<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038693_0001"/>
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East Carolina baseball team will be<lb/>
lio-t t Springfield College today<lb/>
alut Friday in a two game series.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
The SGA musical, "South Pacific"<lb/>
will continue its run tonight and Fri-<lb/>
day night. Students will be admitted<lb/>
by showing their I. D. cards.<lb/>
Volume XXXVI<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1961<lb/>
Number 22<lb/>
Students Elect Strother, 1961 SGA Prexy<lb/>
SGA Proposes Charge In<lb/>
Present Traffic Situation<lb/>
v a recent meeting of the Stu-<lb/>
ernmeat Association, the<lb/>
Si nate was reminded that<lb/>
t' the faculty would be ad-<lb/>
. to see "South Pacific<lb/>
Isniasion is by virtue of<lb/>
tssed earlier in the year<lb/>
Student Senate regarding the<lb/>
of faculty to the Enter-<lb/>
So ru-s.<lb/>
Munn reported that he had<lb/>
the postmaster of Green-<lb/>
erning the possibilities of<lb/>
 le-in-mail box here on<lb/>
s. Mann stated that the<lb/>
i  seemed to favour the idea,<lb/>
he bad no mail boxes of<lb/>
in Stock. The postmaster<lb/>
the S.G.A. President<lb/>
te a letter to him stating<lb/>
fcsons that the students felt<lb/>
. should have another mail<lb/>
the letter would probably be<lb/>
 rial in our obtaining the ad-<lb/>
kil box.<lb/>
e discussion, several peo-<lb/>
opinions that they<lb/>
mail service on the cam-<lb/>
both slow and inefficient,<lb/>
pas taken on this matter.<lb/>
Parking Problem<lb/>
1  campus parking problem was<lb/>
at length. Many ideas were<lb/>
. d by the Student Senate. Fi-<lb/>
nally, a motion was made seconded,<lb/>
and passed that the Student Senate<lb/>
recommend to the Policies Committee<lb/>
the following resolutions: "No fresh-<lb/>
man or student with less than a<lb/>
'C' average will be permitted to have<lb/>
a car. Special oases can be taken be-<lb/>
fore a board set uip by the Dean of<lb/>
Student Ajffairs Commuting stuw<lb/>
dents would fall into the category of<lb/>
special cases.<lb/>
The S.G.A. banquet will be April 4,<lb/>
1061. At this banquet the newly elect-<lb/>
ed officers will be installed.<lb/>
Committee Hears<lb/>
Case Of Accused<lb/>
Student Book Thief<lb/>
The Discipline Committee of the<lb/>
college met on March 10, to hear the<lb/>
case of "Student A freshman, ac-<lb/>
cused of selling stolen books to the<lb/>
i o4lege Book Store.<lb/>
Two English professors reported<lb/>
text books massing from their offices<lb/>
in Austin Bldg. These three missing<lb/>
texts were found among the texts<lb/>
which had been, sold as used books<lb/>
to the bookstore. The Bookstore man-<lb/>
ager produced the triplicate receipt,<lb/>
the social number of which had been<lb/>
recorded in the books at the time<lb/>
of the sale.<lb/>
The signature on this receipt was<lb/>
! that of "Student A After consider-<lb/>
ina towns next week. lne <lb/>
Over 2,250 Vote In Initial<lb/>
Election; Summers Named V P<lb/>
By JASPER JONES<lb/>
Otis Strother, a Junior music ma- than boys in this election Shepherd<lb/>
OTIS STROTHER . . . newly elected<lb/>
SGA President. At left, students com-<lb/>
pare names with faces before casting<lb/>
their ballots.<lb/>
Men's Glee Club Tours<lb/>
Eastern NC Next Week<lb/>
Ei -t Carolina Men's Glee Club<lb/>
dee a tour of two eastern<lb/>
Hitler Image<lb/>
Student Writes To Hitlers Former Interpreter<lb/>
, will sing in Tarboro at the<lb/>
 boo at 1U:30 a.m. March 2lJ<lb/>
wi . journey to Washington<lb/>
2:00 pan. concert.<lb/>
Glee Club is the young-<lb/>
oreJ group on the campus, hav-<lb/>
een organized this school year<lb/>
the direction of Charles Stev-<lb/>
metnbor of the Music Depart-<lb/>
 faculty. The group now boasts<lb/>
mbership of 50, with members<lb/>
almost every- department on the<lb/>
us and from several states.<lb/>
ie of both a serious and a<lb/>
nature will be offered on the<lb/>
Sacred uurabesa by Pales-<lb/>
Bach, and Mendelssohn will be<lb/>
' :  r i; umbers will include<lb/>
 ;p of S:uruuals, a Calypso, and<lb/>
Medley fiom the papular musical<lb/>
ihomsu"<lb/>
 will be Ann Darden, Jerry<lb/>
M. B. Godbold, Mike Kil-<lb/>
k and Bill New berry. Accom-<lb/>
Brett Watson.<lb/>
ible questioning by the committee,<lb/>
 Student A" admitted taking the<lb/>
three texts from the offices in Aus-<lb/>
tin Building und selling them.<lb/>
The committee recommended that<lb/>
"Student A" make financial restitu-<lb/>
;i n to the college book store for the<lb/>
amount received in the sale of the<lb/>
books, and that "Student A" be sus-<lb/>
pended from East Carolina College<lb/>
for one year, (until summer session<lb/>
1962) and that he be placed on aca-<lb/>
demic probation for one quanter upon<lb/>
readmittance.<lb/>
"Is Khrushchev another Hitler?"<lb/>
This was the question that Tommy<lb/>
CuLbreth, an EC student, wanted an-<lb/>
swered when he wrote to Dr. Paul<lb/>
Sol in li dt, former interpreter far Hit-<lb/>
ler.<lb/>
Dr. Schmidt answered Tommy's<lb/>
letter promptly and stated that he<lb/>
would answer any further questions.<lb/>
Prior to Nazi seizure of Germany,<lb/>
Dr. Schmidt was appointed Chief<lb/>
Interpreter and Ambassador. Later<lb/>
he served as Hitler's personal inter-<lb/>
preter. In 1945 Dr. Schmidt assumed<lb/>
the duties of his present adminis-<lb/>
trative post in Munich.<lb/>
In his letter, Tommy asked if Khru-<lb/>
shchev's ambitions and ideas are sim-<lb/>
ilar to those of Hitler and if Russia<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
fas more flexible in his methods and<lb/>
seems to be more convinced of being<lb/>
able to achieve his ultimate objec-<lb/>
tives than Hitler was. The latter was<lb/>
in a hurry to do things in his life-<lb/>
time, while Khrushchev is less anx-<lb/>
ious ito produce results immediately<lb/>
and thinks that there is plenty of<lb/>
time at hand<lb/>
At present Dr. Schmidt is Direc-<lb/>
tor of the Sfprachen-und Dilmets-<lb/>
clier Institute in Munich, Germany.<lb/>
Governor Sanford Designates<lb/>
Physical Therapy Week In N C<lb/>
jor, was elected to the office of Pres-<lb/>
ident of the Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation last Thursday, March 16.<lb/>
He won out over his opponent, Ray-<lb/>
mond Cillikin, by a vote of 1498 to<lb/>
771.<lb/>
Merle Summers, a business major,<lb/>
defeated Ken Trogden by a vote of<lb/>
1224 to 1086 for the job of vice-<lb/>
iwesident.<lb/>
Nancy Coggins and Bob Ward ran<lb/>
unopposed for the offices of secre-<lb/>
tary and treasurer, respectively.<lb/>
Jimmy Ohestnuit defeated Malcolm<lb/>
Burriss for the position of assistant<lb/>
treasurer by 1528 votes to Burriss'<lb/>
58S. There was a runoff between<lb/>
Jayne Chandler and Giles Hopkins<lb/>
for the office of historian.<lb/>
Judiciary Positions<lb/>
Winners of Men's Judiciary spots<lb/>
were Don Graziano, chairman (un-<lb/>
opposed); Doug Robinson, vice-chair-<lb/>
man; Jerry Person, secretary-treas-<lb/>
urer (unopposed); and Fred Wright,<lb/>
member-at-large. There was a run-<lb/>
off vote between Ronnie Hickman<lb/>
and Floyd Hardison, Jr. for the sec-<lb/>
ond office of member-at-large.<lb/>
Women's Judiciary winners were<lb/>
Barbara Schwab, chairman (upop-<lb/>
josed); Faye Abernathy, vice-chair-<lb/>
man; and Ellen Wilson, member-at-<lb/>
larngc. There were run-off votes be<lb/>
Through the cooperation of Gov- ercises. Included also is the motiva-<lb/>
ernor Terry Sanford, this week hastion oi the patient and teaching the<lb/>
patient or relative follow-up proced-<lb/>
been designated as Physical Therapy<lb/>
Week in North Carolina.<lb/>
The purpose of Physical Therapy<lb/>
Week is to bring the (profession of<lb/>
Physical Therapy before the general<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
Shepherd indicated that the in-<lb/>
crease of campus interest in the stu-<lb/>
dent elections may have been stimu-<lb/>
lated by discussion of such perennial<lb/>
subjects as the Entertainment Com-<lb/>
mittee and student interest in the S.<lb/>
G.A.<lb/>
Need For Simple Ballot<lb/>
Shepherd said that he was "glad<lb/>
that the election had gone so smooth-<lb/>
y and that so many people had vot-<lb/>
d He added that there had been<lb/>
some complaint about the number of<lb/>
candidates on the official ballot. "I<lb/>
hci;e that the ballot will be simpler<lb/>
next year he added.<lb/>
When asked about means of simpli-<lb/>
fying the ballot, Shepherd said that<lb/>
he was in favor of some program<lb/>
which would elect marshalls accord-<lb/>
ing to achievement in college work.<lb/>
"I plan to introduce some measures<lb/>
into the S.GJA. soon he said. "There<lb/>
are many people who agree with me<lb/>
on a new system for the choice of<lb/>
marshalls he added.<lb/>
Organization Increases Interest<lb/>
During the days preceding the el-<lb/>
ections, a new organization on cam-<lb/>
pus, the Association of Student's Po-<lb/>
lemics, distributed a "Tractus on<lb/>
S.G.A. Elections, 1961 The paper<lb/>
discussed and criticized the candi-<lb/>
tween Cynthia Kennedy and Dottie dates' Paf and S.G.A. activi<lb/>
Spence<lb/>
cnuld be following the same patternj public, to make a combined and joint<lb/>
of Pre-War Germany. Dr. Schmidt fcffort to interest the people of North<lb/>
Carolina in this work, and to coun-<lb/>
Attention: Juniors<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
Junior Class, Monday at 6:30 pm<lb/>
in 123 Austin. Decisions concern-<lb/>
ing the forthcoming Junior-Sen-<lb/>
ior will be made and its progress<lb/>
discussed. All Juniors are urged<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
replied:<lb/>
I do not think that the Soviet<lb/>
Union and the Satellites are follow-<lb/>
ing the footsteps of Hitler during<lb/>
the Pre-World War period. I believe<lb/>
that Mr. Khrushchev is a greater<lb/>
lealist than Hitler was and that his<lb/>
knowledge of conditions in other<lb/>
countries ami reactions of other na-<lb/>
tions is very much greater than Hit-<lb/>
ler's.<lb/>
"While Hitler indulged in brink-<lb/>
manship on several occasions, and got<lb/>
away with it until this method of<lb/>
conducting foreign policy lead to his<lb/>
final downfall, Khrushchev has so<lb/>
cil students who are interested in<lb/>
Physical Therapy as a profession.<lb/>
Physical Therapy is a health pro-<lb/>
fession  a profession whose pur-<lb/>
ipose is to aid the ill and handicapped<lb/>
to achieve maximum restoration of<lb/>
physical function. The duties of a<lb/>
(physical therapist concern them-<lb/>
selves primarily with administering<lb/>
treatment and correlating his efforts<lb/>
and objectives with those of other<lb/>
health services concerned wibh the<lb/>
patient.<lb/>
Physical therapy procedures in-<lb/>
clude the use of heat by means of<lb/>
uies to be used at home, particularly<lb/>
in exercise routines, the use and care<lb/>
of braces, wheelchairs, crutches and<lb/>
other prosthetic devices.<lb/>
On March 18th, an openhouse was<lb/>
held in the Physical Thenatpy Depart-<lb/>
ment at North Carolina Memorial<lb/>
Hospital, Chapel Hill; the film, "The<lb/>
Return will be shown over Channel<lb/>
7, WITN, on Sunday, March 26th;<lb/>
Sherman Husted interviewed a phy-<lb/>
sical therapist on his program, "Car-<lb/>
olina Today on Monday, March 20.<lb/>
Any interested person is invited to<lb/>
visit the Rocky Mount Physical Ther-<lb/>
apy Clinic during Physical Therapy<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
far always been reluctant to accept diathermy, infra red, hot packs and<lb/>
undue risks. Hitler was stubborn ad whirlpools, massage, muscle testing,<lb/>
rigid like Stalin, while Khrushchev' and most important, corrective ex-<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
There will be a Unitarian Fel-<lb/>
lowship Sunday, March1 26, at<lb/>
8:00 pm. The Rev. Ken Marshall<lb/>
will give a talk on Liberal Re-<lb/>
ligion and Politics. Discussion to<lb/>
follow.<lb/>
for secretary-treasurer and<lb/>
Dot-tie Hicks and Mary Ann Penning-<lb/>
trn for a second member-at-large.<lb/>
The final results of the voting<lb/>
were released Monday after a re-<lb/>
check of the official ballots. All run-<lb/>
off voiring was held today from 12:00<lb/>
to 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Otis Strother listed a more active<lb/>
student government as the prime ob-<lb/>
jective of his platform. He remarked<lb/>
on student apathy and called for<lb/>
moie representation on S.G.A. stand-<lb/>
ing committees. Raymond Gillikin's<lb/>
first suggested campus improvement<lb/>
on his platform was recognition for<lb/>
(honor students. He advocated more<lb/>
honor societies to "create incentive"<lb/>
and make E.C.C. students more in-<lb/>
dustrious.<lb/>
Votes Increase 550<lb/>
There were 2,350 votes cast at the<lb/>
poles on Thursday. This is a 550<lb/>
vote increase over last year's total<lb/>
of 1800. Voting at the girl's dormi-<lb/>
tories was heaviest during the morn-<lb/>
ing, according to Woody Shepherd,<lb/>
elections chairman. Day student vot-<lb/>
ing was small in comparison to votes<lb/>
cast by dormitory students. "There<lb/>
were definitely more girls voting<lb/>
Baton-Dancer, Laverne Blackley, Captures Miss Greenville Title<lb/>
By MONTY MILLS<lb/>
A lovely East Cax-olina College<lb/>
freshman captured the audience and<lb/>
he covn.ed Miss Greenville title last<lb/>
Tft rsday night in Wright Auditor -<lb/>
 ni with her exotic fire-baton dance<lb/>
routine.<lb/>
f averse Bilackley received her jew-<lb/>
eVd crown from Miss North Caro-<lb/>
in the loveily Ann Herring.<lb/>
The sensuous beauty donned a gold-<lb/>
sequin nod costume, with matching<lb/>
headband and slippers, for her per-<lb/>
formance of a ritualistic dance for<lb/>
the talent portion of the pageant.<lb/>
The 19 year old beauty, with the<lb/>
uoise of a veteran contest winner,<lb/>
cmnrinded the undivided attention<lb/>
of the audience as she appeared in<lb/>
the swim suit and evening gown di-<lb/>
visions of the contest. And her viva-<lb/>
ciouine&amp;s soon proclaimed her a fa-<lb/>
vorite with the enthusiastic audience.<lb/>
Laverne was crowned in the stun-<lb/>
riinr white gown that she wore ear-<lb/>
Mer in the evening gown competition.<lb/>
Laverne, who was sponsored by the<lb/>
Alpha Phi sorority, is a 1960 gradu-<lb/>
ate of Dunham High School.<lb/>
The Miss Greenville title was one<lb/>
of many honors achieved by Laverne<lb/>
for her talent and poise. She was<lb/>
named Miss Majorette of North Car-<lb/>
olina in 1958 and 1959, Miss Congen-<lb/>
iality of Majorette Queen of Ameri-<lb/>
ca contest in 1959, and Majorette<lb/>
Queen of the East in I960. Laverne<lb/>
is a physical education major here,<lb/>
and she was a majorette for the EC's<lb/>
Pirate marching band.<lb/>
Contest Prizes<lb/>
As the winner of (the Miss Green-<lb/>
ville contest, Laverne received a full<lb/>
year's scholarship tuition at East<lb/>
Carolina, aflong with a new evening<lb/>
formal, and n new swim suit and<lb/>
other gifts donated by Greenville<lb/>
merchants. Jolinda Brewer, as first<lb/>
runner-up received a $100 scholar-<lb/>
ship to EC along with other mer-<lb/>
chandise gifts. Juilaine Cannon, as<lb/>
country<lb/>
Referring to President Kennedy's<lb/>
inaugural address, she was asked<lb/>
what she could do for her country.<lb/>
"We can get out and work for bet-<lb/>
ter men and women to represent us<lb/>
in foreign countries Laverne re-<lb/>
ported.<lb/>
The other finalists were: Patsy<lb/>
Jones, who sang "Ain't Misbehavin<lb/>
Gail Walser, who did a comet solo<lb/>
"An Affair to Remember and Bar-<lb/>
bara Graham, who did an original<lb/>
dance number.<lb/>
Arlene Harrington, Anna Lynette<lb/>
Hobbs. Alhce B. Starr, and Mary<lb/>
Anne Peranington were the other four<lb/>
contestants.<lb/>
Jaycee president, George Coffman,<lb/>
welcomed the audience, and (Dr. Bad-<lb/>
ger D. Clark, Jr. was general chair-<lb/>
man. This year's pageant was dedi-<lb/>
crfed to a former Miss Greenville<lb/>
contestant. Miss Rachel Spivey, who<lb/>
was killed in an automobile accilent<lb/>
ties in general and called for more<lb/>
student interest in campus govern-<lb/>
ment. The discussion created by the<lb/>
"Tractus" was culminated by a panel<lb/>
discussion on S.G.A. problems on the<lb/>
ampus radio last Wednesday night,<lb/>
March 15.<lb/>
Jim Speight, S.G.A. President,<lb/>
said that he was pleased with stu-<lb/>
dent turn-out at the polls. "I hope<lb/>
that the larger vote is indicative of<lb/>
increased student interest in campus<lb/>
government Speight said. "Of<lb/>
course, a 2,350 vote out of a student<lb/>
body of nearly six thousand is not<lb/>
as good as it should be, but we think<lb/>
that there is a definite trend toward<lb/>
Iveavier voting<lb/>
Speight and Shepherd both expres-<lb/>
sed their appreciation for the help<lb/>
eceived from the campus radio, W.<lb/>
W.W.S. and the BAST CAROLIN-<lb/>
IAN, which ran a special elections<lb/>
issue on Wednesday, March 15.<lb/>
MARSHALLS<lb/>
There were sixty-eight candid-<lb/>
for the position of Marshall. The<lb/>
fifteen winners, listed in descendinr<lb/>
nunnbers of votes from the candidate<lb/>
with the highest vote (856) were<lb/>
Nancy Coggins, Julaine Cannon,<lb/>
Theresa McDamiels, Barbara Ann<lb/>
Ellis, Libby Cooke, Jean Lasater,<lb/>
Elizabeth Taylor, Rebecca Singleton,<lb/>
Carole Anne Ranfcin, Ellie Speck-<lb/>
rrian, Suzie Street, Diana Foster,<lb/>
Donna Ann Parker, Kay Priest, and<lb/>
Beth Harris.<lb/>
There was a run-off this after-<lb/>
noon between Peggy Daniels and<lb/>
Cathy Shesso for alternate position.<lb/>
Her dress was white silk organza. Kodak Camera outfit, a blouse, swea<lb/>
Italian lace sprinkled with pearls Jter, and other gifts. Each of the con-<lb/>
and sequins.<lb/>
First Runner-up<lb/>
Jolinda Brewer, a Greenville native,<lb/>
rMd a 'Charleston' routine from the<lb/>
flapper days of the (rearing twenties,<lb/>
to win her the position of first run-<lb/>
ner-up. She is a freshman, and was<lb/>
sponsored by the Sigma, Sigma, Sig-<lb/>
ma sorority.<lb/>
Second nunner-up in the pageant<lb/>
was Juilaine Cannon who sang 'I<lb/>
Can't Say No' from the broadway<lb/>
musical CarouseP. Julaine, a junior,<lb/>
' - if to riht Julaine Cannon, second runner-up; Laverne Black- was sponsored bv the Delta Zeta sor-<lb/>
MISS GRFFNVCLLE IS OWND c;7olinda Brewer, first runner-up.<lb/>
ley, Miss Greenville; Ann Herring, Miss nonn <lb/>
second irunner-up, was presented a I test winter.<lb/>
Pageant judges were: Jtm Reed,<lb/>
W. E. Debnam, Mr. and Mrs. Bugs<lb/>
Barringer and Mrs. Bfcert S. Peel,<lb/>
ority in the beauty pageant.<lb/>
testants received a geld charm brace<lb/>
let.<lb/>
Iiaverne skillfully handled the 3<lb/>
important questions asked the six<lb/>
finalists by Master of Ceremonies,<lb/>
Bob Ray of BuTlftngton.<lb/>
Commenting on the current fash-<lb/>
ion trend of shorter skirts, she said,<lb/>
'It's up to the individual and I like<lb/>
mine below my knees<lb/>
Wnen asked if she would encour-<lb/>
ap-e her husband to continue his dan-<lb/>
rrerous career if he were an astro-<lb/>
naut, ahe replied, "I would encour-<lb/>
age him in that it would Help our<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
Election Candidates<lb/>
All students with a C average<lb/>
who are interested in filing for<lb/>
any class offices should submit<lb/>
thvir names by letter to the El-<lb/>
ections Committee care of SGA<lb/>
stating the office for which they<lb/>
are filing. Deadline for filing is<lb/>
Thursday. March 30.<lb/>
Woodrow Shepherd<lb/>
Elections Chairman<lb/>
Playhouse Schedules<lb/>
'Simple Simon' Tryouts<lb/>
Trvouts for the annual East Caro-<lb/>
'ina Playhouse children's play will be<lb/>
held in Austin Auditorium on March<lb/>
27 at 7:00 pjn. This year's produc-<lb/>
tion will be an adaption of the famil-<lb/>
iar nursery story "Simple Simon<lb/>
The children's play, which has been<lb/>
a traditional feature of E.C.Cs<lb/>
drama season for a number of years,<lb/>
will play on the caimpus and will also<lb/>
tour local schools. The proceeds of<lb/>
the production will go to the Ameri-<lb/>
can Association of University Wom-<lb/>
en.<lb/>
Tommy Hull, technicad supervisor<lb/>
of the Playhouse, wili direct "Simple<lb/>
Simon "I flunk that 'Simple Simon'<lb/>
is an excellent choice for production<lb/>
Tommy stated. "The children's play<lb/>
is always popular with the local<lb/>
school children, and the actors us-<lb/>
ually enjoy it even more<lb/>
"We hope there wfll be a good<lb/>
turn-out Monday, because there are<lb/>
a number of (good parts in the play<lb/>
Tommy added. "T3j proceeds are,<lb/>
of course, going to a really worthy<lb/>
organization<lb/>
Last year's children's play, "Jack<lb/>
and the BeanBtaBc played to large<lb/>
audiences of cottage students as well<lb/>
as local school children.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038693_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINI AN<lb/>
THURSDAY, MARCH 23, <lb/>
toi<lb/>
1<lb/>
1A<lb/>
se<lb/>
el<lb/>
w<lb/>
s<lb/>
S<lb/>
Student Elections Provide<lb/>
Unusual Campaigns<lb/>
The Student Government elections hit the<lb/>
campus last week with perhaps more force<lb/>
and interest from the student body (and<lb/>
certainly from a few groups) than experi-<lb/>
enced in previous years. This was evidenced<lb/>
by the turn out at the polls, material dis-<lb/>
tributed by non - candidates, an attempted<lb/>
debate between the two presidential can-<lb/>
didates which terminated in a discussion<lb/>
about the SGA and its functions, and new<lb/>
techniques of campaigning by the candidates<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
At the climax of this election perhaps<lb/>
a few campaign tactics have been realized.<lb/>
For example, where and when to give a cam-<lb/>
paign speech. Campaigning is campaigning,<lb/>
even if it is chosen not to call it that.<lb/>
Where and when to give a campaign<lb/>
speech is not at an organized sorority func-<lb/>
tion, and it is not without permission to do<lb/>
such. This probably is realized and perhaps<lb/>
will stand as an example for future candi-<lb/>
dates.<lb/>
If the impression was given at the above<lb/>
mentioned function that one of the candi-<lb/>
dates was omitted from this publication, we<lb/>
would like to correct such an idea. When the<lb/>
news article concerning the candidates for<lb/>
SGA offices for the March 9 issue was com-<lb/>
piled, two men were in the race for the pres-<lb/>
idency and tiro men and thedr platforms<lb/>
went to press. After going to press, we were<lb/>
informed of the change in the candidates.<lb/>
It was not meant to be implied that the<lb/>
East Carolinian had overlooked a candidate,<lb/>
but somehow this was the idea conveyed to<lb/>
those preser.<lb/>
How did the candidate mentioned get on<lb/>
the ballot after the deadline for filing? In<lb/>
the present Elections Constitution, it is<lb/>
stated that a student may place his name on<lb/>
the ballot after the deadline for filing if he<lb/>
has a petition for such signed by 30 students.<lb/>
According to the Elections Chairman, this<lb/>
was the case here.<lb/>
There were many flaws and loopholes<lb/>
in this 1961 election. Probably heading the<lb/>
list would be the eligibility and selection of<lb/>
marshals. Requirements for marshals at the<lb/>
present boil down to merely possessing an<lb/>
average of C. This seems to be a poor method<lb/>
of selecting marshals since there is really no<lb/>
honor, only popularity, involved in the pro-<lb/>
cess. We understand that the Elections Com-<lb/>
mittee is in the stage of investigating the<lb/>
possibility of making this position one of<lb/>
scholastic honor rather than popularity.<lb/>
A point of interest lies in the fact that<lb/>
every SGA office will be filled this year by<lb/>
a fraternity man or a sorority woman Per-<lb/>
haps this means that the Greeks on cam-<lb/>
pus are the ones who are most interested<lb/>
m the affairs of the school. It does not nec-<lb/>
essarily mean they are the most capable ones<lb/>
to fill these positions, but it does show us<lb/>
where the concern lies.<lb/>
In the judiciary- positions, the chairman<lb/>
of the men's judiciary and the vice-chairman<lb/>
of the women's judiciary are independents<lb/>
with the remaining of the offices going to<lb/>
students belonging to a fraternity or soror-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
To the newly elected SGA president,<lb/>
Otis Strother, we extend our congratulations<lb/>
and offer our support for a successful term<lb/>
in 1961-62. With cooperation from the stu-<lb/>
dents and the backing of a strong senate, it<lb/>
is possible for him to reap many a success<lb/>
in SGA endeavors.<lb/>
In this period filled with the growing<lb/>
pains which the college is undergoing, he<lb/>
will need all of the cooperation and support<lb/>
we can possibly give him.<lb/>
LITTLE MAN<lb/>
AMPUS<lb/>
'Sleepy Little Town, Feature<lb/>
Southern Hospitality<lb/>
'1 CAN'T SIGN YOUfc PETITION TO DKOP MYCXPfil VS&amp;<lb/>
YOUK F" TO EOUAUZfc AY 6KAP6 D10T&amp;1WHOM<lb/>
Praises To The College<lb/>
By PAT<lb/>
Nestled along the banks of the<lb/>
Tren-t and Neuse Rivers is a sleepy<lb/>
little town called New Bern. New<lb/>
Bern has risen to national promin-<lb/>
ence lately with the restoration of<lb/>
Vryon's Palace, a majestic structure<lb/>
which faces the city proper with the<lb/>
grandeur of a lioness. But, althougth<lb/>
New Bern w noted for its historic<lb/>
sites, (examples: the Palace, the<lb/>
Presbyterian and Episcopal Churches,<lb/>
lovely, odd homes), a stranger does<lb/>
not pamtieuAairly notice them. He is<lb/>
more impressed with the friendliness<lb/>
of its people. Citizens greet newcom-<lb/>
ers with warm smiles and neighborly<lb/>
conversation. New Bern reeks with<lb/>
the forgotten art of "Southern Hos-<lb/>
pitality The men and women are<lb/>
gracious hosts and hostesses who<lb/>
sihow genuine concern for the welfare<lb/>
of their guests.<lb/>
Can you imagine the delight of<lb/>
walking down a brick-laid street and<lb/>
stopping to converse with a gentle,<lb/>
dignified Negro named Amos about<lb/>
Students Praise White Ball Participation<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Each Winter Quarter Alpha Phi<lb/>
Omega, Natonal Service Fraternity,<lb/>
sponsors the traditional White Ball.<lb/>
The purpose of the White Ball is to<lb/>
raise money for some helpful organi-<lb/>
zation. In 1960, the fraternity gave<lb/>
$150.00 to 'the Crippled Children's<lb/>
Fund, and we hope to give close to<lb/>
$100.00 tihds year.<lb/>
The chairman of the White Ball<lb/>
Committee was John Hart, social<lb/>
chairman of the fraternity. He and<lb/>
his committee made the foundation<lb/>
on which the fraternity built the<lb/>
White Ball.<lb/>
The White Bam and its meaning<lb/>
'has become a keystone in campus<lb/>
life. The climax of the bail is the<lb/>
"Grand Procession" of brothers, their<lb/>
dates, and sponsors for the White<lb/>
Ball Queen. This year Miss Mary<lb/>
Elizabeth Gardner sponsored by Kap-<lb/>
pa Alpha became White BaH Queen<lb/>
for 1961.<lb/>
We in Alpha Phi Omega would like<lb/>
to thank everyone on and off campus<lb/>
Bohunk, Retired<lb/>
Jersey Mark End<lb/>
Of Administration<lb/>
By PAT HARVEY<lb/>
Last week we were fortunate in<lb/>
having several "firsts" on this campus<lb/>
such as: Otis Strother as the new<lb/>
SGA president, over 2300 voters, and<lb/>
Paul Newman at the free movie. But,<lb/>
another "first" (at least I hope it is)<lb/>
didnt create such a nice impression.<lb/>
Perhaps the chairman of the elec-<lb/>
tions committee needed someone to<lb/>
count votes but did he have to swear<lb/>
in two of the candidates? After hear-<lb/>
ing of this unusual feature of the<lb/>
elections who can be surprised if a<lb/>
recount is requested.<lb/>
Another questionable incident was<lb/>
how can a person have 300 votes and<lb/>
hen several hours later have only<lb/>
250?<lb/>
who co-operated so graciously with<lb/>
us. Without the help of others and<lb/>
student participation, the purpose<lb/>
of AJ.0. "Leadership, Friendship,<lb/>
and Service" represented in the<lb/>
White Ball, would not have been pos-<lb/>
BabJe.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
William EHey<lb/>
President Elect Thanks<lb/>
Student Supporters<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I would like to express my appre-<lb/>
ciation to all who participated and<lb/>
helped in any way with my election<lb/>
of last week.<lb/>
I would like to thank the student<lb/>
body as a whole on the growing in-<lb/>
terest which was shown at the elec-<lb/>
tion by the (largest number of votes<lb/>
cast at the polls in several years. I<lb/>
hope this is a sign that there will<lb/>
be a reawakening- of students and<lb/>
student interest in the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association here at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
I hope that the students who sup-<lb/>
ported me in the election and those<lb/>
who supported my worthy opponent<lb/>
will help in any way possible to sup-<lb/>
port the SGA in the coming year. It<lb/>
k also my wish that at any time if<lb/>
any student has a problem or an<lb/>
idea, if he will bring it by the SGA<lb/>
office, either I personally, or some-<lb/>
one serving with me, will be glad to<lb/>
help him.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Otis Strother<lb/>
SGA President Elect<lb/>
Early Morning Writing Dilema<lb/>
By JIM STINGLEY, JR.<lb/>
Here it is, 7:30 a.m. and I am sup- may proceed with the proceedings,<lb/>
posed to write a column. Have you I shan't promise anything and, as you<lb/>
ever tried to write a column at 7:30 know, you probably won't get any-<lb/>
ajm and have it make sense? I do thing . . . but thats the risk you run<lb/>
seriously doubt that you have. But when you read my columns. "Ainyhoo<lb/>
that's what I'm supposed to accom- here goes <lb/>
Peeping toms and nude ballerinas<lb/>
seem to be taking the campus spot-<lb/>
light as spring makes its long await-<lb/>
ed arrival. Cotten Dorm, haven for<lb/>
pretty little coeds, and Ancient Aus-<lb/>
tin, home of Engkah and history, are<lb/>
the spots that the Phantom has si-<lb/>
lently struck. Whoever he is, he has<lb/>
certainly proved one thing. That is<lb/>
tihe iact that it doesn't take much<lb/>
to be a peeping torn these days. As<lb/>
for Austin, well, maybe the poor fel-<lb/>
low liked the organ music.<lb/>
Sad news for campus sentimen-<lb/>
tals! Austin Building is getting the<lb/>
ax. Go ahead and laugh . . . but 111<lb/>
miss it. Someone suggested that the<lb/>
cdllege save its dome and make a<lb/>
sort of a campus shrine, respect for<lb/>
the old? Wilson Dorm is another<lb/>
oldie that's on the way out . .<lb/>
It's getting- that time again. The<lb/>
squirrels aren't even maikng a move- Port City and its fanny flowers are<lb/>
plish, and I must please my superi<lb/>
ors, as well as you.<lb/>
Well, what can I write about? The<lb/>
elections are over, spring has sprung,<lb/>
it isn't time for Wilmington, and<lb/>
Johanson has gone home. Of course<lb/>
I could write about sex, sin, and deg-<lb/>
radation, but to write about some-<lb/>
thing such as that, one must have<lb/>
experience and everyone knows I have<lb/>
no such experience. And then I could<lb/>
always tell about the wonderful as-<lb/>
sortment of spring drinks that can<lb/>
be concocted with alcohol, hut there<lb/>
again one must have the experience,<lb/>
and everyone knows I never!<lb/>
Let's fcce it! At seven thirty in<lb/>
the morning there just isn't much to<lb/>
write about. The birds aren't singing<lb/>
(mainly because they haven't awak-<lb/>
ened yet), the bees aren't buzzing<lb/>
(they, too, are still asleep), and the<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
Published by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Patsy Elliott<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
Associate Editor <lb/>
News Editor <lb/>
Sports Editor  <lb/>
Feature Editor <lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
Photographer <lb/>
Photographer Assistant<lb/>
JoAnne Parks<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
 Pat Harvey<lb/>
 Marcelle Vogel<lb/>
 Jim Stingley, Jr.<lb/>
- Richard Boyd<lb/>
Jean Peace<lb/>
 B. D. Mills<lb/>
After reading Mr. Speight's list of<lb/>
achievements during his term of of-<lb/>
fice I feel that his year has been<lb/>
wasted. A bohunk trophy and a re-<lb/>
tired jersey is nice to have around<lb/>
but many of us feel that an achieve-<lb/>
menit should be something to benefit<lb/>
the student body, not the trophy case.<lb/>
Thanks and congratulations are<lb/>
again in order for Paul Minnis who<lb/>
is responsible for the set designs<lb/>
used in presenting South' Pacific. Mr.<lb/>
Minnis has worked on most of the<lb/>
Playhouse productions and his de-<lb/>
signs and hard work shouldn't go<lb/>
i.nappreciated as many jobs do on<lb/>
this campus.<lb/>
ment. (This is due to the fact that<lb/>
even squirrels know it doesn't make<lb/>
sense to run around at this in-human<lb/>
hour of the day).<lb/>
So here I sit, smoking a cigarette,<lb/>
contemplating, and -watching thirty<lb/>
thousand ants run up and down my<lb/>
nearly empty Old Spfce, It doesn't<lb/>
attract girls, but it gives those ants<lb/>
a 'helluva' big (party.<lb/>
I've finally thought of something<lb/>
calling. There are three types of<lb/>
stores downtown that are being pa-<lb/>
tronized because of this. The drug-<lb/>
istbore, the clothing store, and the<lb/>
house of alphabets.<lb/>
It's once again time to give advice<lb/>
to the lovelorn. Here's the advice . . .<lb/>
Dont!<lb/>
Someone had a dream the other<lb/>
nigtht . . . Seems they overthrew<lb/>
dhe SGA. The EC Underground<lb/>
to write about, so if you're ready, you strikes again!<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON.CAMPUS<lb/>
 Grover Smithwick<lb/>
 George Hathaway<lb/>
Cartoonist  jay Arledge, Gale Hammond<lb/>
Subscription Director  Melba Rhue<lb/>
Exchange Manager  Shelba Morris<lb/>
Columnists  Marcelle Vogel, Pat Farmer,<lb/>
Pat Harvey, Jasper Jones, Roy Martin, Jim<lb/>
Stingley, Jr Kay McLawhon, Mary Anne Pen-<lb/>
nington<lb/>
(Reporters  Marcelle Vogel. Jasper Jones, Jim<lb/>
Stingley, Jr Lewis Latham, Merle Summers,<lb/>
Ruth Johnson, Sylvia Vick, Mary Anne Penning-<lb/>
ton<lb/>
Circulation  Alpha Phi Omega Fraternity<lb/>
OFFICES on the second floor of Wright Building.<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264.<lb/>
From the "Rubayait of Omar Khayam<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety nor wtt<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line.<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word ef ft"<lb/>
translated bj E. Fitzgerald.<lb/>
The Sorority Spectacular which<lb/>
was held on campus recently should<lb/>
give the fraternity hoys an idea for<lb/>
a joint annual production. The show<lb/>
took a great deal of work from ail<lb/>
the girls, but after seeing the huge<lb/>
crowd before them, they undoubtedly<lb/>
felt that their time was not wasted.<lb/>
Kay McLawhon and Sophie Fishei<lb/>
deserve the extra hand of thanks.<lb/>
Many of our superiors feel that TV<lb/>
ih a waste of time, but after witness-<lb/>
ing the fabulous lug-rid Bergman's<lb/>
appearance this week they should be<lb/>
prepared to make allowances. Miss<lb/>
Bergman made another rare appear-<lb/>
ance and another Emmy should be cop-<lb/>
ped at the next presentation. Perbapa<lb/>
if we could watch talent such as this<lb/>
instead of situation timnsdlen and<lb/>
Loretta Young type series commer-<lb/>
cials wouldn't continue to be<lb/>
interesting- than the program.<lb/>
FARMER<lb/>
early, spring flowers? Have you felt<lb/>
the richness of being served dinner<lb/>
from antique silver? Or the lustful<lb/>
pleasure of sitting in a 'period room'<lb/>
and reveling in days gone by? All<lb/>
this is New Bern, and New Bern is<lb/>
all these things. Like the smell of<lb/>
Jiavender, and the feei of a fragile<lb/>
lace handkerchief, New Bern is a spot<lb/>
of the "old Soutir which belongs to<lb/>
North Caroliniansand to the union.<lb/>
Texas Fraternity Tries<lb/>
New Fad, Bed-Rolling<lb/>
(Editor's note: The following is<lb/>
taken Horn The Daily Texan, Uni-<lb/>
ensity o Texas, Jo EicJ-mann, Edi-<lb/>
tor; Gerhardt Elston, World Uni-<lb/>
versity Service, Philadelphia.)<lb/>
(UPS)BedHrolling, the new Ca-<lb/>
nadian and British college fad, hit<lb/>
Texas last week when a bed, mounted<lb/>
on tnree bicycle wheels, came f lying!<lb/>
down U.S. Highway 81 followed by 121<lb/>
Baylor University students, mem-j<lb/>
bers of the Rho Gamma Sigma, so-<lb/>
cial pre-law fraternity.<lb/>
This is the first incident of bed-<lb/>
rolling in the Southwest, according<lb/>
to the Daily Texan, University of<lb/>
Texas student newspaper. It is the<lb/>
first bed-rolling stunt in the United<lb/>
States that has come to the attention<lb/>
of the University Press Service.<lb/>
The Baylor group, working in four-<lb/>
man shifts, completed a 101-mile trip<lb/>
irom Waco to Austin, Texas. The<lb/>
Btunt was a kick-off for the frater-<lb/>
nity's Rebel Ball.<lb/>
Many of the bed-rolling marathons<lb/>
in Canada and England have been<lb/>
used to raise funds for the World<lb/>
University Service or similar Oam-<lb/>
pus drives. World University Service<lb/>
in the U.S. has suggested that Am-<lb/>
erican campuses might IMhg us-<lb/>
ing the new fad for the same pur-<lb/>
pose.<lb/>
The Baylor group, who left Waco<lb/>
the afternoon of Friday, March 10,<lb/>
made the 101-mile trip in 23 hours,<lb/>
4 minutes, non-stop. They were met<lb/>
along the highway Saturday morning<lb/>
by representatives of an Austin hotel<lb/>
who, hearing about the trip, had pre-<lb/>
pared four box lunches for the men<lb/>
and invited them to call at the hotel<lb/>
on arriving in Austin.<lb/>
The 12 fraternity men arrived at<lb/>
the hotel Saturday afternoon. The<lb/>
hotel sales manager had only ex-<lb/>
acted four of the group to stay at<lb/>
the hotel, but a Texas U.S. Senator,<lb/>
Wesley Roberts, offered to pay for<lb/>
half of the hotel rooms flor the group.<lb/>
The sales manager said he thought<lb/>
the hotel could make all necessary<lb/>
arrangements without accepting Rob-<lb/>
erts' offer.<lb/>
Everyone on the road was nice to<lb/>
us said one of the students. "Some<lb/>
of the people gave us food, and the<lb/>
highway ,patrol especiaily cooperat-<lb/>
ed ,f<lb/>
'Birds and Bees' Replace<lb/>
Shivering Countryside<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
Winter, having left its mark, has<lb/>
Bone, taking with it its barren coun-<lb/>
try side and shivering forests to<lb/>
leave in its place a whole new uni-<lb/>
verse of things awakening: birds and<lb/>
bees, trees and flowers, and beach<lb/>
lovers.<lb/>
With this delightful change in the<lb/>
air, changes are also occurring on<lb/>
campus. One important change, and<lb/>
foremost in the minds of the students<lb/>
s the recent change of SGA officers.<lb/>
We would like to congratulate this<lb/>
new slate of officers which the stu-<lb/>
dents elected, and to wish them well<lb/>
m their new and important tasks<lb/>
We are sure the students wffl sup-<lb/>
Port the new officer, as they in<lb/>
turn are here to support and to be the<lb/>
main voice of the student body.<lb/>
Also, with the spring sounds in<lb/>
Jhe air comes a selection of songs<lb/>
-having the enchanting touch of the<lb/>
South Sea fetes. This muc, need-<lb/>
" . "? is  from<lb/>
McGmros Auditorium where the be-<lb/>
loved musical "Soot Pacific" is be-<lb/>
ing performed by an excellent cast<lb/>
of EC students. So, if yo h<lb/>
already seen this musical be aura to<lb/>
seiJ tonifct or tomorrow night.<lb/>
Wrth  change in the weather, the<lb/>
construction of new hattdings Is also<lb/>
being dtacussed and planned. One<lb/>
such building i. the new Chapei.<lb/>
Ttaxjogfc, the time and efforts of<lb/>
the eight sororities on casnpns the<lb/>
pel Pan ha. had a  , ,<lb/>
t as ar aa financial help is con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
CongmtMlattem are in line to the<lb/>
sorority women for their fine per-<lb/>
formances on Friday the 10th.<lb/>
Aside from the worthy<lb/>
  number of ah,<lb/>
out to attend the aucoaesfui proma.<lb/>
Fwm  esMant reente, thia Is m<lb/>
type of entertainment which our cam-<lb/>
pus needs more of, k is a good laay<lb/>
to bring about closer reeatteaa r<lb/>
the students and H also provide, aa<lb/>
- of relaxing<lb/>
Spotlighting Scholarship<lb/>
Student delates Good Idea<lb/>
By ROY M ART IX<lb/>
The other day, we were down in the<lb/>
Kk<lb/>
shoppe, and happened to run into John<lb/>
son, former President of Phi Sigma Pj r<lb/>
teraity. In discussing the recent Student <lb/>
ernment Elections, Dobson came up with an<lb/>
idea which could be a means by which <lb/>
strengthen East Carolina Student Govern<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The idea which Dobson put forth en<lb/>
cerned the establishment, through the<lb/>
dent Government, a scholarship fund, which<lb/>
could have the potential to develo  futUr<lb/>
years into a program equivalent<lb/>
the Morehead and Angier B. Duke programs.<lb/>
Such a program as this, accordin<lb/>
Dobson, would not cause the SGA Treas<lb/>
to break out into a rash, because it couM<lb/>
possibly be realized through a<lb/>
.contributions. For example, on<lb/>
'tration day a table could be set<lb/>
the exit where each student coming<lb/>
Wright Auditorium would be asked to<lb/>
tribute ten cents. With a minimum of 3000<lb/>
.students coming through each registration<lb/>
the final sum would amount to $300. f<lb/>
was done each registration day. evenl<lb/>
approximately $1000 would be collected<lb/>
would be a fine start towards the building of<lb/>
a scholarship fund.<lb/>
Further, the Fraternities and -<lb/>
ties, who are always looking for service proj-<lb/>
ects, could enter into this program. These<lb/>
groups could canvass the dorms, or the town,<lb/>
or even put on special events such as the re-<lb/>
cent "Sorority Spectacular" to funds<lb/>
for this project. The other campus organiza-<lb/>
tions, departmental clubs, prof.<lb/>
honorary fraternities, and other grou<lb/>
assist, making this a total stud. fort<lb/>
If such an idea as this could be realized,<lb/>
the benefits received by the college could be<lb/>
tremendous. First, it would bring to the cam-<lb/>
pus more highly capable students. Thia would<lb/>
in turn, create an interest in other top stu-<lb/>
dents throughout the state and elsewhere,<lb/>
to investigate the college, and possibly en-<lb/>
roll here. Secondly, the Student Government,<lb/>
in steering this program, would be able to<lb/>
strengthen itself by creating a school spirit<lb/>
and interest by ghing the student body<lb/>
something to work for.<lb/>
Such a program as this is one that should<lb/>
not be passed off as impossible. It can be<lb/>
done. It should be done. We CHALLENGE<lb/>
the new SGA Officers to devise a plan around<lb/>
this idea and make it work!<lb/>
'Letter To The Editor' Contest<lb/>
This month two letters from the "Letter<lb/>
To The Editor" column will be selected as out-<lb/>
standing by the editorial staff of the East Caro-<lb/>
linian. The persons submitting the best two<lb/>
will recieve a free carton of Tareyton cigarette<lb/>
each.<lb/>
Letters will be selected on the basis of origi-<lb/>
nality in thought, composition, and pertinence.<lb/>
Letters regarding the parking and traffic<lb/>
problem on campus are encouraged.<lb/>
When Trees Hide School<lb/>
Education Terminates<lb/>
JReprinted from Council for Basic Education<lb/>
Bulletin<lb/>
A core curriculum is one in which the<lb/>
children bring apples to school and eat them<lb/>
and plant the cores in the school grounds.<lb/>
They watch them sprout and grow into leaves<lb/>
and blossoms, and then fruit. This is Science.<lb/>
They paste pieces of bark and twigs and<lb/>
leaves on paper and they paint pictures of<lb/>
the apples in a dish. This is Art.<lb/>
The children sit around under the trees<lb/>
singing "In the Shade of the Old Apple Tree<lb/>
This is Music. The story of Johnnv Appleseed<lb/>
is toM them. This is Library Study. They<lb/>
climb up in the tree and pick the apples. This<lb/>
is Physical Education.<lb/>
They count the apples, "taking away"<lb/>
the wormy ones. This is Arithmetic. In their<lb/>
own words, they tell what a tree is and what<lb/>
they felt when they saw the cores turn into<lb/>
trees. They also write letters to the National<lb/>
Apple Growers Association. This is Language<lb/>
Arts. Tiie gifted children do enriched re-<lb/>
search by reading Kilmer's "Trees" or by<lb/>
finding out about Isaac Newton, the Apple<lb/>
of Discord, the Garden of Eden, William<lb/>
Tell, and otber appiy-y events.<lb/>
They learn such words as arbor, I'arbre,<lb/>
Apfel, Bourn, manzana. Thi8 is Foreign Lan-<lb/>
guages.<lb/>
The boys build boxes fc store the apples.<lb/>
Tnia ia Industrial Arts. And the girls bake<lb/>
w1 nJ.sauee them and pie them. This is<lb/>
omatong. Then everyone eats them and<lb/>
iSSS. ,?ut " nutritional value. This is<lb/>
Hsalth Education,<lb/>
4AT!?ieJ. vities have been performed<lb/>
without a taxtbook or a workbook.<lb/>
- IP1 " Pes tf1 they take<lb/>
L1"88 n again  Dlnt them in the<lb/>
SrSS1 JPrefcy soon, you cannot see<lb/>
and of Education.  (Human Events)<lb/>
<pb facs="00038693_0003"/><lb/>
THL-BSPA.Y, MARCH 23, 1961<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Faculty Member<lb/>
Writes Article On<lb/>
Burmese Drama<lb/>
Hallway Gallery Features Civil<lb/>
War Drawings By Faculty Artist<lb/>
ctisoneees the Burmese dramatic<lb/>
in the Manx issue<lb/>
o<lb/>
of<lb/>
p Joseph A. Withey, faculty<lb/>
&amp;&amp; of the department of Eng-<lb/>
fonm, the pwe<lb/>
, The Guardian, national magazine<lb/>
Burma. He compares and con-<lb/>
the theater of the East and<lb/>
" West in his article "The Burmese<lb/>
;C rhrougfc Western Eyes<lb/>
Wit hey, director of dramatic<lb/>
 . .iu college is now on leave<lb/>
'arolina for a year's re-<lb/>
Hurma on theater arts of<lb/>
East He is studying abroad un-<lb/>
Ivng-ht grant. On completion<lb/>
,ok in Burma he plans to<lb/>
k on the pwe.<lb/>
. r4ch has the purpose, Dr.<lb/>
states, of providing "some<lb/>
for miutual understanding"<lb/>
r.r<lb/>
w  ej<lb/>
between Hast ami West, though, he<lb/>
 he may not "make a pwe-<lb/>
oat of a play-goer<lb/>
' Hi dboamdon of a pwe lproduc-<lb/>
tion centers attention on its inten-<lb/>
 amateurish nature; its lack<lb/>
f dramatic action and of dramatic<lb/>
ion; the interminable length of<lb/>
.ay, traditions of Burmese act-<lb/>
different from those of the West;<lb/>
the dancing and the music,<lb/>
.ranpe to Western eyes and ears.<lb/>
uninitiated Westerner, the<lb/>
at first seems to offer insur-<lb/>
tabfe obstacles to the aipprecia-<lb/>
at the form. Dr. Withey says.<lb/>
, acquaintance with the Bur-<lb/>
tjheetar, he concludes, convinces<lb/>
however, that though East is<lb/>
ad West is West, "the two<lb/>
and do meetand understand<lb/>
Twenty paintings and a series of<lb/>
drawiugs in Civil War subjects com-<lb/>
pose a current exhibition featuring<lb/>
the work of Donald R. Sexauer, a<lb/>
faculty artist. The show is open to<lb/>
the public and will be on view in the<lb/>
Hallway Gallery, Rawl building, until<lb/>
the end of March.<lb/>
Mr. Sexauer's paintings are all<lb/>
realistic, studies of people. The ar-<lb/>
tist's method is to develop his sub-<lb/>
ject in bright colors and then to<lb/>
apply a glaze of polymer plastic.<lb/>
Muted colors skillfully related to one<lb/>
another characterize the paintings.<lb/>
"Ail of the pictures Mr. Sexauer<lb/>
explained, "are life studies. First I<lb/>
made a sketch; then from the pre-<lb/>
liminary drawing I re-arranged de-<lb/>
tails in search of a satisfactory de-<lb/>
sign<lb/>
In "Child Looking at Butterfly<lb/>
the artist's little daughter Mae Lynn<lb/>
is pictured stooping in a setting of<lb/>
tall grasses to watch the bright col-<lb/>
ored insect.<lb/>
"Jury" might be described as a<lb/>
character study of a group of men<lb/>
in a moment of intense concentra-<lb/>
tion. "There's a catch in it Mr.<lb/>
Sexauer said, "for only eleven jurors<lb/>
are shown<lb/>
"Magic realism he said, "is illus-<lb/>
trated in 'Hill of Pebbles The paint-<lb/>
ing has as central figure a woman<lb/>
crossing a stony area and gracefuly I<lb/>
poised against a background of bare<lb/>
boughs.<lb/>
The five drawings are preliminary<lb/>
sketches for a portfolio of 20 prints<lb/>
on the Civil War on which Mr. Sex-<lb/>
from poems, newspapers, and maga-<lb/>
zines of the .period<lb/>
The exhibition is the first (here to<lb/>
present the work of Mr. Sexauer, who<lb/>
joined the faculty test September as<lb/>
a teacher of figure drawing.<lb/>
The artist, a native of Erie, Pen-<lb/>
nsylvania, attended the Norfolk Di-<lb/>
vision of the CoBiege of WiBSam and<lb/>
Mary and holds the B.S. from Eddn-<lb/>
horo State College in Pennsylvania<lb/>
and the M.A. from Kent State Uni-<lb/>
versity in Ohio. He taught for three<lb/>
years in Madison, Ohio, schools be-<lb/>
fore coming to East Carolina. He is<lb/>
a member of Delta Phi Delta, hon-<lb/>
orary art ifraternity.<lb/>
East Carolina Receives $625,000<lb/>
Federal Loan For NewjMen s Dorm<lb/>
President Jenkins ha IV<lb/>
the approval of a $625,000 federal<lb/>
If the fourth dorm is approved,<lb/>
loan to finance the building of an-<lb/>
other BOO capactiy men's dorm here<lb/>
at ECC.<lb/>
He said the information was re-<lb/>
ceived fiom Sen. Sam Ervin, Sen. B.<lb/>
Everette Jordan and Rep. Herbert<lb/>
C. Bonner.<lb/>
Architectural work on the dormi-<lb/>
tory, which will be located on the<lb/>
South portion of campus, between<lb/>
tenth and 14th streets, is underway.<lb/>
College vice president, F. D. Dun-<lb/>
can, said that it is anticipated that<lb/>
the plans will he completed by the<lb/>
first of May. Bids would be taken<lb/>
and contracts let the first of June.<lb/>
"of dorm construction will be j more than 2,000 men students would<lb/>
Exterior cor-1 be housed on the south campus. As<lb/>
riddarebTued wife outside j ft is, the announcement assures hous-<lb/>
leading into four room ing facilities for over 1,500 men.<lb/>
Miss Murray To Attend<lb/>
Conference In Omaha<lb/>
Annie Mae Murray, kindergarten' Construction on the giant dewa w<lb/>
supervisor and member of the educa-<lb/>
tion department, has been awarded a<lb/>
entrances<lb/>
suites. Baths will be included in each<lb/>
of the suites. Thus eight students<lb/>
will be accommodated in each suite.<lb/>
The college now has a request for<lb/>
a fourth 500 man dormitory for this<lb/>
section of the campus before the<lb/>
state legislature. The request won<lb/>
the approval of the lAdvisory Budget<lb/>
Commission. It calls for a state ap-<lb/>
propriation to finance half the cost<lb/>
of a fourth mens dorm with a feder-<lb/>
al loan to finance the other half .<lb/>
The Advisory Budget Commission<lb/>
has also recommended funds for re-<lb/>
placement of Wilson Hall. This old<lb/>
dormitory would be torn down and<lb/>
replaced with a 400 person struc-<lb/>
ture which would double the present<lb/>
capacity<lb/>
Both this proposed dorm for wom-<lb/>
en, and funds for the fourth men's<lb/>
dorm will have to be approved by<lb/>
the State Legislature, which is now<lb/>
ir session.<lb/>
trip to Omaha, Nebraska, Aipril 2-7<lb/>
She will attend the Study Confer-<lb/>
ence of the Association for Child-<lb/>
hood Education, International.<lb/>
A native of Mt. Carmel, South Car-<lb/>
olina, Miss Murray attended Appa-<lb/>
lachian State Teachers College, Ca-<lb/>
tawba College, and Duke University.<lb/>
She received the A. B. degree from<lb/>
Anderson College, Anderson, S. C,<lb/>
and the M. A. degree from Peabody<lb/>
Nashville, Tennessee.<lb/>
begin in June, with completion an-<lb/>
ticipated by the fall of 1962.<lb/>
The new dorm will be built along<lb/>
side two other 520 man dorms, be-<lb/>
coming the third giant structure to<lb/>
be built on the south side of the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The total cost of the new building<lb/>
will be $1,250,000. However, the col-<lb/>
lege has half that amount on hand<lb/>
as the result of a bond issue author-<lb/>
ized by the 1959 legislature.<lb/>
Duncan said that the new dorm will<lb/>
conform with the architecture of the<lb/>
"Student Jobs9 Gives Inside<lb/>
Information On Summer Work<lb/>
Directory Lists Summer Positions<lb/>
A directory listing summer jobs-the directory. Employers are includ-<lb/>
for college students is now available. ed in the directory at their own re-<lb/>
It T'SA - ilTSTii ? W -Je <lb/>
soldier would see it. The idea came<lb/>
0a Campus<lb/>
with<lb/>
MsShdman<lb/>
(Author of "I Wat a Teen-age DwarfThe Many<lb/>
Love of Dobie GiUis etc)<lb/>
I WAS A TEEN-AGE SLIDE RULE<lb/>
In a recent learned journal Mad) the distinguished board<lb/>
chairman (Ralph "Hot-Lips" Sigafoos) of one of our most<lb/>
important American corporations (the Arf Mechanical Dog Co.)<lb/>
wto a trenchant article in which he pinpointed our gravest<lb/>
national problem: the lack of culture among science .gtes.<lb/>
Mr Sigafoos'8 article, it must be emphasized, was in no sense<lb/>
derogatorV. He stated quite clearly that the science student,<lb/>
wbatwith his gelling curriculum in physics, math and chem-<lb/>
ry can hardlTbTexpected to find time to study the art.<lb/>
Et Mr. Sigafoos deplores-indeed, what we .<lb/>
-I the lopsided result of today's science courses: V<lb/>
who can touki a bridge but can't compose a concerto, oow<lb/>
JUS Constant but not Botticelli's Venus, who are familiar<lb/>
with Framhofer's lines but not with Schiller's .<lb/>
Soos can find no solution to this hideous imbalance<lb/>
r howcreT believe there is one-and a very simple one. It <lb/>
iiTSwsctnce don't have time to come to the art,<lb/>
then we most let the arts come to students of<lb/>
tory contains the names and addres-<lb/>
ses of more than one thousand or-<lb/>
ganizations, in locations throughout<lb/>
the United States, that are now<lb/>
seeking student help for this summer.<lb/>
Jobs are available in resorts, ran-<lb/>
ches, government, summer camps,<lb/>
hotels, business, industry, restau-<lb/>
rants, state and national parks, am-<lb/>
usement parks, hospitals, and other<lb/>
types of organizations. These em-<lb/>
ployers represent literally thousands<lb/>
of summer jobs.<lb/>
The names and addresses of em-<lb/>
ploying officials, specific job open-<lb/>
ings, salary range, and information<lb/>
on how to write an effective letter<lb/>
of application are also given. Stu-<lb/>
dents wishing sumnner work make<lb/>
application to the employers listed in<lb/>
from college students<lb/>
Students who wish to have a Sum-<lb/>
mer Employment Directory for their<lb/>
own use may obtain a copy by send-<lb/>
ing $3.00 to the publisher: National<lb/>
Directory Service, Dept. S, Box 65,<lb/>
Wmton Place Station, Cincinnati 32,<lb/>
Ohio.<lb/>
Thousands of college students are<lb/>
wanted this summernet $75.00 to<lb/>
$100.00 per weekto fill glamorous<lb/>
and interesting jobs.<lb/>
This break for students who need<lb/>
vacation employment comes from an<lb/>
unexpected source. Big family-style<lb/>
amusement parks, the nation's new-<lb/>
est extravaganzas, are paying col-<lb/>
lege students bonus wages.<lb/>
In a recent interview, William W.<lb/>
Enow, employment counselor of Wes-<lb/>
ton McMurry Inc. (50 Broad Street,<lb/>
New York City), explained the whys<lb/>
and hows of this new and still rap-<lb/>
idly developing situation.<lb/>
Freedomland in the East and Dis-<lb/>
neyland in the West head a growing<lb/>
list of parks which employ thous-<lb/>
ands of students each summer<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Bureau Announces<lb/>
Job Opportunities<lb/>
.Representatives from the schools<lb/>
md firms listed below will be on<lb/>
campus before April 1, to interview<lb/>
students. Students who are register-<lb/>
ed with the Placement Bureau, and<lb/>
wish to have an interview with one<lb/>
or more of tiwfse representatives<lb/>
should sign up now in the Placement<lb/>
Service Office, 203 Administration.<lb/>
Roanoke County Schools, Virginia<lb/>
-Primaryi Grammar, Dramatics, Li-<lb/>
brary Science, Mathematics, Band,<lb/>
Girls Physial Education, Science.<lb/>
Mecklenburg County Schools (in-<lb/>
cluding Charlotte), N. CInterested<lb/>
ir. all majors except Business, Men's<lb/>
Physical Education, Social Studies.<lb/>
West Covina, Caliornia  Inter-<lb/>
ested in Primary, Grammar, French,<lb/>
Spanish, Business, Science, Indus-<lb/>
trial Airts (shop).<lb/>
Sign up for interviews with the<lb/>
following by 4:30 p.m Friday, Mar.<lb/>
17:<lb/>
Women's Army Corps Interested<lb/>
hi any major.<lb/>
Cone Mills, Greensboro, N.C. <lb/>
Interested in: (1) Chemistry majors<lb/>
or minors for a production training<lb/>
program leading to supervision in a<lb/>
textile finishing plant. (2) Liberal<lb/>
"Indian" canoers. Harness makers<lb/>
and horse shoers.<lb/>
Many other kinds of jobs are also<lb/>
available. Office workers are in de-<lb/>
mand. Receiving and shipping cierks<lb/>
and warehousemen are needed Cash . majora <lb/>
control people must be found. Park- production training pro-<lb/>
mg lot guides and controllers arej rt inn in a<lb/>
w anted<lb/>
But time is short! These jobs are<lb/>
rapidly being filled for the coming<lb/>
summer. Interested students must<lb/>
act immediately.<lb/>
Exclusive, inside information about<lb/>
these jobs has been put into a bro-<lb/>
chure that is packed with the facts<lb/>
reeded: A list of available jobs and<lb/>
their ipay ranges; a list of parks and<lb/>
employmunt managers; application<lb/>
deadlines and dates of hiring peaks;<lb/>
and answers to the questions most<lb/>
I gram leading to supervision<lb/>
textile manufacturing plant.<lb/>
Twenty Represent ECC<lb/>
In Language Frat<lb/>
Twenty students at East Carolina<lb/>
College are participating in the ac-<lb/>
tivities of Sigma Pi Alpha, national<lb/>
honorary foreign languages frater-<lb/>
nity. Each of these members has<lb/>
completed1 twenty hours of work and<lb/>
established a high academic record<lb/>
The employment peak begins in frequently-asked by applicants. Pin coliege department of foreign<lb/>
tovflto titty inftfofit<lb/>
 wtM ho a Tety VkW te <lb/>
 ill m fawiJBlt teO Ub IWlW' a<lb/>
Geography Professor<lb/>
Speaks At Lecture Meet<lb/>
Dr. Robert E. Craaner, faculty mem-<lb/>
ber of the department of geography<lb/>
discussed "Agricultural Develop-<lb/>
ments on the Pamnco Peninsula in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina " at a meet-<lb/>
ing of the College Lecture Club March<lb/>
15, in the Joyner Library auditorium.<lb/>
"The PamMco Peninsula Dr. Cra-<lb/>
mer said in reference to his topic, "is<lb/>
the area covered by Hyde, Beaufort,<lb/>
Washington, and Tyrrell Counties<lb/>
"The Peninsula he stated, "has re-<lb/>
mained for years an isolated area<lb/>
of swamp and forest, and an area of<lb/>
low income and djeclindng popula-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"Extensive land reclamation has<lb/>
been in progress primarily within the<lb/>
past ten years Dr. Cramer said. His<lb/>
talk Wednesday dealt with land de-<lb/>
velopments in the area, progress in<lb/>
agriculture, and factors aontribut4<lb/>
ing to increased: (prosperity and<lb/>
of population.<lb/>
It's the job of the U. S. Mint to<lb/>
n-ake it first and yours to make it<lb/>
last.<lb/>
WGTC Broadcast Tape<lb/>
On Education Rally<lb/>
Radio Station WGTC of Greenville<lb/>
broadca&amp;tted March 19 a tape record-<lb/>
ing of the North Carolina Young-<lb/>
Democratic Club's Educational Rally<lb/>
in Raleigh, March 11.<lb/>
Admirai Hyman G. Riokover. critic<lb/>
of education in the United States,<lb/>
was principal speaker. Panelists in-<lb/>
cluded President Leo W. Jenkins and<lb/>
other leaders in<lb/>
education in the<lb/>
etate.<lb/>
The tape recording was made by<lb/>
the staff of the Campus Radio Sta-<lb/>
tion WWWS as a special production<lb/>
June and continues until Labor Day<lb/>
And the jobs are located in prime<lb/>
vacation spots: New York, Southern<lb/>
CaltLfornia, Texas, Massachusetts,<lb/>
Ohio. Others are opening soon in<lb/>
Washington and Florida.<lb/>
According to Mr. Snow, many park<lb/>
managers favor hiring college stu-<lb/>
dents because their youth, enthusi-<lb/>
asm and glowing good spirits rub off<lb/>
onto others. Surveys show that as<lb/>
a result customers enjoy the parks<lb/>
more, stay longer, return more fre-<lb/>
quently, and spend more money.<lb/>
Including both the unusual and the<lb/>
ordinary kinds, there is a fabulous<lb/>
variety of job openings.<lb/>
There are jobs for hosts and host-<lb/>
esses to greet guests at the main<lb/>
gates, answer<lb/>
detailed instructions about how tolanguaigs<lb/>
apply, when to apply, where to ap-<lb/>
ply, what to stress, what not to say.<lb/>
Rush $100 (to cover costs) to<lb/>
Student Jobs Weston, McMurry<lb/>
Irx-orporated, 50 Broad Street, New<lb/>
York 4, N. Y.<lb/>
Stalls Accepts<lb/>
Army Commission<lb/>
Kenneth Linear Stalls has been ac-<lb/>
cepted for appointment as a com-<lb/>
missioned officer in the U.S. Army<lb/>
.Reserve, with the rank of second<lb/>
questions and "help I lieutenant. The appointment, recog<lb/>
  ii ..iiAnf wvnrd m servici<lb/>
park visitors enjoy the various<lb/>
and amusements. There are jobs in<lb/>
guest relations and child relations<lb/>
1 wil be made available to a num- for persons able to set others at<lb/>
b Tf rao stations in the state in ease. There are jobs for security of-<lb/>
the near future. The broadcasts pro-<lb/>
vided opportunity for those unable<lb/>
to attend the YDC rally to hear Ad-<lb/>
miral Rickover's speech and a dis-<lb/>
cussion of education in North Caro-<lb/>
lina by the panelists<lb/>
fies, groundskeepers and costumers<lb/>
Special talents sought, but not re-<lb/>
quired, include: "Spellers" and lee<lb/>
turers. Stagecoach drivers and shot<lb/>
ridesnizing his excellent record in service<lb/>
and his potentialities for command,<lb/>
became effective March 17.<lb/>
Now a senior, Lt. Stalls has been<lb/>
 member of the 851st Replacement<lb/>
Company of the USAR in Washing-<lb/>
ton since 1959 and has served as Pla-<lb/>
toon Sergeant with the rank of Ser-<lb/>
geant First Ciass under the command<lb/>
of Capt. Jhn H<lb/>
The objectives of the fraternity<lb/>
are to learn more about geography,<lb/>
people, life, history, customs, indus-<lb/>
tries, and cultures of foreign coun-<lb/>
tries; to stimulate interest in the<lb/>
subjects; and to help bring about a<lb/>
better understanding through knowl-<lb/>
edge between foreign countries and<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
The twelve foreign students now<lb/>
enrolled at East Carolina are invit-<lb/>
jed to attend the meetings of Sigma<lb/>
Pi Alpha. <lb/>
Officers of the fraternity for the<lb/>
nresent school year are: Cynthia<lb/>
Pao-ker, president; Nell Marccm, vice<lb/>
resident; Catherine Claire Pippin,<lb/>
secretary: Michael C. Wilkinson,<lb/>
treasurer; and Ann Peaden, social<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
Mrs. Marguerite A. Perry, faculty<lb/>
member of the department of For-<lb/>
eign Language at the college, ad-<lb/>
vises the group.<lb/>
gun riders. Tugboat operators, river-<lb/>
Lt pilots, submarine operators. Greenville and Washm<lb/>
Brookshire of<lb/>
College Qualification Test Set For April<lb/>
The annual Selective Service Col-<lb/>
age Qualification Test will be of-<lb/>
ietr<lb/>
Into<lb/>
ftf<lb/>
If you give some drivers enough<lb/>
rope they'll tie up traffic.<lb/>
Everyone is wearing<lb/>
J<lb/>
emfoomto<lb/>
in<lb/>
is<lb/>
w1!<lb/>
7 7-LZTA w wg b<lb/>
to<lb/>
i Uchts hie Marlboro,<lb/>
taWthepewo01 L Z<lb/>
 wJathk soei, io tow<lb/>
be wnease gnam VTV &amp;&amp;.<lb/>
timg that he ie twWy mm<lb/>
and  his<lb/>
ALL SIZES (Brown and Black)<lb/>
Men's $15.95<lb/>
Girls $11.95<lb/>
22 B. FIFTH STREET<lb/>
'Student Charge Acwimte<lb/>
invited?'<lb/>
fared to college students April 27 at<lb/>
approximately 500 colleges through-<lb/>
out the Nation, announced Dr. Home,<lb/>
registrar.<lb/>
This is the only test that will be<lb/>
given for the 1960-61 school year.<lb/>
There will be no special test given<lb/>
for students who are unable to take<lb/>
the test an April 27, 1961.<lb/>
Application materials for the test<lb/>
are now available at the nearest local<lb/>
board office. Students are urged to<lb/>
make application early. The applica-<lb/>
tion must be postmarked not later<lb/>
than midnight, Ajpril 6. Full instruc-<lb/>
tional materials are issued with the<lb/>
applications.<lb/>
The score made on the test is a<lb/>
,help to local boards in considering<lb/>
students for deferment from induc-<lb/>
taon for study as undergraduate or<lb/>
graduate students.<lb/>
Colonel Thomas H. Upton, State<lb/>
Director of Selective Service for<lb/>
North Carolina, announced that the<lb/>
eat in North Carolina wUl be con-<lb/>
ducted at the following schools:<lb/>
Asheviile, David MiMard Junior<lb/>
High School<lb/>
Boone, Appalachian State Teach-<lb/>
ers College<lb/>
Brevard, Breverd College<lb/>
Chapel Hill, University of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Davidson, Davidson College<lb/>
Durham, Duke Univarsky<lb/>
Durham, North Carolina College at<lb/>
Durham<lb/>
Greensboro, Agricultural and Tech-<lb/>
nical Coliege of North Carolina<lb/>
Guilford College, Guitford College<lb/>
Hickory, Lenoir Rhyne Coliege<lb/>
Raleigh, North Carolina state Col-<lb/>
lege<lb/>
Raleigh, Shww University<lb/>
Wilmington, New Hanover High<lb/>
School<lb/>
Wilson, Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
lege<lb/>
"The test is for the student's bene-<lb/>
fit as well as for the Nation's good<lb/>
Colonel Upton said. "A local board<lb/>
should have full information about<lb/>
 student in order to classify him,<lb/>
mcAuding his class standing and a<lb/>
score on .this test. A high test score<lb/>
may compensate for ikw class stand-<lb/>
ing; and high class standing may<lb/>
compensate for a low test acare-<lb/>
Some studertts do not take the<lb/>
test because a student deferment ex-<lb/>
tends a registrant's liability Colo-<lb/>
nel Upton said. "Other deferments<lb/>
also extend liability to age 35 be<lb/>
added, "such as those for members<lb/>
of the ROTC, for exaimpie. And no<lb/>
registrant can remain out of service<lb/>
beyond about age 23 without an ex-<lb/>
emption, or a deferment which ex-<lb/>
Win-Sa, W.ke For, Col- , o( oooot defonnenU<lb/>
is to give promising students an op-<lb/>
portunity to continue to prepare<lb/>
themselves for careers in support of<lb/>
the national interest<lb/>
Scientific and professional engine-<lb/>
ering organizations are urging stu-<lb/>
dents preparing for careers in those<lb/>
fields to take the test, the State<lb/>
Director pointed out. These organiza-<lb/>
tions recognize the need for advanced<lb/>
study. They also recognize that the<lb/>
undergraduate student who today does<lb/>
not plan on graduate study frequent-<lb/>
ly realizes its importance as he nears<lb/>
graduation. That is the time that a<lb/>
deferment may be most innportant.<lb/>
That is also the time when a test<lb/>
score may be most important in the<lb/>
local board's decision concerning de-<lb/>
ferment.<lb/>
Boyd, Mills Represent College<lb/>
Union At Conference In Virginia<lb/>
,  w;vu n-1 student participation in college un-<lb/>
Glerm Boyd and Monty Muterep" !tlerJ J eonrittee meet<lb/>
i ? ZVKlkyre Union at the lions. The steering "w<lb/>
resented the College un on  Saturday planned the conference<lb/>
steering committee at which ttoe an- I<lb/>
nual fall conference of the Associa-<lb/>
tion of College Unions, Regkm W,<lb/>
was pkuined. The event took place<lb/>
March 18, at the University of Vir-<lb/>
ginia in Chartottesvle.<lb/>
transfer from Gardner-<lb/>
to be held this fall at the Universtty<lb/>
of Virginia, CharolttesYilte, Vir<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
LSU Donates Financial<lb/>
Webb Junior College, has been an AJ To Cuban fctlldents<lb/>
active member of the special projects<lb/>
and the social committees of the CU.<lb/>
Boyd, a sophomore, has served as<lb/>
s member of the College Union group<lb/>
for two years and was  delegate to<lb/>
the Association conference held in<lb/>
Florida last tall.<lb/>
The regional meetings of the As-<lb/>
sociation of Coliege Unions are plan-<lb/>
ned, directed, and staged by tfce sta-<lb/>
fent delegates, under the dhectfon<lb/>
of the regional repreaentativa, a stotff<lb/>
member. The program is oriented to<lb/>
(ACP)Money was collected last<lb/>
month at Louisiana State University<lb/>
to help 36 students from Cuba. The<lb/>
DAILY REVEILLE explained tha<lb/>
the 36 were without funds because<lb/>
Premier Fidel Castro was not per-<lb/>
mitting parents and friends in Cuba<lb/>
to send .them financial assistance.<lb/>
The paper pointed out that Cuban<lb/>
students throughout the United<lb/>
States had been affected by Gastaw'a<lb/>
restriction.<lb/>
Minimum Scholastic<lb/>
Requirements<lb/>
Dr. John H. Home, registrar and<lb/>
Director of Admissions, announced<lb/>
that the minimum scholastic require-<lb/>
ments as stated in the catalogue are<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
(a) A freshman must pass<lb/>
some work his first quarter.<lb/>
During his second and third<lb/>
quarters, he must earn at least<lb/>
six hours of credit each quarter.<lb/>
Furthermore, a freshman most<lb/>
earn at least 30 hours of credit<lb/>
during his first three quarters,<lb/>
(b.) In order to be eligible to<lb/>
enroll for the fourth, fifth and<lb/>
sixth quarters, a student most<lb/>
have earned two-thirds as many<lb/>
quality points as he has hours<lb/>
at East Carolina College.<lb/>
(c) During the fourth, fifth;<lb/>
and sixth quarters, a student<lb/>
must earn not less than nine<lb/>
hours each quarter. Moreover, a<lb/>
student who fails to earn a total<lb/>
of 35 hours during this period<lb/>
will be dropped. Credit is not<lb/>
counted again for a course which<lb/>
is taken to raise a non-failing<lb/>
grade.<lb/>
(d) A student will not be en-<lb/>
rolled for any quarter after the<lb/>
sixth' if he has failed to earn as<lb/>
many quality points as he has<lb/>
total hours at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
BPBBk<lb/>
(e) Furthermore, third and<lb/>
fourth year students must earn<lb/>
a minimum of 40 hours for each<lb/>
of the two years ,and a mini-<lb/>
mum of 9 hours each quarter.<lb/>
Credit is not counted again for a<lb/>
course which is taken to raise a<lb/>
non-failing grade.<lb/>
"A student who does not meet the<lb/>
above requirements by the end of<lb/>
Spring Quarter must attend sum-<lb/>
mer school in an effort to remove tea<lb/>
deficiency in order to be considered<lb/>
for admission for the Fall Quarter.<lb/>
Such deficiency may not he removed<lb/>
through correspondence or<lb/>
ance at<lb/>
Dr. Home.<lb/>
For the first time in history, there<lb/>
are more Americans who own<lb/>
 than those who do net.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038693_0004"/><lb/>
WWBMHHIH<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDiAY, MARCH 23, i<lb/>
It i<lb/>
fii<lb/>
Ci<lb/>
nit<lb/>
3<lb/>
tw<lb/>
?a<lb/>
uli<lb/>
he<lb/>
W<lb/>
ac<lb/>
se<lb/>
ar<lb/>
A<lb/>
Gl<lb/>
ox.<lb/>
se<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
(<lb/>
f.<lb/>
 i<lb/>
Business Frat Elects Reese Prexy<lb/>
Tom Reese was elected to serve as<lb/>
president of Delta Sigma Pi Business!<lb/>
Fraternity for the 1961-62 term. Oth- ;<lb/>
et- officers serving with Keese are<lb/>
Jimmy Adams, senior vice president;<lb/>
Malcolm Burris, 2nd vice (president;<lb/>
Eugene Jackson, treasurer; Clifton<lb/>
lournipn, secretary.<lb/>
Maynard Keith will serve as chan-<lb/>
cellor; Tim Ogdburn, social chairman;<lb/>
Gale Koonce, historian; Earl Rose,<lb/>
professional chairman; and Lee Car-<lb/>
i oil, sergeant at arms.<lb/>
Tiie Spring Quarter Pledge Period<lb/>
for Delta Sigma Pi begun March 9.<lb/>
The Pledge induction took place in<lb/>
e Chapter Room on 6th and Cotan-<lb/>
oha Streets March 14. The Spring<lb/>
Pledges include Bill Subton, Terry<lb/>
 arm. David Lee, Cecil Mills, (Jene<lb/>
Saanders, Carl Tyrodall and Ralph<lb/>
Mc Cotter, Jr.<lb/>
The current membership in the fra-<lb/>
ternity is thirty-two. Mr. William H.<lb/>
Durham and W.W. Howell, faculty<lb/>
members of the School of Business,<lb/>
act as advisors for the fraternity.<lb/>
Brooks Speaks<lb/>
Mr. Samuel R. Brooks of the Un-<lb/>
ion Carbide Consumer Products Com-<lb/>
pany, of Greenville, outlined the com-<lb/>
plexity of large-scale purchasing<lb/>
practices at a dinner meeting of Del-<lb/>
ta Sigma Pi on March 14. Mr. Brooks<lb/>
is presently a field purchasing agent<lb/>
and is also in charge of the receiving,<lb/>
ping, planning, and scheduling<lb/>
operations at the local Division of<lb/>
Union Carbide Corporation.<lb/>
Pictured from left to right are the new officers of Delta Sigma Business<lb/>
Fraternity for the 1961-62 term. Jim Adams, senior vice president; Tom<lb/>
Reese, president; and Mac Burris, 2nd vice president.<lb/>
He explained to fraternity members<lb/>
the responsibilities of the Division to<lb/>
the Central Purchasing Office locat-<lb/>
ed in Cleveland, Ohio, and pointed<lb/>
out the advantages to management<lb/>
of combined buying power through<lb/>
a centralized purchasing system.<lb/>
According to actual practice, he<lb/>
said, consumer purchasing is a func-<lb/>
tion generally known to everyone.<lb/>
However, he continued, industrial<lb/>
Leading Physicians, Social<lb/>
Workers Attend SC Seminar<lb/>
purchasing is a new, specialized, and<lb/>
ever-growing technical function in<lb/>
the realm of marketing practices.<lb/>
Tommy Reese, extended apprecia-<lb/>
tion on behalf of the fraternity to<lb/>
Mr. Brooks for his informative talk<lb/>
on the Purchasing Function.<lb/>
A one-day seminar on the Care of<lb/>
the Severity disabled Patient, assem-<lb/>
bled leading physcftans and sociai<lb/>
workers for addresses and panel dis-<lb/>
cussions.<lb/>
Speakers included Dr. Ellen Win-<lb/>
ston, Commissioner of Public Wel-<lb/>
fare for North Carolina, Raleigh;<lb/>
Dr. Donald Weir, rehabilitation co-<lb/>
ordinator, N.C. Memorial Hospital,<lb/>
Chapel Hill; Dr. William Richard-<lb/>
son, professor of preventative medi-<lb/>
cine, U.N.C Chapel Hill; Dr. John<lb/>
L. Wooten, orthopedic surgeon, and<lb/>
Dr. G. Earl Trevathan, Jr both of<lb/>
Creenville; Dr. Robert A. Gregg, med-<lb/>
director, Central Carolina Re-<lb/>
1 abilitation Center, Greensboro.<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, President, wel-<lb/>
med visitors to the sessions in the<lb/>
Rawl Building. Dr. Frank A. Scott,<lb/>
director of testing at East Carolina,<lb/>
presided.<lb/>
During tiie forenoon, Dr. Weir lead<lb/>
a panel on the responsibility of the<lb/>
local community and the professional<lb/>
worker in an ideal home-care situa-<lb/>
tion, assisted by Dr. Wooten, Miss<lb/>
Jeannette Johnson, Easter Seal So-<lb/>
ciety physical therapist, Chapel Hill;<lb/>
Miss Inez B. Constant, public health<lb/>
nurse supervisor, Pitt County; Hiss<lb/>
Eorothy Bolton, caseworker, Pitt<lb/>
County Public Welfare Department;<lb/>
II. A. Hendrix, vocational rehabilita-<lb/>
Debators Attend<lb/>
District Contest<lb/>
Eight debating teams from high<lb/>
schools in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
met on campus March 21, for a dis-<lb/>
trict contest sponsored by the North<lb/>
Carolina High School Debate Union.<lb/>
Four high schools sent both affir-<lb/>
mative and negative teams to East<lb/>
Carolina to debate the national high<lb/>
school debate query for the current<lb/>
year, Resolved: That the United Na-<lb/>
Dr. Richardson, Dr.)tions oold Be Significantly Streng-<lb/>
tion senior counselor, Greenville; Dr.<lb/>
Bernard Jackson, East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege speech therapist; and Miss Flor-<lb/>
ence Beardon, chief, occupational<lb/>
therapy, N.C. Memorial Hospital.<lb/>
Speakers following a one o'clock<lb/>
luncheon were<lb/>
Gregg, Dr. Winston, and Dr. Treva<lb/>
than.<lb/>
Objectives of the seminar are the<lb/>
improvement and expansion of pro-<lb/>
grams for the care and management<lb/>
of the severely disabled, and better<lb/>
communication between the agencies<lb/>
and disciplines involved in patient<lb/>
care with a co-ordination of services<lb/>
to adequately utilize available com-<lb/>
munity resources.<lb/>
The state committee on the semi-<lb/>
nars, two of which have been held<lb/>
under sponsorship of the North Car-<lb/>
olina Society for Crippled Children<lb/>
and Adults, Inc is headed by Ber-<lb/>
nard .Passer of Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Adding Dr. Scott, co-ordinator of<lb/>
the Eastern Regional Committee,<lb/>
were J. S. Grimes, superintendent<lb/>
of the Pitt County Public Welfare<lb/>
Department; Dr. John L. Wooten;<lb/>
Mrs. David J. Whichard, president<lb/>
of the Pitt Chapter of the Easter<lb/>
Seal Society; Dr. Bernard Jackson;<lb/>
and Dr. James W. Butler of the col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Campus Calendar<lb/>
23Science Fair, Wright Aud All<lb/>
Day<lb/>
College Union Student Board Meet-<lb/>
ing, 3 floor social room, Wright,<lb/>
6:30 p.m.<lb/>
SGA Musical, "South Pacific Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
21Science Fair, Wright And All<lb/>
Day<lb/>
SGA Musical, "South Pacific Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Aud 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
25Movie: "For the Love of Mike<lb/>
Austin Aud 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
27Duplicate Bridge, College Union<lb/>
TV Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
2RChapel Services, Y-Hut, 6:30 pm<lb/>
Entertainment Series: "Walden<lb/>
String Quartet Wright And<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
30Spring Holidays Begin 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
U. Professor Discusses<lb/>
Theories Of Personality<lb/>
Dr. Harold G. McCurdy, Professor<lb/>
of psychology at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina, spoke March 21, in<lb/>
Austin Auditorium on "Theories of<lb/>
Personality<lb/>
He appeared before a group of stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty members interested<lb/>
in psychology. The program -was pre-<lb/>
sented under the uspices of the<lb/>
Danforth Committee of the college.<lb/>
Dt. McCurdy is an outstanding<lb/>
Iprsonality theorist in the Psychol-<lb/>
"epartment of the University of<lb/>
Carolina. He received his Ph.<lb/>
Duke University and has<lb/>
Chapel Hill since 1948. His<lb/>
Personality is "thoroughly<lb/>
and sonwewfhat unconven-<lb/>
Mrding to some author<lb/>
Gl Dividends Aid<lb/>
Nation's Economy<lb/>
The 1961 Gl insurance dividend<lb/>
payments are now being made at the<lb/>
rate of about one million a week as<lb/>
the program to assist the President's<lb/>
drive to aid the Nation's economy<lb/>
gets into full swing.<lb/>
At this rate, the entire quarter-<lb/>
billion dollar 1961 dividend payment<lb/>
to 5,060,000 veteran - policyiholdeis<lb/>
should be vouchered by the Veterans<lb/>
Administration to the Treasury Dis<lb/>
bursing Offices by March 19, J.D.<lb/>
DeRamius, manager, V.A regional of-<lb/>
fice, Winston-Salem, N. C. said to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
More than $106,000,000 of the $25-<lb/>
?,500,000 in payments will go to vet-<lb/>
erams living in 30 of the country's<lb/>
largest metropolitan areas, includ-<lb/>
ing 15 areas listed by the U.S. De-<lb/>
partment of Labor as major areas<lb/>
of substantial labor surplus" with<lb/>
unemployment running 6 per cent or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
Of those 30 metropolitan areas,<lb/>
three are in the Southeast. Veterans<lb/>
of the Atlanta area are slated to re-<lb/>
ceive $1,281,900. In the Miami area,<lb/>
$1,271,300 in payments will be made<lb/>
and around New Orleans Gl policy-<lb/>
holders will receive $1,185,400.<lb/>
North Carolina's ex-servicemen<lb/>
with active Gl policies will receive<lb/>
$5,406,200 in dividend payments by<lb/>
the end of March. Normally these<lb/>
dividends are paid throughout the<lb/>
12 months of the year, depending on<lb/>
the effective dates of the policies,<lb/>
Deltamus said.<lb/>
To help the VA meet this stepped<lb/>
up payment deadline, DeRamus re-<lb/>
minded veterans that individual in-<lb/>
quiries about their dividends wiM<lb/>
only slow up their's and thousands<lb/>
of other payments.<lb/>
thened. Participants will represent<lb/>
the following high schools: Gates-<lb/>
ville, Havelock, Whitakers, and Wake-<lb/>
Ion of Zebu-Ion.<lb/>
An affirmative and a negative team<lb/>
w:is chosen here to compete for the<lb/>
Aycock Memorial Cup in the state<lb/>
finals to be conducted by the North<lb/>
Carolina High School Debate Union<lb/>
at Chapel Bill later this spring.<lb/>
Dr. Ralph Hardee Rives, of the de-<lb/>
triment of English, was director of<lb/>
the contest for this district. In ar-<lb/>
-ing and supervising fee rounds<lb/>
of debates schedule here, he was as-<lb/>
sisted by Barbara Harris and Anne<lb/>
Brothers. Judges were members of the<lb/>
East Carolina faculty.<lb/>
Chi Omega Holds First<lb/>
White Carnation Ball<lb/>
The first White Carnation Ball in<lb/>
i lie history of the Rho Zeta Chapter<lb/>
of Chi Omega Sorority occurred on<lb/>
March 18.<lb/>
The semi-formal dance, given in<lb/>
honor of the Winter pledge class,<lb/>
was held at the Farmville Country<lb/>
Club with music provided by The<lb/>
Monitors.<lb/>
The following members of the Del-<lb/>
ta Pledge Class were .presented: Don-<lb/>
me Hicks, Paulette Ward, Ruth John-<lb/>
son, Shirley Miration, Cathy Shesso,<lb/>
Karen Kast, Elaine Brewer, Barbara<lb/>
Graham, Judy Doyle, and Dinah Nib-<lb/>
!elink.<lb/>
The chapter plans to make the<lb/>
White Carnation Ball an annual<lb/>
event to present its pledges received<lb/>
through Formal tRiush, according to<lb/>
Betty Hope Lane, chapter president.<lb/>
Bands Participate<lb/>
In Contest Festival<lb/>
Student bands from nineteen high<lb/>
schools in the eastern counties of the<lb/>
fctate participated March 18, in the<lb/>
North Carolina Music Educators As-<lb/>
sociation Contest Festival here.<lb/>
During an all-day session extend-<lb/>
ing from 9:00'a.m. until 5:00 p.m.<lb/>
the high school ensembles performed<lb/>
before judges who evaluated their<lb/>
work accordiftg to standards set by<lb/>
the NXTMEA.<lb/>
Serving 0s adjudicators here were<lb/>
Herbert Hazelman, director of music<lb/>
in the Greensboro schools; Paul Bry-<lb/>
an, band director at Duke University,<lb/>
and Harold Luce, band director at<lb/>
the Woman's College in Greensboro.<lb/>
The Contest Festival here was stag-<lb/>
ed through the coopematian of tab<lb/>
college department of musk. Thom-<lb/>
as W. Miller of the music faculty<lb/>
was in charge of arrangements.<lb/>
Bands participating in the event<lb/>
represented high schools at Windsor,<lb/>
Four Oaks, BeuJiaviUe, MUMwook,<lb/>
Wallace, and Apex.<lb/>
Robersonville, WilKawurton, Wilson.<lb/>
Rocky Mount, Plymouth, Lumberton<lb/>
and Fairmont.<lb/>
Washington, Fncpoay Springs, Cite-<lb/>
ton, Edenton, EMzabeth C and<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi Chapter<lb/>
Severs Affiliation<lb/>
(UPS) The Dartmouth chapter<lb/>
of Beta Theta Pi recently severed<lb/>
its affiliation with its national fra-<lb/>
ternity because of alleged racial dis-<lb/>
crimination against the Williams<lb/>
College chapter and "hypocritical<lb/>
dealings" with the Dartmouth unit.<lb/>
The action came as the climax to<lb/>
a series of events which began in<lb/>
1954 when a student referendum at<lb/>
Dartmouth set September, I960, as<lb/>
the deadline date to remove discri-<lb/>
mination clauses from fraternity<lb/>
constitutions.<lb/>
Dartmouth college officials have<lb/>
i; ledged support to the campus Beta<lb/>
chapter on its decision. "I am proud<lb/>
of the initiative and high principles<lb/>
displayed by our undergraduate<lb/>
members Dean of the college Thad-<lb/>
ieus Seymour said.<lb/>
The severance of ties with nation-<lb/>
al came because the Betas at Dart-<lb/>
mouth felt the national had held up<lb/>
the initiation of the Beta pledge<lb/>
class of Williams for "too long a<lb/>
period" because one of the pledges<lb/>
is a Negro student.<lb/>
The national issued an injunction<lb/>
preventing the initiation of the<lb/>
pledges last November. It is still in<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
The Dartmouth group also cited<lb/>
letter sent to the Dartmouth Un-<lb/>
dergraduate Council claiming that<lb/>
members of all major racial and re-<lb/>
ligious groups were Betas. The let-<lb/>
ter, sent out by the national, con-<lb/>
flicted with the action at William and<lb/>
with statements by the national's<lb/>
general secretary that he knew of<lb/>
no Negroes in any Beta chapter.<lb/>
Oak Winters, president of the<lb/>
Dartmouth Betas, charged that the<lb/>
national had also put undue pres-<lb/>
sure on the Beta chapter at Bowdoin<lb/>
College when it pledged a Negro last<lb/>
fall. .The boy depledged of his own<lb/>
volition.<lb/>
"We are making as strong a pro-<lb/>
test as possible Winters said. "We<lb/>
are going to contact every chapter<lb/>
rind alumni group and explain our<lb/>
stand<lb/>
Dr. John Home, registrar, an-<lb/>
nounced today that the last day<lb/>
to drop a course without receiv-<lb/>
ing a failing grade is Wednes-<lb/>
day March 29. at 4:30 p.m.<lb/>
Everett Directs<lb/>
Annual Science<lb/>
Fair Tomorrow<lb/>
The North Eastern District Science<lb/>
Fair will be held in Wright Auditor-<lb/>
ium tomorrow March 24.<lb/>
The Science Fair which has been<lb/>
conducted on campus for the last<lb/>
eight years is being directed by Dr.<lb/>
Grover Everett of the Science Depart-<lb/>
ment. Dr. Frank Elier, also of the<lb/>
Science Department is assisting in<lb/>
the fair.<lb/>
Winners from high school county<lb/>
fairs from approximately 22 counties<lb/>
in the North Eastern part of the<lb/>
state are participating. Winners here<lb/>
go to the state competition; and state<lb/>
wiraiers are entitled to participate in<lb/>
the natojval fair.<lb/>
Last year Charles Kling from<lb/>
Washington High was a county win-<lb/>
ner, state winner, and also a nation-<lb/>
al winner. "This was the first stu-<lb/>
dent from this area to be named a<lb/>
national winner commented Dr.<lb/>
Everett.<lb/>
There will be junior exhibits in<lb/>
Biology, and Physical Sciences cover-<lb/>
ing the 7th, 8th, and 9th grades, and<lb/>
the senior category is from the 10th<lb/>
to the 12th grades.<lb/>
Five ribbons will be presented to<lb/>
the winning junior participants, and<lb/>
five wnners in both the Biological<lb/>
and the Physical Sciences will be se-<lb/>
lected in the Senior division. The sen-<lb/>
ior winners go on to the state compe-<lb/>
tition.<lb/>
"Last year there were about 200<lb/>
exhibits said Dr. Everett, "with<lb/>
about 500 people visiting the campus.<lb/>
This year we hope to have from 200<lb/>
to 250 exhibits<lb/>
'Daily' Interviews Lewis<lb/>
About US Communist Party<lb/>
"Wouldn't it be wonderful to find<lb/>
some way of keeping politics out of<lb/>
politics?"Pat Buttram.<lb/>
Stanford Chapter Loses<lb/>
ATO National Standing<lb/>
(UPS)lAApha Tau Omega an-<lb/>
nounced early this week it is oust-<lb/>
ing its Stanford chapter for accept-<lb/>
ing four Jewish students as members.<lb/>
The chapter's action, the ATO<lb/>
fr.igh council said, violates the or-<lb/>
ganization's constitution which "re-<lb/>
quires allegiance to Christianity,<lb/>
just as a man must be a medical stu-<lb/>
dent to join a medical fraternity"<lb/>
The high council's action followed<lb/>
an investigation of the Stanford<lb/>
chapter.<lb/>
(AGP) We must be able to dis-<lb/>
tinguish between theoretical Com-<lb/>
munism and the Communist party in<lb/>
the United States, Fulton Lewis HI<lb/>
toid the University o Minnesota<lb/>
DAILY in an interview this month.<lb/>
Theatretical Communism" is stud-<lb/>
ied as an economic and political phil-<lb/>
osophy, he said, but the American<lb/>
Communist Party is not a political<lb/>
party, but a conspiracy to overthrow<lb/>
our government by force, and substi-<lb/>
tute a Soviet form of government in<lb/>
the U. S.<lb/>
Lewis, a research analyst for the<lb/>
House Un-American Activities Com-<lb/>
mittee (HUAC), is now on leave,<lb/>
traveling at the invitation of pri-<lb/>
vate groups to lecture and show the<lb/>
Committee's film, 'Operation Aboli-<lb/>
tion a film depicting student de-<lb/>
monstrations at the Committee's San<lb/>
Francisco hearings in May, 1960.<lb/>
Lewis said he did not equate dis-<lb/>
taste for the Committee with being<lb/>
a dupe of the subversives and un-<lb/>
American.<lb/>
"I think there is among college<lb/>
students a great misunderstanding<lb/>
of the Committee. And I think mis-<lb/>
understanding inevitably leads to ha-<lb/>
tred, particularly in this case.<lb/>
"I think that many times they<lb/>
have been fed a line by liberals, lib-<lb/>
eral professors, liberal newspapers<lb/>
on campus. I think that many stu-<lb/>
dents have been fed a hate line and<lb/>
have not conducted their own research<lb/>
into the committee and I think this<lb/>
is part of the hate campaign on col-<lb/>
lege campuses against the Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
"First of aJl he said, "if you are<lb/>
going to be against the Committee,<lb/>
immediately divorce yourself from<lb/>
those who have an axe to grind with<lb/>
the Committee. Make a strict prac-<lb/>
tice to keep your hands clean of<lb/>
Communism. This is a difficult thing<lb/>
to do. because the Communists are<lb/>
very clever.<lb/>
"I am convinced that the students<lb/>
who were assembled (at the San<lb/>
Francisco city hall) were not Com-<lb/>
unisis, were non-Communist pro-<lb/>
testers who had a sincere dedicated<lb/>
hate for HUAC, who were not care-<lb/>
ful and who were taken over and<lb/>
led by a handful of Communist sub-<lb/>
versives<lb/>
Lewis admitted there was a stig-<lb/>
ma attached to an appearance heW<lb/>
! HUAC, but said it was the resok<lb/>
I of the great amount of publicity tfc.<lb/>
I controversial Committee receive<lb/>
much of it from the American Com<lb/>
munsist press.<lb/>
In spite of this criticism, h said,<lb/>
the Committee has a "vital function<lb/>
to perform for the Congress. And<lb/>
that is to inform that Congress 0<lb/>
the activities of the Communw<lb/>
party<lb/>
No one is questioned for his be-<lb/>
liefs, Lewis Mid, but for his actions<lb/>
referring to the difference between<lb/>
tlieoretical communism and the pp.<lb/>
ty's conspiracy against the nation.<lb/>
But before a witness fa called be<lb/>
r.re HUAC to make an identify,<lb/>
t.on or provide other information, he<lb/>
orough!y checked out by both'the<lb/>
lgislature and executive branches<lb/>
of the government to insure his re-<lb/>
liability as an information source<lb/>
Lewis said.<lb/>
SAM Relates State<lb/>
Job Opportunities<lb/>
State government often attrac-<lb/>
ts job opportunities for college<lb/>
graduates, members of the S<lb/>
for the Advancement of Manage-<lb/>
ment were bold at their Marc?, meet<lb/>
in.tr held in the Raw! building<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Ben Johnson of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Employment Securi-<lb/>
s i o n , Raleigh, guest<lb/>
pointed out some of the posii<lb/>
open to college graduate- -ared<lb/>
job opportunities in North Carolina<lb/>
with those of other   i bv<lb/>
formed members of salary ra<lb/>
" employees.<lb/>
Willoughby D. FWeboe,<lb/>
of the organization, introduced Mr.<lb/>
Johnson to SAM members.<lb/>
SAM is a national professional or-<lb/>
ganization of management .<lb/>
try, commerce, government, and edu-<lb/>
cation. The East Carolina chapter,<lb/>
with 32 active members, stages each<lb/>
year a ser: monthly n<lb/>
conducts seminars and<lb/>
discussions, visits h<lb/>
far talks with executives, and ps I<lb/>
cipates in community services v<lb/>
ffive st  ight into man-<lb/>
agement<lb/>
.<lb/>
ipfee presents the contest<lb/>
WiNlFlE<lb/>
to end all contests!<lb/>
Dr. Frood presented the automobile industry with this magnificent<lb/>
pre-compact. Hurt and disillusioned because the auto industry<lb/>
preferred to develop their own compact, FROOD NOW OFFERS his<lb/>
licensed in every state except New Jerf rNf T. "V"0  Froodmo"ile can be<lb/>
car(withR00"DM0BI<lb/>
CMTESr? THE1L?CKV 8TR,KE FROODMOBliT"<lb/>
CONTEST, simply f.nish this sentence in 25 words or less:<lb/>
" need the Froodmobile because "<lb/>
later th, April JS. 1961. All .ntn bZ ZTlTS  ?" P0 <lb/>
your  (or . to LUCKY STR TZZ'tS?- "<lb/>
4.r.cn,<lb/>
 and gef some taste foi  W1WIJ.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038693_0005"/><lb/>
AAROH<lb/>
23, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
Cherry Blossoms Welcome Spring<lb/>
IBCA Sponsors<lb/>
Photo Contest<lb/>
FBLA Members Attend State Convention<lb/>
ler M (Jroek<lb/>
Ma93zine Editor Visits Theta Chi House<lb/>
a<lb/>
ft.<lb/>
of<lb/>
(to<lb/>
W<lb/>
m<lb/>
to<lb/>
r<lb/>
OV<lb/>
re<lb/>
M<lb/>
si<lb/>
in<lb/>
S<lb/>
a<lb/>
na<lb/>
IM<lb/>
B?<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
m<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
of<lb/>
dl<lb/>
ef<lb/>
ft<lb/>
th.<lb/>
lit,<lb/>
Un<lb/>
Da<lb/>
itb<lb/>
fmi<lb/>
 Theta<lb/>
. one<lb/>
i ibutors<lb/>
i<lb/>
W ake<lb/>
 nst<lb/>
I ep-<lb/>
 ihap-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
m el disc<lb/>
He Mild th;t; he,<lb/>
  aroiina<lb/>
; an 1<lb/>
. ipter<lb/>
i i <lb/>
: 958<lb/>
 . ositior of<lb/>
Rattle of Theta t hi. the<lb/>
 <lb/>
ials,<lb/>
<lb/>
. i . in the<lb/>
Hi' la also editor<lb/>
v linfinl Interfraternitj Conn<lb/>
 ditoi<lb/>
 ruitj Monthly. At 76<lb/>
ld  ition of<lb/>
erviee in the<lb/>
minder of Greek Week<lb/>
 y of Michigan In<lb/>
founded Mothers<lb/>
  i tut ies and soroi<lb/>
 bsmte In ehan-<lb/>
. UJ&amp; In 1080, ha<lb/>
K Kl- K The Idea of<lb/>
mpha i of fraternity ami so-<lb/>
oiit lift' tin the campuses of Ameri-<lb/>
rew quicklj and la also celebrat-<lb/>
 i! annually at almost every college.<lb/>
u-olin hold ' Greek Week<lb/>
ig Spria ! quai tei of each year.<lb/>
Prior 'm in- founding of GREEK<lb/>
WKKk. Mi. I a ! was elected Na-<lb/>
Secretary f Theta Chi Fra-<lb/>
 I -a position which he<lb/>
held liil 1931, when he was elected<lb/>
 ai President of Theta Chi at<lb/>
anniversary convention.<lb/>
He was alsu one of the first living<lb/>
i i . : iK'i it i be Dial inguished<lb/>
Service Award of Theta Chi.<lb/>
Mr. 'a her was personally honored<lb/>
! Ohio's state legislature on the<lb/>
 2i year at. Ohio U<lb/>
made an honorary alumnus of the<lb/>
univci sity.<lb/>
We have had many visitors at the<lb/>
Tin ta Chi House this year and we<lb/>
hope that we -hail have many in the<lb/>
future, bud oone wiM leave us with<lb/>
a fonder memory than of OUT guest<lb/>
this week, a Theta Chi him self, George<lb/>
Mm- Lasher stated Wayne Wil-<lb/>
anl, president of the Epsilon lota<lb/>
.diapter.<lb/>
h<lb/>
 ed a resolution recogniz-<lb/>
hwn in the field of journalism,<lb/>
 in led "ii the Ohio 1 cam-<lb/>
( ii. r that time, he has been<lb/>
Dr. Scruggs, Former<lb/>
Faculty Member, Dies<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Elect 1961-1962 Officers<lb/>
-<lb/>
r<lb/>
ua Sigma, siM'ial soror-<lb/>
ha i l ted new officers to serve<lb/>
h, 1961-1962 school term. The<lb/>
will be installed at a<lb/>
ii ceremony in April. Linda Sue<lb/>
.  vill i snme the duties of pres-<lb/>
fmm Betfcj Faye Moore, for-<lb/>
mer prei Went of the sorority.<lb/>
Other new officers to aeeve with<lb/>
e are as follows:<lb/>
Nancy Carr, vice ptosident; Jud-<lb/>
  C. Henderson, recording seere-<lb/>
: Jane Ferry, corresponding sec-<lb/>
y; Thorona L McDaniel, treas-<lb/>
urer; and Ruth ( .Ionian, keeper of<lb/>
:i 1.<lb/>
Dr. Chester A. Scruggs, former<lb/>
faculty member of the Department<lb/>
i ! Science, died at his home in Au-<lb/>
pusita, Georgia, March 7. Dr. Scrugga<lb/>
served on the faculty at East Caro-<lb/>
lina tiom 1946 until his retirement<lb/>
ii. 1955<lb/>
Dr. Scruggs received his educa-<lb/>
tion a: Mercer Univeisity in Macon,<lb/>
Georgia and at Columbia University<lb/>
in New York. Before coming to Fast<lb/>
Carolina, he served on the faculty<lb/>
of the .Junior College of Augusta<lb/>
had been connected with the Sa-<lb/>
nnah Branch of the University of<lb/>
 ieorgia.<lb/>
A: Ka t Carolina Dr. Scruggs was<lb/>
chairman of the committee whidh<lb/>
'nan.in! the local chapter of CW Beta<lb/>
Phi. national honorary science frater-<lb/>
nity. He also was a charter member<lb/>
of the Eastern North Carolina Sec-<lb/>
tion of the American Chemical So-<lb/>
ciety.<lb/>
While in Greenville. Dr. Scruggs<lb/>
was an active member of the Im-<lb/>
iraunud Baptist Chi.fcch where he<lb/>
taught a Sunday school class.<lb/>
(UPS) All students of the world<lb/>
maj participate in a .Photography<lb/>
Contest organised by the Enbernation-<lb/>
.1 Bureau for Cultural Activities<lb/>
(IBCA) in coupe nation with the in-<lb/>
ternational student magazine The<lb/>
Student IBCA is an office estab-<lb/>
lished by t'he International Student<lb/>
'onference more tihan three years<lb/>
 o for promo1 .tg student cultural<lb/>
activi ies ami international cultural<lb/>
-  bangs.<lb/>
nv student currently enrolled in<lb/>
ur iversitj in any area of the world<lb/>
v enter. A maximum of six photo<lb/>
raphs per entrance is allowed. The<lb/>
i.e should he approximately 13 by<lb/>
f 'ms, (inches) although other di-<lb/>
n ens ions will be (permitted if nec-<lb/>
sarj for full artistic effect of the<lb/>
holograph. Both black and white<lb/>
 I colored prints will be accepted.<lb/>
 Contest has two subjects: "Stu-<lb/>
"it Life" and "The Society in which<lb/>
e I ive These subjects may be<lb/>
i eted as desired.<lb/>
The Contest started in January,<lb/>
ml will remain open until December<lb/>
'1 1961. There is no entry fee, but<lb/>
i'l photographs sent in will become<lb/>
IBCiA's property, who will have full<lb/>
i" roduction rig-hts over them.<lb/>
The photographs should be sent<lb/>
tt IBCA, and on the back of each<lb/>
print should be clearly written the<lb/>
name and address of the photogra-<lb/>
pher, the category and the subject of<lb/>
the photograph. Each contestant<lb/>
should also send in an entry form<lb/>
which may be obtained from IBCA,<lb/>
Po I Fox 36, Leiden, Netherlands<lb/>
Prize winners will be announced In<lb/>
the March 1st, 196 edition of "The<lb/>
Student The photographs will be<lb/>
u dged by a jury consisting of the<lb/>
Director of IBCA, the Editor of "The<lb/>
Student two Dutch professional<lb/>
photographers, and the staff of the<lb/>
Coordinating Secretariat of National<lb/>
Unions of Students (COSEC).<lb/>
I The prize-winning photographs<lb/>
' will be displayed at the 10th ISC and<lb/>
i aluable prizes will be offered to the<lb/>
. inners. There will also be smaller<lb/>
' rizes for each category, and some<lb/>
lotiarahle mentions.<lb/>
The Fast Carolina chapter of Phi<lb/>
Beta Lambda of Future Business<lb/>
I e;ulers of America was recently rep-<lb/>
resented by eleven members at the<lb/>
state convention held in Durham, on<lb/>
V, a -h 10. 11, easd 12<lb/>
The eleven members who attended j<lb/>
are: Mary Helen Mumford, Bill Hud-<lb/>
son, Karen Hi own, George Ray, De<lb/>
Jordan. Hill Fverette, Lois Fulghum,<lb/>
II. mv Daniel, Bead Vick, Janice Guy-<lb/>
ton, and Mr. Moittnan ("lameron and<lb/>
Dr. James L. White, chapter sponsors.<lb/>
Atmong the representatives of the<lb/>
EC chapter were state winners. Kar-<lb/>
en Brown was elected State Treai<lb/>
rer foi 1961 -V2, placed first in the<lb/>
-pellint' contest, and was declared<lb/>
Inner of the title of North Caro-<lb/>
lina's Miss Future Business Execu-<lb/>
tive. Bill Hudson, a junior, i the<lb/>
mer oi<lb/>
f tlv title of North Carolina's<lb/>
Future Business Fxecutive.<lb/>
L&amp;MTo Give Away<lb/>
Valuable Contest Prizes<lb/>
SAVE THE PACK CONTEST by<lb/>
Liggett a-nd Myers is now open to<lb/>
a I students of the college. Your<lb/>
smoking enjoyment can bring you<lb/>
one of Uhse fabulous prizes:<lb/>
1st Prize-Philco Stereo Hi-Fi<lb/>
Console<lb/>
2nd PrizePhilco "Slender Seven-<lb/>
teener" Portable TV<lb/>
3rd PrizePhilco Clock Radio<lb/>
i n display at the College Union.<lb/>
HEBE'S ALL YOU DO:<lb/>
Nothing bo write  no contest to<lb/>
enter! After- enjoying any of Ameri-<lb/>
ca's three smoking favorites L &amp; M<lb/>
. . . Chesterfield  or Oasis ciga-<lb/>
rettes, j.i I ave bhe wrappers, any<lb/>
combination of these brands is ac-<lb/>
. ahlc. But start saving now!<lb/>
i oiitest closes at a p.m. Monday,<lb/>
May 1, 1961.<lb/>
Prizes will Ik- awarded Tuesday,<lb/>
May 2, 1961, at i a.m.<lb/>
Tie in bundles of 10 with your<lb/>
I ime and address printed plainly on<lb/>
the outside and turn in bundles be-<lb/>
tween 12 and -r p.m. Monday. May 1.<lb/>
1961 at<lb/>
The College Union<lb/>
STATE WINNERS at the State FBLA Convention. Shown at right is Karen<lb/>
Brown, a junir business major, who won first place in the Miss Future<lb/>
Business Executive Contest. Bill Hudson, at left, also a junior busine-<lb/>
major, placed first in the Mr. Future Business Executive Contest.<lb/>
Organizational News<lb/>
Sororities, Fraternities Select<lb/>
Officers, Pledge Classes<lb/>
Omkron Pi recently pledged mweldy meeting time. Mr. A. B. Stall-<lb/>
.n .<lb/>
'are'  at the end of an in-<lb/>
h.<lb/>
T  e   res are Gail Walser,<lb/>
P  : ai d Brenda itn.<lb/>
Tl e t   had a- a guest last<lb/>
.vet i; Mi Walter C. Mylander, Jr<lb/>
  i of District II! of<lb/>
' . On cron Pi.<lb/>
Ad ' e Mai i meeting on<lb/>
M '   ate for bhe annual<lb/>
for April 19, at 6:00<lb/>
. Parish House,<lb/>
ted   following of-<lb/>
coaning year: Sylvia<lb/>
Wall ice, p ent; ' ice presidents<lb/>
Raj O'Brien and Move Wat-<lb/>
:  aretarj -treasurer. Jackie Gra-<lb/>
irmen Ann Green and<lb/>
reporter, Me'ba<lb/>
 Jolin Davis was sele<lb/>
ssei   ad bor and Mrs. James<lb/>
em  moor advisor.<lb/>
ikei for bhe me ting ws<lb/>
Mr. Guy McClanahan, Productioi En-<lb/>
gineer a bhe Uanon Ce bide Con-<lb/>
m r Producits om;any here in<lb/>
Mr. McC'anahun's talk<lb/>
t with '  " ha irofess;<lb/>
MliS GAY HO(;AN and members of the Physical Education Department<lb/>
plan a Camping and Outing Club which will be open to all students.<lb/>
Department Offers Camping,<lb/>
Outing Activities To Students<lb/>
Ep ikn Kaj a I alony of the<lb/>
, f Pi iciaJ Fraternity<lb/>
eted new officers for the<lb/>
; ear.<lb/>
  R Iin wa elected presi-<lb/>
lktm ' I e : :: as chosen<lb/>
: esident. Secretary treasur-<lb/>
. and N'eal Seid is<lb/>
new historian.<lb/>
r - ' .rei-nity is r.on-sectarian<lb/>
! ! mded on campus by five<lb/>
representing four different<lb/>
illation team from East<lb/>
lia's (imicron Chapter of Phi<lb/>
I mhda traveled to Wilson last<lb/>
Thursday night to insta'l a Phi Beta<lb/>
1i.hda chapter at Atlantic Cl ris-<lb/>
 College.<lb/>
The team consisted of George Ray<lb/>
De Jordan, Bill Hudson, Henry Dan-<lb/>
ie<lb/>
and Mr. Bill Taft. residents of<lb/>
aville and Pi Kajipa Phi alumni,<lb/>
"ere named as colony advisors, and<lb/>
Dan Raj and Obeste. Boone were ap-<lb/>
ted a Pi Kappa Phi IFC rep-<lb/>
i e- ei.tatives.<lb/>
Beta Phi Colony participated, as<lb/>
sonal guest of Kappa Chapter at<lb/>
 Universit,y of North Carolina, in<lb/>
the Pi Kapja Phi district conclave<lb/>
at UNC daring bhe weekend of March<lb/>
eleventh.<lb/>
'You: hands are your God-given<lb/>
talent which is why you choose Home<lb/>
Economics Mrs. J. T. Little spoke<lb/>
these words to the Home Economics<lb/>
Club Tuesday night as she talked<lb/>
about bow her training has helped<lb/>
in her community work.<lb/>
Mrs. Little, a resident of Green-<lb/>
. received her degree in home<lb/>
economics from Iowa State Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
She established the importance of<lb/>
the coordination between the hands<lb/>
and the mind in this field. "You are<lb/>
given a talent which you should use<lb/>
to serve God ami your fellowman<lb/>
said Mrs. Little.<lb/>
"You ran u-e your training in<lb/>
church work, social work, and otr.er<lb/>
community activities. The main thing<lb/>
py in what you are doing,<lb/>
90 combine what you are learning to-<lb/>
day with what you c do to-<lb/>
concluded Mrs. Little.<lb/>
A camping and outing group is be-<lb/>
ing formed by the Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion Dept. for the students of EC.<lb/>
The group vvll be coed and will par-<lb/>
ticipate in sch various activities as<lb/>
canoe trips on the Nuese River, camp-<lb/>
ing at State parks, and beach trips.<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/>
It will be under the direction of Gay<lb/>
Hogan, the Physical Education De-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
The main objective of the group is<lb/>
to help EC students learn the nec-<lb/>
essary skills that make a camping<lb/>
trip a success. It would also be valu-<lb/>
able experience for those who seek<lb/>
summer employment in caimips.<lb/>
"If enough interest is aroused, a<lb/>
two or three day camping trip will<lb/>
he planned for the on-coming holi-<lb/>
days said Miss Hogan.<lb/>
The first meeting of this group<lb/>
will be tonight, March 23, at the<lb/>
Memorial oym, rooni 108, at 7:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
how to be roaring in your twenties<lb/>
Tuni, It's the only hati toni "fSoming oiK Alcohol<lb/>
Watt, .vrnporata- - tffiSR Hair Tonic<lb/>
;uul  fl;ini toak i porMtM. But . oil that re.<lb/>
wont tvaporatt-it'a 100 pure ngm g drag<lb/>
pi, the oil water removes. SojWj m,<lb/>
UM Vaseline' Hair Tonic on om han<lb/>
it's clear '<lb/>
it's clean<lb/>
tin ktiulrii it<lb/>
III<lb/>
e:<lb/>
VASELINE HAIR TONIC<lb/>
Delicious Food<lb/>
Served 24 Hours<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
GRILL<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
THURS, March 23<lb/>
thru SATURDAY<lb/>
Returned by Popular Demand<lb/>
"Swiss Family<lb/>
Robinson"<lb/>
SUNTUES.<lb/>
Your Last Chance To See<lb/>
Ten Commandments'<lb/>
Will Not Be Shown Again<lb/>
For 10 Years<lb/>
COMING SOON<lb/>
"100 &amp; 1 Dalmations"<lb/>
"The Alamo"<lb/>
"Cimarron"<lb/>
"Parrish"<lb/>
"Cry For Happy"<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
 Janice Cuyton, Dave Haskins<lb/>
: n I Pearl Vick. Dr. James L. White.<lb/>
state a visor of the N.C. "Future Bus-<lb/>
iness Leaders of America accom-<lb/>
panied the group.<lb/>
The installation service was con-<lb/>
ducted in the chapel on the AC cam-<lb/>
pus. After the installation service.<lb/>
the group attended a social in the<lb/>
lobby of the chapel.<lb/>
Newly organised on East Carolina<lb/>
rain; us, Beta Phi Colony of Pi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Fraternity conducted its first<lb/>
meeting March 1.<lb/>
The meeting bejran with the pledg<lb/>
ing of Tommy Joel Hicks by acting<lb/>
Anchron Wayne Scott. The election<lb/>
of pledge class officers followed in<lb/>
v-ihich Ctiester Boone, Dan Ray, Phil<lb/>
Wince, and Tommy Hicks were elect-<lb/>
ed to tihe offices of President, Sec-<lb/>
 retary, Treasure and Chaplain<lb/>
Warde" res. eetively.<lb/>
Mon 'ay nijfhts were designated as<lb/>
Starts FRIDAY, March 24<lb/>
(lark Gables Last<lb/>
Picture Is Sensational!<lb/>
PH8t<lb/>
The Gamma Sigma Chapter of Kap-<lb/>
pa Delta, recently elected new offi-<lb/>
cera to serve for the 1961-1962 school<lb/>
term. Katherine Raynor has assumed<lb/>
the duties of president from Jean<lb/>
Hardy, former president of the sor-<lb/>
oiity.<lb/>
Other officers elected to serve with<lb/>
Katherine are as follows: Lynette<lb/>
Hobbs. vice president; Sara Smiley,<lb/>
secretary; Elizaheth Derrick, treas-<lb/>
urer; Judith Lambert, assistant treas-<lb/>
urer; Sylvia Hawkins, editor; and<lb/>
Rebecca Singleton, membership chair-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
GableMonroeiClift<lb/>
in the John Hustm production<lb/>
iDitaRftnwri<lb/>
gtli Walladi UMlli<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
The Zeta Lambda chapter of Delta<lb/>
Zeta Sorority held installation serv-<lb/>
ices for the newly elected officeis<lb/>
following a dinner meeting- at Res-<lb/>
; ess James Ka.rhecue House on Feb-<lb/>
imary 1.<lb/>
President Sylvia Sampedro offi-<lb/>
cially installed Gay Hudson as the<lb/>
new president for the coming year.<lb/>
Other officers for the year 1961-<lb/>
2 are as follows: Carol Rankin,<lb/>
vice-president in charge of pledge<lb/>
training: Edith Baker, vice-president<lb/>
in charge of rush; Gerry Whit field,<lb/>
corresponding secretary; Nancy Ber-<lb/>
ry, recording secretay; Judy Berry,<lb/>
treasurer; and Juteine Casrvnon, his-<lb/>
torian.<lb/>
Alpha Phi, social sorority, has elect-<lb/>
ed now officers to serve for the 1961-<lb/>
1962 school term. Kay Rodriguez will<lb/>
take over the duties of president from<lb/>
Bobbie Ann Bethune, former presi-<lb/>
dent of the sorority.<lb/>
Other new officers to serve with<lb/>
Kay are as follows:<lb/>
Rebecca T. Murphrey, vice presi-<lb/>
dent of pledge training; Mary F<lb/>
L.ftin, vice president of scholarship;<lb/>
Alice E. Calhoun, corresponding sec-<lb/>
retary; Kathryn R. Brown, record-<lb/>
ing secretary; Kay L. Bairefoot. trea-<lb/>
surer; Jane H. .AUbrittin, chaplain;<lb/>
Rachel W. Andrews, rush chairman;<lb/>
Re4eccia W. Lanier, activities chair-<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Patsy Royal, social chairman; Jo<lb/>
Ann Pope, quarterly correspondent;<lb/>
Pauline Inman, and Virginia Carol<lb/>
Butler, both Pawheilenic representa-<lb/>
tives; and Barbara A. Eidson, effi-<lb/>
ciency chairman.<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038693_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
<lb/>
. 1<lb/>
:e<lb/>
1<lb/>
g<lb/>
t<lb/>
I !<lb/>
i<lb/>
Baseball Season Opens Here<lb/>
march<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
Ry RICHARD ROYD<lb/>
Purple 26  Gold 14<lb/>
It was a cald overcast (Saturday aifcemoon at College Stadium when<lb/>
the annual Purple aind Gold game was exhibited before several hundred<lb/>
bmve grid fains. The off-season contest ckmnxcd the Wirtter drills which<lb/>
have been staged since early January Coach Jack Boone's prospective<lb/>
1961 gndders. The hard work and no play that the players had been going<lb/>
through during fete cold winter would exterminate on this chilly mid-Match<lb/>
day.<lb/>
When the experts talk of the Rue's strength for lltl they speak of<lb/>
U as being primarily .through the middle  in other words the center<lb/>
ruartorUuk. and fuWhack. Certainly the Purple team made the exerts look<lb/>
good on this occasion, as center Chuck Gordon, quarterback Dan Rouse<lb/>
and fullback Nick Hilgert proved to be nothing short of sensational in the<lb/>
aggressive encounter.<lb/>
When the fire works died out and the fans began to leave their<lb/>
seat the Purple team had won a 36-14 verdict over a scrappy gold team<lb/>
house had pitched one aerial toss for a score, and the Newport News<lb/>
Villon native had scored twice himself to aid the winner's cause tre-<lb/>
mendously. Hilgert. the bulldozing fullback from Elizabeth City was nothing<lb/>
short of spectacular with his sprints through the middle, one which hit<lb/>
far pay dint. e -Junior who is expected to battle the presently injured<lb/>
bi .y Mnckland for the fallback post next Fall was easily the outstaying<lb/>
ball carrier of the chilly afternoon.<lb/>
Two field generals or the Gold team aided the loser's cause with<lb/>
fine plays. Freshman Vince Eiduke came through in the clutch with his<lb/>
team behind 13-0 during the latter (portion of the first half. The Gold signal<lb/>
caller rolled out to his night and hit another Freshman, Larry Rudisell on<lb/>
 SO yeard pass play that at the time put the underdogs back in the contest.<lb/>
However, the team with the white jerseys, (although carrying the<lb/>
name of Gold) could not strike for the distance again until the last minute<lb/>
of the encounter, and ait the time they were behind by a 26-6 margin Cary<lb/>
Parker, a promising Junior scored from five yards out on a keep play<lb/>
Previous to Parker's rim was Tommy Matthew's sensational 17 yard iournev<lb/>
to the five to set-up the final score in the game. The Hertford speedster<lb/>
was trapped at the .Pole's 30 yard line by several would be tacklers But<lb/>
with beautiful faking and -running he managed to dash to the five to aid<lb/>
most of all toward the final touchdown.<lb/>
Theses were the players most of all directly or indirectly responsible<lb/>
far the scoring. But, probabJy .the game's outstanding lineman was All<lb/>
Stater Clayton Piland. The husky Juruor gave every indication whyTe wil<lb/>
an All-Mate performer during 1960 with his time mostly spent in the Gold<lb/>
hackfield. throwing the backs for minus yardage.<lb/>
Other fine achievements of the day can be contributed to Richard<lb/>
Honeycutt who will be a Sophomore next season, and came1hroUghwlh<lb/>
 one-handed timely catch for the losers. Frank Galloway and Tom Mienell<lb/>
ted some brilliant rum for the Purple eleven. Tackle Vemon Davi, and a-uard<lb/>
arl Sweet did a fine job for tihe Gold team at tW respective nosition<lb/>
 Bunrgnrdner and David Smith proved to be capable 2 hand g' " r<lb/>
for 1te Gold, and Jones Lockerman played his usual outstanding gone<lb/>
PURPLE VS. GOLD  A Gold team back appears to be in trouble here<lb/>
during the action of last Saturday's intra-squad contest. The Purple proved<lb/>
the winner in the hard fought encounter played at College Stadium.<lb/>
Tri-Captains Named<lb/>
The let term en from the 1960 grid<lb/>
tquad have elected tri-Captains for<lb/>
the 1961 campaign. Nick Hilgert, the<lb/>
fullback who netted 140 yards in the<lb/>
Purple-Gold encounter, Clayton Pi-<lb/>
land, an All-State tackle, and Chuck<lb/>
Gordon, the big aggressive center,<lb/>
were chosen as Captains.<lb/>
Besides Hilgert, both Piland and<lb/>
Gordon were outstanding in the Pur-<lb/>
ple and Gold tilt that climaxed the<lb/>
Winter practices. The threesome are<lb/>
expected to lead the men of Coach<lb/>
Jack Boone to another fine grid sea-<lb/>
son in 1961. Last season's record of<lb/>
7-3 and being unbeaten for the first<lb/>
six contests was contributed a great<lb/>
deal to the work of Hilgert, Piland,<lb/>
and Gordon.<lb/>
ECC Grid Schedule<lb/>
Includes Three Hew<lb/>
Members In 1961<lb/>
.  one of tiie flanks.<lb/>
The rooter of the wintergrid practice tea<lb/>
GOLD<lb/>
NameClass<lb/>
ENDS<lb/>
Ricchsrd Honeycutt2<lb/>
Janes Lockerman4<lb/>
Bill Pickering1<lb/>
TACKLES<lb/>
Yemen Davis4<lb/>
James McDirmid8<lb/>
Bil Burton1<lb/>
Jimmy FloydS<lb/>
GUARDS<lb/>
Earl Sweet3<lb/>
Frank Friedland2<lb/>
Wendell Worthington1<lb/>
CENTERS<lb/>
Charles Gordon4<lb/>
Carroll DavisS<lb/>
Mike Lemond1<lb/>
QB'S<lb/>
Cary Parker3<lb/>
Vince Eiduke1<lb/>
HBS<lb/>
Tommy Matthews4<lb/>
Richard Jackson2<lb/>
Richard Stevens8<lb/>
Larry Rudisell1<lb/>
John Matthews3<lb/>
Ralph Kinsey1<lb/>
Bob Hodges1<lb/>
FB'S<lb/>
Bill Strickland3<lb/>
Phil Halstead3<lb/>
Morris Allen2<lb/>
teams for the Purple and Gold game.<lb/>
PURPLE<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ENDS<lb/>
Bobby Birmgardner<lb/>
John Anderson<lb/>
Bob Muldrow<lb/>
TACKLES<lb/>
Clayton Piland<lb/>
Skipper Duke<lb/>
Buddy Stewart<lb/>
Gary Bianton<lb/>
GUARDS<lb/>
Dallas Hollingsfworth<lb/>
Murray Strawbridge<lb/>
Freddie Namtz<lb/>
Bob Nesbitt<lb/>
CENTERS<lb/>
David Smith<lb/>
Jerry Paul<lb/>
QB'S<lb/>
Dan Rouse<lb/>
HBTS<lb/>
Frank Galloway<lb/>
Pete Thorell<lb/>
Ed Pkkford<lb/>
Bill Torrence<lb/>
Bill LeFavor<lb/>
Tom Miohell<lb/>
Ricky Jarrell<lb/>
FB'S<lb/>
Nick Hilgemt 4<lb/>
David Lawrence 1<lb/>
Class<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
ECC's 1961 grid Pirates will launch<lb/>
their season on September 16, with a<lb/>
home engagement against Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania State Teachers College. The<lb/>
Bucs conclude the campaign with two<lb/>
new foes. Furman's Hurricanes of<lb/>
the Southern Conference will meet<lb/>
Coach Jack Boone's eleven in an off<lb/>
contest on November 11. The final<lb/>
fame of the campaign will be against<lb/>
Wofford in an encounter to be played<lb/>
in Greenville. The latter two teams<lb/>
are both from South Carolina.<lb/>
Guilford, Catawba, Elon, Western<lb/>
Carolina, Newberry, Appalachian, and<lb/>
notion champion Lenoir Rhyne re-<lb/>
main on tihe Pirate schedule. The two<lb/>
big home games will be the home-<lb/>
coming contest with Elon on the 7th<lb/>
of October, and the November 4th<lb/>
tilt with LR's Bears.<lb/>
SCHEDULE<lb/>
Pennsylvania State Teachers<lb/>
Member 16 0me<lb/>
Srtember 23 Guilford Away<lb/>
Wwnbor 20 Catawba Away<lb/>
October 7 Elon Home Homecoming<lb/>
October 14 Western Carolina Home<lb/>
October 21 Newberry<lb/>
October 28 Appalachian<lb/>
November 4 Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
November 11 Furman<lb/>
November 18 Wofford<lb/>
Aiway<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Away<lb/>
Home<lb/>
Springfield Plays<lb/>
Two Game Series<lb/>
With ECC Nine<lb/>
Coach Jim Mallory will introduce (<lb/>
the 1961 EC baseball nine in action<lb/>
today against Springfieid Col-<lb/>
lege of Springfield, Massacbusettes.<lb/>
The Yankee team will be here for a<lb/>
iwo day visit. Friday afternoon's<lb/>
contest will conclude the two .Tame<lb/>
series between the two teams.<lb/>
The Bne mentor will probably<lb/>
throw southpaw Larry Crayton in<lb/>
'he opener and miy come back with<lb/>
Nathan Greene, Earl Boykins, or pos-<lb/>
sibly Sophomore Bill Dunn in Satur-<lb/>
day's affair. Mallory is expected to<lb/>
start veterans at each position. Char-<lb/>
lie Johnson will be behind the plate,<lb/>
Jim Martin should start at the ini-<lb/>
tial sack. Spencer Gaylord and Glenn<lb/>
Bass compose a fast double play com-<lb/>
bination. Basketball player, Floyd<lb/>
Wicker, and newcomer Byrd Harris<lb/>
from Hampton, Virginia are battling<lb/>
ii out for the hot corner spot. The<lb/>
latter was a late comer to practice,<lb/>
but has been looking exceptionally<lb/>
well in early drills.<lb/>
Leftfielder Gary Pierce, a hard hit-<lb/>
ting Senior will start in his old posi-<lb/>
tion, while centerfielder Wally Cock-<lb/>
rell should get the nod in centerfield.<lb/>
The rightfield post is expected to be<lb/>
(held down by Murrel Bynum. Other<lb/>
strong outfield candidates who are<lb/>
rushing these players for their re-<lb/>
spective positions are Buddy Wyatt,<lb/>
Ted Chapel, Cotton Clayton, and Har-<lb/>
re9 Boitnott.<lb/>
Other promising players that are<lb/>
expected to see limited action are<lb/>
Bobby Draper, a second baseman from<lb/>
Suffolk, Virginia, and Beasly Jones,<lb/>
a first baser with tremendous field-<lb/>
ing ability. Coach Mallory has a host<lb/>
of Pitchers ready for the Northerners<lb/>
besides the ones already mentioned.<lb/>
Harold Brown, a hard throwing left-<lb/>
hander, Lacy West, a righthander,<lb/>
and Jerry Drainer, also a southpaw,<lb/>
0 transferred from William-Mary<lb/>
m Norfolk, and shows promise of<lb/>
Riding the Buc nine.<lb/>
RESERVE OUTFIELDER BUDDY WYATT is shown here 1<lb/>
at one of the pitches thrown by an EC pitcher. Ckarli hn<lb/>
the plate with an unidentified umpire. Both Wyatt and Jotesoa<lb/>
to help the Pirates this Spring.<lb/>
"Pwv<lb/>
Golfers Trave<lb/>
W<lb/>
Play Ind<lb/>
ians<lb/>
By TONY<lb/>
The Bucs will open their 1961 golf<lb/>
schedule against the Indians of Wil-<lb/>
liam-Mary on March 24. The matches<lb/>
will be played in Williamsburg, Vir-<lb/>
ginia, home of the Indians. Coaching<lb/>
the Pirates this Spring will be Coach<lb/>
Bill McDonald, who is Frederick Col-<lb/>
lege bound next Fall to assume duties<lb/>
as head football coach at the Ports-<lb/>
mouth, Virginia institution. The EC<lb/>
mentor thinks the Bucs will be a<lb/>
strong representative in North State<lb/>
circles this season. The Pirate Golf<lb/>
team is the defending champion of<lb/>
the loop.<lb/>
The list of candidates for the golf<lb/>
team will be as follows: Don ConJey,<lb/>
Bill Guthrie, Steve Pulp, Archie Clark'<lb/>
EKinkie Casey, Bill Streets, Vance<lb/>
TayIor and. Oharles Condon. The EOC<lb/>
KATSIA<lb/>
linksmen<lb/>
Of 1 <lb/>
I matches this<lb/>
home engagi<lb/>
;Mary, Allan<lb/>
fer College.<lb/>
ECC 1961 GOLF SCHEDTJU<lb/>
William &amp; Mary (Tentotte<lb/>
i March 24<lb/>
Bon &amp; A-a<lb/>
i March 27 .<lb/>
April IS Hob 4b , An.j<lb/>
William &amp; Mar. (1<lb/>
lAril 21 Ho I<lb/>
April 24 Atk<lb/>
High I rd<lb/>
APrf1 2 ted<lb/>
April 29 Pfeiffer College<lb/>
May 11 Pfeiffer Coikg feJ<lb/>
s<lb/>
FULLBACK NICK HILGERT is<lb/>
hard driving speedster.<lb/>
Aquanymphs Presents<lb/>
Program Next Week<lb/>
The EC Aquanymphs will present<lb/>
"Journey to a Paradise Isle" on Wed-<lb/>
nesday, March 29, in the college<lb/>
gynrn<lb/>
Using song titles, the Aquanymphs<lb/>
1 -ill guide the audience on a tour of<lb/>
mystic places, beginning with "Smoke<lb/>
(Jets in Your Eyes which is follow-<lb/>
ed by "Bali Hai where they see the<lb/>
"Pirates Then. he tide rushes in<lb/>
with "Ebb Tide A "Cloud Burst"<lb/>
interrupt the calmness until they<lb/>
cross "Over the Rainbow" into the<lb/>
island of paradise Where each Aqua-<lb/>
nymph becomes a "Stranger w Para-<lb/>
dise The program ends with "Red<lb/>
Sails in the Sunset as the Aqua-<lb/>
nymphs leave the island of paradise.<lb/>
Members of the Aouanytnphs are<lb/>
Becky Wayne, Carole Savage. Ann<lb/>
Peaden, Jessie Ivinoff, Ellen Minson,<lb/>
Anne Gates, Amm Green, Diane Wil-<lb/>
lis, Arlene Rhodes, Samdy Snyder,<lb/>
and Janice Edwards.<lb/>
Also appearing with the Aqua-<lb/>
nymphs m the show will be Dr. Hau-<lb/>
ieh, Mr. Steele and Dr. Reeder.<lb/>
CENTER CHUCK GORDON is known<lb/>
for his outstanding ability as a line-<lb/>
backer and offensive center. The Clay-<lb/>
TACliLE CLAYTON PIUND "waa IZ't r' ?'make  ex"<lb/>
an All-State selection in I960 gert " HU'<lb/>
BASEBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
March .3 Springfield Home<lb/>
March 24 Springfield Home<lb/>
April 1 Ithaca College Camp Lejeune<lb/>
April 3 Camp Lejeune There<lb/>
April 6 Delaware Home<lb/>
April 12 Atlantic Christian There<lb/>
April 17 Appalachian (2 games home)<lb/>
-April 22 Western Carolina (2) There<lb/>
April 24 Catawba There<lb/>
April 25 Wake Forest There<lb/>
April 26 High Point (2) There<lb/>
April 29 Pfeiffer (night) Home<lb/>
May 3 Elon There<lb/>
May 4 Lenoir Rhyne (2) There<lb/>
May 5 Pfeiffer There<lb/>
May 10 Atlantic Christian (night)<lb/>
Home<lb/>
May 12 Elon (night) Home<lb/>
May 13 Wake Forest (night) Home<lb/>
The hfespan of a dollar bill is<lb/>
about 13 months, on the average<lb/>
while a 10-dollar bill lasts four years'<lb/>
round gotf SrteT0 GdH h  ter out  '<lb/>
The EC Aquanymphs PresentIurneyToTaradtef<lb/>
SffiLJSSrar"COURSES!<lb/>
mm JTlZ.?  new feehnO  Coke!<lb/>
swob under itHoi1ty of Ths f  -<lb/>
uwortty of The Coctetc G<lb/>
OCh-COLk BOTTLING COMPANY, 6<lb/>
WPBTf-ILLj; H, c.<lb/>

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