<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038059_0001"/>
Welcome Freshmen<lb/>
Homecoming Alumnae<lb/>
-<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
OCTOBER 23<lb/>
Ihe<lb/>
EAST CARtf&amp;t<lb/>
!?!<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
GET ACQUAINTED<lb/>
FRESHMEN<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;kSC6LLEGE<lb/>
VOLUME XIV<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1937<lb/>
NUMBER 1<lb/>
COLLEGE FACULTY<lb/>
IS INCREASED BY<lb/>
TEN ADDITIONS<lb/>
Vacancies Created in Many<lb/>
Departments<lb/>
MISS NORTON TO RESUME<lb/>
WORK IN THE PHYSICAL<lb/>
EDUCATION DEPARTMENT<lb/>
President Leon R. Meadows<lb/>
Alexander to Be Chairman of;<lb/>
Physical Education<lb/>
icufty is consider-<lb/>
r that of last, due<lb/>
lily increasing stu-<lb/>
to a number of<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
nil<lb/>
he<lb/>
!t<lb/>
G<lb/>
a ma r in<lb/>
ered. Mr.<lb/>
aring com-<lb/>
Ph.D. in<lb/>
eorce Pea-<lb/>
. u . I enn<lb/>
the department. <lb/>
? from a similar i<lb/>
Memorial ITnH<lb/>
i h<lb/>
Ided<lb/>
nil I'l<lb/>
rersity,<lb/>
Pt far<lb/>
the US<lb/>
1 Will M<lb/>
.D. from<lb/>
has been<lb/>
ulty. Dr.<lb/>
hemistry.<lb/>
m as re-<lb/>
1 Chemi-<lb/>
Homecoming Program<lb/>
11:00?Meeting in Austin<lb/>
Auditorium (short meeting).<lb/>
Luncheon ? Following pro-<lb/>
gram in Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
Afternoon?Football game<lb/>
and dancing schedule.<lb/>
Note?Be sure to write if at-<lb/>
tending Luncheon.<lb/>
DR. L. R.<lb/>
SHIP YWCA<lb/>
"Life's Golden Candlesticks" Is<lb/>
Subject of Message<lb/>
COURSE IN SCOUT Norman Cordon Thrills<lb/>
Large Audience With a<lb/>
 DelightfulPerformance<lb/>
AT COLLEGE HERI<lb/>
CLASSES TO BE HELD<lb/>
IN AUSTIN BUILDING<lb/>
Dr. Hilldrup To Be Chairman of<lb/>
Scout Leadership Training<lb/>
Life's Golden Candlesticks<lb/>
the theme of an inspiring me<lb/>
brought to the students of<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College at<lb/>
was<lb/>
ssage<lb/>
East<lb/>
Yes-<lb/>
:i. who comes<lb/>
ion at the Uni-<lb/>
his degree of<lb/>
by from that<lb/>
y of Valdosta,<lb/>
i master a de-<lb/>
abody I Jollege,<lb/>
home eeooom-<lb/>
has been teach-<lb/>
llege in Michi-<lb/>
Dr. I K. Meadows<lb/>
(in September 2s T<lb/>
ills! itlltioll.<lb/>
ifiicially welcomed the Freshmen to K.C.T.C.<lb/>
sis is his fourth year as president of this<lb/>
i<lb/>
Br<lb/>
rii.D.<lb/>
Mack;<lb/>
M.A<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
gaget<lb/>
Peab<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
Peab<lb/>
Alar<lb/>
)W11.<lb/>
 University of Chicago, a<lb/>
-t in biology, lakes the place<lb/>
?ience department left vaeant<lb/>
resignation of Miss Jessie<lb/>
and 'Miss Mary Caughey,<lb/>
roni Columbia, substitutes for<lb/>
Lorraine Hunter, who is en-<lb/>
in graduate study at George<lb/>
?iy College this year.<lb/>
W. A. Browne. Ph.D George<lb/>
?? College, follows Mr. Le-<lb/>
Stephan who resigned last<lb/>
spring. Dr. Browne comes from<lb/>
the State Teachers College at<lb/>
N icogdoehes, Texas.<lb/>
Miss Lena Ellis. MJL, Western<lb/>
Kentucky State Teachers College,<lb/>
Bowling Green, Ky takes the place<lb/>
in the commerce department left<lb/>
teant by the resignation of Miss<lb/>
Maude Adams, now at the Woman's<lb/>
("ulleire. Greensboro.<lb/>
Miss Mary 1). Dormer, a graduate<lb/>
of Peabody Conservatory of Music,<lb/>
Baltimore, takes the place of Miss<lb/>
Dora E, Meade. who is on leave of<lb/>
absence from the department of<lb/>
music<lb/>
Miss Parmelia Gwynn, Yanccy-<lb/>
ville, X. C, is substituting in the<lb/>
art department for Dr. Dorothy<lb/>
 Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Freshmen Welcomed<lb/>
By President Meadows<lb/>
 OHM DBEST<lb/>
10 BE DISTRIBUTED<lb/>
AGAIN THIS YEAR<lb/>
ler Service Sunday evening, Oetober<lb/>
3, by President Leon It. Meadow<lb/>
"I have chosen a figurative sub-<lb/>
ject began Dr. Meadows, "from<lb/>
which I hope to draw literal truths<lb/>
Taking his topic from the twelfth<lb/>
verse of the first chapter of Revela-<lb/>
tion, he compared the seven golden<lb/>
candlesticks to life?each<lb/>
stick standing for a trait that makes<lb/>
a strong character.<lb/>
First, he spoke of light of in-<lb/>
telligence; second, the light of free-<lb/>
dom; third, the light of courage,<lb/>
which is made possible only through<lb/>
the acquisition of the second quality :<lb/>
fourth, the light of tolerance; fifth,<lb/>
the light of industry; sixth, the light<lb/>
of fellowman. through which one at-<lb/>
tains the highest goals of Life; and<lb/>
seventh, the light of service.<lb/>
"Serve those who want to serve<lb/>
you and through that you will learn<lb/>
to serve others, stated the speaker.J ,<lb/>
' ce'<lb/>
candle-1??? "? <lb/>
work with Scout<lb/>
J<lb/>
"When a superintendent<lb/>
employs a man to teach<lb/>
i aese seven cnaraeteriSties,<lb/>
eluded Dr. Meadows, "are the<lb/>
con-<lb/>
even<lb/>
qualities which<lb/>
character1<lb/>
mak(<lb/>
a<lb/>
September 28 Given Over To<lb/>
Freshmen Registration<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
year's work on<lb/>
President L. !<lb/>
Week' opened this<lb/>
September 28, when<lb/>
. Meadows gave a<lb/>
welcome to the throng of fresh-<lb/>
men who had been arriving since<lb/>
Sunday. These students gathered<lb/>
MENTAL FATIQUE TO<lb/>
BE RELIEVED BY MASK<lb/>
in the Robert H. Wright Building.pictures of Interesting Events<lb/>
at 2 :30 for their first formal meet- Worth Money<lb/>
ing. After his words of welcome, -<lb/>
President Meadows introduced the <lb/>
r  i i tA tt t t Each week, the Teco Echo's pic-<lb/>
facultv members, and Dr. it. ,1. Me- . ?? ? -?  ? , r- ?<lb/>
jture magazine. Collegiate Digest,<lb/>
Ginnis explained the plan of faculty! win be rpad by thp studl,nts of Emt<lb/>
counsellors, a plan of recent years j Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
The Collegiate Digest will present<lb/>
picture news of important and un-<lb/>
IMPROVEMENTS<lb/>
OVER THE SUMMER<lb/>
Pavement Now Extends To<lb/>
Training School<lb/>
under which each freshman has his<lb/>
own adviser who takes a personal<lb/>
interest in his problems.<lb/>
In his address, President Meadows<lb/>
welcomed the freshmen to Green-<lb/>
ville, to the campus, and its privi-<lb/>
leges, to the body of students they<lb/>
will become part of, and to the op-<lb/>
portunities lying before them for<lb/>
sound work and preparation for<lb/>
special service in life.<lb/>
President Meadow's chief counsel<lb/>
was to utilize time well, observe the<lb/>
college regulations, and be loyal to<lb/>
the institution in every way, exer-<lb/>
cise courage in all things, and strive<lb/>
to develop character along with de-<lb/>
velopment in knowledge.<lb/>
Since last spring numerous im-<lb/>
provements and repairs have taken<lb/>
place on the campus which will<lb/>
better the living conditions and give<lb/>
more conveniences to both students<lb/>
and faculty.<lb/>
The paving, which was started<lb/>
last year, is now completed and hard<lb/>
surface roads extend around the in-<lb/>
firmary, to the Training School,<lb/>
and from the back campus to Eighth<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Extensive renovations have also<lb/>
taken place in numerous halls and<lb/>
other buildings on the campus.<lb/>
DR. FLANAGAN MARRIES<lb/>
RUTH E. PICKELSIMER<lb/>
Were Married in Georgetown,<lb/>
Kentucky<lb/>
usual developments in education,<lb/>
science, sports, extra-curricular ac-<lb/>
tivities, faculty and student projects,<lb/>
and the hundreds of other activities<lb/>
that make up the college community.<lb/>
ECTC students are urged to send<lb/>
in their pictures of important and<lb/>
interesting events on the campus to:<lb/>
Collegiate Press, Box 472, Madison,<lb/>
Wisconsin. Three dollars is paid<lb/>
for each photo accepted for publica-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Minneapolis, Minn. ? (ACT) ?<lb/>
A new oxygen mask to protect<lb/>
mental workers from fatigue caused<lb/>
by tliinking was described to the<lb/>
American Psychological Associa-<lb/>
tion by Dr. Arthur G. Bills of the<lb/>
University of Cincinnati.<lb/>
Delivering to the breather a<lb/>
combination of about 50 per cent<lb/>
pure oxygen mixed with air, the<lb/>
mask's use cuts in half the number<lb/>
of pauses per minute that come to<lb/>
persons doing brain work. These<lb/>
pauses are the result of mental<lb/>
fatigue?the brain taking a short<lb/>
rest.<lb/>
The new oxygen mask is the final<lb/>
step in a series of experiments<lb/>
which appear to prove the theory<lb/>
that fatigue is not due so much to<lb/>
the brain becoming "tired" as to<lb/>
failure of the blood to supply all<lb/>
the oxygen the brain wanted. Dr.<lb/>
Bills has been testing this idea for<lb/>
several years.<lb/>
A brain institute which will make<lb/>
Washington the world capital for<lb/>
the study of the brains of animals<lb/>
and humans is being established at<lb/>
Georgetown University.<lb/>
The elementary course in SCOUi<lb/>
leadership training to be offered at<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College will<lb/>
consist ot a study of the organiza-<lb/>
tion and management of the Scout<lb/>
troop, and of the Scout's place in<lb/>
the community.<lb/>
All the boys of the college are in-<lb/>
vited to attend, and find out more<lb/>
about Scout work. There are more<lb/>
than 2,100 Scouts in twenty-two<lb/>
counties of Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Prospective teachers should be pre-<lb/>
pared to work with these boys.<lb/>
School superintendents bow real-<lb/>
ize the importance of this training<lb/>
and are asking for men who will<lb/>
Superintendent<lb/>
II. Rose, of Creenviile. said<lb/>
recently<lb/>
of cliOi<lb/>
in the schools over which he has<lb/>
jurisdiction, he wants not only a<lb/>
man who is good in the classroom.<lb/>
but also a man who is a community<lb/>
asset. The people of America have<lb/>
now come to regard scouting as the<lb/>
greatest educational force for good<lb/>
in the nation, outside of the school<lb/>
system. Therefore, a good school<lb/>
man who knows something about<lb/>
ut leadership will usually re-<lb/>
tbe call over.the man<lb/>
knows nothing about scouting.<lb/>
too, learning how to become a<lb/>
leader is somewhat of an t<lb/>
tion in itself<lb/>
Speaking along the same line.<lb/>
D. IT. Conley, Superintendent of<lb/>
Pitt County Schools, has said that<lb/>
"In the training of men who ex-<lb/>
pect to take school positions, it is<lb/>
very necessary that they be trained<lb/>
in fields other than actual class-<lb/>
room work. It has been my ex-<lb/>
perience that most communities de-<lb/>
sire young men who can not only<lb/>
teach boys and girls in the class-<lb/>
room, but who can also be leaders<lb/>
in community life outside of the<lb/>
school.  In recent years we have<lb/>
had many calls for men to serve as<lb/>
Scout Masters in connection with<lb/>
their school work. Therefore, in<lb/>
employing assistant principals ant<lb/>
coaches for our schools, we endeavor<lb/>
to get men who will take an active<lb/>
leadership in scout work. I think,<lb/>
therefore, it would be a good idea<lb/>
for teacher-training insitutions to<lb/>
emphasize the development of quali-<lb/>
fication for leadership in activities<lb/>
other than classroom teaching<lb/>
In order that such training might<lb/>
be available to the students, the<lb/>
meetings will be held on Thursday<lb/>
evenings at 7 :30 in room 211 Austin<lb/>
Building. At each meeting, a special<lb/>
speaker will talk for about thirty<lb/>
Metropolitan Opera Singer Gives<lb/>
Excellent Performance in<lb/>
Robert H. Wright Building<lb/>
VOICE ?H0WN TO BE ONE<lb/>
OF POWER AND BEAUTY<lb/>
Cordon is<lb/>
Norman<lb/>
ritone ot<lb/>
iat ion<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
audit nee<lb/>
Native of<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Eastern<lb/>
("ordon,<lb/>
the Met<lb/>
.<lb/>
tar -<lb/>
politan Op<lb/>
nativi<lb/>
delighted<lb/>
of il.<lb/>
:Il<lb/>
pi<lb/>
ege " pie,<lb/>
and visitors from<lb/>
hen he a ppeared on <lb/>
-day night, October<lb/>
:i a<lb/>
NORMAN CORDON<lb/>
FRESHMEN ARE<lb/>
WELCOMED TO<lb/>
COLLEGE BY YWCA<lb/>
Entertain the Newcomers at the<lb/>
"Y" Hut<lb/>
in <lb/>
Ml<lb/>
?V at<lb/>
the ?,<lb/>
Jo ,<lb/>
ins program,<lb/>
es of material<lb/>
to be one of p,<lb/>
who<lb/>
hell,<lb/>
cotlt<lb/>
uca-<lb/>
The Young Woman<lb/>
Association, under tie<lb/>
of its president,<lb/>
('hnsl tan<lb/>
leadership<lb/>
Elizabeth Cope-<lb/>
ongi<lb/>
H<lb/>
land from Ahoskie, began its active<lb/>
work for the year during Freshman<lb/>
dith<lb/>
ma ?<lb/>
mat<lb/>
Pur<lb/>
call-<lb/>
art.<lb/>
1 that opened tin- series f<lb/>
a Called back again ai<lb/>
by storms of applause M<lb/>
n responded gener, . Ij<lb/>
- He accompani, ! hima<lb/>
?ee of them.<lb/>
('ordon gave his audieu<lb/>
Variety in his nmtrrum hi<lb/>
arious typ<lb/>
I his voice<lb/>
?auty.<lb/>
group of popular numbers<lb/>
li, with which the sin<lb/>
his program, probably led<lb/>
with the audience,<lb/>
preferred the four<lb/>
or one of the early group<lb/>
? first, and perhaps the mo<lb/>
1' group, because of its d<lb/>
toi a pur quality of tone, w;<lb/>
up of numbers from Eland<lb/>
it<lb/>
ill<lb/>
in<lb/>
in<lb/>
though<lb/>
"Art<lb/>
11.<lb/>
aid<lb/>
l.ullv. and Scarlatti. The<lb/>
me<lb/>
were<lb/>
application ot great<lb/>
Civen<lb/>
1a<lb/>
til.<lb/>
September <lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
The friends of Dr. Beecher Flana-<lb/>
gan of the Social Science Depart-<lb/>
ment will be interested to learn of<lb/>
his marriage to Ruth E. Pickel-<lb/>
simer of Greenville.<lb/>
The ceremony was performed in<lb/>
Georgetown, Kentucky on Septem-<lb/>
ber 20.<lb/>
Mrs. Flanagan was a graduate<lb/>
of ECTC, and is at present teaching<lb/>
in Smithfield in the Science De-<lb/>
partment.<lb/>
She is a niece of Mr. P. W. Pickel-<lb/>
simer of the Geography Depart-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Graduates of 1936-37 reported<lb/>
placed to date, September 23, 1937.<lb/>
A.B. Graduates ? Mary Lee<lb/>
Penny, Buekhorn; Virginia Pierce,<lb/>
married; Julia Pollock, Comfort;<lb/>
Lydia Purser, Rocky Mount; Lucile<lb/>
Raines, Cleveland; Josephine<lb/>
Banes, Barnesville; Margaret Rawls,<lb/>
Smithfield; Mabel Rich, Herring;<lb/>
Nellie Ricks, Mingo; Martha D.<lb/>
Rogers, Deep Run; Julia E. Rouse,<lb/>
Long Creek-Grady; Nannie Row-<lb/>
lett, Beulaville Susan Rose, Aurora.<lb/>
Betty Salisbury, Long Creek-<lb/>
Grady; Mrs. Eunice Sanders, marT<lb/>
ried; Martha Scoville Louisburg;<lb/>
Nettie Brett Sewell, Rich Square;<lb/>
Mrs. Elsie Simpson, Lemon<lb/>
Springs; Francis Sinclair, Saratoga;<lb/>
Louise Sitterson, Pinetops; William<lb/>
Sledge, Roxboro; Alice H. Smith,<lb/>
Woodleaf; Julia L. Smith, Pike-<lb/>
ville; Ruth Smith, Falkland; Viola<lb/>
Smith, married; Frances B. Spain-<lb/>
hour, Mineral Springs; Inez<lb/>
Stevens, South Mill<lb/>
11118.<lb/>
Lois Strickland, Four Oaks;<lb/>
Nora B. Stephenson, Powells Point;<lb/>
Durward Stowe, Greenville; Mar-<lb/>
garet Stroud, Gaston; Ruth Styron,<lb/>
Micro; Camille Swindell, Louis-<lb/>
burg; Hazel Tart, Piney Grove; Mil-<lb/>
dred Tatum, White Oak; Jennie G.<lb/>
Taylor, Whiteville; Evelyn Thomp-<lb/>
son, New Hope; William Tolson,<lb/>
Ruffin; Louise Tuten, Wagram;<lb/>
Margaret Walker, Pantego.<lb/>
Catherine Wallace, Winterville;<lb/>
Nola Walters, Weeksville; Margaret<lb/>
Warren, Rowland; Effie L. Watson,<lb/>
Falkland; Florence Wells, Old<lb/>
Dock; Blanche White, Winterville;<lb/>
Margaret Whitehead, married;<lb/>
Thelma Whitehead, Belvoir; George<lb/>
S. Willard, Jr Chas. C. Coon;<lb/>
Edna Williams, Union; Elease Wil-<lb/>
liams, Falkland; Dorothy Wilson,<lb/>
Belhaven; Mary Helen Wilson,<lb/>
Goldsboro; Annie E. Windley,<lb/>
Kenansville; Marion C. Wood,<lb/>
Goldsboro; Ruth C. Wood, Parkton;<lb/>
Sara M. Woodard, Smithfield; Vir-<lb/>
ginia Woodbury, Leland; Agnes<lb/>
Worthington, Long Creek-Grady;<lb/>
Annie Worthington, Grimesland.<lb/>
Two-Year Graduates ? Ida Lane<lb/>
Bass, Mt. Pleasant; Annie L. Britt,<lb/>
Piney Grove; Grace Burrus, Hat-<lb/>
teras; Ruby Cone, Harris; Lucile<lb/>
Cox, Happy Home; Mary B.<lb/>
Edmondson, Everetts; Lucy Fouts,<lb/>
Busick; Mrs. Connie Hargett, White<lb/>
Oak; Eleanor Harrington, Merry<lb/>
Hill; Mattie Ipock, Trenton; Wil-<lb/>
lie Jackson, Gaton; Edna E. Kirby,<lb/>
Meadow; Marceline Langston, Pine<lb/>
Level; Joseph Marsh, Maury;<lb/>
Nyda Robinson, Clement; Louise<lb/>
Shackelf ord, Walstonburg; Ellen<lb/>
Stewart, Boone Trail.<lb/>
Graduates of 1936-37 reported<lb/>
placed to date, October 1, 1937.<lb/>
A.B. Graduates ? Margaret<lb/>
Garner, Shoals High School; Melva<lb/>
Johnson, Penderlea; Kathleen<lb/>
Robertson, Knotts Island; Virginia<lb/>
Claris Smith, Wilson's Mills High<lb/>
School.<lb/>
week. On Monday<lb/>
and Tuesday, September z?, the<lb/>
members of the senior cabinet, wear-<lb/>
ing their blue and white badges, met<lb/>
the new students at the trains and<lb/>
buses to welcome ami direct them<lb/>
to the- College, and to help them<lb/>
find their living quarters.<lb/>
The association opened the "Hut<lb/>
for parties for the Freshmen on<lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday nights.<lb/>
The "Hut which has been re-1<lb/>
decorated since last year with new j<lb/>
curtains and rugs, was attractive-<lb/>
ly decorated with fall flowers. Be-<lb/>
 fore an open fire the new comers<lb/>
joined in playing "get-acquainted'5<lb/>
games and dancing.<lb/>
On Wednesday, from ten to four<lb/>
and Thursday from four to six, the<lb/>
Association held Open House in the<lb/>
"Hut" for the new students.<lb/>
Many towns of North Carolina are<lb/>
represented on the cabinet of the<lb/>
YWCA. The members are: Eliza-<lb/>
beth Copeland, president, from<lb/>
Ahoskie; Marie Dawon, vice pres-<lb/>
ident, from Alliance; Prue Xewby,<lb/>
secretary, from Hertford; Georgia<lb/>
Suggs, treasurer, from Hookerton;<lb/>
Rebecca Watson, from Jonesboro;<lb/>
Kathleen Strickland from Nash-<lb/>
ville; Susan Evans from St. Pauls;<lb/>
Louise Britt from Colerain; Maggie<lb/>
Crumpler from Fayetteville; Edna<lb/>
Earl Perry from Louisburg; Cather-<lb/>
ine Cheek from Graham; Fannie<lb/>
Brewer from Clarksville, Tennessee.<lb/>
ly to please the most<lb/>
musically inclined mem<lb/>
singer<lb/>
ritieal<lb/>
ot the<lb/>
of the audience.<lb/>
Two numbers from Gounod's Faust<lb/>
gave Mi. Cordon opportunity to<lb/>
sing in the role in which he L per-<lb/>
haps most famous?that of Mephisto-<lb/>
pheles.<lb/>
The Cincinnati Post said of him<lb/>
when he appeared in that role in<lb/>
Cincinnati: "Cordon as Mephisto-<lb/>
pheles rated the audience's choicest<lb/>
applause of bouquets, stopping the<lb/>
show time after time The Cin-<lb/>
cinnati Enquirer commented : "His<lb/>
Mephistopheles  is an extra-<lb/>
ordinary one, which the audknee<lb/>
cheered to the roof<lb/>
Selections given by Hans<lb/>
Heidemann, Mr. Cordon's ac-<lb/>
complished accompanist were also<lb/>
well received.<lb/>
1 hough Mr. Cordon has no! ap-<lb/>
peared often here in his home sec-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
ga :<lb/>
cin<lb/>
the<lb/>
kej<lb/>
MISS JESSIE MACK<lb/>
MARRIED THIS SUMMER<lb/>
Marries Anthony J. Loudis of New<lb/>
York City<lb/>
The friends of Miss Je9sie Mack,<lb/>
who resigned last spring from the<lb/>
faculty of the science department<lb/>
at the college, will be interested<lb/>
to learn of her marriage in August<lb/>
to Mr. Anthony J. Loudis of New<lb/>
York City.<lb/>
The ceremony was performed in<lb/>
New York.<lb/>
Mr. Loudis is a member of the<lb/>
music department of the University<lb/>
of Delaware at Newark, Del.<lb/>
They are at home on Orchard<lb/>
Drive, Newark.<lb/>
Miss Mack had taught for three<lb/>
years at the college and had made<lb/>
a host of friends on the campus and<lb/>
in the town.<lb/>
ince the days of his fame be-<lb/>
, he in well known in operatic<lb/>
lea in all the leading cities of<lb/>
country. In fact, he has been<lb/>
t so busy in his engagement1<lb/>
with the Detroit Civic Opera, the St.<lb/>
Louis Grand Opera Company, The<lb/>
Chi-ago Grand Opera Company and<lb/>
the famous New York Metropolitan<lb/>
Opera Association that he has had<lb/>
little time for tours.<lb/>
He has recently completed a ;39<lb/>
week radio engagement, and returned<lb/>
from a South American trip, just<lb/>
in time to reach Greenville for tho<lb/>
ECTC concert. He returned at ence<lb/>
to New York to fly by sleeper plane<lb/>
to an engagement in grand opera in<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Notice!<lb/>
Beginning Sunday, October<lb/>
3, J. D. "Swede" Alexan-<lb/>
der, Athletic Director, East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College,<lb/>
will take charge of the Sunday<lb/>
afternoon sports review over<lb/>
radio station WFTC, Kinston,<lb/>
N. C, at 3:15 p.m.<lb/>
Mr. Alexander, who for the<lb/>
past 20 years has been con-<lb/>
nected with interscholastic and<lb/>
intercollegiate athletics as<lb/>
player, coach and director,<lb/>
will review the week's sports<lb/>
from every angle.<lb/>
Station WFTC invites all<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina to tune<lb/>
in for the E.C.T.C. Sports Re-<lb/>
view next Sunday at 3:15 p.m.<lb/>
,y Amna<lb/>
<pb facs="00038059_0002"/><lb/>
 .<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
,S<lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
October 9, 1937<lb/>
A,<lb/>
The TEGQ ECHO<lb/>
BAST (MJtOLlAi. TMGHMS COLLEGE<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Stud-nxls of East Caroli<lb/>
Teachers College.<lb/>
Una<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
C, Ray Pbuettb<lb/>
M uuorie Watsos<lb/>
. Kditur-hi-Chief<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
COLLEGE FACULTY<lb/>
WORK AND PLAY<lb/>
Many Study While Others Visit<lb/>
I! UJVE1 11 i.<lb/>
Leo Bt rks<lb/>
I : b m;snk Cheek<lb/>
ASSOClA IF EDITORS<lb/>
Georgia Sii<lb/>
Sabah Ann Maxwii.i,<lb/>
I'atm Midvrvm:<lb/>
Lester UimxuorK<lb/>
VDYER'l<lb/>
ffAsrci Page<lb/>
L i1. is ReBabkkb<lb/>
. 'UM. E V A N S<lb/>
V; MANAGERS<lb/>
F.tuki. Lee Bykd<lb/>
l.i 111.1.1: Johnson<lb/>
Caboxyjs Lamb<lb/>
1:<lb/>
? u. Staff: LaRue Mooring. Mary Williams. Ina<lb/>
Ma Pierce, Ruth Creekmoore, Mable Owens, Ethel Padgett,<lb/>
Dorothy Hollar, Eodie Hodges, Herbert Wilkerson, Jeter<lb/>
Oakley, Geraldine Harris. Ruth Phillips.<lb/>
Subsc<lb/>
Posto<lb/>
1 ?:<lb/>
Prio<lb/>
$1.00 per College Year<lb/>
Numbers 68, 182<lb/>
Room 25<lb/>
Dean of Women<lb/>
MISS ANNIE L. MORTON<lb/>
Entered as seeond-elass matter December o 1025, at the V. S.<lb/>
Postoffiee, Greenville, N. ( under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
1937 Member 1938<lb/>
ftssociatod Colteftiate Press<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Golle6iate Di6est<lb/>
The members of the faculty spent<lb/>
the summer months doing various<lb/>
interesting things, some studying.<lb/>
others teachingin the ECTC summer<lb/>
school or somewhere else, while still<lb/>
other rested.<lb/>
President .Meadows remained oa<lb/>
the campus must of the time, super-<lb/>
vising the many improvements being<lb/>
made in buildings and grounds.<lb/>
There were representatives from<lb/>
the faculty at numerous universi-<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Three members were at Teachers<lb/>
College,Columbia. They were Miss<lb/>
Clark. Miss Williams, and Miss<lb/>
Johnson, who completed her work<lb/>
for her M.A. degree.<lb/>
Miss Iloltelaw and Mr. Deal<lb/>
studied at New York University,<lb/>
where Miss Holtzclaw completed<lb/>
her preliminaries for Dr. degree.<lb/>
Mr. Wright studied at the Uni-<lb/>
verit v ot ('hicago.<lb/>
Mr Picklesimer and Miss Hughes<lb/>
studied at Peabody College, where across tins negro dance a<lb/>
Mi- Hughes completed work for men!?Danoe begins at eight<lb/>
her M.A. degree. u u,is wh.n voui<lb/>
K A ,?i L, slated for production. . . . Pean<lb/>
DOWN State's and Alpha Chi Kh? Fred<lb/>
d p n a n w a YiWariag anl (ianAT"1" 'v "n!v<lb/>
D K J r J Tf r 1 j bright spots tn the long Varsity<lb/>
 show . ? - originally, that picture<lb/>
By FRED WITTNER and KEL was to be based on the WiacoMin<lb/>
y anAMS Haresfoot Club's unique motto, AH<lb/>
t ? , iritnt, Press Our Girls Are Men. Vet Everyone's<lb/>
(A.socated (ollg 1H p peder80n<lb/>
Correspondent-) If ?? r .<lb/>
RACKET-SMASHEB ???? H' freimmirj imrvej toi<lb/>
Buater Thomas E. DeweyItan, Warner suteequen<lb/>
has acquired "le nomme de guerre writing by Iff. Y. .? Jerrj<lb/>
rfI"3E Enemy No. 1 to New York and others produced the final result.<lb/>
Racketeers. Obtaining hi- B.A. at<lb/>
Dean of Men<lb/>
Michigan 23) am<lb/>
1 his law degree A X1AV DYNASTY<lb/>
at Columbia F. ('25), Dewey served Two Princeton men have entered<lb/>
as F S At. D. A. and practiced ihe picture magazine held to chal-<lb/>
privately before Cornell's N V. lenge the ultra-successful reign of<lb/>
Governor Lehman called him in t" Yale-inspired Time, Inc. Alpha<lb/>
play "Bogey Man' to Metropolitan Delta Phi's Henry Luce and the late<lb/>
gangsters. In hi- two years a- Briton Hadden, B.M.O.C. of tl<lb/>
  1 o?i?r hp wined out lli ,?!? f 'o. Jrr-r launched Tinn<lb/>
' special prosecutor, be wip<lb/>
loan sharks, Lueiano's vice ring, and in L923, following it m<lb/>
the restaurant, poultry, policy and years with the equallj<lb/>
I baking racket Now running for Fortune, "March ol rim<lb/>
New York. lonvicted thugs Now Nassau's 'h;<lb/>
D. A. in<lb/>
won't believe be once<lb/>
-am: solo in Lj<lb/>
W l-i'liee<lb/>
Holm<lb/>
tad Lift<lb/>
. Payne and A<lb/>
1 '32 ). iniectei<lb/>
Lookin' Over<lb/>
the<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
With C. Ray Pruette<lb/>
the Protestant Episcopal Church of fresh blood into the Street &amp; Smii<lb/>
St. Matthew's and St. Timothy's. 'pulp group, have transformed Pi<lb/>
THE LIGHTER SIDE<lb/>
t?1 a ? ? k.<lb/>
DR. REBARE<lb/>
Appiers" mav<lb/>
?lit<lb/>
Highlight of the Week Oil 1 ItOH d- <lb/>
way was the long-delayed opening ol QHATTER<lb/>
Ithe new super-hydraulically-coiossalj fc Carolina<lb/>
I into a general picture magazine in<lb/>
a three-way circulation war with legiana s<lb/>
and Iowa's Lot I: ? among<lb/>
fav<lb/>
his summer, y<lb/>
? dropped to thii I<lb/>
Johnny Trotter, college crew. S<lb/>
international Casmo, with Michi-l Qu viih lUru cheese radio mQO&amp; var;(,v <lb/>
gan's George Olsen waving the baton gh nU UMy an,ing mor? Inajoritv of t . ?<lb/>
your columnist came over bis smooth-sweet hand, the best g. Un havin 1 uit(l njs ?gwr3g? was <lb/>
dvertise- of three musical crews playing for jn(qiU for Gon2afft8 Bing estine to note th<lb/>
 dancing tli<lb/>
ere. . . . Maurice Evan<lb/>
Ci<lb/>
ov in<lb/>
'Pennies from Heaven standard turn<lb/>
Tin<lb/>
ee program am<lb/>
o clocK ,<lb/>
I returned to the boards for a repeat . .<lb/>
Mi-e- Coates and Wahl .pent  ' , "?'? y  rl,l.u, "f 1llis'iurh1 ' directed at a college audience will<lb/>
i vi. - ? honey let's go home. Richard II. . ? ? Messrs. Shubert , ?   T t<lb/>
eht weeks at Northwestern L m- ? r , '   ,   -i continue on the air this falilack<lb/>
" I he Show I- On with-  , . , .<lb/>
i Oakie revive1- hi<lb/>
TO THE FRESHMEN<lb/>
ver-ity where they could see the<lb/>
"blue water and white sailboats" on<lb/>
: Lake Michigan. Later they visited<lb/>
two former ECTC teachers, Miss<lb/>
Catherine Cassidy, in Cleveland,<lb/>
Ohio, and Miss Bonnwit in Yan-<lb/>
i wart. Ohio.<lb/>
Mi-s Grigsby enjoyed courses at ?,(,rs 0Hj ,on'r know<lb/>
University of Wisconsin and en-<lb/>
Mary had a little watch.<lb/>
She swallowed it, it's gOBe,<lb/>
And every time that Mary walks,<lb/>
Time marches on!<lb/>
Note: Thev tell me time stag-<lb/>
 rejuvenate<lb/>
new cast including the Howard<lb/>
'College<lb/>
F<lb/>
Brothers and York and Ki<lb/>
for a<lb/>
month's trvout before putting u ???? , ,<lb/>
Varsity Show emanates ?<lb/>
the road<lb/>
it on<lb/>
other worthwhile Lets<lb/>
feasor Goodman continuing to lay I College Faculty Is Increased<lb/>
it in the groove . . . the Friday night By Ten Add:<lb/>
ie road . . . otner worinwniie oeia  ? i 1 1<lb/>
 i ii 'different campus each week, ami<lb/>
now on tour which you may be able  .   . ni -xr ? . <lb/>
. . , . , '  .  " e i North arolma s Hal Kemp retain-<lb/>
to catch include the Hart-Kaufman<lb/>
Easl Carolina Teachers College is the students' college. The most im  <lb/>
e , ,i ? .i t i i ti,? f i, ioyed seeing the beautiful city of ,  , i. i -<lb/>
portant representation of the study body is the freshman class. J he treli J ? ' ? ? . gy the By, I saw Ruth agle<lb/>
' , ? , ,r, Madison while Mis INewell studied ? ?<lb/>
on  have four years of college life before them to do as they please. v bat Cornell ' tn's summer. She began teaching at<lb/>
 to do while in college may determine their worth in terms; M; QTmm stn,iied at the Chi- J PolksviBe, and says, "she has her<lb/>
ir; - ity of North Carolina and Miss ; little darlings eating out of her<lb/>
?You Can't Take It With You<lb/>
'Tovarich" and "Yes, My Darlim<lb/>
'?? his Friday night spot with Alice<lb/>
Fave remaining until the first of t<lb/>
ie<lb/>
year.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
Schnyder, on leave for the<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
Daughter . . . two other musiea .<lb/>
 . , M1 i ? I Eddy Ihichm<lb/>
still holding out here are babes m<lb/>
. Massachusetts l'harms Mrs. Louella<lb/>
M. <lb/>
ens at the Plaza<lb/>
iere in two weeks. . . . Princeton<lb/>
thev pha<lb/>
of life and living. We are glad to greet the freshmen because they bring Yerai,    ,   <lb/>
with them an abundant youth that is exhilarating, and because they stand ; (iolphin studied at Duke University. 1 hand Poor things!<lb/>
on the threshold of life eager to live. May their lives, as well as the<lb/>
college life, be enriched and the opportunity for service hroadene<lb/>
years of mutual understanding and kindly helpfuln<lb/>
Dk. Herbert Rid<lb/>
.  , , ? . here in two weeks.  1 rinceton <lb/>
Arm- ami the new Virginia . . . .  . u ? , ,<lb/>
  . ?? e ?v Brooks Bowman, who penned the<lb/>
tommy Dorseys recording ot xou , , ? ? " <lb/>
, ,  ?  J t i successful triangle' lubtunea, r.at<lb/>
And I Know and (roodtve Jonan, . , ,? , . i.<lb/>
 r i i i of the bun and JLove and a JLnme,<lb/>
"Goodhv from  ; :<lb/>
ell dai<lb/>
Varsity Show, Warner<lb/>
 , iseveral seasons hack, is scrihblini<lb/>
makes swell dancing for anv campus . . .   <lb/>
 0,  . tor the movies . . . ditto Harvard<lb/>
George Peabody College<lb/>
tuting for Miss Eunia<lb/>
Miss McGhee i- on i-av,<lb/>
uate study.<lb/>
Miss LuciH N<lb/>
leave of ahsen<lb/>
tml winter quarter 1937, f<lb/>
M <lb/>
f. ,r<lb/>
. who wa<lb/>
:ng the<lb/>
Y<lb/>
ell as the; Miss GorreU studied piano under  tv Varsitv s!l?u, Warner's t OVM8 ' ; ; 'iltt0 Ilrvr?? ?nd winter quarter 1937, folio .<lb/>
-d by four Conradi at Chatauqua, New York. w&amp;a j oml)arras,e(i t1(. ()?iu.r day distorted version of Hasty Pudding 'U)h.nu 7'('1 w.h" P08 ?Ty an automobile accident in which sh<lb/>
Several members of the faculty j wak(i(1 iu offiJe to Mask &amp; Wig, Black Friar Waa-Mu ?? ? v'hu" tlU ari "Iwm injured, ha- recovered and re-<lb/>
ivl)? nuight at various institutions. Dr. -it ? ? i i et al has started a revival of college B ' ' turned this fall to resume her worl<lb/>
AKkEK. &amp; : r t mv ,naiii was waiting calmly  .  ?  cu-rv- ri-r  i ? t j<lb/>
olay taught in the science depart? ? - Imusicalsm meina irv. Paramount bWUMtr-vH 1 : m the phvsieal education depart<lb/>
, ? ment at Duke University j Dr. Bang- in Hnc, when a little freshman I gniversai each having one Died-in-the-wool "Shaggers" andlment.<lb/>
rseives tor , visitinic Professor of English looked at me and said, "wefl, what???<lb/>
a<lb/>
provi K : ;<lb/>
made for<lb/>
have eomi<lb/>
winter.<lb/>
dining i<lb/>
infin . ? .<lb/>
a wel.<lb/>
itn<lb/>
to be congratulated upon your opportunitv to fit yourselves for ,  .? . ?? . ,<lb/>
- ' ? ?' ? ? ban was visiting Professor oi English looked at me and sai<lb/>
isefulness to your fellowmen: the state of North Carolina hasLf thl. Cniversity of Alabama; Mr.L0 you want, squirt<lb/>
?: with excellenl facilities for this purpose; provision has been Tabor, at Peabody College and Miss '<lb/>
the phvsieal well-being of those who live on the campus: yon Notion in the demonstration school; <lb/>
1 ? .  ? ?. . rp htt I J wonder whether 1 hidasti runs or<lb/>
hich are well lighted and. in  l niversity of Cennessee. -Miss,<lb/>
, ? . i-i ?? i Frowning wa- on the faculty at.wa'k-<lb/>
meals which are served in beautiful<lb/>
1937-38 FRESHMEN DIRECTORY<lb/>
Sarah Evans, St. Pauls, father, j lahville, father, mail carrier; Lois j bookkeeper; Dorothy Ann P<lb/>
 real estate agent; Daisy Parker, Co- Willdamson, Kenansviiie, father, simer, father, teacher; Held S<lb/>
ather. farmer; Jacksie Dan- sheriff; Ruth Bray, Elizabeth City, father; Margie Soivev.<lb/>
tleto<lb/>
able and attractive buildings wl<lb/>
I. ,i? 1 l V 1 haVe g '?,? ,<lb/>
lavidson t otlege and after tne closei<lb/>
?; an up-to-date laundry enables yon to keep neat; a modern i ,? i i- ) r Roimvotois i i u , v i<lb/>
i ? ? i ot net woik ana miss naimvacei s j notice that Hampton Koe has<lb/>
?? . physician and nurses, promotes health, while a physical term in Greenville, the two were atL . m. i. r;ru l<lb/>
. tment helps build up a sound body for a trained mind; Crossnore in the mountain ?P a case again! U ho w ,th 1 With L- nnlaii Vall)(,(, t ather mer. <lb/>
a girl! chant; Grace Wood, Vancebnro, er; Eizabeth Mas<lb/>
 father, farmer: Margerite Kone- farmer; Grace Smith. Fu<lb/>
Warsaw, father, farmer; Ella<lb/>
Elm City, father, farmer: Va.sii-<lb/>
.1.<lb/>
father. Texaco Oil Co danie Ev- vertising manager; .Tai<lb/>
Robersonv<lb/>
E "l summer school<lb/>
ied library furnishes approximately 25,tMK) volumes for your Among th<lb/>
profit; a campus that is at all seasons a place of beauty; and faculty were: Dr. Adam Mr. Hen<lb/>
. .i ' i  .i  i . derson, Dr. frank. Dr. Rebarker<lb/>
?et the needs id the students. , ??? ???<lb/>
Dr. McGmnis, Miss Graham, Misi<lb/>
fath.<lb/>
mrn.<lb/>
arm-<lb/>
atii<lb/>
mert<lb/>
ti<lb/>
!eonLst : Dor<lb/>
?runietr emi<lb/>
- ex tlent ly prepared to me<lb/>
naturally arises: what will you do with these opportun- i  i) 'vu<lb/>
You<lb/>
1 (<lb/>
t with false teeth and gay, Warsaw, fattier, farmer; Ella Spring father, farmer; Theodora Mae T<lb/>
walk cm a wooden leg, but you can't Marshall, Washington, father, mer- Blaekwelder, Morganton, father, l sali,<lb/>
? r- j, I  . chant; Sally Mary Mathias Orates, chemical engineer; Mary trances Evelyn<lb/>
ley be properly used bv you or will thev be wasted? Will Mr Cummings Miss Rose Mr ?Ut " g ' '  ' "father, fanner: Helen King. Gates, Ervin, Shelby, father, farmer; Ma- tobaco<lb/>
? that the state of North Carolina i- making in you yield Browning, Dr. Hiilgrup, Mr Hollar, ? ll"n (father, farmer: Effie Lewi Farm- mie Thomas, Earmville, father. Earmer<lb/>
 ?  , ?, ,  ' " , I ?r.m Dr Hnvnoii Mr, i  ville. father, farmer; Qheba Harris, farmer: Larson btephenson, ood- pnetor; Elizabeth<lb/>
r will it be a partial or compel failure! As a mean- ol ? lanagan, i'i. naynes, mrs.<lb/>
? , , ,   Bloxton Dr Snamder Miss Red- 1 sometimes<lb/>
ihzeyour time wisely may I suggest the following: ? i-u<lb/>
 .  , , wine. Mrs. Savage, Miss Hvman. dames Smith does thi<lb/>
your intimate associates with the greatest ot care; much<lb/>
ft1  i ,ii ii<lb/>
er. father.<lb/>
Ven on Ty<lb/>
W illianis.<lb/>
land, father, antique repairer: Grange, father fan<lb/>
M<lb/>
t a<lb/>
father, merchant; Othelia Hearn. fa<lb/>
wonder whether Chapel Hill, father, farmer; Esper<lb/>
Nan Bunn, Spring Hope, father. Marjorie Bamhill, Bethel, father,I Early, Ahoskie<lb/>
ather, Mildred Tavfor. South M<lb/>
lg apple -il" "oiu. OJ<lb/>
li,? PlnmK Mnai i,t' thotto . c ? ? t farmer: Louise Woodard, Kenlv, tanner: Marjorie  ??.<lb/>
,    all!l miss i lumn. mosi Ol inese or throws his hodv out of joint. i . , , ? , ? ? i ? i  . , ? ,  .<lb/>
ss ot failure may be attributed to your response to this in- saw the pageant "The Lost Colony " ' father, merchant; utheha Hearn. tarmer; marjorie W nitenurst, Betn- tanner: Lena Beii Davenport, 1<lb/>
I at Manteo.  ' " .Monroe, father, salesman: Annie el, father, farmer: Myra Godfrey, per. father, farmer; Mary E<lb/>
A travelogue of the experiences of WEATHER?Quite cloudy and wilkerson, Rosboro, father, farm- Jonesboro, father, tax-lister; Julia j Edenton, father, teaeher; Ha<lb/>
the faculty members would be inter- rftiny, my Dears! er; Kathleen Potter. Kelly, father. Rives, Jonesboro, father, merchant; Eneoe, Littleton, father, farm<lb/>
testing on' the movie screen Air garmer; Shelton Quinn, Chinqua- Carrie Mai Mann, Lake Landing. Katherine Hurst, Marines fatf<lb/>
3-?Kngage m some extra-curricu a activities; contacts and experience-   , , , , ? , ! ? t i . i ci: i ,i r: i. rstlu? ?  in i ?ii p?u n ,  , ,?<lb/>
  .  Gulledge could give somethmg about Who know- Marv 1 von Shot- Pm? school teacher; Elizabeth Dick- tamer, doctor; Kuth rowell, Cole- tanner: Helen elverton, B<lb/>
n this way may be of inestimable value to you m later Me. ,i -  r ? j ? ! '<lb/>
   . J (,    -X,A ?ghi nd tate and Alnss, wl, mJx rresi(J(iutonodav!<lb/>
your lite, as quickly as possible, to tlie College commnmty; jSammon, about the mountains ot<lb/>
junctn a.<lb/>
2 Enow your teachers well; associate with them as much as possible;<lb/>
they can and will assist you in many ways.<lb/>
gain<lb/>
4Ad<lb/>
learn the regulation- and keep them; play the game fair; as a person is in Western North Carolina.<lb/>
College, so will he he after College. Atr tiu' l'lost' of til0 summer ses-<lb/>
5 -Waste your money if you must, but do not waste your time; it is :iK M? JenkiK! vi?ite. in ?t<lb/>
 , , '  ii - ?, A ?, , ington itv, at the beach and the,<lb/>
your - valuable asset. Be grateful for the privilege of hard work. Virginia mountains, and Misses1<lb/>
Peesident Leon R. Meadows.<lb/>
will write "Looking over<lb/>
21 Campus"?so adios !<lb/>
Ross and Lewis, in New York.<lb/>
Miss Chariton was in Savannah,<lb/>
WHY NOT MAKE GOOD? Georgia: Miss Wilson, in Durham<lb/>
 . , . , , land Chicago; Miss Ivuvkendahl, in<lb/>
( ontrary to the old adage that opportunity comes only once is the fact K(.utlu.ky. Mks Faison in Xorth<lb/>
that many little opportunities are ours every day. Speaking in the Ian- Carolina Miss Norton in Texas<lb/>
guage of our old schools, we have a (dean slate upon which to write our j Tennessee, and Eastern cities.<lb/>
year record. We stand at the beginning of a new school vear so full of The members of the administra-<lb/>
rich opportunities for each of US. Itiou. staff took their vacations scatter-<lb/>
Ti'i I , r ? i I , d from place to place. Mr. McGin-<lb/>
W hy not purpose to show our parents and friends that we can make ? -t ,? ? T31 ? -d ,<lb/>
 ms visited friends m Blowing Rock<lb/>
good? Why not determine to prove ourselves worthy of the confidence a?d Atlantic Beach, where Miss<lb/>
that friends have in us? A good scholastic standing is very desirable Seovifie spent most of her vacation.<lb/>
and often facilitates our progress after we leave college. But while we Miss Ross visited in Asheville and<lb/>
are about it. it would also be a good thing to make friends, develop points of<lb/>
character such a.s honesty, sincerity, and kindness, and to make our-<lb/>
selves better citizens.<lb/>
Now is the time to start the year right, and if we religiously follow<lb/>
this practice during the school year we will have nothing to regret next<lb/>
June and truly our time will not have spent in vain.<lb/>
en. Weldon, father, supt. of brick rain, father, farmer and salesman; ('reek, father, fanner; Novine<lb/>
work ; Margaret lludgens. Pollocks- Until Mooring. Snow Hill, father. M?.re. Micro, father, farmer; D? r -<lb/>
ville, manager of sawmill: Elizabeth farmer; Alary Helen Boykin, Wil-1 Bialoek, Lueama, father, farmer;<lb/>
This is the last time this writer , Hanvll. Powellsville; Melba dor- tiaiuston. father, merchant; Addie Maud Taylor. Deven. father, mer-<lb/>
the don. Mount Olive, father, farmer Lee Meador, WilBamston, Jimmie chant; JnJia Edwards, Tabor ?<lb/>
and merchant; Elizabeth MeLe- Ward, Rose Hill, father, merchant; J father, railroad agent; Ham<lb/>
more. Roseboro, farmer and mer- Charlie J. Frazzell, Richlands. faHinson. Kanston, father, road ?<lb/>
chant ; Berline Faircloth. Rosebi.ro. ther. farmer: Clayton Guthrie,lgpeetor; Ruth Hardy. LtaGrang<lb/>
father, farmer and merchant; Bet-jHarfeers Island, father, fisherman ; Frances Bunting. Palmvra, fa-<lb/>
sy Morris. Spring Hope, father. Merwin Froz.ell. Richlands. father ther. clerk j Kv Amand. Wilming-<lb/>
elerk; Esther Koo&amp;ce, Richlands. fanner; Dalton Wainwright, ton. father. Coast Line attornev ;<lb/>
father, farmer; Erlene Sawyer tirimesland. father, farmer: Alton, Maisie Castlehurv. Apex, father,<lb/>
Powells Point, father, farmer and; Eugene Mills. Grimeslaml, father farmer: Laura Keith. Apex ; fat! er,<lb/>
merchant; RuBelle Mills. Green-j farmer; Jerome Donaldson, (liven farmer; Mary Elizabeth Parrior,<lb/>
ville. father, farmer: Lillian Iliek-j ville. father, farmer: Ralph Hutch Willard. father, farmer; Eathyrn<lb/>
man, Tabor City; Helen Daven- ington. Rockmgham. fatlier. mail Bland, Teachey. father, merchant;<lb/>
Course In Scout Study<lb/>
Scheduled At College Here<lb/>
made tours of the Smoky Mountains<lb/>
Park, and also visited New York<lb/>
City. Mrs. Owens went to Charlotte<lb/>
and Asheville on visits and Miss<lb/>
Wadlington visited her family in<lb/>
Kentucky. Miss Bowen visited in<lb/>
Portsmouth, Va and also went to<lb/>
New York Citv.<lb/>
THIS IS YOUR CAMPUS!<lb/>
For the next nine months this is going to be your campus and your<lb/>
home. Won't you look after it as such?<lb/>
Our campus was very pretty when we came bustling in last week. The<lb/>
shrubbery was freshly trimmed and worked, the lawns were cut, the<lb/>
paper was all picked up and there were no white streaks across a lawn<lb/>
where there should have been grass. The old campus took a "new slant<lb/>
on life while we were vacationing. Now, won't you help to keep this<lb/>
"new slant" permanent. Won't you be a good citizen and work for its<lb/>
upkeep ?<lb/>
You may by:<lb/>
1. Never throwing paper or other garbage on or near the college grounds.<lb/>
2. Never pick or pull parts of any shrubbery.<lb/>
3. Never "cut campus whatever might be the cause.<lb/>
4. Never deteriorate any of the outdoor furniture placed here for your<lb/>
enjoyment.<lb/>
If you do this, cooperating with the members of the college staff, you<lb/>
may be sure our campus will remain one of the prettiest in our state.<lb/>
Remember, this is your campus!<lb/>
Norman Gordon Thrills<lb/>
Large Audience With A<lb/>
Delightful Performance<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
San Francisco. Then he wiF return<lb/>
to New York for the Metropolitan<lb/>
season.<lb/>
As Mr. Cordon's childhood home<lb/>
was in Washington, M. 0L, he has a<lb/>
wide circle of friends and relatives<lb/>
in this section, many of whom were<lb/>
in the auditorium Tuesday night.<lb/>
This first number of the enter-<lb/>
tainment series will be followed by<lb/>
others that will give equal pleasure<lb/>
and profit to college audiences if<lb/>
plans of the Entertainment Com-<lb/>
mittee, under the Chairmanship of<lb/>
Miss Ola Ross, work out satisf actor-<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
minutes on a helpful topic. The<lb/>
rest of the time will be devoted to<lb/>
discussion and practice.<lb/>
The programs are as follows:<lb/>
October T?The Scouting objec-<lb/>
tive and Program?Judge F. C.<lb/>
Harding.<lb/>
October 14?Troop and Patrol<lb/>
Programs?W. L. Draper of Rocky<lb/>
Mount; The Patrol Chit in scout-<lb/>
ing, V. F. Sechriest of Rocky<lb/>
Mount.<lb/>
October 21?Running the Troop,<lb/>
Brasel Lanier.<lb/>
October 28?The Troop Commit-<lb/>
tee, K. T. Futrelle.<lb/>
November 4?Putting the Out in<lb/>
scouting, Wyatt Brown (this meet-<lb/>
ing may be held at the Boy Scouts'<lb/>
Cabin).<lb/>
November 11?The Good Turn in<lb/>
Scouting in Its Relation to Citizen-<lb/>
ship, Mayor M. K. Blount.<lb/>
November 18?Dangers and Pit-<lb/>
falls of Boys, Dr. Carl L. Adams.<lb/>
November 22?Why Boys Drop<lb/>
Out, Scout Executive Sigwald and<lb/>
Jake Skinner.<lb/>
December 2?An Outdoor Meeting<lb/>
on Hiking.<lb/>
December 9?The Scoutmaster's<lb/>
Opportunity to Produce Men pf<lb/>
Character Trained for Citizenship,<lb/>
Rev. W. A. Ryan.<lb/>
December 16?Final Meeting.<lb/>
I<lb/>
port. Kinston; Wista Covington<lb/>
Dillon: Elizabeth Moody. Dillon:<lb/>
Joyce Campbell. Lueama. father,<lb/>
farmer; Willard Wooten. father.<lb/>
farmer; Maey Woolard, father,<lb/>
banker; Madoline Woolard, father,<lb/>
farmer; William Whitehurst. fa-<lb/>
ther, bookkeeper and salesman.<lb/>
Hilda Tew Clinton, father, farm-<lb/>
er ; Tina Maye Luper, Cary, father,<lb/>
foreman of State Farm; Myra<lb/>
Humphrey, Richlands, father,<lb/>
farmer; Lula Cameron, Cameron,<lb/>
father, farmer; Hilda Pearl Davis,<lb/>
Harkers Island, fishernfan; Evelyn<lb/>
Davis. Beaufort, father, fish dealer;<lb/>
Mary Frances Young, Angier, fa-<lb/>
ther, surveyor; Helen Wdlloughby.<lb/>
Kelford, father, telegraph opera-<lb/>
tor ; Clara Reardon, Smithfield, fa-<lb/>
ther, farmer; Geraldine Bullock,<lb/>
Rocky Mount, father, farmer; Eth-<lb/>
eleen Carr, New Hill, father, farm-<lb/>
er; Waverly Hope D'Orsay, Chap-<lb/>
anoke, father, actor; Nell Sessams<lb/>
Newsame, Hanellsville, father,<lb/>
farmer; Ramona Gillam, Hanells-<lb/>
ville, father, merchant; Rena Ses-<lb/>
same, Aubyville, father; Hazel Cul<lb/>
carrier: Harvey Credle. Stranton.<lb/>
father, farmer.<lb/>
Freshmen from Greenville: Lil-<lb/>
lian Abee. father, filling station op-<lb/>
erator; Edith Allen, father, farm-<lb/>
er; Pearlie Ward Barnhill. father-<lb/>
farmer; Martin Beach, father, to-<lb/>
bacconist; Irma Braxton. father,<lb/>
farmer; Ruby Braxtnn, father,<lb/>
farmer: John David Bridgers. fa-<lb/>
ther, newspaperman; Patricia<lb/>
Brooks, father, tobacco buyer;<lb/>
Kathryn Davenport, father, mer-<lb/>
chant; Jerome Donaldson, father,<lb/>
farmer; Florence Dudley, father,<lb/>
farmer; Mary Eakes. father, fann-<lb/>
er; Margaret G. Hardy, father,<lb/>
farmer j Belva Dare Harris, father,<lb/>
deputy sheriff; Dorothy Harris, fa-<lb/>
ther, sales manager; Hilda Her-<lb/>
ring, father, tobacconist; Elizabeth<lb/>
Holliday; Mary Lorraine Home,<lb/>
father, druggist; Louise Hunter,<lb/>
father, mechanic; Miriam James,<lb/>
father, clerk j Ruby Kittrell, father,<lb/>
farmer; Lucy Jane Mills, father,<lb/>
farmer; Madeline Adams, Grimes-<lb/>
land, father, farmer; Mildred Lan-<lb/>
fley, father, farmer; Rosa Lee Mc<lb/>
Hazel Outlaw, Seven Springs, fa<lb/>
ther, farmer; Bernice Hey, Harris-<lb/>
burg, father, farmer; Vera Ed-<lb/>
monson; Katherine Dobson, Beu-<lb/>
rr'pV" ' , ' xxewci U1- uc ?"?er, iarmer; Kosa L.ee Mc-<lb/>
bert, balcon, father, mail carrierGowan, father, owner of garage<lb/>
Lucy Jane Miols, father, farmer;<lb/>
Eloise Mae Mills, father, farmer;<lb/>
Leon Meadows, father, president of<lb/>
E.C.T.C Gilbert Peele, Jr, father,<lb/>
Dorothy Clark. Lewis. Founta<lb/>
father, farmer: Barbara Smith. At-<lb/>
lantic, father, fisherman; Mary<lb/>
Elizabeth Beasiey. Lumbert-n. fa-<lb/>
ther, farmer: Margaret MeDaniels,<lb/>
Woodland, father, farmer; Nancy<lb/>
X. Reid. Smithfield. father, auto-<lb/>
mobile dealer: Mary Bailey. Selma.<lb/>
father, farmer; Doris Woodard,<lb/>
Kenly, father, farmer; Helen<lb/>
Jones, Smithfield. father, farmer;<lb/>
Myrtle Hopkins. Plymouth, father.<lb/>
farmer; Dorothy E. Hathauky, Col-<lb/>
umbia, father; Eugenia Saunder-<lb/>
son. Lake Landing, father, farmer;<lb/>
Xorma Lee Tyndall, Kinston. fa-<lb/>
ther, farmer Margaret Hardy.<lb/>
Greenville, father, farmer; Earn-<lb/>
estine Hardy, Grimesland, father.<lb/>
farmer; Ruby L. Smith. Winter-<lb/>
ville; Mamie Whaley, Wallace, fa-<lb/>
ther, farmer; Martha Gaskins,<lb/>
Mewborn; Estelle Edwards, New-<lb/>
port ; Eileen Parker Pake, Marshel-<lb/>
bury, father, farmer; Catherine<lb/>
Lowery, Trenton; father, farmer;<lb/>
Jeneva Moore, Stokes, father, farm-<lb/>
er; Martha Washington, Angier,<lb/>
father, farmer; Mildred Briley,<lb/>
Bethel, father, farmer; Bernice<lb/>
Williamson, Cerro-Gordo, father,<lb/>
farmer.<lb/>
Note: The Freshmen Directory to be<lb/>
continued in next<lb/>
October 9, 1937<lb/>
Ale<lb/>
ST A<lb/>
INTE,<lb/>
Photography Oi<lb/>
of Athlet<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
qu<lb/>
i,<lb/>
East<lb/>
to '?<lb/>
&amp; <lb/>
gjnnii<lb/>
His<lb/>
in 11<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
: :<lb/>
mo- ?<lb/>
Din<lb/>
versit<lb/>
Wat<lb/>
W.<lb/>
Ah<lb/>
An<lb/>
F<lb/>
old d<lb/>
fath, -<lb/>
red .<lb/>
i isil<lb/>
to a<lb/>
of th<lb/>
your<lb/>
to pul<lb/>
fror<lb/>
Alex<lb/>
Oth :<lb/>
bed.<lb/>
does!<lb/>
Be A<lb/>
We're I -?;<lb/>
ing i<lb/>
v Lanier<lb/>
"lg, helpUj<lb/>
d  rs cal<lb/>
The Si ;<lb/>
The<lb/>
Of it's<lb/>
We A<lb/>
Coop. r i<lb/>
And wh<lb/>
We hop<lb/>
We're needing M<lb/>
And we hope yw<lb/>
So. (???n or fr?N<lb/>
And let ns help yo<lb/>
The hi'dygoat. c<lb/>
Want to welcome<lb/>
He's been an inspl<lb/>
Won't you let him<lb/>
The "butts and<lb/>
A part of every li<lb/>
Let us help vou o<lb/>
"baas"<lb/>
Of your college yea<lb/>
Be sure to join oi<lb/>
And let us help yoj<lb/>
You'll learn some<lb/>
know,<lb/>
And get some fun i<lb/>
<pb facs="00038059_0003"/><lb/>
tober 9, 1937<lb/>
len<lb/>
!?<lb/>
The<lb/>
? u gi 11<lb/>
int? r-<lb/>
N  I<lb/>
ISc1<lb/>
Additions<lb/>
fall<lb/>
M.A<lb/>
on<lb/>
ORY<lb/>
ian<lb/>
? ? immg-<lb/>
? j father,<lb/>
; father,<lb/>
Parrior,<lb/>
i  Kathym<lb/>
:?. merchant;<lb/>
F mtain,<lb/>
: Smith, At-<lb/>
Marv<lb/>
rt n, fa-<lb/>
?: Daniels,<lb/>
?r; Nancy<lb/>
ither, auto-<lb/>
. i ley, Slma,<lb/>
r W trd,<lb/>
r: Helen<lb/>
ither farmer;<lb/>
tbb ? ith, father,<lb/>
ILH ithaulrjr, f'ol-<lb/>
- ? iia Saunder-<lb/>
fatl r, farmer;<lb/>
Kinston, fa-<lb/>
jarel Hardy,<lb/>
fanner; Earn-<lb/>
ind, father,<lb/>
in t. Winter-<lb/>
ley, Wallace, fa-<lb/>
kfartha (task ins,<lb/>
Kit wards, New-<lb/>
fer Pake, Marshel-<lb/>
irmer; Catherine<lb/>
father, farmer;<lb/>
? father, farm-<lb/>
Phington, Angier,<lb/>
Mildred Briley,<lb/>
farmer; Bernice<lb/>
fro-Gordo, father,<lb/>
men Directory to be<lb/>
1 issue.<lb/>
October 9, 1937<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAOB THREE<lb/>
Alexander Replaces Farley as Athletic Coach<lb/>
STAFF REPORTER<lb/>
INTER VIE WS CO A CH<lb/>
Photography Outstanding Hobby<lb/>
of Athletic Director<lb/>
nun<lb/>
1<lb/>
no;<lb/>
I<lb/>
mj<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
- open season ? n all<lb/>
 yout correspondent<lb/>
i to the teeth with<lb/>
ik. and traekt d the<lb/>
? to his lair in the<lb/>
inc. When<lb/>
QUOTABLE<lb/>
QUOTES<lb/>
( I A<lb/>
?AY.<lb/>
lent o<lb/>
faced by opporl<lb/>
ECTC LOSES<lb/>
E<lb/>
10 QUAKES<lb/>
THE FINAL SCORE WAS 7-0<lb/>
WAA HOLDS FIRST<lb/>
MEETING OE YEAR<lb/>
"Tee'<lb/>
Martin Elected Head of<lb/>
Archery Team<lb/>
Coach Alexander<lb/>
The Women's Athletie Association<lb/>
held their first meeting of the fall j<lb/>
quarter, Friday, October 1, in the)<lb/>
Our<lb/>
:<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
til<lb/>
U11<lb/>
Lined i isage (face, to yon<lb/>
sender surrendered and exten<lb/>
answer ay multitude oi<lb/>
So here are the answers:<lb/>
admits he was<lb/>
te naively that<lb/>
ie date, since to ship<lb/>
make hun seem<lb/>
tumble w ith his<lb/>
he is prone to<lb/>
r attended the<lb/>
not Greenville,<lb/>
ted with sixteen<lb/>
i credit He &amp;e-<lb/>
iii each in track, CUSS?<lb/>
. and baseball,<lb/>
ten entered Iowa<lb/>
here he starred<lb/>
Ktball and two<lb/>
11. Our vcrsa-<lb/>
n journeyed to<lb/>
I ea hers (oliege<lb/>
iegree, and later<lb/>
tstitution be-<lb/>
The Quakers of Guilford College.<lb/>
i j- i .i e n r i- Bobert II. Wright Building which<lb/>
defeated the East Carolina Firates ? , - h ,<lb/>
. ,  I will be their regular meeting place.<lb/>
to the tune of , to 0 in the initial GeraMae Tyson, president, pre-<lb/>
game of the season for both teams. J ilo?i over the meeting. Other<lb/>
The Quakers were anything but! officers are: Moselle 1'ernell, vice<lb/>
pacific in the first quarter as theyTrilent; Prue Now by. secretary-<lb/>
racked the E.C.T.( line for gains<lb/>
treasurer; Evelyn Clark, Teco Echo<lb/>
layers .<lb/>
Alexan<lb/>
High -<lb/>
I sn dt<lb/>
ssoeiated Collegiate Press)<lb/>
annot afford to let the aeci-<lb/>
tiirth cripple the educational<lb/>
titles of youths of promise.<lb/>
Leges and universities must<lb/>
leir taproots until they reach<lb/>
all classes of society Harvard's.<lb/>
Fresid, t James Bryant Conant which finally enabled Lentz, G ?Xee?Lowse Martin was elected<lb/>
Justine Harvard's new policy of j ford halfback, to circle left end on a hca(i 0f art.uery and Louise Blanton<lb/>
award: r more and bigger scholar- short run to score the only touch-j head of basketball. Other intra-<lb/>
promising students. j down of the game. Aeree madegood!nmral officers are: Geraldine Tvn.h,<lb/>
?man's college is not con-1 a placement to conclude the scoring onager; Josephine Jackson, head<lb/>
-ith the war between men for the afternoon.<lb/>
ien. . . . The notion that! The Teachers showed promise of<lb/>
"A v.<lb/>
eerned v. i<lb/>
and won.<lb/>
women's ?<lb/>
gear worn<lb/>
date "<lb/>
president,<lb/>
he;<lb/>
of hiking; Ethel Lee Byrd, head of<lb/>
tennis; Alma Carraway, head of<lb/>
croquet and horseshoe; Eva -McMil-<lb/>
?lleges were designed to! scoring ability shortly after the score Ian, head of baseball.<lb/>
q to tight men is out of by the Quakers. Ferebee tossed a! Plans were made for a party to<lb/>
IV<lb/>
pn .<lb/>
?rsil<lb/>
irs<lb/>
bas<lb/>
der<lb/>
Sta<lb/>
lleslev College's vouthful; 17 yard pass to Shelton from his own<lb/>
Mildred II. McAfee, dis-i ??" yard line, and the speedy Shelton<lb/>
hope of training young scampered through the entire Guil-<lb/>
women to take their places in so-1 ford team to score a touchdown,<lb/>
ciety, not militantly. but intelligently; However, the j<lb/>
?f<lb/>
tl<lb/>
aware of<lb/>
citizens.<lb/>
"Through pro<lb/>
tlieir responsi<lb/>
hilit<lb/>
Un-<lb/>
as ,i<lb/>
a ua- called back afternoon, October<lb/>
and new members.<lb/>
due to a penalty for clipping from<lb/>
behind on the part of one of the<lb/>
education of<lb/>
American youth, and only through<lb/>
such means, will this country be! Guilford also had one of its seor-<lb/>
:?:?? ward off the menace of, nig threats spiked i;i tlie o<lb/>
ZO.<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
n<lb/>
?r<lb/>
Fresln<lb/>
for tw<lb/>
move<lb/>
threats spiked in the second<lb/>
Fascism and Comnmnbrn said Dr. I quarter by three consecutive penal-<lb/>
Allen Wilson Ilobbs, dean of the! ties.<lb/>
college of arts and science- of the The E.C.T.C. club came back in<lb/>
University of North Carolina, to! the third quarter to show a complete <lb/>
led him hack; his students. '? reversal of form and push their j invented in modern times That's<lb/>
ider becanit<lb/>
wa State L<lb/>
entertain freshman girls, tentatively<lb/>
on Saturday, October  in the<lb/>
Robert II. Wright Building, after<lb/>
the movie.<lb/>
A hike was also planned for the<lb/>
9, for all oh<lb/>
THIS COLLEGIATE<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
(By Associated Collegiate Fress)<lb/>
The most barbaric thing ever<lb/>
Former Athletic Director At Lin-<lb/>
coln Memorial University<lb/>
Placed in Hall of Athletic Fame<lb/>
By "Pop" Warner<lb/>
Mr. Joseph Alexander, for the<lb/>
1d-r eight years athletic director<lb/>
aLincoln Memorial University,<lb/>
nplaces Boley Farley as coach<lb/>
aid athletie director of E.C.T.C.<lb/>
t!US Var.<lb/>
Mr. Farley left the e Uege at the<lb/>
-ose of the Spring term to - .?? r<lb/>
j? ? ss ux Greenvilk after two uc-<lb/>
?ssful seasons as coach of football,<lb/>
bisketball, and baseball Fan-v<lb/>
J ams in all l:V' e of the ma<lb/>
1?orts boa-ted an enviable record of<lb/>
Pacing two-thirds of all games li     ?<lb/>
1 tl<lb/>
H.<lb/>
at ;<lb/>
En 1929 Alexander<lb/>
eiion of Athletic<lb/>
oh Memorial Uni-<lb/>
laned in that po-<lb/>
"Democracy would be wise if it! beavkr ana more experienced oppo-jwhat rush week is to Betty Graham<lb/>
would curb the education of thou-1?? all over the field. Breece and<lb/>
sands of our present school popula-<lb/>
i. k, trains. M lie teachers also<lb/>
snowed a superiority in punting abil- Shc had Ul mind the nmversity s<lb/>
ity and constantly pushed back the'practice of housing all rushees in<lb/>
white-hirted Quakers in the ex- Corbin Hall, girl's dormitory, dur-<lb/>
. president of the University of<lb/>
Shelton connected for several passes r , c e. T<lb/>
, , , T1 . i Tw Kansas chapter of feietna Kappa.<lb/>
I'res. James L. McConauffhsv to make gams. 1 he teachers also<lb/>
il this fll when he was<lb/>
e positio of Athletic Di-<lb/>
i (<lb/>
"irates<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
of Wesleyan University takes the<lb/>
other side of the Save-Democracy<lb/>
fence.<lb/>
"The chief<lb/>
There, she savs. "thev I<lb/>
K-i-ome<lb/>
ach t ECTC,<lb/>
editon of the<lb/>
lope of America's'change of punts. Although outplay- ing rugn week<lb/>
caping the rising tides of Com- i?g Guilford the entire last half of<lb/>
unism and Fascism rests on ourH1 ()UtP;it- ,lie H?ht anl iuexperi- . .<lb/>
 vi?.jonced Firats failed to exhibit; victims of mob psychology and mob<lb/>
nough power to run over a touch hysteria. Corbin hall is the most<lb/>
naianapoiis scnooi<lb/>
litteel<lb/>
?Xaiide<lb/>
? 3 a<lb/>
itl<lb/>
i tern to<lb/>
he EC<lb/>
e coacneo<lb/>
'(' mentor<lb/>
W<lb/>
mg ie w u<lb/>
 . A!<lb/>
;cti<lb/>
svstei similar to the<lb/>
stem, hieh feature- a<lb/>
 viii an unbalanced<lb/>
ander - well qualified<lb/>
is fe: since he at one<lb/>
: underlie famous "Pop"<lb/>
Warne mentioned Joe<lb/>
i : h Ail-Time All-<lb/>
oot ball Team, but the<lb/>
ich mo(tlv claim- the<lb/>
munism ami fascism rests<lb/>
public schools Carl Wi<lb/>
president of tin<lb/>
hoard lia the -arm- idea as he'own-<lb/>
American Legion when he scores the<lb/>
"ism as nm-Ameriean. "Onrly" ot' ? touchdown, our rne<lb/>
schools . . . must be free . . . ?f tack was stopped by the determine.<lb/>
(Htical control and nnrtv nmmt. stand of the Guilford line.<lb/>
One thrust of the skull and fertile held for wild rumors re-<lb/>
PIRATES' FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
October 9?Campbell CollegeGreenville<lb/>
October 16?Belmont CollegeGreenville<lb/>
October 23?West Carolina Teachers CollegeGreenville<lb/>
October 29?William and Mary (Norfolk Div.)Greenville<lb/>
November 6?High Point Greenville<lb/>
November 13?Louisburg Louisburg<lb/>
piayed in tl<lb/>
East Cai . ? hers O tlegi is<lb/>
fort  ???'? '?'? iring a man of Al x-<lb/>
anders experience and ability I re-<lb/>
place Farley. The present Pirate<lb/>
?: ti r hi - fifteen year- . f .?? aching<lb/>
experh a ??? and a brilliai I reet rd as<lb/>
a player to qualify him for this posi-<lb/>
tion on the East Carolina faculty.<lb/>
Alexander starred for three years ou<lb/>
the football and basketball teams of<lb/>
. Iowa State University, and was men-<lb/>
's tioned in many of the All-America<lb/>
(selections of his time in football.<lb/>
j "Fop" Warner placed him in the<lb/>
Hall of Athletic Fame l?y mention-<lb/>
ing him for his All-Time AU-Amer-<lb/>
ican Team.<lb/>
Alexander has coached at East<lb/>
' Texas State Teachers College, Black-<lb/>
foot Normal School. Lincoln Menio-<lb/>
 rial University, and for two years<lb/>
; was freshman coach at Iowa State<lb/>
, University.<lb/>
again . . . this time on the lawn SUN OVER-RATED:<lb/>
I<lb/>
of a fraternity at Hope College.<lb/>
Holland. Michigan.<lb/>
MOON UNDER-RATED.<lb/>
roes-bones outfit came within six<lb/>
but the at-<lb/>
an<lb/>
party propa-<lb/>
i garouig sororities that one<lb/>
: possibly rind<lb/>
I Other coeds on the campu-<lb/>
could<lb/>
?sidi<lb/>
Just an old college custom?this "<lb/>
! Cambridge, Mass.?(ACP)?The 11<lb/>
a weakling when<lb/>
compare<lb/>
(<lb/>
oacli<lb/>
AI<lb/>
exanaer was<lb/>
far from!Betty favor deferred rushing to<lb/>
er - n:<lb/>
othing<lb/>
aestioi<lb/>
-M1<lb/>
get<lb/>
e pi<lb/>
?rt<lb/>
IS<lb/>
til ill.<lb/>
Alexan-<lb/>
?oii see,<lb/>
prying<lb/>
enorter.<lb/>
The g<lb/>
was on<lb/>
T<lb/>
ter-ratec<lb/>
low to Mr.<lb/>
-son life<lb/>
safe fan the<lb/>
s TeoEcho<lb/>
gentlenn from Texas<lb/>
to MiaLinth Pereboom<lb/>
ie coup has a five year<lb/>
laughter, Sonj and the little<lb/>
i- the itpanic pal of her<lb/>
r. Phot itrrap- is the out-<lb/>
ing hobby of ie Athletic Di-<lb/>
 AlexanderYace brightened<lb/>
v when the eoiersation veered<lb/>
discussion ofameras, films.<lb/>
 and the othj paraphernalia<lb/>
;? amateur phographer, and<lb/>
I'ie Dixon Ryan<lb/>
lege hitting at th<lb/>
sloppiness which,<lb/>
habit- which may<lb/>
later on.<lb/>
"o mere cleverness<lb/>
ox of Union Col-<lb/>
?olleiriate cult of<lb/>
he says, settles<lb/>
irnur discharges<lb/>
quainfed<lb/>
" during the<lb/>
pledging.<lb/>
Deferred<lb/>
to become better ac-<lb/>
with the various houses<lb/>
e first semester without<lb/>
ganaa.<lb/>
"There are numerona forms of j disappointed at the showing made allow girl<lb/>
sloppiness which have been incident by  charge- in the initial tilt.<lb/>
to the buoyant, easy-going spirit of Only two of the starting line-up<lb/>
Anierh-a . . . democracy cannot against Guilford were lettermen,<lb/>
afford to be sloppy So insists u Alexander expressed the belief'1<lb/>
that there would be a vast improve-<lb/>
ment iii the scoring ability of the; would make it ridiculous to get a<lb/>
team as the season progressed. The nu,t, m &amp;es<lb/>
Pirate coach was especially pleased <lb/>
. . ? tier<lb/>
with the all-around play of the line!<lb/>
and the fighting spirit exhibited bv<lb/>
idea of striking Had for funds. Drr" tars of h 0WB tv search <lb/>
H. M. J. Klein, a lu.torv professor-at Oh-ervatory has di- j<lb/>
' ? elo- 1<lb/>
at Franklin and Marshall College,  " <lb/>
found a letter dated IT- addre-sed Ur- Wiam A. ("alder's work ?<lb/>
?ation scientists t<lb/>
I 1<lb/>
t College Girls Welcome j<lb/>
To Our Fashion Shop<lb/>
Exclusive But fsfot<lb/>
&amp; pensive<lb/>
GLORIA SHOPPE<lb/>
to Peter Rhoad<lb/>
iw a a<lb/>
tember of<lb/>
? ? cive<lb/>
the hr-t<lb/>
n-in<lb/>
the<lb/>
'ennvlvania As-emhlv.<lb/>
rushing, thev<lb/>
thiiii<lb/>
I have had that the un is "under<lb/>
par. very accurate measurement<lb/>
can<lb/>
tak<lb/>
am<lb/>
with argument:<lb/>
tears.<lb/>
room and piy<lb/>
mixed with sobs<lb/>
the<lb/>
dace of th. painful processes of hard tlu' tire squad<lb/>
tnd unremitting work Ralph<lb/>
If.<lb/>
Jap-cott. president of the Consoli-<lb/>
dated Edison Company of New York,<lb/>
returns to his Alma Mater to further<lb/>
depress the newest crop of freshmen.<lb/>
TOPERS TO BE BANNED<lb/>
FROM BIG-TIME GAMES<lb/>
of ti<lb/>
j ? ur<lb/>
to pi<lb/>
from<lb/>
Alexander refused tndmit that his<lb/>
other hobby was ea&amp;g crackers in<lb/>
bed, but personally 1 believe he<lb/>
does!<lb/>
Washington. I). C.?(AGP)?<lb/>
Alcoholic exhibitionists are in for<lb/>
a squelching this fall if plans of<lb/>
the nation's big-time football col-<lb/>
leges materialize.<lb/>
Colleges in the Big Ten confer-<lb/>
corre-pondentwas compelled j em,e ar1" distributing to patrons pro-<lb/>
II himself awa,by main iorce;?rrams bating that those who in-<lb/>
-entlmiatii-omments. Mr. I,ist on "hring-inir their own liquor"<lb/>
will be distinctly unwelcome.<lb/>
Ushers are being instructed to<lb/>
stop drinking in the stadium and<lb/>
refuse admission to holders of<lb/>
tickets who are intoxicated and tc<lb/>
throw out anyone violating drink-<lb/>
ing restrictions.<lb/>
At West Point officers insist that<lb/>
"there is no drinking problem here,<lb/>
because that would be bad manners<lb/>
and it just isn't being done by<lb/>
cadets or officers at the Military<lb/>
Academy<lb/>
Queries about drinking at foot-<lb/>
gall games at Annapolis shocked the<lb/>
Xaval Academv officers. Thev said,<lb/>
"Midshipmen are prohibited from<lb/>
drinking on the academy grounds<lb/>
and it would be in very bad taste<lb/>
for officers to drink at football<lb/>
games. Spectators found drinking<lb/>
are promptly ejected. The Marines<lb/>
have the situation in hand<lb/>
The American Football Coaches<lb/>
Association, together with college<lb/>
presidents and other officials, in a<lb/>
secret study of drinking at foot-<lb/>
ball games, found more intoxi-<lb/>
cated persons attend Eastern foot-<lb/>
ball games.<lb/>
In Texas and other Southwestern<lb/>
States, college officials believe in<lb/>
using strongarm methods. Before<lb/>
games start, a ban on drinking in<lb/>
the stands is broadcast over a radio<lb/>
system, and then hundreds of<lb/>
policemen, stationed among the<lb/>
spectators, enforce the ban.<lb/>
Be A Loier<lb/>
We're boosting our cietv?<lb/>
The Sidney Lanier is named.<lb/>
The willing, helpfulpirits<lb/>
Of it's members cai be tamed.<lb/>
We do our best in aw1 try;<lb/>
Cooperation is one r aid.<lb/>
And when we see relts of our work,<lb/>
We hope to feel red.<lb/>
We're needing somtew members<lb/>
And we hope you nl us, too;<lb/>
So, come on, freshfo, join us<lb/>
And let us help yothrough.<lb/>
The billygoat, our iscot,<lb/>
Want- to welcome u.<lb/>
He's been an inspi;ion to us;<lb/>
Won't you let him Ip you, too?<lb/>
The "butts" and "bs" are really<lb/>
A part of every lif<lb/>
Lot us help vou o'ehe "butts" and<lb/>
"baas"<lb/>
Of your college yea-)f strife.<lb/>
Be sure to join omerry group,<lb/>
And let us help yotlrough ;<lb/>
You'll learn some ngs you didn't<lb/>
know,<lb/>
And get some fun of it, too.<lb/>
The next opponent to face the' The old saw about oppoaites at-<lb/>
E.C-T.C footballers is Campbell tracting each other in affairs of the<lb/>
heart is just the exception that<lb/>
proves the rule, science has decided.<lb/>
Dr. E. Lowell EeEy of Connecticut<lb/>
State College is piling up evidence<lb/>
that like attracts like when it conies<lb/>
to matrimony.<lb/>
This attraction of likes is most<lb/>
pronounced in the matter of physi-<lb/>
cal traits, with blondes being at-<lb/>
tracted to blondes, athletic men<lb/>
favoring athletically inclined women,<lb/>
and men of sedentary inclinations<lb/>
finding small women to their liking.<lb/>
Love, on the basis of Dr. Kelly's<lb/>
findings, affects the judgment of<lb/>
women more than that of men. The<lb/>
women were inclined to over-rate<lb/>
their men's handsomeness, but the<lb/>
men came closer to the mark in judg-<lb/>
ing the beauty of their women.<lb/>
Rhoads, Jr. needed money -o he<lb/>
had written :<lb/>
"Hear Father:<lb/>
"Your favor of the thirteenth last<lb/>
I received on the eighth. . . . (iil-i<lb/>
son's surveying i- not immediately<lb/>
the book) would I ni ot Tluv ,iwTatlt kbes.<lb/>
I he moon, on the other hand, wa<lb/>
of the sun's stellar brightness i- im-<lb/>
portant, it seems, since the sun is<lb/>
used by astronomers as a unit for<lb/>
measuring the energy and bright-<lb/>
necessary, but it (<lb/>
greatly assist me. In this vou may<lb/>
found to be lightly brighter thai<lb/>
('oliege. The game will he played<lb/>
at Greenville ou Saturday, October<lb/>
!th.<lb/>
THE LINEUPS:<lb/>
Guilford Pos. E.C.T.C.<lb/>
Fondren  Smith<lb/>
LE<lb/>
McDonald  Johnson<lb/>
LT<lb/>
Byrd  Merner<lb/>
LG<lb/>
XaeeCecot<lb/>
C<lb/>
Boles  DeMond<lb/>
EG<lb/>
Sadler  Quernell<lb/>
RT<lb/>
McCommons  Hatem<lb/>
RE<lb/>
Tilson  Shelton<lb/>
QB<lb/>
Acree  Dudash<lb/>
LH<lb/>
Lents  Breece<lb/>
RH<lb/>
Grice  Noe<lb/>
FB<lb/>
Score by quarters :<lb/>
Guilford 7 0 0 0?7<lb/>
E.C.T.C0 0 0 0?0<lb/>
Substitutions: For Guilford?<lb/>
Chambers, Binford, Hines, Atkin-<lb/>
son, Overman, Wilson, Ketchum.<lb/>
For E.C.T.C Ferebee, Roebuck,<lb/>
Williams, Veenters, Beck, James.<lb/>
Officials: Davis (Davidson), um-<lb/>
pire; Shuler (N.C.), referee; Maus<lb/>
(U. N. C), head linesman; Arron<lb/>
(Army), field judge.<lb/>
Serologic tests for venereal disease<lb/>
were recommended for new students<lb/>
at universities by Dr. R. A. Vander-<lb/>
lehr of the Public Health Service.<lb/>
Discovery of the diseases would not<lb/>
be a basis of refusing admission to<lb/>
a student.<lb/>
Some degree of protection against<lb/>
the virus of sleeping sickness is af-<lb/>
forded by the blood serum of an in-<lb/>
dividual who had the disease in<lb/>
1933, Dr. G. O. Brown, of the St<lb/>
Louis University School of Medicine<lb/>
has found.<lb/>
University of Georgia freshmen<lb/>
got a superinitiation at the mechani-<lb/>
cal hands of the machine age.<lb/>
Their traditional "yes" and "no"<lb/>
intelligence tests were graded by an<lb/>
electric machine that defies flattery<lb/>
or red apples and doesn't believe<lb/>
the first hundred papers are the<lb/>
hardest.<lb/>
Into a machine went Freddie<lb/>
Frosh's papers and a little meter told<lb/>
him whether he belonged with the<lb/>
potential Phi Beta Kappas, the great<lb/>
middle class, or the dullards.<lb/>
It is the first time in the nation<lb/>
that such a machine has been placed<lb/>
in actual continuous use.<lb/>
School officials believe it will save<lb/>
at least four days in placement work<lb/>
and a great deal of wear and tear<lb/>
on professors, instructors and stu-<lb/>
dent graders.<lb/>
Reminiscent of the troublous<lb/>
'20's, the fiery cross is burning<lb/>
S. V. MORTON, JR.<lb/>
Ofle and Bank Equipment and<lb/>
Supplies - Typewriter! - New and<lb/>
Bebuttt<lb/>
Plione 1S7 OEEBKVXLLJB. V. O.<lb/>
i lr r .? c i ' lounu io ne -m<lb/>
please vourselt. and 1 am satisfied, i, .<lb/>
I willwith the help of God, learn ad hitherto bet<lb/>
that the money von have advanced; . rbe. n,?v Photoelectric value<lb/>
me shall not be lost !tor !he visual magnitude of the<lb/>
 ? ? "nn w fonr-tenths ot a magnitude<lb/>
less than the value accepted as a<lb/>
Ah for the life of the porter em standard up to now. The mooa'a<lb/>
the University of Idaho special aew brightness is eleven anndreths<lb/>
train, which collects would-be stu 0f a magnitude more than the value<lb/>
dents from over the state and de- generally adopted.<lb/>
posits them on the Moscow campus <lb/>
for another year.<lb/>
The train is claimed by Union<lb/>
Pacific to be the only one of its kind<lb/>
in the world.<lb/>
When it stopped in Boise, the;<lb/>
porter gasped. "There here young<lb/>
ones are the beatinest kids 1 ever<lb/>
seen. They can deal out more mis'ry<lb/>
in an hour than it'd take anybody<lb/>
a week to catch up to<lb/>
"But" he grinned, "they sure got j<lb/>
a capacity for enjoyment j<lb/>
It took the train an hour instead j<lb/>
of 10 minutes in Boise to get onj<lb/>
board students who seemed just as;<lb/>
willing to spend the rest of the year<lb/>
there, as in Moscow.<lb/>
<lb/>
COBURNS<lb/>
"Your Shoe Store"<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
C - . ' -5 ? ?. ? "T" ?  .  . , . "T" Mday<lb/>
in Footwear of Quc. 1v' at<lb/>
Popular Price for Dre js zr<lb/>
Campus wear.<lb/>
Coburn's Shoes,inc.<lb/>
410 Evans Street<lb/>
<lb/>
WELCOME COLLEGE GIRLS<lb/>
To<lb/>
WILLIAM'S<lb/>
The Ladies' Store<lb/>
DR. A. H. SCHULTZ<lb/>
Dentist<lb/>
400 State Bank Building<lb/>
Phone 578<lb/>
SHOP AT THE BIG<lb/>
SAltt STORE<lb/>
Let Us Supply You With Your<lb/>
School Needs<lb/>
we wii<lb/>
)ehver Your Packages<lb/>
For You.<lb/>
McLellan Stores Co.<lb/>
We sell a lot of hosiery.<lb/>
And really, it's no wonder!<lb/>
Our quality is up on top.<lb/>
Our prices way down under!<lb/>
GRANT'S<lb/>
College Special<lb/>
Regular 79c Isis Full Fashioned<lb/>
Crepe Twist Hose<lb/>
Along with this advertisement.<lb/>
Good until October 25, 1937<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
PLEASANT'S<lb/>
We appreciate your<lb/>
patronage<lb/>
?<lb/>
PLEASANT'S<lb/>
rt Apparel for Women<lb/>
LOWE'S<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
4p-iqp?pMwqpiQipviiipM9??qp?<lb/>
?? aa a o,id? a ?. r- j g ?fc?<lb/>
Buy Your Clothes With Style and Distinction<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
 w w ww'vwv'wwwwwvrw p<lb/>
1 w r rrp - m w ?<lb/>
106264<lb/>
<pb facs="00038059_0004"/><lb/>
October 9, 1937<lb/>
a<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAOS FOUR<lb/>
Summer Graduate List<lb/>
Graduates As Reported Up To<lb/>
August 28, 1937<lb/>
A.B. Graduates<lb/>
AH. degree graduates?August<lb/>
28, L937. .<lb/>
Dove Allen. Ella Turner Atkms,<lb/>
Mr. Wesley Bankston, Verdie Bar-<lb/>
Fraiiees Boyette, Sallie Lee<lb/>
Marv Bullock, Gladys<lb/>
CaUie Charlton, Virginia<lb/>
Cooper, Willie Grey Cox,<lb/>
E, Grumpier. Frances IX<lb/>
1 Daniel. Isabel Daven-<lb/>
Around<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
ir.<lb/>
row<lb/>
Brewer,<lb/>
Capi a,<lb/>
Blount<lb/>
Dorothy<lb/>
Gun-in, Ilaz<lb/>
port Juanita Davis, Thelma Edger<lb/>
ton, Sfavis Evans, Hazel Forrest,<lb/>
Christeen Fowler, Florence Elisa-<lb/>
beth Gooding, Alice Hackett, Eula<lb/>
Ma, Hargette, Annie Mercer Henry,<lb/>
Swannie Home. Hattie Hudgins,<lb/>
1 1. ley, Melva Johnson.<lb/>
Lee, Hilda Gray Modlin,<lb/>
Inez Oliver, Lucy Stuart<lb/>
Mary Lee Penny, Julia E.<lb/>
Lucile Eaines, Margaret I.<lb/>
Nannie Rowlett, -Mrs. Pat-<lb/>
Snnders, Mrs. Elisie Wind-<lb/>
Mice 11 irks Smith,<lb/>
Mildre-<lb/>
Ava<lb/>
Clara<lb/>
Parrisl<lb/>
Pollocl<lb/>
Bawls.<lb/>
By MARVIN COX<lb/>
(Associated Collegiate Tress Corres<lb/>
pondent)<lb/>
Washington. 1. G.?College stu<lb/>
dents continue to be among the re<lb/>
cipients of Federal benefits along<lb/>
with farmers, the unemployed, the<lb/>
aged, the blind and other groups<lb/>
that are on the receiving end of<lb/>
Federal aid.<lb/>
Of course, the cash that goes to<lb/>
college students is not as much as<lb/>
that which goes to the tillers of the<lb/>
soil and the needy unemployed but.<lb/>
at thai, the young people do pretty<lb/>
well for themselves.<lb/>
, lion dollars, tin<lb/>
tional Youth<lb/>
ibis year 1<lb/>
I long way<lb/>
AUDIT<lb/>
Student Fund, East Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
From May 29, 1935 to May 26, 1936<lb/>
On hand in the Guaranty Bank and Trust Company, May 29,<lb/>
1935 <lb/>
From Student Fees <lb/>
. From Gate Receipts <lb/>
From Faculty Tickets<lb/>
From Belle Kearney-<lb/>
From Post Office<lb/>
From Miscellaneous<lb/>
-Cash Account<lb/>
5 254.32<lb/>
15,358.45<lb/>
425.25<lb/>
209.10<lb/>
500.00<lb/>
20.00<lb/>
319.07<lb/>
COLLEGIATE<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
infantile paralysis when<lb/>
(By Associated Collegiate Press)<lb/>
Something new under the sun?a<lb/>
walking sprinkling machine used to<lb/>
water the gridiron at the University<lb/>
to a height of 7,500 feet at a speed<lb/>
of 700 miles an hour. .<lb/>
The average Southern college girl school teacher rooming<lb/>
spends $579 a year exclusive of ee4- rocanng-feovM became<lb/>
charges, tin- largest<lb/>
-ity of Nebraska were exposed to<lb/>
a Krade<lb/>
hi their<lb/>
with the<lb/>
leg<lb/>
item of disease.<lb/>
$17,086.19<lb/>
un<lb/>
 "Simpson.<lb/>
Frances Spainhour, Inez Stevens<lb/>
Lois Strickland, Ruth G. Styron<lb/>
Mil y, .1 O. Tatmii. Katie Jane Tay-<lb/>
lor. Mr. William EL Tolson, Blanche<lb/>
F. White, Mrs. rene Whittington,<lb/>
Eiease Williams. Dorothy Bose Wil-<lb/>
liams. Sara Mar Woodard, Virginia<lb/>
Woodbury.<lb/>
Twenty mil-<lb/>
amount the Na-<lb/>
Ailministration is<lb/>
mving to students, is a<lb/>
rom small change.<lb/>
d<lb/>
.$ 4,500.00<lb/>
646.23<lb/>
129.62<lb/>
517.67<lb/>
135.00<lb/>
379.60<lb/>
1,626.S2<lb/>
493.47<lb/>
5.023.92<lb/>
which ($270) is for clothe, u study<lb/>
at Holliiui College, Virginia, reveal<lb/>
An Austin, Texas, boy plans to en<lb/>
ter college in September, 1?38,<lb/>
?tthe ago of 12. Educaton<lb/>
advancement is due t. Ins<lb/>
at<lb/>
think his<lb/>
An East-Weal collegiate ski met<lb/>
matching teams of Dartmouth (<lb/>
lege and I Hiv?rsity of Wi<lb/>
is being promoted f"r Ida<lb/>
tacular Sun Yalh-y ooura<lb/>
ngtoa.<lb/>
of Nebraska. It's set up at one<lb/>
d-<lb/>
Two-vear Normal Graduates<lb/>
Two year Normal graduates-<lb/>
August 28. 1937<lb/>
Alliene Ba<lb/>
dalt'iu<lb/>
Jnli<lb/>
Bass. Hat-<lb/>
Lee Carson,<lb/>
The students perform specifi<lb/>
services at ilie schools and colleges<lb/>
and in return receive funds from<lb/>
the XVA.<lb/>
Slightly over $10,000,000 will go<lb/>
to college students and the remain-<lb/>
der to high schoo<lb/>
This $10,000,000. if paid out in the<lb/>
form id' scholarships, would provide<lb/>
$500 a piece for 20.000 college stu-<lb/>
dents. However, being distributed,<lb/>
as it will be, in amounts of about<lb/>
$15 a month, this sum will help<lb/>
pay the bills<lb/>
voung men am<lb/>
Disbursements<lb/>
For Annual Tecoan <lb/>
For Teco Echo  <lb/>
For Men's Student Government Association<lb/>
For Women's Student Government Association<lb/>
For Personal Service <lb/>
For Glass Payments <lb/>
For Men's Athletic Association <lb/>
For Women's Athletic Association <lb/>
For Entertainments <lb/>
For Social Committee  01100 ,1<lb/>
For Belle Kearney?Cash Account   ,<lb/>
For Post Office <lb/>
For V. W. C. A<lb/>
For Commencement Fund <lb/>
For Piano <lb/>
For Paving <lb/>
For Fainting Dormitory Booms<lb/>
For Miscellaneous <lb/>
tSnO. P-Pded ?v A. fc of j ? wh. wj ;<lb/>
the water. ,<lb/>
More than 100 Georgetown Urn<lb/>
II.<lb/>
can rca<lb/>
versitv students were used last spring<lb/>
as human guinea pigs in<lb/>
test of the<lb/>
; and tlie remain- ??<lb/>
1 boys and girls. Balance in Guaranty Bank and Trust Company, 2636<lb/>
of around 75.000<lb/>
women during the<lb/>
tie Lou Cannon, :uiia x?e<lb/>
Madeline Eure, Lucy It. FoutS, Mrs.<lb/>
Connie Whit ford Hargett, Mary<lb/>
Sue Johnson, Esther H. Lcake, Air.<lb/>
Joseph V. Marsh. Rachel Anne Mc-<lb/>
Campbell, Gladys W. Miller. Annie<lb/>
Lee Mozingo, Bath Naomi Pearce.<lb/>
Frances Elizabeth Simmons. Eunice<lb/>
Mae Smith. Margaret Sue Watkins.<lb/>
Eunice Mae Watson. Pauline Wor-<lb/>
?urrent academic year.<lb/>
NEW COLLEGE CURRICULUM<lb/>
WENT INTO EFFECT THIS FALL<lb/>
COLLEGE PRESS MEET<lb/>
TO BE LARGEST EVER<lb/>
Gh<lb/>
t he<lb/>
and<lb/>
ollege<lb/>
th<lb/>
b<lb/>
ieago, 111.?(AC<lb/>
argest convention ol ci<lb/>
miversity undergraduate pub-<lb/>
ons workers ever to be held in<lb/>
s<lb/>
This $20,000,000 allocation for<lb/>
students, however, doesn't satisfy<lb/>
allot' them. William W. Hinckley.<lb/>
president of the American Youth 1at<lb/>
Congress, states that his organiza-<lb/>
tion will continue to battle for the<lb/>
passage of the American Youth<lb/>
Act. r<lb/>
This proposed legislation, intro-<lb/>
duced during the last session of<lb/>
Congress, would appropriate $500<lb/>
. 000,000 for the aid of young people.<lb/>
Failure to obtain action last ses-<lb/>
Plans forsion has not discouraged the Youthjments<lb/>
Congress and they will be in there<lb/>
fighting when the next session con-<lb/>
venes in January.<lb/>
FUTURE RADIO ANNOUNCERS<lb/>
ARE BEING TRAINED<lb/>
personality-changing effects of the<lb/>
drug, benzedrine sulphate.<lb/>
Because the Hitler government<lb/>
allows any German traveler to take<lb/>
only $4 spending money with him,<lb/>
Christian Otto Winzen came from<lb/>
Germany to the University ot De-<lb/>
401.63 I troit, with just that much cash, al-<lb/>
tough his passage and railroad fare<lb/>
20.00 I had been paid.<lb/>
175.00 shortage of football shoes will ;<lb/>
300.00 I apparently force a large portion of<lb/>
the Gooding College football team to<lb/>
play barefooted. The "large por-<lb/>
tion" being George Blanklcy, who<lb/>
stands 6 feet 3 inches barefooted?<lb/>
j barefooted because he needs a size<lb/>
$15,869.60 14 football shoe.<lb/>
1,216.59 i)r Robert II. Goddard, Clark<lb/>
University physics professor seeking<lb/>
17.086.19 to develop a rocket plane which can<lb/>
be sent up 100 miles or more, has<lb/>
succeeded in driving his test rocket<lb/>
History students at Mount Holy-<lb/>
oke College have written a prophecy<lb/>
about whither we are drifting, to ???<lb/>
sealed up for a hundred years.<lb/>
Kansas State co-eds and football<lb/>
WILE.<lb/>
VOL<lb/>
f:jov<lb/>
coacm<lb/>
thieve<lb/>
tory 1<lb/>
$19 an-<lb/>
had a common<lb/>
Coeds at the girl<lb/>
t $150, the head eoa<lb/>
the assistant freshman<lb/>
enemy<lb/>
g' dormi-<lb/>
h lost<lb/>
Eating With<lb/>
Your Friends<lb/>
at<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
h. a waP<lb/>
hirtv-oiit<lb/>
wort h<lb/>
;o-eds<lb/>
1- at the l"i'<lb/>
,cr<lb/>
250.00<lb/>
300.00 1<lb/>
300.00<lb/>
170.64<lb/>
The College "Y" S'ore and yc ;r favorite down-town soda<lb/>
or drug store carries a comp re line of Lances Pear ut ? itti r<lb/>
Sandwiches, Salted Peanuts, and Candies, Whenever you<lb/>
the need of a "Snack insist on Lcr.ce's. They ore made ur . -<lb/>
the most sanitan conditions end, are pleasing to the appetite<lb/>
Remember to Insist on LANCE'S<lb/>
Sandwiches : Peanuts : Candies : Peanut Butter<lb/>
LANCE PACKING COMPANY<lb/>
New York. X. Y(ACP)? A<lb/>
new college curriculum to which<lb/>
the experience of sixteen major<lb/>
colleges and universities has con-<lb/>
tributed, goes into effect this fall<lb/>
llofstra College, according to<lb/>
Provost Bttfus D, Smith of New<lb/>
York University.<lb/>
At llofstra, which is the Uni-<lb/>
versity's Long Island affiliate, to a<lb/>
greater extent, perhaps than in any<lb/>
other college, ordinary academic<lb/>
departments will be scrapped. For<lb/>
example, then.<lb/>
only<lb/>
with<lb/>
behind<lb/>
of the<lb/>
during<lb/>
depart-<lb/>
and<lb/>
ire now being formulated<lb/>
ffieers of the Associated Collegi-<lb/>
ate Press, national association of<lb/>
ege publications' editors and<lb/>
1 usiuess managers. The convention<lb/>
in held here October 14 to 16.<lb/>
With a program headlined by<lb/>
Henry Goddard Leach, eminent edi-<lb/>
tor of ; ?' rum magazine, and<lb/>
Howard Vincent<lb/>
ikim<lb/>
mi<lb/>
Chieot<lb/>
attem<lb/>
Five years ago, if someone had<lb/>
suggested a Federal appropriation<lb/>
for college students, the idea would<lb/>
have been ridiculed and its sponsor<lb/>
denounced as a Communist, Social-<lb/>
ist. Demagogue and enemy of the<lb/>
people. Now. however, the idea of<lb/>
Federal aid for college students is<lb/>
O'Brien, news-1 generally accepted. The only sub-<lb/>
editorial columnist for thej tH.t 0f serious debate is the amount<lb/>
i rea<lb/>
will he no<lb/>
if economics, soeiol<lb/>
politics.<lb/>
Instead there will be merely a<lb/>
division of social science, in which<lb/>
ix basic courses running in se-<lb/>
quence from freshman to senior<lb/>
year will correlate all three of the<lb/>
conventional '?departments<lb/>
Comprehensive examinations cov-<lb/>
ering two years' work are planned<lb/>
for upper classes and there will be<lb/>
for independent<lb/>
V. ws, delegates will<lb/>
lort course in news-<lb/>
paper, magazine and yearbook busi-<lb/>
ness and editorial management.<lb/>
Some of the famed journalists<lb/>
to appear on the program include<lb/>
ject<lb/>
to be devoted to this purpose.<lb/>
work<lb/>
under tutorial guidance.<lb/>
There is one important factor in<lb/>
considering the subject of Federal<lb/>
appropriations for the benefit of<lb/>
, the! young people. The government is<lb/>
I 1 Imamw and Yearbook; j borrowing money to spend on them,<lb/>
but this same generation that is re-<lb/>
Curtis<lb/>
 ition<lb/>
George Brandenburg, Editor and<lb/>
Publisher staff writer; John E.<lb/>
Drewry, director of the Cniversity<lb/>
of Georgia School of Journalism;<lb/>
Kenneth F. Olson, director of the<lb/>
Northwestern Cniversity School of<lb/>
Journalism; O. Fred Winner. New<lb/>
York publicist ; James X. Krohne.<lb/>
Chicago advertising writer; G. D.<lb/>
Crain, publisher of Advertising<lb/>
Age; Grant Olson, advertising man-<lb/>
ager of the Sheaffer Pen Co Har-<lb/>
ry C. Baldwin, of Xational Adver<lb/>
tising Service, and many others.<lb/>
Delegates to the convention will<lb/>
bo entertained by Dusty Miller,<lb/>
famed Indiana publisher, and the<lb/>
music of Al Diem and his broad-<lb/>
casting orchestra. Chicago radio<lb/>
artists will also appear on the pro-<lb/>
gram. Delegates will also make<lb/>
tours of the up-to-date Chicago<lb/>
newspaper, printing, engraving and<lb/>
cover-making plants, each personal-<lb/>
ly conducted by an expert in one of<lb/>
these fields of publications work.<lb/>
Special n.ondtable meetings for<lb/>
the discussion of current editorial<lb/>
and business management problems<lb/>
are being arranged, with experts in<lb/>
each field leading each discussion.<lb/>
Last year more than 375 stu-<lb/>
dents from colleges and universi-<lb/>
ties in 33 states attended the meet-<lb/>
ing held in Louisville. This year's<lb/>
is the lbth annual meeting of the<lb/>
Associated Collegiate Press.<lb/>
provision<lb/>
torial &amp;<lb/>
The new system, according to<lb/>
Provost Smith, follows the newer<lb/>
trend toward the broad English<lb/>
type of training as opposed to the<lb/>
highly specialized German type<lb/>
popular in pre-war days.<lb/>
Hofstra's graduates will be pre-<lb/>
pared to face life more realistically,<lb/>
he believes, as a result of their more<lb/>
integrated education.<lb/>
Towa City, Iowa?(AGP)?The<lb/>
Edwin C. Hills and Boake Carters<lb/>
of tomorrow are being trained at<lb/>
WSF1, radio station of the Uni-<lb/>
versity of Iowa.<lb/>
Students interested in radio as<lb/>
a vocation "start from the bottom<lb/>
and start right They write script,<lb/>
build programs, direct plays, edit<lb/>
news and announce?-to name<lb/>
a few of the tasks connected<lb/>
broadcasting. They are<lb/>
the scenes doing the work<lb/>
8,952 programs broadcast<lb/>
the year.<lb/>
The mechanical side of the broad-<lb/>
casts is taken care of by students<lb/>
who have received their training in<lb/>
the college of engineering. Courses<lb/>
cover both radio and television, with<lb/>
an experimental station serving as<lb/>
a laboratory.<lb/>
Students prepare and present<lb/>
three news broadcasts daily, the<lb/>
Parade of Events. Friday evening's<lb/>
dramatization of the news, sports<lb/>
reviews, art news and farm news.<lb/>
And when they step up to the micro-<lb/>
phone, they don't shake with "mike<lb/>
fright but possess a confidence<lb/>
horn of a thorough understanding<lb/>
of radio.<lb/>
Betty Coed<lb/>
and the Duchess of<lb/>
Windsor have something in common<lb/>
?the Duchess's wedding dress.<lb/>
Adaptations of the gown the former<lb/>
Wallis Warfield wore when she mar-<lb/>
ried the abdicated King of England<lb/>
have gone to college with a bang.<lb/>
eeiving the money will also have to<lb/>
pay it back.<lb/>
The old folks who are getting<lb/>
Federal benefits that are paid for<lb/>
with borrowed cash will pass the<lb/>
debt along to younger generations.<lb/>
The young people, however, do not<lb/>
have this advantage.<lb/>
The current college generation<lb/>
will live long enough to have their<lb/>
sleep disturbed by the sound of gov-<lb/>
ernment bonds falling due in the<lb/>
vears to come.<lb/>
it<lb/>
Big Three"<lb/>
Note to law students: If you<lb/>
want to enjoy peaceful membership<lb/>
on the United States Supreme<lb/>
Court, don't join the Ku Klux<lb/>
Klan in early life!<lb/>
In case you doubt that such an<lb/>
affiliation will rise to harass you,<lb/>
let your Washington correspondent<lb/>
refer you to Mr. Justice Hugo L.<lb/>
Black, late a Senator from Alabama.<lb/>
? A GOOD COLLEGE<lb/>
? A GOOD STAFF<lb/>
? A GOOD PRINTER<lb/>
? and there you are ?<lb/>
ALL THE ELEMENTS OF A<lb/>
GOOD PUBLICATION<lb/>
FAULTY DIET BLAMED<lb/>
FOR WORLD'S WAR JITTERS<lb/>
For the benefit of young fathers,<lb/>
the University of California has<lb/>
completed a schedule of baby's cry-<lb/>
ing habits which may enable parents<lb/>
to arrange their away-from-home<lb/>
programs. After the first month<lb/>
there is a 4-month lull when father<lb/>
may safely stay at home. After that<lb/>
there is about a year when baby's<lb/>
vocal cords get plenty of exercise.<lb/>
Cambridge, Mass.?(ACP) ? A<lb/>
good part of the world's war jitters<lb/>
can be blamed on faulty diet, the<lb/>
international food conference at<lb/>
the Massachusetts Institute of Tech-<lb/>
nology was told.<lb/>
Lewis W. Waters, food techni-<lb/>
cian, foresaw doom for the "wall-<lb/>
flower" and a race of healthier, less<lb/>
jittery people as a result of food<lb/>
technology.<lb/>
Declaring surveys showed Amer-<lb/>
ican college boys and girls today<lb/>
were taller and stronger than were<lb/>
their parents at similar ages, Wa-<lb/>
ters said it must be attributed at<lb/>
least in part to "better and more<lb/>
varied foods<lb/>
This Company, in all its efforts, holds<lb/>
fast to the standard of service that<lb/>
merits a place on any "Big Three'<lb/>
Cow-education is the word for it,<lb/>
it seems, at Eastern New Mexico<lb/>
Junior College. Bossie is helping<lb/>
put several youths through school.<lb/>
Bringing their cows to the campus,<lb/>
they are selling milk to pay ex-<lb/>
penses.<lb/>
Nude students riding up and down<lb/>
the main street of Golden, Colo, on<lb/>
an automobile running board shocked<lb/>
the entire community. They were<lb/>
taking part in freshman hazing ac-<lb/>
tivities of the Colorado School of<lb/>
Mines.<lb/>
EDWARDS &amp; BROUGHTON<lb/>
COMPANY<lb/>
? GOOD PRINTERS SINCE 1871 ?<lb/>
Raleigh North Carolina<lb/>
m <lb/>
yer<lb/>
to y?u:<lb/>
now low much<lb/>
pleasure a cigarette can giv&amp;ntil some-<lb/>
body offers you a Chesterfijd.<lb/>
Certainly this is true: Chief fields<lb/>
are refreshingly milder, they've<lb/>
got a taste that smokers lib<lb/>
-n<lb/>
J?&amp;'<lb/>
0&amp;<lb/>
an<lb/>
WE LC<lb/>
ALUM<lb/>
volume :<lb/>
Fa mo<lb/>
Be<lb/>
w<lb/>
MRS. 0<lb/>
Dn<lb/>
R?<lb/>
Mr <lb/>
snips.<lb/>
Lhis ?<lb/>
tirt ?<lb/>
by maki<lb/>
father i<lb/>
the r. ?<lb/>
band, N<lb/>
English!<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
battles ?<lb/>
from I<lb/>
? th<lb/>
Her :<lb/>
meiit a<lb/>
and En<lb/>
mark, v<lb/>
became<lb/>
dip<lb/>
to Caj<lb/>
Chris<lb/>
oleted<lb/>
ha. re<lb/>
bctun<lb/>
II.<lb/>
R<lb/>
PHI SiGMA P! DISCI<lb/>
PLANS FOR Cf<lb/>
At th? 1<lb/>
Octoh. .<lb/>
of Phi - .<lb/>
gethi r<lb/>
faculr :<lb/>
tin- forth<lb/>
Ti ? .? <lb/>
Be en ?<lb/>
h pledg, .<lb/>
guitabh .<lb/>
A eommi<lb/>
retary, I:<lb/>
spon '<lb/>
ine on <lb/>
The ee rel<lb/>
Becnn<lb/>
sored ? nt r<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Chapt. .<lb/>
Francis 1 ?<lb/>
ter, I, ?<lb/>
Fodie II<lb/>
Thornt 0<lb/>
Cha : : k<lb/>
She ii<lb/>
Cniv -<lb/>
or requ<lb/>
the buss<lb/>
again in a<lb/>
in order<lb/>
from the s<lb/>
v ? iri<lb/>
Miduai<lb/>
: we<lb/>
On Time Ev<lb/>
<lb/>
Copyright 1937. Lwearr &amp; Km Tobacco Co.<lb/>
The new clock<lb/>
Hall, that settles<lb/>
as to the exact ti<lb/>
ing in as well as<lb/>
for dates, is the<lb/>
to the school by the<lb/>
man Class of 19371<lb/>
of the "D" Classe<lb/>
uated from here.<lb/>
The clock was<lb/>
ing the latter<lb/>
Spring Quarter,<lb/>
resents our colic<lb/>
'On time every<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038059_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>