<?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="00038068_0001"/>
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EAST CARmiifcmmS COLLEGE<lb/>
VOLUME XIV<lb/>
D<lb/>
IS. MEADOWS<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 1938<lb/>
Number 10<lb/>
RE<lb/>
EO<lb/>
DEPUTATION TEAM<lb/>
PRESENTS PROGRAM<lb/>
NIEETAT STATE COLLEGE<lb/>
Meeting Attended By Educators<lb/>
From Every Part of the<lb/>
Country<lb/>
"Choosing Between the Better<lb/>
and the Best" Was Theme<lb/>
of Visiting Team<lb/>
MOST HELPFUL MEETING<lb/>
HELD IN MANY YEARS<lb/>
STUDENTS ON A<lb/>
RETURN VISIT<lb/>
Three Other Faculty Members<lb/>
Attend Educational<lb/>
Meetings<lb/>
Highlight of Program Was a Talk<lb/>
Given by Susan<lb/>
Evans<lb/>
Sponsors<lb/>
For<lb/>
JOSIE<lb/>
HALL<lb/>
cMarch<lb/>
Dance<lb/>
IRENE<lb/>
UZZELL<lb/>
? Leon R. Meadows has<lb/>
led from Atlantic City.<lb/>
j. where he attended the<lb/>
? American Assoeia-<lb/>
. I ? :? 'olleges.<lb/>
ting was attended by well<lb/>
icators from every Bee-<lb/>
country, and it Mas gen-<lb/>
ded iy those present that<lb/>
 - f the most helpful<lb/>
 ? th Association has<lb/>
 topics that were most<lb/>
I " ? : at the Session were<lb/>
SCS, and general ad-<lb/>
d oi teachers1 colleges.<lb/>
9 were discussed in de-<lb/>
? m ? ll r ing beads: The<lb/>
? ore ?" a teachers' college<lb/>
?? t ??? r.ri nature of a<lb/>
Jlege instructional staff,<lb/>
 nature of a teachers'<lb/>
istrative staff, and the<lb/>
: a teachers' college.<lb/>
? main topics, the sub-<lb/>
educat rs should learn<lb/>
experience oi cfi<lb/>
untrie<lb/>
? ? .    Up .win UiS-<lb/>
ur st ud Di and teachers<lb/>
as, our women students<lb/>
A? ri 'an Association of<lb/>
Women, Conservation of<lb/>
i Teaehers' Colleges and<lb/>
ther members of our<lb/>
Lso attended educational<lb/>
asl i . ?  Misses Kalh-<lb/>
' cla ? and Mary Berry<lb/>
n l d til meeting in At-<lb/>
I Or. 11. .1. McGinnis<lb/>
? ? ting of the I om-<lb/>
Standards of the Associa-<lb/>
1 lieges and Secondary<lb/>
? the Southern States in<lb/>
? oreia.<lb/>
"Choosing Between the Better<lb/>
and the Best" was the theme of the<lb/>
program given by a deputation<lb/>
team, representing the Young Wom-<lb/>
an's Christian Association of this<lb/>
college, on a return visit to the<lb/>
YMCA of State College, Raleigh,<lb/>
on Thursday evening, March 3,<lb/>
The high light of the program<lb/>
was a talk by Susan Evans on "Mak-<lb/>
ing Choices Susan brought out<lb/>
the importance of the choices that<lb/>
must be made; how those choices<lb/>
are made; and when they must be <lb/>
made. She illustrated her talk with j Miss Ann Downev of Elizabeth<lb/>
stones ot young boys and girls andjcity, who has recently Wen selected<lb/>
how the choices they make involve<lb/>
their friends. Miss Evans eon<lb/>
The sponsors for the March dance to be held here the Pith are Josie<lb/>
Hall, Chairman of the Social Committee, and Irene Uzzell, President<lb/>
of the Poe Society.<lb/>
GO. SECRETARY<lb/>
Will Be On Campus On Every<lb/>
Other Week-end Until Her<lb/>
School Closes in May<lb/>
eluded her talk with a warning<lb/>
against living border line lives. "Let<lb/>
us always she stated, "Choose the<lb/>
best"<lb/>
Elizabeth Copland, president of<lb/>
the YWCA, opened the program by<lb/>
introducing the members of the<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
PRACTICE TFARHFRR<lb/>
by the Baptist State Board to be<lb/>
the Baptist Student Secretary at<lb/>
East Carolina Teacher's College be-<lb/>
gan her work with the students the<lb/>
week-end of March 4,  and 6.<lb/>
She will Ik? on the campus every<lb/>
other week-end until her<lb/>
closes in May, after which she will<lb/>
le here full time.<lb/>
She was introduced to the Baptist<lb/>
students Saturday afternoon at a<lb/>
tea in the "Y" hut. Miss Mary<lb/>
?e? Tw.M o ' ?" ?-<lb/>
HIGH SCHOOL DAY<lb/>
TO BEAPRIL12<lb/>
"Visiting Day" Will Be the Third<lb/>
Such Event Held Here By the<lb/>
College in Last 3 Years<lb/>
rn<lb/>
 . I<lb/>
lulH!<lb/>
PilJufl<lb/>
Hundreds of high school seniors,<lb/>
their teachers, and their parents<lb/>
are expected to accept the invita-<lb/>
tions to "High School Day" which<lb/>
have just gone out from this col-<lb/>
lege to the high schools of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The day will be observed this<lb/>
school year at the College on Tuesday,<lb/>
April 12.<lb/>
The program, designed to ac-<lb/>
quaint the high school guests with<lb/>
the activities of a college campus,<lb/>
will open with a program in the<lb/>
obert II. Wright Building in mid-<lb/>
orning, followed by 1 er popu-<lb/>
GIVEN FEBRUARY 27<lb/>
Banquet Sponsored By the Pres-<lb/>
byterian Student Association<lb/>
and the Young People's League<lb/>
of the Albemarle Presbytery<lb/>
College Dance To Be<lb/>
Given On March 12<lb/>
WALLACE ALSTON WAS<lb/>
PRINCIPAL SPEAKER<lb/>
To Play Here<lb/>
Paul Jones To Furnish Music For<lb/>
Gala EverU<lb/>
'An Approach to These Times"<lb/>
Subject of Speaker for the<lb/>
Occasion<lb/>
En<lb/>
if the<lb/>
n go '1<lb/>
A fellowship banquet was spon-<lb/>
sored at the Presbyterian Church,<lb/>
Sunday night, February 27, by the<lb/>
older Young People's Group of the<lb/>
church for the Presbyterian Stu-<lb/>
dent Association and the young<lb/>
people's leagues of the Albemarle<lb/>
Presbytery.<lb/>
In a colorful setting of attractive-<lb/>
ly arranged jonquils and spirea, a<lb/>
delicious upper was served in the<lb/>
basement of the church by the Wom-<lb/>
an's Auxiliary to the 105 attending.<lb/>
A number of young people from<lb/>
Rocky Mount, Wilson, Williamston,<lb/>
and Kinston attended. Among the<lb/>
guests were Miss Zoanna Davis,<lb/>
Methodist Student worker, and Miss<lb/>
Elizabeth Smith, Assistant Dean of<lb/>
Women.<lb/>
Mr. Wallace Alston, director of<lb/>
the young people's work in the<lb/>
Southern Presbyterian churches,<lb/>
coming from Richmond, Yirginia,<lb/>
was the principal speaker for the<lb/>
occasion, using as his topic "An<lb/>
Approach to These Times<lb/>
The speaker listed several ap-<lb/>
proaches. First, he explained "un-<lb/>
conditional surrender" as having<lb/>
nothing to do in the inner spirit to<lb/>
meet th thins - w ith ul<lb/>
Mr Alston nan d "cynicism" as<lb/>
(Please tnra to page two)<lb/>
FIGURE TO BE PLANNED<lb/>
BY MISS LUCILLE NORTON<lb/>
Auditorium to Be Decorated With<lb/>
Collegiate Colors in Form of<lb/>
Pennants<lb/>
PAUL JONES<lb/>
YWCA HEARS<lb/>
M FIEEDS<lb/>
Gives Challenging Message To<lb/>
College Students<lb/>
Miss Frances Fields, Student<lb/>
worker of the Presbyterian Church<lb/>
here, gave a challenging message to<lb/>
the College students at the Vesper<lb/>
Service of the Young Woman's<lb/>
Christian Association on Sunday<lb/>
evening, March 6.<lb/>
Miss Fields, in beginning her talk<lb/>
stated that the message she brought<lb/>
? as<lb/>
 ollej<lb/>
t i<lb/>
r.<lb/>
(<lb/>
u<lb/>
gram: Speaks Briefly On<lb/>
Origin and Growth of<lb/>
Ballads<lb/>
STUDY GROUP<lb/>
END SESSIONS<lb/>
 six-weeks study group<lb/>
g ? niggle in China<lb/>
its bearing on the rest<lb/>
world, spon-ored by the,<lb/>
i .  Association of University:<lb/>
 with a discussion on the re<lb/>
f the United States to the<lb/>
. which was led by Miss<lb/>
E. Jenkins and participated j<lb/>
" . y, iy person present, has come<lb/>
Miss Jenkins reviewed briefly the!<lb/>
- in tie policy toward China;<lb/>
 ? 'urn of the century, bring-<lb/>
rt the fact that this country.<lb/>
I consistent foreign policy<lb/>
in iie respect?a regard for<lb/>
netity of treaties and a feel-<lb/>
- " at their provisions must not<lb/>
ghtly disregarded.<lb/>
J be study of this small but Ba-<lb/>
sted group began in January<lb/>
talk by Miss Laura Rose on<lb/>
likenesses and differences in<lb/>
geography and the people of<lb/>
and Japan, and the events<lb/>
Qg up To Japan's move toward<lb/>
1 Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Miss Margaret MeKinney and I<lb/>
Miss Deli hah Prevatte, seniors here:<lb/>
who are doing practice teaching at<lb/>
the Greenville High School, pre-<lb/>
sented Miss Haskett's eighth grade<lb/>
English classes in a ballad program:<lb/>
at chapel, Friday, March 4.<lb/>
Miss MeKinney, who directed the<lb/>
program, spoke briefly on the origin<lb/>
and growth of ballads. Several of<lb/>
the students gave an old English<lb/>
country dance as an opening num-<lb/>
ber.<lb/>
Dennis Bailey played "Down In<lb/>
(Please turn to page three)<lb/>
STUDENTS ARE GUESTS<lb/>
OF LOCAL ROTARIANS<lb/>
ouie.i lo the Baptist p<lb/>
Greenville. She met with the peo-j<lb/>
pie of the Immanuel Baptist church,<lb/>
for the morning service and with:<lb/>
the people of the Memorial Church<lb/>
, for th<lb/>
for the evening service.<lb/>
Misses Downey and Daniel con<lb/>
ferred with the BSU Council and<lb/>
pastors of both churches Friday eve- j<lb/>
ning, concerning the Baptist Stu<lb/>
dent work.<lb/>
Miss Downey is well qualified for!<lb/>
her position here. She is a graduate I<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
HISTORY CLUB HAS<lb/>
REGULAR MEETING<lb/>
given  students, informal dancing,<lb/>
and a baseball game.<lb/>
This will be the third such "visit-<lb/>
ing day" held by the College in the<lb/>
last three years to interest more of<lb/>
the state's high sehool graduates in<lb/>
entering some college.<lb/>
The first High School Day here,<lb/>
in 1936, found twelve hundred<lb/>
guests present, from over fifty<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Last year the number of guests<lb/>
was nearer two thousand, and they<lb/>
represented over seventy schools.<lb/>
An even larger attendance is anti-<lb/>
cipated for the occasion this spring.<lb/>
MUSICAL PROGRAMS<lb/>
HERE INTERESTING<lb/>
 mi. i<lb/>
living.<lb/>
Several students from this col- j<lb/>
lege were guests of the Rotary Club,<lb/>
Monday, March 7. The students at-<lb/>
tending the Rotary meeting were the !<lb/>
sons and daughters of Rotary Club<lb/>
members. The guests attending<lb/>
from this college were: Janet and j<lb/>
Julia Edwards of Ayden, Sally'<lb/>
Bunting of Bethel, Lillian Hick- ?<lb/>
man and Louise McGoogan of Tabor j<lb/>
City, Mary Craven of Fuquay <lb/>
Springs, and Lina Sermons, Herbert<lb/>
Wilkerson, and Louis ReBarker of j<lb/>
Greenville.<lb/>
The History Club held its first reg<lb/>
ular meeting of the year, Tuesday j<lb/>
night. February-22, in the "Y" hut<lb/>
Lawyer F. C. Harding of Green<lb/>
ville spoke to the members on what<lb/>
made George Washington what he<lb/>
was and what he is today.<lb/>
He opened his talk with the state-<lb/>
ment that history is truth and history<lb/>
is based upon truth.<lb/>
He then explained to the group<lb/>
that Washington was chosen to lead<lb/>
the people not because of his genius<lb/>
and ability but because of people's<lb/>
profound faith and trust in him to<lb/>
pull them through their grave crisis.<lb/>
In conclusion lawyer Harding<lb/>
again emphasized the fact that<lb/>
history is fact in verity and history<lb/>
is truth.<lb/>
RADIO ENTERTAINER HERE<lb/>
"Founders and Builders of ECTC"<lb/>
Will Be Theme of 1938 Tecoan<lb/>
TECO ECHO STAFF GUEST OF<lb/>
PITT THEATRE MANAGEMENT<lb/>
the taff of the Teco Echo in-<lb/>
 ? nig the editors, business staff,<lb/>
and reporters, were guests of the<lb/>
management of the Pitt Theater at<lb/>
the moving picture on February 22.<lb/>
The young people made it a real<lb/>
theater party and enjoyed the oc-<lb/>
casion thoroughly.<lb/>
By PATSY McINTYRE<lb/>
"Founders and Builders of East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College" will be<lb/>
the theme of the 1938 Tecoan,<lb/>
which will be sent to the press at<lb/>
an early date.<lb/>
As founders of this institution the<lb/>
publication will feature Governor<lb/>
Thomas J. Jarvis, for a generation<lb/>
known as the state's "Grand Old<lb/>
Man whose influence was out-<lb/>
standing in establishing ECTC. Wil-<lb/>
liam H: Eagsdale, who conceived the<lb/>
idea of a school solely for teacher<lb/>
training; and James Lawson Flem-<lb/>
ing, upon whose election to the<lb/>
Senate a bill was introduced and<lb/>
passed to establish a teacher train-<lb/>
ing school.<lb/>
Representing the builders of our<lb/>
college will be Robert Herring<lb/>
Wright, master builder and only<lb/>
president for a quarter of a century;<lb/>
Claude Wayland Wilson, a member<lb/>
of the education department in the<lb/>
first faculty, under whose influence<lb/>
the model school was built; and<lb/>
Herbert E. Austin, also a member<lb/>
of the first faculty, and instrumental<lb/>
for many years in placing young<lb/>
teachers in suitable schools.<lb/>
The Tecoan will be made into five<lb/>
books: College, classes, or-<lb/>
ganizations, athletics, features. In<lb/>
addition to these books there will<lb/>
be several interesting pages of snap-<lb/>
shots of students, faculty, and cam-<lb/>
pus activities.<lb/>
The feature sect'jn will he made<lb/>
(Please turn to Page Three)<lb/>
Mr. Olin Winstead, radio enter-<lb/>
tainer, who was formerly of Wilson,<lb/>
entertained the chapel assembly,<lb/>
Tuesday, February 22, with a selec-<lb/>
tion of piano numbers and songs.<lb/>
Scheduled to give only one num-<lb/>
ber, Mr. Winstead gave three extra<lb/>
numbers when so requested by the<lb/>
student body.<lb/>
The numbers which he gave were:<lb/>
"Lonesome Road "Indian Love<lb/>
Call "Trees and "Let Me Call<lb/>
You Sweetheart The assembly<lb/>
joined in the singing of the latter.<lb/>
College Book Room<lb/>
Out of the sixteen thousand<lb/>
books in the coUege book room<lb/>
the average student rents fire or<lb/>
six during- a quarter. From the<lb/>
standpoint of one student, the<lb/>
number seems small. But when<lb/>
this number is multiplied by about<lb/>
eleven hundred students and<lb/>
when, at the end of the quarter,<lb/>
all of them want to get to the two<lb/>
doors of the book room at the same<lb/>
time?well, that is another matter.<lb/>
To lessen this last minute rush,<lb/>
Dr. B. L. Hilldrup, director of the<lb/>
book room, requests that books be<lb/>
turned in as soon as possible. For<lb/>
this purpose, the book room will<lb/>
be kept open a number of extra<lb/>
hours during the last week of the<lb/>
quarter. A schedule will be posted<lb/>
on the bulletin hoard and on the<lb/>
doors of the book room.<lb/>
Solely for the mutual protection<lb/>
and convenience of the college<lb/>
and of the student body, the book<lb/>
room also has a few simple rales.<lb/>
A brief summary of them appears<lb/>
in the front of each book that Is<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
A musical program was given in I<lb/>
chapel, Friday, February 25, by Mr.)<lb/>
Dean Tabor, director of the men's j<lb/>
chorus and orchestra here, Miss!<lb/>
Mary Dormer, of the Piano Depart<lb/>
ment, and Miss Yelma Lowe, of<lb/>
the Commerce Department.<lb/>
Miss Lowe, accompanied at the <lb/>
piano by Miss Dormer, contributed<lb/>
a violin solo, "Salut D'Amour" by<lb/>
Elgar.<lb/>
Miss Dormer followed by playing<lb/>
two piano solos, Brahm's "Waltz in<lb/>
A Flat" and Wieneowski's "Panto-<lb/>
mine<lb/>
Mr. Tabor sang three bass solos.<lb/>
Clay's "The Hobo bringing out the<lb/>
wistfulness of the American hobo,<lb/>
Burleigh's "Deep River bringing<lb/>
out the negro's wistfulness, and<lb/>
"Gypsy John an old English<lb/>
composition.<lb/>
Musical Romance<lb/>
Air. Dean Tabor and Miss Guessie<lb/>
Kuykendall, both of the music de-j<lb/>
partment here, presented an unusual<lb/>
but interesting musical romance<lb/>
program to the student body in:<lb/>
chapel, Tuesday, March 2.<lb/>
Sheets on which a list of questions<lb/>
was printed were distributed among<lb/>
the students. Miss Kuykendall<lb/>
played a group of songs, the names<lb/>
of which answered these questions<lb/>
and the students supplied the<lb/>
answers.<lb/>
Rske Sh. g<lb/>
test for eolle<lb/>
Mi. points of the test that the epea k-<lb/>
er paid particular attention to were:<lb/>
Who are you anyway i What are<lb/>
you doing? What are you ac-<lb/>
complishing?<lb/>
. She concluded her talk by saying.<lb/>
"God help yoti to muster the courage<lb/>
and the wisdom to face and pass<lb/>
this examination in College Living:<lb/>
for it is, after all, a fairly accurate<lb/>
test of the creat adventure we call<lb/>
Life<lb/>
Paul Jones and his orchestra will<lb/>
furnish music for the winter quarter<lb/>
dance, to be held in the Robert II.<lb/>
i Wright auditorium, on Saturday<lb/>
night, March 12. The dance is to<lb/>
be sponsored by the Poe Society, and<lb/>
the Student Social Committee.<lb/>
The auditorium will be decorated<lb/>
with collegiate colors in the form<lb/>
of pennants from ECTC, Carolina,<lb/>
Duke, Davidson, State, and Wake<lb/>
Forest. Songs of these colleges will<lb/>
be played at intervals throughout<lb/>
the evening.<lb/>
The figure will be planned and<lb/>
directed by Miss Lucille Norton, of<lb/>
the Physical Education Depart-<lb/>
ment. It will be led by Josie Hall,<lb/>
chairman of the social committee;<lb/>
 Irene LTzzell, president of Poe So-<lb/>
ciety; and their guests. Others in<lb/>
the figure are Melrose Gardner and<lb/>
Louise Martin, invitation commit-<lb/>
tee, Maggie Grumpier, chairman of<lb/>
j the refreshment committee; Jean-<lb/>
nette Edwards, Xylda Cooper, and<lb/>
I Marie Worthington, decorations<lb/>
committee; Grace Dawson, social<lb/>
committee, Alary Carson McGee,<lb/>
treasurer of Poe Society; Ophelia<lb/>
i Montague, vice president of Poe So-<lb/>
 ciety, Ida Farrior Davis, secretary<lb/>
Poe Society; Margaret Guy Over-<lb/>
43 GUESTS ENTERTAINED<lb/>
IN PRACTICE HOUSE<lb/>
EMERSON SOCIETY<lb/>
FORENSICS WINNER<lb/>
The debating among the literary<lb/>
societies on the campus was resumed (<lb/>
Monday, February 2$. for the first<lb/>
time in several years, with the clash<lb/>
ing of an affirmative team from the1<lb/>
Emerson Society against a negative<lb/>
team from the Lanier Society.<lb/>
Debating on the query: "Resolved,<lb/>
that the United States should accept<lb/>
the policy of extending Federal aid<lb/>
to general public education Louise<lb/>
and Dorothy Woodard upheld the<lb/>
affirmative side and defeated the<lb/>
negative side composed of Jeanette<lb/>
Earley and Erlene Sawyer.<lb/>
Miss Lois Grigsby, Miss Emma<lb/>
Hooper, and Dr. Herbert ReBarker;<lb/>
served as judges at the debate and<lb/>
by their decision the Emersons won.<lb/>
The Emerson team will challenge<lb/>
the Poe Society to a debate to be held<lb/>
during the spring quarter.<lb/>
Takes 40 Gallons of Ice Cream On<lb/>
Sunday to Whet Students' Appetite<lb/>
By INA MAE PIERCE<lb/>
How many students have ever<lb/>
stopped to think how much food<lb/>
it takes to serve, even for one meal,<lb/>
those who eat in the E.C.T.C. dining<lb/>
halls. The statistics gathered in<lb/>
terms of pounds, dozens, gallons,<lb/>
or cans from the stewardess who has<lb/>
to calculate the amounts, seemed im-<lb/>
possible to the statistician who<lb/>
passes the figures on to you.<lb/>
When chicken is served for Sun-<lb/>
day dinner it takes 750 pounds. The<lb/>
potatoes served with it weigh 400<lb/>
pounds, so it is little wonder that<lb/>
the students put on weight also. It<lb/>
takes 200 pounds of butterbeans or<lb/>
3 dozen number 10 cans of peas<lb/>
for the second vegetable. Forty<lb/>
gallons of ice cream furnish the<lb/>
dessert. The sweet pickled peaches<lb/>
that often go with the Sunday<lb/>
meal cost $40.<lb/>
When steak is served instead of<lb/>
chicken, 220 pounds are eaten at<lb/>
an approximate cost of $75.<lb/>
For breakfast either four boxes<lb/>
of oranges, six boxes of tangerines,<lb/>
or six bunches of bananas are served<lb/>
for the fruit. The lightest of foods,<lb/>
cornflakes, pulls down the scales at<lb/>
ten pounds. If bacon and eggs com-<lb/>
plete the menu, 90 dozen eggs and<lb/>
75 pounds of bacon are consumed.<lb/>
Instead of taking butter, which<lb/>
is served at every meal, separate or<lb/>
measuring it by the weight, the cost<lb/>
for one week was requested and<lb/>
found to be $150. Milk, which<lb/>
(Please turn to page two)<lb/>
Each girl during her stay at the<lb/>
practice house gives a guest dinner.<lb/>
During fall and winter quarters<lb/>
many faculty members and out of<lb/>
town people have been entertained.<lb/>
A complete list of girls and their<lb/>
guests are as follows: Miss Bernice<lb/>
Alston, Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Slay;<lb/>
Miss Louise Davis, Miss Rosaline<lb/>
Ivey, and Miss Guinn; Afiss Nellie<lb/>
Sutton, Miss Helen Spangler and<lb/>
Airs. Chas; Aliss Margaret Pruette,<lb/>
Airs. Sells, Placement Bureau<lb/>
Columbia University, Miss Mary<lb/>
Green, Aliss Katherine Holtzclaw,<lb/>
Miss Alary Berry Clark; Aliss<lb/>
Emily Brut Person; Air. and Mrs.<lb/>
AI. AI. Person, Louisburg; Aliss Inez<lb/>
Hubbard, Miss Zoe Anna Davis.<lb/>
Greenville; Aliss Sallie Joyner<lb/>
Davis; AHss Helen Barnhill, Miss<lb/>
A. Y. Moore, Airs. Rose Harrell:<lb/>
Mis Routh Thompson, Aliss Jessie<lb/>
Schnopp, Miss Evelyn Rogers,<lb/>
Teachers of Home Economics,<lb/>
Greenville High School; Aliss Han-<lb/>
nah Martin, Aliss Jamye Martin,<lb/>
Warsaw, Air. Joel Lathan, Lilling-<lb/>
ton; Aliss Lucille Waller, Air.<lb/>
Roberson, Greenville High School.<lb/>
Mrs. Y. M. MullheUand, Principal,<lb/>
Green ville High School, Aliss<lb/>
Marie Graham; Aliss Louise War-<lb/>
ren, and Air. and Airs. Ralph Deal.<lb/>
An outstanding event of fall<lb/>
quarter was the formal Christmas<lb/>
dinner given in honor of Miss Marie<lb/>
White, Washington, D. C, Field<lb/>
Secretary for Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion, Miss Katherine Dennis, Ra-<lb/>
leigh, N. C, State Supervisor of<lb/>
High Sehool Home Economies.<lb/>
Other guests were: Mr. and Mrs.<lb/>
R. G. Deyton, Assistant Director<lb/>
of Budget, Dr. and Mrs. Meadows.<lb/>
Dr. and Mrs. Frank, Dr. and Airs.<lb/>
AfcGinnis.<lb/>
Mrs. Blaxton had as her guests,<lb/>
her sisters, Mrs. H. P. Harrell of<lb/>
Driver, Virginia, and Mrs. A. S.<lb/>
(Please turn to page four)<lb/>
Miss Hunter's Father Passes<lb/>
Word was received here last week<lb/>
of the death of Miss Hunter's<lb/>
father. Miss Hunter was a former<lb/>
member of the faculty here, and was<lb/>
doing graduate work at George<lb/>
Peabody College at the time of her<lb/>
father's death.<lb/>
The Tsco Echo with the students<lb/>
and faculty join in expressing their<lb/>
sympathy to Miss Hunter in her<lb/>
great loss.<lb/>
s<lb/>
<pb facs="00038068_0002"/><lb/>
PAGE TWO<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
-rtH 1938<lb/>
The TECO ECHO<lb/>
iljr CtMEJBM TfiMFKS COUMKE<lb/>
. '?? the Students of East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College<lb/>
STAFF<lb/>
C. Ra-<lb/>
Id v<lb/>
Kt'l 1 TK<lb/>
Watson<lb/>
. . Editor-in-Chief<lb/>
Business Manager<lb/>
ASSOCIATE EDITORS<lb/>
11 akv m Deax Gbobgia StJOQ<lb/>
Leo B sks Sarah Ann Maxwkix<lb/>
1 i in 11 ?: : ak Patsy MiTntykk<lb/>
s Bii.ly Daniels<lb/>
N x i P<lb/>
ADVERTISING MANAGERS<lb/>
E riir.L Lee By an<lb/>
Lucille Johnson<lb/>
r? Carolyn Lamb<lb/>
Stai LaRue Mooring, Ina Mae Pierce, Ruth<lb/>
Ci km ?re, Ethel Padgett, Fodie Hodges, Ruth Phillips,<lb/>
u Mae Turnage, Mary Clyde Coppedge, John David<lb/>
rs, Ja ;k Daniels, Lucille Edge and Margaret Guy<lb/>
0 ? in. 1. uise Tadloek.<lb/>
Subscri<lb/>
Post ffi<lb/>
(office <lb/>
$1.00 per College Year<lb/>
Numbers 68, 182<lb/>
Room 25<lb/>
matter December 3, 1925, at the U. S.<lb/>
X. C, under the act of March 3, 1879.<lb/>
1937 Mratlwr 108<lb/>
mnwun ?J?? REPRESENTED 'OK N?TtON?l. ?OVE?TISINO BY<lb/>
Pbsociaiod CoIo6iaiG Press National Advertising Service, Inc.<lb/>
(allege Publishers Representative<lb/>
Distributor of 420 Madison Ave. New York. N. Y.<lb/>
Colle6iote Cfeest<lb/>
With The<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Notk: Only three pictures icere<lb/>
used in this column this week due<lb/>
to the unavoidable delay in having<lb/>
halftones made. Subsequent issue<lb/>
will carry the column in its usual<lb/>
form.<lb/>
KDITOK.<lb/>
Saying?<lb/>
"God must have loved the common people because he made .so many<lb/>
m " Abraham Lincoln.<lb/>
Definition?<lb/>
A ; ?a government in which a family rules the people.<lb/>
How Will You Vote?<lb/>
PRIMROSE CARPENTER<lb/>
Primrose Carpenter, native of<lb/>
New Bern, North Carolina, attend-<lb/>
ed and graduated from the Xew<lb/>
Bern High School. While he was<lb/>
in high school, Primrose was a mem-<lb/>
ber of the High School Science Cluh.<lb/>
Men's Athletic Association and was<lb/>
vice president of the Monogram<lb/>
Cluh. He also took part in many<lb/>
social activities in which he served,<lb/>
at various times, as chairman of<lb/>
committees.<lb/>
Since entering<lb/>
ECTC, Primrose<lb/>
has contributed<lb/>
much to the stu-<lb/>
dent life of the<lb/>
campus. For four<lb/>
years that he has<lb/>
been here he has<lb/>
been a member of<lb/>
the varsity foot-<lb/>
hall team ami a<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
varsity cluh. lie<lb/>
lias also worked<lb/>
as the secretary of the Science Cluh<lb/>
and this year worked on the edi-<lb/>
torial staff of the Teeoan. He has<lb/>
also served as vice president of the<lb/>
Phi Sigma Pi Fraternity. Prim-<lb/>
rose, elected to serve on the Men's<lb/>
Student Council as representative<lb/>
from the Senior Class, on entering<lb/>
the group was chosen to serve as its<lb/>
vice president.<lb/>
"Prim" says his hobby is sailing.<lb/>
In fact he likes most anything that<lb/>
abounds the ocean's brink. He<lb/>
also likes to danceEvidently the<lb/>
Senior Class thinks he's good for<lb/>
they elected him the best dancer<lb/>
among them).<lb/>
Prim" says he doesn't have hutj<lb/>
nne ambition and that is to he hap<lb/>
COLLEGE BOOK ROOM<lb/>
pily married.<lb/>
elding place t<lb/>
 new will he the erv of<lb/>
I ?lie :Hills next week to decide who -hall head<lb/>
on our campus. The question is?How shall<lb/>
: Is will you vote? Must they have pretty hair :<lb/>
?s: must they be your kin or your good friend'<lb/>
standards such as ability, fitness, responsibility,<lb/>
: good leadership <lb/>
II i . and see if he or she tits your standards<lb/>
ould le, and when you have done this you can<lb/>
have done your part to insure hotter organiza-<lb/>
future.<lb/>
XYLDA COOPER<lb/>
Xylda Cooper comes to us from<lb/>
Wallace, North Carolina where she<lb/>
attended and graduated from the<lb/>
Clement High School.<lb/>
While in High School, Xylda was<lb/>
vice president of her Junior Class<lb/>
and during her Junior year, also<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
rented from the college. Since the<lb/>
student agrees to the complete set<lb/>
of rules and conditions, rather<lb/>
than to the summary, when he<lb/>
signs for a hook, it may he to his<lb/>
advantage to cut out and save the<lb/>
following copy of them:<lb/>
ltook Hot 1 in Holes<lb/>
1. Xo student may cheek hooks<lb/>
out of the hook room in the name<lb/>
of another student. Bad one must<lb/>
get his tiooks in person, and re-<lb/>
turn them in person. It is advis-<lb/>
able for each student to see that<lb/>
his account is properly cleared<lb/>
before leaving the college at the<lb/>
end of u quarter.<lb/>
i. The hook room will he kept<lb/>
open on the last day of registra-<lb/>
tion in each quarter so that the<lb/>
students may arransre to search<lb/>
the shelves for books with which<lb/>
they have been clianred during a<lb/>
previous quarter.<lb/>
3. If a student does not return<lb/>
his hooks, he must pay for them.<lb/>
For a hook which has not been<lb/>
used by a former student, the cost<lb/>
shall he the full retail price: for<lb/>
one that has been used throughout<lb/>
a quarter, the cost shall be three-<lb/>
fourths of the retail price: and for<lb/>
all others, the cost shall be two-<lb/>
thirds of the retail price.<lb/>
t. A tine shall be charged on all<lb/>
books that are returned late. The<lb/>
last day of a quarter is the date<lb/>
when all books shall be consid-<lb/>
ered as due. unless a special ar-<lb/>
rangement has been made where-<lb/>
by a different date is set.<lb/>
This fine shall be five cents for<lb/>
each day that the book room is<lb/>
open between the date that the<lb/>
book is due and the date upon<lb/>
which it is returned until the<lb/>
amount reaches fifty cents per<lb/>
book. If a book is returned more<lb/>
than ten days late, the tine shall<lb/>
be one-third of the value of the<lb/>
book, if that amount is smaller<lb/>
than a fine of live cents a day.<lb/>
Hooks due lonsrer than a full col-<lb/>
lege quarter must be paid for un-<lb/>
less other arrangements are made<lb/>
with the director of the book room.<lb/>
?. If a student fails to take rea-<lb/>
sonable care of the books rented<lb/>
by him, he may lie fined for such<lb/>
neglect: but in no case shall the<lb/>
maximum penalty exceed the origi-<lb/>
nal retail price of the books that<lb/>
are abused.<lb/>
LETTERS<lb/>
to the Editor<lb/>
(Editor's note: This laartment<lb/>
is open to all students tn school<lb/>
here. The Tfxx Kciio reserves the<lb/>
right to censor or reject all com-<lb/>
mu,iications. Letters published<lb/>
herein express individual opinion,<lb/>
and do not represent the editorial<lb/>
policies of this newspaper.)<lb/>
Unusual?But True!<lb/>
Dear Editor:<lb/>
Isn't this supposed i" be<lb/>
lege. or am I mistaken <lb/>
people of college age supp<lb/>
ike ladies am<lb/>
a co<lb/>
Vren't<lb/>
sed 1<lb/>
know how to act<lb/>
gentlemen, or again, am 1 mi<lb/>
swers to the first<lb/>
above art<lb/>
If the an<lb/>
of the question<lb/>
ia ken<lb/>
art<lb/>
in tin<lb/>
a w<lb/>
affirmative, I want to saj<lb/>
or two about the conduct of our stu-<lb/>
dent hody at entertainments. By<lb/>
the term "entertainments 1 mean<lb/>
not only those made possible by<lb/>
funds from the student treasurer.<lb/>
hut the Saturday night moving<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
lent has already seen a<lb/>
a Sat<lb/>
A. B. (happy)<lb/>
XNGRNQR OF ?<lb/>
NO0MBD HIS .v<lb/>
M!GH S V ? I<lb/>
I.) LAW S H '<lb/>
NG NBMSPAi<lb/>
: M3M MJRK<lb/>
AND BA' ?<lb/>
' ,<lb/>
ggcfefr 1938<lb/>
Basketball Climax Rev<lb/>
To Be Third Highest<lb/>
 <lb/>
Summary Taken From Figures rt y.<lb/>
Recently Released By J. D. HI<lb/>
Alexander J<lb/>
ABBIT OF ELON LEADS<lb/>
A TAR HEELS WITH 241<lb/>
High Point's Malfequot Wit<lb/>
Points, and Shelton oJ I ?<lb/>
With 236 Points Follow v.<lb/>
Close Margin.<lb/>
<lb/>
rd<lb/>
v ording to<lb/>
recently by ?'? ' '?<lb/>
gh? ??? ?'?- sharpshi ?<lb/>
the K( TC qainU I<lb/>
pietun<lb/>
If a stui<lb/>
marshal.<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
a toll of<lb/>
hurt or j<lb/>
wise with<lb/>
sight was<lb/>
centr ;?<lb/>
Secoi<lb/>
kille<lb/>
note.<lb/>
This I s<lb/>
thing is tl<lb/>
you nil.i v,<lb/>
whili rid<lb/>
a ilu . -<lb/>
Are You a Speed Cowboy?<lb/>
ii us editorial comment on the subject of driving on the campus<lb/>
!? of  avail. Cars come and iro. some fast, some slow, some<lb/>
 some moderate, but most of them above the speed limit<lb/>
- by the college. The limit is 15 miles per hour.<lb/>
 ? best way in which driving on the eampus will he slowed<lb/>
? ? itation of facts and figures. If facts and figures are<lb/>
roduce seriousness; will it be given the attention it should?<lb/>
ii an effort of experimentation and in the boldness of facts and<lb/>
? v shall be stated: The fart- affect our eampus in four ways?<lb/>
For exceeding the speed limit, the year 1937 brought with it<lb/>
deaths and injuries, amounting to 9,380 killed and i'L'7fi<lb/>
lermanentiy injured. Edward Young, a poet, once said, "Be<lb/>
i speed: A fool al forty is a fool indeed This man's fore-<lb/>
great indeed as he was born in the latter part of the seventeenth<lb/>
? rtainly had this modern generation down to a "t<lb/>
'ess i , for the year 1M7 brought 4,440 people<lb/>
i 53,92 red, an enormous figure of which everyone should<lb/>
sh<lb/>
On e n tering<lb/>
ECTC in the fall<lb/>
of 1934, Xylda<lb/>
was elected presi-<lb/>
dent of her fresh-<lb/>
man class. Dur-<lb/>
ing ber sophomore<lb/>
year, she served as<lb/>
treasurer of the<lb/>
Woman's Student<lb/>
Government As-<lb/>
sociation and on<lb/>
the student chapel<lb/>
committee,<lb/>
was elected presi-<lb/>
MISS ANN DOWNEY<lb/>
IS B. S. SECRETARY<lb/>
Mathematics Club and<lb/>
secretary of the senior<lb/>
ig id<lb/>
?  on our campus which is maybe a dangerous<lb/>
?vcles. Ilow easy it is for an automobile to hit<lb/>
an Last year there were Md people killed and 31,890 injured<lb/>
ng bicycles, and they weren't all children. Therefore it is<lb/>
yourself and to all drivers that you watch before you leap.<lb/>
Fourthly (pedestrians) -According to a booklet "Death Begins at<lb/>
Forty issued by the Travelers Insurance Company, Hartford, Con-<lb/>
necticut, the 1930 automobile is a marvel of speed, power and safety,1<lb/>
but the 1938 pedestrian is the same plodding individual he was a hundred;<lb/>
years ago. He hasn't any all-steel body, nor has nature streamlined!<lb/>
him so he can move faster in this age of speed. The 1920s with its<lb/>
boopadoop?Charleston?"yes, we have no Bananas"?Drug Store Cow-<lb/>
boys?all are gone with the wind, but there is left one tragicomic vestige<lb/>
of the "Two.ties lie is the Speed Cowboy, an unwanted relic of the<lb/>
bygone days, he whizzes blythely on, oblivious to the fact that he is as<lb/>
out of place as Keystone comedy in Radio City music hall. Just a<lb/>
Model T intellect in a streamlined roadster. Some day, he may be caught<lb/>
unaware and be put in a museum, where he belongs, along with the extinct<lb/>
Dinosaur and the Dodo.<lb/>
College people think about this thing called death that lurks on four<lb/>
wheels. Stop! Consider your chances in a country of automobiles<lb/>
where life is cheap and speed is the Vogue! Yes, 1937 has gone?<lb/>
forgotten in the hopes and expectations of 1938?but, its automobile<lb/>
accidents will live long in the maimed and cripple as a gory indication<lb/>
to America's carelessness and indifference. (Statistics and some quoted<lb/>
matter from booklet?"Death Begins at 40)<lb/>
An Old Saying<lb/>
There seems to he an old saying on the Campus that?"the candidate<lb/>
that controls Wilson Hall insures himself or herself of a successful elec<lb/>
tion How true this saying may be it is beyond the writer's knowledge,<lb/>
but if the above be the case it can be remedied. How? By the simple<lb/>
method of going to the polls. Tf Gotten, Jarvis, and Fleming halls go<lb/>
to the polls and vote a solid vote, Wilson nor any other hall can carry<lb/>
an election. Therefore with Wilson Hall going to the polls and voting<lb/>
solid?with probably Jarvis, Cotten, and Fleming voting only small<lb/>
majorities?Wilson Hall can carry an election.<lb/>
Last year<lb/>
?lent of the<lb/>
this year is<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Xylda says her hobby is reading.<lb/>
She also likes to play the piano (at<lb/>
which she is quite good). She says<lb/>
she has one thing for which to<lb/>
achieve and that is to be a success<lb/>
in anything she might undertake.<lb/>
LOUISE ELAM<lb/>
Louise Elam says that though she<lb/>
was horn in South Hill, Virginia,<lb/>
she spent ber childhood days at Ox-<lb/>
ford, North Carolina where she grad-<lb/>
uated from high school in 193? She<lb/>
belonged to various high school or-<lb/>
ganizations, among them the Latin<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
This year Louise<lb/>
is working as vice<lb/>
president in the<lb/>
Mathematics Club<lb/>
and the History<lb/>
Club, working in<lb/>
the student branch<lb/>
of the Women's<lb/>
auxiliary of St.<lb/>
Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church. Here, she<lb/>
was elected to<lb/>
serve as vice pres-<lb/>
ident of this or-<lb/>
ganization this year.<lb/>
Louise says her hobby is reading<lb/>
and working math. She likes to<lb/>
read unusual facts (Robert Ripley's<lb/>
Believe It or Nots, for instance) and<lb/>
to play croquet. After graduation<lb/>
from ECTC she would like to teach<lb/>
other people to enjoy working mathe-<lb/>
matics as much as she does.<lb/>
STUDY GROUP ENDS SESSION<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
expansion on the continent in the<lb/>
early 1930's.<lb/>
The group was under the leader-<lb/>
ship of Miss Laura Rose, chairman<lb/>
of the International Relations Com-<lb/>
mittee of the AAtTW, but was com-<lb/>
posed of both members and non-<lb/>
members.<lb/>
It seemed to be the feeling of the<lb/>
group that the chief benefit derived<lb/>
from the series of meetings was the<lb/>
ability to listen to commentators and<lb/>
read the newspapers more intel-<lb/>
ligently.<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
of Chowan College. She has had a<lb/>
year at the Baptist Training School<lb/>
in Louisville, Kentucky and has also<lb/>
done graduate work here in the sum-<lb/>
mer. She spent part of last sum-<lb/>
mer touring parts of Europe. At<lb/>
the present time Miss Downey is<lb/>
teaching in the Primary grades in<lb/>
Castalia.<lb/>
The Baptist Students here is I<lb/>
headed by the Baptist Student!<lb/>
Union Council with the faculty ad-<lb/>
viser Miss Margaret Samnion;<lb/>
President, Catherine Cheek; first1<lb/>
vice president, Mildred Hollowell;<lb/>
second vice president, Ernestine<lb/>
Perry; secretary, Doris Hollowell;<lb/>
treasurer, Mary Louise MeGougan;<lb/>
pianist, Ina Mae Pearee; chorist,<lb/>
Madeline Fakes; chairman of social<lb/>
committee, Marie Puckett; Sunday<lb/>
school representative, Hattie Hol-<lb/>
land; and reporter, Lucille Xewton.<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP DINNER<lb/>
GIVEN FEBRUARY 27<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
the second approach to these times,<lb/>
and he described the cynic as a<lb/>
man who "sticks a blade in the<lb/>
hack of those who try to solve their<lb/>
problems<lb/>
Another popular approach given<lb/>
was that of pagan "self sufficiency"<lb/>
which he described as the surest<lb/>
type of self-deluse.<lb/>
The last approach which Mr.<lb/>
Alston listed as probably the most<lb/>
popular was expediency or the way<lb/>
of a short cut.<lb/>
In conclusion, Mr. Alston said:<lb/>
"may God help us with decisions<lb/>
and help us to face our lives today<lb/>
with the approach we do not hesitate<lb/>
to call 'the way of faith<lb/>
TAKES 40 GALLONS OF<lb/>
ICE CREAM ON SUNDAY<lb/>
(Costume from vf one)<lb/>
is also served every meal, amounts to<lb/>
70 gallons a day or 490 gallons per<lb/>
week.<lb/>
If sausage is the meat for a meal,<lb/>
250 pounds are necessary, but it takes<lb/>
only 100 pounds of liver. The fish<lb/>
for dinner weigh 220 pounds.<lb/>
The cabbage made into slaw for<lb/>
lunch alone weigh 150 pounds.<lb/>
When pie, which is a favorite<lb/>
dessert, completes a meal, 175 are<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
This is only a few items and the<lb/>
beginning of the story. Twenty-five<lb/>
negroes are kept busy in the kitchen<lb/>
from morning until night preparing<lb/>
this food, and if one man had to<lb/>
wash all the dishes, it would take<lb/>
him 12 hours.<lb/>
picture being shown here on a Sat<lb/>
unlay night, common decency and<lb/>
his sense of eonsideratoiii for others<lb/>
gives him two choices: first, he can<lb/>
stay away cut rely, or secondly, he<lb/>
can at least refrain from making a<lb/>
whispered summary of it to his<lb/>
neighbors and from commenting on<lb/>
what is going to happen next. Lit-<lb/>
tle things like these can utterly<lb/>
spoil a picture for one who is see<lb/>
bag it for the first time, f people<lb/>
will get to the auditorium on time<lb/>
and make up their minds to stay<lb/>
through the showing of the whole<lb/>
film once they're there, noises<lb/>
caused by squeaking and creaking<lb/>
floor boards will be eliminated. If<lb/>
the doorkeepers will refuse to page<lb/>
any person except for a really im-<lb/>
portant reason, it will be much eas-<lb/>
ier to hear the dialogue of players<lb/>
As for the way students conduct<lb/>
themselves at the larger, more im-<lb/>
portant entertainments. have sev-<lb/>
eral criticisms to make Before I<lb/>
go into them, however, let me re-<lb/>
mind you thai most of the people<lb/>
who appeal' on our stage in the<lb/>
Wright auditorium, whether they<lb/>
be lecturers, musicians, dancers.<lb/>
singers, or actors, are celebrities. It<lb/>
stands to reason that word of our<lb/>
reception of them here will reach<lb/>
other celebrities, who are potential<lb/>
entertainers at this college, and if<lb/>
their reports are unfavorable, the<lb/>
reputation of our alma mater will<lb/>
be blackened and our present high<lb/>
standard of entertainments must of<lb/>
necessity be lowered because we will<lb/>
no longer !m able to induce the lust<lb/>
entertainers to appear here.<lb/>
I hope no one thinks I'm being<lb/>
nasty about all this. It is only lie-<lb/>
cause 1 realize that those things I<lb/>
have just mentioned are certain to<lb/>
become realities if we students<lb/>
don't conduct ourselves as refined<lb/>
men and women instead of as hood-<lb/>
lums and urchins of the street, that<lb/>
I am writing at such length on this<lb/>
subject. 1 am merely presentinir<lb/>
an important problem to the stu-<lb/>
dent body. We can reach the prop-<lb/>
er solution if we only will!<lb/>
That certainly was a digression!<lb/>
Let me get back to the ways in<lb/>
which I think our conduct at large<lb/>
entertainments can be improved.<lb/>
First. I think it is terribly rude<lb/>
of us to laugh at people in a play<lb/>
as soon as they appear on the stage.<lb/>
If the characters are supposed tn<lb/>
be comical, laughter in the right<lb/>
places is not amiss, but laughter di-<lb/>
rected at people who are attempt<lb/>
ing to portray serious parts is un-<lb/>
pardonable. Let's try to control our<lb/>
tickle boxes until the characters<lb/>
have been on the stage at least long<lb/>
enough to give us a clue to the<lb/>
nature of their parts.<lb/>
Secondly, those of us who decide!<lb/>
to attend an entertainment should<lb/>
also decide to remain until the final<lb/>
curtain. That goes double for those:<lb/>
in the balcony. The noise made in<lb/>
coming down those wooden steps is<lb/>
simply?well, there just isn't a word<lb/>
to describe it!<lb/>
Another thing which we should<lb/>
take steps to end is this practice of<lb/>
getting up and leaving after giv-<lb/>
ing a round of applause so feeble<lb/>
that, as Dr. Baughan would say, it<lb/>
has "one foot in the grave and the<lb/>
other on a banana peel In large<lb/>
cities it is customary for an audi-<lb/>
ence to give "curtain calls" to the<lb/>
favorite performers. A curtain call<lb/>
is signified by almost thunderous<lb/>
applause and is nothing more com-<lb/>
plicated than a demand bv the au-<lb/>
dience for the reappearance of its<lb/>
favorites. Helen Hayes received an<lb/>
almost unbelievable number after<lb/>
her "Victoria Regina It is up to<lb/>
us to prove that we are not igno-<lb/>
rant provincials by making it a<lb/>
point to give at least one curtain<lb/>
call after every one of our enter-<lb/>
tainments. If we are particular<lb/>
pleased, we can, of course, give as<lb/>
many as the performers will re-<lb/>
ceive.<lb/>
I'm through. To you persever-<lb/>
ing ones who have so valiantlv<lb/>
struggled through this manuscript<lb/>
(it can t rightly be called anything<lb/>
else), let me add that I hope these<lb/>
suggestions will prove helpful AH<lb/>
rCKSrJQ<lb/>
r<lb/>
Collie news<lb/>
receives abojt<lb/>
of the space in<lb/>
the nation's<lb/>
? ? ? PAPERS ? ? ?<lb/>
 130.000<lb/>
SERMON<lb/>
Zn ;fieo doctor<lb/>
ATltCUS G.HAYG0O0<lb/>
OF EAAORV UNiVERSrTr<lb/>
ifcEACHEDASERAAON<lb/>
OH "THE NEW SOUTH<lb/>
WHICH WAS SO WEU-<lb/>
RECEIVED THAT 6EO.<lb/>
T SENEY OF NiEW YORK<lb/>
OCNiKlBUTED 130,000<lb/>
TO EMORY<lb/>
f r in tne stai<lb/>
competition. Ab<lb/>
the Tar Heel scl 1<lb/>
a grand total oi24<lb/>
jbllowed by High ?<lb/>
with ? pJ" ?" !<lb/>
i in a<lb/>
ssed a total<lb/>
p gon - w "rK to -?<lb/>
A summary of I<lb/>
Ltball record sl i ?<lb/>
' lost Sir<lb/>
WhoWould You RatherBelf YouCouldnt<lb/>
Be Yourself, That Is The Question?<lb/>
By HELEN GRAY GILLAM<lb/>
Who would you rat<lb/>
couldn t be vourscll<lb/>
??r be ii you ?<lb/>
hat was I he I<lb/>
Lookin' Over<lb/>
the<lb/>
Campus<lb/>
Aimmmnmtti<lb/>
(<lb/>
question put to the members of the <lb/>
class in Sociology 100 by their in- f<lb/>
struetor, M. L. Wright. '<lb/>
The only limitation was that the <lb/>
person of choice mils? have raad<lb/>
some contribution to civilization. ,<lb/>
 ,  , , In bprine<lb/>
hack member ol the class wrote a '<lb/>
, - , , i- turn- to toie.<lb/>
term paper on lus choice lucliiduig<lb/>
? ? ' ,   them to try t<lb/>
a biosrrapnv ot the person chosen , , <lb/>
i  ' ?  . i ?  boldlv written<lb/>
and the reason tor the choice with<lb/>
emphasis on the latter. ' <lb/>
The biographies of the men  ? ?<lb/>
ranged from Hannibal to Rear Ad<lb/>
attempt to<lb/>
miral Richard E. Byrd and of the , .<lb/>
women, from Cleopatra to Mrs.  ' , <lb/>
Franklin D Roosevelt. o ' 1,I<lb/>
. Scoop ol the<lb/>
Ol the group not a single buy tit vru"?<lb/>
wished to be s woman, but five  ?N  r(<lb/>
irirls wished to be men. The girls .moroas intern<lb/>
Were Louise fii'Lrs. who wished to i i<lb/>
,   , , - . . man at tract!<lb/>
be Hannibal; Jean Stu! . s, Rear  ' ? <lb/>
Admiral Byrd: Virginia Bryan, l ? <lb/>
Will Rogers: Jovce Campbell. L <lb/>
?. ,  ? ,  , , moved into th<lb/>
Woodrow Wilson, and Helen Grav i<lb/>
 , . ? : near he want -<lb/>
(iillam. George ol England i T1 ? ,<lb/>
 , , . , love. 1 he girl<lb/>
Ine most popular choice For the<lb/>
girls was. Florence Nightingale,<lb/>
who was chosen by three. Martha<lb/>
Washington and the first Queen<lb/>
Elizabeth of England ranked equal-<lb/>
ly. Wives of presidents of the<lb/>
United States were popular, as<lb/>
three were chosen, Martha Wash<lb/>
ington by two. and Mrs. Franklin<lb/>
1. Rooseveit and Dully Madison by<lb/>
one each. Rulers headed the list, as . , - , , ,<lb/>
- ? i )? ? , , i ? , vi.u re kicked. 1 ate<lb/>
m audition to the king and queen . ? t- ,<lb/>
mention above. There were two -   .<lb/>
presidents o? the list. OptmiisUciMi 1 the<lb/>
ti, . i;? i i i ? -i I ujrh Beck, better kno<lb/>
i ne list included such notables as  , ,<lb/>
Amelia Earhart. aviatrix. chosen ? e? ?ho OJ?<lb/>
by Juanita Etheridge; Clara Bar- ;h?-?? ?<lb/>
to founder of the Red Cross ,  i -  B t<lb/>
hv Fr.ln, r'ti- r ? i i Lucille Lewis win re hi<lb/>
05 r,ein lark; -lane Addams, , <lb/>
humanitarian of Hull House bv an I'tIIUI?<lb/>
Fannie Gary; Philips Brook fa , lks like Big J<lb/>
mous Boston minister, bv Charles  tnr th r"mf"<lb/>
Harris; Mary Sleswr, missiortarv ??7?  " ' l<lb/>
.vThadysJohnson; John Smith ex- , Ir 1"?k hk" om :<lb/>
plorer and cohmier. bv Charles ?" ?? r!un,i ' P1?<lb/>
MeNatt; Elizabeth Brownimr poet ??2 ail,i M<lb/>
by India Hill; Alexander llamil JC EfJJ<lb/>
ton. financier, bv Howard nr:??.r tllf h,P? sch?o1 hili<lb/>
X<lb/>
()?<lb/>
ton. financier, by Howard Draper<lb/>
ment you will proba<lb/>
?Dm<lb/>
The majority of the students<lb/>
chose to he people of the United m,th:if thpy arf'<lb/>
States covering the whole range of a hlF way'<lb/>
American history with the earlier'  ,llat "Mlki xhr '<lb/>
and modern periods about equally' ows has stoPlM1 &amp;" ;<lb/>
divided. " 1 Jenkins has recovered I<lb/>
Harvey Deal, whose term paper taeks of '?a "<lb/>
was on Lord Lister, the Englissh' strifp with "Wistful" C<lb/>
surgeon, stated emphatically, "I Why did the man ?<lb/>
wrote on the Lord Lister, but I had<lb/>
much rather be Charlie McCarthy<lb/>
COLLEGE DANCE TO BE<lb/>
GIVEN ON MARCH 12<lb/>
(Continued from pace one)<lb/>
Emerson Society, Emilv Brendle,<lb/>
social committee; Rebecca Watson<lb/>
president of WSGA; and Thornton<lb/>
Stovall, president of MSGA; Grace<lb/>
Freeman, chief marshal from Poe<lb/>
Society; and their guests. The stu-<lb/>
dents for the figure were elected bv<lb/>
the social committee and the officers<lb/>
of the Poe Societv.<lb/>
Chaperones for the dance are-<lb/>
Miss Frances Wahl, Miss Dora<lb/>
Coates, Mrs Sue Bowden, Miss Cleo<lb/>
Rainwater, Miss Elizabeth Hvman<lb/>
mm Ruth White, Dr. and Mrsari<lb/>
1 Adams, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Deal<lb/>
and Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Henderson!<lb/>
we have to do is to mak? ?? ? ? riSbt air extent, ?<lb/>
minds to improve our conductance But ft? ?Ut ?f and h' <lb/>
minds to improve our conduct; once<lb/>
that is done, the battle is more'tha<lb/>
A Sophomore.<lb/>
W-A-<lb/>
his st-<lb/>
?k in<lb/>
,rjar&amp;<lb/>
n. the<lb/>
wm<lb/>
ECTC's most prized po<lb/>
victrola, start "stovalline' :ro<lb/>
with Joyce Campbell. R . ei<lb/>
got something there.<lb/>
Dudash has the Spring :ver?<lb/>
why? Because every afteraoaa 1<lb/>
takes a nap on good "oh Mother<lb/>
Earth beside the Austin Building-<lb/>
Whether or not the meat ol f<lb/>
know it,<lb/>
There is in our mid.t. a Barcaawl<lb/>
young poet.<lb/>
He should be revealed ani t? ?<lb/>
do it,<lb/>
He is none other than C. Ray lY8"<lb/>
ette.<lb/>
He says I bum cigs, he's right, that<lb/>
a fact,<lb/>
But now I'll see if I can't get tin<lb/>
guy back.<lb/>
Now I know I bum smokes to ?<lb/>
right fair extent,<lb/>
1"<lb/>
u<lb/>
N.<lb/>
Ul II<lb/>
w<lb/>
lL Ridenhour 2<lb/>
lf. and Berk<lb/>
GRIGGS AND MARTIN<lb/>
TIEFORFIRSTINFREE<lb/>
THROW TOURNEY<lb/>
Eunice Griggs i I<lb/>
tied for fir- pla ??<lb/>
Athletic Aiati <lb/>
Tournament held r ?<lb/>
Griggs and Mart <lb/>
?n possible u to en I ii<lb/>
top honors in ? ???<lb/>
?f sixteen girls ? nterei<lb/>
?ient. The first :?<lb/>
tournament was held<lb/>
?f 2 free throw will<lb/>
trants making the hij<lb/>
?f shots to (-liter th<lb/>
Those entering the ti<lb/>
Ruth Barker. Mavis p;<lb/>
Grigg Mickey Blant<lb/>
aon. and "T" Martin.<lb/>
Jerry Tyson folio<lb/>
?ers. Griggs and Marl<lb/>
fog a total of M <lb/>
foible no. Ruth Pa<lb/>
?hots was in third pla ?<lb/>
Blanton shot 27 free <lb/>
the fourth place award<lb/>
The winners of tl<lb/>
places in the tollman<lb/>
fiven points in the<lb/>
teural Contest<lb/>
WA.<lb/>
PRACTICE TEACHERS<lb/>
PRESENT PROGRAM<lb/>
keep Lent.<lb/>
The "ed" usually sees me when B<lb/>
(Pleas turn to pace fonr)<lb/>
(Continued from pace one)<lb/>
he Valley" and "Home (h<lb/>
Range' on a guitar.<lb/>
The entire group gave two r<lb/>
numbers, "Dabbling In The Dew<lb/>
feted by Frances Williams and I<lb/>
?cklin, and "Whistle. Whistle. '<lb/>
ife after which they sang M<lb/>
i numbers. These were "Suckii g<lb/>
der Through A Straw acted I<lb/>
dly Home and Janet Gowar<lb/>
hortenin' Bread bv John Saieed,<lb/>
h Dear and "Oh No. John<lb/>
by James Worsley and Mart<lb/>
?we.<lb/>
Sara Moore, who has written sev-<lb/>
original ballads, recited two,<lb/>
' Baby Elmer" and "Greedy<lb/>
Form She was followed by<lb/>
ia Seandelon, who plaved as<lb/>
?rdion solo, "Xobodvs Darling<lb/>
Mine<lb/>
Oh Sir, I Was Onlv Flirting"<lb/>
a duet by Mildred Ross and<lb/>
rris Abeyounis.<lb/>
The last number was a cowboy hal-<lb/>
"O Bury Me Not On The Lorn<lb/>
?rie in which the mini inlilj<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
DR<lb/>
dmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00038068_0003"/><lb/>
D<lb/>
all Climax Reveals Shelton<lb/>
iW Highest Scorer In State<lb/>
' 3 H!GH SCHOOLS<lb/>
. WIN TOURNAMENT<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
PAGE 1 HREI<lb/>
Schi  ns Bm's<lb/>
it While Dunn and<lb/>
H h Schools Tie<lb/>
Pirate Baskcteers<lb/>
$&amp;&amp;<lb/>
:?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
? "S8<lb/>
P<lb/>
Bearded Beauties<lb/>
Trip Buccaneers<lb/>
TEACHERS OVER<lb/>
CAMPBEI! LASSIES<lb/>
?r <lb/>
WE QUiNTET<lb/>
WINS TOURNAMENT<lb/>
? r Nava Base Wins Third<lb/>
P ? Bv Defeating Roberson-<lb/>
, i  ? i  s Game<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
l<lb/>
<lb/>
l<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
f<lb/>
i<lb/>
fiCHERS<lb/>
r PROGRAM<lb/>
7p&amp;?? xm)<lb/>
<lb/>
1i<lb/>
a. ,<lb/>
1Old<lb/>
T?;??  '<lb/>
e- - .<lb/>
(<lb/>
Bi,<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
aVI i i -<lb/>
E<lb/>
er<lb/>
f,<lb/>
V<lb/>
s<lb/>
a)a,<lb/>
B<lb/>
wi:<lb/>
H<lb/>
bj<lb/>
P<lb/>
j<lb/>
STUDENTS LOSE<lb/>
TO THE FAGULTY<lb/>
They've Got Something Here!<lb/>
'ef<lb/>
?FOUNDERS AND BUILDERS<lb/>
OF ECTC" WILL BE THEME<lb/>
PIRATES DEFEAl<lb/>
CAMPBELL CAMELS<lb/>
G m e C:<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
lost Hill, Su bpeed, Lucille<lb/>
lons Primrose arpenter, U ? r 1<lb/>
hour, and Sudic Williamson<lb/>
Irs. i<lb/>
f. - f<lb/>
e, and Miss<lb/>
? m in the feminine contingent<lb/>
I :? ?-? -  Frank, Flanagan,<lb/>
M r. Ah tandi r repress nting ? he<lb/>
element of the faeultv. The stu-<lb/>
U im included Xanv Albright,<lb/>
business un : Ida Farrior Davis,<lb/>
Prue Newby, Mildred Boyce, Meta<lb/>
Hammond, Kathleen Strickland,<lb/>
and !Jifton Britton.<lb/>
MlilUM'lHllninillMllHIMHIMHMIill<lb/>
iiil fill ill lilltlt'iHMlltlMHf'<lb/>
i Weai<lb/>
! . lie Pernell, I<lb/>
 Willie Phillips, 1<lb/>
?- . Ralph Elliott I<lb/>
S.V.MORTON, JR.<lb/>
OFFICE AND BANK EQUIPMENT<lb/>
AND SUPPLIES<lb/>
TYPEWRITERS- New and Rebuilt<lb/>
PHONE 157<lb/>
Greenvllle, North Carolina<lb/>
,UUlltlnM)Mi!HI!in)MMH!Utl!tltIIUIintnilIltllMIttlllltitltllllMiItlIMtHlMIUH(in<lb/>
<lb/>
DROP IN FOR A BITE OR A DRINK You'll always find some ofYou Are Cordially Invited to Visit BROWN'S SANDWICH SHOPPE<lb/>
the gang around"Greenville's Newest Gathering Place"<lb/>
LAUTARES'  f -r-t<lb/>
WEDNESDAY THURSDAY MARCH 9-10<lb/>
JOAN<lb/>
BEN N ETT<lb/>
HENRY FONDA<lb/>
in romantic drama<lb/>
"I MET MY LOVE AGAIN"<lb/>
FRIDAY SATURDAY MARCH 11-12<lb/>
JACKIE COOPER<lb/>
"BOY OF THE STREETS"<lb/>
PITT THEATRE<lb/>
COMING<lb/>
G A R B 0<lb/>
Charles Boyer in<lb/>
"CONQUEST"<lb/>
JOAN CRAWFORD<lb/>
"MANNEQUIN"<lb/>
"ROMANCE IN THE DARK'<lb/>
PITT THEATRE PITT THEATRE - PITT THEATRE<lb/>
H-24<lb/>
OH"<lb/>
? Disc<lb/>
things<lb/>
and sj<lb/>
new qc -<lb/>
BLOOM'S<lb/>
IIII O D V " S<lb/>
0<lb/>
SKI r<lb/>
iij<lb/>
lie peautiTul Aide si<lb/>
KiJ. XjL jL lA<lb/>
For young feel thai wanl t go places in style, we<lb/>
suggest thi sauc Red Cross Sfa c. It's a one ej ?let<lb/>
tie that has a short and slendi r silhouette. Perforate I<lb/>
for smartness and coolness. rui now on' $6 '?'<lb/>
RED CROSS SHOES<lb/>
Prk? NOW Onl<lb/>
$650<lb/>
OTHERS FROM 1.98 to 4.85<lb/>
IS K O l V S<lb/>
<pb facs="00038068_0004"/><lb/>
PAGE FOUR<lb/>
March ft<lb/>
THE TECO ECHO<lb/>
, 1931<lb/>
Home Economics Seniors<lb/>
Give Many Book Reviews<lb/>
Go To Many Towns and Clubs To 4 ifl  , <lb/>
Give Resume of Latest<lb/>
Books<lb/>
<lb/>
News . . .<lb/>
CHAPTER NEWS<lb/>
U<lb/>
County Home<lb/>
, asked a group The Raleigh Chapter of the<lb/>
Seniors to read EOTC alumnae will give a hineh-<lb/>
whichlcoa dtaring the North Carolina Ed-<lb/>
ucation Association meeting which<lb/>
will be held in Raleigh March 17-<lb/>
t The lionr of the luncheon is<lb/>
one o'clock, and the plaeethe Worn-<lb/>
ks wore re- ana Club.<lb/>
iks, wnicn<lb/>
to her club<lb/>
ad the meet-<lb/>
books.<lb/>
Books Added to the library<lb/>
? at Winter-<lb/>
Edwards; "Life<lb/>
Chieod?by Km-<lb/>
If 1 Had Four<lb/>
 a by Doris<lb/>
l- dbank by Nel-<lb/>
s 1 nYour Budg- Ha?<lb/>
by Jimmy Cul- N. C.<lb/>
: ks by Ruby LJ<lb/>
?1 ev's Worth"?! Madelin<lb/>
MARRIAGE<lb/>
Ida Pearle Currin to Freddie<lb/>
William Hobgood on February 'J?.<lb/>
Making their home on Route -1.<lb/>
Oxford.<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
Satterthwaite.<lb/>
Tarboro,<lb/>
Hlen Randall;<lb/>
ler"?at Little-<lb/>
na Clifton:<lb/>
X. C.<lb/>
Winstead, Pinetown,<lb/>
Selma Pritehard, Seaboard.X. C.<lb/>
Lamb. Washington,<lb/>
Wi1<lb/>
Vt 1<lb/>
V.v.<lb/>
Rol<lb/>
Carolyn<lb/>
Sierras"?atjx. C.<lb/>
.lice Reaves<lb/>
I<lb/>
n ?at Farm- Frances<lb/>
Waller; "Life X- C.<lb/>
Farmville?by<lb/>
I ?? oseof BU? Kearney, Relvior. N. C.<lb/>
Lamb. Washington,<lb/>
Editor's Xot?: The following<lb/>
books recently hare been added to<lb/>
the Library and are ready for circu-<lb/>
lation.<lb/>
Jackson. J. A. Guiding Your Life.<lb/>
Appleton-Ccntury, lf,57.<lb/>
"The author of Outwitting Our<lb/>
Nerves discusses the personality<lb/>
problems which are characteristic of<lb/>
each of the seven ages of man Wil-<lb/>
son Bulletin. December 195T.<lb/>
Johnson, Edgar. One Mighty Tor-<lb/>
rent: the Drama of Biography.<lb/>
Staekpole Sons. 17.<lb/>
 . . this fascinating chronicle of<lb/>
four centuries of human life sparkles<lb/>
at every line Peabody Journal of<lb/>
Education, May 1!K?7<lb/>
Marshall. II. E. Dorothea DLr,<lb/>
University of X. C. 10.37.<lb/>
Palmer, R. L. &amp; Alpher. Forty Mil-<lb/>
lion Guinea Pig Children. Van-<lb/>
guard, 1937.<lb/>
Rice, Elnier. Imperial City. Cow-<lb/>
ard-MeCann, 19:57.<lb/>
"The powerful story of the life of<lb/>
a modern city, told through the lives<lb/>
of the people that live in it, from top<lb/>
to bottom Scribner, Dec. 1937.<lb/>
Roberts, K. L. Northwest Passage.<lb/>
Doubleday, 1937.<lb/>
'Northwest Passaqe is mightv<lb/>
I<lb/>
Playmates?My Goodness!<lb/>
43 GUESTS ENTERTAINED<lb/>
IN PRACTICE HOUSE<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
State Fan Virginia.<lb/>
1. 1938.<lb/>
. Mr<lb/>
for ttirii in<lb/>
A buffet supper<lb/>
Hargrores<lb/>
?? weei "I' February<lb/>
On Tuesday, Februarj<lb/>
Blaxton entertainet<lb/>
niiallv at a tea.<lb/>
was given is v<lb/>
girla of the ho u<lb/>
Among the gu<lb/>
M Fn i h.<lb/>
Mi- M ii<lb/>
Miss 1<lb/>
r p, y<lb/>
A. S. H r<lb/>
V sjinia.<lb/>
iiiiiiMfitiiuniHiimtitimitu<lb/>
PUZZLED?<lb/>
Let Us Solve That Spring Wardrobe Question fi<lb/>
C. HEBER FORBES<lb/>
iinmititttntiimmit'initiiiiuiMHUnmiiimtiitii<lb/>
KiMHt lilt mum EiiMltllMMii<lb/>
PLAYMATES ? Martha Raye and Ben Blue, eccentric playmates of<lb/>
the screen, are teamed once more in Paramount's "College Swing<lb/>
Martha becomes a professor of practical romance and Ben be-<lb/>
comes a gymnasium instructor ? and the things they do to college<lb/>
never wore learned there.<lb/>
DEPUTATION TEAM<lb/>
PRESENTS PROGRAM<lb/>
AT STATE COLLEGE<lb/>
(Continued from page one)<lb/>
team. Marie Dawson read the scrip-<lb/>
ture lesson, after whieh Maggie<lb/>
Crumpler led the group in prayer.<lb/>
Then Fannie Brewer read the poem,<lb/>
"Once to Every Man and Xation"<lb/>
on which the speaker based her<lb/>
good reading. It is rich in humor and talk<lb/>
suspense, romance and adventure. The members of the team were:<lb/>
with enough excitement to satisfy j Elizabeth Copeland of Ahoskie;<lb/>
   " ' Marie Dawson of Alliance: Susan<lb/>
i tarn?tn<lb/>
Janie M.<lb/>
of 19:17.<lb/>
SOPHOMORE TEA<lb/>
rs of tl p SoWh<lb/>
Nora Walters. Weeksville, X. C.<lb/>
class of 1937.<lb/>
ilee<lb/>
wei<lb/>
East<lb/>
were<lb/>
ieb was given<lb/>
?iiiies Depart-<lb/>
?'???rations<lb/>
keeping with<lb/>
Red rose<lb/>
for the een-<lb/>
LOOKING OVER THE CAMPUS<lb/>
for his<lb/>
(Continued from page two)<lb/>
bumming a weed.<lb/>
Cause he's usually after one lor<lb/>
 own need.<lb/>
But 1 feel sorry for Pruette. 'cause<lb/>
he's outta luck.<lb/>
So, some kind smoker, please be-<lb/>
queath him your duck.<lb/>
nsisted of<lb/>
S, eakes I wonder what Herbert Wilker-<lb/>
  mem- cr'n i? bitting at I He always hits<lb/>
jj  ? with an over hand blow. I wonder<lb/>
. , what Herbert's opponent thinks<lb/>
when he throws his Lack bone out<lb/>
aomic i a-  joint.<lb/>
school 1 ?id you know that:<lb/>
Gold fish are gold because Josie<lb/>
DINNER GIVEN AT Hall dropped gold ink on them.<lb/>
PRACTICE HOUSE S ' ' : Hl!?r ??ld m.v f?e?ds.)<lb/>
rv 24 at<lb/>
and Mrs,<lb/>
Mro. The<lb/>
The een-<lb/>
8am Dees told me that the way<lb/>
a man's heart was not through<lb/>
s stomach nor his lead?but to<lb/>
tim rnrt<lb/>
the heart is.<lb/>
i white<lb/>
urranged<lb/>
wl.<lb/>
CAFETERIA<lb/>
the most captious. Do not miss it<lb/>
It's i whale of a book Boston<lb/>
Transcript, July 3, 1937.<lb/>
Scoonmaker, Frank. Through Fit- Brewer of Clarksville, Tennessee.<lb/>
rope on Two Dollars a Day<lb/>
Evans of St. Paul; Maggie Grump-<lb/>
ier of Favetteville: and Fannie<lb/>
'immiMiiiiimiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiimiHijitHiutiimimmiii<lb/>
IF YOU WANT EXPERT<lb/>
 WATCH REPAIRING <lb/>
I Bring your work to us and<lb/>
be sure of satisfaction . . .<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
LAUTARES<lb/>
1 JEWELRY STORE<lb/>
TiitiHinitniiMiiitiiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiitniiHMIWHIinilllllllllllHIIIIIillllMMIIIIIIIIIIIIlir<lb/>
.? We're always looking forward<lb/>
to fulfilling your wants. You<lb/>
Students will find this a good place<lb/>
to fill your Drug Store needs<lb/>
(HAS. IIORX i:<lb/>
:jJWUWWV'ffJ'SffSSfffffSSJ'fSSSSSS.ammMmSSSm<lb/>
Me<lb/>
Bride.<lb/>
Shepard, Odell. Pedlar's Progress:<lb/>
the Life of Branson Aleott. Lit-<lb/>
tle, 1937.<lb/>
"Father's son, peddler schoolmas<lb/>
BEARDED BEAUTIES<lb/>
TRIP BUCCANEERS<lb/>
(Continued from page three)<lb/>
crawling under the scorers' table.<lb/>
He stubbornly refused to give up<lb/>
ter, philosopher, and friend of ehil-ithe ball, and it finally took the of-<lb/>
dren  he emerges in this fine ficials. the players, and a police-<lb/>
biography as the great American man to persuade him to let the<lb/>
YOU'LL SOON BE<lb/>
PLAYING TENNIS<lb/>
Why not let us<lb/>
fit you in<lb/>
teacher Peabody Journal of Educa-<lb/>
tion, May 1937.<lb/>
Stevenson, S. The Flowering Aloe.<lb/>
Xelson, 1937.<lb/>
Thompson, Randall. College Music.<lb/>
Macmillan. 1937.<lb/>
Undset. Sigrid. The Faithful Wife.<lb/>
Knopf. 1937<lb/>
other hoys play with it<lb/>
Koche, billed as "basketball's best<lb/>
dribbler displayed his ability by<lb/>
dribbling through the entire Pirate<lb/>
squad several times.<lb/>
So far as competition was con-<lb/>
cerned, the game was not exciting<lb/>
to the large crowd of spectators, but<lb/>
Walpole, Hugh. John Cornelius; the three-ring circus put on by un<lb/>
Life and Adventures. Doubledav.<lb/>
1937<lb/>
shaven lads was well worth the<lb/>
price of admission.<lb/>
WWWVrVw<lb/>
WA<lb/>
? Avoid the disappointment of taking a snap-<lb/>
shot you like only to have it lost in<lb/>
poor developing.<lb/>
Bring your films to us and lx s in I<lb/>
complete satisfaction.<lb/>
BAKER'S STUDIO<lb/>
r<lb/>
TENNIS SHOES?<lb/>
Hurry and select your<lb/>
pair from<lb/>
GLORIA SHOP<lb/>
yWWMrViWVWWWW'WJ'A<lb/>
i<lb/>
The College "Y" Stcre and your favorite dewm-towr - !<lb/>
or drug stcre carries a complete line of Lance's Pear it ? irter<lb/>
Sandwiches, Salted Peanuts, and Candies. Whenever  fee<lb/>
the need of a "Snack insist on Lance's They ore n . ;?<lb/>
the most sanitary conditions and are pleasing to the 0 ? I I<lb/>
Remember to Insist on LANCE'S<lb/>
Sandwiches : Peanuts : Candies : Peanut Butter<lb/>
LANCE PACKING COMPANY<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?ywaawwwwvwmtW vvlwvvAVWvvwvAVAr.v.v?.?.?v.<lb/>
McLELLAN'S<lb/>
THE BIG 5 and 10c STORE<lb/>
"? ? . t trade with us. We have<lb/>
nea to save yoi money. We<lb/>
? ? t al! packages to the College.<lb/>
COME TO SEE TJS<lb/>
-? n is tne re-i<lb/>
? taken by<lb/>
e ent elass.<lb/>
Mary Berry<lb/>
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