The Teco Echo, October 9, 1937


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





Welcome Freshmen
Homecoming Alumnae
-
HOMECOMING
OCTOBER 23
Ihe
EAST CARtf&t
!?!
ECHO
GET ACQUAINTED
FRESHMEN
&&&kSC6LLEGE
VOLUME XIV
GREENVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1937
NUMBER 1
COLLEGE FACULTY
IS INCREASED BY
TEN ADDITIONS
Vacancies Created in Many
Departments
MISS NORTON TO RESUME
WORK IN THE PHYSICAL
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT
President Leon R. Meadows
Alexander to Be Chairman of;
Physical Education
icufty is consider-
r that of last, due
lily increasing stu-
to a number of
the summer.
nil
he
!t
G
a ma r in
ered. Mr.
aring com-
Ph.D. in
eorce Pea-
. u . I enn
the department.
? from a similar i
Memorial ITnH
i h
Ided
nil I'l
rersity,
Pt far
the US
1 Will M
.D. from
has been
ulty. Dr.
hemistry.
m as re-
1 Chemi-
Homecoming Program
11:00?Meeting in Austin
Auditorium (short meeting).
Luncheon ? Following pro-
gram in Austin Auditorium.
Afternoon?Football game
and dancing schedule.
Note?Be sure to write if at-
tending Luncheon.
DR. L. R.
SHIP YWCA
"Life's Golden Candlesticks" Is
Subject of Message
COURSE IN SCOUT Norman Cordon Thrills
Large Audience With a
DelightfulPerformance
AT COLLEGE HERI
CLASSES TO BE HELD
IN AUSTIN BUILDING
Dr. Hilldrup To Be Chairman of
Scout Leadership Training
Life's Golden Candlesticks
the theme of an inspiring me
brought to the students of
Carolina Teachers College at
was
ssage
East
Yes-
:i. who comes
ion at the Uni-
his degree of
by from that
y of Valdosta,
i master a de-
abody I Jollege,
home eeooom-
has been teach-
llege in Michi-
Dr. I K. Meadows
(in September 2s T
ills! itlltioll.
ifiicially welcomed the Freshmen to K.C.T.C.
sis is his fourth year as president of this
i
Br
rii.D.
Mack;
M.A
Miss
gaget
Peab
Dr
Peab
Alar
)W11.
University of Chicago, a
-t in biology, lakes the place
?ience department left vaeant
resignation of Miss Jessie
and 'Miss Mary Caughey,
roni Columbia, substitutes for
Lorraine Hunter, who is en-
in graduate study at George
?iy College this year.
W. A. Browne. Ph.D George
?? College, follows Mr. Le-
Stephan who resigned last
spring. Dr. Browne comes from
the State Teachers College at
N icogdoehes, Texas.
Miss Lena Ellis. MJL, Western
Kentucky State Teachers College,
Bowling Green, Ky takes the place
in the commerce department left
teant by the resignation of Miss
Maude Adams, now at the Woman's
("ulleire. Greensboro.
Miss Mary 1). Dormer, a graduate
of Peabody Conservatory of Music,
Baltimore, takes the place of Miss
Dora E, Meade. who is on leave of
absence from the department of
music
Miss Parmelia Gwynn, Yanccy-
ville, X. C, is substituting in the
art department for Dr. Dorothy
Please turn to page two)
Freshmen Welcomed
By President Meadows
OHM DBEST
10 BE DISTRIBUTED
AGAIN THIS YEAR
ler Service Sunday evening, Oetober
3, by President Leon It. Meadow
"I have chosen a figurative sub-
ject began Dr. Meadows, "from
which I hope to draw literal truths
Taking his topic from the twelfth
verse of the first chapter of Revela-
tion, he compared the seven golden
candlesticks to life?each
stick standing for a trait that makes
a strong character.
First, he spoke of light of in-
telligence; second, the light of free-
dom; third, the light of courage,
which is made possible only through
the acquisition of the second quality :
fourth, the light of tolerance; fifth,
the light of industry; sixth, the light
of fellowman. through which one at-
tains the highest goals of Life; and
seventh, the light of service.
"Serve those who want to serve
you and through that you will learn
to serve others, stated the speaker.J ,
' ce'
candle-1??? "?
work with Scout
J
"When a superintendent
employs a man to teach
i aese seven cnaraeteriSties,
eluded Dr. Meadows, "are the
con-
even
qualities which
character1
mak(
a
September 28 Given Over To
Freshmen Registration
Freshman
year's work on
President L. !
Week' opened this
September 28, when
. Meadows gave a
welcome to the throng of fresh-
men who had been arriving since
Sunday. These students gathered
MENTAL FATIQUE TO
BE RELIEVED BY MASK
in the Robert H. Wright Building.pictures of Interesting Events
at 2 :30 for their first formal meet- Worth Money
ing. After his words of welcome, -
President Meadows introduced the
r i i tA tt t t Each week, the Teco Echo's pic-
facultv members, and Dr. it. ,1. Me- . ?? ? -? ? , r- ?
jture magazine. Collegiate Digest,
Ginnis explained the plan of faculty! win be rpad by thp studl,nts of Emt
counsellors, a plan of recent years j Carolina Teachers College.
The Collegiate Digest will present
picture news of important and un-
IMPROVEMENTS
OVER THE SUMMER
Pavement Now Extends To
Training School
under which each freshman has his
own adviser who takes a personal
interest in his problems.
In his address, President Meadows
welcomed the freshmen to Green-
ville, to the campus, and its privi-
leges, to the body of students they
will become part of, and to the op-
portunities lying before them for
sound work and preparation for
special service in life.
President Meadow's chief counsel
was to utilize time well, observe the
college regulations, and be loyal to
the institution in every way, exer-
cise courage in all things, and strive
to develop character along with de-
velopment in knowledge.
Since last spring numerous im-
provements and repairs have taken
place on the campus which will
better the living conditions and give
more conveniences to both students
and faculty.
The paving, which was started
last year, is now completed and hard
surface roads extend around the in-
firmary, to the Training School,
and from the back campus to Eighth
Street.
Extensive renovations have also
taken place in numerous halls and
other buildings on the campus.
DR. FLANAGAN MARRIES
RUTH E. PICKELSIMER
Were Married in Georgetown,
Kentucky
usual developments in education,
science, sports, extra-curricular ac-
tivities, faculty and student projects,
and the hundreds of other activities
that make up the college community.
ECTC students are urged to send
in their pictures of important and
interesting events on the campus to:
Collegiate Press, Box 472, Madison,
Wisconsin. Three dollars is paid
for each photo accepted for publica-
tion.
Minneapolis, Minn. ? (ACT) ?
A new oxygen mask to protect
mental workers from fatigue caused
by tliinking was described to the
American Psychological Associa-
tion by Dr. Arthur G. Bills of the
University of Cincinnati.
Delivering to the breather a
combination of about 50 per cent
pure oxygen mixed with air, the
mask's use cuts in half the number
of pauses per minute that come to
persons doing brain work. These
pauses are the result of mental
fatigue?the brain taking a short
rest.
The new oxygen mask is the final
step in a series of experiments
which appear to prove the theory
that fatigue is not due so much to
the brain becoming "tired" as to
failure of the blood to supply all
the oxygen the brain wanted. Dr.
Bills has been testing this idea for
several years.
A brain institute which will make
Washington the world capital for
the study of the brains of animals
and humans is being established at
Georgetown University.
The elementary course in SCOUi
leadership training to be offered at
East Carolina Teachers College will
consist ot a study of the organiza-
tion and management of the Scout
troop, and of the Scout's place in
the community.
All the boys of the college are in-
vited to attend, and find out more
about Scout work. There are more
than 2,100 Scouts in twenty-two
counties of Eastern North Carolina.
Prospective teachers should be pre-
pared to work with these boys.
School superintendents bow real-
ize the importance of this training
and are asking for men who will
Superintendent
II. Rose, of Creenviile. said
recently
of cliOi
in the schools over which he has
jurisdiction, he wants not only a
man who is good in the classroom.
but also a man who is a community
asset. The people of America have
now come to regard scouting as the
greatest educational force for good
in the nation, outside of the school
system. Therefore, a good school
man who knows something about
ut leadership will usually re-
tbe call over.the man
knows nothing about scouting.
too, learning how to become a
leader is somewhat of an t
tion in itself
Speaking along the same line.
D. IT. Conley, Superintendent of
Pitt County Schools, has said that
"In the training of men who ex-
pect to take school positions, it is
very necessary that they be trained
in fields other than actual class-
room work. It has been my ex-
perience that most communities de-
sire young men who can not only
teach boys and girls in the class-
room, but who can also be leaders
in community life outside of the
school. In recent years we have
had many calls for men to serve as
Scout Masters in connection with
their school work. Therefore, in
employing assistant principals ant
coaches for our schools, we endeavor
to get men who will take an active
leadership in scout work. I think,
therefore, it would be a good idea
for teacher-training insitutions to
emphasize the development of quali-
fication for leadership in activities
other than classroom teaching
In order that such training might
be available to the students, the
meetings will be held on Thursday
evenings at 7 :30 in room 211 Austin
Building. At each meeting, a special
speaker will talk for about thirty
Metropolitan Opera Singer Gives
Excellent Performance in
Robert H. Wright Building
VOICE ?H0WN TO BE ONE
OF POWER AND BEAUTY
Cordon is
Norman
ritone ot
iat ion
Carolina
audit nee
Native of
Carolina
Eastern
("ordon,
the Met
.
tar -
politan Op
nativi
delighted
of il.
:Il
pi
ege " pie,
and visitors from
hen he a ppeared on
-day night, October
:i a
NORMAN CORDON
FRESHMEN ARE
WELCOMED TO
COLLEGE BY YWCA
Entertain the Newcomers at the
"Y" Hut
in
Ml
?V at
the ?,
Jo ,
ins program,
es of material
to be one of p,
who
hell,
cotlt
uca-
The Young Woman
Association, under tie
of its president,
('hnsl tan
leadership
Elizabeth Cope-
ongi
H
land from Ahoskie, began its active
work for the year during Freshman
dith
ma ?
mat
Pur
call-
art.
1 that opened tin- series f
a Called back again ai
by storms of applause M
n responded gener, . Ij
- He accompani, ! hima
?ee of them.
('ordon gave his audieu
Variety in his nmtrrum hi
arious typ
I his voice
?auty.
group of popular numbers
li, with which the sin
his program, probably led
with the audience,
preferred the four
or one of the early group
? first, and perhaps the mo
1' group, because of its d
toi a pur quality of tone, w;
up of numbers from Eland
it
ill
in
in
though
"Art
11.
aid
l.ullv. and Scarlatti. The
me
were
application ot great
Civen
1a
til.
September
(Please turn to page two)
The friends of Dr. Beecher Flana-
gan of the Social Science Depart-
ment will be interested to learn of
his marriage to Ruth E. Pickel-
simer of Greenville.
The ceremony was performed in
Georgetown, Kentucky on Septem-
ber 20.
Mrs. Flanagan was a graduate
of ECTC, and is at present teaching
in Smithfield in the Science De-
partment.
She is a niece of Mr. P. W. Pickel-
simer of the Geography Depart-
ment.
Graduates of 1936-37 reported
placed to date, September 23, 1937.
A.B. Graduates ? Mary Lee
Penny, Buekhorn; Virginia Pierce,
married; Julia Pollock, Comfort;
Lydia Purser, Rocky Mount; Lucile
Raines, Cleveland; Josephine
Banes, Barnesville; Margaret Rawls,
Smithfield; Mabel Rich, Herring;
Nellie Ricks, Mingo; Martha D.
Rogers, Deep Run; Julia E. Rouse,
Long Creek-Grady; Nannie Row-
lett, Beulaville Susan Rose, Aurora.
Betty Salisbury, Long Creek-
Grady; Mrs. Eunice Sanders, marT
ried; Martha Scoville Louisburg;
Nettie Brett Sewell, Rich Square;
Mrs. Elsie Simpson, Lemon
Springs; Francis Sinclair, Saratoga;
Louise Sitterson, Pinetops; William
Sledge, Roxboro; Alice H. Smith,
Woodleaf; Julia L. Smith, Pike-
ville; Ruth Smith, Falkland; Viola
Smith, married; Frances B. Spain-
hour, Mineral Springs; Inez
Stevens, South Mill
11118.
Lois Strickland, Four Oaks;
Nora B. Stephenson, Powells Point;
Durward Stowe, Greenville; Mar-
garet Stroud, Gaston; Ruth Styron,
Micro; Camille Swindell, Louis-
burg; Hazel Tart, Piney Grove; Mil-
dred Tatum, White Oak; Jennie G.
Taylor, Whiteville; Evelyn Thomp-
son, New Hope; William Tolson,
Ruffin; Louise Tuten, Wagram;
Margaret Walker, Pantego.
Catherine Wallace, Winterville;
Nola Walters, Weeksville; Margaret
Warren, Rowland; Effie L. Watson,
Falkland; Florence Wells, Old
Dock; Blanche White, Winterville;
Margaret Whitehead, married;
Thelma Whitehead, Belvoir; George
S. Willard, Jr Chas. C. Coon;
Edna Williams, Union; Elease Wil-
liams, Falkland; Dorothy Wilson,
Belhaven; Mary Helen Wilson,
Goldsboro; Annie E. Windley,
Kenansville; Marion C. Wood,
Goldsboro; Ruth C. Wood, Parkton;
Sara M. Woodard, Smithfield; Vir-
ginia Woodbury, Leland; Agnes
Worthington, Long Creek-Grady;
Annie Worthington, Grimesland.
Two-Year Graduates ? Ida Lane
Bass, Mt. Pleasant; Annie L. Britt,
Piney Grove; Grace Burrus, Hat-
teras; Ruby Cone, Harris; Lucile
Cox, Happy Home; Mary B.
Edmondson, Everetts; Lucy Fouts,
Busick; Mrs. Connie Hargett, White
Oak; Eleanor Harrington, Merry
Hill; Mattie Ipock, Trenton; Wil-
lie Jackson, Gaton; Edna E. Kirby,
Meadow; Marceline Langston, Pine
Level; Joseph Marsh, Maury;
Nyda Robinson, Clement; Louise
Shackelf ord, Walstonburg; Ellen
Stewart, Boone Trail.
Graduates of 1936-37 reported
placed to date, October 1, 1937.
A.B. Graduates ? Margaret
Garner, Shoals High School; Melva
Johnson, Penderlea; Kathleen
Robertson, Knotts Island; Virginia
Claris Smith, Wilson's Mills High
School.
week. On Monday
and Tuesday, September z?, the
members of the senior cabinet, wear-
ing their blue and white badges, met
the new students at the trains and
buses to welcome ami direct them
to the- College, and to help them
find their living quarters.
The association opened the "Hut
for parties for the Freshmen on
Tuesday and Wednesday nights.
The "Hut which has been re-1
decorated since last year with new j
curtains and rugs, was attractive-
ly decorated with fall flowers. Be-
fore an open fire the new comers
joined in playing "get-acquainted'5
games and dancing.
On Wednesday, from ten to four
and Thursday from four to six, the
Association held Open House in the
"Hut" for the new students.
Many towns of North Carolina are
represented on the cabinet of the
YWCA. The members are: Eliza-
beth Copeland, president, from
Ahoskie; Marie Dawon, vice pres-
ident, from Alliance; Prue Xewby,
secretary, from Hertford; Georgia
Suggs, treasurer, from Hookerton;
Rebecca Watson, from Jonesboro;
Kathleen Strickland from Nash-
ville; Susan Evans from St. Pauls;
Louise Britt from Colerain; Maggie
Crumpler from Fayetteville; Edna
Earl Perry from Louisburg; Cather-
ine Cheek from Graham; Fannie
Brewer from Clarksville, Tennessee.
ly to please the most
musically inclined mem
singer
ritieal
ot the
of the audience.
Two numbers from Gounod's Faust
gave Mi. Cordon opportunity to
sing in the role in which he L per-
haps most famous?that of Mephisto-
pheles.
The Cincinnati Post said of him
when he appeared in that role in
Cincinnati: "Cordon as Mephisto-
pheles rated the audience's choicest
applause of bouquets, stopping the
show time after time The Cin-
cinnati Enquirer commented : "His
Mephistopheles is an extra-
ordinary one, which the audknee
cheered to the roof
Selections given by Hans
Heidemann, Mr. Cordon's ac-
complished accompanist were also
well received.
1 hough Mr. Cordon has no! ap-
peared often here in his home sec-
tion
ga :
cin
the
kej
MISS JESSIE MACK
MARRIED THIS SUMMER
Marries Anthony J. Loudis of New
York City
The friends of Miss Je9sie Mack,
who resigned last spring from the
faculty of the science department
at the college, will be interested
to learn of her marriage in August
to Mr. Anthony J. Loudis of New
York City.
The ceremony was performed in
New York.
Mr. Loudis is a member of the
music department of the University
of Delaware at Newark, Del.
They are at home on Orchard
Drive, Newark.
Miss Mack had taught for three
years at the college and had made
a host of friends on the campus and
in the town.
ince the days of his fame be-
, he in well known in operatic
lea in all the leading cities of
country. In fact, he has been
t so busy in his engagement1
with the Detroit Civic Opera, the St.
Louis Grand Opera Company, The
Chi-ago Grand Opera Company and
the famous New York Metropolitan
Opera Association that he has had
little time for tours.
He has recently completed a ;39
week radio engagement, and returned
from a South American trip, just
in time to reach Greenville for tho
ECTC concert. He returned at ence
to New York to fly by sleeper plane
to an engagement in grand opera in
(Please turn to page two)
Notice!
Beginning Sunday, October
3, J. D. "Swede" Alexan-
der, Athletic Director, East
Carolina Teachers College,
will take charge of the Sunday
afternoon sports review over
radio station WFTC, Kinston,
N. C, at 3:15 p.m.
Mr. Alexander, who for the
past 20 years has been con-
nected with interscholastic and
intercollegiate athletics as
player, coach and director,
will review the week's sports
from every angle.
Station WFTC invites all
Eastern North Carolina to tune
in for the E.C.T.C. Sports Re-
view next Sunday at 3:15 p.m.
,y Amna





.
I
1
,S
PAGE TWO
THE TECO ECHO
October 9, 1937
A,
The TEGQ ECHO
BAST (MJtOLlAi. TMGHMS COLLEGE
Published Biweekly by the Stud-nxls of East Caroli
Teachers College.
Una
STAFF
C, Ray Pbuettb
M uuorie Watsos
. Kditur-hi-Chief
Business Manager
COLLEGE FACULTY
WORK AND PLAY
Many Study While Others Visit
I! UJVE1 11 i.
Leo Bt rks
I : b m;snk Cheek
ASSOClA IF EDITORS
Georgia Sii
Sabah Ann Maxwii.i,
I'atm Midvrvm:
Lester UimxuorK
VDYER'l
ffAsrci Page
L i1. is ReBabkkb
. 'UM. E V A N S
V; MANAGERS
F.tuki. Lee Bykd
l.i 111.1.1: Johnson
Caboxyjs Lamb
1:
? u. Staff: LaRue Mooring. Mary Williams. Ina
Ma Pierce, Ruth Creekmoore, Mable Owens, Ethel Padgett,
Dorothy Hollar, Eodie Hodges, Herbert Wilkerson, Jeter
Oakley, Geraldine Harris. Ruth Phillips.
Subsc
Posto
1 ?:
Prio
$1.00 per College Year
Numbers 68, 182
Room 25
Dean of Women
MISS ANNIE L. MORTON
Entered as seeond-elass matter December o 1025, at the V. S.
Postoffiee, Greenville, N. ( under the act of March 3, 1879.
1937 Member 1938
ftssociatod Colteftiate Press
Distributor of
Golle6iate Di6est
The members of the faculty spent
the summer months doing various
interesting things, some studying.
others teachingin the ECTC summer
school or somewhere else, while still
other rested.
President .Meadows remained oa
the campus must of the time, super-
vising the many improvements being
made in buildings and grounds.
There were representatives from
the faculty at numerous universi-
ties.
Three members were at Teachers
College,Columbia. They were Miss
Clark. Miss Williams, and Miss
Johnson, who completed her work
for her M.A. degree.
Miss Iloltelaw and Mr. Deal
studied at New York University,
where Miss Holtzclaw completed
her preliminaries for Dr. degree.
Mr. Wright studied at the Uni-
verit v ot ('hicago.
Mr Picklesimer and Miss Hughes
studied at Peabody College, where across tins negro dance a
Mi- Hughes completed work for men!?Danoe begins at eight
her M.A. degree. u u,is wh.n voui
K A ,?i L, slated for production. . . . Pean
DOWN State's and Alpha Chi Kh? Fred
d p n a n w a YiWariag anl (ianAT"1" 'v "n!v
D K J r J Tf r 1 j bright spots tn the long Varsity
show . ? - originally, that picture
By FRED WITTNER and KEL was to be based on the WiacoMin
y anAMS Haresfoot Club's unique motto, AH
t ? , iritnt, Press Our Girls Are Men. Vet Everyone's
(A.socated (ollg 1H p peder80n
Correspondent-) If ?? r .
RACKET-SMASHEB ???? H' freimmirj imrvej toi
Buater Thomas E. DeweyItan, Warner suteequen
has acquired "le nomme de guerre writing by Iff. Y. .? Jerrj
rfI"3E Enemy No. 1 to New York and others produced the final result.
Racketeers. Obtaining hi- B.A. at
Dean of Men
Michigan 23) am
1 his law degree A X1AV DYNASTY
at Columbia F. ('25), Dewey served Two Princeton men have entered
as F S At. D. A. and practiced ihe picture magazine held to chal-
privately before Cornell's N V. lenge the ultra-successful reign of
Governor Lehman called him in t" Yale-inspired Time, Inc. Alpha
play "Bogey Man' to Metropolitan Delta Phi's Henry Luce and the late
gangsters. In hi- two years a- Briton Hadden, B.M.O.C. of tl
1 o?i?r hp wined out lli ,?!? f 'o. Jrr-r launched Tinn
' special prosecutor, be wip
loan sharks, Lueiano's vice ring, and in L923, following it m
the restaurant, poultry, policy and years with the equallj
I baking racket Now running for Fortune, "March ol rim
New York. lonvicted thugs Now Nassau's 'h;
D. A. in
won't believe be once
-am: solo in Lj
W l-i'liee
Holm
tad Lift
. Payne and A
1 '32 ). iniectei
Lookin' Over
the
Campus
With C. Ray Pruette
the Protestant Episcopal Church of fresh blood into the Street & Smii
St. Matthew's and St. Timothy's. 'pulp group, have transformed Pi
THE LIGHTER SIDE
t?1 a ? ? k.
DR. REBARE
Appiers" mav
?lit
Highlight of the Week Oil 1 ItOH d-
way was the long-delayed opening ol QHATTER
Ithe new super-hydraulically-coiossalj fc Carolina
I into a general picture magazine in
a three-way circulation war with legiana s
and Iowa's Lot I: ? among
fav
his summer, y
? dropped to thii I
Johnny Trotter, college crew. S
international Casmo, with Michi-l Qu viih lUru cheese radio mQO& var;(,v
gan's George Olsen waving the baton gh nU UMy an,ing mor? Inajoritv of t . ?
your columnist came over bis smooth-sweet hand, the best g. Un havin 1 uit(l njs ?gwr3g? was
dvertise- of three musical crews playing for jn(qiU for Gon2afft8 Bing estine to note th
dancing tli
ere. . . . Maurice Evan
Ci
ov in
'Pennies from Heaven standard turn
Tin
ee program am
o clocK ,
I returned to the boards for a repeat . .
Mi-e- Coates and Wahl .pent ' , "?'? y rl,l.u, "f 1llis'iurh1 ' directed at a college audience will
i vi. - ? honey let's go home. Richard II. . ? ? Messrs. Shubert , ? T t
eht weeks at Northwestern L m- ? r , ' , -i continue on the air this falilack
" I he Show I- On with- , . , .
i Oakie revive1- hi
TO THE FRESHMEN
ver-ity where they could see the
"blue water and white sailboats" on
: Lake Michigan. Later they visited
two former ECTC teachers, Miss
Catherine Cassidy, in Cleveland,
Ohio, and Miss Bonnwit in Yan-
i wart. Ohio.
Mi-s Grigsby enjoyed courses at ?,(,rs 0Hj ,on'r know
University of Wisconsin and en-
Mary had a little watch.
She swallowed it, it's gOBe,
And every time that Mary walks,
Time marches on!
Note: Thev tell me time stag-
rejuvenate
new cast including the Howard
'College
F
Brothers and York and Ki
for a
month's trvout before putting u ???? , ,
Varsity Show emanates ?
the road
it on
other worthwhile Lets
feasor Goodman continuing to lay I College Faculty Is Increased
it in the groove . . . the Friday night By Ten Add:
ie road . . . otner worinwniie oeia ? i 1 1
i ii 'different campus each week, ami
now on tour which you may be able . . ni -xr ? .
. . , . , ' . " e i North arolma s Hal Kemp retain-
to catch include the Hart-Kaufman
Easl Carolina Teachers College is the students' college. The most im
e , ,i ? .i t i i ti,? f i, ioyed seeing the beautiful city of , , i. i -
portant representation of the study body is the freshman class. J he treli J ? ' ? ? . gy the By, I saw Ruth agle
' , ? , ,r, Madison while Mis INewell studied ? ?
on have four years of college life before them to do as they please. v bat Cornell ' tn's summer. She began teaching at
to do while in college may determine their worth in terms; M; QTmm stn,iied at the Chi- J PolksviBe, and says, "she has her
ir; - ity of North Carolina and Miss ; little darlings eating out of her
?You Can't Take It With You
'Tovarich" and "Yes, My Darlim
'?? his Friday night spot with Alice
Fave remaining until the first of t
ie
year.
(Continued from page one)
Schnyder, on leave for the
quarter.
Daughter . . . two other musiea .
. , M1 i ? I Eddy Ihichm
still holding out here are babes m
. Massachusetts l'harms Mrs. Louella
M.
ens at the Plaza
iere in two weeks. . . . Princeton
thev pha
of life and living. We are glad to greet the freshmen because they bring Yerai, ,
with them an abundant youth that is exhilarating, and because they stand ; (iolphin studied at Duke University. 1 hand Poor things!
on the threshold of life eager to live. May their lives, as well as the
college life, be enriched and the opportunity for service hroadene
years of mutual understanding and kindly helpfuln
Dk. Herbert Rid
. , , ? . here in two weeks. 1 rinceton
Arm- ami the new Virginia . . . . . u ? , ,
. ?? e ?v Brooks Bowman, who penned the
tommy Dorseys recording ot xou , , ? ? "
, , ? J t i successful triangle' lubtunea, r.at
And I Know and (roodtve Jonan, . , ,? , . i.
r i i i of the bun and JLove and a JLnme,
"Goodhv from ; :
ell dai
Varsity Show, Warner
, iseveral seasons hack, is scrihblini
makes swell dancing for anv campus . . .
0, . tor the movies . . . ditto Harvard
George Peabody College
tuting for Miss Eunia
Miss McGhee i- on i-av,
uate study.
Miss LuciH N
leave of ahsen
tml winter quarter 1937, f
M
f. ,r
. who wa
:ng the
Y
ell as the; Miss GorreU studied piano under tv Varsitv s!l?u, Warner's t OVM8 ' ; ; 'iltt0 Ilrvr?? ?nd winter quarter 1937, folio .
-d by four Conradi at Chatauqua, New York. w&a j oml)arras,e(i t1(. ()?iu.r day distorted version of Hasty Pudding 'U)h.nu 7'('1 w.h" P08 ?Ty an automobile accident in which sh
Several members of the faculty j wak(i(1 iu offiJe to Mask & Wig, Black Friar Waa-Mu ?? ? v'hu" tlU ari "Iwm injured, ha- recovered and re-
ivl)? nuight at various institutions. Dr. -it ? ? i i et al has started a revival of college B ' ' turned this fall to resume her worl
AKkEK. & : r t mv ,naiii was waiting calmly . ? cu-rv- ri-r i ? t j
olay taught in the science depart? ? - Imusicalsm meina irv. Paramount bWUMtr-vH 1 : m the phvsieal education depart
, ? ment at Duke University j Dr. Bang- in Hnc, when a little freshman I gniversai each having one Died-in-the-wool "Shaggers" andlment.
rseives tor , visitinic Professor of English looked at me and said, "wefl, what???
a
provi K : ;
made for
have eomi
winter.
dining i
infin . ? .
a wel.
itn
to be congratulated upon your opportunitv to fit yourselves for , .? . ?? . ,
- ' ? ?' ? ? ban was visiting Professor oi English looked at me and sai
isefulness to your fellowmen: the state of North Carolina hasLf thl. Cniversity of Alabama; Mr.L0 you want, squirt
?: with excellenl facilities for this purpose; provision has been Tabor, at Peabody College and Miss '
the phvsieal well-being of those who live on the campus: yon Notion in the demonstration school;
1 ? . ? ?. . rp htt I J wonder whether 1 hidasti runs or
hich are well lighted and. in l niversity of Cennessee. -Miss,
, ? . i-i ?? i Frowning wa- on the faculty at.wa'k-
meals which are served in beautiful
1937-38 FRESHMEN DIRECTORY
Sarah Evans, St. Pauls, father, j lahville, father, mail carrier; Lois j bookkeeper; Dorothy Ann P
real estate agent; Daisy Parker, Co- Willdamson, Kenansviiie, father, simer, father, teacher; Held S
ather. farmer; Jacksie Dan- sheriff; Ruth Bray, Elizabeth City, father; Margie Soivev.
tleto
able and attractive buildings wl
I. ,i? 1 l V 1 haVe g '?,? ,
lavidson t otlege and after tne closei
?; an up-to-date laundry enables yon to keep neat; a modern i ,? i i- ) r Roimvotois i i u , v i
i ? ? i ot net woik ana miss naimvacei s j notice that Hampton Koe has
?? . physician and nurses, promotes health, while a physical term in Greenville, the two were atL . m. i. r;ru l
. tment helps build up a sound body for a trained mind; Crossnore in the mountain ?P a case again! U ho w ,th 1 With L- nnlaii Vall)(,(, t ather mer.
a girl! chant; Grace Wood, Vancebnro, er; Eizabeth Mas
father, farmer: Margerite Kone- farmer; Grace Smith. Fu
Warsaw, father, farmer; Ella
Elm City, father, farmer: Va.sii-
.1.
father. Texaco Oil Co danie Ev- vertising manager; .Tai
Robersonv
E "l summer school
ied library furnishes approximately 25,tMK) volumes for your Among th
profit; a campus that is at all seasons a place of beauty; and faculty were: Dr. Adam Mr. Hen
. .i ' i .i i . derson, Dr. frank. Dr. Rebarker
?et the needs id the students. , ??? ???
Dr. McGmnis, Miss Graham, Misi
fath.
mrn.
arm-
atii
mert
ti
!eonLst : Dor
?runietr emi
- ex tlent ly prepared to me
naturally arises: what will you do with these opportun- i i) 'vu
You
1 (
t with false teeth and gay, Warsaw, fattier, farmer; Ella Spring father, farmer; Theodora Mae T
walk cm a wooden leg, but you can't Marshall, Washington, father, mer- Blaekwelder, Morganton, father, l sali,
? r- j, I . chant; Sally Mary Mathias Orates, chemical engineer; Mary trances Evelyn
ley be properly used bv you or will thev be wasted? Will Mr Cummings Miss Rose Mr ?Ut " g ' ' ' "father, fanner: Helen King. Gates, Ervin, Shelby, father, farmer; Ma- tobaco
? that the state of North Carolina i- making in you yield Browning, Dr. Hiilgrup, Mr Hollar, ? ll"n (father, farmer: Effie Lewi Farm- mie Thomas, Earmville, father. Earmer
? , ?, , ' " , I ?r.m Dr Hnvnoii Mr, i ville. father, farmer; Qheba Harris, farmer: Larson btephenson, ood- pnetor; Elizabeth
r will it be a partial or compel failure! As a mean- ol ? lanagan, i'i. naynes, mrs.
? , , , Bloxton Dr Snamder Miss Red- 1 sometimes
ihzeyour time wisely may I suggest the following: ? i-u
. , , wine. Mrs. Savage, Miss Hvman. dames Smith does thi
your intimate associates with the greatest ot care; much
ft1 i ,ii ii
er. father.
Ven on Ty
W illianis.
land, father, antique repairer: Grange, father fan
M
t a
father, merchant; Othelia Hearn. fa
wonder whether Chapel Hill, father, farmer; Esper
Nan Bunn, Spring Hope, father. Marjorie Bamhill, Bethel, father,I Early, Ahoskie
ather, Mildred Tavfor. South M
lg apple -il" "oiu. OJ
li,? PlnmK Mnai i,t' thotto . c ? ? t farmer: Louise Woodard, Kenlv, tanner: Marjorie ??.
, all!l miss i lumn. mosi Ol inese or throws his hodv out of joint. i . , , ? , ? ? i ? i . , ? , .
ss ot failure may be attributed to your response to this in- saw the pageant "The Lost Colony " ' father, merchant; utheha Hearn. tarmer; marjorie W nitenurst, Betn- tanner: Lena Beii Davenport, 1
I at Manteo. ' " .Monroe, father, salesman: Annie el, father, farmer: Myra Godfrey, per. father, farmer; Mary E
A travelogue of the experiences of WEATHER?Quite cloudy and wilkerson, Rosboro, father, farm- Jonesboro, father, tax-lister; Julia j Edenton, father, teaeher; Ha
the faculty members would be inter- rftiny, my Dears! er; Kathleen Potter. Kelly, father. Rives, Jonesboro, father, merchant; Eneoe, Littleton, father, farm
testing on' the movie screen Air garmer; Shelton Quinn, Chinqua- Carrie Mai Mann, Lake Landing. Katherine Hurst, Marines fatf
3-?Kngage m some extra-curricu a activities; contacts and experience- , , , , ? , ! ? t i . i ci: i ,i r: i. rstlu? ? in i ?ii p?u n , , ,?
. Gulledge could give somethmg about Who know- Marv 1 von Shot- Pm? school teacher; Elizabeth Dick- tamer, doctor; Kuth rowell, Cole- tanner: Helen elverton, B
n this way may be of inestimable value to you m later Me. ,i - r ? j ? ! '
. J (, -X,A ?ghi nd tate and Alnss, wl, mJx rresi(J(iutonodav!
your lite, as quickly as possible, to tlie College commnmty; jSammon, about the mountains ot
junctn a.
2 Enow your teachers well; associate with them as much as possible;
they can and will assist you in many ways.
gain
4Ad
learn the regulation- and keep them; play the game fair; as a person is in Western North Carolina.
College, so will he he after College. Atr tiu' l'lost' of til0 summer ses-
5 -Waste your money if you must, but do not waste your time; it is :iK M? JenkiK! vi?ite. in ?t
, , ' ii - ?, A ?, , ington itv, at the beach and the,
your - valuable asset. Be grateful for the privilege of hard work. Virginia mountains, and Misses1
Peesident Leon R. Meadows.
will write "Looking over
21 Campus"?so adios !
Ross and Lewis, in New York.
Miss Chariton was in Savannah,
WHY NOT MAKE GOOD? Georgia: Miss Wilson, in Durham
. , . , , land Chicago; Miss Ivuvkendahl, in
( ontrary to the old adage that opportunity comes only once is the fact K(.utlu.ky. Mks Faison in Xorth
that many little opportunities are ours every day. Speaking in the Ian- Carolina Miss Norton in Texas
guage of our old schools, we have a (dean slate upon which to write our j Tennessee, and Eastern cities.
year record. We stand at the beginning of a new school vear so full of The members of the administra-
rich opportunities for each of US. Itiou. staff took their vacations scatter-
Ti'i I , r ? i I , d from place to place. Mr. McGin-
W hy not purpose to show our parents and friends that we can make ? -t ,? ? T31 ? -d ,
ms visited friends m Blowing Rock
good? Why not determine to prove ourselves worthy of the confidence a?d Atlantic Beach, where Miss
that friends have in us? A good scholastic standing is very desirable Seovifie spent most of her vacation.
and often facilitates our progress after we leave college. But while we Miss Ross visited in Asheville and
are about it. it would also be a good thing to make friends, develop points of
character such a.s honesty, sincerity, and kindness, and to make our-
selves better citizens.
Now is the time to start the year right, and if we religiously follow
this practice during the school year we will have nothing to regret next
June and truly our time will not have spent in vain.
en. Weldon, father, supt. of brick rain, father, farmer and salesman; ('reek, father, fanner; Novine
work ; Margaret lludgens. Pollocks- Until Mooring. Snow Hill, father. M?.re. Micro, father, farmer; D? r -
ville, manager of sawmill: Elizabeth farmer; Alary Helen Boykin, Wil-1 Bialoek, Lueama, father, farmer;
This is the last time this writer , Hanvll. Powellsville; Melba dor- tiaiuston. father, merchant; Addie Maud Taylor. Deven. father, mer-
the don. Mount Olive, father, farmer Lee Meador, WilBamston, Jimmie chant; JnJia Edwards, Tabor ?
and merchant; Elizabeth MeLe- Ward, Rose Hill, father, merchant; J father, railroad agent; Ham
more. Roseboro, farmer and mer- Charlie J. Frazzell, Richlands. faHinson. Kanston, father, road ?
chant ; Berline Faircloth. Rosebi.ro. ther. farmer: Clayton Guthrie,lgpeetor; Ruth Hardy. LtaGrang
father, farmer and merchant; Bet-jHarfeers Island, father, fisherman ; Frances Bunting. Palmvra, fa-
sy Morris. Spring Hope, father. Merwin Froz.ell. Richlands. father ther. clerk j Kv Amand. Wilming-
elerk; Esther Koo&ce, Richlands. fanner; Dalton Wainwright, ton. father. Coast Line attornev ;
father, farmer; Erlene Sawyer tirimesland. father, farmer: Alton, Maisie Castlehurv. Apex, father,
Powells Point, father, farmer and; Eugene Mills. Grimeslaml, father farmer: Laura Keith. Apex ; fat! er,
merchant; RuBelle Mills. Green-j farmer; Jerome Donaldson, (liven farmer; Mary Elizabeth Parrior,
ville. father, farmer: Lillian Iliek-j ville. father, farmer: Ralph Hutch Willard. father, farmer; Eathyrn
man, Tabor City; Helen Daven- ington. Rockmgham. fatlier. mail Bland, Teachey. father, merchant;
Course In Scout Study
Scheduled At College Here
made tours of the Smoky Mountains
Park, and also visited New York
City. Mrs. Owens went to Charlotte
and Asheville on visits and Miss
Wadlington visited her family in
Kentucky. Miss Bowen visited in
Portsmouth, Va and also went to
New York Citv.
THIS IS YOUR CAMPUS!
For the next nine months this is going to be your campus and your
home. Won't you look after it as such?
Our campus was very pretty when we came bustling in last week. The
shrubbery was freshly trimmed and worked, the lawns were cut, the
paper was all picked up and there were no white streaks across a lawn
where there should have been grass. The old campus took a "new slant
on life while we were vacationing. Now, won't you help to keep this
"new slant" permanent. Won't you be a good citizen and work for its
upkeep ?
You may by:
1. Never throwing paper or other garbage on or near the college grounds.
2. Never pick or pull parts of any shrubbery.
3. Never "cut campus whatever might be the cause.
4. Never deteriorate any of the outdoor furniture placed here for your
enjoyment.
If you do this, cooperating with the members of the college staff, you
may be sure our campus will remain one of the prettiest in our state.
Remember, this is your campus!
Norman Gordon Thrills
Large Audience With A
Delightful Performance
(Continued from page one)
San Francisco. Then he wiF return
to New York for the Metropolitan
season.
As Mr. Cordon's childhood home
was in Washington, M. 0L, he has a
wide circle of friends and relatives
in this section, many of whom were
in the auditorium Tuesday night.
This first number of the enter-
tainment series will be followed by
others that will give equal pleasure
and profit to college audiences if
plans of the Entertainment Com-
mittee, under the Chairmanship of
Miss Ola Ross, work out satisf actor-
(Continued from page one)
minutes on a helpful topic. The
rest of the time will be devoted to
discussion and practice.
The programs are as follows:
October T?The Scouting objec-
tive and Program?Judge F. C.
Harding.
October 14?Troop and Patrol
Programs?W. L. Draper of Rocky
Mount; The Patrol Chit in scout-
ing, V. F. Sechriest of Rocky
Mount.
October 21?Running the Troop,
Brasel Lanier.
October 28?The Troop Commit-
tee, K. T. Futrelle.
November 4?Putting the Out in
scouting, Wyatt Brown (this meet-
ing may be held at the Boy Scouts'
Cabin).
November 11?The Good Turn in
Scouting in Its Relation to Citizen-
ship, Mayor M. K. Blount.
November 18?Dangers and Pit-
falls of Boys, Dr. Carl L. Adams.
November 22?Why Boys Drop
Out, Scout Executive Sigwald and
Jake Skinner.
December 2?An Outdoor Meeting
on Hiking.
December 9?The Scoutmaster's
Opportunity to Produce Men pf
Character Trained for Citizenship,
Rev. W. A. Ryan.
December 16?Final Meeting.
I
port. Kinston; Wista Covington
Dillon: Elizabeth Moody. Dillon:
Joyce Campbell. Lueama. father,
farmer; Willard Wooten. father.
farmer; Maey Woolard, father,
banker; Madoline Woolard, father,
farmer; William Whitehurst. fa-
ther, bookkeeper and salesman.
Hilda Tew Clinton, father, farm-
er ; Tina Maye Luper, Cary, father,
foreman of State Farm; Myra
Humphrey, Richlands, father,
farmer; Lula Cameron, Cameron,
father, farmer; Hilda Pearl Davis,
Harkers Island, fishernfan; Evelyn
Davis. Beaufort, father, fish dealer;
Mary Frances Young, Angier, fa-
ther, surveyor; Helen Wdlloughby.
Kelford, father, telegraph opera-
tor ; Clara Reardon, Smithfield, fa-
ther, farmer; Geraldine Bullock,
Rocky Mount, father, farmer; Eth-
eleen Carr, New Hill, father, farm-
er; Waverly Hope D'Orsay, Chap-
anoke, father, actor; Nell Sessams
Newsame, Hanellsville, father,
farmer; Ramona Gillam, Hanells-
ville, father, merchant; Rena Ses-
same, Aubyville, father; Hazel Cul
carrier: Harvey Credle. Stranton.
father, farmer.
Freshmen from Greenville: Lil-
lian Abee. father, filling station op-
erator; Edith Allen, father, farm-
er; Pearlie Ward Barnhill. father-
farmer; Martin Beach, father, to-
bacconist; Irma Braxton. father,
farmer; Ruby Braxtnn, father,
farmer: John David Bridgers. fa-
ther, newspaperman; Patricia
Brooks, father, tobacco buyer;
Kathryn Davenport, father, mer-
chant; Jerome Donaldson, father,
farmer; Florence Dudley, father,
farmer; Mary Eakes. father, fann-
er; Margaret G. Hardy, father,
farmer j Belva Dare Harris, father,
deputy sheriff; Dorothy Harris, fa-
ther, sales manager; Hilda Her-
ring, father, tobacconist; Elizabeth
Holliday; Mary Lorraine Home,
father, druggist; Louise Hunter,
father, mechanic; Miriam James,
father, clerk j Ruby Kittrell, father,
farmer; Lucy Jane Mills, father,
farmer; Madeline Adams, Grimes-
land, father, farmer; Mildred Lan-
fley, father, farmer; Rosa Lee Mc
Hazel Outlaw, Seven Springs, fa
ther, farmer; Bernice Hey, Harris-
burg, father, farmer; Vera Ed-
monson; Katherine Dobson, Beu-
rr'pV" ' , ' xxewci U1- uc ?"?er, iarmer; Kosa L.ee Mc-
bert, balcon, father, mail carrierGowan, father, owner of garage
Lucy Jane Miols, father, farmer;
Eloise Mae Mills, father, farmer;
Leon Meadows, father, president of
E.C.T.C Gilbert Peele, Jr, father,
Dorothy Clark. Lewis. Founta
father, farmer: Barbara Smith. At-
lantic, father, fisherman; Mary
Elizabeth Beasiey. Lumbert-n. fa-
ther, farmer: Margaret MeDaniels,
Woodland, father, farmer; Nancy
X. Reid. Smithfield. father, auto-
mobile dealer: Mary Bailey. Selma.
father, farmer; Doris Woodard,
Kenly, father, farmer; Helen
Jones, Smithfield. father, farmer;
Myrtle Hopkins. Plymouth, father.
farmer; Dorothy E. Hathauky, Col-
umbia, father; Eugenia Saunder-
son. Lake Landing, father, farmer;
Xorma Lee Tyndall, Kinston. fa-
ther, farmer Margaret Hardy.
Greenville, father, farmer; Earn-
estine Hardy, Grimesland, father.
farmer; Ruby L. Smith. Winter-
ville; Mamie Whaley, Wallace, fa-
ther, farmer; Martha Gaskins,
Mewborn; Estelle Edwards, New-
port ; Eileen Parker Pake, Marshel-
bury, father, farmer; Catherine
Lowery, Trenton; father, farmer;
Jeneva Moore, Stokes, father, farm-
er; Martha Washington, Angier,
father, farmer; Mildred Briley,
Bethel, father, farmer; Bernice
Williamson, Cerro-Gordo, father,
farmer.
Note: The Freshmen Directory to be
continued in next
October 9, 1937
Ale
ST A
INTE,
Photography Oi
of Athlet
Mi
qu
i,
East
to '?
&
gjnnii
His
in 11
Fresh
: :
mo- ?
Din
versit
Wat
W.
Ah
An
F
old d
fath, -
red .
i isil
to a
of th
your
to pul
fror
Alex
Oth :
bed.
does!
Be A
We're I -?;
ing i
v Lanier
"lg, helpUj
d rs cal
The Si ;
The
Of it's
We A
Coop. r i
And wh
We hop
We're needing M
And we hope yw
So. (???n or fr?N
And let ns help yo
The hi'dygoat. c
Want to welcome
He's been an inspl
Won't you let him
The "butts and
A part of every li
Let us help vou o
"baas"
Of your college yea
Be sure to join oi
And let us help yoj
You'll learn some
know,
And get some fun i





tober 9, 1937
len
!?
The
? u gi 11
int? r-
N I
ISc1
Additions
fall
M.A
on
ORY
ian
? ? immg-
? j father,
; father,
Parrior,
i Kathym
:?. merchant;
F mtain,
: Smith, At-
Marv
rt n, fa-
?: Daniels,
?r; Nancy
ither, auto-
. i ley, Slma,
r W trd,
r: Helen
ither farmer;
tbb ? ith, father,
ILH ithaulrjr, f'ol-
- ? iia Saunder-
fatl r, farmer;
Kinston, fa-
jarel Hardy,
fanner; Earn-
ind, father,
in t. Winter-
ley, Wallace, fa-
kfartha (task ins,
Kit wards, New-
fer Pake, Marshel-
irmer; Catherine
father, farmer;
? father, farm-
Phington, Angier,
Mildred Briley,
farmer; Bernice
fro-Gordo, father,
men Directory to be
1 issue.
October 9, 1937
THE TECO ECHO
PAOB THREE
Alexander Replaces Farley as Athletic Coach
STAFF REPORTER
INTER VIE WS CO A CH
Photography Outstanding Hobby
of Athletic Director
nun
1
no;
I
mj
Mr
- open season ? n all
yout correspondent
i to the teeth with
ik. and traekt d the
? to his lair in the
inc. When
QUOTABLE
QUOTES
( I A
?AY.
lent o
faced by opporl
ECTC LOSES
E
10 QUAKES
THE FINAL SCORE WAS 7-0
WAA HOLDS FIRST
MEETING OE YEAR
"Tee'
Martin Elected Head of
Archery Team
Coach Alexander
The Women's Athletie Association
held their first meeting of the fall j
quarter, Friday, October 1, in the)
Our
:
Mi
til
U11
Lined i isage (face, to yon
sender surrendered and exten
answer ay multitude oi
So here are the answers:
admits he was
te naively that
ie date, since to ship
make hun seem
tumble w ith his
he is prone to
r attended the
not Greenville,
ted with sixteen
i credit He &e-
iii each in track, CUSS?
. and baseball,
ten entered Iowa
here he starred
Ktball and two
11. Our vcrsa-
n journeyed to
I ea hers (oliege
iegree, and later
tstitution be-
The Quakers of Guilford College.
i j- i .i e n r i- Bobert II. Wright Building which
defeated the East Carolina Firates ? , - h ,
. , I will be their regular meeting place.
to the tune of , to 0 in the initial GeraMae Tyson, president, pre-
game of the season for both teams. J ilo?i over the meeting. Other
The Quakers were anything but! officers are: Moselle 1'ernell, vice
pacific in the first quarter as theyTrilent; Prue Now by. secretary-
racked the E.C.T.( line for gains
treasurer; Evelyn Clark, Teco Echo
layers .
Alexan
High -
I sn dt
ssoeiated Collegiate Press)
annot afford to let the aeci-
tiirth cripple the educational
titles of youths of promise.
Leges and universities must
leir taproots until they reach
all classes of society Harvard's.
Fresid, t James Bryant Conant which finally enabled Lentz, G ?Xee?Lowse Martin was elected
Justine Harvard's new policy of j ford halfback, to circle left end on a hca(i 0f art.uery and Louise Blanton
award: r more and bigger scholar- short run to score the only touch-j head of basketball. Other intra-
promising students. j down of the game. Aeree madegood!nmral officers are: Geraldine Tvn.h,
?man's college is not con-1 a placement to conclude the scoring onager; Josephine Jackson, head
-ith the war between men for the afternoon.
ien. . . . The notion that! The Teachers showed promise of
"A v.
eerned v. i
and won.
women's ?
gear worn
date "
president,
he;
of hiking; Ethel Lee Byrd, head of
tennis; Alma Carraway, head of
croquet and horseshoe; Eva -McMil-
?lleges were designed to! scoring ability shortly after the score Ian, head of baseball.
q to tight men is out of by the Quakers. Ferebee tossed a! Plans were made for a party to
IV
pn .
?rsil
irs
bas
der
Sta
lleslev College's vouthful; 17 yard pass to Shelton from his own
Mildred II. McAfee, dis-i ??" yard line, and the speedy Shelton
hope of training young scampered through the entire Guil-
women to take their places in so-1 ford team to score a touchdown,
ciety, not militantly. but intelligently; However, the j
?f
tl
aware of
citizens.
"Through pro
tlieir responsi
hilit
Un-
as ,i
a ua- called back afternoon, October
and new members.
due to a penalty for clipping from
behind on the part of one of the
education of
American youth, and only through
such means, will this country be! Guilford also had one of its seor-
:?:?? ward off the menace of, nig threats spiked i;i tlie o
ZO.
Ma
n
?r
Fresln
for tw
move
threats spiked in the second
Fascism and Comnmnbrn said Dr. I quarter by three consecutive penal-
Allen Wilson Ilobbs, dean of the! ties.
college of arts and science- of the The E.C.T.C. club came back in
University of North Carolina, to! the third quarter to show a complete
led him hack; his students. '? reversal of form and push their j invented in modern times That's
ider becanit
wa State L
entertain freshman girls, tentatively
on Saturday, October in the
Robert II. Wright Building, after
the movie.
A hike was also planned for the
9, for all oh
THIS COLLEGIATE
WORLD
(By Associated Collegiate Fress)
The most barbaric thing ever
Former Athletic Director At Lin-
coln Memorial University
Placed in Hall of Athletic Fame
By "Pop" Warner
Mr. Joseph Alexander, for the
1d-r eight years athletic director
aLincoln Memorial University,
nplaces Boley Farley as coach
aid athletie director of E.C.T.C.
t!US Var.
Mr. Farley left the e Uege at the
-ose of the Spring term to - .?? r
j? ? ss ux Greenvilk after two uc-
?ssful seasons as coach of football,
bisketball, and baseball Fan-v
J ams in all l:V' e of the ma
1?orts boa-ted an enviable record of
Pacing two-thirds of all games li ?
1 tl
H.
at ;
En 1929 Alexander
eiion of Athletic
oh Memorial Uni-
laned in that po-
"Democracy would be wise if it! beavkr ana more experienced oppo-jwhat rush week is to Betty Graham
would curb the education of thou-1?? all over the field. Breece and
sands of our present school popula-
i. k, trains. M lie teachers also
snowed a superiority in punting abil- Shc had Ul mind the nmversity s
ity and constantly pushed back the'practice of housing all rushees in
white-hirted Quakers in the ex- Corbin Hall, girl's dormitory, dur-
. president of the University of
Shelton connected for several passes r , c e. T
, , , T1 . i Tw Kansas chapter of feietna Kappa.
I'res. James L. McConauffhsv to make gams. 1 he teachers also
il this fll when he was
e positio of Athletic Di-
i (
"irates
tion.
of Wesleyan University takes the
other side of the Save-Democracy
fence.
"The chief
There, she savs. "thev I
K-i-ome
ach t ECTC,
editon of the
lope of America's'change of punts. Although outplay- ing rugn week
caping the rising tides of Com- i?g Guilford the entire last half of
unism and Fascism rests on ourH1 ()UtP;it- ,lie H?ht anl iuexperi- . .
vi?.jonced Firats failed to exhibit; victims of mob psychology and mob
nough power to run over a touch hysteria. Corbin hall is the most
naianapoiis scnooi
litteel
?Xaiide
? 3 a
itl
i tern to
he EC
e coacneo
'(' mentor
W
mg ie w u
. A!
;cti
svstei similar to the
stem, hieh feature- a
viii an unbalanced
ander - well qualified
is fe: since he at one
: underlie famous "Pop"
Warne mentioned Joe
i : h Ail-Time All-
oot ball Team, but the
ich mo(tlv claim- the
munism ami fascism rests
public schools Carl Wi
president of tin
hoard lia the -arm- idea as he'own-
American Legion when he scores the
"ism as nm-Ameriean. "Onrly" ot' ? touchdown, our rne
schools . . . must be free . . . ?f tack was stopped by the determine.
(Htical control and nnrtv nmmt. stand of the Guilford line.
One thrust of the skull and fertile held for wild rumors re-
PIRATES' FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
October 9?Campbell CollegeGreenville
October 16?Belmont CollegeGreenville
October 23?West Carolina Teachers CollegeGreenville
October 29?William and Mary (Norfolk Div.)Greenville
November 6?High Point Greenville
November 13?Louisburg Louisburg
piayed in tl
East Cai . ? hers O tlegi is
fort ???'? '?'? iring a man of Al x-
anders experience and ability I re-
place Farley. The present Pirate
?: ti r hi - fifteen year- . f .?? aching
experh a ??? and a brilliai I reet rd as
a player to qualify him for this posi-
tion on the East Carolina faculty.
Alexander starred for three years ou
the football and basketball teams of
. Iowa State University, and was men-
's tioned in many of the All-America
(selections of his time in football.
j "Fop" Warner placed him in the
Hall of Athletic Fame l?y mention-
ing him for his All-Time AU-Amer-
ican Team.
Alexander has coached at East
' Texas State Teachers College, Black-
foot Normal School. Lincoln Menio-
rial University, and for two years
; was freshman coach at Iowa State
, University.
again . . . this time on the lawn SUN OVER-RATED:
I
of a fraternity at Hope College.
Holland. Michigan.
MOON UNDER-RATED.
roes-bones outfit came within six
but the at-
an
party propa-
i garouig sororities that one
: possibly rind
I Other coeds on the campu-
could
?sidi
Just an old college custom?this "
! Cambridge, Mass.?(ACP)?The 11
a weakling when
compare
(
oacli
AI
exanaer was
far from!Betty favor deferred rushing to
er - n:
othing
aestioi
-M1
get
e pi
?rt
IS
til ill.
Alexan-
?oii see,
prying
enorter.
The g
was on
T
ter-ratec
low to Mr.
-son life
safe fan the
s TeoEcho
gentlenn from Texas
to MiaLinth Pereboom
ie coup has a five year
laughter, Sonj and the little
i- the itpanic pal of her
r. Phot itrrap- is the out-
ing hobby of ie Athletic Di-
AlexanderYace brightened
v when the eoiersation veered
discussion ofameras, films.
and the othj paraphernalia
;? amateur phographer, and
I'ie Dixon Ryan
lege hitting at th
sloppiness which,
habit- which may
later on.
"o mere cleverness
ox of Union Col-
?olleiriate cult of
he says, settles
irnur discharges
quainfed
" during the
pledging.
Deferred
to become better ac-
with the various houses
e first semester without
ganaa.
"There are numerona forms of j disappointed at the showing made allow girl
sloppiness which have been incident by charge- in the initial tilt.
to the buoyant, easy-going spirit of Only two of the starting line-up
Anierh-a . . . democracy cannot against Guilford were lettermen,
afford to be sloppy So insists u Alexander expressed the belief'1
that there would be a vast improve-
ment iii the scoring ability of the; would make it ridiculous to get a
team as the season progressed. The nu,t, m &es
Pirate coach was especially pleased
. . ? tier
with the all-around play of the line!
and the fighting spirit exhibited bv
idea of striking Had for funds. Drr" tars of h 0WB tv search
H. M. J. Klein, a lu.torv professor-at Oh-ervatory has di- j
' ? elo- 1
at Franklin and Marshall College, "
found a letter dated IT- addre-sed Ur- Wiam A. ("alder's work ?
?ation scientists t
I 1
t College Girls Welcome j
To Our Fashion Shop
Exclusive But fsfot
& pensive
GLORIA SHOPPE
to Peter Rhoad
iw a a
tember of
? ? cive
the hr-t
n-in
the
'ennvlvania As-emhlv.
rushing, thev
thiiii
I have had that the un is "under
par. very accurate measurement
can
tak
am
with argument:
tears.
room and piy
mixed with sobs
the
dace of th. painful processes of hard tlu' tire squad
tnd unremitting work Ralph
If.
Jap-cott. president of the Consoli-
dated Edison Company of New York,
returns to his Alma Mater to further
depress the newest crop of freshmen.
TOPERS TO BE BANNED
FROM BIG-TIME GAMES
of ti
j ? ur
to pi
from
Alexander refused tndmit that his
other hobby was ea&g crackers in
bed, but personally 1 believe he
does!
Washington. I). C.?(AGP)?
Alcoholic exhibitionists are in for
a squelching this fall if plans of
the nation's big-time football col-
leges materialize.
Colleges in the Big Ten confer-
corre-pondentwas compelled j em,e ar1" distributing to patrons pro-
II himself awa,by main iorce;?rrams bating that those who in-
-entlmiatii-omments. Mr. I,ist on "hring-inir their own liquor"
will be distinctly unwelcome.
Ushers are being instructed to
stop drinking in the stadium and
refuse admission to holders of
tickets who are intoxicated and tc
throw out anyone violating drink-
ing restrictions.
At West Point officers insist that
"there is no drinking problem here,
because that would be bad manners
and it just isn't being done by
cadets or officers at the Military
Academy
Queries about drinking at foot-
gall games at Annapolis shocked the
Xaval Academv officers. Thev said,
"Midshipmen are prohibited from
drinking on the academy grounds
and it would be in very bad taste
for officers to drink at football
games. Spectators found drinking
are promptly ejected. The Marines
have the situation in hand
The American Football Coaches
Association, together with college
presidents and other officials, in a
secret study of drinking at foot-
ball games, found more intoxi-
cated persons attend Eastern foot-
ball games.
In Texas and other Southwestern
States, college officials believe in
using strongarm methods. Before
games start, a ban on drinking in
the stands is broadcast over a radio
system, and then hundreds of
policemen, stationed among the
spectators, enforce the ban.
Be A Loier
We're boosting our cietv?
The Sidney Lanier is named.
The willing, helpfulpirits
Of it's members cai be tamed.
We do our best in aw1 try;
Cooperation is one r aid.
And when we see relts of our work,
We hope to feel red.
We're needing somtew members
And we hope you nl us, too;
So, come on, freshfo, join us
And let us help yothrough.
The billygoat, our iscot,
Want- to welcome u.
He's been an inspi;ion to us;
Won't you let him Ip you, too?
The "butts" and "bs" are really
A part of every lif
Lot us help vou o'ehe "butts" and
"baas"
Of your college yea-)f strife.
Be sure to join omerry group,
And let us help yotlrough ;
You'll learn some ngs you didn't
know,
And get some fun of it, too.
The next opponent to face the' The old saw about oppoaites at-
E.C-T.C footballers is Campbell tracting each other in affairs of the
heart is just the exception that
proves the rule, science has decided.
Dr. E. Lowell EeEy of Connecticut
State College is piling up evidence
that like attracts like when it conies
to matrimony.
This attraction of likes is most
pronounced in the matter of physi-
cal traits, with blondes being at-
tracted to blondes, athletic men
favoring athletically inclined women,
and men of sedentary inclinations
finding small women to their liking.
Love, on the basis of Dr. Kelly's
findings, affects the judgment of
women more than that of men. The
women were inclined to over-rate
their men's handsomeness, but the
men came closer to the mark in judg-
ing the beauty of their women.
Rhoads, Jr. needed money -o he
had written :
"Hear Father:
"Your favor of the thirteenth last
I received on the eighth. . . . (iil-i
son's surveying i- not immediately
the book) would I ni ot Tluv ,iwTatlt kbes.
I he moon, on the other hand, wa
of the sun's stellar brightness i- im-
portant, it seems, since the sun is
used by astronomers as a unit for
measuring the energy and bright-
necessary, but it (
greatly assist me. In this vou may
found to be lightly brighter thai
('oliege. The game will he played
at Greenville ou Saturday, October
!th.
THE LINEUPS:
Guilford Pos. E.C.T.C.
Fondren Smith
LE
McDonald Johnson
LT
Byrd Merner
LG
XaeeCecot
C
Boles DeMond
EG
Sadler Quernell
RT
McCommons Hatem
RE
Tilson Shelton
QB
Acree Dudash
LH
Lents Breece
RH
Grice Noe
FB
Score by quarters :
Guilford 7 0 0 0?7
E.C.T.C0 0 0 0?0
Substitutions: For Guilford?
Chambers, Binford, Hines, Atkin-
son, Overman, Wilson, Ketchum.
For E.C.T.C Ferebee, Roebuck,
Williams, Veenters, Beck, James.
Officials: Davis (Davidson), um-
pire; Shuler (N.C.), referee; Maus
(U. N. C), head linesman; Arron
(Army), field judge.
Serologic tests for venereal disease
were recommended for new students
at universities by Dr. R. A. Vander-
lehr of the Public Health Service.
Discovery of the diseases would not
be a basis of refusing admission to
a student.
Some degree of protection against
the virus of sleeping sickness is af-
forded by the blood serum of an in-
dividual who had the disease in
1933, Dr. G. O. Brown, of the St
Louis University School of Medicine
has found.
University of Georgia freshmen
got a superinitiation at the mechani-
cal hands of the machine age.
Their traditional "yes" and "no"
intelligence tests were graded by an
electric machine that defies flattery
or red apples and doesn't believe
the first hundred papers are the
hardest.
Into a machine went Freddie
Frosh's papers and a little meter told
him whether he belonged with the
potential Phi Beta Kappas, the great
middle class, or the dullards.
It is the first time in the nation
that such a machine has been placed
in actual continuous use.
School officials believe it will save
at least four days in placement work
and a great deal of wear and tear
on professors, instructors and stu-
dent graders.
Reminiscent of the troublous
'20's, the fiery cross is burning
S. V. MORTON, JR.
Ofle and Bank Equipment and
Supplies - Typewriter! - New and
Bebuttt
Plione 1S7 OEEBKVXLLJB. V. O.
i lr r .? c i ' lounu io ne -m
please vourselt. and 1 am satisfied, i, .
I willwith the help of God, learn ad hitherto bet
that the money von have advanced; . rbe. n,?v Photoelectric value
me shall not be lost !tor !he visual magnitude of the
? ? "nn w fonr-tenths ot a magnitude
less than the value accepted as a
Ah for the life of the porter em standard up to now. The mooa'a
the University of Idaho special aew brightness is eleven anndreths
train, which collects would-be stu 0f a magnitude more than the value
dents from over the state and de- generally adopted.
posits them on the Moscow campus
for another year.
The train is claimed by Union
Pacific to be the only one of its kind
in the world.
When it stopped in Boise, the;
porter gasped. "There here young
ones are the beatinest kids 1 ever
seen. They can deal out more mis'ry
in an hour than it'd take anybody
a week to catch up to
"But" he grinned, "they sure got j
a capacity for enjoyment j
It took the train an hour instead j
of 10 minutes in Boise to get onj
board students who seemed just as;
willing to spend the rest of the year
there, as in Moscow.

COBURNS
"Your Shoe Store"
Presents
C - . ' -5 ? ?. ? "T" ? . . , . "T" Mday
in Footwear of Quc. 1v' at
Popular Price for Dre js zr
Campus wear.
Coburn's Shoes,inc.
410 Evans Street

WELCOME COLLEGE GIRLS
To
WILLIAM'S
The Ladies' Store
DR. A. H. SCHULTZ
Dentist
400 State Bank Building
Phone 578
SHOP AT THE BIG
SAltt STORE
Let Us Supply You With Your
School Needs
we wii
)ehver Your Packages
For You.
McLellan Stores Co.
We sell a lot of hosiery.
And really, it's no wonder!
Our quality is up on top.
Our prices way down under!
GRANT'S
College Special
Regular 79c Isis Full Fashioned
Crepe Twist Hose
Along with this advertisement.
Good until October 25, 1937
Visit
PLEASANT'S
We appreciate your
patronage
?
PLEASANT'S
rt Apparel for Women
LOWE'S
Greenville, North Carolina
4p-iqp?pMwqpiQipviiipM9??qp?
?? aa a o,id? a ?. r- j g ?fc?
Buy Your Clothes With Style and Distinction
C. HEBER FORBES
w w ww'vwv'wwwwwvrw p
1 w r rrp - m w ?
106264





October 9, 1937
a
THE TECO ECHO
PAOS FOUR
Summer Graduate List
Graduates As Reported Up To
August 28, 1937
A.B. Graduates
AH. degree graduates?August
28, L937. .
Dove Allen. Ella Turner Atkms,
Mr. Wesley Bankston, Verdie Bar-
Fraiiees Boyette, Sallie Lee
Marv Bullock, Gladys
CaUie Charlton, Virginia
Cooper, Willie Grey Cox,
E, Grumpier. Frances IX
1 Daniel. Isabel Daven-
Around
WASHINGTON
ir.
row
Brewer,
Capi a,
Blount
Dorothy
Gun-in, Ilaz
port Juanita Davis, Thelma Edger
ton, Sfavis Evans, Hazel Forrest,
Christeen Fowler, Florence Elisa-
beth Gooding, Alice Hackett, Eula
Ma, Hargette, Annie Mercer Henry,
Swannie Home. Hattie Hudgins,
1 1. ley, Melva Johnson.
Lee, Hilda Gray Modlin,
Inez Oliver, Lucy Stuart
Mary Lee Penny, Julia E.
Lucile Eaines, Margaret I.
Nannie Rowlett, -Mrs. Pat-
Snnders, Mrs. Elisie Wind-
Mice 11 irks Smith,
Mildre-
Ava
Clara
Parrisl
Pollocl
Bawls.
By MARVIN COX
(Associated Collegiate Tress Corres
pondent)
Washington. 1. G.?College stu
dents continue to be among the re
cipients of Federal benefits along
with farmers, the unemployed, the
aged, the blind and other groups
that are on the receiving end of
Federal aid.
Of course, the cash that goes to
college students is not as much as
that which goes to the tillers of the
soil and the needy unemployed but.
at thai, the young people do pretty
well for themselves.
, lion dollars, tin
tional Youth
ibis year 1
I long way
AUDIT
Student Fund, East Carolina Teachers College
Greenville, N. C.
From May 29, 1935 to May 26, 1936
On hand in the Guaranty Bank and Trust Company, May 29,
1935
From Student Fees
. From Gate Receipts
From Faculty Tickets
From Belle Kearney-
From Post Office
From Miscellaneous
-Cash Account
5 254.32
15,358.45
425.25
209.10
500.00
20.00
319.07
COLLEGIATE
REVIEW
infantile paralysis when
(By Associated Collegiate Press)
Something new under the sun?a
walking sprinkling machine used to
water the gridiron at the University
to a height of 7,500 feet at a speed
of 700 miles an hour. .
The average Southern college girl school teacher rooming
spends $579 a year exclusive of ee4- rocanng-feovM became
charges, tin- largest
-ity of Nebraska were exposed to
a Krade
hi their
with the
leg
item of disease.
$17,086.19
un
"Simpson.
Frances Spainhour, Inez Stevens
Lois Strickland, Ruth G. Styron
Mil y, .1 O. Tatmii. Katie Jane Tay-
lor. Mr. William EL Tolson, Blanche
F. White, Mrs. rene Whittington,
Eiease Williams. Dorothy Bose Wil-
liams. Sara Mar Woodard, Virginia
Woodbury.
Twenty mil-
amount the Na-
Ailministration is
mving to students, is a
rom small change.
d
.$ 4,500.00
646.23
129.62
517.67
135.00
379.60
1,626.S2
493.47
5.023.92
which ($270) is for clothe, u study
at Holliiui College, Virginia, reveal
An Austin, Texas, boy plans to en
ter college in September, 1?38,
?tthe ago of 12. Educaton
advancement is due t. Ins
at
think his
An East-Weal collegiate ski met
matching teams of Dartmouth (
lege and I Hiv?rsity of Wi
is being promoted f"r Ida
tacular Sun Yalh-y ooura
ngtoa.
of Nebraska. It's set up at one
d-
Two-vear Normal Graduates
Two year Normal graduates-
August 28. 1937
Alliene Ba
dalt'iu
Jnli
Bass. Hat-
Lee Carson,
The students perform specifi
services at ilie schools and colleges
and in return receive funds from
the XVA.
Slightly over $10,000,000 will go
to college students and the remain-
der to high schoo
This $10,000,000. if paid out in the
form id' scholarships, would provide
$500 a piece for 20.000 college stu-
dents. However, being distributed,
as it will be, in amounts of about
$15 a month, this sum will help
pay the bills
voung men am
Disbursements
For Annual Tecoan
For Teco Echo
For Men's Student Government Association
For Women's Student Government Association
For Personal Service
For Glass Payments
For Men's Athletic Association
For Women's Athletic Association
For Entertainments
For Social Committee 01100 ,1
For Belle Kearney?Cash Account ,
For Post Office
For V. W. C. A
For Commencement Fund
For Piano
For Paving
For Fainting Dormitory Booms
For Miscellaneous
tSnO. P-Pded ?v A. fc of j ? wh. wj ;
the water. ,
More than 100 Georgetown Urn
II.
can rca
versitv students were used last spring
as human guinea pigs in
test of the
; and tlie remain- ??
1 boys and girls. Balance in Guaranty Bank and Trust Company, 2636
of around 75.000
women during the
tie Lou Cannon, :uiia x?e
Madeline Eure, Lucy It. FoutS, Mrs.
Connie Whit ford Hargett, Mary
Sue Johnson, Esther H. Lcake, Air.
Joseph V. Marsh. Rachel Anne Mc-
Campbell, Gladys W. Miller. Annie
Lee Mozingo, Bath Naomi Pearce.
Frances Elizabeth Simmons. Eunice
Mae Smith. Margaret Sue Watkins.
Eunice Mae Watson. Pauline Wor-
?urrent academic year.
NEW COLLEGE CURRICULUM
WENT INTO EFFECT THIS FALL
COLLEGE PRESS MEET
TO BE LARGEST EVER
Gh
t he
and
ollege
th
b
ieago, 111.?(AC
argest convention ol ci
miversity undergraduate pub-
ons workers ever to be held in
s
This $20,000,000 allocation for
students, however, doesn't satisfy
allot' them. William W. Hinckley.
president of the American Youth 1at
Congress, states that his organiza-
tion will continue to battle for the
passage of the American Youth
Act. r
This proposed legislation, intro-
duced during the last session of
Congress, would appropriate $500
. 000,000 for the aid of young people.
Failure to obtain action last ses-
Plans forsion has not discouraged the Youthjments
Congress and they will be in there
fighting when the next session con-
venes in January.
FUTURE RADIO ANNOUNCERS
ARE BEING TRAINED
personality-changing effects of the
drug, benzedrine sulphate.
Because the Hitler government
allows any German traveler to take
only $4 spending money with him,
Christian Otto Winzen came from
Germany to the University ot De-
401.63 I troit, with just that much cash, al-
tough his passage and railroad fare
20.00 I had been paid.
175.00 shortage of football shoes will ;
300.00 I apparently force a large portion of
the Gooding College football team to
play barefooted. The "large por-
tion" being George Blanklcy, who
stands 6 feet 3 inches barefooted?
j barefooted because he needs a size
$15,869.60 14 football shoe.
1,216.59 i)r Robert II. Goddard, Clark
University physics professor seeking
17.086.19 to develop a rocket plane which can
be sent up 100 miles or more, has
succeeded in driving his test rocket
History students at Mount Holy-
oke College have written a prophecy
about whither we are drifting, to ???
sealed up for a hundred years.
Kansas State co-eds and football
WILE.
VOL
f:jov
coacm
thieve
tory 1
$19 an-
had a common
Coeds at the girl
t $150, the head eoa
the assistant freshman
enemy
g' dormi-
h lost
Eating With
Your Friends
at
LAUTARES
h. a waP
hirtv-oiit
wort h
;o-eds
1- at the l"i'
,cr
250.00
300.00 1
300.00
170.64
The College "Y" S'ore and yc ;r favorite down-town soda
or drug store carries a comp re line of Lances Pear ut ? itti r
Sandwiches, Salted Peanuts, and Candies, Whenever you
the need of a "Snack insist on Lcr.ce's. They ore made ur . -
the most sanitan conditions end, are pleasing to the appetite
Remember to Insist on LANCE'S
Sandwiches : Peanuts : Candies : Peanut Butter
LANCE PACKING COMPANY
New York. X. Y(ACP)? A
new college curriculum to which
the experience of sixteen major
colleges and universities has con-
tributed, goes into effect this fall
llofstra College, according to
Provost Bttfus D, Smith of New
York University.
At llofstra, which is the Uni-
versity's Long Island affiliate, to a
greater extent, perhaps than in any
other college, ordinary academic
departments will be scrapped. For
example, then.
only
with
behind
of the
during
depart-
and
ire now being formulated
ffieers of the Associated Collegi-
ate Press, national association of
ege publications' editors and
1 usiuess managers. The convention
in held here October 14 to 16.
With a program headlined by
Henry Goddard Leach, eminent edi-
tor of ; ?' rum magazine, and
Howard Vincent
ikim
mi
Chieot
attem
Five years ago, if someone had
suggested a Federal appropriation
for college students, the idea would
have been ridiculed and its sponsor
denounced as a Communist, Social-
ist. Demagogue and enemy of the
people. Now. however, the idea of
Federal aid for college students is
O'Brien, news-1 generally accepted. The only sub-
editorial columnist for thej tH.t 0f serious debate is the amount
i rea
will he no
if economics, soeiol
politics.
Instead there will be merely a
division of social science, in which
ix basic courses running in se-
quence from freshman to senior
year will correlate all three of the
conventional '?departments
Comprehensive examinations cov-
ering two years' work are planned
for upper classes and there will be
for independent
V. ws, delegates will
lort course in news-
paper, magazine and yearbook busi-
ness and editorial management.
Some of the famed journalists
to appear on the program include
ject
to be devoted to this purpose.
work
under tutorial guidance.
There is one important factor in
considering the subject of Federal
appropriations for the benefit of
, the! young people. The government is
I 1 Imamw and Yearbook; j borrowing money to spend on them,
but this same generation that is re-
Curtis
ition
George Brandenburg, Editor and
Publisher staff writer; John E.
Drewry, director of the Cniversity
of Georgia School of Journalism;
Kenneth F. Olson, director of the
Northwestern Cniversity School of
Journalism; O. Fred Winner. New
York publicist ; James X. Krohne.
Chicago advertising writer; G. D.
Crain, publisher of Advertising
Age; Grant Olson, advertising man-
ager of the Sheaffer Pen Co Har-
ry C. Baldwin, of Xational Adver
tising Service, and many others.
Delegates to the convention will
bo entertained by Dusty Miller,
famed Indiana publisher, and the
music of Al Diem and his broad-
casting orchestra. Chicago radio
artists will also appear on the pro-
gram. Delegates will also make
tours of the up-to-date Chicago
newspaper, printing, engraving and
cover-making plants, each personal-
ly conducted by an expert in one of
these fields of publications work.
Special n.ondtable meetings for
the discussion of current editorial
and business management problems
are being arranged, with experts in
each field leading each discussion.
Last year more than 375 stu-
dents from colleges and universi-
ties in 33 states attended the meet-
ing held in Louisville. This year's
is the lbth annual meeting of the
Associated Collegiate Press.
provision
torial &
The new system, according to
Provost Smith, follows the newer
trend toward the broad English
type of training as opposed to the
highly specialized German type
popular in pre-war days.
Hofstra's graduates will be pre-
pared to face life more realistically,
he believes, as a result of their more
integrated education.
Towa City, Iowa?(AGP)?The
Edwin C. Hills and Boake Carters
of tomorrow are being trained at
WSF1, radio station of the Uni-
versity of Iowa.
Students interested in radio as
a vocation "start from the bottom
and start right They write script,
build programs, direct plays, edit
news and announce?-to name
a few of the tasks connected
broadcasting. They are
the scenes doing the work
8,952 programs broadcast
the year.
The mechanical side of the broad-
casts is taken care of by students
who have received their training in
the college of engineering. Courses
cover both radio and television, with
an experimental station serving as
a laboratory.
Students prepare and present
three news broadcasts daily, the
Parade of Events. Friday evening's
dramatization of the news, sports
reviews, art news and farm news.
And when they step up to the micro-
phone, they don't shake with "mike
fright but possess a confidence
horn of a thorough understanding
of radio.
Betty Coed
and the Duchess of
Windsor have something in common
?the Duchess's wedding dress.
Adaptations of the gown the former
Wallis Warfield wore when she mar-
ried the abdicated King of England
have gone to college with a bang.
eeiving the money will also have to
pay it back.
The old folks who are getting
Federal benefits that are paid for
with borrowed cash will pass the
debt along to younger generations.
The young people, however, do not
have this advantage.
The current college generation
will live long enough to have their
sleep disturbed by the sound of gov-
ernment bonds falling due in the
vears to come.
it
Big Three"
Note to law students: If you
want to enjoy peaceful membership
on the United States Supreme
Court, don't join the Ku Klux
Klan in early life!
In case you doubt that such an
affiliation will rise to harass you,
let your Washington correspondent
refer you to Mr. Justice Hugo L.
Black, late a Senator from Alabama.
? A GOOD COLLEGE
? A GOOD STAFF
? A GOOD PRINTER
? and there you are ?
ALL THE ELEMENTS OF A
GOOD PUBLICATION
FAULTY DIET BLAMED
FOR WORLD'S WAR JITTERS
For the benefit of young fathers,
the University of California has
completed a schedule of baby's cry-
ing habits which may enable parents
to arrange their away-from-home
programs. After the first month
there is a 4-month lull when father
may safely stay at home. After that
there is about a year when baby's
vocal cords get plenty of exercise.
Cambridge, Mass.?(ACP) ? A
good part of the world's war jitters
can be blamed on faulty diet, the
international food conference at
the Massachusetts Institute of Tech-
nology was told.
Lewis W. Waters, food techni-
cian, foresaw doom for the "wall-
flower" and a race of healthier, less
jittery people as a result of food
technology.
Declaring surveys showed Amer-
ican college boys and girls today
were taller and stronger than were
their parents at similar ages, Wa-
ters said it must be attributed at
least in part to "better and more
varied foods
This Company, in all its efforts, holds
fast to the standard of service that
merits a place on any "Big Three'
Cow-education is the word for it,
it seems, at Eastern New Mexico
Junior College. Bossie is helping
put several youths through school.
Bringing their cows to the campus,
they are selling milk to pay ex-
penses.
Nude students riding up and down
the main street of Golden, Colo, on
an automobile running board shocked
the entire community. They were
taking part in freshman hazing ac-
tivities of the Colorado School of
Mines.
EDWARDS & BROUGHTON
COMPANY
? GOOD PRINTERS SINCE 1871 ?
Raleigh North Carolina
m
yer
to y?u:
now low much
pleasure a cigarette can giv&ntil some-
body offers you a Chesterfijd.
Certainly this is true: Chief fields
are refreshingly milder, they've
got a taste that smokers lib
-n
J?&'
0&
an
WE LC
ALUM
volume :
Fa mo
Be
w
MRS. 0
Dn
R?
Mr
snips.
Lhis ?
tirt ?
by maki
father i
the r. ?
band, N
English!
Florida.
battles ?
from I
? th
Her :
meiit a
and En
mark, v
became
dip
to Caj
Chris
oleted
ha. re
bctun
II.
R
PHI SiGMA P! DISCI
PLANS FOR Cf
At th? 1
Octoh. .
of Phi - .
gethi r
faculr :
tin- forth
Ti ? .?
Be en ?
h pledg, .
guitabh .
A eommi
retary, I:
spon '
ine on
The ee rel
Becnn
sored ? nt r
Th
Chapt. .
Francis 1 ?
ter, I, ?
Fodie II
Thornt 0
Cha : : k
She ii
Cniv -
or requ
the buss
again in a
in order
from the s
v ? iri
Miduai
: we
On Time Ev

Copyright 1937. Lwearr & Km Tobacco Co.
The new clock
Hall, that settles
as to the exact ti
ing in as well as
for dates, is the
to the school by the
man Class of 19371
of the "D" Classe
uated from here.
The clock was
ing the latter
Spring Quarter,
resents our colic
'On time every






Title
The Teco Echo, October 9, 1937
Description
East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.
Date
October 09, 1937
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
UA50.05.02.179
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/38059
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