Newspaper Page Text
Two
SOCIETY
Students Spend
Varied Holiday
Season -Away
Mr. W'olby Rich of Marietta
visited Miss Martha Glarid.
Glynn Shumake spent several
days In Bowdon visiting friends.
Miss Esther 55111 and Miss Alvada
Pope spent most of the vacation
touring north Georgia.
Hob Richardson spent a week
with relatives in Atlanta.
Miss Marion Lanier spent a week
visiting Iriends in LaGrango.
lfarry Dodd and W. L. Hicks
were at Reinhardt College for a
week.
jack Stephens visited relatives
in Florida over the holidays.
Ralph Westbrook with members
of his family made a tour of north
ern and central Florida over the
holidays.
Paul Hurt spent several days
visiting in Macon.
Miss Madge Cain and Eloise Bur
den were the holiday guests of
Miss Vivian Smith.
Robert Knox spent the last week
of the • holidays visiting Horton
Greene in Calhoun. They attended
dances in Calhoun, Rome, and
Cartersville.
Dick Grace, Bill Berry, and Jack
Stephens were in Cedartown and
Trion visiting friends and attend
ing dances.
Wilborn Boggs spent a week in
Birmingham.
Warren Childs spent most of the
holiday season in Miami with
friends.
Henry Sappington and Ed Webb
spent part of the season with Joe
Felker in Atlanta.
Misses Sara Sewell and Madge
Doyal spent some time visiting
friends and relatives in Rome.
Rufus Woods toured southern
Tennessee during the holidays.
Frank Kelly spent three days
with Robert Knox in Thomaston.
Owen Malcolm attended holiday
dances at Athens and Covington.
O’Rear Treadaway and Bob Bell
visited friends in north Georgia
and attended several dances there.
Marge Bowen: What do you
mean telling me that dates you
had with me are like pearls.
Treadway: Neckless, dearie, neck
less.
Nellie-Joe
Beauty Slioppe
Second Floor
First National Bank Building
WILEY CREEL
Jeweler
Carrollton ■- -•- Georgia
Coffee Hour Held
Spotlight Sunday
Centering the social interests
of Sunday evening was the de
lightful coffee hour held from six
until seven at the women’s dormi
tory.
The guests were served by Miss
es Georgia Castleberry, Floyd
Grant, Claire McLarty, and Gwen
dolyn Hines, and during the course
of the hour, Miss Nelle Clegg ren
dered a reading titled “Their First
Spat.”
Among the guests were the mem
bers of the deputation team from
the Inman Park Methodist Church
in Atlanta, composed of Misses
Louise Roberts, Jean Freeman,
Eloise Rivers, Pauline Furr, and
Mr. John Chappell.
The young men attending the
event included: Buddy Brooks,
Randolph Chandler, Pete Potts, L.
W. Witt, Dick Grace, Paul Hurt,
Pelham Staples, Robert Knox, Arn
old Spradlin, Andy Floyd, Jeff
Slade, Frank Burden, Aubury Haw
kins, Ralph Westbrooks, Walter
Ashworth, Joe Hamil, Frank Dy
sart, Gilbreto Oramus, Billy Harris,
Owen Malcolm, and Bob Richard
son.
The young men were accom
panied by their afternoon dates
during the coffee hour.
W ee\end Activities
To Include Dance
Jack Fleming, president of the
Men’s Council, said yesterday that
the Men’s Dormitory would act
as guests at a dance Friday night
to take place in the college gym
nasium.
The Cedartown Capers will furn
ish the music for the dance which
will begin at eight-thirty and last
until twelve.
He announced that there would
be four no-breaks, and two specials.
Inman Park M. E.
Church Deputation
Team Comes Here
Vesper Services last Sunday af
ternoon featured the Inman Park
Methodist Church D e p ut a ti o n
Team, representing the Young Peo
ple’s Department.
Pauline Furn presided during
the program which was opened by
a devotional by Louise Roberts.
The principle speaker of the ev
evlng was Sara Rivers who chose
for her talk, “God, My Brother
an I.”
Special music for the ossacion
was rendered by John Chappell
who gave a violin solo, and Miss
Eloise Chapman who sang “To A
Wild Rose.”
Beauty may be only skin deep,
says Bob Bell, but the human eye
is no X-ray machine.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JAN. 19, 1937
FRANK KELLEY IS
ELECTED PRESIDENT
OF DEBATING CLUB
PLEDGER CARMICHAEL MADE
VICE-PRESIDENT IN TUES
DAY’S ELECTION
Frank Kelly, editor-in-chief of the
Chieftain, was elected president of
the Debating Club last Tuesday
night. Pledger Carmichael was
elected vice president.
Howard Handley, president of
Phi Sigma Alpha, succeeds Kelly
as secretary-treasurer, and Marion
Huddleston, former president, suc
ceeds Carmichael as parliamenta
rian.
According to Kelly, at the Club’s
business session several amend
ments were added to the Constitu
tion, making the membership rules
tighter.
lie also said that the club, an
honorary society, will soon make
the membership more exclusive.
Plans were discussed for securing
emblems or keys for the inter
collegiate debaters.
Kelly said the club is scheduled
to debate the Agricultural Club at
the University of Georgia soon,
and Georgia State College for Wo
men has accepted a challenge for
a debate February.
The West Geogia Teams will
meet Young Harris during the
spring quarter, it was announced.
Details of these debates will be
announced in a later edition of
the West Georgian.
Dean Fred Gunn
Champions Prohibition
In Chapel Talk
POINTS OUT EVILS OP LIQUOR
TRAFFIC
Dean Gunn made a talk during
the chapel exercises Tuesday, Jan.
11. In no uncertain terms he point
ed out the evils of the liquor traf
fic.
Citing a recent news broadcast
from the Press Radio Bureau as a
source of infoymation, he said:
“One of the strongest argumentes
of the repeal forces was that they
would stop bootlegging by legaliz
ing the sale of whiskey. A nation
wide survey shows that instead of
decreasing, bootleging has increas
ed since repeal.”
“Another promise of the wets
was that our highways would be
whiskey cars, and by this the
freed from the menace of speeding
number of fatalities from accidents
cut down. Today there are more
drunken drivers than ever before.
Last year there were 500 more
lives snuffed out by automobiles
than there were the year before.”
“The revenue to be collected on
whiskey, it was promised, would
lessen the tax burden. But if there
has been one cent cut from the tax
es of the people, I have not heard
about it.”
“It is your problem, young peo
ple. And you are going to be the
ones who will face it in the near
future. It must be dealt with.
Therefore, I urge you to petition
your Representatives and Senators
that they may know where you
stand and what you want, and
vote to stamp it out for you.”
President Ingram endorsed this
talk, and affirmed his support of
Prohibition.
Modern day dresses are quite like
good stores, says A Georgia Tech
man; that is, short enough to be
interesting, but long enough to
cover the subject.
Strozier: I like your form.
Weaver: Must we go over that
again?
CaVHIPUjI :
PERSONALITIES
QLENN HOQAN, President of Mu
Z eta Alpha
This issue of the West Georgian
salutes a student who has gained
from the staff more sincere respect
than any other individual on the
campus. His name is Glenn Hogan.
A native of this section of Geor
gia, Glenn was graduated with
honors from Carrollton High School
three years ago this coming June.
The following January he en
tered West Georgia, and since that
time he has proved himself not
only an unusual student from a
scholastic standing, but also the
fact of his natural leading ability.
In addition to being the business
manager of last year’s West Geor
gian, he is this year’s president of
the scientific society, the one and
only Mu Zeta Alpha. He holds
membership in Phi Sigma Alpha,
the French Club, and the Voluntary
Religious Association.
His association with the Dramatic
Club and its campus presentations
have made Hogan well-known; and
his debating as an intercollegiate
debator has won the club many
points.
Serious-minded in almost every
detail, Glenn says that his main
hobby is business and affairs. He
claims that he gets as much plea
sure out of his filling station as
he does a living.
He likes beautiful women, “ex
quisite women,” as he put it. He
likes Chevrolet automobiles, and
thinks that make is the best built
in the low-price field.
His pet topic of conversation,
mingled with automobiles, women,
politics, and dice, is Super Solven
ized Woco Pep Gasoline, and plenty
of it!
To the Lumpkin School of Law at
the University of Georgia, Glenn
has hopes of going. A legal car
eer, strictly legal, he insists, is
highest ambition.
He likes to read, and names
“Scribners,” “Life,” and “American
Mercury” as his favorite maga
zines. Is intensely interested in
the political opinions that the edi
tors of the “American Mercury”
WAKE UP YOUR MOTOR—PEP MAKES A WINNER
—Buy Woco-Pep at —
GLENN HOGAN SERVICE STATION
26 MAPLE STREET
THE PEOPLES HARDWARE CO.
(Incorporated)
Dealers and Jobbers In*
HARDWARE. FURNITURE, PAINTS, FLOOR COVERINGS
WAGONS AND JOHN DEERE IMPLEMENTS
DEVOE PAINTS
21 NEWNAN STREET PHONE 243
t
When You Want ....
Fruit, Candy, Popcorn, and Peanuts
GO TO——
TURNER’S CANDY & FRUIT STORE
The Best In Town at The Best Price!
advance.
His opinion of the modern Ameri
can movies go thus: “Asa whole
Hollywood produces some ex
ceptionally fine and enlightening
motion pictures, but I think that
there is a decided need in stronger
and more complete censorship.”
Spends his spare time reading,
at the station, riding or rather
flying in his Chevie, reading, and
“dice-ing it.” He said last year that
his success was due solely to his
someting-near absolute control of
snake-eyes.
Indulges twenty out of twenty
four hours in a long and smelly
pipe which is almost constantly
filled wdth first Prince Albert, then
Target, then Union Leader, and
often times Sir Walter Raleigh.
He likes women, but at the
present has little time for them.
As for the preferred type, he ad
mits that a mixture of a blond and
brunette with light brown eyes
has gotten him going at times..
Does not dance, has a limited de
sire for social life, but at the same
time is devoted to back - porch
bull sessions with both students
and faculty members.
Likes brown suits with white
shirts and brown ties and brown
shoes. Believes that the -’next
war is coming before the end of the
present decade, but thankful that
he has flat feet.
Is a decidedly human person who
believes that friendliness and the
knack to get along with everybody
is a most important matter.
I’ve never been dated,
I’ve never been kissed,
They said if I waited no man
could resist
The lure of a pure
And innocent miss.
The trouble is this,
I’M FIFTY!
We hasten to point out that while
every man has his wife, only the
iceman has his pick.