<?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="00038786_0001"/>
Eastearolinian<lb/>
vSexxxvni<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1962<lb/>
Number 18<lb/>
Buc Beauty<lb/>
New Weekend Hours<lb/>
Begin Winter<lb/>
Ruth White, Dean of Women, has announced that with<lb/>
the beginning of Winter Quarter, 1963, the weekend hours<lb/>
for women students will be changed to 12:00 midnight on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday nights, and to 11:00 p.m on Sunday<lb/>
uarter<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The announcement also stated<lb/>
that there will he automatic 1:00<lb/>
a.m. permission for the following<lb/>
camipus activities: Greek Weekend<lb/>
(Friday and Saturday night);<lb/>
Homecoming Weekend (Friday and<lb/>
Saturday night); Interdormitory<lb/>
Night; Military Ball; White<lb/>
Ball. Women students will re-<lb/>
ceive late permission even if<lb/>
they do not attend the function.<lb/>
Any campus organization wishing<lb/>
to obtain late permission for a<lb/>
special function may appeal to the<lb/>
Administration.<lb/>
The passing of the new rule is<lb/>
the result of a series of meetings<lb/>
between special student committees<lb/>
and the administration after con-<lb/>
controversary on the<lb/>
later hours was<lb/>
spring when a<lb/>
siderable<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
A request for<lb/>
first made last<lb/>
petition was circulated in the wom-<lb/>
en's dormitories, and then nota-<lb/>
rized. The petition was presented<lb/>
befere the administration by a<lb/>
special student committee. This<lb/>
meeting resulted in the proposal<lb/>
to poll the parents of women stu-<lb/>
dents to obtain their viewpoints on<lb/>
the matters of later hours and of<lb/>
drinking. However, this idea was<lb/>
never carried through.<lb/>
An SGiA approved committee of<lb/>
women met with Dean White to dis-<lb/>
cuss the faults of rules concern-<lb/>
ing women students. Dean White<lb/>
then polled an anoymous committee<lb/>
comiposed of women students who<lb/>
voted unanimously to change the<lb/>
closing hours.<lb/>
t? i : '1; -m-mp, "v-<lb/>
J<lb/>
f<lb/>
- "Hiii- Beauty" is Miss Joan Miley, a Sophomore from<lb/>
in. North Carolina. Joan is a Home Economics major and an<lb/>
?? the II ? Hcono- -b. (Photo by John Garriss)<lb/>
Editor Announces<lb/>
Position Changes<lb/>
On Annual Staff<lb/>
EC Muscians Present<lb/>
Christmas Concert Sun.<lb/>
On Sunday. December 2 at 3:30 p.m the EC Orchestra and Choral<lb/>
Union will present their annual Christmas concert in the Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium.<lb/>
The orchestra, under the direction of Donald H. Hayes, will per-<lb/>
form contemporary works by Hanson, Jacobs, and Shostakovich.<lb/>
Honeggar's Christmas iCantata will be sung by the Choral Union,<lb/>
which is under the directorship of Gordon A. Johnson. Assisting this<lb/>
group will be the orchestra as well as a children's choir from the<lb/>
Greenville City Schools.<lb/>
The Honeggar selection includes four well-known Christmas carols<lb/>
which will be sung in four different languages: Latin, French, German,<lb/>
and English.<lb/>
1: s C (<lb/>
-preseika<lb/>
SSL Delegates Propose<lb/>
Blue Law Abolishment<lb/>
sals to abolish the North<lb/>
1 ? ? "blue laws" will be among<lb/>
the resolutions introduced and de-<lb/>
I by fifteen EC student repre-<lb/>
- vea at the State Student Leg-<lb/>
of North Carolina Thurs-<lb/>
Saturday, November<lb/>
member 1. The annual event<lb/>
? place in the State Capitol,<lb/>
Eyermaa, junior student at<lb/>
as pi-esident this year<lb/>
? State Student Legislature of I Bewe'<lb/>
as announced that twenty- <lb/>
Carolina colleges and<lb/>
rill be represented this<lb/>
is compared to thirteen<lb/>
g ? education last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
15th yearly session, stu-<lb/>
liave an opportunity to<lb/>
?n in the model Assembly<lb/>
.nainted with parlia-<lb/>
y procedures. All resolu-<lb/>
? Presented will deal with state,<lb/>
nal and international affairs.<lb/>
t A top item on the list of "bills"<lb/>
 debated is a measure spon-<lb/>
?orel by Duke University women<lb/>
stodtetg to abolish the State sales<lb/>
tax on food. The women students<lb/>
prUose a cigarette tax instead.<lb/>
her major items on the debate<lb/>
are a bill to legalize abortion,<lb/>
??8ored by Wake Forest and<lb/>
?th students; a bill abolish-<lb/>
 pital punishment m the State,<lb/>
 North Carolina College rto-<lb/>
. nts; and a bill allowing admiss-<lb/>
? Red China to the United<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Delegates from EC who will par-<lb/>
:icipate during the student legis-<lb/>
lature are Bill Goodwin, and Berk<lb/>
Stephens, co-chairmen of the EC<lb/>
delegation; Tommy Mallison, Gene<lb/>
Thorne, Merle Summers, Eddie<lb/>
Harrington, Bryan Bennett. Tom<lb/>
Scott. Cathy Shesso, Margaret Mac-<lb/>
kill. Carol Daugherty, Judy Law-<lb/>
rence, and three alternates?Billy<lb/>
Bra swell, Ann Adkins, and Tim<lb/>
Of Aycoek Hail De<lb/>
Four staff members have been<lb/>
given editorial positions on the<lb/>
BUCCANEER, as announced by<lb/>
i? TVHer Faulknr ?<lb/>
Diarmid h is bee ro-<lb/>
"?-? - ;na assistant sports editor<lb/>
to sports editor. A freshman, John<lb/>
is enrolled in the School of Busi-<lb/>
ness.<lb/>
Martha Thompson has been' resideTlce for ?n students at EC,<lb/>
have been issued by the Board of<lb/>
Ervin Speaks At Dedication<lb/>
Invitations to attend the dedica-<lb/>
tion of Charles B. Aycoek Hall,<lb/>
t tuber 9<lb/>
named to share the duties of editor<lb/>
of the campus organizations section<lb/>
with Rebecca Willis.<lb/>
Anne Riddick and Joyce Sigmon<lb/>
have assumed the co-editorship of<lb/>
"The College" section of the year-<lb/>
book Anne, a freshman, is majoring<lb/>
fn social studies and Joyce, also a<lb/>
freshman, is an art major.<lb/>
These four staff members are<lb/>
responsible for all phases of the<lb/>
work involved in preparing their<lb/>
sections for the press. Each new ap-<lb/>
pointee was selected on the basis<lb/>
of merit shown during the first<lb/>
Trustees and the Faculty of the<lb/>
college. U. S. Senator Sam J.<lb/>
Ervin, Jr will make the dedicatory<lb/>
address.<lb/>
The ceremony will take place on<lb/>
Sunday, December 9, in Aycoek<lb/>
Hall at 4:30 p.m. A large number<lb/>
of friends and relatives of Gov-<lb/>
ernor Aycoek and his family will<lb/>
attend the afternoon program.<lb/>
In honor of the North Carolina<lb/>
governor (1901-1905) noted for<lb/>
his outstanding service to educa-<lb/>
tion in the state, the dormitory was<lb/>
weeks of production of the 1963 j named for him by action of the EC<lb/>
BUCCANEER. Board of Trustees in October. 1961.<lb/>
Dean Of Student Affairs Announces List<lb/>
Of Thirty-Nine Students For 'Who's Who'<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
ons? by students of Greensboro<lb/>
Dr. James H. Tucker, Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs, has released the<lb/>
names of the EC students chosen<lb/>
to be listed in Who's Who Among<lb/>
Students In American Universi-<lb/>
ties And Colleges.<lb/>
In order to choose students for<lb/>
this honor, a letter was sent to<lb/>
each faculty member and organi-<lb/>
Lation president for his choice of<lb/>
three students from his organi-<lb/>
zation or department anl three<lb/>
students from throughout the col-<lb/>
lege to be nominated. The 39<lb/>
persons whose names were nomi-<lb/>
nated moat often, who had an aca-<lb/>
demic average becoming of this<lb/>
designation, and of a general<lb/>
character which is desirous to re-<lb/>
present the college, were named<lb/>
as the most outstanding students<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
The persons named are listed be-<lb/>
low in alphabetical order:<lb/>
Anne Frances Allen<lb/>
Lawrence Murat Blizard<lb/>
Glenn Thomas Boyd<lb/>
James Warren Chesnutt<lb/>
Betty Joseph Collier<lb/>
Mildred Elizabeth Derrick<lb/>
Barbara Ann Ellis<lb/>
Joe Moye Flake, Jr.<lb/>
John Wayne Garriss<lb/>
Minnie Elizabeth Glover<lb/>
William Carroll Goodwin<lb/>
Junius Daniel Grimes, III<lb/>
Sylvia Parks Harris<lb/>
Audrey Deane Holloman<lb/>
Giles Dion Hopkins<lb/>
Ann Jones Kilby<lb/>
Mary Jo Lanoaster<lb/>
Lynda Carole Lewis<lb/>
Clyde Thomas Mallison, Jr.<lb/>
William Edward Moore, III<lb/>
Mary Helen Mumford<lb/>
Jerry Lee Norton<lb/>
Grover Carroll Norwood<lb/>
Rebecca Anne Parker<lb/>
William Edward Phelps<lb/>
Anna Katherine Raynor<lb/>
Judy Elizabeth Redfern<lb/>
Annie Marie Riddick<lb/>
Douglas Carter Robinson<lb/>
George Daniel Rouse<lb/>
Barbara Schwab<lb/>
Woodrow Winder Shepherd<lb/>
Freddie Estelle Skinner<lb/>
Merle Thomas Summers<lb/>
Sylvia Ann Wallace<lb/>
Robert James Washer<lb/>
John Thames Waters<lb/>
James Rolen Wheatley, Jr.<lb/>
Howard Glenn Williams<lb/>
Governor Ayr k made the first<lb/>
commencement address at the col-<lb/>
lege and was introduced on this oc-<lb/>
casion by the late Dr. J. Y. Joy-<lb/>
ner, for a number of years State<lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruc-<lb/>
tion, for whom the East Carolina<lb/>
library is named.<lb/>
Charles B. Aycoek Hall is locateo'<lb/>
on the iSouth Gasmjpfus just off Tenth<lb/>
Street. It houses 530 men students<lb/>
and has been in use since the fall<lb/>
of 1960.<lb/>
President Leo W. Jenkins of<lb/>
East Carolina will open the cere-<lb/>
mony with a welcome to those in<lb/>
attendance. Dean Robert L. Holt<lb/>
will make the (prayer of dedication.<lb/>
Miss Cathy Moreno, of Washing-<lb/>
ton, D. C, great-great-grand-<lb/>
daughter of Gov. Aycoek, will un-<lb/>
veil a portrait of him. The por-<lb/>
trait is the work of M. Tran<lb/>
Gordley, faculty member of the<lb/>
School of Art at the college. J.<lb/>
Herbert Waldrop of Greenville,<lb/>
Chairman of the Board of Trustees,<lb/>
will accept the portrait for the<lb/>
college.<lb/>
A reception for guests at the<lb/>
dedication ceremony will close the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
What's Inside?<lb/>
Intellectuality  Page 2'<lb/>
Time Out  j?ge 2<lb/>
Guest Editorial pmge 3-<lb/>
Globe Trotting  Pige $<lb/>
ECs New School of<lb/>
Art Page 4<lb/>
Greek News Page 5<lb/>
Pirate-Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
Football Game  Page &amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00038786_0002"/><lb/>
Friday, November 30<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ii<lb/>
Part of the Campus<lb/>
Intellectuality<lb/>
It seems that no one ever questions the existance<lb/>
of an intellectual climate here at EC. Indeed, the topic<lb/>
of intellectual climate is hardly ever discussed. The reas-<lb/>
on for this is obvious as well as encouraging?Those<lb/>
who want to function in an intellectual climate have<lb/>
either found one or have created one of their own ac-<lb/>
cord. Granted, this is not as beneficial as would be a<lb/>
campus-wide climate of intellectuality but the fact re-<lb/>
mains that it is here for those who desire it.<lb/>
The intellectual climate on the campus of EC seems<lb/>
to exist in small, unrelated groups rather than in any<lb/>
one massive group of intelligencia. It would be interest-<lb/>
ing to trace the separate groups as to membership, in-<lb/>
terests, cause, and effect. (Naturally, we use the words<lb/>
"groups" and "membership" very loosely since their is<lb/>
no formal organization among any of these groups.)<lb/>
Even without any extensive research, however, several<lb/>
conclusions concerning the structure of the intellectual<lb/>
climate here can be reached.<lb/>
It seems that many of the people who enjoy the<lb/>
benefit of function in an intellectual climate on campus<lb/>
find themselves in such a situation because of friendly<lb/>
relations with people of similar interests and a similar<lb/>
thrist for knowledge and discussion. It is interesting,<lb/>
and again, encouraging to find that the center and in-<lb/>
spiration of many of these groups is a faculty member<lb/>
who will take the time to engage in informal relations<lb/>
and discussions with students. These faculty members<lb/>
deserve commendation for their stimulation and en-<lb/>
couragement of inquiring minds. It would not be sur-<lb/>
prising to find that more is gained, in many cases, from<lb/>
this informal relation than is gained in the more formal<lb/>
classroom relation.<lb/>
In many cases the intellectual climate maintained<lb/>
within a certain group is the by-product of a more form-<lb/>
al, organized common-interest group. After-hours gather-<lb/>
ings of certain clubs and organizations frequently de-<lb/>
velope into intellectual discussion which separates the<lb/>
men from the boys. In such cases, a common bond is<lb/>
forged between those who hold respect for each other's<lb/>
opinions.<lb/>
At any rate, regardless of the structure, interest,<lb/>
or purpose' of these diverse and unrelated groups, they<lb/>
are proof-positive that intellectuality is not dead on this<lb/>
campus and this is something of which we can be proud,<lb/>
especially in view of today's degree seekers and the<lb/>
generally non-academic enviornment of many campuses.<lb/>
Summers Tho Politician<lb/>
The shenanigans ol" some of the SGA politicians are<lb/>
quite frequently amusing. (Theoretically, all EC stu-<lb/>
dents are members of the SGA?actually, it's a very<lb/>
small group.) The politicians sometime, while attempt-<lb/>
ing to elevate themselves, make moves which they ap-<lb/>
parently consider very subtle but are actually astound-<lb/>
ing in their obviousness. We were fortunate enough to<lb/>
witness such an incident at the recent Publications<lb/>
Board meeting.<lb/>
Merle Summers, who has obviously been trying to<lb/>
make himself a force in SGA machinery this year, gained<lb/>
a significant amount of progress toward this goal by<lb/>
being elected Publications Board representative to the<lb/>
Student Senate. We couldn't help but be amused by the<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Mr. Summers announced that the Board had the<lb/>
right to appoint a representative and suggested that they<lb/>
do so. Since there were a considerable number of Board<lb/>
members absent from the meeting because of conflict-<lb/>
ing meetings, Mr. Summers and Keith Hobbs were the<lb/>
only ones present who were eligible for the position.<lb/>
Mi Hobbs couldn't care less about being on the Senate<lb/>
and, without a doubt, would have declined had he been<lb/>
nominated. In short, Mr. Summers himself was the only<lb/>
likely candidate?he was elected without opposition.<lb/>
That's politics.<lb/>
Time<lb/>
By JIM FORSYTH<lb/>
Starting Winter 11<lb/>
en at EC will have later boor, 08<lb/>
weekends. As of November 5<lb/>
women at WC-UNC have<lb/>
drinking privileges.<lb/>
asj<lb/>
Has anyone ever fo . <lb/>
many people attending d<lb/>
al meetings have been the victim,<lb/>
of speakers and half-rate poet,<lb/>
who otherwise would not hi<lb/>
much of an audience? I , ar.<lb/>
going to deduct a QP for mil<lb/>
one of the things, ' ?<lb/>
give you something f<lb/>
One of EC's Don<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina<lb/>
College, Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolinas Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Editor<lb/>
BUI Griffin<lb/>
Business Manager Associate Editor<lb/>
Keith Hobbs Danny Ray<lb/>
Copy Editor<lb/>
Helen Kallio<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Lloyd Lane<lb/>
Managing Editor<lb/>
E. Kaye Burgess<lb/>
Feature Editor<lb/>
Kathryn Johnson<lb/>
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the<lb/>
death your right to say it?Attributed to Voltaire.<lb/>
HAMBURGER<lb/>
A Column for People Who Can't Afford Lobster Neivburg<lb/>
By J. ALFRED WILLIS<lb/>
has obviously decid<lb/>
own closing hours for<lb/>
She considers it hei<lb/>
turn off the lights, lock<lb/>
and make a genera1 n<lb/>
herself about ten or<lb/>
utes before closing time.<lb/>
can be suspended f r<lb/>
1<lb/>
breaking- college re-<lb/>
actions of that kind sJ ?<lb/>
able grounds for dism<lb/>
America is a symbol-conscious<lb/>
nation. The words "image" and<lb/>
?image-making" are the current<lb/>
vogue. Public relations is big busi-<lb/>
ness. Opinion polling is an in-<lb/>
dustry. This is evidence that some-<lb/>
times business men are more con-<lb/>
cerned with the impression they<lb/>
are making on the public, or their<lb/>
image, than the fact.<lb/>
I have a theory that image-mak-<lb/>
ing was first practiced by presi-<lb/>
dents of colleges, especially the<lb/>
state supported colleges. They are<lb/>
confronted with the .problem of<lb/>
squeezing money out of a state<lb/>
legislature. To do so, the college<lb/>
president must point out to the<lb/>
legislature the imminent destruc-<lb/>
tion of his college unless certain<lb/>
improvements are made. And these<lb/>
improvements require money. The<lb/>
successful college president will<lb/>
present his college as in constant<lb/>
crises to the state legislature year<lb/>
after year.<lb/>
The college president must walk<lb/>
a razor's edge, though. The legis-<lb/>
lature must be convinced of the<lb/>
college's backwardness and yet,<lb/>
to the public, the college must be<lb/>
pictured as booming. The more<lb/>
students induced to coming to his<lb/>
college the more improvements the<lb/>
college needs, such as housing and<lb/>
classroom space, and the more<lb/>
money the president can obtain<lb/>
from the state legislature. This is<lb/>
difficult. The president's asset and,<lb/>
often, his liability, is his student<lb/>
body. .Students are not quite adults<lb/>
and not quite children and they<lb/>
frequently get into trouble which<lb/>
results in "bad" ipuiblicity for the<lb/>
college. The state legislature<lb/>
doesn't want to spend money on im-<lb/>
proving a training school for shop-<lb/>
lifters, sex deviates, and radicals<lb/>
(radicals are people who apeak out<lb/>
about rights and responsibility and<lb/>
we all know that people who speak<lb/>
out about rights and responsibility<lb/>
are, perhaps, immoral and a step<lb/>
away from socialism and we all<lb/>
know that socialism is actually<lb/>
another name for communism and<lb/>
it is uin-American to support com-<lb/>
munism). And parents don't want<lb/>
to send their son or virgin daughter<lb/>
to such a training school. Thus, the<lb/>
successful college president often<lb/>
finds himself a censor trying to<lb/>
keep scandals out of the public eye.<lb/>
One of the time-honored solutions<lb/>
to the problem of presenting a<lb/>
picture of a backward yet booming<lb/>
college is that of emphasizing<lb/>
 athletics?notably football. This<lb/>
way the college can be academical-<lb/>
ly backward, thus needing improve-<lb/>
ments like higher salaries for fa-<lb/>
culty and classroom buildings; and<lb/>
still publically booming because of<lb/>
the news coverage of big time<lb/>
r.thletics.<lb/>
Children making faces in the<lb/>
mirror sometimes scare themselves.<lb/>
When a college becomes too con-<lb/>
cerned with the image it is show-<lb/>
ing the public, perhaps they ought<lb/>
tu stop playing make-believe and<lb/>
be natural-letting the buck-teeth,<lb/>
facial warts, and beauty spots be<lb/>
equally visible. No matter what,<lb/>
the personality of a college will he<lb/>
reflected in the lives of the people<lb/>
it influences, as well as the atti-<lb/>
tude of its faculty and the quality<lb/>
of its graduate No amount of<lb/>
paint and powder or any assumed<lb/>
ask will alter the end result of<lb/>
a college's efforts.<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN wel-<lb/>
comes letters from its readers. The<lb/>
briefer they are, the better is the<lb/>
prospect of publication. Letters<lb/>
should ue kept to a maximum of<lb/>
250 words. They should also be of<lb/>
general interest. All are subject<lb/>
to condensation and should con-<lb/>
form to the standards of decency<lb/>
and good taste. We assume no re-<lb/>
sponsibility for statements made.<lb/>
All letters to the EAST CAROLIN-<lb/>
IAN, must be signed. Names will<lb/>
be withheld on request if the Ed-<lb/>
itor can be shown sufficient reason<lb/>
for doing so.<lb/>
One would think that a college of<lb/>
over 6.000 student-<lb/>
debating team. EC<lb/>
things like that which bad<lb/>
light on the int-<lb/>
ties of EC's student bodl<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
EVALUATION<lb/>
1the Editor:<lb/>
The student's evalu<lb/>
professors la year was<lb/>
by many, to be very<lb/>
A similar evaluation 1 ' '<lb/>
! a dormitory counse<lb/>
girls under their jur - I I<lb/>
30 seem to be w<lb/>
The dormd<lb/>
a- much infT<lb/>
social K- as I<lb/>
t ive over her<lb/>
velopment. The<lb/>
ifluences the li<lb/>
the dormitory. W<lb/>
girls should<lb/>
the counselor la - <lb/>
an her inade s.<lb/>
An impartial eva " "<lb/>
counselor by the -<lb/>
under her guidance wc<lb/>
be valuable, not only I<lb/>
lors themselves, in <lb/>
prove, but also to the ?-<lb/>
tion in the hiring of new couM<lb/>
lors.<lb/>
The grading of women to"<lb/>
tory counselors by the gir<lb/>
in the dorms would seem to be kf<lb/>
fairest and most effective rneUI<lb/>
of gaining a true picture of ?<lb/>
quality of the Dorm counselors ??<lb/>
EC.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Two Jarvis Co-ed1<lb/>
M?UHHUHtUUUttHHHluuuttl(twWt.<lb/>
W, S ?udti0n 76 introdu two new columns. We feel tW<lb/>
both of these will be ? definite asset to the paper and we hope that ?<lb/>
meet with your approval.<lb/>
1 1. 'T? 4Trottin a lmn jointly authored by Fred Tabibzadek<lb/>
? Tind " ? eTery week W<lb/>
the remainder of the year. Fred aad John Twell vereed in in<lb/>
?P?'?TT VT 0reign students- ?! ?? -? widely km "<lb/>
additions to the stafT ' " " ??- Both ? W?<lb/>
Another new entry appearing for the Gxt tim. bA. i. the colon<lb/>
to it. We hope that the rea-Mm t? ?. V welcome to cona<lb/>
?h uki vne response to thig column warmntj its continual6,<lb/>
The Bfi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038786_0003"/><lb/>
r mt <lb/>
BRAMBLEBUSH<lb/>
By JIM WILLIS<lb/>
? of the investi-<lb/>
ng the shoplifting in-<lb/>
 nassed and the suspen-<lb/>
?een handed out and the<lb/>
?<lb/>
hone of the tricks,<lb/>
. n<lb/>
"<lb/>
?<lb/>
lures, of the game<lb/>
by rather in-<lb/>
. em ally, exper-<lb/>
seems as if this<lb/>
of operation in-<lb/>
n's trousers<lb/>
: store.<lb/>
n requires that<lb/>
a jacket and a<lb/>
tg, baggy pants.<lb/>
to the men's<lb/>
store and<lb/>
asortment un-<lb/>
? pants to his<lb/>
an should ap-<lb/>
. relv says that he<lb/>
and will ask<lb/>
- any. Once he<lb/>
he likes, he<lb/>
- arm and quick-<lb/>
i air, anv pair<lb/>
. over the first<lb/>
. With the two pair<lb/>
ooks around and<lb/>
tan and asks him<lb/>
a men's dressing<lb/>
v the salesman<lb/>
ective customer<lb/>
room probably in<lb/>
: he store. The op-<lb/>
the room, takes<lb/>
? uts on the last<lb/>
ably walk? outside<lb/>
? k the fit. He<lb/>
as ; uld do, noticing:<lb/>
out any likes<lb/>
he tells a hope-<lb/>
? he doesn't be-<lb/>
rjow and proceeds<lb/>
ssing room. Back<lb/>
nd relaxed operator<lb/>
cunning, and illegal. Its only flaw<lb/>
seems to be that the salesman may<lb/>
wonder what happened to the sec-<lb/>
end pair of pants. Our source says<lb/>
that nine times out of ten they<lb/>
won't wonder, and no one ever is<lb/>
the wiser. If, however, the sales-<lb/>
man does ask about the second<lb/>
pair, the clever and collected opera-<lb/>
tor can pet. around this by saying<lb/>
that he put them back when the<lb/>
salesman wasn't looking; or he can<lb/>
even deny having a second pair. In<lb/>
either alternative, it's up to the<lb/>
operator to decide which one to<lb/>
take. Most salesmen won't ask; and<lb/>
even if they do. the first alterna-<lb/>
tive will usually settle the ques-<lb/>
tion. If it doesn't, the only thing<lb/>
to do is to run. Most of the time,<lb/>
however, the operations runs<lb/>
smoothly according to plan. One<lb/>
time it didrr.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAM <lb/>
Testing Service Designates<lb/>
EC As Teacher Exam Center<lb/>
slips<lb/>
the<lb/>
.?<lb/>
; air he puts<lb/>
was originally<lb/>
ie and baggy pair.<lb/>
Deration is neat.<lb/>
Student Choir<lb/>
Sings At Conf.<lb/>
The EC Choir, composed of ap-<lb/>
proximately fifty student vocal-<lb/>
ists who are carefully selected<lb/>
through auditions, has been in-<lb/>
vited for their excellence in music<lb/>
to sing at the Southern Division of<lb/>
the Music Educators National Con-<lb/>
ference in Charleston. West Vir-<lb/>
ginia. Directed by Gordon Johnson,<lb/>
associate professor in the college<lb/>
School of Music, the Choir will per-<lb/>
form in Charleston March 20 and<lb/>
in several other towns and cities<lb/>
in that area.<lb/>
Terrv Colev is leading the orga-<lb/>
nization this school year as (presi-<lb/>
dent, Mr. Johnson said. Working<lb/>
with Coley are Brett Watson, vice<lb/>
president; and Kay Wiggs, secre-<lb/>
tary.<lb/>
EC has been designated as a<lb/>
testing center for the 1963 nation-<lb/>
wide administration of the Na-<lb/>
tional Teacher Examinations next<lb/>
February, E. M. Nicholson, Di-<lb/>
rector of Testing, announced today.<lb/>
College seniors preparing to<lb/>
teach and teachers applying for<lb/>
positions in school systems which<lb/>
encourage or require applicants to<lb/>
submit their scores on the National<lb/>
Teacher Examinations along with<lb/>
their other credentials are eligible<lb/>
to take the tests. The examinations<lb/>
are prepared and administered an-<lb/>
nually by Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice. Princeton, New Jersey.<lb/>
The designation of EC as a test-<lb/>
ing center for these examinations<lb/>
will give prospective teachers in<lb/>
this area an opportunity to com-<lb/>
pare their performance on the ex-<lb/>
aminations with candidates<lb/>
throughout the country who take<lb/>
the tests in the nationwide ad-<lb/>
ministrations, Mr. Nicholson said.<lb/>
At the one-day testing session<lb/>
a candidate may take the Common<lb/>
Examinations, which include tests<lb/>
in Professional Information, Gen-<lb/>
eral Culture, English Expression,<lb/>
and Nonverbal 'Reasoning. In ad-<lb/>
adit ion, each candidate may take<lb/>
one or two of the thirteen Op-<lb/>
tional Examinations rfiich are<lb/>
designed to demonstrate mastery<lb/>
of subject matter in the fields in<lb/>
whiten he may be assigned to teach.<lb/>
Applications for the examina-<lb/>
tions and Bulletins of Information<lb/>
describing registration procedures<lb/>
and containing representative test<lb/>
questions may be obtained from<lb/>
E. M. Nicholson, Box 111, BC, or<lb/>
directly from the National Teach-<lb/>
er Examinations, Educatonal Test-<lb/>
ing Service, Princeton, New Jerse-<lb/>
ry. Prospective teachers planning<lb/>
to take the test should secure an<lb/>
'Application Blank and a Bulletin<lb/>
of Information promptly, Mr. Nich-<lb/>
olson advised.<lb/>
Author Of "A Paper Horse"<lb/>
WatsonlTo Present<lb/>
Selections From Poetry<lb/>
Robert Watson of the faculty of<lb/>
WC-UNC, will discuss and read<lb/>
selections from his works at East<lb/>
Carolina College Monday, Decem-<lb/>
ber 3, at 7 p.m. in the Austin Au-<lb/>
ditorium.<lb/>
He will be the first of two young<lb/>
poets who under the sponsorship of<lb/>
the University of N. C. Press will<lb/>
appear during 1962-1963 on pro-<lb/>
grams scheduled for the Poetry<lb/>
Circuit of eight N. C. colleges and<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Watson's "A Paper Horse pub-<lb/>
lished last spring by Atheneum,<lb/>
Guest Editorial<lb/>
Religious Inquiry<lb/>
At EC?<lb/>
 .<lb/>
Is 1 e timate place iu<lb/>
n America for<lb/>
issiofi relating to<lb/>
?s? We concede<lb/>
in full agreement<lb/>
S tpreme Court decis-<lb/>
is no part of the<lb/>
government at any level<lb/>
. tc prescribe and pro-<lb/>
.<lb/>
?<lb/>
r as such. We feel that<lb/>
Is to state-supported<lb/>
that it is not the func-<lb/>
to prescribe any form<lb/>
r in any other way to<lb/>
of the functions of a<lb/>
Is, we feel, should<lb/>
arches and student<lb/>
' rs which minister to<lb/>
lents. We be-<lb/>
that those<lb/>
? ;dent religious cen-<lb/>
ster to the people<lb/>
' a splendid job.<lb/>
ent "Religions Em-<lb/>
we tried to make<lb/>
? that the ap-<lb/>
ne of inquiry and dis-<lb/>
- than worship or<lb/>
. Since practically all<lb/>
at the college indicate<lb/>
of religious preference,<lb/>
Presumed that many of them<lb/>
:f- be interested in such a broad<lb/>
toent as the ecumenical<lb/>
'ement fa Christendom, al-<lb/>
?h ah are not Christians. Yet,<lb/>
.  Vlitt effort was made to hear<lb/>
? petures who, by the way,<lb/>
ir?vc! to be informed, capable, and<lb/>
fating, why the lack of in-<lb/>
 Perhaps the following<lb/>
0lIs may indicate some of the<lb/>
ktty may feel that real in-<lb/>
nnot occur in this context Director<lb/>
Some of us at one time or another<lb/>
have attended discussions in<lb/>
churches on subjects like "Is Re-<lb/>
ligion Relevant?" and have learned<lb/>
the hard way that the answer can<lb/>
be predicted before the discussion<lb/>
is held. If the question is raised in<lb/>
the context of a church inquiry the<lb/>
final outcome is predetermined. Re-<lb/>
ligion will be found to he relevant.<lb/>
Same therefore may doubt that a<lb/>
true inquiry and discussion can oc-<lb/>
cur in a "religious emphasis week<lb/>
2. Some people regard religion<lb/>
as such a personal and inward<lb/>
matter, so involved with feeling<lb/>
and emotion, that any kind of in-<lb/>
tellectual approach leaves religion<lb/>
cold and lifeless, and can have little<lb/>
lasting value. <lb/>
3, Perhaps the term emphasis is<lb/>
misleading. IF we are emphasizing<lb/>
religion, we must be selling<lb/>
irion. This term itsel<lb/>
may repel some.<lb/>
4.Even though most of us may<lb/>
identify ourselves with some church<lb/>
or religious group, religious in-<lb/>
sight and inquiry may not actually<lb/>
concern us very much.<lb/>
5. So manv regular demands are<lb/>
laid on our time and energies that<lb/>
have little to spare for other<lb/>
????????????????<lb/>
The roots of the present Sino-<lb/>
Indian crisis date back to 1904 fol-<lb/>
lowing the successful 'Tibetan Ex-<lb/>
ledition' undertaken by Colonel<lb/>
Younghusband.<lb/>
Lord Curzon, the then Viceroy<lb/>
of India, was motivated in dis-<lb/>
patching troops to the area, by:<lb/>
1) The apparent Russian interests<lb/>
in Tibet and India, 2) The hostile<lb/>
and unco-operative attitude of the<lb/>
Tibetan Government toward the<lb/>
Indian traders, 3) The necessity<lb/>
of a distinguished Indian territory.<lb/>
Curzon's Action<lb/>
As a result of the British vic-<lb/>
tory and absence of challenge from<lb/>
any quarters, Curzon was in a<lb/>
position to easily make effective<lb/>
????????????????????????????<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
Globe Trotting<lb/>
The McMahon Line<lb/>
with Tabibzedeh and Bede<lb/>
re-<lb/>
therefore<lb/>
we<lb/>
Wy<lb/>
Whatever the reasons, very little<lb/>
interest was shown in the lectees<lb/>
and discussions of Religious Em-<lb/>
phasis Week. Since a great a?0<lb/>
of planning and work is involved<lb/>
in such an etffort, we retorn to<lb/>
our original question and ask more<lb/>
snecifioaflly: Is he a P f<lb/>
jrn for incrairv discussion in<lb/>
r matters D. D. Gross. McMahon hne -remained Tibetan<lb/>
DirectX of Relifienr Activities, in origin and religion (Lamai Bud-<lb/>
his decisions. Curzon, a staunch<lb/>
student of the Ninteenth Century<lb/>
British Colonial School of Thought,<lb/>
maintained a dim view of alj non-<lb/>
British and the dimmest for the<lb/>
Chinese. In order to insure the<lb/>
British a free hand in Tibet and<lb/>
meantime to avoid any responsibil-<lb/>
ities over Tibet, he decided to place<lb/>
her under the Chinese sovereignty.<lb/>
This move was calculated by the<lb/>
fact thatlChina at the time was suf-<lb/>
fering from internal chaos in gov-<lb/>
ernment, thus guaranteeing con-<lb/>
t'nous chaotic conditions in Tibet.<lb/>
The northern border of the Indian<lb/>
sub continent now consisted of the<lb/>
following areas: The Northeast<lb/>
Frontier Agency, the princely<lb/>
states of Bhuton, Sik'kim, and Nep-<lb/>
al, as well as trans-Himalayan<lb/>
parts of Kashmir.<lb/>
The Boundary<lb/>
In 1914 Sir Arthur McMahon was<lb/>
assigned the task of setting up a<lb/>
mountainous political boundary be-<lb/>
tween Tibet and India. Since the<lb/>
British had placed Tibet under<lb/>
the Sovereignty of China, nego-<lb/>
tiations were carried out with the<lb/>
Chinese government. In drawing<lb/>
the line the British desired to se-<lb/>
cure control over the Northeast<lb/>
Frontier Agency and other passes<lb/>
leading into India from Tibet and<lb/>
China. No consideration was shown<lb/>
for religious and ethnic classifica-<lb/>
tions. As a result, a large percent-<lb/>
age of the (population sooth of the<lb/>
hist). It should be noted that this<lb/>
arrangement was by no means a<lb/>
hmderance to the happiness of these<lb/>
people, since Indian Administra-<lb/>
tion was, and still is, superior to<lb/>
that of the Chinese.<lb/>
The Chinese, whether Nation-<lb/>
alists or Communists, never recog-<lb/>
nized the McMahon Line as a legal<lb/>
boundary. The political upheavals in<lb/>
China prevented her from estab-<lb/>
lishing effective control over Tibet<lb/>
or offering any opposition to the<lb/>
McMahon line itself. This arrange-<lb/>
ment continued to exist for ap-<lb/>
proximately 33 years, until the<lb/>
Indian Independance in 1947 and<lb/>
the fall of China to Communism in<lb/>
1949.<lb/>
China's Motives<lb/>
The Chinese motives for the<lb/>
start of the recent crisis was not<lb/>
restricted to border disputes be-<lb/>
tween the two nations. India is a<lb/>
democracy raJpidly improving her<lb/>
economic conditions. iChina, on the<lb/>
other hand, has not enjoyed India's<lb/>
rapid rate of economic progress.<lb/>
India has been concentrating her<lb/>
efforts on civil economy, China<lb/>
maintains a standing army of<lb/>
4,500,000. The ideological differ-<lb/>
ences between Moscow and Peking<lb/>
had intensified the latter's am-<lb/>
bitions to assume Communist lead-<lb/>
ership in the world. To prove her<lb/>
solidarity in Asia and at the same<lb/>
time defy Moscow. India was the<lb/>
obvious choice. In India is demo-<lb/>
cracy's only possible challenge in<lb/>
Asia against China, Kirshna Men-<lb/>
on had opposed the Western Camp,<lb/>
and the Administration supported<lb/>
a neutralist policy. MoscowT had<lb/>
developed a sympathetic attitude <lb/>
towards India and had poured<lb/>
$982.2 million in loans in there. The<lb/>
aggression was a calculated risk<lb/>
taken by Peking. Its purpose being<lb/>
an open defiance of Moscow by at-<lb/>
tacking a nation friendly to it, and<lb/>
insuring Chinese solidity in Asia.<lb/>
Historical axioms recommend<lb/>
that any totalitarian regime should<lb/>
focus the public's mind on some<lb/>
project or a scapegoat. China's<lb/>
Hate Projects Korea, Indo China<lb/>
(France), Formosa, United States,<lb/>
India, and even Moscow have been<lb/>
examples in this case.<lb/>
has been widely reviewed and<lb/>
praised by critics in leading period-<lb/>
icals.<lb/>
The New York Times described<lb/>
Watson as "an interesting poet<lb/>
whose work is gained with its own<lb/>
kind of candor, subtlety and wild-<lb/>
ress waiting to break loose The<lb/>
Saturday Review said that "he<lb/>
has a sense of tragic invention, a<lb/>
commitment, that sets him apart<lb/>
from the ordinary versers. He is<lb/>
clearly worth watching<lb/>
A native of New Jersey, Watson<lb/>
received his education at Williams<lb/>
College and the Johns Hopkins<lb/>
University, from which he was<lb/>
granted the Ph.D. degree. He has<lb/>
also attended the University of<lb/>
Zurich as a Swiss-American Ex-<lb/>
change fellow.<lb/>
Watson is the first resident of<lb/>
North Carolina to appear on the<lb/>
Poetry Circuit, which as the second<lb/>
enterprise of its kind in the nation<lb/>
and the first in the South was or-<lb/>
ganized last year through the ef-<lb/>
forts of Howard R. Webber, Editor-<lb/>
in-Chief of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Press.<lb/>
Center Offers<lb/>
Scholarship For<lb/>
Far East Study<lb/>
Graduating seniors with interests<lb/>
in diplomatic service in Asia, teach-<lb/>
ing Asian affairs or other careers<lb/>
related to the Far East, will find<lb/>
the holiday break a good chance<lb/>
to apply for an 1963-64 East-West<lb/>
Center scholarship.<lb/>
One hundred scholarships are<lb/>
available. Application deadline is<lb/>
February 1.<lb/>
The East-West Center in<lb/>
Honolulu is America's unique<lb/>
institution for promoting mu-<lb/>
tual understanding between<lb/>
Asia and the United States.<lb/>
It offers expense-paid, 21-<lb/>
month scholar hips for study<lb/>
at the University of Hawaii<lb/>
and in Asia. An additional 200<lb/>
scholarships will be awarded<lb/>
to bring students from Asia<lb/>
and the Pacific area to the<lb/>
Center for study and to share<lb/>
experiences with Americans.<lb/>
The ample scholarships include<lb/>
round-trip transportation, tuition,<lb/>
books and fees, housing, food,<lb/>
health insurance, a small monthly<lb/>
personal allowance and an Asia<lb/>
field study grant. During field<lb/>
study, the student goes to a coun-<lb/>
try in Asia for first-hand acquaint-<lb/>
ance with die particular culture<lb/>
and language in which he is spec-<lb/>
ializing.<lb/>
Further information and schol-<lb/>
arship application forms may be<lb/>
obtained by writing to the East-<lb/>
West Center, Honolulu 14, Hawaii.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038786_0004"/><lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Friday, November 3ft<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pag 4 EAST JAKU1.1IM1A<lb/>
EC's New School Of<lb/>
Boasts Smith's Best Equipped<lb/>
Ceramics, Graphic Arts Shops<lb/>
Jean Butler, Linda Touchton, and Peggy Canipe (L to R) view their product with satisfaction. The pro-<lb/>
duct is a print from an etching press.<lb/>
?: degree in art at EC tions from time to time and con- partmem There are abi two<lb/>
wa lorized in 1946. Before that, ducts critical sessions to aid the hundred an majors in the school.<lb/>
Art Department was strictly &amp;i Lts. The other students are those major-<lb/>
 service depart i degree e faculty members come from inr to primary or grammar educa-<lb/>
5t award. ut 1948. The . ; over :ii' united states. They tio an? those taking art appre-<lb/>
Master's D as een awarded represent no particular school of ciation.<lb/>
tl ?? years. ht but present a variety of ,lWe are so crowded that some<lb/>
Dr. Wellington B. Gray, Dean of points, required work must be done at<lb/>
School of Art. stated. "Since ecd por Space night. All art history course? and<lb/>
I came here in 1956, the size of the j)r Gray said. "Our crying need one studio are taught then. Two<lb/>
department has increased by 52S ; for more space. During the years ago the sculpture studios<lb/>
the staff has quadrupled course of a week, approximately were moved to the basement of<lb/>
Two Undergraduate Degrees - 279 students i: through the de- the North Cafeteria, next door to<lb/>
The School of Art offers two de-<lb/>
the und rg ate level.<lb/>
The B.S. degree - agro with<lb/>
a  in ? area with courses<lb/>
 ? 5. Th ?s si udents<lb/>
this degree are<lb/>
i ? g as well as ers. The<lb/>
A. B. degree requires concentration<lb/>
in one studio area which may be<lb/>
sen from painting, sculpture,<lb/>
ceramics, graphic arts, commercial<lb/>
t. and interior design.<lb/>
There are two degrees in the<lb/>
graduate field too. The M.A. in Art<lb/>
in a studio area includes degrees<lb/>
in painting, sclpture, ceramics,<lb/>
graphic arts, and design. The Mast-<lb/>
er's Degree in Art Education is<lb/>
geared to suit the needs of the<lb/>
teacher<lb/>
The sixteen member faculty in-<lb/>
cludes Francis Speight, artist in<lb/>
residenc He has no formal class<lb/>
schedule, but he teaches some sec-<lb/>
t's really very simple once you g;et the hang of it Janet Hill Morris<lb/>
and Elaine (iitelson are shown weaving a pattern on one of the larger<lb/>
looms in the weaving studio.<lb/>
the rifle range. All of tihe art his-<lb/>
tory and art appreciation courses<lb/>
are taught elsewhere on campus<lb/>
reported Dr. Gray.<lb/>
Superb Equipment<lb/>
The EC Art School has the best<lb/>
tipped ceramics shop and graph-<lb/>
ic arts studio in the South. This is<lb/>
the only sculpture department<lb/>
r e South currently doing ful <lb/>
figure constt uction, Dr. I in<lb/>
that in the rear future the Art<lb/>
Scl ' will be able ? offer ?<lb/>
the bachelor's and the master's<lb/>
degree- in the Fine Arts.<lb/>
Student work is regularly <lb/>
hibited in the Hallway Gallery- and<lb/>
the Kate Lewis Gallery on the third<lb/>
floor of Rawl Building. The ex-<lb/>
hibitions must include a certain<lb/>
percentage of out-of-class work.<lb/>
An A.B. candidate's exhibition must<lb/>
be in one medium, but a B.S. can-<lb/>
didate's exhibition may be in one<lb/>
medium or in a eombination of<lb/>
several mediums. The exhibits must<lb/>
meet a number of technical re-<lb/>
quirements. Dr. Gray said that the<lb/>
exhibition's are for the sole purpose<lb/>
"Why, Madam, I'll have you know I've been turning out spitoons for of giving the student a one-man<lb/>
thirty years now Bud Wall seems to be saying as he labors over one show before graduation to buUd<lb/>
of the potter's wheels in the School of Art. The section of the school is up his showmanship and confidence<lb/>
completely equipped with wheels, drying closets, and kilns. in exhibiting.<lb/>
i)r. Wellington B. Gray, Dean of School of Art<lb/>
Copy By<lb/>
KATHRYN E. JOHNSON<lb/>
Photography By<lb/>
FAY NELSON<lb/>
<lb/>
ai sszrrs' ??? - o-1-<lb/>
<pb facs="00038786_0005"/><lb/>
ridN0V<lb/>
k-?mber O, 1962<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
PageS<lb/>
former Student Comments On<lb/>
Rewards Of Peace Corps<lb/>
, 1959 graduate<lb/>
now working as a<lb/>
0 Peace Corps in Li-<lb/>
te friends here<lb/>
eacher and his<lb/>
"X ii<lb/>
an Episcopal<lb/>
. this is going: to<lb/>
rewarding experience<lb/>
ed he stated<lb/>
F<lb/>
Dept,<lb/>
ormer<lb/>
Head Succumbs<lb/>
C. Veal, for twenty<lb/>
E the Foreign<lb/>
. tit. died No-<lb/>
 who joined<lb/>
23, was a graduate<lb/>
al Seminary at<lb/>
i. and Davidson,<lb/>
at New York<lb/>
! siversity.<lb/>
r  in Bladen County<lb/>
v is friends and<lb/>
rn North Caro-<lb/>
Mr. Deal was<lb/>
 an after-dinner<lb/>
meat speaker.<lb/>
? was chairman<lb/>
: committee and<lb/>
? g the athletic<lb/>
?<lb/>
en students. He<lb/>
in having<lb/>
. Alpha or-<lb/>
member of<lb/>
irch of<lb/>
sd as Elder,<lb/>
in 1045, and<lb/>
S da ighter, Miss<lb/>
last Eig-hth<lb/>
in a recent letber to the Rev. John<lb/>
Drake of St. Paulas Episcopal<lb/>
Church.<lb/>
During his student days at EC,<lb/>
Sinclair was an active member of<lb/>
the Canterbury Club, organization<lb/>
of Episcopal students and edited<lb/>
the club news sheet "Canterbury<lb/>
Tells<lb/>
After training for Peace Corps<lb/>
work at the University of Pitts-<lb/>
burg, Sinclair went by plane to<lb/>
Liberia in late 'August. At Roberts-<lb/>
field near Monrovia, he was wel-<lb/>
comed and entertained by Liberian<lb/>
officials and spent his first week<lb/>
"in getting a more practical view<lb/>
of the Liberian Education system<lb/>
and its problems he wrote.<lb/>
Sinclair reports that he is "quite<lb/>
fortunate" to be located at St.<lb/>
John's Episcopal Mission at Rob-<lb/>
ertsport, not far from Sierra Leona.<lb/>
"The mission he said. "i3 sit-<lb/>
uated on a higrh hill just a few<lb/>
hundred yards from the ocean.<lb/>
The view is quite spectacular. One<lb/>
can see for about 30 miles in all<lb/>
directions. On a clear day I can<lb/>
see the interior mountains<lb/>
At present Sinclair is the only<lb/>
Peace Corps volunteer at the miss-<lb/>
ion, at which two schools, an ele-<lb/>
mentary school with 47 students<lb/>
and a high school with 126 en-<lb/>
rolled, are operated under the su-<lb/>
ervision of two Episcopal clergy-<lb/>
men and a layman.<lb/>
Now engaged in teaching stu-<lb/>
dents of English in the seventh,<lb/>
ninth, eleventh, and twelfth grade-<lb/>
and world history in the tenth<lb/>
grade, Sinclair wrote. "They are bo<lb/>
. ager to learn! Since they have<lb/>
social activity, it's quite marvelous<lb/>
when they devote all of their en-<lb/>
ergies to a lesson in the classroom.<lb/>
"Every place t go he con-<lb/>
tinued, "the people are very friend-<lb/>
ly and make friends easily<lb/>
In town, Sinclair said, are a<lb/>
couple of dirt roads, one or two<lb/>
jeeps, and a couple of stores. But,<lb/>
he stated, progress is on the way,<lb/>
for the mission and sotme parts of<lb/>
town now have electric service for<lb/>
24 hours a day.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi Initiates<lb/>
Seven New Members<lb/>
Greek News<lb/>
By BONNIE HARRIS<lb/>
Laraba Chi Alpha<lb/>
Lamba Chi's new officers are<lb/>
Mickey Conklin, president; Buz<lb/>
Warren, vce president; Cloyce<lb/>
Anders, treasurer; and Eddie Buck,<lb/>
rush chairman.<lb/>
Bobby Hardee, Butch Gawmon,<lb/>
Jim Holmes, Jim Riggins, Jerry<lb/>
Paul, and Ricky Jarreli are new<lb/>
brothers.<lb/>
Newly initiated members of the<lb/>
fall pledge class are Ronnie New-<lb/>
some, Doug Ward. Lynn Benson,<lb/>
Tuggy Tugwell, Trotter Bagley,<lb/>
and Carlton Barnes.<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi<lb/>
One new brother, William Lee<lb/>
Elman, has been initiated.<lb/>
Two pledges, Jon Barry Singer<lb/>
and Donald Edward Moore, are<lb/>
so little, especially in the way of' working toward becoming brothers.<lb/>
Sylvia Parks Harris, president<lb/>
of the Beta Kappa Chapter of Pi<lb/>
Omega Pi, honorary business fra-<lb/>
ternity, presided over an initiation<lb/>
of new members into the organiza-<lb/>
tion this week.<lb/>
The new members are Ann Ad-<lb/>
kins, Brenda Allen, Brenda Brown,<lb/>
Cleveland Hawkins, Marsha Jordan,<lb/>
Mary Anne Swain, and Martha<lb/>
Widdifield.<lb/>
Following several weeks of<lb/>
pledging the fraternity, tie seven<lb/>
new members were initiated into<lb/>
the organization through a formal<lb/>
ceremony attended by the officers,<lb/>
members, and advisors of the local<lb/>
chapter of Pi Omega Pi.<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi is a national honor-<lb/>
ary business fraternity with chap-<lb/>
ters in more than a hundred col-<lb/>
leges and universities in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
The local gToup, which has twice<lb/>
won the national award for its out-<lb/>
standing activities, annually spon-<lb/>
sors a Typing Contest staged for<lb/>
high school students in the north-<lb/>
record in business.<lb/>
Museum Exhibits<lb/>
EC Art Work<lb/>
Four students in the EC Art<lb/>
? School have had work accepted for<lb/>
exhibition by the North Carolina<lb/>
Museum of Art. Peggy Canipe,<lb/>
Maggie Tamura, George Jolly, and<lb/>
James Smith were winners in the<lb/>
North Carolina Artists' Competi-<lb/>
tion. Out of 600 contestants, 150<lb/>
of whom were professional artists,<lb/>
75 pieces were selected for ex-<lb/>
hibition.<lb/>
eastern counties of the state. It<lb/>
publishes a yearbook "Beta Kappa<lb/>
News" and awnards each spring<lb/>
the Thomas Clay Williams Mem-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038786_0006"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIA N<lb/>
Friday, November 30,<lb/>
lt<lb/>
Quarter Pirate Si<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
The Pirates put on a 2lHpoint<lb/>
The Pirates ended their Football season on a winning<lb/>
note last Saturday as they beat Eastern Kentucky,? "? fou'rth. surge to beat a<lb/>
This save the Pirates a 5-4 record under Coach Stasavich Kentucky outfit<lb/>
hiThisfirst year at EC and their first year using the single at College stadium ,ast<lb/>
wing formation. tll no.aiT1,t their Saturday. This win over Eastern<lb/>
The Pirate offense ran up 217 points against xneir<lb/>
opponents' 136. The most the Pirates were defeated bywas<lb/>
4 points. The Pirates lost 27-26 to.Richmond. 23-19 toElon<lb/>
0-16 to Western Carolina, and 7-6 to Lenoir Rhyne The<lb/>
Pirates some say, could have lost every game except the<lb/>
Er game and still had a winning season. There is no doubt<lb/>
that that was the toughest one to loose.<lb/>
There were man; bright spots in this past season The<lb/>
36-8 victory over Newberry was probably the sweetest vic-<lb/>
tory because it pleased so many students and alumni who<lb/>
attend the Homecoming game. Other Pirate wins were<lb/>
Ippalachian 29-16 (which broke a six year losmg streak to<lb/>
the Mountaineers), Wofford 41-9, Catawba 15-14, and East-<lb/>
"SKE sophomores, ha. gainedf much val-<lb/>
nahlP experience this year and has adjusted from the T<lb/>
foSlast year to Coach Stasavich's single wing,<lb/>
whkh'it has developed into a slightly devastating attack.<lb/>
It has bee a highly successful season when viewed from this<lb/>
angle.<lb/>
EC is finding it difficult to schedule football games in<lb/>
the near future. No ACC or SC team would care to put its<lb/>
standing with the other members of that conference in<lb/>
jeopardy bv losing to the Pirates. The Pirates have little<lb/>
to k?T bv playing some of the teams in this three-state<lb/>
area (NC Va and SC). If they beat EC. EC has the ex-<lb/>
cust that with a established athletic systeni as tte olto<lb/>
school has it should win; however, if EChouId win, the<lb/>
other school not only loses the game but also a lot ol pie?-<lb/>
tig?esomething that is very important to the college. The<lb/>
Wake Forest possibility is still that?a posibihty.<lb/>
Some Odds and Ends<lb/>
Kentucky proved to be a big one<lb/>
because it made Coach Stasavich's<lb/>
first season at EC a winning one.<lb/>
The Bucs ended this season with<lb/>
a 5-4 mark.<lb/>
After playing a good first half,<lb/>
the Maroons of Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
came back on the field after half-<lb/>
time to find a tough Pirate de-<lb/>
fense waiting for them. Richard<lb/>
Huneycutt played a great defensive<lb/>
game in halting the Maroon attack,<lb/>
one of the toughest that EC has<lb/>
faced all year.<lb/>
The Kentuckians started the<lb/>
scoring by recovering a Pi-<lb/>
rate fumble on the EC 11-<lb/>
yard line. On the first play<lb/>
from scrimage, halfback Jim<lb/>
Chittum went through the<lb/>
Otte Leads Buc<lb/>
Varsity To 94-60<lb/>
Win Over Fresh<lb/>
EC's Basketball Varsity topped<lb/>
; the frosh team 94-60 at the Gym<lb/>
Although EC Irtto?JSTth? is a Sreat deal of interest j Monda, ni.ht in a pre-season<lb/>
in the LR-Northern South Dakota. If LR wins, it will get warm-?p<lb/>
a bowl invitation.<lb/>
V w ???<lb/>
Speaking of bowl invitations, it is a shame that Duke<lb/>
did not get a bowl invitation. Duke was 8-2 for the season<lb/>
That is a lot better record than some of the teams that wiD<lb/>
te taking part in post season games. Dukes two loses were<lb/>
to Southern California and Georgia Tec!i Southern Cali-<lb/>
fornia is ranked number one m the nation ? an G? I o "the season a!rainst vMI at Lex-<lb/>
Tech beat Alabama, who was number one in the nation.turday night.<lb/>
three weeks ago. ??<lb/>
Center Bill Otte lead the scoring<lb/>
for the varsity with 25 points. Otte,<lb/>
who is a Pirate co-captain, also<lb/>
was the leading rebounder with 24.<lb/>
Forward Bobby Kinard scored 14<lb/>
points for the outmanned fresh-<lb/>
men.<lb/>
The Pirates play their first game<lb/>
?P<lb/>
C<lb/>
Bucj facz Toujh bcu&amp;crn Unterence<lb/>
Squads In '6263 Basketball Schedule<lb/>
. ljj I 1H - - ? - V? l-tatviy<lb/>
Since EC's Basketball Pirates<lb/>
will be playing many Southern<lb/>
Conference teams this year, the<lb/>
Sports department of the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN has compiled some<lb/>
information on these SC teams.<lb/>
Virginia Mlitary Institute<lb/>
On December 1, the Pirates take<lb/>
on VMI at Lexington, Va. VMI<lb/>
lost its highest scorer iln that in-<lb/>
stitution's history in Norman Hal-<lb/>
berstadt. Three other starters will<lb/>
be missing: from the line-uip?Joe<lb/>
Cedro, Gene Lazaroff, and Weldon<lb/>
Eddins. This would seem to be a<lb/>
big blow against chances of VMI's<lb/>
being a strong contender for the<lb/>
SC championship. However, VMI<lb/>
bad a good freshman team last<lb/>
year and has an outstanding center<lb/>
in junior John Yuracheck. Yura-<lb/>
check is 6-6 and weighs in around<lb/>
that 220 lb. range. Coach Miller<lb/>
also looks for a great deal of help<lb/>
from Jeff Gausepohl. The Keydets<lb/>
will have a strong offensive threat<lb/>
in Bill Blair. Blair is a 6-3 for-<lb/>
ward who was second high scorer<lb/>
last year with a 12.7 average. VMI<lb/>
feels that if; will have its best year<lb/>
Citadel<lb/>
The Citadel will be playing a lot<lb/>
of sophomores in an attempt to<lb/>
start another building program.<lb/>
They were hard-hit by graduation<lb/>
losses, especially the loss of Gary<lb/>
Daniels, the "onewman gang<lb/>
Daniels was one of the top scorers<lb/>
in the SC last year. The Bulldogs<lb/>
look for &amp; rough season until they<lb/>
pick up some experience in their<lb/>
sophomores and last year's re-<lb/>
serves.<lb/>
Davidson<lb/>
One of the toughest teams in<lb/>
the SC this year will be the Wild- as a "bride maid" team by losing<lb/>
cats from Davidson. Davidson has j many close games in the<lb/>
started to emphasis basketball in<lb/>
the last few years and has come up<lb/>
with some fine talent, especially<lb/>
right tackle slot to chalk up<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky's first tally,<lb/>
the try for the extra-point<lb/>
conversion failed, and the Ma-<lb/>
roons held a 6-0 lead.<lb/>
This lead proved to be a short<lb/>
one. as the Pirates came right back<lb/>
to take a 8-6 lead. The Pirate drive<lb/>
that climaxed in this score started<lb/>
on the EC 36. Fullback Tom Mi-<lb/>
chel and wingback Jerry Tolley<lb/>
moved the ball from the 36 to the<lb/>
42 of EK. Two passes from tail-<lb/>
back Bill Cline to end Johnny<lb/>
Anderson gave EC the ball on the<lb/>
Maroon 35-yard line. Wingback<lb/>
Larry Rudisill carried the brown<lb/>
ovalthrough right tackle for 35<lb/>
vards and the initial Buc score.<lb/>
Cline carried for the two-point<lb/>
conversion that gave the Pirates<lb/>
an 8-6 lead. Cline sustained a leg<lb/>
injurv on this attempt and was<lb/>
forced to sit out the remainder of<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Again the lead changed<lb/>
hands. The Maroons took the<lb/>
the ball on their own 20 and<lb/>
moved it to the Pirate 4 in<lb/>
eleven plays. The touirh Hue<lb/>
line was faced with holdin- the<lb/>
EK attack with a first and poal<lb/>
situation. The line stiffened<lb/>
and held for three downs. On<lb/>
fourth down and two. quarter-<lb/>
back Marmie plunged over for<lb/>
the score. The pass attempt<lb/>
for the two-point conversion<lb/>
failed, wd Eastern Kentucky<lb/>
left 'he field with a 12-8 half-<lb/>
time lead.<lb/>
Neither team could maintain ;<lb/>
drive in the third period. The t ?<lb/>
the Pirates managed was a 'hive ,<lb/>
from the E 33 to the EK 44. The<lb/>
Maroon line stiffened, and the<lb/>
Pirates were forced to lose the<lb/>
ball. Eastern Kentucky could not<lb/>
move the ball and punted. The Pi-<lb/>
rates received the punt and moved<lb/>
ball to the EK 21 yard lne<lb/>
here the Mar?<lb/>
their third Pirate pass. The<lb/>
wen: this way in the third period.<lb/>
Every time EC seemed to have a<lb/>
scoring drive going, a fumble or<lb/>
a pass interception would make<lb/>
that 12-8 score 1<lb/>
The Pirate sc-<lb/>
high gear in the fourth<lb/>
started the winning touch,<lb/>
drive after recovering a Ma<lb/>
punt on the Buc 19. T<lb/>
0f wingback Tolley <lb/>
Michel moved the ball '<lb/>
Pirate 19 to the 35. T .<lb/>
Eidnke went to the efi f r ,<lb/>
yards to the Maroon<lb/>
from Eiduke to R<lb/>
through the middle by M<lb/>
ried the ball to the El<lb/>
s-ame combination<lb/>
the Eastern Kentu.<lb/>
swept right -n; I<lb/>
the touchdov<lb/>
kicl<lb/>
B i<lb/>
rates all the<lb/>
Barl Sweo:<lb/>
that increa<lb/>
15-12.<lb/>
Eastern Kentucky's tron<lb/>
were not yet over. Two minuter<lb/>
later, EC pot the ball on tfc<lb/>
EC 27. Eiduke went 19 yj<lb/>
to the Pirates 46. n the next<lb/>
play Tom Michel went ar<lb/>
risht end behind good block<lb/>
for a ofi-yard TD jaunt.<lb/>
conversion attempt failed, a<lb/>
the Pirates had 21-12.<lb/>
Wi1<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
e Maroons. '<lb/>
Pirates scor i .<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
' Di<lb/>
TD. E<lb/>
 co<lb/>
re 29-1<lb/>
WRA Plans Winter<lb/>
Tntrnrural Prosrar<lb/>
on last year's surprising freshman<lb/>
team. Last year's frosh were the<lb/>
best in the school history. The<lb/>
Furman coach stated after last<lb/>
year's game with the Davidson<lb/>
varsity that he was glad they were<lb/>
playing the Wildcat varsity in-<lb/>
stead of the Wildcat frosh team.<lb/>
Davidson 'has a vertan squad back.<lb/>
High scoring Bill Jarman will be<lb/>
looked on to carry much of the<lb/>
Wildcat scoring burden. With a<lb/>
veteran squad and a highly rated<lb/>
freshman team to choose from,<lb/>
Davidson's coach Lefty Drissel<lb/>
should be able to put a strong<lb/>
team on the floor to give West<lb/>
Virginia a run for the SC Cham-<lb/>
ponship.<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Richmond will count on a couple<lb/>
of tall transfer students to carry<lb/>
them through this year. George<lb/>
Atwell and Tom Fenwick, both<lb/>
towering around 6-6, will lend<lb/>
their much needed height and as-<lb/>
sistance to the Spiders. Veterans<lb/>
John Telepo, George Grodzicki, and<lb/>
Dan Higgins are returning<lb/>
William and Mary<lb/>
After a disappointing 7-17 record<lb/>
last year, William and Mary ap-<lb/>
pears to be on the comeback trail.<lb/>
K irk Goodlftig wilil 'be returning to<lb/>
give some height to the W &amp; M<lb/>
cause. Goodling is a 6-6 center.<lb/>
The Indians will still be plagued<lb/>
by a depth problem, which hurt<lb/>
itnem considerably last year. Will-<lb/>
iam and Mary earned its record<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
The last game of our season at<lb/>
EC, the Pirates take on last year's<lb/>
No. 2 SC team?Virginia Tech.<lb/>
The Techmen had a tough game<lb/>
. discussed<lb/>
gram foy l<lb/>
November 26 mee1<lb/>
and bowling<lb/>
Classif<lb/>
FOUND?Girl<lb/>
' in front of Peopl<lb/>
I may claim at De<lb/>
in the finals of the SC tourney.<lb/>
They beat West Virginia during the<lb/>
regular season, only to lose to WTVA<lb/>
in the final game of the SC tourna-<lb/>
ment. This year the men from<lb/>
VPI will be handicaped by their<lb/>
lose of backboard strength. Their<lb/>
two big men, Bucky Keller and<lb/>
John Fleischmann, are gone. The<lb/>
one bright spot on the Tech scene<lb/>
is the return of Howard Pardue,<lb/>
a 20-point man last year.<lb/>
With the inclusion of so many<lb/>
Southern Conference teams, EC's<lb/>
Pirates will be playing their rough-<lb/>
est schedule in the school's history.<lb/>
WOULDN'T !<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038786_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>