The Teco Echo, February 26, 1936


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





r
!??
ALUMNAp
NEWS
Vfc; v
Robjnson-Tvson
. married l?. ?
H '? Robins . 7r-
Mrs. U?i,? Ut S
t. ' l
?v.coup ,? ik ?
MJones-Mavo '? ? Vim if 1 Mav,
nMra. ?, B . la. 'orsley-BradhV
. M
W.i
Wil
K
Crow-Mitcheil
1 - f ' , Mr.
i -
t ,i
Kradui
Brown-Knox
I
n
11.
M
N ??
? Hui ters
Wooten-Moonng
V
d i
H:rth Announcement
? M . ?- Mr
? ,1 .1 inn
Recent Visitors
v
Jfaata
If oak, 5!
? ? Brai
: i Dti
ND SERVICE
At
TARES
R KODAK FILMS
Itly AND SKILLFULLY?
hern To Us'
k STUDIO
ES STORE
Feofurmg
and Smartest in
ERCHANDISE
JO MISSES' SUITS
RY SHOES HOSIERY
id Prices Wdl Surely Please
MID-WINTERS
TL ' ,Uvii I i
if' I'luiii ? !
The
ECHO
?F
MARIONETTES
EAST CARti&INZrJffiA($&kS COLLEGE
VOU'MK Xll
GREENVILLE, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1936
NUMBER 8
Stage Set For Gala
Week-End of Dances
E
SIBERIAN SINGERS VARSITY CLUB IS
Cemmittees at Work to Com-
?jete Plans for Successful
Series of Dances
BHMSON'S ORCHESTRA TO
' PLA G EACH OCCASION
OF N. C. CANDIDATES
SUE HASTINGS' MARIONETTES
TO APPEAR HERE MARCH 2
Program Displays Ability of Each Miss Lorraine Hunter Again Di
?Vt, I- ot Guests Given Dr- RaPh McDonald Discusses
Her, r Facilitate Your Educational Status of State
A
amtance
at Present
IV
? k lhe SAYS NORTH CAROLINA
r Danced IS ON THE BOTTOM
litv become
k "plan u;1'Su8gests Necessary Remedial M
ommitti i ?
Member as Soloist of
Talent
The Siberian Singers gave a
plendid program to an apprecia-
rects Boys in Their Annual
Production
le ammal offering of the Varsity
Club, the Minstrel, will be presented
leas-
' this year
hairman of
ures to Establish Teaching
Profession
- ? ? Tl
i : reach danc
-? Decoration
abetl Wagner,
I residi Qta of the
Dixoi John a,
tb Wilsoi :
IIm Forest,
n Wilson; Re-
tee, Ruby Kelly,
1 barb ton and
ih his (Carolina
University, will
the series. The
ar to he held on
lay nights will be-
and ? nd at 11 :50
Ian ?. which will
v afternoon, will
b and last until
Dr. Ralph McDonald, candidafc
djfor governor of North Carolina, was
Truest speaker in chapel Tnesdi
iapei i uesday,
Vhruary 17. Dr. McDonald spoke
of the state of affair- in whirl, the
schools ol North Carolina find them-
selves a! the present time. In giv-
ing a very brief summary of the his-
tory of education in this state a
compared to that in other states, ho.
said that during the ten year period
of 1918-1928 North Carolina made
more rapid strides than any other
state at any time, and yet now they
rank at the very bottom.
I he- !n?f adequate way of measur-
ing tin- quality of education given
our youth is the monev spent per
child per day and North Carolina
spends less per child than any
other state in the country. Tin
teacher load is greater in thi
than in auv
? rm mi an apjirccui-1' 'i nic mlnirci, win oe preseme
tive audience last Friday evening. April 3. The present outlook is tha
Nicholas Vanli.ff. who is director, it will be an excellent one. Mis
proved at once to be a great singer, Hunter, adviser for the Club an
an inspiring leader, and a most dra- Bounced Saturday that plans are
matic person in his interpretationsrapidly progressing. The scene will
and leadership. The force of spirit be lail before a pine cabin, the
an.) intensity of emotion whiehjnome of "Mammy" and "Pappy
characterizes the Singers appeared parents of about fifteen children. All
during the evening thus enrichingjof the children except two.
to a marvelous degree the contrasted"kfiasthmy" and "Epidemic" have
inIs presented. At one extremesoae forth into the world to seek
was the mystical spirituality of anjir fortunes and have become
eleventh century chant, and the other I famous as Chicago night elub enter-
end was the gayety of the "Laughingtainers. En route to Miami for an
Polka A change of costume ?from engagement there, they stop at their
the Cathedral robes to their nationaloW home for a night's visit. Then'
costume of Old Russia accentuated tkey rehearse their performance.
the difference in m1 between thoMaie George" and his family and
serious and gay. The solos, especially (servants will also appear on the pro-
the contra bassos, as well as the gram. About fifty people will have
choral numbers were sung withlpsrts in the minstrel.
artistry and vigor whieh are hard
to surpass.
I heir phenominal range was from
contra (? to treble K and is perhaps
unequalled by any other male en-
semble in the world. Bach member
was a soloist of unusual ability, yet
in ensemble they attained a beauti-
ful vocal blend. They were able to
bring the joys, the heartaches, the
(Please turn to page three)
PLAY IS LIKED
Fannie Brewer Stars in
Beaded Buckle"
"The
Company is Largest and Most
Active Organization of Its Kind
In The Country
AFTERNOON AND EVENING
PERFORMANCE TO BE GIVEN
"Jack And The Beanstalk" and
"Robin Hood" are Two Features
Chosen for Presentation Here
Sue Hastings' Marionettes, the
!large-i and most active Marionette
organization in the country, will
present an afternoon and a night
performance here on March 2. Fea-
tures of the two performances will
be "Jack and the Bean Stalk" and
"Robin Hood respectively.
Puppets have become today i i e
of the teacher's greatest aids. Chil-
dren can make the figures and dress
'hem. They make the controller by
which the strings are assembled to
the hand. Then they learn to operate
the puppets, make them walk. sit.
and talk. Marionette- are a new
angle on the use of drama in the
school room. For thi reason the
j presentation of Sue Hastings'
Marionettes will be of special sig-
nificance to the audience here. Sue
Hastings has undoubtedly furthered
? tiler.
in
tate
average
dailv attendance in this state is 33
be girl break. whereas the next largest i- 28. Find-
ing 83 to be the average means that
often a teacher inn fry fi teach
4? children r more in one room.
"Th- Teacher is not yet born said
Mr. IfeDonald, ??.? can teach ef-
fectively 10 children at the same
time
Mr. McDonald brought out the
fact that the teacher- of North Cam
n ith Montgomery
Adh-r with Karl
Alhn with Hohn
Ambrose with YA-
ian Ambrose with
tine Anderson with
Doris Armstrong
?i!
IS Y. W. SPEAKER?
"Our Spiritual Natures Are The
Bases of The Lives We Lead
Says He
A
gram
plays
intr
ifferent typ
that of
. was ushered
when Linelle
? of chapel pro-
student-produced
ii
(
Two scenes from Sue Hasting
one is from Robin Hood the h
t' Marionettes are shown above. The upper
wer one is from "Jack and the Beanstalk
Friday morn-
ark presented
Headed Buckle" by Frances
Harol
nd -Dilum ar-jina wfn Tak(,n M a nip. mnt fcy
wnh rnomasI &cti(m of til(. General AsseraWy
Marguerite Aabell with of vxM stating that thev were led
Ella Turner AtkinsK bdfcye jn ,nvvi,rtinfX Th
Atkins, Murrell Austin tax t1(.v WuUid h?d s.diool con-
Gaskms MargueriteLy ,1(aUSt. th(.v wolIi(! then re-
Millu.nl hurt Ma . tinamial aid from the state.
ith David i liouttj Even dw- th(i gtaJe wm nu((1(,
n with hlvin Ltown- .?? , ? , , e i
: ? gnonsible for eight months of school,
! ? man with W llliam r . ? . , , f
. , ' ' ? - i w I nothing was put in the place- 01 the
IBiasette with Ray (.avinjr th).
! ret Blythe w,th Hoke (.(ill(iltion 4, in luanv as. than
thy Bolton with Mat- .
. France, Royl with! jr- M(1)iiial( jhrw
I Andrews, Helen Brad-K u(M j to tallish
? jyne Reams. Margaret as a fession. They
Sam Harrell 8ajhe . Adeqnati. ,aaries. with a
er with Francu Taylor b ion io(1 of probably one
Jdey with larcnce . afterwanls. y
n. Louise i?" . (Pi?aBe turn to page two)
and live a spiritual life
advice left to the student
A. Vesper service!
('ook, pastor of the
Sun-1
Hareai
ite, Lucy Rritt with
Genera Brown with
1. dr Jean Brown
: Lillie Dare Brown!
K 1. Nell Wayne Bui-
Ralph Hathsmith. Rosa
k with W. F. Pridgen.j
with Lester Gainor,
Russellitn'ZS'iidnli'Popular NortrTcaolinian Keeps
Bryant Johnson, Doris Audience Interested With His
GOERCH RELATES
AMUSING INCIDENTS
"l.iv,
was tin
at the V. W. (
by Rev. Leylan
Christian Church of Rinston
day night. February Ut.
Students come to college, he said,
to store up their brains with wisdom
and expand their mental capacities,
but is that all? To live, he pointed
out. is the most solemn and dignified
thing that we have before us and we
mut help do all we can to develop
our spiritual nature, a these are
the bases of the live We lead.
In every soul, he continued, there
is some sense that gives to us the
consciousness of helpfulness and
nothing will stabilize life quicker
than spiritual activity.
He gave as an illustration an
anchor being dropped into the sea,
stating that it has no value unless
one end is deep in the sea and the
other securely fastened to the ship.
Believe in God, he advised, strive
to enter in and peace will be in your
soul.
"Dream of an Angel" was played
as a piano solo by Mary Evelyn
Thompson.
the
ray.
The play i a comedy of village
aristocracy. Fannie Brewer played
th- part f the charming widow. Mrs.
Agnes Miller; and D. R. House took
the part of her adoring son, Joseph
('onroy Miller, a University student.
! Lucille Clark gave the interpretation
lot Mrs. Louise Baily, a neighbor and
I friend of Agnes. Other parts were
taken by Mildred MacDonald (Mrs.
Berkely, a gossip); Fodie Hodges
i Herb Shine, proprietor of the
"Metropolitan Store"); and Vivian
Beeves (Leona King, his clerk).
The play is a 'arolina Playmakers
play and was tirr-t produced on the
Playmaker's Stage in February.
1924.
This is the first time in recent
years that students have attempted,
without aid. the production of a
play. Linelle Clark, who coached
the play, has had experience in di-
recting and acting, under the instruc-
tion of Miss Helen Dortch and Miss
Mary Dimberger. Besides several
one act plays of last year she ap-
peared in "Easy Pickin's the suc-
cessful Senior play of 1935.
ALOEN G. ALLEY
L
Travel Has Equipped Him With
Material for Observing Accu-
rately World Events
SOUTHERN N.S.F.A.
T
Conference to be Held at Mem
phis: University of Mississippi
is Host
"The Economic Causes of War
"The League, the Court, and Our
Country and "Sanctions and
Peace were the subjects of the series
This year, the annual meeting
of the Southern and Southeastern
divisions of the Xational Student
Federation of America, including
,f three excellent lectures presented representatives of Men's and Worn
Russell Burney and
'Please turn to page two)
iNFIRMARY BECOMES
A REAL HOSPITAL
Tales From Observation
floats, 1:
ntfirauir
trl.
Carl Goerch. popular editor of
The Stat spoke to the students
at the assembly period Friday.
February 14. using for his subject
v has lees a true "Interesting People and Things in
the past two or three North Carolina' He related several
ill. there have been over I humorous episodes about - ?t ?
NYA Will End in June
Increase Shown Over Last Year
In Higher Education for Women
Y !
. ites will be
f q lifetime
ith us next
IW8SB
Eid
k "I
Carolinians of his acquaintance
from over the state. He then told
the storv of a farmer who remains
loyal and faithful to hL wife who
ha died and whom he has buried in
one corner of his field. Mr. Goerch
patunts were m one explained that the same qualities
characterize people wherever we may
1 students, approximate-
if the student lody, in the
during the so called flu
There were seventy-six
b bed at one time. During
beds were placed in the
Miss
5 the co-eds fell victims to
e are out now, and there
bu students on the sick
present.
innk May of Folkland,
aaployed for week. During
that -he was over here, she
unt-harve
HI. and, the living room
1 '???'??? r bed room. Miss Small
during Mi- Mayo's illness.
, ! ?- Diekerson stated that they
. ? i ai v as one hundred?three
tr ' i ? nts during one of the days
'??; bad so many bed patients.
Hun Smith and Miss Diekerson
Jrr Patient and attentive. Often,
J5 didn't get to bed until two
?el and grt up at six o'clock.
fR d them. He also brought out the
fact that whatever we look for in
people we will find. If one looks
for the good he will n,l gno ;
likewise if he looks for the bad, he
will find bad, .
Mr. Goerch, of Raleigh and
formerlv Washington, has been in-
strumental in bringing to the atten-
tion of the average person in North
Carolina things about his state, along
the lines of government and less im-
portant matters, which should be
generally known. Besides being an
editor, he is a publisher, feature
writer radio speaker, and aviator
and is one of the most versatile and
test informed local men cf today.
The Xational Youth Administra-
tion automatically goes out of ex-
istence at the end of June. Two
weeks or so ago. as a news dispatch
in this week's Cardinal records, a
bill was introduced into the House
of Representatives which would pro-
vide a permanent government set-up
to give sorely needed aid to the needy
students and other destitute youth
in merica. This bill is known of-
ficially as "II. R. 1689 It is called
the American Youth Act.
We shall have more to say about
the Youth Act in future issues. As
soon as space permits, the bill will
be reprinted in full. For the present
the fairly complete outline m the
news story mentioned above will ?m-
ficp- i ? ? ?
The American Aouth Act is a
primary responsibility of the student
councils in every school in the uni-
versity, if they truly represent, as
thev claim, the needs and interests
of the student body. It is their
obligation to the students who put
them in office to publicize the bill
as widely as they possibly can,
through convocations and discus-
sions, and to urge letters to Congress
urging immediate and open discus
sion and consideration
measure.
of the
Washington, I). C. (XSFA)?
Women are favored in the United
States, at least in the field of higher
Hlucation. In January, 1936. there
are 44 more institutions of higher
education in the country than there
were one year before and women have
profited most from this increase. Of
the new schools established, 21 are
for women and 32 co-educational,
while the number devoted to male
education suffered a loss of 9. This
includes colleges, universities, pro-
fessional schools, teachers colleges,
normal schools and junior colleges,
both Xegro and White. The total
number in 1935 was 1,662 while there
are now 1,706 in existence.
3 new Negro institutions were
established, 1 private and 2 state,
while 1, Protestant-sponsored, was
closed. All of the new ones are co-
educational. 9 White state-con-
trolled and 12 Protestant-sponsored
were closed during the year. 1 White
city-sponsored institution, 45 private
and 17 Roman Catholic-sponsored
were established.
There are 14 new colleges and
universities for Whites, 7 for women
and 7 co-educational. Of these, 9
are private, 1 state, 1 city and 3
Roman Catholic. One Protestant
college for Whites was closed. Junior
Colleges suffered most, 9 being
closed. And professional schools
registered the largest gain, 25 being
added
(This summary is based on figures
prepared by Ella B. Ratcliffe for
the U. S. Office of Education, Divi-
sion of Higher Education.)
to the College students February 21
by Dr: Alden G. Alley, an official of
the Xational Council for Preven-
tion of War. who was brought here
by the Y. W. 0. A. and the History
Department of the College. Through
the influence of Mr. Frwin King, of
State College, arrangements were
made for .Mr. Alley to visit a number
of small colleges and schools in the
tate and speak of the vital problems
of the day.
He has attended ten sessions of
the League of Nations Assembly in
Geneva during the fourteen trips he
has made to Europe since 1920. In
the thirteen visits to Germany, he has
followed from the beginnings until
now the rise of Hitler and observed
the reactions of the German people.
A Harvard graduate who had
traveled extensively in Europe be-
fore the World War and served as a
lieutenant in the United States
Army in France during the war, he
had a background that laid the
foundation for his later work that
makes Mr. Alley unusually compe-
tent to interpret sanely and con-
structively the problems and facts
he has met in his travels and study.
He is a gifted, speaker, and good
teacher, so he presents his points
(dearly and interestingly.
He showed the actual work of the
League in Conference, presenting the
strong and the weak points in the
institution, but stressing the fact
that it is still young, and the nations
never before had attempted to work
together. He made clear the dis-
tinction between the World Court
(Please turn to page three)
en's student government associations
and the Southern College Press As-
sociation, will be held in Memphis.
Southwestern and the University of
Mississippi serving as hosts.
Last year the convention held at
Xew Orleans was a great success,
accomplishing some worth-while
purposes, and this year an even
greater convention is expected. The
dates are Thursday. Friday, and
Saturday. April 16, 17. and Is.
This eccasiou gathers student lead-
ers from sixteen southern states, ex-
tending from Arizona to Virginia.
The purpose is the study of student
and college problems and the ad-
vancement of every phase of
activity.
Memphis is an ideal place for
such a meeting. It has the facilities
for stacing a good convention and
carrying it to a successful con-
clusion. It has the social means
which enable such a meeting to be
HOME ECONOMICS MAJORS
GIVEN TEA BY SOPHOMORES
enjoyable and pleasant.
The Convention Headquarters
will be in the Hotel Peabody, and
all meetings will lie held there.
All council presidents, editors of
yearbooks, and editors and business
managers of college papers will
benefit by attending this conference.
Mrs A. A. Harrell is Dietitian
M lir?
Mrs. A. A. Harrell, of Covington,
Georgia, has been secured to fill the
position of Dietitian left vacant by
the resignation of Mrs. Xannie
Jeter. Mrs. Harrell is an ex-
perienced dietitian, and has served at
this college during the summer
quarter for eleven years. Later she
the interest in marionette
Extensive Travelers
The marionette "family" which
are to appear hero have made dur-
ing the past twelve years coast-to-
coast tours of the United States,
played in lyceum houses, womens
clubs, children's schools, churches
and colleges: traveled through Scot-
land, England. Canada, Cuba, the
West Indies, the Virgin Islands, and
South America: performed for
Governors and at the White House.
On one of the trips to the Virgin
Islands, the company had the unique
experience of playing for a leper
colony. This was the first time any
entertainment had ever been offered
to these unfortunate people, who
sat on one side of a wire fence while
the performance was given on the
other sid.
Inhuman performers are far more
fortunate than human actors, who
inevitably show age and fatigue as
time advances upon them. Of the
6H? marionettes used in the extensive
repertoire of the organization,
none is remotely Avorse for wear.
Knocking around in their bags seems
to improve them. There is one
dancer who can now boast of twelve
years of kicking around and some-
thing over 5.000 performances. The
unfading limbemess of her joints
points to a limitless future. Once a
marionette comes into the world, it
is there to stay.
Sue Hastings has brought a
tudent peculiarly American flavor to the
ancient art of marionette shows. Her
appeal is to the old and young. Any
audience is amazed by the art and
-kill of the marionettes. They per-
form the most intricate dance steps,
play musical instruments and sing,
ride bicycles, slide down banisters,
and even indulge in hysterics.
One of the companies is being
featured in the Shubcrt revue "At
Home Abroad starring Beatrice
Lillie, which is one of the outstand-
ing hits of the Xew York theatrical
season.
Two Performances Here
The special matinee for children
will bo sponsored by the Greenville
Branch of the American Association
of University Women. The perform-
ance will begin at 3:30 o'clock. The
feature will be "Jack and the Bean-
stalk a fascinating dramatization
of the old, yet ever-popular story.
Added attractions are "The Three
Little Pigs an amusing version of
the nursery tale, and "The Puppet
Capers of 1936 a group of gay song
served as dietitian at Centre Collegt
in Danville, Kentuckv. She is well and dance numbers. The prices for
? i ?l tl iiimi m iii mi an ma ? ,il, I ,lvii O i I . . i ?
known in Greenville.
On Friday afternoon, February
14, from 3:30 until 5:30 o'clock the
Home Economics Sophomores were
at home in the Home Economics De-
partment of the Science Building,
which has adopted the address of 100
Wright Circle.
The spirit of St. Valentine was
attractively portrayed in decorations
and refreshments. The former con-
sisted of beautiful red roses and
tall red candles. Dainty red and
white sandwiches, cakes and cookies,
served with Russian Tea, salted nuts
and mints completed the color
scheme.
Women make better lawyers than
men, according to every compara-
tive measurement of those charac-
teristics of lawyers studied by the
Human Engineering Laboratory of
Stevens Institute.
the afternoon are: children, 20 cents;
adults, 30 cents.
The night performance, which will
(Please turn to page three)
DELEGATES ATTESd
Y. W. MEETING
Fraternities at the University of
California at Los Angeles have
gone on record as opposing the abo-
lition of compulsory military train-
ing.
Variations in short-wave radio
signals form the basis of a new
system of weather prediction.
Five members of the A W. C. A.
Cabinet represented E. C. T. C. at a
conference held in Greensboro Satur-
day, Sunday, and Monday. The
delegates were Ellen Jenkins, Ruth
Wise, Margaret Xorman, Nola
Walters and Jean Thomas. The
groups left at eleven o'clock Satur-
day morning and returned Monday.
Mr. M. L. Wright chaperoned.
p





I
1 '
I
I
I !
I I
r
T
11
V
w
.1
i
V
e
PAGE TWO
THE TECO ECHO
The TECO ECHO
Bii
UUtaU TE AIMERS COUSCl
'u by Hie StuI nts of East Carolina
Teachers College
STAFF
I Y 11?'? K S
'HixE Raxes
Editor-in-Chief
Busin es$ Ma nager
Assistant Edit
rs
It f! I S I WI.OK
.1 MK Gs! KN TaYI.oK
El.KANOR TaYI.OK
Carolyn Hrinki.ky
Ad
lii! I
ting Managers
t V
HI V I
'TINE
. ninnix.K
MOKBIS
Circulation Managers
?Kir
Doers Mkwbdrn
Helen Downing
Sara Lee Yatks
Saka Lavoulin
The Kibitzer
WeD there's
-The Fit
-till not inuch doing
to
PASTOR DISCUSSES
WORTH OF EDUCATION
Mi
At a recent chapel period Mr.
te rm seems to nave cramped jy Ryan, local pastor, discussed
everybody's styh?Gosh how thesojtle worti, &f education. He used
Kleenex people mast clean Dp (Vesas illustrations average men ?f his
Oscar, in more ways than one) in l aeqnaintano who were interested m
this kind of weather. getting an education. Those who
We view with interest the open-1 us0 geif-instruetion and those who
hools are merelv
attend night senoo
average men he sail
ing of the so-called "Social Parlor"
in the dining hall?at first glance
it would seem, like taking Spinach
away from a starving man and g?v"j instruction
ing him hay?Put we may he mi
taken?We hope ?
! STAGE SET FOR GALA
WEEK-END OF DANCES
(Continued from page one)
George Willard. Ethel Lee Byrd
W. ('?? IJiitt, Ruth Cagle with
Holler, Chaunsey Calfee with
Muir Jimmy Carr with Con
Sura Carraway with Billy
, Cashwell w itfa B. A.
?ancea Chamblee with
Oleta Chamblee
Boj
.$1.50 per College Year
Number 182
Room 2
'ISVliit
matter December 8, 19S5, at the V. S.
X. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.
1935 Member 1936
Associated Golleftiate Press
Distributor of
Golle6iate Di6est
Somewhere in rhe dim, distant
past, we recall having heard a bit
of poetry that somehow struck a
responsive note ? (poems always
made Oscar wild)?and as it came
up. yea. verily, so shall it Je re-
peated?
Xo trick nor kick of fate
Can raise from me a yell-
Serene I sit and wait
For the world to go to heaven?
It seems this charming little bit
was written by an optimist, so it
doesn't rime?anyway, a hit of fa-
talism doesn't go had (especially.
Oscar, in your present location )
We hope the keepers don't hear of
Aleatrez, where the prisoners have
to remain silent.
He told of a
friend ?.f his who through his own
sufficiently educated
himself to enable him to pass en-
trance examinations for the fresh-
man
?lass of
a
large university.
with
Dan
Helen
Taylor, sar
Statou. Gladj
Petersoi
William Speight,
with Preston
toJ1 with Ambrose Doxier, Ome
Cockran with Pal Waiters, Gaynelh
Collins with do Gregory, Mar?
Anna Cooper with Baford Burks,
Xvlda Cooper with Dr. '? V. Zibelin,
Smith. ('allie ('harh

(A
Around Washington
By ARNOLD SERWER
('ollegiaie Press
lMiIldellt )
on
?late
rn
Elizabeth Copeland witfi George
Xewhern. Doris Couch with doe
Proctor, Mary Craven with James
Davis, Clifton Crawford with Edna
Williams. Dorothy Grumpier with
Alvin White. Louise Currin with
Foster Xehlett. Dora Curtis with
Stressing the fact that this was an
average man and that if education
is worth this much to others he
asked, "What ought we to expect
from a group like the one on this
campus living in the educational
atmosphere that it does!
"The hope of our civilization" Dowell Curtis, Lou we Daugntr
said Dr. Ryan, "depend- largely on
what comes out of groups like this.
The latest taii-ii furnish one
with the information that at the
present rate the families of college
faculties will he extinet in six gen
erations whereas the others will
have increased one and three fourths!
million.
Washington, D. No
think- of Washington except 1
seat of the nation gover ?
ihi- city ha- another,
er claim !? distinction, an
it- importance a- a co
For Washington ha
sities and a number oi sma
within the city limit al
doing quite well from I
point of -indent enrollmen
The universities are (?
George Washington EJn i i
1 vet
ilthough less
thai i-
college tout,
four univer
small collegi ?
all of then
tt.
am
Teacln
r? "f i
Aincr
The storm of censorship has ex-
tended itself to the "Y" Store
(Oscar prefers Pop Shop)?and
now poor old Fit, and Joy and that
gang have to move their Sniffle
games to some other place. 7-11
This Collegiate World
It may well he that the single
standard of morality is -lowly crack-
ing up under tin- ravages of this
n : evil age. or it mav
as was
mv
: ibbing than
been thrashi d
I een aecomplL
ins goes on in
"LEADERS" PASS THE BUCK
n "n ? r- rsit -? of Souiht rn ('alifoi nia Trojan )
bock to a faculty committee yesterday, a group of
leaders virtually admitted that they are unable them
1 insidious practice among students of this university??
ng in examinations.
pointed out in the meeting yesterday, is certainly not j
1 r among coast institutions. But to deny that such mis-j
taken deep hold here is to deny fact. One has only to
sroom in which tests are being given to realise that the
ming worse, rather than hotter.
ion hv the men's council, promised by Chairman Leland
av is more likelv to he successful in the elimination of;
re a dozen faculty committees. The whole matter has
;? many time in the past, and still nothing effective has
? Either professors do not care how much cheat-
heir classes, or they are at a loss to devise a way of stop-
gone some time ago, but, according
to a reliable authority Sniffle is al-
most as good?if played with a
small enough piece of paper?the
game was originated by a Listerine
ad writer, the? tell us -
We've heard a lot
the co-eds getting
(hided from the town club (Oscar
says Towny Cluhv. hut we don't
knowy) dance?Anyway, the gentle-
men in question got in on a Bidde,
whilst the Towne Cluhe Wisheth
just be that any-
one, including a l'h.D. can do about
anything he wishes with figures.
During its year and a half ol
existence this column ha- witnessed
and reported campus "surveys" of
every conceivable type?from the
average number of hair- in a fra-
f griping about ternity boy's eyebrows to the num-
thomselves ex her of years it takes the average
hankers son to get through college.
And all this faithful following
of the college press has at last been
rewarded. with
ing it.
Vet the problem is not entirely without solution. At Virginia, the
student council has put cribbing on a par with stealing. An examinee
apprehended in any act that takes unfair advantage of his classmates is
taken immediately before the council where, if found guilty, lie is given
his walking papers?ordered to leave the campus within 12 hours?dis-
graced.
If the Trojan men's council is planning such vigilante action, may
success be the result. The system would undoubtedly catch a few hapless
victims unaware, depriving them of further education here and depriv-
ing the university of their future tuition fees. It would, however, go
a long way toward eliminating misconduct in examinations, putting
honest students on an opportunity par with the dishonest, and enhancing
the university's scholastic standing.
Tic II! to
"Whilst
"Pay
poor
lie
M'liioiians
He out tone S
ry ye Towne Clutlians. campus of Queen
up or Scramnie" ? ami
olde hoves and dates hat
We can now present to you the
results of the purity survey on the
vamoose?Forsooth. Whan that ye
unmerrie gentlemen reached the
rode, muttered implications of
"Cads, Rounders" were to he herd,
and if you want any more of this
we refer you to Oscar's Uncle Geof-
frev?
University. 'T11-
ye rity 111 ttie personal, intimate,
to whisper and snicker sense.
Thomas Vemon, Mary L. Davenport
with Maurice Walker. Betty Cooper
Davis with Randolph floorer. Selma
Davis with Roy Cox, dr Graci
Dawsou with Paul Williams, Johnny
Deatou with Frank Wooten, Joy
De Loatche wish Zack Vam Dyke.
Edith Dixon with Lacy Pender,
Ethel Fake- with Edward Toon.
Margaret Fakes with Edgar Kirk.
Ohessie Edmondson with Edward
Lewis Jeanette Edwards with David
Hardy, Virginia Ellis with R. F.
Hudson, Caroline Evans with Wal-
lace Tarkington, Doris Everette ? ith
dame- Roebuck, Nancy Erring with
Manning Cooke, Elizabeth Faisou
a ith ?scar Smith. Louise Farrioi
with Bob Wheless and John B.
Zibelin, Mildred Fisher with Willis
Fisher, Anne Fisher with Harrj
Fisher, Hyatt Forrest with Juanita
Arthur. Mary Alice Franklin with
?lack Franklin. Grace Freeman with
William Adler. Virginia Fryar with
Fred Downing and dame- FoOte,
I.illie Mae Fuller with R. ( Fuller,
Martha Jane Gates with Tom Faw-
eett, Mattie Move Gaylord with
George Wilkerson, I arrie Gavnor
Alfred Sander Hazel Gaynor
with Boyd Cox, Hoot Gibson with
Catherine Mixzele, Gladys Gaston
with Reynolds Mav. Inez Glover
with Lewis Chamblee, Louise Gooch
with John ()erton. Claudia Gower
Catholic University
University. Wilsoi
lege, I -olumbia 'oil
the Washington Law School
few of the colleges. Probal
fir-t three of the four univi
named are the only one- kie
people outside the District
111111 bin. mainly by virtue oi
publicity their atbh te- cot
time ?o time. The fourt
Fniersity, although one
standing graduate scho
country commands little
tional press mention.
The composition of
bodies of these ach
ti rest ing. The sol
(
i
h. Am
t
.1
d e
?m
.1.
Vi
1,
ernment
f varying importance, ?
uslators having semi-permanen
dence here, and 01 foreign
mats make up the greatest p
their enrollments. Many ;i 1
of-town student of a middle
family casually bringing !ion
son oi an ambassador for the (
mas holidays, has throw;
friend- and relations into a
bordering on panic. How
wonder, did their Wil'
enough samrfroid to 1?
?lass
the
m act
apabli
It seems that the women are 86.4 with Joe Simmon Christine Grady
cent pure while the men areAxn Milton Allen. Eunice Greeoi
with Albert done Hetty Greene
I with l!ill Cherry, Mary Griffin with
Irvin Blanchard, Betsy Grub with
i Paul Fitzgerald, Ida Kav Hair with
Parker with I
Parrisb with
betfa Peeble
Roberta
Ma xvv el
John W
'I. Van-
miii Hat
with I
dr
her,
Lillian W
Carrol
11.
M
in.
,ar
( heek. Mary 1
Register. Reba
per cent pur
but per cent virtuou
Well, with this snow,
the wild is upon me. so
me are going out am
UNDERGRADUATE SUPPORT OF THE GRAHAM PLAN
(North Carolina State Technician)
Action of the Student Council in unanimously approving the Gra-
ham Plan for the clarification of eligibility rules in Southern Conference
athletics i- reflective a general approval 011 the part of the student body.
Advocates of Dr. Graham's Plan hope that the clarity of it and the
express provisions will in a large measure strengthen the existing rules,
and result in a return to higher standards of amateur competition.
Many institutions have refrained from open subsidization simply from
the fear of hypocrisy. Certain member institutions of the Southern Con-
ference, however, have become hardened to such charges, are admittedly
subsidizing athletes. Hypocrisy of this nature can hardly win the loyalty
and support of a student body. Existing regulations are ignored and
violated in principle. Dr. Graham's proposals may not eliminate hypoc-
risy entirely, but they would no doubt aid in bringing about a more favor-
aide understanding.
Certain opposition to the Plan is based on the fear of a rift in Con-
ference ranks if it is vigorously pushed. Such fear is hardly obvious,
hut should not discourage the advocacy of principles which are right.
Member institutions unwilling to abide by a majority decision will not
find the outside ranks favorable. . . . The adoption of the Plan is most
favorable from the point of a check on practices which are only grow-
ing out of hand. It constitutes a turn-point which we can trace back
to the ideals most favorably associated with inter-collegiate athletics.
the call of
Oscar and'
The test consisted of Is questions
I and was given to 150 students.
i Questions varied. One was. "Do
I you smoke l"
One girl turned up with a per-
;lr :lilfect score, and one man got to SH?.o
1 throw sonu
per cent holiness. He was the one
snow balls at yomse ginks-an11 yho adniittCM, lu had onco smoke(1
don t do anvthing you shouldn t at ? r??o
11 m 1 . j u cigarei.
the dances, cause W o II be there-
J?
ante
A.Y.A.?ADEQUATE YOUTH ACT
( From VaJisar Miscellany Xeics)
When last summer the XYA was set up with the announced intention
of providing vocation! apprenticeship relief project work, and student
aid for 500,000 young people between the ages 16 and 25, the proposal
was regarded hopefully by those who saw in it an indication that the
government had at last recognized the crying need of one-seventh of the
young people in the country. Although admittedly inadequate to cope
with more than a very small portion of this group, it was a start in
the right direction, and it seemed reasonable to expect that at least that
portion would be adequately provided for.
However, it soon became apparent that the $50,000,000 allotted for
the project was as thin as a Rockefeller dime when spread among 5,000,000
people. As stated in an article in this issue of the News, the allotment
of approximately $15 a month for college students could not begin to
answer the needs of those living on the relief level. That same sum
could hardly be considered a living wage for young workers, supporting
themselves and in man, cases other members of their families as well.
This form of relief was severely criticized by labor groups who saw the
NYA workers replace regular labor at wages below the prevailing scale.
On its own side, youth complained of the lack of representation of its
own members on the state and national boards, appointed by the govern-
ment without consulting youth or labor organizations.
In a speech made in New York this fall, Aubrey Williams, director
of the NYA, pictured the dispossessed youth of America as surging at
the gates. He predicted that they would not be patient if the gates were
not opened soon. He himself, seemed to have no illusions as to the
NYA's ability to do the job.
The American Youth Congress has formulated the American Youth
Act as a substitute proposal, which was introduced in the Congress on
January 12. This bill will provide vocational training and regular
employment for all unemployed youth. Wages will be equal to the pre-
vailing rate determined by union labor. The AYA workers will not
compete with regular labor.
The act will be administered by a commission on which organized
labor, youth, social service and educational groups are equally repre-
sented. Projects of a military nature, projects not beneficial to the com-
munity as a whole will be ruled out.
ANNOUNCEMENT
Contrary to previous an-
nouncement, there will be a
picture show Saturday night,
February 29. "Becky
Sharpe starring Miriam
Hopkins, will be shown.
WILLIAM BEEMAN HONORED
AT PRACTICE HOUSE DINNER
A Valentine dinner was given in
the Practice House Thursday night,
February 6, in honor of William
Beeman.
Mr. Beeman sat at the right of
his sister. Rose, and his friend, Mr.
Iliggins, sat at the right of the host.
Ruby Kelly. The other members of
the family were Mrs. Bloxton,
Blanche Pearson, and Mareella
X icholson.
Here is what the guests and family
had to eat:
Silver Nip Cocktail
Roast Chicken Giblet Gravy
Cauliflower
Sweet Potato Croquettes
Heart-shaped tomato Aspic Salad
Cucumber Pickle Celery Curls
Caramel Pecan Ice Cream
Quality Cake
Coffee
The cocktail was enjoyed by
candle light, but to save the boys
the embarrassmen of tipping over
their glasses of water the electric
lights were turned on.
Since the young men were from
out of town they were invited to
tarry awhile after dinner. Due to
the change in the temperature, the
group remained at home. They enter-
tained themselves by pretending to
play "smut" and "I doubt it
The boys left the Practice House
about ten o'clock. As they walked
down back campus to the car which
was parked at the gate, they were
greatly amused at the attention they
received from those at the.dormitory
windows.
A national academy of public
affairs, government-controlled along
the lined of West Point and An-
napolis, is proposed in a bill now
before Congress.
NYU's five "iron men" have been
the sharpest menace to Eastern bas-
ketball leagues this season.
Note on love in the blizzard
area: The date bureau at Drake
University in Iowa has closed up
shop for lack of applicants.
A strange tale of the consequences
of a mistake made in translation of
a book on basketball rules is brought
to the University of Minnesota by
a student. Car Hensel, who has just
returned from the University of
Vienna.
Hensel said he found the Austrian
students playing basketball as they
learned it from an American rule
book. But in translation they
thought they were to use an oval
ball instead of a round one. So
night after night, before) cheering
throngs, the Austrian college men
fought around the wooden floor,
tripping over one another while
trying to dribble a football. Even-
tually they came out on the court
with a round ball?but whether the
translator's mistake had been found
or their own ingenuity was respon-
sible, Hensel did not know.
ance Gavin
Hames W
with Howa
-on with
retry wit I
t'Terson w ith
Picker? with
rector with
kerson, Nolle Ranson
d Bo&e, Anne Richard-
Joe W alker. ('aroline
t
It appears, according to a profes-
sor at Kansas State College, that
college, after all, does perform a
developmental function. This pro-
fessor maintains that dumb stu-
dents get more out of attending col-
lege than the naturally bright ones.
He says he has shown that the gains
made by the former are both abso-
lutely and relatively greater.
Along with this we might report
a study made by the University
examiner at Ohio State University
who says that the bright boys and
girls of high' school finish college
still at or near the top of the list.
Cheer note, to be read to your
little brothers and sisters:
It's quite all right if they don't
like to practice at the piano for
their regular half hour a day.
Prof. Carlyle Scott, head of the
music department at the University
of Minnesota says it's quite all
right. In fact, Mr. Scott broke
down and confessed to a reporter
that when he was a youngster he
used to set the clock ahead and
climb out the window.
Text books in history have been
singled out for attack by "Bed
Scare" promoters, according to Dr.
Dixon Ryan Fox, president of Union
College.
M. Johnston, Josie Hall with
Steve Mallard. Martha Hamilton
with Sam Holland, Beatrice Ham-
mond with W. I Bellume. Mary
Hammond with Terry Kdens.
Helen Harding with Bob MeSaw-
horn. Kleanor Ruth Hardy with
Thurmas Dail,Geneva Barrel with
Basil Barrineaw. Iris Barrel! with
Charlie dackson, Marie Hart with
doe Boy Lany, Elizabeth Helms with
Phil Caddy, Jewell Hill with
Barnette Daw-son. Margaret Hilhurn
with Withers Harvey. Elizabeth
Bines with d. C. Page, Martha
Bines with Sam Hines, Doris Hob-
good with William Hammond. Pau-
line Hooker with Dennis C. Doe,
Dorothy Hooks with Jim Dodson.
Mary Hooks with Paul La Rogue.
Ruth Borne with Howard Waldrop,
Lexie Howard with Preston Flynn.
Margie Humphrey with James
Potter. Dolores James with Ollie
Van Nortwick, Jr Irene James
with Yemen James, Louise James
with Arthur Pell, Annie Lou Jef-
fords with John Blanchard. Fdlen
Jenkins with Cecil McCullen, Lois
Jernigan with Roger Taylor, Ellis
Jones with Frank Watson Ernestine
Jones with Norwood Tilley and
Woodrow Simmons, Ruby Mae Jones
with Godfrey Oakley, Elizabeth Keil
with Harold Coltrain, Marv Eliza-
beth Keith with Clem Postum,
Irene Kennedy with Keith Williams.
Ruth Kiker with Dupree Griggs,
Sylvian Knowles with Hames Over-
ton, lone Lane with Chris Rouse,
Bertha Lang with Charles Rountree
Carl Langley with Elizabeth Over-
ton, Mildred Lassiter with Una
Fleetwood, Esther Leake with Wil-
son Warner, Charlotte Lee with
Charles L. Guy, Jr Mavis Lewis
with Henry Everett, Booster Lind-
sey with Eleanor Taylor, Zazelle
Loughhn with Edmund Waldrop
Ruby Lucas with George Neal Lois
Lynch with Clay Brown Dale, Emma
Mallard with Robert Williams
Therion Mallard with Jimmie Wal-
lace, Louise Martin with J. K
Davis, Janet Mayo with John B
Mayo, Helen McGinnis with Herbert
Hadley and Louis Stuart Ficklen
Lucu McLawhorn with McRav
Robinson, Doris Newborn with
Paul Cheek, Evelyn Midgett with
Woodrow Price and Jack King
Miriam Mitchell with Worth Cop?
land, Helen Mohn with T. E. Per-
son, Elizabeth Morris with G H
Matthews Jr Florence Maye with
Jack Nobles, Julia R Murphy with
William Henderson, Vivian Murrav
with Phil Carter Bunn, Sue Taylor
Myers with John H. Bouse Jr
Billie Newell with Ira Wood, Jr
Margaret Norman with Francis
Powell, Shuman Odham with Alma
Hammond, Alvah M. Page with
Nancy Tge, Mary Elizabeth
Richardson with Curtis Todd,
Imogene Rick- with horsey Wood-
liet. Carolyn Riddick with H. B.
Spruill, Hattie Weaver Riddick with
Lewis Perry. ell Riddick with
Ralph Ropier, Vivian Rives with
Leonidas Smith. Lavera Roberts
with Ray Wall. Janie Mae Robinson
with Armour Milner, Myda Robin-
son with Allan Williamson. Martha
Deans Bogers with Bill Rig? and
J. (. Wallae, Marguerite Bogerson
with John D. Ilohgood. Eugenia
Book with Jack Greene, Mackenzie
Boss with Paul McKay. Margaret
Rudisill with O. Galloway and
Robert Mobley, Louise Shaekieford
with Harry Shaekieford. Martha
Scoville with Billy Staton. Elizabeth
Singletary with R. L Che-son. dr
Alice Smith with Kenneth Kennedy.
Eh.ise Smith with Henry B.
White. Harry Smith with Doris
Lewis, Kathleen Saunders with
H :
u.
W.
W
w,
Yo
?
STUDENTS HEAR ONE
OF N C. CANDIDA
(Contin led fi m pact m
tenure of . for te? r - it
one may ??,? ? ; : -?:
some sense I 1 ? s uritr I ?
position. 3. Evet ?? ? at, tint Be-
ers who hai ? ?? ed their Me'?'
many years n v feel SB ? ??'
starving to d ith their U -i-
Mr. KcD. a . said tks ia?
gram of v as ly 1 bera! ?'??-???
education - :? cstabliSOM -
'his btate, as it In ly ?-??? '??? ?!
others.
Louie Pollock, Sara Smith with
Erskine Clements, dr Wilhehmina
Smith with Harold Bisect, Grace
Spencer with Easel Bridgeman.
Beryl Lee Stalling with Cecil Hol-
loman, Maude Starling with Alton1
Strickland, Dorothy Steadman with
Clarence Stroud. Margaret Stephen-1
son with Earl Creech. Nora Stephen-1
son with Warner H. Lassiter. Jr I
Sarah Stephenson with Tallie
Dupree, Jackie Strickland with C O
Armstrong, Mary Stvron with, , ,
Donald Oden, Ruth Strvon vhhlt
Stephen Alford. R But now
Columnist at
sity re-ouot -
which relates :
English ;??
had been ? .
hook. Tie I
that if the Btude
ism would - e
name would not
When the clas
five fidget v "
hi 111!
Dr. I.er.e, 11.
of oral surgi ry
sity. recently w
the country wit
ifessor an
? guilty efphf
im after cla ?
be divulged.
teas over, kef
lents waitice ;v
tmafl of ???
Columbia I?
credited &" l'
, devetephf
trvon with!
toxie Suit with
chemical formula for killing p? ?
re being drilled.
a reaction is ?
nnding that inf I
Gordon Bivius, Georgie Sugg w h "d ? f ,
N7in, DonLtto j11 VSBSS
with Bill Clark, Louise Tadlock whh ? 5f?
Alex Dail Jean Tate "with Ethan
Davis, Helen Taylor with Bill Wood
State University:
The publicity
pvea
the afl
Ma,TJ , Ta'Vl?r with Bi" Wood. . "? P? ? L 'I nate is
Hilda Taylor with dosiah Rouse, tTWK
Louise Tavor witb r? anvthma which gives asp?? ?j
Louise Taylor with Jimmv Daven-
port, Ruth Taylor with' Dwight
Ihomas, Jean Thomas with J D
n yj ' J)orothy Tillman with
Gordon Wallace, Elizabeth Tolson
wnh Elmer Venters, Nita Lee Towu-
send with Richard Martin, Jr.
Camille Turner with Jack Broad-
hurst Edna Turner with Richard
Whaley Rosamond Van Dyke with
Tom Phelps and Reg Simpson, Julia
Van Landingham with R, F Van
Land?ngham, Jane Veasey with
Edward Fortune and WiUiam La
Maywood! Wagner with Glenwood
Brown Eleanor H. Walker with
Dallas Gaschell, Janet Walker with
W. L. FloydI, Catherine Wallace with
Everette Miller, Lucille Waller with
Jarmon Becton and R. C. Kornegay,
Nola Walters with Albert SmUh
Jr Lillian Warren with Sam D
Broadhurst, Margaret 8. Watkins
with George Chandler, Mariorie
wT ?Am Sheffield K22
Weeks with Harvey Powell, Priacilla
West with Robert Riddick and Wil-
son Spivey, Louiae Wells with De
Leon Wells, Jr Alice Whitehead
with Francis Burch, Hazel Wilker-
?on with Bernard Proctor, Mary
ises as much v ief as this doe
have been j
mucn reiiei as iu- - ? ;
been putinthchan
profession for a tryout w ,
the minds of the f
was put nit
lie
Regular graduate ?
obile traffic control wwrS
mobm 11 a in- ?? ?? ?- - ? ?
next fall by Harvard's Bur
Street Traffic Research.
W
Universitv of Michigan?
Dame football relation, W
in 1910, may be rene
wed next:
(?HlHHIIHipr
VISIT
WHITE'S
FOR BEST VAL0e$
IN HOSIER
AND UNDERWIT
UMMAA??
RcasofAttributed to m Court DiviSiO Used
31, 10 at ' m '? ? Id hall ? 111: ? 'Pant! ? ? : '
C ?
II
('
ti
Wi
H.
BEARD AIDS IN RiDDi
FROM INFERIORITY
to c arny tue si i;
that I bave not
in love, I an 1 I I
hah myself as
ity. and I an nol
eient.
speaking, it has be
in get! ing rid oi
plex: it gives me th
?Til adn.i ?? -
exactly please n -
lea I have the ass 1
girl who g '
miiidetl ami intellig
bearded man. w ho h
the number of su ;h
nesota,
"Mv beard also
aeademi ? && anta$
BBiooth-sha en si 1
argues. "Members
ari- extraordinarily
They nod at me on
shake hands ?ith n
roeiii. Thev treat m
My beard gets tin
( nltivation of the
a matter of persev
Jensen, It receive
bavk when only t
Bomber of his frat
doubtless motivated
ousy, forcibly remo
aid- portion of it.
ALDEN G. ALLEY
LECTU
tContinued Iron
and the Conference t
league.
He thinks there is
thi? country gettini:
tiru goon and does n
ls immediate danger
War. He believes tl .
?j the League becaUS
succeeded in doing bo j
is not stopped, no one
flow far Germany w;i
Sanctions are going
1aly. he said, to try
Peaceful settlement be
and Ethiopia. All nl
their black hours, he coj
ltal5 is having hen
Wrong: Phe has brokl
Pi-ornis to Ethiopia ail
vadmg the territorv to I
?n good. What kind .
?d, would this vorlJ
tions are allowed to
n"nt nations and not
w?t it? if people eon1
?ain neutral in crime 1
Ja there will be a coll)
Ration. There can be
Peaceful world as long ?,
essor are treated alii,
Sanctions, he said, arJ
the countries to I
??amst t challenge to
BT,S peace. A poj
needed and citizens ei
j?gn qualities of mind
Sng about the removal!
J x? with this thought (
je Uagne of Nations
"? sanctions against II





Jebruary 26.
nmgton
i;u?, s.
'he d.
? IK.
? P
als
if to
W
n W
. IB .
.Rietui
W . IyS ? ? 1 wi. W rioa 0 i
w
M
Ma
NTS HEAR ONE
OF N. C. CANDIDATES
d
one)
' i : tiH Iti &S10S Witt
. of U ?irity of hi.?
il- tin nt, that IhmV
-i ; ?, i ?: 1r -fate fat
? in a in if '
itfa tl. r "IJ age.
I that a P"
. ral iiit'3-
aid !??. stablialwi in
.? til ? .has in many
. .? ?()?State Tniver-
? ?? - the D p?r-
it( - how aprofessor ? essay which
I 1 ? rr fess - heat &
i we bin jtv of plapiar' ?? r dEae, hl-
old not !?? d riasa htm . m studentsr, ulgod. (lVr. he found waiting f?r
. Lerw Hartinan of the school
m v Columbia Tniver-
. ntlr was credited all ov?
ntry with developi ??
frni?la f.?r killing P"1111
t ti Kre being drilled.
tutm? , ruction N ?"?ing
. SaidDr. Paul Ktf.lunofOhio
' v,T"ir.v: ? ? the
I ? P?Mk?ty ??.
. ;i ? r u BjifortuBate ? ?
" - i , lAr pro?"
Anything which ????? boot srrjj
L a. much relief ? V 0f the
EU been put in ??& I
I f?.iall for a tfjj "JJJfr
ti- put int the aa?da?f,i,f
Fdargniduaturon
Lit, traffic control ?l ? for
? xt fall by Harvard Burea
treat Traffic B-
? 7 Uotre
Fn.v.rsity of Michiganrf
,am, football relation? Jtf-
j?10, mav be renewedji
VISIT
WHITES
FOR BEST VALU?$
IN HOSIERY
AND UND?WIA
hr-arv 26, t?
THE TECO ECHO
PAGE THREE
PANTHERS WIN I Women'sAfAeric Association
f VIRGINIANS !Kotesto?na?ionolWC.A.
IN LAST MINUTES
Reai
attributed to Difference
?i Court Divisions
Used
? ? William and
night, February
Va. I-a-t vcar
i Will
uc of W. A. A. to College is Discussed ot Lost Meeting
of the Association
The Woman's Athletic Associa-
tion had their regular monthly
meeting Thursday evening, Janu-
ary 80, The question of joining
the American Federation of Worn-
ana College Association was dis-
cussed at length by Miss Lueill
Norton. Adviser
LOUtSBURG H
SPORTS
athletes and the other members of
the student body.
"I he Athletic Association allows
the buys and girls who do not take
active part in the campus sports to
became better acquainted with
Pep Talk From Coach Instigates
Scoring Rampage Not to
be Stopped
A. C. C.
GETS REVENGE
The Ramblers are probably as
disgusted with the prevailing
weather?its moods anil tantrums?
as any other students on campus.
Once before, they planned to jour-
ney to Boone and had their enthu-
E. C T. O. did not have as much sm dampened by snow and ice , ?
trouble beating Louisburg 54-15 in! lt t,H' evenfa of t,H' l,asf week-end ; that the last game the Pirates played
this basketball game as they bad were certainly enough to make with A. C. ( was close and proh
beating them 14-0 in football. I them protest against Old Man ably exciting. Such is not true
"Hoot" Gibson, the back that scored jeather. The game lagged to an end! witl
j Outfit Takes Second Game With
Pirates By Score of
26-20
The score 20-2 would indicate
ANNOUNCEMENT
All girls expecting to get
points toward a reward in
girls' sports see me in my
room, Wilson 70, about get-
ting your file.
Helen Wilson.
Vlarv
e-n i VMn- Adviser, The purpose of tlm- 'n SP "f the fact that we all 14 points in the football game To begin with, there was serious A. ( ( six points ahead. "Jew"
Tl rst iis Mocii?E keep colleges ?? lluf 'I1.ir?' US the sports, there! was held scoreh-ss by his former doubt, suspense and even agony, a- Ayers was high scorer with 6 points.
i , i" ?U h1' about the work of Womnns :m' "lan.v boys and girls on the college mates. "Hoot" tried hard to whether or not they could have Holleman followed with : points.
l Athletic Associations. It publishes emlm8 w? (' to weH ac- enough but the net was just too permission to attempt the trip this Francis Sinclair had a technical
u" i four newspapers during the year. Hl?'d with the games so that (elusive for his shots. time due to the illness on campus, foul called on him, and thus tin
"8 . The Association decided to join the ,llNnuv better enjoy them. I Holieman led scoring for E. C. The uproar they mad when the team, for abusive talk from the side
,m' American Federation of Womans "Then, those who do not take T. C. with 2(i points and Johnson final decision. "Ye reached them lines.
College Association and the Teco !U,t'v l,art I2ke to be acquainted was runner-up with 12 points. Ed- was sufficient to bewilder a full din- Line-ups 1 C. I. C. Forwards
' different. Echo reporter was asked to collect ui'11 ,ll(- a,llls- This makes the wards, Gifford, and Lawrence led bag room of people?including pro- Cunningham 1. Ayers 6, Center
wo divisionI material for this paper. games more interesting to them Fouisburg with 5 points cadi. fessors too. Then it snowed and Holleman 5, Guards: Johnson 1
v as
?alh
ien. those who do not take T. C. with 2(i point
active part like to 1
with the athletes. This makes the'wards, Gifford, and Lawrence led bag im of people?including pro- Cunningham F Aye
games more interesting to them Fouisburg with 5 points each. fessors too. Then it snowed and Holleman 5, Goal
Somehow the students seem to en- The team that went out on the snowed and snowed a beautiful and Ridenhour
oy a basketball came or football court to nlav Louisbttrer that niirht snow, at that. Ti a current be- A. .
F a Cockrell 3,
Bowena Dickinson resignec
Teco Echo reporter and her resur v a basketball game or football court to play Louisburg that night snow, at that. Ti a curren
nation was accepted. Louise N I a better it they know the people seemed to be inspired. Coach lief there'
with Martin was a
Ins
.f 19
N't.
lints
tppoiute.l to succeed
i! W
I i
F
More plans are being devised to
ecure a W. A. A. room in the Cam-
us Building. It is hoped that the
n was next association can get one of the pres-
. ( line-up j cut Society Halls.
ie
?ciatioii
19; IF Don. Hollowell gave a readinf
w;i. ler 6; and Blanton "Sportsmanship.M
, p i. Parker; Following is a talk given by Mai
! Mtartin, Smith- art (;uv Overman entitled 1
Value of An Athletic Ass,
j to a College
BEARD AiDS IN RIDDANCE "An Athletic Association is an
"FROM NFER10RITY COMPLEX j asset to any college, Thia organi-
zation i- one of the main sources
oi college activity outside the class-
room.
. ,? . a boone on jmx
on the team. The Athletic Asso- Mathis gave them a pep talk before jinx on Boone.
ciatiou throws the two groups to- the game ami told them that he
gether and they become better ac- would not be with them any more. A i,ilru. T1 11 team minus it- coach
uuainted. and that he wanted them to play (i()f.
"When the games are in prog-M'k11 game for him. When the gam
reas, the team needs someone to fst started the team was playing u.tl A r r ,
back them up, someone to cheer and " 'rht that they couldn't score.
J- orwards: Sot
Center: Haw-on
Guards: Roger- ?. Hayes. Si
tutes: Stevenson and Walter
?a-t.
ame
i oliegiati
Minn.
AC
111 iUlV llHM'c,
1 I i 1 ' I l I. 1 1 i ' . I 1 ? i I II I 11 It I
n't show up so well. At
that's what the outcome of tin
ilfS ????, to nret started the team was playing ujrtl r r
. .? uivii ( T. C. is not a member of th
encourage them. The members of ,ll(U Coach called Ridenhour out
the Athletic Association are inter- tnd talked to him, "Ix" went hack
ested in doing this and they at-oo and shortly after called time out
UPHOLDS TWO
SLANG EXPRESSIONS
OAK RIDGE BEA1EN
FOR FIRST TIME
Holleman Leads Scoring Attack
With 20 Points
eal -??
the The Pirate- felt the loss of Coach
ide-1 Mathis in their first game without
him. but they won from Oak Ridge.
Holleman led the scoring attack
with 20 points and Johnson was
runner-up with 13 points of the
final -core 45-39. Culler led Oak
2 Ridge with 17 point
lo. It is worth n ting that this i- the
3ti- Brsl time the Pirate- bave ever
beaten Oak Ridge in any sport.
They have bad them -eared in base-
ball and football but Oak Ridge al-
wav
- bea
i rai
New York (ACP) Two Blang
North State Conference, but A. C. I,hrs of 'll(' llour "()1, .v' 'lh ?"
C. is on bottom in that league. iHl Ir" ? tak' u were i"uM
Watch vourselves. Team, don't make l,y Robert Gordon Anderstm, author
l'inan. in a recent ad-
i ,? dress to Hunter College students.
end ot ti suecesstttl season.
Rumor has it that the baseball
world weariness as the bitterest cry
Cedes i-
implex, tiin
"Sports are not the main part of
ollege life, but they
.ntelliireiit -nrl I I1P' lt taey are very mi
faculty member l,lallT- This is the only way soso
rowing whiskers,Ico?es iiv "fcowtng their res
Herbert Jensen ' worth a- compared with other col
-el
loo
ar
eet suggests a rea
" he aavs "dust! along different lines. As nothing
nation, let me sai
e-teii in iioing tins ami tiiev arouse ? ? nu-h vourselves. team, aon i maxe ?
the others and the crowd cheers and When play was resumed the Pirates Q0 (hsti(, downfalls bee at the a?d newspape
yell- for the bom team. This makes went on a scoring rampage and ? -In- t? II
the team feel that they are being Louisburg couldu't stop it.
?iiiiifi'eoite.t Biui t)i out vei Staitiiuj line-up ?E. C. T. C. :
appreciated ana the put every- - .i Kumor lias it mat tne oaseoau ;m,17;fl?r? r, ;
iliio.r tev leoi. into tin. n?a to rorwards,onmngnam 6, otowe ?. . . , , , , ?? impiincatioos. it is
ining tin tia? into the game to ? g season now bem-r scheduled will
i i 1,1 ii f Center, Holleman 26, Guards, John- . . .
"Ill lOl i eai l?IU .Via .Mite ,?? i-ontliets with teams a'railist , .
?n .1- ? i i . son 12 Ridenhour 4 Subst tutes: imluu I'mnn s vmui u am. agmusi , disillusioned from
When this spirit prevails, the team ? V1 l ,UM,U1 "? 1U" u. xvu K (' 1 C must nut up a , T ? it -
11 ? l Ms Avers. Jennings. Gibson and Smith. wmca v- ' ' l astes down to Dresser and lewis,
usuaih wins or at least puts up ? , &? . , . strong nine. Coach rarlev will , ? ? , , ,
, i a i i , fouisburu" Forwards Edwards 3. -lmf? " ' ? , I bristles with en at tense, as The
Bttch a good fight that it isn't much M.uig. porwai i.owai i. . ?nL Thon u.
,? . .i ,1 ? i .( ooper '2, venter, vuttord ?. . , . ? i 1 i young men er . w n save you
lun to the other side. i ' , some of last years material back , ? ? ? wn i
. . . . . . Guards, Lawrence 3, Pearce 2. Sub- ! ' , or , ? , slam our illusions? Why have you
The Athletic Association also ?. , ei i ?.i in the ranks. Lin?l ab fnitV?' "
. . . stitutes: onennonnouse z,raw lev. : Kineu oui iaitn ;
otters a great deal Of tun to its Smitj, ju.v Xor was there anything new in
nember. At the meetings of the! nl I IA fill HI AXmCTO "IIf ('an tako it Anderson ?b-
ILLIAKU rLAi hKo IU t? i "ti;? r. g? jJz
i good time was had by all might Uni Tl UMhMV N I "Beneath the bludgeoning f
truly apply to any gathering of the y (? j (? was beaten for the IIULU I UUIll lnlllLl l I chance, my head is bloody but an-
Starting line-ups: F. C. T. C
Forward Cunningham 5, Stowe
? Center: Holleman 20; Guards:
Johnson 13, Ridenhour 1. Substi-
tutes: Hinton, Gibson, Wells.
Smith. Ayers.
Oak Ridge, Forwards: Crute 6.
"?Oh. vealC is not ridiculous ITJ801" 4- Center: J?"18?" Ij
Anderson said. "It i- tragic in i -?ard Smathers 6, Culler 17.
as eloquent of
, Smith. F'arh.
ie meetings oi the
n eiieis eoiiinte ?? ith i oruaiiization ami the occasional pic- .??.
ta-cuor. who ? ' '?? J oU , , - -mp t, with members all HIGH POINT BEATS PIRATES
only each other m intercollegiate sports ??? -11"1 lrtus. tin memoere an conRF HP 79 AD
' j and the people who follow the sports 1"IV" a f-r(i Um, toother. And bT bUUtlt UI a?fU
know which college is most skilled
?t been disappointed
not trying to e-tab-
a campus personal-
, not mentally deli-
ieard ha- been more
era. Psychologically
- been a boon to me
t an inferiority coni-
,e that virile feeling.
hough, that it doesn't
most girls. Rut at
e assurance that any
? ut with me is broad-
Moiiigeiit says the
a ho has not revealed
such girls at Milt-
also gives me an
antage over the
student Jensen
is great or small except by com
parison these intercollegiate sport
really tell the tale.
"Of course, these sport
uld Ik
carried on without an Athletic As
SILK CHIFFON HOSIERY
Full Fashioned
W. T. GRANT CO.
member:
tion.
if the Athletic Associa-
second time this year
Hiirh
Point, but the riratis made'a much Duke and North Carolina Are
"The Athletic Association is in better showing in the last game. Among ThOSe Expected
deed vital to college life. It takes Holleman again led both teams Jq Compete
all sorts of people to make a world with lt? points of the final score of'
sociation. If this were done, how- ami the same is true of an Athletic j 32.40. Th(i (!at(s of thfi annual national
ever, there would be a aad lack of J Association. ariety is the spiee ot j Starting line-ups, E. C. 1. ( jnt0rcollegiate billiard cbampion-
the spirit of cooperation among the! life and the Athletic Association is Forwards: Cunningham, Stowe 4,
bowed
rOU WEAR 'EM
LET US REPAIR 'EM
E. T. GOOR, JR SHOE SHOP
Athletes themselves and between thej the spice of college life
E.C.T.C. LOSES GAME
TO GUILFORD COLLEGE
QUOTABLE QUOTES
Center: Holleman lfi. Guards
Johnson ?, Ridenhour 7. Substi-
tutes: Ayers. High Point, For-
wards: Martin 8, Culler 6, Center:
Harris 9, Guards: Intrieri 10, Tow
JUST ANOTHER SELF-HELP JOB
Mi
n the street and
rith me in the class-
Teat me as a colleague.
- the credit
,f the beard has been
perseverance, explains
received a severe set-
nly two weeks old?a
fraternity brothers,
vated by petty jeal-
. removed a consider-
of it.
"Of c nrse, I don't intend to re
K C T C. foal its second game &? "V "hen it comes, but or 3. Substitutes: Brinkly Hum
with Ouilford bv a margin of I don't think I'm really entitled to .dm-vs. ihamont. Booth and Alder
points, the final'score being 3H-41 '??" Prof Donald Gates of St.
Holleman was put out of the! Thomas College offers original corn-
gam on fouls. This was unusual ?"?? ? thp " 97
in that it is the first time he has "fk compulsory loyalty oath for
fouled out. He was still high SCOT- teachew IS a symptom of national
er with 16 points. nervousness. Dr. Henry M. Wns-
Line-UW E C T C. , Forwards: ton, president of the Association of
Cunningham 4. Stowe 3; Center: American Colleges, fondles the na-
tion a pulse.
"At 17, many high school and
preparatory school students are suf
ship tournaments have been an-
nounced by the Association of Col-
lege Unions, sponsors of the events,
through its president, Carl Lauter-
bach of Rochester University. Thej
National Billiard Association of
America will, as during the past
EXCLUSIVE WEARING APPAREL
for Women
C. HEBER FORBES
phreys, Diamont, Booth and Alder. four vearS) iPIUj advisory aid
The pocket billiards tourney will j
be held on February 27; straight
rail on March 5; and three-cushions
on March 12.
The tournaments are conducted
by telegraph, each college, using a
ra of the faculty
dv cordial to me. Holleman 16, Guards: Johnson 8,
Ridenhour Substitutions: Ayers
ALDEN G. ALLEY
LECTURES HERE
? ted from page one I
! th ' renee features of the
ueagi
il,
f?
in,
a
there is no danger of
getting into war any
i does not believe there
e danger of a World
li res that Italy dared
? tht League because dajian had
'? doing so and if Italy
?? stopped, no one can predict
? "?'? '??: ' lermany will go.
Sanctions are going on against
' ;i 1 said, to try to make a
la'e jement Ixdween Italy
an Ethi pia. All nations have
!?'ir black hours, he continued, now
I,alv is having hers and going
irons; ti ?- "
proaaia
vaaiag
SWl jr.
Mked,
tions ?
has br?ken all her
- to Ethiopia and is now in-
the territory to use for her
?I What kind of world, he
would this world be, if na-
n allowed to conquer in-
nrnt nations and nothing is done
ttaat it i if people continue to re-
?ttuj nentral in crime against law,
en there will be a collapse of civi-
fiatrion. There ran be no hope of a
Peaceful world as long as victim and
a??? e treated alike.
1 aactions, he said, are an attempt
the countries to protect law
Jos fie challenge to it?to make
an1 lse 1(ace x police force ia
Jjed and citizens endowed with
Jg? qualities of mind and soul will
?mp about the removal of injustice.
J ls with this thought in mind that
Je League of Nations has directed
2. Hinton and Gibson.
Guilford. Forwards: Weston 12,
Overman 4, Center: Taliafero 10,
Guards: Blanton :5, MeCommens 4.
Substitutions: Chambers 4 and
Boyles 4.
SIBERIAN SINGERS
PLEASE AUDIENCE
(Continued from page one)
triumphs, the disappointments of a
great people into their music and
they sang with an informality which
makes them memorable. Their mu-
sic was unique and characteristic
with an extensive repertoire.
The concert was opened with
"Divine Praise" by Bartniansky.
This signature was by special re-
quest. An Old Church Melody
Customary Chant was next, followed
by "Halleluiah" an eleventh
century chant. The next song was an
interpretation of a Cathedral serv-
ice called "In a Cathedral" by
Tschackovsky. "Lord Have Mercy"
and "A Song at Evening Tide" con-
cluded the spirtual group.
The "Pirate Song" was derived
from a Volga Legend of Seventeenth
Century. This was followed by a
folk song "Jolly Merchant" in which
their vocal interpretation made it
possible for the audience to note the
mood changes from sad to gay as the
episodes about the merchant were un-
folded, "Siberian Prisoners Song,
a traditional song, was rendered
Syracuse, X. Y. (ACP)?When
Paul Schroeder's phone rings in the
early morning hours, it isn't a
prankish friend calling to ask if j uniform set of key-shots, which
he's sleeping well, or news that were drawn up before the first in-
someone's finally died and left him tcrcollegiate competition five years
a million. Nine times out of ten Sago by Charles C. Peterson, noted
- it's the police, or state troopers, or j billiard authority and today called
"ficiently mature to enter college the emergency ward of a hospital, j "The Father of Intercollegiate Bil-
Harvard's Dean of Freshman Del- with a request that Schroeder drop liards The highest score deter-
T ? t . 1 1 1 .1 1 ? , 1 1 ? 1
mar Leighton would lower the lear0und with the hearse and pick up
gal limit. a little business.
"People will learn better how to Schroeder, a liberal arts student
live, how to accomplish their pur- at Syracuse University, is official
poses with less friction and more
efficiency Dr. William O. Hotch-
kiss of Rennselaer Polytech envi-
sions happy days for the next gen-
eration.
"The professor or the student
who is notably pious is an excep-
tion, somewhat embarrassed by a
prevalent suspicion of enfeebled in-
tellect Dr. Dixon Ryan Fox of
Union College dwells on the pass-
ing of the religious collegian.
A national essay contest to en-
courage youth to express itself on
matters of government, education
and business is being urged on Pres-
ident Roosevelt.
The College "Y" Store and your favorite down-town soda shop
or drug store carries a complete line of Lance's Peanut Butter
Sandwiches, Salted Peanuts, and Candies. Whenever you feel
the need of a "Snack insist on Lance's. They are made under
the most sanitary conditions and are pleasing to the appetite.
Remember to Insist on LANCE'S
Sandwiches : Peanuts : Candies : Peanut Butter
LANCE PACKING COMPANY
custodian of the city morgue from
6 p.m. to 4 a.m. of every day. The
work doesn't bother him, he says?
he took the job a year ago?and he
thinks it may prove to have been a
useful experience. He plans to en-
ter medical school next fall.
Privately endowed universities
and preparatory schools might be
wiped out by "tax the rich" legisla-
tion, says Dr. James Rowland
Angell of Yale.
the
??actions against Italy.
a irauin "??dj - , ,
well, with the accompaniment of tne
clanking of chains. "Soldier a Song
was also well interpreted. The last
of this group was "Laughing Polka
a folk song after which the audience
called for an encore.
After intermission the songs in-
cluded were "Song of India by
Rimsky-Korsakoff and "Song of the
Flea" a satire. These were foUowed
bv "The Volga Boatman Song, l&e
Gvpay group included "Kahnka
"Gypsy Old Refrain" and the popu-
lar Gypsy song "Dark Eyes
Isiah Seligman who accompanied
the chorua at the piano also rendered
two piano solos. .
For many yeara the singers have
made annual tours and created a
sensation on their first American
concert tour. Their broadcasts and
artistic presentation of programs
have been well received in every sec-
tion of the United States.
From Greenville, the singers pro-
ceeded to Columbia, S. C.
Sue Hastings' Marionettes
To Appear Here March 2
(Continued from page one)
begin at 8:30 o'clock, will be "Robin
Hood a colorful and exciting pro-
duction with musical accompaniment
in which the bold outlaw of Sher-
wood Forest is presented in thrill-
ing and amusing episodes from the
popular cycle of legends. Little Jack,
Jolly Friar Tuck, Alana Dale and
charming Maid Marian are all there,
not to mention the Sheriff and his
balky donkey. "Robin Hood" will be
followed by "The Puppet Follies of
1936 a sophisticated revue of
musical acts and comedy sketches.
The prices for the night perform-
ance will be: Children, 25 cents;
adults, 40 cents.
All students, members of the
faculty, and others holding season
tickets will be admitted, to both
performances with them.
mines the winner. Each entrant
sends their scores to the tournament
headquarters. Cornell University
has been selected as tournament
headquarters this year.
Wisconsin University won last
year's straight-rail event (the clos-
est scoring tournament) dethroning
the defending champions, Michigan
State. Purdue finished second.
Approximately 55 leading col-
leges are expected to compete in
this year's tournaments, including
Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Purdue,
Brown, Michigan, Kansas, Roches-
ter, North Carolina, Cornell, Duke,
Indiana, Iowa State, Notre Dame,
Michigan State and Minnesota.
Peterson, greatest of all the trick
shot billiard players, past or pres-
ent, who introduced the game to the
schools, next week will start his an-
nual tour of the schools?coaching
the billiard squads previous to their
tournament competition and also
give his unique exhibition and in-
struction to both undergraduates
and faculty members.
? w w w w w v ?pi"?ir if w i'r
QUALITY AND SERVICE
At
LAUTARES
fcadfcjjfclajggliwgMajg
READY TO BUY THE NEW SPRING OUTFIT?
If So?
WE HAVE THE NEWEST IN SUITS AND DRESSES
ARRIVING DAILY
WILLIAMS
'The Ladies' Store"
Dr. A. M. SCHULTZ
DENTIST
400 State Bank Building
Phone 578
PI
WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY
Vilma Dehnar's
"HANDS ACROSS THE TABLE
With
CAROLE LOMBARD : FRED MocMURRAY
FRIDAY-SATURDAY
The Dramatic Story of
America's Devil Island
11
T T
'The PRISONER of SHARK ISLAND"
With
WARNER BAXTER
SEE OUR NEW SPRING LINE OF
SANDALS and OXFORDS
On Display February 25
MILLER-JONES COMPANY
"The College Shoe Store"
coMrNG -ANYTHING GOES" 22? BING CROSBY
March 2-3
They Are Here!
SHOES and MORE SHOES
The Latest Styles
The Newest Colors
COBURN'S
"GreewvhVs Dipwiabli Shot Stan"





? I
n
r
It
t
t
c
i
t
(
t
i
t

t


1
PAGE FOUR
i
i The NYA And The Youth Problem
t
( Address by Richard U. Brown,
Assistant Executive Director, Na-
tional Youth Administration, at the
Kevuote Luncheon, 'onvention of
the American Council of Guidance
and Personnel Associations and Af-
filiated Societies, Coronado Hotel,
St. Louis, February 19, 1936.)
1 have often wondered during the there are adult problems just as then
past months what a man like are youth problems-
Abraham Lincoln who had fought tiaction between the
hi- ?;iv up from the lowlv lo cabin I nebulous on
EMERSON SOCIETY
ENTERTAINS AT TEA
MM0
social and economic organizations.
In the second place, they too face
just as many if not more problems
requiring adjustment, counseling and
guidance. Why must people insist,
therefore, that, there is a Youth
Problem but no Adult Problem,
when the truth of the matter is that
to til'
he ?
niaiiv
White House would think if
e to listen in on one oi the
iresent-day discussions of the
problem revolving around youth.
He would 1" highly mystified, don't
you think, bv a convention the theme
of which was: The Guidance
Personnel Responsibilities in
n tth Program of 1936 11would
be terribly puzzled by such strange
individuals as junior employment
lor personnel officers, and
rs of vocational guidance.
as for a National Youth Ad-
uinistration, created to "do some-
" r the Nation's unemployed
with the dis-
two a rather
it that?
The answer to this question is to
he found, 1 believe, in the fact that
youth represents that period of
The Emerson Society entertained
the faculty and the student body at a
tea in Fleming Hall parlor Sunday
afternoon, February 9.
Elizabeth Wilson, president of
the society acted as hostess, assisted
by Miss Norton and Miss Mackey,
who poured tea.
Hetty Cooper Davis, chairman of
the social committee, was in charge
of the serving of the tea and cakes.
She was assisted by Mary Kathryu
Griffin, Mildred McDonald, Linelle
Clarke, Doris Newborn, Valda Hart-
selle, Maggie Grumpier, Louise N.
Martin, Carolyn Richardson, Anne
Richardson, Lucille Newton, and

THE TECO ECHO
MR. DEAL SPEAKS AT
SUNDAY NIGHT SERVICE
Man is a creation and his relation-
ship to his creator and to the created
universe around him, was the theme
of Professor R. C. Deal's interesting
talk to the College Y. W. C. A at
Sunday night Vesper, February 17.
The two parts of the Bible he read
Scripture lessons were the first
' the eight!
February 26
"LIFE BEGINS" IS
as
Pictures The Development of
The Child
A free moving pieture, Life
Begins at a seven reel talking pic-
SCIENCE CLUB DISCUSSES
LIGHT AND ITS EFFECTS
"Light" was the topic of the
Science etab meeting 0 February
is. Margaret Warren talked on
"Light aiid Its Affect on Plant
Callie Charleton, with the ttse of il-
lustrations, explained "The Effect ?f
Light on Animal and lfargarel
Branch presented the aeea and de
nd sodium light.
chapters of Genesis and the eightn neg.n ? .? . -? ?- ? i velopnient of near and sodium ngn,
Psalm t?re tracing the growth and dowd (,j(i hoW
He said when he saw God's crea- opment of the human infant, was gpfia& 1VllJt.
tion of the sun and hills and the given in the?Austin Auditorium of, , aIn.av u.iuf, ,??
wonders of nature and realized that the college Wednesday night, eb- p for the annual trip an being
man was above all other created ruary 12. It was sponsored joint y I Edenton or HopewelL
heimra in his nower to use these and by two of the most progressive ClUM i j iv j chosen.
"His bands ?
and ball?
But some da1
world,
On strange
hand- will
A new v.? r:
wheels e irl
'1 heir st r ogi
what nc
tother ag.
hoard
leae bands
A
1H
A
(n

?ft
tuiiu
nth 1
trough
i'rat ii
in.
v
tb
P
Linci
had tn
some i
svropatJiet
who ai
in our (
human cxistance wlien the mind is
relatively mature but is not yet run-
ning along definite and hardened
ind I grooves. It is the period when the
the j twig can readily be bent. It is the
"period when the pattern of life is
set; and if it is set wrong, a whole
life may be ruined. It is thus prob-
ably the most cruical period of a
human being's existence, when he or
she is faeed with the necessity of
making important decisions on many
questions.
These questions are not necessarily
and fundamentally of an educational
nature. It is not until youth leaves
coming to St. Louisthe shelter of school and college that
nintrv for I most of its problems appear. These
Edna Earle Perry,
The parlor was attractively deco-
rated in potted plants and carna-
tions, thus giving a most hoim
atmosphere to the occasion.
?like
man was above all other create-
R-ings in his power to use these an
appreciate them, he was conscious
of man's responsibility. He also
remembered that man was created in
God's image. He gave some of the
things in which man is God-like and
pointed out ways in which he differs
from other creatures
powers of reasoning.
such as in ins
e would doubtless want a
analysis made of its aims.
and activities,
befor
rled around the c
But if
DINNER GUESTS TO VISIT j
PRACTICE HOUSE
. gazing with his sad.
eyes upon the millions
unemployed and on relief
nil s, towns and villages, upon
men and wom-
no fault of their
o leave or have
tool or college only
mitias to work, he
found it hard to
it is you are dis-
urine the next few days
the numberless younj
en who through
uavt
tot
nd
iere
had
Prom 8C
opporti
have
what
problem?, as we tiave seen, revolve
around the choice of a job. the
getting of a job. and the use of leis-
lire time. There are therefore many
agencies outside the educational sys-
tem the activities of which must be
coordinated if there is to he any sort
of serious attempt made to help
youth. Accordingly, the National
Youth Administration has found it
'i or-
4-11
Tuesday evening, January 28,
Rose Beeman (Fa) and Ruby Kelly
(Ma) had Misses Jessie Sehnopp
and Evelyn Rogers, faculty members
of the Greenville High School Home
Economies Department, as their din-
ner guest in the practice house.
Dinner was served at six o'clock.
Other members of the family present
were Mrs. Bloxton (Grandma),
Marc 11a N ieholson (B r o t h e r
"Xick"). and Blanche Pearson
Pearson Sister).
The guests and family were served
jibe following dinner: Oyster Cock-
tail, Boned Chicken, Gravy, Buttered
i Broccoli, hicumber
dition to its work projects, a special
program of educational camps for
unemployed women and job counsel-
ing and placement in certain selected
places. The camps for unemployedjatteii'
ruary 12. It was sponsored jointly
by two of the most progressive clubs
on the campus, the Primary am
Home Economics Clubs. j . . . .
Dr Arnold Gessell. the famous and educational authorities w tne
child psychologist, was the director, NYA program has been highly
of tin- picture. It was prepared for gratifying and wholehearted, there
the Yale University Child Develop has been a certain amount of op
ment Clinic working in collaboration : position. One gnat obstacle has been
with Epri Picture Consultant. The .that awe-inspiring bogey rugged
picture was one which should be.of individualism. There) -?
special interest, not only to mothers pie who believe that
but to teachers and members of the never be helped, that yon
Parent-Teachers Association. left
A majority of the student body
Hi- ej
grin
Of bal
?
A wid
win,
A in
Furth-
have
should
d be
pin-
and
led
11
as we
women were begun under the FERA I faculty members
in the summer of ISM, and have siders,
proved very successful. Since July
of this year more than 3,006 young
women have attended the forty-five
as more of the
and a few out-
; Sab
icuits,
I Marl
necessary to work with sin
ganizations as Y. M. 0. A p
Clubs, vocational guidance assoeia-1shmM be at least an equal emphasis
iekles, Tomato
. Celery Curls. Cheese Bis-
Butter, Vanilla Ice Cream, and
!e Cake.
camps which have been in operation.
Though in some respects similar to
the OCC camps, these women's
camps have no fixed hours of work.
They are rather training schools with
a term of about two months and
provide a curriculum which includes
workers' education, adjustment coun-
seling, health education, training in
household management in connection
young people are being selected with
a view to supplementing the income
of primary wage earners whose large
families make additional aid lar ff
t ieula rly necessary.
XYA projects are as varied as the
communities in which they are being
carried out. In a state like Wis-
consin young pople are supervising
skating rinks. In Louisiana, on the
ther hand, there has been set up
Jong
n
with the camp routine and recrea-
i ii. i i?:? I youne men
tional and cultural opportunities. ?. fe .
an interesting project under wnien
on the
. n tile
.n are doing it. For be
seen how much the worldtions, departments of recreation,jPace
1 since his youth (park commissions, public employ- strong points as
days it was possible for ment offices, social service and re-? their weak points.
who was either lazy norliigions organizations, governmental! -lu' tin
to go out onto the frontier research bureaus, the United States P??t whn
there was room enough and Department of Agriculture, the De-
aough f
for smi
stalwai
development of
on tin
their
Accordingly, the y
not receive a wage. After t
camp, however, it has
to place an unusually
third
are
at
working
for one-
nurse rv
possible
number
It was possible 1 partment of Labor, and the Rural jmto the habit of tanking of ednca-
H communities and Resettlement Administration.
and industrious From the beginning it was recog-
a
Few
11
where
work
then
even
persons within the commnniti
completely self-sustaining am
pendent at what was eonsiden
fairly decent standard of livii.
were dependent upon the labor oi
unseen thousands for their food and
their clothing and other essentials.
Few were completely dependent upon
the smooth functioning of a vast
system f transportation and dis-
tribution. Each poineer had his own
little
spun and wove the clothes
she and her family wore. The coun-
try was still primarily agricultural.
It was nut until tin
cotton was
steel, copper
Stead.
But the industrial era
brought about the destruction of the
independence of the great mass of the
people. It introduced all sorts of
complicated machines. To run these
lias become year by year a relatively
easy matter; but to understand them,
to be able to repair them when they
break down has requ
leans m
i 1 should
n;ie. Manv of us have fallen
in
tion as a goa
rather a means to the end of living, j entered college on scholarship
to belniaed that the Youth Administration a richer and better life. Barents arojthrough XYA aid. hftecn have
inde-ahottld set up no new organizations
particularly prone to falling into this
error; ami for that reason they eon-
'lK.jnVisider it a dreadful calamity if their
I Johnny i:
time at a plant
muix women dit . . x , -
i -i ,? furnishing plants for parks, play-
aey leave I . . , ? , m
grounds and public highways. 1 tie
cooperating sponsor is the South-
western Louisiana Institute, which
development of girls in positions. Urn- camp ie- . , , .
,i , t ,i f ?? i, ?i-1 ha- arranged that m the students
ports that of the forty-eight girls ? . . , - ?
? ? i i t- i f?n ? V;?,riff-l"?is there is furnished training
to one final .who remained for the lull camping . . . ,??J?
, ? i .i ? . i i ,i i in such fields as dairying, creamery
ike to make period, thirty-seven have been placed t i?,
ru: ,i ? ? ? oneration, bee-keeping and larm me-
Ot the seventy girl- m ' . r Z7r - ,i i
? . ifi . ? ehames. The Institute is also mak-
camp, sixteen have tteen
have;1"? v
larships or
re-
to Indi school through NYAmof.
itself, when it is
in jods.
another
placed in private jolt eleven
and agencies which would in any way
duplicate the services already
rendered to youth. It was recognised, Jolmny & not able to pass his eol-
too, that the local communities and' 1('f-r' ??:11'1 exams, or if, once m col-
states knew best what were their kge, be flunks out. To the parents
existing youth service facilities and
turned
aid, and twenty-one are empioye
some form of adult education.
11!
possible for the young men to
i obtain room and board at a nominal
Icost which is defrayed out of their
thlv earnings. Again. in
adiana
under the supervision of
the Purdue Fniversitv Institute of
Finally, for those young people I PnM? Safey young men and women
il the Civil War that
what were their needs. Accordingly,
the Y'outh Administration is a high-
ly decentralized organization, with
Each pioneer woman!the Washington Office acting merely
and wove the clothes which as an advisory and coordinating,
unit.
Nearly half its appropriation is!
being utilized to enable young
; , (1; and iron, persons to earn sufficient money to
reigned in its J stay in school, college and graduate
'school. At the same time student
not only aid is proving doubly valuable in
that it is preventing these same
young persons from being forced out
into that cold world where their
problems would begin in earnest.
It is both postponing and making it
possible for young persons to pre-
pare for that evil day. I say "mak- month
ired a greater ling it possible for young persons to
ana
it is disgraceful that Johnny should
have to go to work. Yet there is
nothing belittling about labor. Good
work is essential to success no matter
what profession young people enter
upon leaving college or school
sooner they?and their parents?
learn this the better.
But getting back to the XYA, its
student aid program is in essence a
continuation of the FERA'S college
aid program of 1934-85 extended to
include secondary school and gradu-
ate students. As under the FERA
special problem is a job, the 1 ?.conducting a traffic survey and
the establish- assisting generally m the develop-
ing and!mnt ot" a statt' 'x' program.
Texas has a state-wide project which
employing young men on the
wliosi
XYA is encouraging
ment of junior counseiin.
placement services in cooperation
with already existing public employ-11'
ment agencies. The majority of jjbeautifieation of the public bjgh-
young people are, of course, seeking iavs ami otrucno of school
a great
the construction of si ?,
The a regular "job in private industrv ?" shelters along them. In
hut they stand little chance of seeur-?ny states such as Colorado,
ing such employment in competition ganizations such as the . M A
with experienced workers. Moreover, the Community Chest, and recreation
mater amount
,f skill. At
an
the same time the number of persons
employed in clerical and executive
positions has increased. Now the
indications that there is going to be
an increasing demand for those who
are trained in the so-called "service
and distribution activities?for
social workers, recreational leaders,
salesmen and services of mechanical
equipment All these occupations
demand special knowledge, training
and skill.
As a result young persons are
faced with many serious problems.
There i- the problem of staying in
school or college and obtaining that
background and -kill that is becom-
ing increasingly necessary. There
is the problem of getting a job when
there are some eight million adults
already answering the "Help
Wanted" ads. There is the problem
of getting the necessary work ex-
perience and training. There is the
problem of choosing the type of work
for which one would be best qualified
and the occupation in which there
is likely to be a demand in the future.
There is. above all. the problem of
what t do with one's leisure time.
IStow the title of my address has
been announced as: "The NYA and
the Youth Problem But to speak
of the Youth Problem is to imply
that all one needs to do is to find
hut one solution, one panacea, and
we shall no longer be obliged to worry
about youth. That, of course, isn't
so. As all of you here well under-
stand, there is no open sesame even to
the particular youth problem which
you are trying to solve. There is no
Youth Problem, then. There are
rather youth problems.
Norwith the possible exception of
the continuance of education, are
the problems of young persons radi-
cally different from the problems of
adults. Adults, in fact, face more
difficult and significant problems
than youth. Their problems, in the
first "place, are the problems of
prepare for" the day they become
job-hunters advisedly. In many
schools and colleges I realize that
little effort is made to furnish youth
with useful courses and with the
necessary advice and guidance. What
can and should be done concerning
the school body. College and gradu
ate students, on the other hand, are
assisting professors in research work
in all fields. They are preparing
geological, archaeological and other
exhibits. They are working in col
needy college students are being
given the opportunity to earn $15 a
month, while secondary school stu-
dents can earn $6 a month and
graduate students $25 and $30 a
In return for this aid stu-
lents are working at tasks varying
according to their knowledge and
skills. School students are engaged
in clerical work, in correcting papers
and in helping serve noontime
lunches, in the repairing of class-
room and playground equipment and
in similar tasks not usually per-
this stubborn fact is a vital ques-jformed by students as members of
tion; and I am happy to see that
one of your groups is discussing
"Curriculum Revision to Meet the
Needs of Youth and that another
is discussing the rural college girls'
problems of guidance. I shall be in-
terested to learn what conclusions
you reach.
Speaking from my experience as
an educator it has seemed to me that
a more personal treatment of stu-
dents is needed all along the line.
The tendency is to lose sight of the
individual in the mass, to forget that
each student has special aptitudes
and special problems. But where
this individual attention is given,
emphasis should he placed upon the
strengthening and reinforcing of the
students' strong points rather than
upon the strengthening of their weak
points. It is too often the ease that,
after being put through a barrage
of tests to discover that they are
poor in this and poor in that, stu-
dents are then tutored to bring their
abilities up to a comparatively low
common level. In this way there are
being created numberless jack-of-all
trades and too few masters of any one
of them. If a student has a special
aptitude for writing and is almost
hopelessly stupid in mathematics,
why should his and his teacher's
time be wanted in tryinug to make
him a mediocre mathematician?
Rather should the teacher concen-
trate on helping the student to be-
come a first-class writer. Not that
I would have the teacher concentrate
solely upon the student's writing
abilities and drop mathematics en-
tirely; but I should like to see a
more positive attitude taken towards
the treatment of students. There
very few public employment office:
have special persons assigned to the
task of placing junior workers. For
this reason, and because the XYA
has tried to avoid duplicating the
services of another agency, a plan
has been worked out whereby junior
employment counselors on the staff
of the N"A have been placed in
state employment offices of selected
and park commissions are co-
sponsoring projects which are
furnishing to community centers
leaders and as?istants in athletics,
hobbies, arts and crafts and other
types of recreation. And, as a final nolul
example, 1 might mention the
project, sponsored by the Director
of the New Y'ork State Agricultural
Station, under which young men
tU
youth
hoU
ink or swim. J u their i
ion. the self-reliance of youth.
of adults too for that matter, i-
being steadily undermined. "Then
is not a child in Savannah a !ad
indignantly wrote to us not
ago, "who cannot get an edttcal
if he wants it. There is not
child in all America who cannot
what 1 did-go out and scramble
u- knowledge. Any child worth re-m
eeiving an education will do just
ithat What such people a- tin- j;
woman cannot realize i- that there
have been great changes in this eoun- ?(?
try in the last twenty-five, the lasl
?fifteen, even in the last eight or
ten years. There have been techno-
logical discoveries that have neces-
tremendous readjustments in
momic structure, many of
Vet tn he made. There
iseoveric- in psychology
that have revolutionized our
of handling people, young and
oh? With these changes and dis-
coveries have come new theories,
new responsibilities. Not the teas!
of these is our responsibility towa
the oncoming generation. We
not wish to pamper it. W e do
wish to lessen in any way the nor-
mal hardships of youth. But i-n't
it reasonable that we should try
to see to it that our young people
have as many opportunities to get
ahead in life a- their fathers and
grandfather- had No land of golden
opportunity awaits youth today.
The frontier has gone. The most
fertile land are now occupied. Yet
the scales of opportunity between
generation which is coming and:
generations which have passed
must be kept even. We must help
young people in special ways. We
must create work opportunities for
them where none exist. We must
-urnri-
ii i i
Hi,

Will bui
the ea
And bat
Against
deartl
Beyond
oil.
.
-i rength
learn b
gone
More than
of mi!
sitated
our ei
which
have 1
too
way:
na
?en
RADIOS FOR YOUR ROO
S20.60 Installed
Carolina Sales Corp
vi
it
IF QUALITY IS YOUR GUIDE.
OUR STORE
WILL EE
YOUR STORE
GARRIS GROCERY
communities?to date, some twenty- and women are taking observations
and notes in field and greenhouse,
cataloguing books in the library and
mounting specimens.
People have built great hopes upon
icounsel them. We must guide them
!so that their vitality, their enthu-
isiasm, their idealism may be more
easily adjusted to the changing eeo-
aml social conditions of our
time. It is the future of America
that is at stake.
A poem by Gerald Raftery en-
titled Boy" has looked into this
future. It runs:
CHARLES HORNE
DRUGGIST
four in number in eleven states.
These junior counselors interview
and seek to find jobs in private in-
dustrv for voung people. Where this
is not possible, young people are the fact that the federal government
. -
Aft
Come
Mus
Ref
and
t'b:
Opposite Proctor Hotel
being placed on NYTA and WPA
work projects.
These work projects provide train-
ing opportunities; but their main
purpose is three-fold. First, to take
idle and needy young people off the
street corner and put them at work;
second, to enable them to supplement
their families' meagre incomes; and,
third, to be of real benefit to the com-
lege libraries and museums and, 0ff-munity when completed. There are
campus, in hospitals and in the of
fiees of local and national govern-
mental agencies. At the present time
some 300,000 students throughout
the country are participating in the
phase of the NYA's program.
But most of the young people in
need of aid are outside the educa-
tional system. Some neither want,
nor are particularly qualified, to re-
turn to school or college. Others
want to go to college or go back to
school, but cannot afford to, despite
the opportunities offered through
student aid. The problems this group
faces are very serious indeed. It is
hard to paint an accurate picture of
the group; but relief statistics of
last May show certain proportions
which by and large hold good for
all needy young people between 16
and 25 who were seeking work at
that time. Twenty-two per cent of
them haa had no work experience
whatsoever. Of the urban youth who
had worked previously 18 per cent
were professional or clerical work-
ers; five per cent skilled workers;
twenty-four per cent semi-skilled;
and thirty per cent unskilled. Of the
rural youth with previous work ex-
perience, seven per cent were farm
operators, fifty-two per cent farm
laborers and nineteen per cent non-
agricultural workers.
To aid those young people who
had no work experience or training
the NTA has been carrying on, in ad-
four broad types of projects of-
fically sponsored by the NYA?
community development and recrea-
tional leadership, rural youth de-
velopment, public service and re-
search. Because they are of such a
general character, it has been pos-
sible to plan projects which accord
with the particular needs of com-
munities and states. In so far as pos-
sible cooperating sponsors in the
communities are being found for each
project; and in most instances these
sponsors are contributing to the
projects either supervision, services
or equipment.
The selection of young people
for projects is made from those be-
tween the ages of 16 and 25 whose
families are on relief, though 10
per cent of those employed on any
one project may be of non-relief
status. These young people are
working for one-third the security
hours and receive accordingly one-
third the security wage of the com-
munity in which they live for the
type of work performed. In the
majority of states young people are
also being employed on regular WPA
projects under similar conditions of
hours and wages. It is interesting
to note, too, that the fact that
another member of the family is al-
ready working on a federal relief
project does not disqualify a young
person from working on an NYA
project. Indeed, wherever possible
has created a National Youth Ad
ministration to serve youth. Prob-
ably some of these hopes are going
to he shattered, because they have
been built upon a false idea as to
the power and authority of the
NY'A. In the first place, there is a
very distinct tendency on the part of
the citizens of the United States to
enact a law or to create a piece of
governmental machinery and then
to sit back and wait for the law or the
machinery to function of its own ac-
cord. Alas, it is becoming in-
creasingly evident that this cannot
be done. No law and no piece of
governmental machinery can work
unless it has the whole-hearted sup-
port and cooperation of the citizens
themselves. Public opinion and the
efforts of the people are the forces
that make a law effective, the gaso-
line that makes the governmental
machinery go. The NYA is par-
ticularly dependent upon the co-
operation and, efforts of others as the
funds at its disposal are com-
paratively limited. In order to make
the NYA's program a real success,
the citizens of each community in
the country, either individually or
as members of some service organiza-
tion, should be doing something to
help youth. Communities must be-
come youth-conscious. At the same
time it is also true, as Elaine Exton
has pointed out recently in "School
Life that "a cOmmunity-conscious
youth is one of the best guarantees
of a youth-conscious community
The NYA is, I believe, helping youth
to become community-conscious.
But are the communities becoming
youth-conscious? Have they yet
come to realize their responsibilities
towards youth? That is more
doutbful.
Though the response on the part
of most community organizations
OUR SPRING STYLES ARE THE SMARTEST
WHY?
WE ARE HERE TO PLEASE THE COLLEGE GIRLS
THE SMART SHOPPE
Across From Bonk Building Dickinson Avenue
CHARLES STORE
NOW FEATURING
The Newest and Smartest in
SPRING MERCHANDISE
LADIES' AND MISSES' SUITS ripBV
DRESSES : MILLINERY : SHOES : HOSIERY
Our Unusual Values and Prices Will Surely Please
We Appreciate Your Patronoge
1
GOSSIP? NO!
All the folk's about the n?
collection of Spring things ot
BLOUNT-HARVEY
Gay printed dresses, little jacket frocks, rfwnrush-wjBj
suits, nautical hat fashions, stunning evening things. Not
mention all the smart accessories, hose, shoes, and such! n
remember, our prices fit a college girls' allowance!
blount-harvey
i ENDO:
WINTER
volume xn
Most
Dean of Women Con
vorably Upon Cow
hibited at Dai
ORCHESTRA EXPRE'
DELIGHT IN pL
Moss and J a pain-
bine to Prod:
Dec
ved t
bad ever plaje I
The d&nees
commented
,ih .litervK-w
sueeess, the
and 1 am p rf
d&nees t(1 be g ?
stated fartl
all right to I
believed it
them at intei
W ilii shar; ' h
It may ?- -a
mark- 1 the I
sponsored by '
ejptiev hich w
ta:r.
The commitl
I Phase tui
JUVENILE COURTS
BY JUDGE HI
Stresses Duty ot
Shaping Live
.1
adge Prank
Ayn. spoke totl ?
ary 28, at as.i
work of ten ? ars
'urt. He said ?
-hm's which are
he handled to as
tion. He finds t!
tend Sunday scb
church services i
eivie organizatioi -
Scouts rarely ever
before the courts
the present time, I
ease which were
the court, not one
Ninety per cent of ?
easily com rolled .?
rigfci road.
Judge Harrtngti
his experience he I I
great deal depends i
the parent or par
nejrliont ,?f their
children are much I
?d themselves in ti
kind. This ts often
oat or both paxenti
when they are ti
children from manv
do not have the opp
tend Sunday Bche
gathering.
?? emphasized t
udents. as prospel
will have in their
lnP of many liret, ,
teacher succeeds in sj
?Ut of five she has
Igat deal. Parents
w"hng to cooperate
ly be attributed to
and misunderstandiii
ation. It is often m
the boy or girl awavl
m m order to save
If the minds oi
W and out of i
Jjsy with constructs
JrlnMtiency is great!
commonwealth 1
8ess?on nner srecimeJ





Title
The Teco Echo, February 26, 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 26, 1936
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.157
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/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38037
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy