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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038719_0001"/>
e<lb/>
Kappa Alpha-Sigma Nu . . . will stage<lb/>
regulation football game in full equip-<lb/>
lent October 28 at 2:00 p.m. in College<lb/>
Hadium. All proceeds will go to the Ha-<lb/>
ni fund.<lb/>
Easttaroiini<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
dume XXXVII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1961<lb/>
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James S. Ficklen Memorial Stadium<lb/>
W<lb/>
tadium Plans Revealed<lb/>
Stadium Receives Name;<lb/>
James S. Ficklen Honored<lb/>
i<lb/>
pThe late James S. Ficklen, a 'max-<lb/>
oitizen, Ls the man for whom<lb/>
arolina's proposed new stadium<lb/>
be named, revealed Dr. Leo W.<lb/>
ikins in an address Saturday night<lb/>
the fall dinner of the Society of<lb/>
? ers.<lb/>
Funds Fledged<lb/>
receding this announcement, Dr.<lb/>
ins disclosed that $55,000 had al-<lb/>
dy been pledged by the Student<lb/>
t-mnK-n: Association, members of<lb/>
tbt faculty, administration, and other<lb/>
firi. s of the college. From the up-<lb/>
eou state tx?nd issue, if it is<lb/>
M&amp;v u. an additional $50,000 will<lb/>
Ike available. This makes an initial<lb/>
tot ,f $106,000. Total cost of the<lb/>
etaU'ii is estimated at $250,000.<lb/>
?A steering committee now working<lb/>
laist' additional funds for the stad-<lb/>
inehidee eight Greenville busi-<lb/>
nun: W. M. Scales, Jr chair-<lb/>
: Dr. E. B. Aycock, James T.<lb/>
?t  J. C. Lanier, Jr R. W. How-<lb/>
afr Howard Hodges, lavid J. Which-<lb/>
ri and Reynolds May.<lb/>
(enter Of Activity<lb/>
r Jenkins predicted that the pro-<lb/>
new James S. Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
1 became a center of activity for<lb/>
of Eastern North Carolina. He<lb/>
nted out that although EC is the<lb/>
rth largest State institution of<lb/>
her learning, no place is now avail -<lb/>
le on campus for large convocations.<lb/>
The name chosen for the new stad-<lb/>
 Dr. Jenkins said, honors the late<lb/>
S. Ficklen of Greenville "who<lb/>
in his time for his own land<lb/>
? was president and chairman<lb/>
he board of directors of the E. B.<lb/>
bklea Tobacco Company of Green-<lb/>
e.<lb/>
new stadium, according to<lb/>
will be built on college pro-<lb/>
near 14th Street and to the<lb/>
ar of the Elmhurst School.<lb/>
Construction<lb/>
Construction will begin Dr. Jen-<lb/>
: s stated, as soon as sufficient<lb/>
nda are available.<lb/>
The new stadium will provide ac-<lb/>
modations for intercollegiate ath-<lb/>
 student convocations, outdoor<lb/>
?mas, musical (productions, public<lb/>
?etmgs and pageants. It could, per-<lb/>
. in the future be the center for<lb/>
National Tobacco Festival lasting<lb/>
entire week, added Jenkins.<lb/>
.Sales, committee chairman, said<lb/>
rlier this week the committee has<lb/>
it 3 goal completion of the stadium<lb/>
time for the first EC home game<lb/>
xt season.<lb/>
The committee plans active soMci-<lb/>
tions among the Greenville merch-<lb/>
ts. Here, the faculty and students<lb/>
ve a goal of $25,000 and $17,000<lb/>
this has already been raised. Ap-<lb/>
oximately 15,000 brochures are be-<lb/>
inailed to college alumni with<lb/>
quests for carftribufcions (to the<lb/>
dium fund.<lb/>
Plans are t? move the 6,000 seat<lb/>
el stands at the present stadium<lb/>
to the new area. These stands<lb/>
U be assembled on the south side<lb/>
the football field. New concrete<lb/>
i<lb/>
te<lb/>
stands, seating 10,000 are (planned<lb/>
for the north side of the field. The<lb/>
concrete stands are to be constructed<lb/>
sc that the stadium could eveatually<lb/>
be expanded into a bowl seating 50,000.<lb/>
Evidence Of Vitality<lb/>
Jenkins told the society,  we<lb/>
want a stadium which is evidence of<lb/>
the vitality and health of the young<lb/>
spirit of this college and of this state,<lb/>
which is only beginning to meet wid-<lb/>
ening challenges that have been of-<lb/>
fered to us as a people in North Caro-<lb/>
lina<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins emphasized that the<lb/>
stadium will be used by the Rose<lb/>
High School football team also. The<lb/>
high school presently iplays its games<lb/>
in College stadium.<lb/>
Local Woman's<lb/>
Club To Entertain<lb/>
Foreign Students<lb/>
Foreign students at East Carolina<lb/>
will be honored by the Greenville<lb/>
Woman's Club on Wednesday, Oc-<lb/>
tober 25, at a gala dinner to be held<lb/>
jn observance of United Nations week.<lb/>
Greenville residents will invite the<lb/>
students as their personal guests to<lb/>
attend the meal featuring foreign<lb/>
dishes, beginning at 6:30. to be fol-<lb/>
lowed by a program of international<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
The speaker for the occasion will<lb/>
be Dr. Keener Frazer of the University<lb/>
of North Carolina. Special music,<lb/>
songs in several languages will be<lb/>
presented by Peter Johl, accompanied<lb/>
by Larry Griffin, both students in<lb/>
the Department of Music.<lb/>
The dinner is one of many activi-<lb/>
ties planned in observance of United<lb/>
.s'ations Week, and all persons in-<lb/>
terested in attending are invited to<lb/>
purchase tickets. For the convenience<lb/>
of college students, faculty and staff,<lb/>
tickets are available ($1.75) each) at<lb/>
the Information desk in the Adminis-<lb/>
tration Building.<lb/>
Dr. Buttrick Speaks On Faith<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
Dr. George A. Buttrick spoke to<lb/>
EC students and townspeople on the<lb/>
relationship of faith and knowledge<lb/>
ia the first of a series of three school<lb/>
sponsored lectures.<lb/>
Over 200 students were turned<lb/>
away. The auditorium was filled to<lb/>
capacity with many students and fa-<lb/>
culty standing in the ailes.<lb/>
Dr. Batten of the Department of<lb/>
Education introduced Dr. Buttrick as<lb/>
being "not only a distinguished writer,<lb/>
lecturer, and minister, but also a<lb/>
distinguished American<lb/>
an IBM machine which produces pros<lb/>
and cons and arriving at a mechani-<lb/>
cal judgement He continued,<lb/>
"Science is rooted in faith and pro-<lb/>
ceeds to investigation He said that<lb/>
our "calculated risks have become<lb/>
miscalculated<lb/>
"God is not the end term in a syl-<lb/>
ogiam nor an object to be scrutinized<lb/>
pointed out Dr. Buttrick. "WThat peo-<lb/>
ple do not believe in is not import-<lb/>
ant; it is what they trust that really<lb/>
matters<lb/>
The audience responded favorably<lb/>
to Dr. Buttrick's lecture, applauding<lb/>
Dr. Buttrick cautioned students to' seVeral minutes after he had con-<lb/>
avoid allowing the "mind to become eluded his speech.<lb/>
interested in running hi the<lb/>
TorchNMarathon" for a better North Caro-<lb/>
ubmit their names along with<lb/>
they wish to run to Merle<lb/>
Summers inhe SGA Office.<lb/>
Number 5<lb/>
EC Rallie<lb/>
Speakers Urge College Youth<lb/>
To Become Interested Citizens<lb/>
Bond<lb/>
"Vote for a better North Carolina"<lb/>
.vas the theme of the college-wide<lb/>
Bond Issue Rally yesterday, for which<lb/>
.he entire student body was dismissed<lb/>
from classes.<lb/>
Approximately 6,000 students, fa-<lb/>
ulty members, and guests gathered<lb/>
lor the Bond Rally in the College<lb/>
Stadium. SGA President, Otis Stro-<lb/>
ther, presided at the raily.<lb/>
The rally, designed to explain the<lb/>
ten points of the bond issue and what<lb/>
East Carolina students can do in in-<lb/>
fluencing its .passage on November<lb/>
7, brought several notable speakers<lb/>
io the campus.<lb/>
Norris Tolson, President of the N.<lb/>
C. State College Student Government<lb/>
Association, told students that they<lb/>
have an obligation to participate in<lb/>
public affairs which affects the wel-<lb/>
fare and the economy of the people<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
-tate's rapidly growing educational<lb/>
institutions.<lb/>
"The other nine issues are of equal<lb/>
importance he declared, "for ob-<lb/>
viously they are directly tied in with<lb/>
the welfare and the economy of North<lb/>
Caroline The economy, he said, will<lb/>
be greatly enhanced, for example, by<lb/>
provisions for expanding the state's<lb/>
port facilities<lb/>
Representative Thomas H. Woodard<lb/>
of Wilson, Chairman of the Commit-<lb/>
tee on Appropriations of the 1961<lb/>
N. C. House of Kepresentatives in-<lb/>
formed students that the Bond Issue<lb/>
is "highly significant to the growth<lb/>
f the state He declared that North<lb/>
Carolina will take a tremendous step<lb/>
backward, in case of a defeat on No-<lb/>
vember 7.<lb/>
The bond issue, that will be voted<lb/>
nf North Carolina. He discussed what,<lb/>
as students, we can and should do to<lb/>
insure progress.<lb/>
"Young people he declared, "are<lb/>
so often the chief recipients of the<lb/>
benefits of forward-looking programs<lb/>
that they should become a great<lb/>
foive in working toward the better-<lb/>
ment of all of North Carolina<lb/>
Speaking to his fellow-students,<lb/>
Strother urged each of them "to carry<lb/>
an educational program about the<lb/>
Bond issue to every county in the<lb/>
state and to inform parents and<lb/>
friends of the benefits which they<lb/>
will have if the vote on November 7<lb/>
i1 favorable<lb/>
As state advisor of the recently or-<lb/>
ganized Student Citizens Committee<lb/>
lor a Better North Carolina, Presi-<lb/>
dent Leo W. Jenkins addressed the<lb/>
audience as "inheritors of the re-<lb/>
sponsibility of building a greater<lb/>
North Carolina. "The Bond Issue he<lb/>
iold them, "is therefore a young<lb/>
people's bond issue and merits the<lb/>
support of those who will be the<lb/>
chief beneficiaries<lb/>
Presenting an immediate appeal to<lb/>
students, he explained, is the item<lb/>
providing needed facilities for the<lb/>
on by the people of North Carolina,<lb/>
reflects careful planning for future<lb/>
needs, and every one of them is im-<lb/>
portant to the economic and cultur-<lb/>
al development of the State and the<lb/>
welfare of tomorrow's citizens.<lb/>
If the bond issue is passed, East<lb/>
Carolina College will receive $3,406<lb/>
750. This money will be used for a<lb/>
new classroom building, dormitory for<lb/>
400 girls (34 cost), addition to li-<lb/>
brary, dormitories and cafeteria for<lb/>
520 men (2 cost), addition to Wright<lb/>
Carringer, Noted<lb/>
Tenor, To Present<lb/>
Concert This Week<lb/>
Walter Carringer, one of Ameri-<lb/>
ca's leading tenors, will visit the<lb/>
East Carolina campus on October 18,<lb/>
announced Tommy Mallison, chair-<lb/>
man of the East Carolina entertain-<lb/>
ment series. He will give a concert<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium on Wednesday,<lb/>
October 18. at 8:15 ip.m.<lb/>
Carringer made his London and<lb/>
Paria debute in the fall of 1968, and<lb/>
his New York debut on the following<lb/>
ear. Last year he presented three<lb/>
concerts in Camigie Hall in New York-<lb/>
City, and last winter he performed<lb/>
n the Winter Park Festival in Win-<lb/>
ter Park, Florida.<lb/>
He sings with the Dallis Symphony<lb/>
Orchestra and occasionally sing's with<lb/>
the North Carolina Symphony Or-<lb/>
chestra,<lb/>
Carringer was bom ia Memphis,<lb/>
Tennessee, but later moved to Murphy,<lb/>
North Carolina. He is a graduate of<lb/>
Columbia Universitv.<lb/>
Nuclear Chemist<lb/>
Speaks On Religion<lb/>
Dr. George K. Schweitzer, a nu-<lb/>
clear chemist whose interest is in<lb/>
Building cost), outdoor athletic natural science and its relation to<lb/>
facilities, and the purchase of land.<lb/>
Said Dr. Jenkins, "We are confi-<lb/>
dent that as a result of this Bond<lb/>
Issue Rally, the students are familiar<lb/>
now with the inyportance of its pass-<lb/>
age, and will go out and tall their<lb/>
family, neighbors, and friends the<lb/>
mecessdty of voting in this coming<lb/>
bond issue election<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
Would any brothers of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Phi Fraternity, who are<lb/>
now attending East Carolina,<lb/>
please call Tommy Elam, Phone<lb/>
752-2380, on any school night.<lb/>
Christian faith, will speak on Oc-<lb/>
tober 24 as a part of Religious Em-<lb/>
phasis Week.<lb/>
He will speak on "The Two-edged<lb/>
Sword of Science" in Wright Aud-<lb/>
itorium at 10:00 a.m. At 2:00 p.m. he<lb/>
will speak on "The Hebrew-Christian<lb/>
Tradition and the Origins of Modern<lb/>
Science<lb/>
Dr. Schweitzer is a professor of<lb/>
chemistry at the University of Ten-<lb/>
nessee, research radiochemist with<lb/>
the University of Tennessee-Atomic<lb/>
Energy Commission Agricultural Re-<lb/>
search Program at Oak Ridge, and<lb/>
director of Health Physics for Nu-<lb/>
clear Service Laboratory.<lb/>
Blue Skies, Confederate Flags, Excited Crowds Typify East Carolina Homecoming<lb/>
Homecoming 'Dixie Days7 Style Rejuvinates Spirit<lb/>
Meetings And Pictures<lb/>
There will be a Freshman Class<lb/>
meeting Wednesday, October 18<lb/>
in Austin Auditorium at 7:30 p.<lb/>
m. Please be prompt.<lb/>
The local Naval Reserve Unit<lb/>
invites any student or faculty<lb/>
member interested in Naval Re-<lb/>
serve to attend the Tuesday night<lb/>
meetings in Austin, room 13 at<lb/>
8:00 p. m. Interested persons<lb/>
may contact Dr. Grover W.<lb/>
Everett of the Science Depart-<lb/>
ment, or they may attend any of<lb/>
the Tuesday night meetings.<lb/>
The last night for student<lb/>
teachers to have pictures taken<lb/>
for the 1962 Buccaneer is to-<lb/>
night from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m.<lb/>
in the Buccaneer office.<lb/>
By MONTY MILLS<lb/>
A brilliant blue sky, filled with<lb/>
fleecy cotton white clouds, welcomed<lb/>
alumni and friends of the college to<lb/>
one of the most colorful and specta-<lb/>
cular of EC Homecomings Saturday,<lb/>
October 7.<lb/>
Saturday morning at 10:15 am. the<lb/>
annual parade, carrying out the theme<lb/>
of "Dixie Days got underway. Forty-<lb/>
nine sponsors, dressed in gay anti-<lb/>
belhum attire; approximately twenty<lb/>
organizational floats; and decorated<lb/>
cars carrying school officials, among<lb/>
them Confederate-clad President Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins, comprised a spectacular<lb/>
one hundred unit parade.<lb/>
Crowds Gather For Parade<lb/>
Crowds lined the streets and busi-<lb/>
ness districts four deep to watch<lb/>
ROTO, Confederate soldiers mounted<lb/>
on spirited horses, and others march-<lb/>
ing with shouldered rifles and pulling<lb/>
a hugh cannon, while Circle K repre-<lb/>
sentatives marched along side selling<lb/>
Confederate flags. Excitement mount-<lb/>
ed during the hour long parade when<lb/>
one of the fraternity floats caught<lb/>
fire and burned while the massive<lb/>
crowd watched as alert students rufch-<lb/>
ed to the aid of the Theta Chi fra-<lb/>
ternity. The fire was extinguished and<lb/>
the parade sped on.<lb/>
Just before game time, the Circle<lb/>
K Club sold their stock of Confed-<lb/>
erate flags, and estimated that the<lb/>
profit of the $394.50 sale of flags<lb/>
netted them a $225. contribution to-<lb/>
ward the building of the new college<lb/>
stadium. Circle K's exgxressed their ap-<lb/>
preciation for the support of the stu-<lb/>
dents and faculty toward making<lb/>
their goal a reality.<lb/>
Pre-game Highlights<lb/>
Prior to game time Saturday af-<lb/>
ternoon at 1:15 p.m forty-nine love-<lb/>
ly sponsors, riding in brightly color-<lb/>
ed convertibles filed slowly out on the<lb/>
football field and were introduced to<lb/>
the crowd by SGA president, Otis<lb/>
Strother.<lb/>
Announcement of the winners and<lb/>
runners-utp in the final judging of<lb/>
I parade floats and dorm decorations<lb/>
proceeded the &amp;xrmJng of the new<lb/>
1961 Homecoming Queen. President<lb/>
Strother expressed his regrets that<lb/>
the Theta Chi fraternity's float had<lb/>
been destroyed by fire, and then asked<lb/>
the crowd for a rousing hand of ap-<lb/>
plause for Theta Chi's efforts. The<lb/>
spectators responded spontaneously<lb/>
for a job well done.<lb/>
First place in the organizational<lb/>
category of judging went to Phi Mu<lb/>
Alpha for their Basin Street saloon<lb/>
?omiplete with dance hall girls and<lb/>
poker playing dealers. Delta Sigma<lb/>
Pi, with its southern bells and state-<lb/>
ly plantation, proclaimed that "Elon<lb/>
wouldn't flout southern hospitality<lb/>
here" and copped second place honors.<lb/>
Tiiatixi place in the organizational<lb/>
judging went to Alpha Phi Omega<lb/>
and their water-powered cotton" gin.<lb/>
In the fraternity category, Phi Kap-<lb/>
pa Tau took first place with its Civil<lb/>
War submarine, the Monitor. Second<lb/>
place went to the Ku Klux Klan's<lb/>
tarring and feathering of Elon spon-<lb/>
sored by Sigma Phi Epsilon. Lam-<lb/>
bda Chi Alpha blasting Elon with can-<lb/>
non fire, copped third place honors.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi, first place winners<lb/>
in the Sorority category, protrayed<lb/>
"Gone With the Wind" complete with<lb/>
Scarlett; O'Hara, and the famous<lb/>
Rhett Butler. Winning second place<lb/>
was Alpha Xi Delta's "Cotton pickers<lb/>
and winning third place was Alpha<lb/>
Phi's "Southern BeQles<lb/>
Prizes went to Cotten Hall for their<lb/>
"first" honors with "Cottendale and<lb/>
Umstead Dorm took second with their<lb/>
cotton gin and mill stream. Third place<lb/>
winners in the dorm decoration went<lb/>
to Fleming's "Elon ain't no cotton-<lb/>
picking good Slay Derm's southern<lb/>
plantation with gay ladies and a cot-<lb/>
ton field won honorable mention in<lb/>
the dorm category.<lb/>
Crowning Of The 1961 Queen<lb/>
Climaxing the Homecoming events<lb/>
of 1961, was the crowning of the<lb/>
new queen by Miss Ellie Speckman,<lb/>
I960 Homecoming Queen. As Presi-<lb/>
dent Strother announced the new<lb/>
queen, lovely Jean Lasater stepped<lb/>
from her place in the line of sponsors,<lb/>
curtsied to her sponsor, Lambda Chi<lb/>
Alpha fraternity, acknowledged their<lb/>
applause and made her way to the<lb/>
microphone. Miss Lasater received<lb/>
her crown from Miss Speckman, and<lb/>
received a congratulatory kiss from<lb/>
Dr. James W. Butler. Wearing her<lb/>
official crown of office, Jean broke<lb/>
into a radiant smile and briefly<lb/>
thanked all concerned for making the<lb/>
honor possible.<lb/>
Later the new queen exclaimed<lb/>
breathlessly "when Otis called out<lb/>
the name of Lambda Chi, I still didn't<lb/>
believe that he was going to say my<lb/>
name. I just could not believe it<lb/>
The new queen later returned to the<lb/>
btadium wearing a bright, blue-green<lb/>
suit and her newly acquired crown.<lb/>
After the game the College Union<lb/>
held an informal open house in the<lb/>
Union lounge for alumnae and stu-<lb/>
dents. Other social affairs were staged<lb/>
during the afternoon and evening by<lb/>
sororities, fraternities, and other<lb/>
campus organizations. The fall dinner<lb/>
meeting of the Society of Buccaneers,<lb/>
campus organizations.<lb/>
Crowning the New Queen . . . SGA President, Otie Strother, announces tke 1961 Homecoming Queen as level;<lb/>
last year's queen, Ellie Speckman. Queen Jeaa began feer reign daring ksjff- time ceremonies in Bfcssajtml 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12<lb/>
ttfl<lb/>
Prophets Watch College Take Athletic Lead<lb/>
EC, Once Tagged 'Sleeping Giant No Longer Sleeps<lb/>
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS<lb/>
Letters To The Editor<lb/>
(Editor's note: Moses Crutchfield, sports<lb/>
columnist of The Greensboro Daily News,<lb/>
make the following observance of athletic<lb/>
growth here at East Carolina.)<lb/>
By MOSES CRUTCHFIELD<lb/>
An athletic giant is beginning to awaken<lb/>
down in the Eastern pail of our state. For<lb/>
sometime, now, the giant has been twisting<lb/>
and stretching, opening an eye ever so often<lb/>
preparatory to full wakefulness. That mo-<lb/>
ment, when the giant is up and raring to go,<lb/>
could come any instant.<lb/>
The giant, of course, is East Carolina.<lb/>
The story is a long one, and the state-<lb/>
ment that the college at Greenville, regarded,<lb/>
perhaps, by some as just another small col-<lb/>
lege and by others as an overly ambitious<lb/>
outfit, is readying for bigger things in ath-<lb/>
letics may bring reactions of surprise and<lb/>
even hoots and cat-calls.<lb/>
But it is a fact, and unless the giant<lb/>
should decide of his own accord to turn over<lb/>
for another snooze, East Carolina could, in<lb/>
the not so distant future, take its place among<lb/>
the athletic powers of Tar Heelia.<lb/>
Whether the authorities at East Caro-<lb/>
lina would care to confirm or deny such am-<lb/>
bitions, the fact is the college, should it con-<lb/>
tinue its present course, will find itself among<lb/>
these powers simply upon momentum, if for<lb/>
no other reason.<lb/>
Those outsiders who have followed the<lb/>
delopment and gi-ovth of East Carolina<lb/>
know the situation to be such . . . and they,<lb/>
like others of the insiders, are waiting for<lb/>
the day to arrive.<lb/>
Amazing Circumstances Behind Story<lb/>
The circumstances which have placed<lb/>
East Carolina on such a threshold, indeed,<lb/>
are amazing.<lb/>
It was in 1947 that Jim Johnson and<lb/>
other athletic officials from the college final-<lb/>
ly, with considerable opposition, gained mem-<lb/>
bership for East Carolina in the North State<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
At the time, the college was making a<lb/>
"transition" from what was popularly, among<lb/>
the opposition, at least, called a "girls col-<lb/>
lege In the prewar years the college's en-<lb/>
rollment had been largely female. With a<lb/>
few exceptions here and there, the school's<lb/>
athletic representatives were regarded strict-<lb/>
ly as second-rate. Internal problems possibly<lb/>
carried over onto the athletic field.<lb/>
With the postwar years, however, the<lb/>
college's enrollment mushroomed and au-<lb/>
thorities realized the male enrollment would<lb/>
support an athletic program worthy of North<lb/>
State Conference membership.<lb/>
And, even then, there were those within<lb/>
the conference who felt Johnson and his co-<lb/>
horts, themselves did not realize the college's<lb/>
tremendous potential, and for that reason<lb/>
opposed admitting the college.<lb/>
Now, the time those prophets foresaw<lb/>
is in the process of arriving.<lb/>
East Carolina's enrollment, in excess of<lb/>
5,000 by far outstrips any other member of<lb/>
what now has become the Carolinas Confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
Alumni resources, at one time a weak-<lb/>
ness, now are becoming a firm strength.<lb/>
Physical facilities, also once a weakness,<lb/>
have improved tremendously. Latest project,<lb/>
for which the ground is being readied, is a<lb/>
new stadium. Designed for a 12,000 capacity<lb/>
at first the plans are such that the stadium<lb/>
can be enlarged to as much as 50,000 at any<lb/>
time and by whatever degrees are necessary.<lb/>
A 2,000 seat gymnasium, a model not so<lb/>
many years ago, already has been outgrown,<lb/>
though not necessarily outmoded.<lb/>
Leadership, possibly at one time con-<lb/>
fused in itself, now has its aims and objec-<lb/>
tives clearly in view.<lb/>
Potential Tremendous For Athletic<lb/>
Greatness<lb/>
It is no secret  in fact, has been well<lb/>
publicized . . . that East Carolina for some<lb/>
years has sought membership in the South-<lb/>
ern Conference.<lb/>
For these ambitions, the college's athletic<lb/>
officials at times have been the object of the<lb/>
criticism from within the conference of which<lb/>
they now are a member.<lb/>
A feeling among some of these other<lb/>
members that "they think they are better<lb/>
than we" has brought very definite, and at<lb/>
times uncomplimentary, remarks about East<lb/>
Carolina's inability to dominate the North<lb/>
State Conference.<lb/>
Actually, this matter of record has noth-<lb/>
ing to do with the situation, except that year-<lb/>
by-yrair the college is laying the foundation<lb/>
for bigger things, athletically speaking.<lb/>
For instant, one athletic director, whose<lb/>
own record is not to be sneezed at, made this<lb/>
remark a few years ago:<lb/>
"When they get their feet on the ground<lb/>
and when they decide where they are going,<lb/>
the North State won't be able to hold them.<lb/>
Perhaps, not even the Southern Conference<lb/>
can do it<lb/>
It is a fact that the president of the<lb/>
Southern Conference spent a week on the<lb/>
Greenville campus last spring.<lb/>
A part of his comments when he pre-<lb/>
pared to leave was this in essence:<lb/>
"When your physical facilities are ready,<lb/>
when you have built your following to the<lb/>
point where it can support substantial guar-<lb/>
antees, we not only will want you in the<lb/>
Southern Conference, we'll be begging you<lb/>
to become a member, for then we will have<lb/>
competition<lb/>
The potential contained on the campus<lb/>
of the college at Greenville, athletically speak-<lb/>
ing, is tremendous. It already is the state's<lb/>
fourth largest college.<lb/>
Greenville, itself, is a growing, bustling<lb/>
town. Such things as the Voice of America<lb/>
Students Raise EC Spirit<lb/>
Compliments To You<lb/>
An Open Letter to the Students of<lb/>
East Carolina :<lb/>
I would like to compliment you for<lb/>
your spirit and conduct throughout<lb/>
the Homecoming weekend. A special<lb/>
word of thanks should be given to<lb/>
all of those students, especially Jayne<lb/>
Chandler, Merle Summers, and Tom-<lb/>
my Mallison, for their work in mak-<lb/>
ing this such a successful occasion.<lb/>
It was a pleasure to note the pre-<lb/>
sence of genuine enthusiasm for sup-<lb/>
porting the team and the obvious<lb/>
absence of alcohol at the football<lb/>
jame. Let's keep it up.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Cay Hogan<lb/>
Department of Health<lb/>
and Physical Education<lb/>
SGA Thanks Students<lb/>
'trig only club I'll Give- you i that it cam?<lb/>
Out Of Town Stadiums Hard To Find<lb/>
Massive Bags, Mums Decorate<lb/>
By MONTY MILLS<lb/>
better to the students:<lb/>
We would like to express our whole-<lb/>
hearted thanks to all who made this<lb/>
past week-end possible and successful.<lb/>
We would like to thank the ad-<lb/>
ministration and dormitory counsel-<lb/>
ors for thefr cooperation in keeping pufl of campus lU fi<lb/>
Fast Carolina College.<lb/>
To a great student lx?h<lb/>
say, "Thank you for ad.i .<lb/>
Homecoming- your enthusi<lb/>
terest All of you ha-<lb/>
reason for great pride nL  , ?<lb/>
of you, let us add this <lb/>
mendation for magnr<lb/>
done<lb/>
Cordially,<lb/>
James W Both<lb/>
ECC Hum<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Dependable Youth .<lb/>
Thoughtless Student<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
It was a wonderful Ho -<lb/>
thrilling- from the word<lb/>
oerall reaction of the<lb/>
to Homecoming pi .<lb/>
reasons why I fel i .<lb/>
studaats. The raqpona<lb/>
tifying to those orf Ufl oc<lb/>
I suspect, most surprising<lb/>
number of our alumni.<lb/>
School spirit has at<lb/>
Saturday's Homecomjifog, parade<lb/>
turned out to be somewhat of a "flam-<lb/>
ing success. The fire that destroyed<lb/>
the Theta Chi float added exciting<lb/>
momenta to the already spectacular<lb/>
parade. Fast acting, and quick minded<lb/>
students had the flames under con-<lb/>
trol when the local fire department,<lb/>
hindered by the parade spectators,<lb/>
finally arrived on one of the hottest<lb/>
scenes in parade history.<lb/>
The Pirates close victory over the<lb/>
Fighting Christians added zest to<lb/>
the already "spirited" crowd at the<lb/>
afternoon game. Girls, wearing the<lb/>
traditional homecoming mums and<lb/>
carrying massive handbags (the in-<lb/>
terior of which remained a secret)<lb/>
decorated stadium.<lb/>
One of the nation's top. "rook and<lb/>
roll" artists paid his last respects to<lb/>
EC late Friday night or very early<lb/>
Saturday morning. The versatile en-<lb/>
tertainer, Chuck "I Don't Want To<lb/>
Cry" Jackson, rated "high" in the<lb/>
students thoughts and actions over<lb/>
the week-end. And a memento to his<lb/>
transmitters which are being located there "performance" hung high in the top<lb/>
are bringing diversification to what once ? a taU ?k Saturday morning<lb/>
was purely a tobacco center. That is good<lb/>
for a college which already has for itself<lb/>
practically the entire eastern part of the<lb/>
state when it comes to football, or any col-<lb/>
lege athletics.<lb/>
The giant could awaken any time, now.<lb/>
Misinterpreting Lad Misses Whole Truth;<lb/>
Hubby Appreciates Eckberg As Rebels Dance<lb/>
Cheerleaders constantly urged the<lb/>
students to really show some spirit<lb/>
and enthusiasm for the football team<lb/>
Saturday afternoon. They prompted<lb/>
ue repeatedly for yells and chants.<lb/>
True enough, we could show a little<lb/>
more spirit than we have so far this<lb/>
By GEORGE GARDNER<lb/>
didn't like it. It didn't tell a story and some guy named 'Goodie Talk is that<lb/>
Dick and Goodie will do it unassisted. Be-<lb/>
sides, I understand everybody is riding a<lb/>
horse in Arizonia again, and I get saddle<lb/>
sores.<lb/>
determined a plump, middle-aged product of<lb/>
rural eastern Carolina. Her husband stood,<lb/>
transfixed, before a bill-board of Anita Ex-<lb/>
berg, exposed. She tugged his arm, and with<lb/>
a jerk he regained his familiar bewilder-<lb/>
ment, and together they disappeared into the<lb/>
night.Lo Dolce Vita had come to town.<lb/>
Meanwhile, back at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege (another level of existence), the Confed-<lb/>
eracy had come to town. General Robert E.<lb/>
Lee had led the troops across the heart of<lb/>
Greenville that morning, General Stonewall<lb/>
Jackson's crack regiment had slaughtered the<lb/>
'Christians' before thousands that afternoon,<lb/>
and now a victory dance was underway?<lb/>
soon to extend into the wee hours of a Berlioz-<lb/>
type, "Witches' Sabbath Across from the<lb/>
merry-making, I am told, President Jeffer-<lb/>
son t)avis, sleep alluding him, prayed that<lb/>
the jubilant populace would safely return to<lb/>
their more natural state?and 'Rest In<lb/>
Peace<lb/>
As I started to leave the motion picture,<lb/>
a young lady emerged alone. Her soldier<lb/>
friend, a former major (in social studies),<lb/>
had been lost in action (drinking bout, I<lb/>
understand). She said to me, "Lousy way to<lb/>
spend a homecoming I expressed condel-<lb/>
ences and she departed. I then walked over<lb/>
to the fire house to inquire if the Rescue Squad<lb/>
had reported any casualties. But for all prac-<lb/>
tical purposes, they were embarked on an ad-<lb/>
venture with "Wells Fargo wherein, all<lb/>
along the way a group of suaive, city-slicker<lb/>
varmits kept popping up to say that if we<lb/>
bought their brand of bananas we would have<lb/>
superhuman vitality; that a particular make<lb/>
of car would give us respect and prestige;<lb/>
that a certain toothpaste would not only clean<lb/>
out our mouth, but release us from all fear<lb/>
of being sexually repulsive; and that laxa-<lb/>
tive X would insure us of the health of a<lb/>
Greek god. A fellow sitting close by told me<lb/>
that these fast talking dudes recently got a<lb/>
president elected that way. "Another one of<lb/>
those guys who doesn't use his name, only<lb/>
initials he said.<lb/>
Anyway, with all those new-fangled de-<lb/>
vices for happiness I felt a 'hankerin' for<lb/>
the next stage west. However, I remembered<lb/>
that there are no Indians left to be shot, and<lb/>
buffalo meat smells bad when it is cooked,<lb/>
and the beatniks and 'Sheriff Pat Brown are<lb/>
out to get the ever dangerous 'Slippery Dick'<lb/>
So I figured, with 'Ole Abe' walking around<lb/>
Springfield as Vachel Lindsay says he does<lb/>
when the world gets in a mess, I couldn't be<lb/>
shot for desertion?he being so far away and<lb/>
not a sign of what he fought for in sight?<lb/>
and I ventured over to the Reb's dance, hor<lb/>
mg that all the tales told on Scarlett O'Hara<lb/>
were true. There I met a girl named Mel ovie<lb/>
du Jn reply to my Que3tion she said that<lb/>
Rhett was dead and that Scarlett had gone<lb/>
to Sweden.<lb/>
Disallusioned, I started home; thereby<lb/>
encountering a very excited young man who<lb/>
aSed.oheroad,to Washin?ton. He called him-<lb/>
self "Swingin' Hamlet but I could have<lb/>
sworn that he was some actor fellow named<lb/>
Booth?or Sinatra. Now a student friend of<lb/>
"i" uV ha5 read a history book tells me<lb/>
Little Circles<lb/>
Make Big Wheels;<lb/>
Spirit Awakens<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
The student's overwhelming re-<lb/>
sponse ,t? Dr. Buttrick's lecture is<lb/>
commendaible  for the first time<lb/>
in years we showed genuine interest<lb/>
in a lecturer.<lb/>
Students were impressed with the<lb/>
quality of the speaker, since Dr. Butt-<lb/>
nck is an authority on a subject that<lb/>
is of real value to college students. His<lb/>
manner of speaking reached the au-<lb/>
dience and caused us to think. We<lb/>
heard comments such as, "We have<lb/>
so few opportunities to hear a noted<lb/>
speaker in this area. More lectures<lb/>
of this type are greatly needed<lb/>
If the saime warm response exists<lb/>
lor every one of the three lectures,<lb/>
and if they are of the same calibre,<lb/>
year, but in the case of the cheer-<lb/>
leaders urging us to action, it's e case<lb/>
of the pot calling the kettle black.<lb/>
These hometown cheerers can yell<lb/>
awfully loud in the local stadium, but<lb/>
it seems that they find it hard to<lb/>
even make it to the out of town<lb/>
ttadiumB.<lb/>
Students groaned and griped over<lb/>
Saturday morning classes and the<lb/>
State Teacher's exam, which lasted<lb/>
well into mddafternoon. Saturday's<lb/>
jxarade and game, the last for many,<lb/>
went unattended by the unfortunate<lb/>
few who reluctantly dressed for<lb/>
classes rather than for the Home-<lb/>
coming events. But thanks to late<lb/>
permission over the week-end, the un-<lb/>
fortunates caught up on the week-end<lb/>
gaiqty, and grouchy temperaments<lb/>
were appeased.<lb/>
'Buc' Lacks Go-op<lb/>
Of Grads, Faculty<lb/>
Iear Editor:<lb/>
Definitions are frequently used to<lb/>
introduce a point of issue or new sub-<lb/>
ject matter. The definition on which<lb/>
1 would like to expound lies in the<lb/>
word "DISGUST Webster's New<lb/>
International dictionary gives as an<lb/>
explanation to this word, "A noun.<lb/>
1. Aversion or repugnance to that<lb/>
which excites nausea or squeamish-<lb/>
ness, or deeply offends the sensibili-<lb/>
ties; strong physical or emotional re-<lb/>
action to that which one loathes or<lb/>
finds loathsome; as, cruelty always<lb/>
excites disgust in her and it goes<lb/>
or. to say more. I have been wonder-<lb/>
ing today just what psychological ? Homecomingsofar as c<lb/>
problems would result if we had no ??? all went well, both<lb/>
the dorms open both Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights.<lb/>
We would like to single out Dr.<lb/>
Jim Butler for the splendid job done<lb/>
as administration Chairman for this<lb/>
and tpast year's homecomings.<lb/>
Our thanks are extended to Circle<lb/>
K for selling Confederate Flags; all<lb/>
the proceeds will go to our new stad-<lb/>
ium.<lb/>
Special thanks to the students for<lb/>
their wonderful conduct and enthus-<lb/>
iasm throughout the week-end.<lb/>
From the office of the President<lb/>
of the SGA<lb/>
Otis Strother, President<lb/>
Favorable Impression<lb/>
Dear Miss Elliott:<lb/>
Thank you for your contribution<lb/>
to a successful Homecoming Day pio-<lb/>
gram in Saturday, October 7.<lb/>
Through the pages of the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN, the Homecoming<lb/>
Committee speaks its appreciation for<lb/>
the co-operation of the entire college<lb/>
community?student body, adminis-<lb/>
trative staff, faculty- in making this<lb/>
a great event in the 1961962 col-<lb/>
lege year.<lb/>
Comments heard from alumni and<lb/>
guests from across North Carolina<lb/>
and other states who were on our<lb/>
campus for the past week-end in-<lb/>
dicate that they were impressed with<lb/>
the warmth of the welcome and that<lb/>
they consider the Homecoming activi-<lb/>
ties very worthwhile. The spectacular<lb/>
floats of the campus organizations,<lb/>
sororities, and fraternities commem-<lb/>
orating the Centennial observance of<lb/>
the Civil War evoked much praise.<lb/>
"Dixie Days" were great from Friday<lb/>
through Sunday!<lb/>
I personally appreciate the ru-<lb/>
terest and cooperation of each re-<lb/>
presentative in planning, producing<lb/>
ami participating in the full schedule<lb/>
words to resort to in a verbal ex-<lb/>
pression of our emotions.<lb/>
Now enough for eemantics and to<lb/>
get bluntly to the point. "I'm dis-<lb/>
gusted Just try to suit more people<lb/>
than yourself and you're in for ft!<lb/>
We are in the process of publishing a<lb/>
432 page pamplet referred to gen-<lb/>
erally as the college yearbook, or the<lb/>
BUtiaANEEJt. In our<lb/>
have<lb/>
attempt, we<lb/>
in the col-<lb/>
lege and off-campus events To cli-<lb/>
max the day with a win for the Pi-<lb/>
rates on Saturday afternoon in Col-<lb/>
lege Stadium and fa, launch a cam-<lb/>
paign for the building of a greater<lb/>
n,T' J6 JamCS S- Ficklen M?-<lb/>
onal Stadium, at -the Buccaneer din-<lb/>
ner Saturday evening, providing for<lb/>
greater athletics, more cultural af-<lb/>
fairs, and splendid spectaculars, make<lb/>
I had better leave the countrvthat th7?.Sf T 2! hmM in the riht <lb/>
cals have formed YSESES&amp;T 5fr Perhr the ? ?? ??<lb/>
. have<lb/>
not changed only the type speaker.<lb/>
Now ihe students are interested in the<lb/>
tap and feel they benefit from at-<lb/>
tending the lectures.<lb/>
Another dhange that may have a<lb/>
great deal to do with student reeponse<lb/>
is that we are paying for these lec-<lb/>
tures and our student representatives<lb/>
are directing the selection of speakers<lb/>
A faculty advisory board aids the<lb/>
student committee in obtaining speak-<lb/>
ers, but the real decisions rests with<lb/>
the committee.<lb/>
In his lecture<lb/>
ittle circles<lb/>
'orm a "bi<lb/>
wrong about Scarif(SSdTS So LTTS BC? He<lb/>
become involved) half truths ar SwT?J2 2Lf e " dedde<lb/>
damaging kind. "? the moat 7hT We stand' ? Wea ca<lb/>
?ho be applied to us. We must decide<lb/>
??WJlere we atand on the issue of creat-<lb/>
J7 - yt f. . :n? cultu?d interests<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
med a committee which looks<lb/>
hard on lolks who talk to strangers<lb/>
I suppose he is right. HoweverI would<lb/>
ike to leave a message for the first little<lb/>
lady I saw in front of the theatre. You will<lb/>
resogmze her anywhere. You pass her a<lb/>
dozen times on the street each day Just in-<lb/>
form her for me that-no, La DoUe Vita did<lb/>
not tell a story?it only told the truth And<lb/>
had she understood this, sho would have liked<lb/>
it even less. Moreover, bless her little puri-<lb/>
tanic heart, the guilt lies elsewhere, I think<lb/>
?about three blocks due east from where we<lb/>
stood But tell her not to criticizethcTtrooM<lb/>
Dear Editor-<lb/>
The<lb/>
La Dolce Vita was that it was a dirtyr<lb/>
lr. Buttrick ex-<lb/>
that we live in<lb/>
can't we put onr<lb/>
an eye on her husband Meii. ??S big w,M!el" "? ?? to-<lb/>
been wron about LuTlY "?rd  adv.?? of<lb/>
xerence Mr. Blizzard mentioned in his<lb/>
last week's column.<lb/>
ATTEMPT: I heard from many<lb/>
faculty people about the poor photo-<lb/>
graphs representing ftheir depart-<lb/>
ments in last year's book. So we tried<lb/>
?to remedy this by making an appeal<lb/>
to department heads for their sup-<lb/>
port in urging their faculty-ataff to<lb/>
have individual photographs made for<lb/>
the yearbook, AT NO COST!<lb/>
RESULTS: After this paper rolls<lb/>
off the press, there remains one day<lb/>
to have a .photograph made for the<lb/>
yearbookAe of October 6, 76 of<lb/>
he department heads did not reaponl<lb/>
to the simple request of forwarding to<lb/>
he weeaaa . ZSm<lb/>
f ? their f?y mamben Skt.<lb/>
three percent of the faculty bWnot<lb/>
taken the e to ha7ap<lb/>
made; and while looking at mJSZ<lb/>
be at least 1 have expres?fvio-<lb/>
lent emotionalism for onTrl?L<lb/>
another, 0<lb/>
veloped emotional maSry<lb/>
j iit weekend saw m ?<lb/>
tick; iii'?ng in more ad ?? ?<lb/>
before. More jtudenta<lb/>
the team than Wfci bel<lb/>
dents expressed<lb/>
harl work of the Home<lb/>
mittee, the Harwi, an.i t: .<lb/>
concerned in nwikir-<lb/>
great success. It is  .<lb/>
to e associated wit!<lb/>
body.<lb/>
And one cannot help  ?<lb/>
of the manner in vrhicl<lb/>
of Theta Chi, as we <lb/>
rtodents, reacted v<lb/>
covered that the n<lb/>
ney of their float w.v<lb/>
Tically no hesitation.<lb/>
the float were removed I<lb/>
(hsconnectted, and the f<lb/>
furiously, was poshed<lb/>
de path. Students b<lb/>
paper and other inf<lb/>
the lower part of the f<lb/>
work. Care had been taken<lb/>
no cars, wires, or boj<lb/>
threatened by the flame . .<lb/>
son called the fire depart 1 ?<lb/>
another ran for a hose at<lb/>
house. A fire extitag<lb/>
and was pressed int. ? .<lb/>
t'me the fire trucks ?n<lb/>
dents had quelched I<lb/>
only damage wias to a d .<lb/>
ther objects in the float<lb/>
prkfc of the Theta Chia T<lb/>
off, when I walked  ?<lb/>
in the day. there was -<lb/>
evidence of the fire re<lb/>
Don't ever tell me the<lb/>
i tion shouldn't he able I<lb/>
oar youth!<lb/>
But then?t the game, a<lb/>
as arrayed across the f<lb/>
strains of our National Ant<lb/>
forth, the Alumni, the<lb/>
of Eastern North Car<lb/>
from Elon, and the fa<lb/>
.ill looked across the f ?<lb/>
the students standing i<lb/>
a soul seemed to he -<lb/>
one thought his own ?<lb/>
then one of our cht-e<lb/>
most the full lemr; fthe<lb/>
up some crepe pa?r Si<lb/>
the other end of the field.<lb/>
Never has one thought<lb/>
had such an opportunity<lb/>
Kiand illusion.<lb/>
Sincerely.<lb/>
Floyd M Etes<lb/>
Science Depart<lb/>
Average Student Fails To See<lb/>
Beauty,Reality In 'La Dolce Mia<lb/>
lthy, foreign film, ft had<lb/>
on no story or ?<lb/>
Lni "? "? other than<lb/>
rtnnkang. and raising cam. Z "<lb/>
lous experiences<lb/>
sex by one, MarceUo. ft ? Z<lb/>
fo, lTe? ?&amp;'? whatsoever<lb/>
the opposite<lb/>
aver-<lb/>
for the film. This<lb/>
opinion, although<lb/>
?ot entirely the fault 7 ?! "u,ou?n<lb/>
a very beautiful and m 1<lb/>
laid bare jttat tnH lt<lb/>
?? ? a previous leSar to ? ?'m8' Wever. wZ 2?<lb/>
his two children and hu B?<lb/>
hnngs in the possibilr m ??<lb/>
needlessly hurting another<lb/>
'Steiner's wife hi the forrr.tr ?<lb/>
tion and she little blon, . . Max?'<lb/>
?? in tiie cafe by the sea,<lb/>
oase)- Marcello took a defeated ?<lb/>
tude from the murders sod<lb/>
Steiner.<lb/>
This is the storv behind the 0<lb/>
unds of parties. Perhars the fi?<lb/>
was confusing' because of the mama-<lb/>
in which the multiple factors erupts<lb/>
Every thing happened ts fast ?<lb/>
you really had to concentaus to ?<lb/>
lrtand .<lb/>
The point of this letter is to sbff?<lb/>
that students at this college hare n-<lb/>
Published<lb/>
jected the challenge of real cultai!<lb/>
And, m closing, for y bLJZTj Steiner, a friend arf mT ti?n <lb/>
"?2Kr?, TaTMseK fcswS SSrisrSsrs<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina ' ButfcrilSn r?C!p4aon ? ? graph schedule at leaiL100" He ?? chaL!?0,l ? ??<lb/>
'Within our And, in<lb/>
The<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Press Association<lb/>
Associated College Press<lb/>
m m ral to the support of<lb/>
?the bond issue. We are banafftlog<lb/>
m these projects. Why not support<lb/>
haven't offended<lb/>
anyone!)<lb/>
other<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Walter C.<lb/>
? BUOOANSSat<lb/>
- ? n Ufe du t? ?<lb/>
uuier purpose in lif? ,1 <lb/>
J5 can nsver be<lb/>
? -winds wooj<lb/>
3 ?nif esUd by<lb/>
? of the hrri 7JW ??li-<lb/>
to be,<lb/>
of<lb/>
ods in the soda shop. A parson <lb/>
??n do this and appreciate good ?<lb/>
tral entertainnient st the same ti9<lb/>
u indeed fortunate<lb/>
A college graduate fe erpectsi '<lb/>
he a leader of his community aad <lb/>
o?ler to fill this position effa<lb/>
he should be a broad-minded and ?<lb/>
rinded person. This type of ?<lb/>
f?velops only by allowing has- "<lb/>
?? exposed to the variou3 for?? ?<lb/>
cnltura.<lb/>
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forms ?<lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Panhellenic Officers<lb/>
l rom left to rijiht: Betty Rose Frazier, Ola Darden, Mary Nell Shaw, Gail Elkins, and Carol Butler.<lb/>
Formal Rush Plans Initiated<lb/>
Industrial Arts<lb/>
Instructors Meet<lb/>
On EC Campus<lb/>
The North Carolina Council of In-<lb/>
dustrial Arts Teachers will meet here<lb/>
October 13-14. Representatives from<lb/>
Xirpalachian State Teachers College,<lb/>
and North Carolina State College<lb/>
will attend.<lb/>
The purpose of the meeting wiil be<lb/>
an evaluation of the industrial arts<lb/>
 urriculum at East Carolina. A study<lb/>
of course offerings will be made to<lb/>
determine whether they meet the<lb/>
needs of the state in industrial arts.<lb/>
The council is now in its third year.<lb/>
Evaluation meetings have been held<lb/>
during this peroid at the three other<lb/>
member institutions.<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Bing, director of the<lb/>
department of industrial aits and<lb/>
faculty members of the department<lb/>
are now making plans for the meet-<lb/>
ing here.<lb/>
Campus Organizations Continue Advancement Plans<lb/>
Groups Announce Plans, Elect Officers<lb/>
t gener-<lb/>
I<lb/>
:he B<lb/>
and<lb/>
n flowed<lb/>
I<lb/>
of EOC<lb/>
ile. Not<lb/>
a? every-<lb/>
ibts. Aru:<lb/>
:s ran ul-<lb/>
l,i. pkkai<lb/>
Jn back to<lb/>
Is StVltT.t<lb/>
latter ?<lb/>
Jr.<lb/>
lent<lb/>
lee<lb/>
ita<lb/>
Icide. This<lb/>
r fear d<lb/>
individual<lb/>
,er situa-<lb/>
Marcello<lb/>
Shaw Heads Panhellenic Council<lb/>
The Panhellenic Council announces<lb/>
- slate o officers for the 1961-1962<lb/>
i These officers are selected by<lb/>
alphabetical relation system o!<lb/>
the sororities. Each year every sor-<lb/>
. lias a member in office.<lb/>
Mary Nell Shaw serves as presi-<lb/>
t (: the Panhellenic Council. Serv-<lb/>
with Miss Shaw will be Carol<lb/>
vice presndent; Gail Elkins,<lb/>
ecording secretary; Dawn Reaves,<lb/>
sponding secretary; Ola Darden,<lb/>
; esurer; Betty Rose Frazier, chaplain;<lb/>
Mary Helen Coffey, parliamentarian;<lb/>
Sara Smiley, rush chairman.<lb/>
advisor is Miss Ruth White,<lb/>
. of Women.<lb/>
Panhellenic Council has under-<lb/>
taken many responsibilities for the<lb/>
coming months. Its first project of<lb/>
year was an Open House. All<lb/>
girls interested in learning about soro.<lb/>
cities were invited to view the dis-<lb/>
 s of each Krroup.<lb/>
The next event scheluded by the<lb/>
Council will be a convocation for wo-<lb/>
men students interested in Formal<lb/>
Rush. At this time, each sorority presi-<lb/>
dent, .president of Panhellenic and the<lb/>
Panhellenic advisor will speak to the<lb/>
?irls on the procedures and advant-<lb/>
ages of Formal Rush.<lb/>
Recent discussions by the Council<lb/>
involved a plan for publication and<lb/>
distribution of the new Panhellenic<lb/>
Booklet which contains vital informa-<lb/>
ition for formal rush. These booklets<lb/>
will be given to each freshman girl.<lb/>
Assisting the Panhellenic Council<lb/>
officers are senior and junior dele-<lb/>
gates from each sorority. This year<lb/>
the Council includes Becky Basnight,<lb/>
Janice Sessoms, Lib Rogers, La Verne<lb/>
Blackley, Ellie Speckman. Also Janice<lb/>
Deaton, Glenda Preslar, Judy Lambert,<lb/>
Judy Redfern, and Elaine Brewer.<lb/>
Dr. Eller Instructs Course In<lb/>
Radiation Monitor Training<lb/>
Nine Qualify For<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson<lb/>
Fellowship Grants<lb/>
Nine seniors with excellent academ-<lb/>
ic records have been nominated by<lb/>
embers of the faculty as qualified<lb/>
to apply for fellowships granted by<lb/>
. Woodrow Wilson Fellowship Foun-<lb/>
dation.<lb/>
The purpose of the fellowship is<lb/>
encooatage outstanding students,<lb/>
particularly in the Humanities and the<lb/>
social sciences, to prepare themselves<lb/>
for careers in college teaching. Grants<lb/>
i ?1,500 a year with allowances for<lb/>
 :es and children, are made annually<lb/>
to nu.iv than 1,000 students in the<lb/>
United States for their first year of<lb/>
graduate study. 'Competition among<lb/>
inees from institutions through-<lb/>
the country is keen. Tests and In-<lb/>
terviews, are among means of choosing<lb/>
recipients by the Foundation.<lb/>
East Carolina seniors nominated for<lb/>
fellowships are Roy Earl Parker,<lb/>
Sandra Cockrell, James Wade Massey,<lb/>
Nancy Lee Berry, Carl H. Tyndall,<lb/>
Wilbur Castellow, Richard Humphrey,<lb/>
Larry Byrd, and Charles H. Moore.<lb/>
A dinner given by the Woodrow<lb/>
Wilson Fellowship Foundation Oc-<lb/>
tober 3 in the North Dining Hall pro-<lb/>
 )etl nominees with information about<lb/>
the fellowships, their purpose, meth-<lb/>
ods of application, qualifications for<lb/>
appointment, and other matters.<lb/>
Present to discuss the fellowships<lb/>
with seniors were Dean Robert L.<lb/>
Holt, Dr. John Howell of the Social<lb/>
Studies Department, Directors David<lb/>
R. Davis of the Mathematics Depart-<lb/>
ment and Clinton Prewett of the Psy-<lb/>
i hology Department, and Dean of Stu-<lb/>
tlfivt Affairs James H. Tucker.<lb/>
A public-service course in radiation<lb/>
monitor training opened October 2<lb/>
in the Joyner Library. With approxi-<lb/>
mately 100 people in the class Dr.<lb/>
Frank Filer of the Department of<lb/>
Science began instruction.<lb/>
Chairman J. H. Rose of the Pitt<lb/>
County Civil Defense Council stated,<lb/>
"This course trains us for something<lb/>
vital and worthwhile that we can do<lb/>
in case of emergency He expressed<lb/>
appreciation to Dr. Eller, who is do-<lb/>
nating his services as instructor of<lb/>
the course. This is the only course<lb/>
now in progress in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Monday's meeting was an orienta-<lb/>
tion and organizational session. Meet-<lb/>
ings of the entire group will be held<lb/>
each Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Joyner<lb/>
Library. Three groups were organized<lb/>
-one representing the college with<lb/>
students and staff members as pers-<lb/>
onnel, one representing nearby towns<lb/>
in the county, and one representing<lb/>
the city of Greenville. These sessions,<lb/>
Dr. Elier said, will be "trade school"<lb/>
or laboratory programs.<lb/>
Using a series of films to illustrate<lb/>
his remarks, Dr. Eiler discussed the<lb/>
effects of an atomic bomb on such<lb/>
a city as Washington, D. C, and on<lb/>
distant cities such as Philadelphia and<lb/>
New York; the nature and the dangers<lb/>
of fall-out; the effect of wind on fall-<lb/>
out; and differences in alpha, beta,<lb/>
and gamma radiation. A film "Primer<lb/>
ol Monitoring" contributed informa-<lb/>
tion for no-scienitists.<lb/>
Dean Holt, expressed appreciation<lb/>
for the interest shown in the course<lb/>
of study. "This course is presented<lb/>
he said, "not to excite people but to<lb/>
prepare for emergency<lb/>
Sigma Ru Names<lb/>
Clark, Advisor<lb/>
By TONY KATSIAS<lb/>
Mr. Joe Clark a graduate of East<lb/>
Carolina in 1955 has been chosen as<lb/>
the new advisor of Sigma Nu Fra-<lb/>
temalby. Mr. Scott Venable, who is<lb/>
presently the Eighth Division Com-<lb/>
mander of Signu Nu, named Clark to<lb/>
this position. Mr. Clark is working in<lb/>
No. 2 Student Supply Store as Mr.<lb/>
Rainey's assistant purchasing agent,<lb/>
and therefore is a familiar face to<lb/>
many of the students.<lb/>
Also, just initiated as brothers are<lb/>
Jeff Faucette and Jim Stout. Jeff is<lb/>
a native of Morehead City, and he is<lb/>
a psychology major. Jim is a native<lb/>
of Haw River and is a geography<lb/>
major. They were initiated on Sep-<lb/>
tember 24 at the Sigma Nu House.<lb/>
PE Club Plans Sports<lb/>
PI OMEGA PI<lb/>
PRICES FOR TYPING AND<lb/>
DUPLICATING WORK<lb/>
Per Page<lb/>
Single spaced $<lb/>
Double spaced<lb/>
With one carbon<lb/>
Each additional carbon<lb/>
(4 carbons maximum)<lb/>
: tencilp and Master Units<lb/>
Single spaced 8V?xll I<lb/>
Double spaced 8xll<lb/>
Single spaced 8xl4<lb/>
Double spaced 8x14<lb/>
lnvelopes<lb/>
$1.50 per hundred<lb/>
1 Hip Heating<lb/>
9. 75 per hour<lb/>
.50 minimum charge<lb/>
Each department or person will be<lb/>
expected to furnish his own supplies.<lb/>
Interested persons may contact any<lb/>
member of Pi Omega Pi1 or the spon-<lb/>
sor, Miss Frances Daniels, in Ravwl<lb/>
212A.<lb/>
.30<lb/>
20<lb/>
.05<lb/>
.01<lb/>
.40<lb/>
.25<lb/>
.50<lb/>
.85<lb/>
CU Representatives<lb/>
Plan U. Va. Conference<lb/>
The College Union will be repre-<lb/>
sented at the Region IV meeting of<lb/>
the Association of College Unions be-<lb/>
ginning today, October 12, at the<lb/>
University of Virginia, Charlottes-<lb/>
ville, Virginia by the following dele-<lb/>
gates: Jimmy M. Taylor, president<lb/>
of the College Union for the 1961-62<lb/>
year, and active for the past year as<lb/>
chairman of the special projects com-<lb/>
mittee; Glenn Boyd, current vice presi-<lb/>
dent, and active for the past two<lb/>
years;<lb/>
Monty Mills, presently social com-<lb/>
mittee chairman, and reporter for<lb/>
the 1960-61 year; Elaine Gitlson, cur-<lb/>
rently recording secretary of the CU,<lb/>
and social committee chairman last<lb/>
year; Carolyn Shearin, the 1961-62<lb/>
corresponding secretary, and an ac-<lb/>
tive committee worker last year; Ross<lb/>
Thomas, summer session director of<lb/>
the weekly bingo-ice cream parties,<lb/>
and an active committeeman for the<lb/>
past two years.<lb/>
President Taylor will serve as dis-<lb/>
cussion leader ftor one of the student<lb/>
group discussion sessions, directing<lb/>
the topic: "How Should the Lnion<lb/>
Program be Organized?" This is part<lb/>
of the over-all theme of the confer-<lb/>
ence: "Blueprint for College Unions<lb/>
Art Department<lb/>
Prepares Sixth<lb/>
Annual Display<lb/>
Faculty members of the depart-<lb/>
ment of art are now staging theiT<lb/>
Sixth Annual Show in the Hallway<lb/>
Gallery on the third floor of the Rawl<lb/>
Building and the display case3 at<lb/>
the entrance on the first floor. Seven-<lb/>
ty-two works, reflecting a variety of<lb/>
styles, techniques, and philosophies,<lb/>
are included in the exhibition.<lb/>
The show is open to the public and<lb/>
will continue through October.<lb/>
Frances Speight, noted artist who<lb/>
joined the East Carolina staff this<lb/>
fall as artist in residence, is ex-<lb/>
hibiting one of his paintings for the<lb/>
first time at the college. His "View of<lb/>
West Manayunk" exemplifies the<lb/>
traditional school of representational<lb/>
painting.<lb/>
Other new members of the art de-<lb/>
partment whose works are included<lb/>
in the show are Ruby Ball, supervisor<lb/>
of art education and practice teach-<lb/>
ing; Mrs. Nanene Engle; and Howard<lb/>
Woody of Roanoke, Va graduate as-<lb/>
sistant.<lb/>
Miss Ball is exhibiting two oil<lb/>
i aintings. Jewelry designs and wash<lb/>
drawings by Mrs. Engle and paintings<lb/>
by Mr. Woody add variety to the<lb/>
thorn.<lb/>
Also included are etchings by Leon<lb/>
Jacobson, paintings by Francis Lee<lb/>
Neal, graphics and 'paintings by Don-<lb/>
ald Sexauer, drawings and paintings<lb/>
by Tran Gordley, sculpture by Wesley<lb/>
Crawley and Thomas Mims, and pot-<lb/>
tery by Paul Miranis.<lb/>
Director Wellington B. Gray of the<lb/>
art department is represented in the<lb/>
show by two elevation renderings of<lb/>
his home, now under construction, as<lb/>
examples of his work in interior de-<lb/>
sign.<lb/>
Reggie V. Edgerton has been elect-<lb/>
ed president of the Physical Education<lb/>
Majors Club for the 1961-1962 term.<lb/>
The club, composed of 350 students<lb/>
marjoring in physical education, has<lb/>
the purpose of promoting interest in<lb/>
activities offered by the department<lb/>
and of increasing interest in athletics<lb/>
at the college.<lb/>
During the school year, cluib mem-<lb/>
bers will make available and super-<lb/>
vise on week-ends recreational events<lb/>
for interested students. The program<lb/>
will include swimming, basketball,<lb/>
and use of outdoor equipment. Dances<lb/>
after basketball games will also be<lb/>
sponsored by the club. Active mem-<lb/>
bers of the organization will receive<lb/>
canoe instructions and will take<lb/>
active part on canoe trips.<lb/>
Dr. Francis F. Pyne of the depart-<lb/>
ment of physical education serves<lb/>
as advisor of the group.<lb/>
Other officers chosen, in addition<lb/>
to President Edgerton, include Mal-<lb/>
colm H. Maxwell, vice president;<lb/>
Doris R. Wayne, secretary; Dale G.<lb/>
Patrick, treasurer; Woodrow W. Shep-<lb/>
herd, men's program chairman; and<lb/>
Janice L. Tripp, women's program<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
Ben Gibson Irons, senior student,<lb/>
uas been elected president of the Al-<lb/>
,ha Delta Tau fraternity and plans<lb/>
for the 1961-1962 school year are now<lb/>
being outlined.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Tau is a national hon-<lb/>
orary fraternity based on scholastic<lb/>
achievement in industrial arts. Among<lb/>
aims of the organization are to pro-<lb/>
rote scholastic proficiency, foster<lb/>
professional advancement, and to up-<lb/>
hold personal and professional honor<lb/>
among members.<lb/>
A retired major with the USAF,<lb/>
Irons is specializing in industrial arts.<lb/>
Other officers in addition to Irons<lb/>
are Carlton R. Tew, vice president;<lb/>
and Marshall Martin, secretary-treas-<lb/>
urer. ,<lb/>
Dr Kenneth Bing, director, and<lb/>
Robert W Leith of the industrial arts<lb/>
Jo-ia-rtment, serve as faculty advisors<lb/>
of the fraternity<lb/>
Other members of the organization<lb/>
include Jerry N. Black, William A.<lb/>
Brown, Jr Wynn A. Cox, Clinton C.<lb/>
Green, Sheldon Ray LassiteT, and<lb/>
James L. Waugh.<lb/>
Alpha Phi Pledges<lb/>
The Delta pledge class of Delta Al-<lb/>
pha Chapter of Alpha Phi has chosen<lb/>
the following girls to serve as their<lb/>
officers for the duration of their<lb/>
pledge period:<lb/>
Eleanor Poole, president; Ann De-<lb/>
vone, vice president; Brenda Reges,<lb/>
secretary; Bunny Mcllwean, treas-<lb/>
urer; Marie Brewer, scholarship chair-<lb/>
man; Grace Maxwell, social chair-<lb/>
man; Patsy Wiley, music chairman;<lb/>
Belinda Smith, activities chairman;<lb/>
and Julia Sutton, publicity chairman.<lb/>
11 Members Installed<lb/>
The Tau Chapter of Phi Sigma Pi,<lb/>
national honorary fraternity, installed<lb/>
eleven new members at a formal<lb/>
ceremony held on Wednesday, Oc-<lb/>
tober 4.<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi is an honorary fra-<lb/>
ternity founded on the basis of high<lb/>
scholarship and with the avowed pur-<lb/>
pose of advancing educational ideals.<lb/>
It stresses and recognizes scholarship,<lb/>
leadership, and fellowship.<lb/>
Dr. Richard Todd of the Social<lb/>
Studies Department serves as advisor<lb/>
to the fraternity.<lb/>
The new members are as follows:<lb/>
Donald Arthur, Larry Byrd, Parker<lb/>
Chesson Jr Ronald Helms, and<lb/>
Thomas Jonets.<lb/>
Other new members are: Charles<lb/>
Moore, WiMiam Murray, Jerry Norton,<lb/>
William Stocks, Glenn Williams, and<lb/>
Mack Worthington.<lb/>
fast to all things which are good and<lb/>
true in college and fraternity life,<lb/>
?:nd to turn away from every motive<lb/>
and action which might lessen esteem<lb/>
for character and result in the weaken-<lb/>
ing or breaking of the ties of friend-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
New members of the Gamma Rho<lb/>
chapter are: John Waters, Nat Van<lb/>
Nortwick, Charles Howie, Jerry Ful-<lb/>
fort, and Virgil Mewtborn.<lb/>
Following the initiatory services,<lb/>
he new brothers were entertained by<lb/>
ihe members in a brief social hour.<lb/>
Ovid Pierce of the English depart-<lb/>
ment, faculty advisor to the fraterui-<lb/>
.y, also entertained members of the<lb/>
ehetpter with a barbecue dinner at his<lb/>
plantation home located near Weldon.<lb/>
Home Ec Installs 60<lb/>
The Home Economics Club install-<lb/>
ed approximately sixty freshmen and<lb/>
transfers at their October meeting<lb/>
in Flanagan auditorium. Audrey Hal-<lb/>
lowman, vice president of the club,<lb/>
led the candlelight cremony, and<lb/>
president Betty Rose Frazier welcomed<lb/>
the girls into the club.<lb/>
Bobbie Jo Surtton reported on the<lb/>
American Home Economics Associa-<lb/>
tion which she attended in Cleveland,<lb/>
Ohio this past summer.<lb/>
Four girls are to be selected at a<lb/>
future meeting to represent the club<lb/>
in Greensboro at the North Carolina<lb/>
Home Economics Association.<lb/>
Students Attend Fair<lb/>
Plans of Delta Sigma Pi. profession-<lb/>
?1 business fraternity, have been an-<lb/>
nounced by its president, Thomas M.<lb/>
Reese. The organization, begun in<lb/>
1955 to promote business as a pro-<lb/>
fession, is now in the process of hav-<lb/>
ing informal rush to encourage mem-<lb/>
bership in the fraternity.<lb/>
During the 1961-1962 school year.<lb/>
members of Delta Sigma Pi will visit<lb/>
the World Trade Fair to be held in<lb/>
Charlotte; visit the Federal Reserve<lb/>
Bank in Richmond, Va sponsor, once<lb/>
again, ? Christmas party for under-<lb/>
 rivileged children; have profession-<lb/>
al guests as speakers at their monthly<lb/>
meetings; and present the fraternity's<lb/>
traditional Rose Ball which is to be<lb/>
highlighted by the crowning of a<lb/>
.ocal co-ed as Rose Ball Queen.<lb/>
Serving the organization as officers,<lb/>
in addition to President Reese, are<lb/>
James Adams, first vice president;<lb/>
Malcoln Burris, second vice president;<lb/>
Clifton Journigan, secretary; Eugene<lb/>
Jackson, treasurer; Maynard Keith,<lb/>
chancellor; and Gale Koonce, histori-<lb/>
an.<lb/>
Chi O Pledges Officers<lb/>
At its first meeting last week, the<lb/>
Epsilon Pledge Class of the Rho Zeta<lb/>
Chapter of Chj Omega elected its<lb/>
officers for the duiation of the Fall<lb/>
.dedge period.<lb/>
The officers are: Linda Minton.<lb/>
president; Ann Greenwell. vice presi-<lb/>
dent; Carolyn Gates, secretary; Jo Nell<lb/>
Rerley, tresurer; Cindy Sturdivan .<lb/>
songleader; Judy Brisson, activities<lb/>
chairman; Barbara Ryan, publicity<lb/>
chairman; Nancy Roberts, scholarship<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
On Campos<lb/>
with<lb/>
MtgShahan<lb/>
Author of "I Wat a Teen-age Dwarf "The<lb/>
Lot of Dobit Gtliw etc.)<lb/>
New KA Members<lb/>
With a membership of thirty-nine<lb/>
nun in the Kappa Alpha Order, fra-<lb/>
ternity, recently initiated five stu-<lb/>
dents as members.<lb/>
Initiatory services took place in<lb/>
the Eigthth Street Christian Chi'rc<lb/>
Kappa Ahpha Order was founded at<lb/>
Washington &amp; Lee University in 1865<lb/>
to perpetuate the Southern idea of<lb/>
gentlemanly character typified by<lb/>
Robert E. Iee, its spiritual founder.<lb/>
The members are committed to hold<lb/>
?????????????????????????????????? ft in<lb/>
- .was w. i jv<lb/>
The man to watch wears a<lb/>
ECC STUDENTS<lb/>
YOU ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT<lb/>
THE "MAP" PARTY HOUSE and<lb/>
PIZZA PARLOR<lb/>
Try Our Delicious Pizza, Sandwiches, Barbecue Dinners,<lb/>
Soups, Pie, and Beverages Anytime.<lb/>
10 Discount on Purchases of "Meal Tickets"<lb/>
Free Dancing at All Times in a Non-Alcoholic Atmosphere<lb/>
Strictly a<lb/>
NICE PLACE FOR NICE PEOPLE<lb/>
Join Us At<lb/>
5 Points - 2nd Floor (over Mary Ann Soda Shop)<lb/>
BILL GRIFFIN, Opr. and Mgr.<lb/>
Camel Hair<lb/>
Sportjacket<lb/>
 naturally<lb/>
Luxuriously soft, this jacket<lb/>
of rich imported camel's hair<lb/>
lends a distinguished yet<lb/>
informal tone to most<lb/>
gatherings. Authentically<lb/>
tailored by College Hall in<lb/>
the natural shoulder<lb/>
tradition with patch and<lb/>
flap pockets, hooked center<lb/>
vent, lined in matching<lb/>
camel print<lb/>
Available in traditional shades.<lb/>
$59.50<lb/>
THE TRUE AND<lb/>
HARROWING FACTS ABOUT RUSHING<lb/>
It is well enouga to sit in one's Morris chair and theorize about<lb/>
sorority rushing, but if one really wishes to know the factd, one<lb/>
must leave one's Morris chair and go out into the field. (My<lb/>
Morris chair, incidentally, was given to me by the Philip Morris<lb/>
Company, makers of Marlboro Cigarettes. They are great-<lb/>
hearted folk, the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, as millions of<lb/>
you know who have enjoyed their excellent cigarettes. Only<lb/>
from bountiful souls could come such mildness, such flavor,<lb/>
such filters, such pleasure, as you will find in Mariborosl For<lb/>
those who prefer crashproof boxes, Marlboro is available in<lb/>
crashproof boxes. For those who prefer soft packs, Marlboro<lb/>
is available in soft packs. For those who prefer to buy their<lb/>
cigarettes in bulk, please contact Emmett R. Sigafoos, friendly<lb/>
manager of our factory in Richmond, Virginia.)<lb/>
But I digress. I was saying that in order to know the true<lb/>
facts about sorority rushing, one must go into the field and<lb/>
investigate. Consequently, I went last week to the Indiana<lb/>
College of Spot Welding and Belles Lettres and interviewed<lb/>
several million coeds, among them a lovely lass named Gerund<lb/>
McKeever. (It is, incidentally, quite an interesting little story<lb/>
about how she came to be named Gerund. It seems that her<lb/>
father, Ralph T. McKeever, loved grammar better than any-<lb/>
thing in the world, and so he named all his children after parts<lb/>
of speech. In addition to Gerund, there were three girls named<lb/>
Preposition, Adverb, and Pronoun, and one boy named Dative<lb/>
Case. The girls seemed not to be unduly depressed by their<lb/>
names, but Dative Case, alas, grew steadily more morose and<lb/>
was finally found one night dangling from a participle. After<lb/>
this tragic event, the father abandoned his practice of gram-<lb/>
matical nomenclature, and whatever children were subsequently<lb/>
born to him?eight in all?were named Everett.)<lb/>
IkimmA<lb/>
(wwXv.VAvivv;<lb/>
?M:vV-fc.S&amp;SfrivivW'S'<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
&amp;f$mwnh<lb/>
MINS WELAJ<lb/>
The winner of our College Hall Suit<lb/>
DAVID LANCASTER, New Dorm<lb/>
AJUftftftfta<lb/>
But I digress. I ws interviewing a lovely coed named<lb/>
Gerund McKeever. "Gerund I said, "were you rushed by a<lb/>
sorority?"<lb/>
"Yes, mister she said, "I was rushed by a sorority<lb/>
"Did they give you a high-pressure pitch?" I asked. "Did<lb/>
they use the hard sell?"<lb/>
"No, mister she replied. "It was all done with quiet dignity.<lb/>
They simply talked to me about the chapter and the girls for<lb/>
about three minutes and then I pledged<lb/>
"My goodness I said. "Three minutes is not very long for<lb/>
asakstalkr<lb/>
"It is when they are holding you under water, mister,<lb/>
said Gerund.<lb/>
"Well, Gerund I said, "how do you like the house?"<lb/>
"I like the house fine, mister she replied. "But I don't live<lb/>
there. Unfortunately, they pledged more girls than they have<lb/>
room for, to they are sleeping some of us in the bell tower<lb/>
"Isn't that rather noisy?" I said.<lb/>
"Only on the quarter-hour said Gerund.<lb/>
?W1, Gerund I said, "it has certainly been a pleasure talk-<lb/>
ing to you I said.<lb/>
"Likewise, mister she said, and with many a laugh and cheer<lb/>
we went our separate ways-she to the campanile, I to the<lb/>
Morrieehair. ???-???<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
The Philip MorrU Compaq mek. in addition to Marlboro,<lb/>
the mm uidUtired. kin?-??? Philip MorrU Commander?<lb/>
choice tobacco, menthj emeuum ?<lb/>
,??,? you the few in ?<lb/>
b? ? new<lb/>
to<lb/>
imwiiiiijpiiii<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Jean Lasater Reigns Over Spectacul<lb/>
<lb/>
i .1 in?<lb/>
;lKln l ???rr f)vid Pierce read final preparations signaling- (he parade<lb/>
8 beginning.<lb/>
'in i ;i radiant J? an I ;iit'<lb/>
l" ttmi!<lb/>
vvv<lb/>
1 I parade marshall, grins at parade<lb/>
.lauce.<lb/>
infills I)<lb/>
i.in <lb/>
?ckground for a southern gentleman and hi<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
by<lb/>
Skip Warns ley<lb/>
Jim Boiling<lb/>
Dark Room Assistant<lb/>
; -?<lb/>
Ho lecomin,<lb/>
K giant Confederate flag, tittle flags wav? over the stadium of "<lb/>
: -rebels" while the Pirates figh, ?UllM<lb/>
ians.<lb/>
Ironclad Merrimac<lb/>
"?- again-iaakee fc<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
Ws ?? hot pursuit.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0005"/><lb/>
TH<lb/>
rOBi R 12, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
I'ACE FIVE<lb/>
?<lb/>
Dixie Homecoming; 'Rebs' Join Events<lb/>
r<lb/>
V<lb/>
?j? ? :? ? -5<lb/>
w<lb/>
Ku Klux Man nun feather an Elon tar bather<lb/>
j<lb/>
nrettes? familiar faces in everj<lb/>
iii parade.<lb/>
Voung man curiousl) studies "modern" Confederate rebels. Gee, look at<lb/>
that big rifle!<lb/>
"A s.<lb/>
passii<lb/>
I, Leo W. Jenkins, surveys crowded streets in the<lb/>
Homecoming Chairman Dr. .hunt- Butler, solicits "Major" R<lb/>
Mull to carrj his "armies' " flag.<lb/>
Miss Greenville dons flowing dress, carries flag for the "1?im? Days" Hume<lb/>
coming.<lb/>
m &amp; jt&amp; mk- ??&amp;<lb/>
Dunn-hull girls, blaring trumpets set background for a fe? hands of five-card dra? at the Basin Street Saloon.<lb/>
Smoke and gunpowder .<lb/>
time show.<lb/>
the Johnny reba are fighting back. The big cannon swings into action during the half-<lb/>
More  More  More <lb/>
"?wp it"<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0006"/><lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
PAGE SIX<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Upha i Delta cotton pickers bale the Klon Christians.<lb/>
Drum corp. paces mul pair, thai also have . par. ia tlu parade.<lb/>
Chuck Jackson hangs high . .<lb/>
rebels take revenge.<lb/>
angry<lb/>
I " 'b !adj graces the rose vtudded gown of the lelta Zeta float.<lb/>
 '?$3:<lb/>
j'h Miami rumba majorette chat. Lib RoK,<lb/>
dunag the hands trip through the I S.<lb/>
Burns Wows his horn for the Homecoming Dance, hacked up bj his ban<lb/>
d.<lb/>
A dejected Theta Chi hopelessly sorveys the remains of the fraternity's<lb/>
show boat.<lb/>
President and Mrs. Jenkins entertain coileg<lb/>
? gueata at one of the<lb/>
"  ?- -??. Homecomtng.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0007"/><lb/>
'?' T:<lb/>
OCTOBER VI, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PACK SEVEN<lb/>
Unbeat<lb/>
en Pirates Me<lb/>
i Pirates .n home again<lb/>
nd to battle WCC<lb/>
ks t extend their tm-<lb/>
 vmi at the expense of<lb/>
( onference foe. The<lb/>
mho have a record<lb/>
of ?ml 1-3 for the season, will<lb/>
be "up" for the Pirate contest.<lb/>
W lot a close one in the<lb/>
final minutes to fired-up Cataw-<lb/>
ba last week b) an 18-11 margin.<lb/>
Western Carolina will he led by<lb/>
Ken Morgan, an All-Conference<lb/>
candidate for the quarterback<lb/>
spot, liu scouting reports on<lb/>
Morgan have him to he an ac<lb/>
curate passer, very fast, and an<lb/>
excellent signal caller.<lb/>
WCC<lb/>
Surviving a fourth period scoring<lb/>
pree by srtwbborti Elon, EC remained<lb/>
undefeated with a close 22-20 victory<lb/>
over Elon. A record crowd of more<lb/>
ihan 10,000 fans was on hand to cele-<lb/>
. i ite the Homecoming affair.<lb/>
The victory, the fourth in suc-<lb/>
,? en or Coach Jack Boone's eleven<lb/>
?. ;i  "I.i one for the Bucs. It left<lb/>
? i'nn'cs in serious contention for<lb/>
Carolina Coferenee ehaowpionship.<lb/>
first Touchdown<lb/>
FuPback Billy Strickland, a junior<lb/>
fi m Portssnoutii, Virginia, climaxed<lb/>
a i.rt yard march early during the itiit-<lb/>
i I period by pkmging his way over<lb/>
'rom the 1 yard line to give the Bucs<lb/>
:i 6-0 lead. Accurate Bob Muldrow<lb/>
tooted the extra point and that was<lb/>
all the scoring thai occurred during<lb/>
the first half of action.<lb/>
All EC<lb/>
After an exciting half-time per-<lb/>
'ormonce, it was all EC in the third<lb/>
period, fairy Ruditeell, a freshman<lb/>
i: i. Hickory scored on a 13 yard<lb/>
run through the middle, with Muldrow<lb/>
attin adding the extra point. Elon hit<lb/>
ay lin in this same stanza on a<lb/>
one-yard run by Burel Clements, the<lb/>
Elon Fullback.<lb/>
1 Frank Galloway off-set the<lb/>
Christian score with a brilliant "5<lb/>
yard punt return. A Vince Eiduek to<lb/>
Johnny Anderson pass gave the Pi-<lb/>
rates two more points, and the lead<lb/>
v -i 22-6 for EC a; the end of the<lb/>
third quarter.<lb/>
Victory Margin Narrowed<lb/>
Elon came to life in the fourth<lb/>
period. A George Wooten to Burel<lb/>
YuM-nts 55 yard pass play put the<lb/>
Christians deep down into Buc ter-<lb/>
ritory. Wooten's pass from flight<lb/>
van ourt to Kelly scored the touch-<lb/>
down, and Clements made the two<lb/>
I HE ACTION WAS HEAVY on the<lb/>
field Saturday as an estimated 10.008 fan.s watched the Bucs defeat Elon.<lb/>
!eet The Team<lb/>
TACKLES<lb/>
Clayton Piiamd, Senior, 6-1, 190,<lb/>
Winton. (Tri-Oaptain) All-Confer-<lb/>
ence and All-Stater last season?won<lb/>
f si hlocker and most improved play-<lb/>
er awards last year?coaches predict<lb/>
great year for him. Excels by the<lb/>
use of his "migtty" forearm. Prob-<lb/>
ably good enough for Ail-American<lb/>
i eeognitkm.<lb/>
Skin-pi- Duke, Sophomore, 6-0, 21 u,<lb/>
Washington. Pt lysical Ed major. All-<lb/>
State tackle at Washington High<lb/>
School. Needs experience?but "has<lb/>
: itt potentiality?good defensive<lb/>
player.<lb/>
William Burton, Freshman, 6-3,<lb/>
!95. Exceptionally strong, lacks ex-<lb/>
perience, but sJhould help the Pirate<lb/>
cause as a reserve. Hampton, Virgin-<lb/>
ia. Physical Education major.<lb/>
James McDiarmid, Junior, 6-2, 200.<lb/>
Rocky .Mount. Expected to he top<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
By RICHARD BOYD<lb/>
?t ra ; (lints on a Will play.<lb/>
With the score 2li-14 and only<lb/>
ninutes remaining Clements scored reserve this year ??sjouhl le starter<lb/>
fl , , k BH It STRICKLAND from Portsmouth, Virginia finds a hole through the Elon defensive line.<lb/>
Th, scored the first Buc touchdown Saturday afternoon in the 22-26 win over "fighting" Elon.<lb/>
Tin down a- the second of the season for the hig Pirate fullback.<lb/>
final Elon touchdown, but a pass<lb/>
pay failed for the attempt of the<lb/>
extra two points and Elon had to<lb/>
kick off to the home team. An on-<lb/>
side kick failed and EC recovered.<lb/>
Dan Rouse. Pirate quarterback, ran<lb/>
out the clock . . . the Bucs remained<lb/>
undefeated.<lb/>
Elon attempts to stop Pirate ball carrier.<lb/>
Tabk Tennis, Bowlins In Campus Highlishts<lb/>
? i both<lb/>
? . ? " table tennis<lb/>
? 'A" Dorm.<lb/>
iached the<lb/>
 -i ?pen" division,<lb/>
players were<lb/>
? -No-<lb/>
?  players<lb/>
a ere n d allowed to<lb/>
dpen" play Lilley's<lb/>
j une allowed him to<lb/>
 upset, as he<lb/>
Champion Charles<lb/>
the semi-finals; 21-16.<lb/>
7. In this match Holliday's<lb/>
ild not control the<lb/>
- thai Lilley mix-<lb/>
occasional backhand<lb/>
I -<lb/>
? Lilley facing Noraaao<lb/>
, 1958-1960 East Caro-<lb/>
. who is now champion<lb/>
1 rn Tennessee and Georgia.<lb/>
?m 'lose to the table, Liltey<lb/>
? well, only to have Kil-<lb/>
ick open op with a fast moving<lb/>
! uk which forced him bark<lb/>
table. Kilpatrick's combin-<lb/>
of fast se vea and forehand smash<lb/>
wore Lilley's defense<lb/>
n. 21-11, 21-11.<lb/>
t in the "pen" division had<lb/>
jal top EC's second ranked<lb/>
t Nelson Tugwell, in the semi-<lb/>
23-21, 21-12. after Tugwell<lb/>
i ad taken a spectaelar win from<lb/>
Bowie Martin, in the quarterfinals;<lb/>
21-14, 20-22, 21-13. In this match,<lb/>
Fugwell hit backhand drive after<lb/>
ackhand drive through Martin's solid<lb/>
lefense, in g brilliant display of cont-<lb/>
ed hitting.<lb/>
Lilley came back from his defeat<lb/>
in the regular singles to annex the<lb/>
Novice title by defeated hard hitting<lb/>
Lewis Marcus in the finals; 21-9, 21-<lb/>
17. In the semi-finals, Lilley had a<lb/>
hard time winning out over the fore-<lb/>
land attack of Billy Lucas; 17-21, 2l-<lb/>
L6, 21-10, while Marcus was hitting<lb/>
through the spin defense of Dennis<lb/>
Creech, 21-14. 21-11. One of th' closest<lb/>
matches osf the night took place in<lb/>
the second round of the Novice divis-<lb/>
??????<lb/>
<lb/>
Cor. fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
"Dedicated To . . .<lb/>
A Young Man's Taste"<lb/>
<lb/>
ion, as Nelson Lee defeated Don<lb/>
Greimer; 21-19, 17-21, 21-19.<lb/>
Bowling has come to Greenville with<lb/>
a "strike<lb/>
Thanks to the interest, energy and<lb/>
negotiations of Bowie Martin, games<lb/>
committee chairman of the College<lb/>
i'nion, Mr. Gale Elliott, manager of<lb/>
,ie howling alleys recently opened in<lb/>
Greenville, has agreed that students<lb/>
who will bowl in a league in the af-<lb/>
ternoons may bowl for 35c (thivty-<lb/>
five cents) a game. The regular price<lb/>
of a game is 50c.<lb/>
Under the leadership of Martin and<lb/>
other committee members, the College<lb/>
Union is in the midst of organizing<lb/>
a campus league. Martin would like<lb/>
to have a men's and women's league.<lb/>
A league must have a minimum of<lb/>
eight teams and according to the con-<lb/>
ditions set by Mr. Elliott, the league<lb/>
piay must take place before 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Men and women who may be in-<lb/>
terested in joining a league are urged<lb/>
to stag) hy the College Union office<lb/>
and sign up.<lb/>
Tennis tournament to be held<lb/>
this Monday: See Intramural Di-<lb/>
rector Jack Jones for further in-<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
in 62. Business Administration major.<lb/>
Buddy Steward, Sophomore, 6-4,<lb/>
215. Wilmington. Played under Leon<lb/>
Brodgen at Wilmington. Attended<lb/>
West Texas State in T(J. Will be a<lb/>
reserve this season. Physical Educa-<lb/>
t ii n major.<lb/>
GUARDS<lb/>
Earl Sweet. Junior, 5-11, 218.<lb/>
I Portsmouth, Virginia. All-Stater at<lb/>
Wilson High School?-Extremely fast<lb/>
ind terrific bail player. The big<lb/>
Hue i : mark is his shoulders. Could<lb/>
i one of the real bright spots in<lb/>
EC's season. P'?vsical Education ma-<lb/>
jor.<lb/>
Dallas rlollingswortfe, Junior, 5-11,<lb/>
185, (i-n'in. Was nn All-State selec-<lb/>
i:oti at Clinton, played in the East-<lb/>
West All-Star game as well as the<lb/>
 tine game. Smart in class. Physical<lb/>
Education major.<lb/>
Wedell Worthington, Freshman, 5-<lb/>
,c. 185, Mooresville. Played freshman<lb/>
football last season?no varsity ex-<lb/>
verience tour sport man in hiph<lb/>
school -good offensive performer.<lb/>
Physical Education major.<lb/>
Frank Friedtend, Freshman, 5-10,<lb/>
193, Newport News, Va. Standout on<lb/>
fe frosh last season. Big, fairly fast<lb/>
and aggressive. All-Stater in Virgin-<lb/>
a. Physical Education major.<lb/>
Mu try Strawbridge, Junior, 6-1.<lb/>
185, Williamston. Strong?agile?<lb/>
better than average speed. Should see<lb/>
a lot of action this season. May start<lb/>
erne of Pirate contests.<lb/>
Robert Nesbtt, Eresjllman, 6-0, 190,<lb/>
Salisbury. Has great potential?ag-<lb/>
gressive real work horse. Good<lb/>
winter practice performance by this<lb/>
Salisbury native. Business Adminis-<lb/>
tiation major.<lb/>
CENTERS<lb/>
Charles Gordon, Senior, 5-11, 195.<lb/>
Clayton. Played guard as a sopho-<lb/>
more -second season as a regular?<lb/>
(onorable mention to the All-Confer-<lb/>
ence team last season. Football stand-<lb/>
out in the service. A fine leader. Phys-<lb/>
ical Education major.<lb/>
David Smith, Junior, 6-1, 190,<lb/>
W'hiteville. TR tree sport man im high<lb/>
school-saw limited action last sea-<lb/>
son?will see plenty of action this<lb/>
year. Fine kicker. Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion major.<lb/>
Jerry Paul. FreeftoaftSL 6-2, 200,<lb/>
Washington. Looked good in winter<lb/>
practice?expected to see a lot of<lb/>
action this year.<lb/>
HOMECOMING, l(.)bl  a spirited pep rally Thursday<lb/>
night, a fine parade Saturday morning, and a 22-20 EC win over<lb/>
Elon. We take our hats off to the Christians for making such<lb/>
a fine comeback against fired-up East Carolina, celebrating one<lb/>
oi the most successful Homecomings in Pirate history.<lb/>
Elon Impressive<lb/>
Before the largest gathering at an EC athletic event the<lb/>
Pirates d not spoil the Homecoming activities and came<lb/>
through with a win over battling Elon. The Bucs were hard<lb/>
pressed until -he final gun. but remained undefeated as a re-<lb/>
sult of the win.<lb/>
Wooten Fint Quarterback<lb/>
Although the short sleeved crowd of an estimated 10,01<lb/>
fans was expecting the Rues to turn the game into a complete<lb/>
one sided affair after the third period, the visitors from Elon<lb/>
had other ideas. The Rues were up against the finest quarter-<lb/>
back that they have played against all season in veteran Junior<lb/>
George Wooten. It was Wooten's passing and faking that kept<lb/>
the game as close as it was until the final second of play.<lb/>
With the large crowd on hand, and plenty of spirit in<lb/>
the air, the Bucs received the opening kickoff and marched 65<lb/>
yards for the touchdown, with Strickland bulling his way over<lb/>
from the one yard line. But the stubborn Christian defense<lb/>
stopped the Bucs from scoring again during the first half<lb/>
action<lb/>
Probably East Carolina's best quarter of the year came<lb/>
in the third when EC moved the ball well, and hit paj dirt for<lb/>
15 points. Names like Frank Galloway. Larry Rudisill, Vince<lb/>
Eiduek, and Johnny Anderson broke into the EC offensive thrust<lb/>
to help turn back the Christians.<lb/>
It was Rudisill's 13 yard run that scored the initial Buc<lb/>
tally in the last half. Galloway's sparkling r5 yard run back of<lb/>
an Elon punt aided by beautiful blocking was the most import-<lb/>
ant score of the game for EC as this one was the final Buc touch-<lb/>
down. Eiduek, a reserve quarterback with plenty of poise threw<lb/>
to Freshman end John Anderson for the two extra points giving<lb/>
the w inning Pirates enough points to win the contest.<lb/>
Western Carolina Next Foe<lb/>
EC seeks to remain undefeated this coming Saturday<lb/>
night at the expense of Western Carolina. The Catamounts pro-<lb/>
v itled the Buc's Homecoming opposition last year and were nipped<lb/>
by the Pirates 7-6. The EC schedule will get harder as the season<lb/>
progresses. The men of Coach Boone play such foes as Newberry,<lb/>
Lit, Appalachian. Wofford, and Furman after the Western Caro-<lb/>
lina contest.<lb/>
All-America)) In Piland<lb/>
If there ever has been an All-American at ECC it certain-<lb/>
ly is Clayton Piland, the great tackle from Winton. Probably the<lb/>
fastest tackle in the conference, Piland is 6l" and weighs only<lb/>
190. This is not a good size for a lineman, but the hard hitting<lb/>
Winton native easily out-plays his opponents.<lb/>
Speaking of good linemen. Chuck Gordon, who is: Tri-<lb/>
Captain along with Nick Hilgert and Piland certainly has proved<lb/>
that he is nothing short of sensational. He teams with Piland to<lb/>
give the Pirates two of the best linemen in the state.<lb/>
Veterans Tommy Matthews and Nick Hilgert lead the<lb/>
Pirates in rushing, and Tom Michel leads the team in scoring<lb/>
with 24 points. The Freshman, Michel, is one of the faster backs<lb/>
in the Carolina Conference.<lb/>
Starts Wednesday<lb/>
at the<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
"Master of The<lb/>
 World"<lb/>
??????????????????????????<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
We all make mistakes<lb/>
ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE<lb/>
ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND<lb/>
Touch-type, hunt-and-peck, type with one hand tied<lb/>
behind your back-it's easy to turn out perfect papers<lb/>
on Corrasable. Because you can erase without a trace.<lb/>
Typing errors disappear like magic with just the flick of<lb/>
an ordinary pencil eraser.There's never a telltale erasure<lb/>
mark on Corrasable's special surface.<lb/>
Corrasable is available in light,<lb/>
medium, heavy weights and Onion<lb/>
Skin. In convenient 100-sheet<lb/>
packets and 500-sheet ream<lb/>
boxes. Only Eaton makes<lb/>
Corrasable.<lb/>
A Berkshire Typewriter Paper<lb/>
?ATO? rAPBB COBPOBATION (8) riTTSflBLD. MASS.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038719_0008"/><lb/>
HHTWA? Ti<lb/>
J.JL  .<lb/>
EAST CA10LIKIA5<lb/>
- :<lb/>
Playhouse Presents 'Robin Hood<lb/>
To Benefit AAUW Fellowship<lb/>
I H<lb/>
pa i h aj tnoril rf hi<lb/>
?  'rr?j<lb/>
? -Tt? jc. reaeana; f; ?<lb/>
- - . '<lb/>
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ae afefced ? La the Iff Office<lb/>
! sc jf - - <lb/>
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? . a 7 ? i  2 ,i-rx - <lb/>
- - ?' ??- ???- r ?.s '&amp; ' ? - ; .i   . -   - ?  <lb/>
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?.  ? ? -?. ? : - - -<lb/>
? i " r c ? Sa T'ia" "? a;<lb/>
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Jackson Appear In Baltimor<lb/>
A Hi Etfiv Han" At rj<lb/>
t ? . ? <lb/>
jg j ?<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
Record Crowd Gathers To <lb/>
Hear 'Highwaymen' Perform<lb/>
,<lb/>
?? AST .J  - ?<lb/>
' r?il,BL vv ?  w  :jir.    B -  - i i ?: : Jfafr<lb/>
'? - port 7?. , . . ? i y Aajy r ?; B-te " v- Ay ?m ? HT a<lb/>
?'? f egw for vkadi ft?f iT plafwi <lb/>
V iT? -&amp;? 2 f U?!??r<lb/>
Mr. i. G. Gsaoa. AJKStait<lb/>
- fLgkt of W?7 ErE??T<lb/>
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?? af?Gcet sc<lb/>
rar<lb/>
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? i 9beve 7 .? -v. 2 i<lb/>
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Smiley Speaks<lb/>
At Dinner Meet<lb/>
:V-  -?: H.ra?a<lb/>
a?a. ?iil b? ? ctmpms mom. <lb/>
i?tr??-? Hea arta 25 jeara ?<lb/>
aee me eider wrtk eitatajuka<lb/>
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to taft vttii aea sabject to Mth-<lb/>
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zr.7rjc. ar.il ?. iir 7e f ?ice ffce. 2?t2 Admistntiam,<lb/>
-? z '? ? tkcoc iv ad .ia .p fo pp?at??at<lb/>
K.y 1? i?c?l is well .iiscspLrje acic seore 4Jt ?jb W,<lb/>
' ?  - o- - -d Majra-m rax- Orob?tr 1<lb/>
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B   2 .rdiag tc Dave J-  We? al-<lb/>
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Bdationi 1 - f ? taaao ??Ve  ion -<lb/>
'????- law  . lt.ry fricardty<lb/>
-? ' 3 tot ea I roic a f irrj<lb/>
 i ?  oKioue fa rt<lb/>
 keep - theve.1<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
Friday, October 13<lb/>
Rock Hudson<lb/>
Gina Lollabrigida<lb/>
Sandra Dee<lb/>
Bobby Darin<lb/>
in<lb/>
Tome September3<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
We'll help you convince your pa-es<lb/>
you shouid have a Rernirg<lb/>
MONARCH portable lypemilw to<lb/>
take the work out of your school work  and<lb/>
make homework fun! AJI you do is fill out and<lb/>
mail the cc.r betow. The- ewrrtea ee-<lb/>
to your folks outlining the reasons why a<lb/>
Remington MONARCH portable can helc you<lb/>
get better grades. (Incidentally, the MONARCH<lb/>
portable comes complete with carrying case<lb/>
plus a terrific self-teaching touch-tc ng<lb/>
course that's a pushover to master!) Ask to<lb/>
see the rugged, modern, compact<lb/>
MONARCH portable at your col-<lb/>
lege store or your Remington dealer!<lb/>
J7<lb/>
Charge Accounts?<lb/>
Yen can charge at Jautar Bros. Jewelers.<lb/>
For BCC tiadenti ire have a tpedbal charge pin with no<lb/>
carrying eharges, iirtwwt, or xtran. No red tape?just<lb/>
nay "charge it<lb/>
Lautares Bros. Jewelers<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
Jewelers For ECC Since 1912<lb/>
EVERYONE<lb/>
is wearing<lb/>
B A S S<lb/>
WEEJUNS<lb/>
Ladies $11.95<lb/>
Mens $15.95<lb/>
222 East Fifth Street<lb/>
GREEWILLE, N. C.<lb/>
CHECK THESE<lb/>
<lb/>
edge guKte leu you insert paper prec?eiy every tmel 5. cJZJ?! " Wer' Mj??73<lb/>
6. Numerais and calibrations on paper table simp,rfy rr S L"  ? heTt3<lb/>
mang cordons 8, Card and neyJ Eur. table on cytTrnX<lb/>
j Ligfner we,ght wrthout a hint of Hhnsiness or "creep Jr"8' U" Tw- ?- -<lb/>
f<lb/>
y. Wilttam Most, Advertising<lb/>
<lb/>
 Sparry Rand Corp.<lb/>
315 Park Avenue South, N. Y, 10, H Y,<lb/>
??  .T " a ?nc- MRENrs<lb/>
 mg and I can rtappiry use the Monarch<lb/>
I portable to take the work out of homeworki<lb/>
f - ??. i<lb/>
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