<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038813_0001"/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
WXVIII<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 1963<lb/>
Number 45<lb/>
IDC Queen Finalist<lb/>
?VT  ???. .?;<lb/>
Army Field Band Plays;<lb/>
Sold<lb/>
lers<lb/>
Chorus Sings<lb/>
Saturd<lb/>
ay<lb/>
The U.S. Army Field Band of<lb/>
Washington, D. C, will present a<lb/>
concert at EC at 8 p.m. in the<lb/>
Wright Auditorium tomorrow. The<lb/>
?public is invited. Since the Depart-<lb/>
ment of the Army forbids the band<lb/>
the 100piece band which has its<lb/>
own motor transportation so that<lb/>
it can fulfill its prime mission of<lb/>
visiting- troops in the field and in<lb/>
presenting' concerts in the grass-<lb/>
roots communities of America.<lb/>
to play at events where admission As Major Bierly put ft, "No<lb/>
11)1 Qaeen Finalists are (1st row, left to right) Barbara Johnson, Linda<lb/>
KHiam. kathy Wesson, Pat Hinrgins. (n ?" ' "<lb/>
MeKean, Layne Shaw, Ann Adkins, Gigi Guice, Cathy Shesso, and<lb/>
Betv I,ocas.<lb/>
is charged, admission will be free.<lb/>
The concert is being co-ordinat-<lb/>
ed in conjunction with the De-<lb/>
partment of the Army.<lb/>
A range of musical composi-<lb/>
ikwis of interest to all music lovers<lb/>
will be offered in Saturday's con-<lb/>
cert. Selections will include classi-<lb/>
cal, semi-classical, and popular<lb/>
compositions; choral arrangements<lb/>
performed by the Soldiers' Chorus<lb/>
of the band; novelty numbers;<lb/>
and a group of stirring military<lb/>
marches.<lb/>
Organized in 1946, the band has<lb/>
?appeared in inaugural parades of<lb/>
the tihree Presidents the United<lb/>
States has had since that time,<lb/>
Presidents Truman. Eisenhower<lb/>
and Kennedy. The band has also<lb/>
presented concerts in all 50 states<lb/>
as well as in Europe and the<lb/>
Orient.<lb/>
Major Robert L. Bierly is com-<lb/>
manding officer and director of<lb/>
town is too small so long as there<lb/>
is a place in which the band can<lb/>
play and sufficient hotel or motel<lb/>
accommodations to billet the band<lb/>
members<lb/>
Motto of the band is "We Are<lb/>
the Kings of the Highway<lb/>
which is in keeping with the<lb/>
band's travel requirements by<lb/>
motor and with the old Infantry<lb/>
son?, "Kings of the Highway<lb/>
which the band use? as its signa<lb/>
turc song<lb/>
A<lb/>
N<lb/>
Home Announces rnew<lb/>
Psychological Exam<lb/>
Students who have a degree and<lb/>
are planning to begin work at EC<lb/>
for the first time this summer<lb/>
will be required to take the Ohio<lb/>
State Psychological Examination<lb/>
or the Graduate Record Examina-<lb/>
tion, Dr. John H. Home, Director<lb/>
o Admissions, has stated.<lb/>
"Students will not be admitted<lb/>
unless they present satisfactory<lb/>
scores on one of these examina-<lb/>
tions before June 10 Dr. Home<lb/>
said.<lb/>
EC Receives National Grant<lb/>
To Promote Science, MathH ;<lb/>
EC has received $8040 from the i funds to aid the participants in<lb/>
Ten Co-eds Seek Title<lb/>
'Queen Of IDC Ball'<lb/>
Ln preliminary competition in<lb/>
iusl q Auditorium Tuesday night,<lb/>
ter. ksts were named from a<lb/>
? r thirty-eight co-eds to vie<lb/>
Intcr-dormiory Ball Queen<lb/>
for krmitory Ball Queen<lb/>
?rored by the IDC is<lb/>
y night. May 18, 1963,<lb/>
! ' until 12:30 in Wright<lb/>
eg. "The Majors" and "The<lb/>
have been booked to<lb/>
r (tie event.<lb/>
of ten judges consisting<lb/>
Executive Committee of<lb/>
f two ma1 e students at<lb/>
'dr cwo female students at<lb/>
and two faculty members<lb/>
the top ten lovelies by bal-<lb/>
Each candidate was introduc-<lb/>
Parker Stages<lb/>
One-Man Show<lb/>
Staged as one of a series of one-<lb/>
n shows by seniors in the<lb/>
8ehoo of Art, an exhibition of<lb/>
Stings by Douglas C Parker<lb/>
 now mm in the Kate Lewis<lb/>
kHery, Rawl Building.<lb/>
Nhie abstract oils, several of<lb/>
?m striking in their brilliant<lb/>
Cf'? n?aP m the major part of<lb/>
 ow. Included also are three<lb/>
?FenfcaMonal oil paintings, tiwo<lb/>
'hm portraits. A drawing and<lb/>
'ae complete the works be-<lb/>
? coll<lb/>
h? shown.<lb/>
ed on stage and given a pop<lb/>
question. Typical examples are.<lb/>
"Why is it important for a young<lb/>
woman of today to receive a col-<lb/>
lege education?" "What would<lb/>
you do if you caught your best<lb/>
girlfriend with your steady?" "If<lb/>
your boyfriend had the money to<lb/>
buy you an engagement ring, and<lb/>
instead he bought a set of golf<lb/>
clubs, what would be your reac-<lb/>
tion?" Judging was based on<lb/>
facial beauty, poise, and personali-<lb/>
ty. The contestants appeared in<lb/>
cocktail dresses.<lb/>
An 8 by 10 picture of each of the<lb/>
ten finalists will be posted on a<lb/>
bulletin board in the men's dormi-<lb/>
tories, and an election by popular<lb/>
vote of the men dormitory stu-<lb/>
dents will decide the queen. The<lb/>
ten finalists will be introduced at<lb/>
he ball, and the queen will be<lb/>
crowned. Any residents of the<lb/>
men's dormitories had the privi-<lb/>
lege of nominating an East Caro-<lb/>
lina co-ed for queen by submitting<lb/>
her name to the IDC. The ball<lb/>
will be free to all men dormitory<lb/>
residents and their dates. Anyone<lb/>
else who wishes to attend can pur-<lb/>
chase a ticket from a member of<lb/>
the IDC for $1.<lb/>
The ten finalists for "Inter-<lb/>
Dormftory Ball Queen, 1963 are<lb/>
Ann Adkins, Gigi Guice, Pat Hug-<lb/>
Hns, Barbara Johnson, Linda<lb/>
Killian, Betsy Lucas. Sharon Mc-<lb/>
Kean, Inne Shaw, Cathy Shesso<lb/>
Kathy Wesson.<lb/>
National Science Foundation to be<lb/>
wed to implement and finance the<lb/>
second phase of a program for<lb/>
junior high school teachers of<lb/>
science and mathematics.<lb/>
This grant is in addition to more<lb/>
than $85,000 the College has re-<lb/>
ceived from ithe Foundation during<lb/>
the past two years in connection<lb/>
with the first-phase Summer In-<lb/>
stitute program for junior high<lb/>
school teachers.<lb/>
The new grant is to be used to<lb/>
pay teaching staff, pay tuition for<lb/>
participating teachers and provide<lb/>
purchasing (texts.<lb/>
Forty m-service, 7th to 13th<lb/>
gTade, teachers from schools with-<lb/>
in commuting distance of Green-<lb/>
ville will be selected to participate.<lb/>
Three quarters of earth science<lb/>
and three quarters of mathe-<lb/>
matics will be offered during the<lb/>
7 963-1964 school year. These<lb/>
courses are especially designed<lb/>
for the program. The courses will<lb/>
carry senior-graduate credit with<lb/>
credit for both the graduate and un-<lb/>
der' naduate certificate renewal.<lb/>
"Should students show up on<lb/>
registration day for the first ses-<lb/>
sion of summer school without<lb/>
having completed all admission re-<lb/>
quirements Dr. Home continued,<lb/>
"they will be referred to the sec-<lb/>
ond session and will have an op-<lb/>
portunity i.o complete the Ohio<lb/>
tate PsycnoLqgical Examination<lb/>
and other requirements before en-<lb/>
rolling for the second term of<lb/>
summer school<lb/>
The Ohio State Psychological<lb/>
Examination will be offered on<lb/>
the campus on Siaturday, June 1,<lb/>
and Saturday, June 8, in Room<lb/>
130, Rawl Building, at 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Registration for the first session<lb/>
of summer school will be on Mon-<lb/>
day, June 17.<lb/>
The same examination will also<lb/>
be administered prior to the sec-<lb/>
ond session of summer school on<lb/>
Saturday, July 13, and Saturday,<lb/>
July 20, at the same time and<lb/>
place.<lb/>
Those students desiring to take<lb/>
the Graduate Record Examination<lb/>
should make application directly<lb/>
to the Educational Testing Ser-<lb/>
vice, Box 592, Princeton, New Jer-<lb/>
sey, which will notify applicants<lb/>
about the date when the test will<lb/>
dp administered and supply other<lb/>
necessary information.<lb/>
A Do-It-Yourself Laundry?<lb/>
Students awoke Tuesday morning to find the central campus fountain once again in the spotlight. This<lb/>
time, instead of a catfish, they found an oversized bubble bath. Evidently someone tripped and spilled<lb/>
a bottle of the bubbly stuff into the fountain. Perhaps someone needed a place to wash his laundry and<lb/>
used an e-Hro box of detergent- Only the culprit knows.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038813_0002"/><lb/>
Page<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Friday, April 26 ,<lb/>
y<lb/>
SAFETY CONSCIOUSNESS<lb/>
In line with recent trends toward safety conscious-<lb/>
ness on the East Carolina campus, and with an eye to<lb/>
reducing the carnage on the campus, we decided to run<lb/>
an editorial about general highway safety.<lb/>
It's a grim business. But regardless of the words of<lb/>
warning which appear in the columns of this newspaper<lb/>
?and in the countless columns of other newspapers<lb/>
across this vast land of ours?the carnage on the nation's<lb/>
highways continues at an alarming rate.<lb/>
Last year was not an exception. In fact, the year 1962<lb/>
stands infamously as the most tragic in the history of<lb/>
highway safety. According to an authoritative report<lb/>
by The Travelers Insurance Companies, 40,500 persons<lb/>
were killed last year in U. S. traffic accidents. It was an<lb/>
all-time high for a single year and erases the previous<lb/>
record of 39,969 fatalities set in 1941.<lb/>
Moreover, highway accidents injured an additional<lb/>
3.345,000 peole in 1962. This, too, is a shocking total?<lb/>
a total which exceeds by nine percent the comparable<lb/>
figure for 1961.<lb/>
To be sure, this is tragic news. However, we cannot<lb/>
help but feel the real tradgedy lies with the public at<lb/>
large which apparently finds precious little motivation<lb/>
for joining the battle to save lives on the highways.<lb/>
Perhaps in the final analysis the communications<lb/>
media are armed with poor ammunition. Statistics, by<lb/>
and large, make poor copy even though they deal with<lb/>
a situation which last year directly affected 3,385,500<lb/>
lives. Countless others were involved indirectly.<lb/>
So the question continues to arise: how can we<lb/>
translate 3,385,500 causualties into a meaningful figure?<lb/>
Consider, if you will, the combined population of<lb/>
cities like Atlanta, Boston, Dallas and San Francisco.<lb/>
Add to that sum the number of people living in Albu-<lb/>
querque, Des Moines and Salt Lake City. Then add the<lb/>
total population in Butte, Montana . . . and in Cheyenne.<lb/>
Wyoming . . . and in Tucson, Arizona . . . and in Wheel-<lb/>
ing, West Virginia.<lb/>
When you total the number of men, women and<lb/>
children living in these 11 American cities, you will have<lb/>
a sum approximately equal to the number of highway<lb/>
casualties in this country last year.<lb/>
It's an appalling numVer. Worse yet, most of these<lb/>
casualties were not caused by mechanical failure or by<lb/>
poor driving conditions.<lb/>
The simple fact is that nearly nine out of every 10<lb/>
highway accidents were caused by driver error and lack<lb/>
of judgment. At the same time, The Travelers report<lb/>
also points out that more than 80 per cent of all accidents<lb/>
occurred in clear weather and on dry roads.<lb/>
This, we devoutly hope, makes our point. We believe<lb/>
these facts stand as mute testimony that the dramatic-<lb/>
reduction of highway deaths and injuries can only be<lb/>
accomplished if we as drivers are determined to stand up<lb/>
and be counted in this annual battle against senseless<lb/>
slaughter on the nation's roadways.<lb/>
0 IT I B B L E R S<lb/>
Apparently, quibbling exists as a foible of legisla-<lb/>
tures other than our own student senate. We recall how<lb/>
earlier this year the student senate held up needed legis-<lb/>
lation while they debated for an hour or more over<lb/>
whether to give some group sixteen dollars for a set of<lb/>
dishes. They went on in the next five minutes to give out<lb/>
almost $3,000.00.<lb/>
The NC state legislature is doinK the same thing<lb/>
now. They have debated the issue of the proposed name<lb/>
change for State College for several months, meanwhile<lb/>
delaying action on the remainder of the education bill.<lb/>
Makes one wonder about these "guardians of the people's<lb/>
trust<lb/>
OUR APOLOGIES<lb/>
The members of the election committee and the<lb/>
student senate and whosever else we thought responsible<lb/>
for allowing the outgoing seniors to vote for next year's<lb/>
senior representatives deserve an apology. They did not<lb/>
originate that policy. It has been the policy "for a long<lb/>
time All they did was perpetuate it.<lb/>
Easttarolinian<lb/>
Published semi-weekly by the students of East Carolina College.<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolinas Collegiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
editor J junius d. grimes tn<lb/>
business manager J tony r. bowen<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Hailing Address; Box 1068, East Carolina Colle Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6716 or pE 2-6101. extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.60 per<lb/>
?63<lb/>
CARPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Pri. 23?Pitt: "The Lion"<lb/>
?State: "My Six Loves" <lb/>
?Golf Match: EC vs Eion College, Country Club, 1:00 pjn.<lb/>
-?Tennis Match: EC vs Guilford College, 2:00 pjn.<lb/>
?Baseball Game: EC vs Florida State Union, Guy Smith<lb/>
Stadium, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
iMnnniiinumfciiiiiiuiiiinnii in hi iimmmmmm<lb/>
iwmwimriWrtiii<lb/>
ELECTICISM<lb/>
In A Different Vein<lb/>
Several little quotable-quote<lb/>
type things have popped up re-<lb/>
cently and we can't resist passing<lb/>
them on. In an old Saturday<lb/>
Review the other clay we read<lb/>
comments on manufacturers and<lb/>
their mottoes. One company manu-<lb/>
facturing arch-support shoes<lb/>
claims that their shoes "make<lb/>
street-walking a pleasure The<lb/>
best one came from he Mercy<lb/>
Baby Foods Oomtpany. Their motto<lb/>
? "The quality of Mercy is not<lb/>
strained<lb/>
In the same issue John Ciardi<lb/>
was discussing the current or now<lb/>
past fad of fifty-mile hikes. Ho<lb/>
said one reader had suggested the<lb/>
hike craze was an anti-intellectual<lb/>
trend, replacing fast reading with<lb/>
fast walking. Another expressed<lb/>
a. desire to see some shoe com-<lb/>
pany manufacture shoes with a<lb/>
dock and a pedometer built into<lb/>
the soles.<lb/>
A friend recently made a nice<lb/>
i;uir He's in Hawaii on the island<lb/>
of MaiuJ and one of the wealthiest<lb/>
families on the island is the Bald-<lb/>
win family. He tefta us that prac-<lb/>
tically everywhere you look you<lb/>
find a memorial this or tha to<lb/>
the Baldwins. The monkeys throw<lb/>
coconuts down from the trees and<lb/>
you pick them utp half expecting<lb/>
see "Baldwin Memorial Coco-<lb/>
nut" inscribed on the side. This<lb/>
year the Baldwins donated the<lb/>
money for a large Baldwin Me-<lb/>
memorial Church and our friend<lb/>
wrote us that he really couldn't<lb/>
understand the furor this had<lb/>
caused. "After all he wrote, "the<lb/>
Baldwins have to be nice to God.<lb/>
He's the only one who owns more<lb/>
than they do<lb/>
We attended a meeting recently<lb/>
at which a young: lady blistered<lb/>
our hide good, although we nat-<lb/>
urally thought rather pointlessly.<lb/>
But it reminded us of a poem by<lb/>
Rudyard Kipling called "The Fe-<lb/>
male of the Species Part of it<lb/>
is as follows:<lb/>
She is wedded to convictions -<lb/>
in default of grosser ties;<lb/>
Her contentions are her children,<lb/>
Heaven help him who denies!<lb/>
He will meet no suave discussion,<lb/>
but the instant, white-hot, wild<lb/>
Wakened female of he species<lb/>
warring as for spouse and<lb/>
child.<lb/>
So i; comes that Man. the coward.<lb/>
when he gathers to confer<lb/>
With his fellow-braves in council,<lb/>
dare not leave a place for her<lb/>
Where, at war with Life and<lb/>
C ?nscience, he uplift? his<lb/>
erring hands<lb/>
mum in residence<lb/>
(I. P.) Not one, out eight<lb/>
writers-in-residence have been<lb/>
named by Hollins College for the<lb/>
1963-64 academic year, President<lb/>
John A. Logan, Jr announced<lb/>
here recently. Novelist Robert<lb/>
Penn Warren, William Golding,<lb/>
Peter Taylor and Andrew Lytle,<lb/>
and poets Allen Tate, Karl<lb/>
Shapiro, Richard Wilbur and How-<lb/>
ard Nemerov will each pay visits<lb/>
of several days to this campus<lb/>
during the coming year.<lb/>
They will consult with literature<lb/>
students, read student creative<lb/>
writing manuscripts, take part in<lb/>
seminars, and give public readings.<lb/>
Hitiherto Hollins has had a dis-<lb/>
tinguished writer-in-residence for<lb/>
the entire year. Howard Nemerov,<lb/>
who was recently named consult-<lb/>
ant in poetry at the Library of<lb/>
Congress for the next year, has<lb/>
been at Hollins during the current<lb/>
session. Last year the British<lb/>
novelist William Golding was in<lb/>
residence, and before that ft was<lb/>
critic-novelist Joihn W. Aldridge.<lb/>
For the 1&amp;63-64 session, how-<lb/>
ever, it was decided not to have a<lb/>
single writer present throughout<lb/>
the school year, but instead to in-<lb/>
vite a series of well-knows authors<lb/>
for short visits to the campus,<lb/>
"We hope to have at least one<lb/>
writer here for several days dur-<lb/>
ing each month of the school<lb/>
year President Logan said. It<lb/>
?will be a privilege for our litera-<lb/>
ture student to be able to meet<lb/>
and discuss fiction and poetry<lb/>
with such eminent practitioners of<lb/>
the art<lb/>
Warren, whose novel "All The<lb/>
King's Men" is generally recog-<lb/>
nized as one of the noteworthy<lb/>
works of 20th Century fiction in<lb/>
America, is known as a novelist,<lb/>
poet, and critic.<lb/>
Golding's novel, "Lord of the<lb/>
Flies is currently the most wide-<lb/>
ly read work of fiction on Ameri-<lb/>
can college and university cam-<lb/>
puses.<lb/>
Taylor, who teaches at Ohio<lb/>
State University, is one of the<lb/>
most highly regarded of post-<lb/>
World War II Southern writers.<lb/>
Lytle, currently editor of the<lb/>
Sewanee Review is author of<lb/>
"The Velvet Horn" and other<lb/>
novels.<lb/>
Tate, Professor of English at<lb/>
the University of Minnesota, is a<lb/>
major figure in 20th Century<lb/>
American poetry.<lb/>
Shapiro, whose poems of<lb/>
World War n catapulted him into<lb/>
national prominence, fe one of tiie<lb/>
controversial figures in the cur-<lb/>
rent literary scene. He is editor<lb/>
of the literary magazine "Prairie<lb/>
Schooner<lb/>
Wilbum, -who teaches at Wes-<lb/>
leyan University, fe genawj<lb/>
considered among the three of<lb/>
four Important Amarican poet of<lb/>
tiia post-World War n gaaantfo.<lb/>
To some God of Abstract Justice?<lb/>
which no woman understands.<lb/>
And Man knows it! Knovrs, more-<lb/>
over, that the Woman that<lb/>
God gave him<lb/>
M i? command hut may not<lb/>
govern ? shall enthral! bst<lb/>
not enslave him.<lb/>
And She knows, because 8<lb/>
warns him, and Hfr insaindti<lb/>
never fail,<lb/>
That the Female of Her Specie?<lb/>
is more deadly than he Male.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
 ? td that's all, brother.<lb/>
Wolves<lb/>
(ACP) Once upon a time, say<lb/>
THE PLAINSMAN, Little Red<lb/>
Riding Hood's mother decide<lb/>
vas time for the girl to gpo to<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
The mother warned ? tk<lb/>
greedy wolves she might ere<lb/>
er during her trip throuf col-<lb/>
lege. At Auburn Ud<lb/>
irn, Ala Miss H<lb/>
I : ? I rgi<lb/>
only three t oks. A-<lb/>
the quarter she to<lb/>
the bookstore to sell.<lb/>
S) e had taken<lb/>
to harm the books e<lb/>
get most of her money back<lb/>
Hood family was r "<lb/>
wes . B;r she <lb/>
learn that they wo r<lb/>
only half of wharf<lb/>
paid. She heard, though, I<lb/>
book store would up the price ?f<lb/>
the book to nearly the dt<lb/>
price and sell it again next qW1<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
1 'nforrunately, this nur;er'<lb/>
rhyme hap no hunter to k:<lb/>
wolf and allow Little Bad B<lb/>
Hood to live hapnily ever af r<lb/>
Elections<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Funny thing about the sena?<lb/>
and class elections?<lb/>
Sometime last week there <lb/>
a meeting of the candidates r-<lb/>
ning for class and senate position<lb/>
Prom what I've been able to t<lb/>
out, some number under one-1<lb/>
the total number of c?ndates<lb/>
were informed of such ntf01<lb/>
and attended. As a consequ1<lb/>
for not attending, each ?<lb/>
candidate was fined $t J<lb/>
meeting was Thursday "J!<lb/>
the announcement of the ?<lb/>
cania a day later in the W<lb/>
GAKOLINIAN. mm<lb/>
Aak the chairman of the PJ<lb/>
tiona Committee, and Ke wffl <lb/>
hat it fe not his job to P<lb/>
filing dates and send notice ?<lb/>
?eetinj. What exactly m<lb/>
Job then?<lb/>
Tours Tralf t<lb/>
<pb facs="00038813_0003"/><lb/>
f.n! 26, L963<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
dustrial<lb/>
Arts<lb/>
Dept.<lb/>
?? VAV.<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
To Offer New Course<lb/>
In Power Mechanics<lb/>
?.??<lb/>
Bill Wallen prints on the offset press.<lb/>
lm " :a! Arts<lb/>
1 in lab-<lb/>
activit ie -<lb/>
r to<lb/>
? ? lopanent<lb/>
? i manufac<lb/>
re.<lb/>
repar-<lb/>
?er-<lb/>
em-<lb/>
on-<lb/>
lor<lb/>
V<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
arl<lb/>
I addi-<lb/>
?<lb/>
lornen-<lb/>
fhe metal shapf-r is one of the essential machines in the metal shop.<lb/>
Mr. Kelsey, woodworking instructor, helps a student use the drill press<lb/>
to drill a lamp base hole.<lb/>
Copy by<lb/>
LORN A NUTTER<lb/>
Photography by<lb/>
ART PLATT<lb/>
? i<lb/>
m<lb/>
lower me-<lb/>
ich or electric and gasoline engines, country and will be the firs; of<lb/>
This type of power mechanics is jts j in this state.<lb/>
something which is new in the<lb/>
Many safety precautions are<lb/>
taken to prevent accidents. The<lb/>
Department follows a system of<lb/>
painting the machines which was<lb/>
developed by Pittsburg Paint Co.<lb/>
and used by many industries. This<lb/>
system employs painting- the base<lb/>
color of the machine green, the<lb/>
moving parts yellow and the<lb/>
switches orange. Also, the corners<lb/>
oj the benches are painted with<lb/>
yellow and black hatched marks.<lb/>
Metal grinders and power saws<lb/>
axe furnished with guards, and<lb/>
students working on the metal<lb/>
grinders must wear goggles. Cov-<lb/>
ered cans are provided for oily<lb/>
lags, to prevent spontaneous com-<lb/>
bustion. The paper cutter in the<lb/>
Graphic Arts section is equipped<lb/>
with a guard.<lb/>
?<lb/>
A 6<lb/>
j uHia rntter bits on the grinder,<lb/>
tudent grinds lathe cuuer "<lb/>
The Industrial Arts Department<lb/>
employs a staff of nine with 118<lb/>
students enrolled. Since Dr. Bing<lb/>
became the head of the Depart-<lb/>
ment about 13 years ago the De-<lb/>
partment has increased its size.<lb/>
Recently it has moved into the<lb/>
bottom floor of the new addition<lb/>
to Flanagan an the existing<lb/>
facilities were renovated.<lb/>
Extra fees for Industrial Arts<lb/>
courses are low. Students pay only<lb/>
for the materials they use, which<lb/>
usually averages about $5 a A radio work bench helps to furnish the recently remodeled electricity<lb/>
course.<lb/>
lab.<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038813_0004"/><lb/>
Pae 4<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
C A R O LI<lb/>
Friday, Aptj 2e<lb/>
'Young Voices' Publish es Poems<lb/>
Of Students Jennings. Kendall<lb/>
UNC.<lb/>
Miss Jennings, a freshman, has<lb/>
been writing- poetry for appro-<lb/>
ximately a year. She was born in<lb/>
Brooklyn, N. Y and now lives in<lb/>
Richmond, Va. Writing ability is<lb/>
a quality which seems to run in<lb/>
her family?her younger sister,<lb/>
Kathleen, has had poetry published<lb/>
also.<lb/>
Mrs. Kendall, a resident of Gar-<lb/>
rett Hall, makes her home in Wil-<lb/>
mington, N. C. She writes as a<lb/>
hobby.<lb/>
Carter Observes French<lb/>
Musicians, Instruments<lb/>
Duggins Replaces Robinson<lb/>
As Head Of Marching Pirates<lb/>
Helen Jennings<lb/>
No available photo of Mary<lb/>
Kendall<lb/>
Helen Martha Jennings and<lb/>
Mary Core Kendall, students at<lb/>
EC, recently had poems published<lb/>
in Young Voices, the 1962-63<lb/>
poetry anthology of the Inter-<lb/>
Coll egi ate Poetry Congress.<lb/>
The Poetry anthology, edited by<lb/>
Henry Allen Paper and Walter 0.<lb/>
Kaelber, is a collection of works<lb/>
by college students throughout the<lb/>
United States. Four works by<lb/>
North Carolina authors were ac-<lb/>
cepted, two from EC and two from<lb/>
Marcus Duggins, freshman stu-<lb/>
dent in the School of Music, has<lb/>
been named Drum Major of the<lb/>
East Carolina College Marching<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The Band, one of the outstanding<lb/>
bands in the South, has staged this<lb/>
year halftime shows for football<lb/>
games; performed for the Home-<lb/>
coming Day Parade; and during<lb/>
the Christmas season, participated<lb/>
in various community events in<lb/>
Greenville and other towns of the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
Mr. Duggins replaces Reginald<lb/>
Robinson of Mount Holly and will<lb/>
act as drum major of the band<lb/>
during 1963-1964. Prior to enrolling<lb/>
here, he served for three years as<lb/>
drum major of the Oxford High<lb/>
School band.<lb/>
He is a member of the East<lb/>
Carolina College Symphonic Band,<lb/>
Varsity Band, Orchestra, and Men's<lb/>
Glee Club.<lb/>
Herbert L. Carter, director of<lb/>
bands at EC, as a member of the<lb/>
"LeWanc Ambassadors of Music,<lb/>
will make a ten-day tour of Prance<lb/>
May 6-16 to observe the manu-<lb/>
facture of musical instruments in<lb/>
French plants, to become better<lb/>
acquainted with new French mu-<lb/>
sic and to hear performances by<lb/>
musicians and music groups there.<lb/>
As a guest of the Leblanc Cor-<lb/>
poration, manufacturers of musi-<lb/>
cal instruments in this country<lb/>
and France, Mr. Carter will be one<lb/>
of a selected group of 90 music<lb/>
educators, woodwind specialists,<lb/>
and professional musicians from<lb/>
the United States who will make<lb/>
thi bour.<lb/>
Tr ?<lb/>
lai tic cr<lb/>
will tra1 ? by i<lb/>
t such ? ?<lb/>
Vicl<lb/>
M ? Carter,<lb/>
? ally to ol<lb/>
Rar<lb/>
Mui ic a<lb/>
!a r Fit<lb/>
and to i<lb/>
present in tl<lb/>
and woodv<lb/>
For th<lb/>
ran. ? ;i pro<lb/>
? ntertainmej<lb/>
I<lb/>
d<lb/>
s<lb/>
Education Major Receives<lb/>
Teachers Assn. Scholarship<lb/>
Judy Louise Biggs of Rocky<lb/>
Mount, junior education major at<lb/>
EC, is one of four North Caro-<lb/>
lina students to be awarded a<lb/>
3200 scholarship for the year<lb/>
1963-1964 by the Mary Morrow<lb/>
Heath Receives<lb/>
NSF Scholarship<lb/>
For Research<lb/>
Linda Katherine Heath, a<lb/>
junior, has been granted a scholar-<lb/>
ship from the National Science<lb/>
Foundation for undergraduate re-<lb/>
search participation this summer<lb/>
at N. C. State College. She will<lb/>
he working with J. R. Mauney,<lb/>
Cotton Physiologist there, from<lb/>
June 10 through August 17.<lb/>
Last summer Miss Heath did<lb/>
research study with cotton em-<lb/>
bryos at N. C. State, n this ca-<lb/>
pacity, she used auxins in an ef-<lb/>
fort to produce callus production<lb/>
ir cotton. She anticipates con-<lb/>
tinuinr this field of research in<lb/>
June.<lb/>
Miss Heath is specializing in<lb/>
biology and science. Her name<lb/>
has appeared on the Honor Roll<lb/>
and the Dean's List of Superior<lb/>
.Students.<lb/>
Scholarship Committee of the<lb/>
North Carolina Classroom Teach-<lb/>
ers Association.<lb/>
Miss Biggs was selected on the<lb/>
basis of her character, financial<lb/>
need, personality, evidence of<lb/>
promise in the teaching field, andJ<lb/>
scholastic achievement in the<lb/>
upper-one-third of her class.<lb/>
Recipients of the State CTA<lb/>
Mary Morrow Scholarship awards<lb/>
must be willing to teach for at<lb/>
least two years in the public<lb/>
schools of North Carolina im-<lb/>
mediately following graduation.<lb/>
The scholarships, provided<lb/>
through donations of teachers, are<lb/>
awarded annually by the North<lb/>
Carolina Classroom Teachers As-<lb/>
sociation, a division of the North<lb/>
Carolina Education Association.<lb/>
The scholarship was named in<lb/>
memory of the first president of<lb/>
the Classroom Teachers Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Miss Biggs, an outstanding stu-<lb/>
dent among campus organizations,<lb/>
lias served at EC as president of<lb/>
the Association for Childhood<lb/>
Education and as treasurer of Tau<lb/>
Sigma, honorary educational fra-<lb/>
ternity. She is also a member of<lb/>
tle student National Education<lb/>
Association and of the Wesley<lb/>
Foundation.<lb/>
Her name has appeared on both<lb/>
the Honor Roll and Dean's List<lb/>
of Superior Students.<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
?<lb/>
get Lote Mare from E M<lb/>
more body<lb/>
in the blend<lb/>
more flavor<lb/>
in the smoke<lb/>
!CD more taste<lb/>
through the filter<lb/>
It's the rich-flavor leaf that does it! Among L&amp;M's choice tobaccos there's more<lb/>
of this longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And<lb/>
w.th L&amp;M's modern fdter- the Miracle Tip - only pure white touches your lips.<lb/>
Get lots more from L&amp;M - the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038813_0005"/><lb/>
26, V,<lb/>
K A S T C AR0L1 N I A N<lb/>
Putnam, Langston To Stud<lb/>
i'age 5<lb/>
WithS<lb/>
aj d Oappy Jo<lb/>
? of the Theater<lb/>
at East Carolina<lb/>
been accepted as<lb/>
e nine week sum-<lb/>
e world renowned<lb/>
11 ince Festival in<lb/>
V t Jacob's<lb/>
stud all forms<lb/>
under teachers<lb/>
itions. Ted<lb/>
 y can concert<lb/>
and too:<lb/>
v ance Fes-<lb/>
: an out-<lb/>
? ach sum.<lb/>
? i2 years at the<lb/>
the facul-<lb/>
famous names<lb/>
Myr Kinch<lb/>
M argaret<lb/>
' v Goya,<lb/>
1 .a Merl I Ethnic<lb/>
Dance F<lb/>
Senior Music Student<lb/>
n<lb/>
an honor<lb/>
Jacob's<lb/>
? ' hird of the<lb/>
lly accepted.<lb/>
1 . tor of<lb/>
1 rro ip, studied<lb/>
'??<lb/>
' Dr.<lb/>
<lb/>
? : Mr.<lb/>
Langston's ap-<lb/>
and Miss<lb/>
iftx rs of the<lb/>
.?t ' e musical,<lb/>
attre s taking<lb/>
S<lb/>
?? wo tal<lb/>
ted : ?<lb/>
rma<lb/>
TV. V.<lb/>
To Appear In Recital<lb/>
Ats. Betsy Hancock Billiard as "Vissi d'arte" from "Tosca<lb/>
senior musdte student, will appeairla group of songs in German by<lb/>
in her graduating recital Sunday, Schumann, Wagner, and<lb/>
composers;<lb/>
"Searching<lb/>
April 2X, at 3:30 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
auditorium. She is one of a small<lb/>
group of 1963 graduates sponsor-<lb/>
ed by the School of Music in a<lb/>
series of honors recitals by stu-<lb/>
dents of outstanding talent. The<lb/>
public is invited to attend.<lb/>
Mr. Bullard is well known in<lb/>
this section of the sal t1 mi <lb/>
pearances in leading roles in<lb/>
the annual spring musicals at the<lb/>
college, in Opera Theater produc-<lb/>
tions, and in other music pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
At EC she has had the leading<lb/>
woman's roles in "South Pacific<lb/>
"Guys and Dolls and 'The 01 I<lb/>
Maid ami the Thief" and. in a idi-<lb/>
tion ,sang solo part- in "Sister<lb/>
Angelica" and Faust She !<lb/>
also bem soloist in "The Messiah<lb/>
and the 1962 concerto progrs<lb/>
and with the College Choir.<lb/>
Mrs. Billiard will be assisted on<lb/>
5 rcday's program by Terry Cole? D ?<lb/>
Vaughan Williams'<lb/>
for Lambs an I<lb/>
Rummiel's "Ectasy<lb/>
Kizer, Grafiam,<lb/>
Evans Attend<lb/>
ACE Conference<lb/>
Three delegate<lb/>
ar<lb/>
r, . r<lb/>
eJHV ru-<lb/>
pianist, and Mrs. Theresa Shank<lb/>
violinist,<lb/>
The program for the recital<lb/>
n: the K :ha pter of the A La-<lb/>
tion for I I Educat at<lb/>
the 1963 ACE1 Stud . Conference<lb/>
at Miami Beach, Florida. Satur-<lb/>
day through Sunday, April 20-28.<lb/>
Hie con feren test urea<lb/>
"Essen) r E<lb/>
? ? Th EC tu ? par-<lb/>
? ' in seminars <lb/>
? opii Values Inherent in I<lb/>
of Life" b ?<lb/>
Under? n r ' Jukfcure thr<lb/>
nee" at  ? conference.<lb/>
 me of I e questions wh<lb/>
I n <lb/>
( lyde Putnam and Cappy Jo Langston<lb/>
(Photo by Art Platt) project" last Saturday" Th?<lb/>
: held a car wash at the T<lb/>
PI KAPPA ALPHA from the University of North lantic sea-vice statdon on i<lb/>
rhe Pi KA'S welcome bheir new i Carolina, Mrs. Sellers was once Bern highway- 1 w s a ? n<lb/>
house mother. Mrs. Sellers, from pinned : a i K A. She now has ajcessful pledge projeel "<lb/>
Mount. N. 0. Graduated j house full. pledges washed thirty cars.<lb/>
vill include such varied numbers wi!l be discussed by the EC dele-<lb/>
gate are "How do we help child-<lb/>
'? vie v mselves and then- so-<lb/>
' ? " ?" and "How<lb/>
V1 DELT I<lb/>
Th<lb/>
e P<lb/>
; i<lb/>
??. H<lb/>
mis<lb/>
At-<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
i <lb/>
arlotte Merle Evan.<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
rve as Treasu-<lb/>
Miss Perry as<lb/>
Membership Com<lb/>
? ?? featured "Our<lb/>
. Future<lb/>
unified Ads<lb/>
I SPINET PIANO<lb/>
ible party to<lb/>
Monthly payments on<lb/>
be seen locally.<lb/>
Manager, P. O. Box<lb/>
Class of '34<lb/>
Class of<lb/>
.<lb/>
. Sotrth Carolina.<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
 High School rlass<lb/>
f 19(53, with initials<lb/>
ME WARD is offer-<lb/>
Paul HjoTtsvang, PL<lb/>
 PL 2 6101 ex. 281. Lost<lb/>
ara.<lb/>
i or almost three decades, one phrase has spoken eloquently to the man who prefers the<lb/>
pure-bred authenticity of traditional suits and jackets: "tailored by College HalT Thafa<lb/>
why this store is proud to carry the most complete wardrobes. If you have a natural<lb/>
predilection for soft shoulder attire, come in and be fitted in a style we're accustomed to.<lb/>
And don't forget to ask for your copy of a new booklet, "How To Make A Natural<lb/>
Impression Written by famous columnist Bert Bacharach, it's packed with ideas.<lb/>
oflftnani<lb/>
MB MS WEAR<lb/>
<pb facs="00038813_0006"/><lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
RTS REVIEW<lb/>
By RON DOWDY<lb/>
Last Tuesday's column about being: admitted or not<lb/>
to the Southern Conference caused quite a ruckus. So, I<lb/>
shall elaborate further.<lb/>
After conversing with Earl Aiken I have learned quite<lb/>
a bit about this subject. There is very little possibility that<lb/>
East Carolina will be admitted into the Southern Confer-<lb/>
ence within the next three years. In order to play these<lb/>
teams we have to have a financial guarantee to asure them<lb/>
that they will not lose any money. EC needs a new and larger<lb/>
basketball court, the field house is in the distant planing<lb/>
stages; and a track. At present the thin-clads don't even<lb/>
have a track to practice on, much less to use for competitive<lb/>
play. We need facilities in order to participate in Home-to-<lb/>
Home scheduling.<lb/>
Even though the school lacks in the facilities, it lacks<lb/>
even more so in student support. The school, as well as the<lb/>
individual teams, need the student support to let the people<lb/>
of the area know how interested we are in our athletic teams.<lb/>
Will it be possible for the students to unpack their suitcases<lb/>
for the sports in order to attend them? Not only are the stu-<lb/>
dents needed in attendance, but more so in their cheers,<lb/>
port the teams. Will the students support the new cheers?<lb/>
With the fall will come new and better cheers to sup-<lb/>
port the teams, will the students support the new cheers?<lb/>
There will be 4,500 seats reserved for the student body<lb/>
in the cement section of the new James Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Will we be able to fill them ?<lb/>
Mr. Aiken feels as though it would be an "honor" for EC<lb/>
to be admitted into the Southern Conference, this year or<lb/>
even in years to come.<lb/>
 <lb/>
It has been mentioned that the Sports Department slights<lb/>
the minor sports here on campus. There just isn't as much<lb/>
to write about an event in track, tennis or golf. We will try<lb/>
to straighten out all complaints.<lb/>
? <lb/>
With the release of the statistics one can readily see<lb/>
that the "B. and B boys are two powerful threats. Carl-<lb/>
ton Barnes and Buddy Bovender are leading the team in<lb/>
almost all of the departments. To watch them and their<lb/>
smoothness on the field is really thrilling. The double-plays<lb/>
they execute are sometimes unbelievable. Bovender started<lb/>
the second-half off right when he went 3-4 against Camp<lb/>
Lejeune last Monday. He hit a triple and also homered.<lb/>
Barnes was hitless. And THAT'S THAT!<lb/>
<lb/>
Stan Sanders, well-known area sportscaster, has of-<lb/>
ficially been named the sportscaster for the NEW EC foot-<lb/>
ball network. Information about the network has not been<lb/>
completed yet, but will be published when it is.<lb/>
Barnes Leads Baseball Team<lb/>
With .408 Batting Average<lb/>
Pirates Edge<lb/>
Camp Lejeune<lb/>
For Ninth Win<lb/>
The Pirates started the second<lb/>
half of their schedule on the right<lb/>
foot last Monday as they eded<lb/>
the Camp Lejeune Marines, 6-4<lb/>
In the ninth victory for the<lb/>
Pirates, ace hurler Lacy West won<lb/>
his fifth. West, a lanky 6'4" senior<lb/>
from Asheboro, went the route as<lb/>
he gave up 10 hits, walked four,<lb/>
and struck out four, while allow-<lb/>
ing four runs.<lb/>
The Pirates scored four of their<lb/>
runs in the third and the Marines<lb/>
scored of their three runs in the<lb/>
seventh. In the third, frosh second-<lb/>
baseman Ruddy Bovender led off<lb/>
the inning with a home run to<lb/>
start the Pirates going. Junior<lb/>
Green and rightfielder Merrill<lb/>
Bynu.ni singled, after which first<lb/>
baseman Tommy Kidd ended his<lb/>
prominent batting slump by sail-<lb/>
ing the fourth pitch over the fence<lb/>
for a three-run homer for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
The Marines fought back in the<lb/>
seventh with back-to-back singles<lb/>
by Tom O'Leary and pinch-hitter<lb/>
Tom Harrington. After two outs,<lb/>
first baseman Hal Norton drove<lb/>
both men across the plate as he<lb/>
doubled down the line. Norton<lb/>
later scored on a single by Cicero<lb/>
McClellan.<lb/>
Carlton Barnes, the husky<lb/>
510" sophomore Physical Edu-<lb/>
cation major firom nearby Wilson,<lb/>
as expected, has paced the EC<lb/>
baseball team with his bat during<lb/>
the first half of the season. He<lb/>
led the team in more than half of<lb/>
the different categories.<lb/>
Barnes, a powerful threat at<lb/>
the plate in his lead off position,<lb/>
batted .408 during the first twelve<lb/>
games. With his high batting ave-<lb/>
rage, he battered out three home <lb/>
runs with thirteen nms batted in.<lb/>
Barnes was also at bat the most<lb/>
number of times with the most<lb/>
base hits and walks.<lb/>
In a close second place, fresh-<lb/>
man second baseman Buddy<lb/>
Bovender pounded out a close<lb/>
seventeen hits with seven runs<lb/>
batted in and a hefty .384 batting<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Outfielder and pitching ace<lb/>
Lacy West and right fielder Mer-<lb/>
rill Bynum both top the rugged<lb/>
.300 mark. West batted .333 with<lb/>
eleven hits and six runs batted in.<lb/>
Bynum batted .325 with thirteen<lb/>
hits and eight runs batted in.<lb/>
WORK in<lb/>
EUROPE<lb/>
MORE TRAVEL GRANTS<lb/>
Apr. 19, 1963?The American Stu-<lb/>
dent Information Service, the only<lb/>
authorized placement service for<lb/>
American students seeking sum-<lb/>
mer jobs in Europe, has increased<lb/>
from 1500 to 2000 the number of<lb/>
travel grants it will award stu-<lb/>
dents applying for positions in<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
Job openings now available in<lb/>
Europe include positions at fac-<lb/>
tories, resorts, hospitals, farms,<lb/>
summer camps and in offices. Ap-<lb/>
plications are received until May<lb/>
31.<lb/>
Interested students may write<lb/>
(naming your school) to Dept. H.<lb/>
ASIS, 2 Ave. de la Liberte, Lux-<lb/>
embourg City, Grand Duchy of<lb/>
Luxembourg, for a 20-page pros-<lb/>
pectus, a complete job selection<lb/>
and application. Send $1 for the<lb/>
prospectus, handling and an air-<lb/>
mail reply.<lb/>
The first 5000 inquiries receive<lb/>
a $1 premiu-m for the new student<lb/>
travel book, Earn, Learn and<lb/>
Travel in Europe.<lb/>
IN THE COLLEGE<lb/>
BRAND ROUND-UP<lb/>
Get on the BRANDWAG0N<lb/>
it's lots of fun!<lb/>
PRIZES: 1st Prize?Admiral Console T. V.<lb/>
2nd Prize?Admiral Clock Radio<lb/>
WHO WINS: Prizes will be awarded to any<lb/>
recognized Campus Group,<lb/>
Fraternity, Sorority or individ-<lb/>
ual submitting the largest<lb/>
number of empty packages of<lb/>
Marlboro, Parliament, Alphine<lb/>
and Philip Morris.<lb/>
RULES: 1. Contest oppn to Students of East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
2. 4,000 empty packages of Marl-<lb/>
boro, Parliament, Philip Morris<lb/>
and Alphine must be submitted<lb/>
in order to sualify.<lb/>
3. Contest closes Wednesday, May<lb/>
8th at 2:00 P. M turn in en-<lb/>
tries from 1:00 P. M- until 2:00<lb/>
P. M. at Student Union.<lb/>
4. N? entries will be accepted after<lb/>
closing time.<lb/>
Alpine<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
The East Carolina Pirates<lb/>
play their first ball game on<lb/>
their home field tod<lb/>
Florida State. N<lb/>
is 3:0<lb/>
State.<lb/>
Game time<lb/>
CLUB <lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
FASHIONS1<lb/>
:re ??<lb/>
-<lb/>
NEW WINES IN OLD BOTTLES pretty well i<lb/>
sportswear story. All your old favorites are j<lb/>
for?only some of them have as many disg<lb/>
a James Bond thriller!<lb/>
SEERSUCKER COMES ON STRONG again u?i<lb/>
Casey Stengel of sportswear fabrics?a hardy perei<lb/>
clean-cut look guarantees that you'll look the same The news<lb/>
current vintage is the widening of the stripes. U<lb/>
with bold new striping ranging from just under<lb/>
anywhere in the medium range?it's a sure sign - f 63 S<lb/>
jackets, shirts and walk-shorts?all will turn tip in<lb/>
seersucker pin-striped pattern as well, in blues, greys as<lb/>
"with white.<lb/>
GLEN PLAIDS PULL A SECOND<lb/>
SWITCH in seersucker this season. Avail-<lb/>
able in blends of cotton and polyester<lb/>
fibers, these new glen-plaid seersucker<lb/>
ihirts and jackets are most striking in<lb/>
black-and-white or brown-and-white com-<lb/>
binations. They mix well with solid-color<lb/>
Slacks and kni? shirts. Let your conscience<lb/>
?and your budget?be your guide!<lb/>
THE "LOOK OF LINEN" moves to the<lb/>
fore in fabrics, to let you take the rough<lb/>
?with the smooth in your sportswear.<lb/>
"Whether it's pure linen made of flax fibers,<lb/>
or the practical blend of polyesters with<lb/>
flax, this textured set of threads can't be<lb/>
topped! Natural tan is the most popular<lb/>
color, with light blues and olive in place<lb/>
and show position. You'll find these tex-<lb/>
tured fabrics in crisply tailored jackets,<lb/>
slacks, sport shirts and walk-shorts. In-<lb/>
trepid spirits on the fashion front will like<lb/>
the new linen-look jacket of bold, blazer<lb/>
stripes to jazz up an otherwise conserva-<lb/>
tive wardrobe.<lb/>
MADRAS HAS THE INDIAN SIGN<lb/>
?East Indian, that is?on Spring and<lb/>
Summer sportswear again this year. This<lb/>
brilliant plaid is doing business at the<lb/>
.same old stand, adding a colorful note to<lb/>
jackets, shirts and walk-shorts. The stop- ;<lb/>
press news in Madras is that it now comes<lb/>
in bigger, bolder plaids and lighter back-<lb/>
grounds to make a new fashion point<lb/>
GOOD GUYS AND BAD GUYS both win go for th ; n?<lb/>
style" sportswear?even if the only thing waiting in the corral is<lb/>
a convertible. The steady eye can pick this trend out of the crai<lb/>
With its yoke-front and contrasting border stitching. Made e<lb/>
denim and denim-type fabrics, these sport shirts and slacks are<lb/>
styled with the lean, narrow, action look.<lb/>
FASHION UNDERFOOT emphasizes the<lb/>
casual, comfortable look of the slip-on,<lb/>
with the moccasin leading in popularity.<lb/>
The canvas-topped deck shoe with rubber<lb/>
sole is no longer a purely practical shoe<lb/>
for sports. You can get them now in slip-<lb/>
ons as well as laced models. And there's<lb/>
a new color in the cards?besides the<lb/>
Standard white and navy blue, this year's<lb/>
models come in a natural hemp color with<lb/>
a rough weave?the "Linen Look men-<lb/>
tioned earlier.<lb/>
'<lb/>
H<lb/>
LATE NEWS BULLETIN: ESQUIREs Correct Dress Guide<lb/>
for College Men for Fall 1963 is now in preparation. To get<lb/>
your copy FREE OF CHARGE, just write to Correct Dre<lb/>
Guide, co ESQUIRE, 488 Madison Ave New York 22, N.T,<lb/>
including your home address, and the Guide will be sent to you<lb/>
in August, in plenty of time before you start your back-to-<lb/>
campus shopping.<lb/>
Sb GUlde Jf.an ind!sPenaWe aid in selecting your college<lb/>
wardrobe, with pointers on what's new and what's going to <lb/>
ww ?T J8re and feedin ?f cI?thes. what to wear wit<lb/>
vmat and all the important guide-lines to the image you'll<lb/>
toESOiSr' falL Send y?ur n?? ? home address<lb/>
to ESQUIRE today, to get your free copy!<lb/>
?2 S?rttr?th t0 Wind "P th? y?r with round-the-c!<lb/>
ideas for summer holiday wear-from beach to baIlroom. Seeo?<lb/>
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