<?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="00038827_0001"/>
Three In Concert' Performs In McGinnis An<lb/>
Marimbist, Pianist And Dancer Appear<lb/>
Throe in Concert' a trio combining in their perform-<lb/>
3 marimba, piano, and dance, will appear at East<lb/>
tonight as the second attraction of the Summer<lb/>
Entertainment Series.<lb/>
program, sponsored by<lb/>
nt Go.ernment As-<lb/>
 is scheduled for<lb/>
" p.m. in McGinnis Au-<lb/>
The public is in-<lb/>
attend without<lb/>
hit" artists who compose<lb/>
are Douglas Williams,<lb/>
and .Sandra Volkart<lb/>
Allen, dancers. The<lb/>
serious music and<lb/>
well as music and dance<lb/>
? th atane.<lb/>
tegan hds professional<lb/>
as a dancer in the corps de<lb/>
' t of the American Ballet<lb/>
nd after a series of<lb/>
ean tours and a successful<lb/>
Russia in 1900 became<lb/>
r. He has also been<lb/>
tar with the Andre Eglev-<lb/>
 at Jacobs Pillow and<lb/>
, .rts Festival, and has<lb/>
in Broadway and tele-<lb/>
luctions.<lb/>
een on the con-<lb/>
. for several years and<lb/>
it and recitals in<lb/>
. Puerto Rico, and<lb/>
 received high<lb/>
, ritica for both his<lb/>
a marimbist and for the<lb/>
e of his stage<lb/>
? <lb/>
rt, a dancer since<lb/>
nod, has been so-<lb/>
ballet and theater<lb/>
Her dancingr is de-<lb/>
"exci ingr anl showing<lb/>
chnique and artistry.<lb/>
these artists are<lb/>
Ring Sale<lb/>
Th- College Ring Sale will<lb/>
today at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Him j he purchased until<lb/>
K;u lime in the College D?-<lb/>
n area from the L. G. Bal-<lb/>
f,??r Company representative.<lb/>
Union Parties<lb/>
THege Union will sponsor<lb/>
d Kingo-Ice Cream party Monday<lb/>
f- ' 30 rm. in the College Union<lb/>
unw. Free ke creftm will be<lb/>
BrivAl a iij:<lb/>
u<lb/>
strong. Combined they are a force<lb/>
ays one critic.<lb/>
Greg Colson, pianist-comedian,<lb/>
will be the third attraction of the<lb/>
Summer Entertainment Series.<lb/>
Appearing later this month, Colson<lb/>
is a remarkable pianist with a<lb/>
wide range of music from Bach<lb/>
to Gtirshwin to Rogers. The Chad<lb/>
Mitchell Trio is being sought as<lb/>
another addition to the Summer<lb/>
Entertainment Series.<lb/>
Coeds Model<lb/>
WXCT-TV viewers of the<lb/>
Miss North Carolina Pag-<lb/>
eant to be televised Saturday<lb/>
nirht will see three East<lb/>
Carolina coeds model fashions<lb/>
from Sallie's of Goldsboro.<lb/>
Appearing on behalf of the<lb/>
bridal and formal shoppe will<lb/>
be Cathy Shesso of Jackson-<lb/>
ville, Buccaneer Queen, 1963;<lb/>
Pat Drake of Williamston,<lb/>
former Miss North Carolina<lb/>
contestant; and Nancy Roberts<lb/>
of Hillsboro, president of Chi<lb/>
Omega Social Sorority. These<lb/>
voung ladies will appear about<lb/>
mid-way the State pageant<lb/>
on Channel 9, Greenville.<lb/>
vol. XXXVIII east Carolina college, greenville, n. c, thursday, July 11, 1963no.59<lb/>
College Sponsors First Summer<lb/>
Program In Asiatic Studies<lb/>
Opening a series of lectures and<lb/>
other prograans scheduled as spec-<lb/>
ial events of East Carolina's first<lb/>
Summer Program in Asian Stud-<lb/>
ies, Zenzo Kato, Superintendeinit of<lb/>
Schools in Nagoya, Japan, spoke<lb/>
on education in his school system<lb/>
Monday" morning in the Austin<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
His talk was preceded by a dis-<lb/>
cussion of "Japan Today" by Pro-<lb/>
fessor George Fasti, Jr director<lb/>
of the Summer Prograim, and a<lb/>
film on "School Life in Japan<lb/>
The Sumimer Program in Asian<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
MOSCOW?The ,giap between<lb/>
Red China and the Soviet Union<lb/>
grew still wider Tuesday when<lb/>
the two leaders took turns de-<lb/>
nouncing each other. The final out-<lb/>
come of the Russia-China idea-<lb/>
logical dispute is expected to alter<lb/>
US foreign policy.<lb/>
WASHINGTON?The U1S Gov-<lb/>
ernment froze all Cuban assets in<lb/>
this country, whether owned by<lb/>
Castro's government or by Cuban<lb/>
individuals. The new move was de-<lb/>
signed to further isolate Red-<lb/>
domi mated Cuba and to prevenit<lb/>
US dollars from being used for<lb/>
subversive activities throughout<lb/>
the rest of Latin America. The new-<lb/>
ly-issued order puts Cuba in the<lb/>
same class with North Korea and<lb/>
Red China.<lb/>
WASHINGTON?The possibility<lb/>
of a nationwide rail strike seems<lb/>
certain unless union and railroad<lb/>
officials can reach an agreement<lb/>
soon. A strike deadline is set for<lb/>
12:01 a.m. Thursday. The dispute<lb/>
is over some 40,000 firemen who,<lb/>
the railroad claims, are unnec-<lb/>
essary and are "featherbedding<lb/>
President Kennedy has exhausted<lb/>
all presidential authority thus far<lb/>
in preventing a walk-out. He has<lb/>
seated that he would not "tolerate"<lb/>
a nationwide rail strike. The strike,<lb/>
if it occurs, will affect the move-<lb/>
ment of US mails.<lb/>
CAMBRIDGE?A group of eight<lb/>
Negroes amd three whites resumed<lb/>
aniti-segregation demonstrations<lb/>
less than an hour after National<lb/>
Guard troops were pulled out of<lb/>
the city and martial law lifted.<lb/>
RALEIGH ? The controversy<lb/>
over the Anfti-Red law banning'<lb/>
Communist speakers from campuses<lb/>
still rages. The executive com-<lb/>
mittee of the University of North<lb/>
Carolina came out Monday againstt<lb/>
the law and sftated that it will ask<lb/>
the full Board of Trustees to seek<lb/>
its repeal. Hope that the bill would<lb/>
be repealed in a special session<lb/>
has dimimn;he.l for it now appears<lb/>
that the bill may not be considered<lb/>
in the special session.<lb/>
S;udies, extending through July<lb/>
23. includes courses in Asian his-<lb/>
tory and geography and the allied<lb/>
courses, "Religions of (the World"<lb/>
and 'World Masterpieces in Trans-<lb/>
lations taught by faculty mem-<lb/>
bers in the field of Humanities<lb/>
atrd English.<lb/>
Staff members of the program,<lb/>
in addition to Dr. Pasti, are Dr.<lb/>
O. P. Milstead and Dr. Andrew D.<lb/>
Perejda of the College Depart-<lb/>
ment of Geography.<lb/>
Mr. Kaito is traveling and lec-<lb/>
turing in this country from June<lb/>
17 through August 17, and, while<lb/>
here, is visiting public school sys-<lb/>
tems bo confer with superinten-<lb/>
dents and their staffs and to ob-<lb/>
serve programs for citizenship ed-<lb/>
ucation, programs and facilities in<lb/>
the natural sciences, and counsel-<lb/>
ing methods. He is also making a<lb/>
study of the preparation of ele-<lb/>
mentary and secondary teachers<lb/>
in schools of education in this coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
At Nagoya City, Mr. Kato is<lb/>
responsible for the administration<lb/>
of 251 elementary and secondary<lb/>
schools with an enrollment of more<lb/>
Business School<lb/>
Offers Workshop<lb/>
The School of Business will con-<lb/>
duct a two-day conference for<lb/>
high school and college shorthand<lb/>
teachers on July 16 and 17. Plans<lb/>
for the conference have been an-<lb/>
nounced by Dr. James L. White,<lb/>
Professor of Business at the col-<lb/>
lege, who is in charge of pro-<lb/>
moting and directing the confer-<lb/>
ence.<lb/>
Guest lecturer will be Howard<lb/>
Newhouse, Professional Specialist<lb/>
of the Gregg Publishing Division,<lb/>
McGraw-Hill Book 'Company, New<lb/>
York. Mr. Newhouse will Bring to<lb/>
the conference a wide and varied<lb/>
background of speaking and writ-<lb/>
ing experience. This will make his<lb/>
third trip to the campus in the<lb/>
past ten years. Newhouse was one<lb/>
of several guest lectures in the<lb/>
Gregg Methods Conference here in<lb/>
1961. He is co-author of two text-<lb/>
books and contributes magazine<lb/>
articles frequently to professional<lb/>
periodicals.<lb/>
The conference is beine: offered<lb/>
on a no-fee, no-credit basis and is<lb/>
oen to all business education<lb/>
teachers. All meetings will be held<lb/>
in Rawl 130 on the campus. The<lb/>
first session will be from one to<lb/>
four o'cock on July 16; the second<lb/>
meeting will be held from nine<lb/>
to twelve o'clock on July 17. New-<lb/>
house will discuss revisions of<lb/>
Greoj Shorthand as the Diamond<lb/>
Jubilee Series.<lb/>
i<lb/>
than 263,000 students.<lb/>
Other sneakers who will appear<lb/>
on the Program in Asian Studies<lb/>
this summer and their topics have<lb/>
been announced by Dr. Pasti.<lb/>
Meetings, each covering: a fifty-<lb/>
minute period, will be held in the<lb/>
Austin Auditorium and are open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The schedule of events includes<lb/>
lectures by Professor Dison Poe,<lb/>
nieng-ICni University, Taiwan,<lb/>
July 12. "The Disintegration of<lb/>
Traditional CorHfucianism 9 a.<lb/>
m and "Western Impact and<lb/>
r'hma's Response 12 noon; Dr.<lb/>
Won-Kyong Cho, July 17, "Korean<lb/>
Poetry 9 a.m and Professor<lb/>
Burton Beers of N. C. State. UNC,<lb/>
Raleigh, July 19, "Some Prob-<lb/>
lems in Americani-Japainese Rela-<lb/>
tions 9 a.m and "Red China<lb/>
12 noon.<lb/>
In addition. Dr. Won-Kyong<lb/>
Cho, Korean classical dancer, will<lb/>
appear in a prograim of Korean<lb/>
dances and an illustrated lecture<lb/>
' n "Comparison of Chinese, Korean<lb/>
and Japanese Dance Movements"<lb/>
at 8:15 p-m. July 17 in the Mc-<lb/>
Cinnis Auditorium<lb/>
Two films "Ja.ran in Summer"<lb/>
and "Japan: 1962" will be shown<lb/>
in the Austin Auditorium July 18<lb/>
at 9 am.<lb/>
Two exhibitions, currently being:<lb/>
shown at East Carolina as part of<lb/>
the Pros-ram of Asian Studies,<lb/>
are "Contemporary Japanese<lb/>
Prints sponsored bv the School<lb/>
of Art, iRawl Building, and "Faces<lb/>
of Asia an exhibition of photo-<lb/>
graphs, Joyner Library. Both will<lb/>
be on view through July 22.<lb/>
SGA Sponsors Ball<lb/>
For Summer Queen<lb/>
Crowning of the Summer School<lb/>
Queen and dancing to music by the<lb/>
Collegians, local dance hand, will<lb/>
highlight the annual Summer<lb/>
School Ball scheduled for Satur-<lb/>
day night, July 20. Sponsored by<lb/>
the Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion, the semi-formal affair will<lb/>
be held in Wright Auditorium from<lb/>
8:00 to 11:30 n.m.<lb/>
Doug Grumpier, SGA Special<lb/>
Events Chairman, announced that<lb/>
representatives from each of the<lb/>
dormitories and a day student<lb/>
candidate will be selected to vie<lb/>
for the honor of succeeding Judy<lb/>
Payne of Bassetit, Va as Queen<lb/>
of the (Sumoner sessions. Crump-<lb/>
ler has asked that each contest-<lb/>
ant turn in her name, address, and<lb/>
a black and white 8"xl0" photo-<lb/>
graph bv 12:00 noon, Wednesday,<lb/>
July 17, to him at the SGA office.<lb/>
Judging will take place in the Col-<lb/>
lege Union Friday, July 19, from<lb/>
9 00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m with an-<lb/>
nouncement of the winner made<lb/>
during the Ball Saturday night.<lb/>
'? r ree ice creaan ww ?<lb/>
? to evervone attending, ano:<lb/>
hiere will be many attractive<lb/>
?:2ps giv?n. Everyone is cordially<lb/>
d to come and join m ?ie<lb/>
Weekly Watermelon Feast<lb/>
??,<lb/>
w.?nRlon eaters made a ad dash for the mall at 3:00 p.m. yester-<lb/>
i A?T honored and twenty-five watermelons sliced into eighths were<lb/>
ttaaSi by numerous EC sudenta. The battle lasted only 15 miutea,<lb/>
leaving many disappointed re-enforeemenis with empty hands<lb/>
growing sensations in their abdominal areas. Yesterday's event<lb/>
the second such CU-sponsored event this Summer.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038827_0002"/><lb/>
m<lb/>
HI<lb/>
2?east Carolinian?thursday, July 11, 1963<lb/>
in order to know<lb/>
The Cold War now taking place between the Com-<lb/>
munist and free world nations is essentially a struggle be-<lb/>
tween two dominant world systems for the minds of men.<lb/>
The increasing realization of the true nature of this strug-<lb/>
gle should cause all of us to conclude that it is vital and<lb/>
necessary that we should learn the facts about Communism.<lb/>
We should strive to build an academically sound under-<lb/>
standing of Communism: its history, its ideology, its methods,<lb/>
and its goals. The individual should be taught to draw his<lb/>
own conclusions after carefully studying and evaluating<lb/>
the differences existing between Communist and Demo-<lb/>
cratic systems. The ability to read and comprehend more<lb/>
fully current newspapers and periodicals within an individual<lb/>
should be promoted by stimulating conversation on Com-<lb/>
munist idealogy and terminology. Also, without deviation,<lb/>
the individual should be prepared to read, think, listen, and<lb/>
s<lb/>
??' i<lb/>
itli calm but accurate discrimination in order that he<lb/>
may not fall prey to insidious propaganda.<lb/>
Avoid emotionalism, propaganda, fear, and ignorance,<lb/>
for these are ideal seedbeds for the growth of any totalitarian<lb/>
system, An open mind, without vehement hatred, in ad-<lb/>
dition to facts and understanding, is the only valid way to<lb/>
create a well-founded appreciation of the challenge of Com-<lb/>
munism to the American way of life.<lb/>
Communism, Communist, Communistic are words you<lb/>
hear and read often today. Some people use them to describe<lb/>
almost anything or anybody they don't like. Others fear the<lb/>
terms without knowing exactly what they mean. Everything<lb/>
you don't know seems greater than it really is. The ordinary<lb/>
man's fears and confusions in regard to Communism make<lb/>
it hard for him to think clearly about this danger that faces<lb/>
democracy.<lb/>
Communism is not easy to define, for it is an old<lb/>
v ord which has meant different things to people who lived<lb/>
l;mg before the Soviet government was set up in Russia.<lb/>
Sometimes Communism has stood for the dream of a para-<lb/>
dise on earth and has summed up the hopes of idealists. Some-<lb/>
timas it has meant revolution against poverty and misery<lb/>
and has stood for violence and destruction. Today Com-<lb/>
munism generally means the kind of government found in<lb/>
Soviet Russia and Communist China. It means rule by a few<lb/>
men who seized power through violent revolution.<lb/>
They (the Communists) claim to govern in the name<lb/>
of the working man, but they use force and deceit to keep<lb/>
their power. Their government owns and controls all pro-<lb/>
perty.<lb/>
These dictators talk about an ideal society, but they<lb/>
keep the workers from having any share in making decisions<lb/>
that are supposed to produce the ideal society. Communist<lb/>
dictators promise freedom, but they have destroyed freedom<lb/>
of speech and of the press, and many other personal liber-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
A basic belief of Communists is that property, land,<lb/>
mines, factories, and shipyards should be owned and operated<lb/>
by the government. Communism has meant drastic regula-<lb/>
tions by the government of everyone's life, even to the ex-<lb/>
tent of dictating how people should think, live, many, work,<lb/>
and play.<lb/>
Let us all then remember that there is no culture, re-<lb/>
ligion, or government of any peoples in the world where<lb/>
struggle was not necessary for progress. Within this strug-<lb/>
gle may be found?hunger, poverty, and violence?as a re-<lb/>
sult of negligence, coersion and exploitation. This should<lb/>
always be true anywhere?even here?as long as ignorance<lb/>
prevails. We have only to look at the physical imprint of<lb/>
mankind which is a vivid implication that the histoiy of<lb/>
the human being has been a race between Catastrophy and<lb/>
Education blessed with Divine Wisdom.<lb/>
Published weekly by the students of East Carolina College,<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolina Col'egiate Press Association<lb/>
Associated C"t?Pinate Press<lb/>
editor<lb/>
associate editor<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
tony r. bo wen<lb/>
ay shearin<lb/>
ohn m. macdiarmid<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: $3.50 per year<lb/>
campus bulletin<lb/>
TONIGHT, July 11<lb/>
9:00-4:00Class Ring Sale, Col-<lb/>
lege Union<lb/>
7:00 pm.?Austin: 'Sail a<lb/>
Crooked Ship"<lb/>
8:15 p.m.?"Three in Concert ,<lb/>
Entertainment Series, Mc-<lb/>
Ginnis Auditorium<lb/>
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty"<lb/>
Pitt: "Summer Magic"<lb/>
Tice: "The Music Man"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: "The Day of<lb/>
the Triffids"<lb/>
FRIDAY, July 12<lb/>
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty<lb/>
Pitt: "Summer Magic"<lb/>
of<lb/>
Tice: "The Music Man"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: "The Day<lb/>
rtihe Triffids"<lb/>
SATURDAY, July 13<lb/>
8:30 a. m.?Graduate Business<lb/>
Test, Rawl 130<lb/>
1:30 p.m.?OSU Psychological<lb/>
Test, Rawl 130<lb/>
State: "Mutiny on the Bounty"<lb/>
Pitt: "Summer Magic"<lb/>
Tice: "At Sunset" and "Beauty<lb/>
and the Beast"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: "Five Old Wom-<lb/>
en" and "Where the Truth<lb/>
Lies"<lb/>
H<lb/>
so others say<lb/>
The Role of The Teach r<lb/>
?by calvert r. dixon<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Writer of the guest column this week is Mr.<lb/>
Calvert R. I ix?n of the Department of Psychology. Mr. Dixon, it<lb/>
is t ? he noted, is tb holder of the Education Specialist Deirree, an<lb/>
advanced post-graduate degree held by few persons. He is a<lb/>
member of Phi Delta Kappa, Kappa Phi Delta the Council for<lb/>
Exceptional Children, and a former chairman of the Governor!<lb/>
Children's Committee in Florida. Mr. Divon was recently tapped<lb/>
for appearance in the publication "Who's Who in American Educa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
If we are to preserve the men-<lb/>
tal faculties of our students and<lb/>
give them the rirht training in<lb/>
the habits and healthful activi-<lb/>
ties n essary for a progressive<lb/>
soci the guide for our teaching<lb/>
will need to follow the natural<lb/>
labilities of the student. Unless<lb/>
consideration be given these in-<lb/>
dividual potentialities, frustration<lb/>
leading to disintegration of the<lb/>
mental life is likely to result.<lb/>
No other institution has a bet-<lb/>
ter opportunity for training for a<lb/>
forceful society than our schools.<lb/>
Teaching, more than any other pro-<lb/>
fession, needs nothinrr so much as<lb/>
training in imdersrtan-ding- how the<lb/>
P rsonality develops, and how to<lb/>
inculcate the attitudes that bring<lb/>
sound knowledge to an objective<lb/>
rwncl?a mind that ;? more con-<lb/>
c ? ned with an impartial world<lb/>
thn with the personal self. This<lb/>
;s not an easy tasJv, for it requires<lb/>
tha the teacher, rather than con-<lb/>
fining the students to a teaching<lb/>
situation, give them an opportuni-<lb/>
ty to view reality with a healthy<lb/>
mind and ipe rsonality. Further,<lb/>
for a student bo be free from con-<lb/>
fusion and abnormal attitudes and<lb/>
to be able to recognize what is<lb/>
essential for a citizen in an ideal<lb/>
society, instruction must not be<lb/>
toward learning rote detail and<lb/>
trivialities, but concentration on<lb/>
the essentials H:hat make life im-<lb/>
portant. It is necessary not only to<lb/>
learn to participate in a work-a-<lb/>
day world, but also to learn the<lb/>
importance of sincerity, loyalty,<lb/>
and service: service that extends<lb/>
beyond the todays of this genera-<lb/>
tion and includes the plans of<lb/>
those that will follow.<lb/>
Teachers maist be free of educa-<lb/>
tional pedantry and linguistic<lb/>
formalism, and concerned more<lb/>
with the motives and attitudes<lb/>
lying behind the teaching- situa-<lb/>
tion than with the task of im-<lb/>
pressing the students with their<lb/>
knowledge.<lb/>
Clear and objective thinking<lb/>
leads to the truth, and some stu-<lb/>
dents will require more experience<lb/>
than others to find it. This points<lb/>
out the need for recognition Mid<lb/>
acceptance of individual d wes<lb/>
and placing the emphasis in jHsitive<lb/>
activity rather than on negation<lb/>
nd . :n. This also mean<lb/>
developing j' freedom of self ex-<lb/>
pression tlie expression of one<lb/>
capabilities is the most potent of<lb/>
all armaments. Fur"her. training<lb/>
should lead toward the realisation<lb/>
( f the importance of the sub-<lb/>
'  ? titude, where the emo-<lb/>
tions are centered around others<lb/>
and directed toward the external<lb/>
world and the activities while con-<lb/>
centrating on the self.<lb/>
The teacher then, although ba-<lb/>
sically concerned with the traini<lb/>
of the mind, must also He con-<lb/>
cerned with the development<lb/>
a well-organizee and cc tenl in-<lb/>
dividual who will be able to make<lb/>
a sai isfactovy contribution to both<lb/>
himself and his s n-iety. The mind<lb/>
rarely comes to school alone but<lb/>
is usually attached to the other<lb/>
parts of the body that are also<lb/>
in need of an education. Socrates<lb/>
believed, for instance, that the<lb/>
mind was the soul of man and that<lb/>
the teacher's work was to be con-<lb/>
cerned with the health of the soul.<lb/>
Jesus also expressed the import-<lb/>
ance of a healthv mind in his<lb/>
statement: "What shall it profit<lb/>
if he gain the whole world and<lb/>
lose his own (mind) soul. Or what<lb/>
shall a man give in exchange for<lb/>
his mind?'<lb/>
A final point mipht be gained<lb/>
from Zimmer's book. The Redis-<lb/>
covery of Jesus, where he points<lb/>
oat that "the philosopher works<lb/>
upon man in isolation, thouch he<lb/>
may assemble his pupils in classes.<lb/>
He also abstains carefully from<lb/>
biasing his feelings by any personal<lb/>
motives, and ad Hires the very<lb/>
principle of authority, makine it<lb/>
his objective to render his pupils<lb/>
his own master, to put him in po-<lb/>
ssession of a ride by which he may<lb/>
guide his actions, and to relieve<lb/>
him from the dene nde nee<lb/>
any external guordianship<lb/>
upon<lb/>
EL TORo<lb/>
by<lb/>
Ron Gollobin<lb/>
Th. Art Depn- ,<lb/>
r11 m m$ nunv- . <lb/>
phone calls and rv<lb/>
the mieeen art j<lb/>
one not sem, auth2<lb/>
the Art Depaitm.w <lb/>
( Red the campus polieVS !<lb/>
wing week. Tb- n<lb/>
the tculnturc pi, :LS Mf<lb/>
side one of the humps<lb/>
- m<lb/>
?on, daij<lb/>
a<lb/>
went to work, a<lb/>
two humps whei<lb/>
(lever p<lb/>
thai the note the<lb/>
pome ty<lb/>
The Chief claims he rej<lb/>
 when he -r <lb/>
the note was i? <lb/>
a ? J<lb/>
Holmes" and<lb/>
dent re; -ed<lb/>
The chief and 1<lb/>
I ? work foil<lb/>
saying ?<lb/>
hidden in tl<lb/>
that<lb/>
las<lb/>
??? ft<lb/>
<lb/>
and there is <lb/>
; in fact, t<lb/>
o them.<lb/>
? <lb/>
The Pol <lb/>
nnmt in a<lb/>
trike h<lb/>
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The Biology Di<lb/>
investig b i<lb/>
item of ? '<lb/>
was f ? ? :<lb/>
The i<lb/>
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in this colum<lb/>
angary letter. T tier read<lb/>
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ur.n have<lb/>
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etigated a lawsuit ?-rn-t ?<lb/>
mipereonating a ? PleMa'j<lb/>
them and tell f <lb/>
To this lerter, Ramon sent'<lb/>
:u. tnitofraphed rf<lb/>
n an a that he wtf wrff<lb/>
that they sen be'r.c ?ued f<lb/>
fx?onatinc ? :I: "<lb/>
should be aued for ;mp?ro?W<lb/>
a bookstore.<lb/>
The Stndem fv.J<lb/>
took their i; Morr? inj<lb/>
m on nap in Rawl JS<lb/>
paeainar son- ?n<lb/>
? . One of ' ? " ? ?<lb/>
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a Judiciary of " ' rJh<lb/>
autotnobile horn- ' Jm<lb/>
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up no-ir Austin. R ' , <lb/>
mould 5<lb/>
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NO SLEEPING. !<lb/>
R imon that thi? n "<lb/>
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renminjr up " <lb/>
?IP<lb/>
Juvenile Delinquency-A Growing Problem<lb/>
akes the redevelontsent<lb/>
Today, juvenile deliquency is a<lb/>
national problem. In 1960, while<lb/>
the number of young people 10 to<lb/>
17 years of age yose 2 per cent<lb/>
over 1959, deliquencies in this age<lb/>
group increased six per cent. The<lb/>
country is faced with a double trend<lb/>
?our child population is increas-<lb/>
ing, and at the same time, a larg-<lb/>
er proportion of that population<lb/>
is getting into trouble.<lb/>
The relationship betrween dn-<lb/>
adequate schooling, difficulty in<lb/>
securing employment, and delin-<lb/>
quency is obviously an important<lb/>
one. It has been estimated that<lb/>
95 per cent of the 17 year old de-<lb/>
linquents are school dropouts, 85<lb/>
per cent of the 16 year olds, and<lb/>
50 per cent of the 15 year olds.<lb/>
v?l? y and other<lb/>
jouth problems are spreadinir<lb/>
from the cities to the suburbs and<lb/>
rural area But it is the shSn<lb/>
areas of the large metropolitan<lb/>
centers that still harbor the high"<lb/>
nnlrCertra.ti0n of delinquency,<lb/>
unemployment, school dropouts<lb/>
dS?fr. fdes and cultura<lb/>
deficits, it ,s here that converg-<lb/>
ing social and economic pressures<lb/>
are huildinsr up to what Dr. James<lb/>
tion maKes tne iw"<lb/>
slum areas in large cities a <lb/>
-rcet for action. <lb/>
In the last analysis, the ,<lb/>
be done only by the states<lb/>
di<lb/>
communities. But there is -<lb/>
an imrportant role for the IrT<lb/>
Government to play- The c05J<lb/>
probleme of youth in ?ur.<lb/>
society today transcend g<lb/>
eources of individual fa"T7<lb/>
local community. Rv ?"11!L<lb/>
gether, the Federal G?<lb/>
and local commumty ca? r<lb/>
more effeetrreiy iohn these r<lb/>
ly pressing problems.<lb/>
? i<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00038827_0003"/><lb/>
f, (Greensboro<lb/>
east Carolinian?thursday, July 11, 1963?3<lb/>
Six ECC Beauties Compete<lb/>
For Miss North Carolina Crown<lb/>
Jr<lb/>
Faye Cooley<lb/>
Miss Randolph County<lb/>
<lb/>
ill iiOlMt<lb/>
Cornelia Holt<lb/>
Miss Greenville<lb/>
By Tony R. Bowen<lb/>
The crown and title of Miss North<lb/>
(Carolina might well go to an East<lb/>
Carolina College coed Saturday<lb/>
nSght as the State's new first lady<lb/>
is selected. Six of the College's<lb/>
lovelier and more talented young<lb/>
ladies are in Greensibono this week<lb/>
competing in the Miss America<lb/>
j relimi nary pageant.<lb/>
Winner of the competition for<lb/>
North Carolina's queen will go to<lb/>
Atlantic City on Labor Day this<lb/>
ptesnber and vie for the coveted<lb/>
title of Miss America. Eighty-four<lb/>
of the State's beauty queens have<lb/>
been in Greensboro since Tuesday,<lb/>
rehearsing for and competing in<lb/>
the four-night event which began<lb/>
lt night and climaxes Saturday<lb/>
with the naming of the new Miss<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Bringing fame to themselves and<lb/>
East Carolina with their participa-<lb/>
tion in the pageant are Cornelia<lb/>
Holt of Troy, Kathy Wesson of<lb/>
Gastonia, Brenda C rowel 1 of Spen-<lb/>
(t r, Faye Oooley of Randleman,<lb/>
Lennis Ferrell of Wei don, and<lb/>
inrie Scarborough of Zebulon.<lb/>
Cornelia Holt, representing the<lb/>
city of Greenville, is a rising jun-<lb/>
ior at the College. In the pageant,<lb/>
the talented blonde will vocalize<lb/>
for :he talent portion of the com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
The reigning Miss Gastonia,<lb/>
Kathy Wesson, is a rising sopho-<lb/>
more. A Buccaneer Queen fiinalist<lb/>
and IDC Queen this past year,<lb/>
pretty Miss Wesson shows much<lb/>
promise as she vies for the coveted<lb/>
crown.<lb/>
Both Miss Holt and Miss Wesson<lb/>
pre members of Sienna Sigma Sig-<lb/>
n ia Sorority. Accompanying them<lb/>
v-ill be Forority sister and former<lb/>
Mir-? Greenville Polly Bunting,<lb/>
rtwice a participant in the State<lb/>
beauty pageant. Miss Bunting is<lb/>
also an ECC student<lb/>
Miss Rowan County in me com-<lb/>
petition is none other than Chi<lb/>
Omega's icnvn Brenda Crowell. A<lb/>
rising junior at East Carolina,<lb/>
Miss' Crowell will use her college<lb/>
majorette experience when she<lb/>
dances and twirls t0 "Night Train<lb/>
Faye Cooley will take the spot-<lb/>
light at the North Carolina Miss<lb/>
America preliminary as Miss Ran-<lb/>
dolph County. Miss Cooley, a ris-<lb/>
ing sophomore at the College, will<lb/>
display her talent as she sings<lb/>
ind does a soft shoe to "Harvest<lb/>
Maria Beale Fletcher<lb/>
Miss America 1962<lb/>
Moon" and "By the Light of the<lb/>
Silvery Moon<lb/>
Enrolled for Fall Quarter of the<lb/>
coming year as freshmen are two<lb/>
of the Miss North Carolina con-<lb/>
testants. One, Lennis Ferrell, re-<lb/>
presenting Roanoke Rapids, will<lb/>
present a skit from "My Fair<lb/>
Lady" as her talent. Miss Ferrell<lb/>
is typed as a brunette with brown<lb/>
eyes. She received her title from<lb/>
another East Carolina student,<lb/>
Joan W instead.<lb/>
Miss Zebulon, Marie Scar-<lb/>
borough, has an original skit<lb/>
planned in which she displays her<lb/>
talent?sewini and dress design-<lb/>
ing. Miss Scarborough, brown-<lb/>
haired, hazel-eyed beauty, is also<lb/>
enrolled as a freshman for the<lb/>
coming year.<lb/>
Each night of the competition,<lb/>
preliminary winners for the three<lb/>
divisions ? swim suit, evening<lb/>
gown, and talent?are to be an-<lb/>
nounced. On Saturday, the ten con-<lb/>
testants leading in total points ac-<lb/>
cumulated during the competition<lb/>
will be named semi-finalists. These<lb/>
semi-finalists will then appear in<lb/>
ach division again, this time live<lb/>
before a state-wide television au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
From the ten, the judges will<lb/>
iname the five finalists, keeping in<lb/>
mind talent or potential talent<lb/>
that might be developed, beauty,<lb/>
poise, and personality. The new<lb/>
Miss Carolina and her Court of<lb/>
Honor will then be selected from<lb/>
these five finalists. The 1964 Queen<lb/>
will foe crowned by Janice Eliza-<lb/>
beth Barren, retiring Miss North<lb/>
Carolina from Morganton.<lb/>
The Miss North Carolina Pag-<lb/>
eant is the largest and oldest of all<lb/>
Miss America preliminaries. In<lb/>
1961, beautiful and talented Maria<lb/>
Beale Fletcher of Asheville was<lb/>
the recipient of the State title.<lb/>
Miss Fletcher went to Atlantic<lb/>
City and the finals and brought<lb/>
honor to herself and the State of<lb/>
North Carolina by winning and<lb/>
becoming the State's first Miss<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Prior to her selection, several<lb/>
Miss North Caroiinas had done<lb/>
well in the Miss America finals.<lb/>
Lu Long Ogburn was first runner-<lb/>
itB in 1961. Betty Lane Evans took<lb/>
the fourth runner-up post in 1958.<lb/>
Am Farrington Herring was sec-<lb/>
ond runner-up in 1960.<lb/>
Since 1956, East Carolina has<lb/>
been privileged to have two of<lb/>
her students holding the coveted<lb/>
crown of Miss North Carolina.<lb/>
Joan Melton served as the State's<lb/>
representaive in 1956-1957. Then,<lb/>
in 1958, Betty Lane Evans won the<lb/>
crown and a year's reign. Miss<lb/>
Evans was a Greenville girl at the<lb/>
time and attended classes at the<lb/>
? allege both during and after her<lb/>
icirn as Miss North Carolina.<lb/>
In the 1962 state pageant held<lb/>
in Charlotte last year, East Caro-<lb/>
lina was well represented by Pat<lb/>
Drake, Judy Wagstaff, Joan Win-<lb/>
siead, and Polly Bunting.<lb/>
A week of pageantry, excitement,<lb/>
end once-in-a-lifetime experience<lb/>
v.ill end at midnight Saturday as<lb/>
a new Cinderella, quite possibly<lb/>
:mi East Carolina beauty, will be<lb/>
topped to reigm for the coming<lb/>
vear as Miss North Carolina.<lb/>
$w&amp;;vv- - vf" v<lb/>
?$;<lb/>
:1<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
Kathy Wesson<lb/>
Miss Gastonia<lb/>
Lennis Ferrell<lb/>
Miss Roanoke Rapids<lb/>
Brenda Crowell<lb/>
Miss Rowan County<lb/>
<pb facs="00038827_0004"/><lb/>
4?east Carolinian?thursday. July 11, 1963<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Adams<lb/>
Mary Adams<lb/>
Student Folksinger,<lb/>
Entertains At Restaurant<lb/>
By R. W. Gollobin<lb/>
Pooular local folksinger Mary<lb/>
Adams was featured at the Bo-<lb/>
hemian restaurant last Friday<lb/>
nipht. Accompanying herself on<lb/>
guitar, Miss Adams gave a per-<lb/>
formance that brought long ap-<lb/>
plause at the end of each number.<lb/>
Wearing a plain, green-checked<lb/>
skirt, white blouse, and sandals,<lb/>
Miss Adams filled the Bohemian<lb/>
with her clear, rich voice. Her<lb/>
soft notes projected well and were<lb/>
clearly audible. She completely<lb/>
tranversed the scale, going from<lb/>
low to high notes without a break<lb/>
in her voice.<lb/>
Miss Adams relies primarily on<lb/>
the story of the song and her voice.<lb/>
as opposed to the technique used<lb/>
so often by wisecracking "slick"<lb/>
groups. Her presentation is sin-<lb/>
cere and doAvnoearth. giving<lb/>
the audience a feelinqr 0f the trag-<lb/>
edy and humor in her songs.<lb/>
During her performance. Miss<lb/>
Adams sang many of the songs of<lb/>
Joan Baez and Peter.<lb/>
Mary. She also sanr a<lb/>
Paul, and<lb/>
few songs<lb/>
that groups such as the Kingston<lb/>
Trio and the Brothers Four have<lb/>
made popular, although she has<lb/>
adapted these songs to her own<lb/>
particlar style. Included in her wide<lb/>
repertoire, were folk songs siwig in<lb/>
Portuguese and French.<lb/>
Miss Adams, who is 22, has been<lb/>
playing the guitar since last Sep-<lb/>
tember and has been singing for<lb/>
some 4ime. She once sang with<lb/>
Joan Baez at a coffeehouse in El<lb/>
Paso, Texas, after one of Miss<lb/>
Paez's concerts.<lb/>
Miss Adams will graduate at<lb/>
the end of ithis summer session and<lb/>
Ians to teach science and math to<lb/>
junior high school students in Wil-<lb/>
mington, her hometown.<lb/>
The crowd on hand for Miss<lb/>
Adams' performance was described<lb/>
as "almost reverent by Bob<lb/>
Faieed, owner of 'the Bohemian.<lb/>
He considered the night a smash-<lb/>
ing success, as a result of the<lb/>
?appearance of Mary Adams. Due<lb/>
to the wide response of her per-<lb/>
rormamice she will again be featured<lb/>
here on Friday, July 19.<lb/>
Harville, Sanders To Cover<lb/>
Football Games This Fall<lb/>
Charlie Harville, one of the South's leading sportcasters,<lb/>
will do the play by play on the East Carolina Football Net-<lb/>
work next fall. In making- the announcement, College officials<lb/>
cited that Harville has been associated with the Florida State<lb/>
Network for the past four years.<lb/>
He was announcer for the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Virginia Net from 1951<lb/>
through 1954 and was with the<lb/>
Washington Redskins radio net-<lb/>
work in 1957. Harville has been<lb/>
Sports Director of WFMY-TV in<lb/>
Greensboro since 1949 and is<lb/>
associated with NBC's Jim<lb/>
Simpson on the ACC basket-<lb/>
ball telecasts during the 1957 sea-<lb/>
son. The coveted Lee Kirby Siports-<lb/>
caster Award was presented to<lb/>
Harville in 1957.<lb/>
The co1 or man for the East<lb/>
Carolina Net will be Stan Sanders,<lb/>
popular s northeaster from Green-<lb/>
ville radio WGTC. Sanders, who<lb/>
was the play by play voice of the<lb/>
Dr. Williams Heads<lb/>
Sociology Department<lb/>
Dr. Ivlelvin J. Williams, now pro-<lb/>
fessor of sociology at Stetson<lb/>
University, Deland, Florida, will<lb/>
join tl e faoulby in September as<lb/>
director of the recently organized<lb/>
Department of Sociology, Presi-<lb/>
dent Leo W. Jenkins has announced.<lb/>
The new department will include<lb/>
in its curriculum courses formerly<lb/>
taught in the Department of So<lb/>
cial Studies, which diuring the<lb/>
spring of 1963 was divided into<lb/>
the departments of Political<lb/>
Science, History, and Sociology.<lb/>
Three faculty members, all of<lb/>
whom have taught in the field of<lb/>
sociology in the Social Studies De-<lb/>
partment for a number of years,<lb/>
will be associated with Dr. Will-<lb/>
iams in the Department of So-<lb/>
ciology. Thev are Dr. Paul A.<lb/>
Toll, Ra'oh Napp, and Dr. George<lb/>
A. Douglas.<lb/>
Dr. Williams is a native of<lb/>
North Carolina. He was born in<lb/>
Stovall airrfi attended the Brag-<lb/>
town High School, Durham, from<lb/>
which he was graduated. He holds<lb/>
the A. B B. D and Ph.D. de-<lb/>
grees from Duke University.<lb/>
Pirates last year, has a wide back-<lb/>
ground in the sportscasting field<lb/>
especially in the Greenville, Hick-<lb/>
ory, iStaitesville and Ashevile<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
The Pirate Football Net will be<lb/>
one of the largest in the Carolinas<lb/>
with at least 14 affilating stations<lb/>
covering an area as far west as<lb/>
Durham and as far east as Wil-<lb/>
mington. Mr. Wally Voigt of<lb/>
Raleigh, an executive of the To-<lb/>
bacco Network and station sales<lb/>
representative for the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Net, announced that several<lb/>
additional stations as far west as<lb/>
Greensboro and Winston-Salem<lb/>
(may join the Net. He further<lb/>
stated that the Wake Forest-East<lb/>
Carolina game may go state wide<lb/>
with as many as twenty stations.<lb/>
A large NtoKh Carolina Oil<lb/>
Corporation will sponsor the broad-<lb/>
casts with announcement of this<lb/>
concern to come within the next<lb/>
week. ?<lb/>
College Branches Announce Enrollment fy<lb/>
Students desiring to enroll in<lb/>
the Camp Lejeune Center or the<lb/>
new Seymour Johnson-Wayne<lb/>
County Center of East Carolina<lb/>
.his fall should apply now for ad-<lb/>
mission. The necessary forms for<lb/>
admission and any further in-<lb/>
formation needed may be obtained<lb/>
bv contacting Dr. David J. Mid-<lb/>
dleton, Director of the Extension<lb/>
Division. The centers will offer<lb/>
courses on the freshman and sopho-<lb/>
more levels, which will be equiva-<lb/>
lent to junior college work.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Dr. Frank W. Eller, Professor in<lb/>
the Department of Science, at-<lb/>
tended the TwemtySixth Annual<lb/>
Meeting of the American Society<lb/>
of Liminology and Oceanography,<lb/>
Inc in conjunction with the Sixth<lb/>
Conference on Great Lakes Re-<lb/>
search, June 13 through 15. The<lb/>
Conference, held at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Michigan, placed emphasis<lb/>
on the aquatic environment.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Mr. Barl E. Beach, Dean of the<lb/>
EC School of Music, is currently<lb/>
a visiting professor on the music<lb/>
faculfty of the University of Michi-<lb/>
gan School of Music. He is instruct-<lb/>
ing courses on tfhe philosophy ef<lb/>
music education and trends in<lb/>
American music education.<lb/>
Patricia Weaver of Rocky<lb/>
Mount, East Carolina junior, is<lb/>
the first student from the East<lb/>
Carolina School of Nursing to be<lb/>
accepted into the U. S. Army Stu-<lb/>
dent Nurse Procrraim.<lb/>
She is now enlisted in the Wom-<lb/>
en's Army Corps, U. S. Army Re-<lb/>
serve, and is on active duty while<lb/>
completing work for the B. S. de-<lb/>
gree in Nursing during her junior<lb/>
and senior years at East Caro-<lb/>
Di Long Directs<lb/>
Psychology Clinic<lb/>
Dr. John Kozy, Jr at present<lb/>
a faculty member at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Mississippi, will join the in-<lb/>
structional staff bi September as<lb/>
director of the new Department<lb/>
of Philosophy, President Ieo W.<lb/>
Jenkins has announced.<lb/>
Courses in philosophy offered<lb/>
are now listed in the catalog under<lb/>
the humanities. Under Dr. Kozy's<lb/>
direction, the new department will<lb/>
be organized and the curriculum<lb/>
expanded. Dr. Robert L. Holt. Dean<lb/>
of the College, speculated that it<lb/>
r?xhably will take a year for Dr.<lb/>
Kozv to complete the organization<lb/>
of tihe department, but by winter<lb/>
Quarter students may be' able to<lb/>
enroll in some of the new courses<lb/>
to be offered. He went on to say<lb/>
that, if the demand is sufficient,<lb/>
a student may eventually be able<lb/>
to maior in philosophy. Associated<lb/>
with Dr. Kozy in thp department<lb/>
will be Cleveland J. Brandner, Jr<lb/>
and D. D. Gross, current faculty<lb/>
members at East Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Kozy is a native of Barnes-<lb/>
ville. Pa. He holds the B. A. and<lb/>
tlie Ph. D. decrees from Penn-<lb/>
sylvania Sate University and the<lb/>
M. A. from Cornell University. As<lb/>
an educator he has held graduate<lb/>
Bssistantshios at Cornell and also<lb/>
at Pennsylvania State University,<lb/>
where on the Ogontz campus he<lb/>
was an instructor in 1961. For the<lb/>
past two years he has taught at<lb/>
the University of Mississippi.<lb/>
Dr. Kozv is also a musician and<lb/>
has played with name bands and<lb/>
?as trumpeter with the Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania Satiate University symphony<lb/>
orchestra.<lb/>
He is a member of the South-<lb/>
ern Society for Philosophy and<lb/>
Psychology, the American Philo-<lb/>
sophical Association, and the<lb/>
American Association of Universi-<lb/>
ty Professors.<lb/>
Supebr Continous Sound<lb/>
Dixiland Bosa No?va<lb/>
Atmosphere<lb/>
STEREOPHONIC<lb/>
Modern Jazz<lb/>
Mood Folk<lb/>
Candelight<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
t pioljemian<lb/>
NIGHTLY<lb/>
?'?? wA<lb/>
As a member of the program,<lb/>
Iffes Weaver will receive basic pay;<lb/>
a food allowance; funds to cover<lb/>
tuition, books, and incidental col-<lb/>
!ere fees; nvedical ami dental care;<lb/>
aafd other benefits. When she is<lb/>
within six months of graduation.<lb/>
,he will be commissioned as a<lb/>
second lieutenant in the Army<lb/>
Nurse Corps.<lb/>
After graduation and completion<lb/>
of the State Board examination,<lb/>
she will take an orientation eon<lb/>
at Fort Sam Houston, Texas, a<lb/>
will then be on active duty in h-<lb/>
Army Nurse Corps for a pen<lb/>
of three years.<lb/>
At East Carolina she holds<lb/>
offices of chairman of the Sd<lb/>
Committee of the College Union<lb/>
and secretary of the Nurses Club.<lb/>
She is also a member of the N. C.<lb/>
Student Nurses Association.<lb/>
 <lb/>
The Mathematics Department,<lb/>
experiencing its largest summer<lb/>
session enrollment, announces that<lb/>
eight full time instructors are on<lb/>
hand this term. Out of a total of<lb/>
sixteen faculty members, six teach-<lb/>
ers are away at National Merit<lb/>
Science Foundation summer insti-<lb/>
tutes at various universities and<lb/>
Jenkins Appoints<lb/>
Humanities Head<lb/>
A six-months clinical intern-<lb/>
ship program at the Pitt County<lb/>
Mental Health Clinic in Greenville<lb/>
is presently in effect to meet a<lb/>
?i-qiremant of a recoiitly or-<lb/>
ganized master's degree program<lb/>
in clinical psychology at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The main purposes of this pro-<lb/>
pram are to meet the need of a<lb/>
greater number of clinical psy-<lb/>
chologists i:i North Carolina and<lb/>
to increase the clinical psycholog-<lb/>
ical services available in the state.<lb/>
Dr. Thomas Long, director of this<lb/>
program, is cooperating with the<lb/>
College in providing opportunity<lb/>
for students in the program to<lb/>
gain exnerience.<lb/>
Dr. Clinton Prewett, director of<lb/>
the Psychology Department at<lb/>
Past Carolina, coordinates the<lb/>
?uo-vear graduate program.<lb/>
Wilbur Saetellow of Windsor<lb/>
and Richard Humph rev of Kinston.<lb/>
two 1962 graduates of East Caro-<lb/>
lina, are the first students to en-<lb/>
ler the in-ternshin program. Their<lb/>
work at the Clinic includes person-<lb/>
al evaluation of patients, under<lb/>
the supervision of Dr. Long, ami<lb/>
participation in staff conferences.<lb/>
Castellow. a magna cum laude<lb/>
graduate, served duty with the<lb/>
? Army in Fiance from 1956<lb/>
to 1958. His name has been in-<lb/>
cluded among student in educa-<lb/>
tional in9titutions throughout the<lb/>
ntoraI in the national publication<lb/>
Vhos Who Among Students in<lb/>
American Universities and Col-<lb/>
leges<lb/>
Humphrey has received official<lb/>
recognition from the College for<lb/>
his outstanding academic record.<lb/>
She QtUfbilht<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
JAZZ NIGHT<lb/>
Thurs. Night<lb/>
8-11<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
"THE JAZZ<lb/>
!<lb/>
KAPELLA"<lb/>
50c cover charge<lb/>
Per person<lb/>
alleges.<lb/>
Mrs. Ant a ,<lb/>
? m ?<lb/>
Pitt, !<lb/>
Counties. ,<lb/>
h-<lb/>
east Regional c<lb/>
Kappa Gamma<lb/>
1ml. ire 7<lb/>
?.? -<lb/>
Senat<lb/>
e Appro?,<lb/>
Summer Bi<lb/>
4<lb/>
Action<lb/>
f the S<lb/>
1<lb/>
sc;<lb/>
Mei<lb/>
-<lb/>
A <lb/>
<lb/>
r -<lb/>
i tovernment<lb/>
appropriat<lb/>
Committ ?<lb/>
Movies, t<lb/>
and THE KKj<lb/>
a committee<lb/>
muimeas nw<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
traduced a n<lb/>
P?-iation of 21<lb/>
ciirive Comr ttee<lb/>
operations. F<lb/>
bon on off e<lb/>
x-s the budget<lb/>
a decrease of ? .<lb/>
w ppliea ace<lb/>
Men's Intrai n<lb/>
$840 for the Smiw,<lb/>
?<lb/>
"?vv<lb/>
gram. The Cai<lb/>
requested by C wiiTJ<lb/>
Per in the amount affMgj<lb/>
proved. ?<lb/>
iE KJEY received ?.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038827_0005"/>
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