<?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="00038830_0001"/>
Portable Outdoor Stage Arrives Saturday-<lb/>
Miss N C Appears Here<lb/>
Jnne Flinn Swanner, Miss North Carolina 1964, will guest here at<lb/>
Eat Carolina tomorrow night. The statuesque beauty will appear at<lb/>
the First nnual North-South Boys Home Football Bowl Game in<lb/>
FickUn Memorial Stadium. A sports enthusiast herself, she avaged<lb/>
17 points per game in high school basketball. Jeanne is also a certified<lb/>
Red Cross lifeguard, and prior to becoming Miss North Carolina, was<lb/>
a lifeguard in Graham. This pretty miss will travel to Atlantic City<lb/>
.ptember to compete for the Miss America title.<lb/>
North-South Bowl Benefits<lb/>
Boy's Home In Grid Game<lb/>
 klen Memorial Stad-<lb/>
te, Friday niirht,<lb/>
- 00 p.m. for the first<lb/>
Home Bowl Football<lb/>
j onsored by the<lb/>
Jaycees, is to be<lb/>
the Lake Waccamaw<lb/>
Patterned after the<lb/>
I Game, the event re-<lb/>
peraons attending<lb/>
e a ticket.<lb/>
treat is in store for<lb/>
Jeanne Flinn<lb/>
statuesque Miss<lb/>
rowned juat last<lb/>
 i to appear<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
executive committee for the game<lb/>
noted, "The merits of this particu-<lb/>
lar game were so strong that the<lb/>
North Carolina High School Ath-<lb/>
letic Association could not have<lb/>
refused to sanction it. We firmly<lb/>
believe that the Boys Home Bowl<lb/>
Game could be a great thing for<lb/>
Pftt County ami the City of Green-<lb/>
The game has a two-fold pur-<lb/>
pose First, the benefit of the Boys<lb/>
Home and, second, to give recent<lb/>
high school graduates from small-<lb/>
er schools a chance to show off<lb/>
their football talents so that they<lb/>
may have a chance to obtain a col-<lb/>
lege football scholarship.<lb/>
A portable stage purchased with<lb/>
proceeds from the mammoth "pa-<lb/>
per penny" project?14 months of<lb/>
saving empty cigarette packs?ar-<lb/>
rived on eannpus Saturday.<lb/>
The completely portable facility,<lb/>
equipped with various lighting fa-<lb/>
cilities and mounted on a trailer,<lb/>
was bought, with about $10,300<lb/>
contributed by the Liggett and<lb/>
Myers Tobacco Co. The comipany<lb/>
paid a penny a pack for empties<lb/>
of its brands collected' by students,<lb/>
alumni and friends of ECC during<lb/>
the college's "Paper Penny" cam-<lb/>
paign<lb/>
First mission for the portable<lb/>
SGA Sponsors Bermuda Ball<lb/>
Do you like d. ?? in tte ??" " ' " BermudaS? " ' '<lb/>
a ring combo? . ? ? the ?? ? ki d of fun swing on<lb/>
If these ideas add up to your bm o ,<lb/>
to the front of Flanan Saturday nK<lb/>
r a IVrmuda-combo party to oe , four.man<lb/>
"?itting, featuring the music of the D?? vers&amp;tm.<lb/>
Woup is known throughout thecollege circle tor <lb/>
d perfection with the "drtfon, with Bermudas<lb/>
the Student Government Aat- prospectg<lb/>
cton for the g,rls four hours way to<lb/>
students taking advantage ?<lb/>
kat the Summer 1 ?at and study fatigue.<lb/>
stage, an all-aluminum facility,<lb/>
was to provide a setting for Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon's concert finale and<lb/>
awards presentation of ECC's 10th<lb/>
annual Summer Music Camp. The<lb/>
program was held on the mall<lb/>
area near the certer of the main<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
The trailer arrived here about<lb/>
noon after a trip from Owatanna,<lb/>
Minin. A delivery crew left the<lb/>
Wenger Manufacturing Co. in<lb/>
Owaratanna Wednesday.<lb/>
Measuring 36 feet long by 20<lb/>
feet wide, the portable stage was<lb/>
purchased primarily for staging<lb/>
various types of productions in the<lb/>
College's new Fickleai Stadium be-<lb/>
fore audiences too lai-ge for in-<lb/>
door stages on campus. Comipletely<lb/>
portable, the stage-trailer is de-<lb/>
signed o that crews cam within<lb/>
three minutes convert it from a<lb/>
trailer into a stage.<lb/>
College oficials say the siiage is<lb/>
destined for numerous outdoor<lb/>
musical and theatrical programs<lb/>
and otiher activities in ihe new<lb/>
stadium.<lb/>
The "Paper Penny" campaign<lb/>
was 1 'unched in April. 1962. Lig-<lb/>
ge t smd Myers' final pock-count<lb/>
and accompanying payoff" came<lb/>
last June.<lb/>
vol. XXXVIII<lb/>
east Carolina college, greenville, n. c, thursday, august 8, 1963<lb/>
no. 62<lb/>
Student Senate Pens Protest<lb/>
Against Communist-Ban Law'<lb/>
Student Government Association Senate members took a firm stand in opposition to<lb/>
the North Carolina Legislature's "Gag Law" at their weekly meeting Monday afternoon.<lb/>
The so-called "Gag Law" forbids Communist speakers and those who have utilized the Fifth<lb/>
Amendment when questioned about Communist affiliation speaking privileges on State-<lb/>
supported campuses.<lb/>
The stand taken by the Summer<lb/>
School governing body was in the<lb/>
form of a letter forwarded to the<lb/>
General Assembly members. Pres-<lb/>
ident Leo W. Jenkins, unofficially,<lb/>
has endorsed the Senate's letter on<lb/>
the issue. The letter, as unanimous-<lb/>
ly passed by the representative<lb/>
body, appears below.<lb/>
To the Legislators of North<lb/>
Carolina:<lb/>
The Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation of East Carolina College,<lb/>
as the representative body of the<lb/>
students of this instiltuion, resolves<lb/>
that it questions bloth the manner<lb/>
of it he passage of House Bill 1395<lb/>
and the law itself.<lb/>
It is our belief that the Fifth<lb/>
Amendment of the Constitution of<lb/>
the United States of America is<lb/>
an inalienable right for the pro-<lb/>
tection of every citizen. Accord-<lb/>
ing to the provision of House Bill<lb/>
1395, claiming the right g aran-<lb/>
teed by the Fifth Amendment is<lb/>
regarded as incriminating the cit-<lb/>
izen. The law is so vaguely stated<lb/>
as to imply that any citizen who<lb/>
refuses to testify against himself<lb/>
is a member of an organization<lb/>
advocating overthrow of ?he gov-<lb/>
ernment of the United States by<lb/>
force.<lb/>
In respect to the manner of the<lb/>
passage of House Bill 1395, it is<lb/>
inferred that an attempt was made<lb/>
to subvert the democratic process,<lb/>
since the bill was not introduced<lb/>
until the day before adjournment,<lb/>
thus leading to the hurried sus-<lb/>
pension of House rules and the<lb/>
refusal of the President of the<lb/>
Senate to permit the necessary<lb/>
deliberation and discussion. Thus<lb/>
we feel srtrontg and dangerous im-<lb/>
plications that this law was a mat-<lb/>
ter of political authoritarianism<lb/>
Communique<lb/>
KOREA?More American sold-<lb/>
iers have been involved in the con-<lb/>
tinued North Korean raids. The<lb/>
Communists have crossed the de-<lb/>
militarized zone several times in<lb/>
the past week since the ambush of<lb/>
an American jeep on the Ameri-<lb/>
can side of the zone early last<lb/>
week, in which at least three Amer-<lb/>
icans were killed. The latest inci-<lb/>
dent reported Tuesday was a clash<lb/>
in wrhich five American soldiers<lb/>
were wounded.<lb/>
LONDON ? Dr. Stephen Ward<lb/>
died Saturday after being kept<lb/>
barely alive by a team of physic-<lb/>
ians for several days following<lb/>
his taking a massive dose of bar-<lb/>
fa iibuates. Dr. Ward has figured<lb/>
prominently in the Christine Keel-<lb/>
er and Mandy Rice-Davies sex<lb/>
scandal that has rocked Britain<lb/>
for the past two months.<lb/>
WASHINGTON ? The FBI is<lb/>
guarding 60-year-old Joseph Val-<lb/>
achi, a narcotics trafficker and<lb/>
killer. Valachi has been giving the<lb/>
FBI detailed information on a<lb/>
national crime syndicate. His in-<lb/>
formation is thought to be the<lb/>
most complete ever given. Police<lb/>
believe that the information will<lb/>
lead to a smashing of organized<lb/>
crime in the nation.<lb/>
rather than of concern for the<lb/>
needs or ithe welfare of the people.<lb/>
One of the purposes of a gen-<lb/>
uine democracy is to prepare its<lb/>
citizens to face the problems of<lb/>
the age with mature minds and a<lb/>
strong sense of responsibility,<lb/>
both nurtured by a free and vig-<lb/>
orous discussion of all sides of<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
We feel that East 'Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege, along with the other colleges<lb/>
of our state, is on the road to ac-<lb/>
complishing this goal. We, the<lb/>
students of this generation, are<lb/>
strong and proud believers in the<lb/>
democratic way of life, as were<lb/>
the founders of our nation. As men<lb/>
and women who will inherit the<lb/>
responsibilities of this state and<lb/>
nation, we require and demand the<lb/>
depth of view which only the un-<lb/>
hindered expression of diversity of<lb/>
opinion can provide.<lb/>
We propose that House Bill<lb/>
1395 be repealed to comply with<lb/>
the requirements of free inquiry<lb/>
which is essential to the contin-<lb/>
uance of a free socierty.<lb/>
 <lb/>
SGA President George Wight-<lb/>
man reported that the Bermuda<lb/>
Ball to be sponsored by the Stu-<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
Pictures will again be a re-<lb/>
quired part of student identi-<lb/>
fication beginning Fall Quart-<lb/>
er. To alleviate the rush in<lb/>
September, photographs will<lb/>
be made all day Wednesday,<lb/>
August 14, in the Student<lb/>
Government Association of-<lb/>
fice in Wright Building. All<lb/>
students planning to return<lb/>
in the Fall should plan to have<lb/>
their picture made at this time.<lb/>
These identification photo-<lb/>
graphs will be necessary for<lb/>
admission to Student Govern-<lb/>
ment-sponsored and campus<lb/>
events, including the opening<lb/>
Wake Forest football game.<lb/>
Students already owning pic-<lb/>
ture ID cards need not report.<lb/>
dent Government Association would<lb/>
be held Saturday night. The gala<lb/>
event will be in the form of a street<lb/>
dance in front of Flanagan Build-<lb/>
ing. A motion was made and<lb/>
passed to appropriate $175 for<lb/>
the Deltas to play for the affair.<lb/>
A request by Doug Crumpler on<lb/>
behalf of Lib Rogers, head major-<lb/>
ette, for a $400 appropriation to<lb/>
cover the cost of new uaiiformis for<lb/>
the Marching Pirates majorettes<lb/>
Avas tabled until more information<lb/>
could be obtained from Miss<lb/>
Rogers. This request is in<lb/>
addition to the $9000 allotted the<lb/>
Marching Pirates for uniforms by<lb/>
the regular-term SGA.<lb/>
One hundred glass serving plates<lb/>
were purchased for the College for<lb/>
a total cost of $27.18. The plates<lb/>
will be kept with other such china<lb/>
in looming Hall and be available<lb/>
for official social functions.<lb/>
New P O Facilities<lb/>
Commence Monday<lb/>
Beginning Monday, August 12,<lb/>
with the opening of the new East<lb/>
Carolina College Station, students<lb/>
Avill have available additional post-<lb/>
al facilities. The building, located<lb/>
on Tenth Street across from Um-<lb/>
stead Hall, will be open weekdays<lb/>
from 8:30 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. and<lb/>
on Saturdays from 8:30 ajm, until<lb/>
12:00 noon.<lb/>
Quicker mail pick-up will be a<lb/>
feature of the new station, in ad-<lb/>
dition to its providing all regular<lb/>
postal services to Eat Carolina<lb/>
sfu lents. The cafeteria post of-<lb/>
fice will continue to sell stamps<lb/>
?n 1 receive insured packages, but<lb/>
will no longer handle registered<lb/>
mail and money orders after Satur-<lb/>
day, August 10.<lb/>
The College plans to provide<lb/>
mail service to the women's dormi-<lb/>
tories within the next two or<lb/>
three months. Post office boxes<lb/>
are to be placed in each of the<lb/>
dormitories for letter receipt by<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
Tenth Street Post Office<lb/>
The new East Carolina Station Post Office promises quicker service and<lb/>
more conveniences to the College students and staff. The modern struc-<lb/>
ture will begin its activities Monday.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0002"/><lb/>
"<lb/>
I<lb/>
2?east Carolinian, thursday, august 8, 1963<lb/>
classroom dogma<lb/>
The Alabama State Board of Education adopted a reso-<lb/>
lution Monday making Bible reading compulsory in public<lb/>
schools. State law already required daily Bible reading, but<lb/>
the newly adopted resolution makes it a part of the course<lb/>
of study.<lb/>
Governor George Wallace, who introduced the resolution,<lb/>
said "if this is ever challenged while I am governor and the<lb/>
courts rule that we cannot read the Bible in some school, Im<lb/>
going to that school and read it myself One can easily<lb/>
doubt Wallace's promise to read the Bible in a school him-<lb/>
self, but his stand is justified.<lb/>
The United States Supreme Court greatly overstepped<lb/>
its boundaries when it made Bible reading illegal in public<lb/>
schools. Granted, no school should use the Bible to indoc-<lb/>
trinate the students, but the students certainly should be<lb/>
exposed to religious history in an educational institution.<lb/>
A course in ancient history would be impossible to accurately<lb/>
present without use of Bible references. .<lb/>
It is thought by many that since religion is controversial,<lb/>
it should be taught to children in the home by the parents.<lb/>
That is pure follv. Combined with the efforts of the church,<lb/>
such religious education of a child would be criminally one-<lb/>
sided. Knowledge of the Bible is an intregal part of one's<lb/>
intellect, and at no price must it be eliminated from the<lb/>
subjects covered in school.<lb/>
Sometime in the past century, well-meaning but ig-<lb/>
norant people decided that school children should be pro-<lb/>
tected from the task of thinkincr which stems from any<lb/>
form of controversial material. The recent Supreme Court<lb/>
decision is merely a culmination of that line of thought.<lb/>
All the way through the grades in public schools, and some-<lb/>
times in college, the textbooks reek of mediocracy. The most<lb/>
noteworthy of these are the literature books. Most of the<lb/>
stories are of the sing-song Pollyanna sort of trash which<lb/>
should never have been written, much less published. Not<lb/>
only are religious subjects omitted, but often stories which<lb/>
inspire patriotism. The usual subjects are good little boys<lb/>
and girls, cats, dogs, and apple trees. Nowhere is the stu-<lb/>
dent exposed to literature which inspires thought. The end<lb/>
result is often a machine-like slob without any taste and<lb/>
with no analytical powers. If he wants the answers to some-<lb/>
thing, his parents have them. Don't laugh. Just look around.<lb/>
The most obvious example of where textbooks commit<lb/>
tremendous atrocities is in literature of the present century.<lb/>
Ezra Pound is one of the most influential men in the litera-<lb/>
ture of our century, if not the most influential. When Robert<lb/>
Frost was an unknown expatriate, Mr. Pound's reviews of<lb/>
two of his books pushed him toward the fame he enjoyed<lb/>
until the time of his death. Most of the later poems of William<lb/>
Butler Yeats were either edited by Pound or written under<lb/>
his influence. Ernest Hemingway sent his earlier manu-<lb/>
scripts to Pound who would mark out most of the adjectives?<lb/>
thus the Hemingway style. Much of T. S. Eliot's poetry,<lb/>
particularly "The Waste Land was edited by Pound. With-<lb/>
out the efforts of Ezra Pound, James Joyce would never have<lb/>
been published. Mr. Pound's influence also branched into<lb/>
sculpture and music.<lb/>
Immediately prior to World War II, Pound took de-<lb/>
finite stands against policies of F. D. Roosevelt and the<lb/>
tyranny of the war we were about to enter. At the time,<lb/>
FDR's popularity was down to 15 but this was overcome<lb/>
when war soothed our economic problems. After the war,<lb/>
the government punished Pound for his "crimes He was<lb/>
placed in St. Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington, D. C, for<lb/>
the mentally deranged.<lb/>
Because he is a controversial figure, the works of Pound<lb/>
cannot be found in most literature texts. In many, his very<lb/>
existance is denied by not mentioning his tremendous in-<lb/>
fluence. It is past time to wipe out this petty nonsense and<lb/>
place education on the high level on which it belongs.<lb/>
i?oiiiIai<lb/>
Published 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<lb/>
managing editor<lb/>
associate editor<lb/>
photographer<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
tony r. bowen<lb/>
ann barbee<lb/>
ronald w. gollobin<lb/>
joe brannon<lb/>
henry bynum<lb/>
Offices on second floor of Wright Building<lb/>
?ailing Address: Box 1068, East Carolina College, Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, all departments, PL 2-6716 or PL 2-6101. extension 264<lb/>
Subscription rate: $3.60 per year<lb/>
campus bulletin<lb/>
m to s st mm p? yc <lb/>
StrTjttt ON<lb/>
.????'?<lb/>
$?$<lb/>
f<lb/>
?iM ?i ? ???? : ifc ?'? ?? "? t 4M<lb/>
EL TO<lb/>
By Ron Gou0J:<lb/>
EDITOR'S N0T? a<lb/>
official has asked us tn rKl<lb/>
the -students that uL J5H<lb/>
not complain about th<lb/>
:g Editor's Note i<lb/>
I DITOR'S NOTE- ?<lb/>
Editor's Note was vrtaZ S<lb/>
authors of this col.nT'H<lb/>
one is authenic. tjjj<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOT? Ediw<lb/>
numibei- 1 and number a l<lb/>
This one and number 2<lb/>
authenic d can keen?1<lb/>
day.) P Jll??bl<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: R<lb/>
not.<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
V<lb/>
.?v.  ?;? ? ?, ?.?.Av - .???- -v?? ? - ? <lb/>
w<lb/>
osj-vw<lb/>
<lb/>
AUTHOR'S NOTE: W9,<lb/>
Editor's not Dlesse stand <lb/>
Patrick Henry Y<lb/>
i- ? ler of the John Kt<lb/>
I called ?<lb/>
in St ? T<lb/>
stated that R<lb/>
so others say<lb/>
?ann<lb/>
11 around us. Mr V<lb/>
also leader of a m<lb/>
trying I<lb/>
moved from th ?<lb/>
The North Carolma <lb/>
nmWy ha<lb/>
Coinmunists On Campus hm I<lb/>
by james forsyth<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: J'fJ&amp; 2??<lb/>
a former associate editor of the EAST CAROLINIAN. A nsmgu<lb/>
ior English major from Gre?rf?ra,Forsyth? currently working<lb/>
with the campus literary magazine the KfcBfc.<lb/>
should not be to be to fill the mind<lb/>
of a student with the lates: m text<lb/>
book knowledge which will be obso-<lb/>
lete when the next edition comes<lb/>
out; rather it should be to teach<lb/>
the student to think, to recognize<lb/>
The North Carolina General As-<lb/>
sembly has taken on the appear-<lb/>
ance of a branch office of the<lb/>
HUAC. While we do not embrace<lb/>
communist theories, we abhor the<lb/>
actions of the General Assembly<lb/>
which stifled educational -growth<lb/>
and abridged academic freedom.<lb/>
Secretary of State Thad Eure<lb/>
and Reps Phil Godwin and Ned<lb/>
Delamar composed the bill which<lb/>
was used in a political blunder<lb/>
which reeks of McCarthyism. The<lb/>
law, which was passed under the<lb/>
pretense of regulating "visiting<lb/>
speakers prohibits freedom of<lb/>
speech on Skate-supported cam-<lb/>
puses to "known" Communists,<lb/>
persons advocating an overthrow<lb/>
of the government, and anyone<lb/>
who has taken the Fifth Amend-<lb/>
ment when questioned' about Com-<lb/>
munist affiliation. Viewed in re-<lb/>
lation to the Supreme Court de-<lb/>
cision on school prayer, Commun-<lb/>
ists have the same status as God.<lb/>
The ramifications which can re-<lb/>
sult from this law are obvious.<lb/>
Faculty members jeopardize their<lb/>
positions by saying anything that<lb/>
a narrow-minded John Bircher can<lb/>
construe as having pink undertones.<lb/>
Even text books are in danger of<lb/>
being snatched from the classroom<lb/>
by the wrath of the long right<lb/>
arm. And so on down the line.<lb/>
Furthermore, the law is a direct<lb/>
insult to the intelligence of stu-<lb/>
dents. The ultimate objective of<lb/>
an institution of higher education<lb/>
the difference between what is<lb/>
good and what is evil and make<lb/>
the choice for the better.<lb/>
Dr. Leo W. Jenkins, president<lb/>
of East Carolina College, has taken<lb/>
a stand in opposition to the law.<lb/>
"The recently passed measure re-<lb/>
stricting visiting speakers from<lb/>
appearing on campuses of State-<lb/>
supported institutions of higher<lb/>
learning he said in an official<lb/>
statement, "has one aspect that<lb/>
may well diminish the great ad-<lb/>
vances made by our colleges in com-<lb/>
batting hostile ideologies<lb/>
"Our colleges have succeeded<lb/>
quite well in removing glamor and<lb/>
hence martydom from those that<lb/>
elect to preach philosophies for-<lb/>
eign to our way of life.<lb/>
"We have found that debate on<lb/>
comparative worth of democracy<lb/>
s. totalitarianism invariably puts<lb/>
democracy in a very favorable<lb/>
light. This instruction is more ef-<lb/>
fective when students discover<lb/>
this for themselves<lb/>
The last sentence is most im-<lb/>
pressive. It shows the trust which<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins has in the merttal<lb/>
capacities of the students. With<lb/>
such men behind us, the stinging<lb/>
breach of our freedom to analyze<lb/>
for ourselves can be corrected.<lb/>
Under the - ? p<lb/>
ing wvc a<lb/>
Icy is enforce<lb/>
pretty high u<lb/>
If you wer<lb/>
go any higher.) V. -<lb/>
be very vagin<lb/>
will try to gi . h<lb/>
nz obvious, h<lb/>
impossible, w? ??  s<lb/>
as C , ,<lb/>
symbols w<lb/>
i!le Book-<lb/>
Who in FA Tor<lb/>
ten cents<lb/>
Efmlo3<lb/>
not eligib'<lb/>
Tlie eto k<lb/>
Great Aw<lb/>
-nkrrse tl <lb/>
soil Tweed,<lb/>
governor. The<lb/>
Tweed's ?rm -was I<lb/>
definite pla:<lb/>
Tweed is <lb/>
hood, for the A<lb/>
aurainst sin<lb/>
:x<lb/>
TODAY, August 8<lb/>
7KX) pjm.?-Movie: "Mr. Hobbs<lb/>
Takes a Vacation Austin<lb/>
Tice: "The Checkered Flag" and<lb/>
"Trigger Happy"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: "Yellow Canary'<lb/>
State: "Donavan's Reef"<lb/>
Pitt: "The Great Escape"<lb/>
FRIDAY, August 9<lb/>
7:00 p.nu ? Faculty Duplicate<lb/>
Bridge, Planters Bank<lb/>
8:30 p.m.?College Union Conibo<lb/>
Dance. College Union<lb/>
Tice: "The Checkered Flag"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: "Yellow Canary"<lb/>
State: "Mondo Cane"<lb/>
Pitt: "Black Zoo"<lb/>
SATURDAY, August 10<lb/>
1:30 p.m.?Graduate Compre-<lb/>
hensive Examination, Rawl 130<lb/>
SATURDAY CLASSES<lb/>
Tice: "The Checkered Flag" and<lb/>
"Trigger Happy"<lb/>
Meadowhrook: "Heller In Pink<lb/>
Tights" and "The Brain That<lb/>
Would Not Die"<lb/>
State: "Mondo Cane"<lb/>
Pitt: "Black Zoo"<lb/>
SUNDAY, August 11<lb/>
Tice: "The Ugly American"<lb/>
Meadowbrook: Dr. Know"<lb/>
State: "Mondo Cane"<lb/>
Pitt: "A Gathering of Eagles"<lb/>
Remember Sergeant' Author<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: The following editorial appeared in THE WEEK-<lb/>
LY, Chapel Hill. Many on campus will remember Mac Hyman<lb/>
as a member of the Department of English last year.<lb/>
He had consented to go to Holly-<lb/>
wood to look over a fat offer to<lb/>
do the screen (treatment. After a<lb/>
few days in California he shrugged<lb/>
off the offer and headed home.<lb/>
What he really wanted to do.<lb/>
he said when he wus summering<lb/>
in Chapel Hill, was to return to<lb/>
his hometown, Cordele, Georgia.<lb/>
here is a river at Cordele, and he<lb/>
wanted to build a fiame house be-<lb/>
side it and settle down. He would<lb/>
?ro on with his writing, and for<lb/>
divers,on sit out there on the bank<lb/>
and look at the river.<lb/>
AiScfat?r had nin a Western<lb/>
Auto Supply in Cordele. When Hy-<lb/>
witin'tTfT1 t0 sittin "??J<lb/>
wimng, the townspeople tagged<lb/>
hm as gaTOe kind of nut. That<lb/>
didn't bother hi? ?? 1! ,<lb/>
B? write same more.<lb/>
rich? "Imli- back t0 0"lee, all<lb/>
-hat los3W81eSfyhhnLi<lb/>
eents to Ampins ri ropre-<lb/>
to all of C wfr Jltenin?- But<lb/>
hone8t!f SSTiSsrr vX?<lb/>
it must mean ?!L httle ???<lb/>
a quiet JitST " in<lb/>
heart Pnv?e comer of the<lb/>
Mac Hyman wasn't one vou would<lb/>
figure to have writtten a novel with<lb/>
the gut-ibusting humor of No Time<lb/>
for Sergeants.<lb/>
In fact, if there was any ribald<lb/>
humor in him, the only way it ever<lb/>
came out was fthrough his pen.<lb/>
He spent a summer in Chapel<lb/>
Hill six or seven years ago, living<lb/>
with his wife and children on<lb/>
Country Cluib Road in a vacation-<lb/>
ing professor's house. The house<lb/>
was pretty well secluded, Mac Hy-<lb/>
man even more so.<lb/>
He was perched on a huge out-<lb/>
cropping of rock beside the house<lb/>
one afternoon waiting for (the ar-<lb/>
rival of a newspaper reporter and<lb/>
photographer, with about the same<lb/>
enthusiasm that you wait for the<lb/>
stroke of a fuillotine.<lb/>
The photographer tried several<lb/>
times to get him rto smile and the<lb/>
harder he tried the closer Hyman<lb/>
iseemed to be verging on tears. "I<lb/>
can't smile Hyman said finally,<lb/>
and that ended that. He never got<lb/>
around to explaining why.<lb/>
At the time, No Time for Serg-<lb/>
eants was still knocking around the<lb/>
ibest-seller list, had been made into<lb/>
a TV play, a Broadway play, and<lb/>
had been sold to the movies.<lb/>
Hyman's, agent had figured to<lb/>
scoop off more cream by putting<lb/>
him on the lecture tour. "I cant<lb/>
talk in front of audiences Hyman<lb/>
said, and that ended that.<lb/>
"Gentleman" rH<lb/>
Barefoot Moo<lb/>
?ecent sti s iiacal<lb/>
"It's best ?<lb/>
Gentleman George exi !<lb/>
the senat f<lb/>
Practice mak<lb/>
 ? ? <lb/>
Everything -<lb/>
is untrue<lb/>
will have an I NT<lb/>
ly all take - l<lb/>
?tore, (NT).<lb/>
 ? <lb/>
Ramon i an ElL<lb/>
course ani finds :? ? 1: the aw<lb/>
tor asks a great ??<lb/>
of the class. The class BM<lb/>
that poor old Ramon, if ?<lb/>
awake, he's n ber aaa<lb/>
versa. Well, Ramon f<lb/>
a way to go: out of ans?<lb/>
those cpuestions. In fact. M<lb/>
cd out a way of ???<lb/>
auestions or even havros<lb/>
hello to anyone on the camj<lb/>
joined the Commur <lb/>
now is forbidden by te, J<lb/>
?peak on Stoteppjw1<lb/>
puses. "Silence says Wj!<lb/>
campus) "Ls gohien. coni<lb/>
 ? <lb/>
Elegy Written in ?<lb/>
Classroom<lb/>
O searching noble ?&amp;?? H<lb/>
Thy levelv madras shir<lb/>
to a T<lb/>
And above, the sky is ?'<lb/>
blue,<lb/>
Thou treads below on<lb/>
Weejun shoe.<lb/>
Hail to thee, thou who<lb/>
reach the realm of?<lb/>
Thy blankness of mind<lb/>
enormity.<lb/>
The student senate<lb/>
first bill of the summ<lb/>
day. The bill ,?as J? 1<lb/>
their seats. The SCA<lb/>
called the measure a<lb/>
movement forward ami 1<lb/>
vancement in procrre<lb/>
The Art Departed<lb/>
nonnced that if the c" n<lb/>
moved the labels f v<lb/>
3Uwl is caught, he wi? ?<lb/>
out of school. The m?-<lb/>
partment unfortunattyt g<lb/>
tip some of the unl 0<lb/>
burned it, thinkin !t <lb/>
it least that's <lb/>
they thought it was)-<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0003"/><lb/>
Fast Carolinians Perform In Drama<lb/>
east Carolinian?thursday, august 8, 1963?3<lb/>
lhe Lost Colony' Honors College In Special Ceremonies<lb/>
By Ann Barbee and Ronald W. (Jollobin<lb/>
East Carolina students and staff, along with Greenville<lb/>
townspeople, journeyed to Fort Raleigh last Friday after-<lb/>
noon to aid The Lost Colony in commemorating "East Caro-<lb/>
lina Night After dinner in Manteo, the evening's events<lb/>
began with a tour of Wright Memorial and the museum sit-<lb/>
uated near the site of the first powered flight.<lb/>
East Carolina Night At Manteo Production<lb/>
the man scenes that make "The Lost Colony" one of America's most entertaining outdoor dramas<lb/>
English people gathered at Queen Elizabeth's castle to await the return of Sir Walter Raleigh.<lb/>
J. H. Waldrop, Recently Retired Chairman,<lb/>
still Anxious To Be 01 Service To ECC<lb/>
??. ? Greenville busi-<lb/>
. East Garo-<lb/>
- v from the small<lb/>
 reachers Training<lb/>
llegi lays through<lb/>
n period to the ap-<lb/>
6,000-studeret body<lb/>
today. J. Herbert<lb/>
. 191 graduate of the<lb/>
shool, today stands<lb/>
I, looking hack<lb/>
oarei ? f service to<lb/>
i . C i . now third-<lb/>
? e St?t4<lb/>
etired I nom his posi-<lb/>
? n of the Board ?<lb/>
? ?. banking official has<lb/>
? r:u?n of his life<lb/>
Oa trustee oapaci-<lb/>
. . - to give up so<lb/>
has culti-<lb/>
and ?' ers in<lb/>
xwth of the ed-<lb/>
n. Waldrop has<lb/>
1 by at all time<lb/>
? ,nv T inity to<lb/>
d 1942 by Governor<lb/>
boa to fill the un-<lb/>
vacant by the<lb/>
anagan, Waldrop<lb/>
. . aj years of<lb/>
a  ?, ,1 bo a full<lb/>
erve I until the late<lb/>
. -y loven Luther<lb/>
him again to a<lb/>
tenur as a Trustee of<lb/>
-t- T N' years latar,<lb/>
A L. Tyler's term ex-<lb/>
Waldrop was elected<lb/>
Chairman, a position he filled until<lb/>
his retirement<lb/>
Among his first major tasks<lb/>
was the apiointmcnt of a comm.it-<lb/>
tee to select a successor to the<lb/>
retiring President, of the College.<lb/>
Dr. John D. Messick. Explaining<lb/>
the ardent search for a qualified<lb/>
replacement, Waldrop said that<lb/>
Peace And Happiness<lb/>
By George E. Jacttson<lb/>
Dear friend, pray tell, do you be-<lb/>
lieve<lb/>
That maybe someday well achieve<lb/>
T ? ' peace of mend and happiness<lb/>
And ne'er be satisfied with less?<lb/>
i know that this may come in<lb/>
dreams,<lb/>
It can be real just as it seems,<lb/>
We must nave faith, and love, and<lb/>
care.<lb/>
And kneel to GOD above in prayer.<lb/>
Don't ever fret discouragement<lb/>
Or let it be a detriment,<lb/>
Mold it in your great foundation<lb/>
As a part of HIS creation.<lb/>
Life you know is well compiled<lb/>
of laughs and heartaches recon-<lb/>
ciled,<lb/>
And with each passing day we<lb/>
pray<lb/>
Thai HE will help us find the way.<lb/>
someday at leisure when you're<lb/>
free<lb/>
Just look at Nature and you'll see,<lb/>
The beauty that prevails on earth<lb/>
Above all, the miracle of birth.<lb/>
Hail to Heaven and to HIS throne<lb/>
And someday maybe, we'll go home<lb/>
To be forgiven for all our sins<lb/>
In Paradise where life begins.<lb/>
Veteran Batonist<lb/>
held high. Lib ends <lb/>
s eclacttlar performance witn ?<lb/>
rching Pirates Majorette Sqnjg-<lb/>
? has already begun work wn<lb/>
?W major ttes, perfecting roa<lb/>
t:n? for presentation this mm<lb/>
the committee searched "far and<lb/>
wide, examining the qualifications<lb/>
of many prospects. They found<lb/>
the best qualified man right here<lb/>
on campus in Dr. Leo W. Jenkins,<lb/>
who was then Vice President and<lb/>
Dean of the College The com-<lb/>
mittee reccomim-ended him, and he<lb/>
was unanimously accepted by the<lb/>
Board of Trustees.<lb/>
Waldrop commended the present<lb/>
Boalxl. commenting on the strength<lb/>
of the newly-appointed members.<lb/>
Should the Board "continue to sup-<lb/>
roil the administration and con-<lb/>
tinue to he as efficient, energetic,<lb/>
and progressive as they have been<lb/>
in the past, East Carolina will<lb/>
have a great future<lb/>
Returning to Waterside Theater,<lb/>
home of Paul Green's symphonic<lb/>
drama, the group enjoyed the pre-<lb/>
sentation of America's first out-<lb/>
door historical production. The<lb/>
Lost Colony.<lb/>
The first actor appearing on the<lb/>
stage was Ed Pilkington, a form-<lb/>
er Eaeit Carolina student, who por-<lb/>
trays Father Martin. Pilkington<lb/>
finished his undergraduate work<lb/>
at Ithica College in New York<lb/>
where he was granted the Bachelor<lb/>
of Fine Arts degree. While at-<lb/>
tending East Carolina, he was<lb/>
named the Best Student Director<lb/>
and the Best Actor by the Play-<lb/>
house. Pilkington expressed pleas-<lb/>
ure over the addition of a drama<lb/>
department to East Carolina's cur-<lb/>
riculunn, noting that he had to<lb/>
leave North Carolina tt? receive the<lb/>
braining' he wanted in his field.<lb/>
The livliest role in the produc-<lb/>
tion is being player by an alumnus<lb/>
of the College, Tom Hull, who<lb/>
portrays the comical character of<lb/>
Old Tom Hams. Hull graduated<lb/>
from East Carolina in 1962 with<lb/>
an A.B. degree in English and<lb/>
speech. In 1960, he received the<lb/>
Most Valued Player Award from<lb/>
the Playhouse. Hull is a charter<lb/>
member of Lamihda Chj Alpha fra-<lb/>
ternity.<lb/>
Relating a recent experience,<lb/>
Hull said that he had been at the<lb/>
hairdressers sittine: next to Mrs.<lb/>
Luther Hodges and a woman view-<lb/>
ing him from the back told the<lb/>
hairdresser that "some women<lb/>
have bad legs, but look at hers"<lb/>
(pointing to Hull).<lb/>
On Sunday mights, the only<lb/>
night each weefc that the perform-<lb/>
ance is not given. Hull and Delia<lb/>
Basnight, another East Carolina<lb/>
student, do a variety-revue night-<lb/>
club act at the Dare County Shrine<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Other East. Carolinians appear-<lb/>
ing in the show are Brad Weisiger.<lb/>
a rising junior drama major who<lb/>
portrays Captain Dare; Bob Good-<lb/>
en, a rising sophomore English<lb/>
major who plays the role of the<lb/>
second soldier, the part Andy<lb/>
Griffith first played; Bob Tilley,<lb/>
a voice major graduating at the<lb/>
end of Fall Quarter who sings in<lb/>
the choir, plays a colonist, and un-<lb/>
J. Herbert Waldrop<lb/>
Rogers Begins Fourth Year<lb/>
As Marching Pirates Chief<lb/>
Stepping oust in front of the<lb/>
Fast Carolina Marching Pirates<lb/>
Band at the opening Wake Forest<lb/>
football game this fall will be<lb/>
Elizabeth "Lib" Rogers, beginning<lb/>
her fourth consecutive year as head<lb/>
0f the Marching Pirates Majorette<lb/>
suad. Leading her corps through<lb/>
intricate dancing, twirling and<lb/>
?rutting routines, Lib, as Chief,<lb/>
is in charge of devising ana ar-<lb/>
ranging all half-time shows per-<lb/>
formed by the group.<lb/>
 Senior Art major this year.<lb/>
I fh is a Greenville girl, who also<lb/>
p the J. H. Rose High School<lb/>
majorettes for two years. She<lb/>
teaches twirling in her spare time<lb/>
 home as well as instructing<lb/>
adTall over the state. She con-<lb/>
dScted majorette classes at the<lb/>
iuJnmer Music Camp here on eam-<lb/>
puTlaS week, a capacity she has<lb/>
file! for several years.<lb/>
Tin is a well known teacher of<lb/>
, j?rt work and judges numerous<lb/>
rette competitions. She her-<lb/>
?f ?a frequent contest winner<lb/>
.nlatimr 9 trophies, 2 cups, 2<lb/>
?SSW in her set-<lb/>
eltSTtwirler keeps her<lb/>
? Lf.? hard at work during<lb/>
;rJOrSll Reason rehearsing<lb/>
the-n?T for all home frames and<lb/>
rcfat?? Averarinff to and one-<lb/>
a!hSu? ofTakice each day<lb/>
?2 the fa U? and the $"?<lb/>
tU?lreadv preparing for the Red-<lb/>
?f? a ofessional football frame<lb/>
5mS?Z which the March<lb/>
Pirates have been invited to pre-<lb/>
sent October 13.<lb/>
A popular campus beauty, Lib<lb/>
has been the Kappa Alpha Rose<lb/>
for the local KA chapter for the<lb/>
past two years. She reigned as the<lb/>
1960-61 Queen of the AFROTC<lb/>
cadet group. Lib was chosen as<lb/>
one of the first coeds to be an<lb/>
LAST CAROLINIAN "Buc Beau-<lb/>
ty'<lb/>
Alpha Omricon Pi, social sorori-<lb/>
ty, benefits from her active par-<lb/>
ticipation. Lib holds membership<lb/>
in the National Baton Twirling<lb/>
Association of America and the<lb/>
Dixie Majorette Association, thus<lb/>
adding to her many activities.<lb/>
Heading the list of her num-<lb/>
erous titles and awards is her Na-<lb/>
tional Baton Twirling Association<lb/>
recognition as North Carolina<lb/>
State Strutting Champion for 1961<lb/>
and 1962. She was also first runner-<lb/>
up in the Miss Majoretite of Dixie<lb/>
contest, a competition for girls<lb/>
from all the original Conferate<lb/>
States. Contrary to popular belief,<lb/>
ttfhese comipetitions, Lib tells us,<lb/>
demand much miore than mere<lb/>
twirling ability. The girls are<lb/>
judged o poise, personality,<lb/>
showmanship, talent, among other<lb/>
strutting and twirling aspects.<lb/>
Well known in the Greenville<lb/>
area for her twirling ability, Lib<lb/>
has recently won an all-expense-<lb/>
paid trip to New York City as first<lb/>
place winner in the WITN-TV tal-<lb/>
ent contest.<lb/>
derstudies the cole of Captain<lb/>
Dare; Frank Keaton, a 1957 grad-<lb/>
uate and a 1960 recipient of the<lb/>
M.A. degree with a major in mus-<lb/>
ic, who is an Indian dancer and<lb/>
sings in the choir; and Mary Jol-<lb/>
iff, an East Carolina student until<lb/>
1961, who sings in the choir.<lb/>
Easl Carolina also has alumni<lb/>
in key positions on The Lost Col-<lb/>
ony staff. Harry Thomas, lighting<lb/>
director for 17 years at Waterside<lb/>
Theater, received his Master's de-<lb/>
gree in education in 1951. Thomas,<lb/>
principal of Elizabeth City High<lb/>
School during the winter, com-<lb/>
mented "It (East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege) certainly is meeting the<lb/>
needs of this part of the Sate 1<lb/>
a Tour-year college, evidenced by<lb/>
the fact that so many of our high<lb/>
school graduates of Elizabeth City<lb/>
:o East Carolina<lb/>
Mabel Jean Basnjght attended<lb/>
East Carolina in the summer of<lb/>
1962 and, at 23, is the youngest<lb/>
house manager the production has<lb/>
ever employed. She is also the only<lb/>
woman to hold that position. Miss<lb/>
lias night stated tiit the attend-<lb/>
ance of 776 Friday night was the<lb/>
the largest crowd attending The<lb/>
Lost Colony that week.<lb/>
At intermission, John W. Fox,<lb/>
general manager, announced that<lb/>
it was "East Carolina College<lb/>
Night" and asked all present and<lb/>
former students to stand up. As<lb/>
the spotlight swept across the<lb/>
audience, those rising were mary.<lb/>
Fox then introduced the College<lb/>
students and alumni taking- part in<lb/>
the presentation. With those per-<lb/>
formers and staff previously men-<lb/>
tioned, Fox introduced David<lb/>
Brown, Susan Basnight, and Mack<lb/>
Wade as future East Carolina stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Fox presented. Dr. Robert Holt,<lb/>
Dean and Vice President of the Col-<lb/>
lege. Dr. Holt spoke briefly on the<lb/>
coming1 diama productions and<lb/>
thanked The Lost Colony for mak-<lb/>
ing "East Carolina College Night"<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Following the performance, the<lb/>
group left Roanoke Island for the<lb/>
return trip to Greenville, pleased<lb/>
with the success of the event and<lb/>
the enjoyable evening they had ex-<lb/>
perienced.<lb/>
Backstage At The 'Colony'<lb/>
Four leading performers chat with Dean Holt during Friday night's<lb/>
"East Carolina Night" production. Tom Hull, Ed Pilkington, Brad<lb/>
Weisiger, and Mary Joliff pause backstage between scenes to welcome<lb/>
the Dean to Fort Raleigh.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0004"/><lb/>
4?east Carolinian?thursday, august 8, 1963<lb/>
Sparks Wide Acclaim<lb/>
Institute Notables<lb/>
Dr William Ebenstein is shown here with Dr. John Howell, Director<lb/>
of the newly-created Political Science Department. Professor Eben-<lb/>
stein appeared as a speaker for the Institute on Constitutional De-<lb/>
mocracy and Totalitarianism last week and lectured on "The Challenge of<lb/>
Communism<lb/>
Ebenstein Guests On Campus,<lb/>
Lectures On Communism<lb/>
Professor William Ebenstein<lb/>
dazzled stwterets and members of<lb/>
the Institute on Constitutional<lb/>
Democracy and Totalitarianism last<lb/>
week with his wit, charm, and<lb/>
ischolarship. Ebenstein, one of the<lb/>
world's most distinguished political<lb/>
theorists, spoke in his public lec-<lb/>
ture on "The Challenge of Com-<lb/>
munism going on record as beioig<lb/>
in favor of leaving the Berlin<lb/>
Wall uip as a monoment to tyranny.<lb/>
As the professor explained, the<lb/>
challenge of Cormmunism is from<lb/>
external or international Ooan-<lb/>
muniam rather than internal over-<lb/>
throw and sabotage.<lb/>
Dr. Ebenstein stated that though<lb/>
he deplores elements of the radi-<lb/>
cal Right he did not see then as<lb/>
a great danger. He is not in favor<lb/>
of recognition of Red China be-<lb/>
cause, as he pointed out, they are<lb/>
on record showing themselves not<lb/>
to be a peace-loving country.<lb/>
The professor gave his views on<lb/>
(public school education, stating<lb/>
that he thought that the greatness<lb/>
and srengths of our own system<lb/>
should be stressed more than the<lb/>
dangers of the opposing- system.<lb/>
In giving his viewpoints on this<lb/>
type of a positive approach, he<lb/>
said that he thought rthat school<lb/>
children and many adults as a<lb/>
whole are not aware enough of the<lb/>
heritage of the free world and that<lb/>
a knowledge of this heritage will<lb/>
-make them proof against emotional<lb/>
propaganda from proponents of<lb/>
totalitarianism.<lb/>
Dr. Howell and Dr. Williams, di-<lb/>
rectors of tne workshop on Com-<lb/>
munism, stated that they were very<lb/>
pleased with Dr. Ebenstein's role<lb/>
in rthe institute. Dr. Williams<lb/>
thought that many students were<lb/>
not aware of the significant place<lb/>
that Professor Ebenstein occupies<lb/>
in the world among political ex-<lb/>
perts. He is the author of a best-<lb/>
selling fbook, TODAY'S ISMS,<lb/>
Baptists Announce<lb/>
Summer Program<lb/>
Connie Radford, Summer School<lb/>
President, aided by the other East<lb/>
Carolina Baptist Student Union of<lb/>
ficers, (has begun plans for second<lb/>
session events and programs.<lb/>
Forum-discussions will continue<lb/>
on Monday nights with Bible dis-<lb/>
cussion on Wednesday nights fol-<lb/>
lowing vespers at 6:00 p.m. Chap-<lb/>
lain Dwight Fickien will lead these<lb/>
discussions on the Book of James.<lb/>
A picnic outing on Saturday, Au-<lb/>
gust 17, is planned for the Cliffs<lb/>
of the Kewse State Park.<lb/>
Officers of the Baptist Student<lb/>
Union other than President Rad-<lb/>
ford are Cecil Stone, vice-presi-<lb/>
dent; Kav Francis, education<lb/>
chairman; Judy Flake, social chair-<lb/>
man; Bettv John Kinard, publici-<lb/>
ty chairman; and Bette Jackson,<lb/>
student center chairman.<lb/>
along with at least a dozen or<lb/>
more major works in his field. Dr.<lb/>
Ebenstein taught at Prince-<lb/>
ton for sixteen years and, in ad-<lb/>
dition to holding other important<lb/>
positions, he was a consultant for<lb/>
UNESCO. Dr. Ebenstein was born<lb/>
in Austria and educated at the<lb/>
University of Vienna and the Uni-<lb/>
versty of Wisconsin.<lb/>
Speaking on the instituite as a<lb/>
whole, which,will continue through<lb/>
August 15, Dr. William W. Will-<lb/>
iams stated that it was the larg-<lb/>
est aggregation of scholars ever<lb/>
assembled at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Notices<lb/>
Tickets are now on sale in<lb/>
the College Bookstore beneath<lb/>
the South Dining Hall and in<lb/>
the Stationery Store in the<lb/>
College Union for the First<lb/>
Annual Boys Home Bowl<lb/>
Game to be played tomorrow<lb/>
in Ficklcn Stadium. The price<lb/>
of the tickets are two dollars<lb/>
each.<lb/>
The EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
welcomes letters from its<lb/>
readers. The briefer they are,<lb/>
the better is the prospect of<lb/>
publication. Letters should be<lb/>
kept to a maximum of 250<lb/>
words. They should also be of<lb/>
general interest. All are sub-<lb/>
ject to condensation and should<lb/>
conform to the standards of<lb/>
decency and good taste. We<lb/>
assume no responsibility for<lb/>
statements made. All such let-<lb/>
ters to the editor must be<lb/>
signed with name and address.<lb/>
Names will be withheld on re-<lb/>
quest if the editor can be<lb/>
shown sufficient reason for<lb/>
doing so.<lb/>
EDITOR'S NOTE: Due to<lb/>
widespread interest in the<lb/>
East Carolina Institute on<lb/>
Constitutional Democracy and<lb/>
Totalitarianism, the following<lb/>
article was prepared by the Col-<lb/>
lege News Bureau as a special<lb/>
to the Associated Press.<lb/>
An effort to bridge the gap fa<lb/>
North Carolina social studies in-<lb/>
struction?left by a lack of under-<lb/>
standing of communist ideology-<lb/>
is under way here in the form ol<lb/>
a three-week institute for 54 pub-<lb/>
lic school teachers.<lb/>
A panel of top-ranking experts<lb/>
in comparing constitutional de-<lb/>
mocracy with communist ideology,<lb/>
totalitarianism, has been brought<lb/>
to the East Carolina College cam-<lb/>
pus, picked by Governor Samford<lb/>
for the institute, to present funda-<lb/>
mentals in both theories of govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The problem which stimulated<lb/>
efforts to organize the course is<lb/>
candidly summarized by one of the<lb/>
institute's key lecturers, University<lb/>
of California professor Dr. Will-<lb/>
iam Ebenstein, internationally- re-<lb/>
spected political scientist:<lb/>
"Amateur teaching about com-<lb/>
munism is about as harmless as<lb/>
amateur brain surgery<lb/>
Ebenstein's view coincides with<lb/>
that of the North Carolina Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Instruction which<lb/>
has acknowledged a dire need for<lb/>
instruction abont communism in<lb/>
the state's public schools. But it<lb/>
has also noted a general absence<lb/>
of qualified instructors.<lb/>
The ECC instituite, suggested by<lb/>
the state's Educational Council on<lb/>
National Purposes headed by High<lb/>
Point newspaper editor Holt Mc-<lb/>
Pherson, seeks to inject into the<lb/>
general void of teachers an initial<lb/>
hypodermic dose of qualified pers-<lb/>
onnel.<lb/>
North Carolina's institute, which<lb/>
attracted educators from 40 coun-<lb/>
ties, is among the half-dozen pro-<lb/>
grams of its kind in the entire na-<lb/>
tion. Staff members and guest<lb/>
lecturers here rank the Tar Heel<lb/>
version with the best.<lb/>
Other schools exploring the new<lb/>
aipproach of arming social studies<lb/>
teachers for courses and questions<lb/>
about communism include the Uni-<lb/>
versity of California, the Universi-<lb/>
ty of South Carolina, Vanderbilt<lb/>
University and St. Louis Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Ebenstein sees in tihe institute<lb/>
an approach as logical as it is<lb/>
vitiial to the problem of launching<lb/>
an expedition toward an ultimate<lb/>
goal of nation-wide instruction<lb/>
about communism in the public<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
The need fbr putting the horse<lb/>
before the cart, Ebenstein's<lb/>
view, is this:<lb/>
"If high school youngsters should<lb/>
know something about communism,<lb/>
who should teach itSelf-appointed<lb/>
'experts'  or (professional schol-<lb/>
ars equipped with proper training<lb/>
in the field of history of Marxist<lb/>
and Communist doctrine. Exper-<lb/>
ience has shown that where re-<lb/>
sponsible educators don't do this<lb/>
job irresponsible rabble-rousers<lb/>
and the ill-informed step in<lb/>
Cov. Sanford's view parallels and<lb/>
amplifies that of Ebenstein and<lb/>
others connected with the ECC ins-<lb/>
titute:<lb/>
"We feel that the Institute has<lb/>
met an important need in our edu-<lb/>
cational (program" because "com-<lb/>
munism cannot survive the bright<lb/>
light and sharp knife of intelli-<lb/>
gent questioning provided by the<lb/>
three weeks of intensive training.<lb/>
The institute, which began July<lb/>
24 and closes August 16, is costing<lb/>
about $25.000?including ECC staff<lb/>
time, $8,500 foundation dollars<lb/>
piped through the Council on Na-<lb/>
tional Purposes, $10350 for 49<lb/>
teachers' scholarships nnrfP<lb/>
?Zmft iSsociation to<lb/>
 fSvelxp and honorar-<lb/>
racDu? Dr. SMFhSS and<lb/>
frTK W. WiUiamss weU<lb/>
?Tthe panel ??JW?lgnS<lb/>
teachers themselves, are nrmJj<lb/>
Wd the institute is a sound<lb/>
JsntHoweU and William.<lb/>
definitely plan to cthheerst:<lb/>
frram next year. Many teapt" en<lb/>
rolled in the institute call for ex<lb/>
Teachers attending the instil :t;<lb/>
which carries college credit, unr<lb/>
animously agree .their time has<lb/>
been well spent here. Each of eight<lb/>
LtevTeweddescribed the course<lb/>
aVverv valuable" and outlmed<lb/>
varying plans for spreading the<lb/>
word when they return home<lb/>
Max Padgett, 37, a resident of<lb/>
Forest City and a supervisor in<lb/>
the Rutherford County schools,<lb/>
predicts, as a result of the institute,<lb/>
the addition of a unit on commun-<lb/>
ism to a social studies course in<lb/>
Rutherford's high school curricu-<lb/>
lum. He also calls for a repeated<lb/>
and expanded institute for teach-<lb/>
ers<lb/>
A Rockingham history teacher,<lb/>
4G-year-old Howard Stogner, sees<lb/>
the institute as the first reliable<lb/>
answer to his students' questions<lb/>
on communism. "We have a rule<lb/>
at Rockingham he says, that<lb/>
teachers just don't go into a topic<lb/>
they don't know something about.<lb/>
Two High Point social studies<lb/>
teachers Mrs. Edna Rose Gay, 24,<lb/>
and Miss Lillian Lovings, 23?both<lb/>
teachers at Northeast Junior High<lb/>
?agree the institute provides a<lb/>
unique opportunity . . . "one we<lb/>
have not had before notes Mrs.<lb/>
Bettv Bullard of Asheville's Lee<lb/>
Edwards High calls the institute<lb/>
Help<lb/>
Help! We need reporters,<lb/>
typists, rewriters, columnists,<lb/>
cartoonists, advertising sales-<lb/>
men, telephone answerers, lay-<lb/>
out artists, etc to help with<lb/>
the editing of the EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN. No experience<lb/>
necessary. Another meeting of<lb/>
all those interested in staff<lb/>
membership will be held to-<lb/>
night at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Do you have any future securities?<lb/>
Let me help you set-up and plan<lb/>
your insurance program.<lb/>
Phone . . . Write . . . Visit<lb/>
M. Louis Collie<lb/>
Agent<lb/>
Tetterton Building<lb/>
Office PL 2-7715 Res. PL 8-1576<lb/>
New York Life Insurance Company<lb/>
Life Insurance Group Insurance Annuities<lb/>
Health Insurance Pension Plans<lb/>
"the finest thing ever <lb/>
She says she can g0 h V<lb/>
pared to "add material t i<lb/>
courses  Ar?i CiV<lb/>
awful lot of my pupjiM<lb/>
know about this kind ?t Xi<lb/>
Mario Clybum, n&amp;<lb/>
structor at OiariotteVu -<lb/>
Sainrh Junior High, agJV<lb/>
arv I harlotte social <lb/>
teach m Pat. Pitts of u9 <lb/>
Junior High, on a k S<lb/>
criticism of the instrtu?TVN<lb/>
be lortjrer says Miss Pit ?<lb/>
Department Hoft<lb/>
Geography Meet<lb/>
The Geography Departs<lb/>
conducting a seminar on up2l<lb/>
in Educational (,eographv7<lb/>
tinue until A i - i6 <lb/>
conjunction wit ? , q<lb/>
Research Institute. a divisi<lb/>
Denoyer-Gepnen Cont<lb/>
capo, the seminar is des<lb/>
? content and methods V<lb/>
in greography instruction. "<lb/>
Class and Isboraten se<lb/>
cover such t pics as mapTll<lb/>
lobes anrt their use  ??.<lb/>
mathematical versus<lb/>
graphy, physical and c<lb/>
patterns, and historical g<lb/>
and its place in social s:<lb/>
phasLs k given to the t<lb/>
the United States in wo;<lb/>
Dr. Bale E. Case and Dr. (<lb/>
ence B. Oriel 1 of the 0<lb/>
Research Ir?stitut are<lb/>
the staff of the ro week seat<lb/>
Participants were United ?u<lb/>
lect gToup of trradrnt<lb/>
from North Carolina. Yirr.ra,<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED<lb/>
FOR SALE; I960 T-Bsrc<lb/>
Convertible, fully eqnippd<lb/>
Call Sam Hudson. WM?<lb/>
Trailer Court. PL 2-6296.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1961 to<lb/>
Craft Mobile Home. One B<lb/>
room. 36 ft. by 10 ft. Q<lb/>
Mike Bonner. PL 6-1322<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1948 Plynwa.<lb/>
4-door sedan. Excellent nossj<lb/>
condition and body. Call PL!<lb/>
'3317 after 6:00 p. m.<lb/>
Campos-and-Career Belts 2.50<lb/>
finishing touch that rings of traditional Ivy auth.fr<lb/>
n?. k u With Polihed brass side rings and hor-<lb/>
wilh r"c,k,e$??ner? that lace saddle-stitched leath<lb/>
morelk .ai,m9 SUede- Cordurayi. oxford cloth and<lb/>
- 'none ?ore lhan this Archdale-iaw $2,501<lb/>
??????? wmum<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0005"/><lb/>
potential Pirates Perform<lb/>
la East-West All-Star Game<lb/>
t:<lb/>
, records, the outstanding<lb/>
I, and the first victory<lb/>
m went to the East<lb/>
S iKtt the West 13-7 in<lb/>
Efesft-W eat A11 - Star<lb/>
Greendbono last Thurs-<lb/>
?<lb/>
. ! time the East team<lb/>
.Kick Foloy, Green-<lb/>
back, scampered 67 yards<lb/>
n. The run by Foley<lb/>
stance record of 61<lb/>
in 1968 bs Bill Burgess<lb/>
dty.<lb/>
Bast touchdown<lb/>
v-?r i quarter on a<lb/>
tchoul to Poley that<lb/>
' 7-play, 67-yard strike<lb/>
men. At halftdme the<lb/>
? 13-0.<lb/>
ard drive the West<lb/>
only touchdown on<lb/>
? ry of Burlington<lb/>
eik of Hich Point<lb/>
ild muster a drive<lb/>
period.<lb/>
won the Sports<lb/>
;it'jf Player Award,<lb/>
wd for the moat in-<lb/>
Bqe Rjained with 8.7<lb/>
ry.<lb/>
! Fast canvmates<lb/>
mes, a defensive end<lb/>
I n. and Steve<lb/>
naive guard from<lb/>
and a West player,<lb/>
a halfback from<lb/>
r? coming' to Fast<lb/>
sepj . nfher.<lb/>
? rn of East Garo-<lb/>
nded the All-Star<lb/>
ho and other<lb/>
officials who were<lb/>
much impressed<lb/>
- EC is getting<lb/>
??<lb/>
rv<lb/>
Clinic Participation<lb/>
Keeps Coaches Busy<lb/>
? few weeks are busy<lb/>
coaching staff?<lb/>
?? lucting clinics, and<lb/>
ig pre-aeaaon games.<lb/>
V unsant and Bullard<lb/>
etrsity of Richmond<lb/>
lirtjzc a clinic in con-<lb/>
the Virginia Coaches<lb/>
Coach Stasarrich will<lb/>
hall-Baskettoall Clinic<lb/>
liege in Greensboro.<lb/>
4 Ohio State will<lb/>
? speaker.<lb/>
lour outstanding players. The East<lb/>
l agohna athletic staff is negotiat-<lb/>
ing with several other Ail-Star<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
lntramurals Offer<lb/>
Brisk Competition<lb/>
The Has Beens, capably managed<lb/>
by Beasley Jones, moved into an<lb/>
early lead over the men of Lambda<lb/>
Chi and won the opening game of<lb/>
the men's Intramural tournament,<lb/>
12-6. The important first game was<lb/>
1 laved under sunny skies. Jim Floyd<lb/>
was the losing- pitcher; the hard<lb/>
hitting Has Beers proved too much<lb/>
for Floyd. This was a big win for<lb/>
the Has Beens in that the Lambda<lb/>
Chi team has, in years past, been<lb/>
tough to defeat. This was the first<lb/>
game of a two game program. In<lb/>
the final game, it was Theta Chi<lb/>
and the Country Gents having their<lb/>
turn with the bats.<lb/>
The Country Gents suffered their<lb/>
first defeat of the new season at<lb/>
the bands of the Theta Chi nine.<lb/>
Jim Stout was on the hill for Theta<lb/>
Chi and with assistance from his<lb/>
team mates, went all the way to<lb/>
di feat ithe Gents. 7-4. Larry Smith<lb/>
was the losing pitcher. The game<lb/>
was in the balance of the pitchers.<lb/>
Manager Bill Hunt of Theta Chi<lb/>
I icked Stout and in turn, Stout<lb/>
allowed the Gents only four runs<lb/>
foi the afternoon. Over in the<lb/>
other camp, Dave Bumgamer,<lb/>
manager of the Gents, sent Smith<lb/>
to the mound. Smith in losing al-<lb/>
lowed seven runs during: the game.<lb/>
On August 5, Lamibda Chi and<lb/>
Theta Ctii were going for the<lb/>
d was. Lambda Chi won, 13-3. The<lb/>
controlled pitching" of Lambda Chi's<lb/>
I en Goforth was too much for<lb/>
Theta Chi in the first game of a<lb/>
double header. Two homeruns were<lb/>
hit during the game, one for each<lb/>
team. A three run homerun in the<lb/>
third by Theta Chi's Ken Moore<lb/>
was not enough to overcome the<lb/>
early lead built up by Lambda Chi.<lb/>
Two games proved to be too much<lb/>
for the strong Lambda Chi team<lb/>
as they were defeated by the Gen-<lb/>
tlemen from Virginia. Well known<lb/>
Bobby Joyce pitched the Virginia<lb/>
Gentlemen to a close 9 -8 victory<lb/>
over Lam'bda (Chi.<lb/>
swsa<lb/>
K<lb/>
<lb/>
'?<lb/>
?<lb/>
W . ??<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
sr;<lb/>
 J0<lb/>
Mm?<lb/>
Out At Home<lb/>
east Carolinian?thursday, august 8, 1963?5<lb/>
Safe At Home<lb/>
L Bass scores from third to add one more run to his team's total for the afternoon. Each day, Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday, various teams are pitted against each other in Intramural softball competition. Two<lb/>
games are planned for each day during this Summer session.<lb/>
The Word Is<lb/>
College Considers New Rulings<lb/>
?hA result of deduction?the<lb/>
e look of pain on this &amp;JJX STTlLISiS<lb/>
funner knows that he is out. Of ?he bell at him. As it turned oui,<lb/>
d?rin if the catcher is gam to throw<lb/>
toe runner met defeat?he was ow.<lb/>
The word here is that we can<lb/>
soon expect a new ruling on the<lb/>
number of cuts a student may or<lb/>
may not take . . . Several weeks<lb/>
ago we read about a new building<lb/>
program that was to take place<lb/>
here on the campus. As yet, we<lb/>
can not get anyone to say just<lb/>
when construction is to begin . . .<lb/>
Word is that the East Carolina<lb/>
Pirates will defeat the Demon<lb/>
Deacons of Wake Forest by two<lb/>
touchdowns . . ? We have noticed<lb/>
several new books in the ECC<lb/>
library that are currently on the<lb/>
best seller list: "Seven Iays In<lb/>
May "Another Country "Fail-<lb/>
Safe and others to mention a<lb/>
few.<lb/>
Next door at the infirmary the<lb/>
word is that there may be a self-<lb/>
help job opening there . ? ? No<lb/>
words for or against the humps<lb/>
have been expressed for several<lb/>
weeks. We wonder why! Maybe<lb/>
more about this next week . . .<lb/>
Word here is thait work on the<lb/>
fall edition of the REBEL is mov-<lb/>
ing along nicely. REBEL Editor<lb/>
Jack Willis looks busy these days;<lb/>
no comment from Jack this week<lb/>
. . W7e got word from Eleanor<lb/>
Poole, editor of the "Big Buc<lb/>
that several pages of next year's<lb/>
book has been sent to the print-<lb/>
ers ? - ? Word is that a new and<lb/>
revised edition of THE KEY is<lb/>
in the making . . . Scoop: New<lb/>
ruling on VIP old ruling will be<lb/>
found in the new edition.<lb/>
The Christy Minstrels are sched-<lb/>
uled to be on campus for Home-<lb/>
coming ? ? ? Sadly, the word is that<lb/>
Ray Charles wnll not be able to<lb/>
be here until sometime in Feb-<lb/>
ruary . . . Word is that Mr. Julian<lb/>
was faced with the prob-<lb/>
lem of people putting salt in the<lb/>
sugar jars; no wonder the tea had<lb/>
a bad taste for a few days  In<lb/>
the Music Building, the word is<lb/>
that the band is planning a trip<lb/>
to Washington, D. C. this Fall . . .<lb/>
The word from Doug Grumpier is<lb/>
that the new band uniforms will<lb/>
be here around ithe first of Sep-<lb/>
tember . . . Ann Barbee, managing<lb/>
editor of this paper, said she just<lb/>
got her clarinet back from the<lb/>
factory. We asked if she blew<lb/>
Notice<lb/>
All organizations who have re-<lb/>
ceived appropriations of student<lb/>
funds from the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association are requested to<lb/>
make final financial plans for the<lb/>
rest of the summer term. All re-<lb/>
quisitions for further expenditures<lb/>
must be in by August 15. Any or-<lb/>
ganization planning activities be-<lb/>
tween August 15 and August 29<lb/>
which call for student fund ex-<lb/>
penditures must requisition for<lb/>
these funds by August 15. No re-<lb/>
quisitions will be accepted after<lb/>
this date. Any expenditures not<lb/>
roroperly requisitioned are the<lb/>
personal bills of those persons<lb/>
ma-kin the expenditures.<lb/>
It is necessary to have all lyo-<lb/>
1963 fiinancial records for the SGA<lb/>
campleted so that the books can<lb/>
be prepared for the yearly audit.<lb/>
Spencer Knight, Treasurer<lb/>
By Joe Brannon<lb/>
the "insides" out of it; we got an<lb/>
emphatic NO for an answer.<lb/>
Our new Sports Editor, Dave<lb/>
Entzaninger, says if he can't have<lb/>
his own chair and desk, that he<lb/>
will have his own personal ash<lb/>
tray.<lb/>
Word is that there wTas a very<lb/>
important meeting held under the<lb/>
new stadium last week. This re-<lb/>
porter later found out that the<lb/>
meeting, attended by the North<lb/>
Carolina Highway Patrol, The<lb/>
Greenville City Police, and ECC<lb/>
Police, was held to discuss ways<lb/>
and means of preventing traffic<lb/>
hazards that could occur when<lb/>
large crowds attend functions at<lb/>
the new stadium . . . Another word<lb/>
from the cafeteria is that during<lb/>
a quarter, forty-two girls hold<lb/>
self-help jobs in the lunch rooms,<lb/>
however, many more jobs are<lb/>
open for girls that would like such<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Confidential: Word is that more<lb/>
happened at a certain meeting last<lb/>
week than those that were there<lb/>
iire willing to tell about; more<lb/>
labout this next wreek . . . That's<lb/>
"The Word Is" for this week as<lb/>
we know it, until next tune, re-<lb/>
member, one good turn gets most<lb/>
ef the blanket.<lb/>
DELICIOUS FOOD<lb/>
SERVED 24 HOURS<lb/>
Air Conditioned<lb/>
Carolina Grill '<lb/>
Corner W. 9th &amp; Dickinson<lb/>
A NEW BOOK STORE!<lb/>
OOK<lb/>
arn<lb/>
"Most Unique Book Store in the Southeast'<lb/>
123 East 5th Street<lb/>
Study aids?the short cut to better grades.<lb/>
)<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0006"/><lb/>
6?east Carolinian?thursday, august 8, 1963<lb/>
i<lb/>
ySac tMsrwu<lb/>
?:??:? : S??$<lb/>
;??:???:??:?:?:? N w.<lb/>
wx; ?.??<lb/>
S?-s ??<lb/>
.&amp;<lb/>
S<lb/>
N?WKK<lb/>
Miss Bonnie Tharrington<lb/>
Rocky Mount boasts this week's "Buc Beauty "A real doll attributes<lb/>
those who know her. Bonnie Tharrington stands sixty-one inches tall,<lb/>
thirteen inches shorter than the reigning Miss North Caro-<lb/>
lina, but we bet there's real quality to every inch of this personable<lb/>
"cutie She's a student at Sacred Heart Junior College nine months per<lb/>
year, but finds East Carolina just the place to spend her summers "get-<lb/>
ting ahead A constant source of amusement to Bonnie is Wright<lb/>
Fountain which she considers "part of a vast propaganda movement on<lb/>
the part of detergent manufacturers She tells us that she wants<lb/>
what every woman wants?marriage?but we maintain she's just too<lb/>
much to be wasted on one guy.<lb/>
Geography Department Offers<lb/>
New Minor To AB Students<lb/>
the A. B. progTam with a major<lb/>
in geography, political scietnce, or<lb/>
sociology. This pre-professional de-<lb/>
&amp;ree trains graduates for positions<lb/>
in planning or development agen-<lb/>
cies and prepares them for grad-<lb/>
uate work leading to a master's<lb/>
degree in planning<lb/>
The curriculum consists of forty-<lb/>
Effective June 1, the Geography<lb/>
lepartmenit initiated a new minor<lb/>
whicJi is available to students in<lb/>
'Big Three' Sign<lb/>
Test Ban Treaty<lb/>
What was termed an import-<lb/>
ant step towards the lessening of<lb/>
inftemaldonal tensions and the<lb/>
strengthening of peace took place<lb/>
Monday when the United States,<lb/>
Great Britain, and the Soviet Un-<lb/>
ion signed a partial nuclear test<lb/>
ban treaty.<lb/>
Secretary of State Dean Rusk<lb/>
stated, "Our three governments<lb/>
have today (Monday) taken what<lb/>
all mankind must hope will be the<lb/>
first step on the road to a secure<lb/>
and peaceful world It was stated<lb/>
in a coirtmannique by the three<lb/>
(powers that they "have stressed<lb/>
their hope that further progress<lb/>
?will be achieved toward that end<lb/>
The treaty was called by Lord<lb/>
Home, British foreign secretary,<lb/>
a "breakthrough in relations be-<lb/>
tween our countries Other state-<lb/>
ments seemed to indicate that the<lb/>
powers believed that nuclear war<lb/>
was impossible, but Dean Rusk<lb/>
stated tha,t "it does not end the<lb/>
threat<lb/>
Premier Khrushchev of the Sov-<lb/>
iet Union listened with rapt at-<lb/>
tention to the words of the for-<lb/>
eign ministers immediately after<lb/>
signing the treaty, but made no<lb/>
official statement himself.<lb/>
The ban affects underwater,<lb/>
space, and atmospheric testing<lb/>
but does not eliminate under-<lb/>
ground nuclear blasts.<lb/>
two hours of required courses in<lb/>
economics, political science, math-<lb/>
ematics, sociology, and geography.<lb/>
Secialized courses in geography<lb/>
include urban geography, urban<lb/>
and regional planning, principles<lb/>
of urban site design, land devel-<lb/>
opment, and techniques of field<lb/>
geography. In addition (to the<lb/>
course work, pre-professional mi-<lb/>
nors will attend scheduled semin-<lb/>
ars organized by the newly-form-<lb/>
ed Institute for Research in Reg-<lb/>
ional Development. These meet-<lb/>
ings will be (part of the Institute's<lb/>
work in research and aid to plann-<lb/>
ing and development agencies on<lb/>
the coastal plain.<lb/>
The need for well-qualified plan-<lb/>
ners is acute, particularly here in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. Planners<lb/>
are employed by cities, counties,<lb/>
states, and the federal government,<lb/>
as well as by industrial and inde-<lb/>
pendent planning firms. Every year<lb/>
there are about twice as many jobs<lb/>
available as there are qualified<lb/>
professional graduates. The De-<lb/>
partment of Geography has placed<lb/>
many .students in this field with<lb/>
starting salaries of $6,000.<lb/>
The Department has consulted<lb/>
various planndmg schools and cer-<lb/>
tain individual planners before ap-<lb/>
proving the program. Anyone in-<lb/>
terested in the program may con-<lb/>
tact Professor (Richard Stephenson,<lb/>
a professional planner, for addit-<lb/>
ional information.<lb/>
News Briefs<lb/>
Who's Who'<lb/>
iDr. Clinton R. Prewett, director<lb/>
of the Psychology Department,<lb/>
will be included in a career bio-<lb/>
graphical sketch in the 1963-liK4<lb/>
Edition of "Who's Who in Ameri-<lb/>
ca Volume 33, a publication of<lb/>
Marquis:Who's Who, Inc of Chi-<lb/>
cago. He is the author of num-<lb/>
erous published articles for pro-<lb/>
fessional journals. He won the<lb/>
top award for "Hunters and Find-<lb/>
ers" in the short story competi-<lb/>
tion of the N. ?. Writers' Contest<lb/>
this year, and his story was also<lb/>
reamed the best all-round entry.<lb/>
His "Joe Melvin" won the top<lb/>
short story award in the contest<lb/>
sponsored by the Greenville Fine<lb/>
Arts Festival this Spring.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Ourtists May. assistant manager<lb/>
of the Student Supply Stores, is<lb/>
in Oberlin, Ohio, this week at-<lb/>
tending the National Association<lb/>
for College Stores Management<lb/>
Seminar. This is May's first year<lb/>
at the seminar. To graduate, he<lb/>
must attend the seminar one week<lb/>
for two years. Joseph Clark, mana-<lb/>
ger of the Stores, graduated last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
 <lb/>
According to Dr. David Davis,<lb/>
head of the Math Department, the<lb/>
1063-64 class of freshmen appear<lb/>
to have had better preparation in<lb/>
math during their high school<lb/>
years than any former class of<lb/>
freshmen has ever displayed. As<lb/>
reflected by scores made on en-<lb/>
trance exams, these students have<lb/>
excelled over all prospective stu-<lb/>
dents before them in tests, which<lb/>
are this year even more difficult.<lb/>
 <lb/>
The Foreign Language Depart-<lb/>
ment has 'heard from the two<lb/>
foreign exchange students from<lb/>
Switzerland and South America<lb/>
who will be here on scholarships<lb/>
this coming fall. The two students<lb/>
will be aid:ng the department in<lb/>
such capacities as language lab<lb/>
assistants, as well as obtaining ed-<lb/>
ucation through the facilities of<lb/>
East Carolina College.<lb/>
 0<lb/>
Clark Trivett of Elk Park has<lb/>
been appointed as a mathematics<lb/>
instructor in the East. Carolina<lb/>
Seymour Johnson-Wayne Countv<lb/>
Center. Trivette is a 1962 B.S. and<lb/>
a 1963 M. A. degree graduate of<lb/>
Appalachian State Teachers Col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
 <lb/>
On Sunday, July 28, senior stu-<lb/>
dent nurses from the East Caro-<lb/>
lina School of Nursing here left<lb/>
for a six-week training period at<lb/>
the Veterans Hosnital at Oteen.<lb/>
Pika Pup<lb/>
This lovable little puppy is one of<lb/>
the new residents of the Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Alpha House. "Her" name is<lb/>
Melvin. Seems that she was named<lb/>
after a stray dog also named Mel-<lb/>
vin. Tony Gross is the proud own-<lb/>
er of this seven-week-old pup.<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN photograph-<lb/>
er Joe Brannon took the photo<lb/>
while one of the Pika pledges was<lb/>
"out walking the dog<lb/>
?<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
Buy from Greenville's only Registered Jeweler.<lb/>
Special Credit Terms for E. C. C. Students<lb/>
Lautares Jewelers<lb/>
414 Evans Street<lb/>
????jUAAAAAAAAA<lb/>
Honors Psychology Dit<lb/>
This is the 1'irst flroup.of ttudert<lb/>
nurses from fcaat Carohna to par-<lb/>
ticipate in this field of trainm.<lb/>
m <lb/>
UisB Barbara Pay Adartw of 1<lb/>
taod assumed her duties as As-<lb/>
sistant Profeaaor of Uedica 1-Mir-<lb/>
ical Nunun in the Bast Caro-<lb/>
lU School of Nursing July I She<lb/>
Una Mwui  ,  n :<lb/>
attended Winthrop Collage and<lb/>
Duke University, where she re-<lb/>
ceived her Bachelor of Sconce rle-<lb/>
g.ree in Nursincr. After receiv<lb/>
the Masters decree in P<lb/>
Health from the University<lb/>
North Carolina, she taught foi<lb/>
years in the James Walker" M<lb/>
orial Hospital School of Nunsw r<lb/>
in Wilmington.<lb/>
 <lb/>
This fall the Foreign Langu . ?<lb/>
Home Ec Staff<lb/>
Attends Meeting<lb/>
Dr. Miriam Moore, Director, and<lb/>
Miss Alice Strawy of the home<lb/>
economics department, ami Mrs.<lb/>
Ma.bel Hail, assistant state ! iper-<lb/>
visor of home economics educa-<lb/>
tion, are participating- in a Voca-<lb/>
tional Home Economics Conference<lb/>
at the University of North Caro-<lb/>
lina at Greensboro this week.<lb/>
Dr. Moore, selected as one orf<lb/>
the featured speakers, will di-<lb/>
"Coneeptg and Family Relations<lb/>
Miss S&amp;rawai will report on the<lb/>
"Housing, dome Furnishings, and<lb/>
Equipment" Workshop which was<lb/>
held at Oklahoma State Universi-<lb/>
ty this spring In relating I ? ex-<lb/>
periences there, she has chosen<lb/>
as her topic "Concepts in Housing<lb/>
und Home Furnishinfirs<lb/>
During the conference, Mrs. Hall<lb/>
will supervise a Teacher-Planning<lb/>
Conference for the coming year<lb/>
with the vocational home econom-<lb/>
ics teachers in the Northeastern<lb/>
area of North Carolina.<lb/>
The conference goafe are bo Id<lb/>
entify concepts in home economics<lb/>
teaching; to examine ways of de-<lb/>
veloping concepts; to increase un-<lb/>
derstanding- of ways to incorporate<lb/>
concepts ir?:o teaching; to plan for<lb/>
enriching the program tihrough<lb/>
further work in this approach to<lb/>
teaching; to plan more concrete<lb/>
vas to interpret home econofi<lb/>
ics to the public; and to give em-<lb/>
phasis to the correlation of the<lb/>
youth program with the total<lb/>
home economics program.<lb/>
repai<lb/>
e ol<lb/>
foreign<lb/>
thirty m-co<lb/>
ready ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
or<lb/>
n <lb/>
.? .<lb/>
- <lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Cor. Fifth iid i0UlkJ<lb/>
Dedtc<lb/>
A 1<lb/>
MARIE'S<lb/>
DRESS SBd<lb/>
422 EVANSr<lb/>
CLEARANCE<lb/>
S A L E !<lb/>
Dresses J ? Price<lb/>
Use Our LrA-Wav Fxil<lb/>
$1.00 will<lb/>
?Also?<lb/>
Sport -v.<lb/>
Blouses - Suite - ?<lb/>
Lii '<lb/>
Roy's Barber Shop<lb/>
West End Circle<lb/>
Where ECC Students Meei<lb/>
Open Wednesday Afternoon<lb/>
Air (<lb/>
?ije JUthskclln-<lb/>
two r, 0udh- Presents<lb/>
1Hh PREMIER PERFORMANCE<lb/>
renL? RAIN6 SINGERS<lb/>
ui Stmaon Bruce Alexander<lb/>
August 10 and 11-9:00 p.m.<lb/>
(75c Cover Charge)<lb/>
<pb facs="00038830_0007"/>
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