<?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>
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<lb/>
1) PLAYS TO<lb/>
BE GIVEN MARCH 21<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE TECO<lb/>
ECHO ADVERTISERS<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA TEACHERS COLLEGE<lb/>
XI<lb/>
Greenville, N. C, Wednesday, March 6, 1935.<lb/>
Numberl<lb/>
VT PER 22-23<lb/>
m<lb/>
to<lb/>
Ig<lb/>
at<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Basketball<lb/>
Tournament Opens To-day<lb/>
B. S. U. Conducts<lb/>
Church Services<lb/>
OUTSTANDING STUDENTS<lb/>
Outstanding East-<lb/>
 High School<lb/>
 l i inatine.<lb/>
i Hill<lb/>
IN<lb/>
"HA V<lb/>
AVOFRD<lb/>
m kv<lb/>
la<lb/>
ill OTIII R;<lb/>
IGI IN riRE<lb/>
! B. S5th<lb/>
NETT"<lb/>
fAK I I<lb/>
N 5 BE MONDAY,<lb/>
lRCH Hth.<lb/>
: ts Fr Tourna-<lb/>
iadc By Student<lb/>
Of Athletics, Jim-<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
 ketball Tourna-<lb/>
? lay, with about<lb/>
?. schoo basketball<lb/>
dance. Invitations<lb/>
A about eighty-<lb/>
. d the responses<lb/>
-ry enthusiastic.<lb/>
will be played in<lb/>
and High School<lb/>
I twelve a day are<lb/>
? many of the<lb/>
he Varsity squad of<lb/>
ill act as referees of<lb/>
-y is open to both<lb/>
I gh school teams,<lb/>
includ<lb/>
tridgeton,<lb/>
ck Ridge<lb/>
t H n<lb/>
Frances Ederton, President<lb/>
Of B. S. U Speaks To<lb/>
Memorial And Emmanuel<lb/>
Baptist Churches.<lb/>
Senior Normal Class Will<lb/>
Present Three One-Act Plays<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union had<lb/>
Charge of the Church Services at<lb/>
the Memorial Baptist Church on<lb/>
Sunday. February 24. and at the<lb/>
Immanucl Baptist Church, Sun-<lb/>
day, March 3. It was through<lb/>
these services that the Baptist<lb/>
people of Greenville became ac-<lb/>
quainted with Baptist Student<lb/>
Union work on the campus.<lb/>
The students who took part in<lb/>
the service were the Baptist<lb/>
Student Union workers including<lb/>
! the college students who sang in j<lb/>
Jthe choir, the ushers and the!<lb/>
?speakers on the program.<lb/>
The service opened with ai<lb/>
scripture reading by<lb/>
Piano Recital Is<lb/>
Well I tended ,<lb/>
Sayj Her Pray-<lb/>
b's Kin folks And<lb/>
Will Be Present-<lb/>
Hie students pictures above have been elected by the student body as the ten most<lb/>
outstanding students in school. They were elected on the basis of character, scholarship,<lb/>
leadership in high standards of politics, athletics, and other forms of extra curricular activi-<lb/>
ties, and possibility of future usefulness to business and society.<lb/>
Reading from left to right on first row are: Fiances Newsom, President of the Student<lb/>
Body; Lucy LeRoy, Vice-President of the Student Body; Frances Watson, acting President<lb/>
of the Y W. C. A Jimmy Carr, Student Manager of Athletics; Clyde Morton, Editor-in-<lb/>
Chief of the Teco Echo.<lb/>
Second row: Melba O'Brien, former President of the Y. W. C. A Ellen Jenkins, mem-<lb/>
ber of the Student Council: Ethel Vick, former secretary of the Student Council: Hattie Pearl<lb/>
Mallard, member of Student Council: and Katie Lee Johnson, also a member of the Student<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
' These students will be awarded a place in "Who Who Among Students in American<lb/>
Colleges This compilation is being made by H. Pettus Randall of Alabama University. The<lb/>
plan lias received highest approval by people who are outstanding in the college world of<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Piano Students A: sist ;i Bj<lb/>
Glee Club And Violin En-<lb/>
semble, Give Public Reci-<lb/>
tal February 21st.<lb/>
The public recital given Feb-<lb/>
ruary 21, by the members of the<lb/>
Piano Department assisted by the<lb/>
Glee Club and the Violin Ensem-<lb/>
ble was highly successful. It<lb/>
MARY DIRNBERGER TO<lb/>
DIRECT PRODUCTION<lb/>
Reh arsals Arc Being Held<lb/>
Daily. Catherine Shute,<lb/>
Elma Joyner And Merle<lb/>
Sasser Are Acting As As-<lb/>
sistants to The Director.<lb/>
The<lb/>
Washington,<lb/>
Dolores<lb/>
n. the<lb/>
Pactolus<lb/>
Smith. Frances Edgej"<lb/>
i president of the Baptist Studt<lb/>
Winter-<lb/>
 Union gave a talk<lb/>
i that it has done<lb/>
the work<lb/>
"The B. S. U<lb/>
vaneeboro, , <lb/>
, she stated, is an organization<lb/>
Grimesland, ,<lb/>
; formed on our campus to connect<lb/>
Jam- ?<lb/>
"GIP Party To Be Mereola Speaks At I Change Made In<lb/>
Held On April 6th<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
sville.<lb/>
! : i head, Bear Grass,<lb/>
Girls' teams enter-<lb/>
Is Ridge. Wmterville.<lb/>
Vaneeboro, Luca-<lb/>
sland, West Edge-<lb/>
? .esville. New Bern.<lb/>
Epson (Henderson), I<lb/>
iSS.<lb/>
first time that East<lb/>
!the students with the local<lb/>
Eve. I<lb/>
Smart<lb/>
 liAflflfi<lb/>
Miiur<lb/>
Teachers College has;t<lb/>
rnanwnt similar to<lb/>
East Carolina Tourna-<lb/>
hekl last year in Ral-<lb/>
they discontinued it<lb/>
Carr, Student Mana-<lb/>
. ties has charge of the<lb/>
? of the tournament.<lb/>
 be awarded to<lb/>
, : t teams, Monday<lb/>
WAN! BIRTH CONTROL<lb/>
TAl (,HT IN 1 OLLEGES<lb/>
. o (IP) ? The<lb/>
I irth control by ev-<lb/>
v. as advocated edi-<lb/>
the Cincinnati Bear-<lb/>
laduate newspaper of<lb/>
itj ? Cincinnati.<lb/>
rial asserted that the<lb/>
las are full of<lb/>
Baj<lb/>
: tist Churches, The students need<lb/>
?the help of the local church and<lb/>
j the local churches need their<lb/>
i youth. Before the B. S. U. was<lb/>
j organized many of the guis who<lb/>
(left this campus wire much far-<lb/>
ther away from God than they<lb/>
were when they came. 'God had<lb/>
no other tongue than our tongue<lb/>
to speak for him. No other hands<lb/>
but our hands to work lor him'<lb/>
so why do we not cooperate and<lb/>
do our best for him while we are<lb/>
here in college<lb/>
The next speaker was Eleanor<lb/>
Cuthrcll who gave a short talk<lb/>
on Rkigecrest, the seat of Bap-<lb/>
tist Student Union conventions.<lb/>
"Ridgecrest said the speaker,<lb/>
"is not a large place, in fact, it<lb/>
has only one large hotel which<lb/>
is made of wood. It is not the<lb/>
appearance of Ridgecrest that<lb/>
counts, but the purpose and the<lb/>
work which it represents. When<lb/>
Committees Have Been<lb/>
pointed. And Work<lb/>
Begun On The Affair.<lb/>
Ap-<lb/>
Has<lb/>
TO BE HELD IN THE<lb/>
CAMPUS BUILDING<lb/>
No Definite Plans Have Been<lb/>
Made Yet Concerning The<lb/>
Orchestra.<lb/>
Chapel Exercises Date Of Banquet<lb/>
Raymond Mereola, Member<lb/>
Of Byrd Expedition Ad-<lb/>
dresses Student. Body In<lb/>
The Tuesday Morning As-<lb/>
sembly.<lb/>
T<lb/>
i ne<lb/>
annual Junior-Senior Nor-<lb/>
mal party will be held this year<lb/>
on April 6th. The date was first<lb/>
reserved for the Junior-Senior<lb/>
Banquet, but was changed so<lb/>
that arrangements with the or-<lb/>
chestra could be made, and the<lb/>
date has beer, reserved for the<lb/>
?C-D' affair.<lb/>
Eleanor Taylor, President of<lb/>
the Class has appointed commit-<lb/>
tees to make arrangements for<lb/>
the occasion. Since the class has<lb/>
not definitely decided on what<lb/>
Junior-Senior Banquet Will<lb/>
Be Held April 13th Instead<lb/>
Of April 6th.<lb/>
JLMMY POYNER TO PLAY<lb/>
Senior Normal Class of<lb/>
allege has chosen three<lb/>
one-act plays to be presented in<lb/>
the Austin Auditorium March 21.<lb/>
The play will be given one night<lb/>
only.<lb/>
Mary Dirnberger, director of<lb/>
composition of Dennee playedby 1 Community Drama, will direct<lb/>
Azalene Southerland. This num- ? P18 This W"T be the<lb/>
her was followed by "Lullaby" fourth bill of plays directed by<lb/>
from Schutt played by Xylda)11' : l' '?'? "iiiin<lb/>
Cooper<lb/>
jussen.<lb/>
was well attended by the college jthe C<lb/>
students and Greenville people.<lb/>
The program was given in the<lb/>
Campus Building.<lb/>
The first number on the pro-<lb/>
gram was "In the Canyon a<lb/>
'Forest Sprites Tor-<lb/>
by Annie Lee Britt<lb/>
have been highly successful.<lb/>
The first play will be "The<lb/>
"Nachtstuck Opus 23. Number: Duchess Says Her Prayers<lb/>
4, from Schumann, by Clifton; The scene is laid in Renaissance,<lb/>
Crawford; ?'Etide in B Flat" from ! paly. The Duchess, Beatrice<lb/>
Schytte played by Elizabeth Tol-Jrj'&amp;te will be played by Polly<lb/>
son; "Arabesque 2. debussy by i Melvin. The part of Cecelia<lb/>
Nola Walters: "Music Box from will b<lb/>
? ? urn or moon- kind of party to have a commit-<lb/>
you are up on the moun J R<lb/>
tain, you are much nearer to. J <lb/>
God<lb/>
The last speaker was Ida<lb/>
?Townsend. She enumerated the<lb/>
"Reasons for Going to Church<lb/>
jShe quoted the three beautiful<lb/>
mepoems and closed her talk by<lb/>
 saying that what we did towards<lb/>
Ella Turner Atkins, Billie Newell,<lb/>
Bertie Lee Sawyer, Ellis Jones,<lb/>
Betty Hay wood, and Hazel Bar-<lb/>
bee has been appointed to make<lb/>
the decision.<lb/>
- The committee to engage an<lb/>
orchestra is made up of Billy<lb/>
 and charged that ng thal vmu We ??J?? Williams Carolyn R.ddick, Betty<lb/>
of birth control in- wprking for Chr,st would be H?kargtt HUlburn and<lb/>
?suits m "the survival: ent thal an who saw us ne, mars<lb/>
and a decline in the I i . ?<lb/>
race, is detrimental<lb/>
Ifare of man and there-<lb/>
social measure<lb/>
1 some of the details<lb/>
ft. I and most efficient<lb/>
of contraception and<lb/>
I tded:<lb/>
atioa on this important<lb/>
too little known. Ev-<lb/>
 sh4 uld offer instruc-<lb/>
ung men and women<lb/>
f continuing the pres-<lb/>
val taboos<lb/>
GRIEVES BECAUSE HER<lb/>
COLLEGE DAYS ARE OVER<lb/>
 t . 11<lb/>
I) 1 IT? n i i J<lb/>
 i<lb/>
iarvey<lb/>
iir Floor<lb/>
NICKNAMES DO A LOT<lb/>
RRK HARM THAN GOOD<lb/>
An<lb/>
York?(IP)?-Nicknames<lb/>
Idren do a lot more harm<lb/>
i. according to the re-<lb/>
r a study reported by the<lb/>
an Orthopsychiatric As-<lb/>
o-jation watched the<lb/>
' ' I nicknames on 235 boys<lb/>
I ?5 mils living in cottage-<lb/>
ii 'itutions.<lb/>
It r md that more than 95 per<lb/>
cent i f the nicknames only pro-<lb/>
: ill -feeling, resentment and<lb/>
? Of<lb/>
Among the boys, 39 per cent of<lb/>
Kknames were taken from<lb/>
Personality defects, 32 per cent<lb/>
 i physical defects and only<lb/>
? n per cent were the result of<lb/>
affection for the individual.<lb/>
Among trie giris 32 per cent of<lb/>
Los Angeles?(IP) ?Seventy-<lb/>
three-year-old Mrs. Adolphinej<lb/>
Kaufman is grieving because herj.<lb/>
college days are over at last.<lb/>
For the last ten years she has<lb/>
been a student at the University<lb/>
of Southern California. Last<lb/>
week she was standing in line,<lb/>
waiting "to register for the next<lb/>
term when someone jostled her.<lb/>
causing her to fall and break her<lb/>
hip.<lb/>
She was taken to the hospital,<lb/>
weeping because she would have<lb/>
to stop studying at college now.<lb/>
Mildred Fuller, Lewellyn<lb/>
Thornton, Hazel Wilkerson, Pris-<lb/>
cilla West, Ida B. Stocks, Mildred<lb/>
LassiUr, Sallie Proctor, Martha<lb/>
Y elver ton and Sue Abernethy<lb/>
compose the decoration commit-<lb/>
Mary Banks is Chairman of<lb/>
the refreshment committee. Those ed why.<lb/>
Raymond Mereola who was a<lb/>
member of Byrd's first expedi-<lb/>
tion to the Antarctic regions gave<lb/>
to the students ofhe College a<lb/>
thrilling account of his exper-<lb/>
iences on February 26th.<lb/>
He first told of his efforts in<lb/>
getting accepted, showing his per-<lb/>
sistence. In spite of repeated<lb/>
failures, he followed the party<lb/>
to New Zealand where he joined<lb/>
them. He told of the conditions<lb/>
on which they were accepted and<lb/>
that the wages were a penny for<lb/>
two years, but said there was not<lb/>
one who went with the first ex-<lb/>
pedition who would not go with<lb/>
the second. He not only gave a<lb/>
report of the scientific work of<lb/>
the Commission, but told of the<lb/>
daily life of the men and the<lb/>
ways in which they managed to<lb/>
pass the time during the six<lb/>
months of darkness. A schoo!<lb/>
was formed, which saved some<lb/>
of them from going crazy, he be-<lb/>
lieves.<lb/>
He said there is no guess work<lb/>
about the findings of the Byrd<lb/>
expedition, because they were<lb/>
scientifically calculated and re-<lb/>
corded from direct communica-<lb/>
tion. He gave a brief report of<lb/>
what Byrd had done for the<lb/>
cause of science and for America.<lb/>
He corrected a number of er-<lb/>
roneous ideas that people have<lb/>
about it. There is no life there<lb/>
save whales, and penguins, and a<lb/>
few seals and birds, and explain-<lb/>
Idea Of French Cabaret To<lb/>
Be Carried Out In Modern-<lb/>
istic Style. Entire Affair<lb/>
To Be Held In Campus<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
Liebach, by Edna Whitley: "To<lb/>
a Wild Rose MacDowell. by<lb/>
Alma Winslow: "Hungarian<lb/>
MacDowell. by Carolyn Hamric:<lb/>
"To a Water Lily MacDowell.<lb/>
and "dountry Gardens Grain-<lb/>
ger, by Edith Marslencler: and<lb/>
"Nocturne Greig, and "March j<lb/>
of the Dwarfs also from Greig, <lb/>
and played by Edith Marslender,<lb/>
taken by Mary Elizabeth<lb/>
Barker. Lodevicio will be play-<lb/>
ed by C. O. Armstrong.<lb/>
Kathryn Shute is serving as<lb/>
the Assistant to the Director.<lb/>
The second play "Jobs Kin-<lb/>
folks is written by Loretta<lb/>
i Carroll Bailey. Mrs. Bailey<lb/>
wrote "Cloey billed in the first<lb/>
group of plays given under the<lb/>
DESIRE AID FOR<lb/>
PAROCHIAL SCHOOLS<lb/>
Columbus. O.?(IP)?For sev-<lb/>
eral years Ohio's Catholics have<lb/>
been attempting to get state aid<lb/>
for parochial schools. Always<lb/>
this state's rural, protestant leg-<lb/>
islators have defeated the at-<lb/>
tempt.<lb/>
Now the Catholics are trying<lb/>
a new stunt. They have intro-<lb/>
duced a bill calling for state aid<lb/>
for parochial schools and for all<lb/>
colleges which give preliminary-<lb/>
teacher training courses.<lb/>
There are a lot of Protestant<lb/>
 nicknames were<lb/>
E S, - ,C? in On,o givi?g teacner a<lb/>
auction instead of defects. j training courses<lb/>
assisting her are Hattie Hillburn,<lb/>
Sara Lee Yates, Sara Whitley,<lb/>
Mary Helen Hammond, Flora<lb/>
Teague, Ida Kay Hare, and Eliza-<lb/>
beth Peebles.<lb/>
The program committee is<lb/>
composed of Lucy McLawhorn,<lb/>
Eleanor Hardy, Marilyn Hender-<lb/>
son, Margaret Lewis and Texie<lb/>
Sowers.<lb/>
The bid committee is composed<lb/>
of Elizabeth Singleton, Edith<lb/>
Morgan, Wilson Blalock and<lb/>
Kathleen Saunders.<lb/>
The committee to collect class<lb/>
dues is composed of Rebecca<lb/>
Watson, Chairman, assisted by<lb/>
Ruby Lucas, Louise Sanderson,<lb/>
Henrietta Pritchard and Mary L.<lb/>
Banks.<lb/>
These committees have orga-<lb/>
nized and work has begun on<lb/>
the affair.<lb/>
The men of the Massachusetts<lb/>
Institute of Technology (Boston)<lb/>
and the women of Radcliffe Col-<lb/>
lege will have a debate on the<lb/>
advisability of "dutch treats"<lb/>
"dates<lb/>
He closed by paying a most<lb/>
glowing tribute to Byrd and<lb/>
made the students want to hear<lb/>
about the present expedition. He<lb/>
excited great interest in students<lb/>
about the present expedition, so<lb/>
they will follow it more intelli-<lb/>
gently.<lb/>
The date of the Junior-Senior<lb/>
Banquet has been changed from<lb/>
April 6th, to one week later.<lb/>
April 13th. The change was<lb/>
made since the orchestra selected<lb/>
to play for the dancing could not<lb/>
come on the date first set.<lb/>
Jimmy Joyner and his State<lb/>
College Collegians will play for<lb/>
the occasion.<lb/>
The idea of a French Cabaret<lb/>
will be carried out. The entire<lb/>
program of the evening will be<lb/>
held in the Campus Building,<lb/>
none of it taking place in the<lb/>
Dining Room as has been the<lb/>
custom of former years. Guests<lb/>
will be seated at tables for four,<lb/>
and will be served by maids<lb/>
wearing the provincial black and<lb/>
white of French maids. Fresh-<lb/>
men taking Home Economics will<lb/>
act as waitresses. Home Econo-<lb/>
mics Sophomores will act as<lb/>
pages, wearing identical cos-<lb/>
tumes with those of the wait-<lb/>
resses. Two floor shows have<lb/>
been planned for.<lb/>
The color scheme of black,<lb/>
white and red will be carried out<lb/>
in a modernistic style. Geomet-<lb/>
ric figures wall be used also for<lb/>
decorations.<lb/>
Invitations for the affair have<lb/>
been selected, and all the needed<lb/>
decorations have been ordered.<lb/>
Actual work will be begun as<lb/>
soon as they arrive.<lb/>
PITT COUNTY CLUB<lb/>
BEEN ORGANIZED<lb/>
gram given<lb/>
dents.<lb/>
The Glee Club under the direc-<lb/>
tion of Miss Gussie Kuykendall<lb/>
sang "Love's A Merchant writ-<lb/>
? community drama project pre-<lb/>
composed the part of the pro-sented here last falli that proVed<lb/>
by the piano stu- J to bo such a pc,pUiar success.<lb/>
This play is also a favorite of the<lb/>
Carolina Playmakers, and is pre-<lb/>
sented quite often by them. The<lb/>
, part of Kizzie will be played by<lb/>
ten by Molly Carew and an Eng-1 yna Tatum. Maribland Albrit-<lb/>
lish Hunting Song. "John Peel j ton will have the part of Kate,<lb/>
The Violin Ensemble rendered ? and Jackie Strickland will play-<lb/>
most beautifully a group of the part of Katherine. Estelle<lb/>
French Folk Tunes. Rondina. on<lb/>
a Beethoven Theme, by Grieler.<lb/>
This was the first public re Carl<lb/>
cital of the year. It is customary'<lb/>
for the Music Department to<lb/>
give one or more public recitals<lb/>
during a school year. The de-<lb/>
partment has progressed rapidly<lb/>
in the past year or so, so much<lb/>
so that it was necessary to en-<lb/>
gage another teacher of Piano to<lb/>
accommodate all those students<lb/>
who desired to take.<lb/>
will be played by Mary Credle.<lb/>
Perry King will have the part of<lb/>
VIOLIN ENSEMBLE<lb/>
GIVES PROGRAM<lb/>
Ninety freshmen at Wellesley<lb/>
College (Mass.) have offered<lb/>
themselves as subjects for a cold<lb/>
preventive experiment being<lb/>
conducted there.<lb/>
DANCING COURSE<lb/>
on<lb/>
A course in Natural Danc-<lb/>
ing will be offered by Miss<lb/>
Sara G. Summerville in the<lb/>
spring term. The coarse will<lb/>
be offered as Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion 105. All those who wish<lb/>
to take the course are asked<lb/>
to see Miss Sommerville, head<lb/>
of the Physical Education<lb/>
department before Registra-<lb/>
tion Day.<lb/>
A Pitt County Club has been<lb/>
organized by the students who<lb/>
are attending East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College from Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty. The initial meeting was held<lb/>
last week at which time the<lb/>
club was organized and officers<lb/>
were elected. Hyatt Forrest was<lb/>
elected President of the club and<lb/>
Esther Mae Dennis, Vice-Presi-<lb/>
dent. Godfrey Oakley is serving<lb/>
as Secretary and Treasurer. The<lb/>
purpose of the club is entirely<lb/>
social, and all students from Pitt<lb/>
county are eligible for member-<lb/>
ship. The next meeting will be<lb/>
held on March 19th, and all those<lb/>
students who are eligible are<lb/>
urged to attend.<lb/>
The East Carolina Tea ei<lb/>
College Violin Ensemble with<lb/>
Miss Louise Nagle as gm I pia-<lb/>
nist presented a beaut pro-<lb/>
gram in an "Hour of Music"<lb/>
given in Austin Auditorium, on<lb/>
Sunday afternoon, February 10.<lb/>
This is the second time the En-<lb/>
semble has given a Sunday after-<lb/>
noon program. Both programs<lb/>
have been highly enjoyable.<lb/>
The Ensemble is made up of a<lb/>
small voluntary group composed<lb/>
of members of the faculty and<lb/>
some students who enjoy playing<lb/>
together once a week.<lb/>
Miss Louise Nagle, teacher of<lb/>
Piano, delighted the audience<lb/>
with her beautiful playing. Her<lb/>
three selections were happily<lb/>
chosen, two from Mendolssohn<lb/>
and one from Chopin.<lb/>
Her playing was marked by<lb/>
splendid rhythm, musical inter-<lb/>
pretation and clear-cut, clean<lb/>
tones, that highly delighted her<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
Dr. C. K. Leith, famed Univer-<lb/>
sity of Wisconsin (Madison) geo-<lb/>
logist, has been awarded the<lb/>
Penrose medal for outstanding<lb/>
geological work.<lb/>
Elma Joyner will serve as the<lb/>
assistant to the director.<lb/>
The last play "Rosalie" is a<lb/>
French Farce written by Max<lb/>
Meure. Minnie Ross will play<lb/>
the part of Rosalie. Monsieur<lb/>
will be played by Billy Tolson.<lb/>
3rs rl Sasser will be the as-<lb/>
sistant to the director.<lb/>
The Senior-Normal Class will<lb/>
follow the precedence established<lb/>
several years ago of giving one-<lb/>
act plaj nstead of one long<lb/>
Everj Senior-Normal<lb/>
lass in thi history of the school<lb/>
has had dramatic entertainment<lb/>
Ei : the public This includes a<lb/>
long list of successful perfor-<lb/>
mances reaching back to the<lb/>
very first classes to receive diplo-<lb/>
mas from the school.<lb/>
BERTIE STUDENTS<lb/>
ORGANIZE CLUB<lb/>
The students registered in col-<lb/>
lege from Bertie County met<lb/>
Tuesday night, January 19th, to<lb/>
organize a club. The following<lb/>
officers were chosen. President,<lb/>
Janie Sessoms; Vice-President,<lb/>
Sara White; Secretary, Blanche<lb/>
White; Treasurer, Elizabeth Gil-<lb/>
lam: Teco Echo Reporter, Sara<lb/>
White.<lb/>
Suggestions were made rela-<lb/>
tive to social activities during the<lb/>
Spring Quarter, including hikes,<lb/>
picnics and social meetings.<lb/>
Victory does not count nearly<lb/>
so much as how you play the<lb/>
game.?Gene Tunney,<lb/>
The legislature of Texas has<lb/>
killed a resolution which would<lb/>
have given former Gov. Alfalfa<lb/>
Bill Murray a professorship at<lb/>
the University of Texas (Austin).<lb/>
They did admit, however, that he<lb/>
is a "profound thinker<lb/>
UNIVERSITY OF HAVANA<lb/>
STUDENTS GO ON STRIKE<lb/>
Havana ?(IP)?Students of<lb/>
the University of Havana, who<lb/>
went on a strike last week in<lb/>
protest against the present Cu-<lb/>
ban government, were given the<lb/>
support of the University's facul-<lb/>
ty, which also went on record<lb/>
censuring the government of<lb/>
President Carlos Mendieta for<lb/>
"the anarchy and disorder now<lb/>
prevalent<lb/>
I<lb/>
H<lb/>
<pb facs="00038028_0002"/><lb/>
Page Two<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Wednesday, Mar:<lb/>
Wednesday. Mi<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Published Bi-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 Josephine Ranes<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/>
and Carolyn Brinkley.<lb/>
Advertising Managers<lb/>
Helen Davis. Chessie Edmundson, Jewel Cole,<lb/>
Billie Vogler, Elizabeth Wilson. Lola Holt,<lb/>
and Mary Alice Starr.<lb/>
Circulation Managers<lb/>
Elma Joyner, Blanche White, Annie Lee Jones,<lb/>
Frances Edgerton. Lois Leakc, 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/>
MEMBER<lb/>
Associated (goUeoiatt rcss<lb/>
034 foflialf BiofOt ?sa<lb/>
HMMtOM wscoitsm<lb/>
Wednesday, March 6, 1935.<lb/>
CAMPUS OFFICIALS TO BE CHOSEN<lb/>
Elections for campus officials for next<lb/>
year will be soon. The new system installed<lb/>
this year will eliminate the confusion of<lb/>
several election days since all major campus<lb/>
officials will be voted on the same day.<lb/>
If East Carolina Teachers College con-<lb/>
tinues to advance the way that she has in<lb/>
the last few years, capable student leaders<lb/>
are necessary. A well organized student<lb/>
council cannot function well if capable coun-<lb/>
cil members are not elected. A publication<lb/>
cannot be representative of the student body<lb/>
if its heads and their staff do not work for<lb/>
the best.<lb/>
No doubt, as long as there have been or-<lb/>
ganized units on the campus, the cry has al-<lb/>
ways arose, imploring that students think<lb/>
twice before they vote. No matter how<lb/>
long East Carolina Teachers College lives,<lb/>
that plea will always be issued, and may we<lb/>
add. wisely. Many tirnes votes are cast<lb/>
Without even a thought as to what kind of<lb/>
officers they will make. A run down cam-<lb/>
pus organization will result if careful steps<lb/>
are not taken.<lb/>
There is a surprising lack of politics on<lb/>
this campus. That is well. Students are not<lb/>
in the clutches of persistent campaign mana-<lb/>
gers, who are trying to get some particular<lb/>
person elected to a position. Since that<lb/>
campus political machine is absent students<lb/>
are allowed to use their own intelligence in<lb/>
voting. Since this condition of freedom does<lb/>
exist, and they are not handicapped they are<lb/>
requested to vote intelligently.<lb/>
An attractive personality, a jovial man-<lb/>
ner and a wide acquaintance are surely de-<lb/>
sirable traits, for an officer. But their re-<lb/>
quirements should not stop there. Many<lb/>
times votes are cast for "my roommate or<lb/>
because "I surely to like her" or "I think<lb/>
she's cute with never a serious thought<lb/>
whether or not that prospective council<lb/>
member, for example, is willing to uphold<lb/>
the rules of the student government associa-<lb/>
tion. With never a thought in regard to the<lb/>
fact that she would make a good officer or<lb/>
not.<lb/>
If each school year is to be progressive<lb/>
as the last then progressive officers must be<lb/>
chosen.<lb/>
FOR MORE SOCIAL ACTIVITIES<lb/>
WELCOME, ATHLETES<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College has<lb/>
taken steps toward broadening social life on<lb/>
the campus. The formal dinner held recent-<lb/>
ly was quite successful and the tea given last<lb/>
Sunday afternoon was most enjoyable.<lb/>
The development of social ease should be<lb/>
a very important part of every ones educa-<lb/>
tion, but even more so in that of the teach-<lb/>
ers, whose personality and conduct should<lb/>
be beyond reproach. Besides being an inval-<lb/>
uable aid, social etiquette gives one confi-<lb/>
dence in his contact with the public, a feel-<lb/>
ing of responsibility and desire for gain that<lb/>
lends the final touch to happiness and ap-<lb/>
preciation of life.<lb/>
College life is a period of intensive<lb/>
training and culture. Certainly that in-<lb/>
cludes social activity. . Although having<lb/>
been somewhat lacking in the past, its neces-<lb/>
sity has been realized, and by mutual con-<lb/>
sent, we eagerly accept it as an enjoyable<lb/>
privilege.<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College extends<lb/>
a cordial welcome to all high school stu-<lb/>
dents participating in the basketball tourna-<lb/>
ment that is being held on the campus now.<lb/>
We are glad that Greenville and East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College are the hosts to<lb/>
the Eastern North Carolina High School<lb/>
Basketball Tournament. It is a pleasure to<lb/>
have the high school athletes on the campus<lb/>
and about the town.<lb/>
Athletes are certainly an outstanding<lb/>
factor in any high school. They serve to<lb/>
develop a spirit of cooperation and to create<lb/>
a general friendly relationship between the<lb/>
members of the squad. Not only that but a<lb/>
fine physical body can result only through<lb/>
exercise. Basketball is a splendid way to<lb/>
get this exercise. Outstanding athletes<lb/>
prove to be outstanding students whether<lb/>
they be high school or college students. It<lb/>
is through their playing that a spirit of ath-<lb/>
letics is built up in their school, and this re-<lb/>
sults in a fine school spirit.<lb/>
This gathering of Eastern North Caro-<lb/>
lina athletes will not only create a strong<lb/>
competition for the best team but it will<lb/>
serve to broaden the acquaintances of the<lb/>
members of the squad.<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College is play-<lb/>
ing host to you, high school athletes. The<lb/>
campus is for your inspection. We hope<lb/>
that some day you will choose this college<lb/>
for your college. This is one reason why we<lb/>
are glad that the tournament is being held<lb/>
in Greenville this year. It will give you a<lb/>
chance to see the plant of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College.<lb/>
May your stay here be pleasant. We, the<lb/>
students of East Carolina Teachers College,<lb/>
extend to you, Eastern Carolina High School<lb/>
athletes, a hearty welcome.<lb/>
PLANS FOR HARVARD<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass.? (IP)?In a recent<lb/>
address, Dr. James B. Conant, youthful<lb/>
president of Harvard University, indicated<lb/>
that he intends to make the ancient institu-<lb/>
tion a truly "national university<lb/>
"The privately endowed universities in<lb/>
the United States he said, "have a common<lb/>
duty to the country at large which differs<lb/>
in no significant way from the duty of the<lb/>
state universities.<lb/>
"It is our task to provide the best possi-<lb/>
ble higher education for the youths of the<lb/>
land who are anxious to obtain the training<lb/>
which a university affords. This opportunity<lb/>
should be open to all of promise without re-<lb/>
gard to the financial status of their parents.<lb/>
"Anyone who looks at the geographical<lb/>
distribution of our students will agree that<lb/>
we are a national university.<lb/>
"It is my desire to increase further the<lb/>
number of students who come from outside<lb/>
New England and, in particular, to make<lb/>
available our educational opportunities to<lb/>
those who would like to come to us from a<lb/>
distance but have little or no ready cash. To<lb/>
do this I have revised our scholarship policy<lb/>
and established for a period of years the<lb/>
Harvard College Prize Fellowships in the<lb/>
states of Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,<lb/>
Minnesota and Wisconsin<lb/>
Dr. Conant said he hoped to expand the<lb/>
plan to include all of the west as soon as<lb/>
funds became available.<lb/>
WE NEED COOPERATION<lb/>
Cooperation is the central figure of<lb/>
achievement and a necessary element in any<lb/>
student body. Ours does not run contrary<lb/>
to the usual type. Without cooperation, or-<lb/>
ganization would not be possible whether<lb/>
that organization refers to the class organi-<lb/>
zations, the clubs, or the college adminstra-<lb/>
tion itself. The motto of our college is "To<lb/>
Serve and to serve successfully and do our<lb/>
best is impossible if cooperation is lacking.<lb/>
Cooperation serves to create a wider<lb/>
scope of friendship among fellow students.<lb/>
Certainly work on committees creates the<lb/>
need for cooperation, and surely such work<lb/>
brings individuals in closer contact with<lb/>
each other, making for better friends.<lb/>
Cooperation can produce successful<lb/>
leaders, and certainly no organization can<lb/>
function without capable leaders. Coopera-<lb/>
tion of individuals is also a necessary factor.<lb/>
Our own idea for a debate: "Resolved,<lb/>
That a Man Can Become a Bigger Fool Over<lb/>
a Woman than a Woman Can Become Over<lb/>
a Man<lb/>
Ruts are easy to get into. The way to<lb/>
get out is a sharp turn in a new direction.<lb/>
You may break a wheel, but you'll get out.<lb/>
17<lb/>
(Sollcoialc Bcsf<lb/>
Wtf<lb/>
I<lb/>
The co-ed with the most deli-<lb/>
cious sense of humor in all<lb/>
America, we think, is a girl,<lb/>
whose real name is unknown, at<lb/>
the University of Iowa (Iowa<lb/>
City).<lb/>
A student Methodist conven-<lb/>
tion was in progress on that cam-<lb/>
pus the other day and dates were<lb/>
provided for some of the out-of-<lb/>
state boys. One of these young<lb/>
men was presented with a large<lb/>
buxom girl for the evening.<lb/>
Somehow he caught the phrase<lb/>
"Margaret Hall" and associated<lb/>
it with his new partner. As the<lb/>
evening wore on, he introduced<lb/>
his partner to all his friends as<lb/>
Margaret Hall, and, since the girl<lb/>
said nothing, naturally presumed<lb/>
the name was correct.<lb/>
Think, then, of his consterna-<lb/>
tion when he wa sinformed hours<lb/>
later that "Margaret Hall" was<lb/>
the women's dormitory!<lb/>
Simile: As cast down as the<lb/>
student who spent a year ridding<lb/>
himself of "b. o and then found<lb/>
out people didn't like him any-<lb/>
way.<lb/>
The annual winter fuss over<lb/>
the discharges and resignations of<lb/>
football coaches occupies student<lb/>
attention in a fistfull of univer-<lb/>
sities; but in nearly all schools<lb/>
the students, whose ranks pro-<lb/>
vide the players and for whom<lb/>
the game originally was intended,<lb/>
have little or nothing to say about<lb/>
the affairs of their athletic de-<lb/>
partments.<lb/>
At the University of Nevada<lb/>
(Reno) there is a body called the<lb/>
Associated Students who thought<lb/>
they had some control over the<lb/>
destiny of their coach?until an<lb/>
administrative committee stepped<lb/>
in.<lb/>
Freshmen players at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Oklahoma (Norman)<lb/>
rose up in arms, too, about the<lb/>
possible resignation of their coach<lb/>
and no doubt many of the stu-<lb/>
dents at Louisiana State Univer-<lb/>
sity (Baton Rouge) had some<lb/>
definite ideas about the parting<lb/>
of Biff Jones after his fight with<lb/>
Senator Long?but with a cen-<lb/>
sored student press their ideas<lb/>
had to remain in their heads.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
There is real student power at<lb/>
the University of Washington<lb/>
(Seattle), however. The student<lb/>
organization there not only hires,<lb/>
fires and determines pay of<lb/>
coaches, but runs all student ac-<lb/>
tivities, including mammoth co-<lb/>
operative book store.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Toast by the Daily Orange, of<lb/>
Syracuse University (N. Y.):<lb/>
"To the ladies, who are like<lb/>
watches, pretty enough to look<lb/>
at, sweet faces and delicate<lb/>
hands, but somewhat difficult to<lb/>
regulate when set going<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Optimismi: Both James and<lb/>
Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr filled<lb/>
in blanks on their Harvard matri-<lb/>
culation record this year, and for<lb/>
"permanent address" wrote in<lb/>
"The White House, Washington<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
There is a wrestler at the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Minnesota (Minneapo-<lb/>
lis) who is going to amount to<lb/>
something some day.<lb/>
He was consigned to the col-<lb/>
lege hospital for measles a few<lb/>
days before a big wrestling meet.<lb/>
As the day drew near the boy<lb/>
grew more fidgety, afraid he<lb/>
would be in poor shape, even if<lb/>
he got out of his ward in time.<lb/>
So one morning he locked the<lb/>
door of the ward, hauled other<lb/>
measle-sufferers from bed, threw<lb/>
the mattresses on the floor?and<lb/>
got them to wrestle with him. He<lb/>
kept in shape, all right, and was<lb/>
released in time for the meet. But<lb/>
the other boys?well, all of them<lb/>
went back to bed with increased<lb/>
temperatures, and could not leave<lb/>
when their terms were up.<lb/>
? ? ? <lb/>
Prof. E. A. Ross, chairman of<lb/>
the sociology department at the<lb/>
University of Wisconsin (Madi-<lb/>
son), joins the list of listers-of-<lb/>
the-outstanding-men-of-1934.<lb/>
They are, he says: President<lb/>
Roosevelt, Senator George W.<lb/>
Norris, Senator Gerald P. Nye,<lb/>
Upton Sinclair, Donald Richberg,<lb/>
Rear Admiral Byrd, Heywood<lb/>
Broun, Senator Huey Long, Hen-<lb/>
ry Wallace and Senator Robert<lb/>
M. LaFollette, Jr.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
Aha! Sabotage! American stu-<lb/>
dents in German universities, it<lb/>
is said, when forced to salute<lb/>
Hitler demonstrations, raise their<lb/>
hands and shout, "Heel Hitler<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Freshman at Harvard Univer-<lb/>
sity (Cambridge, Mass.), noting a<lb/>
bulletin headed "Dates for Eng-<lb/>
lish Examinations remarked<lb/>
that there are hardly any func-<lb/>
tions to which a fellow can go<lb/>
stag anymore.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
A psychology professor at Sy-<lb/>
racuse University, (N. Y.), was<lb/>
showing his class how sudden<lb/>
emotions will produce perspira-<lb/>
tion on .the hands. A co-ed in<lb/>
the class was blindfolded and the<lb/>
instrument attached to her hand.<lb/>
Suddenly the male professor<lb/>
kissed her and the class swears<lb/>
the frantically waving needle on<lb/>
the instrument did not return to<lb/>
normal for a quarter of an hour.<lb/>
? ? ? ?<lb/>
Another argument for the vir-<lb/>
tue of higher education is seen in<lb/>
the recent statement by Warden<lb/>
Lewis E. Lawes, of Sing Sing<lb/>
prison, that college graduates<lb/>
make very good prisoners.<lb/>
THE ULTIMA RATIO<lb/>
The first choice bit that comes<lb/>
to me this week is "Who are the<lb/>
two girls in the new dining<lb/>
room who cannot keep from<lb/>
looking at Charles Ivey Bunn. 1<lb/>
understand that one of them is<lb/>
from Spring Hope, and the other<lb/>
from Columbia.<lb/>
And Catherine Woodall we<lb/>
hear almost broke her neck one<lb/>
morning last week to finish<lb/>
breakfast in order that she might<lb/>
go uptown and get back in a hur-<lb/>
ry. Catherine did just that only<lb/>
to find out when she got up<lb/>
there that the stores would not<lb/>
be open for about an hour.<lb/>
We also see that some one has<lb/>
put a light in the region of ye<lb/>
olde ice boxee. We wonder<lb/>
why? That corner surely is il-<lb/>
luminated now. And one more<lb/>
quarter is gone. To the Prac-<lb/>
tice Teachers that means heaven.<lb/>
About the best one that we've<lb/>
heard in a long time is the one<lb/>
on one certain council member.<lb/>
She went to church one night and<lb/>
came back by her dormitory, and<lb/>
forgot to sign in until about ten<lb/>
o'clock. When she went down<lb/>
to the office to sign in some one<lb/>
made the remark that it might<lb/>
leave the impression that she<lb/>
didn't go to church. Well, the<lb/>
truth of the matter was; her<lb/>
father was a preacher and she<lb/>
outlined the sermon and sent it<lb/>
to him so that he might use it as<lb/>
one of )as own some day. As<lb/>
for checking up. we never heard<lb/>
one any better than that.<lb/>
It is rumored around campus<lb/>
that one certain Fran Ferebee<lb/>
really is in love. And from that<lb/>
far away look in Fran's eyes<lb/>
(sometime) we can easily con-<lb/>
firm the statement. We wish that<lb/>
his girl would come to see him<lb/>
again?it might help matters a<lb/>
bit.<lb/>
Helen Boomer and G. R. Gam-<lb/>
mon, Jr are all washed up, we<lb/>
hear. Sad, but true.<lb/>
Theo Easom has been with the<lb/>
same girl twice in the last three<lb/>
weeks. We can't understand it.<lb/>
Now that the end of the quar-<lb/>
ter is here, all we can here is<lb/>
"I've got to study, I've got to<lb/>
study We hear that a few cer-<lb/>
tain people are expecting to en-<lb/>
joy themselves immensely be-<lb/>
tween terms.<lb/>
What is this rumor about El-<lb/>
len Jenkins and the salesman<lb/>
from Ormond Wholesale Com-<lb/>
pany?<lb/>
In a "Guilfordian official<lb/>
publication from Guilford Col-<lb/>
lege there appeared an excerpt<lb/>
in the gossip column, that one<lb/>
certain basketball player gave a<lb/>
tall waitress a break by taking<lb/>
her to a show when their team<lb/>
was down here. Yeah, gave her<lb/>
a break We resent that?or<lb/>
rather she does?imagine giving<lb/>
that girl a break.<lb/>
It happened about three weeks<lb/>
ago?you may have heard about<lb/>
it, or you may not have?any-<lb/>
way it happened like this?Mr.<lb/>
Flanagan, Doc Mathis and Miss<lb/>
Smith were seen riding. From<lb/>
all appearance it seems as if they<lb/>
were the only people in the car<lb/>
?however Mr. Flanagan doubts<lb/>
the veracity of this statement,<lb/>
and says that another girl was<lb/>
along. While we're on the sub-<lb/>
ject, may we add that when the<lb/>
"cat's away the mice will play<lb/>
Sometimes when Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
M. L, Wright are away there are<lb/>
frequently visitors at their table.<lb/>
Guests of the other members<lb/>
who make up the table we pre-<lb/>
sume. One night we noticed that<lb/>
there were only two lady guests<lb/>
Presumable guests of Bill and<lb/>
Dan. (Note. Miss Smith was<lb/>
away that night so Mr. Flanagan<lb/>
had no guest. Also conspicious<lb/>
by his absence was "Doc" Ma-<lb/>
this.) Mr. Flanagan surely has<lb/>
to get busy if he keeps up with<lb/>
the pace set by his?well, shall<lb/>
we say rival.?<lb/>
Bill Hearse, a popular ex-coed<lb/>
used to be seea places with Nel-<lb/>
lie Grissom. Now when he is<lb/>
passing through Greenville he<lb/>
comes over to the college to see<lb/>
all his old friends. Well, Nellie<lb/>
is teaching in Leggetts this year,<lb/>
and Bill continues to come to<lb/>
Greenville. It is rumored that<lb/>
some- of the office officials re-<lb/>
ceives a card from him quite<lb/>
frequently, and that he paid her<lb/>
quite a lengthy visit on this last<lb/>
trip. Of course now, he might<lb/>
have been on his way to Leg-<lb/>
getts, but he did spend quite a<lb/>
while in Greenville, and around<lb/>
the college.<lb/>
Speaking of Bill reminds us<lb/>
that we were quite glad to have<lb/>
Eric Tucker back with us on the<lb/>
campus this past week-end. The<lb/>
old grads are always welcome.<lb/>
Sinnett caused quite a bit of<lb/>
excitement on the campus. From<lb/>
the answers given to the college<lb/>
girls, the student body will be<lb/>
somewhat diminished in a few<lb/>
months. It seems as if about<lb/>
half f the students registered<lb/>
here now as "Miss" will be reg-<lb/>
istered as "Mr. and Mrs Well,<lb/>
here's luck to ffcem. It was<lb/>
quite an experience to go to a<lb/>
performance and listen at him<lb/>
read someone else's future. The<lb/>
theatre was full at every show-<lb/>
ing. Speaking of shows we'd say<lb/>
that "Irritation of Life" would<lb/>
rate four stars in any man's vo-<lb/>
cabulary.<lb/>
'Tis getting to be spring again.<lb/>
Last Sunday the campus looked<lb/>
 like a veritable Easter Parade,<lb/>
with blues and yellow predomi-<lb/>
nating all other colors. Speaking<lb/>
of spring, the campus couplets<lb/>
seem to be doing right well.<lb/>
Short shots?We wonder if<lb/>
i<lb/>
j Epstein has finally made up his<lb/>
'mind?and Fran Ferebee too?<lb/>
?Red" Flanagan is still flitting<lb/>
 around?Melba O'Brien and her<lb/>
 "Lousy" are still that-a-way?<lb/>
Well, we can't blame them?Now<lb/>
that it is banquet time, we want<lb/>
to know who Kat Hines is going<lb/>
to ask?Theo Easom was seen<lb/>
with a new girl last Sunday ?<lb/>
Wake Forest Junior Senior bids<lb/>
are still on the make?<lb/>
We understand that the tea<lb/>
held last Sunday was well at-<lb/>
tended?We're glad to see such a<lb/>
movement on campus?and stu-<lb/>
dents are already talking about<lb/>
tin- college dance.<lb/>
Since graduation is approach-<lb/>
ing it is thought that this would<lb/>
i be of use to some people, since<lb/>
Weight (country<lb/>
is a model for filling out an<lb/>
application blank.<lb/>
Q. Full name?<lb/>
A. Same as when empty.<lb/>
Q. Present Address?<lb/>
A. Here.<lb/>
Q. Permanent address?<lb/>
A. Sorry it's just a marcell.<lb/>
Q. Year of birth?<lb/>
A. I don't recall, but it was<lb/>
after the flood and before the<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Q. Weight?<lb/>
A. Welter<lb/>
champion).<lb/>
Q. Race?<lb/>
A. Hundred yard dash, but I<lb/>
can do the relay.<lb/>
Q. Condition of health?<lb/>
A. Very well, thank you, and<lb/>
how are you?<lb/>
Q. Any defects in sight or<lb/>
hearing?<lb/>
A. I can see alright although<lb/>
I am stone deaf, however chil-<lb/>
dren should be seen and not<lb/>
heard.<lb/>
Q Any other defects?<lb/>
A- My I. Q. only 43 my<lb/>
mother dropped me out of the<lb/>
third story window when I was<lb/>
only three weeks old, and I<lb/>
haven't had many ideas since.<lb/>
Q. Present position?.<lb/>
A. Standing on my head wag-<lb/>
gling one ear.<lb/>
SINCE 1925<lb/>
Oldest - Largest - Best<lb/>
PERMANENT WAVES<lb/>
$3.35 to SlO.ftf<lb/>
Shampoo and Fiager Wave<lb/>
Short Bai SOe-Lon, Hair 75c<lb/>
'toil hw m? m.<lb/>
QWhal positi<lb/>
to h,Jd?<lb/>
AEditoi oi ?<lb/>
gest.How abou<lb/>
0What is y.<lb/>
ary?<lb/>
A.Conspu .<lb/>
QSalary y u<lb/>
permonth?<lb/>
AEgg<lb/>
stuffed monk( ,<lb/>
you<lb/>
QWhat do <lb/>
A.Brats, wha<lb/>
for?Rabbil i<lb/>
I'ma tea hei, n<lb/>
QGive at !?<lb/>
references?<lb/>
A.John 3:H<lb/>
Britanica Vol ?.<lb/>
tellone.<lb/>
QPlease i i .<lb/>
yourself<lb/>
A.Don't be :<lb/>
don't send my pi<lb/>
men<lb/>
QName t<lb/>
tended.<lb/>
A.It's aireadj<lb/>
QDate?<lb/>
A.Now you i<lb/>
Besidee I'v. <lb/>
Laugh that fi<lb/>
WANT REDS Ol I OF<lb/>
STATE'S INSTII1 RONS<lb/>
Madison. V ?;?<lb/>
sin's famed . ?<lb/>
have started on<lb/>
the state -an It<lb/>
to give a long :<lb/>
that they may find i ? ?.?<lb/>
State's educati -<lb/>
Author i by ' ?<lb/>
ate to investigate<lb/>
mors ani charge<lb/>
tic affiliations a: I<lb/>
of atheism and - ! .<lb/>
educational instil<lb/>
state, the den<lb/>
the tnvestig itii<lb/>
claims that the ; r<lb/>
group is to cleai I ;<lb/>
rather than o mvi I I<lb/>
these charges<lb/>
The hunt will li I<lb/>
University of Wis i<lb/>
and on t' lh<lb/>
teachers college<lb/>
School of Mines m<lb/>
determination of ?? ?<lb/>
the burrowing ther<lb/>
level or the b  <lb/>
from within.<lb/>
And, to top it ail  a<lb/>
ber of the Wisci n<lb/>
has introduced a I<lb/>
all Wisconsin seh<lb/>
painted red, whit'<lb/>
DR. M. B. MASSEY<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 437<lb/>
WedTur Mel ti-7<lb/>
JOHN BOLES<lb/>
LORETTA VOINO<lb/>
In<lb/>
"THE WHITE I'AKADE"<lb/>
Friday. Men. <lb/>
Screen: "GIFT Of (-AB<lb/>
Vaudeville on Stage<lb/>
"TOP OF THE WORLD"<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
MonTues Mch 11 12<lb/>
fgg,<lb/>
m?3<lb/>
9 Stars I 2 Bonds!<lb/>
6 Songs! lOOOirisI<lb/>
RUDY<lb/>
VAUEE<lb/>
SWEET<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
with<lb/>
ANN DVORAK<lb/>
RAM<lb/>
Pirat<lb/>
Jimmie Johnsoi<lb/>
And Jcrn D;<lb/>
Are High Se<lb/>
Latter Gai<lb/>
PIRATES 7.<lb/>
Stow<lb/>
hour<lb/>
Lai (<lb/>
I<lb/>
Elon<lb/>
PI:<lb/>
gan<lb/>
Pirat.<lb/>
Dav.<lb/>
each.<lb/>
difficult<lb/>
SI ?<lb/>
 wit<lb/>
several<lb/>
total of<lb/>
a regular f<lb/>
tently in i<lb/>
contribu' I<lb/>
tog.<lb/>
Jack L u<lb/>
II . inn an I<lb/>
haps the<lb/>
serves.<lb/>
Dr. Carl<lb/>
baKet ball a<lb/>
Jolly vt: J I<lb/>
team.<lb/>
STUDENTS TRY T?<lb/>
RISH THEATRE<lb/>
North M <lb/>
?An atu i ? ?<lb/>
the local <lb/>
djaaatrou ly for i<lb/>
ter Colh g<lb/>
The othei daj<lb/>
dents tried to<lb/>
tre, but w? re rej <lb/>
gas bombs ? ?.<lb/>
Three of the Stuck<lb/>
get even. In Qm -<lb/>
cal laboratory ir !<lb/>
to make some teal<lb/>
their own, and I <lb/>
at ihe cops. Tbr ;?<lb/>
wrung chemical<lb/>
the bombs ex; :<lb/>
trio to the hospital<lb/>
COIXDNT INDERST<lb/>
EXCESSIVE SPEMIN<lb/>
Kansas City. M<lb/>
vin Coolidge was -<lb/>
bewildered by th. I<lb/>
times m which <lb/>
ing to Dr. Claude U I<lb/>
master of Phillips Ac<lb/>
Andover, Mass, ar.J<lb/>
writing of Wop ;<lb/>
president, Dr F<lb/>
on the subject.<lb/>
"From my study . <lb/>
can see how he coul<lb/>
stand the excessive<lb/>
the wild specula r.<lb/>
move toward bun.<lb/>
state socialism he I<lb/>
whole philosophy M<lb/>
thrift and individual.m<lb/>
Dr. B. McK. Jol<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
2?6 State Bank Bi<lb/>
Phone 391<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00038028_0003"/><lb/>
Wedne day, March 6<lb/>
? 1935.<lb/>
a? tnesday, March 6, 1935.<lb/>
' ,?u<lb/>
toh<lb/>
: ? Lit<lb/>
you qU 9<lb/>
your<lb/>
presei<lb/>
' fit.<lb/>
run,<lb/>
tit<lb/>
sal.<lb/>
out by a's <lb/>
machlneii<lb/>
- WUig<lb/>
' "r wh? have<lb/>
. w teach'<lb/>
1 u" you h<lb/>
or I , hoPe<lb/>
 trained i<lb/>
i ' 'teas'1<lb/>
I faster<lb/>
 thro<lb/>
good<lb/>
to E.  <lb/>
1. 7 P M v 'fH'dla<lb/>
? "v you<lb/>
' ! '? Ph of<lb/>
: : ? I H  .<lb/>
BOio <lb/>
 Tang,<lb/>
! " a r<lb/>
ame.<lb/>
ftvsh.<lb/>
i Kl ls OUT of<lb/>
ITE'S INSTITUTIONS<lb/>
?dm-<lb/>
wed<lb/>
reds<lb/>
? the<lb/>
the<lb/>
t a<lb/>
?r<lb/>
 be<lb/>
DR. M. a MASSEY<lb/>
DFNTIST<lb/>
State Hank Building<lb/>
Phase 437<lb/>
Wed Tur. Kfafc 6 7<lb/>
j JOHN HOI K<lb/>
( OKZTTA YOlMi<lb/>
In<lb/>
i IMI WHITE PARADE'<lb/>
I ridav, Mch. 8<lb/>
1 VTn: GIFT OK .AB"<lb/>
 .tud?- ill- on Slate<lb/>
ror r m uoKii)"<lb/>
nIIOH<lb/>
Mon. luv. Mch 11-12<lb/>
vl<lb/>
fe. ?-?<lb/>
i<lb/>
? t<lb/>
9 Stars 1 2 Bands!<lb/>
6 Songs! 100 Girls I<lb/>
(i ii n y<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
SWEET<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
with<lb/>
AW UVOIIAK<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
fage Three<lb/>
SUPPORT THE<lb/>
RAMBLERS TONIGHT<lb/>
SPORTS<lb/>
George S. Willard, Jr Sports Editor<lb/>
TOURNAMENT WILL<lb/>
BEGIN TODAY<lb/>
Pirates End Season; Ramblers Tie William and Mary<lb/>
Jimmie Johnson<lb/>
ii(i Jerry Davis<lb/>
ire IliiihSeorers<lb/>
?.<lb/>
Latti : Games Of Season Most<lb/>
Successful.<lb/>
- WIN TOTAL<lb/>
OF SIX GAMES<lb/>
Perebee, And Riden-<lb/>
 ur Turn In Good Work.<lb/>
i ? k saw the curtain<lb/>
 'i on Hoys' basket<lb/>
I' T t' lor this season,<lb/>
I Mathts' Pirates met<lb/>
? ? I inal game.<lb/>
i h dule of nineteen<lb/>
the ?? ' quint unproved<lb/>
I . : ing experience and<lb/>
hing to finish the tea-<lb/>
. ? i style. Although the<lb/>
. i: tiff opposition in<lb/>
.t- Rocky Mount Y,<lb/>
: H gh Point, Davidson<lb/>
Freshmen, William and<lb/>
A C. C, and Louisburg,<lb/>
n six of the last ten <lb/>
; -v. d, and scored 320 i<lb/>
High School Tournament<lb/>
To Begin This Afternoon<lb/>
pponents<lb/>
308<lb/>
? ,i' Johnson and "Jerry"<lb/>
re the big scorers for<lb/>
? e season and shared<lb/>
?  : i with 159 points<lb/>
Both '? n turned in out-<lb/>
? all-round play through-<lb/>
eason, and it would be<lb/>
It to praise them enough.<lb/>
? was next in the scoring<lb/>
ith M points, and credit for<lb/>
: wins is due largely to his<lb/>
:ii playing. "Lex" Riden-<lb/>
i'irate guard, looped in a<lb/>
f 75 points during the<lb/>
,r.d was the team's long-<lb/>
rtist, "Fran" Fereboe, also<lb/>
guard, played consis-<lb/>
Fifty-One Trams Arc Paired<lb/>
For Opening Rounds.<lb/>
The first E. C. T. C. Eastern<lb/>
Carolina High School Basketball<lb/>
Tournament is scheduled to bo-<lb/>
gin this afternoon in the college<lb/>
and high school gyms.<lb/>
A total of fifty-one teams will<lb/>
participate in the tourney dur-<lb/>
ing today, Friday, and Saturday,<lb/>
it was learned this morning from<lb/>
student manager. Jimmie Carr.<lb/>
The finals will be run off Mon-<lb/>
day night, March 11th.<lb/>
The B Class schools are best<lb/>
represented in the tournament<lb/>
with forty-seven entries. New<lb/>
Hern, Washington and Greenville<lb/>
are the only schools entering<lb/>
Class A teams.<lb/>
Bob Eason, former E. C. T. C.<lb/>
basketbajl player, is bringing his<lb/>
boys' team down today. The<lb/>
West Edgecombe team will meet<lb/>
Bear Grass in the first rounds.<lb/>
The final pairings are as fol-<lb/>
lows:<lb/>
CLASS A<lb/>
Officials Name<lb/>
1935 Star Team<lb/>
At Tournament<lb/>
GOOD, EH WHAT?<lb/>
Boys-<lb/>
New<lb/>
Girls<lb/>
New<lb/>
Bern ?Washington<lb/>
Bern -Greenville<lb/>
CLASS B<lb/>
W. O. Jolly, manager of the<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Pirates, claims that<lb/>
the boys are "plenty good" on<lb/>
a comparative basis, at least.<lb/>
Since the E. C. T. C. team beat<lb/>
Guilford, Guilford beat High<lb/>
Point, High Point won over<lb/>
Davidson, Davidson defeated<lb/>
K. C. SUite, State beat Caro-<lb/>
lina and also Duke. The Pirates<lb/>
could beat any team in the Big<lb/>
Five, comparatively speaking.<lb/>
Perhaps it follows that the<lb/>
Pirates are also unrecognized<lb/>
Southern Conference Cham-<lb/>
pions.<lb/>
Bob Crosland To<lb/>
Give Instruction<lb/>
Spring Quarter<lb/>
Appeared On College Courts<lb/>
Last Week.<lb/>
N. C. Squads Place Five Men<lb/>
On All Tournament Teams.<lb/>
Coach Frank's Team To<lb/>
Play Last Game To-night<lb/>
WHAT COLLEGE STUDENTS<lb/>
DO WITH THEIR TIME<lb/>
ir<lb/>
STl<lb/>
Kt 5<lb/>
every game and also<lb/>
ted his share in the scor-<lb/>
Dunn, Hassell, Calfee,<lb/>
and Nobles were pcr-<lb/>
? outstanding Pirate re-<lb/>
ar! Adams was faculty<lb/>
 adviser, and W. O.<lb/>
: capably managed the<lb/>
DENTS TRY TO<lb/>
H THEATRE<lb/>
CO<lb/>
. Manchester, Ind.?(IP)<lb/>
attempt to "get even" with<lb/>
al gendarms ended almost<lb/>
trou&amp;ly for throe Manches-<lb/>
C lb ge students,<lb/>
other day a group of stu-<lb/>
tried to rush a local thea-<lb/>
but were repulsed with tear<lb/>
bombs thrown by the police.<lb/>
ee of the students decided to<lb/>
i , a. In the college chemi-<lb/>
b ratory they set to work<lb/>
, ke some tear gas bombs of<lb/>
?xv and throw them back<lb/>
thi cops. They mixed the<lb/>
- y chemicals, however, and<lb/>
mbs exploded, sending the<lb/>
the hospital.<lb/>
II.DNT UNDERSTAND<lb/>
CESSIVE SPENDING<lb/>
Boys?<lb/>
Farmville ?Pactolus<lb/>
West Edgecombe?Dover<lb/>
Ayden?Hobgood<lb/>
Alliance?Bear Grass<lb/>
Walstonburg?Whitakers<lb/>
Morehead City?Winterville<lb/>
Vanceboro?Saratoga<lb/>
Gatesville?Spring Hope<lb/>
Moss Hill?Jamesvillc<lb/>
Bridgeton?Stokes<lb/>
Bethel?Bath<lb/>
Lucama?Beaufort<lb/>
Grimesland?Kipling<lb/>
Lillington?(Not paired)<lb/>
Girls-<lb/>
Fountain?Vanceboro<lb/>
Saratoga?Bear Grass<lb/>
- Bath?Morehead City<lb/>
Lillington?Stokes<lb/>
Alliance?Epson<lb/>
Lucama?Winterville<lb/>
Walstonburg?Moss Hill<lb/>
Symrna?Bethel<lb/>
Spring Hope?Jamesville<lb/>
Grimesland?W. Edgecombe<lb/>
Jimmie Carr is in charge of<lb/>
all details concerning the tourna-<lb/>
ment, and to him goes chief<lb/>
credit for the enthusiastic gath-<lb/>
ering of athletes here today.<lb/>
NEW FORMULA<lb/>
FOR SUCCESS<lb/>
Mount Vernon, la.?What do<lb/>
college students do with their<lb/>
time In answer to this none-too<lb/>
important query. Prof. Russell<lb/>
Cooper, of Cornell College, gives<lb/>
us the following data from a<lb/>
survey conducted by him recent-<lb/>
ly:<lb/>
1. Senior men spend 55 hours<lb/>
of each week sleeping.<lb/>
2. Women of Cornell College<lb/>
devote four hours per week more<lb/>
than the men to personal appear-<lb/>
ance.<lb/>
5. Senior men are the most<lb/>
studious of the students, and<lb/>
they spend nine and one-half<lb/>
hours per week at the dining<lb/>
table.<lb/>
4. Freshmen write home on the<lb/>
average of two and one-half<lb/>
hours a week.<lb/>
5. Junior women consume<lb/>
nine hours and 30 minutes each<lb/>
week for "entertainment<lb/>
An exceptional opportunity<lb/>
was offered tennis lovers at E.<lb/>
C. T. C. last week when the Ath-<lb/>
letic Committee secured the ser-<lb/>
vices of Bob Crosland, profes-<lb/>
sional tennis player from Myers<lb/>
Park Club, Charlotte.<lb/>
All students Interested in ten-<lb/>
nis were invited at this time to<lb/>
take advantage of Coach Cros-<lb/>
land's instruction and several<lb/>
players were on hand at the time<lb/>
specified by the Athletic Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
Crosland, who is one of the<lb/>
outstanding tennis players in this<lb/>
state, is a former Davidson Col-<lb/>
lege Coach and under his direc-<lb/>
tion the Davidson team won a<lb/>
State championship.<lb/>
Mr. Deal, chairman of the E.<lb/>
C. T. C. Athletic Committee,<lb/>
states that Crosland will be back<lb/>
again in the Spring quarter, and<lb/>
students wdll once more have<lb/>
an opportunity to improve their<lb/>
tennis games under the direc-<lb/>
tion of a professional player.<lb/>
HARVEY ALLEN TURNS<lb/>
ATTENTION TO EDUCATION<lb/>
ENERGETIC CANDIDATE<lb/>
SELLS HUMOR MAGAZINE<lb/>
in<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
City, Mo.?(IP)? Cal-<lb/>
idge was puzzled and<lb/>
id by the trend of the<lb/>
which he died, accord-<lb/>
Claude M. Fuess, head-<lb/>
tei of Phillips Academy at<lb/>
lover, Mass, and at present<lb/>
Ung of biography of the late<lb/>
sident Dr. Fuess spoke here<lb/>
the subject.<lb/>
From my study of his life, I<lb/>
i see how he couldn't under-<lb/>
r.d the excessive spending,<lb/>
wild speculation and the<lb/>
ve toward bureaucracy<lb/>
o(ialism he said,<lb/>
oie philosophy was that<lb/>
ft and individualism<lb/>
and<lb/>
'His<lb/>
of<lb/>
Dr. B. McK. Johnson<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
206 State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 391<lb/>
Atlantic City, N. J.?A new<lb/>
formula for success for women<lb/>
graduates of the colleges and<lb/>
universities in the United States<lb/>
was advanced here recently by<lb/>
Miss Jean L. Shepard, a New<lb/>
York personnel director.<lb/>
And the reason most college<lb/>
women find it difficult to obtain<lb/>
jobs after graduation is because<lb/>
they neglect style consciousness<lb/>
for intellectual pursuits, she said.<lb/>
"To succeed in business she<lb/>
advised, "the average college girl<lb/>
must give more attention to her<lb/>
appearance, and that means<lb/>
more than being well dressed. In<lb/>
sweater and skirt, the college<lb/>
girls look attractive on the cam-<lb/>
pus, but I am shocked to see how<lb/>
lacking those same girls are in<lb/>
smartness and chic when they<lb/>
come to New York<lb/>
MAGAZINES AND SONG<lb/>
SHEETS<lb/>
All about your movie star<lb/>
favorites.<lb/>
MODERN SCREEN<lb/>
April Number<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co.<lb/>
Philadelphia, Pa.?An energe-<lb/>
tic candidate for The Owd, Tem-<lb/>
ple University's humor magazine,<lb/>
sold Governor George H. Earle a<lb/>
year's subscription?and what's<lb/>
more, she collected the $1 fee.<lb/>
It all happened following the<lb/>
Commencement exercises held<lb/>
here recently, at which the com-<lb/>
monwealth's first citizen was<lb/>
awarded the degree of doctor of<lb/>
laws. The governor and other<lb/>
distinguished guests were having<lb/>
luncheon as guest of Pros, and<lb/>
Mrs. Charles E. Boury, when the<lb/>
Owl's circulation staff suddenly<lb/>
decided it would make a good<lb/>
publicity stunt if they could<lb/>
photograph him with an Owl in<lb/>
hand. Followed a hurried hunt<lb/>
for an Owl. as the last few issues<lb/>
sold out on publication, and the<lb/>
discovery that the only copy was<lb/>
one of February, 1934.<lb/>
Miss Nadeine Reiter. attractive<lb/>
senior, was delegated to show<lb/>
the copy to the governor, while<lb/>
staff photographer Milton Stand-<lb/>
er snapped the camera.<lb/>
"Do you know said Governor<lb/>
Earle when the ceremony ended,<lb/>
"I like this magazine Borrow-<lb/>
ing a dollar from his secretary,<lb/>
he pressed it into the hands of<lb/>
Miss Reiter before she could pro-<lb/>
test, or before he could be re-<lb/>
minded that as a member ex-of-<lb/>
ficio of the board of trustees he<lb/>
would receive the Owl without<lb/>
cost from now on.<lb/>
Middlebury, Vt.?Harvey Al-<lb/>
len, author extraordinary of en-<lb/>
cyclopedia-sized novels, has turn-<lb/>
ed his attention to education, and<lb/>
in a Middlebury college bulletin<lb/>
calls those who teach "cvoodoo-<lb/>
ists of psychology and "wizards<lb/>
of the great racket of education<lb/>
He threw many jibes at the<lb/>
professors and instructors who<lb/>
"every year invent a whole new<lb/>
dialect of terms and abstractions<lb/>
to describe even the most ordi-<lb/>
nary phenomena<lb/>
In commenting upon the per-<lb/>
fection of the Bread Loaf School<lb/>
of English, he said that at that<lb/>
school "No time is lost in pur-<lb/>
blind and "finician' lectures on<lb/>
the psychology of the A-Z group<lb/>
in B-3 high school grade, fourth<lb/>
ward, soda cenlro, or upon the<lb/>
deep mysteries of how to attract<lb/>
attention or to ventilate a school<lb/>
room<lb/>
MAJORITY MEN STUDENTS<lb/>
HAVE BEEN BOY SCOUTS<lb/>
North Carolina was given<lb/>
three and Washington and Lee<lb/>
two places on the 1935 Southern<lb/>
Conference all-tournament bas-<lb/>
ketball team selected Saturday<lb/>
night for the Associated Press by<lb/>
Coaches and officials.<lb/>
No player received a unani-<lb/>
mous vote, but Jim McCachren,<lb/>
floor leader of North Carolina's<lb/>
White Phantoms, received the<lb/>
nod from all but one of those<lb/>
voting. Joe Pette, Washington<lb/>
and Lee's ball hawking junior<lb/>
qualified as running mate at for-<lb/>
ward with Captain Stuart Ait-<lb/>
ken, North Carolina five foot<lb/>
seven inch Captain.<lb/>
Ivan Glace, the six foot four<lb/>
inch pivot of the Tar Heels, was<lb/>
selected over Alex Swails of<lb/>
Clemson and Captain Charlie<lb/>
Smith of Washington and Lee,<lb/>
who tied for the second team<lb/>
jump post.<lb/>
FIRST TEAM<lb/>
Stuart Aitken, forward, N. C;<lb/>
Joe Pette, forward, W. and Lee;<lb/>
Ivan Glace, center, N. C; Jim<lb/>
McCachren, guard, N. C; Nor-<lb/>
man Her, guard, W. and L.<lb/>
SECOND TEAM<lb/>
Melvin Nelson, forward, N. C;<lb/>
William Downey, forward, V. M.<lb/>
I Alex Swails, center, Clemson;<lb/>
Charles Smith, center, W. and L<lb/>
Ray Rex, guard, N. C. S Rob-<lb/>
ert Field, guard, W. and L.<lb/>
Those balloting on the teams<lb/>
were: Coaches Cy Young of<lb/>
Washington and Lee; Bo Shep-<lb/>
ard, of North Carolina; Eddie<lb/>
Cameron, of Duke; A. W. Nor-<lb/>
man of South Carolina; Joe Da-<lb/>
vis of Clemson College; Frank<lb/>
Summers of Virginia Military-<lb/>
Institute, and referees: "Footsie"<lb/>
Knight of Durham, and George<lb/>
Proctor of Richmond; Coach<lb/>
Sermon of N. C. State College<lb/>
said he preferred not to make a<lb/>
selection.<lb/>
EASONITES WIN<lb/>
Ramblers Lose Hard Fought<lb/>
Game To A. S. T. C.<lb/>
The West Edgecombe Bovs<lb/>
Basketball Team, coached by<lb/>
Bob Eason, won over a.n E. C.<lb/>
T. C. Freshman team last week,<lb/>
2G-18. Kilebrew, West Edge-<lb/>
combe center, was high scorer<lb/>
of the evening with Un points,<lb/>
and "Lex" Ridenhour netted<lb/>
seven points to lead the E. C.<lb/>
T. C. freshman quint.<lb/>
Coach Eason is a graduate of<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
and was an active participant<lb/>
in athletics here until he re-<lb/>
ceived his diploma in 1934.<lb/>
Site For The 1940<lb/>
Olympics Are To Be<lb/>
Picked Next Year<lb/>
SINCLAIR AND ASKEW<lb/>
ARE HIGH SCORERS<lb/>
Captain Briley Continues<lb/>
Good Playing.<lb/>
EDUCATION REVOLUTION<lb/>
PROCLAIMED A SUCCESS<lb/>
Butlar, Pa?Exactly 65 per<lb/>
cent of the men attending Ameri-<lb/>
can institutions of higher educa-<lb/>
tion were at one time Boy Scouts,<lb/>
according to William G. Heisel,<lb/>
president of the Butler-Arm-<lb/>
strong Council of Scouts.<lb/>
Using figures obtained in a<lb/>
recent survey, Heisel stated that<lb/>
60 per cent of all football cap-<lb/>
tains on college teams were<lb/>
Scouts at one time during their<lb/>
careers.<lb/>
University sports in Germany<lb/>
are still in their infancy, having<lb/>
been introduced only about 14<lb/>
years ago by ex-soldiers. Up to<lb/>
now they have considered duel-<lb/>
ing to be the only sport worthy<lb/>
of them.<lb/>
Chicago, 111.?The widely dis-<lb/>
cussed University of Chicago<lb/>
"revolution in education" has<lb/>
been proclaimed a success.<lb/>
"We do not claim to have dis-<lb/>
covered a mystic formula for<lb/>
painless education said Dean<lb/>
Chauncey S. Boucher in a book<lb/>
titled "The Chicago College<lb/>
Plan "but we do claim that for<lb/>
ten years and particularly during<lb/>
the last five years, we have<lb/>
studied our job in the manner of<lb/>
the most thorough job-analysis<lb/>
Students and faculty alike<lb/>
agree that the plan has greatly<lb/>
improved student-faculty rela-<lb/>
tions, the Dean says, because ex-<lb/>
aminations are divorced from the<lb/>
teaching function, the competi-<lb/>
tion between student and teacher<lb/>
is eliminated.<lb/>
Site of 1940 Olympic games<lb/>
will not be determined until<lb/>
next year, the International<lb/>
Olympic Congress decided re-<lb/>
cently, although it had formerly<lb/>
planned to name the site during<lb/>
the present meeting.<lb/>
Originally the games were un-<lb/>
officially set for Italy, but as a<lb/>
result of overtures from Japan,<lb/>
Italian officials decided to step<lb/>
aside so that the games could be<lb/>
held in Tokyo.<lb/>
Recently, however, it develop-<lb/>
ed that there was some uncer-<lb/>
tainty as to Italy's exact position<lb/>
in the matter and it was decided<lb/>
to wait until the next meeting<lb/>
during the Olympic games at<lb/>
Berlin.<lb/>
MANY PROFESSORS<lb/>
CALLED INTO SERVICE<lb/>
New Haven, Conn.?Yale Uni-<lb/>
versity has called a halt on fur-<lb/>
nishing brain trust material to<lb/>
the federal government.<lb/>
So many Yale professors have<lb/>
been called into government ser-<lb/>
vice during the past two years<lb/>
that Pres. James Rowland An-<lb/>
gell has said that, "Fairness to<lb/>
the students requires that the<lb/>
university call a halt, despite its<lb/>
genuine desire to serve the pub-<lb/>
lic interest<lb/>
Pointing out that the "situation<lb/>
has at times reached proportions<lb/>
which have not been free of em-<lb/>
barrassment President Angell<lb/>
said: "If such men as a conse-<lb/>
quence of the conscientious per-<lb/>
formance of their official duties<lb/>
Another seemingly impossible<lb/>
;? k was successfully ascended<lb/>
by th E. C. T. C. girls' basket-<lb/>
ball team last week when they<lb/>
tied the varsity William and<lb/>
Mary team at Williamsburg, Va.<lb/>
Handicapped by a foreign<lb/>
court, three division play, and<lb/>
comparative diminutiveness,<lb/>
Coach Frank's team fought val-<lb/>
rentiy in the third quarter to<lb/>
change a one-sided score to a<lb/>
25-all tie. The last half was<lb/>
played on a two division basis,<lb/>
and although William and Mary<lb/>
led 21-10 at the end of the third<lb/>
quarter, the Ramblers staged a<lb/>
thrilling comeback to score 15<lb/>
points before the final whistle<lb/>
and limit the Virginia sextet to<lb/>
two action shots.<lb/>
Home, of William and Mary,<lb/>
was high scorer of the evening,<lb/>
with fifteen points, but she was<lb/>
closely paced by Sinclair, Ramb-<lb/>
ler forward, who sank six long<lb/>
shots during the last half. As-<lb/>
kew ranked next in the scoring<lb/>
with eleven points.<lb/>
The guards of both teams fail-<lb/>
ed to weaken in any period, and<lb/>
Captain Briley turned in excel-<lb/>
lent all-around play for the<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
LOSE ONE<lb/>
A strong A. S. T. C. team<lb/>
downed the Ramblers last Fri-<lb/>
day evening, 25-17, by virtue of<lb/>
it's play in the first half while<lb/>
the E. C. T. C. team was firing on<lb/>
about "two cylinders<lb/>
During the first period the<lb/>
teams jumped center, and the<lb/>
itamblers received an advantage<lb/>
m this respect only about once<lb/>
in ten toss-ups. As a result, al-<lb/>
though the E. C. T. C. forwards<lb/>
attempted several almost perfect<lb/>
shots, the score board reflected a<lb/>
15-1 score at the turn in favor of<lb/>
the Boone Teachers.<lb/>
In their characteristic manner,<lb/>
the Ramblers staged a brilliant<lb/>
comeback in the final half, and<lb/>
even in defeat the team gave an-<lb/>
other demonstration that they<lb/>
never know when they're whip-<lb/>
ped Led by Anne Askew, Coach<lb/>
Frank's forwards scored sixteen<lb/>
As-<lb/>
become involved in highly con- points in that final period,<lb/>
troversial issues dieting violent kew netted 13 of her team s<lb/>
feeling, the university gets drawn 13 :<lb/>
into the picture in ways which<lb/>
may be quite prejudicial<lb/>
Make that Spring Wardrobe Sparkle with<lb/>
GAIETY AND STYLE<lb/>
Our designs are just what you are looking for<lb/>
The Perkins Co.<lb/>
beautiful shots.<lb/>
The A. S. T. C. team was out-<lb/>
played in every division in the<lb/>
Dr C W. Spears, Wisconsin's I last half of the contest, but their<lb/>
grid coach, wants his centers to" !?? lead proved too great for<lb/>
be musicians, for then he will the Ramblers to overcome m the<lb/>
have rhvthm, he says. I (Continued on page four)<lb/>
FOOT STYLE<lb/>
BETRAYS<lb/>
CHARACTER<lb/>
OUR SHOES BETRAY<lb/>
STYLE<lb/>
Coburn's<lb/>
THE STORE WHERE<lb/>
QUALITY<lb/>
SPEAKS FOR ITSELF<lb/>
BE WISE AND<lb/>
VISIT US OFTEN<lb/>
Charles Stores<lb/>
?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00038028_0004"/><lb/>
<lb/>
Page Four<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Ruth Henderson, Reporter<lb/>
A deputation team of three<lb/>
men from the Baptist Union of<lb/>
Wake Forest College conducted<lb/>
the Y. V. C. A. services of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College Sun-<lb/>
day night, February 24th. Their<lb/>
subject was "Peace subdivided<lb/>
into three topics, "World Peace<lb/>
"Man Peace and "Soul Peace<lb/>
Alfred Martin, of Lumberton,<lb/>
in talking on "World Peace"<lb/>
stated that it is evident that the<lb/>
majority of people want peace,<lb/>
and that one task before the stu-<lb/>
dent generation of today is to<lb/>
recognize the great problems that<lb/>
are confronting the nations and<lb/>
to think through them so that<lb/>
they can do something about<lb/>
them when they become leaders.<lb/>
Only when people think in<lb/>
terms of Peace can World Peace<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Junias Martin, of Adairsville,<lb/>
Ga talked on "Man Peace A<lb/>
vital personal question in every<lb/>
life, he said, is how to live in or-<lb/>
der to bring about a peaceful and<lb/>
abundant life. When one has<lb/>
learned to blend into harmonious<lb/>
living the secular with the sacred<lb/>
side of his being, then only does<lb/>
he attain peace in life.<lb/>
W. R. Dixon. of Rocky Mount,<lb/>
developed the third topic as the<lb/>
climax of the series. He said it<lb/>
is the soul that controls the in-<lb/>
tellect and will: when it flows<lb/>
through the intellect it is called<lb/>
genius; and when through the<lb/>
affections, it is called love, which<lb/>
he interpreted in its greatest<lb/>
sense. Man. he said, does not<lb/>
realize the full potentialities of<lb/>
the soul, until he achieves peace<lb/>
of the soul. Then there is an in-<lb/>
flux of the divine, creating with-<lb/>
in one a desire to become Christ-<lb/>
like, and it is this which makes<lb/>
problems, both world and per-<lb/>
sonal, seem to fade into nothing,<lb/>
and then only does the individual<lb/>
attain, "Soul Peace<lb/>
The service was closed with a<lb/>
prayer-hymn sung by Alfred<lb/>
Martin, after which. W. R. Dixon<lb/>
gave the benediction.<lb/>
PROMOTION OF WAR<lb/>
Alumnae News<lb/>
NEWS ITEMS<lb/>
BIRTHS<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Clay of<lb/>
Castalia announce the birth of a<lb/>
daughter, Parrieleigh Bobbitt on<lb/>
Tuesday, January 22, 1935. Mrs.<lb/>
Clay was formerly Miss Parriel-<lb/>
eigh Bobbitt of Castalia and a<lb/>
member of the 1932 class.<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. Linwood<lb/>
Richardson of Selma announce<lb/>
the birth of a son, Charles Lin-<lb/>
wood, Jr on Wednesday, Janu-<lb/>
ary 23rd. Mrs. Richardson was<lb/>
formerly Miss Sadie Fulghum of<lb/>
Selma, class of 1926.<lb/>
HOYT?WILLIS<lb/>
ROBERSON?ROSS<lb/>
Miss Bessie Corinne Willis of<lb/>
Goldsboro, Class of '28, and Fred-<lb/>
erick William Hoyt of Williams-<lb/>
ton, were married at the home of<lb/>
the bride's sister, Monday even-<lb/>
Miss Stella Blevins of lastlin?. February 18, 1935. Mr. and<lb/>
year's A. B. Class spent the week- Mrs- " win be at home in<lb/>
end of the 23rd of February here. Williamston, N. C. Mrs. Hoyt,<lb/>
She is teaching at the Blind Ins- while a student at E- C- T- C-<lb/>
titute in Raleigh, N. C. was the editor of the Tcco Echa<lb/>
Miss Estelle McCullen, Class of<lb/>
34, who is teaching in Aurora,<lb/>
N. C, also spent the week-end of<lb/>
the 23rd here.<lb/>
Miss Mary Underwood spent<lb/>
part of last week here visiting<lb/>
her sister, Julia Underwood. Miss<lb/>
Underwood teaches at Columbia,<lb/>
N. C, and her school has been<lb/>
out because of an epidemic.<lb/>
Miss Eva Vaughn of Elm City,<lb/>
N. C, spent the past week-end<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Miss Dairy Furnell, of Sharps-<lb/>
burg, N. C, w as a week-end visi-<lb/>
tor here.<lb/>
Miss Stella Walston, of last<lb/>
year's class, who teaches at Scot-<lb/>
and Neck, N. C, was a visitor<lb/>
here the week-end of the 23rd of<lb/>
February.<lb/>
Miss Etta Aiken of the Two-<lb/>
Year Normal Class of 1934, who<lb/>
caches at Broadway, visited<lb/>
here Sunday afternoon.<lb/>
Miss Hattie Ross and Harvey<lb/>
Lewis Roberson, both of Rober-<lb/>
sonville, N. C, were married<lb/>
Januaary 16, 1935. Mrs. Rober-<lb/>
son is a graduate of E. C. T. C,<lb/>
Class of '29. While a student<lb/>
here, she was a member of the<lb/>
Student Council. They will<lb/>
make their home in Roberson-<lb/>
ville, N. C.<lb/>
STAMEY?JENKINS<lb/>
Miss Virginia Jenkins of Shel-<lb/>
by, N. C, was married to Thomas<lb/>
Clarence Stamey, Saturday, Feb-<lb/>
ruary 9, 1935. They were mar-<lb/>
ried in the Little Church Around<lb/>
the Corner in New York City.<lb/>
Mrs. Stamey was a member of<lb/>
the Student Council, summer of<lb/>
1934. They will be at home in<lb/>
Fallston, N. C.<lb/>
COLLEGE EDITORS HAIL END<lb/>
OF1 "RAH-RAH" ERA<lb/>
NASH-EDGECOMBE CHAPTER<lb/>
HOLDS MEETING<lb/>
Iowa City. la.?A "League for<lb/>
the promotion of War" has been<lb/>
organized at the University of<lb/>
Iowa.<lb/>
Founded by a group of stu-<lb/>
dents who believe that dictator-<lb/>
ship is the only solution for the<lb/>
complex of modern civilization,<lb/>
the new club is opposed to an-<lb/>
other group here which is advo-<lb/>
cating world peace.<lb/>
Compulsory military training<lb/>
for all male citizens in the<lb/>
United States was one of the<lb/>
resolutions passed at the first<lb/>
meeting of the organization. In<lb/>
addition, if this club has its way,<lb/>
all college students, both men<lb/>
and women, would be required<lb/>
to take four years of military<lb/>
study.<lb/>
The group leaders plan to in-<lb/>
vite Huey P. Long to become its<lb/>
honorary leader.<lb/>
Coach Frank's Team To<lb/>
Play Last Game Tonight<lb/>
(Continued from third page)<lb/>
remaining minutes. Briley, Over-<lb/>
ton, Hearne, and Parker were<lb/>
the outstanding Rambler guards.<lb/>
Lineups:<lb/>
E. C. T. C?Sinclair (12), As-<lb/>
kew (11), Bunn (2), Wilson,<lb/>
Briley, Barbee, Martin, Fulton,<lb/>
Parker, Robeson, Hearne.<lb/>
William and Mary?Home (15)<lb/>
Brittle (10), Murphy, Chomings,<lb/>
Beck, Blanchard, Shear, Belgard.<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Forwards: Askew,<lb/>
(13), Sinclair (2) Fulton (2),<lb/>
Bunn, Wilson. Guards: Briley,<lb/>
Overton. Hearne, Parker, Bar-<lb/>
bee, Robeson.<lb/>
A. S. T. C. Forwards: Felmet<lb/>
(4), Huskins (15), Barger (4),<lb/>
Speese (3). Guards: Shumaker,<lb/>
Rudsell. Chaffin, Dillinger.<lb/>
Referee: Mrs. Charles Wood-<lb/>
ard.<lb/>
Gambling is wrong, according<lb/>
to 114 University of Washington<lb/>
(Seattle) students who took a<lb/>
psyschology test, but only 33 of<lb/>
this number condemned "pet-<lb/>
ting<lb/>
The Nash-Edgecombe chapter<lb/>
of the E. C. T. C. Alumnae Asso-<lb/>
ciation met at the home of Mrs.<lb/>
Thomas Hall on Hill Street in<lb/>
Rocky Mount. February 26, 1935.<lb/>
Miss Wita Bond, president, pre-<lb/>
sided over the meeting. Plans<lb/>
for a benefit bridge party to be<lb/>
given on March 5th were formu-<lb/>
lated. The bridge party will be<lb/>
held at the Masonic Temple in<lb/>
Rocky Mount. The following<lb/>
chairmen of committees were ap-<lb/>
pointed: Miss Irma Vause, chair-<lb/>
man of the refreshments com-<lb/>
mittee; Mrs. F. L. Greathouse,<lb/>
chairman of arrangements com-<lb/>
mittee: reservations, Mrs. Thom-<lb/>
as Hall.<lb/>
Mrs. Hall served her guests a<lb/>
sweet course during the social<lb/>
hour which followed the business<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
BARNES?ALLEN<lb/>
The wedding of Miss Lucille<lb/>
Allen, of Clayton, N. C, and<lb/>
Francis Barnes, of Williamston,<lb/>
N. C, was solemnized at the<lb/>
Episcopal Church in Williamston,<lb/>
N. C, at five-thirty in the after-<lb/>
noon, Friday, March 1, 1935.<lb/>
Mrs. Barnes attended E. C. T.<lb/>
C. and has taught in Williamston<lb/>
for several years. While a stu-<lb/>
dent here, she was a member of<lb/>
the Student Council.<lb/>
The "Rah-Rah boy" who went<lb/>
to college to enjoy life and ob-<lb/>
tain some social luster, strain his<lb/>
vocal chords in the cheer gangs,<lb/>
and offer to die any time for<lb/>
dear old Alma Mater is disap-<lb/>
pearing from the campus. A stu-<lb/>
dent interested in world affairs,<lb/>
government, and social and poli-<lb/>
tical economy, is taking the cam-<lb/>
pus play-boy's place.<lb/>
This is the encouraging an-<lb/>
nouncement of Dr. Walter A.<lb/>
Jessup in his first report as<lb/>
President of the Carnegie Foun-<lb/>
dation for the Advancement of<lb/>
Teaching. It is concurred in by<lb/>
a number of university and col-<lb/>
lege editors who were queried by<lb/>
The Literary Digest.<lb/>
Add this evidence to the indi-<lb/>
cations brought out by the Lit-<lb/>
erary Digest peace poll (that the-<lb/>
students of to-day are more ser-<lb/>
ious-minded than their predeces-<lb/>
sors of the 'twenties,) and the<lb/>
weight of testimony is over-<lb/>
whelmingly in support of Doctor<lb/>
Jessup's report.<lb/>
That report, said the New York<lb/>
Times "furnishes profitable read-<lb/>
ing for the presidents, trustees,<lb/>
teachers, and- graduates of the<lb/>
more than 800 colleges and uni-<lb/>
versities in the United States. So<lb/>
valuable are its ten pages in gen-<lb/>
eral review of the world of the<lb/>
year?that they should be given<lb/>
wider circulation<lb/>
Sounds A Warning<lb/>
While he was putting in a good<lb/>
word for the student of to-day,<lb/>
Doctor Jessup sounded a warning<lb/>
that a struggle for survival among<lb/>
American colleges was imminent.<lb/>
He pointed out that the United<lb/>
States had 800 institutions of<lb/>
higher education while in all<lb/>
England, Scotland, Wales, and<lb/>
Ireland there were fewer than<lb/>
twenty-five.<lb/>
Already, he said, there were<lb/>
some American institutions<lb/>
which were so far from fulfill-<lb/>
ing their function that they<lb/>
might as well abandon the strug-<lb/>
gle. There would be others, he<lb/>
predicted, which would lose<lb/>
ground, and some which would<lb/>
disappear.<lb/>
The issue of the struggle, as-<lb/>
serted Doctor Jessup, will not de-<lb/>
pend on money. "Survival will<lb/>
be conditioned by intelligent<lb/>
leadership, high morale, and the<lb/>
courage to be sincere with the<lb/>
students by selecting and educat-<lb/>
ing them only in the field of in-<lb/>
stitutional competency and in<lb/>
that field doing a genuine and<lb/>
significant job.<lb/>
"In the long run. colleges will<lb/>
be evaluated by their success in<lb/>
maintaining themselves as seats<lb/>
of learning for students and<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
Of special interest to parents<lb/>
whose sons are in college or pre-<lb/>
paring to matriculate is Doctor<lb/>
Jessup's description of the cam-<lb/>
pus-boy of to-day. He "is no<lb/>
longer the blase, sophisticated<lb/>
student of the 'twenties; he is a<lb/>
hard-working, serious-minded<lb/>
person who demands more of the<lb/>
college library, the laboratory<lb/>
and the instructor than did his<lb/>
brother of a decade ago<lb/>
Views of Student Editors<lb/>
Student editors from widely<lb/>
scattered campuses agree. In re-<lb/>
ply to The Literary Digest's<lb/>
question, D. B. Hardeman, Editor<lb/>
of The Daily Texan, student pub-<lb/>
lication of the University of<lb/>
Texas, said the "rah-rah days are<lb/>
gone<lb/>
Mr. Hardoman, who is also<lb/>
President of the Intercollegiate<lb/>
Daily Editors' Association, wrote:<lb/>
"Greater use of libraries, better<lb/>
conduct of students, demand of<lb/>
newspaper readers for more ser-<lb/>
ious articles, increased interest of<lb/>
students in politics, less empha-<lb/>
sis on fraternity membership, less<lb/>
emphasis on athletics, greater in-<lb/>
dependence of thought, less rev-<lb/>
erence for existing institutions,<lb/>
show the college man is thinking<lb/>
more and playing less<lb/>
"The passing of the 'rah-hah'<lb/>
era is a blessing of hard times<lb/>
replied Albert Kosek, Editor of<lb/>
The Minnesota Daily, University<lb/>
of Minnesota. "Students now<lb/>
want dollar for dollar values in<lb/>
education.<lb/>
"The student has been taken<lb/>
ply from Janathan B. Bingham,<lb/>
Chairman of The Yale Daily<lb/>
News, who said that the most<lb/>
conclusive evidence of the change<lb/>
in student type "is that 'rah-rah'<lb/>
is now a term of derision. Yale's<lb/>
serious-mindedness is shown by<lb/>
tripling registration in govern-<lb/>
ment economics courses, a demand<lb/>
for small classes, and individual<lb/>
instruction.<lb/>
"The founding of the Yale<lb/>
Political Union and liberal cur-<lb/>
ricular changes are widely ac-<lb/>
claimed here. The Yale Daily<lb/>
News resents exclusion of Yale in<lb/>
the list, and declares that there<lb/>
is great progress in students'<lb/>
awareness and thinking<lb/>
The resentment expressed by<lb/>
Mr. Bingham is evidently in re-<lb/>
ference to the statement by Doc-<lb/>
tor Jessup that the emergence<lb/>
of the serious-minded student<lb/>
"lias been notably true at Chica-<lb/>
go, Harvard, Minnesota, and<lb/>
Princeton<lb/>
A Marked Trend<lb/>
The statement is borne out as<lb/>
it concerns the great university<lb/>
at Chicago. "Chicago is distinct-<lb/>
ly less 'rah-rah' since the depres-<lb/>
sion and new plan wired How-<lb/>
ard P. Hudson, Editor of The<lb/>
Daily Maroon.<lb/>
"There is a marked trend to-<lb/>
ward academic political and in-<lb/>
ternational discussions by stu-<lb/>
dents, rather than the campus<lb/>
politics of old days<lb/>
Less positive, but encouraging,<lb/>
is the message from the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Virginia. The " 'rah-rah'<lb/>
era ended here years ago re-<lb/>
plied Murot Williams, Editor of<lb/>
College Topics. "It still prevails<lb/>
and in some Vir-<lb/>
'Rah-rahism' has<lb/>
into superficial<lb/>
which may be<lb/>
the new era<lb/>
farther South,<lb/>
ginia colleges,<lb/>
been turned<lb/>
sophistication.<lb/>
worse. However,<lb/>
shows a strong minority interest<lb/>
in public affairs<lb/>
COLLEGE PROFESSORS<lb/>
INVESTIGATE DISMISSAL<lb/>
Pittsburgh, Pa.?(IP)?A com-<lb/>
mittee of college professors, in-<lb/>
vestigating the dismissal of a<lb/>
professor at the University of<lb/>
Pittsburgh, issued a report that<lb/>
the university's administration<lb/>
was inimical to the welfare of<lb/>
the institution.<lb/>
Dr. John G. Bowman, chancel-<lb/>
down from h.s pedestal and is j lor Qf the Universityt went bc<lb/>
fore the Daughters of the Ameri-<lb/>
JOHNSON?MANNING<lb/>
Miss Rachel Pauline Manning<lb/>
and Everett F. Johnson of Ayden<lb/>
were married March 2, 1935, in<lb/>
Bethel. Mrs. Johnson attended<lb/>
E. C. T. C. Mr. Johnson is coach<lb/>
in athletics in Ayden, where the<lb/>
couple will make their home.<lb/>
HOLT?MORTON<lb/>
no longer expected to be a magi<lb/>
cian. If universities can adhere<lb/>
to true liberalism and remain out<lb/>
of the clutches of politicians,<lb/>
they may yet save us from our-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
"The depression killed Joe<lb/>
College wired Chandler Harris,<lb/>
Editor of The California Daily<lb/>
Brain, of the University of Cali-<lb/>
fornia at Los Angeles. "Econo-<lb/>
mic necessity has forced thought<lb/>
into the life of college students.<lb/>
Foolish hazing and tradition, ex-<lb/>
orbitantly expensive fraternities,<lb/>
excessive drinking and gambling<lb/>
are disappearing. Serious thought<lb/>
on economics and political prob-<lb/>
lems is increasing<lb/>
Equally emphatic was the re-<lb/>
can Revolution to be cheered as<lb/>
he announced:<lb/>
"There has been a vast amount<lb/>
of destructive propaganda in the<lb/>
university latelv. I think I am<lb/>
on solid ground when I insist<lb/>
that teachers must be patriotic<lb/>
and reverent. That is only com-<lb/>
mon sense<lb/>
WELCOME<lb/>
WARRENS<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
Miss Elizabeth Morton, class of<lb/>
'29, and High White Holt were<lb/>
united in marriage Saturday at<lb/>
noon, at the home of the bride's<lb/>
parents in Greenville. After an<lb/>
extended motor trip to Mexico<lb/>
and other points of interest they<lb/>
will be at home in Warrenton.<lb/>
DR. WOOTEN<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
State Bank Building<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
BIGGEST SALE OF YEAR<lb/>
?ECONOMY SALE-<lb/>
MARCH 15th to 23rd<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co.<lb/>
See Our<lb/>
Pre-Easter Specials on<lb/>
DRESSES, SWAGGERS, HOSE, BAGS AND<lb/>
UNDIES<lb/>
Always First with the Newest Things<lb/>
Gloria Shoppe<lb/>
Fashion Corner<lb/>
? See The<lb/>
Rouse Printery<lb/>
For Your<lb/>
VISITING CARDS .<lb/>
And<lb/>
WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
TRAIN TELESCOPES ON<lb/>
DARK SIDE OF MOON<lb/>
Wednesday, March 6, 1935<lb/>
WILLIAM Mil I IK IS RIABf<lb/>
TRUSTEE ROLLINS OLLjGf<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass. ? (IP)?In<lb/>
the hope of determining whether<lb/>
or not the craters on the moon<lb/>
are caused by the impact of me-<lb/>
teors, astronomers at Harvard<lb/>
University have trained their<lb/>
telescopes on the dark side of<lb/>
the moon. They expect that if<lb/>
the moon is hit by large crater<lb/>
they will see sparks of light<lb/>
caused by the impact. These<lb/>
could not be seen on that side of<lb/>
the moon lighted by the sun.<lb/>
TRACES ANCESTRY<lb/>
BACK TO ADAM<lb/>
Columbus, O. ? (IP) ? Mrs.<lb/>
Christian Sells Jaeger, historian<lb/>
of the Columbus Genealogical<lb/>
Society, claims she has traced her<lb/>
ancestry back to Adam, by the<lb/>
aid of libraries here, in New-<lb/>
York, Washington and Chicago.<lb/>
Among the intermediate ances-<lb/>
tors she lists Roger Williams, a<lb/>
lot of English and Scotch kings.<lb/>
an Egyption Phara, Zedekiah, the<lb/>
last king (if Judah: David. Enos.<lb/>
and Seth. She is the latest of 15!)<lb/>
generations, she says.<lb/>
"Marriage and home" is the<lb/>
subject of a new course offered<lb/>
by the Wesley Foundation of the<lb/>
University of Texas (Austin.)<lb/>
Winter Park, Fla (Ip<lb/>
ma.s William Miller, Jr 24 1<lb/>
old, and a men bci of 1 1<lb/>
f VXii. has be a elected 1<lb/>
tee of Rollins Colleg 1<lb/>
believed to (?? the j  , 1<lb/>
ever to have been ? 1<lb/>
in the United Stah 1<lb/>
Miller is ? with a bank i, 1<lb/>
Cleveland. As a student h  1<lb/>
considered outstand ? 1<lb/>
Zona Gale famed 1<lb/>
will present a serii 1<lb/>
versity of Hawa 1<lb/>
H.) this sen estei 1<lb/>
Dr. A. M. Schultz<lb/>
DENTIST<lb/>
400 State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone TH<lb/>
<lb/>
Thirty nationalities are repre<lb/>
sented in the University of Chi<lb/>
cago, (111.) dormitory which<lb/>
houses 100 foreign students.<lb/>
LET Y'OIK PURSE<lb/>
BE YOl R (.1 mi;<lb/>
White's<lb/>
is THE ri i:<lb/>
TO Bl v<lb/>
A Big Selection of<lb/>
$1.99 and S2.9S<lb/>
SPORTS DRESS SHOES<lb/>
Campus Boot Shoppe<lb/>
Five Points<lb/>
Top off that New Dress for the<lb/>
JUNIOR-SENIOR DANTE<lb/>
with the latest evening shoes in color to match,<lb/>
accented by our sheer, ringless hose.<lb/>
Bmu uoiir fbjotutear xit ?<lb/>
ILLER-JONES<lb/>
? aid make u a habit<lb/>
KEEP IN TUNE WITH SPRING<lb/>
KEEP IN TOUCH WITH<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
"The Store For The Ladies"<lb/>
Latest Stvles<lb/>
Host Prices<lb/>
Be Prepared for Those<lb/>
SPRING DANCES<lb/>
Visit?<lb/>
The Smart Shoppe<lb/>
For the Latest in Spring Attire<lb/>
WE APPRECIATE YOUR<lb/>
PATRONAGE<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
1<lb/>
 A,<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ifel<lb/>
in the offing<lb/>
Many formal affairs to claim<lb/>
your attention in the near<lb/>
future?Junior-Senior Prom,<lb/>
formal dinners, the <lb/>
Dance. And surely you'll<lb/>
want to look your best?for<lb/>
your big moment?and for<lb/>
the stag line too. We're<lb/>
showing a gorgeous collection<lb/>
of evening things you'll love<lb/>
?Sleek Empire. Sheaths. Ex-<lb/>
quisite Laces, Fluffy Chiffons.<lb/>
Fashion Shop - - Third Floor<lb/>
Blount-Harvey<lb/>
Volume XI<lb/>
Travel C!<lb/>
As Addit<lb/>
Of s<lb/>
Trip Tak<lb/>
Canada<lb/>
ington<lb/>
Thrc Fa.<lb/>
Three Crc<lb/>
lory. <lb/>
phy Art<lb/>
A new f<lb/>
School ol I<lb/>
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box of candy for il<lb/>
has a lot to do ?<lb/>
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a full house, th<lb/>
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dog. By the way, w<lb/>
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with 146 dates fi! I<lb/>
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(Continued on page thrd<lb/>
V El<lb/>
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