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            <mods:title>East Carolinian, Febuary 16, 1961</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</mods:abstract>
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          <dc:title>East Carolinian, Febuary 16, 1961</dc:title>
          <dc:description>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</dc:description>
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mm. <lb />
Letters of application for editorship<lb />
0f the Buccaneer" and "Rebel"<lb />
jfffiH be submitted to Dean James<lb />
H. Tucker as soon aa possible.<lb />
c<lb />
i<lb />
a<lb />
ttarolirMn<lb />
.<lb />
?: -<lb />
 "<lb />
Volume XXXVI<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
The English Club is holding their<lb />
meeting tonight in Austin 110 at 7:30<lb />
p.m. Dr. and Mrs. Poindexter will<lb />
speak.<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1961<lb />
Number 19<lb />
Patsy Elliott Assumes Editorship Duties<lb />
SGA Amends By Law,<lb />
Urge Dormitory Action<lb />
By MERLE SUMMERS<lb />
v - week's meeting of the Stu-<lb />
Government Association, the<lb />
Senate deleted section thir-<lb />
A Bylaws of the S. G. A.<lb />
the discussion, President<lb />
announced a decision of the<lb />
Board's meeting held<lb />
hours earlier. The Publi-<lb />
axd, which controls the<lb />
publications, had voted to<lb />
Student Handbook Commit-<lb />
lee te jurisdiction of the Pub-<lb />
Bosrd. The editor would be<lb />
the Board instead of ap-<lb />
the President of the S.G.A.<lb />
Speight also pointed out<lb />
would be advantages to<lb />
Perhaps the most im-<lb />
vantage would bo that the<lb />
 e committee could be<lb />
y in Spring Quarter and<lb />
working on the composi-<lb />
te handbook during the<lb />
alter instead of waiting un-<lb />
j  school.<lb />
:t Senate voted a section<lb />
. Bylaws of our Constitution. It<lb />
:  ad as follows:<lb />
16. The Publicity Committee<lb />
a. The members of the Publicity<lb />
tee shall be<lb />
I A chairman appointed by the<lb />
Pre lent of the S. G. A.<lb />
1. The chairman shall appoint<lb />
ambers as deemed necessary.<lb />
b. The duties of the Publicity Com-<lb />
n ttee shall be<lb />
1 To publicise all activities spon-<lb />
! - 11 the S. G. A.<lb />
2. To rive to the news bureau all<lb />
information concerning<lb />
to be sent to the student's<lb />
- n etown newspaper.<lb />
 chairman of this committee<lb />
1 rave a seat on the Student<lb />
Senate.<lb />
For some time there has been a<lb />
lot of confusion as to which cafe-<lb />
ttria one was eferring when they<lb />
Mid New or Old or North or South<lb />
cafeteria. A committee was formed<lb />
to look into the possibilities of nam-<lb />
ing the cafeterias.<lb />
Within the last few months, there<lb />
has been much talk among the stu-<lb />
dents about the hours at which<lb />
some of the girl's dormitories close.<lb />
It seems that many students feel that<lb />
isome of the girl's dormitories close<lb />
before others. Many students feel<lb />
that this is an injustice to the girls<lb />
and their dates. The trouble seems<lb />
to lie in the fact that the dormitory<lb />
clocks seem to be unsynchronized. A<lb />
committee was formed to look into<lb />
this matter.<lb />
President Speight also asked about<lb />
the possibilities of rejoining the Na-<lb />
tional Student Association. Several<lb />
people volunteered to write other col-<lb />
leges to find out why they were in<lb />
the N. S. A and if not, why not?<lb />
These people would also ask why the<lb />
colleges withdrew from N. S. A and<lb />
would find out all they could about<lb />
the organization.<lb />
All members of the Student Senate<lb />
were reminded that more than two<lb />
unexcused meetings would result in<lb />
the forfeit of their Senate seat for<lb />
the rest of the college year. The stu-<lb />
dent handbook states if anyone is re-<lb />
moved from the Senate by this means,<lb />
he cannot hold an office in any fra-<lb />
'ernity, sorority, or club for the re-<lb />
mainder of the school year.<lb />
Tom Jackson announced that Pat-<lb />
sy Elliott had been elected by the<lb />
Publications Board to the editorship<lb />
of the East Carolinian.<lb />
Jenkins Announces<lb />
New Committee<lb />
Appointment of a citizens' Advi-<lb />
sory Committee for the School of<lb />
Nursing has been announced by Pres-<lb />
ident Leo W. Jenkins. Six members<lb />
will serve on the committee.<lb />
"We are grateful that these busy<lb />
citizens have accepted the responsi-<lb />
bility of assisting us in making the<lb />
East Caroline School of Nursing one<lb />
of the finest possible Dr. Jenkins<lb />
stated.<lb />
"The responsibilities of the group<lb />
he explained, "are to help us carry on<lb />
a constructive program of evaluation<lb />
and to reveal to the college the ex-<lb />
tent to which we are serving the<lb />
needs of this area. The committee will<lb />
also have the duty of pointing out<lb />
the directions we may go in supple-<lb />
menting and improving our program<lb />
Members of the new Advisory Com-<lb />
mittee are Dr. Ray D. Minges, Green-<lb />
ville surgeon; Mrs. Stephen R. Bart-<lb />
lett of Greenville, president of the<lb />
Pitt County Medical Auxiliary; Dr.<lb />
Isa Costen Grant, health director,<lb />
Wake County Health Department, an<lb />
alumna of East Carolina College.<lb />
Ashley B. Futrell, editor of the<lb />
Washington, N. C, Daily News and<lb />
president of the North Carolina Press<lb />
Association; Emory N. Grubbs, ad-<lb />
ministrator of the Walker Memorial<lb />
Hospital at Wilmington; and Dr. Da-<lb />
vid Rose, Goldsboro surgeon, former<lb />
North Carolina legislator and past<lb />
president of the American School<lb />
Board Association.<lb />
With 52 students enrolled, the col-<lb />
lege began its new four-year program<lb />
of nursing at the beginning of the<lb />
fall quarter 1960. Provisional accred-<lb />
itation as a School of Nursing, ex-<lb />
tending through March 1. 1962, was<lb />
riven last December by the North<lb />
Carolina Board of Nurse Registra-<lb />
tion and Nursing Education.<lb />
New Editor Advocates<lb />
Change In Present System<lb />
Patsy 'Elliott, Associate Editor of<lb />
the feast Carolinian for the past quar-<lb />
ter, was elected editor of the publi-<lb />
cation for the 1961-1962 term at a<lb />
meeting of the Publications Board<lb />
Monday.<lb />
She will replace Tom Jackson, pre-<lb />
sent editor, at the beginning of spring<lb />
quarter for a term of office to run<lb />
through winter quarter of next year.<lb />
The job, which pays $125 dollars<lb />
per quarter, carries a total of ten<lb />
points under the Student Government<lb />
Association points system.<lb />
Miss Elliott commented after her<lb />
election, "I realize what a big job<lb />
this will be since my past experience<lb />
on the paper has shown me some of<lb />
the responsibilities of any member of<lb />
a newspaper staff. I hope my term<lb />
of office will see the East Carolinian<lb />
grow with the school and continue to<lb />
serve the student body and the col-<lb />
lege. I hope the paper will be able to<lb />
"inform, educate, stimulate, and<lb />
make our readers think" as past pol-<lb />
icies have stated.<lb />
"In addition she continued. "I<lb />
hope to extend our services in many<lb />
areas. One of these is on campus<lb />
news coverage. Presently I am plan-<lb />
ning to enlarge our reporting staff<lb />
in order to give more coverage to<lb />
campus events by having reporters<lb />
present. This is going to take a lot<lb />
of work since good reporters are hard<lb />
to train. However, I look forward to<lb />
a lot of cooperation from the present<lb />
staff, as well as faculty members<lb />
who have had training and experience<lb />
in this field, in helping me recruit<lb />
and train these additional reporters.<lb />
She added, "I have made no plans<lb />
for drastic changes in the policies of<lb />
the paper yet. These will be handled<lb />
as they arise. I would like to say,<lb />
however, that I hope to extend our<lb />
coverage into rfome areas which have<lb />
not been covered in the past. One of<lb />
these areas is the actions taken by<lb />
the student judiciaries.<lb />
Miss Elliott is a member of Chi<lb />
Omega sorority and has been active<lb />
in campus affairs since entering Est<lb />
Carolina. She is a Junior mathematics<lb />
major and is minoring in French. Her<lb />
home town is Hertford, North Caro-<lb />
lina. ,<lb />
Running against Miss Elliott in th-<lb />
clection was Marcelle Vogel, Feature<lb />
Editor of the East Carolinian.<lb />
The Publications Board is composed<lb />
of the President of the college, the<lb />
Dean of Student Affairs, the Editors.<lb />
Business Managers and Advisors of<lb />
the campus publications, and three<lb />
members at large elected by the stu-<lb />
dent senate.<lb />
Reg<lb />
istration<lb />
Schedule<lb />
REGISTRATION SCHEDULE<lb />
U through Z<lb />
S through T<lb />
N through R<lb />
T, through M<lb />
H through K<lb />
E through G<lb />
C through D<lb />
 through B<lb />
WN COPLEY, a saucy blond, was chosen Sweetheart of the Valentine<lb />
Dance. Her laughing eyes and pixie smile have earned her the nickname of<lb />
"Peter Pan<lb />
Ann Copley Reigns Over<lb />
Annual Valentine Dance<lb />
Ann Copley was chosen Sweetheart<lb />
of the Valentine Dance in Wright Au-<lb />
ditorium last Saturday night. She<lb />
"was crowned by Dr. E. R. Browning.<lb />
taad of the business department.<lb />
The dance, an annual affair, was<lb />
sponsored by the Future Business<lb />
Leaders of America.<lb />
Ann came to East Carolina from<lb />
Garden City, New York. When asked<lb />
why she chose the South and ECC,<lb />
she disclosed having a sister who is<lb />
a Senior at Gailtford.  .  end I<lb />
just wanted to come to North Caro-<lb />
lina A sophomore majoring in busi-<lb />
ness, she plans to teach business or<lb />
become a legal secretary.<lb />
Ann was initiated into the Kappa<lb />
Delta Sorority in March of 1960, and<lb />
represented the sorority in the Sweet-<lb />
heart corn-petition.<lb />
Notice!<lb />
Students may pay their fee<lb />
'or 8pring Quarter and receive<lb />
their stamped permits to register<lb />
beginning Monday, Feb. 20, In<lb />
the cashier's office Administra-<lb />
tion. Students are urged to take<lb />
advantage of this opportnnity to<lb />
void long lines on registration<lb />
day.<lb />
Bunting, Thomas Win<lb />
Editorial Contest Prize<lb />
Two winners have been named in<lb />
for outstanding letters<lb />
Letters To The<lb />
the contest<lb />
from the column<lb />
" Michael Bunting and Prank<lb />
received a carton of<lb />
Editor<lb />
Thomas each<lb />
Tareyton cigarettes for their recent<lb />
contributions.<lb />
A new contest will be in effect<lb />
this month. Letters will be selected<lb />
on the basis of originality in thought,<lb />
composition, and -pertinence. Tbe se-<lb />
lection is made by the editorial staff<lb />
of the East Carolinian. Letters are<lb />
to be submitted to the East Carolin-<lb />
ian in the Wright Building.<lb />
8:00 a.m9:00 a.m<lb />
9:00 am10:00 a.m<lb />
10:00 a.mll:00 a.m<lb />
11:00 a.m12:00 noon<lb />
12:00 noon-l:00 p.m.<lb />
1:00 p.m2:00 p.m.<lb />
2:00 p,m3:00 p.m.<lb />
3:00 p.m4:00 p.m.<lb />
STEPS TO FOLLOW IN SCHEDUL-<lb />
ING CLASSES:<lb />
1. Enter North door to Wright Au-<lb />
ditorium if fees have been paid. Eti-<lb />
ter Center door to pav fees and or<lb />
to secure Permit to (Register. '<lb />
2. Secure schedule cards from ad-<lb />
visor. New students get envelopes<lb />
containing registration cards at door<lb />
to Wright before seeing advisor.<lb />
S. If fees have not been paid, pre-<lb />
sent PERMIT TO REGISTER to<lb />
Cashier's Table.<lb />
4. Consult advisor (use temporary<lb />
schedule card unitil courses are ar-<lb />
ranged).<lb />
5. Complete IN INK all cards. Il-<lb />
legible cards cannot be accepted.<lb />
6. Have instructor of each course<lb />
and your advisor to initial schedule<lb />
card. .<lb />
7. Turn in ALL cards (except Ad-<lb />
visor's r"Vll at check-out table. EN-<lb />
ROLLMENT IS INCOMPLETE UN-<lb />
TIL CARDS ARE RECEIVED BY<lb />
THE REGISTRAR'S OFFTCE.<lb />
NOTICE:<lb />
1. Upperciassmen who intend to<lb />
enroll for 19 or 20 hours should file<lb />
with the Registrar an application<lb />
for extra hours before Wednesday,<lb />
March 1. An average of "B" on all<lb />
-ourses taken at East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege, consent of the major advisor,<lb />
and approval by Dean Holt aTe re-<lb />
quired 'before one may enroll for 19<lb />
or 20 hours.<lb />
2. Engineering students and stu-<lb />
dents enrolled in ROTC may take a<lb />
maximum of 20 quarter hours with-<lb />
out meeting the above regulations;<lb />
however, they should file in the Reg-<lb />
istrar's Office an extra hour blank<lb />
proved by their advisor.<lb />
All students who have been admit-<lb />
ted to student teaching for the Spring<lb />
Quarter must turn in their Permits<lb />
to Register and their schedule cards<lb />
to the Registrar's Office between<lb />
Monday, February 20, and Saturday,<lb />
February 26,<lb />
Theta Chi Opens<lb />
New Chapter House<lb />
Theta Chi will formally open its<lb />
legal dis-jjfcer hoars hare Sunday,<lb />
February 19. The house, located at<lb />
414 W. 4th St will be open to the<lb />
public from 2:00 to 5:00 p.m. Broth-<lb />
ers will serve as hosts to conduct the<lb />
visitors on a tour of the house and<lb />
grounds.<lb />
Many out of town dignitaries and<lb />
officers of other chapters are expect-<lb />
ed to attend, as well as the parents<lb />
and friends of the brothers.<lb />
President L. S. Guy and the broth-<lb />
ers of Theta Chi extend an open in-<lb />
vitation to all faculty members, alum-<lb />
ni, students, townspeople, and friends<lb />
to visit the house at this time. A<lb />
special invitation is extended to the<lb />
co-eds, as this will be their only<lb />
chance to see the entire house.<lb />
The dedication of the house will<lb />
i ighlight the ceremonies.<lb />
Collegians Furnish<lb />
Music For Annual<lb />
APO 'White Ball'<lb />
Alpha Phi Omega, professional fra-<lb />
ternity, will hold its annual "White<lb />
B:tll" Friday, February 17, in Wright<lb />
Auditorium, lasting from 8:00 until<lb />
11:30 p.m. The music will be fur-<lb />
nished by the Collegians.<lb />
Admission fee will be $1.50 and all<lb />
proceeds will go to the Crippled Chil-<lb />
dren's Fund. Last year the proceeds<lb />
totaled $150.00 but this year it is<lb />
hoped that more will be obtained.<lb />
Th White Ball Queen will be chos-<lb />
en on the night of the Ball and will<lb />
be given a trophy. The organization<lb />
who submits her will receive a plaque.<lb />
The voting will be at one cent per<lb />
vote.<lb />
APO president, Brook Baines said,<lb />
'V hope to have a crowd at this<lb />
year's White Ball which will make<lb />
it the biggest yet. .APO feels the<lb />
Crippled Children's Fund is a very<lb />
worthy cause and we hope our pro-<lb />
ceeds will be large enough to make<lb />
a sizeable donation. This is a good<lb />
way to have a good lime and to help<lb />
others while doing so<lb />
PATSY ELLIOTT plans to take over Editor's duties next quarter; the first<lb />
iesae is scheduled for March 9. (Photograhy by Jim Kirkland)<lb />
'It'll Make You A Scrizophrenic'<lb />
Instructor Combines Teaching<lb />
With Work, Continues Mural<lb />
(Editor's note: Information for this<lb />
article was obtained from Jane Hall's<lb />
"Hall Marks" which appeared in the<lb />
Feb. 15 issue of the News and Ob-<lb />
server.)<lb />
"My primary interest has always<lb />
been drawing said Dr. Bruce Car-<lb />
ter of the ECC art department. "I<lb />
never had any contact with the gra-<lb />
phic arts until I went to Albright<lb />
Art School in Buffalo, N. Y. In my<lb />
last year there, I started print-mak-<lb />
ing<lb />
Graduated from Albright Art<lb />
School, he continued his work earn-<lb />
ing his B. S. degree from State Uni-<lb />
versity of New York, and his mas-<lb />
ter's and doctorate degrees at Penn<lb />
Stale. After teaching in New York<lb />
state and serving as a graduate as-<lb />
sistant at Penn State, Dr. Carter<lb />
came to ECC where he has been for<lb />
the past three years.<lb />
Meat of Dr. Carter's work is ac-<lb />
complished at night and on week-<lb />
nds. Remarked Dr. Carter, "Any<lb />
'Rebel' Receives Contest Prize<lb />
Money; Release Set For Monday<lb />
The Gamma Beta Chapter of the<lb />
Sigma Sigma Sigma social sorority among children. The sorority is the<lb />
at East Carolina College has pre-<lb />
sented $25 to the "Rebel campus<lb />
literary magazine, to be used as prize<lb />
money in the second annual writing<lb />
contest sponsored by the publication<lb />
Editor Roy Martin, Jr of Greenville<lb />
has announced. The staff of the mag-<lb />
azine has announced that the deadline<lb />
for all. entries as been extended to<lb />
April 1.<lb />
Total prize money is $30, Martin<lb />
stated. A first 'prize of $15; a sec-<lb />
ond prize of $10; and a third prize<lb />
of $5 are offered. The winning first-<lb />
prize entry will be published in the<lb />
spring issue of the magazine.<lb />
Sorority president Betty Faye<lb />
Moore, presenting the check to "Reb-<lb />
el" Business Manager David Smith,<lb />
said, The Rebel holds a vital posi-<lb />
tion in the life of East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege. It is our hope that this gift will<lb />
provide more incentive for students<lb />
here to participate in contests, and<lb />
encourage greater interest in crea-<lb />
tive writing for what we consider an<lb />
excellent publication<lb />
Sigma Sigma Sigma is one of eight<lb />
social sororities at East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege. With a membership of 42 wom-<lb />
en students, the Gamma Beta Chap-<lb />
ter encourages high academic stan-<lb />
dards and carries out a program of<lb />
social service with emphasis on work<lb />
first at East Carolina<lb />
residence for members.<lb />
The winter issue of<lb />
will be distributed to<lb />
to acquire a<lb />
"The Rebel"<lb />
students and<lb />
ested friends of the college Monday,<lb />
February 20. In addition to contribu-<lb />
tions from campus writers, contents<lb />
will include an exclusive interview<lb />
with Editor Jonathan Daniels of the<lb />
body who combines teaching and art<lb />
will understand. It'll make you <lb />
schizophrenic<lb />
Murals<lb />
In the past he has executed sev-<lb />
eral mui-als. The mural in Elmhurst<lb />
Elementary School is his work. Others<lb />
are found in Pennsylvania State Uni-<lb />
versity, the National Museum at Get-<lb />
tysburg, Pennsylvania and East Side<lb />
Elementary School in Gouverneur, N.<lb />
Y. Carter has been asked to exhibit<lb />
in a show of flower prints to be held<lb />
soon in Norfolk, Va. Museum, and<lb />
is having work accepted in the North<lb />
Carolina Artists' Annual.<lb />
At present Dr. Carter is working<lb />
on a long term project which con-<lb />
cerns a mural of the Norwegian Re-<lb />
sistance movement in World War II.<lb />
He would also like to do a book illus-<lb />
trating the poems of Nordahl Greig,<lb />
who was killed during the war. His<lb />
interest began at Penn State where<lb />
he met two Fulbrigbt students from<lb />
Norway who told of the tragically<lb />
true incidences occurring during the<lb />
Resistance era. Since that time Dr.<lb />
Carter has devoted much time and<lb />
research to his dream of visiting Nor-<lb />
way and making his dream a reality.<lb />
faculty members and to other inter-1 Raleigh "News and Observer<lb />
REBEL' BUSINESS MANAGER DAVID SMITH accept, a cheek from<lb />
Betty Faye Moore, president of Sigma Sigma Sigma. Roy Martin, editor,<lb />
looks on.<lb />
Jernigan Urges<lb />
Education Support<lb />
Dear Editor:<lb />
The convening of the state legisla-<lb />
tors in Raleigh last week opened the<lb />
Joor to an opportunity for students<lb />
here to have a part in promoting<lb />
higher education for all of North Car-<lb />
olina.<lb />
Students and citizens throughout<lb />
our state who are interested in edu-<lb />
ction are fortunate to have a Gov-<lb />
ernor, who has promised that "Edu-<lb />
cation will be the rock of his ad-<lb />
ministration His goal is to make<lb />
North Carolina second to none in the<lb />
Held of education! This can not be<lb />
done alone.<lb />
As students, we benefit everyday<lb />
from the educational facilities pro-<lb />
vided by our state and should grasp<lb />
the opportunity to aid in the fight for<lb />
quality education in North Carolina.<lb />
This can be done by students taking<lb />
time to write their legislators en-<lb />
couraging them to back the educa-<lb />
tional program headed by Governor<lb />
Terry Snnford.<lb />
A few minutes of your time will<lb />
mean so much to East Carolina Col-<lb />
'ege and the field of education in<lb />
North Carolina.<lb />
Sincerely yours,<lb />
Glenn Jernigan<lb />
Y. D. C. President<lb />
;<lb /><pb facs="00038689_tn_0002" /><lb />
IMMIi'HtllliMHim<lb />
PAGE TWO<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
THURSDAY, FEBRUaRv Jfl<lb />
i<lb />
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1 ill<lb />
Americans Retain Apathy<lb />
Toward Other Countries<lb />
Americans, of which Blast Carolina stu-<lb />
dents are a part, presently seem to be bless-<lb />
ed (or cursed) by a superiority complex.<lb />
They have taken the position that we can out<lb />
produce any nation on earth (true) and will<lb />
always be able to do so (not so true).<lb />
This feeling of superiority has caused an<lb />
attitude which is generally apathetic toward<lb />
the rest of the world.<lb />
As a nation we are not knowledgable<lb />
about situati ns in the rest of the world.<lb />
This is especially true of students who should<lb />
be more interested in this field than anyone<lb />
rise. We feel the average American student<lb />
has a pitiful amount of knowledge about<lb />
conditions in Asia, Europe, Africa, or even<lb />
in our neighboring Latin American coun-<lb />
tries. For example, polls have indicated that<lb />
the average American reads only eleven col-<lb />
umn inches of foreign news per day.<lb />
How many students whjo could give the<lb />
hall scores of the latest "big four" game have<lb />
an opinion or even a vague idea about any<lb />
of the 17 nati- ns in the world who have<lb />
achieved their independence in the past two<lb />
years?<lb />
Americans seem to be too important to<lb />
themselves and have very little interest in<lb />
other nations in the wtorld or in conditions<lb />
in (any place except their own immediate en-<lb />
vironment. How many of us have felt any<lb />
attachment to the fact that two out of every<lb />
three children born in Laos each year die be-<lb />
fore they are 10 years old? How many of us<lb />
consider the rv.le of the Chinese who make<lb />
up one fourth of the total population of the<lb />
world? How many of us in this area who so<lb />
quickly discriminate against the Negro real-<lb />
ize that about 75 per cent of the world's pop-<lb />
ulation is not "white"?<lb />
Americans fare getting soft not econom-<lb />
ically, but mentally. How many of us have<lb />
considered that as students we have a re-<lb />
sponsibility to remedy this situation?<lb />
Newspaper Editor Relates<lb />
Changes During Term<lb />
Since the beginning of spring quarter<lb />
1960 we have experienced many unusual sit-<lb />
uations as editor of the East Carolinian.<lb />
There have been people with problems, and<lb />
people trying to create problems. We have<lb />
watched East Carolina grow and mature a<lb />
little more. We have seen the passing of one<lb />
president and noted the changes initiated<lb />
by a new administration.<lb />
We have presented opinions and ideas<lb />
i n the editorial page which have conflicted<lb />
ith those held by most of the student body.<lb />
At times we have become so discouraged at<lb />
the degree of student and faculty apathy that<lb />
editorials designed for nio other reason than<lb />
to stimulate Rave been printed.<lb />
From these editorials and from the posi-<lb />
tions taken by other staff members, we have<lb />
encountered a few disagreements. We have<lb />
had arguments, spme of which have been stu-<lb />
pid, others enlightening. Some have been vio-<lb />
lent; others have been passive and indiffer-<lb />
ent. Hardly a week has passed when we did<lb />
not have to defend our position to Some stu-<lb />
dent, administrator, or faculty member.<lb />
Over a period of time these arguments<lb />
tend bo fall into a pattern. We have found<lb />
that most of our serious discussions and ar-<lb />
guments become repetitive. We have found<lb />
ourselves defending our position on given<lb />
topics to the same people over and over.<lb />
Occasionally ta new face would appear<lb />
acrcss the desk, or a new address on a letter-<lb />
head would come in the mail. Yet these were<lb />
few. We usually could depend on the same<lb />
people to disagree with us from time to time.<lb />
This is discouraging. In order to oper-<lb />
ate more effectively la codlege newspaper<lb />
needs to be involved in controversy. It needs<lb />
constant valid criticism of its policies and<lb />
positions in order to have adequate frame of<lb />
reference from which to operate.<lb />
We admit there have been times when<lb />
our critics have plagued us with criticisms<lb />
which we felt absurd. There hatve been times<lb />
when they gave us nothing but headaches.<lb />
There have been times when they infuriated<lb />
us. Yet it is to these people we express our<lb />
appreciation for having enough interest and<lb />
integrity to express an opinion.<lb />
To those who offered no criticism, and<lb />
voiced no opinion we still, and always will,<lb />
have nothing but contempt. They are a de-<lb />
plorable breed.<lb />
So in this, our last editorial, we thank<lb />
those readers who have criticized and repri-<lb />
mand those who have remained apathetic.<lb />
We only hope the critical group, especially<lb />
among the student body, will increase under<lb />
the next editor.<lb />
Editing the East Carolinian has been a<lb />
rewarding experience from which we have<lb />
gained in understanding, experience, knowl-<lb />
edge, and scope. We hope the next editor<lb />
will meet experiences as rich as ours have<lb />
been and will publish a newspaper which will<lb />
"inform, educate, stimulate, and make our<lb />
readers think<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<lb />
EDITOR<lb />
Tom Jackson<lb />
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb />
JoAnne Parka<lb />
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb />
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.<lb />
Think A Little!<lb />
Activated Interest<lb />
Marks Future For<lb />
College Newspaper<lb />
By JIM STINGLEY, JR.<lb />
Another chapter of the East Caro-<lb />
linian has come to an end. Tom Jack-<lb />
son has stepped down from the edi-<lb />
tor's position and someone else has<lb />
taken over. What will happen now?<lb />
Will the .paper better itself, or will<lb />
it go along as before, or will it fall<lb />
apart? We, the staff of the East<lb />
Carolinian, will be ipartly responsible<lb />
fat whatever happens. But you, the<lb />
student, will determine the majority.<lb />
Without your help, without your in-<lb />
terest, we'll not advance an inch. Ke-<lb />
n.emtber that this paper is by tne stu-<lb />
dents, and foe the students. It is you,<lb />
and eerything you think or do con-<lb />
cerning campus affairs.<lb />
This next period of our college time<lb />
will be filled with many subjects thai<lb />
will merit discussion and controversy.<lb />
There will he issues that you will not<lb />
agree on, some you do agree on, and<lb />
some that you won't be sure of. Don't<lb />
just sit there reading the funnies and<lb />
gazing placidly out the window. If<lb />
you don't agree with what we say,<lb />
then do something about it! Let us<lb />
know how you think and how you<lb />
feel it should be. We aren't mind-<lb />
readers, nor do we have a crystal<lb />
ball, and the only way we can really<lb />
be sure of how the campus is thinking<lb />
is to hear from you.<lb />
One issue that is looming bigger<lb />
and bigger as the days go by is that<lb />
of integration. .Should we or shouldn't<lb />
we? Will we or won't we? How do<lb />
you feel about it? Do you want it or<lb />
are you against it? Can you back up<lb />
your argument? If you can, then do<lb />
so. Let us and the campus hear what<lb />
jou have to say, for this way interest<lb />
will be created and all will benefit.<lb />
One thing is for certain, integration<lb />
is something that is too big a topic<lb />
for us not to think about. Or talk<lb />
about. Or do something about.<lb />
Several of our staff members have<lb />
recently been to conferences north of<lb />
the Mason-Dixon line. New York and<lb />
Chicago were tw0 of the cities visit-<lb />
ed. They came back and had some<lb />
very interesting things to say. Things<lb />
like how so much superior the north-<lb />
ern schools are compared to us. They<lb />
n entioned that interest was a high<lb />
note in all the northern schools. Not<lb />
just camipus interest, but interest in<lb />
how the rest of the world is doing.<lb />
All of the northern college editors<lb />
had something to say about practical-<lb />
ly everything and could back it up.<lb />
11 might he an integration, or Laos,<lb />
or Labor Unions, but they still had<lb />
the facts and this showed that they<lb />
are not sitting still. We are.<lb />
There is no reason why we can't<lb />
have the same activated interest as<lb />
do these northern schools. Our cam-<lb />
ipus has plenty of sense, if they would<lb />
only use it. Perhaps it would be a<lb />
good thing to remember that no mat-<lb />
ter what happens, the world will soon<lb />
be ours to live in, to work with and<lb />
to try and make something out of it.<lb />
If we don't have the interest created<lb />
now, then it's a pretty good bet that<lb />
we won't have it when we will need<lb />
it most.<lb />
Give it some thought. If you dis-<lb />
agree, then let the campus hear your<lb />
disagreement and why you made it.<lb />
If you think something is good, then<lb />
let the world know you think it's<lb />
good. Perhaps by doing that, there<lb />
will he more of it. No matter what<lb />
you do, remember this, this paper is<lb />
here for you to use. It is dedicated<lb />
to you. You can only .profit by sup-<lb />
porting it .<lb />
1961<lb />
CLASS om<lb />
y<lb />
mutt<lb />
wiir iiimini<lb />
W L4<lb />
?<lb />
ilMkmiimm<lb />
Who Benefits From ProfessionalAFilers'?<lb />
Why can't Johnny read? This is a<lb />
question one hears occasionally. The<lb />
answers are numerous; their diver-<lb />
gence is magnanimous. The public<lb />
asks, the teachers reply, the legisla-<lb />
ture appropriates. 1-2-3. It's that<lb />
simple. It's "too" simple, and some<lb />
who think are beginning to offer<lb />
other answers, otner solutions. Here<lb />
is one: "the pofessional file<lb />
The professional file contains a<lb />
multitude of material. This material<lb />
ranges far and wide. It contains tour-<lb />
ist folders, public health pamphlets,<lb />
comic strip advertising, propaganda,<lb />
and just about any other type of ma-<lb />
terial which may be obtained (es-<lb />
pecially by teachers) by writing to<lb />
the public relations department of<lb />
industrial, transportation, advertis-<lb />
ing, lobbying, or propaganda produc-<lb />
ing corporations.<lb />
Many hours are spent in compiling<lb />
these files. iSome courses are built<lb />
abound the assembly of these files.<lb />
Much emphasis is placed on the file.<lb />
Is it worth what it seems?<lb />
We don't think that it is. We think<lb />
that the professional file and it3 ad-<lb />
vocates are the roots of the answer<lb />
t- the opening question. Johnny can't<lb />
read because his teacher cant read.<lb />
Johnny's teacher can't read because<lb />
his teacher spends too much time in,<lb />
around, and working on "professional<lb />
files<lb />
Johnny gets the benefits of the pro-<lb />
fessional file. He learns that certain<lb />
railroads, publishing houses, steel<lb />
mills, optical houses, and lobbies are<lb />
good. He thinks these are good be-<lb />
cause he has listened to his teacher<lb />
expound upon the processes and pro-<lb />
ducts of these groups. His teacher's<lb />
ideas, of course, come from the vari-<lb />
ous materials he (she) has assembled<lb />
dining his (her) college career.<lb />
All of the material that one finds<lb />
in the professional file is not of the<lb />
type mentioned above, but one may<lb />
rest assured that Johnny will receive<lb />
the underlying advertising and prop-<lb />
aganda resulting in his adoption of<lb />
the stereotype jargon with which he<lb />
is steadily bombarded.<lb />
The people of this state are con-<lb />
cerned about education; the "profes-<lb />
sional filers" are concerned about<lb />
rrofessionai files. The taxpayers lose<lb />
regardless of the diection taken.<lb />
Higher salaries for teachers result<lb />
in an even greater rush towads insti-<lb />
tutions (colleges, universities, depart-<lb />
ments, and courses) where the pro-<lb />
By DAVID T. HOUSE, III<lb />
fessional file reigns. Teachers who<lb />
have worked, studied, and sacrificed<lb />
for their professions deserve to be re-<lb />
warded; "professional filers' deserve<lb />
only contempt. We have been plagued<lb />
with the results of professional fil'ism<lb />
for many years.<lb />
Johnny needs to learn how to read;<lb />
the time of rewarding incompetence,<lb />
inefficiency, unfitness, and mediocrity<lb />
has passed. The atmosphere of the<lb />
professional file needs an investiga-<lb />
tion. Such an investigation might<lb />
bring some answers to "Why cant<lb />
Johnny read<lb />
Tittle One's Take Easy Road<lb />
"When I was a child .<lb />
1 became a man, I put away childish<lb />
things <lb />
The child must become a manhe<lb />
must grow physically, mentally, and<lb />
emotionally; and, he must be allowed<lb />
to grow, lest he become a menace to<lb />
the society in which he lives. Little<lb />
can be done to retard growth physi-<lb />
cally, and certainly nothing is done<lb />
purposefully in this direction. On the<lb />
other hand, the emotional, and con-<lb />
sequently at times, the mental devel-<lb />
opment of young people is retarded<lb />
by parents, and even by teachers.<lb />
It has been my pitiful experience<lb />
to meet on this campus many children<lb />
who call themselves adultnarrow-<lb />
minded individuals who leech off<lb />
their friends, and have no tolerance<lb />
for the beliefs of others.<lb />
Why do they refuse to grow? The<lb />
leasons are many and varied, one of<lb />
them being that these people do not<lb />
have to grow! They are supported by<lb />
many of the professors who do not<lb />
By ANN McCARVER<lb />
but when stimulate them to think, who will al-<lb />
low them to "finesse" through cour-<lb />
ses, and come out with a "C" which<lb />
will keep them in school and sliow<lb />
them to graduate and carry their im-<lb />
maturity into the outside world, bear-<lb />
ing a college degree, and perhaps<lb />
passing their naive ways and beliefs<lb />
on to the next generation.<lb />
They are also supported by the ad-<lb />
ministration, which sets up a strict<lb />
set of rules, some of them ridiculous<lb />
almost beyond belief, for the "little<lb />
children" to live by. Then they sit<lb />
sanctimoniously back and rigidly en-<lb />
force .their rules, with little or no<lb />
real empathy for the position of the<lb />
students.<lb />
Some of us want to growto ma-<lb />
ture. Let us! Right now, our emotion-<lb />
al and mental growth is being smoth-<lb />
ered. No stimulus brings forth no<lb />
lesponse. Why must we be treated as<lb />
children when we are struggling so<lb />
hard for adulthood,  ,<lb />
Society Awaits Freedom's End;<lb />
Brief Interlude Soon Runs Out<lb />
Tired Crew Lacks Spirit,<lb />
'Next Year' Plans Gone Forever<lb />
We are tired; we are disgusted; we<lb />
are passive; WE ARE SENIORS.<lb />
The homestretch is coming into<lb />
view and the upperclassmen are not<lb />
shouting rejoices, because the energy<lb />
is lacking. Unfortuntely, the old<lb />
freshman spirit has been smothered<lb />
long ago and even graduation day<lb />
doesn't look as inviting as it did<lb />
several years ago.<lb />
After months and months of class-<lb />
es we suddenly realize that our home<lb />
is going to be upset, our laundry will<lb />
no longer be done by someone else's<lb />
hands, all secondary and primary<lb />
groups will soon be shattered, and<lb />
the future looks pretty dismal.<lb />
But the worst realization is that<lb />
after nearly four years of so-called<lb />
learning, we suddenly take an inven-<lb />
tory of our education and find that<lb />
"we haven't learned too modi and<lb />
this is bad.<lb />
Going back, to the freshman days<lb />
we remember several discoveries: (1)<lb />
that all college graduates should<lb />
know how to finesse in bridge (2)<lb />
that it's cheaper to go home on the<lb />
weekends and (3) that next year one<lb />
can compensate for the low grades<lb />
made this year.<lb />
After plowing through several<lb />
years of these rationalizations we<lb />
have practiced the first two discov-<lb />
eries and the third is still quoted but<lb />
unfortunately "next year" will never<lb />
come. A college career has been wast-<lb />
ed; a true education has been lost.<lb />
Jtecapturing this "once in a lifetime"<lb />
is impossible and we are DISGUST-<lb />
ED.<lb />
"Next Year" we shall try our hand<lb />
with the art of teaching. But how<lb />
can anyone expect to teach ignorant<lb />
students when we are ignorant? How<lb />
can we flaunt our knowledge when<lb />
we have so little?<lb />
We are Tired. But are we tired of<lb />
studying? Instead, we are tired of<lb />
trying to think . . . thinking about<lb />
our future, thinking about what we<lb />
should know and don't and thinking<lb />
about where we can find a nice dark<lb />
empty cave, for uneducated college<lb />
graduates  but there are none.<lb />
By PATSY<lb />
Duties . . . Obligations . . . The<lb />
college years seem, to us, to be a<lb />
brief interlude between the restric-<lb />
tions of home and the engulfing so-<lb />
ciety which awaits us.<lb />
They are years when we have free-<lb />
doms that should be exercised.<lb />
Ours is a special world; problems<lb />
common to the masses do not trouble<lb />
us. The monster, 'society does not<lb />
have us in his clutches . . . although<lb />
he tries in many obscure ways. Lest<lb />
we be caught up in the race of the<lb />
mediocre, let us come as close to<lb />
life as we can . . . for this may be<lb />
our only opportunity.<lb />
As genuine, certified, identification-<lb />
card-carrying college students H is<lb />
ours, the freedom:<lb />
to be different and try on new ideas,<lb />
plunge into theory, question, and thus<lb />
form our convictions;<lb />
to express our opinions whenever<lb />
and wherever the occasion arises, and<lb />
to give and accept criticism gracious-<lb />
ly;<lb />
to find ourselves through oneness<lb />
and loneliness;<lb />
to look upon the pattern set for<lb />
our lives, and if we dare, to cast it<lb />
aside;<lb />
to profit through our relationships<lb />
and acquaintances, to take something<lb />
of everyone we meet with us;<lb />
to learn the true meaning of loyalty<lb />
to friends and self;<lb />
to lose love and overcome pain and<lb />
hurt; t<lb />
to search unceasingly for that last-<lb />
ing love;<lb />
to be extravagant and impractical<lb />
even when conscience demands other-<lb />
wise;<lb />
to be democratic if we feel like it;<lb />
to openly admit uncertainty;<lb />
to accept the challenges common<lb />
sense would ordinarily expel<lb />
to keep odd hours;<lb />
to ignore rules and regulations;<lb />
to laugh at the whole silly world;<lb />
to like being young and enjoy the<lb />
eccentricities of youth;<lb />
to behold the red and gold sunset<lb />
ELLIOTT<lb />
and admire the taUness of trees;<lb />
to forget about moderation;<lb />
to know right from wrong and to<lb />
be wrong gracefully;<lb />
to be moody and unhappy, depress-<lb />
ed with the sorry lot of the world;<lb />
to rebel against custom society<lb />
everyone, once in a while;<lb />
to use sarcasm;<lb />
to laugh, to dance, to sing as if<lb />
we really could, to drink in society,<lb />
tc be sophomoric and to know all<lb />
the time how small we are;<lb />
to experience tfce thrill of learning<lb />
and understanding;<lb />
to dream of South Sea Islands .<lb />
complete and utter freedom;<lb />
to be confused;<lb />
to get away from it all;<lb />
to experience extreme boredom and<lb />
tc sun in dullness;<lb />
to grow and progress  and to<lb />
marvel at it all;<lb />
to learn we cant go home again<lb />
and to be strangely glad<lb />
T " thjs we  ' d mar<lb />
Those of us who do not exercise the<lb />
freedoms of this interlude WO<lb />
for we are lost already.<lb />
Jumping Plate, 'Choice'<lb />
Steak Result In Frenzy<lb />
bh hoy mart is<lb />
The . ther evening, with<lb />
ger consuming my insides, I ventured in uj"<lb />
direction of the cafeteria.<lb />
As I stJ od in the line my eye caujrh<lb />
sight of a small sign which indicated<lb />
rib steak was being served. With one of<lb />
greatest weaknesses being steak, im J?<lb />
ately I motioned &amp;j the person behind<lb />
counter that I would have steak.<lb />
Upon reaching the end of the line<lb />
1 ltd the tray and sought an empty tLI<lb />
somewhere among the crowd. In the far<lb />
ner I spotted a table, and headed in ttrt"<lb />
direction with glasses, pfetes, etc. precariZ<lb />
iy balanced on the tray.<lb />
Upon reaching the table. I lowered th<lb />
tray, and removed the dishes and placed them<lb />
before me. I st.od there for a minute drink<lb />
ing in with sheer delight the sight of th"<lb />
food. I could hardly wait to begin the attack<lb />
with my knife and fork.<lb />
I sat down, picked up my utensils and<lb />
began with the steak. As I began cutting the<lb />
meat, an unusual thing happened. The knife<lb />
began to bend. I applied more pressure to<lb />
the handle of the knife, and then the plate<lb />
began to slip to the left. I applied more pres-<lb />
sure, and the plate slipped to the right, thee<lb />
forward, then backward. Finally as srj<lb />
hunger began to turn to somewhat of a fren-<lb />
zied struggle as the plate began t Jump"<lb />
creating a slapping noise as it struck the table!<lb />
I stopped for a minute to rest. Then <lb />
began the battle again. Eventually, I was able<lb />
to cut WH a small portion of the meat wh;ch<lb />
I immediately put into my mouth. I began to<lb />
chew  up and down, around and around<lb />
 I tried every method of chewing known<lb />
to man. Finally 1 became worried, because<lb />
I began to hear my jawbone crack, as if it<lb />
was slipping out of joint.<lb />
Thinking perhaps it was just luck that<lb />
I managed to draw such a steak as this, I<lb />
began to feel self conscious as I realized how<lb />
I must have koked as I battled the steak<lb />
However, as I looked around to see if anvone<lb />
had noticed my actions, what a sight it was'<lb />
People were sitting all ever the cafeterii<lb />
with their plates sliding from side to side,<lb />
while others were laboriously chewing.<lb />
The moral of this story' is either swear<lb />
eff steak, or suggest to the cafeteria staff<lb />
that from now on they purchase shoe leather<lb />
instead of steak. I am sure it would serve<lb />
the same purpose.<lb />
Wondering, Wondering<lb />
Where Will We Go, Why?<lb />
By PAT FARMER<lb />
Twelve men and one woman have<lb />
ntAf?o? haS spawned 20 independ-<lb />
ent nations since 1951. Bv 19i h<lb />
tPZl'mk i8  Skater<lb />
than earth's that a mu- IZ<lb />
to wOr  w . 9Pcen trying<lb />
to waft on the planet would be <lb />
 y his own weight.<lb />
RevenuHn N<lb />
t a loss. Pcwl tad<lb />
Over one-third of n ti dotl.<lb />
by finn, fc Hm Ywk JJctawd<lb />
It's funny how we spend the major Dart<lb />
of our lives drifting along aimlesslv without<lb />
purpose or rhyme. Then one day we realize<lb />
that we are at a crossroads with signs point-<lb />
ing in all directions. Where do we go from<lb />
here, we wonder . . . with a frightened look<lb />
on our faces we begin to read the signs posted<lb />
at the intersection.<lb />
One sign may point to the village of<lb />
Contentment where life is a delightful exist-<lb />
ence. Yet we are aware that Contentment<lb />
village is only for the ones who are happy<lb />
to be the followers. Njot that being a follower<lb />
is so wrong, it's just that we lose our identi-<lb />
ties in a crowdtand in such a country as<lb />
ours, we need dynamic citizens who are cap-<lb />
able.<lb />
Anpther sign may point to Tolerance<lb />
l.own. This is the town where individuals<lb />
simply accept things as they are . . . because<lb />
the citizens are uninterested or too tezy to<lb />
put forth the effort to make progressive<lb />
changes. v <lb />
Still another sign may point to Capable<lb />
city where citizens lead busy and industrious<lb />
lives. These citizens are efficient with their<lb />
dated ways yet they are too efficient to create<lb />
new methods.<lb />
u "d Jft?n there  a sign pointed toward<lb />
the city of Frontier. Frontier is a city of small<lb />
Populace, yet the citizens are youthfully dy-<lb />
na3UCit ls thre that our leaders, inventors,<lb />
and artists livefor these individuals were<lb />
not afraid to venture into darkened paths<lb />
where only their beliefs and dreams carried<lb />
I'a forward. This is the city which has<lb />
luS y2Ung  more than any other-<lb />
forthf P"Ka to carry her banners<lb />
in 5. T 8tand at the crosanwiaV-woDder-<lb />
a?:JK3W wondering . . where will we<lb />
go md whyWill we be happy in Contentment<lb />
ViUage, or will we be more satisfied with W<lb />
J JfJce Town? Or shall we be the fu-<lb />
turecitizens of Capable City life owls wit<lb />
lTK2LiV  or ahaH we take the reed<lb />
SrffcSfJF111 hPe that we may be brate<lb />
indfciduaJs with almrpoae in life,<lb /><pb facs="00038689_tn_0003" /><lb />
MRMMMMMOki<lb />
THURSDAY, FEBRUA.RY 16, 1961<lb />
Letters To The Editor<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
PAGE THREE<lb />
Students Voice Opinions On Columnists<lb />
Mi. Editor:<lb />
so mad at Mr. David T, House,<lb />
that if I could get my hands<lb />
vi hia neck, I'd wring it!<lb />
 is one of tiie seemingly few<lb />
enta wlw do not have a hard<lb />
understanding music, why in<lb />
 a name doesn't he help teach<lb />
il  couki just hear some of<lb />
  siapid-sounding questions<lb />
v from students of music<lb />
mderstand Why it<lb />
ighl down to an under-<lb />
cvel.<lb />
 ie, tfw v ay it is presented<lb />
suiting to some students, but<lb />
lould consider themselves<lb />
ickj and try to grin and bear<lb />
. times, in college or anywhere<lb />
may find himself in such a<lb />
The thing to do is try to<lb />
e  ha ia u tag to be<lb />
in th case t' Mr. House,<lb />
a k i  a more advanced<lb />
.i course.<lb />
.i dillj to recommend to him:<lb />
iterature, 106, A, B, and or C.<lb />
 e'll be glad to go back to 207!<lb />
li  itatedly,<lb />
Mary J. Burrus<lb />
Student Seeks Southern<lb />
Integration Opinion<lb />
, Editor<lb />
 northern college student<lb />
. a research paper on the topic<lb />
reelings of the Southern Col-<lb />
its About Forced Inte-<lb />
taming this information is from the<lb />
students themselves.<lb />
' would like t0 have the students<lb />
write me, at the address below, tell-<lb />
ng me their feelings about forced<lb />
n.tegration and why they feel the<lb />
vay they do. I would like to know<lb />
if they dislike the Negroes and the<lb />
reasons why or why not. I would<lb />
also like to know the age and state<lb />
of residence of each student.<lb />
The success of my paper depends<lb />
on my obtaining an answer from as<lb />
many students as possible. It also<lb />
depends on my receiving the answers<lb />
as soon as possible.<lb />
Thanks to you and all the students<lb />
who help me in writing my paper.<lb />
Voura truly,<lb />
Rodney Camipbell<lb />
429 East Grandview Blvd.<lb />
Frie, Pennsylvania<lb />
Letter Makes Appeal<lb />
For Appropriate Cheers<lb />
lear Editor:<lb />
At our home basketball game with<lb />
High Point College December 6, and<lb />
again at our game with Atlantic<lb />
Christian College, February 3, stu-<lb />
dents seated in the East Carolina<lb />
cheering section used language which<lb />
I feel is unbecoming ladies and gen-<lb />
tlemen.<lb />
is very little documentation<lb />
ject. The only way of ob-<lb />
Attention Seniors!<lb />
Lvepresetatives from schools<lb />
ami business firms will be on<lb />
rnpns to interview interested<lb />
seniors. Those registered with the<lb />
placement office may sign up for<lb />
ries in room 203 Admini-<lb />
stration, live schools and business<lb />
iirnis to be represented are:<lb />
Schools: Chesterfield County,<lb />
 a . Fairfax County, Va York-<lb />
lown, Va Plainfield, N. J.<lb />
Business firms: Wachovia<lb />
Banking Co (Joodyear Tire &amp;<lb />
Rubbero N. C. National Bank<lb />
! charlotte, and Pure Oil Co.<lb />
On numerous occasions when the<lb />
High Point and Atlantic Christian<lb />
College cheer leaders led their cheer-<lb />
ing sections with the yell "Go! Go<lb />
our students would follow with Go!<lb />
Go to hell<lb />
When visiting athletic teams come<lb />
to our campus we make every effort<lb />
to treat them as our guests and ex-<lb />
tend to them every possible courtesy.<lb />
True, when once on the athletic<lb />
field or the basketball court we are<lb />
out to win if we possibly can. How-<lb />
ever, we should always keep in mind<lb />
that our speech and actions at all<lb />
times should be a reflection of true<lb />
sportsmanship. If sportsmanship is<lb />
ever left out of college athletics we<lb />
had better discontinue the activity.<lb />
I am appealing to the students to<lb />
search their vocabularies for more<lb />
appropriate words than "hell" or "go<lb />
to hell<lb />
Sincerely yours,<lb />
N. M. Jorgensen,<lb />
Athletic Director<lb />
Irked Student Defends<lb />
Campus Cheerleaders<lb />
Dear Editor:<lb />
So Miss Elliott thinks the Atlantic<lb />
Christian cheerleaders outclassed our<lb />
own? May I ask just what made their<lb />
"yells" collegiate as opposed to "the<lb />
high school' yells our cneerleaders<lb />
try to lead us in ?" So she thinks that<lb />
the AC cheerleaders "conveyed their<lb />
own spirit and enthusiasm to the<lb />
sports fans?" How naive can one be?<lb />
No group of cheerleaders could have<lb />
conveyed the enthusiasm that bubbled<lb />
from that crowdit was there to be-<lb />
gin with! Those fans wanted their<lb />
team to win, and they could have<lb />
cared less whether those cheerleaders<lb />
iiad been enthused themselves or not.<lb />
Miss Elliott, as the heading to her<lb />
article suggests, thinks our cheer-<lb />
leaders have forgotten their purpose.<lb />
What is their purpose? As far as I<lb />
can see, it is to organize the enthu-<lb />
siasm of the crowd into shouting to-<lb />
gether so that everyone will be say-<lb />
ing the same thing at the same time.<lb />
It seems to me that the fault lies,<lb />
not with our cheerleaders, who put<lb />
their 'all into their job, but with our<lb />
fans, who just simply do not care<lb />
enough about organized cheering.<lb />
No, our cheerleaders are not per-<lb />
fect; nor, I daie say, are they the<lb />
best cheeleaders in the whole world-<lb />
but they certainly do not deserve the<lb />
harsh criticism that they receive. "Let<lb />
he who is himself without blame cast<lb />
the first stone. . . <lb />
Sincerely, ,<lb />
Ann Mc Carver<lb />
Under<lb />
The Trees<lb />
By RONALD KNOUSE<lb />
Ever think how our government<lb />
might 'be if the candidates would<lb />
fight the real evils of the world as<lb />
much as they do the pseudo-sins of<lb />
their opponents . . ,<lb />
This way! he shouts, This way!<lb />
. . . , Follow! . . . , Follow! . . . ,<lb />
The weak tread along . . . , the strong<lb />
rebuke . . .<lb />
Psychological Drama Holds<lb />
Audience; Veterans Shine<lb />
Inflation now is revealing its most<lb />
filthy part . . . , The iprice of friend-<lb />
ship is growing steadily higher . . . ,<lb />
the cherished value of sameever de-<lb />
clining . . .<lb />
Athletic Events Lack Enthusiastic Support<lb />
By MARY AjNTSIE PEtNNINGTON<lb />
The student body has finally no- is not made public.<lb />
ticed the lack of spirit and enthusiasm<lb />
at its athletic events. But instead of<lb />
attending the games, yelling a "little<lb />
louder and giving tohe cheerleaders<lb />
the support they need, the students<lb />
have responded by and (placed the<lb />
blame on the cheerleading squad.<lb />
It has never occurred to many of the<lb />
students that cheerleading at EC is<lb />
an especially difficult job because<lb />
the spectators stubbornly refuse to<lb />
participate by following the yells, or<lb />
even beginning them. No wonder the<lb />
cheerleaders ask themselves why they<lb />
are taking time out of their already<lb />
tight schedules in order to attend<lb />
I practices and the games three times<lb />
a week. There is very little satisfac-<lb />
tion in cheering for EC because the<lb />
fans do not appreciate the effort put<lb />
forth and if there is any gratitude it<lb />
Because the fans do not cheer at<lb />
the games, the cheerleaders are<lb />
blamed. Why? What supernatural<lb />
power do the cheerleaders possess<lb />
which can enable them to make a<lb />
stubborn, apathetic audience leap to<lb />
its feet and enthusiastically cheer<lb />
for its team? No one can do that but<lb />
the audience itself. The fans have<lb />
to support their cheerleading squad<lb />
wholeheartedly, but most of all they<lb />
have to want to yell. If there is a<lb />
problem existing, it is not what is<lb />
wrong with EC's cheerleaders but why<lb />
the spectators do not want to yell.<lb />
It has been said that the students<lb />
don't want to yell because the cheers<lb />
are more "high school" than<lb />
cheers anymort "high school" than<lb />
the other North Carolina colleges?<lb />
North Carolina colleges have a long<lb />
way to go before catching up to the<lb />
quality and originality of the cheers<lb />
used by such institutions as Penn<lb />
State, Villanova, FSU, and Colorado<lb />
State. Because of the limitations put<lb />
on the squad concerning the type<lb />
cheers used, the yells have a certain<lb />
"high school twang That is not rea-<lb />
son though for the fans to give up and<lb />
not try to help the squad obtain any-<lb />
thing better.<lb />
Let's not fool ourselves . . . the<lb />
quality of cheers is not a reason for<lb />
failing to have spirit and enthusi-<lb />
asm at our athletic events. And until<lb />
the real reason is discovered, if there<lb />
is one besides that of laziness, we<lb />
would like to think that the student<lb />
body will continue to attend EC's<lb />
sporting events and give the cheer-<lb />
leading squad the support it needs.<lb />
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Hurry! Behold the beauty of saunt-<lb />
ering nature  Run . . . , Run<lb />
Last Thursday night saw a nearly<lb />
full house for the opening perform-<lb />
ance of Emlyn Williams' "Night<lb />
Must Fall As is characteristic of<lb />
usual first acts this one began and<lb />
moved rather slowly, building up the<lb />
background of tftie plot. Probably,<lb />
this was over done, because after the<lb />
end of the first act, the conclusion<lb />
was inevitable.<lb />
The superb acting as exhibited by<lb />
By CHARLOTTE H. DONAT<lb />
Run<lb />
If<lb />
you young women insist on<lb />
wearing blouses cut to the ioint of<lb />
baie coverance, and skirts hemmed<lb />
around the thighs . . . , Why expect<lb />
men to think of, (or treat) you as<lb />
anything more than what you resem-<lb />
ble . .Think about it . . . Ladies<lb />
Industrial Program Challenges<lb />
Students To Learn Skills<lb />
"In the school program an indus-<lb />
trial arts department should not be<lb />
a 'catch-all' for people who can't do<lb />
anything else but learn the manual<lb />
skills " Dean Robert L. Holt of East<lb />
Carolina College told a group of<lb />
school administrators and teachers of<lb />
industrial arts at a conference on the<lb />
campus here Friday, February 10.<lb />
The industrial ails program should<lb />
rather, he explained, present a chal-<lb />
lenge to students to learn some of the<lb />
skills that will help and interest them<lb />
throughout their lives.<lb />
Dr. Holt spoke at a luncheon dur-<lb />
ing the Third Annual Industrial Arts<lb />
Conference staged by East Carolina<lb />
College. Approximately 40 interested<lb />
educators from a wide area of the<lb />
state attended the meeting.<lb />
"Not only, the East Caolina Dean<lb />
said, "should the industrial arts pro-<lb />
gram fulfill the aim of giving more<lb />
people better training for their vo-<lb />
cations, but also it should include in<lb />
its purposes services in the broad<lb />
field of avocation training<lb />
"More leisure time in the future for<lb />
practically everybody means he said,<lb />
"that people must have something in-<lb />
teresting to do. In training people in<lb />
useful skills, industrial arts teachers<lb />
fee continued, "will provide profitable<lb />
and enjoyable activities which can be<lb />
carried on throughout a ifetime<lb />
With Dr. Kenneth L. Bing, direc-<lb />
tor of the East Carolina department<lb />
of industrial arts as moderator, a<lb />
panel discussion Friday morning cen-<lb />
tered attention on the planning and<lb />
construction of school shops for in-<lb />
dustrial arts.<lb />
Speakers and their topics were Lee<lb />
Chapman of the I. M. Wilson Junior<lb />
High School, Rocky Mount, "Types<lb />
of Industrial Arts Programs and<lb />
Ships George Shoe, Greenville ar-<lb />
chitect, "Problems in Planning the<lb />
Industrial Arts Shop and R. F.<lb />
Lowry, superintendent of Washington<lb />
County Schools, "Need for Industrial<lb />
Arts in the Eastern North Carolina<lb />
School Program<lb />
A tour of the East Carolina indus-<lb />
trial arts department in the Flanagan<lb />
b ulding completed the program for<lb />
he day. Of particular interest to<lb />
visitors was the new department of<lb />
graphic arts recently set up at the<lb />
college.<lb />
Dr. Thomas J. Haigwood of the<lb />
East Carolina industrial arts depart-<lb />
ment acted as chairman of the con-<lb />
ference.<lb />
Tommy Hull, Doug Mitchell, Doming<lb />
Jenkins, and Karen Beat kept this<lb />
play from falling into complete bore-<lb />
dom. Their development of the psy-<lb />
chological moods from Tommy Hull's<lb />
subtle, yet extremely humorous<lb />
characterization of a typical, "unmi-<lb />
tigated boor Karen Best's ability<lb />
to captivate an audience so that even<lb />
when she began to speak in a whisper<lb />
of weird things to come, everyone was<lb />
completely drawn to her, Doming<lb />
Jenkins' performance of an utterly<lb />
disagreeable and pessimistic hypo-<lb />
chondriac, to Doug Mitchell's violence<lb />
and his quick change-of-pace in ac-<lb />
tion and voice kept the suspence at a<lb />
maximum.<lb />
Adding to the comic relief of ths<lb />
play, was Judy Wilson as the sharp-<lb />
tongued, sarcastic housekeeper, who,<lb />
in her earthy manner received sev-<lb />
eral well-earned laughs. Alice Corio-<lb />
lana, with only three appearances on<lb />
the stage, carried out her part of<lb />
the district nurse with a great deal<lb />
of competence in her brisk and effi-<lb />
cient manner of walk and speech.<lb />
John Quinn and Susan Truesdale in<lb />
the parts of the Scotland Yard de-<lb />
tective and the pregnant maid respec-<lb />
tively, played minor parts which were<lb />
handled fairly well. The main criti-<lb />
cism of Mr. Quinn is that his very<lb />
British accent was lost by lack of<lb />
volume and many lines were lost to<lb />
over half of the audience. Miss Trues-<lb />
dale, returning for the first time since<lb />
her role of Anne Frank thankfully<lb />
had none of Miss Frank in her por-<lb />
trayal but could have made her im-<lb />
pression much stronger.<lb />
One of the better aspects of this<lb />
production was its continual advance-<lb />
ment toward the climax in the last<lb />
act. There was no major place<lb />
where the play went downhill and<lb />
had to start up again. All in all. the<lb />
r.lay itself was more on a high school<lb />
level with the actors themselves and<lb />
their representations left to make it<lb />
an enjoyable evening at the theater.<lb />
The 34 coral atolls in the Marshall<lb />
Island contain only 74 square miles<lb />
of area, but they extend over more<lb />
than 180,000 square miles of ocean.<lb />
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PAGE FOUR<lb />
u<lb />
ir<lb />
Cl-<lb />
ing<lb />
iu<lb />
3<lb />
toi<lb />
ga<lb />
uh<lb />
he<lb />
W<lb />
ac<lb />
se<lb />
r<lb />
A<lb />
Gl<lb />
ot<lb />
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d<lb />
w<lb />
fi<lb />
i<lb />
School Sponsors<lb />
Local Art Show<lb />
Under the sponsorship of Delta<lb />
Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity,<lb />
East Carolina faculty members and<lb />
students are displaying their works<lb />
as artists in a show open to the entire<lb />
college community.<lb />
The exhibition, staged in the Hall-<lb />
way Gallery, Rawl building on the<lb />
East Campus, includes a variety of<lb />
art work by both professionals, art<lb />
majors, and hobbists. The show will<lb />
continue through the week ending<lb />
Feb. 18.<lb />
Three award winners, announced<lb />
by the fraternity, are: first, J. Lynn<lb />
Burgess, Bast Carolina senior; sec-<lb />
i nd, Betty J. Russell, faculty member<lb />
of the health and physical education<lb />
department; and, third, President<lb />
Leo W. Jenkins of the college. All<lb />
entered oil paintings in the exhibi-<lb />
tion.<lb />
On display are 27 examples of the<lb />
work of East Carolina artists. Oil<lb />
paintings, water colors, prints, pot-<lb />
tery, sculpture, and a quilt in an ori-<lb />
ginal design are on view in the gal-<lb />
lery.<lb />
Noted Mathematician Delivers<lb />
Recent Lecture Series To Club<lb />
Dr. Robert M. Thrall, professor of<lb />
mathematics at the University of<lb />
Michigan, delivered a series of three<lb />
lectures on modern mathematics<lb />
here, Feb. 13-14.<lb />
At present Dr. Thrall is acting as<lb />
a visiting lecturer for the Mathema-<lb />
tical Association of America. The<lb />
Visiting Lectureship Program, sup-<lb />
ported fnancially by the National<lb />
Science Foundation, seeks to stimu-<lb />
late and strengthen mathematic pro-<lb />
grams in colleges by providing op-<lb />
portunities for both students and fa-<lb />
culty members to meet with creative<lb />
mathematicians.<lb />
The topics discussed by Dr. Thrall<lb />
were: "Mathematical Foundations of<lb />
Measurement Theory "Equivalence<lb />
Relations, Invariants, and Canonical<lb />
Forms and "Linear Programming,<lb />
the Simplex Method and the Trans-<lb />
portation Problem<lb />
Besides teaching at the University<lb />
of Michigan for more than ibwenty<lb />
years, Dr. Thrall was a member of<lb />
the Institute for Advanced Study for<lb />
two years, worked with a govern-<lb />
Ethiopian Emperor Receives<lb />
Plea From Boston University<lb />
BOSTON, MASS. (UPS) A peti-<lb />
tion containing the signatures of<lb />
1400 Boston University students and<lb />
faculty members has been mailed to<lb />
Emporer Haile Selassie of Ethiopia<lb />
in an effort to secure aid for a stu-<lb />
dent who returned to Ethiopia after<lb />
completing his studies at Boston Uni-<lb />
versity last June.<lb />
The student, Assrat Deferesu, faces<lb />
possible execution as a result of his<lb />
1 aiticipation in the recent revolt in<lb />
his native country.<lb />
According to Howard Walker of the<lb />
African Studies program at Boston<lb />
University, the signatures were ob-<lb />
tained within a day and a half. The<lb />
petition reads:<lb />
"Your Royal Imperial Majesty: We<lb />
understand that Assrat Deferesu, a<lb />
former student of Boston University,<lb />
has been involved in the recent dis-<lb />
turbance in Ethiopia and that he<lb />
faces possible execution for his par-<lb />
ticipation.<lb />
srat lived and ate with us in<lb />
dormitory. He joined us in our<lb />
classes. He participated in our dis-<lb />
:ons. He shared our University<lb />
life. Many of us know him well. We<lb />
do not want to see him die.<lb />
'ito students, we are equally con-<lb />
cerned over the safety of some of the<lb />
students at the University College of<lb />
Addis Ababa who are reported to<lb />
have been involved in the recent up-<lb />
rising. We hope nothing will be done<lb />
to jeopardize the right of students to<lb />
influence, now, the world they will<lb />
shortly inherit.<lb />
"We appeal to your Imperial Ma-<lb />
jesty to appreciate our feelings for<lb />
our classmate, to consider these fun-<lb />
damental rights of students, and do<lb />
what only you have the power to do<lb />
save the life of our friends and pre-<lb />
serve the active concern of students<lb />
for their future responsibilities?<lb />
mental applied mathematics group<lb />
during the war, was a director of<lb />
two Summer Institutes for the Social<lb />
Science Research Council, and has<lb />
been head of the Operations Scien-<lb />
tific Research Department of the<lb />
Michigan Research Institute for the<lb />
.past three years.<lb />
His main research interests are in<lb />
modern algebra and in mathematical<lb />
models in operations research and the<lb />
behavioral sciences. He has published<lb />
ir.any research papers and books in<lb />
these fields.<lb />
Dr. Thrall is a member' of several<lb />
professional societies both in this<lb />
country and abroad, and is currently<lb />
managing editor of Management Sci-<lb />
ences, a publication of the Institute<lb />
of Management Sciences.<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
Alpha Phi Aids<lb />
Mentally Retarded<lb />
Local Children<lb />
THURSDAY. FEBRUARY m<lb />
EC Placement Service<lb />
Offers Job Interviews<lb />
Representatives from the follow-<lb />
ing school systems and business firms<lb />
will be on campus soon to interview<lb />
Seniors. Those registered with the<lb />
Placement Service who are interested<lb />
may sign up for interviews at 203<lb />
Administration.<lb />
Schools:<lb />
Newport News, Virginia; Mont-<lb />
gomery County, Maryland; Prince<lb />
William County, Virginia; Hampton,<lb />
Virginia; East Orange, New Jersey;<lb />
Baltimore County, Maryland; Norfolk<lb />
County, Virginia.<lb />
Business firms and agencies:<lb />
FieJdcrest Mills; Aetna Casualty<lb />
and Surety Company; The Standard<lb />
Fire Insurance Company; N. C. Board<lb />
of Health; Burroughs Corporation; A.<lb />
M. Pullen and Company (account-<lb />
ants)); Arthur Anderson and Com-<lb />
pany (accountants); Upjohn Com-<lb />
pany (science majors).<lb />
Phi Delta Kappa Fraternity Hears Comments<lb />
On Russian Schools; VS Schools Superivr<lb />
Members of the Delta Alpha Chap-<lb />
ter of Adipha Phi have begun their<lb />
annual service iprdjeot by helping<lb />
mentally retarded children at the<lb />
Wahl-Coates Training School.<lb />
The sorority began the project this<lb />
week and will continue it through<lb />
May. Alpha Phi members help at the<lb />
school by working with children with<lb />
IQ's ranging from 50-70. Visiting the j<lb />
jMShool twie a week, fthey teach<lb />
games; art or music; tell stories; and<lb />
engage in other actiivities that will<lb />
entertain the children as well as aid<lb />
them mentally.<lb />
Sorority members are particularly<lb />
interested in the project because<lb />
most of them are future teachers and<lb />
feel that the experience of working<lb />
with the children will help later in<lb />
their teaching careers. The sorority<lb />
hopes to continue the project in the<lb />
future.<lb />
Those pairticpating in the project<lb />
for the next few weeks are:<lb />
Rebecca W. Lanier, Rebecca Coley,<lb />
Marilyn Boone, Rachel Andrews, Pat-<lb />
y Royal, Dorothy Smith, Judith<lb />
Thornton, and Kay Rodriguez, chair-<lb />
man of the project.<lb />
Man to attractive date: "Tell me<lb />
your dreams, your hopes, your di-<lb />
mensionsReader's Digest.<lb />
Southwestern Tour Combines<lb />
Sightseeing, Study Privileges<lb />
Dorm Space Available<lb />
Dormitory rooms for men are<lb />
now available for Spring Quarter.<lb />
Persons living in town or com-<lb />
muting may receive dormitory<lb />
rooms by applying at the Hous-<lb />
ing Office at any time during<lb />
the remainder of this quarter.<lb />
For all freshmen who are now<lb />
assigned to the dormitory, it is<lb />
a college requirement that they<lb />
continue to live in the dormitory.<lb />
In the event there are freshmen<lb />
who wish to move into a frater-<lb />
nity house or into a private home,<lb />
they must first receive permis-<lb />
sion from the Dean of Student<lb />
Affairs before they move.<lb />
Plans for East Carolina College's<lb />
11 Summer Travel Tour of the<lb />
Southwestern United States are un-<lb />
derway. Already the number of appli-<lb />
cations is well over half the total<lb />
needed to conduct the tour.<lb />
Dr. Robert E. Cramer, Professor of<lb />
Geography and Tour Director, re-<lb />
ports that letters of inquiry are be-<lb />
ing received daily from many states,<lb />
and applicants have signed up from<lb />
as far away as Florida. Four of those<lb />
joining the tour have been with Dr.<lb />
Cramer on previous tours he has con-<lb />
ducted for the college.<lb />
The tour to the Southwest will take<lb />
place June 4-July 3 during the first<lb />
term of summer school. Nine quarter<lb />
hours of college credit can be earned<lb />
in either geography or education,<lb />
and at either the undergraduate or<lb />
the graduate level. Credits can be ap-<lb />
plied to work towards a degree or to<lb />
certificate renewal.<lb />
Those interested in the tour, but<lb />
not needing college credits, may also<lb />
join the group.<lb />
Travel will be by chartered air-<lb />
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS<lb />
conditioned buses, with stops sched-<lb />
uled at first-class hotels and motels.<lb />
Nineteen states and Juarez, Mexico,<lb />
will be covered during the thirty day<lb />
tour.<lb />
Some of the highlights include New<lb />
Orleans, ,a dude ranch in Texas,<lb />
Carlsbad Caverns, Juarez, Grand<lb />
Canyon, Boulder Dam, Las Vegas,<lb />
Los Angeles, Yosemite National Park,<lb />
San Francisco, Salt Lake City, Colo-<lb />
rado Springs, St. Louis, Louisville,<lb />
and the Smokies.<lb />
The Southwestern tour, planned as<lb />
irore than a sightseeing tour, will<lb />
combine education with pleasure. As<lb />
on the other travel tours conducted<lb />
by Dr. Cramer, mimeographed sheets<lb />
will be supplied each day, listing the<lb />
time of departure and highlights of<lb />
the day. The geography of the coun-<lb />
try to be seen that day will be des-<lb />
cribed, as well as points of historic<lb />
importance.<lb />
Also, pamphlets and folders will be<lb />
distributed along the way to fami-<lb />
liarize each student with the state,<lb />
city, or special items to be visited.<lb />
In addition, colored slides will be taken<lb />
by the Director, and duplicates can be<lb />
purchased or slides borrowed without<lb />
charge for private showings.<lb />
VA Urges Prompt<lb />
Report Of Income<lb />
Approximately 22,000 disabled vet-<lb />
erans and dependents of some 13,000<lb />
deceased veterans in North Carolina<lb />
who receive monthly pension pay-<lb />
ments, are being reminded by the<lb />
Vetenauis Administration to report<lb />
their annual income promptly and<lb />
avoid the risk of having their pay-<lb />
ments stopped.<lb />
J. D. DeRamus, Manager, Veter-<lb />
ans Administration Regional Office,<lb />
Winston-Salem, said that VA is now<lb />
mailing to all pension recipients a<lb />
tabulating card upon which the in-<lb />
come report may be made. Pensions<lb />
cease under the old pension law if<lb />
the income of a single individual ex-<lb />
ceeds 1400, or $2700 if the recipient<lb />
has dependents.<lb />
Under the new law, Manager De-<lb />
Ramus pointed out, pensions will<lb />
cease if the income of a single in-<lb />
dividual exceeds $1800, or $3000 if<lb />
the recipient has dependents. The<lb />
amount of pension may be reduced if<lb />
the recipient's annual income rises<lb />
from one of the lower income brack-<lb />
ets$600 and $1200 for a single vet-<lb />
eran or widow without dependents,<lb />
and $1000 and $2000 for a veteran or<lb />
widow with dependents.<lb />
Dependent parents who receive de-<lb />
pendency and indemnity compensa-<lb />
tion also receive income question-<lb />
naires and their payments are simi-<lb />
larly regulated by the amount of<lb />
their income, Mr. DeRamus added.<lb />
Regulations require payment to be<lb />
stopped if the income report is not<lb />
returned to the VA within 30 days.<lb />
No income questionnaire is sent to<lb />
veterans or widows who are receiving<lb />
service-connected benefits.<lb />
"People in the United States are<lb />
being misinformed when they are told<lb />
that Russian schools are better than<lb />
those in this country Superintendent<lb />
Jean .P. Booth of Kinston schools told<lb />
an audience at East Carolina College<lb />
Feb. 4.<lb />
"In some areas he said, "they<lb />
may be ahead of us. The over-all<lb />
picture shows, however that the Am-<lb />
erican school is far superior<lb />
Mr. Booth was principal speaker<lb />
at a meeting of the Delta Pi Chapter<lb />
of Phi Delta Kappa, national honor-<lb />
ary education fraternity.<lb />
His comments were based on his<lb />
observations during an inspection<lb />
tour of Russian schools in October,<lb />
1960. With 21 other educators he<lb />
visited Russia under the sponsorship<lb />
of the U. S. State Department.<lb />
Of the 2,000 schools in Russia, Mr.<lb />
Booth said, 51 per cent are one-teach-<lb />
er schools. Buildings, 81 per cent of<lb />
whih were built before 1917, present<lb />
a drab appearance on the exterior, and<lb />
classrooms are poorly lighted. In<lb />
general, he said, equipment is not<lb />
modern.<lb />
Little or no flexibility, he stated,<lb />
is evident in the curriculum or in<lb />
methods and techniques of teaching<lb />
in Russia. Instruction, he continued,<lb />
is authoritarian, and great emphasis<lb />
is placed on drill and memorization<lb />
in the classroom.<lb />
Library facilities are exceedingly<lb />
poor, Mr. Booth told his audience. A<lb />
school with 1460 students, one of the<lb />
largest which he visited, provided only<lb />
eight seats for readers, he stated.<lb />
, Russia, however, he said, there<lb />
H no dropout problem, for those<lb />
that discontinue academic work are<lb />
placed in jobs on farms or in industry.<lb />
If a disciplinary problem with a<lb />
child arises, Mr. Booth explained, so-<lb />
cial pressure is brought to bear on<lb />
his parents by other parents of the<lb />
community.<lb />
The grade report of the Russian<lb />
child, he says, differs Irum t, .<lb />
schools in the United Statta ln r m<lb />
sia the report cam approxiuuS<lb />
TLmu&amp;t be ex 2<lb />
signed by the parent each week<lb />
Academic succe- he toaUau<lb />
Mings the Russian Stub  aua<lb />
of rewards. Trophies award for -Z<lb />
work are on display in every<lb />
he said.<lb />
Students To Observe Universal Day<lb />
Of Prayer Sunday; Agner To Speak<lb />
College Union Schedules<lb />
Annual Bridge Tourney<lb />
The Annual Intercollegiate Bridge<lb />
Tournament sponsored by the Associ-<lb />
ation of College Unions is scheduled<lb />
to be played in the College Union<lb />
TV Room on Monday, February 20, at<lb />
7:00 p.m.<lb />
This tournament is nation-wide,<lb />
with approximately 125 colleges and<lb />
and universities competing for bridge<lb />
'honors. Each school entering this du-<lb />
plicate bridge tournament will play a<lb />
-set of 16 prepared hands in a single<lb />
session. Prizes in the form of tro-<lb />
phies and certificates will be awarded<lb />
to the winners on a national regional,<lb />
and campus basis.<lb />
The College Union wishes to stress<lb />
that any student who plays bridge is<lb />
eligible to play in the tournament.<lb />
Fog is made up of water droplets<lb />
so small that it would take 7,000,000<lb />
000 of them to make one teaspoonful<lb />
of water.<lb />
Campus Art Majors Visit National<lb />
Art Gallery, Library Of Congress<lb />
?<lb />
?BT?m rONi LOOK INTO Olfc CONIm WINDOW<lb />
IheOld 1um&amp;i<lb />
The man who said money<lb />
mn't everything must have<lb />
tons through a woman's<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 />
'Influential and inspiring' were the<lb />
words used by Doctor Bruce Carter,<lb />
associate professor of art here, in<lb />
describing a trip to Washington, D.<lb />
C. February 10. The trip, made pos-<lb />
sible by an invitation extended by<lb />
Mrs. Margaret Shepherd, head of the<lb />
art exhibition, covered sights in the<lb />
National (Art Gallery and the Library<lb />
of Congress.<lb />
Most of the students who attended<lb />
the exhibition were graphic art ma-<lb />
jors and those in art printing. The<lb />
exhibition on display at the Library<lb />
of Congress included fifty paintings<lb />
chosen from over two thousand en-<lb />
NOW PLAYING<lb />
in Color<lb />
THE SUNDOWNERS<lb />
ROBT. MITCHUM<lb />
DEBORAH KERB<lb />
trees.<lb />
Among the paintings seen at the<lb />
National Art Gallery were the origi-<lb />
nals of Kathe Kollwitz, Goya, and<lb />
Roualt.<lb />
"The actual seeing of these paint-<lb />
ings said Dr. Carter, "causes the<lb />
students to develop a new awareness<lb />
of them. They can also have a greater<lb />
conception of the competition that<lb />
they will face in the field of art after<lb />
graduation<lb />
Commented Doctor Carter when<lb />
asked if there were to be another<lb />
invitation, "This was the first time,<lb />
but I hope it knit the<lb />
Association Urges<lb />
Quality Education<lb />
"Quality Education for the '60's"<lb />
was discussed at a conference of Area<lb />
IV of the North Carolina Association<lb />
for Supervision and Curriculum De-<lb />
velopment here, February 14.<lb />
Dr. O. L. Davis, Jr associate di-<lb />
rector, Fifth Year Program of Tea-<lb />
cher Education, University of North<lb />
Carolina, appeared as principal speak-<lb />
er at the first meeting.<lb />
Homer A, Lassker, supervisor of<lb />
elementary education in the State De-<lb />
partment of .Public Instruction, spoke<lb />
at the afternoon session on "Frontiers<lb />
of Knowledge of Significance for the<lb />
Improvement of Education<lb />
Dr. Douglas Jones of the college<lb />
department of Education acted as<lb />
presiding officer. Greetings from the<lb />
State ASCD were extended by Mrs.<lb />
Lois Reich, president Selma Pritch-<lb />
ard, supervisor of Craven ctwnty<lb />
"chools, discussed "What ASCD<lb />
Means to Me pointing out the val-<lb />
ues of the organization.<lb />
Others who participated in the pro-<lb />
gram included Dr. E. J. Carter, di-<lb />
rector of the department of educa-<lb />
tion, and D. D. Grose, director of re-<lb />
ligious activities, and J, H. Rose<lb />
! superintendent of Greenville city<lb />
schools.<lb />
Starts SUNDAY, Feb. 19<lb />
Jeff Chandler<lb />
John Saxon<lb />
in<lb />
THE PLUNDERERS<lb />
Theatre<lb />
FRI SAT SUN, MON TUBS,<lb />
WED, THUR.<lb />
February 17-22<lb />
"GO NAKED IN<lb />
THE WORLD"<lb />
with<lb />
Gina LoUobrigtda, Anthony<lb />
Franciosa and Ernest Borgntne<lb />
ADMISSION<lb />
Adaks $,?<lb />
Children<lb />
STATE Theatre<lb />
Attention Seniors!<lb />
All seniors who are graduating<lb />
thw quarter and who would like<lb />
their yearbook mailed to then,<lb />
will please leave their address at<lb />
the Buccaneer Office from 3-6<lb />
P.m Monday through Friday.<lb />
Delicious Food<lb />
Served 24 Hours<lb />
Mr Conditioned<lb />
CAROLINA<lb />
GRILL<lb />
Comer W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb />
The Universal Day of Prayer for<lb />
Students will be observed on Sunday,<lb />
rVbruary 19, at East Carolina Col-<lb />
lege. The Service will be conducted<lb />
by students in the Y-Hut and will be-<lb />
gin promptly at 5:00 o'clock. The<lb />
Rev. Terry Agner, Pastor of the Lu-<lb />
theran Church in Greenville, will be<lb />
the speaker. Supper will be served at<lb />
5:45 p.m. by the Lutheran Student<lb />
Fellowship to those attending the<lb />
Service.<lb />
The denominational student groups<lb />
and the Y's are cooperating in the<lb />
planning of this observance, so that<lb />
all Christian student organizations<lb />
and any who are interested might<lb />
come together for an ecumenical serv-<lb />
ice of prayer and dedication to the<lb />
mission of the Church among students<lb />
throughout the world.<lb />
The Service on our campus will be<lb />
a part of thousands of such observ-<lb />
ances which will be held by Christians<lb />
in the colleges and universities of<lb />
literally all countries of the world,<lb />
including student Christian grams on<lb />
the mainland of China. The intei a-<lb />
tional observance g rpsnawej by the<lb />
Wurld Student Christian Federation.<lb />
which unites Christian group, in over<lb />
seve.ity countries around the world<lb />
Since 1895, the Third Sunday .n Fe<lb />
ruary has been set aside 'by the<lb />
student Christian fellowships as f<lb />
occasion when pray, r is :rde to God<lb />
for the spiritual physical, and intel<lb />
taosaal welfare of student teacheri<lb />
and academic institutions f nigh<lb />
learning.<lb />
Barnard Initiates<lb />
Exchange Program<lb />
NEW YORK CITY (UPS) -Two<lb />
Southern schools recent , accepted<lb />
the invitation of Ban, . tQ<lb />
participate in a<lb />
Projrram during the  <lb />
nev semester. Pebruen -<lb />
14 Both Wake Fore<lb />
I college in Winston-S<lb />
C arolina, and s- rhaa n, <lb />
women's col'etre in A:<lb />
five girls to Barnard u :<lb />
five Barnard )WejL<lb />
On Campus<lb />
Kith<lb />
MsShuhan<lb />
Author of "I Wa a Teen-aae Dwarf, "The M<lb />
Love of DobU Gillis etc.)<lb />
fTVE GOT NEWS FOR YOU"<lb />
I know all of you have important things to do in the morning<lb />
like getting down to breakfast before your roommate eats ail<lb />
the marmaladeso you really cannot be blamed for not keeping<lb />
np with all the news in the morning papers. In today's column,<lb />
therefore, I have prepared a run-up of news highlights from<lb />
campuses the country over.<lb />
SOUTHERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY<lb />
Dr. Willard Hale Sigafoos, head of the department of anthro-<lb />
pology at Southern Reserve University, and internationally<lb />
known as an authority on primitive peoples, returned yesterday<lb />
from a four-year scientific expedition to the headwaters of the<lb />
Amason River. Among the many interesting mementos of his<lb />
Journey is his own head, shrunk to the size of a kumquat. He<lb />
refused to reveal how his head shrinking was accomplished.<lb />
That's for me to know and you to find out he said with a<lb />
tiny, but saucy grin.<lb />
NORTHERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY<lb />
Dr. Mandrill Gibbon, head of the department of zoology at<lb />
Northern Reserve University, and known to young and old for<lb />
his work on primates, announced yesterday that he had re-<lb />
ceived a grant of $80,000,000 for a twelve-year study to deter-<lb />
mine precisely how much fun there is in a barrel of monke<lb />
Whatever the results of Dr. Gibbon's researches, this much<lb />
known: What's more fun than a barrel of monkt<lb />
hmm4uci&amp;to ,<lb />
a pack of Marlboro. There is sest and cheer in every puff,<lb />
delight in every draw, content and well-being in even- fleecv.<lb />
flavorful cloudlet. And what's more, this merriest of cigarettes<lb />
comes to you both in soft pack and flip-top box wherever cig-<lb />
arettes are sold at prices that do no violence to the slimmest of<lb />
purses. So why don't you settle back soon and enjov Marlboro,<lb />
the filtered cigarette with the unfiltered taste. <lb />
EASTERN RESERVE UNIVERSITY<lb />
The annual meeting of the American Philological Institute,<lb />
new last week at Eastern Reserve University, wss enlivened<lb />
by the reading of two divergent monographs concerning the<lb />
oof early Gothic "runes as letters of primitive alphabets<lb />
eovJJP SpIeen'famed far and wide as the dis-<lb />
wttsTl. 2-54 Gennn &amp; Shift, read a paper in<lb />
SP 5 middfe wne "gr" (pro-<lb />
bund Jwonkey who as the whole world knows, translated<lb />
uThk rK tMiddk B . contended<lb />
m hn, paper that the Old Wendish rune "pt" derives from the<lb />
wJr (pronounced "gr")<lb />
finalW 'Jk Jd?"i0?. PW TO Dt- Twonkey<lb />
nasmrn " to step mto the gym-<lb />
ETLJT1 v S0  P the chal-<lb />
wSiKH?i-3SLtht " W " Id because there<lb />
Th? fZZ " tLSTnMittm tot "wi"  Dr. Twonksy.<lb />
EasteSn'0ttb fiodm  bard to believe as<lb />
oHhrUmdTrriVeiW5BW length and breadth<lb />
reader tiZ . However, the<lb />
SSj -thandT" ,nr- V" E cxtraor-<lb />
waTrkZTin " I" fact, he spent the last<lb />
NaVAwlt S1- . where he Reived two<lb />
Sjy Award, and wn. widely hailed as a "manly lit<lb />
e imi<lb />
 Irani th<lb />
PhlUp Morris<lb />
fecaa<lb />
n brmmd-nm tea fm <lb /><pb facs="00038689_tn_0005" /><lb />
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1961<lb />
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb />
PAGE FIVE<lb />
President Receives Award<lb />
Everybody's A Winner<lb />
Gala Sounds, Tasty Treats, Entertainment<lb />
Highlight College Union Winter Garden<lb />
By JIM STINGLEY, JR.<lb />
could have a darn good sketch of your commode game. Tri Sig capped third<lb />
"Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Step right i likeness. This shows there is some<lb />
up this way! Everybody's a winner! talent somewhere. While the Art Club<lb />
How about you, little lady? Let. her was sketching, the Kappa Deltas had<lb />
by folks, let the little lady shoot the j you shaving a lathered balloon. This<lb />
ball! Hurry! Hurry! Hurry! Step right j was bad for shell-shocks like myself.<lb />
I i . VV. RICE of the l S. Marine Corps Re ruiting Siriee is pictured presenting Dr. Leo W. Jen-<lb />
it plage awarded East Carolina for its excell n record in man power producing.<lb />
Honorary Frats Initiate New Officers, Pledge<lb />
were Initiated into<lb />
Pi during the weekend<lb />
11. The new brothers<lb />
v ore, Ward Simmons,<lb />
 and Larry Wood.<lb />
a ter recently had a guest<lb />
Mr. Herbert Lee, Executive<lb />
Homo Saving) Loan<lb />
Mr. Lee spoke to the<lb />
s" during a regular dinner<lb />
i gave a brief history and<lb />
 of Home Savings and<lb />
. ma.<lb />
- I pointed out some pit-<lb />
iver extension of credit to<lb />
 question and answer<lb />
discussion period followed Mr. Lee's<lb />
talk.<lb />
Two business majors were install-<lb />
ed as Phi Sigma Pi officers to com-<lb />
plete the current term in ceremonies<lb />
held at the fraternity's Valentine Ban-<lb />
quet Monday evening. John Knarr.<lb />
junior from Fayetteville, succeeds<lb />
John Dobson, who is graduating at<lb />
the end of Winter Quarter, as presi-<lb />
dent of the honorary scholastic fra-<lb />
ternty. Joseph Barbato, senior from<lb />
Wilmington, Delaware. replaces<lb />
Knarr as corresponding secretary.<lb />
R reread W. J. Hadden of the<lb />
Eighth Street Christian Church was<lb />
speaker at the banquet held at Saint<lb />
Paul's Episcopal Parish House. A<lb />
dance followed the dinner.<lb />
In ceremonies held in the Alumni<lb />
Building, five new members of Tau<lb />
Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi were in-<lb />
ducted into the fraternity. The five<lb />
new brothers of the national honor-<lb />
ary fraternity for men are Wilbur<lb />
Castellow, Ronald Capps, James Mas-<lb />
sey. Harold Polsky, and John Rob-<lb />
ei son.<lb />
These five men were chosen on<lb />
the basis of outstanding leadership,<lb />
scholarship, and fellowship. They<lb />
were initiated after a week of pledg-<lb />
ing.<lb />
AFROTC Drill Team<lb />
Lambda Chi Alpha Elects<lb />
Officers; Miles, Prexy<lb />
i Alpha on February 2,<lb />
.  .owing officers: presi-<lb />
Milts; vice president,<lb />
secretary, Burnie<lb />
  treasurer, David Harvey;<lb />
van. Mickey Conklin.<lb />
fficers elected are: ritualist,<lb />
-it; social chairman, Cloyce<lb />
pledge trainer, Spencer Gay-<lb />
tse manager, Nfkki Ellerbe;<lb />
ent, Dallas McPherson;<lb />
secretary, Linwood Hartsell.<lb />
- will be installed Thurs-<lb />
Februery 16.<lb />
i is the fourth president of<lb />
Delta Sign Rho chapter of<lb />
la Chi Apha at EC. The chap-<lb />
ved its charter in 1958.<lb />
a Swingline<lb />
Stapler no<lb />
bigger than a<lb />
pack of gum!<lb />
98<lb />
(Including<lb />
000 staplct)<lb />
CHARLES MILES, is slatea to take<lb />
over his duties of president of Lambda<lb />
Chi Alpha next quarter.<lb />
SWINGLINE "TOT"<lb />
Millions now in use. Uncondi-<lb />
tionally guaranteed. Makes book<lb />
covers, fastens papers, arts and<lb />
crafts, mends, tacks, etc. Avail-<lb />
able at your college bookstore.<lb />
SWINGUNE<lb />
"Cub" Stapler $1.29<lb />
INC.<lb />
vlON9 ISLAND Cm. NEW YOU. M.J&amp;,<lb />
HILL BOYD is at present serving<lb />
ith the Army in Ft. Lee, Virginia.<lb />
Bill is with the Medical Corp and<lb />
ranks as a First Lieutenant. During<lb />
his EC career, he worked as sporta<lb />
xlitor, and intramural director for two<lb />
year. Bill's brother, Richard, is now<lb />
holding down his former position with<lb />
the East Carolinian.<lb />
ANNOUNCEMENT<lb />
Prices at Roy's Barber Shop<lb />
will not increase!<lb />
Flat-Tops $1.25<lb />
Regular Cut $1.00<lb />
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING<lb />
ROY'S BARBER SHOP<lb />
1308 Dickinson Avenue<lb />
Across frpm Sutton's Service Center<lb />
"Give a pig and a boy everything<lb />
they want. You'll get a good pig, and<lb />
a bad boyBill McKenna.<lb />
"What the man who has everything<lb />
needs is help with the payments.<lb />
Maurice Seitter.<lb />
Modern rooms for college boys at the<lb />
COLLEGIATE<lb />
12 block from college  one block from town.<lb />
Call PL 2-9962 or go by 402 Holly Street<lb />
up! Everybodys a winner<lb />
These and many other gala sounds<lb />
fiilkd the College Union Tuesday<lb />
ight as the annual C. U. Winter<lb />
Carnival got under way. It was a<lb />
college "event" to say the least. Gay<lb />
decorations, pretty girls, colorful<lb />
"barkers candied apples, and an en-<lb />
ojmous crowd made the carnival a<lb />
iremenous success.<lb />
Cotton CandyCandied Apples<lb />
No carnival is a carnival without<lb />
tho tasty treats which are associated<lb />
vith them, and this one had no lack<lb />
of them. Alpha Xi Delta fu mi shed the<lb />
popcorn, Tri-Sig 'pushed the French<lb />
fries and drinks, Alpha Omicron Pi<lb />
bold the hot dogs, and The Lutheran<lb />
Student Association topped it off with<lb />
the true Carnie treat of cotton candy<lb />
and candied apples.<lb />
The Real Thing<lb />
In the entertainment line, there,<lb />
were many games such as you would<lb />
find in a "real live" carnie. The Eng-<lb />
Msh Club came through with a dart<lb />
throwing skit, The Chi Omegas with<lb />
a penny-pitching at floating saucers<lb />
game (which I failed miserably at<lb />
every attempt), the Young Democrats<lb />
with their Football throw through<lb />
a swinging tire, and the KA's "Un-<lb />
touchables" with their basketball toss<lb />
ii.1'0 an open commode.<lb />
Moving farther down the line you<lb />
would find the Tau ;Sigma's with<lb />
their "Marrving Sam" booth (ten<lb />
cent? for marriage, fifteen for n di-<lb />
voree), 'picture taking by the YMCA-<lb />
YWCA, penny toss by the Circle K.<lb />
and a colorful exhibition of candle-<lb />
squirting by the Sig Eps. This one<lb />
practically caused a riot at one time.<lb />
One of the highlights of the Carnie<lb />
was the pie-throwing display put on<lb />
hv the Canterbury Club. Big Richard<lb />
urnvtt. Pirate football player,<lb />
wwa the target of the night, and Al<lb />
Smith nearly went broke as he at-<lb />
emoted to chnnire Richard's outward<lb />
appearance. Richard didn't duck one<lb />
ime and <lb />
Fore!<lb />
Golf addicts had a chance to bet-<lb />
t r their scores Tuesday night with the<lb />
Band's little putt-putt, and Theta<lb />
Chi showed that you can haidly<lb />
nock two coke bottles down with a<lb />
tennis ball. A. C. E. had the sexiest<lb />
display of the whole show. It was a<lb />
"Rin-j; the Girls Leg with a Hoop<lb />
Not much ringing was done, but there<lb />
was a whole lotta looking going on.<lb />
Balloon Shaving<lb />
Another outstanding feature of the<lb />
event was the Art Club's Portrai-<lb />
tures. For seventy-4five cents you<lb />
The Math Club's booth was a Bal-<lb />
loon Baskethall game and the MENC<lb />
gave you a chance to break records<lb />
with a ping-pong ball. (Lots of luck).<lb />
Bingo was the Home Ec. Club's proj- (<lb />
ect, and the AFROTC Drill Team<lb />
cleaned up with a Casino game.<lb />
Ugly Man<lb />
Rounding out the Carnie was the<lb />
Phi Mu .Alpha's Dance Hall, Delta<lb />
Sigma Phi's Ugly Man Contest, the<lb />
Delta Zeta's Bowling Alley, and the<lb />
Industrial Arts Club with their Ham-<lb />
mering Nails contest.<lb />
After all was over, the prizes were<lb />
given out. The A. C. E. Booth grabbed<lb />
first place wilth their "Ring the Girl's<lb />
Leg with a Hoop" display. They won<lb />
$1000. The $7.50 second prize went<lb />
tc the KA's "Untouchables" and their<lb />
prize with their French fries and<lb />
mink stand.<lb />
The adult costume prize went to<lb />
Miss Kathy La Baume. She received<lb />
five dollairs, while Bobbie Jo Sutton<lb />
won $2.50 with her second place rat-<lb />
ing. Jim Stone caiptured the most<lb />
ticket; of the night and won himself<lb />
n OOC beer mug. Miss Barbara Baird<lb />
tume contest and the four Fabor chil-<lb />
dren received second prize.<lb />
All in all, every one had a swing-<lb />
ing time at the Carnie and for many<lb />
it will be a college first that will be<lb />
long- remembered. Many thanks should<lb />
go to Miss Mendenhall for her help<lb />
in creating this project and also to<lb />
he CU staff. We hope we'ie speak-<lb />
ing for the campus when we say,<lb />
took first prize in the children's cos-i Congratulations for a job well done!<lb />
Support Your<lb />
Student Government<lb />
Association<lb />
FXftrfS START<lb />
:<lb />
Impala V8 Convertible<lb />
Impala V8 Sport Sedan<lb />
Impala V8 Sport Coup<lb /><lb />
Impala V8 2 Door Sedan : Bel Air V8 4-Door Sedan<lb />
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Nomad V8 4-Door 9-Passenger Station Wagon<lb />
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Every on of the 18 Chevrolets you see : Nom-j Six 4Door 9 Passenger Station Wagon Nomad Six 4-Door 6-Passenger Station Wagon<lb />
here ia priced, lower than comparable j<lb />
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it it to fit a Chevy into your budget. And :<lb />
very model gives you Chevy's Jet- !<lb />
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of other engineering and<lb />
styling advantages you<lb />
can't find in anything j<lb />
else selling at anywhere<lb />
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Nomad V8 4 Door 6 Passenger Station Wagon<lb />
Parkwood Six 4-Door 9 Passenger Station Wagon<lb />
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'Based on  comparison of manufacturers' <lb />
suggested ratal! prices (including Federal tax) for :<lb />
models with 118-Inch wheelbase or above Parkwood Six 4 Door 6 Passenger Station Wagon Parkwood V8 4-Door 9 Passenger Station Wagon<lb />
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.Sec Ike new Ckevroiet cars, Lnevy Corvairs and lite new Corvette at your heal authorized Chevrolet dealer's<lb /><pb facs="00038689_tn_0006" /><lb />
1<lb />
PAGE SIX<lb />
EAST CAR0 LIN I A N<lb />
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY i6, m<lb />
lit i<lb />
fii<lb />
Cii<lb />
TU<lb />
3<lb />
tw<lb />
ga<lb />
all<lb />
he<lb />
W<lb />
a-t<lb />
M<lb />
1<lb /><lb />
L<lb />
e<lb />
.i<lb />
v<lb />
s<lb />
EC Pirates Seek Revenge At AC fe2BT5 SS<lb />
SPORTS !<lb />
By RICHARD BOYD<lb />
In Wilson<lb />
BCC On Scoring Spree<lb />
Coach Karl Smith's high scoring Pirates have averaged 101 points<lb />
per contest during their last two home engagements with WCC and Elon.<lb />
The Saturday night offensive show sitaged by the men of Coach Smith<lb />
staggered the Elon Christians to the extent that they could not catch the<lb />
Bucs, but came within a few points several times. One of the primary rea-<lb />
sons for the offensive showing by EOC has been Lacy West. The rangy<lb />
forward lias averaged 23 points per game during these home encounters.<lb />
ECC's 106 points against the Christians Saturday night was out-<lb />
standing. The win gave the Bucs undisputed possession of second place in<lb />
the North State League standings. The Pirates hit more consistently<lb />
than they have in any other contest. The 60 point half-dime scoring spree<lb />
could come close to becomings school record for the first half of action.<lb />
Elon Better Than WCC<lb />
Elon showed a more potent outfit than their predecessors here on<lb />
Friday night. Their shooting, passing, and rebounding looked entirely<lb />
different from that of the Western Carolina five. But the ball stealing<lb />
tactics of Lewis, the amazing accuracy of West, the playmaking and<lb />
shooting of Clayton, and the rebounding of Smith spelled humiliation for<lb />
the visitors from near Burlington.<lb />
High Scoring First Half<lb />
Never had the Bucs been so deadly with their shooting tactics than<lb />
they wore daring that first half of action. The Christians exhibited a fir-<lb />
ing barrage that accumulated 52 points, but retained an eight points de-<lb />
ency during the initial half. ECC cooled off during the final half<lb />
still managed to go into a spree during the later portion of the game.<lb />
with reserve Danny Bowen coming off the bench and hitting for eight<lb />
tallies, mostly on long shots.<lb />
Bucs Too Strong For WCC<lb />
When East Carolina scored 97 points against Western Carolina<lb />
Friday night it was the maximum number of points that the Pirates had<lb />
scored during the cage season. The Bucs simply raced their opponents<lb />
completely off the hardwood with their "horserace" type of basketball<lb />
employed by Coach Earl Smith.<lb />
The Catamounts from the mountains have a young team that is<lb />
big and aggressive, but their brand of basketball was immature in com-<lb />
parison with the Pirates. When Western Carolina does mature their oppo-<lb />
nents had better watch out, because the Catamount cagers do have the<lb />
potential. But their freshman dominated team was no class for the more<lb />
experienced home team in the North State encounter.<lb />
Prior to tip-off time, East Carolina had been a victim of a two<lb />
game losing streak. ACC nipped the Bucs by a 61-60 margin. In a contest<lb />
that ECC hit on only 28 per cent of their shots the Catawba Indians mas-<lb />
tered an early visitor's lead to whip the Pirates and knock them into a<lb />
second place tie.<lb />
Fast Break Working<lb />
What did East Carolina do so differently in Friday night's contest<lb />
that they have not one in other games? The Bucs employed a fast break<lb />
that worked like a charm is the only logical explanation. In fact, it worked<lb />
so effectively that the visiting team was actually frustrated at the type<lb />
of play that the home team was demonstrating. The most fatigued player<lb />
in the game should have been guard Charlie Lewis. The Kinston native<lb />
sprinted time after time on the fast break to gather in his team-mate's<lb />
passes and netted all but a few  his lay-up attempts. The 6'1" Junior<lb />
had to take a backseat to guard Cotton Clayton and Captain Don Smith<lb />
in the scoring department, but the scoring between the three was very<lb />
close. Clayton netted 22, (8 for 8) on the foul line. Smith hit for 21, the<lb />
majority of them being on jump and push shots, and Lewis rammed home<lb />
20 points, while Lacy West contributed 18 points.<lb />
But it was Charlie who made the fast break work. Late in the one-<lb />
sided affair Coach Smith decided to give his star a rest, and the race horse<lb />
type of basketball which the ECC coach drilled into his personnel seemed<lb />
to die out, and the Bucs quit hitting" on their consistent fast breaks.<lb />
Clayton Hits<lb />
Cotton Clayton, who is living up to his expectations thrilled the<lb />
1500 partisan fans with his scoring tactics underneath the basket. Several<lb />
of the 03" guard's shots were taken without viewing the basket. Clayton<lb />
also hit several times from the outside, and his excellent foul shooting<lb />
demonstrated why his 22 points surpassed his usual 15 per game.<lb />
Last Home Game<lb />
As in the Elon contest, it was truly a team effort to win the WCC<lb />
affair, and the Bucs are definitely one of the teams to beat for the playoff<lb />
championship in the North State League. The Elon contest won by the<lb />
Bucs was the last home game of the season for the Pirates. Thus, if EiCC<lb />
fans wish to see their team in action for the remainder of the campaign<lb />
they will have to do some traveling.<lb />
Three Activities In One Night<lb />
It is a shame that the Elon contest had to be played the night of<lb />
a play and a dance here on campus. It seems as though something should<lb />
have been done about this conflict. Two activities in one night at ECC is<lb />
not fair to the students, but sometimes these things cannot be helped. But<lb />
three activities in one night is all but out of the question.<lb />
Next Saturday the Bucs hit the road to Wilson to renew their<lb />
feud with ACC's Bulldogs. We remember what happened when the Bull-<lb />
dogs last hit Greenville. That was several weeks back and the Wilson<lb />
school claimed a one point victory during the last 15 seconds. However, an<lb />
enthusiastic visiting crowd, and some excellent cheer leaders aided their<lb />
team on to victory. Why can't we have this same spirit when our Bucs<lb />
invade Atlantic Christian this Saturday night?<lb />
The Pirates should le "up" for this encounter since the heartbreak-<lb />
ing defeat three weeks ago. (Although the ECC quint lost the home game,<lb />
tensions were at a high through the hard played contest.<lb />
It has been a school custom for ECC students to pack the ACC<lb />
gym when these two schools met during recent years. The student body<lb />
should not want to break that tradition in Saturday night's encounter.<lb />
Coach Smith will probably employ the same starting five which he has<lb />
started for the majority of the home contest. Clayton, West, Smith, Otte,<lb />
and Lewis, with Ben Bowes ready for plenty of action as the sixth man.<lb />
An exciting contest should be in stoi-e when the two rivals meet this<lb />
Saturday night in Wilson.<lb />
Contest Set For<lb />
Saturday Night<lb />
Will Atlantic Christian retain the<lb />
Bohunk Trophy? Will WCC break two<lb />
game losing streak to the Bulldogs<lb />
from ACC? Can East Carolina, by<lb />
winning assure itself of second place<lb />
in the North State Conference? The<lb />
answers to these and other important<lb />
questions will be given next Satur-<lb />
day night when EC plays AC at Wil-<lb />
son. For the past two games, the<lb />
final outcome has been decided in the<lb />
last, few seconds. On the first game<lb />
of last season, EC won at Wilson by<lb />
the score of 70-57. However, when<lb />
the men from .Atlantic Christian<lb />
made their return engagement here,<lb />
they won the Bohunk Trophy. In the<lb />
first meeting between the two clubs<lb />
this year, the Bulldogs were able to<lb />
ieain the trophy by squeaking out a<lb />
last second win.<lb />
East Carolina by beating Elon, re-<lb />
tained possession of second place in<lb />
the North State League standings.<lb />
The Pirates should carry this posi-<lb />
tion into the conference playoffs held<lb />
in Lexington, North Carolina.<lb />
Tack Boyd. whose field goal in the<lb />
last !5 seconds defeated the Bucs is<lb />
rtill in second place in the North<lb />
Stae scoring race. The Bulldog has<lb />
iveraged 20 points per contest. This<lb />
will be Boyd's last North State Con-<lb />
ference contest. Dick Knox and Jerry<lb />
Fritz are other Bulldogs that will be<lb />
main threats to the ECC cause.<lb />
Don Smith's Last Conference Game<lb />
Don Smith of ECC will be playing<lb />
his last conference game against<lb />
the Bulldogs. The Buc captain with<lb />
the possession of a great scoring eye<lb />
as been the leading Pirate scorer<lb />
this season. Smith has played some<lb />
rreat basketball for the Bucs during<lb />
the past four seasons. Coach Earl<lb />
Smith feels that this year's quint has<lb />
had its ups and downs, but maybe now<lb />
that missing something is there. One<lb />
Junior, tjwo Sophomores, and one<lb />
Freshman have helped the Buc cause<lb />
(besides Smith. Senior Don Smith,<lb />
Junior Charlie Lewis. Sophomores<lb />
Cotton Clayton and Lacy West, as<lb />
well as Freshman Bill Otte will com-<lb />
pose the ECC starting lineup.<lb />
East Carolina and Elon went on a<lb />
scoring barrage here Friday night,<lb />
and the Bucs managed to come out on<lb />
top by an overwhelming 105-86 mar-<lb />
gin. A sound Lacy West, with the aid<lb />
of Cotton Clayton, Charley Lewis,<lb />
and Don Smith proved fatal for the<lb />
Christian five. West, who has been<lb />
having trouble reaching the double<lb />
figure column in this season's scoring<lb />
average netted 28 tallies in a tremen-<lb />
dous exhibition of shooting. The tal-<lb />
ented Sophomore forward was deadly<lb />
.i;h his outside shooting.<lb />
Bucs Take Second Place<lb />
The pace set by the two teams dur-<lb />
ing the first half of action saw 112<lb />
oointa produced. ECC was ahead 60-<lb />
52 a'ter the initial half had extermi-<lb />
nted. West and Clayton paced the<lb />
Bi"s to an early 22 point lead: the<lb />
moca threatened to turn the battle<lb />
or econd place in the North State<lb />
League standings into a complete<lb />
o't. However, the visitors were hot<lb />
themselves during the latter portion<lb />
of the tremendous offensive show<lb />
'urfng the first portion of the contest, l<lb />
Te home lead was narrowed to<lb />
within a few points as the half began !<lb />
come to a close. The visitors made I<lb />
i vita attempt to make a comeback<lb />
;n rood fashion. Five straight points<lb />
oward the end of the initial half put<lb />
Elon back into the game<lb />
During the last half of actiojj<lb />
contest was close until the fjal f.<lb />
minutes, when the Bucs begaa ?<lb />
break tie game wide open f - e P<lb />
rate cooled off bo  . <lb />
t picked up their wrlie, 7<lb />
 the last rive minutes of thfe me"<lb />
W et continued to hit. Clyto T<lb />
ed to net some tallies ai?airi , <lb />
Sophomore Dan Bowen got info th<lb />
act and ended with eight point. fA!<lb />
the night.<lb />
The victory left the Bucs j g<lb />
 Bd place in the loop  " '<lb />
the impressive victory over the Chris<lb />
iani established Coach Ear! Smith<lb />
charges as the favorite fo, t,h<lb />
i xi place position beind LB<lb />
Seven Presidents of tho United<lb />
StatesLincoln, Jefferson, Jackson<lb />
Fillmore, Buchanan, Garfie'd <lb />
Arthurwere born in log cabins<lb />
Eight Presidents didn't go o Co!<lb />
lege; 23 re lawyers.<lb />
Tyler was the first hief executive<lb />
to be photographed, Taff the first<lb />
one to play golf, and McKinlev the<lb />
first to have an auto.<lb />
The<lb />
phrase 'temporary<lb />
placed Methuselah a<lb />
"Robert N. Tavlor<lb />
-ax re-<lb />
-nbo! of<lb />
LACY WEST 32 and BILL OTTE 5 are seer, in action nere in last Saturday<lb />
nights encounter with Elon's Christians. Both could not block opponents<lb />
hot, but the Bucs went on to outscore the Christian five 105-86.<lb />
First Half Spree By Bucs<lb />
Pirate Cagers Outscore WCC Quint<lb />
The Box Score<lb />
Western Carolina College<lb />
Seal .<lb />
Murray<lb />
Gustafson<lb />
Thorpe<lb />
Gibson<lb />
Peterson<lb />
Benson<lb />
Lovelle<lb />
Home<lb />
Greene<lb />
. 3<lb />
4<lb />
1<lb />
7<lb />
11<lb />
1<lb />
1<lb />
5<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
ft<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
5<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
5<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
pf tp<lb />
3 7<lb />
4<lb />
3<lb />
5<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
3<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
8<lb />
2<lb />
19<lb />
23<lb />
2<lb />
4<lb />
15<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
Totals 24 14 21 82<lb />
East Carolina College<lb />
fg ft pf<lb />
Smith<lb />
West<lb />
Otte<lb />
Lewis<lb />
Clayton<lb />
Lowes<lb />
Bowen<lb />
Wicker<lb />
Starrett<lb />
Respess<lb />
Foiues<lb />
Totals<lb />
W. C. C.<lb />
E. C. C.<lb />
9<lb />
7<lb />
3<lb />
10<lb />
7<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
3<lb />
4<lb />
3<lb />
0<lb />
8<lb />
2<lb />
1<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
1<lb />
4<lb />
3<lb />
4<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
0<lb />
tp<lb />
21<lb />
18<lb />
9<lb />
20<lb />
22<lb />
2<lb />
1<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
2<lb />
0<lb />
With three players netting over 20<lb />
points each, ECC defeated WCC 97-<lb />
82 in Memorial Gymnasium Friday<lb />
night. Cotton Clayton, Don Smith<lb />
and Charles Lewis, scored 22, 21, and<lb />
20 points, respectively, for the win-<lb />
ners. The fast-breaking East Caro-<lb />
lina cage quint rolled to an impres-<lb />
sive first half advantage, and then<lb />
settled down to toy with Western Car-<lb />
olina. The Bucs held a 51-39 margin<lb />
t half time, and the Pirates never<lb />
were seriously threatened during the<lb />
final half of action.<lb />
WCC stayed in a man for man de-<lb />
fense, which backfired as Charlie<lb />
Lewis and Cotton Clayton broke the<lb />
visiting defense into small pieces<lb />
with their extreme quickness. Bill<lb />
Otte and Don Smith controlled the<lb />
visiting backboards, and Lacy West<lb />
contributed 18 points as this affort<lb />
proved fatal to the visitors.<lb />
Coach Jim Gudger was not all<lb />
pleased with the visitor's play. While<lb />
he felt that the Greenville crew has<lb />
the better ball club, he did not think<lb />
that there was much difference as<lb />
te score indicated. "My first five are<lb />
s good as any in the league the<lb />
WCC mentor said. "That was the sec-<lb />
ond worst game that we have played<lb />
this season The visiting coach went<lb />
on to vsay that his team percentage<lb />
shooting was only 38 per cent in com-<lb />
parison with about 45 per cent for the<lb />
past three outings. Coach Gudger is<lb />
hopeful that his young Freshman and<lb />
Sophomores will continue to improve.<lb />
The WCC coach has close to two<lb />
years to have his same five with him,<lb />
thus the Catamounts should be title<lb />
contenders in years to come.<lb />
38 21 16 97<lb />
29 5382<lb />
51 467<lb />
WRA Plans Sports Day<lb />
The Women's Recreation Associa-<lb />
tion is planning a Sports Day for the<lb />
high schools of Eastern North Caro-<lb />
lina. The schools have been invited to<lb />
participate in athetic events at ECC.<lb />
The intramural basketball games<lb />
are drawing to a close with Garrett<lb />
leading the dormitory division, and<lb />
Sigma Sigma Sigma leading the sor-<lb />
orty division.<lb />
Beginning Spring quarter, bad min-<lb />
ton, tennis and softball will be of-<lb />
fered in the intramural program.<lb />
Ex Villinova Cagers Lead Wyatt Earp Team<lb />
The prime favorite for the intra<lb />
mural basketball championship is the<lb />
Wyatt Earp quint without a question.<lb />
The Earp five consists of a talented<lb />
crew led by two former Villinova<lb />
varsity members. Richard LeFevre<lb />
and Billy Penney have aided the team<lb />
in accomplishing a 7-0 record prior<lb />
to Tuesday night's contest with the<lb />
Country Gentlemen.<lb />
Fevre is a 6'1" Sophomore from<lb />
n, New Jersey, averaging 18<lb />
er game. The rangy forward<lb />
im to a 22-0 record in New<lb />
lastic circles during his<lb />
in high school. LeFevre<lb />
Pilhnova's freshman team, I<lb />
and he was a reserve on the varsity<lb />
last season. He is laying out this sea-<lb />
son in order to he eligible for the<lb />
varsity at ECC during the 1961-62<lb />
campaign.<lb />
Penney is averaging 17 points per<lb />
contest in intramural activity, and<lb />
'his 6'3" Philadelphia, Pennsylvania<lb />
product, as his teammate LeFerve is<lb />
a former Villinova Freshman starter,<lb />
and he was a reserve for the Wild-<lb />
cats last season.<lb />
Of course, two men cannot possibly<lb />
be the whole team. The other starters<lb />
Buddy Wyatt, Jim Harris, and Bobby<lb />
Bumgardner have held own their po-<lb />
sitions in a creditable manner. Wat<lb />
Wyatt, an ex-East Carolina Freshman<lb />
starter stands 6'4" and has been in-<lb />
strumental under the boards, while<lb />
averaging in double figures for the<lb />
Earps. In the Independent League j<lb />
champions, Jimmy Harris has been<lb />
hitting consistently from his guard<lb />
(position. The Portsmouth Virginia<lb />
native is also an ex-ECC Freshman<lb />
cage member.<lb />
Another excellent rebounder for<lb />
this starting five has been Bob Bum-<lb />
garder, the star end of the East Caro-<lb />
lina football team. His rebound work<lb />
has paid high dividends for the Bucs.<lb />
Bumgarler at W2T is only a Sopho-<lb />
more.<lb />
CAPTAIN DON SMITH is seen here<lb />
in action in the Elon contest. The<lb />
senior forward plays his final con-<lb />
ference game against ACC Saturday<lb />
night in Wilson.<lb />
Notice!<lb />
Baseball practice began on<lb />
Wenesday, February 15, and<lb />
will be held everyday from 2-5<lb />
p.m. in Keel's Warehouse. Stu-<lb />
dents attending the practice ses-<lb />
sions are requested to wear old<lb />
clothes, according to Coach James<lb />
Mallory.<lb />
Smith Praises EC<lb />
Players' Efforts<lb />
What has been the answer to East<lb />
Carolina's surge in the point making<lb />
department which won the Buc quint<lb />
their last two outings by impressive<lb />
nargins? Coach Earl Smith has a<lb />
good explanation to the answer of<lb />
the .Pirate's showings in their last<lb />
two home contests. The EOC mentor<lb />
said, "an over-all team effort has<lb />
been the answer to our problems<lb />
While saying this, the Buc coach<lb />
can hack his words, thanks to the play<lb />
of is fine quint. "PlayeTs like Cot-<lb />
Ion Clayton, Lacy West, and Charlie<lb />
Lewis aid the cause a great deal<lb />
mentioned Coach Smith. "Of course,<lb />
Don Smith and Bill Otte, our other<lb />
two starters, have been playing fine<lb />
ball, and Benny Bowes has really been<lb />
in there<lb />
When asked how a team can score<lb />
16 points in the first half against<lb />
Atlantic Christian one week, and come<lb />
back and score 60 against Elon the<lb />
next week, the BCC coach replied,<lb />
'The boys were not as tense, and were<lb />
fitting more accurately We were<lb />
not doing anything different out<lb />
there, with the exception of working<lb />
the ball better, and getting set up<lb />
for more shots.<lb />
"That Cotton Clayton is a little<lb />
A11-American candidate in my book<lb />
and always will be claimed Coach<lb />
Smith. "He has played the greatest<lb />
basketball during his great career in<lb />
the past two weeks. Lacy West has I<lb />
come along in tremendous fashion,<lb />
and big boy, Otte, is not as tense as<lb />
he was at the first of the season<lb />
This has been a contributing factor<lb />
m the play of the big pivot man.<lb />
Captain Don Smith is not scoring<lb />
as many points as he was, but why<lb />
should he continue to shoot when his<lb />
team mates can take the load off<lb />
his shoulders? The Bucs fast break i<lb />
working beautifully, and Charlie<lb />
Lew,s is a prime factor in the success<lb />
of the ECC offense. "Charlie is <lb />
real hustler Coach Smith declared,<lb />
nd the Buc fans can see why this<lb />
Kinston native as been nothing but<lb />
spectacular. <lb />
?HARP MIOOTING I iri'<lb />
eorrmoMT  imi, rite coca-coi enwu, -. <lb />
BETWEENCLASSES<lb />
mth Gotoi? tag " feeUng<lb />
JstOsd wider authority of<lb />
COCA-COLA BOTTUNC mao.to<lb />
 COKPANY, GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb /></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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