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THE RED AND BLACK
FRIDAY
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APRIL 12, 1935.
Seven
Alma Mater of Fact
WILD C-ROWD OF
STUDENTS ONCE BOMBARDED
HOWARD HALL AT THE U.OF OHIO
WITH CAMPUS CANNONS, BUT
SUCCEEDED IN ONLY BREAKING WIN DOWS
Wisconsin and££\innesota
UNIVERSITIES HAVE A WOODEN
SLAB OF BACON AS THEIR
FOOTBALL TROPHY
FOR REAL PEPPERMINT
FLAVOR CHEWING GUM
'—JUST SAY
WRIGLEY'S
DOUBLEMIN
IJroy female seminaryopen-
ED IN 1821 WAS THE FIRST
INSTITUTION OF HIGHER ED
UCATION FOR WOMEN IN THE U S-
AT TRYING TIMES TRY A Smoot/i OLD GOLD
When Horace Hippohoof drops one of his rock,
crushers on Ermintrude Muggins’ dainty instep ...
Ermie simply grips the injured dog in one hand
and a sympathetic Old Gold in the other. Old
Gold has a talent for soothing gtepped-on feelings.
•t.
Abit Nix to Install
New VRA Officers
Sunday Afternoon
Dean Paul Chapman Will Pre
side at Services in Parlors
of Baptist Church
Installation service for the new
officers and cabinet members of the
Voluntary Religious association for
the year 1935-36 will take place next
Sunday afternoon at 4:30 at the par
lors of the First Baptist church.
Dean Paul W .Chapman, president
of the board of directors of the Vol
untary Religious association, will
preside at the services, and Ablt Nix,
Athens attorney, is in charge of the
installation for both officers and
members of the three cabinets on the
campus.
Officers of the Y. M. C. A. are
John Bond, Toccoa, president; Tom
Scott. Forsyth, and Pratt Adams, Sa
vannah, vice-presidents; Tap Ben
nett, Athens .recording secretary,
and Richard Winston, Athens treas
urer.
The officers of the Y. W. C. A. in
clude Jane Miller, Rome, president;
Jane McKinnon Brunswick, vice-
president; Mary Etheridge, Atlanta,
recording secretary, and Mary Eliz
abeth Nix, Athens, treasurer. Co
ordinate campus officers are: Isa
belle Reid, Madison, president;
Katherine Pattillo, Decatur, vice-pres
ident; Sydney McWhorter, Lexington,
recording secretary ,and Dorothy
Marshall, Dawson, treasurer.
Campus Commissary Contains Quantities
Of Every Element Essential to Existence
Dean’s Office to Release
Schedule for Next Year
Philosophy Essays
Requested April 20
April 20 is the final date on which
essays may be entered in the compe
tition for the Walter B. Hill philos
ophy essay prize of f 50 to be award
ed on honors day for the best essay on
“Ethical Aspects of the Control of
Public Opinion,' Dr. William H.
Wrighton, head of the philosophy de
partment, announced today.
The essay must be at least 6,000
words in length but no minimum
limit is imposed. All papers submit
ted must be typewritten and double
spaced, Dr. Wrighton said.
All reference work must accom
pany the submitted essay in the form
of a bibliography. Reference books
are on Dr, Wrighton’s reserved shelf
in the general library.
The prize was won last year by
Hardy Ulm, Augusta, on the subject
“Ethics of Inflation.”
We use butter to toast our sand
wiches. The Co-op Lunch Room,
“The Students' Hangout." (Adv.)
Anything from razor blades to
penny sticks of candy greet the gaze
of the student, or other person, who
enters the business residence of
Compton Otis Baker better known
on the campus as "Fat.” And a mul
titude of reasons may cause one to
step into the Co-op Lunch room.
They may be financial, physical, or
mental.
And the telephone! Why, its im
portance is indescribable. No one
knows how many future brides and
bridegrooms have Italked over it.
Every night at 10:30 a steady
stream of co-ed conscious men stu
dents converge upon the lunch-room,
and in particular upon the telephone.
Doubt may be expressed as to wheth
er there is a single student living
on the campus who has not, at one
time or another, used it.
Many a student has stopped to
look with fascinated and envious
eyes upon the glass-covered display
of candies, cigarettes, cigars, and
so forth. Some purchase, some con
tinue to look and only look. All go
away with their mental or physical
appetites thoroughly aroused.
Almost an equal number come to
listen to the radio. At least the
Preston Arkwright
Will Give Address
For Alumni May 4
Preston S. Arkwright Sr., presi
dent of the Georgia Power company,
will deliver the annual alumni ad
dress May 4, according to an an
nouncement Wednesday by the board
of managers of the Alumni society,
and portraits of eight alumni, fa
mous as jurists, statesmen, soldiers,
and educators, will be presented to
the University.
Three United States supreme court
justices, a United States senator, a
brigadier general of the Confederate
army, a former chancellor of the
University, a former dean of the
Lumpkin Law school and another
eminent educator compose the sub
jects for the portraits done in oils
by celebrated artists.
The Tech-Georgia baseball game
will be one of the entertainment fea
tures, as will be the annual alumni
luncheon. A large number of alum
ni is expected to attend the meeting
of the society.
Clinic Meets Wednesday
The University clinic will hold a
night meeting Wednesday, April 17,
to which the public is invited. The
speaker for the evening has not yet
been chosen.
The clinic will make its annual
trip to Milledgeville May 6-7. to in
spect the state hospital.
greatest number of persons In the
room are invariably around it.
Baker estimates that an average
of 200 postage stamps are sold each
day to send “sugar reports.” This
campus Mecca is also the recipient
of “sugar reports.” Special deliv
ery letters and telegrams arrive with
frequency.
A $32 clock greets the glance of
the person entering from the door
facing the library. In one corner is
the ever present ice-water. Behind
the counter are grinning darkles,
waiting to satisfy your wants—at a
price. Service, huh? Free matches
are waiting for you! “Fat” says that
10,000 packs of matches were dis
tributed last month.
Stomach and heart troubles are
cured by means of free soda and ad
vice. The combination is perfect.
If you waqt to stay around, you
can cash checks. If you want to go
away, you can buy your bus tickets
there. Evidently this isn’t a bad
business since only $16 worth of bad
checks have come back this year.
Students too lazy to come down
to the lunch-room can call and get
their wants delivered. The colored
delivery boy Is "plenty” busy. Have
a dope on me sometime!
An abbreviation of the new cata
logue together with a schedule of
the year 1935-1936 will be released
next week, according to L. L. Hen-
dren, dean of the University.
To eliminate the confusion in reg
istration at the beginning at the
year, pre-registration for senior col
lege students will be held in May.
This will aid tha students and assist
the faculty members in planning
their work, and avoid the confusion
connected with registration, Dean
Hendren said.
* THE NEW
DENTISTRY
A Phase of Preventive Medicine
College Men find in it unusual
opportunities for a career
HARVARD UNIVERSITY
DENTAL SCHOOL
A comprtrnt court* of preparatij*i for
th* dental profaaaion. A “Clasa A”
School. Write for catalogue
LEROY M * MINER. DMO . MO.. Darn
Dt»t 4. H8 Leo«wood Are.. Batten. Mate
Honor Society Names Hi
New Members in Election
Sixteen freshmen women were
named Tuesday morning in Coordi
nate chapel to membership in Alpha
Lambda Delta national honorary so
ciety for first year women.
Freshmen named are: Virginia
Ashford, Frances Barrow, Dorothy
Jarnigan, Barbara Jenkins, Eleanor
Williams, all from Athens; Charlotte
Chapman, Montez Debnom Atlanta;
Peggy Garrett, Statham;’ Virginia
Gray, Augusta; Celeste Kessler, Ma
con; Evelyn Lancaster, Hartwell;
Sara Lynch, Florence, S. C.; Anna
Jean Tanner Douglas; Elizabeth
Taylor, Columbus; Virginia Tomp
kins, Camilla, and Grace Wilbanks,
Buford.
Among the smart set, you will find men handsomely at
tired in mixed suits. It’s quite the vogue, and Schwob's
Easter display of mixed ensembles is dashingly different.
New patterns and weaves—new effects—smart checks—
soft textures and swanky sport coats with free action
shoulders. Select two suits for four different combina
tions that will take you smartly attired right through
the summer.
QCHWORILT
s 16 5 . 0 $ 19 5 . 0
THE SCHWOB CO.
264 E. Clayton St., Athens, Ga.
Damaged by a Dog-Den ter?
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