<?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="00038852_0001"/>
8<lb/>
i<lb/>
ae XL<lb/>
cast Carolina college, greenville, n. c friday, december 4, 1964<lb/>
number 22<lb/>
Pirates Venture Fo<lb/>
Tangerine Bow Dec. 12<lb/>
Train Tickets Still Available<lb/>
Pirates To Play In 19th Tangerine Bowl<lb/>
Game<lb/>
i4'<lb/>
Dec. 5 Last Day To Get<lb/>
Tickets For Bowl Game<lb/>
&amp; jitb<lb/>
Pirate fans, don't wait until the<lb/>
last minute to purchase your re-<lb/>
served seat ticket on the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Pirates Special Train to the<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl game in Orlando,<lb/>
Florida. This special train of<lb/>
streamBned, recliningMseat coaches,<lb/>
a tavern-lounge, and &amp; dining car<lb/>
on the return trip will take East<lb/>
Carolina Pirates fan and the Pirates<lb/>
Marching Band to Orlando, Florida,<lb/>
and back in relaxed comfort. All<lb/>
day Saturdlay, December 12, can be<lb/>
spent sightseeing before the game<lb/>
that night.<lb/>
Purchase your tickets now while<lb/>
seats are stiill available, from the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office, East Carolina<lb/>
College; from MacDorn Travel<lb/>
Agency in Greenville; or from any<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Line office. Passen-<lb/>
gers may board the train at Green-<lb/>
viUie, Bethel, Rocky Mount, Wilson,<lb/>
or Fayetteville. Both student and<lb/>
adult accommodations will be avail-<lb/>
able.<lb/>
December 5 is the deadline. Re-<lb/>
member! Support the (Parates. Get<lb/>
your ticket for the Pirates Special<lb/>
to the Tangerine Bowl today.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038852_0002"/><lb/>
2east Carolinianfriday, december 4, 1964<lb/>
<lb/>
congratulations<lb/>
The mighty pigskin Pirates have received applause from<lb/>
near and far for earning the bid to the Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
However, due to the Thanksgiving holiday, the East<lb/>
Carolinian has yet to bestow its congratulations.<lb/>
When Dr. Leo W. Jenkins announced this institution's<lb/>
crash progress program and the beginning of E C's "big time"<lb/>
athletic program, possibly even he had no conception that the<lb/>
schorl would be this big . . . this soon.<lb/>
When Coach Clarence Stasavich came to East Carolina,<lb/>
bringing with him his brilliant record, possibly even he had<lb/>
no idea that this schools sports would be this big . . . this<lb/>
soon.<lb/>
And when the Redmen of the University of Massachu-<lb/>
setts meet the Pirates, possibly even they won't have realized<lb/>
how big the P and G players can become  so soon.<lb/>
To Mr Stas the players and the many, many persons<lb/>
making this wonderful event possible, the East Carolinian<lb/>
offers its heartiest congratulations and a truckload of Tan-<lb/>
gerines when vou overcome the Redmen from the North.<lb/>
whoever it is<lb/>
Letters To The<lb/>
EDITOR<lb/>
To The Editor: . , n.<lb/>
Probably you have fi<lb/>
aed an artjde .about Jg<lb/>
train planned for the ,rSS<lb/>
Bowl game. I am writing to express<lb/>
the hope that somehow wecM bring<lb/>
this proposal into the realm of real<lb/>
itv<lb/>
As I write this note, only about<lb/>
25ckets have been sold, above the<lb/>
135 or so covering transportat ions<lb/>
for the Marching Band-end Me<lb/>
the SGA for providing f"ndsJ?Jhft<lb/>
EC might be nicely reoresented at<lb/>
the Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
Unless some last-minute enthusi-<lb/>
asm for the train develops, however<lb/>
the 350 required tickets may not be<lb/>
sold. Certainly Stt.40, to most stu-<lb/>
dents is not chicken feed: but vve<lb/>
must bear in mind that a l;00-mUe<lb/>
round trip is bound to cost some-<lb/>
thing! $31.40 is several dollars less<lb/>
than regular fare from Rxcky Mount<lb/>
to Orlando and back, and it is con-<lb/>
siderably less than the required<lb/>
for a seat on the proposed charter<lb/>
plane. And the train affords time<lb/>
and space to relax, to sleep to en-<lb/>
joy refreshments in the club car,<lb/>
and to become acquainted with tei-<lb/>
Tow students. The drive from here<lb/>
to Orlando, on the other hand, is a<lb/>
grueling 15-hour ordeal, at best.<lb/>
Route 17 from Savannah to Orlando<lb/>
is two lanes with innumerable<lb/>
curves, making passing practically<lb/>
impossible because of its heavy<lb/>
traffic. Route 301 is mostly two lanes,<lb/>
also, with some segments under con-<lb/>
struction. I speak from repeated ex-<lb/>
perience. ,<lb/>
Another point: imagine the put<lb/>
licitv value, from Massachusetts to<lb/>
Florida, of a special train from East<lb/>
Carolina College to the Tangerine<lb/>
Bowl game!<lb/>
Sincerely yours.<lb/>
Robert R. Morrison<lb/>
Relieved and wonderful thanks are in order for the ad-<lb/>
ministration, maintenance or whoever it was that, after much<lb/>
due consideration (about a years worth), finally decided that<lb/>
it was rime to extend the sidewalk in the Tenth Street parking<lb/>
lot.<lb/>
Alas' No longer must one trot gently through the mud<lb/>
in order to partake of treasured knowledge gained in an eight<lb/>
a.m. class.<lb/>
Also there must be some mention of the beautiful job<lb/>
now being done on the curve beside the Gymnaisum. Probab-<lb/>
ly this too is due to much forethought the administration,<lb/>
maintenance or whoever it was that devised this revised curve.<lb/>
Previously, many of the modern "tiger-tanked" autos<lb/>
found this curve barely comprehensible . . . even at the speeds<lb/>
provoked bv much loved slow humps.<lb/>
Thanks, thanks, thanks for these brilliantly calculated WofrV . hp RllCS<lb/>
solutions to such magnanimous problems. ttivu i iw <lb/>
There are, however, a few minor, yet interesting prob-<lb/>
lems not yet dealt with by the administration, maintenance or<lb/>
whoever it is . . . that cares for such matters. There is that<lb/>
small problem of a sidewalk between the Gymnasium and<lb/>
Rawl Building  and that barely visible problem of parking<lb/>
space for students  and that minute problem of the ' cut<lb/>
system Good luck to the administration, maintenance or<lb/>
whoever it is  in solving these problems.<lb/>
TO THE STUDENT: Sing this article to the tune of<lb/>
Holy, Holy, Holy and give your support to the administration,<lb/>
maintenance or whoever it is  . . .<lb/>
Rack<lb/>
The<lb/>
PRSFeSSIon<lb/>
STCDEHT<lb/>
6V MN MAflWfV<lb/>
Ad?<lb/>
Bob Brouses<lb/>
By BOB<lb/>
and mine- Frew. w dis.<lb/>
w0uW be betwr tit r<lb/>
and catch up onto  .<lb/>
am epbcmg  1 <lb/>
"wrSf.2 . m <lb/>
Fnou-h Wroductioa. tor  "<lb/>
, ' Ut dawn to the bmm '<lb/>
,Ua current affairs colunuv<lb/>
 . , . hold many 0 M<lb/>
"v- past  ml'   , ,<lb/>
;  for our "<lb/>
SZ were exam TU-dW then-<lb/>
eaVcHi.ehere<lb/>
XL: Thurs,a t I turt<lb/>
galow (or every th:t <lb/>
 . f the week v<lb/>
home. The rest of U <lb/>
dead: with the exception ol Mtif.<lb/>
NWhiie the majority t jrwi <lb/>
at home on Ibantafi your de<lb/>
columns waa in the Memon.<lb/>
ditonum in Raton I went b <lb/>
and hear the famous James Brown<lb/>
and company. There m<lb/>
good people Hiere from EC. b(<lb/>
mysei. and we dad enjoy the en-<lb/>
tire performance. The show started<lb/>
a' u-oi) with the orchestra enter-<lb/>
taining for an hour before Brown<lb/>
appeared. The orchestra was com-<lb/>
posed of fifteen pieces: four lax,<lb/>
four trumpets, three drummers, two<lb/>
guitars, one organist, and one<lb/>
rector. These players were qun<lb/>
good. At 10:00 James Brown enter-<lb/>
tained for about an hour. He did<lb/>
not say one single word but only<lb/>
sat and played the organ When he<lb/>
finished he merely got up and walk-<lb/>
ed off. For the next hour we were<lb/>
entertained by The Famous Flame.<lb/>
BROWN<lb/>
AJUM K.iiKT p,<lb/>
James Crawford, Al i<lb/>
Five Koya<lb/>
tweht<lb/>
an  ' - gl<lb/>
I ton <lb/>
ber ted for <lb/>
rhsd i<lb/>
a<lb/>
Th -<lb/>
f.gli<lb/>
 f the<lb/>
he ut in tean aod s<lb/>
knees. Fin <lb/>
i.and pi<lb/>
iMft<lb/>
r r<lb/>
v. ,uS St<lb/>
h- Bro<lb/>
mi hus'i <lb/>
<lb/>
d taV :<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
0 the n- tob<lb/>
n  The I<lb/>
and ever<lb/>
Th.<lb/>
.city end two-think of tj<lb/>
ere ware nej -tie<lb/>
three doi<lb/>
  . - <lb/>
h- .<lb/>
i <lb/>
da<lb/>
Well<lb/>
for tins<lb/>
so plea- -<lb/>
used to f t<lb/>
all be grxxi<lb/>
tw'tme w im, iu w. iit m<lb/>
PvbltelMd Wwxklj by th ttudants of iMt Cuolu<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Carolinaa GoUeriate Praas Anocitkn<lb/>
Associated OoDeffimte Praaa<lb/>
Offlcaa on third floor of Wrfcrbft Boilding<lb/>
Robert Doneen<lb/>
Asaociate Editor I Lynda Robbing<lb/>
Bnaineaa Manager I Pam Hall<lb/>
Subscription ratet $5.00 per year<lb/>
MmSBna Address: Box 2516, Eaat Carolina College Station, GreenWDe, North<lb/>
Telephone, aHl departments, PL 2-5716 or 768-5426. extension 264<lb/>
Redmen<lb/>
Of<lb/>
UMasSe<lb/>
At<lb/>
Orlando<lb/>
December 12<lb/>
Campus Bulletin<lb/>
FRIDAY:<lb/>
8:00 Varsity basketball  Gym<lb/>
7:00 Movies  "30 YEARS OF<lb/>
FUN" Austin<lb/>
PITT "HE RIDES TAUL<lb/>
STATE "PAJAMA PABTY"<lb/>
SATURDAY:<lb/>
7:00 Movie  "30 YEARS OF<lb/>
FUN"<lb/>
PITT "HE RUDES TALL'<lb/>
STATE "PAJAMA PARTY"<lb/>
SUNDAY  WRK5MT 7:00<lb/>
prrr "kitten with a whip<lb/>
STATE "PiAJAMA PARTY"<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
4:00 Ooltege Unkm iM!eet&amp;ig  C.U<lb/>
8:00 Varsity BasfcethaOl  Gym<lb/>
PITT "KITTEN WITH A WHIP"<lb/>
STATE "PAJAMA PARTY"<lb/>
TUESDAY:<lb/>
3:00 Beginners Bridge<lb/>
PITT "K1TT1EN WHTH A WHIP"<lb/>
STATE PAJAIMA P1AJRTY-<lb/>
Up From<lb/>
Conservatism<lb/>
By WAYNE CLARK<lb/>
The Republican Party is  sernxis<lb/>
U'ouble, and unfortunately the ul-<lb/>
tra-conser-at:es in control of it<lb/>
either underestimate thfe trouble or<lb/>
are indifferent to it. They hang on<lb/>
to mle dreams of '68 even though<lb/>
the American people QMerwtoeiming-<lb/>
1 rejected their extreme political<lb/>
philosophy. For the Sake of the<lb/>
GOP we would kike bo Bee nxxiera1<lb/>
such as William Scranton. George<lb/>
F.omney, and Nesn Rockefeller<lb/>
back in posrtions of leadership It<lb/>
Was no accident that Richard Vxon.<lb/>
a reasonable and politicailv moder-<lb/>
ate man. pollexl almost half of tbe<lb/>
total vote cast in the presidential race<lb/>
of 1960. We like the two-partv svstem<lb/>
It has worked well for our" country<lb/>
and it has many advantages. It wxuld<lb/>
be a shame for Barry and the Boy<lb/>
to wreck it.<lb/>
For some forty year J. EdfV<lb/>
Hoover has done a fme job of<lb/>
Samzmg and directing the Fed-<lb/>
crLcism In jpmm to mum of<lb/>
his critics. Mr. Hoover has <lb/>
Martin liPre? C0Urt- and Dr"<lb/>
-Martin Luther Km? it LS Mv t,<lb/>
see why Mr Hoover deflS?y <lb/>
crime prevenn . m of<lb/>
ment 0 Zn" iaw otlfor-<lb/>
infallible and M? &amp; iS<lb/>
realize this Hoover shruJ<lb/>
 will be interestang tn o k<lb/>
much monev and Li! -<lb/>
American MedicM x Pressure the<lb/>
exert to defo? tl wi'l<lb/>
for the Aged Plan <lb/>
y trodlT <lb/>
after congress cnJi  blU sw<lb/>
"S h the Hou00" maJori<lb/>
tmppoved consihS  <lb/>
 .much SSnfiSL Wou'd<lb/>
najority of ou7 eld311 .for the<lb/>
for tiAir el(erly cit z r<lb/>
"Jng are<lb/>
 .much SSnfiSL Wou'd<lb/>
majority of oueld111 for the<lb/>
V was cornS here the<lb/>
lP1. medi "J"1 to Pay for<lb/>
 fran the<lb/>
Up From<lb/>
Liberalisi<lb/>
-The N  <lb/>
field<lb/>
D  <lb/>
more siA.<lb/>
Whec GcA"crr. r Seor?<lb/>
tenders .<lb/>
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Son-<lb/>
minn<lb/>
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nclud.<lb/>
1-<lb/>
One<lb/>
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In t)<lb/>
mi<lb/>
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nrf f.j Irofi<lb/>
called the <lb/>
en better <lb/>
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Rus!l B <lb/>
Tv w<lb/>
doi the horr<lb/>
ham<lb/>
smell J <lb/>
Tie was n<lb/>
nlv he - i 2<lb/>
- crorv<lb/>
mood LRT vho<lb/>
det Ttki<lb/>
across h?<lb/>
;wl(; IX<lb/>
-Senator t<lb/>
plans for re m?<lb/>
rewspoper coluTrm<lb/>
nated for the p<lb/>
raiurnnist Art Budjj<lb/>
t( a h-porh' "JT<lb/>
pi ce at KFlIO eg<lb/>
local 235 on the <lb/>
Hj.rry has the quan1<lb/>
come a member<lb/>
"The first QJT<lb/>
stick to the facts<lb/>
the members ;<lb/>
W-ll he er<lb/>
satory?" - ,fNo'<lb/>
Finally. "WM  !Si<lb/>
prejudicea from agT<lb/>
opinions?" "No fl<lb/>
faw m GW " .<lb/>
nin. rd  i<lb/>
don't nr<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038852_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
east Carolinianfriday, december 4, 19643<lb/>
EC Playhouse Rehearses Play;<lb/>
Ginn Takes Part Of'Bee Bee'<lb/>
.use director-producer. Ed Loessin, moves into action with technical<lb/>
John Sneden. The two begin the final rehearsaIn week Sr<lb/>
am production "The Days and Nights of Bee b" FiSer?<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse is<lb/>
now rehearsing its second produc-<lb/>
tion of the year, "The Days and<lb/>
Nights of Beebee Finstenmatoer<lb/>
The play, William Snyder's first,<lb/>
will be presented by a oast of eight<lb/>
nightly from December 9 through<lb/>
the 12 in McGinnris Auduftonium.<lb/>
In the title role is ia junior drama<lb/>
major, Brenda Carole Ginn of Kins-<lb/>
ton. Supporting her are Ross Ann<lb/>
Morris of Richmond, Va as Nettie<lb/>
Jo Repulit; Martha Bradner of<lb/>
Greenville as MeMnda: Jennifer Ce-<lb/>
leste Nielsen of Hillsboro as Betty;<lb/>
(Robert Allen Gooden of Clarkton<lb/>
as Ed Busby; Randolph Castle<lb/>
Cochran of Chesapeake, Va as Bob<lb/>
Smtih: and James Hamilton of Clin-<lb/>
ton as the interviewer.<lb/>
Miss Ginn, as Beebee Fenster-<lb/>
maker. will .portray an adventurous<lb/>
young woman who goes to New York<lb/>
City to live.<lb/>
The play, according to Playhouse<lb/>
Director Edgar R. Loessin, is a<lb/>
"perceptive, touching and often hu-<lb/>
morous" comedy-drama. It achiev-<lb/>
Daughtery Becomes<lb/>
Senior Class Secretary<lb/>
Carol Daughtery of Norfolk, Va<lb/>
has been named secretary of the<lb/>
Senior Class at East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege. She succeeds Sandra Jean<lb/>
Denton of Birmingham. Ala who<lb/>
was elected last spring but recently<lb/>
resigned.<lb/>
ed a record-breaking off-Broadway<lb/>
run and established its author, Sny-<lb/>
der, in the forefront of present-day<lb/>
young American playwrights.<lb/>
After its off-Broadway opening,<lb/>
the New York Times' Howard Taub-<lb/>
man observed: "It has an eye for<lb/>
people as they are: it has a flair<lb/>
for the way people talk: it has<lb/>
flashes of humor and perception<lb/>
The following are brief biographi-<lb/>
cal sketches of the cast for "The<lb/>
Days and Nights of Beebee Fenster-<lb/>
anaker<lb/>
Mrs. Martha Bradner, a regular<lb/>
performer for the Bast Carolina<lb/>
Opera Workshop and a member of<lb/>
(he 1964 EC Summer Theater<lb/>
performing company, is a graduate<lb/>
student in the School of Music at<lb/>
East Carolina.<lb/>
Randy Cochran, a former resi-<lb/>
dent of Swansboro where he grad-<lb/>
uated from high school in 1962, is a<lb/>
junior drama major.<lb/>
Brenda Carle, a 1962 graduate of<lb/>
Kinston's Grainger High School, is<lb/>
a native of Newports News, Va.<lb/>
A transfer from Greensboro Col-<lb/>
lege where she performed with the<lb/>
GC Players, Miss Ginn understudied<lb/>
professional Carolyn Everett during<lb/>
her guest-star appearance as Eliza<lb/>
Doohttle in the EC Playhouse pro-<lb/>
duction of "My Fair Lady" last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
Robert Gooden, a junior drama<lb/>
major, is a 1959 graduate of Clark-<lb/>
ton High School who returned to<lb/>
college this year after interrupting<lb/>
his campus career for professional<lb/>
stage experience. He was produc-<lb/>
tion stage manager for the 1964<lb/>
EC Summer Theater season.<lb/>
James Hamilton, regular perform-<lb/>
er in EC Playhouse productions is<lb/>
a 1959 graduate of Clinton High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
Ross Ann Morris, a junior drama<lb/>
major, has appeared in a number<lb/>
of EC Playhouse productions She<lb/>
is a 1962 graduate of Richmond's<lb/>
George Wythe High School.<lb/>
Jennifer Nielson. the only fresh-<lb/>
man in the cast, is a 1964 graduate<lb/>
of Orange High School in Hills-<lb/>
boro. She is a native of Columbus,<lb/>
Ga<lb/>
Alcoholic Beverage Consumption<lb/>
Increases In Many Varied Ways<lb/>
EC May Receive<lb/>
Bowl Souvenirs<lb/>
rules to the<lb/>
rea may<lb/>
symbolic of tangerines<lb/>
Tanny Hill Details Life<lb/>
Of Prostitute In 1700's<lb/>
picked from limbs<lb/>
 to be delivered<lb/>
i taUege, courtesy<lb/>
.ber of Commerce of<lb/>
- 0 s a good-will<lb/>
welcome East<lb/>
bean bo the cen-<lb/>
The Pirates were<lb/>
ek to play the Uni-<lb/>
ssachnsetts in the<lb/>
B- me m Orlando<lb/>
- souvenirs of Orlando<lb/>
ne Bowl, the foot-<lb/>
be given without<lb/>
v.iLle are persons<lb/>
s supporters of<lb/>
 athletic program.<lb/>
ns, president of<lb/>
3 d friends of East<lb/>
" ; :n receiving the<lb/>
 I contact the col-<lb/>
ne of the trees.<lb/>
mote of Eastern<lb/>
- not generally sui-<lb/>
 p rats, some persons<lb/>
 successfully grown<lb/>
: citrus rees in-<lb/>
Wdat Happened<lb/>
To Our Happiness<lb/>
Let us continue.<lb/>
rOR'S NOTE: The above was<lb/>
tten by sib Fast Carolinian staff<lb/>
daring the week of exams,<lb/>
il remarks added on<lb/>
r day of classes.<lb/>
n. Defeat, Frustrate n.<lb/>
Qskm Otter agony.<lb/>
poss the campus.<lb/>
. sitting m a class-<lb/>
brary, have you noted<lb/>
sions on the faces of fel-<lb/>
ts?<lb/>
 ! of the quarter, one<lb/>
1 exceptionally short,<lb/>
d ffieult.<lb/>
d c n't be re-<lb/>
ne.<lb/>
noened to cause the<lb/>
ry eyes of col-<lb/>
Vccordnig to so-<lb/>
ns, it is the college<lb/>
;noosed to be the<lb/>
 - vable of<lb/>
lifetime. Is this enjoy-<lb/>
th:s happiness0<lb/>
k of working day by<lb/>
f interest, lack of mo-<lb/>
k of proper planning,<lb/>
'he solution?<lb/>
qmrter has started, ons<lb/>
excellent intentions, a<lb/>
Winning. A time for settling<lb/>
md with vigor, approach-<lb/>
he new.<lb/>
11 nw really different is the prosti-<lb/>
tute of 1964 from the prostitute of<lb/>
:49?<lb/>
Having this question as its base<lb/>
iv John Cleland delightfully re-<lb/>
c counts the experiences of Fanny<lb/>
Hill, a prostitute in 18th century<lb/>
England<lb/>
Supposedly written during the time<lb/>
of Boswell and Pope, this novel has<lb/>
more accent' than any of the recent<lb/>
( temporary works. including<lb/>
Terry Southern's Candy or even<lb/>
Peyton Place.<lb/>
The story, told by Fanny, is a<lb/>
i eeoiiection of experiencedthose<lb/>
(: a young naive English country<lb/>
girl who is suddenly thrust into a<lb/>
fast-paced industrial society of<lb/>
lesbians, prostitutes, and fairies.<lb/>
Descriptions of her experiences<lb/>
and bed-mates are especially vivid,<lb/>
possessing T. S. Eliot-like contrasts<lb/>
to appeal to the stock responses.<lb/>
With the same degree of emotion-<lb/>
alism that the Birchers sing<lb/>
America the Beautiful" this book<lb/>
likewise possesses the same degree<lb/>
of Baptist zeal, the them being<lb/>
Sex the Beautiful<lb/>
In addition to this basic contrast<lb/>
appeal, the author employs sensual<lb/>
adjectives and specks of humor.<lb/>
Normally one attempts to tie the<lb/>
 ?v Iv-exDosed with the already-ex-<lb/>
perienced and present. In this case<lb/>
two examples are immediately ob-<lb/>
vin us. First, the Christine Keeler<lb/>
incidentthe only thins lacking<lb/>
:th Fanny being an international<lb/>
scandal.<lb/>
Secondly there is the modern day<lb/>
East Carolin-a coed who has her<lb/>
Greenville "Sugar Daddies" or the<lb/>
over-anxious Freshman who strives<lb/>
too hard 'by my standards to be<lb/>
cepted. And thus, in over-striv-<lb/>
ing destroys herself.<lb/>
According to Mr. Edwards at the<lb/>
Book Bnrn. this controversial book<lb/>
is on the publishers "Black List"<lb/>
and a number of court cases are<lb/>
now pending.<lb/>
One is led to question why is it<lb/>
a controversial book. According to<lb/>
Times there is not a "dirty word"<lb/>
in the entire book.<lb/>
Seemingly those who shout, "evil"<lb/>
fear the influence it will have on<lb/>
virgfa minds, for this book ouestions<lb/>
basic v :lues. thus stimulating<lb/>
THOUGHT.<lb/>
Is society afraid to evaluate and<lb/>
think about its values? Afraid, be-<lb/>
cause many of the standards lack<lb/>
a cement base of worthwhile values?<lb/>
Whit ever the reason, the book is<lb/>
definitely classified as questionable<lb/>
and or debatable.<lb/>
News from a UNC Ed is that if<lb/>
a Carolina coed wants to establish<lb/>
a datable image, she sits on the<lb/>
Pine Room steps, reading Fanny<lb/>
Hill. Maybe the library or Union<lb/>
steps EC coeds?<lb/>
By CARRIE TYSON<lb/>
Anyway, if you want to read<lb/>
about the Memoirs of a Woman of<lb/>
Pleasure. Jack Edwards expects to<lb/>
have in a large supply shortly. Be<lb/>
sure to stop by and get your per-<lb/>
sonal paperback copy! Who knows,<lb/>
maybe it'll help you in some<lb/>
course?<lb/>
Former Professor<lb/>
Resides At Yale<lb/>
Editors Note: The following exert<lb/>
appeared in N. C. State's newspaper<lb/>
just before the Thanksgiving holi-<lb/>
days. Mr. Lowenstein spoke on the<lb/>
EC campus just previous to Nov. 3.<lb/>
The Technician<lb/>
A. Lowenstein. formerly a pro-<lb/>
fessor of Social Studies here, has<lb/>
accepted a position as writer in resi-<lb/>
dence at Yale University.<lb/>
Lowenstein. who returned to State<lb/>
yesterday to "clean up" his office,<lb/>
has spent the past several months<lb/>
campaigning for President Lyndon<lb/>
Johnson. He made cafpaign speeches<lb/>
across the nation for the Democrats.<lb/>
He plans to remain ait Yale for at<lb/>
least a month, where he hopes to<lb/>
begin work on a novel about Missis-<lb/>
sippi.<lb/>
Lowenstein. who resigned from<lb/>
his position here last summer, has<lb/>
traveled throughout the deep South<lb/>
during the past few years working<lb/>
with organizations promoting Civil<lb/>
Rights for Negroes.<lb/>
Hill West Attend<lb/>
Business Law Meet<lb/>
Robert H. West and Colonel Sam<lb/>
T. Hill, professors of Business Law<lb/>
at East Carolina College attended<lb/>
the South Atlantic Regional Business<lb/>
Law Association Meeting in Char-<lb/>
lotte. North Carolina, November<lb/>
12th-14th.<lb/>
The Association is composed of<lb/>
Business Law professors from the<lb/>
South Atlantic states who meet an-<lb/>
nually to give law professors an<lb/>
opportunity to discuss current prob-<lb/>
lems in the legal field.<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
A 1966. B.S. degree class ring of<lb/>
the School's colors was lost in the<lb/>
Soda Shop Wednesday, November<lb/>
25. A reward is offered for its re-<lb/>
turn. Tf found, please contact<lb/>
Charles Terrell or the EAST CARO-<lb/>
LINIAN.<lb/>
NOTICE<lb/>
Christian meeting December<lb/>
7.008:00 P.M. In Y-Hu.<lb/>
10<lb/>
The subject of alcoholic beverages<lb/>
has fascinated writers since the<lb/>
days of the stone tablet and chisel.<lb/>
As a result, there exists a large<lb/>
amount of lore about its use. For<lb/>
5.000 years, at least, a man has al-<lb/>
ways had something handy to offer<lb/>
his friends when they drop inbe it<lb/>
mead, wine, beer, whiskey, gin or<lb/>
vodka.<lb/>
How much do you know about al-<lb/>
coholic beverages? In this 16-ques-<lb/>
tion quiz prepared by the makers<lb/>
of Wolfschmidt Vokda, old and new<lb/>
facts may provide you with some<lb/>
ice-breakers for your next cocktail<lb/>
party:<lb/>
1. Stone Age man was a tee-<lb/>
totaler.<lb/>
False. According to archeologists,<lb/>
the later Stone Age man drank<lb/>
wine and beer. The "brewer before<lb/>
baker" theory holds that he learned<lb/>
to use grain for beer before he<lb/>
learned how to make bread with it.<lb/>
2. In early human societies, the<lb/>
task of making the drinks was al-<lb/>
ways entrusted to the women.<lb/>
False. Women were sometimes<lb/>
barred from the preparation of al-<lb/>
coholic beverages. The custom of<lb/>
the man's mixing the drinks may<lb/>
be our oldest surviving social cus-<lb/>
tom.<lb/>
3. Wages have sometimes been<lb/>
paid off in drinks.<lb/>
True. A clay tablet dating from<lb/>
3000 B. C. and found in Mesopotamia<lb/>
turned out to be a cuneiform "pay-<lb/>
roll When deciphered, it gave the<lb/>
names of persons who were entitled<lb/>
to beer and bread for the day.<lb/>
4. The first liquor manufactured<lb/>
in the American Colonies was on<lb/>
Staten Island.<lb/>
True. William Kieft, Director -Gen-<lb/>
eral of the Netherlands, established<lb/>
a distillery there around 1640. It<lb/>
was taken over by the British in<lb/>
1664. along with the other Dutch<lb/>
possessions in America. The Dutch<lb/>
made gin and brandy there, but<lb/>
the British converted its facilities<lb/>
to the distillation of rum.<lb/>
5. The first Kentucky whiskey was<lb/>
made by a Baptist clergyman.<lb/>
True. He was Elijah Craig, who<lb/>
first made it at Royal Spring, Ken-<lb/>
tucky, in 1789.<lb/>
6. The more alcohol in the liquor,<lb/>
the better your chances are of hav-<lb/>
ing a hangover.<lb/>
False. Alcohol isn't what gives<lb/>
you a hangoverit's the impurities<lb/>
in the alcohol, the "congeners<lb/>
that do it. This is why liquors with<lb/>
few congeners, like vodka, are least<lb/>
likely to give you a hangover. Fur-<lb/>
thermore, as the makers of Wolf-<lb/>
schmidt vodka point out, vodka af-<lb/>
fects a person's breath less than<lb/>
ether aucoholic beverages. And it<lb/>
mav surprise you to learn that<lb/>
vodka has no more alcohol than<lb/>
most other common drinks.<lb/>
7. To be labeled "Scotch" a whis-<lb/>
kev must come from Scotland.<lb/>
False. But scotch whiskey that's<lb/>
not from Scotland must have<lb/>
"scotch tvpe whiskey" on the label.<lb/>
Hen' Scotch whiskey requires a<lb/>
longer aging period than domestic<lb/>
whiskeyseven or eight years. It is<lb/>
sometimes as many as 12 in the<lb/>
case of Chivis Regal Scotch. A do-<lb/>
mestic whiskey may reach maturity<lb/>
in orolv two years.<lb/>
8. Americans drink as much rye<lb/>
whiskey as blends.<lb/>
False. Hardly anyone drinks rye<lb/>
whiskey, mainly because very little<lb/>
of it is made. When someone "orders<lb/>
'rye almost invariablv he means<lb/>
blended whiskey, which is made<lb/>
from rye. The grains that so into<lb/>
biended whiskey, as well as bourbon<lb/>
v.hiskey are, for the most part,<lb/>
corn.<lb/>
9. A whiskey that is 86 proof has<lb/>
43 per cent alcohol by volume.<lb/>
True. Each degree of "proof"<lb/>
means half a per cent of alcohol bv<lb/>
volume. Th- word "proof" comes<lb/>
from the way whiskey was tested<lb/>
m ancient times. Gunpowder was<lb/>
added to the spirits, then a flame<lb/>
and if the mixture didn't ignite it<lb/>
was proved too weak: if it burned<lb/>
too brightly, it was proved too<lb/>
strong.<lb/>
10. The proof of thp midding should<lb/>
be high if you're going to flame it.<lb/>
True. Ronrico, known for its light-<lb/>
bodied. 86 proof White and Gold<lb/>
Label rums, also makes a 151 proof<lb/>
Purple Label rum which it recom-<lb/>
mends especially for flaming. With<lb/>
Purple Label, say its makers, you<lb/>
can even flame ice creamor pre-<lb/>
pare Cherries Jubilee at the table<lb/>
using a casserole over a candle<lb/>
warmer! In many cases, you'll<lb/>
need only half as much Purple<lb/>
Label as would be required of an-<lb/>
other rum or another liquor such<lb/>
as brandy. Other Ronrico sugges-<lb/>
tions: a flaming rum omelette for<lb/>
a midnight supper: for a spectacular<lb/>
entree, lobster or shrimp in a pine-<lb/>
apple-coconut sauce which is flam-<lb/>
ed with rum at the table just be-<lb/>
fore serving.<lb/>
11 The martini was named for a<lb/>
man named Martini.<lb/>
False. His nam? was Alejandro<lb/>
Martinez. Some 60 years ago he<lb/>
was drinking a strange concoction<lb/>
made of gin and vermouth, and got<lb/>
a reputation for it. Bartenders<lb/>
when a patron didn't know what to<lb/>
order, suggested "one of Mr. Mar-<lb/>
tinez drinks And that's how the<lb/>
zebra got his stripes.<lb/>
IS. The manhattan was not invent-<lb/>
ed in Manhattan.<lb/>
False. It was. in 1874 a pre-<lb/>
magural ball was held for New<lb/>
York's Governor-elect Samuel J<lb/>
TiJden at the Manhattan Club on<lb/>
16th Street. The bartender invented<lb/>
the manhattan 'whiskey, sweet ver-<lb/>
mouth and aromatic' bitters in<lb/>
honor of the occasion.<lb/>
13. All American states now per-<lb/>
mit the sale of liquor.<lb/>
False. In Mississippi, it's still<lb/>
illegal.<lb/>
14. The best Champagne is old<lb/>
Champagne.<lb/>
False. The recommended guide:<lb/>
the number and smallness of the<lb/>
bubbles. In general, voung Cham-<lb/>
pagnes are best10 years old or so<lb/>
-because they still have high car-<lb/>
bon ation. and what would Cham-<lb/>
pagne be without bubbles?<lb/>
15. Absinthe - no longer obtain-<lb/>
able today.<lb/>
False. Though banned in France<lb/>
because it contained too much al-<lb/>
ehol, it is now drunk under the<lb/>
name of Pernodalmost the same<lb/>
as absinthe, but with less alcholo.<lb/>
Actually, the worst thing about ab-<lb/>
s nthe is that it inspired what is<lb/>
perhaps the most atrocious pun<lb/>
every punned, to wit: "Absinthe<lb/>
makes the heart grow fonder<lb/>
tt<lb/>
<pb facs="00038852_0004"/><lb/>
4east Carolinianfriday, december 4, 1964<lb/>
Campus Sororities Initiate Girls<lb/>
Into Organizations As Full Sisters<lb/>
January 8 Mark, Night Of fc<lb/>
At Alpha Phi Omega s Whrt <lb/>
This<lb/>
vear the<lb/>
"white hail<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
On November 21, seven co-eds<lb/>
were initiated into the Sisterhood of<lb/>
Gamma Beta chapter of Sig-<lb/>
ma Sigma Sigma sorority. The<lb/>
sixty-six year old rituals climaxed<lb/>
a pledge period of eight weeks.<lb/>
During this period the pledges<lb/>
learned much about their sorority,<lb/>
its history and their responsibilities,<lb/>
and completed both civic and so-<lb/>
cial projects. At a Thanksgiving<lb/>
Dinner Thursday night, the Nu<lb/>
pledges presented the sisters their<lb/>
gifts, chapter directories, bound in<lb/>
the colors and bearing the Greek<lb/>
letters of Sigma.<lb/>
The proud new wearers of the<lb/>
Sigma badge are Patricia Arnold,<lb/>
sophomore from Portsmouth, Va<lb/>
Lisa Green, sophomore from Nor-<lb/>
folk. Va Kathy Howlett. sopho-<lb/>
more from Columbia: Susan Mid-<lb/>
gett, junior from Hatteras: Carr-<lb/>
leeta Redfern. sophomore from Al-<lb/>
bemarle: Cherry Skinner, junior<lb/>
from Greensboro: and Kate Smoot,<lb/>
junior from Tarboro. Sister Pam<lb/>
Waters, Chapter Vice-President,<lb/>
served as Pledge trainer while Carr-<lb/>
leeta Redfern was pledge Presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Betty Jane Foster. Miss Foster is<lb/>
a sophomore voice major at EC and<lb/>
holds membership in<lb/>
Concert Choir.<lb/>
the college<lb/>
and Publicity Committees.<lb/>
Kappa Delta<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
Four coeds were initiated this<lb/>
week into East Carolina College's<lb/>
Gamma Phi Chapter of Alpha Xi<lb/>
Delta, national social sorority.<lb/>
The formal initiation ceremony,<lb/>
which climaxed a two-month pledge<lb/>
period, was held at the Presbyterian<lb/>
Church in Greenville. Preceding the<lb/>
formal induction was a black cere-<lb/>
mony for initiates at the home of<lb/>
Miss Eunice MeGee, sorority ad-<lb/>
visor.<lb/>
One of eight social sororities on<lb/>
the college campus. Alpha Xi Delta<lb/>
has 114 chapters located in the<lb/>
United States. The sorority en-<lb/>
courages the formation of lasting<lb/>
friendship among its members and<lb/>
strives to exert a positive influ-<lb/>
ence at EC.<lb/>
New members of the local chap-<lb/>
ter include:<lb/>
Janice Gail Vaughn Miss Vaughn<lb/>
is a junior elementary major at<lb/>
EC. She served as a student coun-<lb/>
selor during the 196364 Freshman<lb/>
Orientation and as a student coun-<lb/>
selor of Umstead Hall, dormitory<lb/>
for women, last school year.<lb/>
Mary Ella Gaskill. Miss GaskilHs<lb/>
a junior primary education major<lb/>
at EC.<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau Enlists<lb/>
Nine New Pledges<lb/>
Nine students at East Carolina<lb/>
College have been enlisted as<lb/>
pledges for the fall quarter of the<lb/>
Gamma Eta Chapter of Phi Kappa<lb/>
Tau, social fraternity at the col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
Each pledge is undergoing a train-<lb/>
ing period of approximately 12<lb/>
weeks, a prerequisite for full mem-<lb/>
bership in the fraternity<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau Chaplain James<lb/>
Robert Kimsey of Murphy and<lb/>
pledgemaster Willis Allen Separk of<lb/>
Durham conducted the pledge cere-<lb/>
mony at the Baptist Student Union.<lb/>
Richard Clarkson Cox Jr. of Greens-<lb/>
boro, president of the fraternity,<lb/>
presided.<lb/>
New pledges of the local chap-<lb/>
ter are: David Kenneth Riaynor,<lb/>
William (Henry Daniels, William<lb/>
Scott Pearson, Ray Osborn Curtis,<lb/>
Joseph Daniel Rippard, Frederick<lb/>
Steven Bates, James Howard Moss,<lb/>
Angus S. Lamond Jr Marvin Lee<lb/>
Welton.<lb/>
Chi Omega News<lb/>
After a nice Thanksgiving holiday,<lb/>
the Chi Omega sisters are starting<lb/>
the quarter with new subjects and<lb/>
more fun ! ! Already the sisters<lb/>
are getting the Christmas spirit.<lb/>
December 10, the Chi O's are help-<lb/>
ing the Delta Sigmia Pi's give a<lb/>
Christmas party for the under-<lb/>
privileged children. Hie same night,<lb/>
trie sisters and pledges will be deco-<lb/>
rating the Christmas tree and ex-<lb/>
changing gifts.<lb/>
The sisters want to thank the<lb/>
Pika brothers for giving a "boaster"<lb/>
before exiams by giving a party<lb/>
November 16. In return, the Chi 0<lb/>
sisters are inviting the Pika's to go<lb/>
caroling with them. The Pika's can<lb/>
give quite a oartvwonder if they<lb/>
can sing as well<lb/>
The sisters want to congratulate<lb/>
Celia On for being appointed to be<lb/>
on the 9GA Appeals Board and Carol<lb/>
"Daughtery for being nominated<lb/>
Si lior secretary.<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
The East Carolina chapter of Al-<lb/>
oha Delta Pi social sorority has<lb/>
Initiated six new sisters, climaxing<lb/>
for the coeds the traditional pre-<lb/>
requisite period of pledge training.<lb/>
In a formal ceremony conducted<lb/>
by the sorority chapter's president,<lb/>
Nina Virginia Gigi) Guice of<lb/>
Greenville, the six girls became<lb/>
members of the sorority and of the<lb/>
local Delta Omicron Chapter, char-<lb/>
tered at East Carolina in 1959.<lb/>
New ADPi's include: Donna Leflth<lb/>
Stowe, a sophomore in the School<lb/>
of Nursing at EC. Marilyn Jo Tim-<lb/>
beiiake, sophomore home eco-<lb/>
nomics major ait EC, Miss Timber-<lb/>
ltake served as a cheerleader dur-<lb/>
ing her freshman year and as chair-<lb/>
man of the Inter-Dormitory Coun-<lb/>
cil. Karen Lynne Martin, a sopho-<lb/>
more at EC, served during her<lb/>
freshman vear on the staff of the<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN.<lb/>
Madelene Gail (Lynn) Armistead,<lb/>
sophomore education major at EC.<lb/>
Anita Jeannette Zepul, a sophomore<lb/>
business major at EC. She has<lb/>
served as secretary of the Alpha<lb/>
Delta Pi pledge class, and a sen-<lb/>
ator in the Student Government As-<lb/>
sociation. Carolyn Ann Thayer, a<lb/>
junior studying psychology and po-<lb/>
litical science at EC. In extracur-<lb/>
ricular activities, she has served as<lb/>
social chairman of Cotten Hall, and<lb/>
as a member of the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association Entertainment<lb/>
the<lb/>
into<lb/>
Our<lb/>
Brewer,<lb/>
on<lb/>
A<lb/>
wish to thank everyone, muuu- Qpveil<lb/>
the Pi Kaps and Lambda Chi s, VJl <lb/>
We are proud to announce<lb/>
initiation of five new sisters<lb/>
Kappa Delta last Monday nignt<lb/>
new sisters are Lynn JJr<lb/>
Asheville: Kay Crawford, Arlington.<lb/>
Virginia; Janet Daly Goldsboro,<lb/>
Annie Ruth Nixon, Edenton; and<lb/>
Vicki O'Tuel, Goldsboro.<lb/>
The K D's opened the entire we<lb/>
before Homecoming working<lb/>
their float entitled "Look For<lb/>
Star in the Southern Conference<lb/>
We wish to thank everyone.<lb/>
iriCT<lb/>
who helped in'creating such a suc-<lb/>
cessful float.<lb/>
Miss Julie Ober, chapter's spec-<lb/>
ial advisor from Norfolk, Virginia,<lb/>
visited the sorority Nov. 11 through<lb/>
Nov. 13. Her helpful advice and<lb/>
kindness inspired all the sisters to<lb/>
work for higher goals.<lb/>
Last Monday night, Kappa Del-<lb/>
ta entertained the Pika's. Then,<lb/>
the K D's settled down for a hard<lb/>
week's work of studying for exams<lb/>
which we lived through. We hope<lb/>
everyone was as fortunate.<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
Margaret Ruth Peggy Lasley<lb/>
of Draper has been initiated into<lb/>
Alpha Phi social sorority at East<lb/>
Carolina College.<lb/>
A member of the Spring 1963<lb/>
pledge class, she underwent an ex-<lb/>
tensive period of pledge training<lb/>
v.hich included learning about the<lb/>
history, ideals and goals of Alpha<lb/>
Phi.<lb/>
nuad Alpha Phu<lb/>
?Sj be held on<lb/>
January . Ta y&amp;rs  V<lb/>
Auditormm. As  fzation to<lb/>
would le .flC"t inthis event<lb/>
have a  a 8x10<lb/>
bach cteSHfJSSw and MM a<lb/>
ck d w!KSEe Ball queen<lb/>
.C average, w  vote ht,M<lb/>
vvill chosen  m<lb/>
intheO)lelnJona j<lb/>
and ax tphy.<lb/>
thai should<lb/>
of the g<lb/>
The i  w ;<lb/>
wrth the<lb/>
ten that<lb/>
I <lb/>
A<lb/>
V<lb/>
Mi. <lb/>
k a?<lb/>
"fed<lb/>
and her sp<lb/>
u' rii<lb/>
poetrv Forum Busy Manning New Rea<lb/>
 Poets For Commjr Academitfl<lb/>
<lb/>
Alpha Delta Phi Sorority<lb/>
Moves Into New House<lb/>
East Fifth Street has its fifth<lb/>
East Carolina social sorority since<lb/>
last Sunday when the 30-odd sisters<lb/>
of Alpha Delta Pi settled happily<lb/>
into their spacious colonial home<lb/>
at 1407.<lb/>
The ADPi's, one of eight national<lb/>
social sorority groups on campus,<lb/>
joined four of their sister Hellenic<lb/>
orders already resident on East<lb/>
Fifth StreetDelta Zeta at 801,<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma next door at<lb/>
303, Chi Omega next door to ADPi<lb/>
at 1501. and Kappa Delta at 2100.<lb/>
The five sororities have joined<lb/>
four fraternities as real estate own-<lb/>
ers on Fifth Street, the northern<lb/>
boundary of the EC campus. Fifth<lb/>
Street is among the city's older es-<lb/>
ba Wished residential areas with<lb/>
many of Greenville's largest homes.<lb/>
Other members of the campus<lb/>
sorority family have bought or are<lb/>
looking for permanent residences.<lb/>
Alpha Phi has settled on East 10th<lb/>
Street and Alpha Omicron Pi on<lb/>
Johnston Street. The eighth group.<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta, is in the market<lb/>
for a home.<lb/>
The white-painted brick home of<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi, completely remodel-<lb/>
ed in recent weeks, has usable<lb/>
living space on all its four floors.<lb/>
Thirty sdsters inhabit its six bed-<lb/>
rooms, two parlors, chapter room,<lb/>
dining room, kitchen, snack bar and<lb/>
Students Pick Up<lb/>
Cards Before 10th<lb/>
Those students who failed to get<lb/>
Activity Cards on Registration Day<lb/>
and those who registered late may<lb/>
pick up Activity Cards between 9<lb/>
A.M. and 4 P.M. through December<lb/>
10. NO ACTIVITY CARDS WELL BE<lb/>
ISSUED AFTER DECEMBER 10.<lb/>
Each student must show his receipt<lb/>
for payment of fees or class sched-<lb/>
ule in order to get his ACTIVITY<lb/>
CARD. Cards will be issued in the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office.<lb/>
PHOTO I D CARDS<lb/>
Students, faculty and staff mem-<lb/>
bers may get photo I D cards made<lb/>
on the following dates in Wright<lb/>
Lobby between 9 A.M. and 4 P.M.<lb/>
November 30th Registration Day)<lb/>
December 7th<lb/>
Photo I D Cards will be issued in<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office between 9<lb/>
A.M. and 4 P.M. on the following<lb/>
dates:<lb/>
December 7th and December 14th<lb/>
These are the only dates for hav-<lb/>
ing Photo I D cards made and for<lb/>
picking up Photo I D cards during<lb/>
Winter Quarter. No temporary I D<lb/>
ca-ds will be issued: therefore<lb/>
thop who fail to get I D cards will<lb/>
be unable to attend athletic events<lb/>
' nd concerts.<lb/>
utility room.<lb/>
Airs. Lenore Arnold, the ADPi<lb/>
housemother, has her own suite.<lb/>
She moved to Greenville from her<lb/>
(315 Carswell Lane) residence in<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
Featuring Wllliamsburg decor in<lb/>
red, green, gold and antique white,<lb/>
the parlors and dining room are<lb/>
equipped with contemporary oak<lb/>
furniture. Black-and-white floor tile<lb/>
has been laid in the foyer. The<lb/>
hail, stairway, parlors and dining<lb/>
room have red carpeting.<lb/>
Three meals are served daily by a<lb/>
staff of two servants, a full-time<lb/>
cook and a part-time maid. Each<lb/>
Tuesday evening all pledges and<lb/>
sorority sisters45 in allassemble<lb/>
for dinner and the weekly chapter<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Mrs. Robert G. Deyton and Mrs<lb/>
William H. Taft, alumnae advisors<lb/>
were in charge of decoration. An<lb/>
interior commercial decorator, Mrs<lb/>
Tommie Willis of Greenville, assist-<lb/>
ed. Other alumnae who have worked<lb/>
on housing plans include Mrs<lb/>
George Lortz of Raleigh, past pro<lb/>
nnee president: Dr. Mary Lois<lb/>
Staton of the School of Education<lb/>
faculty at EC. Mrs. Sam Under-<lb/>
wood, Mrs. Ed Clement and Mrs<lb/>
Boley Farley, all chapter advisors<lb/>
from Greenville.<lb/>
President of the local sororitv is<lb/>
Virginia Gigi) Guice of Greenville<lb/>
Officers working with her are Marv<lb/>
Jane Conn vice president: Kathrvh<lb/>
I amille Billings, secretary<lb/>
Judy M. Wagstaff, treasurer' '<lb/>
and<lb/>
LOST 'N FOUND<lb/>
The lost and found department is<lb/>
located in the College Union office<lb/>
Anyone wishing to report lost<lb/>
tides or turn in found one<lb/>
happy<lb/>
ar-<lb/>
College Union office will be<lb/>
to accommodate you.<lb/>
RIDE - RIDERS BOARD<lb/>
The ride-riders board<lb/>
card.<lb/>
ROOM FOR<lb/>
Thc EaSt c-rt-a-ss<lb/>
&amp; year Te r .<lb/>
feature up to  V<lb/>
read their own uortv.<lb/>
The FCC Poetry Forum<lb/>
Hv new oi<lb/>
by "<lb/>
nford L 1<lb/>
ind Pat H v<lb/>
of Ucal Habitation.<lb/>
poetry published by<lb/>
p, . Loral Habitation<lb/>
'T I<lb/>
rector<lb/>
son Willis,<lb/>
the author<lb/>
book of<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Tnl-<lb/>
and n from S n<lb/>
Richard V. ' rtes<lb/>
Eat n, Poetry Mauame.<lb/>
v of poetry<lb/>
 rs I bo published<lb/>
in the   19M<lb/>
The Forum, col<lb/>
vid h s be i<lb/>
New Durham Ei<lb/>
New College Writing. Th<lb/>
in the College UnionOBecltSS<lb/>
vice has recently become more <lb/>
tive than ever before. If Vou <lb/>
interested in having riders or<lb/>
ride, please check the College U<lb/>
office ride-riders board and fin m<lb/>
nion<lb/>
an,<lb/>
and othe<lb/>
by tin<lb/>
i<lb/>
Nursing InrucJ<lb/>
Is Honored (,uk<lb/>
 or h<lb/>
Th-<lb/>
Rei lew,<lb/>
Little Re-<lb/>
vfcw. The Phoenix Southern .-nt.<lb/>
The Rebel. Voted ? r<lb/>
chive T<lb/>
ten  ' " '<lb/>
pie as J<lb/>
Van Doren C<lb/>
Karl - T. S. Eliot. <lb/>
Owen. ! W . <lb/>
rum has held nur<lb/>
re:<lb/>
A P 0 Winter Ruh<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
vice fraternity. . to I<lb/>
winter rushDecember 8th and 10th<lb/>
at their new Chapter ro- m<lb/>
on Cotanche - hind Oamj<lb/>
Corner.<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
RENT<lb/>
Attractive room for real for facultv<lb/>
or staff member with private bl h<lb/>
television and air-condition in- AW<lb/>
two meals available daily. The ffi<lb/>
15 located in the heart of GreVKE<lb/>
and thus convenient to thS S<lb/>
For further ir,fw:<lb/>
The most<lb/>
walked a:<lb/>
Slacks on<lb/>
Campus co<lb/>
"DACR0N "<lb/>
Hubb3r<lb/>
have a <lb/>
fof fashto<lb/>
65 "Oacroc"<lb/>
polyester a <lb/>
corobec<lb/>
Styled ft5<lb/>
plain fronts<lb/>
traditK <lb/>
Blade mode<lb/>
wnnJOefree<lb/>
looks a &amp;r<lb/>
comfort 8t!<lb/>
Stores<lb/>
oucir<lb/>
 i<lb/>
c01 ulrTl WMtton, contact<lb/>
Sarah Kirkpatrck at Ext 288 or f<lb/>
tor 6:30 p.m. at PL 2-3339' af"<lb/>
y<lb/>
<pb facs="00038852_0005"/><lb/>
east Carolinianfriday, december 4, 19645<lb/>
Pirate Special To Carry<lb/>
EC Supporters To Bowl<lb/>
I Pirates Lose Opener<lb/>
fh uskt tball Pirates opened their season Tuesday night and were handed<lb/>
a (rat at the hands of High Point. The team on several occasions<lb/>
pring the last period of the game had the opportunity to win. But with a<lb/>
fc ushandled plays and near-misses, thv team failed to get off to a<lb/>
fii oriotis start.<lb/>
Milady Beauty Shoppe<lb/>
Make Your Appointments Early<lb/>
Three Hair Stylists To Serve You<lb/>
PHYLLIS FREY<lb/>
IDA LYNN STOCKS<lb/>
EUNICE BLALOCK<lb/>
Location: 517 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
 A A A A A<lb/>
ERASE WITHOUT A TRACE<lb/>
ON EATON'S CORRASABLE BOND<lb/>
We can't be on perfect key every tim but typing errors<lb/>
needn't show. And won't on CorrasableEaton s paper<lb/>
with the special surface that comes clean in a whiak<lb/>
with an ordinary pencil eraser. There's no smear or acar<lb/>
left in evidence when you type on rr<lb/>
Your choice of Corrasable in<lb/>
light, medium, heavy weights and<lb/>
Onion Skin. In handy 100-<lb/>
sheet packets and 500-sheet<lb/>
boxes. Only Eaton makes<lb/>
Corrasable.<lb/>
A Berkshire Typewriter Paper<lb/>
UTO PAPER CORPOAAT.ON (g) mLft KASSACHOOm<lb/>
Pinail pliams were announced Tues-<lb/>
day for the "Pinatte Special" to car-<lb/>
ry a trtainload of East Cairoiilna sup-<lb/>
porters to Orlando, FLa next month<lb/>
to watch the EC Pirates Dec. 12<lb/>
football game with ithe University<lb/>
of Massachusetts m the 19th annual<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl classic.<lb/>
The train will leave Greenville<lb/>
on Friday evening, Dec. 11; make<lb/>
passenger stops iait Bethel, Rocky<lb/>
Mount, Wilson and FayetteviHe; ar-<lb/>
rive in Orlando Saturday morning;<lb/>
ana begin the return trip an hour<lb/>
after midnight Saturday, two to<lb/>
three hours after the game, with<lb/>
early Sunday afternoon arrival back<lb/>
home scheduled.<lb/>
Sponsored by the college in con-<lb/>
junction with the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Line railroad, the "Pirate Special"<lb/>
must have tat least 350 passengers.<lb/>
First customers to sign up are the<lb/>
135 members of the Mairchdng<lb/>
Pirates, East Carolina's field band<lb/>
scheduled to participate in the Tan-<lb/>
gerine Bowl show. Sponsoring the<lb/>
hand's trip is the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association iait the college.<lb/>
Jack Morgan, general chairman<lb/>
of the Tangerine Bowl, said the<lb/>
"Pirate Special" would become the<lb/>
first special train to a Tangerine<lb/>
Bowl game in the 19-year history of<lb/>
the classic.<lb/>
Round-trip fare for the special<lb/>
will be $31.40 per person and that<lb/>
amount includes bus transportation<lb/>
from the Orlando train station to<lb/>
the Tangerine Bowl and back aigain.<lb/>
J. S. Wilkes of Rocky Mount, dis-<lb/>
trict passenger lajgent for ACL in<lb/>
Eastern North (Carolina, listed this<lb/>
timetable for the special triain:<lb/>
Leaves Greenville (at 7 p.m. Fri-<lb/>
day, Dec. 11; makes stops in Bethel<lb/>
(7:45 p.m.), Rocky Mount (8:50<lb/>
p.m.), Wilson (9:10 p.m.) and Fay-<lb/>
etteville (10:10 p.m.) to pick up<lb/>
passengers; continues non-stop to<lb/>
Orlando with arrival scheduled at<lb/>
9 a.m. Saturday, Dec. 12. well<lb/>
ahead of the 8 p.m. kickofif for the<lb/>
EC-Massachusetts game later that<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Leaves Orlando at 1 p.m. Sunday,<lb/>
Dec. 13, soon after the game; makes<lb/>
return stops at Fayetteviile rll:40<lb/>
a.m.), Wilson 112:40 p.m.). Rocky<lb/>
Mount (1 p.m.) and Bethel (2:05<lb/>
p.m. : and arrives in Greenville at<lb/>
3 p.m. Sunday.<lb/>
Special busses will convey "Spec-<lb/>
ial" passengers from the train de-<lb/>
pot to downtown Orlando, about a<lb/>
mile away, immeddiately on arrival.<lb/>
Fassengers will return to the busses<lb/>
at 6:30 p.m. for the trip to the Tan-<lb/>
gerine Bowl and to the train de-<lb/>
pot after the game.<lb/>
According to Wilkes, the "Pirate<lb/>
Special" will consist of about a<lb/>
dozen cars, including eight coaches,<lb/>
a lounge car with soft drinks land<lb/>
snacks, a dining car for the return<lb/>
trip and a baggage car for band<lb/>
instruments. He salid additional<lb/>
coaches will be added as necessary.<lb/>
Though the schedules eliminates<lb/>
the necessity for overnight accom-<lb/>
modations in Orlando, Wilkes said<lb/>
his office on request will assist pas-<lb/>
sengers in matkdng motel or hotel<lb/>
arrangements. He said his investi-<lb/>
gation disclosed that rates in the<lb/>
Orlando area are "quite reasonable"<lb/>
and quoted what he called a "typical<lb/>
example $3 per person in a room<lb/>
for two.<lb/>
Tickets for cne "Pirate Special"<lb/>
may be purchased from any Atlan-<lb/>
tic Coast Line station in the area;<lb/>
from the Central Ticket Office: and<lb/>
from MacDorn Travel Agency, 314<lb/>
Evans Street (phone: 752-6238),<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Working with Wilkes on arrange-<lb/>
ments for the special train has<lb/>
been Dr. James H. Tucker, dean of<lb/>
student affairs at EC, (and other<lb/>
officials of the college and the SGA.<lb/>
Don't Let The<lb/>
PIRATES DOWN<lb/>
Go See The Tangerine<lb/>
Bowl Game December 12<lb/>
Best Jewelry Company<lb/>
Invites You To Come In and See Their Complete Line of<lb/>
Gifts For All Occasions<lb/>
Charms, Bracelets, Billfolds<lb/>
Serving E. C. C. Students Since 1907<lb/>
NEW DUCATTI MOTORBIKES<lb/>
AT WHOLESALE PRICES:<lb/>
Ducatti Cadet 90 $250.00<lb/>
Ducatti Monza 250 $500.00<lb/>
NO MONEY DOWN WITH APPROVED CREDIT<lb/>
ON THESE SPECIALS ONLY!<lb/>
Get In On The X-Mass Give-A-Way At<lb/>
STANS CYCLE CENTER<lb/>
CU Bowling Begins<lb/>
Tuesday, December 8<lb/>
Bowling for fall quarter has be-<lb/>
gun! The College Union Bowling<lb/>
League invites you, both men and<lb/>
women, to join the league which<lb/>
meets Tuesdays at 4:00 p.m. at the<lb/>
Hillcrest Lanes. A bus providing<lb/>
transportation leaves in front of<lb/>
Wright Auditorium at 4:00 sharp.<lb/>
For only $1.10 a week, this is<lb/>
what is included: 1 RfU 3 games,<lb/>
2Free transportation, 3Shoes-<lb/>
without rental, 4Team and in-<lb/>
dividual sports. See you Tuesday at<lb/>
4:00 p.m !<lb/>
No SGA Quorum<lb/>
On November 30, 1964. at 7:00<lb/>
pm at Rawl. Burke Stephens.<lb/>
Speaker of the House, called the<lb/>
Senate meeting to order. The chair<lb/>
ruled no quorum.<lb/>
Tim Bagwell moved to dispense<lb/>
The minutes and roll call because<lb/>
oi the lack of the quorum.<lb/>
Dean Alexander made announce-<lb/>
ments concerning the Tangerine<lb/>
Bowl urging the Senators to talk<lb/>
to students and sell tickets for the<lb/>
:rain ride which would be on sale at<lb/>
the central ticket office.<lb/>
The meeting was adjourned at<lb/>
7:05 pm.<lb/>
GLAMOR<lb/>
BEAUTY SHOP<lb/>
Phone PL 8-2563<lb/>
110 East 5th Street<lb/>
In Gaskins Jewelers<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Welcome To<lb/>
City Laundrette<lb/>
813 Evans Street<lb/>
Leave Your Laundry<lb/>
To Be<lb/>
Washed and Fluff Dried<lb/>
Attendants To Serve You<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
for<lb/>
TEXT<lb/>
BOOKS<lb/>
at<lb/>
OOK<lb/>
arn<lb/>
PL 8-3613<lb/>
Pactolus Highway<lb/>
123 E. 5th St<lb/>
BARNES &amp; NOBLE<lb/>
STUDY AIDS<lb/>
Please report any lost books<lb/>
to us immediately<lb/>
<pb facs="00038852_0006"/><lb/>
6east Carolinianfriday, december 4, 1964<lb/>
EC Orchestra<lb/>
With Concer"<lb/>
Owens Seasoi<lb/>
Sunday Deed<lb/>
Folk-siagiMg in the U. S. is still bo.ming as it has for the past few years.<lb/>
The folk artist here bangs away on a twelve string guitar as the typical<lb/>
entranced audience looks on. Musical instrument manufacturers claim<lb/>
that orders for some instruments are backed up as far as 1966.<lb/>
Magazine Article Asks<lb/>
About Students' Sanity<lb/>
By Hen Sutton And Carrie Tyson<lb/>
For our column this week, we be- by -imperatively<lb/>
gin with an article from Sarajane<lb/>
Lebowitz, the Press Editor for<lb/>
Mademoiselle. She gave it the title:<lb/>
More Students Seek Professional<lb/>
Counseling We wholeheartedly<lb/>
recommend :t to you.<lb/>
To bring this more to an East<lb/>
Carolina level, the guidance offices<lb/>
are set up with you. the student, in<lb/>
mind. Dr. YVeigand and Mrs. Fick-<lb/>
en will be more than happy to<lb/>
help you so you may better help<lb/>
yourself.<lb/>
Are American college students<lb/>
rapidly "cracking up"?" queries a<lb/>
recent article in Mademoiselle<lb/>
magazine, "Swept with Confused<lb/>
Alarms: The Psychological Climate<lb/>
on Campus" by Rita Hoffmann.<lb/>
Ten to fifteen per cent of college<lb/>
students are already using the na-<lb/>
tion's college counseling services<lb/>
land, according to Dr. Leon J.<lb/>
Saul, psychiatric consultant at<lb/>
Swarthmore college, 'another ten to<lb/>
fifteen per cent should be using<lb/>
them. In an attempt to discover<lb/>
which students seek av&amp;dlable help,<lb/>
why they seek it. and what happens<lb/>
to those who turn to other sources,<lb/>
the magazine canvassed a nation-<lb/>
wide sampling of colleges.<lb/>
A common "disease" among wo-<lb/>
men students is known on some<lb/>
campuses as "the flops She can<lb/>
do nothing but flopon her bed,<lb/>
or the nearest available space. She<lb/>
does not sleep; she cannot study or<lb/>
even concentrate on a book she her-<lb/>
self wants to read. She smokes,<lb/>
nibbles food, converses, resolves to<lb/>
study, then moves on to a new<lb/>
flopping place. The major prob-<lb/>
lems, like "the flops have to do<lb/>
with what is known ias "the identity<lb/>
crisis The concept, so named by<lb/>
Dr. Erffi H. Erikson. internationally<lb/>
known psychiatrist, has already be-<lb/>
come an over-simplified catch-<lb/>
phrase which, roughtly, concerns<lb/>
the search for answers to three<lb/>
basic questions: Who am I? Where<lb/>
shah I go? How shall I get there?<lb/>
Su-colled sexual problems often<lb/>
turn out to be just one among many<lb/>
symptoms which may have more to<lb/>
do with conformity or a craving for<lb/>
emotional warmth than with sex.<lb/>
The change in sex mores provides<lb/>
the more exaggerated and spectac-<lb/>
ular symptoms but equally disturb-<lb/>
ing to 'at least one college psychia-<lb/>
trist, Dr. Lester Sonta? of Antioch,<lb/>
is "the increase in the number of<lb/>
flat personalities I encounter" <lb/>
persons whom people neither like<lb/>
nor dislike, with no emontional re-<lb/>
sonance, who seldom can communi-<lb/>
cate beyond banalities.<lb/>
Since there has been no drastic<lb/>
increase during the past decade in<lb/>
psychotic breakdowns or suicides<lb/>
among college students, why are<lb/>
there so many seeking counsel? In<lb/>
a limited society, where individual<lb/>
choice is narrowly restricted by<lb/>
church or state, life is simplifed<lb/>
clear-cut boun-<lb/>
daries of choice. A free society<lb/>
such as ours, by offering a wide,<lb/>
almost unrestricted range of choice<lb/>
also provides fertile ground for the<lb/>
neuroses of doubt and indecision.<lb/>
In addition, colleges seem to feel<lb/>
tin ! to iiid students in making the<lb/>
choices is a part of their responsi-<lb/>
.v as educators, both to the stu-<lb/>
dent and to society. As a result<lb/>
counseling facilities have increased<lb/>
and mroe students may simply be<lb/>
taking advantage of what is avail-<lb/>
able. Therefore there may be no<lb/>
actual increase in the number of<lb/>
disturbed students.<lb/>
Many of those who hesitate to<lb/>
seek counsel do so because of the<lb/>
smail-community lack of anonymity<lb/>
of a cdiege campus. They are<lb/>
afraid that their outpouring will<lb/>
leak to the Dean's office or on to<lb/>
official records. Many, equally mis-<lb/>
taken, fear that therapy will "flat-<lb/>
Mi them out' 'to be well-adjusted<lb/>
robots, which is quite the opposite<lb/>
of the intentions of psychiatry.<lb/>
There remains some doubt that<lb/>
clinics are helpful or necessary be-<lb/>
yond the need to handle psychotic<lb/>
breakdowns. Subjective evaluations<lb/>
do, however, seem to indicate the<lb/>
positive value of therapy. As one<lb/>
ex-dent put it, "If your emotional<lb/>
problems get in the way to much,<lb/>
you just can't make it from your<lb/>
freshman to your senior year<lb/>
Judging from a survey taken by<lb/>
Mademoiselle magazine ("College<lb/>
SmokingHow Come Nobody's<lb/>
Stopped?" by Mary Ann Guitar,<lb/>
August, 1964) the Surgeon General's<lb/>
report has not substantially affect-<lb/>
ed the smoking habits of college<lb/>
undergraduates. Why not? Neither<lb/>
smokers nor non-smokers opposed<lb/>
cigarettes per se. The attitude was<lb/>
pretty much live and let live, or.<lb/>
die and let die: suicide is a pri-<lb/>
vate affair. Their reaction to the<lb/>
cancer threat was off-hand. Both<lb/>
groups caime up with a number of<lb/>
explanations and rationalizations<lb/>
Tea room or espresso house, bas<lb/>
n.ent or ballroom, backyardor toe-<lb/>
kali field-it doesn't mate hte<lb/>
difference where you hold a noc<lb/>
nanny! . <lb/>
The dnamatic increase in<lb/>
songs iand hootenawiies dunng the<lb/>
Lst two decades is reoordMo be<lb/>
more of an effect thaa cause g<lb/>
the years since the end <lb/>
War II, our nation tasW <lb/>
oerieneing a dramatic rebirth of in<lb/>
West in American culture amTherU<lb/>
age. And one of the more popular<lb/>
directions tnis movemen.has taken<lb/>
is the resurrection of folk-singing.<lb/>
The parents of today's teenagers<lb/>
grew up during the 20 s and 30s and<lb/>
probably had very little contact wh<lb/>
folk songs. An occwnai cnorusof<lb/>
-Clementine" or "She'll be Conrun<lb/>
Round the Mountain" was the ex-<lb/>
tent of their experience.<lb/>
Today folk music fc back-and1 s<lb/>
bigger than ever. On radio and tele-<lb/>
vision, on single records and lung-<lb/>
Playing albums, in personal PP'<lb/>
ances on college campuses in big<lb/>
city auditoriums and small lodge<lb/>
halls groups of singers are enter-<lb/>
turning audiences with hootenaniues.<lb/>
At the present time, there are only<lb/>
four manufacturers in the United<lb/>
States producing banjos. This instru-<lb/>
ment has become so popular durin&amp;<lb/>
the past twelve months that the ban-<lb/>
jo-makers have been unable to meet<lb/>
the demand. According to Sears,<lb/>
banjo and guitar sales increased 90<lb/>
to 100 per cent in 1963.<lb/>
Folk singing is. of course, not<lb/>
new While it is now considered an<lb/>
American art. it had two main<lb/>
streams of origin.<lb/>
The Anglo-Saxon tradition was im-<lb/>
ported from Great Britain and nor-<lb/>
thern Europe, and was responsible<lb/>
for most of our ballads and lyric<lb/>
folk songs.<lb/>
Later, the African tradition was<lb/>
added. This group is credited with<lb/>
the blues, the work songs, and the<lb/>
ever-popular minstrel tunes.<lb/>
To all of these songs was added<lb/>
the only truly American eontr<lb/>
u meim: and the hoote-<lb/>
(,uht  university. O<lb/>
Oregon StjteLw .<lb/>
left behind sonu u<lb/>
buddmg fcjk 2k bother; <lb/>
"Learn mil BAROMf <lb/>
g sted Lothe xn oi be<lb/>
;i, s jS in vmoorta  r u<lb/>
-  fsnf!Lo m b<lb/>
Th" f to find your voice ram<lb/>
they said. to find <lb/>
'j-u. n jp<lb/>
p<lb/>
!<lb/>
 k<lb/>
I k b "<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Vom<lb/>
d the<lb/>
This s YO<lb/>
c n<lb/>
h <lb/>
ncte<lb/>
note- <lb/>
ctart "  uv<lb/>
n this<lb/>
mm<lb/>
' i<lb/>
 ' t I t<lb/>
ang -n CM<lb/>
"<lb/>
T <lb/>
 <lb/>
ECC Symphony Orchestr<lb/>
Opens Season rI his?<lb/>
Hill<lb/>
The Easl<lb/>
phony 0  ill 0Pn '<lb/>
on w.th   - Sundi<lb/>
ber 6 -n Wright Au<lb/>
p m The i estra. i<lb/>
tor David a - <lb/>
aid Tracy as -<lb/>
1 h<lb/>
D in 1<lb/>
'<lb/>
ed Prelude<lb/>
<lb/>
urn<lb/>
baay V<lb/>
 F manor by T ky.<lb/>
ranging from !an inexpensive sub-<lb/>
stitute for psychoanalysis" to "a<lb/>
device that aids soc'alibilty" in de-<lb/>
fense of the choice to smoke.<lb/>
EC Choir Performs<lb/>
In Raleigh Program<lb/>
The East Carolina Concert Choir<lb/>
will join with the North Carolina<lb/>
State Ballet and a group from the<lb/>
Puke University music department<lb/>
to present the finale concert in<lb/>
Tuesday's Music Day program in<lb/>
Raleigh, part of the observance of<lb/>
North Carolina Culture Week.<lb/>
The eighth annual Music Day<lb/>
events will be held in (Raleigh's<lb/>
Hotel Sir Walter. It is sponsored by<lb/>
the North Carolina Federation of<lb/>
Music Clubs.<lb/>
The concert ds scheduled at 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Virginia Dane Ballroom.<lb/>
tion to folk singing: the choral re-<lb/>
frain.<lb/>
How did the term "hootenanny"<lb/>
originate? Some believe it came<lb/>
from a boisterous female folk sing-<lb/>
er of many years ago who picked<lb/>
up the nickname ,lHoot:n Annie<lb/>
If Hootin' Annie were alive today,<lb/>
a glance at the Hit Parade, the 'Top<lb/>
40 the "Hot 100" or any other<lb/>
rating method would show her that<lb/>
there are now scores of popular folk<lb/>
songs and artists in this "modern"<lb/>
music field that's named after her.<lb/>
Thousands of professionals are now<lb/>
making a good income in a field<lb/>
that could hardly support a handful<lb/>
of "pros" thirty years ago.<lb/>
More important than the profes-<lb/>
sional aspect, there are now hun-<lb/>
dreds of thousands of non-profes-<lb/>
sional banjo players, guitar play-<lb/>
ers, and singers who have found these<lb/>
traditional songs a means of self-<lb/>
expression in today's world.<lb/>
Even a beginner can be plunking<lb/>
out accompanying chords on a banjo<lb/>
or guitar in a matter of minutes.<lb/>
While it takes time to learn to play<lb/>
these instruments well, a few chorcls<lb/>
can be played after the first lesson.<lb/>
And there are more than 1.000 folk<lb/>
ongs from which to choose your<lb/>
selections.<lb/>
While stringed instruments go back<lb/>
in history almost as far as the drum,<lb/>
the guitar as we know it evolved<lb/>
in Western Europe. The three main<lb/>
t" pes contain four, six and twelve<lb/>
strings, respectively.<lb/>
The twelve string guitar is still<lb/>
ued by some professionals, but the<lb/>
six string or "classic" guitar is by<lb/>
far the most popular. The four string<lb/>
guitar is the easiest to play, and is<lb/>
often preferred by amateurs. It is<lb/>
possible to pay several hundred<lb/>
dollars for a suitar. but models are<lb/>
available in the twenty to fifty dol-<lb/>
lar range that will produce a soft<lb/>
rch tone.<lb/>
The banjo, on the other hind, is<lb/>
considered to be a development of<lb/>
the Negroes in this country and h.is<lb/>
been called "America's only nation-<lb/>
al instrument Banjos usually have<lb/>
five strings and are also sold in a<lb/>
wide price range. The catalog of<lb/>
1894 listed banjos as low as Si 75<lb/>
but today prices range from $30 to<lb/>
$70 for a good instrument.<lb/>
Is today's interest in folk singing<lb/>
end planned or impromptu hoote-<lb/>
nannies just a passing fador a re-<lb/>
birth of a eulltunafl iMeresrt in pioneer<lb/>
music? The experts believe that<lb/>
since it took almost twenty years to<lb/>
get here, it's going to be with us<lb/>
for a good, long time.<lb/>
It's a long, long way from 'the<lb/>
old Chisholm fraud" to todlay's mod<lb/>
ern expressways, land it's a longer<lb/>
Th  "<lb/>
-<lb/>
 td the<lb/>
 <lb/>
5<lb/>
of Mu<lb/>
Mr. Tracy pi<lb/>
hestr : i h<lb/>
N<lb/>
- Easl<lb/>
C I in<lb/>
numei o ai<lb/>
9 .<lb/>
I <lb/>
f<lb/>
Vby<lb/>
-<lb/>
 &amp; <lb/>
iMU<lb/>
This<lb/>
week's<lb/>
Brunette Beautv<lb/>
-  w eek s "R<lb/>
bTetrbrVi-BeTa. t J En P jt<lb/>
Mii a hubby!<lb/>

</div></body></text></TEI>