<?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="00038036_0001"/>
Jam<lb/>
fhington<lb/>
 <lb/>
v SUM<lb/>
WARREN'S<lb/>
HURSDAY FRIDAY JAN 30-31-<lb/>
MARTIN 1VS00NEY<lb/>
?3fc WROTE<lb/>
IT!<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
Sat unlay<lb/>
 II ?<lb/>
H I I, II IK ,B<lb/>
With<lb/>
LIONEL BARRYORE<lb/>
WALLACE BEERY<lb/>
PITT<lb/>
1 300<lb/>
? CIRCULATION<lb/>
I<lb/>
Ihe<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE<lb/>
ADVERTISERS<lb/>
EAST CAR&amp;lMt-IEACkGRS COLLEGE<lb/>
VOll'MK XII<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, FEBRUARY 11, 1936<lb/>
APRIL 25 IS DATE I??? Jmm PITT COUNTY CLUB SIBERIAN SINGERS<lb/>
FOR HINl-SEIW 0F1936 ARE outlined<lb/>
TOURS TO NEW ENGLAND AND<lb/>
ws Decide on Date at Class CANADA ARE TRIPS OF 22 DAYS<lb/>
Meeting ?<lb/>
Credit in History, Geography, and<lb/>
Amer can Literature<lb/>
Offered<lb/>
COLONIAL SETTING IS MOTIF<lb/>
Appointed to Arrange<lb/>
E, DRUGGIST<lb/>
WN DROP AROUND<lb/>
?? h?k HOTEL<lb/>
S STORE<lb/>
inng<lb/>
E ?<lb/>
ii! Fashioned<lb/>
igles Chiffon<lb/>
69caPflir<lb/>
Newest Shades<lb/>
is<lb/>
TO BE HERE FEB. 21<lb/>
NUMBER<lb/>
uons. Menu, Invitations<lb/>
and Orchestras<lb/>
Di<lb/>
uring the summer school terms<lb/>
'in- year two tours to ew Eng-<lb/>
land and Canada will be offered for<lb/>
r-Senior Han-  ,Sfuy of History, Geography<lb/>
and American Literature.<lb/>
The 22-daj trip includes Wa-h-<lb/>
icetmg held! ??. Annapolis, Baltimore, Phil-<lb/>
a previous meet- j awlphia, Valley Forge, New York Included in the itinerary are<lb/>
N" or man, president H'y? "arrytown, Weal Point, Xew rj such cities as Ashevlle, Ohattauoo-<lb/>
iis ear in, April<lb/>
detinitelv deeid-<lb/>
Mary Dennis Is Elected Chair-<lb/>
man of Program<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
TOUR TO MEXICO AND SOUTH-<lb/>
WEST IS TRIP OF 32 DAYS -The Beaded Buckle by Frances<lb/>
 Gray to be Given in Chapel on<lb/>
Four Courses With Total of Twelve j February 21<lb/>
Semester Hours to be ,<lb/>
0ffer j LINELLE CLARK IS DIRECTOR A very important meeting of th-<lb/>
  .   ; Pitt County Club was held on last<lb/>
1 Ikllejre is offering this sum-i . 0 . Tt w i i ?  - , .<lb/>
a. , rp .  '  , JCast Is Being Selected; Three Wednesday evening, Jantuuy  at,<lb/>
mer a Study, lour to the Southwest  ? r. r- ?' , ,? ,i ir. u v  , n i ,i "Tnn Hnt To Bp Fpaturp of<lb/>
? Characters are Definitely '?.?? Hyatt eorre&amp;t called m nu ,u DC rcdiUIC Jl<lb/>
and Mexicoitv. r our courses will<lb/>
BE<lb/>
HOSTS TO STUDENTS<lb/>
.r i ; i i Chosen<lb/>
be offered with a total of twelve<lb/>
quarter hours or eight semester A . ?The H(1(i(.a BucUe ? l,v<lb/>
hours credit. 1 he 32-dav tour will  ' , <lb/>
i i ? i r ranees Gray, will be (riven in<lb/>
?gin early in dune. ?<lb/>
chapel Friday morning, February<lb/>
la eli<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
meeting to order, after which the<lb/>
following business was held: the<lb/>
club chose the carnation, which<lb/>
means pride and beauty, as the club<lb/>
flower; "Be Square" as the club<lb/>
motto: and green and whin<lb/>
Theatre Party for Whole Stu-<lb/>
dent Body As Guests of<lb/>
Sophomore Class<lb/>
Director Nicholas Vasilieff is Per-<lb/>
son of Unusual<lb/>
Talents<lb/>
EACH MEMBER OF CHORUS IS<lb/>
SOLOIST OF GREAT ABILITY<lb/>
Costumes of Old Russia and<lb/>
Moscow Cathedral Robes Will<lb/>
Enhance Program<lb/>
he Siberian<lb/>
Tin-<lb/>
as club<lb/>
sophomores are preparm<lb/>
Singer?<lb/>
deresting<lb/>
pr<lb/>
this<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
c to fori ulatel ??????? irwviaenw, Plymouth j ga, Nashville, Mem).his. Little uiark, who lias bad experience ml<lb/>
ttei was ?, Kok- Tain,mi Boston, Lexington, Bock, Hot Springs. Dallas. Austin,Letii and eoaching dramatics, hav- tee,<lb/>
Stowc as .Ti:tir-1 ' ?ii'??r?l. Cambridge (Harvard), San Antonio, Laredo, Monterey,j ? , , , ? ,r ? ft tin. knelnoaa <lb/>
1 ? ?ow' H8 a" ? ? . ? ma worked under Miss Mary Dim- Aitei tne Business sessn<lb/>
Vlhrirtnn Ross L.I ortland, Augusta, Waterville, ue- Oiudad Victoria, Mexico City, , ,   , T.  ,?,??? rl(rr.nil <lb/>
vii'iiHuu. ivu-vi i. I   t, a  lierger and Miss Helen Dorteh. entertaining program w<lb/>
.inn. Kli-ilt?-th ? Montreal, Ottawa, toronto, Houston, Baton Rouge, Xew Or-  , , e u<lb/>
 ran ' naiHwi, ii i ? i ?, r i I he play is a comedy of village<lb/>
 flor? Wil- Niagara Palls, buffalo, Williams- leans, Mobile, Montgomery and At- . , ' ? ,rl . ,  ?<lb/>
agie. ?rit.i ? h ii .    . B ?   aristocracv. 1 he scene is laid in a<lb/>
?nea. With the! P?rt' H;<lb/>
Mias Hn<lb/>
I. It ia being coached by linelle r?f  ?  ?1 ? entertainment for the student; body here Fridaj night, Fel<lb/>
 , . , , ,  . wwers. Mary Dennis was chosen id facultv Til(.v !ia M.(ni<lb/>
(lark, who has had experience m chairman of the program eonimit- ?T ? ?? starring Ginger Rogers<lb/>
:30 ? clock.<lb/>
and Fred Astaire, as the feature for<lb/>
a delightful theatre party.<lb/>
For the occasion, special mar-jmatic person in his mterpre<lb/>
believed would<lb/>
ptting for the<lb/>
WlI. ???-?-  ???? eans. . ,on. e. .v.o.ngome ua - aristocraey The eene is laid in a "Beautiful Ohio. Ann K.chani<lb/>
i 'h- M Harnsburg QeUyaburg liar- lanta. I he historic, geographic and lffial towll in Xorth Carolina. In son gave the reading "Mialarlotta<lb/>
,?( per s cerry, rredenck, Winchester,I educational features t each citvl.t ,? . p i fi,n,ivve,i l.v "fawimrs irmvprsnim<lb/>
intii.ji . t . f tentative cast are fanny Brew- tOUOWea n, lainons mipi loiid<lb/>
veral N,w ?arke1 (Endless Caverns), and section will be considered. I, wi1(1 win tl)k ,i1(. )nrt'of Mrs. tions" by MalxT Williams. Follow<lb/>
?ii.) Statiiiton (Wilson's birthplace). In the vicinity of Asheville and  ? ;?? tlm i,mor:ni retYeslmunts won<lb/>
in. a very<lb/>
entertaining program was given.<lb/>
Sarah White Rhyne whistled. shafa   ,  , . <lb/>
n' "lUli 0M- VM i;i ,r1 The marshals are: Corabob Smith,<lb/>
Xeta Lee Townsend, Graee Free-<lb/>
Xieholas Va-ilietf is a gre<lb/>
an inspiring leader, and m<lb/>
and leadership.<lb/>
fur many vears the singe<lb/>
d upon<lb/>
a colo-<lb/>
'his plan was sul<lb/>
ass and was unam-<lb/>
Agnes Miller, a charming widow;<lb/>
Lexington (tombs of Lee and .lack- Chattanooga some of the most beau- Bffl Joho wh(( will tak(. tlu. part<lb/>
? ?tural Bridge, Lyoehbur tifu mountain scenery m the 1 nit- f v , , ?? rniv(.r.<lb/>
man. Sudie Williamson, ran<lb/>
me<lb/>
made annual tours.<lb/>
Thev create<lb/>
i a<lb/>
turns'7 by Mabel William eollow- Brewer .ii,nI11i Culkns, DorisUeBsation on their first American<lb/>
ing the program, refreshments were Xewborn, Eleanor Hardy, and I concert tour. Cheir broadcast<lb/>
Margaret Pruette. The ushers are:<lb/>
thi<lb/>
.1<lb/>
W i'1'i<lb/>
A p.<lb/>
8, and the<lb/>
tembers at-<lb/>
wnich will<lb/>
le.<lb/>
tat<lb/>
Will<lb/>
itip, "ii committees an<lb/>
Durward Stowe,<lb/>
I.ii liilane Alhritton.<lb/>
k. Onie Coebran,<lb/>
-?in. Ruth Oagle,<lb/>
and Ernestine<lb/>
'atrice rlammoud,<lb/>
i Brown, and Ge-<lb/>
ne Banes, chair<lb/>
K and l'l.Tlv<lb/>
 ,     XRC network bo profoundly<lb/>
,J.h" 1 uu' I of Joseph Conroy Miller, a Tni'ver Kighteen membere, four visitors, jxtonrankWwrten Fran- impressed the radio audien that<lb/>
and Appomattox, ed SUtes will be seen. The battle U- stU((.Ilt; an(1 LlK.illt. dark, and also the erab adviaer, Mr. Flan-  j Lester Ridenhour Roy letters of praise and commendation<lb/>
n i ; includes many place9of LookoutMountain will he ?;f"dwl;o ui? fak(i tl)fi pai.f (if M.s liaailj were present The dub boHs B,u.riAv ahii Wnl.th chauncey Cal- for rhr beautiful voices (espeeial-<lb/>
?p ly the contra bassos), and the artis-<lb/>
Tbe exact date of the entertain- tie presentation of their programs<lb/>
ment has not been decided were f?c?ved from every section - I<lb/>
With the arrival of spring, thethe l Dlted States,<lb/>
inallv produced on The IMavniak-j ? sophomores an- going to Morebead J h,ir pbenomeaal range?from<lb/>
,rs Stage, in Chapel Hill, Fel.ru- prilinnO III I I Pn hv and intr-rtine places there '???ntra (i to treble K-is pr-n.ap-<lb/>
the inspiration of "Star Spanuled founded m 110 by ti-nral Audrw ;u.v s anj,   ?) ?? " 1)111 111 VV I -l I . ?? tr a dav unequalled by any other mabd<lb/>
Hannr will be included. In Ja kson and others. This city is a Fluit GraVj was at tliat t;m(. .JUI-IIIUIIU lill-l- MW hi(. in r!u, worH i<lb/>
Philadelphia a number of historic very important shipping and manu tuil(n a! H, i'nivrit- in the<lb/>
places will i" -mi.lied such as Betsy facturing center. The next city to<lb/>
Boss House, Independence Hall be visited is Little Bock, the capita<lb/>
which contain- the "Liberty BeH" of the state of Arkansas, hn rout si;i rian,aKi- ar. v.m- cm- The I' ?? :  - <lb/>
and the room in which the Deelara- lo this city a number ol rice fields fen sh(. eigteeB yeara MiTnp 10 Be Taken Following I ne .  1( )M. p(,M,i(. thr spirit and intensity of emol<lb/>
Easter Holidays  which characterize- the Sib<lb/>
- nnani- " .??-?"?  v  ?-  ?????? who will take tlie part ol Mrs. nagan, were presem. i av<lb/>
of interest and a day will be devot- led. In Nashville the group will i jt()1jM. aiiVi B neighbor. The! regular monthly meeting<lb/>
iiU1? Jed to seeing the city. The Naval visit George Peabody College ?;??! 0ii1(.r characters have not been Be- president asks thai ail m<lb/>
1  . Academy in Annapolis will be vis Teachers and other points ol 'nift(.d jtend the next meeting. '<lb/>
i itd t ?ee the tomb of John Paui'terest. Memphis is situated at the "The Beaded Buckle" was orig-be held at the regular tim<lb/>
 J Jones. Baltimore, one of our great head of deep water navigation on ??Uy i)rutL.t.A ? The Playmak- ?<lb/>
Mississippi River. If<lb/>
ii'ii.<lb/>
A comph le<lb/>
well known English 31 class, the<lb/>
course in which tin- productions of<lb/>
the Carolina Playmakers are writ  . .<lb/>
ten. she was eighteen vea.s old Tnp To Be Taken Following The<lb/>
THE INFIRMARY-MATES SONG  "f visual abili . ?<lb/>
The flu i- mvconriner: I shall not ensemble they attain a rocs Mend<lb/>
 . a- beautiful and sonorous as the<lb/>
live. , T,<lb/>
I ii . i; i  ? r , tone- ot an organ. I he torce<lb/>
It maketh me to In- .low n on -?<lb/>
it.<lb/>
1<lb/>
tloli ot Ilniepen.lenci- V. a - -lglie.1. Wl<lb/>
the grave of Benjamin franklin in<lb/>
and other interesting point Abonl tie Rock, The party will also go to<lb/>
is miles wesl of Philadelphia the Hot Springs, a widely-known health<lb/>
group see Vallv I'orue where and plea-ure resort and also one of<lb/>
n Wood, chair-nffashington spent the tnihle win- our National Parks.<lb/>
uond. Hoot Gib-j tf,r rf i ; On the way to Xw<lb/>
"l,TM when she wrote -The Beaded<lb/>
roeram will be offered in Lit- i<lb/>
still patients.<lb/>
It disturbeth mv soul: it teadeth oinger<lb/>
Hutsell<lb/>
York the<lb/>
VVashincton<lb/>
Texas Emphasized<lb/>
ADVERTISERS ARE<lb/>
BOOSTED IN PAPER<lb/>
spot where Washington! This vear Texas<lb/>
?rod the Delaware will be vis- her centennial vear.<lb/>
name them to expl<lb/>
the heart of a song. Price<lb/>
?-an ,  ???? I V? M nimWs rf the<lb/>
Yea though 1 walk through tfcJ worm famous Choir of Russ<lb/>
 raUeY af the shadow of death, I will beir work its authority.<lb/>
 to be a z1 wwwirFSJtojv,l: t?i- Mi-s Dickinson JJ<lb/>
-??? i The senior ekss ha- chosen for mf m ,li(. ths of righteousness foi<lb/>
MRS. HAZEN SMITH STRESSES its annual trip a lour day tour to , h;Ur ;(<lb/>
ART OF CONVERSATION Washington, D. C. Mr B, C. Birfc<lb/>
i will conduct the tour which mcluf<lb/>
?" riJS? HTihJSJraSS"?JJLTf1i??irzzU- "j-S ?rr?rr.?t;iz<lb/>
ach citv is<lb/>
J Jest in and around Washington and  ,  ,<lb/>
Diversity "i her farst , , , , ,ni?n m? unoni. 1.1 au<lb/>
i ? i en mute there and nacK. rli.v onmfor im<lb/>
talk to students on this campus.  . t<lb/>
of Duke I<lb/>
Tlei)<lb/>
rohes of the Seventeenth C<lb/>
ind in their national<lb/>
i. appropriately reviving ???  8tudent8 on this campus.  ITT i ? i 1 vintr they comtort me. n t?- Th XVr<lb/>
Xcv. York City has many , vent, -onnect.l w,th the develop- ? J I enta ive plans include eavmg Th(.v )1ji;uh U!l.hl.1) before sra- The ? bo <lb/>
aces of interest. Among the most ment of Texas Special emphasisL MUll,llt, is ,hat tll(.v doJZ5ST? in tU f ?f A v ULLl<lb/>
B??rr.?toi, the citv itinerary arc: will be placed on the study of  ?nfi ? ,1 16, after Easter hobdays, a nd m- tW anointeth lnv ehest with. fhey use the nataral<lb/>
P<lb/>
important on tin city itinerary arc<lb/>
Kadi.<lb/>
Miss Fannie Brewer Wins Dollar Gn<lb/>
City. Metropolitan Museum Texas with her romantic historv.<lb/>
lof Art. American Museum of Xa her very extensive ana and <lb/>
ural History, Columbia LTniversity, resources.<lb/>
; t lomh. tin<lb/>
not ask intelligent questions, and<lb/>
are not willing to try to become good<lb/>
? , are not wining to u v io nccoine ?wu Q , . ?, 1U<lb/>
tried . ?? oi i ,i Sunday, April r.?.<lb/>
conversationalists. She named three ,r. ? ' <lb/>
turning to Greenville the following yjet's. riJ(. l;)r r0oms runnethments of beautiful voio<lb/>
?rtrav<lb/>
For Correct Solution<lb/>
Riverside<lb/>
( hlireh, Little Church Around the<lb/>
('oiner. Trinity I nurch I Hami<lb/>
Students other<lb/>
The cost will be $14.00, which<lb/>
fundamental things essential in <lb/>
More than $17,000,000 are being gaining this end; have something to  !<lb/>
-pent on the Texas Centennial Ex- ,av. tnOW how to say it. and know<lb/>
position in Dallas. Both the State wben ro SaV it<lb/>
of boosting tbet tongravel. East Side. Battery and amj Federi<lb/>
iver.<lb/>
the 111'<lb/>
lies<lb/>
if their repert<lb/>
Surelv tin and highfever shall I whether they Ik- in th- music c<lb/>
es. sraoenxs otner f()HiiW mi. ;1? tht. days 0 my life; liturgy, the gay pirate and soldier<lb/>
than seniors will 1m- allowed to ?"? ,i,al dwell in the house of thesongs, r tin- plaintive work songs<lb/>
Sibe-<lb/>
sjoverunieuts are<lb/>
Ib  -? ;? ? W"5FKERV,CES<lb/>
interest j Aquarium, roe- ? mimge ? ?? operating to make this ixpoution Mi one needs a certain amount of Al VtbrtK atrmuca<lb/>
rti.Hpnients the Teco ham), one or more large -tore- such ? fair portrayal of this State- prog-j intelligence; a knowledge of stand<lb/>
' as Macv's. steamship docks to in- ? and achievement The Expo-<lb/>
ill forever<lb/>
(!ottage Ford-<lb/>
M.ect one of ihe I rans-Atlantic lin- sition will cover 187 acre- in an ?nt. a knowledge of the Bible,<lb/>
i a contest in the last<lb/>
 January 28. Th<lb/>
 the participant- to era and Bryan! Park.<lb/>
twentv-tbree letters<lb/>
ird literature, both classical and<lb/>
current a<lb/>
in  advertisements and<lb/>
?? - slogan of 'Ii'1 advertis-<lb/>
?  ? u?iitv-thl'et letters.<lb/>
ewai d of one dollar was of-<lb/>
: the first correct slogan<lb/>
?,  list of the sources of<lb/>
ttei Fannie Brewer proved<lb/>
?? i ner,<lb/>
? . i solution:<lb/>
S . "Patronize Our Adver-<lb/>
Warn i<lb/>
1 hai !? Stores<lb/>
Blount-Harvey<lb/>
R Baker's Studio<lb/>
! I Elite Beauty Shop<lb/>
v oltege I n ('leaners<lb/>
W. T. Grant Co,<lb/>
I n,i?r Forbes<lb/>
i  J  CO,<lb/>
O Lau tares<lb/>
I- Dr. A.  Schultz<lb/>
K Th. Smart Shoppe<lb/>
 Coburn's<lb/>
I) Blount-Harvey<lb/>
V bain? Packing ?<lb/>
r S. Y. Morton, dr.<lb/>
R HcLeilan's<lb/>
T Williams<lb/>
I Whit, <lb/>
- Sally Frocks<lb/>
 ollegi Dry Cb-aner-<lb/>
R Lane Packing Co.<lb/>
v ?'harles Stores<lb/>
LOBBY BEING PREPARED<lb/>
FOR SOCIAL HALL<lb/>
1 OB n tie. - are working on a new<lb/>
' ??:??! ball for the student. To give<lb/>
a  place to congregate -luring<lb/>
? '??? ii ter month a committee is<lb/>
 aaing plans to put seats, a piano,<lb/>
?: -i. i small additions in the lob-<lb/>
t the m w dining ball. If fbis<lb/>
 is not ?bused it will le abled<lb/>
u' tiil in due time there will have<lb/>
?! tal hall of which the students<lb/>
?'H be prnd.<lb/>
and prisoner - songs (.t th-<lb/>
rians. They bring the joys, the<lb/>
heartache the triumps, th- disap-<lb/>
pointments of a great people into<lb/>
their music, and they sing with an<lb/>
informality which make- thern tin in-<lb/>
orabk. Their music is umque<lb/>
and characteristic with an expen-<lb/>
? w?iS. ??. .ivk. ? ???? 1-7 I, n,U . iVrr. Any ?rWH,Be Paid 'f SS,???&amp;<lb/>
and West Point The group will art and education, history, domestic voice mUst be cultivated, as weH as He gave as an example of an edu- $10U tor bnori Hay<lb/>
very likely have opportunity to see arts and home planning, electricitya universal pronunciation, andjeated man, a man who can take a Submitted<lb/>
a dress parade.<lb/>
ea-ilv acces-i<lb/>
 , ble section ol the city. iit- gjagaxines and current events.<lb/>
 -id. trii. will be taken up the Exhibits in the Exposition fall into ,n n imv to say -om<lb/>
Hudson River to Ynkr Tarry- several major group<lb/>
,s. such as agri-<lb/>
tidustrv<lb/>
"Learn How to Learn" was the<lb/>
advice given to the students by Rev.<lb/>
W. A. Wicker, rector of the Epis-<lb/>
copal Church, at the College Y. W<lb/>
MAGAZINE OFFERS<lb/>
CONTEST FOR PLAYS<lb/>
thing, she pointed out, one's gram- C. A. vesper services Sunday night.<lb/>
deal lit of the conntrv<lb/>
ami<lb/>
mimunieatiom. transporta- iiosyncracies must be corrected. eMW through a metropoliti<lb/>
an mu-<lb/>
HU-1 coimioiii ?  i ?? ???  i ni io-vncra les musi ne i-iini-nni. ? ?" .i  ???j ?-<lb/>
New England to Boston tion, petroleum and mineral re- n knowing when to say some- senaa, answer all his questions, ai<lb/>
Tii trio into w England will sources, and natural history aUinW she went on, one must learn never lose patience. 11-<lb/>
?   " . - !??? . , ,? .  111. ?.? 1 BAM<lb/>
to<lb/>
I i iiiiig. sji linn ii. ii. in  - , ii- a -1 ti-c- tj n - sin ii i mil ,i.i .ii<lb/>
1, t 1. . .it exper .mces and aquatic life. to be a g1 listener; a eonversa- how each persoa has some partic-  lU!l? amongthe col<lb/>
' Hvr One of the finest buildings on the liim h,mi(i n,lt k- too one-sided; in- ular gift which God has given him<lb/>
terruptions, sarcasm and being dog- and it is his duty to develop lha<lb/>
n a -?m i introducing a MUSICAL PROGRAM IS WELL<lb/>
: t of it- short play adven- RECEIVED BY STUDENTS<lb/>
DIM i i i?i : a i. i i ? ' ' .M ?" ?  i i  ,  t A i<lb/>
Cw?? ?? ?L2r.JstSSftST<lb/>
Please turn to page four)<lb/>
tion should not be too one-sided; in- ular gift which God has given him (pg y, , ; wi, pubjish the best A well liked and vari<lb/>
terruptins, sarasm and being l-?g- j ami it is his duty to develop that gnort pay written by a student of program was presented Fridaj<lb/>
matic should always be avoided. ; gift in the right way. Although aj ni(1(n 1 r university mo performers<lb/>
ry, tj lt. She concluded with, "Let the hunch study may be "a wei<lb/>
PtintO&amp;TClfihV JVtdkGS rltlG LTOOOy SXOXtU of my mouth and the mdi-jthe flesh he believes that in -very ?( W()k lf a1iite students andjbefore the students parti<lb/>
? "? -? tatioas of my heart be acceptable subject, a man can gain much, it accompanied by an endorsement to! Johnny Lee Deaton,<lb/>
 , t ? l - , . in thv sight, Oh Lord, my strength<lb/>
 person attempting to trail Miss mitory asking her nends to pose re,lener stating that if<lb/>
wh-n nature ,s T-ring such won- J wenderfJf-J v.<lb/>
aii.fu, npportnmties for photogra- perfomace of the Senior May last ,H.aker for the vear.<lb/>
1 i tudie- would soon decide 0?? year, she placed her eamera several ?<lb/>
? ither that the rows from the front of the au-htc<lb/>
Sii, concluded with, "Let the j much 'study may be "a weariness to in the June issue. Entries must be who had iku previously ap<lb/>
e believes that in -very  worjj 0f accredited students andjbefore the students particip<lb/>
aeeompanied<lb/>
he applies himself, as in mathe- tbis effect by a faculty member of by Nola Walters, sang "Tia-nn<lb/>
matica, aside from the mathmat- Tw, Kngli-h or drama department.j Island Xola Walters and Main<lb/>
ical knowledge, he can learn some- entries for this special eompe-i Evelyn Thompson, students in th<lb/>
thing ?f himself and gain self-dis- t;tin must be received not later piano department, played a due<lb/>
her that the rows from the trout -t tne au.ino-j p.piic Hj-r gY<lb/>
sagre-ahl forjrium, and t-ok a time exposure of?<lb/>
FLU EPIDEMIC<lb/>
idpline.<lb/>
Socrates was given a<lb/>
uggeste-1 that we<lb/>
k column" or "flu mol-<lb/>
ing of the sort. We<lb/>
this space to those<lb/>
the infirmity which<lb/>
-live nun i-o ? "iL" , . " i ?,<lb/>
? ??? . , h!t Ih,t .luring which time students passed pervades our fair campus and stops<lb/>
V)v little about the art mi build not with insignificant students, of<lb/>
"l umv W,t!l W&amp; Yet when the film was de-<lb/>
she has a g-<lb/>
does know. <lb/>
Wb-n Mi-s M-ade was a child<lb/>
h?. liu,tber took, -l-velopl U-<lb/>
ilifed pitus. She was wat.died<lb/>
Jtoeely by her -laughter, who hnally<lb/>
lia for herself . small<lb/>
kodak. With which sit- has beentak-<lb/>
im pictures off an-l on ?? s.ne?.<lb/>
She has found out by experimenta-<lb/>
tion that she can take tune expos-<lb/>
ures both indoors an-l outdoors, in<lb/>
 t i.io-bt She knows<lb/>
daytime ?r ? nigin. o<lb/>
tha, tb-v an be taken with the<lb/>
,am- small, inexpensive camera<lb/>
that tin usual l?'riion WOUld US"<lb/>
onlv for pictures in the sun.<lb/>
About a vear ago she concentiat-<lb/>
ed on more indoor pictures. She<lb/>
went up and down the faculty -Ic-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
veloped. no students appeared m<lb/>
the picture.<lb/>
Last summer she took many pic-<lb/>
tures as she traveled and now she<lb/>
values them greatly because they<lb/>
whom the world has never heard,<lb/>
but even invades the ranks of the<lb/>
well known faculty.<lb/>
May the recent spring weather<lb/>
cheer them up so that they can en-<lb/>
joy the birds, which have begun to<lb/>
than April 15, 1936. I "The Sleigh Ride Mabel Wil<lb/>
is a supreme Staqe wants to provide a medium 1 Hams, K. C. T. C -tar imperson-<lb/>
example to mankind of one who for Th. aspiring playwright and tojator, convincingly brought to the<lb/>
learned bow to learn. Mr. Wicker ereate a source of talent for ama-Jstage Zau Pitta, Ma- West, and<lb/>
showed how that great philosopher teur and professional acting groups. Una Merkei. "I'm Falling in Love<lb/>
reached the point of having at bis jT wants to publish good short plays With Someone" was Wesley Banc<lb/>
feet, Athens, the city that had the ??. t.v.rv month for so long as sum's choice for a violin solo, ac-<lb/>
higbest regard for learning; how be j jt receives aeceptable manaseripts-jeompanied by Nola Walters. Han-<lb/>
learned the value of true relation- Consideration will be given onlyjnah Martin an-l Anne Campbell<lb/>
ships and became truly educated; to those plays which have neither j.gave an attractive presentation of<lb/>
and told the story of his tragic! been published nor produced, andLove is Just Around the Corner<lb/>
death, which proved he had learned ! are not adaptations of stories pab-J Completely disguised by the use of<lb/>
how to die. lished elsewhere. Preference will J spectacles, Alvah Page an-l James<lb/>
Special music was rendered byjbe shown plays which can be acted Dudley Simpson, accompanied by<lb/>
Misses Molly Langstou and Edna j within 4 minutes, and which are Marion Wood, sang a medley of<lb/>
Earle Perry. contemporary in theme. "Eeenie. Meenie, Minv, MoFir<lb/>
?- Stag reserves full publieat ion j You and "I Love You Truly<lb/>
DR. C. M. SIMPSON READS rights, but BO production rights. The chairman of the chapel pro-<lb/>
"THE DOVER ROAD AH plays will be read promptly j gram committee. Hyatt Forrest,<lb/>
values iitem gicMn .j.iov ? j ? ; , , i'1-i.<lb/>
serve to recall so vividlv, the mem- sing, and the flowers, which have<lb/>
ones of her trips. ! begun to bloom. The springtime<lb/>
Miss Meade says that because of should not be wasted.<lb/>
her interest in photography, slm is<lb/>
more alert for spots of beauty. She<lb/>
Bees things from a different angle<lb/>
than the average person. Profes-<lb/>
sional photographs are of more in-<lb/>
terest to her. In general. Miss<lb/>
Meade considers her. amateur pho-<lb/>
tography an excellent hobby, one<lb/>
that affords keen delight for spare<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Judging from appearances the<lb/>
rooms in the infirmary must be get-<lb/>
ting full. For the first time in<lb/>
years the halls are being used as<lb/>
bedrooms for patients. Where are<lb/>
the two nurses sleeping? Or do<lb/>
they not sleep? 'Tis a thriving<lb/>
business they have, at any rate. On<lb/>
Friday night the place was inhab-<lb/>
ited bv 58 "Flus<lb/>
Dr. C. M. Simpson read "The<lb/>
Dover Road a play by A. A.<lb/>
Milne, before the members of the<lb/>
A. A. C W. at its meeting last night<lb/>
in Ragsdale Hall. This was the first<lb/>
of a series of programs on which<lb/>
various people will read short plays<lb/>
to the group. The author of "The<lb/>
Dover Road" is also the author of<lb/>
"The Romantic Age" which was re-<lb/>
cently presented here by the Hedge-<lb/>
row Plavers.<lb/>
and accepted or rejected as quick-<lb/>
ly as possible.<lb/>
Dr. C. M. Simpson, of the Fng-<lb/>
lish department, has said that<lb/>
should any student of this college<lb/>
be sufficiently interested to enter the<lb/>
contest, he will endorse that stu-<lb/>
dent's attempt.<lb/>
One hundred dollars will be paid<lb/>
for each acceptable manuscript.<lb/>
Address: Short Play Editor<lb/>
Mage, 50 E. 42nd St<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
urged the student body to seek out<lb/>
talent in its ranks and display it on<lb/>
future programs. The first student<lb/>
program of next term is to be an<lb/>
amateur hour, which will afford op-<lb/>
portunity for any style of exhibi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Three meals a day can't produee<lb/>
maximum physical and mental ef-<lb/>
ficiency, say Yale physiologists.<lb/>
They recommend more frequent<lb/>
and more moderate feedings.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038036_0002"/><lb/>
ruary j.<lb/>
n I<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
UMuact nu:HFR. colleci<lb/>
 ? , Stttdents of Ernst ('arolina<lb/>
rs College<lb/>
i a<lb/>
Edi<lb/>
Managers<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
hit .oi; LAYLOB<lb/>
Cakoi vn Ikin ki.ky<lb/>
Doris Mk.wuorn<lb/>
Hh.kx Dowxisu<lb/>
Sara Lee Yatk-<lb/>
Sara Lapghxin<lb/>
Chapel Hill Cheating Racket Kevealeilfeac<lb/>
E<lb/>
spondence courses done tor them<lb/>
by fessions c<lb/>
rrobora<lb/>
reduted during me wee<lb/>
4 their wort wi<lb/>
1-1'<lb/>
OF CHEATS<lb/>
snonnence courses u?? lv"  . . ?i?n at nanicu<lb/>
X. books left there by students for of parses ?J? .<lb/>
whom X was doing work, papers be- mentioned by X ??<lb/>
in, written, account books and many Wort I ?l? ?'?? <lb/>
The erOUO worked on<lb/>
other pieces of evidence. ??' s ?<lb/>
?pe<lb/>
ted will! the i't! wa<lb/>
articular times complet<lb/>
rented. In fl? Br I'1<lb/>
the pas key ??d wIth <lb/>
their confederate In the<lb/>
by u<lb/>
That afternoon A and the president 0ften from<lb/>
inuousiy,<lb/>
 in the<lb/>
n lrom s uii"?  cure copies oi quo i-i<lb/>
of the student body went down to see morning of the fo!lo"f d' rit?rB and examinations be<lb/>
X With X this time was Y. who was tiays. In ,Vs room Bereu type<lb/>
Chapel Hill Student Government Xs hell)oraIlll waonJ x hud t?i? com- wt.r0 going atooat CODti?u7Bmoke ?-?<lb/>
? ?  . answers if thej were wanted oi<lb/>
ng aepartment, they were able<lb/>
quizzes, p<lb/>
which they wen to M !<lb/>
.1,1 for certain euro<lb/>
Brings Three-Year-OlfJ Ring Uletely of the proceedings of the night shad.<lb/>
to Light<lb/>
Y had agreed with X that the Was beavj<lb/>
were drawn,<lb/>
the door was guardefl<lb/>
era! occasion!<lb/>
X had boast<lb/>
before. l nau asieeu "n" ?-  - ? hi lin rete<lb/>
best thing to do in the matter was to Men were sent out to owam r lQ WJ qolzJ<lb/>
turn over all the information which ences and correlation oi ( n (h(. LTniversity<lb/>
pirates Lo<lb/>
to Guilfor<lb/>
Leman Leads Scori<lb/>
n Games foi Hi<lb/>
Teai<lb/>
(Reprinted from Dail Tar Heel) turn over all the intor.nauo ?? ? ??. - ? returneu quickly and "i nie .<lb/>
The Hoy heard about the cheating they had. Y. on being ?-??? n?y am  chemistrj<lb/>
ring before we went home for the corroborated many of Xs statement. ?m .? in its propel P? sn,?y<lb/>
X and Y<lb/>
wrote tlis<lb/>
tnl tl<lb/>
Semcj Kept absolutely rederau<lb/>
 had been promised to daUy assignment.<lb/>
tated earlier.<lb/>
nig<lb/>
ana tai<lb/>
Christmas holidays. He fold his fa- and added a number of his own.<lb/>
ther, and his father made him prom- at that time, as a result of hat after- Secrecy, oi course, .?<lb/>
ise to go hack to Chapel Hill and as- noon's conversation, A and the stu- nece8sary,<lb/>
sist in getting to the bottom of it from lent body president found definitely x Y for the reason, ? p Inents were the<lb/>
?,? ,??? ? that there bad been a helper la the T,)t. first consideration of tW Hi , wrote<lb/>
ThTCcame back ami told the University mimeographing department li:tll been the name of the n . JeJ ;<lb/>
whohad turned over quizzes to X and d ,Va, waa expressed earlj n tne u.<lb/>
misrepresentation of and sold the exam<lb/>
Assignments wi re ltb r t:<lb/>
and<lb/>
11 03<lb/>
$1.50 per ('ollege Ye&amp;r<lb/>
Numbr 182<lb/>
Room 25<lb/>
 matter December ?. 1925, at the 1 S.<lb/>
. X.  under the act of March  1879.<lb/>
1035 Member 1936<lb/>
Plsvo J Goilercte Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Colic 6icrte Di6est<lb/>
Student, a friend of his. The Student<lb/>
went to the room of A and told him Y. and that the pass key to lonu .am inTe8tigatioi<lb/>
what the Hoy had said. A told the hall was in their possession. Man, IactB throughoutJhyta <lb/>
to t!<lb/>
SONG BOOK, PURCHASED<lb/>
FOP CHAPEL PRGO<lb/>
uch<lb/>
were made in 1) heen d<lb/>
days.<lb/>
m the very w ru<lb/>
rreed that the firsl<lb/>
they added weight to what the Boy the two students thai be would get<lb/>
hail to till. Pieced together, the story ,le!n an,i while A and the student struction, and<lb/>
sounded like something. hody president questioned X, Y went the first<lb/>
Discussing the matter, the little away for 20 minutes, presumably to must<lb/>
group decided that the best thing to gel the papers.<lb/>
do would he to run the leader of the ae returned however, without them<lb/>
The leader was    ?, ?,  ?" lhat sucn a lia5it '<lb/>
or to be rewritten<lb/>
haudw riting<lb/>
In all caw  -tu<lb/>
Student to ask the Hoy to come over other such disclosure<lb/>
to see him and the Hoy came. the hours of conversation<lb/>
By that time, rumors whi.h had Asked to Gel Papers Therefore, I<lb/>
been unnoticed were picked up and y when asked for bis papers, told the group a<lb/>
would be those ol remedy and con- gwers wbi<lb/>
not destruction. And<lb/>
. (ws that the student body<lb/>
would have to be that stu-<lb/>
dents were already taking steps to re-<lb/>
move this blot on the University, and<lb/>
ies existed<lb/>
and the pass key. which had been de- ?? J ?. , ??,?, wM<lb/>
-1(<lb/>
ThisColiegiateWorld<lb/>
a<lb/>
3-<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
I"<lb/>
e<lb/>
1.<lb/>
11<lb/>
h<lb/>
v<lb/>
?<lb/>
ring out ?'t town.<lb/>
named<lb/>
X and the Hy knew it and<lb/>
manded of him. He said, first oi all<lb/>
tin-<lb/>
had tohl the student and A. tha( he had m0VfM, tho papers the<lb/>
Leader Had Assistants night before to the room of a friend<lb/>
Then it was found out, through 0f his, although it later turned out to<lb/>
rumors and other words, that X had ie i,e basement of a certain frater-<lb/>
a number of assistants who would aiiy house. He said that he was 1111<lb/>
possibly carry on the work if X had ai,ie to get the papers at that time as exposun<lb/>
INTERPRETATION VITAL  a- And there would still be the friend was at the moving picture have ha<lb/>
. , .? i fithe assistants to be attended to. Fur- show verslty.<lb/>
ou-i'd the oiunion that the large amount otl ,  . . . A.  i ,?<lb/>
, , , thermore, there would he about 200 Following further questioning (the ea, pun<lb/>
? . .????, ?d an 1 ii'iian 11 u cn-atnig racket can , , ,  , .  rrni<lb/>
t . . . .1 students (so they thought) who wen- whole conversation was again copied records<lb/>
r : ?'? including simply the pvl?s0 involved in the heating activity otl down completely by A on the type- hearing<lb/>
?? - -?? a statement has foundation. ontradie- x alui knew about his program. The writer Y accompanied the two stu- fashion<lb/>
view is extended to inelttde the manner in only way to get rid of X and his as- dents to Y's room and made arrange- And t<lb/>
ent met :iu conquered the crisis presented byjsistants and to prosecute for viola- ments iu meet the next day. At thai commit!<lb/>
12 - : quotation from an editorial in the news-jtion of the honor system the 200 stu- moment A and the president realized the Lni<lb/>
and v,as spreading its cancen<lb/>
t the Btudent body.<lb/>
I'iildiiit Shunned<lb/>
And then there was the question of<lb/>
he all-important trustee meeting of<lb/>
rhursday and yesterday, upon whi.h<lb/>
of such a situation might<lb/>
1 ruinous effect for the Uni-<lb/>
1-n. e, the story v as guard<lb/>
ity was shunned, and ev n<lb/>
the first student ? ? ;ui?-il<lb/>
were renorted ii; routine<lb/>
!<lb/>
M<lb/>
the group<lb/>
a grievous<lb/>
sitv, and th<lb/>
X<lb/>
?up<lb/>
REMEMBER<lb/>
OUP SATURDAY NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE GlS<lb/>
SPEC -<lb/>
HILL H0RNE<lb/>
! dents supposed to be involved would that they must secure Y's papers that  l!ir" although this was so it<lb/>
be through the student council. night, before Y had a chance to de- might be possible to set hira on t&amp;e<lb/>
strov them and their valuable evi- right path.<lb/>
evidence. These considerations might not hav,<lb/>
been so important, furthermore, ha I<lb/>
it not been that the student hods had<lb/>
1 haw Graham and told him of what they<lb/>
,d' our brother I niversity unit an<lb/>
. and straight forwardness of their Go to !r. Graham<lb/>
- have n deliberate and persistei ! A had told his roommate, and to-<lb/>
Howcver disgraceful the scandal,I gether they went to President Frank<lb/>
? for student government and 1<lb/>
Secure Evidence<lb/>
Although Y was unwilling at first<lb/>
 ; intain an ord rlv eommunitv.<lb/>
had heard and of what, they felt cer- to go immediately to g.d the papei<lb/>
tain was true. They asked him if a iu flnall<lb/>
v consente<lb/>
id the three<lb/>
 (<lb/>
BATTLING FLU<lb/>
Svstem snttereu a crucial test, bii<lb/>
tieism has l?n weather And:I Prosecution following an investigaUon walked over to the fraternity house<lb/>
, ii-ii 1 would, at that time, hurt Dr. Graham The student body president, because<lb/>
11 1m- more eleariv indeed, -tiid.iit , ,  . .   . . ' '<lb/>
. . . and the I niversity in its position of 1 his position m student government<lb/>
1 have been instruments in cleariuffl ? ,   ? ,  ,  , <lb/>
! indenmteness about the future. staved outside while A and entereo<lb/>
Mm learned hvthoiteialor will not Dr Grahara n)!iti. always, that t!le house and in the basement gath <lb/>
if what they had told him was true, ered the papers in a satchel. The three<lb/>
rl is page there is ?n idea sei Corthjthen they should not stop until it was then went directly to the University<lb/>
sis. That is the agreement of the! completely cleaned up. Tiny must go y. ML C. A.<lb/>
hot J ? constructivi anl remedial to the bottom of it. They must be There Y asked that a few of his<lb/>
careful and make sure of their facts, personal belongings be removed from<lb/>
but they must not stop until the Job the bag and when they opened the<lb/>
is done. iK. A and president found that the<lb/>
And, more important, Dr. Graham key to Bingham hall was not to be<lb/>
emphasized that it was a matter to found among the papers. Y. however,<lb/>
be done entirely by the students. He insisted that it was. and in a crudely-<lb/>
said that the administration left the concealed gesture, took the key from<lb/>
operation of the honor principle to his own pocket and pretended to hav.<lb/>
them. It would like to he kept ad- found it among the contents of tin<lb/>
vised of all progress, but it would not bau.<lb/>
interfere with student work in un-<lb/>
covering this breach of honor.<lb/>
That night half of the later student<lb/>
group whi.h uncovered the cheating<lb/>
ring was organized. First it was an Htai.t0(! t() loar (hl? pa!U,r <lb/>
: necessary to find out if they had a alul ,hp Mmej, oir,(.ia! tuk it OTn<lb/>
tin infirmary due to a right to enter the premises of X and hhv aml on 1)(,nins it. funii ,hl.<lb/>
US wh have thus fariseize his papers to procure evidence naaaea ,?? mme o ,h(? students men-<lb/>
no legal right to punish X and <lb/>
the group did the next best thin:<lb/>
that was to force them to a<lb/>
campus. However, th present<lb/>
tion of X and V are know n a<lb/>
Universit finds evidence : 1<lb/>
the<lb/>
I!<lb/>
ii<lb/>
;i- 'XI<lb/>
troop worked Hard <lb/>
It is our opinion tha<lb/>
- ever been character<lb/>
ain. Due u the pn<lb/>
oi on being mad<lb/>
In .I. tail, hut no<lb/>
tnpns. Lts exposure wa<lb/>
utions whili were to lea<lb/>
d t!<lb/>
!??? ie-s ases<lb/>
Tuia. morning x and V.in A's<lb/>
riOH) illthe presei 1 ? f A, atnd C,<lb/>
riviewedall th  c ? s andcases<lb/>
wbich h been giv n and wbiCfl the<lb/>
gl r f?oup hi ir seveid put in fair order. all of X's and v- a straight 'hours withThey only a<lb/>
silor; tila- out for lunch. Csat al<lb/>
atypew?Her and wrote evenword<lb/>
w<lb/>
II.<lb/>
ctr<lb/>
tie<lb/>
protect the nai<lb/>
sa's to interpret<lb/>
itat ion that crept in<lb/>
ih<lb/>
down. Immediately aftei supper, the<lb/>
group  at, t n orfe iag tog ther on<lb/>
the c ?  ions and testimony thus<lb/>
far received, drew up an official con-<lb/>
fession which embraced the all-day<lb/>
conversation and previous conversa-<lb/>
outraged and for seemingly no reason. ri(ns Late in the evening at 1100<lb/>
pulled from his pocket a list of names o'clock, X and Y. with B and C met<lb/>
"W<lb/>
Heroines Outraged<lb/>
When acused of this. In<lb/>
i ?.<lb/>
a 11:<lb/>
v<lb/>
 before Paul Robertson, ioca ttornev<lb/>
r oi -tint.<lb/>
to suggestions as t what pr-<lb/>
of his dishonorable work. The stat.<lb/>
tioned in Y's previous confessions ex-<lb/>
(nsetjuently t<lb/>
perins on cam<lb/>
pus who I attorney-general and assistant attor- CeIU two. Y. on being questioned tibotit<lb/>
and notary public, and X and Y set<lb/>
their signatures to the confession after<lb/>
making several changes.<lb/>
I.eaie Hill<lb/>
SiEY REVEALS U<lb/>
GRADS A<lb/>
- m a program of precaution an-offering ney-general were contacted and. after (heso saj( thal OIU BBe he h;(il lul. The next day x left Chapel Hill and<lb/>
rht wtdl be nriuted here a BOod deaI of "t'ation. they ad- ()tu.IL Th? uth(,r he said wag th(i made his exit the following day.<lb/>
,?? 1 iv .?  V111 ;? ,1 hmlv Vised  MU(,ents that tlu'y were l0" name of someone who had nothing to 0theT t'vili besides the straight<lb/>
- uii o n.i t. 11a. f-xl '   ! ! gallv right in conducting their investi-  , testimony against students iavolved<lb/>
ifiicirni to troduce either. 1 he bacteria j ?? ;?  ,??n?1(ir ? ac'<lb/>
- it<lb/>
sufficient to produce either. The bacteris<lb/>
cted bv direct contact. Excessive chilling<lb/>
odv, however, and tt 1- tin- towerei<lb/>
o-k by the bacteria.<lb/>
0 avoid illness will bI the fullwin:<lb/>
inchidins hat and galoshes I.<lb/>
; gatton in that manner. These newIy-unCOVered papers wer<lb/>
Secure Search Warrant that night placed in the University nciinDTunnDnuiii<lb/>
So about 530 in the afternoon of safe with the others. Later in the U. OF NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Saturday, January 25, A and the presi- "ening. meeting in As room, the OUTLINES ATHLETIC POLICY<lb/>
dent of the student body, who had g"jep decided to add to its member-<lb/>
been notified of the group's intended sMp, and the new men were asked Chapel Hill C (XSF -<lb/>
tin<lb/>
n v.<lb/>
baek vouTl know h<lb/>
i<lb/>
w<lb/>
down.<lb/>
Prominent aines Included<lb/>
Before seeking the list of names<lb/>
i spreading baefe 11a.<lb/>
iersons who are il<lb/>
1 in- ioiiowing resolution was passed<lb/>
by th University of North Carolina<lb/>
iticil ami outline- policy<lb/>
concerning scholarship students p<lb/>
mckles, h. id,<lb/>
on Li- legs and the<lb/>
with an iron hammer,<lb/>
program, and Chief of Police Sloan<lb/>
and Officer Wright of the local force.<lb/>
with a search warrant which had been utno?c amuns mc n?i ui names , ? (<lb/>
sworn out by the justice of the peace which had been obtained from Y. the<lb/>
and the chief entered the room of X. students were told that it contained ll! iar-iii -tii.iein- ;<lb/>
.bmltted to "antes of many of their personal pipatmg on varsity.teams. "V<lb/>
f the l nuersity. A- a result, ;m ?.hl<lb/>
Governor Martin L Da  ?. of I H<lb/>
eu rather rough on the stj<lb/>
tllotments of funds to Ohio Sti<lb/>
a. e. the Athletic ('ouncil<lb/>
Open Forum<lb/>
!? X was there and he sul<lb/>
 a search of the room. Then he was friends and many of the most promi- ,<lb/>
questioned and as the conversation ! nent campus figures. They were asked ? "isersity ol .North Carolina, after ?rani ls being passed about on the<lb/>
feoitrx. that tin-writerj Went on. A took down every word on lf the' wished to proceed with the ln years oi intensive study and iq m this new form: "DonM<lb/>
X-s tvpewriter V and the president case, and without exception they sig- strenuous effort, have developed ai ,m " l!liTil tomorrow what vou can<lb/>
' '  ' do t Davev<lb/>
( assmnin<lb/>
of tin- letter reprinted below ex-<lb/>
pressed the sentiment of the entire<lb/>
Y<lb/>
student body to winch he belong<lb/>
of using ami that I speak v th<lb/>
.    -  ;ik. the body 1<lb/>
" prograi  We par- iil(ir Tke ?<lb/>
1, th musical ones and A!oQg with th(. nw! (it- ,ll(. W(.<lb/>
?al'nt 1- being Waiiiia-Kmiw which JOB print in<lb/>
. Friday morning pro- your Vogue column from time to<lb/>
xcelleat. time, voo might have something like<lb/>
rves th<lb/>
of the student body questioned X for nified their determined affirmative re- the Cniversity of North Carolina a<lb/>
five hours. The two officers were pres- &amp;'? When the names were read, si- system of inter-mural and inter-col-<lb/>
i "ViiTT.i ent for a part of the time. and. at the ?? &amp; hurt silen- 11 over the l.j athletics that i-eiitm-lv satis-<lb/>
,U 1T beginning of the second hour. Dean room, and for minutes no one spoke. faetorv  in kt. - fa  ,<lb/>
Bradshaw was called down by the But one by one they voiced their de- traditions of the Universitv of Xorth<lb/>
president of the student body. Follow- termination to press their investiga- (??   T.  . Ul"<lb/>
ing the questioning, the interviewers;tion ana parry the case to the student s' , ' ?  "T athletics 111 tin<lb/>
left with all the papers seized in X's ? council and to abolish the outrageous 'M UT" ' :U1(I brea a huge per<lb/>
cmni.t'tfi'<lb/>
,f ilit- students. I In v<lb/>
, en en much time and<lb/>
,x to bt ttei programs.<lb/>
  suggestions ol<lb/>
,1<lb/>
tins:<lb/>
We wanna know why the food is<lb/>
-o lousy; we wanna know how long<lb/>
these lunches are going to last; we<lb/>
wanna know what's the use of cab-<lb/>
- hi<lb/>
aee: we<lb/>
wanna know how we are<lb/>
irwar<lb/>
, expected to do decent work on fare<lb/>
like that we get in the dining room;<lb/>
-v mterestine chaiK-I periods.  , . '<lb/>
 ' ! we wanna kimw what were going<lb/>
B '  , , (to 11-e for iiionev to keep from starv-<lb/>
n mtersested student. -  , ?<lb/>
ing; wc wanna know why something<lb/>
l-n't done tbont it; wc wanna know<lb/>
1 -ar Editor : who likes the food anyway ; we wanna<lb/>
From "in of niv courses I reealljknow who's afraid to say be doesn't<lb/>
an explanation d" "sympathy" and I like it; we wanna know why we don't<lb/>
the e-sential factors in the ability to (do something about it.<lb/>
sympathize. The idea i- tbat onel VK WANNA KNOW! WHO'S<lb/>
cannot sympathize fullv without hav- (iOIXti TO TKLL l"S<lb/>
A had copied down.<lb/>
Confesses<lb/>
room and the Bra confession which cheating activity. Until late in the n?g? ? the students at the Cni-<lb/>
following morning they discussed V'1S1LV 01 North Carolina an- self-<lb/>
plans of procedure for the week. help students, ami dependent on help<lb/>
Beirin Heaw Tn?t from the I'niversitv itself, their<lb/>
It must be noted here that X was ?t-j.i" neaij xasn friends -nul l?mn; . i,  ? 1<lb/>
not promised by the students or by: T next morning, after a little ?  " Th?t?? .n<lb/>
Dean Bradshaw immunity from prose-j sleeP- and ?? three more additions   Iliat e ? n" n ??<lb/>
cution in the courts if he would give i t0 its membership, the group, now JJ ?i   ? <lb/>
information against the students in numbering eight, set to work classi- P0?1 ? rmadcimore rigid; that Ji<lb/>
t rogression ;i hi mi.<lb/>
Hesitation<lb/>
I repidation<lb/>
1 nteiTogat ion<lb/>
I nformation<lb/>
Investigation<lb/>
 'onfirmation<lb/>
Jubilation<lb/>
Graduation<lb/>
I n Von follow I<lb/>
(rgra<lb/>
- edincHi<lb/>
3 in now<lb/>
Spring FROCKS<lb/>
Navy . . dustj tonesS?<lb/>
lv prints?with al! the re-<lb/>
fashion detus that are mas-<lb/>
j :ng 1936 hcadlinesl U"1<lb/>
PI TT<lb/>
JOHN BOLES and<lb/>
Gladvs Swarthout<lb/>
ami<lb/>
tn<lb/>
One hoy the principal couldn't<lb/>
?1<lb/>
ing first experienced the same situa-<lb/>
tion as the person with whom be is<lb/>
attempting to sympathize. That<lb/>
being true, do you agree with me<lb/>
when I say that the student body<lb/>
of East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
sympathizes with the student body<lb/>
of High Point College in one issue<lb/>
The Forgotten Student,<lb/>
(Hungry!)<lb/>
file the letters and put them indenee at the FnivWkty oT'NoS P! e?JJT'<lb/>
chronological order. Summaries of Carolina before n?t&amp;?K?- ?L F BOTt ? , ?cl?ea m<lb/>
Beginning in June, Yale engi-<lb/>
neering graduates will receive<lb/>
bachelor of engineering instead of j assort them. They included letters<lb/>
bachelor of science degrees. ' from students who had had corre-<lb/>
collected to establish the record of<lb/>
X's and Y's activities.<lb/>
The academic records of every sus-<lb/>
pect was gone over in the files of the<lb/>
different deans. In most cases it was<lb/>
found that the effect of X's aid was<lb/>
clear. In all cases it was found that<lb/>
the evidence given in X's and Y's con-<lb/>
that all students, whether" thev'be' in ordpd hiy.<lb/>
growing. Doctors<lb/>
become the tallest man<lb/>
of policy did not prosecute its stu-<lb/>
dents or former students in the courts    , ?ii-oiin-i tietor- ? ? -? -  . <lb/>
and would not prosecute him unless each letter, cross-references and otherL'  ?i 1 ?? l P?uticijiating m height and weighs 390 noun.Is<lb/>
it were absolutely necessary to do so  ? " - miMtv atl.ldio ami tlnt   ?<lb/>
tm break up his selling aid in cheat-<lb/>
ing. Furthermore, prosecution at<lb/>
court would mean publicity as wit-<lb/>
nesses for all students involved.<lb/>
On the morning of Sunday, January<lb/>
26, the papers which had been placed<lb/>
in the University vaults were taken<lb/>
to A's room and the group began to<lb/>
data were notated and collected. Names " '  , ,l ami "p ?nt,re ??! Bobbie is still<lb/>
mentioned in correspondence, themes, T Cm ? C0V(r ?? ? l?cnod of ,th;nk hp mav w<lb/>
letters and account books all were' years, lie ir resolved, furtherJaj 5ls<lb/>
athletes or otherwise, should be on<lb/>
the same basis and that we see no<lb/>
reason why a boy's eligibility should<lb/>
be influenced by his financial affairs<lb/>
except that he should not receive re-<lb/>
muneration for athletic services, per<lb/>
se<lb/>
One would think Mr. Wadlow<lb/>
should be able to impress a jury.<lb/>
An "overwhelming majority" of<lb/>
college professors are in opposition<lb/>
to New Deal policies, according to<lb/>
the American Liberty League.<lb/>
"ROSE OF THE<lb/>
RANCHO"<lb/>
The First Big Outdoor Mustcol<lb/>
Ever Screened!<lb/>
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
February 11 and 12<lb/>
LESLIE HOWARD<lb/>
BETTE DAVIS<lb/>
in Howard's own famous slog<lb/>
success of last season<lb/>
"THE PETRIFIED<lb/>
FOREST"<lb/>
Also Featuring<lb/>
GENEVIEVE T0B1N T<lb/>
HUMPHREY BOGA'<lb/>
THURSDAY and FRIDAY<lb/>
February 13 and ?V<lb/>
be duties ol ?<lb/>
?trie. ? ?4 , ?<lb/>
told official positio<lb/>
ations. Eighte. - 1<lb/>
three! aeth iti s, ai<lb/>
90 one bettei ? ? bol<lb/>
lecthre offices<lb/>
h itTy-nine of  1<lb/>
tonomous units of<lb/>
ternational organ a<lb/>
remaining number 1<lb/>
excepting 25<lb/>
which students ar<lb/>
basis of aehievemeii<lb/>
ations who m<lb/>
automatical<lb/>
detern<lb/>
Starts Saturday,<lb/>
F?<lb/>
"ATaleofTwoCiliJ<lb/>
Starring RONALD COU<lb/>
??ireumstattee- as class<lb/>
"ar"pns address, them<lb/>
"ban 100 groups to wh<lb/>
;tre admituk! largely h<lb/>
personal choice.<lb/>
Duke student organl<lb/>
into the following genj<lb/>
"ations; Athletics. h?<lb/>
!stry. classical studie<lb/>
subjects, dormitory<lb/>
maties, education, engJ<lb/>
nsics, French. Germ<lb/>
honorary scholarship<lb/>
HniP, law, literature,<lb/>
??licine, music, na<lb/>
needlework, physics,<lb/>
? publications, relid<lb/>
scientific societies, and<lb/>
rnities and sororities!<lb/>
<pb facs="00038036_0003"/><lb/>
Keb<lb/>
ruary n<lb/>
li, 1936<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
ea'ed Teachers Defeat A. C. C. 58-41<lb/>
Thriller<lb/>
 r'mgSy<lb/>
?eW?<lb/>
1 ?!???<lb/>
re th<lb/>
 th' 1Mb,<lb/>
)KS PURCHASED<lb/>
? CHAPEL PROGRAMS<lb/>
MEMBER<lb/>
SATURDAY NiGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE GIRLS<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
ONLY .<lb/>
LL HORNE<lb/>
5.90<lb/>
hions in new<lb/>
ring FROCKS<lb/>
y . dusty tones . ? hve"<lb/>
.j it5?with all the new<lb/>
jhic n details that are mak-<lb/>
1936 headlines! 11 to 171<lb/>
I T T<lb/>
hN BOLES and<lb/>
Gladys Swarthout<lb/>
in<lb/>
Irose of the<lb/>
RANCHO"<lb/>
First B.g Outdoor Musical<lb/>
Ever Screened!<lb/>
rUESDAY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
February 11 and 12<lb/>
SUE HOWARD<lb/>
BETTE DAVIS<lb/>
ymmtt own tamo" ?<lb/>
mam of last s?o??<lb/>
HE PETRIFIED<lb/>
FOREST"<lb/>
Also Featuring<lb/>
INEVIEVE TOBIN .jjrr<lb/>
I HUMPHREY BOGA<lb/>
HURSDAY and f&amp;f<lb/>
Februory 13 and ?<lb/>
Starts Saturday,<lb/>
Feb.15<lb/>
2&amp;ZS&amp;<lb/>
grates Lose First Game<lb/>
to Guilford But Win Second<lb/>
mm 4M Ik gain third 'pirates score<lb/>
: li ads Scoring in Both<lb/>
ga nes for Home<lb/>
Team<lb/>
L<lb/>
Stowe Back in Game After Two<lb/>
Weeks Illness<lb/>
EfoUeman led the Pirates to su-<lb/>
it her victorv liv scoring 19<lb/>
OF<lb/>
OF 62 42<lb/>
P. I. C.<lb/>
Scoring Attack Led By<lb/>
Holleman With 27 Points<lb/>
i Johnson and Holleman Leadj<lb/>
poiafcd The Greenville girls' basketball Team to Easy<lb/>
' ! Marks Second Win nf Seison fnr Su" who waa 1rk in lh" E- C. team won their third vidtory Thins- Win<lb/>
T T. C. line-up after two weeks illH?y ? U? ? A<lb/>
II<lb/>
cored !? points foi<lb/>
?ll'l liljii'c<lb/>
to 13.<lb/>
riu Pirat.<lb/>
rainpagi in<lb/>
KtK'kv Mount<lb/>
GAMES FOR WEEK<lb/>
One Trip of Team is Postponed<lb/>
Pirates Win First Game of Year<lb/>
With A.C.C. in Swift<lb/>
Attack<lb/>
V, in!<lb/>
:i scoring<lb/>
t T. . with !u mints. John- 1;i- Guard<lb/>
1. t'rii-r. Adkins, 2.<lb/>
Ramblers Led by L Martin and<lb/>
Fine Defensive Work of Guards<lb/>
Get Their Third Straight Win 1hncnn oriH Mnll.man , parii i:AIlt Mill IMH-R in the.nrt game of the annual<lb/>
series between E. C. T. '  and<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College, th<lb/>
Teachers were the victors, 58-41.<lb/>
There has aiwavs been a great deal<lb/>
of rivalry between these two teams<lb/>
and they have always battled on even<lb/>
'?' rms, but this time the Pirate- went<lb/>
?coring rampage and the abovi<lb/>
.? as the result. The garni<lb/>
- .???.???.?????? ? as filled with fast action and two<lb/>
(The excellent floor work of the guards lekson, P. J.  forward, led thej'J1J e.  x ,<lb/>
mson i. Ridenhour<lb/>
Temporarily<lb/>
iii- ?? a<lb/>
The Pirate- ran roughshod over<lb/>
Showing supremacy in every I Presbyterian Junior College, E. C.<lb/>
-i Lanier with 7 points eaehjpbase of the game the Teachers ran T. C. used substitutions very<lb/>
second till with led the visitors. Kip a score of 22-8 at the end of the frequently bu1 1 J. C. couldn't stop w' i,1;i.v '?" <lb/>
to defeat the "Y 42- Starting line-ups- half- Led bv L Martin who scored the rampaging Pirates. Holleman led first.game willye Honda<lb/>
n was star player and     ,  . is poirtts ofthe total 12, the game the Pirates with 26 points. John- William and Man ol!<lb/>
. c I i i '?? ' I. v. forwards: mining- ' , , , , . ,  ? , . rinhiirn a Sati <lb/>
?oi I I . I with , ' hvas never doubtful as to the outcome, gon was next with In points. Hel- lJ nil1 v ??<lb/>
uuii?n was ?inuer-uplham 4 Stowe 9. Center: Hollemar1? ' ?? ?<lb/>
tball t i<lb/>
! T<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
Y.<lb/>
VleC<lb/>
1 <lb/>
L he excellent noor wont oi tne guarus teKson, r. ?. ? . lorwaru, icu mc ????? ,?? ??-? ??? -? t <lb/>
was an important factor in the final visitors with 20 points while his Last year the varsity played m-<lb/>
score. teammate Edgertbn, center, scored gat'   ?; ; winning one and  <lb/>
k' SIount "Y" forward, led thi Campbell Forwards: Sessoms 4 The sis thai play on Coaeh l. losing one. Eh l<lb/>
'?' points. This was Anderson 4. Center: Thomas g.lNorton's first team are all freshmen Line-ups:<lb/>
nii win in us manv  ? v- i - i : - except Cantain Margaret Martin. E. C T. C, Cunningham I. Stov<lb/>
iiiian inith ??. Lanier ?. <lb/>
Around Washington<lb/>
Substitutes K. C. T. C Jennings<lb/>
Fleming 3, Hintbn, Ayers 1. ?<lb/>
L'he hne-up: 5, ('enter: Holleman 26. Guards<lb/>
K. C. T. C. Forwards: I Martin Johnson It Ridenhour 1. Sub<lb/>
?ibsontji? Blanton 2, Miller 6, Wilson 12. stitutions: Ayers, Wells 2, Jen<lb/>
II. Martin 1. Guards: M. Parker. 2, Smith 3, (ii<lb/>
mm<lb/>
In- year they have<lb/>
and are hoping they<lb/>
losing<lb/>
dnts. ?<lb/>
Ki<lb/>
v,<lb/>
?i,<lb/>
after a brief fight lasting enly one<lb/>
week, succeeded in having their pres-<lb/>
ident released from the WPA two<lb/>
weeks go. reinstated in her oM job.<lb/>
do not make another tie !v<lb/>
? ed A. C. C. with lo points,<lb/>
the nexi game. . '<lb/>
ri' ? .i r i v (? (i  htartmg line-ups:<lb/>
1 lie trio the I L. 1. i . Urirls  , ,? . ? ,<lb/>
v i i ,i  i ? ,l t ? C. . . Forwards: unning-<lb/>
 aritv liu'l planned lo take toj, ? <lb/>
m , n it; , lham ? btowe  enter: Holleman<lb/>
Mitchell and Appalachian was post- . , . ??? ? i<lb/>
 V, ,i   27. Guards: Johnson 11, Bidenhoui<lb/>
poned because ol weather conditions.<lb/>
? Martin, R. Parker. Howard, Hollo-1Center: Edgerton 14. Guards:Arrangements however, have been ? Fiil Vi.?tr  , ? ?.k.<lb/>
well. Welsh, Wilson. Substitutions: Carr jmade for the Teachers to play Ap-Ij r, 6eater: Hayes, 6. Guard<lb/>
 Wingate Forwards: Brooks 2,1. Cromartie 1. palachian February 22. 11 is not ?<lb/>
Garner 2 Fowler  Holme- 5. definite whether they vvjll t<lb/>
? ii i-ii- i. ii. .iiiuuii t. viuaiu in. i mi' i. . nun, i. im-i'ii.<lb/>
Campbell- Boone a Spell I, Pleasant, Shackleford. Captain M. P. J. C, Forwards 20, Murphy 6.<lb/>
: i  l l1  II 1 Illl ? llti, 1.1 f in.i eil- - I<lb/>
Washington D. c. A.CP?Therum pier 5, Autry, Manning.<lb/>
?'ERA-WPA Lodge of the American . ?<lb/>
f Government Employees,<lb/>
WRITTEN BY DOAK<lb/>
; RVEY REVEALS UNDER-<lb/>
GRADS AS "JOINERS<lb/>
The union's success surprised cu-n its ?<lb/>
D08itlon from evervbodv1 from Mr VIentor of Diamond Sport at State' Rudvard KipUng was made tlrf Nicholson hai<lb/>
? ? rl?? ?l?l, ? DU.nnn Ll .?   .V 1 ill ih, holi.e n<lb/>
N'SF<lb/>
Hopkins down au.iinst reinstatement<lb/>
at Mis- Richter, allegedly discharged<lb/>
foi inefl ? ncj They had ammunition<lb/>
li. tor a ?? light ready, ammunition<lb/>
, :? ulati ?; ' prove that their pres-<lb/>
- ??: idenl - dischargi had been prompted<lb/>
? ' i aer ui Ion acth ities, not by the<lb/>
Completes Work on Playing<lb/>
and Coaching<lb/>
Guard Lovelace, Bass, Hemmings, pRACTCE HQUSE<lb/>
McGnnsey.<lb/>
LATE POET FEATURED IN<lb/>
) CHAPEL PROGRAM Thursday evening, January 23,<lb/>
ilanehe Pearson and Marcelh<lb/>
   i a- their dinner guest<lb/>
Mitchell of not.<lb/>
Substitutions: E.  I. C. Ayers,<lb/>
Well8! 'JewiiiigSj Smith 4. Gibe i<lb/>
HAS DINNER GUESTS.Final Message By Mrs. Smith l ? ?? Cuimingham 4. Btever-<lb/>
Carries Loyalty Theme "<lb/>
OUTSTANDING WORKER<lb/>
i<lb/>
recenl chapel program in the home management house, Mi<lb/>
under the direction of Ruth Horne. Elmer Robinson of the high scho.<lb/>
"Loyalty?the willing, practical,<lb/>
and thoroughgoing devotion ol ai<lb/>
Mi? .Yahhie Ev<lb/>
iier-on to a cause was the theme oi ,<lb/>
' . . , m was an outstandin<lb/>
the hnal message brouglit bv Mr<lb/>
of Greenvillt<lb/>
dent w hile ii<lb/>
i ino uhitiuiii "i Hum ri,??.  -  - i??? 'Ischool here She received her I!<lb/>
l'he Recessional" was read in j faculty and Miss Mack of the collcgi n:iZlll Smith, annual i W. C. A.T,<lb/>
 , v  .  concert by the students and then faculty.<lb/>
i oaeh "Chick" Doak, head base- sung bv a chorus of ten voices. The Dinner was served at -ix o'clock<lb/>
? !l ???, -it s,)tl. en kecamc Poem :lf was read by Helen HardMrs. Bloxton, Rose Beeman, and<lb/>
? ,V '  ' ?  ing; the -torv of Wee Willie Ruby Kelh were present al<lb/>
i full-fledged author recently wliei<lb/>
Idegree in 1929. For several years<lb/>
sneaker, at the college vesper serv-l , i . ? i i ? i i . t,?<lb/>
"  , ? , , ' . she raiteht m Raleigh. Siie got hr-r<lb/>
ices Suinlav night, January ??<lb/>
I)<lb/>
Winki was told 1 Lucile Lewis, The three coursi dinner consisted<lb/>
u,l the poem "When Earth's Last of silver nip, baked chicken<lb/>
masters decree in education at<lb/>
University of North Carolina.<lb/>
v. Mu<lb/>
rork, which quality they the firs( edition oi hi- hook. "La .<lb/>
could prove waa ex- ball, Bfom to Plav and Coach It pture s Painted" was read by dressing and gravy, candied potatc.<lb/>
r , ( i).1M  broccoli, oickles. celerv, tomiit<lb/>
came on the press. Urace i 'a ivson<lb/>
once the central<lb/>
? , between Gen Huh .<lb/>
the XRA employees' .<lb/>
;e lion w<lb/>
iliee<lb/>
time th<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
? Ikuii I<lb/>
a ).inure of t'h<lb/>
q the front.<lb/>
"Mv Boys, t:<lb/>
 II<lb/>
oke at the rally held h FERA<lb/>
- laum hing tl e effort to re-<lb/>
.i Kit r. Doni van, dur-<lb/>
as sMe-id- tit ? I the XRA<lb/>
as suniiarlj discharged, and<lb/>
itati d until the case, brought<lb/>
ie National Labor Board, was<lb/>
in bis favor.<lb/>
s serves to iilustrate the point<lb/>
? ?? Binci th? New Deal first brought<lb/>
youngsters into tbe service there has<lb/>
 ? e owing militancy in the govern- .<lb/>
i : ?  ' i I in;<lb/>
i ,  men! employees' unions. The NRA<lb/>
lodge and th? fkkaavpa lodge have<lb/>
? beet outstandingly pugnacious and ?' - ?<lb/>
o credit outstandingly successful in their hat- Mr, Doak covers practically all<lb/>
: for ties The militancy is directly at- phases of the diamond sport in his<lb/>
a large tribatable to a number of young men work. Following a preface written<lb/>
. salad, cheese biscuits, butter, vanilla<lb/>
1 SFA College Sews <lb/>
' I FRATERNITY BILL AT LAST<lb/>
vi !?? n't taken up by '?"<lb/>
, . ,i ntramurals Hartford, Conn.?(NSFA).? Under-<lb/>
i naees lona aud t'aiillats ;u Trinity College have pre-<lb/>
? m i seated a petition to tbeir Board of Tras-<lb/>
therette. I he only '<lb/>
tees asking for the abolition of com<lb/>
puisory chapel. The petition sets fortl<lb/>
"that compulsory religious services do<lb/>
to oegan her talk by relating the<lb/>
classroom and everyday life with<lb/>
 . . ?, , , . , Ai present she is connected smh<lb/>
"What sorl ot class would this class  '  ,   ? . <lb/>
. .  Y vollege, ' olumma I mversitv,<lb/>
be ii everv member were just like! ?<lb/>
, ? ? New i "re. lit September l'r.<lb/>
me? and stressed the obligations  v1 ,  , ,4 i  - <lb/>
. . . . ; rhomas Alexander, head t -ev.<lb/>
Ii-it i-riiin- with miii- meinlier-liiii ill ? ? . r ,<lb/>
 ollege, sent her to London to super-<lb/>
ivise undergraduate students from<lb/>
New College. She returned January<lb/>
epcudable man. bv l'r. Kovce, pro- ?. , ? , . ?<lb/>
. '   . ??  She and five students met u:<lb/>
fessor at Harvard I niversity, quot- . , -? -y j   rour.<lb/>
AID TO STUDENTS,v1 ; fthful loyal, essen- : the -isit. coll anj<lb/>
! tiiil, mdisjieusable, reliable, trust- ,<lb/>
, , , ? ! i plantations,<lb/>
worthy and valuable; he counts not;1<lb/>
Sfinueapolis, Minn The Creeks j (j!()i. iV ,niIlUtS-  never idle, re-j ?<lb/>
have another good word for it.<lb/>
that come with our membership in<lb/>
various organizations.<lb/>
She read the description of a<lb/>
uses no task be anno' conquer<lb/>
Fraternity house bills have always and never betrays a trust.<lb/>
been u<lb/>
of the last points brought VTiew all the tasks of life<lb/>
eall<lb/>
tt lion<lb/>
lefore a rushee. Now house men are land act so that the Taw of thy life<lb/>
ikely to make it the first point In may become the law of mankind, was<lb/>
i broadening and deepening the under- msjiJQg talks, for recently a fraternity ner<lb/>
eomplish their primary purpose<lb/>
liaddy, aud tu<lb/>
1 ai Guilford<lb/>
iin i iiavi coacneu ai iuui"i'i<lb/>
. , . graduate's spiritual life, but that in- house hill rescued a university ot<lb/>
i olleire 1 mversitv of Aorta aro- , . . . <lb/>
stead they weaken and cheapen his Minnesota pledge from jail.<lb/>
 'I runtv ('ollege I now 1 hike . Kaviy one cold morning a couple of<lb/>
U-ersity), and N. . State ol- ;llt,llllum ?y,u,nl 0f cred- "eeks ago Lloyd Alhinson discovered<lb/>
s prowler outside the Phi Kappa Sigma<lb/>
its<lb/>
It continue<lb/>
DANCE TO BE GIVEN<lb/>
SATURDAY NIGHT<lb/>
THE<lb/>
GLORIA SHOPPE<lb/>
Is Always<lb/>
READY TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
The freshman class w ill give th<lb/>
? junior class a dance Saturday night<lb/>
That compulsory re- !lo?- here' He cal,ed poHce' but theat the Campus Building. The Y<lb/>
prowler had disappeared.<lb/>
recent i(<lb/>
iiiege and uni- ,v himself are chapters on the lay-<lb/>
tigious services do not a. eomplish their morning<lb/>
secondary purpose of disciplining the a pledge came back t0 the house. Find<lb/>
'? entine Motif will be carried out.i<lb/>
ver<lb/>
iiv graduates, who organized and<lb/>
.undergraduate by arousing him for jg ,he frollt (ioor looked, he started<lb/>
 '? , '  ' " ' earlv morning classes, to use religion ;irouI?j to the back door. As he reached<lb/>
??? ?.?,?; Tf5- rf "d? . p? . ?????? . ?. ?? ? ?? ?-<lb/>
r i!r ?- n? :  ??,? M?. a1 "n,im" a"pram into<lb/>
and now they're showing the old guard<lb/>
k<lb/>
??That it is unnecessary for us to a squad car. and took him to the<lb/>
rovernment employees- leaders that bnrf atoh?fiphy of himself "JL aIiy institute method for city jail.<lb/>
? constituting b . . ' ? ?i?? his connection with baseball. Ae- . J ranu<lb/>
d lectures on<lb/>
lizations pr<lb/>
, . , . , ? hi- connection with basebalL A.C- Despite protests, repeated attempts<lb/>
th.vre not -list theoreticians hut also ? . ,1.1 maintaining high attendance ;it chapel H<lb/>
tneyn ? ???? cording to the State diamond euach,p1? 8 identification and many requests to<lb/>
Jimmy Carr's Orchestra will pro<lb/>
vide music for the dance.<lb/>
All co-eds and town students,<lb/>
holding courtesy cards, .are invited<lb/>
The dance will be from s :30 until<lb/>
in :30 dock.<lb/>
t haperm.e- will be Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
Hollar. Dr. and Mrs. ReBarker, Dr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Simpson, Miss Norton and)<lb/>
Miss Mack.<lb/>
E. T. GOOR, JR.<lb/>
SHOE SHOP<lb/>
Come To Us For<lb/>
ALL SHOES REPAIRS<lb/>
RINGLESS HOSIERY<lb/>
a liv a<lb/>
 in , , ?v,??o s   "?" ? a, Hientuicaiion aim inuiii i?4?"i' "j<lb/>
?? able union strategists. The charge , - rh(. pU!ll. for s,rvi(s. The elimination of liu1' Ujok at his plpdge pin, the unf0rtunate<lb/>
their pi annum the old timers is that they re years. During that period :sry attendance, which we sincerely be<lb/>
?th -tu<lb/>
 pledge was lodged in a cell in the city<lb/>
?, enter- just a bunch of young coin ge aura, i)(. haa pkyed 1U (.vt.rv position and ;HvVo l0 be au evil, is ln itself tne sub- jajl when M awoke at s am a final<lb/>
?? therefoae, come to know t?"Ulitulion of a healthy religious atmos<lb/>
student a?<lb/>
"playing at ?union the way children<lb/>
student a play at 'soldlera fundamentals of each position<lb/>
interesting social Thai charge is partially true. There through experii<lb/>
lice.<lb/>
determined search of his pockets<lb/>
I phere brought out his house bill. This was<lb/>
. ? ' i. 1, ,  presented to the police sergeant and<lb/>
?pe?enee ?  alv a ft)lip!t. ?f -over the rampts In  pre ace Mi. chapel Hill. X. a-(NA)Two (Uestioning. the pledge was re-<lb/>
,rs, but also at hov-?? people among the young folks forth the fad that, . . . i aavi u Lhousand o? the twenty-nve hundred<lb/>
1 in leadership ??. M? mii0ns of the New Deal sired nor only to pay tribute to the undergraduates at the University of 1 M<lb/>
,nov. aa.mcie ?? most of them are aal'grea' u?neau name, hut  d-<lb/>
irganiranons are liard,u,ad(.d ai5<lb/>
most 01 luviu  ?-  - ,<lb/>
as the AFGE president, what 1 may to assist yepmg hxgh<lb/>
proximateh M stu . i4ihcock In addit on they bring ?  ' '   L<lb/>
fil.nt- of ;iU)1 , ?m sionaT players in acquiring knowl-<lb/>
'v 1,  ? ? ? 'he ?overnment em- edge of the ftiiidainental- of the<lb/>
 are not taxed oy wfca o,d leaders seem to ??<lb/>
In- leader- laik' unity- PerslstoB?e, and ideal- h, .lUf .uhy tllilT- "From the size<lb/>
in two oreani- is,il f"111 of the l???'k it will not be expected<lb/>
fid time to serve With the example of the unions of . it snoui(l contain all that may<lb/>
nd' four t'lidint- these capable young amateurs before; ,)(. wriUi.v )U the subject of hase-<lb/>
Wing four major them many old line lodges have begun 1)!tll. l,ut ,au assure 'he reader<lb/>
to show signs of increasing vigor. I that it contains my proven knowl-<lb/>
? : . irroups are au- rlvde Baheock. who stood godfather to ; edge of the game<lb/>
- of national or in- l! sra lodge when it was first. Among the.men prominent in the<lb/>
11 tl ,? ? c wht a ram- baseball world who have made fa-<lb/>
rgamzations while th ? forn)ed. never reah.ing jhat a ram <lb/>
tmber are purelj 1-al. bunctious youngster the bab was president. Oak<lb/>
3 l?or ??? " slated to become, is beginning to find okm? ? (, <lb/>
ltS n '1(CrLUn 'fhis job much harder, and somewhat K . <lb/>
rement, and 20 organ- M M the young people<lb/>
memberships w? ?<lb/>
Seventy-three nationalities are<lb/>
Fepxesented among the S00 stu-<lb/>
dents at Boston University.<lb/>
North Carolina are now members of a health is more equitably distrih-<lb/>
eleaning and pressing cooperative : ,unon? ,nari.i(l men than<lb/>
which did a busienss of nr000 in 1934 bachelors, says a recent<lb/>
and far exceeded that in 1935. The co- ?<lb/>
op own its own truck, employs a man-1<lb/>
ager. two clerks and six cleaning and<lb/>
pressing experts. The success in clean-<lb/>
ing and pressing led the students to add<lb/>
clothing to their cooperative service. A<lb/>
private clothing merchant in Chapel<lb/>
Hill is reported to have advertised that<lb/>
he would run the co-op out of business<lb/>
if it cost him $100,000. Today, the<lb/>
merchant is in bankruptcy. The co-<lb/>
operative was started on a capital of<lb/>
$760 raised by $1 membership fees from<lb/>
the charter members.<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
ASKEW GROCERY<lb/>
For QUALITY and<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Full Fashioned, 45 Gauge<lb/>
79c Per Pair<lb/>
2 Pairs for $1.50<lb/>
MILLER-JONES CO.<lb/>
108 V.rth Evans Street<lb/>
 memberships r so aCtive At the last AFGE national<lb/>
?lilLti 1 ?ntion recently the FERA and<lb/>
. - class ratings sum t? n crreat<lb/>
lege; Connie Mack, manager of the<lb/>
Philadelphia Athletics; Branch<lb/>
Rickey, president of the St. Louis<lb/>
Cardinals; and W. G. Bramham.<lb/>
president of the Association of<lb/>
ra lodge delegates provided a great<lb/>
. ??LrlVt 15r own other -servative leaderhren- Minor League<lb/>
TfT f uT0r:ZZTt:C Dr. Jose Antonio Lopez, former<lb/>
 dent organizations fall offices unless the o Id leadIP Ullivorsitv student, may be<lb/>
ff. following general classihover its hardening of the arteries.<lb/>
' Athhties. biology, chem of course, although the employees<lb/>
?&amp; elaaaieal studies, commercial:unio,8 can fight single cases of dis-<lb/>
lr'J?'t dormitory groups, ?lra-jcriminatory discharges or wage cuts,<lb/>
maties, education, engineering, for" they.e up against it when hundreds<lb/>
-?? . fiucauon, eiigineeiiiii, "? ;they'e up againm. it ??????<lb/>
asi s. French, German, h?i'tory,Sare dropped from the payrolls of the<lb/>
tooorary seholarahip and leader- bureaus, which is being done right<lb/>
'hlF, law. literature, mathematics. recentIy begun economy<lb/>
ine, music, nature study, ? momentum. with tha<lb/>
1-work, pbysks, political sci- a ? im employeaa<lb/>
 publications, religion, genial NR?T or more a yeM ago.<lb/>
-?nt,hc societies, and social fra-las WPWfllL . a.<lb/>
 and sororities. 'tbe ni <lb/>
Ohio University student, may be<lb/>
tbe next governor of Puerto Rico.<lb/>
An expert in "euro-psychiatry<lb/>
has been added to the Williams<lb/>
College health department.<lb/>
Graduate courses in automobile<lb/>
traffic control will be offered by<lb/>
Harvard next year.<lb/>
Beginning next year, M. I. T.<lb/>
will limit its freshman class to 600.<lb/>
Only once in 30 years has the<lb/>
Princeton co-operative store failed<lb/>
to pay a 10 per cent dividend.<lb/>
Amateur hockey and college bas-<lb/>
ketbaE are increasing in popularity<lb/>
at Madison Square Garden.<lb/>
FOR BEST VALUES<lb/>
IN HOSIERY<lb/>
PURE THREAD SILK<lb/>
Alt New Shades for the<lb/>
College Girls<lb/>
VISIT<lb/>
WHITES<lb/>
t f ? f t yf m w"r 9 9<lb/>
 Qp w w m "r w m w yJi<lb/>
If It's<lb/>
SPRING STYLES<lb/>
You Want?Try<lb/>
COBURN'S<lb/>
Buy Where<lb/>
College Girls Buy<lb/>
WELL DRESSED LADIES<lb/>
Shop at<lb/>
II I IM K FORBES<lb/>
ft ?????- ?? jfegtesgftsst!<lb/>
CHARLES HORNE<lb/>
DRUGGIST<lb/>
Come in and Enjoy the<lb/>
Latest Popular Music<lb/>
With Your Soda<lb/>
WE HAVE THE SUIT, COATf DRESS, HAT<lb/>
AND ACCESSORIES<lb/>
The Newest of All in Spring Things<lb/>
Arriving Daily . . .<lb/>
COME TO SEE US<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
'The Ladies' Store"<lb/>
Opposite Proctor Hotel<lb/>
DONT FORGET US WHEN YOU<lb/>
BUY YOUR NEW SPRING OUTFIT!<lb/>
We Have Spring Dresses and<lb/>
Suits at Your Price.<lb/>
We Are Here to Please the College Girls<lb/>
THE SMART SHOPPE<lb/>
Across from Bank Building Dkkiasaa) A'<lb/>
<pb facs="00038036_0004"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
t<lb/>
t<lb/>
It<lb/>
2<lb/>
c<lb/>
(<lb/>
t<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
C<lb/>
t<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
LITERARY<lb/>
COLUMN<lb/>
LIFE OF RUDYARD KIPLING<lb/>
TOUR TO MEXICO AND<lb/>
SOUTHWEST 32 DAY TRIP<lb/>
Alice Maedonald met John Lock-<lb/>
wood Kipling, a modeler and de-<lb/>
signer of terra COtta in the Burslem<lb/>
Potteries, at a picnic on the edge<lb/>
of a lake near a village in England<lb/>
named Rudyard. They feli in love,<lb/>
became engage and were married<lb/>
when he received an appointment as<lb/>
director of the art school at Bombay.<lb/>
Despite the lack of pleasure shown<lb/>
by their families, the couple crossed<lb/>
to the Orient.<lb/>
Rndyard Kipling was born in<lb/>
Bombay, on December 30, 1SG5. (The<lb/>
story that he was named Rndyard<lb/>
in memory of Lake Rndyard has been<lb/>
ienied by Kipling himself.) He<lb/>
learned both languages spuken<lb/>
around him?that of his parents and<lb/>
hat of the inhabitants. At the age<lb/>
of six he was sent to England, where<lb/>
he remained for five miserable years<lb/>
with the wife of a retired naval of-<lb/>
ficer, who boarded children from<lb/>
?verseas.<lb/>
At eleven. Rndyard's father took<lb/>
him with him to visit an exposition<lb/>
at Paris. The two became very<lb/>
lose friends. The boy entered the<lb/>
Fnited Service College, a famous<lb/>
public school in England intended<lb/>
hiehV for sons of Anglo-India civil<lb/>
military officer Five years were<lb/>
-pent here, and served as editor of<lb/>
?he U. 8. C, Chronicle during his last<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
At seventeen, when he had to<lb/>
choose between the university or<lb/>
India, he took India.<lb/>
His father having become Director<lb/>
of the Lahore Museum, Kipling<lb/>
went to Sahore to seek a job. He<lb/>
secured a position as sub-editor of<lb/>
the Civil and Militant Gazette. His<lb/>
chief was constantly aware that the<lb/>
newspaper was being spotted with<lb/>
little ditties originating from the<lb/>
seventeen year old newspaper man.<lb/>
The verses became popular. Re-<lb/>
quests came that they be made into<lb/>
a book. The idea appealed so to<lb/>
Rudyard that he became author,<lb/>
editor, printer, and publisher of a<lb/>
hook that was hardly a hook in size<lb/>
and form. It was called Depart-<lb/>
mental Ditties and when every copy<lb/>
was sold, demands came for a new<lb/>
edition. So it was that Kipling he-<lb/>
;ran his writing which continued un-<lb/>
til he was known and liked through-<lb/>
out India.<lb/>
Then he went to England. His<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
grounds is the Exposition Audito-<lb/>
rium, with its theatre seating 4,600<lb/>
people where grand opera, famous<lb/>
orchestras, folk festivals and<lb/>
pageants will be presented through-<lb/>
out the Exposition. The Hall of<lb/>
Natural History will house hun-<lb/>
dreds of examples of Southwestern<lb/>
game and bird life, mounted in<lb/>
habitat groups, and now being col-<lb/>
lected at great expense by experts.<lb/>
Some of the buildings will be of<lb/>
temporary construction and re-<lb/>
moved as soon as the Exposition<lb/>
closes. But many of them will be<lb/>
built to be used indefinitely. Build-<lb/>
ings of a permanent type to be<lb/>
erected, and their approximate cost,<lb/>
include: Transportation and Petro-<lb/>
leum. $39000; Varied Industries,<lb/>
Electrical and Communication,<lb/>
$350,000; Aquarium, $150,000;<lb/>
Agriculture, Livestock and Food<lb/>
Products, $750,000; Fine Arts Mu-<lb/>
seum. $350,000; Natural Science<lb/>
and Horticultural Museum, $250<lb/>
000; House Planning Hall. $150<lb/>
000. A landscaping program, cost-<lb/>
ing more than $200,000 is now un-<lb/>
der way. This will give Dallas one<lb/>
of the greatest civic centers in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Proper emphasis will be given to<lb/>
the historic features of Texas. Texas<lb/>
was for a long time owned by Spain<lb/>
and then passed into the hands of<lb/>
Mexico. The Republic of Texas<lb/>
was born out of the Texas Revolu-<lb/>
tion of 1835-3(5 which was brought<lb/>
about when the Anglo-American<lb/>
settlers of the then Mexican pro-<lb/>
vince of Texas revolted.<lb/>
Texas remained an independent<lb/>
nation recognized by foreign pow-<lb/>
ers, including the Fnited States,<lb/>
Great Britain, France, Holland and<lb/>
other nations, until 1845 when, by<lb/>
a plebiscite, she voluntarily entered<lb/>
the Union, becoming the twenty-<lb/>
ninth state. Texas is the only state<lb/>
to have been recognized as a sover-<lb/>
ign nation prior to admittance to<lb/>
the sisterhood of states.<lb/>
It is interesting to note that Texas<lb/>
has known the flags of six nations in<lb/>
the period of her rule by the white<lb/>
race. In 1519, De Pineda, a Span-<lb/>
ish explorer, landed on Texas soil<lb/>
and claimed the country for Spain.<lb/>
Later, France raised her flag on<lb/>
Texas territory and for some time<lb/>
maintained a small settlement, hut<lb/>
Texas remained a Spanish colony<lb/>
until Mexico revolted from Spain<lb/>
1611. Montreal is now the largest<lb/>
city in Canada and serves as a great<lb/>
commercial, educational and reli-<lb/>
gious center.<lb/>
From Montreal the group will<lb/>
travel to Ottawa, the capital city<lb/>
of the Dominion of Canada. The<lb/>
parliament and other government<lb/>
buildings will be visited. The high-<lb/>
way to be traveled to Toronto paral-<lb/>
lels the St. Lawrence River, the<lb/>
greatest inland waterway in the<lb/>
world. In Toronto the provincial<lb/>
government buildings, the Royal<lb/>
Museum and University of Toronto<lb/>
will be included in the sightseeing<lb/>
program. The party will proceed<lb/>
to Niagara Falls either by boat or<lb/>
highway. A day will be devoted to<lb/>
the inspection of the largest power<lb/>
plant in the world, the great locks<lb/>
on the Welland Canal, the Shredded<lb/>
Wheat plant and also the Commu-<lb/>
nity Plate electro-plating plant.<lb/>
Ample opportunity will be given to<lb/>
see the Falls both dav and night.<lb/>
The Finger Lake" district of<lb/>
New York, one of the most beau-<lb/>
tiful sections of the State, will be<lb/>
traversed. Then the group will con-<lb/>
tinue by the Susquehanna Trail to<lb/>
Harrisburg, the capital of Pennsyl-<lb/>
vania. Three hours will be devoted<lb/>
to the study of the battlefield in<lb/>
Gettysburg. A stop will be made<lb/>
at Harper's Ferry where John<lb/>
Brown organized his raid. Endless<lb/>
Caverns will be visited and each<lb/>
member of the party will marvel at<lb/>
this great underground wonder so<lb/>
effectively lighted. One of the seven<lb/>
TOURS TO NEW ENGLAND<lb/>
AND CANADA 22 DAY TRIPS<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
some time will be spent on the cam-<lb/>
pus of Yale University. The Uni-<lb/>
versity plant is one of the most<lb/>
beautiful in the world and the in-<lb/>
stitution has a long and enviable<lb/>
record in its contributions to the<lb/>
cultural life of the nation. Roger<lb/>
Williams, after fleeing from Massa-<lb/>
chusetts, settled in Providence. This j<lb/>
city is now the capital of Rhode<lb/>
Island, the seat of Brown Univer-j<lb/>
sity, the oldest Baptist Church in<lb/>
the United States and also our EO<lb/>
greatest jewelry manufacturing cen-j travel<lb/>
ter. The next'stop is made at Fly-1 HUi<lb/>
mouth to see the rock on which thej<lb/>
Pilgrims landed in 1620, the Monu-<lb/>
and William Bradford's J and<lb/>
On the way to Boston stops IuaIlV<lb/>
will be made at Miles Standish I<lb/>
Monument, the graves of Miles!<lb/>
Standish and John and Priscilla<lb/>
Alden, the John Alden home, and j ??? ?<lb/>
home and grave of Daniel Webster.<lb/>
through<lb/>
ment<lb/>
grave.<lb/>
in old Mexio will be spent IB<lb/>
Monterev. Monterey has become<lb/>
a great winter resort on account of<lb/>
the mineral springs and its situa-<lb/>
tion at the head of a beautitul va-<lb/>
ley. In the vicinity are rich lead,<lb/>
copper ami silver mines, ami the<lb/>
city has important smelting works,<lb/>
iron foundries and woolen, mills.<lb/>
The houses are built of stone m the<lb/>
Moorish style. The Battle of Mon-<lb/>
terey occurred here September 24.<lb/>
1846. Gen. Zachary Taylor stormed<lb/>
the fortified city and after four .lays<lb/>
hard fighting the Mexicans surren-<lb/>
dered.<lb/>
For three days the group will<lb/>
toward Mexico City giving<lb/>
attention to tin' eHBtOtna of<lb/>
tliis foreign people, their general in-<lb/>
dolence because of the tropical heat<lb/>
the apparent listlessness of<lb/>
in the midst of poverty and<lb/>
misery. The vast majority live to-<lb/>
day as their ancestors did for gen-<lb/>
erations before them, still subsist-<lb/>
little more than their corn<lb/>
cakes and black beans.<lb/>
Mexico City is situated in an<lb/>
?fli(<lb/>
Thi-<lb/>
fhe<lb/>
Una-<lb/>
jeene<lb/>
Umieo<lb/>
place,<lb/>
during nia term oi o<lb/>
tie is located very clo<lb/>
of the Battle of rhapultep.<lb/>
Fifteen niihs out from<lb/>
City is a mo-t unusual<lb/>
Xochimilco. At one rime the<lb/>
a large lake l.ur little by lit!<lb/>
land has been reclaimed, no!<lb/>
at the edges, but al-o ill the -hallow<lb/>
that today there i- no lake<lb/>
intricate network of<lb/>
cover an extensivf<lb/>
Xochimilco is p"i"l<lb/>
a the '?Floating<lb/>
?'Venice of Mexico a- til<lb/>
f locomotion i- d<lb/>
alumnJH<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
places, <lb/>
but only<lb/>
an<lb/>
which<lb/>
puiaily<lb/>
 iardens<lb/>
The group will travel  .<lb/>
 ? oval basin about 50 miles long am.<lb/>
40 miles wide completely surround-<lb/>
ed by mountains of great height<lb/>
1 scenic beauty. The altitude of<lb/>
Mexico City is 7,500 feet and the<lb/>
liniate is remarkably agreeable.<lb/>
Quincy, the home of the Quiney an<lb/>
Adams families.<lb/>
Boston has many places for in<lb/>
spection and study. A partial listjan"<lb/>
of places to be visited includes:<lb/>
Boston Public Library to see the<lb/>
famous Abbey paintings of the<lb/>
King Arthur' Court. Old Xorth<lb/>
Church where the lanterns were<lb/>
hung to give signal to Paul Revere, j tec, am<lb/>
house in which the poem "House<lb/>
bv the Side of the Road" was writ-<lb/>
el<lb/>
Surrounding Mexico City are<lb/>
many interesting remains from an-<lb/>
cient civilizations, principally Az-<lb/>
inany of these are within<lb/>
easy distance to the city. Mexico<lb/>
City itself abounds in relics, beau-<lb/>
wonders of the world, Natural j teUj the old frigate "Ironsides tiful buildings both old and new to<lb/>
Bridge, will be included. Then tho Faneuil Hall. Paul Revere House J s?-v nothing of its wonderful parks,<lb/>
group will travel across the Blue<lb/>
Ridge Mountains, through Lynch-<lb/>
burg and Appomattox, back to<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
These trips last year proved tojwin inclutie Harvard University<lb/>
be both pleasant and edncatfosaHyj 0dest an(j one of tho mogt<lb/>
prominent in the United States)<lb/>
canal-<lb/>
area,<lb/>
known<lb/>
or the<lb/>
chief inethoi<lb/>
water.<lb/>
Back in U. S. A.<lb/>
After the completion of the Mex-<lb/>
ican portion of the tour the group<lb/>
will go into the lower end OI the<lb/>
Rio Grande River or commonly<lb/>
called "Magic Valley This is one<lb/>
of the mo-t fertile region- on this<lb/>
continent and a large quantity<lb/>
citrus fruit 16 produced here. I be<lb/>
group will then proceed to Hous-<lb/>
ton, the largest city in 'I exas. It<lb/>
is also the first cotton port in Amer-<lb/>
ica and the largest spot i<lb/>
ket in the world. Baton<lb/>
Capital of Louisiana,<lb/>
(duded for a complete<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
Then the party moves<lb/>
Orleans, one of the mo-t<lb/>
cities on the entire trip,<lb/>
will be devotet"<lb/>
Rob<lb/>
M<lb/>
I-<lb/>
'Bsea-Tystj<lb/>
i<lb/>
i MID-Wi<lb/>
ni in ti<lb/>
<lb/>
ra.<lb/>
riii<lb/>
Will"<lb/>
F<lb/>
J ones-May<lb/>
0<lb/>
if<lb/>
Gr.<lb/>
Ru<lb/>
otton mar-<lb/>
Rouge, the<lb/>
ill be in- (<lb/>
sightseeing <lb/>
Worsley-Bradlw<lb/>
I;<lb/>
on to i'?<lb/>
interesting<lb/>
A full dav<lb/>
to seeing the I rencb<lb/>
Danish quarters, Audubon<lb/>
Park, business section, shipping and<lb/>
wholesale center and other import-<lb/>
radh<lb/>
die<lb/>
lunce<lb/>
?nior<lb/>
am<lb/>
<lb/>
site of the Boston Massacre<lb/>
Granary Burying Ground, theI tweak<lb/>
Mother Church of the Christian! Of historic<lb/>
Id'cathedrals and other points 01 in-<lb/>
ind<lb/>
general inters<lb/>
ant places. New Ch-<lb/>
in history and has an<lb/>
to be found in no Other<lb/>
By easy tages and<lb/>
to see along the way th<lb/>
Scientists, and others. A side trip is thfi Great Cathedral 878 feet long J ura<lb/>
on tin<lb/>
to Greenvilb<lb/>
and ITT feet wide. It stands<lb/>
site originally occupied by the<lb/>
Teocali, the main temple used by<lb/>
and the Museum which has in its the Aztecs in the height of their<lb/>
varied collection the famous glassglory and destroyed by the Span-<lb/>
instructors for the purpose flowers This trip will then follow iard's before 1525. The present<lb/>
of becoming more familiar with the j aimost the identical route of Paul. Cathedral was erected in 1575;<lb/>
geographic features of our country, BeVere8 ride toward Lexington and much of the material used in this<lb/>
to study the settings and share the Concord. A trip will be made at building was taken from the ruins<lb/>
atmosphere ?t many of our writers r<lb/>
cans<lb/>
atni'<lb/>
sity,<lb/>
with<lb/>
? grot<lb/>
by<lb/>
an<lb/>
rich<lb/>
.here<lb/>
T<lb/>
of <lb/>
of<lb/>
Dec<lb/>
Mrs<lb/>
Crow-MitcheH<lb/>
Wi<lb/>
Committees at v?i<lb/>
plete Plans f(M<lb/>
Series of 01<lb/>
JOHNSON'S ORCh<lb/>
PLAY ON EA<lb/>
Complete Lisl<lb/>
Here To Fa<lb/>
Acqu i - ?<lb/>
valuable. Many students and teach-<lb/>
ers should accept this opportunity<lb/>
to travel under the supervision of<lb/>
college instructors for the purpose<lb/>
Montgomery. Atlan<lb/>
lotte. This four w<lb/>
crease each members know<lb/>
the resources, occupations, in<lb/>
ieal and literary backgrounds<lb/>
our own people and<lb/>
portunity to learn <lb/>
life of one of our 1.<lb/>
e n t v<lb/>
will<lb/>
Mobile.<lb/>
Char-<lb/>
greatly in-<lb/>
dge of<lb/>
liifor-<lb/>
of<lb/>
give ample op-<lb/>
mething of the<lb/>
ext-door neiirh-<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
11 'inter<lb/>
memo<lb/>
Brown-Kaox<lb/>
01<lb/>
th.<lb/>
?war'<lb/>
Wooten-Mooriai<lb/>
Mo ? . ? Lift<lb/>
Wo. ?? <lb/>
English public were much slower to in H&amp;l a?d -eet up a republican<lb/>
accept his works. When he did suc-<lb/>
ceed in gaining notice, however, he<lb/>
was acclaimed eagerly.<lb/>
In 1S92, Kipling married as<lb/>
American girl, Caroline Balestier.<lb/>
He accompanied her to her home at<lb/>
Battleboro, Vermont, where they<lb/>
bought a home and lived until 1897.<lb/>
Two children w re born here. Ver-<lb/>
mont winters were .veil liked by<lb/>
Kipling. He wrote many of his<lb/>
best works while in America. Phila-<lb/>
delphia was played up in them to a<lb/>
large extent.<lb/>
Though Kipling left America in<lb/>
1897 and journey To Africa, there<lb/>
are remainder- of him in this<lb/>
country today. There is a Kipling<lb/>
-tation in Saskatchewan; a Kipling<lb/>
in Ontario; Rudyard, Montana;<lb/>
Rudyard and Kipling. Michigan;<lb/>
Kipling, Xorth Carolina; Rudyard,<lb/>
Mississippi; and Kipling. Louisiana.<lb/>
Following the visit to Africa, he<lb/>
and his family returned to England<lb/>
and settled in a quiet little Sussex<lb/>
village, Kottingdean-near-the-Sea.<lb/>
Two years later, they came to<lb/>
America for a visit, but their stay<lb/>
was shortened by a serious illness.<lb/>
Kipling spent weeks at the point of<lb/>
death in a New York Hotel. Return-<lb/>
ing to England, he settled at Bate-<lb/>
man's near the village of Barwash<lb/>
in Sussex.<lb/>
In 1907, Kipling won the Nobel<lb/>
Prize for Literature. He was also<lb/>
made Rector of St. Andrew Uni-<lb/>
versity, and received honorary de-<lb/>
grees from many colleges. His rmly<lb/>
son was killed in the World War.<lb/>
Until his own death recently, Kip-<lb/>
ling liv d quietly as one of the most<lb/>
venerated figures in the literature of<lb/>
the day.<lb/>
(Material taken from Anice Page<lb/>
Cooper's essay on Rudyarl Sip-<lb/>
line, )<lb/>
'raigie House which was the home<lb/>
of Longfellow. The group will see<lb/>
"Wayside which was the home of<lb/>
Hawthorne ami also Louisa Mae<lb/>
Alcott. Other stops will include:<lb/>
Wayside Inn. renowned through<lb/>
Longfellow's "Tales of a Wayside<lb/>
He will be glad; Imr. the uattionvi(i 0f Lexington<lb/>
to furnish any information that<lb/>
may be desiret<lb/>
field tours.<lb/>
concerning these<lb/>
HISTORY OF VALENTINE<lb/>
Saint Valentine's Day is a festival<lb/>
popularly called Valentine Bay,<lb/>
which falls on February 14. The<lb/>
origin of the observance of this<lb/>
day is altogether uncertain. Equally<lb/>
vague are the circumstances that<lb/>
led to its connection with Saint<lb/>
Valentine. Among the many in-<lb/>
teresting folk customs of Medieval<lb/>
France and England was a gather-<lb/>
ing of the young people on Saint<lb/>
Valentine's eve. Names were drawn<lb/>
by chance from a receptacle, the<lb/>
person whose name was on a slip<lb/>
becoming the "Valentine" or sweet-<lb/>
heart of the holder for the ensuing<lb/>
year. Although not in this same<lb/>
manner, modern Americans continue<lb/>
the observance of Saint Valentine's<lb/>
Day.<lb/>
form of government<lb/>
Texas existed as a Mexican state<lb/>
until 1835-36 and then flew the flag<lb/>
of the Republic of Texas, exchang-<lb/>
ing it for the Fnited States flag in<lb/>
1S45.<lb/>
Students of Texas history will<lb/>
find the historical wing of the state<lb/>
of Texas Building a veritable treas-<lb/>
ure house of Texas, for it will fea-<lb/>
ture relics and records of Texas<lb/>
during the days of the revolution<lb/>
and republic, and also important<lb/>
items from the period of statehood<lb/>
up to the present day. The Hall<lb/>
of Heroes will bo particularly sig-<lb/>
nificant, as it will memorialize the<lb/>
men who founded Texas, giving<lb/>
their records and the history of<lb/>
their lives with an authenticity<lb/>
based on years of painstaking re-<lb/>
search.<lb/>
Besides the Centennial Exposi-<lb/>
tion, Dallas has many other places<lb/>
of interest. It is the seat of South-<lb/>
ern Methodist University and also<lb/>
the Medical, Dental, and Nursing<lb/>
Schools of Baylor University. Dal-<lb/>
las is a great railroad center and<lb/>
distributing point with an annual<lb/>
wholesale business of more than<lb/>
$700,000. Sixty-five per cent of the<lb/>
petroleum produced in the United<lb/>
States is produced within a day's<lb/>
travel of Dallas. It is a great cen-<lb/>
ter for the manufacture of shoes,<lb/>
leather goods, and cotton goods. Her<lb/>
hotel facilities are adequate to care<lb/>
for thousands of visitors.<lb/>
After leaving Dallas, the next<lb/>
city of importance to be visited is<lb/>
Austin, the State's Capitol. The<lb/>
State Capitol Building, The Gover-<lb/>
nor's Mansion, O. Henry's Home,<lb/>
The University of Texas and the<lb/>
University's Historical and Scien-<lb/>
tific Exposition will be visited.<lb/>
Through Canada<lb/>
En route to old Quebec the high-<lb/>
way leads through much of the<lb/>
woodland and along lake shores for<lb/>
which Maine is so well known.<lb/>
Across the international boundary<lb/>
and the St. Lawrence River the<lb/>
St. Lawrence River the group will<lb/>
enter Quebec. In this quaint city<lb/>
many old buildings will be visited<lb/>
as well as Abraham's Plains on<lb/>
which the battle was fought between<lb/>
Wolfe and Montcalm. French lan-<lb/>
guage and customs still persist with<lb/>
more than ninety per cent of the<lb/>
people. Dog carts, thatched roofs,<lb/>
simple modes of life give the vis-<lb/>
itor the feeling that he is in an old-<lb/>
world atmosphere.<lb/>
The next city to be seen is Mon-<lb/>
treal, the site of which was visited<lb/>
by Cartier in 1535; Champlain es-<lb/>
tablished here a trading post in<lb/>
and to study the many places of hi<lb/>
toxic value included in the tour.<lb/>
The tour will be conducted bv<lb/>
Mr. Paul T. Ricks. Greenville.<lb/>
N. . who has had several years<lb/>
experience in the management of<lb/>
educational tours<lb/>
the first Normal School in the Unit-<lb/>
ed States; the home of Harrington.<lb/>
one of the heroes in the Battle of<lb/>
Lexington; the Old Manse, located<lb/>
in Concord; the homes of Emerson<lb/>
and Thoreau; Concord Bridge and<lb/>
" " the "Minute Man statue. The re-<lb/>
Reinstatement, after a long ah- turn trip will include the Bunker<lb/>
sence in this section, of the old-time; Hill Monument,<lb/>
method of punishment?chastise Leaving Boston the group will<lb/>
ment, by means of the chair andi travel through a number of smaller<lb/>
paddle?took place February 7 but prominent cities, such as<lb/>
punishment! Swampscott, Marblehead and Sa-<lb/>
?flem. In Salem the group will visit<lb/>
the law. The nine cases were'the "House of Seven Gables A<lb/>
(tors.<lb/>
The ;otir will be conducted by<lb/>
Mr. Paul T. Rick East Carolina<lb/>
Teacher- College, Greenville, X. I<lb/>
? will gl<lb/>
informal<lb/>
ami n<lb/>
tional<lb/>
tour. This tour should<lb/>
appeal to both teachers ai<lb/>
students.<lb/>
E. C.<lb/>
T. C. CO-EDS<lb/>
CONVICTED OF CHARGES<lb/>
when sentences and<lb/>
were meted out to nine offender:<lb/>
of the old Aztec temple.<lb/>
In and near Mexico City are a<lb/>
number of places of important sig-<lb/>
nificance in connection with the<lb/>
Mexican War. James K. Polk, a<lb/>
North Carolinian by birth, sent a<lb/>
message to Congress in the spring<lb/>
of 1846 that a state of war existed<lb/>
between Mexico and the Fnited<lb/>
States. Within fen mile- of Mex-<lb/>
ico City three decisive victories<lb/>
were won in .1.S47 by American<lb/>
troops?Contreras. San Antonio<lb/>
and Cherubusco. An armistice of<lb/>
three weeks followed the Battle of<lb/>
Cherubusco. Then the Americans<lb/>
advanced to the city gates ami students this semester,<lb/>
stormed the heights of Chapultepec. j the waiting list.<lb/>
Gen. Winfield Scott, with his vic-<lb/>
torious army, entered the Capital<lb/>
city.<lb/>
One of the most imposing build-<lb/>
Th<lb/>
A pa<lb/>
tdly furnish addi-<lb/>
on concerning this<lb/>
strongly<lb/>
i college<lb/>
?'Scliinnnel star of the 1<lb/>
police department- dog -eeTi<lb/>
credited with the individual<lb/>
tion of eight murders.<lb/>
?ii.<lb/>
lion,<lb/>
Burgess<lb/>
 'larence<lb/>
20 193<lb/>
form- r L<lb/>
of Kinst.<lb/>
Birth Announcemen:<lb/>
hi W<lb/>
Mary I<lb/>
Fred<lb/>
Tarhee<lb/>
rrnhr<lb/>
V<lb/>
Recent Visitors<lb/>
Xita Brun<lb/>
of danuary 1'<lb/>
Brumlev. Nil<lb/>
A new<lb/>
Syracuse I<lb/>
course<lb/>
niversit<lb/>
in marriagi<lb/>
y will enroll<lb/>
with 41.<lb/>
130 t<lb/>
on<lb/>
Stanford University<lb/>
-p the nearest bar fiv<lb/>
eer drinker<lb/>
k<lb/>
student<lb/>
regulations<lb/>
mile- from<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
achii<lb/>
Oth<lb/>
garet<lb/>
1 lora<lb/>
Robert<lb/>
Merle<lb/>
Purne<lb/>
?Normal<lb/>
g near<lb/>
Fultoi<lb/>
EVndi<lb/>
Muse<lb/>
ings of Mexico City is the National<lb/>
brought before the regular session stop will he made at the fish pack- Palace which houses the Presidon-<lb/>
of the district- Kangaroo Court, ing plant in Gloucester. The drive. tial. Treasury and other Govern<lb/>
held in the Court Room of the j along the rugged and irregular coast i ment offices. Over the main en-1<lb/>
Boys' Dormitory Friday night after j of this section is one of the most trance is the famous "liberty Bell<lb/>
the basketball game. Judge Jimmy scenic to be found anywhere. The used to call a meeting of patriot- on<lb/>
home of Whittier in Amesbury will tin- night of September 15, 1810. It<lb/>
I<lb/>
on<lb/>
. yT Up <lb/>
Johnson, of Gary, presided, mani-<lb/>
festing, by his wise decisions, his be visited. The group will travel;is rung now on every Septembei<lb/>
knowledge of the world and his tin- through Portland which was Long- bv the President. This Palace i-<lb/>
QUALITY AND SERVICE<lb/>
At<lb/>
LAUTAR ES<lb/>
derstanding of men.<lb/>
fellow's home for many vears. Thelth<lb/>
e same site once occupied by tin<lb/>
I.<lb/>
The cases coming before the jury next stop is made in Brunswick to Palace of the Montezumas<lb/>
were as follows: Howard Aman and<lb/>
Elmer Smith charged and sentenced<lb/>
to ten licks each for perjury, Son-<lb/>
ny Foote, charged and convicted of<lb/>
excessive flapping of the mouth,<lb/>
was sentenced to twenty licks; Joe<lb/>
Hatem, charged and convicted of<lb/>
audibly masticating in the Dining<lb/>
Hall, was sentenced to twenty-five<lb/>
licks; Lyman Smith, J. V. Marsh,<lb/>
and Francis Sinclair, convicted of<lb/>
visit. Bowdo.n College, brom this Tho Xational Museum will be<lb/>
jnstitution Longfellow and Haw- visitc1 to th1 eolleetion of W(. j<lb/>
thorne were graduated m 1825. AU idols and p Am ;<lb/>
night will be spent, in WatemiieL most vauable pieee8 in th? MuJ<lb/>
which has one of the largest paper; seum arp the Aztpc Calndar St<lb/>
manufacturing plants in the world the Saerim,ial Ston( ail(, qJ<lb/>
Our itinerary will include old Plumed Serpent.<lb/>
San Antonio. The Alamo, Shrine<lb/>
of Texas liberty, is in the center<lb/>
of the city. Here Travis, Bowie,<lb/>
Crockett and their gallant little<lb/>
serious charges, the nature of which fom were massacred by the Mex<lb/>
was not made public, were sen- j ;cans. The old palaces of the Span-<lb/>
tenced to fifteen licks each; Paul j ish governors and ancient missions<lb/>
Bowen, George Jordan, and Joe are stiH standing. San Antonio<lb/>
Hatem were charged and sentenced has the largest air training center<lb/>
to five licks each for contempt of ?Randolph Field?in the world<lb/>
court.<lb/>
Chapultepec Park is the princi-<lb/>
pal park of the Capital. On a hill<lb/>
in the park is built the Castle where<lb/>
the President of the Republic lives<lb/>
The gentlemen of the jury, fair<lb/>
and impartial, always finding the<lb/>
culprit guilty, were Frank Jen-<lb/>
nings, George Williard, Bruce Sim-<lb/>
mons, and Jew Ayres.<lb/>
Attorneys for the defense, Paul<lb/>
Bowen and Lee Ridenhour, showed<lb/>
themselves to be quite capable, los-<lb/>
ing every ease. Prosecuting Attor-<lb/>
neys, using all the wiles of the pro-<lb/>
fession, were Francis Sinclair and<lb/>
Sonny Foote.<lb/>
Sheriffs Gherman C. Smith and<lb/>
Bill Holland were present, Sheriff<lb/>
Smith unwillingly serving as Chief<lb/>
Executioner. He stated that it will<lb/>
be necessary to purchase new equip-<lb/>
ment before the next session of<lb/>
court.<lb/>
June 22, ten days before the<lb/>
American Olympic rowing trials,<lb/>
has been set as the date for this<lb/>
year's Poughkeepsie regatta.<lb/>
Each first down would eount for<lb/>
one point under a new football scor-<lb/>
ing system proposed to the national<lb/>
collegiate rules committee.<lb/>
Frostbite sent 112 University of<lb/>
Wisconsin students to the infirmary<lb/>
during a recent cold wave.<lb/>
Laredo is the port of entry into<lb/>
Mexico on the newly completed j<lb/>
Pan-American Highway. Thou- j<lb/>
sands of tourists will be attracted<lb/>
to Mexico this summer because of<lb/>
the opening of this new highway.<lb/>
Plans are now under wav whereby<lb/>
the presidents of the two nations<lb/>
will dedicate the Pan-American<lb/>
Highway by greeting each other and<lb/>
clasping hands across the interna-<lb/>
tional boundary line.<lb/>
Into Mexico<lb/>
The next lap of the journey leads<lb/>
into a foreign land for a visit of<lb/>
more than ten days. The first night<lb/>
CUT ME OUT<lb/>
SE This Coupon and 10c is good for n<lb/>
BISSETTE'S<lb/>
OUR SANDWICHES<lb/>
Are<lb/>
BIGGER AND BETTER<lb/>
Valentine Novelties<lb/>
W. T. GRANT CO.<lb/>
Convenient Shopping Center<lb/>
one BANANA SPLIT at<lb/>
PITT SODA SHOP<lb/>
Center th and (otarn'he Strwt<lb/>
John Blanc hard. Prop.<lb/>
2<lb/>
DO YOU WANT YOUR KODAK FILMS<lb/>
DEVELOPED PROMPTLY AND SKILLFULLY?<lb/>
Bring Them To Us!<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
FREE GIFTS TO<lb/>
E. C. T. C. STUDENTS<lb/>
AT<lb/>
PLEASANT'S<lb/>
Come in and Learn<lb/>
About Oar Plan<lb/>
PHONE 80<lb/>
Expert<lb/>
Watch Repairing<lb/>
Quick Service<lb/>
SPECIAL PRICES<lb/>
to<lb/>
COLLEGE GIRLS<lb/>
BEST JEWELRY GO.<lb/>
CHARLES STORE<lb/>
Now Featuring<lb/>
The Newest and Smartest in<lb/>
SPRING MERCHANDISE<lb/>
LADIES' AND MISSES' SUITS<lb/>
DRESSES : MILLINERY : SHOES : HOSIERY<lb/>
Our Unusual Volues and Prices Will Surely Please<lb/>
DOLLAR DAY!<lb/>
All of you undergraduates will be<lb/>
missing the chance of a lifetime<lb/>
if you fail to trade with us next<lb/>
Thursday, February 13,<lb/>
BLOUNT-HARVE<lb/>
iliVf<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Abbott,<lb/>
Walkee,<lb/>
Foxz, ?!<lb/>
di Vol<lb/>
Milton Jenkins,<lb/>
with Philip Luc<lb/>
rior. Berta Ai<lb/>
Whiteside, Marg<lb/>
Paul Bynnm, E<lb/>
with James Atk<lb/>
with Lake Gas<lb/>
Arerett with M.<lb/>
garet Banck with<lb/>
ere, Lucille Bass<lb/>
tog, Rose Been<lb/>
Beeman, Raehae<lb/>
Idles, Margarel<lb/>
Pollock, Dorothj<lb/>
fowl Bolton, Fr<lb/>
Banyan II. An-li<lb/>
Bhaw with Waym<lb/>
Braswei with San<lb/>
Lte Brewer with<lb/>
Carolyn Brinklei<lb/>
Britton, Hattie Li<lb/>
Donald Morrison, I<lb/>
Harold White, I<lb/>
George (lark. ?.?<lb/>
P. M. Fleetwood,<lb/>
with Bill Brown, I<lb/>
with Irvin Kc? 1. N<lb/>
lock with Ralph it<lb/>
e Bullock with<lb/>
Sarah Bonn ? ?<lb/>
Margaret Burke i<lb/>
lard and RusselHB<lb/>
Burke with Bryai<lb/>
Barney with Russd<lb/>
(Please turn to<lb/>
!<lb/>
INFIRMARY BEC(<lb/>
A Rl<lb/>
patiei<lb/>
The infirmary<lb/>
hospital for the i<lb/>
?Wka. In all. th,<lb/>
Jwo hundred studew<lb/>
i? a fifth of the Btw<lb/>
mfirmary during t<lb/>
epidemic. There -a<lb/>
students in bed at o<lb/>
tt time beds weal<lb/>
tals and six<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Eight of the ?<lb/>
u- These are out<lb/>
2 ??ly six stude<lb/>
? Annie Mav<lb/>
;as employed for <lb/>
" time that she wj<lb/>
r taken ill, and<lb/>
kcame her bed rod<lb/>
Ca? m during Mi-<lb/>
Jhss Diekerson<lb/>
Q a many as onel<lb/>
 Patients during<lb/>
?gl they bad so m<lb/>
Ml8s Smith and<lb/>
as<lb/>
C Kle,Dt and a<lb/>
!ry didn't eet t<lb/>
to<lb/>
<pb facs="00038036_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>