The Teco Echo, November 3, 1937


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





October 19
"w Jarvi,
tTHS
"? Oft
??- Evelyn
an,J the
Mrs. M. J
1 NifH
Vto-
rti8
l any 10c
n at
nd
-ice
ES
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RIES
'?t
,11 M)
ll 1
ptton AsiJCiOtion
ES
All
ILLE, N. C
TRADE
WITH
?.?
The TE.CH ECHO
OUR
ADVERT ISERS
EAST CARJNrmMkS COLLEGE
VOLUME XIV
GREENVILLE, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1937
Number 3
Improvements In School "DIFFERENCE IN BE-
bubject Or rres. Meadows i irro? TUCMC nr
?MHO "?
AT VESPER SERVICE
To Homecoming Alumnae
To Speak
:M
President Meadows Introduced
By Mrs. L. L. Stancill
PRESIDENT TELLS OF
RECENT IMPROVEMENTS
Believe Profoundly in Your Per-
sonality Says Speaker
Cites Increase of Student Body
From 1933-37 "Light' Is Theme of Inspiring
hnprt
iks and
Talk
CHURCH HURT BY
CONFLICT OF IDEAS
Piano Solo Rendered by Mary
Evelyn Thompson
u school, both
hi increase of On Friday, October 29, at the "Difference in Beliefs" was the
heme of Pres- Young Woman's Christian Associa-1 theme of an inspiring message
? Meado
Mrs. I L.
. Alumna -
resident V.
x;
LoisIbrought ti th? Vesper Services of
the Yonng Woman's Christian As-
ocial inn
here
s
unday evening,
"s address to the tion Vesper Service. Mis
n Homecoming Day. Grigsby made an inspiring and en
itancill, president of tertaining talk, using as her theme October 24, by the Rev. f. M. Grant,
sociation, introduced the one w, rd, "Liht. pastor of the Jarvis .Methodist Me-
lows, and later she; "1 wan' to talk began MissIJmrial Church.
Grigsbv, "or rather I am going to
si various
alumnae.
Mad?.
mu1 to the
com-
talk about
great deal
Bible SI
' 1 he more we live began Mr.
wont, which has a:(ir.ult morg w. f;l(. ' om. re
prominence tn the sponsib?Kties, the more we come to
I passages contain- l0 (.l)ni.uum tnat ffe imlst h:m.
n wi
tfa a very joy,h' wonK ht?I,?SMliB8 onpower to live The speaker told
e once witnessed the first page of the Old restament how many are able to dream dreams,
three oi the a ending with the last page of the
New Testament. "It would be in-
teresting stated the speaker, I
. think, it I had the time and scientific
knowledge to analyze the qualities
ol light and find out why Jesus was
SO interested in it
I!
Decided To Study Medicine
When Young
TWIN DAUGHTERS
OF REV. T. M. GRANT
Not Decided On Branch of Medi-
cine Will Study
Former Diplomat
Ruth Bryan Owens
l Lectures Here
STUDENTS HEAR F M.
WOOTEN AT CHAPEL
Delights Large Audience With
Personal Charm and
Experiences
'he
fonorable Chile
toev
Miss Marlene and I a Costen
Grant, twin daughters of the Rev.
T. M. Grant, pa-tor of the Jarvis
Memorial Methodist Church here.
are realizing a childhood dream to
study medicine. When the girl-
were very young they decided to
study medicine, "and now they're
Introduced By President Meadows
As Daughter of "The Great
"The Great Triumvirate" Is Sub- Commoner"
ject of Speaker
I declaring that three men o
general ion in Pitt !ounty h
jeeted their influence into t!
Governor of North Carolina, whoglad they didn't change their minds nation through their conl
will be ne of the speakers at the The twins graduated from high!to the founding of East
NCCPA Convention which will school in Wilson after which they Teachers College, F. M. Wo
Felt Her Purpose as Minister Pleni
potentiary Was to Bring Den-
mark and America Closer
it
Ruth Bryan Owei
known throughout th
her achievement in man
writer, platform ?peake
rh
.11
tl
.woman, and diplomat i
au" large audience October JO ;
ers
men tnree oi t:u
ae after an ex-
was his desin
, 1
?e as napp
as was that family.
Improvements Made
d at Mea loi
and to look out into that great
realm of the future. y- they lack
that ability to accomplish. "Years
Mr. Grant, "people
meet in Raleigh on November 4. 5,lreeeived their B.A, degree from tins (
and f. school. Taking a year out to teach ?? ?
i . li ? dience at chapel October li on the We bv
land t't increase their fortune to ' , ? ?
study toward a doctor's degree, theS1 triumvirate" of Pitt County, usual quality of her iroice, an
twiiis were separated. Isa (ten former Senator J. I Reining, Pro interesting account ol the mot
was employed at the Archer Lodge fessor W. H. Ragsdale, and former, formal activities and observ:
School and Marlene at Chicod- Governor T. J. Jarvis. of a pubhe representative abroj
They decided the next year to takd Mr. Wooten, who was closely asso- Introduced by President M
their premedical work at Duke ciated with these men and knew the daughter
a i;i
contmui
TO MEET IN RALEIGH
??elli'VeU that h
lui'l tO believe
? it was his pleas
libn
certain things and people laid out
oentioned the ' "wresiea m it. - 'ontmuea ithese manv'requirements of beliefs
ts in the school by saying that since there was no, and -f ; nan m QQt MU,y0 th(,m
painted walk in amPk Tlmo foT,? hv wouW he could not be a follower of
num. and some analyse the word letter by letter. Christ
i ,i , Beginning with the letter L, she let
- ano toe new . ? , r
? thi Austin :t stan ,n" 11it. "Some religions,
a : a she explained, "tend to pull men
and on the cam- (Please turn to page three)
lie then told how the church has
been hurt by a conflict of opinions.
Man cannot and does not think
alike. Hut there are some under-
?it
The
tne in-
of the student
. He said that
acre - as an in-
faculty has in-
jnst half of the
Four new
ere added this
mentioned the
rs reprea s"
ra ? states.
i presented to
f the needs of
them being two
VS and
LIFE OF ALFRED DREYFUS
OUTLINED BY PROF. DEAL
lying principles that man must 1
to have tin
lower to li v.
lave
Thev
: A profound faith in himself;
Ea profound faith in others; a pro-
Speaking at assembly at the Col- found faith in a spiritual world.
ietre Friday. K. C. Deal outlined t
life of Alfred Dreyfu
called "the greatesl tragedy of mo
em times
Dreyfus, a French army office
he "So concluded the speaker, be-
which he lieve profoundly in your own per-
sonality, believe in our fellowmen
and believe that God lives in the
souls of men?and then, you will
iaugnt4
"The Crat Commoner whose
nnection between j speeches and writings had touched
entered the Medical College of Vir-ltwo gem-ratio and called to the his own IitV an :v? ? countless
ginia as Freshmen. attention of the present student body others, and as person recognized
Tiie girls, who are very enthusias- ; that they are now student- at KCTCJ in J101' (
tic over their studies, have a scholas- because these men made it possible
tie average of B-plus. They haven't Mr. Fleming, he described as pre-
decided what branch of medicine eminently a legislator. It was he gracious words of thanks and the
.they will specialize in yet They who drafted the bill thai called for laughing comment that she had
Approximately 100 delegates will are n?wTv interested now in their the establishment of a teachers' co arched the Bible to find assurance
University. This fall the twins them well, said t
State College To Be Host (rf realized their childhood dream and lure to make r
Occasion in Capital City
With State Coll sge acting as host,
the X. C. C. P. A. Convention will
meet in Raleigh on the 4. ?"?, and 6
of this month.
. right as a woman oi aot-
:vement and great charm,
Mrs. Rohde responded with a few
undergraduate studies.
attend the Convention from a iarg
majority of the State's colleges, ant j
Hotel Sir Walter Raleigh has been DO m nvTriM cncAicD at
secured as headquarters for the con- MRS BL0XT0N SPEAKER AT
venrion. HOME ECONOMICS MEETING
One of the outstanding features of
hat oratorical gifts descend 1 fro
m
lege in Eastern North Carolina an
piloted it through the General Asi-l parent to child but all she had found
Isemblv. i was that "the sins of the father- are
Mr. Wooten
describe
him as one
isited upon the children
ricted of treason in France inbe a power.
uis audience soi
?he schooL An
? iormitories, om
one for girls, another classroom
buD ling, nc re faculty members, ad-
ditional unit of training school, and
gymnasium. 11
au lience that this
(O ntlnned from page two)
L894 and sentenced to life imprison-
ment on Devil's Island, was released
after serving for twenty year be-
cause new evidence brought to light
showed his innocence.
Having been put back in his old
regiment and assigned to the task of
finding a spy then endangering
France, Dreyfus discovered that
special music was a piano solo
y Miss Mary Evelyn Thompson.
the convention will be a talk by
Governor Clyde P. Hoey.
Attending froir -his college are:
Margaret Davis, editor of the Te-
r?an; Mildred McDonald, business
manager of the Tecocm; Hay Pru-
ette, editor of the Tbco Echo; and
Marjorie Watson, business manager
f the Tbco Echo.
FREDDIE JOHNSON SUPPLIES
MUSIC FOR HOMECOMING HOP
ACE TO MEET
As a dosing feature of the Home-
coming at ECTC the guests and stu-
reminded his ?:ilh 'rcvi?s uiscoveivu mat . attended , danoe in the KoWrt
year, for the ata Han? the beautiful Javanese H wrfght There was no
s are ahle to ?biner wis a German spy niFrance formal re(ivins, line, hut all facultv
and had been sending nnitortant in i i i . i
, -ii - , ? members ami students were hosts
formation back to Uermany during
the World War.
AAUW BEGINS
YEAR'S WORK
who dared strike out for the future Efer informal h-cture which fol-
Professor Ragsdale was presented I lowed, drawn from her experience
Mrs. Adelaide Bloxton, of the as an educator, the teacher of many in Denmark and Denmark's posses-
home economics department of the men now prominent in Pitt County, sion, Greenland, kept her large au-
College, was speaker Friday after-(,ni,i a ,nn ?whosc Life was dedicated ! dience interested, and eager for more
noon, October 22, at a meeting of ; to education ! at the end of an hour.
the home economics group of the Ha described Governor Jarvis as The speaker explained that her
Northwestern Teachers Meeting at a statesman more than a politician, subject?"This Business of Diplo-
U inston-Salem. aad spoke of the many public offiees ! macy was chosen because many
She spoke on the topic -Good he had held. He was greatly influ- people do not realize that diplomacy
Teaching in Home Economics. enced, the speaker thought, by hisjia a bus
Mrs. Bloxton was accompanied aatural surroundings
Home
j Miss Aretha Hyatt, an ther, a Metliodist preacher.
E 'T( I graduate of the class of 1935,
I
The local branch of the A. A.
uad hostesses. jr. w. ?eim its year's activities
The decorations were beautifully ; fOI1,pv n;?ilt ot,her lg ?ni, ?
She was proved guilty and sen-1 i i i ! ?uo nigni. u ton i is, -uitli a
tenced to death. When' the priest I f?j ?Ut m. pmU, "J Tl ?? ? Parish house at which
came to talk to her before she was ff J "TSfJ EZHl9" f? " aml g?e8tS W?M
, , , ?.?? , , ? bunches of purple balloons as grapes nreacnt
executed, she horrified him by doingh i .1 ,i iie.seiH.
' I here and there among the green Tu, mr.a WM t-o1(
tendrils and leaves. lles meeting and program
Freddv Johnson and his Tarheels ?s the offices of at
Biness, a very important one,
and by his fa-1 and not just a frill or "carnation in
, Uncle Sam's buttonhole
The work of these men for the fin ,1 !?? t.?n-
inow head of the home economics de- establishment of the College was ?? ? P,
L??o?t 1? w 'nl.v' . ,U1 wa sentative abroad is to answer the
, partn ,?t in Wmston-Salem ? n has,(1 ou eonvietion of the need, and j M of mail that c.orat t0 rf.
' Tc'Hettv Plovton , n ,r n Tr T 'TT' fice-including letters from auto-
Salem V 1 n 1 o wa a ue C ? ?JZ3TS?& hunter from stamp collec-
? l " al? U'1 J gUV I nV' vther their influence will die ; for from geography elaasea, from
with this generation or through the magazines seeking material for ar-
present student body be projected : li(.lt and so on
utiful.
owed nv busi-
RECEPTION GIVEN IN
HONOR OF MRS. SELLS
On Tuesday night, November 2.
the Association for Childhood
I : icath n will meet.
This vear this branch of the CE An informal reception in honor of j of skillful tup dancing, with Hilly
orefarv and
furnished the music for the occasion, treasurer had been left vacant bv the
During the intermission, Miss J resignation of Miss Jessie Mack.
Carolyn ITanirie cave an exhibition
who is now married and living in
Delaware, and Miss Maud Adams.
work in groups in interest ? co11 vltAr? Irs- Alice Sells Tokon at the piano. James Dudley WM is umv on tho f.u.ultv at tu,
sic story-telling reading rTr!?? Gollege, Columbia, was Simpson, accompanied by James Woman's College of University of
sewing, cooking, and art. 11K1 prula-v 1Uirht? October 22, at Carr on the drum, Ealph Hutehin- Xorth Carolina. Miss Helen Spang-
Oi
j, cooking, and art. I1,111 xriua lu?m? "cwmer zz, at -v. arr on tiie arum, isaipn iiutcnin- Xorth Carolina, Miss Helen Sp?
?h gn up will be dis-itil? hom( W?mM practice house, j son on bass violin, and Billy Tolson k,r ra elected to serve as secretary
ders of the groups. 1 wl,h. Uvsa Katharine Holtzclaw, on the piano, sang three numbers, aU(i Mis. Al)nl(, c Xewell as tretis-
ea of t; ? CF has the' "?ervlntr M hostess in the absence of'ranging in them from a very low urpr
The program was in charge of the
Education Committee. Miss Jessie
Sehuopp. chairman, talked on tin
educational needs of the community,
pointing out a number of fields in
which the A. A. U. W. might help
in some way.
She mentioned the need for more
visual education in the schools, for
work in the creative arts, for hobby
clubs, for vocational guidance
throughout the four years of high
school and for those who are just
out of high school, for more physical
education for girls, more provision
for the play needs of children and
(Please turn to page three)
of t; ? CF has the' 'il'rvl"ng as hostess in the absence of'ranging in them from a very low
tion of being the only stu Mrs- Adelaide Bloxton. bass to a very high tenor.
lent branch in North Carolina As Mrs. Sells is on the staff of the Special sponsors of the dance were
. appointment Bureau at Teachers Airs. L. L. Stancill. alumnae presi-
NINE HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS (ollege people who had stud-j dent; Miss Elizabeth Smith, alum-
trrrtm miiniio lfNa ??f-r-x "? at 1 eaehers College, Columbia, nae secretary: -Mis Margaret Guv
ATTEND JOURNALISM MEET UtT(, tsp?cialIv invited. j Overman, l.anier Society president;
Airs. Sells is visiting a number of j and Miss Josie Hall, chairman of
.Nine students ol Greenville High 0neges in this ailj other states. I the social committee.
School, and V. M. MulhoQand, Jun-
ior school principal, recently at-
tended the thirteenth annual conven
ti'n of the Southern Interscholastic
Press Association at Lexington, Va. I
This is the second year the pub-
licati n, Qretn Lights has been rep-
resented at the convention, which
was sponsored by the Le School of
Journalism at Washington and Leei Sixty of the 100 newspapermen. I touring the State and seeing the
University. Last year. Gfoeat Lights magazine editors, and prominent' places of interest, my ideas are quite
won second honors for schools of! citizens of 23 other states, passed changed.
;laas C standing and was awarded J through Greenville on their way to I In expressing his opinion of the
Quick Thinking On Part Of Mayor
Gives "Travel Tour" View Of ECTC
a medal.
Goldshoro while on a Travel Tour, state William A. White, of the Pitts-
Those attending the convention' which started October 8, and wasihur Press, said, "I particularly
were V. M. Mulhol'and, James made to advertise this state to out-j like the hospitality of Xorth Caro-
Whitfield and Thornton Kyan, co-jsiders and to study the historical; lina, and think it is one of the most
editors-in-chief, Louise Kilgo. Myra background. j beautiful states in the I'nion
Blount, Earle Hellen, Allen Taylor, Mayor Marvin Blount greeted the! The quick thinking on part of
Elizabeth Meadows, Marjorie Sugg, I visitors, who had come here from ; Mayor Blount of Greenville, enabled
and Bert Darden. (Plymouth, and they stayed about J the Travel Tour, visiting our state,
Members of the Associated Press, j ten minutes, leaving here for Golds-
United Press, magazine publishers, boro.
? Tobacco Co.
newspaper editors and writers, edu-
cators and other prominent people
of the journalistic world were prin-
cipal speakers on the program, which
was of keen interest to those inter-
?sted in journalistic work.
Speaking of Xorth Carolina,
Howard A. Moulton, of the Boston
Post, said, "When I rode through
the state on the train, North Caro-
lina appeared to me a mediocre state,
but since I've had the chance of
to get a view of our campus. Whether
it may be called deception or not,
Mayor Blount only knows, because
seeing that the tour would leave
Greenville without seeing our college
caused him to lead the visitors
through our campus, telling them
this was the way to Goldsboro.
Noti
ce
Taking place of the annual
Senior Normal play is the
Sophomore class play, "The
Arrival of Kitty which is to
be presented on December 10,
under the direction of Clifton
Britten, and supervised by Dr.
Helen Spangler and Mr. R. C.
Deal, class advisers.
This is the first attempt of a
Sophomore class to present a
dramatic production and it
promises to be one of the most
enjoyable entertainments of
the year.
of her mother on Sunday.
MATHEMATICS CLUB
GIVES BINGO PARTY
he was even a
iked o
nc to secure a
The Math Club entertained its
members Thursday night, October
21, at Friendly Hall, Episcopal
Church, with a bingo party
Black Money
With five hundred barrels of oil
pouring out daily from an oil well
At the door the guests were given!just discovered on land in Arkansas
pieces of paper on which was writ-leased by her husband, Mrs. V. G
ten some mathematical expressions. McKean has resigned from her posi
The president, Marguerite Avcrctt, tion as dormitory matron at the Col
called the expressions and as a re- lege, and is now at her home a
ply the possessor answered by giving j Stamps, Arkansas,
their name, home address, and other According to a letter from Mrs.
major. After the introduction each McKean to the College authoritie
student was asked a question, fol- j the oil sand is about one hundred
lowing the idea of Carl Goerch. feet deep and is furnishing oil i
However, a dollar was not awarded ; rather high quality.
for correct answering. "It is possible said Mrs. M
Several games of bingo
played and prizes given to the win-1 'brought in' on the j
ners.
After an hour of entertainment
refreshments were served which car-
ried out Hallowe'en colors.
(Please turn to page three)
photograph of a certain type of red
cow from a Danish island far from
her headquarters at Copenhagen.
Divides Work Into Three Classes
Mrs. Rohde divided the work of
our representatives in a foreign
country into three classes: matters
in which an individual must deal
ill the government, handled by the
consulate; matters which concern
? l promotion, handled by the
roomer ial attack; and those in
which government must deal with
g ??? mment, such as treaties and
questi ns of state, handled by the
h gation proper.
Her prime business, she felt, as
. minister plenipotentiary and Envoy
wereLKean, "that other wells will k rvt111 .? ? . p, - , ? J
a . ? , , , IHxtraordinary to Denmark, was in-
troducing the United States to Den-
(Please turn to page fonr)
Mr. and Mrs. McKean have a half
interest in the lease of the 1,000-aere
Arkansas tract, on which oil was
struck about October 10.
Door Definitely Open To Women
Says Lecturer In Interview
Scores of enthusiastic students,
rushing to the stage, were proof that
Ruth Bryan Owens, internationally
famous diplomat, won the admira-
tion and love of her audience, dur-
ing her recent visit to the campus,
as completely and fully as she won
that of the Danish people, to whom
she was sent as Ambassador, the
first woman to receive such an ap-
pointment from America and the
second, from any nationality.
Two reporters pushed their
way through the clamoring auto-
graph collectors in an attempt to
ask Mr. Rohde a few questions,
When panting for breath, they
finally reached Mrs. Rohde, naturally
the first question was, "Don't you
ever get tired of autographing so
many programs?" Airs. Rohde
laughed and said "Oh, no! I'm de-
lighted to autograph the programs,
autographs are so interesting?no-
body writes alike One of the col-
lectors asked the charming diplo-
mat if the little mark that she placed
after the e in Rohde, was an accent.
Mrs. Rhode laughed and replied that
it was merely a habit. She said her
secretary delighted in teasing her
about that little flourish. Mrs
Rohde told how the young people in
Denmark collected autographs.
They make scrapbooks of newspaper
clippings and ask the person to
autograph the clipping. When
asked how she liked North Carolina.
Mrs. Rohde replied, "I love North
(Please turn to pace three)
LANGUAGE ASSOCIATION TO
MEET IN SOUTH CAROLINA
The South Atlantic Modern Lan-
guage Association will hold its
regular Annual Meeting at Winthrop
College. Rock Hill. South Carolina,
November 2ti and 27, 1931
The association was organized in
1929. Professor W. S. Barney of
NCCW was the first president and
Professor R. C. Deal of this col-
lege was the first representative on
the executive board.
An interesting program has been
arranged. This will consist mainly
of papers and discussions divided
into four sections: English, French,
Spanish, and German. Several
general sessions will be held.
The Association is composed of
teachers and students of Modern
Languages in Xorth Carolina, South
Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Ala-
bama. It publishes a Quarterly
Bulletin. Professor Sturgis E.
Leavitt, of the University of Xorth
Carolina, is President; Professor
John A. Strausbaugh of Emory
University is Secretary.
U-





November 3, 1937
PAGE TWO
THE TECO ECHO
The TECO ECHO
CBDM TJ MM?RS COtUKM
- 6 'vdenis i- East C?rohna
ken College
C K
Mlabj
I
STAFF
?:
w
r-in-Chief
s Manager
?rrs A'JCr
ASSOCIATE EDJ
11.
ORS
1 rEOKGI SUGfl
Sarah Ann Maxwkix
Patsv McIntybb
. Biu i Dastisxs
N
I i .
UNG MANAGERS
Ethei Lee Btbd
Lu u E Johstsoh
r,iVN La Mr.
M oring, Mary Williams, lna Mae
n Mable Owens, Ethel Padgett,
H Jeter Oakley, Ruth Phil-
v ? v Clvde O ?? dge, John David
With The
FACULTY-
Or
$1.00 per College Year
Numbers 68, 1S2
Room 25
December S, 1925, at the U. S.
;er the aet of March T. 1879.
1938
PUsoc'toted Gbie6k?e Press
Distributor of
Co(le6iae Di6ost
? "??9?NT?D FO? N CNL AOVIHT18INO ?
National Advertising Service, Inc.
i'oIUet Publisher Rtpreitntativt
420 MADISON AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y.
CttlCM.0 ? BcstoH ? tOS AHMLfS - S?M F???i:iSCO
ELIZABETH BROWN
Miss Elizabeth StiKlley Brown,
instructor for this year in the Science
Department, was born in Abetdeen,
South Dakota, but
received her ele-
mentary and sec-
ondary education
at Huron. South
Dakota. E a u
Claire, Wisconsin,
and Portland, Ore-
gon.
S h e did her
u ndergradua t e
work at the Uni-
versity of Minne-
sota from which she received her A.F.
and M.A. degrees. In spring of 1M7,
she received her Doctor's degree
frmu th' University of Chicago.
While studying at the University
of Minnesota. Miss Brown belonged
to the Young Women's
Association and worked with the
University singers.
Mi" Brown first began teaching
on a one year fellowship at the 1 ni-
versity of Minnesota; she also was
assistant in the zo
at the University
in
Down Broadway
By FRED WITTNER and
MEL ADAMS
(Associated Collegiate Press
Correspondents)
NEW YORK AT LARGE
Success story of the week is that
of Bandmaster Horace Heidt now
at the Biltmore . . . carried off a
West (oast gridiron with a broken
back in the early twenties. Thai
former University of California j
?M-idster and boxhur champion has'
I surmounted several other physical
handicaps to establish himself aa one
of the most popular entertaining
bandleaders in the country. . . .
Broadway hand leaders attribute
falling of in popularity of swing
to lack of education to it. pointing
at Y.P.I Loyola
Campus Camera
three years.
Her hobby is in keeping with her
profession?making jewelry
VELMA LOWE
Miss Velma Wooldridge Ixwc, a
m addition to our commerce de-
partment, was born in Athens, Ten-
nessee. She re-
ceived her elemen-
tary and second-
ary education
from the Athens
public schools and
from Tennessee
Wesleyan College,
a preparatory
school.
Miss Lowe re-
ceived her A.B. de-
gree and M.S. de-
gree (majoring in business educa-
tion) from the University of Tennes-
see, Knoxville. She has also attended I to surveys made
the Berlitz School of Languages, j and Georgetown, which showed that
Havana, Cuba, Bowling Green Busi-hggg t,an u.n per cent understood
University, Bowling Qreen,waat BWing really is. . . . Ralph
announcer on the Major
his start as a
cheerleader at C.S.C. . . . popular
baton-wielders have gotten their
start as a result of going to college,
but Nye Mayhew, CDS baton-waver
at the Boston Statler, reversed the
order bv enrolling at X.Y.U. after he
MAJ. GEORGE
GCAfxWTtO FCOAA "ftfe UNIVER-
SITY OF MICHIGAN AT THE A??
OF 93' At 21 HEWASWrTHiN
A FEW WEEKS OF RECEIVING US
DEGREE WHEN Ht ENLISTED IN
TUB CIVIL WAR . HE WAS PRE-
SENTED WRH Hiv SMEEPJKiN
72 YEARS LATER
rticles from metal
IV;
Green,
Christian Kentucky and has done research work
al the University of Chicago and !
Loyola University. Chicago.
Among her student activities Miss
Lowe was assistant orchestra direc-
tor in the college orchestra, treas-
ogy department urer of her sorority, secretary ot her
of Chicago forjMusic Club, chairman of the college
social committee, and reporter for
ler literary society. Beside- these
and88 Lowe did work in dramatics.
She also!student council, a
" iter in
I Edwan
Bowes gong-fest, got
DE-PAMTSiNG -
AT ARMOUR TECH (CHICAGO) ALL FRESH-
MEN REFUSING TO WEAR GREEN CAPS
ARE STRIPPED OF THEiR PANTS AMD
REQUIRED TO WALK N SUCH A STATE
TO ALL CLASSE5 DURJ'JG THE DAY
'?' On .r. .
F?2
HAMS
had established his band at Mori's
an
also j student
reading and sewing and col-j "dub.
lection specimens for her zoology she worked in the graduate club,
courses. Mis Brown is very much j Miss Lowe's teaching began at
interested in Girl Scouts work and Tennessee Wesleyan College, where
college booster Jin Greenwich illag
graduate work
LETTERS
to the Editor
THE LIGHTER SIDE
Sole opening of the week here
-nice she likes cam
other outdoor life,
interesting leader
work.
ing. hiking, and j she was Dad of the commerce de-
and at Grenada ("liege
where she was director
Vocational and Educational
she would be an partment
for Girl Scout j Mississip
' f t
A WORLD PEACE ORGANIZATION?
nitv.
trued
pain
young pe
i the futu
I. rs. Tic
? and suspicion. The
: iling over and an-
itisi . there should be
! : today. We are
. ? hi responsibilities
:?? fore we as students
ag ab ?ut our influence
organizations of this
keenly felt, resulting
tter understanding of the conditions
carry out this national program,
rove r- ralue. It up to us. ' Will
PARMELIA GWYNN
Miss Parmelia Gwynn,
for Dr. Snyder during
absen
m
enc
America,
has beei
WHY NOT A COLLEGE YMCA?
Y. AY
C. A. for a
he lives of the
i vane
. Colle
teaching
ter leave of
r, was born
in Y' a ncey ville,
X ort h ('arolina.
She has attended
Reiilsville Graded
School, Reidsville
and Wingate High
School, Wingate,
where she received
h e r elementary
and secondary edu-
cation.
Mis Gwynn's
has been wide and
She first started at Meredith
in Raleigh. Later she at-
i Suerette College, Elm College,
Guidance department, She comes
to us this year from the National
Park College in Washington.
m the theatre was Stephen Powys'
"Wise Tomorrow another English
"drawma" with a backstage setting
. . . nothing to really get excited
about. . . . Dick Himber got him-
self his first hotel job in a couple
of years, opening with his band at
tie- Essex house . . ? the Kaufman-
KDITOK'S NOTF.
This department is open to all
students in school here. The
Tmi ECHO reserves the right to
censor or reject all communica-
tions. Letters published herein
express individual opinion, and do
not represent the editorial pol-
icies of this newspaper.
Lookin' Over
the
Campus
I wonder who th
dts in the soda Bh
iman
and amoki
cent ciears?
man, but she
some things!
is that
riv.
fresh
She may !??
sure has graduated
(I'll tell you this mu
Among the interesting activities Gershwin musicomedy, "Id Bather
that Miss Lowe enjoys are sports, Be Right opened in Boston to rave
reading, and playing the violin. Be notices . . . starring George M.
sides this she says she likes to travel Cohan, the presidential satire
promises to be another "Of Thee 1
Sing
si
le
a
blond.)
Dr
comer t tin
was born at (
ege eXpeneiK
war
rd
It.
has been
ever m
be
In
Eas
Ma
Y. M. C.
A. work
leav. 3 hi
than ev
Y
he men s student
? need the Y. W.
Carolina Teach-
y of the men stu-
miss it when they
?me he needs and
1 d years to come
-tic- Y. W. C.A.
-tablish a Y. for
tellO
the University of North Carolina.
the University of Virginia, Ashe-
viile Normal, George Peabody Col-
lege, and Frederckong State Teachers
College in Virginia from which she
received her B.S. degree. She has
done graduate work at Boothbay
Studios, Maine, at Xew York School
Fine Arts, and has completed one-
half of a year on her M.A. at Teach-
er's College, Columbia University.
Miss Gwynn rirst started her
DANIEL R. STULL
Daniel R. Stull. as a new-
Science Department,
lumbus, Ohio, but re-
ceive his elemen-
tary .and secondary
edu
Ohi
He did his under-
graduate work at
Baldwin Wallace
' !ollege, where he
received his A.B
degree, and Johns
Hopkins Univers-
i ty, w here hi s
Ph.D. was con-
ferred upon him.
While at Baldwin Wallace, Dr.
Stull was an active member of the
college band, the orchestra, the col-
lege glee club and the Science Sem-
inar. While here, be won the Mil-
ton T. Baldwin Prize for his excel-
lent thesis on his research work. At
it will swing around to
Washington, Baltimore and Phila-
delphia, before opening here at the
end of November . . . the market
may have weakened a bit, but there
seems t l-e many more classified
advertisements in the Metropolitan
cation at Berea, papers asking for college men to
break in as assistants to advertising,
sales and merchandising managers
if yon don't mind consulting a
dictionary regularly, "Europa Alim-
ixi by Robert Briffauit is a worthy
follow-up to his earlier
. . . radio may be going 1
'?V
uropa
llywood
To the Editor:
The dating-parlor issue has lain
dormant long enough. Girls would
like just a little privacy in their
dating, and it is practically impos-
sible to take two or more steps in the
same direction in Cotton parlor on
Sunday nights. The parlors in the
ot!cr dormitories were unproved,
but for what i Improving these par-
lors is fine, but they can't be fully
enjyed under the pre-ent set-up.
This ian't mere railing at rules
and regulations. It's a plain state-
ment about a situation that has been
left alone long enough. Those stu-
dents in Wilson, -Tarvis. and Flem-
ing who really want dating parlors
The columnists
the practice teache
ing his
wno is it
sucked a who
started teaching
v
ye now turn '?
. John Jenkins,
practice teaching,
lemon before h-
T!
H-
a 1
iirr
-1
le
Up D.1S Q
slaughter.
anly courage to
tac
Speaking of dancing, Alton Payne
nothing of special or ler
jure has i
??He ren
?T
t tile oie
Afri-
can
m
To
ms.
but
v'a
Fre
rine
11 .llywood
via the
Iric March,
Hepburn, 1
is invading
Br
a
legitimate theatre,
Jean Muir, Kathe-
tenry Fonda, Elissa
for their
should Ir-
respective
them.
Sincerelv.
dormitories
A Junh
Juanita Hoell and Fodte Hodges
seem to be doing fine these days?
Fodie with his wayward grin, and
Juanita with her girlish apology,
have arrived at some destination.
They have a crush! I thought Fodie
was dressing mighty well on 1? r-
rowed pants.
Landi
and
Svl
via
S
vdney,
all
en-
gage
ellt.
d behind the footiigl
ights at pres-
i- it worth it
Around
WASHINGTON
d Time, November 1, a fin-
ri rmance is expected.
and
?i
psilon i
11.
By MARVIN COX
social 1 C .s Press
in the Capital, college news
i ff( ring serious competition to the
rious wars, labor strife and com-
g extra session of Congress. The
sheet, in one
ed a third of
bet?
Cent
tn 1- -
??i
W :radi
1 ? . which of Pai
DaMy Nt u s, a loci
issue this week det
its front j?age to n p
didates for the tith
Sweetheart" at Ge
University.
ihe co-eds dominated the worb
ws m this one instance, anvwav
teachmg career at her home town, Johns Hopkins University, he wa-
Vanceyville. Later she taught atU member of the college club
Burlington, North Carolina, and for' President Phi Lambda
was Art supervisor honorary science fraternity. Dr.
Stull taught ir three years while
at Baldwin Wallace College and was
instructor for two years while at
Johns Hopkins University.
Photography is Dr. Stull's major
hobby. He says he is also intereste
in all fields of science, especially
or slated for early appearances
. . . you record collectors will prob
ably like Lionel Hampton's vibra
phones on "Pi
Bunny Bengali's
Talk About Lovt
mo Stomp" and
trumpet on "Why
both for Victor.
been
-pirit
?Hire of 11 can-
of "University
ge Washington
Ne
X.
COEDS OF DUQUESNE
NAME PET PEEVES South
in schools in Danville. Virginia.
During the past summer, she has
taught at W. C. T. C. at Cullowhee.
Miss Gwynn says her hobby is
varied. She likes music, dramatics,
sports, and people. She is very much
interested in her art work for she
served on the production committee
of Virginia for a state course of art
study, was President of the Danville
Art Club, and Virginia State Spon-
sor for the S. E. A. A. for two years.
Her chief interests at the present
time are seeing politics removed from
our educational systems and help-
ing to promote art education in the
His
pa i
6
A
i
th
i u
otl
ti
SCI
? la pr ?, ?
n t : n -
u and m r
up fri nd
countrii - 1
The iir
ai?j marks
of radio education.
U. S.
. Pr
with
an enort to
lati ms with
of educa-
?ew World"
-ming of age
I't't peeves of coeds at Duquesne
University :
"My pet peeve as far as boys are
soncerned are those who flash a
uarter and expect your eyes to
glitter
'The one thing that makes me
see red is the boy who is suffering
from over-expansion of the head.
"Imagine the fellow who goes off
into a spiel such as 'Your eyes are
hke tars, your lips like rubies, i
your teeth like pearls Oh joy! Oh
bliss! And all the while the girl is
thinking. '(h, nuts
'The boys who do all the
formulating of our plans
ROSALINE IVEY
Miss Rosaline Ivey, a new mem-
ber of the Home Economics depart-
ment, was born in
Cecil, Georgia.
Her pre-college
chemistry; and he likes to spend hi
spare time in current reading most
iy in scientific topics. He also en
joys taking long walks.
For the past four summers Dr
Stull has been working in Industrie
laboratories. Last summer he worke
as a research chemist with the Unite)
States Industrial Chemical Compain
at Baltimore, Maryland.
1'AR HEEL BANDSMEN
North Carolina's Chapel Hill
?anipus has seen many swingy feet
trod its greens. . . . The Tar Heel
School boasts five musical biggies in
its alumni records of course vou
mow about Friend Hal Kemp and
Kay Kayser . . . other Carolinians
nelude Jan Garber, Johnny Scott
Dear Editor and Fellow Students:
It seems that there could be a far
better bowing of school spirit in
our college than there has
shown so far this year. School
is the personality of our college, and
? the lack of it only reflects against
our institution. We have a tine school
; here. We have a good football team.
? Their box score for the year may not
.show it. but cores aren't the only
important factors in sports. Our
I team has played good clean ball this
year, they have worked many a
j weary afternoon on the field to give
j us a real game. But what apprecia-
i tion do we show I Hardlv anv !
Flash! Ax.
mith is report
A
to nave joined
orchestra at 1?
pression Grace
ree
i J
t i th
m 1
bnston -
? im-
tas, isn't
it Graeb
?l
Ther
e were approximately three
Trotter of Crosby Music Hall fame hundred students at the W. C. T. C.
tnd Norman Cordon, radio-opera i game, not many more than that
al
singer . . . the latter two formerly
dayed with Kemp.
Thi
ten wi
grams
countr
S.
grams
50,000
Columbia 1
tn
idcasting Sys-
?! weekly pro-
" West wood School for Girls" is
no more. Rivals can no longer call
the University of California at Los
ver the Angeles by that name because the
;ra. and two to one ratio of women 1o men
the pro- has disappeared. This year 3,509
i new coeds and 3,579 men are registered.
in
all
' lentral
WfXK,
wave station
iver its
. Coun
America
over statioi
watt short wave station i
New Y'ork.
Most of the participants in the
I r a I .ts-t series are taken from re-
lief rolls because of the fact that
funds for the programs come from
an allocation of Emergency Relief
funds. The cast u now being
trained in New Y'ork, and when the
curtain rLses at 10:30 p.m. Eastern
Demonstr ation
School, Georgia,
and the State
Woman's College,
Valdosta, Georgia.
She did her
undergraduate
work at North
Texas State
Teachers' College, Denton, Texas.
She received her M.A. degree from
George Peabody College and has
done graduate "work at Teachers'
College, Columbia University.
During her college days Miss Ivey
was secretary of her graduate club,
and she belonged to the Home Eco-
nomics Club and to a Literary So-
ciety. She comes to E. C. T. C. from
Three hundred thirty-seven gal- Kalamazoo, Michigan, where she
Ions of apple butter have Wen taught at Western State Teachers'
made m the kitchens of Glenville College.
"I have nothing to say about tin-
European war situation. I have noth-
ing to say about the youth movement
I have made no exhaustive analysis
of economic trends nor have 1 deveb
ucation was at oped any profound theories, sound
or otherwise, concerning the recent
movement toward development of
totalitarian states Non-conformist
Prof, R. I). Scott of the University
of Nebraska, recently returns fro
a summer tour of Europe, tells re-
porters about the conclusions he
didn't draw.
(Please turn to page three)
State Teacher's College in West
Virginia. This allows each student
1,438 teaspoons or two teaspoonsful
per slice of bread?if the student
consumes 719 slices of bread during
the vear.
Miss Ivey says she is especially
interested in collecting old coins,
state guest permits, and National
Park stickers. She likes to spend
her leisure hours reading, walking,
fishing, and going to the movies.
Last week-end at Purdue males
could not attend the free union tea
dance unless they wore a flower
presented to them by some coed.
Each girl had two flowers to be-
-tow. It was all part of the arrange-
ment by which, for the space of
three days, the men became the
'weaker sex" as far as dating was
concerned.
CHATTER
Your correspondent took them-
selves to Alma Mater Wisconsin for
Homecoming last week-end .
mebbe we're wrong, but seems like
ihe pre-depression spirit is return-
ng favored by a saner sense of pro-
portion, however . . . incidentally,
you guys with long legs will have to
louble them up in order to change
ilothes in the lower berths on those
new Airline Sleepers . . . our short
underpinnings were just able to
make the grade . . . several different
femnie singers claim to have been
classmates of Robert Taylor at Po-
mona . . . the third Piit-Fordham
scoreless tie recalls Dr. Eldridge's
remark as to what happens when the
"irresistible force meets the immov-
able object . . . CBS announcers
have to consult Dr. Luther Good-
rich, Columbia University's Chinese
Studies department head, on the
pronunciation of new Chinese place
and person names coming up for
mention on news programs.
THE OBSERVER"
FACTS?
The most pathetic looking figure
on the campus is Adrian Ayers,
The most jolly person on the campus
is Ida Mae Britt.
The most gorgeous creature on
the campus is Betty Sue Heath.
The most typical senior on the
campus is Margaret Davis.
Catherine Albritton carries off all
honors for the best school teacher.
"Primrose Carpenter is the m st
lovable character on the camp
ays Christine,
Fannie Brewer is one of the
hardest workers in college,
James Smith is the typical town
boy come to the country.
Iran Ferebee is a Hypoehron I .
Ray Pruette was stalking along
the basement after a hard day's work, I
when suddenly, at the top of the
stairs beside the "Y" store some
one yelled Boo Ray immediately j
showed himself to be a strong con-j Norma Johnson, our newly
tender for high-jump and contor-1 quired "Freobie" from Flore
poor lad's South Carolina, is an aha
answer to the co-eds prayer- on
HORRORS and SCOOPS
By
A. HOROSCOOP
ac-
tionist records. The
nerves are overwrought. I suggest
giving him a body guard.
The "half-face test" popularized
by a leading cosmetic house, came
into its own during rat week at
Mercer College. Freshmen women
had to appear one day with their
hair done up in plaits and make-up
on one side of the face only.
IMPROVEMENTS IN SCHOOL
SUBJECT OF PRES. MEADOWS
TO HOMECOMING ALUMNAE
(Continued from page one)
major in physical education. Pres-
ident Meadows thinks the school has
the right to these additional activi-
ties on the merit of the recent in-
crease in the student body and
faculty. -
count of she's destined to pica" I
right where our old friend, Betsy
Congratulations to the Y'WCA Grubb, left off.
cabinet and all responsible parties
for the highly effective program Your able reporter thinks thai
given Sunday at vesper hour. j being as how one of them certain i-
gonna graduate this year, the obi
Many new musical instruments ! Ferrebee-Singletary romance should
have arrived, according to Dean I be renewed. P. S Lib readily ad-
Tabor, and we'll soon have a real; mits she's willing?Come on "Pap
college band.
, " How is it that one Frances IF i -
i a bet some of you didnt know derson and one Neallie Cartwight
after
that Miss Norton gives a dancing! are still the best of friends
class for beginners M
sixth period
W. F. the
Pay more attention to sitting down
quietly during chapel exercises.
We should be thankful for the
beautiful paint job in Austin Audi-
torium.
Mollie's loss of Scrappy "High-
Power" Proctor to Frances. I agree
with you, Mollie?I can't see any-
thing to grieve over either.
"YOU MATCH EM"
Prue, "Weevil Norma, Edna,
Caroline, Marilyn, "Flea Becky,
Molly, "Bibba Leon, "Chink
Dave, Robert, Joe, John, Alton,
Harvey, "Scrap and Ben.
Marjorie Weathers always just
"happens" in Bissette's beautiful
place of business when some ole tall
guy about 6 feet, 2 inches (shoes
size 1414) ia there. It must be true
?she's in love.
mber 3, 1937
otion Pictures
Shown To ECT
Cora Lee Patterson has about
all she can handle in the person of
(Please tarn to page three)
WAAC
Pictures To Aid in Teaching
Science of Football
Here .
ECTC First College in South To r fl
Use This System
Coach Alexand( r. th Pirafc
manch r, ann unci I r cenl ?
was installing a pr j
fljrfWright Building fcosh
pictur of sports to I i
aid in teaching tin - ?
ball. Th. coach -??:?
the natural wa ? t -
point- of the gam?
Coach Ah tan r is til u
thusia- on the f photoj
phy ?nd '? '? f lh.ifi
ject i- extensivi. lie has his
cam ra and ector, Whi
was at thi ' u iv rsity ol I
der Howard .1 ?nes, Direc
letics. he r ived first
in thi- pha -?? oi ph I gra:
has been using this
coaching for ten or tw
Sp' rts a ? in hlei
first used by Knut. Rod i t S
Danu in 1924. h
game of 1923 with ?-
team oi seniors, tin y
fullv tramp d I th ' a ? ts. K-
decided to u ? th moti i
system for the 1924 seas i
Notre Dan pr ed its valu.
playing an I l?? . - el
Army v. ith - team ma :? i
sophomore 1- r m this n id til
system gained the confi .? a ?
famous coacht - all over tin ds.1
Couh Alexander used I .
at Linoln Mi m ri tl ?
His motion picture -p
is very comj .? U an I al
wealth of spoi' - km ??? i lg
Btruc ions, ECTC will be ??
teacher- college in riv- South I
this system.
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
(Continued from pace two)
the preceding games. 1- this -
spirit I Most i f the stud- nts
their l mis, d their ppii j. q I
athou-a : ? . ? insignificant things
on Satur laj aft rn i a. 1 his La the
one day taut ? - (? ? - ha
out to show us w hi I j
Let's shi w th m some apj re iat
We need a larger and bettei
brained che ring secti n, a I ? ?
band, a campus parade bef re g
to show the visiti ra our iril
our pep. and drills betwe i ha
by the gym claaa s, in ? nv sort I
uniforms if possible. Aim st evei
other college has this atm spher
football games. Why not ui col
lege
The question 1- ?: w want a !
lege that teems w ith life, ;??;
enthusiasm, or not i
Whether we win or t, idem
shorn : w their yalt y : j
out .e hun red strong t ? al
athletic coi U -t and by bon sting theii
college whenever an opportunity
arises. The athletes need your sup
port, students; give it to them
rousu.i: cheers from a th asan
voice They earn every praise.
A Stud at,
HORRORS AND SCOOPS
(Continued from page two)
Disillusion reigns supremely up i
this "deah" ole campus.
DOOR DEI
WOmI
David "Heart-breaker" Bn-
a very generous per- ? Dn
fact that the boys are all
girls, according to statistics .?
wants seven?one fer ev ry
the week. Nice felloe, do- '
think iI heard his Wednesdi
and his Friday gal had eh
their hunting ground
Joe "Carolina Hop" Br
ain't what he used to be. W
that old power man !
Don't you Halitosis victims
it so much to heart. It's bett
have bad-breath than no breat
all.
AAUW BEGINS YEAR'S WORK
(Continued rrom pae one i
more adequate library facilities.
hlr?. Luther Herring, another
?HBnber of the committe. moved the
celebration of Book Wei k by the
group; and her committed was re
quested to take charge of the ins
Mrs. Ficklen Arthur, president,
sat at the head of the tab ad
ducted the business meeting. Th
hostesses were Mrs. Arthur. Mr
Jack Edwards, Mrs. C. A. Bowen,
and Miss Kittrell.
JOE
COI
BE
STUDENTS HEAR F. M.
WOOTEN AT CHAPEL
(Continued from page one)
??to the future to generations yet to
Oisne.
Mr. Wooten was introduced by
?ss Sallie Joyner Davis, of the
.pUege Chapel Committee, who also
Wlew the three men in the early
tRys of the College.
-?ry man
Tirls hav?
Amonvr
things Joi
to his atu
nopolLzinj
davenport!
and lettii
campus dl





Ivember 3, 1937
Jovember 3, 1937
THE TECO ECHO
PAGE THREE
N
as
? t i
pus
mat
?a.
to
ins,
m r
figure
vers.
? ,?n
i the
?T all
e m st
i the
town
ndia
V-
id SCOOPS
UC-
?
???lute
r. a?'

? that
ain Lb
old
- m old
v ud-
Pap
ea Hen-
' rtwighi
rr
I tign-
1 ?igree
h? - ?? uny-
just
? ?tx autiful
ote tall
ID?hea i shoes
hntost be true
otion Pictures To Be
Shown To ECTC Squad
Football Directory
ictures To Aid in Teaching1
Science of Football
Here .
:t
First College in South To
Use This System
Alxaiv
announ
tiling :t
it Buil
WU COMPLETES
py
dc
JattersoB has about
dle in the person of
to page thre?)
ier, the Pirate com-
?1 recently that he
projection room in
ling to show motion
t to his squad, to
the science of foot-
i states that this is
to show tlii tine
.i zander is quite an en-
the subject of photogra-
i knowledge of this sub-
?nsive. He has his own
projector. While he
Cuniversity of Lowa, un-
! Jones, Direcor of Ath-
?eceived first instructions
of photography, Iowa
using this auxiliary in
r t n or 1 welve years.
oa i ing in athletics was
Kjnute Rockne at Notre
I 92 I. i n Notre Dame's
923 with Army, with a
niors. they were unmerei-i
?i d by the i 'adets. Rockne
use the motion picture
the 1924 season. In 1924
i, proved its value by out-1
nd completely defeating
meeting of the Woman's
Association Wednesday
team
From
nes
?xaii'
Men
DiC
made mostly of
this incident the
the confidence of
all over the nation.
i. r used this system
lorial with success.
ture sports library
mplete and contains a
sports knowledge and in-
ECTC will be the first
liege in the South to use
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
two)
is this school
(Continued from page
receding
! Most of the students stay in
lorms, do their shopping, and
usand other insignificant things
aturday afternoon. This is the
, that these boys have come
w us what they've done.
them some appreciation!
need a larg r and better
i hi ering section, a football
? impus parade before games
?. a the visitors our spirit and
ween halves
s, in some sort of
lie. Almost every
Isi- atmosphere at
Whv cot our col-
At tin
Athletic
night, October 27, plans were made
for a membership drive to be held
Tuesday, November 2. A booth will
be placed on the main floor of Aus-
tin and students wishing to join will
have the opportunity to pay their
fees at that time.
The Association decided to send
representatives to the National Ath-
letic Federation of College Women
Convention to be held at Tallahassee,
Florida, April 18, 19, and 20, and,
also, to become a member of the Na-
tional Amateur Athletic Association.
Plans for a co-educational college
day night were made.
During the business meeting Mar-
garet Trexhr was elected secretary,
and Velich Austin, doorkeeper. Mo-
-t lie Purnell. chairman of the pro-
gram committee appointed two mem-
bers to fill vacancies on that com-
mittee.
The intramural basketball tourna-
ment will begin November 2 and
1 will constitute teams from Wilson,
Jarvis, Cotton, and Fleming Halls.
The teams from Wilson will be
called A, team from Jarvis B, the
team from Gotten C, and the team
i from Fleming D.
SCHEDULE
November 2
7 A&?A vs. B
8:3??-C vs. 1)
November 3
7 :4f?A vs. C
8 :30?B vs. I)
November 4
8:15?A vs. D
9 m?B vs. c
Player
Avrea
Beck
Breece
Cecot
Demond
Dudash
Ferebee
Forney
Glover
Hatem
Merner
J. Noe
Perkins
Pittman
Quarnell
Roebuck
Shelton
Smith
Venters
Williams
Elliott
Carpenter
James
Pos.
Back
Back
Back
Center
Guard
Back
Quarter
Back
Guard
End
Guard
Back
End
Center
Tackle
Tackle
Back
End
Guard
Tackle
Guard
Guard
Tackle
Wt.Hometown
140Rocky Mount
140Lexington
155Raleigh
170Massena, N. Y.
165Willet, N. Y.
150Massena, N. Y.
160New Bern
156Hopewell, Va.
160Morehead City
163Greenville
140Hopewell, Ya.
160Ayden, N. C.
130Stokes
160Ayden
180Massena, N. Y.
14SStokes
152Danville, Ya.
154Selma
248Ayden
15SGreenville
165Shelby
155New Bern
140Bethel
(PORTS
fNOTES
Basketball Tournament
Scheduled For This Week
PIRATES LOSE TO
T
LONE SCORE MADE
IN THIRD QUARTER
1
3 COLLEGE SOCIETIES
THIS COLLEGIATE
WORLD
Lack of blocking ability seems to
be the reason that the ECTC
outfit has made such a poor showing
this season. The defensive play of I mounts,
the Buccaneers has been as a rule October
above par, but very little offensive
punch has been demonstrated thus
far. After showing up gloriously
in defeat against Belmont Abbey,
the Pirates turned around the next
week and played a pepless, ragged
game against WCTC, a team
that should have been beaten by two
touchdowns. Blocking is the factor
that wins ball games, and until the
Pirates learn to "get their man they
will continue to meet defeat.
FIRST GAMES TO BE
PLAYED NOVEMBER 2
DOOR DEFINITELY OPEN TO
WOMEN SAYS LECTURER
IN INTERVIEW
d drills i
uestion is do we want a eol-
I teems with life, pep and
an, or not 1
ler we win or not, students
h W 'lir loyalty by coming
? n hundred strong to all
atest and by boosting their
whenever an opportunity
The athletes need your sup-
idents; give it to them with
cheers from a thousand
They earn every praise.
A Student.
(Continued from page one)
Carolina, but, of course, I've been
I here before. The fun of this trip
is my being able to show it to my
husband. This is his first trip to
Carolina, you know She said that
they had driven through the coun-
try from Kentucky, by way of Ashe-
ville. She also mentioned the fact
, that she anil Captain Rohde were
planning to spend the Christmas
holidays touring the Coastal plain.
En answer to the question, "what
do you think of the political future
of women Mrs. Rohde stated, "1
am glad to say that the door is
iefinitely open to women Mrs.
Rohde was the second woman of
any nationality and the first from
the United States to receive an ap-
pointment as minister to a foreign
court. Mrs. Rohde told of an amus-
ing incident connected with her an-
ointment. Just after receiving her
HORRORS AND SCOOPS
mtinued from page two)
supre
ly upon
m
commission, she received a letter
from the woman diplomat of Russia
who expressed her happiness at Mrs.
Rohde's appointment. "Because
she wrote, "it definitely establishes a
precedent. She added, Of course I
was appointed first, but then I am
a Balshevike and Balshevikes do any-
"Heart-Breaker" Breece is! thing Mrs. Rohde ended the in-
aerous person. Due to the terview by saying it was not a ques-
the boys are allowed 8tion of sex but of who is best fitted
ording to statistics he only j for the position.
? li one fer every day in The interviewers had other ques-
Nice fellow, don't youjtions to be answered but they did
1 heard his Wednesday gal not have the heart to detain her
?hanged longer as she had a long trip ahead
of her.
The stage presence and person-
ality of the speaker charmed her
audience completely. Tall, majestic,
graceful, she made an impressive
figure as she walked across the stage
with queen-like grace and dignity.
Her manner of speaking, her eager-
ness to sign autographs, her gracious
reception of the interviewers, cer-
tainly prove the truth of the state-
ment that Mrs. Rohde is the world's
most charming diplomat.
During the past week, 119 new
members were pledged into the Poe
Society. This number exceeds last
year's record. The initiation has
proven a great deal of fun, and good
sportsmanship has been displayed
all the time. Initiation was con-
cluded Saturday afternoon in the
Wright Building by a party.
The Emerson Society has added
30 new members. All the new mem-
bers seem to have enjoyed initia-
tions as well as the old ones. The
upper classmen's rooms are cleaner
now than they have been this year,
we wonder why ?
About 40 new members have
joined the Lanier Society. The new
members had to take quite a bit of
"razzing" from the upper classmen,
but they took it like ladies. In spite
of having to do a great many undig-
nified things, such as, repeating fool-
ish sayings, proposing to the co-eds,
and many other things which were
imposed on them, the new Laniers
managed to retain a certain degree
of dignity. The party, which was
given for them Saturday afternoon
in the "Y" hut, ended their misery
and admitted them into the active
membership of the Lanier Society.
The officers responsible for this
week's activities are as follows:
Poe Society:
President?Irene Uzzell.
Yice President?Ophelia Mon-
togue.
Secretary?Ida Farrior Davis.
Treasurer?Mary Carson McGee.
Emerson Society:
President ?Mary Alice Simmons.
Vice President?Hattie Laura
Britt.
Secretary?Meta Virginia Ham-
mond.
Treasurer?Buth Creekmore.
Lanier Society:
President?Margaret Guy Over-
man.
Vice President?Emily Brendle.
Secretary?Edna Crawley.
Treasurer?Ruth Hawkes.
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
The fate of the Spearfish Normal
football team, from Spearfish, S. D
hung on a pair of football pants, two
weeks ago.
The team had come to Aberdeen to
play the Northern State Teachers
College. The Spearfish team had
an "All-American" tackle, according
to its coach, but he couldn't play
because they couldn't find a pair of
pants to fit his 260 pounds of brawn
and muscle.
"I've wired every sporting goods
company and if a pair arrives in
time for the game so I can use him.
we'll have a good chance to win
said the coach.
Dame Rumor has it that the col-
lege will put out a boxing team this
winter. This sport has. reached new
heights of popularity in colleges and
high schools in the past few years,
and exhibitions of the manly art of
self-defense always attract large
crowds of students and outsiders.
Boxing will more than take care of
itself in a financial way. There are
enough experienced fighters on the
campus to furnish the nucleus for
a fine club, and it is hoped that the
authorities will take advantage of
the opportunity to broaden the
school's athletic program.
ECTC's 1937 edition of pigskin
pushers yielded to the WCTC Cata-
7-0, Saturday afternoon,
23, to total four losses for
this year's gridiron season. The
Jinx that has been hovering con-
stantly over the heads of the Buc-
caneers seems to be still gloating j
over his masterpiece of the season,
Due to!
, ECTCi
has received no scoring rewards BO i
far for their splendid sportsman-
ship, perseverance and gamecock ?
spunk, that has marked this season jr
of football.
four games, four defeats,
injuries and tough breaks
The Intramural basketball tour-
nament will begin on November 2,
and will constitute teams from Wil-
son Hall, Jarvis Hall, Gotten Hall,
and Fleming Hall.
The team from Wilson A, the
team from Jarvis B, the team from
Gotten C, and the team from Flem-
ing I).
SCHEDULE
Tues, November 2.
7 :45?A vs. B.
8 m?C vs. D.
Wednesday, November 3.
1z4&?A vs. C.
8 :30? B vs. D.
Thursday, November 4.
8:15?A va D.
9 :00?i VS. C.
Girls constituting th
Fleming: Guards?B
Britt
WCTC scored the only touchdown
ocutt, Gregg
Cotton rGuai
Oates, Rogers,
Johnson,
teams are:
'd, Trexler,
forwards?
s, Bovette.
si
psu
Is Grant, Gammon,
Smith; forwards?
Irvin, Woods.
Wilson: Guards?Bunn, Roach,
Briley, Edwards; forwards?New-
ter, Jackson, Rogers, Boy-
of the game in the third quarter, by-
means of a series of tricky spiral-
reverse plays that caught the Pirate
line unaware; and yielded steady
gains for a push netting a total of
about fiftv yards, Humphrey, the!1'11
Catamount quarterback, carried the I Jarvis; Guards?Parker,
ball over on a short round-end run, j Johnson, Albertson, Brewer
and followed up by kicking the goal! wards?Parker, A Edwards
for the extra point. j man, Blanchard, Nance.
The Dudash-Cecot combination
starred for the Gold and Purple In-
putting on a brilliant show of de-
fense against the Cats' deceptive and
powerful offensive attack. During
the majority of the game, ECTC's
(defense was,good, with Hatem tak-
An English professor in the
Massachusetts Institute of Technol-
ogy is "taking it all back
In 1929 he told the Institute's
graduating class to "Be a snob;
marry the boss's daughter i to an emj
"Now he declares, "I've decided
the advice didn't work out as well
as I expected.
"By marrying the boss's daughter,
the young men took the chance of ac-
quiring the boss's liabilities along
with his assets
Besides, it seems that the young
men so advised were asked by the
fair?and wealthy?objects of their
affections if the offers of marriage
were inspired by love or their pro- j
fessor's advice.
Coach Alexander has issued a pre-
liminary call for basketball candi-
dates. Men who participate in both iand jolmson provim bulwarks
football and basketball are at pres- against power attacks through their
ent excused from the basketball prac-jportion of tho Hno The offonse
Ti h, i.K,t ,r are meeti? j seeme(1 t0 Iaek aomf.tlling that day :
' they just didn't click.
P
for-
Pitt-
All members of the student body
are invited to attend these games.
'AMBITION ESSENTIAL
SAYS MRS. ROOSEVELT
twice weekly to do their limbering
up before the football season comes
PONIES" ACQUIRE MAN-
TLE OF RESPECTABILITY
Ewing
Dandelake
Grev
Miller
MISS GRIGSBY SPEAKS
AT VESPER SERVICE
Students at Columbia University
who take the psycho! gy tests find it
pays to talk back.
If they're asked to "moo like a
cow" they're given a high rating if
they nonchalantly moo, toss back
some flippant comment. Getting em-
barrassed gives them a poor mark.
And an occasional "what-the-hell"
during the examination rated better
than "Yes, sir
The idea is to measure self-confi-
dence, aggressiveness and dominance.
Chapel Hill. N. C? (ACP) ?
11 Ponies used furtively by gener-
ations of schoolboys, have taken the
mantle of respectability.
Interlinear translations of lan-
guage texts is part of a new method
of teaching language advanced by,
Dr. Meno Spann, Iowa State Uni-
versity German professor. It is out- Johnson
lined in a book. '?Interlinear Ger
man Reader" and has been ap-
proved by the hoard of governors
of the University of North Carolina
Press where it is being printed.
Most of the board are faculty mem-
bers.
The reader has printed below
each line of German a literal trans-
lation.
Ithaca. V Y- (ACP) ? Mrs
ing his weekly toll, and Carpenter cvM.? r r i i-
i t , . . r rank!in 1). Roosevelt, speaking be-
fore women students at Cornell
University, told them, if they would
be successful in life, to "do more
than get by
"College graduates .she said,
"have during the past years gotten
jobs easier than girls with grade
school educations, but, at that, there
were many college graduates who
had accepted jobs as sales girls in
department stores
Success requires more of a girl
than just enough ambition to earn
her weekly pay check, she implied.
Here's to the Pirates' success in
coming games: may their fine sports-
manship and ability win out over
Old Man Jinx 100-0
The lineup:
WCTC
Jarv-
is
Pos.
LE
if
LG
C
RG
RT
ECTC
Smith
Martin
Merner
Cecot
Carpenter
Johnson
Sawyer
Yount
LH
RIl"
FB
Breece
Noe
Long Hatem
RE
Humphries Ferebee
QB
Saunders Shelton
Subs: Clemson and Cook; Quar-
nell, Ventors, Dudash, Lindsay,
Pittman, Glover, Ayres, Dimond.
Officials: Umpire, Mock, David-
son. Referee, Burke. Duke. Head
Linesman, Brock. Furman. Field
i Jlidg
?C!
St,
ECTC.
ral had
mting grounds.)
' I Carolina Hop"
hat he used to be.
1 power man I
Braxton
Where's
Don't you Halitosis victims take
so much to heart. It's letter to
lave bad-breath than no breath at
in.
AAUW BEGINS YEAR'S WORK
(Continued rrom page onei
:? adequate library facilities.
Mrs. Luther Herring, another
bember of the committee, moved the
ation of Book Week by the
; and her committee was re-
1 to take charge of the plans.
s. Ficklen Arthur, president,
' the head of the table and con-
? 1 the business meeting. The
? s were Mrs. Arthur, Mrs.
. Edwards, Mrs. C. A. Bowen,
Mise Kittrell.
JOE COLLEGE WILL
BE TAUGHT ETIQUETTE
Mi
STUDENTS HEAR F. M.
WOOTEN AT CHAPEL
(Continued from page one)
(nto th" future to generations yet to
pome.
Mr. Wooten was introduced by
Vliss Sallie Joyner Davis, of the
"ollege Chapel Committee, who also
cnew the three men in the early
lays of the College.
When coeds at the University of
Washington are through renovat-
ing the manners of the masculine
?ontingency on the campus, there
won't be a man who will dare to
keep a girl talking on the tele-
phone more than five minutes when
he should be studying.
The coeds are being subtle about
the thing though It is Done new
1937 edition of the campus etiquette
book, is going to be a part of ev-
ery man's library if coed sales-
girls have anything to say about it.
Among the un-Emily Postian
things Joe College will have called
to his attention is the habit of mo-
nopolizing the sorority's only
davenport, breaking blind dates
and letting frail coeds open heavy
campus doors all by themselves.
(Continued from page one)
down, instead of lift them up" but
the religion that Christ lived by and I .
passed on to us, tends to lift man
up. I represented inspire. Using
colorful illustrations from the great
worker, E. Stanley Jones, the
speaker showed how the Christian
Religion inspires us with hope and
toward reform. For the letter G
the speaker substituted the give.
"Jesus she explained, "gave his
time, his energy, his help, and even
himself The letter II stood for
help. She gave as an example the
story of the Good Samaritan. For
the last letter T, Miss Grigsby chose
teach. "Jesus she said, "is called
the Great Teacher. He tried to
educate people to do the right
thing Miss Grigsby concluded by
saying "If God looked at the light
and said it was good, then he saw
this possibility in it; and if Jesus
said, 'Ye are the light of the
World he tried to instill in it these
verbs which I have attempted to
enumerate to you lift, inspire, give,
help and teach
The University of Iowa possesses
one professor, in the college of edu-
cation, who understands the under-
graduate mind. He occasionally
warns the students, "I think I'll sleep
through class time And he does.
Justice Charles Evans Hughes ahead j
of President Roosevelt as the great-
est living American, a tabulation of
the annual poll of the entering class
disclosed.
SMART CLOTHES FOR SMART WOMEN
? Gt ?
C. HEBER FORBES
?y W ?? -w ??
Texas Christian University stu
have worn out three editions of
Emily Post's book on etiquette and
the fourth is in shreds, according to
the librarian. The most frequent
borrowers are boys. By noticing who
borrows "Emily Post" she can often
predict weddings and announcement
parties.
A break for the men at Ohio
Wesleyan-?coeds there are all in
favor of limiting the Dumber of cor-
sages they expect to receive during
the year. But, they want fewer
flowers "so that the money can be
spent attending more dances
Boston has been displaced as the
home of the most Harvard alumni.
New York has more than 7,000, the
new alumni directory revealed.
Bandsmen at the University of
Minnesota are really just little boys.
Initiation rules for first year men
contain this : "Always carry : one bag
gooey gum drops; one tin legitimate
cigarettes; one package good gum;j
and after dinner mints are darn
good
aJSG '
eN
ROCHESTER UNIVERSITY
HAS UNIQUE CLUB
The latest in campus organiza-
tions is an exclusive little club at
Women's College, University of
Rochester.Twelve girls are members
of the "My Love and I Are Far
Apart Club" and pine for boy-
friends at some distant place?Har-
vard, Princeton, or just "back
home
Members wear yellow ribbons
around their necks to identify their
affiliations. At meetings the girls
discuss "heart problems" and find
sympathetic listeners when they
talk about their boy-friends.
Teaching at Cleveland College of
Western Reserve University is a
family affair to 12 members of the
faculty. There are now six "hus-
band and wife" teams teaching at
the college.
uniimtHiimHmjuiimiiimiiKmmuHUHiiimimtammum. i!iiii?iiHm?tmmi?iHiMiHimtn?miniiiiimmiiiMuiiuijiiiuiHiuuniiimmainitt?iniHmHtmm
Are You WELL-DRESSED?
See Our
COATS, DRESSES, and
READY-TO-WEAR
i
THE SMART SHOPPE
Special Prices to the C :
Utn
Mlimm!m!i!U!MiiimHniinmttim!imimunmi!m!Mm!iiniiui?iii!Mit!i
mmimuurminhti
Princeton freshmen placed Chief
Stop at
PLEASANT'S
For Your
DRINKS and EATS
Also
BUS and TAXI SERVICE
It's never a gamble
when you shop at Pen-
ney's. You KNOW
you'll get top quality
at the lowest possible
price. We maintain a
big testing laboratory
just to check up on
ourselves constantly,
and a staff of expert
buyers whose one job
is to take the gamble
out of your shopping.
No "seconds no "run-
of-the-mill" goods, no
"irregulars" . . . only
the BEST is good
enough for Penney's!
I. ff, PEWMBT Ml
You want to get away
from "everything to
rest ? relax and be
entertained, we suggest
the PITT THEATRE,
the "Home of Good
Screen Entertainment
We have selected the cream of Holly-
wood's pictures for you this year, which
includes "Breakfast For Two Wed
Thur Nov. 3-4; "High, Wide and Hand-
some Fri Sat Nov. 5-6; "Double
Wedding Sun Mon Nov. 7-8.
WATCH FOR PLAY-DATE
MARLENE
DIETRICH
in
ANGEL
COMING SOON
PITT THEATRE
vs.





Nov
PAGE FOUR
THB TECO ECHO
.????? ber j
A FRESHMAN'S FIRST
IMPRESSION OF ECTC
TECO ECHO QUESTION CONTEST
By SARAH EVANS
As 1 rode through the campus of
ECTC. seeing if I
I was
jiit1 .?
modi
reali;
years
struck by it-
?: small tow
fort. Wit!
?d that foi
tat w;
1. Answer the questions below
briefly.
2. Be careful to answer each part
of the question. There is more than
one part to some of the questions.
3. Write the answers in ink, and
the first time.I on one side of the page only. If you
ize. It remindedi have more than one page clip them
or rather like altogether carefully, writing your
this thoughl I full name in the upper right hand
the next four) corner.
4. Be sure to number your an-
swers correctly.
5. It is not necessary to answer
all questions to compete in the con-
test. The answers will be carefully
considered, and the decision of the
judges will be final.
6. You may rind the answers
from any source except from mem-
bers of the "Teco Echo" staff.
i ,? m one oi the
ings, 1 would have
ties alone.
way 1 felt before
the ECTC students,
eek-ends in several j
rer have I met liner :
dormi-
1 very:
re of a
8. What faculty member is a near
relative of what University presi-
dent?
9. For what was the new dining
hall originally used?
10. Who was Dean of Women
before Miss Morton?
11. For what is the profit from
the Soda Shop and the Stationery
Store used?
12. Who was the first man to re-
ceive a degree from this school, and
what position does he now hold?
13. What two professors here
started out in the study of the min-
istry?
14. What year was this college
charter granted?
15. Who was dietitian before Mrs
Harrell?
16. For whom is the aboretum on
7. The contest is open to all stu back campus named? Identify that
dents except those whose names ap person.
pear on the "Teco Echo" staff?j 17. Who is the State Alumnae
business, editorial, and reportorial President of this school for this
eshman wi
with EC1
I creator 5
une in
: impressed
C as I, tins
ehool in the
COMMERCE CLUB
HOLDS MEETING
S. All entries must be in by Fri-
day, November 12, and must be put
in a sealed envelope addressed to
Editor, "Teco Echo College.
9. To the person who turns in the
year1
18. For whom is our classroom
building named? What position did
he hold?
19. Which are the only two
The Commerce Club
TlK
day night,
counting n
dent.
(i
in the
h G
ac
A
club w
new members joining
ded upon.
At the next meeting the (
? Majors will be the guests
Mr and Mrs. Browning at the liY
hut.
most correct answers a cash prize: original buildings on the campus
of $2.00 will be awarded by the that have not been enlarged?
"Teco Echo The second and "third! 20. What is the newest building
prizes will be $1.00 and 50c, re- on our campus?
spectively. 21. Who wrote the words to our
10. Winners will be announced in j school song?
the next issue of the "Teco Echo 22. What year did ECTC have
niT-pqTthnq its nrst football squad?
VUtbllUJNt) What yeflr did tfae gMi here
1. What is the official name of the first play intercollegiate basket-
library? i ball?
2. For whom is Cotton Hall 24 What class published the
named, and for what is the person! first "Tecoan"?
noted? 25. For what purpose was Jarvis
3. For whom are Jarvis, Fleming Hall originally used?
Wilson, and Ragsdale halls named? 26. Who presented the first mo-
QUOTABLE
QUOTES
m-
FORMER DIPLOMAT RUTH
ERYAN OWENS LECTURES HERE
Identify those persons.
4. At what time and for what
purpose were the dugouts back of
Wilson Hall used?
tion picture to the college?
27. Who gave to the school the
new curtains in Austin Building?
28. What three past members of
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
"Two per cent of the people do
the thinking for the remaining 98
per cent and you are a part of the
2 per cent Dr. William F. Quil-
lian, Director of the General Board
of Christian Education of the Meth-
odist Church. South, flattered stu-
dents at Birmingham Soul hern Col-
lege.
"The educational spoon in Amer-
ica is handled by competent and
understanding teachers but the
students should do the feeding
themselves Dr. Alexis Carrel.
ranking scientist, is interviewed by
the Dartmouth student newspaper.
"It may seem strange but all
great men slipped off their pedestals
as soon as they began to beat a path
to the bathtub Dr. Sanders, a
professor in education at De Paul
University, saw this lecture remark
picked up by a campus columnist.
"Superficiality i-s tae most unde-
sirable characteristic of a large
state university located in a small
town Professor Howard McClus-
key of the School of Education.
University of Michigan, cited evi-
dence of this superficiality in the
overdressed women students and
the stereotyped "line
Music from Hollywood
"Musk from Hollywood"
. . . sons of the movies
. . . sung by Jhe stars ?
and played for dancing
America. That's the idea
behind the popularity of
Alice Faye-H&l Kemp's
Chesterfield radio pro-
grams, heard over the
Columbia Network every
Friday evening at 8:30
E.S.T Western Station
S3)IT.).
Kemp's famous dance
orchestraand MissFaye's
i harming voice make one;
of the smartest and
i brightest programs on
the air.
ECTC STUDENTS
lE ft!
SPECIAL GRANTS TO END EVERYONE MAY SEE
FOR FOOTBALL PLAYERS GAMES ON PASSES
PSYCHOLOGY STUDENTS
TO TRY EXPERIMENT
5. What U. S. President spent a! our faculty were at one time sup-
night Ln our college town, and where j erintendent of public instruction in fessor of psychology, because every
(Continued from page onel
marls an I
. Le
helping
to make t
did he stay?
6. Whom did Dr. Meadows suc-
ceed as president? In what year
did the late president die?
7. What position did Dr. Mead-
Pitt County?
29. Who was the first college
physician, and what prominent
state position did he occupy?
30. Where was the Training
Chicago, 111. ? (ACP) ? By
means of a newly invented three
finger multitactor, Northwestern
University's department of psychol-
ogy will attempt to teach an eight-
year-old deaf and blind girl to walk.
talk and hear.
The child has beer, specially se-
lected by Dr. Robert H. Gault, pro-
ly through I
pa era, ??'?: "m
1 The sjm iker i
TfnfA ?
era In a si
United States
knows us chief-
???our daily
and our peo- j
ows hold in the college previous to j School before the one now used
his appointment as president? I and why was it abandoned?
iouti
whic
pers
i
fro
the
i the
our
?til'T
they
news
COMPOSITION CLASS
USES PHOTOGRAPHY
P:
percenl I th? V. S
?? are I in ! be Danish pa-
certain ri 1 was crime
uch of the reat. with it
?? ut our tree sitter?.
thon dancers, our pie-eat-
ta an I i ut "m w sp t of
g (said to b. a pr ved by
lent and its returns levied
on fox NRA funds showed us in
possibly an even worse light than
our crinn i ewe.
Mrs. Rohde wished the papers
would present to the people abroad
a picture of the "typical Americar
ad ler on the sunny side of main
street who would be recognized at
e, she felt, as a man worthy of
respect and friendship.
ThesecondaT6ncy thatshows as
t-foreignersalso Aiientan films
givesa verydistorte1 Ptetore in
manyways.
0esuchmoving j?:? tlre cited,
a: n -?i film, c?prayers
to( i pen irehes
fcr anUijii t II?-?rrors of
Amen Hox;on sled,said the
Seaklly ' prefacethat film
?? ? i s' ibitionwith an cx-
Iit did nct pitdure typ-
1Cenes inour prMons,but also
.therebuild.11 cof live
the unu;ualwoman 8
prisonin WestVirginia un-
Q, e. MaryHirst, the onv woman
warden of a federal prison.
The United States needs to send
abroad films, also, that will give an
accurate picture of American life.
Every advance in good pictures,
made here means an advance in pres-
tige abroad.
To help giv a true picture of
America, and in some measure coun-
teract the unfavorable impressions
given by newspapers and films, Mrs.
Rohde, as minister to Denmark.
hung on the legation walls painting-
of beauty typical of the United
States, such as, at one time, a large;
painting on one wall of a New Eng
. I winter scene and one on thei
opposite wall of a scene in Florida '
at the same season. She tried to j
show the North and South, the
mountains and the plains, to give
her callers some idea of the sweep of ?
the country.
Another of her informal activ-
ities as the U. S. minister was the
organization of an American wom-
an club which devoted itself to pre-
senting American achievements in
the fields of art and science. Its first
program was American music, pre-
sented with the court pianist at the
piano.
The speaker closed with a stirring
description of a Fourth of July cele-
bration in an American park in
Denmark in which she participated,
Morgantown, W. Va,?(ACP) ?
A new way to illustrate the struc-
tural principle-s of writing has been
put into use at the University of
West Virginia. Composition is
mixed with photography.
The freshman taking courses in
composition hunt for pictures that
prove some of the fine points of com-
position. The person who can get
the proper perspective with a cam-
era turns out to be the one who finds
it easier to get the correct slant on
his stories.
For example, one student found
that a scene of a high mountain
peak in the distance could be
i marred by a disfiguring wire fence
j in the foreground, indicating that
! nonessential details can ruin any
! manuscript.
The students bring their illustra-
tive snapshots to school and find
that the grades on their themes go
up as they apply the nice points of
photography to English composi-
tion.
and, telling how 40,000 Danish and
American spectators united first in
"The Star Spangled Banner" and
then in the Danish national anthem,
she said that it was one of those
occasions "when the hearts of man-
kind are swept toward good will and
peace
"And the cultivation of such good
will and peace she concluded, "is
the chief business, after all, of di-
plomacy
A junior at Ohio State University
attended the wrong class. He at-
tended the same wrong class three
weeks in a row. He had, in fact, at-
tended this class, completed the
course and taken a "B" in it two
years before. He explained that he
had sleptthrough most of the classes
and hadn't gotten around to buying
a text, so?.
human faculty which the multitac-
tor is presumed to bring into being
lies dormant in her person.
She cannot walk because, unlike
the majority of ahildren born deaf
and blind, she has failed to grasp
the idea of self-motion from the
pressure of the hands of others.
The multitactor transmits tones
to the fingers through three lingers
?the sense of touch taking the
place of the sense of sound.
Daily charts of the child's prog-
ress will be kept at the department
of psychology. She will never be
able to see, but her teachers believe
they will give her a voice as she
grasps the ability to translate touch
into sound and so bring her mind
to the task of directing movements
of her body.
Pittsburgh, Pa.? (ACP) ? Th
University of Pittsburgh is "put
Baltimore, M
ACP
)e
?inn
hasized" football is a r
solved to the Joy m uuu
ins everybody to go to tin
ting its house in order It has an-the Johns Hopkins Univern
nounced that it will cease giving
special "grants" to football play
ers.
James Hagan, director of ath-JP ' " ,
, . . . . .i, , ; ticket takers, hereafter, will
letics, said that tutun- Pitt athlet- , ,r,
, i . i ? , i glanee at guest cards, tne 'ard
ics should he conducted m accord ,
, ,? ? ? , are available to all asaers and ??-
with the best traditions oi intercol-
legiate . . . practice and that the n0Ifmg- , . , . .
? , 4i Each card will be good for bear
I Diversity basset up an agency to , , ,
? I t . i, , er and allcomers- th :ardown
secure employment for students .
? , .? ,? i er can play host to his relatives am
with athletic ability on the same ba- . . ' ?
sis such help is given to other stu- fn?nf at )vl!L
, I nder the new plan- never be
dents. J
, fore attempted bv a modern-da1
Alter 1940, when present eom-l
mitments expire. Pitt will reduce
the schedule of its Panthers to eight
1 ??ir I.i?i?? of Shoe
Jii.vl Uvci'ivt'd
Don't Foil to Visit
Us F.rst
COBURN S
university ?? ?)
?ver pay nor
? ipKlll
L'ilara
.?rames. These schedules will include
none but major teams because, ac-
cording to Hagan, "a football game
is no longer a football game when
teams as powerful as ours can run
roughshod over teams of schools
which under normal conditions do
not attract an abundance of foot-
ball material
If it (cessation of special
grants) means weakening our
teams, then they will have to be
weaker and there will be no criti-
cism of our coaches as a result of
defeats that may come our way
Hagan said.
It has been understood that Pitt
intends to bring its schedule into
eastern territory almost exclu-
sively.
Included in the rules of the new
policy is one that no coach will be
permitted to initiate a contract with
any athlete or attend any game;
with the idea of "scouting for ath
letes
i will nnanc
?t visiting
ca n trips away
team to d ?
-am
DR.A. M.SCHULTZ
DENTIST
?'?"0 Stote &ink Bunding
Phoru) 578
SHOES
For Every Occasion
Reasonable Prices
Visit Us Often
MILLER-JONES
THE COLLEGE
GIRL DESIRE
SWEATERS
SI.95 iii
SHORT COATS
$2.95 up
SKI It IS
SI.95 up
Come To See MJsl
WILLIAM'S
Th Lad ? Stor
Chesterfields give everybody
more pleasure
Take out a pack and it draws
'em like a magnet . . . right away
smokers crowd around for that
refreshing MILDNESS and BETTER TASTE
Have You Tried Our
Double Cones?
Now is the time to try them
and our Fountain Sodas
STOP AT
CHAS. HORNE'S
Always the Latest in
HEAD-DRESS
Visit Us
LOWE'S
Discount to College Girls
I ?ii. ;p qpimyiiy p w qpq
Copyright 19)7. Uoerrr ft Mnu Tomcco Cbj
smokers
turning to em
everyday
1,30
VOLUME XIV
Apprecia
Hears Be
of Circus
Aided in Speech B
Motion P ?'
GIVES VIVID. DE
DESCRIPT ON
Circus in C n I
Day. S
? p.
t !
u I. .
?
:t ' - in
th rel
bit of
Sir. ?
h retoi : ?
means "
which w a
of the
hU talk
pi v
Be sh
portant i
art' ? :
these was
down the
ear, acotJ
of a grei
keep run
brak f :
these . I
mu-t be ?
A ? ?
(Pit
MANY ATTEND VIEET1I
HELD AT G0L
Over ???? i
Greenvilh
for Childh . E
state Iunch n
Saturday, Sloven i 6,
in conn etion wil I
ers' meeting ? I 1
Among ?-?
College were Mis? D
State President
Ann Etedw Lne, M sa Lo
Miss Kathh ? Plumb. 1
Hughes, MLss
and Miss All I
The st id
a-1 -?;?.? a :
fevee: Hisses I
Aydn; Lucih N
son; Edna Eai ' ry,
burg; telia Gra ham,
feoro; R. :?. i N n,
linton; ; M
North Harl?
The hief s - t thi
was Miss M ? - ?
of East, rn North
Profess, r of 1 tarj
at Peabodj I
1 I ? ??? ' . S
Coates, presid t the
and intr iced speak
Mi i : ;? S'ultoi m
speaker at tin Satin
program
(B&eeting.
Gift
East Carolina 1
lege has just red
A. B. Andrews, of Ralei
gift of a steel engravi
George Peabody, a man
name is famous in educ
Mr. Andrews is now, ai
been for many years, a t
of the College, and has
than once before presente
ilar gifts to the institutij
The engraving is one
Mr. Andrews found on
abroad.
It will probably be hi
the walls of the library
with portraits of former f
dent Robert H. Wrigh
Dr. J. Y. Joyner.





Title
The Teco Echo, November 3, 1937
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
November 03, 1937
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.181
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/38061
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