<?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"><pb facs="00037889_0001"/>
ARCH ;<lb/>
11 �<lb/>
m.<lb/>
IHlHs<lb/>
GROCER<lb/>
VICTORY OVER DEATH' BEING<lb/>
B ON CAMPUS<lb/>
� SUNDAY &amp;m MONDAY<lb/>
Record Crowd<lb/>
ttend Annual<lb/>
! Pay<lb/>
Wli<lb/>
r<lb/>
Th<lb/>
e<lb/>
high<lb/>
:hools<lb/>
here<lb/>
High<lb/>
'�"an<lb/>
v. i re<lb/>
TECO<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
Walter Tucker Heads<lb/>
ECTC Men Students<lb/>
Entire Roster<lb/>
Of Council Now<lb/>
Is Completed<lb/>
Charles Marks has been elect-<lb/>
ed president of the Young Men's<lb/>
Christian Association, succeed-<lb/>
ing Yern Kuetemeyer.<lb/>
During the past year Marks<lb/>
served the tree-year-old campus<lb/>
organization, which is national<lb/>
in scope, as chairman of Reli-<lb/>
gious Education.<lb/>
Sam Crandall, this year's sec-<lb/>
retary, was elevated to the of-<lb/>
fice of vice-president, succeed-<lb/>
ing James Whitfield.<lb/>
Howard Adams succeeds<lb/>
Crandall as secretary and Bob<lb/>
Young is the new treasurer,<lb/>
succeeding Albert Maness.<lb/>
The incoming president an-<lb/>
nounced that his cabinet would<lb/>
be appointed some time in the<lb/>
.immediate future.<lb/>
Officers and cabinet members<lb/>
of both the Young Women's<lb/>
Christian Association and the<lb/>
Young! Men's Christian Asso-<lb/>
ciation will be installed in appro-<lb/>
priate ceremonies within the<lb/>
next several weeks.<lb/>
an Volume XVII<lb/>
Greenville, X. C, Friday, April 11, 1941<lb/>
Number 12<lb/>
mi.<lb/>
u<lb/>
ITED<lb/>
X<lb/>
FOR f&amp;.75<lb/>
zfrk<lb/>
� Dangers<lb/>
Christians<lb/>
'A<lb/>
st<lb/>
J<lb/>
Junior-Senior Prom<lb/>
Next Saturday Night<lb/>
by Pearl Edwards<lb/>
The Junior-Senior "get to-<lb/>
gether" which was originally<lb/>
scheduled for April 20 will be<lb/>
held on the night of April 19<lb/>
The figure of the Junior-Senior<lb/>
Prom will be lead by Ida Ruth,<lb/>
Knowles, president of the Jun-<lb/>
ior ("lass of '41. The music will<lb/>
be furnished by the well-known<lb/>
Dean Hudson Orchestra.<lb/>
The refreshments will be<lb/>
served by Freshmen girls. The<lb/>
color scheme for the decorations<lb/>
will le black and white.<lb/>
Charles Marks, vice-president<lb/>
of the Junior Class, will be in<lb/>
charge of the party for those<lb/>
Juniors and Seniors who do not<lb/>
dance to be held in the Xew<lb/>
(Jlassroom building.<lb/>
Committees have been chosen<lb/>
to help with plans for the party.<lb/>
They will be in charge of the<lb/>
refreshments, decorations, and<lb/>
entertainment for the evening.<lb/>
The Junior-Senior will be at<lb/>
the same time as our regular<lb/>
dances�8:30 P. M. until 11 :45<lb/>
P. M. ("m" on Juniors and Sen-<lb/>
iors and let's enjoy an evening<lb/>
of real fun.<lb/>
Science Division<lb/>
Holds Open House<lb/>
Here Next Week<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
v<lb/>
ranee<lb/>
Roebuck, "Varsity Club<lb/>
�1 i<lb/>
Ji�:<lb/>
Cast Is Selected<lb/>
For 'Wuthering Heights'<lb/>
��� � � ' ��$ <lb/>
Varsity Club<lb/>
Sluing Dance<lb/>
n April 26<lb/>
Racial Secretary<lb/>
Assembly Speaker<lb/>
Mis<lb/>
re-<lb/>
el a<lb/>
oki<lb/>
V<lb/>
published<lb/>
. the only<lb/>
0T W '<lb/>
or this<lb/>
where that<lb/>
j hi � coin-<lb/>
1 VND<lb/>
s yours<lb/>
f<lb/>
) VY<lb/>
"X<lb/>
i<lb/>
nts Enjoy. 3 had �� in Rocky musical<lb/>
Sauare Dance, - � i the lei il-rected the: . v, hich<lb/>
!ered in<lb/>
Or. R. L Hiiidrup<lb/>
 1Conducts Forum i, -up of the De East<lb/>
 �i � e, pre-picti e of irld, a clear . rid his-World War , i  1 ions � ia1 will the nations<lb/>
ing on. Fi�� on, went obi on ed ; . nd ways in . 1 e iii peace �en Forum the Eighth<lb/>
i not rest and thei was a  square dai dor to the rganizati n on .  . ted at the . ii everyone i 1 square dancer, � ryone who went out on -or tried it and liked it i urch. ed �u1 the in. nualil i- r ' 'lur �11 V( ailles Treaty�thf . � ignfhents Ml ter-rtorv l3 � '�'� '1 ntial re-ade available to g oups, the un-i rouping of racial any instano s, in inevitable and continued antagonisms and the im-S� FORUM on Page Four<lb/>
ponsored u have<lb/>
ib on Saturday<lb/>
n<lb/>
fie<lb/>
Frances Roebuck.<lb/>
chosen Varsity<lb/>
etheart, will lead the figure<lb/>
ince to be soonsored by!<lb/>
rsity Ciuo<lb/>
ning, April 26.<lb/>
Several well-known orches-<lb/>
is are under consideration<lb/>
:� should be chosen by the<lb/>
tter part of next week.<lb/>
arc thirty-three mem-<lb/>
the Varsity Club�the<lb/>
larges membership in its. his-<lb/>
tory, and the dance is destined<lb/>
to be one of the largest ever to<lb/>
be sponsored by the Varsity<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
As usual the dance will be<lb/>
b y-br ak and will be formal for<lb/>
m mbers of the Varsity Club,<lb/>
which has expressed the hope<lb/>
the "dance will be the best of<lb/>
the year<lb/>
Since thirteen members of the<lb/>
club are seniors, the dance will<lb/>
1 � a sort of farewell send-off<lb/>
for these boys.<lb/>
It is proposed to stage a ban-<lb/>
quet before the dance, but this<lb/>
Ian is in the tentative stage for<lb/>
the time being.<lb/>
Bids for the dance will be dis-<lb/>
buted within the next several<lb/>
davs. according to an announce-<lb/>
ment made by acting president,<lb/>
Floyd Hinton.<lb/>
by Margit Dudley<lb/>
With the selection of Wuther-<lb/>
ing Heights, an English classic<lb/>
by Emily Bronte and adapted<lb/>
for the stage by Randolph Car-<lb/>
ter, the Chi Pi Players have<lb/>
undertaken their major produc-<lb/>
tion of the year.<lb/>
A talented cast headed by<lb/>
Ruth Bray as Cathy. George<lb/>
Lautares as Heathcliff, Ward<lb/>
Club -lames as Edgar Linton. and<lb/>
Jane Copeland as Isabel Linton.<lb/>
with Clifton Britton as director.<lb/>
the<lb/>
play involving the tragic love<lb/>
story of a man and woman who<lb/>
possess a strange passion for<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
Other important roles are<lb/>
See CAST on Pane Four<lb/>
To b u i Id good-will, under-<lb/>
standing, respect and regard for<lb/>
the beliefs of all individuals is<lb/>
the aim of the National Con-<lb/>
ference of Christians and Jews,<lb/>
declared A. W. Gatschall of<lb/>
Washington, D. C. secretary of<lb/>
the Conference, as he spoke at<lb/>
a recent assembly hour.<lb/>
Tracing the growth of the<lb/>
conference back to its organ-<lb/>
izers. Charles Hughes. Newton<lb/>
Baker and S, Parks Cadman.<lb/>
the speaker showed how it grew<lb/>
out of a presidential campaign<lb/>
12 years ago which had brought<lb/>
to the attention of leaders the<lb/>
bogortry and prejudice existing<lb/>
in this country. When leading<lb/>
publishers were invited by these<lb/>
three men to look over the field,<lb/>
explore its possibilities, and<lb/>
Featuring Dr. C. W. Edwards<lb/>
"f Duke University and his li-<lb/>
quid air exhibit, the Science<lb/>
Club of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College will hold Open House<lb/>
in the Science Department of<lb/>
the Xew Classroom Building on<lb/>
April 18 and 19.<lb/>
Dr Edwards demonstration<lb/>
will be the climax of the Open <lb/>
House and will he presented at<lb/>
11 o'clock Saturday morning.<lb/>
An eminent scientist and schol-<lb/>
ar. Dr. Edwards is known!<lb/>
throughout the nation for hisj<lb/>
work with liquid air.<lb/>
Each section of the depart- j<lb/>
ment will have an exhibit in its j<lb/>
laboratories showing experi-j<lb/>
men's and appartus relating to j<lb/>
its pecuticular field. These ex-<lb/>
periments have been prepared<lb/>
by the science students under j<lb/>
the supervision of their instruc-<lb/>
tors. The exhibits will include<lb/>
demonstrations of electroplat- She<lb/>
ing. saponification. extraction<lb/>
of chlorphyl and the mercury<lb/>
"heat" is a globule of mercury<lb/>
j which under the right condi-<lb/>
tions will heat like a heart.<lb/>
Besides the exhibits of the<lb/>
 College, there will be others from<lb/>
Walter Tucker of Greenville<lb/>
was elected president of the<lb/>
Men's Student Government<lb/>
Association to succeed Walter<lb/>
Rogers in a run-off primary<lb/>
held Wednesday.<lb/>
Howard Adams is the new<lb/>
vice-president, succeeding Tom<lb/>
Cox. Z. W. Frazelle is the new<lb/>
secretary-treasurer, succeeding<lb/>
James Bullock.<lb/>
Representatives for the re-<lb/>
spective classes were named in<lb/>
balloting held yesterday<lb/>
Metsel Simmons, a member<lb/>
of this year's council was named<lb/>
to succeed himself as a junior<lb/>
class representative on next<lb/>
�.ear's council. The other junior<lb/>
representative is Evan Griffin.<lb/>
Serving the incoming senior<lb/>
class on the council will be Jen-<lb/>
nings Ballard and Tom Cox.<lb/>
Owing to the lack of repre-<lb/>
sentatives at the noon meeting<lb/>
on Thursday next year's sopho-<lb/>
more class did not name council<lb/>
members until the dinner hour<lb/>
last night. They are Bill Lucas<lb/>
and Osborne Lewis.<lb/>
President Rogers will turn<lb/>
St e Council on Page Four<lb/>
Eve Curie Tells<lb/>
Of Plight That<lb/>
Confronts World<lb/>
On Thursday evening April 3.<lb/>
an enthusiastic audience await-<lb/>
ed the appearance of Eve Curie,<lb/>
daughter of the famous Madame<lb/>
Curie. As the curtains parted<lb/>
there stepped unon the stage a<lb/>
slender, willowy young woman.<lb/>
was simply dressed in a<lb/>
black evening gown. Her hair<lb/>
was combed off her face in waves,<lb/>
caught in the back with combs<lb/>
and then worn straight in a<lb/>
page-boy style. Mademoiselle Cu-<lb/>
rie was introduced by Robert<lb/>
Humber, native of Greenville<lb/>
various high schools, which have and formally of France.<lb/>
been invited to come and take Mademoiselle Curie caught her<lb/>
part in the Eastern Carolina<lb/>
division of the State Science<lb/>
Contest. Winners in this con-<lb/>
test will go to Raleiirh to enter<lb/>
See Open House on Page Four<lb/>
Paper Is Offered<lb/>
At Convention<lb/>
Benton Rossell<lb/>
Offers Concert<lb/>
and<lb/>
col-<lb/>
Mrs. Meadows' Sister<lb/>
Claimed By Death<lb/>
Denton Rosselle. tenor<lb/>
teacher of singing at the<lb/>
lege will be presented in an even-<lb/>
ing of songs on the evening of<lb/>
April 22nd at 8:15 p. m. in Aus-<lb/>
tin Auditorium. The program<lb/>
is sponsored by the music de-<lb/>
partment and all students and<lb/>
the public are invited to attend.<lb/>
Before comintr to East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College to taech<lb/>
singing Mr. Rosselle had done<lb/>
concert and radio work and had<lb/>
sung leading roles in operatic<lb/>
nreformances with the Opera.<lb/>
Intime under the direction of<lb/>
the composer-conductor Myron<lb/>
Tacobson His program will in-<lb/>
clude well known classics as well<lb/>
as ballads of popular appeal<lb/>
This<lb/>
of a serie<lb/>
Miss Cleo Rainwater of the;<lb/>
Training School faculty of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College had<lb/>
a paper on "The Induction of<lb/>
Student Teachers into the Train-<lb/>
ing of Social Studies" in a bul-<lb/>
letin that was distributed at<lb/>
suggest what to do about it. thethe mPeting of the North Caro-<lb/>
conference resulted. Hna Education Association held<lb/>
Dr. Gatschall emphasized the at Asheville April 3, 4. and 5.<lb/>
fact that the conference does, Miga RainWater was also<lb/>
not ask anyone to "whittle down scheduled to speak at the" de-<lb/>
his demonmation but it does, partmental meeting on April 4<lb/>
ask for regard and respect for of supPrvisors, but was unable<lb/>
the sincerity and integrity of to De there.<lb/>
men of other faiths. After dis Delegates from the college to<lb/>
cussing why people are bitter the three-day meeting were<lb/>
and prejudiced, he challenged, Prpsidprit L. R. Meadows. Mrs.<lb/>
the student body to be deliberate FAhe Rejd Waters and Miss<lb/>
and intelligent in forming its Mabel Lacv of the home<lb/>
opinions. People's minds should nomics department, and Miss<lb/>
be made up on the basis of I Dora Coates, of the education<lb/>
See Speaker on Page Four j department.<lb/>
Mr. Deal Is Kept Busy<lb/>
by Pauline Abeyounis<lb/>
When a man can go to the here; Junior Senior, Murfrees-<lb/>
same towns year after year and boro; Annual Leaders' Banquet,<lb/>
make speeches�sometimes the Windsor; District Rural Mail-<lb/>
audience with her first word<lb/>
and held them with her charm<lb/>
aId intellect. In the first of her<lb/>
lecture she pointed out how last<lb/>
year America and France were<lb/>
at peace, and now France is a<lb/>
torn country, and America which<lb/>
used to be in the third line of<lb/>
defense is now in the second line<lb/>
of defense. Miss Curie pointed<lb/>
out that today we wait anxious-<lb/>
ly for war reports because our<lb/>
future depends on them.<lb/>
"I will always keep in mind<lb/>
the vision of the Frenech men<lb/>
last September said Miss Cu-<lb/>
rie, "The word France means<lb/>
the same to me it always has.<lb/>
I believe in France and I always<lb/>
will Mademoiselle Curie quoted<lb/>
Winston Churchill as saying<lb/>
"France is Great�She will be<lb/>
free again<lb/>
A most dramatic and color-<lb/>
jful picture was painted of the<lb/>
l war by the lecturer. She said<lb/>
Jshe was sitting at her typewrit-<lb/>
ter one day when an air raid<lb/>
started. She immediately drop-<lb/>
ped down on the floor below<lb/>
e.c.�" !the window and stayed there for<lb/>
hours. This became a common<lb/>
occurance while she was in Eng-<lb/>
land. She was in over four hun-<lb/>
jdred air raids while she was<lb/>
there.<lb/>
The night before Miss Curie<lb/>
See Eve Curie on Page Four<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
Fred Nance, sister of<lb/>
Mrs L. R. Meadows of Green-<lb/>
ville, died at her home in Shel-<lb/>
byville three weeks ago.<lb/>
.Mrs. Meadows, wife of Pres-<lb/>
ident Meadows, remained at the<lb/>
bedside of her sister three weeks<lb/>
prior to her death.<lb/>
Mrs. Xance was known to a<lb/>
number of people in Greenville,<lb/>
as she had visited Dr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Meadows on several occasions.<lb/>
"same old speeches"�he must carriers "Ladies Night Green-<lb/>
he plenty good, as we say. Right ville; Junior-Senior, Contentnea<lb/>
in our midst there is a fine 'ole; high school and also Atlantic<lb/>
chap who continues to act as Christian College,<lb/>
guest speaker for banquets, j April 3 found Mr. Deal in<lb/>
clubs, dinners, commencements, Winterville at the Ruritan Club<lb/>
program wi) be the first; professional conventions and!and tonight he will appear be-<lb/>
of three Tuesday entertainments, et cetera. He is fore the Eastern Carolina Safety<lb/>
evening concerts. The second possibly one of the most widely Council here in Greenville,<lb/>
program will take place on the known and most generally liked; A calendar of engagements<lb/>
evening of Mav 6th and will personalities in eastern Caro-j still open for the friendly pro-<lb/>
feature Elizabeth Coppedge, Una. This "student's teacher" iajfessor follows April 25, Com-<lb/>
soprano and Donald Perry, ten- j Mr. Ralph C. Deal, head of the j mencement at Subbury; 26,<lb/>
or. Jean Abevounis, soprano, department of French. j Sigma Pi Chi Faternity guest<lb/>
and Lorraine Pritchard will be! Mr. Deal has made hundreds,speaker at A. C; 29, in the<lb/>
heard on May 20th in the con-�f talks to various audiences in j morning at Red Oak and that<lb/>
eluding program. The student!in State, and has already begun night at Walstonburg; May 6<lb/>
nrograms will include duet num this year, his season of spring Central High School, Elizabeth<lb/>
hers as well as solo. Wilda Royall addresses. In March he was City; 7, Conway High School<lb/>
will be the accompanist for the guest speaker for the Hi-Y ban-j and May 8, Powellsville High<lb/>
nrntrrams. 'quet in Aydei<lb/>
Miss Mamie Jenkins<lb/>
Is Honored At Duke<lb/>
programs.<lb/>
�den; District Nurses!School.<lb/>
Miss Mamie E. Jenkins of the<lb/>
English Department of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College, at-<lb/>
tended the fourth annual alum-<lb/>
nae weekend for Duke Gradu-<lb/>
ates, received recognition at the<lb/>
luncheon as the only represen-<lb/>
tative registered at the meeting<lb/>
from the first four women to<lb/>
graduate at Trinity on equal<lb/>
terms with men.<lb/>
As she had been president of<lb/>
the Duke alumnae at the close<lb/>
of the first World War, Miss<lb/>
Jenkins spoke on the war work<lb/>
and reconstruction work of the<lb/>
Duke alumnae. One of their<lb/>
projects was the adoption of a<lb/>
French village after the war.<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
<pb facs="00037889_0002"/><lb/>
FRIDAY. APRIL 11, 1941<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Page<lb/>
The Teco Echo<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Students of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
Entered aa second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the U. S.<lb/>
Poatoffice, Greenville. X. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
J AMI WBITFIELD<lb/>
Pauline Abeyoi nis<lb/>
Ruth Pollard<lb/>
Mabt D. Horni<lb/>
5mutt Bubks<lb/>
"Mm" Andrews<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
William Harris<lb/>
Frances Southerland<lb/>
O. D. Andrews<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Fenly Spear<lb/>
Photography<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Maiy Agnes Dial Business Manager<lb/>
Rose Carlton Dunn � Ellen McIntyre<lb/>
Emily Murphy Mary Long Ford<lb/>
Jwbke Ketth Mary Harvey Ruffin<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Mtmbrr<lb/>
�tP�t9�iTID FO� NATIONAL �DV�n�iNG BY<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
College Puilisbers Kepreuntativt<lb/>
420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.<lb/>
Ftasockjrfed Colle6�cio Press<lb/>
P.stribuTor of<lb/>
Watching The World<lb/>
by<lb/>
Harold K. Taylor<lb/>
Collefrtoie L5osf<lb/>
LOS A�iin � &amp;,� IUKIKO<lb/>
Are You Discourteous To Visitors?<lb/>
Students of college age are supposed to be courteous to visi-<lb/>
tors, and should show special consideration to dignitaries that<lb/>
come to the campus on notable occasions. When Mile. Eve Curie<lb/>
lectured here last Thursday night a group of students, who regard<lb/>
themselves as ladies and gentlemen, got up and walked out while<lb/>
phe was addressing her audience: and some went so far as to pro-<lb/>
duce a cough of digust.The speaker was alarmed and paused<lb/>
momentarily until noise on the steps leading from the balcony Ir Pro-British, the British government has arranged for the U. S<lb/>
ceased. Perhaps some of the students thought the lecture had endlo shlP her -500 lons of flour valued at 1,000,000 to be distri<lb/>
Yugoslavia during the past few weeks had been facing an im-<lb/>
portant issue; whether to sign Hitler's Non-Agression alliance,<lb/>
or to stand her ground against a German invasion. Last week,<lb/>
amid an uprising between the Serbian population and the pro-<lb/>
German faction, a new government was set up under the leader-<lb/>
ship of King Peter III. The Pro-Allies government immediately<lb/>
declared its stand and began rushing arms to the front. They<lb/>
have more than a million well trained soldiers but their airplanes<lb/>
and other modern weapons are lacking. Germany is determined<lb/>
to crush her in a short time and Yugoslavia is just as determined<lb/>
to hold her own. Atlnough she is lacking in many materials she<lb/>
has the will to fight to the last drop of blood.<lb/>
For weeks the men responsible for keeping the navy ready<lb/>
for any job have been drawing hypothetical lines back and forth<lb/>
across the Atlantic. When the real test comes the American people<lb/>
are going to have to help get British aid suuplies to Europe. The<lb/>
most logical way the U. S. government could help and still abide<lb/>
by the Monroe-Doctrine, the Neutrality act, and International<lb/>
Law, is to convoy British loaded ships to 30 degrees west longi-<lb/>
tude. British ships would be loaded at any American port and<lb/>
convoyed to the end of the safety zone where British ships would<lb/>
take over.<lb/>
Does unoccupied France favor the allies or the axis? This<lb/>
has been an important topic of late�and two of the leading<lb/>
authorities. Pearson and Allen seem to think that France is do-<lb/>
ing everything possible to hinder ally progress. France has always<lb/>
been a proud country and she thought that she had an unbeatable<lb/>
army. Since Germany over ran her so soon, she has had to swallow<lb/>
her pride, which was hard to do. Whether France is Pro-German<lb/>
Hat<lb/>
Museum<lb/>
STUDENT'S CORNER<lb/>
by Pearl Edteards<lb/>
Coming to us from Nashville, North Carolina Virginfc<lb/>
ley entered E. C. T. C. as a freshman in 1938.<lb/>
Since coming to E. C. T. C, Virginia has come . ,<lb/>
important part in our campus life. She has served president<lb/>
of the Junior "Y Publicity Manager of the 8cienc g<lb/>
tarv of the Y. W. C. A Treasurer of the Y. W. I<lb/>
President; "Y" delegate at Blue Ride Convention; I:<lb/>
vention at Memphis, and on the B. S. U. Council. Sh I<lb/>
an active member in the Young Democrats Club and S<lb/>
Economics Clubs.<lb/>
This year Virginia was elected to serve as our P<lb/>
ihe Y. W. C. A. for the coming year.<lb/>
Virginia told me that her ambition was to tea<lb/>
I think deep down in her heart she wants to be a -<lb/>
raise hogs and chickens.<lb/>
Because of her sympathy for and her abili?<lb/>
human nature, Virginia has won the friendship of<lb/>
who have come to know her. Every day she is helping<lb/>
more worth while for others.<lb/>
�. li<lb/>
� �<lb/>
ed. but this (iocs not seem logical, as this many students could not<lb/>
do group thinking of such poor quality.<lb/>
Courtesy should be an attribute for each graduate who serves<lb/>
the public school system of North Carolina, But some members of<lb/>
the student body have not acquired this trait. At least, they failed<lb/>
to show it. Many will conclude. 'T didn't like the lecture, anyway.<lb/>
I paid my own good money to attend and had the right to leave if<lb/>
I was bored This is a shallow attitude. In the course of human<lb/>
events, particularly at public gatherings, and entertainments are<lb/>
no exception, it is necessary for us to think in terms of what is<lb/>
best for the entire group. Any person who ignores this common<lb/>
courtesy has nut found his place in society.<lb/>
Mhe. Curie will not remember East Carolina Teachers Col-<lb/>
lege for its beautiful campus, nor the part it is playing in giving<lb/>
students a splendid intellectual background for jobs as teachers.<lb/>
Instead she will remember it for the few students who were not<lb/>
courteous enough to remain until she had concluded her lecture.<lb/>
No student can contend that she had to leave in order to get back competent<lb/>
to the dormitory, as those who remained got there all right. Had<lb/>
the speaker kept her audience past the zero hour, the dormitory<lb/>
heads would have lie n considerat<lb/>
in their course of action under the circumstances. All in all, it is a<lb/>
disgrace to East Carolina Teachers College. It was an incident<lb/>
that should never happen again.<lb/>
buted by the American Red Cross. Finland has been granted<lb/>
additional loans of $5,000,000 to buy food in this country, raising<lb/>
their borrowings since the Soviet conflict to $35,000,000.<lb/>
The largest Battleship ever built in an American shipyard<lb/>
is the navy's 35000 ton NORTH CAROLINA. It is the first battle-<lb/>
ship commissioned by the navy since December 1923. Its sister<lb/>
ship, WASHINGTON, will be launched during the summer.<lb/>
Resolution<lb/>
We the members of the Faculty of East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College wish to express in some measure our appreciation of the<lb/>
life and personality of our late friend and colleague James R.<lb/>
Gulledge. for five years Librarian of the College.<lb/>
Mr. Gulledge was quiet and unassuming, but diligent and<lb/>
in business. He sought no herald to proclaim his<lb/>
By nature sociable and friendly, he made enduring<lb/>
friendships with an enviable ease and grace. His sympathies and<lb/>
)U interests were as catholic and genuine as his moral integrity and<lb/>
loyalty to friends and duty were free from bigotry and taint of<lb/>
self-interest. In a word, he possessed the sovereign virtues of<lb/>
honesty, dependability, and courage.<lb/>
More concretely. Mr. Gulledge was a trained librarian. He<lb/>
felt that the library is rightly termed the heart of the college. In<lb/>
KadlO station Has Listeners In This College his acquisitions he strove that the book of the hour might not<lb/>
This week Radio Station WGTC began signing off at 10 eclipse too completely the book of all time. In his administrative<lb/>
o'clock instead of 12 o'clock. What the radio station or any other policy he never forgot that a library is something more than a<lb/>
public servant does about hours is none of our business, but we mere collection of books. That is to say, he tried to see beyond<lb/>
believe the action was one that keeps the station from thoroughly landing and printed page to the end-product in human character.<lb/>
serving its public�and it has a public of more than 1,200 stu- He wouM not have wished�he could not have wished�more en-<lb/>
dents at East Carolina Teachers College. Commercial announce- du�ng monument than the thousands of books he helped to acquire<lb/>
ments regulate to a considerable extent the time a station stays during his able stewardship with us.<lb/>
on the air. It is true that Harold Dale's soothing and enlightening ! Hv reason of these tokens it is the will of the Committee that<lb/>
slumber music readings, or his famed Studio Partv seldom were 1his testimony be made a permanent part of the record of our<lb/>
Hats for the ladies is a com<lb/>
paratively recent privilege, fil-<lb/>
ched from the men. If it had not<lb/>
been for St Paul's decree that<lb/>
women cover their heads in<lb/>
Church, the ladies might have<lb/>
waited for headgear as long as<lb/>
they did for slacks. For to every<lb/>
age and every people hats were<lb/>
prized as an Instinctive sign of<lb/>
superority or an expression of<lb/>
mood. This is the theme of the<lb/>
Brooklyn Museum's current ex-<lb/>
hibition of fifty ancient and<lb/>
foreign hats displayed through<lb/>
April twentieth with modern<lb/>
adaptations by Sally Victor.<lb/>
Not only did men corner hats,<lb/>
but they devised almost every<lb/>
basic shape known today and<lb/>
ran the gamut of materials even<lb/>
using: raffia, the recently pop-<lb/>
ular palm fiber, wood, lacquer,<lb/>
paper. jewels and feathers.<lb/>
Their fabulous trims w o u 1 d<lb/>
make the brashest woman pale.<lb/>
Consequently most feminine<lb/>
headgear is a restrained ver-<lb/>
sion of something the men once<lb/>
sported.<lb/>
Those two-in-one numbers,<lb/>
changeable as the wearer's<lb/>
whim, are news this Spring.<lb/>
Yet centuries ago an African<lb/>
now-wowed in an orange and<lb/>
yellow turban with removable<lb/>
plumage. It is reflected in ai<lb/>
Sallv Victor bonnet' with turj)ar jr Fditor:<lb/>
quoise feathers which clip on There is something we need to have on E. C. T. I<lb/>
or off. A practical Mexican once Yes, I know that we need a few more than a dozen th<lb/>
used a large brimmed sailor as troubling vou with only one. T.� get down to the p<lb/>
a pin-cushion tor his poisoned we have more square dances? They are cheap and<lb/>
darts. Visored brims shielded There are no orchestras to hire, no evening cloth<lb/>
Aleutian hutners from the sun The dance sponsored by the Phi Sigma Pi this j<lb/>
and Koreans kept their hoods night was a great success. It is something different ii<lb/>
of oiled papers up their sleeves entertainment that has possibilities to be exploited. 1<lb/>
for sudden showers. Those be-the majority of those presenl had a g1 time, or  I<lb/>
gulling cartwheel might very they put on a good act. A square dance gives an opi<lb/>
well stem from a Korean s top- those vvho don-t rmm(, (ano tn 1ak(. a art in th ,<lb/>
per which measured a yard,from people i m.ver remember seeing on the floor before go<lb/>
1 and showed some vim, pep, and vitality. Our K. I<lb/>
really know how to give the ladies a whirl. Nor do we I<lb/>
off campus to find those who know what to do with<lb/>
So, students, if you like dancing the way Grandpa<lb/>
ma did it, why don't we have another some time, i<lb/>
quarter or two or three?<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Am E. C. f. C<lb/>
STUDENT OPINION<lb/>
To The Editor:<lb/>
Telephones are a great time saver, especial<lb/>
nne's disposal. It is customary in most colleges and<lb/>
have telephones at different nlaces on the campus :<lb/>
students. The operator is an N. Y. A. worker or one g<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
It would be an asset to K. C. T. C. if there wei<lb/>
phones on each floor of the dormitories, one in th<lb/>
in each classroom building for use by the students, ;<lb/>
any one who should happen to be in the building ai<lb/>
t telephone, and one in dining hall lobby; in a booth<lb/>
Dial telephones can be installed in such a ma<lb/>
�alls will be free and long distance calls must be ;<lb/>
1 ime the call is placed.<lb/>
I would like to see more telephones on campus. I1<lb/>
the others. Z. H F<lb/>
� -<lb/>
.<lb/>
� -<lb/>
interspersed by commercial announcements. But students listened It'ult<lb/>
to these programs, and finding satisfaction in them, it was a sell<lb/>
ing point for other programs, the station offered when commercial<lb/>
announcements were read. Ordinarily students of the college sent<lb/>
out more requests that could possibly be handled on the Stud.o<lb/>
Party. This is proof enough that WGTC has a good listening audi-<lb/>
dence in this college.<lb/>
The student body is large enough to merit the listening pleas-<lb/>
ure of the Slumber Music program and also the Studio Partv.<lb/>
Students will still listen to them, regardless of the hour. When'a<lb/>
student goes to college he spends money, and since the radio<lb/>
station is a medium through which he can learn where to spend<lb/>
money, he should be served. And if he doesn't have access to his<lb/>
most popular programs, then he's going to find a program he does<lb/>
like by a simple twist of the wrist and turn of the dial.<lb/>
Signed:<lb/>
D. E. Baughan,<lb/>
Margaret Sammon,<lb/>
Sallie Joyner Davis,<lb/>
A. D. Frank.<lb/>
Unanimously adopted by the Faculty March 7, 1941.<lb/>
A. I). Frank,<lb/>
Secretary of the Faculty.<lb/>
to keep the highups from putting<lb/>
'their heads together.<lb/>
Miss Victor's hats, while de-<lb/>
rived from one or more of the<lb/>
museum's models, were never<lb/>
dicert adaptations. A peaked<lb/>
open-winged bonnet was a pro-<lb/>
duct of ancient Africa and a<lb/>
reversed Alsatian cap. Victorian<lb/>
net and jet made a swirling halo<lb/>
taken from a wooden Chinese<lb/>
silhouette. From a nineteenth<lb/>
century rainhat. designed to<lb/>
stretch over ordinary headgear,<lb/>
came an accordian pleated bon-<lb/>
net of white pique fitted to a<lb/>
head-hugging band. The most<lb/>
impressive mode was a Peru-<lb/>
vian turban of thousands of<lb/>
feathers painstakingly pasted<lb/>
together to picture the Jaguar<lb/>
god. Miss Victor covered the up-<lb/>
turned brim of a natural straw<lb/>
with a similar design, stylized<lb/>
and ripely colored.<lb/>
� I<lb/>
Digging For Dirt<lb/>
This Collegiate World<lb/>
Music Festival Was A Job Well Done<lb/>
Recently several hundred students from thirty-two high<lb/>
schools of Eastern North Carolina assembled on the campus for<lb/>
the annual Greenville District Music Contest to determine partic-<lb/>
ipants from this section for the State Contest being held soon at<lb/>
Greensboro. A. L. Dittmer, head of the Department of Music and<lb/>
general chairman of the festival, along with his capable corps of<lb/>
assistants, are to be congratulated for the efficient mnner in which<lb/>
they conducted the contest. It was a job well done.<lb/>
In he past it has been customary to deermine winners. This<lb/>
year the standouts were merely given a rating without emphasis<lb/>
on winning. We believe that this is the way it should be, as it will<lb/>
develop more appreciation for music and serve as a clinic for the<lb/>
participants. At the climax of the festival, consisting of a mam-<lb/>
moth concert of the combined bands of a number of high schools.<lb/>
Chairman Dittmer announced that this would be an annual affair.<lb/>
Not only will youthful musicians enjoy participating in it, but col-<lb/>
lege students and persons living out in the city will enjoy hearing<lb/>
it. The performance here was a spectacle that long will be remem-<lb/>
bered by those who heard it.<lb/>
Aside from the instrumental offerings, there were also vocal<lb/>
selections. The solos, trios and combined numbers of the glee clubs<lb/>
were both cultural and entertaining. All people should make music<lb/>
a part of their lives. It is a braser for tired nerves.<lb/>
Magazine Staff Needs A Room In Which To Work<lb/>
Since The Pieces 'O' Eight joined the publications familv of<lb/>
the college, its staff has been handicapped considerably by virtue<lb/>
of not having adequate and roomy working quarters. It is true this<lb/>
publication has a staff room, but no place could be more inconven-<lb/>
ient or dangerous. The inconvenience rests in the fact that the<lb/>
staff room is located on the top floor of Austin, and this same<lb/>
situation makes it dangerous. The top floor of Austin is nothing<lb/>
but a fire trap. An examination will reveal this. Then, too, no one<lb/>
en find the magazine's present staff room without a well-designed<lb/>
map. This handicaps the staff considerably when the magazine is<lb/>
distributed, and its personnel were considerate enough to let the<lb/>
students get them at the office of the Teco Echo, as no student<lb/>
relishes the idea of climbing three flights of steps. The publica-<lb/>
tion is young and will have to undergo some growing pains. Un-<lb/>
less the staff is provided with better working quarters, however,<lb/>
there is going to be malnutrition in their productive efforts. We<lb/>
hope some arrangements can be made whereby The Pieces 'O<lb/>
Eight can realize normal growth in ideal working quarters.<lb/>
by Associated Collegiate Press)<lb/>
Approximately 1,750 prehistoric skeltons and more than<lb/>
48,00 Oartifacts have been recovered in Kentucky through a<lb/>
University of Kentucky WPA project.<lb/>
Translating services of Hooker scientific library at Central<lb/>
college, Fayette, Mo one of the most comprehensive in the world,<lb/>
have subscribers in 17 countries.<lb/>
Dr. Oscar Kaplan, University of California psychologist,<lb/>
predicts a huge increase in mental disease of the aged in America.<lb/>
Students at the University of Rochester are experimenting<lb/>
with a combined junior yearbook for their co-ordinate college.<lb/>
There are 928 semi-circular arches in the main barracks of<lb/>
The Citadel. South Carolina military college.<lb/>
Sally Rand recently lectured a student group at the Univers-<lb/>
ity of Minnesota on "The Value of White Space in Advertising<lb/>
A course in Latin-American history has been added to the<lb/>
curriculum at Lafayette.<lb/>
Dr. Paul F. Kerr, professor of mineralogy at Columbia uni-<lb/>
versity, is on a six-month lecture tour of several South American<lb/>
countries.<lb/>
Dr. Hollis R. Upson of Duquesne university is one of four<lb/>
persons in the world working to translate the liturgy of the Sy-<lb/>
rian Orthodox church into English.<lb/>
Half the men students and one-third of the co-eds at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Nebraska are either enitrely or partially self-support-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The New York Library club reports that with the exception<lb/>
of Hunter college, library facilities of the city's four colleges are<lb/>
inadequate.<lb/>
Fordham university has added lecture courses on recent<lb/>
advances in pharmacology and practice and theory of first aid.<lb/>
Less-McRae college students, Banner Elk, N. C, have or-<lb/>
ganized the county's farthest-south skiing club. Members make<lb/>
their own skis in the college wood-shop.<lb/>
The University of Buffalo school of medicine is in its ninetieth<lb/>
year.<lb/>
New York City college has set up a student aid fund in mem-<lb/>
ory of the late Prof. Howard C. Green, for 23 years director of<lb/>
the business school evening session.<lb/>
Alexander Granovsky, associate professor of entomology at<lb/>
the University of Minnesota, is national president of the Organ-<lb/>
ization of the Rebirth of the Ukraine.<lb/>
Southern California area of the Universitv of California ex-<lb/>
tension division recently added 17 new instructors.<lb/>
Wellesley college has a war relief workroom.<lb/>
By S. H. O'Vell<lb/>
Hurkle . . dee . . di . . do . . rum . . tweet, t<lb/>
veah man! Swing yo' pardners hyar and thar. you kr<lb/>
and we don't cyar. Yowsah, yowsah, the ole squar dance<lb/>
ingly one mess 'o fun. lass Satday nite. It was really I<lb/>
got socked on the jaw by one fellow trying to swing h<lb/>
and swung his fist instead. Yes suh, you could realh I hich<lb/>
ones were from the country. Only one trouble tho' on<lb/>
started, there was no finishing, seemingly, which remii<lb/>
had danced so much that she came out looking like a . �� of<lb/>
St. Yitus�the habit had struck her. We understand tl<lb/>
iors are hoping that none of them sneak in on the J. S Pi But<lb/>
before the Junior-Senior comes Easter�ah yes, the<lb/>
glory of every girl and the downfall of every "boy's �. k. I<lb/>
was just wondering who's gonna get corsages�let me -<lb/>
EsteUe will get one from Jerome; Mary Francis will s. 1 in<lb/>
hers from Dudash; then Adelaide will shine with pretl wers<lb/>
Albert (Mustard to you) ;�Maness do you think that<lb/>
will get one from Walter?�you know they've been w ther<lb/>
a whole lot lately. Speaking of Easter�I wonder how<lb/>
The Phi Sima chapter of the rabbits and eggs connected. Hmmmmmimn�wonder wl will<lb/>
Sigma Phi Alpha will send ap-send Frances Roebuck and Lena M. Smith flowers I d m<lb/>
proximately fifteen delegates toTry as I might�can't leave out the Ed. and Ann H<lb/>
CLUB NEWS<lb/>
Phi Sigma<lb/>
wllllZ� T hT?-VH- S' dathe" day to recuperate-fine pickings, i<lb/>
Wake Forest will go to Raleigh Brief pause for guest writer-so don't blame us for ever I<lb/>
so long. Bobbie Hollar's main reason for taking French i<lb/>
for the night. They will return<lb/>
late Sunday afternoon. Mr.<lb/>
Ralph C. Deal and Miss Mar-<lb/>
guerite Zelle Austin will accom-<lb/>
pany the group.<lb/>
One of the main speakers will<lb/>
be Mr. Robert Humber. who<lb/>
has appeared on our campus<lb/>
several times.<lb/>
A. C. E.<lb/>
The annual State news bul-<lb/>
letin of the Association of Child-<lb/>
hood Education has recently<lb/>
been published. This year as<lb/>
last year the local college branch<lb/>
was chosen to edit it. This was<lb/>
due to the success of last year's<lb/>
bulletin.<lb/>
Headed by Annie Laurie Wil-<lb/>
kerson, the editorial staff col-<lb/>
lected and revised the reports<lb/>
sent in by various branches over<lb/>
the state. It contains news of<lb/>
the N. C. A. C. E. and a great<lb/>
many workable suggestions and<lb/>
references. The booklet was well<lb/>
received at the meeting of the<lb/>
North Carolina classroom teach-<lb/>
ers in Asheville on April 4.<lb/>
The editorial staff consisted<lb/>
of: Annie Laurie Wilkersdn,<lb/>
Editor-in-chief; Gladvs Allen;<lb/>
Mary T. Bailey, Estelle Baker,<lb/>
Doris Dawson, Clarissa Ed-<lb/>
wards, Sammie Farlow, Wilma<lb/>
Gray Lee, Sarah Lindley, Hazel<lb/>
Owens, Thelma Raeford, Vir-<lb/>
ginia Seegers, and Helen Weth-<lb/>
erington. Miss Dora Coates was<lb/>
advisor. jjlll<lb/>
8 a<lb/>
romance language�love games are popular among son the<lb/>
school's tennis talent�this is the wrong season of the j<lb/>
"sweetpeas" isn't it Mary Francis? Or do they bloom all �<lb/>
the year? . . . Studio Party over WGTC wasn't responsil for<lb/>
the late hours some of the girls keep�variety lends cold I very<lb/>
occasion, eh Addie? people have B. O. and dogs D. 0.�it' about<lb/>
time the baseball team began filing a suit against some of thi prb<lb/>
for non-support . . . twinkle, twinkle, little star, and 111 do<lb/>
something else�any suggestions? All the new paving should<lb/>
keep boys and girls from stumbling in the dark�Tennis co irting<lb/>
is most athletic . . O'vell, what difference does it make?�la it<lb/>
true that, while being kissed, a girl closes her eves to keep from<lb/>
seeing the boy make a fool of himself? It is Spring and Bob<lb/>
Whichard's thoughts have turned to Dorothy Sasser�We don't<lb/>
know where Jay Casteen has turned his thoughts, and that goes<lb/>
for George Heaffner�"Shorty" is a "little teapot" in JecVi<lb/>
life�"Carolina" is a favorite tune for some girls, but tho "Good<lb/>
Old North State" makes better music to the ears of others�If I<lb/>
had a million dollars it would be impossible�And so to press � �<lb/>
not referring to my trousers, of course.<lb/>
He Got The Job<lb/>
Fayette, Mo.�(ACP)�Obtain a college degree within a year<lb/>
or lose a gob of money. That's the ultimatum James Bothwell<lb/>
faced a year ago last month.<lb/>
P. S He got the job.<lb/>
Bothwell was graduated from Central college at the end of<lb/>
the semester, less than a month ahead of a $35,000 deadline. But<lb/>
it wasn't a storybook finish to a romantic thriller for Bothwell-<lb/>
It the end of the most strenuous year of his life.<lb/>
Bothwell was astonished to learn in January 1940, that he<lb/>
must have a decree by the time he was 25 to receive the legacy<lb/>
of an uncle. And on Feb. 19, 1941, he would be 25.<lb/>
I guess my uncle just wanted to be sure I had a college edu-<lb/>
cation he said, "but up until last year I had no idea of the terms<lb/>
of his will. And yon see, I'd been out of college for three years<lb/>
T<lb/>
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to keep from<lb/>
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teapot" in Jot8<lb/>
4s, but the "Good<lb/>
�a of others�" �<lb/>
Id so to press . � �<lb/>
rree within a 11<lb/>
James Bothwell<lb/>
pee at the end<lb/>
000 deadline. &amp;�<lb/>
lller for Bothwell-<lb/>
oceive the leg"<lb/>
had a college ed�'<lb/>
idea of the tertf<lb/>
for three year<lb/>
THE TECQ ECHO<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1941<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Nine Wins Two; Netters Victorious<lb/>
Along<lb/>
The Sidelines<lb/>
With<lb/>
"Smut" Burks<lb/>
i<lb/>
You guessed<lb/>
Dunn And Simpson<lb/>
Hurl In Double<lb/>
Win Over Braves<lb/>
Double Honors<lb/>
Showing devasting power at<lb/>
the plate. Coach John Christen-<lb/>
bury's Pirates walloped the<lb/>
visiting William and Mary<lb/>
Braves by the scores of 16-6 and<lb/>
18-8 on successive days. The<lb/>
get that he is J first game was played as a fea-<lb/>
'y their tore attraction of High School<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Lefty Dunn hurled the win in<lb/>
the first game, going the route,<lb/>
and scattering nine hits. The<lb/>
Braves bunched three of these<lb/>
hits with a couple of Pirate<lb/>
iring a young man's heart turns -<lb/>
nd tennis! Ah yes, there's nothing so refreshing and<lb/>
is I he crack of the bat against baseball, or the sizzling<lb/>
ennis players as they give their all for Alma Mammy<lb/>
irts. It just makes one want to foi B<lb/>
! most boring studies and pedantic lectures 1<lb/>
pedagogues and trip on out to the athletic con-<lb/>
it's a fine way to stay young and healthful. Ya know.<lb/>
9 good ole vitamin I), and what. I ask you. does<lb/>
Per in the way of vitamins, or any other healthful<lb/>
well, we'll be fighting those damn Germans before<lb/>
n we can really say, "to hell with school, especially<lb/>
What all this nonsensical chatter adds up to: errors to score four runs in the<lb/>
tudents miss out on all this beautiful weather third. A walk, a double by Wal-<lb/>
of the sunshine you dorp, an error, and a mighty<lb/>
bit. but please don't 1 triple by Charlie Futrell sent<lb/>
by. It's here, m three tallies for the Bucs in<lb/>
their half of the third. Two<lb/>
singles, a couple of free passes,<lb/>
and three errors accounted for<lb/>
it's about time we got wise to ourselves We've fnur more Pilate runs in the<lb/>
oys around who go by the name "mountaineers fl�h' and the Christenburymen<lb/>
object of plenty of undeserved criticism Iadded seven more � he sevent<lb/>
They've taken all thi<lb/>
Floyd Iliiiton, versatile sen-<lb/>
ior athlte of E. ( T. C, has<lb/>
been elected president of the<lb/>
Varsity club to finish the un-<lb/>
expired term of Hill Merner,<lb/>
who resigned to accept a teach-<lb/>
ing job in Rich Souare at the<lb/>
beginning of the Spring quar-<lb/>
ter. Hinton has been a spark-<lb/>
plug of the basketball and<lb/>
baseball teams of E. C. T. C.<lb/>
during his four years on the<lb/>
campus, and has displayed the<lb/>
highest quality of sportsman-<lb/>
ship and leadership in athletic<lb/>
contests. Floyd was also chosen<lb/>
as captain of the 1941 edition<lb/>
of the E. C. T. V. baseball team<lb/>
in a recent vote by his team-<lb/>
mates. On the diamond Floyd<lb/>
is one of the main stick weiW-<lb/>
ers, and his formidable bat<lb/>
sends many a run across pay<lb/>
dirt for the Buccaneers. Hinton<lb/>
will be graduated in June.<lb/>
Elon And William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Beaten By Buc Racqueteers<lb/>
By capturing four of the five , Led by Doug Glover and<lb/>
singles matches and one doubles! Dopey Watson, the E. C. T. C.<lb/>
match, the Pirate netters of tennis team chalked up its first<lb/>
E. C. T. C. racked up a 5-2 vic-jvictory of the season by edging<lb/>
' rv over the William and Mary ��t the Elon netters. 3-2, in a<lb/>
'ND) tennis team on the local<lb/>
"ourts on High School Day.<lb/>
Dave Breece, Leon Meadows,<lb/>
and Smut Burks sent the Pir-<lb/>
ates into a 3-0 lead by winning<lb/>
the first three matches played.<lb/>
Norman Wilkerson took the No.<lb/>
5 match to put the match on ice<lb/>
course, when you get tirec1<lb/>
�oom and study just a wee<lb/>
� of letting this Spring weather a<lb/>
athletically speaking!<lb/>
teen<lb/>
th<lb/>
on the campus<lb/>
r without a single word of rebuke, and they should<lb/>
for the fine fellows they are. They have fitted in<lb/>
ampus, and have, by all means, been most friendly<lb/>
to us. They are a hard-working bunch of boys,<lb/>
� that work on the tennis courts, arid without them,<lb/>
ighl be where it was before they came. They have<lb/>
ur campus, in the way of sportsmanship, hard<lb/>
ther virtue that is becoming to a person. They have<lb/>
taken into the varsity club, and this marks the turn-<lb/>
he bitter feeling that has been pointed their way. The<lb/>
I as realized their earnestness, and 1 think it's about<lb/>
student body followed suit. Anyway, if you don't<lb/>
s, 1 just dare you to associate with them a little more,<lb/>
surely see things in the same light that I, and many<lb/>
fining to see now. After all, they are a part of the<lb/>
ich as any of us; so let's give them a break and play<lb/>
Bowdoin lakes<lb/>
Tennis RSatgfi<lb/>
From Pirates<lb/>
Bowdoin College, from Bruns-<lb/>
under- and eighth innings. Paul Wal-jWick. Me handed the Pirate<lb/>
dorp was the leader at the plate<lb/>
1 in or e winners. Paul got a<lb/>
Schuerholz Stars<lb/>
In 13-5 Win<lb/>
Over Campbell<lb/>
"Red" Baucom let the Camp<lb/>
bell College nine down with four<lb/>
hits as the E. C. T. C. diamond<lb/>
squad opened its 1941 season<lb/>
with a 13-5 win over the Camels<lb/>
on the local field April 4.<lb/>
Baucom hurled steady ball<lb/>
for the winners, but he also re-<lb/>
ceived plenty of help from the<lb/>
stick-wielders on his team. After jf0 the Teachers. lpttpr ;<lb/>
the visitors went into a 2-0 lead jirnmy Dempsey lost another first set before'the Elon man<lb/>
in their half of the second, the marathon, this time by scores woke up Glover's net game was<lb/>
of 6-1, 3-6, 6-8, to Ed Kilgore pb, and he showed no mercy<lb/>
of the Braves. Kilgore's steady in rurming his opponent ragged.<lb/>
�ne playing was too much for theWatson defeated Adair, 7-5. 7-5,<lb/>
nine jjrate no. 1 man, and outlasted in tne no 3 sinLrles fo<lb/>
second with a man aboard tojr)omp5ey for victory,<lb/>
even things up. In the third,j Summary:<lb/>
Breece, E. C. T. C, defeated<lb/>
Seagle, 6-3, 6-1.<lb/>
Meadows, E. C. T. C, defeat-<lb/>
ed Murden, 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
Burks, E. C. T. C, defeated<lb/>
Gordon. 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
ras never threatened. Wilkerson, E. C.T. C, defeat-lptive'serve, coupled with the<lb/>
Wilson Schuerholz led the ed Ratten? 9.7 8.6. � . rf Watson waa too<lb/>
Christenburymen at the plate, Rreece and Meadows, ECTC, much for the Christians. Barney<lb/>
getting four hits and driving m defeated Murden and Seagle, iand Johnston defeated MaeTeows<lb/>
four uns. Mayo and Hinton got 5.3 6-4<lb/>
match played on wind-swept<lb/>
courts at Elon, March 29. Only<lb/>
t five-point match was run off<lb/>
because there was only one court<lb/>
available for the meet.<lb/>
Glover defeated Light bourne,<lb/>
6-1, 6-3, in the feature match of<lb/>
the day. The elongated Pirate<lb/>
and had the<lb/>
Pirate sluggers went to work<lb/>
on House, the Camel pitcher.<lb/>
Wilson Schuerholz pasted one<lb/>
over the left field fence in<lb/>
Brown and Mayo drew free<lb/>
passes to first, and B r o w n<lb/>
scored as Futrell got on base<lb/>
via an error. Schuerholz then<lb/>
singled in Mayo and Hinton to<lb/>
put the Teachers into a lead that<lb/>
� ECTC's<lb/>
other point in the singles. John-<lb/>
ston of Elon took a three-set<lb/>
match from Leon Meadows in<lb/>
the no. 2 singles.<lb/>
Glover and Watson teamed to<lb/>
put the match on ice for the<lb/>
Pirates by winning the no. 1<lb/>
doubles, 6-1. 6-3. Glover's de-<lb/>
t w o safeties for runner-up<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
rinning to look like a rosy season for the Pirate base-<lb/>
hey've got power plus, and the spirit that wins. The<lb/>
ring that Coach Christenbury's charges made<lb/>
bell nine was most encouraging, and it looks as<lb/>
teaser-ball t wirier. In the sixth<lb/>
William and Mary scored two<lb/>
runs on three singles, a hit<lb/>
batsman, and a walk. E. C. T. C.<lb/>
started in the first inning and<lb/>
didn't slow down. They scored<lb/>
one in the first, two in the sec-<lb/>
ond. three in the third, four in<lb/>
proverbial fire department" to put them out this,the fourth. and climax�a big<lb/>
aucom heads a dependable muond staff, and in day with six in the sixth. The<lb/>
tment, it looks bad for the opposing nines this pirates reached the Brave<lb/>
hitters as Futrell. Mayo. Hinton. Schuerholz. and pitchers for only ten hits, but<lb/>
twelve miscues by the losers<lb/>
aided the cause considerable.<lb/>
Hinton and Waldorp got two<lb/>
hits each to pace the winners.<lb/>
Box Scores: First game:<lb/>
ECTC 003 240 34x 16 15 7<lb/>
Braves 004 100 100 6 9 5<lb/>
Linton. Wilkerson, Weston<lb/>
and Mosier; Dunn and "Sisk,<lb/>
Rogers.<lb/>
Second game:<lb/>
Braves 010 002 0 3 9 12<lb/>
123 426 x 18 10 4<lb/>
netters a 1-2 defeat on the local<lb/>
courts on April 3. The match<lb/>
single, a double, and a triple in '<lb/>
five trips to the plate. Mayo, was cut short by darkness, and<lb/>
Hinton. and Futrell were close; the doubles matches were not<lb/>
wain got iour 01 tne rsraes . � tjLi�j these two teams on April o was<lb/>
base hits, and also starred afield :1�W three-set match to Ireland <lb/>
�� the losers. f tho �"W , ran   e on account of rain. E. C. T. C.<lb/>
In the second game, Dubose feature1 match ofthe day � 3 was in tho lead, 3-O. w-hen a ter-<lb/>
Simpson handcuffed the Braves sey took the first 6-4, and drop- d h<lb/>
with seven hits, and struck out ned the next one by the same<lb/>
nine in racking up his first vie- score. Then the two court titans<lb/>
tory of the year. Only in thehegan<lb/>
sixth frame were the visitors<lb/>
able to get to the elongated<lb/>
over<lb/>
Kilgore and Gordon, Wm. and<lb/>
Mary, defeated Burks and Wil-<lb/>
and Burks. 6-1. 6-1, in the no.<lb/>
2 doubles match.<lb/>
Score by innings:<lb/>
E. C. T. C.<lb/>
R H E<lb/>
032 071 13 13 1<lb/>
marathon on the no 1 court � c 11 020 021 5 43<lb/>
The score see-sawe4 back and P and<lb/>
forth lor over an hour on that<lb/>
"Pink Pills for Pale People"<lb/>
at<lb/>
Warren's Drug Co.<lb/>
L ALT ARES BROS.<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
Watches�Jewelry�Silver<lb/>
Gifts�Watch Repairing<lb/>
the starting nine, victory is just around the corner.<lb/>
picking the Pirates to come out of this season's play<lb/>
that shows at least two wins to every loss. Wait and<lb/>
sity club has done it again! On Friday night last, the<lb/>
E. C. T. C. took that familiar trek down to the base-<lb/>
campus building and administered the usual doses to<lb/>
- that were unfortunate enough to accept the clubs<lb/>
join. The irrim look on the faces of Joe Williams,<lb/>
Walter Rogers, Tom Cox. and all the other old<lb/>
. prepared for the ordeal, (and it is really consider- ECTC<lb/>
to them) would have been enough initiation for me. Weston, Macon and Bress;<lb/>
I ust like the electrocutioner as he turns on the juice j Simpson and Sisk, Rogers.<lb/>
another life, and I was mighty glad that yours trul<lb/>
ng that well-known group of new members. The whole<lb/>
d a good purpose, though. It certainly boosted the<lb/>
. iness plenty for a couple of days. All the "moun-<lb/>
r admitted into the club, and took their punishment<lb/>
heads high, (except when Tom Cox shouted, "ninety<lb/>
d) Those new members of the club are: Charlie Cra-<lb/>
treen, Bob and Jack Young. Jerome Butler, Howard<lb/>
Bill Lucas. Dan Waddell, Jimmy Gianakos, Wilson<lb/>
George Roberts, and Chick Murray. Congratulations<lb/>
- You are now a part of a mighty fine campus club,<lb/>
u uphold the ideal set up by the varsity club since its<lb/>
n years ago.<lb/>
tell-tale third set. until finally<lb/>
the visiting red head managed<lb/>
to win by a 14-12 count.<lb/>
Summary of other matches:<lb/>
Sreans. B 0 w d i n, defeated<lb/>
Glover, 6-2. 6-2.<lb/>
Breece, E. C. T. C. defeated<lb/>
Pope, 6-3. 6-3.<lb/>
Plimpton. Bowdin, defeated<lb/>
Watson, 6-3, 6-3.<lb/>
Abbott, Dowdin, defeated<lb/>
Meadows. 2-6, 6-2. 6-3.<lb/>
Burks. E. C. T. C, defeated<lb/>
Ciullo, 8-6, 6-2.<lb/>
Sisk.<lb/>
I CREAMED DOUGHNUTS <lb/>
j AXD PIES<lb/>
j AT �Y� ST0RE .<lb/>
j PEOPLES BAKERY j<lb/>
. � take this opportunity to humbly thank the athletic de-<lb/>
� for their action on the tennis courts. The new liner has<lb/>
remendously, and the students that keep the courts in<lb/>
the job as'well as it could possible be done. It just goes<lb/>
, that even the athletic department is capable of doing<lb/>
� gets the notion. Let's hold our breath, and the first<lb/>
i know, we might have ten new tennis courts, adequate<lb/>
Hi for them, a new bus for Pirate athletic teams and<lb/>
ations. At least, it's a pretty good dream, so 111 just<lb/>
with that thought in mind�so long.<lb/>
Editor Is Official<lb/>
Scorer For Ball Club<lb/>
James Whitfield has been<lb/>
named by the Board of Direc-<lb/>
tors of the Greenville Baseball<lb/>
Club to serve the club again this<lb/>
vear as official scorer. Wliit-<lb/>
field who served the Teco Echo<lb/>
as sports editor in 1938-39, was<lb/>
official scorer last season.<lb/>
!<lb/>
CAROLINA DAIRY<lb/>
PRODUCTS<lb/>
DELICIOUS ICE CREAM<lb/>
AND MILKSHAKES<lb/>
"Quality You Can Taste"<lb/>
Washington Street<lb/>
Dial 3123<lb/>
For That Charming <lb/>
Easter and Spring j<lb/>
Frock j<lb/>
Visit <lb/>
WILLIAMS' j<lb/>
"The Ladies' Store" <lb/>
� HOT DOGS<lb/>
� HAMBURGERS<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
"The Best Place To Eat"<lb/>
Place Your Orders For<lb/>
Corsages<lb/>
� For Easter<lb/>
� For The Junior-Senior<lb/>
with<lb/>
ALBERT MANESS<lb/>
Orders Filled by<lb/>
Greenville Floral Co.<lb/>
PARADE<lb/>
OF HITS !<lb/>
SAT SUN MOX<lb/>
James<lb/>
STEWART<lb/>
Hedy Lamarr<lb/>
"Conic Live With Me"<lb/>
NOTICE SENIORS!<lb/>
GENUINE ENGRAVED<lb/>
Calling Cards<lb/>
For Graduation Invitations<lb/>
$1.20 Including Plate<lb/>
Choice Of 12 Cuttings<lb/>
Your Order Appreciated<lb/>
BOBBY HOLLAR<lb/>
�-�<lb/>
Smart<lb/>
New Spring and Summer Frocks<lb/>
CASH or CREDIT<lb/>
FRANCES SHOP<lb/>
407 Evans Street<lb/>
TRY ONE AT THE<lb/>
BALL GAME<lb/>
TRY ONE IN THE<lb/>
"Y"STORE<lb/>
� A �<lb/>
ROYAL CROWN<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
NEHI BOTTLING<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Easter Toys and Novelties<lb/>
�AT�<lb/>
ROSE'S<lb/>
5 � 10 � 25c Stores<lb/>
TUBS - WED<lb/>
Maisie<lb/>
WAS A LADY<lb/>
Ann Sothern L. Ayres<lb/>
COBURN'S SHOE STORE<lb/>
"Your Shoe Store"<lb/>
410 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville North Carolina<lb/>
THUR - FRI<lb/>
In Technicolor<lb/>
"THIEF OF<lb/>
BAGDAD"<lb/>
Sabu and Star Cast<lb/>
COMING SOON<lb/>
Alice Faye<lb/>
Carmen Miranda<lb/>
"THAT NIGHT<lb/>
IN RIO"<lb/>
Jill<lb/>
Latest Spring Styles in Dress and Evening<lb/>
Wear at<lb/>
C. Hebcr Forbes<lb/>
111<lb/>
Curtis Perkins<lb/>
'THINGS MEN WEAR"<lb/>
418-420 Evans Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
Ilk<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
Mickey Rooney<lb/>
ANDY HARDY'S<lb/>
Private Secretary<lb/>
Fruits<lb/>
Cakes<lb/>
Candies<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
"If It's In Town We Have it"<lb/>
I<lb/>
FOR EASTER<lb/>
an Exquisite Gift of<lb/>
PERFUME<lb/>
Chanel<lb/>
Lentheric<lb/>
Elizabeth Arden<lb/>
Lelong<lb/>
Queriain<lb/>
Yardley<lb/>
Exclusively at<lb/>
'jBissette's Drug Store<lb/>
1 j In GREENVILLE j<lb/>
I<lb/>
ATTENTION SENIORS!<lb/>
Get Your Calling Cards for Invitations<lb/>
from<lb/>
O. D. ANDREWS<lb/>
Representative for Star Engraving Co. on Campus<lb/>
100 for $1.00<lb/>
After "lab<lb/>
pause and<lb/>
5<lb/>
YOU TASTE ITS QUALITY<lb/>
Coca-Cola has a delightful taste<lb/>
that always pleases. Pure,<lb/>
wholesome, delicious, � ice-cold<lb/>
Coca-Cola satisfies completely.<lb/>
So when you pause throughout<lb/>
the day, make it thm pautm that<lb/>
refreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola.<lb/>
BoaUd under infhorfty of The Coo-Cola Company by<lb/>
COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY<lb/>
Greenrilk, North Caroline<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00037889_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
FRIDAY. APRIL<lb/>
'1. Ik<lb/>
umni N<lb/>
- - By - -<lb/>
ESTELLE McCLEES<lb/>
ews<lb/>
Nominating Committee Meets�<lb/>
This year is the year to elect<lb/>
all officers of the Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation of East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College except the six dis-<lb/>
trict vice-presidents. The nomi-<lb/>
nating committee appointed at<lb/>
the executive board meeting.<lb/>
March 1. met at the home of<lb/>
Mrs. Thomas Hall (Lucille Bul-<lb/>
lock). Rocky Mount. X. C. Sat-<lb/>
urday afternoon. March 29. Ser-<lb/>
ving on the nominating commit-<lb/>
tee are Miss Mamie Ruth Tuns-<lb/>
tall. Greenville. X. C. Chair-<lb/>
man Miss Hannah Turnage.<lb/>
Kinston. X. C. Mrs. R. F. Noble<lb/>
(Mamie Cutler). Raleigh. X. C.<lb/>
and Mrs. Hall. All were present<lb/>
made for the benefit bridge<lb/>
which was held on March 25 in<lb/>
the Coca Cola clubrooms. The<lb/>
chapter hoped to have had Miss<lb/>
Ella Outland, district vice-pres-<lb/>
ident, as guest speaker, but she<lb/>
was unable to attend.<lb/>
RECORD CROWD<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
of Pitt. Wilson, and Washing-<lb/>
ton counties.<lb/>
A sub-committee composed of<lb/>
girls from the counties which<lb/>
usually have the greatest atten-<lb/>
dance functioned to appoint a<lb/>
girl from each county to act as<lb/>
guide. This committee was corn-<lb/>
attended these Forums that they<lb/>
are rendering a marked service<lb/>
to the community in making<lb/>
available the information, inter-<lb/>
pretation and evaluation of out-<lb/>
standing leaders in the various<lb/>
fields discussed, and serve as a<lb/>
valuable clearing house for the<lb/>
thinking of the people of our<lb/>
community on matters that are<lb/>
engaging the attention of all<lb/>
thinking people of today.<lb/>
OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Teachers College alumni groupi,<lb/>
d�� i r� � r it n t il)0St-xi ot Hazel Owens, Annie<lb/>
Roanoke Ramds East arohna T �,�� ur;it-��-�� n , tit �<lb/>
 -  . I laune Wnkerson, Helen Wolfe,<lb/>
Marv Elizabeth Eagles, and<lb/>
at the meeting. Ballots will be<lb/>
mailed to active members of the<lb/>
Association on or before May 1.<lb/>
At a meeting of the executive<lb/>
board, it was decided to mail all<lb/>
ballots of chapter members to<lb/>
the president of their respective<lb/>
chapter. After they have been<lb/>
distributed and checked, ballots<lb/>
will be mailed back to the Alum-<lb/>
ni Office before May 15. It is<lb/>
hoped that each member will<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
CHAPTER MEETIXGS<lb/>
Roanoke Rapid�<lb/>
Dorothy Whitley. A group rep-<lb/>
resenting the publications on<lb/>
the campus was in charge of the<lb/>
bulletin boards for the day. Bes-<lb/>
sie Fay Hunt, of the News Bur-<lb/>
eau was chairman of this group,<lb/>
and others helping her were<lb/>
Mary Agnes Deal, Betty Keu-<lb/>
zenkamp, and Kathleen Lewis.<lb/>
The barbecue Luncheon was<lb/>
served on the west campus to<lb/>
4500 persons in a period of 33<lb/>
minutes. The dining room crew<lb/>
used 30 pigs, a ton of slaw, and<lb/>
Misses Amanda Tillman, Eve- a barrel of pickles to feed the<lb/>
lyn Tillman, Frances Newsome, crowd.<lb/>
and Katherine Reid were hos-<lb/>
tesses to the members of the<lb/>
on Tuesday night. March 25.<lb/>
During the business session.<lb/>
Margaret Eakes. president, gave<lb/>
a report of the March 1 meeting<lb/>
of the executive board. In order<lb/>
to do a part in helping to meet<lb/>
In the afternoon many of the<lb/>
visitors attended the movie.<lb/>
Hundreds of others danced in<lb/>
the Wright Building, while<lb/>
others saw the ECTC baseball<lb/>
and tennis teams defeat their<lb/>
opponents.<lb/>
Despite the larger crowd.<lb/>
state competition.<lb/>
Another phase of the program<lb/>
will be a series of motion pic-<lb/>
tures. The films to be shown are<lb/>
special reels taken from stro-<lb/>
boscopic light by a method de-<lb/>
veloped in the Massachusetts<lb/>
Institution of Technology which<lb/>
have been loaned for the oc-<lb/>
casion. They present movements<lb/>
ordinarily too fast to be caught<lb/>
by the human eye, such as the<lb/>
flight of the bird or the burst-<lb/>
ing of a bubble.<lb/>
The exhibition is open to the<lb/>
public. There are no admission<lb/>
charges and anyone who is in-<lb/>
terested is invited to come.<lb/>
Members of the Science Club<lb/>
will be on hand to act as guides<lb/>
and to give general information.<lb/>
EVE CURIE<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
was to sail for America there<lb/>
was a small party given in honor<lb/>
of her sailing, there was a slight<lb/>
interruption because of an air<lb/>
raid which started fourteen<lb/>
fires! She described it as look-<lb/>
ing like a great celebration on<lb/>
the horizon with light enough<lb/>
to read a newspaper by. Also<lb/>
she was proud "that Hitler .too<lb/>
had wanted to say goodby<lb/>
Where we have "Swing Bands"<lb/>
in the U. S. A. for our music,<lb/>
the music of the English people<lb/>
is the exploding of shells in the<lb/>
air, shrapnels falling back, fire<lb/>
engines racing like mad; the<lb/>
solo being bombs falling "that<lb/>
you are sure will bear your name<lb/>
in Hitler's own handwriting"<lb/>
and the metronome to keep count<lb/>
with the music, the warden walk-<lb/>
ing on the sand roof. And the<lb/>
typical comment of the English<lb/>
the next day would be, "Rather<lb/>
noisy last night<lb/>
Miss Curie said, "To win the<lb/>
war, England needs all of us.<lb/>
Every one working night and<lb/>
day to reinforce what they have<lb/>
lost "I think of England as I<lb/>
left it behind with it's bobwire<lb/>
fences as an infuriated porcu-<lb/>
SPEAKER<lb/>
FORUM<lb/>
the present financial situation; everything functioned very<lb/>
of the Association the members smoothly. Mr. Hollar, who was<lb/>
present decided on the follow-jm charge of the traffic, stated<lb/>
ing means: to have letters typed;that the traffic was handled bet-<lb/>
which each member will mail to ter this year than ever before,<lb/>
friends of theirs who are East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College grad-<lb/>
ates not belonging to chapters<lb/>
at the present asking for con-<lb/>
tributions from them: to con-<lb/>
tact in the near future inactive<lb/>
members of the local chapter;<lb/>
and to give donations in addi-<lb/>
tion to the amount hoped to be<lb/>
received from the above men<lb/>
tioned sources.<lb/>
High Point�<lb/>
Members of High Point ehap-<lb/>
Con&amp;mued from Page One<lb/>
facts, said the speaker, as he<lb/>
suggested that rumors and mis-<lb/>
representations be examined in<lb/>
the light of day.<lb/>
In concluding he stressed the<lb/>
idea that the forefathers settled<lb/>
America and contributed to<lb/>
American ideals in the hope that<lb/>
here all could live happily to-<lb/>
gether. That dream will be<lb/>
realized when all groups come<lb/>
to appreciate the ideas of others,<lb/>
snare and profound experiences<lb/>
in their hearts, and build with<lb/>
trust and confidence the bridge<lb/>
of understanding.<lb/>
Dr. Gatsehall was introduced<lb/>
by Miss Sallie Joyner Davis of<lb/>
the Chapel Committee.<lb/>
i" <lb/>
pine "The Englishmen say<lb/>
they are so slow minded that<lb/>
when they are lost, they don't<lb/>
know it�and that's the way<lb/>
they are going to win the war<lb/>
Two courageous stories were<lb/>
told of the true spirit of those<lb/>
fighting people. One of a French<lb/>
boy who trusted V the wind<lb/>
to blow him over to England, in<lb/>
his plane, because he did not<lb/>
have much gasoline, but too<lb/>
much spirit and hope not to try<lb/>
to get to that country to fight.<lb/>
The other story was of an Eng-<lb/>
Continued from Page On<lb/>
possibility of rehabilitation of<lb/>
many of the nations participat-<lb/>
ing in the first World War.<lb/>
Among those participating in<lb/>
the discussion following the ad-<lb/>
dress, the Honorable F. C.<lb/>
Harding, in a characteristical-<lb/>
ly lucicL logical and eloquent<lb/>
statement, outlined the legal<lb/>
ter met in March with Mrs. C. steps necessary for the effectual<lb/>
R. Hinshaw (Kathleen Spain), working of such a world gov-<lb/>
served as hostess along with ernment�a plan in part like!<lb/>
Mrs. Worth Ivey (Leona Perry( that for the League of Nations<lb/>
tjI' � Hmshaw- Mrs- W. W. and the World Court, with an,<lb/>
Hodgin (Lola Smith) was wel-i international armed force for<lb/>
corned into the chapter as a land sea. adequate to the en-<lb/>
new member. During the buai- forcement of such laws, rules<lb/>
inal plans were and regulations, as might be<lb/>
drawn up for the governing of<lb/>
the nations.<lb/>
It is felt by those who have<lb/>
COUNCIL<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
the gav 1 over to his successor<lb/>
some time in the immediate<lb/>
future. Xew officers will be in-<lb/>
troduced to the men's student<lb/>
body at a future mass meeting.<lb/>
PAGEANT<lb/>
CAST<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
and postlude will be plaved by<lb/>
Edna Mitchell.<lb/>
Costumes were designed and<lb/>
executed by Rachel Farrior and I<lb/>
her committee and Fenly Spears!<lb/>
will furnish lighting effects.<lb/>
The scenery is handled by I<lb/>
Sammy Crandle, Walter Mallard<lb/>
and Fenly Spear.<lb/>
Bobbv<lb/>
David<lb/>
CojiHnued from Pane One<lb/>
Joseph, played by Russell Rng-<lb/>
erson: Hinley Ernshaw, by<lb/>
Billy Green: Ellen Dean by<lb/>
Irene Mitcham: and old Ellen,<lb/>
the narrator, by Martha Rice.<lb/>
Two English Moorland estates1<lb/>
lend atmosphere and romance<lb/>
to the eighteenth century set-<lb/>
ting. The stage sets of the two<lb/>
estates Wuthering Height? and<lb/>
The Grange are being construc-<lb/>
ted by William Harris, Fenly<lb/>
Spear. Hampton Xoe,<lb/>
Hollar and supervised bv<lb/>
Breece.<lb/>
Fenly Spear will supervise<lb/>
the lighting for the play.<lb/>
David Breece as stage man-<lb/>
ager, Pauline Abeyounis assis-<lb/>
tant stage manager, Verda Har-<lb/>
ris. Mary Agnes Deal and<lb/>
Martha Wheless as propertv mis-<lb/>
tresses. Sybil Taylor, and Doris<lb/>
Hockaday with sound .effects<lb/>
and Mary Harvey Ruffin. Gar-<lb/>
nettc Cordle and Estelle Davis<lb/>
in charge of costumes, will take<lb/>
care of tasks involving the stage.<lb/>
Elizabeth Coppedge and Mar-<lb/>
gie Dudley will handle the pub-<lb/>
licity for the play.<lb/>
William Dudash has been<lb/>
chosen house manager and<lb/>
assisting him will be lobbv hos-<lb/>
tess, Lallah B. Watts and" four-<lb/>
teen marshals.<lb/>
Marshals for the production<lb/>
will be Christine Hellen. Doro-<lb/>
thy Roe Davis, Margaret Lewis,<lb/>
Elizabeth Meadows, Margaret<lb/>
D. Moore, Katherine Russell,<lb/>
Florence Dudley. Janie Eakes,<lb/>
Rosalie Brown. Ophelia Hooks,<lb/>
Lona Maddrey, Virginia Rouse,<lb/>
Hazel Williford and Virginia<lb/>
Atkinson.<lb/>
Tickets will be in the charge of<lb/>
Wilda Royall and Ruby Grant.<lb/>
"Each member of the club is<lb/>
contributing his part toward<lb/>
making Wut-hering Heights one<lb/>
of the most outstanding enter-<lb/>
tainments ever given at the col-<lb/>
lege stated David Breece<lb/>
president of the Chi Pi Plavers<lb/>
iiillllillllilillilll<lb/>
Your College Stores!<lb/>
 Stationery Store<lb/>
Special Bargain Counter<lb/>
Until April 15th.<lb/>
Soda Shop<lb/>
The Meeting and Eating Place<lb/>
Of All Students<lb/>
� DIAL 2861<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Dickinson Av�. �<lb/>
North Carolina �<lb/>
itfgi<lb/>
� A<lb/>
In Planned Patternsde-<lb/>
signed to go with your suit<lb/>
Botany Ties are splendid<lb/>
value.<lb/>
BOTANY<lb/>
WRINKLE PROOF<lb/>
TIES<lb/>
3WY<lb/>
lish woman who came every day<lb/>
to help her clean. One day she<lb/>
called and was very apologetic<lb/>
because she could not go to work<lb/>
but she explained, "we have had<lb/>
an air raid and a bomb wer<lb/>
through my kitchen, exploding<lb/>
three floors below, and every<lb/>
thing is in a terrible mess! I<lb/>
never knew a bomb could carry<lb/>
so much dust<lb/>
Mademoselje Curie bought<lb/>
down the house with her clos-<lb/>
ing statement, "May Eng-<lb/>
land and America watch to-<lb/>
gether over France in PEACE<lb/>
and in WAR<lb/>
Miss Curie is planning to pub-<lb/>
lish a book of letters of opin-<lb/>
ions by the French people, soon.<lb/>
In answer to my question af-<lb/>
ter her lecture. "How are the<lb/>
French people treated by the<lb/>
Germans occupintf France?"<lb/>
She said verv much the same as<lb/>
in Norway, which is pretty bad. .merit was more wv re than P<lb/>
But tnat in some places the treat others.<lb/>
Drop In With<lb/>
Your Friends<lb/>
And Enjoy A<lb/>
Refreshing Bite To<lb/>
Eat<lb/>
at<lb/>
D<lb/>
UKE UNIVERSITY<lb/>
SCHOOL OF NURSING<lb/>
DURHAM, X. C.<lb/>
The Diploma of Graduate Nurse is<lb/>
awarded after three years. The en-<lb/>
trance requirements are intelli-<lb/>
gence, character, and graduation<lb/>
from an accredited High School.<lb/>
Preference is given to those who<lb/>
have had college work.<lb/>
The annual tuition of $100 covers<lb/>
the cost of maintenance, uniforms,<lb/>
hooks, etc.<lb/>
Catalogues, application forms, and<lb/>
information about requirements<lb/>
may be obtained from the admis-<lb/>
sion committee.<lb/>
0KELVINAT0R<lb/>
Other 1941<lb/>
KELYINATOR<lb/>
Electric Ranges<lb/>
F0R AS 99.50<lb/>
LITTLE AS<lb/>
Here's a new low price<lb/>
fo;<lb/>
or a range of Kelvinator <lb/>
quality! Model ER-411 v<lb/>
features Oversize Oven, <lb/>
Scotch Kettle, Storage<lb/>
Drawer for utensils, 5-<lb/>
heat switches and many<lb/>
other modern features.<lb/>
Come in and see it!<lb/>
 f irmg '�"�� and Statt<lb/>
and t trti Jaxts l-lra.<lb/>
De Luxe Model<lb/>
With All These<lb/>
Modern Features<lb/>
COM PI.1 1 i IV<lb/>
MATIC�with s<lb/>
puting Timer an<lb/>
doc k. Mini, t Nl.<lb/>
Selet ur Su Hi h �<lb/>
meeting Time i .<lb/>
Sc ot h Keith o<lb/>
outlet � big 1 <lb/>
w itii auti tra I<lb/>
F lo o d 1 i <lb/>
Scotch K �<lb/>
twitches w<lb/>
Sign.il Lights<lb/>
Bearii Si i<lb/>
and one V. irn<lb/>
� non-glare'<lb/>
Porcelain I<lb/>
and out.<lb/>
Model ER-417<lb/>
Delivered i i � i<lb/>
Kitchen for oi<lb/>
$<lb/>
169.95<lb/>
LBJ V f<lb/>
Carolina Sales Corporation<lb/>
Dial 3143<lb/>
3rd &amp; C<lb/>
FRANK McCORMiCK<lb/>
�tor firjt baseman<lb/>
Cincinnati Reds<lb/>
Look around you at the ball park<lb/>
 you'll see the clean white<lb/>
Chesterfield pack<lb/>
on every side<lb/>
JLlvery smoker who enjoys a Cooler<lb/>
smoke that's definitely Milder and Better-<lb/>
Tasting is a Chesterfield fan.<lb/>
The can't-be-copied blend of the<lb/>
world's best cigarette tobaccos<lb/>
makes Chesterfield the league<lb/>
leader in every cigarette quality<lb/>
that people want and like.<lb/>
Enjoy the game with Chesterfield<lb/>
�&amp;UMWESS Hp JMETTIIt TAST<lb/>
Copyright mi, Luciit A Mtiu Taucca C<lb/>
<pb facs="00037889_0005"/>
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