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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038794_0001"/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
V'ol<lb/>
XXXVIII<lb/>
East Carolina Co liege<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY. JANUARY 29. 19K3<lb/>
Gov. Presents<lb/>
New Interning<lb/>
Number 26<lb/>
s<lb/>
anford, Governor oi X. c. announced in a<lb/>
Leo Jenkins President of EC, that the<lb/>
will conduct a hummer Internship Program<lb/>
?rnment in 196 from June 17 through August<lb/>
X<lb/>
Rainy Weather For Marchathon<lb/>
w ill provide the<lb/>
twenty outstand-<lb/>
nts to work in<lb/>
 State Gov-<lb/>
their work,<lb/>
will have in-<lb/>
I discussion on<lb/>
related prob-<lb/>
na in evening<lb/>
twice a week,<lb/>
le held once a<lb/>
and luncheons<lb/>
e supervision of a<lb/>
and will have<lb/>
? aders, and politi-<lb/>
as guests and re-<lb/>
i e ir ex perie nces<lb/>
: fully on an in-<lb/>
Lnterns will live<lb/>
rmitories at North<lb/>
'? loliege.<lb/>
alify for the In-<lb/>
n, an applicant<lb/>
eted two years<lb/>
ege work and<lb/>
a resident of North<lb/>
enrolled in a<lb/>
educational insti-<lb/>
and professional<lb/>
eligible. A furth-<lb/>
- application is the<lb/>
will be paid<lb/>
fact that interns<lb/>
$75.00 per week.<lb/>
Dr. .lames H. Tucker, Dean of<lb/>
Student Affairs, said that appli-<lb/>
cations are available at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Affairs Office, the College<lb/>
Placement Office, the Student<lb/>
Government Office, and at the of-<lb/>
fices of the Heads of the History,<lb/>
Economics, Business Administra-<lb/>
tion, and Education Departments.<lb/>
All applications must be returned<lb/>
to the (Governor's Office in Raleigh<lb/>
by February 15, 1963, and appli-<lb/>
cants will be notified of their ac-<lb/>
ceptance or rejection by early<lb/>
April. Selection is to be made by<lb/>
a committee which includes promi-<lb/>
nent political scientists teaching<lb/>
in North Carolina.<lb/>
In concluding his letter to Presi-<lb/>
dent Jenkins, Governor Sanford<lb/>
said that the 1962 Summer In-<lb/>
ternship Program was highly suc-<lb/>
cessful aiid that the program seem-<lb/>
ed to him an excellent means of<lb/>
attracting superior students to<lb/>
careers in State Government as<lb/>
well as a remarkable opportunity<lb/>
for able students to learn some-<lb/>
thing of the workings of State<lb/>
Government.<lb/>
Twenty-one members of the AFROTC Drill Team inarched through the streets" Greehf Satur-<lb/>
day m their fourth annual Marchathon for the Pitt County March of Dimes. Although freezing rains<lb/>
halted the march, $806 was collected?$194 short of their goal.<lb/>
Drill Team Holds Marchathon;<lb/>
Collects $806 In Dimes March<lb/>
Freezing rain Saturday marred<lb/>
the Fourth Annual March of Dimes<lb/>
Marchathon of the East Carolina<lb/>
AFROTC Drill Team. Despite a<lb/>
Dr. Judd Announces Lecture Topic;<lb/>
M<lb/>
H. Judd, Republican<lb/>
-man for twenty<lb/>
ithority on U.S.<lb/>
will speak in Aus-<lb/>
tin Auditorium Thursday evening,<lb/>
January 31, at 8:15 p.m. His topic<lb/>
will be "The World Conflict Moves<lb/>
to a climax The program will<lb/>
Dr. Walter H. Judd<lb/>
be open to the public. All faculty,<lb/>
staff, and students are invited to<lb/>
a Social Hour which will be held<lb/>
in Or. Judd's honor at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday in the social rooms of<lb/>
Flanagan Building.<lb/>
As a Congressman, Dr. Judd has<lb/>
served on the Committee on For-<lb/>
eign Affairs, and has played an<lb/>
important role in establishing our<lb/>
relief recovery, re-armament, and<lb/>
economic development programs<lb/>
abroad. He was a delegate to the<lb/>
U.N. General Assembly in 1957,<lb/>
and a delegate to the World Health<lb/>
Organization Assembly in 1950 and<lb/>
1958. In a Congressional poll in<lb/>
1962, he was voted one of the five<lb/>
most influential members of the<lb/>
House of Retresentatives, the only<lb/>
one so named from the minority<lb/>
party.<lb/>
His lecture Thursday is sponsor-<lb/>
ed by the Pitt County Executives<lb/>
Club in conjunction with the Lec-<lb/>
ture Committee. The program will<lb/>
be the first of a series which will<lb/>
include former President Harry S.<lb/>
Truman; the noted author, Harry<lb/>
Golden; and General Carlos Romu-<lb/>
lo, soldier and diplomat. The pre-<lb/>
ceding have acceipted invitations to<lb/>
appear on the lecture series, but<lb/>
no dates have been announced.<lb/>
State Senator R. L. Huanber, Pres-<lb/>
ident of the Executives Club, Dr.<lb/>
John H. Howell, and Ruby E. Edens<lb/>
of the college faculty have worked<lb/>
together in planning the series.<lb/>
Dr. James White chairs the com-<lb/>
mittee in change of arrangements<lb/>
for Dr. Judd's visit.<lb/>
unanimous vote by the twenty-one<lb/>
members of the team to keep on<lb/>
marching the weather forced a<lb/>
halt to the Marchathon.<lb/>
The 1963 Marchathon began at<lb/>
8 a.m. in front of the Pitt County<lb/>
Courthouse, launching another con-<lb/>
tinuous march. Hoping to break all<lb/>
past records of money collected and<lb/>
time marched, the Team was de-<lb/>
termined not to stop because of the<lb/>
rain which began about 1 p.m. Af-<lb/>
:er the Drill Team was required to<lb/>
leave, volunteer cadets, members<lb/>
of the Angel Flight, and the Arnold<lb/>
Air Society remained at their cor-<lb/>
ners to collect money. A total of<lb/>
$806 was collected.<lb/>
In 3pite of the rain and cold<lb/>
weather the spirits of the team<lb/>
seemed high. Smiles were on many<lb/>
of their faces as they marched in<lb/>
formation carrying the nearly ten<lb/>
pound M-l rifles.<lb/>
The EC AFROTC Cadets held<lb/>
their first Machathon in 1960.<lb/>
During a continuous drill of ap-<lb/>
proximately twelve hours, funds<lb/>
for the county March of Dimes<lb/>
were collected. The Marchathon<lb/>
was successfully repeated in 1961<lb/>
and 1962.<lb/>
The Drill Team has been engag-<lb/>
ed in various activities this year,<lb/>
ranging from participating in the<lb/>
Greenville and Bethel Christmas<lb/>
parades, to marching in the EC<lb/>
Homecoming Parade.<lb/>
Traffic Committee Posts<lb/>
Change Ins Regulations<lb/>
The Traffic Committee wishes to<lb/>
call to the attention of the faculty,<lb/>
staff, and all students the follow-<lb/>
ing changes in traffic regulation<lb/>
effective Saturday, February 2,<lb/>
1963:<lb/>
1. Varsity street (between Rawl<lb/>
Building and Wright Building) will<lb/>
be one way going east to the in-<lb/>
tersection of the street on the east<lb/>
side of Rawl Building.<lb/>
2. No traffic or parking will be<lb/>
permitted on that part of North<lb/>
State Avenue between the inter-<lb/>
section of North State Avenue and<lb/>
Student Avenue and the intersec-<lb/>
tion of North State Avenue and<lb/>
Faculty Circle. This is the area of<lb/>
North State Avenue behind Austin<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
3. Parking on Carolina Avenue<lb/>
from the vicinity of Austin Build-<lb/>
ing to Campus Drive is reserved<lb/>
for faculty and staff.<lb/>
4. Parking on Faculty Crrcle<lb/>
between intersections with North<lb/>
State Avenue is reserved for fa-<lb/>
culty and staff.<lb/>
5. The parking lot across Tenth<lb/>
Street from the Gymnasium is re-<lb/>
served for Day Students only.<lb/>
It is hoped that these changes<lb/>
will aid in lessening the traffic<lb/>
problem on campus.<lb/>
Students Attend<lb/>
Rehearsal<lb/>
Of 'Mattress9<lb/>
Ed Loessin, Director of<lb/>
Once Upon A Mattress, has<lb/>
announced that the first<lb/>
three hundred students to<lb/>
present their ID cards at<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium by<lb/>
7:45 p.m Friday, Febru-<lb/>
ary 1, will be privileged to<lb/>
see a preview rehearsal of<lb/>
Once Upon A Mattress,<lb/>
The curtain rises at S:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038794_0002"/><lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
INITIATIVE<lb/>
Many individuals foster loud complaints about the<lb/>
mailed fist the administration supposedly holds over<lb/>
almost all aspects of campus life. The control the admin-<lb/>
istration exercises is hardly anything so cumbrous as<lb/>
a mailed fist; it is exercised cautiously, quietly, and<lb/>
subtley; it is always efficacious. The method most fre-<lb/>
quently takes a form that closely resembles "moral<lb/>
suasion to borrow a term from economics.<lb/>
Close administration control on college campuses<lb/>
is nothing new. It has lessened through the years, but<lb/>
is still exercised on every campus, whether the school<lb/>
is private or sicite supported. Students have agitated<lb/>
for freed . : from this yoke for years, usually couching<lb/>
their protests in the general milieu of the "fight for<lb/>
student rights The majority of this "fight especially<lb/>
a Ea . Carolina, has truly been a tale of sound and fury.<lb/>
Its hollow ineffectiveness stems largely from a failure<lb/>
to consider responsibilities when screaming about rights.<lb/>
The first responsibility of anyone engaged in a<lb/>
dispute should be to discover and interpret the consid-<lb/>
erations that motivate his opponent. Through this<lb/>
knowledge he should learn what to expect and when to<lb/>
expect it. At East Carolina, the pressures of control in-<lb/>
variably loom ominously whenever questions or events<lb/>
arise that might somehow reflect on the good name<lb/>
of the college. This should immediately lead us to con-<lb/>
clude that the considerations of the administration are<lb/>
ideally neither selfish nor petty. They are concerned<lb/>
about the image of the college and its consequent repu-<lb/>
tation, because its continued growth and prosperity de-<lb/>
pend on that image.<lb/>
Our students desire less restraint and more pro-<lb/>
pitious rules on various aspects of campus life. They<lb/>
cry vainly that "If students from Carolina and WC can<lb/>
stay out until one o'clock and have reasonable drinking<lb/>
privileges why can't we? Instead they could quietly<lb/>
move to place East Carolina on a plane in the legislature<lb/>
with other state supported colleges. Probably more than<lb/>
half the present legislature graduated from some branch<lb/>
of the greater university. They are not likely to cut<lb/>
appropriations to their alma mater because of the oc-<lb/>
casional peccadillo of some student. Conversely, many<lb/>
interpret each unfavorable incident about East Caro-<lb/>
lina as indicative of our lack of solidarity, and con-<lb/>
sequently refuse to appropriate much needed money.<lb/>
Legislators from west of Raleigh frequently do not be-<lb/>
lieve that East Carolina exists as a major institution<lb/>
of higher learning in North Carolina. To them we are<lb/>
still a minor teachers college serving the backward<lb/>
eastern areas.<lb/>
What can the individual EC student do? Our parents<lb/>
constitute a considerable portion of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina electorate. Their influence would certainly be felt<lb/>
if we urge them to exert it. We can exert our own in-<lb/>
fluence through letters and personal contacts. We can<lb/>
urge our graduates to support the school and the Alumni<lb/>
Association. Equally important, we can conduct our-<lb/>
selves educationally and socially in the public eye in<lb/>
such fashion as to reflect credit on our school. When we<lb/>
display enough energy and initiative to cement East<lb/>
Carolina's reputation among the colleges of the state,<lb/>
when we convince the public that we are intelligent, in-<lb/>
dustrious students, then it will no longer be necessary<lb/>
that the administration convince the public that we are<lb/>
saints. Perhaps then, when we prove we are ready for<lb/>
it, we can expect a lessening of administrative control.<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Tues. 20?Mental Health Association Meeting, 7:00-10:00 p.m<lb/>
Austin.<lb/>
?Wrestling Match, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Carnival Entry Meeting, CU Office, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Guns of Navarone<lb/>
?State Theatre: "White Slave Ship<lb/>
wed. 30? Duplicate Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Faculty Meeting, 4:00 p.nu, Austin.<lb/>
?Art School Sotpfaomore Meeting, 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Rosemary, 7:30 p,m Austin.<lb/>
Thurs. 31?Reception for Dr. Walter Judd, Flanagan Social Roams,<lb/>
4:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Chi Beta Phi, 317 Flanagan, 7:00 p-m.<lb/>
?Dr. Walter Judd, 8:15 p.m Austin.<lb/>
Fri. 1?Movie: "Madison Avenue Austin, 7:00 pjm.<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Gypsy" with Natalie Woodt<lb/>
Sat. 2?Graduate Business Test, Rawl, 8:00-12:00 noon.<lb/>
?"Once Upon a Mattress 8:16 pjn McGinnis.<lb/>
?.Basketball Game, EC vs. Atlantic Christian, Froeh Game<lb/>
starts at 6:15 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 3?"Once Upon a Mattress<lb/>
Mon. 4?Nurses Club, Rawl, 6:30 pjm.<lb/>
?Faculty Recital, Austin, 7:30 p-niw<lb/>
?"Once Upon a Mattress<lb/>
C ARO LI N IAJ<lb/>
Tuesday, January &amp;<lb/>
?<lb/>
Globe Trotting<lb/>
I His Exhausted Majesty<lb/>
with Tabibzadeh and Bede<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
M<lb/>
????????????<lb/>
Since time immemorial countries<lb/>
have searched to discover methods<lb/>
and means to improve the quali-<lb/>
ties of their respective civil ser-<lb/>
vants. Confucious wrote volumi-<lb/>
nous dissertations regarding the<lb/>
issue and Ottoman emperors own-<lb/>
ed their civil and military service<lb/>
personnel. In every country de-<lb/>
sirable positions were restricted<lb/>
to the unqualified aristocrats who<lb/>
either inherited, bought, or re-<lb/>
ceived them. It was about the late<lb/>
IHh century that appointments be-<lb/>
came based on merit as a solution.<lb/>
Before that time, however, leaders<lb/>
and thinkers alike perceived the<lb/>
problem and sought a solution.<lb/>
One thinker thought of a genu-<lb/>
ine formula in the privacy of his<lb/>
harem. The thinker ? his former<lb/>
Majesty Fatali Shah; his domain<lb/>
?Persia and part of today's Rus-<lb/>
sia; and his discovery ? the con-<lb/>
clusion of an idiot. His majesty<lb/>
was not satisfied with his civil<lb/>
and military servants; his aggra-<lb/>
vation was not due to his corps'<lb/>
inefficiency or poor qualifications<lb/>
since his vocabulary and know-<lb/>
ledge has no associations with<lb/>
these problems. His dissatisfaction<lb/>
laid with his employees' disloyalty<lb/>
qnd lack of allegiance towards him-<lb/>
self, his invulnerable majesty. The<lb/>
sovereign conceived that if all the<lb/>
governmental positions were oc-<lb/>
cupied by his male offspring the<lb/>
problems of allegiance would be<lb/>
automatically solved.<lb/>
After all, his majesty the igno-<lb/>
ramus reasoned, "My sons will love<lb/>
me and thenceforth will be loyal to<lb/>
me In order to provide the na-<lb/>
tion and her citizens with loyal<lb/>
officials and administrators, his<lb/>
majesty labored at the tiresome<lb/>
task of producing sufficient<lb/>
Perfection<lb/>
He stepped meditatively along<lb/>
the white sand, kicking occasional-<lb/>
ly at the hillocks whipped Up by<lb/>
the wind. The crests of the waves<lb/>
tossed the sunlight in blue-green<lb/>
directions and then surged for-<lb/>
ward to crumble on the beach.<lb/>
Clouds billowed overhead like giant<lb/>
mushrooms in an azure garden and<lb/>
gulls drifted among them. An oc-<lb/>
casional large wave rolled in and<lb/>
caressed his feet, and he stopped<lb/>
and contemplated the backwash<lb/>
as it eddyed around his feet and<lb/>
sculptured tiny ridges at the ends<lb/>
of his toes.<lb/>
Once as he stopped to watch the<lb/>
eddies, the sunlight glinted from<lb/>
a shell ? red and gold and green.<lb/>
He stooped and (plucked it from<lb/>
the wet sand and rubbed it against<lb/>
his shorts. When he held it out the<lb/>
colors danced on the smooth surface<lb/>
and he walked slowly on, twisting<lb/>
the shell between his fingers and<lb/>
regarding the changing colors. As<lb/>
he turned the shell, he felt a chip<lb/>
along one edge and, disappointed,<lb/>
he sailed it high up on the dunes.<lb/>
Later as the sun rested along the<lb/>
ocean's edge, he returned along the<lb/>
same beach. When he reached the<lb/>
place where he had thrown the<lb/>
shell he climbed up the dune, think,<lb/>
ing to retrieve the shell and keep<lb/>
it. He scrambled over the dune,<lb/>
digging his ' toes into the sand<lb/>
searching; but he could not find<lb/>
it. As night descended, he clamber-<lb/>
ed down the dune and wandered<lb/>
back along the beach.<lb/>
Classified Ad<lb/>
Lost: Silver charm bracelet<lb/>
with ten charma. Reward of-<lb/>
fered. Contact Joyce Brown,<lb/>
Fleming 282.<lb/>
vow<lb/>
ly<lb/>
of<lb/>
aided<lb/>
vacancies.<lb/>
took the<lb/>
iual-<lb/>
appHeante 1' th<lb/>
Additional concubines<lb/>
matrimony and eq<lb/>
king m ns<lb/>
harem served as<lb/>
and the inatitu-<lb/>
The<lb/>
the<lb/>
experiment. The<lb/>
the producing arm<lb/>
tn of future civil servants.<lb/>
wivea were the I reducing<lb/>
chinea and his majesty<lb/>
t  abort Deriod, thn ugn<lb/>
erator. In a n(,t p? '<lb/>
sovereign's diligence, some<lb/>
the<lb/>
The EC stu!<lb/>
doraoa the jazz<lb/>
we have a. p-a . ar<lb/>
? tin ' ? <lb/>
Each of the .<lb/>
ived by<lb/>
with Bl<lb/>
a n?<lb/>
the r ip ?11 ?<lb/>
from<lb/>
for tl ? last v <lb/>
ei<lb/>
In<lb/>
undi<lb/>
ilable<lb/>
civil servants were maae avi<lb/>
and fil'ed the vacancies as tl<lb/>
reached puberty. The result: the<lb/>
system was a fiasco and the citi-<lb/>
zens received the burden of mi<lb/>
ing and adulating 800 additional<lb/>
inefficient, unqualified, and arro-<lb/>
i ant parasites.<lb/>
Quimmle;<lb/>
This past summer the United<lb/>
states National Student Associa-<lb/>
tion held its loth National Stu-<lb/>
dent Congress. The Confess met<lb/>
on the campus of Ohio State Uni-<lb/>
versity from August 19 until<lb/>
August 30. Various subjects were<lb/>
debated, and, in turn, condoned or<lb/>
condemned. Among the items de-<lb/>
bated was nuclear testing.<lb/>
In the midst of serious and<lb/>
lengthy debating which was aug-<lb/>
mented by publications from<lb/>
groups of various political stands,<lb/>
someone inserted a bit of humor<lb/>
into the formality with a sheet of<lb/>
resolutions he had printed and dis-<lb/>
tributed. The material distributed,<lb/>
needless to say, does not neces-<lb/>
sarily represent the views of the<lb/>
USNSA. Part of it went as follows:<lb/>
"It is suggested that, during<lb/>
the nuclear testing debate, dele-<lb/>
gates choose the resolution below<lb/>
which most closely approximates<lb/>
their own position.<lb/>
"Lib: The USNSA condemns all<lb/>
nuclear testing and regrets the<lb/>
whole bloody mess.<lb/>
"Webster Quimmley Society<lb/>
(named in memory of the famous<lb/>
middle of the roader who was<lb/>
killed in an automobile while driv-<lb/>
ing over the islands of the Santa<lb/>
Ana freeway): The USNSA con-<lb/>
demns the Soviet Union's resump-<lb/>
tion of tests and deplores the<lb/>
United States' earlier test series.<lb/>
We regret the fact that we only<lb/>
deplore the United States testing<lb/>
and seem to be using a double<lb/>
standard. It should be noted, how-<lb/>
ever, that the Soviet Union vio-<lb/>
lated the moratorium and hence is<lb/>
more condemnable than the U. S.<lb/>
On the other hand, it i3 arguable<lb/>
that the Soviets were justified in<lb/>
resuming testing after the French<lb/>
explosions which we deplore. In<lb/>
sum, we hope the Soviet Union will<lb/>
note that we have deplored the<lb/>
West twice while condemning the<lb/>
Soviets only once and, therefore,<lb/>
1<lb/>
B<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
it the i<lb/>
witho<lb/>
 araer8. Then<lb/>
sons for thi<lb/>
rmanci<lb/>
playing rek<lb/>
piano was bad I ?<lb/>
not his usual<lb/>
were ? <lb/>
?<lb/>
much long, i<lb/>
and. hr.v. r ?<lb/>
tenries w ? ?<lb/>
?formers, but<lb/>
horrible :t<lb/>
t very bod <lb/>
"VAF: The I<lb/>
nihilistic i<lb/>
that<lb/>
e than ? .<lb/>
are dirty. Kir tests a<lb/>
is an American.<lb/>
"Birch: The USNSU<lb/>
condemns the S<lb/>
lating the r.<lb/>
poisoning th,<lb/>
clear tests. We urgt<lb/>
?et t pea '<lb/>
t its na<lb/>
with note with in1<lb/>
enee of the<lb/>
the t: ii<lb/>
Red Chinese il<lb/>
search, Wf<lb/>
of nuclear weap <lb/>
to resolve t ? ? d<lb/>
thereby h<lb/>
-afe for deuocrac<lb/>
Seriously the USNSA ?<lb/>
the attempts vf th : l<lb/>
a nuciear test ban<lb/>
attitude of the V S S<lb/>
may recall, the S<lb/>
Friday, September<lb/>
a ;J4-month-old moral<lb/>
testing of nuclear<lb/>
While the USNSA<lb/>
to take direct ac<lb/>
ter, it is an impor-<lb/>
ter student expres (tat<lb/>
example is not la <lb/>
stretch of the imeginal<lb/>
general run of eamwert<lb/>
fortunately, then is l ?<lb/>
dent knowledge '? ning tfe<lb/>
ganrzation. In the e<lb/>
try to give the s I<lb/>
idea of how the USNSA<lb/>
and toward what<lb/>
With proper surr - <lb/>
can become a powerful vc?i?<lb/>
s<lb/>
student<lb/>
JUB<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published aami-WMlrW k- m, .  . -<lb/>
?"??My by the students of East Caroline Co-<lb/>
GreeATille, North<lb/>
?MM? CoIhwiAte Preos<lb/>
OoUariaw<lb/>
juntos d.<lb/>
 Kssta<lb/>
Uffiees on tamal floor of<lb/>
Box latt, See Garotte<lb/>
PL a-I7i?<lb/>
Nort?<lb/>
PL l-iioi.<lb/>
????? ?"???? be k? uVSLS<lb/>
?ho be of general tatereet. AH<lb/>
-? ?"????? ?? tbe .tender <lb/>
" DO "IHHwftUKy for<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN antt k, -w.<lb/>
They T<lb/>
awaati ?<lb/>
All Ww<lb/>
will be witfiM<lb/>
feraoiaf-<lb/>
<pb facs="00038794_0003"/><lb/>
,c? iy<lb/>
January -id, 1963<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
P?C? t<lb/>
Grove Press Extends<lb/>
Deadline For Contest<lb/>
i<lb/>
requests from<lb/>
Grove Press has<lb/>
Uine for entries<lb/>
: until March<lb/>
t. which fea-<lb/>
Ls o on only to<lb/>
?een schedal-<lb/>
; -y 31, 1963.<lb/>
will be awarded<lb/>
t writing the<lb/>
ation by K it -<lb/>
bert (i rover's<lb/>
One Hundred<lb/>
,r Misunderstanding, for ad-<lb/>
al southern uni-<lb/>
One Hundred Dollar Mis-<lb/>
? vel about the<lb/>
J C, a wiute col-<lb/>
and Kitten, a<lb/>
1 Negro girl.<lb/>
no more than<lb/>
i<lb/>
, i<lb/>
? and must be<lb/>
s own style, of<lb/>
sam I taken from the<lb/>
below:<lb/>
ain his fault,<lb/>
jes born dum.<lb/>
? Whitefolks dum,<lb/>
t'tihat big-word<lb/>
? so's he kin<lb/>
and fightin an<lb/>
 be oven kill some-<lb/>
 y human, but not so's he kin<lb/>
lo nothin much else, like talk<lb/>
weet and play nice<lb/>
Tfie 100 runners-up in the eon-<lb/>
a will receive a full year's sub-<lb/>
scription to the bi-mont.hly maga-<lb/>
zine, Evergreen Review.<lb/>
Entries will be judged by a board<lb/>
appointed by the publisher, and<lb/>
entries will become the pro; er-<lb/>
of the publisher. Entries should<lb/>
K submitted to: Kitten Contest<lb/>
Editor, Grove Press, Inc 64 Uni-<lb/>
versity Place, New York 3, N. Y.<lb/>
EC School Of Music<lb/>
Stages Vocal Clinics<lb/>
Two choral clinics to be staged<lb/>
by the School of Music for high<lb/>
school vocalists in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina will take place Feb. 2<lb/>
and Feb. 16. Gordon Johnson, Di-<lb/>
rector of the College Choir, will<lb/>
direct the two meetings and will<lb/>
be assisted in a series of auditions<lb/>
and rehearsals by faculty members<lb/>
of the School of Music.<lb/>
The two meetings are a follow-up<lb/>
less than half the students vote<lb/>
in eamrois elections and though<lb/>
some critics describe student gov-<lb/>
ernment activities as "Mickey<lb/>
Mouse the Students' Association<lb/>
at the University of Texas dis-<lb/>
charges definite responsibilities.<lb/>
For instance, the Student As-<lb/>
sembly approves the apportionment<lb/>
SAM Stages Activities;<lb/>
Students Insight<lb/>
Gives<lb/>
ers of the Society<lb/>
snent of Manage-<lb/>
? actively engaged<lb/>
try, commerce,<lb/>
Pli Kappa Tau<lb/>
Is Four<lb/>
(Pledges Jan. 8<lb/>
. ' itM<lb/>
were installed by<lb/>
. social fraternity,<lb/>
- The formal candle-<lb/>
was conducted by<lb/>
ttrick, fraternity chap-<lb/>
m  Tctigue, pledge<lb/>
?r.<lb/>
-<lb/>
r era rothers are Donald<lb/>
uglas Strickland,<lb/>
irkson Cox, and Wil-<lb/>
'?' er. They were se-<lb/>
r - high scholastic<lb/>
- lership, and their<lb/>
an jntlemanliness.<lb/>
initiation ceremony<lb/>
" ra were honored at<lb/>
rt the fraternity house<lb/>
1 Ea t Third Street. An in-<lb/>
- ? honoring new mem-<lb/>
9, and guests was<lb/>
"lay rnght, Jan. 19.<lb/>
Texas Univ. Discharges<lb/>
Definite SGA Duties<lb/>
Austin, Texas (I. P.) Although . of each $17.57 student activity fee<lb/>
("blanket tax") to eight different<lb/>
?student activities. Such fees last<lb/>
Fall amounted to more than $300,<lb/>
000.<lb/>
Committees maintained by stu-<lb/>
dent government conduct opinion<lb/>
surveys and referendums; hear<lb/>
grievances about campus practices;<lb/>
study ways to improve scholastic<lb/>
integrity and enhance the educa-<lb/>
tional atmosphere; provide leader-<lb/>
ship for freshman orientation, the<lb/>
Campus Chest fund drive, and the<lb/>
flash card, Roundup and Cultural<lb/>
Entertainment activities; supervise<lb/>
elections and investigate problems<lb/>
related to international students<lb/>
and integration.<lb/>
During the tpast year, the As-<lb/>
sembly took action in a number of<lb/>
areas including married students'<lb/>
housing, student insurance and<lb/>
wages, disciplinary regulations,<lb/>
curfew hours, and tuition.<lb/>
Chief student spokesman is Mar-<lb/>
ion (Sandy) Sanford, Jr senior<lb/>
government major, who as 1962<lb/>
Students' Association president has<lb/>
a private office, a secretary, and<lb/>
$100 a month paycheck.<lb/>
He ipresides over the Assembly,<lb/>
serves on the important Texas<lb/>
Union boards of directors, and is<lb/>
one of five students composing Uni-<lb/>
versity President Joseph R. Smi-<lb/>
ley's advisory cabinet. Sanford also<lb/>
makes key appointments, including<lb/>
student representatives on the Ath-<lb/>
letic Council and the Ex-Students'<lb/>
Association executive council.<lb/>
of a clinic at the college last year<lb/>
which had an attendance of more<lb/>
than 275 high school students and<lb/>
choir directors. This enthusiastic<lb/>
response encouraged the staging<lb/>
of two clinics this year so that<lb/>
more schools might have opportun-<lb/>
ity to participate, Mr. Johnson<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
A s( ecial feature of the Febru-<lb/>
ary clinics at EC will be auditions<lb/>
held by teachers of voice in the<lb/>
School of Music for promising high<lb/>
school singers. These sessions of<lb/>
Among major events at each of<lb/>
the clinics will be a series of sec-<lb/>
tional rehearsals. Personnel of the<lb/>
School of Music who will direct<lb/>
these groups will be Mr. Johnson;<lb/>
Charles Stevens, director of the<lb/>
Men's Glee Club; Beatrice Ohaun-<lb/>
cey, director of the Women's Chor-<lb/>
t s; and Dr. Hjortsvang, director<lb/>
of the Chapel Choir.<lb/>
Concluding events at each of the<lb/>
clinics will be making a tape re-<lb/>
cording by participants for broad-<lb/>
casting on radio stations through-<lb/>
fifteen minutes each will be sche- j out the state and a concert in hon-<lb/>
pi Sigma Adds<lb/>
r "ft Members<lb/>
government, and education.<lb/>
A national professional organi-<lb/>
ation, the Society, known in the<lb/>
Business School as SAM, stages<lb/>
each year a series of monthly<lb/>
meetings, conducts seminars and<lb/>
round-table discussions, visits in-<lb/>
dustrial plants for talks with exec-<lb/>
utives, and participates in com-<lb/>
munity services which give student<lb/>
an insight into management.<lb/>
The Society is open to business<lb/>
majors of at least sophomore<lb/>
standing who have maintained an<lb/>
overall C scholastic average. The<lb/>
local business group strives "to<lb/>
develop human resources and to<lb/>
provide business with a better pro-<lb/>
duct to train, mold, and refine<lb/>
Dr. James Stewart of the School<lb/>
of Business faculty serves as ad-<lb/>
visor to SAM.<lb/>
Robert P. Miller has been named<lb/>
by the members of the Society as<lb/>
acting president.<lb/>
Serving with Miller in executive<lb/>
positions are Frederick Lorbach-<lb/>
er, secretary; Richard H. Cash,<lb/>
treasurer; and Howard Glenn Wil-<lb/>
liams, reporter.<lb/>
Other members of SAM include<lb/>
Russell J. Finley; John J. Heery;<lb/>
James F. Jackson; Linwood W.<lb/>
Ro.ier; Mrs. Ruth B. Scott; Mar-<lb/>
tin P. Steinberg; Gerald A. White;<lb/>
and Julian Daniel Rhem.<lb/>
duled on request by the individual<lb/>
student and his director. Conduct-<lb/>
ing the auditions will be Gene<lb/>
Strassler, Dr. Carl T. Hjortsvang,<lb/>
Dan Vornholt, and Mrs. Gladys<lb/>
White.<lb/>
II G<lb/>
aa RPta chapter of Sig-<lb/>
ra Sigrnm, social sorority<lb/>
l announced that thirteen<lb/>
skrtanti have completed<lb/>
llwp reqrrirements and are<lb/>
"??W of the local chapter.<lb/>
np members are Melba A.<lb/>
?? Ue Forbis, Carol Louise<lb/>
- ?. Margaret Avera, Linda<lb/>
L llT' Limia E- Killian,<lb/>
jjj Skirmer, Owen E. Rouse,<lb/>
Ve C Ward' Jacqueline Polk,<lb/>
w'lA' Efiis?n, Travette Jennette<lb/>
j0 Ai Mkigett.<lb/>
aw ber maintained a C<lb/>
lZ0n aI1 m,bects taken dur"<lb/>
d Hre period in addition<lb/>
s other pledge require-<lb/>
of the chapter.<lb/>
Representatives<lb/>
Attend Council<lb/>
Janice Hardison, Director of<lb/>
Alumni Affairs and Foundations<lb/>
and Dr. Robert W. Williams, Chair-<lb/>
man of the Foundations Commit-<lb/>
tee, represented EC at the South-<lb/>
eastern District Convention of the<lb/>
American Alumni Council in At-<lb/>
lanta, Ga. January 27-28.<lb/>
While there, they attended a<lb/>
series of coherences and work-<lb/>
tops relating to tMr work at EC.<lb/>
Miss Hardison participated m pro-<lb/>
grams of alumni publications and<lb/>
annual giving programs. Dr. Wrt-<lb/>
liams attended session on ap-<lb/>
I proaches foundations.<lb/>
Wilder Addresses<lb/>
Library Club Meet<lb/>
The Library Club held its first<lb/>
meeting of the new year January<lb/>
14, 1963, at 7:00 p.m. in Room 215<lb/>
of Joyner Library. The guest speak-<lb/>
er for the evening was Miss Vernie<lb/>
Wilder, faculty member of the Li-<lb/>
brary Science Department. Miss<lb/>
Wilder's topic was "The Light-<lb/>
house which was about H. W.<lb/>
Wilson and the H. W. Wilson Com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
Mallory Proposes<lb/>
To Bleed Campus<lb/>
For 500 Pints<lb/>
EC's goal for the bloodmobile,<lb/>
which will be outside Wright<lb/>
Building, February 13-14, is 500<lb/>
pints.<lb/>
At a recent Dean's Advisory<lb/>
Council meeting, club representa-<lb/>
tives and dorm presidents were<lb/>
asked to call meetings and to ask<lb/>
for donations.<lb/>
Classes will be excused for do-<lb/>
nors while they are at the blood-<lb/>
mobile and refreshments will be<lb/>
served to donors.<lb/>
Students under twenty-one who<lb/>
wish to contribute blood must go<lb/>
to Dean Mallory's office and get<lb/>
a Consent of Release card to be<lb/>
signed by their parents.<lb/>
or of visitors on the campus by the<lb/>
College Choir under the direction<lb/>
of Mr. Johnson.<lb/>
Bates To Speak<lb/>
To Health Assn.<lb/>
Tonight At 7:45<lb/>
Louise Bates, PhD ScD Direc-<lb/>
tor of Research for the Gesell In-<lb/>
stitute of Child Development, will<lb/>
I speak at the annual meeting of the<lb/>
Pitt County Mental Health Asso-<lb/>
ciation in Austin Auditorium, Jan-<lb/>
uary 29, at 7:45 pjm.<lb/>
Dr. Frank Fuller, President of<lb/>
the Pitt 'Ooumity Mental Health As-<lb/>
sociation, will preside; Reverend<lb/>
John Dralke, Jr will present the<lb/>
invocation; and Dr. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
will welcome the members. After<lb/>
being introduced by Mrs. Ellen Gar-<lb/>
roll, Vice-President of the Pitt<lb/>
County Mental Health Association,<lb/>
Dr. Ames will speak on "Child<lb/>
Growth and Development<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha<lb/>
Awards Tuition<lb/>
Scholarship<lb/>
The Zeta Psi Chapter of Phi Mu<lb/>
Alpha, honorary-professional music<lb/>
fraternity, has ap roved plans to<lb/>
award a $240 tuition scholarship<lb/>
this spring. The award will be<lb/>
available to any student in the EC<lb/>
School of Music next September.<lb/>
Candidates wi!l audition at the<lb/>
School of Music on Friday and<lb/>
Saturday. May 11 and 12, and the<lb/>
winner will be selected on the basis<lb/>
of musicianship, financial need,<lb/>
and character.<lb/>
The scholarship will be financed<lb/>
through the chapter Scholarship<lb/>
Fund which has been established<lb/>
for the purpose of attracting out-<lb/>
standing music students to EC.<lb/>
Chapter projects, general fund ap-<lb/>
propriation's and donations from<lb/>
alumni during the last two years,<lb/>
have increased the size of the<lb/>
Scholarship Fund.<lb/>
The Scholarship Committee has<lb/>
distributed information about the<lb/>
award to prospective students,<lb/>
music supervisors, and music teach-<lb/>
ers throughout North Carolina,<lb/>
South Carolina, and Virginia.<lb/>
?v<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
Scotch Grain<lb/>
by Bass<lb/>
Makers of Weejuns<lb/>
$18.95<lb/>
New Shipment of<lb/>
Both Ladies and<lb/>
Mens<lb/>
WEEJUNS<lb/>
Just Arriyed<lb/>
MOST SIZES NOW IN STOCK<lb/>
u<lb/>
222 East Fifth Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00038794_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Tuesday, j<lb/>
fc<lb/>
sac<lb/>
SB<lb/>
SPORTS REVIEW<lb/>
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE<lb/>
Jack McComas, coach at Atlantic Christian, came out<lb/>
last Thursday and said what many coaches in the Carolina<lb/>
Conference may have been thinking- this year. McComas<lb/>
says that the CC has teams that could "play Carolina, or<lb/>
Wake Forest and beat them He went on to state that "the<lb/>
Southern Conference has teams that couldn't win in this<lb/>
league (CC)<lb/>
It seems that Mr. McComas' view has been well proved<lb/>
by the Pirates this year. EC has knocked off three Southern<lb/>
Conference schools ? VMI, The Citadel, and Richmond ??<lb/>
and played one of their best games in a losing cause against<lb/>
another Southern Conference school ? Davidson. The Pirates<lb/>
on the other hand are only two and two against CC squads.<lb/>
The Pirates have been beaten twice by Lenoir Rhyne and<lb/>
have won games from High Point and Elon. The Pirates face<lb/>
another CC team this Saturday night ? Atlantic Christian.<lb/>
 <lb/>
One of the doormats of the Carolina Conference has<lb/>
started to pull the rug out from under its opponents. Atlantic<lb/>
Christian is shedding its nickname of the high school" in<lb/>
relation to sports. AC has started on the comeback trail and<lb/>
they are taking pride in announcing it in the papers by the<lb/>
scores that they have been piling up on their competition.<lb/>
The Bulldogs have hit the century mark three times in as<lb/>
many home games. The Atlantic five beat Guilford 103-83,<lb/>
St. Andrews 104-56, and Old Dominion 105-95. These teams<lb/>
are not powerhouses, but the Bulldogs 75-73 victory over<lb/>
Appalachian proued something. The victory was even more<lb/>
impressive because they beat the Mounties on their home<lb/>
court. The Apps, as any coach in the CC can tell you, are no<lb/>
pushovers in their den. The Saturday night encounter with<lb/>
AC will be the last Pirate home game this season.<lb/>
 4: <lb/>
Some Odds and Ends<lb/>
Princeton isn't going to be a pushover if these Ivy<lb/>
Leaguers get into the. NCAA playoffs this Spring. Princeton<lb/>
is way out in front of all apposition, and the boy who is<lb/>
keeping them on top is Bill Bradley. Bradley is averaging<lb/>
29.6 per game and is ranked near the top in national scoring.<lb/>
1 II I I I ??! Ill . ? ?<lb/>
Baby Bucs Beat Seahawks,<lb/>
Yoder, Kinnard Pace Attack<lb/>
Th-e Pirate frosh took control of<lb/>
the game from the qpening horn<lb/>
and never relinquished control as<lb/>
they shot down the Wilmington<lb/>
Seahawks 88-69 Wednesday night<lb/>
in the gym.<lb/>
EC was paced by Jack Yoder.<lb/>
Yoder ihit 25 in the Baby Bucs<lb/>
sixth victory of the year against<lb/>
six loses. Bobby Kinnard was also<lb/>
up there in the point totals with<lb/>
24. Kinnard connected on eleven<lb/>
from the floor and two of four<lb/>
from the foul line. Yoder was 12<lb/>
for 20 from the floor and one for<lb/>
one from the line.<lb/>
The high man for the visitors<lb/>
was hot from the floor. Gene Bo-<lb/>
gash garnered 11 of 11 field goals<lb/>
and 1 of 3 foul shots.<lb/>
EC G F T<lb/>
Yoder 12 1-1 25<lb/>
Woodside 3 1-1 7<lb/>
Straighten Up And Fly Rfrht<lb/>
Hodges65-717<lb/>
Williamson31-27<lb/>
Phillips12-24<lb/>
Kinnard112-424<lb/>
Hoyle10-12<lb/>
Ricks10-02<lb/>
Laittimore00-10<lb/>
Gilliam00-00<lb/>
Totals3812-1888<lb/>
WilmingtonGFT<lb/>
Bogash111-323<lb/>
Hoylan02-22<lb/>
Hamilton52-312<lb/>
Ware01-11<lb/>
Shipp10-02<lb/>
Barbour74-418<lb/>
Cole41-19<lb/>
Lichenstein10-02<lb/>
Buzzell00-00<lb/>
Bill Otte (left) loses his balance in last Saturday's same with Oftotfcorpc. Gerald P?rk? r<lb/>
after the little spheroid.<lb/>
Hot Petrel Shooting Percentaji<lb/>
Burns Pirates In 63-58 Loss<lb/>
Brogden Contributes 20 Point Effort<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
29 11-15 69<lb/>
Oglethorpe College abandoned<lb/>
their usual ball control tactics to<lb/>
defeat the Pirates 63-58 in the<lb/>
college gym Saturday night. The<lb/>
win proved to be an act of re-<lb/>
venge against the Pirates. EC<lb/>
beat Oglethorpe .two weeks ago<lb/>
to knock the Petrels out of the<lb/>
top ten small college rankings.<lb/>
The Atlanta school was hot<lb/>
from the floor and the foul line.<lb/>
Oglethorpe hit over 70 percent<lb/>
of their field goal attempts and<lb/>
had a perfect 15 of 15 from the<lb/>
line.<lb/>
The Petrels put on a fine ex-<lb/>
hibition of floor shooting to gain<lb/>
a 30-28 halftime edge. The Pi-<lb/>
rates were not out of the game,<lb/>
and came back after the inter-<lb/>
mission to prove it. EC struck<lb/>
for eight points to their oppon-<lb/>
ents three to move into a 36-33<lb/>
lead with 16:00 to go.<lb/>
Oglethorpe rallied five minutes<lb/>
later to make the score 49-43.<lb/>
From this point to the final horn,<lb/>
OC was to remain in control.<lb/>
In the final minutes, EC pulled<lb/>
within two points of the Petrels<lb/>
at 58-56. Oglethorpe's center Mor-<lb/>
ris Mitchell hit two from the floor<lb/>
to move OC into a commanding<lb/>
62-56 lead with less than a minute<lb/>
remaining. EC got two on a goal<lb/>
and Oglethorpe another foul shot<lb/>
to round out the scoring.<lb/>
Bill Brogden was hig-h man for<lb/>
the Pirates with 20 points. Bill<lb/>
Otte and Lacy West hit in double<lb/>
figures for the Bucs. Otte had 18<lb/>
and West, 13.<lb/>
Bob Nance was the big man for<lb/>
Oglethorpe with 20. Three other<lb/>
starters for the Petrels were in<lb/>
double figures?Mitchell 13, Sex-<lb/>
ten 13, and Thomas 11.<lb/>
Theft<lb/>
9-5 seasontorn<lb/>
ECGF<lb/>
Weste0 A<lb/>
Otte'<lb/>
Parker1<lb/>
Williams04<lb/>
Brogden14-4<lb/>
Knowlea0<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Oglethorpe<lb/>
Nance<lb/>
Sexton<lb/>
Whitford<lb/>
Mitchell<lb/>
Thomas<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
:o IM<lb/>
G<lb/>
9<lb/>
6<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
F<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
4-4<lb/>
24 15-15<lb/>
Bil Conmff (pictured above kept hi. 4-0 string intacTng twG pins in the Pirate wrestlm<lb/>
matches last weekend. EC still came oat on the short end in both meetings-H-ll with OW dI?i??f<lb/>
(O.D.), and Douglass (Ft. Bragg). EC wrestles St. Andrews tonight at 7:00 in the gym. <lb/>
Naturally.V-rj1L7LS aM without grease<lb/>
 W? firth ISSess grooming discovery WalS<lb/>
keeps yotr Sr nS3SSing dandruff. prevents dryness.<lb/>
y hair neat a" day Stooutgease Vitalis today!<lb/>
<pb facs="00038794_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>