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4-25-1941

Colonnade April 25, 1941

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GSCW CELEIiltATES SOOl College Notables, Th Alumnae Expected olonna In the fall of 1891 the Georgia Normal and Industrial College for Women was established in Milledgeville. It Volume XV. Z-122. Milledgeville, Ga., Friday, April 25, 1941 Number opened with eighty-eight students. The present Georgia State College for Women evolved from this beginning, and today fourteen hundred students are Mississippi enrolled. GSCW ranks with the largest colleges for women in the Election For Class Ofiicers United States. Chemist Gets Today and tomorrow GSCW is celeteating its Golden An- HertV AwarCl niversary. The guests that have J Scheduled Tuesday, April 29 been invited are: delegates ^^ ^.^^.^^ E. Hand of Mis- from forty-eight southern col- ^^^.^^^ S^^^g .^Ugge ^^^ ^een Nominees To Be leges, memibers tof f t h e State ^^^^^^^^ ^ ^e^ei^^ the Herty / Board of Regents, and GSCW ^^^^^ ^^^ 1941^ Dr. Hand has Introduced In Alumnae. Among some of the ^^^^ ^j^osen as the outstanding outstanding visitors will lie Dr. chemist from the Southeast due Chapel Monday C. S. Boucher, chancellor of to his continuous service as Statf The election for class officers the University of Nebraska; Chemist, and to the national rec- Agnes Ellen Harris, dean of the of 1941-42 will be held Tuesday, ognition he has received as teach- April 29, from 9 to 5 o'clock. Women's College, University of er. Presentation of the medal will Alabama; and Mrs. Ella take place at 8:30 o'clock May 3 For the past week petitions Evans Highman, Washington, in Russell Auditorium. "The have been handed in nominating D. C. attorney. Challenge of a Southern Apostle" girls for the offices of the senior, Many departments, including is the subject that Dr. Hand has junor, sophomore classes and day thei art department, the Jiome chosen for his address. students. economics department, and the The award was established in Aulusta Slappey, and; Judy library are sponsoring exhibits. 1933 by the Chemistry Club at Krauss have been nominated for There will also be tours of Mill- GSCW in honor of Dr. Charles the office of president of the edgeville all day April 2^ for the H. Herty, the famous Georgia senior class, Jessie Marie Brew- out-of-town guests. Several of chemist and native of Baldwin ton having withdrawn her^name. the historic homes and other county, who developed the process por the position of vice-president places of interest, will be open. of making paper from pine pulp. Ann Gwynn, and Nancy Cheney One of the highlights of .the pro- Each year the awnrd is presented will vie. gram will be the Acadentic Pro- to the chemist from the South- Those nominated for secretary cession which will take place Sat- east who, through teaching or Augusta Slappy of the senior class are Elizabeth Frances Jordan ui'day morning. The Celebration research, has done the most to Tatum, Mary Power, and Doris will be brought to a close by a advance his field. Selection of Dunn. Other girls nominated are ball Saturday night. the winners is made by the Hazel Killingsworth for represen- Georgia Section of the American tative to council; Martha Scar- NOTICE Chemical Society in cooperation borough, Ethel Belle Smith, and Those Sophomores and Jun- with other sections of the society Marjorie Herring, for treasurer; in the southeastern states. and Margaret Baldwin, Loree iors interested in continuing Bartlett, Jane Smith, and Mild- their worlc toward a degree The first award was made ii red Pharr for representative to please come by the Registrar's 1933 to Dr. Pi'ed Allison of Ala- court. bama Polytechnic Institute, Au- Office to get your degree The junior nominees for the burn, Ala. Dr. Herty, who died .» 'i^s^>y' blanks checked. class presidency are Betty Jor- (Continued on page 10) don and Ann Stubbs, Ann Coch- ran withdrew from the race. Edyth Trapnell and Martha Lois West^ Luecker Jo Direct Roberts will be candidates for the office of vice-president. Carolyn Wilson was nominated for the of- "Our Town^^; Choirs Assist fice of secretary and was auto- matically elected at the with- This week-end all attention is on our college and its fif- drawal of Ann Stubbs. tieth birthday* however, all interest will be directed to Either Suzanne Wanamaker or "Our Town'' on the night of May 6 at 8:30. "Our Town" Kathryn McGriff will be elected is "unusual—deeply original—a • Judy Krauss . representative to' council from the Anne Stubbs haunting thing," as the Cincin- yan Middlebrooks, Virginia Lu- junior class. Gayle Rankin and nati Times-Star expressed it. cas, and Ernestine Wynn. They Helen Dunn are running for trea- sm-er; while Norma Rurden was Miss Edna West, tlie director, will sing in the wedding and gi'aveyard scenes, and will be ac- nominated for representative to and the cast have been working Students court. on this play for approximately companied by Doris Watson at YWCA Holds three weeks. Mr. Leo Luecker is the organ. Sara Simms will oppose Dilcey the technical director of "Our Robert Benchley said, "There Attend CGA Ai'thur and Joyce Slate for the is no doubt that any season could presidency of the sophmore class. Yearly Retreat Town," and he has as managers Other girls nominated for the of the various staffs: Barbara count.itself proud to bring forth 'Our Town'.' Press Meet 1941-42 sophomore officers are: Montgomery for costumles, Bar- Jane Bowden, and Jane Sparks At Lake bara Conn for lights, Carrie Bai-- The Washington Post expressed ts criticism thus: "A miracle of Martha Daniel and Nancy Rag- for vice-president; Oberley And- The YWCA will hold its annual lie for sound, India Hodgson for land, delegates from College rews, and Carolyn Smith for sec- properties, Dovie Chandler for simplicity, clarity and power. It Retreat at Lake Laiu-el May 3. is all as homely, as vital, as im- Government association, and Lu- retary; Martha Eveleyn Hodges, stage, and Dilsey Arthur for pub- cia Rooney and Evelyn Lane, from and Beth Sheffield for treasurer; All old and new Cabinet mem- licity. pressive, and as inspiring as life "V stripped to its essentials can be The Colonnade, will represent Mary Ann McKinney, Georgia Lee bers will attend. The purpose of Guy Butler is going to play the made by a writer of deep under- GSCW at the annual southeastern Stone, and Leslie Brown for rep. the Retreat is to plan next year's part of Simon Stimfioq| whose standing and great human com- convention of the Student Feder- resentative to council; and Fran- program. choir will consist of representa* passion. 'Our Town' Is more than ation of College Government and cese Garrett, LUlyan Middle- tives from Uie eA Capella, Aeo- a great play; it is an uplifting Press Representatives. The meet- brooks, and Mary Jeff Whechel Installation of the new Y of- lian, and CeciUan chors. Iliese and memorable experience In V^t ing is to be held in Atlanta, April for representative to court. ficers will be held at Vespers members are Jean 6tiewart, LU- theater." 24-26. (Continued cm page 10) Sunday night.

• •; Friday, April 25, 1941 Friday, April 25, 1941 THE COLONNADE Pad THE COLONNADE *ge 2 Corinthian YWCA Has History Dating CAMPUS Writer-Explorer Pens Yarn Memory of A Friend THESE PEOPLE 01 Strange Native Lore Reelects Sallee Back to Schools Infancy .1*. _ MAKE NEWS Perhaps the word "friend" most perfectly described By MILDRED BALLARD In 1895 a group of thirty stu- iller Stephens Bell for GSCW students. Last week we lost By BLANCHE LAYTON Editor dents and faculty at the Georgia of faculty was formed to asJ is friend who had so faithfully and unselfis*hly served us Would you like to know what goes on in the regions a Normal and Industrial College or- little more than just south of the border—in the land of the th| students In making pi/ r 32 years. His hand wa salways close by to support our Every week we have letters from ganized a local Young Woman's head hunters of the Amazon valley to be exact? Then read Mary Sallee, editor of the for the Y program. Through! the students to the editor for im- Christian Association to provide hool. Victor Wolfgang von Hagen's OFF 1940-41 CORINTHRIN, was un- all the years interest was heigj provng the school. What do you for the spiritual growth and de- ened by attendance at c(f Besides being interested in GSCW, Miller Bell was con- WITH THEIR HEADS. Mr. von amlmously re-elected to that po- I think would -be velopment of the girls. Dr. W ferences, at Blue Ridge, and jcted with Wesleyan College and Georgia Military College, Hagen, with his wife Christine, sition by the staff at its meeting the greatest im- Pi Gamma Mu H. Payne, president of Peabody student volunteer confereni iving been ti^ustee of each school. He was a member of the spent months among the Jivaro Monday, April 21. prvement that college, and Mrs. Payne were held only once in a eoUege ge^ oard of Regents of the University System having at one natives, studying their customs, Ann Bridges was defeated for me served as vice-chairman of the board. the student could visiting Dr. and Mrs. Chappell eration. Margaret K. Smith, prj superstitions, practices, and mode the editorship by Sallee but was In 1928 we built with his unforgettable assistance the make on the Initiates Five and Mrs. Payne gave much in- ident of the GSCW Y in 1£ of life in general, and from the elected as associate editor to be )rmitory, Bell Hall, which will always remind us of his love campus? terest and help to the group. In and 1934, was elected to experiences these two encountered assisted by Blanche Muldrow. The )r our college. Judy Krauss the beginning the active member- highest officf in the natlc there has developed a most inter- New Members position of hterary editor will be We of Milledgeville and GSCW will miss our friend but ship consisted only of girls be- YWCA student division, bei| I suggests a better esting book. filled by Blanche Layton. iring our Semi-Centennial celebr^ation, the namte of Miller longing to evangelical churches chairman of the National St attitude. Contrary to common belief, the Five new members, including Viola Gay will be in charge of and the work was carried out by dent Council. Jane Cassels, . Bell will be added to those other names that have 'built "Most of us, "ferocious" head hunters are not three students and two faculty the art work for the 1941-42 maga- committees including bible study, S, C. W.'s Y president in 19^ lY college and cherished hopes for our future. for want of something else to do as bloodthirsty as many reports members, will be initiated into Pi membership devotional, finance, also held this office. It was t spend our leism-e time airing om have it. Instead, if approached in Gamma Mu, national social missionoary, and an intercollegiate this time that the emphasis gripes. We fuss about the food, a peaceable manner, they respond science honor fraternity, at their committee. The association was the Y was broadened to inclui lappy Birthday and lack of dates, and we have wtih an attitude of frieiidliess annual banquet in the college exceedingly interested in missions th\e social implications of tl some causes usually (especially in necessarily mixed with reserve. Be- tearoon May 7 at 7 o'clock. and in the period around 1904 Christian faith. The first Instl Fifty years ago 88 girls enrolled at the Georgia Normal the last case). But just bemoaning cause of the odds against him Those receiving this honor are id Industrial College. That year with two buildings, GSCW our lot won't help us or the college Blanche Muldrow, Rhudene Har- help support a missionary, Miss tute of Human Relations wJ the primitive man of the jungles Getner, in India. In the early Bgan its life. Today our school has been so enlarged that any. If we'd take our suggestions degree, and Murial McMillan sponsored by the Y in 1937 wi| looks out for "big I" until he is days the Y was in full charge is the seventh college o fits type in the world. to our council representatives and Helen Reeve and Judy Krauss its theme Student Responslbili^ convinced of a stranger's motives. of all social and religious activi- Today and tomorrow we pay tribute to those educators use om- energy in a more profita- were eligible for membership but in Sbcial Change inauguratir Coac*. The author found that these na- ties on the campus. It sponsor- the series of institutes which ha^l nd friends who saw the future in establishing colleges for ble line, we might get better re- tives recognize no particular tribal will not join the group. •omen. For half a century GSCW has been growing, during STEWART A. FERGUSON! ed Sunday night services, Wed- become a tradition on the.G. sults." authority other than the leader- To qualify for the honor fra- nesday afternoon services, and lese years young women have received training that would OF ARKANSAS A . 8 M . H A S A S T I P - C.W. campus. Outstanding speal Greta Bell be- ship exercised by the head of the ternity, 29, hours must have been daily vespers in the doi-mitories. t them for useful lives. Department have been added until JHE UNWERSrry OF BUFFAtd ULATION IN HIS AGREE/AEMT ers came to G. S. C. W. incluc lieves our chapel house and descending through his taken in the field of the social It also carried on varied athletic )day we have degrees offered in 15 branches of education. conduct should ONCERAISED P^ ENDOWAAENT THAT STATES HE DOES^JT HAVE sciences and a general scholastic ing Miss Wtnnifred Wygal, FUND OF FIVE MILUON DOLLARS TD WIN A $ I N S L E GAN\E IM THREE several wives to his sons. Women and social events. W. A. Smart, Miss Helen Mortor GSCW is the largest girl's school in the state; but it is be improved. IN OUSTTB4 DAYS.' do most of the work through an average of 88 made in all subjects ot the size but the quality that shows our progress. "We have so taken. Di". Paul Morrow, and Di\ Arthu| By William ingenious plan no doubt devised In 1916-1918 an advisory board Raper. In celebraion of our past and future we greet our visi- many distin- THIS CURIOUS WORLD Ferguson by the male contigent. Since most Besides these students the 3rs. To you wh ohave GSCW as your Alma Mater; to you guished speakers nominations of Miss Mary Lee of the plants are believed to have Peeling that fundamental faitlj ^ho have helped us through our yesterdays; and to you who on our program Anderson, . principal of Peabody feminine souls it appears quite should be the basis for all Chris and these speak- • <%2 ys.Ba:>^0 CASE OF High school and critic teacher of re friends of the school we welcome our campus on this. fitting that women should do all Church Notes tlan people the Y for the last tw( ers go away with history, and Mrs. Drew Lawi'ence, ur fifieth birthday. the planting andtn edhtme years has sponsored Religion/ a fvaorable - or unfavorable - "BIG HEAD' Cotton, coordinator of the local BAPTIST the planting and tending them Emphasis Week, in the fall quar impression of the student body as BEL-ON©ED TO /^ NYA, have been submitted to the Mary Sallee and because baskets are also en* At 2:30 Sunday afternoon, ter. In addition the associatloi awhole. We could at least "sit national board of Pi Gamma Mu. m^S AND WlBllS *HIS SKUUL., dowed with feminlnei souls the April 27, members of the B. T. U. has long recognized the need felij still" and attentive for 30 minutes Those participating will in- zine with Lottie Wallace as her UNEARTHED IN honor of carrying bundles around will discuss "Japanese Christians by college students for guidance By Carolyn Steinger so that the speakers might think STAFFORD falls to the lot of the women. clude the neophytes, of whom assistant. Manager of the business Follow Christ Through the in the field of men-women rela^ we are intersted in something be COUNTVr as staff win be Betty Thurman. Vir- liEM OF THE WEEK other day and left him with the IS THE k.A/!?<5'^Sr All this time the mighty men are : Blanche Muldrow will act Way." tions and first through commit- sides the letters from home." ginia Ryals will be the assistant By far the most intelligent bill to pay. A3^/c»^^/^/ IN THE out himting, cutting off heads torchbearer, and Miss Iva Chand" tees and group discussions, am Lucy Jordon ler of the Beta chapter will of- business manager. CATHOLIC tatempnt read on the labor ques- Wlien Dr. S. was approached on WORL-D. from which they prepare trophies lately through two institutes oi thinks we should ficiate as sentinel. Dr. Guy H. The technical staff will be com. ion this week was made by Will- i na most unusual manner, and During chapel period on Mon- Personal Relations the Y has en- the subject of contributing for a have more inter- Wells and the officers of the posed of Jane Tliornton as ex- Ijam Hammatt Davis, vice chair- going off into trances Induced day morning, April 21 Elizabeth deavored to^ contribute to soundl little Semi-Centennial project he est in programs chapter, who are Dr. Armanda change manager and Martha Scar- |nan of the National Defense by an Intoxicating beverage— Home of the Catholic Church student thinking along these| generously offered to double the and activities and Johnson, president; Dr. Edwin borough In charge of the circula- ediation Board, in speaking to And so it goes—the Jivaro explained to the N. Y. A. girls lines. amount Dr. Lindsley contributed. should develop Scott, vice-president; and Dr. tion. e House Military Affairs Com- braves avenge family injustices, the position of the Vatican City In the meantime he ante-ed up a more class spirit, Sara Nelson, secretary-treasurer, Miss Mary Thomas Maxwell, Always the Y has striven to| ittee: "When you pass compul- young couples bow to strange tra- in the Catholic Church. Father "I think more will take part. member of the English department help each student form her phi- ry legislation you make the quarter. Later he learned the sad ditional marriage ceremonies, King discussed the relation of of us should turn Di'. John Clark, dean of Mer- faculty, was renamed as faculty losophy of life in accordance with )rking man a slave, and there is news that Dr. L. planked out a medicine men practice their doubt- the Pope to the war of today. out for Music Ap-,,f»,^^ cer university, will address the advisor of the publication. the teachings of Christ, to de- 1 use producing defense materials dollar he disgustedly remarked, ful art and, falling to save a vic- Afterwards a panel discussion preciation Hour, recreational ac- members on the, topic, "Latin velop In each student a sympathy I* a nation of slaves, because if "Now. isn't it just like Dr. Lind- tim's life, lose their ^own to atone was held. tivities, and Sunday vespers. I be- America in Our Defense Pro- and sensitiveness to the needs of ere is anything certain in his- sley to be perverse, even an his > (N WHAT TVA/O WA/S , for the crime—all beneath the lieve if we had more class com- ' \M9ULD THE MOON BE \ watchful eye of a writer-adventu- gram." Mr. Lloyd Outland and EPISCOPAL others, and to enable each stu- cy, it is that a national estab- generosity?" petition there would be more class ' , ANi IMPORTANT FACTO|2.^^ Saf/erfie/d's dent to reach her highest pos- Inent which has to depend on J, DURlNCb AN ATTEMPTED V(| rer who then comes home to tell Miss Beatrice Horsbrugh will play Here and There and Elsewhere spirit.." ,1 , INVASION OF eN&LAND;i several violin duets, accompanied On Sunday, April 27, St. Ste- sibilities. This has ever been the laves to produce its materials is us about it that we may nibble at phen's. Episcopal Church will Seniors have been observing Roena ;M:cJun- the fringe fo his experiences. at the piano by Mrs. W. H. Allen. ideal of the organization and will Inevitibly destroyed." (//ass' M^orlrs celebrate the centennial of the continue to be in the future "to quiet week. Instead of observing'a ken desires an :,; He further stated, "Labor or- ninghtly quiet horn* in the dorm improvement in organization of the parish. There realiize a rich and creative life tanizations owe an equally great under supervison they are taking dining hall con- will be a celebration© of the Holy through a growing knowledge ot Jo Anne Bivins Gives Are Published Communion at 8:00 a. m. and a 'espect to the opinion of the citi- a week off for silence in the din. duct. "In my God, to attempt to make this| special centennial service at life possible for all people, and :ensi. They ought to use their legal ing hall. Hold that code! ... It dining hall the A sudden avalanche of literary ©BTWeEN LAKE AAARV 11:30 at which Bishop H. J. Mi- in this task we seek to under- •emedy and noit the remedy of is rumored that two impatient noise js terrific, \ ^AND LONeWOOO, Piano Recital April 30 talent has beset the campus. In- seniors wangled an invitation to and I think it FUORIDA* IS BELIEVED kell will preach. At this 11:30 stand Jesus and to follow him." :brce." lO BE THE cluded in the current edition of service the regular choir will be eat in Mansion dining hall so they makes a poor Jo Anne Bivins, of Cordele, will the GEORGIA HISTORICAL ^AfPRACTICAL JOKE augumented by extra singers could yell "pass the salt." One girl showing for the present her junior piano recital '' QUARTERLY published by the 'Since a "Scandalight" was "^IN THEU.^ from the Aeolian Guild. afflicted with a rather short mem- school. To me that could be our Wednesday night, April 30, in Rus- , Georgia Historical Society is The board of Ottawa Collegi. jlown out of the paper early last ory decided she would take a greatest improvement." « sell auditorium at 7:15 o'clock. She | the master thesis of Miss Vir- METHODIST ate institute is trying to solve a •quarter, some of our better wits m memo pad to meal so she could ^GSCW AIJSWEI^: It would be important because o£ its light, has studied from Miss Catherine ginia Satterfield, head librarian. League will meet Sunday after- mystery of 1913, revealed in a aren't getting their due amount rememjbere what she had thought tldil effect — Pittard and will present the fol- ^ Also in tlie current issue of noon, April 27, at 5:00. of publicity, namely the faculty. letter from an honor student of about and talk about it after lowing program: I VERSECRAPT international poe. that year. Miss Sybil Stewart Dr. Ldndsley turned the tables all Dress Models I PRESBYTERIAN meals. try magazine, is a poem by Miss comjlained that the "gold" medal the way over Di*. Swearingen the Quotable Quotes Arioso—Bach-Pirani At P. S. A. Sunday afternoon, To Be Shown Katherine Faver Glass, instruc- presented to her in recognition Siciliano—Bach-Hughes April 20, Florence Atkins of the tor in library science. of her scholastic standing has Tomorrow, April 26 Chappell (By Associated Collegiate Press) fessor of philosophy at Columbia Ave Maria—Arcadelt-Uszt t Below is given the poem as Episcopal Church explained the Hall will be the scene of the mo- university, emphasizes dlsclpUne belief and rites of the Episco- turned out to be nothing but "A democratic education^is an published in VKEUSECRAFT. The Colonnade deling of dresss made in Home Ec- in defining democratic educa- n palians. gilded bronze. omonicsm, 2n. or 412 which were education which helps human Scherzo in E minor—Mendels- MIRAGE persons to ' shape themselves, tion. Katherine Faver Glass Sunday afternoon, April 27, at PubliW ««kly durin, Khool y..r except J"™«j-^f^lX'! displayed last Friday night in a sohn judge by themselves, discipline I'd rather bruise my fingers 4:15 Mildred Owen, aisslstant sec- •-#!„„ »riod> by the .tudento of the Georgu State College tor fashion show in the auditorium. "The best chance for girls Prelude in E minor-Mendels- , Hamilton college has one Eng- themselves, to love and to prize Than at length to be aware w Z MW^^k. Georgia. Sub.cription price $1.00 per ye,r. This modeling will be for the bene- In business today is to enter fiohn * I retary of the state BSU, will dis- lish composition student who the high truths which are the That I have vented wrath upon fit of the Alumnae visitors who those fields In which the top Nachtstuek No. 4 in F—Schu. [ cuss the Baptist religion. goes in for realism. He wrote on very root and safeguard of their The cold and empty air. go to Chappell Hall tomorrow positions are held by women." mann t "My Roommate Gives Me a Hair- SKUedgeviUe. Georgi., under the .cl of March 3. 1879. dignity, to respect in themselves afternoon from 2:30 until 5:00. Miss Elizabeth Gregg MacGlb- cut." Clinging to the theme pa- and in others human nature and Polonaise in C minor, Op. 26, No. For what can be more baffling To know that Jvist beyon^ it . ^ .„ ir,n+f>r*^ Helen Dunn—Asst. Bus. Mgr- Tlie" girls will be hostesses to tea bon , of the University of Ne- per which he turned in to Davi^ conscience; and to conquer them- 1—Chopin . Than to beat one's hands In fury Is all for which you care? LUC a Booney-EMor Emma Hagan, Mary Emma at the hours alternately.. .Mrs. braska lists home economics, R. Beetle, instructor, were sever- selves In order to win their lib- m Jo Ann Bivins On a wall that isn't there? Oh, a wall of stone is kinder far •Pau a Bf tz-MMaEin| Jio^ ShuKz-Circulation Mgrs. smith's Class of Meel planning w»l stenography, and cosemetology as al small, closely plipped hairs. erty." /.Dr.- Jacques Maritaln, not- Than one that isn't tliere. .Ruth Ada™-AssOT..t«tor or ^ prepare the tea and sponsor the excellent fields for advancement. Bolerp~<2a6ellBtude in D fli^at (Un Sospiro)— ^sct ed French educator, visiting pro- ?^V'fFdteT - Snient Editors _ Panke entertainment. Carillon—Cfsellf^ •.E^d^Sne^Bus. Manager &x, Carolyn Stringer., Friday, April 25,1941 THE COLONNADE P*g? 9 Friday, April 25„ 1941 THE COLONNADE Campus Sportations Classes To Dictatorships Sanlord Gives Vie May 2 Open House By WATERSTON and WILSON and is supposed to be a fast mov- Are Enemies of ing combination of basketball and "Who will come and shoot with soccer techninques. At Swim Meet me Religion-Jones For Juniors Beneath the merry greenwood Splash! Splash! The swiming By MARY EMMA SHULTZ On May 1 the juniors of San- ill tree?" LOCAL D A N C E R S pool is the place all class-spirited is "There is one clear issue facing ford will hold "open house" In —Curry TO P E R F O R M girls may be found these days. The honor of the junior class. The r Best Wishes to GSCW the people of America today-when aquatic meeting is scarcely a week These are Mattie Curry's query- ever there are governments attack- purpose of this affair is that the The Modern Dance group will away, coming on May 2. It takes ing words in regard to archery, of ing democracy these governments juniors may get acquainted with give its first formal rgcital in Rus- a lot of speed to win a free style which she is sports' manager. The are the enemies of religion. In their future home since Sanford sell auditorium on May. 15 at 8:15. relay, and it takes plenty of prac- question doesn't have to be asked seeking to control the lives of men, hall is to be senior dormitory The cheorography for all the tice to take first place in a diving much because archery is so popu- group numbers was done by the dictators seek first to control their next year. On Its lar this spring. There's always a contest for form. The Sanford sophomores will group. Duet, trio, and solo cheoro- religions," Dr. M. Ashby Jones Jane McConnell, manager of the crowd out in front of Parks on graphy was composed by those who stated in assembly Monday, April show the upperclas.smen through Tuesday's and Thursday's at 4:30. swimming meet, says th^t most of 21, when he addressed the student the dormitory aiid thus enable )1 will dance. There will be a pre- A tournament will start on Tues- the teams have been selected, but body. them to choose rooms for next )r classic dance suite, a suite of neg- they aren't telling who is going to 1 day, so be sure and sign up in Dr. Jones is a former Baptist year. ro spirituals, a group of dances to appeal'* in which events. Each your dormitories by Monday night. minister of Savannah and Augusta 11 poems, a suite of dances of the class has an afternoon from 5 un- Some of the archery enthusiasts and is now prominent in religious Antelope milk is of better qual- races, and several other composi- til 6 o'clock to practice privately are: Virginia Hudson, Barbara circles in Atlanta. He represents m tions. The spiritual group will be for the meet. The girls have a stop ity than cow's milk, according to Wilkinson, Etta Carson, Elaine the southeastern region of the accompanied by a chorus composed watch to take their timings in Dr. J. B. Haag, agricultural chem- Baker, EVelyn Turner, Prances National Conference of Chris- of Aeolian Singers, and the Verse the front crawl, back crawl, and ist at Oregon State College. Jordan, Pat Clark, Billie Bradley, tians, Catholics, and Jews with Choir will read the poems for the free style swimming. Jane Reeves, Miss Fran Ramser, dances in the poem suite. There national headquarters in Wash- Here's how the teams stand: among people and regiment their Dr. Mack Swearingen, Miss Grace will be a series of fall techniques ington, D. C. The purpose of the lives." Potts, Helen Granade, Dot Grace, Pi'eshmen: Ida Moreland (cap- and fundamental walks. organization is to promote better He further remarked that where Nell Staples, Virginia Parker, M^ry tain), FlQ Finney. Pat Kansinger, understanding between religious there is no consciousness of kin. Sorrells, Frances Bazemore, Mar- The Modern Dance Club is a Lottie Wallace, Eleanor Jane groups. ship, people are fighting. Adolf gie Paul, Marjorie Coleman, Di*. comparatively new skill club, hav- Thornton, Louise Humphrey, Ober-' Hitler told his people they were Earl Walden. ing been organized only this year. ly Andrews, Alberta Cason, Jean "Fundamental to democracy is Ann Waterston was president of Shakleford, Tommie Kirchner, Pat religious freedom the right of each superior to all other peoples. He With 13 people enrolled, Miss the club and Marjorie Evans has Holmes, Margaret Wilson, Dilsey>. person to choose his God and wor- concluded by saying, "Anyone who Fran Ramser is conducting the served as secretary. Bette Sue Arthur, and Martha Ruth Brown. ship according to the dictates of stimulates consciousness of differ- course. There will be a two-weeks Smith will lead the group next Sophomores: Jane Reeve and his conscience," continued Dr. ences, stirring up racial hatred, preliminary study course and a year and Sara Harp will act as Beth Mooney (co,-captains), Ruth Jones. "The right to choose one's fostering religious prejudices, is an third week devoted to the ex- secretary. The girls have worked Hicks, E. K. Baston, Sara Taylor. own God means the right to dif- enemy to America and all man- lot amination. Those attending the hard and long on this, their first Shirley W;ood. Jean Vann, Stella fer. You can't have differences kind." class are: Misses Ruth Gilmore, recital, and hope to establish per- Ferguson, Margaret Keel, M5?rtle bi Naomi Leyhe, Billie Jennings, manently the modern dance on Keel, and Kathern McGriff.

'^• Fran Ramser, Ruby Donaid the campus. Juniors: Ethlyn Walker (bap- ri Ann Waterston, Frankie Ben- tain), Roxie Wallace, Judy Krauss, ENNIS HOTEL Iu: nett, Etta Carson. Helen Haul- The University of California ex- Loree Bartlett, Elizabeth Colson, brook, Augusta Slappey, Ethelyn tension division has inaugurated' Sis Reichster, Ann Gywnn, and and Walker, Glenn Willard, and Eliza- a course in television production Augusta Slappey beth Gay. and acting. Seniors: Martha Howell (cap- COFFEE SHOP General Recreation Board met 's income tain), Jane McConnell, Ruby Don- last Monday night and completed ald, Ann Waterston, Etta Carson, Have your friends enjoy the comfort plans for next year's^ recreation for the last fiscal year exceeded expenditures by $5,079. Jean Russell. Eva Abrams. Glenn and services of FROM program. The many grand activi- Willard. Helen Haulbrook. Mar- ties which f'Rec" has already geriete Spooner. Jay Smith, and sponsored will be changed only "life" andi the current news The New Ennis Hotel magazines head the library lend- Mattie Ctirry. lie slightly. A new team game will be 0 They will also enjoy the wonderful GEORGE S. CARPENTER ing list at Syracuse university. introduced. It is called speedball Parker Chosen homecooking of MAYOR OF MILLEDGEVILLE President * THE ENNIS COFFEE SHOP Virginia Parker was elected Operated by Mrs. H. S. Butler f TOMJ.TWITTY president of the Atlanta Club for the coming year. Other officers J.C.BASTON ED. & PUB. MILLEDGEVILLE DAILY TIMES are: Ethel Hembrey. vice-presi- ALDERMAN dent; Louise Favor, secretary; 1 Gayle Rankin, treasurer; Willetta J.N.MORGAN Stanley, social chairman. o! The club project, a knitted blan- f J. H. HOLLOWAY MGR. CAMPUS THEATRE ket for Britain, is, ready to be put ALDERMAN together, and all girls with unfin- n ished squares are urged to com- How to hold E.C.EIDD,Jr. plete them. h A short social on Thursday night. L. H. ANDREWS MGR. CULVER & KIDD DRUG CO. May 1, from 7 to 8 in the recrea- your Partner tion lounge of the Physical Edu- ALDERM(AN cation building will take the place of the regular meeting. AH Atlanta RTHUR MURRAY'S glam- COL. J. H. JENKINS girls are invited. ^ ourous dancing teachers Ahave to be even more partic- v L. N. JORDON PRESIDENT G. M. C. ular than most girls about daintiness. No wonder dainty, ALDERMAN Remember effective Gdorono Cream is their big favorite! GUY H. WELLS Your winter clothes can Hold your partner with I Odorono Cream! Chectcs !; PRESIDENT G. S. C. W. be stored without charge perspiration 1 to 3 days— a LAMAR F. HAM non-irritating, non-greasy, er i: at 0 CLERK & TREASURER non-gritty. And it gives you 1,'-: RECREATION COLORS Odorless Cleaners 50 to 100% more for your I MISS BERTIE B, STEMBRJDGE Attractive, glorious new colors, as fashion- money!: able as Summer's loveliest creations . . . ORDINI^Y; BALDWIN COUNTY Send all your winter C. B. McCULLAR perfectly keyed to the new ensembles for I •.|——"' THE ODORONO GO,, INC I things. They will be per- »10 Worth PUBLISHER MILLEDGEVILLE NEWS sports, daytime and evening wear. P. O. Box B, New Yorlt. N. Y. I Phones 6861 — 4265 ••&!•••• Soft and rich in texture. Holeproof Fine f Ussoni in Send me the new AfthurMiiriray'DanceSook I fectly cleaned and care- and Kenerous introductory jar of Odorono I MRS. L. D. SMITH Stockings are famed for their perfection of Arthur Murray Donct Book and Cream. I enclose 2 ) i< to cover priniioK. a a i l i a c ^' I TAX cdjtLECTdR, BALDWIN COUNTY qualty and workmanshipi. fully stor'pd. Genorous Jar of Odorono Croam and handlinc. I In Macon, Holeproof Hose are If the instructions in this new Arthur Name , , , — • .. ~.»- * i J, CLEVELAND COOPER •>' ODORLESS CLEANERS Murr«/ Dance Book were given in sold exclusively at his private studio it would cost tlOl •Addrcsi... ..i...... i. See now easy it is to learn! And see aee now easy ii u at icarui nuu >KV City. • ,'.•'.:.——: — J&IM* .: I MARI^ENNIS B: None Better *-- -°" •• *- •«^ AnW uniip narrner BURDEN SMITH & CO. how easy it is to bold your partner • City^ :—: :—.^IM* .1 « RALPH SIMMERSON REPRESENTATIVE, BALDWIN COUNTY when you use ODORONO CK£AMI I ...... »«....4 BUICK DEALER Ik. Page 7 Friday, April 25, 1941. THE COLONNADE THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 Page 6 Commerce Club George Grant Mason, Jr., mem- Parade Of Opinions Pi K Delta ber of the civil aeronautics board Colles'iate Prattle Mrffedgevflfe After a. Book Briefs Names Malcolm receied his A. B. degree from Yale in 1926. Coca-Cola waged an all-oui ^ ^ A. c. P. By DOT MILLER campaign for some of America's 1961, A. D. It is quite quiet now, President Is Town of Gay Fashion To Tap New CHEERFULNESS BREAKS IN Pat Malcolm was elected presi- collegians the other night. It was this early in the morning. A Cornell students who drive cars by Angela Therkell, author of THE dent of the Commerce Club at a in the SAEi.house at Emory uni- Ry MILDRED COVIN few brazen little birds are pip- must take out insurance against BRANDONS. War or no war the recent meeting. Betty Jones, Mil- versity. ' A. nev;'" dispensing ma- ing thinly. Members public liability for property dam- Celebration Spring is really here! The trees people of the English countryside dred Johnson, and Lucy Jordan chine (an automatic vendor that Those old bricks? Yes; they age and personal injury effective Historic Milledgeville, home of have donned their prettiest shade Ry NANCY GEEEN carry on and in CHEERFULNESS will fill the offices of vice-presi- mixes "cokes" while you watch) of green, the flowers have dress- were probably a building once. July 1. GSCW, has been the scene of University buildings? Most prob- As the debating season for 1940- BREAKS IN, Angela Therkell car- dent, secretary, and treasurer, re- paid off exactly 167 drinks for ed- in their most beautiful colors, ries on in her enchanting fashion, a mere dime. many great celebrations in the ably. There's no one noW; who 41 is about to close and Pi Kappa spectively. past and for that reason is eager young men's thoughts have quite : remembers ... •* Delta, national forensic fraternity, beloved by her readers, the story E. B. Estes, '41, inserted a bloomed into the full flowers of of another English family. The club i§ sponsoring a song meeting. May 6, and one will be nickel in the slot. Silence follow- and able to entertain visitors for The'qiiiet grey moss inches its is about to tap its members for writing contest. Each dormitory chosen as the official club song. the Semi-Centennial of GSCW. love, and, of course, the girls have the coming year, the GSCW De- ed. Disturbed, he rammed an- been racking their brains for new way tlirough the mortar and PHILADELPHIA STORY b y will submit a song at the next The only rule of the contest is that |] plans gradually to engulf the bating Society can look back over other into the machine. A grind- Milledgeville, from 1804 the ideas in clothes. Believe me, these Philip Barry. This play won wide the words must 'be original. The area. Nearby stands the shattered a very extensive schedule. The big acclaim both on Broadway and in ing noise was heard, then came capital of Georgia, grew accus- "Jessie" gals look like bright winners will be honor guests at a stump of an old fir tree. The at- event of the fall was the annual the movies. won the Atlantic Monthly award, the "coke." tomed to big celebrations during flowers nodding their, heads in mosphere is eating away its fib- Georgia Porum, which is fast be- r is her first novel. picnic to be held the last of May. As he picked up the cup, Estes the heyday of jits ipareer. Per- the breeze! GSCW Knitters are doing their part in the aid to Brit- SWAMP WATERS" by Vei'een was startled by the ejection of haps the most magnificent of ers. Were there lots of buildings coming an institution on the camp- jan. which is being carried on by the Ried Cross. A typical' then? Were there lawns and us. Schools from all parts of the Bell, a story of the great Okefe- another Coco Cola. Then came these early celebrations was the Girls' thoughts are also turn- walks and roses in the sunshine? state competed in debates on the nokee Swamp by a native Geor:; a.nother and still another. Estes great ball and reception given ing to love—and housekeeping, scene on the campus is this one above of Helen Rogers, Treat The Family The Best A gentle hint is to wear one of See, here is a bit of an old ce- subject: "Resolved: that the Unit- gian. shouted for help. General Lafayette when he paid Betty Siiaw, and Ella Ruth Thompson. those fefching broom-stick skirts. ment pathway. It crumbles if you ed States should adopt a federal SAE's swarmed in and gulped a visit to the city in the early THE FAMILY by Nina Pedo- At a Spot Better Than The Rest "Little Audrey" Jenkins has an step on it. policy of relief." A team from the the "cokes" while the machine 1800's. Elderly ladies of Mil- rova. Tliis is a story of white Rus- ledgeville still treasure dresses adorable one of the "new-shade- ' Tliere i^ a certain softness University of Georgia won top sians living in China during the PAUL'S GAFE ground relentlessly An SOS was honors in the forum, while GSCW worn by their grandmothers to of-brown" print. A white eyelet Students Knit For British; about the day yet. The mists are present war. The author is a Wliite sent to Phi Delta Theta's and blouse with matching waist and lifting, the air is coolnig to the teams won honorable mention. One of the South's most modern Cafes. KA's. At the end of a half hour, that great affair to which came Russian who has been living in the flower of the states' society. hem band complete the outfit. icheek. But everywhere it is so During winter quarter GSCW China but THE' FAMILY, which Our kitchen is open for inspection at any time. the crowd, now numbering 45, More Workers Needed debated with Wweaton College, of was rapidly becoming Coco Cola Another great celebration, al- Those "white collar" girls are recently when she came to Ameri- By RUTH ADAMS Wheaton, HI.; Emory-at-Oxford, ca. Nina Fedorova did news writ- FREE WEEKLY-2 DINNERS logged but the machine evidenc- beit a sad one, attended the de- really hard to beat when it comes Emory-at-Valdosta, Auburn, Ogle- ing for English papers while in GSCW's Visitors Welcome! ed no signs of weaking. parture of the boys in grey for to looking quite "cachet." Hen- Just as many great novels have Stubbs Elected thorpe, Georgia Evening School, When the 167th coke was de- the war in 1860. Had she but rietta McCord has a brown silk their sequels, so do knitting and Georgia Tech. The latest ac- The typical GSCW girl is get- livered, everybody quit and the knovm, Milledgeville was watch- one designed and made by her- storeis. It all started when stu- President of When self. The skirt is joined to a wide tivity was the trip to Montevallo, electricity supply of the unit was ing, in the departure of these dents on college campuses Literary Guild Ala., to attend the Pi Kappa Delta cut off. boys, the fading of her early belted back and gathered on each throughout the United States de- Southeastern convention. June glory. With the fall of the Con- side of the front. Three-quarter cided that knitting for the Brit- Ann Stubbs was recently elect- IN MACON Moore, Ruth Banks, and Dot Hall Soph. Commission federacy, the capital was moved length sleeves, front zippered ish would be worthy, as well as ed president of the Literars made the trip, debating the nation- to Atlanta. from collar, to hem, and a white a delightful, way to spend their Guild for the coming year. Other al question, "Resolved: that the Hears Mallory A number of days for celebra- pique collar add the finishing leisure time. officers named were Sue Herring] nations of the Wesern Hemisphere SHOP EVERY FLOOR Miss Cynthia Mallory spoke on tion occurred before 190O but touches. Henrietta uses brown secretary and treasurer; EUer Visit and These little fuzzy balls of yarn should form a permanent union.". "What I Think It Means to be they were few and far between. and white spectator pumps and Nelson, program chariman; anc and the number five needles have Next week the new members of -EVERY DEPARTMENT a Christian" at the weekly meet- MiUedgville faced the slow task other accessories of brown. Anne Bridges, social chairman. a way of getting around. First you 111 Make Your Pi Kappa Delta will be announced, ing of sophomore commission of readjusting its economy to fit Mary Linda Dawes wears a see them being carried to the and plans for the annual spring Thursday, April 17. After her its changing status. With the navy blue silk, crepe with a wide movies, then on to gossip sessions banquet completed. talk, connmission held its regular location of the state institutions All memibers ofi the COL- white organdy boUar and cuffs. and club meetings. So it's no business meeting. here, the city became once again ONNADE staff are asked to Headquarters The collar has a band of ruffling longe a matter of where we shall a prosperous center. be present at their tegulat quiet. around the edge that gives that knit, but the question is: what The growth of GSCW has "smart look." meeting to be held Monday At— Were there many people here symibolized the rebirth of Mil- shall we knit? then? Didn't they laugh and talk THIS ledgeville and the growth of ed- Beige is really "in" this spring. Nancy Eagland in Sanford and to one another? Didn't they care way to ucation In jDeorgia. Beginning Another designer is Marie Elling- Rebecca Taylor in Bell can really about lovely old buildings? with humble buildings and sur. ton. Her dress is of beige silk help you out in this respect. These AMERICAN The water in the mill stream charm I roundings, it has grown until now with gathered paneled gores down girls are cooperating with the lo- chortles as you slap it with a it is the sixth largest women's the front, separated by a straight cal Red Cross unit. At present PRINTING little stone. It is muddy green and college in America, educating princess gore. The back is cut on enough wool is on hand to knit IQ co- (Continued on Page 8) WRIGHT'S 150a daughters of Georgia each princess lines and belted. sweaters and 15 scarfs. The scarfs BEAUTy year. are simple, straight patterns; the Printing - Engraving Sailor dresses are being worn sweaters are to be long sleeved and Three years ago, in 1938. it everyday in every way and every- shp overs. Office Supplies SHOP celebrated the 100th anniversary where. Dean Mosher wears a navy of the old mansion building, once 1 blue silk trimmed in white. Sara And say, if you want to knit the Executive Mansion of the 522 Mulberry St. - Ph. 350( Peek has a white shantung stitch- something different why not in- governors of Georgia, now the ed in red. Tlie cut of the collar quire about the wool that is on Mjacon, Ga. Compliments of home of the president of the line is most unusual. hand for a pair of socks? Rumor The Empire Store college, Dr. Guy H. Wells. A large has it that there's only enough pageant and a full day of cele. While reading the fashion news Phone Dial 3167 wool for one pair. To the girl ask- ^^fl^% bration attracted visitors here at the fashion show Friday night, ing first, full directions—along WE DELIVER '4, from all over the state. Barbara Montgomery wore a with due honor—will be given. Each year the United Daughters collegiate beige dress of silk with So we suggest that you see these of the Confederacy conduct a a bright green hip length jacket girls and check out wool for your THOMPSON'S pilgrimage to many old and his. and matching dress belt. gang, club, bull sessions, or what Starts Monday, April 28th ^i^-^,-'"^'"^ IViodenn, streamlined toi'ijC homes located here and South American and Mexican have you. Let's show them that DRUG CO. each year the number of visi- colors are being brought into the GSCW girls are experts in this tors who come has increased styles this season. Carolyn Adams knitting field! The-Place-To-Eat buses with schedules until now it is one of the more combines red and yellow in a important historical pilgrimages. most effective way. Her dress is timed to suit your Thus, the celebration of yellow silk—her accessories con- Congratulations We Serve GSCW's ffifieth annivei^^sa'ry is sisting of a wide belt, shoes, hat, to convenience. but another in the series of liis- gloves, and bag are all of red. TASTY FOOD torical events Milledgeville has Bernice Rogers has 2k dress of G. S. C. W. Offering over $250,000 worth witnessed* many colors, in fact, every color. on their Milledgeville Like the buttonup sweaters Dial 3135 - We DeUver of Fresh ISlew Dependable Mer^ this dress can be worn either 50th Bus Terminal Compliments of backwards or forewards. The true Anniversary what you'll be when you have chandise at Attractive Low Prices MILLER'S back of the dress is buttoned to the waist with neutral colored R 0 S E ' S beautified your fingernails w i t h 5c to $1.00 Regardless of rising costs . . . these prices will prevail Phone 4237 buttons. The skh^t laps through, 5c & 10c Store i,. wliile quantities last. CHAIN STORE over, and ties in front. REPLACEMENT PRICES WILL BE MUCH HIGHER All Types of ...SO BUY NOW AND SAVE ... DUM4L0SS Jimmies Meet Jessies Bus Station Grill SPORTING GOODS 10* x: Nail Polish Everywhere DANNENBERG'S . at . The Place To Go WESTERN AUTO ASSO. STORE _' cMfHplctt twoMct on naili: What to do about splitting naiU; How THIRD AT POPLAR MACON, GEORGIA • • |lTt jrovwlf aPrafn^OMl Maoicnre. A t k for -"Your FinBernaiU and their BOWLING CENTER Gwti* Wrid—Mnlcnv Pcft, Urr Uboratorlci, Paterwn, New Jersey.

•^W Page 8 THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 Friday, Alpril 25-, 1941 THE COLONNADE Page 9 Honor System Constitution Students Get Jessie's Prayer Sophomortand Day Studeni Southern Study Workshop Accepted April 16 Vaccinations, Honor Board drew up a constitution for the Honor System By ARAMINTA GREEN To Be At GSC This Summer wh,ch was accepted at a meeting of the board Wednlsda" Give me a dress that is stunning President Nominees Innoculations and sweet, Approximately 250 foremost All typhoid innoculations were And a hat and some shoes to com- educators from southern schools General Education Board in New completed and some smallpox vac- plete it, will assemble at Georgia State York City, the study conference Classes on the campus will accept. And some place to go College for Women July 21 for The constitution of the Honor senior representative who is cmations given this week. Dr. is being held in Georgia this year elected by the entire Board. Hires asked that any student in Where my gown will best the annual Southern Association for the first time since its or- System follows: Study Conference, Dr. Guy H. PREAMBLE d. Faculty members shall be doubt about her vaccination and show, ganization and it is a distinct elected annually by Honor Board mnoculation records come by the Where envious glances will gi-eet Wells, president of GSCW, said We, the students of the Georeia .„ ,. . . today. honor that GSCW has been chos- from a list furnished by the Presi- hospital and pheck them. it. en for this year's session. For the State College for Women, in order H T Vf ^ "'""^'^'^ ^"^ ^^' P^^^i" Financed by a graRt from the Students treated during clinic past three years the study con- to promote honor in all academacademicl u^'t °i ^^' '°"^^^- '^^ P^'esident Give me a coupe that is tanked work, develop individual and group shall then approve the selection. hours the past week numbered ference was held at the Univer- integrity, and to provide for the 3. Tenure 302. and patients admitted to the with gas, (Here are plenty of girls to fill Honor System sity of North Carolina. Chapel rehabilitation of individuals, do a. All elected members shall hospital for treatment included- (Continued from Page 8) Hill; Vanderbilt University, and serve for one year. Dannie Aycock, Elva Alston. Jea- it. establish this Constitution for the Eastern Kentucky Teacher's Col- nette Bailey. Myra Boykin, Oneida And a road winding far. n FUNCTION , Honor System of the Georgia State b. Members must maintain a lege, Richmond. Ky. College for Women. scholastic average of 75 to qualify Bennett, Lena Bowers, Mary F And no rule t obar A. Honor Council Calhoun. Evelyn Isabel Crenshaw. Our speeding wherever we will it. 1. Purpose I. ORGANiysATION for election and during tenure of Di'. Mildred English and Di\ office. Allene Cross. Paye Culpepper, The Council shall have as its Harry Little of the GSCW edu- I A. Honor Council Give me a man who is trong and 1. Honor Council shall consist B. Honor Board Chrissie j. Cannon, Hazel cook. aim the rehabilitation of the stu- cation faculty have both worked of SIX students and five members 1. Tlie Board shall consist of a Frances Douglas. Adelaide DeBeau- tall, dents. It is not a punitive body. in and for the Association. [of the faculty . maximum of one hundred stu- grme, Gertrude Ehrlich, Ann And a car with a hood to ride in. 2. Duties dents, thirty each from the fresh, Gwynne. Ruth Hargrove. Rose a.. The Honor Council shall The conference will be in a. Senior representative, act- And a night with a moon, Dilcey Arthur Joyce Slate charge of Dr. Frank Jenkins of I ing as chairman. man and sophomore classes, and Hatcher, Martha Jo Hayes, Louise (Oh, grant me this boon). assume full respnosibility for the formulation of policies for the pro- Nashville. Tenn., who is the as- twenty each from the junior and Ivie. Rosemary jones. Charlotte With n oThomas Bragg to_ go b. One representative each mulgation, expansion, and admini- sociation's secretary. from the freshman, sophomore. senior classes. Jackson. Lorraine Justice. Sare spyin'. stration of the Honor System. I a n d junior classes. 2. Qualifications for member- Kirkland. Sally Keith, Isabel Kit- During their stay here the edu- ship chens, Ann Lane. Prances Lott. b. The Council shall receive c. One representative from cators will be quartered in BeesonI |the day students. a. Members must have and Mable Lane. Martha Leach, Cathe- reports of violations of honor reg- and Sanford halls, Dr. Wells said. rine Nix, Leo Odom, Peggy Person ulations from students and in- d. Five faculty members. maintain an average of 75 in scho- Best Hamburgers and Hot Jean Pafford. Jane Reeves. June structors. The General Education BoardI e. President of College Gov- lastic work. Dogs in Town—5c |3rnn^ent Association as ex-offi, b. Members must be actively Ragsdale. Hannah Slappey. Lynda Large Milk Shakes—5c i. Members of Council shall of New York City allots about| |iio member. interested in the Honor System's Standard. Virginia Sims. Louise around W..r T^"' ''^^ ''^"^"^^ DSy^hTwhole year keep these reports and conferences $50,000 per season to the work- Tucker. Mary Ubele. Daisy Verner ZTrJ n"^ ^''^'' ^'" ^^^' "^"^ *he sweaters are, in utmost secrecy . shop's six week session. 2. Elections to Honor Council success. Hayes Pharmacy Evelyn Whitten. and Love Wilson. too! Carne, Baily and Martha Ducey are modeling tw« c. Members of Council shall a. Elections shall be in 3. Election "We are proud that GSCW has Jharge of Honor Council. a. Nominations shall be sub- confer with individuals suspected been selected as the site of the of dishonesty. b. Chairman. mitted by the membership com- workshop this year," Dr. Well^ Parade of Opinion 3. Meetings 1. Shall be Senior Represen- mittee from^ suggestions from said today, "since only school j teachers. "Freshman sponsors." (Continued from Page 6) a. Honor Council shall meet |ative to Honor Board. Jones Drug Store »»,.J5^ which are doing outstanding and Honor Board. flows passively on its way. it is semi-mionthly, alternating with teacher training work are eveij c Tlie class an dday student VarielY In Sweater Line Norris Exquisite Candies Honor Board meetings. lembers of the Board shall elect - . b. • Thes ^^^e ^eshmefreshmen shall be used to being left alone. There named for it." nnually a representative to Hon "'^"'^^^^^^ ^y the membership are no boats floating on its back —•>-' Corsages - Flowers Wired.. B. Honor Board r.Council.from their respectivl '^"""^^^^^^ ^^h°' beforehand, shall Why aren't there any boats^* 1. Pui-pose roups, with the exception of the t\ '^^"^^^^ ^he scholastic What happened to all the people Prevails On GSCW Campus The Honor Board shall serve | ~ - °^ ^^^ standmg of these students. and buUdings? why did they By WINIFEED GREEN Sara Sims as an advisory body to the Coun- Elizabeth HoUingshead cil in the formation of policies, and Prom the report of this simply leave? Didn't they have The typicalGSCW girl is getting wear them without blouses. On the Compliments of any air raid shelters at all? shall promote the Honor System committee. Honor Council shall ap along with eight sweaters, but she other extreme. Evelyn Crenshaw pomt thirty members from the The sun is coming out" now wishes she had more. Welcome Visitors among the students to the best of of Macon contends, "I had rather its ability. Union Dept. Store Compliments of freshman class to serve on Honor Listen, the little birds are sing- While in Milledgeville visit Board. ing. Remindful of the days when see a girl wear a blouse under her Compliments of 2. Duties college regulations forced all stu- sweater." Pond of red. Martha our Dress Shop and Beauty d. Tliese appointments shall ~P- E. in the Oregon Daily The Board shall be responsi- TAXI SERVICE dents to dress alike, and agree- Daniel.-president of CGA, is par- Parlor BURNS BOOT ble for the presentation of the then be approved by Honor Board ment among girls as to what's tial to cardigans, unbuttoned over 4. Vacancies Honor System to all students, and self.perpetuating body. The mem- smart for campus wear in the blouses and touched off by match- SHOP Phone 5237 a. Are to be filled at the be- Junior Miss and shall serve to keep Council advis- bers shall remain members during spring of the eventful 1941 finds ing bows in her dark hair. Make 6407 Your gmnmg of each quarter by the Macon, Ga. ed as to the effectivenss and pro- the duration of their school at- the sweater foremost in every "Jes- Misses Dresses gression of the system. IW. G. LOCKHART, Mgr. nomination and vote of the Hon- tendanc eunless: Corner of 3rd & Cherry Permanent Number sie's" mind whenever she dresses A pretty brunette known for a $3.98 to $16.75 3. Meetings or Board members of the class in i. A written resignation shall Like saddle oxfords, sweaters are gift of expression voiced the senti- which they occur. be presented to Council by the The Board shall have regular Babb's Beauty Shoi a "must" in every wardrobe, with ment Of all the girls, though, when semi-monthly meetings. 5- Tenure member if. variety stressed. Shades rival the she explained the craze. "Sweat- Call for appointment in a. Honor Board shall be a ". Any member shall fail to rainbow and the range of models ers are to me what feathers are in Beauty Parlor - Clothes Cleaned maintain a scholastic standard of appears to have no end for if a to me to birds. They dress up the 75. garment can be called a sweater, darkest Skirt, and add charm to Phone 5128 Darling Shop CAMPUS THEATRE Pit For A Welcome to Our Qty my prettiest outfits, i like them iii. Any member shall miss its index to popularity is never Monday - Tuesday, April 28-29 King VISIT three consecutive meetings with- questioned. over blouses, or any Of the other "It's a Darling Dress" out an accepted excuse. popular ways known to gfrS G. & L. Dress and The Vogue Girls are divided, however, on around here." I iv. Any member shall be 552 Cherry Street a'>l?i SNOW'S "Home of Nelly Don whether to wear their gay sweaters .>- Beauty Parlor i;iizabeth King Dresses*' guilty of unbecoming conduct. -4^ ASTAIRI-60DDARI 6. Officers with or without blouses. An Atlanta in girl holds a middle position. Says RirlT h 1 * r ' ' ' '"'"'^ '^°^«^ «o"»e Mrs. W. L. Gholson Macon, Georgia a. Chairman of Honor coun. she, "Some sweaters are just mad** les With"".? *^'" '''''' «°"^« 4-H Club cil shaU serve as chairman al Alma S. Long to wear over thin lacey blouses and eight ' "'"'^^^ °^"'^e ./• ccono Honor Board. Will Entertain ^ others look darling alone, i wear I The GSCW 4-H Club will be .fJ' Congratnktions to G. S. C. W. m yeur 5«th .hJi. ®^''*^'^ °^ ^°"or Board them one way one day. and the Atuiiversary hostess to a delegation from the Shall be a member of Honor Coun- other the next." DRY CLEANING University of Georgia 4.H Club. JSSUiiAjyflMJAHB cil elected by Honor Council and Wootten's Book Store serving as secretary for Board Carrie Bailie, attractive brunette ^u^^ you want it, The meeting will be held in Pea- and Council. senior, likes her sweaters plain When you want it body auditorium Monday, April with pearls, she dislikes fancy 28, at 7:15. All students are in- (Continued on Page 9) sweaters ^nd prefers to wear hers PROTECTIVE LYON HARRIS & BROOKS vited to attend. 1901 BELL'S 1941 without shirts or blouses. She WELCOME Celebrates its 40th Anniversary Enjoy Sunlight Without often matches her sweaters and Printers Visitors and Alumnae Burning Glare ribbons. Martha Ducey, of Savan- Super Shoe Servicel September 1, 1941 from nah, adores both long and short- VISITING CARDS Expert Shoe Repairing Protect your eyes from sleeved sweaters, but prefers to in the same place of business, the store all G. S. C. W. knows 21 WALL STREET PHONE 876 We Deliver scorching infra-red (heat) Graduates' Special Phone 269 Take a tip from them selling everything for the well- rays ... the same way U. Sucessfully Combined . go to Smartness and Economy ll.QO per 100 dressed woman from head to S. Army fliers do! SHUP TBINE'S PEGGIE HALE SEE OUK SAMPLES Macon, Georgia CORSAGES foot. (Modes of The Moment) Dr, S. H. Dillard Feminine AJ)parel Dainty Flowers 560 Cherry St. Mwon, (5a. Everyone is invited Optometrist J* C. Grant Co. Artistic Arrangement Phone 2816 Farley's Pharmacy E.E. BELL COMPANY t:;j:M;§''inT';-:v ^i)'v:^?!i; |r^^y^(rv?^^*r?J''«*f'««W'" ''•''

Page 10 THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 >—J Cornell students who drive cars Election— must take out insurance against Citizenship Club Organizes; Bulldogs Play (Continued from page 1) public liability for property dam- age and personal injury effective Elizabeth HoUingshead and July 1. Newest Campus Group For Jr.-Sr. Elizabeth ICing will oppose each By Sue Landrum other in the race for president May 17 of the day students Sara Tay- After a long controversy on Under the sponsorship of the local chapter of the lor was elected representative to continuance of sororities at the Daughters of the American Revolution, a Citizenship club On Saturday, May 17, the court having been the only nom- University of Rochester, second- has been organized on this camjpus under the name of The Georgia Bulldogs will play for the inee. Christine Willingham and term freshman rushing has been junior-senior dance, during which Louise King will run for vice- Ruth Bryan. Owen, Rhode -Kl- • ^ adopted. there will be a special lead-out president of the day students; grim's Club. The members of dent, Blanche Muldrow; treas- for the seniors and their dates while Jane Frances Bivins was this club were chosen from those urer, Edith Trapnell; correspond- Mary Jean Everette annoimced nominated for representative to who received good citizenship ing secretary, Dorothy Myrick; that at present no plans have council. Florence Finny was elec- awards from thei rrespectve high porter, Sue Landrum. The mem. been made for decorating the ted secretary of the day students. Compliments of schools, by being outstanding citi- bers are: ^Mary Jeanne Ever- gym. zenes in all respects. The Club ette. Sue Landrum, Sara Harpe The students nominated will be has been in organization since Georgia Stone, Mary Frances presented in chapel \ Monday, People's Hardware November and has a membership Neel, Nell Craft, Margaret Nichol- April 28 to the student body. of forty-five students. The club St. Mary's of Texas has an or- son, Janette Mtichell, Mary Lou ganizaton for Spanish-speaking meets on the first Friday of every Laidler, Rou Hatcher, Dorothy month and has, for the past students, called the Circulo Ibero- Myrick, Blanche Layton, Carolyn americano. Beautiful spring and suni,mer skirts! several times, met at the homes Edwards, Annette Coleman, Mar- of members of the local chapter tha Carter, Patsy Malcom, Beryl College Department Store of the U. D. C. The university of California McDaniel, Jean lizzet, Evelyn Shoes and Ladies* Ready-to-wear Eligibility for this Club is based Boseman, Mildrede Carr Margu- exktension division has inaugu- on the receiving of Good Citizen- erite Basseet, Jewel Bii'd Lanier, rated a course in televison pro- "Your Satisfaction Our Aim"' shp Awards in Hgh School, and Deryl Massey, Eloise Bass, Dor- ducton and acting. the objects of the club are to othy Edwards, Minerva Torbitt, sponsor Good Citizeneship, to Maybess Murphy, Sara Simms, strive for a finer appreciation of Celeste Hooks, Martha Evelyn our United States and the ideals Hodges, Mary Prances Ethridge, for which it stands, and to strive Blanche Muldrow, Florence At- for the betterment of the com- kins, Elizabeth Home, Irene munities in which we live. Cook, Reba Yarborough, Edith Officers of the club are: presi- Trapnell, Dilsey Ai*thur, Oberly dent, Blanche Lay t o n ; vice-presi- Andrews Daisey Eubanks, Ruby Sigman, Emily Beall, Jane Hugh, es, and Annie Ruth McCorkle. M Chesterfield WeVe turned the Spotlight Eveiyboc// who smokes them likes their on our Spring Cothes. New Mississippi Chemist— (Continued from page 1) COOLER, MILDERf BETTER TASTE showing of Sport Clothes, ^r-' in 1938, received,the medal in On the movie lot or wherever you go, the Dresses, Formals, and Hats. 1934. Other 'recipients are: Dr. F. R. Dunnington, University of Right Combination of the best tobaccos Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., from our own Southland and from distant GOLDMAN'S 1935; Dr. W. H. Mclntire, Uni- 572 Cherry Street versity of Tennessee, Khoxville, Turkey and Greece makes Chesterfield ths Tenn., 1936; Dr. J. L. Howe, one cigarette that truly Satisfies. Macon^ Georgia Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.. 1937; Dr. C. B. Note how many more smokers are enjoying Coates, Louisiana State Univer- Chesterfield*s definitely Milder, sity. Baton Rbuge, La., 1938; Dr Cqoler'Smoking, Better Taste, On Mother's Day Frank K. Cameron, University of North Carolina, ChaPel Hill, N give her a C, 1939; Dr. J. Sam Guy, Emory University, Atlanta, 1940. Portrait of Yourself Invitations toHerty Day have been issued to all members of the American Chemical Society in the Eberhart's Studio Southeast and to all officials in the National Chemical Society About 300 guests are expected.

Shadovipsfm The Old Mansion •^-^

MISCILLAUNI. V •tarring In Wornar Bros.' r v" forthcomins hif ^ "AMUION DOUAR BAIY**

(•niillil I M , LMMR i MINI TMMM Gti ;^.iiA^j(.d,;f;i'ap

Page 10 THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 Cornell students who drive cars Citizenship Club Organizes; Election— must take out insurance against Bulldogs Play (Continued from page 1) public liability for property dam- age and personal injury effective Elizabeth HoUingshead and July 1. Newest Campus Group For Jr.-Sr. EUzabeth King will oppose each By Sue Landrum other in the race for president May 17 of the day students Sara Tay- After a long controversy on Under the sponsorship of the local chapter of the lor was elected representative to continuance of sororities at the Daughters of the American Revolution, a Citizenship club On Saturday, May 17, the court having been the only nom- University of Rochester, second- has been organized on this cani)pus under the name of The Georgia Bulldogs will play for the inee. Christine Willingham and term freshman rushing has been Louise King will run for vice- Ruth Bryan. Owen, Rhode Pil- • ^ junior-senior dance, during which adopted. there will be a special lead-out president of the day students; grim's Club. The members of dent, Blanche Muldrow; treas- for the seniors and their dates while Jane Prances Bivins was this club were chosen from those lu-er, Edith Trapnell; correspond- Mary Jean Everette announced nominated for representative to who received good citizenship ing secretary, Dorothy Myrick; that at present no plans have awards froma thei rrespectve high council. Florence Finny was elec- porter. Sue Landrum. The mem- been made for decorating the ted secretary of the day students. Compliments of schools, by being outstanding citi- bers are: Maiy Jeanne Ever., gym. m zenes in all respects. The Club ette. Sue Landrum, Sara Harpe The students nominated will be has been in organization since Georgia Stone, Mary Frances presented in chapel i Monday, People's Hardware lii November and has a membership Neel, Nell Craft, Margaret Nichol- April 28 to the student body. of forty-five students. The club St. Mary's of Texas has an or- li son, Janette Mtichell, Mary Lou ganizaton for Spanish-speaking meets on the first Friday of every Laidler, Rou Hatcher, Dorothy month and has, for the past students, called the Circulo Ibero- Myrick, Blanche Layton, Carolyn americano. Beautiful spring and sum,mer skirts! several times, met at the homes Edwards, Annette Coleman, Mar- of members of the local chapter tha Carter, Patsy Malcom, Beryl College Department Store of the U. D. C. McDaniel, Jean Lizzet, Evelyn The university of California Eligibility for this Club is based Boseman, Mildrede Carr Margu- exxtension division has inaugu- Shoes and Ladies' Ready-to-wear on the receiving of Good Citizen- erite Basseet, Jewel Bird Lanier, rated a course in televison pro- "Your Satisfaction Our Aim" shp Awards in Hgh School, and Deryl Massey, Eloise Bass, Dor- ducton and acting. the objects of the club are to 111: othy Edwards, Minerva Torbitt, sponsor Good Citizeneship, to Maybess Murphy, Sara Simms, ^fi strive for a finer aPPi'eciation of Celeste Hooks, Martha Evelyn our United States and the ideals Hodges, Mary Frances Ethridge, for which it stands, and to strive Blanche Muldrow, Florence At- for the betterment of the com- t; kins, EIli2!abeth Home, Irene munities in which we live. Cook, Reba Yarborough, Editli Officers of the club are: presi- Trapnell, Dilsey Aithur, Oberly dent, Blanche Lay t o n ; vice-presi- Andrews Daisey Eubanks, Ruby Sigman, Emily Beall, Jane Hugh, es, and Annie Ruth McCorkle. Its Chesterfield We've turned the Spotlight EveryJbod/ ivAo smollces fhem //Jlces fhe/r on our Spring Cothes. New Mississippi Chemist— (Continued from page 1) showing of Sport Clothes, COOLEJ^ M/£DER^ fiETTER TASTE Nvr- in 1938, received the medal in Dresses, Formals, and Hats. 1934. Other 'recipients are: Dr. the movie lot or wherever you go, the P. R. Dunnington, University of Right Combination of the best tobaccos Virginia, Charlottesville, Va., GOLDMAN'S 1935; Dr. W. H. Mclntire, Uni- from our own Southland and from distant 572 Cherry Street versity of Tennessee, Knoxville, Turkey and Greece makes Chesterfield ths Tenn., 1936; Dr. J. L. Howe, Maeoii^ Georgia Washington and Lee University, one cigarette that truly Satisfies. Lexington, Va., 1937; Di'. C. E. Note how many more smokers are enjoying Coates, Louisiana State Univer- sity, Baton Rouge, La., 1938; Dr Chesterfield's definitely Milder, On Mother's Day Prank K. Cameron, University of Cqoler'Smoking, Better Taste* North Carolina, ChaPel Hill, N give her a C, 1939; Dr. J. Sam Guy, Emory University, Atlanta, 1940. Portrait of Yourself Invitations to Herty Day have been issued to all members of the American Chemical Society in the Eberhart's Studio Southeast and to all officials in the National Chemical Society About 300 guests are expected.

Shadovifson The Old Mansion

PRISCILLA LANE. •torring in Worner Broi.' Y 7* forthcoming hit ? "MILLION DOLLAR BABY

C«py(i|il>< IMl, LiMMnr A M t m TMMOO C* THE COLONNADE Vol. XV Z-122 Milledgeville, April 25, 1941 No. 25 mi mi

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Page 3 Friday, April 25, 1941 THE COLONNADE THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 Page 2 GSCW Celebrates Fiftieth year Higman, Harris Speak Tonight; Boucher, Elliott Beaver On Program Tomorrow With Two-Day Festival Alumnae to Regent Head Agnes Harris, PROGRAM Hear Higman To Come For Alabama Dean SATURDAY, APRIL 26 FRIDAY, APRIL 25 Tonight Celebration Talks Tonight 9:30 a. m.—Assembling of groups to march in academic procession Agnes Ellen Harris, alumna of Mrs. Ella EVans Higman, a Leading the roster of well 3:00-6:00 p. m.—Registration of delegates and guests, Parks Hall 9-45 a. m.—Mrs. W. Y. Atkinson will be escorted through the campus to GSCW, Dean of Women and graduate of GSCW when it was known speakers in the Com- Dean of the School of Home Ec- 6:30 p. m.—Anniversary Dinner, Atkinson Dining Hall Russell auditorium. GNIC, is scheduled to address memoration Exercises to be held onomics at the University of Ala- Alumnae, GSCW faculty members and wives or husbands, the alumnae and members of the in Richard B. Russell Auditorium 10:00 a. m.—Commemoration exercises, Russell auditorium bama will act as toastmistress at official delegates, and members of the Senior class invited. Senior class of GSCW and in- Saturday at 10:00 a. m. is Colonel the Alumnae Banquet tonight at Presiding: Agnes Ellen Harris, Dean of Women, University Academic procession Forming at Ennis Hali vited guests tonight following the Sandy Beaver, president of River- 6:30 in Atkinson dining hall. Anniversary Dinner to be held side Military Academy in Gaines- of Alabama. Processional Maggie Jenkins, organist Born in Cedartown, July 17, 1883 at 6:30 p.m. in Atkinson Dining ville, Ga. Presentation of distinguished guests Miss Harris is the daughter of Invocation The Reverend John Sprole Lyons, D. D. Hall. Recently appointed Chairman Vocsil solos Nan Gardner Jas. Coffee and Ellen (Simmons) Pastor, First Presbyterian Church, Atlanta, Ga. Mk's. Higman, born in Warren- of the Board of Regents of the Spirit Flower—Campel-Tipton Harris. ton, Georgia, was one of the University System, Beaver will Let My Song Fill Your Heart—Gaines Music ••• A Cappella Choir After graduating here in 1902 three students in her class to extend greetings from the state Address: Ella Evans Higman, Attorney-at-Law, Washing- she attended the University of "Bless The People"—Tschaikov/sky be selected to return for scho- of Georgia to speakers and visi- Tennessee where she received her ton, D. C. Greetings From the State of Georgia larship teaching. Her actual tors from over the nation. ''Women in a Democracy" B. S. and later Teachers College, teaching began at Plains, Ga., and Since 1913 he has steered Riv- Presentation of Scroll and Invitation—Mrs. W. Y. Atkinson Colonel Sandy Beaver, Chairman, Board of Regents, Columbia University getting her M. ended in Winder, Ga., in 1918 erside Military Aciademy to the ELUOTT Alma Mater University System of Georgia A. She is a member of Delta Kappa iSOUCHER • when she became employed in rank of second largest military 9:00-11:00 p. m.—President's Reception, The Mansion Introduction of Speaker .... Mrs. J. E. I-Tayes, State Historian Gamma, honorary fraternity. Washington, D. C, in the Treas- preparatory school in the United Before beginning worlf at the Alumnae, GSCW faculty members and wives or husbands, Director, Department of Archives and History, State ury department. States, Culver being the largest. H.W.Elliott, official delegates, and members of the Senior class invited. of Georgia C. S. Boucher Known as Colonel in military cir- University of Alabama Miss Har- cles, Beaver gained the title of ris was Dean of Women and State Address Harriett Wiseman Elliott Leader of extension work at the THE ACADEMIC PROCESSION Consumer Commission, Advisory Commission, Coun- General as Chief of Staff for NC Teacher Main Speaker Governor Talmadge during the Alabama Polytechnic institute. cil of National Defense, Washington, D. C. Auburn. She also served as Dean Sections: Governor's first administration. Introduction of Speaker Steadman Vincent Saniord oj the School of Home Economics Talks Sat. The procession will be in six sections: In January, 1940, Time maga- Chancellor, University System of Georgia Tomorrow zine filled a whole page with his at the Florida State College for 1. The speakers, regents, and administrators Women. Harriet Wiseman Elliott, form- 2. The official representatives Address Chauncey Samuel Boucher Chauncey Samuel Boucher, who accomplishments. According to er Dean, Woman's College of the the article, Riverside was reduced 3. The faculty Chancellor, University System of Nebraska will speak tomorrow, April 26, University of North Carolina, will 4. The seniors at the commemoration exercises, to two taiuldings and two pupils address GSCW students and -^- 5. The alumni Music A Cappella Choir is a man who has a deep and in 1917, but it didn't seem to dis- alumnae and many notables visi- 6. Other students "The Lord's Prayer"—Gaines sympathetic view of the South courage Sandy Beaver. Today the tors tomorrow at the commeno- Introduction of Delegates arid Guests and all its problems. school consists of 27 buildings, ration c-vercises in Russell audi- Order »i' March: Recessional Maggie Jenkins, organist Chancellor of the University of including a Hotel at Hollywood- torium at ten o'clock. by-the-Sea near Miami where the The order of march will be in the above order, beginning from Ennis 1:00 p. m.—Luncheon, Atkinson Dining Hall Nebraska, Boucher, an able and Recently appointed Chairman, forceful speaker, is a leader of boys train in during three months Consumer Division, National De- promptly at ten o'clock. Alumnae, GSCW faculty members and wives or husbands, of each year. The other five official delegates and members of the Senior class invited. the progressive educators of the fense Advisory Commission, Miss Assembly: country. Although most of his months are spent in Gainesville Elliott, born July 10, 1884 in Car- Immediately following the luncheon: Election of officers by at lieadQC-arters for tiie school. The various groups will assemble at 9:30 a. m. in the following places: GSCW alumnae, Atkinson Dining Hall. academic life has been spent out- bondale, Illinois, has spent most 1. Speakers, regents, administrators—Porch of Ennis side the South except for a brief Time describes the Colonel of her life working with councils 2. Official Representatives—^Pirst floor, Ennis 8:00-12:00 p. m.—Semi-Centennial Dance, Gymnasium and New Dining period at the University of Texas, thusly: "A model for his students, commissions, clubs of all sorts. General Beaver never has tasted 3. The faculty—^Recreation Hall, Ennis Hall Boucher has made himself an Educate-1 at Hanover college, liquor, coffee, tea or soft drinks, 4. Seniors—Second Floor, Ennis Seniors, Sophomores admitted yellow cards authority on southern problems, Columbia university and Wiscon- at 56, still rises at five each morn- 5. Alumni—Recreation Hall, Ennis Juniors, Freshmen admitted with green cards having written numerous articles sin university Miss Elliott has. ing. His proudest boast is that o:\ 6. Other Students—Terrell Hall Porch, Eell Hall Porch at 9:15 a. m. Alumnae, Guests admitttd by white cards and books about southern prob- acted as professor of Political HIGMAN April day in 1936, when a tor- In case of rain, 1 and 2, will assemble in first floor of Arts; 3, Second floor. Science at the Woman's College lems, notably his book on The .aado struck Gainesville, 400 of his Arts; 4, Old Peabody auditorium; 5, second floor high school; and 6, Educa- Official Delegates Nullification Controversy in South Receiving her LL. B. degree of U. of N. C. and served as an cadets took charge in a driving exec!;.cive in the North Carolina tion Building. 1693 College of William and Mary Lucius T. McElrath Carolina. from Washington College of Law, Mi-s. Higman is a member of the rain, held on for eight hours, re- Conff^rence on Social Service, Order: 1749 Washington and Lee University Frank O. Evans, LL.B. Boucher is perhaps best known Georgia Bar, Federal Bar Associ- lieving distress, saving lives." North Carolina Relief Admini- 1776 Hampden-Sydney College William Davis Hooper, Litt. D. for his able seconding of the All the G. S. C. W. students except the seniors will leave in a double line from ation and Inter-American Bar Beaver is generally known HARRIS stration Commission. League of 1785 University of Georgia President Harmon W. Caldwell, LL. D. so-called "Chicago Plan" of gen- Terrell Hall to the lights where they turn north on the walk to Atkinson and Association. tlu'oughout the state as a man Women, North Carolina Legisla- 1814 Nazareth College and Academy Eleanor Parker eral education sponsored by Dr. West end of Parks, hence north to the center entrance to the auditorium A member of the Phi Delta of great ability and varied inter- Active in many iields, she is a tive Council and the Southern where they are to stop and form a double line, reaching from the front of the 1826 Mississippi College George Coleman Osborn, Ph. D. Robert Hutchins of the Univer- 0**"v'-' Dslta International Legal Fra- ests. At the University of Georgia member of the National association Political Science Associaiton. auditorium to the lights, through which the academic procession y/ill pass. 1826 Columbia Theological Seminary President Jas. McDowell Richards, D. D. ,..,.—-... sity of Chicago. He came into iternity, Mrs. Higman went to hf was a star tackle, a baseball of Deans of Women serving as A member of the N. C. Educa- As the last of the Alumni pass under the lights, that end of the double line 1831 University of Alabama Dean Agnes Ellen Harris, M. A. •A- national prominence in connec- Europe in 1937 as one oi a group player, and academically well off president from 1932-35. A member tion Association, Miss Elliott is of students will fall in behind the procession, followed by the juniors. 1831 LaGrange College President Hubert T. Quillian, A. B. tion with the attempts to revise of American lawyers attending enough to make Phi Beta Kappa. of American Home Economics as- also affiliated with the American Group one and two will march in single file, all other in double file. The offi- 1833 President Spright Dowell, LL. D. higher education undertaken the Second International Com- In spite of being born in rather sociation, she was vice president Political Science Association, cial representatives will be in order of the age of the institutions they repre- 1836 Emory University President Harvey W. Cox, Ph. D. there while he was Dean of the parative Law Conference at The humble circumstances in Augusta from 1925-26. The P. T. A. and National Council for Prevention sent, as printed in the program. The faculty will be grouped according to de- 1836 Wesleyan College President Dice R. Anderson, Ph. D, College of Arts, Literature and Hague, Holland. in 1883, he received his A. B. de- A. A. U. W. also claim her member- of War. and the Conference on grees, doctors, masters, and bachelors. There is no special order for seniors 1837 Davidson College John Davidson Wiley, M. D. Sciences from 1926 to 1935. For the past eleven years, Mrs. gree from the University in 1903 ship and from 1935-37 she was the Cause and Cure of War. and alumni. Other students should be grouped according to class. 1838 Emory and Henry College , Rhea A. Taylor, M. A. Boucher has been a historian Higman has served as attorney and his Ph. D. in 1930. Since then state president of the Alabama Miss Elliott was in Chicago in 1838 Duke University .,., E. L. Secrest, A. B. all of his life, haviiig taught his- in the United States Board of he has been teacher, housemas- Division of the latter. 1932 as a delegate-at-large from 1839 Virginia Military Institute James Longstreet Sibley ter and principal of the Univer- ;Seatii!ig: tory at the University of Michi- Tax Appeals. Demand for her leadership seems North Carolina to the Democra- 1842 Mary Baldwin College Mrs. C. P. Crawford gan, Washington university, Ohio sity School for Boys at Stone to have no end for she acted as tic National Convention, and for Group 1 will be seated on the stage; group 2, in the center section at the 1842 Roanoke College J. Christopher Brown,, M. A. Mountain, Georgai, from 1903 to front; group 3, in the center immediately following number two; group 4, at State university, University of director of the fourth district, some time has lectured to colleges 1847 Bessie Tift College President C. L. McGinty, D. D. 1913, at which time he started front on both right and left; group 5, immediately behind the seniors on both Texas, University of Wisconsin, Do You— Alabama Division of the Federa- and civic organizations. 1848 Southwestern College The Reverend Eugene L. Hill, D. D. in his present post at Riverside, tion of Womens Clubs in 1934-36. right and left; group 6, will fill the remainder of the auditorium and the seats and the University of Chicago. (Continued from Page 8) 1853 University of Florida President John James Tigert, LL. D. Hobbies include the study of outside. Visitors will be privileged to take any seat not reserved for groups He left Chicago in 1935 to be- so mad with the boys—we didn't Hofstra college's evening session • Most popular non-fiction book trends in the education of wom- ; 2, 3, 4, and 5. Other students will take seats that are left and those outsic'j:;. 1858 The University of the South The Reverend F. H. Harding M. A. come president of the University much care what happened." has added two pre-engineering 1866 Kentucky Wesleyan College The Reverend Carl Adkins,', A. B. of West Virginia. In 1938 he be- at Manhattan college is Gates's en, motoring and travel. Her courses and one in education. 1872 Vanderbilt University Dean John Bunyan Clarlc', M. A. came Chancellor of the University What is this we hear? Something translation, "The Complete Greek church affiUation is Presbyterian and politically she is a Democrat, Franklin and Marshall college Marshals: 1873 North Georgia College President Jonathan C. Rogers, Ed. D. rf Nebraska. about chickens? Drama." students are investigp,t;Mg the mo- Those in charge of the procession will be: 1873 Shorter College President Paul M, Cousins, LL. D, "Do you remember when we New York university's adult edu- Dr. Boucher will share the pro- bility of population li* Lancaster, Grand marshal and group 1—Harry A. Little 1875 Peabody College President S. C. Garrison, Ph. D. used to have to see about the cation program has been expand- Cornell university has more than gram with Colonel Sandy Beav- Pa. Group 2—Dr. Earl Walden and Dr. Amanda Johnson 1878 Brenau College .: President H. J. Pearce, Ph,' D," y^ incubators—and feed the chick- ed to include afternoon as well as $65,000 available for its new $250,- Group 3—Dr. Charles Smith and Dr. Prances Daniels 1883 John B. Stetson University Pearl Bennett, M. A, er. Chairman, Board of Regents evening classes. 000 recreational and athletic pro- cf the University System of Geor- ens?" More than 600 rural California i Group 4—Or. Paul Boesen and Dr. Mack Swearingen 1884 Mississippi State College for Women Emma May Laney, Ph D. "And plant our gardens and Sixty University of Minnesota gram. physicians are supplied with cur- Group 5—Dr. Sara Nelson 1885 Rollins College Leigh Davis, B". S". gia, and Miss Harriet Elliott, ROTC seniors are expected to be weed them and water them?" stuaenis have rent scientific literature by Uie 1 Group 6—Miss Dimon, Miss Lehye, Miss Wynn, Miss McDaniel (Continued on page 8) member of National Defense Ad- called to active duty with the And on—and on—far into this started a campaign to buy a mo- University of California medical visory Council, speaking at ten army immediately upon gradua- Golden Anniversary Day we hear bile kitchen for the British. school. o'clock in Richard Russell audi- tion. r^rium. —"Do you remember?"

,„^'-ii.-.f',-i-i' .1

I: Page 5 THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 Friday, April 25, 1941 THE COLONNADE Page 4

SANFORD HALL

CHAPPELL HALL

ENNIS HALL

I.y, - ,1V—."ji'* '' PARKS HALL

OLD EXECUTIVE MANSION

VIEW OF FRONTi CAMPUS HEALTH, PHYSICAL EDUCATION AND MUSIC BUILDINGS Parks, Arts, AtkinsoiV Terrell, Bell PARKS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL THE COLONNADiC Page? Friday, April 25, 1941 Friday, April 25, 1941 THE COLONNADE N^- i Page 6 GSCW Today GSCW Yesterday Four Presidents Have 35,00 Volume Library Used By GSCW Students Gone l[re The Don't Take Me Back to 16 "Do You Remember'^? Guided GSCW For 50 Years By Betty Ferguson As GSCW celebrates its fiftieth that "The sum of five hundred died a year .later. His body anniversary, it is significant that dollars is spent yearly in the Days Of The Says Graduate oi 1941 By BETTY PARK was brought to Milledgeville purchase of new books for the Is Query oi Aiuinuae On May 16, 1891, Dr. Joseph a library of thirty-five thousand and the funeral service was con- library." There was no necessity By CAROLYN STRINGER Harris Chappell was elected the volumes serving fifteen hundred ducted in the college chapel on for a trained librarian for the By NELLE WOMACK HIKES Brown Serge first president of the Georgia students and one hundred and When Mother was a girl—a sixteen year old soi)hornore Palm Sunday, catalog goes on to say that "the Noranal /and Imdusitirial CoPege, twenty-five faculty members has Isn't it a wonderful day? Who cares if cabbage has Bv WINIFRED GREENE "If the thorn of his having room is open to students at near- ^y —at the Georgia Normal and Industrial College back in 1913 later to become the Georgia State grown out of the beginnings made gone to 5 cents a pound when you can come back to the Gol- Little but memories and the old been taken from us seems to in- ly ail h vUrs of the day every day she may not have had a chance to raise much hell but she College for Women. in 1891. den Anniversai'y of your Alma Mater! When you can meet oak trees are left of the hey- fict too deep a wound, surely in the week except Sunday, and Dr. Chappell was the son ol A handsome Georgian building, days of the nineties v;hen grand- did learn how to raise chickens. Yep! She really did. Maybe there is the rose in the- sweet a librarian is always present to old friends and classmates and talk of that time when so- Absolom Chappell, a gifted his- attractive rooms for study and mother attended Georgia Normal that is the cause of all those trim white leghorns running thought of thanksgiving to Al- preserve order." and-so happened — and hear that torian, and Loretta Lamar, a recreational reading, a staff of on duty in between—having reg- and Industrial College, the old around in our chicken yard. And if it had anything to do mighty God that in this world He The library was moved from oft repeated phrase—"Do You Re- gentlewoman of the old South. five full-time librarians may be ular hours to see that the "sick" GSCW, dressed in skirt of brown permitted once to live and W:lk the old main building to the base- member?" with a platter heaped with fried • He was born on October 18, 1849, contrasted with the library as had their orange juice!" serge with a Eton jacket and Mother pack in the roomy brown among us Marvin M. Parks." ment Oi Terrell A Dormitory be- Look at that group over there chicken for Sunday dinners back in Macon, Georgia. He received described in the FIRST ANNUAL "Don't I though? I was one of made youthful and gay with trunk outside my door when the This tribute somewhat expresses ANNOUNCEMENT AND CATA- fore the Main Building was de- —hush! Listen! home, old G. N. and I. C. didn't '<:as early education at private the sick. And every dormitory was shirt-waist of white striped per- rules required that she wear one the feelings of Georgians for the LOGUE OP THE GEORGIA stroyed by fire. Thus all the "Do you remember tho time do so bad by her students. schools throughout the state and converted into a hospital. Some of cale. On Sunday she tripped of the uniforms on the journeys second president of GSCW, Who NORMAL AND INDUSTRIAL books in general use were saved when we used to have study hall My Alma Mater is celebrating ""mpleted it at the University of the parents even came and lived down the stairs of Atkinson Hall to and from college? By way of held this office for 21 years. COLLEGE 1891-'92. "The COL- and it was only a roomful of in our rooms and were not allow- looking like a carbon copy of its fiftieth birthday April 25-26. Virginia where he studied Greek, in the dorms and helped nurse." an extra fashion note, seniors Dr. Parks was born in Mari- LEGEi LIBRARY is an important discarded books stored in the ed to sit on the bed?" 200 other girls dressed in Sun- What is now the Georgia State history, and hterature. College for Women was only twen- ^vere seen in cap and gown every adjunct to the institution and main building which was lost. , "But we always had fair notice day best, each with a little Ox- After grsduating from the Una- And this group dates still far- an invaluable aid to its work. Miss Satterfield's description' of when the matron was on her ford Student's cap set carefully ty five years old when Mother time they went to church (mean- ther back—but listen! It now contains about two thous- the library as she found it when way." on the high pompador and a left it minus a degree. She didn't jng every Sunday), to town or any other place off the campus. and volumes, most of them con- she became librarian in 1930 gives "Because it was the day of the "Do you remember how those pair of brown kid gloves on her flunk or get "canned." They just In a letter of reminiscences tributed by friends of the insti- a vivid picture of her difficul- taffeta petticoat—and HOW THEY brass buttons we had on the tails dainty, unused hands. didn't get degrees back in 1916. J. L. BEESON ot our uniform coats used to about college days Mother says, tution. No part of the State ap- ties: "The library was located DID RUSTLE!" (Giggle-Giggle). Individuality in dress has She received a diploma in Educa- in a basement half above ground, scratch the backs of the church "As to social life there was prac- versity, Chappell decided to de- propriation or the regular revenue brightened GSCW's campus only tion, that is, she was ready to be and under a dormitory. The room, Wonder what year this group benches until they looked a a school marm. There was an tically none. You had to have a vote his life to education. While of the college goes to the library. five of the fifty years the col- for there was only one except sight!" amazing problem over choosing a permit from home for a date (par he was working with Chapped It has been gotten up entirely by belongs to? Wliat are they talking lege is celebrating this month. the small adjoining one used for lor) with anyone. No Milledgeville collsge, a school he had estab- the efforts of the Faculty and about—? The fire? That makes "Don't I? And it was awfully From 1887 until 1934 students course. Whether to study Domes- storing periodicals, was long and dates were allowed. A permit was Ished in Columbus for young of the student body and for its them 1924. hard to be sure that our skirts wore regulation uniforms with tic Science (Home Economics) or rectangular with windows on each required to receive a box of candy women, he was called to the future growth and progress must "Do you remember how every- were just six inches from the their wardrobes undergoing a Education ... Education or Do- side. from a boy. Girls could not be greater work of organizing and depend altogether upon the con- body had breakfast with us—in- ground." gradual change which lessened mestic Science . . . Domestic on the campus after dusk and laying the foundations of Geor- tributions of friends." ''On entering the library, one cluding all the firemen and others "And what did you do when slightly their severity. First change Science or Education . . . Whew! • ^ —-v-'' there was a deadline on the cam- gia's fii-st state-supported school Actually, there were 1892 books would probably first notice the who had come up to help?" Monday morning came—if it was came in 1933 when restrictions What they needed was a course pus so we didn't dare walk too for women, the Georgia Normal in the library when the college wooden railing which fenced the "Never saw so many scrambled the week to wear the red-and- on clothes were lifted for seniors in vocational guidance. close to the street. Church at- and Industrial College. In 1891 opened its doors. In 1895-96 the books off from the students. Hun- white striped waist—and not a and juniors. Girls since have been eggs in all my life". The academic standards were tendance was imperative with each the cd'ege opened with 88 pupils collection remained at two thous- dr-ids of books were stacked on one was clean?" free to wear the latest and most "And the faculty had a meeting something else for little Lucib girl attending the church she had End grew under his leadership and volumes, in spite of the fact (Continued on page 8) "I put on the blue-and-white colorful styles. at 8:30 (the fire started about Mathews breezed on into the soph- that year to 268 students. one and made for the office to chosen at the beginning of the 3 or 4 in the morning) in a room In early years Miss GSCW omore class by reason of coming year. Sunday school in the college Ill health forced him. to resign where the water was several explain". from an accredited high school and mother made the college- auditorium was optional (what a his position in 1905 tind he re- MARVIN PARKS ijiches deep—" "Who was that girl who had bound girl traveling suit for her down in Hawkinsville. But before concession!) but we didn't fail turned to Columbus wlhiere he "And classes went on at 9 as bright red hair—and asked for a she left home Grandma had to HARRIS CHAPPELL trip to Milledgeville. Later, un- to line up and march to church etta, Georgia, November 7, 1872. usual—in the Methodist Church "ruling" that she would NOT have do her shopping for her. That con- der supervision of a teacher, she with matrons leading and bring- When ihe was 20 years old he and the Court House." to wear the red-and-white waist?" sisted of ordering two patterns made a winter dress of brown ing up the rear." graduated from Emory college "And one girl tucked her new "Don't remember—but she got and simply yards and yards of Historic Old Mansion serge. The "Physical Culture" togs The letter continues, repeating with a Bachelor of Arts degree, Senior Sweater in its box—under it." brown serge and white percale were a blouse or shirtwaist, de- the story of a church cutting continuing his education at the her arm and refused to be part- from Milledgeville. Toe - length pending upon the weather, and a escapade which is campus legend University of Chicago and Har- ed with it—and we all cried". brown skirts and white shirtwaists Home of GSCW President My goodness—nere are some divided brown serge skirt. In now. "Once some girls in Atkin- vard. with stiff ear-high collars were dred thousand dollars of state June the students attended Com- B,y BONITA CHIVERS * • bragging on their class! seen on the campus in the Pall, son Hall cut church and hid up After holding a professorship Here's another group—and they mencement exercises looking girl- The old mansion needs not money and the Great Seal of ^ . ' i "Do you remember how PROUD Winter, and Spring of '16 and in the attic They walked in the at and Wesleyan ' 1 > ' talk of the "flu" of 1918. ish and innocent in white pique grace of memories, for lovely Georgia to prevent their use by ^1 •• we were to be the first to have wrong place and came, tumbling- I •* ^ many seasons before and after. co'Mege, Dr. Parks wss appoint- * "Do you remember how the frocks. women, gallant and great men "usurpers.". 1 « (Continued on Page 8) What in the name of heaven did V "-(Continued on page 8) ed president of GSCW in 1905. teachers met every class—but went Uniforms were made from an and youthful beauties have sanc- After the War Between the 1 Under his direction the -college J ! official pattern and had to be tified its spacious halls. Twenty- States the Mansion was practi- *•* was develoiped from 'a strictly > . •. i five thousand girls have felt the cally dismantled and rented to \ revamped if they failed to pass normal and industrial institution inspection. atmosphere of the "Old Govern- residents of Milledgeville. In 1880, to a branch of the state univer- 1 or's Mansion" but none of these upon the founding of the Georgia i*> In moiher-s school days lots of sity. In Tampa, Florida, Dr. - ( has forgotten her entrance there. Military College as a part of the progress was made in the stand, Parks died from injuries receiv- ^'';' 'ii University System of Georgia, ard wardrobe. The, girls brought Built in 1838 during the term of ed in an automobile accident on k blue striped shirt-waists and a few the Mansion was turned into a Governor George R. Gilmer, the December 28, 1926. style-conscious leaders went to n old Mansion housed the govern- barracks and used by cadets until 1i classes dressed in red and white ors of Georgia for thirty years the founding of GSCW, when it Dr. Jasper Lumer Beeson, pres- striped blouses. and was the scene of many bril- became a part of the college. ident emeritus of the Georgia A brown waist replaced the liant balls in the spacious days First occupied by the president, St£te College for Women, was Eton blouse in 1905 and Sunday of the old regime. Eight govern- Dr. Harris Chappell and students the son of Captain Willism B. dress during warm months be- ors occupied the Mansion and at of GNIC, the Mansion later be- Beeson and Mary Sibert Beeson. came the same as commencement one time a provisional and a mili- came exclusively the home of the He was born in Keener, Alabams, wear—white lawn waist and tary government were seated president. August 30, 1867. Having recelv-» whits skirt in 1908. there. On May 12-13, 1938, Centennial ed his A. B. and A. M. degrees While domestic women fought It was the Mansion where Birthday of the Mansion was ob- at the University of Alabama, Dr. for woman suffrage and a place Governor Joseph E. Brown was served with a day of celebration Beeson oompleted his work on' in the man's world, GSCW gii'ls arrested in violation of his parole including a pageant depicting his Ph. D. at Johns Hopkins struggled for distinction and orig- by the Federal government. the history of the building, com- university. In 1929 the Univer- inality in their dresses. In the Mansion, Governor Jen- memoration exercises and a sity of Alabama bestowed on him During the era of the "flapper," kins defied the carpetbag rule in dance. L. L. D. girls shortened their uniforms Georgia by refusing to pay with Today, amid a setting of lofty He has completed 43 years of from 5 to 8 inches from the floor. state money the expenses of a trees and spacious lawn, the Man- service at GSCW; seven of these I During the boom years from p*' I ^ constitutional convention called sion serves as the home of Dr. years were spent as president of 1926-29 black hose and black by the military occupational Guy H. Wells, president of GSCW, the college to which office he I low heeled shoes were worn with forces. From the Mansion Gov- a beautiful building to be rever- was appointed in 1926. Dr. Bee- the—yes, you guessed it, the ernor Jenkins took four hun- ed by all Georgians (Continued on page 8) GUY H. WELLS BROWN SERGE. For the dress uniform during the spring months, I ^••*?: while silk was the proper thin.-* m r w for the young ladies. SENIORS DRESSED FOR TOWN m (Continued on page 8) m SUNDAY GO-TO-MEETING COSTUMES 1 r/;,iS;'iS4!&aJ«A*S?Wirs:^^

Page 8 THE COLONNADE Friday, April 25, 1941 I 35,000 Volumes— Four Presidents— a nightshirt (I think the writer (Continued from page 7) meant shirt-tail) parade every "^r- (Continued from page 7) year when school first opened son is listed in "American Mien and the girls would peep out the ' the floor because of ever-crowd- of Science" and in "Wiio's Who windows at them. Teachers and ed shelves. Tlie seating capacity in American Education." matrons frantically rushed around was one hundred and forty for making them leave the windows," over one thousand students, mak- In the summer of 1934 he re- muses graduate of '16. ing it necessary to schedule at- tired and became the president Those same matrons should tendance by assigning classes to emeritus of the school, remain- have been able to look through the library on different nights." ing as an active member of the twenty five calendars to 1941 to chemistry department. While the library was housed view "jimmies" (cadets) strolling ill the basement of the dormi- Several years ago Dr. Marvin down Milledgeville's main streets tory, rules were most stringent. Parks pointed out to residents of with sweet young things in sweat- Each student had to sign in and Mrliedgeville a certain man on ers and skirts which are beaten out of the library with a student the GSCW campus and said, for brevity only by those of a assistant, who sat in the en- "There is a young man ^vho -will ballerina. Oh! the sighing and trance; the next morning it was write his name in Georgia's ed- chuckling had they foreseen the the task of this assistant to check ucational future." This was an Spring '41 campus on week-ends with the housemother with whom unusual coincidence for the young a-bloom with ice cream flannels the students had also signed in man was Guy H. Wells, who is worn by nearby university lads GOV. W. Y. ATKINSON and out. There was a great rush now the president of this college. and white uniforms recently don- every afternoon at four o'clock, ned by the "jimmies." Dr. Wells was born in Temple, for all students who had a cer- We may make jokes of the col- Gone Are— Georgia, Carroll County, on Sep- MRS. W. Y. ATKINSON tain number of demerits, either lege girls of '16 but we can't beat tember 26, 1892, He is a gradu- (Continued from page 6) for being absent or for breaking some of the jokes found in the ate of Mercer University and re- some rule, had to spend an al- Don't Take Me— annual of 1914: Slowly but surely the students ceived his A. M. degree at Co- lotted number of hours sitting (Continued from page 6) "Learned Sophomore; I am won more independence and in lumbia university. In his asso- in the library as punishment. preparing a debate on the ques- the last years of the uniform down through the plaster in the Freshmen were never allowed to ciaton with education he has been tion of allowing immigrationo in dress, 1933-34, only the freshmen ceiling." Some say they fell into go to the library at night, and superintendent of .four schools America. and sophomores were required no book could circulate until five and the Dean and President of the matron's room. Then Mother Smarty Fresh: Emma Gray- to wear them. o'clock in the aftei*noon, nor South Georgia Teacher's college. adds, "I cut church once and shon! Is that another suffrag- Today the keynote of fashion could it be kept longer than one stayed under the bed, but the ette?" and another (if you can When Dr. Wells was elected is originality. Shirt-waists are no night. The life of the library floor was so hard, I wished I take it): r to the position of president of more for in our language we assistant was made harder by the had gone to church. I never cut "Sarah: Look, Kate, see this GSCW the Savannah! Evening class for that had to be excused wear shirts. The old brown serge fact that each year after school Press said, "Guy Wells as pres- bug? closed the assistants stayed over by the matron." Kate: (just back from the has been replacd by a riot of ident of the South Georgia Memories of twenty five years colored skirts and sweaters. to shake epsom salts into each Teachers college at Staf'esboro oculist): No, I tell you I can't separate book. At the beginning ago are naturally disconnected see it. has shown capacity, ability, judge- ramblings but it is extremely in- of the fall term they returned ment, and genius. We are not Sarah: Oh, I forgot you just early to shake the epsom salts teresting to me, a prospective had your eyes diluted." Do you— surprised that he should be call- (Continued from page 6) out of the books and to wash graduate of fifty year old GSCW W-e-e-1-1 let's see about the ed to a higher and more import- to compare notes with my "best all the book shelves." 1916 college humor. Here's a over 100 in our class?" ant service." pal," a graduate of twenty five year stem-winder: "And do you remember every old GNIC. Strangely enough it It was not until 1932 that a "Fresh: Oh'. Elizabeth, did Senior had to read a thesis be- gives me a personal comparison of separate library building was you know they are going -to close fore a group of faculty members?" college girls thinking about V7prld erected under the presidency of Dance— "And one was selected from each War I and girls,of today interest- the College Library? •^- Dr. J. L. Beeson. The Ina Dillard of the diploma groups to be given (Continued from Page 2) ed in World • War n. The^ United Elizabeth: No, Why? Russell Library, named in honor at commencement?—And WERE siates' had not entered tlie, war Fi'esh: They have just discov- of Mrs. Richard B. Russell, wife Semi-Centennial dance will be ered small-pox in the dictionary." WE SCARED?" of the Chief Justice and mother open to all' official visitors and during the period from 1913-16 but they were at it full tilt over- Just one more from the 1916 "And do you remember the of the Senator, was dedicated alumnae. Seniors and Sophomores seas with the same vicious hate annual, for I could quote enough exhibits? And how we worked for December 17, 1932. will dance in the New Dining Hall over practically the same issues to make the readers hysterical WEEKS to make ours better than In addition to the general col- from 8:00—9:45 p. m. and in the involved in the struggle today. but I won't be unkind: it was the year before?" lection, the reference collection Gymnasium from 10:15—12:00 And just as methods, motives and "And hundreds came--and we and the periodical files, the li- p. m. Juniors and Freshmen will "Mj-. Parks (in Chapel): I feelings are found to be highly served them punch and cookies?" brary has special collections of dance in the Gymnasium from have here a dollar bill found expanded and intensified, it seems "And the Lady Board of Visi- pamphlets, government docu- 8:00—9:45 p. m. and in the New yesterday, whose is it? The own- that the. interest of the college tors smiled at us—and said— ments, and several outstanding er will have to describe it. Whose Dining Hall from 10:15—12:00 girl is whipped up to a higher 'It's a grand, exhibit—girls!'" collections of books on special picture is on it? p. m. Admission cards may be degree of avidity. About the only "And how tired we were—but subjects. Of importance to stu- Voice from rear: It's mine." obtained from any Head of Resi- discussions of World War I heard how glad we had stuck to it?" dents as well as to scholars from One quarter of a century be- dence. at GNIC were made in chapel "And the time when Governor other universities is the remark- tween our graduations from the by the president of the college, Terrell came with special guests able assemblage of old Georgia same college has left our interests the late Dr. M. M. Parks, accord- and the Home Economics Depart- newspapers and magazines, which printed from time to time. just as far apart. While Mother ing to Mother. ment served a luncheon for twelve are especially valuable for local Two circumstances which have spent her time sewing, cooking which cost 98 cents?" history. Another distinguished helped the library's growth in and raising chickens I have spent Interest in the GMC cadets *'And the visitors' eyes almost group is the Georgia collection, the past few years are the pur- as many hours concentrating was evident. though greatly sup- popped out." which includes many rare and chase of some five thousand from time to time on everything pressed. Once every fall the stu- "And we were the last to have sigijed copies of books by and volumes comprising the Cox Col- from dramatics to journalism, I dents were privileged to atteiid a Junior-Senior Prom—for there abojat Georgians, Georgia gene- lege Library in 1939 and the can't possibly resist enamg this the GMC-Gordon football game. were not enough boys anywhere alogy, history, laws and state establishment of a rental library wiih "How times tr ^lirir.ee:" "The • GMC boys always staged within reach to go around." docuinents; in 1935. This last adds about two "And we were the first to make -^r-- hundred volumes a year to the OFFICIAL DELEGATES The Beeson Reading Room, in main collection. Tlie books are a regular class trip." which all fiction is to be found (Continued from Page 2) "And we went to Atlanta and paid for entirely by small rental 1885 Georgia School of Technology .. President M. L. Brittain, LL. D, on open shelves, contains a col- fees collected from members who stopped at the Piedmont?" lection of Harry Stiliwell Ed- 1886 University of Chattanooga Professor WiUiam' G, Hope, M. A. "And everybody was joking include faculty and town people 1886 H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College • wardsiana, which includes sign- as well as students. about—'staying with Mi-s. Pied- ed copies of his books and a , Mrs. Aubrey Jones, B. Des mont'". fine portrait of this celebrated The librarians whose faithful 1889 Agnes Scott College President J. R. McCain, LL. D And we went to Georgia Tech." Georgia author. The library has service during the past half-cen- 1890 North lexas State Teachers College "And stopped by Mercer Uni- also, accumulated an excessment tury have produced results which ,..,.,.,, Weston L. Murray, M. i\, versity on our way back." (giggle collection of prints whicli are ex- are truly amazing are listed be- 1891 Woman's College of tlie University of North CaroUna —giggle). printed from time to time. The low with the dates of their tenure , Dean W. C. Jackson, LL. D "And our class gave Dr. Parks library gives added services by of office: 1893 Randolph-Macon Woi^^ans College ..Elizabeth G. Ferguson, M. A. a ring—with the seal of Georgia training teacher-librarians; the 1896 Alabama College" President Milton Lee Orr, Ph. D. on it—Those were the days!" library science class rooms and 1896- 1898—Lilla Morel. 1897 Piedmont College Dean Ruth C. Stone, M. A. "Do you remember when the laboratory are attractive and 1898-1899—Agnes Pressor. 1901 Texas State College for Women Grace .Potts, M. A. boys stole our Maypole one Field well-equipped. 1899.1906—Mrs . Alberta T. 1906 Georgia State Woman's College Day?" Gould. , President Frank R. Reade, Ph. D. "And we ran all the way up The library furnishes biblio- 1906-1909—^Katherine Greer. 1907 East Carolina Teachers College .,...;,. Daniel Jordan, A. B. to GMC and took it away from graphies and reading lists to 1909-1911—Lizzie Mae Holland. 1912 Loyola Uniyersity ; Homer D. Eaton, B. S. tliem?" . alumnae upon request ,and an- 1912-1913--Birdie Ellard. 1912 Rice Institute , ...• .^Everett Ellis Porter, Ph. D. "And the consternation it arous- swers reference questions which 1913" 1917—Sara Newton Steele. 1914 Georgia Evening College Director .George M. Sparlcs, LL. D. ed—?" are sent in from over the state. 1917-1919—Evangeline Clement. 1926 Berry College ,...... Professor George Coleman Osborn, Ph. D. "How did we get out of that A library handbook is given to 1919-1930—Gertrude Anderson, 1929 Georgia Teachers. College Professor Mavlina Trussel, M. S. scrape?" each freshman at the beginning 1930 to date—Virginia &atter- 1933 West Georgia College.,...,,,.., President Irvine S. Ingram, M. A. "I don't remember—but we were of the year, and book lists are field. - 1935 Armstrong" Junior College , , President. Ernest A. Lowe (Continued on Page 3)