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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038053_0001"/>
SS?L?5.1937<lb/>
HON. F. C. HARDING ANuir.<lb/>
ESTION in M2?<lb/>
'isaidl frl111 Pas (ltle)<lb/>
? ?' 1 ? amf Hl arHl to lav. himself ?h . . ? aoeia<lb/>
? its I<lb/>
Keer<lb/>
? I ? a k?!r?5 <lb/>
iu :yn <lb/>
l ? i'PP?? such a ??i also ,i<lb/>
I ? In<lb/>
; r ur <lb/>
lJ1V'ah <lb/>
" eh??08 to <lb/>
I : Hn? tiu a?to ft<lb/>
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11?pendent<lb/>
, ;VpW, tad Iln.<lb/>
<lb/>
' : 65?M ittel<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?peudeuta<lb/>
? ery fifteen<lb/>
 end q t1(l<lb/>
? W" t"n,y one fr<lb/>
: i an1 fifteen. hu<lb/>
<lb/>
?wo with oo?<lb/>
"? ? 'ted l,v tie<lb/>
1 right bere<lb/>
"tunai q<lb/>
? govern-<lb/>
nty. in !?- . ; ?? ,<lb/>
ID ttanda ??'  ?? of which Mias<lb/>
I achairman. iir<lb/>
ntroduced the<lb/>
?' B talk Baa<lb/>
S aim giv(j ?<lb/>
? UII CiM the business<lb/>
' ?' ? :ranch baa<lb/>
 r thirty dollar-)<lb/>
? !? Fellowship<lb/>
?. -? ltg the AAI'W<lb/>
-? archby women.<lb/>
gut -?- were present.<lb/>
PUy, "Uueki<lb/>
? 1" Lag oaached<lb/>
? :  1 llarvev Deal<lb/>
m Dt?1 March B u i<lb/>
t. Tha a- <lb/>
ft 5 10Iowa;<lb/>
k Jeter Oakley<lb/>
RobertPittman.<lb/>
: - ? ' Ml Aken.<lb/>
Mabel Wih<lb/>
Harris,<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
r<lb/>
r<lb/>
M<lb/>
4<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
v<lb/>
M<lb/>
r<lb/>
U<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
No Matter How<lb/>
Hard You<lb/>
Figure . . .<lb/>
?<lb/>
ii ; Get Better<lb/>
n Drugs and<lb/>
Cecnetics<lb/>
CHAS. HORNE<lb/>
secretary"<lb/>
;? TIME<lb/>
t - T- Murray<lb/>
E IS NEWS"<lb/>
OVER 1300<lb/>
CIRCULATION<lb/>
VOLl'ME XIII<lb/>
11I MEADOWS'<lb/>
CRITICISM READ<lb/>
BY G. W. DIEMER<lb/>
president Meadows and Regis-<lb/>
trar McGinnis Return From NEA<lb/>
Meeting in New Orleans<lb/>
THOUSAND REGISTER FOR<lb/>
DEP'T SUPERINTENDENTS<lb/>
OF TEACHERS COLLEGES<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
PATRONIZE<lb/>
OUR ADVERTISERS<lb/>
?&amp;Ms COLLEGE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY, MARCH 11, 1937<lb/>
Number 10<lb/>
High School Day<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
? Meadows Comments on<lb/>
Flood Situation in<lb/>
New Orleans<lb/>
(?<lb/>
l<lb/>
Plans are well under way for<lb/>
the secvond annual High School<lb/>
Day at East Carolina Teachers<lb/>
College to be held this year on<lb/>
AP"1 15, ft was announced<lb/>
recently by Dr. Carl L. Adams,<lb/>
Chairman of the central com-<lb/>
mittee. Invitations will be<lb/>
mailed out shortly to the high<lb/>
schools in this state.<lb/>
Last year twelve hundred<lb/>
students from fifty-four schools<lb/>
and twenty-two counties were<lb/>
on the campus. Authorities<lb/>
here believe that the number<lb/>
will reach two thousand this<lb/>
year. The program for the<lb/>
event on April 15 will begin at<lb/>
10:30 a.m. in the Robert H.<lb/>
Wright building, and will in-<lb/>
elude a luncheon, picture,<lb/>
dancing, a baseball game, and<lb/>
other features. Arrangements<lb/>
are being made to have several<lb/>
high school and bands.<lb/>
MUSIC EDUCATION<lb/>
IS DISCUSSED BY<lb/>
C. TABOR<lb/>
e a erit icism of j<lb/>
i Education m Mr. Deal Introduces Him as Ex-<lb/>
"i"1 b? Gw? pert in His Line<lb/>
' ity teachers <lb/>
mer bad three'<lb/>
ve educate chn-<lb/>
l for part at-<lb/>
? ??? furnish t.<lb/>
bought aad re<lb/>
? in nthood ; and<lb/>
eration between<lb/>
t- be brought<lb/>
i  hi artily with<lb/>
. but disagreed<lb/>
GIVES SEVEN SOLO NUMBERS<lb/>
Dr. McGinnis<lb/>
ling, February<lb/>
ns, where the<lb/>
il Association<lb/>
lent s I h isioo<lb/>
- met for the<lb/>
? atior for the meetings<lb/>
A high, with 1,000<lb/>
f ? the Department it<lb/>
tents ? ?' I schere Col-<lb/>
v as du) largi ly t? the<lb/>
 rthcrn and Western<lb/>
iailv strona.<lb/>
Gives Criticism<lb/>
SUCCESSFUL DANCE<lb/>
St. Patrick is Honored With<lb/>
Shamrocks and Irish<lb/>
Green<lb/>
PAUL JONES AND ORCHESTRA<lb/>
PROVIDE MUSIC'TILL TWELVE<lb/>
SENIOR NORMALS<lb/>
TO PRESENT PLA Y<lb/>
TOMORROW NIGHT<lb/>
Directs Choir<lb/>
Miriam Winalow, who with her Dance Group gave an enjoyable pn<lb/>
gram here .n March 4. Miss Winalow gave seven boIo numbers.<lb/>
Miriam Wins low Group<lb/>
Presents Program Here<lb/>
Floor Show Includes Tap-dancing<lb/>
and Popular Songs; Men's Glee<lb/>
Club Sings Two Numbers; Bobbie <lb/>
Lee Hawkins Scores With Tap-<lb/>
dance<lb/>
Music education a a new phase<lb/>
oi teacher training was discussed<lb/>
 by Dean ( Tabor, of the college<lb/>
faculty at the regular bi-weekly<lb/>
meeting of the Eiwania Club Fri-<lb/>
day night, February SMS.<lb/>
Mr. Tabor made a brief talk on<lb/>
Imusic and then sang thret numbers,<lb/>
accompanied by Mis Nola Walters,<lb/>
escribed<lb/>
Appears on Program<lb/>
student at the collejje and<lb/>
ly with the hist<lb/>
tSOUS: That therej<lb/>
r curriclum for<lb/>
ui- i<lb/>
Mr.<lb/>
ol the most talented musi-<lb/>
?? lied at the institution.<lb/>
Tabor was introduced by<lb/>
.? peopte for parent-jMr- Salph Deal, also of the faculty,<lb/>
 can't educate tbeui for I ho described Oie speaker as an<lb/>
because no one knows expert in his liiw an expert with<lb/>
future will be like; and1 artistic temperament"<lb/>
. great majority of teach- Mr. Tabor declared thai educa-<lb/>
. i ?  the teachers areltional leaders had come to recog"<lb/>
. to teach the reaponai-jniae the fact that music is as much<lb/>
; rriage and parenthood, j a part of the educational program Monday, Match s. was the thir-<lb/>
Go Sightseeing todaj as any of the three 'K tietJb anniversary of the date of the<lb/>
Miss Ona Schindler, head of<lb/>
the music department of the<lb/>
Greenville High School, ap-<lb/>
peared on the program of the<lb/>
ninth biennial meeting of the<lb/>
Southern Conference for Music<lb/>
Education at Columbia, S. C,<lb/>
March 3-6.<lb/>
FACTS ARE GIVEN<lb/>
BY MISS JENKINS<lb/>
March 8 Was 30th Anniversary<lb/>
Of This College<lb/>
One of Best Liked Numbers of<lb/>
Evening was "The<lb/>
Chase"<lb/>
A very enjoyable entertainment<lb/>
was presented here Thursday eve-<lb/>
ning. March -1, bv Miriam Winslow<lb/>
Shamrock and the rish green,<lb/>
honoring St. Patrick ahead of time,<lb/>
dominated the scene of the winter-<lb/>
quarter college dance sponsored by<lb/>
the Lanier Society on last Saturday<lb/>
night. Four hundred couples, or<lb/>
thereabouts, were on the dance floor<lb/>
and were in the grand march as they<lb/>
formed a huge shamrock figure. The<lb/>
march was led by Miss Effie Lee<lb/>
Watson, of Wilson, president of the<lb/>
Lanier Society, and her partner,<lb/>
Alvin Hughes of Greenville.<lb/>
Floor Show<lb/>
rap-dancing and popular songs<lb/>
featured the floor show, which was<lb/>
planned by Misses Josephine Kanes,<lb/>
of TarborO, and Onie Cochran, of<lb/>
Abbeville, S. ( The solos were<lb/>
"South Sea Island Magic sung by<lb/>
Alvah Page of Trenton, and "Moon-<lb/>
"Tweedles Will Mark End of<lb/>
D-class Productions<lb/>
Here<lb/>
ALVA PAGE, REBECCA<lb/>
WILLIAMS TAKE THE<lb/>
TWO LEADING PARTS<lb/>
Play Written by Booth Tarkington<lb/>
and Harry Leon Wilson; Clifton<lb/>
Britton is Director<lb/>
u<lb/>
lit am<lb/>
Shadoi<lb/>
sung by Miss<lb/>
Josephine Wade of Morehead City.<lb/>
The Men's Glee 'lub. directed by Dr.<lb/>
Dean ( Tabor, Bang two numbers,<lb/>
So ,v F. F. Bull-<lb/>
and her dancers. The program was ?'ir'1 al"i "Stout-hearted Man by<lb/>
' igmund Roubere, with dames Smith<lb/>
characterized by variety, contrast.<lb/>
J colorful costumes and careful atten-<lb/>
j tion to detail in background, ac-<lb/>
companiment, and lighting effects.<lb/>
Miss Winslow, who is an excellent<lb/>
example of the new type of artist<lb/>
dancer arising in the laM few years,<lb/>
is now touring the country with a<lb/>
group of ix other dancers, chosen<lb/>
to work with her, since her ambition<lb/>
is "to enlarge and expand her idea<lb/>
X<lb/>
Orleans. Dr.<lb/>
howevet. that only<lb/>
isake m<lb/>
ratification of the bill establishing<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
When plan- for a program celebrat-<lb/>
vears was celebrated on the Satur-<lb/>
day marest the date, failed to mate-<lb/>
i Dr. McGinnis went a -ma per cent could make eood<lb/>
ten. "The thod Mtua-jin such a vocation.<lb/>
r. Meadows, ia not Music Appreciation , ,<lb/>
Orieans and there is "But he declared, "all stodentaj?nf l ounders Day, which for several<lb/>
i worrying over flood i!l be taught to appreciab good<lb/>
 Ponchatrain, ftbovemusic t be good listener Mu-<lb/>
d iboutUic 8hould he taught by the grade nahie, the chairman of the assembly<lb/>
teacher, not to an outsider. The f1!6 m?&amp; M?- Manne<lb/>
i , , mi vll i fl - IE. Jenkins to tell the students, at<lb/>
students should be expo-tit to a <lb/>
I m?B the assembly hour last nday mom-<lb/>
ing, something of the founding and<lb/>
?arlv history of the college.<lb/>
"The Winter ? ui:<lb/>
rd; and <lb/>
s<lb/>
of Greenville, singing the solo part.<lb/>
Bobbie Lee Hawkins, local colored<lb/>
youth, scored heavily with an origi-<lb/>
nal tap-dance.<lb/>
Music was furnished by Paul<lb/>
Jones's orchestra, which was seated<lb/>
on a terrace-like arrangement in<lb/>
trout of an Irish home set up on<lb/>
the stage.<lb/>
The dance hall, the auditorium of<lb/>
through iperation with etiversi-jthe Robert II. Wright Building, had<lb/>
a canopy of green streamers above.<lb/>
K<lb/>
are o<lb/>
h of the Mississippi<lb/>
r g ting over a spill-<lb/>
water level goes r multiplicity of ,<lb/>
He explained als<lb/>
Fn<lb/>
1 Dr. MeGinma<lb/>
Quarter, which<lb/>
music,<lb/>
that 'here were<lb/>
several req<lb/>
iirements for a good mu<lb/>
iunst<lb/>
()<lb/>
ti.l ttie<lb/>
ik" and<lb/>
SIC teacher. He said -he should havi<lb/>
fa targe repertoire in order to pro<lb/>
a (<lb/>
r the "I 'welling Oak<lb/>
. n of N'W Orleans, in<lb/>
National Educational<lb/>
rave a breakfast to<lb/>
vide music tor every occasion ami<lb/>
n ood. He declared that a teacher<lb/>
should have knowledge eommensu-<lb/>
? K<lb/>
hie),<lb/>
of Louisiana prod-<lb/>
del<lb/>
i were bananas.<lb/>
itii the needs of In r students.<lb/>
The speaker expressed hope lor<lb/>
prerequisites for majoring in mu-<lb/>
sic. To follow such a course, he said<lb/>
that a student shouh<lb/>
have a good voice, for spent 11<lb/>
ilU'<lb/>
Miss Jenkins says there was not<lb/>
even time to get out the historic<lb/>
pad much less to get up a speech,<lb/>
but she gave offhand as much in-<lb/>
formation 88 she could give in the<lb/>
fifteen minutes allotted, selecting<lb/>
the items she thought would In1<lb/>
most interesting to the students.<lb/>
The date of the ratification of<lb/>
, ,  the hill. March 8, t??7, considered<lb/>
k1(r  the actual birth of tin<lb/>
fied talent rather than a personal<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Studied in Boston<lb/>
Miss Win-low began the Study of<lb/>
dancing in Boston at an early age,<lb/>
with no idea at the time of making<lb/>
it her life work. She chose dancing<lb/>
as her career in preference to that<lb/>
of an active socialite. She has<lb/>
studied in New York, Spain, Aus-<lb/>
tria, and Germany. Her work has<lb/>
included the organization of a<lb/>
school of dancing in Boston, and<lb/>
the forming of her present touring<lb/>
concert group.<lb/>
Program<lb/>
The tii'M part of the program<lb/>
consisted of dances to music of the<lb/>
Hitb and lTth centuries, the mood<lb/>
and style of the period being re-<lb/>
created in a distinctly modern form.<lb/>
Included in this group were the<lb/>
"Fantasia which brought out the<lb/>
liidit, swift movement of an early<lb/>
COUrt dance.<lb/>
T<lb/>
'Sarahande" re<lb/>
captured the mood of a l?th century<lb/>
dance of Spanish origin, known for<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
Dr. E. H. F. Wis. director of<lb/>
the Guilford College Choir for the<lb/>
past two year will appear here<lb/>
on Sunday afternoon when tin1<lb/>
Choir presents a concert.<lb/>
E<lb/>
Dr. Lucile Turner Writes Article<lb/>
for "North Carolina<lb/>
Education"<lb/>
entering into the chamlalier, and<lb/>
the white columns on the side were<lb/>
decorated with shamrocks.<lb/>
Miss Bertha Mae New.some, of<lb/>
Littleton, presided over the punch<lb/>
howl in which floated shamrock and<lb/>
which was in a setting of Irish green.<lb/>
Head Committees<lb/>
Mi Marian Wood, id Vanceboro,<lb/>
chairman of the social- committee of<lb/>
the College, and the Lanier presi-<lb/>
dent, Mi-s Watson headed the com-<lb/>
mittee Miss Ruth Kiker, of Polk-<lb/>
tOB, was in charge of the decora-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The hosts, hotese and chape-<lb/>
rones were members from the faculty<lb/>
ami staff and their wives. In the<lb/>
receiving tine were President and<lb/>
Mrs. Meadow Miss Morton, dean<lb/>
of women; the presidents of the two<lb/>
student government associations,<lb/>
Mis Elizabeth Dixon Johnson, of<lb/>
Goldsboro; and Thornwall Gibson,<lb/>
of Roper.<lb/>
During the present school year,<lb/>
three faculty members have contri-<lb/>
buted articles to various publications<lb/>
in the state.<lb/>
Dr. H. L. Ilildrup. of the History<lb/>
department, and Dr. H. E. Baughan,<lb/>
of the English department, have<lb/>
been reviewing books for the Raleigh<lb/>
News ami Observer.<lb/>
Dr. Ilildrup has, since October<lb/>
published about half a dozen reviews.<lb/>
Among these are Fighting Angel.<lb/>
by Buck; When Night Descends, by<lb/>
Calmer; and Catherine De Medici,<lb/>
by Boeder.<lb/>
Dr. Baughan. who from 1925 to<lb/>
1929 wrote book reviews as a Svndi-<lb/>
"Tweedles a very popular com<lb/>
edy by Booth Tarkington and Har-<lb/>
ry Leon Wilson will be presented<lb/>
by the Senior Normal class tomor-<lb/>
row evening, March 1?<lb/>
This presentation will bring to an<lb/>
end the long tine of successful plays<lb/>
produced by former classes. Those<lb/>
.days presented by the "D" classes<lb/>
set a high standard which has been<lb/>
upheld by all the classes since then.<lb/>
Through all the years the plays have<lb/>
been characterised by their fine<lb/>
quality, with the best of all types<lb/>
included. The selection of these<lb/>
plays has been a matter of great<lb/>
pride and concern. Among those<lb/>
who have directed the plays arc sev-<lb/>
eral prominent coaches of Balti-<lb/>
more, Chapel Hill, New York, and<lb/>
elsewhere.<lb/>
Setting<lb/>
The action of the play takes place<lb/>
in an antique shop in a small New<lb/>
England summer resort. There<lb/>
arises a great conflict between the<lb/>
family owning this shop, the<lb/>
Tweedles and an aristocratic family<lb/>
of wealthy I'hiladelpbians. the Cas-<lb/>
tlebury's, when the son of the lat-<lb/>
ter falls madly in love with the Win-<lb/>
-ora Tweedle of the antique shop.<lb/>
Alvah Page and liebeeca Wil-<lb/>
liams will take roles of the young<lb/>
lovers and will head the following<lb/>
east:<lb/>
Mrs. KiekettsBettisue Heath<lb/>
Mrs. AlbergoneFdlen Moore<lb/>
Mrs. CastleburyLucy Fouts<lb/>
Adam TweedleBill Pratt<lb/>
Ambrose TweedleHarvey Deal<lb/>
Philemon Tweedle,<lb/>
Ralph Hutcbinson<lb/>
The play is under the direction of<lb/>
Clifton Britton. president of the<lb/>
Freshman class. His successful di-<lb/>
rection of the Senior Play last fall<lb/>
brought much favorable comment.<lb/>
Comments<lb/>
The following comments on<lb/>
"Tweedles are excerpts from re-<lb/>
views of the play in leading New<lb/>
sated feature for the KJnoxville Siuti-i York papers:<lb/>
net, the Nashville Tennessean, and -The happiest piece Booth Tark-<lb/>
the Memphis Commercial -1?. j ington ever wrote. Heartily good-<lb/>
has recently reviewed Tkt Seven humored and genuinely amusing<lb/>
Year Harvest, by Canby; Th Booh comedy?New York Herald.<lb/>
II,<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
day,<lb/>
The Street of the Fishing I a<lb/>
Poldes: and Day of Es ?<lb/>
Bradeu.<lb/>
Get First Editions<lb/>
Since the reviewer of a !??<lb/>
always allowed to keep the bot<lb/>
i Hher chaperones were: reviews which is always a first<lb/>
Ko-cnhack; "Sparkles with humor; delights<lb/>
)V ivo-i<lb/>
tffee, and tea.<lb/>
we<lb/>
is singing, and snould havi<lb/>
background in the field of mn-<lb/>
 ? 1 advised allowing student-<lb/>
MISS GRIGSBY'S CLASS to engage in creative work, permit-)'<lb/>
tinjr them to make and play uastru-<lb/>
G1VES TWO ONE-ACT PLAYS<lb/>
.t the rejru-<lb/>
school.<lb/>
ijwas selected as the day to he known<lb/>
. as "Founders Day therefore Mon-<lb/>
'ay will be the thirtieth birthday<lb/>
f the school. She told something<lb/>
f the fight for the bill ami read<lb/>
from the first chapter the sections<lb/>
stating the purpose of the school<lb/>
Ineadav night, March 8,1, Bromai Dr A. G. Woodard of i and the instructions about the se-<lb/>
" " Rsby's daas in dramatic JwC5o? Kiwanis lieutenant gw- lection of the loeatmn. The latter<lb/>
ae-act play, in the Eng- ? a iit()r. wm called on fer8ection ????<lb/>
room. The first day was I -(. 1)riof remarks. He spent<lb/>
ly, "Our Aunt From Cali?J1BJJ (lf yg f(,w minutes in "rib-<lb/>
. ing" Dr. A. (J. Massey<lb/>
friend. He also paid high tribute<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
Following the<lb/>
'????? Barnard. The ebarae- ;<lb/>
r. : Susan Rose. Philieia;<lb/>
Lois McDonald, Boalyn:<lb/>
Vincent. Sally; Mildred<lb/>
 Mrs. Merry Muntoburn;<lb/>
Ifaaasj, dressmaker; and<lb/>
?? e Spruill. mother and<lb/>
??id. The production Stafl in-<lb/>
 Ruth Styron. director;<lb/>
Grease Taylor. stage<lb/>
r. Willie Gray Cox, cos-<lb/>
Helen Taylor, prompter;<lb/>
ine Wallace, make-up; and<lb/>
Br.tt Sewtdl, properties.<lb/>
second play was "Saved" by<lb/>
The cast of characters in<lb/>
school shall be located by the State<lb/>
Board of Education at such a point<lb/>
an old in Eastern North Carolina as they<lb/>
may deem proper, and shall be lo-<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
fomite<lb/>
Mnsg<lb/>
anaea<lb/>
Oathei<lb/>
aetti,<lb/>
1<lb/>
aogers<lb/>
J? play includcnl the following:<lb/>
?argaret Norman, Emily; Mar-<lb/>
et Whitehead, Minnie; Julia<lb/>
Qtylord, Sue; Helen Sawyer,<lb/>
ftaister'a wife; LaBah Adler, Ada<lb/>
??tie. The production staff was<lb/>
?ariaa Wootl, director; Ruth Wood,<lb/>
?atkt-ap; Rebecca Watson, stage<lb/>
manager; Evangeline Barfield,<lb/>
telteinei; and Mary Elizabeth<lb/>
Parker, assistant stage manager.<lb/>
Youths Climax Drive For<lb/>
The American Youth Act<lb/>
By MARVIN COX<lb/>
PLACE OF STORIES IN<lb/>
LIFE OF CHILD DISCUSSED<lb/>
BY CATHERINE WALLACE<lb/>
(Associated Collegiate Press Wash-<lb/>
i ngton Correspondent)<lb/>
Washington, D. C. ? Thirty-five<lb/>
hundred young people representing<lb/>
colleges and organizations through-<lb/>
out the countrv affiliated with the<lb/>
American Youth Congress climaxed<lb/>
their drive for passage of the Ameri-<lb/>
can Youth Act with a parade from<lb/>
the Capitol to the White House<lb/>
recently. . <lb/>
The colorful procession marched<lb/>
down historic Pennsylvania Avenue<lb/>
shouting and singing their pica for<lb/>
better opportunities. Signs and ban-<lb/>
ners carried by the marchers de-<lb/>
manded scholarships and work pro-<lb/>
jects for unemployed youth. On the<lb/>
south front of the White House the<lb/>
procession came to a halt and the<lb/>
hundreds of young people shouted<lb/>
"Scholarshipsnot battleships "We<lb/>
want jobs "pass the American<lb/>
Youth Act" and other slogans for<lb/>
the benefit of the President. A<lb/>
petition carrying more than 1,000<lb/>
000 signatures urging passage of the<lb/>
Youth Act was presented to Presi-<lb/>
dent Roosevelt.<lb/>
A committee of seven repreaenta-<lb/>
(Please tarn to page three)<lb/>
At the chapel assembly on Tues-<lb/>
day, March 2, Catherine Wallace<lb/>
spoke to the student body on "The<lb/>
Place of Stories in the Life of the<lb/>
Child<lb/>
"Have not all of us she said,<lb/>
"seen images of ourselves in stories<lb/>
that we have readSo it is with a<lb/>
child. As he listens to stories he<lb/>
sees an image of himself as the hero<lb/>
of the story. He learns to know<lb/>
himself better also he is introduced<lb/>
to many people?people whose joys<lb/>
and sorrows he might share<lb/>
"All children have a keen imagi-<lb/>
nation and in listening to well se-<lb/>
lected stories develop that imagina-<lb/>
tion said Miss Wallace.<lb/>
"Children like their stories to<lb/>
have action?they want the charac-<lb/>
ters to be doing something! They<lb/>
like for them to be real?to feel that<lb/>
they might well be their next door<lb/>
neighbor<lb/>
Stories with rhythmic repetition<lb/>
are greatly enjoyed by children.<lb/>
Miss Wallace told a story, "John<lb/>
and his Flute which illustrated<lb/>
this. She arranged this story her-<lb/>
self.<lb/>
Jennie Green Taylor told the story<lb/>
of "The Jar of Rosemary which<lb/>
was an excellent example of un-<lb/>
selfishness in child life.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. BTildrup, Dr. and Mi-<lb/>
Slay. Dr. and Mrs. Henderson, Dr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Baughan, Dr. and Mr<lb/>
McGinnis, Mr. and Mrs. Deal. Mr.<lb/>
and Mrs. Picklesimer, Mr. Stephan,<lb/>
Miss Spangler. Miss Coates; Miss<lb/>
Hunter. Miss Holtzclaw. Miss Bing-<lb/>
ham, and Miss Mack.<lb/>
State College and Wake Forest<lb/>
were in the lead of colleges repre-<lb/>
sented among the guests, but David-<lb/>
son, Carolina, Duke and Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College were represented.<lb/>
While most of the other guests were<lb/>
from Eastern Carolina, there was<lb/>
quite a sprinkling from other sec-<lb/>
tions, and as far off as Norfolk.<lb/>
tion. Dr. Ilildrup and Dr. Baughan<lb/>
by! with its quaintness. Dainty and<lb/>
by charming and filled to the brim with<lb/>
i delightful entertainment ?- A ew<lb/>
 rk Post.<lb/>
is "Charming and deliciously eomic.<lb/>
hi ; Presents human nature with a lot of<lb/>
fidelitv to the truth and the comic<lb/>
mirit at the same time.<lb/>
are adding valuable books to their ??<lb/>
libraries Dr. Baughan has a firs! WCTU REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
edition of Ma-chianeUi's Discourse,<lb/>
which is now over three hundred<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
Dr. Lucile Turner of the English<lb/>
department has been for a number<lb/>
of years a contributor to various<lb/>
magazines of literary interest. Her<lb/>
most recent article is "A Hundred-<lb/>
dollar Bookshelf for the Beginning<lb/>
Teacher of High School English"<lb/>
MAKES TALK ON ALCOHOL<lb/>
Miss Ada Hose Demorest, nation-<lb/>
al representative of the WCTU.<lb/>
made a talk on the subject of "al-<lb/>
cohol" to the College students at<lb/>
their assembly on Tuesday Feb-<lb/>
While the WCTU is putting on<lb/>
an educational program, she said<lb/>
which appeared m the September. &amp;$A thor? fe spocial poh)t in eomin?<lb/>
lj):?6 issue of the North Carolina w the toacher8 of Xorth Caro-<lb/>
Educal ion. Dr. Turner last spring<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Under Cloak of Anonymity<lb/>
Writer Tells of Mischief<lb/>
Under the mysterious cloak of<lb/>
anonymity, some proud fellow took<lb/>
it upon himself last fall to tell the<lb/>
world through the pages of a<lb/>
national weekly the mischief done<lb/>
by his alleged colleagues in the col-<lb/>
lege sports publicity profession.<lb/>
The article was necessarily anony-<lb/>
mous ; otherwise it would have been<lb/>
its own blue slip in the rascal's pay<lb/>
envelop. I was at first inclined to<lb/>
think that the writer refrained from<lb/>
divulging his name because of a<lb/>
sense of shame, but perhaps I judged<lb/>
him rashly.<lb/>
Not only was all sense of ethics<lb/>
missing from the piece, but the<lb/>
fiction was considerably stranger<lb/>
than the facts.<lb/>
The sports publicity writers of<lb/>
my acquaintance had a lot of laughs<lb/>
at the expense of their newspaper<lb/>
reporter friends, quoting the line<lb/>
about "the lazy newspaper men<lb/>
The alleged indolent writers had an<lb/>
equal amount of amusement accusing<lb/>
their publicist friends of having<lb/>
written the piece.<lb/>
Maybe you will join in the chuckle<lb/>
when I repeat some of the extrava-<lb/>
(Pleaae turn to page three)<lb/>
lina now because this state has a<lb/>
textbook, which is used in the sixth<lb/>
grade and it is especially impor-<lb/>
tant that the teachers realize fully<lb/>
the importance of the subject so as<lb/>
to use this book intelligently. She<lb/>
outlined the main objectives for<lb/>
which teachers should work.<lb/>
One of the first of these is that<lb/>
the teaching of the subject should<lb/>
be scientific and impersonal. An-<lb/>
other is that in this age when it is<lb/>
considered smart and clever to drink,<lb/>
the teachers should combat the idea<lb/>
that it is not harmful to drink.<lb/>
Contain Poison<lb/>
The speaker proceeded to prove<lb/>
that by scientific analysis that even<lb/>
the lightest of wines and beers con-<lb/>
tain deadliest poisons, and that no<lb/>
amount can be taken into the sys-<lb/>
tem without harmful results. She<lb/>
further showed efficiency. She<lb/>
quotes Jack Dempsey as saying re-<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
<pb facs="00038053_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
n<lb/>
C<lb/>
T<lb/>
V<lb/>
tl<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
,<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
I sr t Rlil l,i Tt XiMfRS t)lllt.t<lb/>
Pub is) ed ttiu't ekly by the Students of Kiisl Carohna<lb/>
1'i'iu hers College<lb/>
ST K??<lb/>
Gl OBOl S. Y 11 1. uai, .1 K.<lb/>
LoOISK X. M KI IN .<lb/>
Editor-in-Chiej<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
 .iii N'kwml Frances Barnes<lb/>
i i o Burks Lucille Lewis<lb/>
Viola Smith Martha Hamilton Joe Beaxton<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGERS<lb/>
Han nab Martin "Pokey" Johnson<lb/>
Louise Barrr Helen Downing<lb/>
Caroline Evans Margie Watson<lb/>
Sue Speed<lb/>
Iteportorial Staff: Elisabeth Layden, Harvey Deal, Jean Cooper,<lb/>
Sarah Maxwell, .John Crew, Nancy Moore. Patsy Melntyre,<lb/>
Georgia Sugg, Evelyn Aiken. Christine Cnroon, LaRne<lb/>
Mooring, Catherine Cheek, .lane Gopeland, and Doris<lb/>
Burnev, Tom Dennis.<lb/>
Subscription Price $1.00 per College Year<lb/>
Postoffice BoxesNumbers 88, 182<lb/>
Offire Room 25<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the IT. S.<lb/>
Postoflaee, Greenville, N. C under the act of March 3,1879.<lb/>
1916 Member I Ql 7<lb/>
Associated Cblleeiate Press<lb/>
Distributors of<lb/>
GoUe&amp;iate DifSesf<lb/>
ON THE MASS MEETING<lb/>
Yes, all the world is a stage?and there are some pretty rotten plays<lb/>
being produced these days. We cite last week's mass meeting as horrible<lb/>
example number on Why I Not because of the motive behind the meet-<lb/>
ing. And surely not because of the outcome, regardless of what that may<lb/>
have been, BUT because of the utter disregard on the part of intelli-<lb/>
gent students to observe any order which even slightly resembled parlia-<lb/>
mentary procedure.<lb/>
It is true that two factions present at the meeting were vitallv con-<lb/>
cerned with the issue at stake. Yet. that was no reason why the entire<lb/>
liseussioa shonld have been colored with disorder, irrelevant comments,<lb/>
personal preju.liees. The meeting- should have been impartially con-<lb/>
ducted, and remarks should have been addressed to the assembly rather<lb/>
 isn to individuals.<lb/>
The question before the student body should at no time have been<lb/>
resented as a dissension between the men stndents and the women stu-<lb/>
dents who an- residents of Greenville. Such was not the ease. The entire<lb/>
issue, including the dance itself, becomes relatively insignificant when it<lb/>
' Is to disrupt the student body at tlii- college.<lb/>
Dissensions are valuable to college students when, and only when, those<lb/>
students are tolerant and will admit thai perhaps then- is more than one<lb/>
- te to any argument, h is thus that w grow. If V) allow ourselves<lb/>
to become bigots, and are satisfied with a single opinion, we frustrate<lb/>
whatever opportunity there is for personal development.<lb/>
Fortunately, the argument at last has been settled by vote, and it is<lb/>
best now that the issue be dropped. East Carolina Teachers College ex-<lb/>
ists not only for individuals or any one faction, but for a composite unit<lb/>
i ? tip of over a thousand students. The majority rule is recognized as<lb/>
ji St. Whether it is or not may at times be questionable, but if we expect<lb/>
to fit into the present social order, we'll have to accept the verdict decided<lb/>
on by the majority.<lb/>
Whenever student- here patronize the Soda Shoppe and Stationery<lb/>
St re they actually arc participating in the campus beautification pro-<lb/>
gram, for the profit- from the -tore- are used to buy over a thousand dol-<lb/>
trs worth of shrubbery annually. The hedge on. the front campus and<lb/>
the Davis Arboretum were added here during recent years at an expense<lb/>
$1,528.00 to the two student stores.<lb/>
1 lie store- carry a wide variety of articles for convenience of the -tu<lb/>
ts, but the service does not end there. The profits are shared, at least<lb/>
ndireotiy, with the students and faculty. Also, seven college student-<lb/>
are given employment throughout the year. Dr. Frank gives his services<lb/>
in efficiently managing the stores. It may be said truly that we have<lb/>
STUDENT STORKS at East Carolina Teacher- College?Stores that<lb/>
operated by the student and for the students. Let's remember that<lb/>
? next time we nel a pencil, or the like.<lb/>
More than once it has been suggested that a day In- set aside at this<lb/>
institution and be called, Take It Home Day The observance of such<lb/>
;ay of course, would necessitate our returning borrowed articles such<lb/>
books, magazines, clothing, and an occasional dollar.<lb/>
Ten years ago a professor here lent a valuable book to a student for<lb/>
; day or so. He hasn't seen the book since, but is expecting it to turn up<lb/>
most any decade.<lb/>
Seriously, can't we pause long enough to inventory our personal prop-<lb/>
erty and return those article- which some person was kind enough to<lb/>
lend us?<lb/>
last ambulance service without interne in attendance kills more per-<lb/>
sons than it saves, in contradiction of the general opinion that the best<lb/>
ambulance service is the one that arrives on the accident scene the fastest,<lb/>
leaves with the injured the quickest and travels through the streets at the<lb/>
highest rate of speed. Ambulances?except those operated by hospitals?<lb/>
are often not equipped with first aid supplies, splints and other emergency<lb/>
equipment Too few of the drivers have had training in first aid and the<lb/>
proper handling of the injured. Often no effort is made to staunch the<lb/>
flow of blood because the attendant does not know how to stop it. The<lb/>
victim is lifted to a cot and away they go in a race to the hospital. If the<lb/>
victim has enough blood he may live or last until he reaches medical care.<lb/>
Many a person with a broken hack or internal injuries has died because<lb/>
of such treatment. ? The Red Gross Cornier, No p. 18.<lb/>
A school for the aged, open only to men and women over TO, with en-<lb/>
rollment of over 900, is conducted' free of cost by Dr. W. A. McKeever,<lb/>
Oklahoma City. Au alkaline diet?predominantly of fruits and vegeta-<lb/>
ble?!?is urged as first step in the process of psycho-physical regeneration;<lb/>
regular classroom instruction, entertainment and social activities further<lb/>
help those who otherwise might be left to die of loneliness, lack of em-<lb/>
ployment, ill-suited diet and spiritual starvation. Classrooms are do-<lb/>
nated, chiefly by the churches of the city. The mortality rate among the<lb/>
members has fallen decidedly below normal.?Magazine, Digest, Nov p. 80.<lb/>
Around<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
Cor-<lb/>
By MARVIN COX<lb/>
(Associated Collegiate Press<lb/>
respondent)<lb/>
Washington. I C. From Boston<lb/>
to Chicago for the week-end. This<lb/>
sounds like a long week-end trip even<lb/>
for colhgiaus, but members of the<lb/>
Harvard Fixing Club recently made<lb/>
a visit to Chicago for this short<lb/>
t line.<lb/>
Harvard is one of more than 40<lb/>
colleges that have dying clubs. These<lb/>
local organizations of young avia-<lb/>
tors arc banded together in a na-<lb/>
tional organization, the National<lb/>
Intercollegiate Flying Clubs. On<lb/>
March 30 and 81, the National or-<lb/>
ganization will hold it- annual con-<lb/>
ference here and college aviators and<lb/>
aviatrix from all over the country<lb/>
will zoom down on Washington.<lb/>
Many college hobbies are neglect-<lb/>
ed or forgotten in the struggle for<lb/>
existence which usually follows col-<lb/>
lege days. The boys and girls who<lb/>
make a hobby of aviation in college,<lb/>
however, often make this modern<lb/>
phase of transportation their life<lb/>
work. A recent survey by the Na-<lb/>
tional Intercollegiate Flying Clubs<lb/>
shows that more than CO per cent of<lb/>
the members of college Hying units<lb/>
found permanent places in aviation<lb/>
upon graduation. They have be-<lb/>
come pilots, salesmen for airplanes,<lb/>
aeronautic engineers and airline ex-<lb/>
ecutives.<lb/>
Collegiate interest in aviation is<lb/>
not confined to men. Flying clubs<lb/>
are active at Smith College and Lake<lb/>
Erie College, both of which are<lb/>
women's colleges. Some splendid<lb/>
pilots are being developed at girls'<lb/>
colleges and among the co-eds at<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Officials of the NIFC, when in-<lb/>
terviewed by your correspondent,<lb/>
failed to report a single instance of<lb/>
a co-ed walking home from a date<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
-THE-<lb/>
BEAUTY<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
by Helena Rubinstein<lb/>
This gay, colorful spring you can<lb/>
select from six subtly brilliant lip-<lb/>
stick shades, a complete series of<lb/>
svelte, sparkling cases enameled in<lb/>
Thistle Pink, Delphinium Blue,<lb/>
Lotus White, Mimosa Yellow. Car-<lb/>
nation Red, Licorice Black and<lb/>
Gooseberry Green. These are the<lb/>
stunning new costume lipsticks. You<lb/>
can get anyone of the lipstick shades<lb/>
in any one of the cases and if your<lb/>
lipstick isn't the perfect color accent<lb/>
to your costume this Spring, it will<lb/>
be your own fault.<lb/>
The costume lipstick will comple-<lb/>
ment and compliment your every<lb/>
dress, your every unusual accessory<lb/>
note. It's smooth and velvety in<lb/>
texture. It has Olympic staying<lb/>
powers and, better yet, it incorpor-<lb/>
ates precious lubricating elements<lb/>
that keep tin- lips soft and smooth<lb/>
despite March winds.<lb/>
While the costume lipstick conies<lb/>
in seven differently colored cases,<lb/>
you will need no more than two of<lb/>
them to match or contrast with the<lb/>
two basic colors in your wardrobe.<lb/>
For instance, supposing you wear a<lb/>
good deal of blue in the Spring?<lb/>
and what girl doesn't?you will want<lb/>
a rouge and lipstick with just a<lb/>
faint undertone of blue, such as red<lb/>
velvet. The case may be Carnation<lb/>
Bed, Lotus "White, Thistle Pink or<lb/>
Mimosa Yellow depending on the<lb/>
color of the accessories you wear<lb/>
with your blue outfits, and also de-<lb/>
pending on the colors in your other<lb/>
frock For suppi se you have dress-<lb/>
es or sweaters in the Dubonnet and<lb/>
wine reds that have been so popular<lb/>
recently, the red velvet rouge and<lb/>
lipstick would be exactly right for<lb/>
them too. Any of the other color<lb/>
cases mentioned : the Thistle Pink,<lb/>
Mimosa Yellow or Lotus White<lb/>
would be excellent with both blues<lb/>
and blue-reds.<lb/>
Of course there are five other<lb/>
shades besides the red velvet in which<lb/>
the costume lipsticks come, and each<lb/>
of these is the artistically correct<lb/>
shade for a certain color costume.<lb/>
If you would like to have the Make-<lb/>
up Booklet which tells you exactly<lb/>
which rouge and lipstick to wear<lb/>
with your different frocks, which<lb/>
powder is most flattering to your<lb/>
complexion and what eyeshadow will<lb/>
do the most for your eyes, just send<lb/>
the coupon below to the Women's<lb/>
Interest Syndicate. They will be<lb/>
glad to forward it to you free of<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
March H( 1937<lb/>
tl, 1<lb/>
Lookin' Over<lb/>
the<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
-With C. Ray Pruette.<lb/>
Snow has come, snow has gone,<lb/>
leaving a touch of Spring in the air<lb/>
brethren.<lb/>
Maggie Crumpler, best known as<lb/>
editor of the TECOAN, says the<lb/>
TECOAN has been sent to press-<lb/>
Hope its good, Maggie.<lb/>
When did duanita Rhodes become<lb/>
a socialite? (Several people would<lb/>
like to know.)<lb/>
Beauty Queens from each class<lb/>
will soon be elected for the Science<lb/>
Carnival: Who will get it in :<lb/>
The Freshman Class ? ?<lb/>
The Sophomore Class??<lb/>
The Junior Class?I<lb/>
The Senior Class? ?<lb/>
Now is the time to start THINK-<lb/>
ING<lb/>
11<lb/>
Talking of beauty. Clifton Brit-<lb/>
ton says the most beautiful girls on<lb/>
the Campus are Freshmen. (Can<lb/>
Clifton lie called an authority?)<lb/>
Who writes the column "We Only<lb/>
Heard?" It has become to be a<lb/>
critic, that column has.<lb/>
Who is it on the campus that<lb/>
sleeps on the boudoir pillars? (Pre-<lb/>
cisely Alton Payne and no other.)<lb/>
Charles Guy, the fellow who signs<lb/>
his column A. Guy, has a very nice<lb/>
sobroquet don't you think?<lb/>
Latest news on Tom Dennis' prac-<lb/>
tice teaching: tla-h?A girl told me<lb/>
that Tom was a fine teacher but In-<lb/>
lets a little sarcasm creep into his<lb/>
voice, sometimes'<lb/>
Looking at the campus dances<lb/>
from afar, I notice that the spirit<lb/>
is lacking. They dance as if they<lb/>
have to, and each step is an effort.<lb/>
It was not this way a week ago! I<lb/>
wonder what's the matter!<lb/>
The Pittman and Evan- case<lb/>
seems to 1m1 weathering the storm.<lb/>
(By-the-Bye?the little Kvans girl<lb/>
is a good dancer.)<lb/>
It has bees said that a purpose of<lb/>
the college dances, first held here<lb/>
last year, is to make our students<lb/>
feel more at ease in a ballroom. We<lb/>
don't question the validity of the<lb/>
purpose, but if those same dances<lb/>
cause the students to lose a portion<lb/>
of mental equanimity at mass meet-<lb/>
ings, a far greater evil is created.<lb/>
WE ONLY<lb/>
H-E-A-R-D<lb/>
The Woman's Interest Syndi-<lb/>
cate<lb/>
522 Fifth Avenue<lb/>
New York, New York<lb/>
Please send me, free of charge,<lb/>
the new Helena Rubinstein<lb/>
Make-Up Booklet containing<lb/>
the Three-Point Make-up chart.<lb/>
Name <lb/>
Address<lb/>
Somebody said something about<lb/>
a dance, and three political factions<lb/>
came into loing overnight. What<lb/>
are they? Well, Jud White sez they<lb/>
are the SOCIALITES. CRUMBS,<lb/>
and POLITICIANS.<lb/>
The fellow<lb/>
C r u m b s have<lb/>
gone so far as to<lb/>
adopt a party sa-<lb/>
lute. We'd'like<lb/>
to draw a dia-<lb/>
gram of it for<lb/>
you, but sine e<lb/>
s pace doesn't<lb/>
permit, will de-<lb/>
scribe it briefly.<lb/>
The left front<lb/>
foot should be<lb/>
extended slightly, about ten degrees<lb/>
from the "pigeon toed" angle, with<lb/>
the other foot placed perpendicu-<lb/>
larly. The salute is finally executed<lb/>
when the back of the right hand<lb/>
comes to rest on the forehead of said<lb/>
Crumb. (Wonder how Hitler feels<lb/>
towards the new party?)<lb/>
? THIS ?<lb/>
COLLEGIATE<lb/>
WOJU-D<lb/>
(By Associated Collegiate Press)<lb/>
What University of Texas Blu-<lb/>
lents thought was L'oilie' to be a<lb/>
'pipe" examination turned out to be<lb/>
1 viciously circling boomerang.<lb/>
"F e I 1 o w s a n<lb/>
nounced 'be instruc-<lb/>
tor, "I'm just a- tired<lb/>
id" these darn exams<lb/>
a- vou are BO I've de-<lb/>
cided to give yon an<lb/>
easy one today, dust<lb/>
one question, in tact.<lb/>
Everybody in the<lb/>
class did a series of<lb/>
simple mathematical<lb/>
calculations a 11 d ar<lb/>
rived at the sum of<lb/>
100 for the answer.<lb/>
"dust a minute<lb/>
said the instructor, "I<lb/>
forgot something. Re-<lb/>
call the number of<lb/>
times yon were absent<lb/>
from this class, multiply that by two<lb/>
and subtract it from the answer on<lb/>
the problem.<lb/>
The "A" grades that students had<lb/>
visioned slid down the alphabetical<lb/>
scale and even a few "Fs" blemished<lb/>
the instructor's record book.<lb/>
Men are more curious than<lb/>
women, insist coeds in the Zeta Tau<lb/>
Alpha sorority of Northwestern<lb/>
University. Here's how they proved<lb/>
it:<lb/>
They painted a barrel, labelled it<lb/>
"DANCER and placed it on the<lb/>
campus. For one hour hidden Zetas<lb/>
kept tab, counting 106 men and 24<lb/>
women who stepped off the sidewalk<lb/>
to K?er inside.<lb/>
Which, protest the males, proves<lb/>
nothing except that 108 men and 24<lb/>
women passed the barrel during the<lb/>
test hour.<lb/>
Even scholasticallv bum college<lb/>
student- make poor hoboes. This<lb/>
announcement comes straight from<lb/>
th Dean ?the Dean of American<lb/>
Hoboes, one Dan O'Brien.<lb/>
"Fifty years of holloing have con-<lb/>
vinced me that students from col-<lb/>
leges furnish poor material for ho-<lb/>
boes. Hoboes comes from boys?ami<lb/>
hoboettes from girls, from a statu<lb/>
that does not allow or privilege them<lb/>
a college training?-except that of<lb/>
Hobo College writes O'Brien.<lb/>
"As Dean of the Hobo College of<lb/>
America, I am aware that to become<lb/>
and remain a hobo one has to have<lb/>
these superior qualities: first, cour-<lb/>
age; second, a desire to travel, see<lb/>
things and learn, and. last, a strong<lb/>
constitution and tremendous power<lb/>
of adjustment and adaptability as<lb/>
well as a love for freedom and<lb/>
beauty adds Dr. O'Brien.<lb/>
"The official college trains stu-<lb/>
dents to tit themselves into a busi-<lb/>
ness world. Take them out of that<lb/>
environment ami you have perfect<lb/>
fools, but the Hobo College learns<lb/>
its students the nobler art of hobo-<lb/>
ing? how to cope with life.<lb/>
Dispairing more of coeds. Dean<lb/>
O'Brien says "they are hopeless ma-<lb/>
terial. Now you take regular ho-<lb/>
boettes. they get more wisdom in one<lb/>
year than they possibly could have<lb/>
gotten from a college training or be-<lb/>
ing locked up in the Congressional<lb/>
library for four vears<lb/>
Campus Camera<lb/>
7?93 ??&amp;f<lb/>
Bunny<lb/>
CHICAGO H. ? - -<lb/>
199 SUCC1 <lb/>
1 h A?mcuhW Ce8?(?i fmt? Mtiun, VumuH'J<lb/>
BUCKSHOT<lb/>
GIL KUHN WAS SOUTHS<lb/>
OXLIF0RN1A5 NINTH SlGAAA<lb/>
CHI FOOTBALL CAFTAiN H<lb/>
TfcM YEAW1<lb/>
With The<lb/>
FACULTY<lb/>
Yes, I was right thankful that no<lb/>
tomatoes were passed around at that<lb/>
last mass meeting.<lb/>
Lots of students were wondering<lb/>
about the two-minute intermissions<lb/>
on the program of the Winslow<lb/>
Dancers. Maybe they called time<lb/>
out now and then to wash their feet.<lb/>
She was peeved and called him "Mr<lb/>
Not because he went and kr<lb/>
But because just before,<lb/>
As she opened the door.<lb/>
This same Mr. kr. sr.<lb/>
" 'Tis better to have loved a short<lb/>
girl than not to have loved a tall<lb/>
So sez the Iowa State Student.<lb/>
EDUCATION?Trying to teach<lb/>
teachers how to try to teach.<lb/>
Hello! Is that the plant doctor?<lb/>
Well, please hurry over. My weep-<lb/>
ing willow is having hysterics.<lb/>
We've heard that another of those<lb/>
petitions is being passed around to<lb/>
have this column dropped from the<lb/>
Tkco Echo. You know, that's the<lb/>
first sensible suggestion we've heard<lb/>
in a long time. So long<lb/>
WCTU REPRESENTATIVES<lb/>
MAKE TALK ON ALCOHOL<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
ceiitly to a student body that one<lb/>
could not have a fit body unless he<lb/>
was a total abstainer from tobacco<lb/>
and alcohol. She called attention<lb/>
to a recent ruling of the Governor<lb/>
of Indiana that no one in the state<lb/>
employed lo allowed to drink one<lb/>
drop of beer during office hours.<lb/>
Miss Demorest in conclusion gave<lb/>
a rapid survey of high spots in his-<lb/>
tory from the time of Alexander<lb/>
the Great down to the last war show-<lb/>
ing that this is one of the oldest<lb/>
problems in the world. She said<lb/>
that the Belgian liquor-sellers pre-<lb/>
vented the Germans from making<lb/>
good their invasion of Belgium in<lb/>
the World War.<lb/>
At the end she showed charts and<lb/>
samples that give scientific proof<lb/>
of the ingredients of alcohol and<lb/>
their harmful effects.<lb/>
Miss Demorest has spoken to<lb/>
more than 50,000 students in the<lb/>
past year.<lb/>
Mrs. T. H. Plemmons, a former<lb/>
resident of Greenville, who is vice-<lb/>
president of the State WCTU, ac-<lb/>
companied Miss Demorest and in-<lb/>
troduced her.<lb/>
BAUGHAN, HILDRUP<lb/>
REVIEW NEW BOOKS<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
arranged an exhibit of one hundred<lb/>
dollars worth of books and magazines<lb/>
which she considers a good invest-<lb/>
ment for the beginning teacher of<lb/>
English. Her article deals with this<lb/>
specific material and its place in the<lb/>
library of the English teacher.<lb/>
Research Article<lb/>
Dr. Baughan also published in the<lb/>
January issue of The Journal of<lb/>
English and Germanic Philology,<lb/>
a research article, "Shakespeare's<lb/>
Probable Confusion of the Two<lb/>
Romanos<lb/>
in the West. SI<lb/>
California<lb/>
Her hobb <lb/>
profession the<lb/>
especially pitchers ?<lb/>
During th n'm-<lb/>
in Greenville hie<lb/>
Clark became a chi<lb/>
the Greenville, A A<lb/>
heartily welcomed<lb/>
ville, tin- year ? hei<lb/>
of friend- and to tl<lb/>
her delightful :<lb/>
friendly attitude ?<lb/>
ciates 1- winning :<lb/>
larger number.<lb/>
KATHARINE HOLTZCLAW<lb/>
-Mi- Katharine II ?<lb/>
ADELAIDE BLOXTON<lb/>
Mrs. Adelaide Bloxton. a member<lb/>
of the Home Economies Depart-<lb/>
ment, was horn in Xausemoud Coun-<lb/>
ty, Virginia. Her pre-coBege edu-<lb/>
cation was mostly by private teach-<lb/>
ers. Later Mrs. Bloxton attended<lb/>
Normal School at Farmville, Vir-<lb/>
ginia : College of<lb/>
Wi11i a m and<lb/>
Mary, where she<lb/>
received her B.K.<lb/>
degree; and Co-<lb/>
lumbia Univer-<lb/>
sity, where t h e<lb/>
degree of M.S.<lb/>
w a s conferred<lb/>
upon her.<lb/>
Mr Bloxton<lb/>
taught for eight<lb/>
years in g r a d e<lb/>
schools and high schools. For three<lb/>
years he served as grade critic<lb/>
teacher at William-burg; three years<lb/>
as i-ritic teacher in Home Econom-<lb/>
ics and Chemistry in Williamsburg;<lb/>
one year Home Economies teacher<lb/>
at AppOmattOX Home Life School;<lb/>
and one year a- supervisor of Home<lb/>
Economics in Danville, Virginia.<lb/>
Mrs. Bloxton has taught here for fin-<lb/>
past nine years.<lb/>
As bobbies, Mrs. Bloxton i par-<lb/>
ticularly interested in growing roses<lb/>
and fishing.<lb/>
She has had some training for a<lb/>
nurse and some business training.l J?.A. in lie's<lb/>
pleted three quart<lb/>
her I'h.D. degree<lb/>
1 th ?. ?<lb/>
i <lb/>
aching<lb/>
iber of<lb/>
er of Home Ee<lb/>
Peny, Georgia<lb/>
her early educati<lb/>
tended Agnes Se<lb/>
catur. Georgia ui<lb/>
Junior year. Tl<lb/>
trition at Battle<lb/>
Hone- Economic<lb/>
; t.<lb/>
I).<lb/>
M:<lb/>
m:<lb/>
mer-<lb/>
e, (<lb/>
192t<lb/>
The latter enabled her to secure a<lb/>
position a- secretary to Chief Sal-<lb/>
vaging Office of the I S. at ammu-<lb/>
nition plant following the world<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Mrs. Blo.vton's influence has been<lb/>
felt widely on the campus of this<lb/>
college. She has the hue and respect<lb/>
of those students who know her, es-<lb/>
pecially the Hoim- Economics ma-<lb/>
jor Her work with the seniors in<lb/>
the practice house is highly praised.<lb/>
She has two daughters doing grad-<lb/>
uate work, one at William and Mary<lb/>
and the other at Columbia Univer-<lb/>
sity.<lb/>
MARY BERRY CLARK<lb/>
Miss Mary Berry Clark, who be-<lb/>
came a member of the Home Eco-<lb/>
nomies Department this year, was<lb/>
born in Louisville. Kentucky. She<lb/>
received her elementary and second-<lb/>
ary education in Louisville and in<lb/>
Birmingham, Alabama.<lb/>
Her u n d e r-<lb/>
graduate w 0 r k<lb/>
w as done at<lb/>
Converse C o 1-<lb/>
1 e g e. Spartan-<lb/>
burg. S. C. She<lb/>
r e e e i v e d her<lb/>
M.A. degree at<lb/>
Teachers C o 1-<lb/>
1 e g e, Columbia<lb/>
University, and<lb/>
has done addi-<lb/>
tional graduate<lb/>
work at the Cniversity of Wiscon-<lb/>
sin. She has also attended a Sum-<lb/>
mer School Session of three weeks<lb/>
at Cambridge University, England.<lb/>
Miss Clark's teaching experience<lb/>
includes the high schools of Wil-<lb/>
mington, X. C Port, Washington;<lb/>
Long Island, New York; and Green-<lb/>
ville, X. C. where she was critic<lb/>
teacher in Home Economics.<lb/>
As interesting and varied as her<lb/>
other experiences, are Miss Clark's<lb/>
travels. She has spent three entire<lb/>
summers in Europe. Two of these<lb/>
summers she conducted tours for<lb/>
Brownell Private Touring Com-<lb/>
pany. In 1930 she attended the<lb/>
"Passion Play" in Germany. She<lb/>
says that she has had delightfully<lb/>
interesting experiences traveling in<lb/>
the southern, eastern and New Eng-<lb/>
land States of her own country, and<lb/>
that her next trip will be a summer<lb/>
of Chicago.<lb/>
Miss Hottzclaw has ? .<lb/>
experience in high who 1 ti<lb/>
at Whiteville. X Befi r<lb/>
her in the fall -if L928, Miss<lb/>
claw taught Home K<lb/>
Virginia Polytechnic I<lb/>
Blacksburg. Virgin M <lb/>
claw says. This is 1<lb/>
college, and the girl- there '<lb/>
a- great a minority a- the b<lb/>
at East Carolina Teachers I<lb/>
Concerning other things<lb/>
est in her life. Mi 11 lu '<lb/>
marks, "I have several b ??<lb/>
my chief one at present is I<lb/>
leeting of old glass.<lb/>
"My most interesting exp<lb/>
have been my travels in<lb/>
countries. I -pent the - <lb/>
Hb'JO in France and Engl<lb/>
since then 1 have l?een fo<lb/>
tember holiday in Mexico and for<lb/>
another in 'uba and Panama<lb/>
For the past year Miss Holtzela<lb/>
has bees serving as chairman of '??<lb/>
entertainment committee of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College Her<lb/>
work with that committee has beei<lb/>
highly commendable. M ss Holte-<lb/>
elaw, very neat and attractive in a<lb/>
pearance, and possessing a<lb/>
ing personality, is well liked by tn<lb/>
who know her.<lb/>
D 1<lb/>
a<lb/>
tHo<lb/>
Compliments of<lb/>
Greenville Floral Co.<lb/>
Phone 443<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
NOW IT'S MASH j<lb/>
FOR DEPENDABLE AND<lb/>
PLEASANT SERVICES<lb/>
Comfortable. Safe, and<lb/>
Economical Transportation<lb/>
Buy a<lb/>
NASH 6 or a NASH 8 or a<lb/>
Nash Lafayette 400<lb/>
SJDGG MOTOR COMPANY<lb/>
Phone 429<lb/>
"Christi<lb/>
Theme<lb/>
W Students H<lb/>
-Tt- '<lb/>
day<lb/>
-It<lb/>
that '?<lb/>
A ?'?? <lb/>
be sn<lb/>
in<lb/>
a "tal<lb/>
?iur:e'i' ?<lb/>
person<lb/>
Rob<lb/>
the  ?'<lb/>
;ivt <lb/>
for ?? <lb/>
stlldv<lb/>
Boundanes 0:<lb/>
to the - <lb/>
TA V :<lb/>
gyaa ?<lb/>
jtj aight. J<lb/>
"Your - :<lb/>
not ?'<lb/>
?jitv ihoul -<lb/>
they reallj<lb/>
this to I ? - -<lb/>
? E ur.i 1 '<lb/>
pOf-Slt-i<lb/>
The worci '<lb/>
,a0 n . - ?<lb/>
out ner<lb/>
?bat ??? <lb/>
"It<lb/>
"through<lb/>
Lord J sue<lb/>
HlM "<lb/>
played ?? I<lb/>
Tathn<lb/>
Under Cloak of Anon<lb/>
Writer Te<lb/>
( 01<lb/>
ptA inv<lb/>
chause:<lb/>
TL- -<lb/>
.3 ;n par<lb/>
?he -a<lb/>
matur ?<lb/>
UDUrU<lb/>
Kicktia ?<lb/>
suriiarr<lb/>
tin? eai<lb/>
tion thai<lb/>
He :?<lb/>
broads i<lb/>
a stat<lb/>
dH gent<lb/>
men. <lb/>
their -i<lb/>
about U<lb/>
T<lb/>
at tail<lb/>
new <lb/>
the ;n<lb/>
Be, that<lb/>
stsxlet<lb/>
everv <lb/>
Th,<lb/>
r' an.<lb/>
aave n<lb/>
mi a<lb/>
"Yes. -<lb/>
faagb<lb/>
to b? 11<lb/>
and ? tl<lb/>
Haae a<lb/>
19 , <lb/>
r ?<lb/>
tam ?<lb/>
?T th.<lb/>
k i-v ?<lb/>
ail-A<lb/>
bbutk. ?<lb/>
Hr <lb/>
Th<lb/>
best : .<lb/>
an <lb/>
play, p<lb/>
?M g<lb/>
On v<lb/>
iBtUHj<lb/>
"olut. ,<lb/>
ki&amp; nai<lb/>
Iuued from p<lb/>
file C<lb/>
var-<lb/>
moderately<lb/>
? rent a<lb/>
a alt<lb/>
oh in its ii<lb/>
was pretty!<lb/>
?Ba school wl<lb/>
?BB With a 1 ? <lb/>
!1 happened t ?<lb/>
JBy a winner that<lb/>
sr,ews in itself!<lb/>
lh?- exc ption to<lb/>
2" U theae quo<lb/>
g between ffi<lb/>
J" go to thoae play.<lb/>
J? "? firt put buj<lb/>
es,ir(.lKani MaJ<lb/>
erien i, over ,<lb/>
J" because <lb/>
vitv, saaionaln<lb/>
J" n unusually - j<lb/>
?Het a great played<lb/>
j" av- of publieitl<lb/>
I bring. But<lb/>
IjJ lth a mediocre <lb/>
jJJP and you will<lb/>
U<lb/>
Mgg??MMggtaMftMBg??<lb/>
w.<lb/>
 Mp-X &amp;.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038053_0003"/><lb/>
lurch<lb/>
11, 1937<lb/>
09<lb/>
fcJNNY<lb/>
n?<lb/>
N 1935 TO5TB0<lb/>
PCESSNE FREE<lb/>
tj ROWS '<lb/>
p'lAlORS Sffium<lb/>
I ?7j<lb/>
w<lb/>
.SHOT<lb/>
NINTU SIGMA<lb/>
lL CAPTAIN N<lb/>
VEART<lb/>
? eager to go j.<lb/>
"??ping wuh her<lb/>
?'infc ?f chin<lb/>
I various kin.i-<lb/>
of her teachtug<lb/>
go school, MisV<lb/>
'barter member of<lb/>
A-U. W. Shewa?<lb/>
a back to Green-<lb/>
m-re she has a boat<lb/>
? letr?t wh?-rr<lb/>
personality anj<lb/>
toward bet bmq<lb/>
I r her an ev ?<lb/>
in<lb/>
HE HOLTZCLAW<lb/>
II daw. teach-<lb/>
 was born a<lb/>
m re she received<lb/>
:?? Liter she at<lb/>
 '?'Urge at I<lb/>
I the end of ber<lb/>
n she studied nu<lb/>
 . ?? k School oi<lb/>
ai Battle Creek,<lb/>
Michigan. Mi<lb/>
!I iltzclaw aaa<lb/>
spent two sum-<lb/>
- rs at Colum-<lb/>
b i a 1 niversitj<lb/>
1 : later attend-<lb/>
1 d Qeorsjs Pea<lb/>
body College for<lb/>
i ?  here, She<lb/>
was granted her<lb/>
B.8. degree<lb/>
from t her e i a<lb/>
: 26 a ad her<lb/>
it ?? ntly she eotn-<lb/>
? t" work toward<lb/>
 the University<lb/>
ta two y?ars<lb/>
???1 teaching<lb/>
I re coming<lb/>
Mi Holta<lb/>
iv<lb/>
onomi<lb/>
nstitute<lb/>
Miss Holl<lb/>
at<lb/>
M;<lb/>
!? ally ? boj ?<lb/>
Is there were in<lb/>
as the boys are<lb/>
eaehera College.<lb/>
things of intcr-<lb/>
- Boltselaw re-<lb/>
?ral bohbtea, hm<lb/>
esent is the col<lb/>
? en??-t.ng expenances<lb/>
travels in foreign<lb/>
: . ? ? the -ununer of<lb/>
 ! England and<lb/>
tve been for a Sep-<lb/>
kfexieo and for<lb/>
ind Panama,<lb/>
year Mi-s Iloltzclaw<lb/>
g as chairman of the<lb/>
1 ommittee of East<lb/>
hers Collage. Ho<lb/>
I f eosnmitti e has been<lb/>
able. M?ss Holtz-<lb/>
? s a'tractive in ap-<lb/>
 possessing ? charm<lb/>
is well Hked by those<lb/>
lpliments of<lb/>
rille Floral Co.<lb/>
'hone 443<lb/>
ITS MASH<lb/>
'EMABLE AND<lb/>
Iaxt SERVICES<lb/>
?table. Safe, and<lb/>
a I Transportation<lb/>
Ihiy a<lb/>
lor a NASH 8 or a<lb/>
Lafayette 400<lb/>
)TOR COMPANY<lb/>
hone 429<lb/>
"Christian's Daily Life"<lb/>
Theme of YWCA Service<lb/>
ujr,e Puckett Speaks to College<lb/>
Students Here<lb/>
i<lb/>
h Life was<lb/>
iage brought<lb/>
? l'llckcit, at<lb/>
1 i ices I i i-<lb/>
Hs she<lb/>
trig our lives<lb/>
t? rs, ?hither<lb/>
-??,<lb/>
illldl ?ut.<lb/>
' bing your<lb/>
doing a little<lb/>
ugh the deed<lb/>
be garden of<lb/>
,1<lb/>
tarde<lb/>
1 care,<lb/>
make<lb/>
and<lb/>
in<lb/>
ge advising<lb/>
fheir dailv<lb/>
V<lb/>
??<lb/>
conduct, prayer<lb/>
tu dents, and in<lb/>
? 1 and service,<lb/>
rj sang a solo,<lb/>
a '(Lien Deed<lb/>
Boundaries of Life<lb/>
? . - of Life" was<lb/>
? ? ? message brought<lb/>
it tdents at the YVV<lb/>
ervi es, by Hev. W. A.<lb/>
1 I ristian church, Sttn-<lb/>
1 larv ItS,<lb/>
: ? be said, "should<lb/>
ries to their lives;<lb/>
 - lit and do a hat<lb/>
mi to do He applied<lb/>
 students.<lb/>
e stated, "is a way<lb/>
. . might Bee limitless<lb/>
 es in their own lives.<lb/>
: . : that religion is the<lb/>
? that allow, s one to go<lb/>
? wants to to tad be<lb/>
ts to be"<lb/>
ome he concluded,<lb/>
tber wav than the<lb/>
-<lb/>
'ivn<lb/>
Thompson<lb/>
"Green<lb/>
U-<lb/>
loak of Anonymity<lb/>
Writer Tells of Mischief<lb/>
Guilford Choir<lb/>
140atS"n?ny"f,ter,n00n'March<lb/>
, at 2:30 o'clock, the Gnil<lb/>
ordCoHege Choir, made upUof<lb/>
forty-two members, will pre-<lb/>
sent a concert here. The choir<lb/>
? well known throughout<lb/>
eastern United States, and<lb/>
makes a tour of the northern<lb/>
states each Spring. Last year<lb/>
nil "XS Radi0 CityMus?<lb/>
? rV" J ? r present director<lb/>
?s Dr. E. H. F. Weis.<lb/>
llu' '1 Players in the country<lb/>
pretty dose to being the best They<lb/>
i"V "?dUBMUt players who ,au de-<lb/>
?vir with the ehips down, and with<lb/>
watching the great fall<lb/>
and they can do<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
PHANTOM BASKETEERS<lb/>
tuousam<lb/>
football drama<lb/>
it week after week.<lb/>
Music Education Is Discussed<lb/>
By Dean C. Tabor<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
to D. C. Moor Jr club secretary.<lb/>
saymg that he made one of the best<lb/>
"tficers. if Dot the best officer, in<lb/>
the district. He called attention to<lb/>
tlir divisional meeting scheduled for<lb/>
Goldsboro, March 11. and invited<lb/>
all local Knvanians to attend the<lb/>
session.<lb/>
Two members, Tom Wilson and<lb/>
Durward Hart, were accepted in the<lb/>
club. Mr. Deal welcomed them in-<lb/>
to the organization, explaining to<lb/>
them that they would reap benefits<lb/>
in accordance with the efforts they<lb/>
put in the club.<lb/>
"The club pledges its cooperation<lb/>
with you and in turn expects your<lb/>
cooperation Mr. Deal told the new<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Mrs. Kay Tyson, eluh pianist,<lb/>
and H. A. McDougle. (dub singing<lb/>
leader were on hand to fulfill their<lb/>
regular duties.<lb/>
Iieured above are Tom Parrish, and Carl Pierce, who helped the<lb/>
local high school quint come out on top in the Class A Conference this<lb/>
year, toaca Mays "Greenies" were nosed out of the state championship<lb/>
by High Point on March 2.<lb/>
A HIGH SCHOOL<lb/>
STUDENT'S IMPRESSION<lb/>
OF A PRACTICE TEACHER<lb/>
Youths Climax Drive For<lb/>
The American Youth Act<lb/>
1 from page one)<lb/>
- .d tin- modern Mun-<lb/>
i allege press ageiitry<lb/>
- a large part at that<lb/>
have os believe, the<lb/>
ng a player with an<lb/>
 tacking a colorful<lb/>
the already strange<lb/>
?? en starting to plug<lb/>
itb all the ammuni-<lb/>
be shot out of a well-<lb/>
rrapb machine barrel.<lb/>
- of these publicity<lb/>
gradually lulled into<lb/>
pi tie acquiesence by<lb/>
isic of the new cogno-<lb/>
 thing you know<lb/>
. ges arc all inked up<lb/>
gridiron flash with<lb/>
mes into the picture<lb/>
He i- told that his<lb/>
k candidate ha- fired<lb/>
of the reading pub-<lb/>
. public will pay coin<lb/>
-?. him in action,<lb/>
i better ase the new<lb/>
(lowing Saturday and<lb/>
or else.<lb/>
w 1m 1 would be an oddi-<lb/>
. oaches most of us<lb/>
? - off a qnick tremble<lb/>
. mumbles a humble<lb/>
: does as he- told, al-<lb/>
. rlet prove- in practice<lb/>
, tlSv poor, raw, clumsy,<lb/>
as much of a mill-<lb/>
tbe coach's neck as his<lb/>
press agent.<lb/>
ng -tory funny, the<lb/>
- a great record in spite<lb/>
. and the starlet, who<lb/>
the poorest player not<lb/>
ar-ity hut through<lb/>
r teams, is handed an<lb/>
scroll, a ht of watches,<lb/>
i ti stimonials to sign<lb/>
ti<lb/>
thi nonsense<lb/>
is<lb/>
rtat<lb/>
With<lb/>
?B-An?<lb/>
it tie memory test.<lb/>
recall an all-American<lb/>
,1- not playing with at<lb/>
erately ancceaafnl team?<lb/>
all a team which was<lb/>
ogh it carried an ab-<lb/>
 its lineup jnat because<lb/>
- pretty? Can you re-<lb/>
bicta grabbed the head-<lb/>
losing team, unless the<lb/>
. ! to lw so eharacter-<lb/>
? inner that its bad season<lb/>
? i?elf!<lb/>
ption to the implied<lb/>
- ? k questions are few<lb/>
-n Big black head-<lb/>
; ose players and those<lb/>
first put big black figures<lb/>
?rd. Many a deserving<lb/>
1- overlooked by the se-<lb/>
auss his team is not a<lb/>
I ? i-ionally a good player<lb/>
usually successful team<lb/>
gr at piayer, riding in on<lb/>
t publicity his team's<lb/>
ring. But few teams are<lb/>
a mediocre player in their<lb/>
i you will find that the<lb/>
?ns elected are, if not<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL CLASS GIVES<lb/>
FINE PROGRAM ON BALLADS<lb/>
An excellent program of ballads,<lb/>
by the eighth grade of the Junior<lb/>
High Sehool, was presented to a<lb/>
college audience Thursday night,<lb/>
March 2. The program was directed<lb/>
by Miss Naomi New ell, a student-<lb/>
teacher from the Senior class here<lb/>
and sponsored by the English Club<lb/>
of the college.<lb/>
The program included three vari-<lb/>
ous kinds of ballads?folk, old and<lb/>
literary or new?and original ones<lb/>
presented in the different ways, solo<lb/>
reading; chorus or verse-speaking<lb/>
choir; dramatic or dialogue form;<lb/>
and by singing them.<lb/>
The creative work, of original<lb/>
composition, in both writing and<lb/>
music was one of the most significant<lb/>
features of the program, and showed<lb/>
that real talent had been discovered<lb/>
and the girls and boys had been<lb/>
given a chance for expression.<lb/>
Frances Swindell read her own<lb/>
original ballad on a modern theme<lb/>
tht was remarkably true in spirit<lb/>
and form to the true ballad. J. N.<lb/>
Williams composed the music for the<lb/>
ballad "Kosalx'lle" that had the real<lb/>
lilt and yet was not a copy. Julia<lb/>
Ann Bland made a one-act play from<lb/>
an old ballad, "(Jet Op and Bar the<lb/>
Door which was presented well<lb/>
in costume, by herself: Ronald<lb/>
Berry, T. (J. Gates and George<lb/>
Abzevounis.<lb/>
The old ballad. "The Bonny Earl<lb/>
of Murray" was sung by Frances<lb/>
Swindell, ' with 3. S. Williams<lb/>
playing the accompaniment. As the<lb/>
guitar is the instrument most ap-<lb/>
propriate for ballads, and most used<lb/>
with them, a trio composed of Emmy<lb/>
Lou White, Koswald Dailey and Roy<lb/>
Griflin played several ballads on<lb/>
these instruments.<lb/>
The verse choir, composed of the<lb/>
entire grade, read three ballads,<lb/>
"Lord Randall "Railroading<lb/>
and "Baby Lon<lb/>
The program closed with the<lb/>
singing of "Home on the Range<lb/>
the audience joining in.<lb/>
This is the third time the pro-<lb/>
gram has been presented, although<lb/>
it is the outgrowth of classroom<lb/>
work and at first was not intended<lb/>
as a program.<lb/>
MIRIAM WINSLOW GROUP<lb/>
PRESENTS PROGRAM HERE<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
tives of the American Youth Con-<lb/>
gress met with President Roosevelt<lb/>
to appeal for aid to American youth.<lb/>
This conference took place in the<lb/>
afternoon after the parade. The<lb/>
committee reported back to the dele-<lb/>
gates assembled in the Masonic<lb/>
Auditorium President Roosevelt,<lb/>
they said, assured them that sympa-<lb/>
thetic consideration would be ac-<lb/>
corded the demands of the young<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Senator Lundeen of Minnesota:<lb/>
Congressmen Coffee, Maverick, and<lb/>
Voorhis; Morris Ernst, nationally<lb/>
known lawyer; I.en de Caux, spokes-<lb/>
man for John L. Lewis' CIO; and<lb/>
John P. Davis, Negro lawyer, ad-<lb/>
dressed the delegates Friday night.<lb/>
Joseph P. Lash, of the American<lb/>
Student Union, another speaker, told<lb/>
the young people that the youth<lb/>
organizations would return to Wash-<lb/>
ington with soup kitchens and tents<lb/>
and remain until the Youth Act<lb/>
was passed, if this legislation were<lb/>
not reported out of committee within<lb/>
a month. Ernst settled the age of<lb/>
the members of the Supreme Court<lb/>
at this meeting by declaring their<lb/>
average ages were "eight years older<lb/>
than God Each of the speakers<lb/>
wa accorded wild applause.<lb/>
A misunderstanding with police at<lb/>
the termination of the parade re-<lb/>
sulted in the arrest of William W.<lb/>
Hinckley, national chairman of the<lb/>
American Youth Congress, and Ab-<lb/>
bott Simon, legislative director of<lb/>
the organization.<lb/>
The Youth Congress struck back<lb/>
at the police in a bristling statement<lb/>
issued late today. The action of the<lb/>
police was termed "unjustified" and<lb/>
described by the Congress as "a sad<lb/>
commentary on the state of civil<lb/>
lilerties in the nation's capital<lb/>
Groups of the pilgrims made indi-<lb/>
vidual calls on congressmen and<lb/>
senators urging passage of the Youth<lb/>
Act, as a part of their drive toward<lb/>
this objective.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Slay, of this col-<lb/>
lege and Mr. Linwood Murphy, of<lb/>
the Wendell High School faculty,<lb/>
were the dinner guests of Stuart<lb/>
Parrish. at the Home Management<lb/>
House, Tuesday night, March 2.<lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ross, of<lb/>
Lillington, Miss Holtzclaw and<lb/>
Miss Green were dinner guests of<lb/>
Makenzie Ross, at the Home<lb/>
Management House, Saturday night,<lb/>
March 6.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
its stately dignity. The "Horn-<lb/>
pipe" was gay, impudent, rakish, and<lb/>
in lilting rhythm. The last number<lb/>
of the suite, the "Threnody" was<lb/>
a court dance characterised by its<lb/>
slow, grave pacing.<lb/>
The Chase<lb/>
One of the best liked numbers<lb/>
Of the evening was "The Chase It<lb/>
was a dance of vigorous athletic<lb/>
movement and clean cut line, and<lb/>
was a stylized representation of<lb/>
chase and flight, and final vistory.<lb/>
In the Chopin "Prelude" the sing-<lb/>
ing tone, brilliance, swift contrasts,<lb/>
and emotional sweep of Chopin<lb/>
were caught and rendered.<lb/>
Other dances included "Sport<lb/>
Intermezzo which depicted a ten-<lb/>
nis player, swimmer, ami runner.<lb/>
The "Leprechaun half-human and<lb/>
half animal, showed the quickness,<lb/>
agility, and grace of an animal com-<lb/>
bined with the mischievous human<lb/>
element. Two Spanish dances, the<lb/>
"Boy Crusader ami "Little Wom-<lb/>
an and a "Brittany Peasant"<lb/>
dance were well liked by the audi-<lb/>
ence. "Infanta" was a dance show-<lb/>
ing the development of a carefree<lb/>
peasant into a majestic queen.<lb/>
The concluding dance was<lb/>
"Largo with the dancers in grey<lb/>
and white nun-like costumes. It was<lb/>
in the mood of spiritual calm rather<lb/>
than of religious fervor. Each<lb/>
spectator was able to read his own<lb/>
meaning into this dance.<lb/>
Miss Winslow's group, including<lb/>
nine girls, a uniformed chautTciir,<lb/>
and an electrician, travel in a pri-<lb/>
vate car-like bus. and a truck carry-<lb/>
ing costumes and a convenient ar-<lb/>
rangement of stage and lighting<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
They left here for ('orpushristi,<lb/>
Texas and a tour of the southwest.<lb/>
By "SMUT" BURKS<lb/>
Editor's n-ote:?After loafing<lb/>
around the Staff Room for the<lb/>
past several weeks, "Smut" Burks,<lb/>
(i high school junior, finally came<lb/>
across with this "brainstorm" con-<lb/>
tribution. Hope yu like it.<lb/>
(Well, I guess I can relax for<lb/>
awhile with this new college teacher<lb/>
teaching 11 . . . Most college teach-<lb/>
ers are easy anyhow. . . . She looks<lb/>
O.K. too.) Say, Kenneth Lane, do<lb/>
you suppose, she'll give any pop-<lb/>
tests f (ice 1 hope she won't, and no<lb/>
long assignments either. (I hate to<lb/>
have to learn her method of teach-<lb/>
ing that is so different from my last<lb/>
teacher's method. . . . Afraid I won't<lb/>
like her nun-h. . . . Wish she were a<lb/>
boy. They're easier to get along<lb/>
with, and are better to me just on<lb/>
general principles. . . . Guess I<lb/>
shouldn't have such a thought. Inn<lb/>
I've gotta to he loyal to my fellow-<lb/>
masculines. . . .)<lb/>
(Well, well, after a whole week<lb/>
and no pop-tests yet! She must not<lb/>
be so bad. . . .) Charlie, got your<lb/>
notebook finished? "We've got a<lb/>
whole week to complete it?pretty<lb/>
lenient of "battle-axe eh what!<lb/>
(. . . Glad I made a good grade on<lb/>
that announced test. . . . Say, she's<lb/>
pretty good after all. . . . Guess I<lb/>
will start paying attention on<lb/>
class<lb/>
(Ho-hum How fast this last<lb/>
month has gone by. . . . What! She<lb/>
finishes tomorrow?) Good night,<lb/>
she hasn't been teaching a whole six<lb/>
weeks, has she John David? Shucks,<lb/>
and 1 was beginning to like her.<lb/>
Say?she wasn't so bad after all,<lb/>
huh? Guess we won't have another<lb/>
as good. . . . Too bad I didn't know-<lb/>
sooner that she was going to be good.<lb/>
 So long, "battle-axe . . .<lb/>
(Well. I guess I'll bide my time in<lb/>
forming opinions of practice teach-<lb/>
ers from now on. . . .)<lb/>
OUTSTANDING BOYS AND<lb/>
GIRLS TEAM SELECTED<lb/>
At the end of the basketball<lb/>
tournament at East Carolina Teach-<lb/>
ers College ten outstanding players<lb/>
were selection for a girls and boys<lb/>
team. These selections were made<lb/>
by a special committee appointed<lb/>
by Boley Farley, the ECTC athletic<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Gold basketballs were awarded to<lb/>
each of these players. Trophies .vere<lb/>
awarded to the championship teams.<lb/>
Those on the teams are:<lb/>
Boys: Elton Arnold, Leo Mat-<lb/>
thews. Henry Farrell, Watson Hol-<lb/>
lyfield, Lafayette; Frank Bowers,<lb/>
Eugene Carson, Willie Abeyounis,<lb/>
Garland Whitehurst, Bethel; Ralph<lb/>
Hodges, Jesse Black, Washington.<lb/>
Girls: Forwards, Dorothy Beal,<lb/>
Nina Womble, Green Hope; Vivian<lb/>
Adcox, Pattie Godwin, Dorothy<lb/>
('rumpler, Dunn ; Elizabeth Lupton,<lb/>
Hobucken; Thelma Howard, Green<lb/>
Hope; Blanche Godwin, Dunn:<lb/>
Nannie Simond, New Bern.<lb/>
fi<lb/>
(mis<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Well, we're right proud of some<lb/>
of our graduates after the way their<lb/>
basketball teams showed up in the<lb/>
tournament held here recently. . . .<lb/>
Mahle Dickens' Green Hope sextet<lb/>
won out in the Girls' Division. . . .<lb/>
I heo Easom's Lillington team bat-<lb/>
tled its way To the semi-final but<lb/>
lost to Bethel . . . and by the way,<lb/>
Fheo's team had a splendid season<lb/>
this year, winning twelve of sixteen<lb/>
games. . . . Hyatt Forrest. Jimmie<lb/>
Carr, and Pete Honeysuckle also<lb/>
had good teams which were able to<lb/>
win several games. . . . Anyway,<lb/>
laketball is soon to be forgotten<lb/>
as baseball pushes to the foreground.<lb/>
. . . The Pirate- have already be-<lb/>
gun practice and indications an- that<lb/>
they'll have a good ball club early<lb/>
in the season. . . .<lb/>
PIRATES LOSE TO<lb/>
Norfolk Team Defeats Locals,<lb/>
38-34. in Last Game of<lb/>
Season<lb/>
AROUND WASHINGTON<lb/>
(Continued from, page two)<lb/>
with a collegiate flyer.<lb/>
Washington, mecca of lobbyists,<lb/>
experienced a new type of lobby this<lb/>
week. The lobby of young people<lb/>
who came here to urge passage of<lb/>
the American Youth Act contrasted<lb/>
strangely with the more experienced<lb/>
and skillful wielders of political<lb/>
pressure. The young group made<lb/>
up in sincerity and enthusiasm, how-<lb/>
ever, what it lacked in wire-pulling<lb/>
skill. To one who has often watched<lb/>
the machinations of shrewd, calcu-<lb/>
lating lobbyists backed by vast ex-<lb/>
pense accounts, it is refreshing to<lb/>
see elear-eyed, eager college men and<lb/>
women go after an objective they<lb/>
want.<lb/>
The Braves of the Xorfolk Divi-<lb/>
sion of William and Mary College<lb/>
took a '?84 victory over the Teach-<lb/>
ers here on March 2.<lb/>
ECTC led in the first quarter<lb/>
play, but the Braves were in front<lb/>
at the half, 15-14 The Teacher-<lb/>
returned to the front in the third<lb/>
quarter and staved ahead until do-<lb/>
ing minutes.<lb/>
Barnes, with 16 points, was top<lb/>
scorer for the Braves. Edmonds<lb/>
featured on defense. Leading play-<lb/>
ers for the Teachers were Shelton,<lb/>
on attack and Ridenhour and Mar-<lb/>
tin with tine floor play.<lb/>
Lineups: Teachers -Cabfee, Shot-<lb/>
ton 12, K. Martin 7. forwards:<lb/>
Stow 4. center; Powell 2, Ferebee<lb/>
2, Ridenhour 7, guard<lb/>
Braves?Barnes H5. Heath, Ed-<lb/>
monds 7. forwards; Riganto 3,<lb/>
Cohn 1. centers; Krukin 3, Popkin<lb/>
:5. Griffin 2, guards.<lb/>
Gray Suede, Brown and White<lb/>
SPORT OXFORDS<lb/>
? $1.94 ?<lb/>
YOUNG'S<lb/>
Dlekerttn Atmum<lb/>
Melancholy note for college foot-<lb/>
ball players: Eighteen year old Ar-<lb/>
mand Charron of Indian Orchard,<lb/>
Massachusetts, a high school grad-<lb/>
uate, applied for the job of head<lb/>
coach at North Craolina State.<lb/>
WEAR A NEW<lb/>
SUtT HOWtET<lb/>
One of the<lb/>
1TEWEST OUT!<lb/>
From<lb/>
SALLY FROCKS<lb/>
I1<lb/>
! SHOP HERE i<lb/>
for the<lb/>
ROOM and BOARD<lb/>
HOME COOKED MEALS<lb/>
Have your friends come to see you.<lb/>
Let them stop with us.<lb/>
406 BILTMOEE - PHONE 281<lb/>
MRS. LASSITER<lb/>
r<lb/>
MEALS You<lb/>
Will Enjoy<lb/>
Eating With<lb/>
Your Friends<lb/>
At<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
Just Received <lb/>
Shipment of SPRING BLOUSES and HATS<lb/>
All Styles and Colors<lb/>
CHARLES STORES CO.<lb/>
JOIN THE EASTER THRONG<lb/>
OF SHOPPERS<lb/>
? that ?<lb/>
ARE VISITING OUR STORE DAILY<lb/>
FOR THOSE<lb/>
WHO CARE TO BE WELL DRESSED<lb/>
WILLIAMS<lb/>
The Ladies Store<lb/>
We wish to express our<lb/>
deepest sympathy to Dr. Re-<lb/>
Barker in the recent loss of<lb/>
bis mother.<lb/>
A Gift Inspired by<lb/>
Sentiment . . .<lb/>
Your Pfcoto?r??fc<lb/>
SEE OUR DISPLAY<lb/>
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RAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
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Our Fining<lb/>
Your Foot Correction<lb/>
COBURN'S<lb/>
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?<lb/>
If You Want<lb/>
FROCKS ?<lb/>
That are Exclusive but not Expensive<lb/>
Then Make the<lb/>
GLORIA SHOPPE<lb/>
Your Headquarters<lb/>
Located at (5) Points The Fashion Corner<lb/>
And These are the Lovely<lb/>
Shoes You've Been<lb/>
Looking for<lb/>
The College "V" Store and your favorite down-town soda shop<lb/>
or drug store carries a complete line of Lance's Peanut Butter<lb/>
Sandwiches, Salted Peanuts, and Candies. Whenever you feel<lb/>
the need of a "Snack insist on Lance's. They are made under<lb/>
the most sanitary conditions and are pleasing to the appetite.<lb/>
Remember to Insist on LANCE'S<lb/>
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LANCE PACKING COMPANY<lb/>
In beige, grey, tan, navy and black.<lb/>
In bow-trims, open toes and heels,<lb/>
porthole perforations, and eyelets.<lb/>
In walking, street, and dress models<lb/>
$2-95 TO $OJ5<lb/>
Blount-Harvcy<lb/>
THE MODERN SHOE STORE<lb/>
<pb facs="00038053_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
March Ut ggg<lb/>
<lb/>
Commerce Club Holds<lb/>
Regular Meeting Here<lb/>
Suggestions are Made Concern-<lb/>
ing Membership Requisites<lb/>
The Oommesree Club held its<lb/>
regular meeting March 2 at 8:80<lb/>
o'clock in the Commerce Club Room.<lb/>
The meeting was called to order<lb/>
I 5 the president, Miss Beatrice<lb/>
Reaves. In the absence of the secre-<lb/>
tary, Misa Mane Tripp cheeked the<lb/>
Fhe social committee reported<lb/>
that a proposed party would be de-<lb/>
rred until Sprint: qviarter.<lb/>
re were BUggeetiona and dis-<lb/>
 iona concerning membership<lb/>
?? t tea Kiss Elizabeth Gas-<lb/>
- Miss Janet Hayes, and Miss<lb/>
?ephine Wade were appointed as<lb/>
?  to formulate a requisite<lb/>
?, placed before the club<lb/>
next meeting.<lb/>
waa also .t discussion of<lb/>
? - stimulating interest in<lb/>
Their adviser. Miss<lb/>
 Vdams, contributed helpful<lb/>
'?' S - Wade, vice president<lb/>
at - ' the program com-<lb/>
?? . i ted an interesting pro-<lb/>
 ocational and Non-<lb/>
tional ommereial Education.<lb/>
 ? .?? Law a Beal made a<lb/>
? talk on the subject. A<lb/>
? on applying for a job<lb/>
tl ree of the members.<lb/>
n lunced that the Com-<lb/>
her of Greenville High<lb/>
I would six ak al the next meet-<lb/>
ALUMNAE<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
V<lb/>
?' Ab who vunted us<lb/>
 n aliases Ruth<lb/>
Henderson; Virginia<lb/>
g; I Jarrie Gray,<lb/>
?. . Etheridge, Foun-<lb/>
fli rring, I !alypso; Julia<lb/>
-  Lucy Patty<lb/>
j is i oh teaching at<lb/>
Miss Etheridge is<lb/>
Lucj 1 - Roy, Goldsboro,<lb/>
luati f '35 is as a guest<lb/>
impus last week-end,<lb/>
? ? La ? ren ? . I Jolerain;<lb/>
terring, Beaufort; Hattie<lb/>
phrey, i ? aufoi I ; and Hat-<lb/>
(x. Prii ? ton were also<lb/>
 past we I end. Miss<lb/>
tors w re: kfiss-<lb/>
Ivenl I mterbridge,<lb/>
LOU6ll? ' UIT&amp;C, (irilij!1<lb/>
? ? . Faulk, Spring Hope;<lb/>
Raleigh; and Lola<lb/>
 le, all graduates of<lb/>
? Len III ? lai b ia teach-<lb/>
R n Charlton, Seven<lb/>
1 trendle. and !leo<lb/>
?i Boom : Hi ? en also recent<lb/>
! rj Eleanor White. Mid-<lb/>
as ma rried to Earl Frank-<lb/>
?. H ? u lay, February 27<lb/>
in Baltimore. Mrs. Brandt received<lb/>
her education here and at John<lb/>
Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, Md.<lb/>
Miss Kathrvn Utley of Green-<lb/>
ville, and Carney Washington<lb/>
Byntim were married February 27,<lb/>
in the .larvis Memorial Methodist<lb/>
church at Greenville. After Mrs.<lb/>
Bynuni left lOT( she went to<lb/>
N. C. Baptist Hospital in Winston-<lb/>
Salem from where she was graduated<lb/>
in oti.<lb/>
Miss Mary Klizabeth Peebles was<lb/>
married to Dr. Carroll Braeey<lb/>
Robertson, Saturday, February 27,<lb/>
in the Jackson Baptist church.<lb/>
Mrs. Robertson received her educa-<lb/>
tion at WCr.NC, in Greensboro and<lb/>
at ECTC.<lb/>
Miss Ada Bet! doyner and W.<lb/>
Adrian Savage of (Jreenville, were<lb/>
married December 12, at Farmville.<lb/>
Mrs. Savage has been teaching at<lb/>
Belvoir for three years. Mr. Savage<lb/>
:s with the Warren Drug Company<lb/>
at Greenville.<lb/>
FACTS ARE GIVEN<lb/>
BY MISS JENKINS<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
rated in or near that, town offering<lb/>
the largest financial aid, having due<lb/>
regard to desirability and suitabil-<lb/>
ity for the location of said school<lb/>
She called the roll of towns that<lb/>
entered into that historic competi-<lb/>
tion and told the students, many of<lb/>
whom were from these towns, why<lb/>
Greenville got the school and why<lb/>
the others fell out of the race. She<lb/>
said Greenville staked its chances<lb/>
on the item "largest financial aid"<lb/>
while the others offered induce-<lb/>
ments that they felt came under<lb/>
the items "desirability and suitabil-<lb/>
ity She told them the story of the<lb/>
gift from the town and I'itt county<lb/>
of $100,000 and the bond issue. Then<lb/>
the bonds were retired only last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
She called attention to the three<lb/>
portraits at the entrance of Austin<lb/>
auditorium, those of J, L. Fleming,<lb/>
W. II. Kagsdale and Governor Jar-<lb/>
vis, and told something of the part<lb/>
these "founders had in the tight<lb/>
for the school but she said there<lb/>
BOOKS ADDED<lb/>
TO THE<lb/>
LIBRARY<lb/>
Through the courtesy of Mr.<lb/>
James R. Gullege, head librarian<lb/>
here, we are able to continue this<lb/>
feature which began in the last is-<lb/>
sue. Select your outside reading<lb/>
during the coming weeks from this<lb/>
column?Editor's Xote.<lb/>
Albertini, Alberto, Two year, a<lb/>
novel of time and eternity. lib'J(J,<lb/>
Viking press. "A novel based on<lb/>
the early Christian legend of the<lb/>
man granted a reprieve from death<lb/>
through the prayers of a saint. The<lb/>
principal character is a rich young<lb/>
Roman of the fourth century and<lb/>
the story relates what happened to<lb/>
him during the two years obtained<lb/>
for him by the monk Mutius Book<lb/>
Review Digest, Xovemlx'r 1936.<lb/>
Basso, Hamilton. Courthouse<lb/>
square. 1936, Scribner. "This ia<lb/>
Hamilton Basso's best novel to date.<lb/>
It places him among the significant<lb/>
writers of the South. . .  Books<lb/>
November 1, 1936.<lb/>
Becker, Mrs. May. First adven-<lb/>
were others not only in Greenville<lb/>
but in other places in the state who<lb/>
could be counted among the found-<lb/>
ers.<lb/>
She rapidly gave the high spots<lb/>
of these days before the school open-<lb/>
ed -the first meeting of the Board<lb/>
of Trustees on Dec. 31, 1907, the se-<lb/>
the letting of<lb/>
hction of the sitt<lb/>
contracts, the breaking of the<lb/>
ground on duly 2, 1908, the election<lb/>
of the president and faculty, on up<lb/>
to the opening, closing by telling<lb/>
them that October 5, the date of<lb/>
the opening was the date for re-<lb/>
miniscences about the early days<lb/>
another begins there. She refer-<lb/>
turew in reading; introducing chil-<lb/>
dren to books. 1930, Stokes.<lb/>
The Bible, designed to be read as<lb/>
living literature. If36, Simon A:<lb/>
Sell uster.<lb/>
Cabot, R. C. Meaning of right<lb/>
and wrong. 1933, Macmillan.<lb/>
Gather, W. S. Not under forty.<lb/>
1930, Knopf. "Contemplative es-<lb/>
says about literature and people who<lb/>
made it or abetted its making Book<lb/>
Review Digest, January 1937.<lb/>
Chamson, Andre. The road.<lb/>
1929, Scribner.<lb/>
Chase, Stuart. Rich land, poor<lb/>
land. 193G, Whittlesey. "This is<lb/>
a grand hook by a man who knows<lb/>
what he is talking about, for Stuart<lb/>
Chase's great knowledge of the facts<lb/>
of production and consumption is<lb/>
widely recognized Forum, October<lb/>
1936<lb/>
De La Mare. W. J. Poems, 1919-<lb/>
1934. 1936, Holt.<lb/>
Durham, Helen. What your voice<lb/>
reveals. 1931, Dutton.<lb/>
Elliott, H. S. and Mrs. Grace.<lb/>
Solving personal problems. 1936,<lb/>
Holt. "A councillor could not find<lb/>
a better book to put into the hands<lb/>
of the average person seeking bet-<lb/>
ter self understanding Survey,<lb/>
August 1936.<lb/>
Hutching, R. M Higher learning<lb/>
in America. 1936, Yale.<lb/>
Johnson. T. C. Scientific, in-<lb/>
terests in the oh! South. 1936, Ap-<lb/>
plet on.<lb/>
Kantor, Mackinlay. Arouse and<lb/>
beware. 1936, ('oward-McCann.<lb/>
"Mr. Kantor has written a book<lb/>
taut with two primitive passions?<lb/>
the desire to live and the desire to<lb/>
love. It is one of the most power-<lb/>
ful recent works in imaginative ro-<lb/>
mance Springfield Republican,<lb/>
so<lb/>
red to the fact<lb/>
ten members of<lb/>
that four of tl<lb/>
the tacultv who<lb/>
Smart ,<lb/>
Clothes j<lb/>
for f<lb/>
Smart ?<lb/>
Women .<lb/>
? i<lb/>
C. Heber<lb/>
Forbes <lb/>
LOOK<lb/>
SODAS<lb/>
10c<lb/>
CHAS. HORNE<lb/>
DRUG STORE<lb/>
WITHER<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? BREATHTAKEII<lb/>
$3.95<lb/>
3<lb/>
We're tired of gasping "how<lb/>
doyoutioit? It sluiyUunliill s<lb/>
serret, and we're merely in-<lb/>
viting you to enjoy itnot to<lb/>
share it. This two-piere linen<lb/>
has two contrasting stripes to<lb/>
edge its jacket blouse ? and<lb/>
n kirk pleat in the skirt for<lb/>
freedom. Another example<lb/>
why Hay Ihinliill means<lb/>
'tailored distinction<lb/>
In a variety of southern<lb/>
colors. Sizes 12 to 20<lb/>
XBP'<lb/>
were here for the opening and one<lb/>
other who came before the end of<lb/>
the year, were still in the faculty.<lb/>
Miss Sallie Joyner Davis, chair-<lb/>
man of the Chapel committee in-<lb/>
troduced Miss Jenkins as one who<lb/>
perhaps knew more of the history<lb/>
of the college from start to finish<lb/>
than any other member of the fac-<lb/>
ulty because she has lx-cii interested<lb/>
in collecting this material.<lb/>
November 22, 1936.<lb/>
Masters, K. L. Poems of people<lb/>
1 ?):?? Appleton-( 'entury.<lb/>
Miller, Webb. I found no peace;<lb/>
the journal of a foreign correspond-<lb/>
ent. MISS, Simon &amp; Schuster.<lb/>
Mills, E. A. Our national parks.<lb/>
1917, Houghton.<lb/>
Xevins, A. Hamilton Fish; the in-<lb/>
ner history of the (Irant administra-<lb/>
tion. 198S, Podd.<lb/>
IVattie. I. 0. Green laurel, tin<lb/>
lives and achievements of the great<lb/>
naturalists. 1986, Simon &amp; Schuster.<lb/>
Richards, Grant. Author hunt-<lb/>
ing. 1934, Coward-McCann.<lb/>
Roosevelt. F. I . Looking forward.<lb/>
1 ??, Day.<lb/>
Rilev, .1. W. Bee! loved poems<lb/>
and ballads. 1984, Bine ribbon<lb/>
1 looks.<lb/>
Robb, D M. it Garrison. Art in<lb/>
the western world. 1985, Harper.<lb/>
Saintsbury. i. F. B. Prefaces<lb/>
and essays. 1933, Macmillan.<lb/>
Schweitzer. Albert. Out of my<lb/>
life and thought. 1933, Holt.<lb/>
Spender, Stephen. The destruc-<lb/>
tive (dement. 1935 Honghton.<lb/>
"This series of essays is written by<lb/>
a poet who is seeking to determine<lb/>
for himself the position of the artist<lb/>
in society Yale Review.<lb/>
Swinnerton, F. A. Swinnerton: an<lb/>
autobiography. 1936, Doubleday.<lb/>
Van Doren. Carl. Three worlds.<lb/>
1936, Harper.<lb/>
Wald, Lillian I). Windows on<lb/>
Henry Street. 1934, Little.<lb/>
Yeats. W. B. cd. The Oxford<lb/>
book of modern English verse, 1900-<lb/>
1935. 1936, Oxford University.<lb/>
G<lb/>
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Joan Craw -<lb/>
Wm. Pi<lb/>
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