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<pb facs="00038083_0001"/>
<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
Ihe<lb/>
EAST CARSBN?iSfeS COLLEGE<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Volume XV<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1939<lb/>
Number 11<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College Will Be Host<lb/>
To Three Thousand High School Seniors April 11<lb/>
Chinese Artists<lb/>
Offer Program<lb/>
Of Oriental Arts<lb/>
??w <lb/>
Juanita Etheridge Chosen W.S.G.A. President; Delegates Here<lb/>
Men Select Shelton to Succeed Ridenhour<lb/>
1 v. nit Number<lb/>
Pleads iudienee<lb/>
 ?? ss the Pacific<lb/>
: tin Chinese<lb/>
ir ' Chinese arl ists<lb/>
peared at Fa'TC<lb/>
ght, April ?"?. in<lb/>
i ? Chinese lini-<lb/>
ng, and acling.<lb/>
dership of Mrs. i<lb/>
? I be counsellor<lb/>
 incial govern<lb/>
?om posed of mem-1<lb/>
families in China<lb/>
i? rican tour to<lb/>
the suffering vie-<lb/>
. Fn: took part!<lb/>
i as well as being5<lb/>
? ' -ing. daughterj<lb/>
inese minister toi<lb/>
the actresses and<lb/>
been called "the I<lb/>
ir! in Shanghai<lb/>
??? east was Miss<lb/>
iddaughter of Sir<lb/>
mighted by Eking<lb/>
group and also<lb/>
ic production was<lb/>
; ?? of the leading<lb/>
i ('hina.<lb/>
oiLsic, dances, and<lb/>
? I 'hina, the pro-<lb/>
il ne and is quite<lb/>
? h ing in America.<lb/>
? met this group<lb/>
Queen was said<lb/>
of the most en-<lb/>
erstandable scenes<lb/>
ml The title is in-<lb/>
.? are of this scene,<lb/>
ents dating hark<lb/>
?nfucius, the musi-<lb/>
their trad fur-<lb/>
for the program.<lb/>
Marshburn, Gorham, Roper<lb/>
And Whitfield Hold Other<lb/>
Positions<lb/>
In the election<lb/>
Juanita Etheridge<lb/>
and Bill Shelton.<lb/>
emerged victorious as presidents<lb/>
of the Women's and Men's Student<lb/>
Government Associations, respective-<lb/>
ly. Miss Etheridge succeeds Lillian<lb/>
Parrish, and Shelton replaces Lex<lb/>
Ridenhour.<lb/>
Bill Shelton. new president of the<lb/>
MSGA, has this year held the po-<lb/>
sition of president of the Varsity<lb/>
Club. His athletic prowess and<lb/>
scholastic ability made him an out-<lb/>
held recently, year; and James "Whitfield of<lb/>
of AV hi takers, Greenville will fill the position of<lb/>
of Greenville, secretary and treasurer.<lb/>
Juanita has served on the "Wom-<lb/>
en's student council this year in<lb/>
the capacity of chairman of the<lb/>
campus committee. Doris Blalock,<lb/>
who has served as a house president<lb/>
this year, is the newly-elected vice<lb/>
president of the "WSGA.<lb/>
Harriett Marshburn and Sara<lb/>
Gorham will fill the positions of<lb/>
secretary and treasurer, respective-<lb/>
ly. As chairman of the campus<lb/>
JUANITA ETHERIDGE<lb/>
standing student on this campus, committee, Millie Gray Dupree will<lb/>
Bernard Roper of Bath will serve j succeed Juanita Etheridge.<lb/>
as vice president of the MSGA nextj (Please turn to page four)<lb/>
BILL SHELTON<lb/>
Sherwood Eddy Challenges Audience<lb/>
In Brace of Stirring Addresses<lb/>
Lecturer Discusses World<lb/>
Problems In Talks to College<lb/>
Students<lb/>
niiiir. March 30.<lb/>
Varsity Clubbers<lb/>
Have Annual Hop<lb/>
"(an r!igion build a new world and "L- it to be war or peace for<lb/>
Europe and America, and what can we do about it?" challenged Dr. Sher-<lb/>
wood Eddy, Thursday morning and e<lb/>
Dr. Eddy, noted author, trav-<lb/>
"lh-r. and lecturer, was brought to!<lb/>
the college by the Young Women's<lb/>
Christian Association. He has<lb/>
worked in the Far East and in<lb/>
Europe and is well informed on the;<lb/>
international affairs of the world. I<lb/>
Referring to a recent tour of i Members of the Young Women s<lb/>
Europe. Dr. Eddv remarked at the! Christian Association cabinet con-<lb/>
evening meeting that he saw Hit- ducted Sunday evening vesper<lb/>
ler just "after he had killed 300.services at the college recently.<lb/>
men in two days Eddy's reason Miss Doris Blalock gave a talk<lb/>
Juniors Select<lb/>
Isham Jones<lb/>
For Gala Prom<lb/>
Junior-Senior<lb/>
To Be April 22<lb/>
YWCA Cabinet<lb/>
Holds Vespers<lb/>
on "What Christ Means to Us<lb/>
Christ, she said, did his work as a<lb/>
for the obliteration of Ceehoslo-<lb/>
I vakia is that the "half-genius, half<lb/>
.f Paul Moore's! ma?lman and his gang" wanted toIyoung man thereby setting up a<lb/>
rsity Club held'b(?rder as many of the largest coun-challenge to the youth today. He<lb/>
dance in theories of Europe as they<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
<lb/>
tmua<lb/>
ine last<lb/>
could. Ac never flinched when the going was<lb/>
cording to Eddy, Hitler wants to hard even if it meant the loss of<lb/>
j unite the Germans, crush France, j his friends. We have received ideas<lb/>
nrf moss-covered' a"v herself with Great Britain, and land patterns of living from Him<lb/>
?r found them-i<lb/>
uanci<lb/>
aradise of soft lig<lb/>
moss-covered ceiling.<lb/>
terns hung above the<lb/>
danee floor, and a re-<lb/>
vs heel over the dance-<lb/>
I control them with the<lb/>
htsi propaganda.<lb/>
In Russia. Dr. Eddy pointed out,<lb/>
there are none that are rich and<lb/>
sword and j and our life has been enriched<lb/>
through personal association with<lb/>
Him. Christ has given to the world<lb/>
a cause for which to live and follow<lb/>
none that are in dire poverty. He ? something in life to live for. She<lb/>
also stated that in Russia there is j gave several instances of people<lb/>
rs for the dance were<lb/>
Humphrey of Kinston,<lb/>
Shelton, of Greenville,<lb/>
. t the Varsity Club;<lb/>
arden of Windsor.<lb/>
th of Selma. vice presi-<lb/>
trjorie Watson of Wilson<lb/>
Murner of Durham, sec-<lb/>
ts trer; Elizabeth Taylor<lb/>
:  with Lester Ridenhour<lb/>
emee; and Mary Helen<lb/>
id of Comfort with Adrian<lb/>
Rocky Mount.<lb/>
justice without liberty, but in<lb/>
America there is liberty without<lb/>
justice.<lb/>
Thus speaking of justice and lib-<lb/>
erty. Dr. Eddy lists justice, liberty,<lb/>
i (fellowship, and abundance as the<lb/>
four basic needs of all men.<lb/>
In the morning Dr. Eddy also<lb/>
spoke to the student body and fac-<lb/>
ulty members, stating in his opening<lb/>
sentence that it was needless to tell<lb/>
the audience that we are menaced<lb/>
bv war.<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
who have given themselves to<lb/>
cause for the benefit of mankind.<lb/>
Miss Betty MeArthur spoke on<lb/>
 What Christ Means to Our Com-<lb/>
munity She gave a picture of the<lb/>
community as it would be without<lb/>
Christ's influence. She went back<lb/>
a hundred years to a coal mine<lb/>
with women and children workers,<lb/>
with men killed and no one seem-<lb/>
ing to mind. These conditions were<lb/>
improved by workers of Christ.<lb/>
Today workers in factories are pro-<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
Amid an atmosphere of spring-<lb/>
time and music, the annual Junior-<lb/>
Senior Prom will swing into action<lb/>
to the rhythm of Isham Jones' or-<lb/>
chestra on Saturday evening, April<lb/>
22<lb/>
The background for the orchestra<lb/>
will be of pink, shading from deep<lb/>
pink into a lighter shade, with mu-<lb/>
sical notes flaring from a black lyre<lb/>
besprinkled with metallic flakes.<lb/>
Cut flowers, palms, and other plants<lb/>
will decorate the main auditorium<lb/>
in a manner representative of a<lb/>
ballroom.<lb/>
Officers of the classes, the junior<lb/>
council, and the officers of the lead-<lb/>
ing organizations on the campus<lb/>
will take part in the grand march.<lb/>
Chairmen of the committees for<lb/>
the dance are as follows: Orchestra,<lb/>
Xeli Breedlove and Harvey Deal;<lb/>
stage, Ethel Gaston; refreshments,<lb/>
Josephine Jackson; lobby, Kathleen<lb/>
Strickland; orchestra platform,<lb/>
Lottie Moore; flowers, Helen Flana-<lb/>
gan ; invitations and programs, Ida<lb/>
Farrior Davis; auditorium commit-<lb/>
tee, Mattie Lee Jackson; lights,<lb/>
John David Bridgers.<lb/>
The junior class advisers, Mr.<lb/>
Deal and Miss Spangler, are work-<lb/>
ing cooperatively with the officers<lb/>
and committees in planning the<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
Pictured below are some 2 500 High School Seniors who flocked to ECTC's campus last year and imd-<lb/>
TKSL ??.aber attending this year is expected to exceed that of all previous years.<lb/>
Dr. Herbert ReBarker.<lb/>
The following men have been<lb/>
nominated to fill the four offices of<lb/>
the organization: President, Sid-<lb/>
ney Mason, Emmett Sawyer, and<lb/>
Hampton Noe; Vice President, Joe<lb/>
Biggs, John David Bridgers, Ver-<lb/>
non Tyson, and Howard Draper;<lb/>
Secretary, Alton Payne and Vance<lb/>
Chadwick; Treasurer, Joe Staton<lb/>
and Brantley DeLoatche.<lb/>
From 40 Counties<lb/>
Meadows to Welcome Visit-<lb/>
ors; Adams Heads Committee<lb/>
Preparations are being made for entertaining approximately 3,000 high<lb/>
school seniors and their teachers from one hundred and twenty-five 3choola<lb/>
in forty counties. As the Teco Echo goes to press fifty-eight schools from<lb/>
twenty-nine counties have accepted the invitations that were sent them.<lb/>
It is estimated that this year's attendance will top that of last year by at<lb/>
least five hundred.<lb/>
Seventeen committees from the faculty and student body are at work<lb/>
planning entertainment of various types for the guests.<lb/>
Dr. Carl L. Adams is chairman of the central committee which is com-<lb/>
posed of the following faculty members: Misses Grigshy, Holtzclaw, and<lb/>
Greene, Mrs. Barrett, Dr. McGinnis, and Mr. Deal. Other committees<lb/>
are taking care of invitations, publicity, -eating, decorations, reception,<lb/>
campus activities, campus visitations, pictures, danee. comity, luncheon,<lb/>
and serving.<lb/>
Classes will be dismissed after second period so that the college students<lb/>
1 may devote the day to entertaining the visitors.<lb/>
Program<lb/>
The guests will arrive at 9:30 and register at the Robert II.<lb/>
Wright Building. After registering they will be shown about the cam-<lb/>
? - Opus by students. At 10:45 they will<lb/>
assemble at the City Swimming<lb/>
Pool for the march to the Wright<lb/>
Building. The program at the as-<lb/>
sembly in Wright Building Audi-<lb/>
torium will be as follows: Music by<lb/>
the Plymouth High School Band,<lb/>
roll call by counties, the welcome<lb/>
address by President Leon R.<lb/>
Meadows, numbers by the college<lb/>
Glee Clubs, announcements, and a<lb/>
song, "Old North State,?! by the<lb/>
entire assembly.<lb/>
At 1:00 a barbecue luncheon<lb/>
will be served on the back campus.<lb/>
Following the barbecue, at 2:00,<lb/>
the ECTC tennis team will play the<lb/>
ACC Racketeers.<lb/>
At 3:00 the guests may choose<lb/>
between attending a danee in the<lb/>
Wright Building, a motion picture<lb/>
in Austin Auditorium, or a base-<lb/>
ball game. The picture which will<lb/>
be shown twice is "Alexander's<lb/>
Ragtime Band The baseball game<lb/>
on the College Athletic Field will<lb/>
be between the ECTC Pirates and<lb/>
High Point Pointers.<lb/>
High School Day. an annual<lb/>
event, was inaugurated four years<lb/>
ago for the purpose of introducing<lb/>
the high school seniors of the State<lb/>
to the college life at ECTC. In plan-<lb/>
ning the day, the committees have<lb/>
in mind the purpose of giving the<lb/>
seniors a bird's-eye view of college<lb/>
life in its serious and recreational<lb/>
aspects. With this idea in mind,<lb/>
they have arranged for exhibits<lb/>
and activities by the Physical Edu-<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Students Elect Publication Heads;<lb/>
Hollar, Flanagan, Deal, Newby Chosen<lb/>
Quartet of Nominees Emerge<lb/>
Victorious In Hotly Contest-<lb/>
ed Race<lb/>
Student leaders chosen to represent the college as heads of the two<lb/>
publications are Dorothy Hollar, as editor of the Teco Echo, Helen<lb/>
Flanagan as business manager of the Teco Echo, Harvey Deal as editor<lb/>
of the Tecoan, and Prue Xewby as business manager of the Tecoan.<lb/>
Dorothy, a Greenville girl, re-<lb/>
places Billy Daniels as editor of the<lb/>
Teco Echo. Active in the English<lb/>
and History Clubs, she is also a mem-<lb/>
her of the Dramatics Club and has<lb/>
served as historian for that organi-<lb/>
zation during the year. She has been<lb/>
active on the staff of the Teco Echo<lb/>
for two years, serving both years as<lb/>
associate editor.<lb/>
Helen Flanagan, also of Green-<lb/>
ville, has served on the business staff<lb/>
of the paper and is thus fitted for<lb/>
'msiness manager.<lb/>
Chosen by unanimous vote. Harv-<lb/>
ey Deal, of Greenville will replace<lb/>
YMCA Organized<lb/>
By Campus Men<lb/>
Gathering impetus from a visit<lb/>
by E. S. King, General Secretary of<lb/>
the State College branch of the<lb/>
YMCA, the movement to establish<lb/>
a Christian Association for Men<lb/>
on the campus is nearing comple-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The following committee was ap-<lb/>
pointed to draw up a constitution I 1,r position as 1<lb/>
and nominate candidates for the As-1<lb/>
soeiation offices: Emmett Sawyer,<lb/>
chairman, Sidnev Mason, Brant- j<lb/>
ley DeLoatche, "Walter ' Tucker, Pete Hill as editor of the annual<lb/>
Billy Daniels, Dr. R. J. Slay, and The Tecoan. Harvey has been very<lb/>
active on the campus, having served<lb/>
on the staff of both publications and<lb/>
last year serving on the Men's stu-<lb/>
dent council.<lb/>
Prue Xewby of Hertford is the<lb/>
newly-elected business manager of<lb/>
the Tecoan. Prue has served on the<lb/>
staff of the annual for two years,<lb/>
and has also taken an active part in<lb/>
the Y.W.C.A.<lb/>
YWCA Elects<lb/>
Sarah Maxwell<lb/>
Heading the Young "Women's<lb/>
Christian Association for next year<lb/>
is Sarah Ann Maxwell of Pink Hill,<lb/>
who replaces Marie Dawson. Sarah<lb/>
Ann is a member of the Senior " Y "<lb/>
Cabinet this year. She has served<lb/>
as chairman of the campus commit-<lb/>
tee, and was last year an Associate<lb/>
Editor of the Teco Echo.<lb/>
Annie Allen (Wank) Wilkerson<lb/>
was chosen vice president of the<lb/>
YWCA. She has served during this<lb/>
year as the representative from<lb/>
the "Y" to the WSGA.<lb/>
Virginia Whitley was chosen as<lb/>
secretary and Doris Blalock as<lb/>
treasurer of the organization.<lb/>
Death of Mrs. Blaney Taylor<lb/>
Shocks Host of Campus Friends<lb/>
Brief Illness Fatal<lb/>
To Former Student<lb/>
The sudden death of Mrs. Blaney<lb/>
Taylor of Choeowinity, formerly<lb/>
Miss Fannie Brewer, shocked and<lb/>
grieved the students and faculty of<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
Mrs. Taylor died Monday morning,<lb/>
April 3, in the River View Hos-<lb/>
pital, Washington, N. C, after a<lb/>
brief illness.<lb/>
Services were held Tuesday<lb/>
morning in Choeowinity, but the<lb/>
body was taken to her former home,<lb/>
Clarksville, Tennessee, for inter-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
A number of college students and<lb/>
members of the faculty attended the<lb/>
services,in Choeowinity. Mrs. Tay-<lb/>
lor, class of '38, was, as a student,<lb/>
a member of the Young Women's<lb/>
Christian Association, the Junior<lb/>
and Senior "Y" Cabinets, the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government Council, the En-<lb/>
ECTC Ranked<lb/>
As South's Best<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
MRS. BLANEY TAYLOR<lb/>
tertainment Committee, and the<lb/>
Annual Staff. She was a member<lb/>
of the English and Science Clubs,<lb/>
(Please torn to page mar)<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
was rated as perhaps the leading<lb/>
State teachers college of the entire<lb/>
South at the recent eight-day ses-<lb/>
sion of the Southern Association<lb/>
of Colleges and Secondary Schools,<lb/>
reported Dr. Meadows. Dr. Mead-<lb/>
ows has just returned from the ses-<lb/>
sion in Memphis. Tennessee, at<lb/>
which annual examinations of such<lb/>
institutions are held.<lb/>
Maintaining its present high rec-<lb/>
ord, the college met every require-<lb/>
ment. The faculty of East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College has for some-<lb/>
time been ranked by the American<lb/>
Association of Teachers Colleges as<lb/>
one of the three best trained in all<lb/>
the two hundred state teachers col-<lb/>
leges in the United States.<lb/>
The theme of the various pro-<lb/>
grams was "The Second Recon-<lb/>
struction of the South All the<lb/>
speakers of the programs were men<lb/>
of southern origin. They offered<lb/>
many suggestions concerning the<lb/>
training needed by boys and girls<lb/>
to fit them to meet the responsibili-<lb/>
ties of a new South.<lb/>
As the conference was in the re-<lb/>
gion of his old home, Dr. Meadows<lb/>
saw at the meeting a large number<lb/>
of his old friends, classmates, and<lb/>
I former pupils.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038083_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
April 7, 1939<lb/>
hfL<lb/>
a 7,<lb/>
Billy D.xielsEditor<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
Dorothy Hollar<lb/>
Lindsay Which aki<lb/>
Ina Mak Pikkce<lb/>
Mkkuakkt Gut Ovkrmax<lb/>
John David Bkidqkrs<lb/>
Mary Clyde Coppedge<lb/>
Jack DanielsSports Editor<lb/>
ElJZARETH Corn.ANO .1imfMC Editor<lb/>
0. Kay PbuetteExchange Editor<lb/>
Reporters?Mary Horne, Elizabeth<lb/>
Meadows, Iris Davis, Lois<lb/>
Hughes, Bo Kerr, Ellen Mclntyre,<lb/>
Barbara Keuzenkamp, Ethel Gas-<lb/>
ton, Mary Agnes Deal, Gcraldine<lb/>
Sanders, Lena Mae Smith, Camille<lb/>
Clarke, Margie Spivey, Lame<lb/>
Mooring, Edith Martin, Joe<lb/>
Smith, Vernon Tyson (Staff<lb/>
Photographer).<lb/>
the TE<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
1938 Member WW<lb/>
Associated CbDefiidle Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Gblle6iateDi6est<lb/>
Lucille JohnsonBmmma M,lnag(T<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFI<lb/>
Eva Cabteb<lb/>
Ethel Pj<lb/>
'f-TTE<lb/>
E.IST CAKdCIMA-reACB?RS COLLEGE<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Students of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the IT. S.<lb/>
Postoffice, Greenville, N. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
REPREMNTBD FOR NATIONAL AOVEHTI.INO ?V<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
ColUt Publishers kepresentativ<lb/>
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y<lb/>
Chicago - Boston ? Los Austin - SAi. Francisco<lb/>
Helen McCain Helen Flas an<lb/>
Sarah Evans Eelesi -<lb/>
Member of North Carolina ?<lb/>
Press Aasociatioi<lb/>
IS VII DIM .0 I ltll VI A FAILURE? <lb/>
When the government of a democracy fails to carry out the legally<lb/>
expressed will of a majority of irs citizenship, it displays a fatal weakness<lb/>
in the body politic. Simv the Women's Student Government Association<lb/>
is the ? . i organization and embraces eighty percent of the student body,<lb/>
the lead in carrying our the desires of this entire student body is vested<lb/>
anizaiion has failed miserably in its task as<lb/>
E<lb/>
sample<lb/>
tht wishes of the student body.<lb/>
of that failure are not hard to find. Two classic<lb/>
illustrations<lb/>
omcers sa<lb/>
i arenl<lb/>
answer t<lb/>
1,073 Students<lb/>
Register Here<lb/>
For Spring Term<lb/>
Registration for the spring quar-<lb/>
ter has reached a total of 1,073<lb/>
students enrolled thus far.<lb/>
By the last day of registration it<lb/>
is expected that the total will be<lb/>
somewhat increased.<lb/>
Of the 1,073 students, 910 are<lb/>
women and 163 are men.<lb/>
The four girls' dormitories house<lb/>
758 girls while 28 boys room in<lb/>
the basement of Ragsdale. In addi-<lb/>
tion to the 780 dormitory students<lb/>
e are 287 day students living<lb/>
in Greenville or nearby towns. One<lb/>
an t.1 recently.<lb/>
rsl of these is the matter of the restoration of the nightly dancing<lb/>
the W right Building. Some time ago a mass meeting of the<lb/>
adopted a resolution requesting the administration to restore<lb/>
ge. Officers of the administration apparently misinterpreted<lb/>
 and the reply was made that students would be allowed to<lb/>
; social hour thret evenings per week. Student Government<lb/>
tt back humbly and accepted the ultimatum of the administration.<lb/>
atti mpts were made by those officers to secure a satisfactory<lb/>
i solution. The Woman's Student Government has been<lb/>
unfaithful to tl ? trust placed in it by the student body.<lb/>
1 : - pie of failure to fulfill a similar duty to the student<lb/>
. Id a the matter of writing a new constitution. Several weeksei<lb/>
agi ' i studei in mass meeting assembled expressed the desire for a<lb/>
constitution that would meet the growing needs of a co-educational I hundred and fifty-two of these are<lb/>
tution. A committee was appointed by the Woman's Student Govern- women and 133 are men.<lb/>
: with the chairmanship delegated to a member of the Women's! There are 27 new students this<lb/>
Kjiation. At this writing that committee has had one meeting, and quarter, of which eight are men and<lb/>
way of results has been reported to the student body. Either<lb/>
ition that sponsors such a committee is woefully inefficient,<lb/>
se persons in the "inner circle" are so anxious to preserve the<lb/>
locratic status quo" that they are content to bury reform under<lb/>
ist of ind '? rence. In either event, the matter as it stands to date<lb/>
ents anothi r failure in carrying on the duties vested in the Women's<lb/>
nt Government Association.<lb/>
To these damaging failures can be added the pitiful attempts of the<lb/>
W.S.G.A. to conduct the recent elections for the student body. The con-<lb/>
stitutional provision for an "Australian Ballot" was completely ignored<lb/>
by the poll holders, and the voting place became a hang-out for high-<lb/>
pressure politicians and their crews. Ballots were strewn from one end<lb/>
of Austin Building to the other and disorder was the menu for the day.<lb/>
That election was unconstitutional, undignified, and farcial. It represents<lb/>
.?? tl r failure on the part of Women's Student Government.<lb/>
This student body deserves a more efficient, a more progressive student<lb/>
vv Tl "<lb/>
new<lb/>
ms1<lb/>
men<lb/>
As<lb/>
nothing in<lb/>
un<lb/>
the<lb/>
rep<lb/>
Sn<lb/>
' <lb/>
tudent body is in a position to demand a government<lb/>
he will of the majority in function as well as in name.<lb/>
WORTHY OF SUPPORT<lb/>
Definite organization of a branch of the Young Men's Christian Asso-<lb/>
ciation on the campus of East Carolina Teachers College is now an<lb/>
assured fact. This association is the direct result of a need felt by the<lb/>
men here and an indirect result of the inspiration and help given by the<lb/>
Young Women's Christian Association.<lb/>
An organization of this kind can mean a great deal to this student<lb/>
body. Membership is not restricted to men students only, but male mem-<lb/>
ber- of the faculty are invited and urged to join and participate in its aetivi-<lb/>
 es. This fact alone offers the opportunity for the men of the student body<lb/>
and faculty to meet on a common ground for a noble cause.<lb/>
It is probable that the activities of the Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. will<lb/>
be coordinated in certain phases for the mutual advantage of both or-<lb/>
ganizations. This opportunity of fellowship in Christian service is one<lb/>
that should not be ignored.<lb/>
The Y.M.C.A. is worthy of the hearty support of every man on the<lb/>
mpus of East Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
19 are women. One hundred and<lb/>
fourteen students dropped out of<lb/>
school this quarter. Twenty-eight<lb/>
of these are men and 86 are women.<lb/>
This term's enrollment is sur-<lb/>
passed bv that of last quarter of<lb/>
1,169.<lb/>
F<lb/>
RENCH<lb/>
A S H I O N<lb/>
ADS<lb/>
JUSTIFICATION FOR PRIOE<lb/>
East Curolina Teaehers College can well afford to le proud of the man-<lb/>
ner in which dances are conducted here. It would he absurd to maintain<lb/>
that a state of perfection exists while the campus dances are in progress,<lb/>
but when the comparison is made with the type of behavior followed at<lb/>
dances in general, this college need make no excuses.<lb/>
How to have a good time in the right way is a valuable lesson to learn<lb/>
and teach in this topsy-turvy, rushing world.<lb/>
I Just<lb/>
! Glancing Blows!<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
By<lb/>
RICK 6'SHAY<lb/>
AS WE SWING PACK INTO<lb/>
THE SWIM and have roll call,<lb/>
there are found to be forty some<lb/>
odd students that couldn't be with<lb/>
us this quarter. Something they<lb/>
took no doubt.<lb/>
But she backed away from me, by<lb/>
heck.<lb/>
1 placed my hand upon her thighs.<lb/>
She backed up again in mock sur-<lb/>
prise,<lb/>
My pride was hurt by this unfair<lb/>
crime.<lb/>
Bossy usually behaved at milking<lb/>
time.<lb/>
JUST TO BE ACCOMMODAT-<lb/>
ING: The scientists say that the<lb/>
next living things that will rule<lb/>
this earth will be insects. Hitler<lb/>
and Mussolini have proved that.<lb/>
This prophesy lias its brighter side<lb/>
nevertheless. -Fust think, centipedes<lb/>
can replace our faculty and then<lb/>
everybody will have a leg to pull.<lb/>
ALL GOOD THINGS must come<lb/>
to an end, and luckily for you, so<lb/>
must all bad things. So it's au<lb/>
revoir.<lb/>
Sherwood Eddy<lb/>
Challenges Audience<lb/>
By BARBARA KENZENKAMP<lb/>
When the weather is cool, as it<lb/>
has been these past few clays, you<lb/>
will again wear your black jersey<lb/>
and light wool dresses. So as not<lb/>
to lose the spring atmosphere in<lb/>
the air, perk your dresses up with<lb/>
fresh, white, waffle pique collars and<lb/>
cuffs. The French women are known<lb/>
for their use of white trimmings on<lb/>
black dresses.<lb/>
Did you know that in 1915, smart<lb/>
women were ready for the season<lb/>
with one superb suit and a large<lb/>
wardrobe of beautiful blouses? And<lb/>
it's an entirely chic thing to do<lb/>
again this spring. Buy at least one<lb/>
blouse of absinthe ? the color with<lb/>
the veiled sparkle and the most sub-<lb/>
tle of all the yellows.<lb/>
It's new to:<lb/>
Wear dark midnight green in-<lb/>
stead of navy blue.<lb/>
Set your hat on straight, and at<lb/>
the same time to pull it down till<lb/>
it just grazes the bridge of your<lb/>
nose.<lb/>
Tie your hat on with streamers<lb/>
of veiling.<lb/>
Wear a quilted silk evening bo-<lb/>
lero.<lb/>
And to use either the mauve or<lb/>
white lilac. The lilac is the new<lb/>
floral motif of this spring, as the<lb/>
lily of the valley was last spring.<lb/>
A number of the new shoe styles<lb/>
are from de Busschere of Bruges<lb/>
(Flanders in Belgium). Thep rep-<lb/>
resent the old world craftsmen who<lb/>
have sewn shoes for four centuries.<lb/>
Shoe styles are more varied this<lb/>
year than they have been for sev-<lb/>
eral years. You have an amusing<lb/>
and delightful group to choose<lb/>
from, including the spool, wedge,<lb/>
and dutch boy heel styles. So choose<lb/>
your shoes with an eye open for the<lb/>
new styles of this year, aud you'll<lb/>
walk smartly in the fashion parade!<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Below in outline form is the<lb/>
High School Day program<lb/>
which will be carried out Tues-<lb/>
day, April 11.<lb/>
9 :30-10 :00?<lb/>
Arrival and Registration of<lb/>
guests at Wright Building.<lb/>
10:00-10:45?<lb/>
Visiting on Campus.<lb/>
10:45-11:00?<lb/>
Assembling at the City<lb/>
Swimming Pool for the<lb/>
March to the Wright Build-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
11:00-12:30?<lb/>
Program in Auditorium as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
a. Music by the Plymouth<lb/>
High School Band.<lb/>
b. Roll call of Counties.<lb/>
e. Welcome by President<lb/>
Leon R. Meadows.<lb/>
d. Numbers by College Glee<lb/>
Clubs.<lb/>
e. Announcements.<lb/>
f. Song. The Old North<lb/>
State by entire gather-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
1:00?<lb/>
Barbecue luncheon on the<lb/>
Back Campus.<lb/>
2:00?<lb/>
Tennis.<lb/>
3 :00?<lb/>
Picture Show in Austin Au-<lb/>
ditorium.<lb/>
3 :00?<lb/>
Dancing in Wright Audi-<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
3:00?<lb/>
Baseball<lb/>
Athletic<lb/>
Game<lb/>
Field.<lb/>
on College<lb/>
Delegates Here<lb/>
From 40 Counties<lb/>
Home Ec Club<lb/>
Asked To Visit<lb/>
Furniture Show<lb/>
The Home Economics Club of<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College has<lb/>
been honored with an invitation to<lb/>
the Tomlinson Furniture Exhibit<lb/>
in High Point along with jnst one<lb/>
other college, it was reported at the<lb/>
meeting of the club Tuesday night.<lb/>
April 4. This exhibit is usually re-<lb/>
stricted to dealers and business<lb/>
Campus Camera<lb/>
men.<lb/>
The<lb/>
members of the club also<lb/>
have to look forward to April 19<lb/>
as the day for their club trip. This<lb/>
year the trip will be made to New<lb/>
Bern, which rates second only to<lb/>
Williamsburg. Virginia, for its<lb/>
beautiful architecture.<lb/>
Miss Rosalie Ivey made the club<lb/>
members feel the signficance of the<lb/>
Women's Symposium at Duke Uni-<lb/>
versity, March 31, through April 2.<lb/>
Many deans and presidents from<lb/>
colleges over the United States at-<lb/>
tended and Miss Ivey mentioned<lb/>
that we are proud of having so<lb/>
many notables on a southern cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Mrs. Adelaide Bloxton next gave<lb/>
an illustrated talk showing how food<lb/>
deficiencies can retard development<lb/>
?even causing death. Many people<lb/>
have blamed some abnormality to<lb/>
inheritance when probably a glass<lb/>
of milk added to a little sunshine<lb/>
daily would have erased" the ab-<lb/>
normality.<lb/>
 A word to the wise is sufficient.3'<lb/>
Let us think more about how to<lb/>
prevent abnormal development than<lb/>
about how to cure it.<lb/>
1<lb/>
AKIN TO THE SAILOR who<lb/>
takes a cruise on his vacation, and<lb/>
the mail-man who goes to walk on<lb/>
his day off is the college student<lb/>
who spends his vacation loafing.<lb/>
AFTER LONG CONSULTATION<lb/>
with the publications board it was<lb/>
decided that what this paper needs<lb/>
is another ex-editor. Yaas. Lawd.<lb/>
AS CONFUCIUS ONCE SAID:<lb/>
He sit on needle in haystack, do<lb/>
not see point but he will get it in<lb/>
end.<lb/>
SPEAKING OF THE FAR EAST-<lb/>
ERNERS it comes to mind that<lb/>
there was one famous Chinese actor<lb/>
that wasn't with the Chinese Cul-<lb/>
tural Theatre Group when they ap-<lb/>
peared on campus the other night.<lb/>
He was none other than that horse-<lb/>
opry hero, Hopilung Cassidy.<lb/>
POETRY CORNER:<lb/>
I gazed into her love sick eyes,<lb/>
As blue as blue up in the skies.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
The question of what we should<lb/>
do about war, he further added, is<lb/>
the hardest moral problem an Amer-<lb/>
ican has to face today. He pointed<lb/>
out the two ways that men have<lb/>
always faced moral problems. One<lb/>
may take the way of the idealist<lb/>
who believes the evil in question<lb/>
must be fought with extreme means<lb/>
regardless of other things. The<lb/>
other way is that of the realist, who<lb/>
believes that flie lesser of the two<lb/>
evils must be chosen.<lb/>
Think about this question of atti-<lb/>
tude and form now "before the<lb/>
drums begin to beat he urged.<lb/>
In closing Dr. Eddy listed sev-<lb/>
eral things that Americans can do<lb/>
to help keep out of war. He sug-<lb/>
gested that we avoid all entangling<lb/>
alliances, strive to keep America out<lb/>
of war, strive to keep the world out<lb/>
of war, avoid selfish isolation, seek<lb/>
to give justice as the earmarks of<lb/>
the foundation of peace, interna-<lb/>
tionalize the Monroe Doctrine, and<lb/>
open our gates to more war refugees,<lb/>
thereby enriching our national life<lb/>
and allowing our full quota of im-<lb/>
migrants of all nationalities.<lb/>
After speaking here, Dr. Eddy<lb/>
returned to Raleigh to participate<lb/>
in the Institute of Human Rela-<lb/>
tionships.<lb/>
Two Hundred<lb/>
Fail At Least<lb/>
One Subject<lb/>
Today there are 1,350,000 stu-<lb/>
dents enrolled in U. S. colleges and<lb/>
I placed my arm around her neck, universities.<lb/>
Two hundred and twelve stu-<lb/>
dents failed one or more subjects<lb/>
last quarter. This is a decided de-<lb/>
crease of twenty-eight over the<lb/>
number who failed last quarter.<lb/>
Forty-eight students flunked out<lb/>
or did not pass nine hours of the<lb/>
work carried. These forty-eight per-<lb/>
sons failed a total of 384 hours or<lb/>
an average of eight hours each.<lb/>
One hundred and sixty-four<lb/>
other persons flunked one or more<lb/>
subjects. They failed a total of 554<lb/>
hours or an average of 3.4 hours<lb/>
each.<lb/>
The total number of students<lb/>
flunking, failed a total of 908 hours-<lb/>
or an average of 4.42 hours.<lb/>
The cost to students of the 938<lb/>
hours flunked at $6.00 per hour is<lb/>
$5,628. Nine hundred thirty-eight<lb/>
credit hours is enough for four A.B.<lb/>
degrees and 178 quarter hours left<lb/>
over. This is equal to three and a<lb/>
half years of class periods, for one<lb/>
student.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
cation Department and the Music<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
The various committees working<lb/>
in connection with the event are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
Various Committees for High<lb/>
School Day<lb/>
Central Committee: Dr. Adams,<lb/>
Miss Grigsby, Miss Holtzelaw. Mrs.<lb/>
Barrett. Miss Greene, Dr. McGinnis,<lb/>
Mr. Deal.<lb/>
Invitations Committee: Miss<lb/>
Greene, Mr. Deal. Dr. McGinnis.<lb/>
Publicity Committee: Miss Jenk-<lb/>
ins, Miss Grigsby. Billy Daniels.<lb/>
Seating Committee: Dr. W. A.<lb/>
Browne, Mr. McHenry.<lb/>
Decorations Committee: Miss<lb/>
Lewis, Miss Charleton, Miss Wil-<lb/>
liams.<lb/>
Reception Committee: Mr. Cum-<lb/>
mings, Miss Schnyder, Miss Spang-<lb/>
ler, Miss Ivey, College Marshals.<lb/>
Campus Activities Committee:<lb/>
Miss Norton, Mr. Hankner.<lb/>
Campus Visitations Committee:<lb/>
Mr. Browning, Mr. Gilledge.<lb/>
Picture Committee: Miss Holtz-<lb/>
claw, Miss Newell, Miss Rose, Mr.<lb/>
West, Mr. McHenry.<lb/>
Dance Committee: Mr. Deal, Eva<lb/>
Carter, Ethel Gaston, Fodie<lb/>
Hodges, Harvey Deal.<lb/>
County Organizations Commit-<lb/>
tee: Dr. Slay.<lb/>
Luncheon Committee: President<lb/>
Leon Meadows, J. L. Williams, Mr.<lb/>
McHenry, Mr. Duncan.<lb/>
Serving Committee: Dr. Haynes,<lb/>
Mrs. Rives, Dr. Frank, Dr. Re-<lb/>
Barker, Dr. Henderson, Dr. Hill-<lb/>
drup, Gerald DeMond, Emmett<lb/>
Sawyer, Stanley Scarborough,<lb/>
Hampton Noe, Mr. McHenry.<lb/>
Parking and Traffic Committee:<lb/>
Mr. Hollar, Mr. Ricks, Dr. Flana-<lb/>
gan, Howard Draper, Robert Bur-<lb/>
ton, Bernard Roper, Mervin Fra-<lb/>
zelle, Hampton Noe, Albert Maness,<lb/>
C. Ray Pruette, Louis Wilkerson,<lb/>
Thomas Swain, Earl Gulledge, Joe<lb/>
Williams, James Whitfield, Milton<lb/>
Zelon, Gordon Clarke, Frank New-<lb/>
ton, Artis Hardee, Korrison Smith,<lb/>
Charlie Little, Lee Gaskins.<lb/>
Program Committee: Mrs. Bar-<lb/>
rett, Dr. McGinnis, Mr. Duncan.<lb/>
Ticket Committee: Mr. Duncan.<lb/>
Registration Committee: Miss<lb/>
Greene, Miss Williams, Miss Scholtz.<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
BREVITIES<lb/>
Mr. P. W. Picklesimer, head of<lb/>
the Geography Department, has<lb/>
gone to George Peabody College this<lb/>
quarter in order to prepare him-<lb/>
self for the examinations which<lb/>
must precede his study for his<lb/>
Ph.D. degree.<lb/>
Mr. Picklesimer expects to stay<lb/>
on during the summer at the end<lb/>
of which he will have completed<lb/>
his residence requirements.<lb/>
ECCENTRIC<lb/>
JANITOR. AT ST.<lb/>
MARYS COLLEGE (CALIF) IS ABSOU<lb/>
LY HAIRLESS BUT COLLECTS USED<lb/>
. ? ? RAZOR BLADES ? ?<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
Iz<lb/>
-4-<lb/>
rJi .r-  ;<lb/>
<lb/>
v.M !? "j IVritN Hi A<lb/>
: ffOROF THE rr.<lb/>
? ? MG WS UNIX I .<lb/>
y i<lb/>
tyj<lb/>
U<lb/>
?<lb/>
V .<lb/>
CREEL<lb/>
CORNWELL.<lb/>
WANTING EDITOR<lb/>
OF Tin W  .A<lb/>
-L<lb/>
ySi<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
s t<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
MOTRE DAME WAS UNO! Ft i<lb/>
IN FOOTBALL ON ITS HOME :<lb/>
FOR 23 YEARS. 1905-i9?<lb/>
OJ<lb/>
: <lb/>
?A (<lb/>
5<lb/>
thing<lb/>
it's this<lb/>
<lb/>
Student-On-The-Stand<lb/>
Question: What d-o you do in your leisure time?<lb/>
Mary Agnes Deal, Freshman:?'T worry about fchil<lb/>
anything to worry about. I worry about not having<lb/>
about<lb/>
John David Bridgers, Junior:?"N<lb/>
Louise Elam, Senior:?"Well, you<lb/>
better ask Hamp<lb/>
Lindsay Whichard, Junior:?"I just sit around and sav<lb/>
Joe Williams, Sophomore:?"I write poetry. I love to<lb/>
Mother Nature. The budding flowers, the lovely trees, the<lb/>
are my playmates. My leisure time is spent amidst nature<lb/>
Yvonne Alderman. Freshman:?'T spend my leisure <lb/>
piano and dancing<lb/>
Woodrow Long, Freshman:?"I read a great deal in the <lb/>
away my spare moments<lb/>
Under the direction of Miss Mary<lb/>
Greene, the Speech Choir gave a<lb/>
very entertaining program before<lb/>
the English Club. Tuesday night.<lb/>
April 4.<lb/>
The selections recited were<lb/>
"Spring bv Nash, "The Tide<lb/>
Rises, The Tide Falls bv Long-<lb/>
fellow. "Silver by Walter Dela<lb/>
Mare; "Lady and Swine "Mira-<lb/>
cles" by Walt Whitman "An In-<lb/>
dian Summer Day on the Prairies"<lb/>
by Vachel Lindsay, and "The Fair-<lb/>
lies' Lullaby" from a Midsummer's<lb/>
Night Dream by Shakespeare.<lb/>
The University of Alabama has<lb/>
a tree whose ancestry can be traced<lb/>
back 175,000,000 years.<lb/>
University of Texas students<lb/>
have organized a folk-dancing club<lb/>
to keep alive the dances of long ago.<lb/>
Mr. Tabor states that there is a<lb/>
vacancy in the group instrumental<lb/>
instruction class for anj-one inter-<lb/>
ested in alto horn or baritone horn<lb/>
in preparation for band next fall.<lb/>
This class meets Monday and<lb/>
Wednesday, fifth period,<lb/>
freshmen and sophomores<lb/>
apply.<lb/>
Only<lb/>
need<lb/>
Miss Vera Raleigh, of near<lb/>
Whitesburg, Kentucky, came to<lb/>
ECTC at the beginning of the<lb/>
spring quarter to take Mr. R, W.<lb/>
Picklesimer's place in the Geog-<lb/>
raphy department.<lb/>
The newcomer to the faculty re-<lb/>
ceived her A.B. degree from East-<lb/>
ern Kentucky Teacher's College.<lb/>
After teaching for a while she went<lb/>
to George Peabody College, where<lb/>
she received her M.A. degree. She<lb/>
taught there for three years, leav-<lb/>
ing in June 1938.<lb/>
Since June Miss Raleigh has been<lb/>
visiting a number of libraries in<lb/>
Tennessee and Kentucky, studying<lb/>
in order to write her dissertation<lb/>
for her Ph.D.<lb/>
Hitler in Berlin killing off the Jews.<lb/>
Mussolini in Rome deep with the blues,<lb/>
Stalin in Moscow counting out his planes.<lb/>
The Japs adding to woeful China's pains.<lb/>
Britain in a huff, with Chamberlain at the iiead.<lb/>
Daladier running the government, France in the red<lb/>
Franco has his Spain, and a mess it is too,<lb/>
Roosevelt a fishing and wondering what to do!<lb/>
Was it not Shakespeare who said, "Would the gods made thee i<lb/>
With this attempt to put the international situation in noe<lb/>
seem verse than they really are.<lb/>
It seems that the "heir apparent" to Chamberlain's timbrei<lb/>
stick. He probably thinks that a stick will serve to crack Ten:<lb/>
Ixdter than an umbrella.<lb/>
I eople go to colleges, colleges graduate them. Some graduate , -<lb/>
others just graduate. The graduates go out into the world Son i I<lb/>
paths cross, sometimes they don't. Where can college graduate, be<lb/>
The penitentiary at Richmond, Virginia, has eight!<lb/>
Dr. Sherwood Eddy s duet of addresses here stirred up more ir<lb/>
tauve comment than any other thing that has happened on campt<lb/>
noted lecturer proved himself adept at the game of "thoiurht prZ<lb/>
student, at ECTC stopped thinking about the next dance long - i<lb/>
discuss vociferously the question of Socialism vera Cap italic<lb/>
1 BIS<lb/>
Problems of a H.story Practice to commercial studies s?,h a, ???<lb/>
Teacher. Pruette gave some im- writers, eld methods of ?riti<lb/>
Cu l? "  mi"d Wl'iIe shorth!??. ?nd bus-mess ,?ers fc<lb/>
The University of Detroit will<lb/>
again this year sponsor the Na-<lb/>
tional Intercollegiate Turtle Race.<lb/>
A Harvard University research<lb/>
fellow has developed a device to<lb/>
measure the speed of light.<lb/>
The Nicholas Murray Butler<lb/>
Permanent Intercollegiate Philatelic<lb/>
trophy has been won by a Brown<lb/>
University student.<lb/>
The History Club held its regu-<lb/>
lar meeting, Tuesday night, March<lb/>
28, in Room 209, at 6:30 o'clock.<lb/>
The president, Louise Elam, called<lb/>
the meeting to order.<lb/>
Helen Flannagan, chairman of<lb/>
the program committee, introduced<lb/>
the first speaker of the evening,<lb/>
Charles Wooten, who spoke on<lb/>
"The Scope of the History Club<lb/>
He explained the three main pur-<lb/>
poses of the club; fellowship, lead-<lb/>
ership, and scholarship.<lb/>
The next speaker was C. Bay<lb/>
Pruette, whose topic was "The<lb/>
Agnes Wood was elected to suc-<lb/>
ceed Hilda Gray Batten as presi-<lb/>
dent of the Science Club at a call<lb/>
meeting Monday night, April 3.<lb/>
Other omcers elected were Mar-<lb/>
guerite Currin, vice president;<lb/>
Frances E. Newsome, treasurer <lb/>
Ruth Hawkes, publicity manager-<lb/>
and Dorothy Davis, secretary.<lb/>
The club trip will be May 11<lb/>
This year the trip will be to Wil-<lb/>
mington, where the Ethyl-Dow<lb/>
Chemical Plant, oil and fertilizer<lb/>
companies, Purol Company and<lb/>
Orton Plantation will bTvisiJed<lb/>
Forty-five or fifty members wfS<lb/>
pected to make the trip.<lb/>
The Commerce Club has bernm<lb/>
a collection of old relics pertain<lb/>
lius Abernathy is the chairman of<lb/>
the committee working on tnis<lb/>
project.<lb/>
Mr. Dean C. Tabor will give ?<lb/>
talk to the fine art group at the<lb/>
Woman's Club on Wednesday,<lb/>
April 12, on the subject of music<lb/>
in the home.<lb/>
At five o'clock on the afternoon<lb/>
of the same date, the hand will gi5<lb/>
a concert on the campus at the lake<lb/>
for the benefit of the fine art group<lb/>
Yesterday Mr. Tabor was in Ay-<lb/>
den judging a music contest for the<lb/>
colored high school.<lb/>
On April 28, Greenville ?nd<lb/>
Rocky Mount High School bands<lb/>
will give a joint concert in WrigW<lb/>
Auditorium under the sponsorship<lb/>
o? the music department.<lb/>
huma:<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
FROM<lb/>
Pant<lb/>
out th<lb/>
WE Ld<lb/>
Bee<lb/>
Pi b<lb/>
LOCAL!<lb/>
v. -<lb/>
Ho<lb/>
to tin ?<lb/>
Wsshin<lb/>
iW A11 t<lb/>
ttolla<lb/>
? ?. W. J<lb/>
this co<lb/>
Then<lb/>
ON THJ<lb/>
In a<lb/>
.four r-<lb/>
first U <lb/>
ans. <lb/>
track h;<lb/>
are int<lb/>
? ? ? ill<lb/>
nient. Fl<lb/>
ent n<lb/>
and di<lb/>
"V<lb/>
and gr;t<lb/>
son<lb/>
beint:<lb/>
BENE<lb/>
k? thl<lb/>
baseball<lb/>
Crates <lb/>
v&amp;? bvj<lb/>
13 to i<lb/>
e loc<lb/>
visitor<lb/>
Jould<lb/>
Wow8<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00038083_0003"/><lb/>
1939<lb/>
l?er<lb/>
Vf<lb/>
i;<lb/>
lv?<lb/>
lags<lb/>
big<lb/>
leads<lb/>
hide,<lb/>
their<lb/>
tnd<lb/>
?en-<lb/>
'his<lb/>
ion<lb/>
the<lb/>
rh to<lb/>
K-pe-<lb/>
Ttin?<lb/>
Ju-<lb/>
of<lb/>
this<lb/>
re ?<lb/>
the<lb/>
lay,<lb/>
niflic<lb/>
ioon<lb/>
I give<lb/>
 lake<lb/>
Ay-<lb/>
ti?e<lb/>
and<lb/>
i?<lb/>
Baseball, Tennis<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
High School Day Events<lb/>
HOMAW<lb/>
ALONG<lb/>
THE SIDELINES<lb/>
With<lb/>
Jack Daniels<lb/>
YNAMO<lb/>
a ? tsi ball feat of tin<lb/>
Bucs, Dogs Fight<lb/>
To 8-8 Draw<lb/>
In 12 Innings<lb/>
season<lb/>
Ulantic Christian laal<lb/>
la v<lb/>
unt ii<lb/>
jo far, is Ed Wells<lb/>
Monday when tin<lb/>
walked out of the<lb/>
the crowd in dark<lb/>
twelve<lb/>
whole<lb/>
! picture<lb/>
ness and<lb/>
Wells Goes Route<lb/>
On Mound For<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
"Ole Sol<lb/>
and lei<lb/>
the players trying to find the ball.<lb/>
ry mutual agreement the teams<lb/>
decided to quit. . . . It's probably<lb/>
thing they've ever agreed<lb/>
first<lb/>
:<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
W?lls<lb/>
Ttu<lb/>
on.<lb/>
It is seldom that a pitcher can<lb/>
tast twelve easy innings, but on a<lb/>
merry-go-round like that game<lb/>
it's a darned miracle! Wells yield-<lb/>
ed only tt'ii hits during his gruell-<lb/>
ing stay on the mound and man<lb/>
aged t? shut out the Bulldogs in<lb/>
nine of the dozen frames. To a man'<lb/>
who can "dish it out" like that for<lb/>
four long hours . . . we take off our'<lb/>
community hat!<lb/>
Battling for 12 innings last Mon-<lb/>
day the locals and the Atlantic<lb/>
Christian Bulldogs stopped at dark<lb/>
with the score tied at 8 all. Ed<lb/>
Wells delivered the pitch for the<lb/>
whole game as the bitter rivals<lb/>
scrapped for Bo-Hunk Trophy<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
The Bucs drew first blood in the<lb/>
second bracket when Walter Moritz<lb/>
banked out a three-bagger, with<lb/>
Hatem on first, and later stole home.<lb/>
In the fifth the Bulldogs pulled;<lb/>
ahead by scoring three runs for thre<lb/>
Court Players<lb/>
Overwhelm ACC<lb/>
By 8 to 1 Score<lb/>
ECTC Captures<lb/>
"Boliunk" Trophy<lb/>
COACH HANKNER<lb/>
vengeance a<lb/>
left th?- (!hris-<lb/>
se<lb/>
<lb/>
mote<lb/>
th<lb/>
BO-HUNK TROPHY?AGAIN<lb/>
Latest news Hashes report that<lb/>
the once embryonic Bo-Hunk Tro-<lb/>
phy is almost completed and will<lb/>
see its first ceremony when the Buc<lb/>
tennis team meets our worthy rival<lb/>
A.C. next Tuesday which is High<lb/>
School Day. . . . As explained be-<lb/>
fore in this corner, the trophy will<lb/>
esome I) and congenial ?) rivalry!<lb/>
plain language, if we've gotta fight,<lb/>
WHO<lb/>
. . . in<lb/>
fight over.<lb/>
rd The trophy temporarily to the school who last won<lb/>
tween the two bitter rivals . . . when the possessor<lb/>
ward the trophy to the winner for safekeeping until<lb/>
Although the trophy is still in custody of the Tbco<lb/>
r touches can be completed, it rightfully belongs to<lb/>
- recent victory of the 1'irate tennis team over the<lb/>
hits. The Pirates returned with one!<lb/>
in the seventh and ninth with<lb/>
i Atlantic Christian scoring one in<lb/>
I the ninth to force the game into<lb/>
, extra time. The score didn't change<lb/>
i until the twelfth when Ridenhour<lb/>
homered with Bill Shelton on sec-<lb/>
lond. Hatem then doubled and<lb/>
j scored Hinton and Smith. Through<lb/>
! a succession of hits the Wilsonians<lb/>
 pulled the score back into a tie and<lb/>
j the game ended.<lb/>
 ECTC<lb/>
Shelton <lb/>
I Ridenhour <lb/>
Smith <lb/>
finton <lb/>
Hankner Chosen<lb/>
To Fill Position<lb/>
As Head of<lb/>
Dept.<lb/>
New Director<lb/>
Replaces Alexander<lb/>
Ab R H<lb/>
1<lb/>
?)<lb/>
1<lb/>
o<lb/>
ill be unveiled and presented at the ACC-ECTC<lb/>
DayV toast: May it stay here forever!<lb/>
Hatem<lb/>
Moritz<lb/>
Breece<lb/>
Futrell<lb/>
Wells<lb/>
9<lb/>
6<lb/>
8<lb/>
5<lb/>
4<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
2<lb/>
;?<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
2<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
FROM MATCH COMES FIREWORKS<lb/>
? N. Minn meet lliirh Point on the tennis court<lb/>
Totals <lb/>
ACC<lb/>
Lucas<lb/>
Holmes  5<lb/>
Johnson  6<lb/>
Lynch  6<lb/>
ar.<lb/>
,j.<lb/>
u i<lb/>
here<lb/>
ined to be plenty of fireworks. . . . Here's<lb/>
. . . Lenoir-Rhyne trounced the Pirates here last<lb/>
went up to High Point a day later and licked the<lb/>
i" w day- ago i Monday), the Lenoir-Rhynes shut<lb/>
in a match at Hickory. . . . Things begin to stack<lb/>
'or the t" contestants . . . with the Pirates taking<lb/>
2<lb/>
2<lb/>
?7<lb/>
.00K AHEAD<lb/>
Hoykin <lb/>
Windley <lb/>
Lassiter<lb/>
Gardner <lb/>
Xenman <lb/>
Kirby <lb/>
Laughinghouse<lb/>
Ange <lb/>
Outlaw <lb/>
0<lb/>
48 S 14<lb/>
Ab R H<lb/>
0 1<lb/>
5 1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
Ii<lb/>
1<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o<lb/>
0<lb/>
,)<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
E<lb/>
2<lb/>
1<lb/>
?l<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
o!<lb/>
?!<lb/>
0<lb/>
i<lb/>
E<lb/>
o'<lb/>
?i<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
0<lb/>
I)<lb/>
0<lb/>
1<lb/>
0<lb/>
. . in case you don't have calendar)<lb/>
tart a nine-day stretch crammed full<lb/>
-11 ?<lb/>
h<lb/>
i<lb/>
it<lb/>
i Saturday<lb/>
ball bunch<lb/>
which they play ix games. . . . Tomorrow<lb/>
on the home grounds in a double header. . .<lb/>
. . . as usual . . . but we will see if the Yankees<lb/>
tven't got Monday and Tuesday we scrap with High<lb/>
Friday and Saturday the Corsairs clinch with Wilson<lb/>
? . national capital  . if the Washington batmen are<lb/>
r basketeers, the tilt should be just about an even match.<lb/>
wing Monday the Pirates' ship sails to Norfolk in an<lb/>
th Braves of William and Mary.<lb/>
LOC Y MAKES GOOD<lb/>
? received another report on the ramblings of our own Bill<lb/>
ho with his outstanding pitching, brought so much joy<lb/>
F the Pirate squad last season. Bill, who signed with the<lb/>
itors lasl war. has been sent to the Charlotte Hornets to<lb/>
Qg again n the waryvbatters of the Piedmont League. . . .<lb/>
?! the Hornets for a few games at the first of last summer.<lb/>
? H expect to hear big things of Bill in the future  in fact<lb/>
. res he will be major leagues within the next few years. . . .<lb/>
. . "We knew him when . . <lb/>
ON THE HORIZON: TRACK<lb/>
conversation with the new athletic boss, "Hank Hankner,<lb/>
1 ?:? ought up the subject of track. . . . Hankner stated, "The<lb/>
?f athletic expansion are always the hardest . . . chiefly be-<lb/>
ses . . , but the athletic future of East Carolina is good. A<lb/>
built gradually. First, we have to get a few athletes who<lb/>
and train them until they are ready to enter a few meets.<lb/>
they begin to get a Kttite recognition more interest will be<lb/>
interest will create a demand for a track and more equip-<lb/>
. il soon qroir a track team.  We have some equip-<lb/>
ping materials for shot-putting, pole-vaulting, high-jump<lb/>
- get 30me of the boys interested in cross country next fall<lb/>
build around this our track team of the future. Meanwhile,<lb/>
students are getting training at present in the track classes<lb/>
beings JtermTrack results from gradual growth<lb/>
BENEDICTION<lb/>
iting tiling about sports and life is, "anything can happen<lb/>
r give Up!  . See you at the game.<lb/>
Totals <lb/>
Score bv<lb/>
theyjpXTC <lb/>
Wei ACC <lb/>
.48 8 11 1<lb/>
innings<lb/>
.020<lb/>
.000<lb/>
000<lb/>
030<lb/>
101<lb/>
001<lb/>
004<lb/>
004<lb/>
Girls Take Part<lb/>
In Intramurals<lb/>
Girls' spring intramurals got<lb/>
under way last week with the run-<lb/>
ning off of the table-tennis tourna-<lb/>
ment, in which Betty Summersill,<lb/>
of Ayden, copped the first place<lb/>
by defeating Lyla Watts in the<lb/>
finals. Carolyn Hamric and Doro-<lb/>
thy Dalrymple tied for third place.<lb/>
Plans for the soft-ball tourna-<lb/>
ment between dormitories took a<lb/>
forward step last week when prac-<lb/>
tices were started to get the girls in<lb/>
shape for the tournament. Lucille<lb/>
Norton stated that the schedules<lb/>
had not been made out at the time<lb/>
of this publication, but the games<lb/>
would be played in a " round-robin"<lb/>
scheme, so that each team would<lb/>
play every other team. She an-<lb/>
nounced that intramurals will<lb/>
probably begin the early part of<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
Approximately 100 girls have<lb/>
turned out for soft-ball practices.<lb/>
The home-run record is receiving<lb/>
many boosts by Eilleen and Kim<lb/>
Tomlinson, Doris Roberts and<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
WftWWrVWfWrWWrWftft<lb/>
From more than fifty appli-<lb/>
cants, the administration of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College chose<lb/>
O. A. Hankner to fill the place of<lb/>
Director of Physical Education left<lb/>
vacant when J. D. Alexander re-<lb/>
signed at the end of the Winter<lb/>
quarter. Mr. Hankner left a posi-<lb/>
tion as Physical Director of Eureka<lb/>
College, Eureka, Illinois.<lb/>
Mr. Hankner received his high<lb/>
school diploma from Tripoli High<lb/>
School in Tripoli, Iowa back in<lb/>
1925. He was awarded Bachelor of<lb/>
Arts and Master of Arts degrees by<lb/>
the University of Illinois and has<lb/>
done graduate work at Xew York<lb/>
University toward his Doctorate.<lb/>
Since 1930, Mr. Hankner has had<lb/>
instructing and directing experience<lb/>
at the University of Illinois, Xew-<lb/>
man School at Xew Orleans, Wis-<lb/>
consin State Teachers College, Xew<lb/>
York University, Dalton School in<lb/>
Nlew York City, Lookout Mountain<lb/>
Camp for Boys at Cloudland, Ga<lb/>
and Eureka College.<lb/>
In high school, Hankner (short-<lb/>
ened to "Hank" by his friends)<lb/>
won four letters each year in foot-<lb/>
ball, basketball, baseball, and track,<lb/>
serving as captain on the baseball<lb/>
and track teams in his senior year.<lb/>
When "Hank" entered the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Illinois he played all four<lb/>
major sports in his freshman year.<lb/>
Due to a shoulder injury sustained<lb/>
in freshman football, he was unable<lb/>
to continue with Varsity football,<lb/>
but in his junior and senior years<lb/>
Hankner made the Varsity track<lb/>
squad. He threw the javelin and<lb/>
discus and high-jumped.<lb/>
In regard to the future athletic<lb/>
program of the college, Coach<lb/>
Hankner stated that Mr. Alexander<lb/>
had taken a surprising number of<lb/>
forward steps in the past two years,<lb/>
and that he would attempt to keep<lb/>
up this progressiveness toward the<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
East Carolina added another<lb/>
point on their side of the Bo-Hunk j<lb/>
 Trophy last Tuesday when the<lb/>
Men's tennis team effectively rolled<lb/>
! over Atlantic Christian in Wilson<lb/>
with a final score of 8-1. Following<lb/>
a twelve-inning tie in baseball the<lb/>
 day before with the Bulldogs, the<lb/>
(Pirates took their<lb/>
Roman holiday that<lb/>
tians in the lurch.<lb/>
The headline event of the day was<lb/>
Doug (Hover's defeat of Bulldog<lb/>
Pilley, 8-1, 6-3. (Hover, regularly<lb/>
playing Xumber Two for the Bucs<lb/>
requested to play Pilley, regular<lb/>
Number One star, because of an old<lb/>
court rivalry between the two. Doug<lb/>
completely outclassed the Bulldog<lb/>
in a fast moving saga of Corsair<lb/>
revenge.<lb/>
The sixth match between Louis<lb/>
Wilkerson and Bulldog Rawlings<lb/>
turned out to be a two-hour en-<lb/>
durance contest which finally ended<lb/>
in favor of the Pirate 8-6, 12-10<lb/>
NineTo Engage<lb/>
Pointers; Netters<lb/>
Meet Christians<lb/>
Crowd of 3.000<lb/>
Will View Contests<lb/>
JEW AYERS<lb/>
Avers Injured<lb/>
In Auto Wreck;<lb/>
Lost to Pirates<lb/>
Accident Results<lb/>
In Broken Pelvis<lb/>
For Buc Plaver<lb/>
Charles "Flash" Harris, a begin-<lb/>
ner in collegiate tennis, admirably<lb/>
obtained his first victory in two<lb/>
tries, when he swelled the Buccaneer<lb/>
score by swamping Sutton 6-0, 0-1.<lb/>
East Carolina's brilliant Burks<lb/>
Glover combination doggedly out-<lb/>
played Pilley and Daniel 0?, 7-5.<lb/>
This pair gave a beautiful perform-<lb/>
ance of cooperation with Burks<lb/>
supplying steady returns and ac-<lb/>
curate placements and (Hover daz-<lb/>
zling the gallery with effective put-<lb/>
away shots.<lb/>
In the other matches, Burks<lb/>
(ECTC) defeated Windham 6-0,<lb/>
6-1; Meadows (ECTC) lost to<lb/>
Daniel 4-6, 3-6; Green (ECTC) de-<lb/>
feated White 6-1, 6-0; Harris-L.<lb/>
Wilkerson (ECTC) defeatedWhite-<lb/>
Rawlings 6-1, 6-1; and Meadows-<lb/>
Green (ECTC) defeated Windham-<lb/>
McCotter 6-4, 6-4.<lb/>
Baseball Schedule<lb/>
April 8?Ohio Weselyan I here.<lb/>
April 10?High Point, here.<lb/>
April 11?High Point, here.<lb/>
April 14?Wilson Teachers, here.<lb/>
April 15?Wilson Teachers, here.<lb/>
April 17?W.&amp;M. (X.D.), there.<lb/>
April 22?Atlantic Christian,<lb/>
here.<lb/>
April 24?Campbell College, here.<lb/>
April 25?WA'M here.<lb/>
April 26?Louisburg, there.<lb/>
April 28?U S. Xaval Base,<lb/>
there.<lb/>
April 20?U. S. Xaval<lb/>
there.<lb/>
May 1?Louisburg, here.<lb/>
May 8?W. Caro. Teach<lb/>
May 0?W. Caro. Teach<lb/>
May 10?High Point, there.<lb/>
May 11?High Point, there.<lb/>
May 12?TJ. S. Xaval Base. here.<lb/>
May 13?U. S. Xaval Base; here.<lb/>
May 10? Wilson Teachers, there.<lb/>
May 20?Wilson Teachers, there.<lb/>
 Double header.<lb/>
Coach Gordon Gilbert's baseball<lb/>
squad suffered a severe loss before<lb/>
their opening game of the season<lb/>
when "Jew" Ayers, the Corsairs'<lb/>
veteran catcher was crtically injured<lb/>
in a recent automobile accident.<lb/>
Avers was returning to Greenville<lb/>
after a week-end in Rocky Mount,<lb/>
his home town, when the car in<lb/>
which he was riding met another<lb/>
car traveling at a high speed in<lb/>
head-on collision. Ayers sustained<lb/>
a fractured pelvic bone, serious<lb/>
bruises, and minor injuries. He<lb/>
was confined to a Pocky Mount<lb/>
hospital until a few days ago when<lb/>
he was removed to his home.<lb/>
The Pirate has been a letter man<lb/>
in three sports for the past four<lb/>
years. He has taken an interested<lb/>
part in many other phases of outside<lb/>
activities on the campus. His plans<lb/>
to graduate after one term of sum-<lb/>
mer school have been altered but<lb/>
Ayers, from his hospital bed stated,<lb/>
"I'll soon be out of here and back<lb/>
at ECTC. Hell! you can't kill me<lb/>
East Carolina's Pirates w. put<lb/>
on a double show next ! uesday<lb/>
afternoon for their part ??' : en-<lb/>
tertainment of the thr e 1 tsand<lb/>
high school seniors who will 11 guesl<lb/>
on the campus for the mi lal Sigh<lb/>
School Day. Coach Gilberts bas ?<lb/>
ball nine will engage High P i<lb/>
on the diamond while the Pirate<lb/>
racquet-wielders play host to Atlanf<lb/>
(Christian on the bomi ? ? i rt .<lb/>
The (Jorsair batmen m I High<lb/>
Point last year in four contests an I<lb/>
emerged victorious on thre<lb/>
occasions. I n the firsl ? -game<lb/>
series in Greenville. Phillips n<lb/>
j for the Bucs to win SS. and We -<lb/>
pitched the next day to sb .<lb/>
'Panthers 6-0, allowing ?? two<lb/>
Panthers to hit. When the Pi tes<lb/>
engaged the High Pointers al Higl<lb/>
Point in another two garni series,<lb/>
they dropped the first affray 14-3,<lb/>
but the next afternoon splil tl<lb/>
series with a 7-3 victory, with Hol-<lb/>
land doing the throwing,<lb/>
Tuesday's game will be the s<lb/>
of a two game series with the<lb/>
Panthers here; the first game will<lb/>
come off on Monday aftern ?<lb/>
From his pitching squad, Coach<lb/>
Gilbert will probably pick Ed Wells.<lb/>
Kelly Martin, or Willy Phillips to<lb/>
do the hurling. Wells tossed a<lb/>
twelve-inning classic at Atlantic<lb/>
Christian last Monday, keeping the<lb/>
Bulldogs batting down to less than<lb/>
one hit per inning. Earl "Smitry"<lb/>
Smith. Buccaneer second baseman,<lb/>
received a serious abrasion on the<lb/>
leg in the Christian game, which<lb/>
may keep him out of the line-up<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
Those high school senior? who<lb/>
choose to attend the tennis matches<lb/>
will see the local netmen attempt to<lb/>
repeat their saga of last Tuesday,<lb/>
when they swamped the Atlantic<lb/>
Christian Bulldogs 8-1 in Wilson.<lb/>
The Wilsonians journey to Green-<lb/>
ville to avenge the defeat and return<lb/>
home with the Bo-Hunk Trophy<lb/>
which will change hands if they are<lb/>
victorious. The gallery will be<lb/>
given the chance to see the pride of<lb/>
the Buccaneer squad, the Glover-<lb/>
Hurks doubles team, which brings<lb/>
together two of the finest netmen<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
Bas<lb/>
se,<lb/>
there,<lb/>
there.<lb/>
Campbell Wins<lb/>
Over Buccaneers<lb/>
In<lb/>
opening game of the 1030<lb/>
season, Fast Carolina's<lb/>
owed to the Campbell Cara-<lb/>
the overwhelming score of<lb/>
The game was played in<lb/>
park on April 1, and the<lb/>
were on the laughing end<lb/>
jokes played that afternoon.<lb/>
bates hit better than the score<lb/>
indicate, reaping 10 safe<lb/>
M compared to the even<lb/>
tt knocks secured by the opposi-<lb/>
te, but in the matter of fielding<lb/>
?ho bet nine fell down in a woeful<lb/>
fanner. TJ10 Buccaneers commit-<lb/>
Jj a total of seven errors afield to<lb/>
Nee men on base and allow runs at<lb/>
lal moments.<lb/>
Kelly Martin, big right-handed<lb/>
?Wlsr, pitched eight stanzas and<lb/>
nrates<lb/>
van by<lb/>
II ?<lb/>
the loc<lb/>
' isitors<lb/>
r?f all<lb/>
Thop<lb/>
would<lb/>
lh)W;<lb/>
was supplanted by Breece in the<lb/>
last inning.<lb/>
Umpires: Barnhill and Roebuck.<lb/>
Scorer: Scarborough.<lb/>
Tennis Schedule<lb/>
April 10?High Point, here.<lb/>
April 11?Atlantic Christian,<lb/>
here.<lb/>
April 22?Wake Forest, here.<lb/>
April 26?Louisburg, there.<lb/>
April 29?W.&amp;M. (X.D.), here.<lb/>
May 1?Louisburg, here.<lb/>
May 9<lb/>
-Wake Forest there.<lb/>
Enviable Evening<lb/>
Clothes<lb/>
SALLY FROCKS<lb/>
( Win One of the 5 .1)<lb/>
PARKER PEN '1,000 COLLEGE<lb/>
m SCHOLAR ?<lb/>
Get FREE ENTRY BLANK<lb/>
and Rules at any store selling<lb/>
Parker Vacumatic Pens<lb/>
One Scholarship Awarded<lb/>
Each Week for 5 Weeks<lb/>
rPhts 20 Weekly Cash Awards of $25 Each<lb/>
105 AWARDS, TOTAL: $7,500 , J ?uj<lb/>
5 CONTESTS END SATURDAY, APRIL 8, 15, 22, 29-AND MAY 6<lb/>
 lil&amp;7t&amp;?fc<lb/>
BRODY'S<lb/>
IN "GLAMOUR-GLOW" COLORS<lb/>
ling<lb/>
DAINTY AND FEMININE FOR EASTER!<lb/>
BLOUSES<lb/>
98c<lb/>
Lovely styles, both frilly ond<lb/>
tailored! Rayon crepes and<lb/>
shantungs, and smart new spun<lb/>
rayons. Sizes 32-40.<lb/>
J. C. PENNEY COMPANY<lb/>
"Frolic1<lb/>
This exquisitely soft, appealingly<lb/>
lustrous new felt  in glowing<lb/>
pastel shades for a youthful "you<lb/>
BRODY'S<lb/>
2.95<lb/>
<pb facs="00038083_0004"/><lb/>
April 7, i939<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THE TBCO ECHO<lb/>
Raleigh Alumnae<lb/>
Hold Meeting<lb/>
The Maivh mooting of the Ua-<lb/>
teigs Chapter of the Bast Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College Alumnae Asso-<lb/>
ciation met Monday evening. March<lb/>
27. at the homo of Miss Mildred<lb/>
Herring, 1?8 South Boylaa Ave-<lb/>
ntie. Miss Herring was assisted by<lb/>
Mrs. $. h, Maivom and Mrs. Anne<lb/>
W. Kay as hostesses.<lb/>
Mrs. .1. M. Newsoni. president of<lb/>
the chapter, presided over the busi-<lb/>
ness meeting and appointed com-<lb/>
mittees to arrange the annual bridge<lb/>
tournament which was held in the<lb/>
ballroom of the Sir Walter Hotel<lb/>
on Thursday evening, March 20.<lb/>
The meeting marked the close of<lb/>
1 four month"s contest for new<lb/>
members, and attendance. Mrs. J. 0.<lb/>
Holland's group was loser and the<lb/>
members of this group will he<lb/>
hostesses at a social meeting to be<lb/>
held in April. The members of Miss<lb/>
Mildred Herring's group will be<lb/>
the honored guests.<lb/>
Following the business hour. Mrs.<lb/>
Helen W. Larabee. home economics<lb/>
teacher at Hugh Morson High<lb/>
School, gave an account of her re-<lb/>
cent tour in Europe.<lb/>
Refreshments were served at the<lb/>
tea hour.<lb/>
Racqueteers Bow<lb/>
To Lenoir Rhyne<lb/>
Appear Here<lb/>
SSSI<lb/>
Girls Take Part<lb/>
In Intramurals<lb/>
Welcomes Seniors<lb/>
Pictured above are several of the members of the Chinese group who<lb/>
rendered a program here last Wednesday evening.<lb/>
Men To Tilt<lb/>
"Intramurally"<lb/>
Coach O. A. Hankner, East Caro-<lb/>
lina's new Director of Physical<lb/>
Education, recently announced bis<lb/>
forward step in physical education<lb/>
 after one week on the campus. Coach<lb/>
Hankner, with Jimmy Ward acting<lb/>
as his assistant, will stage a boys<lb/>
intramural program starting next<lb/>
Playing without the service of ? k wM inch;deg softball tcimis,<lb/>
their Number 2 racqueteer, Her- .<lb/>
t tmii , ?? - ??u;? horseshoe pitching and badminton.<lb/>
bert Wilkerson, hast uaronnas ?<lb/>
men's Tennis team, went down in The Director stated that all boys<lb/>
defeat 7-2. under the onslaught of enrolled and the men faculty will<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne, March 29, on the fa eligible except the Varsity basc-<lb/>
: The tilt was h;(1 (nns mQn in these respec.<lb/>
tive sports.<lb/>
Death of Mrs. Blaney<lb/>
Taylor Shocks Campus<lb/>
season for both<lb/>
April 15.<lb/>
Mr. Hankner stated that he hoped<lb/>
boys intramurals could he conducted<lb/>
YWCA Cabinet<lb/>
Holds Vespers<lb/>
Pirates' horn<lb/>
?lie first of the<lb/>
earns.<lb/>
Mauney defeated Leo Burks in Sheets tor registration m the<lb/>
the fastest match of the day. The, tournaments have been placed on the<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne star had a little tooJ bulletin boards. Registration for<lb/>
much speed for the hard-lighting softball will close on April 12;<lb/>
little Corsair. ! other registrations will close about<lb/>
In the fourth, and feature match<lb/>
Glover of ECTC took a hotly eon-<lb/>
tested three-set affair from the pre-<lb/>
viously undefeated Bean of the<lb/>
Bears. Glover took the first j steadily in the future to give all<lb/>
set with a three game margin, but: mon students and faculty some ac-<lb/>
dropped the next one 4-6. In the tivitv- in the athletic program<lb/>
final set the Corsair displayed too<lb/>
much ability in his tactics and<lb/>
downed the invader 8-6 in a hard<lb/>
pushed set.<lb/>
The final match of the afternoon<lb/>
brought a victory for the boys from (Continued from page one)<lb/>
Hickory when Bean and Conrad teeted by laws brought about by<lb/>
r??lled over Meadows and Harris, j people working under Christ's in-<lb/>
6-1,6-2. jfluence. From this influence we<lb/>
The most outstanding doubles have public schools, control of alco-<lb/>
mateh teamed Burks and Glover' holic beverages and health laws.<lb/>
against Mauney and Hahn to! Others taking part in the pro-<lb/>
brine- the Pirates their second vie gram were Miss Irene Mitcham,<lb/>
tory. The East Carolinians played! who sang George P. Handel's "I<lb/>
?lie best game displayed by any of I Know That My Redeemer Livetlv'<lb/>
the Pirate racqueteers in collegiate! Miss Lucy Ann Barrow, who con-<lb/>
competition. They easily took the! ducted the program, and Miss An-<lb/>
Bears 6-2, 6-4. j &amp;ie Allen Wilkerson.<lb/>
The Lenoir-Rhyne team showed j<lb/>
the advantage of being well coached.<lb/>
The summary <lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne?ECTC<lb/>
Singles:<lb/>
Mauney defeated Burks 6-1. 6-4.<lb/>
Hahn defeated Green 6-0. 6-0.<lb/>
Kennedy defeated Harris 6-3. 6-0. j<lb/>
Bean lost to Glover 3-6, 6-4. 6-8.<lb/>
L. Conrad defeated Meadows<lb/>
6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
D. Conrad defeated L. Wilker-<lb/>
son. 6-3, 6-2.<lb/>
Doubles:<lb/>
Mauney-Hahn lost to Burks-<lb/>
Glover 1-6, 2-6.<lb/>
Kennedy-D. Conrad defeated<lb/>
Green-Wilkerson 61 6-3.<lb/>
Bean-L. Conrad defeated Harris-<lb/>
Meadows 6-1. 6-2.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
serving as presidents of both or-<lb/>
ganizations, vice president of the<lb/>
Science Club and treasurer of the<lb/>
English Club. Miss Brewer played<lb/>
the lead in the senior play last<lb/>
year, "The Patsy and her per-<lb/>
formance was recognized as a su-<lb/>
perior portrayal by an amateur<lb/>
dramatist. She was chosen as one of<lb/>
the students to represent East Car-<lb/>
olina Teachers College in the Ameri-<lb/>
can College Yearbook of 1938.<lb/>
In her work as teacher of Eng-<lb/>
lish in the Chocowinity High School<lb/>
she had in one year made a host of<lb/>
friends.<lb/>
She is survived by her husband,<lb/>
Mr. Blaney Taylor of Chocowinity;<lb/>
her father. Hill Brewer of Clarks-<lb/>
ville, Tenn a sister, and a brother.<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
Ruth Parker. Preseason pitching<lb/>
laurels go to Elsie Gnpton; while<lb/>
diminutive Annie Laura Parker<lb/>
stars in the outfield.<lb/>
Coach Norton stated "Soft-ball<lb/>
has proved to be in the past four<lb/>
years the best intramural sport.<lb/>
It gains more interest and more<lb/>
girls participate; especially this<lb/>
year<lb/>
Women athletic heads gave out<lb/>
the news that the annual girls' ten-<lb/>
nis tournament will be conducted<lb/>
next week to decide who would be<lb/>
the possessors of the coveted posi-<lb/>
tions on the Varsity team. Miss Nor-<lb/>
ton has arranged matches with<lb/>
Blaekstone College and has writ-<lb/>
ten several other schools to arrange<lb/>
a schedule for the coming season.<lb/>
Returning veterans are Mary<lb/>
Frances Byrd, Prue Newby, Ruth<lb/>
Parker, and Nancy Albright. Prom-<lb/>
ising newcomers to the team are<lb/>
Vera Dare Rouse and Dorothy<lb/>
I )al rmy pie.<lb/>
Juanita Ethridge<lb/>
Chosen NSGA President<lb/>
Heads Committee<lb/>
FIRESTONE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
STATION<lb/>
SEE US<lb/>
GAS, CAR ACCESSORIES<lb/>
WASHING AND GREASING<lb/>
i v V V V W '<lb/>
President Leon R. Meadows and Dr. Carl L. Adams will figure promi-<lb/>
nently in the High School Day program next Tuesday. Meadow mn<lb/>
deliver the address of welcome and Adams is chairman of the central<lb/>
committee in charge of arrangements.<lb/>
When Thirsty? f<lb/>
Be Thrifty<lb/>
Buy a<lb/>
Nine To Engage<lb/>
Pointers; Netters<lb/>
Meet Christians<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
House presidents for the "WSGA<lb/>
are Ida Ruth Knowks, Mamie Lee<lb/>
Boyd, Hazel Owens, Annie Laurie<lb/>
Beale, Ida Farrior Davis, Rebecca<lb/>
Shanks, Iris Davis, Bettie Blanch-<lb/>
ard, and Doris Burney.<lb/>
Lois Hughes was elected cheer<lb/>
leader of the college.<lb/>
?ewjg?<lb/>
F<lb/>
The store which<lb/>
offers you the<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Hankner Chosen<lb/>
To Fill Position<lb/>
As Head of Dept.<lb/>
McLELLAN'S<lb/>
5 and 10c Store<lb/>
Cosmetics<lb/>
1!<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
After your barbecue<lb/>
come view our Spring<lb/>
Frocks?Frocks suit-<lb/>
able for that planned<lb/>
Senior trip.<lb/>
BLOOMS<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
seen at ECTO. The Pirates will be<lb/>
strengthened by the probable return<lb/>
of Herbert Wilkerson, who has been<lb/>
out of the line-up for the past two<lb/>
matches. Louis Wilkerson and<lb/>
Charlie Green, reserves of last sea-<lb/>
son have showed much promise this<lb/>
vear, taking matches from AC last<lb/>
week. Meadows, a veteran, is also<lb/>
back this year. Charles Harris, a<lb/>
newcomer, will play his third col-<lb/>
legiate match, after winning one<lb/>
and dropping one.<lb/>
Now is the Time<lb/>
to have a<lb/>
Photograph for<lb/>
Mother's Day<lb/>
with Easter finery<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
goal of higher standards of physical<lb/>
education.<lb/>
When he was questioned as to his<lb/>
favorite pastime Coach "Hank"<lb/>
immediately replied, "I'd rather<lb/>
play ball than eat. At home we<lb/>
used to get off from work at six<lb/>
o'clock and play baseball until eight-<lb/>
thirty, when it got too dark to see<lb/>
the ball. We postponed supper until<lb/>
then. The true reward in taking<lb/>
part in athletics is not the glory<lb/>
or trophys and such than are gained<lb/>
but it is the pure joy of playing<lb/>
that makes it worth-while<lb/>
EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING<lb/>
We'll fix those old shoes so<lb/>
they'll really look new.<lb/>
You'll like our prices.<lb/>
CITY SHOE SHOP<lb/>
Royal Crown Cola j<lb/>
m I<lb/>
Greenville Bottling Co.<lb/>
Howard Woldrop<lb/>
H. E. Woldrop<lb/>
ssssssssssssssssssssssssssswsssw<lb/>
r-r-ru<lb/>
BELK-TYLERS<lb/>
April 7, 193<lb/>
Dearest Alyce:<lb/>
If you haven t selected your Easter wardrobi <lb/>
should go doxen to Belk-Tyler's today and buy your EmU<lb/>
outfit. Honestly, my dear, I've never seen such gorgem<lb/>
dresses and huts to match, in all the new Spring coioi<lb/>
The prices uill suit your father's pocket too?that's wl<lb/>
all smart college girls shop at Bclk's.<lb/>
In order to look your loveliest for Jim on Eat<lb/>
Sunday go to Belk's to solve your shopping difficulties.<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Pat.<lb/>
?<lb/>
 b Ai??????????i<lb/>
Easter Clothes<lb/>
You'll be proud to<lb/>
wear in ANY<lb/>
Easter parade.<lb/>
William's<lb/>
The Ladies' Store<lb/>
Gams' Grocery<lb/>
and Market<lb/>
204 East Fifth Street<lb/>
Phone 568 - 569<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY SERVICE<lb/>
WELCOME SENIORS!<lb/>
Pay our retail salesroom a<lb/>
visit while here and try a<lb/>
delicious milkshake<lb/>
cream for only 10c.<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
DAIRY PRODUCTS<lb/>
p-HrF"<lb/>
mVF'b9m<lb/>
KARES BROS.<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
and<lb/>
SODA<lb/>
"We Serve the Best"<lb/>
BAKER'S<lb/>
STUDIO<lb/>
FOR ACTIVE<lb/>
FUN<lb/>
errormance<lb/>
coming toon to<lb/>
your local theatre<lb/>
Successors to Lautares<lb/>
? Cardigan jackets and softly<lb/>
detailed jackets; sweaters in<lb/>
every spring hue; pleated skirts<lb/>
and plaid skirts; gaudy and solid<lb/>
colors; skirts?these are what it<lb/>
takes to make a wardrobe for<lb/>
active fun!<lb/>
SWEATERS<lb/>
1.00 to 3.95<lb/>
JACKETS<lb/>
5.95 to 7.95<lb/>
SKIRTS<lb/>
2.95 to 10.95<lb/>
Blount Harvey's<lb/>
I<lb/>
IN SMOKING PLEASURE<lb/>
Before and after seeing Bette Davis in Dark Victory<lb/>
enjoy Chesterfield's Happy Combination<lb/>
of the world's best cigarette tobaccos<lb/>
Thanks to their can't-be-copied blend Chesterfields are refresh-<lb/>
ingly milder, taste better and have a more pleasing aroma"<lb/>
Chesterfield gives you just what you want in a cigarette.<lb/>
When you try them you will know why Chest-<lb/>
 erfields give millions of men and women more<lb/>
smoking pleasure why THEY SA TISFY<lb/>
Chesterfield<lb/>
The right combination of the worldfabest cigarette<lb/>
Z-532<lb/>
Annl<lb/>
To<lb/>
WUI<lb/>
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til ?'?'?<lb/>
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in e<lb/>
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