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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038803_0001"/>
EastCarolinian<lb/>
V lume <lb/>
XXXVIII<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 5, 1963"<lb/>
Number 35<lb/>
?<lb/>
Chairmen Of Reviewing Groups<lb/>
West, Chairman of the NC State Department of Public Education; Dean Robert H.<lb/>
(ha.rman of the Southern Association of Colleges: and Dean Banks Wilburn, Chairman of<lb/>
national turned for the Accreditation of Teacher Education, pose with EC's Dean Holt and Dr.<lb/>
J(,fikin ?E. C. News Bureau<lb/>
Accrediting Agencies Visit EC;<lb/>
c<lb/>
ampus<lb/>
Prep<lb/>
ares ror<lb/>
F<lb/>
2Y<lb/>
ears<lb/>
the requirements<lb/>
era Association of<lb/>
r gram will be re-<lb/>
ree groups repre-<lb/>
g agencies<lb/>
w is a re-<lb/>
i r members of the<lb/>
 on of Colleges<lb/>
be met every ten<lb/>
on for the review has<lb/>
 - and has involved<lb/>
&amp; the faculty through<lb/>
B various study com-<lb/>
ese committees were<lb/>
prepare reports on<lb/>
I i be reviewed by<lb/>
from the accrediting<lb/>
 ' - h committee recom-<lb/>
ments for the col-<lb/>
studied, and most of<lb/>
err.enis have already<lb/>
Students also parti-<lb/>
e preparation through<lb/>
?a of faculty members<lb/>
1 g Quarter 1962. The<lb/>
ior for the review was<lb/>
pervision of an Exec-<lb/>
btee which included<lb/>
L. Holt. Chairman;<lb/>
: ?well, Dr. Douglas<lb/>
'r. James L. Whdte.<lb/>
iewing groups will<lb/>
es from the<lb/>
i of Colleges,<lb/>
for Accredi-<lb/>
r Education and<lb/>
?<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
. One of the mem-<lb/>
em Association<lb/>
&amp;?r?<lb/>
By HERB WILLIAMS<lb/>
group will also represent the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of Schools of<lb/>
Music.<lb/>
The purpose of the reviewing<lb/>
groups is to verify the inform a-<lb/>
q in the committee reports. The<lb/>
Southern Association group is to<lb/>
evaluate EC's overall program, and<lb/>
the other two groups are to gathei<lb/>
Walter B. Mathews, Dr. Paul E.<lb/>
Cable, President Robert R. Martin,<lb/>
Professor Robert L. Van Doren,<lb/>
Dr. J. P. Freeman, and Superin-<lb/>
tendent Jesse 0. Sanderson. The<lb/>
N. C. State Department of Public<lb/>
Education is represented by: Dean<lb/>
Cameron P. West, Chairman; Mr.<lb/>
Clifton T. Edwards, Mrs. James<lb/>
information about its teacher edu- j Valsame, Mr. Jerry Hall. Dr. J. P.<lb/>
cation program. In addition to re-<lb/>
viewing reports, the groups will<lb/>
also be talking to administration<lb/>
officials, directors of departments,<lb/>
chairmen of committees, and prob-<lb/>
ably individual faculty and stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
The reviewing1 groups were to<lb/>
meet for the first time at a buffet<lb/>
dinner Sunday night in the Buc-<lb/>
caneer Room where they were to<lb/>
meet the chairmen of the EC study<lb/>
committees. Following the dinner,<lb/>
each group was to hold an organi-<lb/>
zational meeting for its members.<lb/>
Members of the group from the<lb/>
Southern Association of Colleges,<lb/>
the host group are: Dean Robert<lb/>
H. Wienfeld, Chairman; President<lb/>
C. C. Humphreys, Mr. Robert Aber-<lb/>
nathy, Dr. W. W. Kaempfer, Dean<lb/>
Robert S. Lancaster, Dr. Leon Will-<lb/>
man, Mr. Carrol Quenzel, and Dr.<lb/>
Owen Sellers (also representing<lb/>
the National Association of Schools<lb/>
of Music). Representing the Na-<lb/>
tional Council for the Accredita-<lb/>
tion of Teacher Education are:<lb/>
Dean D. Banks Wilburn, Chair-<lb/>
man; Dean Robert J. Young, Dr.<lb/>
Freeman, Dr. Ben Fountain, Dr.<lb/>
Arnold E. Hoffman, Dr. Francis<lb/>
Bowman, Dr. John Otts, and Mr.<lb/>
Edward T. Brown.<lb/>
Varsity Band<lb/>
Gives Concert<lb/>
Featuring a program of spirited<lb/>
marches and other selections with<lb/>
popular appeal, the EC Varsity<lb/>
Band will appear in concert<lb/>
Wednesday, March 6, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
in the Wright Auditorium. The pub-<lb/>
lic is invited to attend.<lb/>
George W. Knight, Jr of the<lb/>
School of Music will direct the<lb/>
ensemble of 45 student musicians<lb/>
in the first program to be pre-<lb/>
sented by the Varsity Band during<lb/>
the current school year.<lb/>
Opening with Latham's "Brigh-<lb/>
ton Beach Concert March the<lb/>
program will include such varied<lb/>
selections as the march from<lb/>
Wagner's "Die Meistersinger<lb/>
Percy Grainger's arrangement of<lb/>
an Irish folk tune from County<lb/>
Deiry, "Fantasia on Lady of<lb/>
Spain" by Evans, Strauss's "Al-<lb/>
ierseelen and as closing numler,<lb/>
the march from Hoist's "Second<lb/>
Suit for Military Band in F<lb/>
Major<lb/>
A graduate of East Carolina in<lb/>
Is59, Mr. Knight returned to the<lb/>
college last September as a faculty<lb/>
member of the School of Music.<lb/>
During the present school year he<lb/>
has acted as assistant director of<lb/>
the East Carolina Marching Band<lb/>
2nd is now serving as director of<lb/>
the Varsity Band. He was granted<lb/>
the master's degree in music at<lb/>
the University of Illinois in 1959<lb/>
and taught in the Barnwell, S. C,<lb/>
public schools in 1959-1962. He is<lb/>
the son of Mr. and Mrs. G. W.<lb/>
knight of Rocky Mount.<lb/>
The Varsity Band is composed<lb/>
primarily of freshman music maj-<lb/>
ors and of non-music majors.<lb/>
Dollars For Development<lb/>
Gains Support Of Alumni<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
Jane H. Tncker, chair-<lb/>
man of the Publications Board,<lb/>
? receiving applications<lb/>
? Positions of editor of<lb/>
Rn ' WKFR and editor<lb/>
of the KKY for the 1963-1964<lb/>
w ar. Anyone wishing<lb/>
aPplv for these positions<lb/>
sh?uld have their application<lb/>
J to Dr. Tucker's office not<lb/>
'ler?lun 3:00 p.m. on March<lb/>
 boasters' of "Search-<lb/>
A Ion ? Tame Jones" and<lb/>
olaky-Yak- fame will be<lb/>
. cPus in Wright Auditor-<lb/>
 8:00 p.m. Thursday,<lb/>
 7. The concert, spon-<lb/>
sored by the IFC, will also<lb/>
include The Majors' and Gui-<lb/>
tar Kimber and The Untouch-<lb/>
ables Tickets can be purchased<lb/>
in the Student Union or in the<lb/>
Cafeteria Lobby. Student Ad-<lb/>
vance admission sales are<lb/>
$1.25. Student tickets will be<lb/>
$1.50 at the door and general<lb/>
admission to the public will<lb/>
be $2.00.<lb/>
Students holding National<lb/>
Defense Student Loans may<lb/>
pick up their checks Wednes-<lb/>
day, Thursday, and Friday,<lb/>
March 6, 7, and 8 in room 16<lb/>
of the Administration Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Rose Delivers Talk<lb/>
To Newly-Formed<lb/>
Forensic Society<lb/>
Dr. Erwin Rose of the Psycho-<lb/>
logy Department will deliver a lec-<lb/>
ture to the meeting of the newly<lb/>
formed Forensic (debating) So-<lb/>
ciety. The lecture, "Psychological<lb/>
Aspects of Forensics will be given<lb/>
on March 19 at 7:00 P.M. in Rawl<lb/>
235. A question and answer period<lb/>
will follow the lecture. Debators<lb/>
and guests are cordially invited.<lb/>
EC's Dollars for Development<lb/>
Fund, launched in mid-January<lb/>
by the Alumni Association, went<lb/>
into its third stage March 1 with<lb/>
the beginning of a drive in District<lb/>
8 of the Association.<lb/>
Letters soliciting a dollar or<lb/>
more from graduates of the col-<lb/>
lege are now being mailed to alum-<lb/>
ni in the district, which includes<lb/>
the North Carolina counties of<lb/>
Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Cur-<lb/>
rituck, Gates, Hertford, Pasquo-<lb/>
tank, and Perquimans. Personal<lb/>
contacts for collections of funds<lb/>
will begin in these counties April 1.<lb/>
Hiram J. Mayo, Superintendent<lb/>
of Schools in Edenton, is acting<lb/>
as chairman of the drive in the<lb/>
eight-county area.<lb/>
Janice Hardison, Director of<lb/>
Alumni Affairs and Foundations<lb/>
at the college, reported today that<lb/>
Dollars for Development, in<lb/>
amounts of $1 upward, are being<lb/>
received daily at the campus Alum-<lb/>
ni Office from a wide area in this<lb/>
country. Contributions, she said,<lb/>
reflect the interest of alumni in<lb/>
Pitt and Beaufort Counties and in<lb/>
other states where the two pre-<lb/>
vious drives were conducted in<lb/>
January and February. Goal of the<lb/>
drive, she stated, is $13,000.<lb/>
The dollars for Development<lb/>
Drive aims at creating interest<lb/>
and gaining support among alumni<lb/>
for the East Carolina College De-<lb/>
velopment Fund, which was organ-<lb/>
ized this year to finance urgent<lb/>
educational needs at the college.<lb/>
The college Development Fund is<lb/>
a joint undertaking of the Alumni<lb/>
Association and the Committee on<lb/>
Foundations and Development at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Extending through 1963, the<lb/>
Dollars for Development campaign<lb/>
will include drives in nine other<lb/>
districts of the Alummi Associa-<lb/>
tion from April through Decem-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
Rehearsal For 'Faithful Lightning5<lb/>
And play practice begins as Ed Loessin, director of "The Faithful Lightning gives instructions<lb/>
to Bobby Denton and Martha Compton, .? q Newg Bureau<lb/>
<pb facs="00038803_0002"/><lb/>
Tuesday, Ma<lb/>
rrh l<lb/>
i<lb/>
Page<lb/>
?)<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DEMOCRACY<lb/>
In a move to democratize student government at<lb/>
East Carolina, the administration last night nullified a<lb/>
previous vote of the student senate and rescinded the<lb/>
requirements stipulating prior experience in the senate<lb/>
for eligibility to run for SGA office. The amendment<lb/>
passed earlier by the senate was not in keeping with the<lb/>
ideals of democracy and these ideals must be preserved.<lb/>
With the new ruling, any member of the student body<lb/>
with at least a "C" average and sufficient hours is<lb/>
eligible to run for office.<lb/>
Applications may be filed with Burk Stevens elec-<lb/>
tions chairman, in the SGA office from n?w until the<lb/>
14th of March. Elections for SGA officials will be held<lb/>
on March 28. It is hoped that students will avail them-<lb/>
selves of this new democratization and will at least vote<lb/>
on election day. After all. if the students do not partici-<lb/>
pate in their democracy, how can the student govern-<lb/>
ment be strong and effective?<lb/>
FREEDOM OF THE PRESS<lb/>
Republicans have introduced legislation in the N.<lb/>
C General Assembly making it a crime to publish or<lb/>
broadcast the names of victims of rape, assault with<lb/>
intent to commit rape, or carnal knowledge.<lb/>
According to the Raleigh News and Observer, the<lb/>
bill makes the offense a misdemeanor punishable in the<lb/>
discretion of the criminal courts. It empowers civil<lb/>
courts to ward financial compensation for "such damages<lb/>
as may be shown<lb/>
The proponents of the bill give various reasons for<lb/>
its introduction. They seem to feel that more crimes<lb/>
of the listed nature would be reported if the victims<lb/>
were not held up to public scrutiny or sympathy. "A lot<lb/>
of these crimes are not reported because of the em-<lb/>
barassment Charles Strong of Guilford said.<lb/>
Perhaps this is true. Certainly individuals who<lb/>
have been forced to undergo such indignities should not<lb/>
be forced to endure the added humiliation of public<lb/>
perusal. But there is a great necessity that the policing<lb/>
of such incidents remain the responsibility of news-<lb/>
papers and news services. Admittedly, to continually<lb/>
print gruesome details smacks distastefully of yellow<lb/>
journalism. But if such a law were passed, it could<lb/>
eventually leave even the honest newspapers open to<lb/>
the whim of every quack who does not happen to feel<lb/>
like publicity. Worse, such a law would be an incipient<lb/>
abridgement of the fundamental right to freedom of the<lb/>
press. That this freedom too often becomes license is<lb/>
a misfortune, but to abridge the freedom would be even<lb/>
greater license on the part of the legislature.<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Tues. 5?iForeipn Film: "The Red Shoes Austin, 7:30 p.m<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Savage Guns<lb/>
State Theatre: "Two and Two Makes Six<lb/>
Wed. 6?Concert by Varsity Band, sponsored by School of Music,<lb/>
Wright, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
?State Theatre: "Wild for Kicks'<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: Opera Festival?"Aida" and "Madame But-<lb/>
terfly<lb/>
Thurs. 7?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Room, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Chapel Services, "Y" Hut, 6:30 pjm.<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Forty Pounds of Trouble<lb/>
?Concert, Wright, 8:00-10:30 p.m The Coasters, The Majors,<lb/>
The Untouchables, sposored by IFC.<lb/>
Fri. 8?Movie: "It Happened in Athens Jayne Makisfield, Austin,<lb/>
7:00 p.m.<lb/>
?State Theatre: "It's Only Money<lb/>
Satt 9?Purple and Gold Football Game: BC Stadium, 2:00 pjn.<lb/>
?Movie: "It Happened in Athens<lb/>
?Pitt Theatre: "Days of Wine and Races<lb/>
Mon. 11?College Union Bowling League, Hillcrest Lanes, 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Duplicate Bridge, Wright Social Room, 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Recital: Brett Watson and Peggy Morse, Austin, 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Tues. 12?Beginners' Bridge, Wright Social Roam, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
?Dame Judith Anderson, sponsored by SGA Entertainment<lb/>
Series, Wright, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
LETTERS<lb/>
AYCOCK Dohj,<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
We the mak itnrtaau ?.<lb/>
Ay cork, Ba W,ng, W(MjJd <lb/>
apologize for tat malidoQ<lb/>
havior displayed by ort<lb/>
accretttU '?? male ntud<lb/>
Carolina ? j<lb/>
gnaw. May the females, <lb/>
those affected, be assij<lb/>
thi ? e of be! will<lb/>
piece again, ? thet<lb/>
of t nmU<lb/>
for fci reputat on of<lb/>
<lb/>
d<lb/>
ners W ?<lb/>
at<lb/>
<lb/>
???2 i<lb/>
K-H<lb/>
IW<lb/>
ART'S MANAGEMENT<lb/>
Somebody Thinks We're Solid<lb/>
Eastti<lb/>
Published temUweekly by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolina! Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
busi<lb/>
editor I juntas d. grimes m<lb/>
manager keith hobba<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Mailing Address: Box 1063. East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, ail departments. PL 2-5716 or PL 2-61H, sate as ion 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.60 per year<lb/>
The following: article appeared<lb/>
in the February Arts Management,<lb/>
the national news service for those<lb/>
who finance, manage and com-muni-<lb/>
cate the arts. With current criti-<lb/>
sicm and bad publicity East Caro-<lb/>
lina students are getting, the East<lb/>
Carolinian felt that it would be<lb/>
nice to show that we have some<lb/>
extremely strong points as well:<lb/>
"With the rise of professional<lb/>
cultural impresarios on campuses<lb/>
throughout the country, at least<lb/>
one college is providing a contrast<lb/>
to this trend. At East Carolina<lb/>
College in Green vile, N. C, stu-<lb/>
dents have taken over the manage-<lb/>
ment of the campus arts program<lb/>
from the faculty and scored a<lb/>
great success.<lb/>
"Working with a yearly budget<lb/>
of almost $25,000, a student en-<lb/>
tertainment committee selects<lb/>
guest artists for two concert ser-<lb/>
ies of five programs each. Stu-<lb/>
dents also book the artists, sell<lb/>
tickets, and publicize the program.<lb/>
As evidence of the seriousness<lb/>
with which students leadership is<lb/>
taken, the college paid expenses<lb/>
for two student managers to at-<lb/>
tend a recent conference of the<lb/>
Association of College and Uni-<lb/>
versity Concert Managers.<lb/>
Until 1961, the arts program at<lb/>
East Carolina was managed by a<lb/>
faculty committee, with a student<lb/>
entertainment committee provid-<lb/>
ing a rubber stamp for their de-<lb/>
cisions. Then Tom Mallison, an<lb/>
undergraduate who is now presi-<lb/>
dent of the Student Government<lb/>
Association, was appointed head<lb/>
of the entertainment committee.<lb/>
He resolved that students should<lb/>
run the entire arts prograan aided<lb/>
by faculty advisors.<lb/>
"The student constitution was<lb/>
changed so as to establish a rotat-<lb/>
ing student committee of eight<lb/>
members and four faculty advisors<lb/>
with authority to conduct the pro-<lb/>
gram. A strong student govern-<lb/>
ment, which administers an overall<lb/>
yearly budget of $130,000, pro-<lb/>
vides the framework in which the<lb/>
entertainment committee func-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"When students took over the<lb/>
program in 1961, attendance had<lb/>
been sparse and interest was low.<lb/>
two years attendance has<lb/>
Boomed upward, and season ticket<lb/>
sales to the community have in-<lb/>
creased by 800 per cent. The stu-<lb/>
dents courted their crowds first<lb/>
by engaging artists with immed-<lb/>
iate name value, but now they are<lb/>
gradually introducing new names<lb/>
into the program.<lb/>
"At first, student activity tick-<lb/>
ets were punched at the door. But<lb/>
since turn-away crowds became the<lb/>
rule, students must present their<lb/>
activity cards at the box office<lb/>
from three to ten days before a<lb/>
performance in order to obtain<lb/>
tickets. All tickets not picked up<lb/>
three days before the concert are<lb/>
sold to townspeople at $2 each for<lb/>
the fine arts aeries and $3" a seat<lb/>
for the pops series. In addition,<lb/>
the student committee is authorized<lb/>
to sell up to 500 fine arts season<lb/>
tickets to townspeople at $7 per<lb/>
subscription. All money realized<lb/>
from outside sales ($2,000 last<lb/>
year) goes back into a vreneral<lb/>
student fund.<lb/>
every ' ? will Q t<lb/>
curenee refleet . ? - . <lb/>
the re DM i - , .? I<lb/>
lima<lb/>
? waa Dot the m<lb/>
when U oak body <lb/>
forme 1 of th j0;<lb/>
we with thi<lb/>
boys involved: ? W- K f l<lb/>
had been your sweethflait a<lb/>
ter<lb/>
Speaking I r the male W<lb/>
In I f<lb/>
MOBS AND SUCH<lb/>
To the Edito<lb/>
What kind of<lb/>
with us on<lb/>
fnjoy ' ?<lb/>
else's<lb/>
was b -<lb/>
vertebrates ???<lb/>
alone, bli<lb/>
them up. An ? am yo . <lb/>
the result i -&amp;<lb/>
you rolled r ?<lb/>
not. N - '1 take a ?:<lb/>
could be fre<lb/>
and throw <lb/>
against her will.<lb/>
But n<lb/>
It will not ma ? aeaj N<lb/>
lie apmth ? -<lb/>
to strik<lb/>
?<lb/>
friend<lb/>
es<lb/>
no ?? ? ?<lb/>
p<lb/>
.t ?<lb/>
-?<lb/>
of which o<lb/>
it; but did they? What I<lb/>
think<lb/>
to this<lb/>
to her?<lb/>
-Dari<lb/>
"Arrangements for the following<lb/>
year's concert season begin in the<lb/>
spring when at least half the<lb/>
artists are signed, subject to facul-<lb/>
ty approval. An approximate bud-<lb/>
get is approved by a student-<lb/>
faculty budget committee in May,<lb/>
and the rest of the programs are<lb/>
filled in the summer and early fall.<lb/>
"Student fine arts attendance is<lb/>
thus far averaging 75 per cent<lb/>
capacity, up from 50 per cent last<lb/>
year. Pops concerts are about 99<lb/>
per cent filled. Both figures are<lb/>
a great increase over the days of<lb/>
faculty management. The overall<lb/>
budget includes $1,500 a year for<lb/>
operating expenses. Paid help Is<lb/>
Wed to students <lb/>
box off 1Ce and working as ushers<lb/>
at 75c an hour. All other service<lb/>
are contributed free by students<lb/>
and faculty advisors. twwws<lb/>
Mallison says increased mV<lb/>
icy has been important in boost<lb/>
faff attendance. Release8 ?<lb/>
?rty to some 75 newaJplTE<lb/>
Eastern North 01 <lb/>
"A program such as w ??a<lb/>
Mallison told Art. ? <lb/>
"can work at other T <lb/>
vided there fantT<lb/>
TICKETS<lb/>
Iame Judith aJerot <lb/>
Company. March 1 fi j!<lb/>
Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Kermit Hnnter'i<lb/>
Faithful lift" <lb/>
13. 14, 15, 16, &amp;dS ??? <lb/>
(Jinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Tickets will he a'aili1<lb/>
students and faculty !<lb/>
low s: <lb/>
Where: Central Tifirt I<lb/>
fice, Wright uditonU<lb/>
When: March M<lb/>
from 12:00 noos i11'1 '<lb/>
Each student mgJJV<lb/>
a ticket for each P<lb/>
bv presenting hi IP a<lb/>
Student Teachers ? <lb/>
friends present their<lb/>
and pick up their uck<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Since all seat arr<lb/>
a student may P i<lb/>
date's tickets by V<lb/>
her IB card.<lb/>
Faculty members<lb/>
to pick up tickets.<lb/>
Neither student J<lb/>
ty siasabers may P j<lb/>
eU far others cicept H<lb/>
atated abore.<lb/>
Tickets for sale:<lb/>
Dam Judith <lb/>
ndolt$2.00, child-<lb/>
F.ithfsl Ulfl<lb/>
h<lb/>
adalt?$1.50. tlf<lb/>
en amis far each perf<lb/>
<pb facs="00038803_0003"/><lb/>
-<lb/>
Mtmh 5, li63<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Practicing For Sunday Concert<lb/>
Galleries Send Works<lb/>
To Local Art Center<lb/>
<lb/>
SnS<lb/>
<lb/>
The Greenville Art Center will<lb/>
Director is the immediate past<lb/>
exhibit 40 paintings, graphic works president of the Associated Artists<lb/>
??<lb/>
I<lb/>
tin EC College Orchestra practice for the concert which<lb/>
 -uiida afternoon in Wright Auditorium. The orchestra<lb/>
h Mr. Herbert Carter. ?Wiedenbacher<lb/>
and sculpture from the Owen Lewis<lb/>
Gall e rias of W i ns ton-Salem<lb/>
through March 31. A preview<lb/>
and reception for members of the<lb/>
East Carolina Art Society and<lb/>
other guests opened the exhibition<lb/>
on Sunday, March 3, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Since the opening of the Owen<lb/>
Lewis Galleries in March, 1962,<lb/>
50 exhibitions 'have been sent out<lb/>
to cities and towns all over the<lb/>
state of North Carolina. Thirty- i<lb/>
owe artists are represented at the<lb/>
"alleries with over eleven hundred<lb/>
works of fine art, the largest stock<lb/>
in North Carolina. Owen Lewis, included<lb/>
of North Carolina. He is Art Edi-<lb/>
tor of the Greensboro Daily News<lb/>
and General Manager of an F. M.<lb/>
radio station in WinistonHSalem.<lb/>
Among the artists represented<lb/>
in the Greenville exhibition are<lb/>
Joe Cox of Raleigh, Bill Fields of<lb/>
Fayettevtflle, Jack Berkman, Claude<lb/>
Howell and Neal Thomas of Wil-<lb/>
mington.<lb/>
Sig Eps Name Bullock Queen<lb/>
Of Hearts At Founder's Ball<lb/>
The Aveek-end of Feb. 15-16, the 1 night, followed Saturday evening<lb/>
I annual Sig Ep Founder's Ball was by the Formal Ball. The high-light<lb/>
held at the American Legion Hut in<lb/>
Faimiville, N. C. The festivities<lb/>
a Combo Party Friday<lb/>
AFROTC Promotes West<lb/>
To Post Of Cadet Colonel<lb/>
Cadet Gerald V. West of the ! another mathematics major, who is<lb/>
Dr. Cook Announces<lb/>
Mckenna's Cancellation<lb/>
ard MeKenna of<lb/>
scheduled to<lb/>
'The In-<lb/>
l Mai -of Cre-<lb/>
n ? lied his en-<lb/>
Fr day afternoon.<lb/>
r. Genifpe Cook of<lb/>
in charge of<lb/>
- MeKenna during<lb/>
Mr. MeKenna can-<lb/>
-? of a death in his<lb/>
I that he will<lb/>
to EC for<lb/>
later part of<lb/>
laho, Mr. MeKenna<lb/>
after service in the Navy. He<lb/>
entered the University of North<lb/>
Carolina in 1953 to complete his<lb/>
education and prepare himself for<lb/>
a career as a writer. In 1956 he<lb/>
received his degree of B.A. in Eng-<lb/>
lish Literature at the university.<lb/>
He has chosen North Carolina as<lb/>
his permanent residence and now<lb/>
makes his home in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Mr. McKenna's novel, Sand Peb-<lb/>
bles, was awarded the 1963 Harper<lb/>
Prize for a first novel. It was a<lb/>
Book of the Month Club selection<lb/>
and is currently being translated<lb/>
i<lb/>
?-? when he retired into four foreign languages.<lb/>
600th AFROTC Cadet Group of<lb/>
East Carolina has been promoted<lb/>
to the rank of Cadet Colonel, the<lb/>
highest rank which a cadet may<lb/>
attain in the AFROTC program.<lb/>
Cadet West is a senior industrial<lb/>
arts major and is presently Group<lb/>
Comimander of the cadet corps.<lb/>
Other cadets receiving promo-<lb/>
tions along with Cadet West in-<lb/>
clude four other seniors who re-<lb/>
ceived a promotion to the grade<lb/>
of Cadet Major. They are Donald<lb/>
R. O'Brien, a mathematics major<lb/>
serving the corps as Group Person-<lb/>
nel Officer; George D. Rouse,<lb/>
BSU Elects Painter<lb/>
As New President<lb/>
In the recent elections of the<lb/>
Baptist Student Center, Brenda<lb/>
Painter was elected president. On<lb/>
the ll-13th of March other offic-<lb/>
ers will be elected. The BSU is an<lb/>
active group of about 80 student<lb/>
memibers.<lb/>
presently the Group Operations<lb/>
Officer; Hugh S. Ray nor, also a<lb/>
mathematics major, who serves as<lb/>
Group Administrative Officer; and<lb/>
Gary E. Lakin, a business major,<lb/>
whose staff position is that of<lb/>
Group Comptroller.<lb/>
All five of these cadets look for-<lb/>
ward to commissions m the United<lb/>
States Air Force as second lieuten-<lb/>
ants next June.<lb/>
of the ball came with the announce-<lb/>
ment of the newly elected Frater-<lb/>
nity officers, The Outstanding<lb/>
Brother Award, The Queen of<lb/>
I Hearts, and various humor awards.<lb/>
The Outstanding Brother for the<lb/>
ear, who pinned Miss Kar-<lb/>
en White during intermission,<lb/>
was Mr. Sam Jones- Miss<lb/>
Regina Bullock, much to the delight<lb/>
of Eddie Mays, was named Sigma<lb/>
Phi Epsilon's Queen of Hearts. To<lb/>
the chagrin of Ed Mitchel, and the<lb/>
delight of Miss Becky Oowel, broth-<lb/>
er Ed finally received his New<lb/>
Bern Higth School Diploma.<lb/>
Newly elected officers are: Larry<lb/>
Holleman, President; Ronnie<lb/>
Helms, Vice-Presidenrt; Eddie<lb/>
Mays, Controller; Bill Steckel, Re-<lb/>
cording Secretary; Ben Shelfcon,<lb/>
Correspondence iSecretary.<lb/>
G<lb/>
ree<lb/>
k N<lb/>
ews<lb/>
Arts, Culture<lb/>
Melt Iron Curtain<lb/>
generated by the<lb/>
. eats f Western<lb/>
? iing in doing<lb/>
rch of politics has<lb/>
  ac Otnplish: melt-<lb/>
l irtain.<lb/>
m La that of Frank<lb/>
thor of 'The Khrus-<lb/>
1 other books, and<lb/>
-HOW. The Magazine<lb/>
In the just-published<lb/>
? y sets forth his<lb/>
- rnoommon Mar-<lb/>
ti appraisal of the<lb/>
?n of European cul-<lb/>
lers.<lb/>
cle, he states, "The<lb/>
pull of Western Europe<lb/>
? -r the Russian people<lb/>
m the sattellite countries<lb/>
aa the common market<lb/>
irtfluencmg their economics.<lb/>
:tl, inexorably, it will draw<lb/>
?fern in . The Iron Curtain H-<lb/>
k),vly melting . . ? fro"1<lb/>
desire for shared arts and cul-<lb/>
0 accelerating mterchange in<lb/>
? and entertainment be-<lb/>
1 Astern and Eastern Europe<lb/>
 be underestimated, G4bney<lb/>
unified projection Thanks to the<lb/>
pressures put on Kruschev and the<lb/>
Soviet Party mechanism by a rest-<lb/>
less new generation of Russian<lb/>
eggheads, Soviet cultural leaders<lb/>
are being permitted to travel, frat-<lb/>
ernize with their peers in the demo-<lb/>
cratic countries, and even speak out<lb/>
more openly in their own country.<lb/>
Gibney cites the example of poet<lb/>
Evgeny Evtushenko, who can now<lb/>
go off to London to recite his<lb/>
poetry in person, and who was able<lb/>
to recite a poem against Soviet<lb/>
anti-Semitism in Moscow's May-<lb/>
akovaky Square without ending up<lb/>
jail, in Siberia, or dead.<lb/>
The Western influence has also<lb/>
noticeably infiltrated Soviet art<lb/>
forms. Even the Bolshoi Ballet,<lb/>
bulwark of Russian dance tradi-<lb/>
tion, is showing the difference, m<lb/>
the attractive form of fkaterina<lb/>
Maximova, the 22-year-oM baller-<lb/>
ina who is the protegee and ikely<lb/>
in<lb/>
the<lb/>
great Ulanova.<lb/>
and in dance<lb/>
for<lb/>
it is remaking the ?r-<lb/>
maP of Europe on a single<lb/>
successor to<lb/>
Both in appearance<lb/>
style, Maximova is closer to the<lb/>
P and English ballet tradi-<lb/>
tions than to the Slavic<lb/>
Gfcney indicates that many of<lb/>
the newer Russian artists have<lb/>
(arlother-a?d most W?<lb/>
similarity to many of the newer<lb/>
artists in the democracies: they<lb/>
care little about politics. He cor-<lb/>
rects the impression "the Rudolf<lb/>
Nureyev, tine Kirov Ballet dancer,<lb/>
defected in Paris in 1961 because<lb/>
he had repudiated Communism.<lb/>
Actually, Gibney says, Nureyev left<lb/>
principally because of a disagree-<lb/>
ment over ballet company disci-<lb/>
pline, and has not displayed much<lb/>
interest in Communism, either pro<lb/>
or con.<lb/>
Similarly, film director Andrzej<lb/>
Wajda and other Polish movie-<lb/>
makers do not seem inclined to<lb/>
stuff their films full of Communist<lb/>
political content. Even the Rus-<lb/>
sians themselves in some of their<lb/>
recent movies, nave, in Gibney's<lb/>
words, "exhibited" the awareness<lb/>
that films about Communist trac-<lb/>
tors rarely win international film<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
"It is doubtful the author con-<lb/>
cludes, "that any art in Europe<lb/>
will again take the form of na-<lb/>
tionalist polemic. It is without sig-<lb/>
nificance that the last old-fash-<lb/>
ioned national novel of Europe was<lb/>
'Dr. ZMvago Or that its author<lb/>
died victim to the fading vigor<lb/>
of the last, old-fashioned nationa-<lb/>
list attempt to take Europe over<lb/>
Wednesday, February 28, the<lb/>
Iota pledge class of Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma entertained the formal<lb/>
pledge classes of the the other<lb/>
seven sororities. The table was<lb/>
centered with purple and white<lb/>
flowers, carrying out the Tri Sig-<lb/>
ma colors. Punch, cup cakes, and<lb/>
nuts were served.<lb/>
The Gamma Beta chapter of Sig-<lb/>
ma Sigma Sigma elected officers<lb/>
for the coming year. A "C" average<lb/>
must 'be maintained iby the officers.<lb/>
They are as follows: President,<lb/>
Linda Killian; Vice President, Polly<lb/>
Bunting; Recording Secretary, Jan-<lb/>
ice Bentley; Correspondence Sec-<lb/>
retary, Owen Rouse; Treasurer,<lb/>
Barbara Jenkins; Senior Panhel-<lb/>
lenic Representative, Jo Ann Mid-<lb/>
gett; Junior Panhellenic Repre-<lb/>
sentative, Margaret Acera; Keeper<lb/>
of Grades, Laura Gartonan; House<lb/>
Manager, Carol Johnson.<lb/>
Geography Frat<lb/>
Faculty Visit<lb/>
VOA Site Sat<lb/>
Faculty members of the EC De-<lb/>
partment of Geography and stu-<lb/>
dent memibers of the campus chap-<lb/>
ter of Gamma Theta Upsilon, na-<lb/>
tional honorary geography fra-<lb/>
ternity, visited Site A of the Voice<lb/>
of America Saturday morning.<lb/>
They were given a briefing on<lb/>
the selection of this area for the<lb/>
VOA installations and made a tour<lb/>
of Site A.<lb/>
Arrangements for the visit were<lb/>
made by Louis De Vorsey, faculty<lb/>
member of the Department of Ge-<lb/>
ography. Fred K. Blackburn, Plant<lb/>
Manager, and Robert Faas, Elec-<lb/>
trical Engineer, of the VOA have<lb/>
cooperated in making plans.<lb/>
Malli<lb/>
ison<lb/>
erman<lb/>
Attend Wash. Meet<lb/>
Tommy Mallison, President, and<lb/>
Bill Eyerman, Vice President, of<lb/>
the BO Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation attended March 1-3 in<lb/>
Washington, D. C, a conference<lb/>
on the proposed Domestic Peace<lb/>
Corps, or National Service Corps.<lb/>
The event is sponsored by the U.<lb/>
S. National Student Association.<lb/>
The idea of a volunteer corps<lb/>
for service in the United States<lb/>
similar to the Peace Corps has<lb/>
been a persistent one In the Ken-<lb/>
nedy Administration since its in-<lb/>
ception. The success of the Peace<lb/>
Corps has heightened the sentiment<lb/>
for a home based corps.<lb/>
The purpose of the USNSA Con-<lb/>
ference is to disseminate informa-<lb/>
tion aibout present Administration<lb/>
plans in the corps to a student<lb/>
group from selected educational<lb/>
institutions in the nation and to<lb/>
and problems facing the corps.<lb/>
Administration and Congression-<lb/>
al speakers, aware of the devel-<lb/>
opment of the National Service<lb/>
Corps, will address the conference;<lb/>
workshop sessions will utilize the<lb/>
experience of trained resource<lb/>
personnel; reports and suggestions<lb/>
will be prepared by the conference<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
Besides this study of ti? Na-<lb/>
tional Service Corps, the conference<lb/>
will attempt to differentiate the<lb/>
need for a service corps from the<lb/>
problem of youth employment.<lb/>
iSome of the speakers invited to<lb/>
address the conference are: At-<lb/>
torney General Robert F. Kennedy,<lb/>
Senators Hubert Humphrey and<lb/>
Gale McGhee, and Congressman<lb/>
John Brademas. Senator Frank<lb/>
Lausche, who has expressed strong<lb/>
views against a Domestic Peace<lb/>
gather student opinion and sug-J Corps, has also been asked to<lb/>
gestions on the different concerns <lb/>
<pb facs="00038803_0004"/><lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
EAST CARO ?JjLLJL<lb/>
"??<lb/>
SPORTS REVIEW<lb/>
By LLOYD "STACK" LANE<lb/>
It is that time of season again when the spring rains<lb/>
are coming, a young man's fancy, etc and the sight of a<lb/>
crowd of EC students going to  a FOOTBALL GAME?<lb/>
Yes, the Pirates under Coach Clarence Stasavich will be<lb/>
holding the annual Purple-G'old game at the old college<lb/>
stadium this Saturday at two o'clock.<lb/>
This year's game will see two teams out there on that<lb/>
turf giving it all they have (according to athletic pro-<lb/>
motion director Earl Aiken). Although Coach Stasavich<lb/>
has not divided the teams into two seperate units, it has<lb/>
been promised that they will be as even as possible. Since<lb/>
several spots are up for grabs and some of last years fresh-<lb/>
men will be trying to move into a varsity position, the game<lb/>
will be hard fought all of the way.<lb/>
This game means more than just a scrimmage to these<lb/>
two groups; it is a chance to show off some of the new<lb/>
formations that Coach Stasavich has been working on this<lb/>
Winter in the drill sessions.<lb/>
<lb/>
Indoor baseball seems to be an interesting pastime<lb/>
for Coach Earl Smith's charges. The pitchers have been<lb/>
getting into shape for the up-and-coming season by throwing<lb/>
the horse-hide across the gym floor. Coach Smith, who is<lb/>
replacing Dean Mallory at the job of coaching the base-<lb/>
ball team this season, can be seen giving constant advice<lb/>
to the boys who have turned out for this season's team.<lb/>
<lb/>
The Pirates ended their basketball season against VPI<lb/>
a few nights ago. They closed out the season with a 12-10<lb/>
record. These axe the main statistics and the ones that most<lb/>
of the students are interested in. There were others that<lb/>
were compiled that are of interest.<lb/>
1?Bill Otte lead the Pirates in scoring with an 18.7<lb/>
average. Lacy West was a close second, averaging 17.4.<lb/>
2?Lacy West lead the Pirates in accuracy with a 48.5<lb/>
per cent field goal mark.<lb/>
3?West also was the most nearly accurate foul shooter<lb/>
hitting 77.7 per cent.<lb/>
4?Bill Otte hauled down 272 rebounds this season.<lb/>
5?EC averaged 66.9 points a game while holding their<lb/>
opponents to 64.6.<lb/>
6?West's 33 points against Elon was the highest point<lb/>
total for any EC player this season.<lb/>
7?EC scored the most field goals (36) against the<lb/>
Citadel, the most free throws against Elon (27), and com-<lb/>
mitted the most fouls against Atlantic Christian (23).<lb/>
8?The Pirates were 3 and 3 against Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence competition, while they came out on the short end<lb/>
against Carolina Conference competition at 4 and 9.<lb/>
Although the won-lost record is important, these other<lb/>
statistics bring into light somethings that will be buried in<lb/>
the record books by next basketball season.<lb/>
;? 3fc SfC "M. ;$.<lb/>
After the surprising performance of Davidson this<lb/>
vear, Charlotte looks like a shoo-in for the future sight of<lb/>
the Southern Conference Tournament. Davidson showed<lb/>
fans in North Carolina and through-out the East that they<lb/>
can play first class basketball. The City of Charlotte backs<lb/>
the Wildcats as much as the city of Raleigh backs the Wolf-<lb/>
pack. The Coliseum (Charlotte) has the best seating capa-<lb/>
city of any similar construction in the state. It would be<lb/>
quite a feather is North Carolina's hat to have both the<lb/>
ACC and SC tournaments in this state.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Dave Wiedeman gave a fine performance in his last<lb/>
game for Wake Forest against Duke Saturday. The little<lb/>
guard proved that the big men have no corner on all-around<lb/>
ability. This Deamon gave the Blue Devils a fit in the first<lb/>
half of the ACC championship game. Fans left at the in-<lb/>
termission wondering who was the All-American, Heyman<lb/>
or Wiedeman. Wiedeman had scored 13 points in giving<lb/>
the Deacons a 35-31 half time lead, while Heyman had been<lb/>
held to a total of eight points. Coach Bubas realized that if<lb/>
the Duke team was to win they would be forced to stop this<lb/>
fiery competitor. The result was that Buzzy Harrison played<lb/>
WTiedeman man-to-man for the second half. Duke won.<lb/>
<lb/>
The Buckeyes of Ohio State will once again be in the<lb/>
NCAA Tournament. This makes the third straight appear-<lb/>
ence of Ohio State in the event. They went to the finals last<lb/>
year before being defeated by Cincinnati.<lb/>
 t<lb/>
Sports In Brief<lb/>
Jim Beatty, an UNC graduate and the best mile runner<lb/>
in the U. S made his 1963 debut at the New York Athletic<lb/>
Club Meet in Madison Square Garden. The question that the<lb/>
crowd asked themselves was would the strong-hearted, 28<lb/>
year old Charlottean score an unprecidented 16 straight in-<lb/>
door track victory and would he set an indoor mile record?<lb/>
The result was only 3 :58.6 seconds in coming. Beatty bet-<lb/>
tered his own indoor U. S. record by 3-10ths of a second.<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
The EC Forensic Society<lb/>
will meet every Tuesday night<lb/>
for the remainder of Winter<lb/>
Quarter and throughout Spring<lb/>
Quarter at 7:00 p.m. in Rawl<lb/>
235.<lb/>
No requisitions approved<lb/>
after 4:30 p.m Thursday,<lb/>
March 7, 1963. David Shearin,<lb/>
Assistant Treasurer.<lb/>
Pre-Season Pirate Practice<lb/>
The Purple a Fid Go<lb/>
Saturday at 2:00. '<lb/>
Id teams warm up in preparation for their annual i<lb/>
rhe game will be a regulation "?. using paid official<lb/>
1962-63 Wrestling Team<lb/>
 Z&amp;8&amp;M<lb/>
Front row, left to<lb/>
Second row: Keith<lb/>
and Neel Linker.<lb/>
right: Guy Hagerty, llob Lane, Bernic Colardo, Irving <lb/>
Douglas, James Crocker, Bill Cnniff, and Raymond Pern<lb/>
liams, and ft<lb/>
1962-63 Swimming- Team<lb/>
H<lb/>
Norwood Miles Barefoot, George Resseguie ri Sullon' Jam Kertv Jim <lb/>
lenson Jim Marasco, Dan Vanuk, JohnVaffLT Temp,eton' Hob Iiennent. Lawrence ???<lb/>
Paul Donahue, Tom Cox (manager), Coach Ra7m Te u??ngs, Nei Satter.hite. b M<lb/>
ay Martinez.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038803_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>