<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038021_0001"/>
October<lb/>
3- 1934.<lb/>
rni ii iimx Kvno<lb/>
! y th(i<lb/>
: : t the<lb/>
n-<lb/>
rial,<lb/>
We<lb/>
'Hv<lb/>
spend<lb/>
C ? V-<lb/>
uch<lb/>
Col-<lb/>
lar. B. McK. Johnson<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Hank Building<lb/>
Phone '291<lb/>
Y Store or your fav-<lb/>
?da Shop, insist on<lb/>
NCE'S<lb/>
sties, Candies and Salted<lb/>
de under the most sani-<lb/>
u will find them always<lb/>
et with the Red seal<lb/>
Ul'( OKI) ENROLLMENT<lb/>
FOR FALL TERM<lb/>
TECO ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE TECO<lb/>
ECHO ADVERTISERS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
Greenville, N. C, Wednesday, October 17, 1934.<lb/>
Number 2<lb/>
freshnaa (lass<lb/>
sThe Largest In<lb/>
i ollese History<lb/>
Si<lb/>
: i Ropn "sented;<lb/>
Leads Others<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
THE MEADOWS FAMILY<lb/>
Appropriations By Drama Course Is<lb/>
Budget Committee Offered Students<lb/>
Approximately 1-3 Goes To<lb/>
Entertainment; 1-3 To Pub-<lb/>
lications, And 1-3 To Mis-<lb/>
cellaneous.<lb/>
Miss Mary Dirnberger, Who<lb/>
Is In Charge Of Community<lb/>
Dramatics is Director. .<lb/>
New President Is Well<lb/>
Fitted For The Position<lb/>
?RESIDENTS WIFE<lb/>
Ii of the coun<lb/>
represented here,<lb/>
? istudents that <lb/>
fron each.<lb/>
A on, B; Beau<lb/>
26; Bladen, 11;<lb/>
Burke, 1: Camden,<lb/>
Caswell, 2; Cha-<lb/>
6; Cleveland,<lb/>
12; O ?? n. 17; Cur-<lb/>
: bei land, M; Clay<lb/>
. idson, 3; Davie. 2;<lb/>
Durl am, 3; Edge-<lb/>
Jin, 22, Forsyth. I<lb/>
rates, 1 Granville, I<lb/>
? Gkulford, 1; llah-<lb/>
:? 15; Hertford, lid<lb/>
. ?? 7: Irodell. 1:1<lb/>
? ton, 40; Lee, 13; I<lb/>
: rtin 15; Mecklen-<lb/>
tgomery, 4, Moore,<lb/>
Ni w Hanover, 10;<lb/>
 ; to ilOW, 1 fi;<lb/>
? U( tank, 7: Pam-<lb/>
; Person, 5; Per-<lb/>
P tt, 200; Robeson, <lb/>
n . ?:?: Richmond, 2;<lb/>
? . :? rd,  Samp-<lb/>
?  i; Stanley, 2;<lb/>
rrelL 6; Union, Hi:<lb/>
 . S3; Warren, 5;<lb/>
I; Wayne, 40; Wil-<lb/>
itc Georgia, 1; In-<lb/>
. Jersey, I, South<lb/>
 ssee. 1; Texas.<lb/>
leading from left to right are: Leon R. Meadows, Jr Elizabeth,<lb/>
and May Dr. and Mrs. Meadows are in the background. Leon is<lb/>
14 years old, and is in the 9th grade Elizabeth is 12. and is in the<lb/>
8th grade. May is 11 and is in the 7th grade.<lb/>
Miss Dickinson<lb/>
New Infirmary<lb/>
Superintendent<lb/>
Miss Annie Morris. Former<lb/>
Superintendent Is On A<lb/>
Leave Of Absence for One<lb/>
Year.<lb/>
Two Members of<lb/>
Faculty Receive<lb/>
Doctor Degrees<lb/>
Miss Ethel Dickinson, of<lb/>
Shreveport, Louisiana, will be<lb/>
superintendent of th? infirmary<lb/>
here for the year 1934-35. She<lb/>
is taking the place of Miss Annie<lb/>
Morris, who has a leave of ab-<lb/>
sence for one year. After grad-<lb/>
uating from State Teachers Col-<lb/>
lege, at Natchitoches, La Miss<lb/>
Dickinson taught two years in<lb/>
her home state. She then enter-<lb/>
td Tri-State Hospital at Shreve-<lb/>
port from which she graduated<lb/>
at the end of three years. Since<lb/>
that time she has been doing pri-<lb/>
vate ami institutional work. She<lb/>
comes to the college highly re-<lb/>
commended, both as bacterioto-<lb/>
eist and nurse.<lb/>
Professor Beecher Flanagan<lb/>
Of Economic Department,<lb/>
And Hubert Haynes, of<lb/>
Education Department, Re-<lb/>
ceived Their Ph. D. Degrees<lb/>
This Summer.<lb/>
The budget committee, in a<lb/>
meeting on October 9, apportion-<lb/>
ed the funds anticipated from<lb/>
student fees for the year, fol-<lb/>
twing the plan of dividing the<lb/>
money into three approximately<lb/>
equal amounts: about one-third<lb/>
for entertainments; one-third for<lb/>
publications; and one-third for<lb/>
athletics, anil activities of var-<lb/>
ious groups together with neces-<lb/>
sary expenses.<lb/>
The members of the committee<lb/>
arc Elizabeth Overtoil, Senior;<lb/>
Janie (Jutland, Junior; Josephine<lb/>
lanes, Sophomore; Virginia Ak-<lb/>
ers, D or Senior Normal; Frances<lb/>
Newsom, president of the student<lb/>
council; Lou Pitts, student-treas-<lb/>
urer; faculty members. Miss Wil-<lb/>
liams, chairman; and Mr. Pickle-<lb/>
simer.<lb/>
A complete list of the appro-<lb/>
priations follows;<lb/>
Annual $3,80(1.00<lb/>
 Echo  1,000.00<lb/>
Senior Class  200.00<lb/>
1). Class 150.00<lb/>
Junior Class  225.00<lb/>
Sophomore Class  60.00<lb/>
Freshman Class  40.00<lb/>
C. Class  120.00<lb/>
V. W. C. A 25.00<lb/>
Advertising  250.00<lb/>
Student Government  450.00<lb/>
Emerson Society  60.00<lb/>
Lanier Society  60.00<lb/>
Poe Society  60.00<lb/>
Boys' Athletics  1,200.00<lb/>
Girls Athletics  800.00<lb/>
Treasurer  135.00<lb/>
Incidentals  150.00<lb/>
Entertainments  4,500.00<lb/>
Glee Club  10.00<lb/>
udents<lb/>
Today<lb/>
v i nrolled, about<lb/>
Pitl county, with<lb/>
r :? There are<lb/>
? the college dor<lb/>
I<lb/>
. " stl ients is not<lb/>
I Pre hman Class<lb/>
: ? college, but<lb/>
. ? transfers from<lb/>
' ei colli ges.<lb/>
? : hurch pre-<lb/>
?'?: tudents is as<lb/>
? 3 17: Methodist.<lb/>
LICY IdJOY IS ELECTED<lb/>
VICE PRESIDENT S. G. A.<lb/>
15; Presbyterian,<lb/>
. Five Will Bap-<lb/>
n and Quaker, 3<lb/>
nd Holiness, 2<lb/>
? 1 Otdy 76<lb/>
e a choice.<lb/>
COMMITTEES ANNOCNt ED<lb/>
CKS<lb/>
V;r<lb/>
Ban<lb/>
m, President of<lb/>
G ivel nment Asso-<lb/>
? unced two stand-<lb/>
that will serve<lb/>
i ? dnn ent committee<lb/>
-f Mr. J. B. Cum-<lb/>
M  Wright and Dr.<lb/>
? from the faculty,<lb/>
. n ii. Elizabeth Wil-<lb/>
. '? jiiiev will rep-<lb/>
h at body.<lb/>
 e Williams is chair-<lb/>
Budgel committee.<lb/>
I klesimer, Lou Pitts,<lb/>
? stun. Janie Outland.<lb/>
Akers and Josephine<lb/>
I serve.<lb/>
Vacancies m the different of-<lb/>
fices, due t students resigna-<lb/>
tions and to failure to return to<lb/>
school this fall, made it neces-<lb/>
sary to hold an election Thurs-<lb/>
day, October 11. to elect new of-<lb/>
ficers.<lb/>
The re uits were as follows:<lb/>
Vice President of student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association, Lucy Leltoy,<lb/>
House President, France Manus:<lb/>
Co-ed representative to the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government, Jack Humph-<lb/>
rey: Circulation manager of the<lb/>
Teco Echo, Helen Taylor and<lb/>
Cynthia Etheridge: Associate edi-<lb/>
tor of the Teco Echo, Carolyn<lb/>
Brink ley; Business Staff ol the<lb/>
Tecoan, Beatrice Hammond. Cha-<lb/>
pel Program Committee. Clara<lb/>
Mac Martin: Co-ed Representa-<lb/>
tive to the Chapel Program Com-<lb/>
mittee, Jack Humphrey, and<lb/>
Men's Representative to Student<lb/>
Government, Jack Humphrey.<lb/>
Dr Beecher Flanagan during<lb/>
most of the spring and summer<lb/>
completed his dissertation on "A<lb/>
History of State Banking m North<lb/>
Carolina to 1866" He received<lb/>
his Ph. 1). degree from Peabody<lb/>
College this summer. During his<lb/>
stay at Peabody, he, with the as-<lb/>
sistance Of Mr. O. B. Christy,<lb/>
pr pared a copy of all the M. A.<lb/>
Thesis written in Stale Teachers<lb/>
Colleges m the United States. In<lb/>
connection with this phase of the<lb/>
work lie made a survey of all<lb/>
the Teachers Colleges in Tennes-<lb/>
see and Kentucky.<lb/>
As a side line Mr. Flanagan<lb/>
went on a fishing trip on a truck<lb/>
to west Florida, after which he<lb/>
visited in Kentucky.<lb/>
Dr. Haynes did a great deal of<lb/>
work in completing his disserta-<lb/>
tion on "Relation of Teacher In-<lb/>
telligence, Teacher Experience,<lb/>
and Type of School to Types of<lb/>
Questions He received his Ph.<lb/>
D. in June from Peabody Col-<lb/>
lege. Dr. Haynes vacation was<lb/>
spent, mostly, on a large farm in<lb/>
Georgia. He spent two days on<lb/>
an Indian Reservation in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Adams combined work and<lb/>
play and attended Harvard<lb/>
Medical College during the week<lb/>
and traveled during the week-<lb/>
end. Bis work consisted of ex-<lb/>
tensive research work in the ana-<lb/>
tomv and physiology of the ner-<lb/>
vous system His travel was<lb/>
over most of the eastern and<lb/>
northeastern states, having Bos-<lb/>
ton a. his headquarters.<lb/>
Mr Hollar Teaches<lb/>
Extension Course<lb/>
Professor Of History Teach-<lb/>
ing A Course Of Modern<lb/>
European History In Win-<lb/>
terville.<lb/>
H L Mencken, on Bryan-<lb/>
Heave an egg out of a Pullman<lb/>
window and you will hit a Fun-<lb/>
damentalist almost everywhere<lb/>
in the United States today.<lb/>
SOPHOMORE CLASS<lb/>
ELECTS OFFICERS<lb/>
An extension course in history<lb/>
is being taught in Winterville by<lb/>
Mr. E. C. Hollar, one of the pro-<lb/>
fessors of history here. The<lb/>
course being taught is Modern<lb/>
European History numbered<lb/>
History 118 in the Catalogue. The<lb/>
students receive the same credit<lb/>
points as if they were in college.<lb/>
These are teachers who according<lb/>
to Mr. Hollar, are trying to keep<lb/>
alive by not falling into the rut<lb/>
made by so many who teach.<lb/>
They are doing some studying for<lb/>
themselves while teaching. The<lb/>
class meets twice a week, on<lb/>
Monday and Thursday nights, for<lb/>
a period of an hour and a half.<lb/>
Mr, Hollar is especially equip-<lb/>
ped for this type of work, as he<lb/>
has uid extensive experience in<lb/>
extension work both as teacher<lb/>
and as student. While teaching<lb/>
in Memphis, he taught extension<lb/>
classes tri-weekly. When he was<lb/>
a teacher in Missouri he was en-<lb/>
rolled in extension classes.<lb/>
The class in Winterville is<lb/>
merely a resumption of extension<lb/>
work, formerly done by the Col-<lb/>
lege. Eight years ago a similar<lb/>
extension class was conducted in<lb/>
Winterville. For several years,<lb/>
however, for various reasons, the<lb/>
college has done little extension<lb/>
work of this type. The teachers<lb/>
in service, have, however, had<lb/>
the opportunity of taking courses<lb/>
the University has been offering<lb/>
groups in this section.<lb/>
The College student electin<lb/>
the courses in Drama, winch are I<lb/>
taught by Miss Dirntx rgei .vho<lb/>
is also in charge of th ' i tn-<lb/>
lty dramatic are entl<lb/>
over the prop rtiou!<lb/>
have made and the ami ii<lb/>
gram they have outlined I<lb/>
fall term. A bill of threi i n<lb/>
act plays, the cast ol w ?<lb/>
not confined to the membei ? I<lb/>
the class, but is open to the en-<lb/>
tire student body, is on the pro- j<lb/>
gram to be presented next month<lb/>
The members of the class will<lb/>
stage the production.<lb/>
The course is affiliated with<lb/>
the English Department and is<lb/>
offered as a free elective in Eng-<lb/>
lish, carrying three points of cre-<lb/>
dit. It includes production, act-<lb/>
ing, voice-training, stage craft<lb/>
history and background of the<lb/>
theatre, and the coaching of play<lb/>
by student teachers, as weD as<lb/>
the study of plays. The students<lb/>
are expected to find the raw ma-<lb/>
terial of the drama in the life<lb/>
around them, and translate it in-<lb/>
to plays. Miss Dirnberger be-<lb/>
lieves that the material in tins<lb/>
section is especially rich for ama-<lb/>
teurs.<lb/>
Miss Dirnberger has charge-<lb/>
not only of this work in the col-<lb/>
lege, but of all the dramatic com-<lb/>
munity activities in this section,<lb/>
under the FERA.<lb/>
The little theatre movement for<lb/>
Greenville started this week is<lb/>
under her direction. In Nash-<lb/>
ville and Farmville dramatic or-<lb/>
ganizations have been formed and<lb/>
are prospering. "Arms and the<lb/>
Man by George Bernard Shaw.<lb/>
is the production Nashville is<lb/>
TA) vnu, hi' . IO , fi-iln ij ft,<lb/>
planning to give. Both oi mese<lb/>
are under Miss Dirnberger's di-<lb/>
rection.<lb/>
Trained by Dr. Koch, as she<lb/>
was a member of his Carolina<lb/>
Playmakers group, Miss Dirnber-<lb/>
ger comes to this work exceed-<lb/>
ingly well-trained. She was con-<lb/>
nected with the Carolina Play-<lb/>
makers, both in the acting and<lb/>
the writing of plays as well as in<lb/>
the production. She taught in<lb/>
the Summer School of Repertory<lb/>
Playhouse Associates in Putney,<lb/>
Vermont. She has worked in<lb/>
New York City, demonstrating<lb/>
recreational dramatic work in<lb/>
social settlements. Judging from<lb/>
interest shown, Miss Dirnberger<lb/>
believes the results in this sec-<lb/>
tion will be of true significance.<lb/>
Dr. Leon Ii. Meadows, For-<lb/>
mer Head Ol English D<lb/>
Been wun<lb/>
;? F iunda-<lb/>
?.<lb/>
MRS. LEON R. MEADOWS<lb/>
New ssemhlv<lb/>
Plan Introduced<lb/>
Student Chapel Committee<lb/>
Gives Entertaining Ex-<lb/>
cerpts Of Future Chapel<lb/>
Programs,<lb/>
eath ? f DrRH Wi iglin<lb/>
April, ii"  ? 'heaf-<lb/>
election didnotcome asasur-<lb/>
pi ise.<lb/>
When theposieftva-<lb/>
cant the bosird ? . ? tedamb<lb/>
committee f A.B. An lr. E.<lb/>
G. Flanagan, H.C. Bri Uand<lb/>
O P. Makejx-acito consiterthe<lb/>
matter.<lb/>
The announce!nenl of tlielec-<lb/>
lion of thenewpi esident eame<lb/>
(m a fittingdat Octobei5,the<lb/>
twenty-fifthanniversaryofthe<lb/>
opening oftheschool.<lb/>
Dr. Meadowshas beenCl(sely<lb/>
identifiedwith thefl 111. ge<lb/>
throughoutitsentirehistory.<lb/>
He becamea member ofthi fa-<lb/>
A clever introduction to the<lb/>
now series of the student chapel<lb/>
program- v<lb/>
was presented Friday<lb/>
dramatic form.<lb/>
stage, the new com-<lb/>
mented ?-v ???Margaret<lb/>
culty the first year, coming at<lb/>
the beginning of the first sum-<lb/>
mer school.<lb/>
He is head of the English de-<lb/>
partment and director of sum-<lb/>
mer school. He knows better<lb/>
than any one else every phase of<lb/>
the work of the college. He has<lb/>
acted as dean for a number of<lb/>
years. He has been secretary to<lb/>
the Board of Trustees for twelve<lb/>
years, and has been the official<lb/>
at various meet-<lb/>
mornmg<lb/>
On the<lb/>
mittee re;<lb/>
BOStiC'  hrm'he'entiretative<lb/>
and p n v. herein lus j inns,<lb/>
wre ?,ue arises chief b<lb/>
iU-<lb/>
Granville Gives<lb/>
Unique Program<lb/>
Dramatic Interludes Gives<lb/>
Tuesday Night, A Repre-<lb/>
sentation Of Characters Of<lb/>
Literature Ranges From<lb/>
Bible Times To Modern Art.<lb/>
the student chapel programs. In-<lb/>
stead of explaining that they<lb/>
thought well-balanced programs<lb/>
should be of various types, they<lb/>
had a series of scenes, presented<lb/>
by students in costume. The<lb/>
semes illustrated bits of pro-<lb/>
grams to be presented?dance,<lb/>
drama, current problems, fun,<lb/>
and music.<lb/>
For the dance, Katherine Crow<lb/>
introduced her two dancers.<lb/>
Ruth Wood and Virginia Friar.<lb/>
who came out on the stage<lb/>
in soft draperies, swinging and<lb/>
swerving gracefully in harmony<lb/>
with the music, then posed on the<lb/>
side.<lb/>
Jewel Cole, for the drama, pre-<lb/>
sented her players. Katherine<lb/>
Hines and Billy Tolson who gave<lb/>
the balcony scene from "Romeo<lb/>
and Juliet<lb/>
tr man, visitors halfback. starreu'Voi<lb/>
The<lb/>
probie<lb/>
n for<lb/>
Davis, n<lb/>
? r hi<lb/>
current<lb/>
itroduc-<lb/>
an<lb/>
r iazz age is at its ragged<lb/>
tail end. It is no longer smart<lb/>
?er.<lb/>
i m rai?Rabbi A. H. Sib<lb/>
Max Ascob-The New Deal<lb/>
looks more like a mass migration<lb/>
through unexplored lands than<lb/>
like a conflict of classes or<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
Arthur Brisbane?Nature made<lb/>
woman beautiful and, forever,<lb/>
she strives to look queer.<lb/>
Geneva Brown will act as<lb/>
president of the sophomore class<lb/>
this year. Nola Walters will<lb/>
serve as Student Government<lb/>
representative. Other officers<lb/>
elected are Belle Kearney, vice-<lb/>
president; Martha Hints, Treas-<lb/>
urer- Frances Edgerton, Secre-<lb/>
tary; Lucille Clark, Tecoan; Ruth<lb/>
Cagle and Rebecca Noel, Cheer<lb/>
Leaders. The Teco Echo reporter<lb/>
who is chosen by the editor,<lb/>
will be announced later.<lb/>
The Fall Meeting of the North<lb/>
Carolina Collegiate Press Asso-<lb/>
ciation will be held in High Point<lb/>
with High Point College acting<lb/>
as host, on November 8, 9, and<lb/>
10th. An elaborate program for<lb/>
the three day session is planned.<lb/>
Larry ,r tin of State College<lb/>
is Preside of the Association.<lb/>
Kathryn Hines, editor of the<lb/>
Tecoan is Secretary. Other dele-<lb/>
gates from here who plan to at-<lb/>
tend are Mary Gorham, Dorothy<lb/>
Hooks and Clyde Morton.<lb/>
In the unique program of<lb/>
Dramatic Interludes" given on<lb/>
Tuesday night, the English actor.<lb/>
V. L. Granville, presented, in<lb/>
costume, and with excellent in-<lb/>
terpretation, a dozen characters<lb/>
from literature.<lb/>
He proved himself a versatile<lb/>
actor, as he was utterly merged<lb/>
in each character in turn. His<lb/>
program ranged through the var-<lb/>
ious types, from heavy tragedy to<lb/>
comedy, but was made up entire-<lb/>
ly of selections of literary merit<lb/>
chosen from different fields and<lb/>
from first to last, given in chro-<lb/>
nological order. He opened with<lb/>
a selection from the Bible, pre-<lb/>
senting a scene from Job, taking<lb/>
alternately the part of the narra-<lb/>
tor and of Job.<lb/>
From the Greek, he gave a<lb/>
scene from "The Clouds the<lb/>
comedy by Aristopleanes, appear-<lb/>
ing as Strepsiades. Hamlet was<lb/>
the Shakespearean character he<lb/>
assumed. The restoration period<lb/>
was represented by the humorous<lb/>
character of Lady Wishfort from<lb/>
'The Way of the World<lb/>
(Continued on page four)<lb/>
inkling oi ? me great proDiema<lb/>
of the past and Marion Wood<lb/>
forecast the future events.<lb/>
Fun was portrayed by Miss<lb/>
Mary Ella Bunn who cartwheel-<lb/>
ed out on the stage demanding<lb/>
a pan in the year program.<lb/>
Music tame last when Jack<lb/>
Humphrey sang "At Dawning"<lb/>
accompanied by Katie Lee John-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The program ended with a tri-<lb/>
bute to the new President, Dr. L.<lb/>
mittees in Educational organiza-<lb/>
tions,<lb/>
Hv is a good business man, an<lb/>
excellent speaker, and is exceed-<lb/>
ingly popular with his associates,<lb/>
the alumnae, and the students.<lb/>
Dr. Meadows has been absent<lb/>
from his duties at East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College only for grad-<lb/>
uate study and for war service.<lb/>
He spent two years at Columbia<lb/>
University where he received his<lb/>
Ph. D. in 1922. He received his<lb/>
B. A. and M. A. from Yale Uni-<lb/>
versity.<lb/>
He was born in Lafayette, Ala<lb/>
on May 14, 1884, but he later<lb/>
moved to Haynesville, La where<lb/>
he attended public schools.<lb/>
Dr. Meadows has been twice<lb/>
married: in 1919 he was married<lb/>
to Miss Lida Hill of Darlington,<lb/>
S. C, who died in 1925. By this<lb/>
n arriage there are three children:<lb/>
Leon Renfroe, Jr Lida Elizabeth,<lb/>
and May Temperance.<lb/>
On September 10. 1927 he mar-<lb/>
: ed Miss Louise Coggin of Shel-<lb/>
byville. Tenn. He is an active<lb/>
member of the Baptist Church.<lb/>
POE SOCIETY ENTERTAINS<lb/>
THE FRESHMAN CLASS<lb/>
The Poe Society entertained<lb/>
the members of the freshmen<lb/>
class and other new students,<lb/>
transfers from other colleges, at<lb/>
a weiner roast and picnic sup-<lb/>
per down by the lake on Wed-<lb/>
nesday afternoon between the<lb/>
hours of 5:00 and 6:30. In spite<lb/>
EL Meadows and the singing of of a drizzle, games of all kinds<lb/>
the school song. ' were played, weiners roasted<lb/>
The costuming was done by j over the fire, and a picnic sup-<lb/>
Mary Gorham and the incidental j per was served. About three<lb/>
music was played by Rachel ? hundred and fifty new girls were<lb/>
Stone. present. The hostesses were the<lb/>
Miss Mary Dirnberger, teacher' officers of the Poe Society:<lb/>
of the Drama, was director of the Misses Carolyn Brinkley, presi<lb/>
program and Mary Shaw Robe<lb/>
son, chairman of chapel program<lb/>
committee was stage manager.<lb/>
The new chapel program com-<lb/>
mittee consists of Misses Mary<lb/>
Shaw Robeson, chairman, Minnie Philip Curtiss?It is one of the<lb/>
Margaret Gorham, secretary, and most upsetting moments of life<lb/>
dent; Elizabeth D. Johnson, vice-<lb/>
president; Elizabeth Carswell,<lb/>
secretary and Merle Sasser,<lb/>
treasurer.<lb/>
Margaret Bostic, Mae Martin, and<lb/>
Jack Humphrey.<lb/>
Damon Runyan?There is noth-<lb/>
ing more unexciting than a yacht<lb/>
race unless perhaps it is watch-<lb/>
ing the grass grow.<lb/>
when one discovers that some<lb/>
taste, habit or standard of judg-<lb/>
ment which one has trusted for<lb/>
years and supposed to be univer-<lb/>
sal is not really universal at all,<lb/>
but is merely a personal eccen-<lb/>
tricity.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038021_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
3<lb/>
:4g<lb/>
0<lb/>
Paqe Two<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Published Bi-Weekly During Tho College Year<lb/>
By The Student Government Association of<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief Clyde Morton<lb/>
Business Manager Dorothy Hooks<lb/>
Editorial Staff<lb/>
Managing Editor Jennie Green Taylor<lb/>
Sporl Editor George S. Willard. Jr.<lb/>
A<lb/>
teporter<lb/>
.Martha Teal<lb/>
E.<lb/>
Assistant Editors<lb/>
ner, Malene Grant, Frances Monk,<lb/>
(rani. Selma Gurganus, and Carolyn<lb/>
AdvertLsing Managers<lb/>
lie'en Davis: Josephine Ranes, Chessie Edmund-<lb/>
st IT. .lewd Cole. Billie Vogler, Elizabeth Wilson,<lb/>
Lola Holt. Mary Alice Starr.<lb/>
From many quarters comes the reflec-<lb/>
tion that the spirit in which the appropria-<lb/>
tions were made had been violated in that<lb/>
undergraduates are being employed in place<lb/>
of older people, given work that the unem-<lb/>
ployed could accomplish.<lb/>
In devising this plan to increase college<lb/>
enrollment the educational department of<lb/>
FEKA voiced the hope that jobs alloted<lb/>
would be new ones, that work in the fields<lb/>
of education, government and social service<lb/>
at present left entirely undone should be de-<lb/>
vised for beuefitting from the appropria-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
COLLEGE EDITORS<lb/>
HOLD MEETING<lb/>
i j<lb/>
good send-off, iC<lb/>
tii. Harvard<lb/>
nation-w id<lb/>
and a<lb/>
Morrison, Editor of<lb/>
Crimson, "if such a<lb/>
Pull" of undergraduate<lb/>
OUR NEW PRESIDENT<lb/>
Circulation Managers<lb/>
A more lilting date for the election of<lb/>
the new president of our college could not<lb/>
l .i Joyner, Blanche White, Annie Lee Joneshave been picked than October 5th. This is<lb/>
Prances Edgerton, Lois Leake, Merle Sasser, Helen<lb/>
faylor, and Cynthia Ethendge.<lb/>
lite. So as a quarter oi" a century under the<lb/>
first leader passed, the second quarter un-<lb/>
the birthday of the college, and the date just<lb/>
j passed, marked the twenty-fifth year of its<lb/>
Member North Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
at the Postoffice, Greenville, N. C, under the<lb/>
act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
ssofintfd CoUcoiutr press<lb/>
19 I t .?'?u<lb/>
lawMAol I " 1 4<lb/>
Wednesday, October 17, 1934.<lb/>
TYVENTY-FIFTH ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
Advertising Rates 25c per column inch per issue; clor the new leader has begun.<lb/>
Subscription  $1.50 Per Year firgt Uvtntyfivc years was led by<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925, a great person of lofty ideals and of noble<lb/>
character. He has been followed by another,<lb/>
no less great, whose personality has many<lb/>
characteristics similar to those of the first.<lb/>
A man who has the interest of the institu-<lb/>
tion and its future primarily at heart will<lb/>
naturally do his best to promote college ac-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
We see something of his true value in his<lb/>
talks to the student body. He has inspired<lb/>
them with faith, hope and courage. Those<lb/>
who have been so fortunate as to have had<lb/>
classes under him. have seen his sense of<lb/>
humor, and his general optomistic outlook.<lb/>
We congratulate the Board of Trustees<lb/>
upon their selection of so worthy a man to<lb/>
serve the college as it's president but first<lb/>
we congratulate- ourselves upon having so<lb/>
worthy a leader.<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College has just<lb/>
. i ii brated its twenty-fifth anniversary.<lb/>
On October 5, 1909 a small group of<lb/>
students and a small staff met for the first<lb/>
time. To-day over a thousand students are<lb/>
registered for courses here. At that time<lb/>
: asl Carolina Teachers Training School was<lb/>
two-year normal school, with a handful of<lb/>
prospective teachers beginning their work,<lb/>
and seme high school students who did not<lb/>
have access to a standard high school. Now.<lb/>
aii the students are graduates of standard<lb/>
high schools, and more than half of them are<lb/>
wen king for their A. B. degrees. East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College to-day has a national<lb/>
reputation as a class A college, ranking<lb/>
among the best.<lb/>
The beautifully planted campus With" it.<lb/>
seventeen buildings is in sharp contrast with<lb/>
the original camjugf a smalhy; acreage and<lb/>
tewer Duikhngs: me lovely "vv ngnt s Uval<lb/>
and ether of the campus beauty spots are<lb/>
comparatively new and have done much to<lb/>
enhance the general attractiveness of the<lb/>
surroundings,<lb/>
USE THE OPEN FORUM COLUMN<lb/>
We<lb/>
student<lb/>
umn of<lb/>
wish to call to the attention of the<lb/>
body the "Student Opinion" col-<lb/>
the Teco Echo.<lb/>
On September 15, an organiza-<lb/>
tion was formed which may have<lb/>
a profound influence in shaping<lb/>
publie opinion in the future. On<lb/>
that day, some thirty editors of<lb/>
college newspapers met in New<lb/>
York City and drafted the Cove-<lb/>
nant of the Association of College<lb/>
Editors.<lb/>
President Roosevelt expressed<lb/>
his interest in the organization in<lb/>
a telegram:<lb/>
"Will you please convey my<lb/>
greetings and best wishes to the<lb/>
group of young college editors.<lb/>
The purpose of the conference as<lb/>
explained seems to me to be par-<lb/>
ticularly worthwhile, and I wish<lb/>
the founders of 'ACE" all success.<lb/>
Florello H. LaGuardia. Mayor<lb/>
of New York City, also express-<lb/>
ed his interest in a letter which<lb/>
was read to the conference by<lb/>
Francis G. Smith, Jr President<lb/>
of the Association of College Edi-<lb/>
tors.<lb/>
"The possibilities of such an<lb/>
organization are so great, and its<lb/>
usefulness so apparent wrote<lb/>
Mayor LaGuardia, "that one won-<lb/>
ders why it was not done before.<lb/>
It is well known that the youth,<lb/>
and particularly the young col-<lb/>
lege men and women of Euro-<lb/>
pean countries have for many<lb/>
years taken an active part and<lb/>
interest in politics<lb/>
The preamble of the Covenant<lb/>
stated as the aims of the ACE.<lb/>
"To stimulate the interest of Yo<lb/>
students throughout the world in<lb/>
promoting international under-<lb/>
standing and cooperation in the<lb/>
hope of ultimately achieving and ,<lb/>
insuring peace and security; to<lb/>
arouse the students in the- sever-<lb/>
al countries to seek to under-<lb/>
stand and obtain an honest in-<lb/>
telligent, and efficient govern- :<lb/>
merit; to enlist the aid of all<lb/>
students in securing a higher <lb/>
and sounder standard of living in ,<lb/>
the spirit of the greatest good for!<lb/>
the greatest number, to provide<lb/>
media for public expression and<lb/>
direction of the thoughts and<lb/>
?lv. But<lb/>
We<lb/>
u<lb/>
Id<lb/>
O.I<lb/>
?Peaci<lb/>
were conducted immediatt<lb/>
we don't feel that the und<lb/>
duates in this countrj<lb/>
for such a poll-<lb/>
launch a concerted t<lb/>
to arouse interest m these mat-<lb/>
ters, try to understand them, such<lb/>
a poll 'would really prove some-<lb/>
thing"<lb/>
In that spirit, it was agreed<lb/>
that the A. C. E. would launch<lb/>
such a "concerted editorial<lb/>
to arouse inter -t "<lb/>
concerned<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
tempt<lb/>
Dep<lb/>
CO<lb/>
I ? ?<lb/>
lay ?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
Large Numb i<lb/>
Graduate - A<lb/>
s<lb/>
uniincr<lb/>
v,<lb/>
? ad i ii<lb/>
hool Here<lb/>
ie prop<lb/>
,pon<lb/>
iry.<lb/>
Ai<lb/>
edi<lb/>
wi<lb/>
th<lb/>
several<lb/>
ur-<lb/>
lUia<lb/>
onal<lb/>
tgue<lb/>
lited<lb/>
ti<lb/>
r- i ?<lb/>
c<lb/>
n- i i<lb/>
That column has not<lb/>
, vet made its appearance due to the fact that<lb/>
jit has had no contributors. It is a column<lb/>
that is run for self expression of the stu-<lb/>
I cubits on campus matters, and they should<lb/>
ie<lb/>
jree to contribute to it at any time. It<lb/>
is not lor destructive criticism as many peo-<lb/>
ple think, but it is for constructive criticism<lb/>
as well. If there is any campus organization,<lb/>
or activity that you think deserves either<lb/>
, praise or criticism why not tell the student<lb/>
A great change has taken place. The' body about it through this column? Send<lb/>
tppearance and size of the campus, the num- - a letters to the editor of this publication.<lb/>
ber of buildings, the student body, all have Please sign your name and state whether or<lb/>
lergone metamorphis. Even the mem- not you want your name published. If you<lb/>
bers el the original faculty have changed, j do not want it published it will not be. In<lb/>
But there is one thing that has remained the the efforts of the staff to make the Teco<lb/>
same throughout the years. It is no material Echo truly a student's paper, it is necessary<lb/>
thing. It is that faith and aspiration that<lb/>
questions<lb/>
ing peace:<lb/>
1 Do you think there si<lb/>
be some body of internal<lb/>
arbitration, such as the Lt<lb/>
of Nations, and that the I<lb/>
states should become a member d?<lb/>
oi that league?<lb/>
2. Do you believe that<lb/>
maintenance of a large Army<lb/>
Navy is the best method oi ins<lb/>
ing peace?<lb/>
3. Do you think that gove<lb/>
ments should own munition<lb/>
planes and armament factories;<lb/>
It was agreed that, during the<lb/>
second week in January. 1935,<lb/>
the A. C. E. and The Literary Di-<lb/>
gest would cooperate in c<lb/>
ing a national "Peace 1 i<lb/>
among undergraduates based<lb/>
those questions.<lb/>
In order to co-ordinate the ac<lb/>
tivities of the different membi :<lb/>
editors of the A. C. E the grad<lb/>
uate members working in N w<lb/>
City have undertaken U<lb/>
circulate to A. C. E. papers i<lb/>
daily column called "Trend<lb/>
composed of articles and edito<lb/>
rials by undergraduates.<lb/>
11.<lb/>
i i<lb/>
nduct- ; of info<lb/>
in!to the<lb/>
? P?P<lb/>
At the dinner after the conl<lb/>
ence. Francis Smith. Pn iidi I '<lb/>
A. C. E? set forth the purpose<lb/>
the organization,<lb/>
??It is our belief that the i<lb/>
iege press, as the rgan I I<lb/>
new generation of under) radu<lb/>
can arouse, express, and in<lb/>
measure direct their new ld<lb/>
A. C. E. hopes to become in<lb/>
own field what the press of<lb/>
elders once was?an interpre<lb/>
b<lb/>
le. a leader"<lb/>
?From Literary<lb/>
Di<lb/>
energies of both undergraduate a U!<lb/>
and graduate students interested <lb/>
in realizing these aims; to pro- <lb/>
mote progressive education TllC Literary DltfCst<lb/>
The Association of College Edi- Conducts Research On<lb/>
tors is a product of the spirit of j RoOSCVelt's l'olifV<lb/>
V<lb/>
The Mi<lb/>
sota I<lb/>
Nev<lb/>
Univi rsi<lb/>
. ? Dai<lb/>
!?? 1 i<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
s ae oi<lb/>
was instigated in that first student body by<lb/>
their president. Faith in the day and its ac-<lb/>
ti itaes, faith in themselves and faith in their<lb/>
companions; aspiration towards high ideals;<lb/>
they were those qualities that they had.<lb/>
to have your cooperation and you are urged<lb/>
to make contributions.<lb/>
the. Vmes. There are Cronos of i<lb/>
young college graduates all over I<lb/>
the United States collecting for<lb/>
dinner, for lunch, for talks to<lb/>
discuss problems more serious<lb/>
than the approaching football<lb/>
season at their alma maters.<lb/>
Such a group of young grad-<lb/>
uates met at intervals du'ing the<lb/>
summer in New York City. They<lb/>
conceived the idea of organizing<lb/>
the undergraduate press" as the<lb/>
organ of their generation that<lb/>
would serve to stimulate and ex-<lb/>
press their thoughts.<lb/>
That group of graduates wrote<lb/>
READ THE DAILY PAPERS<lb/>
It is interesting to note that a larger<lb/>
 students passed on to the succeeding j number of students arc subscribing to a daily<lb/>
.student body and to all those that followed j aper this year than did last. One of the<lb/>
them the importance of those two things. We, most benefitting habits that a college student<lb/>
to-day, have it, and will pass it on to those!should cultivate is that of reading a daily<lb/>
classes that follow us. As East Carolina j paper thoroughly. Not just look at the comic<lb/>
Teachers College continues to live and to I strips, or read the story, but to really read a<lb/>
grow, it will be with competent student bo- j paper for the news items of world happenings<lb/>
dies who realize the urge of those abstract that they may glean. North Carolina as a<lb/>
qualities?faith and high aspiration. They whole is not an extensive paper reading state.<lb/>
will ever be unchanging qualities that will It is surprising to know just how few people<lb/>
better all those who have them. of th egeneral public do read a newspaper<lb/>
thoroughly. Yet many of these people call<lb/>
themselves educated. In the true sense of the<lb/>
word they are not educated, for they are<lb/>
not familiar with contemporary history. As<lb/>
students we have the chance to help, make<lb/>
a change in this situation. We have the op-<lb/>
portunity in our college to familiarize our-<lb/>
selves ith current events by taking a course<lb/>
in that subject. However this should not<lb/>
suffice. We should make it a habit to read<lb/>
the daily newspapers.<lb/>
FERA APPROPRIATIONS<lb/>
FERA appropriations aimed to increase<lb/>
college enrollment has been apportioned<lb/>
to approximately 12 per cent of the<lb/>
students now registered in the colleges of<lb/>
the United States, but even 12 per cent of<lb/>
the enrollment could not take care of all the<lb/>
applications that were sent in for the Fed-<lb/>
eral aid.<lb/>
The main factors in the alloting of<lb/>
FERA material were financial need, scholas-<lb/>
tic record and the priority of application. At<lb/>
least 50 per cent of the applications must be<lb/>
earned by students who were not enrolled<lb/>
a year ago and each college has divided<lb/>
funds proportionally between men and wo-<lb/>
men students. Varied occupations are in-<lb/>
cluded in the list.<lb/>
There has recently been considerable<lb/>
criticism of the allotment of these jobs to<lb/>
students. Many times students have re-<lb/>
ceived help who do not need it. In the large<lb/>
number of applications the officials could<lb/>
have given work to some students who did<lb/>
not need it. and some other of the applica-<lb/>
tions did.<lb/>
The Literary Digest Poll on h<lb/>
the Roosevelt policies has been j<lb/>
extended to seventeen colleges in<lb/>
different section of the United<lb/>
States m cooperation with the<lb/>
student newspapers in those col-<lb/>
leges. Fifteen million American<lb/>
citizens have been asked through<lb/>
the medium of the current Digest<lb/>
Poll: "Do you favor on the whole<lb/>
the acts and policies of Roose-<lb/>
velt's first Year?"<lb/>
Now The Digest has extended<lb/>
its search for an accurate ex-<lb/>
pression of the Voice of the<lb/>
to some forty college editors in I Amencan people to the Amon-<lb/>
the United States and Canada, Lan cnUij0 campus. Never b-<lb/>
outlining the project The lit- fore have the American youth<lb/>
erary Digest had shown a sympa-j had such m Opportunitv to ex-<lb/>
thetic interest in the venture. press their opinion on a question<lb/>
After long correspondence with (if nali(,nal importance, the ans-<lb/>
the interested editors, the group wer l(J which wlll one day be<lb/>
working in New York met with their mvn probkm.<lb/>
The Digest has always gone to<lb/>
the editorial pages of American<lb/>
newspapers to trace the trend of<lb/>
At that conference, Arthur S. popular opimon. The editors of<lb/>
Draper, Editor of the Literary j The DlgefiX now ri.cognize the<lb/>
Digest, welcomed the young edi- !imDOrtanco 0 working with and<lb/>
through college newspapers.<lb/>
"College newspapers are the<lb/>
midst of a tremendously impor onJy wgan of bVj and f(,r V(,ulh<lb/>
tant social if not political revo- fa "Anu.rica to-day said Arthur<lb/>
lution. It is a buoying thought j g Draperj Editor of Tru. Literary<lb/>
Digest. "The youth that those<lb/>
papers reach will one day gov-<lb/>
home ad<lb/>
The Di?<lb/>
dent tha<lb/>
shall fill<lb/>
evidence<lb/>
i Teave ior<lb/>
have been<lb/>
dresses. Th<lb/>
tmrflf, wit<lb/>
mailed to<lb/>
Editor of<lb/>
st urges that every stu-<lb/>
receives such a bollot<lb/>
it out and return it in<lb/>
of the fact that the<lb/>
Youth of America is interested in<lb/>
currenl events, understands<lb/>
them, and would like an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to register an opinion<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
I<lb/>
S:<lb/>
Mm <lb/>
frnr;<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
WARREN'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
thirty of the college editors to<lb/>
draft the Covenant of the Asso-<lb/>
ciation and to outline its work.<lb/>
tors and sounded the key-note.<lb/>
"In my opinion we are in the<lb/>
Obey the Weather's Commands by Wearing<lb/>
One of the Many Chic Woolen Dresses<lb/>
from Our Shop.<lb/>
BLOOM'S<lb/>
GOOD SPIRIT SHOWN AT GAME<lb/>
The student body is to be commended<lb/>
upon the splendid spirit shown at the pep<lb/>
meeting before the football clash with Win-<lb/>
gate and at the game as well. The interest<lb/>
ran high and the yelling was fine. Every-<lb/>
body seemed to get in the spirit of the game<lb/>
and on the whole the enthusiasm was high-<lb/>
er than ever before. The cheer leaders did<lb/>
their part about leading the yells. Even the<lb/>
boys fought a losing game, but the score was<lb/>
low and the game was splendid.<lb/>
With the enthusiastic support of a thous-<lb/>
and rooters, the future of the team will sure-<lb/>
ly be bright.<lb/>
that under graduates are cons<lb/>
cious of this fact<lb/>
The Covenant, the machinery<lb/>
of the Association of College Edi-<lb/>
tors, was set up and adopted be-<lb/>
fore noon on September 15. Sev-<lb/>
eral older newspaper men sat in<lb/>
on that conference. One of them,<lb/>
John H. Sorrel, Executive Editor<lb/>
of the Scripps-Howard Newspa-<lb/>
pers, was moved to remark.<lb/>
"The thing that impresses me<lb/>
is that all these young men and<lb/>
women seem agreed, they all<lb/>
know where they want to go<lb/>
All members of the ACE agreed<lb/>
to unite in an editorial drive to<lb/>
have a course in current events<lb/>
included in the curriculum of<lb/>
every college, a course based on<lb/>
the daily newspaper as a text<lb/>
book.<lb/>
The Association formally re-<lb/>
quested The Literary Digest to<lb/>
co-operate with A. C, E. member<lb/>
papers in conduf-iai ? "Peace<lb/>
Poll" in all the ctnt, ;s in the<lb/>
United States. A number of the<lb/>
editors pointed out the danger of<lb/>
conducting such a poll as soon as<lb/>
the college year opened.<lb/>
"A Peace Poll" in January<lb/>
" Of course the A. C. E. would<lb/>
gain a lot of favorable publicity<lb/>
ern this country. That day is hot<lb/>
far distant. It is essential that<lb/>
that section of American popular<lb/>
opinion should have some oppor-<lb/>
tunity to express itself, since on-<lb/>
ly through the expression of<lb/>
their opinions can the interest<lb/>
and thought of American youth<lb/>
be sufficiently stimulated so that<lb/>
they may arrive at an opinion<lb/>
worth expressing. It is a circle<lb/>
that college newspapers must<lb/>
keep in motion<lb/>
The Literary Digest began<lb/>
working with the College editors<lb/>
during the past winter when the<lb/>
Ringless Hosiery<lb/>
SHEER AND CLEAR<lb/>
7!)c. 2 Pre. 81.5(1<lb/>
Join Our Hosiery Club<lb/>
Ruyuoutfojolutearxri?? ?<lb/>
LER-JONE<lb/>
? ana make it ah<lb/>
WELCOME TO E.<lb/>
GIRLS<lb/>
Come To?<lb/>
C. T. C.<lb/>
YOUNG'S<lb/>
For<lb/>
DRESSES AND GLOVES<lb/>
AT POPULAR PRICES<lb/>
Dickenson Avenue<lb/>
WELCOME STUDENTS AND FACULTY<lb/>
TO<lb/>
FROCKS<lb/>
TOMORROWS' STYLES TODAY<lb/>
A. S. 1.1 -?"?<lb/>
Vt Op!<lb/>
1H! PI K? ?J OI<lb/>
STUDEN1 j<lb/>
ru A- Dj<lb/>
: - talk 1<lb/>
are playinc a<lb/>
I<lb/>
fairl3 em<lb/>
part We n<lb/>
 Qa of i p<lb/>
erat ion i ? f 1. <lb/>
fett rnnea ar<lb/>
Art wt stJ -<lb/>
part?<lb/>
An . i nd 1<lb/>
monwealth an<lb/>
pies of the ;<lb/>
those prine It<lb/>
ust turn I<lb/>
aal tiviru<lb/>
tual ends ?Nicl<lb/>
ler.<lb/>
The War D? I<lb/>
?"unraer, evi i<lb/>
point will re<lb/>
hour- of Qj<lb/>
lc'ge course<lb/>
QUALITY AT<lb/>
Hosiery. I'ndeM<lb/>
Toilet (.<lb/>
W.T.Gn<lb/>
"Known Fed<lb/>
<pb facs="00038021_0003"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
17. 1934.<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Paae Three<lb/>
Number Former<lb/>
tates Attend The<lb/>
r School Here<lb/>
HOME GAME<lb/>
NOVEMBER 17<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
George S. Willard, Jr Sports Editor<lb/>
LET'S SUPPORT<lb/>
OUR TEAM<lb/>
 .C ill Be Monogram (Huh<lb/>
Vt Opponent<lb/>
Holds lleetin?i<lb/>
Is Well Or-<lb/>
Game Is<lb/>
C<lb/>
T. C. Monogram To B<lb/>
Only One Worn Here.<lb/>
Plans Are Mtade For Initia-j<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
State Plays "Gators" N MK,ins,s<lb/>
In Saturday Contest<lb/>
Mat!<lb/>
?.????.??Duke Plays Davidson; Caro-<lb/>
Sports Comments1 lina Meets Kentucky; Wata<lb/>
E C<lb/>
take<lb/>
T.<lb/>
The Monogram Club has mac. ???.??. <lb/>
new ruling that no men stu??<lb/>
nts wh.? are enrolled here will While the pirate team was 1ns-<lb/>
allowed to wear any other ing a hotly contested fight on the<lb/>
ionogram than that of East gridiron last Saturday, th<lb/>
ai lina Teachers College Hith<lb/>
tofon the men students have<lb/>
een ?eai ing high school tetters,<lb/>
i lei ter from i it her c lleee:<lb/>
Forest Will Observe Homc-<lb/>
Coming Day By Playing<lb/>
Presbyterian College.<lb/>
A Bi Success<lb/>
avp b<lb/>
rm<lb/>
S I<lb/>
tposi i nu<lb/>
DENT 01 M'lL<lb/>
In mot ro PUNISH<lb/>
from. Th<lb/>
the future.<lb/>
Theo Easoi<lb/>
the Club,<lb/>
iniriit<lb/>
All but one of North Carolina's<lb/>
Big Five football teams will play<lb/>
on Old North State soil this week.<lb/>
N. C. State College's Wolfpack<lb/>
goes to Tampa to meet Univer-<lb/>
sity of Florida's 'Gators to pro-<lb/>
vide the only out-of-state en-<lb/>
;y were<lb/>
inning the greatest victory pos-<lb/>
hle on the side lines. The great-<lb/>
it benefit that may be derived<lb/>
r colleges from athletics, regardless of what<lb/>
transferred I our best coaches may say for<lb/>
wd Ibe eliminated in 1 propaganda purposes, is the<lb/>
arousing of school u commun- gagemenf on the Big Five eal<lb/>
President of ity spirit. Imagine any student Iendar.<lb/>
t it is t!i body with a lagging, sluggish Duke mi Davidson will clash<lb/>
? of the ficers to make school spirit, and you will have J at Davidson in a family battle,<lb/>
club one oi the most out- a picture of East Carolina Teach- the first test for Duke within the<lb/>
ding organizations for mm ers College, in past years. Girls Big Five. Carolina will play<lb/>
ent on the campus "Plansjhave boon accused of having Iwslhost to Kentucky in the home-<lb/>
lV<lb/>
fur<lb/>
n<lb/>
?rn-<lb/>
Decn mad<lb/>
i fit Easom, "for ti<lb/>
tion of tin- now nun.in<lb/>
il o states that ho think: I<lb/>
plan of abolishing all oth r c<lb/>
i K?- letters and high school 1<lb/>
ters v. dl aid toward building<lb/>
a bolter college spirit<lb/>
Jimmv Carr is Secretan to '<lb/>
tates I school spirit ami It<lb/>
utia- than boys. Howe<lb/>
He that if these accus<lb/>
the' one of thorn<lb/>
col- . eame Satura<lb/>
 coming day feature at Chapel;<lb/>
! Tf? ?.   .i il u generally agreed<lb/>
ay I Hill. Wake Forest also will ob- ' <lb/>
nd I was serve its home-coming day. with<lb/>
t seen !heltne Blue Stockings of Presbyter-<lb/>
they would have ian College furnishing the oppo-<lb/>
al out faced their<lb/>
or sxtion.<lb/>
up woi<lb/>
ild certainly have been biased Davidson and Wake<lb/>
in their observation.<lb/>
M;<lb/>
1 teams were idle Saturday<lb/>
Forest<lb/>
Most<lb/>
A most enthusiastic group<lb/>
made up of students and faculty<lb/>
members, gathered at the Cam-<lb/>
pus Building Friday evening to<lb/>
give the football team its final I<lb/>
send off before the Wingate<lb/>
game. May this date, October 1.<lb/>
1934 forever be remembered a<lb/>
the beginning of a typ? ,<lb/>
of meeting heretofore unknown!<lb/>
at East Carolina Teachers Col- j<lb/>
lege. The meeting was, in every j<lb/>
sense of the word a real pep<lb/>
meeting. In fact so much pep<lb/>
was displayed that the student<lb/>
body all but won the actual game<lb/>
Friday night.<lb/>
At 8:45 Friday evening the pep<lb/>
meeting began with a "big bang<lb/>
and in a big way. A group ot<lb/>
slightly musically inclined coeds<lb/>
paraded the campus, and their<lb/>
frequent discords resounded<lb/>
from Cotton to Wilson. It was<lb/>
among the<lb/>
bandsmen to ostracize any mem-<lb/>
ber who attempted to play in the<lb/>
right key (you know, it just isn't<lb/>
done at 'pep-py' meetings. Hence<lb/>
the results were colossal, stupen-<lb/>
dous, gigantic and that sort of<lb/>
Pirates Lose To Wingate<lb/>
In A Close Grid Game<lb/>
PIRATE COACH<lb/>
E. C.<lb/>
apologize<lb/>
for what I h<lb/>
if the Davidson players were on<lb/>
on. Frank Jennings, previously in this column rela- j hand to watcli Duke battle Geor-<lb/>
the vIce-President last tive to this subject. gia Tech. The Wildcats' sched-<lb/>
FINAL SCURF IS I<lb/>
"DOC" MATHIS<lb/>
oth I ?  - K ort i! Aei iaJ<lb/>
Attact; E C. T. C. Ha: Ed e<lb/>
In Number Complet i.<lb/>
Crowd Is Most Enthusiastic.<lb/>
Plavins :? i th ? ?s I and<lb/>
East Carolina tea hers C ll ge,<lb/>
the fighting Pirate- went d<lb/>
I ef re a heavier team fi m  .?<lb/>
gate, 6-0. From U e first ? is-<lb/>
tie, most i i the I r aks w? n1 to<lb/>
EL C. T C, but thi newly form-<lb/>
ed team seemed unable to convert<lb/>
the breaks to a score Their best<lb/>
chance for score came in the first<lb/>
and last period A tumble on<lb/>
tia 12 yard line in the last quar-<lb/>
thing and only Durantes "ah-hh , THIS IS WHAT AMATEUR<lb/>
-hh' was missing in the pro- ; IS SUPPOSED NOT TO DO<lb/>
cedure. Many students filed after j<lb/>
the band and added their "pep" I The Amateur Athletic Union<lb/>
ter, with only two yards<lb/>
go tor<lb/>
 did not return to schoo<lb/>
n electi'li will be necessar<lb/>
fill this vacancy<lb/>
Girls have<lb/>
spirit, bu it<lb/>
marvelous<lb/>
a team likt<lb/>
r the week before the game<lb/>
a first down, may have prevent-<lb/>
ed a six-all tie.<lb/>
Wingate's lone score came in<lb/>
the second quarter aftei ex-<lb/>
change of punts. Front the thir-<lb/>
 gible to compete as an amateui , , ? T, ,<lb/>
?t the Campus Building a se-by- S -vard h!U Parish passed to<lb/>
six<lb/>
Chool Me makers left an open date L evr mcreasing volume. says an athlete ceases to be eh-<lb/>
,i'  ,?? v-uhi ? i? t??iwhiiw?with Duke. Wake Forest staged.<lb/>
If' J (j1 ST ?s encounter by opposing ries ? luJ &amp; ?- ? H Mluwmg his name to be used Chapman who netted the<lb/>
THE ULTIMA RATIO When we are through criJFurham in a Thurda-V ?ame "M?' Coach Mathis, jjothj cunnectKm with an advertist.<lb/>
C1Z-<lb/>
Billv Tols<lb/>
n to<lb/>
all thei<lb/>
the Pee Dee Fair in Florence, S.<lb/>
Billv<lb/>
W<lb/>
Now will give<lb/>
w privi- about <lb/>
?p every-<lb/>
wishes to<lb/>
t woi k thai<lb/>
but if the<lb/>
n mighty<lb/>
?yes open<lb/>
ent lemen<lb/>
to talk<lb/>
thini<lb/>
dmit<lb/>
? ol the n<lb/>
LARGE NUMBER FORMER<lb/>
GRADUATES ATTEND THE<lb/>
f SUMMER SCHOOL HERE<lb/>
week su<lb/>
x v. saw o it i<lb/>
Wilson Hall step- 1<lb/>
ounded by a group<lb/>
es<lb/>
is<lb/>
4ConUftuesJ<lb/>
tRENS<lb/>
u eu.<lb/>
Fa<lb/>
i Wearing<lb/>
'it Dresses<lb/>
T!<lb/>
iev<lb/>
osiery<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
( ht!<lb/>
hear at<lb/>
ladies, and we noticed '<lb/>
more or less of a "sick calf" ex-<lb/>
pression in one of the young la-<lb/>
lies eyes?we are also told that<lb/>
one of our instructors has a se-<lb/>
cret passion for a lady by the<lb/>
name of Roena- we are not quite<lb/>
clear on that point, however, and<lb/>
v.iH try to keep you posted<lb/>
We also heard that our friend<lb/>
it is best forlMiss Mack (Portia to you) has<lb/>
disregard a an especial weakness for cats<lb/>
Id be willing 'No. Oswald, an animal) so we<lb/>
 uur band- expect some of the co-eds to start<lb/>
? can do, as purring m their laps.<lb/>
ise things we One of our Stooges told us that<lb/>
igs of great-j he beard a gal say that her<lb/>
I government room-mate heard somebody else<lb/>
 of respon-jsay that she heard that a certain<lb/>
bservance ol little brunette had come back to<lb/>
.  said in j school to keep from getting mar-<lb/>
lay night, welried?Whoooaaa- from the same<lb/>
and we mustsource we heard that a tall blond<lb/>
lay the game had been night-riding 5 times al-<lb/>
mu t do our ready- -but don't quote us.<lb/>
laintain that Today's Queries: What Sue sees<lb/>
lity of coop-j in Jack? Where Blanchard went<lb/>
and of honor Monday0 What Kay was doing<lb/>
. . but to our: ni the bushes Monday"? Who<lb/>
our college. I rooked Katy Lee? Who Dot's<lb/>
ugh to do our friend was down at the lake?<lb/>
Why Cobb the Mighty blows his<lb/>
 horn so much?<lb/>
r urman won, 3-2, the score<lb/>
e does, we must   ' . , ,<lb/>
, sounding like a pitching duel be-<lb/>
fine cheer f -? 7 ,<lb/>
tween the Dean brothers.<lb/>
SI Years Apart<lb/>
The Carolina-Kentucky game<lb/>
will be the headliner for grid fol-<lb/>
lowers of this section. Incident-<lb/>
ally, the Tar Heels and Wildcats<lb/>
from the Blue Grass byve met<lb/>
only once before in football?<lb/>
and that was in 1903 when Ken-<lb/>
tucky won, 8-5. Surviving mem-<lb/>
bers of Carolina's 1903 team will<lb/>
iagf tWQ<lb/>
Tolson acting as cheetf Lje whether compensated for j Both teams frequently resorted<lb/>
to aerials and the Pirates had a<lb/>
,? ? 'slight advantage in the number<lb/>
ensation direct to ,  , <lb/>
ard, Greenville; Lottie Beam.<lb/>
telby, Ella Poo Boomer, Swan<lb/>
Quarter; Hortense Boomer; The-<lb/>
a Bowden, Portsm uth; Velna<lb/>
Boykin, Tarboro; Clio Brmdl.<lb/>
Virginia Watson; Jessie Brew<lb/>
leader. Each member of the jt QJ7 n(jt j to aerials and the Pirates had<lb/>
squad was then introduced, and <lb/>
M  , ,  Accepting compeiuouim .ltc-<lb/>
the students dispersed when the .  a completed. Pass defense on both<lb/>
Hit btuuenu F . ur inciln?,tlv for usmg goods v<lb/>
band started that "awful noise - ?- n .teams seem?<lb/>
a?i or aPPVatus of any ?peis'o'Ai"1 ' i i<lb/>
"ld'iufacturer or agent.  v cKmost<lb/>
? t ?. ;?? 'Hasstll were perhaps  , ,<lb/>
. By engaging for pay or Etnan- , F uth<lb/>
v . . , . . .? ? standing for F. C. 1. C, a.<lb/>
iCial benefit in any occupation or I &amp; , ' , iur-<lb/>
LOSE THEIR CLOTHES , Z ?? l;? the entire team played well u. v<lb/>
l,c i?i??v t.v i business transaction wherein his, ' -<lb/>
 , , , ?u- ing most of the game. Chap-<lb/>
usefulness or value arises chief- b .  , . <lb/>
Ys - ? 3 ?,??, Yuv?? to CT.tr l. ,r ? ? mail, visitors halfback, starred for<lb/>
liow would you like .eip ; m frum the publicity given or tojm<lb/>
TWO WINGATE PLAYERS<lb/>
n. Jolly, and<lb/>
out-<lb/>
toueh<lb/>
wm a football game only to re-<lb/>
turn to the dressing room and<lb/>
find your clothes not even sale-<lb/>
he h nored at Saturday's game.<lb/>
Kentucky has gone Notre Dame<lb/>
ince the last visit of a Wildcat<lb/>
dive<lb/>
! v<lb/>
T<lb/>
'Iteam to Tar Teelia?the Lexing-<lb/>
boro; Julia il Butler. Vanceboro:<lb/>
Mary F. Butler. Lew is ton; Mary<lb/>
Carson, Stoke Sybil Clark.<lb/>
Greenville; Margaret Condon,<lb/>
Stantonsburg; Mrs, Ivy Modlin<lb/>
Cook, Aulander; Mary F. Craw-<lb/>
ford. fCinston; Hilda Creole.<lb/>
Scranton: Lucille Creech, Pine<lb/>
Level: Edna Davenport. Green-<lb/>
ville; (Catherine Davis. Klizabeth-<lb/>
town; Esther Mae Dennis, Aydcn:<lb/>
Pattie Jenkins: DeEtte Kimi<lb/>
ton boys played at Duke twice<lb/>
in recent seasons. Chet Mynne,<lb/>
former Auburn coach, is in his<lb/>
first year at Kentucky. Wynne<lb/>
IS one 0<lb/>
duets<lb/>
be given to the reputation or, ?<lb/>
fame which he has secured from j A high light of the game was<lb/>
his performances m any sport ! Jones' punting. In this he had a<lb/>
able at a fire sale"? Well, that is i rather than from his ability to decided advantage over the Wm-<lb/>
exactly what happened to two perform the usual or natural acts ; Sale back. Chapman,<lb/>
of the Wingate players last Satur- ancj duties incident to such occu-) E. C. T. C. Wingate<lb/>
day. When they returned to the pation or transaction. j Lindsey J Pittman<lb/>
dressing room from the showers.<lb/>
f Rockne's coaching pro-<lb/>
they found their suits almost<lb/>
completely burned.<lb/>
Manager Jimmie Carr attri-<lb/>
buted the cause of the fire to a<lb/>
cigarette.<lb/>
Left End<lb/>
Ross<lb/>
By accepting compensation for j<lb/>
coaching, instructing or papepar- j Johnson<lb/>
ing any person in or for any Left Tackle<lb/>
competition, exhibition or exer- i Carpenter<lb/>
: cise.<lb/>
Duke-Davidson<lb/>
As has been the case annually<lb/>
in recent years, Duke will be a<lb/>
decided favorite to take Davidson<lb/>
in this latest meeting of old foes.<lb/>
That open date just ahead of the<lb/>
Wii-lDukc game was no accident.<lb/>
Wilmington: Hazel ttunrey, w u <lb/>
. o ,i i ??, ?? Wind-1 Davu son scouts have been trail-<lb/>
mmgton: Bertha Leicester, w ma- r<lb/>
sor. Ruth Lemmond. Monroe<lb/>
Margaret Lewis, Farmville; Iren?<lb/>
By directly or indirectly re-M?lly<lb/>
ceivmg pay or financial benefits<lb/>
Hill Winston-Saiem: Irrna Hill<lb/>
Deep Run; Elbe Ford Hinson,<lb/>
Warrenton; Ida Holland, Mays-<lb/>
ville: Bernice House. Parmele;<lb/>
Helen House. Bethel; Marjoric<lb/>
Jackson, Wintervilte.<lb/>
VND FACULTf<lb/>
e British Com- <lb/>
,i chief exam<lb/>
al o.peration oL<lb/>
to which we'<lb/>
Id a society of'<lb/>
peration for<lb/>
1 and intellec-<lb/>
as Murray But-<lb/>
tment has an-<lb/>
egmrung next<lb/>
adet at West<lb/>
ve at least 20<lb/>
part of his col-<lb/>
Today's Criptic Comment: Jean I time, so long.<lb/>
can't Rodenhour because he has<lb/>
no car.<lb/>
Well, the birdie gave out again<lb/>
?stay out in the open. If y?!l<lb/>
hide we'll publish it?till next<lb/>
mg the Blue Devils since the sea-<lb/>
son opened. and yesterday's<lb/>
Duke-Georgia Tech game found<lb/>
varsitv<lb/>
entire Davidson<lb/>
Davidson varsity .  ??? ro<lb/>
J taught how tti earn, lhev weie<lb/>
on hand to get thel? . . ?hH ,n hnvc t(1<lb/>
the<lb/>
coaching crew<lb/>
high-low on WTade's 1934 equip-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Duke-Davidson game orig-<lb/>
inally was scheduled for Dur-<lb/>
ham, but a transfer to Davidson<lb/>
was made in order to give the<lb/>
Carolina-Kentucky game the<lb/>
day to itself in the Durham-Cha-<lb/>
pel Hill sector.<lb/>
Returning from three and a fQg partJclpatlon in any sport or Sinclair<lb/>
half years in the Orient, Prof, H. j oxlnbltj,)n<lb/>
H. Love of Cornell University re-1 By dlspusing of prizes for per- Kofete<lb/>
ports that China is progressing j sonal gain<lb/>
rapidly and warns that it is to Bv accepling directly or mdi Hassell<lb/>
the best interests of the world recUy anv pavmt.nt for loss of)<lb/>
that that nation be not swallowed fhM or wages m attondmg or Bai I t e<lb/>
by Japan. (training for any athletic compe-<lb/>
J i m <lb/>
Left Guard<lb/>
Center<lb/>
Right Guard<lb/>
Right T;<lb/>
Right End<lb/>
iu.<lb/>
Dr. Louis C. Wright?Our grad-<lb/>
nates, in many instances, were j<lb/>
tit ion.<lb/>
By competing under<lb/>
sumed name.<lb/>
an<lb/>
L( ft<lb/>
not properly schooled in how U<lb/>
live.<lb/>
Youth must not be afraid to<lb/>
. face the fact that it has to change<lb/>
In their battle at Tampa the ! polities, it has to change business<lb/>
Techs of State and the 'Gators ! ethics, it has to change the theo-<lb/>
will be seeking to settle the de ries of economics and. above<lb/>
cision for a two-year span. The ? everything else, it has to change<lb/>
teams met here in a night game i its own weaknesses.?Mrs. Frank-<lb/>
last fall, and the result was a lin D. Roosevelt,<lb/>
scoreless deadlock.<lb/>
Fei; ee<lb/>
DELIGHTFUL ADDITION TO YOUR ROOM<lb/>
Fill vour Cake Box, fruit bowl, and candy jar<lb/>
with tastv foods from that first class<lb/>
Grocery on E. Fifth Street.<lb/>
Garris Grocery<lb/>
OCKS<lb/>
FS TODAY<lb/>
QUALrnr at low cost<lb/>
'??'i?r Uaderwesr, Gloves<lb/>
l???Iet Goods.<lb/>
W.T. Grant Co.<lb/>
Known Eor Values"<lb/>
McLellan Stores Co.<lb/>
You Will Always Find Many Values Here<lb/>
SHOP WITH US<lb/>
We Deliver all packages at the College<lb/>
SPECIAL!<lb/>
Full Fashion ? Pure Thread ? Silk Hose<lb/>
69c Value, 49c Per Pair.<lb/>
White's Stores, Inc.<lb/>
Dickenson Avenue<lb/>
Broome.<lb/>
Bonds<lb/>
rterfi?ld<lb/>
Foxx<lb/>
Mclntyre<lb/>
WaJ<lb/>
Ch pman<lb/>
Parish<lb/>
sck<lb/>
Moort . Jack-<lb/>
Subs?Wingat<lb/>
son and Whitaker<lb/>
F. C. T. C: Madrin. Easom and<lb/>
Bowen.<lb/>
Refree: Brook. Furman.<lb/>
Umpire: Fleagle, Davidson.<lb/>
E. C. T. C. GIRLS ARE ALWAYS<lb/>
WELCOME AT<lb/>
E. T. GOOR, Jr.<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
322 Evans Street<lb/>
ENJOY GOOD MUSIC<lb/>
While You Drink Your Dope or Eat An<lb/>
Excellent Lunch.<lb/>
LAUTERES<lb/>
STOP at<lb/>
PLEASANT'S<lb/>
Our Sandwiches and Hot Dogs Are Cf<lb/>
Delicious and the price is only ?<lb/>
Phone 80 Day or Nite<lb/>
We Deliver to the College Girls<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038021_0004"/><lb/>
Wedm<lb/>
Page Four<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Miss Marx Frances Holland,<lb/>
m I ei oi thi V W C A a<lb/>
duel ed I i I ' ? ?? '? evening ?<lb/>
i  I ?  ? wa "Goi<lb/>
Lhi Se nd M l ' Sh said<lb/>
MOORE<lb/>
re, an A. B<lb/>
married to<lb/>
V ircinia<lb/>
Greenville,<lb/>
rs<lb/>
TII)lKKlcl)ONAH<lb/>
M,s. Margaret McDonaM was<lb/>
married to Henry Miles ?<lb/>
 euenboro, October 10. Mr<lb/>
redder is a graduate of E. C l.<lb/>
C . class of 2<lb/>
Miss Dixie Taylor, class of -27.<lb/>
ho teaches in U? Thi,d Street<lb/>
???, m Greenvilte, has eon-<lb/>
ucted a unique project in her<lb/>
?.?. Grade, and received<lb/>
,ually as unique results. Lasl<lb/>
f, the class began the study of<lb/>
I the same time Wall<lb/>
mou "Three Little<lb/>
. i h re They bad<lb/>
.ltld,r; Ethel Clyde Perry, <lb/>
lt!l. Gladys Rice, Beaver<lb/>
Gladys Grantham, ld<lb/>
Marearet Lewis, Karmvillc Ann<lb/>
SSE Morehead City; O-m<lb/>
Rea Morris, -Sunbuiy; f ran <lb/>
N'onnan. Greenville; Mildred<lb/>
Manning, Bethel; Leona Zahniser,<lb/>
Kellie Wise, Stumpy<lb/>
Greenviiu .<lb/>
oint; Mrs. Mary P. l ?a.n<lb/>
Kings Mountain; Martha White-<lb/>
hurst, Parmelee.<lb/>
tumes ami make tip v' '?' !i<lb/>
took two parts, he appeared<lb/>
spotlight on the darkened stag.<lb/>
H had hfc own lighting eq up<lb/>
ment, and hi ? sisiani renew r? a<lb/>
evidently valuable asai Uu -<lb/>
Pr-f Ru-haid U Light "f Y-l<lb/>
University has completed a fugi<lb/>
a(? the Atlantic by ?<lb/>
Greenland and Iceland, an I<lb/>
is making 9? Un ;i  <lb/>
amund the world.<lb/>
a do<lb/>
ip<lb/>
inal poems ?<lb/>
vould like I'<lb/>
GRANVILLE GIVES<lb/>
UNIQUE PROGRAM <lb/>
(Continued from<lb/>
first page)<lb/>
AiU!<lb/>
Di G.<lb/>
?f the Ja<lb/>
M.<lb/>
?eided tl ey w<lb/>
,(' : LitU Pigs"<lb/>
 and had great success<lb/>
 g,  i music teach-<lb/>
;it school wrote the musii<lb/>
,  ( they wen<lb/>
, v' t Di i 'y '?"? his ap<lb/>
i h  much be ap<lb/>
dtb n shown by the<lb/>
, . . drew a cartoon of<lb/>
movie characters, auto-<lb/>
d ih and sent it to the<lb/>
; grade in he Greenville<lb/>
Street School. The C8T-<lb/>
to be framed, and each<lb/>
I v, ill be promoted alone,<lb/>
he gra le. The children are<lb/>
roud oi this cartoon, and<lb/>
? a ; to show d to any one<lb/>
. -i, ? ?o down to -vi' it<lb/>
A! UMN VE IN SUMMEB<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
Th audience perhaps enjoyed<lb/>
Uriah Heep because of their<lb/>
familiarity with Dickens and j<lb/>
.David Copper-field The Onen-<lb/>
 ? renresented by a<lb/>
tal drama ? a !l P1 <lb/>
 froni "The Japanese Bay,<lb/>
? r "Fluttering Hand in which<lb/>
two parts Russian com- j<lb/>
" p m the character!<lb/>
t<lb/>
cdy v<lb/>
l ?!<lb/>
v , Tragedian in Spite of<lb/>
You Will Always find as Clid<lb/>
Ahead in Stle that are <lb/>
We Have the K. C. T, C. Gtrk<lb/>
To l'?e Smart i-it I<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
"The Store for the Ladies"<lb/>
m ? tf " while the Roman F.tn-<lb/>
peror Nero, he showed the Ro-<lb/>
man character. I<lb/>
The Lord Chancellor, from<lb/>
Gilbert and Sullivan's "IManthe'<lb/>
gave the light opera touch As<lb/>
Andre in -The Final Call he<lb/>
closed n! evening with a tragic<lb/>
note<lb/>
Mr. Granvflfe showed great in-<lb/>
genuity in his management of<lb/>
;tac? business and change of cos- :<lb/>
GET YOUR<lb/>
HOT DOG<lb/>
Kittrell; Ruth Da-<lb/>
i ton Safe m; Mary<lb/>
in; Loris Fr eman,<lb/>
Lucile Gammon,<lb/>
di . Stanton, Eliza-<lb/>
v (;? iham Stevens<lb/>
te Frances Stokes,<lb/>
? Sti ? kland, Elm<lb/>
Kat Swain, Char-<lb/>
Ta - ! r; Snow<lb/>
, Taylor, Bachelor;<lb/>
 Merry Hill; Mabel<lb/>
tl n; Edna Peele.<lb/>
Hie Rave Peele, Aul-<lb/>
AT<lb/>
PLEAS AN<lb/>
Phone SO We Deliver to th?<lb/>
BIG ASSORTMENT<lb/>
HALLOWEEN PARTI<lb/>
NEEDS<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co.<lb/>
Known For Values"<lb/>
Uliege, ranking;<lb/>
umn of the 'J c<lb/>
0Jk<lb/>
ji.<lb/>
it.<lb/>
?jeau'<lb/>
seventeen<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
I COLLEGE GIRLS?ATTENTION<lb/>
If interested in free permanents call us<lb/>
for particulars.<lb/>
Cleopatra<lb/>
Ceil li 1? M<lb/>
jH<lb/>
Dr II<lb/>
I,  any imitr. nime Vi?.? lnrrt' "e kkj ? r   ?.1<lb/>
<lb/>
t Here cfie muujw w.r . .? -agMu  <lb/>
Ideal Beauty Shoppe<lb/>
31? Evans Street Phone 102<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
MONDAY<lb/>
"CLEOPATRA<lb/>
STAR-EYED KM H v ' ul<lb/>
Tin: mi t<lb/>
CLAUDETTI<lb/>
M<lb/>
Warren Will<lb/>
C. Anbres S<lb/>
June.<lb/>
te oj tne<lb/>
Rev. E. T.<lb/>
Immanuel Ba<lb/>
Sunday eveni<lb/>
the stud nt: :<lb/>
services. H?<lb/>
timely and a<lb/>
them froi<lb/>
Qjy TjCTtAvfL<lb/>
hat's why the smartest<lb/>
girls are wearing these<lb/>
Octi<lb/>
Y. W. C<lb/>
Mclver ciu d an un i - ??' i wn ?<lb/>
b naf ive -  i  '? 'and<lb/>
- ark? i ci ofid( nee in bim e<lb/>
though he was a I tal strang<lb/>
"O ! Eidt ? ce ? " ' "? ' '<lb/>
ity  o  ?? tud<lb/>
develop. One need to ha1 c<lb/>
Ckience in friends, tea hi rs, p<lb/>
ents and L?oa.<lb/>
He told of another incident<lb/>
 k  n. r-v ornman show<lb/>
in distress n? o<lb/>
dents to have faih. in and  ?<lb/>
for neigh.bors and to pu1 i<lb/>
hate and unselfishness; to stnv<lb/>
to find a place in life and to be<lb/>
a brother'to man both at home<lb/>
and abroad.<lb/>
BIount-Harvey<lb/>
rip 7<lb/>
;pr<lb/>
Y. W. C. A. ACTIVITIES<lb/>
DURING THE SUMMER<lb/>
TYLE 600<lb/>
. ? 15-Gaugt xk-<lb/>
? ha ?pecit chsa'c<lb/>
,t jIv iiii you?<lb/>
t i " ' "  ' ' s<lb/>
ok .i tbc Kigh twirt<lb/>
c the stodting 1'X'ks<lb/>
?-r th-m it really<lb/>
?ccording!y wear<lb/>
 Added features are<lb/>
J heel and toe rein-<lb/>
i Mines . .<lb/>
j revgh scotch<lb/>
 goi? , gen-<lb/>
:?'?:e Goodyear<lb/>
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Carolina Teachers College dur-<lb/>
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Friday evening vesper services<lb/>
were featured by interesting talks<lb/>
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ton.<lb/>
59c. to $1.00<lb/>
Gloria Shoppe<lb/>
"THE FASHION CORNER"<lb/>
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Campus Boot Shoppe<lb/>
Located at 5 Points<lb/>
THE FASHION CORNER<lb/>
Two Delightful Successes For Earil j<lb/>
A Lovely Brown Crepe with Astrakan i api<lb/>
12.95<lb/>
Back- <lb/>
Marked Boy a Two-Piece Effect with U<lb/>
Belted Front<lb/>
10.95<lb/>
SYMPHON<lb/>
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<pb facs="00038021_0005"/>
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