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TRDA93 46 NL = BOONE NCAR 8
LLOYD HOBBS, APPALACHIAN WRESTLING TEAM=
NAVAL APPRENTICE SCHOOL
HERES HOPING YOU HAD PLEASANT TRIP ENJOYABLE E V E N I N G AND GOOD
N I G H T S REST THINGS A R E N T Q U I T E THE SAME WITH YOU A W A Y HOWEVER
IM STILL THE SAME HAPPY GIRL YET LONESOME W I S H I N G YOU AND
THE TEAM SUCCESS YOURS W I T H THOUSAND HAPPY THOUGHTS
AND ALL MY LOVE GOOD LUCK=
ELLA.
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Q U I C K S H O R T - A R M JAB TO SMASH
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����THE 1937
N
HENRY A. S H A N N O N
E d i t o r - In - C h i e f
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ANNUAL O F A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
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BOONE, NORTH C A R O L I N A . . .
T H O M A S G. W O O D
Business Manager
January 11,1937
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Bank of Elisin
Ellsin,
North^CTarolina
Gentlemen:
In behalf of Appalachian yearbook t e Rhododendron, I am
soliciting advertisrnent firms with which the College and the
students have transacted business during the oast year.
Since the annual is put in the hands of some one thousands
students, we feel that it would be quite beneficial to ?'our
business to advertise in the Rhododendron. Any co-opertaion
would be greatly appreciated, by the staff and students of the
College.
Rates are as follcws:
Full page, | 4 hat f page, $12; quarter page, $6; and the small
2;
advertisement $3. uuts if furnished us, will be used without
additional charge.
Jj-'hank
you very much for whatever consideration and co-operation
this application may receive.
Respectfully,
Ella Thompson, Adv. Manager
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F31RD JO 12
BOONE NCAR 155P JAN 30 193?
LLOYD HOBBS
SINCEREST WISHES FOR VICTORY HAVE SOMUCH 10 TELL YOU
LOVE ALWAYS
ELLA
2
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Received at 418 Union Avenue, Knoxville, Tenn. A OPEN S
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BIRTHDAYS • BON VOYAGE ••
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�Yanceyville, N. C.
February 13, 1937.
Dearest SL.la,
Like my new Stationery
1 thought maybe you would.
I ' m in Burch's Office now as Mr. Thompson hasn't come vet.
You see I do get to work on time occassionly (How the Deuce
do you spell i t j ) .
I told mother this morning that if I didn't come home this
afternoon that she might kn.,w that I had hopped the bus 1for
A. S . T . C. I may come up there Tuesday and stay a day of two,
or maybe a week. How about it.
I ' m sorry I couldn't come this
week end so that I might, meet some of the, ; Hobbs-es but Lynn would
be inclined to get mad I expect. I don't! know but I think I will
be glad to see him once more. John Andereon plans to come home
with him and his people are going to meet him in Burlington this
P. M. However, I've got to work all day.
Helen, Miss Bert, Cousin Mae, Mr. Walter and I went to Greensboro yesterday afternoon. Helen and I thought perhaps we would
buy us a new suit or a dress but Gene Raymond in*Walking On Air*
xvith Ann Southern was on so up we went and saw a good—real good,
I mean—show. Oh, by the way, I have one real cute dress already
made and one not yet made. The former is tan with brown accessories
while the latter is orchid, and real pretty. When they get all
f i x e d I'll be the beans.
Penelope came to see me last night and I really endefl up by
enjoying having seen her.
She is 0. K. I suppose, aid is very
anxious to go to Boone. Maybe we'll come .sometime. I*m going to
try to see Mary Lou this week end.
Azzie plans to wrestle in High Point tonight. He might come
home for the day Sunday. Hope/ so. Do write some time and I may
see you about Tuesday. Mr. Burgess is going to Tennessee.
Be good,
Love and kisses,
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����IV1AKE THE GRADES
THAT YOU WISHED
FOR LAST QUARTER
Published Each Week by Students of Appalachian State
VOL. Ill, NO. 22
BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA,
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1937
COLLEGE IS WELL ''South of S<
REPRESENTED IN Be Presented
POSTOFFICE HERE
Several of Older Members Were
,i
Scholars of Appalachian
Training School
COURSES
HERE
ATTRACTIVE CO-ED HOLDS
VARIED CAMPUS OFFICES
HELP
Stmdents Urged to Apply Themselves
to- Subjects that Will Serve as
Foundation for Business Career
Prom janitor to postmaster, the
entire force of the local postoffice,
with the exception of one person,
has attended Appalachian State
Teachers College in pursuit of educcation.
Some of the older members of the
staff were students of the Appalachian Training School. However, the
latest additions to the force were
students of the college as it is today.
Listed here are the representatives
of the office: W. G. Hartzog, B. H.
Watson, J. W. Norris, Ralph G.
Greene, Tom Moore, L. L. Bingham,
Edgar Brown, Mrs. Addie Clawson,
R. K. Bingham, Jr.
Members' of the force are of the
opinion that in this day of specialized training, the course studied in
college largely determines the vocation followed after graduation. However, a good background of the fundamentals of education is needed in
any position that affords a good living.
BEGIN QUA'RTER WITH
RENEWED EFFORT AND
Miss Ella Thompson, popular
member of the Senior class, has
held many and varied offices during her four years at Appalachian.
She has served as president of
Phila Retian Society, and New
Dormitory Club, and an officer in
the Physical Education Major
Club. Sagacity, sincerity, and efficiency have marked her as one of
Appalachian's most capable young
ladies, and a person of whom, any
campus would justly boast.
Teachers College
EAGER ANTICIPATION
PRICE 5 CENTS A COPY
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CAROLINAS ASSOCIATION
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�NOTICE*
Frm2CA
The registration represented by this card expires as flei
the date on the other side. Write your aiitog'raph on blank
space below, in order that you may be identified as the one
whose name is on the iace of this ticket. In case this ticket
is lost 10 cents will be charged for a new one. Your registration
number must appear on every entry you make, otherwise entry
will be rejected.
ATHLETIC CODE OF HONOR
I promise upon my word of honor that in any sport in which
I may be a participant I will not take an unfair advantage of an
opponent, that I may be courteous in word and rJemeanor to
opponents, officials and spectators, that I will observe the rules
of the game in spirit as wiell as in letter, and that I will constantly strive tcytipjiold th«; ethics^of* amateur^ sp/rt...
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����THEA P P A L A C H I A N
MARCH 12, 1937
Appalachian Matnien Win Six First
Places in Tourney
Appalachian Wins
Major Portion of
Bouts in A. A. U.
The A. A. U. tournament terminated at Appalachian State Teachers College Saturday with the local
wrestlers taking six of eight first
places in the finals and two of the
consolations. The Watkins-coached
team placed first with 37 points,
thus receiving the silver arch team
trophy presented by The Watauga
Democrat as an award for the accomplishment.
Approximately 39 representatives
from Elon, Davidson, Barium Springs,
Carolina, and respective towns participated in the event. Elon was
second high in the tourney, placing
one man first in the 145-lb. class
when Carl Foushee defeated Bill
Norris in the final bout. Davidson
and Troutman A Club rated next
with eight points each. Davidson
placed three men in the final features, but lost out to second place
to quarter finalists, thus giving
them three third places. McFaden,
heavyweight, of Davidson, won second place in this class, no entry being matched against him.
Coach Watkins, Appalachian, was
appointed to act as chairman of the
tournament. Frank Harrison, of
Davidson; P. H. Quinlan, Carolina;
Gary Voyle, Duke, were committeemen for the event.
R. E. Jackins, wrestling coach
from Barium Springs, acted as referee for the tournament, acclaimed
by many in attendance as one of the
best in the state.
Tournament winners were as follows:
First Place
Gaskill, Appalachian, 118-lta.; Ben
Norris, Hickory, 126-lb.; Crooks, Appalachian, 135-lb.; Foushee, Elon,
145-lb.; Claude Farthing, Appalachian, 155-lb.; Ewing, Appalachian,
165-ib.; Cline Farthing, Appalachian,
175-lb; Hobbs, Appalachian, heavyweight.
Second Place
Patterson, Shelby, 118-lb.; Beshers,
Barium Springs, 126-lb.; Joe White,
Troutman, 135-lb; Bill Norris, Appalachian, 145-lb.; Wood, Troutman,
155-lb.; Thompson, Elon, 165-lb;
Evans, Lexington, 175-lb; McFaden,
Davidson, heavyweight.
Third Place
Blue, Davidson, 118-lb; Scott, Appalachian, 126-lb.; Parker, Davidson,
135-lb.; E. White. Troutman, 145-lb.;
Walters, Mooresville, 155-lb.; Ellis,
Davidson, 165-lb.; Query, Concord,
175-lb.; no entry in heavyweight.
Time keepers: Ingram, Farthing
and Wood. Announcer: Eugene Wike.
WRESTLERS LOSE
ONLY ONE MATCH
TO VANDY SQUAD
Watkins Coached Matnien Win
by Virtue of Two Decisions,
a Forfeit, Four Falls
The brilliant, undefeated Appalachian matters lost only one bout here
Saturday night as they defeated
Vanderbilt University, 31-5. The
Vanderbilt team got its lone score
when Eackey pinned Bill Lindsay of
Appalachian after fifteen minutes of
werstling.
The summary:
118—Patterson, Appalachian, pi
ned Graves in 6'01".
126-—Lackey, Vanderbilt, won by a
fall over Lindsay in two extra periods.
135—Captain Crooks, Appalachian, won a decision over Captain
Fishel. Advantage, 7'.
145—Bill Norris, Appalachian, won
over Stone by a fall in 1'02".
155—Wood, Appalachian, pinned
Kirkpatrick in 9'05".
165—Ewing, Appalachian, won by
forfeit.
175—Cline Farthing, Appalachian,
won by a fall over Reinschmidt in
3'33".
Heavyweight—Hobbs, Appalachian
won a decision over Fleming. Advantage, 8'.
Referee, Matheson. Timers, Stallings, Ingram.
HOBBS, FARTHING TO
STAGE EXHIBITION
N. C., April 3, 1937, to put on an
exhibition of wrestling, according
to the professional rules and regulations. Both men are aces of
the undefeated Watkins-coached
team that went through the past
two seasons without even as much
as a small scratch on their records. The huge one has wrestled in over twenty matches without a defeat, and Farthing, the
ex-captain of the gridders, has a
very enviable record in the 175
class. The boys are working out
under the supervision of Coach
Watkins in training for the bout
which will be a preliminary to a
boxing card that is bringing together some fine pugilists for the
benefit of the fight fans of this
little town up in the far corner
of the Carolinas.
�THE APPALACHIAN
PAGE THREE
11 Team Wins —3 Conference Games In Week.
,—_
_
. _
_
__
,
.
^
Plans For A. A. U. Mat Tourney Nearing Completion
Matmen Victorious
Over Tennesseeans
Ewing Gets Only Fall of Combat
With University; First Loss for
Tennessee Team
The Appalachian State wrestlers
continued their eighteen-meet winning streak by defeating the University of Tennessee in Knoxville last
Saturday, 26-0. It was the first
time that the Tennesseeans had been
beaten this year.
Roger Ewing, Appalachian 165pounder, got the only fall of the
meet when he pinned Silva in eight
minutes and fifty-one seconds of
their bout.
This victory brings the Appalachian wrestlers' total number of victories to forty-eight out of fifty-two
meets wrestled since 1931.
The summary:
118—Gaskill (A) won a decision
over Anderton. Advantage, 9'22".
126 — Cranford (A), decisioned
House. Advantage, 4'7".
135 — Captain Crooks (A), won a
decision over Pearce.
Advantage,
7'37".
145 —Norris (A), won a decision
over Bradley. Advantage, 5'48".
155— Claude Farthing (A), decisioned Haynes. Advantage, 3'50".
165 —Ewing (A), pinned Silva in
175—Cline Farthing (A), decisioned Schofner. Advantage, 3'11".
Heavyweight— Hobbs (A), w o ni
over Hayes. Advantage, 2'1".
Event Will Be Held in Boone
HOBBS MAKES RECORD
on March 6 and 8; Medals
AS A, S. T. C. MATMAN
Are On Display
CROOKS IS GUNNING
FOR DAVIDSON MAN
-f: chosen as the host school is a sigis
Appalachian is buzzing with exicitement as the final plans are polished off for the entertaining of the
wrestlers of both the Carolinas in
the A. A. U. Tournament which is
to be held on the campus the 5th and
6th of March. Coach Watkins, host
to these amateur grunt and groanmen, is planning to enter all of his
men in the meet which will see some
of the South's finest trying for the
awards that are to be given to the
winners. Gold medals are to be
given to 'the first place winners in
each of the various classes. Silver
awards will be given the second
placers, and the third best will reUndefeated in eighteen matches, ceive bronze medals. The team winLloyd Hobbs, junior of Appalach- ning the most points will be awardian, is making quite a record for ed a golden-glo trophy 10% inches
himself throughout the state. He is high, inscribed as follows: "Carofavored to win high honors in the linas' Champions, A. A. U., 1937, preA. A. U. tournament which will sented by The Watauga Democrat."
convene here March 5-6.
On the face of the individual trophies are drawn the figures of two
Business Men Will
wrestlers and the following declaraI tion: "Carolinas' A. A. U." On the
Play Faculty Team reverse side is the weight in which
As an added attraction to the the winner competed. These beauj tiful trophies are now on display at
wrestling meet scheduled at Appa- , the Carolina Pharmacy, and wrestlachian College Saturday night, Feb- ling fans over the surrounding counruary 13, an exhibition basketball try are all interested in the showing
game between the college faculty and the Mountaineers will make in the
Boone business men will be played. tourney. The fact that this school
This will be the traditional game of
the season, having been established
as a custom several years ago.
Much entertainment is expected to
result from the combat since Mr.
Watt H. Gragg, mayor, of Boone, and
Mr. D. B. Dougherty, business manager of the college, nave been declared officials for the game.
The probable line-up for the town
team will consist of such men as the
Cottrell Twins, Gordon Winkler,
Frank Payne, Dr. Matheson, Archie
Quails, Peck Holshouser, Jim Councill and other prominent business
men of Boone.
Featured on the opposite side will
be such men as H. R. Eggers, Professor Sawyer, Mr. Hinson, Dr. Whitener, Professor Yoder, Star Stacey,
Coaches Brewer and Watkins.
A cordial invitation is extended to
all business men of Boone who wish
to participate in the activity. Entrance may be arranged through the
Cottrell Twins and Coach Watkins,
wrestling coach at the college.
nal honor, but if the men come out
with flying colors, the honor will be
much greater. The record that Appalachian has set up in the wrestling
world of the state in the past two
years leads many well known authorities to predict that the Boone
m'en will account for themselves in a
very noteworthy manner.
It is needless to remind the students that the campus will be on
good be.havior during the tournament to impress the visitors of thesportsmanlike conduct of the Mountaineers and the spirit of 'the perfect
hosts; the students who will be of invaluable aid in entertaining and directing the participants while they
are in Boone. All that the students
can do to help make this one of the
banner events of the year will be
appreciated by the athletic department, the administration and the
A. A. U. who are all behind the»
movement to foster amateur wrestling in the Carolinas.
Jimmie Crooks, senior captain of
the local wrestling team, has been
defeated only once since he took
up grappling three years ago. Last
year he lost one match to a Davidson contestant, Captain Parker,
and this season he is out gunning
for him here in the A. A. U. tourney. It is believed that Crooks
will furnish plenty of thrills for
the spectators in the various
matches scheduled.
Grapplers Will Meet University
of Tennessee in Local
Ring Saturday
The undefeated Appalachian State
wrestling team is scheduled to meet
the University of Tennessee in the
men's gymnasium here Saturday
night in 'the first of a series of
home events. The Mountaineer team
will be trying for their 49th victory
out of 54 meets wrestled since the
inauguration of the sport at Appalachian five years ago.
The Tennesseeans were defeated,
3-0, in a meet at Knoxville last
ek which featured- the close
^latches of Lloyd Hobbs, wrestling
his second year for Appalachian
without defeat, and Bill Norris.
Cranford, substituting in the 126pound class for Ben Norris, who is
out for the season with an injured
arm, turned in a good performance
at Knoxville, and is expected to repeat in coming meets.
The Appalachian line-up includes
Gaskill, Cranford, Captain Crooks,
Norris, Claude Farthing, Ewing,
Cline Farthing, Hobbs. Others who
may see action are E. White, Wood,
Evans and Query.
�������/
��BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA,
Appalachian Co-eds Go On
THE APP
Retreat to Valle Crucis STUDENTS GO ON
RETREAT SUNDAY
TO VALLE CRUCIS
College Students Enjoy Hiking and Games at Country Estate of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor; Misses Dale and Harwell
Accompany Collegians on Trip During Week-End
Saturday afternoon, March 20, at 3:30 o'clock, about twentyfive girls left the Appalachian campus to spend the week-end at
Valle Crucis on the Y. W. C. A. Retreat. This is an annual event
carried out by the Y. W., in which the old and new cabinet members have an opportunity to become more closely acquainted and
can discuss and formulate plans for the following year's work.
French Club Will
Be Led By Newly
Elected Officers
Cynthia Stiles Becomes President;
jB^binson Named v"5* ir^- 'i^j;
Long is Treasurer
The French Club meeting on Wed| nesday afternoon was concerned
primarily with the election of officers for next year. As a result of
the election, which was conducted in
a very smooth and co-operative manner, the following students were
chosen to succeed the outgoing staff:
Cynthia Stiles, president; Josephine
Robinson, secretary; Clifford Long,
treasurer, and Virginia Beam, representative.
Following the election, a beautiful
musical reading was given by Kathleen Morris. The remainder of the
meeting was devoted to the making
of plans leading toward more efficient work and worthwhile accomplishments in the field of French.
Some very helpful suggestions
were offered, one of which was a
correspondence project with students
in France. So appealing was the
idea that the club members made
definite plans for the beginning of
their correspondence work.
The setting of the retreat was at
the country home of Mr. and Mrs.
Chanles Taylor, located on the scenic
highway of the valley. Upon arriving 'Saturday afternoon, everyone
hiked and explored the surropnding
premises for two or three hours. Dinner was then prepared, by an appointed committee of the girls.. Alter the meal, the group was favored
with toasts and after-dinner speeches
by Anne Jones, Martha Butner and
Daisy Williams.
During the evening games were
played. Cynthia Stiles led in singing songs, and several readings were
given. At nine o'clock a discussion
period was held in which future
plans for the Y. W. C. A. organization were reasoned upon. Before retiring home-made candy was served,
after which bedtime vespers were
held.
Everyone arose early Sunday
morning to be greeted with the sunshine and prospects of a glorious
day. After breakfast a spirited
Easter-egg hunt was held in the spacious front yard of the Taylor home.
At eleven o'clock the girls attended
Palm .Sunday services at the small
Episcopal church at Valle Crucis.
In the afternoon everyone hi t.vi
to Dutch Creek falls, one of thei
(Continued on Page Four)
(Continued from Page 1)
most beautiful scenes in the moun
tains of western North Carolina
Upon returning at about five o'clock
(preparations were made for the
homeward journey back to Appa
'lachian.
Accompanied by 2*iiss Lily Dale
of the home economics department
and Miss Katherine Harwell, of the
English department, the girls on re
treat were: Lucille War-lick, Daisy
Williams, Doris Bandy, Vivian Holiloway, Elizabeth _ NeaL^-"Mi^too-th|
Miller, Ruth Howard, fella Thompson
Martha Butner, Nell Mc'SWa.ln, Ura
Suggs, Jimmie Coulter, MJartha Fur-j
chess, Nora Case, Cynthia Stiles,
Anne Jones, Margaret Eury, Margaret Kelly, Francine Holt, Lucy
Little, Gladys Terry, Lucille Hartley,
Clarine Duke, Ruth Epps, and three
visiting cabinet members of former
years, Marguerite Bandy, Evelyn
Caudill and Mabel Hughes.
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Ttie examination being conducted by various representatives of the
English faculty is one of the requisites of the department. Before a student can qualify for graduation this test is given and the individual scores
tabulated. The dates as arranged below were selected so as to benefit the
English stndents as well as the professors scheduled to give the tests.
These dates are final:
Date
Candidates
of Week
March 3 Thelma Massey and Ivah Marsh
(1) Wednesday
March 9 Ruth Sherwood and Aileen Perry
(2) Tuesday
March 10 Lula McLamb and Muriel Hodgson
(3) Wednesday
March 17 John B. Morris and Francis Huitt
(4) Wednesday
March 24 Ella Thompson and Robert Carico
•(5) Wednesday
March 31 Mary Lipe and Mozelle Spainhour
(6) Wednesday
April 3 Moir Ayers and Thomas Wood
••(7) Saturday
April 7 M. A. Wilson and Rutisha Rankin
(8) Wednesday
April 13 Junius Beaver and Stancil Nanny
'(9) 'Tuesday
April 14 Martha Butner and Neil Hartley
«{10) "Wednesday
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THE 1937
H E N R Y A. S H A N N O N
E d i t o r - In - C h i e f
ANNUAL OF A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
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' H O M A S 0. W O O D
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HENRY A. SHANNON
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ANNUAL OF A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
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THE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
BOONE, N. C.
,
�THE 1937
R-M-O
HENRY A. SHANNON
E d i t o r - In - C h i e f
T H O M A S G. W O O D
Business Manager
ANNUAL OF A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
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�April 19, 1937
Dearest Sweetheart;
I love you.
1 understand that you
are going to get your annual tonight.
If you do take it to breakfast in the
morning.
Of course 1 would like to see
that picture of mine in it which looks
like that monkey that you spoke about
this morning.
Vftien I'm at home there
is always a monkey there. hi!hat is the
reason that I told you that there would
be one there this morning.
You know
this summer. I wonder if . ou are half
so happy as I am. toningt. I hope so
any way. remember I love you.
Sweetheart some day about two weeks from
now I'll be leaving 37011 for just a
month. 'It will b" so hard to flo but it
won't be near so hard as it would have
if you haden't told me what you did today
Sweetheart you are the sweetest thing
in the world. You are all m;y hopes in
the future and I certainly believe I
Will get my hopes, I love you Sweetheart
and I always will.
With all Ky love and
a thousand kisses.
Lloyd
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April 21, 1937.
SWEETHEART :
The day has come for us to part for four years it seems like
an awful long time since life would be so long without you and yet
life would' be 'so short with you. YOU have completed a great part
of your preparation for life. I am giving you this gift just to
shovs.' you I appreciate the long hours spent accomplishing this &nfi
to say I love you. There is only one thing 1 am going to ask you
that is use your education to cast good influence upon the kids
you teach. Ella I firmly believe that is the nearest way to Heaven
that's why I make such a request. Then at the end of the next four
years we will become completely one personality. I am now just beginln
as a freshman I need your praArs and* love. Ltn all/p7 v^ 'and bod w
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�•Program
FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL THIRTIETH
at ten o'clock
College Auditorium
Processional
.Heber
Hymn, "Holy, Holy, Holy !"
Congregation
Invocation
The Voice of Praise.
. Mozart
Literary Address
Hallelujah Chorus
Conferring Degrees and Awarding Diplomas
President B. B. Dougherty
Recessional
Audience will remain standing until the
classes march out.
Handel
�tor (Klass ©fitters
President
Vice-President
FRANK KILLIAN
PASCHAL MCLARIN
Secretary
LOTJISE MICHAEI.
Treasurer
NEIL HARTLEY
�(Srabmties
PRIMARY
Lelia Mae Ayers
Dewette Elizabeth Briggs
Mary Frances Brown
Hattie Lee Costner
Hazel Luetta Dolinger
Clarine Duke
Jessie Prances Baker
Thedus Eudy
Mildred Greene
Willa Knox Heafner
Bedie Kathleen Helms
Dorothy Holt
Cora Ellen Ingram
Pearl Johnson
Sally Sue Bruns
Nora Lee Craig
Hazel Crissman
Josephine Duke
Margaret C. Pidler
Mrs. J. P. Pox
Anna Frances Hinson
Annie Maud Hire
Louise Johnson
Alma Luna Joyner
Rachel Elizabeth Masten
Pauline Goodman McCorkle
Mildred Elizabeth Parks
Lucy Pearson
Gail Philips
Hilma Pierce
Elizabeth G. Pratt
Ella Dare Reece
Irene S. Rollins
Mozelle P. Schuyler
Lucy Ellen Snider
Prances Leslie Wicker
Argie Wilburn
Madge Wortman
GRAMMAR
Sarah Lucy Justice
Hazel McDade
William Brian McNeill
Louise Michael
Harold Gifford Miller
Agnes Murphy
Alma Shoaf
Prances Walker
Lucille I. Warlick
Dorothy May White
�(frabmties
HIGH SCHOOL
Nicholas Antonakos
Moir Ayers
Helen Jane Baker
Grady Glenn Barnwell
Hazel Mae Beaver
Junius Beaver
Willard Arch Bess
Dewey Bingham
Conley Bost
C. R. Brown
Carl Thomas Butngarner
Martha M. Butner
Nora Case
Norman Chadwick
Ben H. Colvard
Alfred C. Cromartie
Polly McLean Dougherty
G. Roger Bwing
Cline Farthing
Neil C. Hartley
Muriel Edith Hodgson
Gilbert Hubbard
Edgar Paul Huffman
Prances Adele Huitt
Prank A. Killian
Robert Killian
Edward Gerald Lackey
Fred W. Lentz
Mary Hanna Lipe
Elizabeth Long
Bennie Maree
Ivah Louise Marsh
William Foy Martin
Thelma May Massey
William Harold Massey
Sam W. McCracken
Lula Majorie McLamb
Lambert Paschal McLaurin
John Birch Morris
Stancill Nanney
John Calvin Peden
Aileen Perry
Norman A. Pickert
Rutlsha Rankin
Julia Scruggs Renfro
Karl Summey Sawyer
Henry Anthony Shannon
Gladys Roberta Sigman
Myrtle Mozelle Spainhour
Ella Williams Thompson
Luther Todd
Eugene Wike
Mary Alice Wilson
Thomas Wood
EUUIOTT, PH1LA., PA.
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DAYS RETURN TO
BOONE, N. G.
The 1937
RHODODENDRON
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�J. H. CLEMENT, Resident Judee
Winston-Salem, N. C.
A. H. GWYN, Solicitor
Reidsville, N. C.
OFFICE OF
(ttlerfe jimperwr (Court
CASWELL COUNTY
H. R. THOMPSON. CLERK
Wednesday Morning
Hello Doc!
Did you really get home in one piece or are
you s t i l l p a r t l y up in Caswell?
Tfe c e r t a i n l y have
m i s s e d you since you've "been g o n e , do come tack
real soon, so we w o n ' t forget you--hear?
My toss man is
out of town this morning so
I'm having f u n , d o i n g nothing tut
talking.
I teat
a Coco Cola o u t of a young man while ago and it
sho*
did t a s t e good to ae.
Are they working you very hard, or are you like
Ella, w o n ' t do a thing?
Msten here, d o n ' t let
*em
work you to death and for goodness* sake, tehave yourself.
We're looking for you tack t e f o r e the summer is
gone, that is, if you think y o u . c a n stand us.
to you,
',
P. S.
I really enjoyed it while you s~&a-yed up in this
neck of the woods.
tig hit.
D o n ' t tell anytody, tut you made a
�college girls.
I Notice to all Physical Education
By ELLA THOMPSON
('Majors: 'The time of the club's reg((Staff Writer)
ular weekly meeting has been changWe\nes9ay afternoon
abojtfc^'SO ed from Monday morning to Tuesday
girls, msslly physicaiL-a^htctiuon ma- evening at 6:30 o'clock. Each meetjors, met on the field back of New ing is sure to be of importance toDormitory and began organization each member, so come.
and1 practice for intramural playground ball. Interest among the
girls is high and the coaches believe
that, in spite of the fact that the
field is relatively small and that this
is the first attempt to organize girls'
baseball, the intramural program is
sure to be one of the year's best.
Any and all .girls interested in the
sport may participate on Wednesday
and Friday afternoons from 3:30 to
6:30.
Track for the girls began yesterday on the same field. Participation
in this isport will be at the same
hour on Tuesday and Thursday.
Track is expected to draw a smaller
'group of girls than is baseball.
Since there are no classes provided
for in either of these sports, the
coaches find this to be the only way
by which the majors may secure
training in techniques necessary for
'the presentation of minor sports in
whatever locality the graduates may
toe placed. The intramural program
will furnish exercise essential to all
GJRL'S INTRAMURALS
y ELLA THOMPSON /
As the\fall quarter ends/ the
Blacks are leadingOre—tournaments
held this autumn, having taken the
volleyball and swimming meets and
lost the hockey game by a 5-4 setback in the finals. It is a known
fact that the competition this fall
has been the most spirited of any
that they have held. Practice was
tiresome and long; consequently, no
girl who did not have a determination to win was present when the
names were called off for the finals.
The training was very strenuous, and
thus the teams were better trained
and more efficient
Many of the
girls who didn't make the varsity
were interested enough to stay out
till the games were over. The Physical Education department feels
that they are fortunate in having a
group of girls of this nature on their
enrollment.
There will be a relapse in the program until the coaches are able to
get basketball under way. The prospects for a top-ranking team this
year are great with the pre-season
rumors showing that there will be
will later be followed by scrimmage
more co-eds out for the court game
drills. The coaches contend that sethan ever before. This is very enlecting this year's team is going to
couraging to the coaches, although
be a difficult task, because they are
A. S. T. C. has always boasted of a
all good basketeers.
crack girls' team.
STREET
In the wrestling department we
fing Coach Watkins with some of
th best material he has ever had.
Using past performances of Watkins
coached teams as a basis for prediction it seems safe to say that Appalachian will have another outstanding team of matmen. Though
the team has not yet been chosen,
some of the boys seem to have an
edge on their competitors for a
place on the team. Among these are
in -the 118-pound class;
Crooks, ~t3&;^Claude Farthing, 165;
Ewing, 165; Cltee Farthing, 175,
i —
and Hobbs, ^——•"—•—'—
unlimited.
RL'S INTRAMURALS
ByHEELA THOMPSON
itor's Note: A word of
gratulation- and
Thompson for the co-operation she
is giving to the publication staff.
Although she is not in the masthead as a permanent member of
^-\the staff, her efforts have enabled
/us to keep in touch with the women's department better than would
have been possible
otherwise.
Much praise is due for the unprejudiced manner she has shown
in covering the field and we publicly thank her for the work.
With a Sophomore team led this
year by Lola Martin defending last
year's championship, the intramural
basketball tournament is progressing. Only two games have been
played thus far, but the activity program indicates a busy schedule from
now until the holidays.
In the game Monday night, the
"Black Spiders," captained by Martha Furches, defeated the Sophomore
"Peppers" 22-10. Wednesday night
two freshmen teams clashed and the
"Lightnings" lost to the "Sparklers"
43-10. Vernon captained the victorious team.
Huskins, Luckey and Baker are
refereeing the games. These three
majors are quite capable officials,
having had considerable experience
during the high school tournament
held here last year.
Squad practice is as yet mostly
technique practice. The 24 girls
chosen for the squad are showing exceptional ability in the game. Within the next few days, Miss LeMay is
planning to begin floor work which
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Personal Data
(Miss) Ella Thompson
Permanent address: Route #1, Reidsville, 1-Torth Carolina
Temporary address: Boone, North Carolina, until April 30, 1957
Personal Characteristics:
Age - 20
Weight - 127
Height - 5 ft. 5 in.
Color of eyes - hazel
Color of hair - light
Physical deformities - none
Church affiliation - Methodist
Training:
Elementary school - Trinity Elementary School six years
High School - Bartlett Yancey High School, Yaneeyville,
North Carolina
College - Appalachian State Teachers College
Course ptu^sued - English, Physical Education
Degree - Bachelor of Science in High School Education
Certificate - High School F1A'r Certificate
Experience:
Twenty-four weeks in the Demonstration School of Appalachian
State Teachers College, Boone, North Carolina, where
I directed Physical Education in the entire elementary
school under supervision of the elementary school
principle and director of the demonstration school,
Eleven weeks teaching in the sixth grade of the Demonstration school where 1 taught Grammar, Health, and
Literature under the direction of principle of the
Demonstration School.
Assistant in freshman Oral English in the college under
the direction of the English Department.
Extra Curricular Activities:
\,
censor, secretary, president; Playcrafters, (dramatics);
Physical Education Major Club, reporter; Hew Dormitory
Club, president; Methodist Club, cabinet, vice-president;
Director of worship services in Boone Methodist Church
Sunday School one year; Assistant Matron of New Dormitory
two years; Hockey varsity and volley ball varsity;
ffiig^dendj?on staff, two years, advertising manager.
Specialties:
Public Speaking
Church work
Piano
Certified American Red Cross First Aider
j
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Position preferred:
First choice, director of elementary school physical
education and health program.
Second choice, High School English and Physical Education
References:
As to Character:
Mrs. L. B. Hardin, Matron of New Dormitory, Boone,
North Carolina
Dr» J. D. tfankin, Dean of Appalachian State Teachers
College, Boone, North Carolina
Rev. W. L« Maness, Methodist pastor, Yanceyville,
North Carolina
As to Teaching Ability:
Mr. Eugene E. Garbee, director of Physical Education,
Appalachian State Teachers College, Boone, North
Carolina
Mr. Chapel Wilson, director of Demonstration School,
Appalachian State Teachers College, Boone, North
Carolina
Remarks:
If elected to a position in your school, I pledge iny
best efforts and whole-hearted cooperation in both school and
c omrnun ity w or k.
:
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�Lenoir-Rhyne Team
Walloped By Girls
EDUCATION CLASS
SPONSORS SOCIAL
Physical Education Carnival is Held |
in Women's Gym; Many Games
Feature of Evening's Program
The Physical Education Major
Club held a carnival in the girls'
gymnasium on Monday evening, November 2, from 6:45 o'clock until
8:00. Invited guests included all
Physical Education Majors a n d
members of the faculty. Miss Mildred Barger furnished music for the
occasion and other Seniors were in
charge of the different activities.
The invitation committee included
Misses Ruth Ruskin, Ella Thompson,
and Hazel Beaver and Mr. Norman
Chadwick. The fortune teller, Madame Grease my Palm was Miss Bill
Reeves, assisted by Miss Dema
Reeves and Miss Juanita Dickerson.
Bobbing for apples was sponsored by
Avery Willis and Glenn Miller. Much
fun was had at bingo in charge of
Foy Martin and Webb Ward. Baseball was played with Miss Kate
Lubchenko as owner of the booth.
Fishing in the fish pond was prseided
over by Roger Ewing and A. D. Harrell was enjoyed by the majors. Miss
Eudell Formyduval invited everyone
to play a game of ping pong, while
Mae Bryant and Benie Maree made
see saw a favorite pastime of the
evening. The fun house was under
the direction of Flora Mae Lucky,
Norman Pickert, and Johnny Peden.
Miss Helen Baker was general
manager of the entire carnival with
Miss Ruth Dixon, Mataka Torrence
:and Ruth Howard acting as assistants. "For a penny everyone could
enjoy the fun" and from all accounts
everyone received full value for their
investment.
Victor E. Albright, Wisconsin banker, donated $5,000 to West Virginia
university to establish a scholarship
fund to help finance one graduate of
Preston county high school through
the university each year.
Members of the year book staff
making" up the service committees
are Gerald Lackey, Jack Gibbs, Bob
Elliot, Mary Lipe;, Clajrence Duke,
Mozelle Spainhour, Lucy Little, Ella
Thompson, Thomas Wood, Dwayne
Thon pson, Wheeler Farthing and
i Juanita Putman.
Huskins Scores Twenty-seven Points
as Women's Team Down Visitors
in Free Scoring Contest
By Ella Thompson.
Monday night the Appalachian
girls defeated, 49-24, the LenoirRhyne sextet which defeated them in
the season's first game by a score of
27-26.
During this contest the
Matheson group displayed t h e
smoothest floor play this season, especially the offensive trio whose
plays were executed almost without
interference. By the end of the second period the score had been run up
by the local girls 27 to 7, but the
losers rallied to play more efficiently the last periods.
Rudisill, the winning team's captain and stelar guard, was out of
the game because of an injured knee,
Huskins was the game's outstand- •
ing forward, scoring 27 points.
Wright, for the visitors, led her team
with 15 points, eight of which came
from foul shots.
The line-up was:
Appalachian
Lenoir-Rhyne
Huskins, If
Sigmon, rf
Rhyne, rf
Yount, If
Banner, c
Wright, c
Beasley, rg
Wykes, eg
Kiser, Ig
Boggs, rg
Dixon, eg
Parker, Ig
Substitutes: Appalachian, Brannon, King, Torrence, Whicker, Barlow, Bass; Lenoir-Rhyne, Cooper,
Smyre, Mesenheimer, Whitener, Bagby, Seagle.
GIRL'S INTRAMURALS
By ELLA THOMPSON
As the fall quarter ends, the
Blacks are leading the tournaments
held this autumn, having taken the
volleyball and swimming meets and
lost the hockey game by a 5-4 set-1
back in the finals. It is a known,
fact that the competition this fall 1
has been the most spirited of any
that they have held. Practice was
tiresome and long'; consequently, no
girl who did not have a determination to win was present when the
names were called off for the finals.
The training was very strenuous, and
thus the teams were better trained
and more efficient
Many of the
girls who didn't make the varsity
were interested enough to stay out
till the games were over. The Physical Education department feels
that they are fortunate in having a
group of girls of this nature on their
enrollment.
There will be a relapse in the program until the coaches are able to
get basketball under way. The prospects for a top-ranking team this
year are great with the pre-season
rumors showing that there will be
more co-eds out for the court game
than ever before. This is very encouraging to the coaches, although
A. S. T. C. has always boasted of a
crack girls' team.
GIRL'S INTRAMURALS
By ELLA THOMPSON
Monday afternoon fourteen women of the college made a trip to
Cranberry High School where they
played the first competitive game of
hockey of the season, thus making
another step toward the goal for
which the directors are striving. In
spite of the fact that Appalachian's
team did not play as smoothly as it
oftentimes does in practice, the high
school team was defeated 9-0 in a
contest that proved the abiltiy of all
participants and the fitness of the
coaches.
Since the school there was unable
to buy the / necessary equipment for
the sport, the students had fashioned their own sticks, made serviceable shin guards, and have been using a croquet ball for play. Miss
LeMay furnished sticks and balls for !
both teams, and the opponents showed surprising skill even with the new
equipment. According to reports,
no individual may be praised for all
the players showed skill on the field.
Next Monday afternoon, November 7th, the Cranberry girls will
meet the Appalachian players on the
on the field here a tthe college.. The
entire student body is invited to attend the game which is scheduled to
begin at two o'clock.
In the annual Black-Gold swimming meet held last Monday, the
Blacks were victorious by a score of
44 to 47. Toka Torrence, a certified
life guard representing the Gold
squad, was high scorer with 18 points
to her credit, and Dixon, a Black
representative, was second with 11
points. Lubcheenko and Bowman tied
with 10 points each for third place.
Eleven swimmers participated in the
event.
* * *
Last week the confident senior volley ball team lost to the freshman
group, thus breaking the winning
record with the upperclassmen have
held since they were freshmen thre
yars ago. The Juniors were defeated in a hard fought game by the
Sophomores, after which Louise Holland, captain of the first year tern,
led her group to a glorious victory
over the Sophomores in a rapid and
skillful game.
* * *
This week the volley ball and
hockey season will end as the major
teams, the Blacks and Golds, battle
| for the honors. Competition in volley ball is destined to be keen although the Blacks seem certain of
winning the hockey laurels again
this year.
�^PALACHIAN- j
ELON MATMEN
WAR TOMORROW
Matmen Victorious
In Eight Straight
Elon Wrestlers Host)
To State Champs in
Gym at 8 p. m.
FYSAL PROMISES
PLENTY ACTION
Appalachian Wrestlers Beat Tennessee For Second Time This Season;
Hobbs and yorrig Injured
The brilliant Appalachian wrestling team made it eight straight this
season by defeating the University
of Tennessee for the second time this
season here Saturday night, 22-8.
The two losses for the Mountaineers
came when House of Tennessee pinned Bill Lindsay, wrestling his frist
intercollegiate match, and Hayes
won a time decision over Query, also
seeing action for the first time. Both
Hobbs and Norris, who ordinarily
take these. positions are out with injuries, Norris for the rest of the.seago,n.
The summary:
118—iGaskill, ApgsAachian, won a
decision over \A.nd\rton. Advant
age 5'44".
126—House of uFewnessee, pinned
Lindsay in 4'37"v
135—Captain Cr^ipks, Appalachian
won a forfeit frorriMPearce.
145—Bill Norris S^isioned Bradley.
AdvantageV3J-2
155—Claude Fa^j(ft»g won a de-j
cision over HayrT&s^ Time advant-i
age, 5'54".
165—Roger Ewing, Appalachian
won over Silva by a fall in 6'37".
175—Cline Farthing, Appalachian,
decisioned Schemer. Time 2'21".
Heavyweight — Hayes, Tennessee,
won a decision over Query. Advantage, 5'33".
Referee— Maher. Timers —Wood,
Smith, Farthing.
.••-.••
(Special to Times-News)
Elon College Jan. 26.—At 8 o'clock
i tomorrow ^ight in the Elon colj lege gymnasium, fans will get their
J first opportunity to cheer for their
wrestlers as coach FysaPs EJon college wrestling team makes its 1937
! debut in a match with the state
•j champions, Appalachian college.
Appalachian, one of the best wrestling teams in the South, has won
41 of the' 45 matches in the past
five years.
Coach Fysal, in an interview,
said his wrestlers after two weeks
of strenous workouts were in top
shape.
Martin is Outstanding
Elon's trump card is Bill Martin,
a 135-pounder, who is now the
, Y. M. O. A. champion wrestler in
Virginia, has lost bat one matcn
since he began wrestling, being defeated by the United States Olympic wrestler only. He is well prepared to give Appalachian a scrap; V
fight, as the others.
Hurst and Day of Elon are star
football men for Elon, holding the
j positions. of tackle and having
played for two and three years respectively.
r"Aazie" Thompson and Picfc.Biglow, first year Eloners, are also well
versed on the game of wrestling.
The lineups are as follows:.
Elon
Weights Appalachian
Wilburn
118
Gaskil
Giglow
126
Morris
Martin .. .....135
Crooks
Carl Poushee 145..
Norris
Clyde Poushee 155 . .Claude Farthing
Thompson or
Rudd
165
Ewing
Hurst or '
McGallird .... 175 .. Chine Farthing
Day or
.
Hauslet .. Unlimited...'! .. Jjjobbs
Elon coach—Fysal; Elon manager
—(Salty) Paul.
�STATE
UNIVERSITY
B O O N E , NORTH CAROLINA 286 08
Office of the Chancellor
(704) 262-2040
April 10, 1996
Along with this Chancellor's Society plaque, I send my sincere
appreciation for your exemplary support of Appalachian.
Appalachian's Chancellor's Society is a university-wide benefactor's club for those who contribute at least $1,000 per year
to the University. An eclectic group of people, the membership
of the Chancellor's Society includes creators of endowment
funds for scholarship and department support, athletic scholarship supporters, benefactors of the performing arts, major
donors to campus physical growth, contributors of technical
equipment and software, and supporters of major educational
initiatives.
Since 1970, the Chancellor's Society has been Appalachian's
premiere group of benefactors. This support ensures that the
University will continue to maintain academic excellence and
provide outstanding educational opportunities.
Sincerely,
Francis T. Borkowski
Chancellor
FTB:j h
A MEMBER INSTITUTION
OF THE
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH
CAROLINA
AN
EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY
EMPLOYER
�h-
ero
I*
M §
*- I
p
�Hobbs
�r~
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Scrapbook, 1936-1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1937
Language
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English
Type
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Image
Identifier
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5017_Book_6_ A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Is Part Of
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<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
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PDF
Albums (Books)
Extent
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204 pages
Coverage
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||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.) " href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>
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<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/62d9bc869ac9308fcd3275413ea10249.pdf
629785a7be449ccd5905c13dcaafd536
PDF Text
Text
m
y
��Appalachian Wrestlers Doing Well In Fast Company
Pictured above is the undefeated Appalachian State wrestling team, its record unblemished this season, a ,
s contender for both state and southern college mat. honors.
\h Ked Watkins' wrestlers have
Davidson for the state title last yearj
.
.
Davidson and Appalachian meet at Davidson again next Saturday in what will probably determine. the
w nnei&^o^(/Inpaiacliian State's victims this season have been the University of Tennessee, Vanderbilt, Maryville,
three of Tennessee's strongest, Spray "Y" and Winston-Salem "Y." All of these meets have been won by (ieCL.IVB |cou;^ ^^ ^^ ^ right—Hobbs, unlimited; Clin Farthing, 175; Capt. Claude Farthing, 165; Moore, 155;
W. Norris, 145; Crooks, 135;, Ward, 126; Scott, 118.
•
MAKES RECORD
Grapplers Score 230% Points as
Opponents Tally 35 y2; Women's Cage Team Amass 569.
Coach Red Watkins, who has handled the destinies of Appalachian
State's great wrestling teams of the
past five years, will pit his claimants
to the North Carolina title against
• the holder of the Tennessee state ti, tie here Friday night when Appalajchian State and Maryville tangle.
The 1936 Mountaineer wrestling
squad, under the tutelage of Coach
Robert W. Watkins, ended the most
successful season in the history of
the sport at Appalachian State. Scor| ing an average of 24 points to their
opponents 3.9 in the nine meets held
this season, the grapplers ran up a
grand total of 230 y2 points to 35%
points for the opposition. The victory
schedule included shutout victories
over the Winston "Y", Vanderbilt
University, and two shutouts over the
University of Tenessee.
Individual honors go to Frank
Moore, with 37 points for the season
and to "Doc" Hobbs with 31 points.
These two men were undefeated this
year.
With but two men lost to the
wrestling squad, Coach Watkins is
looking forward to a highly successful season in 1937.
�tATS TOPS
ON MAT
BY ELL WOOD MOYEE.
Coach Parks Harrison's Davidson
Wildcat grapplers, leaders in the Big
Five race, are in a three-way tie with :
the defending champions, Washing- j
ton and Lee, and V. M. I in the
Southern conference wrestling standings. Davidson holds a win over j
Duke, Washington and Lee has taken j
North Carolina, and V. M. I. has de! feated N. C. State this season.
The Wildcats have three conference meets remaining on hteir schedule. Wins in these matches would
give hte Wildcats a claim on the conference title. Friday, February 5,
the 'Cats meet North Carolina in
Chapel Hill; Tuesday, February 9,
V. P. I. will send theri Gobbler matmen to Davidson; and Saturday,
February 20, the N. C. State wrestlers, last year's Big Five champions,
will wrestle the 'Cats in Davidson.
._, _gm s .tt-ppaiacman, wno claimed
the State title last, year along with N, C. :
State, made no doubt of their superiority i
this season with a 17 1-2 to 10 1-2 win
over the State team.
THE BIG FIVE STANDINGS.
Teams
Davidson
Duke
North Carolina
N. C, State
Wake Forest
,
0
Opp.
Won Lost Pts. Pts.
1
21
13
0
13
21
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
SOUTHERN CONFERENCE STANDINGS ,
i )pp. .
Teams
Won Lost Pts. Pts.
13
Davidson
1.
0
21
, i
o 23 11
V M I
13
Washington Lee . , ,...1
0
17
1 34
28
,.-1
1 13
21
...0
1
...0
11
21
V P I
1 11
23
...0
N. C State
Citadel
...0
. . ... 0
William Mary .
.. .0
.. 0
.. .0
...0
...0
...0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
n
0
n
n
Special to The Observer.
DAVIDSON, Feb. 15—Appalachian State wrestlers defeated the
Davidson matmen here tonight, 16I 14, in a State title meet. With Appalachian trailing, 14-13, Hobbs in
! the unlimited class defeated Brown
| o na time advantage of 1:15 in the
i last bout to give the State matmen
j the title. - Both teams won four
'. bouts. Appalachian won two on
i'falls while Davidson toko but one
j on a pin.
Captain
Leroy
Blackwelder,
wrestling in the 165-pound class
for Davidson, kept his season's record clean as he threw Wood -in one
I minute flat. W. Norris and Moore
i of Appalachian, defeated Owen.-and
j Bixler on falls in the 145 and 155
' pound classes, respectively.
The summary:
118-pound class: Blue of Davidson won
on a time advantage from Patterson 7:09
min.
126-pound class: B. Norris of Appalachian, won on a time advantage from Moffet. 7:04 min.
135-pound class: Parker of Davidson,
won on a time advantage from Crooks,
4:16.
145-pound class: W. Norris of Appalachian, won on a fall from Owen, 6:*0
min.
155-pound class: Moore of Appalachian,
won on a fall from Bixler, 3:40 min.
165-pound class: Captain Blackwelder
of Davidson, won on a fall from Wood,
one min.
175-pound class: Hodgin of Davidson,
won on time advantage from Captain
Farthering 2:43 min.
Unlimited class: Hobbs of Appalachian
won on a time advantage from Brown
1:15 min.
Totals: Appalachian State It, Davidson 14.
0
n
0
0
0
0
0
0
WILDCATS RISK
TITLE TONIGHT
Special to The Observer.
DAVIDSON, Feb. 14.—Davidson's
state wrestling title will be at
stake tomorrow night when the
matmen meet the undefeated Appalachian State wrestlers here at
7:15 o'clock. Last year the Wildcats handed the State team its first
defeat on the mat by a North Carolina team when they edged out
a 17-11 win.
Appalachian will bring with
them four undefeated wrestlers
this season. They are Crooks, 135
pounds, Moore, 155 pounds, Captain Claude Farthing, 165 pounds,
! and Hobbs, unlimited. Davidson
'. will have but two undefeated en! tries, Captain LeRoy Blackwelder
i and Jim Hodgin, in the 165 and unlimited classes respectively.
The feature bouts should be the
renewal of both the Blackwelderi Farthing and Hodgin-Hobbs matches, as well as the Parker-Crooks
bout. In last year's meet, all three
bouts were won by the Davidson!
wrestlers.
BOONE, Feb. 10.—Cheated by the
• elements of another possible victim
when heavy snows prevented the
staging of the Appalachian StateUniversity of Tennessee meet here
Saturday night, the State wrestling
team took the occasion to rest up
before starting training for their
meet with Davidson college there
Saturday night for what will probably prove to be the State championship.
Davidson won the State title over
the Appalachian State team last
year by handing them their first
defeat ever suffed at the hands of
a North Carolina team. State will
be out for revenge this year.
The meet appears to be a pregame tossup between the two strong
mat teams, with Davidson's - advantage in the lighter weights being
the biggest factor in the Wildcats'
favor.
Appalachian State will show four !
undefeated men in the meet in!
Crooks, 135 pounds; Moore, 155
pounds; Captain Claude Farthing,
165 pounds; and Hobbs, unlimited.
�Unlimited—Hobbs won decision ov-f
er McBride of one minute and fifty
seconds in an extra period match.
Appalachian 19; Spray 11.
2ND MEET 19 TO 11
Capt. Farthing And Moore Win:
Falls; Crooks, Cline Farthing,
Hobbs by Time Decisions.
In a thrilling, gruelling, bitterly|
fought mat contest the Mountaineer i
, grapplers . won over a determined 1
Spray Y. M. C. A. team on the lat- j
ter's home mat last Saturday night. \y took three'of the first fourj
matches, but the Appalachian. men I
showed strength in .the heavier divi-j
sions, winning falls in the 155-lb. and '
165-lb. classes and by decisions in the
175 ,and unlimited divisions.
Whitt of Spray won by a fall from
Ward of Appalachian to win the only
fall for the triangle team.
The summary:
118 Ib. Hill of 'Spray won a time
decision over Scott of one minute and
three seconds.
126 Ib. Whitt (,S) threw Ward (A)
in five minutes and thirty seconds.
135 Ib. Cooks (A) won a decision
over Roberts (S) of eight minutes
and twenty-seven seconds.
145 Ib. Joyce (S) defeated Norris
( (A) by a time decision of three mini utes and seven seconds.
155 Ib. Moore (A) won a fall over
Pittendreigh (S) in nine minutes and
. thirty seconds.
165 Ib. Claude Farthing, captain,
(A) won fall over Vestall (S) in nine
minutes.
175 Ib. Cline Farthing (A) decisioned Underwood (S) by one minj ute and. forty-eight seconds.
Wrestlers
- M/4.
GRAPPLERS U'OSE
SCHEDULEJOMGHT
Maryville Feared By Watkins'
Men; Hobbs May be Unable
See Action in Meet.
Tonight, the champion Appalachian wrestling team will meet the
strong Maryville college team at
the New Gym in the last meet of the
current collegiate wrestling season.
The Maryville aggregation is the'
most feared of Appalachian's scheduled opponents, and -the meet promises to be a thriller.
In a meet previous to tonight's
scrap, Appalachian defeated the Maryville outfit 18-6, but with the possibility that Hobbs will not see action, the outcome will be dubious until after the last bout.
As a preliminary to the wrestling,
the finals of the intramural boxing
tournament will be run off. This
weekly event has created much interest and indications are that the finals are to be highly entertaining.
The probable lineup:
Appalachian
Maryville
Scott
118
Battaglia
B. Norris
125
Gillispif
Crooks
135
Mears'
W. Norris
145
Dea
Moore
155
Prop
Capt. Farthing
165
Renf
i C. Farthing ~
175
Millsa
Hobbs
Unlimited
Gam:
A.S.T.C. MATMEN
•RECEIVE LETTERS
12 Members of 1935-36 Matmen Receive Letters and Medals; Team
Undefeated During Year.
has had a wrestling team, only four
meets have been lost out of the total
Coach Watkins climaxed his most of forty-two which the Watkinssuccessful season as wrestling men- ccached squad has wrestled. In the
tor at Appalachian in chapel Satur- last, two years, only one meet has
day when he gave letters and me- been lost—Davidson defeating the j
dals to twelve of the 1935-36 squad. 1934-35 grapplers, 17-12.
The team was undefeated this year,
Indivdual records of this year's
gaining the Tennessee title by de- men:
feating Maryville and the University Name
Pts. Wn. Pts. Lost. Awd.
of Tennessee. The grapplers also won I Patterson
L-bar
3
13
a claim on the North Carolina title Scott
Letter
3
:...15
by winning from Davidson 17-12.
Letter
5
Ward
10
In the four years that Appalachian B. Norris
Letter
0
15
L-bar
3
Crooks
28
Letter
6
W. Norris
22
L-bar
0
Moore
37
3 L-2 bars
C. Farthing, c 32
4% L-2 "oars
Cline Fathing....26y2
0 L-l bar
Hobbs
31
Letter
5
Wood
5
Prevette, manager, letter
�Edenton High Grad
Is Champ Wrestler
Lloyd Hobbs At Appalachian State Teachers College Holds Title In Tennessee and North Carolina
Edenton, March 31:—A tall,]
quiet boy who for three year-s
drove a bus to Edenton High!
School, and incidentally in so doing',
commanded the respect and good
behavior of the students on the bus
as well as if he had been a teacher; !
and who went out for football his
junior year and held down a regu-'
! lar berth at tackle with the Aces'
two years, now is claimant of the!
collegiate championship in the un-,
limited class wrestling ~ir>—Tonnco /
see and North Carolina.
He is Lloyd Hobbs, sophomore at
Appalachian State Teachers Col-,
lege, Boone, who was undefeated'
this season as a representative of
Coach Red Watkins grapplers who
have lost only three meets in four
years.
The team came through undefeated this season .as the champs of i
Tennessee and co-champs of North
Carolina, sharing the honor with
State College. Appalachain piled
up 230 y2 points to her opponents'
35*4 during the year.
Hobbs, broad shouldered and de- j
pendable in the heaviest class of |
mat competition, decided at the
last moment not to enter the AAU
tournament held at Davidson College this year, though had he gone
he would have won two medals as
there were no unlimited men entered. The winners of this tournament compete in the Olympic finals
in Pennsylvania.
However, Hobbs hopes to enter
, the tournament next year after
having three years of experience.
He ranks well on the campus.
He makes high grades, and is regular tackle on the atrong Mountaineer team at Appalachain and it
seems that he will develop into one
of the best tackles the school ever
had. He made two letters his freshman year—one each in wrestling
and boxing.
Hobbs is the son of H. T. Hobbs
of the Enterprise section of Chowan County. It is understood that
after finishing Eaenton High he
went to the teachers college with
an idea of becoming a coach.
Lloyd Hobbs Has
Undefeated Record
At Appalachian State
Friends of Lloyd Hobbs, a student';
at Appalachian State Teachers' Col- j
lege, at Boone, will be interested to !
know that he closed his first year of'
regular collegiate wrestling undefeated meeting some of the best
wrestlers in the North Carolina and |
Tennessee mat circles.
Hobbs, heavyweight representative,
was the only Mian to defeat Gamble,
heavyweight champion of Tennessee,
gaining definite decisions over the
Maryville wrestler in two meets. He
is recognized as the unlimited champion of Tennessee as a result of
these decisions. Many of the out-;
standing heavyweights of North Carolint are among his victims on the
mat.
In addition to his wrestling activi- 1
ties, Hobbs is a stellar tackle on the
Mountainer eleven, and has acquired
four letters in two sports during his
first two years at Appalachian College, as well as securing an enviable
scholastic record.
With two years of varsity compe-1
tion ahead of him, Hobbs bids fair
to become an outstanding athlete in
his chosenv sports, and at the present time is a prominent candidate
for the captaincy of the champion-!
ship Appalachian wrestling squad of
1937. He was eligible for the 1936
Olympic tryouts at Washington and
Tree University, but due to spring
football practice, the wrestling team
has been disbanded, and Hobbs is
holding down his regular tackle position with the Appalachian eleven.
�Friend and Philosopher Passes
MARTIN NORTON
HEART ATTACK IS
COLLEGE FACULTY
Prof. A. M. Norton Succumbs
Monday, As He Conducts
His Usual Classes.
A pall of gloom was cast over the
entire campus Monday by the death
of Mr. Andrew Martin Norton, beloved professor of English Literature
at Appalachian State Teachers College, who was stricken with a severe heart attack while lecturing to
his English major classes early Monday morning.
Professor Norton, one of the foremost educators of Western North.
Carolina, devoted his entire life to
the training of youth. A graduate of.
Rutherford College and Duke Univer_
sity, he entered the post graduate
school of Oskatoo'sa. College, Iowa,
from which he received the Master of
Arts degree.
For a number of years Mr. Norton
taught in the public schools in South
Carolina, and for six years he was a
member of the faculty of the New
London High School. He was at one
time Dean of Caolina College, Maxton, a position he held for four years
resigning to become president of
Scarritt-Marsville College, Missouri.
From 1920-1923 he served Weaver
College in the capacity of president
and professor of English. In 1925
he accepted the position as Professor
of English Literature at Appalachian
at Appalachian State Normal 'School
and when the institution became the:
Appalachian State Teachers College
he was named as head of the English department, a position he held:
until his death. During his connection with Appalachian Mr. Norton,
has taught both American and Eng--
•'••lish literature,
Popular With Students
Familiarly known as "The Grand
i| old Man of the English Department,"
Professor Norton was dearly beloved
M by all with whom he came in contact, students and faculty members
! alike. He always had a word for the
depressed, and his philosophic teaching has won for him many followers
and friends.
Throughout his life he was an active Christian worker and was at the
time of his death a leading layman
of the Methodist Church of Boone.
Surviving Mr. .Norton, who was 61
years of age, are Mrs. Norton, who
before her onarriage was Miss Jennie
. T. Thompson, daughter of Reverend
Thompson, outstanding member of
the North Carolina Conference of
jthe Methodist Church; three sons,
Mr. Charles Norton, teacher in the
iOld Fort High School, Old Fort, N.
C.; Mr. Ervin Norton, senior student
jand director of the college band at
.'Appalachian State Teachers College;
and Allen Norton, member of the
senior class of iBoone High School;
two brothers also survive, Mr. Charles
Norton and Mr. P. L. Norton of
Franklin, N. C., and one sister, Mrs.
J. M. Cabe, of Franklin, N. C.
The body lay in state in the college
auditorium from noon until 2:30
I Tuesday afternoon, and then it was
carried to the Methodist Church
where the funeral services were held.
The funeral was conducted by Dr.
Widenhouse and Mr.i Downum; the
-| music was in charge of Miss Virginj ia Wary. Special music was rendered
by Mr. Homer Compton and by Miss
I Wary. As a final tribute Dr. Dougj herty made a simple, yet impressive
talk.
The faculty members, matrons of the dormitories, and secretarial workers of the college served
as honorary pallbearers. The active
pallbearers were: Lloyd Hobbs, Mr.
Bernard Dougherty, Mr. Edd Culler,
Mr. Andy Nesbitt, and George Passage.
�Pictured above are a few of the stars upon whom Coach Brewer is depending upon helping give Appalachian
State a successful start against Piedmont here Saturday. -Coach Brewer has a much improved club with
which to start the Piedmont game, and it will be with interest to follow Appalachian State's second team\r the Brewer regime.
tackles; Captain Cline Farthing-and Irving Smith at guards; Hummie Adams and Martin, Wilson, Angell and
Hawkins in the backfieW.
Appalachian w
�Three Veteran Football Coaches
Pictured above are three veteran coaches, namely: Flucie Stewart,
assistant football and head basketball coach; Mr. Robert W. Watkins,
head wrestling coach and Mr. "Kidd" Brewer, head football coach and
director of athletics, who are toiling daily in an effort to shape the
Mountaineers so that they will successfully combat their opponents in
the tough games scheduled for the coming year.
| success in his two short years at ApI palachian State has changed the college's teams from the also-ran columns into a power in North State
football. The masterful Brewer is a
graduate of Duke University, at
which school lie captained one of
Coach Wallace Wade's teams and also
the track team his senior year.
Brewer took a surprisingly small
amount of material last season and
turned in a first year record of five
wins, two scoreless ties, and two
losses. This season he has developed
COACH KIDD BREWER
a squad consisting of good men three
Pictured here is Kidd Brewer, bril- and four deep and is getting the utliant young coach, whose phenominal most of his men in their bid for fame.
Wins over Piedmont, 105-0, Lenoir-i
Rbyne, 14-0, and Guilford, 52-0, stam;
his club as one of Appalachian'
greatest.
So far this season a first down ha,
been considered a moral victory b;
the opposing clubs so stout has'bee
the defense, and a total of 171 point
in three games wouldn't tend to sho~
much weakness in the backfield.
Appalachian meets Western Caro
lina here Saturday in another test o.
her power. Brewer is hard at wor
| this week with his squad to preven
a let-down next Saturday.
Ooyd Hobbs
'wenty-three years, ten months, I
[seventeen days, and (if you read this
fat precisely seven o'clock, Friday,
September 18, 1936)
ten hours ago, the
/Hobbs family of Edenton, North Carolina,
i was blessed by the addition of a 7-pound
/boy, who, after due deliberation, was dubbed
Lloyd. Records do not
indicate that he was
an unduly precocious
youth, but he managed to graduate
from the Edenton High School in
1933. While in high school, Lloyd
made a letter in football and basketball and dated promiscuously, always
showing a marked preference for
blondes.
Hobbs entered Appalachian in 1934,
Jand earned a letter in football immediately. He also forgot his inhibitions and dated a glamorous brunette. Has lettered twice in both
football and wrestling. Was seen
walking down the railroad several
times last year and, upon investigation, was seen with another girl. His
latest choice indicates that he still
[prefers blondes. Height, 6'3"; weight
200; class, junior; majors in Science
and Physical Education; ambition, to
wear a derby hat; pastime, reading,
"history" of the West; girl friend
(author's guess), Ella Thompson; po-,.
sition, tackle.
�MOUNTAINEERS FACE QUAKERS IN THIRD GAME OF SEASON
i93t> FOOTBALL. S<$U/\D
First row (left to right) : Passage, manager; H. Farthing, center; Ward, back; Stines, back; Hawkins, back;
Hobbs, tackle; McLaurin, end; Norris, back; Captain Cline Farthing, guard; L. Wilson, back; Henson, back;
Robinson, end; Adams, center; I. Si.iith, guard; Angell, back; Hudson, back; Solka, center.
Second row: Yermala, guard; Halyburton, back; E. Smith, end; Woodruff, tackle; Wood, back; Fradey,
back; McCann, ta&kle; Blum, end; Baretz, back; Mills, back; Martin, back; Fairley, end; Morris, back; Turbyfill, ackle.
i
\d row: Walters, b
tackle; Polack, center; Query, tackle; Tharp, guard; Rothrauff, back; Culler, end; Corn back; Freshman Coach
R. W. Watkins.
Fourth row: Head Coach Kidd Brewer; F. Smith, guard; Redmond, guard; Hardin, tackle; Sprinkle, end;
Matinni, back; Jones, guard; East, end; R. Wilson, guard; McGinnis, guard; Broome, back; Watson, tackle;
Crane, tackle; Clark, back; McKinney, back; Richardson, tackle; Dotson, tackle; Hodder, center; Wagner,
tackle; Assistant Coach Flucie Stewart.
APPALACHIAN GRID SQUAD WINS NATIONAL R E C O G N I T I O N
Pictured here is the powerful Ap- | which was second among the nation's mie Adams, Altoona, Pa., centre; Irpalachian State football team which jhigh scoring teams. From, left to vin Smith, Linwood, left guard; Mel
won eight of its nine starts, has the right in the line are Earl Smith, De- Fairley, Gulfport, Miss., left end. In
the backfield are Rovie Angell, Harsouth's leading scorer in Len Wil- catur, 111, right end; Roy Turbyfill, mony, halfback; Webb Ward, Ruthson, which pushed Kidd Brewer to Maiden, right tackle; Lloyd Hobos, erfordton, blocking back; Len Wilthe front as one of the nation's fore- Edenton, left tackle; Captain Cline son, Boone, fullback; and Foy Marmost smar
;ge coaches,
and Farthing, Boone, right guard; Hum- tin, Leland,,. Miss, quarterback.
�MOUNTAINEERS TO
FEAM TOMORROW
Spectacular Football In Store As
Catamounts Play In Spread
Formation; Change Lineup
Appalachian will have more than ;
just another football game at stake '
tomorrow when she meets the West- j
ern Carolina Catamounts at Boone in ij
their annual football event. The
Mountaineers will be trying for their
fourth straight victory and to preserve their record .having won every
game without allowing their opponents to score.
The game promises to be even
closer than that of last year which |
the Brewermen won, 12-0, at Cullowhee. Ralph James, one of the smartest coaches' in the state, took over
the reins at Cullowhee at the begin- 1
ning of the season, and his team has I
been playing good ball against such
opposition as Carson-Newman. However, pre-game dope favors Appalachian in the battle tomorrow.
The game promises to be the most
colorful
offered to Appalachian
bleacherites this year. The Catamounts will use the spectacular
"spread" formation, as well as a modified and regular punt formation on
the offensive. This points to a wide-open game of laterals and passes.
The Appalachian team has also been
working on its deceptive plays. From j
the spectator's viewpoint, the game j
should be one of the most entertain- j
ing ever offered to Boone fans. The
Western Carolina offense will feature
Humphries, a star triple-threat back
and Ratcliffe, an excellent pass receiver and end.
The Appalachian line-up will be j
changed, due to the absence of Cul-j
ler, righ tend, who is out for the sea{ton due to a broken bone in his shoul-; [
'der.
Angell and Martin will pass for-]
Appalachian and Angell will do the
punting.
The probable starting line-up:
I
Appalachian
Position W. Carolina
Fairley
LE
Ratcliffe:
Turbyfill
LT
Jarvis
Smith
LG
Laie
Adams
Center
Barnwell
Farthing (C)
RG
Johnson
Hobbs
RT
Black
E. Smith
RE
Gaston
Martin
QB
Humphries
Angell
RH
Andrews
Ward
LH
Bagwell!
Wilson
FB ...
Dandelake'
Lineup Includes Three NewMen; Rovie Angell Scheduled
to Do Kicking for Squad.
The 1938 Mountaineer football
] team will open the varsity schedule
tomorrow at three o'clock, meeting
Piedmont college on Appalachian's
home field. This contest will be the
first game for each team, therefore
there is not much pre-game dope, but
the Appalachian coaches reports tend
to show that the score will be much
closer than last year's tilt, which the
Mountaineers won, 13-0.
The Piedmont coach, W. D. Hagaman,
a disciple of "Clipper" Smith,
former coach of North Carolina
State, is facing his first season at
Piedmont. He will probably use a
variation of the Notre Dame system
which includes a seven-man defensive line—a system against which
the Appalachian gridmen have had
little or no experience. This advantage of the team may be balanced
'.by the fact that the system is also
comparatively new to them.
The Appalachian line-up will include men who have not appeared on
the varsity team in the' previous
games. Query, having proved his
ability in Saturday's combat, will
start at tackle.
It is probable that others of the
freshmen squad will act as substitutes.
Len Wilson, freshman tackle on
the 1935 team, will make his first
appearance as a blocking- back and
Fairley, who played guard last year,
will start at end.
Player Class
Weight Pos.
Fairley, Sophomore
195
LE
Query, Freshman
190
LT
'-. Smith, Junior
175
LG
Adams, Junior
185
C
Farthing, Senior
175
RG
Hobbs, Junior
200
RT
Hegedus, Sophomore
160
RE
Hudson, Sophomore
155
QB
Angell, Junior
153
HB
Ward, Sophomore
194
HB
Wilson, Sophomore
150
FB
Combat Is First Conference
Game; Quinn and Perry to
Take Care Of Offense.
The varsity squad left at noon today for Hickory, where they will play
their first conference game of the
season with the strong Lenoir-Rhyne
Bears. The combat is scheduled at
eight o'clock tonight.
Both of the coaching camps are
silent when the result of the game is
mentioned. The Bear coach, Pat
Shores, was no doubt made uneasy
:by the showing of the Mountaineers
in the Piedmont game last Saturday.
The Bears lost their game with King
College, 26-0, but that fact fails to
cheer the Appalachian coaches, who
saw the game and report that the
Lenoir-Rhyne team is definitely one
,of the strongest on the Appalachian
schedule. Coach Brewer says that
he could take a one-point victory
with the greatest of ease, and
Coach Stewart refuses to say anything.
Rovie Angell will do the Appalachian punting and will alternate with
Martin in doing the passing. Quinn
i and Perry will take care of these
departments in the Lenoir-Rhyne offense.
The probable starting line-up:
Appalachian
Pos. Lenoir-Rhyne
E. Smith
LE
McSwain
Query
LT
Womack
I. Smith
LG ,.
Kilpatrfck
Adams
Center
Brown
Farthing (C) .... RG
Persianoff
Hobbs
RT
Lockman
Culler
RE
Abernathy
Martin
QB
Amendola
Ward
HB
Quinn
Angell
HB
Perry
Wilson
FB
Little
�1935 VARSITY MOUNTAINEERS
(From left to right) Top row: Eggelson, McCann, Rudisill, Matthews, Adams, Snipes, Fairly, Hobbs, Turbyfill. Second row: Martin, Thompson, Tesh, Ward, Angell, Smith, O'Neal, Holt. Bottom row: Connor, Bartz,
Oliver, Trippany, Mayberry, Smith, Farthing.
Stewart
For Appalachian
Lloyd Hobbs Playing At
Guard Is On High Scoring Team In Nation
Coach Stewart (above), has produced one of Appalachian's hardest fighting lines since the gridiron
game has been a part of the institution's program. BesMes being a
good coach he has won the entire
school's admiration through his
friendly nature and oratorical ability, especially in getting Coach
, Brewer to make his speeches for
him. His linemen have done excellent work in .the four games already
played on the Mountaineers' schedule.
Edenton, Nov. 3.—Lloyd Hobbs,
former Edenton high school athlete, is putting 'in his greatest year
as a member of the Appalachian
State powerhouse that has run up
263 points in its first six games
while allowing its opponents but
two points, and keeping its slate
clean from all defeats, according
to information reaching Trie Daily
Lloyd Hobbs, Edenton boy, is
Advance bureau here.
Hobbs is a 200-pounder aikl at starring at a guard position this
Appalachian State's powhis tackle post he rates number year for which is leading all other
one on the squad. Only a fair rr|an, erhouse,in the Nation in scoring
even though a varsity position teams one of the few unbeaten
and is
holder, last season, he has round- and untied elevens in the country
ed into a star under Kidd Brewer. now.
Appalachian is undefeated at
the present time, and among other of her many records established
this season is the fact that Len
Wilson, giant fullback, is high,
scorer in the Nation with 67'
points. The team as a whole is
leading the entire Nation in regards to points scored.
Hobbs is active in other campus activities also. He was undefeated in the heavyweight wrestling division last season while Appalachian was laying claim to the
State titles of both North Carolina and Tennessee. Aside from his
athletic prowess he is a leader in
literary circles of the school.
�,
MUST RF
The probable line-up:
Appalachian
Pos.
I Smith
. . - LE
lobbs
LT .
Smith
LG
vdams
Center
"arthing (C) .. RG
,]urbyfill ...,.
RT
;'itts
RE
Catawba Team Has Fast Quar" lartin
QB
tet of Backfield Men; Locals
Ingell
LH ..„
To Be in Full Strength
Vard
RH
:
Vilson
FB
The Appalachian State
Moun- \s left early this morning for
Salisbury where they will meet the
Catawba Indians in the most important game of the week in the North
State Conference. In fact, the conference championship is at stake. At
present the Mountaineers have won
all three of their conference, games,
and the Indians have won two and
lost none. A victory for either team
will give an undisputed lead in the
conference.
The Catawbans will offer the
Mountaineers their strongest competition this season, and will serve
as a definite test to the much-publicized Brewer machine. The Indians
have the fastest quartet of backs
that the Appalachian team will face
this season. Meehan, star quarterback, was high scorer in the nation
laat year and was picked on the little
All-American football team. Pritehard and Clark, in the wing and tail
back positions have been running
wild over all opponents this year and
i Catawba supporters are
expecting
them to carry on against Appalachian. Rector, center, and Magiellio, blocking back, are rated by the
Appalachian scouts as excellent defensive ball players. Nash and Horn,
I their ends, are the best to oppose
the Appalachian gridmen thus far.
On the other hand, the Appalchian
j coaches will be able to throw their
I full strength against the Catawbans.
(The l.-nintaineer squad as a whole is
• in the best condition of the season,
| and promise to give the Indians plenty of fight in the crucial game. One
newcomer will make his appearance
on the varsity, Walker Fitts.
Captain Cline Farthing, Hummie
Adams, Rovie Angell and Len Wilson who have been receiving much
publieit-- are expected to give the
?men a very busy afterIndian
: Smith, who has
been
noon. J
! crashing .1 opposition, will be injhis
end position, and will probably give 1
the Catawba blockers plenty of ex-!
citement.
Both Catawba and Appalachian
use the single wing back, and short
and deep punt formations on the offensive. The Indians also use the
single wing back to the left. The
plays of both teams are similar.
Therefore, it will be a contest of skill
and determination.
Martin and Angell will do the passing for Appalachian, and Wilson or
Angell will punt.
The Catawba
"mnting and passing will be done by
nark, Pritchard and Londholm.
/^
* 1•
Catawba
.. Nash
Reid
Newman
.. Rector
Briggs
Guy
Horn!
Meehan [
Clark
Pritchard
Magellio
H/f
Gridiron Men
MOUNTAINEERS
FACE CUMBERLAND
MEN THERE TODAY
Varsity Expecting to Combat
Strongest Foe of Season; Defense New to Locals
\n
The football team left early yesterday for Lebanon, Tennessee,
where they will meet the strong
Cumberland
University
football
team in the last game on the schedule.
A victory will give the Mountaineers the championship in the
Smoky Mountain Conference.
Not much is known of the 1936
edition of the Cumberland gridders,
but local supporters are expecting
the Mountaineers to meet their
strongest foe of the season. Last
year Cumberland handed the Mountaineers the little end of a 26-7 score,
and the Brewermen will be out to
get revenge. Thus far the Cumberland team has not shown much power in their running attack, but their j
passes offer a serious threat to the ;
Appalachian secondary. Since East
Tennessee beat Cumberland 2-0, Ap- j
palachian would seem to be the favorite in tomorrow's scrap, but pre- [
game dope does not help to plunge
that ball over the last white stripe, j
so that there is no excess of confidence on the Appalachian team.
The Cumberland offense is run
from punt formation only, and
should not cause much trouble for i
the hard-charging Mountaineer line- ;
men.
However, their defense, the f
5-3-2-1, will be new to the Mountaineers and may be hard to understand. •
Appalachian
Pos.
Cumberland
Smith
LE
Hayes
Hobbs
LT
Gordon |
Smith
LG
Hamel |
Adams
Center
Barbour
Farthing
RG
High
Turbyfill
RT
Marsh
FairleyRE
Gialanelli
Martin
QB
Vaughn]
Angell
LH
Jordan;
Ward
RH
Loomisl
Brettel
FB
SPORTS
COMMENTS
By HAL FARTHING
The Mountaineers partially redeemed themselves Saturday when
they stopped the previously undefeated, untied and unscored on Buccaneers of East Tennesee. This victory put the Mountaineers far in
front in the conference standing.
They are now the only undefeated j
| team in the conference. A victory
over Cumberland tomorrow will give
«he Appalachian men their first conference championship.
In addition to making up for the
mistakes of the Catawba game, the
Mountaineers got sweet revenge on
(the Tennesseeans, who practically
: ruined the 1935 home-coming day
celebration at Appalachian by defeating the Brewermen, 19-12. The
Tennessee Teachers were handicapped :by the same tenseness and anxiety that played such an important
part in the Mountaineers' defeat at
the hands of the Catawba Indians.
This was the cause of 'the fumble by
Smith that proved to be the turning
point of the game. This time it was
Boyer of the opposition who was so
tense that he dropped the ball and
gave the Mountaineers their first
touchdown, and with it the game.
The Buccaneers never could overcome the feeling of defeat that was
caused by the touchdown at the first
of the game.
Len Wilson ran his total score for
;the season to 85 points by cracking
the line for two touchdowns, and the
team as a whole increased its lead in
the nation's scoring by bringing the
total to 310 points.
�Matmen Under Way
For 1937 Season
WRESTLERS TAKE
EVERY MATCH IN
SEASONISOPENER
BE HELD AT GYM
TOMORROW NIGHT
Wrestlers to Meet Y. M. C. A. in ,
Opener; Boxers Will Engage Kannapolis
Tomorrow night in the new gymnasium the Appalachian matmen will
renew their rivalry with the WinstonSalem Y. M. C. A. aggregation, and
the newly-born boxers will engage
the Kannapolis Y. M. C. A. team,
which holds the Carolina championship in the "Y" division. The wrestlers will begin the show at 7:30
"o'clock, and the boxing team will
take the mat at 9:00.
'The wrestling meet will afford an
opportunity to judge the strength of
the 1936-37 grapplers who will be
faced with the problem of upholding
past records against stronger competition. Winston-Salem is not conceded a chance by Appalachian sup- j
porters in spite of the fact that they |
are known to be a stronger tarn than
that which was defeated by the Watkins-coached men last year, while the
strength of this season's Moun- !
tain- is not known. However, judging from their showing in practice
sessions as that of past seasons, the
matmen will have another winning,
team.
The boxers, who won their meet at:
High Point last Monday are also of j
an unknown strength. The Royal
Arcadians forfeited three of their
matches and won two, indicating that
the Appalachian team is none too j
strong. Kannapolis will definitely
show the strength or weakness of
Coach Brewer's fighters.
The wrestling team will consist of
Gaskill, 118; Ben Norris, 126; Captain Crooks, 135; Bill Norris, 145;
Claude Farthing, 155; Ewing, 165; '
Cline Farthing, 175; and Hobbs, unlimited.
The boxers will include Sherrill,
115; Corn, 125; Clark, 145; Fitts, j
155; Yermala, 165; Adams, 175, and]
Wilson, heavyweight.
With the ending of the football
season, the Appalachian matmen
will begin serious training for the
opening meet of the season with
Winston-Salem Y. M. C. A. here on
December 12. Though the wrestlers I
of last season won easily over the |
Winston-Team, neither Coach Watkins nor his team are taking the
Gaskill, 118 Pounds, Pins Man
| meet lightly, and no effort is being
in 30 Seconds; L. Hobbs Goes
spared in preparing for the "Y" men..
Extra Period to Win
Many of the wrestlers are already
] at work and the prospects for anothThe Appalachian wrestling team
! er winning team are good. The addiof 1936-37 opened their season by
! tion of the White brothers, Gaskill,
| Barnhill, and Flowers, to the squad
winning every match from the WinI will take care of the vacancies left
ston-Salem Y. M. C. A. team Saturfrom last year.
day to roll up a score of 28-0.
Only one of last year's team will
Gaskill, Appalachian 118-pounder,
not be back in uniform this season, j
started the meet by pinning Cline in
Frank Moore, who was undefeated in
30 seconds. Ben Norris won a time
the 155-pound class last season,
decision and Crooks pinned Stocks in
graduated in the spring. However,
one and one-half minutes for the sec- \d and lastCoach of the evening
| fall Watkins is expecting to find
another good man in the wealth of
material from which he will have to
From there to the heavyweight
' choose.
match the Appalachian wrestlers
Lettermen who will be in uniform
gave a demonstration of skill that
again are: Patterson and Scott in the
kept the Winston men on the de118-pound class; Norris and Ward in
fense all the time. Claude Farthing,
the 125; Captain Jimmie Crooks in
last year's captain, won with a time
the 135-pound class; W. Norris in the
advantage of nine minutes and fifty
145 weight; Claude Farthing, 165;
seconds in a ten-minute bout.
Cline Farthing, 175, and Hobbs in j
| In the heavyweight match which
the unlimited class.
j pitted Lloyd Hobbs against Hodgin,
Appalachian wrestling fans are
who wrestled at Davidson last year,
predicting a season as successful as
neither man could gain an advantage
that of last year in which the Watin the regular period. Changing pokins^ protegees were undefeated in a ;
sitions with unusual rapidity and
nine-meet schedule and were chamregularity, the heavyweights staged
the most thrilling match of the evenpionship contenders in North Caroing. Hobbs came perilously near
lina by virtue of a victory over
getting pinned twice in the match,
Davidson. The Tennessee champions,
saving himself by rolling into the
Maryville, were twice victims of the
ropes. However, in -the extra periods
Appalachian team.
Hobbs outclassd his opponent to win
The schedule, which is not yet comthe final bout.
' plete, will include stronger teams
The summary:
I than that of last year and if the team
118—'Gaskill (A) over Cline by a
. can repeat last year's record they
fall in 30 seconds.
i will have an undisputed claim to the j
126—(Ben Norris (A) time decisNorth Carolina championship.
ion over Voss, 4 minutes, 18 seconds.
The tentative schedule:
135—Crooks (A), fall over Stocks
in 1 minute, 30 seconds.
Dec. 12—Winston-Salem Y. M. C.
145—Bill Norris (A), time decisA., here.
ion over Hailey, 2 minutes, 15 secJan. 8—Newport-News, there.
onds.
^January 9—Norfolk Y. M. C. A.,
155—Claude Farthing (A), time
; there.
decision over Daye, 9 minutes, 50
Jan. 14—Elon, here.
seconds.
I Jan. .16—Spray Y. M. C, A., Jiere.
165—Ewing (A), time decision
'Jan. 23—N. C. State, there.
over Lineback, 9 minutes, 30 secJan. 29—University of Tennessee,
onds.
. there.
175—Cline Farthing (A), time deJan. 30—Spray Y. M. C. A., there.
cision over Plaster, 3 minutes.
Heavyweight—Hobbs (A), time deFeb. 10—Elon, there.
cision over Hodgin, 4 minutes, 10
Feb. 13—University of Tennessee,
seconds.
here.
February 27—Norfolk Y. M. C. A.,
here.
March—
, A. A. U. Tournament.
•
�APPALACHIAN MAT
SQUAD PREPARING
FOR WINSTON "Y
Forte's Team Will Be Strengthened by Heavyweight Additions; Meet December 12
The Appalachian matmen are rapidly getting in condition for their
opening meet with Winston-Salem
Y. M. C. A. here on December 12.
This week has been spent in practicing 'the various holds and running as
Coach Watkins endeavors to develop
the endurance of his iron men.
The Winston-Salem matmen under
the direction of Charlie Forte, who
was state champion in the 175-pound
class in lt'35, are expected to offer
much stronger competition in the
coming meet than they did in last
year's affair which the Mountaineer
grapplers won 38-0, pinning every
one of the "Y" men except their 118pound man. This year finds the
Winston men with at least two additions that may be expected to
strengthen their aggregation. Forte,
a brother to the coach, will wrestle
in the 175-pound class and will in all
probability cause the Appalachian
representative some trouble. Hodgin,
their heavyweight, who will meet
Lloyd Hobbs in the climax, is a good
man but so is the "Doctor."
Grapplers Go To Newport
For Meet Saturday Night
The Appalachian State wrestling
team left this morning for Newport
News, Va., where they are scheduled to meet the Newport Y. M. C. A.
in their second bout of the season
tomorrow night.
The squad has been hard at work
since the holidays preparing for
their coming meets and the squad as
a whole are in excellent condition.
Gaskill, diminutive 118-pounder, and
Captain Jlmmie Crooks in the 135pound class are in good condition
and will probably repeat their performances in the Winston-Salem
meet, in which Gaskill won by a fall
in thirty seconds, and Crooks was
not far behind, pinning his man in
one minute and thirty seconds.
The Appalachian team will be
composed of Gaskill, 118; Morris,
125; Captain Crooks, 135; Bill Norris, 145; Claude Farthing, 155;
Ewing, 165; Cline Farthing, ,175;
and Lloyd Hobbs, heavyweight.
Coach "Red" Watkins' grunt and
groan artists will also see action this
-week, invading Virginia for a tilt
with the Newport News Y. M. C. A.
aggregation. Undefeated in their
last fifteen meets, the Mountaineer
matrnen are picked to make it six- r
teen straight in their meet tomorrow.
The 1936-37 wrestlers will findj
themselves in a tight spot this year, j
They will have the record of previous teams to uphold, and the competition will be stronger than that
of any past season. In the five
years that Appalachian has had a
wrestling team, only four meets have
been lost by the Watkins-coached
matmen. To Maryville College goes
the distinction of having been the
only team to defeat the Mountaineer
matmen twice. Davidson and Barium '
Springs have also chalked up wins
over the Appalachian men, but that
was in the good old days when Coach
Watkins was only beginning his career as wrestling mentor at Appa, achian. Last season the Boonemen
met and conquered everything on
..heir schedule which included both
Maryville and Davidson.
There seems to be some question
in the minds of Appalachian students
as to why the number of colleges
represented on the varsity wrestling
schedule is decreasing. It's very
simple?—the colleges have a reputation to maintain and there are better
ways of building or maintaining a
reputation than meeting Coach WatIcins' iron men. It seems that Coach
Watkins is going to have to slow
Tip a bit to give his competition a;
tchance to catch up with him. The
Mountaineers have lost only four
meets since the sport began at Ap- j
rpalachian five years ago.
Coach Watkins
Pictured above is Coach R. W.
Watkins, who has amassed an
amazing total of victories with his
wrestling teams at Appalachian
since its inauguration five years
ago. In these five years the Watkins-coached teams have lost only
four meets. Recently, it was announced that Coach, Watkins
would head the state A. A. U.
wrestling committee, and that the
A. A. U. would be held at Appalachian under his direction. Watkins-coached teams have typified
the progressive program of sports
at Appalachian.
IrFthe wrestling department we
fing Coach Watkins with some of ;
th best material he has ever had.
Using past performances of Watkins
coached teams as a basis for prediction it seems safe to say that Appalachian will have another out-1
standing team of matmen. Though
the team has not yet been chosen,
some of the boys seem to have an
edge on their competitors for a
place on the team. Among these are
Gaskill in the 118-pound class;
Crooks, 135; Claude Farthing, 165;Ewing, 165; Cline Farthing, 175,
and Hobbs, unlimited.
�CKOOKS IS GUNNING
FOE DAVIDSON MANi
HOBBS MAKES RECOKD
AS A. S. T. C. MATMAN
Undefeated in eighteen matches,
Lloyd Hobbs, junior of Appalachian, is making quite a record for
himself throughout the state. He is
favored to win High honors in the
A. A. U. tournament which will
convene here March 5-6.
Jimmie Crooks, senior captain of
the local wrestling team, has been
defeated only once since he took
up grappling three years ago. Last
year he lost one match to a David"
son contestant. Captain Parker,
and this season he is out gunning
for him here in the A. A. U. tourney. It is believed that Crooks
will furnish plenty of thrills for
the spectators in the
various
matches scheduled.
APPALACHIAN
MAT WINNER
APPALACHIAN WINS
Spra,y, Jan. 30. — Appalachian
State's undefeated wrestling team
-swept over a game but outclassed
Spray Y. M. C. A. squad in an interesting meet here tonight by the score
i of 25 to 5.
] The Mountaineers, driving toward
jthe state mat laurels, lost only one ;
| bout, a forfeit in the 126-pound class
when B. Norris suffered a dislocated
elbow and had to quit action.
Gaskill and W. Norris won falls for
the collegians while Crooks, Claude
Farthing, Ewing, Cline Farthing and
Hobbs won time decisions. Whitt
took the forfeit for Spray.
The eummary:
118 pounds—Gaskill, Appalachian State,
\von on R tail Ironi Hill in 1:5".
126 pounds—Whitt, Spray "Y" won on,
a forfeit from I}. Norris.
1.^5 pounds—Captain Crooks. Appalachian State, wou a time advantage over Lelfew ot 8:37.
145 pounds—W. Xorris, Appalachian
State, won a fall over Weaver in :i:0'S.
Io5 pounds—Claude Farthins". Appalachian State, won a time advantage of Pittendreight of 7:49.
lb'5 pounds—Ewinr, Appalachian State,
won a time advantage over Vestal of 2:'->8.
175 pounds—Cline ITarthing-. Appalachian State, won a time advantage over
Underwood of 4:.'ifa'.
Unlimited—Ifobbs, Appalachian,1 State. 1
I wou a time advantage over Shields of 4:35.
SPRAY, Jan. 30.—(^—Appalachian State's undefeated wrestling
team swept over a game but outclassed Spray Y. M. C. A. squad in
an interesting meet here last night
by the score of 25 to 5.
The mountaineers, driving toward
the State mat laurels, lost only one
bout, a forfeit in the 126-pound
class when B. Norris suffered a
dislocated elbow and had to quit
action.
Gaskill and W. Norris won falls
for the collegians while Crooks,
Claude Farthing, Ewing, Cline
Farthing and Hobbs . won the decisions. Whitt took the forfeit for
Spray.
APPALACHIAN
MATMEN WIN
BOONE, Jan, 16, — (/P) — Appalachian State Teachers college's
' powerful wrestling team blanked
the Spray, N. C., Y. M. C. A. grappling team tonijjht, 38 to 0.
Summaries:
118—Gaskill pinned Cassell, 3 minutes,
\3 seconds.
| 326—B. Norris won on forfeit over Whitt
(Whitt failed to return for extra period).
135—Capt. Jimmy Crooks pinned Laifew. 4 minutes, 34 seconds.
! 115—W. Norris pinned Joyace, six min! tites, 3 seconds.
155—Claude Farthing pinned Fettendrigh, 8 minutes, 35 seconds.
165—Ewing won over Vestal, time advantage, 3 minutes, 3 seconds.
175—Cline Farthing won on forfeit.
Unlimited — Hobbs pinned Shields,,*
minutes, 27 seconds.
BOQNE MATMEN
DEFEAT ELON
Special to The Observer.
ELON, Jan. 27—The Appalachian
college defeated the Elon matmen
here tonight by a score of 31-5. The
Eloners put up a hard struggle but
Appalachian displayed their State
champion strength.
Carl Foushee of Elon was Elon's
only winner, defeating Flowers 145pounds of Appalachian, by a fall,
using the half nelson and a back
locK. Martin, the 135-pound captain
of Elon's matmen, lost his. second
match during his career, losing once
before to the U. S. Olympic matman.
At present he is Y. M. C. A. champion in Virginia
The summary: 115-pounds, Patterson of
Appalachian defeated Wilburn of Elon,
by fall, time 7 minutes, 5 points gained:
126-pounds, Gaskil of Appalachian defeated Biglow of Elon by fall, time 3:35,
5 points; 135-pounds, Crooks of Appa-:
]achian defeated Martin of Elon by time
decision. Time 2:16, 3 points; 145-potmds,
Carl Foushee of Elon defeated Flowers!
of Appalachian by a fall, time 4:30, 5
points; 155-pounds, Farthing of Appalah-i
ian defeated Clyde Foushee of Elon by;
fall, time 9:20, 5 points; 165-poundsJ
, Ewing of Appalachian defeated Thomp-"
json of Elon by time decision, time 3:20£
,3 points; 175-pounds, Cline Farthing eft :
'Appalachian defeated McGalliard of Elon
!by fall, time 7:00, 5 points; heavywieght,
HoUb&^of Appalachian defeated Day of
!Elon by fall, time 2:20, five points.
�Appalachian Beats State Matmen
Mountaineers
Upset Wolves
.Watkin's Strong Squad
Wins Meet Over Big Five j
Team at Raleigh
Raleigh, Jan. 22 (IP).—Appalachian
State's strong -wrestling'team defeated N. C. State College's varsity 17%
to 10% here tonight.
The visitors won four matches, lost
three and tied one. Milton Gaskill, :
118-pounder, and
Lloyd Hobbs, j
heavyweight, both of Appalachian,
gained the only two falls of the
night.
The Mountaineers remained in the,
undefeated list for the season. The
team is coached by "Red" Watkins,
former Winston-Salern High athlete
and a native of the Twin City. '
The summary:
118 pounds—Gaskin. Appalachian, defeated Hinpliaw, Fall, 3:00.
1,25—Bell, State, defeated Xorris. Tirfie
Win Matches
'Appalachian, Victor in 44 of
48 Meets, Will Opose State
Here Friday
By OPIE SHELTON.
Boone, Jan. 19. — Appalachian
State College will send a strong
'wrestling team to Raleigh for Friday's meet with N. C. State.
Coach Red Watkins has what local fans consider the strongest mat
team • in the history of the sport
here. This is saying a great deal,
especially when it is realized that
| Appalachian wrestlers have been
defeated only four times in 48 dual
meets over a five-year period. Three
of the defeats came in meets with
Maryville; one, in a meet with Davidson.
This year's team has at least two
capable men in each weight division, and there are as many as four
capable matmen in some divisions.
In two meets this season, against
Winston-Salem Y and the Naval
Traniing School of Newport News,
the Mountaineers lost only one bout.
The Sailors' 165-pound gladiator
scored a fall to prevent his team's
being blanked.
Although there's strength all
along the line of the eight divisions,
indications are that Appalachian is
especially strong in the 118, 135, 155,
175, and unlimited divisions. Milton
Gaskill, 118, is one of the best of his j
weight in Dixie. Lloyd Hobbs,
heavyweight, has not been defeated
in two seasons. Captain Jimmie
Crooks, 135, has Appalachian's vote I
as the State's king in his division.
Others who will carry the Appa- j
lachian standard against State are
Claude Farthing, 155; Cline Farthing, 175; Ben Norris, 125; Bill Nori ris, 145; Ewing, 165.
Hear, Hear!!
Hobbs, top, and Gagkill, bottom,
two brilliant stars of Appalachian
State's undefeated wrestling team,
who turned in fall victories in the
smashing win over N. C. State's
strong mat squad at Raleigh last
night.
advantage, 9 :.37.
135 — Crook, Appalachian, defeated
Bridges. Time advantage, 5:15.
145—Chimer. State, defeated Xorris.
Time advantage 4:^3.
155—Troxler, Stale, defeated C. Farthing. Time advantage, 3:54.
165—Ewing-, Appalachian, defeated Mc1/aughlin. Time advantage, l : l f i .
175—Cline Farthing. Appalachian, and
Thompson, draw, extra period.
Unlimited—Hobbs, Appalachian defeated
Woolen. Fall, 9::;3.
j
Don't let this dispatch lead you to
believe that Coach Watkins, his
wrestlers, or the folks up here in
far-away Boone are counting victories before they're hatched in the
meet with State. Far from that! The
news has reached even into the
mountains that State has a really
good wrestling team, and it's a tough
battle that Coach Watkins' boys are
expecting.
And, youse guys who don't ordinarily pay any attention to college
wrestling—well, here's a tip: go
j out there to State and watch Appajlachian's Mountaineers and the
Techs in combat. You'll see two
nifty college teams, both far above
the average.
Boone Boys Win by SevenPoint Margin over Techs in
Wrestling Meet
By L. B. PHILLIPS.
Appalachian State's strong wrestling team defeated the N. C. State j .
College varsity, 17 1-2 to 10 1-2, |
last night in Frank Thompson
Gymnasium. A large crowd looked on.
The visitors took four of the
eight matches and gained a draw
in one. Appalachian grapplers
scored the only falls of the nightMilton Gaskill, star 118-pounder,
pinned State's Hinshaw in three
minutes, and Lloyd Hobbs, undefeated heavyweight threw Warren
Wooden after nine minutes and 23
seconds in the final match.
State's victories, all gained on timeadvantage, were turned in by William
Bell and Lloyd (Red) Troxler, co-captains, and Clarenc (Red) Shiner Bell
who ordinarily fights in the 118-pound
division, moved up to the 125-pound
class and handily won over Ben Norris.
One Draw.
The closest match of the night—it
still hasn't been settled—was that between Appalachian's Cline Farthing
and State's Dick Thompson, 175-pounders. They were even at the end of the
regulation time (10 minutes), and an
extra period of six minutes failed to
change the bout from a draw.
Troxler won over Claude Farthing in
one of the best matches of the night.
Last night's victory was Appalachian's 45th in 49 dual wrestling meets.
Summary:
118 pounds — Gaskill, Appalachian,
threw Hinshaw. Time: 3-00
125—Bell, State, defeated Norris.
Time advantage, 9:37.
135—Crooke, Anpalachian, defeated
Bridges. Time advantage, 5:15.
145—Shinier, State, defeated Norris.
Time advantage 1:33.
155—Troxler, State, defeated Claude
Farthing. Time advantage, 3:54.
165—Ewing, Appalachian, defeated
McLaushlin. Time advantage, 1-16.
175—Cline Farthing, Appalachian,
and Thompson, drew. (Extra neriod.)
Unlimited — Hobbs. Appalachian,
threw Wooden. Time, 9-23
Referee: May (Duke).
,,^tr^;
4?%^°<v?,.,
"ttv^%J\
�Goorf Sports, And We Could Use More of Them,
MORE you see of these Appalachian State college
folks, the better you like them. They are good sports,
and we do not have enough fellows of that stripe in this
Opie was in town ~withnja^fam~KicTd' (.tsowtlel Brewer
.world.
and the Appalachian ringmen Saturday, and paid a proFor instance, on Saturday night here Coach Kidd
fessional call to this sanctum.
t
Brewer's Appalachian boxing team lost a close meet
to the Charlotte Y. M. C. A, leather slingers.
After the meet I was commiserating with Captain Kidd.
"You have a good team," I said.
"Well I don't know," replied the man with the inevitable bow tie. "It apparently isn't good enough.
We lost."
"But you dropped some closes ones," I suggested. "The
fans booed a couple of those decisions. What did you
think about them?"
i
"You will always get some booes when fights are
close," replied Captain Kidd. "Those things even up, you
know. We are not squawking."
To find a fellow not squawking after his team had
lost such a close engagement was decidedly refreshing. A -week before a gang of belligerent young men
invaded the sports deoartment with eloquent cries
of "We wuz robbed." They, too, had met the Y boxers and lost. Ironically, however, they had dropped
four fights by knockouts, so it took a rather extended
stretch of the imagination to figure out that they had
been the victims of thievery.
You might get the idea from the foregoing that the Y
boys have been the beneficiaries of the breaks in decisions here, and I wouldn't know for sure. I've seen some
close ones called against them, as well as for them. It
goes that way in fisticuff, and these things even up, as
Captain Kidd observed. But more anon.
The Press Agent is Frank, Sells a Story^
"Life is very funny," he said. "Last year I worked
twice as hard as this year and couldn't get to first
base in publicizing Appalachian snorts. This year
the papers have been extremely kind to us. For
awhile I was puzzled over that, but now I know. We
had a good football team. You can get publicity
much easier when you have a good team than when
you don't.
\A7"& WERE speaking about Appalachian and the whole-i We'll Get The Best Decisions Available.
some qualities of the young men who are making "MOW, BACK to fight decisions. You are bound to havN
the sports wheel go around high up there in the Carolina'
close ones. There will be some hairline verdicts in
hills.
the forthcoming Golden Gloves. Sometimes you are bound
There is Opie Shelton, the public relations counsel,
to get ones that are distinctly off key.
who is by way of getting somewhere in journalism,
Opie writes clean copy, does it with considerable
more restraint than the average college press agent,
and while fired with commendable enthusiasm, manages to maintain the proper perspective.
- - - - - '-
"«
,
,
Mr. Shelton opened his brief case. "However," he said,j
"they have me on the spot up there. It's about wrestling.
You know we have a remarkable wrestling team. It just
simply doesn't lose. We had a great team last year. My
folks don't understand why our great wrestling team
doesn't make more headlines."
_?
I was about to interrupt, but Mr. Shelton wouldn t
let me. "Don't tell me," he said, "I alreadv know. I
tell my folks. I say, 'Well, what about Duke; and
Carolina and all the bij? college wrestlw* teams?
You don't see them in headlines either, do you? i
say, college wrestling just simply does not have a
great general appeal, and the newspapers know it.
"So, Jake, I understand. But you know it is not quite
so clear to our wrestlers and the big local following
they have built up as a result of their unusual record.
They have me on the spot."
Mr. Shelton is a good press agent. Before he departed j
I had given him an order for a feature about the Appalachian wrestlers, and he's serving it up hot this morning.
It's a good and interesting yarn, too.
Golden Gloves officials are going to do their utmost this year, however, to reduce tlie bad ones to
a minimum. Dr. Jimmy Wood is actually holding
classes for his corps of judges and referees, educating them to the A. A. U. rules,
They will be unbiased, honest officials, and they will
be men of experience and trained. They will handle the
bouts in an efficient, workmanlike manner. We have every
reason to believe that they will do a splendid job.
Charlotte fans welcome the news that Kidd Brewer
will bring the Mountaineers here next fall to meet the
Catawba Indians, the team which beat his club in an upset this year.
Brewer looks for an improved team. He is dickering
with the idea of sending them through some practice
games with other teams during the spring practice.
Take it away, Oscar.
�APPALACHIAN STATE'S STRONG
CLAUDE FARTHING (155)
CLINE FARTHING (175)
LLOYD HOBBS
WHO
(Unlimit)
MILTON GASKILL (118)
TOSSING ALL COMERS AGAIN
BEN NORRIS (126)
CAPT. JIMMIE CROOKS (135)
Boone Mat Huskies
BILL NORRIS (145)
APPALACHIAN
BY OPIE SHELTON.
.— The Appalachian State
With a s_quad set deep with capa-*—-——_
__...
Die men in every weight Coach
~"............"
Red Watkins has few worries in doubt a|, to the better team this
S^fJVE securinS str°ng shoul- f,Sson- TeMessee was frocked Satders and broad backs for the meets Iurday .mght The road from no
this season.
i on is just as tough as that already
Already among the vanquished is P"??4 ^th caPaWe opponents preN. C. State, who last year was co- Ise,ntmg themselves in the Univerc araant with Appalachian for ISlty .?* Tennessee, Vanderbilt uniNorth Carolina collegiate wrestling I ve^\' E}™' and High Point.
was State de! | After the jregularly "scheduled
°
there remained no i (More on Second Sports Page)
Hobbs, heavyweight.
8rv«ssa°£s!
�Appalachian State Defeats
Tennessee on Mat by 22-8
Boone, Feb. 13. — Appalachian
State's powerful and undefeated
wrestling team continued to march
through the ranks of Dixie's finest
mat teams by defeating the University of Tennessee in an interesting
meet here tonight by the score of
23 to 8.
"Bed" Watkins' Mountaineers
won four time-advantage victories,
one fall and a forfeit to amass the
points of victory, while Tennessee
won a fall and a time advantage.
Gaskill put the Mountaineers into
the lead by winning a time advantage of 5:54 over Amberton, captain
of the Vols, but House came back
to gain a fall over Lindsay and put
Tennessee in the lead.
Appalachian State won the 135pound division when Crooks took a
forfeit over Pearce, out with a bad
ankle, and from this point until the
final match added points to the total. Hayes won the unlimited class
lor VS. T. with a time advantage of
5:33 over Query, substituting for
the veteran Hobbs.
The meet proved unusually interesting and hard fought and offered some of the best mat work
seen here this season.
The summaries:
.115 pound* — Gaskill, Appalachian
State, won a time decision of 5:44 over
Amberton.
I'i6 pounds—House, Tennessee, won a
fall over Uiidsay in 4:37.
135 pounds — Crooks, Appalachian
State, won on a forfeit over Fearce.
145 pounds—Bill Isorris, Appalachian State, won a time decision of 3:12
OTcr Itradley.
155 pounds—Claude Farthing, Appalachian State, won a time decision of
5:54 over Haynes.
165 pounds — Ewing, Appalachian
State, won a fall over Silva in 6:37.
175 pounds—Cliue Farthing, Appalachian State, won a time decision of 2:21
over Shaffner.
Unlimited—Hayes, Tennessee, won a
time decision of 5:33 over Query.
Final score: Appalachian State, 22;
University of Tennessee, 8.
BOONE, Feb. 14.—(^—Appalachian State's brilliant and undefeated
wrestling team continued to amass
victories over Dixie's strong rivals
by defeating the University of Tennessee in an interesting meet here
last night, 22 to 8.
The Mountaineers won four time
decisions, one fall and a forfeit for
the total points, while House, in the
126-pound, won a fall for Tennessee,
and Hayes, in the unlimited, took
a time advantage for the visitors'
points.
Matmen Victorious
Over Tennesseeans
Ewing- Gets Only Fall of Combat
With University; First Loss for
Tennessee Team
The Appalachian State wrestlers
continued their eighteen-meet winming streak by defeating the University of Tennessee in Knoxville last
iSaturday, 26-0. It was the first
itime that the Tennesseeans had been
beaten this year.
Roger Ewing, Appalachian 165pounder, got the only fall of the
.meet when he pinned Silva in eight
minutes and fifty-one seconds of
their bout.
This victory brings the Appalachian wrestlers' total number of victories to forty-eight out of fifty-two
meets wrestled.since 1931.
The summary:
118—Gaskill (A) won a decision
over Anderton. Advantage, 9'22".
126 — Cranford (A), decisioned
House. Advantage, 4'7".
135—Captain Crooks (A), won a
decision over Pearce.
Advantage,
7'37".
145—Norris (A), won a decision,
over Bradley. Advantage, 5'48".
155—Claude Farthing (A), decis-!
! ioned Haynes.
Advantage, 3'50".
165—Ewing (A), pinned Silva in
175—Cline Farthing (A), decision. ed Schofner. Advantage, 3'11".
Heavyweight—Hobbs (A), w o ni
'over Hayes. Advantage, 2'1".
WRESTING TEAM DEFEATS
TENN. BY SCORE OF 26-0
The Appalachian wrestling team
continued their victorious march last
Saturday night, crushing the Univer-j
sity of Tenessee grapplers by a score
or 26-0.
Led by Patterson's surprise pin of
Anderton in eight minutes, the rest
of the Appalachian .grunters defeated
their men by time decisons.
Moore, 155 pounder and Hobbs, unlimted giant, kept clean records for •
an undefeated season as they had
their opponents down for time deci-i
sions.
IVOLS BOW TO
APPALACHIAN
The summaries:
llo-pounds: Gaskill, Appalachian State,
I won a time decision, of 5:44 over Am1 berton.
126-pounds: House, 'Tennessee, won a
J fall over Lindsay in 4:37.
I : 135-pounds: Crooks, Appalachian State,
jl^von on a forfeit over Pearce.
i 145-pounds: Bill Norris, Appalachian
gtate. won a time decision of 3:12 ove.r
Bradley.
155-pounds: Claude Farthing, Appalachian State, won a time decision of 5:54
>ver Haynes.
165-pounds: Ewing, Appalachian State,
iron a fall over Silva in 6:37.
175 pounds: Cline Farthing, Appalachian State, won a time decision of 2:21
over Shaffner.
Unlimited: Hayes, Tennessee, won a
time decision of 5:33 over Query.
Final score: Appalachian State 22; University of Tennessee 8.
VARSITY MATMEN
TO WRESTLE U. T.
Grapplers Will Meet University
of Tennessee in Local
Ring Saturday
The undefeated Appalachian State |
wrestling team is scheduled to meet
the University of Tennessee in the ;
men's gymnasium here Saturday ]
night in the first of a series of j
home events. The Mountaineer team I
will be trying for their 49th victory I
out of 54 meets wrestled since the <
inauguration of the sport at Appa- ;
lachian five years ago.
The Tennesseeans were defeated,
i 26-0, in a meet at Knoxville last
.week which featured the close
matches of Lloyd Hobbs, wrestling
I his second year for
Appalachian
[without defeat, and Bill Norris.
Cranforcl, substituting1 in the 126- i
i pound class for Ben Norris, who is j
, out for the season with an injured i
| arm, turned in a good performance
i at Knoxville, and is expected to reI peat in 'Coming meets.
The Appalachian line-up includes
i Gaskill, Cranford, Captain Crooks,
! Norris, Claude Farthing-, Ewing,
i Cline Farthing, Hobbs. Others who
may see action are E. White, Wood,
Evans and Query.
�.
Plans For A. A. 17. Mat Tourney Nearing Completion
is chosen as the host school is a sig--
Event Will Be Held in Boone nal honor, but if the men come out
on March 6 and 8; Medals
with flying colors, the honor will be
Are On Display
much greater. The record that Appalachian has set up in the wrestlingAppalachian is buzzing with ex- world of the state in the past two
citement as the final plans are pol- years leads many well known auished off for the entertaining of the thorities to predict that the Boons
wrestlers of both the Carolinas in men will account for themselves in a
the A. A. U. Tournament which is very noteworthy 'manner.
to be held on the campus the 5th and . It is needless to remind the stu6th of March. Coach Watkins, host dents that 'the campus will be on:
to these amateur grunt and groan- good behavior during1 the tournamen, is planning to enter all of his ment to impress the visitors of the
men in the meet which will see some sportsmanlike conduct of the Mounof the South's finest trying for the taineers and the spirit of the perfect
awards that are to toe given to the hostg; the students who will be of inwinners. Gold medals are to- be valuable aid in entertaining and digiven to 'the first place winners in recting the participants while they
each of the various classes. Silver are in Boone. All that the studentsawards will be given the second can do to help make this one of the
placers, and the third best will re- banner events of the year will be
ceive bronze medals. The team win- appreciated by the athletic departning the most points will be award- ment, the administration and the
ed a golden-glo trophy 10% inches A. A. U. who are all behind the
high, inscribed as follows: "Caro- movement to foster amateur wrestlinas' Champions, A. A. U., 1937, pre- ling in the Carolinas.
sented by The Watauga Democrat."
On the face of the individual trophies are drawn the figures of two
wrestlers and the following declaration: "Carolinas' A. A. U." On the
reverse side is the weight in which
the winner competed. These beautiful trophies are now on display at
the Carolina Pharmacy, and wrestling fans over the surrounding country are all interested in the showing
the Mountaineers will make in the
tourney. The fact that this school
Basketball And Wrestling
Teams To See Action Here
Two Events Will Be Held
Men's Gymnasium Saturday,j ^^^^B^m^pipi^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^1'
February 20
QUINTET TO MEET KING
Appalachian Wrestling Team is to
Meet Vanderbilt University for
First Time This Season; Cagers
Play Conference Game
The highlight of the winter sport
season will occur in the men's gym-;
nasium tomorrow night when Coach]
Stewart's fast-stepping cagers meet1
King College for the second time this
season, and Coach Watkins' brilliant i
mat team meets Vanderbilt University in what promises to be one of
the best mat events of the year.
;
In their first tilt with King which \k place in Bristol
Mountaineer quint pulled the game]
out of the fire in the closing min-i
utes by virtue of some long shots
that hit. Since that time the Appalachian team has improved greatly,
tout it is also certain that the King
quint will be better organized. They
will be out for revenge on Stewart's
men and the game promises to contain plenty of thrills.
For a starting line-up, Coach Stewart will probably use Smart and
Wagner at forwards, Allred at center, and McGinnis and Culler at
guards.
In the wrestling match, which will
immediately follow the basketball
game, the Appalachian grunt and
groaners will meet some of the
strongest wrestlers of the South. The
University wrestlers are especially
strong in the 135-pound class and
Captain Jimmie Crooks will find the
going rough. The Appalachian lineup will consist of Gaskill, Cranford
or Lindsay, Crooks, JSTorris, Claude
Farthing, Ewing, Cline Farthing, and
Lloyd Hobbs.
recently, the:
�I Season's Record Of Matmen
; Reveals Mammoth Strength
! Records Show That Mountaineer Grapplers Have Won Fifty-five
Out of Sixty-four Bouts in Eight Meets This Season; Gaskill, Crooks and Hobbs Undefeated
Taking the University of Tennes- : respectively. Bill L i n d s a y was
see Vols into camp last Saturday thrown, and Query and Flowers .lost
evening for the eighth straight vic- on time.
tory this year and the nineteenth in
Individual scoring is as follows:
two years, the Mountaineer wrestGaskill
36
i ling team has compiled a season's
Crooks (Captain)
32
[ record that would be envied by any
Cline Farthing
28 Vi
team in the south. In the eight
Hobbs
27
meets of the 1936-37 schedule, the
Ewing
25
I Mountaineers have won fifty-five
Claude Farthing
25
! bouts and lost nine. Twenty-two of
Bill Norris
24
j the victories were falls; twenty-nine
Ben Norris
11
i were time decisions; three were forPatterson
5
feit matches, and the other was a
Cranford
3
draw fight. Of the nine lost, six
were awarded to opponents as a re213%
sult of time advantages; two were
Another interesting fact in the refalls, and one was forfeited due to sume of the wrestling records of Apan injury to Ben Norris in the Spray palachian for this year is the comY. 'meet. The men who fight for parison in the time advantages of
Coach "Red" Watkins have piled up the Mountaineers with their oppona total of 213% points for an aver- ents. Watkins' crew has amassed a
age of 26.6 per meet. Appalachian's total of 220 minutes and 41 seconds
j opponents have been able to win 3.2 against a total of 33 minutes and 34
' points per meet for a grand total of seconds. Three hours in time ad25 for the eight conflicts. Elon and vantage is the difference between
Vanderbilt will toe the last to face Appalachian and her competition in
the Boone grunt and groanmen on simple comparison.
the present schedule, and then the
Regardless of comparisons or point
A. A. U. title battles will see the scores everyone is aware of the fact
Watkins-coached club trying f o r that Boone school for teachers always has a crack wrestling outfit
i state awards on Miarch 5-6.
Reviewing the individual records and will continue to have one if conof the current season one finds that ditions remain as they have in the
Gaskill, freshman star of the mat past few years. Coach Watkins and
game on the Appalachian campus, i his boys are to -be congratulated in
has won six bouts by falls and two keeping' up the high standards of
by decisions on time. This first-year athletics for such a long time and!
man has burnt up the wrestling for making the progress they have
world of the South, and his skill is while the other schools were having
known far and wide wherever the only mediocre success. Wins o
Mountaineers show their wares.
Elon and Vanderbilt and a comparaCaptain Jimmy Crooks is the next tive degree of success in the A, A.
representative who is doing well for U. tourney will mark this season as
himself during the present year. Jim the best in the history of wrestling
has won three by falls; four were at Appalachian.awarded to him by time decisions,
and Tennessee U. forfeited one to
him last Saturday evening. Lloyd
•"'Doc, Huge, Mountain, Tarzan"
Hobbs is another of the stars of the
mat, having won eighteen consecu- :
tive matches in his career, and seven
of these are included in the year
1936-37. Three falls are included in
this record, along with four time detcisions. Cline Farthing has won
' two toy falls and four by time decisions along with one forfeit and
1 one draw.
Claude Farthing and
| "Rog" Ewing both have won two toy
I the fall-route and five by the time-j
decision method. Also, both have
•lost a match, Ewing by a fall and
Farthing by time. Bill Norris has
won three by each method and has
lost one. Brother Ben Norris nas
j won two by decision, one toy forfeit,
and has lost two to his adversaries. |
: In the ranks of the subs are five
lads who have seen action during j
the present schedule. Pat Patterson
•; and Dan Cranford have won one
apiece by the fall and time method,
�Congratulations to Watkins
•L'
ing Team
Appalachian Entertains
Carolinas Mat Tourney
WRESTLING MEET
AT APPALACHIAN
Boone School Will Conduct A. A. U. Wrestling Event March
5 and 6—Plans Being Made For Successful Event.
Ripper Team Will Rule Favorite.
BOONE, Feb. 27. —The undefeated Appalachian S t a t e wrestling
team will play host to teams of the
two Carolinas on March 5 and 6.
The A. A. U. tournament has been
given to Appalachian State, an"
plans are being formulated whjc"
will assure the event of the utmos
success.
Appalachian, through a long winning streak which has lasted over
two seasons of tough competition,
will enter the meet as the favorite, but not without strong competiion from Davidson, N. C. State,
Duke, and North Carolina. Other
strong men will be on hand from
Elon, Barium Springs, and possibly
,from South Carolina.
Of last year's entries two Barium
Springs men won their weights,
with Davidson supplying two winners, and the University of North
Carolina only one. Appalachian
failed to enter the tournament, but
i will be represented this year by its
entire squad.
(Special to Daily News)
Boone, Feb. 23.—The undefeated Appalachian State wrestling team'
will play host to all of the two Carolinas next March 5 and 6. The A.
A. If. tournament has been given to Appalachian State and plans are
being formulated which will assure the event of the utmost success.
Applachian, through a long winning streak which has lasted over
two seasons of tough competition,
'will enter the meet as..the favorite,
I but not without strong competition
jfrom Davidson, North Carolina,
I State, Duke, and North Carolina.
I Other strong men will be on hand
'from Elon, Barium Springs, and
possibly from South Carolina.
Titlest Defends.
Of last year's entries two Barium
Springs men won their weights,
with Davidson supplying two winners, and the University of North
Carolina only one. Applachian
failed to enter the tournament, but
will be represented this year by its
BOONE, -N. C., Feb 27.—(£>)—Apentire squad.
palachian State's powerful unbeaten
! Of last years winners only Milwrestling team moved a step nears ton Gaskill, 123-pounds, and Ralph
er the Southern intercollegiate ti| Spencer, 134-pounds, are back to
tle and clinched the North State mat
laurels by defeating Elon college
defend their titles. Gaskill is a
here tonight by a score of 25 to 3.
j freshman at Appalachian now
j while Spencer will wrestle under
The summary: 118 pounds—Patterson,
Appalachian State, won a time advantage
i the Barium Springs colors.
of 3:08 over Wilburn; 126 pounds—Cran! Exceptionally strong men are
ford, Appalachian State, won on a forj found in North Carolina State's
feit; 135 pounds—Captain Crooks, Ap-j
! Troxler and Bell, Carolinas Umpalach/fm State, won a 2 second time ad- I
vantage over Martin in two extra pe-!
i stead, and at least four of David; fiods; 145 pounds—Foushee, Elon, won a j
! son's teams. Appalachian's strongest
time advantage of 3:22 over Barnhill;
i men are Gaskill, Captain Jimmie
155 pounds—Claude Farthing, Appalach- !
'Crooks, Claude Farthing, Cline
ian State, won on a fall over Clyde
Foushee in 5:46 (half-Nelson and barFarthing and Lloyd Hobbs.
BOONE MATTERS
DEFEAT ELONS
APPALACHIAN
MATTERS WIN
BOONE, Feb. 20.—(/P)—Appalachian State's brilliant wrestling team
moved a step nearer the Southern
intercollegiate championship by defeating Vanderbilt university in an
interesting meet here tonight by the
score of 31 to 5.
The summaries:
118 - pounds — Patterson, Appalachian
State, won on a fall over Graves in 6:01;
12;6-pounds—Lackey, Vanderbilt, won on
a fall over Lindsay in two extra pertods; 135-pounds—Captain Crooks, Appalachian State, won a time advantage
of 7 minutes over Captain Fishel; 143"pounds—Bill Norris, Appalachian State,
won on a fall over Stone in 1:02; 155pounds—Woods, Appalachian State, won •
x|on a fall over Kirkpatrick in 9:05; 165pounds—Ewing, Appalachian State, won
'on a forfeit; 175-pounds—Cline Farthing,
! Appalachian State, won on a fall over
Rienschmidt in 3:33; Unlimited—Hobbs,
! Appalachian State, won a time advan- I
' tage of 8 minutes over Fleming; Filial I
score: Appalachian State 31; Vanderbilt I
: 5; Referee, Matheson.
arm hold I ; 165 pounds—Ewing, Appalachian State, won a time advantage of
3:37 over Thompson; 175 pounds—Cline
Farthing, Appalachian State, won a time
advantage of 9:05 over Rudd; Unlimited
—Hobbs, Appalachian State, won a time
advantage of 7 minutes over McGallian;
Final score: Appalachian State 25; Elon
3.
APPALACHIAN MEETS "1
VANDERBILT ON MAT
~
(Special to Daily News)
Boone, Feb. 19.—Appalachian's
all-conquering
wrestling
team
places its enviable record on the
limb here Saturday night when a
jcrippled team faces the hitherto un- ^defeated wrestlers of Vanderbilt
university.
Substitutes will be
wrestling in three, and possibly
four weights for Appalachian.
Milton Gaskill, 118-pounder, injured a hand while competing in an
intramural boxing tournament, am
will not participate again until th
A. A. U. meet here the first wee!
in March. His place will be fillei
iby James Patterson, last year's var
Isity man. The injured Ben Norris'
126-pound weight will be filled with
ieither Cranford or Lindsy. Bill.
JMorris is ailing with boils, and this ;
may throw his 145-pound division
open to a host of aspirants. It is
still a question as to whether or not
the undefeated Lloyd Hobbs will
be sufficiently recovered from an
attack of boils to compete.
�3NTINEL, WINSTON-SALEM, N. C.
SPORTS
PAGE SEVEN—SECTION A
Appalachian Crushes Guilford
»
Mountaineers Show Power
In Beating Game Quakers
In Homecoming Game, 52-0
A wonderful homecoming program featured th« day with elaborate decorations
(Journal Sports Editor)
on the campus and welcoming- entertainBoone, Oct. 10.—Kidd Brewer and ment for the visitors. It was a great day
his man-crushing- Mountaineers of for this greats school.
Coaches Brewer, Red Watklns and Flude
Appalachian State served very defithe
nite notice that they must be Stewart, of team Mountaineer Staff, started
the second
and this team, taking the
stamped as the team to beat in the opening kick-off, marched to Guilford's
Old State Conference race here to- 24-yard line before a fumble halted the
day, smashing through an inexperi- drive. Gaffney, Luiack and Martin feaenced but gamely fighting Guilford tured thie parade.
Guilford resorted to a sirlct defensive
College eleven for a tooth-rattling
game and gained about an even break until
152-0 victory before five thousand late in the period, when the first team
j Homecoming Day fans.
rushed into the fray. Martin then ran a
punt
i Held to one touchdown in the first down back 15 yards and the first touchdrive was under way.
period, the Mountaineers, with the
Wilson, Martin and Angell teamed to
first team moving into action, raced work the ball to the two-yard line and
wild in the second period for 20 Wilson' cracked center for the score. Ward
points and then came back in the place-kicked the extra point. opened AnSoon after the second period
fourth for 19 more markers to turn gell raced olf left tackle, cut back sharply
and raced 43 yards for a score and again I
the game into a wild rout.
Ward kicked the extra point.
The Mountaineers posted a high j The Moutaineers scored again five minscore mark of 105 against Piedmont utes later when Turbyville and Wils-on
College in opening the season and smeared Acree's punt and Wilson recovered
Wilson
their convincing triumph over Harry on the Guiljprd 1-yard line. and Ward ripped
the forwards for the score
bootHodges' Quakers left little doubt that ed the extra point.
Wilson tore around right end for 19
they are a great squad this fall.
touchdown
the half
Coach Brewer, the Winston-Salem yards and aWard missed just beforefor point.
ended but
this try
man, who is doing his second year of Martin ran a kick back 24 yards and the
head coaching here, trotted out his Mountaineers worked the ball to the fourthe gun for rest-time
second team to open the game and yard line as opened up with their sounded.
Guilford
passing
'when the firing died and the sun had midway of the third period and moved
gone down behind the mountains down into Appalachian State territory as
'west of this beautiful little city, high the first team came back into action.
Wilson
free over tackle and
I in the Blue Ridge, the fourth team down the broke for 24 yards to score shot
field
just
was doing chores.
before the period ended.
Martin 'flipped a pass to Earl Smith lor
The Mountaineers ran with the
7^o"'^l'~rrr~eh;ftT>r!'nn^. hlr'.eked— wi-th- a J^-^ards^a*rtf-*rffi5ri, on the next play, found
a hole at right tackle and went 40 yards
deadly fury and presented a defense to score soon after the final period
f
that held Guilford well in hand opened.
On the next kick-off Wilson/took Brinkthroughout the four periods.
ley's boot on his own 21-yari|r%tripe, moved
1
The battle was not as one-sided as straight down the field, fotind a hole in
(the score might indicate.' The Quak- the pile at the 40-yard / line and cut
ers,
a well-coached team, fought through to travel 79 yarde/lor a score.
Tlie Mountaineers scored their final
*back every inch of the way, and
;many of the Mountaineer touch- touchdown just before the; game ended as
downs came on long and sensational
the goal line,
:runs.
where Richardson fell />n the ball for a
I Guilford presented a swift-working touchdown. Wilson rammed the guards
the extra
'passing attack that featured Brink- forAppalachianpoint. rolled up 12 first-andState
ley, Chambers and Acree and this tens against five for /Guilf ord. Appalachoverhead offense, while not produc- ian tried seven passes and completed one
tive of a score, presented a dazzling lor 14 yards, while/ Guilford tried seven- j
and put across our.
style of play for the big crowd that teen intercepted four/ 1tosses The Mountain-;
eers
while Guilford
I came "back home" for the day.
failed to snag an [ enemy heave. AppaEldridge,, a sophomore center from New lachian State averiged 29 yards on lour
Jersey, played
outstanding-- game for kicks while Guilforid averaged 31 yards on
Guilford in the forward wall,
nine boots. The ; Mountaineers fumbled
enemy fumbles and playing an all- five and recovered , none ol the mistakes.
around fine ' game. Byrd, end; Bpyles, Guilford bo-b'bled thsree times and recovered
guard; and Cannon, tackle, proved strong all of their fumblQs.
men in the defensive for the Quakers.
The line-ups: i
The work of Brinkley, Acree Chani'bers Appalachian State) r >s.
Guilfora
and Captain Tils'on, a 140-pound quarter- Blum
..........
-i.LE.
..........
Ragar
back, were the big stars in the backlield Rothrock . ; . . . , ! ..LT. . . . . . . . . . Cannon
for Hodges' eleven.
Eg-g-Ieston ..... J..IG
............
Bole
It is hard to pick an individual star in H. Farthing
. .
Eldridge
that Appalachian State backfield lor the Poe
• i . . .EG
Boyles
three sets of ball carriers that Coach Brew- Query
^ . . . RT. ....... McDonald
er ran into action all. showed speed, power Fitz
I . . .RE
Byrd
and deception.
Corn . .
Tilson
Leading this was the powerful, plunging Hinson
...LH
Acree
and driving back, Len Wilson, who ripped Saf fney ...... / . . . RH
Brinkley
the Guilford line apart throughout the Hawkins ..... I... .FB
Lentz
game. He scored live touchdowns, includScore by period
ing a 70-yard return of a kick-off in the Appalachian State ...... 7 20 6 19 — 53
fourth period that was probably the most Guilford . . , .1 ......... 0 0 O1 0 — 01
spectacular dash of the day.
Appalachian. State
Corn, Angell, Ward, Flowers, Martin and Wilson ( 5 ) A>-gelI, scoring touchdowns—
Martin, Richardson.
Gaff.ney all did spectacular work in lugging Points after-, touchdowns — Ward, 3 (placethe leahter for the Mountaineers and com- ments) ; W/llson {scrimmage).
pletely dazed the Quakers with their dashes
Substimions:
Baldaround the" ends, knifes at the tackles and win, E/ Binford,Guilford — Cipo, FB; ChamT; Ketehum, C;
spinners and reverses over the guards.
T;
The Mountaineer line all played great bers,. QB: Phillips. HB: Nail, E; Sadler, E;
Heinz, /HB:
McCommons,
football today.
Captain Farthing, at Johnson, G: Capella, FB; Gr.
Overman,.
Appalachian
guard, led this play aiv4 drew great support State.— E. Sink. E: Hobbs, T; J. Smith, G;
rfom Rothrock, Poe. Query J. Smith. Tur- Adams, C: Farthing. G: Turbyville, T; Cul-,
byville, Culler, Adams, Hobbi:. and Sink.
The three Winston-Salem boys in the ler, <'E; Martin, QB: Wilson. FB: Ang-ell,'
E; Hedgus, E;
Appalachian State line-up—Pol Rothrock HB: Ward, HB; Robinson, Rothraull, FB:
QB; Bortz, HB:
and Blum—all did their share' in gaining Htidson, HB: Woodruff, T; F. Smith, G;
the victory,
\' head,Morris.
rolling
Flowers, HB; Hodder, C; R. Wilson, G;
MeCann, T.
Referee, Perry (Elon) : umpire, Parker
(South 'Carolina) ; head linesman, 'Grayj
(North Carolina).
By FRANK SPENCER
�Appalachian Wrestlers
A. S. T. C. LEADS BY
SEVEN POINTS IN
CAPITOL VICTORY
Mountaineers Win Hard Match,
Featuring Two Falls, Two „
Decisions, One Draw
Raleigh, Jan. 22—The Appalachian State wrestlers defeated the
strong- North Carolina State Wolves
in Frank Thompson gymnasium here I
tonight, 17M! to 10 y 2 . The Appa-j
lachian team won two bouts by falls,
two by decisions, lost three decisions and one bout was a draw.
Milton Gaskill, one of the best
wrestlers in Dixie, opened the meet
by pinning Hinshaw in three minutes with a half-Nelson and body
lock.
Co-Captain Bell, wrestling in the
125-pound class, decisioned Ben Norris of Appalachian with a time advantage of 9 minutes, 37 seconds.
Bell is one of the best leg wrestlers
in the state.
Appalachian's captain,
Jimmie
Crooks, decisioned Bridges, another
accomplished leg wrestler, with a
time advantage of 5 minutes, 30 seconds.
Shinier of State won a decision
over William Norris with an advantage of 4 minutes, 33 seconds.
Troxler, State co-captain, won
over Claude Farthing by a decision.
Time advantage, 3 minutes, 54 seconds.
In the 175-pound class, Cline
Farthing, Appalachian, and State's
Dick Thompson wrestled ten minutes and neither had an advantage.
The bout was called a draw when
the two extra periods were wrestled
and neither gained a time advantage.
The heavyweight bout was without doubt the most thrilling of the
evening. With the score at 12%10%, the outcome of the meet depended on the outcome of the bout.
Hobbs took Wooden of State to the
mat and gained a time advantage
of six minutes. But Wooden escaped and came so near pinning Hobbs
that the referee started to pat him
on the back signifying a fall. The
crowd swarmed out of the stands
and for a few minutes it looked like
a riot. But Hobbs regained the advantage and pinned his man in nine
minutes, 23 seconds.
Referee, May (Duke).
Queen Chosen
Spring PI
For Spring Event
E
'In First Election
CContinuei
JANUARY 22, 1937
Grapplers To Engage N. C.
State In Raleigh Tonight
MEET MAYHAVE Aj 1BBBB
BEARING ON RACE
Grim Grapplers Go _
FOR STATE TITLE
Gunning For Spray
Toughest Meet of Season Expected by Mountaineers; Optimism Prevails
The Appalachian State wrestling
team will carry one of the most enviable records of any team in the
south to Raleigh tonight, where the
forces of Appalachian .State and N.
C. State meet on the mat. Defeated
only four times in five years—three
times by Maryville and once by
Davidson—ithe Appalachian S t a t e
team has its strongest outnt in history this season. Every weight is j
flanked two, three, and in places
four deep with good men.
Coach Red Watkins' outfit will be
in top shape against the Big Five
champions of last season, and a
wave of optimism prevails among the
mat-wise of Appalachian. Only five
points have been scored against the i
team this season, these coming on a •
fall in the 165-pound division in the !
meet with the Naval Training school
at Newport News, Va.
Appalachian is especially strong in
the 118, 155, 175-pound, and unlimited divisions. Milton Gaskill, brilliants
118- pounder, is probably the class
of the entire south in his weight,
while Captain Jimmie Crooks, in the
135-pound class, seems to be tops in
the state's collegiate circles. Lloyd/
Hobbs, undefeated in the heavy/
weight division in two years, is especially strong in that position. /
Claude Farthing, in the 155-pouhd
class, and Cline Farthing, in the 1'fepound weight, are very good meV
neither Ben nor Bill Norris, in thV
125 and 145-pound divisions, respectively, has lost this season. Only
Ewing, rookie 165-pounder, has tasted defeat this season.
Grunt and Groanmien
Undefeated Appalachian wrestlers
.will leave early in the morning for
i- Spray, where they will meet 'the
, Spray Y. M. C. A. mat team in a return match. The Appalachian team
I recently defeated the Spray men,
38-0, on the local mat.
It is expected that Spray will pre: sent a stronger line-up to the Moun' taineers in the meet tomorrow night.
j McBride who did not participate in
I the first meet will probably wrestle
for the "Y" team. He is, perhaps,
I the best wrestler in his weight in the
Nstate. Weighing in at around 155
Kpounds, McBride wrestles in any
' clSss from there up. Last year he
| met Hobbs in the unlimited class,
.! and Hobbs had to exert himself to
cision. In the lighter weights
a menace to all comers,
team may make other
effort to stop the 17
ig streak of the Moun-;hian line-up will probne as that which met
the North Carolina
st week. If the Ap1ns tonight it will
winning streak to
',be their 46th vic-
APPALACHIANS SWAMP NAVAL
SCHOOL, IN" MEET AT NEWPORT
Newport News, Va., Jan. 9.—The
Appalachian State wrestlers showed Lj'
a definite superiority over the Naval •:£,
Apprentice school here tonight as
they swamped the shipbuilders 29-5.
Al Ruclin won the lone bout for
Apprentice when he combined a half- ffl
Nelson and body lock toJ^nrTRoger'.
Ewing in eight minutes 6f the match.
�1 STATE CHAMPION
SPORTS COMMENT
By HAL FARTHING
LLOYD HOBBS
"Long John" Hobbs as he was
known among his Edenton school
mates, holds the North Carolina
A. A. U. unlimited wrestling
title and will represent his school,
Appalachian State Teachers College, in the national A. A. U.
tournament to be held in Baltipore.
(OBBS ELIGIBLE
FOR NATIONAL
A. A. U. CONTEST
Lloyd Hobbs, Appalachian Wrestler,
Wins North Carolina Unlimited
Wrestling Title
Friends in this section will be
happ$ to 3o;ow of the enviable re-.
cord made by Lloyd Ho'bbs as a
wrestler. Mr. Hoibbs, a student at
Appalachian State Teachers College
at Boone, N. C., is a member of the
school's crack wrestling squad and
though at present a junior, he has
been out for wrestling for three years
and in that time has taken part in
25 meets, winning 22 out of that
numiber. He has won 20 straight
matches and registered 77 points to
his szhool's credit as against 18
points lost.
Over the week-end March 5-6 Mr.
HoMbs won the North Carolina A. A.
U. unlimited title which was contested by all the wrestlers in the state.
This victory entitles him to a cliance
to compete in the national A. A. U.
tournament to be held in Baltimore.
Mr. Ho&bs is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Hillary T. Hobbs, of Chowan
County and was an outstanding athlete while attending Edenton High
School. His many friends back
home are proud of the record he haa
made and wish for him greater success in his chosen athletic endeavor.
Richard Rogerson, another Edenton boy at Appalachian, also participated in the A. A. U. contest held in
Boone, going to the finals, but losing by a time decision to Ellis of
Davidson.
Coach Watkins and his varsity minute in the 135-pound matches.
grapplers won their seventeenth con- Besides the bout doesn't usually last!
secutive meet when they defeated long enough to become boresome. I
the Spray Y. M. C. A. men on the Crooks has a habit of pinning his op- j
local mat Saturday. This is a record pcnents in short order.
that few teams in the nation can
claim. As an added proof of the Bill Norris is not the flashy type!
strength of Watkins-coached wrest- of wrestler but he usually adds his I
lers comes the fact that in the six quota to the Appalachian score. He I
years that Appalachian has had a has shown steady improvement sincej
wrestling team, only four meets have he first went out for the sport last!
been lost by the Mountaineer mat- year, and is fast becoming one of the|
men. The wrestlers lost to Barium mainstays on the team.
Springs in their first season; Mary—0—
ville, Tennessee champions, handed
Claude Farthing, who was captain!
the team a setback in 1932 and 1933; last year, has been one of the most!
and Davidson secured a victory in dependable wrestlers on the team for!
1934. Since that time, both Mary- three years. The competition in the!
ville and Davidson have been defeat- 155-pound class is, perhaps, the best!
ed by the Boone iron men.
oi all the weights, and Claude has!
This season's team, if they can get won a good majority of his bouts.!
by the meet with State tonight, his complete record shows thirty!
promises to repeat last year's per- victories and eight defeats. That's|
formance in which they went through good pitching in any league.
a ten-meet schedule without a loss.
State is without doubt the toughest
Ewing is a newcomer to the Appa-1
team on the '37 schedule. Winning
the North Carolina championship lachian team. Filling the place ofl
last year, the Aggies seem to have Frank Moore is no cinch but Roger I
a good chance to repeat if they win seems to be doing a good job. His!
recent "loss" at Newport News wasj
tonight.
a referee's mistake.
—0—
_ o—
Appalachian fans are expecting
Cline Farthing is wrestling his|
Gaskill to open the meet with a fall
over his opponent, Bell, co-captain of fourth year for Appalachian. In his I
the State team who won a time ad- freshman and sophomore years, he I
vantage over the 118-pounder from was in the heavyweight class, but!
V. M. I in a recent meet. Gaskill, with the coming of Hobbs he shifted!
who has won three matches this year to the 175 to fill the place of a grad-f
has been on the mat only six minutes, which gives him an average of
Hobbs is one of the best heavy-1
t 2% points for each minute of wrestling. Gaskill comes from Bariun/ weights in the South. He was un-S
Springs, where he was a mainstay defeated in ten bouts last year and!
I on their championship team. In ad\, has holds three North Carolina
he won the this season. Hobbs is!
^a junior and will be a menace to Ap- i
High School Association J u n i o r pHJachian opponents again next year, j
—0—
Olympics, and A. A. U. titles in the
The basketball teams seem to
126-pound class. Dopesters predict
clicking at last, and prospects for
]a perfect season for Gaskill.
good sason on the hardwood are imBen Norris, Appalachian 126-pound proving daily. The men's team made
man has never been defeated and has a clean sweep in the three games
! never won by a fall. Last year Ben over the week-end, defeating some of
made a letter in spite of the fact til strongest teams in the conferthat it was his first season on the ence. The women's team clearly outmat. Norris is a steady conservative classed the Boiling Springs colwrestler, and will be a great asset to legians.
! the team next year.
We pick ColumbusX boxers over
—0—
Captain Jimmie Crooks is one of Aopalachian; Appalachian wrestlers
I the most colorful wrestlers in the over N. C. States Appalachian over
i college sport. There's never a dull the Lenoir-Rhyne quintet.
T
�FEBRUARY 5, 1937
THE APPAL
Double Victory This Week Keeps ^ Fr
Elon Christians And Spray
Beaten By Boone Grapplers
Seven of Eight Matches Are Won
by Matmen in Meet With
Elon and Spray
Elon College, Jan. 27.—Appalachian State proved to be too much for
the Elon College wrestlers he-re tonight, taking seven of eight matches
to beat the Christians, 31-5. The
lone Elon win came when Carl Foushee used a half-Nelson, body-lock
to pin Flowers in four and one-half
minutes of their bout.
The summary:
118—Patterson (A) won over Wilburn by a double fall. Time 2 minutes, 30 seconds (first period); 3
minutes, 53 seconds (second period).
126—Gaskill (A) pinned Biglow
with a half-Nelson, bar-arm in 3
minutes, 35 seconds.
135—Captain Crooks (A) won a
decision over Captain Martin (E).
Time, 2 minutes, 16 seconds.
145—Carl Foushee (E) pinned
Flowers in 4 minutes, 30 seconds.
155—Claude Farthing (A) pinned
; Clyde Foushee in 9 minutes, 20 seci ends.
165—Ewing (A.) won a decision
over Thompson. Advantage, 3 minutes, 20 seconds.
175—Cline Farthing (A) pinned
TSTcGilliard. Time, 7 minutes.
Heavyweight—Hobbs (A) pinned
Day in 2 minutes, 20 seconds.
Exhibition—E. White (A) pinned
Morris of Elon.
Exhibition—Wood (A) p i n n e d
Rudd of Elon.
Referee, Lea.
Spray, N. C., Jan. 30.—The Appalachian wrestling team lost only one
match here tonight as they defeated
Spray Y. M. C. A. for the second
time this season, 25-5. Ben Norris,
Appalachian State 126-pounder, was
forced to forfeit to Whitt when he
was injured in the opening minutes
of their match, giving the Spray
team their lone score.
Gaskill and William Norris won
by falls and the rest of the Appalachian team won decisions over
their men. In the six meets that he
has wrestled for Appalachian this
-year, Gaskill has won by falls in
.exery one.
The summary:
118—Gaskill (A) pinned Hill in 1
minute, 52 seconds.
126—Whitt (S) won from Ben
Norris on a forfeit when Norris was
injured.
135—Captain Crooks (A) won a
decision over Leffew. Time advantage, 8 minutes, 37 seconds.
145—William Norris (A) pinned
Weaver in 3 minutes., 8 seconds.
145—Claude Farthing (A) won a
decision over Pattendright. Advantage, 7 minutes, 49 seconds.
165—Ewing (A) decisioned Vestal.
Advantage, 2 minutes, 38 seconds.
175—Cline Farthing (A) decisioned Underwood. Advantage, 4 minutes, 36 seconds.
Heavyweight—Hobbs (A) decisioned Shields. Advantage, 4 minutes,
, 35 seconds.
Referee, Robinson.
Man in Meet \Vuii *-sity of Tennessee
The Appalachian wrestlers, fresh
from their wars with Spray and j
Elon, will leave early tomorrow for \, Tenn.,
an effort to make it seven straight
victories this year. The Mountaineer
| grapplers will also be shooting for
'their eighteent-h straight victory in
. two seasons.
Nothing is known as to the
i /strength of the Vol wrestlers this
year, but it is reasonably safe, judgI ing from past performances, to say
I that Appalachian will walk off with
the meet.
1
Due to the injury of Ben Norris,
j who is out for the season with a
dislocated elbof, there will be a
change in the Appalachian line-up
j Dan Cranford will take the place of
I Norris, according to recent try-outs
j held to fill the vacancy. The probable Appalachian line-up includes
Gaskill, Cranford, Captain Crooks,
Bill Norris, Claude Farthing Roger
Ewing, Cline Farthing and Lloyd
Hobbs.
DAVIDSON NUMERALS
GIVEN 17 STUDENTS
(Special to Dalljr News)
Davidson* March 19.—Seventeen
monograms and 17 numerals have
been awarded Davidson athletes in
the two winter sports, basketball!
and wrestling. Monograms went to,
nine wrestlers and eight basketeers.1
Four seniors, one junior, and three'
sophomores received basketball letters. They were: Capt. Bill Quick,
of
Charlotte;
Alternate-captain
Maurice Peabody, of Charlotte; John
Armstrong, of Belmont; Bill Hancock, of Bluefield, W. Va.; Bill
Kiesewetter, of Chestnut Hill, Pa.;
J. D. Hicks, of Lawndale; Ned
Iverson, of Miami, Fla., and John
Tice, of Blackey, Ky. Tommy
Thompson, manager of Gastonia,
also received a letter.
Those receiving wrestling monograms were: Capt. Charlie Parker,
Mount Mourne; Bob Blue, of Barium Springs; Charlie Sears, of Barium Springs; Leonard Fort, of Barium Springs; Ed Ellis, of Wooster,
Lock Vass, of Chattanooga, Tenn.,
and Captain-elect Howard McFadyen, of Huschowfu, Ku., China.
Jack Branch, of Washington, D.
C., received a manager's letter while
Ben Clark, of Norris, Tenn., was i
, awarded a service letter.
;
OKLAHOMA GRATPLERS
ANNEX COLLEGE TITLE
Terre Haute, Ind.,, March 21.—
(AP)—Rugged Oklahoma grapplers
toted a lion's share of national col-:
legiate wrestling prizes today.
Oklahoma A. and M. Huskies cap- :
tured 31 points to dethrone another
Sooner state school, Oklahoma university, as national team champion. Oklahoma university's 13
points were .good for the runnerup spot.
The A. and M. matmen pinned
: four of the eight individual titles
to cinch a team victory here last
night. Joe McDaniels dominated
the 118-pound competition; Stanley Henson, 145 pounds; Harvey
Base, 165 pounds, and Lloyd Ricks,
heavyweight.
The Oklahoma wrestlers were by
far the class of the field, representing 24 scattered schools.
�ALL-STAR APPALACHIAN FIRST AND SECOHD TEAMS (?).
If you are Interested in helping select all-star first
and second football beams for Appalachian State Teachers College5
please use one of these sheets and place your selections as
indicated belov;.
A list of-all-star players is given belov; for
your convenience in checking. This list is not complete, and in
case you have other Appalachian players in mind than those'listed,
please feel free to include their names in your selections.
Do not select players for RIGHT and LEFT positions but just
select two ENDS, tv;o TACKLES, tv/o GUARDS, one CENTER, two HALFBACKS, one FULLBACK, and one QUARTERBACK for each team.
r
ENDS: Canipe, Pyatte, Goins, Kannmachcr, Ray Walker, HcConnell,
Hooper, Rudisill, Lackey, Earl Smith, Fairley.
TACKLES" Red Smith, Mahoney, McDonald, Vance, Livingston, V/estenberg,
Oohler, Turbyfill, Hobbs, McCann, Eggleston.
GUARDS: McKinney, Fortner, Loy, Uortman, Cliivous Hoyle, Dougherty,
Cline Farthing, Ervin Smith.
CENTERS: Iloore, Johnson, Pulkorson, Adams, Hal Farthing.
BASKS: Conrad Hinson, E'illiams, Calhoun, Red Falker, Baucom, O'Hare,
Triplett, Hallybuirton, O'Neal, Weaver, Trippany, Fitzgerald,
Harris, \7ilson, Angel, Ward, Stines, Martin, Earl Henson.
Second Team.
First Team.
END
END
END
TACKLE
. . .
TACKLE...
TACKLE
TACKLE...
GUARD
GUARD
GUARD
GUARD....
CENTER...,
CENTER...
HALFBACK
FULLBACK
HALFBACK.
HALFBACK.
FULLBACK.
QUARTERBACK
QUARTERBA
HALFBACK
.«..»
'Signed
Address.
» » * • * * *
�Utah W. P. A, Recreation Projects Preuentt ^~> ~~"
NATIONAL WRESTLING CIIAi'PIOiTSKIPS
OPEN TO MY
AMATEUR ATIiLETE III THE WORLD
CITY CALL PARK, 25th STREET AIID GRANT AVE., OGD3N, UTAH
JULY 19, 20, 21 and 22, 1937
CONTESTS WILL BEGIN PROIPTLY AT 8:15 P.M.
CEAK?IONSI!IP CLASSES TO BE C01ITESTED
112 pounds or under
118 -pounds or under
12G 'oounds or under
135 pounds or under
145 pounds or under
155 pounds or -under
165 pounds or under
175 pounds or under
Unlimited, heavyweight
GENERAL INFORIIATIOH
ELIGIBILITY: Contestants must be amateur athletes,
RULES: Intercollegiate wrestling rules of 1936-1937 will govern this tournament,
The right is reserved to modify the rules or reject any entry at any time*
ENTRIES will close on Friday, July 16, 1937. Send in entry blanks at earliest
moment. Ho fees charged. No seats reserved. Tournament is free to the
public.
PUBLICITY material should accompany entry; send photos and write-ups.
EIIPEHSE3: Ho expenses •vv3.ll be paid contestants.
LiAHAGELIEUT OF TOURifA:IEFT: Tournament will be directed by James Cleary, 201 - 24th
Street, #303, Tel. 3800 Ex. $4, c/o Verne B, Thorpe,
Ogden> Utah.
WEIGHING II-l AIID PAIRINGS: By lot at least three hours preceding start of bouts,
TEA!; AHD INDIVIDUAL CHATtPIOKSHIPS WILL BE DETERMINED AT THIS TOURNAMENT.
AWARDS: Gold-plated, sterling silver and bronze medals will be awarded to first,
second and third place winners in each weight class.
A suitable trophy will bo awarded to the team champion} also, to the
second and third place winning teams.
LEGE1ID: "PIONEER DAYS CELEBRATION - CHAMPIONSHIPS - JULY, 1937," will be engraved
on medals and trophies.
Detach here and mail to Jaraes Cleary, c/o Verne B, Thorpe, 201-24th St. #308, Ogden,
Utah
EliTRY BLANK
Please enter me in the
Weight Class of the
1937 Utah W. P. A. Recreation Projects National Amateur Wres11ing Championships*
My age is
. Name of
Father.
Mother
Guardian.
Contestant's Name
City
State
Street and Number
Representing
(CLUB)
(SCHOOL)
(UNATTACHED)
Weight
Ibs.
In consideration of your accepting my entry and permitting me to attend or
participate therein, I hereby, for myself, my heirs, executors, and administrators,
waive and release any and all rights and claims for damages I may now or in the future, have against Ogden City, a municipal corporation, Pioneer Days Incorporated,
and James Cleary, their or either of their representatives, agents, members, or assigns for all losses and injuries suffered by mo, directly or indirectly, in training
for or in going to or coming" from, or in "competing"in~of"^;Etonding, the'said Championship Wrestling Tournament, I also release any claim I might have to motion
picture or any other kind of picture rights I may or might have that comes through
this tournament during any of the bouts hereinabove mentioned,
I understand that the said wrestling bouts rail bo govcrrcd by the Nationl
Intercollegiate Wrestling Rules, except such changes as James Cleary, the tournament
director, may deem necessary at any time; also, that he has the right to reject
any entry at any time* I agree to study Rule VII carefully, and to endeavor to
comply with same.
Wrestler Sign Here
Father and Mother Sign Here
Guardian Sign Hero
.
�" Watkins' Mountaineers
Lay Claim to Dixie Mat Title
Twin City Native Posts
Brilliant Record as Appalachian Coach
MAT TOURNEY
OPENS FRIDAY
BOONE, March 3 — (/F) — Fiftythree wrestlers, representing five
colleges, one high school, and seventeen cities and towns, have already filed their intentions of being on hand here Friday to participate in the Carolines A. A. U. wrestling tournament.
Appalachian lead? the colleges
with eight entrants, while N. C.
State, with seven men, Davidson
with five, Carolina with four, and
Elon with five men complete the
college list.
Barium Springs is entering four
men, and several applications from
different Y. M. C. A. units are expected to swell the entry list to a
new high for the tournament.
Officials for the tournament will
be Jackens of Barium Springs, Bailey of High Point, and Matheson of
Boone.
By GEORGE W. BLUM JE.
j
•
j
i
|
Robert "Red" Watkins, native of
Winston-Salem and former Reynolds High athlete, wlio has posted
one of the nation's finest wrestling
coaching: marks at Appalachian
State for this season. His matmen have swept through an undefeated season and hold a claim to
the Southern intercollegiate mat
title. His record includes victories
over Tennessee, Vanderbilt and N.
C. State.
Appalachian State Wrestling
Meet Attracts Record Entries
By EUGENE WIKE
Boone, March 1.—Coach "Red"
Watkins' undefeated Appalachian
State wrestling team is all set to
act as host to the matmen of the
two Carolinas in the A. A. U. tournament which will convene here
Friday and Saturday, March 5
and 6.
Appalachian is entering her entire team in the meet, hopeful that
the outcome will be favorable for
the local entrants. However, the
strong competition from Davidson,
N. C. State, Elon, Barium Springs,
Carolina, and possibly Duke makes
:this uncertain.
Gaskill, 118-pounder of Appalachian, is favored to win his
weight, having won the Carolina
.championship in the A. A. U. tour-
ney of last year. Crooks, 135, Appalachian entrant, has made an
enviable record for himself this
season, going through with a 38point individual score, but the two
seconds' time advantage decision
in two extra periods over Bill Martin, of Elon, in the Saturday's meet
gives evidence that Appalachian's
position in this weight is far from
stable. As for the other Mountaineer grapplers, none are sure of
favorable results.
Tile large number of entries received plus
the ones expected before tlie event opens
indicates that the meet mill be a, success.
In the various classes Appalachian will be
represented by Gaekill, 118; Scott. 126;
Crooks. 135; Norris, 145; Claude Farthing-,
155: Ewing-, 165; Cline Farthing-. 175;
Hobbs, heavyweig-ht. Appalachian students
representing- their home towns in the meet
are: Joe White, Troutman, 1.35; Ernest
White. Trout/nan, 145: Carson Wood, Troutman, 155; R : .-hard Rog-enjon, Edenton. 165;
James Patterson, Shelby 118; Roy Wilson,
Oswalt. 185; Charles Walters, Mooresville.
155; newer Barnhill, Winston-Salem, 145:
Cecil Poe, Winslon-Salcm, 153: Don Gatfney, Blacksbury. S. C.. 145: Bill Linttecy,
York, S. C., 135; Marion Query, Concord.
175; Odell Evans, Lexington. 17'5: Dan
Cranlord, Albemarle, 135; Ed Flowers,
Statesville, 155.
Davidson College is cntering-t Blue, 118;
Parker, 135; Port, 155; Vass, 175; and JtcFadden, heavyweight.
State is to be represented by: Eel!, 118;
ChesJock, 126: Shinier, 145: McLaurin, 155;
Troxlcr, 165; Thompson, 175; Coon, heavyweight.'
Elan entrants consist of: * Wilburn, 118;
Martin, 135: Carl Foushee, 145; Clyde Foushee, 155, and Thompson, 165.
Barium Springs; Beehers. 12G; Bosworth.
13p; Donaldson, 145; and Bolton. 155.
?rhe University of North Carolina ie entoping: Harris, 118 pound**; Gohlsoru la«t
year's winner of the 145-pound diVision;
Williams, 105 pounds-, and Crystal, unliinitj-dJ
* Additional entries are expected from
D/uke University, Spray "Y," and fievefai
ofher colleges are expected to make a- lastmute swell of'entrants, establishingtbij
ar's tournament as the largeet ever' h/
•"the Caroliuas A- A, U.
(Special to The Journal)
Boone, March 1.—Amateur wrestling, a most uninteresting sport t
the laymen, is the criterion of a,ll athletic endeavor to those informed in
the technique of the mat game. Thisj
.s the theory that Coach Robert W. j
"Bed" Watkins has drilled into the j
rugged young mountaineer "wrestlers |
who matriculate at Appalachian State
Teachers' College.
Coach Watkins came to Boone with,
a more than impressive athletic rec-f
ord behind him. A native of Win-j
ston-Salem, "Red," as he is known:
to the sport fans of the Twin City, j
played football, basket ball, and baseball at the Richard J. Reynolds High!
School. Watkins, also familiar with ;
wrestling and boxing, was plucked
off the Raynolds High campus by the!
late James DeHart as a prospect for
the Blue Devils. A 160-pound frame [
finds it .tough for football, and the
next year found Coach Watkins a t j
Maryville College. Here he spent i
four years as varsity center of the i
football team and tutor of the Mary-1
vifie wrestlers.
In a period of six years as the Ap-1
palachian wrestling coach, Watkins |
has been beaten only three times.
Rival coaches of the Appalachian mat
team always dre'ad sending their
teams against the powerful moun- j
taineers.
The Mountaineers undefeated and,
untied this year turned back fast and,
powerful opponents as • follows:
lAppalachian 28, Winston-Salem "Y"
JO; Appalachian 29, Newport News Api prentice School 5; Appalachian 38,
]Spray "Y" 0; Appalachian 17%, N. C.
State 10%; Appalachian 81, Elon Col- 1
iege 5; Appalachian 25, Spray "Y" 5 ; '
Appalachian 25, University of Tensessee 5; Appalachian 22, University
of Tennessee 8; Appalachian 31, Vanderbilt 5; Appalachian 25, Elon Col-'
Iege 3. So is the record for the 193637 Mountaineers. Teams like the
University of Tennessee, Vanderbilt
and other larger colleges are pie for.
Coach Watkins. It is no unusual occurrence for the Appalachian wrest-]
jlers to trounce some of the larger uni-,
Iversities- by shut-out scores.
I Four gaps will be left in the Appajlachian lineup for next year via grad'uation. James Crooks, undefeated j
.captain of this year's team; Cline j
Farthing, Loyd Hobbs and Claude
Farthing are the four than have performed for the last time on the i
Appalachian mat team. Gaskil. scrap-:
py 118-pounder, along- with Captain'
Crooks, Cline Farthing and Loyd:
Hobbs were all undefeated this seaCoach Watkins will send a host of
his matmen into ihe lineup for the
annual A. A. U. tournament held at,
Boone March 5 and 6. Although the j
top-notch amateur wrestlers of the I
two Carolinas will attend this meet, j
it is safe to say that the popular Appalachian coach will place winners in j
the finals.
The Appalachian team scored a to-'
tal of 271% points this season to op-i
oonents' 41%. This is record enough 1
to prove the Mountaineers are far'
[superior to college mat teams of the'
'South.
�Carolinas Matters
Open Action Today
•
.—..*... ^'
1 1 -n..«
Over 50 Wrestlers to Take Part in A. A. U. Tournament at Appalachian State College Gym in Boone; Finals
Set For Saturday Night.
'
"DOONE, March 4.—Over half a hundred of the cream of
the amateur wrestlers of the two Carolinas will swing
into action here tomorrow as the A. A. U. tournament gets)
under way. There will be plenty of stiff competition in every
weight, and the entire meet appears to rate a toss-up.
Appalachian's full team ij the larg-&
est single college contingent entered in the meet, while Davidson,
N. C. State, the University of North
Carolina, and Elon each are furnishing their quota of entries.
FINALS FKIDAY.
N. C. State and Davidson are
rated as the two teams likely to
furnish the greatest opposition for
[the Appalacihan outfit, although
['Elon and Carolina both have excel- |
lent men in several weights.
The first round of the meet will
be staged Friday, while the final
matches are scheduled for Saturday
night. The winners of this meet,
will go to Lexington, Va., at a later
date to compete with winners of
other sections for the Eastern title. I
The Southern title claim which:
has been filed by the Appalachian
State team will largely depend upon
the showing of this team in the
tournament, and if this team wins
two, three, or even more of the
individual weights, then her claim
will be justified.
Some of the outstanding participants entered in the tourney include
State's Bell, Troxler, and Coon; Carolina's Gholson; Davidson's Fort,
McFadden, and Parker; Elon's Martin; and Appalacihan's Gaskill,
Crooks, Claude :~Jid Cline Farthing, j
and Hobbs.
FIVE DAVIDSON MEN TO
ENTER MAT TOURNAMENT.
DAVIDSON, March 4. — Coach
Parks Harrison will take five of
the Davidson college wrestlers to
the Carolinas A. A. U. wrestling
tournament which is to be held in
Boone tomorrow and Saturday.
Those making the trip will be Howard McFadyen, Southern Conference high scorer in the unlimited
class, Ed Ellis in the 165-pound
class, Lawrence Fort" in the 145pound class, Captain Charlie Parker in the 135-pound class, and Robert Blue in the 118-pound.
The Davidson wrestlers, who finished third in the Southern Con5]
ference and tied with North Carolina and N. C. State for the Big
Five title this season, are in their
best condition of the season. Captain Parker and Fort, who wrestled 10 pounds out of their class all
season will be shifted back to their
right weight for the tourney.
'CATS, TEACHERS
L E A D MATTERS
BOONE, N. C., March 5—(£>)—The
A. A. U. wrestling tournament
swung under way heret oday with
Appalachian State and Davidson
stealing the major share of the honors. Appalachian swept eight men
; into the finals, with Davidson claiming three places. Elon placed one,
and four were unattached. The finals are to be staged here tomorrow
night.
j The results:
j Afternoon matches—135 pounds—Carl
; Boushee (Elon) over Donaldson (Barium
Springs). Time decision of 4:50; 145
pounds—Barnhill (Banlum Springs) over
Poe (Winston-Salem) on a fall in 7:36;
145 pounds—Flowers (Barium Springs)
over Gaffney Blacksburg, S. C.) time decision of 8:03; 135 pounds—J. White
(Troutman) over Charles Boushee (Elon)
time decision of two minutes; 135 pounds
—Martin (Elon) over Wilson Oswalt) fa
fall in 2:26; 145 pounds—Bill Norris (Appalachian over Flowers (Barium Springs)
time decision of 7:17; 118 pounds—Patterson (Shelby) over Blue (Davidson) time
decision of 3:29; 145 pounds—Fort Day.Uson) over Barnhill (Barium Springs)
time decision of l-'l; 135 pounds—Parker (Davidson) over Cranford (Albemarle) time decision of 8:45; 126 poundsBen Norris (Hickory) over Boushers (Barium Springs) fall in 8:31; 165 pounds—
Ewing (Appalachian) over Thompson
Elon) time advantage of 2:44; 175 pounds
—Evans (Lexington) . over Query (Concord) in fall in 1:54.
NIGHT MATCHES.
165 pounds—Ellis (Davidson) over Rogerson (Edenton) fall in 8:30; 145 pounds
—E. White (Troutman) over Fort (Davidson) time advantage of 1:40; 145 pounds
Crooks Appalachian) over J. White
(Troutman) in time decision of 3:21; 145
founds— Boushee (Elon) over Bill Norrils
(Hickory) time decision of 1:40; 185
.pounds—Parker (Davidson) over Martin
SS(Elon) in time decision of 3:2,0; 155 pounds
•—Claude Farthing Appalachian) over
alters (Mooresville) in fall On 5:50.
BOONE MATTERS
SWEEP HONORS
BOONE, March 7. — (fP) — The !
j strong Appalachian State wrestling ;
team left no doubt as to its greatjness here last night as they won
I seven of the eight weights in the
i Carolinas A.A.U. wrestling meet.
] Appalachian took every individual
I title except the 145-pound division,
which went to Boushee, of Elon,
over E. White, of Troutman...
Beside annexing practically all
of the first place titles, Appalachian also captured five of the consolation palaces. This great show
jof strength gave the Appalachian
j State team a real dim to the South| ern mat title.
The results: 118-pound: Gaskill (Appalachian State I over Patterson (Shelby), fall in 3:43; 165-pound: Claude Farthing (Appalachian State) over Wood
(Troutman), time advantage; 126-pound:
Bill Norris (Appalachian) over Scott
(Boone), fall in 5:46; 135-pound: Crooks
(Appalachian State) over Parker (Davidson), time advantage of 1:47; 145-pound:
Foushee (Elon) over E. White (Troutman),
time advantage of 4:38; 155pound: Claude Farthing (Appalachian
State) over Wood (Troutman), time advantage of 2:03; 165-pound: Ewing (Appalachian State) over Ellis (Davidson),
fall in 8:46; 175-pound: Cline Farthing
(Appalachian State) over Evans (Lexington), time advantage of 1:06; heavyweight: Hobbs (Appalachian State) over
McFayden (Davidson), time advantage of
1:29.
Referee: J. E. Jackins (Barium
Springs).
LETTERS GIVEN i
AT APPALACHIAN
BOONE, March 9.—(/P)—Letters;
were awarded to 39 Appalachian
State athletes last night for their
work in the recently closed winter
sports season. Jake Wade, sports
editor of The Charlotte Observer,1
was the chief speaker at a banquet
given to the boys, and the entire
affair was termed an immense success
Wade, in his speech, gave the
fundamentals of a modern daysports writer, and also compared
the personal type of writing of the
past days with the informative and
entertaining type of today. He also
praised Appalachian State for being
so greatly athletic conscious.
Letters were awarded to the following athletes:
Gir"s basketball—Huskins, Banner,
Frye, Beasly, Dixon, Barlow, Torrence,
King, Kisei-, Brannon.
Boy's basketball — Smart, Hudson,
Allred. Wagner, Culler, Kaplan, Angel,
Hinson, McGinnis, and Trivette, manager.
Boxing—Sherrill, Nadeau, Bartz, Clark,
Martin, Fitts, Yermala, and Passage,
manager.
Wrestling—Gaskill, Patterson, Cranford
Ben Norris, Wood, Ewing, Bill Norris;
Cline Farthing, Claude Farthing, and
Hobbs.
�Lloyd Hobbs Going
•Strong- As Wrestler
That Lloyd Hobbs, Edenton High
-'School graduate, is hanging up an
enviable record as a wrestler at Appalachian Teachers College is evident
in a newspaper clipping sent to The
Herald this week. According to the
story the Mountaineers' grapplers
have won 55 out of 64 bouts in eight
tmeots this season, with three of their
men, including Hobbs, still undefeat• ed. The team defeated the University of Tennessee matmen last !Satur-,
day.
Referring to Mr. Hobbs as "Doc,
Huge, Mountain, Tarzan," the article
says he has won 18 consecutive!
matches in Ms career and seven of j
these are included in the year 19361937. 'School officials expect this;
year's wrestling season to be the best
in the history of the sport at the
college.
Mr. Hobbs is the son of Mr. and
Mrs; H. T. Hobbs, of the Paradise!
section.
�ATTRACTIVE CO-ED HOLDS
VARIED CAMPUS OFFICES
\s Ella Thompson, popular
member of the Senior class, has
'held many and varied offices during her four years at Appalachian.
She has served as president of
Phila Retian Society, and New
Dormitory Club, and an officer in
the Physical Education Major
Club. Sagacity, sincerity, and efficiency have marked her as one of
Appalachian's most capable young
ladies, and a person of whom any
campus would justly boast.
�EDENTON'S "WESTMINSTER ABBEY"
Old St. Paul's Episcopal Church, present head of the first parish
established by the Church of England in North Carolina, another
/priceless architectural relic—beneath whose towering magnolias lie
early day immortals, including Governors Walker, Pollock and Eden.
Joseph Hewes was also a prominent vestryman of the church.
fr~~-~~.»
-..~~~-~-~~—. A
I Hewes' Monument !
THE CUPOLA HOUSE
Standing at the fowl of Court
House Grem, the above monument was erected by act of
Ccsagress iit memory ef Joseph
Hewes* signer ef the /Declaration
of Independence and prominent
Edeatoii citizen: during: Colonial
daysi.
Built in 1758 by Francis Corbin, agent of the Lords Proprietors,
the Cupola House now houses the Shepard-Pruden Library and a
museum. This old landmark is visited by many tourists as well as
countless visitors who come to Edenton to view historic shrines or
in search of information.
�I
GRADUALLY LEAVING THE PICTURE
Was a Widower, Too!
N
James Blount was indicted for
marrying his wife's sister, whereupon "the court having taken ye
premises into serious consideration Do from their hearts Detest
and Abhorr ye action as abominable in ye sight of God and prohibited by ye Laws of the Church."
—Chowan Caperior Court 1723
EOENTON-MACKEYS FERRY
Starting as a Chamber of Commerce project in April, 1922, and
at a time when this was the only means of automobile travel in
this vicinity across the Albemarle Sound, considerable business was
done by the Edenton-Mackeys Ferry Company. However, with the
opening of the Chowan River Bridge much of this business has been
iost and with the expectation that the new bridge across the Albemarle Sound will be completed in something over a year, prospects
are that the Edentor.-Mackeys Ferry will soon be a thing of the
past.
A "MENACING" WATERFRONT
Balm Of Gilead!
Whereupon it is considered and
adjudged that the said Doyle be
tyed to the tayle of a cart and be
whipt on the bare back with thirty-nine stripes through Edenton
this day, that next Friday he be
whipt in like manner through
Bath towne."
—Colonial Records, 1719
I
Here is shown three Revolutionary cannon mounted at the foot
of the Court House Green and facing beautiful Edenton Bay. Origin
of the cannon is interestingly told ia the accompanying article written by W. E. MacClenny of Suffolk, Va.
�THE
March 20, 1937
Page Five
S T A T E
ietiiresque Edenton
ITS interesting history and its
modern beauty and progressiveness delighted members of the
legislature who visited the town,
last week.
T
HERE are few towns anywhere
in this country that possess the
quiet dignity, peace, culture and
serenity that is Edenton's—that beautifully located historic town located on
Edenton Bay at the mouth of the
Chowan River.
It is a city of stately and comfortable homes, many of which date back
a hundred years or more: of progressive and modern business establishments, of a variety of manufacturing
enterprises, and of well-paved, welllighted streets, flanked for the most part
by trees whose branches are bowed
down with the weight of many years.
Edenton is a city of refined, cultured
and hospitable people, in whose midst
the stranger is assured of a warm welcome at all times. The town possesses a
settled, well-established citizenship that
is sure of itself: proud of its rich heritage that has made its present progressiveness possible.
An Enjoyable Visit
Members of the North Carolina General Assembly and other guests who
went to Edenton last week will long
remember their visit. Particularly
those who glimpsed the town for the
first time as their train went across
the five-mile-long trestle that spans
Albemarle Sound—the longest wooden
bridge in the world. They were royally
entertained.
But—interested as they were in the
modern Edenton—they were even more
keenly interested in its history and in
the important part it has played in the
development of Worth Carolina.
The town was settled about 1658,
and for some time known as "The
"Hayes," near Edenton, one of the outstanding Colonial
homes of the nation. It was the home of Governor
Samuel Johnston.
Towne on Queen Anne's Creek." Another name which was given it was
"The Port of the Roanoke." And then,
in 1722, the present name was adopted
in honor of Governor Charles Eden,
whose grave is in. St. Paul's churchyard.
Throughout the eighteenth century,
Edenton was a place of considerable
social and political importance. The
legislative assembly of North Carolina
met there occasionally. There, too,
lived the royal governors and various
well-known citizens of the province,
among them being Joseph Hewes, a
signer of the Declaration of Independence; James Iredell, Sr., a Federalist
leader and later a justice of the United
States Supreme Court; and his son,
James, Jr., a prominent lawyer, for
many years a member of the state legislature, a governor of North Carolina and a member of the United States
Senate.
And so, it was particularly fitting
and appropriate that the North Carolina General Assembly should have decided to hold a one-day session at Edenton last week . . . in the same locality
where legislators of almost two hundred years ago assembled and debated
the problems of state and laid the
foundation for North Carolina as we
see it today.
From Virginia, for the most part,
came the early settlers of Edenton,
supplemented by colonists direct from
England. And many of the people
residing in Edenton today are direct
descendants of those vigorous and
sturdy people who built the first home.'
on the waterfront where the city nov
stands.
Home of Samuel Johnston
Just a short distance from Edentoi
lived Samuel Johnston, a prominent
leader of the American Whigs preced-.'
ing and during the Revolutionary War/
a member of the Continental Congress
governor of North Carolina and
Federalist member of the United Stat<
Senate.
Many and varied are the histo:
places of interest which the people
Edenton delight in showing their gue
. . . St. Paul's church, one of the c
est churches of the nation, with
graveyard in which rest many
tinguished sons and daughters of E<
ton . . . the Cupola House, which
built for his beautiful bride by Fn
Corbin, American agent for the
of Granville, one of the original
Proprietors . . . Beverly Hall, fon
a state bank, which was. converte
Dr. Richard Dillon into a lovely 1
with its wealth of rare and beai |
:
antiques and its intriguing gardei J
the simple but stately home of C J "
nor James Iredell . . . these and f
other places of interest are to b
in and near Edenton.
i
After one has come in contactj
(Continued on page seven)'.
�Beware of imitations, son!
Beware of gaudy, tawdry
plating,
But as the counterfeits you
shun
So you beware of imitating.
In all you are, in all you do,
Be four and twenty carat you.
Ape neither great nor seeming
great.
Be not afraid to stand alone.
The strength you merely imitate
Will surely rob you of your
own.
As any good man be as true,
But in the being it, be you!
The Lord has sent you down
to earth.
If some else could serve His
plan
There'd be no reason for your
birth.
He would have sent another
man.
But for some purpose kept
from view
We must believe He wanted
you.
Be up, up to your utmost best!
Do right, as you the right
shall see.
In every big or little test
Make sure full genuine to
be.
In all your conduct, through
and through,
Be no one else on earth but
you.
atlvcrs Hope
O
b
/"? 1 />
A
-f*
i
Little chsrp who holds my
hand, j
You're too ywmg to under-j
stand '
Half the curious things I say,
But some d^y perhaps yoa
may. f
There's a man I hoped to be, .
Reaching goals denied to me; !
Winning fame and fortune,!
too,
\s
Very oft you ; question me:
"Daddy, whs t is it yon see
When you J ok so far away?"
"J>iothing!".: Nothing, 8dttT* I
say.
Now I know IH never rise
To the counsels of the wise;
But to hope I'm clinging still,
For some day another wifl.
Hilt tJwuwrl* <
J-FUl UIVUKU i
seems
I am gazing at my dnytuts
I hoped to do
Once when I was small like
There's another I shall see
Being all I wished to be,
Doing all I longed to do,
And I hope he may be yonu
TTluman nature hasn't changed)
within historical times, and each
' older generation
since the beginning has declared, as this
one
does:
"Young people,
were better in
my time."
Of course it
i isn't true. It
couldn't be, for
I if each .generation had grown
worse, the race
'would be back
|in . the slime,
whereas the ob.vious truth, is
that it. slowly but surely improves.
Youngsters in the old days had
little chance to be fine. They
were poorer than people of the
same class now. Their environment was more primitive. They
bathed once a week,, with a wash
rag in the kitchen, and they smelled
bad.
Their minds were like their
bodies. Having few if any esthetic
interests and none of our modern
forms of entertainment, they found
their chief interest in sex. Their
speech and morality were those of
the barnyard.
Of course the little hyprocrites
outwardly conformed to the prim
moral standards of the times, but
secret vice was common-and their
lives -as a whole were vulgar, sor: did, dirty •. and ignoble.
They forget all of that, for vanity's sake, but the best of them
could remember shameful things if
they'd try hard enough.
Our way of life changes with the
increase of luxuries,, and now the
middle class has so many opportunities . to acquire education and
culture and refinement that few
are denied a fair chance to be decent.
Yet there is still a great difference between the life of the ordinary middle-class youngster and
that of the elegant people in society, novels, and the result is often
tragic.
The ordinary youngster finds
enough ugliness and baseness in
his home life, his secret conduct
and his thoughts to make him
ashamed. And when he reads of
cultured swells who think only
noble thoughts and never do anything earthy and human, he feels
degraded and inferior.
I knew one such lad who killed
himself because he felt that he
I wasn't a gentleman. Because he
couldn't be like the perfect people
in books, he thought something
had been left out of him.
Reading about such perfect people makes many a sensitive youngster timid, embarrassed and a prey
|to shame. His feeling of inferiority
[dooms him to failure and makes his
life miserable.
things I couldn't do. of it—and the point
The tragedy
of this letter—is that no such people exist. All normal people, howlever high, have the same earthy
and human thoughts and appetites;
and one who masters himself and
hates all unclean and ignoble things
may hold his head high among the
finest, for he is one of them.
�THE ANSWER
By Eleanor Graham
YOU wonder why I give you only smiles
And kisses when we meet. You ask to share
My burdens, too. You'd carry them for mile.
And never think them onerous to
£>UT, darling, there is nothing that I hide;
My troubles simply vanish by your side!
A HELPING HAWBT
IVE to me encouragement,
And a bunch of clean-cut smiles,
I'll reconstruct this universe,
Into forty kinds of styles.
I'll make folks think of charity,
When the holidays are past
So they themselves will wear a smile
That for evermore will last.
G
Just hold my hands, to keep from tire,
When they are raised aloft,
An' I will make a mansion grand,
Of every toiler's croft.
I'll bring of hope to sinner's soul,
I'll fortify his need;
From out the Garden of this Life,
I'll garner every weed.
Right much appears in this column
from time to time about eating, so
maybe a few pointers on table etiquette might not toe out of place. Of
course these rules might be all right
, at some affairs but don't try them
at lodge feeds. Anyway here are 20
of 'em that The Progressive Farmer
asks its readers to remember:
1. Be prompt.
2. To avoid confusion pass dishes
by moving in only one direction.
3. Use knife for cutting only: never
raise foo.d to mouth with it.
4. Gut only one bite of meat at a
time from your slice.
5. Take small bites and eat slowly
and quietly.
6. Do nos attempt to talk with food
in mouth.
7. Ask to have food passed rather
than reach in front of someone else.
8. Never use toothpicks at table
or before anyone.
9. Fill cup or glass only threefourths full.
10. Unfold and fold napkin in lap.
11. Remove spoon from cup or
glass when drinking,
12. When eating soup dip away
from you and sip from side of spoon
gently.
13. Keep mouth closed while chewing.
14. Sit erect at table.
15. Never place hand over top of
glass while passing it.
16. Never drink from saucer.
17. Never spread bread or biscuit
with a fork.
18. Take most breads with hands.
19. Never cram your mouth full.
20. The meal hour should ibe one of
the happiest times of the day, so
talk about cheerful tMngS.
Just wish me well and grasp my hand,
And say, "I'm helping too."
Then I can bring thee happy times,
Where loneliness once grew,
E'er keep thy Faith a-shine and bright,
The moment thou dost live,
j And mind the text, Far better than
{_Jileceiying, is to give'."
Things in this funny old world of
ours do not always turn out as we
have planned. If you have any doubt
about it just read the following
written by J. W. Johnson in the
Chicago Journal of Comn;erce:
QUESTIONS:
Oh, where are the playmates of yesterday ?
The fellows we knew in school?
Oh, what has become of the studious
one,
And where, oh where, is the fool ?
Oh, what has become of the orator,
Whose passion was to recite ?
And the bashful kid who could speak
no piece
Unless he succumbed to fright?
Oh, what has become of the model'
boy,
Who was always the teacher's pet?
And where, oh where, is the tough,
young1 nut,
The one we can never forget?
ANSWERS:
The studious one, so we have beer,'
told,
Is driving a hack these days;
While the fool owns stock in a bank >
or two,
And a railroad that always pays. J
The orator that we knew so well
Is a clerk in a dry goods store;
While the ibashful kid we knew has
been
In congress ten years or more.
Tfte model boy is (behind the bar/
For stealing a neighbor's cow.
And you ask what of the tough ycTUng'
-Oh, he's a preacher-, now.
�Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
GIRL'S BASKETBALL
7—Lenoir-Rhyne at Hickory
13—Wing-ate at Wingate
16—Boiling Springs at Boone
29—East Carolina at Greenville
30—Mitchell at Statesville
3—Mitchell at Boone
6—Boiling Springs at Boiling Springs
15—Lenoir-Rhyne at Boone
19—Milligan at Elizabethton
22—Milligan at Boone
23—Wingate at Boone
27—East Carolina at Boone
WRESTLING
Jan. 9—Naval Apprentices at Newport
News, Va.
Jan. 14—Elon at Boone (Tentative)
Jan. 16—N. C. State at Raleigh
Jan. 30—Spray "Y" at Spray
Feb. 8—University of Tennessee at Knoxville, Tenn.
Feb. 13—University of Tennessee at Boone
Feb. 20—Vanderbilt U. at Boone
Feb. 27—High Point at High Point
BOXING
Jan. 8—University of Tennessee at Boone
Jan. 15—Arcanum Club at Boone
Jan. 22—Columbus U. at Washington, D. C.
NOTE: Other meets pending
: . ^ J|§J*X
.
**ms?
V «4^?' *'
�CAROLINA MOTOR CLUB
as a No-Accident School Bus Driver and hereby presents this Certificate of Award as a citation for meritorious service rendered to
the community and State in operating a school bus for the past
school year without an accident.
This the......:,..:.2......day of.....f..^
FOOTBALL
College 'Wrestling
CAROLINA ARENA
APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS
COLLEGE FRESHMEN
vs.
DAVIDSON COLLEGE
EMORY & HENRY FRESHMEN
APPALACHIAN STATE
vs.
MARCH 2, 1935—8 O'CLOCK
Child's Ticket
September 19
Children's Admission - - - 25c
PHONE 18S
SEASON TICKET
1936
MELVILLE CHEVROLET CO.
IMPOKTANT
1. If Ticket is lost Athletic Association is not Responsible.
2.
A. J. KNIGHT
SALESMAN
This Ticket is Non-Transferable.
Name. d) ,
No._
SEASON TICKET
Name^^NVO^.^
Nc/) ^
SEASON FOOTBALL TICKET
FOOTBALL, 1935
1936
IMPORTANT
IMPORTANT
1. If Ticket is lost Athletic Association not Responsible.
1. If Ticket is lost Athletic Association is not Responsible.
2.
This Ticket is Non-Transferable.
2. This Ticket is Non-Transferable.
��j
"ELITE"
V176
Ward V t f g . Co.
Bos ton , M s « s •
�~~*LjsI.
, ,. ,.
J-J.
i
>. '
-4..J—J_i.
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Lloyd L. Hobbs Scrapbook, 1935-1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1935-1937
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
5017_Book_5_A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.) " href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
43 pages
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Albums (Books)
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/93902bc0eafbd7eafd806fb2b427c48a.pdf
465f6049674b363fa01eabec4833ea95
PDF Text
Text
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������������������������������������������������������COMPLIMENTARY PASS
FOOTBALL SEASON 1936
APPALACHIAN MOUNTAINEERS
Issued to..
By
Athletic Director.
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�DECEMBER 4, 1936
PAGE THREE
THE APPALACHIAN
Mountaineer Matmen Prepare for Busy Season
APPALACHIAN MAT APPALACHIAN GRID SQUAD WINS NATIONAL R E C O G N I T I O N
SQUAD PREPARING
FOR WINSTON
Forte's Team Will Be Strengthened by Heavyweight Additions; Meet December 12
The Appalachian matmen are rapidly getting in condition for their
opening meet with Winston-Salem
Y. M. C. A. here on December 12.
This week has been spent in practicing the various holds and running as
Coach Watkins endeavors to develop
the endurance of his iron men.
The Winston-Salem matmen under
the direction of Charlie Forte, who
was state champion in the 175-pound
class in 11)35, are expected to offer
much stronger competition in the
coming meet than they did in last
year's affair which the Mountaineer
grapplers won 38-0, pinning every
one of the "Y" men except their 118j pound man. This year finds the
Winston men with at least two additions that may be expected to
strengthen their aggregation. Forte,
a brother to the coach, will wrestle
in the 175-pound class and will in all
probability cause the Appalachian
representative some trouble. Hodgin,
their heavyweight, who will meet
I Lloyd Hobbs in the climax, is a good
[man but so is the "Doctor."
Pictured here is the powerful Appalachian State football team which
won eight of its nine starts, has the
south's leading scorer in Len Wilson, which pushed Kidd Brewer to
the front as one of the nation's foremost small-college coaches, and
which was second among the nation's,
high scoring teams. From left to
right in the line are Earl Smith, Decatur, 111, right end:,JEWy~TOTT>yfil^
Maiden, right tackl^; Lloyd Hobos,
Edenton, left tackle; Captain Cline
Farthing, Boone, right guard; Hum-
mie Adams, Altoona, Pa., centre; Irvin Smith, Linwood, left guard; Mel
Fairley, Gulfport, Miss., left end. In
the backfield are Rovie Angell, Harmony, halfback; Webb Ward, Rutherfordton, blocking back; Len Wilson, Boone, fullback; and Foy Martin, Leland, Miss, quarterback.
�THE APPALACHIAN
3RUARY 19, 1937
Banner Sports Events in Gymnasium
Basketball And Wrestling
Teams To See Action Here
Two Events Will Be Held in
Men's Gymnasium Saturday,
February 20
QUINTET TO MEET KING
Appalachian Wrestling Team is to
Meet Vanderbilt University for
First Time This Season; Cagers
Play Conference Game
The highlight of the winter sport
season will occur in the men's gymnasium tomorrow night when Coach
Stewart's fast-stepping cagers meet
King College for the second time this
season, and Coach Watkins' brilliant
mat team meets Vanderbilt University in what promises to be one of
the best 'mat events of the year.
In their first tilt with King which
took place in Bristol recently, the
Mountaineer quint pulled the game
out of the fire in the closing minutes by virtue of some long shots
that hit. Since that time the Appalachian team has improved greatly,
but it is also certain that the King
quint will be better organized. They
will be out for revenge on Stewart's
men and the game promises to contain plenty of thrills.
For a starting line-up, Coach Stewart will probably use Smart and
Wagner at forwards, Allred at center, and MIcGinnis and Culler at
guards.
In the wrestling match, which will
immediately follow the basketball
game, the Appalachian grunt and
groaners will meet some of 'the
strongest wrestlers of the South. The
University wrestlers are especially
strong in the 135-pound class and
Captain Jimmie Crooks will find the
going rough. The Appalachian lineup will consist of Gaskill, Cranford
or Lfndsay, Crooks, Norris, Claude
Farthing, Ewing, Cline Farthing, and
Lloyd Hobbs.
FIGHTERS LEAVE
FOR TOURNAMENT
Coach Brewer and nine of his
fighters left Tuesday at noon for
Charlotte, where they will compete in the annual Charlotte Observer Golden Gloves tournament.
This tournament is the high-light
of the boxing season in the two
Carolinas, the winners being given
a free trip to Boston and a chance
at the national A. A. U. championship.
Even though the number of entries in the event may reach 300,
some of the Appalachian boxers
are expected to go a long way in
the tournament. Len Wilson and
Joe Yarmala are conceded a
chance to win in their weights.
Both fighters are undefeated this
season in meets with some of the
best fighters of the South. Fitts,
Nadeau and Corn are also expected to make good showings in the
eliminations.
Matmen Victorious
In Eight Straight
Appalachian Wrestlers Beat Tennessee For Second Time This Season;
Hobbs and Norris Injured
The brilliant Appalachian wrestling team made it eight straight this
season by defeating the University
of Tennessee for the second time this
season here Saturday night, 22-8.
The two losses for the Mountaineers
came when House of Tennessee pinned Bill Lindsay, wrestling his frist
intercollegiate match, and Hayes
won a time decision over Query, also
seeing action for the first time. Both
Hobbs and Norris, who ordinarily
take these positions are out with injuries, Norris for the rest of the season.
MATMEN TRIUMPH
OVER SPRAY TEAM
The summary:
118—Gaskill, Appalachig.. w<jn .,
decision over Anderton. Advantage 5'44".
126-—House of Tennessee, pinned
Lindsay in 4'37".
135—Captain Crooks, Appalachian,
won a forfeit from Pearce.
145—Bill Norris decisioned Bradley. Advantage, 3'12".
155—Claude Farthing won li decision over Haynes. Time advantage, 5'54".
165—Roger Ewing, Appalachian,
won over Silva by a fall in 6'37".
175—Cline Farthing, Appalachian,
decisioned Schoner. Time 2'21".
Heavyweight — Hayes, Tennessee,
won a decision over Query. Advantage, 5'33".
Referee— Maher. Timers —Wood,
Smith, Farthing.
The Appalachian wrestling team
made its seventeenth straight victory
by defeating Spray Y. M. C. A. here
Saturday night, 38-0. The Mountaineer team won five matches by
falls, two by forfeits, and one by a
time decision.
Gaskill started the meet by pinning Cassell in three minutes, thirtyseconds—the longest time that an
opponent has stayed in the ring with
Gaskill this season.
Ben Norris won by a forfeit when
Whitt refused to come out for an extra period.
Captain Crooks pinned Laffew in
four minutes, thirty-four seconds.
Bill Norris pinned the strong whitehaired Joyce in six minutes, three
seconds.
Claude Farthing won over Pattendrigh by a fall in eight minutes,
thirty-five seconds.
Roger Ewing decisioned Vestal.
Time advantage, three minutes, th"ee
seconds.
^Qline Farthing won by a forfeits
Lloyd Hobbs pinned Shields in
three minutes, twenty-seven seconds.
^'-Referee, Matheson.
�<-J//i_/
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___
THE YOUNGT^WOMEN'SCHRISTIAN
APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
BOONE, N. C.
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�THE 1937
R-M-O-IB--O
HENRY A. S H A N N O N
E d i t o r - In - C h i e f
INI-
ANNUAL OF A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
^ ^ ^
BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA . .
T H O M A S G. W O O D
Business Manager
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�THE 1937
HENRY A. SHANNON
E d i t o r - In - C h i e f
T H O M A S G. W O O D
Business Manager
ANNUAL OF A P P A L A C H I A N STATE T E A C H E R S COLLEGE
^ ^ ^
BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA . . .
��a
PPALACHIAN
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�FOOTBALLHNNER _ _
CONVENE WEDNESDAY
;fc^ $^ '$*«f*w.
Wednesday night, December 16,
a banquet will be given honoring
the 1936 Mountaineer football
teams in the Central dining hall
at 7:30. A menu of turkey and
other delicious food will be served.
All the squad and their girl
friends will be invited first, after
which seating arrangements will
be made for two hundred other
i t students purchasing tickets for
" the occasion.
At the dinner football awards
will be announced, and the captain will be elected for next
year's team. Arrangements are
being made for a guest speaker.
After these activities, "the aggregation will adjourn to the girls'
gymnasium where they will dance
to the music of Freddie Moore's
orchestra—in 1946"
�S. P. Bureau, Incorporated,
Box 678, Boone, N. C.
Dear One to Whom I am Indebted:
I laud the works of your new organization and wish for its continued progress. Before taking advantage of your wondrful offer I had
tried Life Buoy, listerine, Ipana and
lux only to find that these were m
vain compared to your personality
aid. You may quote me to your
friends and prospective clients, for I
now realize that there is satisfaction
in your service.
Your friend and debtor,
DISA PATION.
The Hiddenite high school numbers among the faculty, Mozelle Ball,
'34. In her undergraduate days, Miss
Ball was best known for her work in
the various organizations on the
campus as well as being assistant in
Biology.
�HE YOUNG WOMEN'S CHRISTIAN
ASSOCIATION
BOONE, N. C.
APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
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APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
BOONE, N. C.
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BOONE, N. C.
DEC f|
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MADE IN U.S.A.
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�FROM
EDENTON, N. C.
COURT HOUSE GREEN. SHOWING CONFEDERATE MONUMENT, ALSO CANNONS USED IN THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR
CUPOLA HOUSE, BUILT 1757
signer of the Declaration of Independence from Pennsylvania
SITE OF CABARRUS' HOME
and also a judge of the U. S. Supreme Court, died in
14.—U. S. Fish Hatchery at "Pemb-oke", about
this house while here on a visit to Judge Iredell, His
one-half mile from town on the "Virginia Dare Trail".
remains were interred in the "Hayes" graveyard and
Route No. 342, is the site of the home of Stephen
removed to Philadelphia in 1 9 0 6 by the Pennsylvania
Cabarrus, patriot of the Revolutionary period.
Historical Society with appropriate ceremonies.
—Courtesy late Dr. Richard Diltard, Beverly Hall
(Used by permission Chowan County Chamber of Commerce.')
�Souvenir Folder of*
EDENTON
NORTH CAROLINA
�
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson Scrapbook (Senior Year), 1936-1937
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1936-1937
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
5017_Book_4_A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Format
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PDF
Albums (Books)
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
204 pages
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.) " href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/48f4358586ff58b3afd65653c04a8143.pdf
2916ffb500cf010e38d0547432d1fda0
PDF Text
Text
�����������/» -k BM- ^35
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��TERM, 1935
MEAL TICKET
522:—A Mountain Lake by Moonlight.
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson Scrapbook (Junior Year), 1935-1936
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1935-1936
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
5017_Book_3_A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Albums (Books)
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
225 pages
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/c2f755760d75a60b9e25f132709da74c.pdf
fb3de7be73324988f7ba8681eb68c7d5
PDF Text
Text
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PAGE THREE
Over Milligan College
IFROSH LOSE TO . !!TENNISNOW BEING STAGED
TOURNAMENT
CHILDRENS HOME .
!
·
Fighting Methodist Eleven Win
From Coach Watkin's Team;
Darnell Makes Tally.
Coach Watkin's yearlings lost a
hard-fought game to the Children's
Home at Winston~Salem last Thursday at Hanes Park by the score of
7-0.
The lone tally came at the end of
a long down-field march staged by
the fighting Methodists in the opening minutes of the game. The score
was made 'by W. Darnell on an off-
Students Information Booklet
1\.ppalarqtatt
@~tate
Wearqern (!J.nllegr
This book is the property of
Play in the Intramural Tennis
Tournament, which was begun several weeks ago has
progressed
through several brackets up to the
present time.
Twenty-seven boys
have ·entered the Singles and ten doubles teams have entered the Doubles
Tournaments. Much interest has been
manifested in the playoffs and the
playing in many of the matches has
been hard and spirited. This year a
Sterling Silver Tennis Ball will be
awarded as a trophy to the winner
of the Singles and one will be given
to each memlber of the winning team
in tne Doubles Tournament.
CAGLE'S COLLEGE
LUNCHEONETTE
Sandwiches, Cakes, Soft
Drinks, etc.
Lindsey Cagle,
Mgr.
PASTIME
"PLACE OF GOOD SHOWS"
THE REGISTRAR
APPALACHIAN STATE TEACHERS COLLEGE
Boone, North Carolina
Monday-Tuesday, Oct. 28 - 29
"Here Comes the Band"
With Ted Lewis and Virginia
Bruce
Wednesday, Oct. 31
"The Nut Farm"
With Wallace Ford
Thursday, Oct. 31
"The Little Big Shot"
With Sybil Jason and Robert
Armstrong
Friday, Nov. 1st
"Men Without Names"
\Vith
Fred MacMurray
Madge Evans
Saturday, Nov. 2nd
"Border Vengeance"
With William Russell
and
�PAGE FOUR
The TatlerPeople often picture ludicrous situations and combinations, but see if
you can imagine:
Sarah Lee Armfield without her
fur coat . . Wilma Lee Lackey worrying .. Louise Jonhson without curls
. . Juanita Dickerson with curls . .
Jl!lla Thomps.pn without bangs .. Tressie Mae Cashion not musical .. Mary
Lou Deadmon unhappy . . Foye Cook
not hurrying .. Juanita Gob'be direct.
ing Blanche Cai!oway's orchestra, and
Bill Kester at the head of Ca:b's orchestra .. Jack Sullivan matron of
New Dormitory .. Bruce Tesh and
Red Maylberry giving the Appalachian
co-eds a grand rush . . Seeing happygo-lucky Vannie Blalock, Katherine
Cowan, Beanie Brawley, Gene Baker,
Ruthella Arledge, and Harold Graybeal once more the most popular
group on the campus .. In connection
with Graybeal can you imagine him
not being 'a masterful person on the
campus . . Torchy Mii!er the same
height as Bruce MacFadyen . . Mr.
Antonakos paying attention to IApP'alachian co-eds .. How Carolyn Moore
feels since Maness went home .. Eloise Yelton not talking with her hands
.. Juanita Putnam without Gib Falls
. . Elma Simmons dancing with Op'ie
Shelton . . Sara Howard not smiling
.. GHbert Hubbard without that peculiar walk . . Mary Jo Curry not
discussing Cecil Barger .. Dot Brake
dating "Feet" Lentz .. Lee and Loutse
York with black hair .. George Passage without h'is , l'ine . . Norman
Pickert tall, dark, and handsome . .
Ma~garet Lipe leading
cheers Bernard /Murdock being a gigilo . . Doc
and Lillian staying away from a football game .. Miss Weaver at a cocktail party . . Annie Lee 'S mith not
coaching a ball game from the side
lin~s . . Red Lackey not happy .. Ick
Wike with a serious thought .. Elizabeth Shipman dating Billy Shields
.. Mary Frances Brown weighing two
hundred pounds .. Miss Todd on rol1; r sk'ates .. Miss LeMay without Miss
Steed . . Miss Cathcart not gig,g ling
. Mr. Downum doing a 'b allet dance
. . Bib Isenhour without Webb Ward
. . Flc-rence Hughes, Mable Rhyne,
Billie Black, Louise Jones, Grace Weavil and Catherine Styers not togeth~r .. Nellie Ovetcash falling in love
. . Catherine Rudisill not taLking
about Queens Chicora .. Gus Antonakos trying to make friends .. Ruth
Huskins not dressed in gym clothes
.. Dick Lawson not blushing .. Phjl
Hudson not 'interested in volley ball
games--and girls' figures . . Miss
Lona keeping a road house . . Rudy
ki~king Gracie .. Eleanor Dougherty
bemg true to her boy friend back
home, and not chaperoning Polly and
Foy .. T. B. Honeycutt with a bass
voice . . Helen Smith raising a family .. Having a dance every now and
then . . Margaret Givens without her
~Teen sunshade .. Everybody attendmg Mr. Howell's classes .. Hale Jones
dating :Myrtle Bolick .. Betty Howard in love with Sunshine Martin ..
All Appalachian girls ·b eing men
ters . . Ligon Gillespie writing poetry . . Mrs. Moore allowing couples
to court in the library .. Dr. Dougherty mak'ing five minute speeches
.. Mr. Williams ·a bsent from the stage
in chapel .. The cheerleaders receiving any praise . . Lula McLamb giving the Appalachian boys a break .
Bird without five or six "S.P's." . .
John Matthews looking interested ..
Coach Brewer not idolized .. Hilda
Eaker on the stage . . !Mildred Barger not in ·a good humor . . Coach
Stewart ibeing disliked .. The following boys making up our football
team: Players and positions: Moir 1
Ayers, left end; John Triplett, left
tackle; Jack Gibbs, left guard; [van
Pierson, center; John iRvgers Crews,
right guard; Warren Williams, right
tackle; Thad Wilkins, right end; Tom
Wood, left half; J. B. Crow, quarter
back; Earl Hayworth, right half;
and Carl Sawyer, fuHback .. AH this
baloney!
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��193 5 VARSITY MOUNTAINEERS
Showing more power than in recent years The A palachian Mounta ineers are setting the woods afire
in a blaze of footba ll performance.
Query: Will Th ey Carry on? These boys are· to answer the interrogation tomorrow afternoon. (From left to right) Top row: E ggelson, McCann, Rudisill, Matthews, Adams,
Snipes, Fairly, Hobbs, Turbyfill. Second row: Martin, Thompson, Tesh, 'W ard, Angell, Smith, O'Neal, Holt.
Bottom row : Conner, Barts, Oliver, Trippany, .M ayher ry, Smith, Farthing.
�Dear Mr. Hobbs:
I think we will be
Mr. Lloyd Hobbs
able to do something for
Edenton, N. o.
you & Mr. Sexton here
next year. Let me know
i f you two are still
interested in coming here.
I will then get intouch
W1 th you a.nd let ~
ou nave
more infornation. . . ~ ..,. C' T, •
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Please call at this office, bringing this card with you/or t elephone the office as
soo n as possible. If it is impossible for you to call in person or by t elephone, use
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If you are employed, please let us know.
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APFALACHIAN
S~ATE
1:0
TEACHERS COLLEGE
Registrar's Office
Box 416,
'
BOONE, N. 0.
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Values of
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NOTE: A-Superior
B-Excellent
G--Satisfactory
D-Fair
E-Passing
F-Failure
Ine.-Incomplete
Cond.-Conditioned
471
Appalachian State Teachers College
BOONE, NORTH CAROLINA
Report of M
~-8-~-----~-!~ __!_~ _ _!l~~-~-~~-------------------- _____________
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Rt_~----~:':'"-~~J9-_Ili_!_U_1_~,------~-~---.9-~-----------------------------------
F or Term Ending _______
__________ _~~-~------~~-~------~~-~------------------• 193 ______
:tf
SUBJECTS
jNo.Course\
Grades SUBJECTS
I
Education
JNo. Coursel
-
Grades
I
English
"
----1--
. 7 ~-------- ------~-- ___ Physics
For~ign Lan~~Iage 1----------------- __
______________
Psychology ··:· ·------
::::::1:;::::::: ::"J·::::::::::: Ph,: s.
Geography ____________ !
~~::~:m~~t___:_·:::__:: ::::::::::::::::::I:::::::::::::::::: ::
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________
________ ______
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Ecluc~twn :: ::::·::~s::::::: -:.;d:::::::::::
::
--------~- 1 -----------------· l\fathematics
--'______
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SUNDAY NEWS, 'JANUARY 20, 1935
hy
Elements of Charm
: racious Manner,·
G
Cultivated Expression,
G~aceful Carriage Are
'All Important
THIS is our sixthonand concluding chapter Charm.
So perhaps we had better
make it a sort of review of the
important elements of the
gift described in the dictionary as "that which fascinates;
alluring quality." Also, charm
is offered by Mr. Webster as
something worn to secure good
fortune.
The modern one chooses as her
amulet the wearing of an enchanting manner, an enchanting voice,
expression, grace. And good fortune does attend her.
It's the charming women who
are reaping rich • rewards all
around us. The charmless ones
are wondering why fate has such
a grudge against them
Let's begin t he review by reminding you again that the great
miracle worker, Charm, is possible
to you. It's hidden there in you,
waiting to be brought forth. You
can cultivate its lures and graces
just as well as you can cultivate a
better figure, better hair, better
complexion. And it's the world
left to cooquer.
It's the art, in truth, that makes
the homely woman beautiful and
the beauty still more beautiful.
Without charm you may be absolutely perfect as to form, feature, and coloring, and be not one
bit appealing.
Walking and Sitting. ·
Grace is an all-powerful element.
The body, as some one has said, is
our tool of expression. When we
are seen ~e are generally standing, walkmg, or sitting. So we
must stand well, with . head
stretched tall, shoulders easy with
weight resting lightly ·on the broad
part of the foot.
When yqu walk you must move
smoothly and easily, your face,
your body, a~d your feet reflecting
perf ect physwal ease. N o loose
'!' i p p 11 .waddling; ~0 scurrying
along wtth your chm projecting
and eyes set fiercely ahead.
Do the "one-line" walk, not as if
one foot were on one track, the
ing trait in a world of jutting hard. whom it is not said frequently,
edged rocks for most of us. Be "How lovely she i15l" And it has
kind enough to f orego t he temptafacial beautifying property, this
tion t o criticize harshly.
thing of kindness. Kind eyes make
Avoid the temptation to wise- an otherwise homely face lovely.
crack unmercifully, to high-hat, to
There's naturalness, another fine
act bored, to cut off another's re- note of charm. Be unaffected! Be
marks with a brusque, rude inter- your best self instead of a poor
ruption, to listen disinterestedly.
imitation of another. Be your in·
Kindness has great beauty dividual self in matters of dress,
magic. Show me a kind person, a haii·dress, makeup, and so on. Such
really genuinely kind person, about expression lends gre,t charm.
a
A graceful carriage, interesting
voice and vibrant personality go
to make up the charm t hat is the
reason for Kitty Carlisle's success in films. She knows her own
type and is content to ·abide by
it rather t han attempt to imitate
some other celebrity.
~ --------------~-----
•
other on another track. That calls
for a wabble from side to side.
Simply keep the chest up, head
stretched tall, body stretched tall,
and walk on one track.
When you sit don't collapse into
a chair! Curtsy yourself into your
chair. Stand before it with one leg
barely touching the front of it,
the other foot slightly advanced,
then sink into the chair lightly,
with head and back erect as if
you were making a curtsy.
When you get up don't rise like
a camel, rear end first. Push yourself up and rise all in one piece.
Practice this sitting and rising
until it can be done with perfect
ease. If you must cross your knees
cross your l~gs well above the knee,
so the leg drops down straight, not
out at an ungainly angle. The skirt
will drape prettily this way and
you will have a harmonious line
from shoulder to toe.
Hands and Voice Important.
Your hands are terrifically important to charm. Pick things up
lightly with the fingers not with
h
· h
d
'•
t e tig tene fist. Don t clutch.
Don't grip. The tense hand and
arm make awkward gesture.
Rest your handa easily in your
lap. Don't cross your arms on the
.
chest m a bttnny ~ug. Loosen t~e
hands at the wnst and exerctBe
them in curves-just move them
around in curves, circles, to get the
trick of easy grace:
Then for the voice. Speak clearly,
distinctly, enunciating every word
plainly. Slower enunciation helps
~mprove the vocal tone, too. Watch
your voice. Ask about it. Take the
bad news gracefully if it's bad
news you get, and see what you
can do to beautify your voice.
There's infinite charm in the
voice, as you know. Practice a lit tle
every day on your speaking voice.
Make it as conscious a matter of
improvement as you do your daily
complexion beautifying practice.
Good results are equally guaranteed.
Poise Powerful Force.
Brush up on grammar. You can
get wonderful little books, not expensive, from which lfl&Y #e learned
proper pronunciations and pitfalls
in English to avoid, such as "He
went with she and I to the show."
Quite charm destroying are grammatical errors. I gave you a list
of common errors that shock,
coming from pretty lips.
There's poise, another powerful
charm force. With the conquest of
standing, walking, and sitting
grace, and hand gesture restraint,
you· gain much poise. But there's
mental poise, too, the poise that
makes it possible for you to say
the graceful thing and charming
when you meet people, as opposed
to the gaucheries sometimes committed by the person unsure of
herself or striving too hard to
register.
'
There's kindness-a most endear-
�SUNDAY NEWS, JANUARY 20, 1935
16C
The Woman with Two Jobs by
W orking Wife and Her·
Problems Made Subject
Of Academic Research
of the
T HE crucial problem as the
present social scene
employed married woman is
called, is the subject of a
study inspired by Teachers'
.,...,_11 ~~-- f",..J,TY'I h;,. TTniversitv.
Dr. La Follette said they were • achool work because of lack of~hold tasks. In homes where the
loath to bring children into the home attention, etc., are a few of wife supplies as much of the inworld when they could not
. th h b d
adequately provide for them, that the charges.
c?me as
e u~ an ' and so~ewith husband and wife both workOn the other hand, this study times more, he ts already begmit;~g they could reach a point finan- finds that there are good effects, n!n.g. ~o ,share the domestic responClally m three years that would too. Children learn to do little S1b1hbes. From sole provider the
take a husband fifteen years to th'
reach.
mgs f or · th emseI ves th a t moth- husband becomes partner t'n the
ers usually do too long. They domestic scheme.
Good and Ba d I n ft uences.
.
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.
I n f am11. wh ere there are ch'l - become soctally advanced (meet- t dne · anger· pomte out in the
1es
1 .
.
h
h
dren it/ was found that the boys as mg strangers easlly)~ Th.ey pass s u Y ts t at m t e assumption of
1 well as the girls learn how to over and tO':ercome sbght dis t.hat a job outside the home the wife
· ~vork in the homes of these work- do not receive too ntuch at~entlon. may become more interested in
p.g mothers. These boys, thinks They have learned to thmk of her work, of social groups, or other
[)r. La Follette, will be able to ap- others as .well as of themse.lves.
individuals, than in her family.
>reciate their share in homemaking
One t~mg seems certat~: ~he However, the group interviewed
r,hen they establish homes of changes m home and family ~ife were of the opinion that their hus·heir own, especially if their dt;pendt;nt .upon the wage earnmg bands thought more of th~m f?r
wives continue to wot•k . In some wife wtll mvolve the man of the their stimulating compamonsh1p
)f the homes, howev~r, it was house in assisting more with house- and for their sharing the economic
round there are children who do
\ burden.
nothin~, and in others, no doubt,
CLASSROOM - -//'"""A_D_V_E_R_T
_I_S_E_M_E
_N_T_ __
the chlldren may do more work
J
- -- ~han is good for them.
.
or
BON ER.S , .
A great deal has been wntten
The New•
111 .,t , 2 r
and said of the bad effects of the Claosroom llone': IIUhli:hed. or eYel'J
UIC
~o~king mother upon the children.
A Boner 11 .• '!11moro111 espret~~~loo
Here is a safe and fast way to get relief
Chtldren. out on the streets after ~~~~=• ~~a:h'::!'.'na,t~~ero ~::t'
~r
from ~orturing.¢in without doping yourhours With no one to look after nal. And th~y m 118t he r 11 nny. -unae· self w1th drastic drugs-oecause you call
them· building bad habits in re- eepted man11scrlpte cannot ~ returned. now get Nurito, eminent Specialist's pregard 'to personal clean}' e . d _ Address "Ciaosroom Bnnere." The Newa. scription, at- your drug . store. Sufferere
.
f d
I!'! ss,
e
220 E. 42d St.. N.-v Vnrk. N Y.
from the cruel pain of neuritis rheumaveIopmg poor oo habits; poor
tism, sciatica, lumbago, and 'neuralgi•
TODA Y'S WINNEI<S.
report amazingly quick relief. It works so
She was quite flattened by his fast some claim Nurito contains narcoti~
H OW HE PROPOSED complimentary remarks.
or opiates. But it does not, is guaranteed
saf<: and !'armless. If you want to feel
The N ews will pay $! for
JOSEPHINE TOTARO.
agam the JOY of relief from pain and avoid
every letter pnnted on "How He
1832 Gleason Ave., Bronx.
needless suffering that prevents sound
sleep at night, try Nurito. Get a box from
Proposed." Both men and womShe simply would not canter to your druggist today. If the very first three
en are eligible to submit letters.
powders do not relieve the most intense
his wishes. M. E. COURTNEY.
Addreas Duns Blo.ke, Tile News,
pain, your money will be re<unded.
Central Hotel, Macon, Ga.
220 E. 42d St., New York, N.Y.
1 am relaying on your being at
QUAINT BUT ACCEPTABLE. the appointed place, so do not fail
me.
F. R. MOORE.
.:: am a i.ourig woman whose o~e
2526 Bagley Ave., Detroit, Mich. SUFFERERS -GET QUICK RELIEf
drawback ts being too fat. For
An island is a body of land en- ·l'housands rely on pleasant smoke vapor ol
~hat reason I can truly state that
Dr. J . H . Guild's Green Mountain .,'\sthmatia
[ never had a steady boy friend. I tirely surmounted by water. .
Mrs. JOSEPHINE HAYES.
Compound. Quickly soothes and relieves paro:l(ran around with a crowd of young
ysms of Asthma. Standard remedy at all drug•
Apt. 6, 5720 Franklin Ave.,
people consisting mostly of margists. Powder form, 25 cents and $1.00. Cigarette
Cleveland, Ohio.
ried couples. The girls usually
form, 60 cents for 24. FREE TRIAL. package
He is a man who has detained of 6 cigarettes sent on request. The J . H . Guil4
upplied my masculine escort when
great success in life.
Co., Dept. N 2. Rupert. Vt.
one was positively necessary.
TRUMAN JENKINS.
In this manner I met Harry. We
Lynch, Ky.
were naturally drawn to each
other. About three weeks later
Harry and I were present at a
party when a discussion of the new
bathing suits began.
Bitterly I remarked: "Imagine
me in a bathing suit!"
Imagine my ·surprise when Harry
said: "No. I'd rather imagine you
in a wedding gown with me by
your side."
Quaint, but acceptable!
N.M.
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Student Strike
!:..-- - -=-===----.--......~--.,..-...,...--...------~---··
**
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** * **
Settle111 en t Is' Offered
,____.
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GOMPHOMISE IS
SUGGESTED BY
DR. DDUGHEHTY
HAS HIS TROUBLES
' Student Leaders Would Confer With Faculty.
TO DECIDE SOCIAL RULES
Proposal at Appalachian State
:reachers' College Likely to
t~~"·
~e Accepted.
"''~ '
BOONE, Feb. 13.-(JP)Negotiations looking to a
settlement of the 48-hour
strike of Appalachian State
Teachers' college students,
called in protest against so-'
cial restrictions at the institution, were started here
tonight.
Dr. E. B. Dougherty, president of
the college, presimtetl a plan of settlement. to the entire student body,
assembled in the college auditorium. His plan would allow the
student body to select two mem·
bers from each class to meet at
regular intervals with members of
MR. B. B. DOUGHERTY, president of Appalachian State
the faculty and decide policies concollege, has offered a compromise to students who are now
cernifig student activities.
Leader.s of the student strike said might be termed a strike,
conferences would be held among
the students tonight, and their decision whether to accept or reject
Dr. Dougherty's proposal would be
announced tomorrow. Harold Graybeal, one of the strike leaders, said
he thought the students would
1agree to the proposed settlement
plan.
1
NO DISCRIMINATION.
I
Dr. D.Jugherty, in addr~ssing the .
students tonight, emphas1zed that,
should the plan be accepted, students now registered at the college
would not be discriminated against,
regardless of whether. they had
particip~ted in the str1ke, calle1
Monday night after a demonstr!l·
tion at a basketball game.
Classes were suspended today :
while t.1 udent strikers picketed. the
classroc,m buildings, and admlmS·
tration officials conferred with student leaders, but Dr. Dougherty announced tonight that all classroom
work would be res.u med tomorrow.
Strike leaders said further picketing would depend on what action
is taken looking to settlement of
the diff.::rences.
The striking students demanded
that men students be permitt ed ioo
have "dates" with co-eds two night>
a week, and that men and women
studen·.;s have ' the, privilege of sitting to~ether at a thletic contests.
Present regulations require the
women to sit on one side of the
gymnasium and the men on the
other while athletic games are 1n
progress.
REGULATION DISREGARDED,
Some 50 men students disregarded this · regulation and sat on thi!
women·E side of the gymnasium
Monday night at a basketball game.
and this demonstration precipitated
the strike. Dr. Dougherty said he
did not know how many students
joined t he strike, but Graybeal,
editor of The Appalachian, college
newspaper, said the strike had the
support of 90 per cent of- the students. I .
Other ~mands of the striking
students ask that no d isciplinary
action be taken against participants
in Mond&y night's d isturbance, ani:!
tha~ the policeman responsible f ;Jr
. alleged ly black-jacking two of th~
students make a public apology.
Students tonight ·were repbrtect
firmly rEsolved to continue then
strike if disciplinary action is taken
against any members of their group.
"We are ready to stick it out untjJ
summer," one student said.
All da:v today students congregateJ in groups on the campus
and, although there was no apparent indication of another outbreak,
(Tum to Page 3, Column 3.)
�l
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1935
.~-----~ J
\
SECTION ONE
THE CHARLOTTE OBSERVER --The Foremost Newapaper of The Tw&. Carolinas:---1
·'
STUDENTS AT A.PPALACHIAN GO ON ·STJ
__________ ______
...,..._.....,
'
'~=--=====~~-----------·~------------------------~
·
DEMAND A GHT
I
TO MIX fREELY
Scene Arising When Boys Sit :
With Girls at Game Flares
ln~o Walkout.
I
BOONE, Feb. 12.-Resentment at
restrictions dn meetings of men
and women students flared into a
student strike at Appalachian
State. Teachers college. here today.
There are approximately 600 girls
and 325 boys enrolled at the college.
Demanding that men and women be permitted to sit together at
athletic contests and to mingle at
social funcions, a number of students left their . classes at noon.
Harold Graybeal, editor of The
Appalachian, student newspaper,
and a leader of the strikers, said i
90 per cent of the student body
backed the strike, but Dr. B. B.
Dougherty, president, said classes
were held as usual.
Dr. Dougherty said he did · not
know how many students had
joined in the strike, and added ,
that the college administration
was not inclined to regard it very
seriously.
,
· "I don't know-I really haven't
thought much · aboUt it," he said
when asked what the administration planned to do.
GAME IS CANCELLED.
The first action was to cancel a
gam€ the college basketball team
had scheduled 1 for tonight with
the Catawba college team. The
game, a North State . conf!!rence
contest, was declared forfeited t9
Catawba.
An outburst at a basketball game
last night between the Appalach•
ian freshmen and Brevard junior
col!ege Breceded _the strike.
In violation of the college rule
requiring women students to sit
on one side of the gymnasium .J nd
men ·on the other, a group of men
students sat on the women's side.
Faculty remonstrations
brought
hoots of defiance and derision.
After the game the rebellious
group-estimated by strike leaders
at 50-and other
sympathizers
went to the girls' dormitories and
resisted when town and campus
policemen sought to disperse them.
Page Vannoy, a student, said he
was struck by a blackjack wielded by the policeman.
From the dormitories the , students marched up town to Dean
J. D. Rankin's home to present
their grievances
to him and
clashed again with the police.,. The
student& asserted . that pistols ' were
drawrt on them; Dean Rankin
failed to appear to, address the students . .
CO•EDS CHEER BOYS.
At chapel period this morning,
students It~aders announced that a
mass meeting of all male students
would be held immediately after
the chapel exercises. When the
girls passed out they congregated
in ·a hall outside the cpapel and
cheered the boys meeting within.
At this meeting, Graybeal said the
men decided to strike if · the coeds would particip!lte.
Then, at dinner hour, another
mass meeting was held and Graybeal said both men and women
1tudents agreed to strike. He said
the strikers, numbering 90 per
cent of the student body, failed to
meet classes this afternoon and
picketed classrooms.
The striking students are de-.
manding that men and women be
permitted to mingle . at all social
functions and athletic contests, that
the policeman who struck . Vannoy
publicly apologize, and that no action be taken against those who
had a part in last night's disturb- I
ances.
This afternoon hundreds of students paraded through the main
street of Boone, carrying banners
bearing such slogans as "We want
our rights," and "We are going to
win," and "Ban the blackjacks."
Dr. Dougherty said no formal ·
demands had been made upon the
administration by the strikers, but
Graybeal said the college president and J. M. Downum, regis·
trar, were present when the aims
.of the strike were announced a1;
chapel
1
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson Scrapbook (Sophomore Year), 1934-1935
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1934-1935
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
5017_Book_2_A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Albums (Books)
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
256 pages
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
-
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/9a19d023ac7a09a23f3450bc2b0901f8.png
1985882e1d4a747a6a437c90fbe63620
https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/files/original/a01f00024ed020080b9a328e6570face.pdf
33c2a34e4dd86b42d3cfd41d36073154
PDF Text
Text
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection
Description
An account of the resource
Ella W. Thompson and her husband Dr. Lloyd LeRoy Hobbs were students at Appalachian State Teachers College from 1933-1937. Their collection includes scrapbooks, plaques, yearbooks, and ephemera. Only the scrapbooks have been digitized.
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a href="https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26">UA 29.020: Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
A name given to the resource
Ella W. Thompson Scrapbook (Freshman Year), 1933-1934
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Hobbs, Ella W. Thompson
Hobbs, Lloyd LeRoy, Dr.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1933-1934
Language
A language of the resource
English
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Image
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
5017_Book_1_A
Source
A related resource from which the described resource is derived
<a title=" UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection" href=" https://appstate-speccoll.lyrasistechnology.org/repositories/2/resources/26" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"> UA 29.020 Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs collection</a>
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
305 pages
Format
The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource
PDF
Albums (Books)
Coverage
The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant
||||osm
Boone (N.C.)
||||osm
Blacksburg (Va.)
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
<a title="Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection" href="https://omeka.library.appstate.edu/collections/show/43" target="_blank"> Ella W. Thompson and Lloyd L. Hobbs Collection</a>
Rights
Information about rights held in and over the resource
<a title="In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted" href="https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC-NC/1.0/" target="_blank"> In Copyright – Non-Commercial Use Permitted</a>
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
<a title="Boone (N.C.)" href=" https://www.geonames.org/4456703/boone.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Boone (N.C.)</a>
<a title="Blacksburg (Va.) " href=" https://www.geonames.org/4747845/blacksburg.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener"> Blacksburg (Va.) </a>