<?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="00038823_0001"/>
East-Carolinian<lb/>
Vde XXXVIII<lb/>
East Carolina College<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 31, 1963<lb/>
Number 55<lb/>
Murrow To Address I Mali'<lb/>
Graduating Seniors<lb/>
R<lb/>
Major events of 1963 Com-<lb/>
. rat exercises at College<lb/>
a series of programs on<lb/>
Day, Saturday, June 8,<lb/>
graduation exercises Sunday,<lb/>
jan, i. at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
1 s year for the first time the<lb/>
nduation exercises will take<lb/>
n the new James S. Fioklen<lb/>
gemorial -Stadium. The stadium<lb/>
lafl a eatin capacity of 16,000<lb/>
Alumni Assn.<lb/>
Honors Gray<lb/>
With Citation<lb/>
VUMington B. Gray of the<lb/>
of - rt was honored at<lb/>
Pa State Ooilege<lb/>
Vay 25, as recipient of<lb/>
 - mni Association ? i-<lb/>
? fited in "recocrnuiim<lb/>
achievements a?.d<lb/>
the field of Art Kdv<lb/>
h reflects honcr tvori<lb/>
 received the ciliMon<lb/>
? . W. Geiss, Present<lb/>
. :r ni A ssoci a t i o.i  t<lb/>
and college Pre lent<lb/>
'?O.<lb/>
d rectaon the 3 o?i<lb/>
m in prestige rrd<lb/>
of students. This month<lb/>
v as received at th3<lb/>
at the School has been<lb/>
s an asociate m? m-<lb/>
ational Asso : ? a'on<lb/>
 A rt.<lb/>
people and is expected to be filled<lb/>
for the program.<lb/>
'Howard R. Murrow, Director of<lb/>
the U. S. Information Agency, will<lb/>
address graduates at the com-<lb/>
mencement program Sunday af-<lb/>
ternoon, June 9. The exercises will<lb/>
begin with an academic proces-<lb/>
sion of graduates, college officials<lb/>
and faculty members, trustees,<lb/>
and will include a program of<lb/>
music and the conferring of de-<lb/>
grees by East Carolina President<lb/>
Leo W. Jenkins.<lb/>
Events of Alumni Day, June 8,<lb/>
will begin with the annual busi-<lb/>
ness meeting of the college Alum-<lb/>
ni Association at 10:30 a.m. in the<lb/>
Austin auditorium. President<lb/>
Fodie H. Hodges of Kinston will<lb/>
preside. Of chief interest wrll be<lb/>
the installation of a new slate of<lb/>
officers and iof ndne district direc-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
The Class of 1913, celebrating<lb/>
its, fiftieth anniversary, and the<lb/>
Class of 1938 its itiwenty-tfifth will<lb/>
hold reunions and be honored at<lb/>
programs of the day. Other events<lb/>
for alumni will include the annual<lb/>
luncheon at 12:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
South Dining Hall and a tea at<lb/>
the home of President and Mrs.<lb/>
Jenkins at 3 pjn.<lb/>
Seniors will be honor guests at<lb/>
a Patio dance ait the Presidents<lb/>
home and a buffet breakfast at<lb/>
the Holiday Inn Saturday night.<lb/>
Preceding graduation exercises<lb/>
June 9 was a concert by the East<lb/>
Carolina College Band an an in-<lb/>
formal reception for guests on the<lb/>
campus will take place at 2:30<lb/>
pm. on the College Mall.<lb/>
ison Receives<lb/>
NSA Seminar Grant<lb/>
Students Learn Requirements<lb/>
For Re-Entrance Next Fall<lb/>
Due to the short spand of time<lb/>
between the end of spring quarter<lb/>
and the first session of summer<lb/>
school, the administration will not<lb/>
have time to inform all the stu-<lb/>
dents as to whether they &amp;<lb/>
have to attend the first sess.oi of<lb/>
summer schorl in order to return<lb/>
the fail quarter of 1963, according<lb/>
to Dr. John H. Home, Director<lb/>
of Admissions.<lb/>
Those who will not be inform-<lb/>
ed in time, must find out fur<lb/>
themselves iy consulting the 1162-<lb/>
63 College Catalogue, page &amp;. If<lb/>
the student does not meet rhe<lb/>
four requirements on that pat(e,<lb/>
he will not be permitted to enter<lb/>
fall quarter of '63, unless, by<lb/>
attending ore or both sessions of<lb/>
summer school, he meets those<lb/>
requirements.<lb/>
Also, a student not meeting<lb/>
the requirements on page 3 of<lb/>
the College Catalogue will not be<lb/>
permitted to attend the extensions<lb/>
of EC in order to meet those<lb/>
requirements. Deficits in quality<lb/>
points and hours must be correct-<lb/>
ed at EC and not at the exten-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Tom Mallison, day student presi-<lb/>
dent and former SGA president<lb/>
has been awarded a scholarship<lb/>
to attend the Sixth Southern Stu-<lb/>
dent Human Relations Seminar<lb/>
at the University of Indiana in<lb/>
Bloomingon, Indiana. He is one of<lb/>
the twenty recipients throughout<lb/>
the United States.<lb/>
The Seminar was started six<lb/>
years ago by student leaders who<lb/>
CU Sponsors<lb/>
'Senior Night'<lb/>
For Class Of '63<lb/>
The College Union will stage a<lb/>
special "senior night honoring<lb/>
the graduating seniors of the<lb/>
Class of 1963.<lb/>
Under the leadership of social<lb/>
commititee chairman Pat Weaver,<lb/>
the committee is planning the<lb/>
special event to take place in the<lb/>
College Union lounge Friday,<lb/>
June 7, from 8:30 p.m. until 11:30<lb/>
p.m. With a special bulletin board<lb/>
theme created by the publicity<lb/>
committee and with John Thomp-<lb/>
son as chairman, the College<lb/>
Union will be decorated in a grad-<lb/>
uation theme. A combo will fur-<lb/>
nish dance music; refreshments<lb/>
will be served; and special favors<lb/>
will be available for the guests.<lb/>
The College Union also invites<lb/>
visiting alumni, other campus<lb/>
I guests, faculty, staff, and students<lb/>
remaining on the campus for the<lb/>
commencement weekend lo join in<lb/>
this event honoring the graduat-<lb/>
ing seniors.<lb/>
had a concern in the general area<lb/>
of intergroup relations. The pur-<lb/>
pose of the Seminar is to provide<lb/>
for Southern students an intensive<lb/>
study of Southern history, politics,<lb/>
economics, religion and minority<lb/>
group problems. The Seminar is<lb/>
open to all stulents on Southern<lb/>
campuses.<lb/>
Candidates are judged on sneere<lb/>
interest in the field of intergroup<lb/>
relations. The scholarship recip-<lb/>
ients are committed to a rigid pro-<lb/>
gram of reading, lectures, and dis-<lb/>
cussions and have to be capable of<lb/>
relating ther knowledge toother<lb/>
student s in a community setting.<lb/>
The winners are students with<lb/>
sufficient committment to merit<lb/>
the opportuniy they are offered<lb/>
and with (maturity enough to profit<lb/>
from this kind of experience. This<lb/>
Seminar is one of the more out-<lb/>
standing summer programs avail-<lb/>
able for college and university stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
The Semniar will be held at the<lb/>
University of Indiana in Bloom-<lb/>
ington, and is for a period of three<lb/>
weeks beginning July 29th and<lb/>
ending August 18.<lb/>
Outstanding professional and<lb/>
academic personnel are brought in<lb/>
to treat each of the areas covered<lb/>
in the curriculum. In addition to<lb/>
a Director, a Counselor and Con-<lb/>
sultant spends the entire period<lb/>
with the students.<lb/>
The selection committee is com-<lb/>
posed of the following people:<lb/>
Reverend William Campbell, Na-<lb/>
tional Council of Churches; Mr.<lb/>
Paul Anthony, Southern Regional<lb/>
Council; Mr. Leon Marion, World<lb/>
University Service; and Miss Con-<lb/>
stance Curry, Seminar Director.<lb/>
Senate Approves New System<lb/>
Of Student Judicial Councils<lb/>
"m liliffresents Bill Grubles, top<lb/>
a Sigma Pi President, Roger ??"? 'ess, with the fraterni-<lb/>
duating male student in the School oi ? fey Aft platt)<lb/>
1 scholarship key.<lb/>
At its last meeting of the year,<lb/>
the Student Senate approved plans<lb/>
for a new Judicial System which<lb/>
for the first time gives a student<lb/>
organization power to expel stu-<lb/>
dents from school.<lb/>
In other action, the Senate ap-<lb/>
proved the formation of an honor-<lb/>
ary Dramatics Fraternity, gave<lb/>
the editor of the Buccaneer the<lb/>
right to exclude advertisements<lb/>
from the yearbook on condition<lb/>
thait the Greenville merchants do<lb/>
not Object, appropriated $9,000<lb/>
for the purchase of new uniforms<lb/>
for the Marching Pirates, $50 for<lb/>
printing cards dealing with Par-<lb/>
liamentary Procedure to be dis-<lb/>
tributed at the National Student<lb/>
Association Convention, $250 to<lb/>
the cheerleaders to help with new<lb/>
uniforms; and approved a consti-<lb/>
tution for the Broadcasting Guild.<lb/>
The new Judicial System will<lb/>
establish a system of courts to<lb/>
try st$udent discipline cases. While<lb/>
the Honor Councils will have the<lb/>
power to expel students from<lb/>
school, all students will have the<lb/>
right of appeal to the Appeals<lb/>
Council and to the President of<lb/>
the College.<lb/>
Those named to the Appeals<lb/>
Board are George Wightman,<lb/>
Merle T. Summers, Tommie Wat-<lb/>
son, and Tomye Suggs. This coun-<lb/>
cil will replace the currently used<lb/>
Discipline Committee.<lb/>
Selected by Senate members to<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
The copies of this year's<lb/>
Buccaneer will arrive some-<lb/>
time during exam week. Pro-<lb/>
visions have been made for<lb/>
distribution in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium. The distribution time<lb/>
will be announced over the<lb/>
campus radio.<lb/>
If the yearbooks should not<lb/>
arrive before Thursday or<lb/>
Friday of exam week, those<lb/>
students planning to leave<lb/>
prior to that time may come<lb/>
by the Buccaneer office, sec-<lb/>
ond floor Wright Building,<lb/>
and give their addresses, plus<lb/>
the cost of postage, to have<lb/>
the yearbook mailed to them.<lb/>
GRADUATES: Caps and<lb/>
gowns may be picked up in<lb/>
Soda Shop No. 2, located in<lb/>
the basement of South Dining<lb/>
Hall, beginning Saturday.<lb/>
Ji'ne 1st and through Satur-<lb/>
day, June 8th.<lb/>
the Women's Honor Council were<lb/>
Joan Wetherington, Kay Yow,<lb/>
Dinah Nibbelink, Ronnie Gay,<lb/>
Carol Daughtery, Judy Johnson,<lb/>
and Janet McKenzie. Peggy Davis<lb/>
will serve as alternate.<lb/>
Henry Cantrell, Tom Sobol, Ray<lb/>
Stevens, Doug Langston, Phil<lb/>
Dean, Jerry Ainsfield, and Bill<lb/>
Clark were selected to serve on<lb/>
the Men's Honor Council. Jim<lb/>
Mahan was elected alternate.<lb/>
These councils will serve in ad-<lb/>
dition to the Men's and Women's<lb/>
Judiciaries elected in the Spring<lb/>
elections.<lb/>
The Senate also passed a mo-<lb/>
tion to require the Summer School<lb/>
SGA to pay one-third of the cost<lb/>
of the Key. The regular session<lb/>
SGA pays the entire cost at pre-<lb/>
sent even though he Handbook is<lb/>
used during Summer School.<lb/>
The Orientation Committee re-<lb/>
quested and was granted $1280.<lb/>
$1250 of this total will be for<lb/>
entertainment. The Committee ex-<lb/>
pressed a desire to orient the in-<lb/>
coming Freshmen into the way of<lb/>
life of college students with "Big-<lb/>
League" entertainment.<lb/>
The Senate gave both the<lb/>
Buccaneer and the East Carolinian<lb/>
permission to keep their budgets<lb/>
 open throughout the summer.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0002"/><lb/>
)<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
EAST CAROLINI AN<lb/>
FH4V' r n<lb/>
SUGGESTIONS<lb/>
Marc Antony, in his funeral oration before the<lb/>
Roman people, said this: "The evil that men do lives<lb/>
after them; The good is oft interred with their bones<lb/>
. . . " Our feeling is that, although memories of a person<lb/>
will not necessarily be of the evil he has done, they will<lb/>
be either entirely of the evil or entirely of the good, de-<lb/>
pending on the individual associations of whos doing<lb/>
the remembering. Rarely will there ever be a mixture<lb/>
of pleasant and unpleasant remembrances.<lb/>
In much the same vein, a person's memories of a<lb/>
town he lived in or of an institution he attended will<lb/>
probably be either all good or all bad after the lapse of<lb/>
a few years. We feel sure that we will carry away many<lb/>
more pleasant memories from East Carolina than un-<lb/>
pleasant ones. Consequently, we would like to take this<lb/>
opportunity to point out from a student editor's point<lb/>
of view (Something, God willing, we will never be again)<lb/>
some aspects and attitudes of East Carolina that will<lb/>
perhaps be beneficial to relationships between the staff<lb/>
and the readers next year.<lb/>
Administrative officials are frequently critical of<lb/>
the students at East Carolina who criticize the school.<lb/>
They especially object to such criticism when it appears<lb/>
in the student newspaper. At East Carolina we are for-<lb/>
tunate in that this objection rarely goes beyond a few<lb/>
verbal rumblings?and these rumblings are indeed rare.<lb/>
But administrators take the attitude that if students are<lb/>
so dissatisfied, they should go somewhere else to a school<lb/>
where they might be happier. These administrators feel<lb/>
that there are many good things about the school that<lb/>
the students and anyone else concerned could say and<lb/>
they resent the "constant criticism However, they fail<lb/>
to appreciate one aspect of this phenomenon. The stu-<lb/>
dents who are doing the criticising are not necessarily<lb/>
the students who dislike the school or wish to harm it.<lb/>
They are the students who are interested enough in the<lb/>
school and its actual qualities, as well as its image, to<lb/>
think about faults and wishes to see them improve as<lb/>
much as possible. Many times we have heard these stu-<lb/>
dents who criticise the school when on campus defend<lb/>
it long and vigorously to anyone who dared criticize it<lb/>
away from campus. Additionally, many of the students<lb/>
on this campus who seem the most bitter critics to the<lb/>
administration, are the students who contribute to the<lb/>
shining image of the school, by personal conduct, etc<lb/>
when they are away at national conventions and the like.<lb/>
For example, Mr. Tom Mallison, who has certainly been<lb/>
far from bland in his criticism of vrious aspects of<lb/>
East Carolina, has probably done more than any stu-<lb/>
dent in the history of the college to impress the general<lb/>
public with the vitality and intelligence of the student<lb/>
government here. Jack Willis, editor of the Rebel next<lb/>
year and on the carpet several times for his criticisms of<lb/>
the school, has contributed greatly to the impact of that<lb/>
magazine away from campus.<lb/>
Thus, we feel that in many cases, the severest critics<lb/>
of East Carolina are the students who have the greatest<lb/>
pride in the institution and wish to have an even greater<lb/>
pride. They recognize that there are many, many good<lb/>
things here; but they also recognize that there are things<lb/>
which need improvement. What better place for honest<lb/>
criticism and a desire for improvement to start than<lb/>
right here at home where it will do the most goodWhat<lb/>
better place for laudation of the school than off campus,<lb/>
where it will do the most good ?<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 1 junius d. grimes m<lb/>
business manager j tony r. bowen<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
Mailing Address: Box 1063. East Carolina College, Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-5716 or PL 2-6101. extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $2.60 per year<lb/>
CAMPUS BULLETIN<lb/>
Fri. 31?Movie: "State Pair Austin, 7:00 pan.<lb/>
Sun. 2-?Recital, McGinnis, 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
Man. 3?Senior Recital, Austin, 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Thurs. &amp;?College Chapel Service, Y-Hut, 6:30 pjnu<lb/>
Fri 7?Senior Night, College Union, 8:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 8?Commencement Rehearsal, Stadium, 9:00 aan.<lb/>
Alumni Day Program, Austin,10:30 ajn.<lb/>
?Alumni Tea, 3:00 pjn.<lb/>
?Senior Class Patio Dance, President's Home, 8:00 pjn.<lb/>
San. 9?Symphonic Band Lawn Concert, 2:30 p.m.<lb/>
Commencement, Stadium, 6:00 pjoa.<lb/>
We've always wantedto do it?<lb/>
let you draw your own cartoon!<lb/>
DEDICATED TO SPITE, SATIRE, AND FUN<lb/>
EL TORO<lb/>
by<lb/>
Ronald W. Gollobin<lb/>
"The library is not understaffed<lb/>
sad Mrs. J. H. Benn who is Li-<lb/>
brarian, Assistant Librarian, Ref-<lb/>
eience Lbrarian, and Treasurer.<lb/>
"There is adequate help to handle<lb/>
the needs of the whole student<lb/>
body' she continued, "and both<lb/>
of us are very efficient<lb/>
 <lb/>
Ode to the Maintenance Depart-<lb/>
men by Ramon<lb/>
"I think that I shall never see<lb/>
A sight so absurd as forty men<lb/>
trimming a tree.<lb/>
? <lb/>
Bookstore Song<lb/>
by Ramon<lb/>
Jingle bells, jingle bells, jingle all<lb/>
the way<lb/>
Oil what fun it is to make a mill-<lb/>
d dollars a day.<lb/>
e e e t<lb/>
The cafeteria has cracked down<lb/>
or the criteria for hiring cashiers.<lb/>
After next year, all cashiers wll<lb/>
have had to have passed Math 45<lb/>
with at least a "D<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
We apologize for saying that the<lb/>
average I.Q. of housemothers was<lb/>
9S. The statistics were a little<lb/>
mixed up. The housemothers' aver-<lb/>
age age is 98. Their I.Q. average is<lb/>
87.<lb/>
The Cafeteria Cashier's Blues<lb/>
sung by the Serving Line Six<lb/>
"Tause she's got . . . Personality<lb/>
The Yearbook and the Spring<lb/>
Issue of the REBEL will come out<lb/>
Dn the same day?Septembed IT.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
The bookstore won the city<lb/>
Civic Award last week. They were<lb/>
presented with the award for com-<lb/>
ing to the city's aid when the fed-<lb/>
eral government refused a 10 mill-<lb/>
ion dollar loan to Greenville. The<lb/>
bookstore let them the 10 mill-<lb/>
ion at the usual rate?46 .<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
As a public apology to the ad-<lb/>
ministration, we'd like to say that<lb/>
they Ho not censor this column in<lb/>
any fashion, and that the average<lb/>
I.Q. over there is 243.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
Next year the cafeteria will make<lb/>
all announcements in English. A<lb/>
spokesman explained that there<lb/>
was no particular value in using<lb/>
Pig Latin again this year.<lb/>
LETTER<lb/>
To The New Editor:<lb/>
It seems a bit strange, sitting<lb/>
here looking out the window of<lb/>
the East Carolinian office. For the<lb/>
better part of a school year I have<lb/>
sat here daily and looked out this<lb/>
window at the people, students and<lb/>
faculty, milling on the College<lb/>
Union terrace. In the winter it<lb/>
was brief; they stood there in<lb/>
small clusters rubbing their hands<lb/>
together in unsuccessful attempts<lb/>
to ward off the cold, and then fled<lb/>
into the warmth of the Union or<lb/>
to class. In the early spring, they<lb/>
lounged in burgundy skirts and<lb/>
blouses and madras shirts, the mul-<lb/>
tiple colors of their attire offset<lb/>
by the white blossoms of the<lb/>
Cherry trees in front of Rawl. Now<lb/>
they group together, again briefly,<lb/>
mopping the perspiration and<lb/>
laughing brightly of the coming<lb/>
summer and weekends at the beach<lb/>
or the mountains and the fun to be<lb/>
had in summer school.<lb/>
Many different pictures have<lb/>
teen framed by this window: mobs<lb/>
wriggling together in an almost<lb/>
exotic dance they call the Thund-<lb/>
er bird; girls being dragged rough-<lb/>
ly through the snow; bands of<lb/>
boys ranging about waiting to see<lb/>
vho won the TV set because they<lb/>
had managed to beg, borrow, or<lb/>
steal more Marlboro packs than<lb/>
another fraternity; art student<lb/>
loading paintings to be sent to<lb/>
competitions. Varied, colorful, ob-<lb/>
scene, mirthful, and now a little<lb/>
COMMENDATION<lb/>
To The Student<lb/>
We at Photo Art a,<lb/>
to -spo-ess our appr j<lb/>
h of ycj who had<lb/>
udv for the L963 j.<lb/>
lerbonai later 7<lb/>
 urk by all udenta<lb/>
admin is! rat von and k ?w<lb/>
ermtion thou r. - vA-artj<lb/>
tion is Uj be i<lb/>
this fine attitude towir<lb/>
ject, the ib<lb/>
?<lb/>
M<lb/>
Buccaneer. Y<lb/>
school<lb/>
continue to<lb/>
anw: jj I<lb/>
the state. M<lb/>
er<lb/>
ed for th<lb/>
'V ?<lb/>
0<lb/>
.<lb/>
i '<lb/>
' <lb/>
ed.<lb/>
For your<lb/>
placed all<lb/>
nee<lb/>
? ' ?<lb/>
contacting<lb/>
Already,<lb/>
inc with the e- BEX) -<lb/>
?k. W<lb/>
pood p!anrptl<lb/>
?? - ??<lb/>
be anot: ?<lb/>
(ur ide?"<lb/>
?u gmpl<lb/>
coming 19rcanefr<lb/>
appreciated b SU<lb/>
Al the edt<lb/>
your yeari? <lb/>
together f r<lb/>
Buccaneer a<lb/>
 to I<lb/>
What could be more fitting, in-<lb/>
deed it is altogether fitting and<lb/>
proper that we should  dedi-<lb/>
cate to some measure this last<lb/>
issue to the people of East Caro-<lb/>
lina who have been largely re-<lb/>
sponsible for the impressive<lb/>
growth, and what concerns me, the<lb/>
success of its publications. Mr.<lb/>
Ovid Pierce has been the advisor<lb/>
to the Rebel since I have been<lb/>
associated with it, and he has<lb/>
been my personal advisor for about<lb/>
the same length of time. It's a<lb/>
shame every student can't be as<lb/>
closely associated with him. Dr.<lb/>
Leo Jenkins has a reputation for<lb/>
being the student's president. He<lb/>
id. To the other members of the<lb/>
administration, Dr. James Tucker,<lb/>
Dean Jim Mallory, Dean Ruth<lb/>
White, although we have certain-<lb/>
ly had our disagreements, no col-<lb/>
lege that I have seen can boast<lb/>
as proudly of the proximity of its<lb/>
students and its administration.<lb/>
Jack Willis, Sue Bridgers, Frieda<lb/>
White, Jim Forsythe, Tony Bowen<lb/>
and others have jriven the pub-<lb/>
lications I have edited whatever<lb/>
quality they have had. Without<lb/>
their assistance, they would have<lb/>
been absolutely nothing. thank<lb/>
m ell, and only wiah that the<lb/>
2T 1L" ?<lb/>
Uke ttie interest and contribute<lb/>
tfc time you have contributed over<lb/>
Jhe Jast two years. I wish you all<lb/>
Uie beat in the next few yeirm,<lb/>
7<lb/>
T<lb/>
EXCELLENCE<lb/>
Miss ?" <lb/>
been sele <lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Y?ar t<lb/>
' n U<lb/>
?on McK<lb/>
Delta Aw<lb/>
May 21.<lb/>
Reeipier. 1<lb/>
award are '<lb/>
administrative<lb/>
I a.ft-? of e eads<lb/>
scholarsh Ctar <lb/>
past, two<lb/>
students, Evelyn O<lb/>
Dorothy .Tea- Fl UU<lb/>
ed the award.<lb/>
Lynda, an ed "i?r<lb/>
been active  ? <lb/>
activities. Since she ?<lb/>
president of Genet! Hi<lb/>
a! a memi <lb/>
Women's .1 -B s<lb/>
she is preside <lb/>
president of Ta m<lb/>
ary education frmtenJ<lb/>
ly. Miss Lewis<lb/>
Outstanding WoteM<lb/>
Teacher for 1<lb/>
the outstand <lb/>
cation donartnv; bl ? "<lb/>
ber of Who's Who Amonc '<lb/>
denta in American CiaVl<lb/>
UniTcrstties. Other ci-<lb/>
ties include the S<lb/>
Association, the Chape1 <lb/>
Baptist Sueient Vrdon.<lb/>
National Education At<lb/>
and the Association for '<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
NOTICES<lb/>
Joseph Purcell's j?<lb/>
recital, originally <lb/>
for Friday at 8:30 ???? J<lb/>
been postponed until J?<lb/>
The checks for ta M<lb/>
Defence Stodent U?? fr J<lb/>
Ml ochool eiay be V<lb/>
Monday, Jon &amp;<lb/>
Jane 4, and WedaeaJ<lb/>
I In Room 11? hi ? <lb/>
tim<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0003"/><lb/>
Friday,<lb/>
May 31, 168<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Gaster Wins Awards! Delta Sigma Pi, Honorary Fraternity,<lb/>
From EC Playh<lb/>
ouse<lb/>
M<lb/>
Caster was named the<lb/>
Me member of the East<lb/>
College Playhouse and<lb/>
awards as best actress<lb/>
ad i rug and supporting<lb/>
he annual laurel Awards<lb/>
ed Friday night.<lb/>
a senior, received the<lb/>
I tor her portrayal of<lb/>
ig Princess Winifred<lb/>
g musical "Once Vpon<lb/>
 and was cited for her<lb/>
? in a supporting role<lb/>
I in Kermit Hunters<lb/>
Lightning<lb/>
.ful<lb/>
Ren Avery, senior and veteran<lb/>
Playnouse member, served as mas-<lb/>
ter of ceremonies for the Laurel<lb/>
presentations.<lb/>
Pnor to the presentation of<lb/>
awards, he recognized Playhouse<lb/>
Director Edgar R. Loessin, Tech-<lb/>
nical Director John Sneden, Gene<lb/>
Suassier of the School of Music,<lb/>
and Mrs. Betty Rose Griffith, di-<lb/>
rector of iihe Theater Dance<lb/>
Group, for their help and support<lb/>
during the year<lb/>
Presents Awards At Friday Banquet<lb/>
dents receiving the<lb/>
Laurels at ceremonies<lb/>
cr the presentation in<lb/>
Auditorium of two one-<lb/>
and interpretative<lb/>
, final production of the<lb/>
season, were Clyde<lb/>
Jr best actor in lead-<lb/>
performance as<lb/>
. KB Gerald HarreU,<lb/>
- in a supporting role,<lb/>
t the mute King<lb/>
"Once ITpon a Mat-<lb/>
I.urille Dew, best pcr-<lb/>
a small role, who<lb/>
ia Miss Mabel in "JB<lb/>
Members of the Playhouse tben<lb/>
presented satirical sketches to re-1<lb/>
view the past season's produc-<lb/>
v?ns.<lb/>
Holcombe, new presi-<lb/>
e Playhouse, was named<lb/>
valuable new member of<lb/>
i group.<lb/>
Earlier in th evening members<lb/>
of ihc Playhouse, their date3, and<lb/>
judges attended the annual ban-<lb/>
quet held in the South Dining Hall.<lb/>
Tlie group was addressed by Miss<lb/>
Garter, outgoing president, who<lb/>
will study drama in graduate<lb/>
school and work toward the MFA<lb/>
degree at Yale University next<lb/>
fa <lb/>
Following the banquet, open<lb/>
house was held in the Playhouse<lb/>
Dungeon at Ragsdale Hall where<lb/>
guests had an opportunity to see-<lb/>
displays of mementos of the P'?st<lb/>
theater season at the college.<lb/>
The Beta Kappa Chapter to P4<lb/>
Omega Pi, national honorary<lb/>
business education fraternty, pre-<lb/>
sented awards to outstanding<lb/>
members of the organization at<lb/>
the Alumni Awards Banquet of<lb/>
the fraternity Friday, May 24, at<lb/>
the St. James Methodist Church.<lb/>
Vice President and Dean Robert<lb/>
L. Holt of East Carolina, speaker<lb/>
Cor the evening, discussed "Loyal-<lb/>
ty, Service, and Progress the<lb/>
motto of Pi Omega Pi.<lb/>
The college Beta Kappa Chap-<lb/>
ter received from Frances Dan Ids<lb/>
of the East Carolina School of<lb/>
Business, editor of "Here and<lb/>
There nationally circulated news<lb/>
of Pi Omega Pi. the<lb/>
National Chapter Award. The<lb/>
East Carolina chapter ranks sec-<lb/>
ond in the nation this year be-<lb/>
cause of its excellent program of<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
recognized for outstanding scholr-<lb/>
ship at each of the undergraduate<lb/>
levels and were presented keys.<lb/>
Dr. Audrey V. Dempsey of J.e<lb/>
School of Business presented the<lb/>
Junior Scholaishio Award and key<lb/>
to Carolyn McRoy of Chocownty.<lb/>
Donna Y. Dickens, President of<lb/>
Pi Omega Pi, presented Dean<lb/>
ilolj with a membership p:n as<lb/>
as the newest honorary memN?rs<lb/>
f the fraternity.<lb/>
Sriixley Whitehurst received the<lb/>
Th-uuas Clay Williams Scholar-<lb/>
ship Award, given annually by<lb/>
the Beta Karpa Chapter to the<lb/>
East Carolina senior who had the<lb/>
hi ghost scholortic average in four<lb/>
years of business education.<lb/>
Dean Elmer U Browning of tre<lb/>
School of business presented the<lb/>
ident G . eminent Association<lb/>
A. ward<lb/>
indsor<lb/>
to<lb/>
or<lb/>
3<lb/>
G<lb/>
r e e<lb/>
k N<lb/>
e ws<lb/>
n<lb/>
Vi o micron Pi<lb/>
fOI i p? chapter of<lb/>
- n Pi for n xt year<lb/>
tly by out-<lb/>
Barbara Barco.<lb/>
presi-<lb/>
. presi-<lb/>
n. r- ing<lb/>
yn ! a . : :or-<lb/>
Donna<lb/>
Judy Richie,<lb/>
treasurer; Annette<lb/>
an; Sandra<lb/>
per Lib Rogers<lb/>
, Panhellenic<lb/>
s, fratera-<lb/>
Donn? Rroome,<lb/>
chairman; Barbara<lb/>
ions and his-<lb/>
LAGMA; Vickie Brad-<lb/>
rshlp and standards;<lb/>
assistant rush<lb/>
end historian.<lb/>
ring pledge class i?<lb/>
Euleta Johnson, Ann<lb/>
I Kay Casey, under the<lb/>
f Linda Slaughter,<lb/>
ess<lb/>
i g members have re-<lb/>
rr.ed from District Day<lb/>
n, D. C: Catherine<lb/>
? r na Liverman, Annette<lb/>
I ritherine Moore.<lb/>
guests of Pi Delta<lb/>
the University of<lb/>
College Park, Mary-<lb/>
and Mary Tankard.<lb/>
as<lb/>
Departmental<lb/>
uhodes of Windsor for outstar.d-j<lb/>
ing service to the School of Basi<lb/>
ness Rhodes has servtd<lb/>
treasurer of P Omega Pi and as<lb/>
an actl'e mender of Delta Sigr.a<lb/>
Pi professional business frpver-<lb/>
ity<lb/>
On Thursday, May 1, Kappa<lb/>
Delta held initiation at the St.<lb/>
Jn-mi Methodist Church for<lb/>
pledges Lynn Howell, Joy John-<lb/>
son. Lib Piner, and Doris Poole.<lb/>
As a part of initiation weekend,<lb/>
the sisters enjoyed their annual<lb/>
beach trip at Atlantic Beach,<lb/>
Morehead, N. C.<lb/>
With President Sharon McKean<lb/>
presiding, the annual Kappa Delta<lb/>
wards Banquet was held at the<lb/>
Holiday Inn on May 21. The four<lb/>
new sisters were honored. From<lb/>
the formal class pledges, Lib<lb/>
Finer was named outstanding<lb/>
pledge, an award based on merits<lb/>
acquired during the pledge period.<lb/>
Miss Piner also received the<lb/>
scrapbook award. Miss Lynn<lb/>
Howell was presented the pledge<lb/>
scholarship award.<lb/>
During the banquet, various<lb/>
oher awards were presented to<lb/>
the sisters. Lana McCoy received<lb/>
the scholarship bracelet in recog-<lb/>
nition of the highest scholastic<lb/>
average for the preceding quarter.<lb/>
Pat Waff was selected as the<lb/>
White Rose Girl for 1962-63. She<lb/>
was also presented the silver bud<lb/>
vase awarded each quarter on the<lb/>
basis of activity hours. Pat; re-<lb/>
ceived the book, Leaves of Gold,<lb/>
in recogniton as the Kappa Delta<lb/>
president for 1962-63.<lb/>
Dorothy I urow of Elizabeth<lb/>
Cny won the National Bu.3tw.3s<lb/>
Education Association Award to<lb/>
an outstanding gradauting sen.or<lb/>
in business education. Lei.i C.<lb/>
Fills of the School of Business<lb/>
presented this award to Do othy.<lb/>
Judith Ann Joyner was present-<lb/>
ed the Fie?nman Scholar-hip<lb/>
Award ard Brcnda Flowers, the<lb/>
Sophomore Award. Both wore<lb/>
Foreign Language<lb/>
Dept. Features<lb/>
Plays, Disoussion<lb/>
? Hudson will be<lb/>
? ffidal delegate to<lb/>
,he<lb/>
its<lb/>
nal convention wnfrn<lb/>
he'd this year at Bilo7i<lb/>
ippi, June 23-June 28.<lb/>
-brating the initiation of<lb/>
omen students into the<lb/>
sisterhood of Alpha Delta Pi. ?-<lb/>
rfal sorority at EC, was a series<lb/>
entertainments including a<lb/>
bolarshtp and Founder's Day<lb/>
Banquet. Song Festival, and Beach<lb/>
fcaty at Atlantic Beach recency.<lb/>
Umiaa Womble was recipient of<lb/>
H best pledge award, and June<lb/>
To!son was given honorable men-<lb/>
n and received a pledge "?.<lb/>
New sisters initiated into ADF<lb/>
n addition to Louise and June are<lb/>
ViTinia Lewis, Mary Conn, Gigi<lb/>
ice, Marilyn Miller, Selbm Mor-<lb/>
Sigma P? Alpha<lb/>
On Wednesday, May 8, Sigma<lb/>
Pi Alpha, national honorary fra-<lb/>
ternity, held its regular monthly<lb/>
meeting. Dr. Ralph Napp of the<lb/>
social studies department was the<lb/>
guest speaker and gave an in-<lb/>
teresting and mf ormaive talk on<lb/>
Germany. His observations on the<lb/>
various aspects of German Me<lb/>
were drawn from his recent trip<lb/>
to that and other European coun-<lb/>
tries. It was brought up that at<lb/>
the next meeting new members<lb/>
will be initiated into the fratern-<lb/>
ity To qualify, one must have a<lb/>
B average in courses, one through<lb/>
four of a foreign language pit<lb/>
m over-all C average. At thecon-<lb/>
clusion of the meeting, refresh-<lb/>
tnewta were served.<lb/>
A panel discussion with six<lb/>
, student teachers as participants<lb/>
and a one-act play in French were<lb/>
featured at the spring-quarter<lb/>
meeting of the Department of<lb/>
Foreign Languages at ECC May<lb/>
22.<lb/>
In the panel discussion students<lb/>
analyzed and told how they solved<lb/>
some cf the problems they met<lb/>
during their student teaching in<lb/>
Rocky Mount. Among these were<lb/>
finding living accommodations;<lb/>
arranging for meals; problems of<lb/>
teach-ng, such as testing, grad-<lb/>
ing and discipline; and the<lb/>
methods and audio-visual aids<lb/>
used in the classroom.<lb/>
Participants in the discussion,<lb/>
which was f H wed by a qucjt ?n-<lb/>
and-answer period, were tfrenda<lb/>
Johnson, Kay Kennedy, Sue Little-<lb/>
ton, Freddie Skinner, Btyn<lb/>
S'arhng. and Betsy Winsteil.<lb/>
The one-act play in French,<lb/>
?La farce du cuvier" ("The 'hh-<lb/>
tub Farce" was directed by<lb/>
Catherine Labaume of Paris,<lb/>
France, faculty member ?f the<lb/>
department. Ih.j skit was print-<lb/>
ed by thn?e siuaents of the French<lb/>
conversation class: Ellen 1UU?<lb/>
Gnaoudi Mehidi. and Carmen Ray-<lb/>
nor.<lb/>
Mary Gather .ne Heim, co-h?s-<lb/>
toi ian, presented the first cop t cf<lb/>
'he 1963 Beta Kappa News, an-<lb/>
nual publication o1 the Beta KPa<lb/>
Chapter, to JH.ss Daniels, to whom<lb/>
it is dedicated.<lb/>
President Dickens and Vice<lb/>
President Jie DeBruhl prMit<lb/>
cd the ?-ha;ur sponsors, Pi.<lb/>
Dempsey and Miss Daniels, with<lb/>
gifts in appreciation for ihe ser-<lb/>
vkres rendered the chapter.<lb/>
QnCanmos<lb/>
with<lb/>
(Author of "1 Was a Teen-age Dwarf "The Many<lb/>
Loves of Dobie Giiis etc.)<lb/>
TILL WE MEET AGAIN<lb/>
With today's installment I complete my ninth year of writing<lb/>
columns in your college newspaper for the makers of Marlboro<lb/>
Cigarettes. In view of the occasion, I hope I may be forgiven<lb/>
if I get a little misty.<lb/>
These nine years have passed like nine minutes. In fact,<lb/>
I would not believe that so much time has gone by except that<lb/>
I have my wife nearby as a handy reference. When I started<lb/>
columning for Marlboros, she was a slip of a girl?supple as a<lb/>
reed and fair as the sunrise. Today she is gnarled, lumpy, and<lb/>
given to biting the postman. Still, I count myself lucky. Most<lb/>
of my friends who were married at the same time have wives<lb/>
who chase cars all day. I myself have never had this trouble<lb/>
and I attribute my good fortune to the fact that I have never<lb/>
gtruck my wife with my hand. I have always used a folded<lb/>
iii dw kd kw Qfrwntit<lb/>
newspaper?even throughout, the prolonged newspaper strike<lb/>
in New York. During this period 1 had the airmail edition of<lb/>
the Manchester Guardian flown in daily from England. I must<lb/>
confess, however, that it was not entirely satisfactory. The air-<lb/>
mail edition of the Guardian is printed on paper so light and<lb/>
flimsy that it makes little or no impression when one slaps one's<lb/>
wife. Mine, in fact, thought it was some kind of game, and tore<lb/>
several pairs of my trousers.<lb/>
But I digress. I was saying what a pleasure it has been to<lb/>
write this column for the last nine years for the makers of<lb/>
Marlboro Cigarettes?a fine group of men, as anyone who has<lb/>
sampled their wares would suspect. They are as mellow as the<lb/>
aged tobaccos they blend. They are as pure as the white cellulose<lb/>
filter they have devised. They are loyal, true, companionable,<lb/>
and constant, and I have never for an instant wavered in my<lb/>
belief that some day they will pay me for these last nine years.<lb/>
But working for the makers of Marlboro has not been the<lb/>
greatest of my pleasures over the last nine years. The chief<lb/>
satisfaction has been writing for you?the college population<lb/>
of America. It is a rare and lucky columnist who can find an<lb/>
audience so full of intelligence and verve. I would like very<lb/>
much to show my appreciation by asking you all over to my<lb/>
house for tea and oatmeal cookies, but there is no telling how<lb/>
many of you my wife would bite.<lb/>
For many of you this is the last year of college. This is espe-<lb/>
cially true for seniors. To those I extend my heartfelt wishes<lb/>
that you will find the world outside a happy valley. To juniors<lb/>
I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will become seniors. To<lb/>
sophomores I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will become<lb/>
juniors. To freshmen I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will<lb/>
become sophomores. To those of you going on into graduate<lb/>
school I extend my heartfelt wishes that you will marry money.<lb/>
To all of you let me say one thing: during the year I have<lb/>
been frivolous and funny during the past year?possibly less<lb/>
often than I have imagined?but the time has now come for<lb/>
some serious talk. Whatever your status, whatever your plans,<lb/>
I hope that success will attend your ventures.<lb/>
Stay happy. Stay loose. mmmmmmmm<lb/>
We, the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes, confess to more than<lb/>
a few nervous moments during the nine years we have spon-<lb/>
sored this uninhibited and uncensored column But in th<lb/>
main, we have had fun and so, we hope, have gou. Let us<lb/>
mdd our good wishes to Old Max's: stag happy; stay looe.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0004"/><lb/>
Pa 4<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
V y Ma<lb/>
i  ,r.i ? ru, :i<lb/>
1962-1963 Goo<lb/>
Homecoming, IFC, IDC, Military Ball. .<lb/>
The death of the Student Senate was mourned when the administration<lb/>
overruled a portion of the Constitution.<lb/>
The Boodmobile went over it. iK when it visited I <lb/>
Pirates Enter NA1A<lb/>
Semi-finals Again<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
f<lb/>
'?? ' - . ?MM<lb/>
tttittfa<lb/>
tudvnV. managed to study a little in between times for extracurricular activities.<lb/>
The cigarette pack count increased the stadium fund.<lb/>
Photography by<lb/>
Weidenbaeher, Lewis<lb/>
Platt and Robertson<lb/>
i h w n first pri;<lb/>
Suggs, Shesso, Overton. esson <lb/>
Many .?ng ?ightg were 8pent ? . '<lb/>
s tuaus lor the homecoming parade.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0005"/><lb/>
1?63<lb/>
i-r t-<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Pag? 5<lb/>
"TTITT<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
ear For <lb/>
Majors. Limeliqhters, Brubeck Entertain<lb/>
?<lb/>
istruction was begun on the now completed Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Initiation Fraternity Parties<lb/>
Jimm Shuman talked mere than 18 hour, to raise mone fur the<lb/>
UNICEF Drive.<lb/>
it and enthusiasm than ever before.<lb/>
the campaign banners.<lb/>
I Class Elections<lb/>
??<lb/>
i"<lb/>
One student even walked to Goldsboro.<lb/>
m<lb/>
Construction Of Stadium, Girls Dormitory<lb/>
Vs r.ght Building ww renov<lb/>
ated and walls were<lb/>
constructed.<lb/>
Governor Terry Santord visited EC in the fall.<lb/>
"4s<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0006"/><lb/>
E<lb/>
AST CAROLIN1AN<lb/>
RTS REVIEW<lb/>
By RON DOWDY<lb/>
In this, the last issue of the EAST CAROLINIAN, the<lb/>
sports department wishes to recognize the outstanding<lb/>
achievement of a few of the Pirate athletes.<lb/>
Whether you're in the College gym at an EC basketball<lb/>
game or at Giy Smith stadium, you are sure to hear the<lb/>
name LACY WEST. West has without a doubt contributed<lb/>
more to the field of athletics during this past season than<lb/>
any other Pirate athlete. On the court West had a 22-game<lb/>
average of 17.4 points per game, with a .777 free throw<lb/>
accuracy average. His .485 field goal percentage accuracy<lb/>
was also the highest on the team. His free throw shots were<lb/>
so accurate that he scored 15 out of 16 in the Elon game.<lb/>
On the diamond he doubles as a pitcher and an outfielder<lb/>
on the Area 7 NAIA championship team. In the first game<lb/>
of the recent tourney in Statesboro, Ga. West hurled the<lb/>
Pirates to a 14-inning victory over Carson-Newman. During<lb/>
the regular season he led the team in batting, .333, and in<lb/>
pitching with an 8-2 record.<lb/>
To West we only hope that if he signs a professional<lb/>
contract with a baseball team while in St. Joe, Missouri,<lb/>
he won't sign for less than a half-million dollars, the price<lb/>
we feel he has been worth to this school during his four<lb/>
years here.<lb/>
 <lb/>
It goes without saying that the Pirate baseball team was<lb/>
quite fortunate in the crop of frosh it picked this year. One<lb/>
in particular is second-baseman Buddy Bovender. Bovender<lb/>
is one of Coach Stasavich's football players whenever he<lb/>
isn't on the diamond, or should we say just the opposite?<lb/>
Bovender was a close third on the team in having the highest<lb/>
batting average, second in number of home runs, and leader<lb/>
for the team in total numbers of triples. Although we feel<lb/>
assured Bavender will have the opportunity to sign a pro<lb/>
contract while in Missouri, we also hope he will realize how<lb/>
much a professional athlete needs an education.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Coach Smith and his 15-man squad will leave here at<lb/>
an undetermined time tomorrow for their trip to Missouri.<lb/>
They will fly out and back with an extra 5-man detail<lb/>
tagging along. This detail consists of a statistics man, a<lb/>
trainer, and a few helpers. The tourney starts Monday and<lb/>
we look forward to all the games being broadcast again over<lb/>
the radio. Check your local WGTC station to be sure.<lb/>
Stations Broadcast EC Programs<lb/>
It ma yibe of interest to the stu-<lb/>
dents to know tliat this summer<lb/>
they will be able to turn to their<lb/>
local rato radio stations and<lb/>
pick up programs from East<lb/>
Carolina College. In an attempt<lb/>
to keep the various communities<lb/>
as well as the students in touch<lb/>
with the college, stations through-<lb/>
out Nort&amp; Carolina will be carry-<lb/>
ing these tape recorded progframs.<lb/>
These stations include the follow-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
WBBB?Burlington<lb/>
WWOK?Charlotte<lb/>
WGAI?Elizabeth City<lb/>
WIFM?Elkin<lb/>
WFAG?Farmville<lb/>
WFLB? Fayetteville<lb/>
WLTC?Gastonia<lb/>
WBIG? Greensboro<lb/>
WCOG?Greensboro<lb/>
WGTO-Greenville<lb/>
WRKB?Karmapolis<lb/>
Carl ton Barnes, ss<lb/>
Buddy Bovender, 2b<lb/>
Lacy West, p, li<lb/>
Merriell Bynoum, rf<lb/>
Jim 'Robinson, c<lb/>
Eobby Joyce, cf<lb/>
J. W. Edwards, c<lb/>
Tommy Kidd, ib<lb/>
Junior Green, 2b<lb/>
Chuck Conners, If, of<lb/>
Fred Rodriques, If, 2b<lb/>
Bob Kaylor, 3b<lb/>
Lawrence Keith, cf<lb/>
Roger Hedgecock, lb<lb/>
Art Henretha, rf<lb/>
Record?18 - 14 - 1<lb/>
Games<lb/>
Presbyterian<lb/>
Souithern Illinois<lb/>
Colgate<lb/>
Ithaca<lb/>
Ithaca<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Delaware<lb/>
Delaware<lb/>
Washington &amp; Lee<lb/>
Bowling Green<lb/>
Bowling Green<lb/>
Camp Lejeune<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Elon<lb/>
Atlantic Christian<lb/>
Elon<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
G<lb/>
23<lb/>
23<lb/>
22<lb/>
23<lb/>
14<lb/>
16<lb/>
14<lb/>
23<lb/>
23<lb/>
14<lb/>
13<lb/>
12<lb/>
14<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
AB<lb/>
96<lb/>
91<lb/>
72<lb/>
81<lb/>
45<lb/>
45<lb/>
36<lb/>
78<lb/>
79<lb/>
27<lb/>
20<lb/>
15<lb/>
12<lb/>
11<lb/>
8<lb/>
ECC<lb/>
14<lb/>
6<lb/>
12<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
a<lb/>
18<lb/>
7<lb/>
11<lb/>
9<lb/>
1<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
1<lb/>
17<lb/>
2<lb/>
13<lb/>
5<lb/>
1963 BASEBALL TEAM<lb/>
Statistics for ? Ga?e?<lb/>
R H RBI 2b Sb<lb/>
19<lb/>
11<lb/>
10<lb/>
21 31<lb/>
26 29<lb/>
15<lb/>
19<lb/>
13<lb/>
11<lb/>
8<lb/>
19<lb/>
11<lb/>
6<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
a<lb/>
2<lb/>
24<lb/>
23<lb/>
15<lb/>
9<lb/>
8<lb/>
18<lb/>
17<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
5<lb/>
2<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
12<lb/>
9<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
23<lb/>
13<lb/>
3<lb/>
a<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
16<lb/>
14<lb/>
18<lb/>
7<lb/>
10<lb/>
7<lb/>
2<lb/>
K<lb/>
5<lb/>
8<lb/>
4<lb/>
14<lb/>
7<lb/>
7<lb/>
11<lb/>
Sac 8F HB gB<lb/>
1 0 4 <lb/>
0 1 i l<lb/>
1 1<lb/>
19? 15<lb/>
18<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
6<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
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0<lb/>
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1 2<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
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3?<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
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0<lb/>
3<lb/>
1 12<lb/>
0 0<lb/>
1 0<lb/>
o 0<lb/>
2 2<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
OPP<lb/>
1 (w)t<lb/>
.<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
7<lb/>
2<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
0)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
7<lb/>
6<lb/>
6<lb/>
4<lb/>
0 (w)<lb/>
1<lb/>
9<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
12 (1)<lb/>
3 (w)<lb/>
9<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
(tie)<lb/>
(1)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(1)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
(w)<lb/>
V. I. A. DiKtrict 26<lb/>
ECC<lb/>
Petnb roke S t ate<lb/>
Pembroke State<lb/>
Pfieffer<lb/>
Pfieffer<lb/>
PITCHING RF<lb/>
Lacy West<lb/>
Pete Barnes<lb/>
Jimany Raynor<lb/>
Mike Sntfth<lb/>
Ollie Jarvis<lb/>
Tommy Norman<lb/>
Bob Km<lb/>
Voff,<lb/>
Or?<lb/>
I ,<lb/>
5<lb/>
;<lb/>
? <lb/>
U<lb/>
U<lb/>
Coach?<lb/>
<lb/>
WRA Presents Sorority, Dorm Awn<lb/>
At Recent Annual Spring Banquet<lb/>
WFTC?Kinsiton<lb/>
WBUY?Lexington<lb/>
WSDC?Mooksville<lb/>
WMBI?Morehead City<lb/>
WRNB?New Bern<lb/>
WOXF?Oxford<lb/>
WPNC?Plymouth<lb/>
WKIG?Raleigh<lb/>
WPTF?Raleigh<lb/>
WRXO?Roxboro<lb/>
WCPS?Tarboro<lb/>
WITN?Washington<lb/>
WENC?Whiteville<lb/>
WIAM?Williamston<lb/>
WKLM?Wilmington<lb/>
WWWS?East Carolina College<lb/>
The programs included in these<lb/>
broadcasts are "ECC Review<lb/>
"Pirate Sports "ECC Concert<lb/>
"Why Education?" and "ECC<lb/>
Forum An exclusive program<lb/>
broadcasted only by station WPTF<lb/>
is "ECC News' 'on Sunday at 730<lb/>
pjn.<lb/>
The Women's Recreation Asso-<lb/>
ciation Spring Banquet was high-<lb/>
lighted by the presentation of<lb/>
awards for the year 1962-1963 and<lb/>
an after-dinner skit presented by<lb/>
the Alpha Delta Pi's. Special<lb/>
guests included Dr. N. M. Jorgen-<lb/>
sen, Chairman of the Department<lb/>
of Health and Physical Education,<lb/>
and all of the women instructors<lb/>
of the department.<lb/>
Gifts of appreciation were pre-<lb/>
sented to Miss Betty Russell, ad-<lb/>
visor of WRA, and Miss Nell Stall,<lb/>
ings, former advisor, who has com-<lb/>
pleted 20 years of service to the<lb/>
organization and to the entire<lb/>
physical education department.<lb/>
Letters were presented to girls<lb/>
for five quarters' participation in<lb/>
WRA activities. Team and individ-<lb/>
ual awards for tournaments in-<lb/>
cluded plaques and individual tro-<lb/>
phies. The winners were:<lb/>
Volleyball ? Garrett, dorm and<lb/>
overall; Alpha Phi sorority.<lb/>
Basketiball?-ftagsdale, dorm and<lb/>
overall; Alpha Phi. sorority.<lb/>
Softball?Chi Omega, sorority.<lb/>
Archery?Nancy Williams.<lb/>
Badminton ? singles, Joan<lb/>
Moody; doubles, Linda Jarrell and<lb/>
Gray Little.<lb/>
Tennis?singles, Marsha Jordan.<lb/>
Judy Brisson of Chi Omega re-<lb/>
ceived an award as outstanding<lb/>
sorority representative of the year;<lb/>
Mary Frances Rogers of Wilson<lb/>
was outstanding d natty ?<lb/>
tentative.<lb/>
T?on wont to Alpha Phi?<lb/>
Wilson dorm,<lb/>
SusMin ClifU I ?sJ<lb/>
dt nt, thanked ererj j<lb/>
participation ani ?uppc<lb/>
to close the Y'r<lb/>
WRA<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Business ?mon inttfaa<lb/>
in summer jositions &amp;<lb/>
in tobacco hoald caii ? I<lb/>
Spell at the local Enpie?!<lb/>
Securitv Caromiwuoi efffc<lb/>
College Bowling Tourney<lb/>
SUMMER OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
This year Collier's Vacation Earnings Program offers College Sfcad Bb<lb/>
more prizes and awards than ever before in the history of the Com<lb/>
Students can earn in excess of $150.00 per week while working for prizes.<lb/>
trips, scholarships, and awards such as:<lb/>
?All expense paid trip to Madrid, Spain<lb/>
?Fifteen $1,000.00 Cash Scholarships<lb/>
?Valuable Merchandise awards every week<lb/>
ISdSllSdi0r SUmmer WiH haVe an rtunity to work in to<lb/>
Asheville, N C. Raleigh, N. C.<lb/>
Charlotte, N. C. Fayetteville N C<lb/>
Winston Salem, N. C. Wilmington N C "<lb/>
Durham, N. C. Greensboro, N. C<lb/>
Myrtle Beach. S C<lb/>
Greenville, S. r-<lb/>
Spartanburjr, <lb/>
Columbia, S. C<lb/>
Kenneth Robinson, Whitie Robertson, Joe Blanks, Bill Dean, and<lb/>
Roger Nixon pose with the trophies that they won in the College I<lb/>
Union bowling league.<lb/>
Qualified previous Employe, would have opportunity for KW0-<lb/>
jwkk sasrastsfflBSr ?" fcw nd -a pr?<lb/>
g?SB?ffiffiS8r<lb/>
ROOM 817 AVI<lb/>
SgA TRYON BLDG.<lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N. C.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
School Address<lb/>
Home Address<lb/>
Date available for interview<lb/>
Date you could begin<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
<pb facs="00038823_0007"/>
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