The Teco Echo, May 30, 1934


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





v J934
i
SUMMER SCHOOL
BEGINS JUNE 12th
THE TECO ECHO
PATRONIZE TECO
ECHO ADVERTISERS
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE
Greenville, N. C. Wednesday, May 30, 1934.
Nmber 14.
Finals To Begia
ih re Ob June 2
Ncy Donj
COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER
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T5POT
-?or wardrobe. Her?
wr,4 MHMV to the
:?arror $or soft,
- c u n n y we-arex.
EpOOftn Ske fhe
Am collarette ?Hai
i the throat and
k ? un - inviting
To Be Observ-
day. Governor
l"n Make Corn-
Address That
N EXERCISES
IELD MONDAY
lleman Wil 1 De-
ulaureate Ser-
d t Morning.
C 1! Ehringhaus
commencement
' Carolina Teach-
' . day night, June
luation exercises
Monday morning,
is the first time
? das not been a
? lation exercises.
n ade this year
ernor a aid not
Monday morning.
" ?? i ncement will
? ? late Dr. K. H.
. twenty-five years
East Carolina as
last Carolina Teach-
Mam alumnae are
tut the com-
Duke Professor
Demons trates
Liquid Air
Dr. Edwards Of Duko Univer-
sity Ciics Interesting De-
monstration CM" Liquid Air
Brought To College Under
Auspices Of Science Club.
Excerpts Taken
From President
Wright's Talks
Statements Taken From In-
augural Address. Chapel
Talks And Other Speeches.
Friends Of Dr.
Wright Offer
Their Tributes
GOVERNOR EHRINGHAUS
Seniors Enjoy
Bavviov Outing
? In
Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Pickle-
si mer. And Dr. And Mr
Dr. C. W. Edwards, professor
'l Physics at Duke University,
gave a most interesting lecture
and demonstration of liquid air
last Tuesday afternoon under the
auspices of the Science Club.
Tin- physical laboratory was
filled with girls and boys who
watched with breathless interest
the experiments that showed
what could be done with liquid
air.
Dr, Edwards brought with him
the Liquified air he used and a
lot of equipment for the experi-
ments, lie first explained how
the a;r was prepared, the combi-
J. Slav Act As Chaper- nation t,f & ll contained, and
R.
ones Of Party.
$3.95
Y.
l
W
A
nl sermon
vered by Dr.
? of the Cen- I
1st Of New i
o services,
morning ser-
c vesper ser-
C. A. The
. .sent at ion
. rved in the Y.
, this year.
alumnae will
,t : trat n of the
day and the day
I preciation of I
bt After the
?ss meeting, an
will be served in
to the visitors
ing classes. Miss
Felton, as repre-
10 year class, is
. program com-
The Senioi
able trip to
Greenville c
ing and di
ni
R. J She.
W Pickles
staved at I
s reported an enjoy-
Bayview. They left
n Saturday mora-
1 not return until
The party was
ed by Dr and Mrs.
i Prof and Mrs. P.
m ? The Seniors
wiew Hotel while
the behavior of the air when
brought into contact with var-
ious other things.
He explained the two classes
of experiments used, one .show-
ing the effect of the intense cold-
ness and the other the rate of
burning by increasing the con-
centration of oxygen. He froze
t'efsU
at the resort.
The par.v enjoyed swimmim
dancing and boating.
by
i air
eggs, and other foods
4 them through the
len hammered on them
hardne:
The vio
The S,
rs who went on the
trip were: Mabel Dickens. Leola
Pleasant. Rebecca Curtis. Hattie
Lee Humphrey, Mildred Horton,
Betty Bloxton. Eleanor Jones.
.Estelle McCullen, Beulah House.
i Avis Tew. Pearl Mooring. Eliza-
jbeth Fulcher, Lucille Henderson.
Freda Parks, Betsy Odum, Ehse
Parker. Alice Wharon. Mary C.
. Parker. Christine Wilson, Mary
Bell Wilson. Bob Easnn. Runt
Bostic and Francis Jennings.
ishing of flame
were brought
C1
UK
sudd n
naterial
itact with the air. amazed
the audience.
A group of high school stu-
dei ts were the guests of the club.
Dr. and Mrs. Slay entertained
at dinner in honor of Dr. and
Mrs. Edwards. Others present
were the president of the Science
Club, Clyde Brown, E. L. Hen-
derson and the other members
President Wright's idealism,
faith and vision are shown not
only in the talks he made in
chapel but in all of his public
speeches. For nearly twenty-
five years he conducted chapel
four days a week, talking on
citizenship, economic conditions,
or various passages from the
Bible. Always, he held before
tine student body the motto of
the college To Serve During
these years more than twenty
thousand students have come
and gone and have caught some-
thing of his dream of an edu-
cated citizenry, educational op-
portunities for every boy and
girl, his ideals of faith, service,
and love for one's fellowman.
In bis inaugural address al-
most twenty-five years ago he
said, -Every nation that has ever
been upon earth has stood for
sonu- ideal. Civilization has ad-
vanced by the maintenance,
clash and ultimate influence of
these ideals. The little stream
beginning on the mountain top
winds its way down the moun-
tain-side and is joined by other
.streams until it becomes a
mighty river, bearing upon its
j bosom a world's freight for
humanity; so with civilization,
beginning with the.dawn of God's
creation of man it has trickled
down the ages, jdined here and
there by a national ideal until to-
day we have the jnighty stream
of civilization beating down upon
its bosom all the nations of the
worM. The ideal! that America
has'contributed to jfe stream of
human civilization is political
freedom.
We are the most individualistic
Dr. Walter Patton, Arch T
Allen, F. C. Harding And
A. B. Andrews Express
Their Appreciation Of Dr.
Wright.
Robert H. Wright Memorial
Loan Fund Is Established
Among the large numb
splendid tributes that have
paid to our beloved leader
Robert Herring Wright, are
?r of
been
, Dr.
these
Summer School To
Be?in June 12th
TFCO ECHO STAFF ENJOYS
OUTING AT BAYVtl V
Will Continue
As Summer
Adviser.
S I ??? of the Col-
ducted this year
Eleven
Echo stai
Bayview,
Washingt
m mbers
enjo ed
popular
the 'Feet
ti outing at
esort neai
n. last Saturday after-
noon, returning via Washington
to have supper at the Patrician
Inn.
Those accompanying the group
were Mr. B. C. Deal. Dr. and
M Herbert ReBarker, Mr. and
department. Misses I people upon the earth, and as
Hi
sidy and Wilson.
Annual Recital To
Be Held Friday
p
followed! Mi
ai
nd Mr. and
M. L. W
er and previous sum- j Mrs. M. K. Fort
WO terms of six weeks The staff members who went
? first term will begin were: Dorothy Hooks. Clyde
12, and the second on!Morton, Ruby Wall, lit len Boom-
It will be again under jer, Hael Kimivy. Katie Lee
directorship of Dr. L. Johnson, Julia M. Bordeaux. El-
? who has been direc- len Jenkins. Sehna Gurganus,
past twelve years. The j Lucy LeRoy and Betty Carswell.
iu w are that there1
Program Under Direction Of
Miss Dora Meade And
Miss Lois Gorrell.
iVIS
sw
Blount-Harvey Co.
I t m SI0N
based at
E'S
prel for W omen"
men larger summer
for several years.
and summer sports
active features for
this summer. The
, will be sufficient to
students a chance to
is will also be
iming. Plans are
e for summer baseball
ill be a larger number
an usual.
may register
n or both. Most
s will be organized so
? ;t of work will be
me term. In each
la ses will meet daily
i thiee times a week.
usual term. The class
be lengthened so
week will be reduced
usual six days to five
that the students may
It-ends. The two-term
i n re convenient for
especially for teach-
idents who do not wish
. r entire summer in
yet feel they cannot
? g vacation.
? nanv former students
I normal-school diplo-
? urn to continue work
R Degree. Several
id A B Degrees will
gin or continue
inued on page six
JUNIOR CLASS (JIVES
SENIORS THEATER PARTY
Tuesday night. April 15, the
Junior Class entertained the Sen-
iors at a theater party. Those
students attending saw Al Jol-
son in Wonder Bar. It is custo-
mary for the Juniors to give a
banquet honoring the Seniors.
but in due resp ct to President
Wright, all plans were postponed
for! indefinitely.
of
JOSEPH LOJKE KILLED
IN AUTOMOBILE WRECK
Greenfield. Mass.?dP)-Oos-
eph Lojke. 22. captain of the
undefeated Massachusetts State
College basketball team, was
killed and two Dartmouth stu-
dents and a graduate of Colum-
bia University were seriously in-
jured in an automobile accident
here last week.
The young Beas car was
forced off the road by a bus and
struck a tree.
The Twenty-Fifth Annual Re-
cital of the Music students of
East Carolina Teachers College
will be given Friday evening.
June 1. The program will be
vai :ed including piano and vio-
lin selections. The Glee Club
will close the program with two
numbers.
The program is as follows:
Polish Dance. Scharwenka, play-
ed by Nola Walters: A Sketch,
Dubois. by Persaline O'Brien;
Fireflies, Grant-Schaefer. Arleen
Parker: Berceuse, Grief, Mar-
garet Walters: Hungarian Dances
Nos. 2 and 3, Brahms, Katherine
Bradley, and Virginia Davis: La
Fileuse. Raff. Edith Marslender;
To a Water Lily and In Autumn,
b MacDowcll. Virginia Davis:
Larghetto, Op. 100, Dvorak, Sam
Quincrly, accompaniedoy Violin
Ensemble: Prelude in C. Bach,
Andante Gluck. Waltz. Brahms,
Violin Ensemble: Nocturne, Op.
37. No. 1. Chopin, Elizabeth
Smith: Etude Melodique, Op. 130,
No. 1. Raff, Scottish Dances, Bee-
thoven, Katherine Bradley: The
Mountain, Biainard, Intermezzo,
Leschetizky, Katie Lee Johnson;
My Johann. Grief-Aslanoff, and
Dreaming. H. R. Shelley, Glee
Club.
long as our present ideal domi-
nates, we can never have a
national or state religion. So long
as the ideal that now rules lives,
we, as a nation, are secure and
will be until this ideal dies and
another takes its place as the cen-
tral thought in our life. If this
ever happens, and God forbid
that it should, then we will fol-
low the new ideal until it, in its
turn, is emptied into the great
stream of life
About two weeks before his
death, President Wright referred
to this, and said. "I have lived to
(Continued on page six)
from friends of his; who havt
known him personally for many
years.
Honorable Arch T. Allen. State
Superintendent of Public In-
struction, has known Dr. Wright
for a number of years. Because
of his close friendship with our
former president he pays the fol-
lowing tribute to him:
Robert H. Wright
"It has been my pleasure to
know and admire President
Robert II. Wright ever since we
were students together at the
University of North Carolina.
Bob Wright as a student gave
promise of developing into the
kind of man that we all learned
to know so well. He was thor-
oughly reliable in all his rela-
tions with his fellow students.
No one ever questioned the
righteousness of his purpose. He
did not cater to popularity, but
seemed to be directed at all times
by the promptings of his con-
science. His meticulous care in
doing only such things as his
principles of right would ap-
prove, made him a leading char-
acter among ail of the students
of his day.
He believed fully in the accu-
rate workings of the processes of
his own mind. While he was
not quick to make up his opinion
about new questions, when he
had thoroughly examined all of piano
the facts and made up his mind
it resulted almost in a convic-
tion. After having given ex-
pression to the results of his de-
liberations, only additional evi-
dence would change his mind
and attitude on these points.
President Wright was patriotic.
(Continued on Page Two)
Carolina Glee Club
Is Well Received
Varied Program Of Sacred
Sent Russian Folk Songs.
And Negro Spirituals Were
Rendered.
Contributions
Gmut. An
From
i 11,
V:
ho $10 000 Go
ii i High Clas
$25.00 To Th
Hubert Liverman Accompa-
nist Played Two Of His
Own Compositions.
The
Fund.
! 11 y
the St
ers O
Robert
$10,000.
H
Wr
hi-
Ea
Ie?.
imrne-
Dr.
has already been raised ;
nite plans made for
subscriptions by an earl
The movement started
diately after the death
Wright. At a staff meeting when
resolutions were passed in his
memory, the feeling was strong
than something more tangible
than words should be done to
express tlv appreciation his col-
lis twent
or the C
The Glee Club of the Univer-
sity of North Carolina gave a
concert here on Friday evening.
May 18, which was well received
by the audience.
The program was varied in-
cluding a group of sacred songs.
Russian Folk Songs and Negro
Spirituals.
The numbers included in the
group of sacred songs were i leagues had foi
'Grant Us to Do With Zeal by j years of servic
Bach: "All Praise to God by and his life work for edm
Wagner, and "Hymn of the Pil- Nothing seemed mon
grims by McDowell. The next
group offered was the Russian
Songs. "Sun and Moon "The
Song of the Cudgel the soloist
part was taken by Billie Hunt,
and last "Fireflies The songs
of the Negro race were very en-
joyable and included "Swing
Low "Oh Mary Don't You
Weep and "My Little Banjo
Sam Lane was the soloist in the
first two. The last group was
composed of "Land-Sighting by
Grieg. "Border Ballad" by Maun-
der, with Louis Clark as the solo-
ist. The last number was "Reap-
ers Song a Bohemian Folk-song,
with Mr. Teor and Mr. Clark at
five
Ici'e
ne
SCIENCE CLUB HAS
SUCCESSFUL YEAR
Large Number
Students Are
To Graduate
Larger Number of Students
In Normal Class Than
In Senior.
Piano selections rendered by
Mr. John H. Liverman were es-
pecially appreciated by the
audience. His first number was
??Rhapsody in G Minor" this was
followed by Claire de Lune and
Plainte Verdiqu, Mr. Liverman's
own composition.
The Trio with Thor Johnson,
Violinist, Raymond Fink, Vio-
lincelist: and Wilton Mason, Pia-
nist played "Allegro Man Trap-
po from Mendelssohn's "Trio in
D Minor Opera 49
The concert was given under
the directions of Harold G. Mill-
er, John H. Liverman, pianist,
and Thomas Teer, accompanist.
After the concert the members
of the Glee Club were entertain-
ed in the "Y" Hut by the Senior
Class.
than a loan fund to carry on the
work nearest his heart, helping
boys and girls to fit themselves
to teach. Committees were ap-
pointed for presenting the cause
to individuals and groups of the
College Community who wish to
make contributions. E. L. Hen-
derson is chairman of the com-
mittee, and M. L. Wright is sec-
retary.
The Senior Class of the Green-
ville High School made a contri-
bution of $25.00 to the Wright
Memorial Loan Fund at their
graduation exercises on Monday
night. The formal presentation
of the gifts was one of the most
impressive features of the grad-
uation exercises. The three of-
ficers, Gus Forbes, Jr Julia
Gaylord, and Allan Moore, joint-
ly presented the gift.
A
They who but yesterday pre-
dicted the imminence of social
rebellion m this country are to-
dav discovering and pondering
the baffling fact that the fertile
soil of America is barren to the
It.?Isaac Don Le-
HOME ECONOMICS CLUB
ELECTS NEW OFFICERS
Due to many things that have
arisen since plans for com-
mencement was made, the
Science department will not ob-
serve Open House. However,
some quite remarkable work has
been done by the students which
will be on display any time Fri-
day, June 1, in the Science
Building.
The biology, chemistry, botany,
and physics classes will have
projects on display. The biology
will consist mostly of the collec-
tion of plants and animals. There
are aquariums, terrariums, and
vivariums thriving over in the
laboratory, all built by students
taking those courses.
The chemistry projects consist
mostly of posters showing the
properties and uses of chemical
elements and compounds. A col-
lection of minerals was very in-
teresting.
The outstanding botany pro-
ject is an aquarium made and
balanced by a student. One pu-
pil made a collection of plants
showing their evolution. Wild-
W 111 ???
work seeds of revol
:) ivine-
At the meeting of the Home
Economics Club on May 15, the
new officers for next year were
elected. They are: President,
Irene James; Vice-President,
Clara MacMartin: Secretary,
Ruby Kelly Treasurer, Frances
Maness; Tecoan Representative,
Mary Kathryn Griffin; Nora Bo-
gart Stephcnson has been ap-
pointed Teco Echo Reporter,
The following students are ap-
plicants for graduation June 4
1934.
A. B. Degree Graduates
Pauline Barber, Loula May
Barker, Hilda Blair Barnhill,
Georgia Weeks Bell, Stella Mae
Blevins, Lola Alma Brooks, Sal-
lie E. Brooks, Edwi-na Burch,
Mary Virginia Cale, Hallyburton
Cooke, Rebecca V. Curtis, Mar-
garet Cuthrell, Frances Elizabeth
Dail, Emma Lee Davis, Florence
Denning, Clara Vann Freeman,
Eloise Garrett, Nellie Claire Gris-
som, Helen L. Harkey, Retha Es-
telle Harris, Frances Harvey,
Lois Norfleet Hayes, Will Nell
Higdon, Myrtie Gray Hodges,
Mildred Audrey Horton, Beulah
House, Mildred Reeves Howard,
Marietta Hoyle, Hattie Lee Hum-
phrey, Aleen Hunt, Rheta B.
Hyatt, Louise Eleanor Jones,
Lorna Langley, Elizabeth Leake,
Nellie Lee, Edna Lee McCall, Es-
telle McCullen, Pearl McHan,
Margaret Matthews, Elcy Miller,
Pearl G. Mooring, Lucille Noell,
Dorothy Odham, Elizabeth Odom,
Betsy Odum, Lucille E. Pait, El-
sie Ellen Parker, Mary Geneva
Parker, Ruth Parker, Freda
Incoming Seniors
Elect Officers
Eloise Camp To Be President
Of Class Of '35.
The rising Senior Class has
elected Eloise Camp as their
President. Three elections were
necessitated for this office, in
order to break a tie between the
two nominees, Eloise Camp and
Frances Watson. The other two
nominees were eliminated in the
first poll. Frances, as second
highest, will serve as Vice-Presi-
dent.
Thelma Peele, who was Presi-
dent of the Junior class this year,
will serve as
Gus Forbes, president of the
class, made a most appropriate
presentation speech, telling of
the decision of the class to prove
their interest in the cause by di-
viding their class fund so as to
share in this work. Dr. L. R
Meadows in his acceptance said
this was just another strong link
binding the class and the Green-
ville High School to the College.
He enumerated a number of
other links. The mothers of
several of the class are alumnae
of the College, many of their
teachers were trained by the
College, and many of them have
sisters and brothers in college
now.
Methodist Church
Honors The Late
Dr. R. H. Wri-ht
Dr. G. R. Combs, Pastor Of
Jarvis Memorial Church
Conducts Service.
On Sunday, May 20, the Meth-
odist Sunday School held a me-
morial service for Dr. Robert H.
Wright, the deceased president
of this institution. Dr. Gilbert
Combs, pastor of Jarvis Memo-
uor ctass mis year, Methodlst church led the
the Senior Class
flowers, mosses and rare plants
have been collected.
The most extensive work has I Stewart Parks, Mary L. Pipkin,
been done by the Physics class. Leola F. Pleasant, Annie Esther
The students worked in groups
and put out twelve projects as
a class. They are a radio, tele-
phone, hot water heating system,
electric light and bell, hydraulic
elevator, well-windlass, steam
heating system, force pump and
(Continued on page four)
Pridgen, H. Pauline Robertson,
Josephine Robertson, Ethlyn W.
Sanders, Lucille Rose, Irene
Sandling, Louise Simmons, Mar-
garet T. Smith, Julia Stilley, Ag-
nes Marie Strickland, Frances
Louise Swindell, Faye Tadlock,
I (Continued on page three)
representative to the Student
Council.
Other officers elected were:
Frances Bowen, Secretary, Kath-
ryn Crow, treasurer, and Nell
Williford, Tecoan Representative.
Betty Carswell has been appoint-
ed Teco Echo Reporter, by the
editor of that publication.
It has been customary for the
class to have one or more cheer
leaders, but due to the fact that
intramural athletics have been
discontinued such an officer is
no longer necessary, and it was
voted by the class to discontinue
the position.
I was never meant to be de-
monstrative.?Mahatma Gandhi.
service.
After the congregation sang
"Faith of our Fathers Mrs. M.
K. Blount read several dedica-
tory poems from Henry Van
Dyke. Following this Dr. Combs
paid great tribute to Dr. Wright.
He stated how much President
Wright would be missed from the
congregation, his leadership. He
closed with a beautiful thought,
saying that Dr. Wright was just
in another room. Mr. Ellington,
a member of the class of which
Dr. Wright was the teacher for
nearly twenty-five years, made a
closing tribute to his teacher.
The meeting was concluded with
the singing of Dr. Wright's fav-
orite hymn, "Sun of My Soul
Jk m





Wednesday
Page Two
THE TECO ECHO
Published Bi-Weekly During The College Year
By The Student Government Association of
East Carolina Teachers College
STAFF
Chief Clyde Morton
Manager Dorothy Hooks
M;
Si i
Fditorial Staff
ng Editor Jennie Green Taylor
Editor George S. Willard, Jr.
Assistant Editors
Bcm mer, Malene Grant. Frances Monk.
a Costen Grant, and Selma Gurganus.
THE TECO ECHO
Advertising Managers
Davis; Josephine Banes, Chessie Edmund-
v , ! Cole. Rillie Vogler, Elizabeth Wilson,
v
Alice Starr.
Circulation Managers
Elma Joyner, Virginia Goldston, Blanche White.
Annie Lee Jones. Carolyn Clute, Frances Edger-
s n, Lois Leake, Merle Sasser.
Pot
Selma Gurganus
Ellen Jenkins
Reportorial Staff
Society Lucille Noell
erson Society Will Higdon
Lamer Society Mary Gorham
V A AElizabeth Keith
ip 1 ReporterMary Louise Rives
Junior Class
Sophomore Class .
Scribblers Club Helen Boomer
Science Club Robert Fleming
Cheerio Club Billie Vogler
Senior Class ReporterHally Cooke
C Class ReporterFrances Monk
D Class Reporter Hazel Kimrey
Freshman Class ReporterOnie Cochrane
Alumnae Reporter
Lois Hayes
Member North Carolina Collegiate Press
Association.
Advertising Rates 25c per column inch per issue
Subscription $1.50 Per Year
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925,
at the Postoffice. Greenville, N. C, under the
act of March 3, 1879.
Associated (?oto.tate jjjggg
IcDvtwu; lJ4
Wednesday, May 30, 1934.
achievements, therefore, are dependent up-
on the present product. Thomas A. Edison
did not make his reputation?the value and
quality of his inventions established his
name so firmly in history that no future, no
matter how distant, will ignore it. The Ford
built Henry Ford's reputation; and so it is
with all such business.
And just as the products of the business
world build the great business organizations
so the graduate builds his college. All the
sacrifices and powers of the devoted leader-
ship of Dr. Wright, all the visions and ser-
vices of a dedicated faculty and officers of
administration, and all the confidence of the
people of North Carolina should be imper-
sonated in the graduates of East Carolina
Teachers College.
It would be well for every graduate to
pause before he graduates, and think how
greatly he is responsible for the future of
his Alma Mater. This College owes a great
deal to the school children of North Caro-
lina and he depends upon its graduates to
pay this debt by teaching in the public
schools of the state, and giving to the chil-
dren the training that is essential to them
in building character and in becoming good
citizens.
The wise graduate will remember that
while he is leaving the walls of the Col-
lege he is not leaving the part that makes
the real institution because he is taking
that with him. And when he meets the
challenge of his Alma Mater, he will ac-
cept it and do his part in building the fu-
ture of his College.
FRIENDS OF DR.
WRIGHT OFFER
THEIR TRIBUTES
(Continued from first page)
find certain dooks
had recommended for col-
?ading m lus English
at that time, w?
University.
d r?
Greenville,
a century oi
structive genii
fluence not onl
He believed in North Carolina.
He was willing to undertake any
enterprise that gave promise of
being helpful to the people of tin-
state. No personal sacrifice was
too great for him to make freely
in his effort to serve the State
in every relationship in which
he found himself.
It was a part of his faith that
public education had the power
gradually to raise the level of
civilization. He further believed
that the success of public educa-
tion was dependent upon the
training and attitude of the
teachers in these schools. His
life work, therefore, was the
training of teachers. He was
not satisfied merely with techni-
que, skills and information. He
thought there should be some-
thing more. Personal character
and the individual attitude to-
wards the work were character-
istics which he felt should domi-
nate the life of every teacher who
went out from his institution.
This faith of his and this effort
of his, and the power to trans- ,
mit them to those who came un-
der his tutition represent his
great contribution to the life of
the State
A. T. Allen,
State Superintendent
Public Instruction.
t
Hum
la t era
course. I.
Librarian at the Univer
1 was impressed, then, with the
natural simplicity of his man-
ner. After having the Univer-
sity, I did not meet him again
until 1909, when he came to
Greenville as President of East
Carolina Teachers College.
It was here as President of
the College and as a citizen of
through a quarter !
f service, his con-
radiated an m-
v in North Caro-
throughout our
u
hole
SUPPORT THE LOAN FUND
BON VOYAGE
. i
The movement on foot to establish a
000 Robert H. Wright loan fund is a wor-
i ne. The thing that he was most inter-
? in was youth education, and in estab-
this loan fund the committee is at-
tempting to make a memorial to him in the
rm of something that was close to his
heart. Student organizations are asked to
cooperate in this movement to help those
students that are financially unable to stay
in school. Realizing that they are taking
part in a movement that will continue long
alter their graduation, and that they are
the last student body that was so fortunate
as to be under Dr. Wright's leadership, they
will undoubtedly give their best support to
so worthy a movement. Even though the
different campus organizations are contri-
buting from their appropriations, each stu-
dent should feel a personal responsibility
for the loan fund and to contribute as much
as he can. The $3,000.00 that has already
been raised should be but a beginning; a
comeraoration to this great leader.
WHY NOT SPRING CLASS ELECTIONS?
to
the
As the custom stands now, the only class
that elects officers in the Spring is the ris-
ing Senior Class. It seems as if it would be
better if all the six classes held their elec-
tions in the spring, since it would be a de-
cided advantage to the incoming officers. It
would give more time for the officers
make plans for class activities during
coming year. The class presidents are
surely among the major campus leaders, so
while the other elections are held in April
or- May, the classes should hold their elec-
tions at the same time.
The elections should be so organized
that all the officers of major organizations
would be voted on the same day; this would
include the Student Council, Y. W. C. A. of-
ficers, Teco Echo and Tecoan staffs and class
officers. If this election day were set aside
much confusion of the many elections that
are necessitated, would be avoided.
THE CHALLENGE OF THE GRADUATE
The success of any big business depends
largely upon the products of the enterprise.
Commodities that pour forth from such an
organization build its reputation and the
reputation of its leaders. The
The school calendar serves as a re-
minder that it is time for the last issue of
this year's Teco Echo to go to press.
This year has been a successful one. We
are still far from the goal that we wish to
attain?but we have realized some decided
successes, for looking back where we start-
ed from we find that we are at least as far
from the starting as we are from the goal.
We have worked under handicaps. The
minimum of advertising, the lack of orga-
nization among the staff and the financial
drawbacks hava been the major ones. But
there are many things that we feel have
improved.
First of all, the club in which students
may get training in newspaper work has
functioned well. There has been a time in
the history of Teco Echo when a show of
hands in mass meeting proclaimed the edi-
tors of the publications. The newly elected
staff members must have felt as if they had
been thrown into a river and told to sink
or swim, for they had no training. It took
a great deal of kicking for some of the edi-
tors to survive. We do not claim the pres-
ent editors are experienced college journa-
lists, but we feel as if they are much bet-
ter prepared for the work than they would
have been had they not had that training.
We have an official staff room, situated
so that it is available to every member of
the staff; we have placed in it magazines,
pamphlets, handbooks and catalogues that
will be useful to the staff next year. We be-
long, to such press organizations as the
North Carolina Press Association, and the
Associated Collegiate Press.
We send delegates to the semi-annual
N. C. C. P. A. conventions, and one of our
students has been elected secretary of that
organization for next year.
We plan for a better paper next year
but it is necessary that we have cooperation.
Experience has taught us that as grad-
uates we should not bid farewell to our col-
lege newspaper. There is no other organiza-
tion or publication that needs cooperation
and assistance from the graduates more
than the Teco Echo does. The Alumnae
should support it. The Administration can
more easily reach the alumnae with an-
nouncements that concern them through the
college newspaper. The alumnae associa-
tion may keep a more accurate roll and effi-
cient record. Not only will these items bene-
fit the graduates but they will also keep in
close touch with the happenings of the col-
lege. The Alumnae are still a vital part of
the college?the present graduates are not
bidding it farewell, they are yet a part of it.
The ideal paper must contain campus
future!news, and express student opinion frankly
A tribute from Walter Patton,
another close friend who is pas-
tor of the Hay Street Methodist
Church in Fayetteville, shows
Dr. Wright's attitude as a
churchman. He says:
Bob' Wright was a person to
whom his pastor loved to min-
ister, and by whom his pastor
loved to be ministered unto. As
a church official, he was inspir-
ing, helpful, encouraging and
brotherly in carrying its burdens
or in planning a broader scope
of its work. He lived on the
positive side of the Church's
activities with a creative spirit
to suggest, to cooperate, to car-
ry more than his full share of
the tasks and having put his
hand to the plow, he never look-
ed back, but went to the end of
the row.
His sincere love for the truth
and for goodness, his deep de-
sire for abundant life for people
gave him a spirit of sympathetic
attention, and an awareness to
enhance the ministry of his
church. Companionable, broth-
erly, considerate, with a rare
sense of humor, his was a fine
soul that inspired friends and co-
workers to nobler endeavors and
higher achievements. Hundreds
live to testify to a deeper sym-
pathy for mankind, to a more
tolerant attitude toward their
fellowmen and for a greater pas-
sion for righteousness because
they learned of the Spirit of the
Master by the precept and the
example of their Bible Class
teacher 'Bob' Wright
Mr. A. B. Andrews, attorney
and counsellor at law in Raleigh
gives the following tribute to
him:
"The death of Robert H.
Wright is a severe loss to the
State, especally the cause of edu-
cation.
An acquaintance with him at
Chapel Hill over thirty years ago
when we were in different class-
es, ripened in later years into
a friendship that made to me,
like everyone else who intimate-
ly knew Bob Wright, for the
high regard and esteem for him
that was justly due from every-
one.
At college he stood out indi-
vidually as a student and an
athlete, yet playing on the Uni-
versity football team demon-
strated his ability to work with
others, and subordinate himself
and his personality when it
would advance the cause. His
four years on the campus of the
University of North Carolina
was typical of his life work in
the world, and his manner of
dealing with affairs and men.
The State is richer for his
having lived, and much the loser
by his untimely death
Mr. F. C. Harding, prominent
attorney, who first knew Dr.
Wright when he was a freshman
at the University of North Caro-
lina, says this of him:
One misty gray day in Novem-
ber, 1894, in the late afternoon,
I first met Robert H. Wright. At
that time he was a freshman at
Chapel Hill. He came to me
and requested that I assist him
lina. but
country.
There was a strong tie of
friendship between us. I knew
him well. 1 knew his personal
traits, which gave added strength
of character of his individualism.
He did not copy any man. He;
was content to be himself. He
had ideals, and they all led him
to one common end. the fulfill-
ment of his mission in lift?the
uplift of humanity. He gave to
the college the best he had in
mind and soul. He made it
what it is.
His business standards had in
them a note of sympathy for our
tumanity. He lifted the
level of human ideals and
achievements a little higher than
he found them
He was in heart and soul a
good Rotarian. He read from
the Book of Nature the handi-
work of God.
May I say of my friend. Rob-
ert H. Wright, what Longfellow
said of his friend of Harvard
University.
"And Nature, the old nurse, took
the child upon her knee
Saying here is a story book, thy
father has written for thee
"Come, wander with me she
said, "into regions yet untrod;
And read what is still unread in
the manuscript of God
c-tiel:
ir.
Graph showing increase of
College for the past 25 j
SCIENCE CLUB MARKS
TRIP TO BEAUFORT
The Science CIu
structional trip to
investigate places
terest on Ma
took an in-
Beaufort to
of public in-
10th. The par-
lUt)
ty of fifty-eight science C
members and five members of
the faculty namely Miss Cassidy,
Miss Hunter, Miss Morton, Mr.
Deal and Mr. Henderson, in
college bus and six cars
met at the Mansion H
Beaufort about 10:30 by Jack
Humphrey, a former science stu-
dent of the college, who had
pared for out coming. He
a motor boat ready to
the crowd over to the
land, on which the museun
marine life, and terrapin
were located, and across
j sand to Port Macon.
The first trip was to the island
j After seeing many rare
beautiful speciments of marir
life and the experimental labora-
turn trip, t
gather flov i
bag suppei
Manv shell
mals wen broughi
college mu ?
SKIPPING 1 HI ROl
IMPROVES l - !
iRM
the
were
use in
pre-
had
take
is-
1 of
farm
the
Oxf
pi) ee
f H.
Early i
ter every
co-eds (
pound a
walks.
Mi
i.
K-
her t
nothi
and r
And he wandered av
away with nature, the
nurse.
Who sang to him night and
The rhymes of the Univer
F. C. Harding.
IDEAS AND TROUBLE
ay and I tones
dear old
The difference between ideas
and trouble is that trouble never
comes singlely, and ideas never
come any other way to an edi-
tor. That's why I can say only
one thing at a time and get it
accurate ?? (Yeah accurate)
Anyway here's a brief summary
of the past year, from a diary.
The fall term started out
swell?The frosh loved it?Hash,
heartache and homesickness, hap-
py upper classmen all added to
the torture?then initiation week
?how pleasant?Poes, Laniers,
and Emersons all seem to have
gone nertz on the subject of
rushing.?
Football?We won our first
game in our football history?
cheering college girls?touch-
down?Mad delirum?Press con-
vention?dances, late dates, and
the final for a few hearts?
Thanksgiving?followed by wor-
ry, exams, and flunk slips?I
really meant to study, I'd do it
next term, and show Mom and
Dad?Christmas holidays?
Winter term started?Registra-
tion?the usual confusion of long
lines, worried Frosh who can't
get straight, and Seniors who
have conflicts?new classes?
snow, sloshy snow?more snow
basketball?girl's team takes a
perfect record?peanuts and
chewing gum?two more minutes
to go?yelling crowds?stunt
night?dumb looking students?
term ends, and more snow, just
before we go home?registration
?a never ending thing?conflicts
confusion, and chaos?spring?
romance?Easter holidays?dissi-
pated was a mild way to express
how certain people looked?Con-
ventions?S. G. A Y. W. C. A
and Press Association?Seniors
Washington trip?elections?vote,
vote, vote?support my candi-
date?vote for?swell girl?of-
fices?campus leaders?Senior's
Bayview house party?class par-
ties?baseball games?swell team
?new coach?picnics?final ex-
ams?some flunks?scared Sen-
iors?tears, fond farewells?pros-
pects of jobs?and it's all over?
but all the time men, etc.
wtre visited. The club
then was taken over the diamond
terrapin farm. The Superinten-
dent explained to the club the
life habits of the valuable ani-
mals.
The lunch hour was then spent
at Atlantic Beach, where a de-
licious lunch, packed by Mrs.
Jeter was enjoyed by every one.
After lunch some went swim-
ming and wading, while others
picket! up shells along the edge
of the water.
About 2:00 the club left for a
three-mile boat ride to Fort Ma-
con. After visiting the fort
where the C. C. C. work of re-
constructing the fort was going
on they went up in the tower of
the life guard station. Here they
could see Cape Lookout which
was ten miles away. On the re-
CoRgratuiatiofi'
WARREN'S
DRUG
CO.
White's Stores. Inc.
Dickinson Av?-i.
Complete Store
Hose ? Dress -
Millinery
Underwear
LOOK YOUR BEST FOR COMMENCEMENT
WITH A WAVE FROM
The Rosebud Beauty Shop
Phone 379 State Bank Building
New Arrivals
COTTONS ? LACES ? SILKS
I Special Group Washable Silks
$3.95
BLOOM'S
If the theory that an emer-
gency suspends the constitution
once receives the clear sanction
of our highest court, then the end
of constitutional government in
the United States is measurably
in sight.?James M. Beck.
The Gloria Shoppe
Bids You A Good Vacation And A
Happy Return.
Make This Shoppe Your Headquarters
Whenever You Are In The City.
Gloria Shoppe
Five Points Greenville, N. C.
Wednesday ?" .
University Stud
Elect Minor
Undergra Usefuluau Accomj
Greenstx111 N (
average co . n a
today pi i. to
sport as 1? i '?-
goli rathe ketbal! ami th an
cause he k. tfn
nation h
any iie olthi
spor1 - but
or plaj ? ?; ? is is U Charming '
phj .? al ? men's Divis oi North C; Miss C ??ion I
pression si trend
Or
pi;
js r,
"We America
wise in many w
respects a nn
tor the monotonous pat
n rn life; and we in
iy begin to regiment lei
form it into the
that made us need leis
SHAWN SAYS DANCE
VIRILE AS FOOTBALL
O.
Clevela
Shawn, acknowledged .
a quarter of a centurj a
tr in the modem darn ?
nm " America, thinl
facing fOT men is jusl .
a "j as, .say football
Dancing, he said. i
aaisjcal or t-ffimmate ?
? - exercise for m
W not referring to the
modern interpret v
ng' m which men with
"es strip to the wais
nands ar'd go whirling ,
'n8 about a stage.
Jhe dancer sald he hopi
; 'e American phys ? 1
?2 th3t ? : e
;t and healthful J
gand ls th, propt.r
k- outf3ow ?'
4 of fadlsts inf
rv Z ? he id. "The
2i; geminate stra
lifcVL- ' ep!vi?mmated th
Ha TUrieS' but nev
' .M ,Wt wa"t to do awav
.r.rn dancmg shoujQ
Lngf?,f lhe epicene fH
P ; fiov
bune tur art n the p
JJ? himself appears -
f the 'UrVhe cart?orust's
roW?H Strai8ht
anouldered ac , ,tJ
tiered wall
fc? 27 h ?Ut I
P ?f thp account
P he hi, SUmer tri
?k6' in the ?rLP??r H
Astern otrKure Hillsl
Ste :nty sr J
They 2 sumrner . J
TJS ditches- d? m
dan bUlld roads a?? I
b5 5? thck to earth J
P realill hem the simP
KJ at I demand
? then!0011 ioke on even
I theJ?lnun?ts turned o1
IUl J2 ones you could





May 3Q t
Wednesday, May 30, 1934.
University Students;
Elect Minor Sports
Undergraduates Now Prefer
Useful Accomplishments
THE TECO ECHO
PRESIDENT OF
ALUMNAE ASSOCIATION
boro, N. C?(IP)?The
college man and woman
? tVis to take up such
tennis, swimming and
her than football, bas-
Rd baseball, chiefly be-
knows that after grad-
e can't make much ft
ol the so-called major
ul he can always swim
? i or tennis.
? belief of Miss Mary
Coleman, director of
education at the Wo-
? isi n of the University
Carolina.
teman believes the de-
started a wholesome
ay from over-emphasis
mdling" of the major
giate sports, but she
t ?? ve that intereolle
ts will be or should be
DR. McCLOY STUDIES
INTELLIGENCE TYPES
Page Three
MISS ELIZABETH C. SMITH
ate sports
ated to the
hi! TIM. Fill ROPE
? 1 S ONE'S I ORM
the
the
should
whole
lucation program she
ink it is wrong to use
tthletes to advertise an
especially girls teams,
s today are less inter-
atching someone else
in playing themselves.
nic situation has given
i student a keener
dative values, and in
s favorite sport he
himself, "What will I
e new notes in educa-
she said, are (1) edu-
ise of leisure time, (2)
as a socializing pro-
? '? I education of the
on, physically as well
an.
URGES NEW ORDER
THROUGH DEMOCRACY
Congratulations!
WARRENS
DRUG
CO.
White's Stores, Inc.
Dickinson enu
Complete Store
Hin' ? Dresses
Millinery
Underwear
a past president
can Physical Educa-
tion, docs not be-
er, in "regimenta-
use of leisure time.
uans she said, "so
y ways, are in other
queer people. The
is handed us as an
the machine age,
otonous pattern of
and we immediate- ton
regiment leisure, to
? the same pattern
is need leisure
Boston, Mass.?(IP)improve
meat of democracy rather than
adoption of either Fascism or
Communism or search for other
"isms" is urged as the "way to
a new American social order" by
John J. Mahoney, professor of
education and social philosophy
at Boston University.
Professor Mahoney's definition
of "a better social order for
America" is "one in which the
people possess an understanding
of and are actuated by those mo-
tives which make for better liv-
ing together and for better man-
agement of our democracy
To accomplish this better so-
cial order, Professor Mahoney
holds, education must place less
importance on vocational train-
ing and education for the new
leisure" and spend more time
developing in students an intel-
ligent understanding of the na-
tion's political, social and econo-
mic life.
"Unless we progress toward
the better social order we will
have no need for the vocational
training and the education for
leisure he said. "We'll have too
much leisure and we'll be hav-
ing more marches on Washing-
SH
II
AWN SAYS DANCE
AS FOOTBALL
a if.
i ()R COMMENCEMENf
w E I UOM
bud Beauty Shop
State Hank BaiidiBf I
. O. ? (IP) Ted
Wlodged for nearly
a century as a lead-
lodera dance move-
nerica, thinks that
men is just as virile
aj football.
I ? said, is not lacka-
ffiminate, but a red-
reise for men. He
?rring to the fox-trot,
rn interpretive danc-
?h men with strong
p to the waist, grasp
10 whirling and leap-
stage.
?aid he hoped to
terican physical edu-
dancing can be as
"I want to insist that a way to
a better social order is a road to
a better democracy. Democracy
is peculiarly the American way
of life, and has been since the
beginning. We don't need to
chase after any new isms. Let's
improve what we already have
An informed public opinion, he
said, would correct most of the
evils of the present order, the
difficulty having been that the
general public never lias had an
accurate idea of what the evils
of the present order were.
As examples of how little the
public has known and cared
about evil conditions in the poli-
tical and economic life, he point-
ed to the fact that only 40 per-
cent of the electorate voted in
the 1920 election.
"The American people have
been content he said, "to turn
over their thinking at election
time to clever people who can
invent slogans for them. At
Arrivals
( KS ? SILKS
;roun Washable Silks
?.?
OOM'S
healthful as any
proper element election time many newspapers
deliberately lie to the public
about past events because they
know there is no intelligent
knowledge on the part of the
public as to what has gone on
loria Shoppe
Good Vacation And A
Happ) Return.
I! Shopee Your Headquarters
Nr You Are In The City.
?ria Shoppe
Greenville. N. C
? outflow of emo-
1 fadists infests this
' said. "They car-
minate strain in
minated the last
?-? but never before
to do away with.
'ancing should be
r epicene flutter-
?? laisical flowings
t in the public
-f appears miles
the cartoonist's idea
Straight and
ddered as a fullback,
ured walk suggests a
! much as a dancer.
Wkt comes out even
the lively account he
the summer training
; es-ablished for his
ich and poor youths
the Berkshire Hills in
"?'?'? Massachuseg,
1 twenty boys i?e there
? thi summer ve said.
-? dig ditches, do au the
wk, build roads and ac.
dancing in a big barn, j
15 them back to earth. jt
Bive them the simplify
raiism that I demand in m.
Peg
Rev. Richard E. Shields, secre-
tary of the conference of Com-
munity Church Workers at Kan-
sas City, told the convention that
Rural America would be better
off if 30,000 country churches
were abandoned in favor of
united community places of wor-
ship.
The Student Congress, under-
graduate self-governing body at
the University of Maryland, was
abolished when the students
made drastic changes in their
government-setup.
Temple University, long known
in Philadelphia as the "School
Without a Campus is to have a
campus. It will be a plot on
Watts street, and although it will
not be very large, students are
making quite a bit of it.
A plea was received by Wash-
ington and Lee University re-
tently to send a student well
versed in the art of modern ball
room dance to the fastnesses of
the Blue Ridge Mountains to
a good joke on everybooy
? Communists turned out to m. mut. magt; WilunuilIIS io
fill R'V ?mS y?U ?OUld trusWteach some of the boys at a CCC
Miamp there how to dance.
Iowa City, Ia(IP)Just be-
cause you don't understand the
Einstein theory is no proof that
you are not intelligent.
If you don't know what to do
when your automobile breaks
down on a lonely road, that is
no sign you are not intelligent.
If you make dumb remarks at
a party, you may still be intelli-
gent.
If you pick up a fumbled foot-
ball two yards from the oppon-
ent's goal line and run 98 yards
for a safety for the opposing
team, you still may not be lack-
ing in intelligence.
Evan if it takes you weeks to
learn how to do new things with
your arms or legs, like swim-
ming or hitting a golf ball or
dodging traffic you may be intel-
ligent.
But if you are deficient in all
these things, you had better re-
serve a place for yourself in a
home for the feeble-minded, be-
cause there isn't much hope for
you.
There has been a lot of loose
talk about intelligence, especially
about intelligence on and off the
college gridiron, in the opinion
of Dr. C. H. McCloy, professor
of anthropometry and physical
education at the University of
Iowa here.
In the course of scientific
studies of college athletes, Dr.
McCloy has arrived at the con-
clusion that there are at least
four types of intelligence, and
possibly five.
If you have only one of those
types of intelligence, people with
other types of intelligence are
likely to think you are dumb,
but you can laugh up your sleeve
because you know that by the
same reasoning they probably
are just as dumb. If anyone has
all four or five kinds of intelli-
gence, it is to be assumed he is
pretty much a superman, and
you should not be too envious.
The first kind, Mr. McCloy
said, is abstract intelligence, the
kind that makes it possible for
people to solve deep and abstract
problems. Einstein is probably
at the top of this list, but most
of your good college profs have
that kind also.
The second kind is concrete in-
telligence, which is the kind a
good mechanic, a good watch re-
pair man, or a good, all-around
handy man has. These two
forms of intelligence, Dr. Mc-
Cloy said, are often related, but
not necessarily so.
Third, there is social intelli-
gence, the kind that keeps you
from swearing in front of the
parson or telling smutty stories
when the dean of women is one
of the guests. In other words,
if you have this kind of intelli-
gence, you have tact.
Then there is what Dr. McCloy
calls athletic intelligence, and
more athletes than not have it.
The man with this kind of intel-
ligence may flunk every course
in college, or he may get a Phi
Beta Kappa key?he's intelligent
just the same.
The fifth form of intelligence,
Dr. McCloy calls motor educa-
bility, though he doesn't insist on
it. It is the ability to learn new
skills quickly. Some good ath-
letes have it, some good athletes
don't have it.
I know of a man who nearly
got thrown off the football team
the first two years he played
said Dr. McCloy, "but in his sen-
ior year he made the AU-Ameri-
can. That man had slow motor
educability. But once he got all
the important points of the game
drilled into his head, he was a
smarter football player than the
rest of them
Dr. McCloy has invented a
mathematical formula which,
when applied to a college fresh-
man, or anybody else, shows just
how good an athlete he can be if
he wants to be, and also what
kind of sport he will be best at.
It shows what his horse-power
is, what his motor educability is,
what size and maturity he has
reached, and how agile he is.
"I can apply this test to a
freshman class he said, "and
pick out every potential athlete
in the crowd, provided when he
takes the tests he really tries. If
the tests say he wiU be a good
athlete, he will be one, and I'll
bet on that
AUSTIN BUILDING
LARGE NUMBER
STUDENTS ARE
TO GRADUATE
(Continued from first page)
Elizabeth Tetterton, Hilda Mar-
garet Thompson, Laura H. Thorn-
ton, Alva Van Nortwick, Mar-
garet Walter, George W. Wilkcr-
son, Helen Forbes White, Ola
Williams, Ruth Williams, Mattie
Christine Wilson, Mary Belle
Wilson, Hazel Marie Woodard.
Three University of Minnesota
students were found guilty of
selling stolen books and placed
on probation. The lenient penal-
ties came after the students had
replaced the books.
Two-Year Normal Graduates
Etta Frances Aiken, Margaret
Anderson, Ruby Jane Andrews,
Annie Laurie Askew, Gladys
Baker, Louise K. Banck, Rachel
Loui e Barbee, Mollie Neal Bar-
ringer, Rose Bateman, Julia Mae
Bordeaux, Norma Rivers Boyles,
Katherine Louise Bradley, Cath-
erine Braswell, Elizabeth M.
Britt, Dorothy V. Brooks, Alma
Broughton, Lydia Lee Brumley,
Blanche Lucille Chappell, Rosa
Cleo Collins, Eleanor Daly, Mar-
tha Marie Daniels, Maxine Dan-
iels, Edna Darden, Margaret E.
Daughtridge, Sidney Davenport,
Evelyn Inez Davis, Mary Ruth
Davis, Florence Eagles, Dorothy
Lee Earle, Emma Ellen Earley,
Ila Gray Eason, Rebecca Ed-
wards, Mary Olive Ellenberg,
Lucy E. Ethridge, Emma Pauline
Finch, Frances Gertrude Fleet-
wood, Laura Smith Fleming, Al-
ma Marie Godfrey, Mary Ruth
Fulton, Grace Griffin, Alma
Hammond, Laura Harrell, Lu-
cille Harris, Elizabeth M. Helms,
Sarah B. Herring, Janie Sue Hes-
ter, Helen H. Hinton, Roslyn
Hollingsworth, Annie Laurie
Hudson, Alma Earle Ivey, James
Jackson, Lessie Mae Jennings,
Hazel Go Nelle Kimrey, Pearl
Lautares, Florence Lucille Long,
Alice Elizabeth Manning, Lessie
May, Ruby Lee May, Elizabeth
W. McGhee, Janice E. McGowan,
Catherine McNair, Lois Byrd
Moore, Louise Blount Marris,
Jessie Munn, Sue Taylor Myers,
Athaleah Muse, Sue Noell, Ruth
Hood Norton, Margaret Lee Old-
ham, Emma Avent Outterbridge,
Betsy Parker, Lillie Frank Peace,
Florence Peacock, Mildred Pelt,
Rebecca Pittman, Julia Evelyn
Pollock, Minnie Carol Pollock,
Annie Neal Prevatte, Marjorie A.
Pritchard, Daisy Cox Purnell,
Norma Redfearn, Margaret I.
Rawls, Lina Naomi Riddick, Dora
DeGrace Rountree, Mary Louise
Rives, Miriam Maxine Sloan,
Hannah Frances Snead, Hazel
Louise Spivey, Inez Stevens, Bet-
ty Stuckey, Isabel Mason Suiter,
Eleanor A. Thompson, Minnie
Lee Thompson, Virginia Dare
Tilley, Minnie Lou Tomlinson,
Mamie Ross Trexler, Eva Mae
Turnage, Catherine Tyson, Emily
von Milgram, Stella Almeda
Walston, Erna Lee Watson, Liz-
zie Johnson White, Gladys Iona
Wesy, Elsie Nadine Whitley, Win-
ston Camille Wicker, Louise Ver-
non Wilder, Ruth Willard, Fran-
ces W. Williams, Reba New Wil-
son, Reba Carson Winstead, Ma-
vis Woodard, Willie Hazel Wood-
ard, Sara Mae Woodard.
Congratulations
to thk
East Carolina Teach
eacners
Colleg
OX ITS
25th Anniversary
Under the CWA a genuinely
natural art has been developed.
?Anna Roosevelt Dall.





t
Wednesday. May 30 19
Pace Four
THE TECO ECHO
Wednesday
n
C
T
h
B
V
N umerous People
Pay Tribute To
Dr. R. II Wright
High State And National Of-
ficials, Ministers, School
People, Alumnae, And Stu-
dents Are Among Those To
Verbally Honor Late Col-
lege President.
Mrs. R, II. Wright has received
a targe number of letters and
t li -rams from high Slate offi-
ials, presidents of other colleges,
? lucational leaders, groups of
; ! imnae, school people, minis-
'? . lvot.iiins, bankers, and oth-
ers, paying splendid tribute to
husband, the late president
of this college. Some of them
given here.
A. M Proctor of Duke School
ol Education, and who has been
? mber of the faculty here for
several summers says this of Dr.
Wright:
"North Carolina has too few
men of ins character and ability
and 1 do not know how he can
be replaced. I was talking to
Dr E C. Brooks, of State College
t( day and he was deploring the
thai we cannot have Bob
g t to help us in the fight for
the salvation of the public
schools at this critical period
T. Wingate Andrews, Superin-
tendent of the High Point
schools, and who was the 1933
i inders' Day speaker, says:
"He was as true a man as I
have ever known?unpretentious
an 1 sincere, a man for whom I
: . I the utmost respect and in
ill
?
I
iv. In
. n1 m
me
all :
him
?m a
I col' 1
tad unguarded confi-
character and to some
nppearanee he remind-
Abraham Lincoln. I
better characterization
tan Edwin Markham's
hich the poet refers to
L coin as a ordly cedar going
down and leaving a lonesome
place against the sky'
Carrol G. Pearse, Secretary-
General of the Horace Mann
League (if U. S. A. gives this
tribute:
' We can ill spare pur warm
fi ends, and high minded citi-
zens like Robert are not easily
replaced
W. R. Mills, of the Louisburg
Public Schools, says:
His genial friendship, his
wise counsel, and never-failing
optimism we will miss
Rescue D. McMillan, District
Governor of the 57th District
I; tary Club says:
"Dr. R. II. Wright was a noted
educator, a splendid citizen, and
a valuable rotarian The Gov-
ernor's message was as follows:
His splendid service to the
State and to the institution that
he served so well made him an
invaluable servant of the people
and I am sure I express the re-
gret and bereavement of the en-
tire commonwealth
Lindsay Warren, of the U. S.
House of Representatives, says:
"The State loses a grsat citi-
zen and a noble man and his me-
mory will be treasured
From Josephus Daniels, the U.
S. Ambassador to Mexico, comes
tliis tribute, that he wrote to
Mrs. Wright:
"It is not only a loss to you
and to his family and friends,
but a severe blow to the college
which, in a large sense, is his
lengthened shadow, and to the
cause of the public education
which namely used his able and
courageous leadership
Wm. Louis Poteat, President
emeritus of Wake Forest Col-
lege says that:
"He was the type of public
servant North Carolina can ill
afford to lose
President Bruce R. Payne, of
Peabody College wired: "A great
educator and a noble man has
passed. We shall not see his like
again
President Thurman D. Kitchen,
of Wake Forest wired: "The
state and the whole cause of edu-
cation have suffered an irrepar-
able loss
President E. C. Brooks, of
State College wired: "He accom-
plished much for the state, and
the college will forever stand as
a monument to him
President Walter L. Lingle, of
Davidson College said: "North
Carolina has lost a citizen and
educator
President H. T. Hunter, of
Western State Teachers College,
Cullowhee. wired: "He has been
a courageous, dynamic educa-
tional leader
North Carolina and its educa-
tional progress suffered a severe
loss in the death of your distin-
guished husband and father. He
not only beonged to you but to
the state and nation
Many other colleges have sent
telegrams and letters of condo-
lence to the family of Dr. Wright
and to the student body of the
college. Among those colleges
were Oak Ridge Institute, where
Dr. Wright was prepared for col-
lege, and taught at one time,
Flora MacDonald, Davidson, Ash-
ville Normal, Campbell, Guil-
ford, Chowan, Louisburg, W. C.
of U. N. C, and some South
Carolina colleges.
The following excerpts from
letters and telegrams show that
leaders in the religious world
also highly valued him.
L. L. Gobbel, Executive Sec-
retary of Board of Christian
Education, Methodist Episcopal
Church, South, states that "His
fine appreciation of our program
and his fine support of it we
shall miss greatly, and more than
all, the fine spirit of the man
B. W. Spilman, Field Secretary
of Sunday School Board of
Southern Baptist Convention
wrote: "He loved God and hu-
manity. He gave himself with-
out reserve to his work. The
world is poorer and heaven is
richer because he has gone
W. A. Stanbury, Pastor of
West Market Street Methodist
Church, Greensboro, North Caro-
lina, says that: "The Methodist
Church in North Carolina also
suffers the loss of one of her
finest leaders, and here again it
is true that, though dead, his
life will go on speaking to the,
heart of the Church and of all
good people for unnumbered
years to come
H. Frederick Jones, former
minister of the Baptist Church
here says: "He was easily the
first citizen of your little city.
First in a great understanding of
the problems, and supreme need
of your community and great in
his effort to solve the problems
and meet the needs
People prominent in the poli-
tical world also miss him great-
ly.
Heriot Clarkson, Associate
Justice of the Supreme Court of
North Carolina says: "He stood
for all that was best in this com-
monwealth. His life was a bless-
ing and benediction
Chief Justice, W. P. Stacy
wired: "To those of us whom
your distinguished husband hon-
ored with his friendship the
news of his death comes as aa
shock, but we are comforted in
the thought that North Carolina
is a better state for his having
lived and labored in it
Old friends, whom he had
known in school and business
sent letters and telegrams.
George Stephens, friend and
classmate: "He will be greatly
missed, and I know of few men
in the State whose work and
worth have been more widely
valued. His successful leader-
ship in the educational forces of
the States made him an out-
standing man, and with all his
strength and sweetness of char-
acter, so well known to his
friends, make his passing to all
of us a deep personal loss.
John Wilbur Jenkins, who had
known him well since the early
days in Baltimore, wrote Mrs.
Wright this: "Your devoted and
distinguished husband who is re-
membered affectionately in
Maryland as well as North Caro-
lina not only for his notable ser-
vice, but for the spirit and per-
sonality which impressed all
with whom he came in contact,
that won acquaintances and as-
sociates, and made them life-long
friends
Many members of the alumnae
association expressed their deep
grief at his passing.
Mrs. C. C. Alexander says: "I
esteemed Dr. Wright for his
kindliness of spirit and his wor-
thy achievements. The profound
admiration as a father I have al-
ways felt for him
Edith Matthews Hooks: "I
think I loved Mr. Wright next
to my Daddy. (Her father was
L. L. Matthews who taught in
the first summer school). I
think he was one of the most
unselfish, sympathetic persons I
have ever known
Mrs. Geo. W. Bradshaw, who
was Mary Newby White, states:
"I am so glad that I was one of
the thousands who had personal
contact with one whose life
meant so mcuh to me. I am
our President and faculty mem-
mers better than those of later
years have been able to know
them
Pauline Smith, who is also N.
C. District Home Demonstration
agent, wrote the following to
President Wright during his ill-
ness: "I wonder if you realize
just what you have meant to our
Eastern section. You do not go
in the homes that I do. You do
not have an opportunity to see
the changes which have been
brought about by the graduates
from Teachers College
A student pays his tribute to
Dr. Wright, by "A conclusive
evidence of a man's sincerity is
that he gives himself for a prin-
ciple. Mundane gains are com-
paratively easy to give away,
but when a man gives his life
and practice daily for twenty-
five years, it is evident that the
truth, whatever it may be, has
taken possession of him. One of
many of President Wright's most
admirable characteristics, I
think, was his profound sincerity.
He was honest and straightfor-
ward in every act. Under his
guidance, students were inspired
by his noble character to higher
ideals. Always will the students
and graduates of E. C. T. C. be
indebted to our beloved Presi-
dent, Dr. Robert Herring Wright,
for his benevolent leadership
A faculty member says of him:
"One trait which always inspired
me with admiration was a cer-
tain phase of personal control.
He was blessed, or cursed, with
a temper not surpassed in the
most highly refined strips of
steel. To make such a form of
energy an ally of his rather than
an enemy was almost a life-long
struggle of his. I have witness-
ed some of these battles; I have
also witnessed some of his con-
quests. Only in such moments
was one privileged to know the
true mastery of the man. And
therein lay a trait of his person-
ality which a true evaluation can-
not ignore
FRANK A HOIK BAS
TO BLOW IHS OWN HOB
Cleveland,
Polk, smiling :
John Carroll 1
it is pivtt tOUJ
has to blow h
Frank
Carroll p ibl i il
that v. hen the
it activity ? ; .
to go and ? U
about it Y' ?
that goi to
blowing his ?? ???
(IP.
The
-eni
pi.
The
ENTRANCE COLLEGE PARK FIELD
club in North Carolina to join
this national organization.
There are now about sixty
members of the club. Any per-
son having had six hours of
science with an average grade
of a three is eligible.
The year's work will be
brought to a close with the in-
stallation of new- officers and the
initiation of new members. These
ceremonies will be followed by a
weiner roast.
CORNELL UNIVERSITY IS
REPRESENTED IN ADM.
Y.?(IP)? Cornell
represented in the
SCIENCE CLUB HAS
A SUCCESSFUL
YEAR
(Continued from first page)
President L. E. Smith, of Elonlglad that I was in the third
College wired: "The State ofgraduating class. Then we knew
lift pump, telegraph set, electric
rotator, electric motor, phono-
graph and optical disc. Sound,
electricity, steam engines, water
power, and simple machines will
be illustrated.
The past year has been the
most outstanding year that the
Science Club of this college has
ever experienced and under the
leadership of Clyde Brown, this
year's president, the club has
made considerable progress. The
success of the club is largely at-
tributed to the interest and abil-
ity that Clyde Brown and the
faculty advisor, Miss Lorraine
Hunter, have exhibited. The un-
usually good programs, the coop-
eration among the members of
the club with the officers, and
the work of the officers have
made possible a very successful
year.
There has been a great deal
of interest taken in the pro-
grams of the club, for they have
been planned in such a way that
they have been interesting, enter-
taining, and educational to the
students interested in Science.
Such programs gave an insight
as to the value of Aviation, a
Century of Progress in Science,
Physiological effects of Movies
and Alcohol, reviews of such
books as "A Hundred Million
Guinea Pigs A part of each
monthly meeting was set aside
for a report on Current Science
given each time by Robert Sugg
Fleming.
The Club has not limited its
speakers to the campus, but
have secured speakers from oth-
er colleges or from town. Dr. K.
B. Pace, local physician, gave a
very interesting talk at one of
the meetings on "Modern Medi-
cine As a climax to the year's
programs, Dr. Charles W. Ed-
wards, from Duke University
gave a Liquid Air Demonstra
tion.
Dr. Edwards is nationally
known for his liquid air demon-
strations, and the club feels very
fortunate in having him here.
Another feature instigated this
year was a trip of scientific va-
lue which will be an annual
thing. The club this year visited
the Government Biological Lab-
oratory in Beaufort, Fort Macon
and Atlantic Beach.
The accomplishment that the
club members are most enthu-
siastic about is the fact that the
club is now a member of the
Student Science Clubs of Amer-
ica. This club is the second
Ithaca, N.
University is
Roosevelt administration by
some professors who have been
setting the financial world on its
ear.
But to Dr. Livingston Farrand.
president of Cornell University,
the present trend in economics
is just about as bewildering as it
is to you and me. At least he
says it is.
"Whv I am just as bewildered
about it all as the average
householder he told newspaper
men last week. "I try to follow
the trend of events closely, but
the picture changes so rapidly
that I find myself baffled. I
have to sit down and try to think
it all out
One thing surprises the Cor-
nell president?that there is no
more violence in the country.
"I believe this is due to the
great intelligence of the Ameri-
can people he said. "Before
they will attempt to tier or tear
things up they will do a great
deal of calm considering.
"One of the surprising things
about the current depression is
that the attendance at colleges
and universities has not dimin-
ished as would be expected. Par-
ents and students are making
great sacrifices to keep their
children and themselves in
school
Dr. Farrand believes the typi-
cal American college student is
becoming a bit more politically-
minded and is studying current
affairs with much more interest.
Education Must Be
Changed To Develop
Individual Says Cobb
Washington ?(IP)? The aver-
age man and woman of the fu-
ture will equal the ordinary
scientists of today in ability to
think clearly, in the opinion of
Stanwood Cobb, founder of the
Progressive Education Associa-
tion and director of the Chevy
Chase Country Day School here.
Before society realizes that
high intellectual standard, how-
ever. Cobb says, education must
be changed from "the standard-
ized mass production of today to
the development of the indivi-
dual child to the maximum of
his talents and abilities.
"At present Cobb says, "We
are giving the youth in our high
schools and colleges neither en-
thusiasms nor convictions. We
are not training them in habits
of intellectual initiative or judg-
ment. We are not, except in
some few departments of science,
heightening their creative pow-
ers
Cobb contends that the stand-
ardized schools cause students to
lose their innate enthusiasms
and become secretive and insin-
cere while their intellectual
earnestness and integrity van-
ishes by degrees.
Cobb frankly admires the will-
fulness of adolescent youth
which he says most educators
and parents deplore. He advises
educators to take advantage of
this willfulness to develop a
method of education which will
be "a fertile field for the aggres-
sive skeptical quality of youth
"PAINLESS LEARNING" IS
HYPNOTISM EXPERIMENT
?? ? 1'
got it:
to say.
Then
theater si
president.
?r a
We
II. I
lews Service)
hilt you learn" may
e academic motto of the fu-
if experiments started this
by Dr. Ralph B. Winn, of
logy department of
York City College prove a
(By Colleg
"Sleep
be t
lure
wee
the psycho
New
success. Dr. Winn explained
that the ten students chosen for
the test are in reality placed in
a state of hyposis during the ex-
periment.
The students, he explained, sit
silently for a short time, while
small gray balls are suspended
before their eyes. Only a few
minutes elapse before their eyes
shut aufc matically.
??Yet they are not asleep ac-
cording to Dr. Winn. ?"They are
in a state of 'light hyposis I
then begin to lecture in a slow
even tone, attempting to evoke
clear-cut visions in the student's
minds. Actually their minds will
be wide-awake, listening to me,
and in their imagination they
will be taken to the places about
which I am lecturing or the
scenes I am depicting
Conclusions will be based on
reports which the professor, his
aides and the students themselves
will prepare. If the experiments
are a success. Dr. Winn believes
that a method of instructing stu-
dents will have been discovered
which will make it possible for
students to gain certain types of
th? newspapi r
thinktng th
anyhiW
?1a m
Fr:ink . i
H-K)S?V it ' .
ofthe SCh
toargUe v. : . ?
1"V!rs 31
thebate, ai
gt 1llT i VI U i1
d?ntRot ?? vt 1
mA!power (;f A 1
hopethe
b;rrsfcSS F:
m ?(. ? : . "
wIll be .
manof Carr
way.
Iftii n i
bt'i of the
bjau
Siiitd Bit :
information in
weeks, instead
a few days
of months.
or
pro-
of
It is our own abundance which
compels us to make radiheal
changes.?Rexford G Tugwell.
Asserting that another war
"would be a terrible disaster for
the United States 107 college
presidents of the United States
have sent a letter to President
Roosevelt urging immediate pas-
sage of anti-war legislation.
Home Grocery Store
NUMBER ONE
200 E. Fifth St. Phone 383
"Quality and Service"
We Carry a complete line of
Groceries. Meats and
Vegetables
N. H. Whitehurst, Manager
Jatie Spain, Asst. Manager
A nine-point educational
gram urging consolidation
small school districts into larger
administrative units and broad-
ening the basis of taxation for
school support was acted upon
by the National Congress of Par-
ents and Teachers at Des Moines,
Iowa, last week.
COLLEGE GIRLS
MAKK UP YO! K K.11T
MEAL Ml M
From This Line?
iI
.U?e
Garris Grocery
?Phone
204 Fifth St
We Thank You
We've appreciated your patronage and are
looking forward to serving you again.
MillerJones Co.
408 Evans Street
LAUTARES'
"Fine Jewelry For Less Money'
DIAMONDS and WATCHES
Watch, Clock, Jewelry Repairing
Engraving
Quality Work Reasonable
Pri
DO YOU WANT A GOOD PAYING
POSITION?
Why Not Study Bookkeeping, Shorthand
and Typewriting.
Just The Course For Your Summer Vacation
Call or Write
Mrs. V. C Baker
Phones 697 or 885-J Greenviile. N. c
Thorson School of Beauty
Culture
Work Done Exclusively by students
Permanent Waves
HALLIWELL METHOD
$2.50 and $5.00
ALWAYS INSIST O
LANCE'S
Peanut Butter Sandwiches. Salted Peanuts and Car-
dies. They are made uader the most sanitary
conditions and are lwys fresh. Call for
them at your fsvorite soda fountain.
Club SP
Golden Cheese
N
Upper
Gam
visa
Kapelec J&
Jt-nr.
and Burn ??,
out nim ? ? .
Th. ,
tyoe to be i
How -
contests i
future.
Scon- by ini
Jrs. and Si,
fr. and S
RESOUTIOVx
' l
;??
From Board Of
Jarvis M.moriai
hun1
Where
God, our 1
brother, R
be? called
the larger
whereat, be
years a fth'ful
bar of our
cieni memo
board:
Wt the members
of Stewards of J,
r'?il Method Chw
v'JIe. North Caratti
resolve;
St. that jarv
Methodist Church rt
has lost one of its
and efficient n
Ways stood readv to
every call of duty
ri?h gifts to the fin
Christ's Kingdom, ai
to bis church the .at
"?Vice that won fur
c?nspicious Pia? in
sional life.
Second, That we rec
our city has lost one
valuable cozens, whu
himself with worthy
x?r the advancement
al and civic hfe
Third, That the Sta
Carolina has lost a c
Save conspicious serV,
youth of our commonw
played a large p
or the most valuable c
enterprises of our wb
8'ving himself without i
;hfe w"rthy endeavors
tent of perhapg shord
X" because of his dej
these worthy tasks.
fourth. That we re:
mmend to the youti
commonwealth, for wh
tm? he labored so unj
rough the whole of h
noh?1' the hih examP
"ODleman who constantl
K did itice, and
humbly with his God
LJf1' That a copy
solutions be place?
lnuteSofthisboard,ac
C ta the daily pape
y ??Py published
atT Carolina Christia
. and a copy tn
1





Ml K II Vs
Wedi day. May 30, 1934.
mh A
at
LII d 1e i II A
i ? aii n a t
means
? 5 w ants
. d Polk baa
newspapers
: ' ask what
with Frank
n WYH
? ted a new
the um-
merited
. ask. Frank
sident, Frank
?? IS.
av? a gold
and ti.i the
1 vi. who
? i. Frank has
ity's little
ted new
was it
. ked Frank,
? m there
OLLEGE GIRLS
I
XK, ii YOIU NH.HT
Ml XI MF.M
Irom Fhis line?
t r.ukers
( heeac
r, -h Bread
M.l nllliaiM'
Potted Meats
i, inn OaaBUfwn
i'uklev
lust UgM Tomit'
Olives
Boiled Ba?
l tuit
(.tapes
karris Grocery
Fifth St.
.phone
RES'
less Mone"
Id WATCHES
tlr Kepairintf
ink'
Reasonable i
I GOOD PAYING
kRccpinp. Shorthand
feewntinz.
Vaeati
C. Baker
ville. N. c
THE TECO ECHO
Page Five
PIRATES FINISH
SUCCESSFUL SEASON
Upper Classmen Take First
Game From Frosh And Soph:
SPORTS
George S. Willard, Jr Sports Editor
NEXT INTRAMURAL
GAME SATURDAY
Game Of Series Is Won
Juniors And Seniors.
AL SCORE IS 8 TO 4
!ec, Jennings, And John-
Do Heavy Hitting For
and Sophs; Bostic
d Ridenhour Lead Up-
Classnrn n
ursday afternoon the
i Seniors proved their
- by defeating the rep-
f the Freshmen
more classes to the
8-4 The game was the
series of three to be
the teams. At no time
contest decidedly one-
Jennings, and John-
he heavy hitting for
and Sophs, and Bostic
idenhour led the upper
Easom, Kapelec, Bos-
ggett, Barrett, and Hodges
in the field. Johnson
? '? would have been cham-
e-stealer, but Bostic fin-
igged him between the
Building and the Library.
;1 Pirates, eh boys?)
ings and Dunn did fine
?rk for the underclass-
wing only eight hits,
rnette's pitches were hit
I imes.
game is the first of its
be .laved at E. C. T. C.
the results were so
i g that more intramural
may be held here in the
Sports Comments
Hats off to Dr. A. D. Frank,
coach of baseball during the past
season. Under his direct.cn the
Pirates not only greatly im-
proved their playing in each
game, but won half of the games
played.
Lets have more intramural
athletic contests in the future
The first game of this type, has
shown just how successful the
undertaking may be. All the
players in this game showed fine
sportsmanship, and appeared to
have a "great time
Pirates Win Game
From A.CC Team
Preston Dunn Pitches Second
Consecutive Win; E. C. T.
C. Bats Out Nine Hits Be-
hind The Two-Hit Pitching
Of Dunn.
HEADS VARSITY CLUB
FINAL SCORE IS 6 TO 0
Dunn, Kapelec, Barrett, And
Easom, Feature At Bat For
Pirates; Barrett Gets A
Homer; S. R. Lee Stars
For Wilson Team.
Here and There
by innings:
id Srs. .010102 000-8
: Sphs. 110 0 0 1 100-4
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPEOT
I n?m Board Of Stewards Of
lirvis Memorial Methodist
Church.
Greet!
1ST (
CE'S
Peanut:
. V ? the most sanitaO
fresh. Caller
,e soda fountain.
Sped3'
rjub
tereas m the providence of
our beloved friend and
r, Hubert H. Wright has
called from our midst into
irger sphere of life; and
as, he was for twenty-five
faithful and useful mem-
ur church and an effi-
n.ember of our official
the members of the Board
wards of Jarvis Men.o-
lethodist Church of Green-
North Carolina, do hereby
- that Jarvis Memorial
dist Church realizes that it
t (me of its most faithful
nt members, who al-
itood ready to respond to
call of duty and lend his
fts to the furtherance of
I s Kingdom, and who gave
church the same devoted
? that won for him such a
ious place in his profes-
tl life.
nd, That we recognize that
ity has lost one of its most
able citizens, who identified
If with worthy movements
he advancement of its moral
? and civic life.
i That the State of North
lina has lost a citizen who
c"nspicious service to the
I our commonwealth, and
iyed a large part in one
' most valuable educational
prises of our whole nation,
g himself without stint to
worthy endeavors to the
?! perhaps shortening his
because of his devotion to
worthy tasks.
irth. That we respectfully
nd to the youth of our
nwealth, for whose wel-
he labored so unceasingly
' the whole of his public
r, the high example of this
man who constantly "loved
? did justice, and walked
with his God
Ih, That a copy of these
itiona be placed upon the
' f this board, a copy pub-
I in the daily paper of this
i copy published in the
Carolina Christian Advo-
nd a copy transmitted to
Not that I wish to chime in on
the Sports Editor but I can't help
congratulating the baseball team,
on their splendid work this sea-
son. They've shown excellent
sportsmanship, and have played
good games too.
There is one silver lining that
comes to the seniors that didn't
get to go on the Bayview trip,
they at least won't have sun-
burned noses and backs.
Some members of the Teco
Echo staff paid the seniors a
visit while they were on their
house party last week-end. I
went along too, and I'm telling
you, things sure did look dif-
ferent from what they do here
all the girls in slacks or P. J's
and of all things?Dr. Slay, in
knickers 'Tis said also, that
Mr. and Mrs. Picklesimer took
their dog along and registered
him at the hotel as "Dusty
Pickle The man at the desk
had quite a bit of trouble get-
ting his address, until some
bright Senior, suddenly came to
the conclusion that it was the
dog.
You should have seen three
dignified staff members and Mr.
Deal, play "Follow the Leader"
in a dime store in Washington.
And on that same trip Mr. M. L.
Wright was seen picking daisies!
Fond farewells, and tears are
supposed to be the prevailing
thing around Campus in about
four days. These Seniors that
insist upon looking dignified on
graduation day, really aren't dig-
nified at all maybe.
Have you seen these Juniors
that insist upon arranging their
hair, or make their hand conspi-
cious in some way, so you can
see the new class ring.
Runt and Mary Belle, Hattie
Lee and Bob, Frank and Mabel
and a few other fond couplets
seemed to be thoroughly enjoy-
ing Bayview?seems as if the
coffin" will have to be made
larger, at the rate this new coun-
cil is going?exams will soon be
over, and then commencement
with all its joys and sorrows?
how trite, sez you. To anybody
who would walk through the dor-
mitory these days they'd think
they'd waked up in a penitentiary
er somethin by the bareness of
them. Seems as if everybody has
sent everything to the laundry.
The gossip collector has en-
joyed this column this year, and
with this last issue of the Teco
Echo temporarily ends her career
until next fall, Adieu!
Preston Dunn, E. C. T. C.
southpaw, pitched his second
consecutive win for the Pirates
in the game last Tuesdav with
Atlantic Christian College. Be-
ihind the two-hit pitching of
jDunn, the Pirates batted out a
6-0 victory which was the first
f shut-out game of the season they
have played in.
The E. C T. C. boys gained an
early lead by crossing the plate
three times in the first inning.
Dunn, Kapelec, Barrett and
Easom featured at the bat for the
Pirates. One of Barrett's hits was
too hot for the defense to han-
dle and counted for a home run.
In two trips to bat Easom batted
a single and a triple.
Much of the game was played
in a downpour and was finally
"rained out" in the sixth inning
after Coach Frank's team had
accounted for a total of nine hits.
S. R. Lee, former Greenville
boy, starred in the field and at
bat for the Wilson team.
Score by innings:
E C. T. C. 301 02?6
A- c- c. 000 00?0
Athletes Eligible
For Certificates
To be Announced
Those Athletes Receiving
Certificates Will Be Allow-
ed To Wear E. C. T. C. Let-
ters; Mr. Deal States Three
Requirements.
Theo Easom Pitches Victory
Over High Point Panthers
Work Is Resumed On Tennis
Courts.
THEO EASOM
Theo Easom, popular student
from Spring Hope, was recently
elected president of the first Var-
sity Club of E. C. T. C
Easom has been active in ath-
letics since entering in the Fall.
He played on the football and
baseball teams, and has always
supported co-ed activities. Not
only has Easom participated in
athletics, but has also taken lead-
ing roles in dramatic productions
of the year. He served on the
Teco Echo staff as co-ed editor
during the Winter Quarter.
Jimmie Johnston
Takes Batting
Honors of Season
Last Friday morning Mr. R.
C. Deal, Chairman of the Ath-
letic Committee, announced the
names of those athletes during
the past year who, so far as the
committee knows, are eligible to
receive certificates. Those re-
ceiving certificates will be per-
mitted to wear E. C. T C. letters
or monogram sweaters. Eric
Tucker, former athlete of this
college will also receive a certifi-
cate.
In order to receive a certifi-
cate, Mr. Deal said that athletes
must comply with the following
requirements:
1. Be certified by coach.
2. Play in 50 per cent of the
games during season (Unless in-
jured early in season).
3. Pay student fee.
Mr. Deal also announced that
work had been resumed on the
tennis courts.
BASEBALL SUMMARY
Of
t h i
u ith
Pirates Take Hard Fought
( oi test From High Point;
Panthers Out Hit E. C.
T. C. Team.
SCORE ENDS 11 TO 7
Ride.
wi
Fi
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E.
E
n
an
C
C.
C.
C.
C.
G.
c.
c.
c.
c.
c.
c.
k's
T
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
T.
essary to deeid
The record of (
team follows:
the
C. 3
C
c.
c.
5
4
9
10
1
c.3
c. 1
C. 6
C. fi
C 11
C. 6
Louisburg
Ft. Bragg
P. J. C. 1
P. J. C. 1
P. J. C.
P. J. c.
Oak Ridge
Oak Ridge
Grimesland
A. C. C.
High Point
Oak Ridge 1
Dm Allows Only One Hit;
Kapelec And Johnson Lead
Pirate Batting Attack; Rus-
sell Hits Two Doubles For
Panthers.
MAN MIGHT MAKE
TRIP TO THE MOON
MY TRIBUTE TO THE
TEACHERS OF 1933'34
The New Deal is Theodore's
Roosevelt's Square Deal plus
Woodrow Wilson's New Freedom.
?Walter Lincoln Whittlesey.
the bereaved family of our dear
friend and brother.
Board of Stewards, Jarvis
Memorial Church.
Greenville, N. C.
By James L. Little,
L. B. Garris,
M. K. Blount,
, Committee.
J. W. Crabtree, Secretary of the
National Education Association
In the crisis of the seventies, I
was amazed as a boy, at the sac-
rifices made by the pioneer
teacher of that day. Since then,
I have observed that whether in
time of famine or in time of
plenty, the teacher has lived, not
for self, but for the children and
the community. I have noticed
that the selfish man or woman
seldom remains long in the pro-
fession.
When the terrible days of the
World War came upon us, who
led in food conservation? Who
led in the sale of liberty bonds?
Who led in collecting food, cloth-
ing, and funds for the Red Cross?
Who kept the schools going,
whether funds were available or
not? And what of the teachers
of today? They are serving in a
worse crisis than ever before.
Their responsibility is greater.
Environment is more destructive
in its effect on children. The
teacher-load is almost doubled.
In spite of all this, the teacher
is again leading in welfare acti-
vities. There may be a delay in
pay?a month or six months?or
the pay may be cut off for the
year, yet the work of the school
goes on!
Who is it that removes gloom
from the lives of children who
come from homes filled with sor-
row and suffering because of the
depression? Who is it that in-
spires children with courage and
ambition? Who teaches them to
look forward to better days?
Who is it that is saving civiliza-
tion in these dark hours?
All honor, therefore, to the
teacher of 193334! Your cour-
age and your devotion stand out
4 s the safeguard of our demo-
cracy and as the hope of the
nation.
Presented with personal appre-
ciation.
J. W. Crabtree.
This Argentine war pact is a
gift from the New World to the
Old. It is a trumpet call to fur-
ther awaken world public opin-
ion, for there is no power which
can withstand the force of edu-
cated and aroused public opin-
ion.?Senor Saavedra Lamas.
Pirate Catcher Gets Total Of
Seventeen Hits With Per-
centage of 340; John Kape-
lec Is Runner-Up With Bat-
ting Percentage Of 308; Bill
Puckett And "Runt" Bostic
Are Next Heaviest Hitters;
All Are Stars In The Field.
Jimmy Johnson, hard playing
catcher for the Pirates, took" top
batting honors during the 1934
baseball season with a percentage
of 340. Johnson netted a total
of seventeen hits out of fifty
trips to the bat. Besides play-
ing outstanding ball behind the
plate, he led the batting attack
in several games.
John Kapelec was runner-up
with a batting percentage of 308.
Not only is Kapelec handy with
the bat, but he has made an en-
viable fielding record for the
season.
Bill Puckett, and Clifford Bos-
tic were the next heaviest hit-
ters with the percentages 275
and 260 respectively.
Paris ? (IP) students here
last week were told by Prof.
Auguste Piccard, famous stra-
tosphere baloonist, that man
might some day make a trip to
the moon on power generated by,
the rays of light generated by
the disintegration of a feu-
pounds of lead.
The Swiss professor asserted
that rocket shops would be im-
practical for interplanetary
journeys because they would
have to carry tons of explosives
for return trips.
"Matter dematerialized and
transformed into light rays of
tremendous energy might per-
mit trips between the planets
he said.
"A round-trip from the Earth
to Mercury would require the
dematerialization of 100 pounds
of lead
Because man traveling in
space would age at a much low-
er rate than man on earth, the
professor said, it is conceivable
that men might leave the earth
and return to it only a few years
older in physical age, but to
find the earth anywhere from
10.000 to 100,000 years older.
COLLEGE DAY PROGRAM
SPONSORED AT THE HIGH
SCHOOL BY A. A. U. W
Anniversary Days
We congratulate the faculty, students and alum-
nae of E. C. T. C. in celebrating the twenty-fifth anni-
versary of the College.
Your patronage has been appreciated. We ex-
tend to each of you, a hearty welcome to come and
help us celebrate our Anniversary Sale, beginning
June 2nd.
Our employees are here for your service, and they
will be delighted to show you our every day bargains.
Charles Stores Co.
Incorporated
406 Evans Street :
The observance of College Day
scheduled annually by the A. A,
U. W. was earned out this year
by a chapel hour program at the
high school on Friday. May 4.
In the brief time allotted each,
local representatives of various
North Carolina colleges spoke of
the advantages of their respec-
tive Alma Maters, and some of
the college songs were sung. Mrs.
W. D. Webb sang some Meredith
numbers, and six prospective
students of the Woman's College
sang during that college's part of
the program.
B. W. Moseley spoke for David-
son, Dr. G. R. Combs for Duke
University. Miss Mary Lynn Pip-
kin for East Carolina Teachers
College; Miss Eugenia Thomas
for Meredith; Murray House for
State College: Ralph Collins
for the University; Thurman
Kitchen for Wake Forest and
Mrs. Luther Herring for The Wo-
man's College.
The social feature which is a
part of the usual plan of the A.
A. U. W, for College Day was
omitted this year because of the
death of President Wright.
Miss Mary York, chairman of
the education committee of the
A. A. U. W presided over the
program, and Supt. J. H. Rose
made the introductory speech.
On May 17, at High Point, the
Pirates continued their "winning
streak" by defeating High Point
College 11-7 after a hard fought
contest. The Panthers out hit
East Carolina Teachers College
team 8-6. but their hits were
kept well scattered after the
first inning.
The High Point Panthers gain-
ed an early lead, and scored six
times during the first three in-
nings. However, the fourth was
a big inning for the E. C. T. C.
boys, who scored five runs be-
hind the hard hitting of Kape-
lec. Johnson, Easom, Barrett and
Puckett.
James was the starting pitcher
of the Pirates, but was relieved
by Theo Easom in the third in-
ning. For the remainder of the
game, Easom pitched good ball,
allowing only one hit.
Kapelec and Johnson, each
with a double and a single, led
the Pirate batting attack. Russel
did the heaviest hitting for the
Panthers, netting two doubles.
Score by innings:
E. C. T. C. 200 501 300?11
High Point 321 000 100? 7
No other topic has been more
gummed up in manufactured ob-
scurity than Puritanism.?Prof.
Frances Morehouse.
Vacation Needs
Picnic and Bathing
Supplies
W.T. Grant Co,
Evans Street
McLELLAN'S
J l N E S A L E
WHITE IS RIGHT
SHOP HERE AND SAVE
McLELLAN STORES CO.
409 Evans Street
TO EACH GIRL OF E. C. T. C.
We wish to express our gratitude to you for the
business extended us, and hope you will always feel
that we are at all times as a home to you and ready
to serve you. The cute dresses for sport and dress,
with their accessories are for your approval.
A Visit Will Be Appreciated.
WILLIAMS
"The Store For The Ladies"
'A
u f
)
I
fM,





Page Six
THE TECO ECHO
Wednesday. May 30

BRIEF HISTORY OF Y. V. C.
IS PORTRAYED
Young
Wo
d !
Lzation of
Christian
mpus a
igo, the
r prac-
Dr. Henry Van Dyke has fur-
ther thought of the psalm as ex-
pressive of three notes, all found
m David's life, all ones which
should be found in our lives.
These are the notes of content-
ment, of courage, and of confi-
dence. David was perfectly con-
tented
which
dav.
with far Less
we are disc
He possessed
courage with which
future unflinchingly
confidence because h
was already in
than with
rtented to-
unbounded
ro face the
He had
felt thai he
iis Father's
At the last Friday evening! EXCERPTS TAKEN
vesper service of the year, Mrs. pRQM PRESIDENT
Kate Beekwith, first lady pnn-
f the college presented
house,
lessi m
All
for
three are
us to-day.
wo
tidnrful
stian
in
a b
he ti
if it;
ay.
was
mittees
from
dc n1 Sec
m n of C
Members
ind
ip
inuttee
?om.
Fit
Stud
P.
ance
the
tuality
ire. At
on in
is Eas1
atning
wore
what
today,
by a
Presi-
Chair-
. Mis-
otional,
mH S
At the Vesper Service of
Friday, May -1th, Miss Maria D.
Graham, of tin faculty, who has
been interested in the Y. W. C.
A organization on the campus
since the beginning, and was one
of the early advisors, was the
speaker.
aeec
thim
fton
a ro
; ht,
11
the
nect:
m
se ea
rlv
arefull
I: I V
y ti
sick
w as the care
unshine Flower
beh ind one oi
Here flowers
nded to be sent
and aged of the
theme, joy in doing little
of kindness, and small
well, was plentifully illus-
with examples .cleaned
her wealth of experience.)
tries to .crow a little each
she should remember that
grow th does not come over
This daily growth comes
aei epting little jobs even
larger ones desired do not
it themselves, and from
g the most possible, of
own talents, not letting
s superior beauty, intellect,
lality overshadow one's
-thers
r pers
IWIL
Miss Grahar
wautiful thou
eipal of the college preseniea a
long and interesting talk. In
September of 1909, she said, she
first came to Greenville. Ac-
eompanied by President Wright
she went to the college build-
ings up a muddy walk that is
now Fifth Street and stepping
across stones over a brook and
across a corn field. Six build-
ings comprised the campus, the
Old Dining Hall, the Old Infir-
mary, the Power House, the Ad-
ministration and on either side
of this the West and East Dor-
mitories (now known as Jarvis
ami Wilson).
During the first year, when the
efforts of President Wright and
Mrs. Beekwith were supplement-
ed by those of Misses Graham,
Davis, Lewis and Jenkins and
Messrs. Austin, Laughinghouse,
and Meadows, college life here
was somewhat primitive compar-
ed to that of to-day. No electri-
city in the buildings, made social
life and evening recreation for
the student body of ninety-three
boys and girls at a minimum.
Late in the first year, how-
ever, Mrs. Beekwith and Pattie
Dowell of the student body, a
former Meredith college student,
I organized the Y. W. C. A of the
college. Under it auspices meet-
ings for social work and religious
purposes were held. From this
small beginning, the live organi-
zation of 114 sprung.
WRIGHT'S TALKS
(Continued from first page)
Alumnae News
ANDREWS?WH1CHARD
see this come to pass. We are
at the dawn of a new era. Col-
lectivism, as a new ideal, has
trickled into the stream of civi-
lization. This new ideal is not
dictatorship, though it is appar-
ently taking on this form tem-
porarily, in some nations of the
world. Collectivism is democracy
moving forward and adjusting
itself to the machine age. It
does not destroy individuals; in
fact, it does exactly the opposite
?develops individualism by
making the individual group-
conscious. It makes one realize
that he can get the greatest free-
dom only when he realizes his
obligation to others. Great in-
ventions and great discoveries
are worked out today in labora-
tories. In these experiment sta-
tions the workers develop the
Miss Elizabeth Whichard, the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
Whichard of Bethel to John Her-
man Andrews of Greenville, the
wedding to be solemnized in
June. Miss Whichard graduated
from the Normal School Class of
1930.
The Greenville Chapter of the
E. C T C. Alumnae Association
was delightfully entertained by-
Mrs. Harry Johnson, at her home
on Columbia Avenue, Tuesday
evening, May 8. This was the
last meeting of this school year.
A large crowd was present.
Miss Elizabeth Smith, presi-
dent, presided at the meeting.
Officers for next year were
elected. They are: President,
Miss Elizabeth Smith; Vice-
Y.
JOYNEK MEMORIAL LIBRA!
quotes
hts and
several
poems.
but
i'hap
ili
A
tended
and Sunday night
held weekly as to-
perhaps better at-
hey are in 1934.
membership, too,
fnr now but 18
"Lord, let
day
In such a
That even
mi
e loveliest
. V. Meies,
Verse is:
live from da
f all
of
to
If-for
hen 1
getful
kneel
way,
to pray.
A
ibt rs
90 t
n m i
V. W
t'A
?i tl
M
D
Iv thoughts shall be for others
Mr. T. C. Johnson, pastor of
he Baptist Church of Kinston,
v as the guest speaker at the
of the
C.
Wl
A
Servict
He tool
as
Other ea
wore the
kin l
In Deci
Japanese
the Brox
was repe
same mo
Je
IV
itsi
sal,
History
'D
? ai i'
ants
rest :?
m 192
the Y
years
tui
. i,
.e
for
1918 a
. nettins
In the fall of
g iris v. ere
? ard Par- '
was given this)
I
j
room of
was established
Browsing Room.
The last Sunday Vesper ser-
vice for this college year brought
the student body an inspiring
message from the Reverend A.
J, Reese, pastor of the Methodist
Church in Washington. He
spoke on the Y. W. C. As over
the country, correlating them to
school work. The organization,
he said should be a vestibule to
church membership for anyone
who seeks to understand Jesus
and to share his life with his
j fellow man must be a member.
The Y. W. C. A an organization
list 'ith the largest professional
oever a man soweth, 1 staff of any woman's association
in the country, has a registered
membership of 600,000.
Teachers of tomorrow, should
attend college with the desire to
serve and help humanity, for
teachers may give the children
more ideas than the parents.
Members of the Y. W. C. A. as
well as prospective teachers
j should undertake to share their
ustriously J religion just as "Boxes from
ipply. thejhome" are shared. One's educa-
ner away, j tion is not complete until he
constantly J knows something about God. We
tune from' !nust study, share and grow.
tine Ilellen. They also voted to
have only four meetings next
year.
They had as their guest, Mrs.
Kate Beekwith, and Miss Mamie
Jenkins and Maria Graham. Af-
ter the business was attended to,
a very enjoyable evening was
spent talking together.
A delightful sweet course was
served.
PICK ETT?HUFF
Miss Margaret Ellen Huff,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Burton Huff of East Bend, N. C.
and Frank Henry Pickett of War-
saw were married, January 29.
Mrs. Pickett is a graduate of
the Normal School Class of 1932.
For the past two years she has
been teaching at Warsaw.
Mr. and Mrs. Pickett will be at
home in Warsovv.
WILLARD?-LAMER
p, paraphras-
tic words of an old
k proverb. "He who
st pay the piper and
nacular of the present
n't fool yourself
Johnson said,
human grass-
be compared
the grasshopper of
?nier in '
Mr.
and
i cai
longed f
up
orgt tting that they
uncle. They con- j gciENCE STUDENTS
waiting for their I
in. forgetting that
MAKE TELESCOPE
il back unless it has J
.eing created a few
later.
.ughout the twenty ive
of its existence the Y. W.noj
n our campus has changed on,
iti.er
)
out
ldusion Mr.
s that we an
nisunderstood
lauded her
from lift
Johnson
probably
martyrs,
ies. Each
of presenting it
changing needs
committee heac
i: have been
t throughout tin
j,
of the
s and
altered
years:
b
3
I through it all the same'
?ught of befriending all has:
en remembered. A quarter of
century has not weakened the
?f rts of the association to up-
r, Id its motto.
Not by my might, nor by my
p wer, but as my spirit, saith
the Lord of Hosts
A list of twenty-five Presi-
dents of the Association follows:
Lome Dell Pittman. Katie Saw-
yer, Alien C.ordan, Pattie Dowell,
Agnes Hunt. Ruth Barbee, Marie
Minnie Bent Dad. Mar-
e Hersley, Willh
Gladys Bateman, Christine
et.
eserves.
j The principle of sowing only
j what has been sown, he said, is
well illustrated in the lives of
those who attempt to trifle with
reputation for integrity.
then
with
re-
iquor, with sex, or wit!
iigion. Sowing the seeds
mere outward attendance and
pretention of the latter will not
reap the full glorious harvest of
true religion. The seed which
will mature into that products
are the seeds of religion reflects
in one's daily conversation and
A telescope of the reflecting
type made by three Science Ma-
jors in the Junior Class, Flor-
ence Sinclair, of Wilson, Ida Mae
Nance, of Bonlee, and May
Hearne of Greenville, is creating
xactly what! .eat dcal o interest on the
campus. Star-gazing groups
have studied the craters of the
moon, and have found the moon
of Jupiter or the rings around
Saturn.
The project which has spread
out over the spring term, was in-
of' dependent of class work, and is
Low
guei
Day
Vick, Sally Cheek. Mary Gray jan
Moore, Elizabeth Smith. Evelyn1
Jennings, Kay Lee CloaningerJ
Hannah Tumage. Cullie Stafford.
Ethel Parker. Ethlyn Sanders.
and Melba O'Brien.
The speaker of the Vespei
Service of Friday. April 27. was
Miss Ruth Hillhouse, Presby-
terian Student Secretary in
Greenville. She asked that her
talk be prefaced by the repeti-
tion in unison of the twenty-
third Psalm, the subject of her
remarks.
The twenty-third Psalm, she
said, written by David, as a
young shepherd lad whiling
away time on the peaceful hill-
sides. We can know that ne was
young because of the predomi-
nant note of hope expressed
throughout the verses: for, as a
learned one has put it, "Hope is
f$e angel of the young as me-
fhory is the angel of the old
At the Friday Vesper Service
.( the Y. W. C. A. Miss Mary
Green' Frances Holland, a college stu-
dent, spoke most interestingly on
ipt comparison between a
ag stamp and human be-
. She drew the comparison
in several ways. First a stamp
has value, because a security
backs it. because the United
States government has placed its
seal on it, and because it is
bought with a price. We have
value because God's security is
behind us. because His seal is on
us, ard because He has bought us
with a price.
A stamp and a human being
iare further alike in that the
I stamp's purpose is to carry a
message, while our purpose is to
spread the word, our message.
As a stamp is accepted at its full
value, so God knows our face
value. Unless a stamp faces up-
ward, it cannot work. So we,
too, must face upward. And last-
ly, a stamp may be "licked" but
it still sticks. We should try to
follow this lesson gleaned from
the useful postage stamp.
an outgrowth of interest aroused
m their Freshman year. Miss
Catherine Cassidy, of the Science
Department, has been their ad-
viser. They followed directions
m publications of the Scientific
American, which is sponsoring a
club of amateur telescope-mak-
ers, but they showed great in-
genuity in adapting old materials
and keeping down the cost. Two
discs of glass and six grades of
coerundum was purchased, but
the eye-piece is from an old
microscope, and the mirror,
which serves to bend the rays
from the reflecting mirror, is a
piece of an old wind-shield sil-
vered on the back. A fifty-inch
wooden bar is mounted on a tri-
pod made of iron piping. The
entire cost was between $7.00
and $8.00.
President, Mrs. H. G. Moore,
highest type of individualism the Secretary, Miss Mamie Ruth
world has ever known. The Tunstall; Treasurer, Miss Chris
world in all of its phases is mov-
ing forward through some form
of collectivism. Collectivism
gives us the maximum of free-
dom. We are at the dawn of the
greatest period of human free-
dom the world has ever known.
We have come to a realization
of human inter-dependence, and
the realization takes the form of
what I call collectivism?human
beings working together for the
human good.
If we are to have political free-
dom, if the civilization of to-
morrow is to be the highest type
ever known, what is needed?
Through long ages human beings
have realized that ignorance and
superstitition have been mill-
stones around the neck of pro-
gress. Intelligence has at last
asserted itself. We cannot car-
ry on in this new era unless we
educate all the people. Not in
America, alone, but all over the
world the beacon light of educa-
tion must shine. An enlightened
humanity will give us the most
advanced civilization the world
has ever known
Last November President
Wright said to the student body:
"Young people, I am sorry for
you in one wary, because the civi-
lization that we have worked
out pretty well has literally been
broken up, broken all to pieces,
and many of the standards that
we have held to are being dis-
carded. We are making some
mistakes. On the other hand, I
am not sorry for you, but con-
gratulate you, on being young
in this particular time in the his-
tory of the world, when all
standards of civilization are be-
ing questioned. Every standard
is being questioned and if it can-
not stand up and justify itself it
will, and should be, discarded.
You are truly in a critical period
in the history of the world. If
you will remember that state-
ment, if you live thirty years
longer you will realize its sig-
nificance. In this critical period
justice is one of the things we
should hold to, and character is
absolutely essential if we are go-
ing to go through this period suc-
cessfully. The man or woman
who will lie for himself or his
friends or against his enemies,
who does not ring true, is dan-
gerous to civilization. The per-
son who will deliberately do a
questionable deed is dangerous.
You, each individual, may order
your life in keeping with the
things that are worth while, that
will be worthwhile in this new
civilization when many of things
we have held to will pass and
new things take their place. "To
thine own self be true Regard
Scribblers Choose
Bayview As Site
For Annual Picnic
A new syst
for the bene
who is not g
his life care
out by
College
tl
Partv Accompanied By Miss
Jenkins And Mr. And Mrs.
Cummings.
The Scribblers Club picnicked
at the beach at Bayview last
Tuesdav afternoon, May 22.
Swimming and a boat ride were
enjoyed before supper. The par-
tv prepared supper from provis-
ions secured from the college
dining hail. A late party of
three "staff members enjoyed
supper with the rest of the
group. , Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Cum-
mings and Miss Mamie Jenkins
chaperoned the party. Miss Jen-
kins is faculty adviser of the
Teco Echo. The members of the
club attending were made up
chiefly of the Teco Echo staff
and reporters for the paper.
I m
A consid
pie around
idea that the
this new deal
it is being d
A&P
: POINT
Wholesome I ? :
Willing Employe -
Visit Us
Oxford, April 28?Mr. and
Mrs. David Frank Lanier an-
nouncing the marriage of their
daughter, Pansy Ellen, to Earl
Warren Willard. on Sunday,
August 7, 1933, Williamston.
The bride attended Samt
Mary's School, Raleigh, and E.
C. T. C, Greenville. She is a
member of the faculty at Stovall.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. George S. Willard
of Greenville, and is a direct des-
cendant of Governor Richard
Caswell. first Governor of North
Carolina. During the past sea-
son, Mr. Willard was associated
with the Imperial Tobacco Com-
pany in Greenville.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard are at
home in Oxford.
STATE
Thursday, Ma 31
RONALD COLMAN
"The Masquerade r
Friday
June 1st
RICHARD MX
In "ACE
OK ACES"
Monday-Tuesday, June 1-5
Selected Just For You?
"TWENTY MILLION SWEETHEARTS
with Dick Powell, Ginger Rogers
Pat O'Brien
GRAVELY?TYSON
W.
Heavy and Fancy Crocerie
Onslow County Hams
Greenville, May 5.?The wed-
ding of Miss Margaret Tyson
and William Gravely was sol-
emnized Monday morning at 9
o'clock at the home of the bride's
aunt, Mrs. H. Bentley Harris, on
Dickerson Avenue with only the
immediate family in attendance.
Rev. A. W. Fleischmann of the
Memorial Baptist Church offi-
ciated.
The bride is the daughter of
Mrs. Franklin Tyson. She was
educated in the city schools and
East Carolina Teachers College.
The bridegroom is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. William G. Grave-
ly of Monroe. He is manager of
the local branch of Swift and
Company.
Immediately after the cere-
mony Mr. and Mrs. Gravely left
for a wedding trip and on their
return will make their home in
Greenville.
Ill E. 5th Street
Phone 1'
When authorities ordered the
closing of the University of
Madrid to prevent recurrence of
student demonstrations, the stu-
dents demonstrated by throwing
the university's furniture into the
street.
Dr. A. M. Schultz
DENTIST
400 State Bank Building
Phone 578
less of what the rest of the world
your ideals, ring true'to the best SUMMER SCHOOL TO
there is in life. What a glorious
civilization we are coming into,
if this generation of young folks
can take hold of the things that
are worthwhile, can hold to them.
And what a mess the world will
be in if they cannot! There is
resting upon the college boy and
girl of today a greater respon-
sibility than boys and girls of
any other generation have ever
had. Hold to the truth, young
folks, for the sake of the whole
world"
President Wright was one of
the first men to forsee the prob-
lem of education for leisure time.
He deplored the elimination of
the so-called educational frills
from our curriculum. Last year
he said, "There is a utilitarian
trend in education all over our
nation. The schools have elimi-
nated many of the things people
E. C. T. C. STUDENTS AND FORMER
STUDENTS ARE ALWAYS
WELCOMED AT
The Perkins Co.
Make Our Store Your Headquarters Daring
Your Stay Here.
BEGIN ON JUNE 12th
(Continued from first page)
leading to the Master's Degree.
A large number of high school
graduates of this year will enter
as Freshmen, planning to make
the college course in three years
instead of four. There is a long
list of candidates for graduation
at the close of the summer quar-
ter.
Quinn-Miller & Company
Everything For The Home
Cash or Credit
Phoiie No. 366 L. A. Stroud. Mgf.
Necessity has proved to be the
mother of organization.?Joanna
C. Colcord.
need to use in their leisure time
?art, music, etc. We must train
the youth of today to read good
literature instead of trash, to
gambol instead of gamble, to en-
gage in actvities that are sports-
manlike and upbuild character
OUTFITS
FOR ANY OCCASION
Can Be Purchased at
LOWE'S
"Smart Apparel for Women"





Title
The Teco Echo, May 30, 1934
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
May 30, 1934
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.139
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38019
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