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rolinian's Special Edition for<lb/>
Ih- available to Day Students<lb/>
Lgt- I nion Tuesday and Wednes-<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
xvn<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GMJVILlSI N. C. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1961<lb/>
MarathopRunnersVwiH meet at 4:00 p. m.<lb/>
in th SGAXtffice. Individual run-<lb/>
and group reprentatives should be<lb/>
B<lb/>
Businessmen<lb/>
Continued Effort Makes<lb/>
Dream Become Reality<lb/>
?iAwm Mil I C<lb/>
A-<lb/>
By MONTY MJLLS<lb/>
?:?<lb/>
Pianist From Switzerland<lb/>
Presents EC Performance<lb/>
KATHKYX. ELAINE JOHNSON<lb/>
The setiW i-oncert in the "Fine<lb/>
Arts SsfmmCwill feature Geza Anda.<lb/>
noted conceit ' who wil1 er"<lb/>
form a ?:i? r<lb/>
Wright lAndBto1<lb/>
Now iMdHk bis home in Switzer-<lb/>
land, Anda was lK)in in Budapest<lb/>
where be stadi e Royal Acad-<lb/>
emy of Musk. V. - ?t' wel1<lb/>
known in ?bis cu.uiiry before he came<lb/>
here himself.<lb/>
He made hi " tour of the<lb/>
United States-in li? appearing with<lb/>
six major Otthestra He ; layed with<lb/>
the Philadelphia<lb/>
York, Pbiladelph W. ' ;i- Bal-<lb/>
timore, and at ' Worehester Festi-<lb/>
vaL He also appeared with the sym-<lb/>
phony orchestic : Chicago. San<lb/>
Framaaco, Cleve<lb/>
Vancouver, l(N'sh Columbia.<lb/>
In 1956 be r I his perform-<lb/>
ances "with A?Chi a go and San Fran-<lb/>
cisco ?rebeotoas and played as guest<lb/>
soloist -wiHi th- X-<lb/>
monic and the<lb/>
and Montreal "? :1-VM$<lb/>
brought sol? a, "ces with the<lb/>
Chicago end ?an- symphonies as<lb/>
well as with or,<lb/>
Dallas a?d BsJ<lb/>
In Europe, he i appeared with<lb/>
the major orohe<lb/>
den, AmstetuW The Hague. Paris,<lb/>
Madrid, Lifl&amp;or Zurick. and Geneva.<lb/>
Few foreign art: - ? -ain such popular<lb/>
, ity so mpidly i- ? r<lb/>
Max da Sehauensee, of Philadel-<lb/>
phia's Evening Bulletin, seems to<lb/>
have stimmed up the opinion of Amer-<lb/>
ican musk critics when he wrote, A<lb/>
serious and accomplished musician.<lb/>
He has a solid technique and plays<lb/>
h a full realization of the com-<lb/>
poser's intentions  A memorable<lb/>
performance<lb/>
Anda's recordings include Beeth-<lb/>
aven's Piano Concerto No. I in C,<lb/>
and Moonlight Sonata Liszet's Hun-<lb/>
garian Fantasy. Senator in B minor,<lb/>
Mephisto Waltz. Sonata in B minor,<lb/>
Rachmaninoff's Piano Ooncerto No.<lb/>
 m c minor; and Tchaikovsky's Pi-<lb/>
ano Concerto tn B-flat minor.<lb/>
James S. Ficklen Memorial Stad-<lb/>
um fund, as of Tuesday is just $32<lb/>
000 shy of the quarter million dollar<lb/>
goal for construction of the facility.<lb/>
A committee, headed by W. M.<lb/>
Scales Jr has been contacting busi-<lb/>
ness firms for the past seven days.<lb/>
-I'm speaking for the committee<lb/>
In saving that it has been an inspira-<lb/>
tion to see the entire ? community<lb/>
participating in the campaign<lb/>
Scales said. "This is by far the great-<lb/>
est thing the businessmen in this<lb/>
town have ever done<lb/>
The tireless efforts of the com-<lb/>
mittee and the generous contribu-<lb/>
tions of the Greenville businessmen<lb/>
have been an inapiratiin to East Car-<lb/>
olina College. Every person contact-<lb/>
ed by the committee has responded<lb/>
enthusiastically to the community<lb/>
project.<lb/>
The combined efforts of the com-<lb/>
mittee as a group has brought the<lb/>
stadium fund to the amount of<lb/>
$218,000 through Tuesday. Included<lb/>
in this is approximately $18,500, of<lb/>
the $25,000 college quota, raised<lb/>
among the students and faculty at<lb/>
East Carolina College.<lb/>
EC's 14,000 alumni have been con-<lb/>
tacted by mail through another com-<lb/>
mittee. Committees are also con-<lb/>
tacting other sources on behalf of<lb/>
the James S. Ficklen Memorial<lb/>
Stadium fund.<lb/>
EC's president. Dr. Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
who Ls working in conjunction with<lb/>
the committee, expressed the deep<lb/>
gratitude of the college, faculty and<lb/>
students to the people of Greenville,<lb/>
who by their overwhelming contnbu-<lb/>
tremen-<lb/>
tions have emitted their<lb/>
do's vote of confidence.<lb/>
A site for the 16,000 seating ca-<lb/>
 aity stadium, is already being<lb/>
graded west of Elmhurst School. The<lb/>
stadium, designed to seat approxi-<lb/>
mately 50.000 -persons, will for fur-<lb/>
bure need, be expanded to the de-<lb/>
sired capacity.<lb/>
College officials hope to obtain<lb/>
$50,000 from the November 7 bond<lb/>
issue to add to the Tuesday total of<lb/>
$218,000 to defray a portion of the<lb/>
cost of the stadium.<lb/>
On behalf of the college faculty<lb/>
and students, the East Carolinian<lb/>
offers a most sincere appreciation<lb/>
to the local stadium committee and<lb/>
to its members: W. M. Scales, Jr<lb/>
Reynolds May, Wally Howard, How-<lb/>
ard Hodges, Jr J. Con Lanier, Sr<lb/>
James T. Little. Dr. E. B. Aycock<lb/>
and David Wihichard. And in appre-<lb/>
ciation, their thanks go out to the<lb/>
students and faculty of East Caro-<lb/>
lina College who are also making<lb/>
the James S. Ficklin Memorial a real-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
To Bond<lb/>
With Marathon<lb/>
Schweitzer Points Out Need<lb/>
For Science: Key To Peace<lb/>
Uv ROSALIE VOGEL<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
Josh White To<lb/>
On Bill<lb/>
Religious Evaluation Week got in-<lb/>
to full swing on Tuesday October 24.<lb/>
when the entire college was dis-<lb/>
missed from class at 11:00 for a<lb/>
college wide assembly in Wright Au-<lb/>
ditorium. Dr. George KSchweitzer,<lb/>
featured speaker, spoke on "The<lb/>
Two Edged Sword of Science<lb/>
Bob Ward CSdled the congrega-<lb/>
tion to worship and Bonnie Cox led<lb/>
in an opening prayer. The College<lb/>
Chapel Choir, led by Dr. Carl Hjorts-<lb/>
vang smog "He's Watching Over<lb/>
Israel" from "Elijah" by Mendels-<lb/>
ohn and "Oh Clap Your Hands" by<lb/>
M. Thomas Cousins.<lb/>
Introduced by Carl Yorks, Dr.<lb/>
Schweitzer said that science trans<lb/>
He showed that the Hebrew-Chris-<lb/>
tian tradition deal with reality as<lb/>
compared with the Greeks and un-<lb/>
reality. The Greeks believed that<lb/>
the world is not divine but rather<lb/>
man is and therefore knows all the<lb/>
answers. The Hebrew-Christians be-<lb/>
lieve that the world is divine and<lb/>
mysterious, therefore we must ex-<lb/>
periment to find the answers. The<lb/>
Greeks would ask "why" something<lb/>
happens whereas the the Hebrew-<lb/>
Christians ask "how<lb/>
Dr. Schweitzer finished by point-<lb/>
ing out that tibe Greeks thought<lb/>
everything was made according to a<lb/>
set pattern as compared with the<lb/>
Hebrew-Christian thoughts of each<lb/>
one as an individual. He stated that<lb/>
I  Z thinking. He minted out ihe Greeks thought that "the World<lb/>
 ?- . j i? ?uQ? tht? Hebrew-<lb/>
With<lb/>
As pmtkMi the Popular Entertain-<lb/>
ment Series, Josh White, acclaimed<lb/>
as one of t&amp;e irreatesfr folk singers<lb/>
of our time, will perform on Friday,<lb/>
November IS, t S:15 p.m. in WTright<lb/>
Auditorium the<lb/>
7:16 p. m. W folksinger has appeared<lb/>
i? uaw?sft? Broadway, and before<lb/>
Presides Lev.it and the royal<lb/>
families of mfcat Britain and Den<lb/>
mark, as<lb/>
making many re-<lb/>
I truest tickets for the<lb/>
perforasiMawill go on sale one week<lb/>
aar.ee for $3.00 each.<lb/>
ined from the SGA<lb/>
:00 until 11:00 and<lb/>
3:00.<lb/>
Winding<lb/>
November 11, the Kai<lb/>
?hat there is order in nature put<lb/>
there by the Creator. In order to dis-<lb/>
cover the pattern in life you must<lb/>
?, out and look for it. The Greeks<lb/>
pictured their gods as thinkers in<lb/>
contrast to the Hebrew-Christian<lb/>
concept of God as a God of action<lb/>
D, Shweitzer pointed out that<lb/>
every early pioneer of science was<lb/>
a Christian.<lb/>
Tool In Our Hands<lb/>
Science is limited as it puts the<lb/>
tools into our hands but cannot tell<lb/>
us how to use them. We must find<lb/>
0 . for ourselves our morals,<lb/>
purpose, meaning, loyalty, and meas-<lb/>
ure of good and evil in our life.<lb/>
Dr. Schweitzer stated that every-<lb/>
one has a religion to which he gives<lb/>
himself completely. So many of us<lb/>
think that "Faith is believing what<lb/>
you know ain't so pointed out Dr.<lb/>
Schweitzer. The Greeks thought that<lb/>
so loved God" whereas the Hebrew-<lb/>
Christians say "God so loved the<lb/>
world<lb/>
After the lecture Dr. Schweitzer<lb/>
held a question and answer session.<lb/>
faith was saying "ya" when asked the event<lb/>
Wesleyan College<lb/>
Inaugurates Collins<lb/>
As New President<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins repre-<lb/>
sented East Carolina College at cere-<lb/>
monies marking the inauguration of<lb/>
Dr. Thomas A. Collins as president<lb/>
of N. C. Wesleyan College in Rocky<lb/>
Mount October 25. Other members of<lb/>
he college staff also participated in<lb/>
let arrangements are<lb/>
the Josh White con-<lb/>
born in Denmark,<lb/>
linked States at the<lb/>
up he learn-<lb/>
ombone. Now rated<lb/>
trombonists in<lb/>
lyed with Stan<lb/>
Mulligan, and<lb/>
well as many<lb/>
rery success-<lb/>
if you believed something. The He-<lb/>
brew-Christian concept of faith is<lb/>
-the assurance enough to act He<lb/>
also pointed out that the key to<lb/>
word peace "Thou shalt love the<lb/>
will appear in con- )rd God with all thy soul, with<lb/>
Auditorium at 8:15 au thy strength, and with all thy<lb/>
night And "Thou shalt love thy<lb/>
neighbor as thyself<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
At 2 p. m. of the same day in the<lb/>
Joyner Library Auditorium, Dr.<lb/>
Schweitzer led a seminar for honor<lb/>
students, seniors, graduate students,<lb/>
snd faculty on "The Hebrew-Chrs-<lb/>
tian Tradition and the Origins of<lb/>
Modern Science<lb/>
In his lecture, Dr. Schweitzer com-<lb/>
pared the Greeks with the Hebrew-<lb/>
Christians. He explained that cul-<lb/>
tural climate tells what men think.<lb/>
Carl E. Stout of th Department<lb/>
of Music acted as organist at the<lb/>
inaugural program. He is a member<lb/>
of the American Guild of Organists<lb/>
and dean of the Rocky Mount-Kin-<lb/>
s-ton Chapter of the organization, and<lb/>
organist and choir master of the<lb/>
Church of the Good Shepherd in<lb/>
Rocky Mount.<lb/>
As representatives of colleges and<lb/>
universities of which they are grad-<lb/>
uates, the following East Carolina<lb/>
College faculty members attended the<lb/>
inauguration:<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth Bing, director of the<lb/>
industrial arts department, Nebraska<lb/>
Wesleyan; Dr. Bessie McNiel, direc-<lb/>
tor of the home economics depart-<lb/>
ment, Iowa State; and Mrs. Margue-<lb/>
rite Perry of the foreign language<lb/>
department, Winthrop College.<lb/>
lillliams' Play<lb/>
Opens In McGinnis<lb/>
t Wednesday<lb/>
Tennessee Williams' long-run<lb/>
drama, The Glass Menagerie, will<lb/>
(-pen a 3-performance engagement be-<lb/>
ginning next Wednesday in McGinnis<lb/>
Auditorium. Activity cards must be<lb/>
presented.<lb/>
Reserved seat tickets will be avail-<lb/>
able Monday in the College Union.<lb/>
"The Glass Menagerie" tells the j<lb/>
story of a fading Southern mother,<lb/>
living in an apartment facing a back<lb/>
dley in St. Louis, trying to do the<lb/>
best she can for her two children.<lb/>
but succeeding only in destroying<lb/>
every vestige of hope, beauty and joy<lb/>
in their lives.<lb/>
There is Tom, the dutiful Wingfield<lb/>
son who works in a warehouse, bears<lb/>
up under his mother's early morning<lb/>
snouts of "rise and shine" spends a<lb/>
good deal of time in the movies, and<lb/>
-vould rather he sailing to far-off<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Anr there is Laura, the cripple<lb/>
daughter, so sensitive and shy that<lb/>
she has only her collection of glass<lb/>
animals for solace.<lb/>
Laughs<lb/>
Mr. Williams has put some laughs<lb/>
in "The Glass Menagerie, but they<lb/>
are wise-eracks-they are laughs<lb/>
growing out of the play's essentially<lb/>
poignant situation. The characters are<lb/>
rol trying to be funny; tihey are crea-<lb/>
tors caught in the most ordinary<lb/>
but the most terrible of tragedy?that<lb/>
of trying to live when they have no<lb/>
sensible reason for living.<lb/>
Lucile Dew will be seen in the lead-<lb/>
ing role of the mother?Amanda, in<lb/>
this play which was described by the<lb/>
N. Y. Post critic, during the play's<lb/>
of3-performamce run on Broadway, as<lb/>
being "like life itself, deeply touch-<lb/>
ing very funny and desperately sad<lb/>
Fearful Tom<lb/>
As Tom, the stolid Wingfield bread-<lb/>
winner, who Amanda fears will emu-<lb/>
late his father and "fall in love with<lb/>
long distance" wall be seen Ben Avery,<lb/>
while Laura, the shrinking violet<lb/>
whose heart cries out for affection,<lb/>
will be played by Sue Taylor.<lb/>
As Laura's Gentleman Caller, the<lb/>
j um-chewing philosopher whom Tom<lb/>
brings to dinner, Tom Hull will com-<lb/>
plete the cast of this play which won<lb/>
the New York Critics' Circle Award<lb/>
lor 1945.<lb/>
Director<lb/>
Ralph Hardee iRaves, associate di-<lb/>
dector of the Playhouse is technical<lb/>
director. Working with him as crew<lb/>
heads'are Bab Imamnra, lights; Ern-<lb/>
estine Edwards, properties; Lois Gar-<lb/>
ren, costumes; Tom Hull seta; and<lb/>
Mike Lewis, sound. Other crew heads<lb/>
are Alice Coriolano, makeup; Ed'<lb/>
Smith, house; and Howard Mallard,<lb/>
.rubHcity. Casandra Drake is serving<lb/>
as assistant director to 3. A. With-<lb/>
ey, director of the productJoa,<lb/>
By JEAN PEACE<lb/>
College students in North Carolina<lb/>
are answering the call of the Stu-<lb/>
-dent Committee for a Better N. C.<lb/>
Campus enthusiasm has been sparked<lb/>
by rallies and news of the coming<lb/>
"Torch Marathon.<lb/>
The marathon will begin October<lb/>
31 and run through November 3. Each<lb/>
school has been allotted mileage and<lb/>
a starting place. Runners will carry<lb/>
a kerosene torch throughout North<lb/>
Carolina and meet in Raleigh for a<lb/>
mass rally November 3.<lb/>
The passage of the current Bond<lb/>
Issue is of great importance to every<lb/>
state supported college in North Caro-<lb/>
lina. The students realize this im-<lb/>
portance and are anxious to show<lb/>
their interest in the issue. Student<lb/>
letters have been written, gpeeches<lb/>
given, and rallies staged. The "Torch<lb/>
Marathon" and the rally in Raleigh<lb/>
will climax student support of the<lb/>
Bond Issue.<lb/>
With the passage of the Bond Issue,<lb/>
taxes will not be raised. The treas-<lb/>
urer of North Carolina feels the state<lb/>
is in excellent financial condition and<lb/>
the needs of these bonds will not<lb/>
put a strain on the economy. The is-<lb/>
sue will enable colleges to build much<lb/>
needed dormitories, clossroom build-<lb/>
ings, and laboratories.<lb/>
As the "Torch of Education Maro-<lb/>
thon" makes its way through cities<lb/>
of North Carolina, the hopes of stu-<lb/>
dents and educators throughout the<lb/>
state are traveling with it.<lb/>
A sound car will accompany each<lb/>
runner. Public announcements will be<lb/>
made in each city. Other cars will fol-<lb/>
low the runner with a relief runner<lb/>
ready to begin his mile of torch carry-<lb/>
ing. Runners will wear light colored<lb/>
clothing and run ten minutes each.<lb/>
The Highway Patrol is ready to aid<lb/>
the students and will help to aleviate<lb/>
t raff ice problems if they should arise.<lb/>
The "Torch of Education Mara-<lb/>
thon" is the voice of thousands of<lb/>
North Carolina college students ask-<lb/>
ing the voters to carefully consider<lb/>
the need for" the passage of the Bond<lb/>
Issue.<lb/>
KeTlrogden, Billy Kay Jackson, and Mis? Fischell discuss plans for the<lb/>
Senior Class Dance "The Roaring '20's" ?<lb/>
Burns Band Plays For<lb/>
Senior Sponsored Dance<lb/>
Raccoon coats, cloche hats, and<lb/>
striped blaswrs will once again be<lb/>
che "cat's pajamas" at the senior<lb/>
class sponsored Roaring 20's Dance<lb/>
on November 3-<lb/>
"It's sponsored by the senior class<lb/>
but it's a campus affair. Everyone<lb/>
is urged to attend. The theme is that<lb/>
of the Roaring 20's and we are asking<lb/>
everyone to dress in the type of clothes<lb/>
that"was fashionable then announced<lb/>
Ken Tregdon, senior class president.<lb/>
The dance will begin at $:15 p.m.<lb/>
Jimmy Burns and his band will pro-<lb/>
vide music for dancing. Intermission<lb/>
entertainment will be by Peter Johl,<lb/>
remembered for his performances in<lb/>
Senate Passes Two Proposals;<lb/>
Paper Staft Requests Funds<lb/>
By MARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
,At the weekly meeting of th SGA,<lb/>
the Student Senate voted to recom-<lb/>
mend to Dr. Holt, Dr. Jenkins, and<lb/>
the Policy Committee that: All term<lb/>
oapers theses, synopses, and essays,<lb/>
etc. be submitted before the week<lb/>
preceeding final exams.<lb/>
The motion, which was submitted<lb/>
by Tommy Mallison, further read<lb/>
that quizes shall be prohibited dur-<lb/>
,ng that week preceeding the final<lb/>
exams. No part of the final exam<lb/>
except speech classes, music classes,<lb/>
and labs where individual testing is<lb/>
necessary can be jriven ahead of the<lb/>
exam schedule.<lb/>
The Student Senate also voted for<lb/>
lecommendation that: The day be-<lb/>
fore the final exam shall De declared<lb/>
a reading day-to (prepare for the<lb/>
final exam. This will apply to the<lb/>
students as well as to the professors.<lb/>
No Food Allowance<lb/>
The motion passed the SGA Mon-<lb/>
day night that delegates represent-<lb/>
ing the Student Senate or the SGA<lb/>
shall not have a food allowance for<lb/>
trips, conventions, seminars, etc. The<lb/>
reasons stated for this motion were<lb/>
that it was not ?air for one group<lb/>
to be allowed such privileges when<lb/>
other groutps representing the college<lb/>
are not given the same privileges.<lb/>
The Student Senate supported the<lb/>
recommendation that State rates be<lb/>
alloted advisors who accompany any<lb/>
group under the sponsorship of the<lb/>
SGA.<lb/>
The motion that the Music Faculty<lb/>
be given complimentary tickets to<lb/>
the Fine (Arts Series was defeated.<lb/>
Marathon Path<lb/>
Otis Strother announced that the<lb/>
path has been plotted for the ECC<lb/>
Marathon Runners. The path which<lb/>
we will run will be from Bichlands<lb/>
to seven miles north of Greenville<lb/>
on the Rocky Mount Highway, and<lb/>
from Rocky Mount to Selma.<lb/>
The ?motion was made and approv-<lb/>
ed by the SCA that the freshman<lb/>
class officers 1 in change of dis-<lb/>
tributing activity cards at registra-<lb/>
tion day.<lb/>
Additional Appropriations<lb/>
Patsy Elliott proposed that an ad-<lb/>
ditional $159 be considered by the<lb/>
Budget Committee in order to send<lb/>
two more delegates to the Associated<lb/>
Collegiate Press Conference in Mi-<lb/>
South Pacific" and "The Lady's Not<lb/>
For Burning<lb/>
Jimmy Burns organized his band<lb/>
within the bat year. He has played<lb/>
with dance bands since he was a<lb/>
high school sophomore; he has also<lb/>
played with armed sen-ice bands.<lb/>
More recently, he appeared with the<lb/>
Collegians and the Pastels. Last sum-<lb/>
mer he worked with the Dean Hudson<lb/>
band.<lb/>
The band includes Glenn Briley,<lb/>
drums; Dave Miller, piano and jazz<lb/>
flute; both of whom have appeared<lb/>
in service bands. Dave Miller also ar-<lb/>
ranges material. Rose Lindsey is the<lb/>
vocalist.<lb/>
Advance tickets will cost $1.50 per<lb/>
(uuple. At the door, they will be $2.00.<lb/>
Proceeds will be used in obtaining the<lb/>
new college stadium. All campus or-<lb/>
ganizations are asked to help in sell-<lb/>
ing tickets. The organization which<lb/>
hest supports the fund raising cam-<lb/>
paign will receive a trophy.<lb/>
ami this'year.<lb/>
Patey stated that this conference<lb/>
is primarily for the newspaper staff.<lb/>
an( that it would benefit the stu-<lb/>
dents and the paper to send more<lb/>
Chan the allotted 3 people to this<lb/>
conference. In the past years we<lb/>
have sent 6 delegates and some-<lb/>
limes more to these annual conven-<lb/>
tions. This proposal .passed the Stu-<lb/>
dent Senate and will be reconsidered<lb/>
bv the Budget Committee.<lb/>
Patsv also urged student support<lb/>
fa sending to the parents of the stu-<lb/>
(ionU, a special edition of the news-<lb/>
paper dealing with the Bond Issue.<lb/>
Each dormitory will receive newspa-<lb/>
pers to address, which will be dis-<lb/>
tributed bv the administration staff.<lb/>
Senior Dance<lb/>
Ken Tiogden announced that the<lb/>
.enior class will sponsir a Roarin' 20 s<lb/>
J3ance on November 3. He urged<lb/>
everyone to support the senior class<lb/>
and go to the dance. Late permis-<lb/>
sion until 12:00 m, will be extend-<lb/>
ed to all those attending (he dance.<lb/>
Tommv Mallison announced that<lb/>
season tickets to the remoter of<lb/>
the Fine Arts series wall be $8.00<lb/>
for the general public, and $4 00 for<lb/>
the faculty, administration staff, and<lb/>
married students. The next perfor-<lb/>
mance will be on November 1, and<lb/>
will feature the Hungarian pianist,<lb/>
Geza Anda.<lb/>
Officers Make Plea<lb/>
For Class Support<lb/>
The junior class officers are making<lb/>
bb appeal to class members to attend<lb/>
the business meetings. "Member par-<lb/>
ties, ation in meetings and activities<lb/>
is poor. We would like to give more<lb/>
support to school activities, but we<lb/>
lack organized effort. Of the ap-<lb/>
proximately 900 class members only<lb/>
20 are interested enough to attend,<lb/>
commented Cloyce Anders, president,<lb/>
At present the officers are try-<lb/>
ng to set up committees for the jun-<lb/>
ior-senior dance, the Spring Regent.<lb/>
There are so few interested people<lb/>
that committees can not be formed.<lb/>
"It is a shame the freshman class<lb/>
shows more interest in class pro-<lb/>
grams than the upper classes con- ?<lb/>
tinned Cloyce.<lb/>
To create enthusiasm among the<lb/>
junior class members, a plaque has<lb/>
oeen purchased which will be awarded<lb/>
for meeting attendance. A separate<lb/>
.ontest will be held between the girls<lb/>
dorms and the first, second, and third<lb/>
floors of Jones Hall.<lb/>
Cloyce emphasized, "we hope this<lb/>
will cause the class members to renew<lb/>
their interest in class meetings and<lb/>
activities in order that the junior<lb/>
class can gain the group prestige it<lb/>
should have. "<lb/>
Federal Examination<lb/>
The Federal Service Examina-<lb/>
tion will be given again on No-<lb/>
vember 18. Students interested fas ?<lb/>
taking this exam most file in the<lb/>
Placement Office by 4:30 on<lb/>
Thursday, November 2.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
Gone Is The Calm, Serenity Of Dag<lb/>
SUICIDE or Survival. UN's Fate<lb/>
Dag Hammarskjold is dead. His death . . .<lb/>
a loss to humanity and to the world.<lb/>
This week the world acknowledges the<lb/>
United Nations . . . with its empty chair left<lb/>
by Hammarskjold and its inability to agree<lb/>
on a successor to him.<lb/>
What will determine the course of the<lb/>
UN without its able leader? And is it doomed<lb/>
to die with its Secretary General?<lb/>
Many editorials predicting and specu-<lb/>
lating the fate of the UN have appeared in<lb/>
our nation's newpapers and magazines in<lb/>
recent weeks. We turn now to an editorial<lb/>
in the September 29 issue of Life magazine.<lb/>
"SUICIDE  or Survival. That is the<lb/>
challenge which Dag Hammarskjold's empty<lb/>
chair puts to the United Nations he died for.<lb/>
"The U.N. cannot avoid this choice. The<lb/>
Soviet Union, which can veto any successor<lb/>
to Hammarskiold in the Security Council,<lb/>
announced a year ago that it would never<lb/>
allow him to serve again after his term ex-<lb/>
pired in 1963.<lb/>
"It served notice that it would not per-<lb/>
mit anv other Secretary-General to use the<lb/>
powers'which, by a very broad construction<lb/>
of the Charter, he had largely built into that<lb/>
office himself.<lb/>
"He did this by persuading the veto-free<lb/>
Assembly to extend its own powers when the<lb/>
theoretically all-powerful, but veto-bound,<lb/>
Security Council could not act. When he did<lb/>
this in the Congo . . . thwarting- the Soviet<lb/>
effort to spread the civil war. . . the Com-<lb/>
munists determined to destroy both him and<lb/>
his powers. His death bringrs a showdown<lb/>
that otherwise would have come a year from<lb/>
now. The realities of this showdown are stark-<lb/>
ly clear:<lb/>
"The Charter provides no temporary suc-<lb/>
cessor upon the death of a Secretary-General.<lb/>
"The Soviet Union will likely veto any<lb/>
permanent successor proposed by other mem-<lb/>
bers of the Security Council, will allow only<lb/>
an impotent, three-headed secretariat (troika)<lb/>
devised solely to prevent any effective action.<lb/>
Andrei GTromyko last week gladly gave the<lb/>
U. N. his Rumpelstiltskin recipe to tear itself<lb/>
apart: 'Any one pe's? there cannot be, there<lb/>
must be three<lb/>
"Without a successor to Hammarskjold<lb/>
the U. N. would find it hard to keep forces<lb/>
in the Congo, Gaza, or stamp down any new<lb/>
explosions. It would be paralyzed.<lb/>
"The assembly must bridge the gap by<lb/>
electing an acting Secretary-General to serve<lb/>
until the Security Council can agree on a<lb/>
permanent successor. A precedent for this<lb/>
was set in 1946 when the Assembly chose an<lb/>
executive director pending the election of<lb/>
Secretary-General Trygye Lie, and in 1950's<lb/>
deadlock when the Soviets vetoed his re-<lb/>
election. The Assembly extended Lie's powers<lb/>
until the Council approved Hammarskjold.<lb/>
"Even if these precedents did not exist,<lb/>
the Assembly possesses the natural right of<lb/>
self-preservation inherent in all legitimate<lb/>
bodies and enterprises . . . the right not to<lb/>
commit suicide.<lb/>
"Is the U. N. worth saving? Powerful<lb/>
voices of dissatisfaction with the U. N. . . .<lb/>
Senator Fulbright's the latest  are grow-<lb/>
ing even in the land where it was born. And<lb/>
friends of the U. N. do it no service when<lb/>
they claim more for it than it can do or be.<lb/>
But with all its flaws and failings it has done<lb/>
good work in the world, and it can do more.<lb/>
This is precisely why the Soviets would like<lb/>
to cripple it. Perhaps history will write that<lb/>
the U. N. rode to its own death with Hammar-<lb/>
skjold. The delegates of 99 nations meeting<lb/>
before his vacant chair must now decide.<lb/>
No longer can they say, 'Let Dag do it Now<lb/>
they must do it themselves.<lb/>
"The U. S as President Kennedy has<lb/>
pledged, will do its utmost to help. But it<lb/>
can only help those who are willing to help<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
"The U. S. will fight for the principles<lb/>
of the U. N. charter because these principles<lb/>
are its own. In Kennedy's words: 'We shall<lb/>
pay any price, bear any burden, meet any<lb/>
hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe<lb/>
to assure the survival and the success of<lb/>
liberty<lb/>
"The U. S. will protect these principles,<lb/>
first of all, assuring the survival of the<lb/>
American Republic. The U. S. does not need<lb/>
the U. N. to protect itself but looks to it as<lb/>
a valuable instrument for preventing or put-<lb/>
It could not do so if<lb/>
ting down aggression.<lb/>
the Assembly yields, as Ghana urges, to some<lb/>
variation of the troika, or chooses some spine-<lb/>
less, compliant Secretary-General who would<lb/>
be a one-man troika in disguise.<lb/>
"It is the smaller, emergent nations, who<lb/>
need the U.N. most, on whom the decision for<lb/>
its survival chiefly rests. Suicide for the U.<lb/>
N could well be their own. As if from the<lb/>
grave, Dag Hammarskjold's own words come<lb/>
to tell them this: .<lb/>
UH is not the Soviet Union, or, indeed,<lb/>
ami other big powers who need the United<lb/>
Nations. It is all the others<lb/>
"He spoke this only a year ago, when the<lb/>
Soviets were screaming every conceivable in-<lb/>
sult to scare a brave man away from his duty.<lb/>
The quiet and dignified courage with which<lb/>
he met that challenge should inspire the As-<lb/>
sembly to meet its own: 'It is very easy to<lb/>
resign; it is not so easy to stay on. It is very<lb/>
easy to bow to the wish of a big power. It is<lb/>
another matter to resist'<lb/>
"And so it is<lb/>
'Darned College Crowd'<lb/>
Has No Place To Go<lb/>
By LARRY BLIZZARD<lb/>
Special Bond Edition<lb/>
Welcomes Contributions<lb/>
The East Carolinian is currently planning<lb/>
a special edition to be released the first of<lb/>
next week, Monday. This edition will be aimed<lb/>
at the parents of EC students, seeking their<lb/>
support for the November 7 Bond Issue.<lb/>
Various faculty members, administrative<lb/>
staff, and college staff members, as well as<lb/>
students, are contributing articles for this<lb/>
issue. We encourage any student who would<lb/>
like to participate in the production of the<lb/>
edition to contact us in the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in Wright building. All articles for the<lb/>
issue are due late tonight or tomorrow, Fri-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The procedure for the addressing and<lb/>
mailing of these newspapers is being handled<lb/>
by the administration. Present plans indi-<lb/>
cate that papers will be distributed in the<lb/>
dormitories to be addressed by the individual<lb/>
students. The papers will then be collected<lb/>
and mailed home to moms and dads and other<lb/>
people students would like to reach.<lb/>
We urge you to cooperate and participate<lb/>
with us in just another effort for a Better<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
In this day of the ultra-educated in-<lb/>
dividual, in which prevails a philosophy of<lb/>
"educate the whole man"?mentally, spiri-<lb/>
ually, and socially?many important and dis-<lb/>
turbing question have arisen concerning the<lb/>
quality of education being given to those<lb/>
chosen few known simply as "that darn col-<lb/>
lege crowd For instance, one of the most<lb/>
distressing questions raised by education<lb/>
authorities is: how does the college man<lb/>
(and girl) spend Saturday night?<lb/>
Now in some institutions, this question<lb/>
can be easily answered; for all the students<lb/>
will probably be gathered in one corner of<lb/>
the campus drinking expresso. listening to<lb/>
poetry readings, or just sitting around?in a<lb/>
fog. But at East Carolina, Saturday nights<lb/>
have, in addition to the fog, an aura of mys-<lb/>
tery, a peculiar quality of unrealness?of<lb/>
being "not there Why is this so? Perhaps it<lb/>
is due to the entertainment available to the<lb/>
student on Saturday night?and I'm including<lb/>
the surrounding community as well as the<lb/>
campus itself in this.<lb/>
"But what's wrong with the free movie<lb/>
you ask. Well, nothing really. The great ma-<lb/>
jority of movies shown on campus are well<lb/>
worth attending. However, the one shown<lb/>
this past Saturday night had a distinct qual-<lb/>
ity about it. It was a "religious" movie?in<lb/>
the Hollywood sense?complete with bad guys<lb/>
(Romans) and good guys (Christians). One<lb/>
of the Romans (the hero) spies a girl (Chris-<lb/>
tian) and falls in love with her. He decided<lb/>
to become a Christian and eventually ends up<lb/>
with the girl, after rescuing all the other<lb/>
Christians from death at the hands of the<lb/>
had guys (Romans). Although the acting<lb/>
was somewhat nebulous and the plot enough<lb/>
to cause heathen tendencies to arise among<lb/>
the viewers, the movie nevertheless passed<lb/>
as "entertainment<lb/>
What happens after the movie? Well,<lb/>
there is; of course, the college union. The col-<lb/>
lege man can go there with his date if he<lb/>
wants and dance and drink coffee. But he<lb/>
hung around there all day and most of the<lb/>
night all during the week, he wants to go<lb/>
somewhere else. At that point, new horizons<lb/>
begin to open up for him and his date. He<lb/>
has his choice: he can either go to the place<lb/>
on this side of the road, sit in the car and<lb/>
drink beer. If he has botany notes with him,<lb/>
he can take his girl out to Greensprings and<lb/>
classify plants. If the date is a particularly<lb/>
important one, or if the girls comes from a<lb/>
wealthy family, he may even take her inside<lb/>
one of the "places There they may sit and<lb/>
swoon amid soft lights, listening to the juke<lb/>
box and the sound of switchblades opening<lb/>
and closing as the local color?the ducktail<lb/>
haircut in the next booth?decide who's up<lb/>
for the next drag race.<lb/>
Those unfortunate souls who do not<lb/>
possess a car on campus are urged to pur-<lb/>
chase one immediately so that they, too, can<lb/>
"make the scene<lb/>
Thus, we see that Saturday night at<lb/>
East Carolina has indeed an unreal quality<lb/>
to it. For, in fact, Saturday night does not<lb/>
fit in with the rest of the week. During the<lb/>
week, we scholars are exposed to the best in<lb/>
education?culture, arts, science, etc Yet,<lb/>
on Saturday night, the bottom falls out and<lb/>
all the refinements vanish into thin air, and<lb/>
that is why the week-day scholar finds him-<lb/>
self with nothing left to him on Saturday<lb/>
night but to drive to some "wayside inn" and<lb/>
sit in his car and drink beer?while his date<lb/>
polishes her nails or reads or simply looks<lb/>
bored (as if it were possible to be bored)<lb/>
T0 vAk?; A ;<lb/>
TO THE<lb/>
F ON 0 . W tf ct YQy ?<lb/>
THURSDAY. OCTOBER <lb/>
Fanatic Platitude<lb/>
Smirks Upon <lb/>
Indifference<lb/>
ft?ir&amp;<lb/>
??<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Religious Farce Insults Concerned Student<lb/>
Jazz Meditation-Blasphemous Paganistic Ritual?<lb/>
To the Editor,<lb/>
"Clap hands with Charlie" This is<lb/>
the tdlle of an album of popular<lb/>
music which is played only once in a<lb/>
great while. The gentlemen who put<lb/>
this album out are of three religious<lb/>
groups, this is imjportjant but tihe<lb/>
names of the groups are secondary.<lb/>
Monday might, October 23, 1961 in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, a "Religious" pro-<lb/>
gram was presented to the student<lb/>
!ody for "Evaluation It was a Jazz<lb/>
meditation. Jazz is a very fine instru-<lb/>
ment of music and is used in many<lb/>
churches to accent their services and<lb/>
one must remember that the negro<lb/>
hymn of a hundred years ago was the<lb/>
'basic of Jazz. Using this argument,<lb/>
Jazz is welcome in all scoipes of all<lb/>
environments. We live in an individ-<lb/>
ualistic society in which each person<lb/>
has his choice of method for what-<lb/>
ever goals he might set up for him-<lb/>
self. This, I will defend to the death.<lb/>
Getting back to Monday night, a<lb/>
farce is to me blasphemous play an<lb/>
words, ideals, or any other topic one<lb/>
would like to attempt to -present to<lb/>
rhe public. A religion farce is in my<lb/>
estimation the lowest form of farce,<lb/>
;i,n, blasphemy, or presentation which<lb/>
might be presented before whatever<lb/>
group as might be interested.<lb/>
Religion is ideals and the use of<lb/>
them in one's everyday life. When a<lb/>
man is insulted, he will retaliate in<lb/>
one manner or another. I have been<lb/>
insulted to the worst degree. I am<lb/>
a Christian and am proud of it. I<lb/>
am also a rebel and am equally proud<lb/>
,f this. As a Christian, and not as a<lb/>
Rebel, I plea to the student body,<lb/>
the faculty, and friends of the college<lb/>
for one thing. This is discretion. I<lb/>
know this is so much to ask. If I am<lb/>
to Evaluate Religion, during this week<lb/>
which has been set aside by OUR<lb/>
college, how am I supposed to react<lb/>
when I go to a Campus Building for<lb/>
a RELIGIOUS assembly and find a<lb/>
PAGAN ritual demanding that the<lb/>
world is going to HELL and that to<lb/>
Evaluate is to consecrate Religion.<lb/>
Now that I have stated this most in-<lb/>
teresting point, I would appreciate<lb/>
student reaction so that in the future<lb/>
the students of East Carolina College<lb/>
will not have to undergo the humility<lb/>
cf attending a RELIGIOUS FARCE!<lb/>
Yours most disturbed,<lb/>
William R. Wright<lb/>
2306 E. 4th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Manager Appreciates<lb/>
Cultural Interpretation<lb/>
Magnolia-Scented rManagerie'<lb/>
Completes William's Triology<lb/>
Tennessee Williams' tenderly poi-<lb/>
gnant play, "The Glass Menagerie<lb/>
which opens a 3-performance engage-<lb/>
mem at McGinnis Auditorium starting<lb/>
Wednesday, November 1, is of course<lb/>
a dramatic entity complete in itself<lb/>
but it nevertheless might be said to<lb/>
supply the third item in a notable<lb/>
trilogy.<lb/>
For, although the characters in<lb/>
the three plays are different, there<lb/>
is a considerable uniformity in the<lb/>
choice of characters, and in the at-<lb/>
titude toward life, in "The Glass<lb/>
Menagerie and in its trilogy compan-<lb/>
ents, "A Streetcar Named Desire" and<lb/>
"Summer and Smoke<lb/>
Albhough "The Glass Menagerie"<lb/>
was first produced to the other two<lb/>
and Blanche, and love and pity what<lb/>
is lovable and pdtable in them.<lb/>
Alma Wineaniller, in "Summer and<lb/>
Smoke is also a Southern spinster,<lb/>
younger than Blanche, but no less<lb/>
frustrated. Alma is as confused as the<lb/>
heronines of the earlier plays, and we<lb/>
feel the same compassion for this<lb/>
minister's daughter who makes a<lb/>
brittle stand against the carnal at-<lb/>
tractions of a young doctor she loves,<lb/>
only to find herself unwanted by him<lb/>
after she has "suffocated in smoke<lb/>
from something on lire inside of<lb/>
her<lb/>
Williams' heroines are all victims<lb/>
of the same negation, and sustain<lb/>
themselves by the same illusions. If<lb/>
they lie to others their major lie is<lb/>
plays, in point of time it really is the to themselves. In this way only can<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
trilogy's climax. This is 'the story of<lb/>
a restless boy chained to a warehouse<lb/>
job, his sensitive sister as fragile as<lb/>
her collection of glass animals, and<lb/>
their faded frumpy mother, Amanda<lb/>
Wingfield. Amanda is clinging fran-<lb/>
tically to another time and place when<lb/>
she had had as many as seventeen<lb/>
Gentleman Callers from the Mississ-<lb/>
ippi Delta on a Sunday afternoon  .<lb/>
but now she solicits magazine subs-<lb/>
criptions by telephone and is des-<lb/>
eprately afraid that her daughter<lb/>
will be an old maid. It is the frustrated<lb/>
Amanda, from a magnolia-scented<lb/>
past, who is, m many respects, an<lb/>
?aging counterpart of Blanche in "A<lb/>
Streetcar Named Desire and Alma<lb/>
in "Slimmer and Smoke<lb/>
Blanche DuBoise, in "A Streetcar<lb/>
is a Mississippi school teacher who,<lb/>
like Amanda, has had an unfortunate<lb/>
marriage. Unlike Amanda, she has<lb/>
they hope to make their intolerable<lb/>
lives tolerable. Such beauty as they<lb/>
know exists in their dreams. "These<lb/>
are Mr. Williams' goods, his specialty,<lb/>
his mark, these battered spinsters,<lb/>
these pearl-fleshed frustrates wrote<lb/>
Gilbert W. Gabriel in Theatre Arts<lb/>
magazine recently. "I, for one, am all<lb/>
the fonder of them for being each<lb/>
so like the other. His heroine of "Sum-<lb/>
mer and Smoke" is of the same pity<lb/>
and confusion made as she of "A<lb/>
Streetcar Named Desire" and of "The<lb/>
Glass Menagerie" as well. The author<lb/>
builds and rebuilds rare beauty in<lb/>
her person, and nobody?no Ameri-<lb/>
can Turgenev, at least?has ever done<lb/>
it better<lb/>
Francis P. Gaines, recently retired<lb/>
president of Washington and Lee<lb/>
University, telis thfe one: "Some yeaxa<lb/>
ago, William and Mary, a fine co-ed-<lb/>
ucational college, gave us a bad de-<lb/>
been driven from town because of<lb/>
Published by tihe student of East Carolina College her m?ral turPitude? hut she has the feat in football whereupon one "of<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina r"1 endurance and a like kind of our students muttered, 'Don't<lb/>
erokm, and ahe is clinging to the to pky William<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North State Conference Praas Association<lb/>
Associated College Press<lb/>
Patsy Elliott<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
iCaith Hobbs<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGBE<lb/>
OFFICES on tftue second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Telephone, ah departments, PL 2-41101, extension 284.<lb/>
same illusions of refinement. And<lb/>
she is desperate in trying to find<lb/>
security in another marriage as<lb/>
Amanda is in trying to find a hus-<lb/>
band for her daughter. There is no<lb/>
hope for either character, and it is<lb/>
for much the same reasons that we<lb/>
admire what is admirable in Amand<lb/>
want<lb/>
anyway?just want<lb/>
to play Mary " ?Quoted in New<lb/>
York Herald Tribune<lb/>
If an executive says he positively<lb/>
must have a report before he depart<lb/>
at 4 o'clock, the office will present the<lb/>
papers at 3:59, and not oca minute<lb/>
before.<lb/>
Dear Miss Elliott:<lb/>
I waf most heartened ami encour-<lb/>
aged to see by the letter appearing<lb/>
in your Thursday, October 12, 1961<lb/>
edition, signed by Miss Camilla Men-<lb/>
jaco. that some of the students at<lb/>
East Carolina understood and ac-<lb/>
cepted "LA DOLCE VITA" for what<lb/>
it really was, instead of a dirty de-<lb/>
grading film as some saw it.<lb/>
"LA DOLCE VITA" not only told a<lb/>
?moving and powerful story, it told the<lb/>
troth. Often times the truth is too<lb/>
hitter a pill to swallow, therefore,<lb/>
i ather than recognize something as<lb/>
heinr the truth, it is much easier<lb/>
to condemn the pill than swallow it<lb/>
and accept it.<lb/>
For years England, France and<lb/>
Italy have been known for their truth<lb/>
and realism in their films, while Hol-<lb/>
lywood has been known for sugar-<lb/>
ioating and non-realistic films.<lb/>
In the last year, since we have<lb/>
been operating the State Theatre in<lb/>
Greenville, we have brought many<lb/>
films, "LA DOLCE VITA" was one,<lb/>
that are considered in the higher cul-<lb/>
tured classification. And until "I.A<lb/>
DOLCE VITA" we felt these films<lb/>
ram not appreciated or understood.<lb/>
But thanks to Miss Menzaco's letter<lb/>
and Mr. Gardner's column, we are en-<lb/>
couraged to try at least one more art<lb/>
film. On Thursday October 26, we<lb/>
will present the French film<lb/>
"BREATHLESS starring: Jean Sea-<lb/>
burg. We understand that this is also<lb/>
a most powerful film and should be<lb/>
well received by those who under-<lb/>
stood "LA DOLCE VITA<lb/>
Please let me take this opportunity<lb/>
to thank you, your staff and all the<lb/>
students at East Carolina who have<lb/>
supported these films in the past<lb/>
end I'm sure will in the future. Also,<lb/>
accept this as our pledge to continue<lb/>
to bring the best movie entertain-<lb/>
ment possible to Greenville in foreign<lb/>
as well as American films.<lb/>
Very truly yours,<lb/>
State Theatre<lb/>
Van Jones<lb/>
Peeved Student Seeks<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
I am an uneducated bum because<lb/>
I have long hair? I am one of the<lb/>
limited few who degrade the rest-<lb/>
Tell me it isn't true.<lb/>
I realize that even though I keep<lb/>
my clothes cleaned and pressed, my<lb/>
shoes polished and shined, and<lb/>
avoid clashing colors; I can never<lb/>
never hope to make up for having<lb/>
long hair. I keep my hair neatly<lb/>
eombed at all time, but still, I am<lb/>
called a sinner because my hair<lb/>
is long.<lb/>
I am attending SOC for An<lb/>
tkm, not &amp; haircut. Does this<lb/>
n?e a nonconformist?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
JohcR.<lb/>
By GEORGE G RUfR<lb/>
"Anyorf who w<lb/>
is against the jra .<lb/>
if) asrainst the ?:Ml i<lb/>
way of life -Boo<lb/>
Whnt i a fana? .<lb/>
L not ? fana' k<lb/>
? Utopia that to I<lb/>
v.4 ite All SAW<lb/>
luted and black. H? -<lb/>
?C and will ;? ?<lb/>
ermanent. He wi<lb/>
?he means nfsed to Si<lb/>
;iv eat edU-nt<lb/>
The fanatic looks<lb/>
agree with him i<lb/>
a am g 7.1 :itit ide<lb/>
-miik diamaasea ?. ? ?<lb/>
enchanted iar ?<lb/>
portent the fanati<lb/>
-elt? I<lb/>
not introspectivek<lb/>
:o not join his eras<lb/>
scL<lb/>
When appro<lb/>
01 what grounds<lb/>
First, we must<lb/>
ij today- and of<lb/>
ciently aware;<lb/>
morrow no on<lb/>
ever, we know<lb/>
1 be most inteU .<lb/>
 restores, 9eo ?<lb/>
fanatic closely<lb/>
why we have come but<lb/>
UUM B from the en: ?<lb/>
icn wandering<lb/>
angular trap of<lb/>
and pretension.<lb/>
Humanity, mani<lb/>
sense (not the O<lb/>
ten under I<lb/>
captive Andre ?<lb/>
ing, and yet traf<lb/>
whose white h?? pj<lb/>
diffused a, a<lb/>
disparaging teas<lb/>
Ik? olntion. Chained<lb/>
Tradition, over<lb/>
? a. the awaJU I<lb/>
vh will break I<lb/>
and destr g<lb/>
of Regulation ami &amp;<lb/>
The monster aj;??<lb/>
old: has mind i<lb/>
yore, his heavy para<lb/>
sprayed slope?a- ?<lb/>
seek to .soothe A I<lb/>
And when the dev<lb/>
rives to reston<lb/>
the risk of seeir-<lb/>
with co-Id indifferent!<lb/>
for mauradinir Sal<lb/>
ardor and say. "Lea<lb/>
How do you know <lb/>
yours?" I-<lb/>
-<lb/>
)l<lb/>
v<lb/>
 ;a<lb/>
will be<lb/>
to rape, but to w ' H? <lb/>
ve Andromeda u ?<lb/>
her wings to augumt l<lb/>
This may serve a ?????&amp; ?<lb/>
trrioti with whid<lb/>
fanatic's creed Sad<lb/>
meet Perseus, but  ? as)<lb/>
fanatics.<lb/>
Aesthetic Jazz<lb/>
Hits Weak Peat<lb/>
By CAMILLA MEN!<lb/>
Is a man hopelev-<lb/>
An attempt at eata<lb/>
tive answer to tkii<lb/>
plexinR- question was v :<lb/>
Monday nivrht ir. W<lb/>
ham by Mr. William ' !<lb/>
Peter Johl. with<lb/>
lions by Read S <lb/>
tet. This attempt di<lb/>
'Videnced by a definite atasfj<lb/>
of hopelessness! prev<lb/>
out the proceedings.<lb/>
Although the mus. "<lb/>
aesthetic quality, th ? ce<lb/>
from the music, of - we, ?'<lb/>
sustained 3onr en I<lb/>
a truly meditative moo I<lb/>
reached its peak with Mr H<lb/>
dramatic reading of tfae M?"fl<lb/>
the Word of Elijah. It was ?<lb/>
Bank,<lb/>
If the acoustics had not b?t ?<lb/>
mental, the musical ; log if<lb/>
?i by about fifteen axtBI<lb/>
no interruption for a typo<lb/>
error, and a continuous j?<lb/>
ground, ? more definii ??<lb/>
mood would have had an opp<lb/>
to develop. The jazz music il<lb/>
presented in a poretjo m?J<lb/>
stead of being eontinuocs,<lb/>
would hwve had a more lastfrf '1<lb/>
In this service, the music a<lb/>
hw, the mood did not<lb/>
chance to develop, and tberrf<lb/>
message did not get<lb/>
In this writer's opinion d'<lb/>
?purpose of the program. <lb/>
to ascertain the necesafty ?<lb/>
was defeated.<lb/>
For this new form oi<lb/>
perhaps one needs to be ?P<lb/>
it by degrees before one ?<lb/>
to understand the effect i<lb/>
posed to<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0003"/><lb/>
X)BER 26, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINI A N<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Back In '24<lb/>
'?Vy-?H<lb/>
Employees Work For Quality Meals<lb/>
v?:<lb/>
X <lb/>
<lb/>
Cafeteria Serves Sunday Nights<lb/>
By HILDA LATON<lb/>
Ion- before most students hear Me time off each week Many stu-<lb/>
their item, clocks, EC cafeteria em- dent employee and regular cafetena<lb/>
them. Approximately seven thousand<lb/>
.students are served in our cafeterias<lb/>
ea-h day, presenting many (problems<lb/>
in sowing students "good food at a<lb/>
minimum cost Many students com-<lb/>
plain because they feel that the<lb/>
prices fluctuate from day to day.<lb/>
They do not realize the problems of<lb/>
buying and preparing "a variety of<lb/>
pood food" to suit both taste and<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
New Hours<lb/>
Due to student request the cafeteria<lb/>
is open on Sunday night from 5:15<lb/>
p.m. to 6:1S P-m. As a result, the<lb/>
work hours of the employees have<lb/>
seen rescheduled so that they have<lb/>
2S Us were'see flying ?r the hedge and the Lady Pri?eip?ra head<lb/>
.?? <lb/>
Bfofimrous Tales Of Time Gone By<lb/>
Loses Rusty Chains<lb/>
Circle K Elects<lb/>
National Prexy;<lb/>
ftnnounces Wnw<lb/>
John W. Melton, III, a junior at<lb/>
the University of Southeastern Louis-<lb/>
iana. Lafayette, Ixnrisiana, was elect-<lb/>
ed president of Circle K International<lb/>
at the organization's annual conven-<lb/>
lion at St. Petersburg, Florida August,<lb/>
23-25 Benny Bowes President of the<lb/>
Circle K Club of East Carolina re-<lb/>
ported today.<lb/>
He went on to say that Melton is<lb/>
the seventh president of the young<lb/>
organization which became an official<lb/>
part of Kiwanis International in 1956.<lb/>
Tn that short time Circle K has grown<lb/>
hardship" on them, but they "realize<lb/>
it Ls necessary<lb/>
By buying a "special students may<lb/>
rave from five to ten cents on each<lb/>
meal. A teat is run on each individual<lb/>
item to determine its price. The cost<lb/>
of the item and the cost of preparing<lb/>
it are both taken into consideration<lb/>
before it is priced. All food is bought<lb/>
by the school with no aid from the<lb/>
state government; therefore, the<lb/>
prices have to be high enough for the<lb/>
cafeteria to break even. A change in<lb/>
the rices is the result of food prices<lb/>
fluctuating.<lb/>
Purchase Of Food<lb/>
The process of ordering food is<lb/>
complicated and requires planning.<lb/>
Staple goods are bought four times<lb/>
i year. An estimate of what will be<lb/>
used in three months is taken. Bids<lb/>
are then sent to different companies.<lb/>
The goods are bought from the com-<lb/>
pany offering the best bid.<lb/>
Meats are purchased in the same<lb/>
manner every two weeks. Since the<lb/>
average person does not like fat<lb/>
meat, only U. S. Good grade of meat<lb/>
is purchased. U. S. Choice grade con-<lb/>
tains from 10 to 15 more fat than<lb/>
the cafeteria meats. Other .perishables<lb/>
are bought twice weekly at the best<lb/>
available prices.<lb/>
The cafeteria staff and its em-<lb/>
ployees welcome student and faculty<lb/>
criticism since they are anxious to<lb/>
'prepare and serve a (juality meal<lb/>
Carter Leads Workshop<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, director of bands<lb/>
at East Carolina, directed a workshop<lb/>
Beach Attends<lb/>
Washington Meet<lb/>
Earl E. Beach, director of the de-<lb/>
oartmemt of Music at East Carolina,<lb/>
attended the meeting of the Council<lb/>
on Cooperation in Teacher Education<lb/>
of the American Council on Educa-<lb/>
tion in Washington, D. C, October<lb/>
20-21.<lb/>
Mr. Beach, past president of the<lb/>
Sauthern Division of the Music Ed-<lb/>
ucators National Conference, repre-<lb/>
sented the conference in the series of<lb/>
meetings. He also attended meetings<lb/>
of the Music Educators National Con-<lb/>
ference at the National Education<lb/>
Association! Headquarters during his<lb/>
stay in Washington.<lb/>
The new organization brought re-<lb/>
presentatives of many professional<lb/>
groups and learned societies to ex-<lb/>
amine complex problems in teacher<lb/>
education.<lb/>
panel discussion took place at<lb/>
Former Alumnus<lb/>
Accepts 0. S. Post<lb/>
In Tokyo, Japan<lb/>
Jack S. Everton, East Carolina<lb/>
alumnus, formerly of Columbia, N.<lb/>
C, has been selected to represent the<lb/>
IT. S. General Accounting Office in<lb/>
its Far East activities and will have<lb/>
his headquarters for the next two<lb/>
vears in Tokyo, Japan, according to<lb/>
information just received at the col-<lb/>
'ege. Before his new assignment he<lb/>
was connected with the regional of-<lb/>
fice of the organization in Norfolk,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Mr. Everton; his wife, the former<lb/>
Frances Ann Radcliffe of Pantego;<lb/>
and their two children went by air<lb/>
to San Francisco September 18 and<lb/>
from there, aboard the U. S. S. Presi-<lb/>
dent Hoover, to Japan.<lb/>
"Competition is pretty keen on the<lb/>
foreign assignments Regional Mana-<lb/>
ger C. E. Merrill of the Norfolk of-<lb/>
fice stated in a letter to Director E.<lb/>
R. Browning of the East Carolina<lb/>
School of Business, "and those who<lb/>
get the nod from Washington are<lb/>
considered tops in all resipects<lb/>
Everton was graduated from East<lb/>
Carolina in 1951 with a B.S. degree<lb/>
in English and the social studies and<lb/>
in 1958 with a master's degree in ac-<lb/>
counting. While a student at the col-<lb/>
lege he was a star performer on the<lb/>
basketball team and was included<lb/>
as a student leader at East Carolina<lb/>
A<lb/>
the opening general session on Oc- ?- ? ?????????? ?-? ?<lb/>
tuber 20 with Ole Sand, director of in the 1951 edition of the national<lb/>
By JEAN. PEACE ,verelrom a "few scattered groups to 340<lb/>
tta. to he, around rrand- lady signed up wefl in advance to ,?, unt.l the late 1930 Chains ??. a <lb/>
!T3f<lb/>
aether's rodriefc cha<lb/>
ales of time geoe by. We are going<lb/>
efc . . . hack into EC's history for<lb/>
4M0 old rules for Ei<lb/>
Yes, it was Ike La<lb/>
?hose Nowraai School .lays, who<lb/>
?mgM fear &amp;fco the youm: lady's<lb/>
yes if she went up-town without her<lb/>
at and gloves.<lb/>
' fe 1WA there were no classes on<lb/>
tonday. Instead etesses were held on<lb/>
4tKudKf to prevent the young college<lb/>
idles from smfeiglk with the towns-<lb/>
eople on tie oaaal shopping day.<lb/>
allege ladies did hei n<lb/>
- fondays iaasteatL -?<lb/>
Lady Principal Approves Moving<lb/>
Pktnres<lb/>
Monday was also the ?<lb/>
re allowed to go o the "moving<lb/>
feor?That!st&amp;e c<lb/>
m picture if it had 1<lb/>
nd approved-fey ? Lady Principal.<lb/>
, proved moving fietu-<lb/>
B .the bttUetfcl boards ?,r Monday<lb/>
mornings.<lb/>
Young" laMm watched downtown in<lb/>
growp with th? Idy P<lb/>
ollege president, as<lb/>
. fading ? the ? gsr?W?<lb/>
If a<lb/>
'certain"<lb/>
secure space in Cotten Hall Parlor<lb/>
for courting. Since all gentlemen call-<lb/>
ers were entertained in Cotten -Hall<lb/>
Parlor, getting space must have been<lb/>
as difficult as to reserve booths in<lb/>
the CU after the free movie. Each<lb/>
young man had to meet the counselor<lb/>
and be approved.<lb/>
The girls ahvays looked forward<lb/>
? o concerts or auditorium entertain-<lb/>
ment They dressed in white and sat<lb/>
together for the program. It was those<lb/>
; . v moments afterward that the young<lb/>
ladies met young men in the lobby.<lb/>
However, "young ladies must bid the<lb/>
gentlemen friends good-night before<lb/>
reluming to the dormitory.<lb/>
It was later, during the time of<lb/>
n rddie blouses, that the girls were<lb/>
permitted to walk in groups of five.<lb/>
Blanked permits were not used. For<lb/>
each off-campus visit, a letter from<lb/>
homo had to be sent directly to the<lb/>
Lady Principal.<lb/>
Dean White recalls, "When I at-<lb/>
tended East Carolina, we were allowed<lb/>
to ride 'occasionally' with relatives.<lb/>
 ir.ce my brother came to visit and<lb/>
asked to take me for a ride. Per-<lb/>
mission was not granted because the<lb/>
idy Principal did not believe that<lb/>
1 clubs with more than 6100 members<lb/>
placed across the mam gate and locked eampuses across the United<lb/>
States and Canada. Benny added that<lb/>
each evening. The campus police would<lb/>
unlock the chains early the next morn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
When men began to enter EC after<lb/>
the war, rules began to change. Dating<lb/>
restriction were remove! to a great<lb/>
degree. In these first days of co-<lb/>
education, there was only a women's<lb/>
SGA and Judiciary. Men were day<lb/>
.students and did not participate in<lb/>
campus activtiies.<lb/>
In discussing the changes in EC,<lb/>
Dean White commented, "The greatest<lb/>
convenience in the Dean's office was<lb/>
the installation of public phones in<lb/>
the dormitories At first the only<lb/>
phone was in the Dean of Women's<lb/>
ffiee (Cotten Hall). Maids were sent<lb/>
a major reason for this rapid growth<lb/>
has been the constant goal of Circle<lb/>
K International to serve the college<lb/>
campus in the same manner that its<lb/>
parent group, Kiwanis International,<lb/>
serves the community.<lb/>
Also elected were two vice presi-<lb/>
dents: Perry G. Stover, Byerson In-<lb/>
stitute of Technology, Toronto, On-<lb/>
tario, and Sammy Weems, University<lb/>
of Arkansas. Fayetteville, Arkansas.<lb/>
James S. Mathews, Randolph-Macon<lb/>
College, Ashland, Virginia, was<lb/>
elected secretary.<lb/>
The 500 college leaders at the con-<lb/>
vention also elected 12 international<lb/>
trustees. They are: Brenton A. Blei-<lb/>
er, Muskegon Community College,<lb/>
oung man passed ? "<lb/>
ady on tile ?tre?rtiiey were allowed ne u.as my brother!<lb/>
,11s. It was necessary to make calls<lb/>
in the Dean's office while she listened.<lb/>
I Low one-sided these conversations<lb/>
must have been!<lb/>
Dean White continued, "Another<lb/>
great aid to this office was the em-<lb/>
ployment of full-time dormitory coun-<lb/>
selors<lb/>
Times and rules may change, but<lb/>
people do not. "Human nature being<lb/>
the same explained Dean Wrhite, "we<lb/>
office (Cotten Hall). Mauls were sent Cr, Muskegon oommuTmy ,u.<lb/>
to the dormitories to inform girls of Muskegon, Michigan; Thomas M.<lb/>
1 Brown. Rio Grand College, Rio Grand,<lb/>
Ohio; John L. Cromartie, Emory Uni-<lb/>
versity, Atlanta, Georgia; William R.<lb/>
Fryar, University of Tennessee, Knox-<lb/>
ville, Tennessee; Bradley J. Hughes,<lb/>
Quincy College, Quincy, Illinois; Jerry<lb/>
W. Johnson, Buena Vista College,<lb/>
Storm Lake, Iowa; Mike McCormack,<lb/>
Bismarck Junior College, Bismarck,<lb/>
North Dakota; Tim Potter, St. Peter-<lb/>
bung Junior College, St. Petersburg,<lb/>
held at the University of North Caro<lb/>
lina, Tuesday, October 24 by the<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina, and<lb/>
Virginia Province of Phi Mu Alpha,<lb/>
national honorary music fraternity.<lb/>
Dr. Earl Slocunn, faculty advisor,<lb/>
and Robert Doyle Greeson, Jr of<lb/>
Greensboro, president of the Alpha<lb/>
Rho Chapter at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina acted as hosts of the<lb/>
workshop.<lb/>
"The purpose of the workshop Mr.<lb/>
Carter stated, "is for all officers of<lb/>
each Chapter in the province to be-<lb/>
come acquainted with the intricate<lb/>
workings of the fraternity, and to<lb/>
plan the future in such a way as to<lb/>
,t each chapter reach its maximum<lb/>
potential<lb/>
Attending the event were officers<lb/>
of chapters at East Carolina College,<lb/>
University of North Carolina, Fur-<lb/>
man University, Davidson College,<lb/>
University of South Carolina, and<lb/>
William and Mary College.<lb/>
Officers of the East Carolina Chap-<lb/>
ter who attended the workshop were<lb/>
Dan Gold Smith, president; Zuill Bai-<lb/>
ley, vice president; Reginald Robin-<lb/>
son, secretary; Jesse Holton, treas-<lb/>
urer; Dale Blackwell, historian; R.<lb/>
Winston Morris, warden; Hubert R.<lb/>
Shearon, Jr alumni secretary; and<lb/>
Julian Wagemaker, music director.<lb/>
projects on instruction of the Na<lb/>
tional Aducation Association, acting<lb/>
as moderator. The Honorable Sterling<lb/>
It. MeMurrin, U. S. Commissioner of<lb/>
Education, was the keynote speaker<lb/>
for the luncheon on October 21.<lb/>
ublication "Who's WTho Among Stu-<lb/>
dents in American Universities and<lb/>
Colleges<lb/>
Mrs. Everton, an East Carolina B.<lb/>
S. graduate of 1954, was included in<lb/>
the "Who's Who" volume for 1964.<lb/>
(hCampus<lb/>
with<lb/>
MsocShohan<lb/>
(Author of "1 Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many<lb/>
Loves of Dobie Gillis etc.)<lb/>
IcJ-L<lb/>
'Jem<lb/>
Ate.<lb/>
aly-o speak. Cowtersation was out<lb/>
f the question, and<lb/>
trietion.<lb/>
Notes And Ondy Bars Fly<lb/>
Sunday afteraooas <lb/>
Heditation. After<lb/>
Be a "mad dash"<lb/>
to tite f (Where the young<lb/>
Hfc wasn't as sim<lb/>
Campus Gates Chained<lb/>
The campus was closed at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
le as It J<lb/>
wing m<lb/>
edge. The<lb/>
&amp; stop M<lb/>
eige, W<lb/>
strolled<lb/>
 oaag mm<lb/>
cMci mm<lb/>
Air Force Detachment Ripples<lb/>
xtuscles For 461 Achievements<lb/>
lie gentlemen were<lb/>
reet, beyond the<lb/>
es were required<lb/>
ds side of the<lb/>
Lady Principal<lb/>
between the<lb/>
college ladies,<lb/>
tion difficult.<lb/>
.d candy bars<lb/>
'er the hedge<lb/>
pd's head.<lb/>
ler. the young<lb/>
? f<lb/>
 w<lb/>
its Oil,<lb/>
tings<lb/>
w exhibiting<lb/>
tdent artist in<lb/>
in Rawl Build-<lb/>
of a 1961-1962<lb/>
talented sen-<lb/>
will continue<lb/>
is open to the<lb/>
:ey's exhibit-<lb/>
paintings and<lb/>
of her paint-<lb/>
human figure.<lb/>
es a student<lb/>
?n in traveling<lb/>
Ky the depart-<lb/>
wkam in various<lb/>
art and social<lb/>
the B.S. de-<lb/>
work on the<lb/>
r graduation<lb/>
,ha Xi Delta<lb/>
Delta art<lb/>
is correapond-<lb/>
student Art<lb/>
With the drive of a channel swim-<lb/>
mer, the 600th Aar Force Detachment<lb/>
of AFROTC Cadets at East Carolina<lb/>
is bending its back, and the muscles<lb/>
of more than 250 college men ripple<lb/>
and grow tense under the load of<lb/>
another year. Writh current world<lb/>
affairs in the state they are, en-<lb/>
thusiasm and spirit are running high,<lb/>
and the cadets are looking forward<lb/>
ro a successful year.<lb/>
Among the organizations which are<lb/>
actively functioning and providimg<lb/>
wholesome recreation ami instructive<lb/>
team, commanded by Cadet Captain<lb/>
Bruce Worrell: The Cadet newspaper,<lb/>
"The Tiger published monthly under<lb/>
the leadership of Cadet 1Lt. Carroll<lb/>
Norwood, and whose editor is Eliza-<lb/>
beth Powell of the Angel Flight; the<lb/>
Cadet Bowling Team, led by Cadet<lb/>
Captain Murray Hodges; the Honor<lb/>
Drill Team of East Carolina, com-<lb/>
manded by Cadet 1U. Douglas Rob-<lb/>
inson; the Arnold Air Society, com-<lb/>
manded by Cao Major Sanders<lb/>
Crady; and the Angel Flight, made uip<lb/>
of co-eds who go through pledge<lb/>
the same, expiameu uewi   uun lu"1 ??"??-mm ?-? ?<lb/>
have the same problems. Our girls Florida; Lynn Kesler Powell, Brigham<lb/>
today are no different Young University, Provo, Utah; Kent<lb/>
M. Tucker, Phoenix College, Phoenix,<lb/>
Arizona; Clyde Archer Wotton, Wake<lb/>
Forest College, Winston-Salem, North I<lb/>
Carolina; and Ron Wright, Abilene<lb/>
Christian College, Abilene, Texas.<lb/>
Winner of the annual oratorical<lb/>
contest which embraced the conven-<lb/>
tion theme as its subject was Delaine<lb/>
Mountain, a student at Sneed College,<lb/>
lioaz, Alabama. The subject of his<lb/>
address was "Emphasize Active Cit-<lb/>
izenshijp<lb/>
Selected as the top two Circle K<lb/>
dubs in the U. S. and Canada on the<lb/>
basis of campus service and adminis-<lb/>
trative excellence were the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Southwestern Louisiana, La-<lb/>
fayette first place; and the Circle<lb/>
K club of Quincy College, Quincy<lb/>
Illinois, second place.<lb/>
The collegians adopted the theme<lb/>
"Develop Individual Excellence" for<lb/>
the coming year. It is supplemented<lb/>
by four definitive objectives; develop<lb/>
excellence iin scholarship, in moral<lb/>
and sip?ritual values, in club activities<lb/>
and relationships, and in citizenship.<lb/>
The delegates voted to hold the<lb/>
1962 Circle K Convention in San<lb/>
periods like a sorority, commanded<lb/>
by Angel Flight Major Brenda Nunn-<lb/>
ery.<lb/>
Parties and hot dog roasts are a<lb/>
constant part of the social activities<lb/>
which the Corps stages, and they pro-<lb/>
vide a feeling of close relationship<lb/>
among the entire group, who can<lb/>
pet to know their Cadet Officers and<lb/>
each other through the singing, skits,<lb/>
and plain fun which always make up<lb/>
the program in the evenings. The<lb/>
well-known and popular Annual Mili-<lb/>
tary Ball is scheduled for the month<lb/>
n awl instructive Marchf and is looke(1 forward to<lb/>
participation are the Cadet Rrfle cadets and Cadet Officers with<lb/>
growing enthusiasm.<lb/>
The Corps of East Carolina is<lb/>
inspected throughout the state of<lb/>
North Carolina for its outstanding<lb/>
achievements. An entirely new life<lb/>
opens up to the cadet who is part of<lb/>
HUSBANDS, ANYONE?<lb/>
It has been alleged that coeds go to college for the sole purpose<lb/>
of finding husbands. This is, of course, an infamous canard and<lb/>
I give fair warning that, small and spongy as I am anybody<lb/>
who says such a dastardly thing when I am around liad better<lb/>
be prepared for a sound thrashing!<lb/>
Girls go to college for precisely the same reasons as men do:<lb/>
to broaden their horizons, to lengthen their vistas to drink at<lb/>
the fount of wisdom. But, if, by pure chance; while a girl is<lb/>
engaged in these meritorious pursuits, a likely looking husband<lb/>
should pop into view, why, what's wrong with that? Eh' What s<lb/>
e quttfon no. arises, what should a girl look tor n, a<lb/>
husband A great deal has been written on this subject. Some<lb/>
Ly chlcterTmost important, some say background, some<lb/>
say appearance, some say education. All are wrong.<lb/>
Tnt mTst important thing-bar none-in a husband laheaitt.<lb/>
TWhhe be handsome as Apollo and rich as Midashat good<lb/>
The if he just lays around all day accumulating bedsores?<lb/>
Tne very first thing to do upon meeting a man is to make<lb/>
JeteLuBd of wind and limb. Before he has a chance to<lb/>
sweet-talk you, slap a thermometer m his mouth, roll back ms<lb/>
eyeTidylnk out ht tongue, rap his patella palpate his thora<lb/>
a? himto straighten out a horseshoe with his teeth H hef?b<lb/>
these simple tests, phone for an ambulance and go on to the<lb/>
"t hoXr he turns out to be physically fit, proceed to the<lb/>
J?Z?? requirement in a husband. I refer to a<lb/>
TmlnXcan-t take a joke is a man to be avoided. There<lb/>
are reJnple tests to find out whether your prosit can<lb/>
Se a ioke or not. You can, for example, slash his tires Or burn<lb/>
SMad" comls. Or steal his switchblade. Or turn loose b.<lb/>
r totiaed pranks, laugh gaily and<lb/>
a ii 1 replies "But this is February nine-<lb/>
SLmlhing Thurlish, cross him off your list<lb/>
iumtie 2m. Find out whether he is kindly.<lb/>
opens up to vhv cm.uw, w?u ? ?Mt, - ??.  ? -<lb/>
the hard-working Cadets on campus. Diego, California next August.<lb/>
Dorm Elects Officers<lb/>
Cotten Hall, women's dormitory<lb/>
for freshmen, has elected officrs to<lb/>
serve for the 1961-62 school year.<lb/>
Molly Harrell has been elected to serve<lb/>
as president. Her duties include pre-<lb/>
siding at the meetings of the house<lb/>
committee and attending meetings of<lb/>
the Women's Judiciary<lb/>
lAsaisting Miss Harrell are Mar-<lb/>
tha Ann Lake, vice president; Sue<lb/>
Little, secretary; and Veronica Gay,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
Add To Your Villager Collection<lb/>
OXFORD CLOTH SHIRT<lb/>
Asst'd-Colors<lb/>
$5.95<lb/>
BASS<lb/>
WEEJUNS<lb/>
'ffBW?<lb/>
Ladies9<lb/>
Men's<lb/>
$11.95<lb/>
$15.95<lb/>
humane? Does nm companion? Is it genial? Is<lb/>
SlSl" of du,cet pleaaure<lb/>
from cockcrow till the heart of darkness?<lb/>
18 &amp;5?lV?MU? the man to your bosom with<lb/>
v K Moftee7 orutayt sure that he is kindly as a sum-<lb/>
hreey as a mother's kiss, kindly to his very marrow<lb/>
mer breeze, nnoiy ao he&amp;lthy<lb/>
And now, having found a man wno y <lb/>
?a Wwspd with a sense of humor, the oniy uuug m ?<lb/>
Stt3? ?? he will always earn a handso.rtfhv.ng. That,<lb/>
rjTuiuly, is ?sy. tot enrcll hnn ? engmeenng<lb/>
S2 E. FITTH STBEET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
Student Charge Account Invited.<lb/>
, ? iw? in bringing ?ou thh column throughout<lb/>
Joming Marlboro n brtwns ? <lb/>
welcome aboard!<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0004"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, O TuBEr <lb/>
EAST? r. AROLINIAN<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
Carrinser Presents Memorable<lb/>
Concert In Entertainment Series<lb/>
When Walter Carringer, hailed as<lb/>
outstanding among America's young<lb/>
singers, appeared Wednesday, October<lb/>
18, at 8:15 p.m. in the Wright Au-<lb/>
ditorium, it was, as Paul Hume, the<lb/>
leading crkic in the nation's capital,<lb/>
declared, "a bright evening for au-<lb/>
dience and critic The concert was<lb/>
the first attraction of the 1961-1962<lb/>
Entertainment Series on the campus.<lb/>
Mr. Carringer, a tenor who grew<lb/>
up in Murphy, N. C. has already a<lb/>
remarkable record of important Amer-<lb/>
ican premier performances; appear-<lb/>
ances on nation-wide radio and tele-<lb/>
vision networks; and concerts in for-<lb/>
ty-seven states, Canada, and Europe.<lb/>
With an enviable record as an<lb/>
oratorio singer and recitalist, he was<lb/>
selected as tenor soloist for the prem-<lb/>
ier American performances of Han-<lb/>
del's first and last oratorios. He also<lb/>
sang the New York premier of Lucas<lb/>
Foss' "A Parable of Death" in Town<lb/>
Hall, and the first American per-<lb/>
formance of the "Intimations of Im-<lb/>
mortality" by the distinguished com-<lb/>
poser Gerald Finzi.<lb/>
Mr. Carringer was one of ten young<lb/>
artists from throughout America who<lb/>
in 1955 readied the final competi-<lb/>
tion conducted bi-annually by the Na-<lb/>
tional Federation of Music Clubs.<lb/>
In 1957 he won the auditions spon-<lb/>
sored by National Artists Corpora-<lb/>
tion to select the principals for New<lb/>
Faces in Music. This group toured<lb/>
nationally in the 1957-58 season under-<lb/>
time auspices of Civic Music Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Mr. Carringer made his European<lb/>
recital debut in 1958 in London, and<lb/>
his New York recital debut va 1959.<lb/>
Critics were unanimous in declaring<lb/>
this "one of the most imtpressive de-<lb/>
but recitals in New York in many<lb/>
years Just prior to this he was<lb/>
among twelve young artists from<lb/>
throughout the world chosen to sing<lb/>
with the Experimented Opera Theatre<lb/>
of America under the auspices of the<lb/>
New Orleans Opera Company.<lb/>
When he is not eoncertizing, Mr.<lb/>
Carringer fills the post of Music Di-<lb/>
rector of the Haithcock School in<lb/>
Greenwich, Conn.<lb/>
Cadet Norwood Receives Promotion<lb/>
Grover Carroll Norwood has been<lb/>
assigned to the Group Staff of the<lb/>
('00th Detachment of AFROTC at<lb/>
Fast Carolina College and promoted<lb/>
to the rank of Cadet 1 Lt. in the<lb/>
Corps. Carroll has uen assigned du-<lb/>
ties as Group Information Services<lb/>
Officer.<lb/>
He is publisher of the Cadet news-<lb/>
paper "The Tiger which is publish-<lb/>
ed once a month as a service to the<lb/>
Cadet Coups to promote harmony and<lb/>
spirit in the AFROTC. As ISO, he is<lb/>
responsible for all publicity on the<lb/>
POO-nvan ROTC group at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, and directs the activities of<lb/>
many cadets who work with hilm in<lb/>
handling publicity material, the cadet<lb/>
newspaper, and news releases for the<lb/>
hometown newspapers of the Cadets.<lb/>
Carroll is a junior at East Caro-<lb/>
lina, majoring in English. He attend-<lb/>
ed North Carolina State College,<lb/>
where he was also in the.ROTC wing<lb/>
and performed with the State College<lb/>
erack drill team. The Marching Air-<lb/>
men.<lb/>
Upon graduation in the ROTC pro-<lb/>
gram, Cadet 1Lt. Norwood will re-<lb/>
ceive a commission in the Air Force<lb/>
as a lieutenant, and will begin flight<lb/>
training for active duty.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Leisure-Hour<lb/>
Ease<lb/>
$15.95<lb/>
Smart looking, smooth<lb/>
fitting casuals for indoors or<lb/>
out. Finest quality leather,<lb/>
master-crafted in genuine<lb/>
moccasin construction, cradles<lb/>
your foot in comfort<lb/>
from heel to toe.<lb/>
T.M.Re8.<lb/>
BASS OUTDOOR FOOTWEAR<lb/>
MEN OF<lb/>
MOBILITY<lb/>
CHOOSE<lb/>
English<lb/>
leather8<lb/>
V?H?<lb/>
Mbnekokb<lb/>
MLk<lb/>
fan ft<lb/>
r??h? Hosk<lb/>
ttrnxutiitof.<lb/>
I oa. English Laathtr in crystal bottle.<lb/>
4 os. English Leather in plaitic-ilask<lb/>
framed in handsome Redwood Chest.<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
Book Collectors May<lb/>
Win Library Award<lb/>
The Amy Loveman National Award<lb/>
of one thousand dollars, under the<lb/>
sponsorship of the Woman's National<lb/>
Book Association, the Saturday Re-<lb/>
view, and the Book-of-the-Month Club,<lb/>
is awarded to one college senior for<lb/>
collecting the best personal library.<lb/>
This award has been established<lb/>
tc honor the memory of a notable<lb/>
woman who was associate editor of<lb/>
the Woman's National Book Associa-<lb/>
tion and a winner of its Constance<lb/>
Lindsay Skinner Award.<lb/>
The award will be made to a senior<lb/>
student who has won the book col-<lb/>
lection award on his own local cam-<lb/>
pus and who has been nominated for<lb/>
the national award by the local con-<lb/>
test chairman. For further informa-<lb/>
tion check the bulletin board outside<lb/>
Dr. Tucker's office in the Admin-<lb/>
istration Building.<lb/>
Next Teacher's<lb/>
Exam In February<lb/>
The National Teacher Examinations<lb/>
will be administered at East Carolina<lb/>
on Saturday, February 10, 1962.<lb/>
The Common Examinations, including<lb/>
tests in Professional Information.<lb/>
General Culture, English Expression,<lb/>
Non Verbal Reasoning, and one or<lb/>
two of thirteen Optional Examina-<lb/>
tions to show mastery of the sub-<lb/>
ject to be taught, may be taken in<lb/>
? one day testing session.<lb/>
A Bulletin of Information (and an<lb/>
application) describing registration<lb/>
procedure may he obtained from col-<lb/>
lege officials, school superintendents,<lb/>
or from the National Teacher Ex-<lb/>
aminations, Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vke, Princeton, New Jersery.<lb/>
The completed application, with the<lb/>
proper examination fees, will be ac-<lb/>
cepted by the ETS office during No-<lb/>
vember and December and in Jan-<lb/>
uary before January 12, 1962.<lb/>
Foreign Countries<lb/>
Offer Fellowships<lb/>
Only a month remains to apply for<lb/>
over 200 fellowships offered by for-<lb/>
eign governments and universities for<lb/>
graduate study in 15 countries, the<lb/>
Institute of International Edueat.on<lb/>
announced today. -Applications will be<lb/>
accepted until Novenvber 1.<lb/>
The fellowships, which are for dudy<lb/>
in universities in Austria, Brazil,<lb/>
Canada, Denmark, France, Germany,<lb/>
Iran, Israel, Italy, Mexico, the Neth-<lb/>
erlands, Poland, Raimania, Sweden and<lb/>
Switzerland, cover tuition costs and<lb/>
varying amounts for living expenses.<lb/>
U. S. Government Travel Grants to<lb/>
supplement maintenance and tuition<lb/>
scholarships are available to Ameri-<lb/>
can students receiving Austrian, Dan-<lb/>
 ish, French, German, Israeli. Italian,<lb/>
Netherlands, Polish or Rumanian gov-<lb/>
ernment awards.<lb/>
An American foundation offers two<lb/>
additional awards for study or re-<lb/>
search in any country in the Far<lb/>
East, South or Southeast Asia, and<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
General eligibility requirements for<lb/>
1 these programs are: (1) U. S. citizen-<lb/>
ship at the time of application; (2) a<lb/>
bachelor's degree or its equivalent be- i<lb/>
fore the beginning date of the award;<lb/>
(3) knowledge of the language of<lb/>
the host country; and (4) good health.<lb/>
A demonstrated capacity for hide-1<lb/>
pendent study and a good academic<lb/>
record are exipected. Preference is<lb/>
given to applicants under 35 years<lb/>
of age who have not had extensive<lb/>
experience abroad. While married<lb/>
persons are eligible for most of the<lb/>
fellowships, the stipends are geared to<lb/>
the needs of single grantees.<lb/>
Applicants will be required to sub-<lb/>
mit a plan of proposed study that can<lb/>
be carried out profitably within the<lb/>
year abroad.<lb/>
Students enrolled at a college or<lb/>
university should consult the campus<lb/>
Fulbright Program Adviser for in-<lb/>
lormation and applications. Others<lb/>
may write to the Information and<lb/>
Counseling Division, Institute of In-<lb/>
ternational Education, 800 Second<lb/>
 venue, New York 17, N. Y or to<lb/>
any of HE's regional offices.<lb/>
Competitions for the 1962-63 aca-<lb/>
demic year close November 1, 1961.<lb/>
Requests for application forms must<lb/>
lie postmarked before October 15.<lb/>
I 'omipletod applications must be sub-<lb/>
mitted by November 1.<lb/>
Founded in 1919, the Institute of<lb/>
International Education fosters inter-<lb/>
national understanding through the<lb/>
exchange of ideas and knowledge<lb/>
among all peoples. HE administers<lb/>
two-way scholarship programs for<lb/>
more than 5000 persons between the<lb/>
United States and over 80 foreign<lb/>
countries, and is an information cen-<lb/>
ter on all aspects of international ed-<lb/>
ucation and exchange.<lb/>
IAST DECISIONS . . . but my nose I<lb/>
27 and 30, between 9:15 and 4:30.)<lb/>
ks so big in this one! (Last faya to ftcfe ?artH,k pi<lb/>
Career With Social Security<lb/>
Administration Officers Benefits<lb/>
There are over 600 district office<lb/>
Are you interested in helping <lb/>
others? In securing a position ??<lb/>
advancement possibilities that lead as<lb/>
Job Interviews<lb/>
Representatives from the North<lb/>
Carolina State Board of Health will<lb/>
be on campus soon to interview men<lb/>
interested in positions with the Ven-<lb/>
eral Disease Program. They are in-<lb/>
terested in any major, and will talk<lb/>
with men subject to military call.<lb/>
If you would like to have an inter-<lb/>
view with these representatives, come<lb/>
to the Placement Services Office, 203<lb/>
Administration, and sign up for an<lb/>
appointment.<lb/>
Pat Weaver, National College Queen<lb/>
What makes Artcarved Diamonds the<lb/>
favorite of America's .College Queens?<lb/>
Actually there are many reasons. Artcarved diamond rings<lb/>
must meet traditionally high standards for color, cut, clarity<lb/>
and carat weight. Their award-winning styles are a delight<lb/>
to the eye. And, they take all of the guesswork out of buying<lb/>
a diamond. Every Artcarved ring carries a written guarantee<lb/>
for quality and permanent value that's recognized and re-<lb/>
spected by fine jewelers from coast to coast. We think you'll<lb/>
agree with America's lovely College Queens.<lb/>
Stop in at your jeweler and be sure to see all the exquisite<lb/>
Artcarved diamond rings-the rings you buy with confidence<lb/>
and wear with pride.<lb/>
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN<lb/>
AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES<lb/>
Arjtcarved<lb/>
DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS<lb/>
far as your ability will take you<lb/>
Consider a position with the Social<lb/>
Security lAdministration.<lb/>
Major Williamson. Max nolloman,<lb/>
who are Claims Representatives with<lb/>
a rating of GS-8, and Mrs. Barbara<lb/>
(iarland who is a Field Representa-<lb/>
tive with a rating of GS-9, recommend<lb/>
this tyipe of work to anyone who is<lb/>
willing to work and who is "interested<lb/>
in others and in assisting them in<lb/>
attaining what is rightfully theirs<lb/>
They interview persons who are ap-<lb/>
plying for social security benefits.<lb/>
help them with their applications, and<lb/>
process their claims. They also ex-<lb/>
plain the law and answer other in-<lb/>
quiries.<lb/>
Mr. Williamson, Mr. Holloman and<lb/>
Mrs. Garland are graduates of East<lb/>
Carolina College. They began work<lb/>
for the Social Security Administra-<lb/>
tion soon after graduation. A cal-<lb/>
lage degree, or its equivalent, is re-<lb/>
quired for employment in all pro-<lb/>
fessional positions except that of stu-<lb/>
dent assi-tant. They took the Federal<lb/>
Service Entrance Exam, which they<lb/>
described as very much like a col-<lb/>
lege entrance exam, except more dif-<lb/>
ficult. They were also interviewed<lb/>
by a panel composed of regional and<lb/>
district office representation.<lb/>
They recommend that high school-<lb/>
t is. who are interested in entering<lb/>
this line of work, study, besides the<lb/>
college prep work, some commercial<lb/>
courses and extra courses in. psychol-<lb/>
ogy and social studies.<lb/>
There are three entrance categories<lb/>
of professional positions in the Social<lb/>
Security Administration besides that<lb/>
of claims representative ? claims<lb/>
authorizer, management intern, ami<lb/>
student assistant. Student assistants<lb/>
are juniors in college who are pre-<lb/>
paring to go into this work. Often<lb/>
they are assured positions after<lb/>
they graduate. Advancement oppor-<lb/>
tunities are good, especially for those<lb/>
who can easily relocate in another<lb/>
city.<lb/>
and Puerto Rico, with the Regional<lb/>
Offices in nine major cities. Pa<lb/>
(enters are located in New York,<lb/>
Philadelphia, IJirminghani, Chicago,<lb/>
Kansas City, San Francisco, and Bal-<lb/>
timore. The headquarters office of<lb/>
the .Social Security Administration<lb/>
is also located in Baltimore. Sala<lb/>
begin at $4345 per year with higher<lb/>
stunting salaries offered U those<lb/>
with extra qualifications.<lb/>
All newcomers to the Bureau are<lb/>
given a training program. In additidn<lb/>
to going into an extended technical<lb/>
program, a three week, expenw -<lb/>
n training program ?<lb/>
in Baltimore. On-the-job prog-<lb/>
i ed in each office to keen em-<lb/>
eea up to date on all phases of<lb/>
work in the Bureau.<lb/>
MOW DO I GET THE JOB?<lb/>
Mr. Javk Edwards at youi place-<lb/>
ment office has information and ap-<lb/>
I cations for taking the Federal Ser-<lb/>
vice Entrance F.aami nation. You<lb/>
ix obtain information and aj<lb/>
tions from I Securi Ad-<lb/>
.nation, District Office, 226 Hill<lb/>
Street, Rooky Mount. North Cat<lb/>
D. C. Schools h<lb/>
Depend On AH<lb/>
From Governing<lb/>
WASHINGT<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
YDC Members Attend<lb/>
Durham Convention<lb/>
Plans for the Y. 1). C. convent<lb/>
o in- held in Durham November 9,<lb/>
o. and 11 were discussed at the O<lb/>
ern eating of the club. Those ?<lb/>
will be attending the convention are<lb/>
Lloyd Prout. Anne Francis A<lb/>
Sylvia Wallace. Bob Chris tenser <lb/>
Moore, Carolyn Catee, Julia Parker.<lb/>
Hilly Bart'ieid. Mary- Arm Lasater,<lb/>
and Brenda Sutton.<lb/>
Phyllis Henson was selected as puh-<lb/>
a.ty chairman and Jim Kirklan<lb/>
membership chairman.<lb/>
Regular meetings will be on the<lb/>
md Tuesday of each month at 7:00<lb/>
p. m. in the Library Auditorium.<lb/>
A membership drive will be con-<lb/>
Juried in the College Union tomorrow,<lb/>
October 2i and Monday, October 23<lb/>
from 9:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. In-<lb/>
teraated students are invited to join.<lb/>
-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
new ? . ?<lb/>
n.<lb/>
HURT Bl<lb/>
MON<lb/>
. ? . ?<lb/>
Di ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
Th<lb/>
' T<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
. i<lb/>
T ? . ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Jones Announces N<lb/>
Officers, Proctors<lb/>
iff-i<lb/>
J. R. Wood &amp;. Sons, Inc Dept. CP-21<lb/>
216 E. 45th St New York 17, N.Y.<lb/>
Please send me more facts about diamond rings and<lb/>
"Wedding Guide for Bride and Groom Also name<lb/>
of nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I am<lb/>
enclosing 10 to cover handling and postage.<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
M1IS4S WEAP<lb/>
EVENING STAR<lb/>
First choice of<lb/>
lAmerica's College Queens!<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
City<lb/>
State<lb/>
.County or Zone.<lb/>
East<lb/>
Robi<lb/>
:<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ala -<lb/>
L. T.<lb/>
B. K<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
Heturj 1<lb/>
.<lb/>
.<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
lie Clerk-S . 'her<lb/>
Service ExajB ?<lb/>
 .on em be i 4. il - K'<lb/>
in? at 9AH i m. AB <lb/>
?ho are mu i. - 'bBi<lb/>
exam mut fifc th? '<lb/>
ment Office hx Moasaf. <lb/>
I at 4:30.<lb/>
"Gee, honey, you'll never<lb/>
pass your physics exam unless<lb/>
you learn to loosen up<lb/>
SSffiJ! IPMQ008 MAKE 20 WONDERFUL SMOKES!<lb/>
AOEO MILD. BLENDED MILD - NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY<lb/>
From the<lb/>
9<lb/>
author -q?<lb/>
of'God's. 0U<lb/>
Little ! ii?w?<lb/>
Acre' V<lb/>
Starring<lb/>
DIANE McBAl'<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow<lb/>
-Oct<lb/>
PITT Theatre<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0005"/><lb/>
POBER 26, 1961<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PAQE FIVE<lb/>
?Chile), and Carmen A. Verges Raynor (Puerto Rico) greet<lb/>
itodents. staff, and Greenville citizens at the Foreign Students<lb/>
Tea.<lb/>
Foreign Faculty-Students Honored<lb/>
Students Attend Tea<lb/>
inoun<lb/>
Aramaber of celleur students from<lb/>
outside the continental United<lb/>
States and for faculty members<lb/>
origimaHy from foiv-n countries<lb/>
Twer? honor guests at a tea given by<lb/>
the CoJl??e Union s<lb/>
at 2:30.<lb/>
Students, faculty ana staff mem-<lb/>
bers of the college, and townspoople-<lb/>
ple of Greenville -were invited to meet<lb/>
Jesse J. AiProyo, Guam: .b.hn Jehani-<lb/>
gir, Pakiahan; Pierre Prosper<lb/>
Benrnouyal, Morocco; Alu-e Coriol-<lb/>
ano, Brazil.<lb/>
Maria Arnolda Haendel. Uruguay;<lb/>
Fathaltah Jaber Kahok, Jordan: Che-j<lb/>
ong-Hwan Kim, Korea: Catherine<lb/>
Labsume, Prance; Farhan- Monta-<lb/>
khab, Iran; Carmen A. Verges Ray-<lb/>
nor Puerto Rico; Maggy Tamura,<lb/>
Japan; Ckrita Clark Thomas Can-<lb/>
ada; Mrs. Kirstn B.<lb/>
and Frank Badrock, t;<lb/>
all students.<lb/>
Julia EaC&amp;hwa, Chile; Marcello<lb/>
Martin, France; and IV. and Mis.<lb/>
Henry Wenderman, Austria; all fac-<lb/>
ulty members.<lb/>
Plans for the social event in the<lb/>
College Union 'were ma by Monty<lb/>
Milts, Chaamiaa of the s<lb/>
mittee; iweanbers of the College Un- <lb/>
ion; and Cynthia Ann Mendenhall,<lb/>
recreation sanerffeor of -ie College<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
As a special attract: r. .????? af-<lb/>
(ternoon, the CXJ bulletin<lb/>
played a globe wtrro<lb/>
of the countries .from which honor<lb/>
guests come. Mrs. Scarlett Miller.<lb/>
member of the Coileu. I nion staff,<lb/>
originated the design<lb/>
board. A similar motif was .carried<lb/>
out in the refoeahmeioit table.<lb/>
Among those receiving guests were<lb/>
.lames M. Taylor, president of the<lb/>
CUSB; Glenn Boyd. vice-president,<lb/>
Ann B. Peaden, president of the for-<lb/>
iegn language fraternity, Sigma Pi<lb/>
Alpha; Dr. .lames H. Tucker, Dean<lb/>
of Student Affairs, and Mrs. Tucker;<lb/>
Miss Cynthia Ann Mendenhall;<lb/>
Mr. James L. Fleming, Director of<lb/>
the Foreign Language Department;<lb/>
Dr. Fied C. Martin, Mrs. Margu-<lb/>
rite A. Perry, and Mr. Robert R-<lb/>
Morrison, all faculty members of the<lb/>
Foreign Language Department; and<lb/>
the honor guests.<lb/>
Woman's Club<lb/>
Dinner Honors<lb/>
mm Students<lb/>
T,i1 night sixteen tyreign stu-<lb/>
'ents were honored at the United<lb/>
Notions Dinner sponsored by the<lb/>
Greenville Woman's Club. They at-<lb/>
! tided the linner as the personal<lb/>
vts of Greenville residents.<lb/>
The dinner is given each year dar-<lb/>
ing United Nations Week. This<lb/>
ir. Dr. Keener Fnazier, of the Po-<lb/>
litical Science Department at the<lb/>
I'Diversity of North Carolina spoke<lb/>
rii "The Crisis in the United Na-<lb/>
tions and our National Security<lb/>
Dr. Frazier was inrtoduced by<lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Kittrell a member of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees of the Woman's<lb/>
' )eoe of the University of Jorth<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
There were 150 guests at the din-<lb/>
ner.<lb/>
iCbnsfeiiing of dishes from several<lb/>
?onntries. the menu was printed in<lb/>
? even languages.<lb/>
Mrs. Howard Mims, Chairman of<lb/>
the Dinner Committee, acted as<lb/>
Mistress of Ceremonies. Following<lb/>
the dinner, Catherine Labaiuime, the<lb/>
guest of State Senator and Mrs.<lb/>
Riolbent L. H umber, responded to the<lb/>
welcome extended by Woman's Club<lb/>
President, Mrs. Dink James. After<lb/>
being .presented by their hosts, each<lb/>
of the students told the guests a<lb/>
httle about his country.<lb/>
Peter Johl, Ea&amp;t Carolina music<lb/>
student and a star of last summer's<lb/>
"Lost Colony" production at Manteo,<lb/>
entertained guests with a program<lb/>
o1 music, including songs in several<lb/>
languages. He was accompanied by<lb/>
W. Larry Griffin, graduate student<lb/>
of music.<lb/>
Peace Corp's Goals Discussed<lb/>
ACE Coffee Hour<lb/>
IP<lb/>
- 3<lb/>
bo?"<lb/>
a<lb/>
A coffee hour for education majors<lb/>
who wish to joiw the Association for<lb/>
Childhood Education<lb/>
October SI in the Alumni Building<lb/>
from 3 to 5 p.Vk With two major pro-<lb/>
jects for the college <lb/>
the A?oeiaion is tkw beginning its<lb/>
quest for new ??embers. All students<lb/>
are invited to a&amp;me and obtain in-<lb/>
formation about: the Association and<lb/>
its actavi ties.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Announces Plans<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha, Greek social fra-<lb/>
ternity on the camrpus, has announced<lb/>
its plans, officers, and pledges for<lb/>
the 1961-1962 school year.<lb/>
The fraternity will sponsor on Oc-<lb/>
tcber 28 a football game with Sigma<lb/>
Nu, another social fraternity on the<lb/>
eanvpus, for the benefit of the col-<lb/>
lege's new stadium fund. Highlight-<lb/>
ing Pi Kappa Alpha's social activi-<lb/>
ties are the traditional concert by<lb/>
the sea" and Dream Girl Ball, both to<lb/>
be held in the spring.<lb/>
officers of the fraternity are Jerry<lb/>
Wilkins. president; Vance Taylor, vice<lb/>
resident; William Cox, secretary;<lb/>
Harold Cartel treasurer; and Steve<lb/>
Cockran, conductor.<lb/>
Following "Rush Week" held by the<lb/>
tine social fraternities on the cam-<lb/>
pus, Pi Kappa Alpha has announced<lb/>
its pledges for the fall quarter. They<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Joseph Lea. Jr Wilbur Poston,<lb/>
Melvin Hooker, Weldon Wall, Ed-<lb/>
ward Dixon Worley 111, Thomas<lb/>
Snotherly, Robert Taft, Robert Dodd,<lb/>
Coley Brown, John A. Farris, Jr<lb/>
I ,ester Brown, John Taylor Barnhill,<lb/>
Jr ,<lb/>
George Noe, Hunter Chadwick. Jr<lb/>
Roger L. Hunnieutt, Thomas Scott,<lb/>
Maynard West, Edward V. Pickford,<lb/>
Mack Yarb rough, Jerry Simpson, and<lb/>
Wiley Rogersoo, Jr.<lb/>
Circle K Presents<lb/>
EC Talent Show<lb/>
Fast Carolina College's chapter of<lb/>
the Circle K Club will present a<lb/>
Campus Variety Talent Show No-<lb/>
vember 8 and 9, in Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
Tryouts for this show will be held<lb/>
,n Austin Auditorium November &amp;i<lb/>
at 8:30 p. m.<lb/>
According to Tom Royal, chairman<lb/>
of the planning committee. "Any act<lb/>
-jazz bands, singers, piano players,<lb/>
combos, baton twirlers, dancers or<lb/>
any others are welcome to participate"<lb/>
Pianist will be present to accompany<lb/>
singers; however, they must provide<lb/>
their own music.<lb/>
First, second, and third place win-<lb/>
ners will receive prizes of $15, $10.<lb/>
and $5 respectively.<lb/>
Admission will be 50 cents per<lb/>
person and 75 cents per couple.<lb/>
By M ARCELLE VOGEL<lb/>
"The Peace Corp is composed of<lb/>
Americans who, through the develop-<lb/>
ment of tiheir special skills, go as<lb/>
volunteers to Foreign Countries to<lb/>
help in world imptrovemenft said<lb/>
James Kweder, representative of<lb/>
the Peace Corp who spoke on our<lb/>
ogmpaa Monday.<lb/>
In further explaining the Peace<lb/>
Carp, Mr. Kweder told the students<lb/>
who packed Austin Auditorium for<lb/>
bis Monday miomdng lecture, that<lb/>
the goals of the Peace Conp are the<lb/>
understanding and trust that arise<lb/>
from common effort.<lb/>
"You will receive the friendship of<lb/>
your hosts and the enrichment that<lb/>
arises from intimacy with another<lb/>
culture. You will stand in the eyes<lb/>
of the world as examples of the<lb/>
moral purpose that established the<lb/>
United States and now guides its<lb/>
course in world affairs explained<lb/>
Mr. .Kweder, a graduate student at<lb/>
UNC.<lb/>
The Peace Corp, which was organ-<lb/>
ized on March 1, 1961, was passed<lb/>
by a unanimous vote by the Senate<lb/>
of the U. S. In explaining the Peace<lb/>
Corp President J. F. Kennedy said,<lb/>
"ALthough this is an American Peace<lb/>
Corp, the problem of world develop-<lb/>
ment is not just an American prob-<lb/>
lem. Let us hipe that other natiins<lb/>
will mobilize the spirit and energies<lb/>
and skill of their people in some<lb/>
form of Peace Conps?making our<lb/>
own effort only one step in a major<lb/>
international effort to increase the<lb/>
welfare of all men and improve un-<lb/>
derstanding among the nations<lb/>
Some of the requirements of the<lb/>
Peace Corp, stated Mr. Kweder, are<lb/>
(1) having a basic skill such as<lb/>
teaching, administrative talents, com-<lb/>
munity development workers, agri-<lb/>
cultural extension workers, librari-<lb/>
ans, construction workers . . . and<lb/>
many more such, talents.<lb/>
Another requirement is generaliza-<lb/>
tion?having a broad field and being<lb/>
able to adapt to different circum-<lb/>
f stances.<lb/>
Being culturally emphatic is anoth-<lb/>
er important requirement. The<lb/>
Peace Corp volunteer must be frank,<lb/>
and honest, but at the same time<lb/>
not offending. This need can be bet-<lb/>
oi understood by remembering the<lb/>
Nigerian situation which recently<lb/>
occurred, over the misinterpretation<lb/>
of a 'post card.<lb/>
Another requirement which Mr.<lb/>
Kweder listed is the ability to rec-<lb/>
ognize the potential political situa-<lb/>
ion as it is, and to be able to<lb/>
unteer must have organizational abil-<lb/>
ity to work with the equipment which<lb/>
he is given.<lb/>
Any American citizen over 18 is<lb/>
eligible for the Peace Corp. There<lb/>
is no upper age limit. A married<lb/>
person with no children will be ac-<lb/>
cepted if his spouse is also accepted<lb/>
as a Volunteer.<lb/>
Peace Corp volunteers will be<lb/>
trained by experts in the language<lb/>
and culture of the host country, in<lb/>
the technical fields which a project<lb/>
C!l require and in the tradition, gov<lb/>
lhandle it. Lastly, the Peace Corp vol- j eminent and invitations of the Unit<lb/>
Croups Announce Plans, Officers<lb/>
t-d States. The volunteers will be<lb/>
tmined over an 8 week period, which<lb/>
will count as part of their two<lb/>
years volunteer service.<lb/>
Exams will be given on November<lb/>
8 and 29 in Rocky Mount and in<lb/>
Goldsboro for those people who are<lb/>
i erested m becoming a member of<lb/>
the Peace Corp.<lb/>
For further information on the<lb/>
Peace Cup, students should see Dr.<lb/>
Robert Cramer in the Geography De-<lb/>
I artmeii.t, who is the campus Peace<lb/>
Corp liason officer.<lb/>
Organizational Happenings In Brief<lb/>
Frosh Sponsor Dance<lb/>
New Officers Elected<lb/>
Officers of the Zeta Psi chapter<lb/>
of Alpha Omicron Pi, social sorority<lb/>
a East Carolina, have been an-<lb/>
nounced for the 1961-1962 term. Sara<lb/>
Louise Rogers will take over the du-<lb/>
ties of president from Jan Gurganus,<lb/>
Conner president of the sorority.<lb/>
A junior student at East Carolina.<lb/>
Miss Rogers is specializing in prim-<lb/>
ary education. She served as vice pres-<lb/>
ident of the Alpha Omicron Pi so-<lb/>
rial sorority in 1960-1961.<lb/>
Other officers elected to serve with<lb/>
Miss Rogers are:<lb/>
Janice Sessoms, vice president and<lb/>
senior Panhellenic delegate; Carolyn<lb/>
Beck, recording secretary; Betsy J.<lb/>
Lane, corresponding secretary; San-<lb/>
dra Thompson, treasurer.<lb/>
Martha Alice Allen, rush chairman;<lb/>
Nancy Jane Collins, publicity chair-<lb/>
man; and Elizabeth Rogers, junior<lb/>
Panhellenic delegate.<lb/>
Mary Nell Shaw, a member of Al-<lb/>
pha Omicron Pi, is serving as presi-<lb/>
dent of the Panhellenic Council.<lb/>
Other members of the sorority are<lb/>
Barabara Barco, Jan Carroll Morris,<lb/>
Joan Phelps, Lyrun Slaughter, Brenda<lb/>
Sutton, Gail Walser, and Adelia Smith.<lb/>
Ruth Joyce Harris, is a new pledge<lb/>
of the sorority.<lb/>
The Freshman Class will sponsor<lb/>
a dance after the Pi Kappa Alpha-<lb/>
Sig-ma Nu football game on October<lb/>
28, from 4:30 to 7:00 p. m. This dance<lb/>
is open to the entire student body.<lb/>
Admission will be one cent for each<lb/>
vear of age. That is, if you are twen-<lb/>
ty years of age, you will pay $.20<lb/>
admission fee. The proceeds of this<lb/>
.lance will go to the stadium fund. Re-<lb/>
freshments will be sold, the proceeds<lb/>
of which will go to the Freshman<lb/>
Class. Music will be supplied by re-<lb/>
cords.<lb/>
of ECC, was initiated as an alumni<lb/>
member on October 8. He is currently<lb/>
doing radio and television work in<lb/>
Asheville. North Carolina.<lb/>
KD Pledges Eleven<lb/>
Recently, Gamma Sigma Chapter of<lb/>
Kappa Delta Sorority initiated Shar-<lb/>
on McKean and Mary Alyce Sellers.<lb/>
At this time Kappa Delta also pledg-<lb/>
ed eleven girls. They are: Madge<lb/>
Stancil, Nina Duncan, Joan Zachary,<lb/>
Connie Story, Linda Gale, Carolyn<lb/>
Hart, Norma Carol Summerlin, Mary<lb/>
Helen Mumford, Kay Epton. Pat Wa-<lb/>
ff, and Nancy Gilbert.<lb/>
New Rushees Named<lb/>
The Gamma Phi Chapter of Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta, social sorority at East<lb/>
Carolina, has announced new pledges<lb/>
"ollowing an informal fail rush. The<lb/>
women students will observe a pledge-<lb/>
; raining period of approximately<lb/>
eight weeks. Sue Worthington was<lb/>
elected president of the fall pledge<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Other pledges of the sorority in-<lb/>
elude Brenda Wall, rice president of<lb/>
the pledge class; Mary White Robin-<lb/>
son, secretary-treasurer; Melba Rhue;<lb/>
Clenda Phillips; Betty Ann Wynne;<lb/>
and Linda Armstrong.<lb/>
Recent Initiations<lb/>
Recently initiated into the brother<lb/>
hood of the Phi Kappa Tau fraterni-<lb/>
ty were Forrest H. Teague, Glenn T<lb/>
Sig Ep Initiates Four<lb/>
The North Carolina Kappa chapter<lb/>
uf Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity re-<lb/>
cently initiated four new brothers. Boyd, and ' Ronald E. Schwentorus.<lb/>
The new brothers are: Ronald H.<lb/>
Fochler, Walker P. Norford, Jimmy<lb/>
Jones, and Martin Davis. This was<lb/>
che first initiation carried out by the<lb/>
brothers on N. C. Kappa since they<lb/>
oecame a national chapter. The new-<lb/>
brothers were honored at a banquet<lb/>
that evening ait Respess-James.<lb/>
Charles Robison, a I960 graduate<lb/>
iMowing the service a sicial was<lb/>
held with the entire brotherhood of<lb/>
wenty-two.<lb/>
Delta Zeta Pledges<lb/>
The Zeta lambda Chapter of Delta<lb/>
Zeta sorority will initiate four pledges<lb/>
the sorority on October 28 at St.<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal Church in Greenville.<lb/>
The chapter here at East Carolina<lb/>
will be one of 13,3 chapters and 3<lb/>
olonies throughout the United States<lb/>
? elebrating Founder's Day of Delta<lb/>
Zeta.<lb/>
The women students to be formally<lb/>
;nitiated pledged the sorority during<lb/>
he spring formal rush. They are as<lb/>
follows: Geneva Congleton. Kay Lan-<lb/>
ding, Nancy Ledbettet and Betty Ann<lb/>
Outlaw.<lb/>
Women students pledging the soror-<lb/>
rry after the fall informal rush of<lb/>
Delta Zeta include Carleen Davis,<lb/>
Billie Boyd, and Bonnie Harris.<lb/>
The sorority is under the leader-<lb/>
-h j of the following officers for the<lb/>
1961 -62 school term:<lb/>
Gay Hudson, president; Carole Ran-<lb/>
kin, vice president in charge of pledge<lb/>
training; Edith Baker, rice president<lb/>
in charge of membership; Nancy<lb/>
Berry, recording secretary; Gerry<lb/>
 bitfield, corresponding secretary;<lb/>
Judy Berry, treasurer.<lb/>
Theta Chi Officers<lb/>
Wayne Willard. senior at East Caor-<lb/>
lina. heads a slate of officers for the<lb/>
1961-1962 term elected by the Epsilon<lb/>
K,ta Chapter of the Theta Chi social<lb/>
fraternity at the college.<lb/>
Also elected to office in Theta Chi<lb/>
are Jerry Person, vice president; WTill-<lb/>
am C- Jackson, secretary; Fred<lb/>
Wright, treasurer; Fred Fowler, a-<lb/>
sistant treasurer;<lb/>
Brett Watson, librarian; Kenneth<lb/>
J'rogdon. historian; Jimmy Adcock,<lb/>
chaplain; Kenneth Moore, first door-<lb/>
man: Jimmy Chesnutt, second door-<lb/>
man; Taddis Cates. house manager;<lb/>
James Tenvme. assistant house man-<lb/>
ager; Roy Hall, pledge marshal; and<lb/>
us sisters in a private ceremony pre-1 Michael Keziah. assistant pledge mar-<lb/>
ceding a Founder's Day banquet of! shal.<lb/>
Theta Chi Jubilee<lb/>
Douglas Robinson, James Southall<lb/>
and Kenneth Trogdon, represented<lb/>
Theta Chi fraternity at a committee<lb/>
meeting at Hampden-Sydney College,<lb/>
Hampden Sydney, Va during the<lb/>
weekend of October 21.<lb/>
The coanmittee made plans for the<lb/>
annual Mason-Dixon Jubilee spon-<lb/>
sored by the fraternity, which this<lb/>
year is to be held at the University of<lb/>
Richmond, Richmond, Va. March 16,<lb/>
17 and 18. A social function is sched-<lb/>
uled as well as business meetings for<lb/>
this region.<lb/>
All eleven chapters of Theta Chi<lb/>
in North Carolina and Virginia will<lb/>
be represented at this Jubilee.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
First Tan Sigma Rush<lb/>
The ASph 4 ?ter of Tau Sigma<lb/>
rli-<lb/>
held la Srst,<lb/>
year at the<lb/>
.interested<lb/>
of Ti<lb/>
jrmal rush of the<lb/>
pli House on Oc-<lb/>
and IT persons<lb/>
attended.<lb/>
u Sigma and<lb/>
were presented<lb/>
ickson. Dr. Jones,<lb/>
ted an inspiring<lb/>
d the purposes<lb/>
how members of<lb/>
phould aid in en-<lb/>
'of East Caro-<lb/>
Business Frat Rush<lb/>
The Delta Zeta Chapter of Delta<lb/>
Sigma Pi at East Carolina College<lb/>
has announced its pledges following<lb/>
-all Quarter Rusih. From October to<lb/>
December, the "rushees" will go<lb/>
through a period of pledge and will<lb/>
on December 9 be formally initiated<lb/>
into the professional business frater-<lb/>
nity on campus.<lb/>
Delta Zeta's five pledges include<lb/>
William R. Thompson, Jr Frank D.<lb/>
Payne, Robert H. Lovic, Theodore<lb/>
Wiiitmyer, and William L. Hudson.<lb/>
All members of the fraternity re-<lb/>
cently attended the North Carolina<lb/>
Trade Fair held in Charlotte.<lb/>
ECC STUDENTS<lb/>
ARE ALWAYS WELCOME AT<lb/>
LAP" PARTY HOUSE and<lb/>
PIZZA PARLOR<lb/>
us Pizza, Sandwiches, Barbecue Dinners,<lb/>
i Pie and Beverages Anytime,<lb/>
sunt on Purchases of "Meal Tickets"<lb/>
All Times in a Non-Alcoholic Atmosphere<lb/>
PLACE FOR NICE PEOPLE<lb/>
Join Us At<lb/>
fend Floor (over Mary Ann Soda Shop)<lb/>
LL GRIFFIN, Opr. and Mgr. <lb/>
Interviewers from the U. S.<lb/>
Coast Guard and Portsmouth,<lb/>
Virginia Schools will be on cam-<lb/>
pus soon to interview interested<lb/>
seniors. Those registered with<lb/>
the Placement Bureau who wish<lb/>
to talk with these representatives<lb/>
should sign up for interviews by-<lb/>
November 1, at the Placement Of-<lb/>
fice in the Administration Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
THURSDAY Onlv at the<lb/>
STATE Theatre<lb/>
BREATHLESS<lb/>
starring Gene Sibery<lb/>
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY<lb/>
"MAN IN THE MOON"<lb/>
A Comedy Takeoff on the<lb/>
Astronauts<lb/>
Starts SUNDAY<lb/>
Jeffrey Hunter and David" Jensen<lb/>
in "MANTRAP"<lb/>
??e?0?????????????????????<lb/>
$!<lb/>
 v<lb/>
Cor. Fifth and Cotanche<lb/>
Dedicated To . . .<lb/>
A Young Man's Taste<lb/>
"??a<lb/>
Its what's up front thsrr counts<lb/>
Up front is FILTER-BLEND and only Winston has it!<lb/>
Rich, golden tobaccos specially selected and specially<lb/>
processed for full flavor in filter smoking.<lb/>
B. 3. Bqi?8MiTtb?M?C.WtnttM-a?ha.W.C.<lb/>
WINSTON TASTES GOOD like a cigarette should<lb/>
rrr<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0006"/><lb/>
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2?<lb/>
PAIGE SIX<lb/>
EAST CAftOLIN IAN<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
Moves Bucs On Top<lb/>
EC emerged to the top of the lad-<lb/>
der in the Carolinas Conference stand-<lb/>
ings with a thrilling 13-7 victory<lb/>
last Saturday night in Newberry,<lb/>
South Carolina. The loss removed the<lb/>
Indians from the top seeded spot in<lb/>
the loop, and gave the Bucs a 4-1<lb/>
conference mark, and 5-1 overall.<lb/>
A tremendous team effort by Coach<lb/>
Jack Boone's "fitfhtinjr" Pirates spoil-<lb/>
ed the Newberry Homecoming. It ap-<lb/>
peared that the Bucs would have to<lb/>
settle for a tie of 7-7 following a<lb/>
goal line stand by the hime team<lb/>
during the final ?moments of action.<lb/>
The strong Indian defense spoiled<lb/>
a Buc drive at the one foot line. Quar-<lb/>
terback Tom Gorman, one of the con-<lb/>
ference's truly fine backs, moved his<lb/>
team as far as the EC 16 with only<lb/>
two minutes remaining on the score-<lb/>
board clock.<lb/>
Honeycutt Sets-up and Scores<lb/>
Clincher<lb/>
Gorman pitched back to Phil Or-<lb/>
sini, who tried a sweep to the left<lb/>
side. Pirate left end, Richard Honey-<lb/>
cutt. proceeded to make what proved<lb/>
to be the defensive play of the year<lb/>
for EC. The 200 pounder stole the<lb/>
ball out of the arms of Orsini, be-<lb/>
hind the line of scrimmage, and car-<lb/>
ried it down well inside the opposi-<lb/>
tion's 10 yard line.<lb/>
It did not take the Bucs but two<lb/>
more plays to sew-up the thriller with<lb/>
only 38 seconds remaining. A Rouse<lb/>
to Rudisdll handoff g-ained four, and<lb/>
-set the stage for Rouse's pass to<lb/>
Honeycutt and the winnirug touch-<lb/>
down. Bob Muldrow's attempt for<lb/>
th extra point was wide.<lb/>
Newberry managed to get off sev-<lb/>
eral plays after an onside kick by the<lb/>
Buc's Muldrow, but the Indians had<lb/>
the time to run out on them. Gorman<lb/>
completed 5 of 14 tosses, including<lb/>
one in the last Indian threat. Big Fred<lb/>
Haley from Hartwell, Georgia caught<lb/>
the passes from Gorman.<lb/>
Scoreless First Half<lb/>
In a rugged defensive initial half,<lb/>
which saw both teams show clutch<lb/>
defensive power, the two fine teams<lb/>
had to settle for a scoreless dead-<lb/>
lock. The defensive pky of Bob<lb/>
Biimgardner, Chuck Gordon, and<lb/>
Clayton Piland stood out for East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The fireworks started offensive-<lb/>
ly in the third stanza. EC received the<lb/>
kickoff, but was stopped dead in their<lb/>
shoes. With penalties hurting Coach<lb/>
Boone's eleven's chances thriugh the<lb/>
night, it appeared that the Bucs would<lb/>
never hilt pay dirt.<lb/>
It took a Newberry score to bring<lb/>
fhe Pirates to demonstrate their best<lb/>
-fighting" mood of the season. On<lb/>
fourth down Carl Harris crashed into<lb/>
the end zone from the one, giving<lb/>
?he home team a 6-0 lead. The con-<lb/>
version made it 7-0 midway in the<lb/>
third period.<lb/>
Coach Boone installed Vince Eiduke<lb/>
into the game at the quarterback post<lb/>
for the Bucs. The Pennsylvania native<lb/>
returned the kickoff to the 20. Ei-<lb/>
duke then took charge and marched<lb/>
his team 71 yards for a touchdown.<lb/>
Tom Matthews, the leading Pirate<lb/>
oround-grainer for the night with 52<lb/>
yards in 12 carries climaxed the force-<lb/>
ful drive with an eleven yard run off<lb/>
the right side to hit Pay Hrt. Muld-<lb/>
row converted to tie the game for EC.<lb/>
The Pirates, supported by only<lb/>
a few EC fans and cheerleaders, who<lb/>
were weary from the long day's jour-<lb/>
ney, would not settle for anything<lb/>
but all the marbles. Boone decided to<lb/>
giv? Eiduke a rest on an EC drive<lb/>
during the late stages of the last<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Dan Rouse and Bib Bumgardner<lb/>
were sent into action, and immediate-<lb/>
iv executed a beautiful 20 yard pass<lb/>
play down into enemy territory.<lb/>
Rouse then completed passes to Matt-<lb/>
hews and Strikland, only to see the<lb/>
Buc drive end at the one foot line.<lb/>
However, Honeycutt put the Bucs<lb/>
back into contention by stealing the<lb/>
ball. Afterwards the game was liter-<lb/>
ally exterminated for the Indians on<lb/>
the pass iplay from Rouse to Honey-<lb/>
cutt.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
By RICHARD BOYD<lb/>
This was the scene of action last Thursday night at College Stadium,<lb/>
benefit contest for the new stadium.<lb/>
Hie Purple edged the Gold 12 to 6, in<lb/>
Some of us complain, even when<lb/>
we get what we expected.<lb/>
EC Plays Apps n Battle<lb/>
For Honor In Hickory<lb/>
EC's top seeded Pirates can clinch<lb/>
the Carolinas Conference grid crown<lb/>
with consecutive wins over Appalach-<lb/>
ian this week and Lenoir the follow-<lb/>
ing week. The men of Coach Jack<lb/>
Boone's team have only a 7-6 loss,<lb/>
in the rain and mud against WCC<lb/>
standing in their way of a perfect<lb/>
record during the six contests in the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Bucs will be in operation at<lb/>
Hickory, rather than at Boone, this<lb/>
weekend against Appalachian (3-1)<lb/>
in what should be a real thriller. The<lb/>
Apps are fresh from a convincing<lb/>
12-7 non-conference win over Carson-<lb/>
Newman. The Mountaineers' record<lb/>
equalizes the Bucs' at 5-1 and it sur-<lb/>
passes the Pirate defense with 44 to<lb/>
56 points scored upon them.<lb/>
EC was unbeaten going into last<lb/>
year's contest at Boone, and the home<lb/>
team emerged victorious 21-17. Sweet<lb/>
revenge is sought by Coach Jack<lb/>
Boone and Company at Hickory this<lb/>
weekend. The East Carolina attack is<lb/>
built around Tommy Matthews, a<lb/>
brilliant Senior halfback from Hert-<lb/>
ford.<lb/>
FACULTY GAME<lb/>
The Faculty members of the De-<lb/>
partment of Health and Physical Ed-<lb/>
ucation (Men) hereby challenge the<lb/>
remaining- faculty of the College to<lb/>
a game of basketball to be held at<lb/>
the Memorial Gymnasium the night of<lb/>
November 27, 1961.<lb/>
The entire proceeds of this con-<lb/>
test will be contributed to the Stad-<lb/>
ium Project, (i.e. outside of the cost<lb/>
involved in purchasing rubbing al-<lb/>
cohol, analgesic balm, liniment, tape,<lb/>
and other materials required to patch-<lb/>
up the broken bones and aching mus-<lb/>
cles.)<lb/>
'The Scooter" has picked up 357<lb/>
yards in 52 carries for a 6.9 average.<lb/>
Matthews is also tied in the pass<lb/>
catching department with end Rich-<lb/>
Purple Wins<lb/>
Freshman Game<lb/>
By PARKER CHESSON<lb/>
The Purple edged- the Gold, 12-6,<lb/>
in a freshman intersquad game held<lb/>
in College Stadium last Thursday<lb/>
night. Led by quarterback Bill Cline,<lb/>
who was directly responsible for both<lb/>
touchdowns, the Purple scored once<lb/>
in each of the second and third<lb/>
quarters.<lb/>
The Purple's first touchdown was<lb/>
chaired up by Cline on a quarterback<lb/>
sneak from 3 yards out. The try for<lb/>
the extra point was unsuccessful. The<lb/>
other Purple score was the result of<lb/>
a 30 yard pass from Sline to end<lb/>
Colon Quimi. Again, the try for the<lb/>
extra point failed.<lb/>
Led by halfbacks Jerry Tolley and<lb/>
"Dinky" Mills, the Gold squad scored<lb/>
their touchdown in the third quarter<lb/>
as the result of a 25 yard pass from<lb/>
quarterback Richard Bass to Tolley.<lb/>
The attempt for the extra point was<lb/>
no good.<lb/>
Dave Bumgardner, an end, was<lb/>
another member of the Gold squad<lb/>
who played outstanding ball. He made<lb/>
several good catches of passes, and<lb/>
was a terrific cimpetitor in defense.<lb/>
Based upon the results of this in-<lb/>
Ursquiad contest, Coach Jack Roone<lb/>
should be able to count upon several<lb/>
of this year's freshman squad to con-<lb/>
tribute heavily to East Carolina's suc-<lb/>
cess in the future years.<lb/>
Pika Sigma Nu, In Saturday<lb/>
Afternoon Grid Contest<lb/>
ard Honeycutt.Theformer hassix<lb/>
for 78 yards from the3uc quarter-<lb/>
'lacks.<lb/>
Carolina Conference Standings<lb/>
conference overall<lb/>
WLW LT<lb/>
East Carolina415 10<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne314 11<lb/>
Appalachian314 11<lb/>
Newberry213 30<lb/>
Catawba232 40<lb/>
Elon131 50<lb/>
West Carolina132 40<lb/>
Guilford030 50<lb/>
East Carolina TeamScoring<lb/>
td's pat fg stp<lb/>
Tom Michel40 0 024<lb/>
Tom Matthews30 0 018<lb/>
Bob Muldrow06 2 012<lb/>
Bill Strickland20 0 012<lb/>
Nick Hilgert20 0 012<lb/>
Larry Rudisill10 0 06<lb/>
John Anderson102 0 02<lb/>
Richard Huneycutt10 0 06<lb/>
East CaroLBna's Pirates hit the<lb/>
road again this weekend, but tlhere<lb/>
will be plenty of action this .Saturday<lb/>
afternoon at College Stadium. Pi Kap-<lb/>
,ua Alpha and Sigma Nu, two fra-<lb/>
ternities will meet head on in what<lb/>
should be a real thriller.<lb/>
The two teams have been holding<lb/>
workouts for the past couple of weeks<lb/>
and should be in fair condition for the<lb/>
daylight encounter. The kickoff time<lb/>
for the fraternity contest will be at<lb/>
2:00 p.m. The game will be played<lb/>
for a fine cause. Proceeds will go to<lb/>
tihe new foot)all stadium being built<lb/>
for next season.<lb/>
The Pika fraternity, coached by Ed<lb/>
Mizell of Durham, will field a line<lb/>
averaging close to 190 pounds, and<lb/>
a backfield averaging 180. The two<lb/>
big guns in the Pika attack are ex-<lb/>
acted to be Jerry Wilkins from Dunn<lb/>
and John Cutler, who is a native of<lb/>
Kinston. Coley Brown, a 200 pound<lb/>
tackle from Jacksonville, Florida is<lb/>
expected to be the top lineman for<lb/>
the Pika eleven.<lb/>
Sigma Nu will be led by Co-Cup-<lb/>
tains Sam Hunt from Burlington and<lb/>
James Stout, a rugged right halfback<lb/>
EC Weight<lb/>
Club Organized<lb/>
In the interests of better health<lb/>
and physical fitness, 130 men and wo-<lb/>
men students at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege have organized a Weight Train-<lb/>
ing Club. The organization has been<lb/>
approved by the Student Government<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Charles M. Smith, junior physical<lb/>
education major, heads the organiza-<lb/>
tion as president. Ray H. Martinez,<lb/>
swimming and tennis coach at the col-<lb/>
lege, is faculty advisor of the new<lb/>
club.<lb/>
Other officers are Gordon Patrick,<lb/>
vice president; Peter P. Cash, treas-<lb/>
urer; John Maurice Allen, Jr secre-<lb/>
tary; and Anna L. Baldwin, chairman<lb/>
for women.<lb/>
who weighs 175. David Jones, a Fresh-<lb/>
man from Beaufort is expected to help<lb/>
the Sigma Nu cause considerably.<lb/>
Jones will play the halfback slot op-<lb/>
posite Stout and is quite shifty.<lb/>
Starting Lineups<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha Ht. Wt.<lb/>
LE -Sandy Dalton 6- 0 175<lb/>
LT?Harold Carter 6-0 195<lb/>
LG Willie Godwin 5-11 -210<lb/>
C ?Tom Carroll 6-2 185<lb/>
RT- Jim Ivoftin 5-11 170<lb/>
iGColey Brown 6-1 200<lb/>
RE?Charles Zucker 6-2 180<lb/>
QB?A. W. Farris 5-11 170<lb/>
LHB- -Steve Cochran 5-10 175<lb/>
RHli -Jerry Wilkins 5-11 185<lb/>
FB?John Cutler 6-0 195<lb/>
Sigman Nu Ht. Wt.<lb/>
LE?Stan Cagle 6-0 170<lb/>
LT?Dixie Hohgood 5-9 210<lb/>
LG?Bill Merridith 6-2 190<lb/>
C ?Steve Hockman 5-10 175<lb/>
RG Richard Herring 5-7 160<lb/>
KT -Phi! Langford 60- 190<lb/>
RE?Butch Eason 6-2 195<lb/>
QB?Sam Hunt 5-11 175<lb/>
LHH- James Stout 5-9 175<lb/>
RHB?David Jones 5-10 155<lb/>
FR Ralph Stone 5-10 180<lb/>
Saturday Afternoon Football<lb/>
One of the most popular discussions on - <lb/>
his been the possibility of Saturday aftern?joi I<lb/>
to davUght encounters would be to the benefit of tl<lb/>
In order to have a successful operation<lb/>
turn on the gridiron, a change in the class Mh nn'<lb/>
e'Uarv. Saturday classes would have to?be eitl<lb/>
ventthe coiiese from keeping the name ? BUitrae<lb/>
Wouldn't it be nice to have a game in it )n <lb/>
dance at night If this year's Hwneeoming gam, ?<lb/>
at night, certainly 10,000 tans would not have pa<lb/>
iege Stadium to watch the Pirates play Elon s Chi<lb/>
PeopU A'aht.st This<lb/>
Next season, the Hues will try their confc<lb/>
J S Kicklen stadium. Whether or not any gam<lb/>
coming will be played in the afternoon, ii not<lb/>
present time. Of course, there will be some argun<lb/>
wo work on Saturday, if the Pirates decide to piaj<lb/>
noon. . i u i<lb/>
But, when the number of people who work m<lb/>
Greenville are compared with the size of the stud.<lb/>
Carolina, we will have to go with the latter. Th.<lb/>
pie who like the idea of Saturday classes. U<lb/>
weekend seems to take a great deal out ol<lb/>
af:emoon games might kwp more students on can<lb/>
Competition Geograih tealiy<lb/>
The Atlantic Coast Con fere nee and th? S<lb/>
ence both draw successful crowds on Saturday<lb/>
competition would not be great if the games her,<lb/>
in the afternoon because geographically, EC is in<lb/>
Iosition to have Saturday afternoon games. With i<lb/>
Hill, Durham, and Winsion-Salem well out of oui<lb/>
would be no comeptition in our area and the traffic<lb/>
not be great.<lb/>
If the Pirates do get in the Southern Con:<lb/>
it is most likely that the majority of the games a<lb/>
the afternoon, since the conference does play the m<lb/>
games in the day time.<lb/>
Good Coverage By Radio<lb/>
It is good to know that East Carolina gri<lb/>
been getting excellent coverage on radio at home ai<lb/>
is fine publicity, now many areas that have not I<lb/>
fore have the opportunity to tune in on the Buc's :<lb/>
during the 1961 season.<lb/>
Trmupo rta t io n Of Ch e rli ade r.s<lb/>
There have been many people complaining<lb/>
about the cheerleaders not going to Catawba and oi<lb/>
half of the Guilford game. It is certainly not the gii<lb/>
school did not provide transporation for them.<lb/>
The cheerleaders finally managed to find<lb/>
Newberry game. But arrangements should be m.<lb/>
vance for the away trips. It means a great deal i<lb/>
know that they at least have this much support fr<lb/>
body. Therefore, it is essential that permanent<lb/>
for rides be made.<lb/>
?-<lb/>
lay<lb/>
?<lb/>
a??<lb/>
MA:&amp;iMtt ?????? ?????? ????????? ??????????????<lb/>
W all make mistakes<lb/>
by<lb/>
The Miracle-<lb/>
Comfort<lb/>
Watchband<lb/>
BRAZIL<lb/>
(F.T.l.)<lb/>
itma Bros. Jeweler<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/>
BATOH PAFSM CORPORATION<lb/>
prrrsrisLD. mm.<lb/>
WOULD YOU LIKE TO BE ABLE TO DANCE THE CHA-<lb/>
CHA, TWIST, WALTZ. FOXTROT, MAMBO, TANGO.<lb/>
SAMBO. BOP. Etc.<lb/>
IF SO, WHY NOT VISIT AGNES and RONALD FINDLAY<lb/>
The Findlay's Have Done Exhibition For The College and<lb/>
Also Did The Coreography For The School Play,<lb/>
South Pacific. .<lb/>
Agnes and Ronald Are Now Offering Classes In The Above<lb/>
Dances. These Lessons Will Be One Hour Long and The<lb/>
Cost Will Only Be 75c Per Person For Each L<lb/>
Don't Miss Out On The Fun That Can Be Had Through<lb/>
Dancing! Sign Up Now! You'll Be Glad You Did!<lb/>
For Further Information Call PL 2-5610 Before 1:00 p. ra<lb/>
H?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00038721_0007"/>
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