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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00038062_0001"/>
November 3<lb/>
1 STUDENTS<lb/>
RGANIZE CLI<lb/>
mbers Wa<lb/>
n? i<lb/>
.iiH of Sfioes<lb/>
Visit<lb/>
RN'S<lb/>
E COLLEGE<lb/>
IRL DESIRE<lb/>
SHI VTERS<lb/>
SI.93 itp<lb/>
HOItT COATS<lb/>
K2.??r? iii<lb/>
Ski IMS<lb/>
SI .f? ii p<lb/>
?r-e-J<lb/>
fame To St?i? I .v.<lb/>
LLIAM'S<lb/>
;<lb/>
iokers<lb/>
to em<lb/>
<lb/>
1,300<lb/>
The<lb/>
EAST CARJNrWAdiS COLLEGE<lb/>
ECHO<lb/>
VOLUME XIV<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1937<lb/>
Number 4<lb/>
Appreciative Audience<lb/>
Hears Beal Present Life<lb/>
of Circus In Colorful Way<lb/>
Aided in Speech By Use<lb/>
Motion Pictures<lb/>
of<lb/>
GIVES VIVID. DETAILED<lb/>
DESCRIPTION OF BIG SHOW<lb/>
TO<lb/>
Circus in Constant Movement All<lb/>
Day, Says Beal<lb/>
spp<lb/>
M<lb/>
v audience saw an<lb/>
ainment on Thurs-<lb/>
ling<lb/>
Seal<lb/>
the<lb/>
Four Delegates From This College<lb/>
Attend Press Convention;<lb/>
"Technician" is Host<lb/>
Wright Buil<lb/>
Brinton<lb/>
ton pictures<lb/>
I WCV:<lb/>
. and<lb/>
lie tin<lb/>
. Mr.<lb/>
routine<lb/>
? it left<lb/>
performam<lb/>
on to the<lb/>
tseai<lb/>
. of<lb/>
one<lb/>
in<lb/>
next<lb/>
Four representatives of East Caro-<lb/>
lina Teachers College Publications<lb/>
attended the annual fall convention<lb/>
oi the North Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
Press Association, which convened<lb/>
at<lb/>
Xo<lb/>
vember<lb/>
Ik. Ii<lb/>
tlH-<lb/>
? i of the loading<lb/>
on location am<lb/>
?own. Ah-<lb/>
te<lb/>
li<lb/>
k 1<lb/>
Raleii<lb/>
K. Hoey, Governor<lb/>
Una, delivered the<lb/>
Saturday morning.<lb/>
-poke ot the county<lb/>
experiences with it<lb/>
X<lb/>
?rth<lb/>
('lyde<lb/>
Caro-<lb/>
niain address<lb/>
The Governor<lb/>
newspaper, his<lb/>
and <lb/>
?.<lb/>
Mr.<lb/>
a n<lb/>
nch t<lb/>
ion. Hegav<lb/>
iption of the<lb/>
rshow. Hot.<lb/>
i w hi b takes<lb/>
and which<lb/>
r the performers arc.<lb/>
tasters of their art.<lb/>
ook fa ? audience into<lb/>
? territory hy<lb/>
lotion picture camera,<lb/>
?xplameo<lb/>
the freedom and out-<lb/>
a vivid,<lb/>
lifferent<lb/>
hi about<lb/>
- quite a<lb/>
arc kept<lb/>
WllH<lb/>
rated t<lb/>
un. Ih<lb/>
nature<lb/>
Om th'<lb/>
supplemented<lb/>
-color moving<lb/>
etures.<lb/>
He sh<lb/>
I ' ? ?;o<lb/>
are ne<lb/>
these w.<lb/>
vn th?<lb/>
the man<lb/>
runwav<lb/>
IV<lb/>
h'<lb/>
fn<lb/>
th<lb/>
e cir<lb/>
?edit.<lb/>
led th<lb/>
n tin<lb/>
 another the man who, by means<lb/>
a great cable which be had to<lb/>
sp running smoothly, acted a a<lb/>
tk for these wagons. Both of<lb/>
!8? jobs arc very dangerous and<lb/>
t be carefully attended.<lb/>
rding to Mr. Beal, the circus<lb/>
tPlease turn to page two)<lb/>
to the delegate<lb/>
standing voice of the press.<lb/>
Attending from this college were<lb/>
Margaret Davis ami Mildred He-<lb/>
Donald editor and business manager<lb/>
of the Tecoan, and C. Hay Pruette<lb/>
and Marjorie Watson, editor and!<lb/>
1 business manager of the Teco Echo.<lb/>
The official opening and first <lb/>
j business session was beld Friday<lb/>
morning at 0:30. A talk hv Wesley!<lb/>
center Wallace oi WPTF, asking the cn-<lb/>
operation of the various colleges in<lb/>
'arranging an hour for college news<lb/>
to be put on the air through WPTF<lb/>
was the highlight of the morning<lb/>
A luncheon in the YMCA<lb/>
Building at State College was held<lb/>
at 1 :0(i o'clock, at which time F. II.<lb/>
Jeter welcomed the delegates in be-<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College To<lb/>
Be Host To North Carolina Education<lb/>
Association Here November 19,20<lb/>
I<lb/>
GEORGia UJIDIKUSOOD<lb/>
Secrebaru QuEns<lb/>
BILL STGLTOXl.<lb/>
Second Vice-pyesidenf-<lb/>
IWaKE PORE ST<lb/>
Above Are the Officers of the North Carolina Collegiate Press Association Who Presided Over the Fall<lb/>
Convention Which Was Held at Raleigh, November 4, 5, and 6.<lb/>
most im-<lb/>
?us, who session.<lb/>
Oif<lb/>
Bwagons<lb/>
railwav<lb/>
ARMISTICE DAY jFACULTY MEMBERS<lb/>
OBSERVED HERE ATTEND CONFERENCE<lb/>
Judge Luther Hamilton Speaker Good Teaching Theme of Confer-<lb/>
For Occasion ence; 3 High Schools to Figure<lb/>
in Experiment<lb/>
ENGLISH CLUB HAS<lb/>
INTERESTING MEET<lb/>
Judge Luther Hamilton, ex-serv-<lb/>
ice man, legionnaire receiver ol threw<lb/>
awards from the General Assembly<lb/>
of X. C. and a citizen of Morohoad<lb/>
City, delivered the Armistice Day<lb/>
address in tin<lb/>
hv<lb/>
President L. R. Meadows, Dr.<lb/>
II. J. MoGinnis, and Dr. E. L.<lb/>
Henderson, of the 'ollege returned<lb/>
Xovember 6 from a meeting of the<lb/>
Wright Memorial Xorth Carolina College conference<lb/>
Building. He was introduced '<lb/>
NORA BEUST IS<lb/>
AAOW SPEAKER<lb/>
Speaks on Books With Relation<lb/>
To Children<lb/>
.in Greensboro, of which Dr<lb/>
Mr. Arthur B. Corey, ex-commander Meadows is a member of tin<lb/>
MANY ATTEND MEETING<lb/>
HELD AT G0LDSB0R0<lb/>
Over twenty men<lb/>
Greenville branch of t<lb/>
for Childhood Educat<lb/>
state luncheon i th<lb/>
Saturday, November 6<lb/>
in connection with the<lb/>
i<lb/>
iistrict teach-<lb/>
meetmg held there.<lb/>
Among those attending from the<lb/>
College were Miss Dora Coates,<lb/>
State President of the ACK. Miss<lb/>
: :i Redwine, Mis Luey Xulton.<lb/>
Miss Kathhen Plumb, Miss Gladys<lb/>
Hughes, Mi- Christine John-ton.<lb/>
:?  Miss Alma Browning.<lb/>
The student branch of the ACE"<lb/>
sent a number of representa-<lb/>
tives Misses Corabob Smith, of<lb/>
A j len; Lucile Newton, of Hender-<lb/>
: Edna Karle Perry, of Louis-<lb/>
re: Celia Grantham, of Gclds-<lb/>
: Rebecca Nicholson, of Frank-<lb/>
On Tuesday night, November 9,<lb/>
a very interesting meeting of the<lb/>
English (dub was conducted by its<lb/>
president, Fannie Brewer. The<lb/>
theme of the program was "Book<lb/>
Week In keeping with this theme<lb/>
ssocia: l lin person answered the roll call<lb/>
in GoldsboroI wn some quotation about one of<lb/>
the current books represented by<lb/>
covers on display in the (dub room.<lb/>
The program consisted of a talk by<lb/>
Lillian Powell explaining the origin<lb/>
era ot the<lb/>
? Association<lb/>
? ii attended a<lb/>
mton<lb/>
and Mrs. Pearl Olund. of<lb/>
 h IIirlowe.<lb/>
The chel spcake? at !he luncheon<lb/>
 MissMavcie SUlth:dl. formerly<lb/>
f Eastern North ('arolna. but now<lb/>
Pr fessorof Elementarv Education<lb/>
it Peabwiv College<lb/>
The Sate presilent.Miss Dora<lb/>
i , 5?resided it tlluncheon.<lb/>
? i intrcduced tin1spakcr.<lb/>
Miss 1mcv Xlllton? as also a<lb/>
speakerit the S:tturday morning<lb/>
programof the (listrict teachers'<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Gift<lb/>
f book week and a talk by Margaret<lb/>
tiny Overman giving the story of<lb/>
the evolution of book making. After<lb/>
the meeting, the various groups into<lb/>
which the club is divided met and<lb/>
ilected their leaders. The leaders<lb/>
of these groups are: Modern Read-<lb/>
ing, Ina Mae Pearce, Oral Reading,<lb/>
Emily Rrondle. Drama. Mildred<lb/>
Edwards, and Literary Xorth<lb/>
Carolina, Evelyn Clark. These<lb/>
groups plan to do some good work<lb/>
this year, working as separate units,<lb/>
and the (dub. as a whole<lb/>
the (dub. as a whole, is looking jmanunl<lb/>
forward to a progressive year under silence<lb/>
the guidance of its president. Fan- J parted Comrades" followed<lb/>
I of the Post. The program was<lb/>
sponsored by the Pitt County Tost<lb/>
of the American Legion on Thurs-<lb/>
day morning, Xovember 11.<lb/>
j Judge Hamilton stated that it<lb/>
'was more than a celebration, that<lb/>
jit was a passover or a commemora-<lb/>
Ition. Picturing to the audience the<lb/>
call, the beginning, the continuance,<lb/>
the cessation, and the winning of<lb/>
the war, he said that the greatness<lb/>
of any war was in the fact that the<lb/>
; forefathers of this eountrv fought<lb/>
tor their posterity a war to bring<lb/>
perpetual peace, which is based on<lb/>
righteousness.<lb/>
"America will maintain her great-<lb/>
ness declared the speaker, "as long<lb/>
as she lives up to the principles set<lb/>
up by her forefathers<lb/>
The Armistice Day program was<lb/>
begun with music by the Greenville<lb/>
High School Band, after which the<lb/>
Post was formally opened, and the<lb/>
colors of the country advanced. The<lb/>
invocation was given by the Bev.<lb/>
Clarence Patrick, Pastor of Im-<lb/>
Baptist Church, and a<lb/>
In Memory of our De-<lb/>
exeeu-<lb/>
tive commission.<lb/>
The conference had as its central<lb/>
theme Good Teaching.<lb/>
It heard addresses on various<lb/>
phases of the subject from President<lb/>
Frank Graham, University of Xorth<lb/>
Carolina, Dean Mildred Thompson,<lb/>
Vassar College, State Superintend-<lb/>
ent Clyde Erwin, and Dr. W. H.<lb/>
Kilpatrick, Teachers College, Colum-<lb/>
bia.<lb/>
Two important steps were taken<lb/>
by the Conference.<lb/>
At the request of the Southern As-<lb/>
sociation of Colleges, the Conference<lb/>
decided to request the State to allow<lb/>
students from three high schools in<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
nie Brewer, and the facultv advisers<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
College Campuses Welcome<lb/>
Courses In RedCross First Aid<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers Col-<lb/>
lege has just received from<lb/>
A. B. Andrews, of Raleigh, the<lb/>
gift of a steel engraving of<lb/>
George Peabody, a man whose<lb/>
name is famous in education.<lb/>
Mr. Andrews is now, and has<lb/>
been for many years, a trustee<lb/>
of the College, and has more<lb/>
than once before presented sim-<lb/>
ilar gifts to the institution.<lb/>
The engraving is one which<lb/>
Mr. Andrews found on a trip<lb/>
abroad.<lb/>
It will probably be hung on<lb/>
the walls of the library, along<lb/>
with portraits of former Presi-<lb/>
dent Robert H. Wright and<lb/>
Dr. J. Y. Joyner.<lb/>
Washington. D. C.?Last Janu-<lb/>
ary, when the Hood waters of the<lb/>
Ohio fend Mississippi rivers inun-<lb/>
dated thousands of square miles<lb/>
along these valleys and those of<lb/>
tributary streams, affecting more<lb/>
than a million and a half persons,<lb/>
thousands of college men and women<lb/>
?both graduate and undergraduate<lb/>
?volunteered their services and<lb/>
made generous gifts to the Red Cross<lb/>
to assist in alleviating the suffering<lb/>
of stricken families.<lb/>
In addition to such help in the<lb/>
stress of great emergency, there has<lb/>
been a marked gain in interest in<lb/>
Red Cross programs on campuses<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
The Bed Cross services which arc<lb/>
proving to be most popular in col-<lb/>
leges are water life saving, first aid,<lb/>
and home care of the sick. Courses<lb/>
in these subjects are now taught in<lb/>
many institutions by qualified Red<lb/>
Cross instructors.<lb/>
swimming<lb/>
colleges which<lb/>
With the building of<lb/>
pools by many inlam<lb/>
previously had no means of in-<lb/>
dulging in water sports the Red<lb/>
Cross life saving program has be-<lb/>
come a recognized part of training<lb/>
in aquatics. Today, approximately<lb/>
00 per cent of those colleges which<lb/>
have pools are taught life saving<lb/>
by the Red Cross. Nearly all college<lb/>
swimming coaches are qualified life<lb/>
saving examiners and in many in-<lb/>
stitutions examinations are held each<lb/>
year by life saving field representa-<lb/>
tives of the national staff of the<lb/>
Rod Cross to qualify undergraduate<lb/>
life savers as examiners. These un-<lb/>
dergraduates who become qualified<lb/>
instructors assist swimming eoache9<lb/>
at their school in training other stu-<lb/>
dents to Income life savers and<lb/>
frequently accept positions as coun-<lb/>
cilors at summer camps or swim-<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
"CLUB MUSETTE" IS<lb/>
MUSIC CLUB'S NAME<lb/>
There was a meeting of the music<lb/>
dub Wednesday. November 3 in the<lb/>
Austin Auditorium. All members<lb/>
i present were asked to suggest a name<lb/>
for the newly formed club. The<lb/>
name chosen was "The Club<lb/>
Musette After the usual program<lb/>
of piano and violin music, Misses<lb/>
Dormer and Gorrell gave a special<lb/>
selection. Following the program<lb/>
all students who were not regular<lb/>
members of the club were invited<lb/>
to become associate members. This<lb/>
invitation is extended to all music<lb/>
lovers of the college who would like<lb/>
to attend the practice recitals the<lb/>
first and third Wednesday nights of<lb/>
every month from 6:30 to 7:30 in<lb/>
the Austin Auditorium.<lb/>
PRES. ADDRESSES ALUMNAE<lb/>
CHAPTER AT ROCKY MOUNT<lb/>
The X'ash-Edgecombe Chapter of<lb/>
ECTC Alumnae Association held a<lb/>
very enthusiastic supper meeting in<lb/>
Rocky Mount, Monday, Xovember<lb/>
8.<lb/>
The thirty members present were<lb/>
grouped around long tables over<lb/>
which Mrs. Minnie R. Brake, pres-<lb/>
ident of the chapter, presided. Mrs.<lb/>
Earle Greatliouse gave a welcome<lb/>
toast to which Mrs. Martha Foun-<lb/>
tain responded.<lb/>
Dr. L. R. Meadows delivered the<lb/>
principal address of the meeting.<lb/>
Miss Xora Beust, AAFW speak-<lb/>
er at the Woman's Club building<lb/>
Saturday afternoon, Xovember 6,<lb/>
opened her talk on books with the<lb/>
statement there should be in every<lb/>
community a room especially for<lb/>
children, to help them grow "in all<lb/>
the directions in which they can<lb/>
grow?socially, religiously, mentally,<lb/>
in the line of the fine arts and<lb/>
every way possible.<lb/>
Miss Beust prefaced her discussion<lb/>
of the best of the new children's<lb/>
hooks with a comment on the real<lb/>
need of children to have a library<lb/>
of books of their own.<lb/>
"As in social life she said,<lb/>
"children should have a wide ac-<lb/>
quaintance also in the field of books,<lb/>
but should have, in addition, some<lb/>
close friends to live much with<lb/>
Xo matter how high a book is<lb/>
rated, it is not a good one in a given<lb/>
situation unless it really is suited<lb/>
to the boy or girl who is to read<lb/>
it.<lb/>
The speaker said she no longer<lb/>
believes in limiting purchases of<lb/>
children's books in a family to class-<lb/>
ics, but thinks that some modern<lb/>
books should be bought to read just<lb/>
for fun.<lb/>
Miss Beust. who is a specialist<lb/>
on children's books and has a con-<lb/>
stant flow of new ones from the<lb/>
publishers to her desk, had brought<lb/>
with her from her office in Chapel<lb/>
Hill a number of books just out.<lb/>
(Please turn to page tour)<lb/>
AT CHAIEL HILL<lb/>
Sarah Ann Maxwell Replaces<lb/>
Louise Davis As First Vice<lb/>
President of Conference<lb/>
Attendance Expected To Reach<lb/>
Over 1.500 During the<lb/>
Meeting<lb/>
DANCE TO BE ADDED<lb/>
FEATURE OF PROGRAM<lb/>
Program to be Divided Into Three<lb/>
General Meetings<lb/>
Accompanied by Miss Zoe Anna<lb/>
Davies, director of Religious Educa-<lb/>
tion at the Greenville<lb/>
Church, sixteen students<lb/>
and two town hovs attend"<lb/>
Methodist<lb/>
of ECTC<lb/>
i the sixth<lb/>
it C.1<lb/>
F !<lb/>
and :<lb/>
will<lb/>
annual meeting of the N State<lb/>
Student Methodist Conference in<lb/>
Chapel Hill. November 5-7, 1037.<lb/>
The University of North Carolina.<lb/>
and University Methodist Church<lb/>
were hosts to the conference. Ap-<lb/>
proximately one hundred and fifty<lb/>
delegates were present, representing<lb/>
fifteen colleges in North Carolina.<lb/>
With an attendance of I<lb/>
2,000 expected, the f, ? ;?.?,<lb/>
Northeastern District of th<lb/>
Carolina Education Associat<lb/>
hold their annual meeting<lb/>
? 'arolina Teachers ('ollege,<lb/>
mkI Saturday. November If<lb/>
The first general meeting<lb/>
held in the Austin Building A .<lb/>
torium, Friday afternoon, Novembi<lb/>
19, at three o'clock. Dr. Jacks .<lb/>
president of the North Caro<lb/>
Education Association and preside n<lb/>
of the Woman College at Greens-<lb/>
boro, and the Honorable Cal Einm .<lb/>
of Atlanta. Georgia, will Em the<lb/>
speakers of this meeting.<lb/>
The second general meeting will<lb/>
he<lb/>
ich<lb/>
theme<lb/>
Dr. Craig made three<lb/>
addresses, after which ques-<lb/>
tions were asked. In open forum.<lb/>
Dr. X. C. MePherson, dr of the<lb/>
General Board of Christian Educa-<lb/>
tion. Nashville, Tennessee, also dis-<lb/>
cussed questions vital to the life of<lb/>
the college student.<lb/>
Ellis Bullins of the University of<lb/>
Robe<lb/>
Dr. Clarence T. Craig of Oherlin i, VXiT f v'f1'<lb/>
  p  m ? ?  r, Building at eight o 'dock. Eridav.<lb/>
( ollege. Oborhn. Ohio, was theon- rv r-n   r , , <lb/>
 ft - , ,  . , ,1'r. hlbert K. rretwell of Columbia<lb/>
ference speaker, r ol lowing the con- ? 7 ? . . ,  , . <lb/>
, T,  . . T 1 I nivensty, and lvde A. hrwm,<lb/>
ference theme 'The Christian J? State Superintendent of Public Ln-<lb/>
Today Dr. raig made three ,truction be th(. fa<lb/>
formal addresses, after which ques-1 ,i meetm?<lb/>
Xorth ('arolina, president of this<lb/>
this<lb/>
'The third and last general meet-<lb/>
ing will be held in the Austin Build-<lb/>
ing Auditorium at eleven o'clock on<lb/>
Saturday morning. The speaker for<lb/>
this session will be Dr. Fretwell.<lb/>
Dinner Meeting<lb/>
Four dinner meetings will be held<lb/>
Cnivorsitv presided over the business !at .sixo1lock ? Frida' ?in? Wlth<lb/>
meeting Louise Davis of ECTC P?Pal ? ' ' ' ' - ??<lb/>
acted as first vice president.<lb/>
Saturday morning, six discussion<lb/>
groups concerning "The Christian<lb/>
Issue Today" as the college student<lb/>
sees it, were held. Saturday eve-<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
"HOBBIES" SUBJECT OF MISS<lb/>
GWYNN TO HIGH SCHOOL CLASS<lb/>
ing the old dining room, classroom<lb/>
teachers in the new dining room,<lb/>
vocational teachers in the Parish<lb/>
House of the Episcopal Church, and<lb/>
the Childhood Education Associa-<lb/>
tion in the Rotary Club Building.<lb/>
Departmental group meetings will<lb/>
be held Friday afternoon at 4:30<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Miss Parmelia Gwynn, teacher of<lb/>
public school art at ECTC made I<lb/>
a brief talk to the home economics!<lb/>
class at the hieh school last Tues-<lb/>
day afternoon<lb/>
"Hobhies<lb/>
"Hobbies<lb/>
on<lb/>
the subject of<lb/>
AT VESPER SERIES<lb/>
may easn<lb/>
trow into<lb/>
state<lb/>
vocations<lb/>
using her own life<lb/>
For thirteen years<lb/>
interested in art<lb/>
"Birthdays'<lb/>
I inspiring an<lb/>
made at the YWCA<lb/>
lice, Friday evening<lb/>
i<lb/>
1 Miss Gwynn,<lb/>
as an illustration-<lb/>
she said, she was<lb/>
as a hobby, and<lb/>
finally became so interested in it that<lb/>
she made it her life work.<lb/>
The speaker corrected the gem ral<lb/>
impression that some persons are<lb/>
horn artists. She pointed out that<lb/>
everyone can create whether he can<lb/>
draw or not.<lb/>
In speaking of her own classes,<lb/>
Miss Gwynn said. "Out of one hun-<lb/>
dred and three students, onlv six ,<lb/>
. , . . , . ? . ; first reference<lb/>
had used brushes before, and their Lo 1 1<lb/>
, ,   ,  Herod who was<lb/>
art work was remarkably well done. 1 ? ? t<lb/>
T ,  , ? , . ,(nieces dancing<lb/>
In concluding, the guest explained j<lb/>
how stenciling, designing, finger'<lb/>
painting, spatter prints, and various<lb/>
other works of art were done.<lb/>
was the subject of an<lb/>
enlightening talk<lb/>
Johnson Outstanding Boxer<lb/>
of South, Says Add Warren<lb/>
Vesper Serv-<lb/>
November ?<lb/>
?y Miss Emma L. Hooper, a mem-<lb/>
ber of the English Department of<lb/>
this College.<lb/>
"L" began Miss Hooper, "am<lb/>
going to talk to you about birthdays<lb/>
a strange subject maybe, but then<lb/>
everybody likes birthdays The<lb/>
speaker then quoted references to the<lb/>
work birthday from the Bible. The<lb/>
was that of King<lb/>
so pleased by his<lb/>
that he promised<lb/>
anything in the world. After<lb/>
conferring with her mother, sin-<lb/>
asked for the head of John the<lb/>
Baptist. Her request was granted,<lb/>
hut King Herod's birthday was<lb/>
ruined. The next reference was to<lb/>
?1<lb/>
lit<lb/>
Jesus<lb/>
By BILLIE DANIELS<lb/>
Jimmy Johnson, one of ECTC's<lb/>
most outstanding athletes, added to<lb/>
his laurels last Friday night as he<lb/>
defeated Odell Jackson in a<lb/>
scheduled eight round boxing match.<lb/>
Johnson won by a knockout after<lb/>
15 seconds of the second round. He<lb/>
knocked his opponent down three<lb/>
times in the first round with a<lb/>
vicious barrage of blows, and con-<lb/>
tinued the bombardment in the first<lb/>
part of the second round to floor<lb/>
his opponent twice, the second time<lb/>
for the full count.<lb/>
In disposing of Jackson, John-<lb/>
son defeated one of the Smith's out-<lb/>
standing heavyweights. Add War-<lb/>
ren, former champion of Dixie in<lb/>
the heavyweight class and at present<lb/>
boxing coach of Duke, claimed that<lb/>
Odell Jackson ranked high among<lb/>
the best boxers in the South. In<lb/>
defeating Jackson, Jimmy Johnson<lb/>
replaces him in the southern rank-<lb/>
in8s- m<lb/>
Last Friday's bout was the third<lb/>
time these two heavyweights have<lb/>
met in the ring. Johnson has won<lb/>
two of these fights via the knockout i<lb/>
route. Jackson likewise defeated!<lb/>
Johnson in one of their meetings on <lb/>
a technical kayo.<lb/>
Johnson announced after his re-j<lb/>
turn to the local campus that the<lb/>
ECTC Varsity Club would sponsor!<lb/>
a card of boxing matches in thej<lb/>
very near future. Fight fans of<lb/>
Greenville will be given an op-<lb/>
portunity to see the Pirate boxer in<lb/>
action at this time. To date no<lb/>
opponent has been found to meet<lb/>
Johnson but one of this section's<lb/>
capable heavyweights will be selected<lb/>
to fight the college mauler.<lb/>
the blind man, who:<lb/>
I restored. The day he began to see<lb/>
was indeed a birthday to him. As a<lb/>
colorful illustration the speaker told<lb/>
of Helen Keller, and her desire to<lb/>
? see and what she would choose to<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
New Matron<lb/>
A University of Minnesota fresh-<lb/>
man has had to say "Ugh" 97,000<lb/>
times in the last few weeks. That<lb/>
one world is his entire speaking part<lb/>
in a play.<lb/>
The place as dormitory ma-<lb/>
tron at the College left vacant<lb/>
by the resignation of Mrs.<lb/>
W. G. McKean has been filled<lb/>
by Miss Ruth White, a former<lb/>
ECTC graduate, whose home is<lb/>
near Colerain.<lb/>
Miss White has been teach-<lb/>
ing at Roanoke Rapids and tak-<lb/>
ing additional work in ths sum-<lb/>
mer at this College, the Univer-<lb/>
sity of North Carolina, and<lb/>
Duke.<lb/>
Last summer she served here<lb/>
as assistant to the Dean of<lb/>
Women during the summer ses-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
<pb facs="00038062_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
Il'r ,??<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
bast ixmui.s.i ftiimw causes<lb/>
Published Biweekly by the Students of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
C. Rat Phcetti<lb/>
Marjosie V MS.<lb/>
Ihl.l.Y DaMI! S<lb/>
Hakwa Dk.w<lb/>
Lso Burks<lb/>
Cats kim: Cukki<lb/>
Sports . . .<lb/>
. Edilor-in-Chicf<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITOBS<lb/>
GkOEGIA Sl'UU<lb/>
Sabah Ann Maxwell<lb/>
: Patsy MtIntyre<lb/>
Fii.i.v Daniels<lb/>
Xanay Page<lb/>
Lewis KkKakkkk<lb/>
Caroline Evans<lb/>
 DVERTISIXG MANAGERS<lb/>
Ethel Lee Bykd<lb/>
Lccille Johnson<lb/>
Carolyn Lamb<lb/>
Rbpobxobxax. Staff: La Hue Mooring, Mary Williams, lua Mae<lb/>
Fierce, Ruth ('reekmore, Mablo Owens, Ethel Padgett,<lb/>
Dorothy Hollar, Fodie Hodges, Jeter Oakley, Bath Phil-<lb/>
lips, Edna Mae Tnrnnge, Mary Clyde Coppedge, John David<lb/>
Bridges, Jack Daniels.<lb/>
Subscription Price $1.00 per College Year<lb/>
Postoffiee PoxesNumbers 68, 182<lb/>
Office Room 25<lb/>
Entered as second-class matter December 3, 1925, at the IJ. S.<lb/>
Postoffiee, Greenville, X. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
1937 Member 1938 I<lb/>
j RCPRESENTCO FOB NATIONAL ADVERTISING BV<lb/>
Associated GbUefciate Press NationalAdvertisingServlce,liic.<lb/>
Collte Publisher Retirtsenlalivt<lb/>
Distributor of<lb/>
Colle6tateD'i6est<lb/>
420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.<lb/>
CmCMO - BOSTOH ? LOS ARGELCS - SAR FRARCISCO<lb/>
East Carolina Teachers College to<lb/>
Be Host to N. C. Education As-<lb/>
sociation Here November 19-20<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
o'clock and Saturday morning at<lb/>
9:30 o'clock<lb/>
An added feature of the meeting<lb/>
will be the reception and dance<lb/>
Friday evening given in honor ol<lb/>
the visiting teachers by the teachers<lb/>
of Greenville City Schools, Green-<lb/>
ville Tobacco Hoard of Trade, and<lb/>
the Greenville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce. The dance will he held at<lb/>
Greenville High School.<lb/>
Places of meeting are as follows:<lb/>
First general meeting, Austin<lb/>
Auditorium. ?' p.m.<lb/>
Second general meeting, Robert<lb/>
II. Wright Auditorium. 8 p.m.<lb/>
Third general session. Austin<lb/>
Auditorium, 1 1 a.m.<lb/>
Agricultural teachers, Austin<lb/>
Building, Room 109.<lb/>
Classroom teachers. Austin Build-<lb/>
ing, Room 209.<lb/>
Home Economics Teachers, third<lb/>
floor College Science Building.<lb/>
Department oi' Superintendents,<lb/>
Austin Building, Room l?.<lb/>
English teachers, Austin Building.<lb/>
Room 111.<lb/>
Latin teachers, Austin Building,<lb/>
Room 104.<lb/>
Librarians, Creenvill<lb/>
School Library.<lb/>
Elementary Principals<lb/>
LETTERS<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
(Editor's Note: This depart-<lb/>
ment is open tn all students m<lb/>
school here. The TECO Echo<lb/>
reserves the right to censor or<lb/>
reject all communications. Jit-<lb/>
ters published herein express in-<lb/>
diridual opinion, and do not<lb/>
1 ml<lb/>
iocs<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
ildmj<lb/>
R<lb/>
oom<lb/>
120.<lb/>
High<lb/>
Austin<lb/>
Austin<lb/>
an<lb/>
The staff of the Teco Echo wishes every member of the college faculty.<lb/>
students of East Carolina Teacher's College a most pleasant<lb/>
Thiiiksirivine<lb/>
PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS!<lb/>
Each student of East Carolina Teacher's College can do<lb/>
support the Teco Echo by patronizing the firms whose advertisements<lb/>
appear in this publication.<lb/>
his part to<lb/>
Th<lb/>
LOITERING<lb/>
time is here when students should realize that loitering on our cam-<lb/>
pus is a serious problem. It i. up to the student body as a whole, boys as well<lb/>
as girls, to solve this problem. The Student Government Associations<lb/>
cannot clear up the situation alone. They need, and ak for, the coopera-<lb/>
tion of every student enrolled in this school.<lb/>
Surely if you have walked on campus at night between 7:30 and 10:00<lb/>
o'clock you are not unaware of the situation which exists in regards to<lb/>
this matter.<lb/>
Will yon say that it becomes college students to be seen hanging around<lb/>
porch steps, columns, shrubbery, and corners at night? Certainly not!<lb/>
We have parlors open every night and they are the places to entertain)<lb/>
friends. There is no need for one's having to entertain his friends at any<lb/>
of the other named places.<lb/>
It we will alter these circumstances it will be the means of solving another<lb/>
much-discussed problem on our campus?the dating parlor issue. It has<lb/>
been declared by authorities that if the students will be quieter in the<lb/>
dormitories, it they will refrain from leaving the dormitories not properly<lb/>
(Lei. and if they will stop loitering on the campus after seven-thirty p.m.<lb/>
all parlors will be open for dating?each girl dating in her respective<lb/>
dormitory, when we return from the Christmas holidays. We have asked<lb/>
for the opening of these parlors; are we willing to do our part in remov-<lb/>
ing the obstacles that prevent this! The proposition has been stated.<lb/>
Whether we will solve it and prove that we really want the parlors open<lb/>
i- up to us.<lb/>
Let us bear the aforementioned three points in mind, and above all don't<lb/>
biter on the campus, anywhere after 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
LESS NOISE. PLEASE!<lb/>
noise has become a problem for everyone.<lb/>
The elimination ol<lb/>
eordant sounds assail one's eardrums practically everywhere.<lb/>
 in some places, has more than its share of racket<lb/>
Di<lb/>
Persons<lb/>
in and around the "Y" store during vacant periods are sometimes care-<lb/>
less or thoughtless about the fuss they are making. The teachers in the<lb/>
basement are hampered in the effectiveness of their teaching when various<lb/>
an, sundry catcalls and yells divert the attention of the class.<lb/>
The making of unwanted noise is a social error, and a nuisanc<lb/>
does no one good and it causes harm in many cases.<lb/>
Fewer menagerie sound-effects from the vicinity of the "Y" ton<lb/>
please!<lb/>
L<lb/>
High School Principal<lb/>
Building. Room 224.<lb/>
Modern Language Teachers,<lb/>
Austin Building, Room 26.<lb/>
Dramatic Arts. Austin Building.<lb/>
Room 203.<lb/>
Music teachers. Austin Building,<lb/>
Room 123.<lb/>
Math Teachers. Austin Building,<lb/>
Room 126.<lb/>
Commercial teachers. Austin<lb/>
Building. Room 103.<lb/>
Physical Education teachers,<lb/>
Austin Building, Room 110.<lb/>
Social Science teachers. Austin<lb/>
Building, Room 1 14.<lb/>
Elementary teachers, Austin<lb/>
Building Auditorium.<lb/>
Science teachers, First floor<lb/>
Science Building.<lb/>
College Campuses Welcome<lb/>
Courses in Red Cross First Aid<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
ming instructors at beaches<lb/>
pools.<lb/>
First aid. like life saving, is being<lb/>
taught more widely each year in<lb/>
colleges and universities by the Red<lb/>
Cross. Today both of these subjects<lb/>
are required in nearly all physical<lb/>
education courses.<lb/>
Following the adoption of first aid<lb/>
as a regular course in many junior<lb/>
and senior high schools throughout<lb/>
the country, numerous teacher-train-<lb/>
ing colleges have requested the Red<lb/>
Cross to send its staff doctors in to<lb/>
give advanced first aid courses in<lb/>
their institutions so that the teacher-<lb/>
graduates may le qualified to in-<lb/>
struct in this subject.<lb/>
Courses in home hygiene and care<lb/>
of the sick are given to women in<lb/>
many colleges and universities,<lb/>
especially to students in home eco-<lb/>
nomic and teacher-training depart-<lb/>
ments. This instruction is given by<lb/>
Red Cross nurses and, although it<lb/>
does not qualify the students as in-<lb/>
structors, it does enable them to<lb/>
plan more intelligently health in-<lb/>
struction in the schools where they<lb/>
subsequently teach.<lb/>
Each autumn, during the annual<lb/>
Red Cross Roll Call, thousands of<lb/>
university and college students in<lb/>
every part of the nation renew their<lb/>
memberships to help support the lied<lb/>
Cross to carry on its disaster relief<lb/>
work and year-round service pro-<lb/>
grams throughout the coming twelve<lb/>
months. FXeryone is invited to<lb/>
share in the work of the Red Cross<lb/>
by enrolling from November 11 to<lb/>
represent tlie editoria<lb/>
of I his newspaper.)<lb/>
To the Editor:<lb/>
The action by (lining-room au-<lb/>
thorities in prohibiting the men of<lb/>
the college from sitting together at<lb/>
meals has been a cause of complaint<lb/>
from many sources. 1'nderthe pres-<lb/>
ent set-up. one or two members of<lb/>
the male sex are placed at the fable<lb/>
with the other four or five places<lb/>
taken by girls. If a young man is<lb/>
so unfortunate as to be the only<lb/>
masculine representative at bis fa-<lb/>
ille, be sits silent and lonely, eating<lb/>
his meal while shooting furtive<lb/>
glances at his companions with the<lb/>
hope that they won't notice bis<lb/>
voracious appetite. Meanwhile, the<lb/>
girls carry on a perfectly spark-<lb/>
j ling conversation about the latest<lb/>
j styles, last week-end's date, and the<lb/>
 horrid way some other gal wears<lb/>
! her baiv.<lb/>
Instead of being in a wholesome<lb/>
! atmosphere where all his com pa n-<lb/>
i ions are as hungry as he is and the<lb/>
conversation is definitely masculine<lb/>
I in its content, the down-trodden<lb/>
j male must listen to the chatter of<lb/>
j frivolous femininity. In short.<lb/>
j meals have become to the men of<lb/>
I the college a time to dread rather<lb/>
than the most enjoyable part of<lb/>
! the college program.<lb/>
A Junior.<lb/>
lips are so tempting<lb/>
I have one taste!<lb/>
Please join<lb/>
lyn's movement<lb/>
sign languugt<lb/>
boys on 'ot t<lb/>
I ha I girls in<lb/>
to boys outside the dormitories.<lb/>
Thanks to everyone responsible<lb/>
for that big succes<lb/>
ing dance. (<lb/>
favorable.<lb/>
My Persona<lb/>
ol' dark rooms<lb/>
At all athletic eontesl<lb/>
of the cheering is don<lb/>
parativoly few people.<lb/>
cheering section won<lb/>
the cheer leaders am<lb/>
? <lb/>
Joe Blow takes it upon liimse<lb/>
to say that, on the average, stu<lb/>
dents enjoy the dancing hour from<lb/>
0:30 to 7:30 better ilian all Hi'<lb/>
other entertainments put together.<lb/>
In spite of this very few new rec-<lb/>
ords are bought. Buying tin<lb/>
records would be a very cheap way<lb/>
to secure the esteem and genuine<lb/>
thanks of the student body.<lb/>
APPRECIATIVE AUDIENCE<lb/>
HEARS BEAL PRESENT LIFE<lb/>
OF CIRCUS IN COLORFUL WAY<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
is in a constant state of movement<lb/>
all day, the regular circus day being<lb/>
sixteen hours long for the workers.<lb/>
He said that the bosses' job was a<lb/>
Hrdent worker pckl<lb/>
WrERMAnONAL PEAC&amp; <lb/>
lAMILTOK HOLT<lb/>
 PR&amp;SiDEMT OP KXJLHMS COI<lb/>
PJMJQJRATEO THE ODNflBENCE I I<lb/>
JTUD WHICH ABPLlSHfcD THE LEClV-r<lb/>
bectwion SYnEM-PLAcs?JG soa<lb/>
OW AN ElGHT-HOue Ci '<lb/>
j To the Editor :<lb/>
ECTC has the unenviable record<lb/>
of being the only college in the state<lb/>
of North Carolina to give its ath-<lb/>
lletic association les?s than $2.00 a<lb/>
quarter to support men's sports.<lb/>
Our men's athletic department re-<lb/>
tlu<lb/>
twenty-tour hour per<lb/>
The pictures which<lb/>
of the animals were<lb/>
One picture<lb/>
aants walkini<lb/>
eeives the enormous sum of exactl .<lb/>
60 cents per student to finance its<lb/>
program This 00 cents comes out!<lb/>
of the $).()() Student Activity fee.<lb/>
a fund that is contributed by the<lb/>
students for their own activity. The<lb/>
I committee which appropriated this<lb/>
an(l j fund to the various activities saw<lb/>
day JOD.<lb/>
i weic shown<lb/>
irticularly<lb/>
good. line picture sllov.ed a group<lb/>
of elephants walking single file, each<lb/>
one holding the tail of the one in<lb/>
front of him. Mr. Beal explained<lb/>
that this was done to prevent the<lb/>
elephants from snatching things. r<lb/>
! even people, from the crowd. Also.<lb/>
'someone has to walk in front of the<lb/>
elephants and pick up any obstacles<lb/>
which might hurt the animal's feet.<lb/>
: Elephants, he said, have very tender<lb/>
The Type of Dance Is Not The Thing<lb/>
But Listen Sister, You Gotta Swing<lb/>
Editors X'ote : This article was<lb/>
taken fron the Technician X. C.<lb/>
Stan<lb/>
,i<lb/>
fit to give the Athletic Association<lb/>
about ten per een1 of the total<lb/>
amount as compared with the 35<lb/>
per cent given to the Tecoon and<lb/>
over 30 per cent granted for other<lb/>
college entertainments. As a conse-<lb/>
 , irnese qualities in order tna<lb/>
quence, our teams are not properlyL. ? -n  ?th<lb/>
? , ill j. ? thing will run sniootluv. I he circus<lb/>
euumned and lack the neeessni-v In. . ? , . , <lb/>
is one great Ing happy family, said<lb/>
Quite in opposition to general<lb/>
opinion. Mr. Beal pointed out the<lb/>
fact that camels are the most dan-<lb/>
gerous animals in the circus. They<lb/>
must be treated accordingly.<lb/>
The people who are a part of the<lb/>
circuS are as Mr. Beal see- them,<lb/>
very ordinary home folks. The<lb/>
workmen are loyai and prompt<lb/>
which make it easier to carry on<lb/>
the work of the circus. It is quite<lb/>
necessary for the workmen to possess<lb/>
these qualities in order that everv<lb/>
College and depicts the types<lb/>
dancers unusually well.<lb/>
THE SWOOPEB IXX KB ?<lb/>
who wraps his arm around your<lb/>
middle, hauls you in. and after<lb/>
you re completely pinioned and<lb/>
powerless tries his best to find out<lb/>
how many interesting twists your<lb/>
backbone can manage without<lb/>
cracking. If it cracks in the swoop-<lb/>
ing, yon are not a good dancer. The<lb/>
least this type could do would be<lb/>
to make an honest woman of you<lb/>
afterwards.<lb/>
THE CHISELEB is he, lowest:<lb/>
of beasts, who after<lb/>
Lookin' Over<lb/>
the<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Louis KeB,<lb/>
these davs '<lb/>
Well, every<lb/>
thirty 2 of<lb/>
little bow am<lb/>
irker is p<lb/>
How do<lb/>
aftemooi<lb/>
he pract<lb/>
1 arrow d<lb/>
en<lb/>
hip<lb/>
He calls<lb/>
equipped and lack the necessary fa<lb/>
eilities to win more ball games.<lb/>
A Sports Fan.<lb/>
"THE OBSERVER"<lb/>
By JOE BLOW<lb/>
Joe Blow, who writes this col-<lb/>
umn, will conduct "Advice to the<lb/>
Lovelorn which will appear in<lb/>
the subsequent issue of this rag.<lb/>
Please give Joe material so he<lb/>
will be able to make this a regular he told his audience, "and must h<lb/>
feature. Address all sob stories to trained to hit the net in such<lb/>
Joe Blow, and either leave them in as to prevent being injured<lb/>
the Teco Echo room or give them<lb/>
to one of the editors.<lb/>
around with you in breathless ecs-<lb/>
tasy i he in ecstasy, you breathless!<lb/>
switches bis grip to a lean on your<lb/>
right shoulder, props bis weight<lb/>
there and moves his legs like all hell<lb/>
while you're more or less anchored<lb/>
Mr. Beal. to the spot?except the back of your<lb/>
The pictures presented along with lap which displays a tendency to<lb/>
his talk of the big show were quite buckle up from the strain.<lb/>
good. He showed the bare-hack THE LONDON BRIDGERS<lb/>
riders. trapeze artist, trained or a variation of the cheek-to-eheek<lb/>
animals, and (downs. He said that dancer who presses your heads to-<lb/>
il' one of the performers should fail gether and presses his cheek com<lb/>
1 just wonder where ana<lb/>
?avortmg iiIM ?  ?  ,<lb/>
L1  -loll!) !CU . .If S these (j<lb/>
ur' had a way with the<lb/>
one particular lady I km<lb/>
H.<lb/>
Looking at the dee (<lb/>
Armistice Day. discovered<lb/>
end row. singing, no oth<lb/>
Stanley Scarborough, and<lb/>
to myself, says i What<lb/>
that I haven't got My dea<lb/>
a tall U.v<lb/>
UH<lb/>
Bah<lb/>
"What to do with one's spare<lb/>
time" is one of the major prob-<lb/>
lems of humanity, and, without a<lb/>
shadow of a doubt, ECTC students<lb/>
are human beings. Would it be too<lb/>
much to ask that a NYA student<lb/>
be put on duty in the "Y" hut in<lb/>
the afternoons, so students can<lb/>
dance and meet their friends?<lb/>
 I've noticed lately that ever since<lb/>
Emmit Sawyer tried out for the<lb/>
Sophomore play he's been going<lb/>
around repeating some lines from<lb/>
the play to certain girls ? to wit:<lb/>
From the deepest cavern of my<lb/>
heart, Darling, I love vou. your<lb/>
Cas<lb/>
which<lb/>
true.<lb/>
speaKii<lb/>
of ou<lb/>
WHAT OTHER EDITORS SAY:<lb/>
? think of "personality" as a "way with peoph<lb/>
friends possess. Technically speaking, that is not<lb/>
 1 ersoaahty is not the "way" in which a person has, but rather the<lb/>
way m which he affects us?shall we say, our reactions to him. Thus<lb/>
we are dependent on anotlu r person for the things we think and often for<lb/>
the things that we do. At the same time realize how many times we disre-<lb/>
gard the ideas and feelings of that very person upon whom we are emo-<lb/>
tionally or intellectually dependent! Xot that we do it outwardlv-Oh<lb/>
no ! Ju.st to ourselves!<lb/>
If we would or could take our minds away from ourselves long enough<lb/>
to listen to others-not with our minds miles away-how much more we<lb/>
could learn f? The ?s ormal Bacquette?Potsdam.<lb/>
MISS HOOPCTSWjIg j. TOwM.a.fci.<lb/>
M VESPER SERVICES -a dreadful gift, or will we choose<lb/>
like the blind man?to do that which<lb/>
NEWS<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
look upon if she had three days<lb/>
to see.<lb/>
When people find themselves, it<lb/>
is indeed a birthday for them. "And<lb/>
continued the speaker, "It is the<lb/>
privilege of each of us to choose<lb/>
what we will choose to celebrate<lb/>
And how much richer and fuller<lb/>
will our life be if we but choose the<lb/>
Jesus wishes us to do? Miss Hooper<lb/>
closed her talk by saying: "Birth-<lb/>
days are lovely opportunities for us<lb/>
to choose our way of life?to make<lb/>
it richer and fuller year by year.<lb/>
If one's life is so guided and so<lb/>
touched with spiritual life that it<lb/>
grows and finds favor with God and<lb/>
m this way with man, then our birth-<lb/>
days are happy occasions<lb/>
(Editor's Note: The following<lb/>
article appeared in the Teco<lb/>
Echo, October 26, 1927.)<lb/>
"Delia Does Her Shopping"<lb/>
I declare, I just hate to go down<lb/>
town when I haven't but one post-<lb/>
age stamp between me and being<lb/>
broke. But land! don't I have a<lb/>
good time window shopping. It just<lb/>
naturally makes my mouth water<lb/>
to see all the pretty fall rig outs<lb/>
these merchants have for college<lb/>
girls. As soon as Dad receives that<lb/>
heart and purse breaking letter I<lb/>
dispatched yesterday I'm going to<lb/>
decorate my boats to a new pair of<lb/>
shoes. The other evening when I<lb/>
didn't have much to do (Ethel<lb/>
Spratt had borrowed my N. C. His-<lb/>
tory book) I put on my town and<lb/>
Sunday frock and "dropped in"<lb/>
on several of the merchants. Mary<lb/>
and I went into raptures over a<lb/>
black georgette and velvet dress at<lb/>
Williams-Chanman's. The skirt was<lb/>
one velvet ruffle after the other<lb/>
'Twas just the thing for tall girls<lb/>
like me. It was trimmed in the pret-<lb/>
tiest buttons I ever saw and had a<lb/>
In The Teco Echo<lb/>
Ten Years Ago<lb/>
tie on the shoulder. I always did<lb/>
love to have something on my<lb/>
shoulder. I don't blame some folk's<lb/>
for carrying chips on theirs.<lb/>
Well, sir, I thought I was going<lb/>
to have to call the police to keep<lb/>
Mary from walking off with one of<lb/>
those puppy-dog poeketbooks at<lb/>
Bowen's. I was nearly as bad when<lb/>
I found I could mash his tail and<lb/>
he would bark. I didn't buy one<lb/>
now because its nearly my birth-<lb/>
day and since I'm an Emerson I'll<lb/>
go down then and purchase me one.<lb/>
I saw something at Heber Forbes<lb/>
that isn't just the snake's hips,<lb/>
it's the whole snake made in the<lb/>
form of a flexible bracelet. There<lb/>
was a long necklace that could be<lb/>
worn in cahoots with it, too. My,<lb/>
that was something flashy.<lb/>
I spent so much time at three or<lb/>
.  ,  ?? , ,? ? ? I' Huteiunson pise<lb/>
to make his act good at first trial fort ably and permanently against I ?limre dances these days<lb/>
he must keep at it until he does it yours. Then aghast at his own an-1 MP,aro J Il(' Still thinks <lb/>
right. "Even the best trapeze and dacity. he does his best to get the! wm wrn"?' ?!?"it round v<lb/>
tight rope artists miss sometimes rest of his body as far away from <lb/>
yours as possible?giving the effect It looks as if Joe Wfl<lb/>
ra.n1 to hit she an ,n such a way ; of a bridge. The only commendable good with his broke art<lb/>
j thing to be said for this type is that always managed to get mo<lb/>
than ('hauneev Caifee.<lb/>
rhv<lb/>
ic hi<lb/>
"The horses which are used in the if the floor is crowded , ,i Her<lb/>
circus, for pulling purposes, are couple can verv easily dance in the<lb/>
picked up anywhere, sometimes from gap between the bodies without dis-<lb/>
milk wagons said Mr. Beal. j turbing anyone<lb/>
His lecture even earried his THE PFMPER-He is a more<lb/>
audience, by his words and the mov-i enthusiastic member of the hand<lb/>
ing pictures, mto the private trailer shaker family. After he has sized<lb/>
homes of the performers. jyou up. he grasps your right band<lb/>
The ease with which the circus firmly in his left and without fur<lb/>
men and women move from one loca-ther ado proceeds with the pumn<lb/>
tion to another was especially im-hng process which consists of hat 1-<lb/>
tks<lb/>
There is only one thine<lb/>
cause Primrose Carpentei<lb/>
?rill<lb/>
pressive to the audience.<lb/>
GOVERNOR TALKS TO<lb/>
CONVENTION DELEGATES<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
half of State College.<lb/>
Group Meetings<lb/>
ing you up on your toes with a<lb/>
yank and setting you back again<lb/>
with a downward push on the same<lb/>
very vigorous or<lb/>
look, and<lb/>
an's call<lb/>
'ten. and that<lb/>
Briefs?<lb/>
Scarlv.ro si<lb/>
Stanley<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
Charles<lb/>
blondes?.<lb/>
Adrian Avers is hard.<lb/>
MlSsseSw hi!)<lb/>
i arm. It may be very vigorous or! lisl language (Pronunciai<lb/>
racefully slow as the falling of! F?die Hedges likes stea<lb/>
iceordiiig to the tempo ofjerv,l in onions when the ?<lb/>
leaves,<lb/>
the music<lb/>
Group meetings for a discussion j arm. Of course, this is more or less<lb/>
of special problems of the editors unpopular with the fellw dancers'<lb/>
and business managers of the pub- who may lose a tooth otTeartW<lb/>
and the strength of hisv 's paying for it.<lb/>
Ethel Lee ByrtTs fai<lb/>
I've (bit My Fingers (<lb/>
Mary Lyon Shotwi<lb/>
?rrna t<lb/>
ITS. W<lb/>
FfZoroeVsicTr ?? ;r ?<lb/>
Norembera. Louis II. Wilson editor THF RVnimm. ?T? W I<lb/>
for Hie .I? of CSScS - i.KKr'TO Kmx,T -SSS1   <lb/>
messed up alxiut 100 <lb/>
proofs. Fodie sure likes<lb/>
around.<lb/>
W<lb/>
yearbooks; Herbert Hitch remise, A V i! ,  8tMl -VOU at ow<lb/>
H? 3 CharloErin?: he ft? hidl Th- ?<lb/>
pauv. addressed the (Stj3 tUckpd " ?ly under!<lb/>
he<lb/>
his<lb/>
was a banquet given at 7:30 in the<lb/>
V lrginia Dare Ballroom at the Sir<lb/>
NV alter Hotel, where Carl Goerch<lb/>
was the speaker.<lb/>
The final business session was held<lb/>
on Saturday morning at 9:30 when<lb/>
the WPTF student broadcast was<lb/>
decided upon. The various com-<lb/>
mittees made their reports on the<lb/>
progress of the convention, and sev-<lb/>
CTa JiT were made and <lb/>
four stores thatTdidnYnaTime ShoSLSS' r'<lb/>
to sit down for a drink at the ernor of N P itR ?w7' ??v<lb/>
Candy Place, but Mr. Lautares was J??wTinMVffel " C0D-<lb/>
mighty nice about wrapping it cob rwm VlFgUUa Dare BalJ-<lb/>
legiate for me. Mary says she's not Saturday afternoon t a i<lb/>
going shopping with me next week, attr, :y?"t!r?t?n ??<lb/>
Who does want to got<lb/>
pany. addressed the editors of in ;c v<lb/>
nuals; and Carl GoerXdil "ft'Lf? f ?v0"  f<lb/>
TYIO'lT L. ?.? 1 i ? . J?ivi<lb/>
ieep<lb/>
ems<lb/>
 ays<lb/>
? M<lb/>
ttbk<lb/>
' CTH rga?1 between StateCoL<lb/>
lege and Citadel.<lb/>
; - ?- vv uinil SIMM"('<lb/>
may have vanished in the meantime<lb/>
but never let it be said that that mat-<lb/>
tered. .Nay, nay. If vou're able to<lb/>
spot this type of dancer beforehand<lb/>
yon can leave previous instructions<lb/>
St12??? ???<lb/>
mTST' there Vhe inious in-<lb/>
S kJ , lCS the do?ble-dip, in<lb/>
dle of your backbone which auto-<lb/>
matically collapses you into a dip-<lb/>
which is well and good since a HtSe<lb/>
relaxation never hurt anyone. Th!<lb/>
un'on?8 S hR ?"2<lb/>
up on himself just as vou are in an<lb/>
upright position, and withou the<lb/>
signal slips the foot out again! whmh<lb/>
leaves you astride his ? Tht<lb/>
A professor at Carnegie 1<lb/>
of Technology in measuring<lb/>
eibels of sound in the men ?<lb/>
tory found that between 5 r<lb/>
12 midnight, the average no<lb/>
was 112.1 decibels, or "equivaleal to<lb/>
that given by two riveting ma bines<lb/>
or a sustained roll of thunder<lb/>
itato<lb/>
 de-<lb/>
rmi-<lb/>
and<lb/>
level<lb/>
A sociologist at Indiana fiu-<lb/>
yersity hired "a well known expert<lb/>
m theft" by the week to tell him<lb/>
about the "trade Then he com-<lb/>
piled a lexicon of terms in under-<lb/>
world jargon for the several branch<lb/>
of thievery.<lb/>
gives the effect of horseback riding<lb/>
or the remains of the childhood o??-<lb/>
plex of bannister sliding. Dignitf<lb/>
u no help.<lb/>
November 17, 193<lb/>
PIR<lb/>
ECT<lb/>
Hatem. Forney. Dua<lb/>
Ferebee Score Touc<lb/>
In Spectacular Co<lb/>
TROJANS FIGHT HAR<lb/>
LAST QUARTER "<lb/>
Tin "? i<lb/>
Pin i proved 1<lb/>
tean.<lb/>
Tea eh rs l ed<lb/>
to th( ir -<lb/>
soaki ? . .<lb/>
at L . ? :<lb/>
rain<lb/>
The Pii ?? -<lb/>
first . . ? :<lb/>
Pur; . :<lb/>
three ton hd<lb/>
points ? :<lb/>
thee i : ?<lb/>
Iricke I  ?<lb/>
eaK wren I<lb/>
busucc?' il<lb/>
Breece retui<lb/>
Louisburg ;<lb/>
sooth a?<lb/>
ward pass 1<lb/>
rema ining h<lb/>
Ferebee's tt(<lb/>
tra  nt<lb/>
bloc <lb/>
The Teacl<lb/>
met d <lb/>
doui. Bre<lb/>
from the 1 - ?<lb/>
Fonv mad<lb/>
40 and ai l- I<lb/>
his team mafc -<lb/>
sary yardag<lb/>
drove over the exf<lb/>
play<lb/>
Th thir I - i<lb/>
qua: '? r ami is<lb/>
tained mat I the P<lb/>
Taki' g th? :<lb/>
rate I a ks<lb/>
Trojan line I zood <lb/>
tack termh I<lb/>
drove over<lb/>
to scor F r ? i<lb/>
tra point<lb/>
With the s<lb/>
of ti ?- firsl : . . Ale<lb/>
in pra n .<lb/>
serves played 1 Iocs<lb/>
than even terms<lb/>
ter. but : die I 1 -<lb/>
threatened str ?<lb/>
minutes oi the<lb/>
sleeping end play - .<lb/>
ball was within 1<lb/>
line. An attem I i1 I<lb/>
to gain, an I the t<lb/>
as the w histh - I <lb/>
The Pirates -<lb/>
third quart r A L I<lb/>
was blocked by the :?<lb/>
line oi the Teachers.<lb/>
Martin re 'ovi re ; I i<lb/>
Trojan, territory Fei<lb/>
the line from the three<lb/>
to ring up an ther tw<lb/>
the Purple and G<lb/>
cracked the line to ci<lb/>
point, and to make the -<lb/>
A fighting L lisl<lb/>
back strong in the his<lb/>
wore two touch . wns .<lb/>
point to make - : . ,<lb/>
13. The Trojans at ?<lb/>
ef the game coup! w<lb/>
sive spirit thai<lb/>
ily. Several oi I te T?<lb/>
string had b tab<lb/>
gaim? at this I ?<lb/>
scored upon was com!<lb/>
of reserves.<lb/>
The Pirates were mil<lb/>
ice- of ?!???  185 pi<lb/>
Williams, lineman; ?<lb/>
and Shelton, the S .<lb/>
ECTC attack.<lb/>
Breece, Ferebee, I<lb/>
Dudash all sfa we?<lb/>
Teachers' back fit<lb/>
turns of pun's w,<lb/>
outstanding featui<lb/>
The entin B . u<lb/>
heads up ball for <lb/>
The work oi Hatem, Q<lb/>
tin. and Car I i<lb/>
be desired.<lb/>
The vie; us ?<lb/>
and Ne was a<lb/>
rates' defense<lb/>
The line-up:<lb/>
ECTC Pos.<lb/>
Smith<lb/>
L. E.<lb/>
Martin  <lb/>
L.T.<lb/>
James <lb/>
L.C<lb/>
Pittman <lb/>
C.<lb/>
Carpenter <lb/>
KG.<lb/>
Quernell <lb/>
R.T.<lb/>
Hatem <lb/>
RE.<lb/>
Breece <lb/>
Q.B.<lb/>
; Ferebee <lb/>
L. H. B.<lb/>
(Please turn to<lb/>
dMttk<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00038062_0003"/><lb/>
November 17<lb/>
November 17, 1937<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE THREE<lb/>
IRATES SCUTTLE HIGH POINT PANTHERS 19-7<lb/>
HOLT<lb/>
MS COLLET<lb/>
ENCE PLAN<lb/>
: C UCE-CUTZj<lb/>
? 'j XOCRAT<lb/>
IK CAY<lb/>
The Thing<lb/>
otta Swing<lb/>
km' Over<lb/>
the<lb/>
jmpus<lb/>
) mg Cupid<lb/>
I know it"<lb/>
. i ?' ?. vn.<lb/>
? es v  ?<lb/>
own bj Cat-<lb/>
m ??? si uut-<lb/>
ood "Ole'<lb/>
e day. ! B<lb/>
Glee Club on<lb/>
? vered on the<lb/>
i" other than<lb/>
and I vtys<lb/>
M dears, be'a<lb/>
is?n pm<lb/>
?? wny<lb/>
I olumbus<lb/>
? ? Williams did<lb/>
? ? ana, m be<lb/>
? 1 pet more braid<lb/>
? 1 fee,<lb/>
1 ne thing that will<lb/>
1 arpenter lo stop,<lb/>
? ? is a wnm-<lb/>
Briefe?<lb/>
? ?. ptm in his<lb/>
tfte prefers<lb/>
?I on the Bag-<lb/>
. 'lation .<lb/>
st ah snioth-<lb/>
the other fel-<lb/>
?? orite son? :<lb/>
3 I iwd<lb/>
Xylda<lb/>
Lang bare<lb/>
Why? Weil.<lb/>
? 1 more en-<lb/>
? are practice<lb/>
will keep<lb/>
ihv rooffli<lb/>
ins ways<lb/>
 7 MMM<lb/>
to ramhle<lb/>
. en- Institute<lb/>
luring the de-<lb/>
!l n's donni-<lb/>
n  p.m. and<lb/>
rage noiae b'vel<lb/>
r "equivalent to<lb/>
rating machines<lb/>
) thunder<lb/>
 Indiana O"<lb/>
well known expert<lb/>
week to tell him<lb/>
.? Then he cono-<lb/>
f terms in under-<lb/>
 several branches<lb/>
t of horseback riding<lb/>
-( the childhood com-<lb/>
i-ter sliding. Dig101?<lb/>
CTC Defeats Louisburg Trojans 27-13<lb/>
latent, Forney. Dudash, and<lb/>
Ferebee Score Touchdowns<lb/>
In Spectacular Contest<lb/>
TROJANS FIGHT HARD<lb/>
LAST QUARTER TO SCORE<lb/>
? offensive power of the ECTC<lb/>
Berates proved too much for a game<lb/>
?earn of Louisburg Trojans a the<lb/>
peachers roiled up four touchdowns<lb/>
lt their opponent's two on a rain<lb/>
?ked field. The game was played<lb/>
Louisburg in a steadv drizzle of<lb/>
ni.<lb/>
Krs<lb/>
Wu<lb/>
ihr<lb/>
p<lb/>
?he<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
uarter<lb/>
and (<lb/>
touchdowns<lb/>
to make th<lb/>
.Id<lb/>
tffense racked in the<lb/>
and the aggressive<lb/>
outfil chalked up<lb/>
? and two extra<lb/>
e score 20 to 0 at<lb/>
 of she initial period. ECTC<lb/>
d off to the Trojans but the lo-<lb/>
R-ere forced to punt after an<lb/>
eessful attempt at the line.<lb/>
ee returned the kick to the<lb/>
isl arg 40 yard line. Breeee, a<lb/>
b tit I pa? passer, then tossed a for-<lb/>
I pass to Hatem, who sped the<lb/>
 nia ning twenty yards to score.<lb/>
Ferebeesattempt to convert the ex-<lb/>
tra point from placemenl was<lb/>
SEE LAST ACTION<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Is Last Time Senior Squad Mem-<lb/>
bers Will Wear Uniforms<lb/>
'Hi<lb/>
'd.<lb/>
I<lb/>
tn<lb/>
own<lb/>
rom<lb/>
Teachers used a similar<lb/>
i to score their second toueh-<lb/>
Breece shot a pass to Forney<lb/>
the Louisburg 40 yard line.<lb/>
Forney made the catch on his own<lb/>
40 and aided by good blocking by<lb/>
his team mates journeyed the neces-<lb/>
sary vardage to score. Ferebee<lb/>
drove over the extra point on a line<lb/>
play.<lb/>
The third touchdown in the first<lb/>
Quarter came as a result of a sus-<lb/>
me<lb/>
i a<lb/>
i<lb/>
I march by the Pirate outfit.<lb/>
ing the ball in midfield, the Pi-<lb/>
? backs repeatedly cracked the<lb/>
dan line for good gains. The at-<lb/>
k terminated only when Dudash<lb/>
. over from the two yard line<lb/>
scor Ferebee ran over the ex-<lb/>
a ? t the score 20 to 0 at the end<lb/>
the first period, Alexander sent<lb/>
practically a new team. The re-<lb/>
es played the locals on better<lb/>
D even terms in the second quar-<lb/>
bul failed to score. Louisburg<lb/>
eatened strongly in the closing<lb/>
nutes of the first half. An old<lb/>
end play was good and the<lb/>
within two feet of the goal<lb/>
attempt at the line failed<lb/>
and the threat was spiked<lb/>
Last Friday's gridiron contest<lb/>
was the last game that senior mem-<lb/>
bers of the football squad were to<lb/>
wear a Pirate uniform, flames<lb/>
.Johnson. Primrose Carpenter, Ger-<lb/>
ald dames, Fran Ferebee, and Ken-<lb/>
neth Quernell are members of the<lb/>
squad who will graduate this<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
?lames Johnson has completed<lb/>
four years of service with the<lb/>
ECTC football team and has been<lb/>
an outstanding player all the way<lb/>
through, Johnson's regular position<lb/>
is tackle although he has alternated<lb/>
at end for the past season. This 185<lb/>
pound Raleigh boy has<lb/>
cially valuable as a<lb/>
player. His strength and aggresive-<lb/>
ness have made him a thorn in the<lb/>
side of Ins opponents for tin past<lb/>
four years.<lb/>
Fran Ferebee. popularly known<lb/>
as "Pappy has also played four<lb/>
years. ?"Pappy" has shown himself<lb/>
capable of holding down any of the<lb/>
baekneld positions. He has demon-<lb/>
strated his ability to carry the ball<lb/>
and has likewise been a keen defen-<lb/>
sive player. Although not an expert <lb/>
in passing or kicking, Ferebee can<lb/>
do both when the occasion demands.<lb/>
His general usefulness has strength-<lb/>
ened greatly the past four editions<lb/>
of the Pirate football club. Tins<lb/>
season concludes thirteen years of<lb/>
football for this New Bern lad. He<lb/>
has played high school, independ-<lb/>
ent, and college football.<lb/>
Another New Bern product will<lb/>
likewise finish four years of grid-<lb/>
iron experience with ECTC. Prim-<lb/>
rose Carpenter has played guard<lb/>
for the Pirate team for the seasons<lb/>
of 1934, 'Ho. '36, and "M. "Prim-<lb/>
! my" lias been especially adept at<lb/>
pulling out of the line and running<lb/>
(PORTS<lb/>
Notes<lb/>
By BILL DANIELS<lb/>
.May we express a vote of thanks<lb/>
to those members of the 1937 foot-<lb/>
hall squad commonly known as the<lb/>
" bench-sitters. ' This group is com-<lb/>
posed of those players who toil<lb/>
through the weary grind of prac-<lb/>
t ice five days a week and somehow<lb/>
never see action in Saturday's<lb/>
game. It takes a lot of fight and de-<lb/>
termination to be "practice" ma-<lb/>
terial for the first string and never<lb/>
get the cheers of the crowd and the<lb/>
newspaper headlines. However, if it<lb/>
been espe-j were not for their unselfish eoop-<lb/>
defensivel eration it would be impossible to<lb/>
have a football team. So, we're<lb/>
thinking about you Bench Sit-<lb/>
ters"?vim not onlv warm the<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
T<lb/>
EAR BUCCANEERS<lb/>
FIVE LETTER MEN<lb/>
ON PIRATE SQUAD<lb/>
SCHEDULEFOR 1938<lb/>
PROSPECTIVE GAME WITH<lb/>
THE CITADEL IS 0UT<lb/>
Bill Shelton Runs 95<lb/>
Yards For Touchdown<lb/>
In First Play of Game<lb/>
BRAVES SCALP<lb/>
PIRATES 18-6<lb/>
Secret Bucks Line To Make Only<lb/>
Panther Score of Game<lb/>
The East. Carolina basketball<lb/>
team for the season of 1937.18<lb/>
should be something to write home<lb/>
about if pro-season prospects mean<lb/>
anything. With five letter men re-<lb/>
turning from last year's squad and<lb/>
several experienced players among<lb/>
the transfer students. Alexander<lb/>
should have a nucleus for a strong<lb/>
team. Shelton. Martin. Calfee.<lb/>
Johnson, and Kidenhour have all<lb/>
earned their letters in previous<lb/>
years with the Pirate basketeers.<lb/>
However. Coach Alexander re-<lb/>
fused to acknowledge any feeling of<lb/>
confidence over prospects so far. He<lb/>
even seemed to be quite pessimistic<lb/>
over his chances for a winning<lb/>
team. "If there is a single good bas-<lb/>
ketball player in this college, he<lb/>
must be hiding said the coach<lb/>
Even the aristocratic sport of gloomily. . . . "at least. I haven't<lb/>
lorseback riding must come into seen anybody who looked like ine<lb/>
notice by this column. The other j Known as a typical "gloom gath-<lb/>
day a "boss" was "parked" out in erer so your reporter thinks the<lb/>
front of Wilson Dormitory. . . . A jovial Swede has an ace or two up<lb/>
very attractive little girl fully his sleeve.<lb/>
garbed in a riding habit tripped j To date twelve games have been<lb/>
lightly out and attempted to get; scheduled for the cage outfit with<lb/>
aboard the animal  it took a! tentative arrangements for five or<lb/>
Six football games have already<lb/>
been definitely arranged for the<lb/>
1938 edition of the Pirates and at<lb/>
least three more contests will be<lb/>
planned, according to J. D. Alex-<lb/>
ander. Athletic Director of-ECTC.<lb/>
Western Carolina Teachers College.<lb/>
Belmont Abbey, High Point, Boil-<lb/>
ing Springs. Norfolk Division of<lb/>
William and Mary, and Milligan<lb/>
College are included in the list of<lb/>
games which have already been defi-<lb/>
nitely scheduled. The Pirate mentor<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
SHELTON SCORES ONLY<lb/>
PIRATE TOUCHDOWN<lb/>
The Pirates of<lb/>
promised land i<lb/>
first time this se<lb/>
defeat Of High<lb/>
the tune of 19<lb/>
brought the spec<lb/>
on the first plav<lb/>
ECTC entered the<lb/>
f victory for the<lb/>
ison in a thrilling<lb/>
Point College to<lb/>
to 7. Bill Shelton<lb/>
tators to their feet<lb/>
of the game as he<lb/>
The Braves of William and Mary<lb/>
(Norfolk Division) defeated th<lb/>
Pirates of East Carolina Teat '<lb/>
College by a score of 18 to (J<lb/>
Hers<lb/>
in a<lb/>
contest played at<lb/>
hard fought<lb/>
Norfolk.<lb/>
The Pirates drew first blood early<lb/>
in the second quarter as Shelton.<lb/>
speedy halfback, took the ball on<lb/>
his own ten yard line, went through<lb/>
a hole in the Brave line, and eluded<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
caught High Point's kick-off on his<lb/>
j own five yard line ami returned il<lb/>
! 95 yards for a touchdown. The su-<lb/>
 perh blocking of the Pirate team<lb/>
j coupled with Shelton's speed and<lb/>
j elusiveness enabled the Teachers to<lb/>
perform this perfeet play of foot-<lb/>
ball. Ceeot's kick from placement<lb/>
was good and the scoreboard showed<lb/>
ECTC 7-High Point 0 after less<lb/>
than a minute of play.<lb/>
The Teachers then kicked off to<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
bench, you warm our hearts also!<lb/>
step-ladder, fifteen minutes and the<lb/>
assistance of two boys to get the<lb/>
equestrienne in the saddle . . . all of<lb/>
which forces us to this sage conclu-<lb/>
sion : That all girls in a 'riding<lb/>
habit" are not necessarily in a 'habit<lb/>
of riding<lb/>
ping ena piay was good aim uk interference for the ball-carrier.<lb/>
ball was within two feet of the goal This task requires a man who can<lb/>
line. An attempt at the line failed block well and who is speedy enough<lb/>
to gain, and the threat was spiked to stay in front of the ball carrier.<lb/>
as the whistle ended the first half. Carpenter is known as one of the<lb/>
The Pirates scored again in the J best "running" guards ever tamed<lb/>
third quarter. A Louisburg punt out Mv tus allege. His heady de-<lb/>
was blocked by the fast charging<lb/>
line of the Teachers, and Kelly<lb/>
Martin recovered the ball deep in<lb/>
Trojan territory. Ferebee bucked<lb/>
the line from the three yard marker<lb/>
to ring up another touchdown for<lb/>
the Purple and Gold Breeee<lb/>
tracked the line to convert the extra<lb/>
point, and to make the score 27 to 0.<lb/>
A fighting Louisburg team came<lb/>
baek strong in the last quarter to<lb/>
score two touchdowns and one extra<lb/>
 int to make the final score 27 to<lb/>
13 The Trojans utilized the breaks<lb/>
? the game coupled with an aggres-<lb/>
sive spirit that would not yield eas-<lb/>
ily. Several of the Teachers' first<lb/>
string had been taken from the<lb/>
game at this time, and the club<lb/>
s red upon was composed largely<lb/>
of reserves.<lb/>
The Pirates were minus the serv-<lb/>
ices of Johnson, 185 pound tackle:<lb/>
Williams, lineman: Ceeot, center:<lb/>
; shelton. the spark-plug of the<lb/>
ECTC attack.<lb/>
Breeee, Ferebee. Forney, and<lb/>
Dudash all showed up well in the<lb/>
Teachers' back field. Breoce's re-<lb/>
turns of punts was an especially<lb/>
outstanding feature of the frame.<lb/>
The entire Buccaneer tin<lb/>
heads up ball for the most part.<lb/>
Tbe work of Hatem. Quernell, Mar-<lb/>
tin and Carpenter lacked little to<lb/>
be dt-sired.<lb/>
The vicious tackling of Ferebee<lb/>
FACULTY MEMBERS<lb/>
ATTEND CONFERENCE<lb/>
fensive play has enabled him to<lb/>
often outplay heavier and stronger<lb/>
opponents in the line.<lb/>
New York state can be given<lb/>
credit for furnishing the Pirates<lb/>
with another game, aggressive line-<lb/>
man. We refer to Kenneth Quer-<lb/>
nell, tackle, who will graduate this<lb/>
spring after playing only one sea-<lb/>
son with ECTC. Quernell is a trans-<lb/>
fer student from Appalachian<lb/>
State Teachers College and lacked<lb/>
only one year of work to graduate.<lb/>
He has been outstanding on both<lb/>
defense and offense for the Pirates<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Gerald James, another lineman,<lb/>
will also receive his diploma this<lb/>
spring. This season was dames' first<lb/>
attempt to play college football.<lb/>
Coach Alexander has used him as a<lb/>
reserve lineman this season, and he<lb/>
showed up especially well against<lb/>
High Point.<lb/>
METHODIST STUDENT<lb/>
CONFERENCE IS HELD<lb/>
AT CHAPEL HILL<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
this state to graduate and enter col-<lb/>
lege without baring met college en-<lb/>
trance requirements.<lb/>
Then the record made by these<lb/>
students in college will be compared<lb/>
with that made by students who met<lb/>
college entrance requirements in the<lb/>
high school course.<lb/>
This experiment will affect only<lb/>
one school in Winston-Salem, one<lb/>
in Charlotte, and the one in Golds-<lb/>
boro.<lb/>
The second step was voting, at the<lb/>
request of State Superintendent<lb/>
Erwin, to make a careful study of<lb/>
the training schools in all North<lb/>
Carolina institutions for training<lb/>
J teachers.<lb/>
This study would be made by the<lb/>
Standards Committee under the<lb/>
leadership of President W. P. Few,<lb/>
of Duke, who is chairman of the<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
six additional contests. Below is a<lb/>
tentative schedule:<lb/>
December 13: Portsmouth (YM<lb/>
CA)?There.<lb/>
January 14 : Naval Training Sta-<lb/>
tion?There.<lb/>
January 15: William and Mary<lb/>
(Norfolk Div.)?-There.<lb/>
January 18: Naval Training Sta-<lb/>
t ion?Here.<lb/>
January 19: High Point College<lb/>
?There.<lb/>
January 20 WCTC?There.<lb/>
Januay 21: WCTC?There.<lb/>
January 26: Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College?Here.<lb/>
January 27: William and Mary<lb/>
(Norfolk Divi?Here.<lb/>
February 11: Belmont Abbey?<lb/>
Here.<lb/>
February 12: High Point Col-<lb/>
lege?Here.<lb/>
February 15: Atlantic Christian<lb/>
College?There.<lb/>
ROLLS DEVELOPED<lb/>
Any tl2 roll kodak film developed, eight<lb/>
never-fide Velox Prints lor onlyj j<lb/>
VALUABLE PREMIUMS GivEnICP<lb/>
Mall Your Flint to<lb/>
Jack Rabbit Co.<lb/>
SPARTANBUR6.sC. icoini<lb/>
Mailing Envelopes for Films Furnished<lb/>
and Noe was a real aid in the Pi-<lb/>
rates" defense.<lb/>
The line-up:<lb/>
ECTC Pos. Louisburg<lb/>
Smith Troutman<lb/>
L. E.<lb/>
Martin  Stokes<lb/>
L. T.<lb/>
James  Pearson<lb/>
L. G.<lb/>
Pittman  Parker<lb/>
C.<lb/>
Carpenter  Chaffin<lb/>
R. G.<lb/>
Quernell R. Brown<lb/>
R. T.<lb/>
Hatem A. Ingram<lb/>
RE.<lb/>
Breeee West<lb/>
Q.B.<lb/>
Ferebee  Brown<lb/>
L. H. B.<lb/>
(Please turn to page tour)<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
ning the delegates enjoyed as Fellow-<lb/>
piayedjship banquet at the church.<lb/>
On Sunday morning the con-<lb/>
ference officers for the coming year<lb/>
wore installed. Miss Marjorie<lb/>
Leonard from the Woman's College<lb/>
will serve for the coming year as<lb/>
president. Sarah Ann Maxwell, re-<lb/>
placing Louise Davis, will be first<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
A most impressive communion<lb/>
service administered by Rev. A. P.<lb/>
Brantley pastor of University<lb/>
Methodist Church, followed the in-<lb/>
stallation of officers, all delegates<lb/>
participating in this sacrament.<lb/>
Those students attending from<lb/>
ECTC were Eleanor Hardy, Frances<lb/>
Hardy, Rebecca Ross, Lillian Par-<lb/>
rish, Emily Brendle, Helen Grey<lb/>
Gillian, Elizabeth Stubbs, Iberia<lb/>
Roach, Marie Gregory, Inez Hub-<lb/>
bard, Louise Davis, Marguerite<lb/>
Vause, Beatrice Reaves, Ann Aikers,<lb/>
Sarah Ann Maxwell, Charles Wooten<lb/>
and Charles Musselwhite. The<lb/>
Young People's Division of Jarvis<lb/>
Memorial Church was represented<lb/>
by Beulah White, Neal Herring, and<lb/>
Alton Johnson.<lb/>
REI D'S<lb/>
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Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
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There's a cold wave due to-<lb/>
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We Have Additional<lb/>
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Sizes 11-17, 12 to 20.<lb/>
EVENING DRESSES<lb/>
-7.95 TO lg.75<lb/>
? A collection of chic, provocative frocks, especially<lb/>
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svelte satin, quaint moire just for you when you<lb/>
dance with "him Sizes 11 to 17,12 to 20.<lb/>
BLOUNT HARVEY<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00038062_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
November 17<lb/>
Laniers Hold First<lb/>
Meeting In "Y" Hut<lb/>
Interesting Talks Given By Mem- nilin HI I tin mn<lb/>
 BAND PLAYS FOR<lb/>
rS ietj held its first Dllinn<lb/>
1 me CHAPEL<lb/>
the N gt has otributed in- <lb/>
Poetrj ?? : v as the theme of The newly organized band of tin<lb/>
prog D 1 rabor, mem- College, in existence only three<lb/>
ber of the - music depart- weeks, entertained the College as-<lb/>
1 I n  ??' ta k on Negro sembiy Friday, November  under<lb/>
gs 1 ter v '? ? sang "Water the leadership of their director,<lb/>
Boy" and !? River Dean Tabor.<lb/>
Gr ene then made Among the instruments played<lb/>
S gn poetry. Kx- by the members of the young band<lb/>
ta 5 she read, are elarinets, a bass horn, alto<lb/>
da Sings1 "Ange- horns, B-fiai saxophones, a bass<lb/>
! Conqueredjdrum and a snare drum, trumpets.<lb/>
The Turning a trombone, a baritone, and alto<lb/>
I ted  saxophones,<lb/>
sting Natures were; Mr. Tabor had eaeh instrument<lb/>
? ? new members displayed and then demonstrated<lb/>
? " ?? nl 1 ? the pro- for the audience. Though the musi-<lb/>
for the following cians had practiced only a few<lb/>
bers of this com- times, they were able to play one<lb/>
n Reed, Lillian number in harmony.<lb/>
? s Director Tabor showed the stu-<lb/>
dent how anyone could begin to<lb/>
ay after only a few lessons.<lb/>
Accompanied by Miss Dormer.<lb/>
Talior gave two trumpet solos.<lb/>
which were received with enthusi-<lb/>
"uee asm, though he modestly declared<lb/>
ttord, Ca- that he had not practiced on the<lb/>
- " reach-j trumpet for some time.<lb/>
nARToBQAR&amp;r<lb/>
llr want to ee a .star. ?<lb/>
W TAKE LAW<lb/>
THESE FORMER LAW STUDENTS<lb/>
AJOW APPEAR BEFORE THE COURT<lb/>
OF PUBLIC OPINION ? ? ?<lb/>
When Meli<lb/>
"Al<lb/>
Coach Announces Tentative<lb/>
Gridiron Schedule For 1938 yh<lb/>
ATCOMMERCE MEET<lb/>
BRAVES SCALP PIRATES 18-6 ARMISTICE DAY<lb/>
? OBSERVE<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
the defensive harks to SCOTC -taiid-<lb/>
ing up afterabrillMBt 90 yard run.<lb/>
The try fr extra print ri l,la<lb/>
t failed. ECTC held its lead<lb/>
rimly for the remainder of the p-<lb/>
df ended with<lb/>
I;<lb/>
<lb/>
siht. i?-<lb/>
flic-111<lb/>
riod, and the first<lb/>
at ,1 ? 1;  0 hi favor of th<lb/>
The<lb/>
came ha<lb/>
William and Mary outfit it<lb/>
?k strongly in the third and ,<lb/>
run<lb/>
Professor Lee A. Wolford. bea<lb/>
of Department of Commerce ? Mv 6 (<lb/>
Marshall College, Huntington, W.jXortb Carolinians<lb/>
Va will be the main speaker at the<lb/>
commerce sectional meeting which,<lb/>
is to be held here November 20 at fourth quarters, however,<lb/>
9 a.m. The meeting will he held in and pass their wav<lb/>
accounting room and all coin- downs and victor<lb/>
rs are invited to attend, lacked the i<lb/>
 the tide wl<lb/>
ECTC DEFEATS LOUISBURG In-?-?stand<lb/>
TROJANS 27-13<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
th.<lb/>
merce maj<lb/>
'l"h Pirate team<lb/>
rve strength to stem<lb/>
the lineup of the<lb/>
Braves was constantly chan<lb/>
renair the<lb/>
weakened spot-<lb/>
WORLDS LARGErT<lb/>
SCMODUHOUrt<lb/>
Pittsburgh s gatmedrau of<lb/>
LEARNING IS 42 STORES h'GM,<lb/>
CONfTAlNS 375 ROOMS, 67 LABS,<lb/>
51 RESEARCH LABS. 9 CLASSROCV.S,<lb/>
8 LARGE LECTURE HALLS. i5 DEPT.<lb/>
STUDIES. 5 THEATERS. 75 0FFiC?S.<lb/>
3 FLOORS OF LIBRARY. A FWE ARTS<lb/>
UBRARY, CLUB A?8 LOUNGE ROOAS '<lb/>
ntinued fi<lb/>
tture has de-<lb/>
Ales)<lb/>
that his<lb/>
1<lb/>
BILL SHELTON RUNS 95<lb/>
YARDS FOR TOUCHDOWN<lb/>
IN FIRST PLAY OF GAME<lb/>
nlj n :?<lb/>
ments I ? t I i<lb/>
1 telmont Al ;<lb/>
S rings will ph<lb/>
Ei ?? Tennessee<lb/>
in the Pirates' own backyard.<lb/>
; ?'?"? arrangements for a<lb/>
Hie Citadel collapsed<lb/>
I ! that tiie South<lb/>
; dd not play any<lb/>
hnite arrange-<lb/>
the  ?me games.<lb/>
and Boiling<lb/>
here with a pos-<lb/>
ird, Catawba, and<lb/>
achers may play;<lb/>
turn<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
Purple Panthers of High Point.<lb/>
'? s kick went dee into High<lb/>
territory, and the Panther<lb/>
i arrier was downed after re-<lb/>
kick a short distance.<lb/>
n defense of the Bue-<lb/>
ised to yield a first<lb/>
e High Pointers were<lb/>
The ball see-sawed<lb/>
for the remainder<lb/>
tii<lb/>
The stubl<lb/>
cancer- i<lb/>
down, am<lb/>
forced to<lb/>
back and<lb/>
High Point 20yard line. Line plays High Point scoring: Touchdowns<lb/>
then placed the ball to within iiinej ?Secret. Extra point ? Secret.<lb/>
yards of the goal line. An end runl enmn ? tii<lb/>
i?. v , , . . . L( It scoring: Touchdowns ?<lb/>
bj Shelton succeeded in tallyingL lx  f<lb/>
th.e thinl Pirate touchdown. Ferehelton 3' Extra P?mt Ceeoi<lb/>
bees attempt at extra point failed. High Point substitutions: Backs?<lb/>
With the score 19 to 7 against Mali'regoet, Rennie. Ends?Petree.<lb/>
them, High Point resorted to passes Tackle?Barlow. ECTC suhstitu-<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
Oudash  Wise former<lb/>
The game was character<lb/>
roughness taroughont<lb/>
?; T' player and<lb/>
?f the William am<lb/>
abor,<lb/>
Forney<lb/>
member ol I w<lb/>
 Brinnj squad, "as for<lb/>
F. P<lb/>
Substitutions: ECTC? Elliot I. juri<lb/>
Merner, Noe, Avers. Venters<lb/>
clover. Roebuck, Louisburg ?<lb/>
Lamm, Bryan.<lb/>
Officials: Refere.?Nelma, X. C<lb/>
State; Umpire?Doke. Guilford<lb/>
Head Linesman?.lav. X. C. State<lb/>
Pratt,<lb/>
BOW a<lb/>
Mar<lb/>
afii<lb/>
to leave the<lb/>
after tic- firs! three plays due to in<lb/>
Merner, Pirate guard, wai<lb/>
reed to leave the geld with broken<lb/>
1 ?<lb/>
ribs and Other injuries<lb/>
 Hatem, and Noe were .?<lb/>
 in the conflict. There v<lb/>
' casualties in the " Bill an<lb/>
line-up.<lb/>
Yn<lb/>
Manib<lb/>
 a ?, a a, ?<lb/>
Be Well Dressed on all Occasions<lb/>
Buy from<lb/>
C.HEBER FORBES<lb/>
swim i(ms<lb/>
tmi k s<lb/>
sioki s<lb/>
College Girls AUc. Welcome<lb/>
LA UTA RES<lb/>
,? .p-y  yy.<lb/>
if the first quarter with ECTC<lb/>
freshmen anili,Uivins: a decided edge in offensive<lb/>
' strength.<lb/>
The strong attack of the blood-<lb/>
transfers i th varsity squad.<lb/>
With a limited number of football<lb/>
men attending ECTC, Alexander I I"s?-V grates again yielded r<lb/>
found  m. ossibh<lb/>
Citadel authorities<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
meet The:s!llts m Tno second quarter. Shel-<lb/>
those condi-<lb/>
n. Ferebee. and Dudash cracked<lb/>
the Panther line and swept the<lb/>
ends for consistent gains, to bring<lb/>
WflRA RCiiCT ic : tl!l1 !)a11 trom their own twentv<lb/>
NUHA BEUST IS jyard lin0 to the Ili?h Point <lb/>
AAUW SPEAKER yard stripe. Shelton went over<lb/>
i center to score his second touch-<lb/>
(Q)nticaed from page one) , down of the afternoon. CeeoCs at-<lb/>
- - ? ? I to her audience tempt to kick the extra point was<lb/>
- : r - .i h the age and sex suit- i blocked. " ith the score 13 to noth-<lb/>
for, the type of child who would, in- 'n their favor, the Pirates were<lb/>
be interested, and - me critical com-1 content to play conservative foot-<lb/>
menta ss to otents. format, and j ball for the remaining minutes of<lb/>
illustrations. the second quarter.<lb/>
Good illustrations, she explained The Panthers snarled and<lb/>
? to which the child can scratched viciously in the third<lb/>
?? ' : ;U1 "gain and find J quarter, and with an offensive drive<lb/>
" ' ? that would not be denied suceeded<lb/>
5 brought by the speaker in pushing over a touchdown. Se-<lb/>
me? of poetry and cret and .McKeithan smashed the<lb/>
ires, stories with back-1 battered Pirate line to take the ball<lb/>
many lands, a book on to their opponents 25 yard line<lb/>
mrate m its facta and in- Captain McKeithan then swept end<lb/>
sung m its presentation of them, for a L?0 yard run. Secret bucked<lb/>
 ;UfT types. ' the line for the onlv High Point<lb/>
Alter tae talk, the audience had touchdown of the game. A plaee-<lb/>
onity to esamme the hooks ment by Secret was good to make<lb/>
j the score 13 to 7 with the Teaeh-<lb/>
I ala va an era still leading. High Point con-<lb/>
- hsplayed at tinued to threaten in the last of<lb/>
"j,  r " ' opera- the third period and the first of<lb/>
the fourth. Cecot. a pillar of<lb/>
rived m tune strength on defense, was forced to<lb/>
?id hour before leave the game due to a back in-<lb/>
M T? T i .iluT- ln spite of the loss of Cecot.<lb/>
' AIr- 5 ?? however- ,h ?anie Pirate line dug<lb/>
i.iiams, Mrs ft. &amp;lm and stemmed the attack of the<lb/>
ark. Mrs. ! visitors.<lb/>
ECTC then assumed the offen-<lb/>
sive in the last half of the fourth<lb/>
J oint backfield with repeated gams<lb/>
through the line. Shelton tossed a<lb/>
in<lb/>
in detail<lb/>
Manj ?<lb/>
exhibit oi<lb/>
the ?<lb/>
don of til<lb/>
M Mt ? :<lb/>
for th<lb/>
. pr gr<lb/>
Hostes<lb/>
Miss I<lb/>
Br<lb/>
1  ?- 1<lb/>
? ring and Mrs. Jack<lb/>
Ficklen Arthur, AAT'W<lb/>
With<lb/>
??' - Sa<lb/>
dith (<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
guests ??!<lb/>
frien<lb/>
w ? i k<lb/>
M<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
B,<lb/>
Beast was a friend C ?Zi ontmn tossed a<lb/>
I Marks, from Mere l?uUi PJ" 0 Hatem. Bucca-<lb/>
MlTC near end. who was downed on the<lb/>
in an attempt to score, but tin<lb/>
alert backfield of the locals pre-<lb/>
vented their success.<lb/>
Bill Shelton was easily the out-<lb/>
standing ball-carrier of the game.<lb/>
In addition to his 95 yard return<lb/>
of the initial kick-off, the clever<lb/>
halfback made himself a constant<lb/>
threat to High Point by his con-<lb/>
sistent gains. His feat of scoring<lb/>
three touchdowns in one game was<lb/>
one which is not often duplicated<lb/>
in collegiate football.<lb/>
Ferebee and Dudash also turned<lb/>
in splendid performances as ball<lb/>
toters. Johnson. Carpenter, James.<lb/>
Cecot. and Hatem were the out-<lb/>
standing linemen of the game.<lb/>
The most encouraging feature of<lb/>
the game to the ECTC supporters<lb/>
was the hard blocking of the en-<lb/>
tire team. It was due to this fact<lb/>
that the offensive drives of the Bucs<lb/>
yielded pay dirt.<lb/>
The line-up:<lb/>
High Point Pos. ECTC<lb/>
Brinkley  Smith<lb/>
L. E.<lb/>
Moran  Johnson<lb/>
L.T.<lb/>
Phibbs  James<lb/>
L. G.<lb/>
Lawing Cecot<lb/>
C.<lb/>
Ilar-ville  Carpenter<lb/>
R. G.<lb/>
Webster  Quemell<lb/>
R.T.<lb/>
Franklin Hatem<lb/>
R. E.<lb/>
Armstrong  Dudash<lb/>
Q. B.<lb/>
Standing  Forner<lb/>
L. H.<lb/>
sret  Shelton<lb/>
R. H.<lb/>
McKeithen  Ferebee<lb/>
F. B.<lb/>
Score by periods:<lb/>
High Point  0 0 7 0 7<lb/>
ECTC 7 6 0 6?19<lb/>
tions: Guards ? Venters. Glover,<lb/>
?Pittman. Center?Breece. Back?<lb/>
Elliot. Officials: Referee, Burke,<lb/>
Illinois; umpire. McGaskill, UXC; <lb/>
head linesman, Brock. Furman<lb/>
field judge, Stowe, ECTC.<lb/>
Adoption of movies to supplement! 1<lb/>
but not replace the present system of i <lb/>
teaching is being seriously considerec<lb/>
at Michigan State College.<lb/>
gmBUttMRMHittHitiimiH?amiimttaHMMmtiitiiiw<lb/>
A Complete lAne oi<lb/>
COATS, SUiTS. DRESSES. SWEATERS<lb/>
and REAM-TO-WEAR<lb/>
i<lb/>
Always Visit Us First <lb/>
WILLIAM'S<lb/>
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QuimHitmtniiHii!iiMii?HHitimiiiuiituMHii?timuiuunHm?iiituimtiiiiiiitti<lb/>
iiiitHiMriitiiiH)itiMiriHiiti!ifHiMiii;niiiniHilifiinitiimisi(itinmniuiii3<lb/>
TAXI. BIS STOP<lb/>
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Line ? Coll at<lb/>
PLEASANTS<lb/>
r<lb/>
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with a smoker<lb/>
when he finds out<lb/>
about Chesterfields<lb/>
Smokers like th<lb/>
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and sure as shootin<lb/>
they're MILDER<lb/>
A<lb/>
and Mi Mark- were<lb/>
Lucile Turner, an old<lb/>
igsaale Hall over the<lb/>
I nner etuesl - Sat u - I av<lb/>
i I Mr R. J. Slay,<lb/>
( long standing.<lb/>
?BMHWMMMMmHHHMM<lb/>
McLELLAN'S<lb/>
THE BK<lb/>
Kd 10c STORE ? 1<lb/>
trade w.tr. u Wt have ?<lb/>
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! hi-kagf-s to the CoiPRe. <lb/>
COME TO SEE US ?<lb/>
iMfmilMMHHmmi!tIl?tt?MWllHt!ttmiUIHm<lb/>
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buy<lb/>
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from<lb/>
SALLY FROCKS<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
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Visit Us Daily<lb/>
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YOURHOLIDAYGIFT<lb/>
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New Underwear for Christmas<lb/>
Full Line of Women's Shoes<lb/>
 THE GLORIA SHOP<lb/>
tioarrr<lb/>
iilerrp<lb/>
VOLUME XIV<lb/>
Kir by Page En<lb/>
Audience Wit,<lb/>
OnEconomi<lb/>
Lecturer is Known As An A I<lb/>
Editor, and Recognized Autf<lb/>
ity on Economic and Potittca<lb/>
Conditions of Tor.<lb/>
MAKES TWO ADDRESSES HER!<lb/>
Page is Sponsored ??<lb/>
of This C<lb/>
Kirhy Page, fa<lb/>
tor, lecturer, and n<lb/>
ity on the ec  n<lb/>
condition of the <lb/>
erel a Beriea of le tur -<lb/>
ing Bo:ial Ju-ti ?? I br ugh<lb/>
mie of Christianity<lb/>
ber 4. This rare privilej<lb/>
sort-d by the Yonng ?<lb/>
tian Aaaociation.<lb/>
Speaks at Assembly Hour<lb/>
Mr. Pag ma le bis I 1<lb/>
the chapel hour Sati<lb/>
in the Austin An lil<lb/>
speaker waa introd i<lb/>
Robert Grady, past r of th<lb/>
terian church. A- tin I i<lb/>
lecture. Mr. Page ch -? <lb/>
"Mut a peaceful Na1 a tab<lb/>
arms against another n iti -<lb/>
is a vy important<lb/>
people ol today,<lb/>
lectun r. "are ?<lb/>
rib danger in t<lb/>
th earth. Th<lb/>
alliance and in<lb/>
many peoph sa;<lb/>
cratic p? pie ?-<lb/>
cept resort to wi<lb/>
But if v resoi<lb/>
Several queati i<lb/>
si'i- red : first, V<lb/>
mg tak pi ice, i<lb/>
pns will<lb/>
will ?? ?; pen ?? '<lb/>
th pi  : "H<lb/>
l r ?<lb/>
ship'<lb/>
?V<lb/>
.1.<lb/>
wage i<lb/>
M:<lb/>
tat  . more tl i<lb/>
disproved in K'lv H ?<lb/>
lector by giving a<lb/>
three ri bb rs, illusl<lb/>
nation- of t '?. fi the;<lb/>
built theiT gr at em in<lb/>
vt rti and nv. wer attem ti - i<lb/>
keep the slow r nati us  i<lb/>
ing up an em in<lb/>
Evening Address<lb/>
On Saturday i ening t 8:K M<lb/>
Page sp ke   I ?<lb/>
Economic Distn <lb/>
"I want to dia iss briet<lb/>
gan, "utiy in a nation<lb/>
for plenty for ?<lb/>
(Please turn to pace ftwur<lb/>
LARGE AUDIENCE<lb/>
AnENDSpiIl"<lb/>
In the Oreenvillo High School<lb/>
Auditorium, Tue?iay night, N ? '<lb/>
ber 16, a largo audience of his<lb/>
school and college student- waa I<lb/>
ileged to see a presentation of<lb/>
Shakespeare's Hamlet The A<lb/>
Players, who presented "Mere!<lb/>
of Venice" lat year on the High<lb/>
School stage, again gave proof of<lb/>
their outstanding talent in the pres<lb/>
entation of "Hamlet<lb/>
"Hamlet" is the story of th.<lb/>
Prince of Denmark, who after Iv<lb/>
ing informed by the ghost of hi-<lb/>
late father that the death ol<lb/>
father was brought about by his<lb/>
uncle, sets out to avenge his fathi r e<lb/>
death. He kills, by accident, the<lb/>
i Please turn to page two)<lb/>
10<lb/>
DAYS TIL<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
li<lb/>
el<lb/>
0<lb/>
ilnf<lb/>
Mr.<lb/>
f todm<lb/>
y the<lb/>
standan<lb/>
dent- tc<lb/>
Qenm<lb/>
much<lb/>
smokinl<lb/>
less ini<lb/>
living<lb/>
They<lb/>
tent ai<lb/>
for ed<lb/>
have<lb/>
<pb facs="00038062_0005"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>