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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038792_0001"/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
e XXXVIII<lb/>
East Caroli n a College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1963<lb/>
Number 24<lb/>
Brubeck Plays Thursday<lb/>
1 I jrt I oJ?  vs "Y "tf, " v VN;Y?Y$:i&amp; ?? jfc<lb/>
Jenkins Presents<lb/>
Annual Awards<lb/>
For 'Down Beat'<lb/>
A ?Dave Brubeck Quar-<lb/>
.sday night, the<lb/>
'witness more than<lb/>
unparalleled mus-<lb/>
the yearly Readers'<lb/>
'by -Down Beat<lb/>
fur ine, first place<lb/>
pesiti )iisgora to Dave Bru-<lb/>
'?est combo, Paul Des-<lb/>
 the best alto sax<lb/>
v rello for being<lb/>
aer. President Leo<lb/>
nbehalf of "Down<lb/>
t the awards to<lb/>
irho represent the<lb/>
ence in their field.<lb/>
the arrangements<lb/>
R i ("hard Norm an,<lb/>
Buddy Murray,<lb/>
'the show through<lb/>
tters and long-dis-<lb/>
alls to Don Demi-<lb/>
the bi-weekly<lb/>
:?: Joe Glaser, Pres-<lb/>
1 Booking Com-<lb/>
? ? r consent, the<lb/>
1 be impos-<lb/>
 awards here<lb/>
? ?? r BC. This is<lb/>
sident of a<lb/>
? ese awards.<lb/>
?eck Quartet<lb/>
e summer of<lb/>
' ime bassist<lb/>
played a con-<lb/>
.? visit, they<lb/>
? ? ? '???t-sell-<lb/>
? Out" which was<lb/>
? next day at<lb/>
ckeys' I kmven-<lb/>
Dave Brubeck Quartet<lb/>
IDC Creates Co-ed Visitation<lb/>
In Ay<lb/>
coc<lb/>
k,N<lb/>
ew<lb/>
M<lb/>
D<lb/>
en s uorms<lb/>
Starting Wednesday, January 23,<lb/>
women students will be allowed in<lb/>
the recreation rooms of New Dorm<lb/>
and Aycock Dorm. To initiate this<lb/>
prog-ram. the IDC has scheduled<lb/>
a Coke Party for all women stu-<lb/>
dents tomorrow night, from 7:00<lb/>
p.m. until 10:00 p.m. in the recre-<lb/>
ation room of Aycock Dorm. All<lb/>
men dormitory students also are<lb/>
invited. It is the wish of the IDC<lb/>
that women students attend this<lb/>
event in support of the visitation<lb/>
program. This step toward foster-<lb/>
ing a wholesome program of social<lb/>
Women's Residence Hall<lb/>
To House 432 Students<lb/>
ith wing<lb/>
 year can<lb/>
tth the women<lb/>
who will have to<lb/>
State Museum<lb/>
Purchases Prints<lb/>
If M Students<lb/>
Museum of Art in<lb/>
? purchased prints<lb/>
ira and Peggy Ca-<lb/>
in the perma-<lb/>
?? of contempory art.<lb/>
ora'a "Composition<lb/>
a color woodcut,<lb/>
u<lb/>
??<lb/>
'nine's "Abstraction,<lb/>
color (print, were en-<lb/>
 19?2 N. C. State Art<lb/>
? were then selected by<lb/>
fo the permanent<lb/>
? Rth students are pu-<lb/>
Donald Se<lb/>
Pr<lb/>
xaurer.<lb/>
an:re ard Miss Tnmura<lb/>
?a 0f the looa chapter<lb/>
 pT. ?n?rary art fraternity Del-<lb/>
? Delta.<lb/>
become accustomed to awakening<lb/>
eery morning to the sounds of<lb/>
heavy machinery But noise is<lb/>
more easily tolerated when it is<lb/>
for the eventual good of the stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Our rar idly expanding college<lb/>
i having a new women's dormi-<lb/>
tory built to try to keep up with<lb/>
the demand for living quarters.<lb/>
The new dorm, a modern seven-<lb/>
sbosy structure, will be completed<lb/>
a year from this month if plans go<lb/>
as scheduled. When it is completed,<lb/>
the $1,087,062 building- will be the<lb/>
tallest building in Greenvile.<lb/>
The new residence hall designed<lb/>
by Jesse Page and Associates of<lb/>
Raleigh will house 432 women stu-<lb/>
dents. With the entrance leading<lb/>
into a one-floor reception room<lb/>
and foyer, it will have rooms for<lb/>
students which will measure 15'4"<lb/>
x 12'9 There will be two elevat-<lb/>
ors located centrally between the<lb/>
wings, and a basement for a rec-<lb/>
reation lounge and storage space.<lb/>
Financing the new building is<lb/>
the U. SL Housing and Home Fi-<lb/>
nance Agency. They will be paid<lb/>
back with the money collected for<lb/>
rental fees.<lb/>
activities for men donroitory resi-<lb/>
dents was made possible by the In-<lb/>
terdormitory Council and the Ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Co-ed Visitation means that<lb/>
women students will be able to<lb/>
visit the men's dormitories on<lb/>
Wednesday and Friday nights from<lb/>
7:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. and on<lb/>
Sunday afternoons from 12:00 ip.m.<lb/>
until 6:00 p.m. A jukebox is being<lb/>
installed in the recreation room<lb/>
of New Dorm, and dancing will be<lb/>
permitted in this area. In Aycock<lb/>
Dorm ping-pong tables have been<lb/>
set up, and televisions are avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
A set of rules has been drawn<lb/>
up which everyone must obey if<lb/>
this Co-ed Visitation program is<lb/>
to be successful. These rules are<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
1. Women students will be al-<lb/>
lowed in the men's dormitories on<lb/>
Wednesday and Friday nights from<lb/>
7:00 p.m. until 10:00 p.m. and on<lb/>
Sunday afternoons from 12:00 p.m.<lb/>
until 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
2. Women students will only<lb/>
be allowed downstairs in the rec-<lb/>
reation rooms of New Dorm and<lb/>
Aycock Dormitory.<lb/>
3. Men should dress in school<lb/>
clothes if they plan to be in either<lb/>
of these areas at times when women<lb/>
students are visiting.<lb/>
4. Men should remember that<lb/>
women students may be present<lb/>
at any of these times and should<lb/>
conduct themselves accordingly.<lb/>
5. Dormitory counselors, floor<lb/>
proctors, and IDC chaperones will<lb/>
be present whenever women stu-<lb/>
dents are visiting the dormitories.<lb/>
6. Chaperones will have the<lb/>
authority to ask anyone to leave<lb/>
at any time they deem it necessary.<lb/>
EC Initiates 2-Year Program<lb/>
For Psychology M. A. Degree<lb/>
East Carolina College will initi-<lb/>
ate at the beginning of the spring<lb/>
quarter a two-year program lead-<lb/>
ing to the degree of master of arts<lb/>
in clincal psychology.<lb/>
Dr. Clinton Prewettt, Director of<lb/>
the Psychology Department, an-<lb/>
nounces that the N. C. State Board<lb/>
of Health has provided a sum of<lb/>
$3,600 to be used for the develop-<lb/>
ment of this program.<lb/>
According to an agreement with<lb/>
the State Board of Health, EC will<lb/>
develop a curriculum appropriate<lb/>
for such a degree, and include as<lb/>
rarlt of the two-year program a<lb/>
six-months clinical internship.<lb/>
The Pitt County Mental Health<lb/>
Clinic will iptrovide opportunity for<lb/>
the students in the program to gain<lb/>
experience as interns. Dr. Thomas<lb/>
Long, Clinical Psychologist at the<lb/>
clinic will direct the work of in-<lb/>
terns.<lb/>
The program is being established<lb/>
to meet the need of a greater num-<lb/>
ber of clinical psychologists in<lb/>
North Carolina and to increase the<lb/>
clinical psychological services<lb/>
available in the state. Dr. Prewett<lb/>
will direct the new program with<lb/>
the assistance of Dr. John Clarke<lb/>
and Dr. Albert V. Griffith.<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
Walter Faulkner, Editor of<lb/>
the BUCCANEER requests<lb/>
that all honorary fraternities<lb/>
turn in to him by Friday an al-<lb/>
phabetical list of their mem-<lb/>
bers if they wish to have the<lb/>
pictures in the yearbook.<lb/>
The Freshman Dance, form-<lb/>
erly scheduled for this week<lb/>
has been postponed until next<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Famous Group<lb/>
Receives Title<lb/>
Of 'Elite In Jazz9<lb/>
This Thursday night EC stu-<lb/>
dents, faculty, and a few off-cam-<lb/>
pus people who were lucky enough<lb/>
to obtain tickets will be enter-<lb/>
tained by the music of the world-<lb/>
renowned Dave Brubeck Quartet.<lb/>
This amazing group evolved from<lb/>
the Dave Brubeck Trio in 1951 to<lb/>
take high, higher, and then high-<lb/>
est honors in jazz polls such as the<lb/>
recent ones in "Down Beat" and<lb/>
"Playboy Those are just two or-<lb/>
ganizations whose readers have<lb/>
elected them the elite in the jazz<lb/>
world. In recent years, they have<lb/>
corned practically every award<lb/>
given to men in their field, as a<lb/>
group and as individuals.<lb/>
Of the many Brubeck albums,<lb/>
one seems to have appeared by ac-<lb/>
cident. On a trip through Disney-<lb/>
land, Dave discovered that many<lb/>
of the Disney themes were ones<lb/>
which had been in his repertoire<lb/>
for quite some time. Several long-<lb/>
distant telephone calls later, and<lb/>
an album was in the making. The<lb/>
end result was an album appro-<lb/>
priately entitled "Dave Digs Dis-<lb/>
ney" which opens with a Brubeck<lb/>
version of "Alice in Wonderland"<lb/>
and closes with"One Song<lb/>
Paul Desmond, composer of<lb/>
"Take Five came to the Dave<lb/>
Brubeck Trio and added his alto<lb/>
sax in 1951. Thus, the Dave Bru-<lb/>
beck Quartet was born. Desmond's<lb/>
first meeting with Brubeck was<lb/>
when they were in the Army. "I<lb/>
remember the first tune we play-<lb/>
ed was Rosetta says Paul. "I<lb/>
was really dazzled by his (Bru-<lb/>
beck's) harmonic approach Aside<lb/>
from his numerous albums with<lb/>
Brubeck, Desmond has a new one<lb/>
out with Gerry Mulligan entitled<lb/>
"Two of a Kind.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Joe Morello, one of the greatest<lb/>
drummers of all time, joined the<lb/>
Brubeck organization in 1956. Joe<lb/>
has brought more than one audience<lb/>
to its feet in wild enthusiasm,<lb/>
paying tribute to his amazing speed<lb/>
and musical ability. Critics and<lb/>
audiences agree that he is perhaps<lb/>
the most exciting drummer in the<lb/>
country, with a pair of the fast-<lb/>
est hands ever to hold drum sticks.<lb/>
In "Take Five" it is interesting to<lb/>
note how Morello creates intricate<lb/>
and often startling counter-pat-<lb/>
terns over the rigid 5-4 pulse.<lb/>
The most recent figure to record<lb/>
with Bruibeck, Gene Wright joined<lb/>
as bass player in 1958 just prior<lb/>
to their history-making tour of<lb/>
Eurasia under the sponsorship of<lb/>
tlie IT. S. State Department. An<lb/>
outstanding player, the Chicago-<lb/>
born Wright has been featured<lb/>
with Count Basic, Cal Tjader, and<lb/>
Red Norvo before his association<lb/>
with Brubeck.<lb/>
No jazz group has ihad a more<lb/>
distinguished career than the Dave<lb/>
Brubeck Quartet. The audience<lb/>
response wherever they play easily<lb/>
explains their reputation and<lb/>
unique position in the musical<lb/>
world.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038792_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
1<lb/>
Tuesday, Jar<lb/>
LABOR<lb/>
Irresponsible, Unrealistic<lb/>
Kennedy's outburst last year when "big steel" tried<lb/>
to raise prices by pennies to meet modernizatron costs<lb/>
caused even avowed liberals to shiver at the powers the<lb/>
man wielded. One of the coercive weapons he employed<lb/>
to enforce his demands was the threat of investigation<lb/>
and prosecution for possible violation of the Sherman<lb/>
Antitrust Act. If business can be prosecuted for banding<lb/>
together to accomplish something it wants (and accord-<lb/>
ing to many economists needs), why should not some<lb/>
similar law be passed to restrict the activities of ir-<lb/>
responsible labor coalitions? Or in such rare cases where<lb/>
laws do exist, why are they not invoked?<lb/>
Consideration of a case in point, the long-run New<lb/>
York newspaper strike, demonstrates the relevancy of<lb/>
this question. On December 8 the leaders of typographi-<lb/>
cal Union Local 6 initiated a strike that through union<lb/>
cooperation has idled 20,000 people. The true basis of<lb/>
the dispute is the refusal of union leaders to discuss what<lb/>
they call two "retrogressive" proposals of the pub-<lb/>
lishers. The publishers seek the use of teletypesetter<lb/>
tape to set stock tables and they seek to dispense with<lb/>
some of the "bogus" work now being done. The first of<lb/>
these proposals would eliminate a few typesetters; the<lb/>
second would eliminate needless featherbedding. Both<lb/>
seem to the layman to correspond to sound business<lb/>
principles.<lb/>
But apparently sound business principles no longer<lb/>
exist as adequate motives for even moderate proposals<lb/>
by an employer. He must be ruled by the irrational<lb/>
caprice of the union. An irrational caprice which, in this<lb/>
case, will certainly force at least one of the less affluent<lb/>
New York papers to fold, and has already been respon-<lb/>
sible for paper mills in the Scandinavian countries shut-<lb/>
ting down.<lb/>
Yet the government does nothing, and their lack of<lb/>
action in such cases where the national economy is not<lb/>
directly threatened seems almost to sanction caprice<lb/>
and inefficiency. But business cannot continue to skip<lb/>
merily along under the rigors of inefficiency. This is<lb/>
already evident in the case of railroads, and it will be-<lb/>
come evident in more businesses as the specter of auto-<lb/>
mation drives more and more unions to strike. The<lb/>
possible results are appalling, because only one or-<lb/>
ganization exists that can afford to pay men to do work<lb/>
made unnecessary by an ever improving technology?<lb/>
the U. S. government.<lb/>
Where will it all end? Will the government event-<lb/>
ually take over the press as it will probably take over the<lb/>
railroads. Or will the inefficiency-loving unions drive<lb/>
smaller newspapers out of business until the complete<lb/>
concentration of the free press makes it no longer a free<lb/>
press? Neither possibility is inviting. Unions were orig-<lb/>
inally formed to protect employees from the exploita-<lb/>
tion of employers. It seems now that we need to pro-<lb/>
tect the employers from the exploitation of the unions.<lb/>
If these unions irresponsibly refuse to be realistic, and<lb/>
no law exists to force them to be realistic, then we sug-<lb/>
gest that such a law should be passed and enforced.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolinas Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
x:W:W: ???<lb/>
editor<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
junius d. grimes m<lb/>
keith hobbs<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Mailing Address: Box 1063, East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6101, extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.50 per year<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Tues. 22?Physical Education Club, GYM, 6:30 pjn.<lb/>
?Mardd Gras Entry Deadline Meeting, CU TV Room, 7:00<lb/>
pjQft.<lb/>
Pitt Theatre: 'Doctors in Love<lb/>
?State Theatre: "Jumbo<lb/>
Wed. 23?Duplicate Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjn.<lb/>
?EAST CAROLINIAN reorganizational staff meeting, 4:00<lb/>
p.m third floor Wright Building, all interested persons<lb/>
invited.<lb/>
?Science Club, Flanagan 317, 7:30 p.m "Student Activities<lb/>
at the Marine Biology Lab, Cape Cod, Mass<lb/>
?Basketball Game: EC Frosh vs. Wilmington! Junior College,<lb/>
8:00 p.m Gym.<lb/>
?Math Departmental Meeting, Austin, 6:30 pirn.<lb/>
Thur. 24?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjm.<lb/>
?Chapel Services, Y Hut, 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
?Dave Brubeck Concert, SGA Enteirtainsnent Series, "Down-<lb/>
beat" Awards, Gym, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
State Theatre: "Carry On Teacher<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Boccaccio 70<lb/>
jYi. 25?Movie: "State Fair" with Pat Boone, Austin, 7:00 pjn.<lb/>
gat. 26?Basketball Game: EC vs. Oglethorp, 7:30 pjn Gym.<lb/>
Sun. 27?State Theatre: "White Slave Ship<lb/>
Mon. 28?CU Bowling League, Hillcrest Lanes, 4:00 pjn.<lb/>
Tues. 29?Carnival Eentry Meeting, CU Office, 7:00 pjn.<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Gune of Navarone<lb/>
? <lb/>
<lb/>
mm<lb/>
t ? '? ??-??"? ?-  -  ' "issSS<lb/>
Globe Trotting <lb/>
??????it<lb/>
Say Pepsi Please<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
hummmmm with Tabibzadeh and Bede<lb/>
Not too long before I left the<lb/>
land of my fathers in order to ob-<lb/>
tain a worthy education in the<lb/>
U. S introduction of a new pro-<lb/>
duct had aroused the curosity and<lb/>
expectations of the people. One<lb/>
day I observed a fellow citizen<lb/>
and an American placing hand-<lb/>
somely pi-epared posters in a deli-<lb/>
catessen. The poster showed a beau-<lb/>
tiful girly, properly exhibiting her<lb/>
curves, drinking Pepsi Cola. In the<lb/>
lower part of the poster, a few<lb/>
words urg-ed the imediate consump-<lb/>
tion of Pepsi Cola.<lb/>
This poster, along with many<lb/>
more varied ones, appeared in all<lb/>
public places, as well as daily and<lb/>
weekly publications. The local ra-<lb/>
dio network announced the coming<lb/>
of this refreshment and that served<lb/>
as a great introducer, or inducer.<lb/>
The method of advertisement was<lb/>
unique and its effects were great.<lb/>
Peope could hardly wait any longer<lb/>
for this well publicized drink.<lb/>
The man who was to bring the<lb/>
product to the markest was a very<lb/>
wealthy man; we will refer to him<lb/>
as the Tycoon. He had little trouble<lb/>
in transacting the contracts abroad<lb/>
since he was a sound creditor in<lb/>
the U. S. as well as at home. His<lb/>
problems at home were even less<lb/>
minute. He had friends who were<lb/>
always influential, although some-<lb/>
times needy, and he seemed willing<lb/>
to give for a good cause. His own<lb/>
construction company built the bot-<lb/>
tling plant, his Studebaker dealer-<lb/>
ship (the only one in the country).<lb/>
pTovdded the trucks for distribu-<lb/>
tion, and his other enterprises<lb/>
coupled together to make his task<lb/>
an easy one.<lb/>
The hot June day that the pro-<lb/>
duct was brought to the market<lb/>
was unique in the city's business<lb/>
history. That is, of course, how a<lb/>
group of ignoramouses had been<lb/>
so induced to go out of their way<lb/>
to purchase a product totally un-<lb/>
necessary. A refreshing drink<lb/>
which was still hot since they were<lb/>
being sold as rapidly as they could<lb/>
be unloaded from the trucks. The<lb/>
long line of people could have ob-<lb/>
(tained a much more refreshing<lb/>
drink for exactly the same price<lb/>
?cold beer.<lb/>
?Sales rocketed to new heights.<lb/>
Everybody wanted to taste Pepsi.<lb/>
It became fashionable to drink it.<lb/>
People of means ordered Pepsi by<lb/>
the case and drank it in the pri-<lb/>
vacy of their homes. Those less<lb/>
fortunate bought it from the vend-<lb/>
or on the sidewalk. They all said<lb/>
"Pepsi and only a few said "Pep-<lb/>
si .please Everyone gave his opin-<lb/>
ion after a drink. They musi have<lb/>
all said good things, since they<lb/>
continued to drink it.<lb/>
The spirit of private enterprise<lb/>
was at work. The rich were getting<lb/>
richer and poor kept on drinking<lb/>
Pepsi. Other soft drink producers<lb/>
who were doing rather well before<lb/>
Pe.tsi could not take the competi-<lb/>
tion anymore. IS i nee they knew<lb/>
little economics and little about the<lb/>
science of advertising, they were<lb/>
easily eliminated from the marked<lb/>
One producer whose plant was in<lb/>
the basement of his home got a<lb/>
job at the Pepsi Cola bottling<lb/>
plant after his business folded.<lb/>
Others had more fighting blood in<lb/>
them and fought back. One of them<lb/>
hired a chemist to imitate the form-<lb/>
ula, but the influential friends of<lb/>
the Tycoon easily discovered and<lb/>
annihilated the threat. A more<lb/>
imaginative and desperate com-<lb/>
petitor went to great expense to<lb/>
horde Pepsi bottles in order to re-<lb/>
duce production. Pepsi Cola bottles<lb/>
were ordered by long distance tele-<lb/>
phone and flown in immediately<lb/>
from the U. S. Another competitor,<lb/>
who must have indeed possessed a<lb/>
wicked mind, bribed a few religious<lb/>
leaders to attack the product. These<lb/>
men of God informed their congre-<lb/>
gations that the Pepsi f ormoila was<lb/>
originally put together by Chris-<lb/>
tians and another religious minor-<lb/>
ity was distributing it in a Moslem<lb/>
country; henceforth, drinking Pep-<lb/>
si was declared an unforgivable<lb/>
sin for a good Moslem. This at-<lb/>
tempt was also a failure, since<lb/>
the religious leaders had earlier<lb/>
themselves and needed exe-<lb/>
sold<lb/>
cutive assistance to enforce their<lb/>
declaration. The Influential friends<lb/>
of the Tycoon were indeed a great<lb/>
help in this instance. Some dreamed<lb/>
of proper legislation or indirect<lb/>
governmental asistance to help<lb/>
them compete with the giant. Ty-<lb/>
coon's influential friends had long<lb/>
turned thfe possibility into an im-<lb/>
possibility.<lb/>
All these small competitors fail-<lb/>
ed in this miracle of free enter-<lb/>
prise. The Tycoon, on the other<lb/>
hand, expanded his enterprises. He<lb/>
is the sole importer of fine Euro-<lb/>
Library Dispk<lb/>
"President Lincoln JI<lb/>
preliminary Bmancip?wT 1<lb/>
nation Sept. 2, 1862. Qa '<lb/>
L86S, he followed viriUj h <lb/>
ration declaring that aij <lb/>
areas still in rebellion we v<lb/>
thenceforth, and forever f J<lb/>
2n k<lb/>
<lb/>
Thus reads the card<lb/>
I ibrary dispay cai<lb/>
Periodically tb :ry j<lb/>
lively displays  <lb/>
events or person f hist<lb/>
rificanoe. The one rn 1<lb/>
play tells of tl ?? J<lb/>
in the freeing of the siav?7j<lb/>
this, the 100th an viry0y<lb/>
freedom.<lb/>
Along with a boo . <lb/>
rnai illustrating e , aRn J<lb/>
trade, there is a p hiionl<lb/>
Lincoln from h r"<lb/>
?-enville, Kentu kj Peerm<lb/>
1800 until the i rf the<lb/>
cipation Proclamation.<lb/>
Also on display are 8CTttllj<lb/>
lustrations from recent peri<lb/>
with fpicuires of Uaeoh<lb/>
about emancipation, and detA<lb/>
observance of the vahvtm<lb/>
Aupmrwntinfc tho a photo<lb/>
ropy of two etoriea abovt th??<lb/>
which appeared in the Jama<lb/>
1863 Issue of Th New YorkT;<lb/>
Indoctrinated<lb/>
With Hippies<lb/>
(ACP) THE DA<lb/>
LE, Louisiana S<lb/>
Baton Rouge, !???<lb/>
mimber of etadi<lb/>
Most smoke1 -icere, ori-<lb/>
ented people v.<lb/>
want and bow<lb/>
Some smok-<lb/>
some before and. for n I<lb/>
ing: IS their N re affl<lb/>
ted to being a<lb/>
they felt they <lb/>
sure to amoke ar. I<lb/>
strictly voluntary<lb/>
Since bis first<lb/>
school, the<lb/>
plagued with i:<lb/>
him by hi gre '<lb/>
non-smoker. F<lb/>
but a small m I 'y and ?<lb/>
threat to the advancement ??<lb/>
irrg<lb/>
The number of pers ns ?<lb/>
cigarettes today is impart) I<lb/>
history; their number are ?<lb/>
less, and the result of it all i<lb/>
to perdict: Eve: ' :<lb/>
will be a smoker.<lb/>
Children will be in k-ctrinatfi<lb/>
birth by replacing fitoen f<lb/>
rettes with rabies. N I<lb/>
signs will be replaced by "<lb/>
smoldnfr sijerns. Univen w<lb/>
other social organizntion ??<lb/>
it a prerequisite that all their<lb/>
dents smoke, and will be w1<lb/>
until they do. Fraternities ?<lb/>
rorities will ban from nx&amp;fc<lb/>
any pledge whose fingers are<lb/>
nicotine-atained.<lb/>
pean and American automotf<lb/>
a host of various goods, both<lb/>
essary and Tory unnecessary<lb/>
to his efforts and the ?<lb/>
others like him, many infan: <lb/>
have ceased to exist. His cottf<lb/>
balance of trade is a sad joke-<lb/>
United States is pourin? in<lb/>
eigrn aM to balance the ?<lb/>
and prevent Soveit domin<lb/>
His influential friends an? <lb/>
toff their accounts with this<lb/>
thy source of hard currency <lb/>
it to remain Influential, h<lb/>
neantkne, everybody continJ<lb/>
drink Pepei and wonder "hy"<lb/>
We setting scarce.<lb/>
East Carolinian organizational Staff HeoHi"<lb/>
May, 4:00 p.m Third Floor Wright NMi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038792_0003"/><lb/>
V January 22 1963<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Pa?e I<lb/>
Quiet, Refined Tradition<lb/>
:m of Rathskeller is done in rustic German style with exposed beams and wooden tables com-<lb/>
a b chairs of the same period. Criss-crossed boards on wall are offset by heraldic crests.<lb/>
Rathskeller Opens Thursday;<lb/>
Copies Original German Design<lb/>
Rathskeller<lb/>
I for a iae<lb/>
officials. The new<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
ed in i mi-<lb/>
ni Rath-<lb/>
Li1 n St in son<lb/>
Gr lie Rath<lb/>
I tradi-<lb/>
implies. The<lb/>
11:00 am<lb/>
I will<lb/>
dating<lb/>
? in<lb/>
bsic and<lb/>
provided<lb/>
 the<lb/>
promote and maintain an estab-<lb/>
lishment of dignity, dress, and en-<lb/>
joyment Mr. Stinson hopes through<lb/>
the idealization of these ambitions<lb/>
to gve to EC and Greenville an<lb/>
asset it has long- needed.<lb/>
Music School Members<lb/>
Perform In New Bern<lb/>
Faculty members and students<lb/>
of the School of Music at East<lb/>
Carolina College, representing the<lb/>
Greenville Music Club, gave a pro-<lb/>
gram before the St. Cecilia Music<lb/>
Club in New Bern Monday in the<lb/>
Maola Company auditorium at 8:30<lb/>
p.m. Bdbh vocal and instrumental<lb/>
music was featured.<lb/>
The recital was an exchange pro-<lb/>
gram between the Greenville and<lb/>
the New Bern music clubs. Last<lb/>
November musicians from New<lb/>
Bern performed for the group here.<lb/>
Monday's program included two<lb/>
Schubert impromptus played by<lb/>
Elizabeth Drake, pianist; and a<lb/>
concertino for trumpet by Kenneth<lb/>
Garris, accompanied oy Sandra<lb/>
Willoughby, pianist.<lb/>
Dr. Carl T. Hjortsvang, tenor,<lb/>
and Jane Murray, contralto, each<lb/>
presented a group of songs. Mrs.<lb/>
Eleanor Toll accompanied Dr.<lb/>
Hjortsvang.<lb/>
School Official Attend<lb/>
Jan. Superintendent Seminar<lb/>
.<lb/>
? agement ra-<lb/>
th the college<lb/>
an attempt to J<lb/>
5 Credit Union<lb/>
'ays Dividend<lb/>
lend of five per<lb/>
has been de-<lb/>
-ts of the Credit<lb/>
?nt came at the<lb/>
of Credit Union<lb/>
I in the Library,<lb/>
It was made by<lb/>
" W. Williams of the<lb/>
?  ailment, 1962<lb/>
" e organization.<lb/>
ceed Dr. Williams<lb/>
te Dr. Charles Price,<lb/>
of the Social Stud-<lb/>
 and Secretary of<lb/>
1962. New Sec-<lb/>
?5 tlter Talhoun and Vice-<lb/>
Ralrh Brimley.<lb/>
?" Saturday marks the<lb/>
ond full year of<lb/>
" the Credit Union, in<lb/>
Hip is open to all<lb/>
loyeeB of the College.<lb/>
not eligible for mem-<lb/>
Last Thursday more than 25<lb/>
school officials from eastern count-<lb/>
ies of the state gathered on our<lb/>
tipns to participate in the Jan-<lb/>
uary Seminar for School Superin-<lb/>
tendents.<lb/>
One of a series of monthly study<lb/>
programs on school problems held<lb/>
mder the direction of Dr. Ral;tfi<lb/>
Brimley of the Department of Edu-<lb/>
cation, Thursday's seminar included<lb/>
discussions of programmed learn-<lb/>
ing, world affairs, and planning<lb/>
and maintenance of school build-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
As the seminar opened in the<lb/>
Raul building Thursday morning,<lb/>
Dr. Douglas Jones, Director of the<lb/>
Department of Education, present-<lb/>
ed a discussion of programmed<lb/>
learning, a type of study which<lb/>
allows the student to proceed at<lb/>
his own pace of learning. Dr.<lb/>
Charles Price, speaker at a lunch-<lb/>
eon meeting, directed attention to<lb/>
world problems, with emphasis on<lb/>
the split between Russia and Red<lb/>
China.<lb/>
The afternoon program was de-<lb/>
voted to (problems of building and<lb/>
maintenance. Dr. Brimley discus-<lb/>
sing "Unusual Maintenance Prob-<lb/>
lems delt with boilers, water<lb/>
tanks, and other school equipment.<lb/>
Assistant Superintendent Paul<lb/>
Tyndall of Onslow County Schools<lb/>
presented plans of the new admini-<lb/>
stration building for Onslow Coun-<lb/>
ty schools. Superintendent H. S.<lb/>
Browning of Wilson County Schools<lb/>
showed and discussed a scale model<lb/>
of a new school bus garage for<lb/>
his area.<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pi<lb/>
Pledges Eleven<lb/>
Business Majors<lb/>
Delta Sigma Pi, international<lb/>
'business fraternity, initiated eleven<lb/>
new pledges Thursday night, Jan-<lb/>
uary 17. These pledges were select-<lb/>
ed from the male business majors.<lb/>
They are as follows: Jerry Fowler,<lb/>
Joe Johnson, Delano Long, Dick<lb/>
Holbert, Bob Edwards, Wayne<lb/>
Cook, Jim Rabon, Daniel Griffin,<lb/>
Dan Guy, Bill Dean, and Steve<lb/>
Frazier.<lb/>
The purpose of this fraternity<lb/>
is to encourage scholarship, to en-<lb/>
courage social activities, and to en-<lb/>
courage the association of students<lb/>
for their mutual advancement by<lb/>
research and practice.<lb/>
m tn paying interest to<lb/>
"n money invested, the<lb/>
purpose of the Union is<lb/>
Credit available to rte mem-<lb/>
reasonable terms. In-<lb/>
kntfita on deposits and<lb/>
 abo provided.<lb/>
rf the Credit Union nre<lb/>
J8 &amp;e Mathematics De-<lb/>
M<lb/>
tn,<lb/>
erit<lb/>
Treasurer and in<lb/>
the operations of the<lb/>
Nation.<lb/>
DIAMONDS WHOLESALE?<lb/>
Yes our diamond prices are below the wholesale price<lb/>
you'would pay if you bought your diamond from a<lb/>
wholesale catalog or any wholesale source.<lb/>
We buy our diamonds direct from a diamond cutter,<lb/>
and because we have our own grading facilities, our<lb/>
quality is usually better that that of stones from the<lb/>
above sources.<lb/>
We have special credit terms available for ECC stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Lautares Bros.<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
Registered Jewelers AGS<lb/>
George Lautares, E. C. C, Class '41<lb/>
MX<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
with<lb/>
MaxQhuIman<lb/>
w (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many<lb/>
 Loves of Dobie GUlis etc.)<lb/>
CALPURNIA, HERE I COME<lb/>
Now, as the college year approaches its mid-point, one fact<lb/>
emerges clearly: you are all going to flunk everything.<lb/>
There are two things you can do about it. First, you can<lb/>
marry money. (I don't mean you marry the money itself; I<lb/>
mean you marry a person who has money. Weddings between<lb/>
people and currency have not been legal anywhere in the United<lb/>
States since the Smoot-Hawley Act. Marlboro Cigarettes, on<lb/>
the other hand, are legal everywhere and are, indeed, smoked<lb/>
with great pleasure and enthusiasm in all fifty states of the<lb/>
Union. I bring up Marlboro Cigarettes because this column is<lb/>
sponsored by the makers of Marlboro, and they are inclined to<lb/>
brood if I omit to mention their product.)<lb/>
But I digress. I was saying you can marry money but, of<lb/>
course, you will not because you are a high-minded, clean-<lb/>
living, pure-hearted, freckle-faced American kid. Therefore, to<lb/>
keep from flunking, you must try the second method: you must<lb/>
learn how to take lecture notes.<lb/>
According to a recent survey, 123.6 of American uader-<lb/>
graduates do not know the proper way to take lecture notes. To<lb/>
illustrate this shocking statistic, let us suppose you are taking<lb/>
a course in history. Let us further suppose the lecturer is lec-<lb/>
turing on the ruling houses of England. You listen intently. You<lb/>
write diligently in your notebook, making a topic outline as you<lb/>
have been taught. Like this:<lb/>
I. House of Plantagenet.<lb/>
II. House of Lancaster.<lb/>
III. House of York.<lb/>
Then you stop. You put aside your pen. You blink back a<lb/>
tear, for you cannot go on. Oh, yes, you know very well that the<lb/>
next ruling house is the House of Tudor. The trouble is you<lb/>
don't know the Roman numeral that comes after III.<lb/>
(It may, incidentally, be of some historical interest to point<lb/>
out that Americans are not the only people who don't know<lb/>
Roman numerals. The Romans didn't know them themselves.<lb/>
I suppose they could tell you how much V or X were or like<lb/>
that, but when it came to real euties like LXI or MMC, they<lb/>
just flang away their styluses and went downtown to have a<lb/>
bath and take in a circus and maybe stab Caesar a few times.<lb/>
(You may wonder why Rome stuck with these ridiculous<lb/>
numerals when the Arabs had such a nice, simple system. Well<lb/>
sir, the fact is that the Emperor Vespasian tried like crazy to<lb/>
buy the Arabic numerals from Suleiman the Magnificent, but<lb/>
Suleiman wouldn't do business?not even when Vespasian<lb/>
raised his bid to 100,000 gold piastres, plus he offered to throw<lb/>
in the Colosseum, the Appian Way, and Charlton Heston.<lb/>
(So Rome stuck with Roman numerals?to its sorrow, as it<lb/>
turned out. One day in the Forum, Cicero and Pliny got to<lb/>
arguing about how much is CDL times MVIX. Well sir, pretty<lb/>
soon everyone in town came around to join the hassle. In all<lb/>
the excitement, nobody remembered to lock the north gate and<lb/>
?wham!?before you could say pecca fortiter, in rushed the<lb/>
Goths, the Visigoths, and the Green Bay Packers!)<lb/>
Well sir, that's the way the empire crumbles, and I digress.<lb/>
Let's get back to lecture notes. Let's also say a word about<lb/>
Marlboro Cigarettes. The makers would be so pleased! And is<lb/>
it not fitting that we should please these honest tobacconists?<lb/>
these fine men, fond of square dancing, water sports, protein,<lb/>
and tattoos?these tireless perfectionists who spend all of their<lb/>
days trying to please us?searching everywhere for the best of<lb/>
all possible tobaccos, aging them with patience, blending them<lb/>
witn tender, loving care? Marlboros are available in soft pack<lb/>
and flip top box. You will find XX cigarettes in each package.<lb/>
m mm mm ??<lb/>
 <lb/>
Marlborum onto, Tom Marlborum amat, Dick Marlborum<lb/>
amat, Harry Marlborum amat, June Marlborum amat,<lb/>
Joan Marlborum amat, Jean Marlborum amat, Jane Marl-<lb/>
borum amat, quiqu Marlborum amant?et Marlborum<lb/>
quoque amabituu<lb/>
<pb facs="00038792_0004"/><lb/>
Pae 4<lb/>
AST CAROLINI A N<lb/>
Tuesday, J<lb/>
ORTS REVIEW<lb/>
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE<lb/>
Over 350 people attended the 1962 Pirate Football Ban-<lb/>
quet at the South Cafeteria. Some of the interesting words<lb/>
spoken can give a person something- to think about.<lb/>
It was interesting to hear a winning coach talk about<lb/>
loosing. John McKenna, head football coach at VMI, said<lb/>
that the coach is similar to any other teacher in college.<lb/>
The only difference is he teaches on the football field in-<lb/>
stead of the classroom. His subject is football. What he<lb/>
hopes to communicate to his "class" is the fundamentals of<lb/>
the game. With this will also come a development of the<lb/>
characteristics that are essential in the world today?mental<lb/>
adjustment, emotional stability, physical conditioning, and<lb/>
spirit and desire.<lb/>
We believe that these attributes are wli worth having<lb/>
on any campus in the country. This is something practical<lb/>
that can be used when a person gets out of college, and as<lb/>
a whole can contribute more than most of the courses that<lb/>
a student takes during the period where he gets his degree.<lb/>
An interesting note: When General McArthur was<lb/>
made head of West Point, he instituted the rule that each<lb/>
cadet had to compete in athletics during his four years at<lb/>
the Academy. This has paid dividends, not only to the school,<lb/>
but to the country as a whole.<lb/>
<lb/>
At this banquet. Coach Stasavich stressed the fact<lb/>
that although he was looking: forward to the game with<lb/>
Wake Forest next fall, the major aim of the Pirates will be<lb/>
the University of Richmond. Richmond beat the Pirates<lb/>
last year by one point 27-26. A victory over Richmond would<lb/>
mean a great deal to the Pirates chances for entrance in the<lb/>
Southern Conference. A victory over Wake Forest would<lb/>
just be a prestige victory. It would show that the Pirates<lb/>
are ready to play a major college schedule. The victory<lb/>
over Richmond might enable us to play a "big-league"<lb/>
schedule, and be associated with a major conference.<lb/>
Martinez Rates Pirate Swimmers<lb/>
Best Team In School's History<lb/>
"Finest team we've had by far separated at the finish line by only<lb/>
AJVVy ???? V<lb/>
West, Brogden Spark Pirat<lb/>
Victory Over Richmond 62<lb/>
VI<lb/>
f c shots for a 33.6 per , Parker<lb/>
The Pirates recorded their third with ?! of d did a Uttle Know.<lb/>
cent mark I 20 of 56 Otte<lb/>
KT?rtol?? On fc-IWJIta-<lb/>
shots or 6b.( P?r<lb/>
shoot, the Pirates hit 18 of 22<lb/>
?d the Spiders hit 10 of 14.<lb/>
.Richmond held an ?T<lb/>
Pirates in rebooting. 6-6 Tom<lb/>
?Twick pulled in 16 of the Spider h<lb/>
ctory in four Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence games as they defeated Rich-<lb/>
mond 61-50 at Richmond Satur-<lb/>
day might. The victory gave the<lb/>
Pirates a 9-4 record.<lb/>
Lacy West was high man for<lb/>
both teams as he hit the hoop f or j 46 reboUnds. West grabbed U<lb/>
22 points. Bill Brogden and Bill the pirates total-<lb/>
Coach Ray Martinez described this<lb/>
season's swimming team in a re-<lb/>
cent interview. Indeed, Coach Mar-<lb/>
tinez does have reason to be proud<lb/>
of this team, which he readily des-<lb/>
ignates, "hardest working group<lb/>
since I've been in school here<lb/>
Coach Martinez, who has been at<lb/>
EC for nine years, added, "Every<lb/>
day these boys are swimming bet-<lb/>
ter than they ever have before<lb/>
Coach Martinez is a pleasant,<lb/>
quiet, easy-going person. He is<lb/>
quick to praise his swimmers for<lb/>
their accomplishments, and is al-<lb/>
ways willing' to help his players in<lb/>
any way.<lb/>
"This is the most grueling sport<lb/>
in terms of conditioning Coach<lb/>
Martinez elaborated. He further<lb/>
explained that most of the swim-<lb/>
mers work out twice daily, 7:00 to<lb/>
8:00 A.M. and 3:00 to 5:00 P.M.<lb/>
The swimming season lasts from<lb/>
September through March.<lb/>
This year's roster of Varsity and<lb/>
Freshman teams includes 22 boys.<lb/>
Captain of the team is Ed Zaohau,<lb/>
a senior. Other members are Bob<lb/>
Kingrey, senior; Miles Barefoot,<lb/>
Jim (Roberts and Robert Federici,<lb/>
Juniors; Harry Sober, Jim Somma,<lb/>
Ed Harrington, Douglas Sutton,<lb/>
Bob Bennett, Chuck Norwood, and<lb/>
George Ressegue, sophomores; and<lb/>
Jim Morasco, Paul Donohue, Larry<lb/>
Hewes, John Gaffney, Howard<lb/>
Purser, Dan Vanuk, Neil Satter-<lb/>
white, George Cuanminigs, Clement<lb/>
Templeton, Larry Hewes, and Gary<lb/>
Henson, freshmen. Tom Cox, a<lb/>
sophomore is manager of the team.<lb/>
Full of enthusiasm and hopeful-<lb/>
ness, Tom explains that the 1-2<lb/>
won-lost record EC now holds is<lb/>
not a good indicabor of the type of<lb/>
competition EC has been. EC has<lb/>
won one meet from Davidson, 59-<lb/>
33, and has lost to UNC 58-37, and<lb/>
NC State 58-37. These three teams<lb/>
are rated very highly.<lb/>
NC State counts four All-lAimer-<lb/>
icans and the world's record holder<lb/>
for the butterfly stroke among its<lb/>
players. Many of the races in these<lb/>
first three meets had close finishes<lb/>
or "hand touches In one of the<lb/>
races, all four participants were<lb/>
seconds. The EC team, led by Kin-<lb/>
grey and Morasco, broke State's<lb/>
individual winning streak of 37<lb/>
events in a row.<lb/>
The Varsity meets NC State on<lb/>
January 30 for a rematch. EC's<lb/>
next Varsity game is Thursday,<lb/>
January 17, when the team travels<lb/>
to UNC for what should result in<lb/>
a most competitive meet. The next<lb/>
Freshman game is also at UNC<lb/>
on the preceding evening.<lb/>
The EC swimming team is not<lb/>
in a conference this year. However,<lb/>
since EC does belong to the Nat-<lb/>
ional Collegiate Athletics Associ-<lb/>
ation, EC will be eligible to com-<lb/>
pete in this associaton meets to<lb/>
be held in the NC State pool.<lb/>
To spotlight the most promising<lb/>
members of this team is most dif-<lb/>
ficult. Captain Ed Zachau, who<lb/>
holds the individual Best Medley<lb/>
Relay record, is a very good swim-<lb/>
mei??one who, it might be added,<lb/>
exhibits consuming team spirit and<lb/>
drive. Morasco, a freshman, prom-<lb/>
ises to be good, especially on the<lb/>
breastt stroke. Kingrey, a senior,<lb/>
holds the National Athletic In-<lb/>
tercollegiate Aissociation Diving<lb/>
Championship. Donohue, a fresh-<lb/>
man, promises to be a good diver<lb/>
also. Noted for excellence in the<lb/>
freestyle competition are Sober and<lb/>
Hewes. Purser, also a freshman, is<lb/>
steadily improving.<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
Starts THURSDAY, Jan. 24<lb/>
Otte iboth reached the 10-plus<lb/>
mark. Brogden and Otte scored 16<lb/>
and 13 respectively for the Pi-<lb/>
rates, who never tailed after the<lb/>
early minutes of the contest.<lb/>
After regaining an early 4-2<lb/>
lead from Richmond, the Pirates<lb/>
dominated play unJtdl the final<lb/>
horn. The Spiders kept interest<lb/>
alive as they rallied to eut the<lb/>
Pirate lead to two points at various<lb/>
times throughout the game. The<lb/>
Pirates managed to keep the lead<lb/>
with several quick bursts of points<lb/>
to hold the Spiders in check.<lb/>
The Pirates came back from the<lb/>
dressing room at halftime lead-<lb/>
ing 31-23 only to have the vic-<lb/>
tory-hungry Spiders start cutting<lb/>
away at this margin until the Bucs<lb/>
were ahead 38-36. EC put this<lb/>
threat down by gunning in nine<lb/>
straight points in two minutes to<lb/>
build their lead up to 47-36. West<lb/>
scored five points in this scoring<lb/>
outburst.<lb/>
With 11 minutes left in the<lb/>
game, the Pirates started playing<lb/>
control ball. They froze the ball<lb/>
one one occasion for 4 minutes be-<lb/>
fore West connected on a field<lb/>
goal. The Pirates went on to score<lb/>
a 62-50 win.<lb/>
Neither team had a good night<lb/>
from the floor as far as shooting<lb/>
percentages go. The Bucs connected<lb/>
In the prelim, the Baby Bucs<lb/>
beat the Richmond Frosh 82-71.<lb/>
Neil Hodges led the Baby Buc<lb/>
scoring with 19 points.<lb/>
FC G F T<lb/>
fc q 4-4 22<lb/>
West 9 4 '<lb/>
Brogden<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
Telepo<lb/>
Burton<lb/>
Grods'ki<lb/>
Tenwick<lb/>
Ench<lb/>
Hunt<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
3-D<lb/>
M<lb/>
M<lb/>
M<lb/>
U<lb/>
F<lb/>
0.2<lb/>
<lb/>
3-5<lb/>
EC Loses Swim Meet<lb/>
To Caroli<lb/>
arolina learn 61-3.<lb/>
The Pirate swimmers walked tfce<lb/>
plank at UNC last Thursday as<lb/>
they suffered their second loss of<lb/>
the season 61-34.<lb/>
EC won three firsts in the eleven<lb/>
event match. Bob Kinery's diving<lb/>
form gave the Pirates a first in<lb/>
the diving competition. EC took<lb/>
first place finishes in the 200 But-<lb/>
terfly and the 200 Breast stroke.<lb/>
Bob Federici won the Butterfly in<lb/>
2:12.2, and Jim Maroso took a<lb/>
lirst in the breaststroke at 2:27.4.<lb/>
The UNC tankmen set a new<lb/>
record in the 400 medley as, Mann,<lb/>
Swift, Merrill, and Roberts better-<lb/>
ed the old mark by four-tenths of<lb/>
a second. The winning time was<lb/>
3:51.0.<lb/>
400 medley relay ? UNC (Mann.<lb/>
Swift Merrill, and Roberts) 3:51.0.<lb/>
200 freestyle?1. Adams (UNC);<lb/>
2. Soben (EC); S'chiffnmn (UNC)<lb/>
159.8<lb/>
50 freestyle ? 1. Wood row<lb/>
(UNC); 2<lb/>
vn (EC) 22i<lb/>
200 !?<lb/>
(UNC); 2. Z<lb/>
(EC) 5<lb/>
Diving<lb/>
Donahue I E(<lb/>
24r point<lb/>
200 B<lb/>
(ECU; 2. I<lb/>
not (EC) 2:12.2<lb/>
100 f r. ? '<lb/>
(UNC; 2. Mam LT! ?<lb/>
(EC) 4&amp;A<lb/>
200<lb/>
(UNC: 2. Za .<lb/>
 (BC) I4i<lb/>
500 free <lb/>
2. B ell (UN<lb/>
5.42A<lb/>
200<lb/>
(EC); 2. S ft<lb/>
(EC) 2:27,4.<lb/>
400 fre I<lb/>
Adams, K:<lb/>
(UNC) 3:28.7.<lb/>
Intramural Dept.<lb/>
Sets Deadline<lb/>
Intramural Bowling- will begin<lb/>
Tuesday, January 29. The deadline<lb/>
for entering teams in the Intra-<lb/>
moiral Bowling league has been set<lb/>
for Monday, Jan. 28 at 1:00. For<lb/>
one dollar, each person will receive<lb/>
shoes, three games, and transpor-<lb/>
tation to and from Hillcrest Lanes.<lb/>
The games will be bowled every<lb/>
Tuesday afternoon. Participation<lb/>
points for the Intramural Trophy<lb/>
will total 10 per team.<lb/>
m<lb/>
1<lb/>
SEM<lb/>
ANNUAL<lb/>
A Bold Lool at Love . . .<lb/>
Italian Style<lb/>
In Technicolor<lb/>
Starring<lb/>
SOPHIA LOREN<lb/>
ANITA EKBERG<lb/>
ROMY SCHNEIDER<lb/>
January<lb/>
Clearance Sale<lb/>
In Progress<lb/>
MENS and LADIES<lb/>
Fall and Winter<lb/>
Merchandise<lb/>
REDUCTIONS<lb/>
Up To<lb/>
w<lb/>
2<lb/>
222 East Fifth Street<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
 All Ladies SPORT SHIRTS<lb/>
1-2 Price<lb/>
 A Selected Group of SUITS<lb/>
25 Per Cent Off<lb/>
 A Selected Group of SPORT C0A1<lb/>
25 Per Cent Off<lb/>
? A Group of JACKETS<lb/>
1-3 Off<lb/>
? A Group of PANTS<lb/>
25 Per Cent Off<lb/>
 m m<lb/>
offifii cm&amp;<lb/>
MBNS W<lb/>
-???'?lt?tTr<lb/>
<pb facs="00038792_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>