<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038765_0001"/>
mmm<lb/>
Easttaroli<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
-<lb/>
m<lb/>
e XXXVII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, JULY 26, 1962<lb/>
'Buc Beauty5<lb/>
A<lb/>
? <lb/>
:a<lb/>
at<lb/>
at<lb/>
h n<lb/>
pixie, Melinda Causby, Sophomore Primary Education Major<lb/>
e of High Point, is preparing for a teaching degree. Swira-<lb/>
and ringing with the Woman's Chorus fill part of Melinda's<lb/>
nn. She is relaxing at home?awav from the grinds of sum-<lb/>
school this session.<lb/>
High School Musicians<lb/>
Here For Summer Camp<lb/>
Processing 11 iikiji i pin? i nni<lb/>
Extensive TestinsProsram<lb/>
rr.an 500 junior and senior<lb/>
school musicians from Georg-<lb/>
S :h Carolina, South Carolina,<lb/>
Jersey, Pennsyylvania, Tenn-<lb/>
i Virginia are now at-<lb/>
I tike Annual Summer Music<lb/>
aged at EC July 22<lb/>
Jenkins To Head<lb/>
Pitt United Fund<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkrns, East Caro-<lb/>
' ? liege president will serve as<lb/>
sign chairman for the 1962<lb/>
" County United Fund, Presi-<lb/>
R. Wallace Howard announced<lb/>
s v.<lb/>
tiv? in United Fund work in<lb/>
us ypars. Dr. Jenkins has<lb/>
campaign speaker and has<lb/>
airmanships of other county<lb/>
?gns.<lb/>
vard stated this morning that<lb/>
Jenkins certainly possesses<lb/>
&amp;e energy and capacity to ensure<lb/>
' ?- fill) success of our campaign.<lb/>
1 am confident the citizen of Pitt<lb/>
County will completely support bis<lb/>
effort! and again demonstrate tf?t<lb/>
rcommunity is really progres-<lb/>
?? and best of all, a wonderful<lb/>
P ace to live<lb/>
He said, "It is encouraging to<lb/>
? that man "who stays a busy<lb/>
a Dr. Jenkins is still willing to<lb/>
devoftl his time to the most worth-<lb/>
while cause<lb/>
Other appointments concerning<lb/>
!?? United Fund campaign will be<lb/>
de in the future, Howard stated.<lb/>
through August 4.<lb/>
A workshop in choral and in-<lb/>
i strumeretai music at the college is<lb/>
j being offered for the benefit of<lb/>
! 52 music teachers who are in at-<lb/>
i tendance.<lb/>
Earl E. Beach, director of the<lb/>
college music department, and Her-<lb/>
bert L. Garter, director of band's<lb/>
at East Carolina, are acting as<lb/>
coordinators of the workshop and<lb/>
are planning a (program of activi-<lb/>
ties suited to the needs and in-<lb/>
terests of teachers of choral and<lb/>
instrumental music.<lb/>
Those enrolled in the workshop<lb/>
are taking either choral or instru-<lb/>
mental work. During each class<lb/>
-ession, teachers will observe for<lb/>
three hours each day the camp<lb/>
program and will attend a one-<lb/>
hour class Monday through Fri-<lb/>
day from 4 to 5 pm.<lb/>
Sessions will be devoted to clini-<lb/>
cal work and in discussion of such<lb/>
aspects of the school music pro-<lb/>
gram as materials, methods of in-<lb/>
struction, rehearsal techniques,<lb/>
and vocal and instrumental prob-<lb/>
lems.<lb/>
Faculty members of the Bast<lb/>
Carolina Department of Musk and<lb/>
a number of visiting specialists will<lb/>
act as instructors and discussion<lb/>
leaders during the towo-week<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Those completing requfrementa<lb/>
wil receive three quarter hours<lb/>
of college credit on either the<lb/>
graduate or the undergraduate<lb/>
leveL Credits earned at the work-<lb/>
shop may be applied to renewal<lb/>
of teaching certificates.<lb/>
During the summer months, the<lb/>
IBM equipment in the Administra-<lb/>
tion Building has been undergoing<lb/>
extensive testing before actual aipr<lb/>
plication to student registration<lb/>
next Fall Quarter. The electronic<lb/>
data processing method is not only<lb/>
a transition from manual labor to<lb/>
machine labor for the Registrar's<lb/>
Office, but will simplify previous<lb/>
registration procedures for stu-<lb/>
dents as well.<lb/>
Pre-Regist ration<lb/>
Each quarter, the students will<lb/>
pre-register for courses for the<lb/>
coming quarter. Individual course<lb/>
cards from each department, cover-<lb/>
ing each course offered, will be<lb/>
prepared. These cards will repre-<lb/>
sent the maximum number of stu-<lb/>
dents for each section of a p&amp;rtic-<lb/>
ular course. By using the pre-<lb/>
registered cards, proper course<lb/>
cards are selected by manual opera-<lb/>
tions. The student will be enrolled<lb/>
in the class requested even if the<lb/>
maximum number is exceeded. The<lb/>
student's name and ID number are<lb/>
then punched in the individual<lb/>
course cards to complete the initial<lb/>
enrollment operation.<lb/>
The IBM tabulator will run a list<lb/>
of aK students to be enrolled in a<lb/>
given course and this list will be<lb/>
forwarded to each department di-<lb/>
rector for his approval. If the<lb/>
maximum per class is excessive,<lb/>
the departmental director may of-<lb/>
fer another section of a particular<lb/>
course, or an excessive number of<lb/>
students per period may necessitate<lb/>
using an alternate subject that the<lb/>
students indicated while pre-regis-<lb/>
tering for the course.<lb/>
Registration Day<lb/>
Individual! course schedules will<lb/>
he mailed to the students approxi-<lb/>
mately three weeks before the next<lb/>
quarter begins. At this time, the<lb/>
student may pay his fees in the<lb/>
Casfhier's Office. On registration<lb/>
day, pre-registered students will<lb/>
not be required to report to the<lb/>
registration area. Only new (first<lb/>
quarter at EC) students and those<lb/>
students who have to repeat a<lb/>
course will report to this area. Pre-<lb/>
registered students need only to<lb/>
report to the classes as indicated<lb/>
on has individual course schedule<lb/>
if his fees are paid.<lb/>
Drop-Add Procedures<lb/>
Drop4Add procedures are to be<lb/>
changed somewhat under the new<lb/>
electronic computing system. Dur-<lb/>
ing the three weeks periods, after<lb/>
the student receives his individual<lb/>
course schedule, he may change a<lb/>
By WALTER C. FAULKNER<lb/>
course before the new quarter be<lb/>
gins by going to his advisor for<lb/>
approval.<lb/>
After registration day, the stu-<lb/>
dent may drop or add a course by<lb/>
getting proper authorization<lb/>
through the regular channels. He<lb/>
will then go to ithe professor and<lb/>
pick up the course card that he is<lb/>
dropping and secondly, he must<lb/>
get aproval from the professor for<lb/>
the course for which he wishes to<lb/>
add. The remaining steps are com-<lb/>
parable to the existing procedures.<lb/>
End Of Quarter<lb/>
At the end of the quarter, each<lb/>
professor will indicate the student's<lb/>
grade on his course card and for-<lb/>
ward alili cards to the data pro-<lb/>
cessing center. IBM will then go<lb/>
into operation to compute and tab-<lb/>
ulate individual grade summaries.<lb/>
Under the IBM system, student<lb/>
grade sheets will indicate total<lb/>
hours and quality points, not only<lb/>
or the previous quarter, but for<lb/>
the total record as well.<lb/>
Other Applications<lb/>
A master statistical card is made<lb/>
for each student. This card will<lb/>
contain all pertinent information<lb/>
on each student, such as: his ID<lb/>
number, county, high school at-<lb/>
tended, percentile rank in his<lb/>
graduating class, residence on cam-<lb/>
pus, hours, quality points, martial<lb/>
status, and more.<lb/>
Student ID cards will be prepared<lb/>
by the IBM machinery, and another<lb/>
possible application may include<lb/>
alphabetizing and indexing stu-<lb/>
dents for the Buccaneer, the col-<lb/>
lie ge yearbook. Other applications<lb/>
will be added after the present<lb/>
operations are running at opti-<lb/>
mum efficiency.<lb/>
Student Draws<lb/>
Suspension For<lb/>
Falsified Record<lb/>
The Discipline Committee met<lb/>
on Monday, July 16, 1962, at 4<lb/>
p.m. to consider the case of a<lb/>
woman student who was charged<lb/>
with falsifying her off-campus per-<lb/>
mit. The student signed out to go<lb/>
home with a friend; instead she<lb/>
left the campus at a late hour for<lb/>
the beach. The student admitted<lb/>
her wrongdoing.<lb/>
The Committee recommended<lb/>
that she be placed on restriction<lb/>
for the second summer session and<lb/>
suspended from school during the<lb/>
fall quarter. The reasons for per-<lb/>
mitting her to remain in school<lb/>
during the second summer session<lb/>
instead of suspending her im-<lb/>
mediately were to permit her to<lb/>
continue receiving guidance and<lb/>
counseling and to improve her<lb/>
academic status.<lb/>
Major Kidd Joins Faculty Of<lb/>
Air Force ROTC Detachment<lb/>
Major Elbert Lewis Kidd has<lb/>
joined the staff of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina College Air Force ROTC de-<lb/>
tachment as Professor pf Air<lb/>
Science. He replaces Lt. Col. Nor-<lb/>
man Merritt, who has been at the<lb/>
college since August, 1959, and<lb/>
whose new assignment is in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. C.<lb/>
Major Kidd, whose home is in<lb/>
Roanoke, Va was stationed from<lb/>
September, 1959, to June, 1962,<lb/>
at Headquarters, Pacific Air For-<lb/>
ces, Hawaii. He served there as<lb/>
personnel officer.<lb/>
During more than nineteen years<lb/>
of service, Major Kidd has bad<lb/>
overseas duty in 1944-1945 as a<lb/>
bombadier in B-17's in Italy, in<lb/>
1951-1952 in Korea, and in Hawaii.<lb/>
College Recognizes Records<lb/>
Of Top Academic Students<lb/>
In this country he was on re-<lb/>
cruiting duty 1947-1950 and was<lb/>
stationed at Maxwell AF Base in<lb/>
Alabama 1954-1959.<lb/>
Among decorations which he has<lb/>
received are the Air Medal with<lb/>
two oak (leaf clusters, the Army<lb/>
Commendation Medal, the ROK<lb/>
Presidential Unit Citation, and the<lb/>
Korean Service Medal with two<lb/>
battle stars.<lb/>
Three lists of students at BC<lb/>
who have received official recogni-<lb/>
tion from the College because of<lb/>
their excellent records in academic<lb/>
work during the spring quarter of<lb/>
the present school year have just<lb/>
been announced.<lb/>
Included on the lists are the<lb/>
names of 698 students, of whom<lb/>
262 are men and 436 are women.<lb/>
North CarolSnians number 637, and<lb/>
students from outside the state,<lb/>
61.<lb/>
Thirty-seven men and women<lb/>
who made the grade of "A" on each<lb/>
subject taken received top honors<lb/>
<lb/>
for scholastic achievement in an<lb/>
"AH A's" List.<lb/>
The Dean's list, including 182<lb/>
students, is composed of under-<lb/>
graduates who (made at least two<lb/>
and one-half quality points per<lb/>
credit hour on all work taken, with<lb/>
no grade below "O These stun<lb/>
dents did superior academic work.<lb/>
The Honor Roll, with 479 repre-<lb/>
sented, is composed of undergrad-<lb/>
uates who made at least two quali-<lb/>
ty points per credit hour on all<lb/>
work taken, with no grade below<lb/>
"C The work completed by these<lb/>
students was well above average.<lb/>
Major Kidd<lb/>
Major Kidd attended Roanoke<lb/>
College, Salem, Va and N. C.<lb/>
State College, Raleigh, and received<lb/>
the bachelor's degree at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Alabama.<lb/>
He is married to the former<lb/>
Doris Elaine Doyle of Pueblo, Col-<lb/>
orado and Norfolk, Va. They have<lb/>
two daughters, Elberta and Frances<lb/>
and a son. Ronald. In Greenville<lb/>
they will live at 305 Meade Street.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038765_0002"/><lb/>
-r<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Thursd<lb/>
Hk<lb/>
Who Will Support<lb/>
Big Time Athletics?<lb/>
The athletic program at East Carolina is a boom-<lb/>
ing thing. With the current expansion in this field it<lb/>
is not too difficult to conjure, up visions of EC becoming<lb/>
a real football school. Thtfs vision is strengthened some-<lb/>
what by a new, arid so far, very successful coach and a<lb/>
new stadium.en there is the fact that we have with-<lb/>
drawn from the CaftrConference and are seeking<lb/>
admission to the Southernnftw.All these things<lb/>
point to the fact (that someone is willing to go to a lot<lb/>
of trouble to see the College strengthen its position<lb/>
through accomplishments in athletics.<lb/>
Whether or not this is (the way to go about making<lb/>
our mark on the state and the nation is an argument<lb/>
that could take pages of print and still not be resolved.<lb/>
There is, however, one thing that needs tto be realized.<lb/>
If we are truly going "big time" in athletics, then the<lb/>
athletic program should take upon itself the responsibi-<lb/>
lity of carrying its rightful share of the financial bur-<lb/>
den (that is sure to become a by-product of all this ex-<lb/>
pansion.<lb/>
Currently, the athletic department receives ap-<lb/>
proximately 50 of the student activity fee. (It is<lb/>
doubtful that most students realize this, since the popu-<lb/>
lar opinion is that the SGA handles the entire amount.)<lb/>
This is not, by any means, their sole source of income.<lb/>
Until recently, the Summer School SGA had been appro-<lb/>
priating $1,000 to fthe department. A motion to discon-<lb/>
tinue this policy was carried recently. Even so, the<lb/>
athletic department still seems to have some sort of<lb/>
mental advantage. For instance, no one will object very<lb/>
much to (the athletic scholarships, but it's not at all<lb/>
difficult to get someone to raise a ruckus about editors<lb/>
of publications and SGA leaders being paid. (Under-<lb/>
paid would be the more appropriate word.)<lb/>
Certainly, no one expects the athletic department<lb/>
to make a forftune during its first year under the new<lb/>
expanded program, but there should be the understand-<lb/>
ing that it will eventually be enough of a public drawing<lb/>
card to be, for the most part, self-supporting. If there<lb/>
is no such understanding, then there is no justifying the<lb/>
time and money that have been invested in athletics<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
LITP H MAN ON CAMPUS<lb/>
lM A NEW TEA?Hg?-Afl0" COJ&amp; ftCUM 6f OFF"<lb/>
1D PUZIN6 OWL SGtfc&amp;MZQ O&amp;Kt VOW&amp;1<lb/>
Apartheid<lb/>
Majorettes<lb/>
The people who support the "no shorts or kilts"<lb/>
sentiment on campus are probably going through some<lb/>
sort of torment over the throngs of scantily-clad major-<lb/>
ette students who are currently on campus for the Sum-<lb/>
mer Band Clinic. There are some who don't find this<lb/>
distasteful, however, as may be seen by the crowds of<lb/>
spectators at each practice session<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published weakly by the students of East Carolitia College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Oarolinas Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Bill Griffin<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
Keith Hobbs<lb/>
BUSINESS MANAGER<lb/>
Associate Editor .<lb/>
Managing Editors<lb/>
Sports Editor <lb/>
 Walter Faulkner<lb/>
Monty Mills, Kaye Burgess<lb/>
?? Tom MoAiister<lb/>
Proofreading Directors  Carla Shiller, Yotecy Oantrell<lb/>
Subscription Director  Jackie p)lk<lb/>
Columnists   June Grfmeg<lb/>
Kaye Burgess, Richard Boyd, Walter Faulkner<lb/>
TyPiSt ?  Beth Oouch<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building.<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6101, extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.50 per year.<lb/>
From the "Rubayait of Omar Khayanu"<lb/>
"The moving finger writes, and, having writ,<lb/>
Moves on; nor all your piety not wit,<lb/>
Shall lure it back to cancel half a line.<lb/>
Nor all your tears wash out a word of it<lb/>
translated by E. Fitzgerald.<lb/>
The outside world has heard<lb/>
a great deal about South Af-<lb/>
rica's policy of apartheid, but<lb/>
few people realize the fantas-<lb/>
tic extremes to which this seg-<lb/>
regation is carried, the expense<lb/>
and dislocations it causes, and<lb/>
the ludicrous situations it<lb/>
sometimes creates. As the<lb/>
South African government is<lb/>
in the process of further tight-<lb/>
ening the system, TIME Jo-<lb/>
hannesburg Bureau Chief Lee<lb/>
Griggs offers a catalogue of<lb/>
apartheid.<lb/>
Two years ago, a question was<lb/>
asked in all seriousness in South<lb/>
Africa's Parliament in Cape Town:<lb/>
Does apartheid on the beaches ex-<lb/>
teiMi to the hightide or low-tide<lb/>
mark? Aghast, M.P.s finally con-<lb/>
cluded that in either case Africans<lb/>
could wade across from black<lb/>
beaches into white water, spoiling<lb/>
it for white swimmers. The prob-<lb/>
lem was finally solved by taking<lb/>
a precedent from international con-<lb/>
ventions; apartheid on the beaches<lb/>
was extended out to the three-mile<lb/>
limit-<lb/>
Such debates take up much of<lb/>
the South African Parliament's<lb/>
time. Once a government minister<lb/>
declared that it was scandalous that<lb/>
so many whites shook hands with<lb/>
Agricans, said that Africans would<lb/>
prefer to be greeted in the tradit-<lb/>
ional native way?an up raised<lb/>
hand with no pressing of the flesh,<lb/>
Out went government directives<lb/>
ordering traditional greetings to re-<lb/>
iplace handshakes. The orders were<lb/>
quickly countermanded, however,<lb/>
when an opposition M.P. gfLeefully<lb/>
announced after 'boning up. on tra-<lb/>
ditionalist lore, that if the greet-<lb/>
ing were employed, a white woman<lb/>
meeting a black man would have to<lb/>
kneel down and kiss both feet.<lb/>
Equal Escalators. Apartheid af-<lb/>
fects every aspect of South Afri-<lb/>
can life. Whites and nonwhites<lb/>
not only have separate park<lb/>
benches, public toilets, post office<lb/>
windows, but in many buildings,<lb/>
separate elevators. Africans often<lb/>
outsmart white starters by getting<lb/>
on or off white elevators on the<lb/>
second floor, where the starters<lb/>
cannot catch them Escalators, how-<lb/>
ever, are integrated; the only rule, ?<lb/>
and a humane one at that, requires<lb/>
(passengers to wear shoes.<lb/>
African men shopping for hats<lb/>
must first put on a skull cap pro-<lb/>
vided by the store before trying<lb/>
any on; African women are not al-<lb/>
lowed to try on hats at all Blacks'<lb/>
and whites' blood is kept separately<lb/>
in blood banks, although most doc-<lb/>
tors would not hesitate to U3e<lb/>
whatever blood is available in an<lb/>
emergency. Recently, however, a<lb/>
white ambulance driver in Joh-<lb/>
annesburg refused to (pick up an<lb/>
African woman in labor on the<lb/>
sidewaflk.<lb/>
On the road, blade Africans<lb/>
travel on separate buses and use<lb/>
separate bus stops. Only white bus<lb/>
stops have benches. Blacks also<lb/>
use separate railroad coaches. Non-<lb/>
whites cannot eat in dining cars,<lb/>
but special nonwhite stewards<lb/>
serve meals to blacks in their<lb/>
coaches. Nonwhites on airplanes<lb/>
are usually confined to seats at<lb/>
the front or rear; if the pflane is<lb/>
crowded that the only free seats<lb/>
are next to whites, stewardess first<lb/>
must ask permission from the white<lb/>
passengers to seat the blacks next<lb/>
to them; if permission is not<lb/>
granted, the blacks are usually<lb/>
shifted to other planes. They are<lb/>
served on plates and cups of a<lb/>
different color from white passen-<lb/>
gers and their dishes are washed<lb/>
separately. When the nonwhite<lb/>
leaves the aircraft, his headrest<lb/>
is immediately tagged and its<lb/>
cover laundered separately from<lb/>
others on the plane.<lb/>
While whites can move about<lb/>
South Africa freely, Africans<lb/>
cannot move into an urban area for<lb/>
more than 72 hours without special<lb/>
(permission. To qualify as a per-<lb/>
manent resident of an urban area,<lb/>
an African must have either been<lb/>
born there or worked continuously<lb/>
for one employer for ten years. If<lb/>
he marries a woman from outside<lb/>
the area, she may not stay with<lb/>
him for more than 72 hours. Blacks<lb/>
in Johannesburg can own their own<lb/>
houses, but can only lease the<lb/>
land they stand on for 30 years.<lb/>
Whites in arrears with their rent<lb/>
are on evicted; Africans are<lb/>
criminally charged and can be im-<lb/>
prisoned.<lb/>
Under the Immorality Act, sex-<lb/>
ual relations between the races are<lb/>
forbidden. Many whites, fearful of<lb/>
being run in under the law, will<lb/>
not even drive a servant home in<lb/>
the evening without having wife<lb/>
or children along in the car. But<lb/>
sometimes it is difficult to teill<lb/>
what race is white. After a Chinese<lb/>
named Song had himself declared<lb/>
white because he "was generally<lb/>
accepted as white the govern-<lb/>
ment changed the law to read that<lb/>
a person is now white "so Ion as<lb/>
he generally ia accepted as white<lb/>
and is not obviously not white"<lb/>
The new interpretation takes white<lb/>
(Continued on Page 4)<lb/>
Tfce <lb/>
lnquirer<lb/>
By BILL EIDEN<lb/>
THE QUESTION Do<lb/>
the drinking re<lb/>
weaken the moral <lb/>
Carolina students. <lb/>
The inquirer qUes?j0n<lb/>
seems to have rj H<lb/>
raised<lb/>
same<lb/>
<lb/>
thought, along- with<lb/>
disertation length.<lb/>
Webster's Collect, <lb/>
places morality in <lb/>
the people of a society. <lb/>
the connection between J<lb/>
and drinking would differ <lb/>
East Carolina's many ce! ?<lb/>
groups-thai Is, if m <lb/>
Webster's definition, <lb/>
what three students ha t?,<lb/>
Glenda Lu WIHis, English &amp;<lb/>
Junior?Relaxing the drinking.<lb/>
ulations on BCC campus would'j r<lb/>
a strong indication that the ?<lb/>
dents on this campus have fin?<lb/>
grown up and become sociallvi<lb/>
ture individuals. This would -<lb/>
away with the present define<lb/>
that students as.sciate with dr<lb/>
ing as something- dirty and i.<lb/>
moral. Personally, I am of<lb/>
opinion that if a person is grig<lb/>
to drink, he will drink just ?<lb/>
readily on a strictly regalaai<lb/>
campus as on a liberally regular<lb/>
campus. At least the student urij<lb/>
not go to some of f-irimits shack or<lb/>
side road handout to drink became<lb/>
drinking in public on a saiedj<lb/>
regulated campus would be Ami<lb/>
and ridiculed.<lb/>
Jerry Winberry. Social Si<lb/>
Major, Senior?I do not feel fat<lb/>
drinking has any relation to r.<lb/>
ity, but this misunderstand it<lb/>
not as great as the or.e tha: it<lb/>
present regulation en fflf<lb/>
one who tries to interpret the<lb/>
Lawrence Behr, Psychology I<lb/>
jor, Sophomore ? Relax - i !<lb/>
drinking regulations would n<lb/>
nay opinion, have any detriment<lb/>
effect on the morals of BCC stfr<lb/>
dents, provided that we BBBfe <lb/>
eoiu- strive to achieve a 1-<lb/>
sense of moral responsibility<lb/>
through broadening cultural back-<lb/>
grounds and widening experience.<lb/>
Consumption of alcohol is not. :<lb/>
itself bad, and indeed car. be a BO<lb/>
relaxing and stimulating: experience<lb/>
furnishing- a background for ?<lb/>
lowship and fun. But drinks<lb/>
without intelligent purpose is -?:<lb/>
commendable.<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN-<lb/>
welcomes letters from its<lb/>
readers. The briefer they are.<lb/>
the better is the prospect of<lb/>
publication. Letters should be<lb/>
kept to a maximum of 250<lb/>
words. They should also be of<lb/>
general interest. All are sub-<lb/>
ject to condensation and should<lb/>
conform to the standards of<lb/>
good taste and decency. We as-<lb/>
sume no responsibility f?r<lb/>
statements made. All letters<lb/>
to the EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
must be signed.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038765_0003"/><lb/>
iV<lb/>
 QUESTION, n<lb/>
0 y?-?<lb/>
"?"??I fiber 7<lb/>
nave rat<lb/>
along with<lb/>
to have raised<lb/>
?<lb/>
answer<lb/>
? loa Ienimh. ?<lb/>
?? of a society. The<lb/>
'tion btw? "?<lb/>
 morality<lb/>
-nking would differ b?J<lb/>
a' man, ??<lb/>
8 Bmir Piques and<lb/>
' if ?n acceDQ<lb/>
"finition. Ut <lb/>
- Khobi have to say.<lb/>
'A' -EnH,h Major,<lb/>
?nsrthedriakingreg-<lb/>
(' omnfens would be<lb/>
-ion that the stu-<lb/>
- campus have finally<lb/>
??me socially ma.<lb/>
This would do<lb/>
prevent definition<lb/>
? i aaaorinUi with drink-<lb/>
? ? ? and i&amp;<lb/>
-ly. I an; of the<lb/>
-it if a person is going<lb/>
? wiU drink jotf as<lb/>
?v ?trictfc regulated<lb/>
s on a liberal iy regulated<lb/>
MM the student would<lb/>
some off-ldmits shack or<lb/>
t to drink because<lb/>
public or. a strictly<lb/>
Social Studies<lb/>
I do r. A fee! that<lb/>
 n moral-<lb/>
nderstandtng is<lb/>
tiie one that she<lb/>
?iate for any-<lb/>
i t nterpi ? I I em.<lb/>
I gy Ma-<lb/>
? ? Relaxing<lb/>
not, a<lb/>
? any detrimental<lb/>
alt f Err sta-<lb/>
we simuitan-<lb/>
to achieve a higher<lb/>
??nal responsibility<lb/>
?fling cultural back-<lb/>
widening experience.<lb/>
r" alcohol is not, m<lb/>
indeed can be a most<lb/>
? stimulating" experience<lb/>
g a back ground for ?<lb/>
fun. But drinking<lb/>
i;tfent purpose fii not<lb/>
We.<lb/>
etters<lb/>
E ISFT CABOUNIAH<lb/>
letters from is<lb/>
The briefer they are,<lb/>
M- is the prospect of<lb/>
on. Letters should he<lb/>
a maximum of 250<lb/>
'hey should also be of<lb/>
li iterest. AH are sub-<lb/>
ndensation and should<lb/>
o the standards of<lb/>
and decency. We aa-<lb/>
respousibility f?r<lb/>
s nade. AH lettert<lb/>
LAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
kigned.<lb/>
fBiursday, July 26, 1962<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Paga 0<lb/>
Hamlet's Group Spoofs<lb/>
Classic 'Dick And Jane'<lb/>
3SfctST .?U?dhS? - " C?,0r the rr- membere ?f the H-? Community. Countries<lb/>
have apphed for membersh.p or association are shoWn in white and bordered by solid line.<lb/>
Nikita Challenge<lb/>
Free World's E<lb/>
Success Of<lb/>
?nomic Boom<lb/>
The war-ravaged Western Eu-<lb/>
?pe of 1945 is today the Free<lb/>
a jrld's biggest success story.<lb/>
Its success is so great, in fact,<lb/>
that Russia's Premier Nikita<lb/>
Khrushchev recently called a grand<lb/>
council of the Soviet bloc to discuss<lb/>
ways of meeting the challenge of<lb/>
the Common Market.<lb/>
The booming European Economic<lb/>
niunity?the full name of the<lb/>
nmon Market? has impressed<lb/>
more people than Premier Krush-<lb/>
ev.<lb/>
President Kennedy's Trade Ex-<lb/>
pansion Act, now in Congress, is<lb/>
ed directly at increasing Ameri-<lb/>
-Common Market trade.<lb/>
The president has called for an<lb/>
"Atlantic Partnership" with the<lb/>
European Community.<lb/>
Great Britan is negotiating now<lb/>
for membership in the European<lb/>
Community. Ireland, Turkey and<lb/>
Spain have applied for association.<lb/>
Greece already has associated.<lb/>
What is the European<lb/>
Community?<lb/>
The European Community?com-<lb/>
prised of Belgium, France, Italy,<lb/>
Luxembourg, the Netherlands and<lb/>
the Federal Republic of Germany?<lb/>
is a United States of Europe in<lb/>
the making. Built on the ashes of<lb/>
World War II, it is aimed at build-<lb/>
ing a single market of continental<lb/>
scale such as that of the United<lb/>
States and is moving toward a po-<lb/>
Educators Conduct Annual<lb/>
.Junior High Workshop<lb/>
. Douglas R. Jones, Director; el ine Tripp, supervisors of ele-<lb/>
tibe EC Department of Educa- mentary education Henry How-<lb/>
n, said today 12 educators have aid, principal, Goldsboro Junior<lb/>
High School; Dr. Willard Srvviers,<lb/>
assistant superintendent, Fayette-<lb/>
ville City iSohools; Conrad Hooper,<lb/>
assistant superintendent, Raleigih<lb/>
Ellen Car-<lb/>
-rnments in the Second Annual<lb/>
kshop on the Junior High<lb/>
ool here which is continuing<lb/>
rough Tuesday, July 31.<lb/>
Trends in the Junior High<lb/>
1" is principal theme being<lb/>
developed by the speakers in daily<lb/>
sessions with the 61 persons regis-<lb/>
tered for this two-week workship.<lb/>
Dr. Vester M. Mulholland, di-<lb/>
rector of Educational Research of<lb/>
e State Department of Public<lb/>
Instruction, is leading discussions<lb/>
n the topics of Trends and Re-<lb/>
search in Junior High School Ad-<lb/>
ministration. Others from the De-<lb/>
ment of Public Instruction on<lb/>
speaking schedule include Joe<lb/>
L. Cashwell and Howard Reinhart<lb/>
division of instructional services;<lb/>
Homer A. Lassiter and Miss Mad-<lb/>
City Schools; and Mrs<lb/>
roll, supervisor of instruction,<lb/>
GreenviMe, N. C, City Schools.<lb/>
Prom East Carolina College,<lb/>
Dr. Jones said, speakers include<lb/>
Dr. iClinton R. Prewefet, director<lb/>
of the Department of Psychology;<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Haigwood, Department<lb/>
of Industrial Arts; Dr. James W.<lb/>
Butler, (Assistant Director of Pub-<lb/>
lic Relations.<lb/>
Areas of discussion and project<lb/>
assignments in the workshop in-<lb/>
clude the teaching role, functions<lb/>
and multi-period classes, and stu-<lb/>
dent activities in the junior high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
litical union that may eventually<lb/>
contain more peopile and industrial<lb/>
power than either the United<lb/>
States or the (Soviet Union.<lb/>
If Great Britan enters the Com-<lb/>
munity, as seems likely, the Eu-<lb/>
ropean Community will become an<lb/>
even more powerful force in the<lb/>
free world. It will be able to pay<lb/>
a greater share of the aid to under-<lb/>
developed nations . . . able to pro-<lb/>
vide for its own defense . . . able<lb/>
to give the United States a power-<lb/>
ful ally for peace at the bargain-<lb/>
ing table with the Soviets.<lb/>
U. S. Helped Europe Unite<lb/>
The Marshall Plan after World<lb/>
War II gave Western Europe the<lb/>
help and spirit it needed to revive<lb/>
from war which killed its young<lb/>
men, destroyeyd its cities, and de-<lb/>
pleted its resources. The idealism<lb/>
and cooperative spirit of the Mar-<lb/>
shall Plan were transferred to the<lb/>
leaders of Western Europe, some<lb/>
of whom had shared a long dream.<lb/>
That dream was a Europe where<lb/>
Germans and Frenchmen and their<lb/>
neighbors would live in peace while<lb/>
raising living standards for all<lb/>
their people. In short, a United<lb/>
States of Europe.<lb/>
As it turned out, this was one of<lb/>
the times in history that the dream-<lb/>
ers got heir way . . . and it's hap-<lb/>
pening even sooner than they<lb/>
hoped.?European Community In-<lb/>
formation Service.<lb/>
Parents who scorn the "See, See,<lb/>
See" tedium of basal readers"<lb/>
have long cherished the story<lb/>
about tine first-grade teacher who<lb/>
steps out of her wrecked car ?<lb/>
cry, " Oh, Oh, Oh?Damn, Damn,<lb/>
Damn Now the gag has grown<lb/>
to an entire parody of the best-<lb/>
known reader, Fun with Dick and<lb/>
Jane. At this month's convention<lb/>
of the National Education Associa-<lb/>
tion, delegates hazily passed<lb/>
around the anonymous spoof, Fun<lb/>
ith Hamlet and His Friends. Ex-<lb/>
cerpts:<lb/>
See Hamlet run. Run, Hamlet,<lb/>
Run.<lb/>
He is going to his mother's room.<lb/>
"I have something to tell you,<lb/>
mother says Hamlet. "Uncle<lb/>
Claudius is bad. He gave my fa-<lb/>
ther poison. Poison is not good.<lb/>
I do not like poison. Do you like<lb/>
poison?"<lb/>
"Oh, no, indeed says his mo-<lb/>
ther. "I do not -like (poison<lb/>
"Oh, there is Uncle Claudius<lb/>
says Hamlet "He is hiding be-<lb/>
hind the curtain. Why is he hiding<lb/>
behind the curtain? Shall I stab<lb/>
h 1mWhat fun it would be to stabb<lb/>
him through the curtain<lb/>
See Hamlet draw his sword. See<lb/>
Hamlet stab. Stab, Hamlet, Stab.<lb/>
See Uncle Claudius blood.<lb/>
See Uncle Claudius blood gush-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Gush, Blood, Gush.<lb/>
See Uncle Claudius fall. How<lb/>
funny he looks, stabbed.<lb/>
Ha, ha, ha.<lb/>
But it is not Uncle Claudius.<lb/>
It is Polonius. Polonius is Ophelia's<lb/>
father.<lb/>
"You are naughty, Hamlet says<lb/>
HamOtet's mother. "You have<lb/>
stabbed Polonius<lb/>
But Hamlet's mother is not<lb/>
cross. She is a good mother. Ham-<lb/>
let loves his mother very much.<lb/>
Hamlet loves his mother very, very<lb/>
much. Does Hamlet love his mother<lb/>
a little too muchPerhaps.<lb/>
See Hamlet run. Run, HamOet,<lb/>
Run.<lb/>
"I am on my way to find<lb/>
Uncle Claudius Hamlet says.<lb/>
On the way he meets a man. "I<lb/>
am Laertes says the man. "Let<lb/>
us draw our swords. Let us duel<lb/>
See Hamlet and Laertes duel.<lb/>
See Laertes stab Hamlet. See Ham-<lb/>
let stab Laertes.<lb/>
See Hamlet's mother drnk pois-<lb/>
on. See Hamlet stab King Qliaudius.<lb/>
See everybody wounded and<lb/>
Weeding and dying amd dead.<lb/>
What fun they are having!<lb/>
Wouldn't you like to have fun<lb/>
like that??(Time, July 20, 1962)<lb/>
Medical Societies<lb/>
Discuss Roles Of<lb/>
Senior Citizens<lb/>
More tJhan 125 people from the<lb/>
eastern (part of the state attended<lb/>
an (Area Conference on Aging<lb/>
here last Wednesday, July 18, an-<lb/>
nounced Dr. Stephen R. Bartlett of<lb/>
Greenville, chairman.<lb/>
Sponsored by the N. C. Medical<lb/>
Society in cooperation with the<lb/>
Pitt County Medical Society and<lb/>
the Committee on Aging, the Con-<lb/>
ference centered attention on ap-<lb/>
praisal of the significance of added<lb/>
years and expansion of opportuni-<lb/>
ties for fulfiilment among older<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The meeting brought together<lb/>
representatives of agriculture,<lb/>
labor, business, government, in-<lb/>
dustry, churches, schools, health<lb/>
professions and agencies, service<lb/>
clubs, senior citizens groups, and<lb/>
communications media.<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins was<lb/>
guest speaker at the luncheon and<lb/>
he discussed "The Role of the Aging<lb/>
in a New Society<lb/>
The morning (program featured<lb/>
a symposium on "Preparation for<lb/>
Livring" and a panel discussion on<lb/>
Achieving Results through Recre-<lb/>
ation, Agriculture, Industry, and<lb/>
Retraining and Rehabilitation<lb/>
The afternoon session included<lb/>
four group meetings for discussion<lb/>
of "Health Maintenance and Aitti-<lb/>
tudinal Adjustments "Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion, Counsling, and Retraining<lb/>
"Education for Emotional and So-<lb/>
cial Adjustments and "Communi-<lb/>
ty Planning and Coordination for<lb/>
Home-Care Services<lb/>
Among approximately forty par-<lb/>
ticipants in the day's programs<lb/>
were the following representatives<lb/>
of the sponsoring groups: Dr.<lb/>
Fleming Fuller of Kinston, First<lb/>
Vice President of the N. Cw Medi-<lb/>
cal Society; Dr. Charles P. Adams<lb/>
of Greenville, President of the Pitt<lb/>
County Medical Society; and Dr.<lb/>
James W. Butler of East Carolina<lb/>
College, Chairman of the Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty Committee on Aging.<lb/>
JAMES MAUREEN<lb/>
STEWfflrT' CfWW<lb/>
ri<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038765_0004"/><lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
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EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Business, Economics Expert!<lb/>
Discuss Basic Training Need<lb/>
Renowned speakers are discuss-<lb/>
ing the need of more and better<lb/>
(training for young people in bastic<lb/>
(business and economics in a con-<lb/>
ference staged by the East Caroi-<lb/>
Qiina lOollege School of Business<lb/>
July 23-27.<lb/>
With Dr. James L. White as con-<lb/>
ference director, the program is<lb/>
highlighted! hy six experts in basic<lb/>
business and economic education<lb/>
as discussion leaders. They are Dr.<lb/>
Z. S. Diokerson, Jr Head of the<lb/>
Department of Business Education<lb/>
Madison College, Harrisonburg,<lb/>
Va B. Lewis Keeling, Associate<lb/>
Editor in Basic Business with<lb/>
South-Western Publishing Co<lb/>
Cincinnati, Ohio;<lb/>
Dr. Harlan B. Miller, Director ojf<lb/>
the Educational Division, Institute<lb/>
of Life Insurance, New York City;<lb/>
James Parthemos and Dr. Thomas<lb/>
C. iSanders, Economists, Federal<lb/>
Reserve Bank, Richmond, Va and<lb/>
Arthur L. WaDker, Supervisor of<lb/>
Business Education Service, State<lb/>
Board of Education, Richmond, Va.<lb/>
iA graduate of Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
State College, Dr. Dickerson re-<lb/>
ceived tihe M. S. and the Ed. D.<lb/>
degrees from the University of<lb/>
Kentucky. Prior to joining the fac-<lb/>
ulty of Madison College, he served<lb/>
for seven years as head of the De-<lb/>
partment of Business Administra-<lb/>
tion and Education at Florence<lb/>
State College.<lb/>
Mr. Keeling attended Ohio North-<lb/>
ern University where he received<lb/>
the B. S. degree in Education and<lb/>
from Indiana University, he re-<lb/>
ceived the M.B.A. degree. As As-<lb/>
sociate Editor of the South-West-<lb/>
ern Publishing Company since 1956,<lb/>
he has also served as instructor<lb/>
in the Norwood Technical SchooS<lb/>
since 1956.<lb/>
Dr. Miller as Director of the<lb/>
Educational Division of the Insti-<lb/>
tute of Life Insurance has the re-<lb/>
sponsibility for the preparation<lb/>
and distribution of teachng 'aids in<lb/>
the area of money management and<lb/>
family finance. A graduate of<lb/>
Kansas State Teachers College, he<lb/>
was granted the Master of Science<lb/>
degree hy he University of Deli-<lb/>
ver, where he majored in economics<lb/>
and finance. The Ph.D. degree was<lb/>
awarded to him by the University<lb/>
of Colorado. ? ?<lb/>
Prior to joining the staff of the<lb/>
Federal Reserve Bank in I960, Mr.<lb/>
Parthemos taught at he Universi-<lb/>
ty of South Carolina, (Catawba GoI-<lb/>
lege, Presbyterian College, Duke<lb/>
University, and Tulane University.<lb/>
A native off Abbeville, S. C, he at-<lb/>
tended Clemson College, received<lb/>
the A. B. degree from Erskine<lb/>
College, and the M. A. degree from<lb/>
the University of South Carolina.<lb/>
After being awarded a Fulbright<lb/>
Scholarship to the University of<lb/>
Athens, Greece, Mr. Parthemos did<lb/>
additional graduate study at Duke<lb/>
University.<lb/>
Before joining the bank's staff<lb/>
in 1959, Dr. Sanders had been a<lb/>
cost analyst with the New York<lb/>
Quartermaster Price Adjustment<lb/>
Office; secretary-treasurer of The<lb/>
Culpeper Corporation; instructor<lb/>
in statistics at Ohio University;<lb/>
statistician for the Bureau of Pop-<lb/>
ulation and Economic Research<lb/>
land acing instructor in economics<lb/>
at the University of Virginia; and<lb/>
associate professor of economics<lb/>
(at the University of Virginia; and<lb/>
associate professor of economics at<lb/>
the University of Richmond where<lb/>
he was also acting director of<lb/>
evening classes. Aifter graduating<lb/>
from Harvard College with an A.<lb/>
B. degree in bioflogy, Dr. Slanders<lb/>
entered Harvard Graduate School<lb/>
of Business Administration, where<lb/>
he received his M.B.A. degree. He<lb/>
later received his Ph.D. in econom-<lb/>
ics from the University of Vir-<lb/>
ginia.<lb/>
Mr. Walker received the B. S.<lb/>
degree in Business Administration<lb/>
from North Texas State Teachers<lb/>
College and the M. A. degree in<lb/>
Business Education from Colorado<lb/>
State College of Education. From<lb/>
1943-1945 he served as professor<lb/>
and head of the department of<lb/>
Business Education at Western<lb/>
Michigan College of Education.<lb/>
As a visiting professor in Busi-<lb/>
ness Education, Mr. Walker has<lb/>
been much in the demand in uni-<lb/>
versities and colleges in the U.S.A.<lb/>
Administration Names <lb/>
Athletic Promotion Dir<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Off<lb/>
ers<lb/>
r e e<lb/>
Classified Advertisi<lb/>
Lost, Found, Help Wanted,<lb/>
<lb/>
Work Needed, Rides,<lb/>
Riders, For Sale,<lb/>
For Rent, Personal<lb/>
Vansant, Former Pirate Gridder, Returns<lb/>
As Teacher9 Baby Buc's Football Coach<lb/>
Henry iCiharles Vansant, for the<lb/>
past year line coach of the Hope-<lb/>
well, Va high school football team,<lb/>
will join the coaching staff at East<lb/>
Carolina College on September 1.<lb/>
Announcement of Vansanfs ap-<lb/>
pointment to the ipositiom of tfiresh-<lb/>
man football coach was made by<lb/>
Dr. N. M. Jorgesnsen, director of<lb/>
athletics, and Head Football Coadh<lb/>
Clarence Sitasavich. Vansant will<lb/>
have a teaching- assignment in the<lb/>
East Carolina Department of<lb/>
Health and Physical Education.<lb/>
Vansant holds the B. S. and<lb/>
M. A. degrees which he earned at<lb/>
East Carolina College. He was an<lb/>
outstanding football player for the.<lb/>
Pirates and in his senior year won<lb/>
the John B. Christenbury Award<lb/>
for scholarship and leadership<lb/>
awarded to a physical education<lb/>
major.<lb/>
Vansawt's home town is Hamfp-<lb/>
ton, Va where his father, H. C.<lb/>
Vansant, makes his home. From<lb/>
1954 to 1957, Vansant served with<lb/>
the 82nd Airborne Division. His<lb/>
wife is the former Miss Ronnie<lb/>
MacDonald, of Fayeteville. The<lb/>
Vansants have a 20-month-old son,<lb/>
Charles.<lb/>
Dr. Jorgensen said Vansant was<lb/>
a leader in campus life during his<lb/>
student days at East Carolina and<lb/>
comes "highly recommended for his<lb/>
coaching duties.<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
r<lb/>
Carolina Gril<lb/>
Dickinson<lb/>
Earl Lee Aiken of Hickory has<lb/>
been named director of athletics<lb/>
promotion and sports publicity at<lb/>
East Carolina College, and begins<lb/>
his duties on August 1, it was an-<lb/>
nounced by Dr. Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
president, and Dr. N. M. Jorgensen,<lb/>
director of athletics.<lb/>
Aiken d-s widely known in the<lb/>
sports field for ihis eleven-year re-<lb/>
cord at Lenoir Rhyne College where<lb/>
he was for a time also director of<lb/>
(public relations and alumni affairs.<lb/>
He has also been a researcher for<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Movies<lb/>
Hatari! Christian Science Moni-<lb/>
tor: Comedy-adventure about ani-<lb/>
mal-gathering expedition in Tan-<lb/>
ganyika alternately turns its focus<lb/>
on look-alike scenes of chas-and-<lb/>
capture on the veldt and shallow<lb/>
depictions of romance in the bunk-<lb/>
hcuse. An international cast pro-<lb/>
vides varied accepts, but Red But- when they concluded a trade ap&amp;<lb/>
ton's genial humor saves the show, nient with th SantJi a?f? -<lb/>
Time, Inc.<lb/>
Educated a: Lenoir Rr<lb/>
leg, graduating fc, 1&amp;0<lb/>
leceived the A.B. dejm; ' S<lb/>
He was also graduated inl&amp;;?<lb/>
Cecil's Busmen Colleg? ?i<lb/>
ville where he completed 1<lb/>
var.ced accounting ami bui <lb/>
ministration court. 5Qe<lb/>
Prior to joining th L. J<lb/>
?rtaff in 1950. Ail? 1<lb/>
-luten sen<lb/>
newspaper correspond"<lb/>
Washington, D. f, p,?<lb/>
owner of a Business college<lb/>
by, N.C and for a brief pe<lb/>
.secretary of the Brevard.I<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce. BfateV<lb/>
ing Lenoir Rhyne in October t<lb/>
he has operated hfc on b<lb/>
as public relation? consultant I<lb/>
Aiken is married to the foj<lb/>
Miss Hezel Wilkerson. The AftJ<lb/>
have one son, Michael Lee, 13<lb/>
lege<lb/>
as<lb/>
APARTHEID Continued<lb/>
(Continued from Page 2)<lb/>
status away from the visiting fy<lb/>
anese, who gained it only lastj<lb/>
(Starts Friday at the State.)<lb/>
Mr. Hobbs Takes a Vacation.<lb/>
Christian Science Monitor: Senti-<lb/>
mental comedy designed to show<lb/>
how a family on holiday is brought<lb/>
cioser together by a succession of<lb/>
problems ranging from a balky<lb/>
water pump to a near boat wreck.<lb/>
James Stewart's air of conviction<lb/>
and Technicolor's visual charm<lb/>
give a lift to otherwise routine pro-<lb/>
ceedings. (Starts Friday at the<lb/>
Pitt.)<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
"Chairless Concert" Johnny<lb/>
Nash bascked up by Pat Dom and<lb/>
ihis Orchestra. (August 8, Gym-<lb/>
nasium.)<lb/>
ment with the South African p<lb/>
ernment. And poor Mr. Son?, i<lb/>
neglected to get his wife decki<lb/>
white with him under the old for<lb/>
violates the Immorality Act wbe-<lb/>
ever .he goes to red with her.<lb/>
Little Christian charity is a<lb/>
tended toward blacks by Soar<lb/>
Africa's Dutch Reformed chuitbe<lb/>
Most refuse to admit blacks to the<lb/>
services. A current joke has ?<lb/>
white fpolieeman entering a chcri<lb/>
on a Sunday morning, where k<lb/>
finds a lone black on his tan<lb/>
"What are you doing, Kaffir<lb/>
the cop. "Scrubbing the flee<lb/>
answers the Africa "O.K np<lb/>
the cop. 4'But God help you  .<lb/>
catch you prayir.i?Time,<lb/>
6, 1962)<lb/>
! SEMI-ANNUAL<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
A Group of SUITS<lb/>
Up to 1-3 (Hi!<lb/>
A Group of SPORT COATS I<lb/>
Up to 1-3 Off;<lb/>
A Group of PANTS<lb/>
20 Percent Oil!<lb/>
Summer Sport SHIRTS 2.95;<lb/>
Values to 6.95 !<lb/>
Ladies Sport SHIRTS<lb/>
Up to 1-3 Off<lb/>
A Group of SHOES 1-2 Off<lb/>
BERMUDAS and<lb/>
SWIM TRUNKS 1-3 Off<lb/>
Pnl 5 il 58<lb/>
i<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00038765_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>