<?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="00038023_0001"/>
'her :u, 1934<lb/>
' 5<lb/>
ItileM ha was Colfcg, Day ! ' Gnt-nviUy l" ?? Hoard 1 nseetinj Last<lb/>
Mliner presided<lb/>
1! 'K?pp iclassmen nai ice to p. nents! These ?" W eded u some oiit ? w attrac. Initi ? V I think '?'k a httiv traditkaci thai wear those<lb/>
? <lb/>
. McKJohnson<lb/>
mMlST<lb/>
B tieHank Iluddmi;<lb/>
l'hMM391<lb/>
<lb/>
RE<lb/>
k that We Have<lb/>
We Also Have a<lb/>
?c College Girls.<lb/>
ill and l<lb/>
ores<lb/>
1 IN SHOES<lb/>
pur areAlways<lb/>
irt.<lb/>
('KS<lb/>
es9Inc.<lb/>
?re<lb/>
I V ANYTHING<lb/>
I EXCEPT<lb/>
itAPa<lb/>
Why not make an<lb/>
m 1<lb/>
Studi<lb/>
io<lb/>
ot fluffy for!<lb/>
ATS<lb/>
 matt Sljks<lb/>
4<lb/>
.7<lb/>
jr's brings yoo the'<lb/>
styles at a marvel-<lb/>
price! Coats are<lb/>
imple sleeves pre-<lb/>
ite?far collars are<lb/>
igly different! Fur<lb/>
it s. revers, rippled<lb/>
k Crepes and rfc<lb/>
id crepes?black.<lb/>
green! 14-46!<lb/>
:y co.<lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
CAROLINA PLAYMAKERS<lb/>
HERE NKXT WEEK<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE TECO<lb/>
ECHO ADVERTISERS<lb/>
XI<lb/>
EAST CAROLINATEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
Grecmnlle. N. C. Wednesday. Noi'cmber 14, 1934.<lb/>
Number 4.<lb/>
Armistice Day Program<lb/>
Is Sponsored by Legion<lb/>
Sp, aks To Stud-<lb/>
AihI Pin Countj<lb/>
American Le-<lb/>
nsLrumental Mu-<lb/>
redFor Occasion.<lb/>
C uty Post No 39<lb/>
Dsi . ' ,i '?tiva-?. Monday, No-<lb/>
 campus build-<lb/>
CaTeachers<lb/>
?!? of o re monies<lb/>
1? il opening of<lb/>
advjncement of coi-<lb/>
. ition, of Divine<lb/>
. silent prayer for<lb/>
! arecitation of the<lb/>
theConstitution. A.<lb/>
?orrvan of the mem-<lb/>
i gave a report<lb/>
p campaign.<lb/>
J by the sing-<lb/>
rica.Miss Bessie<lb/>
i?:m im nt musical<lb/>
v. (im nville sang<lb/>
Mirs Land and<lb/>
Mrtougle of the<lb/>
 j ' hSchOO faculty<lb/>
in x?t solo "Roses of<lb/>
 0Day address<lb/>
Mr H. L. iiac-<lb/>
?enl lawyer of<lb/>
i MitcMilian was es-<lb/>
4 t s ,be able to speak<lb/>
j (jit occasion, be-<lb/>
f, ,Jmer connection<lb/>
i sident of the school.<lb/>
an and Dr. Meadows<lb/>
huntia University to-<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
Is Represented<lb/>
At Conference<lb/>
North Carolina College Con-<lb/>
ference Is Attended By<lb/>
Presid nt Meadows. Drs. H.<lb/>
J. McGinnis, A. 1). Frank.<lb/>
And Mr. E. L. Henderson.<lb/>
One-Act Plays<lb/>
Well Presented<lb/>
Cooperative Spirit Favorably<lb/>
Shown In Work Of Pro-<lb/>
ducers.<lb/>
1<lb/>
from East<lb/>
ege, Presi-<lb/>
F"ur representativ<lb/>
Carolina Tea hers D<lb/>
dent 1. R. Meadows. Dr.  J.<lb/>
McGinnis, Dr. A. D. Fran and<lb/>
E. L. Henderson attended the<lb/>
fourteenth meeting of the North<lb/>
Carolina College Conference<lb/>
which was held in Greensboro at<lb/>
the King Cotten Hotel.<lb/>
Dr. Meadows is on the com-<lb/>
mittee on college standards and<lb/>
Dr. McGinnis on the committee<lb/>
Oil Student Mortality. The cen-<lb/>
I tral theme of the meeting is:<lb/>
'The Selection and Pr<lb/>
of Teachers<lb/>
The principal evenin<lb/>
will be delivered by 1)<lb/>
F Arps, Dean of tin<lb/>
Education, Ohio State Univer-<lb/>
sity, on the subject of "Science<lb/>
and the Social Order The<lb/>
president's address will open the<lb/>
evening meeting and the res-<lb/>
ponse will be made by Cue B<lb/>
'reparation<lb/>
address<lb/>
George<lb/>
college of<lb/>
three one-act plays<lb/>
Jounscl Retained "Ctoeyand<lb/>
"hird Verse staged under the<lb/>
rection of Miss Mary Dirnbcr-<lb/>
r were successfully produced<lb/>
STATE SUPERINTENDENT<lb/>
Friday evening, November 2<lb/>
plays were sponsored ' by the<lb/>
r'ERA ami the college.<lb/>
The plays provided good en-<lb/>
tertainment with acting thai<lb/>
gave evidence that the actor had<lb/>
an excellenl opportunity to give<lb/>
self-expression to their indivi-<lb/>
lualities, and yet all played to-<lb/>
gether so well that there were<lb/>
no stars.<lb/>
Good v,<lb/>
High Point Host<lb/>
To the Collegiate<lb/>
Press Association<lb/>
T<lb/>
eachers College Publications<lb/>
Are Represented By Edi-<lb/>
tors Clyde Morton And<lb/>
Kathryn Hines. Busing<lb/>
Manager Dorothy Hooks<lb/>
And Mary Gorharn.<lb/>
Carolina Playmakers<lb/>
Return for Performance<lb/>
Edit<lb/>
editor of the<lb/>
han . Busines<lb/>
o. Clyde Moi-<lb/>
 i-vi <lb/>
D<lb/>
lb<lb/>
r of T<lb/>
T. C,<lb/>
mv nl.<lb/>
rkmanlike training in<lb/>
il branches of the theatre was<lb/>
shown not only in the work of<lb/>
the actors but tin. .staging and<lb/>
costuming gave proof that all<lb/>
those behind the scenes were<lb/>
equally well trained.<lb/>
The first, "Counsel Retained<lb/>
written by Constance D'Ar<lb/>
Mackaye, was a very brief, pic<lb/>
luresque play with the realistic<lb/>
touch given by the characters<lb/>
known in history. The play wa.s<lb/>
centered around an incident in<lb/>
the lives of two famous people.<lb/>
Peg Woffington, part taken by<lb/>
Rebecca Noell, the brilliant Irish<lb/>
at the height of her<lb/>
IS the favorite of the j<lb/>
;e. Jack Humphrey,<lb/>
Burke, a young and j<lb/>
w jr r. was just start- I<lb/>
t<lb/>
CLYDE A ERWIN<lb/>
Newly appointed Stale Superin-<lb/>
tendent of Public Instruction,<lb/>
who succeeded Arch T. Allen.<lb/>
Mr. Erwin was a member oi tin<lb/>
summer school faculty here m<lb/>
1929 and wdl serve in his new<lb/>
Arcy position as Chairman of the<lb/>
Board of Trustees of the college.<lb/>
anu<lb/>
?ks, I iness Mi na -<lb/>
Echo, represented E.<lb/>
the 28th semi annual<lb/>
f the North Carolina<lb/>
Collegiate Press Association that<lb/>
mel al High Point Novembei 8,<lb/>
), and 10th.<lb/>
Business managers of all col-<lb/>
lege publications represented<lb/>
planned la: t Fridt y to continue<lb/>
the movement among college<lb/>
publications inaugurated last<lb/>
spring for the establishment of<lb/>
a standard advertising rate for<lb/>
all publication<lb/>
Tentative rate schedules, based<lb/>
on the circulation of each class<lb/>
of publication were discussed,<lb/>
and schedules drawn up last<lb/>
spring were revised.<lb/>
Stringfield Directs<lb/>
Carolina Symphony<lb/>
In Concert Here<lb/>
'?Th.<lb/>
To<lb/>
p i :<lb/>
P<lb/>
opular Oi<lb/>
One Oi .<lb/>
l ea I<lb/>
dule.<lb/>
i.nt(<lb/>
C( <lb/>
S<lb/>
Lamar Straigfa<lb/>
the North Carolii<lb/>
Orchestra presented a de<lb/>
program of music b fore<lb/>
ppreciative audi nee<lb/>
bche-<lb/>
duct<lb/>
I. Will<lb/>
one-act<lb/>
??. Ven-<lb/>
nir-<lb/>
and<lb/>
w;<lb/>
itv<lb/>
actresi<lb/>
popuh<lb/>
London m.<lb/>
 F.tinuni<lb/>
Or. R. W. Miles Is<lb/>
i ne iii-t'o, siuuem paper a<lb/>
Anmi'll Sn'lua' n'E;h Pomt College, was host i<lb/>
nniaai ptaivti  (,nnvltKin. and pm;ented<lb/>
auditorium of the Campus Build-<lb/>
ing last night.<lb/>
The program was opened<lb/>
intry quack dot<lb/>
een at the Can<lb/>
i Grci.<lb/>
j Monday, No<lb/>
I p. m. Thea<lb/>
her<lb/>
9. at<lb/>
by<lb/>
8:30<lb/>
plays were<lb/>
the playing of the Impress<lb/>
sario I<lb/>
)'e. i-r.ted<lb/>
the Pi<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
, i unique theatre<lb/>
i where they<lb/>
first<lb/>
lymakers own<lb/>
i Chapel Hill,<lb/>
written under<lb/>
Iii-Po, student paper at<lb/>
1:<lb/>
Philhps, Supt. of Greensboroing the career that was later to j<lb/>
Schools, who is president of the!flower as fine a brand of states-<lb/>
IN. C. E. A. Imanship as the world remem-<lb/>
Dr. McGinnis is on the pro-jbers. Jack Boyd as Richard<lb/>
jV gram of the section of registrars. Grenvilk fitted well into the tri-<lb/>
e chosen no better j Tiu" dominant purpose of the angle,<lb/>
?elebration than -i iicmiintM'n is to further the<lb/>
felt that th<lb/>
I.<lb/>
i<lb/>
the cause of<lb/>
i.<lb/>
ntributed by fur-<lb/>
for the exercises<lb/>
barbecue dinner<lb/>
.ed in th.e base-<lb/>
?? pus Building to<lb/>
the Legion who<lb/>
cause 0<lb/>
ther education in thi<lb/>
In "Cl<lb/>
oev.<lb/>
written by Lorett<lb/>
Dr. Miles, of Lexington, Ky<lb/>
Is Conducting The Annual<lb/>
Y. W. C. A. Series Of Ser-<lb/>
vices For Second Time In<lb/>
Three Years.<lb/>
Dr. Robert W. Miles, pastor of<lb/>
the First Presbyterian Church of<lb/>
Lexington, Kentucky, is conduct-<lb/>
ing the annual scries of service<lb/>
according to the officers of th<lb/>
association, one of the best ar-<lb/>
rays of speakers had in recent<lb/>
years by the organization.<lb/>
Tin- principal address of the<lb/>
convention was delivered by D.<lb/>
Hiden Ramsey, president of the<lb/>
North Carolina Press Association,<lb/>
and general manager of the Ashe-<lb/>
viile Times-Citizen, at the ban-<lb/>
met Friday night. The youth<lb/>
on<lb/>
ar hails were<lb/>
? college led in the<lb/>
erica and the state<lb/>
na The musical<lb/>
program was ar-<lb/>
. s Gussie Kuyken-<lb/>
? ge Music Depart-<lb/>
State. The membership is com-1<lb/>
pi ed of trie presidents of the1<lb/>
State colleges with one other rep-j<lb/>
resentative from each, the state<lb/>
superintendent of public instruc-<lb/>
tion and two others from the<lb/>
State Department of Educati  I<lb/>
The officers are: Frazer Hood,<lb/>
president, of Davidson College<lb/>
T. Hunter, vice-president, of:<lb/>
tem Carolina Teacher c 1-<lb/>
?: . V. Walker, secretary-<lb/>
CarrolL the action moved slow<lb/>
JSI of today is not the lost genera-<lb/>
sponsored by the ifoung Woman's<lb/>
Christian Association. He was<lb/>
!v. and tl<lb/>
caught admi<lb/>
ibly<lb/>
m<lb/>
nd<lb/>
tors caugnt acmur-<lb/>
the tragic undercurrentt<lb/>
w? re implied rather than ex-<lb/>
ed. Hazel Britt as -Cloey"<lb/>
Billy Tolson as<lb/>
'the speaker in this same capacity<lb/>
tion Ramsey claimed, "it is th<lb/>
saved one. We older ones are<lb/>
the lost, caught up by fate and<lb/>
two years ago. Those who I t u, flounder. The world to-<lb/>
heard him at that time will re- Ljay belongs to its youth<lb/>
j member him as a very strong and<lb/>
He is much in-<lb/>
;H.<lb/>
We<lb/>
! leg?<lb/>
tn .<lb/>
bowed fine feeling for the char-<lb/>
acters and gave an excellent in-<lb/>
terpretation. Rowena Dickinson<lb/>
as Mr . Mol inger, the widow<lb/>
who exacted the full payment<lb/>
 , , , Idav evening<lb/>
showed remarkable understand<lb/>
D. Kermit Cloniger, business<lb/>
, . forceful speaker. He is much in- j manager of The Hi-Po, was ad-<lb/>
terested in youth and had a de-lvanced fn,ni gurd to second<lb/>
finite helpful message for them vice-president to fill the vacancy<lb/>
left by the resignation of Mar-<lb/>
garet Graves, of W. C. U. N. C.<lb/>
Betty Allardyce. also of Wom-<lb/>
en's College, was elected to the<lb/>
Overture from Mozart.<lb/>
number was followed by<lb/>
r , l, . .the inspiring teachership of t red-<lb/>
four movements of Brahms '<lb/>
Symphony No. 1 in C Minor. The<lb/>
movements were Mn poco soste-<lb/>
nuto. Andante sostenuto, Un po-<lb/>
co Allegretto, e Grazios, and Ade-<lb/>
gio, Allegro mm troppo. One of! "Tfu' L(v1 Venture a roman-<lb/>
the most experienced conductors ? comedy by Wilkeson O'Con-<lb/>
of Brahm's dav considered th, nvll J a thrilhng story of Pirate<lb/>
first and last movements of theldays "n the CaroHna coast? and<lb/>
Symphony particularly the Fm-the colorful incidents of the plot<lb/>
ale. the most valuable ofarc basi'd ? historical inci-<lb/>
crick H. Koch. Eight students<lb/>
will take part in the plays, and<lb/>
four occupy the positions of<lb/>
' tech niciam.<lb/>
trer, of the University of<lb/>
na: W. H. Frazer. of<lb/>
ee; E. L. Cloyd,<lb/>
North Cat<lb/>
Queens O tlege; K. L. Cloyd, of<lb/>
Stat4 College and Miss Miriam<lb/>
11 Blair Oi the Woman's College.<lb/>
Credh<lb/>
Mr. Miles has been speaking<lb/>
each evening at 6:30 and will<lb/>
continue to do so through Fri-<lb/>
He spoke at the<lb/>
i chapel service Tuesday morning<lb/>
the difficult part. Mary ' . ' <lb/>
 , .and will also peak at that time<lb/>
played will the part ot 1 ? . , . ,<lb/>
Brahm's instrument eomposi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
En Bateau, a Debussy number<lb/>
was beautifully rendered in soft<lb/>
light trilly chords.<lb/>
"Old Joe Clark Steps Out by<lb/>
Vardell, an orchestral version of<lb/>
a piano piece suggested by an<lb/>
old folk dance was especially en-<lb/>
joyable. It is an admirable il-<lb/>
lustration of the adaptability of<lb/>
the Anglo Saxon folk tune as a<lb/>
basic for elaboration into music<lb/>
of a more extended and develop-<lb/>
ed character.<lb/>
"Banjo" written by Louis Mo-<lb/>
reau Gottschalk, the first inter-<lb/>
nationally recognized American<lb/>
born musician followed "Old Joe<lb/>
Clark Steps Out This is folk<lb/>
(Continued on page three)<lb/>
office vacated by Cloniger.<lb/>
The highlight of the conven-<lb/>
es<lb/>
IMAM) DEPARTMENT HAS<lb/>
GREAT ROTES FOR YEAS<lb/>
Grade.<lb/>
The rtewspapei<lb/>
Verse<lb/>
of the editorial office, giving the<lb/>
triangle of editor, publisher, and<lb/>
MRS. T. C. TURNAGE<lb/>
ADDRESSES ASSEMBLY<lb/>
Mrs. T. C. Turnage of Farm-<lb/>
ville spoke at the chapel exer-<lb/>
on Friday morning. Special eon-i t?,n was tilt. group discussion<lb/>
. Iferences are being arranged I period Friday morning. John<lb/>
play, "Third throughout the day. j Cannon, head of the High Point cises on Friday morning, Novem<lb/>
by Wilbur Dorsette was Ur Mles p.lVx. tlR, tlst talk Bureau of<lb/>
of the series of services sponsoi<lb/>
Dt<lb/>
DK. MEADOWS SPEAKS AT<lb/>
HAT-TYSON REUNION;? "f tbe publK- in a comedy<lb/>
situation. Sue Elizabeth Smith<lb/>
. . as Phyllis showed a fine sense of<lb/>
comedy and appreciation of the<lb/>
play. Mary Carson McGee<lb/>
as the owner of the paper<lb/>
and Frances Watson as the of-<lb/>
fended society woman port raved<lb/>
well the role each represented.<lb/>
Excellent work was done by<lb/>
Billy Neshit and his staff of<lb/>
stage designers and property<lb/>
people and also Flora Teague<lb/>
who had charge of the costumes.<lb/>
L. R. Meadows spoki<lb/>
Department of E. C-jthe May-Tyson reunion which<lb/>
. it hopes of a very ! met in the Farmville High<lb/>
 it has the enroll-(School building on last Saturday<lb/>
iargest since 1929. ' morning at lu:3U o'clock He is<lb/>
tic Recitals that! a member of the clan and for-<lb/>
to he indispensable maily initiated into it.<lb/>
men! seem such a Dr. J. V. Joym-r, former State<lb/>
Superintendent of Public In-<lb/>
?tKe Recitals, which struction and one of the leading<lb/>
e,v two weeks on citizens of the State, was among<lb/>
ighl the piano sto- the distinguished kinsmen of the<lb/>
 d a chance to de- tribe present<lb/>
iblic playing. In<lb/>
gtv<lb/>
? in <lb/>
recitals which have been<lb/>
. . far, some of the stu-<lb/>
??-? made it evident that<lb/>
n ,i. talent and ambi-<lb/>
this fall's class. Those<lb/>
ticipated so far are:<lb/>
Crawford, Catherine Wal-<lb/>
15 Meadows, Elizabeth S.<lb/>
Caroline Riddick, Gwen<lb/>
ten J. Taylor, Emma<lb/>
Xylda Cooper, Edna<lb/>
Mary Evelyn Thompson,<lb/>
'urnage,<lb/>
MISS HOETZCLAW ATTENDS<lb/>
MEETING IN RALEIGH<lb/>
The celebration included social<lb/>
features, with a basket dinner<lb/>
served in the basement of the<lb/>
high school<lb/>
Dr. Meadows will peak at the<lb/>
meeting of the Worn -n '?' der-<lb/>
ated Clubs of Pitt C ty,<lb/>
which are working under the<lb/>
supervision of Miss Nice.<lb/>
He will also speak to the alum-<lb/>
nae of Wilson and Greene coun-<lb/>
ties at a joint meeting at Sara-<lb/>
toga tomorrow night.<lb/>
the Greensboro Daily I ber 2. The subject of her talk<lb/>
News, led the discussion for the was cities that we should and<lb/>
newspaper editors. Listen Pope,should not visit on the journey<lb/>
former editor of the Duke Chan- throughout life.<lb/>
tieleer, addressed the editors of The first nee<lb/>
' annuals. John Mebane, literary sa<lb/>
MISS COATES TALKS<lb/>
TO WILSON TEACHERS<lb/>
(Catherine Holtzclaw of<lb/>
Home Economics Depart-<lb/>
waa on the program of the<lb/>
Economics Section of the<lb/>
Central District which<lb/>
in Raieigh on Friday, No-<lb/>
1 1 9 Her subject wa.s "The<lb/>
Era in Home Economics<lb/>
Miss Lucy Nulton, critic teach-<lb/>
f" n the training school, spoke<lb/>
to a group of primary teachers<lb/>
Friday. November 9 at the meet-<lb/>
ing of N C. E. A. on the subject<lb/>
of "Wort Books of Reading<lb/>
N<lb/>
Miss Katherine Holtzclaw of<lb/>
the Home Economics Department<lb/>
has been elected editor-in-chief<lb/>
of the "North Carolina Home<lb/>
Economics News Letter This<lb/>
is a quarterly which is the offi-<lb/>
cial organ of the Home Econo-<lb/>
mics teachers of the State.<lb/>
Miss Dora Coates made a talk<lb/>
to the teachers of Wilson on the<lb/>
subject. "The relationship of<lb/>
the individual to the activity<lb/>
program This is the first in<lb/>
ii series of meetings when all<lb/>
the teachers of Wilson will get<lb/>
together to consider problems of<lb/>
vit importance to the schools.<lb/>
They '  meet, in turn, at the<lb/>
different school buildings. About<lb/>
sixty-five teacher were present<lb/>
yesterday afternoon .and they<lb/>
had a most satisfactory meeting.<lb/>
Control of athletics at Cornell<lb/>
University, both intercollegiate<lb/>
and intramural, has been vested<lb/>
this year in a three man com-<lb/>
mittee on athletic control, ap-<lb/>
pointed by the president of the<lb/>
university. It is the first time<lb/>
in its history that the university<lb/>
is in the position of directly fos-<lb/>
tering sports.<lb/>
ed by the Young Women's<lb/>
Christian Association Monday<lb/>
evening. He announced that he<lb/>
would center his talks, each<lb/>
evening, around the subject of'editor of the High Point Enter-<lb/>
"Christian Youth Building a New j,iri and former editor of the<lb/>
World j Carolina Magazine, headed the<lb/>
He stated that college students j magazine editors. Business man-<lb/>
are living actively in their daysjagers of all publications were<lb/>
of youth and that as long as I presided over by A. M. Beck, of<lb/>
they have youthful attitudes they Edwards and Broughton Corn-<lb/>
will continue to be young. They j pany.<lb/>
need a motto or slogan to pin J Committees serving for the<lb/>
their ideas to, which gives voice convention<lb/>
to their underlying sentiments<lb/>
and desires. A slogan, however,<lb/>
is futile unless there is an ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
Youth, he said, is living in a<lb/>
new world that calls for con-<lb/>
structive work and the solving<lb/>
of many of the difficult prob-<lb/>
lems of life. The world is con-<lb/>
stantly changing and unless the<lb/>
youth realizes this fact, it will<lb/>
become a liability rather than<lb/>
an asset.<lb/>
Youth, if it is going to help<lb/>
build a new world, must be will-<lb/>
ing to dare, think cleverly and<lb/>
were<lb/>
nominating<lb/>
committee, Charles Harris, Wake<lb/>
Forest, chairman. Mary Gorham,<lb/>
E. C. T. C, and Bill Sullivan,<lb/>
State; exchange committee,<lb/>
Clyde Morton, E. C. T. C. chair-<lb/>
man, Frank Norris. Wake Forest,<lb/>
and K. D. Wills. Davidson: rules<lb/>
committee, Waldo Cheek, of<lb/>
Wake Forest, chairman, Ben Rose<lb/>
Davidson, and Betty Allardyce,<lb/>
W. C. U. N. C: resolutions com-<lb/>
mittee. Hazel Hardison, Flora<lb/>
McDonald, Clyde Hurt, Atlantic<lb/>
Christian and Jim Earnhardt, of<lb/>
State; publicity committee, C. T.<lb/>
Morris, High Point. Margaret<lb/>
Mrs. Turnage U<lb/>
A "DOROTHY DIX" IS<lb/>
LIVING ON CAMPUS<lb/>
The student body will be<lb/>
somewhat surprised to learn that<lb/>
somewhere on campus lives a<lb/>
"Dorothy Dix" answering all<lb/>
questions, solving all problems,<lb/>
especially those pertaining to re-<lb/>
lations between the sexes. Please<lb/>
for your own sake, flunk no more<lb/>
tests, or spend no more unhappy<lb/>
hours on account of the opposite<lb/>
sex, but turn your problems to<lb/>
her.<lb/>
sanely, be courageous, possess ajGilliam, QueenrChicora, and<lb/>
vision and live precariously<lb/>
Dr. Miles Tuesday night con-<lb/>
tinued his talks to the college<lb/>
students by showing them then-<lb/>
responsibility, taking as his text<lb/>
the fifth commandment. He di-<lb/>
vided the ten commandments in-<lb/>
to three groups, the first four<lb/>
giving one's relation to God, the<lb/>
last five, his attitude towards so-<lb/>
ciety, and between these two<lb/>
groups, the fifth to the family.<lb/>
He gave four reasons why love<lb/>
and respect for parents should<lb/>
give a longer, richer life, filled<lb/>
with satisfaction in living. One<lb/>
can learn how to accept discip-<lb/>
(Continued on Page Two)<lb/>
Guv Angell, Appalachian; time<lb/>
and place committee, Monk Liv-<lb/>
engood, Duke; Margaret True,<lb/>
Quecns-Chieora, and Bets Nel-<lb/>
son, W. C. U. N. C.<lb/>
Women's College, in Greens-<lb/>
boro, will be the hostess to the<lb/>
spring convention. It was select-<lb/>
ed following an invitation to that<lb/>
effect and the recommendation<lb/>
of the time and place committee.<lb/>
The delegates were the guests<lb/>
of the High Point Enterprise at<lb/>
a luncheon Friday. Rev. Tom A.<lb/>
Sykes spoke, stressing the influ-<lb/>
ence wielded by the college edi-<lb/>
tors, and urging them to use it<lb/>
in a constructive way.<lb/>
ity of the trip<lb/>
.1 road map.<lb/>
There is none so accurate as ' u<lb/>
Bible. It can always serve a a<lb/>
guide. It should be a daily oc-<lb/>
currence that we read it.<lb/>
The cities that we shall wa it<lb/>
to visit says .Mrs. Turnage are<lb/>
these: Vivacity, the city of en-<lb/>
thusiasm and joy; Tenacity, a<lb/>
city of strength, that was often<lb/>
visited by such heroes as John<lb/>
Paul Jones: Sagacity, a city of<lb/>
wisdom, that Socrates knew<lb/>
well: Simplicity, the city of jew-<lb/>
els, because to be a jewel, a<lb/>
thing must be precious, rare and<lb/>
genuine; Voracity, the city of<lb/>
truth, which was never forgotten<lb/>
by men like Robert E. Lee and<lb/>
the deceased president of our<lb/>
college. Dr. Robert H. Wright.<lb/>
Here the speaker stopped to pay<lb/>
tribute, to our great and be-<lb/>
loved leader.<lb/>
Two cities that we shall all<lb/>
visit, whether we wish to or not<lb/>
arc the cities of Necessity and<lb/>
Adversity. If we have learned<lb/>
the lessons of the first group of<lb/>
cities have taught we shall have<lb/>
no trouble here.<lb/>
dent which occurred in the early<lb/>
nineteenth century. The scene is<lb/>
laid in the taproom of the only<lb/>
inn in Bellepori. a small coast<lb/>
town of the Province of North<lb/>
Carolina, in the year 1768.<lb/>
"Fixin's" is a tragedy, univer-<lb/>
sal in its theme and handled<lb/>
with a terrible reality and a<lb/>
thorough knowledge of tenant<lb/>
farmers in North Carolina. It<lb/>
portrays two characters bound<lb/>
by marriage but fundamentally<lb/>
incompatible.<lb/>
"Quare Medicine" is a comedy<lb/>
of a country quack doctor whose<lb/>
medicines help to solve a domes-<lb/>
tic problem, much to his own<lb/>
surprise.<lb/>
In Wilkeson O'Connel's "Loy-<lb/>
al Wnture will appear Fowler<lb/>
Spencer, a transfer of Florida<lb/>
State College for Women, who<lb/>
lives in Carthage, N C. Pryor<lb/>
McFadden. formerly with the<lb/>
Charlotte Little Theatre, carries<lb/>
an important role of a sea-cap-<lb/>
tain. Alfred Barrett, who has<lb/>
my juvenile roles<lb/>
ikers stage, is the<lb/>
I of the piece.<lb/>
 m Boston, also<lb/>
r. : . a 1 a captain. Ken-<lb/>
3artlett fr m California will<lb/>
e m an S ot h lawyer in<lb/>
Loyal V ntun ' and inter-<lb/>
the amusing character of<lb/>
 J can in Paul<lb/>
 Quare Medicine.<lb/>
Ma and Harry Davis of<lb/>
l ivr ? i staff also b ive<lb/>
interpreted<lb/>
on the Pla<lb/>
restless, b<lb/>
David L<lb/>
ly. ear!<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
au3<lb/>
N.<lb/>
as<lb/>
C . as his  me, will app-<lb/>
Marpent in "Loyal Venture<lb/>
take the part ot ihe abused Har-<lb/>
ry in Quare Medicine and inter-<lb/>
oi-et the character of Jim Coop-<lb/>
er m<lb/>
Paul and<lb/>
urn<lb/>
Green's<lb/>
play "Fixin's The main charac-<lb/>
ters in the latter play, those of<lb/>
Ed and Lilly, will be played by<lb/>
Laurence Cheek of Chapel Hill,<lb/>
who is interested in the French<lb/>
theatre and language, and Mil-<lb/>
dred Howard from Glasgow,<lb/>
Kentucky.<lb/>
Frederick H. Koch is known<lb/>
over the land as a pioneer in one<lb/>
of the most important develop-<lb/>
ments of American drama, the<lb/>
actual creation of drama out of<lb/>
native history, tradition, matter<lb/>
of the soil. He has made North<lb/>
Those cities that should not j Carolina the center of American<lb/>
be included in our itinerary are folk-drama, and the folk plays<lb/>
Duplicity, the city of flattery<lb/>
and deception; Animosity, the<lb/>
city of hard feelings and hate;<lb/>
Rapicity the city of greed and<lb/>
Monstrosity, the city of fear.<lb/>
Mrs. Turnage concluded her<lb/>
talk by saying that we should<lb/>
live for our country rather than<lb/>
die for it. We must be prepared<lb/>
to live for it and to be prepared<lb/>
we must have an education. We<lb/>
will then grow more beautiful<lb/>
in soul.<lb/>
written by his students have at-<lb/>
tracted national attention.<lb/>
Almost since their founding a<lb/>
little over sixteen years ago the<lb/>
Playmakers have carried their<lb/>
unusual plays on tour, first to<lb/>
North Carolina, and later reach-<lb/>
ing out as far as Boston to the<lb/>
North and Georgia to the South.<lb/>
The present trip, which brings<lb/>
them to Greenville will consti-<lb/>
tute their thirty-second tour.<lb/>
(Continued on page four)<lb/>
<pb facs="00038023_0002"/><lb/>
Wednesday, <lb/>
Page Two<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Wednesday. Nov mh<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Published Bi-Weekly During The College Yeai<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/>
Sports Editor George S. Willard, Jr.<lb/>
Alumnae Reporter Martha Teal<lb/>
Assistant Editors<lb/>
Helen Boomer, Malene Grant, Isa Costen Grant,<lb/>
Selma Gurganus. and Carolyn Brinkley.<lb/>
Advertising Managers<lb/>
Helen Davis; Josephine Ranes, Chessie Edmund-<lb/>
son, Jewel Cole, Billie Vogler, Elizabeth Wilson,<lb/>
Lola Holt, Mary Alice Starr.<lb/>
Circulation Managers<lb/>
Elma Joyner, Blanche White, Annie Lee Jones,<lb/>
Frances Edgerton, Lois Leake, Merle Sasser, Helen<lb/>
Taylor, and Cynthia Etheridge.<lb/>
Member North Carolina Collegiate Press<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Advertising Rates 25c per column inch per issue<lb/>
Subscription  $1.50 Per Year<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925,<lb/>
at the Postoffice, Greenville, N. C, under the<lb/>
act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
pVagociatfd gollcftiatr ffirrgg<lb/>
Wednesday. JVorember 14, 1934.<lb/>
FOR A BETTER STUDENT GOVERNMENT<lb/>
is impossible in a student body the size of<lb/>
this one not to have some students feel that<lb/>
an honor system exists in name only, and<lb/>
personal honor means nothing to them.<lb/>
Those people are parasites by nature, and<lb/>
will always attempt to have someone else<lb/>
do their work for them. Even if they have to<lb/>
steal to get it done, to them it is better than<lb/>
working for it. The majority of students are<lb/>
not like that. They can be proud of an hon-<lb/>
or system because to them it means personal<lb/>
honor, and they are proud because they<lb/>
have a quality like that.<lb/>
Of course there are a few people who<lb/>
will insist that the honor system means<lb/>
nothing to us. They are wrong, it does. Even<lb/>
though there are some students to whom to<lb/>
cheat is merely a course that they pursue on<lb/>
every examination that they take, there are<lb/>
also those students who have a fine enough<lb/>
streak in them to realize that to steal is<lb/>
wrong, and to cheat is to steal.<lb/>
THE ULTIMA RATIO<lb/>
AL'NT HET SPEAKS OF<lb/>
SCHOOL TEACHERS<lb/>
NEW ASSEMBLY IS SUCCESSFUL<lb/>
The Student Government Association<lb/>
here is a well organized unit, and functions<lb/>
well. However, it is hard not to criticize<lb/>
the actions taken by it. It is equally as hard<lb/>
not to assume a "preachy" attitude if at-<lb/>
tempts are made to curb this attitude.<lb/>
This year the Student Council has the<lb/>
power to deal with a great many more cases<lb/>
than it has ever had before. In all instances<lb/>
they have handled these cases admirably.<lb/>
Last spring, however, shortly after the in-<lb/>
stallation of the new officers council meet-<lb/>
ings were held so frequently that it became<lb/>
to be an unusual event if the council did not<lb/>
meet every night. Much criticism was of-<lb/>
fered and statements were made to the ef-<lb/>
fect that the council was just attempting to<lb/>
see what it could do, and to see what auth-<lb/>
ority they could exercise. This attitude<lb/>
taken by some members of the student body,<lb/>
was entirely false. Not one member of the<lb/>
Council had such an attitude in mind. Those<lb/>
meetings and others held since then that<lb/>
were similar in nature was not only an un-<lb/>
pleasant duty but was a physical strain as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
If the student council lives up to its<lb/>
name it will be a Student Self Government<lb/>
Association. The members of it are elected<lb/>
by you, and it is surely a part of the plan<lb/>
for you to give it your support.<lb/>
It is the nature of people to be prone<lb/>
to criticize, and ofttimes they offer adverse<lb/>
criticism. It is said that if the proceedings<lb/>
of the student council were not kept secret<lb/>
that in all probability much criticism would<lb/>
be avoided. But what a state would exist<lb/>
if the council proceedings were made public.<lb/>
It could not possibly be as successful as it<lb/>
is now, and for a good college community<lb/>
offenders must be punished.<lb/>
In the spring elections elect students<lb/>
that you feel that you can trust with the<lb/>
problems that face the campus, where you<lb/>
will make your home for the next nine<lb/>
months. You are a part of the Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment unit. Elect a student that will be<lb/>
what you consider a good representative of<lb/>
your part of the unit.<lb/>
Every year the Student Government is<lb/>
given more and more power. So far they<lb/>
have proven themselves equal to handling<lb/>
the cases satisfactorily. The changes in the<lb/>
handbook are significant of that, for there is<lb/>
a continual change of taking out many rules<lb/>
and regulations, that are no longer consid-<lb/>
ered necessary.<lb/>
Let criticism be favorable until it is<lb/>
known that the situation deserves to have<lb/>
adverse criticism. Will there be so much<lb/>
of it?<lb/>
The plan that has been adopted for the<lb/>
new assembly period has proven to be de-<lb/>
cidedly successful. Under this new regime<lb/>
the student body has shown that they will<lb/>
give the plan their best support.<lb/>
The twice a week assembly is attended<lb/>
more enthusiastically than the old five day<lb/>
a week assembly. More worthwhile pro-<lb/>
grams are given. All the programs given by<lb/>
the students, the faculty or guest speakers<lb/>
have been both entertaining and instructive.<lb/>
They are to be highly complimented upon<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
The student chapel committee has been<lb/>
hard at work, and as a result have produced<lb/>
entertaining programs. The director has<lb/>
been most helpful in her suggestions.<lb/>
The question has arisen many times as<lb/>
to why the assembly was heir, five times a<lb/>
week. Students became very tired of go-<lb/>
ing and looked upon going to chapel as a<lb/>
burden. There was never quite a satisfac-<lb/>
tory answer to the question, and chapel con-<lb/>
tinued to meet the regular five times. Now<lb/>
a change has occurred and it is met with ap-<lb/>
proval in all respects.<lb/>
The days that chapel is not held gives<lb/>
ample time for club meetings, class meet-<lb/>
ings, or any others that it is necessary to<lb/>
call.<lb/>
This system is a great deal more satisfac-<lb/>
tory than the old plan. We. as prospective<lb/>
teachers must avoid sinking into a rut, that<lb/>
we find ourselves not able to get out of, but<lb/>
must then accept the situation as we have<lb/>
made.<lb/>
Well, well, well! There's noth-<lb/>
ing like going to a football game<lb/>
in a moving van?but that's just<lb/>
what the players did. I saw<lb/>
them leave and did those boys<lb/>
show alacrity in climbing in the<lb/>
conveyance?It seems as if the<lb/>
boys insisted upon taking Dr.<lb/>
Haynes with them, but for some<lb/>
reason or other, Dr. Haynes did<lb/>
not feel that way about it. May-<lb/>
be that can be accounted for by<lb/>
the fact that he went on one of<lb/>
the trips before.<lb/>
The North Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
Press Association has held an-<lb/>
other meeting. High Point was<lb/>
the scene of the festivities and<lb/>
was it festive??? Ask anybody<lb/>
who went?Kat Hines and her<lb/>
boy friend from Wake Forest did<lb/>
right well?<lb/>
What's all this I hear about<lb/>
one certain little girl wearing a<lb/>
diamond on her-left hand? You<lb/>
know, she's seen a lot with a<lb/>
Senior co-ed. No fair calling<lb/>
names. . .<lb/>
And speaking of co-eds, Ray<lb/>
Hassell and his girl are still that<lb/>
a-way. Tex and Eleanor are<lb/>
seemingly on good terms?and<lb/>
they'll probably continue to stay<lb/>
that way, from the way things<lb/>
look now, but y u never can<lb/>
tell . . .<lb/>
Well, the big news of the week<lb/>
seems to be the episode of the<lb/>
lights in the library (not to men-<lb/>
tion Gotten Hail parlor) going<lb/>
out at a very opportune mo-<lb/>
ment. We hear that in the par-<lb/>
lor the lady brought out a can-<lb/>
dle, but we have already form-<lb/>
die.<lb/>
It looks like the depression is<lb/>
back?the other day we bought<lb/>
"two for a nickel" and lit it. It<lb/>
happened that we were in front<lb/>
of the better known co-eds and<lb/>
when we threw it away it looked<lb/>
like a fight between them trying<lb/>
to get to it.<lb/>
The way the team was tack-<lb/>
ling Monday it looks like these<lb/>
parlor dates are doing them a<lb/>
lot of good?and while we<lb/>
are still on the football<lb/>
team?-think of the good training<lb/>
these gals would give them?and<lb/>
while we're still on the football<lb/>
subject, in the game next Friday<lb/>
Primrose said to give the rest<lb/>
of the boys Bill, and he take care<lb/>
of Mary?and when Jack got<lb/>
saw two red-heads stand j<lb/>
ROCKY<lb/>
MOUNT CHAPTER<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
Aunt Het, that character of<lb/>
everlasting popularity makes her<lb/>
comment on school teaching. The<lb/>
excerpt comes from tht' South-<lb/>
west City Republic, a newspaper<lb/>
published m Southwest City,<lb/>
Missouri.<lb/>
Aunt Het Says:<lb/>
"One o' my girls had her heart<lb/>
set on being a school teacher, but<lb/>
1 talked her out of it. Teachin'<lb/>
school is too much like bein' a<lb/>
preacher's wife, it's a high call<lb/>
ing, but people expect you<lb/>
give more'n tin y pay tor.<lb/>
"You take teachers here<lb/>
town. The only difference<lb/>
them an' a Christian martyr<lb/>
the date an' the lack of bon fire,<lb/>
"They was hired to teach an'<lb/>
they do it. They teach the<lb/>
youngun's that can learn, and en-<lb/>
tertain the ones that fell on<lb/>
their heads when they was little.<lb/>
But that ain't enough. They're<lb/>
supposed to make obedient little<lb/>
angels out. o' spoiled brats that<lb/>
never mind nobody, an' wet<lb/>
nurse little wild cats, so their<lb/>
mothers can get a rest, an' make<lb/>
gennuses out o" children that<lb/>
couldn't have no sense with the<lb/>
parents they've got<lb/>
"But that ain't the worse.<lb/>
They've got to get up plays an'<lb/>
tilings to work the school out o'<lb/>
debt: an' sing in the choir an"<lb/>
teach a Sunday School class, an"<lb/>
when they ain't doing nothing<lb/>
else they're supposed to be a<lb/>
good example.<lb/>
"Then they don't get no pay<lb/>
for six month an' can't pay their<lb/>
board or buy decent clothes an'<lb/>
on top o' (??crything else they<lb/>
can't hold hands cumin' home<lb/>
Meadows v.<lb/>
a meeting<lb/>
t Chapter<lb/>
lociation, w<lb/>
Dr L H<lb/>
speaker at<lb/>
Rocky Hour<lb/>
Alumnae Asa<lb/>
held at tin Lantern Inn on<lb/>
day evening. November<lb/>
winch time Mi O. K. i<lb/>
vice-president of the <lb/>
presided and delivered th<lb/>
dress of welcome, to whic<lb/>
Louelia Stancil responded<lb/>
Gertrude r. ich-red a vocal<lb/>
tion prior to Dr. Meadow"<lb/>
Dr. Meadows, spoke <lb/>
great d ire. and of that 0<lb/>
associates of our late pr<lb/>
?f<lb/>
est<lb/>
the<lb/>
t<lb/>
ot II<lb/>
icb wa<lb/>
n Tues<lb/>
o<lb/>
REVISION OF ,?,( i<lb/>
SYSTEM ADVISEB NAl<lb/>
I IX i<lb/>
A!<lb/>
UH WINS<lb/>
B<lb/>
at<lb/>
i i<lb/>
RaJ<lb/>
oi<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
M i<lb/>
- perpetuate<lb/>
"Living Men<lb/>
U<lb/>
a<lb/>
this<lb/>
stud<lb/>
end<lb/>
kn<lb/>
Fuv<lb/>
mi<lb/>
faculty,<lb/>
nts are w<lb/>
. as the<lb/>
.1!<lb/>
Shi<lb/>
?Wrigi<lb/>
iv. <lb/>
; that<lb/>
xt.<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
the ight vwry oih-<lb/>
with the college sh id<lb/>
hours of pleasure ?-?<lb/>
is continuing as ins<lb/>
two classes each day,<lb/>
to his duties as pres<lb/>
asked that pupils co<lb/>
think of him as a w a<lb/>
them and to use the<lb/>
"Mister" rather than<lb/>
The banquet table<lb/>
lively appoint<lb/>
in a scheme i<lb/>
college colors<lb/>
santhemumi<lb/>
cent i piece,<lb/>
the college<lb/>
again the<lb/>
pointed<lb/>
The folio<lb/>
1 cal chapt<lb/>
guests wen<lb/>
Greathouse,<lb/>
?dd<lb/>
plain<lb/>
uDoc1<lb/>
rd f<lb/>
i p<lb/>
th<lb/>
b<lb/>
id<lb/>
We<lb/>
COUI Ses<lb/>
ana<lb/>
present<lb/>
tfrs. W<lb/>
it-of-w<lb/>
Mrs. F<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
from prayer<lb/>
some pious old<lb/>
ty mind starin' a seanda<lb/>
meetin w<lb/>
sister with<lb/>
ii ,<lb/>
as soon<lb/>
mule wor<lb/>
it can ft i<lb/>
CLYDE A. ERWIN<lb/>
WHAT ABOUT THE HONOR SYSTEM?<lb/>
North Carolina State College has abol-<lb/>
ished its Honor System. As a result a great<lb/>
deal of criticism has arisen. The Honor<lb/>
System was abolished because it was not<lb/>
found practical.<lb/>
Does the Honor System that we have<lb/>
here really amount to anything, or do we<lb/>
cling to it because it has been in existence<lb/>
here quite a while and we feel that we are<lb/>
being radical if we do away with it. The<lb/>
pledge was abolished sometime ago.<lb/>
Yet if there is honor among us there<lb/>
Governor Ehringhaus has appointed a<lb/>
man of capability and prominence to fill the<lb/>
place left by the late Dr. Arch T. Allen.<lb/>
That man is Clyde A. Erwin, who was Sup-<lb/>
erintendent of Schools in Rutherford County<lb/>
at the time of his appointment.<lb/>
Mr. Erwin is a young man, and has the<lb/>
interest of the youth of the state at heart.<lb/>
In spite of his youth he is one of the most<lb/>
prominent educators of the State, and has<lb/>
served as President of the North Carolina<lb/>
Education Association. He has been con-<lb/>
nected with movements for public education<lb/>
for a number of years. His appointment is<lb/>
especially interesting to us for he served on<lb/>
the faculty here during one summer term,<lb/>
and as the Superintendent of Public In-<lb/>
struction automatically becomes Chairman<lb/>
of the Board of Trustees here.<lb/>
It is interesting to note that Mr. Erwin<lb/>
is the first state school head of this century<lb/>
who does not hold a college degree. But<lb/>
this does not mean that Mr. Erwin is not<lb/>
educated. Far from that. Although he at-<lb/>
tended a formal college only two years, he<lb/>
is well educated, for he has that necessity<lb/>
to education, experience!<lb/>
"I'd ju<lb/>
mule. A<lb/>
hard, but<lb/>
by kicking up il<lb/>
ting time without<lb/>
talk.<lb/>
ithout I Tett.<lb/>
a  ! Mrs.<lb/>
! '??. i Han,<lb/>
plow K- -J<lb/>
t a. -? ? -?"<lb/>
U<lb/>
taring<lb/>
ul<lb/>
lit<lb/>
ind<lb/>
15. F. W<lb/>
rton, J<lb/>
T. R Ea<lb/>
.l i . IVII<lb/>
oyner, M<lb/>
E R. W.<lb/>
er Henri<lb/>
il<lb/>
3.<lb/>
PC<lb/>
L<lb/>
J. V.<lb/>
Mrs. o<lb/>
Lm<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
JUNIORS AND SENIORS<lb/>
ORGANIZE PRIMARY CLUB<lb/>
Miss Leyta Carter, Miss Irma<lb/>
Yause, Miss Gertrude House, of<lb/>
Rocky Mount.<lb/>
Dr. L. R. Meadow:<lb/>
die;<lb/>
I rneriy<lb/>
composed of i Rocky<lb/>
' are I "<lb/>
A Primary Club.<lb/>
Juniors and Seniors w<lb/>
primary majors, was organized<lb/>
Tuesday night, November t; when<lb/>
ley. n<lb/>
Lynn,<lb/>
Mr. Chas, C.<lb/>
of Greenville<lb/>
Mount, Hiss<lb/>
liss Janie Le<lb/>
of ( ? <lb/>
Pierce, for-<lb/>
but now of<lb/>
Leta Brant-<lb/>
Miss Claire<lb/>
thai<lb/>
an<lb/>
ste<lb/>
the<lb/>
with<lb/>
and<lb/>
"Y"<lb/>
several<lb/>
critic<lb/>
hut for<lb/>
hurt wi<lb/>
up and look worried?What a I<lb/>
man!<lb/>
Looks like "Duke Cobb" is<lb/>
getting a lot of free advertising<lb/>
but he sure looked swell when he (elected and they are<lb/>
brought that big dog over here? I Watson, president: Stu<lb/>
the only trouble was that it was I Smith, vice-president-<lb/>
son,<lb/>
primary<lb/>
teachers<lb/>
the pur-<lb/>
F. E. R. A. PLAYS<lb/>
The three one-act plays under the Fed-<lb/>
eral Emergency Relief Administration were<lb/>
very successful and enjoyable. A well se-<lb/>
lected cast, a capable director and efficient<lb/>
stage and costume managers were all factors<lb/>
that produced an enjoyable performance.<lb/>
This is only further evidence that there<lb/>
is dramatic talent in the student body here.<lb/>
During the past few school years there have<lb/>
been at least two 'home talent" plays pro-<lb/>
duced every year and every performance<lb/>
has been worth-while.<lb/>
Without a doubt, we as teachers shall<lb/>
be called on to direct plays in the school in<lb/>
which we teach. It is wise that we avail<lb/>
ourselves of every opportunity to receive<lb/>
training in the line of dramtaics. There is<lb/>
no better way to do this than take part in<lb/>
the actual production of plays here under<lb/>
should be a deep meaning to the honor. It the splendid direction.<lb/>
hard to tell which end<lb/>
leash Duke was on?<lb/>
of the<lb/>
They tell us that Johnson is<lb/>
gelling his picture in this week's<lb/>
issue- maybe he can stand it,<lb/>
but how about the rest of us?<lb/>
These co-eds are getting along<lb/>
too well?several of the great<lb/>
love affairs around here are tak-<lb/>
ing on a more and more perma-<lb/>
nent aspect?but several of the<lb/>
boys seem to be torn between<lb/>
two fires, as it were. One of<lb/>
the latest handsome ones must<lb/>
have quite a line?we've noticed<lb/>
three different ones mooning at<lb/>
him?and when Humphries be-<lb/>
gins crooning several seem to get<lb/>
sick?(No, Oscar?Love-sick, not<lb/>
nauseated).<lb/>
Mr. Williams is cracking down<lb/>
on the town boys, but we saw<lb/>
one get in Saturday?it seems<lb/>
that the gal he was with had<lb/>
some kind of influence over the<lb/>
"chief<lb/>
We heard one of the co-eds<lb/>
say that the portion of the popu-<lb/>
lace that resides in virtruous<lb/>
domiciles should refrain from<lb/>
propeling petrified particles?so<lb/>
we'll close it up until next week<lb/>
?watch out for the Boogie man.<lb/>
j the group<lb/>
instructors<lb/>
met at thu<lb/>
pose of organizing such a club.<lb/>
Officers were nominated and<lb/>
Frances<lb/>
Elizabeth<lb/>
Margaret<lb/>
Peele, secretary, Myra West-<lb/>
brook, treasurer. Mae McFar-<lb/>
land, Tecoan representative, and<lb/>
Bess Hinson, Teco Echo reporter.<lb/>
The needs and aims of the club<lb/>
were presented and discussed,<lb/>
and it was decided that a meet-<lb/>
ing would be held once a month<lb/>
At the close ot the business<lb/>
meeting, and after a delightful<lb/>
supper was served, the social<lb/>
was turned into a costume party.<lb/>
with each one representing a well<lb/>
known character in primary sto-<lb/>
ries. Miss Coates, as "little<lb/>
Bo-Peep" won the prize for giv-<lb/>
ing the best impersonation.<lb/>
Mrs. Mary Holt Richard-<lb/>
of Spring Hope: Mrs. Will<lb/>
Rhodes, Wilson; Mrs. Sam Lee-<lb/>
son, Middlesex and Mrs. Martha<lb/>
Lancaster, Fountain. Miss Flor-<lb/>
ence Eagles and Miss Antionette<lb/>
Darden of Tarboro.<lb/>
DR. R. W. MILES IS<lb/>
ANNUAL SPEAKER<lb/>
JUNIOR NORMAL ELECTS<lb/>
OFFICERS FOR YEAR<lb/>
On Thursday night the Junior<lb/>
Normal Class held its election.<lb/>
Eleanor Taylor was elected as<lb/>
president; Mildred Fuller, vice-<lb/>
president; Carolyn Richardson,<lb/>
secretary; Millie Williams, treas-<lb/>
urer.<lb/>
Josie Hall will represent the<lb/>
class on the student council.<lb/>
DR. M. B. MASSEY<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 437<lb/>
Prof. Richard C. Borden, head<lb/>
of the department of public<lb/>
speaking at New York University<lb/>
and his wife, were attacked and<lb/>
robbed by seven Turkish sol-<lb/>
diers when they landed from a<lb/>
collapsible boat last summer. La-<lb/>
ter the governor of Istanbul apo-<lb/>
logized to the pair, and the sol-<lb/>
diers were given prison terms.<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
Besides Our Specialty of<lb/>
Foods, We Have<lb/>
COMPACTS<lb/>
BRACELETS<lb/>
WATCHES<lb/>
STATIONERY<lb/>
and the like to interest you.<lb/>
(Continued from First 1'a.ie.i<lb/>
line, learn to be calm and de-<lb/>
velop poise, prepare for life's ex-<lb/>
perience through those of his<lb/>
parents, and learn to respect per-<lb/>
sonality, if he will follow' the<lb/>
fifth commandment.<lb/>
?d, "capable f<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Study<lb/>
The<lb/>
for pi<lb/>
has o<lb/>
tic ; i:<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Last -<lb/>
an c:<lb/>
dent<lb/>
der a<lb/>
perm<lb/>
able<lb/>
tentio<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Girls Are Always Welcome At<lb/>
E. T. GOOR, Jr.<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
322 Evans Street<lb/>
Representatives at E. C. T. C.<lb/>
Miss Vivian Perry Miss Beryl Lee Stalling<lb/>
Miss Dorothv Hooks Miss Halance<lb/>
THE LATEST STYLES IN SHOES<lb/>
for Dress and Campus Wear are Always<lb/>
Shown Here First.<lb/>
POPULAR PRICES<lb/>
Coburn's Shoes, Inc.<lb/>
"Your Shoe Store"<lb/>
WE FEATURE DRESSES<lb/>
Of Those Fabrics Which Indicate the Seasons<lb/>
Vogue.<lb/>
BLOOM'S<lb/>
E.C.T.C. Pa<lb/>
BRANCH 1<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Coach Mat!<lb/>
Take Fin<lb/>
Pass From Ha<lb/>
son Nets I.<lb/>
Was Cl selj C<lb/>
FINAL SO ?<lb/>
Johnson Stan<lb/>
Entire Line SI<lb/>
Imp: ove<lb/>
By (;?<lb/>
After wall<lb/>
of defeat foi<lb/>
Mathis" fighting P<lb/>
ed power with I<lb/>
come the Scot ? .<lb/>
dnwn margin<lb/>
tion came iat-<lb/>
quarter when I I<lb/>
ally "cut Lr<lb/>
The problem I I i<lb/>
East ? nough t bn<lb/>
th. ? pi i sin .<lb/>
been i tved d? Ei it<lb/>
son ci acked th . i -<lb/>
time for consist) I g<lb/>
son playing hall<lb/>
and tackle or. defe<lb/>
E. C. T. C. I: .<lb/>
Hassell to John<lb/>
teen yard penaltj ?<lb/>
within striking . I<lb/>
byterian's g  I<lb/>
lone score. S i aft<lb/>
ter, the Scots<lb/>
ing attack v. hicl<lb/>
yards and put 1<lb/>
yards of th- Pi '<lb/>
ever Jolly ei I<lb/>
intercepting a tf ;<lb/>
Jolly, Carp! I<lb/>
were outsta I<lb/>
for E. C. T C<lb/>
tire line did v I ,<lb/>
Wellum Snipes<lb/>
line and Hacl'<lb/>
played best : r the<lb/>
Since Coach M I<lb/>
Henderson of P<lb/>
mates in 193u. I<lb/>
ed a rather pel<lb/>
coaches are still -<lb/>
Mathis is one u<lb/>
The line up f<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
Left End- Li I<lb/>
Left Tackle N<lb/>
Left Guard C<lb/>
Center?Jelly.<lb/>
Right Guard S<lb/>
Right Tackle B<lb/>
Right End- F i<lb/>
Quarterback?Rid.<lb/>
Left Half?Haf?<lb/>
Right Half J<lb/>
Fullback?Fereb <lb/>
Score by per: I<lb/>
E. C. T. C. t<lb/>
P. J. C.<lb/>
JUST A FEW SAM PI S<lb/>
OF FOOTBALL'S SLA!<lb/>
Dictionary compilers an<lb/>
ing their graying locks ?"<lb/>
prospect of a m m<lb/>
fining the van. us ti<lb/>
have been coined or, <lb/>
Following are a few:<lb/>
"Get rugged"?to pla<lb/>
"Rustle"?Southern slang<lb/>
proselyte.<lb/>
"Loogan"?lineman with<lb/>
18 shoes.<lb/>
"Gravy boat"?a place <lb/>
roeals are free<lb/>
"Gravy train"?scholarship 1<lb/>
"Take a yell"?to fab<lb/>
Until the crowd gives f00 B<lb/>
rahs.<lb/>
"Play-batty"?disease caus:<lb/>
coach to draw diagrams on<lb/>
tablecloth.<lb/>
And those are just a few<lb/>
The Harvard University Lj<lb/>
rary has purchased a collect!<lb/>
?f more than 8,000 photogra<lb/>
?f important figures of the<lb/>
century, including more than<lb/>
Pictures of Lincoln.<lb/>
A. L. BRAY<lb/>
RADIO REPAIR WORK<lb/>
PHONE 755-JX<lb/>
, <lb/>
<pb facs="00038023_0003"/><lb/>
i9:u.<lb/>
UTednesd<lb/>
November 14, 1934.<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Page Three<lb/>
'? ?i 'i.uATI<lb/>
iSTI l Uiskd K<lb/>
m; winn<lb/>
on of<lb/>
Yurk<lb/>
11 d<lb/>
edli-<lb/>
?d the<lb/>
K. C. T. C. PLAYS NORFOLK<lb/>
BRANCH HERE NOV. 16.<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
George S. Willard, Jr Sports Editor<lb/>
ATTEND THE PEP MEETING<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHT<lb/>
Pirates Blank P. J. C; Lose to Louisburg, 6 to 7<lb/>
Coach Mathis' Athletes<lb/>
Take First Grid Game<lb/>
Coach Mathis<lb/>
Is Honored<lb/>
Duke - Carolina<lb/>
Meet Saturday<lb/>
?p<lb/>
? -I'll To John-<lb/>
it Score; Game<lb/>
Contested.<lb/>
SCORE WAS 6 TO 0<lb/>
FIGHTING PIRATE<lb/>
Enthusiastic Gro<lb/>
Pep Meeting Success; Mr.<lb/>
Deal Makes An Interesting<lb/>
Talk.<lb/>
Jtars On Offense;<lb/>
,ine Shows Much<lb/>
iprovement.<lb/>
I Uso. Willard<lb/>
n ing in Ihe depths<lb/>
? ? two weeks, Coach<lb/>
it ing Pirates combin-<lb/>
. deception to over-<lb/>
it t eh ven by a touch-<lb/>
gin Most of the ac-<lb/>
late in the fourth<lb/>
I i  both teams liter-<lb/>
i " u ith everything.<lb/>
 m of finding a back<lb/>
to break through<lb/>
li; e, many have<lb/>
? li finitely, for John-<lb/>
I ii line time after<lb/>
nsistent gains. John-<lb/>
g half back on offense<lb/>
n defense, starred for<lb/>
It was a pass from<lb/>
Johnson after a fif-<lb/>
I ? nalty placed them<lb/>
 ng distance of Pres-<lb/>
l ? that netted the<lb/>
S on after the coun-<lb/>
ts unleashed a pass-<lb/>
which netted them 50<lb/>
put them within nine<lb/>
he Pirates' goal. How-<lb/>
. ended the threat by<lb/>
g a short pass,<lb/>
'arfM<lb/>
A<lb/>
very enthusiastic group fil-<lb/>
ed into Austin Auditorium Sat-<lb/>
urday evening to cheer the Pirate<lb/>
team and its coach "Doc" Mathis.<lb/>
Billy Tolson and Elizabeth Keith<lb/>
ed the cheering.<lb/>
Mr. Deal made a very inter-<lb/>
esting talk on athletics in small<lb/>
colleges, illustrating that E. C.<lb/>
spirit can<lb/>
am. After<lb/>
introduced<lb/>
called upon<lb/>
or the same<lb/>
r. during the<lb/>
aid further<lb/>
ble to beat i<lb/>
t the Pirate<lb/>
! ing hard on<lb/>
0 prove this<lb/>
i given a big<lb/>
?it ts showed<lb/>
"or Ins work<lb/>
Makes j Duke's Undefeated Blue De-<lb/>
vils In Big Five Scraps Will<lb/>
Be Seeking Third Consecu-<lb/>
tive State Championship;<lb/>
N. C. State Will Meet Geor-<lb/>
gia In Athens.<lb/>
Varsity ciub ferebee Carries Ball<lb/>
Plans Weddmj<lb/>
Over ior Ll.l.l. Score<lb/>
Dowd-Jenkins Nuptials<lb/>
Take Place November<lb/>
T. C<lb/>
Mis?<lb/>
Jen-<lb/>
JIMMY<lb/>
HNSON<lb/>
MATH CLUB ENTERTAINED<lb/>
AT HALLOWE'EN PARTY<lb/>
acted<lb/>
re<lb/>
? ian<lb/>
?tter<lb/>
. Welcome At<lb/>
s?<lb/>
i<lb/>
 I . T. .<lb/>
Beryl Lee SUlIings<lb/>
Mi.s Balance<lb/>
c<lb/>
J, c<lb/>
ti-r and Sinclair<lb/>
: ng on the defense<lb/>
C . although the en-<lb/>
very good work<lb/>
ies and Russell in the<lb/>
Donald and Beverly<lb/>
I r the Scots.<lb/>
h Mathis and Coach<lb/>
 P. J. C. were class-<lb/>
the battle assum-<lb/>
I ? ? sonal nature. The<lb/>
still good friends but<lb/>
te up in the coring,<lb/>
p for E C. T. C. was<lb/>
Lii dsay.<lb/>
Ie Nobles,<lb/>
li Carpenter.<lb/>
ird Sinclair.<lb/>
? it Bowen.<lb/>
I E.iSom.<lb/>
ck Ridenhour, B.<lb/>
HasseU<lb/>
If Johnson.<lb/>
Ft rebee.<lb/>
: ? riods:<lb/>
o o o o e<lb/>
o o o o t<lb/>
URGES CURES TO PLACE<lb/>
BEAUTY ABOVE SPORTS<lb/>
Maidenly comliness will not<lb/>
be sacrificed for excellence in<lb/>
athletics at Omaha Municipal<lb/>
University as long as Miss Ruth<lb/>
Diamond is girl's physical educa-<lb/>
tion director there.<lb/>
She allows the girls to get j<lb/>
rough, enough in playing soccer j<lb/>
to brush the powder of each<lb/>
other's noses, and she allows!<lb/>
them to climb the highest hills<lb/>
around the city, but she draws<lb/>
the line at that.<lb/>
Oi<lb/>
Miss Diam<lb/>
that in this<lb/>
n<lb/>
Jl SI A FEW SAMPLES<lb/>
OF FOOTBALL'S SLANG<lb/>
 SHOES<lb/>
. ir are Always<lb/>
?vi<lb/>
ICES<lb/>
tioes, Inc<lb/>
. . ??<lb/>
 compilers are pull-<lb/>
: era ng locks at the<lb/>
? I a new edition con-<lb/>
? ? various terms which<lb/>
? n cmed on the gridiron.<lb/>
ng are a few:<lb/>
.  d'?to play dirty.<lb/>
? ' Southern slang for<lb/>
te<lb/>
fan"?lineman with size<lb/>
, . Iat?a place where<lb/>
ire free<lb/>
 train"?scholarship list,<lb/>
a yell"?to fake injury<lb/>
crowd gives you fifteen<lb/>
1 freely admits!)<lb/>
day and age a girl '<lb/>
can't be a "hothouse plant" but.<lb/>
she says, "what 1 object to is the<lb/>
thought that a girl should be al-<lb/>
lowed to let athletics monopolise<lb/>
her time until she walks, talks<lb/>
and acts like a man.<lb/>
"In this day of transcontinen-<lb/>
tal automobile trips, involving<lb/>
life in tourists' camps and 12<lb/>
hour drives when the feminine<lb/>
portion of the party is expected<lb/>
to take her trick at the wheel, a<lb/>
girl cannot be a hothouse plant<lb/>
Miss Diamond stated.<lb/>
"But it is just as grotesque for<lb/>
a girl to desert the arts that<lb/>
give her charm to excel in athle-<lb/>
tics as it would be for one of our<lb/>
football players to leave the<lb/>
gridiron so that he might knit,<lb/>
crochet and cook<lb/>
College athletics for the fair<lb/>
sex should be designed to give<lb/>
them poise, resoluteness of char-<lb/>
acter and the ability to think<lb/>
fast, Miss Diamond believes.<lb/>
Tuesday evening. October<lb/>
30, the Math Club was entertain-<lb/>
ed at a Hallowe'en party in the<lb/>
??Y" hut.<lb/>
During the evening many<lb/>
:  oi entertainment were car-<lb/>
ried out. including the pinning of<lb/>
the tail on the proverbial Hallo-<lb/>
we'en cat, a string puzzle, and a<lb/>
spelling mat?<lb/>
Utter of thi<lb/>
pii iiiounced.<lb/>
Martha Crater<lb/>
liams. was also<lb/>
Ice cream and<lb/>
ed those present<lb/>
. ular nv m<lb/>
Club, the freshn<lb/>
and the faculty<lb/>
tics Department.<lb/>
all<lb/>
VI u<lb/>
i which certain<lb/>
ihabet were not<lb/>
dc furnished by<lb/>
ind BiHie Wil-<lb/>
njoyed.<lb/>
cakes was serv-<lb/>
which included<lb/>
,ers of the Math<lb/>
.?li Math, majors<lb/>
if the Mathema-<lb/>
XYLDA COOPER IS ELECTED<lb/>
EROS1I (LASS PRESIDENT<lb/>
At a recent meeting<lb/>
Freshman class, they<lb/>
their president Xyl la<lb/>
Annie Mae Ward was<lb/>
of the<lb/>
chose as<lb/>
Cooper.<lb/>
elected<lb/>
vice-president; Bertha Joyner<lb/>
Lang, secretary; Mary Lawrence<lb/>
Davenport, treasurer; and Eliza-<lb/>
beth Copeland, representative on<lb/>
Student Council. Maggie Belle<lb/>
Crumpler and Thelma Gmn will<lb/>
represent the class on the Tecoan<lb/>
and Teco Echo staffs respective-<lb/>
ly-<lb/>
The class chose Dr. Slay and<lb/>
Miss Holtzclaw as class advisors.<lb/>
Yesterday's results in a pair of<lb/>
Big Five battles provided final<lb/>
touches? in a competitive way?<lb/>
to preparations for the Carolina-<lb/>
Duke game to be played Satur-<lb/>
day afternoon of this week at<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Duke defeated<lb/>
Wake Forest. 28-7, and Carolina<lb/>
defeated Davidson, 12-2, in yes-<lb/>
terday's Big Five scraps.<lb/>
Duke's Blue Devils, undefeat-<lb/>
ed in Big Five competition, this<lb/>
week will be seeking their third<lb/>
consecutive triumph in the State<lb/>
championship race, Carolina, vic-<lb/>
torious over Wake Forest and<lb/>
Davidson and holding a tie with<lb/>
.V C, State, will be aiming for a<lb/>
victory which would mean the<lb/>
State championship for Carl<lb/>
Snavely in bis first year as head<lb/>
coach of the Tar Heels.<lb/>
Saturday's game will be Caro-<lb/>
lina's last of the season in the<lb/>
Big Five. Duke has one more<lb/>
family scrap ahead?the Thanks-<lb/>
giving Day battle at Durham with<lb/>
IN. C. State.<lb/>
Expect Record Crowd<lb/>
Athletic officials of the State<lb/>
have a right to talk "record<lb/>
crowd this week. That's what<lb/>
they're expecting for the Caro-<lb/>
lina-Duke game and indications<lb/>
arc thai Kenan Stadium will be<lb/>
taxed beyond its capacity of i<lb/>
26,000. However, the real rush<lb/>
for tickets comes this week. G.<lb/>
E. "Bo" Shepard, Carolina's head<lb/>
man of the ticket works, reports<lb/>
a heavy advance sale but points<lb/>
out that there are plenty of good<lb/>
tickets left. "I've got meeyluns<lb/>
of 'em; meelyuns of 'em. but<lb/>
they won't last long says Shep-<lb/>
ard in his best Jimmy Durante<lb/>
takeoff.<lb/>
Carolina and Duke come up to<lb/>
the "big game" with records<lb/>
which make them appear fairly<lb/>
close "on paper Each has lost<lb/>
only one game?Tennessee de-<lb/>
feated Carolina, 19-7; Tennessee<lb/>
defeated Duke, 14-6. Duke has<lb/>
won all its other tests; Carolina<lb/>
has won all other tests except<lb/>
the 7-7 battle with N. C. State.<lb/>
Carolina's surprising 14-0 vic-<lb/>
tory over Georgia and the de-<lb/>
cisive manner in which the Tar<lb/>
Heels defeated Georgia Tech?<lb/>
the score was 26-0 have combin-<lb/>
ed to boost the Tar Heel stock,<lb/>
and those developments assured<lb/>
the "record gate" for Saturday's<lb/>
;ame.<lb/>
While Carolina and Duke are<lb/>
scrapping at the Hill, N. C. State<lb/>
will be meeting Georgia at Ath-<lb/>
The Varsity Club of E C.<lb/>
announce the wedding of<lb/>
Robbie Dowd to Mr. John<lb/>
kins, the wedding to be solem-<lb/>
nized before as many people as i<lb/>
can be crowded into Austin<lb/>
Auditorium, on Tuesday, Nov-j<lb/>
ember 27th, 1931 J<lb/>
The bride has selected most of<lb/>
her attendants. Mrs. "Red"<lb/>
Smith will be dame of honor. The<lb/>
bride's maids will be Misses Theo<lb/>
Easom, W. Olive Jolly, Johnsie<lb/>
Johnston, Primrose Carpenter,<lb/>
Dannie Wright, and Baxie Riden-<lb/>
hour. Little Paul Bowen will be<lb/>
the ring bearer. Little Miss Jen-<lb/>
nie Carr will be the flower girl<lb/>
The other attendants will be se-<lb/>
lected as soon as the groom (real-<lb/>
ly bride) decides.<lb/>
The Rev. "Doc" Mathis will of-<lb/>
ficiate at the altar.<lb/>
Miss Jackie Humphrey, local<lb/>
soloist, accompanied by Miss Bil-<lb/>
lie Tolson at the piano will an-<lb/>
noy the audience.<lb/>
Some of the bridal party are<lb/>
expected to arrive in time to<lb/>
have dinner in the College Din-<lb/>
ing Hall before the wedding.<lb/>
A small admission will be<lb/>
charged to help defray the ex-<lb/>
penses of a short honeymoon.<lb/>
Rice will be furnished to specta-<lb/>
tors for so long as it lasts.<lb/>
Miss Lorraine Hunter will have<lb/>
charge of keeping the bridal par-<lb/>
ty sober until after the wedding.<lb/>
In the Realm of<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
Bv Willard<lb/>
G;<lb/>
Is (<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
d li'<lb/>
I FORMER E. C. T. C.<lb/>
I ATHLETE IS HURT<lb/>
With the shifting of Jimmie<lb/>
Johnson from tackle to halfback<lb/>
comes the possibility of frequent<lb/>
scores in games yet to be play-<lb/>
ed. This reminds me of a card<lb/>
that Jimmie received last week<lb/>
from his father in Raleigh. It<lb/>
read something like this:  I'm<lb/>
sorry they're making you play<lb/>
way back now, because I know-<lb/>
that you want to be out in front<lb/>
where the action is taking place<lb/>
I'm sure that Jimmie's dad<lb/>
didn't mean to criticize our back-<lb/>
field for their slowness, but he's<lb/>
absolutely correct as far as Jim-<lb/>
mie is concerned. I've known<lb/>
Jimmie since high school days<lb/>
and he's always played in the<lb/>
line?right in the midst of action.<lb/>
Coach Mathis' Team Meets<lb/>
Norfolk Branch William<lb/>
And Mary Friday.<lb/>
Stringfield Directs<lb/>
Carolina Symphony<lb/>
In Concert Here<lb/>
Gldtime football coaching tac-<lb/>
tics with the coach exhorting<lb/>
his charges to "do or die for dear<lb/>
old Rutgers" are now frowned<lb/>
upon by officials of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas Interscholastic Lea-<lb/>
gue. The league which super-<lb/>
vises the football activities of<lb/>
nearly 500 Texas high schools<lb/>
has warned coaches against the<lb/>
practice, in an effort to cut down<lb/>
serious injuries.<lb/>
(Continued from first page)<lb/>
music of the American world<lb/>
and was greatly enjoyed by the<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
The final number on the pro-<lb/>
gram was "Second Hungarian<lb/>
Rhapsody" by Lizst, character-<lb/>
ized by its stately broad chords.<lb/>
As an encore the orchestra<lb/>
played the last movement from<lb/>
the director's own "Southern<lb/>
Mountain Suite called "Cripple<lb/>
Creek This selection has been<lb/>
played before audiences here a<lb/>
number of times and always re-<lb/>
ceives highest applause.<lb/>
Bill Puckett, former Pirate<lb/>
player, should have known bet-<lb/>
ter than to try a line plunge<lb/>
through his last year's team-<lb/>
mates. Easom, Jolly and John-<lb/>
son threw him effectively for a<lb/>
two yard loss plus a broken col-<lb/>
lar bone. None of the three bore<lb/>
malice toward Bill, but accidents<lb/>
will happen.<lb/>
By Dan Wright<lb/>
In a game that was featured by-<lb/>
cold weather and frost nipped<lb/>
fingers, the Pirates lost a hard<lb/>
fought game to Louisburg Col-<lb/>
lege by a close score of 6 to 7.<lb/>
Both teams used many passes<lb/>
and many good gains were reg-<lb/>
istered by both in the aerial at-<lb/>
tacks. Both teams fought hard<lb/>
for their gains and the breaks<lb/>
were about evenly divided. The<lb/>
team play by play is as follows:<lb/>
First Quarter<lb/>
Louisburg kicked off to Pir-<lb/>
ates, Hassei received and return-<lb/>
ed to the Pirates 20 yard line.<lb/>
Ferebee gained a yard over left<lb/>
tackle. Johnson punted to Louis-<lb/>
burg 45 yard line, Puckett re-<lb/>
turned 20 yards. Puckett around<lb/>
R. and L. end. Gibson over cen-<lb/>
ter for 1 yard, 15 yard penalty<lb/>
on Louisburg for holding. Puck-<lb/>
ett around R. end for 5 yards.<lb/>
Davis punted into the end zone.<lb/>
Pirates ball on their own 20<lb/>
yard line. L. Ruimhour lost 2<lb/>
yards on attempted end run. Has-<lb/>
sell picks up 2 yards over L.<lb/>
tackle. Johnson kicks to Louis-<lb/>
burg 45 yard line.<lb/>
Gibson over L. guard for no<lb/>
gain. Puckett skirted L. tackle<lb/>
for 6 yards. Puckett went<lb/>
over R. tackle for 2 yards. Davis<lb/>
kicked L. E Hassell returned to<lb/>
the 14 yard line.<lb/>
Ferebee fumbles and recovers,<lb/>
no gain. Louisburg penalized 5<lb/>
DR. SLAY ASKED TO<lb/>
ADVISE WITH N. C. TEXT<lb/>
BOOK COMMISSION<lb/>
I ESSES<lb/>
I Indicate the Season's<lb/>
 batty"?disease causing<lb/>
to draw diagrams on the<lb/>
'? t I .oth.<lb/>
And those are just a few!<lb/>
The Harvard University Lib-<lb/>
?ry has purchased a collection<lb/>
I mote than 8,000 photographsl<lb/>
&amp; important figures of the last<lb/>
ury, including more than 100<lb/>
pictuies of Lincoln.<lb/>
MUSIC TEACHERS ARE<lb/>
HOSTS TO STUDENTS<lb/>
Misses Dora Mead and Lois V.<lb/>
Gorrell entertained their music<lb/>
students at Ragsdale Hall re-<lb/>
cently For the occasion the loO-<lb/>
by was beautifully decorated<lb/>
with ferns, marigolds, and nas-<lb/>
turtiums, orange being the pre-<lb/>
dominant color. The guests were<lb/>
divided int groups and played<lb/>
musical games. Delicious re-<lb/>
freshments were served.<lb/>
ns; Wake Forest will be playing<lb/>
Richmond at Richmond, and Da-<lb/>
vidson will be meeting V. M. I.<lb/>
at Davidson.<lb/>
Cr<lb/>
Dr R. J- Slay has been asked<lb/>
to advise with the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Text Book Commission on<lb/>
the new science books that are<lb/>
to be adopted for use in the<lb/>
High Schools of North Carolina.<lb/>
Dr N. W. Walker of the Educa-<lb/>
tion Department of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina is chair-<lb/>
man of the commission that is<lb/>
composed of five members. Dr.<lb/>
Slay appeared before the com-<lb/>
mission on November 3, to make<lb/>
his recommendations.<lb/>
Delta Upsilon Fraternity re-<lb/>
cently celebrated its 100th anni-<lb/>
versary at a convention at Wil-<lb/>
liams College, Williamston, Mass.<lb/>
T<lb/>
DR. WOOTEN<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
hose<lb/>
reasured<lb/>
asties<lb/>
CAN<lb/>
BE<lb/>
BOUGHT<lb/>
AT<lb/>
GARRIS<lb/>
GROCERY<lb/>
Company<lb/>
First Class Foods<lb/>
Fifth Street<lb/>
According to Prof. Rudolph<lb/>
Altrocchi of the University of<lb/>
California, well-known Dante<lb/>
scholar, Dante's Divine Comedy<lb/>
reveals the existence in Dante's<lb/>
time of gangsters and most of<lb/>
the other bad influences that ex-<lb/>
ist today.<lb/>
yards off side. Ferebee over<lb/>
center for 2 yards. Johnson kicks<lb/>
'to Pirates 47 yard line.<lb/>
Gibson over center for 1 yard.<lb/>
Puckett around L. End for 5<lb/>
yards. Puckett fumbled, losing 5<lb/>
yards. Davis kick? to Pirates 25<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
(Continued on page four)<lb/>
We are showing the smartest sport and dressy<lb/>
dresses in Newest Shades and Football<lb/>
Colors.<lb/>
Thev have the flash. A visit from the E.<lb/>
girls is always welcomed.<lb/>
C. T. C.<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
"The Store for the Ladies"<lb/>
A. L. BRAY<lb/>
RADIO REPAIR WORK<lb/>
PHONE 755-JX<lb/>
MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT<lb/>
Chas. Home's Drug Store<lb/>
Opposite Proctor Hotel<lb/>
Sandwiches-Hot and Cold Drinks<lb/>
Served at our Fountain.<lb/>
gless Chiffon H<lb/>
45 GUAGE<lb/>
79c or 2 Pairs $1.50<lb/>
JOIN OUR HOSIERY CLUB<lb/>
 fhntwarxii<lb/>
Cheerful and Gay<lb/>
SILK OR WOOLEN<lb/>
Dresses $3.95<lb/>
This is one of our Anniversary Gifts to you?<lb/>
from a big manufacturer who gave us a price<lb/>
"concession for this event.<lb/>
New Tunic Frocks! Charming WToolens;<lb/>
New Silks!<lb/>
Each frock is an outstanding model for 1935<lb/>
smartness Sunday Night dresses included.<lb/>
Colors: new peacock blue, cocktail blue, gold,<lb/>
raspberry, green tile, red, brown and black.<lb/>
GLORIA<lb/>
FASHION CORNER<lb/>
<pb facs="00038023_0004"/><lb/>
Wednesday,<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
T<lb/>
H<lb/>
Page Four<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Ruth Henderson, Reporter<lb/>
Mrs. Adelaide Bloxton spoke<lb/>
.it tin- vesper services Friday<lb/>
even ng, November 2. Her topic<lb/>
was "Character and Sex and<lb/>
sh gave a clear definition and<lb/>
H functions of character. "It<lb/>
; a c tmplex changing influence<lb/>
that has to be adjusted to meet<lb/>
e situations in which one<lb/>
"e self She gave the<lb/>
i hip of character to sex<lb/>
? beautiful and wholesome<lb/>
SI<lb/>
tins Sie gave the true mean-<lb/>
i sexand its values in life.<lb/>
he tract?d processes through<lb/>
attains happiness in a<lb/>
. . thaiwas easily understood.<lb/>
' i K isc.1 the students how to<lb/>
i hiIdren with whom<lb/>
iej will. me in contact, the<lb/>
lory of hfe.<lb/>
'hi amual installation of the<lb/>
V.W, C. A Cabinet was<lb/>
eld Sun.ay night, November 4.<lb/>
"he SCabinet chose 25<lb/>
if the Freshman and<lb/>
 r Nirmal Classes to serve<lb/>
unior Cabinet whose<lb/>
SCENES FROM PLAYS TO UK<lb/>
5 GIVEN BY CAROLINA PLAYMAKEBS<lb/>
GRANVILLE COUNTY CLUB<lb/>
ORGANIZED LAST FRIDAY<lb/>
In order to be drawn closer to-<lb/>
gether and become better ac-<lb/>
quainted during their school<lb/>
year at E. C. T. C. the Granville<lb/>
County girls at a meeting last<lb/>
Friday evening organized a<lb/>
Granville Count' Club.<lb/>
Of the 18 girls from Granville<lb/>
County, practically all were pres-<lb/>
ent at the meeting. Alice Yan-<lb/>
eey was elected president and<lb/>
Myrtle Watkins, Secretary and<lb/>
Treasurer. Other members of<lb/>
the Club are: Lou Pitts, Mary L.<lb/>
Shotwell. Mildred Satterwhite,<lb/>
Carrie Cotten, Esther Royster,<lb/>
Lucy Murray, Belle Kearney,<lb/>
Roxie Suit, Helen Critcher, Per-<lb/>
saline O'Brien, Louise Gooch, Lu-<lb/>
cille Bailey and Cliffie Hobgood.<lb/>
C<lb/>
tea :<lb/>
Dow<lb/>
Brad<lb/>
 n<lb/>
H . a girls are chosen pri-<lb/>
for the interest that they<lb/>
 v n thus far in the Y.<lb/>
C. A activities.<lb/>
he service is one of the most<lb/>
itiful and impressive of the<lb/>
W. C. A. ceremonies, Melba<lb/>
rien, president of the organi-<lb/>
. ght? d each girl as her<lb/>
. . ? called by Frances<lb/>
vice-president of the or-<lb/>
les were given<lb/>
cabinet members,<lb/>
them from the can-<lb/>
the presidenl<lb/>
ng girls were selec-<lb/>
,i, i r Cabinet: Helen<lb/>
lise Britt, Helen<lb/>
lli Newell, Caro-<lb/>
? Marilyn Hender-<lb/>
Chandler, Ruth Da-<lb/>
vis, Carrie Cotten.<lb/>
. irn, Hattie Hil-<lb/>
? Davis. Edith Mor-<lb/>
Laughlin, Maggie<lb/>
annie Brewer. Ophe-<lb/>
ie, Callie Charlton,<lb/>
y, Margaret Davis,<lb/>
Ruth Wise. Maywood<lb/>
i da Kay Hair.<lb/>
ly after the service<lb/>
abinel held a short<lb/>
id iected Ida Kay<lb/>
rman and Carolyn<lb/>
 .rotary. Jean<lb/>
 i lected the sponsor<lb/>
. c Cabinet<lb/>
ndrieks, pastor of<lb/>
Church at Farm-<lb/>
the Sunday Y. W.<lb/>
services. Novem-<lb/>
alked to the girls<lb/>
A tonso scene from "Fixin's the tragedy of a tenant far-<lb/>
mer, by Pavil and Erma Green, which will be shown by the Caro-<lb/>
lina Playmakers on their forthcoming bill of plays at E. C. '1 C.<lb/>
In h<lb/>
the N-<lb/>
Hayes<lb/>
1j. ?<lb/>
j seem<lb/>
mac<lb/>
'Ol<lb/>
 Paul Green's uproarous<lb/>
ARE MEDICINE<lb/>
faro<lb/>
a coun<lb/>
r<lb/>
Since the last issue of the Teco<lb/>
Echo, the Placement Bureau has<lb/>
received the following reports:<lb/>
Miss Hannah Snead is teaching<lb/>
fifth grade at Deep Creek School.<lb/>
Wadesboro. N. C.<lb/>
Miss Norma Boyles is teaching<lb/>
second grade in the Lawsonville<lb/>
School, Stokes County, N. C.<lb/>
Miss Dorothy Earle is teaching<lb/>
second grade in Mebane, N. C.<lb/>
Miss Mildred Pelt is teaching<lb/>
third grade in Saulston School.<lb/>
Wayne County, N. C.<lb/>
Miss Margaret Walter is teach-<lb/>
ing in Symrna High School, Car-<lb/>
teret County, N. C.<lb/>
Miss Alma Godfrey. Class of<lb/>
'34. visited here the past week-<lb/>
end. She is doing office work<lb/>
in Elizabeth City.<lb/>
Miss Mattie Lou Cotten, Class<lb/>
of '34. is teaching at Chicod. She<lb/>
visited Glennie Draper the past<lb/>
week-end.<lb/>
Miss Hazel Proctor. Class of<lb/>
'31, who is teaching at Speed,<lb/>
spent the week-end with her sis-<lb/>
ter. Mavis Proctor.<lb/>
Miss Mary Louise Grimes vis-<lb/>
ited on the campus Saturday,<lb/>
November 10th.<lb/>
Miss Chrystelle Lucas, Class of<lb/>
'27, who teaches at Farmville.<lb/>
visited here Sunday.<lb/>
Mr. Bob Eason, Class of '34,<lb/>
who is teaching at West Edge-<lb/>
combe School. Rocky Mount, and<lb/>
Mr. Henry Oglesby, who is<lb/>
principal at Bell Arthur, were<lb/>
among the alumni attending the<lb/>
E. C. T. CLouisburg football<lb/>
game here Monday. November<lb/>
12th.<lb/>
Miss Mabel Allen, two-year<lb/>
class of '33, and Miss Dorothy<lb/>
??? <lb/>
m<lb/>
Carolina Play makers<lb/>
Return for Performance<lb/>
(Continued from first page)<lb/>
They have bee here H<lb/>
lh ge a number of times di<lb/>
,i past ten Or twelve yea!<lb/>
ways well received,<lb/>
VISITS IN DURHAM<lb/>
A scene from "The Loyal Venture a romantic c<lb/>
by Wilkeson O'ConnelL This play will be one of the<lb/>
makers at E. C. T. C.<lb/>
em-<lb/>
it pirate day<lb/>
i be presente<lb/>
1<lb/>
i the On iina a ?<lb/>
the C;irolina 1'lav<lb/>
FEREBEE CARRIES BALL<lb/>
OVER FOR E. C. T. t. SCORE<lb/>
Ridenhour fo<lb/>
(.Continued from first page)<lb/>
HasseU f<lb/>
ell failed to gain over L<lb/>
rebee over center, no gain<lb/>
17 yards. First <lb/>
and ten. Pass. Ferebee to Easom Johnson<lb/>
good for 12 yards. First and ten)<lb/>
on Louisburg's 8 yard line. Fere- J Carocnu<lb/>
bee over center for 3 yards. He<lb/>
(repeated over L. T. for a touch-<lb/>
down. Lou ihurt<lb/>
n punted to Louisburg's j bee's kick. Score<lb/>
i'<lb/>
E. :<lb/>
Johi<lb/>
43 yard line,<lb/>
Puckett failed to gain around<lb/>
L. E. Weldon kicked to Pirates<lb/>
28 yard line. Ferebee rounds L.<lb/>
E. for 4 yards. Louisburg pena-<lb/>
lized 15 yards for roughness.<lb/>
First and 10 for Pirates. Hassell<lb/>
passed to Easom, incomplete.<lb/>
Fen bee crosses R. T. for 2 yards.<lb/>
blocked Fere-<lb/>
7-ti in favor of<lb/>
Jolly<lb/>
Johnson punted to Louisburg 25<lb/>
yard line Weldon rounds R. E.<lb/>
for 5 yards. Quarter ends.<lb/>
Second Quarter<lb/>
Gibson crosses R. G. for 4<lb/>
yards. Repeats for 2 yards-<lb/>
first and ten for Louisburg. Wel-<lb/>
don around right end for 2 yards.<lb/>
Gibson fails to gam over center.<lb/>
Hobgood. two-year class of '32,1 Weldon punts to Pirates 32 yard<lb/>
who both teach in Stem, N. C, j ijne<lb/>
A. V<lb/>
? 11.<lb/>
H<lb/>
about the active and passive ele-<lb/>
ents : Khe Christian Life.<lb/>
A tivity is essential to life and<lb/>
. . : :? n.eais death was his<lb/>
chiei point. One must possess<lb/>
? i rgy and a willingness he be-<lb/>
lieves, in order to help himself<lb/>
in getting those things from life<lb/>
.? ich are set before him. Char-<lb/>
denotes the passive side<lb/>
fe and expresses what one<lb/>
nd not what one does, and<lb/>
I ive Quality, he thinks,<lb/>
ti uly important as the ac-<lb/>
One attains real beauty of<lb/>
: ter through development<lb/>
and much endurance, was his<lb/>
ing idea.<lb/>
act<lb/>
cnai<lb/>
spent the week-end of the 10th<lb/>
here. Miss Allen visited Lou<lb/>
Pitts and Martha Teal, and Miss<lb/>
Hobgood, Helen Critcher.<lb/>
Miss Hattie Lee Humphrey,<lb/>
class of '34, who is teaching at<lb/>
Morehead City, spent the week-<lb/>
end of November 3rd with her<lb/>
sister. Marjorie Humphrey.<lb/>
Miss Joy Pickard, who is<lb/>
teaching at Stokes visited sever-<lb/>
al students Saturday, November<lb/>
3rd.<lb/>
Miss Ola Morris, Class of '34,<lb/>
visited here Saturday, November<lb/>
3rd. She is teaching at Aurora.<lb/>
Miss Mary G. Parker, Class of<lb/>
'34, a teacher in the Dover school,<lb/>
visited here Sunday, November<lb/>
4th.<lb/>
Miss Eleanor Jones, also of the<lb/>
'34 Class and who is teaching at<lb/>
Williamston, visited here Satur-<lb/>
day, November 3rd.<lb/>
Miss Mary C. Holland, Class<lb/>
Hassell fails to gain around R.<lb/>
E. Ferebee picked up 2 over<lb/>
center, Johnson kicked to Louis-<lb/>
burg's ten yard strip. Weldon re-<lb/>
turned to the 20.<lb/>
Weldon over L. T. for 4 yards.<lb/>
Gibson picked up 2 over center,<lb/>
Johnson blocked Weldon's kick<lb/>
but Weldon recovered. Johnson<lb/>
blocked Weldon's second kick,<lb/>
Pirates ball on Louisburg 2G<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
Hassell passes to Lindsay for<lb/>
15 yards. First and ten, Pirates.<lb/>
Hassell loses 5 yards around end.<lb/>
Three passes by Hassell incom-<lb/>
plete.<lb/>
Louisburg takes ball and<lb/>
downs their own 20 yard line.<lb/>
Weldon kicks to own 45 yard line.<lb/>
Rowland rounds R. E. for two<lb/>
yards. Pirates penalized 4 yards<lb/>
for offsides. Gibson stepped<lb/>
off 15 yards over center. First<lb/>
and ten. Weldon failed to gain<lb/>
Louisburg. Rest of quarter un-<lb/>
eventful.<lb/>
Fourlh Quarter<lb/>
Pirates ball on their own 2?i<lb/>
yard line. Johnson over center<lb/>
for 2 yards. Johnson kicked to<lb/>
Louisburg's 45.<lb/>
Davis went over Center for 25<lb/>
yards. Louisburg lost bail on<lb/>
downs on Pirates 20 yard line.<lb/>
Ferebee over center for 2i<lb/>
yards. Louisburg penalized 15 J<lb/>
yards for roughness. Johnson j<lb/>
kicked to Louisburg's 45 when <lb/>
Weldon failed. Lindsay covers.<lb/>
Pass Ferebee to Easim inter-<lb/>
cepted by Goodwin.<lb/>
Davis kicked into Pirates third<lb/>
end z.one.<lb/>
Ferebee over L. T. V, yards.<lb/>
Tried again for 2 yards. Johnson<lb/>
kicked. Boland ran 3 plays fo<lb/>
as many yards. Davis kicked to<lb/>
Pirates 24 yard line.<lb/>
Pass Ferebee to Lindsay good<lb/>
for 20 yards. Gibson intercepted j<lb/>
the next throw.<lb/>
Weldon over center for 11 j<lb/>
yards. Picked up 12 yards in j<lb/>
next three plays. Gibson went '<lb/>
over center for 2 yards as game<lb/>
ended.<lb/>
Punt average?E. C. T. C, 3G<lb/>
yards. Louisburg 24.9 yards<lb/>
First downs- E. C. T. C. !?:<lb/>
Louisburg 10.<lb/>
Lineup:<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Louisburg<lb/>
Left End<lb/>
Lindsay McFadgen<lb/>
B. Rid<lb/>
Left Tackle<lb/>
Lefl Guard<lb/>
Center<lb/>
R  Guard<lb/>
Righl Ta? kle<lb/>
Right End<lb/>
ayior<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
Miss Alice V. Wilson, of<lb/>
ciencc Department, spent<lb/>
a end in Durham vis<lb/>
i r mother and the family o<lb/>
rother, Dr. R. N Wilson,<lb/>
ssor of Chemistry at Duke<lb/>
. : .??. lit r moth r birt<lb/>
,ras celebrated on Saturday<lb/>
pn<lb/>
?<lb/>
Dr. A. M. Schultz<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
11)0 State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 578<lb/>
FREDRH MARCH<lb/>
CHARLES 1 M (.HI(i<lb/>
IN<lb/>
? Till: BARRETS OF<lb/>
W1MPOLE STREET<lb/>
Monday?Tn. 9daj<lb/>
November 19 SI<lb/>
STATE<lb/>
Iv<lb/>
Lai<lb/>
Quarterback<lb/>
L. RidenlM ii;r Left HalfGibso<lb/>
HassellRight HalfPucke<lb/>
NoblesFullbackDav<lb/>
FerebeePark<lb/>
Substilites E C. T.C. Bow<lb/>
en. Nortlcutt, Dunn: I;bi sr<lb/>
Nelson. 1Uchards, W? Id? GoO(<lb/>
win. (ndler, Bullock. HoyJ<lb/>
Boland.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHS LIVE FOREVER<lb/>
PHOTOS 1Ao<lb/>
POSES AVV<lb/>
4<lb/>
Special with this ad one Tint FREE on week<lb/>
days only.<lb/>
McLELLAN'S<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
Offi<lb/>
-Bri<lb/>
Si<lb/>
npp,<lb/>
. foP<lb/>
Coll<lb/>
ege<lb/>
Girls!<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
WARREN'S<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
Dr.a-MeK. .Johnson DENTIST<lb/>
20(iState Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 391<lb/>
SAVE YOUR TIME AND ENERGY!<lb/>
DEPEND ON IS FOR EXCELLENT STOCK<lb/>
AND PROMPT DELIVER' SERVICE<lb/>
RE WISE AND VISIT IS<lb/>
Charles Stores<lb/>
of '32, who is teaching at New- on two center bucks and then<lb/>
M:c? Ruth Ilillhouse was the<lb/>
speaker at vespers last Friday<lb/>
i v, ? ing. She talked to the stu-<lb/>
lenti about the importance of<lb/>
tak ng a stand on the affirma-<lb/>
tive or negative side of a ques-<lb/>
) The two words "yes" and<lb/>
"no" so important in determining<lb/>
th future that they have chang-<lb/>
ed pages o! history and a study<lb/>
of them should make one stop<lb/>
to think about his answer.<lb/>
When momentous questions are<lb/>
to be decided by a nation, the<lb/>
y ?uth, by its answer, may do<lb/>
much in determining what steps<lb/>
shall be taken. Now. as never<lb/>
before, youth has the opportunity<lb/>
for more independence in think-<lb/>
ing, and because of this great<lb/>
opportunity the responsibility<lb/>
has been increased.<lb/>
port, spent the week-end of the<lb/>
3rd here.<lb/>
COCKRELL?COOKE<lb/>
Miss Halliburton Cooke, a<lb/>
graduate of the 1934 A. B. Class,<lb/>
was married in July to W. Chen-<lb/>
ault Cockrell of Louisville, Ky.<lb/>
Mrs. Cockrell was formerly of<lb/>
Dillon, S. C. They are making<lb/>
their home in Louisville.<lb/>
crsca<lb/>
Blount Harvey<lb/>
EXCM?HODGES<lb/>
The Y. W. C. A. room has been<lb/>
moved across the hall in the<lb/>
room formerly occupied by the<lb/>
Y W. C. A. Store and has been<lb/>
renovated and refurnished and<lb/>
will soon be ready for use.<lb/>
Miss Ruth Blount Hodges was<lb/>
married in October to Robert<lb/>
Exum of Snow Hill. The bride<lb/>
attended E. C. T. C. They are<lb/>
making their home in Snow<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
Dean Carl W. Aekerman of<lb/>
the Columbia School of Journa-<lb/>
lism has urged the making of a<lb/>
world-wide study of journalism,<lb/>
especially to determine whether<lb/>
unrestricted dissemination of<lb/>
news might not be one of the<lb/>
best guarantees of peace.<lb/>
fumbled losing 20 yards. Davis<lb/>
kicked to Pirates 46 yard line.<lb/>
Pass Hassell to Johnson incom-<lb/>
plete. Gibson intercepted Has-<lb/>
sell's next throw and runs 12<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Pass Weldon to Richards to<lb/>
Boland to Weldon, good for 20<lb/>
yards. First and ten. Boland<lb/>
picks up 4 ards over center.<lb/>
Weldon skirts R. E. for 18 yards,<lb/>
putting ball on Pirates 1 yard<lb/>
strip. Pass Weldon to McFayden.<lb/>
Scores. Weldon place kicks<lb/>
goal. 7-0 favor Louisburg. Half.<lb/>
Third Quarter<lb/>
Lex Ridenhour kicks off to<lb/>
Weldon who returns to owm 38<lb/>
yard line. Weldon over center<lb/>
4 yards. Weldon repeats for 8<lb/>
yards. First and ten on Pirates<lb/>
47 yard line. Weldon picks up<lb/>
8 yards on next 2 plays, and then<lb/>
fumbled. Lindsay covered.<lb/>
Ferebee over R. T. for 2 yards.<lb/>
Johnson punts to Louisburg's 25.<lb/>
Louisburg failed to gain and<lb/>
Weldon kicked to Pirates 45.<lb/>
Northcutt returned to Louis-<lb/>
burg's 40. Ferebee passes to Lex<lb/>
. . PARDON MY OXFORD ACCENT<lb/>
We'll excuse it in your speech, madam,<lb/>
but there's no need for apologies when<lb/>
the Oxford accent's in your shoes. It's<lb/>
smart there! Every young thing likes<lb/>
this Oxford and our many other walk-<lb/>
ing shoes?especially the "Zipper<lb/>
2.95 to 4.85<lb/>
Heber Forbes<lb/>
GOOD TAST E<lb/>
IS<lb/>
A L W AYS FASH10N A B L E<lb/>
OUR STYLES IN CLOTHES<lb/>
ARE<lb/>
ALWAYS TIMELY<lb/>
THANK:<lb/>
EN hi<lb/>
Yulnmi<lb/>
Liter;<lb/>
Firsi<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
P<lb/>
P<lb/>
?:? I ?<lb/>
ciety<lb/>
?t<lb/>
At th I<lb/>
ng il -?<lb/>
I ,  <lb/>
Ni<lb/>
i eco t<lb/>
place<lb/>
not re'<lb/>
list of<lb/>
appoin<lb/>
edil :<lb/>
The<lb/>
neini<lb/>
I.am<lb/>
At-  ?<lb/>
nier Soc i I .<lb/>
first met til<lb/>
session was<lb/>
social progn<lb/>
Jenkins ask<lb/>
fill out bla<lb/>
part they c<lb/>
programs<lb/>
made thai <lb/>
chair- f : ?<lb/>
The social i<lb/>
?  11 ? T itj<lb/>
dent of I'iM<lb/>
singing nf th<lb/>
impromptu gj<lb/>
This consist)<lb/>
dancing, stu<lb/>
while biii U<lb/>
SX girls we<lb/>
favorite a i<lb/>
time whik <lb/>
nied them wlj<lb/>
favorite song.<lb/>
The meetinl<lb/>
after refreshnl<lb/>
For the Hi<lb/>
'pars. summeL<lb/>
Spilman, Trea<lb/>
the Campus<lb/>
wek at one<lb/>
month he sre<lb/>
Nw York.<lb/>
torium.<lb/>
ri<lb/>
?ca <lb/>
 ? - ????<lb/>
<pb facs="00038023_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>