<?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="00037917_0001"/>
JZE<lb/>
(A NTs<lb/>
PER<lb/>
Enter War Bond<lb/>
Playwritin Contest<lb/>
Th<lb/>
e TECO ECHO<lb/>
Who Is Afraid<lb/>
Of An Investigation?<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1943<lb/>
Number 10<lb/>
??<lb/>
��<lb/>
AI.S Q<lb/>
ostume<lb/>
RRES<lb/>
�����,<lb/>
o<lb/>
DALS<lb/>
i.<lb/>
�<lb/>
Varsity Club Sweetheart.<lb/>
Varsity Club Gives<lb/>
Successful Dance<lb/>
Two-hundred and fifty people<lb/>
attended the gala Varsity dance<lb/>
last Saturday night. It was held<lb/>
in the gym; from 8:30 until<lb/>
111:45 everyone enjoyed the<lb/>
jr-usic of Billy Knauffs band,<lb/>
I the charming company of the<lb/>
i w- men and men students, and<lb/>
! i "� ice men from Norfolk,<lb/>
Cherry Point, and New River.<lb/>
Jerome Butler, Bob Young,<lb/>
Doug Jones and Nick Zuras de-<lb/>
i nod the military ballroom<lb/>
R" yle which was carried out in<lb/>
red. white and blue crepe paper.<lb/>
Highlighting the evening of<lb/>
'ancing was the traditional fig-<lb/>
ure, lead by Nancy Wynne,<lb/>
Varsity Sweetheart, and her<lb/>
escort, Bob Young. Others in<lb/>
he figure were Lt. (jg) and<lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Christenbury; Billy<lb/>
Greene, club president, and<lb/>
Ellen Maddrey; Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
O. A .Hankner, Miss Dorothy<lb/>
Parks and Floyd Woody, follow-<lb/>
ed by the remaining members<lb/>
of the club and their dates.<lb/>
The traditional V was formed<lb/>
to finish the figure, then the<lb/>
sweetheart presented Lt. Chris-<lb/>
tenbury at which time the or-<lb/>
chestra played "Anchors<lb/>
Aweigh "He's My Guy" was<lb/>
played for the honor dance.<lb/>
President Greene says that<lb/>
the dance was quite a success<lb/>
and he hopes that everyone<lb/>
there enjoyed it.<lb/>
Students Demand Committee Investigation<lb/>
Of Growing Campus Problems<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the last issue of Teco Echo<lb/>
it was stated that there would be<lb/>
visiting members on the Disci-<lb/>
pline Committee from the stu-<lb/>
dent body. There will be voting<lb/>
students on the Discipline Com-<lb/>
mittee, not visiting.<lb/>
Government Seeks<lb/>
More Workers<lb/>
Freshmen Cabinets<lb/>
Give Prosram At Vespers<lb/>
Men and women are sought to<lb/>
fill positions as technical and<lb/>
scientific aid in the Federal<lb/>
Government. They are needed<lb/>
to do research and testing in the<lb/>
following fields: chemistry,<lb/>
geogloy, geophysics, mathema-<lb/>
tics, metallurgy, meteorolgy,<lb/>
physics, and radio. The posi-<lb/>
tions pay $1,620 to $2,600, plus<lb/>
overtime.<lb/>
Applicants may qualify<lb/>
through experience or educa-<lb/>
tion. For the assistant grade,<lb/>
War Savings Staff<lb/>
Offers Contest<lb/>
The human drama behind the<lb/>
purchase of War Bonds is the<lb/>
theme that will be stressed in<lb/>
the nationwide college playwrit-<lb/>
ing contest which has recently<lb/>
been inaugurated by the Wo-<lb/>
men's Section of the War Sav-<lb/>
ings Staff of the United States<lb/>
Treasury.<lb/>
The reasons for this contest<lb/>
are twofold, the Treasury<lb/>
points out. First, there is a<lb/>
widespread call on the War<lb/>
Savings Staff for short drama-<lb/>
tic scripts which stress the War<lb/>
Savings theme. Second, partici-<lb/>
pation in such a playwriting<lb/>
venture will, it is believed, make<lb/>
the individual contestants more<lb/>
keenly aware of their personal<lb/>
responsibility to the war effort.<lb/>
Mrs. Henry Morgenthau, Jr<lb/>
Chief of the Special Activities<lb/>
Unit of the Women's Section,<lb/>
and one of the judges of the<lb/>
contest, emphasises this "per-<lb/>
sonal participation" value, when<lb/>
she says: "I believe that any<lb/>
Notice!<lb/>
The Teco Echo would like to<lb/>
bf Kin a regular column about our<lb/>
alumni in the service. To you who<lb/>
have once been a part of our stu-<lb/>
dent body, we ask that you write<lb/>
to us from time to time and let<lb/>
us know how you are getting<lb/>
along in the service, when you<lb/>
get a promotion and when you<lb/>
change your addresses. We want<lb/>
to continue to sent the paper to<lb/>
you and feel that it would be re-<lb/>
ceived quicker if you would noti-<lb/>
fy the newspaper office of any<lb/>
change.<lb/>
Attention Seniors!<lb/>
�<lb/>
the<lb/>
in<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
YM<lb/>
Methodist Group<lb/>
Conclude Vesper<lb/>
Program Series<lb/>
i n that<lb/>
si . lish<lb/>
ties for<lb/>
nd pro-<lb/>
it ies<lb/>
War 1.<lb/>
W was<lb/>
i ��cnc<lb/>
iiJlingtoii<lb/>
of the<lb/>
nted out<lb/>
�pose for<lb/>
Y"W does<lb/>
program<lb/>
: . educa-<lb/>
eation.<lb/>
am nation<lb/>
A.<lb/>
�' Dunn<lb/>
of the<lb/>
loing on the<lb/>
inning of<lb/>
: . Reade<lb/>
ed over the<lb/>
w a s Miss<lb/>
ro. As a<lb/>
elton Creech<lb/>
lyed Xiven's<lb/>
Ending the series of pro-<lb/>
grams to help people in one de-<lb/>
nomination have a better under-<lb/>
standing of the beliefs of others<lb/>
and see the similarity in the<lb/>
fundamentals of the various be-<lb/>
liefs, was a program presented<lb/>
March 6. in the "Y" hut at the<lb/>
college by the YWCA and<lb/>
YMCA. At this time the Metho-<lb/>
dist group presented their loc<lb/>
tlines through the method of<lb/>
panel discussion, with Mabel<lb/>
Spence Watson of Fremont as<lb/>
discussion leader.<lb/>
Four other students, Misses<lb/>
Lillian Boyette of Ahoskie,<lb/>
Edith Wilkerson of Bailey,<lb/>
Elizabeth Morgan of Carthage,<lb/>
and Nell Pitts of Creedmoor,<lb/>
took part in the panel.<lb/>
About the history of the de-<lb/>
nomination, the panel speakers<lb/>
brought out its origin in a small<lb/>
group of students at Oxford<lb/>
University in 1729. the source<lb/>
of the name Methodist in the<lb/>
methodical ways of living prac-<lb/>
ticed by the original group, and<lb/>
said that John Wesley was in-<lb/>
strumental in establishing the<lb/>
doctrines of Methodism in both<lb/>
England and America.<lb/>
believes that<lb/>
Uncle Sam Needs<lb/>
Bacteriologists<lb/>
Applications will be accepted<lb/>
from bacteriologists for filling<lb/>
future needs in their field, the<lb/>
Civil Service Commission an-<lb/>
nounced today. Base pay is<lb/>
$2,600 and $3,000 a year, which<lb/>
under the overtime system now<lb/>
in effect is increased to $3<lb/>
163.20 and $3,824.24 a year for<lb/>
a 48-hour workweek.<lb/>
There are six options: gen-<lb/>
eral medical bacteriology, ana-<lb/>
erobes (medical), viruses,<lb/>
brucellosis, rickettsiae, and bio-<lb/>
logicals. Persons appointed will<lb/>
do research in one of these<lb/>
branches of bacteriology, and<lb/>
will prepare reports on their<lb/>
findings.<lb/>
Applicants must have com-<lb/>
pleted a 4-year college course<lb/>
leading to a bachelor's degree,<lb/>
which must have included 24<lb/>
semester hours of study in bac-<lb/>
teriology. Two years of profes-<lb/>
sional experience in advanced<lb/>
applications will be accepted<lb/>
from persons who have comple-<lb/>
ted 1 year of paid experience or college student who takes part<lb/>
a war training course approved in this contest will, in a very<lb/>
by the U. S. Office of Educa- real way, be rendering her roun-<lb/>
tion. One year of college study, try a definite patriotic service<lb/>
including i course in the option Judges for the contest are na-<lb/>
applied for, is also qualifying<lb/>
Persons now enrolled in war<lb/>
training or college courses may<lb/>
apply, subject to completion of<lb/>
the course. For the higher<lb/>
grades successively greater<lb/>
amounts of education or experi-<lb/>
ence are required.<lb/>
See Worker on Poor <lb/>
English Club<lb/>
tionally known figures in the<lb/>
non-commercial theatre world.<lb/>
The panel is headed by Margo<lb/>
Jones, Head of the Dramatic<lb/>
Department of the University<lb/>
of Texas; and is includes, be-<lb/>
sides Mrs. Morgenthau, Hallie<lb/>
Flanagan Davis, Dean of Smith<lb/>
College and Barrett H. Clark of<lb/>
the Dramatist's Play Service,<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Students of any university or<lb/>
colletre in the United States are<lb/>
eligible to enter their plays in<lb/>
Dr. M. N. Posey, authority on the contest which closes April 1,<lb/>
Walt Whitman,<lb/>
meeting of the<lb/>
spoke at the<lb/>
English club<lb/>
1943. Scripts should be between<lb/>
ten and thirty minutes of play-<lb/>
Tuesday night on biographies of ing time It is preferable to<lb/>
the poet. i have them as short as possible.<lb/>
Dr. Posey had with him j This contest is open to the<lb/>
seventeen of the twenty bio students of some 1600 college<lb/>
graphies of Whitman that have; d r a m a departments. Scripts<lb/>
been published since the first will be judged locally by heads<lb/>
one appeared in 1883. Also on I of these departments and the<lb/>
"Canned Beans and shoes<lb/>
aren't the only things which are<lb/>
scarce now a days. Even Sheep<lb/>
skins are a bit hard to get, espe-1<lb/>
dally the variety that are treas<lb/>
ured by the sweet young gradu-<lb/>
ates says Dr. H. J. McGinnis.<lb/>
Wi'h May 31 not as far off as<lb/>
it cilce was and August 27,<lb/>
which closes the summer ses-<lb/>
i n. ;mv'iring upon the hori-<lb/>
zon he believes the attention of<lb/>
the students should be brought<lb/>
to the matter of diplomas. The<lb/>
firm that provides diplomas for<lb/>
the college "is hard put" to<lb/>
supply them this year. Materials<lb/>
and the workmanship that en-<lb/>
ters into the preparation of<lb/>
those diplomas are involved.<lb/>
They would like to know how<lb/>
many diplomas ECTC is likely<lb/>
to need for both the spring and<lb/>
the summer graduation.<lb/>
Dr. McGinnis would like very<lb/>
much for all students who con-<lb/>
template graduating on or be-<lb/>
fore the close of the summer ses-<lb/>
sion, 1943, to make application<lb/>
now on a form provided in the<lb/>
Registrar's office that they may<lb/>
be able to tell the engraver how<lb/>
much of a supply to try to get<lb/>
for this college. The diploma<lb/>
fee need not be paid until the<lb/>
beginning of the quarter in<lb/>
which the students expects to be<lb/>
graduated.<lb/>
Councils Object To<lb/>
Committee Election<lb/>
About one hundred students<lb/>
gathered in the history lecture<lb/>
room Tuesday night to discuss<lb/>
what is to be done about grow-<lb/>
ing campus problems. This meet-<lb/>
ing wras promted by the action<lb/>
the Woman's Student Govern-<lb/>
ment took in one case. Many<lb/>
students did not understand<lb/>
why such action was taken, and<lb/>
felt that the time had come to<lb/>
take a stand on an underlying<lb/>
menance to the standards of the<lb/>
school. Feeling that the entire<lb/>
student body should have a voice<lb/>
in the matter, the group asked<lb/>
the president of the WSGA to<lb/>
call a mass meeting for the fol-<lb/>
lowing night.<lb/>
On Wednesday night no doubt<lb/>
the longest mass meeting in the<lb/>
history of the school took place<lb/>
for three hours. The meeting<lb/>
opened with the body singing<lb/>
the school song with "real school<lb/>
spirit like we are always talk-<lb/>
ing about<lb/>
Sammy Crandell, president of<lb/>
the YMCA. addressed the stu-<lb/>
dents and voiced his opinion on<lb/>
what should not be allowed on<lb/>
the campus. Sammy is an out-<lb/>
standing student and mmediate-<lb/>
ly had the support of a majority<lb/>
of students. "What I'm here for<lb/>
is to have a committee appoint-<lb/>
ed to investigate what is going<lb/>
on and report to the student<lb/>
body he said.<lb/>
Evan Griffin, president of the<lb/>
MSGA. briefly commented up-<lb/>
See Mass leeting on Page 3<lb/>
display was a set of Whitman's<lb/>
"complete" works, which Dr.<lb/>
Posey had supplemented with<lb/>
four or five volumes of ma-<lb/>
terials from manuscripts not in-<lb/>
cluded in the set.<lb/>
As American literature is<lb/>
bacteriological work for the Dr. Posey's special field and he<lb/>
Junior-Senior<lb/>
Plans Underway<lb/>
assistant grade ($2,600 a year),<lb/>
and 3 years of such experience<lb/>
for the associate grade (3,000 a<lb/>
year), are required. Postgradu-<lb/>
ate study in bacteriology may<lb/>
be substituted for experience,<lb/>
but it must in addition to the 24<lb/>
semester hours called for in the<lb/>
educational requirement.<lb/>
See Bacteriologists on Page 3<lb/>
has made a particularly careful<lb/>
study of Whitman, he was able<lb/>
to point out the merits and<lb/>
shortcomings of the bigraphies<lb/>
on hand and indicate the most<lb/>
helpful material in the field for<lb/>
various purposes.<lb/>
Margaret Green, program<lb/>
winning entries will then be<lb/>
sent to Mrs. Morgenthau, Treas-<lb/>
ury Department, Washington,<lb/>
D. C. They must reach Wash-<lb/>
ington not later than April 10.<lb/>
Winning scripts will be made<lb/>
available to non-com-<lb/>
mercial theatre groups, and to<lb/>
college theatres upon request.<lb/>
The student authors of winning<lb/>
plays will receive the Treasury<lb/>
Special Award of Merit for dis-<lb/>
tinguished service to the War<lb/>
Savings Program.<lb/>
Results will be announced on<lb/>
May 15, 1943. All scripts be-<lb/>
Students Speak<lb/>
On Classroom Art<lb/>
At ACE Meeting<lb/>
chairman, presided at the meet-1 come the property of the U. S.<lb/>
ing. : Treasury Department.<lb/>
The Teco Echo - 1925 To 1943<lb/>
Just before Christmas in the<lb/>
�Harold K Taylor.<lb/>
th� cnheUGCod, 5T�ij f&amp; �JSLL&amp;<lb/>
Himself through the Trinity,<lb/>
in<lb/>
�f Junior-<lb/>
resident of<lb/>
S has an-<lb/>
much an-<lb/>
This year the<lb/>
ak instead<lb/>
ard dance.<lb/>
class feared<lb/>
d not be able<lb/>
situation<lb/>
favor of the<lb/>
k. "I hope ic<lb/>
1 suite me<lb/>
they said, that the Bible con-<lb/>
tains all the teachings necessary<lb/>
for salvation, and that man is<lb/>
saved by faith alone. It teaches<lb/>
that nothing should intervene<lb/>
between God and man except<lb/>
Christ ,that there will be a<lb/>
resurrection of the body and a<lb/>
See Methodist on Page 3<lb/>
hardly anything about how to I they called the dean's office<lb/>
�:h Harden,<lb/>
corationa, has<lb/>
"ttee of all.<lb/>
the junior<lb/>
to help<lb/>
comm<lb/>
of<lb/>
nor-bound<lb/>
at i1 ns.<lb/>
mil tees are: Invi-<lb/>
rlazel Williford, chair-<lb/>
nan; Dorothy Davis. Margaret<lb/>
' '  � Ruth Davis, Carol<lb/>
h Humpheries. Orchestra<lb/>
' �  Cordle, chairman;<lb/>
I Kennedy. "Baby" Pear-<lb/>
�i'i Pigui . Iris lb, ring, chair-<lb/>
man: Doris Hockaday, Bonnie<lb/>
Davis. Refreshments�Lib Kit-<lb/>
trell, chairman; Rachel Dixon,<lb/>
Christine Hellen. Delia Adams,<lb/>
Ella Carawan. Chaperones�<lb/>
?n e H�ll�man' chairman;<lb/>
S i Jh.iior-Scnior on Page 3<lb/>
How To Conduct<lb/>
Business Meetings<lb/>
Representatives from the<lb/>
class in Parliamentary Proce-<lb/>
dure, English 117 used the<lb/>
assemblv period Tuesday to<lb/>
demonstrate simple steps in the<lb/>
handling of business in a group.<lb/>
"Our class willingly accepted<lb/>
the invitation to give this<lb/>
demonstration said Mabel<lb/>
Spence Watson, who introduced<lb/>
the program and explained its<lb/>
various parts because we<lb/>
realize that e-ery student on the<lb/>
campus, as a member of his<lb/>
class, and a member of the stu-<lb/>
dent'body, belongs to at l�jrt<lb/>
two groups that have to thresh<lb/>
and ideas, and -<lb/>
so<lb/>
out plans " � -�j , <lb/>
needs to know something of the<lb/>
rules of the game in which he<lb/>
PlWSith Janie Eakes as chair-<lb/>
See Business on Page 3<lb/>
issue of the Teco Echo came off<lb/>
the press. Deanie Boone Has-<lb/>
kett, a Greenville student, and<lb/>
now a critic teacher in the<lb/>
Greenville High School, was the<lb/>
first editor. Miss Mamie Jen-<lb/>
kins served as editorial faculty<lb/>
advisor and Mr. M. L. Wright<lb/>
as advisor to the business staff.<lb/>
The Teco Echo was not the<lb/>
first publication on the campus,<lb/>
however, 'Way back in the<lb/>
Spring quarter of 1914 the first<lb/>
college publication. "The East<lb/>
Carolina Training School Quar-<lb/>
terly came out, with Miss<lb/>
Jenkins as editor. After a spec-<lb/>
ial session of the State Legisla-<lb/>
ture in the summer of 1920<lb/>
changed the name of the college<lb/>
from East Carolina Training<lb/>
School to East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College the paper was re-<lb/>
named "The Teachers College<lb/>
Quarterly In 1923 the publica-<lb/>
tion of "The Quarterly" was<lb/>
terminated because of the lack<lb/>
of funds but a demand by the<lb/>
alumni for a college newspaper<lb/>
led to the publication of "The<lb/>
News Letter a small tabloid<lb/>
addressed mainly to the alumni.<lb/>
A demand for a paper "by the<lb/>
students and for the students"<lb/>
brought about the Teco Echo in<lb/>
the fall of 1925. Miss Jenkins<lb/>
recalled recently some experi-<lb/>
ences while organizing and<lb/>
organize a paper we finally got<lb/>
the first issue out just before<lb/>
the end of quarter she said.<lb/>
Since that time the Teco Echo<lb/>
has shown steady improvement<lb/>
in keeping abrest of the journ-<lb/>
alistic world. As clothing styles,<lb/>
hair-do's, and practically every-<lb/>
thing else has changed, so has<lb/>
the style of writing and make-<lb/>
up of the paper. In the first<lb/>
papers the front page was a<lb/>
solid mass of print with head-<lb/>
lines at the top of each column,<lb/>
and with very few pictures.<lb/>
Now7, you may notice that the<lb/>
front page is almost a solid<lb/>
mass of headlines and pictures<lb/>
with very little printed matter.<lb/>
The most radical changes took<lb/>
place when James Whifield was<lb/>
editor two years ago. Some-<lb/>
times the name of the paper ap-<lb/>
peared at the bottom or in the<lb/>
center of the front page instead<lb/>
of in its original position at the<lb/>
top. Although these changes<lb/>
were new and different the<lb/>
paper won a second class honor<lb/>
rating by the Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association and was liked by<lb/>
the students.<lb/>
On the editorial page in one<lb/>
of the early papers the students<lb/>
were writing letters "To the<lb/>
Editor" protesting the rules<lb/>
which made them wear hats<lb/>
every time they went up town.<lb/>
It seemed as if the townpeople<lb/>
printing the first Teco Echo. thought it was disgraceful to see<lb/>
"Without any student knowing a bare-headed girl up town so<lb/>
every time thev saw a hatless<lb/>
ECTC girl on the streets of<lb/>
Greenville. The townpeople are<lb/>
still calling Miss Morton's of-<lb/>
fice these days but it isn't be-<lb/>
cause of Hats<lb/>
On the inside page of each<lb/>
issue was a column of jekes<lb/>
which I presume fills the same<lb/>
space that "Scumming fills<lb/>
this year. I remember one of the<lb/>
jokes especially which wrent like<lb/>
this: one guy; "Best girl I saw<lb/>
you with last night?" 'Nother<lb/>
Guy: "Necks best Another<lb/>
joke brings back memories of<lb/>
those good ole' days when there<lb/>
was plenty of meat�a belle of<lb/>
the 20's makes this statement<lb/>
after being at ECTC for three<lb/>
weeks: "How big was the col-<lb/>
lege cowWe've had beef every-<lb/>
day since we've been here<lb/>
The sport page was missing<lb/>
except for the fact that a WAA<lb/>
meeting was reported in nearly<lb/>
every issue. There weren't any<lb/>
boys here then and the bloomer<lb/>
girls played basketball behind<lb/>
locked doors. In the late 20's<lb/>
one of the biggest scandals on<lb/>
the campus involved one of the<lb/>
first men students; he was on<lb/>
third floor of Austin looking at<lb/>
the bloomer-clad girls play ten-<lb/>
nis on the court behind Wilson<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Nearly all the former editors<lb/>
have gone into the teaching<lb/>
field and are working with the<lb/>
See Teco Echo on Page 3<lb/>
"Art in the classroom" was<lb/>
the topic for discussion by sev-<lb/>
eral members of the ACE at its<lb/>
regular meeting Tuesday night,<lb/>
March 9.<lb/>
In introducing the student<lb/>
speakers, Carol Leigh Humph-<lb/>
ries, vice-president of the asso-<lb/>
ciation, brought out the point<lb/>
that children are under tension<lb/>
and strain of war, and it is up<lb/>
to the teachers in the classroom<lb/>
to provide an outlet against such<lb/>
tension. Free, creative expres-<lb/>
sion through art, finger point-<lb/>
ing, water coloring, etc, was<lb/>
discussed as an outlet.<lb/>
Carolina Richardson discuss-<lb/>
ed "The Value of Fine Arts<lb/>
Dorothy Pearsal, "Principles of<lb/>
Art Teaching and Sybil Bea-<lb/>
man, "Art Echoes from the<lb/>
Child Himself In closing the<lb/>
program Carol Leigh Humph-<lb/>
ries read a poem, "The Two<lb/>
Temples<lb/>
Tentative plans for the April<lb/>
ACE program are being center-<lb/>
ed around "Music Interests of<lb/>
the Child<lb/>
Spring Quarter<lb/>
Begins Next Week<lb/>
Registration for spring quar-<lb/>
ter will be held next Thursday<lb/>
March 18: 1943, the day follow-<lb/>
ing the closure of this quarter.<lb/>
Contrary to the usual proce-<lb/>
dure, there will be no spring<lb/>
holidays this year. Spring and<lb/>
Thanksgiving holidays were<lb/>
done away with at the begin-<lb/>
ning of the fall quarter because<lb/>
of transportation conditions due<lb/>
to the war. An extra week was<lb/>
given at Christmas time, which<lb/>
was throughly enjoyed, but no<lb/>
doubt students and faculty<lb/>
would profit by a slight breaK<lb/>
between these two quarters.<lb/>
Permits to register will be<lb/>
put in the college post office<lb/>
boxes for dormitory students<lb/>
enrolled in the winter quarter.<lb/>
Other students will get theirs<lb/>
from the Registrar's office<lb/>
Fees are to be paid to the Treas-<lb/>
urer in the Office building. Ac-<lb/>
tivity fees wffl be paid in the<lb/>
Wright building.<lb/>
Hours for registration are:<lb/>
Freshmen � Wednesday after-<lb/>
noon, 2 to 4:30 or on Thursday<lb/>
morning, 8 to 9 o'clock. Seniors<lb/>
�Thursday morning 8:00 to<lb/>
10:30. Sophomores�Thursday<lb/>
morning 10:30 to 12:30. Jun-<lb/>
iors Thursday afternoon 2 to 4<lb/>
and on Wednesday afternoon.<lb/>
Practice Teachers will register<lb/>
See New Quarter on Paw 3<lb/>
Chi Pi Players<lb/>
To Give Spring<lb/>
Production<lb/>
Piano Students<lb/>
Play In Assembly<lb/>
Piano students of Miss Lois<lb/>
V. Gorrell presented a series of<lb/>
six selections for the assembly<lb/>
program, Tuesday morning,<lb/>
March 2.<lb/>
Edna Earle Lang, of Gates-<lb/>
ville, played Nataniel Dett's<lb/>
"Juba Dance and Laura<lb/>
Walker, of Coinjock, Guy Ma-<lb/>
ier's arrangement of the Negro<lb/>
spiritual "Nobody Knows the<lb/>
Trouble I've Seen<lb/>
Dorothy Maynard ,of Smith-<lb/>
field, played "Valcik by Mokj-<lb/>
res; Frances Southerland, of<lb/>
Burgaw, Debussy's "Clair de<lb/>
Lune and Iris Lee, of Newton<lb/>
Grove, two short numbers,<lb/>
"Pluck by Greig and "The<lb/>
Fauns by Chaminade.<lb/>
"Ladies In Retirement" has<lb/>
been chosen as the spring pro-<lb/>
duction by the Chi Pi Plavers<lb/>
Miss Ellen Caldwell will direct<lb/>
the play.<lb/>
Try-outs were held Monday<lb/>
night at which time the final<lb/>
cast was not decided upon.<lb/>
Several students were asked to<lb/>
come back on Tuesday night to<lb/>
complete the try outs.<lb/>
Students who have parts are:<lb/>
Virginia Cooke, Hazel Harris,<lb/>
Betsy Hobgood, Mozelle Hooks,<lb/>
Metsel Simmons, Mary Alice<lb/>
Charlton and Ruby Taylor.<lb/>
This play was first played on<lb/>
Broadway in 1940 and met with<lb/>
great success. It was later made<lb/>
into a thrilling movie. Those<lb/>
students who remember "The<lb/>
Skull a mystery given by the<lb/>
Players a couple of years ago,<lb/>
may expect just as many thrills<lb/>
from this play. It is a murder<lb/>
play and promises to be a fine<lb/>
play in the true Chi Pi style.<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
73428<lb/>
<pb facs="00037917_0002"/><lb/>
SATURDAY. MARCH 13<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
The Teco Echo<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Students of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3,<lb/>
1925' at the U. S. Postoffice, Greenville,<lb/>
N. C, under the act of March 3, 1SV9.<lb/>
Rosalie Hrown Editorin-rhief<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
Margie Dudley Charles Craven<lb/>
Louise Thomas Harold Taylor<lb/>
Maribelle Robertson Mary Sue Moore<lb/>
REPORTERS<lb/>
Evan Griffin James Worsley<lb/>
Margaret Lewis Betty Edwards<lb/>
Conelia Beems Keyhole Correspondents<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;&amp;ftftftftft<lb/>
Ray Sparrow<lb/>
Floyd Woody<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sports Reporter<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Harry Jarvis Business Manager<lb/>
ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS<lb/>
Dorothy Pearsall Pat Edwards<lb/>
Helen James Charles Cushman<lb/>
Rachel Dixon Betty Batson<lb/>
Bernice Jenkins<lb/>
TYPISTS<lb/>
Helen Page Johnson<lb/>
Jean Goggin<lb/>
Cathy Hester<lb/>
Lois Grigsby<lb/>
Beecher Flanagan<lb/>
Sherman M. Parks<lb/>
Cathy Hester<lb/>
Proof Reader<lb/>
Alumni Reporter<lb/>
Editorial Adviser<lb/>
Business Adviser<lb/>
Tecnical Adviser<lb/>
Member<lb/>
North Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Member<lb/>
ftssockiled GoIle6�ate Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
GoIle6iaieDi6est<lb/>
REPRESENTED FOB NATIONAL ADVERTISING BY<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
College Publishers Representative<lb/>
420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.<lb/>
CHICAGO � BOSTON � LOi ANSELfS � SAN FRANCISCO<lb/>
"United We Stand"<lb/>
At the mass meeting Wednesday one<lb/>
thing was certainly obvious, school spirit<lb/>
that we used to hear so much about. Of<lb/>
course in this issue the spirit was divided,<lb/>
but no less it was spirit. It speaks well of the<lb/>
entire student body to show their interest in<lb/>
this important movement, pro and con, to<lb/>
the extent that they stayed in the mass meet-<lb/>
ing for three hours.<lb/>
So far a lot of harm has come by way<lb/>
of undue criticism, ugly rumors, and false<lb/>
accusations. However, a great deal of good<lb/>
is coming and will continue to come from<lb/>
this movement.<lb/>
No doubt there isn't a student on this<lb/>
campus that wishes to make an example of<lb/>
ont case, and probably not a student who<lb/>
would sincerely uphold drinking, gambling<lb/>
or any immoral conduct on the campus.<lb/>
What a person thinks about drinking at<lb/>
home or away from the campus (when they<lb/>
are not coming back to the campus, that is)<lb/>
is not always the same as what they think<lb/>
about drinking on the campus. There are<lb/>
many students who wouldn't vote for prohibi-<lb/>
tion if they had a chance, hut they don't<lb/>
drink. The students are not against the coun-<lb/>
cil and have no wish to violate the constitu-<lb/>
tion. They do ask for facts, if facts can be<lb/>
obtained. Is it "the truth that hurts in this<lb/>
case Anyone with a clear conscience can<lb/>
certainly not object to an investigation.<lb/>
Those students who do not understand what<lb/>
the committee is to do should talk to the<lb/>
number of students who do. instead of con-<lb/>
demning it<lb/>
Gossipers who start talk with thin air<lb/>
are just as guilty of immoral conduct as any-<lb/>
one. After all gossiping is a form of lying,<lb/>
if the gossip is untrue and who can be sure<lb/>
when it is true or not with no one trying to<lb/>
clear it up? Perhaps some of the students<lb/>
who are really fine citizens of this campus<lb/>
have offended others and have not conducted<lb/>
their side of the situation suitable to all. Al-<lb/>
so, other students who have fust as fine<lb/>
characters, maybe holding positions of lead-<lb/>
er ship and not, have taken a stand that looks<lb/>
as if they are opposed to drinking on the<lb/>
campus which wouldn't speak well for them<lb/>
If everyone would stop being so sure what<lb/>
everyone else is thinking and their motive<lb/>
for their actions, and sit down and seriously<lb/>
weigh their own thoughts and get a clear<lb/>
course of action in mind, then much of the<lb/>
misunderstandings will clear up. After all<lb/>
college men and women or no longer children.<lb/>
They should have learned by now how to<lb/>
think out problems. Although one of the<lb/>
hardest things to fight is feelings�senti-<lb/>
ment and -motions . . . that is what must be<lb/>
done now. Emotions take you around in a<lb/>
circle; level headed thinking, common sense,<lb/>
and "cold blooded" facts take you to the<lb/>
point�in a straight line which is�yes, the<lb/>
nearest distance from one point to another.<lb/>
BONDS<lb/>
LIKE YOU NEVER DID BEFORE<lb/>
bim-biHSiSizix-teisisiZ-frft jkj W SAYINGS BONDS tSWMK<lb/>
Support the<lb/>
JAPAN AZI<lb/>
SINKING FUND<lb/>
dents as individuals of their responsibilities<lb/>
and a step toward success has been made<lb/>
Helen Stone, junior: "The student<lb/>
council in my opinion has taken a great deal<lb/>
of criticism and in most cases has taken the<lb/>
criticism with a good spirit. We are backing<lb/>
our student council and we only wish to help<lb/>
them in a cooperative spirit through a com-<lb/>
mittee<lb/>
Mary B. Thorp, sophomore: "I think<lb/>
aim is to develop a system of espionage which<lb/>
is an insult to the students as well as to the<lb/>
student councils.<lb/>
The students gave the council a unani-<lb/>
mous vote -of confidence and immediately<lb/>
turned and refuted this vote by electing a<lb/>
committee to investigate accusations made<lb/>
by a group through a medium of what is<lb/>
known in a slang term as a "stool pigeon<lb/>
These methods of reformatio nare highly un-<lb/>
ethical in society; and if the council was<lb/>
ent idea for there are several issues to be<lb/>
cleared up for the good of both student body<lb/>
and student councils as they have been given<lb/>
a grave responsibility and have done their<lb/>
best, as yet<lb/>
Metsel Simmons, senior- "In the first<lb/>
place, drinking and gambling are no worse<lb/>
this year than before. It has merely come to<lb/>
the attention of the students. In the second<lb/>
place some of the people who wanted to hear<lb/>
about the rumors did not have the guts to<lb/>
stand up and ask about them in mass meet-<lb/>
ing, and last if this group had used some tact<lb/>
something might have been accomplished but<lb/>
as it is it all stinks<lb/>
Willie Mae Daniels, sophomore: "If we<lb/>
students are innocent of this ghastlv affair,<lb/>
then why do we tremble at the idea of an in-<lb/>
vestigating committee? We are responsible<lb/>
for our own conduct, and in turn the con-<lb/>
duct on our entire campus. The reputation of<lb/>
this institution depends on us! Do we want<lb/>
to go out into the world living down a repu-<lb/>
tation that is shadowy just because we have<lb/>
a degree from an institution that has a<lb/>
"name" over the entire state It's up to us<lb/>
Eloise Barefoot, senior: "I. personally,<lb/>
am in favor of a committee's investigation of<lb/>
our present situation on our campus in or-<lb/>
der to clear up doubts in the minds of many<lb/>
students. This should be able to clear the<lb/>
things which have been left hanging over the<lb/>
council members if they are not there<lb/>
Frances Robertson, senior: "I am for<lb/>
the committee 100. I believe that both<lb/>
councils are capable but I believe that there<lb/>
is a firm need of such a committee; if there<lb/>
isn't a need then we will find out soon<lb/>
enough<lb/>
Sammy Crandell, senior: "Frankly I<lb/>
am in favor of making ECTC a better social,<lb/>
morally and spiritual institution. I think the<lb/>
committee will work to help the student<lb/>
body and council and as a committee will<lb/>
have no authority as to penalities or restric-<lb/>
tions on post or future cases<lb/>
Charlotte Sherian. senior: "I think that<lb/>
the council has really been run down too<lb/>
much and had a big job, but something needs<lb/>
to be done about the demoializing things<lb/>
that are going on here. If we are going out<lb/>
as teachers and represent ideals of a teacher<lb/>
we need to have the right morals while in<lb/>
college. I do believe the committee is a good<lb/>
idea and hope they will get at the bottom of<lb/>
it all and clear up the problems Let's make<lb/>
our campus a better place to live and our<lb/>
college one known over our state for its high<lb/>
ideals<lb/>
Mildred Beverly, senior: "The time has<lb/>
come when the students need to take a stand<lb/>
for right on this campus. Thev (the stu-<lb/>
dent) have taken the first step in establish-<lb/>
ing higher principles of living and I'm proud<lb/>
of them. The entire student body owes a<lb/>
vote of thanks to Sammy Crandell and<lb/>
Bessie Fay Hunt for their leadership<lb/>
Rosalie Brown, junior: "What I say is<lb/>
not as editor of the paper, but as a student.<lb/>
I hate drinking anywhere, but I think it is<lb/>
up to the individual as to what he does away<lb/>
from school. I don't advocate the college try-<lb/>
ing to dictate what students are to do when<lb/>
they go home for week-ends, and the sum-<lb/>
mer, but as for drinking on the campus (and<lb/>
that encludes drinking anywhere in town<lb/>
and then coming back to the campus) I<lb/>
think a stop should be put to it. The investi-<lb/>
gating committee will serve to help clear up<lb/>
these matters. We have a right to ask that<lb/>
no visitor ccme on the campus (alumni, ser-<lb/>
vicemen, or dates) while drinking. I do not<lb/>
believe that our college has a bad reputation<lb/>
Evan Griffin, senior: "My contentions gXnTimless lunZrTTC<lb/>
are that the action of a committee was some- reproach � standards are kept above<lb/>
fcwhat ot a paradox. It's not that the councils<lb/>
'oject to aid from the committee but, after<lb/>
vote of confidence in the councils which<lb/>
elected for the purpose of handling such<lb/>
x ers, I can't understand just what the<lb/>
pwttee intends to accomplish. Whatever<lb/>
procedure may be, I would suggest<lb/>
C wtl!fn TS emPjovcTd �,ihe mas I Some of the principles involved in<lb/>
knnntevfdaTmght- ItiH c�tend Wednesday night's mass meeting wire en"<lb/>
fcnf nn ons is more tirely right The faction setttng forth these<lb/>
Hant now than the past. Convince stu principles, however, is entirely wrong Thei?<lb/>
that the investigation committee is an excell- I corrupt, the student body denied that it was<lb/>
Every accusation and rumor brought against<lb/>
the members was disproved to the saisfac-<lb/>
tion of the student body. There must be some<lb/>
other way for a program of reform to be<lb/>
carried out, one that respects the inegeity<lb/>
of the students.<lb/>
�Ch a ties Cushman.<lb/>
�Charles Craven.<lb/>
The flowers that bloom in the spring<lb/>
tra-la are this year tucked among feather<lb/>
curls, atop M'lay's new spring bonnet or<lb/>
splashed daisy fashion across her new skirt<lb/>
From tip to toe  spring wouldn t<lb/>
be perfect without some confection direct<lb/>
from an OPA bandbox.<lb/>
Mile features Dobbs new Toot hat. the<lb/>
eye-fetcher for your favorite pastel suit.<lb/>
Zootes is the original accompanist to the<lb/>
zoot suit worn by our own eccentric South-<lb/>
ern fellows�the extremely wide brimmed,<lb/>
smashed-topDer with a swish of a feather<lb/>
duster along side . . the same of which is<lb/>
Mile's Zoot hat.<lb/>
Berets, from wee calots to the huge pan-<lb/>
cake ones, keep morale top-notch. Flash,<lb/>
flash, the very lates�hats marie from cot-<lb/>
ton ticking, buttons for hats, veiling like<lb/>
stuff, chicken wire (a bird in a cage!)<lb/>
Check and double check�you can't go<lb/>
wrong. Pin check, big check, little check-<lb/>
all checks, in spits, coats, skirts, blouses,<lb/>
hats, gloves�and neckties! The husband and<lb/>
wife version. All right, all right that remains<lb/>
in the hazy future (and beside? your<lb/>
man wears a field scraff now, do<lb/>
Twin ties, or the single variety, come in<lb/>
Beau Brumbel checked crispness or big S<lb/>
ator Brown solid ties. Pin stripes rani<lb/>
favor along with the check-<lb/>
Pink, yellow, blue, pastels herald<lb/>
spring, dictates fashion's top notchers v<lb/>
the blessing of OPA (takes teas acids<lb/>
stuff which makes the new lighter dyes.)<lb/>
April showers, to protect rain-day<lb/>
choose pastels again in huge squan<lb/>
rayon sporting your initials.<lb/>
Another fash�Veronica Lake pin<lb/>
those tresses Good example to all!<lb/>
Taps sound for the gay be rage<lb/>
ed shoes, reds, greens, blues, bid a moun<lb/>
adieu till "Johnny comes Marching 11<lb/>
Again Play shoes, a cute snatch in a<lb/>
desperate attempt, come in all colors<lb/>
without ration stamp numbers.<lb/>
But at the present with had all<lb/>
dress up with plenty of knewledge,<lb/>
next week, "That man's here<lb/>
EXAMS. See you next quarter.<lb/>
SCUMMING<lb/>
By The Keyhole Correspondent<lb/>
February 3<lb/>
Southwest Pacific<lb/>
Dear Rosalie,<lb/>
This is just a note to let you and the<lb/>
staff of the Teco Echo know what a pleasure<lb/>
those two issues of the paper you sent me<lb/>
were. I really do appreciate the thoughtful-<lb/>
ness of the school in getting up the list of ad-<lb/>
dresses and mailing the papers. I am a home-<lb/>
town boy and the paper also gave me some<lb/>
Greenville news as well as college news.<lb/>
I was really shocked to hear of O. D.<lb/>
Andrews and John Johnston being killed,<lb/>
but they were doing their duty and they will<lb/>
be avenged. I hope to visit the college after<lb/>
the war which I think will be soon.<lb/>
Gratefully yours,<lb/>
John R. Williams,<lb/>
AM 2 C USN<lb/>
This morning I had a letter from one<lb/>
of our former graduates, Mary Helen Gul-<lb/>
ledge, recommending to us a good prospec-<lb/>
tive student for next year, thanking us for<lb/>
a transcript, and then she adds this para-<lb/>
graph which seems to be rather significant.<lb/>
"Mr. Daniels asked me whether it would be<lb/>
advisable to send Aileen (the prospective<lb/>
student) to a business school or college I<lb/>
advised sending hre to ECTC. I think ECTC<lb/>
one of the most democratic schools I know<lb/>
of, and think you would have a better chance<lb/>
of making of yourself what you wish there<lb/>
than at any other school I know<lb/>
In view of some discussion that has been<lb/>
going the rounds recently I am inclined to<lb/>
believe this statement from one who has<lb/>
spent four years on the campus, and now<lb/>
has gone out into the wider field, would<lb/>
have considerable value.<lb/>
Howard J. McGinnis, Registrar<lb/>
With examinations just around the<lb/>
corner and council on a rampage we shall at-<lb/>
tempt to let you in on what we've been able to<lb/>
learn by peeking in key holes and such. As<lb/>
the old Adage goes�"When it rains it<lb/>
pours As hard to find as a needle in a hay-<lb/>
stack: an ECTC lassie who can leave cam-<lb/>
pus this week�300 gals caught by council<lb/>
without "slips"�don't get us wrong, we<lb/>
mean date slips.<lb/>
After solving a small "social" problem<lb/>
between themselves, Doug and Ruthie are<lb/>
on the ups again.<lb/>
Steve Jones has finally realized what<lb/>
ECTC holds within the cold brick walls of<lb/>
its dormitories. Steve has decided it's more<lb/>
fun holding hands with neat little Wooten<lb/>
than playing contract in the parlor.<lb/>
While the cat's away the mice will play<lb/>
�with Frances in Ahoskie rendezvousing<lb/>
with Bennett and Blackie, Ben left no stones<lb/>
unturned seeing that Mary Warren had<lb/>
plenty of fun at the Varsity dance (flowers,<lb/>
a la Miller, ectera!)<lb/>
If you thought you were have halliuci-<lb/>
nations when you saw the campus chains<lb/>
down all night, don't worry any more. It<lb/>
seems that Chief has his own ideas about the<lb/>
Mores on the campus. He went on a strike,<lb/>
leaving the gates open a couple days.<lb/>
The glamorous red-head you saw on<lb/>
campus last week-end was here on Brant's<lb/>
invitation. Nice work' (What a shape . . .<lb/>
this world is in!)<lb/>
From all appearance Janie Eakes and<lb/>
Bill Council are or soon shall be! Ask Dot<lb/>
Lewis what the "Weegie Board" said about<lb/>
that the other night. Speaking of "Weogie"<lb/>
we are wondering why Miss Nor<lb/>
wouldn't let him finish answering a e<lb/>
question for her.<lb/>
To little Asbell, we like her much I<lb/>
ter this way�which reminds us<lb/>
roommate, Katie Earle Owen has been .<lb/>
ing Grace Humbles a little competil<lb/>
Stewart Tripp.<lb/>
Incidentally. Vaughn, the trai<lb/>
from Georgia Tech, VP1 or what-have-<lb/>
has centered his attention on little ;<lb/>
Elsie Corbett.<lb/>
Practice House or USO? Mrs. B<lb/>
was wondering bu1 you can't blan<lb/>
long as she had the USO sticker on<lb/>
Anyway the Marines got a kick mi<lb/>
bell<lb/>
ami<lb/>
ly <lb/>
ing the door<lb/>
-USO?"<lb/>
It might come to that when the I<lb/>
and Marines move in at the ai orl prett:<lb/>
soon. (After thought.)<lb/>
Maybe what 1he facult: r sent<lb/>
our efforts in this c h.mn at good clean fun<lb/>
is the fact that they have not been included.<lb/>
Scoop from the faculty�Constan<lb/>
partners on the dance floor�Deloac<lb/>
Austin. With Sell man and Chapman it's<lb/>
either Captains or Lts leaving the pool<lb/>
gals the PFC's. There are fathers, too, a<lb/>
we haven't forgotten you.<lb/>
Quote Genie Marshburn, " It's<lb/>
being campused a week to ha dinner v<lb/>
Jerry It seems that's prett much the sen-<lb/>
timents of the other 299.<lb/>
To be continued on Page two of <lb/>
issue of T( co Echo unless council conl � i<lb/>
the clean-up campaign to the extenl<lb/>
there won't be enough dirt le; for fill.<lb/>
"The truth shall make vou free When<lb/>
men and nations today are struggling to be<lb/>
free, it is encouraging that the students of<lb/>
our college have taken action to free them-<lb/>
selves from a deplorable situation that<lb/>
seems to be rather well established on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
In a recent mas?, meeitng a majority of<lb/>
students voted to set up a fact-findimr com-<lb/>
mittee, composed of five students elected by<lb/>
the student body and of the Discipline Com-<lb/>
mittee of five faculty members, to bring to-<lb/>
gether the facts about the extent of gambling<lb/>
and drinking on the campus. Until the stu-<lb/>
dent body has the unbiased facts�instead of<lb/>
rumors�about this serious problem, it can-<lb/>
not take a definite stand.<lb/>
The question has been raised, "What<lb/>
possible good can come of it?" and "Why<lb/>
not just start as of today?" We agree that<lb/>
we have a common purpose�to build a bet-<lb/>
ter citizenship here. In the building of any-<lb/>
thing that is to be permanent, a solid foun-<lb/>
dation is necessary Only when mistakes in<lb/>
our past are faced fairly and squarely with-<lb/>
out prejudice can the student body map out<lb/>
its plan of action against such a condition<lb/>
getting a firm hold on our campus again in<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
When the report of the committee is<lb/>
presented to the student body, the course of<lb/>
action rest with that body, as it should in a<lb/>
democratically governed group. There need<lb/>
be no doubt that the East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
college student body, UNITED, can be mas-<lb/>
ter of the situation.<lb/>
Wrhat have we to be afraid of�this<lb/>
matter is "all in the family If we want our<lb/>
college to find the real situation and �et up<lb/>
a better standard for the future, can we not<lb/>
ALL, regardless of our personal connection<lb/>
with this matter, join together to work<lb/>
through this problem together and start to-<lb/>
gether anew? If we are willintr "to know the<lb/>
whole truth, to know the worst, and provide<lb/>
VA" Las atrick Henry once said, we<lb/>
ought to be able to handle this matter WITH-<lb/>
OUT THE LOSS OF A STUDENT<lb/>
�Bessie Fay Hunt.<lb/>
<lb/>
FEATURE SERVICE<lb/>
By Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass. � (ACP) � How a<lb/>
"pay-off" of 50,000 yen was made by the<lb/>
Japanese government to the Nipponese<lb/>
"underworld" in the early part of the cen-<lb/>
tury to pr :vent altercations with American<lb/>
visitors that might have led to war then was<lb/>
related recently by Albert Bushnell Hart,<lb/>
professor emeritus of history at Harvard.<lb/>
"I got the storv from an attache of the<lb/>
American embassy in Japan soon after the<lb/>
incident occurred, and I don't believe it ever<lb/>
has been told said the 88-year-old, white-<lb/>
haired professor.<lb/>
"I was in Japan at the time the 'good-<lb/>
will fleet' sponsored bw President Theodore<lb/>
Roosevelt stopped at Yokohama.<lb/>
"Shortly before the fleet landed, a repre-<lb/>
sentatives of the undercrust of Japan�the<lb/>
underworld gang�went to officials of the<lb/>
government and said in substances: 'There<lb/>
will be hundreds of Americans coming off<lb/>
those ships and circulating about in this<lb/>
area. What's it worth to keep us from start-<lb/>
ing trouble?'<lb/>
"My information was that the Japanese<lb/>
officials said it was worth 50.000 yen to<lb/>
them to prevent any outbreaks that'might<lb/>
possibly lead to an 'incident' vith the United<lb/>
States . . . They weren't readv then.<lb/>
"The 50,000 yen was paid over to the<lb/>
gang leader, and there was no trouble when<lb/>
the fleet landed.<lb/>
"Subsequently, I went to the American<lb/>
embassy and a3ked someone there if the<lb/>
story I had heard was sound, and he inform-<lb/>
ed me there was 'something to it<lb/>
"It was might cheap for the Japanese<lb/>
government to get off that way said Hart.<lb/>
"And it's not impossible the gang which was<lb/>
'paid-off had something to do with events<lb/>
that led up to Pearl Harbor<lb/>
f o!f0ih!ield' Minn(ACP)� Students<lb/>
of 30 Midwest colleges and universities,<lb/>
meeting at Carleton college as a Midwest<lb/>
Student Victory Assembly, ended their two-<lb/>
day session by repledging full support to the<lb/>
war effort and to postwar inter-nation co-<lb/>
operation.<lb/>
 1sJa1t.in a realization that complete and<lb/>
final Allied victory is the absolute prerequis-<lb/>
lLfoI ,any f uture P�gress of all peoples, the<lb/>
135 delegates went on record as endorsing<lb/>
all measures and actions which lead to de-<lb/>
feat of fascism by establishment of a com-<lb/>
plete war economy at home and by the build-<lb/>
ing of real military and diplomatic unity<lb/>
among the United Nations.<lb/>
The assembly demanded establishment<lb/>
oi a United Nations war council to function<lb/>
now and in the immediate postwar period,<lb/>
to bring about a unity of command, distribu-<lb/>
tion of war materials, and complete inter-<lb/>
allied confidence.<lb/>
Recognizing the need for thorough over-<lb/>
all national planning in production and<lb/>
supply, manpower supply, technical and ed-<lb/>
ucational mobilization, and economic stabali-<lb/>
zation, the delegates gave strong support to<lb/>
the Tolan-Kilgore-Pepper bi 11 now in the<lb/>
house of representatives.<lb/>
Washington� (A CP) �Horror stories<lb/>
or no, many a collegian will cock his hat to-<lb/>
ward Washington come job-hunting time in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
If you have the capital bug. vou'll won v<lb/>
about making a modesty salarv stretch over<lb/>
the nation's highest high-cost-of-living<lb/>
about living with a million and a half where<lb/>
only half a million were meant to be<lb/>
Here's what hardened Washingtonians<lb/>
can tell you about Washington today �<lb/>
They're exhorting householders'to con-<lb/>
vert their spare rooms and unused attics in-<lb/>
to quarters for government workers Over<lb/>
by the Potomac, they're tos.dng toother<lb/>
l6!Tr,any d�rmitories for government<lb/>
white-collar girls. But you can still get a<lb/>
room in reasonably short order, thanks to a<lb/>
registry of rooms set up for the likes of vou.<lb/>
RniinTn! r,elstry is J�,�� U. S. Information<lb/>
Building (formerly billed as "Mellett's Mad-<lb/>
mimft?22 P?.�sylvania Avenue fe<lb/>
Ss �y,st?�m,med Volley from Union<lb/>
inton y�Ur first stop in Wash<lb/>
Pnr The registry will help you find a room.<lb/>
 or men or women, rooms run from �20 to<lb/>
leo : Zl W,th two meals a day' �� to<lb/>
Finding an apartment is something else<lb/>
again. At 1400 Pennsylvania, they'lfaugh<lb/>
S .nStaSTf CtUally' '��"anUet<lb/>
an apartment�IF you're persistent enoueh<lb/>
and recruit enough early settlers to help<lb/>
1 he apartment managers will sav thev<lb/>
A�VdethTeSt3 �f 30� t0 '�OOO<lb/>
The trick is finding an anartment<lb/>
Tew �� wuth? ire 1?�ro�3te,tK<lb/>
xieia, for the Army, for back hnmo f�.<lb/>
any place. Then worka deal toslip1� as �<lb/>
slips out, giving a minimum of trouble to the<lb/>
management. Then you're in luck.<lb/>
:�- !�;<lb/>
<pb facs="00037917_0003"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
1 -J<lb/>
M942<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i<lb/>
t<lb/>
'�am<lb/>
I' 8<lb/>
W the<lb/>
ith<lb/>
ATURd<lb/>
MARCH IS, 1042<lb/>
rnful<lb/>
I<lb/>
� in-<lb/>
Over<lb/>
L�t I<lb/>
inment<lb/>
-<lb/>
nation<lb/>
MatJ-<lb/>
fivo<lb/>
U'nion<lb/>
RTasb-<lb/>
�OODO<lb/>
1520 to<lb/>
it) to<lb/>
lauKn<lb/>
0 l<lb/>
rough<lb/>
lp.<lb/>
they<lb/>
K ment<lb/>
it the<lb/>
e. for<lb/>
as he<lb/>
to the<lb/>
Rooms For Rent<lb/>
BACTERIOLOGISTS<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
ment to crisis.<lb/>
Sn Cen samP!ings, about<lb/>
high school group<lb/>
half<lb/>
in ac-<lb/>
rare ill<lb/>
es1 a<lb/>
. ton's<lb/>
eX-<lb/>
� re-<lb/>
i h for<lb/>
to the<lb/>
i. n<lb/>
� re s<lb/>
ai e rrival<lb/>
� � mn<lb/>
hunt.<lb/>
mdlord<lb/>
at helV111 be epted; Recked seem "morT7essimistk<lb/>
at the liwi Service Commis- tnan is<lb/>
sion, Washington, D. ? until fress in overcoming war prob<lb/>
further<lb/>
mier<lb/>
1 de-<lb/>
"No<lb/>
the<lb/>
unter<lb/>
r his<lb/>
inta<lb/>
. i re-<lb/>
Sorae of the positions are<lb/>
Washington, D. C. but the ma-<lb/>
jority are in other parts of the<lb/>
I nited States. Thre are no age<lb/>
limits, and no written test will<lb/>
be given. Applications and com-<lb/>
plete information may be ob-<lb/>
tained at first-and second-class<lb/>
st offices, from civil service<lb/>
regi rial offices, and from the<lb/>
Civil Service Commission at<lb/>
Washington, 1). c.<lb/>
Persons using their highest<lb/>
-kills in war work are not en-<lb/>
couraged to apply. War Man-<lb/>
on Federal<lb/>
restrictions<lb/>
' m-<lb/>
time<lb/>
kera<lb/>
v<lb/>
ni<lb/>
liv-<lb/>
justified by our pro-<lb/>
u overcoming war j<lb/>
notice, but qualified lems- "An important minority<lb/>
Persona are urged to apply now. J the pupils appear to be con-<lb/>
fused and misinformed" sum-<lb/>
marizes Dr. Cronbach. "On<lb/>
most questions, pupils have not<lb/>
oecome more realistic and more<lb/>
confident than they were at the<lb/>
start of the war.<lb/>
"The passage of a year has<lb/>
j not removed the misconceptions<lb/>
about war which have made the<lb/>
pupils more emotional than need<lb/>
j be. Pupils need information<lb/>
about war, about prospects and<lb/>
j plans for the wartime and the<lb/>
' postwar future. A continuous<lb/>
survey of morale is necessary,<lb/>
i for the schools and the govern-<lb/>
j ment to attack those fears<lb/>
which are most serious and un-<lb/>
warranted<lb/>
Nationwide interest is gen-<lb/>
erated in this morale study, I<lb/>
which was so fortunately timed j<lb/>
that it was in the hands of all<lb/>
hhrti school administrators in<lb/>
state of Washington less than a<lb/>
week after our entrance into the<lb/>
war. Next month the Stanford<lb/>
press will publish, under aus-<lb/>
pices of the American Associa-<lb/>
tion of Applied Psychologists,<lb/>
a technical monograph on re-<lb/>
sults and methods of testing<lb/>
written by Dr. Cronbach.<lb/>
The Educational Policies com-<lb/>
mission, set up by the National<lb/>
Education association, has<lb/>
drawn upon the findings in<lb/>
planning wartime policies and<lb/>
curricula to recommend to the<lb/>
schools. The most recent re-<lb/>
power<lb/>
appointments are given in Form<lb/>
3989, posted in first-and sceond-<lb/>
v lass post offices.<lb/>
Capital To Campus<lb/>
Q. In what names may a Wat<lb/>
Savings Bond be issued?<lb/>
A. War Bonds can be reg-<lb/>
istered only in the<lb/>
names of individuals in<lb/>
their own right, in one<lb/>
of the folio wing forms t<lb/>
3a The name of one in<lb/>
dividual, or<lb/>
2 The names of two<lb/>
individuals, aa co-<lb/>
owners, or<lb/>
8a The name of one<lb/>
individual as owner<lb/>
and the other indi-<lb/>
vidual as benefici-<lb/>
ary.<lb/>
Q. May a Bond be registered in<lb/>
the name of a minor?;<lb/>
MASS MEETING<lb/>
Ed ication Elst win r�<lb/>
"Education" on Nazi terms<lb/>
has become a major interest of<lb/>
Vidkun Quisling, the Norwe-<lb/>
gian quisling. Smuggled re-<lb/>
porst reveal the puppet premier<lb/>
has put the scientific works of<lb/>
Marie Curie and all books by<lb/>
tthors of Polish origin on the<lb/>
"verboten volume" list. At the<lb/>
same time, libraries were order-<lb/>
ed to display "large pictures"<lb/>
i" Vidkun Quisling.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Quisling has a juvenile delin<lb/>
quency problem, too. He's using<lb/>
tid dont<lb/>
a dies<lb/>
( CTMES<lb/>
police to fore e Norwegian vision of the Test on the Effects<lb/>
youngsters to attend youth ser- of War is now being used in<lb/>
 ice meetings, fining parents if half a dozen widely scattered<lb/>
the kids play hookey. states. It is helping in a special<lb/>
 study of Jewish youth in New<lb/>
Curricula are being expanded York City. The research divi-<lb/>
in occupied Holland. According ion of N. E. A. has iust order-<lb/>
to Het Nationale Dagblad of ed 5.000 copies so that the<lb/>
Utrecht, one of the first pro- morale test can be given to every<lb/>
Nazi papers in Holland, the high school student in Washing-<lb/>
Burgomaster of Harlem has ton. D. C.<lb/>
supplemented technical courses The idea for the need of the<lb/>
�w i t h classes in national study came originally in the fall I ,<lb/>
socialism. of 1941 from Dean J. Murray!<lb/>
Radio monitors have picked Lee of the school of education at I preparing their<lb/>
up a report that Italv's "schools Washington State, who was im-iwar<lb/>
By Gib Crockett.<lb/>
A. Yes.<lb/>
How can I buy a Bond by<lb/>
mail from agencies other<lb/>
than a post office?<lb/>
A- Write to the Treasurer<lb/>
of the United States for<lb/>
an order form or send<lb/>
a letter with a check to<lb/>
the Treasury Depart-<lb/>
ment or to a Federal Re-<lb/>
serve bank stating num-<lb/>
ber and denominations<lb/>
of Bonds wanted and<lb/>
giving complete in-<lb/>
structions as to the de-<lb/>
sired registration.<lb/>
Can Bonds be attached for<lb/>
debt in case of a judgment?<lb/>
A. Yes. The right to re-<lb/>
ceive payment of a<lb/>
Bond may be trans-<lb/>
ferred through valid ju-<lb/>
dicial proceedings, but<lb/>
only if the Bond itself<lb/>
is surrendered to the<lb/>
Treasury Department.<lb/>
See Treasury Depart-<lb/>
ment Circular No. 530,<lb/>
Fifth Revision.<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
on what he and the Men's Stu-<lb/>
dent Government association<lb/>
have done to prevent any un-<lb/>
pleasant actions on the campus.<lb/>
Griffin took a stand against any<lb/>
committee being elected, feeling<lb/>
that it was going over the coun-<lb/>
cil. He prided with, "He who is<lb/>
without sin, let him cast the<lb/>
first stone<lb/>
Quite a number of remarks<lb/>
and questions came from the<lb/>
floor. Personalities of students<lb/>
and council members were in-<lb/>
cluded in the discussion. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the two councils took<lb/>
places on the stage offering to<lb/>
help clear up any rumors that<lb/>
were going around about the<lb/>
council or any rumors in gen-<lb/>
eral that could be "aired out<lb/>
Members of the WSGA asked<lb/>
that the student body accept<lb/>
their resignation as a body.<lb/>
This starling statement was at<lb/>
once followed bv a roar from<lb/>
the student body, "NO Then a<lb/>
vote of confidence was taken for<lb/>
both councils. In both cases<lb/>
there was a unanimous positive<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
Electing of a committee to<lb/>
serve with the councils in an in-<lb/>
vestigation was moved. "A com-<lb/>
mittee of five students to be e-<lb/>
lected by the student body to<lb/>
serve with the Discipline com-<lb/>
mittee to investigate the extent<lb/>
of drinking and gambling on the<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Three hundred and two voted<lb/>
in favor of such a committee,<lb/>
with two hundred and sixty-one<lb/>
voting against the motion. Nom-<lb/>
inations of students were then<lb/>
voiced, and they were to be elec-<lb/>
ted by secret ballot.<lb/>
Q. Can Stamps of various de-<lb/>
nominations be placed in<lb/>
one album?<lb/>
A. More than one denomi-<lb/>
nation in an album<lb/>
greatly increases the<lb/>
work and cost of re-<lb/>
el e rn p t i o n. Please,<lb/>
therefore, don't mix<lb/>
denominations.<lb/>
Q. May a minor designate a c<lb/>
owner or beneficiary?<lb/>
A. Yes, if the purchase Is<lb/>
made by the minor<lb/>
from his own wages or<lb/>
earnings.<lb/>
Q. Do I lose my investment if<lb/>
my War Savings Bond is lost,<lb/>
stolen, or destroyed?<lb/>
METHODIST<lb/>
Remember�the longer<lb/>
yon keep War Bonds,<lb/>
op to 10 years, the more<lb/>
valuable they become.<lb/>
By Gib Crockett.<lb/>
A. No; upon satisfactory<lb/>
proof of loss or destruc-<lb/>
tion, the Treasury De-<lb/>
partment will issue a<lb/>
duplicate, usually with-<lb/>
out requiring a bond of<lb/>
indemnity.<lb/>
Q. May I register the name of<lb/>
a beneficiary on a Bond with-<lb/>
out his knowledge?<lb/>
A. Yes. Records of War<lb/>
Savings Bonds are con-<lb/>
fidential. It is not nee<lb/>
essary for the Treasury<lb/>
to contact the bene-<lb/>
ficiary during the own-<lb/>
er' lifetime. Only indi-<lb/>
viduals may be named<lb/>
as beneficiaries. No as-<lb/>
sociations, churches, or<lb/>
clubs may be so named.<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
final judgement, and that mis-<lb/>
sion work is the great commis-<lb/>
sion of all churches.<lb/>
The two sacraments of the<lb/>
Methodist church were given as<lb/>
baptism and the Lord's Supper,<lb/>
both symoblic in nature.<lb/>
In concluding the program,<lb/>
Miss Watson referred to the<lb/>
various churches whose beliefs<lb/>
had been discussed in the past<lb/>
few weeks and said that it had<lb/>
been made obvious that in spite<lb/>
of differences of form and<lb/>
ritual, the churches were one in<lb/>
spirit and aim.<lb/>
Robert Martin of Rich Square<lb/>
presided for the YMCA at the<lb/>
service. Genevieve Hodkins was<lb/>
pianist in this series of pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
TECO ECHO<lb/>
Remember�the longer<lb/>
you keep War Bonds,<lb/>
up to 10 years, the more<lb/>
valuable they become<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
man the group showed the steps<lb/>
in an ordinary motion, with and<lb/>
without discussion.<lb/>
With Helen Stone in the<lb/>
chair, steps in changing a mo-<lb/>
tion and those in putting one<lb/>
into the hands of a committee<lb/>
were shown.<lb/>
Clarine Johnson served as<lb/>
chairman in the final drill,<lb/>
which showed how. when a<lb/>
"main" motion is on the floor,<lb/>
certain other motions that may<lb/>
be needed are in order if proper-<lb/>
ly handled.<lb/>
Others taking part in the<lb/>
drills were Mary Frances Ellis.<lb/>
Grace Whitehurst, Rebecca<lb/>
Perry, Elsie West, Mary Emma<lb/>
C 1 a r k, Charlotte Bordeaux.<lb/>
Leah Mildred Ross. Vera Has-<lb/>
tings, Esther Mae White and<lb/>
Bettie Smith.<lb/>
students for<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
student papers in the high<lb/>
schools. Jane Hall, a former<lb/>
Tcco Echo worker, is now a re-<lb/>
porter for the News and Ob-<lb/>
server.<lb/>
JUNIOR-SENIOR<lb/>
her<lb/>
w-<lb/>
of higher learning<lb/>
for good April<lb/>
will be drafted<lb/>
f farm work.<lb/>
will close<lb/>
J,0. All students<lb/>
for army duty<lb/>
Alt B<lb/>
QUIZ<lb/>
Bond or give it<lb/>
War Savings<lb/>
It are not transfer<lb/>
� beneficiary redeem a<lb/>
; iluring the lifetime of<lb/>
ured owner?<lb/>
A. Pio. The Bond will be<lb/>
to the beneficiary<lb/>
? the Treasury only<lb/>
vhen the beneficiary<lb/>
has furnished the<lb/>
Tre-a�u.ry with proof of<lb/>
the owner's death.<lb/>
does a Var Bond<lb/>
pressed by the effect of the<lb/>
gathering war clouds on the atti-<lb/>
tude of youth. By November,<lb/>
1941, the first studv was made,<lb/>
and the opinions of 500 high<lb/>
WPB isn't known as a patron school youths were checked just<lb/>
in time for the results to be<lb/>
started on their way to Wash-<lb/>
ington educators while fires<lb/>
were still burning at Pearl<lb/>
Harbor.<lb/>
Soon after we were at war<lb/>
more than 2.000 high school stu-<lb/>
he experimental drama, but<lb/>
it's keeping an eye on an experi-<lb/>
ment among New England col-<lb/>
� theatres that involves�of<lb/>
ail things�a logging project.<lb/>
Since the experiment con-<lb/>
i reduction of the manpow-<lb/>
hortage for winter logging j dents of Washington were test-<lb/>
ed and these results compiled<lb/>
and evaluated. Since then the<lb/>
study has continued and grown<lb/>
in scope. Assisting with the bul-<lb/>
letin were Dean Lee and two<lb/>
W. S. C. faculty members now<lb/>
doing war work�Dean Paul H.<lb/>
Landis of the Graduate school,<lb/>
include who is now heading up the<lb/>
Derations, however, WPB has<lb/>
a legitimate interest. Matter of<lb/>
fact, WPB wrote the script. It's<lb/>
"Woodman, Chop That Tree a<lb/>
dramatization of the need for<lb/>
loggers.<lb/>
Members of the Allied Col-<lb/>
lege Theatres of New England<lb/>
presenting the drama<lb/>
By Gib Crockett.<lb/>
A. Thf price of War Bonds<lb/>
T pfrcent of their<lb/>
maturity value.<lb/>
Fot a �25 denomina<lb/>
� n Bond, for exam-<lb/>
pie. miu pay 818.75<lb/>
and at maturity in 10<lb/>
yean you receive $25.<lb/>
This is the smallest<lb/>
Bond you can buy.<lb/>
Q H��� io I receive my Bond?<lb/>
A. If you buy over the<lb/>
� ounter for cash, it will<lb/>
!� deliered at that<lb/>
time. If ordered by<lb/>
mail, it will be mailed<lb/>
to your address or to<lb/>
anyone whom you des-<lb/>
Ignati<lb/>
Amherst Bennington, Brown,<lb/>
Mount Holvoke. Smith. Welles-<lb/>
ley, Williams and Yale.<lb/>
Theatres at these schools or-<lb/>
ganized last fall to integratt<lb/>
and mlarge their war activities.<lb/>
Following the logging pro-<lb/>
ject, their next war contribu-<lb/>
tion will be plays dealing with<lb/>
aspects of the four Freedoms.<lb/>
Parade Of Opinion<lb/>
by Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
PREP MORALE�<lb/>
Tested after a year of war,<lb/>
the morale of high school stu-<lb/>
dents is healthv but far from<lb/>
perfect, comments Dr. lee J.<lb/>
Cronbach, associate professor oi<lb/>
psychology at Washington State<lb/>
college, whose succession of<lb/>
morale tests extending back<lb/>
I prior to Pearl Harbor is proving<lb/>
j helpful to educators and others<lb/>
' concerned with the problem of<lb/>
! helping vouth make its adjust-<lb/>
Washington. D. S. study of the<lb/>
rural manpower problem: and<lb/>
Sociologist Delbert C. Miller,<lb/>
who is now in personnel work<lb/>
with the Sperry Gyroscope com-<lb/>
pany of Brooklyn, New York.<lb/>
Washington, D. C� (ACP)<lb/>
�Miss You Couroux-Mangin,<lb/>
niece of the French hero of<lb/>
1918, General Mangin, and now<lb/>
a student at Trinity college,<lb/>
spoke to her fellow Frenchman<lb/>
recently in a broadcast arran-<lb/>
ged by the office of war in-<lb/>
formation and carried over 14<lb/>
short wave stations.<lb/>
The slender, 19-year-old<lb/>
Frenchwoman told her country-<lb/>
men of the universal desire of<lb/>
Americans to defeat the enemy,<lb/>
and how American colleges are<lb/>
j LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
' JEWELERS<lb/>
! Watches � Jewelry � Silver<lb/>
 Gifts � Watch Repairing<lb/>
After the broadcast. Miss<lb/>
Mangin told friends she could<lb/>
picture her audience, "clustered<lb/>
around muffled radios to catch<lb/>
the faint words of hope which I<lb/>
tried to give them. It was the<lb/>
greatest moment of my life<lb/>
St. Peter, Minn.�(ACP J �<lb/>
A system of free college educa-<lb/>
tion which would be open to all<lb/>
American boys and girls is ad-<lb/>
vocated by Dr. W. A. Lunden,<lb/>
president of Gustavus Adclphus<lb/>
college, to give the country the<lb/>
trained manpower and leader-<lb/>
ship now lacking.<lb/>
"America loses 80 per cent of<lb/>
her potential leaders because<lb/>
they do not have the privilege<lb/>
of advanced education he de-<lb/>
clared.<lb/>
"Accident of birth, geogra-<lb/>
phical location or insufficient<lb/>
funds are the reasons why these<lb/>
groups do not go to college. Al-<lb/>
though we have a splendid<lb/>
grade and high school system,<lb/>
democracy in education in this<lb/>
country ceases after that point<lb/>
and only a very small per cent<lb/>
of our capable youth continues<lb/>
Dr. Lunden pointed out that<lb/>
75 per cent of the colleges in<lb/>
this country are private schools.<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
"Shorty" Sessoms. Helen James,<lb/>
Mary Virginia Butt. Ibby�<lb/>
Gretchen Webster, chairman:<lb/>
Ernestine Vinson, Helen Flynn.<lb/>
Mickey Boyette. Furniture and<lb/>
Flowers�Doris Williams,<lb/>
chairman; Myrtle Harris. Mar-<lb/>
garet Lewis, Sue Parker. Rosalie<lb/>
Brown will handle the publicity.<lb/>
"We are considering Billy<lb/>
Knauff and the Oak Ridge<lb/>
Band, but we also have another<lb/>
band in mind which would be a<lb/>
nice surprise Dave says.<lb/>
Dormitory representatives to<lb/>
collect class dues are: Cotton<lb/>
Hall. Dot Davis and Fioridel<lb/>
Kennedy; Fleming Hall, "Baby"<lb/>
Pearsall and Tris Herring; Jar-<lb/>
vis Hall, Mary Virginia Butt;<lb/>
Wilson Hall, Margie Dudley,<lb/>
garet Lewis, Margie Dudley,<lb/>
Ruby White, Ann Ward, Mary<lb/>
Louise Wallace, Frances Rad-<lb/>
cliff. Class dues must be paid<lb/>
before the dance is attended.<lb/>
NEW QUARTER<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
at 8:30 on Thursday morning,<lb/>
special, unclassified and gradu<lb/>
ate students will register at 4:00<lb/>
that afternoon.<lb/>
�All students are expected to<lb/>
arrive at the Wright building<lb/>
promptly at the beginning of the<lb/>
period scheduled for it. Each<lb/>
student who has his grade book<lb/>
should bring it with him on<lb/>
registration day. Students who<lb/>
do not receive their grade books<lb/>
through the mail because of un-<lb/>
paid dues, should pay the dues<lb/>
and call for the books at the<lb/>
Registrar's office.<lb/>
63l2t�&amp;t<lb/>
SUGGESTS<lb/>
<lb/>
A NATIONAL DRINK<lb/>
ROYALCROWN<lb/>
I COLA<lb/>
TRY IT FIRST<lb/>
QUENCHES THIRST<lb/>
NEHI BOTTLING<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Palace Barber<lb/>
Shoppe<lb/>
The Three Musketeer<lb/>
Barbers<lb/>
TAKE A STROLL<lb/>
DOWN TO<lb/>
WILLIAMS'<lb/>
AND SEE WHAT'S NEW<lb/>
"The Ladies Store"<lb/>
j� make-up,<lb/>
tiat Sza4t4 . .<lb/>
ALL THROUGH THE DAY<lb/>
Apply All-Day Foumdatioti . hides<lb/>
tiny blemishes, gives a radi-<lb/>
ant glow (8 shades) .1.00<lb/>
Finish with Elizabeth Ardii Facm Powd.r<lb/>
mist-fine ever-so- clinging<lb/>
. . And how it flattersl .<lb/>
1.75 and 3.00<lb/>
Two Powder Box<lb/>
1.50 and 3.00<lb/>
Price jiu taiti<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
Evans Street<lb/>
A ItirtHtfrlri<lb/>
Ht������������<lb/>
Krmember�the longer<lb/>
ou k�ep War Bonda,<lb/>
up to 10 years, the more<lb/>
valuable they become.<lb/>
KARES<lb/>
VV.<lb/>
Serve The Best<lb/>
In<lb/>
ATS<lb/>
and<lb/>
DRINKS<lb/>
E<lb/>
SEE OUR NEW SPRING LINE OF<lb/>
Coats, Suits, Dresses<lb/>
Sweaters and Skirts<lb/>
BE SURE TO SEE OUR<lb/>
EASTER BONNETS<lb/>
We Have All Kinds Of Sandals and Play<lb/>
Shoes That Are NOT RATIONED<lb/>
SAIEED'I<lb/>
DRY GOODS SHOP<lb/>
503-505 Dickinson Ave.rd Door From Five Points<lb/>
PATRONIZE YOUR<lb/>
COLLEGE STORES<lb/>
BELK-TYLER'S<lb/>
SANDALS<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Stationery Store<lb/>
A COMPLETE LINE OF SCHOOL<lb/>
SUPPLIES<lb/>
Soda Shop<lb/>
THE MEETING AND EATING PLACE<lb/>
OF ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
Play Shoes<lb/>
LADIES! If you have not gotten you PLAY SHOES or SANDALS,<lb/>
hurry down to BELK-TYLER'S early tomorrow morning and make<lb/>
your selection from the new assortment which just came in to-<lb/>
day. Over 200 pairs to choose from. Remember these shoes sell<lb/>
very rapidly, and we recommend that you hurry down to BELK-<lb/>
TYLER'S the first thing tomorrow morning and get yours while the<lb/>
stocks are complete.<lb/>
200 Pairs Lovely New<lb/>
SANDALS<lb/>
In WEDGES, PLATFORMS, OPEN<lb/>
and CLOSED TOE, OPEN HEELS,<lb/>
and ANKLE STRAPS. Uppers made<lb/>
from Kipskin . . . Cape . . . Sheepskin<lb/>
. . . and imiation leathers. In browns,<lb/>
tans, red, and navy . . . medium and<lb/>
narrow widths.<lb/>
ill<lb/>
1.98 to 5.00<lb/>
You Do Not Need A<lb/>
Stamp To Buy These<lb/>
Sandals.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Vyyy��������yyyyy���V�����j����y�����������������<lb/>
mm: -<lb/>
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PAGE FOUR<lb/>
ICJI<lb/>
if?<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
SATURDAY. MARCH 1J, 42<lb/>
Charlotte Chapter� �<lb/>
The Charlotte alumnae chap-<lb/>
ter of the East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College met Thursday for a<lb/>
luncheon meeting at Tachers.<lb/>
Mrs. Lonnie Rogers (Nancy<lb/>
Brantley) president presided.<lb/>
The group approved the adop-<lb/>
tion of three alumnae soldiers<lb/>
who are Prviate Hicks H. Hen-<lb/>
d e r a o n. Lieutenant Leo F.<lb/>
Burks. Jr and Yeoman third<lb/>
class, Jerome Donaldson.<lb/>
Covers were laid for 10 mem-<lb/>
bers of the local alumnae. A<lb/>
book revi.w is scheduled for the<lb/>
m xt meeting on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 33 at 3:45 .Jock with<lb/>
-Mrs. Fred E. Sprock (Louise<lb/>
' rell) on Norton Road.<lb/>
Since only one chapter report<lb/>
has been received by the Alumni<lb/>
WORKERS<lb/>
limits, and no written test<lb/>
required. Applications and<lb/>
Ass<lb/>
the<lb/>
are<lb/>
wen<lb/>
th r<lb/>
they<lb/>
� is<lb/>
is <lb/>
A1 ui<lb/>
hear fr<lb/>
tation recently, the Alum-<lb/>
' ice has been wondering if<lb/>
jports have been sent and<lb/>
�1 in the mail. If they<lb/>
to be sent from overseas.<lb/>
would be no doubt why<lb/>
have not been received;<lb/>
they were not. the office<lb/>
ting and wondering. The<lb/>
Office would like to<lb/>
m each of vou.<lb/>
Continued from page One<lb/>
The majority of positions are<lb/>
; in Washington. D. C, but some<lb/>
will be filled in other parts of<lb/>
the United States. There are no<lb/>
a.vt<lb/>
is<lb/>
complete information may be<lb/>
obtained from first-and second-1<lb/>
 class post offices, from civil;<lb/>
j service regional offices, and I<lb/>
from the Commission in Wash-<lb/>
ington, D. C. Applications will<lb/>
I be accepted at the U. S. Civil <lb/>
Service Commission. Washing<lb/>
ton, I). ( until the needs at the<lb/>
service have been met.<lb/>
Trainee positions in technical!<lb/>
and scientific work will be fill - j<lb/>
ed in Washington, D. C, and<lb/>
vicinity. The salary is $1,440 a;<lb/>
year plus overtime, and the only<lb/>
: educational requirement is that;<lb/>
: applicant must have completed'<lb/>
one high school credit of physics,j<lb/>
chemistry, mathematics, bio-<lb/>
logy, or general science. There<lb/>
are no options.<lb/>
sion at Washington, D. C.<lb/>
Persons using their highest<lb/>
-kills in war work are not en-<lb/>
couraged to apply. War Man<lb/>
power restrictions on Federal j<lb/>
appointments are given in Form I<lb/>
3989, posted in first-and sec<lb/>
ond-class post offices.<lb/>
Collegiate Review<lb/>
Omaha, Nebr. � (ACP) �<lb/>
Three different speedup plans<lb/>
for students who will enter the<lb/>
armed forces have been made<lb/>
available at the University of<lb/>
Omaha,<lb/>
Pre-induction review courses<lb/>
in urgent military subjects are<lb/>
now being offered, plus stepped-<lb/>
up courses in the regular acade-<lb/>
mic field. These may be finished<lb/>
in from six to eight weeks, mak-<lb/>
ing it possible to finish a year's<lb/>
work in some fields in one<lb/>
semester. Blocks of credit will<lb/>
also be offered each four weeks<lb/>
for boys called to the service.<lb/>
Last summer a regular seme-<lb/>
ster was added to the schedule.<lb/>
By taking classes three seme-<lb/>
sters each year, a student now<lb/>
is able to complete the four-vear<lb/>
course in two years and eight<lb/>
months.<lb/>
scientist believes. Its present<lb/>
age is 3,000,000,000 years; still<lb/>
in kindergarten.<lb/>
At the end of this span, he<lb/>
said, the system disintegrates�<lb/>
the stars slow down into con-<lb/>
servative individualists drows-<lb/>
ing away the years.<lb/>
Dick Blakinger, business<lb/>
manager for the Cornellian,<lb/>
Cornell college, Mount Vernon,<lb/>
Iowa, was meeting a University<lb/>
of Minnesota Wrestling op-<lb/>
ponent in Minneaplois when he<lb/>
learned of his call to active duty<lb/>
in the army air corps enlisted<lb/>
reserve. Blakinger wired Bill<lb/>
Slothower, Editor: 'T quit. Sug-<lb/>
gest you get a woman or about<lb/>
a 9 year-old boy for your next<lb/>
business manager<lb/>
 <lb/>
The first college professor ever<lb/>
signed to a movie acting con-<lb/>
tract, Don Curtis, has little op-<lb/>
portunity to show his profes-<lb/>
sorial perfection in Metro-<lb/>
Goldwyn-Mayer's "Salute to the<lb/>
Marines<lb/>
Curtis plays a hard-bitten<lb/>
marine lieutenant, and the<lb/>
script calls for a large number<lb/>
nf "ain'to " "Hoco " 'Mote "<lb/>
of "ain'ts "dese.<lb/>
"dems and "Dose<lb/>
'dats<lb/>
Per<lb/>
nio,<lb/>
th,<lb/>
T<lb/>
MORE ALUMNI IX THE<lb/>
SERVICE�<lb/>
Walti r W. Mallard-<lb/>
Air Cadet Walter W. Mallard<lb/>
stationed at San Anto-<lb/>
as. He was a member of<lb/>
ior class majoring in<lb/>
and English, before en-<lb/>
le service. His addre<lb/>
Walter W. Mallard. Jr<lb/>
Squadron 101, Barrack<lb/>
AAFCC-SAACC, San An-<lb/>
1 exas.<lb/>
i" F. Marks�<lb/>
am F. Marks attend-<lb/>
going in<lb/>
A i<lb/>
1 72<lb/>
tonio,<lb/>
Willh<lb/>
p<lb/>
W<lb/>
i<lb/>
ei scho i hei c he<lb/>
service. His<lb/>
Arn r, C I<lb/>
BKs 872.<lb/>
1 'rowder, Mo.<lb/>
address is: U. S.<lb/>
. 29th Sig Tng. Bn.<lb/>
CSCRTC, Camo<lb/>
L<lb/>
Ih<lb/>
� f u<lb/>
h&amp;<lb/>
flO'H<lb/>
F<lb/>
$t Lt. James C. Dempsey,<lb/>
Jr who took his preliminary<lb/>
Hij lining with the CPTP<lb/>
here at Greenville airport is in<lb/>
the news again. He has been<lb/>
�nal pilot to General feed<lb/>
Eisenhower and General Spaatz.<lb/>
commandei of the Allied Air<lb/>
Fore a in North Africa.<lb/>
in ;i I -tter written from Gi-<lb/>
braltar to his wife inWilson, he<lb/>
told of his transfer from a post<lb/>
London in the American<lb/>
bomber command to become<lb/>
sonal pilot for the allied<lb/>
leaders in Algiers.<lb/>
Recently he has been attached'<lb/>
to Ferry command between Eng-<lb/>
and North Africa after a<lb/>
term of bomber service<lb/>
Europe; and recently too,<lb/>
ns using their highest<lb/>
skills in war work are not en-<lb/>
couraged to apply. War Man-<lb/>
power restrictions on Federal<lb/>
appointments are given in Form<lb/>
3989, posted in first-and-second-<lb/>
class post offices.<lb/>
Agricultural marketing spe-<lb/>
cialists in many commodities!<lb/>
are sought for civilian war ser-i<lb/>
vice .the Civil Service Commis-<lb/>
sion announced today. Appoint-<lb/>
ments v ill be made in foreign<lb/>
countries, as well as throughout<lb/>
the United States, and in Wash-1<lb/>
ington, D. C.<lb/>
Salaries range as hish as<lb/>
$6,500 a year, but most of the<lb/>
appointments to be made will<lb/>
pay from $2,000 to �3.000 a<lb/>
year. Overtime on the basis of<lb/>
21 of the first $2,900 will be<lb/>
paid in cases where the aggre-<lb/>
gate compensation will not ex-<lb/>
ceed $5,000 a year.<lb/>
Persons are needed to work<lb/>
with marketing problem? as af-<lb/>
fected by Lend-Lease. food dis-<lb/>
tribution, and other war activi-<lb/>
ties in such fields as. cotton,<lb/>
dairy products, fats and oils,<lb/>
teeds. fruits, and vegetables,<lb/>
grains, livestock, meats, poul-<lb/>
try and egs, tobacco, and wool.<lb/>
Persons with education and ex-<lb/>
perience in other fields may be<lb/>
used, and applicants should in-<lb/>
dicate such fields on the appli-<lb/>
cation.<lb/>
Ingeneral. applicants for the<lb/>
junior grade ($2,000 a<lb/>
Having taught English and<lb/>
literature at Northwestern and<lb/>
Washington, D. C(ACP)' Duquesne universities, Curtis is<lb/>
Praising Ohio university, Hoi- wondering what his former stu-<lb/>
dents will think when they see�<lb/>
and hear�his screen debut.<lb/>
He's especially concerned<lb/>
about those he flunked in Eng-<lb/>
lish.<lb/>
lins college, Penn State and the<lb/>
State College of Home Econom-<lb/>
ics at Cornell for their partici-<lb/>
pation in the fats salvage cam-<lb/>
paign, the salvage division of<lb/>
the war production board urged<lb/>
other colleges to step up their<lb/>
fat collections.<lb/>
The fat salvage campaign to-<lb/>
date has yielded only one fourth<lb/>
of the fat needed to make gly<lb/>
cerine for allied gun powder,<lb/>
gun recoil mechanisms, ships'<lb/>
steering gears and depth charge<lb/>
reeases. and medicine. Glycerine<lb/>
stocks are being depleted rapid-<lb/>
ly and no ounce of glvcerine-<lb/>
containing fat can be "wasted,<lb/>
WPB officials stress.<lb/>
Although most institutions<lb/>
have always salvaged fat for its<lb/>
sale value, the WPB salvage<lb/>
division points out that the job<lb/>
must be seriously intensified' or<lb/>
else some day some allied gun<lb/>
won't fire for lack of gun-<lb/>
powder. As well as straining<lb/>
lats used in frying and saving<lb/>
unpalatable fats, all meat trim-<lb/>
mings�including table scraps<lb/>
�must be rendered to add to<lb/>
the fat supply if the country is<lb/>
going to have the glvcerine<lb/>
supply it needs to win the war<lb/>
th<lb/>
land<lb/>
long<lb/>
over<lb/>
he had th<lb/>
Hollwood<lb/>
Algiers to entertain service men.<lb/>
Mildred Owens<lb/>
Miss Mildred Owens, who at-<lb/>
tended the college in 1926. left<lb/>
recently for Daytona Reach.<lb/>
Florida, to enter the Woman's<lb/>
riliary Corps training cen-<lb/>
� After her basic training she<lb/>
expects to enter the WAAC of-<lb/>
ficers' training school. Until she<lb/>
enlisted in the WAAC, Miss<lb/>
v?V? Pm'ed bv the<lb/>
r,ank of Ldenton. Edenton, N.C.<lb/>
M'n y Ji ;( Clark<lb/>
First Lt. Mary Belle Clark<lb/>
01 the Army Nurses Corps hn<lb/>
been sent to England for active<lb/>
duty. Lieutenant Clark gradual.<lb/>
ed from here in 1932 with an<lb/>
A. B. degree in History and<lb/>
Science. She taught in Creed-<lb/>
more and Greenville schools af-<lb/>
ter graduation. In 1941 she<lb/>
graduated in nursing from<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, Dan iS<lb/>
v lrginia<lb/>
She is a daughter of Ifra W<lb/>
Clark of Virgilina, Va. "<lb/>
year) must have had 3 years of<lb/>
experience, college training, or<lb/>
a combination of the two. in<lb/>
market i ng agricultural pro-<lb/>
ducts Qualifying experience<lb/>
been gained while employ-<lb/>
pmdegeof piloting ed in marketing, scion<lb/>
from London to government, or educational or-<lb/>
ganizations. The minimum re-<lb/>
quirements for the higher<lb/>
g r ad e s are proportionately<lb/>
greater. For many of the posi-<lb/>
tions some background of farm-<lb/>
ing experience is required.<lb/>
Ability to speak, write, or read<lb/>
any foreign language should be<lb/>
mentioned m the applications<lb/>
at fhi1 rCaVe11S ;vi3J be accepted<lb/>
at the Civil Service Commission<lb/>
non?eT(;n- Di-C- umil fher<lb/>
notice, but qualified persons are<lb/>
urged to apply immediately<lb/>
written " ?� ad ��<lb/>
ntten examination will be<lb/>
given. Complete '<lb/>
application<lb/>
first-and second-c<lb/>
office n'm1ciril SerWce reiona<lb/>
� and from the Commis-<lb/>
Chicago, 111.�(ACP)�Stars<lb/>
don't twink�they blink.<lb/>
Yawning away their span of<lb/>
life, the vast systems of stars<lb/>
are undergoing a slow process<lb/>
of "relaxation according to a<lb/>
theory presented by Professor<lb/>
Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar<lb/>
of the University of Chicago.<lb/>
The star's manner of relaxing<lb/>
is different, to say the least. No<lb/>
masseur's rhythmic pat�but<lb/>
the traffic on the heavenly high-<lb/>
ways slows down these stellar<lb/>
"bundles of nerves<lb/>
"Any given star Dr. Chan-<lb/>
drasekhar said, "because of oc-<lb/>
casional near misses while pass-<lb/>
ing other stars, gradually will<lb/>
lose energy be deflecting slower<lb/>
moving stars from their paths<lb/>
( The systems, he said, spend a<lb/>
"lifetime" becoming relaxed.<lb/>
And what a life�10 trillion<lb/>
years for the Milky wav, the<lb/>
Cincinnati, Ohio�(ACP) �<lb/>
There may be more than coinci-<lb/>
dence in the fact that the birth-<lb/>
days of Abraham Lincoln and<lb/>
George Washington both occur<lb/>
in February, for they are among<lb/>
notables of American history<lb/>
who may have achieved great-<lb/>
ness because of the part weath-<lb/>
er played in their pre-natal de-<lb/>
velopment.<lb/>
This opinion is expressed by<lb/>
! Dr. Clarence A. Mills, Univers-<lb/>
 ity of Cinncinati authority on<lb/>
j effects of climate and weather<lb/>
I on human progress. He holds<lb/>
the James T. Heady professor-<lb/>
ship or experimental medicine<lb/>
m the university's college of<lb/>
medicine and is author of the<lb/>
recent volume. "Climate Makes<lb/>
the Man<lb/>
"Climate and weather do<lb/>
some rather surprising things<lb/>
to mankind Dr. Mills said.<lb/>
I hey dominate his rate of<lb/>
growth, his vitality and energy<lb/>
tor thought or action as he lives<lb/>
on from day to day; but their<lb/>
influence begins even before he<lb/>
is born.<lb/>
�. 7eW P.ople knmv or realize<lb/>
that a child conceived in sum-<lb/>
mer heat has only half the likeli-<lb/>
hood of entering college that is<lb/>
enjoyed by youngsters conceiv-<lb/>
ed in winter cold.<lb/>
"People conceived in late win-<lb/>
ter or spring tend to live long-<lb/>
est and to be most likely to<lb/>
achieve greatness. 'Who's Who'<lb/>
volumes list a heavy prepond-<lb/>
erance of person conceived in<lb/>
this favorable time of year.<lb/>
"Even our American Presi-<lb/>
dents have stressed the point.<lb/>
It was probably not entirely<lb/>
chance that placed the birth-<lb/>
days of our two greatest Presi-<lb/>
dents in February.<lb/>
"Eleven of the 31 presidents<lb/>
were conceived in the first<lb/>
quarter of the year, ten in the<lb/>
second, only four in the third<lb/>
(summer heat), and six in the<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
"The thoughtful parent may<lb/>
well give serious consideration<lb/>
to these forces affecting his un-<lb/>
born progeny, if he would give<lb/>
them all possible advantage in<lb/>
life<lb/>
Claremont, Calif.�(ACP) �<lb/>
j Itsue Hisanaga will finish her<lb/>
college work at Oberiin college<lb/>
in Ohio this semester and will<lb/>
! get a diploma�from Pamona<lb/>
I college in Claremont.<lb/>
Miss Hisanaga. who matricul- j<lb/>
j ated here, is from Hilo, Hawaii<lb/>
When the exacuation order fol<lb/>
lowed Pearl Harbor, the entire<lb/>
Pomona college student body<lb/>
and its brass band turned out f<lb/>
to bid her farewell.<lb/>
President E. Wilson Lvon of;<lb/>
Pomona college forwarded her<lb/>
A. B. degree to Oberiin, for pre-<lb/>
sentation by proxy.<lb/>
J She has two brothers in the<lb/>
l United States army, Sgt. Ben-<lb/>
i nie Hisanaga, former Pomona<lb/>
college football captain, and:<lb/>
 Kazuma Hisanaga. Bennie, said<lb/>
to be the only Japanese-Ameri-<lb/>
can ever to captain a mainland<lb/>
college football team, plans to!<lb/>
be an instructor of physical edu-<lb/>
cation after the war. <lb/>
The Iowa farmer's doctor is<lb/>
considerably older than t h e<lb/>
medic of the city dweller, ac<lb/>
cording to figures compiled by<lb/>
Kaethe Menglebert. Iowa State<lb/>
college economist.<lb/>
Recording session of classes<lb/>
taught by practice teachers is a<lb/>
unique aid to teacher training<lb/>
introduced at Depauw univers-<lb/>
ity.<lb/>
More than 400 members of<lb/>
the University of Minnesota<lb/>
teaching and research staff,<lb/>
counting all ranks, are absent <lb/>
in some form of military or war-<lb/>
related service.<lb/>
Dr. Andrew Leon Harvis. as-<lb/>
sociate horticulturalist at Ohio<lb/>
agricultural experiment station<lb/>
has become assistant professor<lb/>
of pomology at Cornell State'<lb/>
college of agriculture.<lb/>
Dr. Donald Bertrand Tresid<lb/>
dei will become president of I<lb/>
chancellor.<lb/>
More than 100 Texas schools<lb/>
have organized victory physical<lb/>
fitness clubs under a program<lb/>
sponsored by the University of<lb/>
Texas Interscholastic league.<lb/>
Curriculum requirements for<lb/>
i history majors at Hunter col-<lb/>
I lege have been revised to pro-<lb/>
i vide greater flexibility in choice<lb/>
j of courses as well as to give<lb/>
training in independent re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
"Should American youth sup-<lb/>
port the re-establishment after<lb/>
the war of competitive enter<lb/>
prise as our dominant economic<lb/>
system?" is the question of the<lb/>
annual national inter-college-<lb/>
iate radio debate.<lb/>
School of engineering at Man-<lb/>
hattan college recently celebrat-<lb/>
ed its golden jubilee.<lb/>
University of Wisconsin radio<lb/>
station WHA is aiding in collec-<lb/>
tion of old radio sets for the<lb/>
army air force training school<lb/>
at Madison.<lb/>
Colgate university has intro-<lb/>
duced a compulsory pre-induc-<lb/>
tion program of military drill<lb/>
and physical conditioning re-<lb/>
qnested by a vote of the stu-<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
Fordham college is admitting<lb/>
a freshman class in February<lb/>
for the first time in seven<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Co-operating with the city of.<lb/>
Elmira, X. Y and gathering<lb/>
much-needed information for<lb/>
the .vowrnment. Elmira college<lb/>
sociology students have been<lb/>
conducting a womanpower<lb/>
survey.<lb/>
University of Minnesota had<lb/>
three presidents during the four<lb/>
years of the class of 1942: Drs,<lb/>
Lotus 1). Coffman, Guv Stanton<lb/>
Ford, and Walter C. Coffey.<lb/>
Texas's 1940 mineral produc-<lb/>
tion totaled $714,905.731. ac-<lb/>
cording to Dr. E. H. SeHards,<lb/>
director of the University of<lb/>
T e x a s bureau of economic-<lb/>
geology.<lb/>
University of Wisconsin is<lb/>
temporary home of 480 WAVES<lb/>
receiving radio code and conv<lb/>
m u nications t ra i n i ng.<lb/>
"Industrial Inspection" and<lb/>
"Fundamentals of Automotive<lb/>
Mechanie" are n e w war<lb/>
courses for won a1 '���<lb/>
State university<lb/>
Bob Rog  -tudyin,<lb/>
hire and painting<lb/>
versity of Texas, U . <lb/>
rodeo tar.<lb/>
There  little :<lb/>
war's heavy d�-n. .<lb/>
plete the America!) f<lb/>
Dow V. Baxter,<lb/>
lessor of silvie<lb/>
ology in the L'n<lb/>
igan scl f fort<lb/>
servat;<lb/>
, An i i intent<lb/>
studenl - � havt<lb/>
ed ch� . aiior<lb/>
school v. i ; e enrolled i<lb/>
Wayne university.<lb/>
A 12-month- � <lb/>
orology course i �<lb/>
Pomona coil .<lb/>
Hallett Abend.<lb/>
the Far East, n i ently ;<lb/>
ed Washington Stal<lb/>
with a Chine .<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Of 11.27 living �<lb/>
Sigma I) e 1 t a Cl<lb/>
journalistic I<lb/>
imately 2 500 a: �<lb/>
services.<lb/>
Income of the T<lb/>
Minnesota in th�<lb/>
was 113,319,187<lb/>
Two weeks ft G<lb/>
lege launched a<lb/>
drive, its war<lb/>
quota was reacht<lb/>
The Woi<lb/>
University of North C<lb/>
making asun �<lb/>
alumna. I find<lb/>
they're doing<lb/>
Wofford col!er<lb/>
than 5O0 students u<lb/>
than 4,000 living<lb/>
an estimated 700 alumni ii<lb/>
armed servi<lb/>
Manford university September<lb/>
1. succeeding Dr. Ray Lyman!<lb/>
Wilbur, who will continue as;<lb/>
VISIT THE !<lb/>
JDIXIE LUNCH!<lb/>
f "Where The Gang Eats" <lb/>
information and<lb/>
may be obtained at<lb/>
le,<lb/>
I<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
Norfolk Shoe Shop <lb/>
All Work Guaranteed<lb/>
BOWL FOR HEALTH'S<lb/>
SAKE AT<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
fEALTH CENTER<lb/>
Use The Davtime<lb/>
STUDENT RATE<lb/>
Wountain Service<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
GRANTS<lb/>
For Your<lb/>
SPRING ACCESSORIES<lb/>
Call For That�<lb/>
MUCH NEEDED<lb/>
NOURISHMENT WHILE<lb/>
STUDYING<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
"If It's In Town We Have It"<lb/>
HAVE YOUR SHOES<lb/>
REPAIRED AT<lb/>
CITY SHOE SHOP<lb/>
East Fifth Street<lb/>
D<lb/>
UKE UNIVERSITY<lb/>
SCHOOL OF NURSING<lb/>
DURHAM, N. C.<lb/>
The entrance requirements are in-<lb/>
telligence, character, and for the<lb/>
duration of the War, one quarter or<lb/>
one semester of College. Classes will<lb/>
be admitted April 1, 1943 and<lb/>
January 27, 1944. The Diploma of<lb/>
Graduate Nurse is awarded after<lb/>
three years.<lb/>
The annual tuition of $100.00 covers<lb/>
the cost of maintenance and uni-<lb/>
forms. Loan funds covering the<lb/>
annual tuition are available.<lb/>
Catalogue, application form, and in-<lb/>
formation about the B. S. degree re-<lb/>
quirements may be obtained bv<lb/>
writing to:<lb/>
The Dean<lb/>
Duke School of Nursing<lb/>
Durham, North Carolina<lb/>
STUDENTS!<lb/>
PATRONIZE<lb/>
THE MERCHANTS<lb/>
WHOSE ADS YOU SEE<lb/>
IN THIS PAPER<lb/>
ERNEST<lb/>
BROWN DRUG CO.<lb/>
The Real Druggist<lb/>
Dial 2815 712 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS<lb/>
Prescriptions Carefully<lb/>
Compunded By Registered<lb/>
Druggist<lb/>
COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
I i<lb/>
ISCOTT'S DRY!<lb/>
j CLEANERS<lb/>
(REPAIRS - ALTERATIONS)<lb/>
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