About The Red and Black (Athens, Ga.) 1893-current | View Entire Issue (Oct. 21, 1912)
I'agc I. THE RED AND BLACK I ho H(mI ;iikI Hlack T II K S T U II K V T S' I* A I* K It <•11 ICIAI, ORGAN OF THE ATHLKTK ASSOCIA TION of the university of Georgia. Kntered nt the Pott off! re nt Athens. (In., n* ttrond clnnn mall matter. Oiii* Dollar IVr Aniiiini EDITORIAL STAFF I). A. RUSSELL Editor-In-Chief BENTLEY CHAPPELL Associate Editor K<)Y COOPER Athletic Editor FRANK A. HOI-DEN. Social Editor \SHTON Ill'lll-’OItI> Exchange Editor III SI NESS DEPARTMENT HENRY II. WEST ..Rutin css Manager IV N. HENDRICKS _ -Aset. Ilualneta Manager I. K. SWEAT Circulation Manager, o I. ol.MSTEAD Attt. Circulation Manager. 1‘ATRONIZK OI K ADVKRTISKK8. \d\ertlsiug Rates can In* obtained from the Manager. TO I NCI.E DAN E. Chancellor David ('. Harrow celebrated hit six tieth birthday Friday. October isth. Making It happier fur him. It wat alto the anniversary of Mrs. Harrow's birthday. Many students remembered the event anti went to Chapel services that morning. The three score years of the Chancellor's life have been full. Whether or not the l.ord In Ills wisdom shall spare him Tor the other ten years of man s allotted time, lie will have lived more than ninety-nine out of the hundred who exist longer in terms of years. He has learned much, thought much, worked much, and loved more than all. The t'nlverslty system Is debtor to Chancellor Harrow. After receiving his degrees front the Uni versity proper, he for a time went Into the practice "t law. hut the work of Ills life has been the train ing of youth within her walls. This work has been crowned with the honors and duties of the chan cellorship, and In this office lie lias adorned himself and the position and has been and Is beloved by every student In the thousands who have been reg istered In the system. The student body, which best knows Chancellor Harrow, on Friday congratulated him most heartily, and wished for hint sixty more years of life as full and as glorious as the past sixty have been. May Ills heart grow bigger, and the warm tires of his love grow brighter until the time when C.od for nis glory shall take him from us. True friends have no solitary Joy or sorrow. ("banning -■ ■ i o It is easier to forget our frleuds than to forgive our enemies -Ex. ■ o Nobody has hollered ‘'calf-rope' - yet. according to the best reports obtainable at the University. If our foresight were Just as good as our hind sight — IE ■ o — Some happiness comes through forgetting. VICTORY IN DEFEAT. Whatever the Vanderbilt University team may have done to the football team of the University of Georgia lust Saturday at Ponce de been park, one thing In the event stood out clearly: the students were there, and stayed with 'em till the last blow of the whistle. In the lust quarter, when the Vandv backs were going through the Georgia team for touchdowns almost at will, the cheering was us strong as when Covington first kicked off. The throals were a little hoarse from overwork, but the bull-dog was still barking. Tie Tech men laughed and jeered, and the Georgia men noticed them with a "Tech Uah," and a little "Rambling Wreck,'' and went on with the real cheering. Credit goes to "Dick" Russell and Ed Dunlap for keeping them together, but the loud praise goes to the four hundred men who stuck behind Captain r.mp” Peacock when their throats were raw and their stomachs weak and their hearts as sick as .' oung hearts can be. The victory on our side went to them. They coulddn't play on the team, but thev did what they could, and they fought a good light. "What others think of me matters little; what I think of myself matters much." I he coach and the athletic association, too, won a little moral victory all their own. The published weights gave us one pound average In weight on \and,v. When the tcums lined up, few* spectators doubted where the weight was. If there was a mistake in the scales used, It was not the Georgia scales. This victory, too, was ours. o \V< rise ill our seats to enunciate the fundamental truth that the individual who is mirthful at the latest date Is the one who is Joyous most oonsist- mtly. Tech papers, please copy. In spite of It all. the world Just kept on moving, they say. Students at the University are beginning to i D.e that for the publications of the studenti prosper they must patronize those who advertls ' ■ ll8 18 l »" right, and the movement sta this fall and so well under way this early in year can but have the best results. The Weekly, the monthly, the quarterly and annuals could not exist ir ft were not for the vertlsers, and when there is a choice betwee tore which advertises and one which does not student owes it to the University to patronize’ one which helps him. Students are often thoughtlcw—being vou they could hardly be otherwise; hut Just a wore reminder should be enough to show them the * .O help their own interests. 1, ls not an arguffi of b plus x equal, so-and-so; if they help yo help then In return, and both will receive adv- age. This Is no graft argument; neither is it Incepi blackmail. I, „ s , mpIj - encouraging a movem, In evidence this fall and especially ln Allama , Saturday, that will be a curative to the drv attacking the publications at the University at , time they go to sleep on the job. College Directory Y. M. C. A. H. T. Singleton, President. It. P. Howard, Vice-President. C. R. Walker, Treasurer. Zach Cowan, Secretary. FOOTBALL, 1912. W. A. Cunningham, Head Coach. Ilarol 1 Ketron, Assistant Coach. D. It. Peacock, Captain. Z. S. Cowan, Team Manager. Rhodes Slade, Financial Manager. BASEBALL, 1913. W. A. Cunningham, Coach. Rob McWhorter, Captain. Frank Carter, Team Manager. | C. II. Newsome, Financial Manager. ALUMNI HALL GYMNASIUM. Howell Peacock, Director. PUBLICATIONS. Red and Black (Weekly), j D. A. Russell, Editor-In-Chief. Bentley Chappell, Associate Editor. Henry West, Business Manager. Georgian (Monthly). Elmer I. Ransom, Editor-in-chief. Chas. Bloch, Business Manager. Engineering Annual. Dick Goodwyn, Editor-In-Chief. Pandora. Not yet elected. Agricultural Quarterly. Frank Garrison, Editor-In-Chief. Joe Woodruff, Business Manager. LITERARY SOCIETIES. Demosthcnian. B. I. Segall, President. Pill Kappn. E. I„ Morgenstern, President. Jeffersonian Law Society. T. I,. Aderhold. President. Agricultural Club. W. .1. Boyett, President. Engineering Society. •I. Rhodes Slade, President. FRATERNITIES. Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Chi Phi. Kappa Alpha. Phi Delta Theta. Alpha Tau Omega. Sigma Nu. Chi Psl. Kappa Sigma. Pi Kappa Alpha. Sigma Chi. Delta Tau Delta. Theta Lambda Phi (Legal). Tau Kappa Alpha (Debating). CLUBS. Sphinx (honorary, elective). Delta Delta (honorary, earned). Casque and Gauntlet (honorary, social). Senior Round Table (literary). Junior Cabinet (literary). Thaliana (dramatic, competitive). German Club (social). Glee and Mandolin Club. Gridiron Club.