The Teco Echo, February 11, 1936


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





Jam
fhington

v SUM
WARREN'S
HURSDAY FRIDAY JAN 30-31-
MARTIN 1VS00NEY
?3fc WROTE
IT!
Starts
Sat unlay
II ?
H I I, II IK ,B
With
LIONEL BARRYORE
WALLACE BEERY
PITT
1 300
? CIRCULATION
I
Ihe
ECHO
PATRONIZE
ADVERTISERS
EAST CAR&lMt-IEACkGRS COLLEGE
VOll'MK XII
GREENVILLE, N. C, FEBRUARY 11, 1936
APRIL 25 IS DATE I??? Jmm PITT COUNTY CLUB SIBERIAN SINGERS
FOR HINl-SEIW 0F1936 ARE outlined
TOURS TO NEW ENGLAND AND
ws Decide on Date at Class CANADA ARE TRIPS OF 22 DAYS
Meeting ?
Credit in History, Geography, and
Amer can Literature
Offered
COLONIAL SETTING IS MOTIF
Appointed to Arrange
E, DRUGGIST
WN DROP AROUND
?? h?k HOTEL
S STORE
inng
E ?
ii! Fashioned
igles Chiffon
69caPflir
Newest Shades
is
TO BE HERE FEB. 21
NUMBER
uons. Menu, Invitations
and Orchestras
Di
uring the summer school terms
'in- year two tours to ew Eng-
land and Canada will be offered for
r-Senior Han- ,Sfuy of History, Geography
and American Literature.
The 22-daj trip includes Wa-h-
icetmg held! ??. Annapolis, Baltimore, Phil-
a previous meet- j awlphia, Valley Forge, New York Included in the itinerary are
N" or man, president H'y? "arrytown, Weal Point, Xew rj such cities as Ashevlle, Ohattauoo-
iis ear in, April
detinitelv deeid-
Mary Dennis Is Elected Chair-
man of Program
Committee
TOUR TO MEXICO AND SOUTH-
WEST IS TRIP OF 32 DAYS -The Beaded Buckle by Frances
Gray to be Given in Chapel on
Four Courses With Total of Twelve j February 21
Semester Hours to be ,
0ffer j LINELLE CLARK IS DIRECTOR A very important meeting of th-
. ; Pitt County Club was held on last
1 Ikllejre is offering this sum-i . 0 . Tt w i i ? - , .
a. , rp . ' , JCast Is Being Selected; Three Wednesday evening, Jantuuy at,
mer a Study, lour to the Southwest ? r. r- ?' , ,? ,i ir. u v , n i ,i "Tnn Hnt To Bp Fpaturp of
? Characters are Definitely '?.?? Hyatt eorre&t called m nu ,u DC rcdiUIC Jl
and Mexicoitv. r our courses will
BE
HOSTS TO STUDENTS
.r i ; i i Chosen
be offered with a total of twelve
quarter hours or eight semester A . ?The H(1(i(.a BucUe ? l,v
hours credit. 1 he 32-dav tour will ' ,
i i ? i r ranees Gray, will be (riven in
?gin early in dune. ?
chapel Friday morning, February
la eli
Pi
meeting to order, after which the
following business was held: the
club chose the carnation, which
means pride and beauty, as the club
flower; "Be Square" as the club
motto: and green and whin
Theatre Party for Whole Stu-
dent Body As Guests of
Sophomore Class
Director Nicholas Vasilieff is Per-
son of Unusual
Talents
EACH MEMBER OF CHORUS IS
SOLOIST OF GREAT ABILITY
Costumes of Old Russia and
Moscow Cathedral Robes Will
Enhance Program
he Siberian
Tin-
as club
sophomores are preparm
Singer?
deresting
pr
this
?
c to fori ulatel ??????? irwviaenw, Plymouth j ga, Nashville, Mem).his. Little uiark, who lias bad experience ml
ttei was ?, Kok- Tain,mi Boston, Lexington, Bock, Hot Springs. Dallas. Austin,Letii and eoaching dramatics, hav- tee,
Stowc as .Ti:tir-1 ' ?ii'??r?l. Cambridge (Harvard), San Antonio, Laredo, Monterey,j ? , , , ? ,r ? ft tin. knelnoaa
1 ? ?ow' H8 a" ? ? . ? ma worked under Miss Mary Dim- Aitei tne Business sessn
Vlhrirtnn Ross L.I ortland, Augusta, Waterville, ue- Oiudad Victoria, Mexico City, , , , T. ,?,??? rl(rr.nil
vii'iiHuu. ivu-vi i. I t, a lierger and Miss Helen Dorteh. entertaining program w
.inn. Kli-ilt?-th ? Montreal, Ottawa, toronto, Houston, Baton Rouge, Xew Or- , , e u
ran ' naiHwi, ii i ? i ?, r i I he play is a comedy of village
flor? Wil- Niagara Palls, buffalo, Williams- leans, Mobile, Montgomery and At- . , ' ? ,rl . , ?
agie. ?rit.i ? h ii . . B ? aristocracv. 1 he scene is laid in a
?nea. With the! P?rt' H;
Mias Hn
I. It ia being coached by linelle r?f ? ?1 ? entertainment for the student; body here Fridaj night, Fel
, . , , , . wwers. Mary Dennis was chosen id facultv Til(.v !ia M.(ni
(lark, who has had experience m chairman of the program eonimit- ?T ? ?? starring Ginger Rogers
:30 ? clock.
and Fred Astaire, as the feature for
a delightful theatre party.
For the occasion, special mar-jmatic person in his mterpre
believed would
ptting for the
WlI. ???-?- ???? eans. . ,on. e. .v.o.ngome ua - aristocraey The eene is laid in a "Beautiful Ohio. Ann K.chani
i 'h- M Harnsburg QeUyaburg liar- lanta. I he historic, geographic and lffial towll in Xorth Carolina. In son gave the reading "Mialarlotta
,?( per s cerry, rredenck, Winchester,I educational features t each citvl.t ,? . p i fi,n,ivve,i l.v "fawimrs irmvprsnim
intii.ji . t . f tentative cast are fanny Brew- tOUOWea n, lainons mipi loiid
veral N,w ?arke1 (Endless Caverns), and section will be considered. I, wi1(1 win tl)k ,i1(. )nrt'of Mrs. tions" by MalxT Williams. Follow
?ii.) Statiiiton (Wilson's birthplace). In the vicinity of Asheville and ? ;?? tlm i,mor:ni retYeslmunts won
in. a very
entertaining program was given.
Sarah White Rhyne whistled. shafa , , .
n' "lUli 0M- VM i;i ,r1 The marshals are: Corabob Smith,
Xeta Lee Townsend, Graee Free-
Xieholas Va-ilietf is a gre
an inspiring leader, and m
and leadership.
fur many vears the singe
d upon
a colo-
'his plan was sul
ass and was unam-
Agnes Miller, a charming widow;
Lexington (tombs of Lee and .lack- Chattanooga some of the most beau- Bffl Joho wh(( will tak(. tlu. part
? ?tural Bridge, Lyoehbur tifu mountain scenery m the 1 nit- f v , , ?? rniv(.r.
man. Sudie Williamson, ran
me
made annual tours.
Thev create
i a
turns'7 by Mabel William eollow- Brewer .ii,nI11i Culkns, DorisUeBsation on their first American
ing the program, refreshments were Xewborn, Eleanor Hardy, and I concert tour. Cheir broadcast
Margaret Pruette. The ushers are:
thi
.1
W i'1'i
A p.
8, and the
tembers at-
wnich will
le.
tat
Will
itip, "ii committees an
Durward Stowe,
I.ii liilane Alhritton.
k. Onie Coebran,
-?in. Ruth Oagle,
and Ernestine
'atrice rlammoud,
i Brown, and Ge-
ne Banes, chair
K and l'l.Tlv
, XRC network bo profoundly
,J.h" 1 uu' I of Joseph Conroy Miller, a Tni'ver Kighteen membere, four visitors, jxtonrankWwrten Fran- impressed the radio audien that
and Appomattox, ed SUtes will be seen. The battle U- stU((.Ilt; an(1 LlK.illt. dark, and also the erab adviaer, Mr. Flan- j Lester Ridenhour Roy letters of praise and commendation
n i ; includes many place9of LookoutMountain will he ?;f"dwl;o ui? fak(i tl)fi pai.f (if M.s liaailj were present The dub boHs B,u.riAv ahii Wnl.th chauncey Cal- for rhr beautiful voices (espeeial-
?p ly the contra bassos), and the artis-
Tbe exact date of the entertain- tie presentation of their programs
ment has not been decided were f?c?ved from every section - I
With the arrival of spring, thethe l Dlted States,
inallv produced on The IMavniak-j ? sophomores an- going to Morebead J h,ir pbenomeaal range?from
,rs Stage, in Chapel Hill, Fel.ru- prilinnO III I I Pn hv and intr-rtine places there '???ntra (i to treble K-is pr-n.ap-
the inspiration of "Star Spanuled founded m 110 by ti-nral Audrw ;u.v s anj, ?) ?? " 1)111 111 VV I -l I . ?? tr a dav unequalled by any other mabd
Hannr will be included. In Ja kson and others. This city is a Fluit GraVj was at tliat t;m(. .JUI-IIIUIIU lill-l- MW hi(. in r!u, worH i
Philadelphia a number of historic very important shipping and manu tuil(n a! H, i'nivrit- in the
places will i" -mi.lied such as Betsy facturing center. The next city to
Boss House, Independence Hall be visited is Little Bock, the capita
which contain- the "Liberty BeH" of the state of Arkansas, hn rout si;i rian,aKi- ar. v.m- cm- The I' ?? : -
and the room in which the Deelara- lo this city a number ol rice fields fen sh(. eigteeB yeara MiTnp 10 Be Taken Following I ne . 1( )M. p(,M,i(. thr spirit and intensity of emol
Easter Holidays which characterize- the Sib
- nnani- " .??-?"? v ?- ?????? who will take tlie part ol Mrs. nagan, were presem. i av
of interest and a day will be devot- led. In Nashville the group will i jt()1jM. aiiVi B neighbor. The! regular monthly meeting
iiU1? Jed to seeing the city. The Naval visit George Peabody College ?;??! 0ii1(.r characters have not been Be- president asks thai ail m
1 . Academy in Annapolis will be vis Teachers and other points ol 'nift(.d jtend the next meeting. '
i itd t ?ee the tomb of John Paui'terest. Memphis is situated at the "The Beaded Buckle" was orig-be held at the regular tim
J Jones. Baltimore, one of our great head of deep water navigation on ??Uy i)rutL.t.A ? The Playmak- ?
Mississippi River. If
ii'ii.
A comph le
well known English 31 class, the
course in which tin- productions of
the Carolina Playmakers are writ . .
ten. she was eighteen vea.s old Tnp To Be Taken Following The
THE INFIRMARY-MATES SONG "f visual abili . ?
The flu i- mvconriner: I shall not ensemble they attain a rocs Mend
. a- beautiful and sonorous as the
live. , T,
I ii . i; i ? r , tone- ot an organ. I he torce
It maketh me to In- .low n on -?
it.
1
tloli ot Ilniepen.lenci- V. a - -lglie.1. Wl
the grave of Benjamin franklin in
and other interesting point Abonl tie Rock, The party will also go to
is miles wesl of Philadelphia the Hot Springs, a widely-known health
group see Vallv I'orue where and plea-ure resort and also one of
n Wood, chair-nffashington spent the tnihle win- our National Parks.
uond. Hoot Gib-j tf,r rf i ; On the way to Xw
"l,TM when she wrote -The Beaded
roeram will be offered in Lit- i
still patients.
It disturbeth mv soul: it teadeth oinger
Hutsell
York the
VVashincton
Texas Emphasized
ADVERTISERS ARE
BOOSTED IN PAPER
spot where Washington! This vear Texas
?rod the Delaware will be vis- her centennial vear.
name them to expl
the heart of a song. Price
?-an , ???? I V? M nimWs rf the
Yea though 1 walk through tfcJ worm famous Choir of Russ
raUeY af the shadow of death, I will beir work its authority.
to be a z1 wwwirFSJtojv,l: t?i- Mi-s Dickinson JJ
-??? i The senior ekss ha- chosen for mf m ,li(. ths of righteousness foi
MRS. HAZEN SMITH STRESSES its annual trip a lour day tour to , h;Ur ;(
ART OF CONVERSATION Washington, D. C. Mr B, C. Birfc
i will conduct the tour which mcluf
?" riJS? HTihJSJraSS"?JJLTf1i??irzzU- "j-S ?rr?rr.?t;iz
ach citv is
J Jest in and around Washington and , ,
Diversity "i her farst , , , , ,ni?n m? unoni. 1.1 au
i ? i en mute there and nacK. rli.v onmfor im
talk to students on this campus. . t
of Duke I
Tlei)
rohes of the Seventeenth C
ind in their national
i. appropriately reviving ??? 8tudent8 on this campus. ITT i ? i 1 vintr they comtort me. n t?- Th XVr
Xcv. York City has many , vent, -onnect.l w,th the develop- ? J I enta ive plans include eavmg Th(.v )1ji;uh U!l.hl.1) before sra- The ? bo
aces of interest. Among the most ment of Texas Special emphasisL MUll,llt, is ,hat tll(.v doJZ5ST? in tU f ?f A v ULLl
B??rr.?toi, the citv itinerary arc: will be placed on the study of ?nfi ? ,1 16, after Easter hobdays, a nd m- tW anointeth lnv ehest with. fhey use the nataral
P
important on tin city itinerary arc
Kadi.
Miss Fannie Brewer Wins Dollar Gn
City. Metropolitan Museum Texas with her romantic historv.
lof Art. American Museum of Xa her very extensive ana and
ural History, Columbia LTniversity, resources.
; t lomh. tin
not ask intelligent questions, and
are not willing to try to become good
? , are not wining to u v io nccoine ?wu Q , . ?, 1U
tried . ?? oi i ,i Sunday, April r.?.
conversationalists. She named three ,r. ? '
turning to Greenville the following yjet's. riJ(. l;)r r0oms runnethments of beautiful voio
?rtrav
For Correct Solution
Riverside
( hlireh, Little Church Around the
('oiner. Trinity I nurch I Hami
Students other
The cost will be $14.00, which
fundamental things essential in
More than $17,000,000 are being gaining this end; have something to !
-pent on the Texas Centennial Ex- ,av. tnOW how to say it. and know
position in Dallas. Both the State wben ro SaV it
of boosting tbet tongravel. East Side. Battery and amj Federi
iver.
the 111'
lies
if their repert
Surelv tin and highfever shall I whether they Ik- in th- music c
es. sraoenxs otner f()HiiW mi. ;1? tht. days 0 my life; liturgy, the gay pirate and soldier
than seniors will 1m- allowed to ?"? ,i,al dwell in the house of thesongs, r tin- plaintive work songs
Sibe-
sjoverunieuts are
Ib -? ;? ? W"5FKERV,CES
interest j Aquarium, roe- ? mimge ? ?? operating to make this ixpoution Mi one needs a certain amount of Al VtbrtK atrmuca
rti.Hpnients the Teco ham), one or more large -tore- such ? fair portrayal of this State- prog-j intelligence; a knowledge of stand
' as Macv's. steamship docks to in- ? and achievement The Expo-
ill forever
(!ottage Ford-
M.ect one of ihe I rans-Atlantic lin- sition will cover 187 acre- in an ?nt. a knowledge of the Bible,
i a contest in the last
January 28. Th
the participant- to era and Bryan! Park.
twentv-tbree letters
ird literature, both classical and
current a
in advertisements and
?? - slogan of 'Ii'1 advertis-
? ? u?iitv-thl'et letters.
ewai d of one dollar was of-
: the first correct slogan
?, list of the sources of
ttei Fannie Brewer proved
?? i ner,
? . i solution:
S . "Patronize Our Adver-
Warn i
1 hai !? Stores
Blount-Harvey
R Baker's Studio
! I Elite Beauty Shop
v oltege I n ('leaners
W. T. Grant Co,
I n,i?r Forbes
i J CO,
O Lau tares
I- Dr. A. Schultz
K Th. Smart Shoppe
Coburn's
I) Blount-Harvey
V bain? Packing ?
r S. Y. Morton, dr.
R HcLeilan's
T Williams
I Whit,
- Sally Frocks
ollegi Dry Cb-aner-
R Lane Packing Co.
v ?'harles Stores
LOBBY BEING PREPARED
FOR SOCIAL HALL
1 OB n tie. - are working on a new
' ??:??! ball for the student. To give
a place to congregate -luring
? '??? ii ter month a committee is
aaing plans to put seats, a piano,
?: -i. i small additions in the lob-
t the m w dining ball. If fbis
is not ?bused it will le abled
u' tiil in due time there will have
?! tal hall of which the students
?'H be prnd.
and prisoner - songs (.t th-
rians. They bring the joys, the
heartache the triumps, th- disap-
pointments of a great people into
their music, and they sing with an
informality which make- thern tin in-
orabk. Their music is umque
and characteristic with an expen-
? w?iS. ??. .ivk. ? ???? 1-7 I, n,U . iVrr. Any ?rWH,Be Paid 'f SS,???&
and West Point The group will art and education, history, domestic voice mUst be cultivated, as weH as He gave as an example of an edu- $10U tor bnori Hay
very likely have opportunity to see arts and home planning, electricitya universal pronunciation, andjeated man, a man who can take a Submitted
a dress parade.
ea-ilv acces-i
, ble section ol the city. iit- gjagaxines and current events.
-id. trii. will be taken up the Exhibits in the Exposition fall into ,n n imv to say -om
Hudson River to Ynkr Tarry- several major group
,s. such as agri-
tidustrv
"Learn How to Learn" was the
advice given to the students by Rev.
W. A. Wicker, rector of the Epis-
copal Church, at the College Y. W
MAGAZINE OFFERS
CONTEST FOR PLAYS
thing, she pointed out, one's gram- C. A. vesper services Sunday night.
deal lit of the conntrv
ami
mimunieatiom. transporta- iiosyncracies must be corrected. eMW through a metropoliti
an mu-
HU-1 coimioiii ? i ?? ??? i ni io-vncra les musi ne i-iini-nni. ? ?" .i ???j ?-
New England to Boston tion, petroleum and mineral re- n knowing when to say some- senaa, answer all his questions, ai
Tii trio into w England will sources, and natural history aUinW she went on, one must learn never lose patience. 11-
? " . - !??? . , ,? . 111. ?.? 1 BAM
to
I i iiiiig. sji linn ii. ii. in - , ii- a -1 ti-c- tj n - sin ii i mil ,i.i .ii
1, t 1. . .it exper .mces and aquatic life. to be a g1 listener; a eonversa- how each persoa has some partic- lU!l? amongthe col
' Hvr One of the finest buildings on the liim h,mi(i n,lt k- too one-sided; in- ular gift which God has given him
terruptions, sarcasm and being dog- and it is his duty to develop lha
n a -?m i introducing a MUSICAL PROGRAM IS WELL
: t of it- short play adven- RECEIVED BY STUDENTS
DIM i i i?i : a i. i i ? ' ' .M ?" ? i i , t A i
Cw?? ?? ?L2r.JstSSftST
Please turn to page four)
tion should not be too one-sided; in- ular gift which God has given him (pg y, , ; wi, pubjish the best A well liked and vari
terruptins, sarasm and being l-?g- j ami it is his duty to develop that gnort pay written by a student of program was presented Fridaj
matic should always be avoided. ; gift in the right way. Although aj ni(1(n 1 r university mo performers
ry, tj lt. She concluded with, "Let the hunch study may be "a wei
PtintO&TClfihV JVtdkGS rltlG LTOOOy SXOXtU of my mouth and the mdi-jthe flesh he believes that in -very ?( W()k lf a1iite students andjbefore the students parti
? "? -? tatioas of my heart be acceptable subject, a man can gain much, it accompanied by an endorsement to! Johnny Lee Deaton,
, t ? l - , . in thv sight, Oh Lord, my strength
person attempting to trail Miss mitory asking her nends to pose re,lener stating that if
wh-n nature ,s T-ring such won- J wenderfJf-J v.
aii.fu, npportnmties for photogra- perfomace of the Senior May last ,H.aker for the vear.
1 i tudie- would soon decide 0?? year, she placed her eamera several ?
? ither that the rows from the front of the au-htc
Sii, concluded with, "Let the j much 'study may be "a weariness to in the June issue. Entries must be who had iku previously ap
e believes that in -very worjj 0f accredited students andjbefore the students particip
aeeompanied
he applies himself, as in mathe- tbis effect by a faculty member of by Nola Walters, sang "Tia-nn
matica, aside from the mathmat- Tw, Kngli-h or drama department.j Island Xola Walters and Main
ical knowledge, he can learn some- entries for this special eompe-i Evelyn Thompson, students in th
thing ?f himself and gain self-dis- t;tin must be received not later piano department, played a due
her that the rows from the trout -t tne au.ino-j p.piic Hj-r gY
sagre-ahl forjrium, and t-ok a time exposure of?
FLU EPIDEMIC
idpline.
Socrates was given a
uggeste-1 that we
k column" or "flu mol-
ing of the sort. We
this space to those
the infirmity which
-live nun i-o ? "iL" , . " i ?,
? ??? . , h!t Ih,t .luring which time students passed pervades our fair campus and stops
V)v little about the art mi build not with insignificant students, of
"l umv W,t!l W& Yet when the film was de-
she has a g-
does know.
Wb-n Mi-s M-ade was a child
h?. liu,tber took, -l-velopl U-
ilifed pitus. She was wat.died
Jtoeely by her -laughter, who hnally
lia for herself . small
kodak. With which sit- has beentak-
im pictures off an-l on ?? s.ne?.
She has found out by experimenta-
tion that she can take tune expos-
ures both indoors an-l outdoors, in
t i.io-bt She knows
daytime ?r ? nigin. o
tha, tb-v an be taken with the
,am- small, inexpensive camera
that tin usual l?'riion WOUld US"
onlv for pictures in the sun.
About a vear ago she concentiat-
ed on more indoor pictures. She
went up and down the faculty -Ic-
ing
veloped. no students appeared m
the picture.
Last summer she took many pic-
tures as she traveled and now she
values them greatly because they
whom the world has never heard,
but even invades the ranks of the
well known faculty.
May the recent spring weather
cheer them up so that they can en-
joy the birds, which have begun to
than April 15, 1936. I "The Sleigh Ride Mabel Wil
is a supreme Staqe wants to provide a medium 1 Hams, K. C. T. C -tar imperson-
example to mankind of one who for Th. aspiring playwright and tojator, convincingly brought to the
learned bow to learn. Mr. Wicker ereate a source of talent for ama-Jstage Zau Pitta, Ma- West, and
showed how that great philosopher teur and professional acting groups. Una Merkei. "I'm Falling in Love
reached the point of having at bis jT wants to publish good short plays With Someone" was Wesley Banc
feet, Athens, the city that had the ??. t.v.rv month for so long as sum's choice for a violin solo, ac-
higbest regard for learning; how be j jt receives aeceptable manaseripts-jeompanied by Nola Walters. Han-
learned the value of true relation- Consideration will be given onlyjnah Martin an-l Anne Campbell
ships and became truly educated; to those plays which have neither j.gave an attractive presentation of
and told the story of his tragic! been published nor produced, andLove is Just Around the Corner
death, which proved he had learned ! are not adaptations of stories pab-J Completely disguised by the use of
how to die. lished elsewhere. Preference will J spectacles, Alvah Page an-l James
Special music was rendered byjbe shown plays which can be acted Dudley Simpson, accompanied by
Misses Molly Langstou and Edna j within 4 minutes, and which are Marion Wood, sang a medley of
Earle Perry. contemporary in theme. "Eeenie. Meenie, Minv, MoFir
?- Stag reserves full publieat ion j You and "I Love You Truly
DR. C. M. SIMPSON READS rights, but BO production rights. The chairman of the chapel pro-
"THE DOVER ROAD AH plays will be read promptly j gram committee. Hyatt Forrest,
values iitem gicMn .j.iov ? j ? ; , , i'1-i.
serve to recall so vividlv, the mem- sing, and the flowers, which have
ones of her trips. ! begun to bloom. The springtime
Miss Meade says that because of should not be wasted.
her interest in photography, slm is
more alert for spots of beauty. She
Bees things from a different angle
than the average person. Profes-
sional photographs are of more in-
terest to her. In general. Miss
Meade considers her. amateur pho-
tography an excellent hobby, one
that affords keen delight for spare
time.
Judging from appearances the
rooms in the infirmary must be get-
ting full. For the first time in
years the halls are being used as
bedrooms for patients. Where are
the two nurses sleeping? Or do
they not sleep? 'Tis a thriving
business they have, at any rate. On
Friday night the place was inhab-
ited bv 58 "Flus
Dr. C. M. Simpson read "The
Dover Road a play by A. A.
Milne, before the members of the
A. A. C W. at its meeting last night
in Ragsdale Hall. This was the first
of a series of programs on which
various people will read short plays
to the group. The author of "The
Dover Road" is also the author of
"The Romantic Age" which was re-
cently presented here by the Hedge-
row Plavers.
and accepted or rejected as quick-
ly as possible.
Dr. C. M. Simpson, of the Fng-
lish department, has said that
should any student of this college
be sufficiently interested to enter the
contest, he will endorse that stu-
dent's attempt.
One hundred dollars will be paid
for each acceptable manuscript.
Address: Short Play Editor
Mage, 50 E. 42nd St
New York.
urged the student body to seek out
talent in its ranks and display it on
future programs. The first student
program of next term is to be an
amateur hour, which will afford op-
portunity for any style of exhibi-
tion.
Three meals a day can't produee
maximum physical and mental ef-
ficiency, say Yale physiologists.
They recommend more frequent
and more moderate feedings.





ruary j.
n I
PAGE TWO
THE TECO ECHO
The TECO ECHO
UMuact nu:HFR. colleci
? , Stttdents of Ernst ('arolina
rs College
i a
Edi
Managers
Ma
Editor-in-Chief
Business Manager
hit .oi; LAYLOB
Cakoi vn Ikin ki.ky
Doris Mk.wuorn
Hh.kx Dowxisu
Sara Lee Yatk-
Sara Lapghxin
Chapel Hill Cheating Racket Kevealeilfeac
E
spondence courses done tor them
by fessions c
rrobora
reduted during me wee
4 their wort wi
1-1'
OF CHEATS
snonnence courses u?? lv" . . ?i?n at nanicu
X. books left there by students for of parses ?J? .
whom X was doing work, papers be- mentioned by X ??
in, written, account books and many Wort I ?l? ?'??
The erOUO worked on
other pieces of evidence. ??' s ?
?pe
ted will! the i't! wa
articular times complet
rented. In fl? Br I'1
the pas key ??d wIth
their confederate In the
by u
That afternoon A and the president 0ften from
inuousiy,
in the
n lrom s uii"? cure copies oi quo i-i
of the student body went down to see morning of the fo!lo"f d' rit?rB and examinations be
X With X this time was Y. who was tiays. In ,Vs room Bereu type
Chapel Hill Student Government Xs hell)oraIlll waonJ x hud t?i? com- wt.r0 going atooat CODti?u7Bmoke ?-?
? ? . answers if thej were wanted oi
ng aepartment, they were able
quizzes, p
which they wen to M !
.1,1 for certain euro
Brings Three-Year-OlfJ Ring Uletely of the proceedings of the night shad.
to Light
Y had agreed with X that the Was beavj
were drawn,
the door was guardefl
era! occasion!
X had boast
before. l nau asieeu "n" ?- - ? hi lin rete
best thing to do in the matter was to Men were sent out to owam r lQ WJ qolzJ
turn over all the information which ences and correlation oi ( n (h(. LTniversity
pirates Lo
to Guilfor
Leman Leads Scori
n Games foi Hi
Teai
(Reprinted from Dail Tar Heel) turn over all the intor.nauo ?? ? ??. - ? returneu quickly and "i nie .
The Hoy heard about the cheating they had. Y. on being ?-??? n?y am chemistrj
ring before we went home for the corroborated many of Xs statement. ?m .? in its propel P? sn,?y
X and Y
wrote tlis
tnl tl
Semcj Kept absolutely rederau
had been promised to daUy assignment.
tated earlier.
nig
ana tai
Christmas holidays. He fold his fa- and added a number of his own.
ther, and his father made him prom- at that time, as a result of hat after- Secrecy, oi course, .?
ise to go hack to Chapel Hill and as- noon's conversation, A and the stu- nece8sary,
sist in getting to the bottom of it from lent body president found definitely x Y for the reason, ? p Inents were the
?,? ,??? ? that there bad been a helper la the T,)t. first consideration of tW Hi , wrote
ThTCcame back ami told the University mimeographing department li:tll been the name of the n . JeJ ;
whohad turned over quizzes to X and d ,Va, waa expressed earlj n tne u.
misrepresentation of and sold the exam
Assignments wi re ltb r t:
and
11 03
$1.50 per ('ollege Ye&r
Numbr 182
Room 25
matter December ?. 1925, at the 1 S.
. X. under the act of March 1879.
1035 Member 1936
Plsvo J Goilercte Press
Distributor of
Colic 6icrte Di6est
Student, a friend of his. The Student
went to the room of A and told him Y. and that the pass key to lonu .am inTe8tigatioi
what the Hoy had said. A told the hall was in their possession. Man, IactB throughoutJhyta
to t!
SONG BOOK, PURCHASED
FOP CHAPEL PRGO
uch
were made in 1) heen d
days.
m the very w ru
rreed that the firsl
they added weight to what the Boy the two students thai be would get
hail to till. Pieced together, the story ,le!n an,i while A and the student struction, and
sounded like something. hody president questioned X, Y went the first
Discussing the matter, the little away for 20 minutes, presumably to must
group decided that the best thing to gel the papers.
do would he to run the leader of the ae returned however, without them
The leader was ?, ?, ?" lhat sucn a lia5it '
or to be rewritten
haudw riting
In all caw -tu
Student to ask the Hoy to come over other such disclosure
to see him and the Hoy came. the hours of conversation
By that time, rumors whi.h had Asked to Gel Papers Therefore, I
been unnoticed were picked up and y when asked for bis papers, told the group a
would be those ol remedy and con- gwers wbi
not destruction. And
. (ws that the student body
would have to be that stu-
dents were already taking steps to re-
move this blot on the University, and
ies existed
and the pass key. which had been de- ?? J ?. , ??,?, wM
-1(
ThisColiegiateWorld
a
3-
t
?
I"
e
1.
11
h
v
?
ring out ?'t town.
named
X and the Hy knew it and
manded of him. He said, first oi all
tin-
had tohl the student and A. tha( he had m0VfM, tho papers the
Leader Had Assistants night before to the room of a friend
Then it was found out, through 0f his, although it later turned out to
rumors and other words, that X had ie i,e basement of a certain frater-
a number of assistants who would aiiy house. He said that he was 1111
possibly carry on the work if X had ai,ie to get the papers at that time as exposun
INTERPRETATION VITAL a- And there would still be the friend was at the moving picture have ha
. , .? i fithe assistants to be attended to. Fur- show verslty.
ou-i'd the oiunion that the large amount otl , . . . A. i ,?
, , , thermore, there would he about 200 Following further questioning (the ea, pun
? . .????, ?d an 1 ii'iian 11 u cn-atnig racket can , , , , . rrni
t . . . .1 students (so they thought) who wen- whole conversation was again copied records
r : ?'? including simply the pvl?s0 involved in the heating activity otl down completely by A on the type- hearing
?? - -?? a statement has foundation. ontradie- x alui knew about his program. The writer Y accompanied the two stu- fashion
view is extended to inelttde the manner in only way to get rid of X and his as- dents to Y's room and made arrange- And t
ent met :iu conquered the crisis presented byjsistants and to prosecute for viola- ments iu meet the next day. At thai commit!
12 - : quotation from an editorial in the news-jtion of the honor system the 200 stu- moment A and the president realized the Lni
and v,as spreading its cancen
t the Btudent body.
I'iildiiit Shunned
And then there was the question of
he all-important trustee meeting of
rhursday and yesterday, upon whi.h
of such a situation might
1 ruinous effect for the Uni-
1-n. e, the story v as guard
ity was shunned, and ev n
the first student ? ? ;ui?-il
were renorted ii; routine
!
M
the group
a grievous
sitv, and th
X
?up
REMEMBER
OUP SATURDAY NIGHT
COLLEGE GlS
SPEC -
HILL H0RNE
! dents supposed to be involved would that they must secure Y's papers that l!ir" although this was so it
be through the student council. night, before Y had a chance to de- might be possible to set hira on t&e
strov them and their valuable evi- right path.
evidence. These considerations might not hav,
been so important, furthermore, ha I
it not been that the student hods had
1 haw Graham and told him of what they
,d' our brother I niversity unit an
. and straight forwardness of their Go to !r. Graham
- have n deliberate and persistei ! A had told his roommate, and to-
Howcver disgraceful the scandal,I gether they went to President Frank
? for student government and 1
Secure Evidence
Although Y was unwilling at first
; intain an ord rlv eommunitv.
had heard and of what, they felt cer- to go immediately to g.d the papei
tain was true. They asked him if a iu flnall
v consente
id the three
(
BATTLING FLU
Svstem snttereu a crucial test, bii
tieism has l?n weather And:I Prosecution following an investigaUon walked over to the fraternity house
, ii-ii 1 would, at that time, hurt Dr. Graham The student body president, because
11 1m- more eleariv indeed, -tiid.iit , , . . . . ' '
. . . and the I niversity in its position of 1 his position m student government
1 have been instruments in cleariuffl ? , ? , , ,
! indenmteness about the future. staved outside while A and entereo
Mm learned hvthoiteialor will not Dr Grahara n)!iti. always, that t!le house and in the basement gath
if what they had told him was true, ered the papers in a satchel. The three
rl is page there is ?n idea sei Corthjthen they should not stop until it was then went directly to the University
sis. That is the agreement of the! completely cleaned up. Tiny must go y. ML C. A.
hot J ? constructivi anl remedial to the bottom of it. They must be There Y asked that a few of his
careful and make sure of their facts, personal belongings be removed from
but they must not stop until the Job the bag and when they opened the
is done. iK. A and president found that the
And, more important, Dr. Graham key to Bingham hall was not to be
emphasized that it was a matter to found among the papers. Y. however,
be done entirely by the students. He insisted that it was. and in a crudely-
said that the administration left the concealed gesture, took the key from
operation of the honor principle to his own pocket and pretended to hav.
them. It would like to he kept ad- found it among the contents of tin
vised of all progress, but it would not bau.
interfere with student work in un-
covering this breach of honor.
That night half of the later student
group whi.h uncovered the cheating
ring was organized. First it was an Htai.t0(! t() loar (hl? pa!U,r
: necessary to find out if they had a alul ,hp Mmej, oir,(.ia! tuk it OTn
tin infirmary due to a right to enter the premises of X and hhv aml on 1)(,nins it. funii ,hl.
US wh have thus fariseize his papers to procure evidence naaaea ,?? mme o ,h(? students men-
no legal right to punish X and
the group did the next best thin:
that was to force them to a
campus. However, th present
tion of X and V are know n a
Universit finds evidence : 1
the
I!
ii
;i- 'XI
troop worked Hard
It is our opinion tha
- ever been character
ain. Due u the pn
oi on being mad
In .I. tail, hut no
tnpns. Lts exposure wa
utions whili were to lea
d t!
!??? ie-s ases
Tuia. morning x and V.in A's
riOH) illthe presei 1 ? f A, atnd C,
riviewedall th c ? s andcases
wbich h been giv n and wbiCfl the
gl r f?oup hi ir seveid put in fair order. all of X's and v- a straight 'hours withThey only a
silor; tila- out for lunch. Csat al
atypew?Her and wrote evenword
w
II.
ctr
tie
protect the nai
sa's to interpret
itat ion that crept in
ih
down. Immediately aftei supper, the
group at, t n orfe iag tog ther on
the c ? ions and testimony thus
far received, drew up an official con-
fession which embraced the all-day
conversation and previous conversa-
outraged and for seemingly no reason. ri(ns Late in the evening at 1100
pulled from his pocket a list of names o'clock, X and Y. with B and C met
"W
Heroines Outraged
When acused of this. In
i ?.
a 11:
v
before Paul Robertson, ioca ttornev
r oi -tint.
to suggestions as t what pr-
of his dishonorable work. The stat.
tioned in Y's previous confessions ex-
(nsetjuently t
perins on cam
pus who I attorney-general and assistant attor- CeIU two. Y. on being questioned tibotit
and notary public, and X and Y set
their signatures to the confession after
making several changes.
I.eaie Hill
SiEY REVEALS U
GRADS A
- m a program of precaution an-offering ney-general were contacted and. after (heso saj( thal OIU BBe he h;(il lul. The next day x left Chapel Hill and
rht wtdl be nriuted here a BOod deaI of "t'ation. they ad- ()tu.IL Th? uth(,r he said wag th(i made his exit the following day.
,?? 1 iv .? V111 ;? ,1 hmlv Vised MU(,ents that tlu'y were l0" name of someone who had nothing to 0theT t'vili besides the straight
- uii o n.i t. 11a. f-xl ' ! ! gallv right in conducting their investi- , testimony against students iavolved
ifiicirni to troduce either. 1 he bacteria j ?? ;? ,??n?1(ir ? ac'
- it
sufficient to produce either. The bacteris
cted bv direct contact. Excessive chilling
odv, however, and tt 1- tin- towerei
o-k by the bacteria.
0 avoid illness will bI the fullwin:
inchidins hat and galoshes I.
; gatton in that manner. These newIy-unCOVered papers wer
Secure Search Warrant that night placed in the University nciinDTunnDnuiii
So about 530 in the afternoon of safe with the others. Later in the U. OF NORTH CAROLINA
Saturday, January 25, A and the presi- "ening. meeting in As room, the OUTLINES ATHLETIC POLICY
dent of the student body, who had g"jep decided to add to its member-
been notified of the group's intended sMp, and the new men were asked Chapel Hill C (XSF -
tin
n v.
baek vouTl know h
i
w
down.
Prominent aines Included
Before seeking the list of names
i spreading baefe 11a.
iersons who are il
1 in- ioiiowing resolution was passed
by th University of North Carolina
iticil ami outline- policy
concerning scholarship students p
mckles, h. id,
on Li- legs and the
with an iron hammer,
program, and Chief of Police Sloan
and Officer Wright of the local force.
with a search warrant which had been utno?c amuns mc n?i ui names , ? (
sworn out by the justice of the peace which had been obtained from Y. the
and the chief entered the room of X. students were told that it contained ll! iar-iii -tii.iein- ;
.bmltted to "antes of many of their personal pipatmg on varsity.teams. "V
f the l nuersity. A- a result, ;m ?.hl
Governor Martin L Da ?. of I H
eu rather rough on the stj
tllotments of funds to Ohio Sti
a. e. the Athletic ('ouncil
Open Forum
!? X was there and he sul
a search of the room. Then he was friends and many of the most promi- ,
questioned and as the conversation ! nent campus figures. They were asked ? "isersity ol .North Carolina, after ?rani ls being passed about on the
feoitrx. that tin-writerj Went on. A took down every word on lf the' wished to proceed with the ln years oi intensive study and iq m this new form: "DonM
X-s tvpewriter V and the president case, and without exception they sig- strenuous effort, have developed ai ,m " l!liTil tomorrow what vou can
' ' ' do t Davev
( assmnin
of tin- letter reprinted below ex-
pressed the sentiment of the entire
Y
student body to winch he belong
of using ami that I speak v th
. - ;ik. the body 1
" prograi We par- iil(ir Tke ?
1, th musical ones and A!oQg with th(. nw! (it- ,ll(. W(.
?al'nt 1- being Waiiiia-Kmiw which JOB print in
. Friday morning pro- your Vogue column from time to
xcelleat. time, voo might have something like
rves th
of the student body questioned X for nified their determined affirmative re- the Cniversity of North Carolina a
five hours. The two officers were pres- &'? When the names were read, si- system of inter-mural and inter-col-
i "ViiTT.i ent for a part of the time. and. at the ?? & hurt silen- 11 over the l.j athletics that i-eiitm-lv satis-
,U 1T beginning of the second hour. Dean room, and for minutes no one spoke. faetorv in kt. - fa ,
Bradshaw was called down by the But one by one they voiced their de- traditions of the Universitv of Xorth
president of the student body. Follow- termination to press their investiga- (?? T. . Ul"
ing the questioning, the interviewers;tion ana parry the case to the student s' , ' ? "T athletics 111 tin
left with all the papers seized in X's ? council and to abolish the outrageous 'M UT" ' :U1(I brea a huge per
cmni.t'tfi'
,f ilit- students. I In v
, en en much time and
,x to bt ttei programs.
suggestions ol
,1
tins:
We wanna know why the food is
-o lousy; we wanna know how long
these lunches are going to last; we
wanna know what's the use of cab-
- hi
aee: we
wanna know how we are
irwar
, expected to do decent work on fare
like that we get in the dining room;
-v mterestine chaiK-I periods. , . '
' ! we wanna kimw what were going
B ' , , (to 11-e for iiionev to keep from starv-
n mtersested student. - , ?
ing; wc wanna know why something
l-n't done tbont it; wc wanna know
1 -ar Editor : who likes the food anyway ; we wanna
From "in of niv courses I reealljknow who's afraid to say be doesn't
an explanation d" "sympathy" and I like it; we wanna know why we don't
the e-sential factors in the ability to (do something about it.
sympathize. The idea i- tbat onel VK WANNA KNOW! WHO'S
cannot sympathize fullv without hav- (iOIXti TO TKLL l"S
A had copied down.
Confesses
room and the Bra confession which cheating activity. Until late in the n?g? ? the students at the Cni-
following morning they discussed V'1S1LV 01 North Carolina an- self-
plans of procedure for the week. help students, ami dependent on help
Beirin Heaw Tn?t from the I'niversitv itself, their
It must be noted here that X was ?t-j.i" neaij xasn friends -nul l?mn; . i, ? 1
not promised by the students or by: T next morning, after a little ? " Th?t?? .n
Dean Bradshaw immunity from prose-j sleeP- and ?? three more additions Iliat e ? n" n ??
cution in the courts if he would give i t0 its membership, the group, now JJ ?i ?
information against the students in numbering eight, set to work classi- P0?1 ? rmadcimore rigid; that Ji
t rogression ;i hi mi.
Hesitation
I repidation
1 nteiTogat ion
I nformation
Investigation
'onfirmation
Jubilation
Graduation
I n Von follow I
(rgra
- edincHi
3 in now
Spring FROCKS
Navy . . dustj tonesS?
lv prints?with al! the re-
fashion detus that are mas-
j :ng 1936 hcadlinesl U"1
PI TT
JOHN BOLES and
Gladvs Swarthout
ami
tn
One hoy the principal couldn't
?1
ing first experienced the same situa-
tion as the person with whom be is
attempting to sympathize. That
being true, do you agree with me
when I say that the student body
of East Carolina Teachers College
sympathizes with the student body
of High Point College in one issue
The Forgotten Student,
(Hungry!)
file the letters and put them indenee at the FnivWkty oT'NoS P! e?JJT'
chronological order. Summaries of Carolina before n?t&?K?- ?L F BOTt ? , ?cl?ea m
Beginning in June, Yale engi-
neering graduates will receive
bachelor of engineering instead of j assort them. They included letters
bachelor of science degrees. ' from students who had had corre-
collected to establish the record of
X's and Y's activities.
The academic records of every sus-
pect was gone over in the files of the
different deans. In most cases it was
found that the effect of X's aid was
clear. In all cases it was found that
the evidence given in X's and Y's con-
that all students, whether" thev'be' in ordpd hiy.
growing. Doctors
become the tallest man
of policy did not prosecute its stu-
dents or former students in the courts , ?ii-oiin-i tietor- ? ? -? - .
and would not prosecute him unless each letter, cross-references and otherL' ?i 1 ?? l P?uticijiating m height and weighs 390 noun.Is
it were absolutely necessary to do so ? " - miMtv atl.ldio ami tlnt ?
tm break up his selling aid in cheat-
ing. Furthermore, prosecution at
court would mean publicity as wit-
nesses for all students involved.
On the morning of Sunday, January
26, the papers which had been placed
in the University vaults were taken
to A's room and the group began to
data were notated and collected. Names " ' , ,l ami "p ?nt,re ??! Bobbie is still
mentioned in correspondence, themes, T Cm ? C0V(r ?? ? l?cnod of ,th;nk hp mav w
letters and account books all were' years, lie ir resolved, furtherJaj 5ls
athletes or otherwise, should be on
the same basis and that we see no
reason why a boy's eligibility should
be influenced by his financial affairs
except that he should not receive re-
muneration for athletic services, per
se
One would think Mr. Wadlow
should be able to impress a jury.
An "overwhelming majority" of
college professors are in opposition
to New Deal policies, according to
the American Liberty League.
"ROSE OF THE
RANCHO"
The First Big Outdoor Mustcol
Ever Screened!
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY
February 11 and 12
LESLIE HOWARD
BETTE DAVIS
in Howard's own famous slog
success of last season
"THE PETRIFIED
FOREST"
Also Featuring
GENEVIEVE T0B1N T
HUMPHREY BOGA'
THURSDAY and FRIDAY
February 13 and ?V
be duties ol ?
?trie. ? ?4 , ?
told official positio
ations. Eighte. - 1
three! aeth iti s, ai
90 one bettei ? ? bol
lecthre offices
h itTy-nine of 1
tonomous units of
ternational organ a
remaining number 1
excepting 25
which students ar
basis of aehievemeii
ations who m
automatical
detern
Starts Saturday,
F?
"ATaleofTwoCiliJ
Starring RONALD COU
??ireumstattee- as class
"ar"pns address, them
"ban 100 groups to wh
;tre admituk! largely h
personal choice.
Duke student organl
into the following genj
"ations; Athletics. h?
!stry. classical studie
subjects, dormitory
maties, education, engJ
nsics, French. Germ
honorary scholarship
HniP, law, literature,
??licine, music, na
needlework, physics,
? publications, relid
scientific societies, and
rnities and sororities!





Keb
ruary n
li, 1936
THE TECO ECHO
PAGE THREE
ea'ed Teachers Defeat A. C. C. 58-41
Thriller
r'mgSy
?eW?
1 ?!???
re th
th' 1Mb,
)KS PURCHASED
? CHAPEL PROGRAMS
MEMBER
SATURDAY NiGHT
COLLEGE GIRLS
SPECIAL
ONLY .
LL HORNE
5.90
hions in new
ring FROCKS
y . dusty tones . ? hve"
.j it5?with all the new
jhic n details that are mak-
1936 headlines! 11 to 171
I T T
hN BOLES and
Gladys Swarthout
in
Irose of the
RANCHO"
First B.g Outdoor Musical
Ever Screened!
rUESDAY WEDNESDAY
February 11 and 12
SUE HOWARD
BETTE DAVIS
ymmtt own tamo" ?
mam of last s?o??
HE PETRIFIED
FOREST"
Also Featuring
INEVIEVE TOBIN .jjrr
I HUMPHREY BOGA
HURSDAY and f&f
Februory 13 and ?
Starts Saturday,
Feb.15
2&ZS&
grates Lose First Game
to Guilford But Win Second
mm 4M Ik gain third 'pirates score
: li ads Scoring in Both
ga nes for Home
Team
L
Stowe Back in Game After Two
Weeks Illness
EfoUeman led the Pirates to su-
it her victorv liv scoring 19
OF
OF 62 42
P. I. C.
Scoring Attack Led By
Holleman With 27 Points
i Johnson and Holleman Leadj
poiafcd The Greenville girls' basketball Team to Easy
' ! Marks Second Win nf Seison fnr Su" who waa 1rk in lh" E- C. team won their third vidtory Thins- Win
T T. C. line-up after two weeks illH?y ? U? ? A
II
cored !? points foi
?ll'l liljii'c
to 13.
riu Pirat.
rainpagi in
KtK'kv Mount
GAMES FOR WEEK
One Trip of Team is Postponed
Pirates Win First Game of Year
With A.C.C. in Swift
Attack
V, in!
:i scoring
t T. . with !u mints. John- 1;i- Guard
1. t'rii-r. Adkins, 2.
Ramblers Led by L Martin and
Fine Defensive Work of Guards
Get Their Third Straight Win 1hncnn oriH Mnll.man , parii i:AIlt Mill IMH-R in the.nrt game of the annual
series between E. C. T. ' and
Atlantic Christian College, th
Teachers were the victors, 58-41.
There has aiwavs been a great deal
of rivalry between these two teams
and they have always battled on even
'?' rms, but this time the Pirate- went
?coring rampage and the abovi
.? as the result. The garni
- .???.???.?????? ? as filled with fast action and two
(The excellent floor work of the guards lekson, P. J. forward, led thej'J1J e. x ,
mson i. Ridenhour
Temporarily
iii- ?? a
The Pirate- ran roughshod over
Showing supremacy in every I Presbyterian Junior College, E. C.
-i Lanier with 7 points eaehjpbase of the game the Teachers ran T. C. used substitutions very
second till with led the visitors. Kip a score of 22-8 at the end of the frequently bu1 1 J. C. couldn't stop w' i,1;i.v '?"
to defeat the "Y 42- Starting line-ups- half- Led bv L Martin who scored the rampaging Pirates. Holleman led first.game willye Honda
n was star player and , . is poirtts ofthe total 12, the game the Pirates with 26 points. John- William and Man ol!
. c I i i '?? ' I. v. forwards: mining- ' , , , , . , ? , . rinhiirn a Sati
?oi I I . I with , ' hvas never doubtful as to the outcome, gon was next with In points. Hel- lJ nil1 v ??
uuii?n was ?inuer-uplham 4 Stowe 9. Center: Hollemar1? ' ?? ?
tball t i
! T
Hi
Y.
VleC
1
L he excellent noor wont oi tne guarus teKson, r. ?. ? . lorwaru, icu mc ????? ,?? ??-? ??? -? t
was an important factor in the final visitors with 20 points while his Last year the varsity played m-
score. teammate Edgertbn, center, scored gat' ?; ; winning one and
k' SIount "Y" forward, led thi Campbell Forwards: Sessoms 4 The sis thai play on Coaeh l. losing one. Eh l
'?' points. This was Anderson 4. Center: Thomas g.lNorton's first team are all freshmen Line-ups:
nii win in us manv ? v- i - i : - except Cantain Margaret Martin. E. C T. C, Cunningham I. Stov
iiiian inith ??. Lanier ?.
Around Washington
Substitutes K. C. T. C Jennings
Fleming 3, Hintbn, Ayers 1. ?
L'he hne-up: 5, ('enter: Holleman 26. Guards
K. C. T. C. Forwards: I Martin Johnson It Ridenhour 1. Sub
?ibsontji? Blanton 2, Miller 6, Wilson 12. stitutions: Ayers, Wells 2, Jen
II. Martin 1. Guards: M. Parker. 2, Smith 3, (ii
mm
In- year they have
and are hoping they
losing
dnts. ?
Ki
v,
?i,
after a brief fight lasting enly one
week, succeeded in having their pres-
ident released from the WPA two
weeks go. reinstated in her oM job.
do not make another tie !v
? ed A. C. C. with lo points,
the nexi game. . '
ri' ? .i r i v (? (i htartmg line-ups:
1 lie trio the I L. 1. i . Urirls , ,? . ? ,
v i i ,i i ? ,l t ? C. . . Forwards: unning-
aritv liu'l planned lo take toj, ?
m , n it; , lham ? btowe enter: Holleman
Mitchell and Appalachian was post- . , . ??? ? i
V, ,i 27. Guards: Johnson 11, Bidenhoui
poned because ol weather conditions.
? Martin, R. Parker. Howard, Hollo-1Center: Edgerton 14. Guards:Arrangements however, have been ? Fiil Vi.?tr , ? ?.k.
well. Welsh, Wilson. Substitutions: Carr jmade for the Teachers to play Ap-Ij r, 6eater: Hayes, 6. Guard
Wingate Forwards: Brooks 2,1. Cromartie 1. palachian February 22. 11 is not ?
Garner 2 Fowler Holme- 5. definite whether they vvjll t
? ii i-ii- i. ii. .iiiuuii t. viuaiu in. i mi' i. . nun, i. im-i'ii.
Campbell- Boone a Spell I, Pleasant, Shackleford. Captain M. P. J. C, Forwards 20, Murphy 6.
: i l l1 II 1 Illl ? llti, 1.1 f in.i eil- - I
Washington D. c. A.CP?Therum pier 5, Autry, Manning.
?'ERA-WPA Lodge of the American . ?
f Government Employees,
WRITTEN BY DOAK
; RVEY REVEALS UNDER-
GRADS AS "JOINERS
The union's success surprised cu-n its ?
D08itlon from evervbodv1 from Mr VIentor of Diamond Sport at State' Rudvard KipUng was made tlrf Nicholson hai
? ? rl?? ?l?l, ? DU.nnn Ll .? .V 1 ill ih, holi.e n
N'SF
Hopkins down au.iinst reinstatement
at Mis- Richter, allegedly discharged
foi inefl ? ncj They had ammunition
li. tor a ?? light ready, ammunition
, :? ulati ?; ' prove that their pres-
- ??: idenl - dischargi had been prompted
? ' i aer ui Ion acth ities, not by the
Completes Work on Playing
and Coaching
Guard Lovelace, Bass, Hemmings, pRACTCE HQUSE
McGnnsey.
LATE POET FEATURED IN
) CHAPEL PROGRAM Thursday evening, January 23,
ilanehe Pearson and Marcelh
i a- their dinner guest
Mitchell of not.
Substitutions: E. I. C. Ayers,
Well8! 'JewiiiigSj Smith 4. Gibe i
HAS DINNER GUESTS.Final Message By Mrs. Smith l ? ?? Cuimingham 4. Btever-
Carries Loyalty Theme "
OUTSTANDING WORKER
i
recenl chapel program in the home management house, Mi
under the direction of Ruth Horne. Elmer Robinson of the high scho.
"Loyalty?the willing, practical,
and thoroughgoing devotion ol ai
Mi? .Yahhie Ev
iier-on to a cause was the theme oi ,
' . . , m was an outstandin
the hnal message brouglit bv Mr
of Greenvillt
dent w hile ii
i ino uhitiuiii "i Hum ri,??. - - i??? 'Ischool here She received her I!
l'he Recessional" was read in j faculty and Miss Mack of the collcgi n:iZlll Smith, annual i W. C. A.T,
, v . concert by the students and then faculty.
i oaeh "Chick" Doak, head base- sung bv a chorus of ten voices. The Dinner was served at -ix o'clock
? !l ???, -it s,)tl. en kecamc Poem :lf was read by Helen HardMrs. Bloxton, Rose Beeman, and
? ,V ' ' ? ing; the -torv of Wee Willie Ruby Kelh were present al
i full-fledged author recently wliei
Idegree in 1929. For several years
sneaker, at the college vesper serv-l , i . ? i i ? i i . t,?
" , ? , , ' . she raiteht m Raleigh. Siie got hr-r
ices Suinlav night, January ??
I)
Winki was told 1 Lucile Lewis, The three coursi dinner consisted
u,l the poem "When Earth's Last of silver nip, baked chicken
masters decree in education at
University of North Carolina.
v. Mu
rork, which quality they the firs( edition oi hi- hook. "La .
could prove waa ex- ball, Bfom to Plav and Coach It pture s Painted" was read by dressing and gravy, candied potatc.
r , ( i).1M broccoli, oickles. celerv, tomiit
came on the press. Urace i 'a ivson
once the central
? , between Gen Huh .
the XRA employees' .
;e lion w
iliee
time th
.

? Ikuii I
a ).inure of t'h
q the front.
"Mv Boys, t:
II
oke at the rally held h FERA
- laum hing tl e effort to re-
.i Kit r. Doni van, dur-
as sMe-id- tit ? I the XRA
as suniiarlj discharged, and
itati d until the case, brought
ie National Labor Board, was
in bis favor.
s serves to iilustrate the point
? ?? Binci th? New Deal first brought
youngsters into tbe service there has
? e owing militancy in the govern- .
i : ? ' i I in;
i , men! employees' unions. The NRA
lodge and th? fkkaavpa lodge have
? beet outstandingly pugnacious and ?' - ?
o credit outstandingly successful in their hat- Mr, Doak covers practically all
: for ties The militancy is directly at- phases of the diamond sport in his
a large tribatable to a number of young men work. Following a preface written
. salad, cheese biscuits, butter, vanilla
1 SFA College Sews
' I FRATERNITY BILL AT LAST
vi !?? n't taken up by '?"
, . ,i ntramurals Hartford, Conn.?(NSFA).? Under-
i naees lona aud t'aiillats ;u Trinity College have pre-
? m i seated a petition to tbeir Board of Tras-
therette. I he only '
tees asking for the abolition of com
puisory chapel. The petition sets fortl
"that compulsory religious services do
to oegan her talk by relating the
classroom and everyday life with
. . ?, , , . , Ai present she is connected smh
"What sorl ot class would this class ' , ? .
. . Y vollege, ' olumma I mversitv,
be ii everv member were just like! ?
, ? ? New i "re. lit September l'r.
me? and stressed the obligations v1 , , ,4 i -
. . . . ; rhomas Alexander, head t -ev.
Ii-it i-riiin- with miii- meinlier-liiii ill ? ? . r ,
ollege, sent her to London to super-
ivise undergraduate students from
New College. She returned January
epcudable man. bv l'r. Kovce, pro- ?. , ? , . ?
. ' . ?? She and five students met u:
fessor at Harvard I niversity, quot- . , -? -y j rour.
AID TO STUDENTS,v1 ; fthful loyal, essen- : the -isit. coll anj
! tiiil, mdisjieusable, reliable, trust- ,
, , , ? ! i plantations,
worthy and valuable; he counts not;1
Sfinueapolis, Minn The Creeks j (j!()i. iV ,niIlUtS- never idle, re-j ?
have another good word for it.
that come with our membership in
various organizations.
She read the description of a
uses no task be anno' conquer
Fraternity house bills have always and never betrays a trust.
been u
of the last points brought VTiew all the tasks of life
eall
tt lion
lefore a rushee. Now house men are land act so that the Taw of thy life
ikely to make it the first point In may become the law of mankind, was
i broadening and deepening the under- msjiJQg talks, for recently a fraternity ner
eomplish their primary purpose
liaddy, aud tu
1 ai Guilford
iin i iiavi coacneu ai iuui"i'i
. , . graduate's spiritual life, but that in- house hill rescued a university ot
i olleire 1 mversitv of Aorta aro- , . . .
stead they weaken and cheapen his Minnesota pledge from jail.
'I runtv ('ollege I now 1 hike . Kaviy one cold morning a couple of
U-ersity), and N. . State ol- ;llt,llllum ?y,u,nl 0f cred- "eeks ago Lloyd Alhinson discovered
s prowler outside the Phi Kappa Sigma
its
It continue
DANCE TO BE GIVEN
SATURDAY NIGHT
THE
GLORIA SHOPPE
Is Always
READY TO SERVE YOU
The freshman class w ill give th
? junior class a dance Saturday night
That compulsory re- !lo?- here' He cal,ed poHce' but theat the Campus Building. The Y
prowler had disappeared.
recent i(
iiiege and uni- ,v himself are chapters on the lay-
tigious services do not a. eomplish their morning
secondary purpose of disciplining the a pledge came back t0 the house. Find
'? entine Motif will be carried out.i
ver
iiv graduates, who organized and
.undergraduate by arousing him for jg ,he frollt (ioor looked, he started
'? , ' ' " ' earlv morning classes, to use religion ;irouI?j to the back door. As he reached
??? ?.?,?; Tf5- rf "d? . p? . ?????? . ?. ?? ? ?? ?-
r i!r ?- n? : ??,? M?. a1 "n,im" a"pram into
and now they're showing the old guard
k
??That it is unnecessary for us to a squad car. and took him to the
rovernment employees- leaders that bnrf atoh?fiphy of himself "JL aIiy institute method for city jail.
? constituting b . . ' ? ?i?? his connection with baseball. Ae- . J ranu
d lectures on
lizations pr
, . , . , ? hi- connection with basebalL A.C- Despite protests, repeated attempts
th.vre not -list theoreticians hut also ? . ,1.1 maintaining high attendance ;it chapel H
tneyn ? ???? cording to the State diamond euach,p1? 8 identification and many requests to
Jimmy Carr's Orchestra will pro
vide music for the dance.
All co-eds and town students,
holding courtesy cards, .are invited
The dance will be from s :30 until
in :30 dock.
t haperm.e- will be Mr. and Mrs.
Hollar. Dr. and Mrs. ReBarker, Dr.
and Mrs. Simpson, Miss Norton and)
Miss Mack.
E. T. GOOR, JR.
SHOE SHOP
Come To Us For
ALL SHOES REPAIRS
RINGLESS HOSIERY
a liv a
in , , ?v,??o s "?" ? a, Hientuicaiion aim inuiii i?4?"i' "j
?? able union strategists. The charge , - rh(. pU!ll. for s,rvi(s. The elimination of liu1' Ujok at his plpdge pin, the unf0rtunate
their pi annum the old timers is that they re years. During that period :sry attendance, which we sincerely be
?th -tu
pledge was lodged in a cell in the city
?, enter- just a bunch of young coin ge aura, i)(. haa pkyed 1U (.vt.rv position and ;HvVo l0 be au evil, is ln itself tne sub- jajl when M awoke at s am a final
?? therefoae, come to know t?"Ulitulion of a healthy religious atmos
student a?
"playing at ?union the way children
student a play at 'soldlera fundamentals of each position
interesting social Thai charge is partially true. There through experii
lice.
determined search of his pockets
I phere brought out his house bill. This was
. ? ' i. 1, , presented to the police sergeant and
?pe?enee ? alv a ft)lip!t. ?f -over the rampts In pre ace Mi. chapel Hill. X. a-(NA)Two (Uestioning. the pledge was re-
,rs, but also at hov-?? people among the young folks forth the fad that, . . . i aavi u Lhousand o? the twenty-nve hundred
1 in leadership ??. M? mii0ns of the New Deal sired nor only to pay tribute to the undergraduates at the University of 1 M
,nov. aa.mcie ?? most of them are aal'grea' u?neau name, hut d-
irganiranons are liard,u,ad(.d ai5
most 01 luviu ?- - ,
as the AFGE president, what 1 may to assist yepmg hxgh
proximateh M stu . i4ihcock In addit on they bring ? ' ' L
fil.nt- of ;iU)1 , ?m sionaT players in acquiring knowl-
'v 1, ? ? ? 'he ?overnment em- edge of the ftiiidainental- of the
are not taxed oy wfca o,d leaders seem to ??
In- leader- laik' unity- PerslstoB?e, and ideal- h, .lUf .uhy tllilT- "From the size
in two oreani- is,il f"111 of the l???'k it will not be expected
fid time to serve With the example of the unions of . it snoui(l contain all that may
nd' four t'lidint- these capable young amateurs before; ,)(. wriUi.v )U the subject of hase-
Wing four major them many old line lodges have begun 1)!tll. l,ut ,au assure 'he reader
to show signs of increasing vigor. I that it contains my proven knowl-
? : . irroups are au- rlvde Baheock. who stood godfather to ; edge of the game
- of national or in- l! sra lodge when it was first. Among the.men prominent in the
11 tl ,? ? c wht a ram- baseball world who have made fa-
rgamzations while th ? forn)ed. never reah.ing jhat a ram
tmber are purelj 1-al. bunctious youngster the bab was president. Oak
3 l?or ??? " slated to become, is beginning to find okm? ? (,
ltS n '1(CrLUn 'fhis job much harder, and somewhat K .
rement, and 20 organ- M M the young people
memberships w? ?
Seventy-three nationalities are
Fepxesented among the S00 stu-
dents at Boston University.
North Carolina are now members of a health is more equitably distrih-
eleaning and pressing cooperative : ,unon? ,nari.i(l men than
which did a busienss of nr000 in 1934 bachelors, says a recent
and far exceeded that in 1935. The co- ?
op own its own truck, employs a man-1
ager. two clerks and six cleaning and
pressing experts. The success in clean-
ing and pressing led the students to add
clothing to their cooperative service. A
private clothing merchant in Chapel
Hill is reported to have advertised that
he would run the co-op out of business
if it cost him $100,000. Today, the
merchant is in bankruptcy. The co-
operative was started on a capital of
$760 raised by $1 membership fees from
the charter members.
VISIT
ASKEW GROCERY
For QUALITY and
SERVICE
Full Fashioned, 45 Gauge
79c Per Pair
2 Pairs for $1.50
MILLER-JONES CO.
108 V.rth Evans Street
memberships r so aCtive At the last AFGE national
?lilLti 1 ?ntion recently the FERA and
. - class ratings sum t? n crreat
lege; Connie Mack, manager of the
Philadelphia Athletics; Branch
Rickey, president of the St. Louis
Cardinals; and W. G. Bramham.
president of the Association of
ra lodge delegates provided a great
. ??LrlVt 15r own other -servative leaderhren- Minor League
TfT f uT0r:ZZTt:C Dr. Jose Antonio Lopez, former
dent organizations fall offices unless the o Id leadIP Ullivorsitv student, may be
ff. following general classihover its hardening of the arteries.
' Athhties. biology, chem of course, although the employees
?& elaaaieal studies, commercial:unio,8 can fight single cases of dis-
lr'J?'t dormitory groups, ?lra-jcriminatory discharges or wage cuts,
maties, education, engineering, for" they.e up against it when hundreds
-?? . fiucauon, eiigineeiiiii, "? ;they'e up againm. it ??????
asi s. French, German, h?i'tory,Sare dropped from the payrolls of the
tooorary seholarahip and leader- bureaus, which is being done right
'hlF, law. literature, mathematics. recentIy begun economy
ine, music, nature study, ? momentum. with tha
1-work, pbysks, political sci- a ? im employeaa
publications, religion, genial NR?T or more a yeM ago.
-?nt,hc societies, and social fra-las WPWfllL . a.
and sororities. 'tbe ni
Ohio University student, may be
tbe next governor of Puerto Rico.
An expert in "euro-psychiatry
has been added to the Williams
College health department.
Graduate courses in automobile
traffic control will be offered by
Harvard next year.
Beginning next year, M. I. T.
will limit its freshman class to 600.
Only once in 30 years has the
Princeton co-operative store failed
to pay a 10 per cent dividend.
Amateur hockey and college bas-
ketbaE are increasing in popularity
at Madison Square Garden.
FOR BEST VALUES
IN HOSIERY
PURE THREAD SILK
Alt New Shades for the
College Girls
VISIT
WHITES
t f ? f t yf m w"r 9 9
Qp w w m "r w m w yJi
If It's
SPRING STYLES
You Want?Try
COBURN'S
Buy Where
College Girls Buy
WELL DRESSED LADIES
Shop at
II I IM K FORBES
ft ?????- ?? jfegtesgftsst!
CHARLES HORNE
DRUGGIST
Come in and Enjoy the
Latest Popular Music
With Your Soda
WE HAVE THE SUIT, COATf DRESS, HAT
AND ACCESSORIES
The Newest of All in Spring Things
Arriving Daily . . .
COME TO SEE US
WILLIAMS
'The Ladies' Store"
Opposite Proctor Hotel
DONT FORGET US WHEN YOU
BUY YOUR NEW SPRING OUTFIT!
We Have Spring Dresses and
Suits at Your Price.
We Are Here to Please the College Girls
THE SMART SHOPPE
Across from Bank Building Dkkiasaa) A'





s
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PAGE FOUR
THE TECO ECHO
LITERARY
COLUMN
LIFE OF RUDYARD KIPLING
TOUR TO MEXICO AND
SOUTHWEST 32 DAY TRIP
Alice Maedonald met John Lock-
wood Kipling, a modeler and de-
signer of terra COtta in the Burslem
Potteries, at a picnic on the edge
of a lake near a village in England
named Rudyard. They feli in love,
became engage and were married
when he received an appointment as
director of the art school at Bombay.
Despite the lack of pleasure shown
by their families, the couple crossed
to the Orient.
Rndyard Kipling was born in
Bombay, on December 30, 1SG5. (The
story that he was named Rndyard
in memory of Lake Rndyard has been
ienied by Kipling himself.) He
learned both languages spuken
around him?that of his parents and
hat of the inhabitants. At the age
of six he was sent to England, where
he remained for five miserable years
with the wife of a retired naval of-
ficer, who boarded children from
?verseas.
At eleven. Rndyard's father took
him with him to visit an exposition
at Paris. The two became very
lose friends. The boy entered the
Fnited Service College, a famous
public school in England intended
hiehV for sons of Anglo-India civil
military officer Five years were
-pent here, and served as editor of
?he U. 8. C, Chronicle during his last
two years.
At seventeen, when he had to
choose between the university or
India, he took India.
His father having become Director
of the Lahore Museum, Kipling
went to Sahore to seek a job. He
secured a position as sub-editor of
the Civil and Militant Gazette. His
chief was constantly aware that the
newspaper was being spotted with
little ditties originating from the
seventeen year old newspaper man.
The verses became popular. Re-
quests came that they be made into
a book. The idea appealed so to
Rudyard that he became author,
editor, printer, and publisher of a
hook that was hardly a hook in size
and form. It was called Depart-
mental Ditties and when every copy
was sold, demands came for a new
edition. So it was that Kipling he-
;ran his writing which continued un-
til he was known and liked through-
out India.
Then he went to England. His
(Continued from page one)
grounds is the Exposition Audito-
rium, with its theatre seating 4,600
people where grand opera, famous
orchestras, folk festivals and
pageants will be presented through-
out the Exposition. The Hall of
Natural History will house hun-
dreds of examples of Southwestern
game and bird life, mounted in
habitat groups, and now being col-
lected at great expense by experts.
Some of the buildings will be of
temporary construction and re-
moved as soon as the Exposition
closes. But many of them will be
built to be used indefinitely. Build-
ings of a permanent type to be
erected, and their approximate cost,
include: Transportation and Petro-
leum. $39000; Varied Industries,
Electrical and Communication,
$350,000; Aquarium, $150,000;
Agriculture, Livestock and Food
Products, $750,000; Fine Arts Mu-
seum. $350,000; Natural Science
and Horticultural Museum, $250
000; House Planning Hall. $150
000. A landscaping program, cost-
ing more than $200,000 is now un-
der way. This will give Dallas one
of the greatest civic centers in the
world.
Proper emphasis will be given to
the historic features of Texas. Texas
was for a long time owned by Spain
and then passed into the hands of
Mexico. The Republic of Texas
was born out of the Texas Revolu-
tion of 1835-3(5 which was brought
about when the Anglo-American
settlers of the then Mexican pro-
vince of Texas revolted.
Texas remained an independent
nation recognized by foreign pow-
ers, including the Fnited States,
Great Britain, France, Holland and
other nations, until 1845 when, by
a plebiscite, she voluntarily entered
the Union, becoming the twenty-
ninth state. Texas is the only state
to have been recognized as a sover-
ign nation prior to admittance to
the sisterhood of states.
It is interesting to note that Texas
has known the flags of six nations in
the period of her rule by the white
race. In 1519, De Pineda, a Span-
ish explorer, landed on Texas soil
and claimed the country for Spain.
Later, France raised her flag on
Texas territory and for some time
maintained a small settlement, hut
Texas remained a Spanish colony
until Mexico revolted from Spain
1611. Montreal is now the largest
city in Canada and serves as a great
commercial, educational and reli-
gious center.
From Montreal the group will
travel to Ottawa, the capital city
of the Dominion of Canada. The
parliament and other government
buildings will be visited. The high-
way to be traveled to Toronto paral-
lels the St. Lawrence River, the
greatest inland waterway in the
world. In Toronto the provincial
government buildings, the Royal
Museum and University of Toronto
will be included in the sightseeing
program. The party will proceed
to Niagara Falls either by boat or
highway. A day will be devoted to
the inspection of the largest power
plant in the world, the great locks
on the Welland Canal, the Shredded
Wheat plant and also the Commu-
nity Plate electro-plating plant.
Ample opportunity will be given to
see the Falls both dav and night.
The Finger Lake" district of
New York, one of the most beau-
tiful sections of the State, will be
traversed. Then the group will con-
tinue by the Susquehanna Trail to
Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsyl-
vania. Three hours will be devoted
to the study of the battlefield in
Gettysburg. A stop will be made
at Harper's Ferry where John
Brown organized his raid. Endless
Caverns will be visited and each
member of the party will marvel at
this great underground wonder so
effectively lighted. One of the seven
TOURS TO NEW ENGLAND
AND CANADA 22 DAY TRIPS
(Continued from page one)
some time will be spent on the cam-
pus of Yale University. The Uni-
versity plant is one of the most
beautiful in the world and the in-
stitution has a long and enviable
record in its contributions to the
cultural life of the nation. Roger
Williams, after fleeing from Massa-
chusetts, settled in Providence. This j
city is now the capital of Rhode
Island, the seat of Brown Univer-j
sity, the oldest Baptist Church in
the United States and also our EO
greatest jewelry manufacturing cen-j travel
ter. The next'stop is made at Fly-1 HUi
mouth to see the rock on which thej
Pilgrims landed in 1620, the Monu-
and William Bradford's J and
On the way to Boston stops IuaIlV
will be made at Miles Standish I
Monument, the graves of Miles!
Standish and John and Priscilla
Alden, the John Alden home, and j ??? ?
home and grave of Daniel Webster.
through
ment
grave.
in old Mexio will be spent IB
Monterev. Monterey has become
a great winter resort on account of
the mineral springs and its situa-
tion at the head of a beautitul va-
ley. In the vicinity are rich lead,
copper ami silver mines, ami the
city has important smelting works,
iron foundries and woolen, mills.
The houses are built of stone m the
Moorish style. The Battle of Mon-
terey occurred here September 24.
1846. Gen. Zachary Taylor stormed
the fortified city and after four .lays
hard fighting the Mexicans surren-
dered.
For three days the group will
toward Mexico City giving
attention to tin' eHBtOtna of
tliis foreign people, their general in-
dolence because of the tropical heat
the apparent listlessness of
in the midst of poverty and
misery. The vast majority live to-
day as their ancestors did for gen-
erations before them, still subsist-
little more than their corn
cakes and black beans.
Mexico City is situated in an
?fli(
Thi-
fhe
Una-
jeene
Umieo
place,
during nia term oi o
tie is located very clo
of the Battle of rhapultep.
Fifteen niihs out from
City is a mo-t unusual
Xochimilco. At one rime the
a large lake l.ur little by lit!
land has been reclaimed, no!
at the edges, but al-o ill the -hallow
that today there i- no lake
intricate network of
cover an extensivf
Xochimilco is p"i"l
a the '?Floating
?'Venice of Mexico a- til
f locomotion i- d
alumnJH
NEWS
places,
but only
an
which
puiaily
iardens
The group will travel .
? oval basin about 50 miles long am.
40 miles wide completely surround-
ed by mountains of great height
1 scenic beauty. The altitude of
Mexico City is 7,500 feet and the
liniate is remarkably agreeable.
Quincy, the home of the Quiney an
Adams families.
Boston has many places for in
spection and study. A partial listjan"
of places to be visited includes:
Boston Public Library to see the
famous Abbey paintings of the
King Arthur' Court. Old Xorth
Church where the lanterns were
hung to give signal to Paul Revere, j tec, am
house in which the poem "House
bv the Side of the Road" was writ-
el
Surrounding Mexico City are
many interesting remains from an-
cient civilizations, principally Az-
inany of these are within
easy distance to the city. Mexico
City itself abounds in relics, beau-
wonders of the world, Natural j teUj the old frigate "Ironsides tiful buildings both old and new to
Bridge, will be included. Then tho Faneuil Hall. Paul Revere House J s?-v nothing of its wonderful parks,
group will travel across the Blue
Ridge Mountains, through Lynch-
burg and Appomattox, back to
Greenville.
These trips last year proved tojwin inclutie Harvard University
be both pleasant and edncatfosaHyj 0dest an(j one of tho mogt
prominent in the United States)
canal-
area,
known
or the
chief inethoi
water.
Back in U. S. A.
After the completion of the Mex-
ican portion of the tour the group
will go into the lower end OI the
Rio Grande River or commonly
called "Magic Valley This is one
of the mo-t fertile region- on this
continent and a large quantity
citrus fruit 16 produced here. I be
group will then proceed to Hous-
ton, the largest city in 'I exas. It
is also the first cotton port in Amer-
ica and the largest spot i
ket in the world. Baton
Capital of Louisiana,
(duded for a complete
trip.
Then the party moves
Orleans, one of the mo-t
cities on the entire trip,
will be devotet"
Rob
M
I-
'Bsea-Tystj
i
i MID-Wi
ni in ti

ra.
riii
Will"
F
J ones-May
0
if
Gr.
Ru
otton mar-
Rouge, the
ill be in- (
sightseeing
Worsley-Bradlw
I;
on to i'?
interesting
A full dav
to seeing the I rencb
Danish quarters, Audubon
Park, business section, shipping and
wholesale center and other import-
radh
die
lunce
?nior
am

site of the Boston Massacre
Granary Burying Ground, theI tweak
Mother Church of the Christian! Of historic
Id'cathedrals and other points 01 in-
ind
general inters
ant places. New Ch-
in history and has an
to be found in no Other
By easy tages and
to see along the way th
Scientists, and others. A side trip is thfi Great Cathedral 878 feet long J ura
on tin
to Greenvilb
and ITT feet wide. It stands
site originally occupied by the
Teocali, the main temple used by
and the Museum which has in its the Aztecs in the height of their
varied collection the famous glassglory and destroyed by the Span-
instructors for the purpose flowers This trip will then follow iard's before 1525. The present
of becoming more familiar with the j aimost the identical route of Paul. Cathedral was erected in 1575;
geographic features of our country, BeVere8 ride toward Lexington and much of the material used in this
to study the settings and share the Concord. A trip will be made at building was taken from the ruins
atmosphere ?t many of our writers r
cans
atni'
sity,
with
? grot
by
an
rich
.here
T
of
of
Dec
Mrs
Crow-MitcheH
Wi
Committees at v?i
plete Plans f(M
Series of 01
JOHNSON'S ORCh
PLAY ON EA
Complete Lisl
Here To Fa
Acqu i - ?
valuable. Many students and teach-
ers should accept this opportunity
to travel under the supervision of
college instructors for the purpose
Montgomery. Atlan
lotte. This four w
crease each members know
the resources, occupations, in
ieal and literary backgrounds
our own people and
portunity to learn
life of one of our 1.
e n t v
will
Mobile.
Char-
greatly in-
dge of
liifor-
of
give ample op-
mething of the
ext-door neiirh-
Miss
11 'inter
memo
Brown-Kaox
01
th.
?war'
Wooten-Mooriai
Mo ? . ? Lift
Wo. ??
English public were much slower to in H&l a?d -eet up a republican
accept his works. When he did suc-
ceed in gaining notice, however, he
was acclaimed eagerly.
In 1S92, Kipling married as
American girl, Caroline Balestier.
He accompanied her to her home at
Battleboro, Vermont, where they
bought a home and lived until 1897.
Two children w re born here. Ver-
mont winters were .veil liked by
Kipling. He wrote many of his
best works while in America. Phila-
delphia was played up in them to a
large extent.
Though Kipling left America in
1897 and journey To Africa, there
are remainder- of him in this
country today. There is a Kipling
-tation in Saskatchewan; a Kipling
in Ontario; Rudyard, Montana;
Rudyard and Kipling. Michigan;
Kipling, Xorth Carolina; Rudyard,
Mississippi; and Kipling. Louisiana.
Following the visit to Africa, he
and his family returned to England
and settled in a quiet little Sussex
village, Kottingdean-near-the-Sea.
Two years later, they came to
America for a visit, but their stay
was shortened by a serious illness.
Kipling spent weeks at the point of
death in a New York Hotel. Return-
ing to England, he settled at Bate-
man's near the village of Barwash
in Sussex.
In 1907, Kipling won the Nobel
Prize for Literature. He was also
made Rector of St. Andrew Uni-
versity, and received honorary de-
grees from many colleges. His rmly
son was killed in the World War.
Until his own death recently, Kip-
ling liv d quietly as one of the most
venerated figures in the literature of
the day.
(Material taken from Anice Page
Cooper's essay on Rudyarl Sip-
line, )
'raigie House which was the home
of Longfellow. The group will see
"Wayside which was the home of
Hawthorne ami also Louisa Mae
Alcott. Other stops will include:
Wayside Inn. renowned through
Longfellow's "Tales of a Wayside
He will be glad; Imr. the uattionvi(i 0f Lexington
to furnish any information that
may be desiret
field tours.
concerning these
HISTORY OF VALENTINE
Saint Valentine's Day is a festival
popularly called Valentine Bay,
which falls on February 14. The
origin of the observance of this
day is altogether uncertain. Equally
vague are the circumstances that
led to its connection with Saint
Valentine. Among the many in-
teresting folk customs of Medieval
France and England was a gather-
ing of the young people on Saint
Valentine's eve. Names were drawn
by chance from a receptacle, the
person whose name was on a slip
becoming the "Valentine" or sweet-
heart of the holder for the ensuing
year. Although not in this same
manner, modern Americans continue
the observance of Saint Valentine's
Day.
form of government
Texas existed as a Mexican state
until 1835-36 and then flew the flag
of the Republic of Texas, exchang-
ing it for the Fnited States flag in
1S45.
Students of Texas history will
find the historical wing of the state
of Texas Building a veritable treas-
ure house of Texas, for it will fea-
ture relics and records of Texas
during the days of the revolution
and republic, and also important
items from the period of statehood
up to the present day. The Hall
of Heroes will bo particularly sig-
nificant, as it will memorialize the
men who founded Texas, giving
their records and the history of
their lives with an authenticity
based on years of painstaking re-
search.
Besides the Centennial Exposi-
tion, Dallas has many other places
of interest. It is the seat of South-
ern Methodist University and also
the Medical, Dental, and Nursing
Schools of Baylor University. Dal-
las is a great railroad center and
distributing point with an annual
wholesale business of more than
$700,000. Sixty-five per cent of the
petroleum produced in the United
States is produced within a day's
travel of Dallas. It is a great cen-
ter for the manufacture of shoes,
leather goods, and cotton goods. Her
hotel facilities are adequate to care
for thousands of visitors.
After leaving Dallas, the next
city of importance to be visited is
Austin, the State's Capitol. The
State Capitol Building, The Gover-
nor's Mansion, O. Henry's Home,
The University of Texas and the
University's Historical and Scien-
tific Exposition will be visited.
Through Canada
En route to old Quebec the high-
way leads through much of the
woodland and along lake shores for
which Maine is so well known.
Across the international boundary
and the St. Lawrence River the
St. Lawrence River the group will
enter Quebec. In this quaint city
many old buildings will be visited
as well as Abraham's Plains on
which the battle was fought between
Wolfe and Montcalm. French lan-
guage and customs still persist with
more than ninety per cent of the
people. Dog carts, thatched roofs,
simple modes of life give the vis-
itor the feeling that he is in an old-
world atmosphere.
The next city to be seen is Mon-
treal, the site of which was visited
by Cartier in 1535; Champlain es-
tablished here a trading post in
and to study the many places of hi
toxic value included in the tour.
The tour will be conducted bv
Mr. Paul T. Ricks. Greenville.
N. . who has had several years
experience in the management of
educational tours
the first Normal School in the Unit-
ed States; the home of Harrington.
one of the heroes in the Battle of
Lexington; the Old Manse, located
in Concord; the homes of Emerson
and Thoreau; Concord Bridge and
" " the "Minute Man statue. The re-
Reinstatement, after a long ah- turn trip will include the Bunker
sence in this section, of the old-time; Hill Monument,
method of punishment?chastise Leaving Boston the group will
ment, by means of the chair andi travel through a number of smaller
paddle?took place February 7 but prominent cities, such as
punishment! Swampscott, Marblehead and Sa-
?flem. In Salem the group will visit
the law. The nine cases were'the "House of Seven Gables A
(tors.
The ;otir will be conducted by
Mr. Paul T. Rick East Carolina
Teacher- College, Greenville, X. I
? will gl
informal
ami n
tional
tour. This tour should
appeal to both teachers ai
students.
E. C.
T. C. CO-EDS
CONVICTED OF CHARGES
when sentences and
were meted out to nine offender:
of the old Aztec temple.
In and near Mexico City are a
number of places of important sig-
nificance in connection with the
Mexican War. James K. Polk, a
North Carolinian by birth, sent a
message to Congress in the spring
of 1846 that a state of war existed
between Mexico and the Fnited
States. Within fen mile- of Mex-
ico City three decisive victories
were won in .1.S47 by American
troops?Contreras. San Antonio
and Cherubusco. An armistice of
three weeks followed the Battle of
Cherubusco. Then the Americans
advanced to the city gates ami students this semester,
stormed the heights of Chapultepec. j the waiting list.
Gen. Winfield Scott, with his vic-
torious army, entered the Capital
city.
One of the most imposing build-
Th
A pa
tdly furnish addi-
on concerning this
strongly
i college
?'Scliinnnel star of the 1
police department- dog -eeTi
credited with the individual
tion of eight murders.
?ii.
lion,
Burgess
'larence
20 193
form- r L
of Kinst.
Birth Announcemen:
hi W
Mary I
Fred
Tarhee
rrnhr
V
Recent Visitors
Xita Brun
of danuary 1'
Brumlev. Nil
A new
Syracuse I
course
niversit
in marriagi
y will enroll
with 41.
130 t
on
Stanford University
-p the nearest bar fiv
eer drinker
k
student
regulations
mile- from
Senior
achii
Oth
garet
1 lora
Robert
Merle
Purne
?Normal
g near
Fultoi
EVndi
Muse
ings of Mexico City is the National
brought before the regular session stop will he made at the fish pack- Palace which houses the Presidon-
of the district- Kangaroo Court, ing plant in Gloucester. The drive. tial. Treasury and other Govern
held in the Court Room of the j along the rugged and irregular coast i ment offices. Over the main en-1
Boys' Dormitory Friday night after j of this section is one of the most trance is the famous "liberty Bell
the basketball game. Judge Jimmy scenic to be found anywhere. The used to call a meeting of patriot- on
home of Whittier in Amesbury will tin- night of September 15, 1810. It
I
on
. yT Up
Johnson, of Gary, presided, mani-
festing, by his wise decisions, his be visited. The group will travel;is rung now on every Septembei
knowledge of the world and his tin- through Portland which was Long- bv the President. This Palace i-
QUALITY AND SERVICE
At
LAUTAR ES
derstanding of men.
fellow's home for many vears. Thelth
e same site once occupied by tin
I.
The cases coming before the jury next stop is made in Brunswick to Palace of the Montezumas
were as follows: Howard Aman and
Elmer Smith charged and sentenced
to ten licks each for perjury, Son-
ny Foote, charged and convicted of
excessive flapping of the mouth,
was sentenced to twenty licks; Joe
Hatem, charged and convicted of
audibly masticating in the Dining
Hall, was sentenced to twenty-five
licks; Lyman Smith, J. V. Marsh,
and Francis Sinclair, convicted of
visit. Bowdo.n College, brom this Tho Xational Museum will be
jnstitution Longfellow and Haw- visitc1 to th1 eolleetion of W(. j
thorne were graduated m 1825. AU idols and p Am ;
night will be spent, in WatemiieL most vauable pieee8 in th? MuJ
which has one of the largest paper; seum arp the Aztpc Calndar St
manufacturing plants in the world the Saerim,ial Ston( ail(, qJ
Our itinerary will include old Plumed Serpent.
San Antonio. The Alamo, Shrine
of Texas liberty, is in the center
of the city. Here Travis, Bowie,
Crockett and their gallant little
serious charges, the nature of which fom were massacred by the Mex
was not made public, were sen- j ;cans. The old palaces of the Span-
tenced to fifteen licks each; Paul j ish governors and ancient missions
Bowen, George Jordan, and Joe are stiH standing. San Antonio
Hatem were charged and sentenced has the largest air training center
to five licks each for contempt of ?Randolph Field?in the world
court.
Chapultepec Park is the princi-
pal park of the Capital. On a hill
in the park is built the Castle where
the President of the Republic lives
The gentlemen of the jury, fair
and impartial, always finding the
culprit guilty, were Frank Jen-
nings, George Williard, Bruce Sim-
mons, and Jew Ayres.
Attorneys for the defense, Paul
Bowen and Lee Ridenhour, showed
themselves to be quite capable, los-
ing every ease. Prosecuting Attor-
neys, using all the wiles of the pro-
fession, were Francis Sinclair and
Sonny Foote.
Sheriffs Gherman C. Smith and
Bill Holland were present, Sheriff
Smith unwillingly serving as Chief
Executioner. He stated that it will
be necessary to purchase new equip-
ment before the next session of
court.
June 22, ten days before the
American Olympic rowing trials,
has been set as the date for this
year's Poughkeepsie regatta.
Each first down would eount for
one point under a new football scor-
ing system proposed to the national
collegiate rules committee.
Frostbite sent 112 University of
Wisconsin students to the infirmary
during a recent cold wave.
Laredo is the port of entry into
Mexico on the newly completed j
Pan-American Highway. Thou- j
sands of tourists will be attracted
to Mexico this summer because of
the opening of this new highway.
Plans are now under wav whereby
the presidents of the two nations
will dedicate the Pan-American
Highway by greeting each other and
clasping hands across the interna-
tional boundary line.
Into Mexico
The next lap of the journey leads
into a foreign land for a visit of
more than ten days. The first night
CUT ME OUT
SE This Coupon and 10c is good for n
BISSETTE'S
OUR SANDWICHES
Are
BIGGER AND BETTER
Valentine Novelties
W. T. GRANT CO.
Convenient Shopping Center
one BANANA SPLIT at
PITT SODA SHOP
Center th and (otarn'he Strwt
John Blanc hard. Prop.
2
DO YOU WANT YOUR KODAK FILMS
DEVELOPED PROMPTLY AND SKILLFULLY?
Bring Them To Us!
BAKER'S STUDIO
FREE GIFTS TO
E. C. T. C. STUDENTS
AT
PLEASANT'S
Come in and Learn
About Oar Plan
PHONE 80
Expert
Watch Repairing
Quick Service
SPECIAL PRICES
to
COLLEGE GIRLS
BEST JEWELRY GO.
CHARLES STORE
Now Featuring
The Newest and Smartest in
SPRING MERCHANDISE
LADIES' AND MISSES' SUITS
DRESSES : MILLINERY : SHOES : HOSIERY
Our Unusual Volues and Prices Will Surely Please
DOLLAR DAY!
All of you undergraduates will be
missing the chance of a lifetime
if you fail to trade with us next
Thursday, February 13,
BLOUNT-HARVE
iliVf
Th
Abbott,
Walkee,
Foxz, ?!
di Vol
Milton Jenkins,
with Philip Luc
rior. Berta Ai
Whiteside, Marg
Paul Bynnm, E
with James Atk
with Lake Gas
Arerett with M.
garet Banck with
ere, Lucille Bass
tog, Rose Been
Beeman, Raehae
Idles, Margarel
Pollock, Dorothj
fowl Bolton, Fr
Banyan II. An-li
Bhaw with Waym
Braswei with San
Lte Brewer with
Carolyn Brinklei
Britton, Hattie Li
Donald Morrison, I
Harold White, I
George (lark. ?.?
P. M. Fleetwood,
with Bill Brown, I
with Irvin Kc? 1. N
lock with Ralph it
e Bullock with
Sarah Bonn ? ?
Margaret Burke i
lard and RusselHB
Burke with Bryai
Barney with Russd
(Please turn to
!
INFIRMARY BEC(
A Rl
patiei
The infirmary
hospital for the i
?Wka. In all. th,
Jwo hundred studew
i? a fifth of the Btw
mfirmary during t
epidemic. There -a
students in bed at o
tt time beds weal
tals and six
room.
Eight of the ?
u- These are out
2 ??ly six stude
? Annie Mav
;as employed for
" time that she wj
r taken ill, and
kcame her bed rod
Ca? m during Mi-
Jhss Diekerson
Q a many as onel
Patients during
?gl they bad so m
Ml8s Smith and
as
C Kle,Dt and a
!ry didn't eet t
to





Title
The Teco Echo, February 11, 1936
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
February 11, 1936
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.156
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38036
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