Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

Western Carolina University (20) View all
  • Western Carolina College (199)
  • Western Carolina Teachers College (239)
  • Western Carolina University (1792)
  • Allanstand Cottage Industries (0)
  • Appalachian National Park Association (0)
  • Bennett, Kelly, 1890-1974 (0)
  • Berry, Walter (0)
  • Brasstown Carvers (0)
  • Cain, Doreyl Ammons (0)
  • Carver, George Washington, 1864?-1943 (0)
  • Cathey, Joseph, 1803-1874 (0)
  • Champion Fibre Company (0)
  • Champion Paper and Fibre Company (0)
  • Cherokee Indian Fair Association (0)
  • Cherokee Language Program (0)
  • Crittenden, Lorraine (0)
  • Crowe, Amanda (0)
  • Edmonston, Thomas Benton, 1842-1907 (0)
  • Ensley, A. L. (Abraham Lincoln), 1865-1948 (0)
  • Fromer, Irving Rhodes, 1913-1994 (0)
  • George Butz (BFS 1907) (0)
  • Goodrich, Frances Louisa (0)
  • Grant, George Alexander, 1891-1964 (0)
  • Heard, Marian Gladys (0)
  • Kephart, Calvin, 1883-1969 (0)
  • Kephart, Horace, 1862-1931 (0)
  • Kephart, Laura, 1862-1954 (0)
  • Laney, Gideon Thomas, 1889-1976 (0)
  • Masa, George, 1881-1933 (0)
  • McElhinney, William Julian, 1896-1953 (0)
  • Niggli, Josephina, 1910-1983 (0)
  • North Carolina Park Commission (0)
  • Osborne, Kezia Stradley (0)
  • Owens, Samuel Robert, 1918-1995 (0)
  • Penland Weavers and Potters (0)
  • Rhodes, Judy (0)
  • Roberts, Vivienne (0)
  • Roth, Albert, 1890-1974 (0)
  • Schenck, Carl Alwin, 1868-1955 (0)
  • Sherrill's Photography Studio (0)
  • Smith, Edward Clark (0)
  • Southern Highland Handicraft Guild (0)
  • Southern Highlanders, Inc. (0)
  • Stalcup, Jesse Bryson (0)
  • Stearns, I. K. (0)
  • Thompson, James Edward, 1880-1976 (0)
  • United States. Indian Arts and Crafts Board (0)
  • USFS (0)
  • Vance, Zebulon Baird, 1830-1894 (0)
  • Weaver, Zebulon, 1872-1948 (0)
  • Western Carolina University. Mountain Heritage Center (0)
  • Whitman, Walt, 1819-1892 (0)
  • Wilburn, Hiram Coleman, 1880-1967 (0)
  • Williams, Isadora (0)
  • Jackson County (N.C.) (2282)
  • Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • Asheville (N.C.) (0)
  • Avery County (N.C.) (0)
  • Blount County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Buncombe County (N.C.) (0)
  • Cherokee County (N.C.) (0)
  • Clay County (N.C.) (0)
  • Graham County (N.C.) (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Haywood County (N.C.) (0)
  • Henderson County (N.C.) (0)
  • Knox County (Tenn.) (0)
  • Knoxville (Tenn.) (0)
  • Lake Santeetlah (N.C.) (0)
  • Macon County (N.C.) (0)
  • Madison County (N.C.) (0)
  • McDowell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Mitchell County (N.C.) (0)
  • Polk County (N.C.) (0)
  • Qualla Boundary (0)
  • Rutherford County (N.C.) (0)
  • Swain County (N.C.) (0)
  • Transylvania County (N.C.) (0)
  • Watauga County (N.C.) (0)
  • Waynesville (N.C.) (0)
  • Yancey County (N.C.) (0)
  • Newsletters (510)
  • Publications (documents) (1773)
  • Aerial Photographs (0)
  • Aerial Views (0)
  • Albums (books) (0)
  • Articles (0)
  • Artifacts (object Genre) (0)
  • Bibliographies (0)
  • Biography (general Genre) (0)
  • Cards (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Clippings (information Artifacts) (0)
  • Crafts (art Genres) (0)
  • Depictions (visual Works) (0)
  • Design Drawings (0)
  • Drawings (visual Works) (0)
  • Envelopes (0)
  • Facsimiles (reproductions) (0)
  • Fiction (general Genre) (0)
  • Financial Records (0)
  • Fliers (printed Matter) (0)
  • Glass Plate Negatives (0)
  • Guidebooks (0)
  • Internegatives (0)
  • Interviews (0)
  • Land Surveys (0)
  • Letters (correspondence) (0)
  • Manuscripts (documents) (0)
  • Maps (documents) (0)
  • Memorandums (0)
  • Minutes (administrative Records) (0)
  • Negatives (photographs) (0)
  • Newspapers (0)
  • Occupation Currency (0)
  • Paintings (visual Works) (0)
  • Pen And Ink Drawings (0)
  • Periodicals (0)
  • Personal Narratives (0)
  • Photographs (0)
  • Plans (maps) (0)
  • Poetry (0)
  • Portraits (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Programs (documents) (0)
  • Questionnaires (0)
  • Scrapbooks (0)
  • Sheet Music (0)
  • Slides (photographs) (0)
  • Songs (musical Compositions) (0)
  • Sound Recordings (0)
  • Specimens (0)
  • Speeches (documents) (0)
  • Text Messages (0)
  • Tintypes (photographs) (0)
  • Transcripts (0)
  • Video Recordings (physical Artifacts) (0)
  • Vitreographs (0)
  • The Reporter, Western Carolina University (510)
  • WCU Students Newspapers Collection (1744)
  • A.L. Ensley Collection (0)
  • Appalachian Industrial School Records (0)
  • Appalachian National Park Association Records (0)
  • Axley-Meroney Collection (0)
  • Bayard Wootten Photograph Collection (0)
  • Bethel Rural Community Organization Collection (0)
  • Blumer Collection (0)
  • C.W. Slagle Collection (0)
  • Canton Area Historical Museum (0)
  • Carlos C. Campbell Collection (0)
  • Cataloochee History Project (0)
  • Cherokee Studies Collection (0)
  • Daisy Dame Photograph Album (0)
  • Daniel Boone VI Collection (0)
  • Doris Ulmann Photograph Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth H. Lasley Collection (0)
  • Elizabeth Woolworth Szold Fleharty Collection (0)
  • Frank Fry Collection (0)
  • George Masa Collection (0)
  • Gideon Laney Collection (0)
  • Hazel Scarborough Collection (0)
  • Hiram C. Wilburn Papers (0)
  • Historic Photographs Collection (0)
  • Horace Kephart Collection (0)
  • Humbard Collection (0)
  • Hunter and Weaver Families Collection (0)
  • I. D. Blumenthal Collection (0)
  • Isadora Williams Collection (0)
  • Jesse Bryson Stalcup Collection (0)
  • Jim Thompson Collection (0)
  • John B. Battle Collection (0)
  • John C. Campbell Folk School Records (0)
  • John Parris Collection (0)
  • Judaculla Rock project (0)
  • Kelly Bennett Collection (0)
  • Love Family Papers (0)
  • Major Wiley Parris Civil War Letters (0)
  • Map Collection (0)
  • McFee-Misemer Civil War Letters (0)
  • Mountain Heritage Center Collection (0)
  • Norburn - Robertson - Thomson Families Collection (0)
  • Pauline Hood Collection (0)
  • Pre-Guild Collection (0)
  • Qualla Arts and Crafts Mutual Collection (0)
  • R.A. Romanes Collection (0)
  • Rosser H. Taylor Collection (0)
  • Samuel Robert Owens Collection (0)
  • Sara Madison Collection (0)
  • Sherrill Studio Photo Collection (0)
  • Smoky Mountains Hiking Club Collection (0)
  • Stories of Mountain Folk - Radio Programs (0)
  • Venoy and Elizabeth Reed Collection (0)
  • WCU Gender and Sexuality Oral History Project (0)
  • WCU Mountain Heritage Center Oral Histories (0)
  • WCU Oral History Collection - Mountain People, Mountain Lives (0)
  • Western North Carolina Tomorrow Black Oral History Project (0)
  • William Williams Stringfield Collection (0)
  • Zebulon Weaver Collection (0)
  • College student newspapers and periodicals (1769)
  • African Americans (0)
  • Appalachian Trail (0)
  • Artisans (0)
  • Cherokee art (0)
  • Cherokee artists -- North Carolina (0)
  • Cherokee language (0)
  • Cherokee pottery (0)
  • Cherokee women (0)
  • Church buildings (0)
  • Civilian Conservation Corps (U.S.) (0)
  • Dams (0)
  • Dance (0)
  • Education (0)
  • Floods (0)
  • Folk music (0)
  • Forced removal, 1813-1903 (0)
  • Forest conservation (0)
  • Forests and forestry (0)
  • Gender nonconformity (0)
  • Great Smoky Mountains National Park (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Hunting (0)
  • Landscape photography (0)
  • Logging (0)
  • Maps (0)
  • Mines and mineral resources (0)
  • North Carolina -- Maps (0)
  • Paper industry (0)
  • Postcards (0)
  • Pottery (0)
  • Railroad trains (0)
  • Rural electrification -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • School integration -- Southern States (0)
  • Segregation -- North Carolina, Western (0)
  • Slavery (0)
  • Sports (0)
  • Storytelling (0)
  • Waterfalls -- Great Smoky Mountains (N.C. and Tenn.) (0)
  • Weaving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • Wood-carving -- Appalachian Region, Southern (0)
  • World War, 1939-1945 (0)

Cullowhee Yodel Volume 07 Number 11

Item
?

Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).

  • THE CULLOWHEE YODEL 3% (ftuUntuljpp $oM Published semi-monthly by the faculty and students of Western Carolina Teachers College, Cullowhee, North Carolina. office at Cull.. olina, under the Act of March 3, 1879. EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE H. T. Hunter, Chairman | W. E. Bird ; Alice Benton ; Arthur Fincannon ; Conley Rogers. STAFF Martha Mayfield (Columbian)...Editor-in-Chief Anna Jean Plott (Erosophian)..Editor-in-Chief C. H. Allen Business Manager Mary Hope Westbrook Faculty Adviser Ruth Oliver Treasurer Edith Downs (Columbian) Literary Editor Edna Farmer (Erosophian) Literary Editor Annie Lee Mundy (Columbian) Field Editor Fannie Sue l: . Social Editor Ethel Ellen (Columbian) Art Editor Thelma Ray (Erosophian) Sports Editor J. M. Plemmons Alumni Editor Jessie Y. Stanley Contributing Editor Subscription price: One dollar per year; single copy ten cents. The Easter Prayer The blue azure sky overhead, the pure white Easter lily, the delicate earthy odor, the swelling of the buds, all tell of a spring that is here and of an Easter that is approaching. With an indefinable swelling my heart leaps within me and I lift mine eyes to the hills. Surely, Oh, surely the earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof; the world and they that dwell therein! Even the most savage would sense this mysterious, wonderful spirit of resurrection. Signs of it are everywhere. Signs of it are everywhere. The winter is past. There is a fringe of yellow-green leaves on those slim trees there. The Junco is seen less often and the mockingbird has taken his place, joining in chorus with the Vesper. The flowers are sprouting. Green shoots appear everywhere. The air is filled with a spirit of renewal of life in all of its freshness and beauty. Oh, may the Great Soul so high up above those clouds and yet so near, keep us, direct us, and press us ever near his own great heart until we are in perfect harmony with his own great heart throbs—May our influences even in the minuetest detail of our daily lives be such that we may indeed attain a spiritual immortality. An Appreciation One of the most efficient men ever to be connected with the Board of Trustees of Western Carolina Teachers College has just retired from membership on the body. Reuben B. Robertson was appointed on the Board by Governor McLean in 1925 and was immediately elected as chairman by the Board membership; he was also made chairman of the Executive and Building Committees. As president of the Champion Fibre Company of Canton, one of the country's largest paper mills, he had demonstrated outstanding executive ability. He is a recognized organizer and leader of men. The Board of Trustees was fortunate in having the leadership of such a man during the recent years of great physical expansion of the College plant. Mr. Robertson served as chairman of the Board from August, 1925, till March, 1930, almost five years. During that time the greatest building program in the history of the College has been carried out. Difficult and delicate problems have been handled, in all of which Mr. Robertson's leadership has been manifest; and his singular devotion to the interests of the College as well as his sense of justice and spirit of co-operation has won the admiration of all his associates. He will doubtless be missed on the Board of Trustees, and the faculty and students will miss his occasional visits to the College campus. Local Churches Hold Special Union Service A Worthy Cause The first Sunday in May has been set aside, by members of Mr. Hunter's Sunday School Class, as Silver Offering Day. According to Mr. Hunter this offering is for the benefit of the new- Cullowhee Baptist church. Not only members of this particular class are asked to donate, but all who have been connected with this church at any time are invited to contribute. This is the time for the college students who are not here now to show their appreciation and remembrance of the church under whose watch-care they were while in Cullowhee. The students here now and those formerly should and are expected to show by their offering that they have a deep feeling for the church and students who are later to come here. Some Holiday Plans For Easter Some startling bits of news have come to the attention of the editors in the last few days in regard to the activities of some of the students during the Easter holidays. Bernice Benton will visit Mr. and Mrs. Mark Watson, and Margaret Rowland will visit Mr. and Mrs. John Arthur Fincannon, Joe Mangum is going to visit in Waynesville but Earle plans to go to the Eastern part of the state. It is rumored that Joe wants roses for Easter flowers. Fisher and Jane plan to visit the Vanderbilt estate, and Fisher says he wont let Jane get arrested for stealing carnations as Mr. Bird did. Martha Mayfield wants to go home where there aren't any glass doors. The plans of Mary Pearce are not known. It all depends on what Claude does. Ralph Smith thinks so much of Mrs. Posey and Red, he is going to spend his holidays at the college. Everyone expects Thelma Ray and Louie Young to go to Franklin. Mildred Starnes would like to go also. Ethel Ellen's plans have had to be changed on account of several cases of meningitis in Sylva. Lucile Montague intends to stay at Cullowhee and make lesson plans and to keep Virgie from getting a pie-bed. Conley and Ruby are going to practice for the tennis tournament to be held in the early spring. And last but not least "Mash" and Ruth have managed to keep their plans secret. PRES. HUNTER TALKS TO BOY SCOUTS "Jesus was a good Scout," said Mr. H. T. Hunter, president of Western Carolina Teachers College, in speaking to the Cullowhee Boy Scouts Sunday morning, April 6, in a union service held at the Cullowhee Methodist Church. "When Jesus was Boy Scout Age" was the theme of Mr. Hunter's speech. He took his text from Luke 11:40-52. He considered what we really know about Jesus from the scriptures, what we can imagine about Jesus, and what we can reasonably infer about the boyhood of Jesus from what we know of him as a man. Mr. Hunter continued his talk by asking the question, "What do we really know about Jesus from the scriptures? The Bible doesn't tell us much about Jesus' boyhood. However, we do know a few things. First, we know the circumstances of his birth, Mary his mother, is in Bethlehem, there the angels sing and the wise men come to see the Christ child. Second, we know that he was taken out of this country because of the king. Third, we know that Jesus' parents were very religious. His father was a carpenter. Jesus learned this trade at an early age. He was called the carpenter's son and later just carpenter. He went with his parents once each year to Jerusalem to worship God." Second, "What can we imagine about Jesus? Henry Van Dyke says that Palestine has been very much changed. The hills, flowers, stars, and hearts of men are very much the Birthday Party Given On Saturday evening, March 29, Ina Henry and Frankie Martin were charmingly entertained with a lovely surprise birthday party given by Nancy Justice and Annie Laurie Phillips. The room was beautifully arranged and decorated to suit the occasion. The guests found their places at the table by place cards. Delicious refreshments were served to the following: Mattie Lou Mease, Ibbie Ball, Ina Henry, Nancy Justice, Ab- bie Jean Jowers, Frankie Martin, Annie Laurie Phillips, Marietta Welch, Mattie Wilkes, Genevieve McKeldrey, Oleta Wright, and Lois Howard. same today, but practically everv thing else has changed. I can j *" ine Jesus as being a boy that disturb ed in school, as any bright boy does today. He even asked the wise men questions that astonished them, so I imagine he asked questions in school " "My final thought is what can we reasonably infer about the boyhood of Jesus from what we know of him as a man. We parents are permanent exhibits to our children and neighbors of what we were when a boy. we can't fool our boys into thinking we were a genius in school unless we are now. The lad at once says 'I've got Dads number.' When God made Adam he made him of mud, and he was a mud man the rest of his days. Then God found a new plan, that was of making men from boys." Speaking to the boys Mr. Hunter said "Jesus took his eyes with him, as Dr. Poteat of Wake Forest College would say. In His Sermon on the Mount He referred to nature, society, animal life, and the physical world. Boys, when you go out on your camping trips, try to learn the trees, flowers, leaves, and birds. Jesus was a good student; we know this from his Sermon on the Mount in which he quoted from twenty different books in the Bible." "In conclusion, Jesus was a good Scout. A Scout must be trustworthy, he must be loyal, Jesus said, 'I must be about my Father's business.' A Scout must be courteous, kind, obedient. Jesus said, "Not my will but Thine.' And last a good Scout must be thrifty, brave, clean, and reverent." "I live not in myself, but I become Portion of that around me; and to me High mountains are a feeling." —Byron. LAST CALL for Easter Coats, Dresses, and Millinery Sharp Reduction Prices in Coats $10.00 Values $4.95 $15.00 Values $9.95 $20.00 Values $14.95 $35.00 Values $22.75 Hales A Smart Shop for Smart Women Phone 104 Sylva, N. C NEW EASTER SONG Tune: "Carolina" Nothing could be sweeter Than a Hollingsworth to greet her Early Easter morning. See our beautiful assortment of Easter boxes Mail Orders Given Special Attention Buchanan Pharmacy Agents for Hollingsworth Candies Sylva North Carolina
Object
?

Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).