Newspaper Page Text
THE RED AND BLACK, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1938.
Fire
4-H Club Carnival to Feature '? New
Building
s
Hypnotists Worsham, Harrison Explain
LUCAS & JENKINS
Palace today - tomorrow
Yoa’I 8c Rolling in the Aisle...
When They Swing...Hill-Billy Style!
World’s Famous Mystic “S1NNETT
AND ON
THE STAGE
DAYS - Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday - 3 DAYS
THE MIGHTIEST
ENTERTAINMENT THAT
EVER THRIILED YOU!
featuring
TRANK MORGAN
EDNA MAY OLIVER
Directed by W. S. VAN DYKE II
A Mmlio-Goldwyn-Mayr Picture
Milk Bottle, Bingo, and Beauty
Proceeds From Carnival to
Go Toward Maintenance of
Loan Fund
4-H Manager
Milk Bottle, Bingo, and a beauty
contest will be the feature attrac
tions at the third annual 4-H Club
Carnival scheduled to be held next
Thursday and Friday nights in the
Physical Education Building and
Hardman Hall.
Paul L. Marshall, Appling, is man
ager of the carnival, and Alvin S.
Davis, Rome, president of the 4-H
Club, is in charge of the program for
the 4-H Club section.
Proceeds from the carnival will be
used to maintain a loan fund for
students in the College of Agricul
ture. All agricultural organizations
and societies are cooperating with
the 4-H Club in carrying out this
benefit show.
Admission Will Be Charged
In the beauty contest, each organ
ization will sponsor a man and wo
man student to compete for the title
of ‘‘King and Queen of Ag Hill.” The
two selected as the most ideal stu
dents will be crowned during the
carnival.
Among the many attractions are
included a dance, cake walk, ‘‘hit
the negro,” “country store,” a min
strel show, boxing matches, and
weight guessing contests. Another
feature is the selection of the wo
man with the most kissable lips.
Fifteen cents admission price will
be charged. Small admission charges
will be made for some of the fea
tures to be presented in the hall.
SIM) Will Participate
Marshall urges all students to at
tend the show and do their part in
helping with the student loan fund.
“This carnival is one of the biggest
student stunts on Ag Hill, and is a
great step forward for the 4-H Club,”
he said.
“Approximately 800 agricultural
students, faculty members, and ex
tension workers will participate in
the carnival. This great increase in
the number of participants necessi
tates a two night program instead of
one night, as was last year’s event,”
Marshall continued.
The carnival last year attracted a
great number of students and Athen
ians, and over 1,000 people are ex
pected to attend the show Thursday
and Friday.
To Be Constructed;
Dormitory Changed
Milledge Hall to Be Enlarged
By Addition of 2 Wings;
Work Begins Soon
Psychic Power Is Mechanical Process
Here is Paul Marshall, Appling,
the follow who will swing the
leader's whip In the annual 4-11
Club carnival next week-end.
Religious Council W ill Hold
Triologue Program Sunday
University Religious Council will
present a triologue program Sunday
afternoon in the Chapel at 3:30
o’clock, the general theme of which
will be, "A Better Understanding Be
tween the Various Religious Faiths.”
Appearing on the program will be
Father H. J. Barr, of the Athens
Catholic Church: the Rev. Claude
Fullerton, student pastor of the First
Methodist Church; and Rabbi Law
rence Block, of the Jewish Syna
gogue. Abit Nix, Athens attorney
and member of the Board of Re
gents, will preside.
Abil Nix to Address Class
In Law of Press Saturday
Milledge Hal! is to be enlarged and
a new dormitory for women and a
home management building are to be
constructed during the next few
months in the University’s new
1 uilding program.
Announced by B. C. Kinney, bus
iness manager, the work will begin
within two weeks. Two buildings on
the main campus and a forestry
building on Ag Hill are already being
constructed.
Two wings are to be added to Mil
ledge Hall. When work is completed
about Oct. 1, this dormitory, to ac
commodate 156 law and graduate
students, will be the largest for men
on the campus.
The new women’s dormitory,
which will be identical to the one re
cently completed for women students,
is scheduled to be built on Ag Hill!
Included in the structure will be a
dining hall to seat 500. The Daw
son Hall cafeteria will be given over
to classes in home economics for
laboratory work. The dormitory will
have modern equipment throughout.
Folding doors will separate the ban
quet hall into smaller unitB.
A site for the new home manage
ment building has not yet been se
lected, but it will probably be near
Dawson Hall. The present building
will be razed to make room for the
new dormitory.
By Bruce Wilder
It takes all kinds to make a stu
dent body. First, there were ven
triloquists, then came the patrons of
nightshirts for nocturnal comfort,
and now there is the hypnotist who
has invaded the campus with his
super-psychic powers and dynamic
eye.
Hubert Worsham and Henry Har
rison, both of Jeffersonville, haven't
reached the "dynamic eye" point of
perfection yet, in spite of their two
years of experimenting In hypnotism,
they say. But when they find the
right “subject,” they know enough
about the art to produce many dra
matic as well as hilarious situations.
"About half of those who see us
hypnotize someone believe that there
is some sort of trickery. The only
trick is the person hypnotized. If
the subject is willing to be ‘worked
on' and concentrates according to the
rules, hypnotizing is just a mechan
ical process," they maintain. It is
about as easy for one person to hyp
notize as it is for another.
They believe that most folks are
just naturally hard to convince.
“Some remain skeptical,” they say,
“eves when we try to prove that a
person is 'asleep' by putting his head
on one object and his feet on another
and then sitting on his middle."
These two college mystics became
interested In the tricks of the sub
conscious mind while iu junior col
lege where a professor made a hobby
of hypnotism.
Worsham has been hypnotized
once. “I don’t remember the things
l did, for 1 was genuinely asleep,
tint from what l was told after I
'came out,’ they must have been
pretty silly.”
Probably the best trick they ever
pulled was making a boy believe that
he was walking up the street in a one
man shirt-tail parade. “The look on
his face was as dramatic as it was
funny,” they recall.
'Kind Lady’. . .
be
(Continued from page 1)
wards’ daughter, Aggie, will
played by Eleva Smith, Atlanta.
Mary Nell McKoin, Atlanta, will
be Phyllis Glenning in the play.
Phyllis is the somewhat mercenary
but altogether charming niece of the
“Kind Lady,” who has got herself
engaged to Peter Santard, an Ameri
can.
William Hammack, Cuthbert, will
play the part of Peter Santard. Pe
ter, yawning frequently, is being in
troduced to all Phyllis’ relatives as
a reminder to them to send wedding
presents.
Hugh Hill, Griffin; Melvin Pollock,
Athens, and J. A. Hungerpiller, Au
gusta, will also appear In the show.
The play is a tale of horror, but
without melodrama. The action
moves in a manner to build up sus
pense and the chills and thrills, j
though real and often, come quiet
ly and subduedly.
The plot concerns an old maid,'
Mary Herries, who is estranged from
her family and lives in a quiet sec
tion of London. Her life, too, is |
quiet until the mystery thickens.
Abit Nix, prominent Athens at
torney, will address the class in the
“Law of the Press" at the Grady
School of Journalism Saturday morn
ing at 11:30.
Earlier this week Walter G. Pas-
chall, of the Atlanta Journal and
radio station WSB, addressed the
students in the class in “Radio in
Journalism.”
A regent of the University System
Mr. Nix was for some years a mem'
ber of the faculty of the Lumpkin
Law School. He is an alumnus of
the University of Georgia, a mem
ber of the Sigma Chi fraternity, and
prominent in civic, fraternal, and
other phases of public life.
Pulp Paper Expert
Will Speak Tonight
Experienced in the production of
pulp paper, John Torcequar, Chilla-
eothe, Ohio, will speak at the Science
Club meeting Friday night at 8:30
in Memorial Hall.
Mr. Torcequar, chief technician
of Mead Paper Company, has for the
last few years followed very closely
the increased use of southern pine
for an increasing number of paper
products.
Born in Scotland, Mr. Torcequar
came to this country in 1913. He
operated a chemical plant in Mas
sachusetts until 1920. After sev
eral years with Meade Paper Com
pany he took charge of the research
laboratories, his work being con
fined chiefly to the production of
new pulp processes aimed at the
utilization of more raw materials.
Editors Gather . . .
(Continued from page 1)
of the Newspaper Association Man
agers, Inc.
John E. Drewry. director of the
Grady School, will preside at the
banquet Wednesday night. Also ap
pearing at this time, in addition to
the featured speaker, will be Miss
Emily Woodward, founder of the
Georgia Press Institute; President
Harmon W. Caldwell of the Univer
sity. and Albert S. Hardy, chairman
of the Press Institute Committee.
Hugh Hodgson, head of the fine arts
department, will direct the banquet
music.
A score of prominent journalists
throughout the state will appear in
minor roles on the program and ev
ery newspaper presenting a speaker
will give either a luncheon or ban
quet.
Pandora Review . . .
(Continued from psge 1)
ledge Hall; Anne Abney, Alpha
Lambda Tau. and Bobbie Stevens,
Sigma Pi. Chi Phi will select its
sponsor next week.
Judges for the review will be
named by Baxter later. There will
be an admission charge of 25 cents.
Crab!) Slightly Improved;
Conscious Only at Times
Regaining consciousness only
for brief intervals, George Crabb,
Athens, confined to the General
Hospital as result of injuries re
ceived from a horse in a second
advanced cavalry ROTC class last
Friday, is reported as slightly bet
ter today.
Crabb suffered a concussion of
the brain and a broken collar bone,
lie remained unconscious until
Tuesday morning. Since that time
he has been conscious intermit
tently but never for any length of
time.
Hoi Singer, Unadilla, member of
the Mu Chapter of Tau Epsilon Phi
lias been awarded one of the four
national extra-curricular keys of the
fraternity.
The Dance Club attended the Jooss
Ballet at the Fox theater in Atlanta
Thursday.
Dr. E. E. Byrd, professor of zool-l
ogy, spoke to the Pharmacy Club I
last Tuesday on “Intestinal Para- j
sites.”
Mrs. Thomas Whitehead, NY A su
pervisor, urges all students who I
transferred from Shorter College to |
contact her at her office in {he Aca
demic Building within the next week. I
Military Ball . . .
(Continued from page 1)
and five stars will adorn one wall
while national, brigade, and regi
mental colors will be on another.
Members of the decorating com
mittee are: Gillespie, ex-officio
member; Jackson, chairman; Buster
Mathews, Atlanta; Henry Madden
Athens, and Guy Firor, Athens.
Daniels Service
Station
NORMAL TOWN
Prince and Georgia Avenues
PHONE 9127
Standard Oil Products
BEFORE BUYING
Your New Spring
Bonnet Visit
The Martha Shoppe
M0ITH II MPklN
• Nett Pokes • Pill Box
* Light Felts • Felt Rollers
* Turban*
Quality Service
INDUSTRIAL LAUNDRY
AND DRY CLEANING
COMPANY
PHONE
2 7 6
142-146 W. Clayton Street
COMING - THURSDAY - FRIDAY - SATURDAY
William Powell •> Anna Bella in
y/ The Barroness and the Butler*
//
2 DAYS
CLARK
GABLE
WALLACE
BERRY
in
“Hell Divers”
TODAY €r
Tomorrow
2 DAYS - MONDAY 6- TUESDAY - 2 DAYS
THE GRANDEST STORY Of HOLLYWOOD!
Swell fun and romance in the studios—
by the author of “ Mr. Deeds"!
WALTER WANGE8
prtunti jO*'"
LIS'-' 1
• with
HUMPHREY BOGART
Released Are United Artiest
2 DAYS • WEDNESDAY 6- THURSDAY - 2 DAYS
tXY glowing, Mushing,
f sweet and »erred moment of yoor
'fend love will come berk to you!
WUmtWUWRk-t
f BENNEfT FONDA
I MET MY ioVI AGAIN
-* .ns DAM* MAT WHfTTV * A LAM MAMHAU
LOUtSt PLATT • A LAM 8 AXLES • TIM HOLT
lt«l«oedd iSn. Untied AsSiW ~