<?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="00037932_0001"/>
 the<lb/>
ssing<lb/>
ver<lb/>
Mrs'<lb/>
who<lb/>
PQ<lb/>
lie'(rh,<lb/>
ac-<lb/>
'��'Sby-<lb/>
i the<lb/>
-hap.<lb/>
any<lb/>
East<lb/>
A w<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
argt<lb/>
' the<lb/>
wet.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-res?<lb/>
I<lb/>
ar-<lb/>
;its<lb/>
O.<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
jrs<lb/>
It<lb/>
DO<lb/>
la-<lb/>
test<lb/>
th<lb/>
Promote Victory<lb/>
Bv Buying Bonds<lb/>
Th<lb/>
e TECO ECHO<lb/>
Get Into Swing<lb/>
At Dance Tonight<lb/>
s<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1944<lb/>
Number 7<lb/>
Dr. McGinnis Submits New Plan<lb/>
For Class Absences to Students<lb/>
i.f the Student Co<lb/>
� day night,<lb/>
v ard  McGtnnia<lb/>
. lera for<lb/>
� � ions a plan<lb/>
and cuts The<lb/>
dance is<lb/>
Every class<lb/>
me edu-<lb/>
tudenl ami<lb/>
Uty on l'th<lb/>
ttructor. Ah-<lb/>
� numbers may<lb/>
i holastic stan-<lb/>
 ith absence<lb/>
. i ausc of late<lb/>
. <lb/>
to ab-<lb/>
-aisfac-<lb/>
r adn is ton to<lb/>
i instruc-<lb/>
�<lb/>
� necessary to<lb/>
. 5, the regula-<lb/>
spplj '<lb/>
� . I nl - may be per-<lb/>
more ab-<lb/>
. iurse than<lb/>
v - of credit hours<lb/>
irse, or<lb/>
�' regular e<lb/>
on and Btan-<lb/>
 rk) a week in the<lb/>
c ise may be ac-<lb/>
r for these ab-<lb/>
National Exams<lb/>
Given Teachers<lb/>
At Romans College<lb/>
On Match 17-18, 1944. there will<lb/>
c given National Teacher examina- <lb/>
�ien�. at the Woman' College of the j<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Jreensboro, which at present is the<lb/>
only examining center in the state.<lb/>
The par ose f the f examinations<lb/>
 to make teacher qualifications for<lb/>
'ifferent states a? uniform as pos-<lb/>
i! lc Many school systems, partic-<lb/>
larly in the North nd East, and<lb/>
Ctentially in the South require tests<lb/>
esolta along with other information<lb/>
�bout the individual in judiri'ig quali-<lb/>
Ications of an applicant for beaching<lb/>
o ition.<lb/>
Until 1940 there was no competent<lb/>
teacher examination designed for na-<lb/>
tion-wide use. It was in this year<lb/>
that the American Council on Edu-<lb/>
i cation, through its National Commit-<lb/>
i Lee on Teacher examinations inaugu-<lb/>
Above is the staff for ECTC's nursery school. Standing, from ! rated the preparation and administra-<lb/>
U 11 to right, are Miss Helen Finch, faculty director, Annie Audrey , tion of such tests, which are the tests<lb/>
Stephenson, Mildred Copeland, Ada Willey and Janice Marine, "ow required by many of the more<lb/>
Gretchen Webster and M&amp;rjorie Privette are seated. desirable school systems to be taken.<lb/>
The results from these examina-<lb/>
tions are not the sole basis for teach-<lb/>
er selection, but are considered along<lb/>
with such qualifications as experi-<lb/>
ence, academic marks, etc. Such<lb/>
examinations are limited to intellec-<lb/>
tual, academic, and cultural ma-<lb/>
terials. Emphasis is placed on func-<lb/>
tions and application rather than<lb/>
facts, thus specific preparation is not<lb/>
essential. All examinations are of<lb/>
objective type, consisting of multiple<lb/>
choice items, and will extend over<lb/>
two full days, each day including<lb/>
about six hours of actual testing<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Examination fees are $7.50 per per-<lb/>
son and include reporting of test re<lb/>
Alec Templeton to Appear Here<lb/>
In Concert, Friday, February 11th<lb/>
m<lb/>
NURSERY SCHOOL STAFF<lb/>
Pres. Dorothy Lewis Deems<lb/>
Dime March Drive Success<lb/>
ALEC TEMPLETON<lb/>
Dot Lewis, chairman of the Infan- i<lb/>
the larger; but l(. par:iiysis Drive on the campus,<lb/>
. dices may be n.prts that the amount of money<lb/>
� cla<lb/>
given by the students amounted to<lb/>
176.00. Dot acted as chairman of the<lb/>
collect ions from Wilson dormitory<lb/>
with the following students from Jar-<lb/>
ergency, and pro- v;s Fleming, Cotton, Ragsdale and<lb/>
 used with- j);iv students: Mary Young Bass.<lb/>
excuse the absences j,  Earp, Clarine Johnson, J. C.<lb/>
nal absences shepherd. Clifton Nelson, Frances<lb/>
r �� � : n application of junstall and Jane Harrison, respec-<lb/>
Vbse&amp;CC Commit- tjTejy. Also represented were the<lb/>
Only illness of the y gtore and the Practice house by<lb/>
 illness in his im- Kranr. Newby.<lb/>
representation of the "Each chairman had sub-chairmen<lb/>
� : d activity, or like (,n tiu. vanUs balls of the dormitories.<lb/>
ttter will be interpreted Through the cooperation of everyone<lb/>
justifying such ad- we fvv that the drive on our campus<lb/>
ace waa a reat success. The amount,<lb/>
� shall not receive $73 00 collected this year exceeded<lb/>
ourse in which the total 1;lsl year's amount by $29.00 Dot<lb/>
also says, "Thanks to everyone for<lb/>
oces equals one-<lb/>
� class meetings<lb/>
g the quarter, ac-<lb/>
NNIS on Page Four)<lb/>
Jarvis Forensic<lb/>
Selects Debaters<lb/>
For State Meet<lb/>
his splendid cooperation<lb/>
Gotten hall led the contribution<lb/>
with a total of 119.65, Wilson and<lb/>
Jarvis were close behind with $16.14<lb/>
and $16.07, respectively. Fleming<lb/>
was fourth with $11.90.<lb/>
WILLIAM MILLER BURKS<lb/>
William Miller Burks, affection-<lb/>
ately known as "Smut" to those<lb/>
who were privileged to know him,<lb/>
died Thursday morning at his<lb/>
home on Eighth street after sever-<lb/>
al weeks of serious illness.<lb/>
His winning personality and<lb/>
brilliant mind endeared him to his<lb/>
classmates and teachers while he<lb/>
uas enrolled as a student here.<lb/>
"Smut" graduated from Green-<lb/>
ville high school where he was a<lb/>
member of the Monogram club and<lb/>
the editorial staff of the school<lb/>
newspaper "Green Lights<lb/>
After enrolling at East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers college, majoring in Eng-<lb/>
lish and music, he made a name<lb/>
for himself in various campus or-<lb/>
ganizations. He was a member of<lb/>
the Chi Pi Players, the varsity-<lb/>
tennis team and Co-editor of the<lb/>
Teco Echo. For two years he was<lb/>
manager of the college varsity<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
No Not Hollywood Glamour<lb/>
But Just ECTC's "Y" Store<lb/>
Alec Templeton, the famed pianist,<lb/>
i improvtter, and composer, will ap-<lb/>
 pear here at the Wright auditorium<lb/>
next Friday evening, February 11,<lb/>
beginning his program at 8:00. He<lb/>
romes here a the third entertain-<lb/>
m nt of the year, soon to be followed<lb/>
V Eileen Farrell, whose concert was<lb/>
" tponed.<lb/>
Mr. Templeton, who is starred over<lb/>
�' weekly radio progiam Wednesday<lb/>
nights from 10:30 to 11:00 over the<lb/>
Columbia network, is one of Ameri-<lb/>
ca's mast popular musicians. He is<lb/>
r nsidered by music critics as the<lb/>
' iremost of the few remaining im-<lb/>
 visers. As a piano satirist, he<lb/>
can take a popular hit and perform it<lb/>
in the different styles of the masters,<lb/>
or take a classic and literally put it<lb/>
'in the groove John Hutchens,<lb/>
radio editor of the New York Times,<lb/>
described him as  a serious<lb/>
musician of distinction,  a prac-<lb/>
tioner of the now rare art of musical<lb/>
improvisation,  an uproariously<lb/>
funny mimic. The fact is there is no<lb/>
me remotely like him . . <lb/>
A native of Wales, Mr. Templeton<lb/>
came to the United States in 1936<lb/>
and has since become a citizen of this<lb/>
country. During the eight years that<lb/>
 he has been here American music has<lb/>
become a part of his life. This can<lb/>
sandwich, two cream puffs, a l e easily seen in his own composj.<lb/>
; on what "a won- �� fo"r he makes extensive use of<lb/>
I He ny cne<lb/>
school officials will be made upon re-<lb/>
quest and payment of fifty cents<lb/>
The test need be taken only one time. : one ls<lb/>
symphony.<lb/>
by JACKIE DELYSLE ! ham<lb/>
Just as Hollywood stars have their :ok . uu wuat �  j tions.<lb/>
Coconut Groves and Brown Derbys lerful breakfast they have just had ! the jazz jdjg Even though he is<lb/>
ECTC has its famous "Y" store. Al- Dave I wens�bright as a new cop- noted as being a champion of jazz,<lb/>
though our "pepsi-Collinses" are a per penny�drools in and polutes the j he is a foremost artjst 0f serious<lb/>
little weak, and our "bar-jerkers" not place with his new black cigar music.<lb/>
so experienced in the art of making "Marajuana .Madness In hjs propram here Mr. Templeton<lb/>
beverages, we ain't eomplainin Hiram Mayo and Mickey Ross are j wiU mcude several of his own com-<lb/>
The quietness and solitude of the Jouched in one booth, their heads i posjtjons and his famous improvisa-<lb/>
��Y" store jrive it an atmosphere more bent eve, a list of figures�a budget j tions Tho first part 0f ft will <lb/>
devoted to serious music when he will<lb/>
play Beethoven's Pathetique Sonata.<lb/>
After intermission the second part of<lb/>
his program will include the playing<lb/>
of modern music by such famous<lb/>
composers as Debussy and Rachmani-<lb/>
noff. In the final group will be pre-<lb/>
sented his own compositions and im-<lb/>
provisations.<lb/>
susceptible to study even than that of : it turns out to be.<lb/>
few minutes�<lb/>
suits to superintendents anywhere, to,the library. The gentle clank-clank We eavesdrop. .<lb/>
the candidate and to the dean of the of the ice-breaker, Ben Brown's soft Strams of 'bsten here, you cat I saw<lb/>
college. Additional reports of test I voice whispering in Gertie Woolard s him first and you leave him alone or<lb/>
results, which are kept on permanent U-ar. John Charlton's soap box ora- 111 smack yonr- -face! reach our<lb/>
by the National committee, to! tions. and "Is's" melodic voice call- blocked ear.<lb/>
ignals to "Admiral Morgan And too, like the Coconut Grove,<lb/>
Christian Students<lb/>
Form Campbell Club<lb/>
Efforts have been made to secure<lb/>
� sub-center at East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers college, but as yet no definite re-<lb/>
sult has been obtained.<lb/>
Any senior interested or desiring<lb/>
further information may see Dr. Carl<lb/>
L. Adams, and through him obtain<lb/>
application blanks, which must be<lb/>
sent to Greensboro not later than<lb/>
Saturday, February 19, 1944.<lb/>
eeting of the Jarvis<lb/>
cm -day, January 25,<lb/>
Students on the campus belonging<lb/>
to the Christian church recently met<lb/>
an dorganised the Campbell club.<lb/>
Heretofore there has been no college<lb/>
, who organisation for the students of this<lb/>
 in the debate with denomination. With thehelp of Dr.<lb/>
led for the near fu- .11. G. Haney, pastor of Eighth Street<lb/>
selected are Amanda Christian church. Mrs. I aul R cks,<lb/>
 Elsie West; those on Sunday school teacher of the college<lb/>
lass and Sylvia Greene, student<lb/>
Methodist Group<lb/>
Hears Bradshaw<lb/>
At Recent Meet<lb/>
Y Group Sponsors<lb/>
Religious Program<lb/>
team are Kathryn e<lb/>
. Miriam Averette. The worker, the group was organized m-<lb/>
were Miss to activity.<lb/>
g the decisions<lb/>
� P wen, Dr. Paul Toll, and<lb/>
� r Flanagan.<lb/>
niery, Resolved "That the<lb/>
 should coperate in<lb/>
g and maintaining an In-<lb/>
i . � Force upon the de-<lb/>
f the Axis is the national<lb/>
. ry for ir.ter-collegiate con-<lb/>
-<lb/>
f the more outstanding teams<lb/>
made c.p of Carlyie Cox and Jen- <lb/>
gs BaUard, both of whom are now j<lb/>
am ed lervices. Dr. Posey has<lb/>
r of the club since its or-<lb/>
zation.<lb/>
The club has requested a date near<lb/>
latter part of March. It is ex-<lb/>
: thai the debate will be held<lb/>
the auditorium of the new class-<lb/>
adding. The definite date will<lb/>
e posted later.<lb/>
The following officers were elec<lb/>
A "Religious Emphasis Week"<lb/>
sponsored by the YWCA and the<lb/>
MCA will be observed on the cam-<lb/>
Thursday evening, January 19, at! pus during the week of February 21.<lb/>
6:45 in the Classroom building the i The speaker for the occasion will be<lb/>
monthly Wesley Foundation campus the Rev. Charles Jones, pastor of the<lb/>
meeting was held, with President; Presbyterian church of Chapel Hill,<lb/>
Mickey Boyette presiding. who has been active as a speaker on<lb/>
After necessary business and group j college campuses and at conferences,<lb/>
singing, Edtih Wilkerson, chairman The theme chosen for the week of<lb/>
of the committee of recreation, intro- j services is "Brotherhood Mr. Jones<lb/>
duced Dr. Robert Bradshaw, known will make his first public talk at<lb/>
;ng signals to luuninu m.u�u�u v w, �e<lb/>
I lend into such perfect harmony that we mustn't forget our featured and<lb/>
reminded of a moonlight famed vocalists. Tom "Bing Cros-<lb/>
i y" Rowlette and Dot "Ethel Waters"<lb/>
Sudd-nly in the midst of this poetic Peebles give out with their new ar- j<lb/>
dream, a feminine voice is heard, rangement of " 'Y' Store Blues<lb/>
"Ohhhh, you cufe man! You send The floorshow has begun Hubert!<lb/>
roe On closer observation we find ' Bergeron and "Blimp" Flynn do a<lb/>
that Joe Lassiter has turned on his ballet entitled "Flappin' the Feet<lb/>
Frank-Sinatra charm and has com- while Margaret Lewis and Doris j<lb/>
pletely melted some victim into bliss- Brock flip them cigarette butts,<lb/>
ful unconsciousness. Wt' triP a r�PtJ that is tied j<lb/>
In another booth, we find Alton across the doorway. Oh, Oh�Vashti<lb/>
"Stokes" Gray, Sybil Eakes, Julian Newman is catching Marines again.<lb/>
"Paderewski" Matthews, Robert Mar- We persuade her that we aren't in<lb/>
j tin. and Winnie Bell holding a friend-<lb/>
ly game of Spin the Bottle. Not<lb/>
I satisfied, Robert Martin drifts over<lb/>
! to the light switch and casually turns<lb/>
 ihe lights off. "Is" blazes at him,<lb/>
and he sheepishly returns to his slow-<lb/>
game of Spin the Bottle.<lb/>
ted: Elorir.e Clark, president; Hazel j to most students as "Uncle Bobby ' chapel on Tuesday and will speak af-<lb/>
vice-president, Leyta Taylor, pastor 0f Jarvis Memoria' Methodist<lb/>
secretary; Polly Bailey, treasurer; j church of Greenville.<lb/>
Annie Blanche Johnson, publicity j nr. Bradshaw pointed out in begin-<lb/>
chairmaa; Lucy Lancaster, social j ninj? his talk that the church used to<lb/>
chairman; Grace Clark, membership be thought of as an organization<lb/>
chairman; Gladys Snell,<lb/>
leader.<lb/>
devotional<lb/>
ASTP To Continue<lb/>
Training Army Men<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C. (ACP)�<lb/>
The Army Specialized Training Pro-<lb/>
gram, which is now providing college<lb/>
training for thousands of Army men<lb/>
in more than 200 colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities throughout the nation, will<lb/>
continued despite rumors to the<lb/>
contrary which have been circulated<lb/>
'ithin recent weeks.<lb/>
"The number of soldiers assigned<lb/>
for training under the ASTP Secre-<lb/>
tary of War Henry L. Stimson recent-<lb/>
ly stated, "will be changed from time<lb/>
to time so as to accord with the needs<lb/>
of the Army and available manpower.<lb/>
It is now being somewhat reduced but<lb/>
may later be increased or still further<lb/>
reduced as the needs of the military<lb/>
situaton or military training make<lb/>
advisable<lb/>
At present time, about 140,000 men<lb/>
�re being trained under the ASTP.<lb/>
Gorrell Pianists<lb/>
Present Recital<lb/>
Pupils of the piano class of Miss<lb/>
Lois V. Gorrell presented a studio<lb/>
recital Wednesday afternoon, Janu-<lb/>
ary 26, 1944, at 4:45 in Room 123,<lb/>
Austin building. This is the first one<lb/>
of its kind for the current year.<lb/>
The program was a varied one. In-<lb/>
cluded were Song of the Lark by<lb/>
Tschaikowski, played by Lorraine<lb/>
Davis; Theme from Andante by<lb/>
Tschaikowski, Manora Mewborn; Pre-<lb/>
lude in C-Sharp Minor by Rachmani-<lb/>
noff Curtis Butler; Polonaise in A by<lb/>
Chopin, Mary Warren; Nocturne by<lb/>
Respighi, Martha Strawn; Romance<lb/>
(Two pianos) by Arensky, Iris Lee<lb/>
and Pearl Arnold; The Two Larks by<lb/>
Leschetizky, Edna Earle Lang; Juba<lb/>
Dance by Dett, Dorothy Maynard;<lb/>
"Round Three Blind Mice (tran-<lb/>
scribed by John Thompson, Elizabeth<lb/>
Brown; Spirituals . . Transcribed for<lb/>
solo piano, Swing Low, Sweet Chariot<lb/>
and Oh, Nobody Knows the Trouble<lb/>
I've Seen, Laura Walker; The Girl<lb/>
with the Golden Hair by Debussy,<lb/>
Camille Jernigan; Symphony, No. V.<lb/>
(Arranged for four hands) by Beeth-<lb/>
oven, Maribelle Robertson and Ca-<lb/>
mille Jernigan.<lb/>
necessary to join to go to heaven, but<lb/>
that its very real purpose today is to<lb/>
try to build a world in which it will<lb/>
be easy to be a Christian. He con-<lb/>
ter supper in the auditorium each<lb/>
evening through Friday. In addition<lb/>
to that, talks will be scheduled for<lb/>
some time each day and meetings<lb/>
with small groups and individuals<lb/>
will be arranged.<lb/>
Mabel Spence Watson, YWCA pro-<lb/>
gram chairman, and Sam Strickland,<lb/>
In addition to the nightly crowd of ; Virginia Knowles as vice-president,<lb/>
aristocrats, there is also the swanky i Vera Williams as secretary, Louise<lb/>
"breakfast" gang, who rush in two I Wooten as treasurer and Dorothy<lb/>
minutes before the last bell�stuff a ' Reade as reporter, the ECTC social<lb/>
I science majors have organized the<lb/>
Seven Coeds Initiated Aiih Sigma fraternity<lb/>
j . jji c 1 Sophomores, juniors, and seniors<lb/>
IntO rhl Olgma " , Wlth an average of a "3" are eligible<lb/>
Seven new members were initiated I membership. The purpose of the �<lb/>
into the Tau chapter of Phi Sigma ; fraternity is to promote leadership<lb/>
service and research in the field of<lb/>
Honor Students<lb/>
To Be Initiated<lb/>
Into Pi Omega Pi<lb/>
At an initiation-dinner on Satur-<lb/>
day night, February 12 at 6:00 twen-<lb/>
ty-five honor commercial students<lb/>
will be initiated into the Pi Omega<lb/>
Pi, national business education fra-<lb/>
ternity. The local chapter will have<lb/>
as its name Beta Kappa. These<lb/>
twenty-five girls were formerly Zeta<lb/>
With Allene Yause as president, I Dt.lta chapter of the Alpha Ioti. This<lb/>
year the organization decided to re-<lb/>
linquish that chapter and become af-<lb/>
(See "Y" STORE on Page Four)<lb/>
Social Science Majors<lb/>
Organize Fraternity<lb/>
Pi Tuesday night, January 25, in the<lb/>
"Y" hut. The fraternity now has<lb/>
twentv-one active members.<lb/>
New members are Dave Owens, ithree instructors in the social science<lb/>
Pinetops; Hiram Mayo, Mesic; Tom j department Dr. Paul A. TolL Dr.<lb/>
Beecher Flanagan, and Mr. M. L.<lb/>
filiated with the Pi Omega Pi. Mem-<lb/>
bership in the Pi Omega Pi is based<lb/>
on scholastic achievenment in com-<lb/>
mercial subjects, with general su-<lb/>
perior scholarship taken into conside-<lb/>
ration.<lb/>
Those students who will be initiated<lb/>
are Ruth Allen, Annie B. Bartholo-<lb/>
mew, Rena Bateman, Gretchen Web-<lb/>
social science. ster Mary Bryan, Dixie Chapell, Har-<lb/>
Advisers for the fraternity are the j riet Chestnut, Amy Floyd, Laura<lb/>
Williams, Greenville; Leslie Venters,<lb/>
Grimesland; Ernest Chesson, Jr<lb/>
Columbia; Clifton Crandell, Stokes;<lb/>
and Kenneth James, Winterville.<lb/>
Stanfield Johnson, president of the<lb/>
tinued by declaring that in the world mittee working out plans for the<lb/>
today it is much easier for some j week. Other members of the corn-<lb/>
people to be Christian than it is for j mittee are Mary Cameron Dixon.<lb/>
(See METHODISTS on Page Four) Elsie West, Clifton Crandell, Mrs.<lb/>
Y MCA vice-president, head the com- Educatoa fraternity presided over<lb/>
the initiation exercises.<lb/>
Robert W. Ramsey, Jr Bobbie Brew-<lb/>
er and Edna Hodges.<lb/>
Wright. "It Grows as It Goes" was<lb/>
selected as the motto and black and<lb/>
gold as colors for the club.<lb/>
"We hope to increase our member-<lb/>
ship and raise our standards to such<lb/>
extents that we shall soon be able to<lb/>
affiliate ourselves with a national<lb/>
social science fraternity states<lb/>
Dorothv Reade.<lb/>
Laniers Sponsor<lb/>
Valentine Dance<lb/>
The college dance, sponsored by the<lb/>
1 anier society will be held Saturday,<lb/>
February 12 at the Wright building.<lb/>
The Ijinier officers are Gretchen<lb/>
Webster, president; Grace Clark, vice-<lb/>
president; Ruth Davis, secretary;<lb/>
Dorothea Boyette, treasurer.<lb/>
The sponsors are Charlotte Elliott,<lb/>
Ethel Smith. Morris Flow, Frances<lb/>
Brewer and Dot Reade.<lb/>
The committee chairmen are Lib<lb/>
Jenkins, decorations; Betty Batson,<lb/>
figure; Marie Hinton, refreshments;<lb/>
Morris Flow, orchestra;<lb/>
Hearne, Betsy Hcbgood, Clarine<lb/>
Johnson, Mildred Johnson, Evelyn<lb/>
Jones, Dot Lewis, Daisy Mayo, Man-<lb/>
era Mewborn, Annie Sue Perry, Ellen<lb/>
Riddick, Maribelle Robertson, Mar-<lb/>
jorie Rowe, Katherine Russell, Geral-<lb/>
dine Taylor, Frances Tunstall. Jane<lb/>
Vann, Vivian Yelverton.<lb/>
Dr. E. R. Browning, head of the<lb/>
Business Education department, and<lb/>
Miss Audrey Dempsey, both of whom<lb/>
are members of the Zeta chapter at<lb/>
the Colorado State College of Educa-<lb/>
tion, will preside over the initiation<lb/>
rituals. Miss Lena C. Ellis and Yel-<lb/>
ma Lowe, instructors in the com-<lb/>
merce department, will be taken into<lb/>
the chapter as honorary members.<lb/>
Other members will be initiated<lb/>
during the spring quarter.<lb/>
F.T.A. Holds Meeting<lb/>
On Education Groups<lb/>
The Future Teachers of America<lb/>
held their regular meeting on Tues-<lb/>
day. January 18, at 6:30 P. M. in<lb/>
Austin building.<lb/>
The program was directed by the<lb/>
program chairman, Mildred White.<lb/>
Several National Education associa-<lb/>
tion and North Carolina Education<lb/>
Dorothy i association talks were given on the<lb/>
Reade, courtesy card; Mary Young j FT A, and their meanings.<lb/>
Bass, invitations; Edna Earle Moore, The old and new business was<lb/>
chaperones; and Hazel Williford and transacted. For a new project this<lb/>
�MBS<lb/>
Katie Earle Owen, property.<lb/>
Alice Copeland and Billie Bryan<lb/>
chapter decided to have a paper<lb/>
salvage drive to collect waste paper<lb/>
are presidents of Poe and Emerson on the campus for defense. Plans<lb/>
societies. j are now being made for this project.<lb/>
The theme will be valentine. Herb The plans completed.<lb/>
Gupton and his orchestra will play The meeting was adjourned with<lb/>
for the occasion. 1 the Teachers pledge.<lb/>
j<lb/>
,<lb/>
.<lb/>
s<lb/>
9<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00037932_0002"/><lb/>
SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 5. 1944<lb/>
I<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
Should ECTCs Coeds Be Deprived<lb/>
Of Communication With Outside?<lb/>
The question: Should the telephone in<lb/>
the boys dormitory be removed and placed<lb/>
in one of the girls' dormitories, all of which<lb/>
havi several telephones?<lb/>
The answer: Very definitely NO.<lb/>
There should be a telephone in every<lb/>
dormitory that can be used in case of an<lb/>
. mergencv. If the pay telephone in Bags-<lb/>
dale v ere removed, the boys would not have<lb/>
a telephone if an emergency should<lb/>
hone in the teachers'<lb/>
ut the men students<lb/>
it under any cireum-<lb/>
aeeSr<lb/>
a. ISC<lb/>
1<lb/>
a<lb/>
We don't<lb/>
.� the boys'<lb/>
u<lb/>
o use<lb/>
now whose idea it is, to re-<lb/>
telephone, but it isn't such a<lb/>
good one. The telephone situation here at<lb/>
ECTC is bad enough as is. and there is no<lb/>
earthly reason for making the situation<lb/>
worse.<lb/>
The fact that over eight hundred girls<lb/>
have to rely on the one pay telephone in Jar-<lb/>
vis for all their social and business calls is<lb/>
distressing inched. However, there are other<lb/>
ways of remedying the situation than re-<lb/>
moving the phone from Ragsdale.<lb/>
Several of the deans of the girls' dormi-<lb/>
tories have telephones in their rooms. As a<lb/>
solution to the problem we suggest that one<lb/>
of these telephones be removed and placed at<lb/>
the disposal of the students.<lb/>
program and your help in staging the Presi-<lb/>
dent's Birthday Ball. Please extend to the<lb/>
girls of the college also our appreciation for<lb/>
their help in attending the ball; and tell them<lb/>
how sorry we are that we did not have more<lb/>
Marines present. However, a check-up of<lb/>
Cherry Point and New River discloses the<lb/>
fact that they have a very intensive pro-<lb/>
gram now, and it is pretty difficult for a<lb/>
Marine to get off during the week<lb/>
Very truly yours,<lb/>
J. H. ROSE<lb/>
Co-chairman Pitt County Com-<lb/>
mittee for Infantile Paralysis<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
STUDENT SPOTLIGHT<lb/>
b,t Tom WiUtam<lb/>
David Lawrence Owens. Dave to you<lb/>
h.v, grabbed the<lb/>
class<lb/>
UaVlO Lawrence v�? - - . . emnr class,<lb/>
spotlight this issue. Dare IS preside '� tn- ' Hy is lisU.i<lb/>
last year he was president oi the.junior class,<lb/>
in the 1944 edition of Who's Who in Awn<lb/>
K<lb/>
n<lb/>
�4 �i<lb/>
and Universities<lb/>
QUOTABLE<lb/>
QUOTES<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
Judiciary Punishments<lb/>
Unfair to Students<lb/>
This<lb/>
i � � a;<lb/>
suggestion<lb/>
these time<lb/>
al id I ' I<lb/>
in th<lb/>
is n� t an<lb/>
ad vocation for doing<lb/>
3 and regulations but it is a<lb/>
that those in power realize that<lb/>
are such that it is impossible to<lb/>
ird and fast rules when nothing<lb/>
� day abides by any sort of<lb/>
unpredictable times. There<lb/>
ns to rules now that would have<lb/>
� i .istiP.ee in normal times.<lb/>
rse, certain rules and regulations<lb/>
to guide the student body in up-<lb/>
roper standards, but surely there<lb/>
� excepti �ns to all things. True, students<lb/>
have a v av of putting up some nearly im-<lb/>
pregnable excuses for getting around any<lb/>
sel up, but if those in power would take<lb/>
i n that they are dealing with<lb/>
n beings, there would be<lb/>
tuss and cooperation on the<lb/>
are<lb/>
Of CO!<lb/>
needed<lb/>
holdim<lb/>
iauai m,<lb/>
mm<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Recei � .<lb/>
late returninj<lb/>
home becaust<lb/>
c ml inuance i<lb/>
ha<lb/>
girls who were unavoidably<lb/>
to school from week-ends at<lb/>
of bad weather and th3 dis-<lb/>
bus service were punished by<lb/>
social privileges removed for a<lb/>
of three or four weeks. These stu-<lb/>
absolutely not guilty. They said<lb/>
rol over the circumstances. Human<lb/>
� � blessed with extraordinary<lb/>
I r prognostication. These girls<lb/>
her r diet nor remedy nature's<lb/>
i re lainly snowbound.<lb/>
r such seems inhuman and<lb/>
in<lb/>
� QUO<lb/>
; it is not against the law to travel.<lb/>
nment merely requests that travel<lb/>
i to a necessary minimum. There<lb/>
i ason f r the student judiciary to step<lb/>
� rce th students to cease traveling.<lb/>
� in scenery and atmosphere is help-<lb/>
. � and especially to students.<lb/>
�� v. ork � In n he is not confined<lb/>
thing for too long a period. It is<lb/>
- mi st necessary for students to<lb/>
as it is for any other person<lb/>
a to do so. Punishment should<lb/>
� inflict  for necessities, though they<lb/>
to be necessary evils.<lb/>
'his was not the only case of punish-<lb/>
f r being late that the students have<lb/>
teen sujected to this quarer. At the begin-<lb/>
ning of the quarter there were some few stu-<lb/>
d nts who registered late. The administra-<lb/>
set a time for registration, but it<lb/>
have jurisdiction over a student un-<lb/>
registered at the college. A charge<lb/>
d liar ia made to all students who<lb/>
after that time set by the adminis-<lb/>
lf a  . ent is willing to pay this<lb/>
f it . late registration, then he should<lb/>
� �: ireise the privilege if he sees<lb/>
to do so without having to be punished<lb/>
The Teco Echo<lb/>
Published Biweekly nj the Students of East<lb/>
Carolina Tei.chers College<lb/>
i i<lb/>
by<lb/>
is<lb/>
in<lb/>
On<lb/>
to<lb/>
m tti<lb/>
not I<lb/>
seem<lb/>
nu<lb/>
tion may<lb/>
d m� not<lb/>
uI he is<lb/>
by the judiciary. The main offense the stu-<lb/>
dent has committed is that he has caused the<lb/>
administrative offices an inconvenience.<lb/>
Coming late is no crime and should not be a<lb/>
punishable offense beyond the one-dollar for-<lb/>
feit. Such a small percentage of the student<lb/>
body is ever late for registration that it<lb/>
seems foolish for any body of students or<lb/>
administrators to make such an issue over<lb/>
it. The majority of the student body showed<lb/>
that they are very anxious to get registration<lb/>
over with by completing their registration<lb/>
before the Christmas holidays began.<lb/>
Music Offers Escape<lb/>
From War Jitters<lb/>
Music sets the mood for action in the<lb/>
world drama as well as in the theatre. Lulla-<lb/>
bies lull us to sleep; syncopated swing pre-<lb/>
sents us with the urge to turn Fred Astaires;<lb/>
classic masterpiece- awe US to the extent<lb/>
that we are lost in their exquisite beauty, for-<lb/>
getting the maddening rush of the world's<lb/>
tempo; blaring trumpets and rolling drums<lb/>
spur us on to Victory�each type has its<lb/>
place in the lives of today's inhabitants of<lb/>
the world.<lb/>
So valuable is music to our enjoyment<lb/>
of living that many great musicians are<lb/>
sacrificing their luxuries and their lives to<lb/>
afford us the pleasures of enjoying their<lb/>
art. In the war-torn country that once was<lb/>
the great France orchestras and operas still<lb/>
ive their regular scheduled performances<lb/>
despite the cost. In issues of current maga-<lb/>
zines army morale officers report that music<lb/>
leads the way in making the soldiers happy.<lb/>
Though we do not have the abilities to<lb/>
(by Associated Collegiate Press)<lb/>
"It is impossible to separate Nazis and<lb/>
the German people. I don't like our appeals<lb/>
that Germany repudiates her leaders, be-<lb/>
cause if the German people again change<lb/>
their government just to get an easy peace,<lb/>
we won't convince them that war doesn't<lb/>
pay. If that happens we may almost as well<lb/>
have lost the war said the University<lb/>
of Texas' professor of government. Dr.<lb/>
John L. Mecham. recently, who believes that<lb/>
the kind of peace that is made after the war<lb/>
doesn't count so much as the way that peace<lb/>
is carried out.<lb/>
 <lb/>
"Across the Atlantic in the British Isles<lb/>
the Yanks are trying to fit American slang<lb/>
into the dignified game of cricket. Mem-<lb/>
bers of the U. S. Eighth Air Force recently<lb/>
razzed batters and bowlers in the best<lb/>
Bronx manner. Such razzing is not cricket,<lb/>
say the English, who prefer a polite hand-<lb/>
clapping to the cheer and jeer. Which in-<lb/>
fluence will prevail? Will baseball audiences<lb/>
become sedate or will cricket fans learn to<lb/>
shout. "Better duck, you jerk, here comes<lb/>
the bottle�Student Life. Washington<lb/>
University, St. Louis. Mo.<lb/>
his favorite composers ne � � AboutMe<lb/>
lar mUsic and hke. ��- �� J� rooners<lb/>
Cr JS U StUta ihhungiwl-niuanaM-a<lb/>
him (Probably doesn t like tnai nun��j<lb/>
possesses)<lb/>
���e doesn't like the funny papers! Imagine that! He<lb/>
fces �od things to eat, however, ami o , and Mto<lb/>
0 play the role of "God s personal gift to CM � <lb/>
had a part in<lb/>
mil was<lb/>
t<lb/>
fairer sex.<lb/>
In his sophomore year h<lb/>
the senior play. -Vivacious Lady<lb/>
in the contest play that went to hapel Hill.<lb/>
Last year he appeared in two one-act plays.<lb/>
I once had to he a mamma bear<lb/>
high scb ol in debal<lb/>
v ar h � v aa elect d cli<lb/>
cause he had too man) .<lb/>
resign.<lb/>
Dave hails fi m I<lb/>
twenty year-old i ' M�<lb/>
n a play<lb/>
Bits o' Fas hi<lb/>
asiuoii<lb/>
' SUE<lb/>
SCUMMING<lb/>
By The Keyhole Korrespondent<lb/>
of Beethoven or<lb/>
Mozart or to sing like Pons or Flagstad, we<lb/>
create works equal to thost<lb/>
D<lb/>
are free to enjoy passively music such as this<lb/>
in our everydav living.<lb/>
As in everything else the tastes of in-<lb/>
dividuals vary in the selection of music.<lb/>
Tin re are those who prefer hearing a five-<lb/>
piece jazz band in smoke-filled dance halls to<lb/>
enjoying the dignity of a performance of<lb/>
foremost virtuosi at Carnegie hall or the<lb/>
Metropolitan. If Beethoven's "Pathetique<lb/>
Sonata" fails to free our tired minds from<lb/>
the words of the ever-reminding commenta-<lb/>
tors and editors who continuously harp on<lb/>
the increasing peril our country is facing,<lb/>
perhaps the current "Paper Doll" will do the<lb/>
trick. As long as individual differences re-<lb/>
main, it is necessary that music continue in<lb/>
a variety of phases from opera to hill-billy<lb/>
from oratorios to swing, in order that every-<lb/>
ine can be reached by at least every type.<lb/>
Music is the secret to harmonious liv-<lb/>
ing in peace or wartime. It is a medium<lb/>
through which people of different tongues<lb/>
can meet in mutual understanding. When<lb/>
its message penetrates us. we subconscious-<lb/>
ly forget our silly prejudices against others<lb/>
and our souls become refreshed with love<lb/>
for our fellow man.<lb/>
Letters To Student Body<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3,<lb/>
1925, at the U. S. Postoffice, Greenville,<lb/>
X. C. under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
AT<lb/>
UHB<lb/>
:i.r.K ROBERTSON Editor-in-chief<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
trown, Thomas WilHams, Jean<lb/>
. alie<lb/>
Goggin.<lb/>
REPORTERS<lb/>
Nancy Wynne. Cornelia Beems, Katie Owen,<lb/>
Hazel Harris. Frances Congleton, Alta Mae<lb/>
Thompson. Louise Kilgo, Robert Martin,<lb/>
Jimi 1T- rren, Paula Ross. Jane Hardy,<lb/>
W ' . Elsie West, Kathryn<lb/>
inkle, Jackie DeLysle, Charlene Moye.<lb/>
Clifton Crandell Sports Editor<lb/>
Mary Sue Moore<lb/>
John Johnson<lb/>
Fashion Editor<lb/>
Photography Editor<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Sybil Beaman Business Manager<lb/>
ASSOCIATE BUSINESS MANAGERS<lb/>
Gladys Davis. Lucille Huskett, Betty Bat-<lb/>
son, Helen Wooten<lb/>
Robert Morgan.<lb/>
Denver E. Baughan<lb/>
Beecher Flanagan<lb/>
Graham T. Olive<lb/>
June Brandenburg,<lb/>
Editorial Adviser<lb/>
Business Adviser<lb/>
Technical Adviser<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Sorth Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association<lb/>
htmtm<lb/>
(Associated Golleeiate Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Ql!e6iote Di6es<lb/>
MFNIIINTfO FOR KATK)N�L ADV��T1�M� Wft<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
CaUtf PmUabers Ripitmnltim<lb/>
420 Madison ave New York. N. Y.<lb/>
The following letters, the first in connec-<lb/>
tion with the telephone situation and the<lb/>
second concerning March of Dimes, were re-<lb/>
ceived ljy Dorothy Lewis, president of the<lb/>
Student Cooperative council:<lb/>
"S�me days ago I wrote to Mr. Aycock,<lb/>
local manager of the Carolina Telephone and<lb/>
Telegraph company, and asked him if it<lb/>
would be possible for us to get another tele-<lb/>
phone in one of the girls dormitories. As<lb/>
you know, we had asked for this telephone<lb/>
on numbers of occasions, but had been un-<lb/>
able to get it. Today I received the follow-<lb/>
ing letter from Mr. Aycock.<lb/>
'In reply to your letter requesting an<lb/>
additional pay station in the girls dormitory,<lb/>
it will be impossible to give this service un-<lb/>
der present conditions. The only alternate I<lb/>
can suggest in this case is to transfer the pay<lb/>
station that is now located in the boys dormi-<lb/>
tory to one of the girls dormitories. If this<lb/>
meets with your approval we will be glad to<lb/>
make the transfer as soon as possible.<lb/>
W. W. AYCOCK, Manager<lb/>
Will you, as President of the Student<lb/>
Cooperative Government association, take<lb/>
the matter up with the ones most concerned,<lb/>
which I take it, would be the boys in this<lb/>
case, and find out if they would like the tele-<lb/>
phone transferred to a girls dormitory. If<lb/>
so, Mr. Aycock has promised to transfer it<lb/>
immediately. Mr. Aycock tells me that the<lb/>
telephone does not pay where it is.<lb/>
Please let me know at your earliest con-<lb/>
venience just what the decision of the stu-<lb/>
dents is so that we may have the telephone<lb/>
moved in case that is the conclusion you<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
Very truly yours,<lb/>
LEON R. MEADOWS, President"<lb/>
Valentine's Day rolls around and finds<lb/>
Cupid hard at work shooting love arrows in-<lb/>
to the hearts of many an ECTC couple. Ye<lb/>
Keyhole Korrespondent barely escaped his<lb/>
deadly arrow in time to let you in on the<lb/>
kndw on who's carrying the "arrow" for<lb/>
who.<lb/>
Mary Cameron Dixon and Joe Lassiter<lb/>
seem to be wearing that "Will you be my<lb/>
valentine?" expression. It's nice to have<lb/>
some good moral support at the basketball<lb/>
games, isn't it Joe?<lb/>
"Sit" Knowles made a valentine with<lb/>
"My Charles" inscribed on it and sent it to<lb/>
HER Charles. Cupid didn't miss you, did<lb/>
he, "Sit"?<lb/>
Cupid's biggest arrow landed right<lb/>
smack in Butch Daniel's heart when she<lb/>
took one look at that jitterbugging lad from<lb/>
Kinston.<lb/>
One couple that needs no assistance<lb/>
from Cupid is Maribelle and Billy. Instead<lb/>
of "Billy-blah blah�"It's Billy, ohhhhhhh<lb/>
Troy Rouse caused many an ECTC<lb/>
heart to beat valentine until "Fish" showed<lb/>
up and shot her own arrows.<lb/>
Has Cupid at last pierced the heart of<lb/>
"Termite"? Can "Mot" Jefferson be the<lb/>
lucky one?<lb/>
Dick Fleming returned home for the<lb/>
weekend, renewed all old flames, and ac-<lb/>
quired a few more. Oh. that Carolina line<lb/>
Edna Powell and Faye Case certainly<lb/>
have a technique with the higher ranking<lb/>
service men. Also Jerry Albritton�was<lb/>
that a flower garden, Jerry, or merely two<lb/>
orchids?<lb/>
This June-in-January weather seems to<lb/>
have thawed Frances and Stanfield out. Has<lb/>
a certain Robert Bright become her Febru-<lb/>
ary valentine or has "Fred Astaire" Murphy<lb/>
danced his way into her heart?<lb/>
Do Lib Darden and Reecie Hinton be-<lb/>
lieve in sharecropping, or is Bill Lee just a<lb/>
mighty cute hunk o' man? Speaking of<lb/>
hunks of men, who is Morris Flow's new<lb/>
heartthrob?<lb/>
Was Cupid on Evelyn Lewis's side or<lb/>
did "Blondie" just lose interest in Percy?<lb/>
By the way, Blondie, who was that snazzy<lb/>
little valentine you toted to the President's<lb/>
Ball?<lb/>
Who will Miss Norwood choose as her<lb/>
Valentine this year? Keep on eye on her at<lb/>
the college dance, Cupid.<lb/>
Who are the "gruesome threesome" and<lb/>
who dates them? Let us in on it, Tom.<lb/>
Virginia Cooke sported her Ensign<lb/>
Billy Green for one glorious weekend. Cupid<lb/>
was certainly good to you, huh, Cooke?<lb/>
Jack "Lucky Teeter" Edwards is simply<lb/>
driving the girls crack with a week's fur-<lb/>
lough and his little Buick scooter! Night<lb/>
riding, huh?<lb/>
Isn't it funny or is it merely a coinci-<lb/>
dence that Mimi Tripp and Dot Peebles both<lb/>
like Bens? Incidentally, the basketball<lb/>
games, or Ben, seem to be drawing quite a<lb/>
large attendance of feminine admirers.<lb/>
With the college dance rolling around,<lb/>
Cupid should be well in evidence with a<lb/>
whole new quiver of arrows. In the mean-<lb/>
while be good and Happy Valentine. For-<lb/>
ever snooping, K. K.<lb/>
in<lb/>
favorite<lb/>
Once upon'na time there was a little girl<lb/>
named Esse Tesse. She had a long mane oi<lb/>
flowing hair, although it had been longer a<lb/>
couple of years back. Atop her pancake<lb/>
f, undation she wore a flurry of powder and<lb/>
v, bright smear of lipstick, which she religi-<lb/>
ously renewed between every class for the<lb/>
sake of her own morale, if for no other rea-<lb/>
son (male). Her bosom friend, her cell<lb/>
mate of dorm life, laid claim to a leather-<lb/>
cut but all other descriptions were ditto. <lb/>
On Monday mornings, at the crack o<lb/>
dawn (8:45), Esse would lift one eye-lid,<lb/>
take a peek at the clock, make a broad jump<lb/>
and in LO minutes flat, Esse would be smil-<lb/>
toothily from the back row. clad in her<lb/>
weater�pastel blue, green, yellow.<lb/>
�the one she'd meant to wash last<lb/>
week but just hadn't gotten around to. On<lb/>
Mondays she always wore her plaid-pleated<lb/>
(real pleats) skirt left over from her Fresh-<lb/>
man year, 'cause it built up her morale. On<lb/>
other days she wore her other skirt�the<lb/>
slim one which she liked too. but in which<lb/>
she had to stand tall, hold in her tummy and<lb/>
up her shoulders in order to look fetching.<lb/>
Loafers she wore on her feet " 'cause you can<lb/>
jump in 'tm in two jerks andcause every-<lb/>
body else wears 'em anyhow<lb/>
" Whereupon established in her cozy<lb/>
corner, class would begin and Esse would<lb/>
begin settling down to take up her slumbers<lb/>
where she'd left 'em off. Afore reaching the<lb/>
"just right" spot, she'd remember and sit up<lb/>
 ith a jerk, taking it all in; for, after all.<lb/>
there's a war on, you know, and the least we<lb/>
can dp is to be good students now so's we can<lb/>
become educated and go out and teach others<lb/>
to become the same way.<lb/>
And BO the week would go�classes,<lb/>
trips up town, studying, jam sessions, jaunts<lb/>
��<lb/>
�<lb/>
MEN. An<lb/>
 hion ma<lb/>
to the "Y store for coke n i<lb/>
i no should keep fit<lb/>
And thus v come S<lb/>
noon bringing w it h i �<lb/>
one really net ds 0w � n en at<lb/>
one's patriotic duty I enteri<lb/>
dears so off Esse would go a M<lb/>
ins hands on on<lb/>
other. And SO Es� .� -<lb/>
from one week-end I I �<lb/>
as I can remember.<lb/>
MORAL OF THE STOItt :<lb/>
could have had TWO Mann. �<lb/>
and a soldier and a<lb/>
she'd dr ss a'<lb/>
of the -c re of<lb/>
the new stands.<lb/>
F'instance spring's jusl a<lb/>
corner, although it has felt as th igl<lb/>
played an advanced assignpH<lb/>
spring comes rain. Vog � sh�<lb/>
blue paratroop twill ram suit�slim,<lb/>
skirt with boxy jacket and with wid<lb/>
med bat both are. oh, so pretty rain<lb/>
shine. Another rain or shine outfit<lb/>
Vogm is a c al in red-and<lb/>
rayon surah.<lb/>
ness belted ii<lb/>
sports a i atching wide-brimmed hat wit<lb/>
snood tie for i ainy-day curls.<lb/>
For class s, a dim skirt is tops.<lb/>
by a lumper blouse it's colossal. Skirt<lb/>
neutral-grey, earn. 1 beige, right<lb/>
brown: blouse in white, yellow or<lb/>
striped in red. yellow, and blue�this<lb/>
would be pretty now under a I<lb/>
and later standing alone.<lb/>
And so claiming the withwh<lb/>
of Best 1 '��' ssed (and cute too), 1<lb/>
pecting to see you any day being es rt<lb/>
by a whole Batallion.<lb/>
a<lb/>
ias a fly front with f<lb/>
� and wrist. Th-<lb/>
8<lb/>
With The Armed Forces<lb/>
by Rosalie Brown<lb/>
"In behalf of the County organization<lb/>
to fight infantile paralysis allow me to thank<lb/>
you and your student government organiza-<lb/>
tion for your help in the March of Dimes washing dishes is helping them out in the<lb/>
Bill Council and Brant Walters are<lb/>
really toughening up the hard way out in<lb/>
California. They are on mess duty and work<lb/>
eighteen hours a day. No doubt the experi-<lb/>
ence these boys got in the ECTC dining hall<lb/>
Marine corps. Bill says he misses his sleep<lb/>
quite a bit. He thought it was something<lb/>
ten ible to have to get up at seven when he<lb/>
was in school here, but "never like this<lb/>
Bill learned of "Coach John's" address<lb/>
through the paper and they are beginning<lb/>
to make plans to pay him a visit soon. They<lb/>
are stationed near each other.<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
Former business manager of the Teco<lb/>
Echo, Harry (Shacky) Jarvis, has left for<lb/>
overseas. In a letter to Miss Graham just<lb/>
before his departure, he said he was quite<lb/>
ready to go and wished he were on the ship<lb/>
them because he wants to do his bit in finish-<lb/>
ing this war in a hurry so he could get back<lb/>
to ECTC. "When that new class comes in.<lb/>
think of me and how much I'd like to be<lb/>
there he wrote.<lb/>
 <lb/>
Tommy Noe writes that he is back in<lb/>
school, but says it will never be like ECTC.<lb/>
He is at the Great Lakes Training station<lb/>
and there are nothing; there except sailors,<lb/>
no pretty ECTC girls.<lb/>
 <lb/>
In an interesting letter that came to the<lb/>
paper last week, George W. Heafner was<lb/>
thanking the staff for the many copies of<lb/>
the Teco Echo that have found their way to<lb/>
him in the South Pacific. "Not only have<lb/>
you shown to the service alumni your moral<lb/>
support, but have demonstrated the de-<lb/>
votion, loyalty, and the friendly school spirit<lb/>
with which the paper and ECTC have here-<lb/>
tofore been credited.<lb/>
"During the course of events, I have<lb/>
met other alumni, many of whom were form-<lb/>
er classmates�even roommates�and can<lb/>
truthfully say that the recognition you have<lb/>
given us boys has met the admiration of all<lb/>
George has been in the South pacific<lb/>
for fifteen months and has "seen warfare"<lb/>
in many places. .He has been on several is-<lb/>
� lands from time to time and has to say that<lb/>
"while the modern conception of them is<lb/>
very misleading they are interesting, how-<lb/>
ever<lb/>
� � � <lb/>
Lt. Leo Burks wrote a letter on Christ-<lb/>
mas day thanking the staff for the paper<lb/>
and giving his new address. Leo says the<lb/>
paper contributes a "sort of bond between<lb/>
me and the college days I enjoyed so much<lb/>
He told the Editor and me to "get on the<lb/>
ball" and double the space given to the<lb/>
� �i<lb/>
e writes. "I'm<lb/>
my oeck<lb/>
alumni news<lb/>
sunny Italy in mud up to<lb/>
 <lb/>
O. II. Forrest, serving with th-<lb/>
ing Squadron Twenty-Nine was<lb/>
with quite a problem when he receivt<lb/>
October issue of the paper. "On<lb/>
low mates asked what the name of tl<lb/>
meant. Right offhand I did not know st<lb/>
do not). I replied. 'Are you so -<lb/>
ed you can't understand what it i<lb/>
trying my best at the same time to figure i<lb/>
out. for it had never occurred to me just w<lb/>
the name meant before. After th -<lb/>
noticing him think a few moments I -<lb/>
Tbco is an abbreviation for Teachers (<lb/>
lege; Echo is caused by reflecti<lb/>
therefore, it means teach ra c liege n<lb/>
1 lector The answer must have sal<lb/>
him for he wanted to know nothing<lb/>
about the name of the paper. Juatwhal I -<lb/>
the name mean?" (Whow! Was that a<lb/>
to me, former editor of this sheet, and<lb/>
be darned if I knew what it literally nu.<lb/>
either. Just for fun 1 won't answer<lb/>
question until another issue. Wonder<lb/>
else this will stump.) He is looking forward<lb/>
to receiving more issues. "In the mean'<lb/>
"he writes "I shall sail and fly over<lb/>
briny sea until I run across the enemy. '<lb/>
I will deliver an extra blow for our deal<lb/>
Alma Mater<lb/>
hN MEMORIAM<lb/>
The staff of the Teco Echo wilu- fco<lb/>
express for itself and for the entire student<lb/>
body of East Carolina Teachers college its<lb/>
deepest symapthy to the family of William<lb/>
Miller Burks of Greenville, who died Thurs-<lb/>
day morning following a brief illne.s.<lb/>
All who knew "Smut" loved him and<lb/>
what he stood for. His friends will cherish<lb/>
iis memory for many years.<lb/>
i<lb/>
j '<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
By<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
v<lb/>
Bc-ej<lb/>
j<lb/>
o<lb/>
I<lb/>
w<lb/>
nu<lb/>
dal<lb/>
th<lb/>
stl<lb/>
I<lb/>
vv<lb/>
I -v<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00037932_0003"/><lb/>
AY, FEBRUARY 5. 194 1<lb/>
i<lb/>
�.as<lb/>
r<lb/>
h t<lb/>
h a<lb/>
in<lb/>
5 ou<lb/>
� -<lb/>
rted<lb/>
I'm in<lb/>
i<lb/>
feived his<lb/>
t-i-<lb/>
-till<lb/>
I<lb/>
I it<lb/>
'�<lb/>
i -aid.<lb/>
nan col-<lb/>
If f n<lb/>
satisfied<lb/>
fax more<lb/>
rhat does<lb/>
It a blow<lb/>
and I<lb/>
� means,<lb/>
mer his<lb/>
tjr who<lb/>
forward<lb/>
iantime<lb/>
over the<lb/>
ny. then<lb/>
dear ole<lb/>
�ishes to<lb/>
student<lb/>
ilege i<lb/>
WilKm<lb/>
Thurs-<lb/>
is.<lb/>
U.im �nd<lb/>
cheri<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
Terrors Win Over Marines In Second Overtime Contest<lb/>
i<lb/>
in<lb/>
Wrif<lb/>
ianuarv i<lb/>
in the<lb/>
v i time.<lb/>
DJ<lb/>
Of-<lb/>
� in<lb/>
. r�<lb/>
Lassiter Rates<lb/>
Is Star Athlete !<lb/>
?n ECTC Ssurts<lb/>
by CLIFTON E. CRANDELL<lb/>
"Did you see that shot? Yeah!<lb/>
and look who made it! It's that<lb/>
purple No. 5. Joe Lassiter, All-<lb/>
I American Junior from Conway,<lb/>
' N. C Yes, it's that Joe Lassiter<lb/>
again�this time he's making head-<lb/>
lines.<lb/>
Ma-<lb/>
 and<lb/>
m lead 'f<lb/>
i they<lb/>
I � first<lb/>
f the<lb/>
Next Week's Games j<lb/>
On Wednesday night at 8:30,<lb/>
the Colden Terrors will meet the<lb/>
Marine Enlisted Men's team in a<lb/>
baskeiball game in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium. The Marines are com-<lb/>
ing from the local air base. The<lb/>
Terrors have defeated the Ma-<lb/>
rine Officers and a Naval De-<lb/>
tachment from the same base.<lb/>
Oi Monday night, the Terrors<lb/>
will probably meet the William-<lb/>
ston Martins, a semi-pro team<lb/>
from Martin county. No details<lb/>
of this game are available.<lb/>
T ONLY BEING PATRIOTIC. IF WE DON'T 00 TO TH? PROM<lb/>
I CAN SPEND hW MONEY IN SAVINGS STAMPS,<lb/>
It's A Good Time For All<lb/>
At Barn Dance Tonisht<lb/>
: I<lb/>
making<lb/>
� ertime, with<lb/>
: I � rejru-<lb/>
Ham-<lb/>
o ach.<lb/>
. lead<lb/>
by HILDA MOOSE<lb/>
It's flot a square dance; it's r.ot a<lb/>
exclusively for hep cats; but<lb/>
t's a : time for all at the WAA<lb/>
I$arn Dance, ton ght, Saturday. Feb-<lb/>
from 8:30 i 10:45.<lb/>
Wright gym. now known as<lb/>
 ncle Ezra's (urn ("rib, will he dec-<lb/>
rated in such a manner<lb/>
Grey Mare wish she were back<lb/>
where she Used to be. If, when you<lb/>
r the door, you don't recognize<lb/>
where y.u are (and you know good<lb/>
I well that you're in the Wright<lb/>
buildingor at least you thought<lb/>
.1<lb/>
I7n<lb/>
T rrr.<lb/>
. John Charl-<lb/>
Tt i and<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
6<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
8<lb/>
11<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
I)<lb/>
e<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
r<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
9<lb/>
F<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
Q<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
Q<lb/>
TV<lb/>
12<lb/>
rere), then it's because Old<lb/>
Ezra hasn't let you in on all<lb/>
cret surprises he has in store<lb/>
u. However, I'll tell you a few<lb/>
so you won't be too stunned.<lb/>
le Ezra put in a pretty good <lb/>
� : of hay last year, and as yet he<lb/>
ented to get around to turn<lb/>
ing such a "good money crop" into<lb/>
cash; BO I'm afraid the old stuff<lb/>
will be quite in evidence. Then too,<lb/>
I don't think "Enc" is such a good<lb/>
ekeeper - (barn-keeper). He<lb/>
. � .  - plows and racks and<lb/>
� g all around; he's quite care-<lb/>
S if J'� U stump your toe on one<lb/>
farm implement when ou<lb/>
- swear too loudly, 'es<lb/>
Ezra doesn't approve (He<lb/>
the language of the devil.)<lb/>
. Ezra may he old-fashioned<lb/>
- speech but when it eomee to<lb/>
. a right on t'P- He used<lb/>
are dance when he was young,<lb/>
'a too old and stiff now. Says<lb/>
 back and watch the<lb/>
. . these modern steps<lb/>
girls wearing pants, acquired<lb/>
fn cklea and missing teeth, and all<lb/>
such stuff. He let me in on the<lb/>
sc ret that Miss Stallings is going<lb/>
to come dressed as a bale of hay�<lb/>
well!<lb/>
Even if he is getting pretty old,<lb/>
Uncle "Ezra has still got a lot of<lb/>
'he spirit left. In his old-fashionad way<lb/>
he enthusiastically urges everyone to<lb/>
come. He personally guarantees<lb/>
that everyone will have a good time<lb/>
for he, himself, is supervising all the<lb/>
preparations and is buying many<lb/>
new records.<lb/>
P. S. If you think Uncle Ezra is<lb/>
doing all the work, ask Nell Murphy,<lb/>
Amanda Etheridge, Catherine Brin-<lb/>
son. Garnette Crocker, Julia Anne<lb/>
Hancock and Hilda Moore.<lb/>
i his<lb/>
Terrors Win Over<lb/>
Winterville 28-38<lb/>
The Greenville Golden Terrors de-<lb/>
feated the Winterville All-Stars<lb/>
Thursday night, January 27, 38-28,<lb/>
in Wright auditorium. The Terrors<lb/>
led most of the way and the game<lb/>
was regarded as an easy game to<lb/>
win, although the All-Stars led at<lb/>
end of the half. 13-10.<lb/>
and jitterbuggmg).<lb/>
Stanfield Johnson led the dreaded<lb/>
Terrors pace, scoring 12 points. Tom<lb/>
Rowlette came in second with 8, fol-<lb/>
lowed by Lassiter and Harrison with<lb/>
�' . ach For the losers, Blainie Moye<lb/>
scored 10, and Worthington 7.<lb/>
Gaining a 7-4 lead in the first in the Army<lb/>
Joe tells me that he likes anything<lb/>
that pertains to sports, including<lb/>
wolfin "I like best to take part in<lb/>
basketball and swimming, because<lb/>
basketball is about my speed I am<lb/>
not certain that Joe likes wator. For<lb/>
example, I hear that he got a little<lb/>
too much while at White Lake once.<lb/>
He was unconscious for 14 hours, his<lb/>
body literally filled with lake water.<lb/>
There's one phase of swimming thai<lb/>
Joe doesn't like, and that's drowning.<lb/>
Joe's, high school sports proirram<lb/>
consisted of two years on the Conway<lb/>
High quintet and one year on the<lb/>
diamond. Since coming to ECTC he<lb/>
has taken part in all the intramurals<lb/>
offered. Had Joe had the chance, he<lb/>
probably would have been a big gun<lb/>
on a Pirate team. He was a mem-<lb/>
ber of Floyd Woody's championship<lb/>
team in softhall last spring. In the<lb/>
summer of '43, there were no intra-<lb/>
mural sports on the campus, but Joe<lb/>
found his place on the Greenville<lb/>
. Spinners baseball nine, a semi-pro<lb/>
team in this city.<lb/>
He was appointed to captain one<lb/>
of the teams in football last fall. His<lb/>
team had the championship almost<lb/>
sewed up until Ben Brown. Lassiter's<lb/>
biggest reliance, tore ligaments in<lb/>
his ankle.<lb/>
Just before going home for Christ-<lb/>
mas, Joe defeated finalist J. C. Shep-<lb/>
herd to win the Men's Table Tennis<lb/>
Championship. To gain a place in<lb/>
the finals, Joe beat Clifton Crandell,<lb/>
and Ed Beddingfield.<lb/>
Appointed a captain in basketball<lb/>
also, Joe has led his team to victory<lb/>
in two contests and is a member of<lb/>
the undefeated "new" Golden Terrors<lb/>
of Greenville, Lassiter has the high-<lb/>
est individual scoring record in the<lb/>
intramural league with 50 points to<lb/>
his credit.<lb/>
Some of the girls on the campus<lb/>
may be wondering why this great big<lb/>
hunk of "God's gift to women" isn't<lb/>
Well, Joe has a 2-A<lb/>
ECTG Quint Tops<lb/>
local Navy Team<lb/>
Sy Score Of 25-16<lb/>
The Golden Terrors of Greenville<lb/>
won their fifth straight game Mon-<lb/>
day night, January 31, by defeating<lb/>
he Greenville Navy team from the<lb/>
air base. The game was one of the<lb/>
closest the Terrors have played all<lb/>
season, gaining a substantial lead<lb/>
�nly after bitter fighting in the third<lb/>
period, at the end of which they were<lb/>
out in front, 25-16.<lb/>
The Navy team held its own in the<lb/>
first two periods, the first quarter<lb/>
ending with the game tied at six ah,<lb/>
and the half at 15-14. The third<lb/>
period rally was the deciding factor<lb/>
in the game for the teams played on<lb/>
even terms during the last clocking,<lb/>
the game ending 35-27.<lb/>
High scorer of the game was the<lb/>
Navy center, Mattola, with 15. He<lb/>
was followed by Joe Lassiter with 12<lb/>
ror the Terrors and Stuart Tripp with<lb/>
10 for the boys in Gold. Stanfield<lb/>
Johnson led the defensive, along with<lb/>
the versatile Ben Harrison.<lb/>
The Box:<lb/>
?<lb/>
CulUrAuttii by tht American Scott! ojMagamu CurtwuM.<lb/>
Sixty-One Girl Athletes<lb/>
Participate In Basketball<lb/>
The 1.44 basketball season began<lb/>
with Blxty-oue ECTC girls participa-<lb/>
ting in the activity. They are as fol-<lb/>
lows :<lb/>
Matthews, Rebecca Kirkland, Jose-<lb/>
phine Creech, Loed McLawhorn,<lb/>
Dorothy Jones, Bessie Wooten, Dot<lb/>
Peele, Lucy Winston, and Emma Lee<lb/>
oe, Nell Murphy, Amanda Garris.<lb/>
Virginia Knowles, Dorothy<lb/>
F<lb/>
l<lb/>
ll<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
TP<lb/>
1<lb/>
(round aam<lb/>
j . K,   t0 (el you 'bout the ! period, the Golden Terrors sent in<lb/>
atest and the contest fori their substitutes, and Winterville<lb/>
ckiest costume He oaed to j took the lead, 13-10 at the half. With<lb/>
all such prizes but he says he'll j the return of the first-team Terrors<lb/>
leave such "nonsense" up to you. in the third period, the story was<lb/>
ed some of the things they j different The Terrors scored 17 to<lb/>
 do in his days: mismatched the All-Stars 4. leading at the end of<lb/>
34<lb/>
deferment as a student of math and<lb/>
science. However, our friend Joe is<lb/>
planning to enlist soon. He prefers<lb/>
the Army Air Corps or the Navy. He<lb/>
has a brother in each of these<lb/>
branches of the service.<lb/>
I am sure you read about Joe "Hot-<lb/>
- i- -i.w �vu ton �nirt ' lips" Lassiter in the last issue of this<lb/>
k- bovs wearing dresses 1 the period, 21  With this ten-point i <lb/>
lead, the Terrors coasted to a final W�<lb/>
39-28 victory.<lb/>
Greenville Navy<lb/>
Howard. G, 86<lb/>
Drum, G, 44<lb/>
Mattola. C, 27<lb/>
Lelakus, F, 43<lb/>
Levine, F, 58<lb/>
McCormiek, F, c6<lb/>
1 otaIs<lb/>
Golden Terrors<lb/>
Harrison, G, 6<lb/>
Tripp, G, 1<lb/>
Chartton, C, 12<lb/>
Owens, C, 12<lb/>
Johnson, F, 3<lb/>
Rowlette, F, 9<lb/>
Lassiter, F, 5<lb/>
G.<lb/>
2<lb/>
o<lb/>
7<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
12<lb/>
G.<lb/>
3<lb/>
5<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
16<lb/>
FT.<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
s<lb/>
F.<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
Lee Bl<lb/>
Etheridg<lb/>
Sheann, Ifosette Suitt, Marjorie<lb/>
Sugg, Margaret Hall, Nan Little,<lb/>
Franees Chapman, Martha Jefferson,<lb/>
Jerry Albritton, Eknse Williams,<lb/>
Christine Yarborough, Wilma John-<lb/>
son. Jessie Carter, Elsie West, Doris<lb/>
Stevens, Elizabeth Simpkins, Nancy<lb/>
Holloman, Francelle Harden, Bobby<lb/>
Brewer, Helen Rouse, Opal Eldridge,<lb/>
Dixie Chappell, Reba Brown.<lb/>
Vema Carroway. Edna Powell,<lb/>
Mickey Boyette, Nancy Wynne, Hilda<lb/>
2 Grimes. Lib Hardee. Mae Bowen,<lb/>
� Catherine Abernathy, Helen Sessoms,<lb/>
27 Anne Woody, Elsie Corbitt, Katherine<lb/>
.9 .?? <lb/>
TP<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
15<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
COLD WAVE<lb/>
a it d<lb/>
MACHINELESS<lb/>
PERMANENTS<lb/>
visit the<lb/>
<lb/>
FT. F. TP Wood, Hazel Piland, Anne Bell John-j<lb/>
1 6 son, Pauline Taylor, Elizabeth:<lb/>
1 101 Thomas, Lois Chadwkk, Daphne;<lb/>
0 7 Doverson, Jean Scarborough, Carolyn'<lb/>
1 0 , Register, Annie B. Bartholomew<lb/>
1 0 Penny Smith, Betty Joyce Kinlaw,<lb/>
1 0 Margaret Chestnut.<lb/>
1 12! Lois Eaikens, Helen Raper, Jean<lb/>
tFRIENDLY BEAUTY?<lb/>
I SHOP 1<lb/>
 �?� ��v ����<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
HUNGRY?<lb/>
NEED FOOD?<lb/>
6 35<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
WAA Hikers Get<lb/>
Bivouac Training<lb/>
On Field Trip<lb/>
wrong spot Looking for the old di-<lb/>
' lapidated bridge that spans the<lb/>
4�30 marsh by the Washington highway,<lb/>
g34 these female commandos found them-<lb/>
ath 2. serves two blocks west of their ob-<lb/>
Inman, jeetrve Their motto, "Never turn<lb/>
e: Marines back" egged them on. Jumping from<lb/>
dry land, to cypress knees, to dry-<lb/>
logs, they plodded their path, and pro-<lb/>
gressed. Finally they hit their des-<lb/>
tination (the old bridge), but then<lb/>
1<lb/>
The Box:<lb/>
Winterville<lb/>
Worthington,<lb/>
Tucker, C<lb/>
Avery, F<lb/>
B. Moye, F<lb/>
Joyner, G,<lb/>
Forest, G<lb/>
Harris, G<lb/>
J. Moye, G<lb/>
HILDA<lb/>
MOORE<lb/>
i' nothing on<lb/>
attended<lb/>
Januarv<lb/>
they had to do a little washing in the<lb/>
creek, for their sense of balance<lb/>
seemed to be lacking in some respect.<lb/>
(Ask Jo Creech if you disagree with<lb/>
this account.) ,<lb/>
Miss Stallings claimed the title of Lassjter, G<lb/>
"Gal with Muddiest Feet" but for<lb/>
some strange reason the whole party<lb/>
fought<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Golden Terrors<lb/>
Harrison, G<lb/>
Cutler, G<lb/>
ut<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
22.<lb/>
in jifw�t of<lb/>
sow (cause ain't<lb/>
her life?) the<lb/>
he swamp in the<lb/>
igh<lb/>
Owen's Quintet Leads<lb/>
Intramural Standings<lb/>
over since each member<lb/>
she deserved it most.<lb/>
' you readers are inclined to think<lb/>
that the Marines are the only ones<lb/>
who go on bivouac, maybe you'd bet-<lb/>
ter join the WAA hikers on their<lb/>
next tour of the land.<lb/>
Girl Quints Have<lb/>
Good Tournament<lb/>
Crandell, G<lb/>
Johnson, C<lb/>
Boyd, C<lb/>
Rowlette, F<lb/>
(ummings, F<lb/>
Owens ,F<lb/>
Register, F<lb/>
Gray F<lb/>
FG<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
5<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
13<lb/>
FG<lb/>
3<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
5<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
FT<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
j Joe's life. He is president of the<lb/>
i hand and has a big role in the newly<lb/>
-pp organized college orchestra. He plays<lb/>
7 j the trumpet in both.<lb/>
Joe is also treasurer of the YMCA,<lb/>
a member of the Phi Sigma Pi fra-<lb/>
ternity, and a member of the Men's<lb/>
Student government. Besides, Joe is<lb/>
a representative on the Student Co-<lb/>
i operative council.<lb/>
0<lb/>
4<lb/>
10<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
Totals<lb/>
Score by periods:<lb/>
Greenville Navy � 6<lb/>
Golden Terrors � 6<lb/>
Half time score: Navy 14, Terrors<lb/>
15. Free throws missed: McCormiek<lb/>
2, Lelakus, and Lassiter.<lb/>
8 2 9�27<lb/>
9 10 10�35<lb/>
Morton's Bakery<lb/>
Best<lb/>
in Bakery Goods<lb/>
1<lb/>
2 7 28<lb/>
FT F TP<lb/>
0 0 6<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
�I<lb/>
0<lb/>
12<lb/>
0<lb/>
8<lb/>
0<lb/>
3<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
already hard at work on his first big<lb/>
case.<lb/>
The situation that is challenging<lb/>
his talents is that of a burglary at<lb/>
704 Linden in which two men broke<lb/>
into a room and took two cartons of<lb/>
cigarettes, a sport coat, a suitcase,<lb/>
a train ticket to Seattle and $10 in<lb/>
cash.<lb/>
Randy vows that he'll solve the<lb/>
case if it's humanly possible. In<lb/>
fact, he's quite stirred up about the<lb/>
case. You see, it was his room.<lb/>
EAT and DRINK<lb/>
where all<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
meet<lb/>
I KARES<lb/>
VISITTHE<lb/>
DIXIEL IT N C II<lb/>
"Where TheGang Eats"<lb/>
For the food you need<lb/>
while studying, visit<lb/>
GARRIS GROCERY<lb/>
Convi ni( ni Location<lb/>
Buy War Bonds First, and<lb/>
then keep up your morale by<lb/>
seeing New Spring Suits,<lb/>
Coats and Dresses at<lb/>
WILLIAMS'<lb/>
-The Ladies' Store"<lb/>
QUALITY and QUANTITY'<lb/>
IN<lb/>
CAROLINA.DAIRY'S<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
MILKSHAKES<lb/>
1<lb/>
Totals 16 6 5 38<lb/>
Half-time score: Winterville 13,<lb/>
Golden Terrors 10. Free throws<lb/>
missed: Johnson 3, Worthington 3,<lb/>
B. Moye, Forest, and Rowlette.<lb/>
vis I and III, played. Jarvis I won<lb/>
with a nice margin of 21 to 7. Dot<lb/>
The first game of the girls' basket- peeie ieat Jarvis I's coring with 8<lb/>
program is I ball tournament was played January )()ints with Verna Carroway close<lb/>
�. In Wednes- 2S between Fleming I and Cotten IL i with 7 points and Lee Bledsoe<lb/>
f this week j Cotten II won the game with abi� following with 6 points. High scorer<lb/>
for Jarvis III was Lena Mae Black-<lb/>
� (,f two games last<lb/>
� � icheduk b�r four this<lb/>
NEW SPRING MERCHANDISE ARRIVING<lb/>
DAILY IN OUR<lb/>
Ladies' Ready-To-Wear<lb/>
AND<lb/>
Men's Departments<lb/>
well with 6 points. Eakes came in<lb/>
; for 1 point.<lb/>
On January 31, Jarvis II met Cot-<lb/>
ten II on the basketball court. Cot-<lb/>
ten II won the game 20 to 6. Jarvis<lb/>
II scored the entire 6 points on free<lb/>
j shots. For Cotten II, West and<lb/>
Knowles bagged 7 points each and<lb/>
week : Cotten II<lb/>
, that won last margin of 63 to 31. Catherine Aber-<lb/>
Change in the League ; nathy lead Fleming Vu scoring with<lb/>
g Owen's top-heavy five is 13 points. Mozelle Suitt came m<lb/>
, v,r with energy, scoring ; with 10 points and Carolyn Register<lb/>
two games as compared followed with 8 points High scorer<lb/>
Bent? 30. Lassiter's , for Gotten II was Elsie West with<lb/>
.Ltet hasn't been quite 28 points and W'J"?�<lb/>
 They have 82 as op- close on her trail with W pofflt<lb/>
eir opponents' 47. Bover- i Bobbie Brewer came in for ��� ,<lb/>
r Bombardiers have scored; The second game was played on. Carroway Came in with 6 points.<lb/>
�: toJTS i January 27 with Wilson vs. Cotten I. Miss Stallings said, "The girls have<lb/>
otal or .it wnue ine 1 wjth a score much in ovement ln g<lb/>
Johnsons Sharp- e  beginning rf <lb/>
 BELK-TYLER CO.<lb/>
I Greenville, N. C. ,<lb/>
 �<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ten have 41 as compared to the<lb/>
63.<lb/>
Resuha for February 1:<lb/>
Termites 45, Marine Flyers 28.<lb/>
Sharpshooters 51, Bombardiers 15.<lb/>
Standings to date:<lb/>
Termites<lb/>
Marine Flyers<lb/>
Sharpshooters<lb/>
bombardiers<lb/>
W.<lb/>
3<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
of 24 to 14. Ruth Spencer lead Wil<lb/>
son's scoring with 8 points. Murphy<lb/>
Simmons, and Hall came in for L<lb/>
points each. Ida Gray Williams top-<lb/>
ped Cotten I's scoring with 12 points<lb/>
Dot Jones accounted for 8 points and<lb/>
L. Pet Nan Little came in with 2 pointsl<lb/>
0 1000, Jarvis is the only dormitory with<lb/>
1 .667 enough girls participating m basket-<lb/>
2 .338ball to make up three teams.<lb/>
8 .000 January<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Miss Alex commented, "I'm glad to<lb/>
see so many girls playing, especially<lb/>
those who have never played before<lb/>
THIS COLLEGIATE WORLD<lb/>
Randall "Sheriff" Johnson is only a<lb/>
freshman in the police science course<lb/>
�iiniuii<lb/>
Tm.tSL�� �'Ts"on; mmmmmmmmmsm<lb/>
OUR BEAUTIFUL LINE OF SPRING<lb/>
COATS ARE ARRIVNG DAILY<lb/>
SAIEED'S<lb/>
503-505 Dickinson Avenue<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Do You Want More Bottle Drinks?<lb/>
Bring In Those Bottles<lb/>
2c Each<lb/>
Soda Shop<lb/>
THE MEETING AND EATING PLACE<lb/>
OF ALL COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
! 1<lb/>
MORE BOTTLES�MORE DRINKS<lb/>
I'liiiiiisiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiittiiiiiiHHiitiHiiiinifiniiiHflHiiiS!<lb/>
HBBSJSJgnSltJBJHSJHaHSJHWM<lb/>
<pb facs="00037932_0004"/><lb/>
SATURDAY. FEBR1 ARY<lb/>
-I<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
Chi Pi Players Are Getting Ready<lb/>
For Presentation Of Jane Eyre<lb/>
The Chi Pi Players, who several<lb/>
j ars ago successfully presented<lb/>
Emily Bronte's immortal Wuthering<lb/>
Heights, are now engaged in the pre-<lb/>
ation of Charlotte Bronte's equally<lb/>
famous Jane Eyre. Dates for the<lb/>
I erformances are Friday and Satur-<lb/>
nights, February 18-19.<lb/>
This production, according to Hazel<lb/>
�i , pre ident of the drama group,<lb/>
, pex ted to rival that of Wuther-<lb/>
i , i, both in the appeal and<lb/>
in technical beauty.<lb/>
c ne is laid at Thornfield<lb/>
Hall, in the north of England, in<lb/>
,y this gloomy and forbidding<lb/>
; e youi �' Jane Eyre comes as<lb/>
i . and many are the mys-<lb/>
terious and terrifying events<lb/>
fke place before her love<lb/>
that<lb/>
for Mr.<lb/>
Rochester, her employer, can be re-<lb/>
W anied.<lb/>
Crete hen Webster as Jane and<lb/>
mj Warren as Rochester, sup-<lb/>
. by Curtis Butler as Mason,<lb/>
son as Blanche, Lynn<lb/>
Klein a Lady Ingram, Mary Frances<lb/>
Ellis a Mrs, Fairfax. Kenneth<lb/>
Jam a; Wood, and Marybelle Red-<lb/>
as til ace make up the cast.<lb/>
Directed by Miss Ruth Oncley of<lb/>
University of North Carolina,<lb/>
Jane Eyre is in its fourth week of<lb/>
rehearsals. In the absence of Miss<lb/>
Oncley President Harris acts as di-<lb/>
rector.<lb/>
Vesper Program Presents<lb/>
Varied Religious Services<lb/>
The vesper programs of January i Qp her own plan to work abroad; am<lb/>
21 and 23 were both led by students. ! a young college man who has had to<lb/>
Marine Johnson presented a program give up his ambition to practice t e<lb/>
j of readings Friday evening; and Sun- Christian way of living as a lawyer<lb/>
! lay evening Carol Leigh Humphreys, to go into the armed forces, but he<lb/>
 -resident of the Baptist Student is now doing great work for other:<lb/>
Home Test'for WAVE Prospects.<lb/>
Ten. 'Aye, Aye's Needed To Pass<lb/>
Att<lb/>
Onl<lb/>
.<lb/>
wondering about their - .<lb/>
and get  .<lb/>
WAVE-m.ndcd g r.s iMtlon<lb/>
themselves . s,mple Ik uej W q fc y<lb/>
they would be ��? tebt o course. but <lb/>
It isn't an infallible ori bhc ca� Lc reai<lb/>
hcM ten questions affirmatively<lb/>
STWAVES SfTita to have her:<lb/>
- �<lb/>
mion, spoke on "Serving Christ at<lb/>
College<lb/>
At the Friday evening service<lb/>
1: I it<lb/>
ie<lb/>
is<lb/>
on the small island where he is now<lb/>
stationed.<lb/>
'Tf the waffles have stuck in your<lb/>
read the beautifull "Hall of, life said Miss Finest in closing.<lb/>
feroes" and led the group in several ' "you can 'turn them into batter-<lb/>
hymns. She also read the poems cakes. With Cod's help you can make<lb/>
"Wanted: A Messenger" and "I something valuable out of what is<lb/>
hall Not Pass This Way Again bft<lb/>
Carol Leigh began her talk at the Emma Grace Clarke led the do- �<lb/>
service with the question votional, and the B. S. U. trio com-<lb/>
is the Christian motive for osed of Dorothy Sasser, Clarine<lb/>
To this question the answer Johnson, and Edna Averette, aeconi-<lb/>
the words of Christ, panied by Dorothy Whitley, sang<lb/>
�We Would Be Builders Mary<lb/>
Warren was pianist.<lb/>
<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
�What<lb/>
ervice.<lb/>
as given m<lb/>
. his is my commandment I give un-<lb/>
o y u that ye love one another<lb/>
"How may we become skilled in<lb/>
Christian service and how may we<lb/>
serve" was the next question Carol<lb/>
eigh dbcussed. She said that we<lb/>
barn to serve by serving in the<lb/>
YWCA, the YMCA, the vesper ser-<lb/>
vices, church organizations here on votional.<lb/>
the campus, and in the church itself.<lb/>
'Let us not be weary in well-doing,<lb/>
for in due season we shall reap if we<lb/>
faint not she quoted. In closing<lb/>
he read the poem, "Awareness<lb/>
The speaker at the Friday evening<lb/>
vesper service, January 28, was<lb/>
Reverend N. C. Brooks, who waa on<lb/>
the campus as a guest of the Baptist<lb/>
Student union. Mary Cox led the<lb/>
lie-<lb/>
Twin Beds Chosen<lb/>
For Senior Play<lb/>
Scene from Jane Eyre showing Josephine Gibson as Blanche,<lb/>
James Warren as Rochester and Gretchen Webster as Jane Eyre.<lb/>
!<lb/>
Twins Beds, three-act comedy and<lb/>
on picture hit, lias been selected J<lb/>
ai the senior class play to be given<lb/>
late in the winter quarter. Clifton <lb/>
Britton, of Goldsboro and formerly<lb/>
ECTC director will supervise the pre-<lb/>
sentation of the production. Dates<lb/>
for the tryouts will be held in the<lb/>
near future, to be announced on the,<lb/>
Austin bulletin board.<lb/>
After making a study of several<lb/>
plays, a committee from the senior<lb/>
class headed by Babe Hooks selected<lb/>
T�in hied. Stage managers for the<lb/>
production will be Babe Hooks and<lb/>
Lave Owens, president of the senior<lb/>
class. Only seniors will be behind<lb/>
stage and only seniors girls may try<lb/>
for parts in the play. Due to the<lb/>
scarcity of boys in the senior class,<lb/>
any boy on the campus may try out.<lb/>
Oncley To Direct<lb/>
Chi Pi Production<lb/>
Of Jane Eyre<lb/>
Reverend Brooks pointed out in his<lb/>
talk several dangers confronting the<lb/>
world today. He said thai we mu-t<lb/>
remember that "might is not always<lb/>
right "It is a great fallacy to think<lb/>
that the majority is necessarily<lb/>
right he said.<lb/>
"The cry of the crowd is still be-<lb/>
ing heard he said, "and it is as<lb/>
dangerous as it was when the people<lb/>
Can you prove you are a at t� <lb/>
burn or naturalized<lb/>
Are vou between 2" and I e�<lb/>
consent of parents or guardian is tut<lb/>
Are vou single, or marrw<lb/>
children under 18? (Wi t ,<lb/>
eligible, but not wh<lb/>
Li. gn on up.)<lb/>
i a you furnish three charactei reier es?<lb/>
liave yon attended high school<lb/>
school for at least I yea<lb/>
Are yon at least 5 led I<lb/>
al least l5 pounds, m � . .<lb/>
 it m t � general body bu<lb/>
Caa va read with either ee U<lb/>
with both eyes at 12 feel �<lb/>
read at 20 I I<lb/>
I an yon hear whispered v.<lb/>
Are your teeth sound"<lb/>
ntenta are no bar.)<lb/>
Will your ph) �i� ian <lb/>
that you are in g<lb/>
examination by N �<lb/>
W VF. aspirants answering "yes" � l<lb/>
.  �� ,  �� visit or telephone the Navy 1- � run<lb/>
Office ofN; a I i krr h.urrtnn.t Asl<lb/>
bkkt gWiS complete iafor�n�t.ou ,<lb/>
quarters, etc.<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
to<lb/>
studei '<lb/>
Mo � '<lb/>
of th<lb/>
cried 'Crucify Him! Crucify Him to with our own eye<lb/>
Pilate, who found no quilt in Jesus. ing.<lb/>
As far as<lb/>
Miss Mary Lee Krnest, Baptist<lb/>
student secretary, spoke Sunday<lb/>
night, January 30 at vespers on<lb/>
"Waffles Into Battereakes<lb/>
The topic chosen came from an in-<lb/>
cident related by, Miss Ernest in<lb/>
which, when the waffles for a guest He pointed out that although ths ma-<lb/>
breakfast stuck, the mistress instruc- jority agreed in the incident of the<lb/>
ted the cook to "turn the waffles in-  golden calf being made, it was not<lb/>
to battereakes right. "The voice of God he said,<lb/>
"The 'waffles' stick sometimes in; "must be heard and be reckoned<lb/>
nearly everyone's life said Miss with<lb/>
Ernest, "but we must not give way 1 "The place of the minority when<lb/>
weakly, but make the best out of j the crowd cries is close to the cross<lb/>
Ruth Oncley. director of the what we have ' said Reverend Brooks in "closing.<lb/>
She illustrated by references to<lb/>
standings between agencies<lb/>
unwillingness of most agencit<lb/>
lose a medkum of control. We have<lb/>
seen the fight for power and presl �� I -��<lb/>
is -omnipresent in Washington. We I<lb/>
had heard that, of course, before we<lb/>
But now we can see the fight<lb/>
ind it's eye-open-<lb/>
came<lb/>
an alert, mV<lb/>
V<lb/>
taking g<lb/>
of their spe<lb/>
i m p i �<lb/>
N<lb/>
F<lb/>
ourselves are concerned,<lb/>
A n y<lb/>
we have learned that the recta- exis-<lb/>
hi nuvc umu . I becoming an<lb/>
tence of an interne leads to utter ex-<lb/>
; inform I I I<lb/>
of Pubi<lb/>
Building. W<lb/>
�. use<lb/>
Mis:<lb/>
("In Pi Player's latest production,<lb/>
Jane Eyre, to be presented February three cases: Andrew, the apostle who<lb/>
1- and 19, bails originally from Win- did not attain first place in the<lb/>
field, Kansas. There she attended group, did not let this prevent his<lb/>
Soutb Eastern university for two rendering other service to his Master;<lb/>
years, before transferring to WCU- a prospective missionary in China<lb/>
RUTH ONCLEY<lb/>
DR. McGINNIS<lb/>
(Continued from Page One)<lb/>
cording to the teacher's record, ex- j<lb/>
� that a student above sophomore i<lb/>
ng who has a grade average of;<lb/>
"2" on all previous college work may<lb/>
have unlimited class absences.<lb/>
4. Except in such emergencies as<lb/>
those listed above, a permit to leave<lb/>
the campus, which involves a class<lb/>
absence will not be given if the stu-<lb/>
dent's grade average is below "3<lb/>
Members of the council turned in-<lb/>
to Dr. McGinnis their suggestions for<lb/>
changing the above plan and general<lb/>
criticisms of the plan. The plan is<lb/>
published in order that all students<lb/>
on the campus may have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to study it and to offer to Dr.<lb/>
McGinnis any suggestion that may be<lb/>
desired.<lb/>
After the suggestions have come in<lb/>
and Dr. McGinnis has completed the<lb/>
compilation of student opinion, the<lb/>
report will be taken to the faculty<lb/>
and administration for final action.<lb/>
Rev. N. C. Brooks<lb/>
Conducts Meetings<lb/>
For Baptist Union<lb/>
I NC, from which she was graduated in<lb/>
; 1940.<lb/>
i During her stay at WC she was a<lb/>
; mi mber of the Play Likers, and since<lb/>
! her graduation she lias worked with<lb/>
tock companies and Little Theatres<lb/>
and on the radio. At present Miss<lb/>
Oncley is a Rockefeller assistant at<lb/>
� tl e University of North Carolina,<lb/>
where she is assistant business mana-<lb/>
ger of the Carolina Playmakers. Her<lb/>
most recent work in dramatics<lb/>
was not defeated when forced to give<lb/>
"There is victory with Christ he<lb/>
said. "The wrong may Seem to suc-<lb/>
ceed for a time but in the end the<lb/>
victory is Christ's<lb/>
Edna Earle Lang and Dorothy<lb/>
Whitley were pianists for the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
hidden meanings behind the news and tional Labor Relations Board or the<lb/>
gossip in this world crossroads.<lb/>
A year ago, the fifty internes now<lb/>
in Washington were undergraduates<lb/>
at various colleges throughout the<lb/>
United States. Most of us were re-<lb/>
puted to be campus leaders of a sort.<lb/>
Some were editors of campus news-<lb/>
papers; some were presidents or of-<lb/>
at ficers of student associations. Others<lb/>
Many problems facing young people th<lb/>
Committee for Fair Employment<lb/>
Practices. Several of us are experi-<lb/>
encing the throes of reorganization<lb/>
in Lend Lease, Office of Economic<lb/>
Warfare, office of Foreign Economic<lb/>
Coordination and the Office of For-<lb/>
eign Relief and Rehabilitation�all<lb/>
now joined into one happy family<lb/>
known a the Office of Foreign Eco-<lb/>
nomic Administration.<lb/>
But all of us, regardless of place-<lb/>
ment, have had similar opportunities.<lb/>
We have helped in the necessary and<lb/>
practical work of administration.<lb/>
UNC was the interpretation of the were active in dramatic or musical ac-<lb/>
role of Sara Miller in Watch on the, tivities or were members of college<lb/>
Rhine, shortly before Christmas. debating teams. And some of us<lb/>
Miss Oncley expressed pleasure at were graduated with Phi Beta Kappa<lb/>
the interest in dramatics shown by honors.<lb/>
tiie students here and said she hoped We came from various walks �fFiow<lb/>
of today were discussed last week as that Jane Lyre would prove as great campus life with one thing in com tion indices, reports and paper sur-<lb/>
many students thought more deeply i success as Claudia. mon-an interest in government and j veys haV(. u tunu.d out in quanti-<lb/>
spiritually when Reverend Nathan a healthy curiosity about the way it<lb/>
Brooks, Jr pastor of the First Bap- . i rlAli4� jn W H �Vl i n erf ATI wrks at the federal level.<lb/>
tist church, Waynesboro, Georgia, led OMiatasia all tf asating urn An investifati()n int0 uur<lb/>
forums on "The Christian Home" and Washington A C P� Still fairly, personalities, characters and academ-<lb/>
brought inspirational messages in the,new  tjH. Capital scene is the j ic standing we were chosen to be-<lb/>
observance of the "Week of Deeper government interne � the bright,(come students at the National Insti-<lb/>
 Spiritual Thinking in the Baptist young college graduate who comes to<lb/>
Student union. Washington to study the machinery'<lb/>
As the forums began Tuesday af- 0f government in operation.<lb/>
j lernoon, Reverend Brooks asked the The theory behind internship is<lb/>
girls two questions: "Do you want to ro( new por manv years, educators<lb/>
j build a home? Do you want to build anj students of political science have<lb/>
a Christian home?" Mr. Brooks led contended that if you mix specialized,<lb/>
the group to realize that there is a coflege training and an interest in<lb/>
difference in building just home and government with a knowledge of<lb/>
in building a Christian home. j government at work, you'll come out<lb/>
The aim throughout the week m with higher standards among pros-<lb/>
the forums was to seek through a pective federal servants. The interne<lb/>
better understanding of the problems j js taking hold.<lb/>
METHODISTS<lb/>
(Continued from Page One)<lb/>
other people, and that such a situa-<lb/>
tion should not exist. Christians<lb/>
should try to make this world the<lb/>
kind of world it ought to be, for<lb/>
example, so there will not be a world<lb/>
in which fifty percent of people go<lb/>
hungry, as is the case today.<lb/>
"No permanent world peace stated<lb/>
Dr. Bradshaw, "will ever be unless<lb/>
Christian principles are followed, and<lb/>
to insure such a peace, there should<lb/>
be a Christian pressure group at the<lb/>
peace table<lb/>
He concluded by saying that the<lb/>
world peace is the churches' business,<lb/>
as well as anyone else's, and that all<lb/>
people should think not as individ-<lb/>
uals, or as separate states, but as<lb/>
Christians with world good in mind.<lb/>
"Y"STORE<lb/>
(Continued from Page One)<lb/>
the service and she finally releases<lb/>
us.<lb/>
Tip-toeing cautiously across the<lb/>
cigarette-butt carpet that lines the<lb/>
mahogany floor, we find "Mot" Jef-<lb/>
ferson drawing names in cigarette<lb/>
ashes. She mumbles incoherently. We<lb/>
take out our code books and finally<lb/>
decipher her vague mutterings. "1<lb/>
want to go Huntin Ralph HuntinV<lb/>
We pass on.<lb/>
Do we hear a donkey? Why, it's<lb/>
Stanfield Johnson just showing his<lb/>
Dr. Jekyll-Mr. Hyde personalities!<lb/>
Frances "Gun Moll" Page winks at<lb/>
"Al Capone Murphy. They jitter-<lb/>
bug out.<lb/>
Margaret Pugh Harden staggers<lb/>
in. It seems she had eleven too<lb/>
involved and a discovery of the "Will<lb/>
of God" to strengthen the bases of<lb/>
our the "Christian Home<lb/>
Some of the safeguards of a Chris-<lb/>
tian home which Reverend Brooks of-<lb/>
fered the students were an under-<lb/>
standing of the divine origin of the<lb/>
home; Jesus' teaching concerning the<lb/>
motives of the heart and of Christian<lb/>
living; study of and a holding up of<lb/>
the Bible; teaching, concerning Chris-<lb/>
tian stewardship; and prayer as a<lb/>
most important safeguard.<lb/>
Tuesday night Reverend Brooks<lb/>
brought a message on "There am I<lb/>
using as his text "For where two or<lb/>
three are gathered together in my<lb/>
name; there am I in the midst of<lb/>
them Wednesday night "Living<lb/>
Dangerously" was his topic, with one<lb/>
of the Beatitudes as his scripture,<lb/>
"Blessed are they which are perse-<lb/>
cuted for righteousness sake; for<lb/>
theirs is the kingdom of heaven<lb/>
Thursday night Reverend Brooks<lb/>
brought a most inspiring message on<lb/>
"Please Do Not Disturb His text<lb/>
was "These that have turned the<lb/>
More and more<lb/>
of these students of government are<lb/>
arriving in Washington every year.<lb/>
This week Capital to Campus presents<lb/>
one of them. She is Esther Miller,<lb/>
a 1943 graduate of Rochester Uni-<lb/>
versity. This is her story. From<lb/>
here on, it's told in her own words . <lb/>
We internes are leading an exciting<lb/>
life in Washington. We work forty-<lb/>
eight hours a week and never manage<lb/>
to get enough rest. We sit in on<lb/>
agency conference and try to impress<lb/>
executives with our silent wisdom.<lb/>
We visit Capitol Hill and attend<lb/>
House and Senate committee hear-<lb/>
ings. And we burn the midnight oil,<lb/>
just as many of us did in school. But<lb/>
not over books. .Now we sit up talk-<lb/>
ing about the day's events and the<lb/>
tute of Public Affairs and internes<lb/>
or trainees in administration in the<lb/>
federal government. The Institute is<lb/>
a privately endowed organization. Its<lb/>
prestige with government agencies<lb/>
and the arrangements it makes with<lb/>
them permit us to see agency opera-<lb/>
tions from the inside.<lb/>
We are here for a seven months'<lb/>
training period. Our first month was<lb/>
devoted to orientation. Twice daily<lb/>
we listened to directors of agencies,<lb/>
bureaus and divisions discuss their<lb/>
work and inform us of the practical<lb/>
applications of government admini-<lb/>
stration. Among the better known<lb/>
persons who talked to us are Eleanor<lb/>
Roosevelt, who entertained us at the<lb/>
White House, Harold Smith of the<lb/>
Budget Bureau and Chief Justice<lb/>
Stone.<lb/>
After a month of this intensive in-<lb/>
struction and discussion, we felt<lb/>
saturated with knowledge and ready<lb/>
to choose the branch of public admini-<lb/>
stration in which we would concen-<lb/>
trate our study. By the middle of<lb/>
August, we were all placed as in-<lb/>
ternes in some sport in the govern-<lb/>
ment. Some of us aligned ourselves<lb/>
with the War Labor Board, the Na-<lb/>
ty by the internes. Special inter-<lb/>
agency conferences and staff meet-<lb/>
ings have been opened to us. We<lb/>
have been given opportunities to<lb/>
move around, between and within<lb/>
agencies.<lb/>
We have seen beautiful diagrams<lb/>
of both the war agencies and the old-<lb/>
! line agencies and have observed<lb/>
these patterns being ignored because<lb/>
they failed to allow for the human<lb/>
factor. We have come to know the<lb/>
importance, for administrators, of<lb/>
connections "on the Hill We have<lb/>
learned that the lack of adquate<lb/>
political connections on the part ofj<lb/>
administrators has too often resulted<lb/>
in the closing of Congressional<lb/>
moneybags and the end of a necessary<lb/>
program or the gradual death of an ;<lb/>
agency.<lb/>
We have heard the cries of war-<lb/>
impacted communities, bedeviled with<lb/>
one federal investigation after an-1<lb/>
other. And we have seen attempts<lb/>
to coordinate and telescope these in-<lb/>
vestigations on the federal level�<lb/>
attempts which have often failed in<lb/>
part or entirely because of misunder-<lb/>
haustion. We take three or foor<lb/>
hours of credit at American or<lb/>
George Washington Universities, at-<lb/>
tend weekly meetings conducted by <lb/>
the Institute, and for the Institute<lb/>
we prepare detailed, monthly pro- 'oHtriates' World<lb/>
gresa reports. All this is in addition <lb/>
to our daily government work. OffcTS Varieties<lb/>
College students who are intei ted<lb/>
in become internes should I �<lb/>
warned that our weekly forty-eight post-1<lb/>
hours spent working m government presun � . i it th<lb/>
agencies are given on the WOC (with- r<lb/>
out compensation) basis. All living f mistlet<lb/>
expenses must be paid out of the in-<lb/>
terne's pocket. And there is no time<lb/>
during the seven months' course for<lb/>
afternoon paying jobs. Most of us<lb/>
spend about $600 for our living costs<lb/>
durin gthe seven months we are here.<lb/>
This does not include transportation<lb/>
costs to and from Washington. Some<lb/>
colleges tighten the interne's finan-<lb/>
cial burden by granting scholarships,<lb/>
I ut such aid is all too infrequent.<lb/>
The disadvantages suffered by an<lb/>
interne, however, are far outweighed<lb/>
by the advantages. With their ad-<lb/>
vance knowledge of practical public<lb/>
administration, many internes have<lb/>
risen to positions of authority short-<lb/>
ly after they took jobs with the<lb/>
federal government.<lb/>
That is the stor of Esther Mil-<lb/>
ler, government interne. It tallies<lb/>
closely with the torses of her fellow<lb/>
�<lb/>
ng the 1 It<lb/>
in similar quant<lb/>
�ho still ha tl ttei<lb/>
all at h .<lb/>
� � � �<lb/>
Inst i tor Ro! ert ' I<lb/>
classroom recent1 I<lb/>
r Army students. A I<lb/>
. . �<lb/>
der. "W 11,<lb/>
�aid the in<lb/>
� .<lb/>
�I'm<lb/>
��?-?'??������<lb/>
LAUTARES BROS.<lb/>
JEWELERS<lb/>
Watches � Jewelry<lb/>
Silver � Gifts<lb/>
Watch Repairing<lb/>
"The Culieae Jeweler"<lb/>
New Spring<lb/>
COATS<lb/>
SUITS<lb/>
DRESSES<lb/>
visit<lb/>
CHEBERF0RBE<lb/>
THE BEST LINE OF<lb/>
Cosmetics, Hosiery and Notions<lb/>
AT<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
last<lb/>
many "Creme-puff de menthes'<lb/>
night.<lb/>
The lights blink out�we push<lb/>
Clifton Nelson away, and motion to<lb/>
Ed Garris to wipe Jean and Edna<lb/>
Earle's lipstick off�The manless<lb/>
girls pick themselves up Jirenes, co-<lb/>
eds, or high schools (He's fifteen,<lb/>
isn't he, Vashti?) and retreat to<lb/>
Bush No. 13. "The Admiral" in his<lb/>
orange and pink plaid uniform, ushers<lb/>
us out, and the waitresses sweetly<lb/>
us to return soon to the fashionable<lb/>
"Y" store. And we won't kiddin'<lb/>
when we say we will! See ya' to-<lb/>
morrow at breakfast!<lb/>
world upside down are come hither<lb/>
also Reverend Brooks said that too<lb/>
many of us do not want to be dis-<lb/>
turbed in our Christian life.<lb/>
The vesper hour Friday night<lb/>
brought the week to a close when a<lb/>
most inspiring service of consecration<lb/>
was led by Reverend Brooks as he<lb/>
brought a message on "The Cry of the<lb/>
Crowd His opening thoughts were<lb/>
centered around the cry of the crowd<lb/>
when Christ was crucified. "Today,<lb/>
we are hearing cries of the crowd<lb/>
Reverend Brooks said, "and we must<lb/>
realize that might does not always<lb/>
make right. We must dare to be in<lb/>
the minority and stand for the right"<lb/>
<lb/>
BOWL FOR HEALTH<lb/>
at<lb/>
Greenville Health<lb/>
Center<lb/>
<lb/>
Palace Barber Shop<lb/>
Appreciates<lb/>
Your Patronage<lb/>
SCOTT'S DRY<lb/>
CLEANERS<lb/>
 REPAIRS - ALTERATIONS i<lb/>
1 All Work Guaranteed<lb/>
Third at Cotanche, Dial 3722<lb/>
We Appreciate Your<lb/>
Business<lb/>
i  -ill iilJiMA Nil.  Iv.i K <lb/>
i<lb/>
j THINKING AHEAD FOR<lb/>
YOUR NEW<lb/>
SPRING OUTFITS<lb/>
AN EARLY VISIT TO<lb/>
illllliili �<lb/>
����������������������������<lb/>
<lb/>
DIAL 2S61<lb/>
71� DICKINSON AVE.<lb/>
Renfrew printing ftiTMy<lb/>
commercial printers<lb/>
Grctnvitlc, North Carolina<lb/>
"ftl<lb/>
Mof<lb/>
�����'������������� �������� �tfH��f�M����MM��l���tH<lb/>
WILL ASSIST YOU IN<lb/>
YOUR SELECTIONS<lb/>
!i!l11illi!IItySilllliltiill!IS!tiliiillillt!lllii!H<lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00037932_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>