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<pb facs="00038798_0001"/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Volume XXXVIII<lb/>
East Car olin a College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1963<lb/>
Number 30<lb/>
3E<lb/>
Senate Appro ves Rule Traffic Committee<lb/>
Changes For Wmrin Stresses Car Rules<lb/>
ViAMllVV A VJL ff Jf JrK&amp;mmM The Traffic Committee has be- j ly for a leng:h of time b<lb/>
fho student seriate, at its M on-<lb/>
to evening meeting, approved ap-<lb/>
pra rs of $S00 for the En-<lb/>
tertainment tunmittee, $60 for<lb/>
I. p. Card Committee, $530<lb/>
1ST CAROLINIAN, and<lb/>
j35fl for the College Choir; au-<lb/>
Kntertainment Com-<lb/>
pjfttee ite up to 60 per<lb/>
t year's anticipated en-<lb/>
tertamn budget; accepted the<lb/>
inttneiit of a new Elections<lb/>
airman; and ap-<lb/>
a resolution to he sent to<lb/>
 ration calling: for<lb/>
in restriction rales of<lb/>
Hfcs. ,<lb/>
 chairman of the En-<lb/>
?rr. rv.it tee submitted<lb/>
r an additional $800<lb/>
? for the remaind-<lb/>
year. SGA Treasurer,<lb/>
ffered an amend-<lb/>
would have required<lb/>
to use marshals at<lb/>
Arts Programs instead<lb/>
$72 for ushers. This<lb/>
. s defeated. After<lb/>
ssion of the Enter-<lb/>
i tree's expenses,<lb/>
ap :vved the $800 re-<lb/>
. rd Committee re-<lb/>
received $60 to hire<lb/>
be I. D. cards<lb/>
trstaon. The com-<lb/>
: that it has had<lb/>
help during<lb/>
ing hours of regis-<lb/>
tration day.<lb/>
Editor June Grimes, after study-<lb/>
ing the organizational structure<lb/>
of the EAST CAROLINIAN for<lb/>
several weeks, requested and re-<lb/>
ceived $530 for staff salary in-<lb/>
creases during the next two quart-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
The College Choir was granted<lb/>
$350 to be added to its regular<lb/>
budget appropriation for the pur-<lb/>
pose of representing the college<lb/>
at the Music Educators National<lb/>
Convention in Charleston, West<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
The seante voted to give to the<lb/>
Entertainment Comanittee of any<lb/>
year the authority to obligate up<lb/>
to 60 (percent of the following<lb/>
year's anticipated budget.<lb/>
The senate also approved a reso-<lb/>
lution which would permit women<lb/>
students who are on restriction to<lb/>
have friends in their rooms, and to<lb/>
talk with men students while walk-<lb/>
ing on campus. A copy of the reso-<lb/>
lution will be sent to the admin-<lb/>
istration.<lb/>
Productions Commdttee chairman<lb/>
Ed Smith requested $250 to cover<lb/>
the cost of a party for the cast<lb/>
of this year's musical. The senate<lb/>
passed a substitute motion which<lb/>
provided for the reallocation of<lb/>
funds in the musical budget, but<lb/>
not exceeding $225, for the party.<lb/>
In other action, the senate ap-<lb/>
proved the appointment of Berk<lb/>
Stephens as chairman of the Elec-<lb/>
tions Comanittee, accepted nomi-<lb/>
nations for the Queen's Court of<lb/>
the Azalea Festival, and conducted<lb/>
swearing-in ceremonies for Bob<lb/>
Nelson from New Dorm.<lb/>
Duke To Install Local<lb/>
Colony Of Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Kappa Phi fraternity, Beta Phi<lb/>
Colony of Pi Kappa Phi, national<lb/>
social fraternity, will seek na-<lb/>
tional affiliation today. Mu Chap-<lb/>
ter of Duke University will initiate<lb/>
the East Carolina colony.<lb/>
Kappa Phi was founded locally<lb/>
on February 15, 1961, by Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Phi traveling counselor Jim<lb/>
EC Hosts WC Choir<lb/>
For Sunday Concert<lb/>
N<lb/>
15.<lb/>
r Woman's College<lb/>
1 be guests on the<lb/>
ge Campus<lb/>
T e East Carolina<lb/>
? e Club will join<lb/>
'a .re Choir in pre-<lb/>
ncert in Wright<lb/>
. V br tary 17,<lb/>
I the Wom-<lb/>
up is Rich-<lb/>
r of the East<lb/>
la Charles<lb/>
 I be guest, solo-<lb/>
Alto Rhapsody, and<lb/>
1 be guest solo-<lb/>
fs Coronation<lb/>
Boris (fOdounov. Miss<lb/>
Le Assistant in<lb/>
1 at East Caro-<lb/>
g is a member<lb/>
Music of Wom-<lb/>
lan's College Choir will<lb/>
onga from the<lb/>
arranged by Beeth-<lb/>
numbers by Gustav<lb/>
til Thompson. The<lb/>
aa Men's Glee Club<lb/>
by Brahms and<lb/>
mpson as well as two<lb/>
'Shcnandoah and<lb/>
'nv Ye Winds<lb/>
i 100 voices of the<lb/>
ra groups will join for the<lb/>
"Ho- ters ? tne Pr??Tam'<lb/>
Pl, L"v iv is Thy Dwelling-<lb/>
fr<lb/>
We<lb/>
?n Brahms' German Re-<lb/>
 d :he "Coronation Scene"<lb/>
foissourgsky,s Boris God-<lb/>
ounoT.<lb/>
Sunday's concert will climax two<lb/>
weekends of music by the choral<lb/>
groups from Greensboro and Green-<lb/>
ville. This past Saturday, the<lb/>
croups met in Greensboro for re-<lb/>
hearsals as well as social events<lb/>
and on Sunday gave the first pro-<lb/>
gram of the series.<lb/>
Accompanists for Sunday's pro-<lb/>
gram will be Mary Ida Hodge,<lb/>
Terry Coley and Ted Gossett,<lb/>
pianists, Henrietta Nance, vio-<lb/>
linist, and Marcia Fountain, cell-<lb/>
ist.<lb/>
Arrangements for lodging for<lb/>
Woman's College girls are being<lb/>
made by members of the East<lb/>
Carolina Women's Glee Club.<lb/>
Lloyd, and Wayne Scott. Scott<lb/>
received his undergraduate degree<lb/>
at UNC, where he was president<lb/>
of his fraternity. He attended East<lb/>
Carolina's Business Graduate<lb/>
School on a scholarship (provided<lb/>
by the National Organization of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi. It was during his<lb/>
course of study here that he or-<lb/>
ganized the colony.<lb/>
Saturday, newly?initiated Beta<lb/>
Phi Chapter will host a three-<lb/>
state conclave. Chapters from<lb/>
Sou.th Carolina, North Carolina,<lb/>
and Virginia "will be in attendance.<lb/>
All officers of the National Coun-<lb/>
cil will be present.<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi will have a tea<lb/>
Sunday afternoon from 2:00 until<lb/>
4:00 in the CU. Students, faculty,<lb/>
and friends are invited to attend.<lb/>
gun a thorough investigation of<lb/>
all cars being operated by col-<lb/>
lege students on the campus of<lb/>
East Carolina College and in the<lb/>
Greenville area in order to ascer-<lb/>
tain that each student who is<lb/>
operating a car is eligible to do<lb/>
so according to the College regu-<lb/>
lation which reads:<lb/>
"It is to be noted by all that<lb/>
no freshman (including Summer<lb/>
School) student at East Caro-<lb/>
lina College is permitted to have<lb/>
and or to operate a motor vehicle<lb/>
on the East Carolina College cam-<lb/>
pus or in the Greenville area.<lb/>
"In addition, no student having<lb/>
le?s than a "C" average or on dis-<lb/>
ciplinary probation at East Coro-<lb/>
lina College is permitted to have<lb/>
andor operate an automobile on<lb/>
the East Caroliaia College campus<lb/>
or in the Greenville area<lb/>
This rule was established by<lb/>
the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion and the Administration was<lb/>
asked to enforce it.<lb/>
During the past week, two stu-<lb/>
dents have been suspended for the<lb/>
remainder of Winter Quarter when<lb/>
it was discovered that they were<lb/>
operating cars on the East Caro-<lb/>
lina College campus illegally.<lb/>
There is a strong possibility that<lb/>
several more students will be sus-<lb/>
pended before the present phase<lb/>
of our investigation is complete.<lb/>
The Traffic Committee would<lb/>
like to urge all students to comply<lb/>
with the rules regulating the pos-<lb/>
session of cars on campus or in<lb/>
the Greenville area. It is not our<lb/>
desire to suspend students from<lb/>
school but when we have violators,<lb/>
we have no choice but to resort to<lb/>
this type of disciplinary action.<lb/>
All students should be aware<lb/>
of the fact that we continously<lb/>
check on the cars being operated<lb/>
by college students on or near the<lb/>
campus. It is possible that a stu-<lb/>
dent may operate a vehicle illegal-<lb/>
length of time before it<lb/>
is discovered by the Traffic Com-<lb/>
mittee but upon the Committee's<lb/>
learning of such a violation, action<lb/>
will be taken.<lb/>
Alabama Quartet<lb/>
Renders Chamber<lb/>
Music Sunday<lb/>
Tile Alabama Quartet, one of<lb/>
the outstanding Chamiber Music<lb/>
organizations in the United States,<lb/>
will appear in a concert here Sun-<lb/>
day, February 17, at 8:00 p.m. in<lb/>
the McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
This program is sponsored by<lb/>
the School of Music of the col-<lb/>
lege and made possible by a grant<lb/>
from the Sarah Sprague Coolidge<lb/>
Foundation. The public as invited<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Of special interest among the<lb/>
selections will be the premiere<lb/>
performance of "Quartet in One<lb/>
Movement" by Dr. Martin Mail-<lb/>
man, composer-in-residence a t<lb/>
East Carolina Collge. Dr. Mail-<lb/>
man's riece will be first on the<lb/>
program. Other pieces to be per-<lb/>
formed by the Quartet will be<lb/>
"Quartet in G Major, Op. 54, No.<lb/>
1 by Haydn, and "Quartet in C<lb/>
Sharp Minor, Op. 131 by Beeth-<lb/>
oven.<lb/>
An ensemble-in-residence at the<lb/>
University of Alabama, the Quar-<lb/>
tet is composed of Emil Raab,<lb/>
first violinist; Frank Spinosa,<lb/>
second violinist; Henry Barrett,<lb/>
violist; and Margaret Christy,<lb/>
cellist. All are expert musicians<lb/>
with a wide and varied experience.<lb/>
They will give some forty per-<lb/>
formances this year throughout<lb/>
Alabama, North Carolina. Flori-<lb/>
da, Mississippi and Illinois.<lb/>
Bleeding Campus<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
Will anyone having any<lb/>
copies of the Fall issue of<lb/>
the REBEL please send or<lb/>
bring them to the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN office at their<lb/>
earliest convenience. They are<lb/>
needed for the men coming<lb/>
to EC in March U evaluate<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
There are two male roles<lb/>
still open i? "The Faithful<lb/>
Lightening" by Kermit Hunt-<lb/>
er, author ?f "Horn In the<lb/>
West If interested, contact<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, Playhouse Di-<lb/>
rector.<lb/>
The Bloodmobile, which visited this campus, February 13-14, fell short of its hoped-for 500 pints of<lb/>
blood. The final counting revealed that EC students and faculty had donated only 374 pints to th?<lb/>
Bloodmobile.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0002"/><lb/>
M<lb/>
Friday, February l5<lb/>
PaKe 2 EAST CAROLINIJANgCg ft<lb/>
POSTERITY PraiST<lb/>
When the first "man" swung- down from the branches<lb/>
and ambled around, stoop-shouldered and bent-spined,<lb/>
one of the first places he ambled was to a wall. He went<lb/>
to a wall, found vsonvething- that would mark the wall,<lb/>
and proceeded to inscribe for posterity. These earliest<lb/>
inscriptions were little more than crude, linear etchings.<lb/>
But the art of inscribing walls progressed rapidly, and<lb/>
the etchings assumed definite shapes. They represented,<lb/>
not so much an attempt at prehistoric creativity, as a<lb/>
manifstation of man's desires and practices. Etchings<lb/>
of animals are believed by modem archaeology to have<lb/>
been created just before each hunt as magic charms.<lb/>
The hunters, by etching a hunt scene on a wall, assured<lb/>
themselves a successful hunt. Other pictures are be-<lb/>
lieved to be primitive enchantments to assure fertility<lb/>
and continueed duration of the species.<lb/>
Later, more civilized men continued the practice.<lb/>
The Egyptians painted detailed scenes on the walls of<lb/>
their tombs. These paintings also portrayed the customs<lb/>
and beliefs of the era. No Pharoah worth his mummy<lb/>
would have dreamed of meeting Osiris without first<lb/>
preparing by having scenes of a successful journey<lb/>
painted on the walls of his tomb.<lb/>
Thus men have committed themselves for pos-<lb/>
terity. The scratches and paintings on the walls of<lb/>
caves and tombs have been almost like inscriptions on<lb/>
the walls of time. Through a study of them archae-<lb/>
ologists have discerned many of the habits and beliefs<lb/>
of prehistoric and early historic man. Without these<lb/>
inscriptions the knowledge of early man would be al-<lb/>
most non-existent. They remain as a touchstone for<lb/>
historians.<lb/>
Today man continues to inscribe and etch on walls.<lb/>
Actually, modern man will etch anywhere?on walls,<lb/>
on furniture, in concrete, in toilets (especially). He<lb/>
aridly carries on the grand tradition; and when all<lb/>
else fails, when life as we know it perishes, when the<lb/>
books decay, when the great monuments man has erected<lb/>
to himself tumble, there will yet be a still, small voice<lb/>
of America carrying out amidst the rubble and ruin.<lb/>
Some future intelligence, excavating the ruins of<lb/>
a long-extinct American civilization, will discover our<lb/>
walls and interpret the etchings and inscriptions. And<lb/>
America will squat happily in the annals of history?<lb/>
a civilization of pimps, homosexuals, satyrs, and other<lb/>
assorted perverts and sex-maniacs.<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Fri. 15?Movie: "Satan Never Sleeps" with William Holden.<lb/>
Austin, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "West Side Story<lb/>
?State Theatre: "The Hook<lb/>
??Freshman Class Dance, Wright, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 16?Movie: "Satan Never Sleeps" with William Holden,<lb/>
Austin, 7:00 pjn.<lb/>
?National Teacher's Exam, Rawl, Flanagran, Library, all day.<lb/>
?Eastern North Carolina Choral Clinic.<lb/>
Sun. 17?Joint Concert by East Carolina Men's Glee Club and<lb/>
Woman's College Choir, Wright, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Mon. 18?CU Bowling League, Hillcrest Lanes, 4:00 pjn.<lb/>
?Intercollegiate Bridge Tournament, Wright Social Room,<lb/>
7:00 pjn.<lb/>
Tues. 19?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs. 21?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 pjn.<lb/>
-Chpel Services, "Y" Hut, 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
State Theatre: "A Girl Named Tamiko<lb/>
Fri. 22?Movie: "Lisa" with Stephen Boyd, 7KK) pjm Austin.<lb/>
?-Pitt Theatre: "Legend of the Lobo<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN welcomes letters from its readers.<lb/>
The briefer they are, the better is the prospect of publication.<lb/>
Letters should he kept to a maximum of 250 words. They should<lb/>
also be of general interest. All are subject to condensation and<lb/>
should conform to the standards of decency and good taste. We<lb/>
assume no responsibility tfor statements made. All letters to the<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN must be signed. Names will be withheld on<lb/>
request if the Editor can be shown sufficient reason for doing so.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolines Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
By CATHERINE LEBAUME<lb/>
editor<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
junius d. grimes in<lb/>
keith hobbs<lb/>
??<lb/>
A student newspaper iroight not<lb/>
be the place for a political con-<lb/>
troversy, but as the only French<lb/>
native on this campus, I must<lb/>
Answer the very provocative ar-<lb/>
ticle on "De Gaulle?Friend or<lb/>
Foe?"<lb/>
The reactions to de Gaulle's<lb/>
European decisions have been more<lb/>
bitter m the USA than anywhere<lb/>
eNe in Europe (England excepted,<lb/>
of course). The USA complains<lb/>
of these decisions because their<lb/>
ir-i1' arv and commercial interests<lb/>
in Furore have received a blow.<lb/>
The bitterness of the American<lb/>
complaints is in itself a proof of<lb/>
how deep the USA is involved in<lb/>
Europe and therefore how right<lb/>
and appropriate are de Gaulle's<lb/>
decisions to restore Europe's au-<lb/>
tonomy, and not French domina-<lb/>
tion over Europe.<lb/>
This does not mean that de<lb/>
Gaulle wants to 'break the Atlan-<lb/>
tic Alliance. He is a great enough<lb/>
politician to see that the Free<lb/>
World could not survive without<lb/>
an Alliance of all Occidental<lb/>
countries. The building-up of an<lb/>
-autonomous French nuclear de-<lb/>
fense, even much smaller than the<lb/>
American defense, is not incomq-<lb/>
atible with the Atlantic Alliance;<lb/>
but rather than an integration of<lb/>
Atlantic forces, France prefers a<lb/>
co-operation of allied forces. This<lb/>
means that she wants to have the<lb/>
control of her own weapons, and<lb/>
the possibility to decide their im-<lb/>
mediate use in case of emergency.<lb/>
As far as the Common Market is<lb/>
concerned, the door is certainly<lb/>
not closed definitely to England.<lb/>
The American public should realize<lb/>
that England was twice invited<lb/>
to join the Common Market: once<lb/>
in 1950 when the Coal and Steel<lb/>
Comnminity was founded, a second<lb/>
time in 1955 before the signature<lb/>
of the Rome Treaty creating the<lb/>
Common Market. England refused<lb/>
twice, and even more, tried hard<lb/>
to wreck the Common Market, by<lb/>
creating a competitive European<lb/>
Free Trade Area (with the Scan-<lb/>
dinavian countries). This E. F. T.<lb/>
A. remained stagnant, while the<lb/>
'Gammon Market was rocketing<lb/>
towards prosperity. England will<lb/>
be allowed to join it as soon as<lb/>
she conforms to the "club regu-<lb/>
lations the rules of the Rome<lb/>
Troaty-conformity she has not<lb/>
Z realized, especially regardm<lb/>
he relations with the Common-<lb/>
11. ??nries and the agricul-<lb/>
wealth coun.nts ?<lb/>
tural structure of her economy. An<lb/>
evolution is on the way, however,<lb/>
and M s&amp;(n as England com-<lb/>
plete it, the door will be wide<lb/>
ooen into Europe. Enough com-<lb/>
mon suffering and memories have<lb/>
united France and England for<lb/>
the whole 20th century to make<lb/>
France strongly wish Britain's<lb/>
entrance in Europe.<lb/>
To conclude this short restate-<lb/>
ment of a misunderstood problem,<lb/>
let me briefly answer the ridicu-<lb/>
ouseven shocking for any in-<lb/>
telligent person?comparison be-<lb/>
tween Hitler and de Gaulle. First<lb/>
of all, how could de Gaulle at the<lb/>
same time grant independence to<lb/>
twenty African nations and think<lb/>
of a Napoleonic domination over<lb/>
Europe? Secondly, de Gaulle ac-<lb/>
quired his prestige and fame for<lb/>
devoting five years of his life to<lb/>
fight Naziism; he exiled himself<lb/>
in England and got sentenced to<lb/>
death by his own countrymen for<lb/>
this?could Churchill and Roose-<lb/>
velt have said the same thing?<lb/>
Third and last, de Gaulle has<lb/>
proved in the recent crises (Berlin,<lb/>
Cuba) that he was firmly backing<lb/>
Kennedy's decisions; he certain-<lb/>
ly would have supported the USA<lb/>
in case of war because he is a<lb/>
man of honor (could the same<lb/>
thing be said of Eisenhower when<lb/>
he (promised help to the Hungar-<lb/>
ian rebels in 1956 and then let<lb/>
them be crushed by the Russians?).<lb/>
This should take care of the hints<lb/>
of a possible Moscow-Paris axis.<lb/>
Yes, de Gaulle wishes, as much<lb/>
as the USA, a "modus vivendi"<lb/>
with the USSR, but only when<lb/>
there will be no threat against<lb/>
peace.<lb/>
De Gaulle wants a powerful self-<lb/>
governing Europe, allied to the<lb/>
USA, and all Europeans want it<lb/>
with him. He knows that the<lb/>
European peoples would not bend<lb/>
under a fascist domination?they<lb/>
experienced the evils of such a<lb/>
regime!<lb/>
And I wish people in this Col-<lb/>
lege would read and learn some-<lb/>
thing, and stop rwriting about<lb/>
things they do not know. All opin-<lb/>
ions are good to hear, if they are<lb/>
based on facts, and not on imagi-<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
GIANT STEPS IN REVERSE<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 2-6161, extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.50 per year<lb/>
Take a giant step (backward. And<lb/>
so goes education in the public<lb/>
schools of North Carolina for<lb/>
another year.<lb/>
In 1961, the (State Legislature<lb/>
adopted Governor Sanford's $100<lb/>
imdllion school enrichment pflo-<lb/>
gram. The result was a jump from<lb/>
39th in average teacher pay to<lb/>
33rd. Overall, the average teach-<lb/>
er pay went up more than 18 per<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
That was fine for 1961, but it<lb/>
seems that 1962 was, for all prac-<lb/>
tical purposes, practically left out<lb/>
of the calendar. The National Ed-<lb/>
ucation Association, in a recent<lb/>
report, says that North Caro-<lb/>
lina has fallen from its previous<lb/>
33rd lowest position to an even<lb/>
imiore lowly 35th among the states<lb/>
(hi average pay for teachers. Not<lb/>
only that, but the gap between<lb/>
North Carolina teachers' average<lb/>
pay and the national average has<lb/>
widened from $628 to $760. In a<lb/>
nation that spends more money on<lb/>
liquor and gambling than on the<lb/>
education of its children, our<lb/>
State has an average $297 per-<lb/>
pupil expenditure, 44th in the<lb/>
en<lb/>
disclose<lb/>
nation, compared to a $432 nation-<lb/>
al average.<lb/>
N. E. A. reports that the<lb/>
State's $4,975 average pay re-<lb/>
flected an increase of less than<lb/>
2 per cent over last year, com-<lb/>
pared to a 4 per cent national in-<lb/>
crease. If this shows nothing else,<lb/>
it shows a lack of intelligence or<lb/>
gross apathy on the (part erf the<lb/>
State toward its children and their<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
The 1961 school enrichment pro-<lb/>
gram, on the surface, seemed like<lb/>
f large amount of money; but,<lb/>
it was obsolete before it ever got<lb/>
off the ground. In the first place,<lb/>
 help much because<lb/>
teachers' salaries had been hr-<lb/>
wT1 Th a lon ?? &amp;?<lb/>
U remember that even after<lb/>
W reonall ? <lb/>
iy, reasonable plans were not made<lb/>
for future improvements. If North<lb/>
adopt stLZ L Zhm ih dti??<lb/>
"r" that 6tre suitable<lb/>
 twenty yearsZ<lb/>
Jua forsyth<lb/>
Washington is <lb/>
iniT inside with charge, aruj <lb/>
er-charges over all.<lb/>
ministnntion concern and<lb/>
ledge about the sttunti ,n in'<lb/>
Just what the ncto <lb/>
are m Oufca ls not goiru<lb/>
known by the <lb/>
v time soon, perhaps nvjjj<lb/>
historians analyze the<lb/>
some years hence (<lb/>
will never obtain a ful<lb/>
from extemporary sounf<lb/>
issue is too full of polity ?<lb/>
narrate for a disclosure to <lb/>
pedient for the administration<lb/>
the Democratic Party, awj<lb/>
if information advjurwed jjv d<lb/>
publican Par . an(j <lb/>
go verrnnemt-in -exile itHMu.<lb/>
correct, it would be disnejjt<lb/>
:ho prfxlic. Ihroanaaeannafc .<lb/>
vocal groups are looked Upon wft<lb/>
suspicion. The ad -m (<lb/>
save their political skint), tnia.<lb/>
military (to avoid eritk <lb/>
whatever negligence or comply<lb/>
ency existed). gav- rise fe fa<lb/>
vulnerable position in the fiat<lb/>
place. One might conclude, the<lb/>
fore, that the only way that Aa?.<lb/>
icans are going- to epara the<lb/>
soup from the frott<lb/>
cal cauldron will he to weigh nV<lb/>
derue. charg-e. rumors, and i<lb/>
i.ot. pick out the plausr<lb/>
the absurd, and draw<lb/>
judgements.<lb/>
Tax Cuts:<lb/>
Terry Sanford has follow<lb/>
lead of Kennedy &amp; Co. arvi<lb/>
ing this year's North<lb/>
legislature (meeting, by the on,<lb/>
for the first time in the newT<lb/>
house of the Carolina N4<lb/>
a reduction in state taxes: a eat<lb/>
of nearly eignt million dollars. Tk<lb/>
Governor's proposal reduces pena<lb/>
al tate income taxes by 7 <lb/>
ion dollars, by raising indhrifa<lb/>
exemptions from 300 to 500 dol-<lb/>
lars. An additional 500.0M &amp;<lb/>
lars would be r by dwliinn<lb/>
the ,V sales on prepared mrf-<lb/>
cine, the so-caPed "news bey laf<lb/>
which is levied on newspaper ??<lb/>
riers, and taxes that were at <lb/>
just two years ago along with fr<lb/>
controversial food sale tax. Tff<lb/>
principle motivation for the <lb/>
reduction ostensibly Iprhtgl fn?<lb/>
the Sanford administration's<lb/>
ity education" Hinge. The word s<lb/>
Rjileig-h is that the ?rer 3J?<lb/>
dollar dependent exemption is ?<lb/>
hJg-h enough to take into tcco<lb/>
the increased cost of educa<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Consider the facts: erg:<lb/>
dollars a year amounts to a ss<lb/>
of less than two dollars a ye&amp;: P<lb/>
person: therefore, the rec<lb/>
could be considered neglipkk ?<lb/>
the average person, hut the j?"<lb/>
gTegte of eight million 4<lb/>
sounds spectacular, and Terry s<lb/>
ford needs something spertac<lb/>
to son ash the pro wine n<lb/>
of his administration. A ? <lb/>
of serious thought on this ?<lb/>
seems to indicate that the Go<lb/>
nor is playing political haJ<lb/>
panky A??in. this time ustf v<lb/>
pie statistical deception tc<lb/>
mote hi? future. <lb/>
Bei<lb/>
LAwre<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
All Secondary Mijo? <lb/>
plan to do student ????<lb/>
mtxt fall qoorter. should <lb/>
tact their department! ?<lb/>
kge Npervisor at onet<lb/>
pick up application blanks ??<lb/>
proceed forthwith to ?<lb/>
tae physical eM?lilt? (?<lb/>
quired). According to eatiW<lb/>
requirements, these <lb/>
returned to yo?r soper'<lb/>
with the sijrnatiire of ? ?<lb/>
?fciaa on the h?lth <lb/>
cate, net later than ? <lb/>
?- April 1.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0003"/><lb/>
,iav.<lb/>
February 16, 1968<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Maintenance Department<lb/>
Repairs, Remodels, Cleans;<lb/>
Receives Little Recognition<lb/>
? S "gyMa<lb/>
S&amp;&amp;TC<lb/>
SB?<lb/>
?;pilliPP<lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
?' ' iT-Zv<lb/>
<lb/>
:??:?:<lb/>
<lb/>
Tpg<lb/>
i:?w?:?; ????vx :?<lb/>
m<lb/>
ill<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
( rH?m has beds and mattresses available for present and<lb/>
bi stories.<lb/>
, atioi r an institution ed into two sections. These are<lb/>
Oarolina College headed by Mr. J. N. Capreli of<lb/>
f time, money, Buildings and Grounds and Mr. H.<lb/>
t the Main- P. Markham, who is the Engineer.<lb/>
. ? UTider Mr. Caprell's supervision<lb/>
? is divid- there are approximately seventy-<lb/>
Mr. Capreli, head of the Maintenance Department, discusses ?ne ?<lb/>
his many problems over the telephone.<lb/>
Expecting a flat tire soon?<lb/>
storage room is prepared.<lb/>
The<lb/>
five people. Included in this group<lb/>
are the carpenters, painters, maids<lb/>
janitors and ,the yard crew.<lb/>
The work of this department<lb/>
consists of repairing, remodeling,<lb/>
cleaning, and, in general, keeping<lb/>
everything in working order. On<lb/>
days when weather conditions will<lb/>
not allow outside work, the men of<lb/>
Uiis department are. working in-<lb/>
side washing windows, cleaning<lb/>
rooms and other janitorial work.<lb/>
Mr. Markham has thirteen men<lb/>
working with him. His department<lb/>
takes care of the plumbing, foeat-<lb/>
Copy by<lb/>
DAVE ENTZMINGER<lb/>
Photography by<lb/>
BILL WEIDENBACHER<lb/>
?? ???? ?<lb/>
en have to be cartful around these hot pipes in<lb/>
A member of the Maintenance Department works on a typewriter<lb/>
desk for the administration building.<lb/>
A<lb/>
workman ftt. pipes in Wahl-Cotes Elementary School.<lb/>
An electrician works in Wahl-<lb/>
Coates Elementary School.<lb/>
in-g, refrigeration, air conditioning,<lb/>
and all electrical appliances. This<lb/>
department handles the installation<lb/>
and upkeep of all plumbing, heat,<lb/>
and electricity.<lb/>
There are thirty-seven buildings '<lb/>
which this department has to keep<lb/>
in good working order. The cost<lb/>
of upkeep on these buildings and<lb/>
on our grounds is approximately<lb/>
$700,000 a year. This is not very<lb/>
much considering it includes both<lb/>
salaries and expenses.<lb/>
Although we often overlook this<lb/>
department, the benefits we re-<lb/>
ceive from it are always evident.<lb/>
To the men of the Maintenance<lb/>
Depatrment we owe a debt of grat- Bill Whichard, in charge of the ninety-odd maids and janitors, pre-<lb/>
itude for their fine work. P?es materials for their use.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIA<lb/>
N<lb/>
Friday, p<lb/>
?kTl<lb/>
Indiana Univ. Praises<lb/>
Former EC Students<lb/>
Director Explair<lb/>
Nat'l Teacher E<lb/>
Two former students of music<lb/>
at East Carolina College, both<lb/>
North Carolinians, have enviable<lb/>
records as students in the School<lb/>
of Music at Indiana University,<lb/>
according to information received<lb/>
at the college from Joseph Battis-<lb/>
ta, artist-rSn-reeidence there. They<lb/>
are Carolyn Hinton of Zebulon and<lb/>
Richard Tamiinsan of Franklinton.<lb/>
Both studied piano with Dr. Rob-<lb/>
ert Carter of the School of Music<lb/>
before beginning graduate work.<lb/>
Miss Hinton completed work for<lb/>
the master's degree at the end of<lb/>
the fall semester at Indiana Uni-<lb/>
versity this academic year. She re-<lb/>
ceived their the highest award of-<lb/>
fered by the School of Music at the<lb/>
university, the Performer's Certifi-<lb/>
cate, which Mr. Battista describes<lb/>
as "a very distinguished accom-<lb/>
plishment and honor<lb/>
Mr. ToanJinsosn Is now working<lb/>
toward the (master's degree and<lb/>
as a student is designated by Mr.<lb/>
Battista as "gifted" and "reward-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
At East Carolina, Miss Hinton<lb/>
was a memeber of the college chap-<lb/>
ter of Sigma Alpiha lota, national<lb/>
music organization, and in 1961<lb/>
was selected as one of the student<lb/>
leaders to represent the college in<lb/>
the national yearbook "Who's Who<lb/>
Among Students in American Col-<lb/>
leges and Universities<lb/>
As a student at Bast Carolina<lb/>
Mr. Tomlinson appeared in a piano<lb/>
recital before the State Federation<lb/>
of Music Clubs in 'Raleigh and also<lb/>
gave a series of programs before<lb/>
audiences in six towns in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Tisdale Represents EC Union<lb/>
At Regional ACU Meeting<lb/>
Noel Tisdale is attending a meet-<lb/>
ing this weekend in Tampa, Flori-<lb/>
da, representing East Carolina<lb/>
College Union as a member of the<lb/>
Steering Committee of (Region IV<lb/>
of the Association of College Un-<lb/>
ions. This committee is planning<lb/>
the annual fall meeting to be held<lb/>
next fall at the University of South<lb/>
Florida in Tampa.<lb/>
Member schools in Region IV,<lb/>
including Virginia, Kentucky,<lb/>
North Carolina, South Carolina,<lb/>
Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and<lb/>
Florida, send delegates to the<lb/>
Steering Committee meeting; and<lb/>
this group, along with the host<lb/>
school, plans the conference theme,<lb/>
guest speakers, discussion group<lb/>
topics, and the date of the subse-<lb/>
quent conference.<lb/>
East Carolina College Union<lb/>
has been a member of the Associa-<lb/>
tion for the past eight years and<lb/>
its students have taken an active<lb/>
role in regional meetings. Tisdale,<lb/>
a CU Committee member for the<lb/>
past two years, serves as the<lb/>
chairman of the Social Committee.<lb/>
Approximately 860 teachers and<lb/>
prospective teachers will take the<lb/>
National Teacher Examination<lb/>
here tomorrow. E. M. Nicholson,<lb/>
Director of Testing has announc-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Each of the candidate for the<lb/>
examinations has received a ticket<lb/>
of admission advising him of the<lb/>
address to which he should report<lb/>
to take the examinations. All can-<lb/>
didates for the Common Examina-<lb/>
tions will report to the center in-<lb/>
dicated on their tickets of admis-<lb/>
sion at 8:30 a.m Saturday morn-<lb/>
ing and will complete tfiese exam-<lb/>
inations at approximately 12:30<lb/>
p.m. Mr. Nicholson will supervise<lb/>
the administration of the tests<lb/>
which are prepared annually by<lb/>
Educational Testing Service of<lb/>
Princeton, New Jersey.<lb/>
Candidates for Optional Exami-<lb/>
nations will return to the exami-<lb/>
nation center at 1:30 p.m. Satur-<lb/>
day. Those taking only one Optional<lb/>
Examination will comrpiete their<lb/>
testing at about 3:15 p.m. and<lb/>
those taking two Optional Exami-<lb/>
natioTte will fmiifc .<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Most of those tafo fa? v<lb/>
Teacher Examination.<lb/>
seniors preprin v te<lb/>
cm applying for poshjonj'<lb/>
.systems which encour <lb/>
applicants to submit tiT T<lb/>
on the National Teacher F<lb/>
tkns along wit their ?J7<lb/>
dential. Mr. Niefe? <lb/>
He pointed out, hcv<lb/>
?ome candidate? nay y<lb/>
examinations because of ??'<lb/>
terest in discorenig tu"1<lb/>
stresngths and weakJ<lb/>
I )??; to such teacker<lb/>
as are RMHKtTed by the tt<lb/>
The Common Embmj<lb/>
elude tests m Prof?a<lb/>
mat ion, (General Culture<lb/>
Expression, and NoiYerba:<lb/>
ing. Each of the thineec<lb/>
examinations offered ig<lb/>
to demonstrate mastery of<lb/>
matter in the field of t:?&amp;Z<lb/>
education or in tl cccaJ<lb/>
taught in the bigk &amp; <lb/>
country.<lb/>
Hogan Presents<lb/>
List Of Summer<lb/>
Camp Openings<lb/>
Miss Gay Hogan, Camp Place-<lb/>
ment Director, has announced<lb/>
that there are many summer job<lb/>
opportunities for college men and<lb/>
women, married or single. She has<lb/>
a list of camps from all over the<lb/>
country which have openings for<lb/>
summer counselors.<lb/>
"February Is the month when<lb/>
most of the jobs are coming in<lb/>
stated Miss Hogan. "A camping<lb/>
course, PE 265, will be taught<lb/>
Spring Quarter, Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at 8:00 a.m. for two<lb/>
hours' credit<lb/>
Miss Hogan is in her office,<lb/>
room 2-04 in the Gym, 9:00-10:00<lb/>
a.m. Tuesdays, Thursdays, and<lb/>
Fridays, and at 8:30-9:00 a.m. and<lb/>
2:00-3:00 pn. on Mondays and<lb/>
Wednesdays.<lb/>
Faculty Members<lb/>
Attend Home Eo<lb/>
Education Bonf.<lb/>
Miss Alice Strawn and Mrs. Ma-<lb/>
bel Hall, home economics faculty<lb/>
members here and state honorary<lb/>
members of Future Homemakers<lb/>
of America, attended last Monday<lb/>
through today the Southern Re-<lb/>
gional Home Economics Education<lb/>
Conference in Washington, D. C<lb/>
Mrs. Hall also serves as assis-<lb/>
tant supervisor of the northeastern<lb/>
area of Home Economics Education<lb/>
and Miss Strawn also works with<lb/>
home economics student teachers<lb/>
in eastern North Carolina areas.<lb/>
Robert A. Luke, Director of Adult<lb/>
Education, National Education As-<lb/>
sociation, will be among the key-<lb/>
note speakers in his presentation<lb/>
of "What Next in Education for<lb/>
Adults?"<lb/>
State reports on strengthening<lb/>
certain aTeas of home economics<lb/>
and reports on experimental pro-<lb/>
grams and research in higher insti-<lb/>
tutions will be given during the<lb/>
conference. Other events of the<lb/>
agenda are panel discussions and<lb/>
group work om research.<lb/>
Play "Crazy Questions"<lb/>
Baried on ?f? hilanaut hank 7h?? C ?Ai U<lb/>
50 CASH AWARDS A MONTH. ENTER NOW. HERE'S HOW:<lb/>
First, think of an answer. Any answer. Then come up with<lb/>
a nutty, surprising question for it, and you've done a<lb/>
"Crazy Question It's the easy new way for students to<lb/>
make loot. Study the examples below, then do your own.<lb/>
Send them, with your name, address, college and class,<lb/>
to GET LUCKY, Box 64F, Mt. Vernon 10, N. Y. Winning<lb/>
entries will be awarded $25.00. Winning entries sub-<lb/>
mitted on the inside of a Lucky Strike wrapper will get a<lb/>
$25.00 bonus. Enter as often as you like. Start right now!<lb/>
RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries en the has cf<lb/>
humor (up to V3). clarity and freshness (up to l) and appropnat<lb/>
to V3), and their decisions will be final. Duplicate prizes will be mwM<lb/>
in the event of ties. Entries must be the original works of the ts aod<lb/>
must be submitted in the entrant's own name. There will be 50 sv:<lb/>
every month, October through April. Entries received durw.g mxw<lb/>
will be considered for that month's awards. Any entry rec . Ft?r Apr'<lb/>
30, 1963, will not be eligible, and all become the property cf 7<lb/>
Tobacco Company. Any college student may enter the conte-<lb/>
ployees of The American Tobacco Company, its advertising . . sand<lb/>
Reuben H. Donnelley, and relatives of the said employees<lb/>
notified by mail. Contest subject to all federal, state, and local rcf<lb/>
THE ANSWER:<lb/>
FREUDIAN<lb/>
UP<lb/>
n ui9se3up0N 'ep33 Xoy<lb/>
ijo jaAoodis ueipnajj e<lb/>
asn noX pinoM ieijM :NOIJ.S3n6 3H1<lb/>
THE ANSWER:<lb/>
A Stones<lb/>
Throw<lb/>
AjUfl UOSOQ 'ziiAes OOf<lb/>
?meioo ujojj puejs<lb/>
PIABQ pip jbi moh :NOIlS3n5 3H1 ,<lb/>
THE ANSWER IS:<lb/>
THE ANSWER:<lb/>
?Aiun AJOU13 'spiouCau Pieuorj<lb/>
c90, eiu jo no ajiM<lb/>
siq q2 ajjb, ubo moh :NOIlS3fl6 3H1<lb/>
THE ANSWErT<lb/>
Otinsteiit<lb/>
o8eo!MO ;o Ajun 'ssow maqesoy<lb/>
. , iSnuj jaaq<lb/>
auo eo no op je4M :NOuS3nO 3HJL<lb/>
THE ANSWER:<lb/>
'1<lb/>
A FAREWELL<lb/>
10 &amp;SHB<lb/>
"lrC0 cjjsjoh "uosjaof a PJf<lb/>
iuoij eq; o sjnuead paj Xoq a4!l<lb/>
uoum pauaddeij leijM :NOIlS3flu 3H!<lb/>
THE ANSWER:<lb/>
NOEL<lb/>
i<lb/>
H ttJ?JS?MqviON qsnjg suf <lb/>
ioSeoiqo u; aus uouejjodsueJl <lb/>
jo jjnsaj am s.mm :NOUS3nO 3H1 J<lb/>
the taste to start with the taste to stay with<lb/>
THE QUESTION IS: WHAT CIGARETTE SLOGAN hac tuc lk,m? ,<lb/>
tttsw? No question about it, the taste of a uX c?7 NJTIALS GL msw ? ? ?<lb/>
This taste is the best reason to"start$u?E? 8ffiou f?r er cigarettes,<lb/>
stay Lucky smokers. And UiclaS Se tto V ?g Wason Lucky smokers<lb/>
am'ong college students. iSTftSfi Se?Lud?y  '<lb/>
C I G A ft<lb/>
e t r e s<lb/>
?4. r. e<lb/>
ts<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0005"/><lb/>
. ry 15. 1W3<lb/>
Buc Beauty<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
v<lb/>
Students Go Greek<lb/>
Following Rush Week<lb/>
?n-hairtd, green-eyed La Rue Lockerman is this week's Buc Beauty.<lb/>
I . a sophomore education major who enjoys dancing, horseback<lb/>
jnd playing the piano in her leisure time.<lb/>
Student Artist, Burns<lb/>
Exhibits Work In Rawl<lb/>
Kn Bums is now ex-<lb/>
I r s rk as a student art-<lb/>
lekr, Johnston<lb/>
Eeceive Offices<lb/>
i I ollege<lb/>
tns were elected<lb/>
n the annual<lb/>
Nor1 I Carolina<lb/>
? ration held<lb/>
?ruary v and<lb/>
ere ! tee Behr to<lb/>
of the North<lb/>
.and Bobb<lb/>
i wiy created<lb/>
? Area Liason Of-<lb/>
? dIs Johnny Moore<lb/>
?liege. He is also<lb/>
of the ECC<lb/>
g Republicans.<lb/>
of twelve EC<lb/>
- ? ieans represented<lb/>
?invention.<lb/>
tst in the Kate W. Lewis Gallery<lb/>
at East Carolina College. She is<lb/>
one of a number of talented seniors<lb/>
who are giving one-man shows this<lb/>
academic year under the sponsor-<lb/>
ship of the college School of Art.<lb/>
The show will be open to the public<lb/>
through Feb. 17.<lb/>
Included in Mrs. Burris's exhibi-<lb/>
tion are oil paintings, watercolors,<lb/>
drawings, pottery, and an etching.<lb/>
The show was hung under the sup-<lb/>
ervision of Wesley Crawley and<lb/>
M. Tran Gordley of the faculty.<lb/>
Mrs. Burri's began the study of<lb/>
art at Wingate Junior College and<lb/>
since 1961 has been a student here.<lb/>
A candidate for the bachelor of<lb/>
science in art education, she is<lb/>
scheduled for graduation during<lb/>
the present school year.<lb/>
At East Carolina she is a mem-<lb/>
ber of the Art Club and the Alpha<lb/>
Xi Delta social sorority.<lb/>
She is married to Richard Donald<lb/>
'Burria of Mount Pleasant, also a<lb/>
 senior at East Carolina.<lb/>
Each quarter the social sorori-<lb/>
ties and fraternities of EC ob-<lb/>
serve rush weeks.<lb/>
Two weeks ago during rush<lb/>
these students pledged the follow-<lb/>
ing Greeks: ALPHA DELTA PI;<lb/>
Mary Jane Conn, Mariam Cox, Gigi<lb/>
Guice, Virginia Lewis, Selba Mor-<lb/>
ris, Ira Layne Shaw, Etmagene<lb/>
Williams, Louise Womible, Mary<lb/>
R. Tankard, June Tolson; ALPHA<lb/>
OMICRON PI: Frances Lee Bass,<lb/>
Vickie Brodburry, Judy Ritchie;<lb/>
ALPHA PHI: Jean Allen, Caro-<lb/>
lyn Harris, Annita Randall, Ms-<lb/>
iinda Wall, Sandy Black, Ann<lb/>
?Crenshaw, Pat Moore, Frances<lb/>
Gupton; ALPHA XI DELTA:<lb/>
Reba Batten, Sandra Dial, Carolyn<lb/>
Todd; CHI OMEGA: Nancy Alli-<lb/>
son, Kathy Cauible, Joyce Oliver,<lb/>
Melissa Root, Doris Watkins, Jane<lb/>
Mewborn, Nell Bowen, Sarah<lb/>
Baldwin, Peggy Honeycutt, Lesley<lb/>
Marine, Carolyn Goker; DELTA<lb/>
ZETA: Carol Ann Combs, Terrie<lb/>
Frittsi Nancy Garner 4 Eleanor<lb/>
Hant, Sarah Peterson, Elizabeth<lb/>
Phelps, Kathryn Sue Sawyer,<lb/>
Billi Stewart, Nancy Jo Tedder,<lb/>
Linda Warren; KAPPA DELTA:<lb/>
Pat Davis, Lynne Howell, Lib<lb/>
Piner, Doris Poole, iGarolyn Tuck-<lb/>
er, Joy Johnson; SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
SIGMA: Patricia Chapman, Jac-<lb/>
queline Harrington, Joyce Sigmon,<lb/>
Carol Waring, Kathryn Wesson,<lb/>
Sandra Woodfin, Donna Markum,<lb/>
Bibbie Riddick, Martha Thompson.<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA: Mor-<lb/>
rell Simpson, Dennis Lamibert,<lb/>
Jerry McGalliard, tRonny Goforth,<lb/>
John Behr, Perry Barnes, Martin<lb/>
Linker, Benjamine Sutton, Carl<lb/>
Carlberg, Wrilliam Spence, Law-<lb/>
rence Keith, Michael Lambert,<lb/>
Corie McRae; SIGMA NU: James<lb/>
Weaver, Jerry Rice, James Apple,<lb/>
Francis O'Briant, Stewart Simith,<lb/>
Johnny Jones, Richard Collier,<lb/>
Jim Michegam Steve Leonard;<lb/>
ALPHA EPSILON PI: Mark Melt-<lb/>
zer; PHI KAPPA TAU: Bob<lb/>
Washko, Jim Kimsey, Wayne Clane,<lb/>
Danny Euliss; THETA CHI: Larry<lb/>
Boyte, Bill Clark, Mark Flannagan,<lb/>
Dave Alexander, Tom Scott, Tim<lb/>
Bagwell, Jim Rogers, Jerry Ains-<lb/>
field, Pat Lloyd, Eddie Harrington,<lb/>
Bill Norman, Bill Torres;<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA: Buddy<lb/>
Goodwin, Hal Lanning, Bill Cop-1<lb/>
ley, Wayne Tragdon, Robert Wall,<lb/>
Steve Westfall, Rusty Sherril, Jim<lb/>
Coates, Beverly Sawyer, Bill Brew-<lb/>
er, Charlie Stancil, Brian Gilliam,<lb/>
John Stonestreet, Richard Thomas,<lb/>
Robert Dowd, Guy Hagerty, Jim<lb/>
Galloway, Fred Williams; PI<lb/>
KAPPA PHI: Tommy Bridges,)<lb/>
Everett Cameron, Ken Martin,<lb/>
Walt Jacobs, Bill Cooper, Bobby<lb/>
Childress, Ollie Jarvis, Carter<lb/>
Murphy, Reginald Mulle; DELTA<lb/>
SIGMA PHI: Jeff Marley; SIG-<lb/>
MA PHI EPSHLON: Frederick<lb/>
Zebley; KAPPA ALPHA: Jerry<lb/>
Wallace, Linford Harrell, Eddie<lb/>
Barnes, Basil Tippette, Bill Lacy.<lb/>
Campuses Become Centers<lb/>
Of Emotional Stress, Pressure<lb/>
. f ,i.p.)Onee<lb/>
? campuses, like their<lb/>
y are becoming<lb/>
? ?? emotional stress<lb/>
 according to John<lb/>
Director of Stanford<lb/>
V C.<lb/>
enber.<lb/>
Counseling and Test-<lb/>
tudent, the pressure<lb/>
? tectually Ls the<lb/>
K of the stress he has<lb/>
elementary school<lb/>
(htain admission states<lb/>
o is also an associate<lb/>
 professor of psychology.<lb/>
; a?t numbers (e. g over<lb/>
'f 0r male students), the<lb/>
 " rrt simply to obtain<lb/>
B' hut to qualify for grad-<lb/>
uT0r Pwfearfcmal school.<lb/>
a<lb/>
Mh<lb/>
school, or to flunk<lb/>
no longer reasonable op-<lb/>
We the' were when most of<lb/>
?wahim colle?e: they are ull<lb/>
rr? e as a aisn?norable dis-<lb/>
rom th? service or a felony<lb/>
?n- Twenty years ago,<lb/>
those who cared, studied, and got<lb/>
good grades; those who didn't<lb/>
played. Today or tomorrow, every-<lb/>
body cares, everybody studies, but<lb/>
the old grading curve hasn't<lb/>
changed much. The result can only<lb/>
be more intense, self-serving com-<lb/>
, etitiom and. more temptation to<lb/>
succeed by hook or crook, more<lb/>
hostility and anxiety.<lb/>
"For the faculty, the pressures<lb/>
are equally great. They are faced<lb/>
wrth more and more brighter stu-<lb/>
dents. Up to a point, brighter stu-<lb/>
dents are a blessing; beyond that<lb/>
point, they can be a challenge and<lb/>
a threat.<lb/>
"In our universities, faculties<lb/>
are under great compulsion to do<lb/>
research and to publish. More and<lb/>
more administrative work is re-<lb/>
ouired of them, managing research<lb/>
contracts, supervising graduate<lb/>
programs; for many men ofschol-<lb/>
arly temperament mdministratave<lb/>
work is unusually stressful.<lb/>
"The appalling problems of<lb/>
those charged with managing col-<lb/>
lege plants, budgets, fund raising<lb/>
faculty recruitment and the like<lb/>
are too obvious to require elab-<lb/>
oration. What is imiportant is that<lb/>
the more harried the faculty and<lb/>
administration, the more serious<lb/>
and concerned the students, the<lb/>
greater the (potentiality for un-<lb/>
healthy conflicts, both covert and<lb/>
overt, between them.<lb/>
"When obviously bright students<lb/>
critize the teaching, champion a<lb/>
professor whose contract isn't be-<lb/>
ing renewed, complain about the<lb/>
'sick call' aspect of the health<lb/>
service, demand membership on<lb/>
university committees?these po-<lb/>
tentially constructive expressions<lb/>
of adolescent energy tread on<lb/>
sensitive toes. To handle such<lb/>
problems constructively requires<lb/>
a respect for students, an under-<lb/>
standing of them, and a maturity<lb/>
and patience that the administra-<lb/>
tor who already feels pressured<lb/>
may not be able to display<lb/>
?N'<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
with<lb/>
-<lb/>
Author of "J Was a Teen-age Dwarf, "The Many<lb/>
Loves of Dcbie Gillis etc.)<lb/>
GLAD RAGS<lb/>
The hounds of spring are on winter's traces. Soon buds the<lb/>
crocus, soon trills the giant condor, soon come the new spring<lb/>
fashions to adorn our lissome limbs.<lb/>
And what will the American college student wear this spring?<lb/>
Gather round, you rascals, and light a Marlboro Cigarette and<lb/>
enjoy that fine mellow tobacco, that pure wrhite filter, and<lb/>
possess your souls in sweet content, and listen.<lb/>
As everyone knows, campus fashions have always been casual.<lb/>
This spring, however, they have gone beyond being merely<lb/>
casual: they have become makeshift.<lb/>
The object is to look madly improvised, gaily spur-of-the-<lb/>
moment! For example, why don't you girls try wearing a<lb/>
peasant skirt with a dinner jacket? Or matador pants with a<lb/>
bridal veil? Or Bermuda shorts with bronze breastplates? Be<lb/>
rakish! Be impromptu! Be devil-take-the-hindmost!<lb/>
And, men, you be the same. Try an opera cape with sweat<lb/>
pants. Or a letter-sweater with kilts. Or a strait jacket with<lb/>
hip boots. Be bold! Be daring! Be a tourist attraction!<lb/>
'?ft rdkiil IfymptomMl<lb/>
But all is not innovation in college fashions this spring. In<lb/>
fact, one of the highlights of the season turns time backward in<lb/>
its flight. I refer, of course, to the comeback of the powdered<lb/>
wiff.<lb/>
This charming accoutrement, too long neglected, has already<lb/>
caught on with in undergrade everywhere. On hundreds of<lb/>
campuses the bossa nova is giving way to the minuet, and<lb/>
patriotic undergraduates are dumping British tea into the<lb/>
nearest harbor. This, as you may imagine, does not sit well with<lb/>
King George III who, according to reliable reports, has been<lb/>
stamping his foot and uttering curses not fit to reproduce in<lb/>
this family newspaper. For that matter, a lot of our own people<lb/>
are steamed up too, and there has even been some talk about the<lb/>
American colonies declaring their independence of England.<lb/>
But I hardly think it will come to that. I mean, how can we<lb/>
break with the mother country when we are dependent on her<lb/>
for so many things?linsey-woolsey, Minie" balls, taper snuffers,<lb/>
and like that? She, on the other hand, relies on us for turkeys,<lb/>
Marlboro Cigarettes, and Route 66. So I say, if Molly Pitcher<lb/>
and those other Radcliffe hotheads will calm down, and if<lb/>
gentlemen will cry "Peace 1 Peace we may yet find an<lb/>
amicable solution to our differences. But let not our British<lb/>
cousins mistake this willingness to negotiate for weakness. If<lb/>
fight we must, then fight we will! Paul Revere is saddled up.<lb/>
the rude bridge arches the flood, and the ROTC is armed!<lb/>
But I digress. We were smoking Marlboro Cigarettes?O,<lb/>
splendid cigarette! O, good golden tobaccos! 0, pristine pure<lb/>
white filter! 0, fresh! 0, tasty! 0, soft pack! 0, flip top boxl<lb/>
O, get some!?we were, I say, smoking Marlboros and talking<lb/>
about spring fashions.<lb/>
Let us turn now to the season's most striking new feature-<lb/>
pneumatic underdrawers. These inflatable garments make every<lb/>
chair an easy chair. Think how welcome they will be when you<lb/>
sit through a long lecture! They are not, however, without<lb/>
certain dangers. Last week, for example, Rimbaud Sigafoos, a<lb/>
sophomore at the University of Pittsburgh, fell out of a 96th<lb/>
story window in the Tower of Learning. Thanks to his pneu-<lb/>
matic underdrawers, he suffered no injury when he struck the<lb/>
sidewalk, but the poor fellow is still bouncing?his seventh<lb/>
consecutive day?and it is feared that he will starve to death.<lb/>
? 1963<lb/>
Fashions come, fashions go, but year after year Marlboro<lb/>
Cigarettes, sponsors of this column, bring you the tastiest<lb/>
tobaccos and m pure white filter too. Try Marlboro soon.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
E<lb/>
AST C A R 0 LINIAN<lb/>
Friday,<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
SPORTS REVIEW<lb/>
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE<lb/>
It is interesting to note the growth in sports in the<lb/>
Carolinas, especially North Carolina, in the last decade.<lb/>
Most of the larger cities and towns in N. C. have profess-<lb/>
ional baseball teams. Two of them, Charlotte and Greens-<lb/>
boro, now have professional ice hockey teams. The Greens-<lb/>
boro team leads the Southern Division of the Eastern<lb/>
Hockey League. (Can you imagine what a North Caro-<lb/>
linian's reply would have been if you would halve suggested<lb/>
even the remostest possibility of professional ice hockey<lb/>
in the South ten years ago?)<lb/>
Now to increase a furthering of sports in N. C, Char-<lb/>
lotte has been mentioned as a possible new home for the<lb/>
Chicago Zephyrs of the National Basketball Association.<lb/>
Charlotte is an ideal sight for such an athletic business ven-<lb/>
ture because of the extreme interest that Mecklenburg<lb/>
County and the surrounding area follows this sport. This<lb/>
region gave heavy support to the NCAA Regional Tour-<lb/>
nament that took place there two consecutive years and to<lb/>
the Dixie Classic which was originated from Charlotte.<lb/>
Charlotteans pack nine high school gyms to watch the local<lb/>
competition. Sell-out crowds attend the District 4-A con-<lb/>
ference tournament which is held in Park Center. The<lb/>
area has two basketball teams which draw crowds at their<lb/>
local gyms?Davidson and Belmont Abbey. At the Duke-<lb/>
Davidson game last year, in which the Wildcats upset the<lb/>
Blue Devils, a sell-out crowd was on hand. An NBA franch-<lb/>
ise is almost a guaranteed profit maker in Charlotte.<lb/>
<lb/>
Duke continues to lead the Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
in almost every statistic. The Blue Devils lead the con-<lb/>
ference with a 10-0 mark and 17-2 overall record. The<lb/>
Duke team leads the ACC in total offense, rebounding, and<lb/>
field goal percentages. Clemson's resurgent Tigers lead in<lb/>
one statistic?defense, and the Tigers are pushing Duke<lb/>
for the rebounding lead. Duke is averaging 51.7 and Clemson<lb/>
is at 48.1.<lb/>
Baby Bucs Beat Indians<lb/>
In Two Overtimes 96-92<lb/>
EC's frosh went into two over-<lb/>
times before emerging the victor<lb/>
in a contest with the William and<lb/>
Mary freshmen 96-92 in a pre-<lb/>
liminary to the varsity game last<lb/>
Saturday night in Williamsburg,<lb/>
Virginia,<lb/>
The Baby Bucs staged a four<lb/>
point comeback with a little over<lb/>
a minute left to (play in the regu-<lb/>
lation period to send the game into<lb/>
overtime with both teams tied at<lb/>
77 apiece. Neil Hodges evened the<lb/>
regulation game up with two free<lb/>
throws made in the final 20 sec-<lb/>
onds.<lb/>
The Pirate and Indian frosh<lb/>
both scored eight points in the<lb/>
first overtime period to leave the<lb/>
game tied op at 85-85 going into<lb/>
the second overtime period. Grady<lb/>
Williamson and Larry Philips<lb/>
scored all of he Bug's points in<lb/>
the final overtime period.<lb/>
EC Jumped off to a quick lead<lb/>
in the second overtime period to<lb/>
lead by eight points 96-88. The In-<lb/>
dians made a comebock but found<lb/>
time to be their greatest enemy<lb/>
as their rally was caught short<lb/>
after they had scored two quick<lb/>
baskets to make the score 96-92.<lb/>
The gun sounded as the Indians<lb/>
were trying to work the ball down-<lb/>
court for a final shot.<lb/>
Jerry Woodside was high man<lb/>
for both teams with 28 points.<lb/>
Neil Hodges and Jack Yoder hit<lb/>
IS apiece for the the Pirates.<lb/>
The Pirates led in rebounding<lb/>
and shooting (percentages over<lb/>
William and Mary. EC out-re-<lb/>
bounded the Indians 65-55. The<lb/>
Pirates had a hot hand from the<lb/>
floor in hitting 39 of 82 attempts<lb/>
for 47.5 shooting percentage while<lb/>
the Indians hit 38-91 attempt for<lb/>
a 40.7 average.<lb/>
Intramural Dept. Announces<lb/>
Men's Basketball Standings<lb/>
William And Mary Indi,<lb/>
Defeat EC Pirates 81-66<lb/>
William and Mary's Indians<lb/>
handed the Pirates their second<lb/>
straight loss on EC's current road<lb/>
trip by a score of 81-66 in Will-<lb/>
iamsburg, Va. Monday night.<lb/>
The Indians, fresh from their<lb/>
Saturday night victory over West<lb/>
Virginia, took the lead from the<lb/>
evening horn and never were<lb/>
caught again by the Pirates. The<lb/>
closest that the Pirates could get<lb/>
was 9-8 with six minutes gone in<lb/>
the first half. William and Mary<lb/>
pulled way out in front of the<lb/>
cold shooting Bucs a few minutes<lb/>
later. W &amp; M kept increasing this<lb/>
lead until half-time when they left<lb/>
the floor leading 39-22.<lb/>
The Indian coach started subs-<lb/>
tituting freely after 13 minutes<lb/>
had gone by in the second half.<lb/>
William and Mary had their larg-<lb/>
est lead of the evening at this point<lb/>
67-43.<lb/>
EC managed to cut this 24 point<lb/>
margin down to the final 15 point<lb/>
edge, but was uneffective in mak-<lb/>
ing any serious comeback. After<lb/>
,he opening ten ??? ?<lb/>
second half, there could be little<lb/>
doubt as to the outcome.<lb/>
The only statistics in which the<lb/>
Pirates were even close to the In-<lb/>
dians was rebounding. Both teams<lb/>
were about equal in that depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The floor shooting of both teams<lb/>
showed William and Mary to be<lb/>
the more accurate. The Indians<lb/>
hit 30 of 62 for a 49 percentage<lb/>
mark. The Bucs connected on 23<lb/>
of 77 attempts or an average of<lb/>
slightly over 30 percent. The In-<lb/>
dians hit 21-22 free throw at-<lb/>
tempts while the Bucs hit 20 of<lb/>
29 charity tosses.<lb/>
Bill Otte and Lacy West led<lb/>
the Pirates in scoring with 20 and<lb/>
19 points respectively.<lb/>
Roger Bergey was high man for<lb/>
the home team with 20 points. Bob<lb/>
Harris was the only other In-<lb/>
dian in double figures with 16.<lb/>
The foai was the second in a<lb/>
row for the traveling Pirates<lb/>
whose record now stands at 10-8.<lb/>
The EC record <lb/>
stands at 3 and 2. <lb/>
The victory Wag<lb/>
?straight fr Wilham )<lb/>
! The Indian now hav , 7,<lb/>
BC G<lb/>
WTest<lb/>
Kncrwles<lb/>
Parker<lb/>
Otte<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Brofrden<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
W &amp; M<lb/>
Bergey<lb/>
11 uifter<lb/>
Ckodi ng<lb/>
Harris<lb/>
Morris<lb/>
Cowley<lb/>
Roy<lb/>
Dickerson<lb/>
Younkin<lb/>
A rv 1 ri aJ is<lb/>
Corley<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
7<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
23<lb/>
(,<lb/>
8<lb/>
9<lb/>
?<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
30<lb/>
F<lb/>
u<lb/>
M<lb/>
F<lb/>
M<lb/>
24<lb/>
u<lb/>
M<lb/>
M<lb/>
-<lb/>
&amp;4<lb/>
Four different ways to make goir,u<lb/>
more fun than getting there<lb/>
You can see why ont of America's<lb/>
favorite outdoor sports is driving<lb/>
Chevrolets, with four entirely different<lb/>
kinds of cars to choose from. There's<lb/>
the Jet-smooth Chevrolet, about as luxu-<lb/>
rious as you can go without going over-<lb/>
board in price; the low-cost<lb/>
i rhevy II, a good-looking car<lb/>
t hat would send any family<lb/>
acking; another family<lb/>
vorite, the sporty Corvair,<lb/>
CHEVROLET<lb/>
will make you think that ice and snow<lb/>
are kid stuff; and for pure adventure,<lb/>
America's only sports car, ConttU-<lb/>
now in two all-new versions with looks<lb/>
that can stop traffic like a rush-hour<lb/>
blizzard. Picked your favorite already?<lb/>
The next thing is to take<lb/>
the wheel at your Chevrolet<lb/>
dealer's. If that doesn't have<lb/>
you thinking of places to<lb/>
?0, maybe you'd rather.<lb/>
. a<lb/>
ose rear-engine traction lieeps bOing WCBl have a ball around town!<lb/>
According to the latest official<lb/>
release from the Men's Intra-<lb/>
mural Basketball department, the<lb/>
early leaders in the competition<lb/>
are Lambda Chi and Sigma Nu in<lb/>
the Fraternity League. Neither<lb/>
of these teams has lost a game<lb/>
thus far. The Silver Eagles lead<lb/>
in the Independent League with r<lb/>
5-1 record. Aycock Dormitory ha?<lb/>
two teams vying for first place<lb/>
in the Dormitory League. First<lb/>
floor West and third floor East<lb/>
are both undefeated. The follow-<lb/>
ing are the team standings:<lb/>
Dormitor League<lb/>
W L Ft<lb/>
Aycock 1st Floor West 5 0 0<lb/>
Aycock 3rd Floor East 4 0 0<lb/>
New Dorm 3rd Fl. N. 3 1 0<lb/>
New Dorm 3rd Fl. S. S 2 0<lb/>
Aycock 1st Floor East 2 2 0<lb/>
(Aycock 4th Floor West 2 2 0<lb/>
Aycock 3rd Floor West 2 8 0<lb/>
Jones 2nd Floor East 13 0<lb/>
Jones 4th Floor East 13 0<lb/>
Jones 3rd Floor West 0 4<lb/>
Jones 2nd Floor Wes?t 0 3<lb/>
Fraternity League<lb/>
W L<lb/>
Lambda Chi 7 0<lb/>
Sigma Nu 5 0<lb/>
Theta Chi 8 1<lb/>
Kappa Alpha 3 2<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi 2 2<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega 3 4<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau 2 3<lb/>
Kappa Phi 2 3<lb/>
Pi Kappa Alpha 2 5<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon 1 3<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Pi 1 4<lb/>
Independent League<lb/>
W L<lb/>
Silver Eagles 6<lb/>
Country Gents 4<lb/>
Rinky Dinks 3<lb/>
Tranfers 2<lb/>
Rejects 2<lb/>
Fearsone 5 2<lb/>
Magnificent 7 3<lb/>
Drill Team Cadets 1<lb/>
Sleepers q<lb/>
Foo Foos o<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ft.<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Ft.<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
JET-SM00TH CHEVROLET 1MPALA SPORT COUPE<lb/>
CHEVY II NOVA 400 SPORT COUPE<lb/>
CORVAIR M0NZA CLUB COUPE<lb/>
s;<lb/>
-CRVETTE STiia MT SPORT COUPE<lb/>
Bonanza Bsnfo<lb/>
your<lb/>
Chevrolet dd'<lb/>
II<lb/>
<pb facs="00038798_0007"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>