<?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="00038024_0001"/>
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IN<lb/>
1 HI H IRR1 n? i?<lb/>
UPOl 1 SI Rl I 1<lb/>
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mhrr 1JO<lb/>
8 i?"tATEr<lb/>
1 i<lb/>
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KORKVER<lb/>
10c<lb/>
I ItEE on week<lb/>
AN'S<lb/>
oirls!<lb/>
1 I<lb/>
) ENERGY!<lb/>
m 1.1 IK NT STOCK<lb/>
I . i m SERVICE<lb/>
I SIT I S<lb/>
btores<lb/>
THANKSGIVING HOLIDAYS<lb/>
KM DECEMBER :j<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE TECO<lb/>
ECHO ADVERTISERS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
XI<lb/>
bes<lb/>
 s t i:<lb/>
HIONABLE<lb/>
llN ? LOUIES<lb/>
L<lb/>
ITIMELY<lb/>
Literary Societies Hold<lb/>
First Regular Meetings<lb/>
GreenvUle, N. C. Wednesday, November 28, 1934.<lb/>
Number 5.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
Ami Laniers<lb/>
ies Hall On<lb/>
And Discuss<lb/>
rs Work<lb/>
PINGS ARE WELL !<lb/>
ATTENDED<lb/>
i ty 1 las Interesting .<lb/>
At Find. Meeting. I<lb/>
. : ts Carolyn Brink- <lb/>
.N th Davis Ami<lb/>
? ? kins Presided.<lb/>
Memorial Services for the<lb/>
late Dr. Robert Herring<lb/>
Wright, for twenty five years<lb/>
our president, will be held on<lb/>
Sunday, December it at three<lb/>
o'clock in the afternoon. I)r.<lb/>
I rank Graham. President of<lb/>
(he liiiverity of North Caro-<lb/>
lina, will speak. There will<lb/>
he special music by the col-<lb/>
lege girls.<lb/>
Playmakers Are<lb/>
Well Received<lb/>
"The Loyal Venture "Fix-<lb/>
in's" and "Quure Medicine'<lb/>
Were Presented By Caro-<lb/>
lina Playmakers On Nov-<lb/>
ember 19th.<lb/>
? I<lb/>
.ay<lb/>
 izhl<lb/>
ociet<lb/>
necung i : the<lb/>
rity of the stud-<lb/>
embers of one of<lb/>
all ol the meet-<lb/>
attended The i Carol St<lb/>
held in the SO-<lb/>
Qee Club Will<lb/>
Give Program<lb/>
Foe Soeiet<lb/>
mvhv To Be Given A<lb/>
Few Days Before Christ-<lb/>
mas Holidays.<lb/>
KOCH IS THE DIRECTOR<lb/>
"Quare Medicine" and "Fix-<lb/>
in V Were Written By The<lb/>
Famous North Carolina<lb/>
Dramatist. Paul Green.<lb/>
The Carolina Playmakers with<lb/>
 their well balanced bill of three<lb/>
one-acl plays were well received<lb/>
by a large and appreciative aud-<lb/>
ience Monday night, November<lb/>
18th. Tin- plays, each with a<lb/>
Carolina setting appealed to the<lb/>
people o( this section and they<lb/>
 showed their keen appreciation<lb/>
of the excellent performances.<lb/>
During the first intermission<lb/>
 Dr L. R Meadows, in the intro-<lb/>
duction of Professor Frederick<lb/>
Koch, the director, referred to<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
Association will entertain<lb/>
the Studenl Body at a Mas-<lb/>
querade party on Saturday<lb/>
night, December 8, at the<lb/>
Campus building. Everyone<lb/>
is cordially invited and urged<lb/>
to wear a costume.<lb/>
The picture show will start<lb/>
at 7:00 that nisht, and the par-<lb/>
ty will he held after the show<lb/>
is over.<lb/>
The announcement is being<lb/>
made before the Thanksgiving<lb/>
holiday, so that the students<lb/>
can bring back costumes when<lb/>
they come back from the holi-<lb/>
days.<lb/>
acuity Members<lb/>
Attend Meeting<lb/>
Members Of Faculty Go To<lb/>
District Educational Meet-<lb/>
ing Held November 20.<lb/>
MEET IN ELIZABETH CITY<lb/>
Bishop Hughes Speaks<lb/>
On Campus Sunday<lb/>
SPEAKS MM1AV<lb/>
Varsity Club<lb/>
Gives Wedding<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Hyman,<lb/>
Is Vice-President Of<lb/>
Elementary Group<lb/>
Unable To Attend.<lb/>
 M Koch, the inferior, referred to<lb/>
inkley who is presi- MISS KUYKENDALL IS him as the man who discovered<lb/>
Poe Society, the so- DIRECTOR and brought life to material that<lb/>
1 l ' ' '?? in BCttinU I had riMVi :i in1! i rlrw?Tari hiwi? trr<lb/>
at the year<lb/>
tried<lb/>
this v<lb/>
th Toe Soc<lb/>
v.it of the <lb/>
ittees were<lb/>
tad remained dormant here for<lb/>
Glee Club Will Have A Spe- generations.<lb/>
cial Part In Wright Memo Professor Koch, gave his theo-<lb/>
rial Service<lb/>
December l?tl<lb/>
Held ! He- of drama saying that all<lb/>
C<lb/>
Mi:<lb/>
d.<lb/>
Gus<lb/>
? air was conducted by<lb/>
imen who were not<lb/>
: special initiati n<lb/>
were sung by a<lb/>
ddl - were given. One<lb/>
h ? I ti give her rea- '<lb/>
ning thai particular Deceml<lb/>
"he n i ting was ad-<lb/>
'? : the singing of the<lb/>
kg<lb/>
great drama is folk drama. H<lb/>
cited Shakespeare, Ibsen, and<lb/>
th di Moliere, as essentially folk dra-<lb/>
Kuyken-1niatisf who wrote their plays to<lb/>
ill, is planning to give a Christ-lbe played in a theatre, lie te-<lb/>
as Can I Servici a few days viewed briefly the IT years of<lb/>
fore the Christmas Holidays the work of the Carolina Play-<lb/>
Tl a rv ce is an annual makers and touched on their far<lb/>
at i the program is ear- reaching influence. He referred<lb/>
i out n beautiful simplicity, i to the success of Paul Green as<lb/>
The Glee Club will also have an example of what<lb/>
part in t!ie Wi igh! Mi<lb/>
if their work<lb/>
Emerson Society<lb/>
that is to be held<lb/>
16th.<lb/>
The Glee Club has been suc-<lb/>
? ful this year in getting good<lb/>
?. lices Those singing I rs1 np-<lb/>
rano are Virginia Alters, Polly<lb/>
Melvin. Eloise Bone, Man u I<lb/>
Soc<lb/>
n,<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
Fl<lb/>
has grown<lb/>
showing how<lb/>
i1 has readied Broadway and<lb/>
Hollywood.<lb/>
The first play presented was<lb/>
"The Loyal Venture" written by<lb/>
Wilkerson O'Conneli This was<lb/>
a drama of colonial Carolina. The<lb/>
scene was laid in the taproom of<lb/>
the only inn in Belleport, a<lb/>
 all coast town of North Caro-<lb/>
President L. R. Meadows and<lb/>
several of the faculty attended<lb/>
the meeting of the northeastern<lb/>
districl of the N. C. E. A. a1<lb/>
Elizabeth City, November 16, IT.<lb/>
M: js Sara Somerville, head of<lb/>
the Physical Education Apart-<lb/>
ment, was chairman of that sec-<lb/>
tion. Ih-r program was devoted<lb/>
to the problems of girl's basket-<lb/>
ball Officiating was an author-<lb/>
ity on the subject, Miss Aldace<lb/>
Fitzwater, of the Woman's Col-<lb/>
lege of the Greater University,<lb/>
who is the State Chajrmna of<lb/>
girls' basketball.<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Hyman, critic<lb/>
teacher of the sixth grade in the<lb/>
Training School, is the vice-<lb/>
president of the Intermediate<lb/>
group, but was unable to attend<lb/>
because of the illness of her mo-<lb/>
ther.<lb/>
Dr. R. J. Slay and Miss Lor-<lb/>
raine Hunter represented the<lb/>
Science Department. Miss Lois<lb/>
JGrigsby, the English department.<lb/>
Miss Louise Williams the Mathe-i<lb/>
I matics department, and Mrs.<lb/>
ihirmt<lb/>
18th century.<lb/>
be<lb/>
Miss Robbie Dowd And Mr.<lb/>
John Jenkins Are United<lb/>
In Wo man less Wedding.<lb/>
MATHIS OFFICIATES<lb/>
Several Vocal Solos Were<lb/>
Rendered By Miss Jackie<lb/>
1 lumplncy. Accompanied<lb/>
By Miss Billie Tolsort<lb/>
A man iage of great interest to<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina was sol-<lb/>
emnized at 8:00 o'clock to-night<lb/>
in the auditorium of the Austin<lb/>
Building when Miss Robbie Dowd<lb/>
became the bride of Mr John<lb/>
Jenkins.<lb/>
The auditorium was beautiful-<lb/>
ly decorated with field pine and<lb/>
ferns. Candles from candlebr;<lb/>
furnished the light for the occa<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Miss Jackie Humphrey sang, i<lb/>
"Just Before th, Battle, Mother? QUMJF1 WITH PISTOLS<lb/>
"Lord, You Mad" the Night too<lb/>
Long and "But I Wake Up j<lb/>
Smiling" accompanied by Miss<lb/>
Billie Tolson. Rev. Doc Mathis<lb/>
officiated at the altar.<lb/>
Bridesmaids were Misses W.<lb/>
Olive Jolly who wore a pink<lb/>
evening dress with maching ac-<lb/>
cessories; Primrose Carpenter,<lb/>
wearing white net with ruffles;<lb/>
BISHOP E. H. HUGHES<lb/>
Students Attend<lb/>
Church Conferee<lb/>
Martha Teal. Lou Pitts. And<lb/>
Ruth Kiker Attend North<lb/>
Carolina Methodist Student<lb/>
Conference East Week-End.<lb/>
HELD IX RALEIGH, N. C<lb/>
deUude Bloxton, the Home <lb/>
1 Economics department.<lb/>
2nd CLASS ARTILLEKMEN<lb/>
Main Speaker Was Dr. W. A.<lb/>
Lambeth of High Point,<lb/>
Who Addressed ' The As-<lb/>
semblage On "Youth Build-<lb/>
in World Anew<lb/>
Ei<lb/>
V<lb/>
o sign up for<lb/>
story telling,<lb/>
sfi in order t! . I<lb/>
?  was made<lb/>
the program com-<lb/>
?? Themsa. Mag-<lb/>
. Beatrice Ham-<lb/>
ty Eason, and J- in<lb/>
rv? with her. Each<lb/>
a  be responsible<lb/>
an one month dur-<lb/>
ce Collier; Effie Li<lb/>
Wats ?n, M Uj Langston, Mart!<lb/>
T. ?  Esti Lie Griggs, Myrtle Wa<lb/>
kins Billie Newell, Sara White Car! Thompson as Marpent, Pry-<lb/>
Rhvne fnez Stephens and Ha.elr McFadden as Durant. the pir- Theo Easom wearing black sa-<lb/>
Waddell ate, and David Lewis, the sea cap- tin with a Lovely red picture hat;<lb/>
?, T , tain did outstanding acting in Jimmy Johnson wearing a pink<lb/>
The second sopranos are; Lot- " f <lb/>
,  ,   the play dress and matching hat; Baxter<lb/>
tie Moore, Hazel Copeland, Deny ? ? <lb/>
  , Paul Greens play "Eixm s . a Ridenhour wearing a vellow<lb/>
Carswell, Mavi: Kmlaw, Edna- ' ? ?<lb/>
r tracedv of a tenant farm woman, creation and Dannie Wright in<lb/>
Kmchl Elsie thomas, uoris<lb/>
? ?, "? was a pathetic play that was blue with a matching hat. They<lb/>
Couch, Ray Byrum, Blanche ' , ' ;  , , , , . ,<lb/>
r,  n , ; well received by the audience, slowly proceeded down the aisle<lb/>
Swms n En n 1 B BlaitarQ, 1<lb/>
.  . T.  The characters of Ed and Lilly as Miss Tolson played Funeral<lb/>
" ? 11 ! , t 1 11 w'ln were tenant farmers on an March from Chopin. As the<lb/>
 . , , ? ? estate played by Laurence Cheek bridesmaids entered on the left<lb/>
Sawyer, Elizabeth Ferguson, Re-  , , . ,  ,<lb/>
out of the fifty second class ar- Hath Kiker. of East Carolina<lb/>
tdlery men have qualified m the Teachers College was elected<lb/>
use of .45 calibre automatic pi<lb/>
toj during the past two month<lb/>
Secretary of the North Carolina<lb/>
Methodist Student Conference<lb/>
Pridge<lb/>
Flora Teague,<lb/>
and Mildred Howard, showed a the groomsmen entered on tin<lb/>
and a half. Of this group Mullen that met in-Raleigh, November<lb/>
alone qualified as an expert shot 23, -4- id 25- Other del-gates<lb/>
from E. C. T. C. were Lou Pitts<lb/>
and Martha Teal. About 200<lb/>
were in attendance.<lb/>
101<lb/>
with a score of over SS per cent,<lb/>
only nine shot sharpshooter with<lb/>
core over 7<lb/>
jer cent, while delegate<lb/>
the remaining 28 men qualified representing nearly all of the<lb/>
; hove 60 per cent or as a marks- North Carolina Colleges.<lb/>
man. The twelve men failing to I The theme of the conference<lb/>
qualify shot somewhere below was?a challenge to Christians in<lb/>
the Go per cent mark. the Economic Stress of This Era.<lb/>
T, . , , ,  I The conference opened Friday<lb/>
Requisition for medals for the<lb/>
, ? , night with a banquet. After the<lb/>
men making them has gone into 1<lb/>
Third Corps Area Headquarters<lb/>
ught<lb/>
p<lb/>
tWE AT END<lb/>
Lht Fill (' ?: a dmenl<lb/>
i" '? 11 rxis i ? - i.<lb/>
ioD Ed ? ! I '  i " ?<lb/>
di ' leaden in th Uj '? I<lb/>
. . p ?pk in the Campus Build-<lb/>
? s mday mi in iin<lb/>
Speaking on the subjeel of the<lb/>
Fifth Commandment that says:<lb/>
"Honor thy fatta i n I thy mo-<lb/>
a i that thy daj n ay be long<lb/>
on the land wh . the Lord thy<lb/>
God giveth thee, Bishop Hughes<lb/>
discussed this commandment<lb/>
from five different angles. These<lb/>
angle were position, partiality,<lb/>
promise, problem and partner-<lb/>
ship<lb/>
He declared there should be a<lb/>
partnership in the business of<lb/>
paying proper deference to par-<lb/>
ents, because parents were put<lb/>
on an equal issue. He asserted<lb/>
that equal honor should be paid<lb/>
to father and mothers, in that<lb/>
God had placed them on an<lb/>
equal plane and should be so re-<lb/>
cognized by children.<lb/>
Bishop Hughes brought out in<lb/>
several ways that when a child<lb/>
succeeds the parents are uccess-<lb/>
ful. but if the child fails the par-<lb/>
ents fail.<lb/>
He declared that every farther<lb/>
and mother deserved honor, and<lb/>
that a person should consider<lb/>
himself lucky to have the chance<lb/>
to care for those in their second<lb/>
childhood, who cared for him in<lb/>
his first.<lb/>
Bishop Hughes was presented<lb/>
by Dr. G. R. Combs, pastor of the<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial Church, who led<lb/>
the devotional service. He spoke<lb/>
of Bishop Hughes as one of the<lb/>
leaders of religion in this coun-<lb/>
try, and he declared that he was<lb/>
? were made for the<lb/>
rep rter to take the<lb/>
;  Powell who did i<lb/>
chool. From the<lb/>
? ?. s Ruth Cagle was<lb/>
; hi position by the<lb/>
I . Teco Echo.<lb/>
? g wa i loaed by the<lb/>
? the society song.<lb/>
i .inier Society<lb/>
members of the La-<lb/>
? ??? were present for the<lb/>
I ? g A short business<lb/>
 held previous to the<lb/>
eram President Janice<lb/>
er<lb/>
BUTLES'S WORK PUBLISHED<lb/>
contrast that made clear the es- right The groomsmen were<lb/>
 n;nnv- ;U1,1 A'V sgjjtiaj conflict of the play. In Messrs. Hay Hassell, Cliff Mad-<lb/>
Brilt Mary Frances Green, Mar- ' '  m ? ?<lb/>
. to tins plov the pent furv of a work nil, Howard Perkins, G. K. Gam-<lb/>
earet Davis and Bertie Lee Saw- ' ? . . T, ? . ,<lb/>
driven woman was portrayed mon, Jr I-ran rcrebee, and<lb/>
with grim and terrible reality. Mickey Northeutt,<lb/>
She craved a little beauty, "pur- Miss Gherman "Red" Smith<lb/>
(Continued on page four) (Continued on page two)<lb/>
New York. (IP) -Dr. Nicho-<lb/>
las Murray Butler is best known<lb/>
as president of Columbia Univer-<lb/>
sity and as an oral commentator<lb/>
on national and international<lb/>
! vents.<lb/>
But he's been doing a lot of<lb/>
writing as he went along.<lb/>
This was revealed last week<lb/>
when the Columbia University<lb/>
and according to local H O. T.<lb/>
C. office authorities will be dis-<lb/>
tributed shortly.<lb/>
The Federal Emergency Relief<lb/>
Administration has decided to<lb/>
set aside $1,414.1)40 each month<lb/>
this w alter to aid needy stu-<lb/>
dents in colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Honor and Cooperation Among Students<lb/>
Is Discussed by School Council Recently<lb/>
Frances Watson Is Made, chosen by the committee gave a<lb/>
talk on honor.<lb/>
Press announced plans for pre chairman Of The College<lb/>
p;uing a complete biography of Honor Committee.<lb/>
The an-<lb/>
ti.at all members his literary work;<lb/>
? indicating nrhatUouncement indicated that the The fall meeting of the School, ciass during examina<lb/>
d take n society I Columbia oresident had written Council was held November 12<lb/>
(2) That all students do not<lb/>
bring books, notebooks or any<lb/>
A<lb/>
in society iColumbia pr<lb/>
suggestion was 3.20'i books, i<lb/>
?eietv buy more<lb/>
h?T1<lb/>
?eiety nai<lb/>
progt am was turned<lb/>
ise James, Viee-presi-<lb/>
society. After the<lb/>
oclety song an<lb/>
program vvas given.<lb/>
(feed of songs. t.ip<lb/>
? and drawing<lb/>
f I led A group of<lb/>
 asked to sing their<lb/>
,gs all at the same<lb/>
some one accompa<lb/>
Who<lb/>
peeches, ar-JThe School Council is composed<lb/>
,duiM  of the Women's Student Council.<lb/>
These include thil ? he wrote the Men's Student Council, and<lb/>
Ln high school and college. The Miss Cieo Rainwater. Miss Annie<lb/>
earliest of his known writings is' Newell. Miss Lois Gngsby, Miss<lb/>
entitled: "Questions and Answers j Annie L. Morton and Dr. Herbert cuoperation to discuss the<lb/>
for Admission to the Paterson ReBarker from the administra- ? m (An announcement to<lb/>
This was written lion. Dr. Leon R. Meadows is ?<lb/>
I tion and announced tests, except<lb/>
when asked to do so by the<lb/>
teacher. ?<lb/>
(3) That there be an organiza-<lb/>
tion composed of students inter-<lb/>
ested in building a spirit of hon<lb/>
xmquet delegates were enter-<lb/>
tained by Eugene Spivey and b<lb/>
the State College Quartet. Thi<lb/>
delegate to the conference wen<lb/>
welcomed by Presid nt Horace<lb/>
Gotten, who is President of th?<lb/>
Y. M. C. A at State C 11 'ge. He<lb/>
introduced the peakei I the<lb/>
evening, Dr. W. A. Lamb th i I<lb/>
High Point,<lb/>
In Dr. Lambeth' talk on<lb/>
ne pointed ut th<lb/>
that anyone can si ' ling<lb/>
anew.<lb/>
and intn ductii ns fol ? I<lb/>
I address. After home as ign-<lb/>
ments, the meeting adjourned<lb/>
until Saturday morning. A: this<lb/>
j time the worship service was led<lb/>
bv the Meredith College delega-<lb/>
playing a tremendous part in car-<lb/>
rying the Word of Christ to peo-<lb/>
ple in ail walks of life in this<lb/>
and other countries.<lb/>
The sermon heard by the con-<lb/>
the Jarvis Memorial<lb/>
( 11<lb/>
gregati<lb/>
Methodist Church,<lb/>
body of the college<lb/>
to scores of repres<lb/>
i ther denominaf .? ir<lb/>
cribed as i ?ne of t<lb/>
the student<lb/>
in addition<lb/>
??itatives of<lb/>
s was des-<lb/>
te most clo-<lb/>
th at has<lb/>
liCil<lb/>
ree)<lb/>
High. School,<lb/>
m 1872.<lb/>
L. R. MEADOWS ATTENDS<lb/>
MEETING IN RALEIGH<lb/>
Dr. L. It. Meadows went to<lb/>
was playing her Raleigh Monday to attend a<lb/>
? meeting of a committee that has<lb/>
?eting was adjourned been appointed by Governor Eh-<lb/>
e-hments were served, nnghaus to investigate the rais-<lb/>
- ijng of scholarships for negro<lb/>
? first time in fourteen teachers. Governor Ehringhaus<lb/>
rrmer or winter. J. B is launching an investigation of<lb/>
Treasurer, has been off the negro education problem in<lb/>
is for as much as a North Carolina.<lb/>
I one time. The past<lb/>
m.nth he pent at East Aurora. If we do not learn to labor<lb/>
chairman of the group.<lb/>
The main business brought up<lb/>
at this meeting was the discus-<lb/>
sion of a plan that is hoped will<lb/>
build up a sentiment and coop-<lb/>
eration towards honor on the<lb/>
campus. After a discussion of<lb/>
honor systems on other college<lb/>
campuses and the probable ef-<lb/>
fect of a similar system here, the<lb/>
following measures were approv-<lb/>
ed by that body:<lb/>
(1) That a chapel program be<lb/>
given by the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association for the purpose<lb/>
of presenting the matter to the<lb/>
Student Body. At this time a<lb/>
member of the faculty chosen by<lb/>
be made and all students inter-<lb/>
ested in the question be asked to<lb/>
meet at a definite time.)<lb/>
(a) The presidents of the men<lb/>
and women's S. G. A. will ap-<lb/>
point the chairman of the com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
(b) Three students (including<lb/>
the chairman) met with the fa-<lb/>
culty discipline committee in<lb/>
dealing with cases of cheating.<lb/>
(4) A committee of three con-<lb/>
sisting of the President of the<lb/>
Men's S. G. A. and Presidents of<lb/>
the Women's S. G. A. and the<lb/>
chairman of the group that is to<lb/>
work toward building up this<lb/>
honor and cooperation among<lb/>
the students, work with the fa-<lb/>
COLUMBIA STUDENTS<lb/>
VISIT OUR COLLEGE<lb/>
culty committee on discipline mjtion.<lb/>
handling matters of cheating. - Professor H. E. Spence of Duke 1 Dr. Florence Stratemeyer and<lb/>
(5) That all cases of cheating j University, the principal speak a group of students from Teach-<lb/>
that have been handled by the L- of the morning addressed the ers College. Columbia University,<lb/>
Student Council be handled byjassembly on "The Teachings of spent Monday. November 19, ob-<lb/>
this Committee on discipline. Jesus and Our Present Economic serving in the Training School.<lb/>
These resolutions have been j Order"?an encouraging opinion j They are making a tour of in-<lb/>
submitted to Dr. Carl L. Adams, Lf the youth of today was ex- j spection of schools in different<lb/>
Chairman of the Faculty Discip- pressed by Dr. Spence. A help- sections of the country and this<lb/>
ful summary of Jesus general j college is the first one the<lb/>
teaching was given as a guide?j South to be visited.<lb/>
animate things are worth more Dr. Stratemeyer, who is a<lb/>
than the inanimate: human being! member of the faculty of Teach-<lb/>
in animate world above others ers College, has a national repu-<lb/>
m the personal realm, the spiri tation in the field of research<lb/>
tual above the physical. work in Education. She is well-<lb/>
Following the general teach known to many of the College<lb/>
ings of Jesus are the specific in- faculty, several of whom have<lb/>
line Committee and have receiv-<lb/>
ed his approval Dr. Meadows<lb/>
has requested that the plans be<lb/>
presented to the faculty at the<lb/>
meeting that is to be held pre-<lb/>
vious to examinations.<lb/>
At the chapel program where<lb/>
honor will be discussed Frances<lb/>
Watson, chairman of the Honor<lb/>
Committee and Dan Wright from<lb/>
the student body will make talks<lb/>
?n honor. Some faculty member<lb/>
who will be selected later will<lb/>
also speak on the subject.<lb/>
This movement towards an<lb/>
honor system grew out of pre-<lb/>
vious unsuccessful attempts to<lb/>
build up a similar system. The<lb/>
pledge that all students were<lb/>
once required to sign binding<lb/>
them to report all forms of ly-<lb/>
becn in her classes, and others<lb/>
knew her in student days.<lb/>
Two young men and two<lb/>
junctions?the value of person-<lb/>
ality; the secondary place of<lb/>
wealth: and justice and genero-<lb/>
sity are to be hoped for. The j young women, students in the<lb/>
opposing forces of life as out-j New College, and who do much<lb/>
lined in Dr. Spence's address are of their studying from first hand<lb/>
poverty, graft, suspicion, greed, study and experience collected<lb/>
fear, disease and war. These are j data from their observations,<lb/>
against cooperation, cheerfulness, j They are Misses Janet Brinker-<lb/>
optimism, faith, common sense i hoff and Evelyn Hoxe and<lb/>
and courage. (Messrs. Paul WTilliams and Geo<lb/>
??      ? ? The interest groups met andjO'Brien. Miss Mary Devers of<lb/>
ing cheating and stealing was the following topics were discussthe State Department of Educa-<lb/>
abolished last year. I (Continued on page three) Uion accompanied them.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038024_0002"/><lb/>
Paqe Tioo<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
We<lb/>
Wednesday ?<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Published pi-Weekly During The 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/>
Fdilorial 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/>
Selnia Gurganus, and Carolyn Brinkley.<lb/>
Adverttsing Managers<lb/>
Helen Davis; Josephine Kanes, Chessie Edmund-<lb/>
son, Jewel Cole, Billie Vogler, Elizabeth Wilson,<lb/>
Lola Hol Mary Alice Starr.<lb/>
Circulation Managers<lb/>
Elma Joyner, Blanche White, Annie Lee Jones,<lb/>
mces Eklgerton, Lois Leake, Merle Sasser, Helen<lb/>
Paylor, 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/>
M ? M e E ?<lb/>
Associated goUcoiatf ffirrss<lb/>
1934 (folWolr Diui-ol ,935<lb/>
Wednesday, November 28, 1934.<lb/>
THEY'VE DONE WELL<lb/>
One of the worst things about<lb/>
capital punishment is the fact that<lb/>
many times it is not the offenders<lb/>
that are punished. The guilty go free and<lb/>
the innocent are punished. Tins is a terri-<lb/>
ble blot on humanity and one that could be<lb/>
avoided if capital punishment was abolished<lb/>
in the state of North Carolina and other<lb/>
states in Hie union. If civilization cannot<lb/>
curb crime in some other way than by tak-<lb/>
ing the life of those who commit the crime<lb/>
is there not something wrong with civiliza-<lb/>
tion?<lb/>
Is not capital punishment premediated<lb/>
killing?<lb/>
A CAMPUS NEED<lb/>
The football team is making a name for<lb/>
itself. Those recent games have shown the<lb/>
student body that we really have a team to<lb/>
be proud of. It has been most successful<lb/>
this season even though all the games have<lb/>
not been won. The players have been en-<lb/>
thusiastic, the cheer leaders have been full<lb/>
of pep and the student body has had its in-<lb/>
terest keyed to the highest pitch. As a re-<lb/>
sult splendid football games have been<lb/>
played.<lb/>
This college probably has the smallest<lb/>
n:t n's student body of the four-year colleges<lb/>
North Carolina to have an athletic squad.<lb/>
H t, in itself is a significant fact. That we<lb/>
old have one of such quality, is something<lb/>
to be proud of.<lb/>
DO STUDENTS LACK<lb/>
CONFIDENCE?<lb/>
Why are the students afraid of self ex-<lb/>
. n in mass meetings? A mass meet-<lb/>
h  is seldom held that some question does<lb/>
i ol arise that is of much concern to the stu-<lb/>
t in'dy at large. An opportunity is giv-<lb/>
en for discussion and the majority of the<lb/>
time not one person will offer any sugges-<lb/>
ns as to what they think should be done<lb/>
in the matter. When the question is to be<lb/>
voted on, hands are raised in a listless life-<lb/>
less manner, and the issue is closed. But as<lb/>
 as the meeting is adjourned students<lb/>
regate m the halls and start talking<lb/>
ng themselves. They make remarks to<lb/>
the i ffect that if such and such were done<lb/>
ituation would be remedied, or in some<lb/>
or offer what they think are possible<lb/>
utions of the matter. Why won't they<lb/>
make those suggestions in the mass meeting<lb/>
where the entire assemblage could hear<lb/>
them and could act upon them accordingly?<lb/>
Student opinion is necessary if campus<lb/>
problems are to be discussed. We do not<lb/>
have to accept all suggestions that are of-<lb/>
fered but if a variety of them are presented<lb/>
there can be more to choose from than if we<lb/>
accept the measure as it is. Those opinions<lb/>
that are offered after the meetings would<lb/>
be far more worthwhile if they were offer-<lb/>
ed before the entire student body so that<lb/>
they would not vot? so blindly.<lb/>
The movement on foot for a dormitory<lb/>
for men students is surely a step forward<lb/>
towards a larger enrollment of men students.<lb/>
A larger enrollment of men students will<lb/>
mean growth of the college. There will be<lb/>
more material available of athletic squads,<lb/>
and athletics are splendid advertisers for a<lb/>
college, hence will tend to draw more stu-<lb/>
dents to the institution.<lb/>
A Men's Student Government Associa-<lb/>
tion has already been organized. There will<lb/>
be decidedly more need for such an organi-<lb/>
zation for men, and it will undoubtedly<lb/>
function well. They have started self gov-<lb/>
ernment now by the organization of this dis-<lb/>
ciplinary body.<lb/>
The number of men students is contin-<lb/>
ually increasing, so more than ever is there<lb/>
a nvvd of a dormitory. Not only is the num-<lb/>
ber of those students live in towns other<lb/>
than Greenville. Therefore it is not possi-<lb/>
ble for them to live in their own homes, but<lb/>
it is necessary for them to find other places<lb/>
to stay. Most of those boys eat in the dining<lb/>
hall. It would be better if they lived on the<lb/>
campus for a number of reasons, and had<lb/>
some definite work for their Student Gov-<lb/>
ernment Association.<lb/>
A dormitory help will naturally create<lb/>
a definite school spirit. It is hoped that the<lb/>
Board of Trustees will act upon this matter<lb/>
at an earlv date.<lb/>
I Associated gbUcgiatr fyrens<lb/>
WHY CAPITAL PUNISHMENT?<lb/>
Last week the first triple execution<lb/>
since the death chair has been used as the<lb/>
means of capital punishment in North Caro-<lb/>
lina, occurred. These three negroes were<lb/>
guilty of the crime of killing a filling station<lb/>
proprietor, and for this crime suffered death<lb/>
in the death chair. These three negroes are<lb/>
not the first to die in this manner. One<lb/>
hundred and forty two others have proceed-<lb/>
ed them since the installation of the death<lb/>
chair in 1909.<lb/>
Is North Carolina civilization better off<lb/>
because of the use of capital punishment?<lb/>
Has not past civilization proved sufficiently<lb/>
that crime cannot be stopped by such vio-<lb/>
lent methods? We shudder to think of the<lb/>
inhuman practices used in the Dark Ages<lb/>
but if further thought is given to the sub-<lb/>
ject it will be seen that those practices only<lb/>
served as a promoter for other thoughts of<lb/>
those suffering. We cannot, even in this<lb/>
day, stop crime by putting to death the cri-<lb/>
minals.<lb/>
DO WE LACK TIME?<lb/>
The modem college student who<lb/>
is interested in the fact that he<lb/>
is in college for something besides the fun<lb/>
that he gets out of it. perhaps finds that<lb/>
the chief drawback to the modern educa-<lb/>
tional system is the lack of time. This may<lb/>
be the rule or the exception in this particu-<lb/>
lar student body. Do the majority of the<lb/>
students find that it is difficult to spend an<lb/>
hour in the chemistry room studying the<lb/>
electrolysis of water and then within the<lb/>
next ten minutes find himself on an Eng-<lb/>
lish class trying to appreciate Browning's<lb/>
poetry? Or do the math formulas insist up-<lb/>
on congregating with the major battles in<lb/>
American history? This routine is not con-<lb/>
fined to class rooms entirely. Even in after<lb/>
school hours it is hard to concentrate upon<lb/>
a term paper that is due the next day while<lb/>
at the same time the thought is hanging over<lb/>
his head that maybe that math problem was<lb/>
worked wrong after all.<lb/>
A student can meet classes in this man-<lb/>
ner and probably gather something from<lb/>
each class. As a result he might have a sort<lb/>
of very general knowledge of subjects and<lb/>
tends to be like the adage "jack of all trades<lb/>
and master of none<lb/>
This lack of time tends to make the<lb/>
student become a mere mechanical fact ab-<lb/>
sorbing machine. Class bells or alarm<lb/>
clocks govern his very day, and if he at-<lb/>
tempts to disregard them his whole routine<lb/>
is thrown into bedlam.<lb/>
A student who comes to college with the<lb/>
intent to spend his time in some major sub-<lb/>
ject and has the nerve to neglect all the<lb/>
rest of his classes for that major will have<lb/>
the time to learn enough about that field to<lb/>
grasp its true value. Those people are really<lb/>
the most successful college students, though<lb/>
ofttimes their names never appear on the col-<lb/>
lege honor rolls. In reality they have got-<lb/>
ten something of benefit and importance<lb/>
from those hours of class and research work.<lb/>
This is a day of specialization, and if that<lb/>
thought is kept in mind the modern college<lb/>
student will probably realize the value of<lb/>
specialization in one field.<lb/>
Those serious minded college students<lb/>
find that the method that would seem the<lb/>
most acceptable to them in their work would<lb/>
be the opportunity to be able to study his<lb/>
favorite subject in his own manner and at<lb/>
his leisure. There would be no jumping from<lb/>
Shapespeare to Chemistry, like pressing a<lb/>
button so that the room would be filled with<lb/>
light.<lb/>
There is undoubtedly the need for more<lb/>
time to pursue study. But how is it to be<lb/>
attained?<lb/>
Sherman Finger is making a<lb/>
name fur mmseM at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Minnesota in the field ol<lb/>
track. His fame has spread<lb/>
wide and far. and finally they<lb/>
heard all about him at Alabama<lb/>
Polytech. with the result that<lb/>
they invited him to become their<lb/>
football coach<lb/>
"I would be dubious about my I<lb/>
standing in the South, with my<lb/>
name was his refusal.<lb/>
"Mister came the reply, "just<lb/>
march through Georgia, that's all<lb/>
we ask?just march through<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
You've read about them, you<lb/>
have listened to them, but you<lb/>
really have never been aide to<lb/>
do much about them. The old<lb/>
jokes filed in the librarydjrain<lb/>
of the college professor, we mean.<lb/>
But, tilings have been dune<lb/>
about them at the University of<lb/>
Wisconsin. Witness: The quips<lb/>
of one famous lecturer were re-<lb/>
peated by him so many times<lb/>
that Ids library was no longer a<lb/>
private one. During one lecture,<lb/>
however, he forgot one of his<lb/>
quips- and the class woke up<lb/>
with a bang!<lb/>
Aft<lb/>
a committee of students waited<lb/>
upon the offender and presented<lb/>
tu him a memorandum which <lb/>
ran somewhat as follows: "We<lb/>
beg to inform you that you have<lb/>
committed a grave error in<lb/>
omitting one of your prize 'jokes'<lb/>
from your lecture this hour. The<lb/>
class is deeply hurt by your<lb/>
flighting them, and requests an<lb/>
apology<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Let's give them a break, and<lb/>
recount one of the jokes that<lb/>
really deserves a place in his-<lb/>
tory: A philosophy instructor at<lb/>
Ohio University yearly recreates<lb/>
his "regular" pun m this man-<lb/>
ner: After passing out the pa-<lb/>
Hambone, and Tom Dennis as<lb/>
Stepn Fetchit.<lb/>
Wesley Bankston as the moth-<lb/>
er of the bride. Chauncey Calfee<lb/>
as mother of the groom and Sel-<lb/>
by Jones as father of the groom<lb/>
were also present.<lb/>
Allan Moore, Daniel Jordan<lb/>
and Jack Nobles were ushers for<lb/>
the occasion.<lb/>
This entertainment was spon-<lb/>
sored by the Varsity Club. Theo<lb/>
Kasom is President of the club<lb/>
umi had charge of the arrange-<lb/>
ments. Miss Lorraine Hunter di-<lb/>
rected the wedding.<lb/>
COLLEGIATE EDITORS<lb/>
COLLEGE "WIMP1<lb/>
HIST STUDENT BODY MINNEAPOLIS t kij i<lb/>
THE ULTIMA RATIO<lb/>
Nev. York (IP) War has<lb/>
broken out between a group ol<lb/>
senior students at Columb a O<lb/>
lege an dthe staff of the Sp '??<lb/>
tor, uniei itj ui &amp; rgi aduati<lb/>
new i.ii. i, over the new pap' i<lb/>
editoriai and mv. j??icu<lb/>
The seniors i tarted it bj cir-<lb/>
culating a qu tionnaire, which<lb/>
.1 ked a yes i r no answ r to th<lb/>
follow tng:<lb/>
?i) you believe that the Spec<lb/>
tator has pursued an i ditoi i tl<lb/>
AH<lb/>
Well, well, well?here we are<lb/>
again and Thanksgiving is upon<lb/>
us- -the gals seem mighty anx-<lb/>
ious to get home you may call<lb/>
it turkey, but I call it and then<lb/>
again, maybe they are that anx-j<lb/>
ious to see their "Parents<lb/>
We are told that a member of <lb/>
the team was going home with<lb/>
bis lady friend, and that the<lb/>
possibility of a game with dear<lb/>
old Chowan prevents him tough<lb/>
luck, pal. but thats football it<lb/>
looks like Louise and Jimmy<lb/>
have the only truly greal love<lb/>
affair?note the sacrifices both<lb/>
of them are making.<lb/>
We heard the other day a girl<lb/>
-ay that shs was going to wres-<lb/>
tle with Temptation?we wonder<lb/>
who this guy Temptation any-<lb/>
way?and what little girl is going<lb/>
green with envy when Ddwd<lb/>
grabs her boy friend in the wo<lb/>
manless wedding Tuesday nighl<lb/>
?there will be some " vrening1<lb/>
i (hesses in foul shape after that<lb/>
I is over?and what girl wrote<lb/>
? i, . ; period closed. jJimmy C;utV fSme m  hl?<lb/>
We wonder what inscription<lb/>
was on Lex's date's tombstone in <lb/>
Hickory- Lex, how is a date in.<lb/>
a graveyard and they tell u j kr<lb/>
that Calfee used a stogie to re1<lb/>
gurgitate his breakfast on the n<lb/>
bus and "Miss P pularity"<lb/>
Uines has her picture spread a)<lb/>
over all sorts oi rags We had<lb/>
Fullmoon last we k, but as Tor<lb/>
says, what's a full moon afte<lb/>
all??What, no Map" We hea<lb/>
from Duke that a day studen<lb/>
whose middle name ; links i<lb/>
liable to be blackn ad we'<lb/>
try ti follow this up and giv<lb/>
you the details?Eppie-Weppie i<lb/>
policy wnic<lb/>
orably upon<lb/>
college; th<lb/>
hei !i guilty<lb/>
the selectioi<lb/>
reacted<lb/>
has<lb/>
; far<lb/>
Fl:<lb/>
i ?nal i ipm '? ' I<lb/>
board; do you<lb/>
that th Sp i tat<lb/>
tv of action<lb/>
managing board<lb/>
detrin i ? tai to<lb/>
f the univer its<lb/>
to the i ollece ii<lb/>
Majority Say "Yes"<lb/>
The<lb/>
00 n<lb/>
lions<lb/>
Fnll<lb/>
.Sp<lb/>
Eug<lb/>
?-( i.<lb/>
the<lb/>
Lil<lb/>
1)1. A. M. Srhult<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
tooState Bask Building<lb/>
Phone 578<lb/>
1 t! C<lb/>
a Ken by a sub.<lb/>
Those a-t kii<lb/>
still stringing them- -so is Nob<lb/>
?and we hear that Dallas All<lb/>
pers for Ids final examination he has a picture of a girl with black<lb/>
sits back and slyly waits for hair signed Always. Billie" all<lb/>
some nervous co-ed to touch a this is hearsay of course?Well,<lb/>
puff to her nose (Puff to you), (stay out of the Liush.es.<lb/>
Then, all haughtiness, he arises.) About the ,H,st i()lu, tat IVt,<lb/>
heard this year is the one about<lb/>
T. G. Basnight's eat. You see its<lb/>
1 like this: T. G. lives in Stokes,<lb/>
and for some reason or oth r<lb/>
has lots of wildlike cats around<lb/>
his house, T G. saw one of the<lb/>
creatures sunning himself on the<lb/>
back fence the other day, and de-<lb/>
cided that he would catch it He<lb/>
crept up behind right quiet like,<lb/>
but in creeping up he stepped on<lb/>
a pecan. I. cracked, and T. G.<lb/>
just knew that the cat would<lb/>
wake up, so he decided that the<lb/>
best plan of attack would be to<lb/>
pounce down on the animal<lb/>
quickly and catch him before he<lb/>
knew what it was all about. He<lb/>
did that very thing and caught<lb/>
the cat successfully, only to find<lb/>
that the cat had been dead all<lb/>
the time. And was T. G. dis-<lb/>
gusted? He didn't even bother<lb/>
to bury the cat. but dropped him<lb/>
in the same spot.<lb/>
regist r thi ir i<lb/>
en! .  i n<lb/>
i lie (' I<lb/>
t pi ? of<lb/>
and di tortion<lb/>
umns and bad<lb/>
rial columns<lb/>
s trie or<lb/>
bends an accusing finger. and<lb/>
drily remarks:<lb/>
"Young woman, this is not<lb/>
make-up examination<lb/>
VARSITY CLUB<lb/>
GIVES WEDDING<lb/>
(Continued from first page)<lb/>
was the Maid of Honor. She en-<lb/>
tered on the left wearing an old<lb/>
rose ensemble.<lb/>
Little Paul Bowen entered<lb/>
from the right carrying the ring<lb/>
in the heart of a cabbage. Mas-<lb/>
ter Bowen was appropriately at-<lb/>
tired in basketball trunks and<lb/>
blouse with a big bow tie.<lb/>
Little Jennie Carr was the<lb/>
flower girl. She wore a dainty-<lb/>
dress of pink with matching<lb/>
bonnet. She entered from the<lb/>
left scattering thorns in the path<lb/>
of the bride.<lb/>
The bride entered on the arm<lb/>
of her step-father. Hon. Ben Har-<lb/>
ris, who gave her into marriage.<lb/>
She was attractively attired in a<lb/>
lovely creation of baby blue<lb/>
muslin. Her train was of white<lb/>
cheese cloth. Train bearers<lb/>
were little Misses Billie May and<lb/>
Ray Barrow. They were both<lb/>
dressed in dainty pink drosses.<lb/>
The groom entered from the<lb/>
back wdth his best man, Mr. Tex<lb/>
Lindsey. They were followed by<lb/>
Rev. Mathis who then performed<lb/>
the ceremony.<lb/>
After the fervent embrace of<lb/>
the bride to the groom, Tilda an-<lb/>
nounced that "Soups On" and the<lb/>
recessional takes place to the<lb/>
tune of "The Fight Is On<lb/>
Out of town guests were Na-<lb/>
than Epstein as Dolores Del Rio,<lb/>
Jack Dunn as Clark Gable, Fran-<lb/>
cis Sinclair as Mae West, Forrest<lb/>
Hyatt as Tilda, James Joyner as<lb/>
Will Rogers, David Johnson as<lb/>
Flapper Fanny, Charles Cobb as<lb/>
Aunt Het, Lester Ridenhour as<lb/>
ast<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Dr. L. M. Davis had more than<lb/>
an ordinary fan's interest in tl e<lb/>
Donna-Weslaeo High Schoi I<lb/>
football game down in Texas.<lb/>
He was tiie attending physician<lb/>
at tiie birth of thirteen oi <lb/>
Donna players and nine of <lb/>
Weslaco players.<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
WARREN'S<lb/>
DRUG STOKE<lb/>
A Permanent<lb/>
Wave<lb/>
Is onl as i;ood as 'In- jun-<lb/>
ior. Why take a chance'1<lb/>
We have onh expert opera-<lb/>
tors and use onh i nuioi ??up-<lb/>
plies?treating imliwuht in<lb/>
?ach wave.<lb/>
PERMANENTS<lb/>
$3.00 In $10.00<lb/>
Ask the woman wh has a<lb/>
Vanitie Boxe W.na '<lb/>
The<lb/>
Vanitie<lb/>
Boxe<lb/>
Ev.inls St at I ive n<lb/>
DR. WOOTEN<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
An experimental movement in<lb/>
the arts and crafts at Swathmore<lb/>
College is being fostered this<lb/>
year by the addition to the fa-<lb/>
culty of Miss Beatrice Beach, a<lb/>
graduate of the Yale School of<lb/>
Drama and D. Owen Stephens,<lb/>
an artist and architect.<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
the<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
DELIGHT<lb/>
EXCELS<lb/>
IN<lb/>
EVERYTHING<lb/>
THE LATEST STYLES IN SHOES<lb/>
For )ress and Campus Wear are Always<lb/>
SHOWN HERE FIRST<lb/>
Brown and White Oxfords Are The Rage<lb/>
Coburn's Shoes, Inc.<lb/>
"Your Shoe Store"<lb/>
DON'T FORGET THAT<lb/>
A Dependable Quality of Groceries<lb/>
equals<lb/>
A THANKSGIVING DINNER<lb/>
OF UNUSUAL SUCCESS<lb/>
Fender's Stores<lb/>
Ringless Hosiery<lb/>
sheer and clear 79c, 2 Pairs $1.50<lb/>
JOIN OUR HOSIERY CLUB<lb/>
ygutfaatutearxit<lb/>
FIRST BASlI<lb/>
BE HELD<lb/>
William a<lb/>
Held T<lb/>
Both<lb/>
(s<lb/>
HASSELL<lb/>
E.<lb/>
Pool Pa ?<lb/>
Fe H in<lb/>
The Pii '<lb/>
? i e gar<lb/>
the N-  -<lb/>
the off n<lb/>
 ies ten<lb/>
by play<lb/>
L. Rid.<lb/>
the Piral<lb/>
First Qi<lb/>
returned -<lb/>
line. J' <lb/>
Lef: Tackli<lb/>
yards ? v r Right<lb/>
tine kicked<lb/>
yard Liu th<lb/>
and Kyl <lb/>
Johnson v<lb/>
5 yards.<lb/>
Johnson's <lb/>
to the 2(! yat I<lb/>
Northcutt ?<lb/>
guard. Johnsoi<lb/>
46 yard line<lb/>
Walker<lb/>
5 yard-  I<lb/>
3 yard-<lb/>
OVer cenh ?:<lb/>
Pirate- : . -<lb/>
N rthi ti<lb/>
right end<lb/>
Braves 4;<lb/>
Walkei . yai<lb/>
left end<lb/>
completed<lb/>
kicked to 1<lb/>
Howeli fail ;<lb/>
Braves 10 ;<lb/>
yards. Valenl<lb/>
own 30 yai I<lb/>
Feret-e. I<lb/>
yards. T? . i<lb/>
Lindsay wre n<lb/>
kicked into the<lb/>
Ball on Bravi<lb/>
Johnson w. nl<lb/>
14 yards. 1<lb/>
Johnson tost 5<lb/>
plays. Val i I<lb/>
Teachers 3 <lb/>
Hassell w ent<lb/>
for 8 yard Fei<lb/>
tackle. Jones -<lb/>
25 yard line.<lb/>
Johnsmi skirb<lb/>
20 yards 1 ai<lb/>
Second Quarter<lb/>
Johnson 3 yar<lb/>
plays over left I<lb/>
kicked to Pirati<lb/>
Hassell steppe i<lb/>
center. 1 an I<lb/>
Hassell gained 5 ; ' I<lb/>
ter. A pass H -<lb/>
was good for 25 :<lb/>
for Pirates. H is<lb/>
right guard foi I<lb/>
penalized 5 yards<lb/>
Ferebee gain :<lb/>
over right ta. <lb/>
for Pirates F r<lb/>
yards around right<lb/>
Ferebee to E.i- :<lb/>
Ferebee's next toss wei<lb/>
end zone and the l- -<lb/>
brought to the Br - -<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Johnson rounded left<lb/>
38 yards. 1 and 1<lb/>
Garrett loses 8 yards<lb/>
next play for en ng :<lb/>
rear. Valentine kicked ?<lb/>
Pirates 20 yard line.<lb/>
Northcutt gamed 3 <lb/>
center. Pass Uassel; to L<lb/>
was incomplete. Jones kicki<lb/>
Braves 43 yard line. Dea<lb/>
3 yards on a fumble as halfj<lb/>
Third Quarter<lb/>
Dozier kicks for Braves.<lb/>
sell received on the It' yarc<lb/>
and returned to his own 201<lb/>
line. Jones kicked to J<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Johnson gained 11 yards I<lb/>
fiext three plays, 1 and lj<lb/>
Braves. Garrttt gained 5<lb/>
in two plays over center.<lb/>
tine kicked into Pirates end<lb/>
Ball brought to 20 yard liH<lb/>
Braves penalized 15 yarc<lb/>
holding Ferebee brought!<lb/>
(Continued on page foi<lb/>
<pb facs="00038024_0003"/><lb/>
'??' et j<lb/>
? 1934.<lb/>
Wednesetsy, November 28, 1934.<lb/>
COLLEGI WIMPY" S( ,)RVi<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
11? 'v Koh-<lb/>
 ; lot<lb/>
youngs <lb/>
 ( ' r wa.<lb/>
J ' ,lm out<lb/>
Wr3 bit on,<lb/>
I   1 -<lb/>
?urge fr<lb/>
r. A. M. SchuKz<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
? State K.ink Kuildin?<lb/>
Phone 578<lb/>
A Permanent<lb/>
Wave<lb/>
good fts tin npera-<lb/>
takc a chance?<lb/>
ml) expert opera-<lb/>
mii genuine sup-<lb/>
ine indivuahlv in<lb/>
PERMANENTS<lb/>
$3.00 to $10.00<lb/>
? ? imi.in who has a<lb/>
Box Wave!<lb/>
The<lb/>
mam mm 0 <lb/>
Vanitie<lb/>
Boxe<lb/>
l' tats St- at Five Points<lb/>
-H i ES IN SHOES<lb/>
. ? ? W car are Always<lb/>
HERE FIRST<lb/>
rds Are The Rage<lb/>
hoes, Inc.<lb/>
?? Store<lb/>
TTHAT<lb/>
 of Groceries<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
UAL SUCCESS<lb/>
'$ Stores<lb/>
? Hosiery<lb/>
 mi 79c, 2 Pairs $lJi<lb/>
HOSIERY CLUB<lb/>
focifufpar fit - ?<lb/>
R-JONES<lb/>
Page Three<lb/>
FIRST BASKETBALL DRILL TO<lb/>
BE HELD MONDAY, DEC. 3<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
George S. Willard, Jr Sports Editor<lb/>
POST SEASON GAME WILL NOT<lb/>
BE PLAYED ON 29th<lb/>
William and Mary Is<lb/>
Held To Scoreless Tie<lb/>
'earns Arc Strong On<lb/>
Offense.<lb/>
HASSELL STARS<lb/>
K. C. T. C.<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
asses And Long Runs<lb/>
at in os Of Game.<lb/>
In The Realm Of<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
By Willard<lb/>
Deacons To Play<lb/>
Davidson Team<lb/>
Thanksgiving Day Contest<lb/>
Continues Scries Marked<lb/>
By Many Odd Turns.<lb/>
It<lb/>
w.<lb/>
Bi .<lb/>
Pirates Continued their<lb/>
ame schedule by playing<lb/>
:? Ik Branch of William<lb/>
rj College to a scoreless<lb/>
th teams were strong on<lb/>
nse but lacked the punch<lb/>
when deep in the ene-<lb/>
rritory. The game play<lb/>
S as follows:<lb/>
First Quarter<lb/>
! nhour kicked off for<lb/>
ati S, Dozier received the<lb/>
his own H yard line and<lb/>
I 2o yards to the 30 yard<lb/>
hnson failed to gain over<lb/>
ickle Walker gamed 4<lb/>
 r Right Guard. Valen-<lb/>
ked to the Pirates 30<lb/>
, the ball was fumbled<lb/>
I? pounced on the ball<lb/>
went around left end tor<lb/>
Hassell intercepted<lb/>
iS pass and returned it<lb/>
JO yard line.<lb/>
cutt, no gain over right<lb/>
Johnson kicks to Pirates<lb/>
! line.<lb/>
t sounded right end for<lb/>
Johnson followed for<lb/>
Dozier failed to gam<lb/>
nter. Valentine kicked to<lb/>
8 yard line.<lb/>
. utt lost 5 yards around<lb/>
, L Jones kicked to the<lb/>
45 yard line.<lb/>
r gained 1 yard around<lb/>
I Dnzier threw two in-<lb/>
ed passes. Valentine<lb/>
to Teachers 15 yard line.<lb/>
failed to gain over the<lb/>
10 yard line, a kick of 75<lb/>
lentine kicked to his<lb/>
ird line.<lb/>
fumbled and lost 6<lb/>
passes Ferebee to<lb/>
ere incomplete. Jones<lb/>
: into the end zone.<lb/>
?n Braves 20 yard line.<lb/>
n went over right end for<lb/>
is 1 and 10 for Braves.<lb/>
: lost 5 yards on next two<lb/>
Yah-ntine kicked to the<lb/>
I 30 yard line.<lb/>
I went over left guard<lb/>
yard. Ferebee over left<lb/>
Jones kicked to Braves<lb/>
rd line.<lb/>
is rumored that a little<lb/>
extra sleep, and too many<lb/>
pancakes caused Bowen to<lb/>
miss the football bus last<lb/>
Thursday However, I feel a<lb/>
delicacy in articulating, since<lb/>
Bowen's poor physical condi-<lb/>
tion must also be considered.<lb/>
Being of a highly nervous<lb/>
temperament, intensive study<lb/>
here has caused him to melt<lb/>
to a mere hundred and nine-<lb/>
ty pounds, in spite of the<lb/>
fact that his team mates have<lb/>
carried milk for him<lb/>
some of the trips.<lb/>
on<lb/>
real speed<lb/>
game play-<lb/>
Hay Hassell showed<lb/>
and deception In th(<lb/>
ed against the Norfolk Branch of<lb/>
William and Mary. He gained<lb/>
consistently through holes open-<lb/>
ed by Jolly. Carpenter and Sin-<lb/>
clair, and stepped off several<lb/>
runs from twenty to thirty<lb/>
yards. Good work. Hassell.<lb/>
STUDENTS ATTEND<lb/>
CHURCH CONFER'CE<lb/>
v<lb/>
T<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
(Continued from First Page.)<lb/>
ed: "World Peace and the Econo-<lb/>
mic Order by Rev J. E. Flet-<lb/>
cher: "Personality and Our Eco-<lb/>
nomic Order" by Professor<lb/>
Hicks, "The Church and Our<lb/>
Economic Order" by Dr. H. C.<lb/>
Brown: "World Missions and our<lb/>
Economic Order" by Dr. E. Mc-<lb/>
Neill Poteat.<lb/>
The afternoon meeting was<lb/>
opened by the student delega-<lb/>
tion from Greensboro College.<lb/>
Dr. Harvey C. Brown of the<lb/>
General Board of Christian Edu-<lb/>
cation spoke to the assembly.<lb/>
After dinner, the address and<lb/>
devotion were given by Iron K.<lb/>
King. After the talk, a business<lb/>
meeting was held and officers<lb/>
for the coming year were elect-<lb/>
ed. Sunday morning, after an<lb/>
organ prelude the officers were<lb/>
installed. The sermon of the<lb/>
morning was an inspiring and a<lb/>
challenging one, preached by Dr.<lb/>
Davidson, Nov. 24.?Davidson<lb/>
will be seeking to avoid unac-<lb/>
companied occupancy of the Big<lb/>
Five cellar when it meets Wake<lb/>
Forest College gridders here on<lb/>
Thanksgiving Day in the 22nd<lb/>
football game between the Pr<lb/>
byterians and the Baptists<lb/>
Wake Forest, which sprung an<lb/>
upset to gain a 13-12 win over N.<lb/>
C. State by virtue of a great 85-<lb/>
yard advance in the final three<lb/>
minutes of the game, now ranks<lb/>
in fourth place in Big Five stand-<lb/>
ings. Davidson, beaten in each<lb/>
of its previous Big Five tests, is<lb/>
in the cellar. A win on Thanks-<lb/>
giving Day for Davidson would<lb/>
drop Wake Forest into a tie with<lb/>
the Presbyterians for fourth and<lb/>
fifth places in the league.<lb/>
Hard On Favorites<lb/>
Davidson will be favored to<lb/>
take that victory-but therein<lb/>
ies cause for grief in the David-<lb/>
son camp. Probably fed football<lb/>
series anywhere can match the<lb/>
Davidson-Wake Forest series for<lb/>
producing upsets. The favored<lb/>
team in pre-game speculation<lb/>
very often has come out on the<lb/>
short end of the final score. The<lb/>
rival teams have a way of show-<lb/>
ing surprising strength when giv-<lb/>
en the "underdog" role.<lb/>
This series has been unusual<lb/>
in other ways. Davidson won<lb/>
annually for the first nine years.<lb/>
Then Wake Forest took charge<lb/>
and for the next decade the Bap-<lb/>
tists lost not a single game al-<lb/>
though four of the contests were<lb/>
ties. Three of the ties came in<lb/>
succession.<lb/>
INTRAMURALSTANDING<lb/>
W. L Pet.<lb/>
Fleming3 1 1000<lb/>
Cotten2 1 666<lb/>
Wilson1 2 3,33<lb/>
Jarvis0 3 000<lb/>
SING SING STAR<lb/>
ENDSCAREER<lb/>
Football Season<lb/>
Is Concluded<lb/>
Pirates Play Last Grid Game<lb/>
Against Lenoir Rhyne.<lb/>
Edward Collins Pitts, the<lb/>
greatest athlete ever turned out<lb/>
i by this exclusive academy, sat<lb/>
es-ion the senior fence tonight andjanc(<lb/>
ponder over the future.<lb/>
Edward?who is known to the<lb/>
world outside as Alabama Pitts<lb/>
?played his last football game<lb/>
for his alma mater today. Next<lb/>
June 4, he will be graduated,<lb/>
summa cum laude, with five<lb/>
bucks in cash and a ten dollar<lb/>
suit.<lb/>
He will come out the most<lb/>
prominent jailbird athlete in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
In the cool quiet of this insti-<lb/>
tution, surrounded by its tall<lb/>
spiked walls, he reflected rather<lb/>
sadly upon the reputation he had<lb/>
acquired.<lb/>
"I'd kinda like to shuck off this<lb/>
Alabama name he admitted.<lb/>
"I'd like to be plain just Edward<lb/>
Collins<lb/>
It was no outpouring of mod-<lb/>
esty. Alabama Pitts is a shy<lb/>
yioung man, tall and blondish,<lb/>
with steady gray eyes. He is<lb/>
Sing Sing's model job?all-time,<lb/>
all-round, all-American, all-<lb/>
everything. He will leave here<lb/>
with a reputation but he'd much<lb/>
rather leave the reputation.<lb/>
The Pirates ended a successful<lb/>
football season last Friday when<lb/>
they lost to a superior Lenoir-<lb/>
Rhyne eleven. Of the six games<lb/>
played, the Louisburg game was<lb/>
perhaps the hardest fought, al-<lb/>
though the game, with Wingate<lb/>
and Presbyterian Junior College,<lb/>
Norfolk Branch of William<lb/>
and Mary were filled with thrills<lb/>
and spectacular playing. In<lb/>
these four games' E. C. T. C.<lb/>
scored a total of twelve points<lb/>
as opposed to thirteen points<lb/>
chalked up by the opponents.<lb/>
Until Coach Mathis joined the<lb/>
Pirates" rank this year, only one<lb/>
touchdown had been scored in<lb/>
inter-collegiate competition dur-<lb/>
ing the past two seasons. This<lb/>
year the Pirates scored three<lb/>
touchdowns in the six games<lb/>
played. Two of the scores came<lb/>
on passes, Hassell to Easom, and<lb/>
Hassell to Johnson, but in the<lb/>
Louisburg game Ferebee plunged<lb/>
across the goal line for the six<lb/>
points.<lb/>
The summary for the<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
E. C. T<lb/>
0<lb/>
Duke and State Offer<lb/>
Feature In This Sector<lb/>
DR. SLAYS SON<lb/>
MAKES VARSITY<lb/>
AT UNIVERSrn<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fans, Ft oli ,<lb/>
State Suq<lb/>
In On This.<lb/>
J h<lb/>
Jm<lb/>
R.<lb/>
Sli<lb/>
Rla<lb/>
son of Dr<lb/>
A this cit<lb/>
AME TO BE PLAYED ON<lb/>
Univt rsit;<lb/>
the varsil<lb/>
Thus far.<lb/>
the<lb/>
very successful in intercollegiate<lb/>
competition, and Slay has contri-<lb/>
buted much in each game.<lb/>
In high school, Slay devoted<lb/>
his athletic ability to freshman<lb/>
football and varsity basketball,<lb/>
although he also participated in<lb/>
baseball and tennis.<lb/>
This is young Slay's second<lb/>
year at Duke, and much may be<lb/>
expected of him scholastic-ally<lb/>
and athletically in the next two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
CHAPEL EXERCISES<lb/>
Fred R. Chenault, of Danville,<lb/>
kirtt-d right end for Virginia.<lb/>
The conference closed with the<lb/>
benediction of the morning ser-<lb/>
cei<lb/>
u<lb/>
: 1 and 10 for Braves<lb/>
Second Quarter<lb/>
son 'X yards in as many vice.<lb/>
vt r left tackle. Valentine <lb/>
to Pirates 10 yard line, j girls' MANNERS BAD<lb/>
: stepped off 32 yards over j SAYS BARNARD DEAN<lb/>
1 and 10 for Pirates. <lb/>
: gained 5 yards over cen- J ncw York?(IP)?In the opin-<lb/>
 pass Hassell to Ferebee ' ion nf rean Virginia Gildersleeve<lb/>
od for 25 yards, 1 and 10 ()f Barnard College, the voices of<lb/>
rates Hassell went overmost gjri students are very bad,<lb/>
guard for 4 yards. Braves ;antj just to prove it to them, she<lb/>
? ed 5 yards for time outs, j js making each one of her charges<lb/>
? gained the needed 1 yard j recor(i her voice on a phonograph<lb/>
ighl tackle. 1 and 10 record and then listen to it.<lb/>
rates. Ferebee gained 6' The dean then expects to have<lb/>
around right end. Pass I the girls go about correcting the<lb/>
to Easom, incomplete, j unpleasant things about their<lb/>
next toss went into the j speech.<lb/>
and the ball was j The dean also thinks the man-<lb/>
to the Braves 20 yard i ners 0f college girls are pretty<lb/>
I bad.<lb/>
Johnson rounded left end for; "Don't grab plates of cake at<lb/>
. irds 1 and 10 for Braves. L tea. Don't elbow your way in-<lb/>
Garrttt loses 8 yards and oneto an elevator she admonished.<lb/>
next play for clipping from the<lb/>
21.<lb/>
Younger's Teams "Jinxed"<lb/>
The 10-year reign of the Bap-<lb/>
tists was during the coaching re-<lb/>
gime of Coaches Monk Younger<lb/>
and Tex Tilson, and those gen-<lb/>
tlemen went on to other fields<lb/>
without having found a way to<lb/>
avoid the annual jinx which<lb/>
Wake Forest has ready for the<lb/>
Wildcats. Younger and Tilson<lb/>
have been assistant coaches at<lb/>
Virginia Poly since after the 1931<lb/>
football season.<lb/>
Davidson's first victory since<lb/>
1920 came in 1932 when Coach<lb/>
Doc Newton's boys edged a 7-0<lb/>
triumph over the Deacons. Last i<lb/>
fall the game arrived with Da<lb/>
vidson as topheavy favorites<lb/>
Wake Forest had not scored ai<lb/>
single point all season?but j7<lb/>
against the Wildcats the Deacons j<lb/>
found the scoring range and 13<lb/>
crashed through for 13 points <lb/>
and made a fine bid for an upset<lb/>
victory. However, Davidson won<lb/>
by a 20-13 count.<lb/>
A victory next Thursday not<lb/>
cons in the rivalry which began<lb/>
in 1908.<lb/>
Scores for the series follows:<lb/>
1908?Wake Forest 4, Davidson<lb/>
31.<lb/>
1910?Wake Forest 0, Davidson<lb/>
32.<lb/>
1912?Wake Forest 7, Davidson<lb/>
13.<lb/>
1913?Wake Forest 0<lb/>
C.<lb/>
Wingate<lb/>
A. S. T. C. 0<lb/>
P. J. C. 6<lb/>
Louisburg 6<lb/>
N. B. W. M. 0<lb/>
Lenoir Rhyne 0<lb/>
season<lb/>
Opno.<lb/>
G<lb/>
27<lb/>
0<lb/>
n<lb/>
i<lb/>
0<lb/>
47<lb/>
UPPERC LASSMEN AT .<lb/>
HARVARD ALLOTTED<lb/>
UNLIMITED CUTS<lb/>
TWEI i<lb/>
Duke And Stal I<lb/>
Ft otbaU A Dec<lb/>
N. (' Stat . wh<lb/>
ing m Duke Si i<lb/>
giving Day.<lb/>
The Wolves aad th?<lb/>
vils have given Nort<lb/>
three of its bes<lb/>
I past three yeat<lb/>
North Car lii i<lb/>
those contest ? a<lb/>
.11<lb/>
En<lb/>
and<lb/>
on<lb/>
; I<lb/>
Blue :??-<lb/>
orth Car<lb/>
games in the<lb/>
and most of<lb/>
s who missed<lb/>
Davidson<lb/>
1914?Wake Forest 6, Davidson<lb/>
1915?Wake Forest 7, Davidson<lb/>
1917?Wake Forest 7<lb/>
72.<lb/>
1919<lb/>
;21.<lb/>
Davidson<lb/>
1920-<lb/>
27.<lb/>
1921-<lb/>
son 7.<lb/>
1922-<lb/>
16.<lb/>
1923-<lb/>
0.<lb/>
1925-<lb/>
-Wake Forest 0. Davidson<lb/>
-Wake Forest 7, Davidson<lb/>
-Wake Forest 10, David-<lb/>
-Wake Forest 6, Davidson<lb/>
-Wake Forest 6, Davidson<lb/>
-Wake Forest 7, Davidson<lb/>
1926- Wake Forest 3, Davidson<lb/>
David-<lb/>
Ul<lb/>
38<lb/>
ds<lb/>
rebec<lb/>
rebee<lb/>
rear Valentine kicked to the<lb/>
Pirates 20 yard line.<lb/>
Northcutt gained 3 yards over<lb/>
center. Pass Hassell to Lindsay<lb/>
Was incomplete. Jones kicked to<lb/>
Braves 43 yard line. Dozier loses<lb/>
3 yards on a fumble as half ends.<lb/>
Third Quarter<lb/>
Dozier kicks for Braves, Has-<lb/>
B received on the 10 yard line<lb/>
and returned to his own 20 yard<lb/>
line Jones kicked to 50 yard<lb/>
line.<lb/>
Johnson gained 11 yards on<lb/>
Sttt three plays, 1 and 10 for<lb/>
Braves. Garrett gained 5 yards<lb/>
m two plays over center. Valen-<lb/>
tine kicked into Pirates end zone.<lb/>
Bali brought to 20 yard line.<lb/>
Braves penalized 15 yards for<lb/>
holding Ferebee brought over<lb/>
(Continued on page four)<lb/>
The Dartmouth Players, stu-<lb/>
dent drama organization at Dart-<lb/>
mouth College, have been given<lb/>
$1,000 by the college trustees<lb/>
this year to aid them in their ar-<lb/>
tistic work.<lb/>
only will keep Davidson from<lb/>
finishing?all alone?in the Big<lb/>
Five cellar, but it will enable<lb/>
the Wildcats to get a .500 aver-<lb/>
age for the season. The 'Cats<lb/>
have wo nthree games, lost four,<lb/>
and tied one.<lb/>
Davidson Leads<lb/>
Davidson has won 11 of the 21<lb/>
games played with Wake Forest.<lb/>
The Deacons have won six. Four<lb/>
have been ties. Aided by a top-<lb/>
heavy 72-7 victory scored in 1917<lb/>
Davidson has tallied more than<lb/>
twice as many points as the Dea-<lb/>
David-<lb/>
1927?Wake Forest 13,<lb/>
ison 13.<lb/>
1928?Wake Forest 25,<lb/>
son 6.<lb/>
1929?Wake Forest 6, Davidson<lb/>
0.<lb/>
1930?Wake Forest 13, David-<lb/>
son 2.<lb/>
1931?Wake Forest 7, Davidson<lb/>
0.<lb/>
1932-<lb/>
7.<lb/>
1933-<lb/>
son 20.<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass. ? (IP) ?<lb/>
Members of the sophomore, jun-<lb/>
ior classes at Harvard College<lb/>
this year do not have to attend<lb/>
classes unless fhey want to.<lb/>
Moreover, they are not required <lb/>
to take the old half-term exami-<lb/>
nations in November and April.<lb/>
Harvard is entering its 299th<lb/>
year and the second year of the<lb/>
presidency of Dr. Conant. who<lb/>
spent his firt year observing the<lb/>
operation of the university and<lb/>
is now beginning to try out some<lb/>
innovations.<lb/>
One of his plans calls for the<lb/>
recruiting of some of the most<lb/>
brilliant young men of the coun-<lb/>
try for the Harvard College<lb/>
freshman class each year.<lb/>
This year the freshman class<lb/>
includes in its membership ten<lb/>
Middle Westerners with unusual<lb/>
high school scholarship records.<lb/>
Ultimately President Conant<lb/>
hopes to have 10 per cent, of each<lb/>
first year class made up of such<lb/>
students.<lb/>
BISHOP HUGHES SPEAKS<lb/>
ON CAMPUS SUNDAY<lb/>
-Wake Forest 0, Davidson<lb/>
-Wake Forest 13, David-<lb/>
Since little recognition is giv-<lb/>
m to American artist. Miss Kate<lb/>
W. Lewis of the art department<lb/>
chose as her topic for the talk<lb/>
that she gave in chapel this<lb/>
morning, "American Artists<lb/>
Homer Winslow was the first<lb/>
artist that she presented. Wins-<lb/>
low is known as the typical<lb/>
American artist and is called the<lb/>
"Nellet of America His pic-<lb/>
tures portray the sea and the<lb/>
life of the sea faring people.<lb/>
Perhaps the best known of his<lb/>
pictures is "The Fog Warning<lb/>
He painted nature as he saw it<lb/>
and not as he wished it to be.<lb/>
The second American artist<lb/>
presented was George Ennis who<lb/>
was a great landscape painter.<lb/>
His pictures are aglow with col-<lb/>
or and he expressed the emotion-<lb/>
al side of nature. Two pictures<lb/>
that he painted are "After a<lb/>
Summer Shower" and "The Age<lb/>
of Plenty<lb/>
The last artist was E. Erving<lb/>
Couse, a painter of Indian life.<lb/>
Instead of portraying the war-<lb/>
like Indian he presented the<lb/>
peaceful Indian who hunted and<lb/>
fished. He was much loved by<lb/>
the Indian people, who called<lb/>
him "The Green Mountain" be-<lb/>
cause he was a large man and<lb/>
wore a green sweater.<lb/>
ar expected to be<lb/>
in the Duke horse-shoe Thursday<lb/>
to be on the spot for what pro-<lb/>
mises to be another great battle.<lb/>
Fans Fooled Thrice<lb/>
The games between Duke and<lb/>
State, in short, have been gieat<lb/>
contests little appreciated by the<lb/>
football public of this State. And,<lb/>
after having been fooled by not<lb/>
attending the past three battles,<lb/>
fans have come to realize that<lb/>
some of the best football in this<lb/>
State has been played by the two<lb/>
teams in their annual engage-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Since the rivalry first started<lb/>
the games have been close, but<lb/>
the past three games have been<lb/>
the strangest in the series. Each<lb/>
tyear Duke has come up to the<lb/>
, game rated to win by "you-pick-<lb/>
your-own" margins, and in two<lb/>
'of those years the Blue Devils<lb/>
I were soundly trounced and last<lb/>
I year the best Duke team in mod-<lb/>
ern football history had to shove<lb/>
across a touchdown in the final<lb/>
play to triumph by 7-0.<lb/>
Duke officials expect the<lb/>
Thanksgiving Day game to at-<lb/>
tract the largest State-Duke at-<lb/>
tendance since the 1927 contest,<lb/>
when more than 20.000 jammed<lb/>
old Hanes field at Duke to see<lb/>
State win the Big Five title by<lb/>
gaining a 20-18 margin in one of<lb/>
(Continued on page four)<lb/>
(Continued from first page)<lb/>
Methodist Church assisted in the<lb/>
devotional service.<lb/>
After speaking here Bishop<lb/>
Hughes left for Washington, N.<lb/>
C where he addressed the clos-<lb/>
ing session of the North Caro-<lb/>
lina Methodist Conference.<lb/>
Dr. B. McK. Johnson<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
206 State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 391<lb/>
S.CT.C GIRLS<lb/>
VISIT THE STORE WHERE<lb/>
STYLE BEGINS<lb/>
You Are Always Welcome<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
"The Store For The Ladies<lb/>
Smart College Girls<lb/>
VISIT US OFTEN<lb/>
We Have The Dress For Every<lb/>
Occasion.<lb/>
The Perkins Co.<lb/>
When you are visiting the Y Store or your<lb/>
favorite down town Soda Shop, insist on<lb/>
LANCES<lb/>
Peanut Butter Sandwiches, Candies and Salted<lb/>
Peanuts. They are made under the most sani-<lb/>
tary conditions and you will find them always<lb/>
fresh and delicious.<lb/>
Look for the package with the Red seal.<lb/>
FOR CHRISTMAS THIS YEAR<lb/>
Send The Most Personal of all Gifts?<lb/>
YOUR PHOTOGRAPH<lb/>
See our display window for attractive new<lb/>
styles.<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
Ready for Christmas!<lb/>
A Wonderful Selection of Greeting Cards, Seals<lb/>
and Wrappings, 1c to 10c.<lb/>
NEW NOVELTIES and PRACTICAL GIFTS<lb/>
10c to 81.00<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co.<lb/>
'Known For Values'<lb/>
"THE 1934 GRIDIRON BALL"<lb/>
Featuring the music of<lb/>
Johnny Hamp and His Orchestra<lb/>
(Drake Hotel, Chicago)<lb/>
THE OUTSTANDING SOCIAL EVENT OF<lb/>
THE SEASON<lb/>
For The Entertainment of the College Set<lb/>
MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM RALEIGH, N. C.<lb/>
November 28, 10:00-2:00<lb/>
FLOOR SHOW<lb/>
DANCING $165<lb/>
<pb facs="00038024_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
???<lb/>
Page Four<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Wednesday, No emha. ?<lb/>
? 0 1 Jf<lb/>
Ruth Henderson, Reporter<lb/>
Mr Worth Wicker. Rector of<lb/>
the Episcopal church, used the<lb/>
? . me "Blessed is the man who<lb/>
: gg th a well in a desert in an<lb/>
inspiring talk before the Y. W.<lb/>
C. A. Sunday evening, Novem-<lb/>
ber IKth lie pointed out that<lb/>
' chief duty of man is to dig<lb/>
Uti<lb/>
ecause<lb/>
all great<lb/>
: h ; gs in 1 ife are mxle up of the<lb/>
ttl tl ings It isthe desirable<lb/>
, ttain unto liftyheights. he<lb/>
pointed out, but itis impossible<lb/>
? veryone to beat the top.<lb/>
tittle efforts,finally there<lb/>
i jes  thing i ifbeauty.<lb/>
lie stated thatthe students<lb/>
 ill be the future teachers<lb/>
: a i a gr at opportunity to dig<lb/>
laj bj day, in guiding the<lb/>
mind f hildren vho some day<lb/>
rAin discover-<lb/>
ies, science, politicsart, and re-<lb/>
lig i in am i by so d(mg they will<lb/>
bring in closer reality, the dra-<lb/>
ma ' ??.? rid.<lb/>
Ha el VVa Idellaccompanied<lb/>
BJsang an ap-<lb/>
"1 h tve seen everything in my<lb/>
life" was the text from<lb/>
h Rev. W. A. Ryan talked<lb/>
Y W. C. A. of East Caro-<lb/>
: rs College Sunday<lb/>
H spoke in a practical<lb/>
way making his listeners feel<lb/>
? ?? were getting good sound.<lb/>
per: na advice.<lb/>
W! ?. one flunks that lie has<lb/>
tearni there is to know then<lb/>
 ha reached a most danger-<lb/>
is tnd ti agi point. He pointed<lb/>
. ' if "a little learning is a<lb/>
? ?: ? th rig" and that the<lb/>
tolerate things<lb/>
: ? ?-?:? t- It is his opinion that<lb/>
th v. irld is unconquerably rich<lb/>
in a t rial and that there is<lb/>
something new and worthwhile<lb/>
Alumnae News<lb/>
Miss Et.lyn Saunders. Class of<lb/>
'34, who is teaching at Swans-<lb/>
boro, was the week-end guest<lb/>
here November ltth.<lb/>
Miss Eva Vaughn, Class of "34.<lb/>
and a teacher at Elm City, also<lb/>
visited here last week-end.<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Britt, Class of<lb/>
'34, who is teaching at Hubert,<lb/>
visited here last week.<lb/>
E. C. T. C. ALUMNAE<lb/>
CHAPTER MEETS<lb/>
every dav<lb/>
There<lb/>
in Heaven and<lb/>
as ever dreamed<lb/>
in Life" was the<lb/>
ijed ol the last talk, the cli-<lb/>
ix in the series given bv Dr.<lb/>
R<lb/>
Y<lb/>
ie theme:<lb/>
: m the Making of a new<lb/>
rid His talk this morning<lb/>
closed ?? eries of Y. W. C. A.<lb/>
rvice! h Id this week for the<lb/>
'? ge tudents He has held<lb/>
?? regular meetings each day,<lb/>
M : : i W tch, the evening ser-<lb/>
d forum immediately<lb/>
zing the evening service.<lb/>
rhi stature ol Jesus comprises<lb/>
things that are necessary to<lb/>
litful living: personality, a<lb/>
irpos in life, a fellowship with<lb/>
??  and the age of youth, and<lb/>
m should measure his stature<lb/>
that of Jesus if he would have<lb/>
life to the full, was the heart of<lb/>
the message Dr. Miles gave in his<lb/>
last talk at evening services. He<lb/>
tered his theme around Je-<lb/>
sus, who is the only foundation<lb/>
upon which one may build in<lb/>
order to find eternal life. Other<lb/>
things he gave were one should<lb/>
possess the quality of youth.<lb/>
which is a matter of outlook, he<lb/>
uld develop and should con-<lb/>
tinue the practice of prayer, and<lb/>
hould have a definite pur-<lb/>
in life. If he will attain<lb/>
the stature of Jesus, per-<lb/>
? ality will take care of itself:<lb/>
me drives away these posses-<lb/>
he wiil drive away all that<lb/>
make  r complete living.<lb/>
The Raleigh Chapter of the E.<lb/>
C. T. C. Alumnae Association<lb/>
met at the home of Mrs. J. C.<lb/>
Holland Thursday evening. Nov-<lb/>
ember 15th. The meeting was<lb/>
called to order by the president.<lb/>
Mrs. George W. Bradshaw.<lb/>
An invitation was extended to<lb/>
all alumnae to attend the me-<lb/>
morial services for the late Dr.<lb/>
Robert H. Wright which will be<lb/>
held at the college on December<lb/>
16th, at 3:00 o'clock.<lb/>
It was announced that the an-<lb/>
nual Christmas bazaar will be<lb/>
held on December 13.<lb/>
Following the business session,<lb/>
bridge was enjoyed. Prizes were<lb/>
won by Miss Lola Peel and<lb/>
Mrs. Max Miller.<lb/>
Delicious refreshments were<lb/>
served by Mrs. Holland. Mrs. E.<lb/>
H. Spruill, Mrs. J. ML Newsome<lb/>
and Mrs. R. F. Noble, hostesses<lb/>
for the meeting.<lb/>
DEATHS<lb/>
Miss Mary Rabb, A. B. Class of<lb/>
'33, of Marion, N. C. died at<lb/>
Duke Hospital, Durham, Novem-<lb/>
ber 20th. She taught the month<lb/>
of October at Old Fort, N. C<lb/>
Her health gave away and she<lb/>
entered Duke Hospital about the<lb/>
first of November. While a stu-<lb/>
dent at E. C. T. C. Mary was<lb/>
held in high esteem by all her<lb/>
fellow students, a fact shown by<lb/>
the honors she was given on the<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
SCIENCE CLUB HOLDS<lb/>
REGULAR MEETING<lb/>
Miss Alma Worthington, Class<lb/>
of '32, died at the Fowler Memo-<lb/>
rial Hospital in Washington, N.<lb/>
C. November 22. following a<lb/>
mastoid operation. She had<lb/>
taught in the Graham schools<lb/>
for several years.<lb/>
The Science Club which has<lb/>
grown from 15 members in 1932<lb/>
to 60 members today and is now<lb/>
affiliated with the Student<lb/>
Science Clubs of America held its<lb/>
regular meeting Tuesday, Nov-<lb/>
ember 20. at ti:30 o'clock, in the<lb/>
Science building. "Why Precious<lb/>
Metals are Precious" was the<lb/>
theme of the program. Rarity,<lb/>
complicated metallurgy, beauty,<lb/>
and the wide range of uses were<lb/>
the reasons given which separate<lb/>
the precious metals.<lb/>
Silver and why it is precious<lb/>
was discussed by Isa Costen<lb/>
Grant. She pointed out the fami-<lb/>
liar uses of silver and the new<lb/>
uses such as in the purifying of<lb/>
water. George Willard explain-<lb/>
ed that gold was precious main-<lb/>
ly because it was so rare, appear-<lb/>
ing combined with 70 different<lb/>
elements. He also illustrated the<lb/>
amount of labor required to ex-<lb/>
tract even a small amount. Why<lb/>
Platinum is precious, besides the<lb/>
reasons given for all precious<lb/>
metals was that it is a thermos-<lb/>
tatic metal and is very important<lb/>
to the chemist in the laboratory,<lb/>
was pointed out by Elbert Tyson.<lb/>
Jean Tate centered her talk<lb/>
around the fact that the diamond<lb/>
is the most precious stone be-<lb/>
cause it cannot successfully be<lb/>
made artificially and its occur-<lb/>
rence is rare. She mentioned<lb/>
some of t'ne largest diamonds and<lb/>
their worth.<lb/>
The years program was out-<lb/>
lined. The next meeting for the<lb/>
quarter will be a Christmas So-<lb/>
cial. During tin- winter term<lb/>
physical subjects will be discuss-<lb/>
ed. They are planning for an<lb/>
outside speaker but lie has not.<lb/>
yet been decided upon.<lb/>
Biological subjects with Dr.<lb/>
Wells of State College- speaking<lb/>
or. Natural Gardens of North<lb/>
Carolina is planned for the<lb/>
Spring quarter. The Club is al-<lb/>
so planning a scientific excur-<lb/>
sion which will probably be to<lb/>
the Bromine plant at Wilming-<lb/>
ton.<lb/>
DIKE - STATE<lb/>
OFFER FEATURE<lb/>
IN THIS SECTION<lb/>
(Continued from third page)<lb/>
PARTY AT COLLEGE<lb/>
The annual "D" Senior Normal<lb/>
party for the "C Junior Nor-<lb/>
mals, was held Saturday night<lb/>
in the Campus building from 8:30<lb/>
to 10:30 o'clock. The building<lb/>
was beautifully decorated in the<lb/>
Senior Normal class colors, pink<lb/>
and white. The entertainment<lb/>
was a formal reception with<lb/>
practically all in evening dress.<lb/>
The faculty was invited to at-<lb/>
tend. As a special feature of the<lb/>
evening. Jack Humphrey sang<lb/>
two selections, and Carolin Ham-<lb/>
ric tap danced. Ice cream in<lb/>
Dixie cups was served later.<lb/>
Louise King is president of the<lb/>
Senior Normal class, and Eleanor<lb/>
Taylor is president of the Junior<lb/>
Normal.<lb/>
To be an American is to be an<lb/>
optimist.<lb/>
Miss Julia M. Taylor. Class of<lb/>
'14, died m New Orleans, La in<lb/>
November. She has been Ad-<lb/>
minister of relief in five Louis-<lb/>
iana parishes under the Emer-<lb/>
gence Relief Administration.<lb/>
On Thursday night, November<lb/>
. Miss Turner gave a delightful<lb/>
party honoring the English prac-<lb/>
ice teachers and critic teachers<lb/>
The guests were welcomed hear-<lb/>
tily by Miss Turner, after which<lb/>
everyone was introduced. An<lb/>
njoyable hour of intellectual<lb/>
contests kept the guests busy un-<lb/>
til tea and salad were served.<lb/>
The winners in the contest were<lb/>
Miss Samon of the College Lib-<lb/>
rary Department and Miss Has-<lb/>
kett of the Greenville High<lb/>
School faculty. The practice<lb/>
teachers present were: Sue Sew-<lb/>
11, Kathryn Hines, Selma Gur-<lb/>
ganus. Ruby Wall, Elizabeth<lb/>
Carswell, Helen Clark, Minnie<lb/>
Margaret Gorham, and Helen<lb/>
Boomer. Other guests present<lb/>
were Miss Charlton, Miss Has-<lb/>
kett, Mrs. Bowen. Mr. Mulhol-<lb/>
land and Mr. Uzell.<lb/>
In a recent address Maj. Gen.<lb/>
Smedley D. Butler, retired mar-<lb/>
ine officer, asserted that he would<lb/>
"never carry a rifle beyond the<lb/>
borders of the United States<lb/>
again and called the Marine<lb/>
Corps a "debt collecting agency<lb/>
The radio to the mind is what<lb/>
the butcher, baker, grocer and<lb/>
milkman are to the stomach. It<lb/>
feeds the mind. And as the<lb/>
mind is above the stomach, so<lb/>
the radio is above all other con-<lb/>
tributions to civilization, and to<lb/>
an existence worth while.<lb/>
the greatest games ever played in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
First Game In 1924<lb/>
State and Duke, then Trinity,<lb/>
first met in football a decade<lb/>
ago. That 1924 game ended in a<lb/>
!4-0 victory for State. And it<lb/>
wasn't until 1028 that Duke was<lb/>
able to get a victory. That year<lb/>
Sam Buie and his Blue Devil<lb/>
mates edged a 14-12 victory over<lb/>
State in a thriller played on Rid-<lb/>
dick Field in Raleigh.<lb/>
Scores of games played in the<lb/>
series follow:<lb/>
1024?State 14. Duke 0.<lb/>
1025?State 13. Duke 0.<lb/>
1926? State 26, Duke 19.<lb/>
1927?State 20, Duke 18.<lb/>
1928?State 12, Duke 14.<lb/>
1929?State 12, Duke 19.<lb/>
1930?State 0, Duke 18.<lb/>
1931?State 14, Duke 0.<lb/>
1932?State 6, Duke 0.<lb/>
1933?State 0, Duke 7.<lb/>
The new shrine of Remem-<lb/>
brance, unveiled on Armistice<lb/>
Day at Melbourne, Australia, is<lb/>
so constructed that only at 11 a.<lb/>
m on November 11, Melbourne<lb/>
time, does the sun shine through<lb/>
to the Rock of Remembrance<lb/>
within.<lb/>
Gertrude Stein, the author<lb/>
who writes in mixed sentences<lb/>
and shuffled words, cancelled a<lb/>
speech at the University of Chi-<lb/>
cago because the officials found<lb/>
it impossible to keep the crowd<lb/>
down below 500.<lb/>
WILLIAM-MARY<lb/>
IS HELD TO A<lb/>
SCORELESS TIE<lb/>
(Continued from third page)<lb/>
left guard for 5 yards. Hassell<lb/>
gained 22 yards over center. 1<lb/>
and 10 for Pirates. Hassell gain-<lb/>
ed 11 yards on next two plays.<lb/>
1 and 10 for Pirates. Hassell<lb/>
gained 5 yards around right end.<lb/>
Ferebec failed to gain over cen-<lb/>
ter. Hassell tossed two passes<lb/>
that were ruled incomplete.<lb/>
Braves gained ball on downs.<lb/>
Valentine kicked to Pirates 25<lb/>
yard line. Valentine intercepted<lb/>
Ferebee's pass. Valentine fum-<lb/>
bled and Carpenter covered, giv-<lb/>
ing the ball to the Pirates on<lb/>
their own 28 yard line.<lb/>
Hassell went over center for<lb/>
8 yards. Ridenhour picked up 1<lb/>
yard over center. Jones kicked<lb/>
to Braves 27 yard line.<lb/>
Johnson failed to gain in 3<lb/>
plays. Valentine kicked to Pir-<lb/>
ates 40 yard line. Hassell gained<lb/>
5 yards around left end as quar-<lb/>
ter ends.<lb/>
Fourth Quarter<lb/>
Jones kicked to the Braves 10 j<lb/>
yard line. Johnson returned 12<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Johnson gained 3 yards in two!<lb/>
plays. Valentine kicked to Pir<lb/>
ates 45 yard line.<lb/>
Hassell gained 13 yards in two<lb/>
plays. 1 and 10 for Pirates. A.<lb/>
lateral Ferebee to Hassell was<lb/>
good for 9 yards. Ferebee gamed<lb/>
2 yards over left guard. 1 and<lb/>
10 for Pirates. Pass Hassell to<lb/>
L. Ridenhour completed on<lb/>
Braves 12 yard line, a gain of 25<lb/>
yards. 1 and 10 for Pirates. Fere-<lb/>
bee failed to gain over center.<lb/>
Davis intercepted Hassell's pass<lb/>
to his own 10 yard line.<lb/>
Valentine kicked to his own<lb/>
44 yard line.<lb/>
Brock intercepted Ferebee's<lb/>
pass and ran to the Pirates 47<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
Pass Dozier to Johnson for 6<lb/>
yards. Johnson over right guard<lb/>
for 6 yards. 1 and 10 for Braves.<lb/>
Dozier's next toss was intercept-<lb/>
ed by Jones on the Pirates 21<lb/>
yard line.<lb/>
Johnson gained 4 yards over<lb/>
left guard. Valentine kicked to<lb/>
the Pirates 20 yard line as the<lb/>
game ended.<lb/>
First Downs?E. C. T. C, 9;<lb/>
William and Mary, 5.<lb/>
Punt Average?E. C. T. C,<lb/>
40.6: Wrilliam and Mary 35.1.<lb/>
The Line-up:<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Wm. &amp; Mary<lb/>
Left End<lb/>
Lindsey Kyle<lb/>
Left Tackle<lb/>
Johnson Davis<lb/>
Left Guard<lb/>
Carpenter<lb/>
Center<lb/>
PLAYMAKERS ARE<lb/>
WELL RECEIVED<lb/>
(Continued from first page)<lb/>
ol awakening something within<lb/>
their pupils. He behoves that a<lb/>
new day is coming m Education<lb/>
when the capacities of the whole<lb/>
ty-fixm's but was denied them<lb/>
because her husband could not<lb/>
see beyond the sod that he<lb/>
plowed. The scene was laid m<lb/>
a bare cabin home that is typi-<lb/>
cal '?f SO many tenant farmers.<lb/>
"Quare Medicine Paul Greens<lb/>
first comedy was the last per-<lb/>
formance of the evening. The<lb/>
opening scene between old man<lb/>
Jernigan and Henry, his son,<lb/>
played by Kenneth Barlett and<lb/>
Carl Thompson was excellent,<lb/>
and quite ludicrous. Their com-<lb/>
Iments and tin singing off stage<lb/>
by Henry's wife, Mattie, com-<lb/>
pletely characterized that shrew-<lb/>
ish person. Her part was played<lb/>
by Ora Mae Davis who gave an<lb/>
 excellent interpretation of such<lb/>
a character. At the climax of<lb/>
'the play Henry's change was as<lb/>
J complete as it was thoroughly<lb/>
convincing. Doctor Emmanuel,<lb/>
tin quack doctor, who resembled<lb/>
somewhat a tribal medicine man,<lb/>
completely cured the submissive<lb/>
Henry, and the domineering<lb/>
Mattie, much to the approval of<lb/>
old man Jernigan. Henry was<lb/>
now the master of the house and<lb/>
Mattie obeyed bis every call<lb/>
The rytlmi of the speech of the<lb/>
quack doctor added to the atmis-<lb/>
phere of the play.<lb/>
The three plays were well<lb/>
staged and well acted. The char-<lb/>
acters were well chosen and<lb/>
Showed sympathic understanding<lb/>
of the parts thai they took. Car!<lb/>
Thompson showed his versatility<lb/>
and the effect of training by tak-<lb/>
ing three parts on the bill bring-<lb/>
ing a unique quality to each<lb/>
characterization.<lb/>
Tins was the first fall engage-<lb/>
ment of the Playmakers. which<lb/>
will end at Thanksgiving. They<lb/>
have appeared here a number of<lb/>
times previous to this engage-<lb/>
ment. This is their 32nd tour<lb/>
and includes Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
Woman s '1<lb/>
stud gri up<lb/>
Problems m Ri<lb/>
Countries 'j t<lb/>
six times v<lb/>
as leader.<lb/>
Dr. Lm <lb/>
that the Dran i<lb/>
Decembei 3rd<lb/>
student will be recognized and<lb/>
11 amed. He deplored the fact<lb/>
that when budgets had to be cut<lb/>
it was just such real essentials<lb/>
as music, domestic science, man-<lb/>
ual training and drama, which Mr Ve <lb/>
were cut out while mathematics I "Hell-Bent<lb/>
and latin were retained. In his cher Hug'<lb/>
travels about the country he has<lb/>
sensed a reaction to this, not on-<lb/>
ly upon the part of the students,<lb/>
but on the part of the parents.<lb/>
And teachers as well. He be-<lb/>
lieves that there is, and will be<lb/>
more actual rued for the teacher<lb/>
who is trained to give her stu-<lb/>
dents an understanding of life<lb/>
as it is expressed through the<lb/>
arts. In the new day of a more<lb/>
substantial economic security for<lb/>
the common man the instinct for<lb/>
age old expression in music and<lb/>
in drama will find itself reas-<lb/>
serted and fosteied by those<lb/>
who will be the teachers of to-<lb/>
morrow.<lb/>
His audience was composed of<lb/>
the members of the drama class,<lb/>
a group of High School students.<lb/>
and visitors from the town and<lb/>
faculty.<lb/>
lnnourww!<lb/>
A. A r. w.<lb/>
Mi- Ev<lb/>
corned a. a<lb/>
placed on<lb/>
tee<lb/>
At the<lb/>
ness uiei ?, ?<lb/>
kins. Pre<lb/>
gave a bri<lb/>
of th, . Xi<lb/>
?die atu '<lb/>
sometime .<lb/>
PBACTK 1 i rr.u<lb/>
) he ri gulai<lb/>
recital f  ?<lb/>
was held V-<lb/>
November 2!<lb/>
Building<lb/>
The 5tud<lb/>
the recital .<lb/>
Grace Ki e i<lb/>
en Tayl' i i.<lb/>
Westbra h<lb/>
Frances S;?<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
An added<lb/>
gram wa I<lb/>
bv Jack Hui<lb/>
lina and parti<lb/>
Maryland.<lb/>
Virginia and<lb/>
Professor Koch Speaks<lb/>
Professor Frederick Koch, the<lb/>
founder ami director of the<lb/>
Carolina Playmakers. talked to<lb/>
Miss Mary Dirnberger's class in<lb/>
drama Monday afternoon. Nov-<lb/>
ember 10. He stressed the need<lb/>
for the teachers who are capable<lb/>
On Monday evening, Novem-<lb/>
ber 10th, the A. A. U. W. met at<lb/>
the Parish House for their regu-<lb/>
lar meeting. Although the occa- by Cli<lb/>
s!n was largely social, a few<lb/>
important matters were present-<lb/>
ed and decided upon.<lb/>
The topic for the program was<lb/>
the "Youth Movement" Rev, W<lb/>
A. Ryan was, selected as speak-<lb/>
er.<lb/>
It was decided that because o?<lb/>
the many requests from mem-<lb/>
bers of other organizations to at-<lb/>
tend A. A I W. meetings thai<lb/>
the next one. that Will be held<lb/>
December 7th. would be open<lb/>
to the public.<lb/>
The A. A. U. W. is joining the<lb/>
Woman's Club and the Junior<lb/>
New Ringfegg<lb/>
Lyncrest<lb/>
FILL FASHIONED<lb/>
HOSE<lb/>
:??(? i'air<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co.<lb/>
"Known For Values'<lb/>
Jolly<lb/>
Right Guard<lb/>
Sinclair<lb/>
Right Tackle<lb/>
Bowen<lb/>
Right End<lb/>
Easom<lb/>
Quarterback<lb/>
L. Ridenhour<lb/>
Left Half<lb/>
Hassell<lb/>
Right Half<lb/>
Northcutt<lb/>
Fullback<lb/>
Ferebee<lb/>
Substitutions?E. C.<lb/>
Richardson<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Forehand<lb/>
Small<lb/>
Brock<lb/>
Davis<lb/>
Johnson<lb/>
Walker<lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
T. C, B.<lb/>
Rodenhour. Jones, Nobles, Ep-<lb/>
stein.<lb/>
William and Mary, Davis, Gar-<lb/>
rett, Simmons.<lb/>
Officials?Fleague (Davidson)<lb/>
Brock (Furman), Beatty (State).<lb/>
KEEP YOUR FEET<lb/>
OFF OF THE FLOOR<lb/>
Put Them In a Pair of<lb/>
BOUDOIR SLIPPERS<lb/>
We have a complete<lb/>
new stock in all colors<lb/>
and materials.<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
BOOT SH0PPE<lb/>
Five Points<lb/>
The Gloria Shoe Dept.<lb/>
MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT<lb/>
Chas. Home's Drug Store<lb/>
Opposite Proctor Hotel<lb/>
Sandwiches?Hot and ("old Drinks<lb/>
Served At Our Fountain<lb/>
HOME GROCERY STORE<lb/>
Fifth Street<lb/>
THE PLACE TO BUY YOUR NIC NACS<lb/>
?or?<lb/>
Your Large Orders For Holiday Meals<lb/>
WE DELIVER<lb/>
Phone 383<lb/>
DR. M. B. MASSEY<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 437<lb/>
Our Holiday Meals<lb/>
ARE SUPERIOR<lb/>
Allow Us To Prove It To You<lb/>
GREENVILLE CAFE<lb/>
Clean Wholesome Food to Tempt You<lb/>
APPEAR<lb/>
BEFORE YOUR FRIENDS AT HOME<lb/>
In One Of These Chic Creations<lb/>
?at?<lb/>
BLOOM'S<lb/>
Dresses For Every Type<lb/>
TRY?<lb/>
LAUTARES'<lb/>
?FIRST<lb/>
In Meeting Your<lb/>
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING DEMANDS<lb/>
Drink and Shop at the Same Time<lb/>
Lengthen the Life<lb/>
OF YOUR BEST-WEARING SHOES<lb/>
Let Us Repair Them For You <lb/>
E. T. GOOR, Jr.<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
We Have Representatives at the College<lb/>
You Need Not Hesitate<lb/>
i<lb/>
TO BUY HERE FOR CHRISTMAS<lb/>
NO MATTER HOW LARGE YOUR<lb/>
BUNDLES ARE?WE WILL<lb/>
DELIVER THEM TO THE<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
Charles Stores<lb/>
PRESIDENT'S<lb/>
TO UK HELDJ<lb/>
Volume<lb/>
v l<lb/>
P1 a c e m c 111<lb/>
Bureau Issue<lb/>
Good Rep<lb/>
h n ?<lb/>
(H<lb/>
M;ts ioi Chs, K i 3 n<lb/>
A <lb/>
1 '? "<lb/>
there<lb/>
year n<lb/>
The .<lb/>
Horn SelmaG<lb/>
French<lb/>
The<lb/>
Cn dl<lb/>
tinea te<lb/>
been <lb/>
Theatre Guilj<lb/>
Present Festil<lb/>
The Christi<lb/>
which th-<lb/>
Theatn G h<lb/>
? ,r  i ? <lb/>
engaged was<lb/>
Friday evei<lb/>
eight ??' .<lb/>
munity affaii<lb/>
was chai.<lb/>
Kiwanis Cl<lb/>
p? rimenl<lb/>
A pr jed<lb/>
The VJ<lb/>
val whi I : ? '<lb/>
of an imat<lb/>
ily. wi re i ttei<lb/>
Miss J Had<lb/>
ma Lei  I I<lb/>
the n leni<lb/>
the fai <lb/>
1934 <lb/>
. <lb/>
back ? ?<lb/>
I as ? rce<lb/>
older ? :<lb/>
many ten<lb/>
which th i<lb/>
The nexl<lb/>
reception ro<lb/>
lina home<lb/>
Christn a I<lb/>
festivities wen i '<lb/>
during thea<lb/>
living around<lb/>
gai I San n - I<lb/>
tc.ms of inften I<lb/>
corporated ??<lb/>
this scene incl id i<lb/>
mas deer hunt, brii  <lb/>
"back-log" by i: i I<lb/>
visit of "John Co na<lb/>
The mistress of<lb/>
manor was port<lb/>
G. Hiiton, h. I<lb/>
Played by Misa Ag<lb/>
ton, and hei :<lb/>
Morgan bj Miss H<lb/>
nis. Others ap earing<lb/>
scene Included W rti<lb/>
Sam Underwood, Ho<lb/>
snnth, Broodk Gii n<lb/>
Henderson. Billy C<lb/>
Scoville and hint B ? -<lb/>
sher.<lb/>
Every effort was made t<lb/>
this scene as glamorous a;<lb/>
We. Reproductions of<lb/>
American furniture of th<lb/>
eral period were lent by<lb/>
cal firm and a drum tab<lb/>
another. An "original" p<lb/>
the period was supplied<lb/>
antique shop. The costun<lb/>
copies from old hunting<lb/>
and from the pages of<lb/>
Ladies Rook "<lb/>
The final scene dealt w<lb/>
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