<lb/>
Pfeiffer encounter. Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian is the traditional game which<lb/>
usually brings the largest crowd to<lb/>
the Buc gym. The Wilson school<lb/>
possesses a strong outfit this sea-<lb/>
son, and it should be an interesting<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
Pirates Out For Revenge<lb/>
Of course, the Pirates will be out<lb/>
for revenge in the Ap-pulachain con-<lb/>
test. The Apps defeated the Bucs at<lb/>
the foul circle in the Boone contest.<lb/>
However, the Pirate five expects a<lb/>
different story when the opposition<lb/>
opposes the talented East Carolina<lb/>
five on .January 30 in Memorial Gym-<lb/>
nasium. '<lb/>
Elon Last Home Game<lb/>
Following the final game of this<lb/>
homestand against Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian Pirate fans will only get a<lb/>
chance to see the Bucs in action<lb/>
at home for one more contest. Elon<lb/>
comes to Greenville on February 11,<lb/>
in what should be a real thriller. Pre-<lb/>
vious to the Christian invasion, the<lb/>
Pirates travel to Salisbury to meet<lb/>
the Indians of Cawtaba, and follow-<lb/>
ing the Elon contest end the regular<lb/>
1960-61 campaign with engagements<lb/>
at High Point and Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian.<lb/>
t Carolina star half-back Glenn -<lb/>
East aron watchful eyes<lb/>
0i Z rtT team, the Small<lb/>
Ua, was defeated by<lb/>
roUege AU-Stars in the<lb/>
Howl played at Tuscon,<lb/>
Al<lb/>
wil<lb/>
to<lb/>
College<lb/>
the Large<lb/>
Ail-American<lb/>
Arizona.<lb/>
Glean, St.<lb/>
I choke, set up one<lb/>
  r r  - <lb/>
side with 45 yards net<lb/>
this standout perform-<lb/>
North Carolina na-<lb/>
as the most out-<lb/>
maller schools.<lb/>
Louis Cardinal draft<lb/>
touchajwn with a<lb/>
)ght fiv? aerial tos-<lb/>
t e,<lb/>
ty.p loser's<lb/>
gained. Fo'<lb/>
 the Wilson,<lb/>
was named<lb/>
tive<lb/>
in. Th<lb/>
ill hoo's<lb/>
1 <lb/>
Table Tennis<lb/>
The East Carolina College<lb/>
Union is one of the few college<lb/>
unions that operates its table<lb/>
tennis facilities without addition-<lb/>
al charge to the players. Many<lb/>
similar organizations on college<lb/>
campuses charge a fee for the<lb/>
use of the tables and sell the<lb/>
balls.<lb/>
Recently an alarming number<lb/>
of rackets have been broken by<lb/>
players. In addition to the cost<lb/>
of rackets to replace these brok-<lb/>
en ones, the very expensive tables<lb/>
are being ruined by players whe<lb/>
insist on making a public display<lb/>
of being unable to control them-<lb/>
selves and beat the racket on the<lb/>
table, causing gashes in the<lb/>
tables. This damage cannot be<lb/>
repaired.<lb/>
The College Union is asking<lb/>
the cooperation of all table ten-<lb/>
nis players to eliminate this type<lb/>
of behavior. Please do not abuse<lb/>
the equipment. A disciplinary<lb/>
rule will be forced into effect,<lb/>
if the current condition is not<lb/>
improved.<lb/>
COLLEGE UNION GAMES<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
in,r 1 ack of the s<lb/>
in itself a marvelous<lb/>
Th s was in i"6'1<lb/>
 for the Prate star.<lb/>
irhievement tor tne r<lb/>
M-nv pro teams are mterested m<lb/>
 am, it appears as though he<lb/>
, ;mbe the first to make the grade as<lb/>
larger schools spanked the<lb/>
24-12, but failed t<lb/>
he speedy East Caro'ina back.<lb/>
this collection of outstanding "big<lb/>
 e" nlavers could not stop Glenn,<lb/>
r certain'y the professionals may<lb/>
 the same trouble.<lb/>
n climated 14,000 non-partisan<lb/>
. rl8 looked on as Dick Norman of<lb/>
Stanford exhibited a tremendous<lb/>
quality of passing exhibition, while the<lb/>
.mall schools helplessly watched their<lb/>
i.p onent's tosses aid in turning into<lb/>
v two touchdown victory for the more<lb/>
pubHcized colleges.<lb/>
' However, a sound Glenn Bass sure-<lb/>
aided his team's chances for win-<lb/>
and re- i ning, as well as his own personal<lb/>
bounder through the Guilford contest. Don is a three year letterman from chances for big time foot ball I. cer-<lb/>
Portsmouth, Virginia, and has been one of the leading factors in the Buc. , tainly appears as though East Caro-<lb/>
strong bid for the North State crown. Un. will have their first player in<lb/>
 I history to make the grade in pro-<lb/>
TT W1 r T 5 O I . fessional football, as Glenn has prov-<lb/>
Bucs iip tilon Un Utte s Basnet<lb/>
A never say die East Carolina five<lb/>
edged Elon's Christians 78-77 Satur-<lb/>
day night on a Bill Otte layup with<lb/>
only two seconds left to play on the<lb/>
loser's scoreboard clock. Otte, the<lb/>
husky Buc center also aided in a<lb/>
1 irate drive during the latter stages<lb/>
of the initial half by tallying nine<lb/>
quick points.<lb/>
As in most of the other Pirate con-<lb/>
tests Captain Don Smith was the<lb/>
leading scorer for Coach Earl Smith's<lb/>
fine crew with 17 points. Dependable<lb/>
Charley Smith came through with<lb/>
15 tallies for the winners, and play-<lb/>
maker Cotton Clayton continued to<lb/>
hit in double figures by netting<lb/>
eleven points through the hoops.<lb/>
The victory left the Pirates with<lb/>
a 5-2 mark in league play with 12<lb/>
c nference games left on the ECC<lb/>
standings. A preChristmas loss to<lb/>
Appalachian Apps hindered the Buc<lb/>
chances for the league load. How-<lb/>
ever, the North State League race is<lb/>
still anybody's according to the re-<lb/>
spective coaches in the loop.<lb/>
PIRATE STATISTICS  Captain<lb/>
Don Smith, the G-5 in. star Senior<lb/>
from Portsmouth, Virginia is the<lb/>
leading Buc scorer as the season ap-<lb/>
proaches the half-way point. The<lb/>
rangy- forward has averaged 16.1<lb/>
points per game previous to Monday<lb/>
night's Guilford encounter. Cotton<lb/>
; Clayton, Bill Otte, and Charlie Lewis<lb/>
are the only other cagemen in double<lb/>
figures. Smith holds the individual<lb/>
game record for scoring this season<lb/>
with a S3 ipoint effort in the LR<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
HALFBAh GLENN H<lb/>
here with the trophy that u p<lb/>
sented to him av ir . llanding p<lb/>
rate Senior hark. R eeatlj, dura. y.<lb/>
December 2K Ml- American Bt<lb/>
Glenn at elected the ouuum,<lb/>
back of the small collage iquaj v,<lb/>
though hi team lest i0 the W<lb/>
colleges throughout the land, the L<lb/>
Carolina star made a must faToni<lb/>
impression at the Tucon, Aruo<lb/>
caaaic.<lb/>
My Neighbors<lb/>
CU Tournament<lb/>
The Winter Quarter Novice Table<lb/>
Tennis Tournament will be conducted<lb/>
Wednesday, February 18, in the CU<lb/>
table tennis area. Starting time for<lb/>
this event will be 6:30 p.<lb/>
This event is for all non-expert<lb/>
players. Winners of (previous novice<lb/>
tournaments, and all players listed<lb/>
on the non-novice list, are not eligi-<lb/>
ble to play in this tournament. The<lb/>
non-novice list will be attached to<lb/>
the poster concerning this event on<lb/>
the door to the Table Tennis Room.<lb/>
These are a few of the players who<lb/>
will not be allowed to participate in<lb/>
this event: Nelson Tugwell, Charlie<lb/>
Munn, Charles Holliday, Bowie Mar-<lb/>
tin.<lb/>
Interested players are encouraged<lb/>
to sign up iprior to tournament time<lb/>
at the Table Tennis Roam entrance.<lb/>
Play will statrt promptly at 6:30,<lb/>
and all entrants must be present<lb/>
prior to starting time to insure par-<lb/>
ticipation.<lb/>
This tournament will be conducted<lb/>
by Games Committee Chairman Bowie<lb/>
Martin and committee members. The<lb/>
United States Table Tennis Associa-<lb/>
tion playing rules will be in effect.<lb/>
CENTER BILL OTTE was the de-<lb/>
termining factor in the outcome of<lb/>
the Elon contest. With seconds re-<lb/>
maining un the scorebiard clock,<lb/>
the husky Pirate hit on a layup to<lb/>
give the Bucs a hard earned 78-77<lb/>
win over a surprisingly strong Chris-<lb/>
tian outfit. Otte has been a consis-<lb/>
tent scorer and rebounder for the<lb/>
Pirates during the 1960-61 season.<lb/>
ThF certainly do get<lb/>
healthy in there, don't they<lb/>
Valentine Dance<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday Feb. 11<lb/>
8:00-11:45 P. M.<lb/>
"Come and vote for the Valentine<lb/>
Queen of 1961"<lb/>
Music by the<lb/>
Collegians Combo<lb/>
Dress will be Semi-Formal<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Per<lb/>
Couple<lb/>
Tickets are on sale by members of<lb/>
the F.B.L.A. and will be sold at<lb/>
the door.<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Chapter of the Future<lb/>
Business Leaders of<lb/>
America<lb/>
GLARD CHARLIE LEWIS wa. highly responsible for hu Buci d<lb/>
78-77 win over Elon Christian. Saturday night on th Christian  <lb/>
floor The left the Pirate, with a 5-2 win in conference pla. East Cv<lb/>
hna hopes to improve this mark as the season progresses, and h  in<lb/>
Charlie Lewi, in Coech Smith's talented .quad. BC should b. .t itf <lb/>
toward the end of the sssfssi<lb/>
1,850 PAYING SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
EARN YOUR TRIP AND EXPENSES<lb/>
IN EUROPE<lb/>
COMPLETE TOUR INCLUDING<lb/>
ROUND-TRIP TRANSPORTATION<lb/>
345<lb/>
FOR FREE INFORMATION WRITE TO:<lb/>
lAtMBRICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICE<lb/>
JAHNSTRASSE 56a - FRANKFURTMAIN, GERMANY<lb/>
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE<lb/>
WOMENS<lb/>
 ENTUtE STOCK<lb/>
Winter Dresses<lb/>
(Including Cocktail Style.)<lb/>
Now y2 Off<lb/>
 ENTIRE STOCK<lb/>
Winter Skirts<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
$16.95 $9<lb/>
$17.95-19.95 $11<lb/>
 ONE GROUP<lb/>
Cashmeres<lb/>
50 Percent Off<lb/>
 LARGE GROUP<lb/>
bv Fur Blends<lb/>
REG. UP TO<lb/>
14.95 $9<lb/>
$16.95-17.95 $11<lb/>
 ONE GROUP<lb/>
Blouses<lb/>
up to $6.95 $3.88<lb/>
MEN'S<lb/>
 ONE GROUP<lb/>
Sweaters<lb/>
50 Percent Off<lb/>
 ENTIRE STOCI<lb/>
Sport Shirts<lb/>
Reg $4.95 $2.79<lb/>
Reg. $5.95 $3.88<lb/>
 ONE GROLF<lb/>
Wool Pants<lb/>
12 Off<lb/>
 Top Coats<lb/>
Reg. $39.00<lb/>
Now $25.00<lb/>
Suits - Sport Coats<lb/>
30 Percent Off<lb/>
Other Store Wide Reductions<lb/>
iec<lb/>
ni<lb/>
Ha<lb/>
In<lb/>
QuJ<lb/>
tat<lb/>

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