Newspaper Page Text
VOLUME XXXVIII.
NUMI1ER 21
Hi)t Beb anb placfe
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, t.A„ MARCH 24, l»8rt.
Military Rites
To Be Held for
Army Air Hero
Lieutenant Hamilton, Former
Student, to Be Buried Sun
day With Full Honors
Constitutional Exam
To Be Held April 6
Lieutenant Edward N. Hamilton,
former Georgia student and athlete
who was killed during army air
corps maneuvers in Balboa, Canal
Zone, recently, will be buried in his
native city of Athens with full mili
tary honors Sunday at 3 p. m.
Lieutenant Hamilton’s body will
arrive in Atlanta some time Saturday
by airplane from Panama and will
be escorted to Athens upon arrival.
An army air corps convoy carried the
body to Cristobel Wednesday, after a
military funeral at the post, and the
body was started north by plane.
Body to Lie in State
Funeral services will be held at
the First Methodist church of Ath
ens. The services will be conducted
by the Rev. Lester Rumble, the pas- Prominent Alumnus Speaks
tor, who will be assisted by the Rev.
L. B. Jones, of Young Harris Me
morial church. The body will lie in
state at the church from 1 until 3
p. m., when the services will begin.
The military escort will be com
posed of 60 members of the TJniver-
The annual senior examination on
the constitutions of the United States
and of Georgia will be held Thurs
day, April 6, according to Dr. J. H.
T. McPherson, head of the history
department.
By act of the general assembly
all students graduating from a state
supported institution must pass this
examination unless they have receiv
ed credit for history.
The examination this year will be
held in the history classrooms on
the third floor of the Academic build
ing at 3:30 p. m. on the announced
date.
Copies of the .constitution of Geor
gia and a list of suggested questions
for study may be obtained from the
Co-op.
Georgia Graduate,
Medical Leader,
To Give Address
In Chapel on Crawford W,
Long Day, Thursday
Dr. Allen H. Bunce, Atlanta, 1908
graduate of the University, will make
sity R. O. T. C. cavalry unit and 60 an address in the chapel Thursday,
members of the University infantry j A,arch 30, at the regular assembly
unit. Eighteen staff officers of the ! period, according to Dr. S. V. San-
Athens High school military unit will
follow the Georgia cadets. A de
tachment from the Allen R. Fleming
post of the American Legion and
another from the Athens Officers Re
serve association will also be part of
the honorary escort. Frank Harde
man chapter, Order of DeMolay, of
which Lieutenant Hamilton was a
member, will march in a body as an
honorary escort.
Professors Pay Tribute
Dr. S. V. Sanford, president of
the University: T. W. Reed, reg
istrar and treasurer of th Uni
versity; Prof. John W. Jenkins, and
Prof. Glenn W. Sutton, both of whom
taught Lieutenant Hamilton when
he was a student in the School of
Commerce, will be part of the hon
orary escort. Members of the Uni
versity coaching staff will also act
as escorts. Other honorary escorts
will be Dr. E. B. Mell, Dr. W. W.
Brown, Ruppert Brown, and Nathan
Cox.
A squadron of 12 planes from
Langley field, Va., will fly over the
cjturch during the services in a me
morial to Lieutenant Hamilton. The
planes will also fly in formation over
the grave. Several pilots in the
squadron, now at Oakland city, near
Atlanta, awaiting the funeral ser
vices, were classmates of Lieutenant
Hamilton at Kelly field, Texas.
Teammates Are Pallbearers
Active pallbearers will be as fol
lows: Lawrence H. Costa, Lawrence
J. Costa, Joe I. Costa, Vernon Smith,
Milton Leathers, John Burns, Chap-
elle Matthews, and Mell Stephenson
Jr. All were classmates and team
mates at Athens High school or the
University.
Lieutenant Hamilton was a pop
ular student during his three years
at the University, He was a mem
ber of Georgia football and base
ball teams, and was a student in the
(Continued on page 8)
ford, president of the University.
March 30 will be observed as Craw
ford W. Long day at the University.
Dr. Bunce is a former president
of the Georgia Medical association
and is nationally known in the field
of medicine.
At the suggestion of Dr. Frank
K. Boland, of Atlanta, the Univer
sity observed March 30 last year as
Crawford W. Long day. Dr. Boland
was induced to deliver an address
and it was on that occasion that he
presented to the University the paint
ing of Crawford W. Long which
hangs in President Sanford’s office.
March 30 is observed by hospitals
all over the country as National
Ether day, in commemoration of the
discovery of ether as an anaesthetic
by Crawford W. Long, one of the
(Continued on page 8)
Jordan Elected
Y.M.C.A. Head
In Student Poll
Margaret Slaton Named Presi
dent of Y. W. C A. 489
Votes Cast in Record Ballot
By an overwhelming majority
Clarence Jordan, Talbotton, was
elected president of the Y. M. C. A.
for the scholastic year 1933-34, at
the general student election Wednes
day. The defeated candidates, Claude
Broach, Athens, and Milton Rich
ardson, Macon, will automatically
become the two vice-presidents of
the organization.
Jordan is a member of the Alpha
Tau Omega social fraternity, Blue
Key council, Alpha Zeta, Aghon, In
ternational Relations, the Gridiron
club, and a past president of the
Agricultural club. He is a senior in
the College of Agriculture, and will
return for a master’s degree next
year.
A total of 489 votes were cast in
the election, which is the largest
vote that, has ever been cast.
Miss Margaret Slaton, Washington,
was elected president of the Y. W.
C. A. for next year at the same elec
tion. Miss Slaton was opposed by
Miss Lavinia Maynard, Athens. Miss
Katherine McMillan was elected vice-
president over Miss Elina Shuman,
Greenville, S. C. Miss Marguerite
Holst, Cuthbert, was elected to the
office of corresponding secretary,
and Miss Margaret Dasher was elect
ed secretary-treasurer.
Other officers elected were: Claude
Green, Clayton, recording secretary,
and Norman Sands, West Point,
treasurer.
The election was held in fornt of
the “Y" rooms and in Connor hall
on the Agricultural campus. Sepa
rate votes were printed for the two
elections.
At a meeting of the Y. M. C. A.
board of directors, held Saturday
night, Dr. S. V. Sanford, president
of the University, was elected an ex-
officio member of the board for the
entire period of his office as pres
ident of the University. He was an
active member on the board until
(Continued on page 8)
f Be Happy, Don’t Worry, Marry Young,’
Registrar Reed Tells Young Phi Kappans
Former Scout Men
Will Meet Thursday
A meeting of all men students of
the University who were formerly
members of the Boy Srout organiza
tion, will be held in Demosthenlan
hall, at 7:30 p. m. Thursday.
The meeting is for the purpose of
laying the foundations for the estab
lishment of a chapter of the Alpha
Phi Omega, national scouting fra
ternity. The meeting is to be under
the direction of Dr. A. 8. Edwards,
professor of psychology, who la spon
soring the organization.
There are over seventy chapters
of the fraternity in American col
leges and universities.
'Hell May Be Likened Unto an Eight-forty
Declares One Calloused University Cynic
"Hell,” replied Pugh Hark in
answer to the reporter’s query, “is
a place where everybody has eight-
forties, and, all of them are either
math or physics.”
This week the Mad Reporter in a
moment of weakness, toured the
campus, making an "interview lm-
posiurn’’ of prominent men on our
little school-yard to get their various
impressions of what this place called
hell is really like.
“What do I think hell is like?”
exploded Juan Martini of Old Col
lege. “I live in the dump! Do you
hear any wings flappin' around this
tenement?”
By a bare margin of two feet the
flustered scribe led a covey of old
shoes and brickbats down the stairs
and into the great out-of-doors.
According to Hoimen Tal-MahaJ,
"Hell ain’t a place. It’s something
you raise when you want the price
of tags reduced. Ask my guv’nor.”
“Hell is lousy with Thermos De
mons, whose favorite pastime ic
playing Dan McGrew in meeting,”
declared Virilyn B. Less, eminent
Phi Kappan, "and they’re in-fer-no-
good.”
Horrible visions of maddened cam
pus leaders pumping bullets into
giant avoirdupois raced through the
reporter’s mind, as he dashed for
the fire escape.
“Bone Bender” Lindsey, inventor
of the “Handy Home Class Cutter,”
came through with the declaration
that “Hell is paved with good inven
tions. Freshman chapel is hell-ed
every day, and there ain’t no Santa
Claus.”
The Mad Reporter shuddered,
pulled his sombrero down over his
cauliflowers, and fled.
Seventeen co-eds expressed the
conjecture that every day there is
registration day, and ail chaperones
are mind readers. “There is a house
(Continued on page S)
Bride Should Not Be Chosen
Because of Beai ty Alone,
Declares 'T. W.’
“Be happy, don’t worry, and mar
ry young.” With these three thoughts
Mr. T. W. Reed, registrar and treas
urer of the University, addressed Phi
Kappa Literary society at its regular
meeting last Wednesday night.
Mr. Reed began his talk advising
his listeners to marry young. "Don’t
marry too young but don't wait un
til you have amassed a fortune, for
that time may never come, and it it
does the best years of life will be
gone. Marry young when you and
your bride will be each other’s in
spiration to seek and find the higher
things of ife. Don't choose your
bride because of her beauty of other
outward appearances alone, but se
lect her tor the qualities that will
grow and become more beautiful as
the years roll by.”
“Happiness,” continued Mr. Reed,
“is the greatest essential to real suc
cess. With it a man can forge ahead
into yet unconquered worlds, up
right and unafraid, but without it
the way will be full of obstaces that
will arise because of fear and the
way will be harder and the chances
for success will be greatly lessened.
"Don’t worry about trivial mat
ters that will present themselves
from day to day. Such matters will
arise continually, but worrying about
them will neither diminish them nor
bring about their solutions. Not
worrying will cause a person to be
(Continued on page 8)
Editor 111
Charles Reynolds, editor-in-chief
of The Red and Black, was confined
to bis bed Wednesday due to illness.
This week's issue is being publish
ed under the editorship of W. B. Wil
liams, managing editor.
Noted Churchman Opens
Welfare Conference With
Address, f Voices of Times’
Gen. Edward L. King
To Inspect R. O. T. C.
Gen. Edward L. King, command
ing general of the fourth corps area,
will inspect the R. O. T. C. unit of
the University Thursday, March 30.
The schedule of inspection is as
follows:
8 : 40-9: 30—2nd Advanced Field
Arillery; 1st Advanced Cavalry; 1st
Basic Cavalry.
9:40-10:30—-2nd Advanced In
fantry and Cavalry; 1st Basic In
fantry.
12:20-1:10—-1st Advanced In
fantry and Cavalry; 1st Basic In
fantry and Cavalry.
2:30-3: 20—2nd Advanced Infan
try and Cavalry; 2nd Basic Infantry
and Cavalry.
3:30—General Assembly of entire
Cadet Corps.
Literary Societies
Hold Anniversary
Exercises in Chapel
Morgan Goodliurt UepreHcntH
Dcinosthcnian; Hamilton
Lokey Speaks for Plii Kappa
Annual anniversarian exercises of
Demosthenlan and Phi Kappa Lit
erary societies will be held In the
chapel at 10:30 a. m. Thursday, ac
cording to Prof. Goorgo G. Connol
ly, assistant professor of English.
Demosthenlan and Phi Kappa are
two of the oldest literary societies
of their kind in the United States.
The Demosthenlan society, which
was founded the year that the Uni
versity began operation, will cele
brate its 132nd anniversary; Phi
Kappa, founded several years later,
will celebrate Its 123rd anniversary.
Morgan Goodhart, Adairsvllle, will
represent Demosthenlan in the exer
cises, and Hamilton Lokey, Atlanta,
will deiver the Phi Kappa address.
Both of the speakers are past pres
idents of their respective societies.
Lokey is a senior In the Lumpkin
Law school and Goodhart is a senior
in the College of Liberal Arts.
“The Failure of American Lead
ership,” will be the subject of the
address by Goodhart. Lokey will
speak on "Modern Trends in Ameri
can Colleges and Universities.”
J. Milton Richardson, Macon, will
Introduce the Demosthenlan speak
er, and McCarthy Crenshaw, Jack
sonville, Fla., will introduce Lokey.
Dr. S. V. Sanford, president of the
University, has been asked to pre
side at the annua exercises.
Tho annual anniversarian address
es are a high spot of the University’s
forensic activities. Each year two
outstanding speakers In the literary
societies are chosen to deliver tho
addresses and a large audience at-
tneds. Anniversarian exercises In
the past have aroused a great deal
of interest over the state as well as
in the University.
The two societies will form in line
in their respective halls and file Into
the chapel at the beginning of the
exercises. They will be accompanied
by the Engish faculty In academic
robes. Professor Connelly Is In
(Continued on page 6)
Students Register
Despite Difficulties
In spite of the present economic
situation, registration at the Uni
versity for the spring quarter nas
been about normal, with no more
than the usual number of students
dropping out, according to T. W.
Reed, registrar.
Twenty new students, mostly up
perclassmen, registered for the first
time at the University at the be
ginning of this quarter, Mr. Reed
said.
Some difficulty wag experienced by
a large majority of students In re
registering due to financial difficul
ties, but not to the extent of serious
ly affecting the size of the student
I body.
'Christian Appeal to Best in
Men’ Subject of Bishop Mc
Connell’s Second Address
Bishop Francis J. McConnell, of
tho Methodist Episcopal church, New
York, noted author, educator, and
churchman, will address the Ninth
Annual Religious Welfare conference
at the University April 6 in two ser
vices, one at tho morning meeting
entitled, "Voices of Times,” and an
other during the evening services,
“Christian Appeal to Best in Men.”
The purposes of the conference,
according to Mr. E. L. Secrest, direc
tor of the Voluntary Religious as
sociations of the University, are: to
culture and broaden the religious life
of tlie students at Georgia; to enlist
the active interest and cooperation
of parents, ministers, alumni, and
church laymen throughout Georgia
in the work which is being done for
the religious welfare of the students
at the University by the Y. M. C. A.
and Y. W. C. A. with the assistance
of the Athens churches.
Additional Purposes
Other purposes are: to emphasize
the fact that the University of Geor
gia desires that religious work be
done among the students, and to en
courage the churches to see that this
is among their institutions as well
as that of the state, and to help the
churches feel their responsibility to
tlie students of their respective de
nominations at the University.
Bishop McConnell, according to
Rev. Lester Rumble, pastor of the
Athens First Methodist church, has
one of the most incisive minds of
our day. He is a leading churchman
in the country and has written 13
books on religion which have been
widely read In the church world.
Rooks Written
Among the books written by Bish
op McConnell are: "The Divine Im
minence,” "Religious Certainty,”
"Christian Focus,” and "The In
crease of Faith." As a lecturer.
Bishop McConnell was named Lay
man Beach lecturer at Yale univer
sity in 1930.
President 8. V. Sanford, of the
University, will preside over the two
sessions of the Religious conference.
Dr. R. C. Wilson, professor of
pharmacy, is general chairman of the
conference committee, and Is assist
ed by Mr. Paul W. Chapman, state
director of vocational education, and
Dr. Jere M. Pound, president of the
College of Education.
The committee feels that the suc
cess of the conference depends upon
the interest and support it receives
from parents, students, educators,
ministers, and church people
throughout the state, Mr Secrest
said.
In 1930 the Rev. Doctor Charles
R. Brown, New Haven, Conn., deliv
ered the lecture; In 1931 the Rev.
Doctor James I. Vance, Nashville,
Tenn.; and In 1932 the address was
delivered by the Rev. Doctor George
W. Truett. Dallas, Texas. The Vol
untary Religious association strives
to build character and to put new
emphasis upon the Importance of
developing the social, moral, and
spiritual values of life. All students
are considered members and are
urged to share in the program and
activities. This work Is dependent
upon the voluntary service on the
part of students and faculty. The
associations reaped church loyalties
and endeavor to meet the religious
needs of the campus.
Provisional Club to Meet
At Seney-Stovall Theater
Provisional members of the Thal-
ian-Blackfrlars Dramatic club will
meet Tuesday, at 7:30 p. m., 1n
Seney-Stovall Memorial theater at
Lucy Cobb, according to Tom Dozier,
Athens, president.
The regular meeting of the club
scheduled for last Tuesday was post
poned, and the program which was
to have been presented at that time
will be presented at next Tuesday's
meeting.