The Teco Echo, October 13, 1936


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






WELCOME
FRESHMEN
The
ECHO
WELCOME
FRESHMEN
EAST CARdi.JHrmACkRS COLLEGE
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1936
NUMBER 1
PRESIDENT LEON R. MEADOWS
d b Miss Cath-
d C. L. Sinipson
H en Spangler
Baughn
HLBECOMES
00L PRINCIPAL
Itlll UcS
Coach
it
Work as
aroima
r. Fealed
Five
: j their
? , i
the Biaff
Freder-
i the his-
iis Ph D.
of Yir-
ation re-
the So-
il st paper
ident. He
Study at
and has
?c in both
Dr. Hill-
ta Teach-
the Cita-
where he
enrollment here
meases daily
1.063 Students Reported By Dr.
McGinnis as Registered
JACK DENNY AND
ORCHESTRA PLAY
HERE OCTOBER 19
College Placement Bureau Also NUMBER INCLUDES TOTAL
Unable to Supply Demand for
Athletic Coaches
EVERY SCIENCE GRADUATE
FINDS A POSITION
Percentage of Graduates Placed
Runs High
OF 104 MEN STUDENTS
Transfers From Other Colleges in
the State are Numerous
Orchestra Leader
Entertainments are Sched-
hinir
rb
Dr. Howard .1. McGinnis, Ee,
trar at East Carolina Teachers Col-
lege, announced last week that the
College Placement Bureau has been
unable supply the demand for
i borne economies teachers, men who
could coach athletics, and men with
1 principal certificates. The bureau
forced to turn down sev-
representatives looking
Eas
now
Con
tion
these figure
last vcar's
been
E
i ?
ba ?
i-t Tennessee.
:i department.
ree from Yale
aving already
M.A. degrees
liversitv. He
experience in
ing taught in '
reachera (JoUege in .
Middle Tennessee
in Murfresboro.
?a :ii:ier of Morgan-j
aa. who will leacli
epartment, received
e from Duke 1'ni-
olda her A.B. and '
om the University
iiia. Most of her
ice bas been as grad-
t these two univer-
Dr. L. K. Meadows
Peachers Collie on S?
f this institution.
ifficiallv welcomed the freshmen t Fast Carolina
ptember ?. He enters his third rear as President
President Welcomes
Freshmen to E.C.T.C.
"ALLAN MOORE IT
KILLED BY TRUCK
Wednesday. September 2, Given
Over to Freshman
Registration
Had Attended School Here for
Two Years

The twenty-eighth year of East
"arolina Teachers College opened
on Tuesday morning. September A
The newly paved drives were the
scene of much confusion as scores
of freshmen and transfers with their
friends, relatives, trunks, andI suit- A - of thf
, t t 'cases narked near Cotton Hall and . . ,
vder, of Lau- . , K ? ? . u ?? -xr nmt promising voung men ot
the Administration Building. Mem i
hers of the Student (Government I Greenville and a student at
Council and
greeted thes(
bas
c!
for home economics teachers, and
has been unable to furnish replace-j
ment for Teachers College graduates
who were offered positions as as-
sistant county agents. Dr. McGin-
nis said that he had had any liuin- j
her of calls for men who could coach
athletics, and men with principals'
certificates are also in demand.
Every science graduate who filed
his application with the Placement
' Bureau found a position.
Of the 97 June graduates who
availed themselves of the services
of the Bureau, 84 have reported as
having found a position. Dr. Mc-
(iinuis believes that some of the
thirteen applicants who have not re-
ported an' teaching, which, in two
instances, he knows to be the case.
There is now comparatively lit-
tle demand for two-year normal
graduates. The bureau has suc-
ceeded in placing only 4S of 111
June normal graduates. Several of
those who were not placed are back
in school this fall.
With improved facilities in the
Home Economics Department and
an enlarged athletic program for
men. Dr. McGinnis says that he
hopes the bureau will he able to fill
all vacancies in the future.
iccording to registrat
-t ('arolina Teachers College is
iccommodating 1,063 students,
dering the fact that registra-
will continue another week.
compare favorably with
fall enrollment which
was l.oTl. This year there are 357
freshmen who are starting the four
yeav course. Of the entire regis-
tration there are 1 ?4 hoys on cam-
pus. 1 Ins year there are fewer new
more
back
to complete
There are a
Thi
students than last year but
old students who have conn
the four year course.
large number of trans-
fers this year coming from Appa-
lachian State Teachers College.
Meredith, Chowan, Campbell, Wom-
ans College of the University oi
North Carolina. Louisburg, and At-
lantic Christian College.
'CC
uled fos
Fail Quarter
PLANS OF ENTERTAINMENT
COMMITTEE NOT COMPLETE
Irina Scaritina Will Lecture Here
as Final Feature of Program
for This Quarter
mai
lot' I
. not
ie ellti
. All
rtaiun
otli
'lit
e ;tlit W
bas had
all the
immittei
5 have
0 he
irth-
i'or
la ns
are
been
own
here
JACK DENNY
. 1.0.
IS VICEJHAIRMAN
Is Former Assistant Treasurer of
College
.LR.
SPEAKS 10 Y1A
"An Understanding Heart'
Subject of Message
is
complete, cont.ra
made with a number oi well ki
entertainers who are to appear
j during the year.
During the fall quarter three en-
tertainments are scheduled. In
October Jack Denny and his Or-
chestra will appear with a musical
program. In November the Caro-
lina Haymakers will present a
Carolina Folk Play. The last feature
of th" entertainment program for
the fall quarter will be a lecture
by the great Russian, Irina
Skaritina.
The winter quarter schedule in-
cludes a famous violinist, the popu-
lar lecturer Lowell Thomas, and
Miriam Winslow with her dances.
The spring quarter entertain-
lave not been definitely ar-
land, New York, who
th Art Department
ed her Ph.D. degree
rk Iniversity. from
ilds her B.S. and
She has been teaeh-
school in New York
1
rine Holtzelaw, who!
of absence since the
f last year for the
lying for her doctor's
University of Chicago.
? 1 .rk in the Home
partment.
rine i'lumh. of Clear-
. who holds the M.A.
Peabody College in
comes as critic
-1 venth grade in the
i. She has been teaeh-
I years in Clearwater.
the YWCA cabinet j Carolina Teacher
new students and tW(
escorted them to the office of the
Dean of Women where they filled:
out their entrance cards. I his
procedure completed, the new Stu-
dents saw for the first time the
rooms in which they would spend
many hours during the quarter.
Manv of them then went to the
library to get their permits to
register and then to the administra-
tion building to relieve themselves
j of some money.
Freshman Week had started!
The first event was a bus ride over
; Greenville, conducted by Mr. Kicks
immediately after lunch.
At 3:30 the Freshman Class as-
;embled in the Robert H. Wright
vears
student at East
College during
was killed al-
most instantly last dune when an
iec truck he was attempting to
crank ran over him. Investigation
revealed that the truck was in gear,
and crushed Moore against a rail-
road tie.
Young Moore was a graduate of
the Greenville high school
tered college here in 1M4.
one of the most populai
on the (
friends
ality.
He was a member of th
Street Christian Church.
WHAT POISON, PLEASE?
The greatest authority on the sub-
ject of cigarette smoking. Prof. Dr.
Johan Plesch of the University of
j Berlin, who is himself a smoker.
j once gave me a list of deadly poi-
j sons contained in tobacco: besides
nicotine, ammonia, pyridine, and
pyridine derivatives, cyanides and
sulpho-cyanides, arsenic. He did
not argue against cigarettes but he
laid down this law. To escape dan-
ger to one's health the tobacco user
must continually change the kind of
Mrs. J. B. Spilman. former as-
sistant treasurer of East Carolina
Teachers College, who resigned that
position last May to become asso-
ciated with a Greenville business
firm, is now vice chairman of the
State Democratic Executive Com-
mittee and is busy assisting in the
current campaign.
Mrs. Spilman was elected to the
position of vice chairmanship when
the Democratic Committee con-
vened in Raleigh early in August.
Miss Ruth Burke, of La Grange,
made the nominating address.
The honor comes to Mrs. Spilman
after serving as a member of the
State Democratic Committee, and
for eight years as vice chairman
of the county Democratic Executive
Committee. She ran for the state
Senate two years ago, and was de-
feated by a rather narrow margin.
By KLFZABKTH (OPELAND
"An Understanding Heart" wai
the subject of the message brought j ment
to the college students by their pres- i ranged, hut it is expected that Eva
ident, Dr. Leon R. Meadows, at the La Galliene and Dr. Sigmund
first YWCA Vesper service of
the year, Sunday night, October 4.
lie related the story of Solomon,
the wisest man, who believed that
God is above rather than here, and
how, in spite of his wisdom, he felt
that God could be reached better
from higher places. He told of Sol-
omon's dream on the mountain, in
which God gave him his choice of
one thing. "He might saic
Dr.
and en-j tobacco- he uses, so that the minute
He was I amount of poisons the different va-
students! rieties contain may not affect him.
'? , 1, . ?r i American tobacco contains more of
ampus, ana gained a Host ot . ,? .1 t. 1
1 - certain kinds of poison than Turk-
with his admirable person-
YOUTHS ASSIST IN THE
WAR ON CRIME
Spaeth, the Tune Detective, will ap-
pear sometime during the quarter.
The first entertainment of the
year will he presented by Jack
Denny and his orchestra October
10. This program, according to the
Music Corporation of America,
should be one of special attraction.
The Corporation furnishes bio-
graphical information which reveals
that hack of the soft, genteel music
that one associates with his orchestra
has a history full of significant mile-
stones and that this music is a re-
sult of years of work and struggle.
Jack Denny was horn in Green-
castle, Indiana, where his father was
professor of history at De Pauw
Iniversity. Since both of his
parents were skillful pianists, he
began early to take lessons from his
sociates; third, know the difference fatjH,r ani at the age of six was
able to play well.
who has been i Building. This was the first fresh-
seventh grade for ajman class in the history of ta?
ar, bee
turn to pane four)
Eighth
isb, and vice versa. One should
change kinds, not brands, fre-
quently.?George Seldes, "Freedom
of the Press
More than 300,000 under-privi-
leged children took part in activities
sponsored in the 71 youth centers
of New York City by the Crime
Prevention Bureau recently. A
marked decrease in juvenile delin-
quency was shown in areas in which
the centers were located, it was said
by Oapt. Edward F. Flynn, head
of the bureau.
Meadows, "have chosen riches, long
life, destruction of enemies or fame,
hut Solomon chose an understand-
ing heart. He said get wisdom, and
in thy wisdom get understanding
Dr. Meadows enumerated the
things that students should under-
stand : first, as Plato said, know
thyself; second, in order to suc-
ceed, one must understand his as-

between right and wrong, good and
had; and fourth, understand the re-
sponsibilities to one another, to state
and to government.
"The highest quality one can pos-
sess conhided Dr. Meadows, "is
an understanding heart
One of the college students, Made-
lain Fakes, sang a solo, "I Am Sat-
isfied
A NEW KIND OF TREMOR
FROM SAN FRANCISCO
After starring in all forms of
athletics in high school and college,
.lack felt that he'was not meant to
U a scholar. Leaving school at the
age of nineteen, he went to Chicago
and found work in a music store.
Shortly afterwards he left this work
and in partnership with Tom
Catalano toured for two years the
l.oew circuit, wtih Catalano doing
a tenor role and Denny accompany-
ing on the
engagement
and I tenny ace
piano. Then
1 at the Palace
followed
Theater
JIM SLAY SPENDS SIX
WEEKS IN MARINE
IE
Son of Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Slay
is Senior at Duke University
lit.
I;
r.v.
gini
. full time!college to start out with one hundred
I per cent of the number taking a
four vear college course. In spite
j of the fact that there was no one
'allowed to eater for the two-year
normal school course, which will be
abandoned at the end of this year.
the indications were that there
would be no loss in numlors.
The assembly opened with the
singing of several obi famihar
songs led by Dr. H. J. McGinnis and
accompanied at the piano by Miss
Gussie Kuykendall. Dr. McGinnis
then introduced President Meadows
who welcomed the new students.
The theme of Dr. Meadows mes-
was, "The quality of the
(Please turn to page four)
STUDENTS GRADUATING DURING SUMMER SESSION
At the close of the summer school, Id arvis, primary; Mr. Francis Jen-
nings, math sci Mr. David John-
son, hist sci Matilda Dleen, gram-
Lee Mann, primary;
Slay, -on of Dr. and Mrs.
ly and senior at Duke Fni-
Ids year, put aside his eru-
suita f.r six weeks during
: vacation to take an ac-
rt in Fn.le Sam's Marine
Corps at Quantieo, Yir-
sage
No More Mud
s oong Slav was one of the 250
" - east of the Mississippi
T" the special inducement.
F students from the University
rf" i invitations after passing a
Ver7 rigid physical examination.
,sv- is a graduate of the Green-
y!i!f' bigh school, and entered Duke
? ISI3. He was an honor student
!n high school, and has been mak-
W a splendid college record.
Muddy campus drives are no
longer "Public Enemy Number
One" at East Carolina Teach-
ers College, and students' bills
for cleaning and pressing will
probably be on the decline dur-
ing this year. The paving
which was begun late last
spring, was continued during
the summer and resulted in
hard-surfaced drives on both
front and back campus.
August 21. IMG, there were forty-
four graduates who were awarded
A.B. degrees, while the number
completing the normal course was
thirty-two. Four boys received
diplomas.
The names of the August grad-
uates are given below:
A.B. graduates August 21, 1936?
Mrs. Julia Winfield Amerson, gram-
mar; Edith Bowman, primary; Jes-
sie Koland Brewer, grammar; Lil-
lie Dare Brown, primary; Mary
Esther Butler, primary; Edna Dav-
enport, primary; Edna Davenport,
grammar; Eva Rebecca Davenport,
math French; Bettie Cooper Davis,
home ec, sci Ilamae Fitzgerald,
grammar; Mrs. Madie Bell Godley,
grammar; Carrie Congleton, gram-
mar ; Kate E. Griffin, primary; Ethel
Jane Hall, grammar; Bessye Mae
Harrell, primary; Nellie Marguer-
ite Harries, grammar; Mrs. Kath-
erine White Harrison, primary;
Sara Herring, primary; Mrs. Kath-
leen Spain Hinshow, grammar;
Mary Frances Holland, Eng
French; Myrtie B. Holliday, gram-
mar; Janice Hutchins, grammar;
Julia Dolores James, primary; Ada
Lee Jarvis, primary; Mona W.
(By Associated Collegiate Press) (and Colonial Theater in New York
From the laud of earthquakes, j and another 64 weeks booking on the
California and more specifically I Keith Circuit. Discouraged by
from San Francisco, conies a new salary cuts and other difficulties
kind of tremor?a tremor that may Catalano and Denny split their
soine day tear apart the very foun- J partnership and Denny enlisted in
mar; Katie
Wheetley Martin, primary; Mae
McFarland, primary; Wilma Per-
soline O'Brian, primary; Sarah
Elizabeth O'neal, primary; Isabelle
Pickett, primary; Berkeley Sauls,
primary; Alice Jane Savage, pri-
mary ; Mrs. Martha Stallings Sease,
primary; Iva D. Tarum, grammar;
Virginia Christine Taylor, primary;
Margaret Elizabeth Walker, gram-
mar; Neel Ward, grammar; Mrs.
Willie Jackson, primary; Catherine
Woodall, home ec, sci Mr. Wal-
ter Wooten, soc. sci.
Two-year normal graduates, Au-
gust 21 1936?Ella Turner Atkins,
Lillington, Harnett County, Pri
Berleen Bryant, Tarboro, Edge-
combe, G. G Thelma Bryant,
Tarboro, Edgecombe, G. G Eth-
elyne Ruth Fisher, Fayetteville,
Cumberland, Pri Mildred Lee
Fisher, Battleboro, Nash, Pri
Floribelle Garner, Newport, Car-
teret, Pri Annie Doris Hobgood,
Oxford, Granville, Pri Mr. Ells-
worth Hosea, Pikeville, Wayne,
G. G Christine Jernigan, Dunn,
Harnett, G. G Margaret Kath-
erine Kelly, Vass, Moore, Pri
Sarah Ross Laughlin, Tarboro,
Edgecombe, Pri Charlotte Gray
Lee, Benson, Johnston, Pri Susan
Bernice Lee, Four Oaks, Johnston,
G. G Mary Love, Armour, Co-
lumbus, Pri Nancy Christine Mor-
ris, Wendell, Wake, Pri Louise
Owen, Clarkton, Bladen, Pri Mrs.
Myrtle Tharrington Parrish, Louis-
burg, Franklin, G. G Rebecca
Mercer Pitt, Pinetops, Edgecombe,
Pri Caroline Richardson, Wendell,
Wake, G. G Dora Carolyn Rid-
dick, Hertford, Perquimans, Pri
Laverna Emma Roberts, Creedmoor,
Granville, G. G Faye Rowell,
Garysburg, Northampton, G. G.
Margaret Rudisell, Cherryville,
Gaston, G. G Bertha Lucille
Stokes, Greenville, Pitt, G. G Mag-
dalene Suggs, LaGrange, Lenoir,
Pri Ruth Truslow, Draper, Rock-
ingham, Pri Priscilla West, Louis-
burg, Franklin, G. G Louise
Whaley, Richlands, Onslow, G. G
Marie Whitehurst, Stokes, Pitt,
G. G Evelyn Williams, Roberson-
ville, Martin, Pri Helen Earle
Wilson, Reidsville, Buckingham,
G. G Marjorie Mae Youngblood,
Wilsons Mills, Wilson, G. G.
dation of the English language.
it may sound funny to you. but it j
is a serious proposition with Lou
Harrison, a former student at San j
Francisco State College, who is ex-
perimenting with a new type of
poetic expression. It is based on
the use of special verbs made from
nouns and used in a verbal and often
adverbial sense.
"Road yourself . . . look lakely
. . . love cliffly . . . hill yourself
These are only a few illustrations
Mr. Harrison offers. His latest
poetry reveals many more examples
of this simplification of sentence
structure by his novel adaptation of
verbs created from nouns.
Special Service
Miss Loraine Hunter, chair-
man of the Budget Committee,
announced this week that the
Budget Office will render a
special service this year by re-
ceiving student deposits.
Record cards are now being
printed, and all students are
urged to deposit any amount
they wish. Withdrawals may
be made at any time. There
is no charge for the service.
(.Please turn to page four)
DUMBEST
TO BE DISTRIBUTED
AGAINJIS YEAR
Pictures of Interesting Events
Worth Money
With this issue of The Teco
Echo, students of East Carolina
Teachers College will again begin
reading Collegiate Digest. The Teco
Echo's picture magazine, regularly
each week.
Featuring a new style of editorial
presentation, Collegiate Digest this
year will bring to our readers com-
plete pictorial news of events of in-
terest and importance on the na-
tion's campuses, gathered for its ed-
itors by more than 300 regular cor-
respondents and the ace photogra-
phers of the world's leading news
picture agencies.
Discarding the formal and stilted
(Please turn to page four)

-&?





r
PAGE TWO
THE TECO ECHO
The TECO ECHO
f ir rtR?r.v! TE.ctt?AS college
)f East Carolina
leathers (ollege
STAFF
N.
V 11 1 V KI ,
Mabtim .
-Ik.
. Editor
Business
? In-Chief
Manager
ASSOCIATE EDITOBS
Vi

OM1
Waun
Xi WKI.I,
s Baks es
"i?)i , Smith
Lucille Lewis
M AKTUA
.MILTON
Joe Braxtoh
llNNM
ADVERT
Maktin
liRITT
5 E V A N S
lNt. MANAGERS
"l'oKI V JoHNSOS
lli-i.KN Downing
Makoik Watson
Si k Speed
PLAYING FOR FUN!
In an article in a recent magazine j
it is stated that "more and more
people are coming to realize tliej
personal t'nn they can get from the
game of making and listening to
music It is just this that is re-
sponsible for the organization ami
the continuance of the East Caro-
lina Teachers College Violin En-
semble.
For ten years or more a small
group of music lovers, teachers and
pupils, have assembled once each
week during tin- school year to play
together merely for the fun of do-
, ing it.
The Ensemble has shared this
fun with other music lovers in play-
ing at Clubs, Churches ami on
iml upon
BACK - ALLEY
N-E-W-S
Flash! Attention please
may he interested to know that tin
original Blabbit (accept no suhsti
tute), who tells all and knows notli
ing, has returned from an exciting
vacation to resume his "distasp
dutv" of uncovering campus
dal The famous Blahhit
sympathy whatsoever for the up-
perclassmen, hut to the Freshmen
he offers this one warning: "Crime
does not pay
il programs
Pri
.imi per "ollrge Tear
Number 182
Room 2?
F
:T( l: Ule
matter December 3, 102), at the
X. C, under the act of March :?, 187t,
1036 Member 1?37
Associated Golleeiale Press
Distributors of
GoHe&iale Digest
a wo
printing of this issue, the staff again takes up the rosponsi-
tiug The Teco Echo. In order that we may work toward
our nurpose during this year shall he: To present an
?f college activity as completely as possible; to
which we fee! will result in the betterment ol
College; and to adopt a conservative policy. I i;na
usideration in every ease before drawing conclusions,
'itorial comment seems caustic, we ask you to re-
i intended. In all our policies, we will
and the institution first in our minds,
increasing progress of this college from year
if this progress. With this first number of
liegiance to East Carolina Teachers
-thwhile goal, our
partial cross-section
: : rs any movement
East Carolina Teacher
ag adequate
If at any time our editorial
her that uothing personal
i: al &y - to keep the student
We are aware of the ev
to year, and we are prom
The T? o Echo we reaffirm out
5CQOOJ recital programs ;ui up
occasion has even ventured to give
entire Ensemble programs.
Very naturally the personnel
changes from year to year and the
group is always small.
Violin, 'cello, clarinet and flute
are used when available, since all.
of these instruments blend well and j
supplement each other. The piano
is also used to give background and
volume.
The music chosen is of a high
type mainly because it is assumed
the Ensemble prefers good music
ami does not tire of working week
after week upon some real treasure.
Music of a somewhat more popular
nature is indulged in at times, more
as a matter of recreation from the
more serious study or as an offering
to any in a recital audience who
may not care for too heavy a pro-
gram.
Several members of the Ensemble
have played in it almost from its
beginning and look forward ea
session to the Thursday night n
hearsal.
The East "ar-dina
lege Violin Ensemble
lieved. a real place in East Caro-
"Vachers Collesre.
Ole Blabbit is so concerned
with the well being of you new
students that he pauses here to
add one suggestion to your
memorandum of "don'ts.
By this time you have no doubt
had much advice hurled at you
from every direction. In tact yon ve
been burdened with so much advice
that Blabbit was in a quandary for
weeks trying to think of something
new to say. After much I) con-
sideration he offers you this advice
-although you may use same only
at your own risk.
Don'1 take college life Too Seri-
ously. Enjoy it fully, hut do not
consider it as an end. If you wish
to take part in extra curricular ac-
tivities, choose the "lies which are
satisfying to you instead ot being
persuaded to try something for it
' potential benefit. If you join on
tch!
College raid, the principles for which it stands.
of the societies, or the traternity.
recognize it only as an organiza-
tion (out to collect dues). Ami for-
get any idea that the choice will af-
fect your future in college. If you
! become an outstanding member o-
eachers Col- yw? class, enjoy the feeling that it
has, it is be- permits, BUT?remember that four
short years from today your name
will mean very little on the campus.
The most important factor in
your college life is gOtt. If you
brine about desirable changes in
Yourself, and continue to grow men-
tally, morally, and spiritually, your
stay at East Carolina Teachers Col-
lege, regardless of days, months, or
know the predominant reasons that j wars probably will' be the most
wholesome period of vour entire
WHY STUDENTS ATTEND
CERTAIN UNIVERSITIES
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
Lincoln. Xeh.?ACP?Do von
students attend certain universi
ma
TO THE FRESHMEN
'eachers College welcomes the Freshman (lass as
the
presents a
East Caro? .
newest unit of this institution. To most of you, college tilt
substantial change?a departure from your high school environment.
The question is: Will you be ahle to make the necessary adjustments?
-tion von should answer independently is why you
An important qu
came to c
oil
ege.
To have a good turn
It
is waiting
for you.
To
ties? Surveys on this subject are
always interesting even though they
may not always be scientifically ac-
curate.
Dr. S. M. Corey, professor of edu-
cational psychology and measure-
ments at the University of Ne-
braska, made an extensive study of
life.
)
The opportunity exists. Because you think tj,js qlu,sti0n in so far as his own
? o olorv Pnrli!in??niul then, nerhans ??;?? ?? mnnrnA ai Vi?a?
d then, perhaps
improve vour social status
that an A.B. degree guarantees a salary? Perhaps?am
you may lo interested in getting an education. And
you should discover the meaning of the term "educa-
1 That your parents are resolute in their
not. Of course
if that is the cast
tion Whv do ;
m want it
lesire to have an "educated offspring, does not justify your spending
four valuable years in college. You too, must honestly welcome the
opportunity to bring about desirable changes in yourself.
Although many of vour professors today would contend that they
learned nmre outside of the classroom than in it, if closely questioned,
you would find that their interest in classroom activities was great
also. An intrinsic value cannot be gained from college without a portion
of hard studv. And bv learning effective methods of study immediately,
vou may not only be benefited in a positive way, but may avoid the em-
barrassment of the defense mechanism: "Had to leave college at the end
of the first quarter because of 'eye trouble'
An excellent terse discussion of the mechanics of effective studying
is offered by Guy Montrose Whipple in his booklet, How to Study Effer-
tirenj. Copies of the booklet are available in the college library, and
vou will do well to set aside an hour or so for its perusal.
Of course it is quite impracticable to write down anything like a code
to be followed during the transition from high school to college, but do
give serious thought to the occasion of matriculating. And the college
is vours.
ALLAN WILSON MOORE
The death of Allan Wilson Moore created a vacant place at East
Carolina Teachers College which never again will be filled. Admired
by students and faculty alike, he was one of the most popular students
at our college?popular because of his straightforwardness and high
ideals.
The College thoroughly sympathizes with Allan's family?for the loss
is mutual.
"Accidents in the United States last year cost 100,000 lives, caused
more than i 000,000 injuries and cost in actual cash about $3,400,000,000.
hout 274 persons were killed each day and lost pay, doctors' bills and so
on amounted to about $0,500,000 daily?Pathfinder.
The student body, and particularly the science majors, are happy and
sorrowful at the same moment. The return of Miss Lorame Hunter
to the Biology Department, after her illness last, spring, gives reason
for rejoicing ' And at the same time, we sympathize with Miss Catherine
( as.idy, who was called home during the summer to be nearer her
parents.
institution was concerned, and these
were the answers, in the order listed :
Recommendation of high school
teachers and administrators.
Proximity of the university to the
student's home.
Family influence.
Prestige of the institution.
Economy.
Availability of desired courses.
Influence of friends.
"Of the seven students who gave
'influence of athletics' as their rea-
son says Dr. Corey, "five rank in
the lowest psychological test and
none in the highest
The poor coeds at German uni-
versities and colleges acquire their
education by degrees, and at the end
of their courses most of them can't
get their diplomas anyway.
Only a limited number of women
?enough to fill vacancies in special
professions, are given the chance to
write exams for their degrees. So
Gretchen can't finish her schooling
and expect to search for a position.
If she isn't offered a job and with
it the opportunity to pass the final
test, she has to be content with say-
ing: "Heck I didn't want the darn
old thing anyhow Ja, so geht's.
Not only the individual experi-
ence slowly acquired, but the ac-
cumulated experience of the race,
organized in language, condensed in
instruments and axioms, and in
what may be called the inherited
institutions?these form the multiple
unity which is expressed in the ab-
stract term "experience ? John
Locke.
Well, now that's over, Blab-
bit will slide back into his own
department and check over the
"scandal-log
The calendar indicates that it is
now October, but there's something
wrong somewhere. Only yesterday
ye ole columnist overheard Francis
Sinclair whispering: "What is so
rare as a day in June (Perhaps
Francis should broaden his state-
ment to: What is so rare as a day
in any month if a "certain bru-
nette" is about forty miles nearer
Greenville.) Dear friend, we sym-
pathize !
And would you believe it if I
told you this conversation passed
between Chauncey and Primrose
yesterday ?
Chauncey: "Can you tell me the
name of the President of this col-
lege?"
Primrose: "Xo, I'm just a foot-
ball player here (Oh, so you
won't believe it? Well, I'll tell
somebody else!)
Confidentially. Carolyn Hamm
uses thick wooden soles on her dan
ini slippers, as they make more
"fuss" than iron taps, SHE SAYS.
We wonder, also, if Nell Biddick
still has her melodious voice?
"And if we take all the eo-e
out of college, what will follow f"
the stern nrofessor asked his hril
ianf cla
T will a masculine voice m tin
rear answered.?Maroon.
cabinet form oi government am
been secured in Spain and finally
abdication ol their King. That
followed by a series of
;abineta each more radical than its
predecessor until the small lam
owners and the propertied cla-s
have united r stop this increasing
radicalism for they see communism
is the ultimate outcome.
"Spain had become the most ra
teal nation in Europe outside Kus-
sia. A couple more cabinet changes
and Spain would have adopted com-
j niunisni. Small landowners
Flash, and Double Flash! Lopez Spain got worried that the govern-
started something with bis "Knock- j ment would be communistic. These
knock" song. It's certainly "goingj people hacked up by the army and
round" all right, and nobody seemsI navy started out to stop the surge
to know just where it'll "come out i toward capitalism. The radicals
Here's Blabbit's personal contribu-j depended on militia. These rad-
tion (although none of the orchestraj ieals are made up of poor people
leaders have used it YET). j and non property holders
Party of 1st part?Xok, Xok. j Thousands have bees killed and
the name of the freshman who
mailed (?) letters for a week
in the trash can at the corner
of Austin Building.
And I'm still trying to learn
Party of 2nd part?Who Xox?
Ditto of 1st part?Ida.
Ditto of 2nd part?Ida who?
Both parties?Ida know!
And another
A?Xok. Xok.
B?Who
C?Ed and Verda !
D?Ed and Verda who?
E?Ed and Verda last round-up!
Blabbit will be in his office daily
during the next week to explain
these "literary gems" to any of you
who are interested to know wherein
lies the humor.
NEWS
In The Teco Echo
Five Years Ago
TO PREVENT ACCIDENTS IN
FOOTBALL CAMPS
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
Chicago, 111.?(ACP) ? Notice
?coaches and trainers! In view of
the recent fatal accidents that oc-
curred in the Purdue football camp,
special precautions should be exer-
cised so that no more athletes will
be added to the list.
Doctor Morris Fishbein, in an
editorial in the American Medical
Association Journal, explains how-
danger of explosions and burning
can be eliminated or at least be
greatly minimized by a wise selec-
tion of solvents for the purpose of
removing adhesive tape from the
athletes.
"One preparation says Fishbein,
"consists of 98 per eent dichlorome-
tbane and is completely non-inflam-
mable. The other, a mixture of
about 60 per cent carbon tetra-
chloride, 40 per eent naphtha, and
a small amount of sassafras oil, will
burn but will not explode
Xoble E. Kizer, director of ath-
letics at Purdue, has said since the
accident that only non-explosive
solvents would be used by the Uni-
versity athletic department in the
future in removing tape from the
players' bodies.
Kizer hopes that coaches and
trainers all over the country follow
his example and prevent similar
disasters.
The pains we take in books or
arts which treat of things remote
from the necessaries of life is a busy
idleness.?Fuller.
At Pennsylvania State College
enrollments in four-year courses of
the school of agriculture and experi-
ment station have nearly doubled in
the past 10 years.
Notre Dame University alumni
are planning a nation-wide cam-
paign against communism.
Do not ask if a man has been
through college. Ask if a college
has been through him; if he is a
walking university.?Chapin.
The fruit of liberal education is
not learning, but the capacity and
desire to learn; not knowledge, but
power.?C. W. Eliot.
Three thousand "amateur" in-
terpreters and guides were trained
in Berlin for the Olympic Games.
Observation more than books, ex-
perience rather than persons, are
the prime educators.?A. Bronson
Alcott.
Education is the cheap defense of
nations.?Burke
Ed. Note.?The following letter
appeared in the "Freshman Issue"
of The Teco Echo in October, 1931.
Jli. C JL. j.
Oct. 1, 1931.
Dear Ma and Pa and the folks:
I'm miserable! If you don't come
after me right away I'll jump out
of a window 'er something; just see
if I don't. Honestly ma and pa,
my eyes are all swollen from cry-
ing and look so ugly that nobody
pays me any mind. You'd think
they didn't ever know that I was
president of my clap s in high school
and voted the prettiest girl and
everything, but they can't fool me.
Of course, when we have a class
meeting I'll probably be elected to
something or other, because all the
teachers last year said one look at
me showed that I had powers of
leadership. I don't care about that
thought I WANT TO GO HOME.
The girls up here aren't a bit nice
like I thought they would be. Why,
I always thought when you got to
college that they came around and
invited you to feasts and things but
all I've seen to eat around here is
hash in the dining room. Gee! the
girls aren't even polite. I smiled
at one this morning and all she said
was, "Hello, Freshman I won-
der how she knew I was a Fresh-
man? Anyway she must be some-
body important because I saw her
walk right up to one of the pro-
fessors and speak and he actually
answered her.
Speaking of professors; in one of
my classes this morning Mr. Flan-
agan (oh! ma, he's kinda young,
and human looking?not a bit like
a professor) called me Miss Jones,
and I told him that it would-be all
right to call me Mary 'cause all
the folks at home did. Something
funny must have happened about
then because everybody laughed and
Mr. Flanagan got all red in the
face, just like he had a fish-bone
in his throat.
Well, ma and pa, I guess you all
are getting ready to go to bed now.
The lights go off here at 10:30 and
I never do have time to brush my
hair one-hundred times like it says
in the beauty book and roll it up on
paper. The old beds are so hard
that I just wish and wish for my
feather-bed and if I were there I
wouldn't even fuss at Sis for crowd-
ing.
Ma, I'm trying to do just what
you told me about being polite to
everybody and not eating too fast
at the table. I don't have to re-
member about the forks, because we
don't have but one. Some of the
girls were greedy enough to take
oranges out of the dining room at
breakfast but not me!
Guess 111 have to close and go to
bed. Please, please, come to see me
and bring some good old fried
chicken.
Love and kisses,
Mary.
P. S.?Send my tooth-brush.
Dr. Frank interpreted the logical
conclusion that many hundred
thousand of wounded have resulted
and much property destroyed.
Two alignments are in process in
Europe?one communist Russia, ex-
tremely socialist France which will
go communist in, the face of any
crisis, and Spain, the other Fascist
Italy, Germany and Austria. If
these two alignments materialize
there will be precipitated another
World War. Dr. Frank stated. From
England all leadership toward a
constructive future must come; if
they will do it, the United States
will have been a good turn for in
ease of a World War we would
likely enter the same role we did
in the last World War, as ally of
England, he declared.
Returning to the Spanish revo-
lution, Dr. Frank told how France
is sympathetic with the govern-
ment of radicals, and Italy and Ger-
many are helping the rebels. The
Spanish government had lodged a
protest with the League of Nations
that the help from Italy and Ger-
many is doing harm. The Spanish
say the next war will be within na-
tional boundaries and will be be-
tween ideals?communist and cap-
italists.
In the meantime England is dom-
inant on the Mediterranean and has
the assurance that the rebels of
Spain will cooperate to preserve the
present status quo on the Mediter-
ranean if they win, he said.
The guest of the club Monday
night was a visiting Rotarian from
Washington, N. C, Maynard Fletch-
er. The attendance prize given by
Joe Dresbach was won by A. B.
Stalworth.
your
antness
covered
teas I'h.
I Gr.
f Thon
to kec
the
??all
gather
ig to 1
them; hut wl
mese, the mor
tlie more a Pai
L T. I su
ias seen every
charming Land.
to hear some ot
Ha. ha. ha!
L. (Jr. Why
toty-skire, Eti
other very pie
ones.
L. T. And wh
does vour Lords
LGr. They
but that in whi
quently to pass
shire. But sin
put me on
pray give m
ime. is P-
r Lordship ?-
? this Co
t-
uani a ?-
at. in w?-
?men of ftf
spend tte-
do. mv Lord:I?:
Lea
of the Count its ,
too many young (
tune are resolve.
days.
L. T. Pray ao, i
mightilv to bear v.u-ni. .
Giving himself airs at theGlf
L. Gr. The Country un-
called Illiterate, and some rf
principalounties are i'n? ?
tjftutrtunu gmrt, lo??
Crmtempthire, with
which I have not time to ennmj
ate. Now 1 would have your ?
ship know, that I
a Title from any
fess 1 am ambi
Gentleman, if I
L. T. Travel
that, my Lord.
L. Gr. Travel
ishing Stroke to
but I believe ha
attained that Cl
? ?,
?eint. I
m to be a 2M
m
she
may p the
, tine Gentled
?dh mvhodve
bv Trsvf-
You've heard i
if not more, but i
its new fall-model
Beast r
It all happen.
training school
nesota?this
Methuselaic
Rav Billy gave
th.
mmiredt
it is ags'3 -
Lost
One new red bicycle with all ac-
cessories. Finder will please return
to William H. Tolsen, III and
claim reward.
HOTICE
All students in school who
are interested in newspaper
work of any kt&d, and who
would like to become a mem-
ber of the "Teco Eeko" staff,
please meet the editor in Room
25, tiie "Teco Echo" office, at
?:30 o'clock, Wednesday aifht,
October 14.
near the f
, Red Wing. ?Z
dramatization oi
? &?
,taSt ?
ism instructors me ?? . .
when he tried to capture a a,
loving weasel As all Z
will do in similar J-JJ
this one wrapped itsV?fr
BihVs right hand. Lr
fang" showed mule tendency
fusing to be pried loose, m
him hard with his strong te?
him hard with
til the animal passed out.
Journalism doffs its hat ?
sir!
TO
m
More is learned ? ?
in a private school,? "J"
tion. There is the collision
with mind, or the radtftj
minds pointing to one
I Johnson.
had availed, .
activity, the fa "
Murray was dea Ab
of whether or not I
denee were bus
Norton ha I f
pointed to th?
suggested a motiv i
Xo Laborati rj
bothered and the f!
dieated that the i1
interrupted in th-
scandi. A bunsen '
Hs hissing ooise. M
istry and physics
opened at the peri
ot the elements, ai
pencil lay Dear it i
rion pi of S ?
the most noticeable I
large glass sphere ?? '
ens smaller spheres,
All this equipment a
useless now that its
no longer utilize it i
nients.
Biology profess" r,
Wl been Ir. M
friend. He was ?
though weB-fon :
Prognathn- features
bis dominant in m
but a sympathetie via
won the heart of th
Reaves had spent literal
a time carefully bst j
Murray's hypothetical
and offered him only
eouragement on stub ot
The professor aided
ton by answering all
clearly as possible, ban
ton asked, "Who were ll
enemies?" Reaves dhosl
"He alone could haf
that question
Reaves turned bis att.
Murray's opened bandb
Norton to continue h
jon. When the Shei
from the chemistry
?eaves said slowly but
y, Dr. Murray's munf





0ct?ber 13
MERA
?it
m "AR01.D CMUM
trtg

127
t?t POSTMEN
! N OF I.FARNing
? ? ? Mi r
turner ran
illouink M-lectioa i?
Book Collection at the
? W defeat
? '?- m Thomas Spate-
Sr ? ? ' v ??
?. masK,
printed in 174
??'? ?' ' ' ? ar' a-
more i ?, rer of it,
I' - i I m it grow it
I j tii lr.i: i
. I ibtv of tin WIJ
i I a nd I should in glad
f ? ? i turn ?? of them:
w , ? , ??
?? ? tad several
I taai ? ii d fruitful
of 1 ? n, 1 pray.
! rrlakin Ilk al '
I .? 11811 ip (1KI I- -s .
rhei are all ehajwaaj;
in whi h 1 ? buae BMal 6
? pan d ??? i inn ? i ' '
? . , vour Idship hu
? i, rj king this Country.
B Leave to aMM a k
i unties of that, bi W
. rotaag Qt Btkanea "f ftf
. reeolved :? i?(
II PTM io. my Lord: I "Et
I. ? ? . bear them. .
I rig himself airs al theGjtJ
It Jr. The Country itself tt
?- roia, and ? aft"
I ??? are DuaaJ ????
?M uwlifr'
jrita several other?
f. nt tine to ?
,? 1 would have your Uj
w. that I oWl oaretottW
. . !?? in it. !???
j . , be a m
I ,i . if I I'ati- ,
travel would make ??
ii Lord. . .
r -i ma: ??
Stroke to a 'tine Ge
iMieve hardly anv bodyfj
I that Character by V?
h .nri it a "hundred ?
hnt wvv it ??&;
? . ii ??? "Boy w
ill n
hut here u ?? .
odd guise: -nBiW'
- the ??
II happened Bear '?
ii r Bad Wmft ???
thi- draraatitttioB ?
i ' "man bite-dog ?- ?
Ian man U0&
Billv gave rK -jeB
I .1 ? l.ite?t lpr
I- trueton the law
tried to eaptnr,? a
I ? As all
L, wrapped it? ?oatTajaj?
1 right hand. Wtaj Jj
shewed mule tade!
L to be prW UtsLhV
. i w.th his a ,eC'
animal passed out. u
rnaHsm doff8 Hi
?-?- TVj ta
t8 learned in ? Ttja;
private school, VJgim
rhereisthoccdhJ,
lumi, or the radi
pomting to one cea0
h is
October 3, 136
A CHEMICAL SOLUTION
An Extremely Short Story
THE TECO ECHO
PA?E THREE
I
L
NYA LAUNCHES
E
STUDENT GOVERNMENT LEADERS
Hv GEORGE WILLARD
irh rnornina w ith it
?ttera in
tl
ler
.i c-lullfd hgurr,
"ittBctory rounds
p. To 1'hi.i Wil
iound anvtliingf"
to know iiutnedi-
lad risen
tuffb t'n-
iis tirst or last
l and be was recognised by the
tatioB add ),???-
"Ilac you
NTortoa waste
Iwaya had ??
yment, but "Nothing now eompromiaed
;il Reaves, -hut 1 think I will be able
to name the murderer for von in a
few minutes
'i a
I be statement bewildered even
flie alert Jim Norton, who had han-
vtrv criminal ease in the
eollege town for the past
inquisitive gaze
reflected disbelief as the professor
t 8 tiguiv i diligently with the pencil
a? !u hulk wuuldn 11r I)r- Murray's handbook.
He wondered what sort of fool
errified studenta j would try to eehre a murder case
teitiratei"
tor h
ui halt to eaten a
-le'li iiceasions, i
iath before con-
! died
srp report uiornen- j M;1
llness. All personal J twelve years
:antlv va- replaced
? of dutv. as tin
tl UCtl
rror.
Small!
dor. OldIhi8 8COrB r 1r-
i- trageilv excit
id corn
ui professor t
murdered while
With only a pencil, hut in view of
ins own lack of progress, be saved
Unemployed Young Men Between
18 and 25 Will Be Given
Work
A nation-wide program of soil
conservation and water control
which is to he integrated with sim-
ilar programs eondueted by the Soil
Conservation Service, the Depart-
ment of Agriculture, state highway
departments, and other allied
groups, was launched yesterday by
the National Youth Administra-
tion.
Youth directors in the several
states are now being authorized to
submit projects for the erection of
small dams, terracing operations,
the planting of cover vegetation, as-
semhling of rainfall and run-off
data, and other work involved in
the broad plan of soil conservation.
I nemploved young men between
18 and 2 will he employed on such
Kenneth Lane Henderson
Is Honored At Assembly
O-B-l-T-U-A-R-Y
THORNWELL GIBSON
ELIZABETH JOHNSON
AROUND WASHINGTON
By ARNOLD SERWER
(Associated Collegiate Press Correspondent
Notes at the end of a Washing-
ton summer:
The Department of Labor will
' -null start building up a small staff
Deceased?One East Caro-
lina Teachers College pitcher.
Cause of death: Inability to
hit wooden milk bottles with
twelve ten-cent baseballs at a
distance of nine paces.
Francis Sinclair, on Pirate
pitching staff last Spring,
wrote the word "finis" to his
baseball career while at Ocean
View during the summer va-
cation. In throwing twelve
times at the "carnival milk-
tottle-pyramid Sinclair not
only DIDN'T win a shiny red
cane, but unbelievable as it
may seem, he COULDN'T
throw within a foot of the six
bottles.
The reason for his poor con-
trol is still undetermined, but
it is understood that a "com-
panion" was with him on the
occasion.
Son of Dr. and Mrs. E. L Hen-
derson Receives Highest
Boy Scout Award
Kenneth Lane Henderson, xm m
Dr. and Mr K. L Hendersoa and
Greenville high school junior, re-
cently was awarded the Eagle Scout
Mi-rir Badge, which is the highest
honor that may be conferred upon
a boy neont.
!r. Ralph Mozo, assistant scout
? ?, ii . ?? Easti !?!? Carolina
W ith an expression of quick real
ration, Beaves looked up and al-j to promote the gener
During the hottest periods the to enforce the Wal-h-llealy Bill, ai
work, while unemployed women in! ?? )lks wnt "? tnl' ?11 ?1 act requiring union standards and
the same age gronp "will engage in drinks ,hiri"K tlu' wk- an'1 nV'1 f? work conditions in plants supplying
the preparation of exhibits and' ,lt.v on wds. 1 sually they tied I
ther educational material designed irg?M BM! Atlant?c ??7'
11 ? ? I 1 i.l - I
materials to the Government. Most
if this staff, however, will be secured
QUOTABLE
QUOTES
,i ,f beaches along the Potomac in Tide
most shouted. "Quick. Arrest Roger I aervation in the schools, community i wrater YiWi? or on Chesapeake by borrowing personnel from other
Clareborn. We haven't time for an center- and elsi-where ' : Hay. I hey came hack hotter than government bureaus, since there art
for'
1. A small
Ins taboratorv, -hurt
o'clock It' was al j' lan'hnni- ?' haven't tune for anicenters, and elsewhere.
that anvone would ?Pm???? bow, but Vm positive "Conservation will be a dominant' ?"vr'I (h-u aul 1 ;i
. i?? generally! flt M? ? om re-ponsihle forjpart of ?,?? work program during t 'T "
-? :it i-iiian vs ho had
sixtv vears
Vet, his "blood-stained Iemriy ?n i,ttrnoon tr ai ex-jIKrector of NYA, said yesterday in
-id of i,Ia"an?,1-i llis manner suggested the commenting on this new develop
"I know of no way in which a semi-
i ready preparedness can be developed
with less militarizing effect than
in the
doubt.
, . . . when it is mixed with all the force-
, , ? i u t U- tU avallab1 to ilIn of a curriculum on a univer.itvcam-
H.jthat he the one responsible for prt ()f our work program dnring & Srmoent grind. A small Mv Wlrk(.rs in :U1V gremt nm?l? The University of Rochester's
't,V1r1 r m ?xtsixnMmthsormoreIHd1ful,?II??f!tl,Vvf,? Gbaneellor C. W. Flint makes bis
When Shentf Norton returned i iir, K. Brown. Deputy Executive t"71,a11 drinks during the ?.ek J ; Lu l-iMVPf! ?? : M i .
e-n-lv in the iitei-nnim for -in v ir . vV i' i and on the wei'k-ellds tied to the clil 11
'?'? 11 i i noon lor an ex )irectoi- r?1 1 (Mid veterduv ml. , . . i
interiors ?t local movie houses, only Student aid under the XYA will
? ?restBg
-or? ? t?easio? oa S1
? ? ? ?. inth? Iitrhseho.I andi
31r. !M r. iM1rdiii- inti ig, ehodil aim?ed
1!thi rt oi jhly ol ?u ts.Vo! i iior, ad-
ir?-iig theantoran1 seni.r high
-?tool9t1li its,MMoa ?n ?
th' I'nncipl- isenitu -?1ter
be1idMrsHern :t moie
thmpl e h;i me idgeat ; on(let 3 liea r s-ke HI.1 hertop.n
MrII?nd.inrea1 a 1.?t ter1 t f
ngr?itlllition-ti?on,JanteaK.
West.cin-f 9?niif eneettive.Belore
elimg fleJVim,Mr.Mullol-
land??!irratilatc IK?Iiliethonhe-
hiIf -f tifee shlit?dv am1 tetieh-
eis;andresdtelegramof I?Oli-
:n?atulath1-tr?nVupenitealent
J11RSe,wl. iwasoUt .?f t.rtVli
atth time.
Kennetfa Lant? i-th aidest ofDr.
defense of the ROTC SVStem.
de ? ion. had eon-
?ss research work
utmost admiration. I don't knowjnient.
how in thunder you guessed that "Not onlv is sucli work extreim
Clareborn was guilty he began, 1 necessary to tl
"hut be broke down (ate this morn-jot" the .Nation, hut it tr:
emerging when the temperature j undoubtedly be granted in even "No patriotic teacher should oh-
. I dropped to 90 degrees and the asphalt ; greater volume this coming academic jet to taking the oath of allegiance.
and is making a splendid record in
the local high school.
Romano.? hen a man runs aft-
ie economic welfare1 r,?turl Tn ? soll1 s,at( . e knew Vt.ar than it was last year. NYA an- It is an honor, not a reflection, upon r a ,u. nuU sn? eatehes him.
, hotter than to leave the city. Scout- thorities are coming more and more j character.
'ai andihad told us that in hot weather th.
It doe- not carry with it
in realize that it is one activity they interference witli the risxht of edn-
i re-i.iicn ww i f rv. I IT 1 .? i l, t i "?? oou u 111.11 in ikm wcawKi in tO realize that it is one activitv Iliev luierierence iiiill Tlic risiui ol e.iu-
, , ft ana eoniessea everyining. tie educational value tor young work- , , . . ? , ?i . . . ? ?. . . . ,
. ini-trv and ph.vs- . ? , . 1i i ir . , ? . T 1 n . wasa doorknobs of Atlantic i it be- U1 engaae in with a minimum of catora to determine the ours oi
, ? , ? eiaim- tn,h ne approacneo t't. atur-fers adants it Darticuiarlv well to I 1 .1 r i ? . ! t . i- 1 ?? ,
t unusual ior him at-t(,r 1 ),? ia,i declared 1,1 , v " ' came just as mushy as they tint in (.ritici-m and a maximum of praise.istudy. ourses oi study will be safe
niahl orovinfr or! if , t . ? i- ? ' , ? . , I Washington. (Prevarication by T)i 1. ?.i- ??-?. ( tl I in the hands of loyal teachers But
. 8 J . his intention oi turning him over General features of the program ??. .? vfri-T? 1 iU m,h worS program 01 tin .
ries concerninar .1 n- r ? t ? courtesj 01 -Mark Lwam.l . atva ; ,??, lir,lr t,? c-irrv om the l. A. K. s .Mrs. William Becker
? llu(to the Discipline Committee for were approved by officials here fol- " -NiA 1- much haniei to carry out
ti ar behavior 1111- 111 1 ?. , ? ' , . ' , , 1 ,tlU- Thi an limitatinnfl lOrgeta that those who promote the
stealing ab equipment deposits, lowme their attendance upon the , , successiuiiy. mere ah. nmiiauon. 1
? His recent l- ? .? ' , 1 iail(( "V 1 Despite the t rough i, there was a L? .1 in,i 1 amount of useful ar1' a1 promote interference with
? " j bearing disgrace and expulsion, he 1 p-Stream hngineering Conference ' . e . . 11 ' . amouni 01 usiitu.
ii t1'1 been the tried f? (jlSsn;)(1(, th, )lH.f(1I, aI1(1 J exteIided through most of last! ?7 ;?? ?;root straw votes which urk that ean 1h-found for unen.ploy- audits.
ol all. It made! 1. ? 1.1 ? 11 1 X- ? . 1 .1 ? ? had to he threshed over hy the sages d voiifh 111 the avt-raire eoinmumtv.
amusement tor hi
.? 1
had come j
hh a little queer al-j
; ? . ! had allowed BO
1 j
()ld age had ln-ell
Kplanatton when Dr.
!o to ilisapproe the
, that molecules are
and ner lose their
Nevertheless, the
9 recent1 L- ? r i ?i ? r ? ? r? ? iM'siuie rue (irougui, inere vas a ,?, , i
" j bearing disgrace and expulsion, he p-Stream hngineenng Conference ' , r i- 1 '
?eu the . ? i . r 1 .1 u . 1 ?? , 111 1 e 1 very good crop oi straw votes which uri. fif,
, . ! tried to dissuade the Doctor, and which extended through most of last , ; ,6, , , uorKtn.ir
, 1v. 1 1 ? ? had to he threshed over by the sages 1 Voiith 1
th Directors and their , ? v ? 'w. '?, ea youra i .
i of the Republican .National ommit- f;uiv types t work conflict with
a number of interested th(i J)(.Ill(((.rati(. Xitti((lial 'J W A roiects. Others n- ??
LOWEs
Smart Apparel for Women
Greenville, N.c.
i-ays he intended using the gun only week. Youth Directors and their
to -car Dr. Murrav, hut shot him aid from
in a tit of anger when he
his
?fused
to alter his plan
If education is to realize its true
, , , ???? -???? ????? peratii u r. pri.cf Mri - e&& it cannot confine itself to an
States were brought into Washing- ronnuitt(.t TlH, sac?.s oved to their '? ,ki? Ilot IOU,Hi aII10Ilg these academic discussion ,f life-it must
ton to attend sessions of this group QWB satistatioI1 tliat aliv lVvu ,tniU. rf fo,k, w,u haV( become a part of life itself. I believe
piire skills not found among these a
'1 ?" wl '? Jr ?ir ,h:U ,ih" 11 U'?'0? VZZu'Mu'uui? haTnoltul'g!? worktpermuce ednei-io i- makin, ? cr-at mri
how you knew that Roger did the familiar with the tetdmical aspects
killing.
tit in
"If yon had known Dr. Murray fiY cooperation of N YA were worked 'u. (u,lu(.tori :llH stranger on
a- 1 did. Norton, you would have j out with the assistance of leaders! Pennsylvania Avenue, has come to
studied hi- handbook more closely. f the Vp-Stream Engineering Con- the eonelnsion that the election is in
ou Mini iii.n ii'i-i urn mi- laminar wiui uie lecumeai aspeci (f4 ? ?. c t,t ? 1 - 11
presage 01 ueie.tr 01 a promise oi x" iint-m the oi)re-ion
g, and where did the figuring of the problem. In a .separate meet- Sryhe writer, after interviewing:
the picture j mg on 1 ritlay tletails tor the apeci- tm.(, i,i(.n. m ? i,H.al hotel, a street nFFIPFRS OF NP.F1
OFFICERS OF NCEA ARE
I that each of theT(, n.UMj gome ()f the left hand ference.
t matter neei
the bag for Thomas Jefferson. Both
hution to the solution of our difficul-
ties. It is creating interest and stim-
i ulating discussion. Letting every
-rtp rft? vr.D moc s7 I man have his sav is the constitutional
ELECTED FOR YEAR 1936-37 i)thol of aAhg our !)robkms
Why should we make teaching into a
Xs ! ? ?? "? ; " has suspecr profession by making our
T : teachers take a special oath f The
DR. A. M. SCHL LTZ
DENTIST
100 State Back Building
? Phone 578 ?
1 oi Blatter Beeee- (.ipi ;uill th(. slliaU nuiuM,rs writ-j The program will not call for Democrats and RepubHcaaa were for CaroUn ehe? Colkt ?n'r ? ; teachers take a special oath i" The
m an individual axuj, ten ,( illtrvals over different ek- any additional outlays of monev, ililM ' the NCEA the new officers. ii(.puui(,aus' Alf. M. Landon hands
the origin ot their ni(im liI(.(i in t,1(. (( was defi-lMr. Brown pointed out, hut will elected for the school year of 193?- , )U(.stion ?, the D. A. R.
mon o? the ,iit(.lv ,1I!lik(. tll? i)(H.t(ll, He was! form an important phase of the reg-1 W(.(,k . tn h m g -e: chairman Miss Khzabtth
always mat and exaet 111 his work, alar work program for which allo-i , N I)t. , rni t.ut dowB H.va T - ? o f 1" "W1n l "? slU(1nr "een.
be would raise hta ani, , hnVl. IH kmwn lim toi cations totaling approximately $10 ilH,ir t.ltf. aerrS of particularly T J- tJaming ??l I took six subjects and only flunked
Ivaneed studeflta andL. ? ? ikt- l:? iiDm Such; oou oou lro.i.U- lv l?n mnde ? A' : who succeeds Mis Green, and sec- three
t- and
h is rotating at a
anv of his tables. Such 000,000 alreadv have been madt
mark on
an ad was nnpar.
mahh
in In
Rrojeets of this nature will be tlement Admini-iratmn ami tin
11 a r 11, 10,111. !
1 1 -i it ' wi
evert- cuts took place in the Heset-
teacher of the Third (iradt
limately twenty-five opinion, ? view of this character- eondueted under thv aponaorship Works Progress Administration. Ee-
every twenty tour; itji. j n.lturanv made the conjee- either of other agencies already en- settlement lopped off about a third
oildn't each of the .1 , . 1 1 1 niiiiil?red those' irjurf.d in conservation work or those f ;t t?? ttr ;?ii;?,r
10 succee.is .ns ureen, ami sec three
rtarv. Mis- Eunice MeGee, critic which would have helped towards
who
mv ilesrree,
ueeeeds Mi-s Williams. I If I hadn't dropped the other three,
ldn'1 each of the ;? that h(, had aumhered dtoael gaged in conservation work or those irf 7,71 rh "uti for tlu' X"rthasT- ' -The Cod
elements for the specifie purpose of;
les present at the im-
al-o rotate at a like
? r In- most recent researeh
? and de-pite his past
? fact remained that Ir.
- dead And regardless
: or not molecules of evi-
busy rotating. Sheriff
I fomid no clue which
the murderer, or even
a motive for the crime.
? 1 v equipment had been
i the ghastly scene in-
? the Doctor, had bees
B the midst of his re-
bun-en tlaine still made
Murray's ohem-
handbook was
thi periodic arrangement
d Bta, and a hard-leatl
1 .ar it on the table. 1 a-
es ot special apparatus.
i'liceahle of whieh WHS A
sphere containing numer-
r spheres, were at hand.
I i.pment seemed entirely
a thai its ereattir could
utilize it in his oxperi-
.1, c tt l.i.rlitc.i- nrk- .iiei ? iii! era District will be held at East
such iif state Highway, park, ana about a thousand employees here. ? , , ?
?i. i i?j artdina teachers College on .No?
For a number
f years it met each fall in Green-
host, but
Buy All
SCHOOL
SUPPLIES
At
WH HE'S
muse.
phvsic
identifying his assailant. At the j forest departments, which have a WPA eat its Washington peraoanel , , ,
appearance of Clareborn with a gun 1 special interest in the program i,v a)uUt 0ne-sixth, releasing over ((). v
in his hand, and unmistakable rage Teehnieal and engineering super- employees. Probably all of the .ut ?val t t, 'au
on his faee. Dr. Murray must have vision will he furnished by the spoil- j emergency bureaus but one, will con-l"1 wUh ; ; , ;J,S
sensed his fate.
"Noticing that the numbers in the
handbook ran from one to six. and
the tdements in the order numbered
were: Carbon, Lanthanum, Rheni-
um, Boron, Oxygen, and Itadon, I
looked up the symbols used as chem-
ical abbreviations for these lements.
The result was C La Re B O Rn.
Knowing Roger's reprehensible rep-
utation since entering school here
bat term. I felt positive that he had
murdered poor Dr. Murray
"Well 111 be d was all Nor-
ton could think to mutter.
I : professor, John Reaves.
been Dr. Murray's closest
frit H was a diminutive,
" tgl well-formed, individual.
thic features accounted for
ki? : 1 . nance in most situations.
bat - i: pathetic, vieariousnoss haw
?on ? . heart of the old Doctor.
h?i ha I -pent literally hours at
I ? carefully listening to Dr.
Murray's hypothetical reasoning,
fered him only sincere en-
p .nt on such occasions.
If- professor aided Sheriff Nor-
answeriac all questions as
dear as possible, hut when Nor-
aakt I, "Who were Dr. Murray's
i Reaves shook his head.
"Hi alone could have answered
thai qaeatioa,M
Reaves turned his attention to Dr.
array's opened handbook, and left
"orton to continue his investiga-
'i'n When the Sheriff returned
fr.in the chemistry stockroom,
Reaves said slowly bin emphatical-
ly "lb. Murray's murderer has aix
PRACTICE RECITALS
The first Practice Recital of the
college year was held Wednesday
evening at S:S? iu the Austin Audi-
torium. Part of the hour was tak-
en by Miss Mead and Miss (iorrell
in explaining to the students what
is expected of them in the music
department, ami how best results
may be obtained in the shortest
tm'?- . 11 .1
After these informal talks, the
following students played?Xylda
Cooper, Rachel Moore, Mary Eve-
lyn Thompson, Christine Alford
and dean Corey.
Practice Recitals are held the
first and third Wednesday evenings
of each month, at 6:30 in the Aus-
tin Auditorium. Music students are
required to attend. While these re-
citals are for the benefit of the stu-
dents studying, other students not
studying are welcomed, if they are
especially interested.
TRY OUR AEW EXTRA SHEER
First Quality, Ringless Hose
? 69c ?
You'll Want the Second Pair
? We Deliver ?
CHARLES STORES CO.
406 EVANS STREET
Lawyer to colored, client: Well,
Hank I can probably get you a
divorce, but it will cost you $50.
Hank: Fiftv dollars, boss!
Lawyer: Yes, that includes court
fees and other expenses.
Hank: Well, boss, I tjeil"
want no deevorce. There am t $50
difference between dem two wim
men.?Pathfinder.
i-i i vv ?;ii oh. 1 .11 it has trone the rounds ot other large
sors. while the .NYA will provide, tinue retrenchment until election ? . , ,
, , 1 , r. rr, .1 towns m the district, hlizaoeth
the labor. land after. I he exception is the dim 1
Mr. Brown sai.l that no estimate! Social Security Board, which is "?? Houston, Rocky Mount, and
was possible at this time either of growing slowly as it takes on people Washington, and now comes hack
the number of youths or the amount from Civil Service lists. to the College again
of money which the NYA would
invest in the program.
"Each State Director will work
out a program to fit. the needs of,
his state he declared. "In some
of the Middle Western states, the
percentage of both youths and funds
may run close to forty per cent of
(piota allowances, while some in the
Kast may find that relatively little
conservation work needs to be done.
"The reaction of the Youth Di-
rectors in all of the states has been
most enthusiastic, however and I
contemplate pretty general adoption
of conservation projects throughout
the country
One state, he pointed out?Texas
?already has devised its conserva-
tion program and will have approx-
imately 1,000 youths at work with-
in the next two weeks. The pro-
gram there is under the sponsorship
of Texas Agricultural and Mechan-
ical College and has received the
active support of Governor James
V. Allred.
Among the types of projects
which have been suggested as suit-
able for operation under the NYA
are surveys for soil conservation ter-
races, diversion channels, gulley re-
tards, check dams, preparation and
operation of silt measurement
guages, planting of vegetative cover-
ing on eroded areas, collection of
run-off and precipitation data, etc.
In addition to such actual con-
struction work, young people will
engage in an active campaign
of
educating their communities to the
needs and benefits of proper con-
servation practices. This will he ac-
complished through the preparation
of exhibits of many kinds and the
organization of forums and discus-
sion groups.
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
"Saack 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 : Peaaut Butter
LANCE PACKING COMPANY
The gift that only you can give ? that grows
more precious with the years . . .
YOUR PHOTOGRAPH
? IvWKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY ?
Baker's Studio





r
PAGE FOUR
Teco Echo Editor and Business Manager
DIRECTS PROGRAM
OF SENIOR HIGH
Mrs. Luther Herring is Appointed
Junior High Principal
I V 1 Mnlh.dhmd. English
? lhe Greenville high
mi mix r of the East
l In rs College faculty
:? ? i?ii summers, lias
. ; principal of the j
S e is i o r High
' A School, it was an-
nounced by Su-j
p. riuteudent J.
II. Rose at the
hi st high school j
assembly held on
September T. At
the same time,
Mr. Rose an-
nounced that Mrs.
Luther Herring,
supervisor of the
in, would be princi-
ly organized Junior
Under this arrange-
lland and Mrs
directing the a
toberll
pirat
National President of Fraternity F? the first time in thehistory
is Master of Ceremony of the h.gi, school the ,?11 nt
j ls passed the six hundred mara.
On May $8, of the past SpringjAt present 608 students make up
quarter, the local Tan Sigma Sigma the junior and senior high schools,
fraternity officially became the Tan 222 of whom are of senior high elas-
ehapter of Phi Sigma Pi, a nationalLineation and 386 of whom belong
professional education fraternity.J to the seventh, eighth, and ninth
At that time, ten men from the grades.
Omicron chapter at State Teachers The senior class the -mIL ?
College, Shippensburg, Pennsyl- s,?ll1
school, lias 87 students who, this
vania. were tin hand to initiate
vear.
live together in one
home room. Among the juniors, is
GEORGE S. WILLARD, Jr.
LOUISE N. MARTIN
IN THE FIELD OF
SCIENCE
M
Nine-Lens Camera
shock. It was said that the reviv-
. A nine-lens camera which will ing snoca has proved successful tn ja carrying out the
members into the new chapter. S. S. ghouy )(. (( are 16 students,
; Shearer, national president of thejknown as Christmas seniors, who
organization and science professor may, by passing five subjects dur-
at the college in Shippensburg, was in the first semester, be full-fledged
seniors at the beginning 01 the sec-
master 01 the ceremony. , ? 1 ? ,1 ; . ,
j mid term. Considering tin- nuin-
Purpose j i(.r tj1(, graduating class may exceed
Phi Sigma Pi is a professional I lnill(llVll in ,jmu
educational fraternity for men in n QUmbera ,?. juni,(1. elass is
teacher training institutions, wniehln(J larsrt in school, with a
is founded upon a basis ol superiorU, nf 14() lul.mH.v. Topping the
scholarship, and with the purpose ,ist bowever ;s the sophomore elass
an enrollment of 165 students.
"Chubl:
Executive Secretary Lloyd G
States Reason For
Decision
Fo!
-cr Coastal PI
HaS Successful
Connie Hack
,c ALUMNUS OFDM
lb OAK RIDGE. AN
Dean
Collects 97 H:
Season wit
Averat-
RUTH J. CAGLE
01 advancing educational ideals.
purpose
the ira-
Wltll
T
(i
eight ii grade
n ?m.a his M.A. compited for the. Department of Chinese Had a Name For It ??$???? Ac ap ' F?
Duke University in Commerce and it is to be used in. Ephednn, a modern drug used tion ? professional skill, and the
? iching four years ???PPng is country's coast line, today many brands of nose and fostering of fraternal fellowship
. Is high school, in Who Said "Heavy Hydrogen?" throat drops, has been found 111 thehritbin i'ts ranks.
I the local high Dr. K. T. Barabridge, of liar- ancient Chinese medicine, powdered! Officers
1981, Besides vard. has determined the weight of dried bullfrog. Officers of Tan chapter for the
arses in tenth and an atom of hydrogen as 0.000,000 Altitude Causes Change em-rent year were also installed at
gl Mr. Mulhol- 000,000,000,000,000,003! of a gram. According to a report by Dr. K. the chapter installation ceremony.
? interest in journal- Inconceivably small?yet it is mat- Campbell in The Swiss Medical They are: Wesley Bankston, pivs'i- c. ftntp ? ? c. toc irt n?0
1 j.iiiv WeA-iu the vit ,1 nr??.? ,) i : ur-ii 1 ? - Students in 48 States to Keceive
increased steaairj hi. neemy, ine 1t.11 processes 01 the dent; George Willard, vice presi- . .
culminating in the ad- Two Shocks?Better Than One human body are accelerated by high ; dent; Judson White, secretary; Nearly SIX Million UOllarS
???? eourse this method for restoring life to altitudes. Francis Sinclair, assistant r- This Year from NYA
victims of electric shock was de- Germs Fly High tary: and Thornton Stovall, treas-
alism eourse, taught scribed lat duly before the Amer- It has been estimated that theIurer and historian. (Bv Associated Collegiate Press)
M ilholland, is already ican Institute of Electrical Engi- average house fly carries as passen-i Bruce Simmons, founder and Washington, 1). ( -So that eol-
I results. Its prac- aeers, in Pasadena. And believe it gers about 1,000,000 germs. How- former president of Tan Sigma lege and university students who
- arrangement, with or not, the power used to start the ever, loads of as many as S0 or 401Sigma, gives credit for the new have been shadowed by the spectre
- rving mainly as a heart once more is another electric I million germs are not so uncommon, j chapter to the hard work of I Nr. ol depression may continue their
which 1 re e n ????
r, takes form. PRESIDENT WELCOMES
? for the keen.
? students,
was enrolled in
FRESHMEN TO E. C. T. C.
(Continued from page one)
Duke during product depends upon the quality
?f 1928 and of the material Dr. Meadows said
ard a Ph.D. he was favorably impressed with
NOTED SPEAKERS
Beecher Flanagan, official sponsor, higher education, the National
and the wholehearted cooperation Vouth Administration of the fed-
Collegiate Digest To Be
Distributed Again This Year . . , ;
f President Meadows. eral government this year will dis-
Besides George Peabodv College tribute almost six million dollars
in Nashville, Tennessee, - nteen among the collegians of the 48
State Teachers colleges in Bin states states.
have chapters in the fraternity A recent announcement of Deputy
the nineteenth chapter being at NTYA Director Richard Brown re-
the quality of the material which he Fifteenth Annual Meet To Be Held ast Carolina Teachers College. vealed that $5,057,630 would be
saw before him but proof of his jn Loujsvj,e Kentucky on 1AP? ncMMV noruccTDA 22 7 ? ZfT? t
judgment could not be seen until n. ?? ? JACK DENNY ORCHESTRA graduate .benefits but that this would
the end of the four years. From
tinned from page one 1
m?9?W 0" JACK DENNY ORCHESTRA
uttouer C3, ju, ol PLAYS HERE OCTOBER 19 1k supplemented with a fund of
" . ?oU? for distribution to stu-
prs CoUege has had two mottoes "To Many spealwrs prominent ia the (Continued from page one) M?'?T '? -? drought-ridden
Serve and "On Time Fvery Time fields of journalism and advertis- j1(. arinv ?? tn Kurone andh ? e south and middle west
The combination of these two mot- ing are now being scheduled for the arriving lust before the Armistice Pr?griun tllis .val wil! large-
? - picture toes, according to President Mea- tiftivnth annual convention of the He returned to vaudeville for a l-v ,hM that of former years.
unusual de- dows, will help m coming years, Awoeiated Collegiate Tress to Huumh-v of years and was finally en- w1lth eolle ,omei&h exercising eom-
?ii. science, Dr. Meadows welcomed the stu- , ? . , ? KlVllfn(.w fw gaged by the Frivolitv Club in pb'te c??trol oror the selection of
-s. sports, dents to the institution and all its M '? ?ms ?? ? Kentucky, Octo- jg ffhere ,u, ov(,r applicants and the devising and su-
ojects, and privileges. The welcome was ex11 -????" and 31. years. His broadcast from there Pe181 ta w?rk they perform,
tivities that tended on behalf of the faculty, stu- Besides the featured speeches of established him as one of the fore- M"mlv earnings are also un-
eommunity. dent leaders, churches and eitiaens these outstanding newspaper and most orchestra leaders on this eonti- (l:in?(i- wit!l averages of $15 set
erning the of Greenvaie, and the twenty :1(V(.nisillir :nitlorties. officers of "t-nt. He started a vogue for smooth for undergraduates and (35 for
concise and thousand students who had passed . . , mellnw .l-m m?ai? jLtin.n.wi i graduates.
i i , ? the Association are now planning lv 1,1I1M 1,U1U 'itniguished
in the through the halls oi the college. ' . ? v unusual arrangement featuring
- to their lu closing, Dr. Meadows said. :l f ?frwmd vMo dMCttSSlons strings, woodwind's, and novel per The freshmen at Southwestern
.nance. -vy welcome you to the privilege taat H M to editorial and husi- Lussion instrumeats. College in Memphis, Temi. are re-
gular new- ? wor and to the privilege of ness staff delegates a complete re- In u:l Denny secured a contract mre t( wear baby caps and bibs
: will pre- developing your personality and to view of what is new and important to play at the Waldorf-Astoria :im' T t'ur books in laundry
es in every the privilege of preparation for the m l)l(, gey ut- 01(.sr(, j?.w-s?alM.r; Hotel: later he went on an extensive; ,a?rs- AVn(ir kow Stanley Scar
itiona that service of mankind , .
, , publishing
? t . 1 .1. .1 1 i o
COLLEGE FACULTY IS IN- fewer
CREASED BY 5 ADDITIONS requii
ereast
(Continued from page one) will
principal of the Training School ;i ???
ami supervisor of grammar grade " '
w.rk. ' '???
Mrs. L. L. Rives, of Greenville,
take- the place of A. A. Henderson vir
who has served as -toward of the ,v
college for the past seven years.
Mrs. Rose C. Harrell. of (vine vears old did
ton. (ia is dietitian in place of Mr "r,i 8s '?
Nannie deter, who had held that 1 these -
position for nineteen years. Mrs. unusualn
Harrell had formerly been assist- ir amonjj
ant dietitian in the college. started ti
Rufus 1?. Johnson of Four Oaks, six years ? Id I
N. C, began his work as assistant
treasurer in the college the first of consideration
August. He i- a graduate of the only sevei
University of fforth Carolina. Be- nren ar h
tore coming here he was connected too young. S ?
with the Carolina Power and Light er const I tig
Company in Wadesboro. ? r- fell it '
Boley Farley, A.I of I'uke Fni- service to I tl
versity, who is rated as one of the by fixing the :
best all-round athletes ever turned that the ma
out'at Duke, is athletic coach. He ing the first gi
began this work last spring with the be six years
baseball season. For the past two to school,
seasons he has been manager of the "There are
Greenville baseball cluh of the where childrei
Coastal Plain League. or five-ami I
Miss Catherine Cassidy, one of first irrade worl
the most popular teachers at Fast ceptional. fl
Carolina Teachers College for the these children
past seven years, has resigned her work when th
position in the Science Department ;U1(j rnake a con
in order to be nearer her home in m lt,
Cleveland. Ohio. Mi-s Cassidy came ,nt f being a
to this college in ti parents uml
it v i h an for this deeisioi
A.H. from Ohio ,ll(t 0f i1(,n.
State University, ti,at ;t ?
and an M.A. from ?ounger childrei
Teaehers College, they x v.
('olumhia I niver-
sity. Since then
las take n
?lies
te photograpl
I
ik
Pain caused the abandoning of
plans for a tour of the campus
With its sessions to be held in
M Itour and returned to the ultra 1,oru"h (second-year freshman)
exclusive Hotel Pierre in New York I iUul Silu'1;lir fourth-year fresh-
st.e nas ia ten glink: Did G
graduate work at !llrk ;j I);a.
Western Reserve Snoop: Exact
. . ? Clevelaad. Her n yg wife p
major in-ld is chemistry, and during
last year she worked tirelessly in
building up the Museum, particu-
larly in her department.
Miss Cassidy's plans for this year
are not definitely known, hut it i-
thought that she may continue to
work on her Ph.D. degree at West-
ern Reserve.
For BEST Shoe Repairs
E. T. G00R, JR.
SHOE SHOP
articular in-1and the barbecue, which was Louisville's famed Brown Hotel, the
City, which he established as oneiman) NvouW look in SIU'11 regalia.
of the leading rendezvous for dinim
ips and trace the scheduled to take place on the eam-jl93? convention is being sponsoredjand dancing.
Would you believe itHere we
rnificance of unusual J pus, was held on the ground floor) by the University of Louisville, and' His music has such wide popular I tul(1 thought that the literary lights
events through the of the Robert H. Wright Building, jg g Blaekwell assistant to the aPPea' radio that he was signed Ba ?1WU (ut (f sports. Bill
?f the news camera. In the evening another assembly j . V - 7 Jfor a vears contract on a program Shakespeare graduated from Xotre
( Ucgiate Digest of the fn-shmen was held for tl.V 1'rsuillt ol the nation s oldestUo-featuring Harry Riclunanrandp8. ? Henry Wadaworth Loag-
:?- lively and inter- purpose of introducing them to the municipal university, is the local John B. Kennedybroadcast over a I tV,I,nv left 'liwestern. But no.
ies of the great and student and dormitory officers.)chairman of the convention. coaat-to-eoast network, Denny's w " I he Last of the Mohicans
i regularly in every Elizabeth Dixon Johnson presided Two of the outstanding speakers ?'?e recent engagements include the Jamesenimore Cooper, has popped
at this meeting. It was announced' wm hav1 alm(lv am ted invit:
!at this meeting that the Jrltt . .
.? years in The
this College are urged
i Theater would give tickets to new
tions to address the convention are
.udents to see doan Bennett and Herbert Agar. Pulitzer prise wia-
iieir pictures ol important . ?. . ,?' , ? ? , , t
Joel Mc( rea in "Two m A Crowd, ner, and "Dusty Miller of the Wil-
ing events on our cam- , , ?
? Dig Fox 4T-? ' h'kt"ts -oul(i be secured tor either Immgton, O Wews-Jourmed, The
a t' i ii Tuesday or Wednesday's matinee itl j ,i
V isconsin. three dollars . , . i latter accepted in tins manner:
?r each photo accepted for
Following the assembly the
"Tickled to come to your dinner ii
YWCA invited the freshmen whose l,r.KU"u l" im' vuur u,n,ier m
last names started with a letter be- j Luh Vlllp- ?i?1 A,I1 promises
? 'tween A and M to the "Y" hut for ! all of the wit and philosophy (not
of the students at the Uni a l)arty- of the textbook variety) necessary
of Kentucky go to great! The turning out of lights in the to make a convention dinner digesti-
? ? ?? 1inti,m Imagine-1 dormitories announced tlie close ot ,
ducation. l magim i,ie , ail(l th(, BrowB Hotel managers
1 800 mike inst to so to tll nrt aa3 ot w "Oo1- , , , . ?.
' J - wj?j? have been boasting to us tor months
year, which amounts to . . . let's
see . . . maybe you'd better figure
it out for yourself.
From China India? Xo. r!u' eatire ,ia.v of Weoaeaday,
.iv live about 10 odd miles September 30 was spent m registra-
le campus, but they commute 'T tof ll!mM re audltoriu1m
One of the fellows figuresH the W right Building was the
e hums approximately ml?1 ?x mwh actlviv a,s ??? sVl"
of gas during the "school 1 I? acquainted with the
routine of registration. rigures
show that there were 35T freshmen
who registered. .
From four to six in the afternoon
the YWCA cabinet was at home in
the "Y This provided an op-
portunity for new students to be-
come better acquainted with old
students.
On Tuesday evening at a meeting
in Austin Auditorium, Miss Morton
and Elisabeth Dixon Johnson ex-
plained to the freshmen the college
customs, rules, and regulations.
Biltmore Hotel, the Pennsylvania
Hotel, and the French Casino in
New York City. He is now on an
extensive road tour and will appear
in the college auditorium, October
19.
The "morning after" headache is
caused by spinal rluid. Dr. ,1. Mil-
ton Robb, of Detroit, told the On-
tario Medical Association at its an-
nual meeting last July. He said
alcohol promotes the secretion of
the fluid, and either too much of it,
or too little, causes headaches.
Maiden-Munchansena are in a
tss by themselves. And here we
had thought all along that men were
the greatest fabricators of fables
and fan. ies. However?and this is
the rnh?the committee of judges
at a liar's contest staged at the Uni-
versity of California, conceding that
women are superior in this sinful! This meeting was followed by a
art. refused To let the questiouably i party in the "Y" hut, similar to the
fairer Bex have the opportunity of j one of the preceding night, for the
?mpeting against the men. Now
they have their own place in the
"lie-iug-sun
remainder of the new students. This
party brought to an end the activi-
ties planned for new students.
about their fine food).
Expenses? Well, the railroads
have all been telling about their
rate cuts, so traveling expenses are
at a minimum. And we've special
hotel rates that cut living-away-
from-home expenses to a minimum.
We'll give you complete details in
a special convention bulletin to be
sent to you soon.
One of the most interesting ses-
sions of the convention will be the
Friday noon luncheon of all dele-
gates as guests of the staff of the
l&itisviUe Courier-Journal and
Times. Important speakers are now
being engaged for this meeting.
In addition to the regular con-
vention program. Mr. Blaekwell and
his assistants have arranged im-
portant and interesting tours
through one of the south's famed
cities, through metropolitan news-
paper plants, and to other points of
interest about Louisville.
It has been disclosed that a no-
bleman, a Cossack and three former
laborers head the greatest peace-
time army the world has known.
They are the Commanders of the
Red Army, a fighting force of about
a million and a half men, equipped
with five thousand airplanes and
undetermined thousands of tanks.
up at Marquette U
"PINK PILLS FOR PALE
PEOPLE"
Warren's Drug Store
ECTC RINGS!
Girl's Size ? $11.50
Boy's Size ? $12.50
BEST JEWELRY
COMPANY
"YOUR JEWELER"
THE SMART SH0PPE
Ladies Dresses$2.95 to $8.95
Twin Sweaters?Brush Wool and Plain Knit. .$1.95 to $2.95
Berkshire Hose69c - 89c
Special Prices to the College Girls
OUR MOST HEARTY WELCOME
TO GIRLS ID TEACHERS
OF E.C.T.C.
TO VISIT LS OFTE.
Williams
? The E.C.T.C. Store ?
GREENVILLE : NORTH CAROLINA
WELCOME
? E? C. T. C. ??
MAKE OUR STORE YOUR
MEETING PLACE
Chas. Home
DRUGGIST
OPPOSITE PROCTOR HOTEL
B
I

his
W
v
all
pro
Sur
First I
legPirates' l ' j t.
wh ?
eai-fiv? hits -
l1 two of his ' Makes G
J) 111&iaek, Dean i
teani s batting
aw:age oi ?
wen? the only Atli
m t 109his respect. W games, Dean
rua' 46 g beg, one hom i eores. As a a lining oi thi - .??
av?-?ag- above tOO Cemparis
1 Leaa comparing gue pitehers ? ii h !
pit? American League on
pir.her every day, ?
whle in the Cuastal
gn? trouble. Chubby" has be a
having some very good he gives his brother
forbeing a great hi
?
It the egotist is
is worthless. If th
acute, full of dist
his egotism is prec
a possession of the
Smith.
Dartmouth Co
tributed $94,500
1936. a new reco
butions during a
Dr. Clarence A. M
versity of Cincinnati
falling birth rat is
crease in the earth's
Women drivers
than men in tin.
geney. according
ries of scientific I
sylvania State
Yale University
home uf Nah W
cause bo one wi nl
for it? upkeep.
Dr. A. Lawrei
dent emeritus of EL
sity. recently fail- d
tomobile dining I x;
John .Stuart Cur:
of the soil, is ii an
deuce" at the CJniv
cousin.
Prof. Selig Hecht of ?l
University claim- that dj
in the eye cause our color
A gentleman is a tarl
than some of us think foi I
erav.
New York University hi
course in cosmetic hygiene!





;hool commit

October 13,
1030
THE TECO ECHO
PAGE FIVE
Icutive Secretary I u
1 States E?Gf
Decision
Pirates Will Play Chowan College on October 17
"Chubby" Dean? Yes, We Knew Him When?Seventeen Candidates
j Report For First Practice
Women's Association to
: (,r.4.(
Wk
i.
g
BEST Shoe Repairs
E T GOOR, JR.
SHOE SHOP
wmucmm
IOBM
IFTKN
ins
lore
IRTH CAROLINA
1E
t OUR
CE
irne
T
OTEL
0!
-
sta Plain League Star
issful Season With
Mack's Athletics
S OF DUKE.
RIDGE. AND E.C.T.C.
egin Year's Work Soon
THEY PLAYED FOOTBALL TOO
ST
97 Hits, and
with Batting
Ends Women's Athletic Coach
Equipment Now Ready for Use of
Students
:e
of 290
pasl
his
Flit' Women's Athletie Association
is ready to begin its year's work, it
was announced recently by Helen
Wilson, president of the organisa-
tion. The eroquel and horse shoe
equipment may now be used by any
student. Tournaments in these
sports will In' ran off in the spring.
Beginning last Monday after-
it at 5KK), Miss Norton has been
giving dancing lessons in the Wright
Building to those students desiring
to learn to dance. Xo boys are per-
mitted to dance during this hour.
Basketball practice will get un-
derway about the middle of October.
BUCKSHOT
MICHIGAN $
FAMED
WILLIE HE5T0N
SCORED
CWER IIO
TOUCHDOWNS
FROM 1'X.M
Q 1905
'Jfcftftf
?
4K
?t a
around 400
Pitcher
LUCILE NORTON
Joseph Petritz Discusses Move-
ment To Provide Accurate
Football Information
?an
don
Lei
un
lur
The following diseus-
vement to provide
Perl
I from there. Be-
plaj baseball, and
? be game - ery day
arolina Teachers ( ?
tasted the effeetive-
? 's burling in 1934
. Phelpa allowed the lo-
ts against Oak Ridge!
.1 immie Johnson
?' bis team's hits.
Makes Good
past season with (!?n-
, N an ranked third in the
ing percentages with an'
'o. Uosea and Finney '
Athletics above him
pect. While playing in
1?. an collected 7 hits,
home run. and batted in
Aa a pinch hitter at the
: the season he had an
? 00.
Comparison
pa ring the American
aera with Coastal Plain
?an says that in the
League one faces i tiOOD
?v .lay. every time up.
In Coastal Plain a few-
has been fortunate in
? verv goixl coaches, and
is brother Dayton credit
- great help to him.
more accurate
the sport was
for 1 iik Teco
?usted (Collegiate
tritz, director of
the I Diversity
for ,i
tist is weak, his egotism
If the egotist is strong,
A distinctive character.
,s precious, and remains
of the race.?Alexander
outb College alumni con-
$94,500 to the college in
. w record high in contri-
ring a single year.
Ed. Not.
sion of th
football fans with
information about
written exclusively
Echo and the Asso
Press by Joseph P
rt- publicity at
of Notre 1 ame,
B JOStril l'KTKITZ
The Official Football Gu
VXM lists the names of some 57;
football players who, in 1936, made'
punts of between 71 ami 80 yards
on the tly.
1 watched Bill Shakespeare, Notre
Dame's ail-American halfback of
1935, for three years, kicking op-
ponent- dizzy. During that time'
and for several years previously I
-aw many of the games, other famous
distance kickers?Kabealo of Ohio
State, Bobby Hogan of Pitt, Dick
Xesl.itr of Drake, later of the Chi-
cago Bears, and others?and I have
vet to see a punt travel 70 yards
in the air from the line of scrim-
mage.
The point is not that the Official
Football Guide ?S necessarily wrong,
for it is possible that with a strong
tail wind a man might kick a ball
the prodigous distance upwards of
71 yards.
What I wonder alout, though, is
whether the kicks were measured
from the line of scrimmage or from
the spot where the kicker stood.
In Notre Dame's thrilling game
with Pittsburgh last fall, Acting
Captain Marty Peters booted the
place kick in 'the last two minutes
of play which settled the issue in
favor of the Fighting Irish, 9 to 6.
The ball was on the lS-yard line be-
fore the center passed it back. Peters
stood on the 26-yard line to make
his epic effort. The goal posts were
10 yards behind the goal line. The
question arose then whether the
kick should bo scored as an 18-yard
kick, a 26-vard kick, or a 36-yard
kick. Many valuable words and
time were wasted by
to clarify and standardize both the
method oi keeping these statistics
and the charts on which they are
presented.
Asked to speak at a district meet-
ing d' the ACl'A at the conclusion
of the li. season, when the welter
of charts and misunderstanding of
that season was fresh in my mind. I
suggested that these forms be clari-
fied and standardized for 1936,
Homer Dunham. 1935 ACPA Vice
President in charge of athletics
worked on the forms ami methods:
1 suggested to him after a personal
survey of methods used all over the
country, and the association adopted
tin' suggested forms at its dune YXM
meeting.
This means that some 300 member
j schools will he keeping statistics in
i the same way and presenting them
I on identical charts this fall. It means
that the newspapermen writing
against time will not have to pore
through long columns of figures,
reading every heading, in an effort
to find the number they want, then
re-read the heading and compare it
with others to he sure they have
not been misled, and, for example,
included under total yards gained
from scrimmage, only those made by
carrying the ball.
The college publicity men have
no desire to force upon the publicity
or the press forms which they do
not want. The charts, as accepted
by the ACPA, however, are believed
to he the simplest and most com-
plete yet devised. Copies of them
have been sent to many of the na-
tion's best known football writers.
They have been unanimous in their
approval of the idea of standard-
izing the figures. From some have
come suggestions for clarifying the
charts still further.
The Association of Football "Writ-
ers of America, headed by Stanley
Woodward of the New York Herald-
Tribune, is expected to pass on the
charts at an early date. The associa-
tion was formed at Notre Dame on
the eve of Notre Dame's opening
game with Kansas last fall with the
announced purpose
press box abuses.
w 210
30S ' R A
II6H VLAFVtTTIE
f i L -1 1 MI -
viG DIRECTION
ID iHt G0AL-
Seven Letter Men Furnish Coach
Farley a Nucleus
The East Carolina Teacher- Col-
lege football eleven will open its
1936 season here on October 17
when tbev meet Ohowan College
litr tfame
Praetie
M.
COACH
iA.A.STAG6,
THE GRAND
OLD AAAU OF
FOOTBALL,
NPS AM EMO
ON "THE
FiRST
ALL- ANNLkCAM
IF AW IN
- 1869'
At
Wt
ii I
k
no
ib
th
la that
wi

A
?,
SKIVY DAVIS.
OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY, KICKED
23 GOAL? AFTER TOUCHDOWN?
IN ONE GAME, SEPT. 29,1917.
?4 0P
; was an
! cent of
I a recori
Let us reso
j tend all the
this season, 1
not under-tan
I burly should attend, for every teach-
er should possess some knowledge ol
sport
i
se students who do
the game particu-
if)
CATAWBA COLLEGE
COACHING STAFF
At Present is "Indian" Line Coach
and Scout
FRESHMEN MEET
THEIR FACULTY
COLLEGE STUDENTS
ARE ON GREENVILLE
T
atals of the
havoc with the
team during mi
I v ith iudicati'
ah ad Coach
?y through son
aration for the
? the lettermen returning
in are Ferebee, and Gibson
lackfield; Ridenhour, cen-
Isey, end; and Carpenter,
and Price, guards.
Among
tiie newcomers who are
trying for positions on the team
arerShelton Powell, Noe and Pratt
lackfield; and M-
Pittman and
rlol
non,
Venters
nee A. Mills of the Uni-
incinnati claims that the
h rate is due to an in-
ne earth's heat.
of correcting
hers react more slowly
time of braking emer-
ig to findings of a so- Hiqmnes
i ui
,hc tests given at Penn-
ite College.
.wrsity is having the
oah Webster razed l1-
ie would furnish funds
cici
much precious
writers who were conscientious
enough to clear up the point.
It is not an infrequent occurrence
for an ambitious college publicity
man. trving to push one of his
school's stars into an all-Amencan
berth, to list the average yardage
gained hv the player in response to
about that player, but to
specify whether these
made on running plays,
ught or threw, kickoff
returns, or even on
l.awr.nce Lowell, presi-
us of Harvard Univcr-
f a lied to pass an au-
ina examination.
rl,
neglect to
yards were
ie ca
Stuart Curry, famed artist
. it now anartist in MB-
it the University of Wis-
of Columbia
dig Hoeht
claims that chemicals
ause our color sense.
tilman is a rarer thing . of us think for.?Thack-
trtv.
.w, v
rk University has a new
kinetic hygiene.
passes
returns, punt
nunts. Mavbe his average runs up
around 7 to 10 yards a trip. 1 os-
siblv his average on running plays
from scrimmage is three yards.
These random examples will serve
i.artially to make the point, that
the hoePinq of football statistics
varies greatlv throughout the coun-
trv, and in its ambiguity takes sorne-
tlnng from the enjoyment and under-
standing of the game. ?
The rest of the point could best
be made bv llustrations showmg the
various charts different schools use
to prase the statistics to the work-
nress at the conclusion of the
Lines run one way on some,
on others. Some in-
that others omit,
more schools
While the old method of present
ing game figures can hardly be called
an abuse?for each publicity man
conscientiously made his own forms
and tried to give the best service
he could with them?it was at least
an inconvenience.
All suggestions made by the end
of the current season will be dis-
cussed at the 1937 meeting of the
ACPA, the charts modified where
necessary and then offered to the
football rules committee for final
approval, by that body.
For those of a technical turn of
mind, we submit here some of the
regulations to be used in 1935 by
ACPA schools:
All runs, and passes will be
measured from the line of scrim-
mage to the point where the ball is
declared dead.
All punts will be measured from
the line of scrimmage to the point
of furthest advance. In the case of
balls punted over the goal line for
touch backs, measurement will be
from the line of scrimmage to the
20-yard line.
G. L. "Doc" Mathis, former East
Carolina Teachers College athletic
coach, is now a member of the Ca-
tawba College coaching staff at
Salisbury. North Carolina. His du-
ties are: Coaching the line in foot-
hall, scouting opponent teams, as-
sisting with basketball and base-
ball, and conducting spring prac-
tice in football.
While coach here during the past
two years, Mathis developed some
of the most outstanding teams in
the college's athletic history. Par-
ticularly were the football teams
improved. With only ordinary
material last year, he shaped a win-
ning team that by the end of the
season had scored seventy-seven
points to their opponents thirty-two
points.
Last year's Pirate basketball
quint was equally successful, win-
ning a total of twelve games while
losing only five.
Indians Win
The Catawba "Indians" turned
on the steam during their first game
of the current football season and
scalped West Carolina Teachers
College 33-0. The line seems to
have been well coached by Mathis,
for the Teachers never threatened
the Catawba goal line.
Each Student Fills Out Question-
naire Giving Facts About
His Life
Page, Tolsen, and Williams Win
for Greenies During
Summer
Meeting with their faculty coun-
selors Tuesday night was the final
thrill the College Freshmen had for
their "Freshman Week which
closed at that time.
The class was divided into small
groups of only six or eight, and a
member of the staff appointed as
counselor to each group.
Each girl or boy had previously
received a slip giving the name of
the counselor and the place of the
meeting. At 6:30 the whole class
met in the Austin Auditorium from
where Dr. MeGinnis, chairman of
Freshman counselors, gave final in-
structions, and from there they went
in groups to the places designated.
The purpose of the meeting was
for the counselor and students to
know each other.
A questionnaire was filled out by
each student in which he gave his
father's, or mothers occupation, the
same facts about his life and ex-
periences, and the kind of commun-
ity he came from.
The college was well represented
on the Greenville swimming team
this summer. Alva Page, as cap-
tain of the tankstcrs, led the Green-
ies to a successful first season in
which the team won from Finston
twice, lost to Tarboro four times,
and took third place in the East
Carolina meet at Kinston. Bill Tol-
son was the only backstroker to de-
feat Miss Carolyn Perritt, of Tar-
boro. this season. Miss Perritt was
headlined throughout the south as
the sensation of the Mid-Atlantic
Meet. Joe Williams swam on the
relay team which captured the East
Carolina championship. Vernon
Ward, a graduate student here,
coached the Greenies.
Ill tile
Fearingti
in the line.
The schedule as announced
Coach Farley includes six sched-
uled games with one open date. Two
of the games will be at home and
the balance will lie on foreign soil.
The schedule is as follows: October
17?Chowan College, here; October
2-f?West Carolina Teachers' Col-
lege, there; October :1?William
and Mary (Xorfolk Division) at
Norfolk; November 1-1?Gtiilford
College at Guilford; November 21
?Louis burg College, here; Novem-
ber 28?Open date.
Anthropological measurements
University of Kansas freshmen com-
pared with those of a selected list
of other schools recently revealed
that these men were taller, about the
same in weight, and less in girth of
chest.
By way of increasing enjoyment
of football through more intimate
knowledge of its finer points, Coach
Charles E. Dorais of the University
ef Detroit conducts free football
clinics for fans.

Mg
game
another way
elude yardage
Terms used by two or
mav mean different things 18 differ-
ent' parts of the country.
To the American College Publicity
Association goes credit for the first
move made to date, to my knowledge,
The American College Publicity
Association at the annual conven-
tion in Boston elected Frank S.
Wright, University of Florida, as
its president.
Salaries of Bucknell University's
faculty and administrative staff
have been increased 5 ier cent.
Extension of Northwestern Uni-
versity's Evanston campus a half
mile into Lake Michigan is being
planned by that institution's au-
thorities.
Welcome to E.C.T.C Girls
We have a beautiful line of sport and dress
shoes for college girls
COBURNS?Your Shoe Store
Mary slides down banisters.
And loves to climb up trees!
Now that she wears Penney's
hose
She can't wear out the knees!
J. C PENNEY
SMART MEN
ABOUT CAMPUS
are wearing Blount-Harvey
clothes. Smart single and
double-breasted suits in
the new colors and fabrics,
shirts boldly patterned with
novelty collars, ties for
"gay dogs and sox that
are an eyeful Yes, they're
from
BLOUNT-HARVEY'S
STORE FOR MEN
(A C
QUALITY and SERVICE
AT
LAUTARES
Be
a Campus Queen
Buy From
C. HEBER FORBES
rom the smart
college angle"
Our third floor is a heavenly place to shop for new dresses
. . coats . . . furs . . . sweaters . . . all the things that
capture a college girl's heart. And at the present mo-
ment our buyer is in New York, selecting a beautiful new
collection of mid-season things. Come in to see the new
clothes. . . . You'll love their swing skirts, princess lines,
and exciting details.
Sale of Fur Coats, Otcober 9 to 14
Blount-H
arvey
i


.??





PAGE SIX
THE TECO ECHO
October
Placement Bureau Report
"COLLEGE FACULTY
Where Graduates Are Teaching.
As Reported Up To Monday,
October 5. 1936
A.B. Graduates
.1 uanits Arthur, leveland, X. (
1 n a Adcock, Jamesville, X. Cj
I, Beam, Shelby, . ( Rose
Margaret
('arnlvn
N. (
(
X
VARIED VACATION
TECOAN EDITOR AND BUSINESS MANAGER
Rose Hill, X. C; Lottie
!V( ii Springs, X. ()
dlahan, 'larkton, X. (
r, Vrtuur, X. C; Elka-
i . Mingo, X Linelle
? i. . I M:i) Emma
ro, . C; Jewel 'ole.
X. (
: 11
. i
V (
X. (
Y C
g
.1. i
t
X
lixai
ttton
!h a
dnn
L'liua
(' ?
X.
N,
X.
X.
X.
I 1
( V
iiaw.
ensboro,
is El heridge, Foun-
C tls G. Easoin, Sims,
? tma Louise Pelton, Oo-
. C; Hyatt Forrest,
, X. ( Elizabeth Faison,
. ( Louise Farrior,
' . X. C; V srginia Fryar,
X. Marv Gorham,
Springs, X. ( Lottie
?'? , Deep Creek, X. G.
fin, Mar-hvillc. X. C.
Louise Grimes, Battleboro,
h n Grimsley, Richlands,
"helma Haislip, Clements,
Alma Hammond, Stokes,
Y, Idah Hartse
Maud. Peele
X. C Elizabeth
fordo. X. C:
1. Verona,
ffedspeth,
M. Helms, i
Elizabeth
Mi
l,
Faison, X. Lola Holt
all, X. ( Dorothy Hooks,
. X. C Annie Sue Hun-j
Kelford, X. Irene)
Plymouth, X. ( Ellen
, Spring Hope, X. Cj Julia
ihnson, Jacksonville, X (;
.? .lones. Pantego, X. 0
The members of the College fa
ulty took advantage of the summer
vacation to do advanced study at
some big university of under some1
noted specialist, or to travel, or to
settle down somewhere ami combine
resl with reading and study, bul all
were interested in doing the things
that help them to keep :iee with
educational trends and new ideas in
their fields.
Dr. Lucille Turner spent five
I weeks doing research work in the
Congressional Library, in Washing
ton 'itv. and then went to New
York and Philadelphia. Miss
Holtzclaw spent the spring and;
summer terms studying at the Uni-
versity of Chicago. Miss Green j
I studied there during the summer
term. Miss Newell spent some time
i at Oswego Xormal Sehool studying
reading problems and attending the
clinics under Dr. Betts, the noted!
specialist in this field. After tlii
she was at Hack Log ('amp, at in
dian Lake, in the Adirondacks.
Mr. M. K. Fort completed the;
(work for in's Fh.h. at Peabody Col-
lege. Mr. Picklesimer spent the
summer at Peabody College work-
ing towards his doctor's degree.
Miss Norton studied at Peabody,
also. Miss Mack attended the lat-
ter part of the Columbia Univer-
sity Summer School, after teaching
ONE-DAY INSTITUTE
OF MUSIC IS HELD
AT THIS COLLEGE
HEADS YWCA
I Utii
ev tl
one-day institute of
School Music, sponsored
State Department oi
struetion, the Woman
of North Carolina.
federation of Wom-
Caro-
Pul
(!o
in-
of
University
una
10.
Stat
Van
ea
her
T?
,t
MAGGIE CRUMPLER
BEATRICE HAMMOND
AUDIT
Student Fund, East Carolina Teachers College
GREENVILLE, N. C.
From May 29, 1935 to May 26, 1936
RECEIPTS
On hand in the Guarantee Bank and Trust Co May 29, 1935 $ ?
Student Fee ?'?
Gate Receipts
iacuity Tickets
Belle Kearney('ash Account
Post Office
From
From
From
From
From
From
th
and the X. I
en's Clubs was held tit ha
?s College on October
Hattic Parrott, of tin
Department, and Miss Grao
hrke Moore, of fit" Woman's
('ollege, were the directors.
The Department of Pu '
Music of Eastern Carol
(rs ('ollege bad charge
rangements ;? nd ? xtend
to all classroom teacht
eial teachers of music
this section of the sta
: invitation to attend the
The program stresse
preciatiori, I here wei
les, in which folk i
use in Music Ap
; were used and ty
preciatiou given.
with orchestral
tl
a
ire
Hit
imr.
?ssed music
,ngg suitabb
eciation eoi
lessons in
'Making fri
instruments
CATHERINE WALLACE
EMORY UNIVERSITY LEADS
IN INTRAMURAL ATHLETICS
By A-
Atlant
V
Ai
iir
-t tl
M iseellaneous
:09.1u
?00.00
20.00
! F.i.ii7
?f th
r
topic
-ion. At the
time was given to open discu
This was the fourth in a
of six sectional institutes, the
of which was held at Asheville
iu se
Ivelt
Wall
ace.
X. (
ana
C
C;
C:
Mary 1
Ruby Kelley, Newport, X. (
Knight, Seven Springs, X.
Helen Lassiter, Colerain, N
Dorothy Logan, Woodlief, N
Hattic V. Mallard. Parkton, X. C
Minnie Mallov. Lee County, X. (
Clara Martin. Reidsville, X. C;
Margaret L. Martin, Conway,
X. 0 Mae McFarhmd. Myrtle
Grove, XT. C Katie Miller. Stone-
wail, X. ( Mary Mitchiner, Arch-
er Lodge, X C Elizabeth Mussel-
white, Chicod, X. C Jane Out-
land, Ahoskie, X C; Emma Out-
terbridge, Pantego, N. C.
Mary B. Parker, Buna, X. C;
Florence Peacock, Orrum. X. C
Blanche Pearson. Piney Grove,
X. V. Margaret Peele, Roxobel-
Kelford. X. ( Mary Foy Peter-
son, Creswell. X. C Mary Emily
Smith, Lillington, N. C Evelyn
Stegall, Union. X C Rachel Stone,
Rei Oak. X O; Mary R, Tarry,
Jonesboro, X. C Jean Tate, Ala-
mance County. ST. C Helen J.
Taylor, Elizabeth City, X C Jean
Thomas. Warsaw. X. C Mary
Trexler, Koekwell, X. C; Evelyn
1). Turlington, Married; Julia Un-
derwood, Jonesboro, X. C; Ethel
Marie Viek, Edgeeombe County,
X. C Louise E. Wells, Aulandor,
X. C Myra E. Westhrook. New-
ton Grove, XT. C; Annie M. Whit-
ley, Saratoga, X. C Louise Wilder,
Bailey. X. C Elizabeth Wilson,
Lucama, X C.
Two Year Graduates
Ruth Lucille Harden. Wilson
Mills, X C: Frances Boyd, Vir-
gilina, Va Mary II. Boyd, Arthur.
X. C Roberta Brantley, Wilson
County. X. C; Lena Rose Britt,
Kenly. X. C Mary Geneva Britt,
Benson. X C Margaret A. Brown,
Hatteras, X. c Lucille Crocker,
Clayton, X. C; Huth Davis, Lum-
berton, X. ( Lona Mae Eaddy,
South Carolina; Virginia Lee Ellis,
Sniithfield, X. C Thelma Ginn,
Hampstead, X. O; Claudia Gower,
Chicod (Hollywood School), X. C
Mary Frances Greene, Nashville,
X C Ida Kav Hair. South River,
X. C; Marie' Ilnrgett, Pink Hill,
X C Mary Elizabeth Hargett,
Clinton, X C; Annie Lee Hawkes,
Zehulon, X. O R 1 ; Bettie G. Her-
ring. (lalypso, X C Virginia Hof-
ler. Sunlmry, XT. C Mayo Lee,
E. C. T. C. this quarter; Reva
Lewis, Whiteville. XT. C Ruth
Loughlin, Clayton. X. C Ruby
Lucas, Creedmoor, X. C Julia
Murphy, Calypso, X. C Jennie
Williams Newell, Franklin County,
X. C Erma Pake. Newport, X. C
EtheUne Parker, Beulaville, X. C
Elizabeth Peebles, don't know where.
Julia Mae Peterson, Johnston
County. X C; Doris Quinn, Seven
Springs, X. 0 Bertie Lee Sawyer,
East Lake, X. C Dorothy Smith,
Fountain, X. C Rachel Eloise
Smith, Clayton, X. C Azalene
Southerland, Rocky Point, N. C
Texie Gray Sowers, Linwood, N. C
Georgia Strickland, Mt. Pleasant,
X. C Elizabeth Stubbs, Pembroke,
N. C Blanche Swinson, Colerain.
N. C, R. 1; Eleanor Taylor, Lum-
berton, X. O, RFD; Elsie Thomas,
Greenwood School, Lee County,
N. C Lewellyn Thornton, Stan-
hero, and then spent sonic tune at
a camp in Vermont.
The Texas Centennial and the
mountains in Western North Caro-
lina and neighboring states, seem to
have been the favorite vacation
places. Mr. and Mrs.ununings
are the champion tourists, as they
went on one of the Canadian-New
England tours the first of the sum-
mer, and to Texas the latter part,
finally resting a while in their home
town of Trenton, Tennessee. Mr.
and Mrs. E. L. Henderson and fam-
ily spent several weeks in Texas.
their home state, and. of course,
took in the Centennial. Dr. and
Mrs. Frank made a loop trip to
Texas, stopping on the way down
for a visit at her home in Louisiana
and coming back by his home in
West Tennessee.
Dr. and Mrs. ReBarker and son
spent their time exploring the
mountains in Western North Caro-
lina, Tennessee, and Kentucky. Miss
Rainwater spent several weeks in
the western part of the state. Dr.
and Mrs. Adams visited Blowing
Rock. Mr. and Mrs. Gulledge were
in the mountains for some time.
Miss Sammon visited in Asheville
and Little Switzerland.
Misses Williams, Grigsby, and
Hooper together had a leisurely
motor trip through the Great
Smokiest on their way from their
homes in Mississippi, Tennessee,
and Kentucky. Misses Charleton
and Turner motored through the
Smokies, also. Mr. and Mrs. M. L.
Wright divided their time between
the mountains and Atlantic Beach.
Air. Deal spent some time in Xew
York and Washington. Miss Coates
was in Washington City for some
time with her sister, Mrs. Arnold
King, while Mr. King, a member
of the U. X. C. faculty was doing
research work there. Miss Jenkins
spent her vacation visiting in and
around Washington City.
Miss Lewis was with her sisters
in Xew York City. Miss Wilson
spent some time in Chicago with
the family of her brother. Dr. Louis
Wilson. Miss Adams spent the
summer visiting and camping in
three states, her home state, Iowa,
Minnesota, and Indiana. Miss Rose
spent most of her vacation at her
home in Marine-on-the-St. Croix,
in Minnesota.
Mrs. Bloxton divided her time be-
tween the Shenandoah Valley and
Williamsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Brown-
ing and baby visited their home
state, West Virginia. Dr. Flanna-
gan was in and around Chattanoo-
ga, his home city, most of the time.
Most of the others spent the time
in their homes or took short trips.
DISBURSEMENTS
For Annual Tecouii
For I K Echo
For Men's Student Government Association
Vuv Women's Student Government Association
For Personal Service
For ('lass Payments
For Men's Athletic Association
For Women's Athletic Association
cries
first
Nor-
$17,086.191 ma College last week. One will be
j held at the Woman's College in
$ 4,500.001 Greensboro this week and one was
646.23
scheduled for Meredith College the
day before the one to be held here.
17.67 Flora Macdonald College will have
129.6
than evei tx I
letics in pht
commercialize
tein. Emorv
herself in th
foreman r o
But the bv
this Method
sity. For ov
confined participa
sports to inter-el
organization contei
pus, and studi at
inn i'? ??'
"llier ?
enviable
a reforn
1"
th
u
vears :a
u
i
' or
S,
135.00
:7!u;i
1,626.82
493.47
Entertainments 5,023.92
401.63
500.00
20.00
175.00
300.00
250.00
300.00
300.00
170.64
the following week witl
1 one
at 1 hi- nually -p
nd
in
vidson Ci
near the ei
The program
one
ege (dosing the Serie-
of the month.
arranged for the
minor ;
tern.
Yet,
ports
?sp
tile
e money an
atercolleg '?
tramura) sys
?k of an in
r Social Committee
For Belle Kearney Cash Account
For Post Office
For YWCA
For Commencement Fund
For Piano
For Paving
For Painting Dormitory Rooms
For Miscellaneous
Mo,
re
Balance in Guaranty Bank and Trust Co, 5-26-36.
$15,869.60
.$ 1,216.59
$17,086.19
NEW YARDSTICK FOR
FOOTBALL PLAYERS
FROM STUDENT TO SCHOOL
PRINCIPAL IN TWO MONTHS
Modern Chinese girls and boys
blow through here" and it comes
out: "Sun Huan Loh?Sun Huan
Loh The swing song has hit China,
according to an account in the Bal-
timore American. If the horn could
translate into English as it goes
"Round and Around" it would come
out as "Round and Around, Happy
Music
tonsburg, N. C Anne Ruth "Wade,
Orrum, N. C Maywood Wagner,
Chicod, N. C Inez Whitener, Gas-
ton County, N. C; Billie Williams,
has a job some place; Elizabeth
Morris, Aurelian Springs, N. C.
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
Detroit, Mich.?Coach Charles E.
"Gusv Dorais of the University of
Detroit has evolved a new yardstick
for the measurement of football
players?a yardstick that fans at all
colleges and universities will find
helpful in sizing up the qualifi-
cations of their athletic classmates.
According to Dorais, here are the
10 things that are essential to the
ideal football player:
1. Coordination. This implies
muscle response and quick reflexes.
As Dorais sees it, strength, speed
and agility are of little use to a foot-
ball player unless be is able to co-
ordinate these qualities. East think-
ing is of value only when coupled
with ability to translate the thought
into instant muscular response.
2. Condition. In order to play
topnotch football a man must be in
such perfect physical condition that
he can go through a game, or such
part of a game as he remains in the
line-up, without slackening hisr
speed or thought of action.
3. Enthusiasm. Xo man can
hope to be a great player without
boundless enthusiasm for the game.
4. Mental alertmness. The great
football player must have a fast-
acting mind. He must be constant-
ly on the alert to meet the varying
situations that arise both on offense
and defense.
5. Courage. Both physical and
moral courage of a high order are
essential. Football entails a lot of
hard knocks and the man who is
afraid of getting hurt will never be
a success at it. Moral courage im-
plies ability to keep fighting in the
face of reverses.
6. Cooperation. A player must
be willing to cooperate with his fel-
lows and his coaches.
7. Size. It is a well-proved
axiom in sport that "a good big man
is better than a good little man
For that reason the ideal football
player should have a rugged phy-
sique and adequate weight.
8. Mental stability. The good
player will be a man who can re-
tain poise under all conditions.
9. Application. There is a lot
of hard work, almost drudgery, con-
nected with learning the funda-
mentals of football.
10. Susceptibility to instruction.
The ideal player must be willing to
learn.
Many are destined to reason
wrongly; others not to reason at all;
and others, to persecute those who
do reason.?Voltaire.
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
Peter Skalkos' recent fortune
sounds something on the order of
the "Phil the Fiddler" type story
that Horatio Alger, Jr used to
grind out.
Xot everyone, in fact very few
university students, can boast of
changing from a college student to
a high school principal in two
months.
Skalkos was graduated from the
University of Toledo in June and
received an appointment to the gov-
ernment high school in Las Marias,
Puerto Rico, early this summer; he
assumed his duties on August 24,
signing a one year contract for the
position.
"Everything is grand here he
writes to a friend in Toledo, "ex-
cept the bananas, which are served
at every meal in a variety of dis-
guises. Gardenias line all the walks
leading to the school
Whether or not it was "apple-
polishing" Skalkos doesn't know ex-
actly, but on his first day as prin-
cipal he mentioned that he was fond
of horseback riding. The next day
three of his pupils brought horses
to school for his use. They told
him that their fathers had reminded
them that they must treat "El Amer-
icano" well.
ay institute was as to
Program
Miss Grace Van Dykt
Presiding.
?CJO-10:00. Registration.
10:00-10:20. Opening of Confer-
ence and Plan for the Year,
10:20-11:00. Song Clinic (using
folk songs suitable for use in Mu-
sic Appreciation Course).
11 :00-ll :W. The Teaching of Mu-
sical Form.
ll50-12:0O. Typo Lesson in Mu-
sic Appreciation.
12.00-12:30. Continuation of Song
Clinic.
Recess for Lunch.
1:30-2:00. Making Friends with
Orchestral Instrument.
2 :00-2 :45. Type Lesson in Music
Appreciation.
2:45-3:1). Integrating Music Ap-
preciation in Your Daily Pro-
gram.
3:15-3:40. Continuation of Song
Clinic.
3:30-4:00. Open Discussion.
Adjournment.
WELCOME
E. C. T. C.
STUDENTS
The weakest spot in every man
is where he thinks himself to be the
wisest.?Xathaniel Emmons.
More than 100,000 students in the
United States are now attending
America's 500 junior colleges. Fif-
teen years ago there were only 100
junior colleges in the nation.
Xo one can teach you Shake-
speare so well as Shakespeare can,
mo one can teach you science as
Huxley can, and no one can teach
you philosophy as Plato can; but
you might never hear of Shake-1
speare, Huxley, and Plato if your
instructor did not tell you about
them.?The instructor is a guide
waiting to show you the road.?
Percy Marks.
Pleasure and pain, though di-
rectly opposite, are yet so contrived
by nature as to be constant com-
panions; and it is a fact that the
same motions and muscles of the
face are employed both in laughing
and crying.?Charron.
Error is always more busy than
ignorance. Ignorance is a blank
sheet on which we may write; but
error is a scribbled one from which
we must first erase.?Colton.
Man often acquires just so much
knowledge as to discover his ignor-
ance, and attains so much experience
as to regret his follies, and then
dies.?W. B. Clulow.
Pure friendship is something
which men of an inferior intellect
can never taste.?De La Bruyere.
WE WELCOME
E. C. T. C.
STUDENTS AND TEACHERS
BACK TO GREENVILLE
? and ?
BLOOMS
THURSFRL, OCT. 15
Gene Rorr.c-d - -?? S:
16
"WALKING ON AIR"
Plus
"MARCH OF TIME"
SATURDAY, OCT. 17
Richard D in
"Special Investigator"
COMING
"SWING TIME'
"OLD HUTCH"
"Big Broadcast"
'The General Died at Dawn"
PITT
1
p
m
m
SHOES FOR THE
COLLEGE GIRL
Whether you're on campus, or off on one of those
glorious week-ends, you'll need several pairs of
shoes that distinctly individualize you. Campus
low heels, graceful high ties, svelte suedes, lovely
evening sandals.
295 To 8-50
BLOUNT-HARVEY'S
MODERN SHOE STORE
?'
1300
CIRCULA'
VOLUME XIII
Professor M. L. W
College Instr I
Highways '?
TWENTY-FIVE STt
ARE ENR0LLEC
"Man and tiw ?
Used a ?
Th
. ?. fTBIGH i
M ? t I ai
In ok wit
from othei
"Motor Vel
lina ai
License A
course.
Highway S
Departmei I
fed that ;
course by r
partly t t;
safety g "? ? ?
echo in t
mer un l i
Highway
in which an
the tea hers
in safety .
Dir. r
osrraI bv ?:?
highway m
Profess
thai a dem
be laid
ing all tl
where ad i
may be giv
they may .
to drive saf
A"
DEAL ADD!
Says Travel Cu
ComJ
Ralph Deal,
Carolina T
ed an inferi
suit of being I
with the social.
cal systems U
Teachers from
New York, Geoi
did the telling.
humdrum exi
went "abma
states had outat
lina. He spent
a week in Waal
that seemed lil
delphia. He re
for North Carol!
Deal told thd
Club that in
guides are as nu
? dog "and serve
There is more jl
York than anyf
world, he assert!
New Yorker tH
lina is a little s
ond that it isn't
handkerchief,
told me he plann
?-nd would run
nd take lunch
"I suspect Wj
ed by Congre-l
owns like GreeJ
?an be thankful
of alderman tl
year or two anc
"life in Nei
(Please tui
n, v





Title
The Teco Echo, October 13, 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
October 13, 1936
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.164
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
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