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            <mods:title>The Teco Echo, January 15, 1937</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</mods:abstract>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">19370115</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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          <mods:subject authority="lcsh">
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              <mods:namePart>East Carolina University</mods:namePart></mods:name>
            <mods:topic>Students</mods:topic></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
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              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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          <dc:title>The Teco Echo, January 15, 1937</dc:title>
          <dc:description>East Carolina's student-run campus newspaper was first published in 1923 as the East Carolina Teachers College News (1923-1925). It has been re-named as The Teco Echo (1925, 1926-1952), East Carolinian (1952-1969), Fountainhead (1969-1979), and The East Carolinian (1969, 1979-present). It includes local, state, national, and international stories with a focus on campus events.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>East Carolina University--Students</dc:subject>
          <dc:coverage></dc:coverage>
          <dc:contributor>East Carolina University</dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>19370115</dc:date>
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          <dc:identifier>38049</dc:identifier>
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          <dc:subject>East Carolina University--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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: tees were held in Sox<lb />
I dgar Long Memorial<lb />
! pal 'hureh at 3<lb />
1 r 28, and burial in<lb />
� i metery. Service- were<lb />
the Rev. Ir. V. A.<lb />
Greensboro, the Rev.<lb />
a of Raleigh, and the<lb />
. binaon of Roxboro.<lb />
:� arera were : Roger.<lb />
irrell Wilkerson. Rcgi-<lb />
and Wallace Harris,<lb />
� bb, dr of Roxboro.<lb />
ral cortege left Martin-<lb />
tneral Home Monday,<lb />
8 at 12 o'clock for Rox-<lb />
pallhearen were: W. R.<lb />
W. II. Harris. W. A.<lb />
I Hunter, J. A. Long,<lb />
rfield, S. G. Winstead,<lb />
irt, Y. 1). Merritt. Kin-<lb />
Walter Woodv, W. T.<lb />
B. K. Love, F. O. Car-<lb />
Lunaford, G. S. Brooks,<lb />
E. K. Bradshaw, T. D.<lb />
3 B. Davis. Dr. E. J.<lb />
Thompson. J. M.<lb />
igh Woods. W. T. Pass.<lb />
Thomas, T. E. Austin,<lb />
Harry Winstead, J. W.<lb />
Walker. W. 1. Newton.<lb />
9, and Nat V. Brooks,<lb />
ro. John A. Park, Carl<lb />
John Hall Manning.<lb />
Harris, J. E. Tbiem,<lb />
rson, Leroy Allen, C. C.<lb />
i, MaeDonald Fortune,<lb />
aytor, and Dr. O. E.<lb />
: Raleigh; F. E. Brooks,<lb />
Dan, Dink James, W. S.<lb />
Blount, J. Key Brown.<lb />
r. B. T. Cannon. ST. O.<lb />
n r<lb />
impson,<lb />
W. Z. Mor-<lb />
T. Wooten, Dr. L. R.<lb />
ind the male faculty of<lb />
all of Greenville.<lb />
Irt. noted wild animal<lb />
Florida, recently sent<lb />
neat of biology at Lehigb<lb />
rive additions to its<lb />
a southern corn snake,<lb />
snake, a yellow chicken<lb />
ndigo snake, and a water<lb />
Pilot.<lb />
Heap, gtar halfback of<lb />
�tera University, is flying<lb />
se days. He has been doing<lb />
ng in the plane which he<lb />
other students bought.<lb />
Mpecta to apply for a private<lb />
heente soon.<lb />
Hyi<lb />
four<lb />
LATE MATRON<lb />
MRS. MAMIE BRADSHER<lb />
diner, head of the<lb />
at East Caro-<lb />
Mr. P. W. Piekl.<lb />
geography department<lb />
lina Teachers College, has prepared<lb />
an article on the Eastern Dark-<lb />
Fired Tobacco Region. The article<lb />
is a geographical interpretation of<lb />
the region, and will 1- published<lb />
the tatter part of March in the An-<lb />
nual Dixie .Number of Tobacco, the<lb />
most widely read tobacco trade jour-<lb />
nal in America.<lb />
Mr. l'icklesimer, after long study,<lb />
IS an authority on the Dark-Fired<lb />
Region. Recent acknowledgement<lb />
by the leading tobacco trade jour-<lb />
nal comes as well-deserved recog-<lb />
nition.<lb />
Mr. Picklesimer joined the col-<lb />
lege faculty eleven years ago. He<lb />
holds B.S. and M.A. degrees from<lb />
George Peabody College and has<lb />
also done additional graduate study<lb />
at that school.<lb />
Says King's Love of Common<lb />
People Motivated Action<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1937<lb />
NUMBER 6<lb />
WRITES ON DARK<lb />
FIRED REGION<lb />
Article to be Published in Leading<lb />
Tobacco Trade Journal<lb />
Dr. L. R. Meadows, president of<lb />
East Carolina Teachers College ex-<lb />
pressed the opinion on December 14<lb />
that King Edward's love for the<lb />
common people of England was<lb />
more responsible for his abdication<lb />
than his love for Mrs. Simpson.<lb />
Doctor Meadows was speaking at a<lb />
dinner meeting of the Nash and<lb />
Edgeeomhe county chapters of the<lb />
Teachers College Alumnae Associa-<lb />
tion.<lb />
After explaining that the King,<lb />
by his friendship for the common-<lb />
ers, had inspired the wrath of the<lb />
conservatives, Doctor Meadows said<lb />
that the common people of this coun-<lb />
try are also faced with the opposi-<lb />
tion of the more conservative ele-<lb />
ment, who even go so far as to op-<lb />
pose the education of the masses.<lb />
"Pertinent Educational Problems<lb />
of the Day was Doctor Meadow's<lb />
subject. After his exposition of the<lb />
forces which oppose mass education,<lb />
he next considered the problems of<lb />
teacher preparation, teacher tenure<lb />
of office, and teacher salaries.<lb />
Of teacher preparation, he said<lb />
that colleges must have more time<lb />
to prepare teachers. He cited East<lb />
Carolina Teachers College, where<lb />
the two-year course has already been <lb />
discontinued, and expressed the be-<lb />
lief that a minimum requirement<lb />
oi five-years' training for all teach-<lb />
ers is immediately ahead.<lb />
Of teacher tenure of office,<lb />
remarked that security is an aim<lb />
of today, and that the next legisla-<lb />
ture should protect all teachers who<lb />
have demonstrated their ability over<lb />
a given number of years.<lb />
Without better salaries, Doctor<lb />
Meadows said, many good teachers<lb />
will leave the profession and, still<lb />
(Please turn to page four)<lb />
ES MADE IN<lb />
COLLEGE FACULTY<lb />
Four<lb />
New Members are<lb />
for Winter Term<lb />
Added<lb />
DEAN C. TABOR REPLACES MRS.<lb />
DAVENPORT IN MUSIC DEP'T<lb />
Miss Gladys Bingham Substitutes<lb />
for Miss Norton<lb />
four new members of<lb />
ft the winter term, one<lb />
permanent, and three<lb />
has<lb />
raining<lb />
FALL REPORT ON<lb />
GRADES GIVEN DY<lb />
PRES. MEADOWS<lb />
225 Students Fail One or More<lb />
Subjects; Eighty-three<lb />
Average 1.7<lb />
There are<lb />
the facnlty f<lb />
of whom is<lb />
who are substitutes for teachers who<lb />
have leave of absence for the term.<lb />
Dean C. Tabor of Massachusetts,<lb />
who has been teaching in Peabody<lb />
College, Nashville, Tennessee, for<lb />
the past three years, is teaching<lb />
public school music in place of Mrs.<lb />
Paul Davenport who, as Miss Eu-<lb />
genia Thomas, has been teaching in<lb />
the college for years, and who 1<lb />
been supervisor in the T<lb />
School.<lb />
I abor holds his music degree from<lb />
the New England Conservatory of<lb />
Music in Boston, and his B.Sand<lb />
M.A. degrees from Peabody, where<lb />
be has also been working toward his<lb />
Ph.D degree. For three years he<lb />
taught music in the Tennessee Poly-<lb />
technic Institute at Cookeville, Ten-<lb />
nessee. Before he left Massachu-<lb />
setts, immediately after leaving the<lb />
conservatory he was a radio an-<lb />
nouncer.<lb />
Miss Gladys Bingham will have<lb />
charge of the Physical Education<lb />
department, in place of Miss Lucille<lb />
Norton, who has been in the hos-<lb />
pital ever since her automobile ac-<lb />
cident in November, and will not he<lb />
abl- to resume her work for some<lb />
time. Mis- Bingham comes direct-<lb />
ly from the State Teachers College<lb />
in Hattiesburg, Miss where she has<lb />
been teaching, and from which place<lb />
she received her B.S. degree. She<lb />
holds an ABA. degree from Peabody<lb />
College.<lb />
Miss Oneida Parks of Gleason.<lb />
Teiin who holds both her B.S. and<lb />
M.A. degrees from Peahody College,<lb />
is critic teacher of the fourth grade<lb />
in the. Training School, taking the<lb />
place of Miss Alma Browning, who<lb />
(Please turn to page two)<lb />
PRESIDENT MEADOWS SETS<lb />
OBJECTIVE FOR STUDENTS<lb />
Pays Beautiful Tribute to Mrs.<lb />
Mamie Bradsher<lb />
MISS HOOPER DESCRIBES<lb />
PERSONALITY OF THE<lb />
MISSISSIPPI RIVER<lb />
The Persona<lb />
sippi River as<lb />
ity of the Missis-<lb />
described by Miss<lb />
Emma Hooper, of the F'nglish de-<lb />
partment, entertained the student<lb />
body of the College during the as-<lb />
sembly hour on December 15. Since<lb />
a greater part of her life has been<lb />
closely associated with the river, her<lb />
experiences and descriptions were<lb />
very vividly told.<lb />
Something of the size of the river<lb />
and its tributaries, the size of the<lb />
bridges that span it, its discovery by<lb />
De Soto, and its early history, helped<lb />
the students to visualize the river<lb />
as it is today.<lb />
"The Mississippi River is like a<lb />
hook Miss Hooper brought out "be-<lb />
cause one must read all parts of it.<lb />
If one cannot read it, he is entirely<lb />
lost<lb />
Miss Hooper explained howT the<lb />
river is a thing of usefulness, a be-<lb />
ing of service, and a person of com-<lb />
panionship.<lb />
"Personality she said "is that<lb />
quality that causes a person to be<lb />
remembered, to be sought again, to<lb />
be talked about and to be written<lb />
about Then truly the Mississippi<lb />
does have personality.<lb />
(Please turn to page two)<lb />
"The cost of failures in the fall<lb />
term if reduced to dollars and cents<lb />
would keep Cl-2 students in college<lb />
one term, with all necessary expense-<lb />
paid declared President L. R.<lb />
Meadows in his interpretation of<lb />
the statistical report made by the<lb />
registrar of East Carolina Teachers<lb />
College on grades for the fall term.<lb />
The total number of students fail-<lb />
ing one or more subjects was 225,<lb />
of which 130 failed only one course<lb />
and 29 failed three or more. The<lb />
total number of credit hours repre-<lb />
sented was 1,057, or six per cent of<lb />
all hours scheduled. Freshmen nat-<lb />
urally had the highest percentage<lb />
of failures with 20 of the class hav-<lb />
ing one or more. Of the regular<lb />
four-year classes, the seniors have<lb />
the lowest percentage with 15.3 hav-<lb />
ing one or more failures, with Jun-<lb />
iors just a little lower and Sopho-<lb />
mores making a big drop almost to<lb />
the level of Freshmen with 26.1 per<lb />
cent. The second-year, or senior-<lb />
normal class ranks only a little be-<lb />
low the Juniors. The Freshman<lb />
�dass had 3l per cent of all the<lb />
failures. Seniors 10.6 with the sen-<lb />
ior-normal or two-year group hav-<lb />
ing 8.8.<lb />
A selected group of eighty-three<lb />
students having the highest grades<lb />
averaged 1.7, the scale of grading<lb />
being from 1 to 5. In this group<lb />
nine are Seniors, and Juniors and<lb />
Feshmen tie with 22 each. The<lb />
number of hours carried by those in<lb />
the superior group is a fraction<lb />
heavier than the general average.<lb />
Thorough work was the first of<lb />
four objectives which Dr. Meadows,<lb />
(Please turn to page two)<lb />
JEAN LE MEE SAYS AMERICAN<lb />
COLLEGE LIFE "TOO LOVELY<lb />
FOR FRENCH STUDENTS"<lb />
Jean Pierre Le Alee, the 19-year-<lb />
old French student sent to the United<lb />
States by his government to make a<lb />
survey of social life in American<lb />
colleges, is convinced that college<lb />
life here would be "too lovely for<lb />
French students<lb />
Le Afee expressed amazement that<lb />
American students have such a good<lb />
time. If the college life in the<lb />
United States were suddenly trans-<lb />
planted to my country, he said, the<lb />
students there "wouldn't think of<lb />
working As it is at present, life<lb />
for them is all "work, work, work<lb />
Le Alee's inspection tour began on<lb />
September 21. He first visited five<lb />
colleges on the West coast. En route<lb />
to the East, he dropped in at the<lb />
University of Chicago. In the East<lb />
he visited Columbia University, New<lb />
lrork University, Temple Univer-<lb />
city, the University of Pennsylvania,<lb />
Bryn Mawr, Princeton, and Har-<lb />
vard.<lb />
In reference to the five football<lb />
games he saw, Le Mee said: "At first<lb />
I thought they were all crazy play-<lb />
ing such a game. All those boys<lb />
ready to kill each other and the man<lb />
whistling all the time. The shout-<lb />
(Please turn to page four)<lb />
INTERNATIONAL Y KNOWN<lb />
VIOLINIST HERE JANUARY 19<lb />
NOTED ENTERTAINER<lb />
East Carolina Teachers College<lb />
to be Included in 25th Anni-<lb />
versary Tour by Efrem<lb />
Zimbalist<lb />
EMINENT VIOLINIST MADE<lb />
AMERICAN DEBUT IN 1912<lb />
Is an Artist of Self-effacing Devo-<lb />
tion to Lofty Ideals<lb />
East Carolina Teacher- (����<lb />
will be included in the twenty-fifth<lb />
anniversary tour which will carry<lb />
; Efrem Zimbalist from coast-to-coast<lb />
j this season, bringing him here for<lb />
I a concert on January If.<lb />
'The eminent violinist made his<lb />
American debut just a quarter of a<lb />
century ago and throughout the<lb />
country his thousands of admirer�<lb />
an- uniting to do him special honor.<lb />
Zimbalist was first heard by an<lb />
American audience on October 27,<lb />
1111. when be appeared as guest<lb />
soloist with the Boston Symphony<lb />
estra. On that occasion he<lb />
On<lb />
EFREM ZIMBALIST<lb />
Eighty-Three Students<lb />
On "All-American" List<lb />
Star Scholars Here Included<lb />
Quarterly Report by Regis-<lb />
trar McGinnis<lb />
in<lb />
On FViday morning. January 8.<lb />
an announcement was made by Pres-<lb />
ident Meadows to the effect that<lb />
eighty-three students here last quar-<lb />
ter succeeded in making the All-<lb />
American list, conceived and brought<lb />
into being by Dr. H. J. McGinnis,<lb />
college registrar. The list is made<lb />
up of the star scholars at this col-<lb />
lege. The average grade of a typ-<lb />
ical All-American is 1.7.<lb />
Following are the eighty-three<lb />
All-Americans for last quarter:<lb />
Josephine Anderson, Lucille Bailey.<lb />
Boy Barrow, Lucy A. Barrow, Es-<lb />
sie M. Batten, Hilda Gray Batten,<lb />
Buth V. Batten, Lucille Beaman,<lb />
Louise Beck, Mary Lily Best, Annie<lb />
II. Boone, Ilattie Laura Britt.<lb />
Marguerite Britt, Elizabeth Brooks,<lb />
Mary Lou Butner, Madeline Byrum,<lb />
Elizabeth Carrico, Bettie Castelloe,<lb />
Catherine Cheek, Katrine Collie,<lb />
Virginia Cooper, Carrie V. Cotton,<lb />
Ernestine Creech, Harvey Deal,<lb />
Margaret Eakes, Mary Alice Frank-<lb />
lin, Ethel Gaston, Martha Jane<lb />
Gates, Elizabeth Gillam, Helen G.<lb />
Gillam, Louise Griggs, Margaret<lb />
Griggs, Eleanor Harrington, Geral-<lb />
dine Harris, Bettisue Heath, Ro-<lb />
wena Hicks, Pete A. Hill, Maude E.<lb />
Hinson, J. Weston Hodges, Doro-<lb />
thy Hollar. Marguerite Hutchinson,<lb />
Mildred Hey, Gladys Ipock, John<lb />
E. Jenkins, Margaret G. Jenkins,<lb />
Melva Johnson, Belle Kearney, Ren-<lb />
nie Lassiter, Elizabeth Layden,<lb />
Katherine McClees, Flora Ethel<lb />
McCormick, Margaret McKinney,<lb />
Eva McMillan, Edith Modlin, Mar-<lb />
tha Morrison, Minnie Morton,<lb />
Prue Collins Newby, Naomi Newell,<lb />
Ruth Phillips, Lillian Powell, Mag-<lb />
dalene Powell, C. Ray Pruette, Eliz-<lb />
(Please turn to page two)<lb />
Lowell Thomas Unable to Appear Here<lb />
In February; To Attend Coronation<lb />
he<lb />
The following Utter was received<lb />
by Miss Katherine Holtzclaw, chair-<lb />
man of tfie Entertainment Com-<lb />
mittee, explaining that Lowell<lb />
Thomas will be unable to lecture<lb />
here in February. In the letter.<lb />
Mr. S. B. Bridges, president of the<lb />
Alkahest Bureau in Atlanta, sug-<lb />
gests other celebrity speakers for<lb />
substitute.<lb />
Miss Katherine Holtzclaw,<lb />
Chairman Entertainment Com-<lb />
mittee,<lb />
East Carolina Teachers College,<lb />
Greenville, North Carolina.<lb />
Dear Miss Holtzclaw :<lb />
I have just now received a very<lb />
distressing letter from Lowell Thom-<lb />
as advising that his radio sponsors<lb />
had decided on the plan of sending<lb />
him to the Coronation in London<lb />
next spring instead of the vacation<lb />
trip to Florida which they have<lb />
been promising all along. For that<lb />
reason, he says: "I am afraid there<lb />
is not a chance in the world now<lb />
of my getting down your way before<lb />
next season This is going to<lb />
terribly upset my plans here in<lb />
Atlanta as well as other places I<lb />
had planned to send him on this trip<lb />
which he had promised me faith-<lb />
fully he would make this winter to<lb />
Florida and would take care of<lb />
these engagements in that connect-<lb />
ion though, as you know, I could<lb />
never pin him down to any definite<lb />
dates. Of course, I understood<lb />
from the very nature of his radio<lb />
work that it was impossible for him<lb />
to fix definite engagements very<lb />
far in advance but I was not pre-<lb />
pared for this result. I am rushing<lb />
this information along to you with<lb />
the hopes that we may be able to<lb />
arrange a satisfactory substitute<lb />
from those attractions we have<lb />
available.<lb />
First: I would like to have you<lb />
consider Dr. Roy Chapman An-<lb />
drews in whom I know you have been<lb />
interested, who is available on Feb-<lb />
ruary 8 on his way south, or we<lb />
(Please turn to page four)<lb />
THREE STUDENTS<lb />
GO TO SGFA MEET<lb />
Three campus leaders. Misses<lb />
FlizaTieth Dixon Johnson, president<lb />
of the Woman's Student Govern-<lb />
ment Association and Louise N.<lb />
Martin, business manager of Tiie<lb />
Teco Echo; and Thornwall Gibson,<lb />
president of the Men's Student Gov-<lb />
ernment Association, represented<lb />
Faf Carolina Teachers College at<lb />
the Twelfth Annual Congress of the<lb />
National Student Federation of<lb />
America, which met from Decem-<lb />
ber 28 to January 1, in New York<lb />
City. School of Commerce of New-<lb />
York University, was the host col-<lb />
lege and the headquarters were in<lb />
Hotel Victoria.<lb />
Among the principal speakers for<lb />
the congress were Chancellor Harry<lb />
W. Chase, now of New York Uni-<lb />
versity, formerly president of North<lb />
Carolina University; Dr. Walter<lb />
Kotschnig, former executive secre-<lb />
tary of the ISS; Charles W. Tans-<lb />
sig, chairman of the advisory board<lb />
of the National Youth Admin-<lb />
istration ; Professor Jerome Davis,<lb />
of the Yale Divinity School; Aubrey<lb />
Williams, administrator of the<lb />
NYA; Dr. Homer P. Bainey, direc-<lb />
tor of American Youth Commis-<lb />
sions, and Dr. S. Ralph Harlow, of<lb />
Smith College.<lb />
Each delegate was appointed to<lb />
the commission he or she was most<lb />
interested in. The commissions met<lb />
separately and their reports were<lb />
mimeographed. At the final plenary<lb />
session the reports and resolutions<lb />
were voted upon.<lb />
Arthur Norwood, Jr was re-<lb />
elected president. The next congress<lb />
will be held in New Mexico, with<lb />
the University of New Mexico act-<lb />
ing as host.<lb />
Fraternity houses at the Uni-<lb />
versity of Florida lodge more than<lb />
100 more students than the dormi-<lb />
tories. The fraternities have 600<lb />
men, while the dormitories have<lb />
491. <lb />
DR. EDWARDS EXPLAINS<lb />
WHY STUDENTS FAIL<lb />
played the Glazounow Concerto in<lb />
A Minor for the first time in Amer-<lb />
ica. He was immediately hailed as<lb />
an artist of exceptional merit. In<lb />
the twenty-five years that have passed<lb />
since then, the name of Zimbalist<lb />
has become synonymous with great<lb />
violin music. He has played in prac-<lb />
tically every large city in the world.<lb />
Zimbalist has also established<lb />
himself as a composer and more re-<lb />
cently as a conductor. lie is the<lb />
composer of a symphonic poem<lb />
"Daphines and Chloe" which was<lb />
recently performed for the first time<lb />
by the Philadelphia Orchestra with<lb />
Leopold Stokowski conducting. He<lb />
is also the composer of an operetta<lb />
"Honeydew a Sonata for violin<lb />
and piano in G Minor. Three Slavic<lb />
Dancers and numerous short violin<lb />
compositions. Two years ago he<lb />
made his debut as a conductor, di-<lb />
recting a performance of Tschaikow-<lb />
sky's "Eugew Onegin" which was<lb />
presented by the Art of Musical Rus-<lb />
sia. More recently, he conducted<lb />
the Chicago Symphony Orchestra in<lb />
a performance of his most recent<lb />
works "An American Rhapsody<lb />
Although Russian by birth Zim-<lb />
balist is in many repects an Amer-<lb />
ican artist. He is an American citi-<lb />
zen, makes his winter home in New<lb />
York City and his summer home in<lb />
Connecticut, and has two children<lb />
born in this country.<lb />
He was born in Rostov-on-the-<lb />
Den, on April 8, 1SS9. His first<lb />
teacher was his father, who was an<lb />
orchestra leader. The boy showed<lb />
such extraordinary gifts that when<lb />
he was only nine years old he became<lb />
first violinist in a grand opera or-<lb />
chestra. And it was not because his<lb />
father happened to be the distin-<lb />
guished director of the opera house,<lb />
for the elder Zimbalist was the most<lb />
exacting master Efrem ever had. It<lb />
was only at the insistence of the<lb />
older musicians that the father final-<lb />
ly consented to entrust his young son<lb />
with such important a post.<lb />
In 1903 he entered The Imperial<lb />
Conservatory in Petrograd, studying<lb />
under Brofessor Leopoed Duer.<lb />
Graduating, he was awarded the<lb />
coveted gold medal and the Ruben-<lb />
stein Scholarship of 12,000 rubels.<lb />
He made his Berlin debut at the age<lb />
of eighteen, appearing later in Lon-<lb />
don and on the continent with great<lb />
success. lie stands today at the<lb />
pinnacle of the musical ladder in<lb />
popularity and prestige.<lb />
Zimbalist the Collector<lb />
Touring holds more than one in-<lb />
terest for Zimbalist, for every new<lb />
city means unexplored bookshops;<lb />
and bookshops and what they con-<lb />
tain are the violinist's hoWLn His<lb />
collection of rare editions in almost<lb />
(Please turn to page four)<lb />
Physical and mental diseases<lb />
are" not major causes of student<lb />
failure, according to Dr. A. S. Ed-<lb />
wards, professor of phychology at<lb />
the University of Georgia.<lb />
Dr. Edwards has recently pub-<lb />
lished a phamphlet, "Aetiology of<lb />
Student Failures in the University<lb />
of Georgia based on eight years<lb />
of experimentation and compilation<lb />
of data. The pamphlet explains<lb />
that most of the students who get<lb />
failing grades get them in courses<lb />
which do not interest them.<lb />
ENGLISH CLUB DRAMATIC<lb />
GROUP PRESENTS PLAY<lb />
The Dramatic Group of the Eng-<lb />
lish Club, whose chairman is Mil-<lb />
dred Edwards, presented a most<lb />
entertaining play in the English<lb />
club room recently. "What Men<lb />
Live By by Leo Talstory, was the<lb />
play presented. The characters<lb />
were: Simon�Susie Gray Cobb;<lb />
Matrena�Nellie Ricks; Baron�<lb />
Hattie Laura Britt; Anna�Georgia<lb />
Sugg; Irafinoff�Geraldine Tyson;<lb />
Sonia�Apryle Joyce Harrell;<lb />
Guardian Angel � Madelene By-<lb />
rum; Little Devil�Katie Iris Vin-<lb />
son; Thedka�Elizabeth Wilder;<lb />
and Michael�Frances Currin.<lb />
X<lb /><pb facs="00038049_tn_0002" /><lb />
r<lb />
n <lb />
V<lb />
tl<lb /><lb />
PAGE TWO<lb />
THE TECO ECHO<lb />
January 15, 1937<lb />
The TECO ECHO<lb />
EAST CitMi.Vt Tf V3MTR.V fOUECE<lb />
 , yj ed Biweekly by the Students of Easi (1roiim1<lb />
Teachers College<lb />
GUM-CHEWERS<lb />
GET GONG<lb />
STAFF<lb />
SK X<lb />
 Smith<lb />
Will AK1, .1 R.<lb />
M KT1N . .<lb />
. Editor-in-Chief<lb />
Bttstness Manager<lb />
City Editor<lb />
 AO v. 1<lb />
N hWil.I.<lb />
ASSOCIATE EDITOES<lb />
Fli A N CBS B ARN ES<lb />
Lucelue Lbwis<lb />
m.uu'iia hamilton<lb />
Sports<lb />
Sports<lb />
ADVERTISING MANAGERS<lb />
1 I A N N A<lb />
R<lb />
B Martin<lb />
Beitt<lb />
.VANS<lb />
"Porky" Johnson<lb />
Hki.kn Downing<lb />
Makoie Watson<lb />
Son Speko<lb />
oriorial Staff: Elizabeth Layden, Harvey Deal. Joan Cooper,<lb />
Sarah Maxwell. John Crew, Nancy Moore. Patsy Mclntyre,<lb />
Georgia Sugg, Evelyn Aiken, Christine Caroon, LaBue<lb />
Vf. riiie Catherine Cheek, Jane Copeland, and Dons<lb />
Tic<lb />
Lioxe<lb />
.$1.00 per College Year<lb />
Numbers 68, 182<lb />
Room 25<lb />
second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the IT. S.<lb />
 Greenville, N. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb />
1936 Member IW<lb />
Flssocicded Gotteefcfe Press<lb />
Distributors of<lb />
(xUe6ideDitfesf<lb />
Gum-chewers commonly fall<lb />
into two classifications. First,<lb />
those who synchronize their<lb />
mouths with their pencils. Sec-<lb />
ondly, those who chew accord-<lb />
ing to the speed of the lecturer.<lb />
However, at East Carolina<lb />
Teachers College, there seems to<lb />
be another distinct type which<lb />
chews gum only in formal dress.<lb />
Let us recall this situation: A<lb />
formal dance here is progress-<lb />
ing in its usual stilted manner.<lb />
Serious-faced gentlemen are<lb />
dancing with mature-for-the-oc-<lb />
casion ladies. Suddenly a vio-<lb />
lent spop! spop! spop! inter-<lb />
rupts the music. Oblivious of<lb />
the glares thrown in her direc-<lb />
tion, a girl is chewing gum, and<lb />
advertising it by sounds which<lb />
are unpleasant, to say the least.<lb />
Do you get the contrast?<lb />
Gum-chewers have always pes-<lb />
tered Society, and no doubt al-<lb />
ways will. But can't the habi-<lb />
tual chewers at this college show<lb />
an ounce of consideration for<lb />
others and confine their gum-<lb />
chewing activity to moments of<lb />
solitude?<lb />
Every East Carolina Teachers<lb />
College student, whether con-<lb />
scious of the fact or not, has an<lb />
effect on the reputation of the<lb />
college�either positive or nega-<lb />
tive. There's no doubt as to the<lb />
category into which the gum-<lb />
chewers fall.<lb />
THE<lb />
BEAUTY<lb />
SCHOOL<lb />
by Helena Rubinstein<lb />
� THIS �<lb />
COLLEGIATE<lb />
WORLD<lb />
Campus Camera<lb />
Y<lb />
i<lb />
FACULTY PASSES<lb />
ON ENTERTAINMENT<lb />
RECOMMENDATIONS<lb />
T<lb />
in<lb />
VI<lb />
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT FROM THE STUDENT BODY<lb />
e, tl student body of Hast Carolina Teachers College, offer these<lb />
�i - as a tribute to the memory of our deceased matron, Mrs.<lb />
Bradsher, who was called home to God. December 27, ItSt.<lb />
 in her passing we have lost one who for many years closely<lb />
lives in a manner that was particularly significant and who<lb />
in our recollections as a kindly friend.<lb />
ta1 we recognize above the sense of our own loss, the wisdom and<lb />
mi miseient God who does all things well and who has said,<lb />
0 prepare a place for you and receive yon into myself. That<lb />
am there ye may be also And recognizing this promise, we<lb />
dee that Hi- will is ever above our own.<lb />
;at in her life on the campus, in the execution of her duties, and<lb />
social contacts, we observed a sincerity of purpose and a love for<lb />
i. : ts of this school<lb />
� a � ,v of these resolutions be recorded in the files of the Stu-<lb />
overnmenl Association.<lb />
bat a copy be sent to the family.<lb />
r a coov be sent to Tin Tbco K bo and local papers of Green-<lb />
Respectfully submitted.<lb />
Frances Dames, Chairman<lb />
Elizabeth Dixon Johnson<lb />
Naomi Newell.<lb />
Hi for publication.<lb />
THE WHEELS GRIND SLOWLY<lb />
Ragsdale" was the title of an editorial which ap-<lb />
.),<lb />
ma 1<lb />
plant<lb />
1 a<lb />
i.ier<lb />
in Teco Echo for November  The editorial did not re-<lb />
ifter eleven pja. in the basement of Bagsdale Hall but agreed<lb />
istration that the eight bears between eleven and seven<lb />
f minimum amount of sleep for college students.<lb />
purpose of the editorial in question to call the attention of<lb />
str ti, n  th, darkness which renders day-time study in the<lb />
�� : all but impossible.<lb />
 , area in the men's basement is limited, and shrubbery<lb />
Lreetly in front of the windows obstructs much of the light.<lb />
the brightest summer days, the price that the student must<lb />
eing industrious is eye-strain and possible headache. During<lb />
morning and early afternoon hours and on cloudy days, study<lb />
ait of the question.<lb />
: as the winter progresses, the basement rooms become daily more<lb />
� iii' . even mote gloomy than in the fall.<lb />
When diverse extracurricular and extra-campus activities are �Ma-<lb />
ting for the student's time, a circumstance which makes study ineon-<lb />
nienl or difficult may enable the student to rationalize his failure to<lb />
�IK.<lb />
Jt is the obligation of any college to provide the best possible study<lb />
nditions for the student.<lb />
But her as at other colleges, the wheels grind slowly.<lb />
The recommendations printed be-<lb />
low were made by the entertainment<lb />
committee and approved by the fac-<lb />
ulty on January 8, 1937. In regard<lb />
to Number 3. requests for entertain-<lb />
ment dates for the present quarter<lb />
must he filed with the chairman of<lb />
the Entertainment Committee before<lb />
February 1.<lb />
1. That the motion picture ma-<lb />
chine shall not be used for "Small<lb />
Pay" entertainments, but that in-<lb />
stead, several good moving pictures<lb />
other than the Saturday evening<lb />
shows be shown each quarter.<lb />
2. That every entertainment put<lb />
on by a student organization be su-<lb />
pervised by a member of staff or<lb />
faculty member acting as adviser.<lb />
3. That all requests for student<lb />
entertainment dates be filed with the<lb />
chairman of the Entertainment<lb />
Committee as follows: those for en-<lb />
tertainments to be given in either<lb />
the winter of the spring quarter<lb />
must be filed before the beginning<lb />
of the quarter when the event will<lb />
take place; and those for entertain-<lb />
ments to be given in the fall quar-<lb />
ter must be filed within the first two<lb />
weeks of that quarter.<lb />
4. That a student secure the ap-<lb />
proval of her faculty adviser before<lb />
taking part in any entertainment<lb />
program.<lb />
Katharine Holtclaw,<lb />
Chair. Entertainment Committee.<lb />
Sometimes I think that New<lb />
Year resolutions are silly. By<lb />
the time you finish reforming your-<lb />
self down to the most picayune and<lb />
insignificant details (on paper)<lb />
you're feeling so virtuous at hav-<lb />
ing recognized all your faults, and<lb />
happy in the sense of a good deed<lb />
well done, that actually doing some-<lb />
thing about your failings seems anti-<lb />
climatic.<lb />
This is all very well for the fancy,<lb />
do it up with a frill resolutions: for<lb />
the faults you don't really mind hav-<lb />
ing. It's' fatal where your looks<lb />
are concerned. Beauty isn't ach-<lb />
ieved in the hour before a date.<lb />
Certainly it isn't achieved by mere<lb />
wishful thinking.<lb />
For instance, you know that you<lb />
are interested in doing something<lb />
about your looks. Quite frquently<lb />
it occurs to you that life would be<lb />
so much simpler and pleasanter if<lb />
only you were a tall, willowy blond<lb />
with large, expressive eyes, a marvel-<lb />
ous complexion that was always in<lb />
the pink of condition, and a gor-<lb />
geous figure. You think about the<lb />
wonders accomplished by famous<lb />
Parisian dressmakers, and person-<lb />
ality coiffures and how Norma<lb />
Shearer turned from an ugly duck-<lb />
ling into a swan. And then you<lb />
fall asleep or find you've arrived at<lb />
your destination; and that's that.<lb />
"Well, this year I think you ought<lb />
to change all that. Make up your<lb />
mind to do one thing at a time�<lb />
in<lb />
Carleton College students who<lb />
dine at Burton Hall turned the<lb />
tables on Miss Boyce, the dietitian.<lb />
When Miss Boyce lost her voice<lb />
temporarily, disgruntled gourmets<lb />
seized the opportunity to berate her<lb />
for serving certain<lb />
dishes which they dis-<lb />
like.<lb />
Since she is help-<lb />
less to answer them,<lb />
the voiceless Boyce is<lb />
enduring a lot of pun-<lb />
ishment. But she has<lb />
the upper hand even<lb />
now, for she still has<lb />
a voice in the foo<lb />
choice.<lb />
A little, blond co-ed<lb />
at the University of<lb />
Ftah germinated the<lb />
"kissing strike" that<lb />
paved the way for sim-<lb />
ilar movements on<lb />
many of the college<lb />
campuses throughout<lb />
the country.<lb />
During a laboratory class, she<lb />
pressed a glass slide to her lips.<lb />
placed it under a microscope am<lb />
screamed when she saw millions of<lb />
bacteria dividing before her eyes.<lb />
Co'eds all over the campus took<lb />
action and declared a "kissing-<lb />
strike" that included most of the<lb />
girls. "Scabs" who refused to join<lb />
The "anti-osculation" drive ration-<lb />
alized to appease the answer of strik-<lb />
ing females and to retain their par<lb />
standard of exchange with the Ftah<lb />
men.<lb />
"Kissing may not he so dangerous<lb />
vou<lb />
WE ONLY<lb />
H-E-A-R-D<lb />
a do it. Don't tell anyone about I if you use the right technique,<lb />
vour resolve, but just wait until the argued one germ-defying co-ed<lb />
reform becomes obvious to all your Another suggested that although<lb />
friends through actual accomplish bacteria may "go to town under the<lb />
ment. Suppose this year you make microscope they are pretty belpless<lb />
up vour mind to concentrate the first in the dark.<lb />
month on getting to bed at a reason A freshman girl declared, If vou<lb />
kiss hard enough, you<lb />
can kill th<lb />
ihle hour, thus dispelling those rings<lb />
vou're beginning to develope under germs.<lb />
vour eves Next month vou devote Angered at being deprived ot ro<lb />
to attaining the hair-brushing habit; mance, the men organized an Oacula<lb />
the month after to good posture, tion League to combat the resolut,<lb />
By the end of the vear you'll have women. I he leagues first step wa<lb />
achieved something really worth-1 to call a stnkeon all dates.<lb />
while and you'll he good looking<lb />
into the bargain<lb />
that<lb />
anything<lb />
Say it's your complexion<lb />
bothers you more than<lb />
else. Don't wait till you get home. I<lb />
till exams are over, till there's<lb />
nothing else to do before beginning, j<lb />
If you do, you'll never lw'gin�and 1<lb />
you'll never be beautiful. Start <lb />
now. Get the pasteurized cleansing:<lb />
cream that you've been meaning<lb />
to get for the past six months. Get<lb />
the beauty grains that will do away<lb />
with occasional blackheads. Use<lb />
these regularly, be true to your month<lb />
by month beauty resolutions�and<lb />
a beautiful New Year will be yours!<lb />
This trend brought matters to a<lb />
head. Science versus romance. There<lb />
were no two ways about it. Since<lb />
the men were unyielding the girls<lb />
had to "kiss and make up<lb />
If the burglar who looted a frater-<lb />
nity house at the University of<lb />
Southern California had been an<lb />
olympic star he would have had<lb />
some chance of getting away with<lb />
his pilferings.<lb />
He ran down the dark avenue as<lb />
fast as he could go, hut faster foot-<lb />
steps gained on him.<lb />
Before he got<lb />
a block away, he was tackled from<lb />
behind�tackled by Harold Small-<lb />
wood, national 400 meter champion.<lb />
Take it or leave it. If you can't<lb />
leave it, take it:<lb />
Calfee (at the movies): ' Are<lb />
you sure you can see o.k.?"<lb />
Object of his affection: "Posi-<lb />
tive<lb />
Ditto: "And your seat's comfort-<lb />
able?"<lb />
Second Ditto: "Yes<lb />
First Ditto: "Would you mind<lb />
changing seats with me, little<lb />
girl?"<lb />
After extensive re-<lb />
tteareh, we are pre-<lb />
pared to submit the<lb />
average college man s<lb />
interests in order ot<lb />
preference.<lb />
1. Himself.<lb />
�1. Himself.<lb />
3. Himself.<lb />
4. Football,<lb />
o. Himself.<lb />
0. Athletics.<lb />
7. His family.<lb />
5. Himself.<lb />
9. The weather.<lb />
10. Himself.<lb />
We hope the above<lb />
information will<lb />
prove valuable to tin<lb />
young women here in<lb />
making conversation with the eru<lb />
dite co-eds.<lb />
Lookin' Over<lb />
the<lb />
Campus<lb />
Pn �<lb />
1 with rRav<lb />
Besohttions fr �:<lb />
Mis Mnek -� T<lb />
Chemistry Class<lb />
Joe Braxton T<lb />
entirelv.<lb />
"Pokey" Johnson<lb />
lip stick.<lb />
miii<lb />
Xot to send any<lb />
iristmas cards.<lb />
Bill Pratt�To b. 1<lb />
Charles Guy To I<lb />
Sam I ees� 1 0 It<lb />
alone.<lb />
Alton Payne�1 <lb />
dancer.<lb />
Adrian Avers�To<lb />
many question<lb />
Ruth Caele� To m<lb />
CHANGES MADE IN<lb />
COLLEGE FACULTY<lb />
If you have a personal beauty<lb />
problem on which you need advice,<lb />
please write Womans Interest Syn-<lb />
dicate, 522 Fifth Avenue, New<lb />
York City.<lb />
FALL REPORT ON GRADES<lb />
GIVEN BY PRES. MEADOWS<lb />
LETTERS<lb />
to the Editor<lb />
teacher.<lb />
Ambrose Irwins�<lb />
eat less.<lb />
j Francis Sinclair<lb />
What not to do, when and where mfr cigars.<lb />
I tennis�T<lb />
(Continued from page one)<lb />
has a leave of absence for the win-<lb />
ter term.<lb />
Mrs. C. L. Fountain, who as Miss<lb />
Martha Lancaster was at one time<lb />
a critic teacher in the old Model<lb />
School, will have charge of the third<lb />
grade for the winter term in place<lb />
of Miss Eunice McGee, who is in<lb />
Duke Hospital recovering from an<lb />
operation. Mrs. Fountain is a reg-<lb />
ular teacher in the Tarboro schools,<lb />
but has a leave of absence for the<lb />
term.<lb />
New Hostess<lb />
Mrs. Sue Hyman Bowden, now of<lb />
Greenville but formerly of Rocky<lb />
Mount, has been added to the staff<lb />
To the Editor:<lb />
It seems as if something could he<lb />
done about this method of registra-<lb />
tion we have. We stand out in a<lb />
I crowd and are shoved from one side<lb />
jof the walk to the other by people<lb />
pushing and hollering on every side<lb />
(Continued from page one)<lb />
in his first talk before the students snH1� ailu ,st!H(PriIIg uu CTVJ niuc,<lb />
for this quarter, set up for them to stepping on vou (and if vou happen<lb />
! r  e i '�" v' to have on your best 'shoes�well<lb />
that's just too bad.)<lb />
I stood in that crowd for an hour<lb />
not to say what, what not to wear,<lb />
are topics discussed at the "Charm<lb />
School" at Purdue University.<lb />
Or in simpler language, what-<lb />
ever you're doing, don't do it. You<lb />
can't go FAR wrong. Get it?<lb />
. And who is that certain young<lb />
lady who sez she made fifty reso-<lb />
lutions this year just becuz she<lb />
"likes to break rules"? (Don't ask<lb />
us, cuz we only beard.)<lb />
work for and he used the above<lb />
statistics to show the need for bet-<lb />
ter work. The other objectives he<lb />
used were: constructive leadership<lb />
that knows values and does not quib-<lb />
and a half to pay my tuition in a-<lb />
bout five minutes. When I finally<lb />
ble over non-essentials; cooperationLjjj through my legs were trem<lb />
with the faculty in reaching her Wing g0 rom sn0ving of those<lb />
With the beginning of a new year, merchants over the nation "take<lb />
inventory Tln-v carefully examine assets and liabilities to determine<lb />
if their business is profitable. Likewise, at this time, it would be well<lb />
for ea.h of as to take a personal inventory. If for some reason we have<lb />
not done as well in college as we should have, now is the time to get<lb />
on the right track. College is not a fitting place to loaf. Those of us<lb />
privileged to<lb />
scholastic standards; and, last,<lb />
through their loyalty to the ideals<lb />
of the College, to adopt its motto<lb />
and prepare to serve a larger num-<lb />
ber of people with a higher type of<lb />
service.<lb />
President Meadow's first words to<lb />
Mount, has been addea one �� a<lb />
of dean of women as hostess of W ll- -k�.� ?� m� M(am<lb />
bench"<lb />
attend East Carolina Teachers College should strive to<lb />
�lves as well as our "alma mater<lb />
Tutoring bureaus, an old and flourishing institution on most sizable<lb />
V. S. campuses, are paid by undergraduates to provide them with enough<lb />
last-minute information tosqueeze them through an examination. They<lb />
are characteristic of such universities as Harvard, Yale and Princeton,<lb />
where students have enough distractions and enough money to make them<lb />
a paying convenience. About half of all Harvard students at some point<lb />
in their careers patronize one of the five competing tutoring schools;<lb />
there is one which advertises a "Pay-As-You-Pass" system that guaran-<lb />
tees a grade of D and charges a sliding scale-rate thereafter.�Time.<lb />
Health of the school child is being neglected. The majority of children<lb />
suffer from recognizable physical defects most of which are readily cor-<lb />
rectable in childhood. Medical examinations of many thousands of school<lb />
children have established such defects in vision, hearing, teeth, nose and<lb />
throat lungs, nutrition. Children are left out of games, fail their school<lb />
tests sit stupidly in grades far below their ages, not because of intellectual<lb />
deficiency, but solelv because of physical handicaps. (It costs 12 cents<lb />
to test a'child for hearing, but $60 for a pupil to repeat a grade.) Vast<lb />
sums are spent on hospitals and other institutions to care for adults<lb />
manv of whom are crippled in health from the culmination of defects<lb />
thatwere correctable in school days but are so no longer. (Howard W.<lb />
Haggard, professor of physiology, Yale University.)�Vttal Speeches<lb />
of the Day.<lb />
son Hall in place of Mrs. Mamie<lb />
Bradsher, who died recently. Mrs.<lb />
Bowden is a sister of Miss Elizabeth<lb />
Hyman, critic teacher in the Train-<lb />
ing School. She has been taking<lb />
work in the College leading to the<lb />
A.B. degree, and has been student-<lb />
assistant in the dean's office for the<lb />
past year.<lb />
We hear there'U be "Pennie"<lb />
from heaven for Robert Pittman<lb />
this quarter.<lb />
It's also rumored around that a<lb />
certain senior girl is planning to<lb />
"get hitched" next week. (Better<lb />
keep the news from Walter Win-<lb />
ehell�he doesn't spare names.)<lb />
beautiful tribute to Mrs. Mamie<lb />
Bradsher, a member of the staff who<lb />
died during the holidays. He spoke<lb />
of how greatly she was loved by the<lb />
girls, not only by those who are now<lb />
living on the campus but by thou-<lb />
sands who had known her in the<lb />
eight years she had been on the staff.<lb />
MISS HOOPER DESCRIBES<lb />
PERSONALITY OF THE<lb />
MISSISSIPPI RIVER<lb />
"Ten days or fifteen dollars<lb />
"I'll take the fifteen bucks, your<lb />
honor<lb />
From the looks of some of the<lb />
men students, we are sure they still<lb />
remember the holidays.<lb />
"Fatty" Clark, the 355 pound<lb />
guard who played with the Uni-<lb />
versity of Arkansas in 1930 and '31,<lb />
was the largest college football<lb />
player in the world.<lb />
(Continued from page one)<lb />
"As we read of the progress that<lb />
is being made, we see how the edu-<lb />
cation of man is like the conquest<lb />
of the river�straight and narrow<lb />
but very deep, free for service, hap-<lb />
py in giving, controlled in his pas-<lb />
sions. Only thus, can the fine per-<lb />
sonality of man or river fulfill its<lb />
place in the Creator's scheme of<lb />
things she said.<lb />
In concluding she said that in a<lb />
few days she hoped to be riding<lb />
along the river's driveway that will<lb />
be lighted by many colored lights<lb />
and to see the river, not at flood tide<lb />
around me) I could hardly walk.<lb />
Some students stood in line two<lb />
hours (or as one girl said, "as long<lb />
as I can remember)<lb />
As much space as there is on this<lb />
campus it seems there would be some<lb />
place for all of us to register instead<lb />
of over one thousand students try-<lb />
ing to squeeze through one doorway<lb />
to transact business that will keep<lb />
us in college for three months.<lb />
Well, here's hoping that something<lb />
will be done by spring quarter so<lb />
that we will be able to register much<lb />
easier, and quicker.�A Student.<lb />
To the Editor:<lb />
Why not give us a short writeup<lb />
on all of the basketball boys? And<lb />
please tell the boys numbers and<lb />
their names. We surely would ap-<lb />
preciate it. We would like to know<lb />
who our boys are when we go to<lb />
the ball games. Give us a tip.<lb />
Sincerely,<lb />
A Student.<lb />
And speaking of resolutions, here<lb />
are a few suggestions.<lb />
1. Don't study TOO much.<lb />
(There's plenty of time for that<lb />
next summer when you can't do<lb />
anything else.)<lb />
2. Attend all athletic contests.<lb />
(You may not understand the game<lb />
but that's all right. Mystery, they<lb />
say, lends enchantment, or some-<lb />
thing. Anyway, if you are in a<lb />
borrowing mood�.)<lb />
3. Don't try swimming with the<lb />
goldfish. (They resent "pajama<lb />
clad" company, and are contem-<lb />
plating a petition to the Board of<lb />
Trustees.)<lb />
Yes, they say an egotist is a self-<lb />
made man worshipping his maker.<lb />
(Wonder if there are any self-made<lb />
women.)<lb />
Was it really a coincidence that<lb />
the local chapter of Phi Sigma Pi<lb />
presented its "Mock Faculty" at<lb />
the same time a faculty meeting<lb />
was in progress?<lb />
Well, anyway, reports are that<lb />
Sinclair is still dodging Dr. Frank.<lb />
We understand that Miss Hunter<lb />
has solved the problem of which<lb />
came first, the chicken or the egg.<lb />
"A hen is the egg's way of per-<lb />
petuating itself<lb />
p�<lb />
- . Mr<lb />
 bring<lb />
rilroaa<lb />
in the<lb />
, - back<lb />
.1 .ack<lb />
� hi<lb />
 Ne<lb />
iir.<lb />
I the<lb />
L'ame<lb />
mre for<lb />
Please<lb />
 team.<lb />
ooth hv<lb />
instafl-<lb />
r.il it's<lb />
us grl<lb />
hand-<lb />
EIGHTY-THREE STUDENTS<lb />
IN "ALL-AMERICA" LIST<lb />
(Continued from pagpe one)<lb />
abeth Rivers, Martha Scoville, Sue A friend (?) seeing Bill, laugh-<lb />
Speed, Nancy B. Sperling, Mattie ing over a letter remarked: ' That<lb />
B. Stovall, Mary B. Strickland, must be a sweet letter, kid<lb />
Harding Sugg, Jennie G. Taylor,<lb />
Mary E. Taylor, Ruth H. Thomp-<lb />
son, Marie Tripp, Vernon G. Ward,<lb />
Judson White, George Willard,<lb />
ami. w �� ht� � Irene Williamson, Annie Pearl Wil-<lb />
of terror, but in its normal height! son, Margaret Wilson, Annie E<lb />
and in the peaceful mood of the Windley, Rosa Womack, Valeria<lb />
Christmas season. I Womack<lb />
'Oh, no was the quick reply<lb />
"It's only from my mother<lb />
Mr. Cummings: "What would<lb />
you do with 24 hours immediately<lb />
after crossing the international<lb />
date linef<lb />
Dickey: "I'd use it deeping<lb />
15, 1937<lb />
Tom<lb />
cigars.<lb />
Alvah Page�To do a<lb />
of practice teaching.<lb />
Joseph Hatem� to 1<lb />
money he can.<lb />
1 sec that the cur� .<lb />
ogy has moved v<lb />
Shorty's new � �<lb />
Smoke Shop.<lb />
Chauncey Calfee, Beaui<lb />
hoy, is back in school ' itb<lb />
new laughs, and a fo a<lb />
ion.<lb />
Ruth Cagle is lookup I '<lb />
Agent. 1 wonder why '<lb />
Who is the hoy tha'<lb />
in the sticks that whea<lb />
has to get a mule and es rt<lb />
his belongings to tin- first<lb />
station? Guess who:<lb />
We have one yoiinir mai<lb />
college, that has such � <lb />
that he can rais� a 100<lb />
of flour up off the gr<lb />
teeth, his hands !whi<lb />
other than Mr. Francis Sine<lb />
There was some evi� -<lb />
girls at the L�Bsbarg-E I<lb />
the other night applau i <lb />
Louisburg than for E I �<lb />
girls, let's applaud for our 0'<lb />
Thank you.<lb />
Fran Ferebee has a new<lb />
stalled, in his head on tn<lb />
ment plan. You cant eve:<lb />
bogus.<lb />
The soda shop ha a ae<lb />
and a new girl customer.<lb />
customer is often seen<lb />
some Bill Pratt, lately<lb />
The Social hour at the Wright<lb />
Building is lacking. Lacking wnaxt<lb />
A record called "Pennies troro<lb />
Heaven<lb />
Caesar had his Brutus, Greece<lb />
had its Alcibiades, France its Uw<lb />
XVI, but Chauncey Calfee has love<lb />
or mud in his eyes, I cant ten<lb />
which. ,<lb />
and<lb />
FRANCES WAHl<lb />
Vauee �<lb />
fret"<lb />
itioil<lb />
West<lb />
Mary Hooks has a new ring<lb />
I can't tell whether it's engagement,<lb />
dinner, or a wedding ring<lb />
Adrian Ayers, commonly knownto<lb />
his friends as "Jew had to P�y<lb />
the Kim of $1.00 for his late coming<lb />
to this institution. My, � tbm<lb />
days are modern 1<lb />
W<lb />
MARY H. GREE<lb />
H. (<lb />
Y �<lb />
� her M<lb />
-ar-  ii<lb />
!<lb />
fore; a - ��<lb />
Cohtii I 1<lb />
did grs<lb />
of O<lb />
WL<lb />
in eolli V <lb />
of tb . eg,<lb />
year  g <lb />
eluU I glee 1 I<lb />
riety : � <lb />
Gaili ih j<lb />
Kappa<lb />
As .<lb />
fonhr,<lb />
Carolina, tea.<lb />
kere rinc the befrinni<lb />
tter tt 1 � �' 928<lb />
, V?!� (roestioi<lb />
�sebi Miss (��. n<lb />
hxk. � . Qr8e j<lb />
Uble ol . ik- b f<lb />
nd a rgi sell<lb />
J�) oi books 01 SI<lb />
"�jricai literature<lb />
MisN i irI1(. ),a, <lb />
J�ns of the Cniu<lb />
" England and<lb />
�?�gh int Mexir. t ,<lb />
�ght.<lb />
Vounc. sincere, frank, <lb />
jy Mi- Greene <lb />
���� the student body. Ii<lb />
SI lMr- nalitv and arti<lb />
�� her .tand out as a<lb />
vid<lb />
ual on the eamjHH<lb />
EMMA L. HOOP<lb />
 Emma L. HooperJ<lb />
J.ghdi, was born in<lb />
i�ippi, arilj roeeJ<lb />
mentarvi<lb />
ondary<lb />
t h e r<lb />
txoopei<lb />
daughte<lb />
South,<lb />
eeived<lb />
educatu<lb />
sis-�ipj<lb />
ter's dijj<lb />
-Wbi<lb />
the Fnj<lb />
rt Virgiui<lb />
 Louisiana,<lb />
t attending Missis<lb />
2f,for Women, wh,<lb />
C W bachelor's de<lb />
 kelp write tfa<lb />
�f<lb />
! -<lb /><pb facs="00038049_tn_0003" /><lb />
1437<lb />
PCR TWO FULL YEARS<lb />
 9�8 MOT A VIRi �<lb />
PSSSONM. rout <lb />
N <lb />
Lookin' Over<lb />
the<lb />
Campus<lb />
. With C. Kav Pm, ��<lb />
�' '� " year.<lb />
to hai i gggj<lb />
"king<lb />
moit<lb />
M. r .<lb />
i U<lb />
' : al-<lb />
t e 11 a j<lb />
 FO ru<lb />
i . . � r � �.<lb />
k - � to<lb />
OH ' �: -i'l-<lb />
��I  " B v r�!<lb />
!� s  rr.nv<lb />
i � tafc � <lb />
 i ' � urda<lb />
 � better<lb />
Co atoj � so<lb />
 v. ill � I good<lb />
LI " ' 0 re.<lb />
ir Ta ! in �<lb />
r do H<lb />
r i<lb />
I the<lb />
ir in<lb />
( I<lb />
I . <lb />
� � .1.<lb />
pi iy-<lb />
. ;�41 fee I PWM<lb />
 w niir why '<lb />
. -  bei that I1 �� ar<lb />
� k- thai when H ���<lb />
, run end cart to hf�l<lb />
0 the r r.vlroad<lb />
if<lb />
11<lb />
�<lb />
THE TECO ECHO<lb />
PAGE THREE<lb />
With The<lb />
FA CULTY<lb />
v<lb />
liU '<lb />
M vung man hi �<lb />
.  Mi a r��f<lb />
raise I IW I'01'1 "a,<lb />
 , (. ground wit W<lb />
 ,mls behind him. N�<lb />
�n Mr. Francis Sim-bur.<lb />
, ,w mm evxlcre- J<lb />
the Lowahurg-ECTC gM<lb />
r night ai�plaing ni��rr tor<lb />
r 1 ETTC W�<lb />
irg than for ��' ' m<lb />
I -applaud for nur-wnuaro.<lb />
� k v u, .<lb />
'ran Eef�M h�-� a new JJ<lb />
� d ta hi. head on the uul<lb />
�. Ymi can't even t. u �<lb />
b mha- a new e�rgj<lb />
Mi girlI customer 1h <lb />
 often ���� w1t<lb />
B 1 Pratt, lately.<lb />
Social hour at the ��<lb />
, j. lacking. Inking �<lb />
r! �� "IYnnies iT�m<lb />
Nh.h.ad rranooit<lb />
a�nw-V"Tcan't tell<lb />
I<lb />
or rand in h�� eyes,<lb />
w,uh- � and<lb />
Mary Hooka ha a new ring<lb />
, "7tall whetbar ilfrjf '�<lb />
r. or a wedding ring- �<lb />
Adrian A ver. commonly kn�<lb />
hk friendas "Jew� had toj?<lb />
flu ��� $1.00 for h�W3<lb />
j to tin? institution. J�y<lb />
.days are modern!<lb />
NCES WAHL<lb />
, - Walil. a member of<lb />
department, come. <lb />
 .� She uas horn in<lb />
I Araanaaa,<lb />
and received her<lb />
.r� college educa-<lb />
tion there. She<lb />
received I two-<lb />
y c a f diploma<lb />
from the Arkuu-<lb />
State Teach-<lb />
 tion for the Stmlent (lovennnent As-<lb />
sociation, served as president of her<lb />
class for all four years, played sub-<lb />
stitute on both class and varsity<lb />
basketball teams, and stooped thecoi-<lb />
111. �i: it " ' . .<lb />
all her hours out of the classroom<lb />
in finding and writing items of pub-j<lb />
lie interest concerning the school.<lb />
Her associates find her busy, full<lb />
of enthusiasm and vitality, an in-<lb />
teresting and entertaining conversa<lb />
tionalist and a dependable, helpful<lb />
friend. She has been editorial ad-<lb />
viser of The Teoo Echo since its<lb />
Mrth in 1926.<lb />
PORTS<lb />
u<lb />
mm rules<lb />
Women's Team Defeats<lb />
Chowan College, 50-8<lb />
Hooper succeeded<lb />
ege clock. Mis?<lb />
in accomplishing the last feat by<lb />
hanging her class eulors fr<lb />
top of the (dock t<lb />
oin the<lb />
ower. It was the<lb />
occasion of � basket hall game and<lb />
wished the colors of her class to<lb />
The following day<lb />
per was called to the of-<lb />
dean and greeted with the<lb />
�aa. and her U.S. I question.<lb />
sas<lb />
she<lb />
be in evidence.<lb />
i , ('ollege in j Miss Hoo<lb />
onwiy, Arkan-j lice of the<lb />
m<lb />
inma Hooper, why die<lb />
trona 1'ea- you stop the college clock f<lb />
end the wind<lb />
A<lb />
i<lb />
w<lb />
r<lb />
Nashville. Lean.<lb />
received her M.A.<lb />
nubia 1'niversity.<lb />
� i lent in college Mis-<lb />
as president of the stu<lb />
� organization, vice I<lb />
I actina president of<lb />
,i secretary ami treas-j<lb />
ikatima Literary 8o-<lb />
haa held positions in<lb />
I ossetl ami Fort Sniitli<lb />
q ut Arkansas and has<lb />
�.ruing School of Fa t<lb />
, rs iothwe since Jan<lb />
In the<lb />
received the blame for<lb />
twisting the colors around the hands<lb />
of the clock. Strangely enough, the<lb />
hands of the clock were stopped on<lb />
the exact score of game!<lb />
Miss Hooper ha<lb />
and tennis have seen<lb />
lobbies bttt at present<lb />
sted in hiking, science<lb />
. adtng. 8h� has also<lb />
iv with Girl Ueserves,<lb />
rs councillor for a<lb />
 Fort Smith.<lb />
has tra eled widely in<lb />
and that together with<lb />
neriences in college and<lb />
a ell fitted her for,<lb />
ha<lb />
Wahl has diseon-<lb />
as a critic teacher<lb />
x r ising the work Of<lb />
e practice teachers.<lb />
DOW coming in coii-<lb />
irger group of girls<lb />
 of whom agree that<lb />
i ir beat friends. Miss<lb />
 � sense of humor,<lb />
 av that wins the eon-<lb />
stndents, Her high<lb />
v. and depth of char-<lb />
ring students U) strive<lb />
stt a teachers.<lb />
tatight English<lb />
in the high schools of Yazoo City,<lb />
Jackson, and Hattieshurg, in Mis-<lb />
 sissippi, and in a junior college in<lb />
I Mannshcld, La. She once coached<lb />
I boys basketball. Miss Hooper has<lb />
been a member of the faculty of East<lb />
I Carolina Teachers College since tl<lb />
fall of I9S4,<lb />
Mis Hooper has written a Christ-<lb />
mas story, "Mary of Nazareth'<lb />
which he has read t<lb />
on the campus and which has been<lb />
ALICE LUCILLE TURNER<lb />
Miss Lucille Turner, supervisor<lb />
of practice teachers in Eaglish and<lb />
professor of English, was born in<lb />
l'ulaski, Tennessee, where she still<lb />
makes her home.<lb />
S h e attended<lb />
Martin Junior<lb />
('ollege, Peahodj<lb />
(JoUege, where she<lb />
received her H.S<lb />
M.A and Ph.D.<lb />
degrees, and the<lb />
1'niversity of Chi-<lb />
cago. Miss Tur<lb />
ner wrote her dis<lb />
sertation on "A<lb />
Sewanee Review with<lb />
Notes<lb />
ii<lb />
'Tee" Martin and Blanton Lead<lb />
Local Offense; Holleman Scores<lb />
Five of Chowan Points<lb />
Dr. Oberteuffer, at Ohio State,<lb />
Suggests Moratorium on Rules<lb />
Regulating Eligiblity of<lb />
College Athletes<lb />
Suggesting a moratorium on<lb />
i i c I comnlicated rules and programs<lb />
WtteslepkyedM J <lb />
games and have won three. QJwT,Dr. rjgfeert (fertetiffe,<lb />
losses have been since Christmas. illu,lll1. - r i � �i<lb />
losses nave bbbb non-coaching professor of physical<lb />
Guess the lay-off a J�0 ranch , io J (ho State Fniversity,<lb />
for them. Anyway Coach rarlevi<lb />
is expecting the" team to greatly im-<lb />
prove within the next week or so.<lb />
of its athletic; constitution.<lb />
"These rules, all under the juris-<lb />
diction of the college itself, are:<lb />
First, an athlete must he physically<lb />
in good condition to play; second The women's basketball team de-<lb />
he must he in good standing as a! fated the Chowan quintet, 5�-8, in<lb />
student, and third, he must have 8eM0J�<lb />
ieen a student there tor one year ot<lb />
orientation.<lb />
"Three simple rules�are they im-<lb />
practical �f administration in the<lb />
Southern Conference, or the West-J�jiekey" Blamton, also a member of<lb />
"Tee" Louis<lb />
year's sextet,<lb />
and tied for<lb />
Martin, star of lat<lb />
- hack this year,<lb />
�oring honors with<lb />
Study of the<lb />
Historical Introduction (A part<lb />
of this dissertation was republished<lb />
read to women's eluhs in other parts<lb />
of North Carolina. The "Episode<lb />
on the Founding of East Carolina<lb />
Teachers ('ollege that was given<lb />
in the Wright building on the eve-<lb />
ning of November 20. !�$$, was<lb />
in the Rcrinr during the year it cele<lb />
hrated its fortieth anniversary.)<lb />
While a student in college, Miss<lb />
Turner was associate editor of the<lb />
ic I college annual, and vice president<lb />
and chairman of the program com-<lb />
mittee for the YWCA.<lb />
 Miss Turner has had a varied<lb />
o many groups teaching experience, having been an<lb />
iu v.�� L� I assistant teacher in English and<lb />
Latin at Martin College; principal<lb />
of a county high school near her<lb />
home; head of the English depart-<lb />
ment at the State Normal School,<lb />
Jacksonville, Alabama; instructor at<lb />
lVahody College while working for<lb />
and a teacher here<lb />
Bill Shelton, a newcomer to<lb />
ECTC, and all-state high school<lb />
forward from Danville, Va is high<lb />
scorer so far. His roommate, Powell,<lb />
has been supporting him with fine<lb />
passvvork.<lb />
Qhi<lb />
or in anv con-<lb />
Some of the women students here<lb />
at FCTC either have very poor<lb />
school spirit, or are unable to dis-<lb />
tinguish their own team from the<lb />
visiting team. You know, they yell<lb />
almost as loud for the visitors as<lb />
for their OWN team.<lb />
ECTC beat Morehead<lb />
Shelton scored 22 points.<lb />
64-12.<lb />
recommends the system of govern-<lb />
ing used by Amherst College.<lb />
"Perhaps we should suspend all<lb />
rules and start over he said. "Let's<lb />
find out what college games are for<lb />
really. For H years, more or less,<lb />
we liave been piling rule upon rule<lb />
without ever stopping for a careful<lb />
analysis.<lb />
"All this time some over-1<lb />
enthusiastic coaches and directors<lb />
of athletics have been responding to<lb />
the victory-hungry public by going<lb />
to all lengths to produce winners.<lb />
"It is suggested that the solution<lb />
of this problem lies in an examina-<lb />
tion of fundamental concepts (ot<lb />
amateurism) and in a return to sim-<lb />
plicity of administration<lb />
Commenting in The Journal of<lb />
Higher Education upon eligibility<lb />
recommendations recently made by<lb />
the president of the University of<lb />
he said thev<lb />
ern, or the<lb />
1 crence<lb />
Dr. Ghertenffer stated that per-<lb />
haps we are not yet in the position<lb />
to place too much confidence in<lb />
the other fellow. If we do need<lb />
bigger and better and more restric-<lb />
tive rules, "then h-1 us retain sonif<lb />
lawyers and give them six month:<lb />
to draw op Statutes infallihi<lb />
all-embracing, and<lb />
sheriff in every atl<lb />
to guard<lb />
pia<lb />
1tic-<lb />
and<lb />
i trained<lb />
partment<lb />
against n<lb />
PIRATES DEFEAT<lb />
II<lb />
last year's team. Each scored 1<lb />
points. Newby, a newcomer to<lb />
ECTC. played a fine game at for-<lb />
ward, scoring a total of ten points,<lb />
Stephenson and Bogeraoo played<lb />
, well a guards for the local team.<lb />
Bollemaa and Adams did all the<lb />
scoring for Chowan College. Hol-<lb />
leman netted 5 points, and Adams. I,<lb />
Lineups :<lb />
ECTC -Forwards: Wilson<lb />
Newby I 10, Blanton I 14 i.<lb />
: Martin f 14 i. Beamon 2 ). am<lb />
kett (2); guards: Austin, Stephen-<lb />
son, McMillin, Tyson. Parker,<lb />
Stephenson. and Rogersom.<lb />
Chowan�Forwards: Jilcott, Hol-<lb />
leman (5), Adam- (3), Long, and<lb />
guards: Payne, Jenkins,<lb />
(83),<lb />
�Te<lb />
, Bnr-<lb />
. Freeman; r<lb />
Bill Shelton Leads Offense With Mathews, Hill, and CoVard<lb />
Twenty-six Points<lb />
East<lb />
and coached hv Miss! her doctorat<lb />
I since 16.<lb />
rk<lb />
both written<lb />
Hooper.<lb />
fitted her for' Hiss Hooper has served as an ad- Reading Spencer and eighteenth<lb />
been doing here, viaer for the YWCA here for many century "Esteemed farces and En-<lb />
ii ii� years and her work with this group ' tertainnients" is one of Misslur-<lb />
has won a place for her in the hearts ner's hobbies while the other is "buy-<lb />
of all YWCA members. However, I big old books when 1 can, and read-<lb />
Miss Hooper's influence has not been tag about collections of fascinating<lb />
felt in this one organization alone.<lb />
Her bobby, dramatics, has brought<lb />
her into contact with numerous<lb />
Others. Her work as a teacher has<lb />
i been highly praised by her students.<lb />
hooks which I can't afford Miss<lb />
Turner says that "going places" also<lb />
might be considered a hobby.<lb />
Miss Turner is a member of the<lb />
Modern Language Association of<lb />
America. Kappa Delta Pi, state<lb />
The women's squad seems to be<lb />
having quite a . hit of dissension<lb />
these days. Not taking either side,<lb />
but do "hate for the team to lose<lb />
Gladys Miller, one of the tiest for-<lb />
wards ever to attend East Carolina<lb />
Teachers College.<lb />
NEW STUDENTS LANGUAGE<lb />
FILM DEPARTMENT CREATED<lb />
North Carolina<lb />
"so firm, so rigid, and so reaction-<lb />
ary as to stun those who have been<lb />
hoping for some mite of liberalism<lb />
Dr. Oberteuffer pointed out that<lb />
"one is amazed by the number and<lb />
complexity of constitutions of high<lb />
ischool athletic associations and col-<lb />
lege conferences.<lb />
"There are age limits, scholarship<lb />
standards, transfer rules, amateur<lb />
rules, and freshmen rules. And the<lb />
that<lb />
Score at half. ECTC (35),<lb />
Chowan (5).<lb />
Carolina Teachers College<lb />
arejeagers defeated Louisburg 39-24.<lb />
ast Friday night to register their!<lb />
with nine points, led the losers.<lb />
Teachers : Forwards�Shelton 26,<lb />
last Eridav night to register theiri ieactiers: rorwarus�own� �,<lb />
first win of the New Year. Camp-jStowe 2, Avers, Ferehee, Calfee,<lb />
bell College defeated the Teachers Tharrington. Center�K. Martin<lb />
30-23, earlier in the week in the 2. Guards�Powell. Ridenhour 9,<lb />
opening game of the 1937 schedule Roebuck.<lb />
Coach Bo Farlev's outfit gained Louisburg: Forwards�Cooper 3,<lb />
the lead in early play and remained; Brian 4, Watson. Center�Crawley<lb />
in front throughout 9. Guards�Robinson 3, Newsome<lb />
Shelton was the big gun on at- j 3, West, Newton 2. Shannonhouse,<lb />
tack. He tallied 26 points. Crawley, j Fox.<lb />
I<lb />
universities throughout<lb />
having doubled in the past year as<lb />
lRY<lb />
11<lb />
H. GREENE<lb />
 i ,ivi�ne. i member<lb />
English depart<lb />
M<lb />
1.<lb />
ti-<lb />
lt.<lb />
ii<lb />
d<lb />
in Abbeville, South<lb />
. gne received ha<lb />
irh cdmaiion.<lb />
roin high school<lb />
die went to Agnes<lb />
Scott College in j<lb />
Decatur, Georgia<lb />
v, here she received<lb />
her A.B. degree<lb />
it, 2I. In 12<lb />
M,� Greene at<lb />
tended -uminer;<lb />
school at the Uni-<lb />
versity of Call-<lb />
received her M.A. from;<lb />
niveraity ta 192 and,<lb />
work in the Fniversity<lb />
q the summer of 1838.<lb />
is undergraduate work<lb />
s Greene was editor<lb />
we, newspaper for two<lb />
:1 member of a writers<lb />
j dub, an honorary so-<lb />
college activities, and of<lb />
au Alpha (now Phi Beta<lb />
;� m,ss Greene served<lb />
� arsat Bones Path. South<lb />
teaching tenth and elev-<lb />
, English. She has been<lb />
the beginning of the sum-<lb />
of 1928.<lb />
luestioaed concerning her<lb />
�s Greene replied. "Buying<lb />
.nr-e. 1 have some val-<lb />
ha, a few first editions<lb />
 lection (for a begifl-<lb />
ks on Shakespeare and<lb />
literature<lb />
ireette has traveled in most<lb />
t the United States except<lb />
gland ami has been far<lb />
into Mexico to see a bull<lb />
sincere, frank, and friend-<lb />
Ureefte has the respect and<lb />
, student body. Her charm-<lb />
.nalitv and artistic taste<lb />
r stand out as a distinct m-<lb />
on the campus.<lb />
MAMIE E. JENKINS<lb />
Miss Mamie E. Jenkins, North<lb />
Carolinian for generations back, ami<lb />
belonging to the "Granville County<lb />
Jenkinses i- the daughter of l<lb />
Methodist minister<lb />
and hence spent her<lb />
early life moving<lb />
from place to place.<lb />
junior college I once won a ,<lb />
for writing the heat story but 1 was<lb />
told later that it wasn't because mine<lb />
was so good but because the others<lb />
I were so bad .<lb />
"Once in a while I have an article<lb />
in a while X have<lb />
regions.<lb />
idementary<lb />
education was re-<lb />
1 in private schools, beginning<lb />
kindergarten at the age of<lb />
,��,�   valuable aid to language stmh<lb />
treasurer of Delta Kappa Gamma. �as caused John 8. Tapernoux,<lb />
and former president of the Green- president of the French Motion 1 ie-<lb />
ville branch of the AAFW. ture Corporation, to announce the<lb />
Among other interesting facts j creation of a new student's Language<lb />
about Miss Turner, she says that "in U-ilm Department, under the sttper-<lb />
prize j vision of Mr. N. Yaillancourt.<lb />
Films of international importance,<lb />
not necessarily French productions,<lb />
will thus lie made available to col-<lb />
leges everywhere in the United<lb />
States. .<lb />
"The new department, said Mr.<lb />
Tapernoux, "will devote itself en-<lb />
tirely to the furthering of college<lb />
interests, and will feature foremost<lb />
a specialized service for all lan-<lb />
guage professors and language or-<lb />
ganizations.<lb />
history of each one is that it i;<lb />
The exhibition of foreign films in I formulated to control some trouble<lb />
" � America some situation�without counting<lb />
the cost of those who might be try-<lb />
ing to foster athletics for the benefit<lb />
of all boys regardless of age, income,<lb />
or previous condition of servitude<lb />
Dr. Oberteuffer congratulated<lb />
Amherst College for the simplicity<lb />
having lived, gone<lb />
,o school, or taught : hlish(.(i. om,<lb />
m all sections of nv (nmt, ha(.k lu)me .just eau,0;<lb />
the state the I md- Miffl Turnor spiint much of the<lb />
mont, coastal, and mmmmr ()f H4 in Europe.<lb />
mountain regions, j . TnrmT i,as been outstanding<lb />
Her elementary( "xwmwr of the faculty here.<lb />
She gives freely to others of her store<lb />
of knowledge, experience, and collec-<lb />
tions of valuable material ami equip-<lb />
�� which she has been acquiring<lb />
, , ' oer a number of years from various<lb />
a"u I places including Europe.<lb />
Miss Turner is truly a teacher of<lb />
I teachers. Through her love of her<lb />
work she has led her students to find<lb />
   1ilf.  <lb />
and accuracy in or-<lb />
make them invalu-<lb />
;)vaii illl( ,� study and teaching.<lb />
Miss Turner has a definite and kmd-<lb />
tI hi ;�tn the chars<lb />
attitude to-<lb />
of<lb />
M<lb />
tSHtT!<lb />
Wl<lb />
Coll,<lb />
eei<lb />
Boo,<lb />
KMMA L. HOOPER<lb />
Emma L. Hooper, professor<lb />
rlish, was born in Edmburg,<lb />
ppi, and received her ele-<lb />
mentary and ���-<lb />
ondarv education<lb />
there. Miss<lb />
Hooper is a true<lb />
daughter of the<lb />
South, having re-<lb />
ceived her early<lb />
education in Mis-<lb />
sissippi, her mas-<lb />
ter's degree from<lb />
the Fniversity of<lb />
Virginia, and<lb />
ii Louisiana.<lb />
attending Mississippi btate<lb />
for Women, where �<lb />
,er bachelor's degree, Miss<lb />
helped write the conatitu-<lb />
ceivi<lb />
with<lb />
three, and continuing through va-j �hu,h<lb />
rious schools including<lb />
School for Young Ladu<lb />
Hawkins School for Girls. Miss<lb />
Jenkins never attended a public<lb />
school. When she entered college.<lb />
she found to her surprise that sh(' Xin'in teaching. Her many files<lb />
was a sophomore, possibly due l) j SU(W � noatness and accuracy in or-<lb />
thc fact that she was far advancedLfcatfcB that make them invalu-<lb />
in the study of Latin. After at J Xo stU(lv and teaching,<lb />
tending Trinity College (now Duke , Turmr ha, a definite and kmd-<lb />
Fniveraity) for three years she re- L ins- llt into the characters of her<lb />
ceived her A.B. degree, being �m��Sm and a friendly " ' <lb />
Of the first four girls to go through ' thpm<lb />
that institution on equal terms with<lb />
1 men and receive degrees. She took<lb />
part in many campus activities and<lb />
holds a Phi Beta Kappa key. After<lb />
graduation Miss Jenkins has served<lb />
as president of Trinity Alumnae and<lb />
a member of the Duke '�"�"<lb />
Miss Jenkins received her M.A.<lb />
degree from Columbia Fniversity<lb />
and has done more university study<lb />
since receiving her degree than be-<lb />
fore with another full year and sev-<lb />
eral'summers at Columbia, and study<lb />
at other places, among them the<lb />
Fniversitv of Wisconsin.<lb />
Her teaching experience extends<lb />
from the grades up, HffJ"<lb />
third grade in Durham schools, Latin<lb />
a�d modern languages m Martha<lb />
Washington College, English in W i -<lb />
mington high school, (ranada Col-<lb />
lege in Mississippi, and East Caro-<lb />
Z Teachers Training Schooland<lb />
College from the fM�&amp; felu �JJ<lb />
been active in the AALW and the<lb />
National Council of Teachers of<lb />
ES Jenkins says that her hob-<lb />
bies are might-have-been, because<lb />
books and magazines crowd out the<lb />
things that she would like to m-<lb />
Sin. Her early interests music<lb />
f dramatics, are revived when she<lb />
is i New York, or some other city<lb />
where she revels in attending real<lb />
 grand opera, ortaug-g<lb />
svmphony concerts. She awo saj<lb />
na if there had been time and<lb />
money she would have traveled far;<lb />
but her travels have been intensive<lb />
ather than extensive extending<lb />
Jorn Central America, Canada, and<lb />
central United States.<lb />
In addition to her teaching; m<lb />
the English department Miss J�n-<lb />
i A GIFT INSPIRED BY <lb />
SENTIMENT<lb />
YOUR PHOTOGRAPH<lb />
See our display for<lb />
attractive new styles<lb />
( BAKER'S STUDIO j<lb />
I<lb />
ATTENTION<lb />
STUDENTS!<lb />
(�j<lb />
Attend YOUR<lb />
Basketball Games<lb />
and<lb />
Yell for YOUR Teams<lb />
m<lb />
THEY NEED YOUR<lb />
SUPPORT!<lb />
v<lb />
li 1<lb />
V<lb />
A<lb />
i<lb />
Lots <lb />
of <lb />
New <lb />
Frocks j<lb />
at<lb />
SALLY j<lb />
FROCKS!<lb />
i<lb />
2?<lb />
A<lb />
 I<lb />
��<lb />
LOIS GRIGSBY<lb />
Miss Lois Grigsby, a teacher of<lb />
English, comes from a family that<lb />
has been Tennesseean for five gen-<lb />
erations, and Virginian before that<lb />
As a child, Miss Grigsby received<lb />
the usual elementary and secondary<lb />
education in country schools of Ten-<lb />
nessee. She then<lb />
attended prepara-<lb />
torv school for<lb />
one year and Ohio<lb />
Wesleyan Univer-<lb />
sity in Delaware,<lb />
Ohio, for t w o<lb />
years. (The lat-<lb />
ter is a college of<lb />
world-wide eon-<lb />
tacts and one<lb />
which has the rep-<lb />
utation of having produced more<lb />
Methodist bishops than any other.)<lb />
Miss Grigsby then took time out to<lb />
teach "odds and ends" for two years<lb />
in her home high school. Follow-<lb />
ing those years of teaching she re-<lb />
turned to Ohio Wesleyan for her<lb />
B.A. . , , . x<lb />
In college Miss Grigsby's special<lb />
interests, outside of her work, were<lb />
in the English Writers' Club, Phi-<lb />
losophy Club, and Women's Athletic<lb />
Association. (She won her numerals<lb />
in field hockey and her college let-<lb />
ter in girls' baseball.) One year<lb />
Miss Grigsby worked with the<lb />
YWCA, another year she played in<lb />
the orchestra, did some work for the<lb />
periodicals, and wmfAS:<lb />
dent government council. She holda<lb />
a Phi Beta Kappa key from Ohio<lb />
Wesleyan University.<lb />
In Ohio Miss Grigsby taught Eng-<lb />
lish from the seventh grade through<lb />
the twelfth, served as head of the<lb />
(Please turn to pae tour)<lb />
SALE<lb />
Continues with greater re-<lb />
ductions on all Footwear to<lb />
make room for early Spring<lb />
Styles . . .<lb />
COBURNS SHOES, Inc.<lb />
"Your Shoe Store"<lb />
0<lb />
ok'<lb /><lb />
i<lb />
January Reductions<lb />
On AH<lb />
Winter Apparels<lb />
The SMART SHOPPE<lb />
We Are Featuring for This Month<lb />
LADIES' FULL-FASHIONED HOSE<lb />
For 49c<lb />
First Quality � Ringless<lb />
WE DELIVER<lb />
CHARLES STORES CO INC<lb />
ATTENTION GIRLS!<lb />
DO NOT READ THIS AD<lb />
Entire Stock of Winter Dresses<lb />
1.74 274 374 5.74<lb />
7.74 9-74<lb />
Entire Stock of Winter Coats and Suits<lb />
12 PRICE<lb />
For Boys Oniy<lb />
Camels, Lucky Strikes,<lb />
Chesterfields 11c<lb />
and<lb />
One Group of Gossard Corsets<lb />
ft PRICE<lb />
Entire Stock of Hots<lb />
l2 PRICE<lb />
One Group of Novelty Sweaters One Group of Evening Dresses<lb />
l2 PRICE Vl PR,CE<lb />
WHIT<lb />
S STO R<lb />
Blount-Harvey<lb /><pb facs="00038049_tn_0004" /><lb />
PAGE FOUR<lb />
THE TECO ECHO<lb />
January l5t r<lb />
Women Drivers Do Not<lb />
Cause Most Accidents<lb />
Statistics Show That Women Are! internationally Known<lb />
Involved in Only Six Per Cent<lb />
ot Highway Accidents<lb />
Violinist Here January 19<lb />
x<lb />
v<lb />
k. .V. (ACP)�<lb />
srs, long thought to<lb />
i men drivers do not<lb />
t automobile accidents.<lb />
 bv Prof. William<lb />
of Yale University<lb />
omeu drivers arc in-<lb />
tv t! per cent of the<lb />
lents.<lb />
� � hile driving from :<lb />
k  at or the front<lb />
thai women can<lb />
t influence on the<lb />
tO !<lb />
shed<lb />
ih(<lb />
We<lb />
os declared. "It,<lb />
. reduced, it will wastebacket.<lb />
through women � k shop m<lb />
� problem fin- 80<lb />
done little with it.<lb />
I of public opinion<lb />
�rvance of law with<lb />
creasing automobile<lb />
'finitely a work for<lb />
! know that there arc<lb />
eaths annually from<lb />
while 1,250,000<lb />
fr<lb />
hi<lb />
rorn<lb />
he same<lb />
fcial and certain cn-<lb />
� is one thing need-<lb />
lacking to reduce<lb />
s. Public opinion<lb />
mi ut can be worn-<lb />
FORMER MEMBER INFIRMARY<lb />
STAFF CLAIMED BY DEATH<lb />
Morris, from 1926-<lb />
tbe East Carolina<lb />
 infirmary, died in<lb />
� the home of a rela-<lb />
M<lb />
- were held in La<lb />
iiig, and she was<lb />
her form r home.<lb />
dean of women;<lb />
lith, who was Miss<lb />
in the infirmary<lb />
 ainins under<lb />
(Continued from pase one)<lb />
as precious to him as his priceless<lb />
violin.<lb />
It is a collection of which any<lb />
connoisseur might well be proud.<lb />
First editions of Sapling, George<lb />
Eliot, Oscar Wilde. Sir Walter Scott<lb />
cram the shelves and cahinets of his<lb />
studio the one room sacred to him<lb />
in his three story New York house.<lb />
Volumes for which a professional<lb />
might have paid a small fortune the<lb />
famous artist picked up for a song.<lb />
His prize is a dingy paper-cov-<lb />
ered book that looks ready for the<lb />
The storekeeper in a<lb />
Adelaide. West Aus-<lb />
ta, remarked when Zimbalist<lb />
asked him about it.<lb />
"What, that old thing? You can<lb />
have it for a shilling<lb />
Zimbalist paid the shilling and<lb />
left the shop. The hook was first<lb />
edition of "Tales of a Grandfather"<lb />
by Sir Walter Scott.<lb />
"Yon find things in the most un-<lb />
expected and out of the way places<lb />
the violinist explains. "For instance,<lb />
T got a copy of an early edition of<lb />
�Don Juan for a shilling in a shop<lb />
in Sidney. For the same price I<lb />
got a first edition of 'Daniel De-<lb />
ronda1 in the same far off city. The<lb />
dealer thought it worthless. It was<lb />
a pirated edition and he didn't see<lb />
 why I wanted it. In India I got<lb />
i an old Shakespeare and three copies<lb />
of the India Railway F.dition of<lb />
 Kipling. These I prize very highly<lb />
because they pre-date the actual in<lb />
I England. But since they looked<lb />
 like worn out magazines I got them<lb />
for very little too<lb />
Almost an entire set of Dickens<lb />
has been assembled from bookshop<lb />
little short of magic. Today Zim-<lb />
balist exhibits a similar instinct for<lb />
strange instruments. Wind, string<lb />
percussion�or some obscure prehis-<lb />
toric instrument from Africa or the<lb />
Orient�he can play them all, after<lb />
a moment's earoful inspection. How-<lb />
ever, he still prefers his violin.<lb />
A recent tribute to the art of<lb />
Kfren Zimbalist comes from that<lb />
distinguished Dean of American Mu-<lb />
sic Critics, William Henderson of<lb />
the New )'ork Sun.<lb />
"Mr. Kfren Zimbalist is least of<lb />
all things a fiddler. Above all things<lb />
he is an artist of singular and self-<lb />
effacing devotion to lofty ideals. He<lb />
seems to love music better than he<lb />
loves himself. When he believes in<lb />
a composition he plays it again and<lb />
again in the fond hope that he may<lb />
eventually overcome the inertia of<lb />
the true art. He might possibly<lb />
have gained for himself a larger<lb />
amount of space in the daily prints<lb />
had he utilized modern power of<lb />
ballyhoo. But those who have<lb />
watched his career are well aware<lb />
that he would shrink with aversion<lb />
from such a method of eelebration.<lb />
lie remains content with the deep<lb />
respect and sincere affection of all<lb />
those who reverence art as he does<lb />
INTERESTING<lb />
TITLES<lb />
IN OUR<lb />
LIBRARY<lb />
The Destructive Element<lb />
By S. Spender<lb />
Twice-Born Men<lb />
By Harold Begbie<lb />
"What Makes Us Seem So<lb />
Queer?"<lb />
By David Seabury<lb />
Fellow Creatures<lb />
By Charles D. Stewart<lb />
With The<lb />
FACULTY<lb />
(Continued from page three)<lb />
Knglish department in a high school,<lb />
and later was the assistant principal<lb />
in another high school. After do-<lb />
ing advanced work in Columbia I ni-<lb />
versity, the degree of Master of Arts<lb />
was conferred on Miss Gngsby.<lb />
Since coming to Kast Carolina<lb />
Lowell Thomas Unable To<lb />
Appear Here in February;<lb />
To Attend Coronation j gather<lb />
phis (Tennessee). University of j<lb />
New Hampshire, and University of<lb />
Alabama. He has also served as full j<lb />
time professor of Knglish at the last!<lb />
three.<lb />
Dr. Baughan, although he has<lb />
served on the faculty here for only<lb />
three months, has made a place for<lb />
himself on the campus. The grad-<lb />
uate students speak highly of his<lb />
work as an instructor in advanced<lb />
�� �� iwork Dr. Baughan has had many<lb />
Teachers College, Miss Cirigsby has interesting experiences, having tra-<lb />
beon a member of the Knglish dVLfed in many parts of this country,<lb />
partment and is active in other col Canada, Mexico, Central and South<lb />
U. work, having served as YWCA America, Cuba, England, and<lb />
adviser for a number of years. She; France. The trip to Central and<lb />
has a deep and active interest in the j South America was made possible<lb />
people about her and in their profe- by his winning Of the Scnpps-Ilow-<lb />
lems Her delightful sense of humor j ar(i a,�i Panama Steamship essay<lb />
and her ability to analyze a situation contest. His hobby, like that of most<lb />
from more than one viewpoint, to-j Knglish teachers, is collecting oh<lb />
with the attitude of friend- hooks Dr. Baughan adds that col<lb />
CLOTHES<lb />
Lo<lb />
iycly Shoppe<lb />
Dressmaking and Altering<lb />
Hand Work a Spectoitv<lb />
Jean Le Says American<lb />
College Life "Too Lovely<lb />
For French Students"<lb />
(Continued from page one)<lb />
inir and the singing were the only<lb />
things T liked. But by the fifth time<lb />
1 began to see how marvelous the<lb />
game was mathematically<lb />
He cited the differences he ob-<lb />
served in the universities of the West<lb />
and Kast coasts. "The students<lb />
don't work very hard in the West<lb />
All they could talk about was poli-<lb />
tics and sports. Everything was<lb />
parties�sinking parties, bridge par-<lb />
ties, dancing parties, radio parties,<lb />
and week-end parties. The Univer-<lb />
sity of California at Los Angeles is<lb />
tretching from London to Calcutta very near Hollywood and all the<lb />
Th.<lb />
re arc sevc<lb />
�ral volumes of Ha-1 girls there seemed to think of going<lb />
M<lb />
Wi<lb />
111!<lb />
an<lb />
Mis<lb />
M<lb />
t on t<lb />
ral<lb />
Rev.<lb />
Mr<lb />
Miss<lb />
.( Mi<lb />
Purl<lb />
serviei<lb />
J. (<lb />
J. P.<lb />
� College at<lb />
Smith and<lb />
.mi.<lb />
i were eon-<lb />
Humble, pas-<lb />
idisl church, at the<lb />
Mrs. W. X. Barks.<lb />
Morris. A sextette<lb />
� lames X. 1). Harp-<lb />
and W. L.<lb />
Wade FergU-<lb />
J. II. Bouse,<lb />
two beautiful<lb />
Barwick<lb />
I Messrs.<lb />
Wj<lb />
were Dr. M. L.<lb />
Don Slade. Clem<lb />
liters, and W. R.<lb />
Le<lb />
EkUl<lb />
ht v service at the<lb />
r . Miss Morris was<lb />
i . � of the Moore-Her-<lb />
al in Wilson for thirteen<lb />
n ���; � ! her training<lb />
t the Wilson Sanitorium,<lb />
ara in private nursing.<lb />
  active work two<lb />
ise of failing health.<lb />
n in Craven County.<lb />
afly moved to Durham<lb />
a � tve mature life was<lb />
Is � where she had hosts<lb />
Dg whom are former<lb />
d nurses who had their<lb />
ider her. To these were<lb />
era of the faculty and<lb />
- College girls. She was<lb />
- and popular superin-<lb />
id institutional adminis-<lb />
eer. She was noted for<lb />
among the poor, seeing<lb />
- first hand and giving<lb />
ma Boswell, superintend-<lb />
United States stiu<lb />
,�,�,  ,w.  know some of their professors, he 'ou<lb />
�1r nioso in the world to- remarked, something that is impos-<lb />
sible in France without the proper<lb />
introduction.<lb />
Le Mee, in his report to the French<lb />
ministry of education, is going to<lb />
recommend six American features<lb />
for adoption in French universities:<lb />
playing fields, fraternities and clubs,<lb />
large dining rooms, good reproduc-<lb />
tions of great works of art in college<lb />
buildings, and university theatres,<lb />
magazines, and newspapers.<lb />
m th<lb />
t hi<lb />
M<lb />
atl<lb />
Moore-Herring<lb />
who was at one time a<lb />
o this school, Miss Kliza-<lb />
B, who worked in the in-<lb />
m summer, and Mrs.<lb />
nes, who was trained under<lb />
rris, were the represent-<lb />
m the Wilson nurses who<lb />
her funeral.<lb />
Says King's Love of Common<lb />
People Motivated Action<lb />
at-<lb />
( Continued from page one)<lb />
�. the profession will not<lb />
� better minds.<lb />
r�y Teachers College alumnae<lb />
and Edgecombe counties<lb />
the banquet, which was<lb />
he Masonic Temple.<lb />
L. Grcathouse, of Rocky<lb />
from N<lb />
attende<lb />
serve. �<lb />
Mrs.<lb />
Mount, presided at the meeting and<lb />
delivered the address of welcome.<lb />
Joe Dunn, who was graduated from<lb />
Teachers College in 1035 and is now<lb />
principal of the school at Speed,<lb />
made the response.<lb />
The alumnae introduced them-<lb />
selves and recalled incidents from<lb />
their experiences at the College.<lb />
They were given Santa Claus bags<lb />
of candy which they are to empty<lb />
of candy and to fill with coins. The<lb />
full bags will be returned to the<lb />
Alumnae Association to pay for dues<lb />
and the subscription to Teco Echo,<lb />
the College newspaper.<lb />
litt. Trolloppe. "Rousseau, Wilde,<lb />
profusely illustrated in black and<lb />
white and said to be the finest one<lb />
in existence, is the most pretentious<lb />
section of the Zimbalist collection.<lb />
The favorite of the artist is a fac-<lb />
simile of the manuscript of Alice<lb />
in Wonderland with sketches by<lb />
the author.<lb />
In addition to his rare editions,<lb />
Zimbalist has a fine collection of<lb />
semi-precious stone, quaint Oriental<lb />
vials, carved ivories and fine tapes-<lb />
tries, also brought from the far cor-<lb />
ners of the world.<lb />
Zimbalist has more violins than<lb />
any<lb />
day. His collections contain the fa-<lb />
mous "Lamorlux" Stradivarius and<lb />
an almost equally valuable, Guada-<lb />
gini. The Guadagini. in addition to<lb />
being one of the rarest of the eight-<lb />
eenth century Cremonas has a mod-<lb />
ern history that is most unique. It<lb />
has probably done more traveling,<lb />
unaccompanied by guide or chaper-<lb />
one, than any violin iu existence.<lb />
It started when the Guadagnini<lb />
was stolen from Zimbalist's dressing<lb />
room in a Los Angeles Concert hall.<lb />
As the violinist was scheduled for<lb />
an Oriental Tour starting immedi-<lb />
ately, he was forced to sail without<lb />
it. But a short time after the violin<lb />
was offered for sale to the Chicago<lb />
representative of Rudolph Wurlit-<lb />
zer who had himself sold it to Zim-<lb />
balist. He recognized it at once,<lb />
called the police and then rushed to<lb />
the nearest telegraph office to cable<lb />
the violinist. Zimbalist wired back<lb />
his delight and asked to have the<lb />
precious instrument shipped to him<lb />
in Australia. It missed him in Sid-<lb />
ney, Tokio, Singapore, Shanghai,<lb />
Marrila, until he finally cabled<lb />
to have it sent "home" by the most<lb />
direct route, without any further<lb />
junketing.<lb />
Zimbalist's Uncanny Knowledge of<lb />
Musical Instruments<lb />
Zimbalist possesses, among better<lb />
known gifts, an uncanny ability to<lb />
play almost any instrument that<lb />
comes into his hands. Nobody has<lb />
ever shown him a musical instru-<lb />
ment that after a moment of concen-<lb />
trated examination, he has not been<lb />
able to play. And this strange in-<lb />
stinct came valiantly to his rescue<lb />
once early in his career.<lb />
When, as a youth of eighteen he<lb />
came up before the faculty of the<lb />
Petrograd Conservatory for his final<lb />
examination, he learned just before<lb />
entering the sanctum of the jury<lb />
that during all the years he was<lb />
studying the violin there under Pro-<lb />
fessor Auer, he was supposed to have<lb />
had a knowledge of the piano too.<lb />
Part of the examination, he discov-<lb />
ered to his dismay, was the task of<lb />
playing a Beethoven piano sonata<lb />
at sight�and he had never touched<lb />
a piano further than to get his A<lb />
for violin-tuning.<lb />
"I was scared to death is Zim-<lb />
balist's reminiscent comment. He<lb />
sat down, however, got his breath,<lb />
played. When he finished, he was<lb />
instructed to play the whole thing<lb />
over again�this time from memory.<lb />
He did so. After a moment of si-<lb />
lence, the room broke unanimously<lb />
into applause�an unheard-of dem-<lb />
onstration.<lb />
This amazing performance seems I<lb />
into the movies instead of working<lb />
Le Mee declared that the Kast<lb />
was different. He said that the girls<lb />
at Byrn Mawr didn't "shout" and<lb />
students really worked. Columbia<lb />
and New York universities held lit-<lb />
tle interest for him because they<lb />
were too much like "what we have<lb />
in Paris They did not have the<lb />
campus life that seemed to be almost<lb />
everywhere else, he said.<lb />
He stated that students at French<lb />
universities live alone and seldom<lb />
get to know one another. In the<lb />
dents even get to<lb />
(Continued from page one)<lb />
might get him there a little later<lb />
in February on his return. Dr. An-<lb />
drews is, as you know, director of<lb />
the American Museum of Natural<lb />
History in Xew York, and has<lb />
headed" a number of expeditions to<lb />
China, Mongolia, etc in search of<lb />
the missing link. He has made some<lb />
wonderful pictures in these coun-<lb />
tries which he shows in connection<lb />
with his lectures.<lb />
Next: I would like to have you<lb />
consider Martin and Osa Johnson<lb />
on your course in the story of their<lb />
expedition to British Borneo from<lb />
which they have just returned with<lb />
some wonderful pictures and ex-<lb />
periences which they relate, appear-<lb />
ing alternately on the program in<lb />
connection with the showing of the<lb />
pictures. They are booked at the<lb />
Woman's College in Greensboro on<lb />
February 10. If you could take<lb />
them the night before or the night<lb />
following the Greensboro engage-<lb />
ment, we could let you have them<lb />
as a substitute for Mr. Thomas on<lb />
the same terms.<lb />
Another excellent suggestion is<lb />
for you to take Cornelia Otis Skin-<lb />
ner for a return date on January<lb />
10 following her engagement at<lb />
liness and quiet dependability that lecting rejection slips from article<lb />
characterize Miss Grigsby's rela- that he had hoped to have publish<lb />
tionship with her students and other lujfflt be considered a second hobby,<lb />
associates create a charming and)<lb />
rare personality that has the power<lb />
not only to attract<lb />
fluence her friends.<lb />
but also to in-<lb />
DENVER BAUGHAN<lb />
Dr. Denver Baughan, professor of j<lb />
Knglish, conies from Henderson,)<lb />
Tennessee, where he was born and j<lb />
educated. He re-1<lb />
ceived his B.A.<lb />
and M.A. degrees<lb />
from Yanderbilt<lb />
q i v e r 8 i t y in<lb />
Nashville, T e n-<lb />
n e s s e e, and his<lb />
l'h.D. from Yale<lb />
University in Xew<lb />
Haven, Connecti-<lb />
cut.<lb />
While a student<lb />
Teachers College Dr.<lb />
staff artist and adver-<lb />
! tising manager for the college an-<lb />
! nual. DeSoto. Later he was exchange<lb />
'editor and artist for Yanderhilt's<lb />
i Masquerader, and treasurer of Chi<lb />
j Phi (social) fraternity at Yander-<lb />
Jhilt.<lb />
Dr. Baughan has had a wide and<lb />
The Sigma Nus at Oregon State<lb />
College have introduced the idea of<lb />
having a hired chaperon at their<lb />
fraternity during Saturday eve-<lb />
nings.<lb />
Nehi Bottling Works<lb />
at Memphis<lb />
Baughan was<lb />
Smart j<lb />
Clothes I<lb />
for I<lb />
Smart <lb />
Women j<lb />
� i<lb />
C. Heber I<lb />
Forbes <lb />
I I<lb />
Richmond, Virginia, which is a<lb />
varied teaching experience.<lb />
having<lb />
wnicn is a y� , -   , 1<lb />
xr n i,n tamrht in several public schools ot<lb />
TZ T WrT?m west Tennessee, served as head of<lb />
Bhegavejher Bteryjm program l (lcpart'mont and assistant<lb />
a Richmond last year 1 ut th is yea f Viptonville (Tennessee)<lb />
they are bringing her hack in one l i -r v,lh A<lb />
of "her original sketch programs high school head of Englbahde-<lb />
which have been made so popular j lJnient of lullahoma. (Tsee<lb />
through her radio broadcasts. This gh school special instructor in<lb />
p. T. flf � in ��, h0(i�lJ summer schools at Murfreesboro<lb />
time might tit into your seneauie<lb />
best and would also solve the prob-<lb />
lem of your dramatic feature this<lb />
season. ' I would be willing to let<lb />
(Tennessee) Teachers College, Mem<lb />
GREETINGS GIRLS<lb />
Fcr 1937 with lots of thrills<lb />
for you in your work Visit<lb />
us often to lift your burden<lb />
in selecting your Ready to<lb />
Wear.<lb />
WILLIAMS<lb />
The Ladies Store<lb />
Just Call I <lb />
 8<lb />
i<lb />
Magazines : Sond�<lb />
FOUNTAIN SERVICE<lb />
GREENVILLE<lb />
SMOKE SHOP<lb />
WE DELIVER<lb />
SCIENCE CLUB PRESENTS<lb />
INTERESTING PAGEANT<lb />
At the Christmas meeting of the<lb />
Science Club, a pageant was pre-<lb />
sented, written by Frances Barnes,<lb />
a member of the club. "The His-<lb />
tory of Chemistry" was the title of<lb />
the pageant. Those taking active<lb />
parts in the pageant were Joe Hatem,<lb />
Roy Barrow, Henry Hatsell, and<lb />
George Willard. The pageant was<lb />
directed by Frannie Brewer. The<lb />
pageant proved to be a tremendous<lb />
success.<lb />
After the pageant, the members<lb />
gathered around the Christmas tree.<lb />
Ray Pruette, acting as Santa Claus,<lb />
gave out bags of refreshments.<lb />
This quarter's work will be de-<lb />
voted to physics. The first meeting<lb />
of the quarter will be held the third<lb />
Tuesday of this month.<lb />
ave Miss Skinner instead of<lb />
Mr. Thomas at the same fee, if you<lb />
could take her, under the circum-<lb />
stances, and I am sure your students<lb />
would greatly appreciate your giv-<lb />
ing them the opportunity of hearing<lb />
her in another program.<lb />
Then, we have some open dates<lb />
in the weeks of January 18 and 25<lb />
in the schedule of Richard Halli-<lb />
burton, the noted author, who is in<lb />
great demand this season and is<lb />
really one on the most successful<lb />
platform speakers we have ever<lb />
Iwoked, regardless of price. I do<lb />
not believe there is any man on our<lb />
list whom your students would enjoy <lb />
more. I am mailing you under<lb />
separate cover copies of some of the<lb />
pages that have been run in a num-<lb />
ber of the leading dailies throughout<lb />
the country this past summer and<lb />
fall and If you will look over these,<lb />
I think you will be interested in<lb />
having him appear there. I do not<lb />
believe Mr. Halliburton has spoken<lb />
in Greenville and if he did it was<lb />
a long time ago when, I am sure,<lb />
none of your present students were<lb />
there.<lb />
If you would prefer some com-<lb />
mentator on national questions and<lb />
affairs like Will Irwin, Kaltenborn,<lb />
or Frederick William Wiles, we<lb />
might be able to secure one of these<lb />
for you.<lb />
Yours very sincerely,<lb />
S. R. Bridges<lb />
WANTED!<lb />
700 College Girls<lb />
To Visit the<lb />
Permanent Wave Shop<lb />
and be convinced that you pet better<lb />
service for the same money than any<lb />
other place in town!<lb />
Shampoo and Wave  25c up<lb />
Hair Cuts25c<lb />
Manicure25c<lb />
Eyebrow Arch25c<lb />
Permanent Waves$2.50 up<lb />
Other Prices in Proportion<lb />
NOT A SCHOOL<lb />
All Graduate, Experienced Operator<lb />
Permanent Wave Shop<lb />
Upstairs, Munford Bldg 5 Points<lb />
"Look for the Big Sign"<lb />
IF TONIGHTS<lb />
THE NIGHT�<lb />
after the show, bring her<lb />
here for a student's special<lb />
BRAZIL JVlT ICE CREAM<lb />
LAUTERES<lb />
frauimBiuammiuiiiaBiraHiiuoiimiiiininniiiiiiiiioiiimm-<lb />
 All Hand Made j<lb />
I Sweaters <lb />
a<lb />
For $2.42<lb />
For Thursday Only j<lb />
PLEASANT'S<lb />
DRUG STORE and<lb />
TAXI SERVICE<lb />
THRIFT<lb />
sweeping the country!<lb />
E LUNCH<lb />
�lltWMIWWMIIitlilltWtttWiSI<lb />
The number of thrifty<lb />
Penney shoppers is con-<lb />
tinually growing! Every<lb />
month new Penney stores<lb />
are opened, every day new<lb />
friends are made by Pen-<lb />
ney stores everywhere!<lb />
It all goes to show that<lb />
smart shoppers every-<lb />
where are learning that<lb />
Penney's sells better<lb />
goods for less  always!<lb />
PjjINNEY'S<lb />
� PITT<lb />
SHOWING THE PICK 0' THE PICTURES'<lb />
SATSUN JAN. 16-17<lb />
A Human Drama of the Big City<lb />
"THE DEVIL IS A SISSY<lb />
With FREDDIE BARTHOLOMEWIAN HUNTER<lb /><lb />
MONTUES JAN. 18-19<lb />
CLARK GABLE<lb />
JOAN CRAWFORD<lb />
IN A MERRY MAD ROMANTIC FROLIC<lb />
"LOVE ON THE RUN"<lb />
� with �<lb />
FRANCHOT TONE<lb />
WEDTHURS JAN 20-21<lb />
IRENNE DUNNE<lb />
� in �<lb /><lb />
THEODORA GOES WILD<lb />
With MELVYN DOUGLAS<lb /><lb />
COMING<lb />
" BORN TO DANCE<lb />
a<lb />
GOD'S COUNTRY AND THE WOMAN "<lb />
-GATHERING<lb />
MOMENTUM"<lb />
Comn<lb />
Colle<lb />
at<lb />
Twentytii<lb />
Enrolle<lb />
m Students Hav N<lb />
Barred From ta?<lb />
Teachers Cc<lb />
WERE ACTIVE DURIN<lb />
YEARS OF THiS N<lb />
Men's Quarters I<lb />
Inadequate For la I<lb />
Enrol B1<lb />
r.<lb />
E<lb />
IUi<lb />
However, u<lb />
Am hi - <lb />
men oBXi<lb />
tearooms ol<lb />
The first -<lb />
Qweral A<lb />
Carolina iei<lb />
ratirk Mu:<lb />
follow - "<lb />
bsh'u'  : �<lb />
able point i<lb />
Em a I � � �<lb />
or the train<lb />
and woi<lb />
MM 01<lb />
Training Sch � I<lb />
MB f the act, �  '�<lb />
catak'tri  '��<lb />
objeot in estal us tn<lb />
ing said :� �� � - �� �<lb />
young white men<lb />
e&amp;aeati m an I tra<lb />
and qua th I<lb />
p�Uk school ol N �<lb />
School Re-Chai<lb />
The � � ol was<lb />
In General Asa i<lb />
the two sections<lb />
in one, as follow -<lb />
school shall be maim<lb />
rtaito for the porpoei (<lb />
white men and � u<lb />
tion and training �<lb />
qualify them to t<lb />
school? of North I<lb />
Another Bectii a rei<lb />
when, in the judgxm at<lb />
of trustee, the 1-  �<lb />
school will he pn m '�<lb />
hoard may decline t<lb />
men into the rooms<lb />
tori<lb />
Tllf tWO Btat4 <lb />
cataleptic of 19K<lb />
subsequent catalogue, .<lb />
tan altered in the �� i<lb />
In 1909-10, the &amp;<lb />
school, 22 men wer �<lb />
the regular y�'ar. an I<lb />
there were 33. For<lb />
years the men fron<lb />
on the campus jusrt �<lb />
kvhig as a dormitory<lb />
hat ia now J arris <lb />
joined the apartnn at i<lb />
President's family resi :� - I<lb />
fright had Buperriav o<lb />
joys the first year. Th m<lb />
h Meadow who �� il I th<lb />
Juring the summer, lived<lb />
toys and was their adriai<lb />
d year the boar I of tri<lb />
ercised their right d nj<lb />
"J to the ho vs. !� �<lb />
�� that there wen<lb />
'Pplicatinns from women<lb />
��A demand from them i<lb />
Jryepaee that the h-ntrd<lb />
J�ded to give the DM n'a t�<lb />
Jari8 to the women. 11 owi <lb />
(Please turn to pafft ' �<lb />
FRESHMAN-JUNIOR DAN<lb />
K SET FOR FEBRU<lb />
H,<lb />
4 a recent freeman cl<lb />
" Plans were ducuaaed f .<lb />
2� reshman-Junir Dan<lb />
�JJ Februarv 13. Mim<lb />
rr. Deaj clasg adviM.<lb />
,Tr&amp;ging talks and gav.<lb />
Btions.<lb />
of tkl0r � tili9 me"tiinP' t<lb />
jj class met and appon<lb />
JJon and refreshment<lb />
Wa �pITan&amp;emnt8 were<lb />
2 : pnl Jones and his<lb />
?Wah the<lb />
!?� floor shoi<lb />
music; he<lb />
show consisting oJ<lb />
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