The Campus mirror. (Atlanta, Georgia) 1924-19??, May 01, 1933, Image 17

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Speakers, Guests and Entertainers 1932-33 October 2—Dr. M. Ashby Jones, Honorary President of the Commission on Interracial Co-operation, formerly Pastor of the Ponce de Leon Baptist Church, St. Louis, Mis souri. October 9—Dr. Willis J. King, President of Gammon Theological Seminary. October 13—Dr. John E. Holloway, Di rector of the Office of Census and Statistics of the Union of South Africa. October 14—Dr. John Hope, President of Atlanta University. October 1(1—Rev. L. A. Pinkston, Pastor of Beulah Baptist Church. October 21—Rev. Father Alban Winter, of Yorkshire, England, a minister of the Church of England in charge of a secondary school for native students in a mission at Johannesburg, South Africa. October 22—Dr. Henry R. Butler. October 24—Mrs. Julia Peterkin, of Lang Syne Plantation, Fort Motte, South Caro lina, author of Black April, Scarlet Sister Mary, Bright Skin. October 28—Dr. Will Durant, author of The Story of Philosophy and other books, formerly professor at Columbia University and lecturer at the Labor Temple School of New York. October 30—Dr. Lavens M. Thomas II, Professor of Religious Education, Emory l Tiiversity. November 4—Dr. Frederick P. Keppel, President of the Carnegie Corporation. November 9—Miss Celestine Smith, Re gional Director of the South and Southwest of the Young Women's Christian Association. November 14—Dr. Carter G. Woodson, Director of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. November 15—Dr. Rayford W. Logan, of the Association for the Study of Negro Life and History. November 1(1 Fred Lynn Steeley, Profes sor of Sociology, Paine College, Augusta, Ga. November 17 Dr. Edgar 11. Webster, Professor Emeritus of Atlanta University. November 19 Dr. William Tinfant Fos ter, formerly President of Reed College, Portland, Oregon; Director of the Poliak Foundation for Economic Research. November 23—Mis^ Ruth G. Lockman, of the Intercollegiate Prohibition Association. November 25 Miss Mabel Carney, Asso ciate Professor of Education ot benchers College, Columbia University, New York. November 27 Rev. Raymond J. Hender son, Pastor of the Greater Wheat Street Baptist Church. December 1 — Henry H. Landon, Jr., of New York City. December 1 Dr. Kenyon L. Butterfield, lecturer and adviser on mrnl affairs; author of The Farmer and the Anr Day, Chapters The Campus Mirror Sonnet Frances Lawson, ’33 So many things there are I do not know About the subtle world I’m living in— The insulating calm ne’er seemed so thin Till piercing sorrow straight began to show How freely useless tears, so big can flow. How painful little words to hearts can be— To hearts that seem wrapped in security. Who makes the pain, in worlds and these things, so? And yet this world is still a kind old place; Some men have felt all these, yet conquered much. And, too, I find smiles wreathed around their faces: They live beside me in this self-same world. I, too, can live with smiles about me curled, For then my aches and pains—I'll conquer such! Installation Services .New officers of the campus organiza tions for the school year 1933-1934 were in stalled during the Y.W.C.A. service hour, Sunday evening, May 28. Officers were charged by President Florence M. Read. in Rural Progress, A Christian Program for the Rural Community, and other books. December 4—John W. Stanley, formerly professor of Biology in Madura University, India; Executive Secretary of the Young Men’s Christian Association during the War, and later National Secretary in India. December 5—Dr. Ambrose Caliver, Senior Specialist in Education for Negroes of the United States Bureau of Education. December 11—Dr. Frederick Carl Eiselen, Corresponding Secretary of the Board of Education of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Chicago, Illinois. December 14—Dr. Winifred Nathan, of the Department of Education, Atlanta Univer sity. January 4—Miss W’nifred Wygal, Na tional Student Secretary of the Young Women’s Christian Association. January 8—Dr. Harvey W. Cox, President of Emory University. January 10—Dr. Ambrose Leo Suhrie, Professor of Education, New York Univer sity. January 15—Rev. W. J. Faulkner, Pastor of First Congregational Church. January Hi—John P. Whittaker, Registrar of Atlanta University and Morehouse Col lege. January 20—Mercer Evans, Professor of Economics, Emory University. January 22 Dr. Luther Rice Christie, formerly Pastor of Ponce de Leon Baptist Church, Atlanta; Pastor-elect of Fourth Ave nue Baptist Church, Louisville, Kentucky. January 24 Dr. Florence M. Snell, head of the English Department of Huguenot University, Wellington, South Africa. January 28- William L. Finley, naturalist, of Jennings Lodge, Oregon. (Continued on Page 19) 15 What Eler Music Meant to Me To Carol Blanton, ’33 By Ruby L. Flanagan, '36 Out of a past where Memory keeps Her cherished things and weeps, I list and hear when the grate is red And phantom folk in the gloaming tread, To the words her music said. A pine tree lifts its branches high In pleading to the sky, The yellow blooms of the jassamine vine Like lamps swing low and somehow twine Her music in this heart of mine. Her dainty fingers touched the keys. Then the melody of things Lute-like, most musical, most sweet Beneath the pine tree seemed to meet; There love's own harvest was complete. At every note, the moonlight swayed With every touch her fingers made. Upon the keys old loves seemed wed, As when one through a dream is led By the words her music said. The lute-like notes brought back again White sprays of April rain: As dew-wet lilacs scent the air— Ah, once again she blessed them there With music like a prayer. Ivy Oration (Continued from Page 11) mourned over his fate, should he become lost in the Atlantic fog? There are all too many with this spirit —the feeling that I can't do that, and even if I did they wouldn’t give me due credit any way. How do you know until you’ve tried? All things considered, you can do anything anyone else can do. Try the world sometimes and see if it isn’t a pretty just old place, after all. Presevere as the ivy does, confidently, and staunchly. And remember: “If you think you're beaten, you are; If you think you dare not, you don't; If you’d like to win but think you can't, It’s almost a cinch you won’t. “If you think you’ll lose, you’re lost, For out of thq world we find Success begins with a fellow’s will; It’s all in the state of mind. "If you think you’re out-classed, you are; You’ve got to think high to rise; ’t ou 've got to he sure of yourself before ^ ou can ever win a prize. “Life's battles don't always go To the stronger or faster man, But soon or late the man who wins Is the one who thinks he can.”