The Teco Echo, May 7, 1943






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n-xi0u
Good Luck
New Officers
Im7"xvni
The TECO ECHO
Graduation
May 31
1 tiip
.
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1943
Number 15
h
' vvh;
he
Carlyle Cox Elected To Head New SCGA
Conrad Thibault, Baritone
To Give Concert Here
With The Armed
J rorces I

) R Y
s
il Thibault, lamed bari-
io and the concert
replace Dennis Mor-
al ured artist of the
entertainment program, I
to an announcement
� ainment commit- I
bault wlil appear on the
is Friday evening,
d lays in the pr -
I id ures in which
I h nnis Morgan
able to meet his
ement at ECTC. it
� members of the
at he may be avail-
� at present
fall although his
up.
is the well-know n
popular network
.� 1U' is featured
'Manhattan Merry
' and the CBS "Amei-
Hour both of
familiar to ECTC
Conrad Thibault
nas
er
often
Hel-
Co.
s
:her
b
se
U8
ii,ll!ti!
Is
K
lant
n
1:
r.e time sang
ladelphia Grand
pany, Thibault's
in radio a n d
He claims
io ies or from
ra his ability to
radio and concert
with his fine voice
lality. This is his first
� in Givt aville.
Registrar Holding
Application Blanks
For Federal Jobs
ig the possibility of
i T ' students se-
rai employment ir-
"i the many
college students
d and where they
or various types of
ice, a Federal Rep-
recently visited the
aid .1. McGin-
positions
personne1
are many
ilified personne1
plications secured
:ately reviewed
n forwarded to
cant as to just what
as are then available'
There are several ap-
rms in the regis-
ice, and a sample one
i Echo office for
are interested, to in-
Eight Activities
Cut By Budget
Eight student organizations
and undertakings were cut a
total of $1410.00 in their ap-
propriations at a recent meet-
ing of the Budget committee.
This action was necessitated by
a sharp drop In enrollment for
the past two quarters.
"At the first of the year we
based the appropriations on an
enrollment of 1,000 students
and a total of $18,000 in stu-
dent fees explains Student
Treasurer Claire Jenkins. "But
last quarter the enrollment
was 900. and this quarter we
can depend on only 850 stu-
dents
Since the $200 allotted the
music department for the pro-
duction of the opera. Martha.
was repaid, a cut of $1300.0C
was necessary. The cut of
1410.00 leaves a balance of
110.00 to cover any possible
deficiency caused by failure
some students to pay
fees.
Major cuts were made in th�
appropriations of the Enter
tainment committee ($400.00),
the Men's Athletic association
C?M40.00), and the Women's
Student Government associa-
tion ($250.00). The Woman's
Athletic association and Social
committee were cut $100.uO
each. The Men's Student Gov-
ernment association was cut
$90.00, Pieces O' Eight $80.00,
and the Teco Echo $50.00.
These cuts went into effect
April 23.
of
student
Student Teachers Meet
bij Margaret Lewis
ing the high schools Branch was
Aviation Cadet Merwin Fri-
zelle, a graduate of ECTC in
the class of '41, is now train-
ing at the Naval air station
it the University of Oklahoma.
'After staying out part of the
night doing night flying it's
tough having to get up at 5:30
each morning. I can hardly
1 wait to get at those yellow Japs
! and help get this thing over�
i then I can sleep he wrote. His
'address: 3 B 43 N, Post, Naval
Air Station, Xorma, Oklahoma.

A visitor on the campus re-
cently was 2nd Lt. Alvin Woo-
ten of the Army air corps. Al-
vin came to school here year
before last and began his flying
in the CAA course which was
offered here then. Since that
time he has taken advance pilot
training at Lumbeiton and at
New Orleans, La. After com-
pleting the course in New Or-
leans he instructed at Lumbei-
ton until he received a com-
mission in the Ferry Command
of the Air Corps last February.
His address is: New CastL
Army Air Base, Wilmington,
Delaware.

Pfc. Vance Chadwick, a
graduate of the class of '40, is
crew chief on a B-24 bomber,
and is stationed at the Army
air base, Colorado Springs, Col.
Vance writes, "This is a train-
ing squadron and very ruggea.
To show you what 1 mean, Wc
made three emergency landings
in one day. It may be wore
overseas but I wouldn't sweat
anymore He says he gets his
Ttco Echo regularly and ap-
preciates it verv much. His
address is 11th Photo Sqd. "H
Army Air Base, Peterson Field
Colorado Springs. Col.

According to information re-
ceived by Mr. and Mrs. S. L
Bridgers of Greenville, a pic-
ture of their son, John David
Bridgers, appeared in the Ap-
ril 12th issue of Life Magazine.
The first indication Lt. Bridg-
ets family had that he was or
had been on Guadalcanal wa,5
when the picture appeared ia
Life and was brought to their
attention by local friends of
the flier as well as some of
his friends now in the armed
forces serving in various sec-
tions of the country.
John David graduated from
ECTC in 1941 and enlisted in
the Naval Air Corps shortly
after finishing. He has been
stationed in the Pacific war
zone for the past 14 months
and has seen action over a wide
area including the battle of
Midway
Edward Bernays
Establishes Three
Fellowships
-
Commencement Exercises
Scheduled For Last Of May
Three fellowships for research
in public relations for 1943
have just been established by
Edward L. Bernays, publicist of
New York, author of "Propa-
ganda "Crystallizing Public
Opinion" and "Speak Up for
Democracy
The fellowships are: 1) t
Western Reserve University,
Cleveland, $500 for the study of
how in the past 25 years busi-
ness .education, government and
the press have increased theii
use of public relations. This is
to be awarded to a graduate stu-
dent for the study ot the public
attitudes toward business since
1930 as reflected in the pres&.
on the radio, resolutions and ac-
tions of the different consti-
tuent groups that make up our
society�labor, religious, farm,
social service, government and
other groups.
2) to the Columbia Univers-
ity Graduate School of Journ-
alism $1,000 for the study of
the attitudes of liberal United
States business men in the past
50 years and what the effects ol
these attitudes were on public
public opinion and public ac-
tion. The subject was chosen
"because liberal business men
have done a great deal to further
the relations between th com-
ponnt parts of our society, and
the results of their efforts
should be made available t
other industrial leaders w h o
have not learned how to apply
such principles and practices to
their own commercial and in-
dustrial activities
3) to New York University
$1,000 to be awarded to a grad-
uate student for the study of
changing attitudes towards pub-
lic relations by the press and
business in the past 25 years.
Breaking a precedent which
has been established for several
years, the commencement exer-
cises will be conducted this year
the last week-end in May instead
of the first week-end in June.
The address for the gradua-
ting exercises to be held on
Monday morning in the Wright
auditorium will be made by Dr
Clyde A. Erwin, State Superin-
tendent of Public Instruction
and a well-known figure in edu-
cational groups throughout the
state. The invocation will be
made by Rev. George Perry,
pastor of the Jarvis Memorial
Methodist church.
Commencement officially be-
gins on Saturday morning at
the annual meeting of the Alum-
ni Association which features
the formal recognition of the
graduating class as new mem-
bers of the association, the in-
stallation of new officers, and
the presentation of the Alumni
award.
Dinner is to be served the
alumni and the graduating
class as new members of the
graduating class in the Wright
auditorium. During the after-
noon alumni, the faculty, and
the graduating class will be en-
tertained at open nouse at the
home of President and Mrs
Meadows, after which there will
be an "Allegiance Service" for
the graduates. The annual music
recital will constitute the pro-
gram of the evening presenting
student soloists and various
musical organizations on the
campus. There will be no alum-
ni Dance this year as previous-
ly, due to current war condi-
tions.
Dr. W. Taliaferre Thompson
will make the baccalaureate ad-
dress on Sunday morning. Dr.
See Exercises on Page Four
Meadows, Davis, Cox
Speakers At Installation
Music Department
Presents Singers
In Vocal Recital
-$
Hi
exi
� ident teaching cen-
lome economics educa-
nts decided they would
w more about how the
is carried n and the
periences of student
� . Twelve home
rs repi eseniing the pr
r t h e present school
re invited to meet the
ic trainees and discuss
� �.� m their experiences.
e conference, which was
.Monday evening, May 3,
Classroom budding, was
m ned by Annie Kate Evan,
resenting the methods class,
after giving a welcome and
the purpose of the con-
introduced Mary
Long
. chairman of the panel of
-T'ident teachers.
Miss Ford reviewed in an in-
to � ting manner the steps in
the development of the present
studnt teaching program made
necessary by an increased en-
rollment in the department and
made possible by an oppropria-
n by the federal government
known as George-Dean fund?.
'Before a school is selected"
she stated, "it must be approved
I �v the State Department of
Public Instruction, the State
Supervisor of Home Economics,
and the College In addition to
Greenville the following high
schools have been used: Ayder,
Farmville, Williamston, Rober-
sonville, Murfreesboro ,Scor
land Neck, Chocowinity,
rora,
also used for one
student teacher
According to reports - given
student teachers are making a
major contribution to the war
effort while serving their ap-
prenticeship in preparation for
econom- employment. They are helping
high school students to assume
greatly increased responsibili-
ties and providing training for
same, such as caring for small
children of working mothers,
providing recreation for child-
ren, planning, preparing, and
serving nourishing meals; help-
ing children and adults to pro-
duce more food through victory
gardens, teaching them conser-
vation of food through food
workshops, canning and drying
demonstrations; adult nutrition
classes, and regular foods class-
es where they learn to use meat,
butter, and sugar substitute;
to plan meals on the home food
supply and to adapt menus 10
point values. The high school
students are also taught to con
serve other materials such as
clothing by renovating and car-
ing for old garments and by
wise purchasing and construct-
ing of clothing for the dura-
tion; by the care of household
appliances and irreplaceable
household equipment all the way
from pins and needles to elec-
tric refrigerators and stoves.
Young people are extremely
interested in how they will find
a place for themselves in a war-
torn world and seek the help of
Au-1 student teachers through class-
last June at which
was a flier aboard the
aricraft carrier York-
and Wintervllle: Poptar I See Tethers on Page Fmr
time he
ill-fated
town.

Mrs. Kathryn Jones Ashe,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ar-
thur Nash of Greenville, re-
cently was commissioned an
ensign in the WAVES after
having completed the training
at Smith College. Ensign Ashe
is spending several days with
her parents before reporting
for duty. She attended ECTC
several years ago. Ensign Ashe
is the niece of Miss Mamie Ruth
Tunstall, one of the most active
alumni of the college.

"You should feel the heat the
tropical sun is pouring down
on me as I write�One can al-
most feel the actual impact of
heat waves writes Lt. Leo
Burks from his station in
North Africa.
"This morning I was down
on the rocky shore. From my
tent I have a wonderful view
of cliffs, a fine harbor and the
'Italian Lake I was just
thinking of you and Dr.
Brandt continues Leo in his
letter to Dr. Slay, "as I sat
on the rocks examining na-
ture's wee creatures at first
hand, I wished for Dr. Brandt
and a microscope
Leo graduated here in '41
and taught in New Hanover
High School in Wilmington be-
fore going into the army.

Staff Sgt. Elmer Bland vk-
See Servicemen on Page Three
by Mary Sue Moore
On Tuesday night, May 4, the
Music department presented an-
other successful concert. Miss
Jean Abeyounis, soprano; Miss
Lorraine Pritchard, mezzo-so-
prano; Mr. Linwood Gurganus,
Baritone; and Mr. Denton Ros-
sell, tenor, entertained the well-
filled Austin auditorium.
The first group of selections
came from the Italian Opera
"Brindisi from "La Traviata"
by Verdi the group was sung by
Miss Abeyounis. "Una Voce Po-
co fa" from "The Barber of Se-
ville" by Rossini was sung bj
Lorraine Pritchard. Linwood
Gurganus and Mr. Rossell sang
"Guarda Che Bianca luna" by
Canpana. Three arias from "La
Boheme" by Puccini were giver
by Jean Abeyounis. "Tutti fior"
from "Madame Butterfly" by-
Puccini was sung by Jean and
Lorraine (better known as Bob-
by). The sextette from "Lucia"
by Donizetti concluded the first
group of selections. Jean, Lor-
raine, Mr. Rossell and Linwood
were assisted by Ingram Wal-
ters and Freeman Watson in
this selection.
The next group of songs,
"From the Modern Repertoire"
was appreciated more by tire
audience since it consisted of
tunes more familiar. "O Lovely
Night" by Ronald opened the
group sung by Lorraine Pritch
ard and Mr. Rossell. Linwood
Gurganus thrilled the audience
with Pauper's "Drive by Hom-
er" and "De Glory Road" by
Wolfe. He sang as an encore,
"On the Road to Mandalay
"Apres un Reve by Faure,
"April Children" Carey, and
"Song of the Open" by La
Forge were sung by Jean Abey-
ounis. Her encore was "Little
China Figure Lorraine Pritch-
See Recital on Page Four
Dr. W. T. Thompson
Carlyle Cox
Home Economics
Majors Hold
Panel Discussion
The new constitution setting
up a Student Cooperative Gov-
ernment association designed to
bring together in one council
for constructive activities the
leaders of all campus organiza-
tions, both men and women,
went into effect here May 4.
with the installation at assembly
of officers for the coming year
These officers were elected
last week under special pro
visions pnding the formal going
into effect of the new constitu-
tion, which had been ratified by
the student body on April 7. The
constitution is the product of
months of study by a student
committee headed by Bessie Fay
Hunt of Wilmington, who has
worked unceasingly for better
student government throughout
her college career, with Carlyk
Cov, Virgil Ward and Evan
Griffin, Joyce Dunham, Willie
Mae Daniels, J. C. Shepherd
Jennings Ballard and Estelie
Davis. It sets up the one joint
council representing all interest
groups to take the lead in coor-
dinating all student activities,
and in creative thinking for the
campus, and provides for sep-
arate men's and men's judiciar-
ies to handle enforcement of
regulations with the assistanct
of special dormitory and day-
student committees.
For the installation program,
three speakers, Dr. Leon R.
Meadows, president of the col-
lege, Estelie Davis, retiring
president of the Women's Stu-
dent Government association,
and Carlyle Cox, president of
the new SCGA, struck the key-
note of the added responsibility
and opportunity that the new
organization is assuming. Then
in an impressive ceremony, the
new officers spoke together,
pledged their loyalty and faith-
fulness in the performance of
their duties, and the student
body, accepting them, responded
with a like pledge that it would
assume its share of responsibii
ity for better citizenship.
President Meadows told the
large group of new officers who
will compose the executive coun-
See Installation on Page Four
In order to acquaint junior
majors in home economics with
problems met in practice teach-
ing, members of Mrs. Ethel
Watters' home economics meth-
ods class held a panel discus-
sion on the subject in the new
Classroom building, May 4.
Mary Long Ford, senior from
Franklinton, was in charge of
the program. After welcoming
the juniors to the meeting, she
sketched the department's prac-
tice-teaching program for them,
especially as it has expanded
since 1940. Since then, in addi-
tion to Greenville high, at least
9 high schools, approved by both
the college and the State De-
partment of Public Instruction,
haev assisted in the home eco-
nomics practice teaching pro-
gram.
Fall quarter student teachers
who spoke, with the name of the
town in which they taught were:
Ovelia Price, Greenville; Leah
Fleming, Williamston; and Eu-
nice McKeithan, Robersonville;
winter quarter teachers were
Dorothy McClure, Williamston;
Lucy Warren, Scotland Neck;
Grace Draughn, Robersonville;
and Margie Hollowell, Green-
ville; sping quarter teachers
are Elizabeth Peele, Winter-
ville; Clellie Mae Croon, Green-
ville; Marian Stalhngs, Rober-
sonville; and Ella Carawan,
Williamston.
From the faculty, Registrar
See Discussion on Page Four
Dorothy Lewis
Voted To Hold
Vice-Presidency
Carlyle Cox, outstanding jun-
ior from Robersonville, piled up
an overwhelming majority over
Willie Mae Daniels, rising jun-
ior from Oxford, in the race for
president of the combined stu-
dent body for next year in the
student elections held Wednes-
day, April 28. Dorothy Lewis
gained a majority over oppon-
ents Virginia Cooke and Joyce
Watson in the contest for the
vice-presidency.
More than 700 students, the
largest number ever to vote at
ECTC, cast ballots in the stu-
dent elections this year. Two
hundred and sixty-six candi
dates were running for the 59
offices decided in the election.
In addition to the president
and vice-president, Amanda
Etheridge was made secretary
Ruth Allen treasurer, Clarine
Johnson first-assistant treas-
urer, Margaret Person second-
assistant treasurer and Burchie
Smith Johnston historian of the
Student Cooperative Govern-
ment association.
In the publications race�
Bernice Jenkins and Harry Jar-
vis were oted eidtor and busi-
ness manager of the Teco Echo,
Christine Hellen and Dorothy
Davis editor and business man-
ager of the Tecoan, and Mari-
, belle Robertson and Dorothy
i Pearsall editor and business
manager of Pieces O' Eight.
Jane Vann is chairman of the
Women's Judiciary. Camille
Jernigan is vice-chairman, An-
nie B. Bartholomew secretary
and Dixie Chapel treasurer.
Chairman of the Men's Judici-
ary is Frank Coiner. Robert
Martin is vice-chairman, Bever-
ly Cutler secretary and treas-
urer and Robert Morgan and Joe
Lassiter members at large.
Frances Tunstall heads the
Women's Day Student commit-
tee. Vice-president is Jane Har-
dee. Laura Hearne is secretary-
treasurer and members at lare
are Wilma Cozart, Josephine
Gibson. Evelyn Jones. Sarah
Moore, and Doris Wells. Clyde
Mann is chairman of the Men's
Day Student committee. Harry
Jarvis is vice-president, Doug-
las Eley secretary-treasurer,
and Roy Carson. Thomas Wil-
liams, Sam Strickland, James
Worsley, Bernice Jenkins and
Melvin Frizzell are members at
large.
Faculty Advisers for the Stu-
dent Cooperative council are Di
R. J. Slay, Dr. Beecher Flana-
gan, and Dr. Herbert Rebarker.
Student members of the Stu-
dent-Faculty committee are
Doris Hockaday, M a r i b e 11 e
Robertson and James Worsley.
Associate editors of the Teco
Echo are Margaret Lewis, Rosa-
lie Brown and Thomas Wil-
liams. Associate business man-
agers are Rachel Dixon, Dorothy
Pearsall and Robert Morgan.
Associate editors for the Tecoan
are Dorothy Lewis, Inez Sim-
mons and Pinear Mae Windle
Associate business managers
are Lillian Boyette, Bessie Coun-
cil and Rebecca Horton. Asso-
ciate editor of Pieces O' Eight
Sec Election on Page Four
Camille Jernigan
To Give Recital
SENIOR OFFICERS
In elections held yesterday to
fill officers in the rising senior
class at ECTC, Dave Owens,
Pinetops junior, was named tc
succeed himself as president.
He was also recently chosen
chief marshal.
Dorothy Pearsall is to be
vice-president; Hazel Williford
secretary, Clyde Mann, treas-
urer.
For senior representatives to
the Student Cooperative Coun-
cil the class elected Helen Flynn
and Garnette Cordle. Dorothy
Davis will represent the class on
the staff of the Teco Echo and
the Tecoan.
Camille Jernigan, pianist,
who will be heard in conceit
on Tuesday, May 18th. A
group of new singers including
Mary Alice Charlton, Mary
Blane Justus, Lucy Nell Smith,
Morris Flow, Josephine Gibson,
Ingram Walters and W. B.
Harris will sing on the pro-
gram. Miss Jernigan, who is
a pupil of Mr. Rossell, will play
Beethoven's "Pathetique Sona-
ta" and compositions by Schu-
mann, Chopin and Falla. None
of the singers have sung in
campus concerts before al-
though several of them were
heard in the winter production
of "Martha One of the fea-
tures of the vocalists will be
selections from the opera "Han-
sel and Gretel" in which they
will be joined by Mr. Rossett.
The concert will be held in Aus-
tin Auditorium at 8:15.
i
WJUWWP9p!pp!P3
fQg&S
t





� � -�� :
PAGE TWO
The TECO ECHO
FRIDAY, MAY 7. 1943
The Teco Echo
Published Biweekly by the Students of East
Carolina Teachers College
Entered as second-class matter December 3,
1925' at the U. S. Postoffice. Greenville,
N. C, under the act of March 3, 18Y9.
Rosalie Brown Editorin-chief
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Margie Dudley Charles Craven
Louise Thomas Harold Taylor
Maribelle Robertson Mary Sue Moore
REPORTERS
Evan Griffin James Worsley
Margaret Lewis Betty Edwards
Conelia Beems Keyhole Korrespondents
BUSINESS STAFF
Harry Jarvis Business Manager
ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS
Dorothy Pearsall Pat Edwards
Helen James Charles Cushman
Rachel Dixon Betty Batson
Bernice Jenkins
TYPISTS
Helen Page Johnson Cathy Hester
Jean Goggin Proof Reader
Cathy Hester Alumni Reporter
Lois Grigsby Editorial Adviser
Beecher Flanagan . Business Adviser
Sherman M. Parks Tecnical Adviser
Member
North Carolina Collegiate Press
Association
Member
Associated Golle&iate Press
Distributor of
GolIe6iaieDi6est
REPRESENTED FOR NATIONAL ADVERTISING BV
National Advertising Service, Inc.
College Publishers Representative
420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.
Chicago � Boston � Lot Anselis � San Francisco
1 oTneAlumni
Dear Alumni:
A train, we are extending to you a very
cordial invitation to attend Commencement.
It is possible and even looks probable that
some or most of you have persuaded your-
selves that it would not be wise to attempt
to attend Commencement his year. If you
have reached such a conclusion I rust you
will change your mind. We did not have
Homecoming Day last fall beer use we want-
ed to conform to the spirit of the nation in
conserving gas. tires, cars, energy, and peo-
ple. However, a great many colleges did
observ e the day. and perhaps in doing so
promoted the cause of education. We feel
that it would be wise for our Alumni to
get together at least once a year. We hope
that the inspiration gained from the reurn
to the campus will react favorably in the
cause of education wherever the alumni live.
In addition to the actual good accomplished
by such a visit to your Alma Mater we
believe that during this time of stress when
nerves are taut it is good for us to relax
ocasionally and. with others, gain strength
through association for the duties which
lie ahead. You will enjoy the clay or days
spent on our campus at the close of May.
A new president o fthe alumni asso-
ciation will be elected this year, and you
will want to be here to help inaugurate the
one who is to lead you for the next two
years. Also, you will wish to be here to
honor the one who receives the alumni
award; and Mrs. Meadows and I will expect
you here to attend the tea at our home on
the afternoon of Alumni Day.
Rooms, meals, and other types of enter-
tainmtnt will be as in former years. The
luncheon will not be formal. We are ex-
pecting large numbers from the honor
classes, which this vear are those of '18, '33,
and '42.
Let us know not later than Saturday,
May 22. if you can be with us so we can
make our rationing plans accordingly.
Very cordially yours,
Leon R. Meadows. President.
Dear Alumni:
At this season our thoughts turn to
Commencement and you. I am happy to
have the privilege to remind you that not
only are we hoping to have you with us
this year, we are expecting you. We are
anxious to know how you have spent the
years since you left us, and how can we
know unless you come back and give us a
report ?
As always at commencement time, the
campus is yours. However, this year more
than ever before, we are having to make
more definite plans to assure your happi-
ness and comfort while you are with us.
Rooms in the dormitories and meals in the
dining halls will be available for those who
notify us by Saturday, May 22.
The classes of '18, 33, and '42 are our
honor guests this year. Complimentary meal
tickets will be given to the members of those
classes when they register in Gotten Office.
Meal tickets for members of other classes
may be purchased. These tickets are thirty-
five cents each except Sunday dinner which
is fifty cents. As in the past the luncheon
on Saturday is complimentary.
We hope you have made plans to be
with us. If not, please start those plans
at once�then you will fill the attached
blank and mail it to reach me or the Alumni
Office by Saturday, May 22. If you prefer
you may send us a postal card giving the
needed information.
Most cordially yours,
Annie L. Morton
'As Time Goes By Voted
Most Popular Tune In Poll Campus
Only An Editor
Has To Guess
The following editorial, as nearly as we
can ascertain, first appeared in "The Pur-
ple and White weekly newspaper of
Mill sap's college, Jackson, Miss.)
Profs can sit crosslegged on the top of
a desk: dean's first list students can let
down their guard; student body presidents
can fraternize with the masses.
Only an editor is required to be pon-
tifical always.
Only an editor is supposed to know
everything that happens, so it is taken for
granted that he always knows it, and no-
body ever tells him anything; only an editor
is supposed to keep an open mind always,
and at the same time to make snap decisions
for each political impasse; only an editor is
required to keep his nose out of politics,
meanwhile keeping tab on the strength of
each separate lineup.
Profs have their apple-polishers who
ask questions after class; dean's list stu-
dents get their quarterly reports; student
body presidents hear quarterly reports;
student body presidents hear complaints in
SEB meetings.
Only an editor has to guess.
Only an editor has to grope blindly
along, trying to put out a paper for a stu-
dent body who will talk onlv behind his
back, who will never tell him what they
like or don't like, who will squak audibly
only when they are mortally and irreparably
wounded who never thank him when he
;says anything nice about them or censor
anything nasty, who have to be tracked
down, cornered, and beaten insensible be-
fore they will so much as give him a news
lead.
Profs have the satisfaction of seeing
their teachings put into practice; dean's list
students are an inspiration to their succes-
sors; student body presidents can point with
pride at year's end to long rows of achieve-
ments.
Only an editor has to endure the spec-
tacle of 99 of his GOO loyal readers, each
and every week, turning immediately on
receipt of the paper to the Finger of Scorn,
ignoring everything else in the issue; to
find the layouts which he and his staff have
spent hours of work, completely unappre-
ciated ; to feel his editorial campaigns which
he has planned for months, vhich a-e his
only method of criticism of his school and
of society, coldly ignored.
Profs get to sit on the stage; dean's
list students don't have to attend class;
student body presidents get to introduce
visitors.
Only an editor is damnfool enough not
to want to trade places with any of them.
And, when all's said and done, only an
editor has the satisfaction of knowing that
his thousand words a week are written
down in letters that can never be erased;
of feeling something in a way which must
have immediate and lasting effect; of know-
ing that, if he knew how to use it, he has
the whole state for his audience; of sensing
that he is doing a job for the students which
no one else could do in quite the same way
and last but not least, of being sure of a
staff that, no matter how much he is forced
to abuse them, overwork them, denv them
my reward for their work, will bedriven
back for more by pure love of literary effort.
Only an editor would gripe about it.
Here's How They Do It!
The Oracle, Monmouth (III.) College:
The editor is elected by the students, is paid
on the basis of number of issues put out.
This usually amounts to a $150 scholarship!
The business manager is appointed by the
Oracle board, which is composed of the edi-
tor, the old business manager, two assist-
ants of the new editor, and a facultv mem-
ber. The business manager is paid in
accordance with the amount of advertising
he sells: usually gives him a $125 scholar-
ship. The above system is defined in the
student body constitution. The editorship
is a political plum, due to this svstem Both
the scholarships are paid from ' Orach rev-
enues. The adviser does not direct the
activities of the staff. Two or three tmes a
year he passes the editor a hot tip but the
rest of the time he never sets foot n the
paper office. When the editor wants advice,
he goes to the alumni secretary, who has
his office next to the Oracle office and who
is interested in what s going on. There
is a standing debt to the printers, so con-
seiencious editors and business managers
try to run the paper as economically as
possible, in order to pay a small amount o;
NOTICE TO BE SENT BY MAY 20
To the Alumni Office
East Carolina Teachers College
Greenville, North Carolina
Dear Alumni Secretary:
I am expecting to attend the 1943
Commencement, and request reservations
tor the following times: (Please check.)
Nights: May 28 ,29 . 30
Meals: May 28: Supper.
May 29: Breakfast , luncheon , supper
May 30: Breakfast , dinner , supper
May 31: Breakfast upper
Sncerely yours,
Name
Address
Boys
20
45
17
16
3
Boys
37
43
14
6
Boys
20
33
47
Boys
77
5
By Harold K. Taylor
In a recent Campus poll a hundred stu-
dents voted their opinions on 1.4 questions.
35 boys and 65 girls were quizzed. Listed
below are the questions and the percentages
answering in various ways.
1. Favorite Comic strip: Girls
Blondie 16
Cap'n Easy 10
Li'l Abner 25
Henry .34
Other 15
2. Do you smoke? It was a surprise to
find that 44 of the girls smoke while only
43 of the boys indulge in the habit.
3. Favorite Branch of Service:
Girls
Armv 44
Navy 25
Marines 24
Didn't say 7
4. Do vou go to bed� Girls
Before or by 11 30
Between 11 and 12 18
After 12 .52
5. Do vou believe in kissing�
Girls
On the first date 12
By the tenth date 38
The other percentage unaccounted for
said it depended on whom they were dating.
Eleven of the sixty-five girls quizzed said
they didn't believe in kissing at all�wonder
who believes that? They ought to tell that
to the marines One boy said that kissing
was a waste of time but as figures show
over three-fourths of the bovs try it on the
first date!
6. Do you attend church regularly?
(at least twice a months
Girls Bovs
Yes 62 57
No 38 43
7. The most popular song was "As Time
Goes By Other favorites were "Old Black
Magic "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home
To and "There Are Such Tnings
8. For the most popular news commen-
tator Gabriel Heater got 65 of the votes.
Kaltenborn was next in popularity.
9. WGTC's Eleven Hundred Club was by
far the favorite radio program with the
girls. 10 of the girls liked Superman.
The bovs preferred Bob Hope.
10. Pop tests were almost unanimously
disliked by the girls�96 were made un-
happy by the pop-quiz professors. 65
per cent of the male student's said that pop
tests were all right and one said he thought
they were fine�as long as they were for
someone else!
11. Do vou favor war marriages?
Girls
Yes 52
No 37
Depends 11
12. How many hours do you study? Such
answers as "What an embarrassing ques-
tion "I'm ashamed to say and "Not
enough to count appeared on the ballots.
The answers revealed that the; girl studies
2.7 hours each day while the boys study 2.1
hours. These figures look bad but you'd be
surprised how accurate they might be
13. Have you ever been in leve? 81 of
the girls say they have been in love and one
girl said that she'd been in love seven times.
66r'r of the boys have been in love while one
boy said he had a funny feeling once but
he didn't know whether it was love.
14. Of the hundred students questioned
eight of them said they didn't drink car-
bonated beverages at all. The other 92 stu-
dents averaged 1.7 drinks per day�mostly
Pepsi-Cola. One guy said he drank 6 a day
�I'd like to advise him to slow up unless he
wants to be 4-F material.
Boys
37
58
5
this debt. Because we at small colleges
believe that everyone has a right to par-
ticipate in as many extra-curricular activi-
ties as he can and because we wish to guard
against any one group controlling the ppaer,
all who wish to write for the paper are
allowed to try out. This does detract from
the final merit of the paper in that most
of our stories are not well-written, we
realize.
Loyola Maroon, Loyola University of
the South, New Orleans, La : The Univer-
sity news sources are divided into beats
which are covered weekly by students in
newswriting class and some editing stu-
dents. A definite copyreading schedule,
with copyreaders recruited from the editing
class, is drawn up and posted each week.
For this work students receive grades which
are counted in final classroom marks. Like-
wise a schedule of workers for the Droof-
reading and layout work at the printers is
posted so that students get an opportunity
to observe first hand the mechanics of
getting out a paper.
Mac Murray College Greetings, Jack-
sonville, III Probably the outstanding
feature of the MacMurray college Greetings
is the fact that we have conducted for the
last two years what is known as the "Survey
of Student Opinion This started through
the ordering by part of our staff of a little
pamphlet from Dr. Gallup of the American
Institute of Public Opinion. The students
read these pamphlets and organized a sim-
plified system for sampling public opinion
at the college. Our process is somewhat
as follows: On Monday of each week the
three students in charge of the student poll
pick out the questions for the coming week.
These are mimeographed on Mondav and
placed in each student's mailbox on Tues-
day. By Wednesday noon the material has
been returned to the institute box and tab-
ulation is made on Thursday.
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT
Well, we feel that you won t need much
of an introduction to the Snothght for this
t me, because Harold TayUor really gets
around on this campus Harold is very
blonde, five feet ten and ne-half inches
tall, and weighs 15C pounds. (It sure fc
nice to find someone you can take inventory
on, and they don't even object to ijs appear-
ing in print. But this is typical of Harold s
good nature and willingness to help.)
As a freshman Harold was a member
of the Debate club, charter member of the
YMCA, and began his career en the college
newspaper. He has remained an active
member of the YM for the four years he
has been here. He served as an associate
editor of the paper his junior year, and
this year. During his junior year he served
on the "Y" cabinet. For three years Harold
has been in the Phi Sigma Pi, acting a
assistant secretary his junior year, and sec-
retary this vear. In case you are wondering
how his political interests lie, he was a
member of the YDC for two years.
Harold's career as a journalist has
been very interesting. From the duties of
reporter'his first two years, he turned to
those of an associate editor his last two
years. He has been in charge of the ser-
vicemen's column and has to say of that
duty that he has enjoyed the job more than
any other one he has had. He gets quite
a bit of "fan" mail from his readers. During
his junior year he attended he Press Con-
vention in Winston Salem. "I'd like to go
into the newspaper world after the war
states Harold. He developed this life .i am-
bition by working on this paper.
Between his junior year and his senior
year this energetic young man turned "from
scholar to a machinist, back to a scholar
Translated, that means he dropped out of
school for a year to work in the Norfolk
Navy yard in Portsmouth. Va. Thus, he
received a taste of Navy life, or rather a
peep in on what it's all about. Maybe that
is where his enthusiasm for the Navy began.
Anyway, he is now in the V-7 and thinks he
will go in training shortly after graduation
the last of May. When asked why he el
the Naval Reserve, he replied, "Because 1
think it's the best branch of the service!
Good reason.
"My hobby Oh. courting
Harold in reply to the reporter's questi
"A mixture�blonds and brunettes, mos
brunettes, though When the reporter in-
sisted that he must hav another hot:
confessed that he collects feature stoi
from magazines and newspapers. lb- a
collects pictures of ships. Harold i :
tennis (as you will notice by his red I
and bleached hair lately), basketball. .
swimming, lb dances, "more to as
with people rather than a love of dancil
Modern fiction is the way his ?ash- rui
literature. He was a member of the B
of the Month Hub until a couple of n
ago. He has a nice library that he hi
to leave behind when he got- to the Ma
He doesn't go to the shows much. ;
"rather loaf in the 'Y' store . . . more th
anything else Pepsi-Colas and crei a puffs
are his favorite attractions in the i
He loves to eat!
"I think all girls are fir and dai
ius Amazing remark but that v
he said. He says he is a bashful little I
but he couldn't take time off from a "hej
date" to finish this interview1
During the summer of S9 he hitch-
hiked to the New York World's Fair v
eighteen dollars in hi pocket and adv I !
in his blood. On his way be stopped
Philadelphia and visited the Inquirer office.
He had quite a trip with plenty to eat,
insisted, and came back dodging flood a
thirty-five cents in his pocket! Hitch-hik
was once a favorite pastime of his.
I next thing he will probably be hopping
ride with will be one of Uncle Sam's ves
and we wish him all the luck in his endea
ors. "I really want to help lick Hell oul
of those Japs says he, and here's hopi
he does!
�.�
I
SCUMMING
By The Keyhole Korrespondent
Now that spring has put leaves (pro-
tection) on the bushes and drawn ECTC
lovers out of hibernation in the dorms, the
Keyhole Korrespondents of old have emerg-
ed from red flannels and warmth of the
kitchen stove to bring you a bit of the good
earth (dirt to you, chum!).
We'd like to know who Harry Willey
appointed as Claudia Jordan's guardian
when he left for the army? There seems to
be a little conflict�she has too many
guardians. Margart Greene ain't so happy
anymore either since Carl left�and she's
being true to him too, almost!
That Peacock-Beck affair ain't lagging
any these warm Spring days. If you want to
find Peacock just look for "Tete
Dramatics have some social advantages
all right. Ever since "Ladies in Retirement"
was presented Virginia Cooke and Willie
Greene have been rehearsing a lot.
Ask some of the fraternity boys where campus - - could a certain lieuter
their pins are � President Clyde Mann I something to do with her stand?
�those triangle affairs are dangerous. Won
der if he's told Margie how serious it is
with Jerry?
The beautiful friendship of next-door
neighbors Catherine Jones and Mildred
Beverly is growing daily. They were last
seen up at OTI together.
"The most experienced Candidate,
Carlyle Cox, when asked what he was ex-
perienced in by Miss Mamie Jenkins replied,
"I can't tell YOU what I'm experienced in.
Miss Jenkins
Stone buddies Sammie Crandell and
Frank Coiner are contesting for th" hand
of petite Jerry Albritton�By the way, we
understand that Sir Francis is organizing
a Gestapo to keep the boys in line next vear.
At a closed meeting of some of the
heads of the new student organizations on
Monday night. Jane Vann staunchly de-
fended the rights of the marines t the
wanted to order three so he'd have enough
to give each one of his girls one.
Whn speaking of rugged men don't for-
get that Sam Strickland! He had two dates
one night last week.
The boys in Ragsdale sorta' hawked
S. L. Goddard the other day when they told
him they'd written his girl in Hopewell
telling about the way he's been galivanting
,around�S. L. got so excited he called her
up long distance to get the situation
straightened out.
Dot Reide, Virginia Davis and others
got the disappointment of their lives last
weekend when Ensign Jennings Ballard
didn't show up!
Latest reports have it that Thelma
Cherry is gently nudging "Mickey" Ross out
of the Hiram Mayo picture�Better watch
him, Delia Rose!
A word of warning to Metzel Simmons
We wonder when the new editor. Ber-
nice Jenkins, will get time to organi7e the
paper when he takes over the next issue
At the rate he's been going lately his cam
pusology courses and his many, 'many stu-
dents keep him too busy.
Harold Taylor offers a warning to
Fairless and Jarvis about the staff room-
Sally still sees all and tells all
Is Dot Starling still listed among the
taken femmes? If so, by whom. ATLAS?
Maribelle Robertson was hawked when
her "Billy Boy" couldn't make it to Green-
vlile other day.
Evelyn Conyers almost forgot J W.
other day when her ole' flame, Lt. Alvin
Wooten came back to the campus.
Since we don't get around much any-
more we don't know everything � so we'll
sign off until the next issue. You just
keep making dirt so we'll have dirt to dig.
Bits o' Fashion
BY SUE
Pull off your winter undies, my chilluns,
and let's start on out-door back-to-the-woods
campaign. I hear you saying�"But what has
ECTC to offer in the great outdoors?" Sup-
press that complaint, "cause here's a list to
set you going�tennis, bicycling, bowling,
skating, hiking, badminton, horse-shoe
pitching, softball, and archery. (You take
over: I can't think of anymore.)
Just an old sweater 'n skirt won't do to
give M'lady a fresh from the sports-band-
box appearance for her spores hero or her
own morale. So here's hints from the wise
ole owl.
Starting at top: Maybe your hair stays
in place for an afternoon of galavanting
even when the winds on high, the game gets
tight or when racing through town 'n coun-
trybut that's not the way I heard it.
Pigtails tied in bright ribbons rate high in
appeal and in efficiency too. Or perhaps
you'll want to turn Hindu and swath your
raven locks in a turban.
Vogue says Muchas gracias for Mexi-
can slacks with a tail-out shirt. The Chinese
have also donated slacks with the coolie jac-
kets, Mexican, Chinese or what-ever slacks
presents a trim look on the home-front for
bidding, hiking or what's-on-the-program.
Shorts are the versatile members "of the
sports wardrobe. Long school-boy shorts
shortruffled skirt's la balleriana with brief
little girl shorts peaking out beneath, simple
classic shorts�you have your choice.
Dresses shed their sleeves, backs, and
maybe midriffs and join the sports band
wagon.
Shorts, slacks, dresses�all come in a
profusion of colors and materials. Shark-
skins, madras, denium, gingham, linen;
pink, pale yellow, lemon yellow, black (the
sophisticate), green�any of these add up to
good-looks, my lady.
Plastic soled shoes�the brainchild of
the modern test-tube come in sports stvles
which are grand for hiking, bicycling and
anything except tennis when the age-old
tennis shoes makes a new entrancethis
time after a trip to the paint pot.
Sun-light brings many evils as well as
advantages�such as sunburn, freckles, and
wrinkles; for which there are anti-sun-
burn lotions, freckle creams, and sun glass-
es. But a tanned hide is the sign of the trade
and gives a distinction which is purely on the
summer side�and cute





DAY, MAY 7. 1943
The TECO. ECHO
PAGE THREE
F
reene Reveals Program
or Spring Intramurals
Murray's Demons Win
Season's First Game
m
r
-�
I
B
ii
St
A
P
n
h
il
t
lior physical
aer ing us
A. H&nkner
lucation de-
chairman uf
sports pro-
trter.
the softbaP,
and track pro-
$ iring. The
tit w being
nine series
aptained by
i n d Floy
officiating.
lounced that
oftba
held.
ha e o ei
day is plan-
m round wa
interrupted
program at
- a first-string
squad and regu-
ln-

i
4
.
Ii l
It-
f
D�
ad
pd
i
�K-
fei!
th�'
to
Pounding the pill for 11 safe
blows, Buddy Murray's Demon
Deacons knocked out a 9-2 de-
cision o v e r Floyd Woody's
Woodpeckers in the first game
of the current intramural soft-
ball season played on the athle-
tic field April 21.
The Deacs were paced at the
platter by Elry Forrest, who
collected a homerun and a
single in two official times at
bat. Brant Waters collected two
ubles for throe trips. Carlyle
Cox appeared in a pinch-hitting
irk and contributed a two-run
double. Wiley Brown and Mur-
ay got two for four.
1 he Woodpecks could connect
but six safe blows on the
itching of Brown. Stanfield
j.johnson got two of those, includ-
!��� a two-base hit. Joe Lassiter
ml Woody shared mound duties
or the Peckers.
Score by innings:
Woodpeckers 000 200 0 2 6 0
Deacons 103 113 x 9 11 2
Batteries: Lassiter, Murray
and Butler; Brown and Murray
Umpire, Greene.
Smith Stars As Peckers Win,
To Play Deacons AsainToday
Deacons Accept
Woody's Donation
In Strange Game
Floyd Woody
giving IT free
cost his Woodpeckers a game as
thev bowed to Buddy Murray's
Deacons, 2518, in a comedy of
errors April 23. It was the sec-
ond game of the softball loop
and the second victory for the
Deacons.
Ten miscues by the Murray-
men helped the Woodpeckers to
most of their 18 tallies. Three
Peckers errors helped the Dea-
con cause.
An eleven-run outbrust in
the third frame, in which eight
men were issued passes to first,
Eugene Smith's towering
homerun down the right-field
line with two out and two aboard
in the last inning scored the tie-
ing and winning runs as Floyd
Woody's Woodpeckers edged a
13-12 decision over Buddy Mur-
ray's Demon Deacons in an er-
ror-marked game Wednesday
afternoon.
This was the second victory in
five starts in the five-oinine
games series with the Demons
for the Woodpeckers. The two
teams meet this afternoon on the
athletic field in a crucial battle.
A win for the Peckers today Will
knot the series at 3-3, while a
victory for the Demons will give
them what might prove to be a
decisive 4-2 lead in the series.
Going into the last inning of
Wednesday's battle, the Peckers
were trailing by a 12-9 score.
Captain Woody worked Clyde
Mann for a walk, stole second,
reached third on an infield out
an dcame home when Mann
erred Randolph Roper's roller
to the box. Mann walked Nick
Ztiras to put two men on base
and set the stage for Smith's
game-winning blow.
The Demons put together five
hits and three costly errors by
the Woodpeckers to score eight
runs in the first frame. Woody
started on the mound but was
generosity in'replaced by Clark after six runs
passes to i'irst had scored. Woody again went
to the mound in the second, but
three runs on three errors and
one hit caused him to retire in
favor of Clark at the end of the
inning. Clark allowed only one
run on five hits for the last five
stanzas.
A single by Zuras, a triple by
Smith, a single by Joe Lassiter
and a double by Clark gave the
Peckers four runs in the second.
Two errors, a walk and single
by Smith and Lassiter account-
ed for four runs in the sixth.
Smith with three Tor four and
Deacons Capture
Third Victory
In Softball Loop
Capitalizing on all breaks and
plaving heads-up ball, the Dem-
on "Deacons of Buddy Murray-
took their third victory in four
starts against Floyd Woody's
Woodpeckers, 7-6, April 30.
Three Pecker errors helped
the Deacons to five runs in the
third inning. Five hits, includ-
ing successive homeruns by G.
A. Taylor and Nick Zuras net-
ted the Woodpeckers four runs
in the fifth nning.
Brant Waters drove Murray
home from first with a triple in
the sixth to put the tilt on ice
for the Deacons. Murray with
three for four, Emmett Fisher
with two for three and Waters
withtwo for four led the Dea-
cons with the willow.
Woody with two for three and
Taylor with two for four led the
Woodpeckers at bat.
Score by innings:
R H E
Woodpeckers 010 140 0 6 10 4
Deacons 105 001 x 7 12 1
Batteries: Clark and Gaul-
din; Saieed, Mann and Murray.
-a
BUY MORE WAR BONDS
Nick Leads Woodpeckers
To 9-5 Win Over Demons
Behind the steadv, five-hit I third on what would have
hurlintr of Nick BZuras, Floyd ordinarily been a home run.
Woody's Woodpeckers won their i Zuras had things under con-
first game in intramural soft-trol over most of the route. He
ball play, defeating Buddy Mur-1 fanned four Deacons.
ray's Demon Deacons 9-5 Wed-j Score by innings:
nesday, April 28. i Deacons 010 004 0 5 5 1
Highlight of the game was a Woodpeckers 130 104 x 15 9 Z
four-plv hit by Clvcte Mann of
VISIT THE
DIXIE LUNCH
"Where The Gang Eats"
, ,�iJX
Rottftr I
SAUER
he Deacons ahead to stay. I Lassiter with two for four paced
Murray and Wiley Brown paced I the winers at bat. lmo Ma(
First Rounds Being Played
As Mural Tennis Is Begun
W
A
- in the intramur-
ti namenca were run
ay. Men's and w� -
and mixed doubles
i in the program.
per brackel of the
es Emmett Fisher
iamla Etheridge took a
75 ,6-4 decision
Windle and Carl-
am e to the quarter
Woody a n d Sit
drew'a bye to reach
nala in this bracket.
, ,� bracket Brant Wa-
uj Esther Parker drew a
lVA Jerome Butler and
Davis haven't met Harry
ln Lindsay yet.
men's singles Floyd,
has already reached the
.finals int he upper brac-i
drew a bye in the first
and defeated Harold Tay-
! 6-2, in the second round, j
r' stopped William Craft,
2. in the first round. Carl-
x outlasted Harry Jarvis,
7 ni the first round
ill meet the winner of the
Brown-Burney Warren
in the second round.
the lower bracket Nick
Jerome Butler drew
for the first round. Brant
V. tiers will meet Emmett Fish-
, decide v. ho will play Zuras,
inn r of the Ray Spar-
row-Bob Martin match Will
� Butler,
In the first round of the wo-
men's singles Lee Bledsoe de-i
feated Mildred Jordan, Amanda
Eth ridg topped Dot Shearin.
Esther Parker downed Rache-
Robertson, and Frances LggeLt
defeated Ruth Hall in the upper
In the lower bracket Dot Peele
defeated Jane Vann, Eunice Her-
ring defeated Annie Bartholo-
mew. Sit Knowles defeated Nell
Murphy and Louise Lindsay de
� ated Jerry Albritton.
SERVICEMEN
Continued from Page One
ited the campus recently while
home on a furlough. He is
stationed at Keesler Field, Mis-
sissippi, and is in the personne.
department of tho Army Ai.
Forces. Elmer graduated from
ECTC in 1941.

Aux. Elizabeth White Per
kins, daughter of Mrs. J. i.
White of Greenville, is home
ion furlough because of the m-
ness of her brother. She hat
finished the WAAC basic train-
ing and is now stationed at
Davtona Beach. Florida. Aux.
Perkins came to ECTC several
vears ago. Her present address
is 2nd Co 4th Reg 2nd
WAAC Training Center, Day-
itona Beach, Florida.

In a letter to Editor Rosalie
Brown, Jerome Donaldson,
Yeoman 2c wrote: "I wish to
thank you and your co-workers
for sending me The Teco hcru.
By the time I receive them, the
news is rather old, but still it o
news to me. Many times the
travel around for a month or
more trying to catch me. 1
received the February 27 issue
on April 30. I like the Ser
vicemen's Column because it
keeps me informed on the
whereabouts of friends and
classmates Jerome graduateu
here in 1941 and went into the
navy shortly thereafter. He is
stationed aboard the cruiser
U S. S. Savannah, co rleet
Post Office, New York, N. Y.
he winners with two hits each.
Murray included a round-trip-
per in his two. Senior also con-
nected for the circuit for the
victors and Nick Zuras and Ran-
dolps Roper hit homers for the
Woodpeckers. Wood y, Snag
Clark and Burney Warren led
the losers at the plate.
Score by innings:
Deacons 20 (11) 032 7 25 10 10
Woodpeckers 163 151 2 18 11 ?�
Batteries: Crandell and Mur-
ray. Woody and Butler. Um-
pire .Greene.
got four singles for four trips
for the Demons. Elvy Forrest
and Wiley Brown each hit two
for two, and Carlyle Cox hit a
double in his one chance at the
plate in a pinch-hitting role.
Score by innings:
R H E
Woodpeckers 140 004 4 13 10 8
Deacons 831000 0 12 116
Batteries: Woody, Clark and
Gauldin; Mann and Murray.
Umpire, Greene.
Teachers Divide
With High School
high
ECTC and Greenville
school are even in softball
standings for the season, botn
teams having won one of the
two games played to date. The
high school team took the first
game played on the college
athletic field, 13-10, but the
Teachers came back to avenge
that defeat with a 12-11 victory
in the second game.
In the first game the college
team outhit the high schoolers
11-5, but errors by his team-
mates cost Pitcher Floyd Woody
the game. Williams with two for
two officially was the only high
school plaver to get more than
one hit. Elvy Forrest, Elmo
Mayo and G. A. Taylor each col-
lected two hits for the college.
In the final game Woody re-
ceived better support afield and
gave up only seven hits, but
walks kept him in trouble. The
game went into an extra inning
and Wiley Brown drove in For-
rest with the last of ECTC's 17
hits. Pitcher Bill Harrington
with two for four was the only
high school boy to get more than
one safe blow. Woody got three
for four and Forrest three for
five for the college. Buddy Mur-
ray, Brown, Brant Waters,
Snag Clark and Taylor each got
two hits for the winners.
the losers in the sixth. The
Peckers were apparently coast-
ing home with a 5-1 lead in the
going into the sixth frame. But
at this juncture Wiley Brown
beat out an infied hit and Elmo
Mayo and Murray were safe on
fielder's choices and the bags
were drunk. Mann sobered
them with a blow to deep cen-
ter.
In the last half of the sixth
Zuras led off with a four-bag-
ger for the deciding run. A fev
minutes later Joe Lassiter hit
a homer with Dick Gaulding a-
board to sew up the game.
Beverly Cutler was top man
in the Woodymen's 15-hit as-
sault on Buddy Murray with
three for four. Woody, Lassiter.
Stanfield Johnson, and Burney
Warren each got two hits.
Carlyle Cox had a triple in two
trips for the Deacons. An in-
jured leg caused him to stop at
H R E
Batteries: Murray and Cran-
dell; Zuras and Gauldin. Um-
pire, Greene.
QUALITY and QUANTITY
IN
CAROLINA DAIRY'S
DELICIOUS
MILKSHAKES
COLONY
SUNDAY 10-22c
Joan
CRAWFORD
Melvyn Douglas
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odor, checks perspiration
itself 1 to 3 days. Not irri-
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Smooths on in a jiffyno
need to rinse off. Order
your supply todaysave
half price!
BISSETTE'S
DRUG STORE
LAUTARES BROS.
JEWELERS
Watches � Jewelry � Silver
Gifts � Watch Repairing
Call For That�
MUCH NEEDED
NOURISHMENT WHILE
STUDYING
GARRIS GROCERY
" It's � Town We Have It"
BOWL FOR HEALTH'S
SAKE AT
GREENVILLE
HEALTH CENTER
Use The Daytime
STUDENT RATE
Fountain
HOSIERY AND DRY GOODS
Visit
C�$CS 5&1C
i
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Eastern Carolina's
Shopping Center
,fJOIN THE CROWD
1.1THAT SHOPS
ndSMARTLY AND
I �� �'�ECONOMICALLY
as 4i�� at �
jid M in- . flKgGRANT'S
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It IN IN ID g0 GET SET N0W
FANS For The Season Is At Hand!
Wilson Racquets 1.95 UP
Wilson Nylon Strung 375EUP
Wilson Tennis Balls 50c
EDWARDS HAS ALL THE ACCESSORIES, TOO!
Presses � Covers � Reels � Nets � Visors
Court Markers � Shorts � Shirts
C H. Edwards Hardware House
"SPORTSMAN'S HEADQUARTERS"
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WHEN WRITING
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OVERSEAS USE
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IT PHOTOGRAPHS BEST!
DOUBLE SIZE
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AT THE
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Stationery Store
t
f





I
If
I
I
PAGE FOUR
The TE C 0
FRIDAY. May
McKeith-
Alumni Dag Plans
As in former years the Alum-
ni Day program will be on Sat-
urday during Commencement,
which comes this year on May
29 through May SI. The pro-
gram of the Alumni Association
will include such significant
events as installation of the new
officers, citation to the Alumni
Award recipient, recognition ot
the graduating class, and the re-
ports of chapters. In the after-
noon President and Mrs. Mead-
ows will hold a most informal
"at home" for alumni and the
graduating class, and at 6:30
the graduating class will have
the traditional Allegiance Ser-
vice on the campus.
The Honor Classes who will
be special guests are the class of
1018. the class of 193:5. and the
class of 1942.
Other plans for Commence-
ment are similar to those of
other years, though somewhat
simplified. The next issue of the
Teco Echo will carry full de-
tails of the program.
Elsewhere in this issue you
will find invitations to "come
home" and a blank for the ne-
cessary reservations. This is
the first year in the Association
that reservations have been
necessary, but this is also the
first year that the Association
has also been called on to work
for Victory against tyranny. If
you can come to commencement,
fill out blank and mail it on
time. If you cannot come youi-
self, please pass the blank to
some one who can return.

Cutnsboro Chapter�
The Spring meeting of the
Greensboro Alumni Associa-
tion of ECTC was held May 1.
1943 at the vmw of Miss Lila
Pritchard and Miss Bess Doub,
hostesses.
The guest speaker was Miss
Alice Let Pope who reviewed
Gertrude Diamant's "The Days
of Ofeiia She was both enter-
taining and scholarly in her re-
view, and estimated the Diam-
ant story as an authenic and
human interpretation of the
Mexican scene.
The next year officers are as
follows: Mrs. C. A. Jackson
(Pattie Bess Doub): Secretary
and Treasurer. Lila Pritchard
Program Chairman, Mrs. R. .
Morris (Margaret Smith and
Publicity chairman. Alice Pope.

GranvUle County Chapter
The March meeting of the
Gianville County Alumni Asso-
ciation of ECTC was held in the
Oxford High School library
with Mrs. B. D. Bunn (Iola
Finch) presiding.
A very interesting report of
the alumni war work was given
by the chairman. Time and space
will not be allow a complete list
of the number of activities ear-
ned on. but the members of the
Gianville Chapter have partici-
pated most heartily in every un-
dertaking.
To the efforts of the presi-
dent. Mrs. Iola Finch Bunn, the
growth of the active member-
ship was largely due. The eigh-
teen active members have found
it a joy to follow their compe-
tent leader, who worked so
faithfully towards the cause of
her Alma Mater.
The following officers foi
1913-44 are: Mrs. Nellie Breed-
love Hobgood, president; Mrs.
Shirley Averette, vice-presi-
dent: Miss Vida Jones, secre
tary; and Miss Josephine Caf-
lett, treasurer.

Franklin County Chapter
The last regular meeting of
the Franklin County ECTC A-
lumni Association met in Louis-
burg and Franklinton April 6.
Six Alumni from Louisburg and
seven from Franklinton were
present.
After the meeting was called
to order by the president, Mrs.
Susie Jackson the minutes of the
last minutes were read and a fi-
noncial report was made. Letters
from Mrs. Holland were read
and discussed. Final plans for
meeting our budget for the
Association finances were made.
After the business, a delicious
salad plate was served by our
hostesses, Mrs. R. B. Mitchell
and Mrs. Hugh Perry.
ELECTION
Continued from Page One
is Dorothy Pearsall. Associate
business managers are Pinear
Mae Windley, Laurene Marsh-
burn and Elsie Biggs.
Marshals are Beity Batson,
Elizabeth Darden, Dorothy Da-
vis. Dorothy Whitley, Ruth
Winslow. Alice Wiggins, Mar-
gie Dudley, Pat Edwards, Dave
Owens. Elmo Mayo, Robert
Morgan. C a m i 11 e Jernigan,
Rosalie Brown, Dorothy Sasser,
Maribelle Robertson and Vir-
ginia Dare Britton.
Cheerleaders are Barbara
Parker. Carolyn Daniels, Doney
Jones, Lois Sessoms, Lee Bled-
soe, Maxine Pleasant, Mary
Alice Cahoon and Evelyn
Lewis.
Following are the officers of
the various house committees:
Gotten hall�preisdent, Marj -
rie Privott; vice-president, Vir-
ginia Dare Britton; secretary.
Amy Floyd; members at large,
Gertrude Berry, Estelle Hester,
Syble Beaman, Barbara Brewer,
Lillian Hins and Anne Audre-
Stevenson � Fleming hall-
president, Elizabeth Crawforu;
vice-president, Bonnie Davit
secretary, Vivian Yelverton;
members at large, Sarah Hun-
ter. Annie Kate Evans, Willie
Copeland, Maxine Pleasant,
Nina Cook and Marguerite
Ricks�Jarvis hall� president,
Dorothy Shearin; vice-presi-
dent, Mary Virginia Butt; secre-
tary, Verna Carraway; mem-
bers at large, Lee Bledsoe, Fran-
ces Carter, Reba Brown, Eliza-
beth Temple, Frances Temple,
Dorothy Jean Creech�Wilson
hall�president, Margie Dud-
ley; vice-president, Annie Mae
W ard ; secretary, Gertrude
Woolard; members at large,
Louise Keith. Mary Alrce Ca-
hoon. Elizabeth Darden, Alice
Wiggins, Bessie Council and
Nell Murphy�Ragsdale hall-
president, Ray Sparrow; vice-
president, Joe Lassiter; secre-
tary, Stanfield Johnson; mem-
bers at large, Elmo Mayo, S. D.
Goddard, Dave Owens, John
Johnston and Bill Council.
ternities. The invocation for the
baccalaureate sermon will be
conducted by Dr. R. S. Boyd of
Presbyterian Church of Green-
ville.
On Sunday night the Vesper
service is being jointly sponsor-
ed by the YMCA and the YW
CA.
Commencement begins on
Saturday, May 29 and is cul-
minated with the graduating
exercises on Monday morning.
May 31.
YW-YM Sponsor
Easter Lily Sale
Over forty dollars was real-
ized from the sale of small
paper Easter lilies for the bene-
fit of crippled children which
was carried on here on the cam-
pus and in Greenville, April 27,
by the YMCA and the YWCA.
The campaign, planned by
Anne Audrey Stevenson and
Ed Brown for the YW-YM, re-
spectively, lasted just one day,
with a booth in the post office
lobby at the college in the morn-
ing, and at the social hour in the
Wright building in the evening,
and one at Five Points down-
town both afternoon and eve
ning.
For this sale, the lilies were
made by crippled children of
North Carolina, and to them
the proceeds will go, as the pro-
ject was inaugurated by the
Crippled Children's association
of this state.
True To Their
Pledge Says
Chesterfields
The current Chester
pays tribute to the mt
women of medicine. Am
doctors are making medi
tory . . . serving on all fighting
fronts and doing double duty at
home, caring for their own pa-
tients and those of doctors who
have gone into service. As
Chesterfield says, "They're true
to their pledge" to serve hu-
manity faithfully wherever the
need may be. Copywise, Ches-
terfield again stresses the im-
portance of proper blending ir
giving smokers the milder, cool-
er, better-tasting smoke they
like. It ties in its cigarette
s t o r y with the headline:
"They're true to their pledge
. . . THEY SATISFY
The Liggett & Myers Tobac-
co Co the makers of Chester-
field, back up their newspaper
copv with two top-ranking ra-
dio shows: FRED WARING
and his gang with Victory
Tunes and the Nation's leading
1-minute variety show . .
HARRY JAMES and Ameri
ca's most popular dance baud.
In its printed copy and on the
air Chesterfield urges every-
body to "Back up the Man in
Uniform . . . Buy War Bonus
�Write Letters
Williamston; Eunice
Draughon and Mil
Roberaonville
bv Pvt. Vernon Kuetemeyer,
former student here The selec- ; am G
tions "I Got Plnty O Nuttin � b� � Ford and Elizabeth
"Summertime "Bess 'You o Xtorville. Lucy War-
My Woman Now It n t Pail �
Finale" we Other student teachers
Dept Mis
Teacher Traim i

Necessarily
ight.
ii ice
uncan,
-Mi
who

!
i
tain d i
pti
( lassroom B
x me � non j
nior nru i
as a final encore portion!
Private Kueterneyer's arrange-
ment of Show Boat.
DISCUSSION
Sue
Sou
Continued from Page One
H. J. McGinnis, President L. K.
Meadows, Mr. M. L. Wright,
Miss Katherine Holtzclaw, and
Mr. F. D. Duncan were invited
to attend the program.
TEACHERS
Continued from Page One
es in vocational guidance. Many
have been taught how to u&
their leisure time profitably
without the use of tires and gas- j
oline, by choosing interesting
and worthwhile hobbies, by
making their homes attractive
places for entertaining, and by
providing home entertainment i
for the family and friends.
Jenkins, Margaret ail. Be. s
Usry, Lorainr Home. Inez
Stephenson, Violet Hopson, and
Parker of Williamston;
Lou Young and Melva Wil-
liamson of Winterville; Marie
Penuel, Irma Rhodes. Mildred
Dewar, and Jewel Langley �.t
Scotland Neck; Ruth Bizell, L
dia May Booth, Juiia David,
Lulu Gupton, Sally Taylor,
Mrs. Eleanor C. luster. Elsie
Hat sell. Carolina llines Wini-
fred Mercer. Ailine Mewborn,
Henrietta Ray. Leona Sugg,
Louise M u r p h y. Margaret
Crocker, Grace Humbles. Clou-
nie Huskins, of Greenville.
Members of the home eco-
nomics -education class who ar-
ranged for the conference art :
Annie Kate Evans. Gladys
Mumford Anne Audrey Ste-
phenson, Mavis Ballance, Eli-
zabeth Creech, Annade Da
son, Lina Edwards, Jam- Fish-
er, Helen House. Alene Mc-
Lamb, Elizabeth R berts, l
educatio
attendinj th
-(-e
Srl l' DENTS
PATR
THE MERCU
WHOSE A
IN Tlii-
A NATIONAL DRINK
ROYAL CRown
COLA
� �-� � �v
Many have learned practical!Jane Saint. Gretchen Webster,
ways of maintaining good Dorothy Wilson, and Hael Yei-
INSTALLATION
PHI SIGMA PI
EXERCISES
Thompson is Professor of Rc-
by Associated Collegiate Press
ligious Education Education a
Lnion Theological Seminary.
Richmond, Va. He received his
education at Davidson and the
Union Theological Seminar
He was ordained a minister iu
the Presbyterian Church in
1910 and has held pastorates in
Lexington, N. C; Knoxviile,
lenn and Mobile, Alabama.
Dr. Thompson is a member �i
Phi Beta Kappa, Kappa Sigma,
and Omicro Delta Kappa fra-
Continned from Page One
oil that they have an opportun-
ity to help shape a better col-
lege community that no other
students in this institution have
had, and called on them to give
time, energy, and thought to
fulfilling their obligations to
themselves, their fellow stu-
dents, the college and the world
outside.
Miss Davis spoke of the part
of the individual student in
making the new government a
success; and Cox, speaking on
the importance of setting a goal
and working toward it. pointed
out that the new system frets
the central council for construc-
tive activities and suggestet,
ways of developing a more pro-
gressive student body to play its
part in building a stronger
institution.
Eight new members were
initiated into the Tan Chaptei
of the Phi Sigma Pi Fraternity
last Tuesday night. They are
listed with their home ad-
dresses as follows: Edward
Brown, Colerain; Atlas Woo-
len. Greenville; Jerome Butler,
Scotland Neck: William Greene,
ICrossnore; Sam B. Strickland.
Rich Square; William s. John-
son, Conway; J. C. Shepherd,
Lexington: Randolph Roper,
I Bath.
Phi Sigma Pi is a national
education fraternity and was
founded in 1D1G at Missouri
State Teachers College. The lo-
cal chapter was founded in
1936 and now has a total mem-
bership of 110. Active mem-
bers at present number 24.
Dr. Beecher Flanagan, pro-
fessor of economics, is sponsor
of the ECTC chapter and is
national historian.
Ethel K. Wat-
.u-wv Trainer
ol Stud .
health and caring for sick in j verton, with Ml
the home in the absence of doc-iters, Resident I
tors and nurses, with the aid of and SuperviSoi
equipment which they are Teaching.
taught to improvise. Much Red Slaff membera attendinj! lh�
conference: Dr. L. R. Meadow.
President; Dr. Howard J. Me
IT
TRY IT
QUENCH
student teachers and by higf
school students under the su-
pervision of student teachers,
who also assisted with salvage
drives and the rationing pro-
grams.
Seniors participating in the
discussion and the school cen-
ters in which the yare taught
are indicated as follows: Oveiia
Price, Clellie Mae ('room, and
Margie Hollowell ol Greenville;
Leah Fleming. Dorothy Mc-
Clure, and Ella Carawan of
Ginnis, Registrar; Miss Kath-
arine Holtzclaw. Chairman ofl
NKIII BOTTLING
COMPAN1
G reen v
Palace Barber
Shoppe
The Three Musketeer
Barbers
11 V E R Y T H I N G
For The
COLLEGE BOY OH (; I R i
From SHOES To HATS
BELK-TYLER CO
Greenville, North Carolina
iiiriwiiHiinimmiminiBiniHiMMiiiaiiiiHiKimini&iQiiiiHiiHimmiiinimni
mini
PITT
SONG SERVICE
RECITAL
Song service held on the step
of the new Classroom building
Friday evening. May 1, took the
place of the usual Friday night
YW, YM vesper hour.
Songs from the song sheets
included hymns, rounds, and
many old favorites. The sing-
ing was led by Miriam Sexton
assisted by Charlotte Shearin,
outgoing president of the YW.
Continued from Page One
ard concluded the group by sing-
ing "Into the Night" by Ed-
wards, "Lift Thine Eyes" bj
Logan. "Sometime" by Russot-
to, and the "Jaintor's Roy" as
an encore.
The last group consisted of
selections from "Porgy and
Less" by Gershurin, arranged
KEEP 'EM FLYING
SUN-MON TUE
"HITLER'S CHILDREN
from honk "Educating I or Death"
WEDNESDAY
PRANK MORGAN
"A Stranger In Town"
&�yIta. �tamp4.
Thur-Fri "MEANEST MAN IN TOWN
Jack Bwwj PriaeiUa lane
B UV W A R BONDS
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TH EYRE
7Z
:Qm'
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ERNEST
BROWN DRUG CO.
The Real Druggist
Dial 2815 712 Dickinson Ave.
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS
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COLLEGE STUDENTS
WELCOME
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and
DRINKS
tRUE TO THEIR
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'a-
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P
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o.

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DIAL 2861
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716 DICKINSON AVE.
fUmmm prJntinQ Gofu
I
commercial printers
Greenville, North Carolina
THEY'RE W TRUE TO
THEIR PLEDGE
AMERICA'S 180,000
MEN AND WOMEN OF MEDICINE
are serving humanity faithfully
wherever the need may be. They
give their best with our troops and
are doing double duty at home.
m
Giving you a MILDER
BETTER TASTE .
Ihe steadily growing popularity of
Chesterfields is a sure sign that they
make good their pledge to give you the
things that count most in a cigarette.
Smokers know they can depend
on Chesterfield's Right Combination
of the world's best cigarette tobaccos
to give them a MILDER, BETTER
TASTE. They're true to their pledge
.They Satisfy.
WAR BONDS
Copyright 1943. Liggett & Myerobaoc
THE CIGARETTE THAT GIVES SMOKERS WHAT THEY WANT
BHH
T
T
�&Bi





Title
The Teco Echo, May 7, 1943
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
May 07, 1943
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.268
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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