<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other"><pb facs="00037920_0001"/>
<lb/>
Strong Leaders<lb/>
ieeded For SCGA<lb/>
The f ECO ECHO<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Elections Next Week<lb/>
Will<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 9,1948<lb/>
Number 13<lb/>
Jew Constitution Ratified By Student Body<lb/>
�� .<lb/>
Broadway Hit Ladies In Retirement<lb/>
To Be Presented Thursday And Friday<lb/>
�<lb/>
Retirement an<lb/>
drama in three<lb/>
- as a Broardwa<lb/>
a i - ago and was<lb/>
vie, v. ill be<lb/>
- hi Pi Play-<lb/>
and Frida<lb/>
Austin Audi-<lb/>
duction will<lb/>
ad way as faj<lb/>
- Miss Caldwell,<lb/>
play in<lb/>
a careful<lb/>
f the cos<lb/>
 same as<lb/>
the i roadwa<lb/>
Leon R. Meadows<lb/>
Attends Meet<lb/>
p<lb/>
 I o<lb/>
rank with<lb/>
i the Chi<lb/>
r the past<lb/>
! fame<lb/>
r n North<lb/>
ays as<lb/>
"Double<lb/>
iirhts<lb/>
ti'<lb/>
lea<lb/>
Flora<lb/>
actres:<lb/>
adwa<lb/>
U� tire-<lb/>
i ather<lb/>
ound<lb/>
�n to<lb/>
.<lb/>
ically<lb/>
two<lb/>
- E<lb/>
play is a<lb/>
alt marshes<lb/>
in the<lb/>
ago. The<lb/>
. murdei<lb/>
tie Eng-<lb/>
a collection<lb/>
1sophomore will play i � � �� ho R bson !<lb/>
1 1 1 .� da Luipino made her j � as thel oduction, j � year. 11 w hose USC . ce, will be Aliee Charl-� d Raleigh of the sup-n the opera<lb/>
tted sis-Emily, will be nd Betsy Hob-in from inj on the i Four<lb/>
RepresentECTC<lb/>
At State Meet<lb/>
At the meeting of the Council<lb/>
on Cooperation in Teacher Edu-<lb/>
cation in Chicago last week-end,<lb/>
from which President Leon R.<lb/>
Meadows returned early this<lb/>
week, the chief problems con-<lb/>
sidered, said President Mead-<lb/>
ows, were financing the school<lb/>
maintaining morale in educa-<lb/>
tion, pre-service and in-service<lb/>
training teachers, and post-war<lb/>
education.<lb/>
Around 75 representatives of<lb/>
the fourteen national education<lb/>
organizations of the country<lb/>
were present at this meeting,<lb/>
which was, for mo.t of them, a<lb/>
substitute for their usual annual<lb/>
convention. President Meadows<lb/>
represented the executive com-<lb/>
mittee of the American Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Teachers colleges.<lb/>
All met first in a general ses-<lb/>
sion, then divided into foui<lb/>
groups to consider separate<lb/>
��pies, and later brought to-<lb/>
jgether th i findings and sugges-<lb/>
! tions of each.<lb/>
Also, representatives of<lb/>
National Safety Organization<lb/>
me1 with the Council, to seek the<lb/>
assistance of teachers collects<lb/>
especially, in carrying out a plan<lb/>
for safety education.<lb/>
The chief suggestions record-<lb/>
ed l�y the Council were the need<lb/>
for the prospective federal aid<lb/>
being offered the schools by the<lb/>
three hundred million subsidy<lb/>
bill now before Congress, the<lb/>
Mrs. May Eure Tyndall<lb/>
Elected Alumni Secretary<lb/>
M is. May Johnson Eure<lb/>
Tyndall. of Ay den, North Caro-<lb/>
lina, has been elected to the<lb/>
position of secretary of the<lb/>
Alumni Association of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College and<lb/>
will arrivi on the campus about<lb/>
the first of May to begin her<lb/>
duties and will continue, in this<lb/>
beginning period of her service,<lb/>
through the first term of the<lb/>
Summer School. This is the im-<lb/>
portant announcement just re-<lb/>
leased by Mrs. J. C. Holland,<lb/>
State president of the Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyndall. who<lb/>
her A. B. degree in June, 1938,<lb/>
was a major in grammar grade<lb/>
education; and for the past two<lb/>
years has been teaching in the<lb/>
elementary grades in Deep Run.<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
As a charter member and the<lb/>
first president of the Ayden<lb/>
( hapter of the Association,<lb/>
Mrs. Tyndall demonstrated her<lb/>
the) leadership and loyal service in<lb/>
the Association. Each year since<lb/>
her graduation she has taken an<lb/>
active part in both her<lb/>
chapter and the Association at<lb/>
large, so that she is well in-<lb/>
formed on the nature of the or-<lb/>
ganization and experienced in<lb/>
many phases of its work.<lb/>
In her senior year in college<lb/>
Mrs. Tyndall was chosen among<lb/>
the "superlatives" of her class<lb/>
as the member with the "most<lb/>
personality It is this striking<lb/>
personality, her friendliness, in-<lb/>
telligence, and poise which also<lb/>
make her well fitted to take over<lb/>
the responsibilities of alumni<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyndall is affiliated<lb/>
w i t h the Aydcn Christian<lb/>
Church and was formerly a<lb/>
member of the Ayden Junior<lb/>
Woman's Club. She is the<lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B.<lb/>
Eure of Whiteville, North Caro-<lb/>
lina.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyndall succeeds Miss<lb/>
Estelle MeClees, the Associa-<lb/>
tion's first secretary, whose<lb/>
 resignation last June to return<lb/>
 to her former position as a<lb/>
Ingram Waiters, senior stu- science teacher in Elizabeth<lb/>
dent in music, presented a piano City left a vacancy that has been<lb/>
' recital with a skill and artistry ; difficult to fill. The committee<lb/>
Dr. W. A. Browne,<lb/>
Father Maurice<lb/>
Vespers Speakers<lb/>
necessity of the development of<lb/>
a retirement system for teach-<lb/>
ers as a contribution to morale<lb/>
in education, the need to train<lb/>
teachers for both immediate and<lb/>
long-time needs, and the impor-<lb/>
tance of trying to envision the<lb/>
needs of the education of the fu-<lb/>
ture from knowledge of the past<lb/>
and of making preparation for<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Dr. W. A. Browne, adviser<lb/>
for the YMCA and a member of<lb/>
the faculty spoke at the Vesper<lb/>
service Sunday evening, March<lb/>
29.<lb/>
Dr. Browne used as his topic<lb/>
"Religious Mannerisms and in<lb/>
received the talk brought out some of the<lb/>
differences in religious ideas<lb/>
and practices that groups have<lb/>
fostered at one time or another.<lb/>
"We cultivate our religion to<lb/>
suit our wishes instead of mak-<lb/>
ing our wishes suit our reli-<lb/>
gion he told the audience.<lb/>
Then turning to some of the<lb/>
"religious mannerisms" in ways<lb/>
of thinking that are practiced<lb/>
j now, he said, "We have acquir-<lb/>
ed, for example, the idea that<lb/>
I some occupations are better<lb/>
.11 than others or that the interests<lb/>
of a few groups are more im-<lb/>
porant than others<lb/>
Dr. Browne warned against<lb/>
failing to recognize values in<lb/>
others. In hating our enemies<lb/>
we may iose sight of the good<lb/>
in them. To get ourselves int<lb/>
the right ways of things we<lb/>
must get right ways of living,<lb/>
he declared.<lb/>
Alice Ferrell of Clayton con-<lb/>
ducted the devotional. Pianist<lb/>
Vern Kuetemyer<lb/>
Arranges Melodies<lb/>
When Jean Abeyounis, Lor<lb/>
raine Pritchard, Linwood Gur-<lb/>
ganus, Camille Jernigan and<lb/>
Denton Russell appear together<lb/>
in concert on May 4th they will<lb/>
include on their program<lb/>
melodies from "Porgy and<lb/>
Bess" in an arrangement which<lb/>
has a unique distinction. The<lb/>
arrangement was made by<lb/>
Private Vernon Kuetemeyer of<lb/>
the Army Air Corps and was<lb/>
completed in the barracks and<lb/>
around the amusement center<lb/>
piano at the army air base in<lb/>
New Orleans where PrivaU;<lb/>
Kuetemeyer is stationed.<lb/>
Last year as a graduating<lb/>
senior in the music department<lb/>
Vernon Kuetemeyer arranged<lb/>
melodies from Jerome Kern's<lb/>
"Showboat" which were sung in<lb/>
a campus concert and repeated<lb/>
this week in chapel. This year<lb/>
although in a much different<lb/>
environment he has found the<lb/>
necessary minutes of time to<lb/>
complete his arrangement of<lb/>
themes from the famous folk<lb/>
opera by George Gershwin. The<lb/>
arrangement includes such<lb/>
familiar numbers as "Summer-<lb/>
time "I Got Plenty o 'Nut<lb/>
tin' " and "It Ain' Necessarily<lb/>
So<lb/>
The four singers and Mis<lb/>
Jernigan will offer a diversi-<lb/>
fied program of solos, duets<lb/>
and ensemble numbers.<lb/>
Bessie Fay Hunt's Motion<lb/>
Carried At Mass Meeting<lb/>
A. L. Dittmer<lb/>
New Officers<lb/>
Elected By BSU<lb/>
BSU officers for next year<lb/>
have been elected by the Bap-<lb/>
tists of ECTC. They are Carol<lb/>
Ieigh Humphries, president;<lb/>
was Dorothin� Massey of" Pleas- Gwendolyn Ward, membership<lb/>
Rudy Walters<lb/>
Gives Successful<lb/>
Piano Recital<lb/>
ant Hill<lb/>
For the vesper hour service<lb/>
April 5, Father Maurice, pastor<lb/>
of St. Gabriel's Catholic Church<lb/>
of Greenville, spoke on the vital<lb/>
need for religion along with<lb/>
formal education.<lb/>
Presiding for the YMCA, the<lb/>
student welfare chairman of the<lb/>
organization, W. B. Harris, pre-<lb/>
sented Miss Pearlie Langston<lb/>
of Four Oaks, who introduce<lb/>
A. L Dittmer<lb/>
To Give Recital<lb/>
Next Tuesday<lb/>
The next musical offering<lb/>
from the Music Department will<lb/>
be given next Tuesday evening,<lb/>
April 13, in the Austin Auditor-<lb/>
ium at 8:30 P. M. when A. L<lb/>
Dittmer. violinist and Mrs. Guy<lb/>
Smith, pianist appear in a con-<lb/>
cert of violin and piano music.<lb/>
Mr. Dittmer of our faculty is<lb/>
well known in and around<lb/>
Greenville for previous appear-<lb/>
ances as a violin soloist. Mrs.<lb/>
Smith, formerly of our faculty,<lb/>
is now organist at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church of this<lb/>
city. She will always be remem-<lb/>
bered for the excellent accom-<lb/>
panying she used to do for the<lb/>
many traveling artists who fre-<lb/>
quently anpeared without an ac-<lb/>
companist; her accompaniments<lb/>
for all of these were, in spite of<lb/>
their extemporaneous nature,<lb/>
practically flawless.<lb/>
The program to be given next<lb/>
vice-president; Mary Cox, de<lb/>
votional vice-president; Ruth<lb/>
McHair, social vice-president:<lb/>
Mary Frances Ellis, secretary;<lb/>
Edna Earle Lange, treasurer; j Tuesday is particularly interest -<lb/>
Jean Dailey, Baptist Student ing from the fact that so many<lb/>
representative; Dorothy Sasser, I contemporary composers are<lb/>
reporter; Rebecca Perry, editor<lb/>
of Key; Dorothy Whitley, music<lb/>
chaiman; Christine Hellen, day<lb/>
student representative; Laura<lb/>
M. Walker, YWA president;<lb/>
Father Maurice. For the special Mary Ann Rogers, Immanuel<lb/>
ion of meni-<lb/>
� D Ita chapter of<lb/>
. Gamma, honorary<lb/>
ternity for teach-<lb/>
the state meeting<lb/>
past week-end.<lb/>
ere three faculty<lb/>
Dr. Lucile Turner,<lb/>
Jei and Miss<lb/>
that won much applause Frida<lb/>
evening, April 2.<lb/>
The program was varied and<lb/>
interesting. Among the com-<lb/>
j positions given, those of modern<lb/>
composers seemed to win most<lb/>
response from the audience<lb/>
Walters' own composition, "Pre<lb/>
lude" was so well received by<lb/>
his listeners that he repeated it<lb/>
See Recital on Page Four<lb/>
that secured Mrs. Tyndall's ser-<lb/>
vices was appointed by Mrs.<lb/>
Holland last June, and was<lb/>
composed of Mrs. J. L. Marconi<lb/>
of Raleigh, Miss Virginia<lb/>
Blount of Roanokc Rapids, Mice<lb/>
Maria D. Graham of the Faculty<lb/>
Advisory Committee to the<lb/>
As. ociation, and Mrs. Holland,<lb/>
ex-officio chairman, of Ral-<lb/>
eigh.<lb/>
music, Jean Abeyounis sang "I<lb/>
Heard a Forest Praying<lb/>
The purpose of education, said<lb/>
the speaker, is not to make<lb/>
walking encyclopedias, but to<lb/>
fit people to live in their own<lb/>
state in life. A man may have<lb/>
any number of degrees, and still<lb/>
not be fit to meet his obliga-<lb/>
tions to his fellow men and God.<lb/>
irn�<lb/>
head of<lb/>
.� ; ai tmi nt of this<lb/>
is a state founder<lb/>
irer, also attend-<lb/>
: the Council,<lb/>
i the general<lb/>
nd was a guest of<lb/>
a ,i reception for Dr<lb/>
ml the state officers.<lb/>
Jenkins, also of the Eng-<lb/>
- ent, spoke at the<lb/>
aft rnoon session as<lb/>
the standing com-<lb/>
oii progress. Miss Nevveli,<lb/>
Education department,<lb/>
ate from the local<lb/>
a isisted in the initi-<lb/>
eremonies for new mem-<lb/>
 and the reception which<lb/>
'��1.<lb/>
Among the initiates wero<lb/>
. for the local chapter, Mrs<lb/>
R. Waiters, of the Home<lb/>
nomics department; Miss<lb/>
Lacy, field worker with<lb/>
State Department of Edu-<lb/>
i ai ion and member of the Home<lb/>
Kconomics faculty; and Mrs.<lb/>
Mary Langston Evans of Man<lb/>
teo, formerly a teacher in the<lb/>
Greenville schools.<lb/>
Members of the Northeastern<lb/>
Chapter of Delta Kappa Gam-<lb/>
ma, including Farmville, Kins-<lb/>
ton, Plymouth and Manteo, will<lb/>
See State Meet an Page Four<lb/>
by Helen Page Johnson<lb/>
I spend a considerable por- contagious,<lb/>
tion of my time observing the<lb/>
habits of my fellow students.<lb/>
By their various movements<lb/>
and migrations they bring the<lb/>
about, to me! I<lb/>
see they<lb/>
fever?<lb/>
year<lb/>
have the fever. What<lb/>
Spring, of course.<lb/>
Yes, Spring is here! I can tell<lb/>
it by the air, the budding of the<lb/>
trees, chirping of the birds, and<lb/>
yes, the pairing off of the birds,<lb/>
and also the ECTC lassies�<lb/>
mostly with the Marines.<lb/>
Along with spring comes this<lb/>
thing called spring fever which<lb/>
is the cause of all the changes<lb/>
on our campus�changes such<lb/>
as sitting on the grass instead<lb/>
of in the parlors. From my<lb/>
window I now see several<lb/>
couples who seem to be lazily<lb/>
enjoying the pleasantness of it<lb/>
all. 'That couple straight in<lb/>
front of my window, is none<lb/>
other than Hazel Branch and<lb/>
Harold Smith.<lb/>
Dr. Haynes has "it too!<lb/>
Look at those most becoming<lb/>
shorts he is wearing. He has his<lb/>
tennis racket, a box of balls, and<lb/>
a little cap sitting back on his<lb/>
heaa, coming toward the tennis<lb/>
courts. This fever seems to be<lb/>
because when I<lb/>
started to dinner I saw more<lb/>
shorts, sweat shirts, and tennis<lb/>
shoes chasing balls on the courts<lb/>
out in front of the college post<lb/>
office.<lb/>
As the girls filed out of their<lb/>
respective dormitories at the<lb/>
sound of the dinner bell last<lb/>
evening, I noticed they had<lb/>
changed their wearing apparell<lb/>
from skirts and sweaters to<lb/>
starched pinafores which<lb/>
brought a look of carefreeness<lb/>
to them. In place of their regu-<lb/>
lar saddle shoes were sandles<lb/>
of every color and kind. From<lb/>
under these straps shone red<lb/>
toe nails, and Harold Taylor re-<lb/>
marked that he had even seen<lb/>
some green ones!<lb/>
Spring Fever has a tendency<lb/>
to make people want to go<lb/>
places and do things. The effect<lb/>
of this on our campus is that we<lb/>
have fewer students here on<lb/>
week-ends.<lb/>
Spring is here and along with<lb/>
it came spring fever which is<lb/>
greatly responsible for the sud-<lb/>
den change brought about on<lb/>
the campus, be careful boys and<lb/>
girls and don't let too much of<lb/>
it get into your hair.<lb/>
Inter-Faith Council<lb/>
To Sponsor<lb/>
Holy Week<lb/>
Recently organized Inter<lb/>
Faith Council composed of<lb/>
representatives from the de<lb/>
nominations the YWCA and the<lb/>
YMCA will sponsor Holy Week<lb/>
services April 19-24, the week<lb/>
preceeding Easter.<lb/>
Short devotionals in the "Y"<lb/>
Hut each afternoon from 1:30<lb/>
til 1:45 concerning the signi-<lb/>
ficance of Holy Week. Every-<lb/>
one is cordially invited to at-<lb/>
tend and share in the worship.<lb/>
Sunday School representative;<lb/>
Annie Sue Perry, Memorial<lb/>
Sunday School representative;<lb/>
Marguerite Ricks, Immanuel<lb/>
Training Union representa-<lb/>
tive; Clarine Johnson, Memo-<lb/>
rial Training Union representa-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
New officers will attend the<lb/>
Spring Retreat in Raleigh,<lb/>
April 9-10, to discuss with tin.<lb/>
6ther officers throughout the<lb/>
state, their plans for next year.<lb/>
They will be installed at a<lb/>
formal party April 30, and will<lb/>
begin their duties May 1.<lb/>
represented. A composition by<lb/>
Efren Zibalist, husband of the<lb/>
beautiful Alma Gluck who died<lb/>
not long ago in the prime of her<lb/>
life: another by Albert Spald-<lb/>
ing, well remembered for his<lb/>
appearance here last fall; an-<lb/>
other by Albert Stoessel, pro-<lb/>
fessor of music at N. Y. U two<lb/>
by Fritz Kreisler, and another<lb/>
by Samuel Gardner, violin in-<lb/>
structor at the Juiliard School<lb/>
of Music in New York�these<lb/>
are all given in answer to the<lb/>
often made query, "Must a<lb/>
musical composition be old to<lb/>
be good?"<lb/>
This concert nas been timed<lb/>
in order that it may at the same<lb/>
time serve as a special feature<lb/>
of the "Greenville Art Festival"<lb/>
See Dittmen on Page Four<lb/>
by Bernice Jenkins<lb/>
By a unanimous vote of al-<lb/>
most the entire student body,<lb/>
the Student Cooperative move-<lb/>
ment, new constitution for the<lb/>
student government association,<lb/>
was accepted and ratified in a<lb/>
mass meeting Wednesday night<lb/>
The n e w government which<lb/>
was presented in full in the<lb/>
April 5 issue of the Teco Echo,<lb/>
will go into effect May 4.<lb/>
Bessie Fay Hunt, chairman of<lb/>
the committee which planned<lb/>
the constitution, put forth the<lb/>
motion "that the constitution<lb/>
and by-laws of the Student Co-<lb/>
operative Government associa-<lb/>
tion appearing in the Teco Echo<lb/>
of April 5, 1943, be adopted and<lb/>
that they go into effect on Ma;<lb/>
4, 1943<lb/>
In the discussion which fol-<lb/>
lowed the motion by Bessie Fay.<lb/>
two amendments to the constitu-<lb/>
tion were carried. Harry Jarvis'<lb/>
suggestion that nominees for<lb/>
cheer leaders be required to try<lb/>
out before the student body at<lb/>
a mass meeting before elections<lb/>
was accepted. James Worsley,<lb/>
moved that the individual, not<lb/>
the organization, be punished by<lb/>
loss of membership for unex-<lb/>
ctised absences from Student<lb/>
Cooperative council meetings.<lb/>
The motion was carried.<lb/>
Two motions concerning the<lb/>
election of marshals were re-<lb/>
jected.<lb/>
In order to insure the consti-<lb/>
tutionality of the coming elec-<lb/>
tions, a list of special provisions<lb/>
was presented by Carlyle Cox,<lb/>
a member of the constitution<lb/>
committee. The provisions were<lb/>
accepted; and a nominations<lb/>
committee composed of eight<lb/>
women and four men was ap-<lb/>
pointed by Estelle Davis, presi-<lb/>
dent of the women's Student<lb/>
Government association, who<lb/>
presided over the meeting.<lb/>
Carlyle Cox was made chairman<lb/>
of the committee, which will re-<lb/>
commend candidates for the<lb/>
major offices of the SCGA at a<lb/>
mass meeting Tuesday night.<lb/>
Elections will be held April 26<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi<lb/>
Elects Officers<lb/>
On Monday night at the regu-<lb/>
lar meeting of the Tau Chapter<lb/>
of Phi Sigma Pi, new officers<lb/>
were elected for the '43-44<lb/>
term. This year for the first<lb/>
time in its history, the fratern-<lb/>
ity elected rising sophomores to<lb/>
offices. The newly elected of-<lb/>
ficers are as follows: President,<lb/>
Clyde Mann, Manteo; Vice-<lb/>
president, Harry J. Jarvis,<lb/>
Hopewell, Va Secretary, Ro-<lb/>
bert B. Morgan, Lillington;<lb/>
Assistant - secretary, Francis<lb/>
Coiner, Newport News, Va<lb/>
Treasurer, Buddy Murray, Ral<lb/>
eigh; and Historian, Belvin B.<lb/>
Beck, of Lexington.<lb/>
Official information regard-<lb/>
ing the Navy College Training<lb/>
Program has been received by<lb/>
the ECTC boys in classes V-l<lb/>
and V-7 in the Naval Reserve.<lb/>
The new Navy College Train-<lb/>
ing Program will be inagurat-<lb/>
ed about July 1, 1943. Qualified<lb/>
students enlisted in the Naval<lb/>
Reserve will be ordered to ac-<lb/>
tive duty as Apprentice Seamen<lb/>
under this program on or about<lb/>
July 1, with pay, subsistence<lb/>
and uniforms. They will be as-<lb/>
signed to colleges with which<lb/>
the Navy will have contracts<lb/>
for further training. Class V-l<lb/>
and V-7 students will initially<lb/>
be assigned to training on the<lb/>
basis of their present or indi-<lb/>
cated major field of concentra-<lb/>
tion and the needs of the ser-<lb/>
vice.<lb/>
The present class V-7 stu-<lb/>
dents who, as of July 1, 1943,<lb/>
have one term or less to com-<lb/>
plete in order to meet the re-<lb/>
quirements for a bachelors de-<lb/>
gre may, if they desire, remain<lb/>
on inactive duty at the college<lb/>
in which they are now enrolled<lb/>
The Navy will enter into con-<lb/>
tracts with selected colleges and<lb/>
universities for the training,<lb/>
housing, feeding and medical<lb/>
service of its students. Colleges<lb/>
are selected by a joint commit-<lb/>
tee consisted of representatives<lb/>
of the Armed Forces and the<lb/>
War Manpower Commission.<lb/>
The list of colleges with which<lb/>
the Navy will have contracts in<lb/>
connection with the Program<lb/>
has not been announced yet.<lb/>
Students who are able to<lb/>
carry elective courses in addi-<lb/>
tion to their Navy Curriculum<lb/>
may do so provided the extra<lb/>
work does not interfere with<lb/>
their proper performance of as-<lb/>
signed duties. Under similar<lb/>
conditions they will be allowed<lb/>
to participate in college athle-<lb/>
tics or other extra-curricular ac-<lb/>
tivities. Navy students may, a4<lb/>
their own personal expense,<lb/>
join all previously established<lb/>
college organizations and fra-<lb/>
ternities which are available to<lb/>
all students on the same terms.<lb/>
The discipline standards of the<lb/>
Navy will be maintained.<lb/>
Pitt county boys in the Re-<lb/>
serve are W. B. Harris and<lb/>
James Worsley of Greenville.<lb/>
Samuel Crandell of Stokes and<lb/>
Max Tucker of Bethel. In all,<lb/>
there are twenty ECTC boys in<lb/>
the Naval Reserve.<lb/>
WAAC Recruiters<lb/>
To Visit Here<lb/>
April 26-27<lb/>
A team of WAAC Recruiters<lb/>
consisting of one WAAC Of-<lb/>
ficer, one Auxiliary and one En-<lb/>
iisted Man will be at East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College on April<lb/>
26th and 27th to answer ques-<lb/>
tions, contact interested girls<lb/>
and take applications for enroll-<lb/>
ment in the Women's Army<lb/>
Auxiliary Corps.<lb/>
The team is making a tour of<lb/>
the major women's colleges in<lb/>
North and South Carolina in an<lb/>
effort to increase enrollments<lb/>
and at the same time expedite<lb/>
enrollment of college girls who<lb/>
have waited until the end of the<lb/>
college semester before joining<lb/>
the rapidly growing corps of<lb/>
the Women's Army.<lb/>
Lt. Dorothy E. Cooper, 3rd<lb/>
Officer of the WAAC and Assis-<lb/>
tant Recruiting Officer of the<lb/>
Charlotte District Recruiting-<lb/>
Headquarters is in charge of the<lb/>
"Collegiate Recruiting Crew<lb/>
Auxiliary Mary E. Foster and<lb/>
Private Bill Mitcham are the<lb/>
members of the team which is<lb/>
covering every major women's<lb/>
college in the two Carolinas for<lb/>
the purpose of enrolling college<lb/>
in the Women's Branch of the<lb/>
U. S. Army.<lb/>
This lightening tour of the<lb/>
major colleges in the Carolinas<lb/>
will cover a total milage of more<lb/>
than a thousand miles, and will<lb/>
take place during the month of<lb/>
April.<lb/>
Women are desperately need-<lb/>
ed now to release men for actual<lb/>
combat duty, and the college wo-<lb/>
men are un untapped source of<lb/>
women-power that is now being<lb/>
called upon to aid in the fight<lb/>
to protect the freedom of<lb/>
America.<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00037920_0002"/><lb/>
ttBHNMMI<lb/>
RAGE TWO<lb/>
TECO<lb/>
The Teco Echo<lb/>
Published Biweekly bu the Students of East<lb/>
Caroliiia 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 8, 18V9.<lb/>
Rosalie Brown Editorin-chief<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
Margie Dudley Charles Craven<lb/>
Louise Tht.mas 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/>
Ray Sparrow<lb/>
Floyd Woody<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Sports Revorter<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/>
Luis Grigsb<lb/>
Beecher Flanagan<lb/>
Sherman M. Park-<lb/>
Cathy Hester<lb/>
Proof Reader<lb/>
Alumni Reporter<lb/>
Editorial Adviser<lb/>
Bnsin ess A d riser<lb/>
Tconical Adviser<lb/>
Mt mber<lb/>
N( rth Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Associated Golle&amp;iate Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Cblle6iateDi6esl<lb/>
NEPREdtKTED FOH : �UOSL OV LffTldlNO BY<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
College Publishers Representative<lb/>
420 Madison Ave New York. N. Y.<lb/>
CHICAOO � BOSTOI. � LOS ANSELES � SAH FRANCISCO<lb/>
JL o X neEditor<lb/>
ay night, as I sat in the library<lb/>
Tu sd.<lb/>
trying to study. I suddenly realized one (and<lb/>
maybe the most important) reason why my<lb/>
eyes are gradually going to the bad. The<lb/>
print in the book, which it is imperitive that<lb/>
I read, was rather small but that was only a<lb/>
minor factor why I couldn't see, As I look-<lb/>
ed around, I noticed that almost everyone<lb/>
was hovered over their work trying to make<lb/>
out their own notes or the printed material<lb/>
before them.<lb/>
Yes, it's just what everyone of us knows<lb/>
�it's those "doggoned" dim lights. Can't<lb/>
something be done about them? I think that<lb/>
if something isn't done this will soon have to<lb/>
lit turned into an institution for the blind<lb/>
and we wouldn't want that to happen! May-<lb/>
be that's one reason why so few students use<lb/>
the library.<lb/>
�Hub White.<lb/>
Commerce Club<lb/>
President Meadows has given his con-<lb/>
sent for the use of a small room in the Com-<lb/>
merce department to be used by Commerce<lb/>
majors as a reading room.<lb/>
The (Commerce club and Commerce<lb/>
sorority met at a call meeting Monday eve-<lb/>
ing, March 29, to discuss plans for raising<lb/>
funds to furnish this room. To this end, the<lb/>
club and sorority are sponsoring a square<lb/>
dance Saturday evening, April 17, in the<lb/>
Wright building. Admission will be 15 and<lb/>
25 cents.<lb/>
Regular meeting of the Commerce club<lb/>
was held Thursday evening, April 1, and<lb/>
officers for the coming year were nominat-<lb/>
ed. Voting will be by secret ballot in the<lb/>
Commerce department sometime soon.<lb/>
FRIDAY, APRIL 9<lb/>
1943<lb/>
WTFWW i- ��  ��   � �vb ,<lb/>
Bits o Fashion<lb/>
BY SUE<lb/>
F r<lb/>
I rs Oi<lb/>
that she<lb/>
Square Dance<lb/>
A square dance, sponsored by the Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi Fraternity was given last Satur-<lb/>
day night at the Campus Building. Levi<lb/>
Evans and his five-piece string band furn-<lb/>
ished the music for the occasion. Mr. Vance<lb/>
Corey, famous in this section for his ability<lb/>
to call square dance sets, led the Virginia<lb/>
Reel, Four-handed Star and other forms of<lb/>
folk dancing. At the end of the dance Mr.<lb/>
Corey remarked that this was one of the best<lb/>
square dances ever held on the ECTC cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
M mbers of the fraternity and the com-<lb/>
mittees on which they served are as follows:<lb/>
Harry Jarvis, "Tete" Beck, and W. B. Har-<lb/>
ris, Door; Nick Zuras and Ray Sparrow,<lb/>
Music; Metzel Simmons, Tickets; Frank<lb/>
Coiner and Robert Morgan, Publicity; and<lb/>
Robert Martin, Russell Rogeron and Nick<lb/>
Zuras checked hats and coats.<lb/>
Cafeteria<lb/>
The East Carolina Teacher's College<lb/>
cafeteria under the supervision of Miss<lb/>
Stella Marie Cox, of the Food department,<lb/>
and with the assistance of the girls, who<lb/>
are taking the lunch room management<lb/>
course, Home Economics 220, are providing<lb/>
well planned, prepared and properly served<lb/>
meals for the training school students and<lb/>
others who wish to get their meals there.<lb/>
Meals are served between the hours of<lb/>
twelve and one o'clock every day except<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Well balanced plate lunches are served<lb/>
three times a week, and soup and sandwiches<lb/>
are served the other two days. Each meal is<lb/>
Marshals for the 1942-43 year will com-<lb/>
plete their term of office when new mars-<lb/>
hals are elected in the general elections next<lb/>
week. Pictured above from left to right are:<lb/>
Top row: Dot Davis, president of the Lanier<lb/>
Society, from Seaboard: Bobby Pritchard,<lb/>
chief marshal. Seaboard; Ann Poythress,<lb/>
president of the Poe. Henderson: Hilda Mar- Grangt<lb/>
tin, president of Emersons, Conway. Second<lb/>
row: Camille Jernigan. Poe, Aulander;<lb/>
Blanche Crisp, Emerson, Oak City; Dot<lb/>
Johnson, Poe, Scotland Neck; Helen Thom-<lb/>
as, Poe, Corinth. Third row: Betty Batson,<lb/>
Lanier, Burgaw; Billy Bryan, Emerson, La Angier.<lb/>
Zalia Carowan, Lanier, Pantego;<lb/>
Adminta Eure, Poe, Eure. Fourth row:<lb/>
Helen Massey, Lanier, Pleasant Hill; Jane<lb/>
Vann, Emerson, Clinton; Nell McCullen,<lb/>
Lakeland, Florida; Inez Stephenson, Lanier,<lb/>
I<lb/>
SCUMMING<lb/>
By The Keyhole Korrespondent<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
The service men must have heard about<lb/>
the lack of dirt on the ECTC campus, for one<lb/>
calm and peaceful morning, while all were<lb/>
quiet and sleeping, a soldier invaded Wilson<lb/>
Hall and had a friendly chat with several be-<lb/>
fuddled lassies. All we have to say is ECTC<lb/>
has the calmest, COOLEST, and most col-<lb/>
lected bunch of girls or else the ddumb-<lb/>
est one we've ever seen. Not a one of them<lb/>
screamed! It seems that even Mr. Beans did<lb/>
not protest when the said person or another<lb/>
(?) spent the night in Miss Morton's private<lb/>
parlor.<lb/>
From the service men back to civilians<lb/>
the Frances Phelps-Emmett Fisher<lb/>
case seems to be about the most potent and<lb/>
all-of-a-sudden affair we've encountered. As<lb/>
for our predictions, we are afraid to predict.<lb/>
sold for the sum of ten cents, which includes<lb/>
a desert. Half pints of milk are sold to the<lb/>
students for one cent and popcicles for five<lb/>
cents.<lb/>
More of the college day students and<lb/>
others are urged to get their lunches at the<lb/>
cafeteria which is located on the first floor<lb/>
of the Wright building.<lb/>
Following are some of<lb/>
menus used:<lb/>
Vegetable soup<lb/>
Meat Sandwiches<lb/>
Rice pudding<lb/>
 <lb/>
Meat loaf<lb/>
Mashed potatoes string beans<lb/>
corn muffins<lb/>
milk<lb/>
 <lb/>
Brunswick Stew<lb/>
, , ' Carrot Stripa<lb/>
whole wheat biscuits<lb/>
vanilla pudding<lb/>
milk<lb/>
the typical<lb/>
Crackers<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
fruit<lb/>
Greens<lb/>
But, Frances, a word to the wise <lb/>
For all of you girls who were afraid<lb/>
Brant and- (?) were joined in Holy Wed-<lb/>
lock last week-end, we have the matter all<lb/>
cleared up and definitely know he's still on<lb/>
the loose.<lb/>
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde have hit the<lb/>
campus�or should we say Miss Jekyll and<lb/>
Mrs. Hide? Yes, these dual personalities<lb/>
really exist in Fleming, Jarvis and Cotten.<lb/>
Why the fictitious names, girls? Maybe<lb/>
that's the explanation for the strange man<lb/>
in the dormitory!<lb/>
Here's a triangle for you. Lorraine<lb/>
Moore, Powell Spaight (State, guy), and<lb/>
Betty Lee Spruill. May the best gal win!<lb/>
We thought the custom of frat pins had<lb/>
ceased to mean "taken but not so with the<lb/>
Teet and Peacock affair, if what we've heard<lb/>
is on the leval.<lb/>
And Lois Green is "pinned Cam Fet-<lb/>
ner has returned and she wears a pair of<lb/>
silver wings! The cradle�it rocks no more�<lb/>
or does it?<lb/>
N Baby Pearsal and "Cosanova" Warren<lb/>
have been seen together somewhat latlev.<lb/>
Now that Troy Rouse is in the army,<lb/>
maybe we'll see if his relationship with Betty<lb/>
Batson and Dot Johnson was just a beauti-<lb/>
ful friendship. They've been together almost<lb/>
constantly, y'know.<lb/>
We hear that Marguerite Ricks is plan-<lb/>
ning to visit her best love in Washington, D.<lb/>
C, this week-end. Can it be that when she<lb/>
returns she will be another among the in-<lb/>
eligibles?<lb/>
Roper, you better watch yourself. You<lb/>
seem to be invincible, but Jean Asbell seems<lb/>
to have a way with her men.<lb/>
Just a reminder folks. Bill Council and<lb/>
Janie Eakes are not allowing their friend-<lb/>
ship (?) to dry-rot.<lb/>
Anchors away my lad  . All hands on<lb/>
deck! Bob Adams is back in town and spend-<lb/>
ing every spare minute with Mary Louise<lb/>
Wallace. Stand back, girls, and worship from<lb/>
afar. She has the situation well in hand.<lb/>
(Pardon the expression, Marines.)<lb/>
Ho hum, folks. Wake up! Don't take life<lb/>
seriously�you'll never get out of it alive.<lb/>
Physical Coddling<lb/>
by Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
Coddling of the nation's youth by auto-<lb/>
mobiles, double feature movies and the<lb/>
radio is reflected in a recent war manpower<lb/>
commission announcement that more than<lb/>
40 per cent of draft registrants arc? being<lb/>
rejected, according to Prof. Leon Kranz,<lb/>
head of Northwestern university's depart-<lb/>
ment of physical education.<lb/>
Prof. Kranz, who was a lieutenant in<lb/>
the army air corps during World War I, says<lb/>
the rejection rate of 35 per cent during that<lb/>
war was serious enough, but that the current<lb/>
rate offers challenge to educational and<lb/>
health authorities. He maintains that many<lb/>
defects which show up in the prime of life<lb/>
orginate from unhygienic practices during<lb/>
childhood.<lb/>
"Petore gas rationing it was a common<lb/>
practice to see youngsters riding to school<lb/>
in the family automobile he said. "They<lb/>
sit through three or four hours at a stretch<lb/>
in the movies and then lounge before the<lb/>
radio for several hours. These practices are<lb/>
going on at a time when the youngsters<lb/>
should be building bodies for the future.<lb/>
"We are not beginning in this country<lb/>
to do a proper job of training our youth in<lb/>
helpful physical pursuits<lb/>
Americans, in Kranz's opinion, have<lb/>
glorified the white collar worker and aban-<lb/>
doned use of the hands except for getting<lb/>
food to the body and dressing themselves,<lb/>
fcven walking is avoided whenever possible<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Kranz blames the high percentage of<lb/>
rejections among older men to what he<lb/>
claims is a misdirected physical training<lb/>
program 'The reason men degenerate so<lb/>
rapidly after 25 he said, "is because they<lb/>
give up the activities of youth and do not re-<lb/>
The college glamour-puss of the ),at<lb/>
gives a deep bow. as the Now American Girl<lb/>
is ushered in mid cheerings from tin-<lb/>
bleachers.<lb/>
This New American Miss has fina<lb/>
given herself a clean scrub off come the<lb/>
winged lips (everybody knew they were<lb/>
faked anyway) ; off, the gobs of mascara<lb/>
"curled" eyelashes: up and back go th<lb/>
snaky locks; and�strike up the band' The<lb/>
new Miss America comes forth smootl<lb/>
feminine. Her hair is much shorter, not al<lb/>
lowed to blow wth the breeze but smooth<lb/>
and simple; her lips are natural in brij<lb/>
red instead of the previous purples; <lb/>
eyes sparkle behind lashes only touched <lb/>
mascara in fact our belle has come on m �� �<lb/>
char.<lb/>
this new Miss America, the dii<lb/>
fashions�Americans, too) de<lb/>
shall be more fetching than ever.<lb/>
Spring has come<lb/>
And winter has went;<lb/>
And Skirts 'n sweaters<lb/>
la past and spent.<lb/>
So the wise ole gal<lb/>
Packs 'em up till later.<lb/>
And wears cute cottons<lb/>
So men'll want to date Yr.<lb/>
Peasants skirts and blouses, nothi<lb/>
new to the campus lassie, this year howe<lb/>
have a new approach. The skirts com<lb/>
deep, rich colors in heavy cottons or ray.<lb/>
the blouses, in bold splash prints in ra<lb/>
jersey with low round drawstrings form!<lb/>
the neck lines and big billowing s!ee<lb/>
Chambray, eyelet embroidery, and seer-<lb/>
sucker are favorites for the little girl dres<lb/>
which are favorites of college girls Pina-<lb/>
fores, drawstring skirts are found in every<lb/>
girl's closet.<lb/>
To go with these "baby" dresses you'll<lb/>
find baby sandles called Alice in Wonder-<lb/>
lands, but which call for number 17. So<lb/>
might choose a play shoe-ropez, or the like<lb/>
which'U retain your glamour and your valu-<lb/>
able coupon.<lb/>
This new Miss America likes to wear u<lb/>
hot' Esnecially since she finds such a van, .<lb/>
of stepn-fetchers in the stores. There are<lb/>
the petite skull-huggeis which MU featun s<lb/>
in pale pastels or in print to mutch a blouse.<lb/>
Or perhaps you'd like one in straw with a<lb/>
big, big rim for your glamorous moment<lb/>
If it's a sporty number you're after fake a<lb/>
tip from General Montgomery and snitch his<lb/>
African beret; it's an adaptable thing, can<lb/>
be worn tipped fore, aft, or sidewavs<lb/>
For a fling-on jacket the Navy has<lb/>
loaned us the pea-jacket, the brief cut cute<lb/>
little double breaster. Or for an elongated<lb/>
number, the trench coat.<lb/>
Madam Chiang Kai-Shek has hit the<lb/>
lecords, she appeared on a fashionable wo-<lb/>
mans college in slacks and fur top coat.<lb/>
Presto, the college lifted its band againsl<lb/>
that versite garment and fashion now de-<lb/>
crees the tunic look of a trench coat worn<lb/>
over slacks. Madam Chiang gave Adrian,<lb/>
the elite Holloywood designer, the inspira<lb/>
tion for new prints tor spring, raw silk<lb/>
showing dragons, fans, and other things<lb/>
oriental.<lb/>
With new glamour and new spring<lb/>
clothes our campus Miss gives a star' per-<lb/>
formance anywhere, anytime so that he's<lb/>
asked back for a curtain call Our new Miss<lb/>
is one-A!<lb/>
Quotable Quotes<lb/>
by Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
"Dictators dare not permit the untram<lb/>
meed and objective study of the institutions<lb/>
and policies of government, but democracies<lb/>
cannot live without it. In everv land it is the<lb/>
holders of irresponsible power, the posses-<lb/>
sors of vested interests, and those who fear<lb/>
a genuine government of the people, who are<lb/>
the first to attempt to suppress the free dis-<lb/>
cussion of pohtcal questions. liberal consti-<lb/>
tutional democracies that know their true in-<lb/>
terests protect and promote the unrestrict-<lb/>
ed study of political institutions and meth-<lb/>
ods, because their own welfare and prore<lb/>
depend upon it<lb/>
P'ot-�am A, Anderson of the Unicns-<lb/>
ity of Minnesota.<lb/>
place them with a suitable program<lb/>
the ZS C�U,d,Create- in the minds of men<lb/>
hev Kl an�e �f continuins training after<lb/>
5JV� glVen up Participation in so-call-<lb/>
ed strenuous games, then we could continue<lb/>
to maintain a high level of bodv conT on-<lb/>
ing well beyond the present age "<lb/>
In this regard, the Northwestern edu-<lb/>
cator challenges the exercise value of Uv0 of<lb/>
towlm? HpmMt P�PU,ar SP�rtS' �lf �<lb/>
bowling He asserts it is a delusion to be-<lb/>
lieve that participation in these sport nro-<lb/>
nesl aTh.adeqUat: Pr�gram of Physical Pf"t.<lb/>
ness. These sports are valuable chieflv for<lb/>
their social relationships and not as condi<lb/>
tioners says Kranz, who shoots golf fatte<lb/>
0 s and bowls in the 200's<lb/>
Kranz recommends that three parts of the<lb/>
body most neglected in everyday activity be<lb/>
given special attention. Thev are the abdo<lb/>
snouioers. or the first he suggests lvintr on<lb/>
the back and repeatedly raising the head and<lb/>
shoulders to a trunk-curl oosition This is<lb/>
arshouldnthraCting th �fcwninai muscles'<lb/>
and should be increased gradually until it<lb/>
can be repeated 60 to 75 times daily To<lb/>
strengthen the feet he recommends more a<lb/>
tive use of th toes in walking. For the frms<lb/>
wv ?2Ste h8 SUgest �ome activity 7n<lb/>
which the body weight is supported such is<lb/>
chinning or pull-ups. ' Ucn as<lb/>
As a general conditioner, Kranz recom-<lb/>
SpadtrRTninrh � ffttrSSK<lb/>
w 5unnmf' he said, is becoming a<lb/>
tEMSEJ8 revived in �? to &amp;<lb/>
'just<lb/>
Vsl' . .<lb/>
week th<lb/>
privi<lb/>
week f�<lb/>
Rouse<lb/>
Doua- <lb/>
left �.<lb/>
trail<lb/>
Ricl '<lb/>
hau "<lb/>
for 1!in<lb/>
.<lb/>
raak<lb/>
Hei<lb/>
the<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
l<lb/>
an inj<lb/>
Rd<lb/>
IT<lb/>
<pb facs="00037920_0003"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
S<lb/>
klDAY, APRIL 9, 1943<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
TV<lb/>
M�<lb/>
r<lb/>
en<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
true it-<lb/>
t f n<lb/>
after<lb/>
i- -call'<lb/>
Hitinue<lb/>
I -<lb/>
If and<lb/>
to be<lb/>
f pro-<lb/>
:al f<lb/>
fiy f�r<lb/>
conds-<lb/>
in the<lb/>
f the<lb/>
be<lb/>
a<lb/>
kity<lb/>
abdo-<lb/>
 and<lb/>
ing on<lb/>
id a<lb/>
'his <lb/>
�ft<lb/>
re �c<lb/>
srm�<lb/>
lty in<lb/>
ich <lb/>
rtcoifl<lb/>
du�l'8<lb/>
iinf <lb/>
r�i<lb/>
With The Armed Fore<lb/>
es<lb/>
By Harold Taylor<lb/>
me<lb/>
� Ml.<lb/>
Buck,<lb/>
becaus<lb/>
i be<lb/>
when<lb/>
is cards<lb/>
came out a mechanic<lb/>
all<lb/>
said ments at the army air base in<lb/>
next New Orleans. Vern wrote thai<lb/>
a buck assembling aircraft parts was a<lb/>
rs who left this I far erv from music, but<lb/>
arm) were Troy Uncle Sam shuffled hit<lb/>
Yaw ard Bright, for him he<lb/>
slie Nelson <lb/>
r Keesler Field After being in the combat<lb/>
i they will gev one for several months, Floyd<lb/>
e air corps. Char- ! Hinton, former three-letter man<lb/>
will report to thefrom ECTC came back to the<lb/>
idquarters in I campus for a brief visit thL<lb/>
but doesn't week. Floyd is a First lieutenant<lb/>
AMERICAN HEROES<lb/>
BY LEFF<lb/>
where he'll b<lb/>
V Victor<lb/>
i kson.<lb/>
i � a 111 <lb/>
19 K)<lb/>
�tain.<lb/>
s V<lb/>
Workman<lb/>
a record<lb/>
tder of Com-<lb/>
339th. Infan-<lb/>
ch is station-<lb/>
South Caro-<lb/>
here when<lb/>
has risen<lb/>
u his present<lb/>
He married<lb/>
rta of Ashe-<lb/>
RoinK in the<lb/>
W ilkerson appeared<lb/>
� me when around<lb/>
s courts during th<lb/>
ls. Herbert grad-<lb/>
<lb/>
ival (lommunica-<lb/>
HarVard Uni<lb/>
and was com-<lb/>
Ensign. Ensign<lb/>
r San Fran<lb/>
sun.<lb/>
now and has many experiences<lb/>
to relate after having seen ser-<lb/>
vice in the thickest of fighting<lb/>
in the far Pacific battle area.<lb/>
Soon after graduating from<lb/>
ECTC in 1941 Floyd entered<lb/>
the Army Air Corps and after<lb/>
training in several states he<lb/>
won his wings and was com-<lb/>
missioned a second lieutenant<lb/>
One of his first assignments af-<lb/>
ter going on actie duty wa?<lb/>
dropping paratroopers at Ft.<lb/>
j Benning. Ga. When the an<lb/>
corpi started experimenting<lb/>
with gliders Floyd found him-<lb/>
self in the midst of it all and was<lb/>
one of the first pilots in the<lb/>
United States to work with<lb/>
gliders.<lb/>
With a South Pacific island<lb/>
as his home base after leaving<lb/>
the states. Floyd made many<lb/>
trips to Guadacanal carrying<lb/>
freight and supplies and bring-<lb/>
ing back wounded marines.<lb/>
Because of an ulcerated<lb/>
stomach he has been grounded<lb/>
since last December and ha<lb/>
YW-YM Elections<lb/>
M.SS. LtFP<lb/>
I<lb/>
 in the Lumber pilot killed, the co-pilot seriously injured, both<lb/>
left motors hot a�ay, left wing on fire and a swarm of Jap Zeros all<lb/>
around Col. L. ti. Saunders took over his bomber's controls above Bou-<lb/>
gainville, escaped the Zeros and saved his seven remaining crew mem-<lb/>
bers' lives by a crash landing on the water at 95 miles an hour. Navy<lb/>
craft rescued them.<lb/>
They give their lives�You lend your money.<lb/>
Loan Bonds.<lb/>
Buy Second War<lb/>
president of the YMCA to suc-<lb/>
ceed Sammy Crandell. He was<lb/>
chosen in a run-off election with<lb/>
Edward Brown.<lb/>
In the same run-off Joe Lassi-<lb/>
ter of Convvay won out over<lb/>
Robert B. Morgan for treasurer.<lb/>
In a previous election Del<lb/>
ton Creech of Smithfield was<lb/>
vice-president; Sylvia chosen secretary and Sammy<lb/>
Strickland of Rich Square was<lb/>
elected vice-president.<lb/>
AMERICAN HEROES<lb/>
BY LEFF<lb/>
Helen Stone of Reidsville was<lb/>
chosen in elections at ECTC the<lb/>
last week in March to serve as<lb/>
president of the YWCA for next<lb/>
year. She will succeed Charlotte<lb/>
Shearin of Rocky Mount in that<lb/>
office.<lb/>
In the same election Willie<lb/>
Mae Daniels of Oxford was<lb/>
chosen<lb/>
Green of Ruduco, treasurer;<lb/>
and Violet Sparks of Reidsville,<lb/>
secretary.<lb/>
As treasurer of the YWCA<lb/>
this year, Helen Stone has sat<lb/>
on the cabinet and been active<lb/>
in the work of the organization<lb/>
She is now president of the Fu-<lb/>
ture Teachers of America on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Miss Dan! -Is has been the "Y"<lb/>
secretary ;his year. She is als-e<lb/>
organizer and first president of<lb/>
the college Four H club.<lb/>
Miss Green has been serving<lb/>
as chairman in charge of<lb/>
properties. Miss Sparks is a<lb/>
freshman .<lb/>
J. C. Shepherd, rising senior<lb/>
from Lexington, was elected<lb/>
Future Teachers<lb/>
Meet In Raleigh<lb/>
1 londa .<lb/>
ked tit lastlbeen at Nichols Hospital in St.<lb/>
lere on a ten Louis. His doctors think he'ii<lb/>
is stationed I Y he can hardly wait to get<lb/>
be flying again soon and Floyd<lb/>
back at the Japs.<lb/>
 <lb/>
: ampa, r lon-<lb/>
� he ground crew of<lb/>
He has taken<lb/>
: 0. C. S. and<lb/>
� � a chance at a com<lb/>
As captain of a<lb/>
m at ' he field this<lb/>
� showed his bud- j<lb/>
was still a good<lb/>
his to animates<lb/>
. mp trophy.<lb/>
beii i hai bliss, jun-<lb/>
ast year, is in North<lb/>
� � orts that he re-<lb/>
colleg ap r regular-<lb/>
glad to get il. He<lb/>
- � ar a large city<lb/>
he best I health.<lb/>
- G. Whtiford, a<lb/>
here last year, re-<lb/>
. . lated from an Army<lb/>
hnicians' School at<lb/>
Wis. i is ;s spend-<lb/>
irlough at his<lb/>
. � ille am<lb/>
Former ECTC women stu<lb/>
dents aren't letting the men get<lb/>
ahead of them in this war. Lt.<lb/>
Mary Beile Clark is a Nurse in<lb/>
a hospital in England and re-<lb/>
in.its that our English allies are<lb/>
very nice people to work with.<lb/>
Ensign Frances E. Nance is<lb/>
working in the office of the<lb/>
Navy Chief of Personnel in<lb/>
Washington. D. C. She got her<lb/>
commission after completing the<lb/>
WAVES Officer Training<lb/>
course at Smith College. North-<lb/>
ampton. Mass.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Other former ECTC girls and<lb/>
their service addresses are list<lb/>
ed below:<lb/>
Mildred Owens, Co. 4. Reg.<lb/>
62nd. WAAC Training Center.<lb/>
Davtona Beach. Fla Edna E.<lb/>
second class in the navy. He is<lb/>
stationed in Norfolk, but is now<lb/>
out at sea. He was in the battle<lb/>
of Casablanca.<lb/>
Gordon Forrest, sophomore<lb/>
here this year, entered the army<lb/>
on March 7, 1943. He was in<lb/>
ducted at Camp Lee, Virginia.<lb/>
Linwood, who attended<lb/>
King's Business College in<lb/>
Greensboro, is now a sergeant<lb/>
at Camp Rucker, Ala.<lb/>
A sister, Christine, is a 2nd<lb/>
Lieutenant in the Army Nurses<lb/>
Corps. She took her nurse's<lb/>
training at Lynchburg, Va.<lb/>
Beatrice Forrest, another<lb/>
sister, is now a grammar grade<lb/>
sophomore in this college.<lb/>
Jim Slay<lb/>
Makes Captain<lb/>
James M. Slav, eldest son of<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Slay of Stu-<lb/>
dent street, has just been pro<lb/>
moted to the rank of captain, ac-<lb/>
cording to word reived yester-<lb/>
day by his parents.<lb/>
Captain Slay is an instructor<lb/>
in the Marine Corps School at<lb/>
Quantico, having been station-<lb/>
ed there in January of last year.<lb/>
Before that he was an instruc-<lb/>
tor in Randolph Macon Aca-<lb/>
demy, Fort Royal. Va.<lb/>
At the state meeting of the<lb/>
Future Teachers of America in<lb/>
Raleigh April 1, Mabel Watson<lb/>
of Fremont, ECTC junior, was<lb/>
elected state secretary for the<lb/>
coming year; and Rebecca Perry<lb/>
of Louisburg, was named to<lb/>
serve on the executive commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
Miss Perry and Edna Earle<lb/>
Lang of Gatesville represented<lb/>
the college at the Raleigh meet-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
FTA is the student branch of<lb/>
the NCEA and the NEA.<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS, j<lb/>
JEWELERS j<lb/>
- Jewelry � Silver j<lb/>
Watch Repairing i<lb/>
Watches<lb/>
Gifts<lb/>
I SCOTT'S dry!<lb/>
I CLEANERS<lb/>
REPAIRS - ALTERATIONS!<lb/>
j All Work Guaranteed <lb/>
BUY<lb/>
Morton's Bakery<lb/>
PRODUCTS<lb/>
L6FF<lb/>
Marine l'vt. 1st Cla-s If. G. Hoffman. survior of the U. S. :?.<lb/>
QU'V Y. �as a loader on one of her big guns until he was unk during<lb/>
an engagement with the Japs off Savo Island in the Solomons.<lb/>
Hoffman i typical of the crew. You are helping Hoffman and his<lb/>
baddies when you buy bonds during the Second War Loan Drive. They<lb/>
ui- their live You lend your money.<lb/>
. all th � . rclassmeu<lb/>
Merle Slater, who<lb/>
: into the army<lb/>
tnior lure last May.<lb/>
� ime Merle has been<lb/>
After crossing<lb/>
en1 a tim or two he<lb/>
Panama where he<lb/>
r -ix months. In<lb/>
e was sent back to the<lb/>
si udy navagation at<lb/>
1 . Id, La. "I haven't had<lb/>
nee I've been in<lb/>
Merle, "so maybe they'll<lb/>
a : v, days leave after<lb/>
� the first part of my<lb/>
ict week James Bul-<lb/>
learning to be a<lb/>
at Selman Field.<lb/>
will re-1 Whitley. WAVES Officer Train-<lb/>
Tampa ing School. Smith College. Nor-<lb/>
thampton, Mass Lucy Inez<lb/>
; Glover. WAVES Training Cen-<lb/>
ter, Bloomington. Indiana;<lb/>
Rachel Farrior. WAACS�ad-<lb/>
dress changed.<lb/>
former students of ECTC and<lb/>
one daughter of Mrs. 0. H.<lb/>
Forrest of Wmterville are now<lb/>
in the service of their country.<lb/>
Hyatt Forrest, an A. B. gracl-<lb/>
i uate of this college in 1938 en-<lb/>
I tered the Navy February 3.<lb/>
I 1943. He was commissioned an<lb/>
j ensign on M arch 4, 1943.<lb/>
'lie will be stationed in Rhode<lb/>
i Island. Prior to his entering<lb/>
! the navy, he had been a teacher<lb/>
I of science in schools of Grimes-<lb/>
land. Pactolus, and was princi-<lb/>
forces.<lb/>
Ola Forrest, who was ECTC<lb/>
unior in 1942 is now a yeoman<lb/>
ERNEST<lb/>
BROWN DRUG CO.<lb/>
The Real Druggist<lb/>
Dial 2815 712 Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
EVERYTHING IN DRUGS<lb/>
Prescriptions Co. refully<lb/>
Compundcd By Registered<lb/>
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COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
I<lb/>
Third at Cotanche, Dial 3722<lb/>
We Appreciate Your<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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PATRONIZE<lb/>
THE MERCHANTS<lb/>
WHOSE ADS YOU SEE<lb/>
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FOR EASTER MERCHANDISE<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
TCkJMIC Spring and Tennis Go Together<lb/>
r a Lir S0 GET SET N0W<lb/>
FANS For The Season Is At Hand!<lb/>
Wilson Racquets 1.95 up<lb/>
Wilson Nylon Strung 3.75 up<lb/>
Wilson Tennis Balls 50c<lb/>
EDWARDS HAS ALL THE ACCESSORIES, TOO!<lb/>
Presses � Covers � Reels � Nets � Visors<lb/>
Court Markers � Shorts � Shirts<lb/>
C. H. Edwards Hardware House<lb/>
"SPORTSMAN'S HEADQUARTERS"<lb/>
Dickinson Avenue at Ninth Street Dial 2418<lb/>
pal of the Ayden School when<lb/>
Four sons, three of whom are;he resigned to enter the armed<lb/>
COME ENJOY THE HOSPITALITY OF<lb/>
THE OLDE TOWNE INN<lb/>
WITH YOUR FRIENDS<lb/>
DIAL 2861<lb/>
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also<lb/>
Vernon Kuetemeyer is<lb/>
r in aircraft instru-<lb/>
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ROYAL CROWN<lb/>
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TRY n FIRST<lb/>
IT QUENCHES THIRST<lb/>
NEHI BOTTLING<lb/>
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 otenville, N. C.<lb/>
See Our<lb/>
COAT SUITS AND COAT FOR EASTER<lb/>
Latest Styles. Spring Colors.<lb/>
SAi EEDf<lb/>
DRY GOODS SHOP<lb/>
503-505 Dickinson Ave.�3rd Door From Five Points<lb/>
Renfrew DNntinQ Go?�?<lb/>
ii<lb/>
ii<lb/>
commercial printers<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
KARES<lb/>
iiiiiiiiii<lb/>
WRIGHT &amp; DITSON<lb/>
Tennis Racquets<lb/>
$4.95 to $11.95<lb/>
�Also�<lb/>
A Limited Supply Of<lb/>
WRIGHT &amp; DITSON<lb/>
Tennis Balls<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
Stationery Store<lb/>
"Your College Store"<lb/>
�HI<lb/>
GIFTS FOR ALL OCCASIONS<lb/>
ARMY STATIONERY AND THE LATEST IN SPRING<lb/>
CLOTHES AT BELK-TYLER'S<lb/>
Be Sure To Visit Our New Third Floor<lb/>
BELK-TYLER CO.<lb/>
"Eastern Caroliims Shopping Center"<lb/>
Ardana Valva Craa<lb/>
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tt� essential  For dry or normal skin the uses rlah<lb/>
Ardona Orange SUn Cream, for �My fWn, petal"<lb/>
textured Ardona Velva Cream. mmmmm<lb/>
BISSETTE'S DRUG STORE<lb/>
427 EVANS STREET<lb/>
The Worlds Most<lb/>
Democratic Shirts!<lb/>
Arrow Hitt, Arrow Trump and Arrow Dale are<lb/>
very democratic fellows.<lb/>
They're three of Arrow's most popular white<lb/>
shirts, because they go well with just about all<lb/>
kinds of necks, complexions, facial contours,<lb/>
suits and ties!<lb/>
All three are Sanforized-labeled (won't shrink<lb/>
even 1), are crowned with those smooth Arrow<lb/>
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HITT, $2.24 TRUMP, $2.24<lb/>
DALE (super-fine broadcloth) $2.75<lb/>
BL0UNT-HARVEY<lb/>
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� . �� �� � .���<lb/>
<pb facs="00037920_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
FRIDAY. APRIL 9. 1943<lb/>
Alumni News<lb/>
1<lb/>
At the state meeting of the<lb/>
Future Teachers of America in<lb/>
Raleigh Thursday, Miss Main)<lb/>
Watson nj' Fremont, ECTC jun-<lb/>
ior was tit,ted state secretary<lb/>
lor the coming year arid Miss<lb/>
Rebecca Perry, student, was<lb/>
named to serve on the executive<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
Miss Perry and .Miss hdn.<lb/>
Earle Lang of Gatesville repre-<lb/>
sented the Robert li. Wrigh!<lb/>
chaj ter of F. T. A. at the Ral-<lb/>
eigh meeting. This is the local<lb/>
chapter of which Helen Stone i-<lb/>
president and Mabel Watson is<lb/>
STATE MEET<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
meet Saturday afternoon in<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall. Mrs. Mabel<lb/>
Evans Jones, president of the<lb/>
chapter, will preside. Miss Jen-<lb/>
kins is vice-president of thiejed plans for a four-week sum<lb/>
group. imer session in which city-bred<lb/>
i the annual national meet-j students will harvest crops by<lb/>
ias been cancelled becausehay an attend classes at night.<lb/>
The Collegiate<lb/>
Review<lb/>
by Associated Collegiate Pres<lb/>
Of more than 350 alumni of<lb/>
New Mexico Highlands uni-<lb/>
versity now in the armed<lb/>
forces. S3 are commissioned of-<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
Brooklyn college has aisclos-<lb/>
m<lb/>
the<lb/>
war, the national presi Baltimore Polytechnic insti-<lb/>
' in. Dr. Margaret ?Strob, of the<lb/>
Wilson Teachers college. Wash-<lb/>
tute has inaugurated a sea di<lb/>
vision, designed to teach pros-<lb/>
UV- Pi 1<lb/>
rsident.<lb/>
!� A. is ih�<lb/>
� n 11 "i' I he nai i na<lb/>
11 w! Associatinn and a'<lb/>
N "tii Carolina Ass 1<lb/>
dent<lb/>
uca-<lb/>
the<lb/>
- and<lb/>
the � lc<lb/>
c curses<lb/>
I es-<lb/>
tt ("hapter 0<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
vi<lb/>
ington, !). 0 attended this pective navy, coast guard and<lb/>
mot-ting to bring the national marine recruits about the life<lb/>
point of view. Her speech at a they will lead on active duty.<lb/>
dinner meeting on Friday eve- College students in the scien-<lb/>
ning on the effect of the war on I tific and technical fields may be<lb/>
the schools of the nation, which deferred until July 1, 1945, un-<lb/>
she declared arc being "bombed hr provisions of a new occupa-<lb/>
by the forces of greed and tional bulletin sent from selec-<lb/>
short-sightedness was a high-jtive service headquarters to<lb/>
light of the program. local boards.<lb/>
Other attending the conven-i Although' women are filling<lb/>
tion from this chapter were many University of Oklahoma<lb/>
Mrs. Mabel Evans Jones, pres- campus jobs formerly held by<lb/>
�: th chapter. Miss Annie men, a man has been hired to<lb/>
1 kins, j rid Miss Edna Robin- wait table in Hester hall, wo-<lb/>
seii of Farmville and Miss Ethel I men's dormitory<lb/>
1 errv.<lb/>
'Iwnouth.<lb/>
he lii<lb/>
tion-<lb/>
r. ,<lb/>
entertaining b<lb/>
. Love (Anni Lot<lb/>
d Mrs. , . W.  gi 1 -<lb/>
1 -harli �tte liaptei<lb/>
rs purple ami<lb/>
�tit decora-<lb/>
he  Mrs<lb/>
DITTMEK<lb/>
Two University of Kentucky<lb/>
sophomores. Billy Hockaday<lb/>
i and James Snyder, are finan-<lb/>
cing their education as profes-<lb/>
sional magicians.<lb/>
Dr. Isaiah Bowman, presi-<lb/>
dent of John Hopkins univers-<lb/>
ity, is new president of Amer<lb/>
icting<lb/>
�veninj<lb/>
co-sponsors f<lb/>
"War and<lb/>
 1<lb/>
in -i. Mrs. J. K.<lb/>
a Miller), Mrs. H.<lb/>
I R salind Sj I<lb/>
� E. Love, Mrs,<lb/>
(Grac Whitaker)<lb/>
I Pi er t Helen G.<lb/>
Fred L. SprocK<lb/>
 � trell), Mrs. Lannie<lb/>
Nancy Brantley), Mrs.<lb/>
irrington (Shirely Mil-<lb/>
� � Lucy flanks, and<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
W mien's club who in this ca;<lb/>
the Greenville'J ican Association for the ad<lb/>
vancement of Science.<lb/>
William II. Hastie, former<lb/>
dean of Howard university law<lb/>
school, has been named winner<lb/>
rlK.L'1 J AL, of the Spingarn medal for 1942,<lb/>
Continued from Page One an annual award by the Nation-<lb/>
end as an encore. al Association for the Advance-<lb/>
fhe two-piano number "Auf ment f Colored People.<lb/>
ii Bergen" by Grieg, played I Leroy H. Durham, graduated<lb/>
Waiters and his teacher, recently from the University of<lb/>
V. Gorrell, was a fea Missouri, completed 16 3-4 years<lb/>
of scho iing with a perfect at-<lb/>
tendance record.<lb/>
The war department has re-<lb/>
leased a list of 119 colleges<lb/>
which have been approved a<lb/>
pre-aviation cadet training cen-<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
Hunter college has started a<lb/>
program under which every<lb/>
freshman, sophomore and jun-<lb/>
ior is required to complete a<lb/>
program or course in one of 30-<lb/>
odd war service training areas<lb/>
which the college offers.<lb/>
Co-eds studying interior de<lb/>
signing at the University of<lb/>
Texas have been asked by post<lb/>
officials from the Del Valle air<lb/>
base to design decorations for<lb/>
the officer's lounge at the base<lb/>
New theater courses in pup<lb/>
petry are offered at Western<lb/>
college, Oxford, Ohio.<lb/>
The University of Utah is the<lb/>
oldest state university west of<lb/>
the Mississippi river.<lb/>
President Edmund E. Day of<lb/>
Cornell university recently was<lb/>
elected president of the Asso-<lb/>
ciation of Land Grant Colleges.<lb/>
Seven hundred fifty students<lb/>
at Illinois Institute of Techno-<lb/>
logy are dividing their time be-<lb/>
tween classroom and actual<lb/>
work industry.<lb/>
All Pomona college men are<lb/>
now required to pass an agility-<lb/>
obstacle course test to determine<lb/>
their physical fitness undo<lb/>
standards set up by the militarj<lb/>
services.<lb/>
Mrs. Mary B. Bondurant, di-<lb/>
rector of placement and studenl<lb/>
aid at the University of Geor<lb/>
gia, is administering a nationa;<lb/>
teacher-clearance center for ta-<lb/>
xational Institutional Teachei<lb/>
Placement association.<lb/>
and Mrs. A. E. Hobgood of this<lb/>
city. Now a junior in college,<lb/>
she was active in dramatics in<lb/>
the Greenville high school, as<lb/>
member of the Black Mas-<lb/>
quers' and taking one of the<lb/>
leads in the plav "Night Must<lb/>
Fall<lb/>
Virginia Cooke will play<lb/>
Lucy, the maid, who with Al-<lb/>
bert, cheerful, corrupt, dapper,<lb/>
helps to solve the mystery. Vir-<lb/>
ginia became known to play-go-<lb/>
ers' last year when she had the<lb/>
leading role in the melodrama.<lb/>
"On the Bridge at Midnight<lb/>
Albert will be played by Bilk<lb/>
Greene of Crossnore. Billy's<lb/>
most outstanding- performance<lb/>
up to the present was as Cathy's<lb/>
drunken brother in "Wuthering<lb/>
Heights<lb/>
Ruby Taylor, sophomore from<lb/>
Greenville and a transfer from<lb/>
Greensboro College, will por<lb/>
tray the Catholic nun. Sister<lb/>
Theresa.<lb/>
Miss Ellen Rion Caldwe<lb/>
teacher in the matnematics<lb/>
part ment is directing "Ladi<lb/>
it<lb/>
stage managers.<lb/>
Stanfield Johnson is head<lb/>
the stage crew and Katie E<lb/>
(twons and Jerry Aibritt<lb/>
in charge of property -<lb/>
Mary Sue Moore is in cha<lb/>
of costumes and Marge D ,<lb/>
of publici .<lb/>
Ruth Bostian is prompter.<lb/>
play directing and experience in<lb/>
plays at Randolph Macon Col-<lb/>
lege and at Columbia Univers-<lb/>
ity. She has directed plays in<lb/>
Nashville, Tenn before coming<lb/>
to Greenville.<lb/>
Having seen the. play on<lb/>
Broadway and having had an<lb/>
intervh w after the play with the<lb/>
star. Miss Robson, makes Miss<lb/>
Caldwell especially eapabh of<lb/>
directing Ladies in bire<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Later Miss Caldwell watched<lb/>
the Nashville Little Theatre<lb/>
group give a creditable per-<lb/>
formance of the play.<lb/>
Denton Rosselk who directed<lb/>
"Martha" last quarter, is assis-<lb/>
ting as technical director. Mem<lb/>
bers of the Chi Pi Players art<lb/>
assisting in various ways.<lb/>
Ophelia Hooks, president of<lb/>
the club, and Dave Owens are<lb/>
ft- �����<lb/>
SEE OUR<lb/>
N w Line Of<lb/>
DRESSES AND COA<lb/>
FOR SPRING<lb/>
B L 0 0 M ' S<lb/>
R<lb/>
tin ment. .She assistec<lb/>
directing the opera. "Martha<lb/>
Miss Caldwell had courses<lb/>
Palace Barber<lb/>
Shoppe<lb/>
The Three Musketeer<lb/>
Barbers<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
Continued from Page One<lb/>
ECTC stage for the first time.<lb/>
Mozelle's brother was active In<lb/>
the Carolina Play makers So-<lb/>
ciety while a student at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of North Carolina<lb/>
Betsy is the daughter of Mr<lb/>
QUALITY and QUANTITY<lb/>
CAROLINA DAIRY'S<lb/>
iw<lb/>
of the program because ol<lb/>
coordination attained be-<lb/>
n the two instruments.<lb/>
Assisting the pianist was<lb/>
Jean Abeyounis, soprano, with<lb/>
Dent �'� Rossell of the musk<lb/>
faculty as her accompanist, who<lb/>
three pleasing songs.<lb/>
Walters will graduate in<lb/>
music at the college in June.<lb/>
I VISIT THE j<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH!<lb/>
"Where The Gang Eats" j<lb/>
Call For That�<lb/>
MUCH NEEDED<lb/>
: RISHMENT WHILE<lb/>
ST1 DYING<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
"� It's I �� Towi W IIa�� 11"<lb/>
SEE IS FOR YOUR<lb/>
Spring Furniture? Rugs<lb/>
and Etc.<lb/>
WAR BONDS ON SALE HERE EVERYDAY<lb/>
SIN - MON<lb/>
"STAND BY FOR ACTION<lb/>
Root. Taylor<lb/>
John Carroll<lb/>
TUE - WEI)<lb/>
Rita Hay ward<lb/>
"HIT PARADE of 1943"<lb/>
Thur-Fri�'� AT THE FRONT' in North Afric<lb/>
� � GREENVILLE<lb/>
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lent 01 lenin suits,<lb/>
hambrays, seers . k<lb/>
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rody's<lb/>
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<lb/>
On<lb/>
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<pb facs="00037920_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>