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            <mods:title>The Teco Echo, March 27, 1943</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</mods:abstract>
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              <mods:namePart>East Carolina University</mods:namePart></mods:name>
            <mods:topic>Students</mods:topic></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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            <mods:namePart>East Carolina University</mods:namePart>
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          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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          <dc:title>The Teco Echo, March 27, 1943</dc:title>
          <dc:description>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>East Carolina University--Students</dc:subject>
          <dc:coverage></dc:coverage>
          <dc:contributor>East Carolina University</dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>19430327</dc:date>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
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          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
          <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
          <dc:identifier>37918</dc:identifier>
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          <dc:subject>East Carolina University--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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                <pb facs="00037918_tn_0001" />
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XVIII<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1943<lb />
Number 11<lb />
udy Walters To Present<lb />
enior Piano Recital April 2<lb />
Miss LA<lb />
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same person.<lb />
he most talen<lb />
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Rudy Walters<lb />
mmmer School<lb />
session Offers<lb />
any Subjects<lb />
Exams Are Over<lb />
' Ain't' It Swell<lb />
Book Of Poems<lb />
Is Published<lb />
By Vernon Ward<lb />
Vernor Ward of Roberson-<lb />
ville, a former ECTC student,<lb />
rec ntly sent a copy of a volume<lb />
f ; oems written by himself to<lb />
he president of the college with<lb />
i compliments.<lb />
Ward calls his volume<lb />
national Poems and de-<lb />
i � ibes the verses in his fore-<lb />
ord as "poems of freedom,<lb />
tin cracy, and friendliness<lb />
As they have a decided anti-<lb />
nationalistic emphasis, the<lb />
oems had difficulty in finding<lb />
publisher and were finally<lb />
published by the writer himself.<lb />
A number of people whose<lb />
names carry some weight have<lb />
commented favorably on tht<lb />
book, among them 11. V. Kal-<lb />
tenborn, Senator Claude Pep-<lb />
per. Paul Green, and the Indian<lb />
leader, krishnalal Shridharani.<lb />
Ward was interested in writ<lb />
ing when he was at the college<lb />
a few years ago, and even then<lb />
was working on the theme of<lb />
internationalism.<lb />
Junior-Senior Prom Tonight;<lb />
Oak Ridge Band To Play<lb />
High School<lb />
Debate Teams<lb />
Hold Contests<lb />
tj<lb />
Si<lb />
ll<lb />
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ano<lb />
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I find<lb />
w 1.1<lb />
this<lb />
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Iii Harold Taylor<lb />
Exams are over but there's no<lb />
resl in store for us weary pre-<lb />
m a t u r e 1 y s p r i n g-fevered<lb />
scholars  However, half of the<lb />
student body took a long week-<lb />
end off to rest their overwork-<lb />
brains� (I played sick and<lb />
k rm vacation in the infirm-<lb />
Clothes Needed<lb />
For Russian Cold<lb />
((<lb /><lb />
it<lb />
ECTC tl<lb />
ii n<lb />
hat<lb />
siuo<lb />
K<lb />
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be<lb />
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tment ruling thai<lb />
for the duration<lb />
� rtain field i<lb />
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� hey need to<lb />
a rtil icates.<lb />
now in eolle<lb />
ed up<lb />
cai<lb />
an! it.<lb />
will<lb />
he<lb />
�ad-<lb />
um-<lb />
criven<lb />
Miss Grogan and Miss<lb />
Stokes got suspicious when I<lb />
started asking about midnight<lb />
sna they threw me out next<lb />
 other half of the stu-<lb />
body stayed on the campus<lb />
In't over-exert themselves<lb />
their new assignments,<lb />
were approximately three<lb />
nts studying in the library<lb />
 si Friday night.<lb />
Greal and glorious is the<lb />
climax of the quarter�getting<lb />
the grades, came this week and<lb />
with the grades came many re-<lb />
lapses. It really takes a week to<lb />
recuperate from the shock of<lb />
getting tin- grade book, so the!<lb />
I e a c h i r s better n o t poke<lb />
too much at us while we are in!<lb />
such a weakened condition<lb />
Many of the students who<lb />
registered for sixteen hours this<lb />
quarter will probably lose a!<lb />
c urse or two because of the;<lb />
grade book reaction!<lb />
departments<lb />
' heretofore,<lb />
1 1meat ion and<lb />
�. � Victoryi '� rps pro-<lb />
hich publicschool teach<lb />
g called on to cou-<lb />
th . . rtmnt of health<lb />
education will of-<lb />
irses in mass games and<lb />
and personal hygiene<lb />
tter health.<lb />
rich andSpanish will<lb />
ach tena oi the sum-<lb />
school, t h iparticular<lb />
' � ��. :�lined by the<lb />
th its enrolling.<lb />
in all thedepartments<lb />
v willbe available.<lb />
' � in W ill stless the usual<lb />
igh pre ara1 ion for teach-<lb />
� l on Post &amp;<lb />
m<lb />
The old saying, "You can'l<lb />
t your candy and have it too<lb />
ighl be remembered by a lot<lb />
of us who are yelping because<lb />
we didn't have any spring holi-<lb />
days�we forget what a good<lb />
time we had during that extra<lb />
week Christinas. Actually, there<lb />
are some people who wouldn't<lb />
mind going to scho<lb />
ter without any holidays�<lb />
they're the boys in the Army.<lb />
They find that going to school<lb />
isn't bo bad at all when you<lb />
have to go other places!<lb />
Spring Production<lb />
Cast Is Chosen<lb />
By Chi Pi Players<lb />
Camp Davis Rabbi<lb />
Assembly Speaker<lb />
(<lb />
YWC<lb />
At<lb />
By Marfjie Dudley<lb />
With a record of many excel-<lb />
lent productions to their credit,<lb />
the Chi Pi Players are in the<lb />
midst of another characteristic<lb />
I production, Ladies In Retire-<lb />
Ralph II. Blumen-ment by Edward Percy and<lb />
ish Rabbi, of Camp Reginald Denham.<lb />
will be on the campus Miss Ellen Caldvvell of the<lb />
as guest speaker of the 1 matematics department has<lb />
Committee and the , stepped into the role of director<lb />
A and YMCA. which was occupied for six<lb />
the assembly hour, Chap-years by Clifton Britton, found-<lb />
Eudcational authorities and<lb />
school system officials of two<lb />
states and more than thirty<lb />
cities in every seciton of the<lb />
C. S. have sponsored campaigns<lb />
to collect clothing which will be<lb />
shipped through Russian Wav<lb />
Relief. Inc to civilian sufferers<lb />
in the war-torn areas on the<lb />
Russian front.<lb />
State-wide drives were initi-<lb />
ated by educational officials in<lb />
Kentucky and Georgia, where<lb />
more than 350.000 boys and<lb />
girls of elementary and high<lb />
school age set a goal of 2,500,000<lb />
garments.<lb />
Georgia's "Share Y o u r<lb />
Clothes with Russia" campaign<lb />
was sponsored by the Georgia<lb />
State Department of Education,<lb />
the Georgia Education Associa-<lb />
tion and the Georgia Congress<lb />
of Parents and Teachers. Ken-<lb />
tucky's "Clothes for Russia"<lb />
drive was also sponsored by the<lb />
State Department of Education,<lb />
which granted George Yates,<lb />
principal of the Versailles High<lb />
School, a leave of absence to<lb />
supervise the clothing collec<lb />
tion<lb />
The pattern in Kentucky and<lb />
Georgia was duplicated in cities<lb />
throughout the country. Wash-<lb />
ington, D. Cs School Board<lb />
distributed a leaflet to children<lb />
in the public schools urging<lb />
them to bring clothing which<lb />
this quar would "help a Hero by Helping<lb />
a Hero's Family Robert L.<lb />
Haycock, acting superintendent<lb />
of schools in Washington, in a<lb />
letter to all school officers,<lb />
wrote:<lb />
"The civilian population of<lb />
Russia has played a tremendous<lb />
part in the great war effort<lb />
against Germany but at an un-<lb />
believable cost to themselves.<lb />
The great suffering of the Rus-<lb />
sian people is common knowl-<lb />
edge; the yare in dire need of<lb />
the everyday necessities of life.<lb />
Some of this suffering we can<lb />
help alleviate. The school offi-<lb />
cers ask the cooperation of the<lb />
school teachers and pupils in<lb />
See Clothes on Page Three<lb />
Eighteen high school debate<lb />
teams from twelve schools in<lb />
two Eastern districts of the<lb />
North Carolina high Debating<lb />
union entered an elimination<lb />
tournament which began on the<lb />
campus Thursday afternoon at<lb />
two o'clock and closed with a<lb />
final public debate Friday night<lb />
held at seven-thirty o'clock in<lb />
the Austin auditorium. The<lb />
tournament, directed by Dr. M<lb />
N. Posey, faculty advisor of the<lb />
Jarvis Forensic club, intended<lb />
to eliminate some of the teams<lb />
which would in normal years<lb />
participate in the contest at<lb />
Chapel Hill.<lb />
All of those teams in the two<lb />
Eastern districts which defeat-<lb />
ed their opponents in the trian-<lb />
gular debates competed in the<lb />
contests. The best affirmative<lb />
and negative team from each of<lb />
the two districts were awarded<lb />
certificates after the debates<lb />
last night, the name of the<lb />
teams were not available in<lb />
time for printing. These teams<lb />
will take part in the debate<lb />
finals to be held at Chapel Hill.<lb />
The teams of the second dis-<lb />
trict, which is the more western<lb />
of the two participating in the<lb />
contest, clashed in debate last<lb />
night.<lb />
Winning teams were selected<lb />
Thursday in two rounds of de-<lb />
bates, one in the afternoon and<lb />
the second in the evening. In<lb />
each round decisions were ren-<lb />
dered by judges from the fac<lb />
ulty and the college debating<lb />
team. Members of the debating<lb />
club and the class in debating<lb />
served as chairmen and time-<lb />
keepers.<lb />
Entering the tournament<lb />
were the following schools.<lb />
Pantego, Edenton, Leggett. Wil<lb />
liamston, Scotland Neck, Vance-<lb />
boro, C h o w a n, Washington,<lb />
Roanoke Rapids. Wilson, Rocky<lb />
Mount, and Kinston.<lb />
Dr. Posey explained that the<lb />
See Contests on Page Three<lb />
Chairman for Junior-Senior committees pictured above:<lb />
top row, left to right Hazel Williford, Ophelia Hooks who will<lb />
lead the figure with president Dave Owens, Rosalie Brown. Second<lb />
row, left to right. Gretchen Webster, and Margaret Pugh Har-<lb />
den. Bottom row. Anne Holloman, Lib Kittrell, and Garnette Cor-<lb />
:lle. Not pictured are chairmen Doris Williams and Iris Herring.<lb />
Investigation Committee<lb />
Elected, Beginning Work<lb />
Mrs. L. A. Shroud<lb />
Leads Discussions<lb />
ain<lb />
tin Blumenthal will speak on<lb />
"J wish Contributions to Amer-<lb />
ican Democracy and at 2 :0C<lb />
in the afternoon, under the<lb />
� f the YWC A ana<lb />
YW( A. he will talk on "Cur-<lb />
Philosophies of Jewish<lb />
Life in the Austin auditorium.<lb />
A graduate of the University<lb />
Cincinnati and the Hebrew<lb />
Union College, the speaker has<lb />
red as Rabbi in Knoxville,<lb />
It nnessee, where he was a<lb />
member of the Leisure Time<lb />
Council and the Knoxville Com-<lb />
mittee for the Blind. Before be-<lb />
ing called to the chaplaincy, he<lb />
served in the pulpit of Hunting-<lb />
ton. West Virginia, and was<lb />
recognized as a leader among<lb />
young people.<lb />
Chaplain Blumenthal comes<lb />
to the campus through the<lb />
Jewish Chautauqua Society.<lb />
: Cincinnati, Ohio.<lb />
Mrs. L. A. Stroucl from Mem-<lb />
orial Baptist church and Green-<lb />
ville, led conferences at the<lb />
Baptist Student Center this<lb />
past week on Love, Marriage,<lb />
and several other topics of a<lb />
similar nature in observance of<lb />
Christian Home Week. Many-<lb />
questions and problems wrere<lb />
openly discussed between the<lb />
leader and students. As a stu-<lb />
dent remarked, "We really dis-<lb />
cussed the building of a Christ-<lb />
ian home from the first step to<lb />
the living in that home<lb />
The week's discussion groups<lb />
have proved very helpful to<lb />
those students on the campus<lb />
who became interested in build-<lb />
ing Christian home in the fu-<lb />
ture.<lb />
Students Form<lb />
Religious Council<lb />
Representatives of the vari<lb />
ous organized religious groups<lb />
on the campus decided to form<lb />
an interfaith council to bring<lb />
leaders of the groups together<lb />
at stated intervals to talk over<lb />
their plans for the term and so<lb />
make it possible for each organ-<lb />
ization to know something in ad-<lb />
vance of the activities of the<lb />
other. This council was formed<lb />
Friday night. March 10.<lb />
Miss Elizabeth Tittsworth<lb />
Methodist student worker, wa<lb />
chosen to serve as chairman.<lb />
Carol Leigh Humphries, a jun-<lb />
ior, was named vice-chairman<lb />
and Jonnie Faye Barnes, a sen-<lb />
ior, was elected secretary.<lb />
Representatives of the two<lb />
"Ys most of the church groups<lb />
and the student secretaries and<lb />
advisors were present at the<lb />
meeting. The group met in the<lb />
"Y" Hut after vespers.<lb />
Attending Meet<lb />
President Leon R. Meadows<lb />
"We are not building our pro-<lb />
gram with rumors we mighi<lb />
hear; we are working only with<lb />
specific facts declared Chair-<lb />
man Sammy Crandle, when<lb />
asked about the operation of the<lb />
Investigation committee elected<lb />
by the student body to investi-<lb />
gate drinking and gambling on<lb />
the campus.<lb />
Purpose of the committee as<lb />
stated in the motion made at a<lb />
mass meeting of the student<lb />
body held March 10 is "to bring-<lb />
together facts as to the extent<lb />
of drinking and gambling on<lb />
the campus, and when a suffi-<lb />
cient investigation is held con-<lb />
cerning these matters, it will<lb />
be submitted to the student<lb />
council and student body<lb />
In a general election of the<lb />
student body held Friday, March<lb />
12. Crandle, Rudy Walters, Jim<lb />
White, Katherine Kyzer and<lb />
Charlotte Shearin were named<lb />
to the committee. Dr. Herbert<lb />
II ay nes. Mrs. Adelaide Blox-<lb />
i ton, Miss Frances Wahl, and<lb />
j Miss Audrey Dempsey are fac-<lb />
ulty representatives on the com-<lb />
I mittee. They were chosen by Dr.<lb />
 Beecher Flanagan, chairman of<lb />
the Discipline committee, who<lb />
is also serving on the Investiga-<lb />
 tion committee.<lb />
At the first of the two meet-<lb />
; ings already held by the new7<lb />
Juniors and Seniors should<lb />
be getting excited by now for<lb />
tonight at 8:30 the much antici-<lb />
pated Junior-Senior will be<lb />
held in the Campus building<lb />
Members of the various commit-<lb />
tees have been hard at work for<lb />
several weeks on decorations,<lb />
invitations, and the music.<lb />
Dave Owens, preisdent of the<lb />
junior class, voices his opinion<lb />
that he believes this to be- one<lb />
the nicest dances of the year.<lb />
Contrary to the usual card<lb />
dance which has become tradi-<lb />
tional at Junior-Senior time,<lb />
this will be a girl-break. Girls<lb />
thought that with most of their<lb />
friends far off in seme branch<lb />
of the service, a more success<lb />
ful dance could be given in this<lb />
way.<lb />
Chairman of the committees<lb />
are: Margaret Pugh Harden,<lb />
decorations; each member of<lb />
the class is helping to execute<lb />
her plans. Invitations, Hazei<lb />
Williford, chairman; working<lb />
with her have been Dorothy<lb />
Davis, Margaret Gerock, Ruth<lb />
Davis, Carol Leigh Humphries.<lb />
Orchestra, Garnette Cordle,<lb />
chairman; Floridel Kennedy,<lb />
"Baby" Perarsall. Figure, Iris<lb />
Herring, chairman; Doris Hock<lb />
aday, Bonnie Davis. Refresh-<lb />
ments, Lib Kittrell, chairman.<lb />
Rachel Dixon, Christine Hellen.<lb />
Lelia Adams, Ella Carawan<lb />
Chaperones, Annie Holloman,<lb />
chairman; "Shorty" Sessoms,<lb />
Helen James, Mary Virginia<lb />
Butt. Lobby, Gretchen Webster,<lb />
chairman; Ernestine Vinson,<lb />
Helen Flynn, Mickey Boyette<lb />
Furniture and Flowers, Doris<lb />
Williams, chairman; Myrtle<lb />
Harris, Margaret Lewis, Sue<lb />
Parker. Publicity, Rosalie<lb />
Brown.<lb />
Billy Knauff and the Oak<lb />
Ridge band will offer the music<lb />
for the gala affair.<lb />
is<lb />
attending the meeting of the 1�?�?J ammy �,randle wafS<lb />
i iouncil on Cooperation in I f,ecU'd� chairman The commit-<lb />
vv ilfl;n,r tee will meet in Austin at least<lb />
HOW 'K .IIil. . . vi <lb />
once and probably more than<lb />
once each week in the future.<lb />
according to Sammy. He esti-<lb />
See Cow mittee on Page Three<lb />
Teacher Education<lb />
held in Chicago.<lb />
For the meeting of this coun-<lb />
cil, the executive committee of<lb />
all national education organisa-<lb />
tions in the country will come<lb />
together to work on educational<lb />
problems connected with the<lb />
war.<lb />
The meeting is scheduled to<lb />
convene from March 27 to<lb />
March 30.<lb />
New BSU President<lb />
By Annie Kate Evans<lb />
er of the dramatic club.<lb />
Hazel Harris as Ellen has the<lb />
title role, supported by Mar<lb />
Alice Charleton as Mrs. Fiske,<lb />
Virginia Cooks plays the part of<lb />
Lucy, Mozelle Hooks is Louisa,<lb />
Betsy Hobgood is Emily, Ruby<lb />
Taylor is Tereca, and Billy<lb />
Greene, Albert.<lb />
Ophelia Hooks, president of<lb />
the club, and Dave Owens will<lb />
act as co-stage managers. They<lb />
have acted in this capacity for<lb />
the past two years for all Chi<lb />
Pi productions.<lb />
William Stanfield Johnson<lb />
heads the scenery construction<lb />
crew. Lona Maddrey is in<lb />
charge of properties and Mary<lb />
Sue Moore is costume mistress.<lb />
Sound directors are Donald<lb />
Perry and Helen Flynn, promp-<lb />
ter is Ruth Bostian and pablic-<lb />
ity is in charge of Margie Dud-<lb />
ley.<lb />
Carol Leigh Humphries has<lb />
been elected to serve as BSU<lb />
president for next year. Since<lb />
Evelyn Stewart graduated<lb />
March 17, Carol Leigh has been<lb />
serving in the capacity of presi-<lb />
dent.<lb />
Coming from Woodsdale,<lb />
Carol Leigh is a rising senioi<lb />
She is a member of the Bethel<lb />
Hill Baptist Church in Woods<lb />
dale. Since enrolling at ECTC<lb />
she has been very active in<lb />
Baptist and YWCA work. As a<lb />
freshman she was vice-presi-<lb />
dent of the Freshman "Y<lb />
During her sophomore year<lb />
she was Extension Director on<lb />
the BSU council. This year she<lb />
is serving as vice president of<lb />
the YWCA and president of one<lb />
of the BTU unions at Memorial<lb />
Baptist church. Holding the of-<lb />
fice of vice-president seems to<lb />
also serves in that capacity in<lb />
the Emerson Society and ACE<lb />
Last summer she taught in<lb />
youth revivals and Vacation<lb />
Bible school for four weeks.<lb />
She plans to do similar work<lb />
again this summer. She also<lb />
plans to attend Ridge Crest this<lb />
summer.<lb />
This charming girl is a gram-<lb />
mar grade major, likes children,<lb />
and is looking forward to hav-<lb />
ing a room full all her own,<lb />
soon. She thinks she is going to<lb />
like teaching, but says she de-<lb />
finitely doesn't like "old maid<lb />
school teachers Her favorite<lb />
hobbies are keeping a scrap-<lb />
book and collecting poems. She<lb />
has a scrapbook of her life his-<lb />
tory and she always closes her<lb />
speeches with a poem from her<lb />
collection.<lb />
Carol Leigh likes to skate,<lb />
play basketball, and fish. The<lb />
eel�but that didn't discourage<lb />
her. She developed a like for the<lb />
sport anyway. Believing that it<lb />
is a long way to go from mule-<lb />
back riding (only member of<lb />
the horse family she has ever<lb />
ridden) to horseback riding,<lb />
she thinks she would like to ride<lb />
a horse, however. Living on a<lb />
farm all her life, she has learn-<lb />
ed to enjoy and appreciate farm<lb />
life and the "wide open spaces,<lb />
of a sort She likes to cook,<lb />
"country style Her favorite<lb />
food is fried oysters.<lb />
"My greatest joy says Carol<lb />
Leigh, "is to serve Christ b<lb />
serving others�m a y b e by<lb />
carrying a program to the<lb />
county home, negro hospital,<lb />
prison camp, helping fellow stu<lb />
dents and such. BSU has meant<lb />
more to me than any other or-<lb />
ganization on the campus and<lb />
through it I've been able to do<lb />
be a jinx with Carol Leigh, she first fish she caught was an more service for Christ<lb />
President Speaks<lb />
On Responsibility<lb />
In Chapel<lb />
Using as his theme the ques-<lb />
tion "Am I my brother's keep-<lb />
er?' President Leon R. Mead-<lb />
ows spoke to the student in<lb />
assembly Tuesday morning,<lb />
March 24.<lb />
After reading the Biblical ac-<lb />
count oC Cain's murder of his<lb />
brother, Dr. Meadows said that<lb />
civilization itself has answered<lb />
Cain's question in the affirma-<lb />
tive ever since it was first ask-<lb />
ed. Every person must assume<lb />
the responsbility for his own<lb />
acts, he said.<lb />
A baby, he said, has no re-<lb />
sponsibility for itself; its<lb />
mother or nurse must meet its<lb />
needs in every way. But as a<lb />
child develops, it can not escape<lb />
gradually assuming responsibil-<lb />
ity for its own life.<lb />
Dr. Meadows then discussed<lb />
the necessity for recognizing the<lb />
responsbility that rests on every<lb />
individual in the audience he<lb />
was addressing, not only for his<lb />
acts, but for the reputation of<lb />
the college he attends, the com-<lb />
muniy he beldngs to, and the<lb />
world of which he will be a<lb />
part.<lb />
Qualifying Test<lb />
For Army, Navy<lb />
To Be Given Here<lb />
Qualifying tests for Army<lb />
and Navy College Training<lb />
Programs especially of interest<lb />
to high school seniors and re-<lb />
cent graduates likely to be<lb />
drafted within the next year,<lb />
will be held in the Austin build-<lb />
ing on Friday morning, April<lb />
2, beginning promptly at 9<lb />
o'clock.<lb />
The purpose of the examina-<lb />
tions is to aid in the selection of<lb />
prospective officer material for<lb />
the Army, Navy, Marine Corps<lb />
and Coast Guard.<lb />
From those who successfullv<lb />
complete the tests, candidates<lb />
will be selected to attend col-<lb />
leges under contract to the<lb />
Army and Navy. Students se-<lb />
lected for the Army Program<lb />
must undergo further screening<lb />
during thirteen weeks of basic<lb />
military training before they<lb />
are finally qualified for college<lb />
attendance. Students chosen for<lb />
the Navy Program after selec-<lb />
tion by the Officer of Naval Of-<lb />
ficer Procurement, will be de-<lb />
tailed directly to the selected<lb />
colleges for training, with all<lb />
expenses paid.<lb />
Such students will be under<lb />
military discipline on active<lb />
duty in uniform with pay, say<lb />
notices received from Army and<lb />
Navy headquarters.<lb />
The test will be administered<lb />
at the college by Dr. Herbert<lb />
ReBarker, dean of men, and Dr<lb />
Beecher Flanagan, of the de-<lb />
partment of sociology and eco-<lb />
nomics. Application blanks are<lb />
now available in Dr. ReBarker's<lb />
office in the Austin building.<lb />
Applicants should either obtain<lb />
and fill them out in advance,<lb />
says Dr. ReBarker, or plan to<lb />
come early on the day of the<lb />
tests, since the work must be-<lb />
gin at the hour set by the gov-<lb />
ernment.<lb />
As these are the only such<lb />
tests to be given for at least six<lb />
months, they offer many boys<lb />
not in the armed forces now,<lb />
but likely to be drafted soon,<lb />
their only opportunity to qual-<lb />
ify for college training and the<lb />
commissions this training usual-<lb />
ly leads to.<lb />
1<lb />
u<lb />
fi<lb />
V<lb /><pb facs="00037918_tn_0002" /><lb />
mm<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, 1879.<lb />
Rosalie Brown 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 Korrespondents<lb />
Sports Editor<lb />
Sports Rvmrter<lb />
Orchids To The Tar Heel<lb />
SATURDAY. MARCH 27, m<lb />
Ray Sparrow<lb />
Floyd Woody<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 Ad riser<lb />
Tconical Adviser<lb />
Member<lb />
North Carolina Collegiate Press<lb />
Association<lb />
Member<lb />
Associated Golle&amp;iate Press<lb />
Distributor of<lb />
Glle6iate Di6est<lb />
REPRE9GN r&amp;D POR NAtiON M. ADVIRTI8INO 8V<lb />
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb />
College Pubiiibers Representative<lb />
420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.<lb />
C�IC�SO � BOSTON � LOI AOOCLES � S�N FRARCIMO<lb />
Support Red Cross<lb />
The Greatest Mother<lb />
When a child is hurt, where does he<lb />
turn first? Yes, he turns to his Mother. So<lb />
is it with a country, or community. In the<lb />
time of disaster it is the American Red<lb />
Cross they turn to. This mighty organiza-<lb />
tion has feed the hungry, clothed the naked,<lb />
and cared for the sick. Though flood, fires,<lb />
bombings, and enemy prison camps the work<lb />
of the Red Cross goes on.<lb />
We hoar so much now a days about<lb />
taxes, donations, and drives that we become<lb />
careless and overlook some. We can not over-<lb />
look this drive the entire nation is putting<lb />
on for the American Red Cross.<lb />
Some people have probably never stop-<lb />
per to think what wonderful work has been<lb />
accomplished through this organization. To-<lb />
day those lonely, wounded, and home-sick<lb />
soldiers, sailors, and marines of ours who<lb />
are in Jap prison camps and Nazi concen-<lb />
tration camps are receiving those letters<lb />
from home. How? The Red Cross. Maybe<lb />
you don't know anyone in on of these camps,<lb />
but one never knows when the tragedies of<lb />
a country at war will "strike home<lb />
We must do our small part in contribu-<lb />
ting to this drive. What if it does mean giv-<lb />
ing up a drink for a few days, or a movie.<lb />
They would and do do as much for us. Give<lb />
what you can to "The greatest Mother of<lb />
them all THE AMERICAN RED CROSS.<lb />
Colleges Must Serve<lb />
by Associated Collegiate Press<lb />
Following is a digest of an address de-<lb />
lieved recently at Haverford college by Paul<lb />
V. McNutt, chairman of the war manpower<lb />
commission:<lb />
Until recently it would never have oc-<lb />
curred to college students to regard them-<lb />
selves in terms of manpower.<lb />
The term is more frequently associated<lb />
with the masses of workers employed by<lb />
large-scale industry than with the fortunate<lb />
minority of carefullv educated individuals<lb />
whom the colleges induct into professional<lb />
and managerial life So when you were regis-<lb />
tered for the national service you may have<lb />
experienced something of the surprise of<lb />
that character in Moliere's play who dis-<lb />
covered that he had been talking prose with-<lb />
out realizing his accomplishment.<lb />
Your government regards you as im-<lb />
portant, whether you are leaving college for<lb />
the military or for other forms of national<lb />
service, because of the exceptional training<lb />
opportunities which you have had.<lb />
It is very important that popular faith<lb />
in the value of our colleges, and in the qual-<lb />
ity of their students, should be sustained.<lb />
The larger educational institutions,<lb />
with facilities for housing, feeding and<lb />
teaching large numbers are naturally and<lb />
properly being called upon more largely<lb />
than others, although by no means exclusive-<lb />
ly, to accommodate the specialized training<lb />
units which the army and navy are setting<lb />
up.<lb />
A number of the smaller colleges, because<lb />
of special facilities or exceptional standards,<lb />
have been selected for pai-ticular forms of<lb />
service lying outside the general army and<lb />
navy plan. But what about those colleges<lb />
which are ouside the general army and navy<lb />
plan and are also overlooked in special<lb />
training plans? Is their place in the war ef-<lb />
fort to be confined to yielding their students<lb />
to the draft and restricting their services to<lb />
education of the handful who are under 18,<lb />
or physically unfit?<lb />
by Associated Collegiate Press<lb />
By H. C. Cranford<lb />
On Feb. 23, 1893, students at the Univers-<lb />
ity of North Carolina awoke to find Volume<lb />
1, Issue I of a new campus newspaper which<lb />
called itself the Tar Heel, Now, half a cen-<lb />
tury later, students at NCU can still climb<lb />
out of bed and find a new issue of the publi-<lb />
cation every day in the week except Monday.<lb />
Attached to the Tar Heel's record of 50<lb />
years of continuous service is a story of hard<lb />
work, ambition and youthful enterprise; a<lb />
story of hundreds of student j ournalists<lb />
who have contributed freelv of their time<lb />
and talents to "get the paper out on sche-<lb />
dule" regardless.<lb />
When the paper celebrated its golden<lb />
anniversary, there was no special super-edi-<lb />
tion, no banquet, no speech-making. Not<lb />
tven a birthday cake �all thanks to the war.<lb />
Instead the regular four-page sheet was<lb />
circulated as usual. Only a couple of "re-<lb />
search years" on the early days of the paper<lb />
by Coed Reporter Sara Yokley and remini-<lb />
scent and somewhat notalgie editorial ap-<lb />
peared to call attention to the event. Manag-<lb />
ing Editor Bob Hoke. in anticipation of a<lb />
gala anniversary, had undertaken weeks be-<lb />
fore to line up important speakers for the<lb />
event and to obtain extra paper allowances<lb />
for a special supplement. Both attempts fail-<lb />
ed because of "government priorities Hoke<lb />
talked the matter over with Editor Vernon<lb />
Harward. The two decided that rather than<lb />
stage a second-rate observance it would be<lb />
better to abandon the plan altogether. The<lb />
Tar Heel Vol. I, No. I was viewed by a skep-<lb />
tical and none-too-receptive campus on that<lb />
cold morning in 1893.<lb />
It was no less an authority than a Har-<lb />
vard professor of journalism who called the<lb />
Tar Heel in 1893 the  . best, brightest,<lb />
newiest college weekly in the Union . . . "<lb />
And today editors of the paper still regard<lb />
this evaluation as a criterion that must be<lb />
preserved at any cost.<lb />
The late Charles Baskerville. who<lb />
taught chemistry at North Carolina for<lb />
many years, was the first editor of the Tar<lb />
Heel. He served for only two months, leav-<lb />
ing to study at the Universitv of Berlin, and<lb />
Walter (Pete) Murphy took over the reins.<lb />
Business manager of the paper in 1893 was<lb />
A. B. Andrews. Jr attorney and former<lb />
secretary of the university board of trustees.<lb />
J. Crawford Biggs, attorney and former<lb />
United States solicitor general, and Caswell<lb />
(Booter) Ellis, former president of Cleve-<lb />
land college were star reporters. Other<lb />
members of the original staff were W. P.<lb />
Wooten, brigadier general in the army, and<lb />
the late Perrin (Punkin' Head) Busbee,<lb />
former Raleigh attorney, who won the an-<lb />
nual eating contest in his senior year by<lb />
polishing off 24 bananas in 144 minutes.<lb />
Whether or not it was due to the fact<lb />
that all members of the staff were athletes<lb />
is open to debate, but the first issue of the<lb />
Tar Heel contained only sports stories.<lb />
In March of 1894 a group of about 200<lb />
Carolina students began a newspaper, the<lb />
Blue and White, in opposition to the Tor<lb />
Heel, which at that time was under the ab-<lb />
solute domination ot fraternity members<lb />
and the Athletic association. Chief objective<lb />
of the Blue and White was complete abolition<lb />
 of campus fraternities. The staff of the sheet<lb />
j fought doggedly fro a. while, but in February<lb />
of 1895 gave up the fight and was absorbed<lb />
; by the Tar Heel. The Blue and White never-<lb />
I theless had a profound and beneficial effect<lb />
 on the Tar Heel, which up until tha time<lb />
" had leaned to one side on many controversial<lb />
! issues. Since then the paper has attempted to<lb />
! presented an impartial view of any campus<lb />
J dispute.<lb />
Society coverage during the early days<lb />
; of the paper was all-inclusive. If a student<lb />
j left town for the weekend and the event<lb />
I escaped mention in the Tar Heel, the editor<lb />
was sternly reprimanded. Of little concern,<lb />
it seems, were doings of the professors.<lb />
When two faculty members received ap-<lb />
pointments as United States ambassadores,<lb />
the Tar Heel used the news as fillers and<lb />
without headlines. Tar Heel columnists<lb />
griped and groaned about the same as they<lb />
do today. They complained because the rail-<lb />
roads stopped giving free tickets to college<lb />
reporters, hinted of impending scandals<lb />
which seldom materialized, scraped up the<lb />
latest dirt about you-know-w ho, re-hashed<lb />
and claimed credit for small-time jokes<lb />
plucked from exchange columns, and drib-<lb />
bled and doodled in general.<lb />
Tar Heel staff men, alarmed at a sudden<lb />
decline in paid advertising, once front-paged<lb />
a story which scolded Chapel Hill merchants<lb />
for skinflint ad buying, as compared with<lb />
the generous practice of Durham concerns.<lb />
The next week advertising hit a new low.<lb />
Some of the stories in early issues have<lb />
a humorous ring today. One article, for in-<lb />
stance, tells of a decision of the librarian to<lb />
chain all seats to the floor to prevent the<lb />
students from drawing them up to the<lb />
stove.<lb />
News as a rule was not more than a<lb />
week or 10 clays old. Some stories, however,<lb />
were 20 days old before they appeared in<lb />
print. The first telegraphed football reports<lb />
were printed only 12 hours late in Novem-<lb />
ber, 1894. Cartoons began to appear the<lb />
same year.<lb />
Shootings, the files of the paper reveal,<lb />
were commonplace on the campus. Class<lb />
rivalry and football celebrations often<lb />
caused deaths and injuries.<lb />
Editorial campaigns were introduced at<lb />
an early date and often did more harm than<lb />
good, as is still the case. One "edit" in 1894<lb />
branded football as a northern game which<lb />
filtered south only six years previouslv and<lb />
would naturally "be changed for the better<lb />
by southern players<lb />
Many of the 62 editors the Tar Heel has<lb />
had hold important positions today through-<lb />
out the nation as jurists, legislators, journ-<lb />
alists, physicians, authors, brokers, and the<lb />
like. J. C. B. Ehringhaus, a former governor,<lb />
was editor in 1901-02. Seventeen editors<lb />
moved into the legal world, 14 entered edu-<lb />
cation. Only 13 (about 20 per cent) stuck to<lb />
journalism as a life profession. Dr. Frank<lb />
P. Graham, president of t h e Greater Uni-<lb />
versity and a member of the national war<lb />
labor board, tops the list of past editors still<lb />
connected with the university. He was editor<lb />
in 1908-09, and was succeeded by O. J. Cof-<lb />
fin, now head of the"department of journ-<lb />
alism. J. Maryon (Spike) Saunders, secre-<lb />
tary of the General Alumni association, took<lb />
charge in 1924. Another editor wro still<lb />
lives in Chapel Hill is Charles Phillips Rus-<lb />
sell, professor of journalism and creative<lb />
writing and an author of note. One of the<lb />
early editors was Dr. Natham W. Walker,<lb />
who was later to become dean of the uni-<lb />
versity department of education. Walter<lb />
Spearman, who was connected with the<lb />
journalism department until last year when<lb />
he entered the army, was editor in 1928-29,<lb />
when the Tar Heel became a daily. One of<lb />
most discussed authors of the decade, the<lb />
late Thomas Wolf, served on the paper in<lb />
1919-1920. Jonathan Daniels, editor of the<lb />
Raleigh News and Observer until he took a<lb />
war job in Washington, and Jake Wade,<lb />
sports editor of the Charlotte Observer, are<lb />
former editors. Others who broke into<lb />
journalism on the DTH include Ralph H.<lb />
Graves, head of the Doubleday. Doran syn-<lb />
dicate: Tom Linn of the New York Times;<lb />
Julian Starr of the New York Sun; J. T.<lb />
Madry, former editor of the Scotland Neck<lb />
Commonwealth. R. D. W. Connor. 1897 edi-<lb />
tor, was appointed by President Roosevelt<lb />
as first national archivist. He is now Craig<lb />
professor of jurisprudence and history in<lb />
the university. Warren T. Polk, editor in<lb />
1916, sold short stories for magazines, ser-<lb />
ved as mayor of Warrenton and is now asso-<lb />
ciate editor of the Greensboro Daily News.<lb />
Editor Daniel L. Grant became a New York<lb />
broker. Still another editor, Don McKee, is<lb />
a well known labor union official. Editor<lb />
Martin Harmon of 1939-40 is now an en-<lb />
sign in the navy on duty in Africa. Don Bis-<lb />
hop, who served as editor in 1940-41, is con-<lb />
nected with the army public relations de-<lb />
partment at Fort Bragg, while last year's<lb />
editor, Orville Campbell, is a yeoman in the<lb />
public relations division of the navy.<lb />
Today dozens of reporters cover the<lb />
campus daily on regular news beats. A staff<lb />
of 50, including a large number of co-eds<lb />
assist Hoke and Harward in the task of see-<lb />
ing that the paper "goes to bed" on time each<lb />
night. Many of the paper's best reporters<lb />
and news editors have left for army and<lb />
navy service, and Hoke has predicted that<lb />
co-eds may be forced to take over the paper<lb />
altogthor next year.<lb />
And so it is that the Tar Heel looks back-<lb />
on 50 years of service to the University of<lb />
North Carolina, and, at the same time, casts<lb />
r determined glance in the direction "of the<lb />
future. "The oldest college daily in the<lb />
Southeast says Managing Editor Hoke,<lb />
"will go on as usual, come hell or high<lb />
water<lb />
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT<lb />
by Margaret Lewis<lb />
'I don't know what I'm goir<lb />
to<lb />
years.<lb />
room-<lb />
now that my 'better hall is gone<lb />
I have been together nearly four<lb />
Metzel had that far away look in his<lb />
when he told us Evan Griffm, his<lb />
mate and best<lb />
friend was leaving<lb />
for the army, April<lb />
15th.<lb />
Capable a n d<lb />
cooperative Metzel<lb />
is a senior, from mw<lb />
Columbia, N. C.<lb />
Majoring in com-<lb />
merce and math.<lb />
He d i d practice<lb />
teaching in Green-<lb />
ville high school and<lb />
like most students<lb />
says, "it wasn't bad<lb />
of roses As to his future Metzel plans to<lb />
get a lick at those Japs and when the lights<lb />
go on again settle down in some business<lb />
to make the most money possible. lie grad-<lb />
uates in July to go right on to Officers<lb />
Training School in the Naval Reserve.<lb />
Simmons, or "Pee Wee" as most<lb />
dents know him. ha done many things to<lb />
make him worthy of a place in this column.<lb />
He was one of seniors chosen this year for<lb />
Who's Who Among Student? in American<lb />
Universities and Colleges. He i? now presi-<lb />
dent of YDC and was treasurer last year.<lb />
He has been a member of MSGA and is a<lb />
Phi Sigma P member. He is a member of the<lb />
Chi Pi Players. This year h" D on the busi-<lb />
ness staff of the Tecoan.<lb />
Metzel spends a great deal of his pas-<lb />
is ;i<lb />
He<lb />
do ! time reading the latesl books pn<lb />
"criff and ber of the book of the Month Club<lb />
cially likes Thomas Wolfs books and h<lb />
ntly read Of Tutu and tin<lb />
C�'l<lb />
r� i<lb />
il<lb />
f t<lb />
11 in b my I<lb />
he acti<lb />
cide. I .<lb />
a a red-h<lb />
 e-W.<lb />
music as<lb />
"Y<lb />
stu-<lb />
I<lb />
second tinu He has a fine collet I<lb />
ing current best sellers.<lb />
States Simmons,<lb />
shows, good or bad and<lb />
actor. A for my pick <lb />
dial's rather had to de<lb />
Greer Garson, though<lb />
oh. boy. 1 like red-h<lb />
classical and semi-classical<lb />
�.cod swing<lb />
If you're a frequent visit r al -<lb />
store you can verify his Btatemenl<lb />
ay 1 jerk sodas . . mostly cracl ic<lb />
When questioned about his<lb />
ood, he says. "Food. Period. Well,<lb />
are extra good, but with the meal<lb />
coming on I can't afford to b cl<lb />
(Incidentally, he doesn't think th<lb />
be over before the fall of 1945L<lb />
Griff says if you ever wanl -<lb />
when he's not out on the campus, "He'<lb />
combing his scalp. He's a fine<lb />
though, and will make some girl a<lb />
band. He keeps the room clean and d<lb />
snore<lb />
Metzel i interested in sports I<lb />
go out for athletics. His favorito<lb />
football and he enjoys prof<lb />
�but not amateur play.<lb />
Xow that Griffin and many oJ<lb />
friends have gone into service -<lb />
anxious to get out and do his parl<lb />
very giad to be able to finish: -� <lb />
Red Cross Needs<lb />
Blood Donations<lb />
During the past two years thousands of<lb />
college men and women from all parts of the<lb />
country have made a contribution to the Red<lb />
Cross of which they may well be proud. This<lb />
contribution consisted of a voluntary dona-<lb />
tion of blood. Collected at the request of the<lb />
Army and Navy, these donations are pro-<lb />
cessed into plasma and serum albumin and<lb />
used on the world's battlefields to help give<lb />
our wounded a much better chance at life.<lb />
The Red Cross Blood Donor Service has<lb />
opened the eyes of many to the real signifi-<lb />
cance of the Red Cross. Through it thous-<lb />
ands who are unable, for a variety of rea-<lb />
sons, to join the fray are sending their blood<lb />
to the very battle lines where it is doing yeo-<lb />
man service.<lb />
There is no question but hat plasma is<lb />
working near miracles on the fighting<lb />
fronts. Great numbers of men who in the last<lb />
war would have died of their wounds are be-<lb />
ing saved because someone back home took<lb />
the time and trouble, and that's all it takes,<lb />
to visit one of the 31 Red Cross blood donor<lb />
centers. Army and Navy medical authorities<lb />
from the Surgeons General down are un-<lb />
stinted in their praise.<lb />
"It is astounding but perfectly true that<lb />
the Navy is losing less than one percent of<lb />
the wounded at Guadalcanal Rear Admiral<lb />
Ross T. Mclntire, Surgeon General of the<lb />
Navy recently reported. "In the first world<lb />
war more than seven percent of the wound-<lb />
ed died of their wounds. These figures ex-<lb />
clude men killed in action<lb />
The wounded, he said ,are flown to a<lb />
hospital on an island several hundred miles<lb />
away. Before being moved, often on the<lb />
battlefield, they receive first aid and fre-<lb />
quently blood plasma transfusions to stop<lb />
hemorrhage and reduce shock.<lb />
Surgeon General James C. Magee of the<lb />
Army, after a recent inspection trip to<lb />
North Africa, cited as an examole of the ef-<lb />
fectiveness of plasma transfursions a case in<lb />
which 400 men were badly burned on a ship<lb />
during one of the landings on that continent.<lb />
"They treated those men with primitive field<lb />
equipment General Magee said, "but be-<lb />
tween midnight and 8 o'clock next morning<lb />
everyone had been properly cared for and<lb />
only six of them died. Blood plasma gets the<lb />
credit to a very large degree<lb />
Plasma is that part of blood from which<lb />
the red and white cells have been removed.<lb />
By a process of evaporation it is reduced to<lb />
a powdered form and needs only to mixed<lb />
distilled water to be ready for use. Packed<lb />
in hermetically sealed tins along with a<lb />
bottle of distilled water and the necessary<lb />
tubing and needles for mixing and admini-<lb />
stering, it is impervious to iungle heat.<lb />
There is no question of delays for blood<lb />
typing, as plasma is universal, and it re-<lb />
quires but moments to mix and administer<lb />
SCUMMING<lb />
By Thi Keyhole Hoi-respondent<lb />
Dit-Dit-Da-Da-Da-Dash�or should we<lb />
say, Dig, Dig. Down. Down Down? No<lb />
Trash! No Hushes! No Dirt! Whose idea<lb />
was this anyhow? How am I going to get my<lb />
little bit O' loving in since they've thinned<lb />
out my favorite bush<lb />
Conditions on the home front have al-<lb />
ready driven many from our midst to for-<lb />
eign ports�We wonder what the 37G girls<lb />
who went home were seeking?? Jordan (Mil-<lb />
dred) clearly stated her reason for going to<lb />
Elm City last-week-end. Did veu catch up on<lb />
that lovin' you've been missing since last<lb />
July. Jordan?<lb />
Simmons, Griffin (now a graduate;<lb />
and Roper vacationed with some fair (?) �<lb />
ouch�damsels in Washington. D. C. Zoom-<lb />
bie! And if you can hold a coupla those and<lb />
still walk out straight in certain night spots<lb />
in 1). C. your money is refunded. It seems<lb />
after proving they were "of age" in one<lb />
swanky club, the waiter still didn't believe<lb />
them and refused to serve�well, anyway<lb />
they walked STRAIGHT out of THAT one<lb />
It's just leaked out! Stop me if you've<lb />
heard this one! Doug Jones (yes, again)<lb />
escorted Dot Starling to the Varsity Dance<lb />
� (We don't get it either) �but it seems the<lb />
florist sent Ruthie, Doug's flowers, probably<lb />
from force of habit.<lb />
Who says Wiley Brown Is eating his<lb />
heart out? He seems just as much that way<lb />
about little, quiet, dignified Clellie Mae<lb />
Croon.<lb />
History is being made on ECTC cam-<lb />
pus. The first coed to marry a girl on cam-<lb />
pus. Freeman Watson took his vows to love,<lb />
honor, and�we'll wait and see�with<lb />
Carolyn Dixon last Thanksgiving!<lb />
Love comes unseen�we only see it go!<lb />
We agree with Dick Gouldin that Dot Edge<lb />
seems to be a pretty good cure for a broken<lb />
heart.<lb />
Lib Darden wasn't the only one made<lb />
happy by a short vist by Pvt. Jack Edwards.<lb />
The line formed to the right as the girls<lb />
greeted him one by one. What's he got that<lb />
we "ain't" got? Don't answer! I know�a<lb />
uniform. (But don't get any ideas that Brv-<lb />
ant and Bernice are the only "guys" around<lb />
this campus who can write this truely crea-<lb />
tive work of art These ole korrespondents<lb />
wear pants, 'tis true, but we could wear<lb />
skirts, too. Couldn't we?)<lb />
Another heart made happy by an alum-<lb />
nus on furlough was, well it was either Mar-<lb />
W<lb />
jorie Rowc. Virgil Ward, or L<lb />
Well. Steve?<lb />
We think it's a good idea<lb />
these days but don't you think its<lb />
patriotism a little too far wh n <lb />
baring men? Mid Maxwell seen- I<lb />
no scruples about sharing )l<lb />
Martini. Rachel. Jane C fti ; Litl<lb />
Oh, well, it's all in the family.<lb />
That Hines girl from Wila<lb />
seems to have Set. Herring well<lb />
she even refused a perfectly good r<lb />
last week-end. Well. well. "Perfectly<lb />
Says he maybe.<lb />
What's this between Donald, th.<lb />
er. and Camille. the pianist? W, ha<lb />
own ideas about there being iusl a<lb />
more there than "musical attraction<lb />
Now students how was "Piec -<lb />
Eight" this time? Have you read th<lb />
jokes? Not bad! By the way. Sit. wh;<lb />
story behind the story on Morris If-<lb />
Wise gal. that Margie Webl<lb />
man. namely Bill G. that might b.<lb />
slip in a few extra ounces, with meat<lb />
ing near at hand. Mavbe In- could gel<lb />
extra pounds for the I). H.<lb />
It seemed like old times to see N<lb />
Wilkerson and Lallah B. Watts at the I<lb />
pus bidding Saturday night and the<lb />
Sunday. Where is your S. A Fisn<lb />
If you think the Beck-Peacock rom<lb />
is smooth, take a look at the Molly E<lb />
and Buddy Murray affair. It speaks<lb />
self.<lb />
We "dood" our best to let you<lb />
what's been going on and some that n<lb />
ain't, too. Come on, folks, get in the grr<lb />
Give your Keyhole Korrespondents a<lb />
thing to find out about. You know v<lb />
about eight weeks that you aren't resl<lb />
ed for from now until the end of ach<lb />
when restrictions are over, please cel<lb />
�and let us know.<lb />
Now who (that call themselves I<lb />
phans") from Jacksonvile, X C<lb />
dedicate "Got A Touch 0 Texas in My<lb />
to Singie Austin and Doris Brock over<lb />
1100 Club'? Joyce Watson and Sister<lb />
Austin also got dedications. "While M-<lb />
Lady Sleeps"�all the way from Hat! <lb />
Point. That card also said that Grei<lb />
girls are O. K. But these girls aren't<lb />
from Greenville. Guess they meant K<lb />
girls in general.<lb />
Bits O' Faski<lb />
asnion<lb />
BY SUE<lb />
CampiiiUssies have adopted patriotism<lb />
for her glamous formular and find it works.<lb />
Miss Campus Glamour finds cute tricks for<lb />
her wardrobe inspite of L-85, fabric short-<lb />
ages. OPA and priorities.<lb />
She still finds a drape shape for dirnd-<lb />
les by running a fine seam up on old table<lb />
cloth, remanents of materials, or whacking<lb />
off the bottom half of an old evening skirt.<lb />
She conserves material but still keeps her<lb />
long, long jackets either bv making Mom's<lb />
old coats, Pop's old suit, or inheritng bro-<lb />
theis jackets, discarded for kakai, olive<lb />
drab, or blue.<lb />
Cotton is her favorite for evening, be-<lb />
cause she feels she's a morale builder in full<lb />
twirling skirts in that material. It's much<lb />
easier to get than rayon or silk. What she<lb />
has she s guards with a glutunous eye. She<lb />
should (although studies or pleasure inter-<lb />
fere too often) keep all her wardrobe press-<lb />
ed, cleaned, and brushed with faces shining<lb />
(except in the case of the rear view of a wool<lb />
skirt!) Wardrobe patriotism is a large part<lb />
I<lb />
The<lb />
of conservation.<lb />
Fashion dictates a blouse spring<lb />
step-child of suits�the blouse now conn<lb />
the fore. With a gang of blouses you can<lb />
dress a suit up or down for any occasion!<lb />
The newest in tailored blouses is the severe-<lb />
ly tailored shirt with a dark Senator's bow<lb />
tie, checked or plain. For best bib and tuck-<lb />
er, a softly feminine one with a big soft bow<lb />
to crush in the neckline of her dress-m�' r<lb />
suit, or a blouse with row por row<lb />
organdy or lace ruffles dresses <lb />
dining and dancing or whatever.<lb />
Hats�ditto. Dress up your 1<lb />
��uii Wit a sportv little number<lb />
Mil e Zoot hat; or add a frou of strav<lb />
ing and flowers a-ton for a spot o' gla-<lb />
Veiling and spice and everything nice�<lb />
that s what little girl's hats are made of; but<lb />
Lncle Sam s own sons require sterner stuff.<lb />
Therefore, hats will problablv not be on the<lb />
list for our clothing ration book of the fu-<lb />
ture.<lb /><pb facs="00037918_tn_0003" /><lb />
9<lb />
RDAY, MARCH 27, 1943<lb />
� ?<lb />
llW<lb />
 WV<lb />
�-ni<lb />
n?<lb />
Itr BO<lb />
in- My<lb />
I<lb />
�n.ille<lb />
I<lb />
W The<lb />
imt' �<lb />
foil can<lb />
Icasi'Ti!<lb />
severe<lb />
Id tuck-<lb />
bft bo<lb />
nice�<lb />
lof: but<lb />
stuff-<lb />
on the<lb />
It he fu-<lb />
The TECO ECHO<lb />
PAGE THREE<lb />
Servicemen's Column<lb />
By Harold Taylor<lb />
 .<lb />
( K<lb />
orge Lautares of<lb />
-� Corps visited the<lb />
week. George is an<lb />
the Ana Costia<lb />
tat ion near Wash-<lb />
C. When asked<lb />
received his Teco<lb />
replied, "Boy, that<lb />
lurun sure gets 'em<lb />
c py of the Teco<lb />
highlight of any<lb />
Cray, a "42 grad-<lb />
to be a real devil<lb />
Jesse is in the<lb />
pa and is now do-<lb />
. nt, and Inl-<lb />
and is getting<lb />
mit training. Af-<lb />
w eeks of success-<lb />
ess is scheduled<lb />
wings and cora-<lb />
1. Lt.<lb />
Staton, a gradu-<lb />
. was on the cam-<lb />
laj s. Joe received<lb />
ning at Quantico<lb />
I here last month.<lb />
nday for San Die-<lb />
where he will be<lb />
Marine Base<lb />
the old saying, "You can't keep<lb />
a j?ood man down<lb /><lb />
If we can get enough news<lb />
about the boys in the services<lb />
we plan to run a column about<lb />
them each issue. The college<lb />
students as well as other readers<lb />
of the paper are anxious to<lb />
know where the ECTC boys are<lb />
n�w and how they're getting a-<lb />
long�so it's up to you boys in<lb />
the services to let us hear from<lb />
you. Write us a card or letter<lb />
and tell us about vourself!<lb />
Pvt. Charles L. Marks, '42<lb />
graduate and preseident of the<lb />
VMCA last year has been<lb />
stationed at Gowen Field. Idahr<lb />
during his period of basic train-<lb />
ing but recently was transfer-<lb />
red to Orgeon State College to<lb />
take a course in Civil Engineer-<lb />
ing.<lb /><lb />
"The army is all right but<lb />
they keep you plenty busy<lb />
writes Frank Marks, who was<lb />
inducted into the army during<lb />
the Winter Quarter. Frank is<lb />
getting his basic training at<lb />
Camp Crowder. Mo.<lb />
h. Fl<lb /><lb />
W t n has recent-<lb />
sioned a 2nd. Lt.<lb />
Air Forces follow-<lb />
� raining at the<lb />
late School at<lb />
a. Charles re-<lb />
A. B. and M. A.<lb />
ECTC and had<lb />
for three years.<lb />
�<lb />
has been ill for<lb />
in the Naval<lb />
he Midshipmans<lb />
!i t -tern but his<lb />
much imporved<lb />
of his illness<lb />
� � ith his class<lb />
to another class<lb />
later. Jennings<lb />
is in the same clas,<lb />
a tVw clays with the<lb />
I will graduate at the<lb />
ime.<lb /><lb />
Bernard Roper,<lb />
Randolph Roper and<lb />
raduate of 1941 visit-<lb />
is a few weeks ago.<lb />
.d jusl graduated at<lb />
ndidate School at<lb />
W. C. Harris, who will be re-<lb />
membered for his work in de-<lb />
sign ing stage scenery at ECTC,<lb />
has received his promotion<lb />
from Ensign to Lt. (jg) in the<lb />
Naval Air Force and has been<lb />
commended by the admiral of<lb />
his command for "excellent<lb />
performance of an operational<lb />
mission of a secret nature He<lb />
is a commanding officer abroad<lb />
a navy bomber and has seen I f01<lb />
service<lb />
iantic.<lb />
on both sides of the At-<lb />
corresponding responsibility<lb />
Responsibility is a trait that<lb />
all student publication staffs<lb />
try honestly to develop, but re-<lb />
sponsibility can develop only in<lb />
proportion to training. Many<lb />
college sheets are put out by the<lb />
students alone, with faculty su-<lb />
pervision at a minimum. Obvi<lb />
ous shortcomings on the part of<lb />
student writers are not justi-<lb />
fied, but the college is still his<lb />
training ground; he is learning,<lb />
if sometimes slowly, to do the<lb />
job right. Maturity is an inde-<lb />
finite period in .development<lb />
'out wherever it is, the under-<lb />
graduate journalist is working<lb />
toward it earnestly. And with<lb />
it comes responsibility.<lb />
Dr. Williams: "Indolence in<lb />
searching for facts results too<lb />
often in the campus paper's, be-<lb />
ing composed entirely from the<lb />
 inner consciousness of the staff<lb />
after assembling in the compos-<lb />
ing room<lb />
This "inner consciousness" is<lb />
inexcusable in most instances,<lb />
but occasionally a lack of co- ;<lb />
operation from news sources;<lb />
themselves force student staff;<lb />
members to round out a news<lb />
story with suppositions and<lb />
guesses, much to the discomfort<lb />
and regret of all concerned.<lb />
Especially is this supposing<lb />
true when student readers de-<lb />
mand news on future events for<lb />
which news is either indefinite<lb />
or insufficient. Lack of person-<lb />
nel h the biggest cause of such<lb />
inefficiency in waitime. lt can<lb />
be safely said that little com-<lb />
ment appears in straight news<lb />
stories.<lb />
Dean Palmer: "Trivialities<lb />
should be banned b.y the editors.<lb />
even though faculty vanity ma<lb />
be injured. It should be possible<lb />
a faculty member to acquire<lb />
ticular students. At sometime<lb />
during the year we attempt to<lb />
get a picture and story in a local<lb />
paper about every member of<lb />
our staff. We promote the<lb />
Emerald about the campus.<lb />
The promotion department<lb />
handles a large bulletin board<lb />
at the University co-op store<lb />
where we place prints of most<lb />
of the pictures taken. A banner<lb />
across this board reads "The<lb />
Oregon Daily Emerald�Always<lb />
first with the latest Above the<lb />
doors of ihe Emerald offices is<lb />
a large white sign with black<lb />
and green lettering, "Oregon's<lb />
most active students pass<lb />
through these doors daily To<lb />
obtain desirable pictures we<lb />
have a regular photography de-<lb />
partment under a photo editor.<lb />
We maintain our own equipment<lb />
and dark room, etc. In addition<lb />
the paper has a standing offer<lb />
to buy any contributed picture<lb />
we think worth running. Pay-<lb />
ment isn't much, usually around<lb />
$.50, but we have received some<lb />
good pictures in this way. Our<lb />
! staff is an alert group. We stress<lb />
 very heavily the idea of "being<lb />
; up on your toes Because of the<lb />
 promotion which 1 have men-<lb />
tioned and for several other rea-<lb />
sons it has become desirable for<lb />
any activity person to work on<lb />
the Emerald. At the first of this<lb />
year we had a staff turnout for<lb />
the editorial side of around 390<lb />
students, of around 150 for th?<lb />
business side. Of these we can<lb />
use only around 90 on the edi-<lb />
torial side and around 75 on<lb />
business. The competition for<lb />
positions is great so we tolerate<lb />
very few inefficiencies.<lb />
The Change<lb />
A SHORT SHORT STORY<lb />
By Charles Craven<lb />
Three officers, a major, cap-<lb />
tain, and Lieutenant, were dis-<lb />
cussing death and philosophy<lb />
in an officers' club in Mel-<lb />
bourne. Death was always emi-<lb />
nent and could always be dis-<lb />
cussed apropos of the mention<lb />
of any phase of the war. In-<lb />
variably the thought of death<lb />
brought expressions of philoso-<lb />
phy and religion.<lb />
The young officers were<lb />
drinking Scotch. They always<lb />
liked to drink when they dis-<lb />
cussed death because when they<lb />
drank with their discussions<lb />
they could talk about death as<lb />
college boys talked about being<lb />
drafted.<lb />
"I am an agnostic I suppose<lb />
said the lieutenant who was ver<lb />
young; his shirt was open at the<lb />
neck and his neck was very clear<lb />
and youthful.<lb />
"Huxley said agnostic?" the<lb />
captain asked.<lb />
"Yes<lb />
"Huxley could as well used<lb />
ignoramus from the Latin re-<lb />
They laughed.<lb />
"You have other instincts be-<lb />
side eating reminded the cap-<lb />
tain. "There is one instinct<lb />
which is not moral<lb />
"Yes, but marriage is in-<lb />
stinctive said the lieutenant.<lb />
"That makes the other instinct<lb />
moral<lb />
"It isn't used much over here,<lb />
now<lb />
The captain refilled thei'<lb />
glasses from the bottle from the<lb />
table. v<lb />
"Hemingway said 'What is<lb />
moral is what you feel good af<lb />
ter, and what is immoral is<lb />
what you feel bad after " the<lb />
captain said.<lb />
"He makes you think<lb />
"What else did Hemingway<lb />
say?" asked the young lieu-<lb />
tenant.<lb />
"I don't know. He is a very<lb />
good novelist<lb />
"Genius<lb />
"Yes, genius<lb />
Everything was very warm<lb />
and comfortable to them. The<lb />
marked the Major, remember smoke was a dense veil around<lb />
ing something he had read and j the lights. The Scotch bottle be-<lb />
bourne was commanding an an-<lb />
ti-craft battery during an air<lb />
raid.<lb />
The gun was in the midst of<lb />
harbor installations, and the<lb />
bombing was very intense in<lb />
that sector. The Japanese air-<lb />
men were endeavoring to de<lb />
molish the harbor installations<lb />
They were pattern bombing and<lb />
the planes screamed down and<lb />
their roar against the great<lb />
blasts of the bombs was terror-<lb />
izing.<lb />
A piece of shaipnei seared<lb />
across the lieutenant's belly and<lb />
severed the visceral and the in-<lb />
testines dropped out in a blue,<lb />
wet blob. The lieutenant cupped<lb />
his hands under them and tried<lb />
to walk. He fell flat because his<lb />
trousers had fallen down around<lb />
his ankles. He laid there with<lb />
the guts mixing with the sand.<lb />
Two privates bent over him.<lb />
Afterwards one private asked<lb />
the other what the lieutenant<lb />
had said. "He said something<lb />
that sounded like T believe "<lb />
answered the other private.<lb />
Bertram Bateman, a graduate<lb />
of 1939. visited the campus<lb />
"e!during the past week. During<lb />
the past six weeks he has been<lb />
studying meteorology at Massa-<lb />
chuttes Institute of Technology<lb />
and after completing the course<lb />
he will be in line for officer's<lb />
training.<lb />
Black and Magenta, Muckiu-<lb />
gum College, New Concord,<lb />
Ohio: We are finding a point<lb />
a new dog. leave town tempor-1 W�JmiJ P� Here te �"<lb />
arilv. or dig in his garden with schedule of points,<lb />
out "comment by a paper . News stories, up to o inches<lb />
What Dean Palmer says about : � . &amp;. "  .�<lb />
trivialities is true, but the na- P��s �ted tan 75 points,<lb />
ture of trivia lacks explanation. ! P�J fj��� E,<lb />
The news editor s beleaguredel �" ,neh over 5 mchea 10<lb />
with what immediately looks to <lb />
be trivia, but news is news<lb />
is news. It is up to the editoi<lb /><lb />
received by Dr.<lb />
- ol two former<lb />
� ing in far away<lb />
letter was from<lb />
rthcutt, who will be<lb />
d by the upperclass-<lb />
star catcher on the<lb />
team two years<lb />
d that on his first<lb />
nam id town in In-<lb />
irmer classmate,<lb />
�Ugh, a graduate<lb />
can imagine the<lb />
boys had talking<lb />
school days.<lb /><lb />
lodges, graduate of<lb />
former president of<lb />
a Pi fraternity,<lb />
ith a 2nd. Lt's. com<lb />
the Marine Offi-<lb />
� f School at Quan-<lb />
i March 23. We hope<lb />
� ind time to spend a I<lb />
around ECTC before!<lb />
to distant parts.<lb />
 �<lb />
(Mike) Barber,<lb />
� liege engineer, who<lb />
.numbered by many<lb />
and members of the<lb />
has written friend.<lb />
he is in Africa. He is<lb />
ny Engineers Unit.<lb />
Collegiate Press<lb />
Review<lb />
hy Associated Collegiate Press<lb />
Lehigh university's Brown<lb />
and WThite recently engaged in<lb />
an editorial tilt with Lehigh<lb />
President Clement C. Williams.<lb />
Dr. Neil Carothers, dean of the<lb />
Lehigh business college, and<lb />
Phillip M. Palmer, dean of the<lb />
arts college, over criticisms of<lb />
collegiate newspapering attri<lb />
buted to them in the College<lb />
Publisher, monthy magazine of<lb />
Pi Delta Epsilon journalism so-<lb />
ciety.<lb />
Referring to the trio as<lb />
"friends of campus publishing<lb />
and backers of the values that<lb />
lie behnd it Brown and White<lb />
explained that they "have both<lb />
commendatory and condemna-<lb />
tory words for this student ac-<lb />
tivity. They speak for colleges<lb />
in general and college publica-<lb />
tions in general; so the Brown<lb />
and White attaches a universal<lb />
significance to their remarks.<lb />
But the Brown and White likes<lb />
to defend itself and its kind at<lb />
every opportunity<lb />
The publication then listed<lb />
what it called "representative<lb />
comments" of the three and pro-<lb />
ceeded to answer them, as fol-<lb />
lows :<lb />
Dr. Carothers: "There is one<lb />
basic defect in college journal-<lb />
ism. It is the freedom granted<lb />
to college journalism without<lb />
to evaluate the news<lb />
sign to it its proper importance.<lb />
The most insignificant news,<lb />
through this procedure, finds its<lb />
proper place. No news is too<lb />
small; it s important to some-<lb />
one. Dean Palmer might be<lb />
failing to account for what<lb />
journalism calls tin "human in-<lb />
teerst" story. Whether human<lb />
nteerst is trivia is for the read-<lb />
er to decide.<lb />
and to as-1 loi.ntr: rated<lb />
University of Oregon Daily<lb />
Emerald (Eugene): We pro-<lb />
mote the idea of the Emerald as<lb />
an institution�an institution<lb />
which has no affilation with the<lb />
faculty, the journalism school.<lb />
or any student group. In other<lb />
words we make it known that<lb />
this paper is not controlled by<lb />
any group and that anyone has<lb />
an equal chance as far as get-<lb />
ting to the top. We have a regu-<lb />
lar promotion department<lb />
which functions vi ry efficient-<lb />
ly. It is the job of this depart-<lb />
ment to get out stories and pic-<lb />
tures about members of the<lb />
staff�usually these stories and<lb />
pictures are sent to the student's<lb />
home town newspaper. In addi-<lb />
tion the Emerald is sent to every<lb />
major daily and weekly paper<lb />
in the state. The promotion de-<lb />
partment handles all requests<lb />
to borrow our engravings, or<lb />
for additional details about par-<lb />
Feature and column material.<lb />
ser inch, rated "good" 25<lb />
fair" 15 points.<lb />
Attendance at weekly staf<lb />
meeting, 25 points; Proof-read-<lb />
ing: Each galley proof pulled<lb />
It) points, Each galley proof<lb />
read 10 points: Each page proof<lb />
read 35 points.<lb />
Rating of copy is done by the<lb />
editor. We have set up a mini-<lb />
mum requirement of 2,000<lb />
points for the semester. Each<lb />
week the points are compueted<lb />
and marked on a large chart in<lb />
the editorial office. Those at-<lb />
taining the requirement will re-<lb />
ceive kevs.<lb />
believed to be true. "Pluralism<lb />
is more concrete<lb />
"It's your life that really<lb />
counts offered the captain.<lb />
"It's how you live that counts<lb />
"It all doesin't make sense<lb />
said the lieutenant, "It all<lb />
doesn't make sense. I can't see<lb />
it. It's all so Goddamned im-<lb />
possible<lb />
"What about religion?" said<lb />
the Major, sipping his drink. He<lb />
tasted the whiskey slowly.<lb />
The lieutenant laughed and<lb />
picked up his glass of Scotch.<lb />
He drank and drew deeply on a<lb />
cigarette letting the smoke drift<lb />
to the ceiling to merge thickly<lb />
about the lights.<lb />
"Religion?" he said, "Reli-<lb />
gion is a most tenuous philoso-<lb />
phy, Major. Religion is man's<lb />
egotism through fear<lb />
The Major thought of Ein-<lb />
stien and smiled.<lb />
"Why have morals then said<lb />
the captain.<lb />
"They are i n s t i n c t i v e<lb />
answered the lieutenant. "They<lb />
are instinctive like eating be-<lb />
cause they are necessary for the<lb />
health and preservation of the<lb />
body<lb />
"You mean you have natural<lb />
inclinations to be moral?" asked<lb />
the captain, dryly.<lb />
The young lieutenant laughed<lb />
and said, "Yes, they are natural<lb />
inclinations<lb />
"You have deviated much<lb />
from your natural inclinations<lb />
came empty. They ordered an-<lb />
other bottle by the white coated<lb />
waiter with the white towel over<lb />
his arm.<lb />
They felt very good with their<lb />
discussion and their comfort in<lb />
the deep leather chairs around<lb />
the glossy topped table.<lb />
"Death is always fearsome<lb />
said the captain.<lb />
"Especially if you're an ag-<lb />
nostic added the Major.<lb />
The lieutenant whose face was<lb />
very flushed said, "Hell, I can<lb />
face death He had seen much<lb />
death. He looked boyish with his<lb />
clear neck.<lb />
"Those who are always as<lb />
close to death as we should have<lb />
more comfort said the Major<lb />
"Yes, we should<lb />
thing more<lb />
death<lb />
The young<lb />
ed his drink.<lb /><lb />
Sometime later<lb />
who had been in<lb />
in the officers'<lb />
SUMMER SCHOOL<lb />
Continued from Page One<lb />
ing and shape their work to<lb />
contribute to immediate aims in<lb />
any additional way that may be<lb />
needed bv the students enrolled.<lb />
CONTESTS<lb />
Continued from Page One<lb />
preliminary debates were being<lb />
held in the various colleges of<lb />
the state this year instead of at<lb />
Carolina, because of transporta-<lb />
tion problems and the difficulty<lb />
of securing rooms at Chapel<lb />
Hill.<lb />
Jii a News Letter, Johns Hop-<lb />
kins university, Baltimore, Md<lb />
News writing: Personal con-<lb />
sultation with all reporters as<lb />
soon as copy is written. Mis-<lb />
takes and desirable changes<lb />
pointed out and copy immedi-<lb />
ately rewritten. Feature: Pic<lb />
torial previews of fine arts ex-<lb />
hibits on a gloss insert, printed<lb />
through the financial assistance<lb />
of the fine arts department.<lb />
Call For That�<lb />
MUCH NEEDED<lb />
NOURISHMENT WHILE<lb />
STUDYING<lb />
GARRIS GROCERY<lb />
" It's In Town We Have It"<lb />
VISIT<lb />
GRANTS<lb />
FOR<lb />
ECONOMY SALE WEEK<lb /><lb />
�<lb />
rn Lewis is still getting<lb />
tion although he was<lb />
nto the army while in<lb />
h. re last Fall. A feature<lb />
in the Teco Echo shortly<lb />
was inducted into the<lb />
id of the high score he<lb />
on the army intelligence<lb />
Si net- that time Osborne<lb />
�mpleted a course in army<lb />
- at Wake Forest college<lb />
now in training at the Of-<lb />
I a ndidate School at Camp<lb />
Osborne is living up to<lb /><lb />
i<lb />
A NATIONAL DRINK<lb />
Iroyalcrown<lb />
Palace Barber<lb />
Shoppe<lb />
The Three Musketeer<lb />
Barbers<lb />
SEE WILLIAMS FIRST<lb />
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BE SURE TO SEE OUR<lb />
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PATRONIZE YOUR<lb />
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A COMPLETE LINE OF SCHOOL<lb />
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THE MEETING AND EATING PLACE<lb />
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have some-1 <lb />
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lieutenant finish-<lb />
the lieutenant<lb />
the discussion<lb />
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for Today<lb />
C&amp;J&amp;01<lb />
Elizabeth Arden draws a clear picture<lb />
of beauty in action in the March 13 issue<lb />
of the Saturday Evening Post.<lb />
Let us show you the Victory Red make-up<lb />
Elizabeth Arden describesThe Efficiency Kit<lb />
for simplified skin care that cuts minutes<lb />
off precious timeElizabeth Arden<lb />
beauty aids designed for these times<lb />
ond this new beauty.<lb />
For your "Right face"<lb />
Victory Red on yovr Hpt, cheeks and fingertip<lb />
lipstick, 1.00 to 2.00; Noll Polish, .75<lb />
Dark Rachel Foundation for a hoalthy all-day alow, I.00<lb />
Rom Rachel Cameo Powder for added radiance, I.7S and 3.00<lb />
Eyelath Pomade to alve lathes a more natural theen, 1.00 and 2.00<lb />
Ellxooeth Arden'i Efficiency Kits for simplified skin care, S.S0 to i.00<lb />
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427 EVANS STREET<lb />
:<lb />
i-<lb />
i<lb /><pb facs="00037918_tn_0004" /><lb />
 �-���  � . � ;<lb />
PAGE FOUR<lb />
The TECO ECHO<lb />
SATURDAY, MARCH 27<lb />
Al<lb />
umni iNews<lb />
H<lb />
Letters from Roanoke Rapids,<lb />
Granville County, Burlington,<lb />
Winterviile a n d Louisburg<lb />
chapters show that all these are<lb />
active and doing valuable work.<lb />
Details concerning their meet-<lb />
ings were not. however, sent in.<lb />
Alumna visits campus�<lb />
Miss Blanche Lancaster, a<lb />
prominent alumna, visited on<lb />
the campus last Tuesday,<lb />
March 23.<lb />
She is now located in Raleigh<lb />
w ith the State Occupational<lb />
Analysis Section as an occupa-<lb />
tional analyst. Before taking<lb />
this position, on which she has<lb />
worked five and half years, she<lb />
was located in Asheville with<lb />
the same type of work.<lb />
Miss Lancaster taught Eng-<lb />
lish and French in Raleigh High<lb />
School for several years.<lb />
She is one of three sisters<lb />
who are graduates of this col-<lb />
lege. Miss Cora Lancaster, who<lb />
is now teaching in the elemen-<lb />
tary schools of Raleigh, and<lb />
Mrs. Martha Lancaster Foun-<lb />
tain, a primary teacher in Tar-<lb />
boro.<lb />
She was happy to attend<lb />
chapel here on the day when<lb />
President Meadows wa<lb />
speaker.<lb />
In the Navy�<lb />
Katherine Jones Ashe. who<lb />
received the A. B. degree in<lb />
English and French from this<lb />
college in 1932. is now station-<lb />
ed at Northampton, Mass as a<lb />
midshipman in the navy.<lb />
In a letter received recently<lb />
she says. "For the first four<lb />
weeks of training or indocrina-<lb />
tion, you are an apprentice Sea-<lb />
man, studying such subjects as<lb />
Naval Law. Naval History,<lb />
Customs and Usage, Ship and<lb />
Aircraft.<lb />
"First of all, you have to<lb />
learn that the station here is a<lb />
ship, the USS Xorthamptu),<lb />
he floors are decks, the stairs<lb />
are ladders, the walls are bulk-<lb />
heads, the bathrooms are heads,<lb />
and "Scuttlebut" is rumor<lb />
She said. too. "This is a<lb />
marvelous opportunity for any<lb />
girl. I can't describe the feeling<lb />
one has about it. Of course, it's<lb />
Avenue with her sister, Mrs. J<lb />
A. Keel, serving as additional<lb />
hostess.<lb />
The president. Mrs. E. P.<lb />
Gerard, called the meeting to<lb />
order. She gave the group ai.<lb />
outline of the work the college<lb />
has asked the chapter to do for<lb />
its quota.<lb />
A nominating committee com-<lb />
posed of Miss Wita Bond, Miss<lb />
Irma Yause, and Mrs. W. M.<lb />
Wester was appointed to name<lb />
a slate of officers.<lb />
A delicious sweet course was<lb />
serving to the following: Mes-<lb />
dames E. P. Gerard, Thomas<lb />
Hall. E. M. Spruill, G. A. Hag-<lb />
gard, Earl Privett. J. M. Brid-<lb />
gets, John Hayes, J. A. Keei<lb />
W. M. Wester and Misses Irma<lb />
Yause and Wita Bond.<lb />
COMMITTEE<lb />
Continued from Page One<lb />
mates that the<lb />
will last throughout the quartet<lb />
"or at least for six weeks<lb />
This committee, which "just<lb />
investigates and reports is in<lb />
vestigating existing condition<lb />
as well as certain past violations<lb />
of the drinking and gambling<lb />
rules. It is investigating speci-<lb />
fic cases in which evidences is<lb />
brought forward by students<lb />
and faculty members who are in<lb />
a position to do so. Individual<lb />
students will be called before<lb />
committee for questioning,<lb />
when facts have been brought<lb />
forward.<lb />
"If anyone is called for an in-<lb />
j vestigation. he is urged to come<lb />
j up and answer the questions to<lb />
 the best of his ability says<lb />
j Crandle. "If he is innocent of<lb />
I any offense, his appearance will<lb />
undoubtedly be to his ad van<lb />
tage<lb />
western University.<lb />
Commenting on the initiative<lb />
of educators throughout the<lb />
country who have sponsored<lb />
clothing drives for Russia's war<lb />
victims, Edward C. Carter,<lb />
president of Russian War Re<lb />
lief, Inc said that boards of ed-<lb />
ucation and school officials have<lb />
recognized the educative value<lb />
of student participation in war-<lb />
related activities, and are giv-<lb />
ing important community lead-<lb />
ership to war relief work.<lb />
Reports to Russian War Re-<lb />
lief national headquarters, Car-<lb />
ter pointed out, emphasize that<lb />
teachers are finding in clothing<lb />
collections a basis for special<lb />
studies on Russia.<lb />
On the receiving end, Carter<lb />
said, recent cables from the<lb />
Soviet Union to Russian War<lb />
Relief describe the enthusiastic<lb />
and greatful response of Rus<lb />
siaan children for the aid being<lb />
sent them by American young<lb />
people. One message, a lettei<lb />
written by five school children<lb />
from the village of Sokolniki,<lb />
in the Moscok region, tells of<lb />
the experiences which they went<lb />
through when the Nazis occu-<lb />
their village.<lb />
children dc<lb />
not know what the Nazi army is<lb />
like the Russian children<lb />
wrote. "We have seen them and<lb />
, we know.<lb />
"The German soldiers took<lb />
whatever they liked, even if<lb />
they had to drag clothes off a<lb />
boy in the street. We were<lb />
afraid to go out on the street<lb />
in shoes, because those of us<lb />
who did so usually returnee!<lb />
barefooted. German soldiers<lb />
took away our fur coats. They<lb />
liked our brief cases, too. So the<lb />
Germans used to stop us on the<lb />
streets, empty our school books<lb />
on the ground and take away<lb />
our brief cases. They were all<lb />
sent to Germany. None of us has<lb />
a brief case anymore. They<lb />
even took some of our tovs<lb />
investigation ,)1(;r<lb />
'iou American<lb />
T<lb />
CLOTHES<lb />
Continued from Page One<lb />
 this drive for clothes for Rus-<lb />
sian War Relief<lb />
Among other school systems<lb />
! which are cooperating with<lb />
work. never houf fe ,Wat Reli!� In?" An<lb />
was possible to do so mh in fZ$B2S&amp;�.<lb />
Typewriter Talk<lb />
one day<lb />
Raleigh ChapU r�<lb />
Miss Mildred Herring, libra-<lb />
rain at the Hugh Morson High<lb />
School, reviewed several out-<lb />
standing new books Thursday<lb />
at the meeting of the Raleigh<lb />
Chapter nf the East Carolina<lb />
Teachers College at the Wo-<lb />
man's Club, and Miss Esther<lb />
Mann. 11th grade pupil and li-<lb />
brary assistant, gave a book re-<lb />
view.<lb />
The following nominating<lb />
committee was appointed to re<lb />
port at the dinner meeting in<lb />
May: Mesdames E. H. Brown-<lb />
ing. J. S. Ferguson and C. J.<lb />
Thoroughgood.<lb />
The chapter hostesses for the<lb />
USO Club at the YMCA next<lb />
week-end. March 27, will be<lb />
Mrs. 0. K. Joyner and Mrs.<lb />
Ethel Crawley, co-chairman,<lb />
and Miss Nita Townsend, Annie<lb />
Laurie Melvin, Mary Lou But-<lb />
ner and Mildred Herring.<lb />
Hostesses were Mesdames O.<lb />
K. Joyner. Ethel Crawley, C.<lb />
W. Bradshaw and Charles M.<lb />
Johnson. Tea and cookies were<lb />
served in the dining room.<lb />
Rock a Mount Chapter�<lb />
The ECTC Alumnae Chap<lb />
ter in Rocky Mount held its<lb />
third meeting of the year on<lb />
Tuesday evening at the home of<lb />
Mrs. W. M. Wester on Western<lb />
QUALITY and QUANTITY<lb />
IN<lb />
CAROLINA DAIRY'S<lb />
DELICIOUS<lb />
MILKSHAKES<lb />
Ore<lb />
troit, Mich Portland.<lb />
Champaign-Urbana. 111<lb />
St. Louis. Mo. In addition<lb />
versity and college officials an<lb />
sponsoring drives at the Uni-<lb />
versity of Illinois, Brown Uni<lb />
versity. Lasell Junior College,<lb />
Barnard College, Penn<lb />
by Associated Colleaiatc Press<lb />
Walter "Bud" Briggs, 23.<lb />
University of Chicago graduate.<lb />
has been wounded covering the<lb />
war for United Press on the<lb />
Araken front in Burma. His<lb />
wounds were not serious, but<lb />
necessitated hospitalization.<lb />
Briggs for a time was corres-<lb />
pondent on the Chicago campus<lb />
for the Chicago Times and upon<lb />
and i graduation joined UP's Chica-<lb />
go bureau. He was sent to the<lb />
Orient about three year ago,<lb />
first to Japan and then to<lb />
Shanghai. After working for UP<lb />
China he took<lb />
in China he took a public rela<lb />
State. Itions job with the Chinese air<lb />
Willianf Woods College, Smith j force but rejoined the UP staff<lb />
College. Westminister College, j after the present conflict began<lb />
Antioch College, the University  Union college and its publi-<lb />
oi Cincinnati. Boston Univers- cation. Concordiensis, are gel-<lb />
lty, Hamilton College, Hood Col ting along with only half their<lb />
7geJhe Connecticut College i usual typewriters. The other<lb />
for omen. ellesley College half have been "drafted" at re-<lb />
Princeton University Carleton quest of the war production<lb />
College.ornell L niversitv, i board <lb />
Wheaten College and North Science for the war, journal-<lb />
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THIR-FRI Jack Benny Ann Sheridan<lb />
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Wilson Nylon Strung 3.75 up<lb />
Wilson Tennis Balls 50c<lb />
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"SPORTSMAN'S HEADQUARTERS"<lb />
Dickinson Avenue at Ninth Street Dial 2418<lb />
ism and liberal arts for the vic-<lb />
tory and peace to follow. This<lb />
is the new slogan of the Henry<lb />
W. Grady School of journalism,<lb />
University of Georgia, as it<lb />
modifies its curriculum to meet<lb />
the demands of war. In ex plan-<lb />
nation of this policy, the fol-<lb />
lowing statement appears in a<lb />
current bulletin going to staff<lb />
members of high school publica-<lb />
tions: "High school journalists<lb />
who want to get as much uni-<lb />
versity education as possible be-<lb />
fore entering the armed services<lb />
will be interested to know that<lb />
the school of journalism is try-<lb />
ing to meet their needs. Modifi-<lb />
cations have been made in the<lb />
degree requirements whereby<lb />
young men may pursue addition-<lb />
al courses in mathematics, phy-<lb />
sics, and related fields if they<lb />
so desire, along with their jour-<lb />
nalism and other liberal arts<lb />
courses. The Grady faculty be-<lb />
lives that it has a program which<lb />
should interest all staff mem-<lb />
bers, especially the 16-year-old<lb />
group (with a least a year or<lb />
two in college), the girls, and<lb />
those who for one reason or<lb />
another cannot enter the mili-<lb />
tary service. Now, as never be-<lb />
fore faculty advisers should<lb />
make a special effort to give<lb />
their staff members educational<lb />
direction. They should be en-<lb />
couraged to see beyond the dur<lb />
ation. Their educational prepa-<lb />
ration and life goals should be<lb />
in terms not only of the all-out<lb />
war effort but of the long years<lb />
that lie ahead. Some one has said<lb />
that the best possible vocational<lb />
guide is this: Choose that life<lb />
work which one would like to<lb />
continue to pursue, just for the<lb />
fun if it, even though he be-<lb />
came independently wealthly.<lb />
For many of us connected with<lb />
high school publications, that<lb />
would be journalism in some<lb />
one of its many forms� news-<lb />
papers, press associations, syn-<lb />
dicates, advertising, magazines<lb />
specialized publications, o r<lb />
radio<lb /><lb />
Men in the fighting forces<lb />
serving abroad are now receiv<lb />
ing sports news of the South-<lb />
west under an arrangement<lb />
worked out by the office of war<lb />
information, the national col-<lb />
legiate athletic bureau and the<lb />
department of information ana<lb />
college publications at Texas<lb />
A. &amp; M. college which depart-<lb />
ment for several years has serv-<lb />
ed as official Southwest con-<lb />
ference sports statisticians.<lb />
Each Monday morning Mike<lb />
Haikin, sports assistant at Tex-<lb />
as A. &amp; M. writes a by-lined<lb />
sports roundup of the preceed-<lb />
ing week with club standings,<lb />
leading scores in the basketball<lb />
race, and highlights of indivi-<lb />
duals and schools, and air mails<lb />
it to the N. C. A. B. at New<lb />
York. There it is put into shape<lb />
for cabling to London, and then<lb />
turned over to the OWI cable-<lb />
wireless section, which then,<lb />
transmits it overseas Tuesday<lb />
night or Wednesday morning.<lb />
It then appears in print for ser-<lb />
vice men in the papers, reach-<lb />
ing Thursday. All Schools in the<lb />
Southwest, and all service teams'<lb />
records, when available, are in-<lb />
cluded in the release. Sports edi-<lb />
tors and others having sports<lb />
news items they would like to<lb />
have included in the weekly re-<lb />
lease should send them to Hai-<lb />
kin.<lb /><lb />
RUSSELL SAGE COLLEGE<lb />
QUILL, TROY, N. Y A week-<lb />
ly press conference has been<lb />
established where authorative<lb />
information is given to the staff<lb />
with release dates. Present are<lb />
the president of the college<lb />
riea'n of women, registrar, voca-<lb />
tional guidance director, head<lb />
of public relations, heads of each<lb />
school in the college, editor of<lb />
the paper, and three reporters.<lb />
To date it has proved very ef-<lb />
fective and has served especial-<lb />
ly to make the paper a recogniz-<lb />
ed organ by the administration.<lb />
Other schools may already have<lb />
this recognition, but in our case<lb />
it was often difficult to ob-<lb />
tain important stories for fu-<lb />
ture release before the press<lb />
conference was initiated.<lb /><lb />
COLLEGIAN REPORTER.<lb />
MORNINGSIDE COLLEGE,<lb />
SIOUX CITY, IOWA: We hold<lb />
our staff meetings during lunch<lb />
hour, having the reporters bring<lb />
their own lunches. The meeting<lb />
are attended nearly 100 r' .<lb />
whereas formerly when held at<lb />
other periods the attendance<lb />
was scanty, in faci almost non-<lb />
existent. Not having a journ-<lb />
alism department, we have dif-<lb />
ficulty getting the writers to<lb />
conform to newswriting prin-<lb />
ciples. After each edition we<lb />
piaster the paper on the walls<lb />
with ratings and suggestions<lb />
written on each story in red<lb />
pencil.<lb />
FOI CONSERVATIONISTS<lb />
the 110 shirt<lb />
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20 at the home of Mr<lb />
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illness of some weeks<lb />
Mrs. Lewis was s<lb />
in Greenville as she<lb />
making her home in t<lb />
a number of years.<lb />
Surviving are the<lb />
and one son, John S.<lb />
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is, mother<lb />
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ied March<lb />
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t, after an<lb />
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ALL OVER THE WORLD<lb />
America's 900,000 aviation workers<lb />
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