<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00038685_0001"/>
<lb/>
Placement Bureau<lb/>
All seniors who have not registered<lb/>
ith the Placement Bureau are urged<lb/>
to do so now.<lb/>
<lb/>
olume XXXVI<lb/>
riWBMMWHM<lb/>
Glamour Contest<lb/>
All girls who would like to compete<lb/>
in Glamour Magazine's 10 best dressed<lb/>
girls contest are urged to submit their<lb/>
names to the editor of the East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
GTREENVILLE, N. C THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1961<lb/>
Number 15<lb/>
Playhouse Schedn 'es MysU ry<lb/>
As Third Major Production<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Eat Carolina College Play-<lb/>
. v  will present its first major<lb/>
iction for the 1961 season Febru-<lb/>
 9, 10, and 11 at 8 p.m. in Mc-<lb/>
- auditorium.<lb/>
sm.y. Emily William's "Night<lb/>
Must Fall is a suspenaeful mystery<lb/>
that won broad aclaim when it<lb/>
i in London and on Broadway,<lb/>
was highly successful when made<lb/>
a movie.<lb/>
A cast of eight students has been<lb/>
meed by Dr. Corinne Rickert,<lb/>
toi of closed circuit television<lb/>
guest director of the Playhouse<lb/>
il East Carolina.<lb/>
D run Jenkins, senior primary<lb/>
ition major, will play Mrs.<lb/>
an elderly invalid who<lb/>
the household and falls prey<lb/>
harms of the smooth-talking,<lb/>
. psychopath, Dan, played<lb/>
as Mitchell, senior English<lb/>
Best, a junior art major,<lb/>
;iv Olivia Grayne, skeptical<lb/>
 Mrs. Bramson.<lb/>
m the cast are Claude Thomas<lb/>
is Hubert Laudie; Suzanne<lb/>
I . h Dora Porkoe; John F.<lb/>
as Inspector Belsize; and<lb/>
Wilsoa as Mrs. Terence.<lb/>
.a Harvey, rehearsal secre-<lb/>
Robett L. Parson, assistant<lb/>
andd W. Marshall Braddy,<lb/>
itage manager, are working with<lb/>
in staging the produc-<lb/>
Designers and builders of the<lb/>
ire to be announced later.<lb/>
EC Opera Theatre Presents Menotti s<lb/>
Work, "The Old Man And The Thief<lb/>
Students Violate<lb/>
EC Housing Policy<lb/>
the moving of college stu-<lb/>
m dormitories to fraternity<lb/>
M and off-campus housing with-<lb/>
anj pri r notice to proper col-<lb/>
? officials, a policy was adopted<lb/>
dive the beginning of Winter<lb/>
ter 1960-61. This policy in effect<lb/>
a that it will be a requirement<lb/>
. student who plans to vacate<lb/>
is dormftkaty room to move into a<lb/>
fraternity house, soroTity house, or<lb/>
ve off campus at the change of a<lb/>
quarter must notify in writ-<lb/>
thc House Office of the Dean of<lb/>
en two weeks in advance of the<lb/>
np of the new quarter.<lb/>
In the future those students whe<lb/>
e at the change of a scheol<lb/>
aartR without giving proper notice<lb/>
ave to pay a fee of f 10 that<lb/>
- charged to their account in<lb/>
i Business Office. This will be<lb/>
nvalent to the $10 deposit that is<lb/>
red for a person to reserve a<lb/>
tcry room.<lb/>
If at any time during a school<lb/>
tarter a student wishes to move out<lb/>
the dormitory into off-campus<lb/>
Mine, including fraternity and<lb/>
r n; houses, the student may do<lb/>
n!y under the condition .that<lb/>
mated portion of the room rental<lb/>
! he forfeited. In such cases, the<lb/>
eats wishing to move must first<lb/>
the matter with the Housing<lb/>
it or the Dean of Women.<lb/>
i evtnt those persons<lb/>
rs-ve into a fraternity<lb/>
house are freshmen, they<lb/>
first receive permission from<lb/>
Mean of Student Affairs before<lb/>
ve. The policy has been estab-<lb/>
v the College Administration<lb/>
il  ! freshmen must have at least<lb/>
average before they may be<lb/>
lei-ad for moving into  f"<lb/>
:ty house. In cases where ap-<lb/>
i is jfiven for a freshman<lb/>
re into a fraternity or<lb/>
Doug Mitchell scares Doming Jenkins<lb/>
in upcoming production.<lb/>
ROTC Cadets Sponsor<lb/>
March Of Dimes Drive<lb/>
Eighty Participate<lb/>
In Formal Rush<lb/>
For This Year<lb/>
Formal rush week got underway<lb/>
for the sororities on Monday night<lb/>
with lAdpha Xi Delta, Delta Zeta,<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi, and Chi Omega en-<lb/>
tertaining the first night. On Tues-<lb/>
day night Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa<lb/>
Delta, Alpha Phi, and Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma conducted rush parties. All<lb/>
of the approximately eighty rushees<lb/>
.participating in Formal Rush Week<lb/>
were invited to the Monday and<lb/>
Tuesday night parties.<lb/>
Elaine Brewer, a rushee from Sil-<lb/>
ver City said, "The girls were very<lb/>
nice and friendly. They didn't make<lb/>
you feel uncomfortable and you<lb/>
weren't under so much of a strain<lb/>
"All the sorority girls made the<lb/>
rushees fteel right at home said<lb/>
Myrtle Weaver, a rushee from Ra-<lb/>
leigh.<lb/>
Karen Kast from Jacksonville<lb/>
commented, "Everybody was very<lb/>
friendly, but there wasn't enough<lb/>
time to really get acquainted with<lb/>
each sorority girl<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta president, Lucille<lb/>
Coulbourn from Windson, said, "I<lb/>
was pleased to see the nomber of<lb/>
girls and the type of girls that<lb/>
turned out for rush. This year we<lb/>
have more sorority material and the<lb/>
girls seem more interested in so-<lb/>
rorities than in the past<lb/>
"Although 1 was pleased with the<lb/>
girls who came to the first parties,<lb/>
I was disappointed in the number<lb/>
said Sue Sparkman, a Chi Omega<lb/>
from St. Pauls. Edith Baker and Bar-<lb/>
bara Smith, both Delta Zetas thought! will be played by Ann Dalden of Wil-<lb/>
Comic Opera Opens This Week<lb/>
The East Caroina Opera Theater's<lb/>
latest production the popular comic<lb/>
opera 'The Old Maid and the Thief<lb/>
by Gian Carlo Menotti, will be pre-<lb/>
sented on January 20 and 21 at 8:16<lb/>
p.m. in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
The play is centered around an old<lb/>
maid, and her maid who gives shelter<lb/>
to a cold and hungry tramp. He<lb/>
proves so attractive, intelligent and<lb/>
entertaining that they don't want<lb/>
him to leave. The ladies even turn<lb/>
to thieves, raiding a liquor store, in<lb/>
hopes of keeping their gentleman<lb/>
guest interested.<lb/>
When news comes that there is a<lb/>
thief and murder in the neighbor-<lb/>
hood, who has just broken out of<lb/>
jail, the ladies think that their<lb/>
tramp, Bob, and the thief are the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
"The plot is cleverly woven into<lb/>
a musical setting, to provide an eve-<lb/>
ning of entertaining pleasure com-<lb/>
mented Paul Hickfang, musical di-<lb/>
rector of the opera.<lb/>
The opera will have a double cast,<lb/>
with a different oast for each night<lb/>
of performance. Miss Todd, the-old<lb/>
maid, will be portrayed by Martha<lb/>
Kradner, of Greenville, and Jessa-<lb/>
mine Hiatt, of Clinton. Alison Moss<lb/>
of Greenville, and Betsy Hancock of<lb/>
Scotland Neck, will play the part<lb/>
of Letitia, maid to Miss Todd. Bob,<lb/>
the thief, will be portrayed by Peter<lb/>
Johl. of Groton, Connecticut, and<lb/>
Jerrold Teachy of Washington, D.C.<lb/>
The other members of the cast, Miss<lb/>
Pinkerton, the neighborhood gossip,<lb/>
Allison Moss, a graduate student,<lb/>
has appeared locally in several pro-<lb/>
ductions, and recently returned from<lb/>
New York where she auditioned for<lb/>
 he Fullbright Scholarship. Martha<lb/>
Bradner was a "Messiah" soloist, and<lb/>
appeared in the opera's 'The Bar-<lb/>
tered Bride "The Medium and<lb/>
'Sister Angelica She is a member<lb/>
of Chi Omega Sorority and Sigma<lb/>
Alpha Iota Fraternity.<lb/>
Jessamine Hiatt sang in "The Me-<lb/>
dium Sister Angelicia and was<lb/>
soloist in the "Messiah' performance.<lb/>
She is also in the college choir and<lb/>
is president of the Opera Workshop.<lb/>
Betsy Hancock also appeared in "The<lb/>
Bartered Bride "The Medium and<lb/>
Sister Angelicia as did Ann Darden<lb/>
and Patsy Roberts. They are all mem-<lb/>
bers of the College Choir.<lb/>
Jerrald Teachy, a member of the<lb/>
College choir, is performing in his<lb/>
first college opera, although he has<lb/>
had much singing exrperience.<lb/>
Sets for this production are being<lb/>
designed by Ray Minnis of the Art<lb/>
Department faculty. Dr. Robert<lb/>
Rickert is in charge of the dramatics<lb/>
and .Paul Hickfang is musical direc-<lb/>
tor of the opera.<lb/>
Accompanists are Ardyth MeCro-<lb/>
sky and Frank Keaton.<lb/>
MEXOTTI'S<lb/>
i comedy.<lb/>
OPERA CAST performs in unusual manner in tomorrow's<lb/>
At nine (9) o'clock Saturday, Janu-<lb/>
ary 21st, The East Carolina AFROTC<lb/>
Honorary Drill Team will begin a<lb/>
March of Dimes Marchathon to raise<lb/>
money for this year's March of Dimes<lb/>
campaign.<lb/>
Twenty-one AFROTC Cadets, on a<lb/>
vountary basis will march continuous-<lb/>
ly in an attempt to break their last<lb/>
year's record of 12 hours. They will<lb/>
march, in full uniform, carrying M-l<lb/>
rifles, on third street in front of the<lb/>
.Pitt County Courthouse.<lb/>
Cadet Major Walter T. Worthing-<lb/>
ton will command the group as they<lb/>
execute various drill movements. The<lb/>
East Carolina College Angel Flight<lb/>
will be on hand to serve coffee, sand-<lb/>
wiches, and donuts to the Cadets as<lb/>
they strive to raise money for the<lb/>
March of Dimes. Angel Flight mem-<lb/>
bers will also be on hand to col-<lb/>
lect all donations.<lb/>
The Students of East Carolina are<lb/>
urged to come out and support these<lb/>
men, encouraging them to break<lb/>
their previous record by making do-<lb/>
nations.<lb/>
that the rushees seemed very much<lb/>
interested in sororities.<lb/>
Jaye Finnegan, President of the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council, and an Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi from Virginia Beach had<lb/>
this to say about rush. "The number<lb/>
uf girU participating in rush was<lb/>
disappointing but the girls them-<lb/>
selves were not. The sorority women<lb/>
are more experienced in rushing and<lb/>
are therefore handling rush with<lb/>
more ease and efficieniy<lb/>
The last rush parties will be on<lb/>
Friday night. Each rushee is allowed<lb/>
to accept three invitations to the last<lb/>
round of parties. The rushees will<lb/>
sign their preferences on Friday<lb/>
night from 9:30 until 10:00 in the<lb/>
Panhellenic Room.<lb/>
The sororities will submit their bid<lb/>
lists to Dean White on Friday night<lb/>
by 11:30. Saturday at 1:00 p.m. the<lb/>
rushees will go to the Panhellenic<lb/>
Room and pick up their bids. These<lb/>
are formal invitations to join the<lb/>
sorority which their preferences<lb/>
matched. Rushees will then go im-<lb/>
mediately to the previously appointed<lb/>
places to be pledged.<lb/>
iiamston, and Patsy Roberts of<lb/>
Farmville.<lb/>
The entire east has had much mu-<lb/>
sical background. Peter Johl, a former<lb/>
student of Julliard School of Music,<lb/>
has sung professionally with several<lb/>
different opera companies. He re-<lb/>
cently appeared in the Playhouse<lb/>
production "The Lady's Not For<lb/>
Burning<lb/>
Family Life Specialist Delivers Lectures<lb/>
Mrs. Ethel Nash, family life spe I Center for a supper at 6:15 p.m. and<lb/>
Teacher Positions<lb/>
Grady L. Ballard, Director of Per<lb/>
sonnel in Anne Arundel County,<lb/>
Maryland, will be on campus soon to<lb/>
interview teacher candidates in all<lb/>
areas with the exception of guidance,<lb/>
driver training, and dramatics. Bal-<lb/>
lard will be especially interested in<lb/>
interviewing industrial arts students.<lb/>
According to the Placement Office,<lb/>
all seniors in the process of registra-<lb/>
tion are urged to complete the place-<lb/>
ment forms as soon as possible in<lb/>
order to qualify for interviews as<lb/>
February is one of the heaviest<lb/>
months for recruiting.<lb/>
cialist in the Department of Preven-<lb/>
tive Medicine, Bowman Gray School<lb/>
of Medicine, Winston-Salem, will be<lb/>
principal speaker at a conference<lb/>
here on Dating, Engagement, and<lb/>
Marriage. The program has been ar-<lb/>
ranged by the Faculty Committee on<lb/>
Family Life.<lb/>
The two-day conference, Monday<lb/>
and Tuesday, January 23-24, will de-<lb/>
velop the theme "Marriage for Bet-<lb/>
ter or Worse" in a series of four ma-<lb/>
jor meetings and a number of dis-<lb/>
cussion groups. Planned especially<lb/>
for students at EC, the conference<lb/>
will be open also to young people in<lb/>
Greenville and other localities nearby.<lb/>
The conference will open January<lb/>
23 at 9:00 a.m. in the Austin audi-<lb/>
torium. Mrs. Nash will speak on<lb/>
'Personality Assets and Liabilities<lb/>
for Marriage<lb/>
Monday evening the meetings will<lb/>
be at student centers with individual<lb/>
leaders speaking on the topic "Are<lb/>
You Ready to Go Steady?" The Bap-<lb/>
tist students will meet at the Bap-<lb/>
tist Student Center at 5:16 p.m. with<lb/>
Rev. C. F. Bowen, speaker. The<lb/>
Methodist and Episcopal students<lb/>
will meet at the Methodist Student<lb/>
discussion at 6:15 p.m. by Dr. Meline<lb/>
Irons and Dr. Horold Hoke.<lb/>
iA supper is planned for the .Pres-<lb/>
byterian students at 5:15 p.m. at the<lb/>
Presbyterian Student Center fol-<lb/>
lowed by a discussion session at 6:15<lb/>
p.m. led by Dr. Frank Fuller. YMCA<lb/>
and YWCA meetings will be held in<lb/>
the Y-hut with other interested<lb/>
groups. The speaker will be Mrs.<lb/>
Ethel Nash.<lb/>
The Baptist Fellowship and Lu-<lb/>
theran Fellowship will meet at their<lb/>
regular places.<lb/>
Sex Ignorance of College Stu-<lb/>
dents" will be the topic of discus-<lb/>
sion on Tuesday, January 24 at 10:00<lb/>
a.m. in the Austin Auditorium with<lb/>
Mrs. Nash, speaker.<lb/>
Students who wish to have indi-<lb/>
vidual conferences with the discus-<lb/>
sion leaders may call College Ext.<lb/>
243 for appointments during the<lb/>
day. Calls will be taken between the<lb/>
hours of 8:30-12:30, 1:30-4:30.<lb/>
A special discussion group, led by<lb/>
the Bowman Gray family life spe-<lb/>
cialist, is scheduled for Tuesday<lb/>
night at 7:00. For Engaged and<lb/>
Pinned People Only" will take place<lb/>
in the Flanagan building, room 101.<lb/>
In addition to the discussion groups<lb/>
and individual appointments planned<lb/>
for the conference, the college book-<lb/>
stores will feature book displays in<lb/>
keeping with the program.<lb/>
Dr. George Douglas, family life<lb/>
specialist in the department of so-<lb/>
cial studies, is chairman on the Plan-<lb/>
ning Committee of the Conference.<lb/>
A group of ten other faculty mem-<lb/>
bers is working with him on arrange-<lb/>
ments for the event.<lb/>
wish-<lb/>
or<lb/>
Southern Schools Face Impending Integration Problems<lb/>
vw-<lb/>
to<lb/>
sorority<lb/>
. he must follow the procedure<lb/>
tlinad above.<lb/>
Frats Accept<lb/>
36 New Pledges<lb/>
Following informal rush last week,<lb/>
the seven campus social fraternities<lb/>
pledge 36 men. This number is few<lb/>
as compared with the number of men<lb/>
that pledged fall quarter.<lb/>
Informal rush differs from formal<lb/>
rush in the following manner: During<lb/>
formal rush each prospective pledge<lb/>
is required to visit each fraternity at<lb/>
least once during the week whereas<lb/>
they have to visit only the fraternity<lb/>
they are interested in during in-<lb/>
formal rush.<lb/>
Most of the fraternity men agree<lb/>
that this rush was a successful rush<lb/>
despite the fact that few men pledged.<lb/>
The reason for this agreement is that<lb/>
all the men who were extended a bid<lb/>
to join a fraternity had a "C" aver-<lb/>
age or better. Many of the men who<lb/>
accepted bids last quarter were<lb/>
freshmen and had no grades<lb/>
The I.F.C. rules stating that all<lb/>
men must have a "C" average to be<lb/>
pledged or initiated does indicate that<lb/>
fraternities are interested in scho-<lb/>
lastic growth as well as social growth.<lb/>
The fraternities accepted pledges<lb/>
as follows: Lambda Chi Alpha, 4;<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Order, 3; Pi Kappa Al-<lb/>
pha, 3; Sigma Nu, 4; Sigma Phi<lb/>
Epsilon, 8; Phi Kappa Tau, 8; and<lb/>
Theta Chi, 6.<lb/>
Tar River Site Yields<lb/>
Million Year Old Fossils<lb/>
Fossils estimated to he about 30<lb/>
BrflBoa years old have been un-<lb/>
covered at the construction site of<lb/>
Greenvilie's new sewage plant.<lb/>
Dr. Jean Lojwry, assistant ge-<lb/>
sraphy professor, said that the work-<lb/>
men found the fossils in blue clay.<lb/>
The plant is being constructed near<lb/>
the city dump along the Tar River-<lb/>
Dr. Lowry, who has worked in tHe<lb/>
field for nine years as a10'<lb/>
has identified the fossils as oyster<lb/>
and clam .hells. She believea that sow<lb/>
old bones that were found may<lb/>
those of a whale. These will ba itadiad<lb/>
by sn expert. mm . K<lb/>
Some time ago, bonaa danadby<lb/>
an expert as tho of 60UHo<lb/>
year old dinoaaar, waa loano <lb/>
the Tar River.<lb/>
Jim Hudson<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: In recent weeks<lb/>
many college and universities as well<lb/>
as secondary schools in the south<lb/>
have been faced with the problem of<lb/>
unexpected and immediate integra-<lb/>
tion One recent example is the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Georgia which was the<lb/>
center of attraction and racial excite-<lb/>
ment only a few days ago.<lb/>
Already some of North Carolina s<lb/>
schools have been integrated. For-<lb/>
tunately school integration has been<lb/>
carried out quietly and peacefully<lb/>
here so far<lb/>
However, we feel many EC stu-<lb/>
dents have never given integration<lb/>
any serious consideration. There are<lb/>
many who look on integration as<lb/>
something that happens at other<lb/>
schools .   something that will<lb/>
never come hare.<lb/>
Pat Harrey<lb/>
Integration will come to East<lb/>
Carolina eventually. How long it will<lb/>
be no one is sure. It may be years,<lb/>
but it could be next quarter. We feel<lb/>
the question of integrated class-<lb/>
rooms at East Carolina and all<lb/>
southern schools, is only a matter<lb/>
of time. We could be the next to<lb/>
have to face and adjust to this<lb/>
change.<lb/>
With this in mind, the East Caro-<lb/>
linian this week is attempting to get<lb/>
a sample of student opinion of this<lb/>
subject and, at the same time, stimu-<lb/>
late those students who have no<lb/>
opinion to think about the question.)<lb/>
Jim Hudson<lb/>
Integration should not be rushed<lb/>
at East Carolina but when the situa-<lb/>
tion arises wa the students and the<lb/>
administration should accept it with-<lb/>
Mike Katsias<lb/>
out reservation. We are a slate sup-<lb/>
ported institution and therefore have<lb/>
bo right to reject those applicants<lb/>
who are qualified for admission.<lb/>
Barney West<lb/>
Here at iEUst Carolina I feel we<lb/>
must face a practical situation. With<lb/>
so large a Negro population sur-<lb/>
rounding our college it is conceiv-<lb/>
able that the Negro influx could<lb/>
tempt white students to abandon East<lb/>
Carolina for other areas of the state,<lb/>
as far as I am concerned personally,<lb/>
I am opposed to forced integration.<lb/>
 If forced segregation is a viola-<lb/>
tion of constutional rights then so is<lb/>
forced integration  To make it<lb/>
impossible for a student of eastern<lb/>
North Carolina to gain an education<lb/>
without violating the ideals, morals,<lb/>
and customs of his family and cam-<lb/>
Betty Maynor<lb/>
n.unity, would be, in my mind, a vio-<lb/>
lation of his rights.<lb/>
Pat Harvey<lb/>
Integration usually involves fights,<lb/>
verbally and physically, and if I<lb/>
thought this would be the case at<lb/>
our college I would spend a great<lb/>
deal of time thinking before I made<lb/>
a cut and dried statement; but I<lb/>
don't believe East Carolina would get<lb/>
violent, because the students are so<lb/>
"blah" about any college controversy.<lb/>
Therefore, I believe they can, but<lb/>
"should" is out of my hands.<lb/>
Betty Maynor<lb/>
Yes, I think East Carolina should<lb/>
be integrated. There are many rea-<lb/>
sons why I feel that any institution<lb/>
of learning should afford equal op-<lb/>
portunities to all races. This, how-<lb/>
ever, is only the practical point of<lb/>
view<lb/>
Barney West<lb/>
(1) Everyone must pay taxes, these<lb/>
taxes support schools, why should<lb/>
one race attend a school which is<lb/>
partially financed" by another with-<lb/>
out equal opportunities to attend.<lb/>
(2) I think that since East Caro-<lb/>
lina is a state supported school and<lb/>
since each student is on partial<lb/>
scholarship from state funds, all col-<lb/>
lege age students should be allowed<lb/>
to attend regardless of race<lb/>
Mike Katsias<lb/>
Whether we have an integrated<lb/>
system .at East Carolina will depend<lb/>
on the decision of our Board and the<lb/>
influence exerted by the national<lb/>
government. If the school were inte-<lb/>
grated I would have no feelings of<lb/>
mejudice toward these students. I<lb/>
feel that any student should be<lb/>
judged on the basis of his scholastic<lb/>
abilities and performanca.<lb/>
EC Brass Choir Presents<lb/>
Concert On Wednesday<lb/>
The EC Brass Choir, under the<lb/>
direction of James Parnell, will pre-<lb/>
sent a concert on Wednesday, Janu-<lb/>
ary 25, at 8:00 p.m. The concert will<lb/>
be held in McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Some of the numbers the brass<lb/>
choir will perform are: "The Trojane<lb/>
in Carthage excerpt, by Hector<lb/>
Barlioz; "Festival Prelude" by Henry<lb/>
Purcell; and "Conzona per Senare<lb/>
No. 2 by Giovanni Garbrieli. They<lb/>
will also perform: "The Brass<lb/>
Square by Earl Zindars; and "Top<lb/>
Brass by Alan Scrulman.<lb/>
Also included in the program will<lb/>
be tht Phi Mu Alpha Brass Quartet.<lb/>
They will present "Quartet hy<lb/>
Arthur FranwekDohl. The members<lb/>
of the blass quartet are: trumpet<lb/>
Thomas Spry, and James Burns, and<lb/>
tromboneJerry Liles and Rimnklin<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Jerry Liles will be in charge of<lb/>
the art work for the program.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038685_0002"/><lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
JANUARY<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
s<lb/>
Gamm<lb/>
Sigma Sijcrr<lb/>
North Care<lb/>
I : Ei<lb/>
1969, fro<lb/>
nal initial<lb/>
5. I960.<lb/>
Purple and<lb/>
Tri Sijrma. T<lb/>
I indented<lb/>
pearls. The so<lb/>
pie violet. Tri<lb/>
Faithful Unt<lb/>
na Sigi<lb/>
nded at L<lb/>
te, Virginif<lb/>
day there are<lb/>
- the badj<lb/>
Th sixtee<lb/>
Phi Epsilon<lb/>
sorority on '<lb/>
Gamma Beta<lb/>
ority to oper<lb/>
Last yea<lb/>
Delta Zetas<lb/>
to sisters a<lb/>
Jane Chand<lb/>
Zeta<lb/>
Delta Zel<lb/>
established<lb/>
(pus in Febi<lb/>
ority, LamJ<lb/>
Lambda Cb<lb/>
The Zeta<lb/>
of 129 coll<lb/>
mnae chap<lb/>
tablished s<lb/>
ing in 1902<lb/>
ford, Ohio,<lb/>
eludes 40yf<lb/>
thers' Clu!<lb/>
the United<lb/>
Delta Ze<lb/>
Eintther in<lb/>
to promote<lb/>
ture of it<lb/>
plans for<lb/>
tion. High<lb/>
larship, pi<lb/>
tivities. to<lb/>
Die-Hard Southerners<lb/>
Suffer As Integration<lb/>
Closes Around Them<lb/>
There is no longer any real question<lb/>
concerning school integration. Any questions<lb/>
that might rise have already been answered<lb/>
by federal court orders and by successfully<lb/>
integrated schools. Those die-hard souther-<lb/>
ners who insist on participating in a con-<lb/>
temporary "Greek tragedy" will be the ones<lb/>
to suffer most from this point on.<lb/>
Bast Carolina now stands just outside<lb/>
the wake made by past and recent decisions.<lb/>
The full impact has not hit us yet, but it is<lb/>
as inevitable that these decisions will affect<lb/>
us as it is that the wave from a passing boat<lb/>
will hit an object in its path.<lb/>
Consider two pieces of wood with about<lb/>
two inches showing above a river. The wave<lb/>
from a passing boat will move toward and<lb/>
past them. The first piece of wood which is<lb/>
floating will ride the wave graciously and<lb/>
pass dry to the smooth water beyond. The<lb/>
other piece of wood, however, is the visible<lb/>
part of a post with its other end firmly im-<lb/>
bedded in the river. This piece of wood will<lb/>
also end up on the other side of the wave,<lb/>
but it does not ride. It resists. When the<lb/>
wave has passed, both pieces of wood will be<lb/>
on the other side with only one difference.<lb/>
The one that could not ride is wet.<lb/>
This is the present position of East Caro-<lb/>
lina (and other schools in the south). We<lb/>
can see the wave coming . . . and we wait.<lb/>
Will we ride it gracefully and safely to the<lb/>
' snv oth water' or are our policies too firmly<lb/>
imbedded in the prejudice mores of the past?<lb/>
If they are, the wave will inevitably sweep<lb/>
over us, leaving a wet, dripping mess.<lb/>
No school, and especially no southern<lb/>
school, can afford to sacrifice education to<lb/>
uphold standards and beliefs that are tragic<lb/>
even without useless sacrifice.<lb/>
Last year we understand one Negro stu-<lb/>
dent submitted application for transfer to<lb/>
East Carolina. At the time college officials<lb/>
did not have to make a decision because the<lb/>
applicant did not meet the regular entrance<lb/>
requirements of the college. The issue of<lb/>
race was never forced.<lb/>
The next time this happens a decision<lb/>
must be made. Someone will have to face<lb/>
the responsibility of making this decision.<lb/>
Considering the present atmosphere in North<lb/>
Carolina, we feel confident East Carolina, as<lb/>
a state supported educational institution, will<lb/>
not be faced so much with a decision as it<lb/>
will with how to best carry it out.<lb/>
There are some students here who will<lb/>
never be anything but rabble rousers. There<lb/>
are a few who are too narrow minded to ever<lb/>
be anything but stupid. However, we feel<lb/>
the majority of students at East Carolina<lb/>
are serious, reasonably informed, intelligent<lb/>
individuals. We hope our concept of the stu-<lb/>
dent body turns out to be valid when the<lb/>
wave reaches us.<lb/>
We pledge the support of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian (and hope the student body will follow)<lb/>
to meet and accept in a rational, civilized<lb/>
manner the wave which is sure to come.<lb/>
THE JOY OF BEING AN EDITOR<lb/>
Getting out this magazine is no picnic.<lb/>
If we print jokes, people say we are silly.<lb/>
If we don't, they say we are too serious.<lb/>
If we stick to the office all day,<lb/>
We ought to be around hunting material.<lb/>
If we go out and try to hustle.<lb/>
We ought to be on the job in the office.<lb/>
If we overlook manuscripts,<lb/>
We don't appreciate geaius;<lb/>
And if we do print them, the paper is filled<lb/>
with junk!<lb/>
If we edit the other fellow's write-up,<lb/>
We're too critical;<lb/>
If we don't, we're asleep.<lb/>
If we clip things from other papers,<lb/>
We are too busy to write them ourselves.<lb/>
If we don't, we are stuck on our own stuff.<lb/>
Now, like as not, some gal will say<lb/>
We swiped this from some magazine.<lb/>
"Mutual Moments"<lb/>
EC Critics Abound When Will America Begin To Fight<lb/>
In Ignorant Bliss The Inescapable Idealogical War?<lb/>
Negroes Only Look<lb/>
By JIM STINGLEY, JR.<lb/>
This column is dedicated to our<lb/>
campus critics, those intelligent ani-<lb/>
mals who are forever knocking the<lb/>
college's carmpus publications, in<lb/>
hopes that they will share a bit of<lb/>
their unbounded knowledge with the<lb/>
poor little group that writes for these<lb/>
publications. <lb/>
Criticism is good, if the person<lb/>
behind it knows something of what<lb/>
he is criticizing. And the recipient<lb/>
of this criticism1 should be smart<lb/>
enough to accept it. This way, criti-<lb/>
cism will be a benefit to all con-<lb/>
cerned, and everyone will be better<lb/>
off.<lb/>
This is all fine and good. But what<lb/>
if the criticism has nothing solid<lb/>
behind it? What about the criticism<lb/>
that comes out as only cuts that can<lb/>
do nothing but harm. It seems a sad<lb/>
thing to say, but this campus has<lb/>
tt great number of "Owl Critics"<lb/>
abounding in ignorant bliss. Every<lb/>
little thing that is (published on<lb/>
campus receives some of their cuts.<lb/>
Nearly every writer who contributes<lb/>
to campus publications gets a taste<lb/>
of their unfounded criticism at one<lb/>
time or another.<lb/>
If the writers of the campus pub-<lb/>
lications are so bad, then why don't<lb/>
these critics do something about it?<lb/>
Why don't they, themselves, submit<lb/>
an article or story and see how they<lb/>
rate with the campus? They have as<lb/>
much right as anybody to do so, for<lb/>
these publications are formed by the<lb/>
studentsfor the students. If they<lb/>
prove to have some sort of knowl-<lb/>
edgeable understanding of what they<lb/>
tare doing, they will not be turned<lb/>
down.<lb/>
If we have stepped on any toes<lb/>
with this article, it is because what<lb/>
has been said is true. What comes<lb/>
next, my dear friend, is up to you.<lb/>
Panty Raids Ends<lb/>
In Unusual<lb/>
Circumstances<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
Thursday's the day and several of<lb/>
our exhausted female population are<lb/>
not saying "TGIF" because of a<lb/>
week of tiresome classwork. These<lb/>
courageous few are repeating the<lb/>
campus prayer because there is only<lb/>
one more day of being nice to badge-<lb/>
girls, drinking watered-down punch,<lb/>
and telling more fibs than is usually<lb/>
necessary. Hooray for sisterhood!<lb/>
He who laughs first usually re-<lb/>
grets it afterwards. One of our<lb/>
younger groups of greek boys has<lb/>
been the recipient of several color-<lb/>
ful names, but since Homecoming<lb/>
Day has piled up mountains of pres-<lb/>
tige awards. While the other 'more<lb/>
important" groups have gotten their<lb/>
names in the paper also but under<lb/>
less favorable circumstances  "the<lb/>
IFC, because of certain . . . must<lb/>
place a penalty . .  But the name's<lb/>
the thing!<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
EDITOR BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Tom Jackson JaAnne Parks<lb/>
Managing Editor Pat Harvey<lb/>
Associate Editor  Patsy Elliott<lb/>
Sports Editor Richard Boyd<lb/>
Feature Editor  Marcelle Vogel<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor - B. D. Mills<lb/>
Photographers Grover Smithwick, Jim Kirkland<lb/>
Photographer Assistant  George Hathaway<lb/>
Cartoonist Gale Hammond, Jay Arledge<lb/>
Subscription Director  Melba Rhue<lb/>
Exchange Manager  Seiba Morris<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/>
Men's Circulation Manager Carlyle Humphrey<lb/>
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.<lb/>
From the "Rubayait of Omar Khayam<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wta,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a Hue.<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of tt<lb/>
translated by E. Fltigarald.<lb/>
Well, it looks as though even Bast<lb/>
Caroina has reached a democratic<lb/>
level, or will if the SGA's proposed<lb/>
amendment is passed. And it will if<lb/>
enough people happen to wander by<lb/>
the polls in search of their morning<lb/>
coffee and afternoon pepsi next<lb/>
Thursday. I wonder how the country<lb/>
would hold up if their votes de-<lb/>
pended on the liquid satisfaction of<lb/>
its people?<lb/>
Panty raids are funny at some<lb/>
colleges, but only at East Carolina<lb/>
could the finale be held at the local<lb/>
jail. But not many caroling sessions<lb/>
turn into mischevious robberies. Note<lb/>
to all future raiders: TAere is no<lb/>
excuse for disorganiation.<lb/>
The evidence is inescapable. We<lb/>
need now to act. America is at war.<lb/>
A war we are losing. We are under<lb/>
attack by Godless Communism on a<lb/>
world front and Godless materialism<lb/>
on the home front. Selfishness, per-<lb/>
version and division within our<lb/>
borders are the forces through which<lb/>
Communism takes over.<lb/>
When will America begin to fight<lb/>
the idealogieal war and make Moral-<lb/>
Armament her national policy?<lb/>
Washington, clean, straight, and<lb/>
God-directed would be an invisible<lb/>
force leading mankind to its destiny.<lb/>
The urgent need is for patriots<lb/>
Democrat and (Republican, Labor and<lb/>
management, black and white, young<lb/>
and old  who will put right what<lb/>
is wrong in their own lives and the<lb/>
life of the nation. .Such men will take<lb/>
on the task of arming America with<lb/>
her true ideology.<lb/>
It means absolute standards of<lb/>
honesty, purity, unselfishness and<lb/>
love, applied drastically, personally<lb/>
end nationally. It means men accept-<lb/>
ing the guidance of God. Definite,<lb/>
accurate, adequate information can<lb/>
come from the mind of God to the<lb/>
minds of men. It comes to those who<lb/>
listen and obey. It is the new dimen-<lb/>
sion of statesmanship.<lb/>
Dr. Frank Buchman, born in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, initiator of Moral-Re-<lb/>
Armament, has done what no other<lb/>
American has done. He has not only<lb/>
seen the need for an ideology but has<lb/>
given a lifetime to raise up a world<lb/>
force of men and women trained and<lb/>
committed to fight and win the<lb/>
ideological war.<lb/>
The governments of France, Ger-<lb/>
many, Greece, Japan, Free China,<lb/>
Tax Payers Must Bear<lb/>
The 'Ides Of March'<lb/>
It's that time of year to reprint<lb/>
a parody that's been bouncing around<lb/>
on editorial pages for several years<lb/>
now:<lb/>
"Two score and four years ago<lb/>
our fathers brought forth on this<lb/>
continent a new misery, conceived in<lb/>
desperation and dedicated to the<lb/>
proposition that all men are created<lb/>
taxable. Now we are engaged in a<lb/>
great long form, testing whether<lb/>
that taxpay, or any other taxpayer<lb/>
so confused and so frustrated, can<lb/>
iong endure. We are met on a great<lb/>
battlefield of that struggle. We have<lb/>
tome to dedicate a portion of our<lb/>
income to the great causes, useless<lb/>
and foolish, which have taken our<lb/>
money that this Nation might con-<lb/>
tinue to support other nations. And<lb/>
yet, in a large sense, we cannot af-<lb/>
ford, we have not got, we will not<lb/>
have, this hallowed money. For the<lb/>
brave taxpayers, broke and penni-<lb/>
less, who have paid here, have dedi-<lb/>
cated it far above our poor power<lb/>
to add, subtract, multiply, divide,<lb/>
refer to separate schedule Z, etc. The<lb/>
world will little note nor long re-<lb/>
member what we pay here, but the<lb/>
Bureau of Internal Revenue will<lb/>
never forget it if we don't. It is for<lb/>
the living rather to be here dedicated<lb/>
to the unfinished payment which<lb/>
they who made here have thus far so<lb/>
reluctantly advanced. It is rather for<lb/>
us to be here dedicated to the tre-<lb/>
mendous payments still remaining<lb/>
before us  that from the examples<lb/>
of these financially bankrupt we take<lb/>
increased deductions for the cause<lb/>
for which they gave the last full<lb/>
measure of their money  that we<lb/>
here highly Tesolve that these pau-<lb/>
pers shall not have forked over in<lb/>
vain  that this taxpayer, under-<lb/>
paid, shall have a new birth of lower<lb/>
taxes and higher wages, and that<lb/>
government of the taxpayer, by the<lb/>
taxpayer, for the taxpayer, shall not<lb/>
perish from the earth<lb/>
ACP<lb/>
.After a successful last production,<lb/>
the Playhouse has taken the plunge<lb/>
again. Next on the agenda will be<lb/>
a melograma which offers a cast of<lb/>
psychologically diseased which even<lb/>
the malajusted East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents will find interesting. Night<lb/>
Must Fall promises to entertain, take<lb/>
your mind off your own problems, and<lb/>
give the Playhouse the right to chirp<lb/>
again.<lb/>
By LEWIS LATHAM<lb/>
the Phillippines, Thailand and Iran<lb/>
have decorated him with their na-<lb/>
tion's highest honors. In recent<lb/>
months leaders from 16 African na-<lb/>
tions have urged him to come to their<lb/>
countries before it is too lste. In<lb/>
America 97 Senators and Congress-<lb/>
men said in a message to him, "You<lb/>
are giving a uniting idea to nations<lb/>
which can turn the ideological tide in<lb/>
the world today<lb/>
Speaking to a World Assembly for<lb/>
the Moral-Re-Armament of the Na-<lb/>
tions at Mackinac Island, Michigan,<lb/>
Dr. Buchman said:<lb/>
"My deep personal wish is to have<lb/>
every American free under the direc-<lb/>
tion of God to fight for America; so<lb/>
tc fight that America really be free,<lb/>
free from tyranny of sin, under<lb/>
God's direction, the unseen but ever-<lb/>
present Power. I wish this no less<lb/>
deeply for everyone in every nation.<lb/>
"I don't want our sons, especially<lb/>
our fighting sons, to go about with-<lb/>
out an answer. It simply enslaves<lb/>
them. It is not good enough. It will<lb/>
drive them to the same (philosophy<lb/>
that rules our opponents. We shall<lb/>
never create an inspired democracy<lb/>
. i-rn to bave <lb/>
that w.y. Men -, vo.<lb/>
MU, that il. T v.lu-<lb/>
save Atneri-<lb/>
we have<lb/>
will be a revo'u-<lb/>
lution. If we can<lb/>
rjwrsfir <lb/>
this revolution there<lb/>
tion of chaos sin<lb/>
It needs this ' thud,<lb/>
leaves us with a , <lb/>
The blood of Jesus Christ His<lb/>
cleanseth us from all sin. i<lb/>
the discovery everyone is looking for.<lb/>
That is the answer.<lb/>
'Then you<lb/>
will have a<lb/>
whole<lb/>
wonderful<lb/>
example that the<lb/>
follow. You will<lb/>
which the wise<lb/>
And that is what<lb/>
world will<lb/>
have no<lb/>
and<lb/>
want to<lb/>
America to<lb/>
honest can repair,<lb/>
the world expects today of America.<lb/>
You will have a battle-cry of freedom,<lb/>
and that  what America wanto.<lb/>
You will have a democracy that is<lb/>
really inspired.<lb/>
"Then our young men and our oa<lb/>
men will fight as Lincoln fought of<lb/>
()1(1. Our young men will know what<lb/>
to fight for and our wars will be<lb/>
won. And we shall be at peace with<lb/>
all men and the whole world.<lb/>
The hour is late. Here is the an-<lb/>
swer. For God's sake, wake up!<lb/>
Rushes Sweat As End Is Near<lb/>
By PATSY ELLIOTT<lb/>
Hooray for the Pitt! After a con-<lb/>
tinuous aray of losers a movie with<lb/>
appeal is bound to turn up. Butter-<lb/>
field 8 not only offers Elizabeth Tay-<lb/>
lor but it also throws in (1) semi-<lb/>
nude girls (2) intimate yhact aims<lb/>
(3) four love scenes and (4) an<lb/>
onange coat. Now this is entertain-<lb/>
ment!<lb/>
After a full week of parties, con-<lb/>
stant 'pepsodent' smiles, bright anx-<lb/>
ious faces, and names, facts, and<lb/>
places to remember, rushees, pledges,<lb/>
and full-fledged sorority women<lb/>
hopefully look forward to a success-<lb/>
ful climax to it all.<lb/>
Tension and anxiety, mounting<lb/>
through the week, have been evi-<lb/>
denced by rushees who seek to im-<lb/>
press the groups they hope to join.<lb/>
The questions, "Will I make it?"<lb/>
"Do they like me?" harass young<lb/>
aninds. "Does she want us?" worries<lb/>
those who already belong to the<lb/>
world of Greeks.<lb/>
Since these questions are so urgent<lb/>
this week, we thought it appropriate<lb/>
to pass along a few comments, not<lb/>
necessarily advice, to the approxi-<lb/>
mately 400 women students con-<lb/>
cerned . . . especially the rushees.<lb/>
Those of us who know the experi-<lb/>
ence of formal rush realize the<lb/>
climbing hopes which engulf a<lb/>
rushee and know that some of them<lb/>
will find disappointment ahead. For<lb/>
some, there will be only abundant<lb/>
joy in realizing a dream come true.<lb/>
For those, the week will end hap-<lb/>
pily-<lb/>
We can understand the mixed emo-<lb/>
tions which confront rushees . . . the<lb/>
potent desire to belong . . . the fear<lb/>
of failure . . . the unwillingness to<lb/>
accept rejection. We know these<lb/>
things, mainly because we know the<lb/>
significance of belonging, of being a<lb/>
part of something which cannot even<lb/>
be explained, in so many words, to<lb/>
Chief Of Police Urges<lb/>
Student Cooperation<lb/>
Chief of the campus police<lb/>
force, Johnnie Harrel, has asked<lb/>
this week that students walking<lb/>
in the general area of Memorial<lb/>
gymnasium and on the routes to<lb/>
Jones and New men's dormitories<lb/>
utilize the sidewalks and cross-<lb/>
walks which have been placed<lb/>
there for their convenience by<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
Chief Harrel commented that<lb/>
he urges students to co-operate<lb/>
with the campus police in pre-<lb/>
venting any accidents on campus.<lb/>
This area, he said, is particularly<lb/>
dangerous because of the amount<lb/>
of traffic on tenth street and<lb/>
the number of cars entering and<lb/>
leaving campus in front of the<lb/>
gymnasium.<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS<lb/>
Don't forget to read the front<lb/>
page. Integration is always inter-<lb/>
esting, as conversational material,<lb/>
that is.<lb/>
4vrsw wg pull iiPaifvAitf6iTNTH,gMNacflwri<lb/>
Late Model Car hi.<lb/>
Oblivious Audience<lb/>
By HOY MARTIN<lb/>
It wasn't a new car<lb/>
years old, perhaps, but it had bees <lb/>
The paint looked almost new, ari(j <lb/>
of chrome trim gleamed in the m<lb/>
morning aun.<lb/>
Of<lb/>
It was Sunday<lb/>
distance. The crowd<lb/>
uround the car began<lb/>
which bad<lb/>
tO t:<lb/>
someone who has not known the feel-<lb/>
ings of closeness and oneness real-<lb/>
ized through sisterhood.<lb/>
Yes, we understand the current<lb/>
anxieties, and to the rushees, we ex-<lb/>
press a.sincere wish for success with<lb/>
whatever group they choose. For<lb/>
those, at this first experience, who<lb/>
are met with disappointment . . .<lb/>
maybe next time.<lb/>
Reader Expresses<lb/>
Unusual Feelings<lb/>
Dear Editor;<lb/>
Here are some lines of my own<lb/>
composition which I think will in-<lb/>
terest some of your readers.<lb/>
COMMODIOUS CAN OF<lb/>
CONCENTRATED CORN OR,<lb/>
LIFE ON THE TAR<lb/>
The EC coed<lb/>
Is marvelously bred<lb/>
To plot for diamond rings<lb/>
 Among other things.<lb/>
Is tobacco-jpatch bred,<lb/>
Not very well read<lb/>
(Reason: an empty head?)<lb/>
Will certainly act coy<lb/>
Yet her sorority: I broke boi.<lb/>
She's quite generous<lb/>
In chatter frivolous,<lb/>
Will flit and flirt<lb/>
With not any young jerk<lb/>
But plays to those fuzzy-cheeked<lb/>
lads,<lb/>
Those modern Sir Gala-been-hads<lb/>
Who give fraternity cheers,<lb/>
Have ivy behind their ears.<lb/>
'Tis easy to see<lb/>
(At least to me)<lb/>
That the BC coed<lb/>
Is very well fed, <lb/>
Has all her graces<lb/>
Stacked in the right paces;<lb/>
Is really quite sweet<lb/>
Tho' inclined toward deceit;<lb/>
Her sense of humor?<lb/>
That's only a rumor.<lb/>
Her reason for existing<lb/>
 Are all listening? <lb/>
Is to strongly fight<lb/>
For her women's rights<lb/>
Which are - the marriage rites<lb/>
Frank Thomas<lb/>
'Under The Trees<lb/>
1. When bred eyes open, we prom-<lb/>
ise  , promise  but do we, do<lb/>
we ever?<lb/>
2 When ends don't meet, it. usual-<lb/>
ly because someone's pulling too hard<lb/>
at the beginning . .<lb/>
3. Though the mind be kept buay<lb/>
end is kept m mdnd<lb/>
4. Loudly he boasts' hi. many <lb/>
u n ' ' a raindrop fall,<lb/>
the sflence is deafening <lb/>
5. Iant it sfcraa <lb/>
improves himself, the worfc L <lb/>
metamorphosis<lb/>
morning, r <lb/>
tne baptist Church culd be heard 1<lb/>
ao <lb/>
jiLst about time for th. preaching J<lb/>
A lew people remained, moat xJ<lb/>
Tney walked around the car,<lb/>
ting down on their knees . . y jp<lb/>
puning open tne doors to peej<lb/>
sionaiiy, they would aha aeadil<lb/>
ways muttering to then<lb/>
'Gawd knows, that<lb/>
mess of this 'un, didn't he:<lb/>
groes said. "Lawd, he sho<lb/>
companion, as he stooped d , mipJJ<lb/>
of the tires. ihe white boya, ;eeil;<lb/>
wa-iked around to tne rear oi the<lb/>
ing tne possibility ol out- ir<lb/>
tne salvage dealer came b get it fa<lb/>
tnem kicked tne tailpipe extension ,<lb/>
right pipe with his loot, it fell to tati<lb/>
'ine ooy haatny picKed it up, ana snovi<lb/>
into the pocket oi tne fatigue jackets!<lb/>
wearing, ihen he hooked a: mi tomj<lb/>
anyone had seen what he had aunt.<lb/>
The license tag on tne ;ruu haaa<lb/>
by one bxlt, began to slap n.ttnanoJ<lb/>
against the bumper as the breeze picked a<lb/>
As i turned to leave, i  Ai<lb/>
miaui-aged man, bareheaded, hig nair<lb/>
on top. He wore a pair of coveralls<lb/>
straps loosely traversing his Miouiriar<lb/>
a dingy white sweatsnirt. He dian'a qi<lb/>
word. He just kept looking at the ksmU<lb/>
as it slapped against the bumper. He i<lb/>
almost to shake with every slap ol them!<lb/>
i stood for a inomen tmtchiaf him,<lb/>
1 cast my glance towards the car. Fort<lb/>
ment it seemed aimoat alive. lot p<lb/>
smashed and twisted, .etitd to me a<lb/>
hideous lace oi a monster, graining, sjp<lb/>
ing, mocking. And tne chrome aimyaa<lb/>
in the light oi" the morning sun.<lb/>
Georgia Cries<lb/>
lilt Julep Sippers <lb/>
Preach Education tfyl<lb/>
By PAT FARMER<lb/>
Here in our Southland  the W<lb/>
of magnolias and mint juleps  we art <lb/>
with another crisis in our gregaaa<lb/>
integration battle. Both oatioaal <lb/>
national attention has been foe<lb/>
University of Georgia camp by an<lb/>
well-meaning group of state leaders tfi<lb/>
somewhat biased press coverage.<lb/>
Two students  Charlayne ihrf<lb/>
Hamilton Holmesboth Negroes, &amp;;<lb/>
admission to the University of Georp<lb/>
were admitted via a federal conn<lb/>
state officials screamed and the<lb/>
watched. But with all the fanatic pr<lb/>
ins, we wondelred: whv are Georgia<lb/>
ficials fighting so desperately for sep<lb/>
tion  wny do we southerner? sit isf<lb/>
placency and watch  how can ed<lb/>
denied to anyone who is willing and<lb/>
of lemrnfn?<lb/>
First  is it that the Georgia<lb/>
 Justified in their pr -segregauoc<lb/>
ef Can it be that they fear an edu<lb/>
S?11101"6 than a mass of illiterate<lb/>
t then we realize that other pJJ<lb/>
America feel justified in their<lb/>
6. The silence thunder.  iu<lb/>
r hearts, have w'Jl1 nf 0 Ricans, the JeWUhfl<lb/>
joeaches for gentiles only), and the<lb/>
How have the others coped wits<lb/>
Prejudices?<lb/>
fone or said, loved" "ZZT<lb/>
Iove   . God pitT aS<lb/>
pity . . . ". God<lb/>
 tt we worked as hard <lb/>
get to God . - r"? tryin to<lb/>
But with all our problems, we<lb/>
" Him, more wouJd w " ten? S&amp; ?omP1ceflcy and charge <lb/>
answer . . uld tua JfJ.Politicians each election year t<lb/>
8- God's trees kv lrouh  torm of yankee pers<lb/>
T1 f ?ent  to ut T1 wallow when the worid<lb/>
and fro<lb/>
roots<lb/>
but<lb/>
 W thay a her fm&amp;r at UBLnd<lb/>
Of<lb/>
all because<lb/>
the<lb/>
- America, whv . Lf61  content. And the n<lb/>
if when fonnd. wJ i.h . v?,w,l .who could be leaders are <lb/>
WwaWatltiS <lb/>
bloody white<lb/>
!0. Doesn't it<lb/>
it<lb/>
sHHtf inch . . . okV <lb/>
'    &amp; - . . We L 2!l  <lb/>
With mint julep in our hand, <lb/>
aflJS?11  doctrine of eft<lb/>
'  yet at the same moBMigr<lb/>
TOjTofrmdy for educati011 2'i<lb/>
ilSJS14 toeet'witk <lb/>
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<pb facs="00038685_0003"/><lb/>
n i<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Enthusiasts<lb/>
Game Excitement<lb/>
Releases Emotions<lb/>
U ith the fa ling of Autumn i<lb/>
ter, college - .  fans<lb/>
nation have I the<lb/>
un into the gymnasium. The<lb/>
' - and shoulder pads of 4M.tbaN<lb/>
ave given   i ibbei  I<lb/>
and wai m-up j ..<lb/>
With j   <lb/>
make the big gym fee damp<lb/>
bring out th<lb/>
son ushers in ba a brisk-<lb/>
ness thai even the outdooi<lb/>
stadiu <lb/>
Here at Easl Carolina the Pirate<lb/>
ers have sensed that brisk<lb/>
responded . .<lb/>
ne contest.<lb/>
winning, espe .<lb/>
-   j:i(j- e.i i<lb/>
an ou1 let f<lb/>
" n d spectal have<lb/>
Ki  - atiun of tensi<lb/>
S?a lie, 01 just plain devot<lb/>
rts . . . no one<lb/>
' "ten ?e i<lb/>
'i  ' he excitement I <lb/>
 '  tint . . . what di a<lb/>
  earns of e 'si tcj the ne<lb/>
<lb/>
d it be the c<lb/>
1 ac . Eai.<lb/>
ica-<lb/>
the seal v<lb/>
This . <lb/>
the q<lb/>
  ntei -,<lb/>
an to these <lb/>
Of course, the Individ. to<lb/>
that he sh<lb/>
-ii.j team, b it also I cheer 1 be<lb/>
torj h it e<lb/>
le.<lb/>
This in itself would aid the Buc<lb/>
an-<lb/>
Certainly, with the stu-<lb/>
ent bodj behind the - R<lb/>
' '  til playe<lb/>
'  e incieased<lb/>
erior.<lb/>
Th   -<lb/>
<lb/>
f to the individuals who<lb/>
ha  ie opportunity to<lb/>
 nore tense contesl<lb/>
H in o portunitj<lb/>
i maturity occurs I<lb/>
"student esires 1<lb/>
s '' in a manner that<lb/>
d distinguish himself as a gen-<lb/>
tleman.<lb/>
When this is accomplis  -he bat-<lb/>
tle of the fan with himself is<lb/>
ough the game may not be<lb/>
But we can continue to attend tese<lb/>
bests cheering for the .Pirates in<lb/>
Food faith. The Bues are proud of<lb/>
home record, and with mature<lb/>
 J fans to stand behind the<lb/>
team, a fine record should be in<lb/>
for the Winter on the hard-<lb/>
d in Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
So this week the East Carolinian<lb/>
!ay tribute to coke and peai<lb/>
 ard seats and crowded stands, to<lb/>
'   t- and lav -ups . . . a 1<lb/>
ege basketball and the Pira<lb/>
East ai olina college.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038685_0004"/><lb/>
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M'V-fl !)<lb/>
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3<lb/>
tO!<lb/>
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W<lb/>
ad<lb/>
se<lb/>
sr<lb/>
A<lb/>
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A<lb/>
if<lb/>
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PAGE FOUR<lb/>
College Extension Announces<lb/>
Fall European Art Tour<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY. JANUARY If, <lb/>
An Art Tour of Western Europe<lb/>
for the summer of 1961 has been an-<lb/>
nounced by the College and is now<lb/>
being organised by the Extension<lb/>
Division of the college. Dr. Leon<lb/>
Jacobson, assistant professor of art<lb/>
history, will direct the tour, which<lb/>
will combine travel and study.<lb/>
The itinerary of the tour schedules<lb/>
a S8-day trip June 12-July 20 through<lb/>
England, Belgium, Holland, Germany,<lb/>
Switaerland, Italy, and France. The<lb/>
Atlantic Crossing to Scotland wil be<lb/>
by air. The return trip to this country<lb/>
gives a choice between travel by air<lb/>
or by ship. Travel in European coun-<lb/>
tries will be largely by motor coach.<lb/>
The tour is the second to be of-<lb/>
fered by East Carolina for the sum-<lb/>
mer of 1961. A Grand Circle Tour of<lb/>
cine European countries, also from<lb/>
June lJ-July 20. will be directed by<lb/>
Mrs. Myrtle K. Clark of the educa-<lb/>
tion department, who last summer<lb/>
ted a similar trip for thirty<lb/>
lent tourists.<lb/>
For those who wish college credit,<lb/>
completion of requirements on the<lb/>
 Tour, will give the student nine<lb/>
quarter hours of graduate or under-<lb/>
graduate credit.<lb/>
The Art Tour will include major<lb/>
art museums and many of the im-<lb/>
portant monuments of the countries<lb/>
on the itinerary. Private galleries<lb/>
and studios will also be visited. In<lb/>
addition, plans for the trip include<lb/>
sightseeing, shopping, theater-going,<lb/>
and other attractions.<lb/>
Museums and art galleries which<lb/>
the tourists will visit include the<lb/>
British Museum, the Tate Gallery,<lb/>
and the Wallace Collection in Lon-<lb/>
don; the Aehmolean Museum at Ox-<lb/>
ford; the Kijksmuseum in Amster-<lb/>
dam; the Galleries dell' Accademia in<lb/>
Venice; the Pitti and Uffizi galleries<lb/>
in Florence; the National Museum in<lb/>
Naples; and the Louvre, the Musse<lb/>
National d-Art Louvre, the Muse<lb/>
Bank art galleries in .Paris.<lb/>
Other places of interest on the trip<lb/>
include many of the great cathedrals<lb/>
and churches in England and Europe;<lb/>
the ruins of Pompeii; Statford-bn-<lb/>
Avon; Scheveningen, fashionable<lb/>
leach resort in Holland; the Black<lb/>
Forest; Lake Como; Vatican City;<lb/>
Capri; and Versailles and Malmaison.<lb/>
Tourists on each of East Carolina's<lb/>
summer tours may join a two-week<lb/>
tear of Spain, which will begin on<lb/>
July 20 and end Aug. 2.<lb/>
Further information on the Art<lb/>
Tour may be obtained from Dr. Ralph<lb/>
Brimley, Director of Extension, or<lb/>
from Dr. Leon Jacobson, Art Depart-<lb/>
ment, East Carolina College.<lb/>
Sorority Awards<lb/>
Study Fellowship<lb/>
Lucille Coulbourn. President of<lb/>
A Touch Of Irony<lb/>
Group Pickets Chapel Hill Movie House<lb/>
Gamma Phi chapter of Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta, announced today that as part<lb/>
of its national philanthropic program<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta Sorority will award<lb/>
a graduate fellowship in the amount<lb/>
of $1,00.00 for advanced study in<lb/>
the field of Social Service. Any<lb/>
graduate of an accredited college or<lb/>
university is eligible to apply.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta, national social<lb/>
sorority for college women founded<lb/>
at Lombard College sixty-eight years<lb/>
ago, numbers more than 34,000 col-<lb/>
lege and alumnae members. In serv-<lb/>
ice to others, their efforts are fo-<lb/>
cused on the American Child and<lb/>
methods of combating Juvenile De-<lb/>
linquency, by working locally with<lb/>
Juvenile Courts and Social Agencies.<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (UPS)  "I Got. sign-hoisters, insuring a continuous, turn engagement early this week<lb/>
Plenty of Nothin was chorused on) parade. 'was "Inherit the Wind a hart-hit-<lb/>
ting drama of bigotry and social un-<lb/>
Presently Gamma Phi chapter is<lb/>
aiding a junior high student in this<lb/>
area. It is the aim of the sorority to<lb/>
help this student financially, as well<lb/>
as to develop her interest in educa-<lb/>
tion and culture.<lb/>
Interested persons may obtain<lb/>
applications for tie Fellowship at<lb/>
this time from Lucille Coulbourn,<lb/>
P.O. Box 1160, East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege. Deadline for filing applications<lb/>
is March 1, 1961.<lb/>
the screen of the Carolina Theater<lb/>
recently, but the refrain outside was<lb/>
'All-Colored oast, but  in Chapel<lb/>
Hill  all-white audience<lb/>
Advertisements for George Ger-<lb/>
shwin's folk opera "Porgy and Bess"<lb/>
served as backdrop for four quiet,<lb/>
but determined pickets  two white,<lb/>
two Negro  who hoisted signs in<lb/>
front of the theater protesting the<lb/>
management's refusal to admit Ne-<lb/>
gro patrons.<lb/>
The signs bore directives  "Pro-<lb/>
test Segregation .Policy of Manage-<lb/>
ment" and "We Enjoy Movies Too<lb/>
Another carried the "All-Colored<lb/>
Cast  But in Chapel Hill  all-<lb/>
white audience" message.<lb/>
The plan followed by the demon-<lb/>
strators called for employing a<lb/>
"shift system replacing the four<lb/>
pickets each hour with four new<lb/>
The pickets said they would con-<lb/>
tinue to carry their signs until the<lb/>
rest. The<lb/>
Among the theater will be<lb/>
next attraction at the<lb/>
A Breath of Scan-<lb/>
movie ended its run<lb/>
picketers were two University ofldal.<lb/>
members Picketing of the theater was remi-<lb/>
 1   . 1A.<lb/>
North Carolina faculty<lb/>
Team captain for the first four<lb/>
pickets and spokesman for the group<lb/>
was Mary Mason, a senior at North<lb/>
Carolina College in Durham.<lb/>
Posters advertising forthcoming at-<lb/>
tractions lent a teuch of irony to<lb/>
the occasion. Framed over the slowly<lb/>
marching pickets was the title, 'The<lb/>
Facts of Life Scheduled for a re-<lb/>
pi  - <lb/>
niscent of the "pledge card" picket-<lb/>
ing of two Chapel Hill theaters last<lb/>
April when a number of UNC stu-<lb/>
dents, with the sanction of ten stu-<lb/>
dent religious groups, picketed the<lb/>
theater- and gave out pledge cards<lb/>
vhich asked for equal service for<lb/>
both whites and Negroes, the Daily<lb/>
Tar Heel reported.<lb/>
1961 Summer Placement Directory Now Available<lb/>
The new entarirp ioci ai vj . , . <lb/>
e new enlarged 1961 annual ships in social agencies<lb/>
immer<lb/>
and hos-<lb/>
Placement Directory, the pitals. on-the-spot studies of business<lb/>
largest and most comprehensive list-<lb/>
ing of actual summer jobs, projects,<lb/>
awards, and fellowships is now avail-<lb/>
able. This is the same Directory used<lb/>
ea year by over 1500 college place-<lb/>
rent offices and copies can be ex-<lb/>
amined at most Universities Place-<lb/>
ment or Deans' office, college and<lb/>
lie libraries, and school superin-<lb/>
tendents' office.<lb/>
s unique Directory completely<lb/>
sed and brought up to date each<lb/>
is particularly prepared for<lb/>
students, teachers, profes-<lb/>
firjns by college professors, secre<lb/>
tarial work at the United Nations,<lb/>
church caravans, trainees on a cruise<lb/>
ship, and a concert tour to Europe<lb/>
for singers with the All-American<lb/>
Chorus.<lb/>
This year's Directory offers many<lb/>
directly to the Institute and include<lb/>
job descriptions, dates of employ-<lb/>
ment, necessary qualifications, num-<lb/>
ber of openings, salaries, and the<lb/>
names and addresses of the em-<lb/>
ployers. Helpful information is given<lb/>
on how to apply for positions and<lb/>
each Directory contains a samiple<lb/>
resume to assist applicants.<lb/>
The Summer Placement Directory<lb/>
Business Club To Hold<lb/>
Beauty Pageant<lb/>
The Furniture City Chapter of the<lb/>
American Business Club will hold<lb/>
its annual beauty pageant in High<lb/>
Point, April 7 and 8, 1961 to select<lb/>
Miss Sun Fun of North Carolina,<lb/>
1961.<lb/>
Wake Forest Professor Presides<lb/>
At Business Education Meet<lb/>
The winter meeting of the North already completed was a status study<lb/>
Carolina Business Education Council I of business education in the white<lb/>
high schools of the state. Currently<lb/>
.    -   uriiinu j-mrectory<lb/>
openings of a permanent nature in<lb/>
hundreds of firms such as Eli-Lilly<lb/>
Co Vick Chemical Co Litton Sys-<lb/>
tems, Krogers Co Addressograph-<lb/>
Alultigraph Corp.Jngersoll - Rand,<lb/>
 -a, pruies- .viuiugrapn t'orp.Jngersoll - Rand,<lb/>
and librarians. Jobs for which Hughes Aircraft, Cincinnati Gas and<lb/>
school seniors may also apply<lb/>
are clearly indicated.<lb/>
me of the over 14,000 unusual<lb/>
runer earning opportunties listed<lb/>
- ut the United States and<lb/>
foreign countries including<lb/>
' ip projects to study the U.S.<lb/>
rnment, scholarships for study-<lb/>
archaeology in Greece, baking<lb/>
d and pastries in Alaska, theo-<lb/>
apprenticesbips in summer<lb/>
houses, conducting tours to<lb/>
summer newspaper fellow-<lb/>
for journalism teachers, intern-<lb/>
Electric Co Aerojet-General Corp<lb/>
Singer Sewing Machine Co etc.<lb/>
Study projects camp positions, jobs<lb/>
and apprenticeships with summer<lb/>
play houses and music theatres, and<lb/>
work at inns, resorts, restaurants,<lb/>
hotels, motels, lodges, and dude<lb/>
ranches are some of the other varied<lb/>
offers made to students and educa-<lb/>
tors. Many branches of the U.S.<lb/>
Government in Washington ami<lb/>
throughout the country have also re-<lb/>
quested their openings to be included.<lb/>
All openings have been submitted<lb/>
from the Advancement and Place-<lb/>
ment Institute, Box 99P, Station G<lb/>
Brooklyn 22, N.Y. A new companion<lb/>
booklet called 99 ways for teen agers<lb/>
to earn money during the summer, is<lb/>
now also availabe for 50 cent. Since<lb/>
1952, the Institute has been a clear-<lb/>
ing house of occupational informa-<lb/>
Institute Urges Students To<lb/>
Consider Foreign Lands Work<lb/>
The Advancement and Placement<lb/>
Institute, urges all American edu-<lb/>
cators who are able to do so to take<lb/>
advantage of the many opportunities<lb/>
to teach in foreign lands both for the<lb/>
contributions they can make in in-<lb/>
terpreting our country abroad and<lb/>
l the enriching experience in in-<lb/>
ten.ational understanding they can<lb/>
I ring to our students in this country<lb/>
upon their return to the schools of<lb/>
 United States.<lb/>
The Institute, a non-commercial<lb/>
fessional information and advis-<lb/>
ory service for the field of education,<lb/>
has been publicizing foreign educa-<lb/>
tion-positions in its monthly non-fee<lb/>
placement journal, Crusade For Edu-<lb/>
ion, since 1952. Last year the In-<lb/>
stitute assisted administrators in<lb/>
hundreds of overseas schools in more<lb/>
than 65 countries in Europe, the Near<lb/>
and Far East, Africa and South<lb/>
America, to recruit American educa-<lb/>
tora for positions at all levels from<lb/>
kindergarten through university.<lb/>
While every issue of Crusade in-<lb/>
maay overseas opportunities,<lb/>
annual International Issue is es-<lb/>
pecially devoted to foreign positions<lb/>
of a teacher who has lived and taught<lb/>
in the Gevernment Dependent Schools<lb/>
in Okinawa, the Philippines, Cuba<lb/>
and the Azores.<lb/>
The International Issue may be<lb/>
examined at most Deans' Offices,<lb/>
University and Public Libraries, and<lb/>
School Superintendents' Offices or<lb/>
may be ordered from The Advance-<lb/>
ment and Placement Institute, Box<lb/>
99-M, Station G, Brooklyn 22, N.Y,<lb/>
for $2,00.<lb/>
Now is the best time to begin<lb/>
application procedure for foreign<lb/>
education positions.<lb/>
Raw! Displays<lb/>
Lithographs From<lb/>
Beaver College<lb/>
Thirty lithographs by Benton<lb/>
Spruance. instructor and art director<lb/>
of Beaver College, Jenkintown, Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, are being displayed in the<lb/>
in order to give educators ample time hall gallery of Rawl building dur-<lb/>
u complete application procedure for I ing January<lb/>
September 1961 positions. This Inter<lb/>
national Issue includes specific data,<lb/>
including qualifications and salaries<lb/>
about actual teaching, administra-<lb/>
tive, librarian, research, and science<lb/>
positions in many schools in many<lb/>
lands. Among those included will be<lb/>
pri ite schools in Australia, Canada,<lb/>
The lithographs show variety in<lb/>
technique and competence of execu-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The print exhibition covers a wide<lb/>
range of subjects varying from the<lb/>
human figure to landscapes. The<lb/>
artist's work indicates a major in-<lb/>
in human beings, since few<lb/>
i? i . t  v " nujuan Demgs, since lew<lb/>
England. Iraq Peru, Costa Rica and prints escape the inclusion of tie<lb/>
tzerland; American-type schools figure.<lb/>
in Austria, Brazil, Columbia, Ecua-<lb/>
dor. Buatemala, Mexico, Puerto Rico,<lb/>
and Venezuela; universities in Eng-<lb/>
land, Hong Kong, Greece and Mexi-<lb/>
co; language schools in Spain and<lb/>
Finland; church-related schools and<lb/>
collages in Africa, Hong Kong, Ja-<lb/>
maica, and Jordan; public schools in<lb/>
Australia, Canada, Turkey and Eng-<lb/>
land; high schools in Jamaica; and<lb/>
C 8. Government Oversees Dependent<lb/>
Schools, etc.<lb/>
Many of these positions pay travel<lb/>
expenses and, in most cases, the<lb/>
language of instruction is English.<lb/>
This issue features an article on<lb/>
Ins ard living in England and<lb/>
Color plans an important role in<lb/>
many of the prints in the exhibition.<lb/>
Brilliance of color is strikingly<lb/>
achieved by transparent colors which<lb/>
reflect the white of the paper be-<lb/>
neath them. Clear colors that seem<lb/>
to belong with one another are used<lb/>
to create a unified effect.<lb/>
Mr. Spruance not only portrays<lb/>
people and their activities and feel-<lb/>
ings, but also uses the human figure<lb/>
os a designing element in his prints.<lb/>
Dr. Bruce Carter, faculty member<lb/>
of the art department who is in<lb/>
charge of instruction in graphics,<lb/>
studied with Mr. Spruance last sum-<lb/>
mer.<lb/>
ibing the experiences! The show is open to the public<lb/>
She will represent North Carolina<lb/>
in the national pageant at Myrtle<lb/>
Beach in June 8-10 where Miss Sun<lb/>
Fun USA will be selected.<lb/>
Any single girl between the ages<lb/>
of 18 and 25 interested in participat-<lb/>
ing is.asked to contact Mr. Stewart<lb/>
Stone, Box 1, High Point, North<lb/>
Carolina. Attendance at a North<lb/>
Carolina College or University ful-<lb/>
fills the residence requirement even<lb/>
if your home is not in North Carolina.<lb/>
was held here on January 14. Ap-<lb/>
proximately 50 business teachers,<lb/>
school administrators, and business-<lb/>
men were in attendance. The morn-<lb/>
ing meetings were held in Rawl Class-<lb/>
room Building and included a coffee<lb/>
hour followed by committee and<lb/>
Executive Board sessions.<lb/>
At the full Council-luncheon meet-<lb/>
the Council is actively engaged in<lb/>
promoting a state service for the<lb/>
more than 800 business teachers and<lb/>
a past president of the Council. As-<lb/>
sisting him are Alton Finch, Peggy<lb/>
Holman, and Frances Daniels, all<lb/>
members of the staff of the School <lb/>
of Business at East Carolina.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
Jan. 27: All State Orchestra, all day.<lb/>
Basketball Game: ECC vs West-<lb/>
ern Carolina, Gym 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Jan. 28: All State Orchestra, all day.<lb/>
Movie: "Korea Dean Martin,<lb/>
Austin Aud 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
 Jan. 29: All State Orchestra all dv<lb/>
tion and positions for the field of Jan in- p i, n  "escra- a1' dav-<lb/>
education I Basketball Game: ECC vs<lb/>
Appalachian, Gym 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
ing in North Cafeteria, President<lb/>
Joyce Bateman of the School of busi-<lb/>
ness, Wake Forest College, presided.<lb/>
Greetings from East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege were extended by Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, president, and Dr. E. R.<lb/>
Drowning, Director of the School of<lb/>
Business.<lb/>
Important items on the agenda in-<lb/>
cluded discussionsof the business 196<lb/>
education service at the state level, who<lb/>
 immunity surveys, layout and equip-<lb/>
ment for business education depart-<lb/>
ments, and recommendations to the<lb/>
Textbook Commission.<lb/>
The North Carolina Business Coun-<lb/>
cil is an organization comprised of<lb/>
business teachers, businessmen, and<lb/>
school administrators. The purpose<lb/>
of the Council is to provide a co-<lb/>
ordination agency for these groups to<lb/>
work together in improving the busi<lb/>
Fall Quarter Produces 131 Graduates<lb/>
Students who oomplete their work Twenty-one will receive<lb/>
Pact r'on.r.Kno  V.  a. m<lb/>
aster<lb/>
of ar:s degree; and fifteei<lb/>
lor of arts degree.<lb/>
Fraternity Entertains<lb/>
Honoree, Miss Costa<lb/>
at East Carolina at the end of the<lb/>
fall quarter include 131 candidates<lb/>
for degrees. Registrar John H.<lb/>
Korne has announced.<lb/>
With other members of the Class of<lb/>
1961, graduates of the fall quarter<lb/>
are eligible for degrees will re-<lb/>
ceive their diplomas at the annual! Beta Psi Chapter of Sigma V<lb/>
commencement eises, scheduled Iota, national professions V<lb/>
for Sunday, May 21. for wormm  the f, J<lb/>
All of the fall-quarter graduates at honored one of its honorary<lb/>
Carolina are North Carolinians bars, Mary Costa, January I, mh<lb/>
After her recital in Wright' Vudi-<lb/>
lorium, the SATs bald a reaeptk<lb/>
for Miss Costa in the Musk Hall.<lb/>
Mary Costa was initialed into SA1<lb/>
in March, 1960, at UCLA.<lb/>
except three, who came from Florida,<lb/>
South Carolina and Virginia. The<lb/>
129 North Carolinians represent 41<lb/>
counties of this state.<lb/>
Those completing their work at<lb/>
th<lb/>
 je e"l of the fall quarter include<lb/>
srs&amp;RSL?the hrta frhvr:rd f. -  - --<lb/>
the mo. imPurtot projW ,, jrs tis a,rr: &amp;; <lb/>
'It's strange bow the ignorant re-<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
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1<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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jnv-oivp chopping makes it easy tc<lb/>
the right buy at your Chevrolet dea<lb/>
A whole new crew of Chew Corvair tZ 'i ;i,j- , type 01 car for any kind of going,<lb/>
before in e -a5SBa<lb/>
spacious Chevy wagons-all with a Jet-smooth ride ComeininH'J !?" ?<lb/>
easy wayon a onetop shopping tourl se one you want the<lb/>
Iks<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
New '61 Chevrolet IMPALA 2-000R SEDAN<lb/>
WmBcffiMfc immi<lb/>
New 'd Chevrolet 4-D00R BISCAYNE 6<lb/>
NOW-BIG-CAR COMFORT AT SMALL-CAR PRICES<lb/>
Chevies. Yet they give you a full measure of Chevrolet rooming<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
New -61 Corvair 500 UKEW000-STATION WAGON<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
t.<lb/>
New '61 Chevrolet BEL AIR 2-D00R SEDAN<lb/>
c  r1" club <lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
;i<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
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YDC Prexy Attends<lb/>
President Elect's<lb/>
Inaugural Events<lb/>
(JleBn Jernigan: preside (f<lb/>
Young Democratic Hub td V<lb/>
here, has been invited l  !or<lb/>
augumj activities b Washing<lb/>
1. C, Jnnnnrj 18-20. InvitatiZ<lb/>
Young Democratic Club members<lb/>
the United States is Umii to Km<lb/>
While in Washington, D<lb/>
Jernigan will attend a r<lb/>
ing President-elect John r K nL<lb/>
and Vice President-elet Lyndon h<lb/>
Johnson and their wiies and aiSo<lb/>
reception for Young Democratic Oat<lb/>
members. He has a n . f<lb/>
the Inaugural parade on . f <lb/>
Mr. Jernigan (a a goefcj ' "<lb/>
major with emphasis on economics<lb/>
In student activity a<lb/>
 of the Circle K Club and the Stu"<lb/>
dent National Education ion'<lb/>
and i one of the Ka<lb/>
dent leadet  app,ar" <lb/>
the 1961 edition of the national year-<lb/>
book "Whos who Among Student b<lb/>
-Arnerican Universities and College<lb/>
He was campus eaanpaign man-<lb/>
ager at East Carolina for G<lb/>
Terry Sanford and statewide coflete<lb/>
campaign manager for Sen. John F<lb/>
Kennedy.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038685_0005"/><lb/>
XHlRSDAY, JANUARY 19, 194i<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
Pirates Open Home Stand<lb/>
mr<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne Defeats East Carolina<lb/>
Carolina Violate. NCAA Ruling<lb/>
In ltsbuiKh, Pennsylvania the meeting of the National Collegiate<lb/>
ti. Association was penalizing North Carolina' strong cage five, the<lb/>
the Tar Heels were turning back a game Wake Forest team. Dur-<lb/>
eotttest theoach Prank McQuire outfit gave indications that they<lb/>
i be the team to win the Atlantic Coast Conference from such strong<lb/>
ents as Duke, State, Maryland, and even this same Demon Deacon<lb/>
thai Doug Moe, York Larese and Company rolled over.<lb/>
irolina violated NGAA rules only from a minor standpoint, but it<lb/>
T.i. Heels a shorter season than the University followers antici-<lb/>
 one yeai probation ruling only on basketball was a jolt to the<lb/>
Chapel Hill school. It took some close investigation by the NOCA of-<lb/>
hinder the basketball program with any type of violations. An<lb/>
example of one of the violations was the University paying accessory ex-<lb/>
s of the parents and players oi prospective Tar Heel entrees in the<lb/>
future. This occured at the recent Dixie Classics in which the Carolina<lb/>
efeated three strong opponents for the Classic championship.<lb/>
Duke Strong Contender<lb/>
Of course, the Chapel Hill school will be able to play out their<lb/>
e schedule and participate in the playoffs for the ACC championship,<lb/>
Prank MeQuire's talented crew can go no further. Duke will probably<lb/>
tc Atantic Coast Conference representative in NCAJA post season play.<lb/>
I  Blue Devils. Cotton Bowl kings in football, could be the NCAA cham-<lb/>
i in basketball. It is certain that Carolina can not go to New York<lb/>
. first round classics in March, but Duke may be just as good or<lb/>
aps even better representative than their hated neighbors about 8<lb/>
1s down the road at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Ruling Affects Former Time Powera<lb/>
The NCAA has shown its power once again. North Carolina State,<lb/>
bom, and Kansas University are among schools with brilliant accom-<lb/>
ments in fiootball and basketball that the board has hindered severely.<lb/>
e sports observer would elaborate on this serious situation, he would<lb/>
that Carolina may be in hot water as far as their (basketball program<lb/>
concerned if they follow the same pattern as these other schools have<lb/>
followed.<lb/>
Prior to Carolina's phenomenal 1996-67 all winning Tar Heel five<lb/>
rth Carolina State was the team to beat for the ACC. However, Ever-<lb/>
ett Case, the highly respected State cage mentor, brought in Jackie More-<lb/>
I, a fabulous schoolboy fresh from the "Deep South in the state of<lb/>
Louisiana. An illegal violation by the NCAA Board ruling on improper<lb/>
recruiting left State College without Mr. Moreland and a four year pro-<lb/>
Sation sentence that not only applied to the hardwood but the gridiron<lb/>
a well.<lb/>
State Takes Backset<lb/>
Since this violation, the Wolfpack has had the tendency to play<lb/>
vond fiddle to Carolina and Duke in basketball. Of course, the Raleigh<lb/>
sonool is on its way to a winning season during this campaign, but they<lb/>
are not favored to knock off Duke or the Tar Heels for the championship.<lb/>
'Wilt the Stilt" Sensational<lb/>
A few years back Kansas's Jayhawks had the incomparable Wilt "the<lb/>
Chamberlain join their basketball program all the way from Phila-<lb/>
phia, Pennsylvania where the 7 ft. 2 in. Negro star rewrote every high<lb/>
1 record book in the Quaker state. This was the same Chamberlain<lb/>
t played againBt Carolina in the 1957 NOOA finala in which Kansas<lb/>
was beaten in three overtimes 54-63.<lb/>
Kansas Guilty<lb/>
The NCAA found the University guilty of aiding the AU-American<lb/>
legaJty. The Kansas team was put on probation, and have since been a<lb/>
tiica! intercollegiate representative in comparison with their Big Seven<lb/>
tfit with their star Negro n fold.<lb/>
Remember Bud Wilkinson's all winning grid season at Oklahoma<lb/>
ring the latter stages of the fifties. Well, the NOAiA ruled the Sooners<lb/>
D probation on a football violation.<lb/>
Oklahoma No Longer Powerful It Has Been<lb/>
The radical stage was set for this great power, and evident that the<lb/>
Sooners have been having their troubles on the gridiron in recent football<lb/>
reasons. Missouri has replaced the Sooners as the football .power of the<lb/>
Big Seven. It used to be almost impossible to come close to defeating<lb/>
Oklahoma. But now it is not common to see the Sooners beaten badly.<lb/>
Can Carolina Survive Situation?<lb/>
The question is, will these rulings of the past on Oklahoma, North<lb/>
Carolina State, and Kansas affect the basketball Tar Heel in the same<lb/>
manner as far as national prestige is concerned athletically speaking?<lb/>
Carolina's penalty was only minor, whether it will hurt their recruiting<lb/>
program which has been almost directly from the New York City area<lb/>
remains to be seen.<lb/>
Maybe this ruling will be an example for the other big time schools<lb/>
in our area. Of course. East Carolina is not in the NCAA and can not be<lb/>
affected by the board. But it will be interesting to keep a watchful eye<lb/>
on other action which could take place involving Big Four schools.<lb/>
Hata Off<lb/>
Our hats off to The East Carolina Swimming ceaeh, Dr. Ray Mar-<lb/>
tinez, on his most commendable work in the recent high school swimmmg<lb/>
meet held in the Pirate pool, 14 scholastic tS T?.nfd<lb/>
live schools, from Va. and<lb/>
N C, during last Saturday's colorful meet.<lb/>
MlMk swimmers in this part of <lb/>
in the meet. Dr. Martinez had to work many hours overtime in getting<lb/>
everything set up for the big occasion.<lb/>
Speaking of swimming, our own crew takes to the road today against<lb/>
highly regarded VPI in Blacksburg, Virginia. The tankmen swing down<lb/>
to meetXpalachain at Boone, and Georgia in Athens following the Vir-<lb/>
ginia Tech invasion.<lb/>
Pirates Return Hoe<lb/>
It will be nice to have our Pirates at home again. Let us hope that<lb/>
L n will turn out to watch our highly talented cage team<lb/>
everyone who can will J J? e. for thift one<lb/>
battle Pfeiffer Saturday night. The visitors swuia .  ,<lb/>
Coach Earl Smith's East Carolina<lb/>
cage Pirates open a four game home-<lb/>
stand Saturday night against a dan-<lb/>
gerous Pfeififer quint. The latter<lb/>
team puWed one of the big surprises<lb/>
of the 1960-61 campaign earlier dur-<lb/>
ing the season by turning back At-<lb/>
lantic Christian at Wilson.<lb/>
ECC Heavy Favorite<lb/>
The Bucs will not be taking the<lb/>
opposition lightly due to a scare at<lb/>
Pfeiffer in which the Pirates won<lb/>
by the narrow margin of only a<lb/>
couple of points. This could be a<lb/>
close one for the Bucs, but ECC will<lb/>
be a definite heavy favorite over a<lb/>
team that is seeing its first season<lb/>
in North State League comtpetition.<lb/>
The East Carolina opponents will<lb/>
be getting rougher during this home-<lb/>
stand as Western Carolina's Cata-<lb/>
mounts, lAppalachain's Apps, and an<lb/>
aggressive quint from Atlantic Chris-<lb/>
tian invade Greenville. A sweep of<lb/>
these opposing teams could establish<lb/>
the Pirates as a top threat for the<lb/>
league leadership before the season<lb/>
exterminates.<lb/>
Consistent Scores<lb/>
A well-balanced attack has been<lb/>
the answer to the success that Coach<lb/>
Earl Smith has been enjoying dur-<lb/>
ing the current campaign. Captain<lb/>
Don Smith and playmaker Cotton<lb/>
Clayton have been highly responsible<lb/>
for the consistency of the team in<lb/>
the scoring depatment. Incidentally,<lb/>
the Bucs have been averaging close<lb/>
to 80 points per contest and is the<lb/>
leading offensive team in the con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
Five Bucs axe currently hitting in<lb/>
double figures on unofficial statis-<lb/>
tics. Forward Don Smith leads the<lb/>
team with a 16.7 average, followed<lb/>
closely by guard Cotton Clayton who<lb/>
is currently pressing 16 points per<lb/>
contest. Junior Charlie Lewis who<lb/>
confiscated the guard post adjacent<lb/>
to Clayton during the latter stages of<lb/>
last season has a 13.5 scoring mark<lb/>
to his credit. The New Jersey Fresh-<lb/>
man, Bill Otte has an eleven point<lb/>
average from has pivot slot, and Lacy<lb/>
West is currently netting an aver-<lb/>
age of a little better than ten points<lb/>
per contest.<lb/>
Bowes Valuable Replacement<lb/>
These five, are the usual players to<lb/>
start for the Pirates. Bill Otte is<lb/>
sometimes replaced by dependable<lb/>
Ben Bowes at the center position.<lb/>
Bowes could probably start for most<lb/>
any team in the loop, but his services<lb/>
as sixth man in the ECC lineup has<lb/>
played an important factor in the<lb/>
success of the cage Pirates.<lb/>
Tight Race<lb/>
Currently it appears to be a four<lb/>
way race right down to the wire in<lb/>
North State loop circles. Atlantic<lb/>
Christian possesses a contender still,<lb/>
but High Point, Appalachadn, Lenior<lb/>
Rhyne, and the Bucs appear to be<lb/>
the teams that wild settle it out in<lb/>
the end. High Point has the poise of<lb/>
a champion. This was demonstrated<lb/>
during the pre-Ghristmas showing<lb/>
the High Pointers made at Green-<lb/>
ville. lAppalachain is a deadly shoot-<lb/>
ing team, with a home court that is<lb/>
almost impossible for the opposition<lb/>
to walk away with a win to their<lb/>
credit. Lenior Rhyne has won seven<lb/>
in a row prior to the Pirate tilt last<lb/>
Saturday night, and the Bears of<lb/>
Coach Bill Wells posses a well-<lb/>
rounded five.<lb/>
ECC Has Strong Material<lb/>
Am interesting race is anticipated<lb/>
during the latter stages of the sea-<lb/>
son. The prime favorite will be High<lb/>
Point from all indications. However,<lb/>
East Carolina is a young ball club<lb/>
that may win it all if they continue<lb/>
to improve. Probably possessing the<lb/>
finest talent in the league, Coach<lb/>
Earl Smith's charges have looked<lb/>
like true champs on plenty of occa-<lb/>
sions this season. With Captain Don<lb/>
Smith and Cotton Clayton, their re-<lb/>
markable 'playmaker at 6 ft. 3 in. in<lb/>
fold, trouble is the only meaning for<lb/>
all opposition concerned for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the cage season.<lb/>
Lenior Rhyne was impressive in<lb/>
defeating East Carolina at Hickory<lb/>
Saturday night 92 - 65. The win<lb/>
dropped the Pirates down into fourth<lb/>
in the North State standings with a<lb/>
6-3 mark. Prior to the contest there<lb/>
was a third iplace tie between the<lb/>
Pears and the Bucs. The win was the<lb/>
ninth in a row for the red hot Hick-<lb/>
ory school, and left them with a 8-2<lb/>
record in league play.<lb/>
The Sears were defeated by<lb/>
these same Bucs in Greenville by al-<lb/>
most the same margin. East Caro-<lb/>
lina won 90-67. the stunning<lb/>
win by Lenoir Rhyne was sweet<lb/>
revenge and moved the Bears<lb/>
into second place behind Appal a-<lb/>
chain'a Apps in the league standings.<lb/>
Appalachain's win over High Point<lb/>
in a convincing manner Saturday<lb/>
night made the mountain school a<lb/>
prime favorite for the league cham-<lb/>
pionship. Previous to the encounter<lb/>
the Panthers were a slight favorite<lb/>
for loop honors. However the win<lb/>
left the Boone school with a 8-1 rec-<lb/>
ord, and dropped the Panthers to a<lb/>
7-2 mark.<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates played an<lb/>
important league contest with West-<lb/>
ern Carolina on the latter's home<lb/>
court Monday night. A loss would<lb/>
place a severe blow- in the Buc's<lb/>
chances for the championship. .Pre-<lb/>
vious to the encounter the Pirates<lb/>
6-3 record left them in contention<lb/>
for the North State League crown.<lb/>
Lenior Rhyne with two Juniors and<lb/>
three Sophomores composing the<lb/>
lineup has been the big surprise<lb/>
lately in loop play. It now appears<lb/>
to be a closer race after last Satur-<lb/>
day night's important league contests.<lb/>
CENTER BEN BOWES is expected to see considerable action Saturday<lb/>
night for the ECC Pirates. The Bucs open a four game homestand against<lb/>
conference foes, and this Burlington native should play a leading role in<lb/>
the outcome of these tilts.<lb/>
Charlotte Myers Park Wins<lb/>
Invitational Swimming Meet<lb/>
Myers Park of Charlotte captured the 100 yard breaststroke with the<lb/>
the annual scholastic swimming time of 1.07.6 minutes,<lb/>
meet in the East Carolina College jyiore tnan 180 swimmers were<lb/>
pool this past Saturday. Granby High j active in this participation of high<lb/>
school athletes on the campus. Two<lb/>
states were represented by the 14<lb/>
schools. Twelve were from North<lb/>
School of Norfolk, Virginia placed<lb/>
second in the event. The Virginia<lb/>
representative was closely followed<lb/>
by Needham Broughton of Raleigh,<lb/>
with 42 points.<lb/>
Other schools that placed in the<lb/>
field of 14 scholastic teams were as<lb/>
follows: Chapel Hill with 26 points,<lb/>
Norview of Norfolk 18, Senior of<lb/>
Greensboro 16, Fort Bragg 9, Green-<lb/>
ville 9, Milbrook of Raleigh 8, Appa-<lb/>
lachian 7, East Mecklenburg, located<lb/>
near Charlotte, finished with 4, and<lb/>
Page High of Greensboro scored<lb/>
only one point. The only team that<lb/>
did not place was Tarboro High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Thad Adams of Myers Park suc-<lb/>
ceeded in a record breaking 2.01.0<lb/>
minutes in the 220 yard freestyle.<lb/>
Adams also placed first in the 100<lb/>
yard breaststroke. Darrell Nicholas<lb/>
PLAYMAKER COTTON CLAYTON will be in the Bac starting lineup this<lb/>
Saturday night against Pfeiffer. The Pirate guard was all-conference<lb/>
Carolina and two were from Virginia. I last season as a freshman.<lb/>
Former ECC Star Service Player Of The Year<lb/>
One of the greatest backs in the Stasavich was there for the presen-<lb/>
history of East Carolina College was iation acceptance. The Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
highly honored in Washington, D. C, coach is being seriously considered for<lb/>
last week at the Capital's touch-<lb/>
down club made a presentation to;<lb/>
James Speight for the most out- '<lb/>
standing service football player for<lb/>
the 1960 campaign. The Air Force<lb/>
2nd Lt. is currently stationed at j<lb/>
Mitchell Air Force Base in Mary-<lb/>
land.<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne's mighty football;<lb/>
Bears were also honored as the out- l<lb/>
standing small college of this past<lb/>
the University of Virginia vacancy.<lb/>
Such distinguished men as Vice<lb/>
President Richard M. Nixon and<lb/>
Speaker of the House Sam Ray burn<lb/>
were on hand to see some of the<lb/>
silver trophies to go to the finest<lb/>
athletes of 1960. Mickey Mantel of<lb/>
baseball fame, and Joe Bellino, the<lb/>
great Navy grid halfback, were there<lb/>
to receive awards.<lb/>
Mantle was regarded as the most<lb/>
of Norview broke the record for year. Their head coach, Clarence i outstanding contribution to baseball<lb/>
Swimming Team Takes Four Day Road Trip<lb/>
during 1960, and Bellino the All-<lb/>
American was honored as top collegi-<lb/>
ate back of this past season.<lb/>
Other athletes that received re-<lb/>
wards of deep concern were Doc<lb/>
Blanchard and Glen Davis of Army,<lb/>
Bill Dudly or Virginia, and Johnny<lb/>
Lujack of Notre Dame, and the Chi-<lb/>
cago Bears, for their outstanding play<lb/>
in 1940's.<lb/>
East Carolina is certainly proud of<lb/>
one of their former athletes to be at<lb/>
such a 'presentation, and above all to<lb/>
receive such a distinguished reward.<lb/>
Dr. 'Ray Martinez will take the<lb/>
East Carolina swimming team on its<lb/>
first road trip of the season with<lb/>
An indoor match against Virginia<lb/>
Tech's Gobblers of the Southern<lb/>
Conference tonight in Blacksburg,<lb/>
Virginia. The Pirate swimmers will<lb/>
then swing southward to play. Appa-<lb/>
lachain's Apps, and then conclude a<lb/>
Conference Standing<lb/>
ATLANTIC COAST<lb/>
Conference AHG<lb/>
W L Pet W L<lb/>
SOUTHERN<lb/>
Another space story concerns the<lb/>
two Russian scientists who were dis-<lb/>
covered by St. Peter lurking just out-<lb/>
side the pearly gates. "You fellows<lb/>
can't come in here said St. Peter<lb/>
sternly. "You're atheists<lb/>
"We dont want to come in an-<lb/>
swered one of the Russians. "We<lb/>
just want to get our ball<lb/>
The Reader's Digest<lb/>
PIRATE CO-CAPTAINS . . . Tommy<lb/>
Tucker and Tommy Carroll, from left<lb/>
to right.<lb/>
Duke <lb/>
Carolina <lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Maryland -<lb/>
State<lb/>
Clamaon ?<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
So. Carolina <lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
6<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0 1.00013 1<lb/>
0 1.00010 2<lb/>
1 .8679 6<lb/>
2 -6008 4<lb/>
1 .4009 4<lb/>
8 .2678 9<lb/>
7 .1262 12<lb/>
4 .0006 7<lb/>
W. Virginia<lb/>
The Citadel6<lb/>
Va. Tech<lb/>
Win. A Mary  6<lb/>
Oeo. Wash2<lb/>
Furman 8<lb/>
Richmond - &amp;<lb/>
Davidson1<lb/>
VMI1<lb/>
AI1G<lb/>
W L<lb/>
10<lb/>
.888<lb/>
J88<lb/>
.600<lb/>
.400<lb/>
.187<lb/>
.148<lb/>
10<lb/>
7<lb/>
8<lb/>
8<lb/>
9<lb/>
6<lb/>
4<lb/>
2 10<lb/>
"Fortunately for the country, nei-<lb/>
ther party is quite as had as the<lb/>
other Insists it isEarl Wilson.<lb/>
NORTH STATE CONFERENCE<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
W L Pet<lb/>
Appalachian - - 7<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne  8<lb/>
High Point 6<lb/>
East Carolina  6<lb/>
Eton4<lb/>
Catawiba 8<lb/>
W. Carolina3<lb/>
Pfeiffer2<lb/>
Guilford <lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
9<lb/>
1 10<lb/>
.876<lb/>
.800<lb/>
.760<lb/>
.887<lb/>
.671<lb/>
.429<lb/>
.429<lb/>
.162<lb/>
.091<lb/>
AUG<lb/>
W L<lb/>
10 2<lb/>
132<lb/>
64<lb/>
64<lb/>
97<lb/>
78<lb/>
4 11<lb/>
212<lb/>
1 12<lb/>
Delicious Food<lb/>
Served 24 Hours<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
four day road trip Monday night in<lb/>
Athens, Georgia against the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Georgia Bulldogs of the<lb/>
strong Southern Conference. The<lb/>
Bulldogs will probably be the strong-<lb/>
est of the three foes.<lb/>
Coach Martinez has been working<lb/>
with the team hard in preparation for<lb/>
the big road trip. Co-Captains Tom-<lb/>
my Tucker and Tommy Carrol will<lb/>
lead the Pirate swimmers, who re-<lb/>
cently were defeated by the strong<lb/>
University of North Garoina swim-<lb/>
ming team in a Greenville match.<lb/>
East Carolina has lined up some<lb/>
istrong representatives to meet a-<lb/>
gainst this season, but the Buc<lb/>
coach has a fine team on hand to<lb/>
meet the opposition as was proven<lb/>
in the impressive loss to the Tar<lb/>
Heels from Carolina.<lb/>
TODAY through SATURDAY<lb/>
PRISONERS OF THE<lb/>
CONGO'<lb/>
In Color<lb/>
AND<lb/>
THE AMAZING MR.<lb/>
CALLAGHAN'<lb/>
SUNDAY, MONDAY and<lb/>
TUESDAY<lb/>
'SONG WITHOUT<lb/>
END'<lb/>
(The Franz Liszt Story)<lb/>
In Color<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
Phone PL 2-7649<lb/>
. RAINBOW OF COLORS   <lb/>
8 t 10" 6X8 S 4"X5" EVER-CHANGING j<lb/>
A.mTMENTS OF VARIED SUBJECTS. <lb/>
SttNICS. ANIMALS, MVHAN INTEREST STMTA L<lb/>
REINICHES   "  1 pktvk mc<lb/>
CONGRATULATIONS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
FOR HAVING A SWELL<lb/>
BASKETBALL TEAM!<lb/>
THIS COUPON AND<lb/>
60c<lb/>
WiU Admit Any East<lb/>
Carolina Student<lb/>
To See One of the Year's<lb/>
Top Shows!<lb/>
"SWISS FAMILY<lb/>
ROBINSON"<lb/>
THURSDAY thru TUESDAY<lb/>
Jan. 19-24<lb/>
Please Be Sure to Bring<lb/>
This Coupon With Yon!<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
East Carolina's Favorite<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/>
Thi,<lb/>
CuRisiiw Science<lb/>
Monitor<lb/>
Subscribe Now<lb/>
at Hal! Price"<lb/>
You con read this world-famous<lb/>
daily newspaper for the next six<lb/>
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Get top news coverage. Enjoy<lb/>
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Sand your order today. Enclose<lb/>
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TMt spKial off aniletil ONLY to softest<lb/>
i iacuity mmbtn, aa aarp life<lb/>
<pb facs="00038685_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
.ifc<lb/>
3<lb/>
toi<lb/>
ga<lb/>
uli<lb/>
he<lb/>
W<lb/>
a-c<lb/>
se<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
se<lb/>
v<lb/>
Herbert Carter Accepts Position<lb/>
As Director Of Two Band Clinics<lb/>
EAST C AROLINI AN<lb/>
THURSDAY, JANUARY 9<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, faculty member<lb/>
ot the music department, will act as<lb/>
director of bands in clinics at West-<lb/>
ern Carolina College at Cullowhee<lb/>
and at Winthrop College, Rock Hill,<lb/>
uuth Carolina, this month.<lb/>
The Western Division of the North<lb/>
Carolina All-State Band Clinic will<lb/>
be befcj at Western Carolina Janu-<lb/>
ars 20-21. High school musicians<lb/>
trots that area will organize a clinic<lb/>
band and iaitieipate in .a series of<lb/>
rehearsals directed by Mr. Carter. A<lb/>
concert Saturday night, January 21,<lb/>
will conclude the two-day program.<lb/>
Members of junior high school<lb/>
bands throughout South Carolina<lb/>
will meet at Winthrop College Janu-<lb/>
ary 27-2S for a program of training<lb/>
in hand technisues and ensemble<lb/>
performance. Mr. Carter will conduct<lb/>
the All-State Junior High School<lb/>
Clinic Band in a concert Saturday<lb/>
night, January 28.<lb/>
Mr. Carter is director of the March-<lb/>
ing- and the Concert bands at East<lb/>
Carolina College. He is a past presi-<lb/>
dent of the North Carolina Band-<lb/>
masters Association and at present<lb/>
is a Province Director for the North<lb/>
Carolina. South Carolina, and Vir-<lb/>
ginia Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia of<lb/>
Ameica, national honorary music<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
Roommates Cop Leading<lb/>
Roles In Campus Play<lb/>
Greenhouse Progresses<lb/>
The East Carolina department of<lb/>
science has a new $8,700 greenhouse<lb/>
being constructed on the south camp-<lb/>
us of the college. Plants for use in<lb/>
botany and plant physiology<lb/>
courses will be grown there, and vari-<lb/>
of demonstration material<lb/>
be on display.<lb/>
The greenhouse, when competed,<lb/>
will have a floor space of 21 feet 6<lb/>
inches by 52 feet. It will be heated<lb/>
thermostatically and will have three<lb/>
ions: work-space area, a middle<lb/>
ion for growing plants, and a<lb/>
third section for demonstaation pur-<lb/>
poses.<lb/>
Dr. Christine Wilson of the science<lb/>
department is in charge of the<lb/>
greenhouse.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi Plans<lb/>
Colonization Soon<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi, national Jewish<lb/>
fraternity, will colonize on the East<lb/>
Carolina campus some time next<lb/>
month, according to Dr. Harold<lb/>
Goldstine, advisor to the new social-<lb/>
religious group.<lb/>
The East Carolina chapter is<lb/>
scheduled to become Epsilon Kappa<lb/>
chapter of the national organization.<lb/>
whose home office is in University<lb/>
City Missouri.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon ,Pi is the largest<lb/>
Jewish fraternity in the United<lb/>
States. Another new colony of the<lb/>
fraternity is scheduled for initiation<lb/>
at the University of North Carolina<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
Officers for the neAv East Carolina<lb/>
chapter will be Bruce Cooiper, Presi-<lb/>
dent; Howard Rubin, Vice-President;<lb/>
and Charles Sklut, Secretary-Treas-<lb/>
urer. The group will start with seven<lb/>
charter members.<lb/>
Doming Jenkins and Jessimine Hiatt Clown<lb/>
Bob Hope, recalling the days when<lb/>
he .played football at school: "I was<lb/>
known as Neckline HopeAlways<lb/>
plunging down the middle, but never<lb/>
leally showing anything<lb/>
The Reader's Digest<lb/>
Butner Hospital Offers<lb/>
Jobs To Interested Students<lb/>
University Of Hawaii Offers<lb/>
Twenty-five Scholarships To Students<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
nited number of college, uni-<lb/>
I seminary students will<lb/>
I to work in the Institu-<lb/>
Service Projects at Dorothea<lb/>
tal, Raleigh, and at the<lb/>
itaJ at Butner, N. C. These sta-<lb/>
lls may "net approximately $350<lb/>
the summer as well as learn<lb/>
about mental health and<lb/>
. life through actual participa-<lb/>
S1 dents may have a week of work<lb/>
and worship, study and play by par-<lb/>
si the Work Camp .at Cas-<lb/>
Baptist Assembly at Southport.<lb/>
C. This work camp is open to all<lb/>
dents in college in this<lb/>
There is plenty of work pre-<lb/>
ng for the opening of the assem-<lb/>
: there are plenty of inspira-<lb/>
tion and wonderful memories to take<lb/>
away from the week to share through-<lb/>
out the summer and back at school<lb/>
or a job next year.<lb/>
For the daring student who does<lb/>
not need to look for remuneration,<lb/>
but who seeks to serve, there are<lb/>
the many projects sponsored by the<lb/>
Ecumenical Voluntary Service. The<lb/>
American Friends Service Commit-<lb/>
tee likewise sponsors such work<lb/>
cam s where service, study, group<lb/>
living, and conversations are em-<lb/>
phasized.<lb/>
These are some of the many op-<lb/>
portunities one may find for re-<lb/>
munerative or non-remunerative work<lb/>
uuring the summer. The denomina-<lb/>
tional student workers, and many<lb/>
faculty members, can furnish ad-<lb/>
ditional information to interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
(UPS) The<lb/>
the University of Hawaii is offer-<lb/>
ing 25 all inclusive scholarships to<lb/>
American students to join the newly<lb/>
launched program of East-West stud-<lb/>
ies and cultural interchange this<lb/>
February.<lb/>
The Center is seeking qualified<lb/>
American undergraduate and gradu-<lb/>
ate students to pursue programs in<lb/>
the following areas: Undegraduate:<lb/>
Asian and Pacific Languages and<lb/>
Area Studies. Graduate: Far Eastern<lb/>
Studies, Overseas Operations, Far<lb/>
Eastern History, Far Eastern Art.<lb/>
Geography, Comparative Govern-<lb/>
ment, International Relations, Pacific<lb/>
Island Studies and Eastern or Com-<lb/>
parative Philosophy.<lb/>
Because the Center has come into<lb/>
being so swiftly, American scholar-<lb/>
ships for the spring semester are<lb/>
still available. Ala<lb/>
East-West Center Jof, should write to Director, East-West<lb/>
Center, University of Hawaii, Hono-<lb/>
lulu 14, Hawaii.<lb/>
Similar scholarships are being of-<lb/>
fered to Asians and qualified people<lb/>
throughout the Pacific area. To pub-<lb/>
ii ize the Center, an East-West Cen-<lb/>
ter team of five University of Ha-<lb/>
waii professors has been touring<lb/>
Asia since October. The team re-<lb/>
ported that in Taipei alone, 417<lb/>
scholarsh applications were received<lb/>
tv. days after the announcement was<lb/>
published.<lb/>
Scholars and leaders from Asia and<lb/>
the West are being offered grants<lb/>
U enable them to come to the Center<lb/>
-ind participate in joint research<lb/>
I rojects and seminars. Ten grants<lb/>
are being offered for 1900-01 and<lb/>
20 for 01-61. These increase each year<lb/>
until 1900 when 200 grants will be<lb/>
offered.<lb/>
?(.<lb/>
SO scholarships<lb/>
are being offered for the fall semester<lb/>
and 7;i for September, 1902. Most<lb/>
ire for a two year period and include<lb/>
round-trip transportation, room and<lb/>
board, tuition, fees, books and inci-<lb/>
dental expenses. An unusual feature<lb/>
is an expense paid study tour of the<lb/>
Asian area or country pertinent to<lb/>
the student's studies. Applicants<lb/>
Former Associate Editor Ends Eventful<lb/>
Career In Extra-Curricular Activities<lb/>
Frat Celebrates<lb/>
Founder's Birth<lb/>
Have you ever heard the old saying<lb/>
"opposites attract each other"? In<lb/>
the case of Doming Jenkins and<lb/>
Jessamine Hiatt this saying certainly<lb/>
holds true.<lb/>
Darning, a primary ed major from<lb/>
Greenville, is a tall, willowy brunette,<lb/>
with brown eyes, while her room-<lb/>
mate, Jessamine, a music major<lb/>
from Clinton, is a petite blond, with<lb/>
blue eyes.<lb/>
Music is continually going on in<lb/>
their room, although Jessamine is<lb/>
partial to classical music, while<lb/>
Doming "digs" jazz and rock and<lb/>
roll, although she laughingly ad-<lb/>
mitted that any kind of music is OK<lb/>
with her.<lb/>
Koommates Enjoy Each Other's<lb/>
Company<lb/>
The girls tells me that they stay<lb/>
up many late hours talking about<lb/>
"everything under the sun while<lb/>
they drink their usual pepsi's and<lb/>
milk. Typical of so many students<lb/>
they 'love that bed, and hate to get<lb/>
up in the morning when the alarm<lb/>
rings<lb/>
Life is never dull in the girls'<lb/>
room, because when they get tired<lb/>
of .talking or listening to the radio<lb/>
oi Hi Fi, Jessamine begins singing<lb/>
her opera in Latin while Doming re-<lb/>
cites her lines with an English<lb/>
accent.<lb/>
"We both enjoy each others com-<lb/>
pany said Jessamine, "and have<lb/>
fbout the same temperment<lb/>
Exclaimed Doming, "We get along<lb/>
quite fabulously, and although we<lb/>
are quite different in some respects,<lb/>
we're very much alike<lb/>
Garls To Star In Latest<lb/>
Productions<lb/>
These roommates will soon star as<lb/>
the lead characters in the next two<lb/>
college theatrical productions. These<lb/>
productions, also, are very different<lb/>
in type and character.<lb/>
Jessamine will appear as Miss<lb/>
Todd, the old maid, in the Opera<lb/>
Theater's latest production "The Old<lb/>
Maid and the Thief by Menotti.<lb/>
This comic opera will be presented o<lb/>
January 20 and 21 in McGinnis Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
Said Jessamine about the opera,<lb/>
"It's a typical Menotti opera, very<lb/>
entertaining and with a clever plot.<lb/>
The opera can't be anything except<lb/>
excellent, considering the top notch<lb/>
directors we have working with us<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Paul Hickfang, of the Music De-<lb/>
partment, is musical director of the<lb/>
opera, and .Robert Rickert, of the<lb/>
English Department, is dramatics<lb/>
director. The latter also directed<lb/>
The Medium" by Menotti, which the<lb/>
liness Professor Receives<lb/>
Doctorate From U. of Kentucky<lb/>
Samuel W. Dry, assistant professor ter health through re<lb/>
in<lb/>
, thet School of Business, has just<lb/>
been awarded the doctorate in edu-<lb/>
cation from the University of Ken-<lb/>
tucky. His work there was in the<lb/>
field of business.<lb/>
Dr. Dry joined the East Carolina<lb/>
laculty in 1958. He teaches finance,<lb/>
and business<lb/>
management, and business i a w<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
A native of Norwood, N. C, Dr.<lb/>
Dry holds the bachelor's degree from<lb/>
Lenoir-Khyne and the master's de-<lb/>
gree from Appalachian State Teach-<lb/>
ers College.<lb/>
ilis ex pilie nee is a teacher in-<lb/>
cludes work in the public schools at<lb/>
Troy, Boone, and Lowell in North<lb/>
Carolina. For two years, 1954-56, he<lb/>
vas a faculty member of the business<lb/>
 .ition department at Appalachian.<lb/>
Mrs. Inez N. Martinez, instructor<lb/>
n the School of Nursing, has been<lb/>
named on the committee for District<lb/>
20 including Pitt County and the<lb/>
area nearby, in a nation-wide fund-<lb/>
raising effort being undertaken by<lb/>
the American Nurses' Foundation,<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
Contributions will be used to sup-<lb/>
port Foundation programs for bet-<lb/>
re-<lb/>
mg. ln<lb/>
The Foundation, which  ,h<lb/>
earca arm of the American ft. <lb/>
Association, Inc b cor. <lb/>
million fund ap :us  <lb/>
ties to expand the <lb/>
search grants program ai <lb/>
means far widespread '<lb/>
research results. g <lb/>
Mrs. Martinez wfi . . fe<lb/>
area in raisin Xi- nations <lb/>
paign goal. -<lb/>
'ht from b <lb/>
,  -  nur.<lb/>
iiik, and non-nursing g <lb/>
J" CC ' ' Em<lb/>
ment, Mrs. Martinez expressed!?<lb/>
fidence that these group, and <lb/>
general public sri I join " J<lb/>
asure th<lb/>
drive. ' ' <lb/>
Notices<lb/>
. J Ml W1UCI1 I<lb/>
tonight the brothers and pledges Opera Theater produced last year<lb/>
By LEWIS LATHAM<lb/>
Betty Maynor, former Associate<lb/>
Editor of the East Carolinian, is<lb/>
d to be graduated from East<lb/>
Carolina in February. Her graduation<lb/>
climax an eventful career in<lb/>
urnalism and othtr student activi<lb/>
tit? on campus.<lb/>
"I've sways enjoyed English and<lb/>
literature noted Betty. This is<lb/>
rohably one of the chief reasons for<lb/>
I i r outstanding success as a student<lb/>
: aperwoman.<lb/>
Betty's journalistic career began<lb/>
when she attended the Columbia Press<lb/>
:ion Conference held in New<lb/>
City while only a junior at Wil-<lb/>
liams High School in Burlington,<lb/>
I  her home at that time.<lb/>
The following year she broadened<lb/>
I er experience while working on the i<lb/>
school annual, the Doe-Wah-<lb/>
Jack, .it Williams High School.<lb/>
Upon enrollment at East Carolina,<lb/>
'tame a reporter on The East<lb/>
l arolinian. However, as an ambitious<lb/>
student, Betty devoted most of her<lb/>
time during her freshman year to<lb/>
maintaining her honor roll status.<lb/>
Except for two quarters she has been<lb/>
s.n honor roll student during her four<lb/>
ara at the college.<lb/>
She has maintained an average of<lb/>
above "B" for her entire career at<lb/>
East Carolina and has been on the<lb/>
I'tan's List of top students twice.<lb/>
In her sophomore year Betty found<lb/>
more time to devote to journalism.<lb/>
She was selected News Editor of the<lb/>
East Carolinian in the fall quarter<lb/>
and eventualy became Feature Editor<lb/>
before the year was completed.<lb/>
"My junior year at East Carolina<lb/>
was my most eventful she stated.<lb/>
That year Betty was president of the<lb/>
Library Club; Vice-president of Jar-<lb/>
vis Dormitory; Feature and Campus<lb/>
Editor of the East Carolinian, and a<lb/>
member of the Dean's Advisory<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
"That was the year we chartered<lb/>
the Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kappa<lb/>
Delta she explained. Because of her<lb/>
skill and experience she was elected<lb/>
T V m<lb/>
oi Gamma Rho chapter of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Order will celebrate the<lb/>
founding of the Order, on this, the<lb/>
birthdate of its spiritual founder,<lb/>
Robert E. Lee, at the annual Conviv-<lb/>
ium banquet.<lb/>
The speaker for the evening will<lb/>
be Mr. Jim Bearden (Centenary Col-<lb/>
legeAlpha Iota chapter) of the<lb/>
Doming will appear in the next<lb/>
iplayhouse production "Night Must<lb/>
Fall In this famous melodrama,<lb/>
Doming will portray the eldeTly Mrs<lb/>
Bramson. This will be presented<lb/>
February 9-11.<lb/>
"This .play is a very suspenseful<lb/>
murder mystery commented Dom-<lb/>
ing. ' 'Night Must Fall' should be a<lb/>
School of Business. Other distin-I good production she added "be-<lb/>
guished guests will include the cause .the cast is excellent and very<lb/>
Reverend John Drake (Wake Forest! suitable for their roles. The male<lb/>
ollegeTau chapter) and Miss Mary i leads in the cast have done profes-<lb/>
Cardner, Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Elizabeth<lb/>
Rose.<lb/>
Kappa Alphas from across the na-<lb/>
tion observe these dates by holding<lb/>
Convivium banquets and celebrations<lb/>
to honor the founding of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha, at Washington and Lee Uni-<lb/>
versity, at Lexington, Va on De-<lb/>
cember 21. 1865, and Robert E Lee's<lb/>
birthday.<lb/>
(Robert E. Lee was born on Janu-<lb/>
ary 19, 1807, at Stratford, Va. He<lb/>
served as Superintendent of West<lb/>
Point, and later as President of<lb/>
Washington College, Lexington, Va.<lb/>
He built the chapel on the campus<lb/>
of Washington College, which name<lb/>
was later changed to Washington<lb/>
and Iee University.<lb/>
Pledging ceremonies will be con-<lb/>
ducted also this evening to induct<lb/>
three new men into the chapter's<lb/>
I ledge program. These three men<lb/>
are B. D. Mills, Charlie Howie, and<lb/>
Jim Blanton.<lb/>
Betty Maynor sits at East Carolinian desk for the last time<lb/>
of the social sorority.<lb/>
'Also in my junior year Betty re-<lb/>
called, "nine of us went to New York<lb/>
as representatives of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian at the Associated Collegiate<lb/>
Press Conference<lb/>
Her first "big-time" newspaper<lb/>
work was the summer following her<lb/>
junior year, when she worked with<lb/>
the Daily-Times News in Burling-<lb/>
ton, N. G.<lb/>
Betty's senior year at East Carolina<lb/>
proved equally rewarding in that she<lb/>
was elected Associate Editor of the<lb/>
East Caroinian, senior delegate for<lb/>
Kappa Delta on the Panhellenic<lb/>
Council of the college, and editor of<lb/>
society news for the sorority<lb/>
"This<lb/>
Collegiate Press Conference in Chi-<lb/>
cago along with seven other<lb/>
gates from the East Caroinian <lb/>
noted Betty.<lb/>
Climaxing her senior year was her<lb/>
election to represent East Carolina<lb/>
in the 1961 edition of the nationally<lb/>
circulated yearbook "Who's Who<lb/>
Among Students in American Uni-<lb/>
versities and Colleges Thirty-eight<lb/>
outstanding student leaders on the<lb/>
campus here were selected for this<lb/>
honor by a faculty student committee<lb/>
Nursing Scholarship<lb/>
Fund Plans Announced<lb/>
The Pitt County Medical and<lb/>
Dental Society at its January meet-<lb/>
dele- jing announced the organization is in<lb/>
the process of forming a scholarship<lb/>
fund for students at the DC School<lb/>
of Nursing. ufi<lb/>
According to society president, Dr.<lb/>
Howard H. Gradis, the fund would<lb/>
provide two scholarships for appli-<lb/>
cants for the nursing school that<lb/>
opened its doors last fall.<lb/>
Details of the proposed grants<lb/>
were not available, but it was an-<lb/>
nounced the scholarships would go<lb/>
sional acting in the past<lb/>
Corinne Rickert, who is the wife<lb/>
of Robert Rickert, director of the<lb/>
opera, is directing "Night Must<lb/>
Fall "Mrs. Rickert is a marvelous<lb/>
director said Doming, "with whom<lb/>
I hope to gain much acting experi-<lb/>
ence<lb/>
Both girls have had much previous<lb/>
experience in the acting field. Dom-<lb/>
ing has appeared in and assisted with<lb/>
nine plays since she began high<lb/>
school. She has been in the play-<lb/>
house since 1956, and plans to go<lb/>
into acting as a career. She hopes to<lb/>
study .acting under Strosshurg in<lb/>
New York. Doming is past corre-<lb/>
sponding secretary of the Playhouse,<lb/>
and is assistant social chairman of<lb/>
the Delta Zeta Sorority.<lb/>
Jessamine has appeared in three<lb/>
plays and two operas since she be-<lb/>
gan high school. She is a member of<lb/>
the College Choir, MENC, and is<lb/>
president of the Opera Workshop.<lb/>
She also was soloist for the annual<lb/>
presentation of Handel's "Messiah<lb/>
this year, and will appear in the<lb/>
Spring Concerto Program.<lb/>
Jessamine, who has been singing<lb/>
all her life, has studied voice for the<lb/>
past three years from Mr. Hickfang.<lb/>
U-pon graduation she plans to teach,<lb/>
and do further classical study.<lb/>
year, during Thanksgiving<lb/>
Publicity Chairman and News Editor holidays I .attended the Associated<lb/>
Professor Initiated<lb/>
In a candlelight ceremony on<lb/>
January 10, Mrs. Elsie Eagan was<lb/>
initiated into Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
sorority at the St. James Methodist<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
ch in her hometown but even County Carolina, will serveT<lb/>
of faculty advisor for the group.<lb/>
to teach in her hometown but even<lb/>
tually she plans to teach in Florida<lb/>
or Virginia, where some of her so-<lb/>
rority sisters are empoyed. Betty is<lb/>
also interested in summertime news-<lb/>
paper work.<lb/>
The United Nations head-quarters<lb/>
now ranks as the top tourist attrac-<lb/>
tion in New York. More than two<lb/>
million (persons a year visit it.<lb/>
One ragweed plant can pollute the<lb/>
air with from five to eight billion<lb/>
grains of pollen.<lb/>
Men who will graduate by the<lb/>
end of this summer and who are<lb/>
registered with the placement<lb/>
service are reminded representa-<lb/>
tives from Burlington Industries<lb/>
will be on campus one day next<lb/>
week to interview interested<lb/>
students.<lb/>
They are particularly inter-<lb/>
ested in men majoring in busi-<lb/>
ness, chemistry and any indus-<lb/>
trial courses that would lead to-<lb/>
wards manufacturing assign-<lb/>
ments. If you would care to talk<lb/>
with one or more of these rep-<lb/>
resentatives, please come by the<lb/>
Placement Service office, 203<lb/>
Administration, and sign up for<lb/>
an interview before noon, Satur-<lb/>
day, January 21. Descriptive<lb/>
brochure is available. (They will<lb/>
interview men subject to mili-<lb/>
tary call.)<lb/>
Jack Edwards, Director<lb/>
Cadet Donald L. McArthur<lb/>
has been chosen Cadet of the<lb/>
Month in the 600th AFROCT<lb/>
(Cadet) Group on campus.<lb/>
Cadet McAlthur, a freshman,<lb/>
is a member of Flight E, 62nd<lb/>
:d. He was chosen for his out-<lb/>
standing knowledge and ability<lb/>
demonstrated in drill and cere-<lb/>
momea during Leadelship Labra-<lb/>
ory for the month of January.<lb/>
The Rev. Robert S. Wolley,<lb/>
Director of Extension of the<lb/>
Lniversslirt Church of America,<lb/>
w speak on "Unitarian Uni-<lb/>
versalism" at 8:00 p.m. Sunday,<lb/>
Janary 22, at the Y-hut. All re-<lb/>
IiKious hberals are cordially in-<lb/>
vited. 3<lb/>
Dempsey Willi.ra8, Senior Class<lb/>
President, has announed a senior<lb/>
class meeting for Wednesday<lb/>
January 25, 1961 at 7:30 in<lb/>
Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
The agenda includes the far-<lb/>
 r graduation invitations,<lb/>
prehmmary plans for the senior<lb/>
banqu et, and other pertinent<lb/>
topics for seniors<lb/>
 ' '  ' '  said<lb/>
be able to .  '<lb/>
gram initiated by AM-<lb/>
climate for continue.<lb/>
grass in future year<lb/>
Those rho<lb/>
" , f,iml' U tJ<lb/>
should send , payable I t<lb/>
American u: .ndstio<lb/>
her at School of <lb/>
East Carolina College.<lb/>
Gritzner Speaks<lb/>
At Fraternity Meet<lb/>
At its January meeting, Sigma Pi<lb/>
A , ha, foreign lang . . <lb/>
fraternity, had as its .  SD.aksr<lb/>
Mr. Charles F. Gritrner. Mr. Grit,<lb/>
ner, who is an instructor in the Geo-<lb/>
graphy Department, cai a3J<lb/>
Carolina as a graduate of Louisiana<lb/>
State University.<lb/>
Following the :<lb/>
meeting. Mr. Critsner spoki<lb/>
BTOtip on French G<lb/>
slides of points of h<lb/>
undergra !u<lb/>
ace t the 'uni-<lb/>
versity on a f :<lb/>
Guiana's plants.<lb/>
Cynthia Parker. f g<lb/>
ma Pi Alpha, and Nel Marcom. vice<lb/>
president. are currently<lb/>
ling in searby to<lb/>
of these office<lb/>
s and Tommy Heath are sei<lb/>
the fraterr.it ss pre<lb/>
president, respective<lb/>
Valentine Dance<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Saturday, Feb. 11<lb/>
B4t-ll:45 P. M.<lb/>
"( me 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 he sold at<lb/>
the door.<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Chapter of the Future<lb/>
Business Leaders of<lb/>
America<lb/>
a?d t: iip,non9 S bpi99r<lb/>
Qvmant4 by ft<lb/>
 Value PW<lb/>
LT1 "9 Artcv2<lb/>
Br,dCirclt<lb/>
t?c:rcr1itio:S<lb/>
i<lb/>
Lauiart<lb/>
 " wo rm. Tm. A <lb/>
The College Jewelen"<lb/>
w.<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>