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The George-Anne Student Media Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern The George-Anne Student Media 12-8-1951 The George-Anne Georgia Southern University Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/george-anne Part of the Higher Education Commons Recommended Citation Georgia Southern University, "The George-Anne" (1951). The George-Anne. 260. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/george-anne/260 This newspaper is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Media at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in The George-Anne by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Support THE GEORGE-ANNE Professors! PUBLISHED BY STUDENTS OF GEORGIA TEACHERS COLLEGE VOLUME 24 Collegeboro, Georgia, Suburb of Statesboro, Saturday, December 8, 1951 NUMBER 9 SI rrots. Whip Airmen; 71 Lose lo Leathernecks The TC Professor rolled over Moody APB Monday night tallying 76 points to 32 for the Airmen. This victory came after the vaunted Parris Island Marines outscored the Teach- ers 85-63 on last Saturday night. The Professors will go on the ™ road at the end of this week to meet their first college competi- Students^ Vote tion. They will encounter North Yes On Corsages Georgia College at Dahlonega on Friday night and Piedmont at The results of balloting here Demorest Saturday. the corsage question show that there will be corsages at the In the routing of Moody Air Christmas formal dance. Stu- Base the entire Teachers squad dents indicated their choice in the polling which took place saw action, with Marvin Vanover last Monday. winding up as high scorer. Fran McMenamin, scrappy Par- ris Island guard,, was top scorer in the Marine contest. The Leath- Musical Events erneck cause was aided consider- ably when Ralph Parsons, stal- wart TC guard, fouled out early Are Scheduled in the second half. As a gay prelude to the Christ- mas holidays the music depart- It was the first time within ment will sponsor a series of three memory that the Gyrenes had out- Sarah Fletcher IN "WHO'S WHO"—Pictured above are nine TC seniors who were programs. The first will be a con- scored the Professors. named to "Who's Who in American Colleges and Universities. They are cert by the Philharmonic Choir on The Professors' home schedule Receives Honor (front row, left to right): George I. Parrish Jr., Edith Carpenter, and Friday, December 7. for the remainder of the quarter Charles Jackson; second row: Jimmy Oliver, Betty Anne Withrow, Adding more variety and color is: December 10, Maxwell Air Col- Sarah Fletcher, freshman from and Grover Bell; third row: Dan Biggers, Anne Trice and Spencer W. to the prelude will be the student lege; December 14, Turner Air Chula, attended the National 4-H Overstreet. recital to be presented on Tues- Force; December 19, Camp Gor- day, December 11. Those partici- don. Club Congress held in Chicago last pating will be: Sonny Hawkins, week. After winning first place in Marjorie Weatherford, Gene Rob- the state and regional frozen foods Shakespearean Drama erts, , Shirley Gulledge, Eunetta Harvey Lee Simpson, sophomore division, Sara, became a sectional Purvis, Loretta Green, Beverly from Sylvester, has replaced Jo- winner at the convention. Bargeron, Johnny DeNitto, Farye seph Neverla as make-up editor The 1,500 delegates stayed at the Lunsford, Hugh Pharis, Gilbert of The George-Anne. Joseph re- Conrad Hilton Hotel. During the To Be Presented In 1952 Hughes, and Martha Driskell. signed because of pressing duties conference Sarah was an honor The final event will be a concert which warranted his time and The first Masquers production of 1952 will be Shakes- by the TC band, consisting of attention. Welcome, Harvey. Continued to Back Page. cai-ols and popular Christmas peare's comedy, "Twelth Night." This will be the second songs, highlighted by Russ Ever- Shakespearean drama to be produced on the T. C. campus. itt's singing of "White Christmas." The first was "A Midsummer Night's Dream," which was presented years ago in the amphi- Janice Chastain.' r^wcoiSjSjwwTO-x*^! ' The costumes will be designed An old fashioned square dance theatre under the direction of Miss will be held in the gym this Sat- Mamie Jones. by Bill Fox and made by a staff of college students headed by Val- urday. The dance is sponsored by Starring in the play will be Bar- daree Jennings. Working with her Alpha Psi Omega. bara Fossett, Viola; Dan Biggers, will be Faye Henry, Martha Hine- the Duke Orsino; Bill Evans, Sir ly, Dorothy Ford, Margaret Jones, Toby Bolch; and George Parrish, Sue Wynn, and Doris Ford. Bobby TC Band Plays Malvolio. The play is under the Wright and Margaret Wright will direction of Miss Dorothy Stewart. be stage managers for the play. For Basketball Included in the cast are Jane Other committees and their Seabolt, Sebastian, brother to Vi- members are: Bobby Richardson, Spectators at the opening ola; Ottis Houston, Antonio, friend props and lights: Edith Carpenter basketball game at Georgia Teach- to Sebastian; Christy, a sea cap- and Martha Wood, publicity chair- ers College Saturday got a half- tain and friend to Viola; Phil Nor- men; Shirley Gulledge, Jo Starr, time surprise — precision drill by ton, Valentino, and Jimmy Wells, and Grover Bell, publicity commit- the college band. Curio, both gentlemen attending tee; Janie Christian, programs; Dana M. King, Jr., band director, the duke; Billy Moore, Sir Andrew Rosie Ammons, - tickets; Ottis and 16 music majors gave the per- Augecheek, a steward to Olivia; Houston, Jimmy Wells, Anngene formance, believed the first at a Hara Toler, Fabian, a servant to Culbreth, Roy Goolsby, and Jo basketball game in the Soufe, Olivia; and Carl Tyson, a priest. Starr, program and ticket commit- Band members decided in Sep- The Pages will be played by Rose tee; Loretta Green, Ann Trice, and tember to appear at four college Mary Ammons and Margaret Annie Ruth Moody, general duty; basketball contests rather than Jones, and the Ladies-in-waiting and Anne Trice, music. play at high-school football games, are Betty Ewing, Martha Wood, The time and place of produc- tried basketball intermission shows Edith Carpenter, Anne Trice, and tion will be announced later. High-school bands in Colorado last year, Mr. King says. When Not Teaching, TC Clements Gives Teachers Are Evaluating Referee Specs When they aren't teaching, classes—sometimes as late as mid- J. I. Clements Jr., assistant teachers at Teachers College this night—in a "self-evaluation" of coach at Teachers College, has year are evaluating. the college. Their job will continue done what every losing bas- until their report, is evaluated in ketball coach probably would Evaluaton, or stocki taking, al- like most to do. ways has been part of the teach- turn in 1953 by a committee of visiting educators. At the final whistle of an ing process, but the formal evalu- exhibition game which the GEORGIA TEACHERS, TOP TO BOTTOM—The long and the short ation now engaging the teachers The aim is to examine the pol- Teachers lost, Clements flank- and the tall go to make up the Teachers College basketball squad, as is the largest one ever undertaken icies and practices of the college ed himself with several par- by the Teachers College or similar and to implement or improve them tisans and presented the ref- indicated by Randy Whaley, six-foot, nine-inch center of Pelzer, S. C, institutions. wherever necessary, eree with spectacles. and O'Neal Register, five-foot, six-inch guard of Irwinville, Ga. Both All 75 faculty members are ac- wherever necessary. As much im- He wouldn't have been so are outstanding freshmen. Whaley will be in the line-up here for the tive participants. Divided into provement as possible is supposed brazen, of course, if the ref- first time when the Professors meet Camp Gordon in an exhibition seven committees, they are work- to be made before the visiting eree hadn't been his brother. game on Wednesday night, December 19. (Clifton Photo from Savannah ing before, between, and after Continued to Back Page. Morning News.) BBBBBHBHBB H^p^M————m ■■■■■■■■■I THE GEORGE-ANNE (Established 1927) EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Charles Stewart ASSOCIATE EDITOR Mary HeleD Aultman BUSINESS MANAGER -J'im Hodges FEATURE EDITOR E<H'.h Carpenter MAKE-UP EDITOR -H'arley Simpson ART EDITOR v..George Parrish PHOTOGRAPHY - Peggy Dobbs CIRCULATION MANAGER Gilbert C. Hughes, III SPORTS EDITORS Harry Strick'land, Joan Bennett COLUMNISTS..-Harry Strickland, Jo Ann Darden, Martha Wood REPORTERS—Rose Mary Ammons, Shirley Hanson, Margaret Jones, Liz Hartley, Faye Waters, Betty B. Bran- nen, Betty Ruth Fplsom, Alice Willingham, Mar- tha Hinely, Peggy Jo Burke, Robert Hurst. TYPISTS —Betsy Tippins, Betty Eason, Peggy Davis, Barbara Waters, Shirley Lagerbald. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1951 Published weekly, September to June, except during holidays ,by Georgia Teachers College students. (Entered as second class matter at Postoffice at Collegeboro, Ga., under temporary permit.) SUBSCRIPTION: $1.50 PER YEAR Passing the Book GEORGIA (Sun.-Mon.) 'ACROSS THE WIDE MISSOURI." It is late in the quarter and most in the audio-visual room we are of us have been reaching way, going to show the movie version M-G-M presents their big tech- way down into our pockets, only of Daphne Du Maurier/s "Jamaica nicolor spectacle of the year in the Inn," directed by Alfred Hitchcock the tradition of "King Solomon's to come up emptyhanded. Finan- and starring Charles Laughton, Mines" and "Kim," with the story ces, with corsages and Christmas Maureen O'Hara, and Leslie It's Up To Us! of the rugged, brawling Mountain presents coming up, are at a low Banks.
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