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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038103_0001"/>
A LUMNI<lb/>
ISSUE<lb/>
Tte<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
ALUMNI<lb/>
ISSUE<lb/>
EAST CAR<lb/>
mitkS COLLEGE<lb/>
Volume X I<lb/>
Democratic Club<lb/>
Schedules May 16<lb/>
For (barter Night<lb/>
Mas Delegates<lb/>
prom HIht Colleges<lb/>
To ittend Ktiii<lb/>
<lb/>
i lemocratic "lub of<lb/>
. ?? rs 'ollege w ill<lb/>
Night en Thurs-<lb/>
 - accepted the<lb/>
State ('ollege<lb/>
of Korth aro-<lb/>
?t?- to a dinner<lb/>
r part of the<lb/>
untl out activi-<lb/>
oeratic Clubs in<lb/>
 crsit ies and col-<lb/>
. ' Winston-Salem,<lb/>
r si lent and well-<lb/>
-? - akt r. has been<lb/>
er 'in address on<lb/>
I iring v. hicb K?r-<lb/>
I hirham. preside tit<lb/>
h mocratic 1 'lubs of<lb/>
i, will present a<lb/>
. - Whitfield, presi-<lb/>
Young 1 teniocrats.<lb/>
.1 the formal phas<lb/>
slated to be attende<lb/>
a Young 1 democratic<lb/>
? llegi. Wake Forest,<lb/>
North 'amlina.<lb/>
1 Diversity, Ap-<lb/>
1 eachers ('ollege<lb/>
.  pje of (ireensborO<lb/>
, i- planned. Repre-<lb/>
a student political<lb/>
? will be here foi<lb/>
All students will b<lb/>
? ihf speaker of tin<lb/>
.i,<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, MAY 3, 1940<lb/>
Number 13<lb/>
Thirty-Niners'<lb/>
Will Observe<lb/>
First Reunion<lb/>
First Year Class<lb/>
To Be Honored<lb/>
On June 1<lb/>
The 2) members of the class of<lb/>
'5! will Ik- honored at this vein's<lb/>
commencement. During the one<lb/>
year that they have been away,<lb/>
favorable reports have reached the<lb/>
college concerning their progress.<lb/>
Sixty-five returned to celebrate with<lb/>
their Alma Mater on Homecoming<lb/>
Day. Five of the group have mar-<lb/>
ried?Hilda Gray Batten and Ray-<lb/>
mond Sasser. at home, Lucama.<lb/>
X. C: Louise Sam' Freeman and<lb/>
Tom Jimison loving in (Joldsboro.<lb/>
X. C Minnie Gertrude Morton and<lb/>
L. B. Ward, at home, Wilson, N. C<lb/>
Opal Claire Harris and George<lb/>
Thompson, at home, Oxford, N. 0<lb/>
and Kuth Rosalind Mayo and<lb/>
Morris who are living in Wash<lb/>
ington, 1). C. Tin<lb/>
Alumni Association To Assemble Here lune 1<lb/>
For Observance of Twenty-eighth Anniversary<lb/>
?o <lb/>
Mrs.E. S. Bennett<lb/>
To Preside Over<lb/>
Annual Program<lb/>
Estelle McClees<lb/>
To Be Hostess<lb/>
To Alumni<lb/>
Dorothy Reed Miller, who will be crowned<lb/>
morrow afternoon on front campus at 4 :3?.<lb/>
Queen of the May' to-<lb/>
Silver Jubilee Honor Class of 1915<lb/>
To Meet To Celebrate Anniversary<lb/>
hit' members will<lb/>
. nd the entertain-<lb/>
. 1 teal, member of<lb/>
st I Carolina 1 eaeh-<lb/>
pr minent speaker<lb/>
 and educational<lb/>
i) N ortb 'arolma,<lb/>
ddress oi welcome.<lb/>
Greenville, State<lb/>
will introduce the<lb/>
eiiiniT.<lb/>
ards are being de-<lb/>
members win havt<lb/>
All students in-<lb/>
ing should confer campus<lb/>
,? in tbe immediate<lb/>
wintei<lb/>
Xigbt promises to<lb/>
ist celebrated inter-<lb/>
ever to Ik' held on<lb/>
Dorothy Miller Reigns As Queen<lb/>
Of Elaborate May Day Festival<lb/>
Christine Harris<lb/>
Heads Court As<lb/>
Maid of Honor<lb/>
Walser Talks<lb/>
To English Club<lb/>
Dorothy Seed Miller, senior from<lb/>
Wilmington, will reign as queen at<lb/>
the May Dav Festival held tomor-<lb/>
Come One, Come All<lb/>
Come one; come all to ye<lb/>
old-fashioned community sing<lb/>
to be held on the steps of the<lb/>
new classroom building tonight<lb/>
at 6:30 o'clock under the spon-<lb/>
sorship of the Y.W.C.A. Dean<lb/>
Tabor will lead the singing.<lb/>
All students over 70 years<lb/>
of age will be permitted to<lb/>
stand on the side and listen to<lb/>
the others. Any 69-year-olds<lb/>
are expected to participate.<lb/>
Members Of Class Of<lb/>
1915 To Be Guests<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
matic<lb/>
dred per cent. Everyone awaits them<lb/>
R, G. Walser, director of dra-1 ? a f welcome ald STS<lb/>
 ,r. , c x , their advisers. Dr. Herbert Ke-<lb/>
at Greenville High School?U an(1 Mr I()lan Miss<lb/>
row afternoon at 4:30 on the front w&amp;g f(,atUred on the program for the I i)orothy Schnyder. also an adviser,<lb/>
English Club meeting, Tuesday,jig no longer with Fast Carolina<lb/>
Mr Walser spoke to theI Teachers College. She is teaching<lb/>
lramatics in the high ? ?&amp;e in w York state.<lb/>
t Miss Estelle McClees (left) will be hostess to the returning alumni on<lb/>
in.r,on u . i ne eugagment of Alumni Day this year. Mrs. Elizabeth Stewart Bennett (right<lb/>
Mildred Ercelle Freeman to William dent of the association, will be m charge of the program.<lb/>
Xeal DeVane of Norfolk, Va and<lb/>
Powellsville. X. C has been an-<lb/>
nounced, by her parents, Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. llev Whitie Freeman of Cole-<lb/>
rain.<lb/>
The president of the class, Lucille<lb/>
Lewis who is teaching in the Com-<lb/>
mercial Department in the Kinston<lb/>
High School, recently returned with<lb/>
a group of students?all commerce<lb/>
majors?for a visit to the entire cam-<lb/>
pus. The only classes that they ob-<lb/>
served were the ones in the commer-<lb/>
cial department. Louise Elam, vice<lb/>
president is teaching in Newland;<lb/>
Madeline Byrum, secretary, in<lb/>
Stedman: and Mahry Hodges, treas-<lb/>
urer, in Paetolus.<lb/>
Mr. Rowland Farley. Mi. '39 has<lb/>
heen coaching at East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College during the year<lb/>
ly3940.<lb/>
It is hoped that the members of<lb/>
this class will come back one bun-<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers C<lb/>
has set the stage for another a<lb/>
Alumni Day program, which<lb/>
feature the graduating class<lb/>
L915, 1 ) and 1939.<lb/>
Miss Estelle McClees, A<lb/>
Secretary, will be the pri<lb/>
hostess for the occasion. Mis<lb/>
Clees will name others in<lb/>
futur<lb/>
m<lb/>
K'Lre<lb/>
ua<lb/>
u I<lb/>
umni<lb/>
icipal<lb/>
- Mc-<lb/>
nea r<lb/>
erve on the committee<lb/>
to<lb/>
presi- ! with her.<lb/>
1 Mrs. Elizabeth Stuart<lb/>
j Forest City, preside!<lb/>
Alumni Association of K<lb/>
Teachers College, is in e<lb/>
program. Mrs. Benn<lb/>
Bennett of<lb/>
t of the<lb/>
ist ('arolina<lb/>
targe of the<lb/>
tt has an-<lb/>
Miss Miller, who was elect<lb/>
ed try the student body during the<lb/>
term, was also crowned j APnI ?<lb/>
"Queen of the May7' at the annual j group on dramatics in<lb/>
spring dance in 1938. school. He pointed out that there<lb/>
Heading the court as maid of more to dramatics than getting<lb/>
honor will be Christine Harris from ; Q a &amp;y I(, c(mtinued this with<lb/>
Clarksville. Tennessee Other mauls statem?D that there shou(i as0<lb/>
of the court will be Eloise Uoone.<lb/>
oi uu ion l HelenUw present self confidence, play<lb/>
Sarah Ann Maxwell. Marj iieien i j<lb/>
Culledge. Mildred Jane Taylor, books, a knowledge of the play, and<lb/>
Millie Gray Dupree and Marguerite; belp in enunciation. "Dramatics<lb/>
Britt. ! stated Mr. Walser, "means some-<lb/>
The program will begin with theUg Vou can't get in the English<lb/>
ts from five eolored entrance of trumpeters. Spense y dim.tor. m M<lb/>
County gave a pro-Hatley and Bill Basden. who will-<lb/>
? selections at the be followed by the crown bearer<lb/>
ujro Students<lb/>
Present Program<lb/>
Ri Pi Players<lb/>
To Present Plays<lb/>
Class Officers<lb/>
NominatedFor'41<lb/>
Walser<lb/>
re ai rector, in -Mr,<lb/>
opinion, should begin with<lb/>
V A vesper hoar last<lb/>
onlna Frezell; the dancers, lords the student's level of drama.<lb/>
and ladies, maidsand maid of honor. Added attractions to the program<lb/>
The procession will be climaxed by consisted of three selections by the<lb/>
ools represented wen . . ?. r  -<lb/>
D esland Winterville the entrance of the Queen followed<lb/>
i Bethel. Quartet by her train bearers Louise<lb/>
riven Farmville and Baughan and Barbara Tabor.<lb/>
After a song,  Melody mr, by<lb/>
the sones were 'Lindv,R?benstein. the dancers will present<lb/>
. leominiT Spring "Is a group of May dancesThese are<lb/>
one Herer and "Deep<lb/>
choral speaking group, and a read-<lb/>
ing, "Mary Had a Little Lamb by<lb/>
Margaret Reed.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
ograra was arranged<lb/>
. X. Darnelle. who is<lb/>
of Xeirro education in<lb/>
untv.<lb/>
an English Country Dance<lb/>
Corniser May Danee, and<lb/>
Morris Handkerchief Dance.<lb/>
These will precede the main event<lb/>
of the dav, the crowning of the<lb/>
(Please turn to page three).<lb/>
The new officers are Pauline<lb/>
Abeyounis, president; Lda Miria<lb/>
George, vice president; Edna<lb/>
the I Mitchell, secretary; Norine Moore,<lb/>
The I treasurer; Madeline Adams, Teco<lb/>
Echo representative; and Elizabeth<lb/>
Harrell, Tecoan representative.<lb/>
These new officers will assume their<lb/>
duties at the next meeting.<lb/>
Eleven Alumni Chapters Report Successful Work;<lb/>
Organizations Show Constant Growth and Unity<lb/>
Daring the year 193940, the<lb/>
Al i ai Chapters have been very<lb/>
ieti e and report quite a successful<lb/>
year. There are, at present, eleven-<lb/>
four of which have been organized<lb/>
in 1940 (Ayden, Columbia, Char-<lb/>
lotte, and High Point). The Green-<lb/>
ville Chapter is also new having<lb/>
teen organized in the fall of '39. It<lb/>
is hoped that during the year, 1940-<lb/>
'fl, the chapter program will con-<lb/>
tinue its constant growth and that<lb/>
the State Association will show a<lb/>
great increase in membership.<lb/>
The Avden Chapter was organized<lb/>
in February, '40 at a meeting at<lb/>
which Mr. R. C. Deal was guest<lb/>
speaker. It has held two other meet-<lb/>
ings (monthly). In the April meet-<lb/>
ing, Miss Mamie E. Jenkins, W<lb/>
Principal speaker. The chapter has<lb/>
enrolled over twenty members who<lb/>
are very enthusiastic alumni. Offi-<lb/>
cers are: Mrs. Clyde Tyndall, Jr.<lb/>
(May Johnson Eure), president;<lb/>
Mrs. James Ray Pittman (Marie<lb/>
Moore), secretary and treasurer;<lb/>
and Miss Clyde Stokes, reporter.<lb/>
Charlotte organized during March<lb/>
'40 making plans to hold monthly<lb/>
meetings. The organization meeting<lb/>
was with Mrs. L, W. Rogers (Nancy<lb/>
Brantley). Officers are: Mrs. Ina<lb/>
Whitaker Staples, president; Mrs.<lb/>
Vera Miller Harris, vice president;<lb/>
Mrs. Rosalind S. Stegall, secretary;<lb/>
Mrs. Nancy B. Rogers, treasurer;<lb/>
and Mrs. Glenny Mangum Sawyer,<lb/>
reporter.<lb/>
The Columbia Chapter was or-<lb/>
ganized in February, '40, and has<lb/>
held monthly meetings since that<lb/>
time. Its officers are: Marguerite<lb/>
Averette, president Mrs. Russell<lb/>
Everton (Camille Bateman), vice<lb/>
president; Mrs. Maxie Spencer<lb/>
presented by the Ki Pi Players,<lb/>
Tuesday evening, May 9, 1940 in<lb/>
the Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
"Women's Ward a tragedy,<lb/>
starring Jane Copeland, as Mary a<lb/>
young mother who has been unjustly<lb/>
sentenced to prison, is being directed<lb/>
by David Breece. The supporting<lb/>
cast is Dopey Liz, played by Sarah<lb/>
Moore; Sadie, by Mary Fields;<lb/>
Goldie, by Pauline Abeyounis; May,<lb/>
by Mary Ellen Mathews; and<lb/>
Guard, by Maude Sawyer.<lb/>
The comedy of the three is "For<lb/>
the Love of Pete" directed by Miss<lb/>
Lena Ellis and featuring Louise<lb/>
Davis as Emma playing opposite<lb/>
Lindsay Whichard as Peter, the<lb/>
young gentleman who causes all the<lb/>
trouble. Other members of the cast<lb/>
are Jean Phipps, Marie Trippe, Iris<lb/>
Davis, Margaret Reid, Albertina<lb/>
Brinson, Waylan Tucker, Nancy<lb/>
Darden, Alton Payne, and Irene<lb/>
Mitcham.<lb/>
"Sky-Fodder the third of the<lb/>
group is a highly emotional type of<lb/>
play that has only, three persons in<lb/>
the cast. They are George Lautares<lb/>
(Thelma Ireland), secretary and (who plays the part of a young air<lb/>
treasurer; and Hortense Boomer, ?-????ftZ<lb/>
reporter<lb/>
Candidate- for officers in the in-<lb/>
coming senior class were nominated<lb/>
at a recent meeting. According<lb/>
to Bill Memer. .resident of the<lb/>
junior class, the elections will come<lb/>
off by secret ballot on Saturday cl-<lb/>
early next week.<lb/>
Nominees for the presidency are<lb/>
Three one act plays are to bejMaisie Castlebury, Erlene Sawyer,<lb/>
ftounced that all phases oi the pro-<lb/>
gram will be of interest to the<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
Office furniture and equipment<lb/>
for the Alumni Office in the Austin<lb/>
Auditorium has arrived and will be<lb/>
offered for use by the visiting<lb/>
alumni.<lb/>
As in recent year- the twenty ove<lb/>
year class 1915), the ten-year class<lb/>
(19S0), and the one-year elass<lb/>
' (1939) will be guests of honor. Only<lb/>
 four other classes have held their<lb/>
twenty-fifth reunion. Only the<lb/>
classes of 1911, 1912, 1913, and 1914<lb/>
have celebrated their twenty-fifth<lb/>
I anniversary before.<lb/>
Registration will begin at 9:30<lb/>
o'clock in the Alumni Office. The<lb/>
first meeting will begin at 10:30<lb/>
o'clock in the Austin Auditorium,<lb/>
with the program meeting, followed<lb/>
hv a business meeting before the<lb/>
eon which will<lb/>
be at 1 :30 in the college dining hall.<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College; LelalClass reunions and executive hoard<lb/>
, x- i .4 ? ?,a meetings will be held during the<lb/>
Carr Newman, demonstration teach-  ?  i -??<lb/>
 , ,   ? ,  afternoon. President and -Mrs.<lb/>
? i. Peabody (ollege, Xashville, Meadowg are folding open house for<lb/>
'In Union There is Strength" is<lb/>
the motto under which the forty-<lb/>
six memers of the "green and white"<lb/>
class spent two happy years in col-<lb/>
lege. Mr. Austin was adviser for<lb/>
the class in 1915, During the two<lb/>
iyears. '14 and '15, the class had two<lb/>
presidents, Katherine Tillery (Mrs.<lb/>
William Quinerly) and Louise<lb/>
Moore (Mrs. H. H. Llewellyn).<lb/>
The year. 1940. finds thirty-five<lb/>
members of the class married; a few<lb/>
still teaching. Among these are<lb/>
Christine B. Johnson, second grade annual Alumni Lunch<lb/>
critic teacher. Training School, East<lb/>
Tenn<lb/>
L. P.<lb/>
Elizabeth<lb/>
Thomas),<lb/>
Spencer<lb/>
seventh<lb/>
S:<lb/>
(Mrs.<lb/>
grade.<lb/>
and Hazel Starnes. The three candi-<lb/>
dates running for the office of vice<lb/>
president include Myra Godfrey,<lb/>
O. D. Andrews, and Virginia<lb/>
Wei don.<lb/>
Virginia Williams and Mattie<lb/>
Davis are the only candidates up for<lb/>
the office of Secretary, and the two<lb/>
nominees running for the office of<lb/>
treasurer are Becky Shanks and<lb/>
Rachel Templet on.<lb/>
Other nominees include Teco<lb/>
Echo representative, Elisabeth<lb/>
Meadows. Effie Lewis, and Margaret<lb/>
D. Moore; Tecoan representative,<lb/>
Anrfe Goosby, Ruth Pollard, and<lb/>
Dorothy Davis; Student Government<lb/>
representative, Annie Laurie Keene,<lb/>
Ruth Hall, Alice Powell, Dorothy<lb/>
Hollar.<lb/>
Farmville, X C; Sarah E.<lb/>
Clements, Oxford. X. O and Clara<lb/>
Davis (Mrs. Charles L. Wright).<lb/>
Washington, X. C. Two of the class<lb/>
have died.<lb/>
Twenty-five years ago the forty-<lb/>
six members of this class left their<lb/>
Alma Mater having been taught that<lb/>
no avenue of life was more desirable<lb/>
than that which leads "To Serve<lb/>
The gathering of the class for the<lb/>
(Please turn to page six)<lb/>
Math Club Holds<lb/>
Election of Officers<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
iese<lb/>
celebration of its silver anniversary<lb/>
will mean much in perpetuating<lb/>
and renewing grand associations, in<lb/>
keeping in touch with the continued<lb/>
growth of their Alma Mater, and in j was entertained<lb/>
revealing, as thev enter another<lb/>
Kathleen Barkley. Elm City<lb/>
Sophomore has been elected presi-<lb/>
dent of the math cluh for the com-<lb/>
ing year. She follows Ruth Hardee<lb/>
who is president this year.<lb/>
Margaret D. Moore was chosen<lb/>
vice president; Bessie Fay Hunt,<lb/>
secretary-treasurer: and Beth<lb/>
Mathews. chairman of social com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
were nominated at a busi-<lb/>
ness meeting following a social at<lb/>
which the High School Math Club<lb/>
?s, ai <lb/>
twenty-five years, what each member<lb/>
has contributed to the life of<lb/>
service.<lb/>
Miss Kate Lewis, who has been<lb/>
asked to serve as special hostess to<lb/>
the class, is anxious to welcome all<lb/>
members, fortv-four strong!<lb/>
The Goldsboro Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion of East Carolina Teachers Col-<lb/>
lege, composed of only a few mem-<lb/>
bers has had a very interesting year.<lb/>
Due to our small number we have<lb/>
been unable to contribute large sums<lb/>
to any funds. We made a small con-<lb/>
tribution to the local empty stocking<lb/>
fund. On one occasion we had our<lb/>
college President, Dr. Leon Mead-<lb/>
ows, and four faculty members for a<lb/>
barbecue dinner. It was greatly en-<lb/>
joyed by all. Miss Jenkins gave a<lb/>
most interesting account of her trip<lb/>
to Europe last summer. At the last<lb/>
meeting held in April we were for-<lb/>
tunate in having our Alumni Sec-<lb/>
retary, Miss Estelle McClees, and<lb/>
Miss White of the Advisory Board.<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
Charles Marks who are cast in the<lb/>
roles of passengers. This unusual<lb/>
and unique play was written by<lb/>
Jack Reynolds and is being directed<lb/>
by Clifton Britton.<lb/>
Ten Year Honor Classes of 1930<lb/>
To Hold Reunion On Annual Day<lb/>
Dora Coates to Assist<lb/>
InSummerWorksliop<lb/>
Miss Dora Coates of the Educa-<lb/>
tion Department will participate in<lb/>
the Rural Education Workshop to<lb/>
be held at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina this summer. The work-<lb/>
shop will be conducted during the<lb/>
first six weeks of summer school.<lb/>
Miss Coates is one of the two repre-<lb/>
sentatives from North Carolina who<lb/>
will participate in this workshop.<lb/>
The two classes of 1930, the four<lb/>
year and the two year, will be special<lb/>
guests of the college for the 1940<lb/>
Commencement. Back to the cam-<lb/>
pus a number of these graduates<lb/>
will come and view with pride the<lb/>
constant expanding of their Alma<lb/>
The A.B. Class of 1930 has a<lb/>
membership of ninety-seven. During<lb/>
the passing of ten years, the alumni<lb/>
office has not been able to keep in<lb/>
contact with all of the members;<lb/>
however, included in this article is<lb/>
what is believed to be the correct<lb/>
whereabouts of many.<lb/>
Forty-three have married. Of this<lb/>
number a few are making their<lb/>
homes in other states. Mrs. Ovid<lb/>
B. Lewis (Julia Lee Cogdell), East<lb/>
Orange, N. J Mrs. Theodore<lb/>
Wohlnick (Martha Trayham),<lb/>
Irvington, N. J Mrs. S. L. Wil-<lb/>
liamson (Kay Lee Cloaninger),<lb/>
Atlanta, Ga and Mrs. O. E. Haynes<lb/>
(Katherine Smith), Columbia LTni-<lb/>
versity, N. Y. Kate Lee Cloaninger<lb/>
was president of the class; Helen<lb/>
Guthrie, Rocky Mount, vice presi-<lb/>
dent; Katherine Whitehurst, secre-<lb/>
tary, and Frances Murray, treas-<lb/>
urer.<lb/>
Tracing the careers of the mem-<lb/>
bers of the class would reveal some<lb/>
very interesting, successful, and<lb/>
worthwhile activities. Mr. O. I.<lb/>
Haynes (Katherine Smith) received<lb/>
the M.A. degree in Nutrition from<lb/>
Columbia University and was em-<lb/>
ployed upon her graduation, and<lb/>
remains, as Assistant Director of<lb/>
Johnson Hall. Mrs. R. M. Taylor<lb/>
(Ethel Shelton) is president of the<lb/>
Rocky Mount Alumni Chapter.<lb/>
Elizabeth Deal is bookkeeper at Pitt<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
Commencement<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
Friday, May 31<lb/>
Dance (for seniors and<lb/>
Alumni sponsored by the<lb/>
Junior class).<lb/>
Saturday, June 1<lb/>
9:30 a.m.?<lb/>
Meeting of the Alumni Asso-<lb/>
ciation.<lb/>
1:00 p.m.?<lb/>
Alumni Luncheon.<lb/>
4:00 p.m.?<lb/>
Open House for Alumni and<lb/>
Faculty, at the home of Pres-<lb/>
ident and Mrs. Meadows.<lb/>
6:30 p.m.?<lb/>
Alllegiance Service, by Class<lb/>
of 1940, West Campus.<lb/>
8:30 p.m.?<lb/>
 Music Recital<lb/>
Sunday, June 2<lb/>
11:00 ajn.?<lb/>
Commencement Sermbn.<lb/>
Reverend Francis F. Lynch,<lb/>
Rector, Saint Thomas'<lb/>
Church, Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
7:00 p-m.?<lb/>
Vesper Service, Robert H.<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Monday, June 3<lb/>
10:30 a.m.?<lb/>
Address: Senator Joshua B.<lb/>
Lee, Norman, Oklahoma.<lb/>
11:30 a.m.?<lb/>
Graduating Exercises.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038103_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
May 3, 1940<lb/>
Dobotht HollarEditor in Chief<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
Georoe Lactares<lb/>
Barbara Keuzenkamp<lb/>
Elizabeth Meadows<lb/>
Mary IIorxe<lb/>
I a) is Hughes<lb/>
LaRue Mooring<lb/>
Reporters?Iris Davis, Harold Tay-<lb/>
lor. Sarah Gorham, Lena Mae<lb/>
Smith, Mary Baily, Betty Keuz-<lb/>
enkamp, John Williams, Pat<lb/>
Jackson, Margie Spivey, Lindsay<lb/>
Whichard, Margaret D. Moore.<lb/>
the TE<lb/>
'? )S.F<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
Member<lb/>
Associated Cbflebiate Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Colle&amp;iate Di6est<lb/>
EAST CAMOiJNA-TKACa&amp;US COLLECE<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Students of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
Helen FlanaganBusiness Manager<lb/>
BUSINESS STAFF<lb/>
Mart Agnes Deal Alice Powell<lb/>
Lallah B. Watts Brantley I kLoachk<lb/>
Ellen McIntyrk Jean Wendt<lb/>
James WhitfieldSports Editor<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the U. S.<lb/>
Postoffice, Greenville, Iff. C under the act of Mach 3, 1879.<lb/>
MPMMNTID rOn NATIONAL AOV?ltTI?INO BY<lb/>
National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
Collttf Publishers Rtfiriuntativt<lb/>
420 Madison Ave. new York. N. Y.<lb/>
Chicago ? Boston - Lot Aneu.it - S?n F?Hcitco<lb/>
Purpo.se of Alumni Issue<lb/>
The purpose of the Alumni Issue of the Tec? Echo this year<lb/>
is tri-fold. First of all, the issue is published to bring to the alumni<lb/>
information concerning fhe alumnae and alumni of the college and<lb/>
to feature activities of the eleven chapters of the association.<lb/>
Secondly, it gives them information concerning preparations for<lb/>
Alumni Day, this year's honor classes, and the commencement<lb/>
program. Thirdly it gives the alumni an insight into the regular<lb/>
highlights of student life and activity on the campus of their alma<lb/>
mater.<lb/>
Approximately 1,500 copies of this special issue have been dis-<lb/>
tributed tit the alumni throughout the state. Special emphasis<lb/>
has been placed on the observance of the twenty-eighth anniversary<lb/>
of the organization of the Alumni Association to be celebrated on<lb/>
Saturday, June 1. Efforts are being made to offer a program<lb/>
which will be enjoyed by all those who return to this campus for<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
Bast Carolina Teachers College extends a cordial welcome to all<lb/>
those who graduated from the college in years past. She urges<lb/>
you to come back to renew acquaintances with former classmates<lb/>
and faculty and to be a part of the college once more. Come back.<lb/>
We want to see vou.<lb/>
I nil oil We Stand; Divided We Fall<lb/>
Installation is over. Our campus leaders for next year have taken<lb/>
office. To them the student body should drink a toast and pledge<lb/>
their whole hearted support and cooperation. Their success for the<lb/>
coming year hinges on these two words. Small though these words<lb/>
mav seem, thev are the keys to success in student government. And<lb/>
this is all that the new officers have called upon the students to give.<lb/>
It is a service that the student body can render without much effort<lb/>
if thev will onlv try.<lb/>
Foremost in the minds of the students should be kept the thought<lb/>
that even if these leaders aren't their winning candidates, vet thev<lb/>
were the choice of the student body. Whether or not they carried<lb/>
your support in the recent elections it is your duty to your school<lb/>
to give these girls your support and a fair chance to prove that<lb/>
they are capable in assuming their responsibilities. Don't push<lb/>
them off on the wrong foot. Give them an even break iust as vou<lb/>
would desire if you were taking office for the first time.<lb/>
Onlv with support and cooperation can these girls fulfill the<lb/>
duties of their offices and do the things that vou have been wanting<lb/>
done. They are the ones who pull the strings and it is up to us<lb/>
to back them up, because united we stand; divided we fall<lb/>
Campus Camera<lb/>
7<lb/>
CATCHING ? COACHES Qfl? GuaAxl<lb/>
ggfffr ' ? X <lb/>
F<lb/>
RENCH<lb/>
ASHION<lb/>
ADS<lb/>
By Barbara Keuzenkamp<lb/>
mm?,?mm.mmm?mmm,?mmmmmmmm?mmmmmn????<lb/>
Watchinj<lb/>
The World<lb/>
by<lb/>
fljwmunmmiun<lb/>
"UMIWB MVW MAN <lb/>
FRANK ANNEBERG, KANSAS U. TUMB-<lb/>
LING COACH CAN WALK ON HIS HANDS<lb/>
ALMOST AS EASILY AS HE CAN ON MS<lb/>
FEET. HE ONCE STOCK) ON HIS HEAD ON<lb/>
TOP OF THE WRIGLEY BUILDING IN CHI-<lb/>
CAGO AND CALMLY PLAYED A TROMBONE<lb/>
SOLO HIS BAG OF TRICKS INCLUDES<lb/>
DOING A CHEEK STAND AND SHAVING<lb/>
HIMSELF AT THE SAME TIME <lb/>
OPEN FOR UM<lb/>
(Editor's Note: This Department<lb/>
is open to all students in school<lb/>
here. The Teco Echo reserves the<lb/>
right to censor or reject all com-<lb/>
munications. Letters published<lb/>
herein express individual opinion,<lb/>
and do not represent the editorial<lb/>
policies of this newspaper.)<lb/>
 Pat on the Back<lb/>
The work of the outgoing Women's Student Government Asso-<lb/>
ciation council is to be complimented this year for the numerous<lb/>
services rendered to the student body. Theirs is a job of which<lb/>
they may well be proud.<lb/>
Of their many accomplishments, perhaps the most outstanding<lb/>
one is the revision of the custom of observing a Mav Dav festival<lb/>
on the campus. It has been through their efforts that this has been<lb/>
made possible once more this year. They have undertaken the<lb/>
responsibility of serving as sponsors of the gala affair and in seeing<lb/>
that it goes off as the May Day celebration of any college should.<lb/>
Another of their accomplishments has been that of furthering<lb/>
interests in the college by sending delegates to conventions through-<lb/>
out the state. These meetings not only have given the delegates<lb/>
an opportunity to ask questions about their problems and to ex-<lb/>
change ideas witli others who are in the same key positions in other<lb/>
schools, but thev have served as excellent advertisement for the<lb/>
college. By so doing our college is becoming better known among<lb/>
the other leading colleges and universities in the state and in<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
Also this vear the student government association has been suc-<lb/>
cessful in getting the whole student bod' to back them in their<lb/>
policies. The students have cooperated well and as a result they<lb/>
have profited from capable leadership made possible by whole-<lb/>
hearted support.<lb/>
To Juanita and the outgoing council, the Teco Echo on behalf<lb/>
of the student body takes this opportunity to express the opinion<lb/>
that their's has been a job well done and one of which to be exceed-<lb/>
ing proud.<lb/>
Six Years Ago<lb/>
Six years ago on April 25, Dr. Robert Herring Wright, first<lb/>
president of East Carolina Teachers College, passed away after<lb/>
serving a quarter of a century as head of this institution. Inspired<lb/>
and guided by his leadership, this college grew from a school of<lb/>
barely 175 students to an institution of over a thousand.<lb/>
Nor were Dr. Wright's interests confined to the campus and his<lb/>
profession. They were also that of his community. He was keenly<lb/>
interested in civic life and gave freely of his time, talent, and<lb/>
finances to further any movements that he felt were for the good<lb/>
of the community.<lb/>
The esteem with which Dr. Wright was held,by those who knew<lb/>
him is indicated by the following quotation from the Greenville<lb/>
Reflector: "It is needless to endeavor in a short time and space to<lb/>
cover the activities and achievements of this great man. It should<lb/>
suffice to say that truly the state and especially this immediate com-<lb/>
munity is a better place for his having lived v<lb/>
"North Carolina has lost a worthy son, a capable and dis-<lb/>
tinguished educational leader, and a good citizen stated an edi-<lb/>
torial in the Kinston Free Press as it summarized the accomplish-<lb/>
ments of the deceased president.<lb/>
"No man ever lived who was more willing, eager and ready to<lb/>
serve the youth of his home, his friends, and associates, and the<lb/>
community in which he lived, in any way, in any capacity, at any<lb/>
time, than Robert H. Wright<lb/>
At the time of his death the Teco Echo stated the attitude of<lb/>
the student body toward their beloved leader in the following<lb/>
comment: "This college and its work of training teachers will go<lb/>
on a living memorial to this great leader<lb/>
Our present student body and faculty must not fail in the trust<lb/>
that Robert Herring Wright has placed in them.<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
Students at East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College for some time have been<lb/>
voicing disapproval of conditions<lb/>
existing at the local bus-terminal;<lb/>
but as yet we have seen no discussion<lb/>
of the matter in this paper.<lb/>
Traffic jams?caused by busses as-<lb/>
sembling at the bus-station?on<lb/>
Greenville's main highway occur al-<lb/>
most hourly, making the spot a dan-<lb/>
gerous one for both automobiles and<lb/>
bus-passengers. College students<lb/>
walking to the business section are<lb/>
forced to pick their way through<lb/>
veritable mountains of trunks and<lb/>
other luggage which crowd the side-<lb/>
walks ; at times, they even have to<lb/>
step into the street. Should "the<lb/>
powers that be" defer action until<lb/>
after some student or pedestrian has<lb/>
been injured or even killed?<lb/>
In addition to the highly danger-<lb/>
ous conditions under which the sta-<lb/>
tion is operated, the station itself<lb/>
presents an appearance which is<lb/>
hardly in keeping with the stand-<lb/>
ards set by the other public build-<lb/>
ings in Greenville. The lack of suit-<lb/>
able waiting-rooms, the absence of<lb/>
rest-rooms of any but the crudest<lb/>
type, and inefficient direction of pas-<lb/>
sengers to the proper busses might<lb/>
be appropriate to Pumpkin Center?<lb/>
but surely they are out of place in<lb/>
"The Hub of Eastern Carolina<lb/>
Since students of ECTC com-<lb/>
prise a large portion of the patron-<lb/>
age of the local bus-station, we feel<lb/>
entirely justified in asking 'for<lb/>
changes. Naturally, those persons<lb/>
maintaining the station will not make<lb/>
expensive improvements of their own<lb/>
volition; but if sufficient public pres-<lb/>
sure can be focused upon the dangers<lb/>
and abuses prevalent under the ex-<lb/>
isting situation, perhaps Greenville<lb/>
will, some day, have a bus-terminal<lb/>
comparable with those of Washing-<lb/>
ton and Wilson. At any rate we hope<lb/>
so.<lb/>
Respectfully yours,<lb/>
Spectator.<lb/>
I<lb/>
.<lb/>
to forego the pleasures of attending<lb/>
classes in order to watch the few<lb/>
members of the opposite sex com-<lb/>
pete in games of skill and incidental-<lb/>
ly lessons of great value could be<lb/>
gleaned by the girls even while vis-<lb/>
ually enjoying the rippling and<lb/>
swelling of the masculine biceps.<lb/>
What lessons? Chiefly, that of<lb/>
sportsmanship?It's true the girls<lb/>
will hardly be called upon to exhibit<lb/>
sportsmanship of any kind while<lb/>
on the ECTC campus. They don't<lb/>
get the chance. And speaking of<lb/>
sportsmanship?the brand of sports-<lb/>
manship exhibited on the tennis<lb/>
courts has not been a matter of<lb/>
chasing boys from the courts at the<lb/>
discretion of classes, as classes in<lb/>
tennis meet only three times a week<lb/>
and the boys maintain one of the<lb/>
best courts for their own use when<lb/>
such an incident has occurred.<lb/>
Nancy Albright.<lb/>
Hats seem the fashion item in<lb/>
which Parisiennes most willingly in-<lb/>
dulge themselves in wartime; and<lb/>
one is practically certain to find the<lb/>
salons of the more popular modistes<lb/>
crowded.<lb/>
A group of new models at Blanche<lb/>
and Simons gives prominence to<lb/>
sport felt hats trimmed by scarfs of<lb/>
jersey tulle of contrasting color, such<lb/>
as maroon on natural grege tone, or<lb/>
moss green on mustard. Very light<lb/>
felts are also used for afternoon<lb/>
hats, trimmed with clusters of flow-<lb/>
ers the most popular being anemones<lb/>
in their natural tones so that they<lb/>
give a vivid note. These hats are<lb/>
usually very small but high, such<lb/>
as a model of white felt with narrow<lb/>
brim whose crown is replaced by a<lb/>
fan drape of the felt, with flower<lb/>
steins twisted around its base. A light<lb/>
gray felt with its crown heightened<lb/>
by a cluster of anemones on top has<lb/>
a short black veil of coarse mesh<lb/>
covering the eyes.<lb/>
Though veils are not used as much<lb/>
this spring as they were this winter,<lb/>
they are still very popular, but hang<lb/>
at sides and back as often or even<lb/>
more often than they do at the front.<lb/>
This is particularly true of canoties;<lb/>
and Suzy's way of dividing a plain<lb/>
mesh veil into scarfs which fall at<lb/>
each side framing the face seems to<lb/>
be meeting with much favor from<lb/>
Parisiennes. One also sees canotiers<lb/>
with a brief and careless drape of fine<lb/>
mesh veil over the brim at the back,<lb/>
something like a puff of smoke be-<lb/>
comingly filling in the space between<lb/>
the head and the hat as the tiny<lb/>
canotier brim tips up in the air so far<lb/>
forward that most of the head is left<lb/>
exposed.<lb/>
Molyneux presents pencilslim,<lb/>
floor-length skirts with contrasting<lb/>
tops for evening. New are fluttery<lb/>
chiffon frocks which are high-necked<lb/>
but sleeveless, presented in soft tones<lb/>
like dusty pink?especially flatter-<lb/>
ing in the evening.<lb/>
George Lantares<lb/>
1 GEORGE LAUTARES<lb/>
Hitler's efficient war machine continues to march further i<lb/>
while in England and France, the civilians are clamori<lb/>
forces to make a better showing against the enemy. It seen<lb/>
had planned his latest conquest with eare and precision I<lb/>
has been Germany all the way. The allies report that more<lb/>
continually being landed on Norwegian soil augmenting I<lb/>
but the results that should accompany these reinforcements ;<lb/>
developed. Instead, the Germans have I<lb/>
 strategic point that they have attempted<lb/>
Most of the principal seaports are now h ?<lb/>
of the Xais. Of course, the reports that<lb/>
belligerent sources are not reliable, but if is<lb/>
to say that Hitler is winning in Norway.<lb/>
The remarkable feature of the present wa<lb/>
lack of naval action in the Mediterrai<lb/>
receives a tremendous amount of sup<lb/>
across this route and thus far it lias passe<lb/>
molestation. At Gibraltar, the British are<lb/>
close watch in order to prevent enemy<lb/>
from entering through the Straits. Their ?<lb/>
been successful. However, at the present, there are two Gen<lb/>
marines now lying in an Italian Mediterranean port, interned<lb/>
officials. If Italy should allow these boats to escape from their<lb/>
ment, then the allies would be forced to take precautionary<lb/>
on a new  front<lb/>
The Senate is now debating the proposal of Senator Bob Re<lb/>
take certain colonies belonging to Britain. Holland, and Fra<lb/>
payment for the long over-doe war debt. This action will certaii<lb/>
a great deal of apprehension amongboth political parties in this ?<lb/>
At the present, those countries involved in wars could do ver<lb/>
toward preventing the United States from taking these possessi<lb/>
it would he a dangerous step for the neutrality that we ar-<lb/>
maintain. As we stand now, we do not expect to become involve<lb/>
conflict, but if we become too careless and certain of our m<lb/>
and dabble in colonial possessions, then undoubtedly the A.E F.<lb/>
again be sailing for Europe.<lb/>
Russia and Great Britain are now negotiating on a possibh<lb/>
agreement. It seems that the British are glad to forget their r<lb/>
Russia when that country was pounding at little Finland. 1! .<lb/>
the way the war is going for the British, they should endeavor <lb/>
the good will of some of the now neutral powers, for if Hitler<lb/>
satisfied with Norway after he gets it, he may decide to take the B<lb/>
Isles awav from the British.<lb/>
wm<lb/>
E.C.T.C.?AN ATHLETIC CLUB!<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
There seems to be some misunder-<lb/>
standing among certain members of<lb/>
Esse Tesseville, X. C.<lb/>
1940.<lb/>
Dearest Mother and Dad:<lb/>
I'm awfully sorry that I haven't<lb/>
written or been home before this<lb/>
but you see, there has been a slight<lb/>
misunderstanding as to who I am<lb/>
that I had to straighten out.<lb/>
First of all, about two years ago<lb/>
they had a boy up here by my<lb/>
name that they had kicked out on<lb/>
account of getting drunk (you<lb/>
know that I wouldn't think of do-<lb/>
ing anything such as that) and they<lb/>
thought that I was the same boy.<lb/>
After much confusion, I finally<lb/>
straightened things out, but I don't<lb/>
know for how long.<lb/>
Really, I believe that I'm going<lb/>
to like this East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College. There's not many girls,<lb/>
though, so you won't have to come<lb/>
up to check on me. Because of the<lb/>
few girls, I probably won't need<lb/>
so much spending money.<lb/>
Which brings up the age-old<lb/>
question of money: As I see it now,<lb/>
about a dollar and a half a week<lb/>
will carry me all right at the pres-<lb/>
ent for spending money. But later,<lb/>
I'll need about nine dollars for a<lb/>
so-called student fee which must be<lb/>
paid. Then there is the class fee<lb/>
of $2.75, which I'll need, if you<lb/>
expect me to participate in any<lb/>
class events. And, of course, you'll<lb/>
want me to see the athletic con-<lb/>
teats and a season ticket is only five<lb/>
dollars and a quarter, which is<lb/>
cheap enough.<lb/>
This laundry up here is pretty<lb/>
sorry, but it is as good as one might<lb/>
AND THE LIGHTS WENT OX<lb/>
THE BLIXK<lb/>
Deuces Wild<lb/>
ASA<lb/>
by<lb/>
SPADES<lb/>
OXCE IX THE LIFE OF EVERY WOMAX: There comes a time<lb/>
when she says to herself, "To (censored) with him. I can always<lb/>
date John David Bridgers.<lb/>
on Payne<lb/>
or is the administration along with<lb/>
a few members of the faculty suffer-<lb/>
ing delusions of grandeur? Judg-<lb/>
ing from the article written by the<lb/>
guest sport columnist of the last<lb/>
Teco Echo, and supposing his opin-<lb/>
ion to be that of many, are we to<lb/>
understand that East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College is no longer an in-<lb/>
stitution of higher learning but a<lb/>
glorified Athletic Club?for men<lb/>
only? If so, certainly the girls on<lb/>
the campus should be informed of<lb/>
the true state of affairs. After all,<lb/>
there are only nine hundred and<lb/>
some odd who would be only too glad<lb/>
the student body concerning the<lb/>
functions of this institution. It is , , , ,  , ?? .<lb/>
an educational institution, is it not?Hg or $? ? week iho The"<lb/>
It was nine o'clock in the staff room<lb/>
And the editor was in doubt,<lb/>
When someone blew a fuse upstairs<lb/>
And all the lights went out<lb/>
The news stories weren't newsy<lb/>
When the lights went on the blink<lb/>
And the stories were so "phewsy"<lb/>
And really they did stink<lb/>
But the staff carried on you bet<lb/>
For when they looked about<lb/>
There were two boys in the staff room<lb/>
When all the lights went out.<lb/>
Anon.<lb/>
Dr. S. Winston Cram believes that<lb/>
students should take his name in<lb/>
vain, for he urges all in his classes<lb/>
not to cram for his final examina-<lb/>
tions. And to add to the effectiveness<lb/>
of his no-cramming edict at Emporia<lb/>
(Kans.) State Teachers College,<lb/>
Prof. Cram says his students may<lb/>
use "ponies" when they write the<lb/>
answers to his quiz problems.<lb/>
Says the professor: "This plan<lb/>
serves as an impetus to the student<lb/>
to put in a worthwhile review pro-<lb/>
gram. He won't have to clutter up<lb/>
his mind with numerous equations<lb/>
which he can't remember. It makes<lb/>
for more constructive review instead<lb/>
of cramming<lb/>
So we hereby initiate a movement<lb/>
to create more Crams and less cram<lb/>
ming in all collegeland!<lb/>
THE REIGXS CAME: Due to a previous engagement. Alt<lb/>
was forced to withdraw from the race for May Queen.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
CRIME AXD PUNISHMENT: A lot of people have come to their<lb/>
census lately.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
PAGIXG WHITFIELD : That worstwhik editor<lb/>
being the expectant father of a book to be knows<lb/>
as "How to Get Girls and Hold Them<lb/>
 ? <lb/>
SIGX IX A BOOK STORE: "AIL This and<lb/>
Heaven Too'?Take "Rebecca" home with vou.<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
WHAT CO-ED thought the "Hunchback of<lb/>
Xotre Dame" was a football picture!<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
SOME WOMEX are called Amazons because<lb/>
they are so wide at the mouth. We wonder.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
FRESHIE: Once upon a time there was a dumb freshman who<lb/>
thought that campus cliques were college photos. Well, he learned.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
"Where is my wandering boy tonight<lb/>
I wonder, near or far?"<lb/>
An anxious parent asks, and adds:<lb/>
"And also, where's the ear?"<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
IX THE SPRING a young man's fancy turns to baseball and other<lb/>
kinds of pitching.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
DEPARTING from the so-called humor of this column for a few<lb/>
moments, we would like to make a few awards. If the shoe fits, it wont<lb/>
squeak, so wear it and grin.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
ORCHIDS: To Lucille Bedford for being a good sport, having an<lb/>
unimpeachable sense of humor, the ability to take a ribbing without<lb/>
squawking, and being a nice person to know.<lb/>
POPT? ?F ;?W T? W? FRIENDS AND INFLUENCE<lb/>
fHiUFLili : lo a lot of people we know.<lb/>
? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
A COPY OF "LIVE ALONE AND LIKE IT'<lb/>
school-teachers.<lb/>
service is rather poor, so that you'll<lb/>
have to add fifty or seventy-five<lb/>
cents to that for repairs?buttons,<lb/>
and the like.<lb/>
My little radio is causing quite<lb/>
a little fuss over at the house. The<lb/>
landlady says that it will cost me<lb/>
$1.60, but I may be able to jew<lb/>
her down to $1.45 a month.<lb/>
The other day while getting a<lb/>
hair cut my barber told me that<lb/>
I have a very bad case of dandruff.<lb/>
He has a special service there which<lb/>
will guarantee a cure. I'll have to.<lb/>
take that treatment twice every<lb/>
two weeks for a month at 50 cents<lb/>
each. If I don't do it he says I'll<lb/>
be bald in six months, and you<lb/>
wouldn't want me to be bald, would<lb/>
you?<lb/>
I" have to close now. I have to<lb/>
meet a person down at the "Y"<lb/>
reading room to study. That is the<lb/>
only place on the campus that they<lb/>
require strict silence so I spend<lb/>
most of my time there studying.<lb/>
? Your loving soon,<lb/>
"Hoot" Yehutie.<lb/>
P. S. I'll need a dollar extra this<lb/>
week because I have two pairs of<lb/>
pants that need cleaning.<lb/>
To all future<lb/>
fiteLh?he?GH a square peg wm not fit a ? hole'a "i?? deal<lb/>
FOR DATERS ONLY: Always let tte'band members talk about<lb/>
tTMTjJZ:30? bl0Wmug their own horas "d the tennis men<lb/>
are harmless; they enjoy a racket.<lb/>
NOTICE: Next week well reveal the deep'dark secret of this column.<lb/>
? '????<lb/>
If you lovl me<lb/>
lake I lore you<lb/>
Then RJS. V.P.<lb/>
And<lb/>
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Alumni D.S. Club<lb/>
Proves Active<lb/>
In Two Years<lb/>
EHughtridgc<lb/>
li?l- Organization<lb/>
During I9394t<lb/>
tv.y<lb/>
rill<lb/>
Lc<lb/>
at?<lb/>
Hf,<lb/>
f!l<lb/>
- 1<lb/>
ADS President<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE f fiREE<lb/>
. I augbters and Sons<lb/>
aliic.l in the fall of<lb/>
Snip of Miss Mamie<lb/>
- now the club's ad-<lb/>
irpose of the club is<lb/>
loser feeling of tVl-<lb/>
u the students of this<lb/>
. descendants of stu-<lb/>
- attended Kast ('aro-<lb/>
i l!ejre before them ;<lb/>
i the memory of those<lb/>
past.<lb/>
i Daughters and Sons<lb/>
s the members on roll<lb/>
Phe officers this year<lb/>
aughtridge, president;<lb/>
I n . ice president ; and<lb/>
hail, secretary and<lb/>
new officers will be<lb/>
leeting in May.<lb/>
ost important events<lb/>
ilendar for this year<lb/>
party given in the<lb/>
'it party given by Miss<lb/>
Lgsdak Hall. April 11,<lb/>
. tnbers of the A.D.S.<lb/>
committee made up of<lb/>
the elub. and headed<lb/>
aughtridge, president,<lb/>
omecoming Day held<lb/>
1940 the club is hold<lb/>
- in the "Y" hut for<lb/>
who return for com-<lb/>
a'h will end a sueeess-<lb/>
the Alumni Daughters<lb/>
ANITA DAUGHTRIDGE<lb/>
Newest ECTC Sorority Displays<lb/>
Unique Originality In Organization<lb/>
len car Honor<lb/>
Classes of 1930<lb/>
(<lb/>
the<lb/>
<lb/>
m resp<lb/>
tin<lb/>
of<lb/>
eord<lb/>
.rt<lb/>
tii<lb/>
it'J from page one)<lb/>
pital, Greenville, X<lb/>
 iu?- are still in<lb/>
Fession. A tew of those<lb/>
Xorth Carolina are:<lb/>
well, Burlington; Vir-j<lb/>
White, Hohgood;<lb/>
earne, Washington; <lb/>
n,t r. 'olumhia ; Helen<lb/>
. Bailey; Myrtis Stan<lb/>
Mount Airy: Verna<lb/>
Ahoskie; Anna Jane<lb/>
It shore ; Ruth Hunter.<lb/>
Fannie B. Johnston;<lb/>
(adeline McCain, High<lb/>
 nne Glenn Roberson,<lb/>
Elba Metiowati, War-<lb/>
abeth Allen, Aurora;<lb/>
Turner was class ad-<lb/>
r, during the year 1929-<lb/>
, lying at Peabody, and<lb/>
i. came the adviser for<lb/>
i normal class consists<lb/>
:  'asde ('arty Mrs.<lb/>
was president and<lb/>
raughn, Ifahel Collier<lb/>
. Fisher), and Hallie<lb/>
James Morgan), vice<lb/>
crctary, and treasurer,<lb/>
Mrs. Jones is making<lb/>
I teaching in War-<lb/>
. ; Marjraret Vauirhn is<lb/>
Rocky Mount. X. C<lb/>
 Elisabethtown, X. (<lb/>
igan in Monroe, X. C.<lb/>
ching in the Benton<lb/>
ool<lb/>
has been notified of<lb/>
marriages oi this class.<lb/>
aber are still employed<lb/>
?ls of the state. Essie<lb/>
now employed as book-<lb/>
grapher at Tayloe Hos-<lb/>
ington, X. C. Two of<lb/>
enrolled in school this<lb/>
lah Deaton and Patsy<lb/>
(Glass). Many others<lb/>
? i the A.B. degree, the<lb/>
:ate, and have attended<lb/>
leees for summer ses-<lb/>
ing brought to the cam-<lb/>
ice Cherry, (irimesland,<lb/>
trj Sheppard Keel (Mrs.<lb/>
Stacy), (i-reenville, X. C.j<lb/>
rclothMrs. ( W. Wal-<lb/>
lops, X. Cj and Mary<lb/>
i ishville, X. C.<lb/>
number of deatlis in the<lb/>
-??? has been three.<lb/>
- members of the classes of<lb/>
? arty welcome awaits you.<lb/>
tnions will be held. Come<lb/>
. bear the roll-call of your<lb/>
bniy a few have been men-<lb/>
ibovt ; however, due to very<lb/>
g results obtained recently<lb/>
?nse to a questionnaire sent<lb/>
tembers of the 'Si classes to<lb/>
dd ?esses of those for which<lb/>
e was uncertuin, a majority<lb/>
transitions have been re-<lb/>
New Books Added<lb/>
To ECTC Library<lb/>
According to J. R. (uilledge, li-<lb/>
brarian, the following books of in-<lb/>
terest have been recently added to the<lb/>
library :<lb/>
F. L. Allan, "Since Yesterday<lb/>
Alice Bret, "I Begin Again J Y.<lb/>
Case, "At Midnight on the Slat of<lb/>
March A. F. Collins, "Photograph<lb/>
for Fun and Money I). Du Man-<lb/>
lier. "Jamaica Inn Irwin Edemas,<lb/>
"Candle in the Dark H. G. Espy,<lb/>
"The Public Secondary School<lb/>
David Ewon, "Men and Women Who<lb/>
Make Music L. Farmer, "What's<lb/>
Your Allergy P ; Paul Gordon, "The<lb/>
New Archerv G. Household,<lb/>
"Rogue Male W. II. Hudson,<lb/>
"Tales of the Pampas S. A. Ion-<lb/>
ides, "Stars and Men" ; Lewis Jacobs,<lb/>
"The Kise of the American Film<lb/>
Diana Jordan, "The Dance as Edu-<lb/>
cation I. Kant. "Perpetual Peace<lb/>
K. H. Koek, "The Spirit of Horace<lb/>
Mann Carries On Raymond Mo-<lb/>
ley, "After Seven Years 0. Mora,<lb/>
"In Place of Splendor Robert Na-<lb/>
than, "Portrait of Jennie E. M.<lb/>
Poteat. "These Shared His Passion<lb/>
.1. B. Priestley, "Rain Upon Gods-<lb/>
hill A. Saint Exupery, "Wind,<lb/>
Sand, and Stars<lb/>
K. T. H. Shaffer, "Carolina Gar-<lb/>
dens Clarence Streit, "Union<lb/>
Xow D. Taylor, "The 111 Tem-<lb/>
pered Listener Hugh Walpole,<lb/>
"The Sea Tower Mrs. Bayard<lb/>
Wooten. "Charleston Win. C. De-<lb/>
Mille, "Hollywood Saga D. C.<lb/>
Beard, "Hardly a Man Is Xow<lb/>
Alive Estelle Hamburger, "It's a<lb/>
Woman's Business William Sara-<lb/>
van, "Peace Thomas Wolfe, "The<lb/>
Face of a Xation Edward Benes,<lb/>
"Democracy Today and Tomorrow<lb/>
Perry Miller, "New England Mind<lb/>
A. B. Tourtellat, "Be Loved No<lb/>
More W. L. Poteat, "Youth and<lb/>
; Margaret Ernst, "In a<lb/>
M. E. Chase, "This Eng-<lb/>
V. A. Milne, "Autobiog-<lb/>
Hilaine Belloc, "Sonnets<lb/>
ami Verses M. M. Knappen, "Tu-<lb/>
dor Puritanism M. X. Armstrong,<lb/>
"Murder in Stained Glass Sholem,<lb/>
"The Xazarene L. Bush-Brown,<lb/>
"America's Garden Book Thomas<lb/>
Craven, "A Treasury of American<lb/>
Prints J. T. Whitaker, "America's<lb/>
to the South Donald C. Peattie,<lb/>
"Flowering Earth Laura Benet,<lb/>
"Enchanting Jenny Lind Stoyan.<lb/>
Pribichevich, "World Without<lb/>
End Yu-Tang Lin, "Moment in<lb/>
Peking Mrs. Martha Cheney,<lb/>
"Modern Art in America G. E.<lb/>
Frost, "Planets, Stars, and Atoms<lb/>
Philip Hale. "Great Concert Music<lb/>
R. L. Buell, "Poland and Stefan<lb/>
Zweig, "Master Builders<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
has a student elub for every purpose<lb/>
and the latest entry is the D.E.Y.C.<lb/>
Sorority, composed of 10 girls, who<lb/>
hold secret meetings and carry out<lb/>
established objectives of the organi-<lb/>
zation.<lb/>
When you have 10 girls compris-<lb/>
ing a (dub, they're going to have fun.<lb/>
And the D.E.Y.C. Sorority does just<lb/>
that. But there's a serious side to<lb/>
their activities. One of their most<lb/>
notable achievements since organiz-<lb/>
ing has Wen to collect clothing for<lb/>
little girls of poor families enrolled<lb/>
in the Training School.<lb/>
Officers of the Sorority are Eva<lb/>
Carter, president; Sula Carr, vice<lb/>
president; Alice Bragg, secretary;<lb/>
Shirley Latham, treasurer; Mary<lb/>
Helen Gullege, chairman of the in-<lb/>
vitations committee, and Marian Al-<lb/>
len, mascot tender. Other members of<lb/>
the group are Evelyn Brummitt,<lb/>
Dale Pitts, Anna Jones and Bess<lb/>
Usrv. The Sorority is limited to 10<lb/>
members,<lb/>
"Henry, Jr is the mascot of the<lb/>
Sorority. There's nothing very out-<lb/>
standing about Henry, except that<lb/>
he's a Bunny Rabbit?the kind you<lb/>
purchase downtown from one of the<lb/>
department stores. But Henry has<lb/>
his advantages. He's the only male<lb/>
at the meetings and knows every-<lb/>
thing that goes on. Henry was born<lb/>
without a.tongue and can't say any-<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
Members of the Sorority live on<lb/>
the first floor of Jarvis Hall. If any<lb/>
student ever hears commotion on this<lb/>
floor on Thursday night around<lb/>
10:30 o'clock?that's the time the<lb/>
Sorority holds its meetings?he'll<lb/>
know why hilarity prevails.<lb/>
Dues of the D.E.Y.C. are a penny<lb/>
a week and a nickel if a member has<lb/>
an unexcused absence. Money saved<lb/>
up thus far this year went to defray<lb/>
expenses of a party of the Sorority<lb/>
held last Saturday night after the<lb/>
delightful Junior-Senior Dance.<lb/>
The Sorority has its own consti-<lb/>
tution ; meets in a different room each<lb/>
week, and meets only once a week<lb/>
unless one of the girls gets a box<lb/>
from home. Should a box come to<lb/>
one of the members every day, then<lb/>
the D.E.Y.C. members would meet<lb/>
every night.<lb/>
Freshman Class<lb/>
Plans To Present<lb/>
One-act Drama<lb/>
Hilda Ruth Martin,<lb/>
Norman Wahl<lb/>
Have Leads<lb/>
Sh- Wns Only A Farmer ' Daugh-<lb/>
ter, a one-act melodrama, will be<lb/>
given on the night of May !). 1940 by<lb/>
the Freshman .Class. Hilda Ruth<lb/>
Martin from Conway plays the lead<lb/>
as an innocent country girl who goes<lb/>
to the city and is tricked by the vil-<lb/>
lain or slicker. Norwood Wahl, the<lb/>
poor hut honest country boy, plays<lb/>
Hilda Ruth Martin, on the left, plavs the part of an innocent country 'opposite her ami finally wins the<lb/>
girl in the Freshman play Thursday night. Norwood Wahl, on the right 1U11(1. of hls chlUi!loi sweetheart by<lb/>
plays opposite her as the poor but honest country boy who finally wins j tv.<lb/>
her hand.<lb/>
Emory University Divides Professors<lb/>
Into Ten Characteristic Classes<lb/>
Dynamite Buried Under T Hut<lb/>
Back In The Old Pioneer Days<lb/>
Culture'<lb/>
Word<lb/>
land<lb/>
raphy"<lb/>
Every night, I shake with fright,<lb/>
for dynamite?now, there is no<lb/>
reason for fear, but nevertheless it's<lb/>
there. Yrep, right there.<lb/>
It seems that when this vast cam-<lb/>
pus of ours was forest primeval,<lb/>
except for the administration build-<lb/>
ing, West, Dormitory, and East Dor-<lb/>
mitory, as they were then called in<lb/>
this man's land, some workmen made<lb/>
use of dynamite to remove tree roots.<lb/>
They were to remove the roots to<lb/>
(dear a place for more buildings.<lb/>
When the job was completed, dyna-<lb/>
mite was left strewn around. Since<lb/>
this was dangerous (well, other peo-<lb/>
ple say it is. I'll take their word<lb/>
for it), President Wright requested<lb/>
the engineer to collect it and dis-<lb/>
pose of it somewhere. Thus the en-<lb/>
gineer went 'way, 'way back in the<lb/>
woods and buried it beside an old<lb/>
stump?an insignificant little stump.<lb/>
Time marched on and one. day the<lb/>
Yr.W.C.A. decided to build a hut.<lb/>
Therefore 'way back in the woods<lb/>
(beside the infirmary) they go.<lb/>
They knock aside this stump; they<lb/>
knock aside that stump; and up<lb/>
goes the "Y" hut. Yep, right over<lb/>
the dynamite, it did, the exact place.<lb/>
Hum-m-m I hope it's not another<lb/>
gunpowder plot, I hope. But folks,<lb/>
it's there, gone but not forgotten.<lb/>
I bet'eha.<lb/>
(Editor's note: We don't know<lb/>
whether this is true, but it makes a<lb/>
good story anyway.)<lb/>
Mock Faculty<lb/>
To Be Held<lb/>
Dorothy Miller<lb/>
Reigns As Queen<lb/>
Sponsored by the Zeta Delta So-<lb/>
rority, a mock faculty will be pre-<lb/>
sented in the Austin building on<lb/>
May 15 at 8:00 o'clock.<lb/>
Marie Trippe, chairman of the<lb/>
Mock Faculty committee states that<lb/>
short characterizations will be pre-<lb/>
sented by students of some forty<lb/>
"odd" teachers. When consulted on<lb/>
the program Marie declared emphati-<lb/>
cally, "If you have ever had a wish<lb/>
to see your favorite teacher as other<lb/>
students see them, here is your<lb/>
chance. Also if teachers have ever<lb/>
had the desire to see themselves as<lb/>
others see them, here is their chance<lb/>
Three rows on the front will be<lb/>
reserved for teachers so desiring to<lb/>
see the Mock Faculty.<lb/>
Miss Ellis, adviser of the group<lb/>
is directing the students.<lb/>
Admission to the entertainment<lb/>
will be 10 cents per person.<lb/>
Hanover, X. H.? (ACP) ? For<lb/>
the first time in the long history of<lb/>
Dartmouth College, undergraduates<lb/>
this year are actively participating<lb/>
in the determination of the institu-<lb/>
tion's academic policies.<lb/>
In a new plan designed to give<lb/>
students a greater interest in their<lb/>
Own education, juniors and seniors<lb/>
will discuss with their insthuctors<lb/>
the requirements, eurricular prob-<lb/>
lems and departmental mechanics of<lb/>
their courses. Economics, sociology<lb/>
and political science are the first<lb/>
three courses to be included in the<lb/>
new plan.<lb/>
Dartmouth's administrators feel<lb/>
that if members of the student body<lb/>
are eligible for election to commit-<lb/>
tees on wrhich they will work with<lb/>
faculty members, an actual concern<lb/>
for the affairs of the department will<lb/>
be developed in the individual stu-<lb/>
dents. They feel that this will raise<lb/>
the educational standards of the col-<lb/>
lege.<lb/>
ACP.?The Emory Wheel, news-<lb/>
paper of Emory University, declar-<lb/>
ing that "since the professors divide<lb/>
students into classes it is safe to as-<lb/>
sume that all professors can also be<lb/>
divided into classes offers these<lb/>
groupings:<lb/>
The Killer type. He wants to kill<lb/>
off the lower third and thinks the<lb/>
best way is by over-work.<lb/>
The Card type. He is a card, but<lb/>
not an ace. He's a 3x5 card. Out-<lb/>
standing in index appeal.<lb/>
The Spicy type. He has a lot of<lb/>
cheek and plenty of tongue to put<lb/>
it in. His lectures kick up intel-<lb/>
lectual sparks out of the academic<lb/>
flint.<lb/>
The Fatherly type. He is the un-<lb/>
expectant father, always giving pop<lb/>
quizzes.<lb/>
The Hard Rock type. Yrou have<lb/>
Other parts are played by Estelle<lb/>
Davis as the banker's daughter,<lb/>
David Cox as the city slicker, Marat; -<lb/>
ret Hennant as the heroine's aunt,<lb/>
Joy Parnell as the hero's mother.<lb/>
Bill Baysden as the hanker father<lb/>
of Estelle Davis, and Frances Sears<lb/>
as the banker's wife.<lb/>
The Symphonic Orchestra will<lb/>
high C under this joker. If he fl&amp;?JQT ? performance which wi<lb/>
bit a<lb/>
were a movie critic he wouldn't even<lb/>
give the United States flag 48 stars.<lb/>
The Uh-Man type. He doesn't<lb/>
know any punctuation except "uhs<lb/>
For variety he throws in a "but uh"<lb/>
now and then.<lb/>
ne given in Austin Auditorium. Fol-<lb/>
lowing the play real old-fashioned<lb/>
melodrama (applaud the hero, hiss<lb/>
the villain), a variety diow is<lb/>
going to be given. Mrs. Al Dittmar<lb/>
is aiding in the show which is going<lb/>
to be composed of farces on school<lb/>
The Cocktail type. He whets your Kfe and featuring individual types<lb/>
intellectual appetite. He knows a<lb/>
great deal but doesn't try to make<lb/>
everybody realize it.<lb/>
The Candy-Between-Meals type.<lb/>
A course under him destroys your<lb/>
intellectual appetite.<lb/>
The Axe-Grinder type. He can't<lb/>
of ability in the freshmen cla<lb/>
Admission will be fifteen cents.<lb/>
The play is being directed by Ken-<lb/>
neth Woolard.<lb/>
Among the faculty members who<lb/>
attended the concert of Marian An-<lb/>
sharpen his wits, so he has to grind derson, famed negro singer, in Ku-<lb/>
an ax. Sometimes it's propaganda hej leigb last night, were Misses Ola<lb/>
grinds out. j Ross, Frances Wahl, Louise Wil-<lb/>
Optional?The Xomad type. Like! lan Kathleen Plumb, and<lb/>
the Xomad of the desert he loves to<lb/>
wander, and what he wanders over<lb/>
to be more than a good musician to is as dry as the desert.<lb/>
Attending the "Y" interracial con-<lb/>
ference in Chapel Hill over the last<lb/>
week-end were five members of the<lb/>
local Y.W. and Y.M. Those attend-<lb/>
ing were Annie Allen Wilkerson,<lb/>
Doris Blalock, Rebecca Ross, How-<lb/>
ard Draper, and Charles Marks.<lb/>
They were accompanied by Dr.<lb/>
Haynes.<lb/>
Dr. Hornell Hart was the princi-<lb/>
pal speaker for the meeting.<lb/>
rWWWWWWWWW<lb/>
Portuguese has been added to the<lb/>
long list of foreign languages taught<lb/>
at the University of Texas.<lb/>
KARES BROS.<lb/>
RESTAURANT<lb/>
and<lb/>
SODA<lb/>
We Serve the<lb/>
Best<lb/>
Grigsby.<lb/>
1<lb/>
HOT?<lb/>
RELAX AND ENJOY<lb/>
ROYAL CROWN<lb/>
COLA!<lb/>
Nehi Bottling Co.<lb/>
J. C. WALDROP<lb/>
HOWARD WALDROP<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
vv<lb/>
 v' <lb/>
<lb/>
Come and Yell for the Hero<lb/>
Hiss the Villain<lb/>
and<lb/>
HI<lb/>
University of Wyoming students<lb/>
wst year Bpent .$64,500 in member-<lb/>
?Mp dues in student organizations.<lb/>
jwenty-three thousand three hun-<lb/>
wtd seventy-three dollars and sev-<lb/>
f-my-Hv (gat, WM for national dues,<lb/>
PW and initiation fees.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
Queen by the maid of honor.<lb/>
Two lords and ladies have been<lb/>
chosen to represent each class.<lb/>
These are: Juanita Etheridge, Betty<lb/>
Blanchard, Herbert Wilkerson and<lb/>
John David Bridgers, seniors;<lb/>
Francis Roebuck, Mary Francis Er-<lb/>
win, Adrian Brown, and Ward<lb/>
James, juniors; Francis Suther-<lb/>
land, Marjorie White, Jimmy<lb/>
Dempsv, and Spense Hatley, soph-<lb/>
omores and Lois Williams, Fay<lb/>
Bateman, Sammy Crandal and Nor-<lb/>
man Wilkerson, freshmen.<lb/>
Members of the May Day Com-<lb/>
mittee are Juanita Etheridge, chair-<lb/>
man; Annie Laurie Beal, Patsy<lb/>
Gltuss Montague, Dorothy Spense,<lb/>
Ethel Gaston, Bill Shelton, student<lb/>
members; and Miss Katherme<lb/>
Holtzclaw. Miss Mary Green, Miss<lb/>
Helen McElwain, William H. Mc-<lb/>
Henery and Dean Tabor, faculty<lb/>
members. . .<lb/>
The college orchestra will furnish<lb/>
the music.<lb/>
Salaries of Barnard College grad-<lb/>
Uats and undergraduates who were<lb/>
Pa positions through the college<lb/>
pupation bureau last year totaled<lb/>
1T3,443.<lb/>
Thirteen University of Texas stu-<lb/>
dents were on the British ship Ath-<lb/>
ema when it was torpedoed at the<lb/>
opening of the European war.<lb/>
A special course in the Russian<lb/>
language and literature has been<lb/>
added to the Cornell University cur-<lb/>
riculum.<lb/>
Real Old Fashioned Mellerdrammer!<lb/>
and Sparkling Variety Show!<lb/>
Featuring - Singing! Dancing!<lb/>
The Freshman Sweet Band!<lb/>
? Given By The ?<lb/>
FRESHMAN CLASS<lb/>
MAY 9 ? 8:15 ? 15c<lb/>
m gj A  A -V"<lb/>
Bb<lb/>
lAAAgg<lb/>
New Arrivals at<lb/>
BELiK-TYLiER'S<lb/>
GLAMOROUS EVENING DRESSES<lb/>
Just arrived from the fashion center?Nets,<lb/>
Swisses, Organzas, Chiffons, and Laces! Full,<lb/>
floating skirts! Sizes 12 to 20.<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
DAIRY<lb/>
PRODUCTS<lb/>
DELICIOUS<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
and<lb/>
MILK SHAKES<lb/>
?<lb/>
"Quality You<lb/>
Can Taste"<lb/>
Washington Street<lb/>
DIAL 3121<lb/>
TTTVVTYT ????y-<lb/>
?T"t ?tt yryy -r y?<lb/>
T W "W T yr-r ????<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Patronize Your Stationery Store and<lb/>
Soda Shop<lb/>
All Profits are Spent for Campus<lb/>
Improvements<lb/>
Agents for A. B. DICK MIMEOGRAPH SUPPLIES<lb/>
and<lb/>
REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITERS<lb/>
Stationery Store<lb/>
$5.95<lb/>
$7.95 - $9.95<lb/>
BELiK-TYXER CO.<lb/>
"GREENVILLE'S SHOPPING CENTER"<lb/>
For Register of Deeds<lb/>
Vote for Amos O. Clark, who is qualified by training<lb/>
and experience to fill the office of Register of Deeds<lb/>
to the satisfaction of the people of Pitt County. He<lb/>
will appreciate your support and vote at the Demo-<lb/>
cratic Primary, May 25.<lb/>
CLARK<lb/>
<pb facs="00038103_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THK TECO ECHO<lb/>
y?y 3, m<lb/>
w<lb/>
J,3<lb/>
Teco Echo Rates I<lb/>
Good In Report<lb/>
From ACP Critics<lb/>
i tutorial. Sport<lb/>
Page Each Hated<lb/>
"Excellent"<lb/>
??(<lb/>
<lb/>
L'HO<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
were<lb/>
On<lb/>
eonu class honor rating, <lb/>
lg as w :i received lasl<lb/>
w Associated Collegiate!<lb/>
- critical service has been given,<lb/>
li?3l) o v olume of the 1 Etxi<lb/>
i 1,000 as a total seore, tin<lb/>
i- ? k 1 nufalicalimi won 61C<lb/>
 tin i asc of 10 points over<lb/>
i' lasl year, Under the head<lb/>
ews akies and sources' 170<lb/>
, ssibh 250 were -cored. One<lb/>
d and fifty-five out of 2S0<lb/>
l ij for "urns lit mg and<lb/>
"head lines, topog-<lb/>
I niake-uu rated 133 oi a<lb/>
t 250 point- and "department<lb/>
and sp cial features" received<lb/>
; ?i ble 22 points,<lb/>
 Hollar and James Whit-<lb/>
ceived "excellent respective-<lb/>
? n . ditorials and sports page.<lb/>
 ar's editorials rated only<lb/>
: Li) last year's -port page<lb/>
"excellent" as it did this year.<lb/>
(groups receiving "excellent"<lb/>
"balance, vitality, and treat-<lb/>
u ter the heading of "news<lb/>
?: the complementary eriti-<lb/>
was that the writing quality<lb/>
paper has been high during<lb/>
ar. One of the constructive<lb/>
 Sllggi sted a more liar-<lb/>
style of type to go with<lb/>
ishi-left headlines and streara-<lb/>
whieh was put into practice<lb/>
I.es Brown, who will play for the<lb/>
May frolic, animal spring dance<lb/>
sponsored by the l.anier Literary so-<lb/>
ciety which will be held here to-<lb/>
morrow night.<lb/>
Louise Williams<lb/>
Represents AAUW<lb/>
At State Meeting<lb/>
Appointed Head<lb/>
Of Committee<lb/>
Mi Louise Willis m s . newly<lb/>
elected president of the tocal branch<lb/>
of the American Association of Uni-<lb/>
versity Women, represented the local<lb/>
branch in the receiving line at a tea<lb/>
at the governor's mansion Friday<lb/>
afternoon at the state convention ot<lb/>
the A.A.T.W.<lb/>
Mi-s Williams participated in a<lb/>
?residents' panel at the Saturday<lb/>
morning meeting and was appointed<lb/>
to head the Time and Place Commit-<lb/>
tee for next year's meetings.<lb/>
Miss Mamie K. .Jenkins, local leg-<lb/>
islative chairman, attended a special<lb/>
breakfast meeting Saturday morning<lb/>
with other legislative chairmen of<lb/>
College Faculty<lb/>
Is Kept Busy<lb/>
Making Speeches<lb/>
Members of the faculty of KOTO<lb/>
have been busy lately making Com-<lb/>
mencement and Junior - Senior<lb/>
Speeches.<lb/>
Dr. Herbert Rebarker has made<lb/>
several speeches and has a full<lb/>
schedule. On April 25 he spoke at<lb/>
Maury; on April 26 at Calypso; on<lb/>
Mav 2 at Oriental. He plans to speak<lb/>
at Olendall on May 10 and at Mars<lb/>
Mill on May 15.<lb/>
Dr. Meadows spoke on April 20<lb/>
at Snow Mill, on April 50 at Pan-<lb/>
tego; on May l' at Ohicod; on May<lb/>
: at l'actolns. On May ? he will<lb/>
speak at Whitakers; on May 7 at<lb/>
Ooldshoro; on May 1" at Scotland<lb/>
Neck; on May 13 at Stonewall; on<lb/>
May 16 at Lewiston.<lb/>
Dr. Hollar spoke on April 1!? at<lb/>
Pink Hill; on April 20 at Swan-1<lb/>
quarter; in Faulkland on April 3?j<lb/>
and on Mav 2 at Stumpy Point.<lb/>
Mr. it O. Deal spoke on April li<lb/>
at Ooldshoro; on April 22 at Ohicod;<lb/>
at Pelhaven on April S? and at<lb/>
Swampiarter on May 1. He was at<lb/>
Orifton on May 2; he will speak at<lb/>
Connenta on Mav 0: and on May<lb/>
11 at Poplar Branch, X. C. Mr.<lb/>
Deal will also speak to the Xew Bern<lb/>
Women's Club on Mav l'S.<lb/>
was made only on tneithe state.<lb/>
hrsl : ?? issues ot the 1 eco fcCHO tin<lb/>
,  tnder the editorship of Dorothy<lb/>
i and tin- present staff. N"<lb/>
ating as given to the business side<lb/>
of the paper, which has been under<lb/>
11 ? on of Helen Flanagan.<lb/>
S i nsored by the University of<lb/>
es ' i S "hool hi Journalism, the<lb/>
At ciated "ollegiate Press is a part<lb/>
? ??,? National Scholastic Press A<lb/>
  ? ion w liich offers this crit ieal<lb/>
. ?? to high school and college<lb/>
newspapers each year.<lb/>
Eleven Minimi Chapters<lb/>
Report Sueeessfal Work<lb/>
(Continued from page one i<lb/>
We hold monthly meetings the sec-<lb/>
M. ti lav night of each month.<lb/>
VI . Helms. Secretary 1940-<lb/>
Among the highlights ot the con-<lb/>
vention were the addresses at the<lb/>
Friday night banquet and Saturday<lb/>
luncheon. On Friday night Dr. Jo-<lb/>
Mali Morse, of the University ot<lb/>
South Carolina, spoke on "The Edu-<lb/>
Sigma Pi Alpha<lb/>
Holds 1940 Meet<lb/>
The Annual Congress of Sigma<lb/>
Pi Alpha, National Foreign lan-<lb/>
guage honorary fraternity, met here<lb/>
Saturday, April 20. The Phi Sigma<lb/>
Chapter of KOTO, with Miss Annie<lb/>
Mart Boone, president, acted as host.<lb/>
In the afternoon a business meet-<lb/>
ing was held iu the New Building,<lb/>
and a banquet and dance was given<lb/>
that evening at the Woman's Club<lb/>
with Spenee Hatley and His Deans<lb/>
of Rhythm furnishing the music.<lb/>
Professor K. O. Deal, former prcsi<lb/>
Les Brown Plays<lb/>
For Term Dance<lb/>
Saturday Night<lb/>
Lanier $oei?t<lb/>
Sponsors Ma<lb/>
Frolie Here<lb/>
Les Brown and hi.<lb/>
play for the Ma<lb/>
Spring dance sponso<lb/>
nier Sueiety tomoi<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
Sponsors chosen<lb/>
are Both Wood Pi<lb/>
dent ; leo Bnriiey.<lb/>
Andre- White, Eli<lb/>
and Xell Beddard.<lb/>
Society officers, cha.<lb/>
cial ('ommittee, M<lb/>
President of the P<lb/>
Societies and then -?<lb/>
' pose the Irand M <lb/>
be lead by Mar<lb/>
chairman of the S?<lb/>
The Orchestra fo<lb/>
University has rec<lb/>
(Cincinnati and <lb/>
broadcasts over Xa' i<lb/>
Decorations will<lb/>
shades carrying o i<lb/>
Mavtime.<lb/>
( )<lb/>
College Orchestra<lb/>
Gives Public Concert<lb/>
at which Les Brown and<lb/>
Sponsors for the Mav dance come from the Lanier Literary Society this term, ai ?ul?afjea?rf?Jl? Under tne mrec<lb/>
his orchestra will play. Sponsors include Elisabeth Meggs, Oleo Buniey, Margaret Keed, Audry White. Well ECT.C. orchestra<lb/>
Beddard, and Ruth Wood Pritchard, president of the society. concert in the Austii<lb/>
 Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
Yow Elected Head n addition tot<lb/>
A Good Time Was Not Had By All<lb/>
At The State Press Convention<lb/>
By Semaj Dleiftihw<lb/>
errors in the old issues?but there<lb/>
Of ACE For 1940-41<lb/>
by the whole orehesi<lb/>
several special num<lb/>
a clarinet solo, "The<lb/>
eated Woman's Place in the Xew<lb/>
Set-up The Saturday speaker wasjj(llt (t- ti1(. xational Chapter- acted! peace, Meredith, Queens, Y<lb/>
Dr. George A. Shipman, of the Duke as toastmaster presenting gifts to<lb/>
Department of Political everyone present<lb/>
Since the ECTC boys don't like to I weanDea ?? o t!?. ruaniat ba<lb/>
Ada Rose Vow of Henderson va<lb/>
elected president of the Association jj<lb/>
for Childhood Education at a recent ? '(. <lb/>
meeting of the (dub.<lb/>
r?, v ,?. r , -i -I A string quart) <lb/>
the office oi the vice president ot . , x ,<lb/>
, ' i- ? i i Arcti 1 OW. <lb/>
)een divided i t <lb/>
mer, ami Betty K.euj<lb/>
? ? - by Orval M<lb/>
-01O, "Meditat ioi<lb/>
ov.<lb/>
incenl<lb/>
University<lb/>
Science, who talked on "Making the<lb/>
Democratic Process Work<lb/>
The state meeting next year will<lb/>
be held in Asheville.<lb/>
ociahze with girls tn.m St J?&amp; of a very"unattractive Wind. But you into three parts for the first time  Vt7, vat"m.<lb/>
eace, Meredith, Queens, Woman 8 sitmltion in ur(1,r t() r,HeV(. t1u, pr,sill,ur 0f r?1?<lb/>
College and Flora Macdona Id, and his date by throwing some of her duties. These are Vh- . The eollege string ens<lb/>
veryone present. the girls dishke the idea ot dancing Wh &amp;t )M nf tm. desk' ginia Williams, Kuth Chandler and ludes several beginn.<lb/>
Heads ol foreign language de- with boys iron, Duke State Wake TW wen( (m fw h ,jUt Sara R(rter m two numbers? The<lb/>
?artments in addition to student rep- Forest, Elon, Davidson Lenoir- gmrreya (atej ()th(,r officers elected wprp Marv and Belwve Me. It A.<lb/>
resentatives were present, coming Shyne and Appalachian, the annual<lb/>
Alton Payne gave a talk on China<lb/>
at a recent meeting of the Inter-<lb/>
national Correspondence club of the<lb/>
Greenville High School.<lb/>
Payne illustrated his talk with<lb/>
numerous souvenirs which he has<lb/>
received through correspondence with<lb/>
a resident of t Tina.<lb/>
A number of these souvenirs are on<lb/>
display at the present in Miss Bas-<lb/>
ket's English classroom at the high<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Sii.ee the organization ot tin<lb/>
Greenville Chapter of the East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College Alumni Asso<lb/>
? cm, o. ember L939, we have ha<lb/>
interesting programs arrange<lb/>
b ? I . . gram committee consisting<lb/>
oi Mrs. Louis Uaylord, Chairman,<lb/>
Mrs. (it - Forbes,and Mr Harry<lb/>
Forbes. Our programs have ranged<lb/>
from lectures, book reviews, to trav-<lb/>
el talks. We have a membership ot<lb/>
forty-nine and a very good average<lb/>
ttenance. We are making plans for<lb/>
a Bridge Tournament Friday p.m.Jcolle<lb/>
Mav 3. This is for the purpose of to cooperate in every way<lb/>
making a contribution at commence- every good wish to the graduating<lb/>
 to the Siate Association. We are classes who go out to join chapters,<lb/>
ry pleased with the growth of our or start new ones, we hope to see you<lb/>
chapter and expect to eventually have at commencement. (Beported by<lb/>
from as far north as Virginia and as<lb/>
far south as Mississippi.<lb/>
College Juniors<lb/>
Hold Banquet<lb/>
convention id the<lb/>
Press<lb/>
aearing Voting Char<lb/>
Hardy, treasurer; Sally! The orchestra was<lb/>
Maiv Matthias, publicity chairman; l)ean ? Tabor, cha<lb/>
Helen Butner, publications repre-Music Education Dej<lb/>
Miss Edna Mitchell<lb/>
, ; seemed to mind. 'Agnes Alston, secretary; Marv<lb/>
North arolina . .  .  ,? v<lb/>
, . ? . ? ? ,1, Louise Davis, versatile editor of Xranees<lb/>
Collesriate Press Association tietu i .  . , , ,<lb/>
(hhuih ii i?iii'c Pieces 0 hiqltf, thought thej<lb/>
last week mharlotte proved a dull I u <lb/>
ffftlr j?Z r?'l???tatives ot tlie- - na( of a fourtPonth an. sentative; and Marv T. Bailey, Teco<lb/>
three h K publications. naal convention, and sent her clothes Echo representative.<lb/>
All the delegates, as expectedu Charlotte on a moving van. The;<lb/>
went to bed early at night and got hotel attendants were perplexed as<lb/>
up bright and early for the conven-jt(l jimv tu t aj 0 them in the<lb/>
On Wednesday night, May 1,1940, tjOB meetings. Sherwood Staton, hotel. They finally solved the prob-<lb/>
the orchestra at the<lb/>
the Junior class had their formal president, and the other executivehem hy hoisting them up with a pul-<lb/>
banquet. I officers hadn't made any plans for hev<lb/>
The theme of the banquet was that Tju, convention and had to stay up pnit<lb/>
Xewbv, business manager<lb/>
B of Junior's third birthday, signifying ta(.h night until I o'clock to mapLhis of tlu; yv was detained<lb/>
the age of the class. Pastel shades them. Xaturally, this caused them 1 at poliee headquarters to<lb/>
Senior history majors will be en-<lb/>
tertained by the faculty members of<lb/>
the History Department on Thurs-<lb/>
day evening. May !?, at a picnic -up-<lb/>
per. The picnic will be held on the<lb/>
grounds of the old Cox estate near<lb/>
Winterville.<lb/>
were used as a color scheme witli0 0e au hour late for the meetings<lb/>
each table having a cake with three tne uext morning; and the delegates<lb/>
re<lb/>
the large<lb/>
Kurh<lb/>
alumni ena<lb/>
pter.Mamie<lb/>
nu-<lb/>
ll. Secretary').<lb/>
t i- the youngest or-<lb/>
aving organized April<lb/>
re: Ruth Modlin, pres-<lb/>
ine Mc( lain, vice pres-<lb/>
gan i.a 11 ui.<lb/>
!? Officers<lb/>
ident; M ?:?<lb/>
ident; Lillian Parrish, secretary-<lb/>
treasurer, and Sue Speed, reporter;<lb/>
Mrs. C. K. Hinshaw (Kathleen<lb/>
iin i program eti<lb/>
airman; and Mrs.<lb/>
Worth I.ev, soeial ehairman.<lb/>
Hoanoke Rapids Chapter has- a<lb/>
membership of thirty-four who meet<lb/>
regularly once every month. Meet-<lb/>
ings consist of a business session<lb/>
and social hour. Mo-t of the mem-<lb/>
bers attend regularly and enjoy the<lb/>
meetings. Two money-making proj-<lb/>
Ethel Shelton Taylor, Pres.)<lb/>
The Raleigh Chapter of the Alum-<lb/>
ni Association of Fast Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College is a very active one<lb/>
ami has had quite a successful year<lb/>
with Airs. (). K. Joyner (Christine<lb/>
Vick) serving as president. Other<lb/>
officers are: Mrs. Ai. R. Medlin (Sa-<lb/>
rah Louise Mixon), vice president;<lb/>
Airs. Henry Ohadwiek, secretary;<lb/>
Mrs. E. II. Spruill (Tula Jones),<lb/>
treasurer; and Mrs. Anne W. Kay<lb/>
(Ann Whitehurst), corresponding<lb/>
secretary. The chapter has the fol-<lb/>
lowing standing committees: pro-<lb/>
gram, ways and means, social, Host-<lb/>
ess, membership, scrapbook, year-<lb/>
book, publicity (reporter and tele-<lb/>
eet- have been carried out. The (dub phone).<lb/>
sponsored the city owling alley in The Chapter has a membership of<lb/>
which a small amount was made.I fifty-three and holds regular month-<lb/>
Later a bridge tournament was held, ly meetings. During the X.C.FLA.<lb/>
The officers who have been servingj Convention it served as hostess to the<lb/>
the dub are: president, Martha Fast Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
Whitelmr-t; vice president, Ruth Alumni for a luncheon meeting. The<lb/>
Dean secretary-treasurer, Ethel annual Bridge Tournament was held<lb/>
Parker (Mrs, Wyche Land); and! in April and was highly successful<lb/>
reporter, Julia Farrior. (Reported having nearly doubled the receipts<lb/>
by Mrs. Wyche Land). after expenses were paid over last<lb/>
Enthusiastic is the Rocky Mount<lb/>
Chapter in the work being done.<lb/>
Each meeting has been attended well,<lb/>
and a varied and interesting pro-<lb/>
gram has been planned and carried<lb/>
out. The dinner meeting with Dr.<lb/>
Meadows is always a highlight of<lb/>
the year?though the meeting at<lb/>
which Miss McOlees spoke ran a<lb/>
close second. The Ways and Means<lb/>
Committee lost a few of those "forty<lb/>
winks" and gained au extra wrinkle<lb/>
in the brain trying to get into the<lb/>
higher finance bracket. They did an<lb/>
excellent job of selling barbecue to<lb/>
all their friends, and sold a few more<lb/>
on the idea of holding thirteen<lb/>
cards in a bridge tournament. March<lb/>
9 found plenty of Rocky Mount<lb/>
Alumni back on the campus enjoy-<lb/>
ing a day long to be remembered.<lb/>
Proud of the progress made at the<lb/>
candles on it.<lb/>
The program was fashioned in<lb/>
infant style with the feeding<lb/>
schedule for the menu. The program<lb/>
consisted of the following: Invoca-<lb/>
tion "Father, We Thank Thee" sung<lb/>
by Lib Coppedge. Junior's "First<lb/>
we stand ready and willing Word a welcome by Bill Merner;<lb/>
With "Meet the Family the introduction<lb/>
of the faculty; the quadruplets ren-<lb/>
dered a number or two. They were<lb/>
made up by the State College Quar-<lb/>
tet. Miss ErMne Sawyer rendered<lb/>
"Showing Off" a childish reading.<lb/>
Dr. Posey told Papa's Bedtime<lb/>
Story as speaker of the evening.<lb/>
The banquet closed with everyone<lb/>
singing Lullaby and Goodnight, by<lb/>
Brahms. Spenee Hatley and his<lb/>
Deans of Rhythm played dinner<lb/>
music.<lb/>
year's tournament<lb/>
The Winterville Chapter of the<lb/>
Alumni Association of East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College has met six<lb/>
times this year, and an additional<lb/>
meeting has been planned for May.<lb/>
One of the outstanding meetings of<lb/>
the year was held October 28 when<lb/>
Miss Emma L. Hooper and Dr. Leon<lb/>
R. Meadows were guests at a dinner<lb/>
meeting. On February 28 the chap-<lb/>
ter sponsored a Bridge Tournament<lb/>
to make money. Miss Estelle Mc-<lb/>
Clees and Miss Ruth White were<lb/>
guests at this meeting. The following<lb/>
officers were elected on April 23 for<lb/>
the next year: president, Mrs. Edith<lb/>
Fornes Worthington; vice president,<lb/>
Mary Louise Taylor; secretary,<lb/>
Blanche White; and treasurer, Aldah<lb/>
Parker. (Reported by Mary L. Tay-<lb/>
lor). , t<lb/>
Installation of the new officers of<lb/>
the Student Government took place<lb/>
in Chapel Tuesday. Juanitsi Ethe-<lb/>
ridge the outgoing President, read<lb/>
out the names of the old officers as<lb/>
the new officers came upon the plat-<lb/>
form to take their places.<lb/>
Doris Blalock the new president<lb/>
for the coming year, was last year<lb/>
vice president and her place is taken<lb/>
by Harriett Marshburn. Sarah Gor-<lb/>
ham is the new secretary taking the<lb/>
place of Harriett Marshburn. Joyce<lb/>
Dunham is taking the place of Sa-<lb/>
rah Gorham as treasurer. Millie<lb/>
Grey Dupree's place as chairman of<lb/>
the Campus Committee is replaced<lb/>
by Emily Murphy.<lb/>
The old House Presidents were<lb/>
Iris Davis, Annie Laurie Beale,<lb/>
Hazel Owens, Ida Ruth Knowles, Ida<lb/>
Ferria Davis, Betty Blanchard, Ma-<lb/>
nic Lee Boyde, Rebecca Shanks. The<lb/>
new House Presidents are Mary El-<lb/>
liott, Shirley Johnson, Myra God-<lb/>
frey, Mary Grant Bailey, Wilda<lb/>
Royall, Elizabeth Noe, Virginia<lb/>
Whitley, Celia Blanch Dail, Ruth<lb/>
Britt.<lb/>
The old class representatives were<lb/>
Freshmen, Ines Stephenson; Sopho-<lb/>
more, Emily Murphy; Junior, Er-<lb/>
lene Sawyer; Senior, K. P. Lewis.<lb/>
For this coming year Sophomore,<lb/>
Annez Stephenson; Junior, Jessie<lb/>
Keith will take their places on the<lb/>
council.<lb/>
Rebecca Shanks is taking the<lb/>
place of Wilda Royall as Y.W.C.A.<lb/>
Frances Sutherland will succeed<lb/>
Dorothy Hollar as council represent-<lb/>
ative from the Teco Echo.<lb/>
P<lb/>
answer charges ot abusing private<lb/>
. .property. A Charlotte policeman<lb/>
reprimanded them for their tardi- foimj rUe pajating the doors of<lb/>
ness. 111(1 grote Charlotte. When asked:<lb/>
Mary Agnes Deal and Jamesjwiat su. was doing Prue replied:<lb/>
Whitfield accompanied four Flora "Why, sir, Vm. merely painting the<lb/>
Macdonald girls from Red Springs town red. That's why I was sent to<lb/>
to Charlotte and neither of them had tile convention<lb/>
a thing to say to their companions?<lb/>
didn't even ask their names. Even<lb/>
after they had reached Charlotte<lb/>
neither was able to tell the other<lb/>
members of the delegation with whom<lb/>
they had ridden.<lb/>
Barbara and Betty Iveuzenkamp<lb/>
stole the show at the dances doing<lb/>
the "Big Apple They used such<lb/>
speed in the dances that none of the<lb/>
young blades from the other schools<lb/>
were able to keep up with them.<lb/>
After the orchestra stopped playing<lb/>
for the night they begged the lead-<lb/>
er to play one more fast number,<lb/>
even though they had danced stead-<lb/>
ily for several hours.<lb/>
Mary Home carried a bundle of<lb/>
Teco Echos to the convention and<lb/>
while the others were having a big<lb/>
time she relaxed in one of the easy<lb/>
chairs of the hotel and tried to spot<lb/>
George Lautares, always in a hur-<lb/>
ry, tangled with five taxi drivers be<lb/>
cause they stopped for red traffic<lb/>
lights. George smashed the noses of j<lb/>
all the cab drivers and then ran five;<lb/>
policemen out of town?but he wasj<lb/>
in the lead.<lb/>
Lallah B. Watts, who attended the;<lb/>
convention with the view of getting!<lb/>
some points on salesmanship, as;<lb/>
she's business manager next year of j<lb/>
the Teeoan, tried her technique onj<lb/>
the proprietor. She sold him 1,000<lb/>
fly swatters and 500 mouse traps.<lb/>
The merchandise was sold at cost,<lb/>
but she did have fun.<lb/>
All the delegates returned to<lb/>
Greenville together and each declared<lb/>
that travel and plenty of sleep is<lb/>
just the thing for students.<lb/>
Maybe you are inclined to believe<lb/>
all this. Don't worry. We Don't.<lb/>
Baptist Students<lb/>
Install Officers<lb/>
"Spring would be a dreary season,<lb/>
if there were no flowers in spring<lb/>
At least that is what the Baptist<lb/>
students seemed to have uppermost<lb/>
in their thoughts, for their annual<lb/>
installation banquet was staged Avith-<lb/>
in a garden of spring flowers cen-<lb/>
tered with a lily pool banked with<lb/>
rocks and moss, carrying out the<lb/>
theme, "The Master's Garden<lb/>
Serving as gardener and guiding<lb/>
the guests through the garden, Masie<lb/>
Castlebury, toastmistress, led the<lb/>
group on their tour.<lb/>
The incoming BSU officers were<lb/>
installed as blooming rose buds<lb/>
formed a bower of roses. Aboe all<lb/>
the flowers in the Masters garden,<lb/>
"The Lily of The Valley, Christ<lb/>
was the subject of Mr. W. Perry<lb/>
Crouch, guest speaker.<lb/>
Best Shoe Values<lb/>
For Play and Dress<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Latest Styles<lb/>
KEDETTES<lb/>
1.94 and 2.50<lb/>
SPORT OXFORDS<lb/>
2.95 Up<lb/>
SPECTATOR PUMPS<lb/>
3.95 and 5.95<lb/>
Bloimt-Harvey<lb/>
"Your X-Jtay Shoe Store"<lb/>
J<lb/>
WATCH FOR LATEST EDITION OF<lb/>
t<lb/>
PIECES OF EIGHT<lb/>
<lb/>
MAY 15<lb/>
ALL FOUR ISSUES FOR 25c<lb/>
?TECO<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038103_0005"/><lb/>
' ? I ?<lb/>
3, 1940<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE FIVE<lb/>
Mra will<lb/>
a"miai<lb/>
Ira<lb/>
ncert<lb/>
Httmer,<lb/>
I ? public<lb/>
" mun<lb/>
; ved<lb/>
P :?? Were<lb/>
h i'ludiiig<lb/>
i I Varia-<lb/>
D I ;t vio-<lb/>
1 bais<lb/>
j osed of<lb/>
A.Ditt-<lb/>
ip played<lb/>
e, which<lb/>
? a red<lb/>
Refrain"<lb/>
?e En-<lb/>
id ???! by<lb/>
It of the<lb/>
I mpanied<lb/>
Middies Stingy With Hits In 3-1 Triumph<lb/>
UHHHItllllllHIIIII<lb/>
iiniHMiiiiiiimimiiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii<lb/>
"HiiiimiiiiiiMiiiMiuiiiiiiiiiimiiiiHiiHiimiimiHiiiiHimiiiiiniii<lb/>
ALONG<lb/>
THE SIDELINES<lb/>
With<lb/>
James Whitfield<lb/>
iiuiuiiiiiiiiiniiiMiMiiiHiin<lb/>
?TF<lb/>
gor<lb/>
a-<lb/>
n;i'<lb/>
the<lb/>
w<lb/>
TIP I<lb/>
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiniiiiiiiiiimiiitiiiiititniiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiititi<lb/>
CHO" SPORTS PAGE RATED EXCELLENT<lb/>
al service of the National Scholastic Press Association, spon-<lb/>
the Department of Journalism, University of Minnesota,<lb/>
si place honor rating to the sports page of the Teco Echo,<lb/>
year by .lames Whitfield, with George Lautares as associate<lb/>
excellent rating given the page by critics of one of the<lb/>
 schools of journalism echoes the efforts the sports staff<lb/>
I his year in trying to present to the student body a round-up<lb/>
tivities in each issue of the paper. It is impossible to please<lb/>
A; attempt to please everyone would be futile. In handling<lb/>
ear the sports staff of the Teco Echo has had the interest of<lb/>
body at heart and was little concerned with what critics<lb/>
the job. lint the critics apparently approved of the staff's<lb/>
'icy tossed bouquets in the form of an excellent ratinjr.<lb/>
Eileen Tomlinsonl Cancelled Dick Chadwick<lb/>
Named President<lb/>
of The WAA<lb/>
Plans Are Formulated<lb/>
For Next School Year<lb/>
Vnd<lb/>
'BIG<lb/>
Kn ?<lb/>
BO<lb/>
tilt I<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
D<lb/>
I'M PI<lb/>
P?<lb/>
tiv<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
TV<lb/>
rii'<lb/>
ran<lb/>
 <lb/>
d<lb/>
?<lb/>
ATK<lb/>
KB<lb/>
?ei ?<lb/>
me<lb/>
far<lb/>
? D<lb/>
m<lb/>
3!i<lb/>
S. <lb/>
Pk<lb/>
It<lb/>
til<lb/>
per:<lb/>
fr ?<lb/>
B i<lb/>
tor<lb/>
thai<lb/>
Irii<lb/>
perfect, however. No one is perfect. There are ways we can<lb/>
i that's just what the sports staff intends to do<lb/>
t ONSTRUCTION COMPANIES<lb/>
Scarborough, diminutive ECTC senior, can make a bid with<lb/>
is company as a steeplejack when he graduates if he's unable<lb/>
a j'li teaching. Workmen recently erected scaffolds in the<lb/>
ding to paint the ceiling. When Stanley entered the building<lb/>
ud he proceeded immediately to scale the scaffold and<lb/>
? do a good job in climbing. Steeplejacks seldom carry much<lb/>
ce, as the rate is too high for this type of person. But they<lb/>
tity of money. And Stanley, like all other seniors who are<lb/>
graduate in June, is interested in making money.<lb/>
FIVE" BASEBALL IS NOTED FOR UPSETS<lb/>
lendid pitching arm of Tommy Byrnes, Wake Forest left-<lb/>
Ids out, Duke Tniversity's powerful Blue Devils are going to<lb/>
selves way down in the bracket of Big Five" standings<lb/>
season is ended. In last Saturday's game Byrnes set the<lb/>
- down in fine style as his mates hammered the Duke tosser<lb/>
dozen runs. The Deacons yielded only one run. Byrnes has<lb/>
stamina and determination. His confidence not only enables<lb/>
tingy with the hits, but also to run up a tine record in<lb/>
Is lie struck out 14 Blue Devils last Saturday and his score<lb/>
Is at an average of more than one strikeout an inning. In<lb/>
to making him the "man to be feared" among other "Big<lb/>
reams, Byrnes is destined to receive some fine offers from the<lb/>
rs of the major leagues. Aside from being a pitcher, Tommy<lb/>
with the stick. He proved this when the Deacons turned back<lb/>
tn earner game. Just how far Wake Forest will go remains<lb/>
They still have some headaches forthcoming with Carolina,<lb/>
. tig undisputed claim to the second-place berth.<lb/>
RES ARE ALWAYS RIGHT<lb/>
ist, they're right in a ball game, even though spectators and<lb/>
: not always put so much confidence in their decisions. On the<lb/>
? Id the privileges of the player are confined to one category and<lb/>
the umpire to another. As far as decisions go, the umpire has<lb/>
ind. If a player dislikes the decision of an umpire, he should<lb/>
? that. When players are unable to adjust themselves to deci-<lb/>
 find themselves shoving youngsters from a knothole outside<lb/>
order to watch the rest of the game. Being able to cope with<lb/>
of an umpire is merely a matter of good sportsmanship.<lb/>
? etes will disagree with this statement, but it only stands to<lb/>
i1 an athlete has to ignore many personal ideas at times to<lb/>
sportsmanship. In many instances the player is correct in<lb/>
g with what the eye of the umpire supposedly saw. But<lb/>
letting the judge of balls and strikes know how he feels, he<lb/>
his opinions to himself. The matter of acquiring umpires is<lb/>
,b officials. Unless an umpire does a good job, he's going to<lb/>
fay behind the plate short-lived. But whether an umpire is<lb/>
t should be left with the officials and not the players. A<lb/>
ise player disliked one of Umpire Roebuck's decisions in a<lb/>
recently and was chased from the park. Roebuck has umpired<lb/>
rates' games several seasons. He has done a good job. The<lb/>
he Middle was an example of a player being unable to display<lb/>
smanship.<lb/>
LETES ARE GOOD-WILL AMBASSADORS<lb/>
ts are sometimes prone to wonder what good athletics do a<lb/>
? numbers of the student body are familiar with those ele-<lb/>
elp the athlete to play the game squarely, physical develop-<lb/>
tera. However, one element that many often overlook is the<lb/>
hletes advertise a college among other schools. It is true that<lb/>
tes are more concerned with being a good player than a good<lb/>
? a good pLaver is a fine thing, but being a good mixer is<lb/>
? tnial if an athlete expects to develop a well-rounded per-<lb/>
l iring the trips of athletic teams to other schools, there are<lb/>
I - crowd who make friends wherever they go and players<lb/>
ools brand them as "good-will ambassadors Whenever the<lb/>
tne school associates with students of other schools, whether<lb/>
end or foe he is going to find someone asking about certain<lb/>
his sehool.And that's a fine thing. What a player does m one<lb/>
will be forgotten at the next game by everyone except the<lb/>
t when he acquires staunch friends in other schools, they are<lb/>
Present educational trends tend to remove individuality<lb/>
lents and put emphasis on personality. And here s a note to<lb/>
s. When the team goes on a tour and fails to chalk up vic-<lb/>
: an rest assured that they have done something for the school<lb/>
The candid'cameraman of the Teco Echo sports staff read in a maga-<lb/>
zine of photography that unusual angles are always good in picture<lb/>
making. He went out to the sof tball field and the picture you see is what<lb/>
he brought back. Those legs belong to Wiley Mayo. They're always in the<lb/>
game when WTiley is playing.<lb/>
Skunks And Swingsters Deadlocked<lb/>
For Honors In Softball Circuit<lb/>
By Nancy Albright<lb/>
Eileen Tomlinson has been elected,<lb/>
president of the Women's Athletic;<lb/>
Association of East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College for 1010-41, succeeding;<lb/>
Eva McMillan.<lb/>
Even though elections have just<lb/>
been held, the Women's Athletic<lb/>
Association already is in the process;<lb/>
of formulating plans for the ensuing<lb/>
school year, including a well-rounded<lb/>
intramural program.<lb/>
Myrtle Hopkins is the new vice-<lb/>
president; Maybelle Pollock, sec-<lb/>
retary; Estelle Edwards, treasurer<lb/>
Maude Sawyer, Teco Echo repre-<lb/>
sentative; and Frances Roebuck ,<lb/>
Tecoan representative.<lb/>
Heads of sports for 194(-41 are1<lb/>
Margaret Wood, soccer; Rachel;<lb/>
Bill Spence, manager of the<lb/>
tennis team of Louisburg Col-<lb/>
lege, this week advised Douglas<lb/>
Glover, captain of Coach H. C.<lb/>
Haynes' netters, that the tennis<lb/>
meet scheduled here tomorow<lb/>
between the tennis teams of<lb/>
Louisburg College and East<lb/>
Carolima Teachers College had<lb/>
been cancelled because of "May<lb/>
Day" at Louisburg. Spence<lb/>
explained that many of the<lb/>
tennis players were participat-<lb/>
ing in the festivities and would<lb/>
be unable to be here for the<lb/>
matches.<lb/>
Drives In Lone<lb/>
Run of Pirates<lb/>
Hurler Smith Limits<lb/>
Locals To Two Hits<lb/>
Girls' Athletics<lb/>
Well Under<lb/>
Way<lb/>
Cox, Rodgers Shine<lb/>
As Intramural Stars<lb/>
Bill Dudash's "Skunks" and John<lb/>
Williams' "Swingsters" are dead-<lb/>
Intramurals among the girls are locked for the top-place rung after<lb/>
well under way on the campus and atwo weeks of Pla? in the mtramural<lb/>
NSPAGivesHigh<lb/>
Rating To Page<lb/>
Sports Sheet Rated<lb/>
Excellent By Critics<lb/>
The critical service of the Nation-<lb/>
Scholastic Press Association,<lb/>
sponsored by the University of Min-<lb/>
nesota and in cooperation with the!<lb/>
, Associated Collegiate Press, recently<lb/>
Blanchard, hockey; Esther Parker gaye a first-place honor rating to the<lb/>
volleyball; Nick Proctor, basketball; sports page of tlie Teco j;cho<lb/>
James Whitfield has been sports<lb/>
editor this year, with George Lau<lb/>
Doris Roberts, softball; Dorothy<lb/>
Dalrymple, tennis; Elizabeth Burns,<lb/>
hiking; Louise Lindsay, individual<lb/>
sports; Camille Gaskins, bicycle;<lb/>
and Margaret White, archery,<lb/>
tares as associate sports editor. John<lb/>
Williams and Harold Taylor have<lb/>
been sports reporters. Nancy Al-<lb/>
mammoth program will have been<lb/>
realized before the current school<lb/>
year is concluded.<lb/>
The annual track and field event<lb/>
sponsored by the Women's xthletic<lb/>
Association scheduled for tomorrow<lb/>
was cancelled because of the "May<lb/>
Day" festivities that will prevail on<lb/>
the campus.<lb/>
Play in softball has begun and<lb/>
tournaments will be staged in ten-<lb/>
nis, ping pong, shuffleboard, and<lb/>
badminton. Activities in archery also<lb/>
are being embodied in the intra-<lb/>
mural program.<lb/>
Miss Helen McElwain is the di-<lb/>
rector of women's intramurals on<lb/>
the campus and is making an effort<lb/>
to make future programs in intra-<lb/>
murals larger than those of the past.<lb/>
Since the program consists of both<lb/>
indoor and outdoor games, the girls<lb/>
can conduct their activities rain or<lb/>
shine.<lb/>
Grand Forks, W. D.?(ACP)?<lb/>
Floating in a test tube on the desk<lb/>
of Dr. Neal Weber, University of<lb/>
North Dakota associate professor of<lb/>
biology, are eight of the smallest ants<lb/>
in the world.<lb/>
So small that 12 of them together<lb/>
would be the size of one pinhead, the<lb/>
tiny insects were discovered by Dr.<lb/>
Weber last summer in central Afri-<lb/>
can jungle near the Belgian Congo<lb/>
border in the Sudan. The professor's<lb/>
specimens have proved to be 25 per<lb/>
cent smaller than any other ants<lb/>
known to man.<lb/>
softball circuit on the campus.<lb/>
The pitching of Dudash and the<lb/>
hitting of Dopey Watson have been<lb/>
outstanding in the superb play of<lb/>
the "Skunks who have dropped<lb/>
only one game in four starts.<lb/>
Tom Cox and Walter Rodgers have<lb/>
established themselves as all-star<lb/>
performers with the "Swingsters<lb/>
co-pacesetters. The disappointment<lb/>
of play thus far has been the poor<lb/>
showing of Joe Williams' jittery<lb/>
"Jitterbugs who have won only one<lb/>
encounter. Expected to top the<lb/>
league, Joe has had difficulty in get-<lb/>
ting his high class club on the field<lb/>
at game time. The club has been<lb/>
bolstered, however, by the signing<lb/>
of Dave Breece, slugging first-sacker,<lb/>
who is expected to help the team<lb/>
show marked improvement.<lb/>
The "Deans of Rhythm" have had<lb/>
trouble in getting their instruments<lb/>
in tune and have dropped three games<lb/>
without a victory to show for their<lb/>
efforts. Bill Basden, bandmaster of<lb/>
the club, has also signed new talent<lb/>
and a little harmony can be expected<lb/>
as a result.<lb/>
The two leaders clash this week in<lb/>
what will probably determine the<lb/>
eventual winner of the tournament.<lb/>
The admission is free and all stu-<lb/>
dents can plan to attend.<lb/>
The remainder of the intramural<lb/>
program, including horseshoes, ping<lb/>
pong, and tennis, are moving along<lb/>
nicely and will be completed near the<lb/>
end of the quarter. Doug Glover has<lb/>
emerged as the top threat for the<lb/>
horseshoe crown, while Charles Har-<lb/>
ris and Don Brock loom high in ping<lb/>
pong and tennis, respectively.<lb/>
The program of the Women's Ath- j bright has represented the sports<lb/>
letic Association enables each of its; staff in the Women's Athletic Asso-<lb/>
members to participate in the sport! eiation and Bill Merner from the<lb/>
which she likes best. It also offers i Varsity Club.<lb/>
a major in physical education to gain! Each year high school and college<lb/>
experience in sports that will be val- ? newspapers throughout the United<lb/>
uable when she goes out in the com States are judged by veteran jour-<lb/>
munity to train others. nalists of the National Scholastic<lb/>
A new membership drive of the; Press Association. In addition to<lb/>
Women's Athletic Association will j ratings, the critics also make val-<lb/>
be held early next fall. Variety that j uable suggestions relative to im-<lb/>
intersperses the public phase of the proving make-up and presentation of<lb/>
initiation has attracted much at-<lb/>
tention on the campus heretofore<lb/>
news.<lb/>
During the past<lb/>
school vear the<lb/>
New officers of the W.A.A. expect; sports staff has placed much empha-<lb/>
to assume offices in the immediate ? on presenting a round-up of va-<lb/>
future.<lb/>
The United States Naval Training<lb/>
Station of Norfolk hammered Coach<lb/>
Farley's Pirates for eight hits in a<lb/>
game that lasted only six and a half<lb/>
innings because of rain and one that<lb/>
produced a 3-1 win for the Middies.<lb/>
It was the devastating hurling of<lb/>
T. W. Smith, Norfolk tosser, that<lb/>
was the contributing factor in the<lb/>
Pirates' loss. Smith settled down to<lb/>
his job of pitching with the style of<lb/>
a veteran and limited the Farley-<lb/>
men to a pair of safeties.<lb/>
An error by Weiler enabled<lb/>
Charles Futrell to take second in<lb/>
the second inning and set the stage<lb/>
for the Pirates' lone tally. Futrell<lb/>
advanced to third on an infield out<lb/>
and scored on Richard Chadwiek'a<lb/>
single. Bill Davidson blasted a double<lb/>
to right field for the Teachers' other<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
Norfolk staged a two-run party in<lb/>
the third. Kinsman singled and had<lb/>
Williams run for him because of a<lb/>
"charley horse" after he had ad-<lb/>
vanced to second on Davis' infield<lb/>
out. Nickols walked and stole second.<lb/>
Both he and Williams scored on<lb/>
Weeks' single.<lb/>
In the fourth another run crossed<lb/>
the plate for the Middies when<lb/>
Kinsman singled and let Williams<lb/>
enter the game as a guest runner.<lb/>
Williams advanced to second on a<lb/>
passed ball, to third on Waldrop's<lb/>
error and scored when Nickols<lb/>
reached first on a fielders choice and<lb/>
Northeutt dropped a nice throw from<lb/>
second to borne.<lb/>
Umpire Roebuck chased Weiler<lb/>
from the game before the rains came<lb/>
because lie had something to say<lb/>
about a decision of the game official.<lb/>
rious sports on the campus instead<lb/>
of putting most of the emphasis on<lb/>
Pittsburgh, Pa (ACP) -Art, any particular sport,<lb/>
culture, and traditions of European; awarding the excellent rating,<lb/>
lands now at war are preserved in a J critics offered suggestions the<lb/>
unique series of nationality class tors will attempt to perfect in<lb/>
rooms in the University of Pitts- forthcoming issues of the paper.<lb/>
burgh's world-famed 42-story Cathe<lb/>
dral of Learning, but the political WVWWWWWWWWWWWW<lb/>
credos and racial hatreds are in no<lb/>
way suggested. The 19 nationality<lb/>
teachers' college, where the tendency is for students to transfer to or<lb/>
from other schools, it is no easy matter to make predictions about the<lb/>
outlook for the types of teams that will be produced in each of the major<lb/>
sports. No one can do this until the season for each rolls around and the<lb/>
material is surveyed. A glance at new material this year has shown that<lb/>
today's greenies are going to be tomorrow'sveterans. One of the school's<lb/>
greatest strides this year and last has been in the field of intramurals.<lb/>
We hope this program sees continued advancement.<lb/>
rooms, a "little league of nations<lb/>
are projects of national groups in j<lb/>
this country.<lb/>
Here in the nine rooms already<lb/>
completed, students and faculty may<lb/>
enjoy the culture, art, and architec-<lb/>
ture of many countries now at war.<lb/>
Arts, which recognize no boundary<lb/>
lines, portray in concrete form the<lb/>
finer instincts of the peoples repre-<lb/>
sented.<lb/>
The classrooms, with decorations<lb/>
and appointments authentic and in<lb/>
keeping with some period in the his-<lb/>
tory of the nation represented, offer<lb/>
the inspiration which the best artists<lb/>
and philosophers of the various peo-<lb/>
ples have given to the world.<lb/>
There is no necessary relation be-<lb/>
tween the character of the rooms and<lb/>
the subjects taught in them. The idea<lb/>
is much simpler. It is that youth,<lb/>
preparing for useful lives, shall see<lb/>
concrete evidence of other useful<lb/>
lives in other times and other lands.<lb/>
? For ?<lb/>
Delicious Doughnuts<lb/>
? and ?<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
? Visit ?<lb/>
Sullivan's Doughnut<lb/>
Shop<lb/>
A.<lb/>
DIXIE LUNCH<lb/>
BEST PLACE TO<lb/>
EAT<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
o<lb/>
i<lb/>
!<lb/>
i<lb/>
I We Are Now Showing t<lb/>
j THE LATEST SPRING !<lb/>
I STYLES 1<lb/>
? Visit Us ?<lb/>
PENNEY'S<lb/>
m<lb/>
ore beneficial to others than the short-lived matters of<lb/>
erame.<lb/>
A VAT TER OF OPINION<lb/>
act.<lb/>
"if,<lb/>
George Lautares, associate sports editor of the Teco Echo<lb/>
 st columnist in the last issue and expressed the opinion that<lb/>
.liege bad its quota of tennis courts, there ??ld b0<lb/>
aving classes on the courts, but since it d ' V<lb/>
hat classes should be discontinued he was advancing a belief<lb/>
I with conditions resulting from the lac of tenniscourts. Thew<lb/>
e disagreement about the declaration and "<lb/>
persons on one side of the 1SZ<lb/>
and persons on the other side who believe that g<lb/>
?ved from classes in a certain field of ?fS&amp;<lb/>
ariation of opinion, ??-??il,<lb/>
DO '<lb/>
eat<lb/>
thai<lb/>
was v<lb/>
? I<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
be dp<lb/>
be a<lb/>
piakm, but to<lb/>
DON'T MISS<lb/>
reZurirpeot wither an opinion comes ton.<lb/>
- pmon or J, it tZi an opinion. If George or any other sta-<lb/>
?"it has an opinion of something it's hjs prmlege tojf<lb/>
?Pinion as l??K as he lite. BteddanotherS!<lb/>
?Pmion, i, is his privilege to ?,Qi taTiTffii ?? newi<lb/>
mSrjS M ?s in the eolumns ot<lb/>
Hose newspaper, Ae<lb/>
SEASON OF ATHLETICS DRAWS TO A CLOSE<lb/>
With the elections of the Women's J???&amp;<lb/>
tmnd and those of the Varsity Club ?111 be brought to<lb/>
 the reality that this year's athletic iTtoe objee-<lb/>
a elose. Each organization has done much thra J?? yg that<lb/>
tivos. with notabTe results. To the refarmg fZf have<lb/>
you have done a good job; to the incoming fXosedance yon<lb/>
o do much to equal the leadership of those ?deho? gm ?<lb/>
have been during the school year now being brought to a<lb/>
THE SPRING<lb/>
PRODUCTION<lb/>
OF THE-<lb/>
KI PI PLAYERS<lb/>
FRESH DAILY<lb/>
Doughnuts<lb/>
And<lb/>
Buns<lb/>
PEOPLE'S<lb/>
BAKERY<lb/>
At<lb/>
COLLEGE "Y"<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
Only Coca-Cola gives<lb/>
you that happy after-sense<lb/>
of complete refreshment.<lb/>
That's why millions enjoy<lb/>
it every day. It had to be<lb/>
good to get where it is. So,<lb/>
get a Coca-Cola, and get<lb/>
the feel of refreshment.<lb/>
USE THAT REFRESHES<lb/>
COCA-COLA<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C<lb/>
o(TbeCoca-ColmCo.by<lb/>
tOTTLING COMPANY<lb/>
<pb facs="00038103_0006"/><lb/>
PAGE SIX<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
?BsssBBaonEaeB<lb/>
Mav u<lb/>
<lb/>
192324<lb/>
192425<lb/>
192527<lb/>
192729<lb/>
19293l<lb/>
193132<lb/>
193233<lb/>
193335<lb/>
193537<lb/>
193739<lb/>
193941<lb/>
Pattie S. Dowell.<lb/>
Mrs. Alex Bynum.<lb/>
Ruth Lowder.<lb/>
Bonnie Howard.<lb/>
Mrs. F. S. Johnson (Hel-<lb/>
en Watson).<lb/>
Deanie Boone Haskett.<lb/>
Mrs. John W. Thompson<lb/>
(Lillie Mae Dawson).<lb/>
Elizabeth C. Smith.<lb/>
Mrs. O. Key Joyner<lb/>
(Christine Viek).<lb/>
Mrs. L. L. Stancil (Luella<lb/>
Lancaster).<lb/>
Mrs. B. M. Bennett (Eliz-<lb/>
abeth Stuart).<lb/>
Pictured are the members of the May Court who will be featured in the Mav Day festival tomorrow<lb/>
afternoon on the campus. Centered around Christine Harris, Maid of Honor are, Eloise Bone, Sarah nn<lb/>
Maxwc<lb/>
v. . i. niiuiio vl luu j?utj v i?ui i urn! win oe ieanirea m tne Jiav jJav testiv<lb/>
on on the campus. Centered around Christine Hams, Maid of Honor are, Eloise Bone,<lb/>
11. Marguerite Britt, Millie Gray Dupree, Mildred Taylor, and Marv Helen Gulledsre.<lb/>
Back on the Campus<lb/>
Mrs. T. Frank Jones (Addie Mar<lb/>
Pearsons), Goldsboro, W. C Lucy<lb/>
McBride, Margaret Boss, and Lu-<lb/>
cille Hearne, Washington, U. C<lb/>
India Hill, Benson, 1ST. C Rev.<lb/>
Sodeman, Clayton, N. C Mrs. A. K.<lb/>
Wood (Louise Sloan), Beulahville,<lb/>
N C. (Mrs. Wood was here making<lb/>
plans to have her daughter enrolled<lb/>
for the fall term '40).<lb/>
Director<lb/>
Boston, Mass.<lb/>
(ACP)<lb/>
A<lb/>
famed Massachusetts Institute ol<lb/>
etate at 4"n<lb/>
? Fahrenheit.<lb/>
The new d? '<lb/>
Technology scientist. Prof. S. ( )n.M? ?<lb/>
Collins, has developed the world- the coldest li<lb/>
coldest refrigerator- and it will op man.<lb/>
LANCE Presents TOASTCHEE<lb/>
A Delightful Sandwich at Your Soda Fountoi<lb/>
? This new peanut butter sandwich has enjoyed a marvel<lb/>
ception since its introduction as an addition to the Lot<lb/>
merchandise. Call for it by name ? your "Y" Stor.<lb/>
favorite soda shop has a fresh supply on display now<lb/>
? Each Wednesday at 10:00 E.S.T the House of Lux<lb/>
Dean Hudson and his Lance Orchestra over Columt c<lb/>
and Lance Affiliated Stations.<lb/>
LANCE, INC.<lb/>
n<lb/>
re<lb/>
Estelle McCkes<lb/>
Among<lb/>
The<lb/>
Alumni<lb/>
 Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Darden of<lb/>
Stantonburg. X. ( have announced<lb/>
the engagement of their daughter.<lb/>
Edna Darden. '5o to Samuel Mitch-<lb/>
ell Frisbie. of Asheville and High<lb/>
 j Point. The wedding is to take place<lb/>
 i in May.<lb/>
Chessie P. Edmondson's, "37, en-<lb/>
High Point Has an East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College Alumni<lb/>
Chapter<lb/>
The High Point Chapter of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College Alumni<lb/>
Association held its first meeting on<lb/>
April 16, with Mrs. C. E. Hinshaw<lb/>
(Kathleen Spain). Officers for the<lb/>
chapter were elected as follows: Miss<lb/>
Ruth Modlin, president; Miss Made-<lb/>
leine McCain, vice president; Miss<lb/>
Lillian Parrish, secretary-treasurer;<lb/>
Miss Sue Speed, reporter; Mrs. C. R.<lb/>
Hinshaw (Kathleen Spain), pro-<lb/>
gram chairman; and Mrs. "Worth<lb/>
Ivey, social chairman.<lb/>
The chapter will hold its next<lb/>
meeting early in May, when Mrs.<lb/>
Julian Franklin (Georgia Smith).<lb/>
Miss Iluldah Hester, and Mrs. Worth<lb/>
Ivey will be associate hostesses.<lb/>
Alumni Association To<lb/>
Assemble Here June 1<lb/>
Kenneth Woolard of Greenville<lb/>
who is directing the Freshman play.<lb/>
Kenneth has had previous experi-<lb/>
ence with the production of several<lb/>
plays here at the college1.<lb/>
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION<lb/>
OF EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
TEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
Officers of the Association<lb/>
President, Mrs. B. M. Bennett<lb/>
(Elizabeth Stuart), Forest City,<lb/>
X. C.<lb/>
Vice<lb/>
( Mi<lb/>
Seer<lb/>
Smith,<lb/>
N. I .<lb/>
Resic<lb/>
McClee<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Mrs.<lb/>
caster ).<lb/>
vil X<lb/>
Mrs.<lb/>
Boss<lb/>
!?H<lb/>
idem. Mrs. W. IT. Brake<lb/>
?s . Rocky Mount. X. C.<lb/>
-Treasurer, Miss Grace<lb/>
Evans St Greenville.<lb/>
?m- Secretary, Miss Estelle<lb/>
. East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
Greenville, X. C.<lb/>
Executive Board<lb/>
L L. Stancil (Luella Lan-<lb/>
708 F. Fourth St Green-<lb/>
C,<lb/>
William II. Brake (Minnie<lb/>
Rocky Mount, X C.<lb/>
Mrs. .1. L. Marconi (Augusta<lb/>
Woodward I 1408 Mordecai Drive,<lb/>
Raleigh. X. C.<lb/>
Miss Wita Bmd. Rocky Mount,<lb/>
X. C.<lb/>
Miss Everyn Tilghman, 074 Ham-<lb/>
ilton St Roanoke Rapids. X C.<lb/>
Misa Grace Smith, 907 Evans St<lb/>
Greenville. X. <lb/>
Misa Alary Grey Moore, Xew<lb/>
Bern. .V. ( Monte 4.<lb/>
Mr. If. C. Oglesly. Grifton, X. C.<lb/>
Faculty-Alumni Advisory Board<lb/>
Mis- Emma L. Hooper, Chr 409<lb/>
Summit St Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Mi-s Maria I). Graham, East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College, Green-<lb/>
ville, X. C.<lb/>
Miss Ruth White, East Carolina<lb/>
 oil<lb/>
oiiejre<lb/>
Greenville, X. C.<lb/>
513 E. 8th St.<lb/>
Teacher<lb/>
Dr. A. D. Frank<lb/>
Greenville. X. C.<lb/>
Mr. .1. H. Cummings, 1002 E. 3rd<lb/>
St Greenville, X. C.<lb/>
Chapter Presidents<lb/>
Ayden, N. C Mrs. Clyde Tyn-<lb/>
dall, Jr. (May Johnson Euro).<lb/>
Charlotte. X. C Mrs. Tna Whit-<lb/>
aker Staples. 1307 Greenwood Cliff.<lb/>
Columbia, X. C Miss Marguerite<lb/>
Averette (Home Address?Oxford,<lb/>
2T, C;)<lb/>
Goldsboro, X. C Mrs. Russell<lb/>
Spenee (Minnie Malloy), Goldsboro<lb/>
Hairy.<lb/>
Greenville. X. C Mrs. Harry<lb/>
Forbes (Martha Scoville).<lb/>
High Point. X. C: Miss Ruth<lb/>
Modlin. 212 Lindsay St.<lb/>
Xew Bern, X. C Miss Mary Grey<lb/>
Moore, Route 4.<lb/>
Raleigh. X. C Mrs. O. Key Joy-<lb/>
ner (Christine Vick) W-2A Came-<lb/>
ron Court Apts.<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids, X C Miss Mar-<lb/>
tha Whitehurst.<lb/>
Kockv Mount, X C Mrs. R. M.<lb/>
Taylor "(Ethel Shelton) Box 86.<lb/>
Winterville, X C Mrs. L. S.<lb/>
Worthington (Edith Fornes).<lb/>
Dear Alumni:<lb/>
You will be needed on our<lb/>
campus at commencement, and<lb/>
particularly on Saturday, June<lb/>
1, which is Alumni Day. We<lb/>
need you because of the inspira-<lb/>
tion you bring to those of us<lb/>
who must remain here from<lb/>
year to year; then, too, we<lb/>
want to learn about you,<lb/>
about your work, about your<lb/>
communities and about your<lb/>
plans for the future. Also, we<lb/>
want you to keep in touch with<lb/>
the college, to see the changes<lb/>
that are taking place, and, we<lb/>
trust, the progress that is be-<lb/>
ing made.<lb/>
At four o'clock in the after-<lb/>
noon of Alumni Day, Mrs.<lb/>
Meadows and I will welcome all<lb/>
alumni and faculty members at<lb/>
our home; we hope you will<lb/>
come and stay as long as you<lb/>
can.<lb/>
Very cordially yours,<lb/>
LEON R. MEADOWS,<lb/>
President.<lb/>
gagement to Edward H. Hooks,<lb/>
Greenville, X C, has been an-<lb/>
nounced by her parents, Mr. and<lb/>
Mrs. Frank Edmondson. Tarboro,<lb/>
X. C. The wedding will be June 15.<lb/>
At present. Chessie is teaching at<lb/>
Bell-Arthur.<lb/>
be given<lb/>
Anniversary<lb/>
Mrs. Walter E. Franklin (Glenn<lb/>
Brooks) Portsmouth. Va celebrated<lb/>
on April 20, her silver wedding an-<lb/>
niversary.<lb/>
Births<lb/>
A son. William Colvin Huhbard.<lb/>
to Earl C. Huhbard and Marv Alice<lb/>
Bullock (Huhbard), "32.<lb/>
A daughter. Carolyn<lb/>
rell, to Dalton Sumrell<lb/>
Briley (Sumrell), r33.<lb/>
Dai<lb/>
and<lb/>
Sum-<lb/>
Marv<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
the Alumni at 4:00 o'clock.<lb/>
At 0:30 a program will<lb/>
in which the outgoing seniors have<lb/>
been asked to take a part. This is<lb/>
a new addition to the Alumnae Day<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
We are hoping said Miss M-<lb/>
Clees. "to have the largest number<lb/>
of Alumni we've ever had. A very<lb/>
interesting program is being planned<lb/>
in that hope<lb/>
On Sunday. June 2. the Com-<lb/>
mencement Sermon will he delivered<lb/>
by Bev. Francis F. Lynch, Rector of<lb/>
the Saint Thomas' Church. Balti-<lb/>
more. Md. Vesper services will be<lb/>
held that night in the Robert H.<lb/>
Wright Building.<lb/>
Senator Joshua B. Lee of Norman,<lb/>
Oklahoma will deliver the Com-<lb/>
I mencement address followed by the<lb/>
irraduatinsr exercises at 11:30.<lb/>
ALUMNI NEWS<lb/>
Mr. James Butler lias been elected<lb/>
Secretary of the Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce, Goldsboro, X. C.<lb/>
Miss Trixie Jenkins was recently<lb/>
chosen as a member of the Delta<lb/>
Kappa Gamma, Xational Honor So<lb/>
Marriages<lb/>
Marie Worthington, '38, and<lb/>
Woodrow Tayloe. at the Methodist<lb/>
Church. Ayden, X C. They are now<lb/>
living in Aulander, If. C. Before<lb/>
her marriage. Marie was teaching in<lb/>
Scotland Xeck, XT. C.<lb/>
Presidents of the Alumni Associa-<lb/>
tion Since June 5, 1912, the<lb/>
Date of its Organization<lb/>
191214 Mrs. A. M. Moore (Xell<lb/>
Bender)<lb/>
,191416 Edna Campbell,<lb/>
eiety for Women Teachers. She was;i9iGl8 Estelle Greene,<lb/>
chosen from western Xorth Caro- 191819 Mrs. L. L. Stancil (Luella<lb/>
hna m the Chapter that includes the j Lancaster)<lb/>
territory from Statesville to Mur- ;i9192l Mrs. D. H. Osborne (Louise<lb/>
phy. Miss Jenkins was graduated<lb/>
with the A.B. degree in 1925 and has I<lb/>
since done graduate work at Pea-j<lb/>
body. At the present time she is crit-<lb/>
ic teacher at Western State Teachers I<lb/>
College, Cullowhee.<lb/>
Miss Maud Melvin '39, sang over<lb/>
National hook - up in Washington,<lb/>
D. C. on April 24. She sang with a<lb/>
boy's quartet from Edwards Mili-<lb/>
tary Institute. She also sang two<lb/>
solos.<lb/>
Alumni enrolled at East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College during the spring<lb/>
quarter are Lucille Beaman, Mrs.<lb/>
Louise Petty Matheny, Lottie Mc-<lb/>
Clenny, Ida Townsend, Mrs. Doro-<lb/>
thy Liverman Combs, Mrs. Dollie<lb/>
Arthur Barkley, Voldah Deaton,<lb/>
Patsy Montague Glass, Eloise Bone,<lb/>
Margaret Garner, Rachel Barbee,<lb/>
and Julia Murphy.<lb/>
While attending "College Night"<lb/>
in Roanoke Rapids, the Alumni Sec-<lb/>
retary was delighted to see the fol-<lb/>
lowing alumni: Carrie T. Smith,<lb/>
Hazel Whitehurst, Olive Gilbert,<lb/>
Evelyn Tillman, Sue Elizabeth<lb/>
Smith, Frances Xewsome, Nancy<lb/>
Sperling, Miriam Sloan, Ella Dill<lb/>
Gibbs, Elizabeth Wilder, Thelma<lb/>
Daughtry, Mrs. E. A. Telliga (Car-<lb/>
rie L. Arnold), and Alvah Page.<lb/>
Smaw).<lb/>
192l22 Mrs. L. C. Ferrcll (Ophe-<lb/>
lia O'Brian).<lb/>
192223 Ruth Deans.<lb/>
The University of Illinois is con-<lb/>
structing new campus buildings at a<lb/>
cost of $3,400,000.<lb/>
The Ohio University football team<lb/>
was undefeated in a home football<lb/>
game from 1927 to 1937.<lb/>
Put Spring in Your Feet j<lb/>
? in ?<lb/>
MERIT SHOES<lb/>
All the Latest Styles<lb/>
in<lb/>
Play and Dress Shoes<lb/>
i<lb/>
ENGAGEMENTS<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Parker of<lb/>
Pollocksville, N. C, have announced<lb/>
the engagement of their daughter,<lb/>
Gertrude DuVal Parker, '38, to<lb/>
Lieut. J. W. Newsome of Fort<lb/>
Bragg. The wedding is to take place<lb/>
in June.<lb/>
Ethel Marie Williams, '31, en-<lb/>
gagement to Clyde Hull Cantrell of<lb/>
Raleigh has been announced by her<lb/>
mother, Mrs. B. F. Williams of An-<lb/>
gier, N. C. Ethel is teaching in the<lb/>
State Blind School, Raleigh, N. C.<lb/>
We CONGRATULATE the Editors<lb/>
and Business Managers on their success in<lb/>
making THE TECO ECHO an outstanding<lb/>
college newspaper<lb/>
The "Dedication" and other issues during<lb/>
the current session are examples of fine<lb/>
achievement in student journalism.<lb/>
As their printers, it gives us pleasure to<lb/>
serve the Publication Board of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College.<lb/>
EDWARDS &amp; BROUGHTON COMPANY<lb/>
Raleigh, North Carolina<lb/>
jfaJHHSS<lb/>
Have You Seen Our<lb/>
Collection of<lb/>
Evening Dresses?<lb/>
C. Heber Forbes<lb/>
YJWWUWWJVm'mVSSttSSSwV.V.VmV<lb/>
DR. W. I. WOOTEN<lb/>
CANDIDATE FOR<lb/>
HOUSE of representative:<lb/>
FOR PITT COUNTY<lb/>
YOl'R VOTE AND SI PPORT ? III l,i<lb/>
APPRECIATED<lb/>
? ? 'iT -?rl I I' 9  I 9 JJ. -j 9 . ? <lb/>
Democratic Primary, Saturday, May 25, 9-<lb/>
<lb/>
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t<lb/>
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f<lb/>
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wywvw<lb/>
vwwvrvwuvvv??-?-?-?-???i.l?<lb/>
America's Busiest Corner<lb/>
Chicago's Madison and State<lb/>
Streets, where Officers HARRY<lb/>
KLEPSTEEN and THOMAS McGINTY<lb/>
keep the traffic moving. And<lb/>
at every corner CHESTERFIELD<lb/>
is America's busiest cigarette<lb/>
because smokers have found<lb/>
them Definitely Milder, G<lb/>
er-Smokirig and Better-Tasting<lb/>
AMERICA'S<lb/>
BUSIEST<lb/>
CIGARETTE<lb/>
at eveiy corner its<lb/>
Chesterfield<lb/>
 foeay's definite milder cooler-<lb/>
smoking  berrer-tasfing cigarette<lb/>
When you buy a pack of cigarettes, give<lb/>
it the smoker's perfect quiz  Is it mild?<lb/>
Is it cool? Does it taste better? If you do<lb/>
that, you'll turn by choice to Chesterfield<lb/>
because Chesterfield has all the answers.<lb/>
Their blend of the best tobaccos grown,<lb/>
thetr stze, shape and the way they burn,<lb/>
all help to make Chesterfield America's ?<lb/>
Busiest Cigarette.<lb/>
Make your next pock Chesterfield<lb/>
Copyright 1940,<lb/>
: Myhs Toucce G&amp;<lb/>
You can't buy a better Op?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00038103_0007"/>
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