r it - Athenaeum@UGA - University of Georgia

Transcrição

r it - Athenaeum@UGA - University of Georgia
c. o.
Jl?e
l^ir^sberry, ai)d
. . ARE . .
College Work a Specialty. My facilities for
large groups of Fraternities and
Classes are unsurpassed.
PERFECT IN ALL
POINTS AND PREFERRED BY ALL PROMINENT PERFORMERS.
E carry a full line of Violins, Guitars,
Mandolins, and Sheet Music at lowest and
popular prices.
Write u» for Catalogue.
"America's Greatest Piano House."
The Cable Co.
96-98 Whiteaill Street.
. . ATLANTA. GA.
Have the only studio light in the city especially
adapted to large groups.
J. E. Canton
PANDORA
Published by
The FRATERNITIES of the UNIVERSITY of GEORGIA.
June Tenth, Nineteen-One.
— -a m
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BOUND BY THE NATIONAL LIBRARY BINDERY CO. OF GA.
Move you checked, to be sure, volume is complete, with all issues, index
and title page? Imperfect volumes delay return of binding. Thanks.
"
Dedication*
jfdown the crowding ranks of years
tjhe long line grows.
jfnd youth and age
Join hands to swell the brotherhood
Of " Seorgia's " tons,
Cornelia-like
Old " Seorgia " proudly points you out,
" jfnd these my jewels are, " she says.
\jo you, who by oft words of cheer,
Who by your lives, your toils, your call
TJO great endeavor, and your fame,
Jfave cheered us when the road was rough,
llJhen steep and sterile seemed the slopes
"Chat upward to the summit lead,-
Tjo you, who ' ve watched, and warned, and now,
'Uhe summit gained, glad greetings give,
jfnd welcomes fraught with tender thrill f
"Uo you, alumni, fratres, friemds,
Sn honor of our mutual loves,
We dedicate this book of ours.
Calendar*
J900.
SIPTKMBBB 17TH-18TH. Monday and Tuesday—
Examinations for entrance.
SEPTEMBER 19TH. Wednesday—Session opens ;
Law School opens.
OCTOBER IST. Monday—Medical School opens.
NOVEMBER 29TH. Thursday—National Thanks­
giving Day.
DECEMBER 2IST. Friday—Christmas recess
begins.
J90I.
JANUARY SD. Wednesday—Exercises resumed.
Examinations for entrance half advanced.
JANUARY 19TH. Saturday—Birthday of K. E.
Lee.
FEBRUARY 19TH. Tuesday—Anniversary of the
Demosthenean Society.
FEBRUARY 22D. Friday—Washington's birth­
day. Anniversary of the Phi Kappa Society.
APRIL 2D. Tuesday—Commencement of the
Medical School.
MAY 25TH. Saturday—Final examinations
begin.
JUNE 12TH. Wednesday—Commencement be­
gins.
University Centennial Commencement*
Programme.
TUESDAY, JUNK HTH—10:80 P. M.—Sophomore Hop.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12TH—Local Celebration Day. Centen­
nial of City of Athens and County of Clarke.
11 a. m.—Addreu by DEAN SYLVANUB MORRIS (Class
1872).
10:30 p. m.—Hobo Hop.
THURSDAY, JUNE 13TH—Undergraduates Day.
11 a. m.—Sophomore Declamation.
4 p. m.—Junior Speaking and Delivery of Sophomore
Frizes by HON. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES (Class 1875).
10:30 p. m.—Pan-Hellenic German.
FRIDAY, JUNE HTH—Graduates' Day.
11 a. mX-Senior and Law Class Exercises.
4 p. m.—Prize Drill.
10:30 p. m.—Junior Hop.
SATURDAY, JUNE 15xn—Literary Societies Day.
11:30 a. m.—Address before Literary Societies by HON.
J. L. M. CURRY, LL. D. (Class 1845).
4 p. m.—Laying corner-stone new buildings.
8 p. m.—Champion Debate between Demosthenean and
Phi Kappa Societies.
SUNDAY, JUNK 16TH, 11 a. m.—Baccalaureate Sermon, BEY.
BENJAMIN M. PALMER, D. D., LL. D. (Class 1838).
8 p. m.—Sermon before University Young Men's Chris­
tian Association, KEY. B. J. WILLINQHAM, D. D.
(Class 1873).
MONDAY, JUNE UTH—Centennial Day.
11:30 a. m.—Address before University, HON. OSCAR
STRAUSS, of New York.
4 p. m.—University Celebration.
10:30 p m.—Cotillion Club German.
TUESDAY, JUNE ISTH—ALUMNI DAY.
10 a. m.—Session of Alumni Society.
11:30 a. m.—Alumni Addreu, HON. EMORY SPEEK
(Class 1869).
4 p. m.—Second Session Alumni Society.
8 p. m.—Social Reunion.
10:30 p. m.—Lawyers' Hop.
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 19TH—Commencement Day.
11 a. m.—Baccalaureate Address, DR. HENRY VAN
DYKE, Princeton.
10:30 p. m.—Senior Hop.
Places for Class Reunions.
The following places have been arranged for class head­
quarters. The object in appointing these places of rendezvous
is to enable members of the same class to meet each other more
readily. A book, in which members may register upon arrival,
will be provided in each of the places named:
Classes from 1836 to 1851, Professor Barrow's room,
Library Building.
Classes from 1851 to 1863, Professor Snelling's room,
Library Building.
Classes from 1866 to 1876, Chancellor's Lecture-room, Sci­
ence Hall.
Classes from 1875 to 1880, Dr. White's room, Science Hall.
Classes from 1880 to 1885, Law School Building, first
floor.
Classes from 1885 to 1890, Law School Building, second
floor.
Classes from 1890 to 1895, Demosthenean Hall.
Classes from 1895 to 1900, Phi Kappa Hall.
Greeting.
The editors of the 1901 PANDORA tender their kindest
greetings in this centennial year of our University.
They
present this volume to the world with no appeal for charity
or apology for the faults to be found herein : but with the
sincere hope that it may please each reader and recall to his
mind in future years the student life at Old Georgia.
MH BOLLARD
W.D.HOYT xt
ATu)
Trustees of the University of Georgia,
His Excellency, GOVERNOR A. D. CANDLKR, Atlnnta, Ex-officio.
G. F. GOBER, Marietta ............ From the State-at-large. ......... .
CLARK HOWELL, Atlanta ........... From the State-at-large. ..........
F. G. DuBuiNoN, Savaiimih .......... From the State-at-large. ..........
W. E. SUMMONS, Lawrcnceville ....... . From the State-at-large. ......... .
B. A. DENMARK, Savannah .......
. First Congressional District.........
B. B. BOWJCR, Bainbridge ........... Second Congressional District ........
W. H. FISH, Americus ............ Third Congressional District .
......
HENRY PERSONS, Talbotton .......... Fourth Congressional District ........
H. D. McDANiEi., Monroe .......... Fifth Congressional District. ........
A. O. BACON, Macon ............. Sixth Congressional District. ........
D. B. HAMILTON, Home ............ Seventh Congressional District .......
H. T. LKWIS, (ireensboro ........... Eighth Congressional District ........
N. L. HUTCHINS, Lawrencevillc ........ Ninth Congressional District ........
Term expires
Term expires
Term expires
Term expires
Term expires
Term expires
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September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
September
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
1st,
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1!K)7
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I'.tOS
1!K)3
1!K)5
1!K)5
l'.K)5
1JKI3
1!H)3
1!K»1
1!»01
11HI3
l'.K)7
G. T. BARNKS, Augusta ............ Tenth Congressional District ........ Term expires September 1st, I!t07
H. G. TURNER, Quitman .......
... Eleventh Congressional District ....... Term expires September 1st, 1907
A. L. HULL, Athens .
........... Resident Trustee . ............ . Term expires September 1st, 1!K)7
HOWELL Conn, Athens ............ Resident Trustee . ............. Term expires September 1st, 1!M>1
N. E HARRIS, Macon, President of Technological Board, Ex-officio.
F. G. Di'BiuNON, Savannah, President Board of Commissioners, Girls' Industrial College, Ex-officio.
P. W. MKLDKIM, Savannah, President Board of Commissioners, Colored Industrial College, Ex-officio.
12
The Academic Faculty*
WALTER BARNARD Hn.i., A. M., B. L.,
JOSEPH LUSTRAT, BACH. EsLETT.,
Chancellor, and Professor of Metaphysics and Kthics.
Professor of Koiiiance Languages.
HENRY CLAY WHITE, PH. D., F. C. S.,
ANDREW HENRY PATTERSON, A. M.,
President of the Georgia State College of Agriculture and the
Professor of Physics and Astronomy.
Mechanic Arts, and Professor of Chemistry.
DAVID CRENSHAW BARROW, A. M., C. and M. E.,
HUGH NESBIT STARNES, A. B.,
Dean of Franklin College, and Professor of Mathematics.
ROBERT EMORY PARK, A. B., A. M.,
l>r"fess"r <>f -V^cuit.m-.
Professor of Khetoric and English Literature.
JOHN PENDLETON CAMPBELL, A. B.. PH. D,
HERTY, PH. B, PH. D.,
Professor of Biology.
,
...
Adjunct Professor of Chemistry.
WILLIS HENRY BOCOCK, A. M..
URIAR HARROU, DAVKNPORT) B . S.,
Professor of Aiirit'iit Luniruiii'cs.
i
m
fi *
i i*
Instructor
in JMivsics
an<li Klcctrical
hn^inceruiir.
^
•
CHARLES MORTON STRAHAN, C. and M. E.,
ERNEST LEE GRIGGS ( GRADUATE V. M. I.),
Professor of Civil Engin.-ering.
Instructor in Engineering and Commandant of Cadets.
JOHN HANSON THOMAS MCPHERSON, A. B., PH. D.,
JAMES MADISON STEPHENSON, JR., A. B.,
Professor of History and Political Science.
Tutor in Kn"lish
CHARLES MERCER SNKLLING, A. M.,
JAMES BOLAN LAWRENCE, A. B.,
Professor of Matliematics.
Tu , 1)r jn Ancient Languages.
WILLIAM DA vis HOOPER, A. M.,
EUGENE CUNNINGHAM BRANSON, A. M.,
Professor of Latin.
Lecturer in Psychology and Logic.
JOHN MORRIS, A. M.,
Miss SARAH A. FRIERSON,
Professor of English Language and Teutonic Philology.
WALTER BARNARD HILL, A. M., B. L.,
Librarian.
Law Faculty.
JOHN D. MELL, A. B., B. L.,
Chancellor, and Lecturer on the Science and History of Law,
Federal Law, and Legal Ethics.
Professor of Parliamentary Law.
HOWELL COBB, A. M., B. L.,
SPAMUEL C/wBf.N^ICT ' "' D"
....
T
Professor 01„ Law.
Professor of Medical Jurisprudence.
r
SYLVANUS MORRIS, A. M., B. L.,
J- H. T. MCPHERSON, A. B., PH. D.,
Professor of Law.
Lecturer on Koinan Law.
13
PROF. R. E. PARK, JR.
Robert Emory Park, A. M.
N
OT many pleasures are as genuine as that
which now is afforded us. Almost solely to
the counsel of Mr. Park and his financial
aid, is this edition of PANDORA made a possibility.
This act of his is an index to the true character of
the man. Mainly through his untiring efforts was
Georgia able to successfully cope with North
Carolina. Solely, might we say, was a new Geor­
gian resurrected, and it has profited by the errors
of the past, making from an apparently unreconstructible failure, a college magazine that is the peer
of any such publication in the South.
Not only has this benefactor of Georgia oiled
the hinges of our brains and made Georgia foremost
in the forum and journalistic field, but he has
encouraged the union of brain and brawn in the
athletic field. Thus we see that Georgia has been
indeed fortunate in the selection made for the chair
of English.
By some this eulogy may appear inappropriate
but the editors of PANDORA willingly submit to all
criticism in order to be able to express in lasting
words their appreciation for one who has made his
every effort and the advancement of Georgia's in­
terest synonymous.
Professor Robert Emory Park was born in Tuskegee, Alabama, December nth, 1869, where he
was educated in Park High School of that place.
He received an appointment in 1888 to West
Point Military Academy, where he was in college
for eighteen months being compelled to withdraw
on account of crushing his ankle. He received his
degree of Bachelor of Arts from the University of
Alabama in 1892 and one year later he received his
Master of Arts degree. He then accepted the posi­
tion of superintendent of public schools of Gainesville, Georgia. After holding this position for three
years he gave it up to open a private school in
La Grange, Georgia, the citizens of that city giving
him the ground and building to induce him to take
charge of the school.
This position he resigned in the spring of 1899
in order to complete his education at the University
of Chicago. While there he was elected to the
chair of English which duties he began in Septem­
ber, 1900.
Though a native by birth of Alabama, Professor
Park has ever been a Georgian by sentiment and
descent. In the roll of the alumni of the University
there are perhaps more of his immediate family than
that of any family in the State. His father, grand­
father, two uncles, and a first cousin all bearing the
name of Park, and a number of other relations of
different names, all appear on the roll, and it affords
us much genuine pleasure to record among the
lovers, supporters and promoters of our dear old
University the name of Professor Robert Emory
Park.
"Pandora," Its Purpose and History.
P
ANDORA, " the gift of all the gods." Every
god and goddess contributed something to her
perfection. Beauty and charm were hers,
PANDORA, the gift of all the students. Every
student contributes something to her—we will call
it perfection. Beauty and charm are hers. Pan­
dora herself was fashioned as a curse for man;
our PANDORA is fashioned as a blessing.
She has a mission to perform and has she not in
the past performed it well? Her duty it is to por­
tray college life, college habits, the college itself,
as they are; to convey to the outside world an idea of
what we are doing. She must, collect, gather, accu­
mulate, everything of interest that has happened
within the walls of our alma mater, sift them and
give them to our alumni, to the State.
What a flood of recollections flows upon an
alumnus when the name PANDORA is mentioned?
Does he not once more live his college life? Does
he not once more pass through that joyous time
when he stands irresolute upon the threshold of life,
fearing to proceed yet unable to retreat? PANDORA
starts this train of thought. To it he turns in his
leisure and loves to think of his vicissitudes as a
college boy, of his woes which he thought could
never be equaled, his successes whicli he thought
could never be eclipsed.
Let us glance backward for a few years and trace
the history of PANDORA. It will be most pleasant
as well as profitable. PANDORA represents not only
college life in all its manifold phases; it is not only
an outlet for the literary activity and thought of
the college; but in addition it purposes to be a
history of the college during its year. If the Uni­
versity is prosperous it follows that the PANDORA is
brilliant and successful. If the University is labor­
ing under hardships naturally this reacts upon the
PANDORA and it falls below the standard. Let us
trace, then, its history since its establishment.
Set on foot in 1886 by some bright mind it has
been published annually, up to date, save in 1889
and 1891. The PANDORA published in 1886 was a
pioneer in the South as only one such Annual
had preceded it. It was small and unpretentious;
bound in pasteboard. Notwithsta»ding all this and
regardless of the fact that it was far below the
average of the volumes which followed it, more than
twice as many men were required to edit it, as now
constitute the PANDORA board. At the time this
volume was issued very little happened in college
worthy to be published in an Annual.
Football in the South was then considered to be
absolutely barbarous and consequently no college
indulged in such sport. Baseball here was limited
to interclass games and one with the Athens City
nine. The PANDORA of '86 is so unpretentious that
it contains no illustrations and but few pen-andink sketches. No clubs and organizations with
16
which recent PANDORAS have teemed, were known
in the University at that time. Thus we see what
a limited field there was to cover; what a limited
scope there was to view.
The PANDORA of 1887 in appearance resembles
its predecessor yet it has evolved from its embry­
onic state and has begun its first upward shoot.
This issue abounds in wit and humor depicting
college pranks and jokes. In it is chronicled the
first Zeta Chi initiation which has always been the
bane of the Freshmen's existence. Editorially, the
PANDORA deplores the lack of a gymnasium in the
University and suggests several plans by which the
necessary funds might be raised. There is also an
article eulogizing Chancellor P. H. Mell, who then
stood at the helm of the University. In this year we
find that Field-day was observed for the first time
and a list of the winners on that occasion is given.
The year 1888 marks a still greater evolution in
the PANDORA. It is bound in cloth with a neat
cover design and contains some good illustrations.
The poems have improved and several long articles
are inserted notably one descriptive of Athens and
its advantages. The editorial space is consumed
by an appeal to the Legislature for more funds and
a statement of the deplorable fact that Mercer and
Emory were on a better financial footing than the
University.
So great was the need of funds to back the PAN­
DORA that no issue was published in either '89 or
'91. The PANDORA of '90 makes little improve­
ment over that of '88. Yet it contains an original
idea that of giving a history in a sarcastic style of
the different editors composing the staff. Here we
find the last account of a Zeta Chi initiation until
the quiet Freshman was again disturbed in the fall
of'98.
By '92, the difficulties seem to have been over­
come and PANDORA is at last on a firm footing.
Since that time it has thrived and prospered. The
principle subject of interest with which this PAN­
DORA dealt was the installation of Dr. William E.
Boggs as chancellor.
The year 1892 marks the first game of inter­
collegiate football played in the South. Auburn
and Georgia were the contestants. Since this time
the colleges have been brought into closer union
with each other. They have discarded their old
prejudices and enter into friendly rivalry in various
fields.
The PANDORA of 1893 came out in a new and
attractive style, rectangular in shape with a neat
black and red cover. This PANDORA represents a
broader field as the college had taken on a new
growth. Here for the first time we find pictures
of the various fraternity groups. Also the Thalians
and the football team are given prominent places.
The '94 PANDORA closely resembles its prede­
cessors. In '95 we find an account of the formation
of a glee club in the University. Here also the
Non-Fraternity Club first has its picture published.
The most prominent original feature of the '96 PAN­
DORA is a well written history of Demosthenian and
Phi Kappa Literary Societies.
In 1897 the size of the PANDORA was increased
and it was issued in a more attractive form than
ever before. The plan of this PANDORA has been
closely followed by the volumes of '98, '99, and 'oo,
which have fully recorded events of note in the
University during their respective years. And the
volume of 1901 will surpass all others, we are per­
fectly confident.
After our graduation, to look back over our
college course with a PANDORA by our side will
veritably be a joy; to think of our old friends; of
the irresistible and charming beauty of youth; of
our hopes and ideals and how we have lived up to
them.
F. B.
18
Senior Class Officers.
E. A. DUKE .......................... President
F. R. HAPP ........................ Vice-President
W. G. THOMPSON ....................... Historian
J. M. GANTT ................... Secretary and Treasurer
R. M. Goss ............................ Poet
FRED JACKSON .......................... Orato^
HAROLD HIRSCH ..................... Captain Football
J. D. McCARTNBY ................... Manager Football
JOHN BANKS ....................... Captain Baseball
L. E. TATB ...................... Manager Baseball
H. C. JOHNSON ................... Captain Track Team
J. C. BRAND .................... Manager Track Team
20
Senior Class, J90J.
JOHN BANKS, -V 0, Phi Kappa.
.......... La Grange, Georgia
A. B. Entered College, September, '97. President Sophomore Class, '98-99 ; Treasurer Athletic Association, '98-99;
Business Manager Red and Black; Athletic Editor Red and Black; President Thalians; Business Manager Mandolin and
Banjo Club; Athletic Council; Secretary and Treasurer Junior Class, '00-01; Corporal CadeU,'98-99 ; Sergeant Major Cadets,
'99-00; Adjutant and Captain Company " C," Cadets, '00-01; President Art League, '98-99 ; Junior Hop Committee ; Chair­
man Senior Hop Committee ; Captain Senior Baseball Team ; Business Manager 1901 'Varsity Baseball Team ; Business Man­
ager 1901 PAXDORA.
J. CHARLES BRAND, Dem.
...........
B. S. Entered College, September, '97.
Senior Track Team.
KARL CLARENCE CAMPBELL, Dem.
A. B.
Canton, Georgia
President Demosthenean Society ; Manager Sophomore Football Team and
.........
Entered College, September, '97.
Monticello, Georgia
J. A. CRAWF»RD, Dem., ............
B. S.
Entered College, September, '96 ; Left College, March, '01.
WILLIAM MAZYCK DAVIS, I A E, Phi Kappa
........
Athens, Georgia
Macon Georgia
B. S. Entered College, September, '97. Business Manager Red and Black, Two Terms; Associate Editor 1900 PANDORA ;
Manager 1900 Football Team j President Phi Kappa, '00; First Lieutenant Company "C," Corps of Cadets; Toastmaster
Senior Banquet, March, '01.
EUGENE ALBERTO DUKE, Dem.
..........
Newbern, Georgia
B. S. Entered College, September, '97. Sophomore Declaimer ; Junior Orator; President of Demosthenean Society ;
Engineering Society and Senior Class ; Editor Georgian.
JOHN M. GANTT, Dem.
A. B.
............ Marietta, Georgia
Entered College, September, '97.
President Demosthenean Society.
RALPH MONTGOMERY Goss, J T J, Phi Kappa
.......
A. B. Entered College, September '96 ; Out of College One Year.
Second Lieutenant Company " B," Corps of CadeU.
HAROLD HIRSCH, Phi Kappa
Athens, Georgia
Member Senior Hop Committee; Senior Class Poet ;
........... Atlanta Georgia
A. B. Entered College, September, '98. Sophomore Speaker; Sophomore and Junior Class Football Teams ; Captain of
Second Football Team, and Substitute on 'Varsity Team, '99; Center on 'Varsity Football Team, '00; Assistant Business
Manager Georgian, '99-00 ; President of Athletic Association, '01 ; Member Advisory Board, '01 ; Master of Ceremonie*
North Carolina-Georgia Debate, '01 ; Second Lieutenant Company "C," Corps of Cadets; Manager '01 Football Team.
21
WILLIAM DANA HOYT, X ¥, Phi Kappa
.........
Rome Georgia
A. B. Entered College, September, '97. Secretary Athletic Association, '99-00; Junior Speaker; Prize Essayist of
Engineering Annual, '00 ; Editor Georgian, '01; Associate Editor '01 PANDORA ; Senior Editor Engineering Annual, '01.
FRED CARLTON JACKSON, Dem.
..........
Athens, Georgia
A. B. Entered College, September, '97. President Demosthenean Literary Society; First Lieutenant Company "A,"
Corps of Cadets ; Sophomore Declaimer; Junior Speaker ; Class Historian, Junior Year.
FRANK RENSAK HAPP, Phi Kappa
..........
Macon, Georgia
B. S. Entered College, September, '97. Member Orchestra; Thalians ; Mandolin and Guitar Club ; Winner of Profes­
sors' Prize in Drawing, '99 ; Chief Bugler Drum Corps, '99 ; Adjutant Corps of Cadets, '01 ; Athletic Editor Red and Black;
Vice-President Senior Class.
J. FRANK HOWARD, Phi Kappa
B. 8.
..........
Entered College, September, '97.
HORACE J. CORNELIUS JOHNSON, A' ¥, Phi Kappa,
B. S. Entered College, September, '98.
Member Sphinx.
THOMAS R. KING, Phi Kappa
A. B.
of Cadets.
........... Athens, Georgia
Entered College, September, '96.
Business Manager Engineering Annual, '01; Captain Company "B," Corps
Entered College, September, '99.
B. S. Entered College, September, '99.
Chief 1901 PANDORA.
CLAUDE HAMMOND STORY, Dem.
.......
Tallapoosa Georgia
.......
Thomasville, Georgia
President Demosthenean Literary Society.
...........
Entered College, September, '98.
W. C. THOMPSON, Dem.
Vice-President University Literary Club; Editor of the Georgian ; Editor-in-
.......... Augusta, Georgia
Entered College, September, '97.
Lucius E. TATE, J T J, Dem.
A. B.
Wayctoss, Georgia
Entered College, September, '97.
JOHN D. N. MCCARTNEY, 2'.</A', Phi Kappa
A. B.
.......
Left College, December, '00.
HERBERT JOHNSON McBRiDE, S A E, Dem.
A. B.
....... Etowah, Georgia
Captain of Track Team, '00; Sophomore Declaimer; Senior Hop Committee;
WARREN CLARENCE LOTT, S A E, Phi Kappa,
A. B.
Atlanta, Georgia
Business Manager Engineering Annual; Left College March, '01.
Tate, Georgia
Captain Company "A," Corps of Cadets ; Athletic Editor Red and Black, '01.
...........
Madison, Georgia
A. B. Entered College, September, '97. President Demosthenean Society; Associate Editor 1900 Georgian; Member
Advisory Board, '00; Sophomore Declaimer ; Junior Orator.
22
W. Q. THOMPSON, Phi Kappa
A. B.
........
Entered College, September, '97.
HENRY GOLDSMITH WELLS, X ¥, Dem.
B. S.
Entered College, September, '97.
.
.
Endora, Georgia
Sophomore Speaker; Preaident Phi Kappa Society.
........ Stone Mount, Georgia
Lieutenant Company "A," Corpt of Cadets ; Pan-Hellenic Committee.
Elective Members.
JOSEPH FRANCIS GATINS, I A £, Phi Kappa
Entered College, September, '98.
CLIFF GREEN, d> A 6, Phi Kappa
Entered College, January, '01.
New York City
.....
.
Atlanta, Georgia
Associate Editor 1902 PANDORA.
JOHN RANDOLPH HUMPHRIES, Phi Kappa
Entered>College, September, '99.
.
Cotillion Committee ; Irish Club.
....
Sophomore Speaker.
Acworth, Georgia
History of the Centennial Class—1901.
T
HE Class of 1901 has the honor of being dis­
tinguished as the " Centennial Class," and it
is indeed fitting that this honor should be
conferred upon such a noble body of young men.
Young men of high ideals, noble character, lofty
ambitions, imbued with the spirit of independence
and courage, and determined in every duty under­
taken.
To mention the many honors and victories won
by the members of this class, in our college life,
would be impossible in so short an article. But
in looking back over our college career we find our
men in almost every struggle for college honors,
and in almost every position of importance and
responsibility we find men of this class at the head.
Beginning with the jolly Freshmen, of four years
ago, when starting out upon their long journey,
those ties of love and bonds of union, of which we
can yet boast, were made and sealed. Though with
their share of the " tinge of spring " this unity made
them strong and they were never baffled by any foe
which came within their range. It is true that some
of the paths of our Freshman life were rough and
perilous, but all Freshmen have to become ac­
quainted with college life. We soon learned how
things were done at college, and in after years it
was our pleasure to help conduct other Freshmen
along that road which all newcomers must travel.
While Freshmen our ambitions were indeed
lofty. The goal for which we so eagerly sought
was the thought of some day attaining the high
distinction of a Senior. With this end in view we
fought bravely the battles of the Freshmen, and
whether in the classroom, upon the gridiron, or
upon the diamond the Freshmen were seen and
heard.
As Sophomores we were in a position to enjoy
with the upper-classmen the actions of the timid
Freshmen, but this fun did not last long for we
were soon busily engaged with the subjects of which
we had heard the upper-classmen speak so much.
The work of our Sophomore year will be remem­
bered as the most difficult in our college course.
We soon saw that to be able to master the methods
and problems of Mr. Wells, the history of the Eng­
lish people as recorded by Mr. Gardiner, and the
beautiful Homeric stanzas it woufd be necessary for
a Sophomore to burn the midnight candle, lose
many hours of sweet sleep, and refrain from attend­
ing the social gatherings which would have been a
source of great pleasure.
Although our work in the Sophomore year was
quite burdensome, we see a number of our men tak­
ing an active part in athletic contests and in many
instances coming out victorious. And now as the
1 year was drawing to a close we were proud to know
that we had mastered those difficult subjects and
were ready to advance to the next class.
Our Junior year was one of much smoother sail­
ing than the preceding. In this we had more time
to devote to the reading of the works of the great
authors and thus our knowledge of the literary
world was greatly broadened.
The metaphysical subjects which were then pre­
sented aroused much interest and discussion and
have been among the most beneficial contributions
to our college life.
As Junior speakers, and as orators and debaters
in literary societies we will ever be proud of the
record which*the men of 1901 made. And in the
management of college publications and all import­
ant offices of honor the men of this class took a
high stand. In class athletics, the Juniors of the
Class of 1901 marched forward with the banner of
victory. And in every phase of college life you will
find the members of this class liberal supporters
of the best interests of their college.
The jolly Freshmen of '97, are now the dignified
Seniors of '01. Our minds and ideas have greatly
changed and our ambitions are of a much higher
character than that of being a Senior.
Our ideals of exalted characters and true man­
hood have been very much elevated in our ethical
discussions and we are enabled to see life in a much
purer light. And in the investigations of other sub­
jects we have had broad fields opened to us from
which each one has reaped an abundant harvest.
In the literary field of our Senior year we have
indeed accomplished a great work, and have culti­
vated an interest for research in the works of the
master minds of literature.
The part taken in the literary societies is shown
when we see that eight of our number have had
the honor of being elected presidents of their
societies. And in public exercises and the staffs of
both the college publications we have had men
holding important positions. When we come to the
athletic department we find that the manager for
next year's football team and the managers for
both the football and baseball teams for 1900-1901,
were chosen from the ranks of the Senior Class.
With this record in college we may expect our
men to be called upon when they enter public life
to direct the affairs of the government both State
and National. And we may feel sure of success in
all undertakings, if we will profit by the lessons of
HISTORIAN.
our excellent instructors.
Class of J902.
Officers.
EUGENE WOFFORD RAGSDALE
................. President
ISHAM PARK Goss ..................... Vice-President
ROY DA vis STUBBS
...................... Secretary
LUCIAN PRITCHARD GOODRICH ................. Treasurer
JAMES LONGSTREET SIBLEY ..................... Poet
MILES WALKER L/EWIS ..................... Historian
PINKUS HAPP
......
........... Manager Baseball Team
AUGUSTUS LONGSTREET HULL ........... Captain Baseball Team
HENRY JAMES L.AMAR
.............. Manager Football Team
SIDNEY SMITH DEAN
............... Captain Football Team
KENION EUGENE EDWARDS ............. Manager Track Team
EDWIN RUTHVEN CAMP
............... Captain Track Team
MITCHELL KING ........................ Chaplain
28
Class of 1902.
NAME
POST-OFFICE
AIKEN, "WiLLiB PAT
.............
Pennington
BARRETT, FRANK HARVEY, S A E, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Augusta
BLACKSHEAR, STERLING, X 0,
............
Athens
BLACKWELL, REUBEN LEE ..............
Dip
BROWNLEE, EDWIN DARNALL ............
Plainville
BULLARD, NEWTON HUDSON A T Q, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Milledgeville
CAMP, EDWIN RUTHVEN
.............
Atlanta
COLLIER, MILES WILLIS .............
Comer
CALLOWAY, ROY
..............
Lexington
DEAN, SIDNEY SMITH, SAP.,.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Rome
EDWARDS, UBNION EUGEXE ............. Sylvester
FAUST, JOSEPH GEORGE .............
Lexington
GOBER, GEORGE FLETCHER, JR. ............
Marietta
GOODRICH, LUCIAN PRITCHARD
............ Griffin
Goss, ISHAM PARK
..............
Decatur
GOULD, RUSSELL
............... Athens
GRAHAM, BOTUWELL, J T J,
............
Athens
GRAVES, RALPH AUGUSTUS, K A, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Bainbridge
GRIFFITH, ARTHUR JESSE ............. Danielsville
HAPP, PINKUS
...............
Macon
HARDY, WILSON MOORE, I A E,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Rome
HARBER, HOMER REYNOLDS ...........
Harmony Grove
HART, JAMES FOUT, .Y <P,
............. Athens
HILL, EDWARD YOUNG, 2' A E, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Washington
HULL, AUGUSTUS LONGSTREET, JR., I A E, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Athens
JACKSON, WALTER MARION, J A E,
..........
Augusta
JORDON, JAMES KOLLOCK, A T U,
..........
Sandersville
29
JOHNSON, CLIFFORD SNEED, K A,
...........
Waycross
KEITH, OSCAR LOVELL ..............
Athena
KING, MITCHELL, X d>, .............. Atlanta
LAMAR, HENRY JAMES, JR., d> 4 6, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Macon
LEWIS, JUNIUS POULLAIN, X ¥,
...........
Greensboro
LEWIS, MILES WALKER, .Y ?, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Greensboro
MICHAEL, MORRIS ............... Athens
MclNTYRE, WILLIAM IRWIN
...........
Thomasville
McWoRTER, ROBERT LIGON ............
Woodville
Nix, SIDNEY JOHNSON
............ Harmony Grove
OLIVER, EDGAR
............
Kissimmee, Florida
OXFORD, NORWOOD
.............. Monticello
RAGSDALE, EUGENE WOFFORD
............
Dallas
RICHARDSON, MARION SIMMS, X <P, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
SIBLEY, JAMES LONGSTREET .............
Athens
STEPHENS, ROBERT GRIER, K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
STUBBS, ROY DAVIS
.............. Eatonton
THOMAS, WILLIAM MILTON
............ ,
Athens
THOMPSON, LEWIS JASPER ..........
Rocky Head, Alabama
WILLIAMS, IRA WELLINGTON
............ Villa Rica
History of the Junior Class.
G
IBBON said that history is little else than a
catalogue of the crimes, mistakes, and mis­
fortunes of man. If this be true the Junior
Class has little history and the Historian is entirely
without material for his work. If it were possible
to prove a rule by a particular case it would be an
easy matter to show the fallacy of Gibbon's state­
ment by pointing to the record that the Junior
Class of the University has left this term. Her
crimes are none unless that of mercilessly " shoot­
ing " professors be counted against her. Her mis­
takes are rare and the only misfortune under which
she labors is that of not having enough positions of
honor and trust to distribute among her worthy
sons. Indeed, to say that '02 is proud of herself is
putting it very mildly. Her deeds should inspire
the most callous heart with pride. In every phase
of university life she has taken the lead and has
demonstrated her ability to deal with every problem
of college affairs. Her load has been a double one
and the way in which she has borne it has won the
admiration and respect of all who know her.
A complete list of the honors and duties imposed
upon 'O2's members, with an account of the con­
fidence with which they were undertaken and the
success with which they were carried out, would
prolong this article far. beyond the necessary limits.
However, in justice to the Class and to substantiate
his boastful statements the Historian feels con­
strained to mention some of the more important
trusts given to '02 men.
First in athletics: She was represented on the
football team by two star backs; and the successful
financial termination of the season is largely due to
the assistant manager. In baseball she is as well
represented, the back-bone of the team being '02
men. The whole department of track athletics has
been turned over to Juniors, and it was never in
better hands. In the Athletic Association '02 men
hold the positions of vice-president and treasurer.
In debate, she has more than held her own. This
is shown by the fact alone that '02 men have re­
peatedly been called to fill the highest positions in
the literary societies. But greatest of all, it re­
mained for two of her steadfast sons to break the
long list of defeats sustained by the University and
to win over most worthy opponents in debate.
In journalism, her record is enviable. She is
always represented on the Red and Black staff and
two of the most energetic of the Georgian's editors
together with the manager are '02 men. The Board
of Editors of the 1901 PANDORA has three Juniors.
Perhaps in the classroom more than elsewhere
does '02 lay her claim to superiority. It is not her
boast that she possesses record-breaking students,
but she does indeed boast of her remarkably large
per cent, of sober, steady students, intent upon
learning and research but not to the neglect of
3»
other branches of college life; '02 has time and
again been complimented by members of the
faculty on this score and it is a source of great pride
to her. More than once her attention has been
called to the fact that something more is being ex­
pected of her than of the average Junior Class at
the University and she has yet to hear of room for
complaint concerning the way she has met her
obligations.
Last, but not least, comes the University Or­
chestra. It is enough to say that the success of
this organization is largely due to the number and
efficiency of the men the Junior Class has supplied.
With the above facts in mind, it is easy to see
why we can unhesitatingly predict a most glorious
and useful career for '02 in the future. She will
enter upon the Senior year with at least fifty mem­
bers. Her average man is the representative col­
lege man, and this alone makes her an ideal class.
She is a sober, energetic, conservative body of men
with one purpose alone in view, that of duty. Her
merit is recognized by all who come in contact with
her, and when the day for separation comes the
University will reflect honor upon herself by send­
ing forth from her walls her most steadfast and
loyal body of men—the present Junior Class.
HISTORIAN.
Officers of Class 1903,
J. H. MONAHAN ........................ President
C. R. LAWLER ....................... Vice- President
W. O. CHENEY ......................... Historian
R. J. MORAN ............................ Poet
F. M. RIDLEY ...................... Captain Football
F. H. RICHARDSON .................... Captain Baseball
H. M. SCOTT ...................... Manager Football
C. S. McWnoRTER ................... Manager Baseball
C. M. JOHNS .......................... Secretary
L. P. YOUNG ......................... Treasurer
E. H. CLAY .......................... Chaplain
D. A. COHEN .................... Manager Track Team
J. F. BAXTER .................... Captain Track Team
34
Roll of Sophomore Class*
ANDERSON, J. B., 2 Nt
.............. Atlanta
BARROW, B. H., .Y 0, ..............
Athens
BARROW, T. A., K A,
.............. Pelham
BAXTER, J. F., 2' A E,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
BAXTER, T. W., IA E, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Sparta
BEAVER, S. A. ...............
Augusta
BENEDICT, R. G., K A, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Athens
BOND, C. W.
................ Canon
BOYD, M., IA E, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
BUNN, 0. C., X^y,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Cedartown
CALHOUN, A., X V,
..............
Atlanta
CIIENEY, W. O.
.............. Bairdstown
CLAY, E. II., X 0,
..............
Marietta
COHEN, D. A. . • .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Rutledge
DALLIS, E. E.
............... La Grange
DICKINSON, M. M., K I, .............
La Grange
DRANE, W. E.
...............
Buena Vista
Du FREE, D. II., I N,
.............. Danville
ECHOLS, G. L.
................
Ila
FARLEY, F. M., .Y <P,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Atlanta
FRANKLIN, G. B.
..............
Excelsior
FRANKLIN, O. J.
............... Excelsior
GRINER, L. L., A T Q,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Dublin
HIGH, J. B.
...............
Atlanta
HILL, E. C., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Washington
HODGSON, W. B., K A,
.............
Athens
HUDSON, T. L.
..............
Gainesville
35
HULSEY, L. J., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
,
.
.
.
Atlanta
JACKSON, "W. A.
............... Athens
JBRGER, E. K., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Thomasville
JBSTBR, J. C. .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Athens
JOHNS, C. M.
...............
Bishop
JOHNSON, M. S., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Atlanta
JOHNSON, S. S., X ¥, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Etowah
JONES, "W. H., IA £,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Macon
KELLY, E. C., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Monticello
KRENSON, C. M., K A,
.............
Savannah
LAWLER, C. R. ............... Tallapoosa
LEQWEN, G. W., 0 J 8,
............ Crawfordville
LYNDON, A. J., JR.
..............
Athens
MCCALLA, J. E. O., K 21,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Heardmont
MCCALLA, J. A., ATS,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Conyers
McDoNALD, J. M. ............... Conyers
MclNTYRE, A. T.
.............
Thomasville
McMuLLEN, J. 8., K A,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Hartwell
McWnoRTER, C. S.
.............. Woodville
MANLEY, J. P.
...............
Griffin
MASK, W. S.
...............
Athens
MORAN, R. J. ................ Atlanta
MARTIN, E. W.
............... Crawford
MONAHAN, J., S N,
.............
Savannah
NEWTON, W. F. ..........
Washington, District of Columbia
PERRY, W. O. .
...............
Carl
POTTS, K. ................
Atlanta
RICHARDSON, F. H. ............... Hartwell
RIDLEY, F. M., X <P, .
............ La Grange
ROUNSAVILLE, J. R., 0 J 0,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Rome
36
ROUNSAVILLE, R. B., 0 J 6,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Rome
RUSSELL, C. D., 0 J 6,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Savannah
SCOTT, H. M., X 0,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
SEYMOUR, W. W. ..............
Dahlonega
SMITH, M. H., IA E,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Atlanta
STANTON, J. M.
............... Winder
STEVENS, 0. B., JR., 0 J 6,
............. Griffin
STRICKLAND, E., K A,
..............
Dalton
THORNTON, A. A., X <P,
.............
Atlanta
TOLBERT, M. L., I N,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Atlanta
WALKER, B. S., IA E,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Monroe
WATSON, R. O.
............. Kieaimmee, Florida
WIIITFIELD, C. H., <P J B, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Macon
WING, J. D., X <P, ............... Atlanta
WORSHAM, W. A., S N,
.............
Forsyth
YOUNG, L. P. ...............
Woodville
37
History of 1903.
T
HIS year's Sophomore Class was composed
of an unusually large number of old men.
But we welcomed into our midst more than
enough men to fill the places made vacant by our
former members who had left college.
We commenced our career of conquest when a
Sophomore was chosen to represent Georgia in the
State oratorical contest.
In athletics we showed up better than any other
class, not only in the number of men, but also in
their quality. Among our best football players
were many Sophomores, among them the captain
of next year's team.
In baseball we were still more successful in fur­
nishing star players. More than half the players
on the team including the captain were Sopho­
mores.
At the time this was written Field-day had not
come off. But, if we judge by the number of vic­
tories we won last year on that day, we certainly
will gain more than our share.
This is the first Sophomore Class that has fur­
nished Varsity a captain of the football team, the
first to furnish a captain of the baseball team, the
first to furnish an anniversarian for one of the liter­
ary societies, and the first to furnish Georgia's re­
presentative in the oratorical contest.
We have shown up well in every phase of college
life. We have been represented on the staff of our
college papers. The Sophomores have not lost
their reputation, made, even while Freshmen, of
being leaders of social events. In fact we have been
thwarted in but few of our undertakings—unless,
perhaps, some of us undertook to make a rise. We
succeeded admirably well in shearing the Fresh­
men's scalps. We had decided to capture the toastmaster for the Freshmen banquet and all those who
were going to give toasts, and had appointed men
to capture them. The men appointed caught them
and imprisoned them. But the Freshmen had
formed an alliance with their dear kinsmen, the
lawyers, and by their timely aid the ones captured
were liberated. They reached the feast, but they did
not have much light on the subject. Some Sopho­
more had cut the electric wires.
There are many other deeds and accomplishments
of the Class of 1903, that would be worth mention­
ing but my space is limited. Suffice it to say that
we believe our professors when they tell us that 1903
is the best class, taken as a whole, that ever entered
the University of Georgia.
When we examine our past we can not help but
say: " Surely, surely, '03 is great,—'03 is great."
HISTORIAN.
NOBLE FRESHMEN
FRtSti
Of THE PASTBE WORTHY of THEM.
LIVES or
FRESH
ALL
REMIND -US
WE CAN
MAKE
UR LIVES
Officers of Class J 904.
PAUI, E. JETTE ........................ President
RICHARD P. HICKS .................... Vice-President
TANEY O. BENTON ................ Secretary and Treasurer
ALVIN G. GOUICKK ......................... Poet
WILLIE T. SEIBELS ....................... Historian
t
HUGH H. GORDON ................. Captain Football Team
CHARLES G. STRICKLAND ............. Manager Football Team
JAMES BOSWELL .................. Captain Baseball Team
MARION S. MONK ................. Manager Baseball Team
JOHN HENRY POOLE ...................... Chaplain
40
Roll of Freshman Class*
ANDERSON, "W. L., K A,
.............
Atlanta
ARCHER, L. S., K S,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Guyton
BASCH, E.
................ Savannah
BENTON, H. C. .......'........
Monticello
BBNTON, T. O.
............... Monticello
BOSWELL, J. G.
..............
Penfield
BOWER, D. R., K A,
.............
Bainbridge
BOWER, J.D., K A, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
Bainbridge
BROACH, C. E.
............... Magnolia
CARSON, G., K A,
..............
Savannah
CARTER, M. C., A T Q,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Scott
CHANDLER, I. "W.
..............
Planters
CHANDLER, J. C. ...............
Planters
CLEMENTS, F. L., <P J 8, .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Buena Vista
CLEVELAND, J. F.
............
"Wartrace, Tenn.
CLINE, B. M., A T J2,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Milledgeville
CONWAY, K. ................
Athens
COOGLER, O. J., K 2",
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Riverdale
DAVID, J.
................
Paoli
DA vis, E. H. ................ Oreman
DEADWTLER, C. M.
.............
Fort Lamar
FALK, A. ............... Charleston, S. C.
FARBSTEIN, J.
...............
Athens
FELKER, J. K., $ A 6,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
. Monroe
GOLUCKE, A. G., 0 J 6,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
Crawfordville
<
GORDON, H. H., X <P,
............... Atlanta
GUERRY, Du P., K //,
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
• .
.
Macon
*HAINES, A. A.
.............. "Wrightsville
HAINES, G. W., X 0, .............. Savannah
HARBIN, J. C. ................ Athens
HICKS, R. P.
..............
Wrightsville
HINES, R. W. ...............
Calhoun
HODGES, M. P.
..............
Logansville
HODGSON, F. B.
............... Athens
HODGSON, J. L., A T Q,
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Athens
HOLLINGSWORTH, G. B.
.............
"Whigham
HULL, J. L., 2 A E,
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Athens
JACQUES, S. R., Jr., I A £', .
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. Macon
JETTE, P. E., X <P, . .
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. Savannah
JOHNSON, CARLETON,
.............. Athens
JOHNSON, E. ................
Baxley
JOHNSON, J.
................ Baxley
JONES, S. C., S A E,
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t "Waynesboro
KING, P. J., K 2',
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. Summerville
KOCH, J. C., K I,
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. Tallapoosa
LANG, J. "W.
...............
"Waverly
LOVEJOT, R., S N,
..............
Athens
LUCIGUANI, A. ..............
Key West, Fla.
MADDOX, C. M. A., 0 J 0, .
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Atlanta
MELDRIM, R., X 0, .
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Savannah
MICHAEL, MAX
...............
Athens
MILLER, W., K A,
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Macon
MONK, M. S., K I,
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Knoxville, Tenn.
MORTON, W. J., K I,
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Gray
•Deceased.
4*
MOSELY, D. D.
..............
Eastanollee
MCLAUGHLIN, C. F., I N, .
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Greenville
McMiLLAN, D. B., 0 A 6,
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. Savannah
NICHOL, L., 2* N,
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. Atlanta
OLIVER, C. R.
...............
Plains
POOLE, J. H. ...............
Alpharette
RAMBO, M., ATS,
..............
Marietta
REID, CARLETON,
............... Atlanta
REID, W. L.
..............
Crawfordville
RICHTER, M. L., ® A B,
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...
•
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•
•
•
Madison
ROBERTS, "W. 0. ............... Yatesville
SCHIRM, R. F., 0 J 6,
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Savannah
SCOTT, H. F., X 0,
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Atlanta
SHAW, W. B.^/f S, ..............
Lafayette
SIBLEY, G. R., K A,
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Augusta
SEIBELS, W. T.
............... Gerome
SIMPKINS, N. H., K A, .............. Savannah
SORRELLS, R. J.
...............
BoggS
STARNES, B. M. ...............
Athens
STEINER, M. C., £ N,
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. Augusta
STRICKLAND, C. G.
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Valdosta
SWANSON, B., X 0,
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LaGrange
THOMPSON, A. F.
..............
Conyers
THRELKELD, G. W., K 2",
.............
Cairo
TRAYNHAM, T. G., A F,
............ Laurens, S. C.
VONDERAU, E. H.
............... Athena
WADE, G. H.
...............
Etowah
WARTMAN, H. A.
...............
Citra
WEATHERLY, E. B.
..............
Athens
WELSH, G. V., A T Q,
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Marietta
43
WILBURN, H. H. .
WILKINS, E. L.
WOODS, R. W.
WOOLFOLK, T. N., I A E,
WRIQHT, L. M., 2 A E,
WYNN, J. H. .
. Monticello
. Athens
Athens
. Albany
Rome
. Carlton
44
History.
A
BOUT the middle of September, 1900, ninetythree boys, representing many sections of
Georgia and neighboring States, came to
Athens to attend the University. As soon as we
entered college we organized ourselves into a band
to be known among " the powers of the world " as
the Freshman Class.
Having elected officers, we had a meeting and
arranged a time for " painting the town red." A
committee was appointed to secure brushes and
paint.
A few nights liter we went on an expedition and
displayed our artistic skill in a royal way. The
historic statuary at Lucy Cobb was given a fresh
coat, and the time-honored custom of painting the
water tower was not neglected. Next morning '04
greeted the towns-people from nearly every wall
and fence and high up on the tank the figures of '04
gleamed in the early sunlight. We enjoy the dis­
tinction of having our figures highest and have the
satisfaction of knowing that no others can be put
higher.
Our Class is such an extraordinary lot of boys
that any complete account of their doings would
require volumes to tell. Their noble achievements
and daring deeds would burden any historian to
record and would be too long for practical pur­
poses ; hence, it is necessary to omit the minor
details and note only the more important matters.
At the beginning of our college life, we were
charged on all sides with having a verdant appear­
ance. Several upper-classmen assured us that by
all means we should keep off the grass, else we
would not be conspicuous in the sight of the faculty.
The heartless scamps (upper-classmen, of course),
tried to convince us that we could have our laundry
done at the Chancellor's better and cheaper than
at any other place in town.
Soon after our entrance in college we settled
down to hard, earnest work and have since been
" good little boys and have learned our lessons
well."
Our Class has been closely united from the begin­
ning and whatever honor has been achieved by any
one has been distributed among us all as a common
possession. We take an interest !n our Class affairs
second only to our interest in the dear old Univer­
sity at whose fountain of knowledge we are drink­
ing to-day.
We have played two class games, a game of base­
ball with the Junior Class in which the purple and
white came out triumphant. Our second game was
also a game of baseball which we played with the
Sophomores and, sad to relate, they won. But the
victory was theirs mainly through want of training
on our part.
In athletics, our Class is well abreast of the others.
We contribute three men to the 'Varsity football
45
team and also gave three to the baseball team,
besides several of our number being sub players on
both teams.
It has been claimed by sage men who have the
gift of prophecy that the future of the University
depends upon the Class of '04.
The Freshmen have been prominent in every
phase of college life. Many have served with credit
and distinction in our literary societies. In debate
we have often surprised our elders by our logical
reasoning and with our persuasive eloquence.
We are represented in the Guitar and Mandolin
Club and in the College Orchestra. We all have
good voices and love to sing but some of us are a
little hard of hearing and get things badly mixed
in chapel sometimes.
On April 15th, we had our Class banquet at the
Commercial Hotel. It was a complete success and
no one who participated in that royal feast can ever
forget the occasion. Numerous toasts were res­
ponded to and no words can tell of the eloquence
that broke forth that night.
If there is any one thing upon which our boys
may justly pride themselves it is upon their personal
appearance. They have the rosiest, cheeks, the
prettiest eyes, and the most charming, curly locks
of any boys in college. In fact their curls are so
attractive that several Sophomores double-teamed
on one of our boys and tried to clip his locks.
They succeeded in getting a curl and it is said that
a young lady in town who came in possession of it,
has framed it and intends to keep it for its wealth
of beauty.
To retaliate for the outrage of cutting our fellow
Freshman's hair we armed ourselves with tongs
and sheep-shears and proceeded to take the wool
off many a Sophomore head. A wool dealer in
town got a wagon and followed us, picking up the
tufts that fell.
It is asserted on good authority that the afore­
said wool dealer has since retired from business and,
1 ' Now he keeps a carriage and pair,
For rich he became from Sophomore hair."
Our college life has been brief,—just one short
year, but how full of stirring scenes and memorable
incidents! We have enjoyed it beyond expression.
We have played with our own Poole, we have
sailed by our own Wynn, we have been lighted by
our own Jette; we have dug with our own Maddox,
and we have our own Miller to furnish the " staff of
life." We have our own Archer to shoot the faculty,
and we have our own Fort (Scott), to dodge behind;
but it is our custom always to do Wright.
Our boys have the pluck and determination that
it takes to win out and we are resolved to do even
better in the future than in the past. We intend to
see that our ability is recognized and that our merit
is rewarded. We expect to make " Ha, Reuben
Rah " rival " Home Sweet Home " in popularity
and fame.
HISTORIAN,
'TIS DISTANCE LENDS
ENCHANTMENT TO THE VIEW
47
Officers of Law Class, J90J.
S. D. HEWLETT ........................ President
H. J. QUINCEY ...................... Vice-President
H. HoujS ........................... Secretary
E. P. SHANNON ..................... Captain Football
A. P. ADAMS ...................... Manager Football
F. P. McCuTCHEON ................. Captain Track Team*
H. McWHORTER ................... Manager Track Team
G. CALLAWAY ...................... Captain Baseball
A. J. MCDONALD .................... Manager Baseball
J. H. BRANNEN ........................ Historian
JUDGB RICKETSON .............. J. P. and Ex-Officio Chaplain
48
Law Gass Roll.
ADAMS, A. P., X 4>,
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. Savannah
ADAMS, J. W. .
............... Royston
BACON, R. J., JR. ............... Baconton
BELAVAL, H. S. ...............
Porto Rico
BENNETT, R. L.
................ Jesup
BERRY, W. H., £ N, .
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Columbus
BOOTH, R. H., J T J, .
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Hogan
BOWBN, C. C. ................ Dallon
BRADWELL, J. D., <J> A 6,
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Athens
BRANCH, J. A.^ ...............
Magnolia
BRANNKN, J. A. ............... Statesboro
BROWN, A. C. ...............
Hartwell
BROWN, PAUL, ATS,.
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. Hartwell
BURTZ, A. H. ................ Marietta
CALHOUN, E. K, IN, .
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Palatka, Fla.
CALKENS, J. E. .
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. Jacksonville, Fla.
CALLAWAY, G. L. ............... Lexington
CARNEY, W. H. ...............
New York
COLEMAN, G. Y., X ¥, .
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Seneca, S. C.
COLVORD, J. S. .
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Bowman
CONE, HOWELL
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Ivanhoe
COOLEY, PEMBERTON ................ Leo
Cox, A. T., I A £,
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Atlanta
CROSS, J. A.
............... Bristol, Va.
DEHART, JOHN TEMPLK
............. Bristol, Va.
DENMARK, R. L., I A £, .
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. Valdosta.
49
DICKKRSON, M. D.
.............. Homerville
DKNSMORE, R. E.
.............. Birmingham
DOBBS, E. O.
............... Woodstock
DONALSON, E. M., K A,
............. Bainbridge
DRECIISEL, K. C. H.
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...
.....
Philadelphia, Pa.
ELDKR, J. C., K A,
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. Athens
ERWIN, J. L., S A E, .
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Athens
FORTSON, B. E., S A E,
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. Washington
GAY, F. T. ................
Augusta
GARRETT, O. 0.
..............
Roopville
GRIGGS, C. O.
............... La Grange
GRUBBS, W. E. ...............
Sylvester
HAMMOND, W. J., K A,.
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Thomasville
HARRIS, G. H. ................ Athens
HOUSBR, EMIL
...............
Athens
HERRING, LEE ROY ............... Climax
HEWLETT, S. D., K A, .............. Savannah
HOLLIS, HOWELL
.............. Buena Vista
HOSCH, W". H., K A,
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.
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.
........ t . Gainesville
HUNNICUT, D. H.
............. Tullahoma, Tenn.
HUNT, J. M.
............... Cedartown
JENKINS, J. A. .
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. Montezuma
LANKFORD, W. C.
..............
Sirmans
LANIER, F. T. ...............
Statesboro
LATHAM, E. A.
.............. Fernandina, F'.a.
LATIMER, T. E. ...............
Woodstock
LOGAN, A. R.
............... Americus
MABRY, W.
...............
Brunswick
McCtTEN, D. E. ............... Savannah
McCuRRY, J. B., K A,
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Hartwell
McC0TCHEON, F. K, X 0, .
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Dalton
McDoNALD, A. J.
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. Pendergrass
McKiBBEN, M. V., I N,
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Jackson
Me WHORTER, H. J., 0 J 0,
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Lexington
MARTIN, W. J., 2' N, .
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. Leesburg
MOORE, C. J., A" 2", .
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Bainbridge
MOTT, J. P. ...............
Johnsonville
ODOM, PATRICK H., £ N, .............. Lyons
PARKS, B. G., S N,
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. Gainesville
POTTS, PAUL
................ Atlanta
POWELL, J. H.
...............
Camella
PUTNAM, I. M. A" 2", .
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Arlington
QUINCEY, II. «l. ..............
Bronson, Fla.
RICKETSON, J. E.
............... Pearson
ROBERTS, T. W. ............... Woodstock
ROOP, C. E., // 7" J2, .
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Roopville
RUCKER, L. C., IA E, .
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Atlanta
RUSSELL, L. D. ................
Dunn
SANDFORD, S. 8. .............. Tolen, Florida
SEYMOUR, S. H ................ Athens
SHANNON, E. P., 0 J B.,
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Elberton
SIMMS, W. P. ................ Atlanta
SMITH, W. W., I N, ..............
Augusta
TERRY, RICHARD
............... Preston
TISON, J. L. ................ Savannah
TURNER, S. M., K A, ............... Quitman
WALDEN, H. S. ...............
Spread
WHITTEN, P. E.
..............
New York
WHITEUEAD, FRANK, /7 A" A .
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. "Warrenton
WILLIAMS, P. A., I N,
.............. Hagan
History of Law Class 1901.
I
F a detailed account of the proceedings of the
University of Georgia during the session of
1900-01 should be written, it would be amazing
to outsiders to know how many of these various
events have been instigated by the Law Class. The
enrollment of that class for the present session num­
bers more than eighty men and we are recognized
by all as the " legal light " of the college.
I shall not attempt to narrate all, or even half, our
victories. Glance over the following questions and
be convinced of the many successes we have
achieved:
What class is the largest at the University?
Who are the leaders of athletics?
Who are the editors of the Red and Black?
Who are the editors of the Georgian?
Who are the leading counsel for both?
Who are the leaders of the Glee Club?
Who are at the head of the Press Club?
Who are the organizers of the Literary Club?
What class has the highest yearly average?
Who are the leaders of every enterprise among
the student body which tends to the upbuilding of
the University?
The answer is, THE LAWYERS.
Thus in the above questions it may be seen that
Lawyers are answers, contrary to the general rule
that they are interrogation points.
The above facts, pleaded even " to a certainty of
common intent," are sufficient to convince the most
casual reader of our importance in college circles.
Our Class is composed largely of college men,
since fully sixty per cent, of our number hail from
the various colleges of the land, and bear such
insignia as A. B., B. S., etc. Yea our brows have
been bathed in the original founts of knowledge in
the highest universities of two continents. Go to
the granite hill tops of old Vermont, and remember
that we are represented there; descend to the
heights of Boston, " a city set on a hill," a paragon
of skill, knowledge, literature, culture, and legal
lore, and we are there; come to the Mother of Presi­
dents, renowned for truth and chivwlry from time
" whereof the memory of man runneth not to the
contrary," and we are there; cross over to the "old
Palmetto State," a veritable home of heroes and
statesmen whose wise sayings have immortalized
her throughout the world, and we are there; take a
steamer to St. Augustine, among the calcareous
rocks of Florida,and we are there. My reader,if not
sea-sick, sail to the isles of the sea and we are there.
Last, but not least, return to the " old red hills of
Georgia," the cradle in which was rocked the infant
of liberty, the asylum of the distressed and op­
pressed, whose head is fanned by the winds of'the
great Atlantic and whose feet are washed by the
waves of the same, and we are here.
No wonder then our Class has achieved so much.
Search creation round and you will not find a better
band. We have met upon the arena of Quiz the
most abstruse principles of legal science, and at each
combat have acquitted ourselves most gloriously.
We stand to-day in the very zenith of blessing that
a happy prosperous college life can give. To say
Now that our college life is drawing to a close,
soon we must say " Good-bye." May we, in what­
ever section our lot is cast, remember that we go to
make illustrious old Georgia; may we in every con­
flict of life bear the " red and black " victorious from
the field; may we cherish for one another and for
our honored faculty the very fondest recollections; '
may we all hail the occasions in subsequent life that
shall bring us together in genial influence and
generous joy, where affections are exercised, friend­
ships are cultivated, the bonds of brotherly love are
strengthened, and there is fostered that homo­
geneity of thought, feeling, and sentiment upon
which patriotism shall build its firmest hold for the
perpetuity of our old Institution, and for the peace
and prosperity of our peerless Commonwealth.
HISTORIAN.
11 That we are skilled in hardest laws,
To tickle men with legal straws."
would put it rather mildly. Let it suffice, brothersin-law, that no class with such high hopes and
flattering prospects has ever left the University;
that we are the capstone, aye the crown of the cen­
tury, of our alma mater's history.
53
Law Class Will—1901.
'E the cadaveric-rigidified Law Class of 1901
being about to leave this vale of tears, in
lull possession of a sound mind, memory
and misunderstanding, do make and publish this
our last will and testimony, hereby striking and
making void all former wills by us at any time here­
tofore made.
And first we do direct that our funeral services
shall be conducted by our beloved sisters-in-laws
the Lucy Cobb Girls, with the stipulation that Pro­
fessor " Sylvie," John Doe, Richard Roe, and
Abraham Baldwin be our pall-bearers, only enjoin­
ing that the funeral be carried on with all the
dignity and pomp that our situation in the Uni­
versity scale has merited.
As to such estate as it has pleased the fates, our
own strong arms and craniums to give us, we do
dispose of the same as follows, viz :
ITEM i: We give and bequeath to the Asylum
authorities (commonly known as the Faculty) rest­
ful nights and peaceful dreams. We promise them a
rest from Nineteen Hundred and One's variations,
petitions, intoxications, cuttings, clippings, and
surplusages. No more will we be called upon to
bend the haughty knee to supplicate; no more will
they be pained to refuse. It has been hard to have
our fondest wishes thwarted; it must have been
hard for them to refuse so fair a pleader. They have
done their duty and they have their reward. We
have acted by compulsion and expect to receive
our " dips." Nineteen and One has always been
modest and retiring, especially from the classroom
and at night, and she does not want to create a
commotion or appear at all prominent, except in
athletics, tennis, germans, on street corners, at Lucy
Cobb and at all charity balls.
ITEM 2: We give, bequeath, and quit-claim to the
University as a whole the following songs: " Come,
All Ye Loyal Classmates," "America," "Dixie,"
" Home, Sweet Home," and " I Feel Like I Feel,"
on condition that she hold them in trust as a nucleus
to which each year shall be added others, until we
have a collection to be proud of. May alma mater
be the theme of far better songs in the future.
t
ITEM 3: We give and bequeath to our best
beloved and cherished sisters-in-law, the fairy
maidens of the L. C. I. all the wealth of love and
blessings they may want. May our mantle of love
fall completely on their shoulders. We will waste
no time in giving to those who seem so very able
to get.
ITEM 4: We give to the University Freshman
Class the following advice: Copy Nineteen Hun­
dred and One; learn to work if not to win; develop­
ment comes sooner through bearing failures than
successes. It isn't fun, but still, look at Nineteen
Hundred and One and be encouraged.
54
privileges—with the Dean's permission—too well
understood to be detailed.
Law Class dignity is always handed over to the
new-made lords of the University world. We are
afraid that this will be a strain upon the nerves and
muscles of the gay and debonair Nineteen Hundred
and Two lawyers, but all hope they will rise to the
occasion, as they not always sometimes can.
Last comes the one thing hard for us to part with.
To our successors we must give our course in Moot
Parliament, Medical Jurisprudence, and Roman
Law—and let me say that these are studies where
you learn that lots of things that you once knew
are not so. Our upward extremities are packed
with knowledge upon these all-important topics,
and we could relate many interesting facts about
" Cadaveric-rigidity," " Corpus Juris Civiles," and
the " Previous Question," but we desist, as we fear
that the consensus of desire would be to " cut "
hearing it. We will leave it a sealed book until
next year. If Nineteen Hundred and Two gains
half the profit and the inspirations we have found
in the upper middle chamber, and sanctum sanc­
torum of the Ivy Building with the Dean, this will
be their most precious possession, as it has been
ours, as it is the one we are most loath to leave.
Besides these enforced gifts we leave, not of
necessity but of our own free will, our blessing and a
pledge of friendship from henceforth.
All the rest and residue of our property, whatso­
ever and wheresoever, of what nature, kind and
quality soever it may be, and not herein disposed of
ITEM 5.: The subjoined list will be recognized as
entailed estates, to which we do declare the Class of
Nineteen Hundred and Two the real and rightful
successors:
First. The Law Class seats in chapel, the same
being as yet unknown to the Class of Nineteen
Hundred and Two. May she be as fond of the
back row next year as we have been this. Let
every member show his gratitude for the gift by
being promptly in his seat each morning, especially
when Professor " Sylvie " is present.
Second. As to wealth, our Class is in a most
flourishing condition; we have succeeded in getting
credit and many goods from almost every merchant
in the " Classic City." We are now the happy pos­
sessors of many clothes and other smaller things in
profusion, which said merchants should have kept
upon their shelves. We have nothing out, except
debts, bills, notes, and promises to pay, and these
our successors may collect in and fulfill as they see
fit, it being a matter left wholly to their discretion.
The work the worry and the glory are now in other
lawyers' hands.
Perhaps the most valuable of all this list will be
found to be the Law Class Politics. Nineteen Hun­
dred and One has enjoyed the excitement of many
stirring elections and has been chagrined with much
joy, at least twice, when they were compelled to pro­
ceed to lay one pugilistic Roberts and Alfonzo
Jenkins upon the table, on account of general
debility to capacitate in their respective capacities.
How the list lengthens; next come the Law Class
55
(after paying our way back to the mountains, and
funeral expenses), we give and bequeath to our be­
loved Dean, for his use and benefit absolutely, and
when he is no longer " a sweater under the collar,"
" a plain old tin pan," " pusher along," to the gen­
erations who shall come along in his line, born and
to be born. If he see fit, he may use the knowledge
and startling information and experiences we have
given him at whatsoever times we may have had
quizzes and written examinations, in the education
of the younger goslings who are sure to try to fol­
low us. This latter matter is however entirely at
his discretion.
And we do hereby constitute and appoint the said
Dean sole executor of this, our last will and testa­
ment.
In Witness Whereof, We the Class of Nineteen
Hundred and One, the testators, have to this our
will, written on a sheet of parchment, set our hand
and seal, this the twenty-third day of April, Anno
Domini, One Thousand Nine Hundred and One.
LAW CLASS OF 1901.
Per B. G. P.
57
Fraternity Life at the University of Georgia.
T
HE student at the University of Georgia
changes his idea of its fraternity life many
times. At first he thinks it is one bewilder­
ing succession of rushes and dinners and drives, and
he feels he is a very important person. lie thinks
these new-founcl friends of his are the kindest men.
and have the truest appreciation of merit, his merit,
of any he has ever met. He is only sorry that he
can not join all the fraternities. But when he has
made his choice and the bellicose goat gets in his
work, the Freshman is apt to feel that fraternity
life is a delusion and a snare. But as the months
pass by he learns to love it more and more.
Fraternity life at Georgia has a tone and
atmosphere all its own. Eight different fraternities
have chapters here and the mystic little emblems are
worn by one hundred and fifty men. Of course
rivalry is very keen, but after all it is good-natured.
The personal relations between the members of the
different chapters and that between the fraternity
and non-fraternity elements are of the most pleasant
kind.
Several of the chapters are domiciled in frater­
nity-houses. These are mainly built in the colonial
style and are surrounded by spacious and well-kept
grounds. In the houses are elegantly furnished
parlors and plainer yet comfortable smoking, and
reading, and sleeping rooms. A feature of these
last, is the number of bizarre decorations, each
with its tale of some wild prank, which adorn their
walls. The fraternities not occupying chapter­
houses, have well-appointed meeting halls.
Each one of Athens's charming girls,—and they
are many—claims allegiance to some one of the
fraternities and wears its pin. Their interest and
their loyalty add zest and piquancy to the sum-total
of fraternity life, and their " sisterly " offerings of
sofa-pillows and banners, freezers of cream and
waiters of cake are material benefits by no means
to be despised.
Each fraternity gives an annual banquet and
entertains occasionally during the year with germans or other social functions, ^hiring the com­
mencement 'season, the social gaiety centers in the
chapter-houses and a pretty custom of having a
commencement picture of each fraternity and its
girls has been in vogue for many years.
When the old graduate looks back through the
haze of memory and draws a picture of the old
chapter-house with its pillared front and wide
verandas on which a gay, careless, crowd laughs
and jokes and sings, and when he calls to mind the
dear old days when life was young and hearts were
warm and cares were few, he is sure to say with
all of us who have been fortunate enough to have
taken part in it. that fraternity life at old Georgia
is the most pleasant phase of a man's college career.
6C
09
Sigma Alpha Epsilon*
Foanded at the University of Alabama, 18S6. Georgia Beta Chapter Established, 1866.
Colon.
Royal Purple and Old Gold.
Fratres in Urbe.
E. BANCROFT v
G. W. BRUNSON
J. W. BRUNSON
Z. L,. COBB
H. C. ERWIN
JOHN GERDINE
LEROY HART
JAMES HODGSON
ROBERT HODGSON
A. L. HULL
A. F. LATIMER
E. B. MELL
J. C. MELL
J. D. MELL
T. S. MELL
A. L. MITCHELL
C. H. PHINIZY
C. A. SCUDDBR
H. STOVALL
G. E. THOMAS
W. W. THOMAS
E. C. UPSON
Fratres in Facilitate.
A. H. PATTERSON
JOHN D. MELL
H. N. STARNES
Law Class.
ALBERT TROUP Cox
BLANTON ERWIN FORTSON
LAMAR COBB RUCKER
REMER LANE DENMARK
JOHN LAMAR ERWIN
das of J90J.
HERBERT JOHNSON MCBRIDE
WARREN CLARENCE LOTT
JOHN D. N. MCCARTNBY
61
WILLIAM MAZYCK DAVIS
*
Class of J902.
EDWARD YOUNG HILL
WILSON MOORE HARDY
SIDNEY SMITH DEAN
FRANK HARVEY BARRETT
JOSEPH FRANCIS GATENS, JR.
WALTER MARION JACKSON, JR.
AUGUSTUS LONGSTRBET HULL, JR.
Out of 1903.
JULIAN FITZSIMMONS BAXTER
MINOR SADLER BOYD
WILLIAM HENRY JONES
MARION HOKE SMITH
CAM DAWSON DORSEY
THOMAS WYLIE BAXTER, JR.
B. SANDERS WALKER, JR.
da«s of J904.
SIDNEY CARSWELL JONES
SAMUEL RANDOLPH JAQUES, JR.
JOSEPH HULL
62
Louis M. WRIGHT
THOMAS N. WOOLFOLK, JR.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity Directory,
Province Alpha.
Boston University (Massachusetts Beta Upsilon), Boston,
Mass.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Massachusetts Iota
Tau), Boston, Mass.
Trinity College (Connecticut Alpha), Hartford, Conn.
Harvard University (Massachusetts Gamma), Cambridge,
Mass.
"Worcester Polytechnic Institute (Massachusetts Delta), Worcester, Mass.
University of Maine (Maine Alpha), Orono, Me.
Province Beta.
Cornell University (New York Alpha), Ithaca, N. Y.
Dickinson College (Pennsylvania Sigma Phi), Carlisle, Pa.
Columbia University (New York Mu), Brooklyn, N. Y.
Pennsylvania State College (Pennsylvania Alpha Zeta), State
St. Stephen's College (New York Sigma Phi), Annandale-onCollege, Pa.
Hudson, N. Y.
Bucknell University (Pennsylvania Zeta), Lewisburg, Pa.
Allegheny College^Pennsylvania Omega), Meadville, P».
Gettysburg College (Pennsylvania Delta), Gettysburg, Pa.
University of Pennsylvania (Pennsylvania Theta), Philadelphia, Pa.
Province Gamma.
University of Virginia (Virginia Omicron), Charlottesville,
Va.
Washington and Lee University (Virginia Sigma), Lexington, Va.
University of North Carolina (North Carolina Xi), Chapel
Hill, N. C.
Davidson College (North Carolina Theta), Davidson, N. C.
Wofford College (South Carolina Gamma), Spartanburg, S. C.
UNIVERSITY OK GEORGIA (Georgia Beta), Athens, Ga.
Mercer University (Georgia Psi), Macon, Ga.
Emory College (Georgia Epsilon), Oxford, Ga.
Georgia School of Technology (Georgia Phi), Atlanta, Ga.
Province Delta.
University of Michigan (Michigan Iota-Beta), Ann Arbor,
University of Cincinnati (Ohio Epsilon), Cincinnati, Ohio.
Mich.
Ohio State University (Ohio Theta), Columbus Ohio.
Adrian College (Michigan Alpha), Adrian Mich.
Franklin College (Indiana Alpha), Franklin, Ind.
Mount Union College (Ohio Sigma), Alliance, Ohio.
Purdue University (Indiana Beta), West Lafayette, Ind.
Ohio Wesleyan University (Ohio Delta), Delaware, Ohio.
Northwestern University (Illinois Psi Omega), Evanston, 111.
University of Illinois (Illinois Beta), Urbana, 111.
63
Province Epsilon.
Central University (Kentucky Kappa), Kichmond, Ky.
Bethel College (Kentucky Iota), Russellville, Ky.
Kentucky State College (Kentucky Epsilon), Lexington, Ky.
Southwestern Presbyterian University (Tennessee Zeta),
Clarksville, Tenn.
Cumberland University (Tennessee Lambda), Lebanon, Tenn.
Vanderbilt University (Tennessee Nu), Nashville, Tenn.
University of Tennessee (Tennessee Kappa), Knozville, Tenn.
University of the South (Tennessee Omega), Sewanee, Tenn.
Southwestern Baptist University (Tennessee Eta), Jackson,
Tenn.
University of Alabama (Alabama Mu), University, Ala.
Southern University (Alabama Iota), Greensboro, Ala.
Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College (Alabama
Alpha-Mu), Auburn, Ala.
Province Zeta.
University of Missouri (Missouri Alpha), Columbia, Mo.
Washington University (Missouri Beta), St. Louis, Mo.
University of Nebraska (Nebraska Lambda-Pi), Lincoln, Neb.
University of Arkansas (Arkansas Alpha-Upsilon), Fayetteville, Ark.
Province Eta.
University of Colorado (Colorado Chi), Boulder, Col.
Leland Stanford, Jr., University (California Alpha), Palo
Denver University (Colorado Zeta), Denver, Col.
Alto, Cal.
University of California (California Beta), Berkeley, Cat.
Province Theta.
Louisiana State University (Louisiana Epsilon), Baton
Rouge, La.
Tulane University ( Louisiana Tau-Upsilon), New Orleans, La.
University of Mississippi (Mississippi Gamma),
sity, Miss.
University of Texas (Texas Rho), Austin, Texas.
Univer­
Alumni Associations.
Boston, Mass.
Atlanta, Ga.
Alliance, Ohio
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Knoxville, Tenn.
New Orleans, La.
St. Louis, Mo.
New York City
Worcester, Mass.
Augusta, Ga.
Cincinnati, Ohio
Jackson, Miss.
Detroit, Mich.
Washington, D. C.
Birmingham, Ala.
Wilmington, N. C.
Pittsburg, Pa.
Denver, Col.
Savannah, Ga.
Chicago, 111.
Kansas City, Mo.
Cleveland, Ohio
Chi Phi Fraternity.
Founded at Prlnoeton University, 1884. Eta Chapter Established, 1867.
Fratres in Urbe.
BILLUPS PHINIZY
F. B. STANLEY
J. H. RUCKER
F. A. LIPSCOMB
M. A. NICHOLSON
GEORGE T. HODGSON
C. B. GRIFFITH
YANCEY HARRIS
Fratres in Facilitate.
WALTER B. HILL
ALEXANDER PRATT ADAMS, Law
D. C. BARROW, JR.
Class of J90I.
JOHN BANKS, A. B.
H. C. WHITE, A '66
FRANK KELLEY MCCUTCHEN, Law
Class of (902.
STERLING HAMILTON BLACKSHEAR
MITCHELL KING
JAMES FORCE HART
MARION SIMMS RICHARDSON
das of (903.
EUGENE HERBERT CLAY
ANDREW CALHOUN
FRANK MARION PARLEY
HUGH MCDANIEL SCOTT
ALFRED AUSTELL THORNTON
BENJAMIN HENRY BARROW
FRANK MORRIS RIDLEY
JOHN DURHAM WING
Class of (904.
BENJAMIN GRAVES SWANSON
HUGH HARALSON GORDON, JR.
HENRY FORT SCOTT
RALPH MELDRIM
67
GORDON WAYNE HAYNES
PAUL E. JETTE
Chi Phi Fraternity.
Roll of Active Chapters.
Alpha, University of Virginia, Cbarlottesville, Va.
Beta, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Boston, Mass.
Gamma, Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Delta, Kutgers College, New Brunswick, N. J.
Epsilon, Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va.
Zeta, Franklin and Marshall College, Lancaster, Fa.
ETA, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHKHS, GA.
Theta, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, N. T.
Iota, Ohio State College, Columbus, Ohio.
<
Lambda, University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Mu, Stephens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, N. J.
Nu, University of Texas, Austin, Tex.
Xi, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Omicron, Sheffield Scientific School, Yale College, New Haven, Conn.
Kho, Lafayette College, Easton, Pa.
Sigma, Wofford College, Spartanburg, S. C.
Phi, Amherat College, Amherst, Mass.
Psi, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa.
68
V
!i
Hammond
Hewlett*
Barrow
Hulsty
Andaraon
Krenson
McCurry
Graves
Hodgton, W.
Carsoni
Miller
Kel'y
Sibley. Q.
Simpkins
Donalson
Bower, R.
McMullan
Stephens
Johnson, C.
Jerger
Benedict
Stncklanfl
Hosch
Johnson
Hill, E. C.
Turner
Bower, J.
Kappa Alpha Fraternity,
Gamma Chapter.
Established, 1868.
DR. J. C. BLOOMFIELD
Fratres in Urbe.
ROBERT TOOMBS DuBosE HARRY HODGSON,
JOSEPH W. MORTON
E. J. BONDURANT
THOMAS F. GREEN
J. AUDLEY MORTON
JUDGE A. J. COBB
CHARLES W. DuBosE
MARION D. DuBosE
E. B.
E. R. KlNNEBREW
BENJAMIN F. HARDEMAN
CHARLES N. HODGSON
EDWARD R. HODGSON, JR.
SMITH
PROFESSOR SY^VANUS MORRIS
J. D. Moss
A. R. NICHOLSON
JOHN W. MORTON
R. S. RAWLAND
FREDERICK S. MORTON W. M. RAWLAND
JOHN W. WELCH
Fratres in Facilitate.
DR. S. C. BENEDICT DR. C. H. HERTY
PROFESSOR C. M. STRAHAN
Law Class.
ERLE MELDRIM DONALSON WILLIAM HOSCH JULIAN BERRY MCCURRY SAMUEL DUNBAR HEWLETT
WALTER JONES HAMMOND
SIMON MORTON TURNER
JOHN CLIFTON ELDER
Class 1902.
RALPH A. GRAVES
CLIFFORD SNEED JOHNSON
ROBERT GRIER STEPHENS
Class 1903.
THOMAS AUGUSTINE BARROW
REVAUD G. BENEDICT
EDWARD CHATFIELD HILL
WALTER BLENSHALL HODGSON
L/UTHER JORDON HULSEY
EDWARD R. JERGER
MIDDLETON SAMUEL JOHNSON
CAMPBELL M. KRENSON
ELMO CLYDE KELLY
JOEL SINCLAIR MCMULLAN
EDWARD STRICKLAND
Out 1904.
WALTER L,ESTER ANDERSON
DONALD ROWLAND BOWER
JACKSON DICKINSON BOWER
NEYLE HABERSHAM SIMPKINS
GORDON CUBBEGE CARSON
DuPoNT GUERRY, JR.
WALLACE MILLER
GEORGE ROYAL SIBLBY
7*
Kappa Alpha Fraternity*
Roll of Active Chapters.
Alpha, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va.
GAMMA, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS, GA.
Delta, Wofford College, Spartanburg, 8. C.
Epsilon, Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Zeta, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.
Eta, Richmond College, Richmond, Va.
Theta, Kentucky State College, Lexington, Ky.
Kappa, Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Lambda, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Nu, Agricultural and Mechanical College, Auburn, Ala.
Xi, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas.
Omicron, University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Pi, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Sigma, Davidson College, Mecklenburg Co., N. C.
Upsilon, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Phi, Southern University, Greensboro, Ala.
Chi, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Psi, Tulane University, New Orleans, La.
Omega, Centre College, Danville, Ky.
Alpha-Alpha, University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
Alpha-Beta, University of Alabama, University, Ala.
Alpha-Gamma, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.
Alpha-Delta, William Jewell College, Liberty, Mo.
Alpha-Epsilon, Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Alpha-Zeta, William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va.
Alpha-Eta, Westminster College, Fulton, Mo.
Alpha-Theta, Kentucky University, Lexington, Ky.
Alpha-Iota, Centenary College, Jackson, La.
Alpha-Kappa, Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo.
Alpha-Lambda, Johns Hopkins University,^Baltimore, Md.
Alpha-Mu, Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.
Alpha-Nu, Columbian University, Washington, D. C.
Alpha-Xi, University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Alpha-Omicron, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark.
Alpha-Pi, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Stanford, Cal­
ifornia.
Alpha-Rho, University of Weit Virginia,
W. Va.
Morgantown,
Alpha-Sigma, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
Alpha-Tau, Humpden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va.
Alpha-Upsilon, University of Mississippi, University, Miss.
The Order of Kappa Alpha Fraternity was founded at Washington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., in 1866.
73
Phi Ddta Theta Fraternity*
Organized at Miami University, 1848. Georgrla Alpha Chapter, 1871.
Fratres in Urbe.
E. K. LUMPKIN
S. J. TRIBBLE
J. W. CAMAK
FRED J. ORR
E. H. DORSEY
C. G. CHANDLBR
J. B. S. COBB
E. I. SMITH
T. W. REED
D. D. QUILLIAN
J. J. STRICKLAND
E. B. COHEN
J. T. DAVIS
Prater in Facilitate.
U. H. DAVENPORT
Law Oats.
J. D. BRADWELL
E. P. SHANNON
H. McWnoRTER, JR.
daa of 1901.
CUFF GREEN
dan of 1902.
H. J. LAMAR, JR.
Class of (903.
G. W. LEGWEN
C. D. RUSSELL
O. B. STEVENS, JR.
C. H. WHITFIELD
J. R. ROUNSAVILLE
R. B. ROUNSAVILLE
QMS of 1904.
C. M. A. MADDOX
R. F. SCHIRM
M. L. RICHTER
J. K. FALKER
A. V. GOLUCKE
D. B. MACMILLAN
FELTON CLEMENTS
75
Phi Delta Theta Fraternity.
Roll of Active Chapters.
Alpha Province.
Maine Alpha, Colby College, Waterville, Me.
New Hampshire Alpha, Darmouth College, Hanover, N. H.
Pennsylvania Alpha, Lafayette College, Easton, Pa.
Pennsylvania Beta, Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg, Pa.
Vermont Alpha, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.
Pennsylvania Gamma, "Washington and Jefferson College,
Massachusetts Alpha, "Williams College, "Williamstown, Mass.
Massachusetts Beta, Amherst College, Amherst, Mass.
Washington, Pa.
Pennsylvania Delta, Allegheny College, Meadville, Pa.
Rhode Island Alpha, Brown University, Providence, B. I.
New
New
New
New
York
York
York
York
Pennsylvania Epsilon, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pa.
Alpha, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Beta, Union University, Schenectady, N. Y.
Delta, Columbia University, New York, N. Y.
Epsilon, Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.
Pennsylvania Zeta, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia,
Pa.
Pennsylvania Eta, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa.
Beta Province.
Virginia Beta, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Virginia Gamma, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.
Virginia Zeta, Washington and Lee Univ., Lexington, Va.
North Carolina Beta, Univarsity of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill, N. C.
*
Kentucky Alpha, Centre College, Danville, Ky.
Kentucky Delta, Central University, Richmond, Ky.
Tennessee Alpha, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Tennessee Beta, University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
*
Gamma Province.
GEORGIA ALPHA, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA, ATHENS,
Georgia Gamma, Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
GA.
Alabama Alpha, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Georgia Beta, Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Alabama Beta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala.
Delta Province.
Ohio Alpha, Miami University, Oxford, Ohio.
Ohio Beta, Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware, O.
Ohio Gamma, Ohio University, Athens, O.
Michigan Alpha, University of
76
Ohio Zeta, Ohio State University, Columbus, O.
Ohio Eta, Case School of Applied Science, Cleveland, O.
Ohio Theta, University of Cincinnati, Cincinnati, O.
Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich
Epsilon Province.
Indiana Alpha, Indiana University, Bloomington, Ind.
Indiana Delta, Franklin College, Franklin, Ind.
Indiana Beta, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Indiana Gamma, Butler College, University of Indianapolis,
Irvington, Ind.
Indiana Epsilon, Hanover College, Hanover, Ind.
Indiana Zeta, DePauw University, Greencastle, Ind.
Indiana Theta, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Ind.
Zeta Province.
Illinois Alpha, Northwestern University, Evanston, 111.
Illinois Beta, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.
Illinois Delta, Knox College, Galesburg, 111.
Illinois Zeta, Lombard University, Galesburg, 111.
Illinois Eta, University of Illinois, Champaign, 111.
Wisconsin Alpha, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis.
Minnesota Alpha, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis,
Minn.
Iowa Alpha, Iowa Wesleyan University, Mount Pleasant,
Iowa.
Iowa Beta, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
Missouri Alpha, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.
Missouri Beta, Westminster College, Fulton, Mo.
Missouri Gamma, Washington University, St. Louis, Mo.
Kansas Alpha, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas.
Nebraska Alpha, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.
v
Theta Province.
Mississippi Alpha, University of Mississippi, University,
Texas Beta, University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Miss.
Texas Gamma, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas.
Louisiana Alpha, Tulane University of Louisiana, New
Orleans, La.
Eta Province.
California Beta, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Stanford University, Cal.
California Alpha, University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Washington Alpha, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.
Alumni Clubs.
ANNUAL ALUMNI DAY, MARCH 1GTH.
Boston, Mass.
Providence, R. I.
New York, N. Y.
Baltimore, Md.
Pittsburg, Pa.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Washington, D. C.
Richmond, Va.
Louisville, Ky.
Nashville, Tenn.
Columbus, Ga.
Atlanta, Ga.
Macon, Ga.
Montgomery, Ala.
Selma, Ala.
Birmingham, Ala.
Mobile, Ala.
New Orleans, La.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
Akron, Ohio.
Cleveland, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio.
Athens, Ohio.
Detroit, Mich.
Franklin, Ind.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Chicago, 111.
Galesburg, 111.
LaCrosse, Wis.
77
Milwaukee, Wis.
Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minn.
Kansas City, Mo.
St. Louis, Mo.
Denver, Col.
Austin, Texas.
Salt LakeCity, Utah.
San Francisco, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal.
Spokane, Wash.
Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity.
Founded at the VlrKlnla Military Institute. 1866.
Georgia Alpha Beta, Founded 1878.
Fratres in Urbe.
H. H. CARLTON
J. C. COBB
C. W. BRUMBY
*
JAMES BARROW
GRAVES STEPHENSON
G. C. BOND
Fratres in Facoltate.
E. C. BRANSON
J. B. LAWRENCE
JAMES M. STEPHENSON
Law Class 1901.
C. E. ROOP
PAUL BROWN
Class 1902.
JAMES K. JORDAN
N. H. BULLARD
Clan 1903.
J. H. MCCALLA
L. L. GRINER
Class 1904.
B. M. CLINE
JOSEPH L,. HODGSON
M. C. CARTER
81
MARCELLAS RAM BO
G. V. WELSH
Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity.
Roll of Active Chapters.
Province I.
Alabama Alpha Epsilon, Agricultural and Mechanical College, Auburn.
Alabama Beta Beta, Southern University, Greensboro.
Alabama Beta Delta, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa.
Georgia Alpha Theta, Emory College, Oxford.
GEORGIA ALPHA BETA, UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA,
Athens.
Georgia Alpha Zeta, Mercer University, Macon.
Georgia Beta Iota, School of Technology, Atlanta.
South Carolina, Beta Xi, College of Charleston.
Province IL
Illinois Gamma Zeta, University of Illinois, Champaign.
Indiana Gamma Gamma, Polytechnic Institute.
Michigan Alpha Mu, Adrian College, Adrian.
Michigan Beta Kappa, Hillsdale College, Hillsdale.
Michigan Beta Omicron, Albion College, Albion.
Nebraska Gamma Theta, University of Nebraska.
Province in.
North Carolina Alpha Delta, University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill.
North Carolina Xi, Trinity College, Durham.
Pennsylvania Alpha Iota, Muhlenburg College, Allentown.
Pennsylvania Alpha Pi, Washington and Jefl'ereon College.
*
Pennsylvania Alpha Upsilon, Pennsylvania College, Gettysburg.
Pennsylvania Tau, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Virginia Delta, University of Virginia, Charlottesville.
Province IV.
Ohio Alpha Nu, Mount Union College, Alliance.
Ohio Alpha Psi, Wittenburg College, Springfield.
Ohio Beta Eta, Wesleyan University, Delaware.
Ohio Beta Mu, Wooster University, Wooster.
Ohio Beta Omega, State University, Columbus.
Ohio Gamma Kappa, Wesleynn Keserve University, Cleveland.
Tennessee Alpha Tau, Southwestern Presbyterian University,
Clarksville.
Tennessee Beta Pi, Vanderbilt University, Nashville.
Tennessee Beta Tau, Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson.
Tennessee Lambda, Cumberland College, Lebanon.
Tennessee Omega, University of the South, Sewanee.
Tennessee Pi, University of Tennessee, Knoiville.
82
Province V.
Maine Beta Upsilon, University of Maine, Orono.
Maine Gamma Alpha, Colby College, Waterville.
Massachusetts Gamma Beta, Tuft's College.
New York Alpha Omicron, St. Lawrence University, Canton.
New York Alpha Lambda, Columbia University, New York.
New York Beta Theta, Cornell University, Ithaca.
Rhode Island Gamma Delta, Brown University, Providence.
Vermont Beta Zeta, University of Vermont, Burlington.
Province VL
Louisiana Beta Epsilon, Tulane University, New Orleans.
Texas Gamma Eta, University of Texas, Austin.
City and State Alumni Associations
Augusta, Ga., Alumni Association.
Allentown Alumni Association, Allentown, Pa.
Boston Alumni Association.
Birmingham Alumni Association.
Chicago Alumni Association.
Cleveland Alumni Association.
Dayton Alumni Association, Dayton, O.
District of Columbia Alumni Association, Washington, D. C.
Dallas Alumni Association.
Georgia Alumni Association, Atlanta, Ga.
Louisville Alumni Association, Louisville, Ky.
New York Alumni Association, New York City.
Tennessee Alumni Association, Nashville.
Texas Alumni Association, Dallas, Texas.
86
Sigma Nu Fraternity*
Founded at Virginia Military Inatltnte, 1809.
Na Chapter Established, 1884.
Fratres in Urbe.
F. C. SHACKELFORD
A. C. FBARS
k
T. J. SHACKELFORD
G. H. WILLIAMSON
Fratres in Facilitate.
C. M. SELLING
W. H. BERRY
P. A. WILLIAMS
CLEM AKERMAN
Law dais.
P. H. ODOM
M. V. MCKIBBEN
WILLIAM M. SMITH
Class (903.
C. W. BOND
ARCHIE WORSHAM
M. C. STEINER
JOHN MONAHAN
Class J904.
C. F. McL-AuGHLiN
MARK TOLBERT
J. B. ANDERSON
87
BEN G. PARK
E. NOBLE CALHOUN
DAN H. DUPREE
PAUL LOVEJOY
JACK TOLBERT
Sigma Nu Chapter List*
First Division.
Lambda, 1882, Washington and Lee University, Lexington,
Beta, 1870, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Va.
Epsilon, 1883, Bethany College, Bethnny, W. Va.
Psi, 1888, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
Beta Tau, 1895, North Carolina A. and M., Raleigh, N. C.
Second Division.
Beta Phi, 1888, Tulane University, New Orleans, La.
BetaTheta, 1890, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn Ala.
Upsilon, 1886, University of Texas, Austin.
Theta, 1874, University of Alabama, Ala.
Phi, 1887, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.
Iota, Howard College, Bust Lake, Ala.
Third Division.
Omicron, 1884, Bethel College, Russellville, £y.
Zeta, 1883, Central University, Richmond, Ky.
Sigma, 1886, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Fourth Division.
Beta Lambda, Central College, Fayette, Mo.
Rho, 1886, Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo.
Beta Xi, 1894, William Jewel! College, Liberty, Mo.
Beta Mu, 1893, State University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa.
Nu, 1884, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kan.
Fifth Division.
Beta Rho, ( Sub rosa )
Pi, 1884, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa.
Sixth Division.
Mu, University of Georgia, Athens, Ga.
Eta, Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Xi, Emory College, Oxford, Ga.
Kappa, North Georgia College, Dahlonega, Ga.
Gamma Alpha, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
88
Seventh Division.
Beta Beta, De Pauw University, Greencastle, Ind.
Beta Iota, Mount Union College, Alliance, O.
Beta Zeta, Purdue University, LaFayette, Ind.
Beta Nu, University of Ohio, Columbus, O.
Beta Upsilon, Rose Polytechnic Institute, Terre Haute, Ind.
Delta Theta, Lombard University, Galesburg, 111.
Beta Eta, University of Indiana, Bloomington, Ind.
Beta Pi, University of Chicago, Chicago, 111.
Gamma Gamma, Albion College, Albion, Mich.
Eighth Division.
Beta Chi, Leland Stanford University, Stanford, Cal.
Beta Psi, University of California, Berkeley, Cal.
Gamma Chi, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash.
Alumni Organizations.
Texas Alumni Association
Louisiana Alumni Association
Missouri Alumni Association
Seventh Division Association
Alatthma Alumni Association
Iowa Alumni Association
Sixth Division Association
PitUburg Alumni Association Philadelphia Alumni Association New York Alumni Association Atlanta Alumni Chapter
Kansas City Alumni Chapter
Birmingham Alumni Chapter
89
Chi Psi Fraternity,
Founded at Union College, 1841.
Alpha Delta, Established 18BO.
Prater in Urbe.
W. B. BURNETT
Law Class.
G. Y. COLEMAN
Class 1901.
H. C. JOHNSON
W. D. HOYT
H. G. WELLS
Class 1902.
J. P. LEWIS
C. C. BUNN
M. W. LEWIS
N. P. PARK
Class 1903.
W. F. NEWTON
Class 1904.
T. G. TRAYNHAM
93
W. N. SHEATS
S. S. JOHNSON, JR.
Chi Psi Fraternity.
Roll of Active Chapters.
Pi, Union College, Schenectady, New York.
Theta, Williams College, Williamstown, Massachusetts.
Mu, Middlebury College, Middlebury, Vermont.
Alpha, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut.
Phi, Hamilton College, Clinton, New York.
Epsilon, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Chi, Amherst College, Amherst, Massachusetts.
Psi, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York.
Tau, Wofford College, Spartanburg, South Carolina.
Nu, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Iota, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin.
Kho, Rutgers College, New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Xi, Stevens Institute of Technology, Hoboken, New Jersey.
Alpha Delta, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia.
Beta Delta, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Gamma Delta, Stanford University, Stanford, California.
Delta Delta, University of California, Berkeley, California.
Epsilon Delta, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois.
94
McCilla
Coogler
King
Sha<
Moore
Thretkeld
Putnam
Koch
Monk
Morton
Otckinson
Archer
Kappa Sigma Fraternity,
Founded at University of Virginia, 1867.
Beta Lambda Chapter Established, 1901.
Law Class.
ISRAEL MERCER PUTNAM
*
CHARLES JOHNS MOORE
Clan 1903.
JOHN EARLE OVBRBY MCCALLA
MARION McDowELL DICKINSON
das J904.
GEORGE WASHINGTON THRELKELD
JOHN CHRISTIAN KOCH
OSCAR JOHNSON COOGLER
MARION STINSON MONK
WALTER BARNBTT SHAW
PAUL JONES KING
WILLIAM JEWETT MORTON
LINTON STEPHENS ARCHER
97
Kappa Sigma Fraternity.
Roll of Active Chapters.
District L
Psi, University of Maine, Orono, Me.
Alpha-Rho, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Me.
Alpha-Lambda, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.
Beta-Alpha, Brown University, Providence, R. I.
Alpha-Kappa, Cornell University, Ithaca, N. Y.
Beta-Kappa, New Hampshire College, Durham, N. H.
District IL
Pi, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa.
Beta-Delta, Washington and Jefferson College, WashingAlpha-Delta, Pennsylvania State College, State College, Pa.
ton, Pa.
Alpha-Kpsilon, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.
Beta-Iota, Lehigh University, South Bethlehem, Pa.
Alpha-Phi, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pa.
Alpha-Alpha, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Md.
Alpha-Eta, Columbian University, Washington, D. C.
District HI.
Zeta, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Va.
Eta, Randolph-Macon College, Ashland, Va.
Nu, William and Mary College, Williamsburg, Va.
Upeilon, Hampden-Sidney College, Hampden-Sidney, Va.
Beta-Beta, Richmond College, Richmond, Va.
De:ta, Davidson College, Davidson, K. C.^
Eta-Prime, Trinity College, Durham, N. C.
Alpha-Mu, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C.
District IV.
Alpha-Nu, Wofford College, Spartanburg, 8. C.
Alpha-Beta, Mercer University, Macon, Ga.
Alpha-Tau, Georgia School of Technology, Atlanta, Ga.
,
Beta-Lambda, UNIVERSITY OP GEORGIA, Athens, Ga.
Beta, University of Alabama, University, Ala.
Beta-Eta, Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Auburn, Ala.
District V.
Theta, Cumberland University, Lebanon, Tenn.
Omega, University of the South, Sewanee, Tenn.
Kappa, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tenn.
Alpha-Theta, Southwestern Baptist University, Jackson,
Lambda, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tenn.
Tenn.
Phi, Southwestern Presbyterian University, Clarksville, Tenn.
Alpha-Xi, Bethel College, Russellville, Ky.
Beta-Nil, Kentucky State College, Lezington, Ky.
98
District VL
Sigma, Tulane University, New Orleans, La.
Iota, Southwestern University, Georgetown, Texas.
Tau, University of Texas, Austin, Texas.
Alpha-Upsilon, Millsaps College, Jackson, Miss.
Gamma, Louisiana State University, Baton. Rouge, La.
Epeilon, Centenary College, Jackson, La.
District VIL
Beta-Gamma, Missouri State University, Columbia, Mo.
Alpha-Psi, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, Neb.
Xi, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Ark.
Alpha-Omega, \V illiam Jewell College, Liberty, Mo.
District VIIL
Alpha-Gamma, University of Illinois, Champaign, 111.
Alpha-Chi, Lake Forest University, Lake Forest, 111.
Beta-Epsilon, University of Wisconsin, Madison, "Wis.
Beta-Mu, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn.
Alpha-Sigma, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
Chi, Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind.
Alpha-Pi, Wabash College, Crawfordsville, Ind.
Beta-Theta, University of Indiana, Bloomington, Ind.
District DC
Beta-Zeta, Leland Stanford, Jr., University, Stanford University, Cal.
Alumni Associations.
Philadelphia, Pa.
Yazoo City, Miss.
Pittsburg, Pa.
New York City
New Orleans, La.
Chicago, 111.
St. Louis, Mo.
Pine Bluff, Ark.
Boston, Mass.
Indianapolis, Ind.
Richmond, Va.
Buffalo, N. Y.
99
Ruston, La.
Nashville, Tenn.
Chihuahua, Mexico
Memphis, Tenn.
Louisville, Ky.
Atlanta, Ga.
Quoth the Devil
More potent than the angels, I wield the wills of men,
Though cursed by ban of God and man : wherever, how, and when
I will man's will to do my will, he yields and yields again.
Booked in the cradle of an infant race,
Twin-born with man and mind,
I more than with the world keep pace
And by exalted means or base
A thousand thousand souls in cringing servitude I bind.
A thousand times on reeking sod
Or heaven-lifted tower
I' ve smote the hosts of man and God,
I 've smote and seen their power
Dissolve—the power that once the magic spell
Breathed in psalm-tuned ecstacy that threatened regal hell.
In quiet dale,
In whirling gale,
In court, on field, or sea,
Man's every deed, like bending reed,
Doth serve and honor me.
As long as man shall breathe and act,
As long as time shall last,
Till earth's foundation stone is cracked,
Time swallowed in the past,
So long with scepter more than gold,
From my all-ruling throne,
Shall I men's deeds design and mould
And claim them for mine own.
—C. D. B.
100
FNT
' i*^ ^ T^ TT ^—ir—i
U—•) &
U
&
a
O P H 0
14
P.
Tuuday, June llth, 10:30 p.m.
Committee.
G. W. lyBGWBN,
Chainnan;
ANDJ&W CALHOUN,
D. H. DUPREB,
ANDREW LYNDON.
Pan-Hellenic German*
Committee.
Jun* )3th, 1901.
E. P. SHANNON, 0 4 B
B. E. FOBTSON, I A E
P. K. MCCUTCHKN, X 0
E. M. DONALSON, K A
L. L. GRINKR, A T Q
D. H. DUPREE, I N
H. G. WBLLS, X
Committee.
Friday, June 14th, 10.30 p. m.
H. J. LAMAR, Chairman
STERLING BLACKSHBAR
S. S. DBAN, »
MITCHKLL KING
NOEL PARK
Cotillion*
Monday, June 17th, 10:30 p. m.
Committee.
A. PRATT ADAMS,
Chairman ;
S. D. HEWLETT,
J. F. GATINS.
Lawyer;
Tuuday , June I 8th,
Committee.
'
HAMILTON MCWHORTBR,
Chairman;
A. PRATT ADAMS,
P. A. WILLIAMS,
E. M. DONALSON.
106
Wednesday, June 19th, 1901, 10.30 p.m.
Committee.
JOHN BANKS, Chairman
R . M. Goss
H. J. McBRiDB
H. C.JOHNSON
107
Calendar*
September.
College opens.
Sam Johnson returns ; general rejoicing.
A new " lion " among the ladies makes his appearance in
our menagerie; i. e., Simeon Morton Turner.
Poole joins Zeta Chi.
i.
A letter of advice and warning to new Owls and Serpents
is received from Beckett.
Noble Calhoun drifts in and begins to tell us about his
grandfather.
26. Batch dismisses his nurse.
October.
The Athens Carnival.
2. Clinton elopes with Bosco.
3. Dean buys season ticket to the Oriental Theater.
4. Gordon gets in trouble. War between Athens Guards and
students. Booth springs into prominence with a long
talk.
9. MR. BLACKWBLL (to Professor Davvy): "Will you
please repeat that question ? I was trying to figure
14.
20.
out which could drink the more water, a hippopot­
amus or a rhinoceros, and did not hear you."
Walter Jackson leaves college for a week. W. I. MacIntyre mourns for his return, because when Walter is
absent, Mac. is the poorest student in the French class.
The proud Simeon's great papa comes to town. Simeon
stops shooting pool and smoking cigarettes.
November.
2.
6.
7.
Will Sheata gives his famous definition : "A ghost is a
mental hallucination on the cortex of the cerebellum."
Dr. Benedict (in Medical Jurisprudence): "I can give
a better idea of a mentally unsound person by talking
than by referring to the text-book."
Professor Park appears at Chapel with his hair combed.
10.
In a scrap with Jette, Robert James Moran is knocked
unconscious for two hours. Vote of thanks to Jette
by the student body, and recommendation to make it
longer next time.
13. Joe Gatins studies a lesson.
16. Hirsch pays his board at the training-table; Mrs. Ashe
faints.
December.
3. Freshmen start the beautiful custom of yelling in Chapel.
4. Bob Kounsaville forgets to be pleasant.
10. Red and Black appears without a reference to Dinky
Dallas. Dallas sues for damages.
12. Professor Bocock attends Chapel.
14. The Chancellor meets his ethics class for the second time.
16.
19.
108
The Chancellor (in Ethics Class): " Mr. Hirsch, what
are your ideas as to the immortality of the soul ?"
Mr. Hirsch: "I don't know, Mr. Hill. I '11 have to
ask Rabbi Rubenstein."
Sylvie admits for once that he is wrong.
January.
18.
14.
15.
16.
Georgian appears.
Some one suggests the name
Boothian. Herbert McBride, haunted by the cry of
" Madge 1 Madge I" says the life of a literary light is
not a bed of roses.
Sammie Johnson gets kidnapped. Full particulars later on.
Sammie returns. The solar system resumes its sway.
Wiregrass Club banquet. Jerger smokes a cigar; tele­
graphs for papa and Carrie.
Freshmen get ther hair cut at Sophomore barber shop.
Guerry and Simkins appear as chief mourners.
18.
19.
Freshmen and Sophomores declare war. Rules for Freshmen:
1. Don't get gay.
2. Be in your rooms at seven.
3. Be good babies.
4. Hats off to Sophs.
5. Hair cut once a month.
Hugh Gordon and Monk get Baby Lyndon's scalp.
February.
4. John Marshall Day.
6.
7.
8.
11.
Gramophone Odom and Cone represent the law class.
Judge Bleckly enters college. Is greeted by Bemer. Says
he hopes*Remer is not a representative student.
Logan is hazed, but doesn't have his hair cut.
The Judge tells Polly Mac. that he (Polly) is a callow
youth and doesn't know much about Political
Economy.
The Judge is fired for absences, but before leaving swears
he knew Miss Puss before the flood.
14.
16.
19.
22.
St. Valentine's Day. Hirsch gives Miss Puss a ring.
Holiness and Purification meeting at the Chancellor's
house. Tate and Will Davis represent the Senior Class.
Demosthenean anniversary. Smith and his mouth and his
dress suit at 11 a. m., make a powerful impression.
Old George's birthday. Phi Kappa anniversary. Sam
Johnson makes us suffer. Hamp McWhorter weeps
because Sam hai no dress suit.
March.
Kell Potts leaves college to devote his time exclusively to
corn and rye culture.
3. Our popular students leave for Washington under the
careful guidance of Nurse Stevenson.
4. Thompson and Sibley allow Bill to be inaugurated.
5. The popular ones return. Steve is detained in the Phila­
delphia jail.
1.
11.
18.
22.
109
Jimmy Lawrence (to Greek Class): " Please excuse me,
gentlemen ; I have to go fill Professor Bocock's pipe
for him."
The Irish Club celebrates the birthday of its patron—
Patrick. Dispensary and Mayor's Court greatly en­
riched thereby.
Senior Banquet. Ask Will Davis; ask the Commercial
Hotel; don't ask Wells or Green.
The Freshman Hair Clipping*
I tell no tale of ancient days,
No story of the dead, dark past,
I twine no wreath of floral praise,
Nor carol choral roundelays,
In memory of the storied, vast,
Unnumbered throng of demigods
And heroes, at whose shrines are cast
The homage of the humbler classed.
I gaze not with prophetic ken
Beyond the Future's wicket gate,
Where serried ranks of giant men
Loom grand in view. Nor yet again,
In fiction's realm dare I create
A story such as none have heard.
And, yet, to get my story straight,
So much by preface I relate.
The midnight hour had long since fled ;
Each glimmering lamp had disappeared ;
Each Freshman student in his bed
Lay fast asleep. No dream of dread
Disturbed their rest, nor night more wierd,
They little guessed the danger near.
These guileless youths who nothing feared,
Had dangers dire undaunted dared.
And rushing forth to combat, went
In squads of five. Each squad, its man,
One man, had chos'n for punishment,—
To give their vengeance surer vent.
In gloating joy their deep-laid plan
They haste to execute. The ban
Of scorn will fall on him who quails,
On him who in duty fails I
' T was night.
The customary shades
And shadows screened the drowsy town
The hours passed on. From near-by glades,
The screech-owl trilled his serenades
In solemn monotone, adown
The silent ways an echo stirred.
All else was still. The stars threw down
Upon each spire a starlit crown.
Had gloried in the heyday rout,
Had battles waged and laurels won,
Had victors been in many a bout;
But now unconscious that throughout
The town the Sophomores had begun
To steal in silence, one by one,
With vengeful aim and purpose grim,
Down to the campus gate,
Not long the valiants wait.
Each armed with pondrous shears,
And " knucks " and clubs and spears,
And masked. ( Ye|, strange to tell I )
They gave one frantic yell;
Adorned with arms, in warlike tnm.
The Freshman waking in the morn
Enraged to find their forelocks shorn
Full vengeance vow,
If late or now,
The kindly fates in luck allow,
That on the sea or solid ground,
The guilty culprits e'er be found.
Meanwhile 't is hard to tell which most
The Sophomores gladly, vainly boast: —
The vict'ry won that fateful night
O'er foes, whose hopeless, drowsy plight
In that affray,
Made them a prey
To easy conquest, or the gray
And guzzled trophies, dark and fair, —
Their pocketfuls of Freshman hair.
—CHANSAW.
IIO
The Sphinx*
A. PRATT ADAMS, P. P.
JOHN L. ERWIN, P. H.
REMER L. DENMARK, K. S.
HORACE C. JOHNSON, D. S. B.
JOHN BANKS, H.
A. P. ADAMS, (7)
JOHN BANKS, (16)
STERLING BLACKSHEAR, (33)
R. L. DENMARK, (17)
N. PARK, (30)
PROF. W. D. HOOPER, (2)
J. L. ERWIN, (24)
W. J. HAMMOND, (31)
W. M. HARDY, (29)
PROF. A. H. PATTERSON, (i)
LONGSTREET HULL, (27)
H. C. JOHNSON. (21)
H. J. LAMAR, (28)
F. K. MCCUTCHEN, (26)
L. C. RUCKER, (32)
Honorary Members.
A—H.
E—W.
I—H.
M—F.
Q—G.
BROWN
A. HARRIS
G. COLVIN
R. MITCHELL
T. JACKSON
B—G. BUTLER
C—S. H. SIBLEY
F—H. BACON
G—M. P. HALL
J—W. S. COTHRAN
K—W. SPAIN
N—H. DODD
O—C. H. BLACK
R—CHANCELLOR W. B. HILL
112
D—E. E. DOUGHERTY
H—F. K. BOLAND
L—J. T. DORSEY
P—W. R. TlCHENOR
Officers.
WILSON M. HARDY ........... President
I. W. WILLIAMS .......... Vice-President
E. W. MARTIN ........ Recording Secretary
W. B. SHAW ....... Corresponding Secretary
M. S. MONK .............. Treasurer
Standing Committees.
Hind-book.
SIDNEY S. DEAN, Chairman
MILTON THOMAS
B. S. WALKER, JR.
Bible Study.
I. W. WILLIAMS, Chairman
C. R. OLIVER
Fall Campaign.
S. J. Nix, Chairman
J. P. MANLY
Missionary.
R. D. BROWNLEE, Chairman
E. W. MARTIN
W. O. ROBERTS
E. P. SHANNON
W. C. THOMPSON
G. H. WADE
Devotional.
Chairman
F. C. JACKSON,
PROF. R. E. PARK
J. D. MCCARTNBY
WIRE
CLAJB.
Members.
WALTER J. HAMMOND
RBMER L,. DENMARK
SIMEON M. TURNER
EARLE M. DONALSON
JOHN D. MCCARTNBY
WARREN C. LOTT
W. I. MAC!NTYRE
RALPH GRAVES
CLIFFORD S. JOHNSON
EDWARD JERGER
T. N. WOOLFOLK
116
T. A. BARROW
A. T. MAClNTYRE
C. G. STRICKLAND
J. D. BOWER
D. ROLAND BOWER
Engineering Society.
E. A. DUKE ...................................... President
RUSSELL GOULD ...
...............
.............. Vice-President
J. K. JORDAN ..................................... Secretary
Lectures Before Society.
PROF. C. M. STRAHAN
J900-J90L
PROF. A. H. PATTERSON
DR. C. H. HERTY
Engineering Annual.
COLONEL E. L. GRIGGS ..........
................... Editor-in-Chief
}............-........
.......... Associate Editors
P.' M. HOWARD }••.....•....................... Business Managers
117
*
• STOHY
^•••m
V
/
1 ~C D IB B
CDUNTV CLUB
Officers.
PROF. J. B. IvAWRENCB ........ President
J. L. SIBLEY ............ Secretary
E. H. CLAY ............... Treasurer
Members.
G. F. GOBER
A. H. BURTZ
J. M. GANTT
MARCELLUS RAMBO
C. J. MOORE
J. R. HUMPHREYS
G. V. WELSH
118
119
SHE
Honorary Club of the Class of 1902.
Founded In Sophomore Tear.
FIRST TERM.
Officers.
SECOND TERM.
I. P. Goss ............... President ............... F. H. BARRETT
BOTHWELL GRAHAM ........... Vice-President ........... M. S. RICHARDSON
J. P. LEWIS ..........
... Secretary and Treasurer .......... E. R. CAMP
Members.
F. H. BARRETT
E. R. CAMP
SIDNEY S. DEAN
I. P. Goss
BOTHWELL GRAHAM
LONGSTREET HULL
MITCHELL KING
H. J. LAMAR
WILSON M. HARDY
R. G. STEPHENS
J. P. LEWIS
M. W. LEWIS
N. P. PARK
MARION RICHARDSON
120
Oratorical Association.
*
Officers.
J. P. MOTT, President.
F. C. JACKSON, Secretary and Treasurer.
JAMES I/. SIBLEY, Vice-President.
123
Officers.
FIRST TERM.
JULIAN B. MCCURRY,
President.
E. W. RAGSDALE,
Vice-President.
E. R. CAMP,
Secretary and Treasurer.
SECOND TERM.
W. G. THOMPSON,
President.
J. D. WING,
Vice-President.
F. H. ^ARRETT,
Secretary and Treasurer.
THIRD TERM.
Members.
F. H. BARRETT, President.
GLEN W. LEGWIN, Vice-President.
R. J. MORAN, Secretary and Treasurer.
B. J. Moran
J. B High
B, L. Blackwell
E. B. Camp
W. E. Beid
W. M. Jackson, Jr.
S. J. Nix,
K. C. Campbell
C. H. Story
E. D. Brownlee
W. F. Newton
J. R. Jordan
O. P. Coogler
E. P. Shannon
T. A. Barrow
N. Oxford
Paul Jette
E. E. Dallis
W. G. Thompson
J. C. Brand
N. P. Park
M. W. Lewis
B. A. Graves
I. W. Williams
J. D. Bower
E. W. Ragsdale
Jack McCartnoy
R. G. Golucke
J. D. Wing
D. B. Bower
Martin Bicbter
W. M. Hardy
J. L. Sibley
M. W. Collier
124
/-
/
OFFICIAL ORGAN : The Georgian.
A. P. ADAMS ................. President
J. D. MCCARTNEY ............ Vice-President
JAMES L. SIBLEY ............... Secretary
Programmes.
January J7th.
Classic Myths ............. J. D. MCCARTXEY
Opportunity .
Literature of the Bible ......... REV. J. T. DAVIS
Some Hints .
February 8th.
Causes of Dearth of Southern Literature . . F. H. BARRETT
Discussion
Future of Southern Literature ....... C. D. RUSSELL
A Literary Life
...... R. H. BOOTH
. . PBOF. W. H. BOCOCK
1 E. P. SHANNON
I PROF. R. E. PARK
May 2d.
. H. ROBIN ADAIR
The Literary Societies ............ W. B. HILL
ME NPK
HUGH MCDANIEL SCOTT
JOHN HENRY MONAHAN
BENJAMIN HENRY BARROW
ANDREW JACKSON LYNDON
THOMAS AUGUSTINE BARROW
x f
126
Red Devils*
Officers.
L. J. HULSEY .............. M.
F. M. RIDLEY ... ... ... ... . . L,.
B. S. WALKER .............. D.
ANDREW CALHOUN ... ... ... . . D.
M. S. JOHNSON ... ... ... . . . . . I.
Members.
LUTHER J. HULSEY
ANDREW CALHOUN
AUSTELL THORNTON
MARVIN DICKINSON
SAM JOHNSON
CAMPBELL KRENSON
FRANK M. RIDLEY
SANDERS WALKER
CAM DORSEY
SANDY BEAVER
MINOR BOYD
127
R.
D.
E.
K.
G.
Skull and Bones*
Officers.
FIRST TERM.
P. E. JETTE ..... G.
S. R. JAQUES . . . V. G.
RALPH MELDRIM . R. G.
J. L,. HULL . . . . P. G.
G. W. HAINES . H. M. D.
M.
M.
M.
M.
M.
SECOND TERM.
S. R. JAQUES. . . . G.
N. H. SIMKINS . . V. G.
H. H. GORDON . . R. G.
J. L. HULL . . . . P. G.
P. E. JETTE . . H. M. D.
MeiAbers.
M.
M.
M.
M.
M.
P. E. JETTE
S. R. JAQUES
RALPH MELDRIM
J. L. HULL G. W. HAINES
WALLACE MILLER
DUPONT GUERRY
G. C. CARSON
N. H. SIMKINS
H. H. GORDON
W. L,. ANDERSON
L. M. WRIGHT
128
139
Members.
J. L. SIBLEY, G. H.
S. M. TURNER, G. E.
C. G. STRICKLAND, B.
A. T. MACINTYRE, D.
G. R. SIBLEY, W. G.
R. A. GRAVES, Z.
W. I. MACINTYRE, P.
W. J. HAMMOND, V. G. E.
C. M. KRENSON, R.
E. R. JERGBR, F.
Honorary Members.
CARRIE NATION
J. D. MCCARTNEY
E. P. SHANNON
EMILIO AGUINALDO
BILLY HOOPER, !/!<• D.
EDWARD VII.
JUDGE LOGAN E. BLECKLEY
University Golf dub.
Officers.
JACK McCARTNEY ................... President
EMORY SHANNON ................. Vice-President
R. F. SCHIRM ..................... Secretary
J. L. SIBLEY ...................... Treasurer
DAN HUNNICUT .................... Instructor
Members.
C. D. DORSEY
C. D. RUSSELL
JACK MCCARTNEY
W. M. DAVIS
J. F. GATINS
J. H. T. MACPHERSON
W. H. BOCOCK
W. B. HODGSON
DAN HUNNICUT
C. M. KRENSON *R. F. SCHIRM
J. R. ROUNSAVILLE SIMEON MORTON TURNER EMORY SHANNON
Athens Members.
MR. AND MRS. CHARLES GRIFFITH
ISABEL THOMAS
FLORENCE ANTHONY
ijucv COBB TYLER
GERTRUDE THOMAS
i*71:"*
SUSIE LUMPKIN
132
ELLIE WILLIAMS
GERTRUDE JACKSON
NANNETTE HODGSON
MARION LUMPKIN
Young Men's University Temperance Association.
MOTTO : Down with Booze.
PRATT j -^DAMS
1
President
(. WILLIAMS ;•••••••••
IRA W. WILLIAMS .......... Secretary
MACON JOHNSON, Treasurer for the school^children
of the City of Athens.
Members.
HAMILTON MCWHORTER, Saratoga, Ga.
SHAM PANE WHITBHEAD
CAPTAIN KELLY.'of.Georgia
WILSON M. HARDY
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL JULIAN BERRY BENSON^MCCURRY
Missionaries in Other Lands*
KELL POTTS
TOM WOOLFOLK
BEN SWANSON
WILL SHEATS
GEORGE COLEMAN
133
CHARLES D. RUSSELL
CARRIE NATION
Irish Club.
You all know the motto.
HAROLD HIRSCH
................. President
FRANK HAPP ................. Vice-President
ST. PATRICK ................... Secretary
The Common Herd.
ADAMS
McWHORTER
WELLS
GATINS
FORTSON
HEWLBTTE
WILLIAMS
McBRIDB
BANKS
McCUTCHBON
DONALSON
134
Kindergarten Club*
Members.
EVAN BASCH
BABY L/YNDON
ERWIN VONDERAU
CAM DORSEY
NOEL PARK
R. D. STUBBS
FRANK BARRETT
FRED JACKSON
Honorary Members.
THE LUCY COBB GIRLS AND WALTER JACKSON.
Yell.
Give us more Mellin's Food.
135
Colors.
Baby Blue.
Sweet Singers of the Law Class*
BOOTH ............. Most Bass of all
SHANNON ......... Pitcher of the Himes
BACON .......... Chimpanzie Squealer
DRECHSEL ..... Herr Von Ancient Rhymster
BOWEN ......... Striker of the low notes
BBLAVAL ............... Trillist
JBNKINS, RICKETSON WILLIAMS and MCDONALD ................... Relay Quartette
ADAMS, A. P., IvATiMBR, McCuBN, DENMARK and CONB ............... . Anvil Chorus
SANFORD ....... Keeper of the tuning fork
ODOM ............... Soft soloist
SMITH .......... The wild west wailist
BENNBTT ....... Vocalist a la midnight cat
CROSS ............ Squeaky but loud
CALHOUN ............ Chief Blowist
TISON ............. Musical Kickist
WHITEHEAD and BURTZ .... Too hoarse to sing
136
Tiger Club.
Motto.
'T is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all.
Officers.
ANDREW PETE CALHOUN (" used to be h—") .................... . Chief Mahout
SIMEON MORTON TURNER ....................... Grand (Blind) Tiger Hunter
JOSEPH FRANCIS IGNATIUS GATINS ............................ Growler
Members.
K. ELLYNGTOYNE DINKY DALLAS
WILLIAM MAZYCK JOHNSON
HENRY GOLDSMITH WELLS
HORACE CORNELIUS JOHNSON (Sam did it)
WALTER MARIAN JACKSON
137
Banjo and Mandolin Club*
Officers.
WALTER M. JACKSON, JR. ... Business Manager
FRANK R. HAPP ...... President and Leader
Members.
BANKS
BAXTER, J. F.
BAXTER, T. W.
HILL, E. Y.
JAQUES
HULSBY
JESTER
CALHOUN, A.
FORTSON
HAPP, F. R.
JACKSON
University of Georgia Orchestra*
Members.
PROF. J. P. CAMPBELL, Cello
WALTER MARIAN JACKSON, Drums
O. L. KEITH, Violin
F. R. HAPP, Clarinet
CARTER JESTER, Violin
MORRIS MICHOLL, Piano
PAUL LOVBJOY, Violin
D. A. COHEN, Clarinet
PINKUS HAPP, Violin
MAX MICHOLL, Violin
138
Officers.
K. C. H. DRBCHSEL ......................... President and Musical Director
HINTON BOOTH .................
W. M.JACKSON
E. P. SHANNON
H. S. BELAVAL
.................. Secretary
Members.
B. E. FORTSON
D. H. HUNNICUTT
L. H. HULSEY
JACK BANKS
»39
The Thalians.
Officers.
JACK BANKS .................... President
WALTER JACKSON ............... Vice-President
PINKUS HAPP ............... Business Manager
EMORY SHANNON ............... Stage Manager
FRANK HAPP ................ Musical Director
Members.
BANKS
SHANNON
HAPP, P.
JACKSON
HAPP, F.
DONAl^ON
FORBES
140
University Battalion*
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL E. L. GRIGGS ............... Commandant.
F. HAPP ............................. Adjutant.
W. M. HAKDY ........................ Sergeant-Major.
J. L. SIBLEY ................... Sergeant and Chief Musician.
Company A.
L. E. TATE .............. Captain.
F. C. JACKSON ........ First Lieutenant.
H. G. WELLS ........ Second Lieutenant.
Company B.
T. R. KING .............. Captain
W. G. THOMPSON ....... First Lieutenant
R. M. Goss ......... Second Lieutenant
v
Sergeants.
First—I. P. Goss and O. J. KEITH.
Third—J. G. FAUST and A. L. HULL.
Second—B. GRAHAM and S. J. Nix.
Fourth—M. KING and H. J. LAMAR.
Fifth—N. P. PARK and E. R. CAMP.
Corporals.
First—S. BEAVER and J. BAXTER.
Third—G. LEGWIN and O. J. FRANKLIN.
Second—C. WHITFIELD and G. B. FRANKLIN.
Fourth—D. DUPREE and R. G. BENEDICT.
Fifth— —— LAWLER, G. ECHOLS and M. BRYD.
Company C.
J. BANKS .............. Captain.
W. M. DA vis ......... First Lieutenant.
H. HIRSCH ......... Second Lieutenant.
Sergeants.
First—E. R. RAGSDALE.
Second—R. G. STEPHENS.
Third—P. HAPP.
Fourth—S. BLACKSHEAR.
Fifth—H. HARBBR.
Corporals.
First—C. JOHNS.
Fourth—S. S. JOHNSON.
Second—P. YOUNG.
Fifth—B. HIGH.
141
Third—W. B. HODGSON
Sixth—J. D. WING
Dream-Dreams.
Did you ever dream of Bleeping
Where the world disturb'd you not?
Did you ever wake a-weeping
Over sorrows long forgot ?
Did you ever dream of waking
From a dream within a dream,
When you found your heart a-breaking
Over things that seem'd to seem ?
Did you ever dream of dreaming ?
In a dream from dreams awake,
Just to find your happy seeming
Seemed to seem for seeming's sake ?
Have you seen the stars in daytime?
Or the sun shine all night long ?
Have you seen it snow in May-time ?
Or a Christmas coming wrong.
A kiss is like a bath
That you take from the river :
You can take, and take, and take,
And take them on forever,
And still there 's just as many
As if you had n't taken any.
Have you thought all wisdom foolish ?
Things below to seem above ?
Or the cherubim seem ghoulish ?
Then you 've never been in love.
DAK HUNNICUTT.
Marriage is like a candle-light,
Placed in a window on a summer's night,
Inviting all the insects in the air
To come and singe their pretty winglets there:
Those that are out butt heads against the pane ;
Those that are in butt only to get out again.
142
Presidents of Phi Kappa*
H. McWaoKTER
J. L. ERWIN
I. W. WILLIAMS
S. M. TURNER
R. J. BACON, JR.
W. M. DAVIS
I. P. Goss
R. J. BENNETT
W. G. THOMPSON
144
t45
Presidents of Demosthenean Society*
*
J. M. GANTT
F. C. JACKSON
W. C. THOMPSON
C. H. STORY
E. A. DUKB
J. C. BRAND
JOHN I,. TISON
H. S. WALDEN
147
State Oratorical Association Contest*
Presidtnt
G. W. LEGWEN, University of Georgia
Georgia's Representative
G. W. LEGWEN
Georgia-North Carolina Debate.
Held at Athens, April 5th, 1901.
Subject:
RESOLVED, That the combinations of capital commonly called
trusts are more injurious than beneficial.
*
Georgia
North Carolina
Affirmative:
Negative:
W. I. MclNTYRE
L,. P. GOODRICH
Messrs. STERN and WILLIAMS.
Georgia won !
148
G
W. IEQWEN, Oratorical Representative
W. I. MclNTYRE
149
L. P. GOODRICH. North Caroline Debaters
O
05
Officers Football Team.
J900-J901.
F. K. McCuTCHHN
......... Captain
W. M. DAVIS ....
E. E. JONES, Princeton ......... Coach
Manager
1901-1902.
P. M. RIDLEY ............ Captain
H. HIRSCH
BILLY REYNOLDS ............ Coach
Manager
FOOTBALL.
T
HE history of the football season for the cur­
rent year is the tale of a series of defeats.
The cause of these is the fact that Georgia
has for the past few years nourished an unhealthy
and thriftless custom of having hired men on her
teams. This had grown to be so very degrading
that all saw at once the necessity of an immediate
correction. To this change we attribute our lack
of victories. But we can promise to the athletic
world a team in the season to come that will show
the grit of Georgia as it really exists.
The personnel of the team is as follows: Shannon,
Terry, Hirsch, center; Swanson, McCalla, right
guard; Cross, Putnam, left guard; Monk, right
tackle; Gordon, left tackle; Ridley, Rucker, right
end; Baxter, Rucker, left end; Dorsey, Monahan,
quarter-back; Shannon, Lamar, Hull, full-back;
Hewlette, Dickerson, right half; McCutchen, Hull,
left half.
Substitutes, Dean, Hardy , Potts, Walden, Smith,
Clay, and Calhoun.
155
Baseball Team*
J900-J90J.
M. M. DICKERSON
SANDY BEAVER (Captain)
GORDAN |
HULSEY j
•TLUlvI*
)
......... Coach
..... Catcher
BLACKSHEAR •»
RICHARDSON j
...... Pitcher
WALKER .......... .... Shortstop
JAQUES ..........., . . . Center Field
T^irQfr 'RaQf*
McMULLAN j
. . . . Third Base
GORDAN
-\
RICHARDSON > ....... . . . Second Base
HULL
J
McCALLA .........
MCWHORTER ....... . . . . Right Field
Substitutes.
HINES
. . . . . Left Field
MONK
156
BOWER
157
'59
Tennis*
Manager.
JOHN MONAHAN
Athletic Council,
FIRST TERM.
A. PRATT ADAMS !_....
HAROLD HIRSCH J
H. J. LAMAR .........
R. G. STEPHENS ........
W. D. HOYT .........
A. PRATT ADAMS j
R. L,. DENMARK
) ••••••
W. M. DAVIS .........
E. H. CLAY ..........
JOHN BANKS .........
JOHN L,. ERWIN ........
JOHN MONAHAN ........
A. H. PATTERSON .......
DR. CAMPBELL .........
JOHN WELCH .........
F. R. MITCHELL ........
JUDGE COBB ..........
F. K. McCuTCHEN ......
A. T. Cox ...........
H. C. JOHNSON ........
SECOND TERM.
President Athletic Association . .
........
Vice-President .........
Treasurer ...........
Secretary ...........
......... H. J. LAMAR
........ H. H. GORDON
......... H. M. SCOTT
Editor-in-Chief Red and Black . .
........ J. D. BRADWELL
Football Manager .......
Manager Second Team .....
Baseball Manager .......
Track Manager ........
Tennis Manager ........
Physical Director .......
Faculty Member ........
Resident Alumnus Member ...
Non-resident Alumnus Member .
Trustee Member ........
Football Captain ........
Baseball Captain ........
Track Captain .........
....... HAROLD HIRSCH
........... . . . .
......... JOHN BANKS
........ NOEL P. PARK
........ JOHN MONAHAN
....... A. H. PATTERSON
..... PROFESSOR R. E. PARK
......... E. H. DORSEY
........ F. R. MITCHELL
.......... JUDGE COBB
....... F. M. RIDLEY, JR.
.......... S. BEAVER
.......... S. S. DEAN
162
J. B. McCuRRY
Annual Field-Day Programme.
EVENT.
FIRST,
SECOND.
HIS RECORD. COLLEGE
RECORD.
HOLDER.
100-Yard Dash.
McCutchen, Johnson, H., Baxter, Ridley,
104-5.............. 10 sec. ............ Johnson H., '01
Hammer Throw.
Archer, Bennett, Hewlette, Galloway, R.,
Dean.................. ................................
Hewlette......... 74.4................ 92ft. 8 in........ Moore, '00
High Jump.
Hewlette, John«on, H., Ridley, Hardy, Cal-
5 ft. 2 in ......... 6 ft. 6in......... Wrigley, '96
220-Yard Dash.
24 1-6.............. 22 3-6 sec......... H. O. Cox, '00
Shot Put.
Bennett, Hewlette, Nix, Parka, B. G., Lamar,
Calloway, R ....................................... Nix ............... Hewlette.......... 36.3...... .......... 36ft. 4J in ...... F. Price,
Law, '95
220-Yard Hurdle Race.
Hardy
Hart, Hardy, Dorsey, Parks, B. G., Dean..... Dean............... (3) Parki. ....... 30 1-6... ........... 274-6sec......... Black, '98
Pole Vault.
Dorsey, Latimer, Rucker, Wright, J.,
Bower, McWhorter, C. S., Forbes, John­
son, H.. ................................. ............ Latimer...........
(8) Dorsey
163
8ft. 9 in... ...... 9ft. 7} in ........ Mclntosh, '99
Annual Field-Day Programme.—Continued.
FIRST.
EVENT.
SECOND.
HIS RECORD. COLLEGE
RECORD.
HOLDER.
Mile Run.
Rucker, Boyd, Scott, H., Hart, Lamar, Beid,
H. C., Smith, W. M............. ............... Hart............... Rucker... .........
(3) Scott
Law, '98
120-Yard Hurdle Racei
Hardy, Dorsey, Dean, Parks, B. G., Hewlette. Hardy ............ Parks.............. 20 sec... ........... 20 sec. ............ Hardy
(8) Dorsey
50-Yard Three-Legged Race.
Nix and Thompson, Schirm and Starnes,
Hardy and Dean, Parks, B. G., and
Backer ...............................................
440-Yard Dash.
Baxter, Scott, Newton, Starnes, Schirm,
Camp, Lamar, Bichardson, F., Hewlette.
Broad Jump.
McCutchen, Johnson, H., Calloway, B.,
Bidley..................... ...........................
Half-MUe Run.
Boyd, Wright, Manley, Lamar,
W. G.,
50-Yard Sack Race.
Starnes, Dorsey, Dean, Lamar, Beid, H. C.,
NIT
P«rlrl
(8; Camp
17 ft. 10J in.
Ridley.. ...........
17 ft. 6 in.
Wright ........... \( Thompson
Manley
60 sec.... ..........
H. O. Cox, '00
fiS 4-fi fl*w»
«
17 ft. 4J in.
20ft. 4 in. ....... Weaver, '99
2 min. 22 2-6 sec 2 m. 10 8-6 sec.. Donaldson, '99
Parks... ........... Dean...............
Relay Teams.
Junior...........
164
Law, '01
Pandora*
Editors of PANDORA from J886 to the Present Time.
VOLUME I, 1886 —Editor-in-Chief, G. N. Wilson, K A. Bus­
iness Manager, W. B. Cook, A T Q. Associate Editors,
W. E. Wootten, 2 A E ; S. McDaniel, X *; C. F. Rice,
X * ; C. H. Wilcoi, K A ; W. A. Speer, * A 6; F. F.
Stone, * A 9; R. D. Meador, A T C; M. B. Bond, A T A;
W. S. Upshaw, A T A ; K. S. Moye, * T A ; P. L. Wade,
* T A; A. W. Wade, 2 N; W. G. Brown, 2 N.
VOLUME VI, 1893—Editor-in-Chief, Harry Hudson, K A.
Business Manager, F. G. Barfield, 2 A E. Associate
Editors, C. R. Nisbet, X * j N. B. Stewart, A T C; A. O.
Halsey, 2 N; H. A. Alexander; E. G. Cabaniss, * A 6;
F. G. Johnson, A T C; Eugene Dodd, X *.
VOLUME VII, 1894—Editors-in-Chief, C. R. Tidwell, A T Q;
Noel Moore, 2 A E. Business Managers, Paul L. Flem­
ing, X *; John D. Stelling, A T U. Associate Editors,
L. D. Fricks, 2 N; W. P. Harbin, X *; H. Brown,
K A ; George W. Beckett, * A 6.
VOLUME II, 1887—Editor-in-Chief, C. F. Rice, X *. Busi­
ness Manager, J. W. Daniel, K A ; Associate Editors,
T. W. Reed, * A 6; G. Waters, * T A ; W. J. Shaw,
2 N ; H. K. Milner, A T C ; A. L. Franklin, A T A.
VOLUME VIII, 1896—Editor-in-Chief, W. A. Harris, X *.
Business Manager, J. J. Gibson, A T^Q. Associate Edi­
tors, H. H. Steiner, 2 A E; J. W. Morion, K A; W. W.
Chandler, A T U; W. L. Kemp, 2 N ; J. T. Dunlap,
* A 6 ; H. V. Black, X * ; J. G. Smith, Non-Fraternity.
VOLUME III, 1888—Editor-in-Chief, Albert Howell, K A.
Business Manager, A. W. Griggs, A T A. Associate
Editors, W. L. Moore, 2 A E ; T. R. Crawford, AID;
F. W. Coile, 2 N; Lucien L. Knight, X *; W. M.
Glass, A T A.
VOLUME IV, 1890—Editor-in-Chief, John D. Little, 2 A E.
Business Manager, W. K. Wheatford, 2 N. Associate
Editors, F. E. Calloway, K A ; S. J. Tribble, * A 6 ;
J. G. Crawford, 2 N ; W. D. Ellis, X * ; W. L. Stallings,
A T A ; W. N. Smith, X * ; E. A. Cohen.
VOLUME IX, 1896—Editor-in-Chief, Pliny Hall, K A. Busi­
ness Manager, J. G. Pitman, 4> A 6. Associate Editors,
M. M. Lockart, 2 A E ; J. B. Connally, X *; Fred
Morris, 2 N; C. H. Holden, A T C; J. M. Stephenson,
Jr., A T Q; H. V. Black, X * ; T. A. Neal; R. B.
N alley.
VOLUME V, 1892—Editors-in-Chief, J. F. Lewis, X *; L. L.
Brown, A T Q. Business Managers, W. E. Cristie, 2 N ;
W. T. Kelley, A T C. Associate Editors, J. C. Kimball,
2 A E; Roy Dallas, * A 6; J. R. Lane, £ A E ; E. W.
Frey, X *.
VOLUME X, 1897—Editor-in-Chief, H. G. Colvin, 2 A E.
Business Manager, R. E. Brown, A T Q. Associate Edi­
tors, F. L. Fleming, X *; J. W. Spain, K A ; Harry
Dodd, X *; P. S. Smith, * A 6 ; A. L. Tidwell, A T Q;
H. Lovejoy, 2 N ; W. B. Kent; J. W. Hendricks.
166
VOLUME XI, 1898—Editors-in-Chief, Harry Dodd, X *; Hugh
"White, 2 N; Business Manager, J. C. McMicbael, K A.
Associate Editors, C. H. Black, X *; E. E. Pomeroy,
2 A E; C. Westbrook, A T C; J. T. Dorsey, * A 6; H. B.
Perkins, A T Q.
VOLUME XIII, 1900—Editors-in-Chief, Archibald Blackshear,
K A ; Fair Dodd, X *. Business Manager, F. E. Brodnaz,
A T Q. Associate Editors, F. P. Calhoun, X *; E. P.
Shannon, * A O; F. G. Tupper, 2 A E; J. P. Gairdner,
2 N ; William Davis ; E. H. Hamby.
VOLUME XII, 1899—Editors-in-Chief, Garrard Glenn, 2 A E;
A. P. Adams, X *. Business Manager, P. E. Johnson,
X *. Associate Editors, J. B. McCurry, K A; W. S.
Blun, A T a; F. E. Brodnax, A T Q ; W. E. Watkins,
2 N; D. G. Heidt; J. W. Mason.
VOLUME XIV, 1901—Editors-in-Chief, E. P. Shannon, * A 6 ;
J. D. McCartney, 2 A E. Business Manager, Jack Banks,
X *. Associate Editors, P. A. Williams, 2 N ; V. H.
Bullard, A T Q; R. G. Stephens, K A; I. M. Putnam,
K 2; W. D. Hoyt, X *; James L. Sibley.
I6 7
Editors " Red and Black/'
First Term.
JOHN BANKS .......... Athletic Editor
W. M. DAVIS ........ Business Manager
NOEL PARK ..... Assistant Business Manager
A. PRATT ADAMS ........ Editor-in-Chief
E. R. CAMP ......... Exchange Editor
C. H. WHITFIHLD ........ Local Editor
Second Term.
FRANK HAPP ......... Athletic Editor
REMER L. DENMARK ...... Editor-in-Chief
ANDREW CALHOUN ...... Exchange Editor
G. W. LEGWIN ........ Associate Editor
E. L. CAMP ........ .V . Local Editor
SAM JOHNSON ........ Business Manager
DAN DUPREE .......... Assistant Business Manager
Third Term.
L. E. TATE .......... Athletic Editor
MITCHELL KING ......... Local Editor
PAUL BROWN ......... Exchange Editor
J. D. BRADWELL ........ Editor-in-Chief
E. M. DONALSON ....... Associate Editor
S. J. Nix .......... Business Manager
D. H. DUPREE .......... Assistant Business Manager
168
EDITORS FIRST
EDITORS SECOND TERM
TERM
EDITORS THIRD TERM
'? i-.l
To Renee.
Arch little maiden, your smile and your eyes
Tell me, though young, you are awfully wise.
Child though you may be—what matter it then ?
Tou are match with your arts for a dozen of men.
-
Innocent maid, whom no pretense deceives,
You welcome the suitor who trusts and believes,
And judge not his suit by his fame or his pelf,
But see the true merit and worth of himself.
Sweet little girl, it is just such as you,
Makes this world pleasant for journeying through.
An angel descended from Heaven a while,
Clothed in its brightness and bringing its smile.
R6nee, my dear, you may trample my heart
Under your feet, if you will For my part,
No revenge will I take, but to Heaven I'll pray
To keep you forever, as sweet as to-day !
,'' J-*..-
EDWIN VAIL.
f
To Renee Asleep.
Alas I 'T is in vain all my arts have been plied;
Down on her cheek the long eyelashes sweep.
Weary is she, and although I have tried
To please her—her lids droop, and Renee 'a asleep.
Sleep, little maiden, and sweet be thy dreams.
What though thou slightest the suit I would pay !
Heavy thine eyelids have shut out the beams,
That thine eyes from the sunlight have gathered all day.
What a sweet picture she makes, as she lies
With head on her arm, in a tangle of brown 1
She is dreaming of fairies, she can not disguise
Her smile, as she greets them in Lullaby town.
Dear little maiden, some lovers might grieve
At the thought of your coldness, and be in despair.
Happy am I, that you do not deceive I
Heaven watch over you ! This is my prayer.
EDWIN VAIL.
171
Editors.
,\\
li
F. H. BARRETT, '02
R. J. BACON, JR., Law, '01
R. H. BOOTH, Law, '01
W. D. HOYT, '01
E. A. DUKE, '01
E. W. RAGSDALE, '02
Advisory Committee.
A. P. ADAMS, Law
J. D. McCARTNEY, '01
Business Manager.
W. M. HARDY, '02
Assistant Business Manager.
J. D. WING, '03
172
EDITORS
173
•NIGGER"
174
A
BOUT three thousand years ago the unterrified Democracy of Greece was under the
control of a clique of gods and goddesses
called the Olympian Council. Led by the mightyZeus, they formed a ring which ruled the Grecian
people for centuries. As a still greater handicap
to the country, heroes were then so thick in Greece
that you could not throw a stone inside the city
limits of Athens without hitting one of them, and
you could not go down to the post-office in Sparta
without tripping over the feet of the cheap thirdclass immortals that loafed on the doorsteps.
Old Zeus had stood this accumulation for a long
time, but he wearied of it. In order to improve
the situation he decided to weed out the superfluous
stock of heroes by exciting a war.
Thirty centuries or more have elapsed since Zeus
stirred up the fighting blood of Greece's choicest
cut-throats, brt the facts about that famous fight
have been so cob-webbed with the dreamings of
poets and the dust of ages that they have never been
told in the shape of naked truth.
A young man named Paris, of Troy, was made
a judge in one of the goddesses' beauty shows.
Since he could not avoid it, he made a decision and
awarded both diploma and medal to Aphrodite.
There were others in the contest. They charged
that Paris had carelessly accepted a bribe too
openly, but still the decision stood, and the corrupt
judge went at once to Sparta to spend his ill-gotten
wealth. At Sparta, he was received into the best
society. He first visited one of his old college
chums, Mr. Castor, the inventor of the well-known
Castor Oil, who was the senior partner of the drug
firm of Castor & Pollux. By him, Paris was in­
troduced to the Hon. Menelaus, who was then at
the summit of his fame as the boss of Spartan
politics. Castor and Menelaus were great friends.
Menelaus allowed Castor to keep his drug-store
and blind bar open on Sunday and in return for this
favor Castor furnished the oil for the political
machine.
Mrs. Helen Menelaus (nee Pauline) was at that
time the belle of Sparta, and she was considered
175
" Never," replied the fair Helen.
" Very well, we shall go at once. In fact,
Madame Helen, we shall elope. Have your bag­
gage ready as soon as possible."
" It is very annoying," said Helen, " but my
husband has used my Saratoga trunk to take his
lunch to the picnic, and I can't find my telescope
anywhere."
" Ah, I see; you have lost your grip. Never
mind, we shall get along without it. I still have
mine. Let me try this skeleton key on your
husband's cash box,—it doubtless contains some­
thing worthy of my steal."
Helen went to her desk and wrote the following
telegram to Menelaus:
by the best judges to be the ten-thousand-dollar
beauty of the country. She was all the rage. Her
picture was in all the face-powder and complexion
soap advertisements, and when Paris came to
Sparta the cigarette manufacturers had begun to
use it in their " Spartan Straight-Cut " boxes.
One day, while Paris was visiting at the Menelaus mansion, Mr. Menelaus was so giddy and
foolish as to go down to Crete on a Sunday-school
excursion. Assisted by Aphrodite, the prize god­
dess of the Beauty Show, the gay young Trojan
" Hon. N. G. Menelaus, Crete.
Have gone off with handsomer man. Good-bye
Meny. Incomprehensibility.
t HELEN."
" This is all right, of course," said Paris, as he
looked at the message, " but what in the name of
Zeus does that last word mean? "
" Oh, nothing; but you see it makes ten and it
don't cost any more. I just put down the longest
word I knew."
" Hadn't you better leave it out," asked Paris;
" It doesn't do any good, and it might worry the
old man."
" Never," replied Helen, decidedly; " I don't care
if it does worry him. It '11 do him good. How
much do you suppose he has worried me,—staying
planned and schemed. The man and the opportu­
nity were there.
" Madame," said Paris, as they arose from the
dinner table on that eventful day, " have you ever
seen the city of Troy? "
176
out nights and going off on wars and hunting trips?
It's time he was worried a little."
" Well, let it go. But I suspect that when he
gets that message he '11 start on another hunting
trip."
" Let him hunt; I 'm game. Have you got the
tickets? "
Within a few days this venturesome couple had
safely arrived at Troy.
Upon receipt of the message from his wayward
wife, Menelaus returned in hot haste to Sparta,
swearing large round oaths in choicest Greek and
vowing vengeance upon Paris and all his people.
Arriving at th* house of his brother Agamemnon
at about midnight, he jerked on the front door­
bell so fiercely that he pulled the knob off. Aga­
memnon stuck his classic head out of an up-stairs
window. " What do you want? " he asked, in a
voice that would have come from his shoes if he had
had them on.
Menelaus gasped hysterically, " Oh, Agamem­
non, my wife—"
" Well, send for the doctor ; don't bother me.
What in the name of Cerberus do you want with
me at this time of night? I 'm supposed to be
asleep."
Menelaus gasped again. He was purple in the
face with rage. " She 's gone," he howled; " she 's
gone off to Troy with that rascally Paris. Perfid­
ious wretch!"
Agamemnon fell down-stairs.
Assisted by his brother, and also by all of his
political supporters in Sparta, Menelaus at once
organized an army for the purpose of taking Troy
up by the roots and removing it from the map. All
the heroes of Greece flocked to the assistance of the
Spartans, anxious to make use of their unemployed
heroism, which was becoming weak and flabby from
lack of exercise. Among them were Diomedes,
Nestor, Ajax, with his patent puncture-proof shield,
and an Ithacan farmer named Odysseus who
claimed to be the champion wing shot of the world.
The famous Achilles also joined the army, bring­
ing with him his friend Patroclus and many other
followers, all of them panting for gore and glory.
Meanwhile Paris, assisted by Priam, his father
(who was then Mayor of Troy), began to collect a
force to defend himself and his prize from the
avenging Grecians. Hector, a brother of Paris,
took an active part in the defence of the city. When
the Greeks approached the city, all of the Trojans
except .SCneas deemed it prudent to retire within
the walls at once. ^Eneas tarried outside to gather
up his live-stock and that worthy hero was promptly
chased under cover by Achilles, barely escaping
with his life.
For ten long years the Grecians loafed around the
walls of Troy, calling the Trojans names and dar­
ing them to come out and fight. The Trojans
peeped over the walls and made faces at them and
asked if Achilles wouldn't like to come in to supper.
Every little while a squad of venturesome Trojan
heroes would stroll outside of the city and get into
The Greeks then put their heads together to
devise a scheme by which they might enter the city
without being detected by the guards. The goddess
Athene, who had been to school at the University
of Athens, suggested that a pony be constructed by
means of which they might pass the examination
of the watchful guards.
The plans and specifications submitted by Athene
were accepted and a large hollow horse was built of
fir planks. Inside of this huge effigy was stowed
a choice assortment of the finest heroes of Greece.
The Grecian army then retired, leaving the game in
the hands of a bunco-steerer named Sinon. This
famous confidence man advised the unsuspecting
Trojans to take the horse into the city, and they
were green enough to do it.
an altercation with some Greeks. These little de­
bates generally ended in the extinguishment of
many shining lights of that heroic age.
One day Achilles got mad at some of the Grecian
leaders, and, refusing to continue the argument, he
crawled into his tent and sulked. The Greeks being
without the aid of their best warrior, the Trojans
took advantage of the chance to make a score. Hec­
tor sallied forth and drove back the Greeks with
great slaughter, killing Achilles' friend Patroclus.
Hearing of the death of Patroclus, Achilles forgot
his anger and returned to the fray, killing Hector
and chasing his followers back into the city.
During all these military operations Achilles was
protected by a complete suit of the finest Harveyized steel armor,bearing the trade-mark of Hephaestos & Vulcan, and guaranteed by the makers to
be free from all or any defects in material or work­
manship. A flaw in the heel of this armor was the
occasion of his receiving a mortal wound from the
hand of Paris. Achilles' wife brought suit in the
Court of Athene and was awarded heavy damages.
Odysseus and Ajax were candidates for the posi­
tion of Grand Mogul of the Greeks, which had been
held by Achilles. Odysseus was elected, and Ajax,
being sorely disappointed, gracefully fell upon his
sword and expired.
But Troy could not be captured as long as the
Palladium, a charmed statue, given by Zeus, re­
mained within the city. Disguised as a tramp,
Odysseus sneaked into the city, swiped the precious
statue and escaped.
That night before the moon was up, while the
Trojans were refreshing themselves with sardines
and pop-skull whiskey, the gray-whiskered old
Nestor slid down the horse's front leg and let the
Grecian army in through the back gate. The heroes
all tumbled out of the wooden horse and Troy im­
mediately fell with a dull sickening thud.
178
Menelaus then proceeded to make a bon-fire of
the city and also had the inhabitants pacified by the
process of extermination,—much to his own satis­
faction and amusement.
JEneas and his aged father were allowed to escape
the general destruction. Taking with them nothing
but a hand-organ and a small chimpanzee, they
went at once to Italy and founded there a race of
new people who were afterwards known as the
Dagoes.
'V
" NTI
After attending the funeral of Priam and a few
other prominent Trojan officials, Menelaus went to
the house of Paris to meet his long-lost wife. Walk­
ing boldly into the house, he found the fair lady
busily packing her trunk.
" Helen! " he called, in a stage whisper.
Heaving a heavy sigh as easily as if it had been
a feather, Helen fell upon his sunburned neck and
wept. " Meny," said she, " how did you leave the
baby? " " Out of sight," said he, " —and hearing."
My Pipe.
O faithful comrade, stanch and true,
Midst changing scenes and faces new,
Thou hast e'er my refuge been
From debts and woes and hateful men.
If love grow cold, if friendship cease,
In thee I find content and peace.
If pay-day '8 far and I am "broke "
My " bustednesi" will end in smoke.
And when to rest from earthly toil
I shuffle off this mortal coil,
No prieit I want nor shrift from friar,
But only thou, my trusty briar.
Do thou lie fast within my hand
Until we reach Styx's farther strand ;
For, thou once lit, flames cut no ice—
Thou 'dst make in hell my paradise.
180
The Freshman's Farewell.
1 Oh, won't you look upon me
Ae I kneel here at your feet ?
Just one little look of pleasure
From those eyes so grave and sweet ?
It would make me, oh, so happy I
To know I 'm in your grace,
And to have you look upon me
With a smile upon your face.
I 've known and loved and sought thee,
Sometimes with hope, then fear,
And all of this has cost me—
First, a smile, then groan, now tear.
With a broken heart, I leave thee—
Leave thee to another's care ;
But whoe'er it is that wins thee,
Wins a jewel, ah, so rare ! "
B.
Sweet Variety.
" How happy I could be with either,
Were t'other dear charmer away,"
And another would do if neither
Would bother me just for a day.
One man is as good as another,
" And just a bit better," said Pat.
So, I can be happy with " t' other,"
" A man is a man for a' that."
What matters a formal affiance,
When others are mine to command ?
Small gifts for the sweets of suppliants,
A smile, or a touch of the hand.
When others with charms so beguiling,
They tempt me, ( but still I am true ! )
Yet, I can be loved for a-smiling,
And any old charmer will do.
He's gone, my betrothed, and I miss him,
Sometimes—when no other is near,
And, sometimes, I wish I could kiss him,
And sometimes, I drop him a tear.
My heart is for him and no other,
God bless him wherever he roams ;
But, now, I '11 be happy with " t' other,"
And happy with him when he comes.
DAN HUNNICUTT.
181
44 In Lovers' Lane."
Three gay young men went out a bike,
' "With each gallant a miss.
They rode—until they reach'd the pike,
In
dom
like
file
ranthii.
But when they reach'd the wooded lane
They (ought for sweeter blus,
So, o'er the quiet, shady plain
They
rode
The road led thro' a narrow pais—
Nor did in come amiis—
Each lad still rode beside his lass,
But
«r
like
clotup
this.
in
twot
like
thi*.
The lad in front his lassie press'd
And tried to steal a kiss—
They fell, as also did the rest,
Alltangleduplikethis !*!*!*!
HUNNICUTT.
182
Things the Catalogue Does Not Tell.
D
EAR JACK: I understand that you contem­
plate going off to College next fall, and as we
fellows are very anxious for you to join us
here I take the liberty of sending a catalogue of the
University; but there are numerous advantages of
this place that no catalogue can tell, and pardon me
while I presume upon your time to set forth a few
of them.
Did you ever consider that one of the chief con­
trolling forces of a man's character is his environ­
ment. This is* not only a theory of the psycholo­
gists but a fact of practical life, and since it wields
so potent an influence it is surely a factor that
should be regarded at all times, and particularly
when one is looking for a place to spend the forma­
tive period of his life. Now all this argues that you
should come to Athens to college, for here we have
the environment that will tend to make a gentleman
and a student out of any person on earth.
The place itself is an ideal college town —not too
large nor too small. You remember that the Uni­
versity was founded more than one hundred and
fifteen years ago, and that its buildings were not
only almost the first to be constructed in the town,
but even in the county. Thus the town has grown
up around the University and has adapted itself to
the needs of the school, so that its twelve thousand
people consider the interests of one as the interests
of the other and are never pitting themselves
against the students as the city people do in many
college centers.
Because the University has been here so long it
has made Athens a seat of culture and refinement
such as is seldom found. Nearly every person here,
both man and woman, has a collegiate education;
the very air of the place tells of the Henry Gradys,
the Ben Hills and the Cobbs that made it their
home. All this environment puts learning at such a
premium and ignorance at such a discount that the
student can hardly help choosing the former, even
if he were not naturally so inclined.
You have often heard it said that when a boy goes
to college he goes there for mental training alone.
Well, that is a mere soap-bubble theory, for all mind
training and no self-culture leaves Jack an awkward
boy, and that's not the kind that grows into success­
ful men. A little social inter-mixture is the health­
iest thing in the world and the sort of social inter­
mixture that Athens affords is certainly a most de­
lightful one. The girls are prettier than the ones
in your own town, and as gracious and charming
as the " queen " herself. Nor is society dominated
by the " all money and no manners " class. Pro­
vided a boy is refined, and gentlemanly, his social
success depends hardly a straw's breath on his finan­
cial condition. Society in Athens is always simple,
always pleasant, and it is never too exacting.
183
The conditions of every-day existence are another
thing a person should take into consideration in
selecting a college. At the University you have
presented both the fraternity and the non-fraternity
life; both have their supporters, and both are the
best of their kinds. If your lot should be with the
fraternities, there will be added to it the delights of
the chapter-house home, which at Georgia is re­
garded by both faculty and citizens as a veritable
home. Club-house life gives the satisfaction here
that it does at few places in the country, and it holds
the favor of everybody. But should your lot not be
with the fraternities these every-day pleasures are
far from wanting; life in some private family or in
the old dormitory all have their advantages and
their special privileges. After a few more months
there will be a new dormitory, too, that will be
fitted up like a palace, speaking in terms of college
comparisons, and it will accommodate a hundred
boys.
But in these days of diversified knowledge, what
is man's chief mental end? Is it to narrow his mind
by absolute specialization, or is it not rather to
broaden it by the acquisition of wisdom, even if that
acquisition precludes any specialization at all? It is
a lamentable truth that many colleges do really
have that former end in view, and that Georgia does
not have it is one of her greatest advantages. Could
that college be called narrow which has almost as
a motto " Wisdom, rather than knowledge, is
power." The day has come when broadness of in­
tellect instead of mere information, counts for suc­
cess ; the University of Georgia presents the means
of gaining this breadth that are the best in the
world.
One of the chief of tfiese means is by lectures on
intellectual topics by outside men. As often as once
every week or so there is an outside lecture on some
subject of particular interest, perhaps it may come
on Saturday morning after chapel, or on some night
under the auspices of the Engineering Society, or
the Young Men's Christian Association, or the Lit­
erary or Press Club; or, again, perhaps it may be at
Lucy Cobb. Instruction by lectures has come to
be a chosen method in late days, and you can de­
pend upon it that it is not only a very satisfactory,
but also a very delightful method. The State Uni­
versity is always the headquarters of education in
the State, and because it is we often have the privi­
lege of visits from noted men that qther institutions
of learning do not have, these men put their best
strength in their lectures, and it is reflected in the
whole tenor of the College.
Another advantage you will find at our College
that even the Northern universities do not present
is personal contact with the professors. They are
not the great inapproachable bugbears that you
have been taught to think such men, but they are
your friends. There is not a man on the faculty
but is willing and anxious to help a boy whenever
he can. You need feel no hesitancy in going to
them for advice even as personal friends.
If you have literary talent and wish to exercise
it, or if you have none and wish to acquire it, come
184
to Georgia. There are more student publications
here than most colleges of twice the size can sup­
port. If a man inclines toward newspaper work the
Red and Black, a typical weekly paper is open to
him; if he inclines toward pure literary work the
Georgian is his developer; if he prefers scientific
study the editors of the Engineering Annual will be
glad to cultivate his ability for writing, and lastly
the PANDORA will coach him up and give him op­
portunity all around. These publications are every
one student enterprises, and are supported prac­
tically alone by the students; their columns are
always open to them and they never go unfilled.
Debates, both intercollegiate and local, are very
common things with us, and you have only to try
to win a medal or a place as representative in them,
to realize the stage of development this work has
reached. You have doubtless heard of our recent
victory over North Carolina; well, the men who won
that debate did not work much harder than some
of the fellows who are laboring for victory for their
society in a local contest. The training given here
in writing and delivering speeches is as good as you
can find no matter how far you look.
While Georgia's athletics have not been particu­
larly successful of late years from the standpoint of
victory, that very fact is prima facie evidence of
their success in another respect, and that respect is
the main end and justification of college athletics;
it is the affording of wholesome exercise not only
to students who are born athletes, but to students
who are athletes for the sake of health. It would be
a safe assertion to say that fully half of the students
that enter college could make an athletic " G " by
good practice. A majority of the representative
athletes have been developed to that point of effi­
ciency from green aspirants. Every line of activity
in this field is given full room, and if a person does
not like football or baseball, the tennis courts and
the track are open to him ; if none of these suit, he
may find his forte in the gymnasium.
Neither are religious influences found wanting;
in fact, they are very much evidenced.
The College Young Men's Christian Association
occupies a position of respect and power among the
boys and it is unnecessary to speak of the city
churches in this connection, for any one should
know that the churches in Athens are as strong and
helpful as they are anywhere in the country. The
pastors all take an interest in the boys and regard
them as members of their own congregations.
I fear I have trespassed on entirely too much of
your time, but only let my efforts be successful and
neither you nor I shall ever regret the imposition.
W. M. H.
185
A Face.
There '> ». picture jn the Banner that is haunting me to-night—
Just a face with dreamy eyes that seem to look another way ;
And a wealth of hair above it with a ringlet on the right,
While an ear is hid among it—and my Cupid 's there to stay.
There's a nose'that's just perfection (something that you seldom see);
There 's a mouth that's almost smiling, there 's a twinkle in her eye,
And her lips are full of pasiion just as sweet as sweet can be,
And an oval chin so charming I could love her till I die.
Head was never poised more graceful, face was never half so sweet—
Never since the Virgin Mary have such eyes been teen on earth.
It would be a taste of heaven such a charming girl to meet—
Just to see her face a-smiling and to hear her voice in mirth.
As I look at her I wonder—well, about a thousand things—
Would she'let me keep her picture if she knew I loved it so?
But I '11 cut it out and keep it just for luck until it brings
lie a message from my sweetheart—such a mascot will, I know.
—DAN.
Here 'e to the men that conquered Spain—
To the " pigs " that wouldn't suey ;
l>ad cest to the men that sunk the Maine—
A Toast.
Good luck to our gallant Dewey.
Here 's a health to the maidens fair
That kissed the hero bold;
Good luck to them till gray is the hair
That now is eighteen-carats gold.
Here 's a mint julep made of " Old,"
For our boys who fought so well;
And here is a drop of water cold
For the Spaniards now in hell.
Luck to the girl, Kentucky bred,
Whose parents named her " Sueie ; "
Here 's a hip-hooray for those who wed
To the privates, now, we '11 drink all round,
And soldiers, all, "Attention ! "
Good health to those without a wound—
To all the rest a pension.
And name a son for Dewey.
—D. H. HUNNICUTT.
186
''''THE KIDNAPING<* SAMMY JOHNSON!
The Fable (In Slang) of How the Boys Did the Pat Crowe Act to Sammy Johnson.
(WITH APOLOGIES TO GEORGE ADE.)
O
NCE upon a Time there was a Broad Youth,
named Johnson who lived in Atlanta, but that
Burg got too small for him, and it was Him
to the Choo-Choo, and off for the Diploma Well at
Athens.
Sam was as Verdant as a Vernal Meadow when
he first struck the Classic Shades of the Sacred Cen­
ter of Learning, but he soon got Next to Himself
and began to Run Things. He was a Youth of
Great Possibilities, and he began to Organize before
he had been in College a Week.
Within twenty-six days he had Mark Hanna laid
in the Shade, and Boss Croker and Tom Platt
looking like a thirty-cent Piece with a Hole in it.
He could give Matt Quay Cards and Spades and
Little Casino and beat him out.
The Main Guy of the Diploma Well, whom the
Y. M. C. A. Molly-boys call " our Honored Chan­
cellor " clamped his Optics on S. Middleton and
Communed with Himself thusly: " That Geezer is
a Hot Cup of Tea. He Knows more about things
than I do ; I will make him Vice-Chancellor."
Then Sam began to do the Alexander Act and
Sighed for New Worlds to Conquer.
So he Started in to be a Social Success. All the
Squaws were Dotty about him, and would Walk
Miles to get the Loving Glance from his Cerulean
Lamps. One Night he had been Conferring a Lit­
tle Happiness on one of the Gentler Sex, and was
Hitting the Grit toward his Domicile, where he
Desired to Hit the Feathers. As he was going
past the City of the Dead at the 'Witching Midnight
Hour, about twenty-eight Bold Bad Highwaymen
Sprung up. They shoved 44/5 in Sam's Classical
Countenance, and took his Ticker and his Wad.
They then Bound his Tender Flesh with Cruel
Thongs, and Hied Away to the " Rural Regions,"
with Sam in their Wake. About Steen Miles from
Town, they entered a Hut with a Coco-Cola sign
on it, and Tied their Weeping Captive to the Bed
187
When the news reached Athens, Universal Mourn­
ing broke forth. All the Flags hung at Half Mast,
the church bells Tolled Mournfully, and all the
Calico in Town threw a few Spasms of Grief. Great
Mass-Meetings were held and by Strenuous Efforts
the forty-six cents were raised. Even Tight-Wad
and Pee-Wee Loosened Up with a Jitney apiece.
The Next Morning Sam was Ransomed—and when
Post. They then Dispatched the Following Note
to the Chancellor:
DERE CHAN CELLAR :
We have took away youre pet. You can get
Sammy back by paying a hansom ransom of 46
sents. We are concealed on the syllabubs of town
BLUD.
house No. 4—n—44.
188
he came back—the Sun burst Forth from Behind a
Cloud, the Church Bells rang Peals of Joy—and
the Athens Band played " Hail to the Chief."
Sam had his Mug struck and sent it to the Con­
stitution and had a two-column Puff about what a
Great Man he Was. So he was Happy, and the
Rags were Happy to Have their Hero Back and
the University Resumed Exercises.
MORAL :—" All's well that ends well."
MAC.
189
The Personal Reminiscences of Ham.
Told to a Reporter Daring the Days of Babel.
B
ABEL was on a boom. Seta and Nimrod, the
grandsons of Ham, were doing a land-office
business selling sandwiches, ginger-cakes and
soda pop to the Babel tower laborers. Their shop
was on Main Street and directly under the office of
the " Babel Times-Democrat."
Their store was the favorite loafing place of all
the tower workers, hen-pecked husbands, and lastly
for their own Grandpa Ham, now a hale old man
about eight hundred and thirty-nine years old, but
whose tongue was as loose and active as ever, and
many a stick of type had his yarns filled for me—
then an humble reporter on the aforesaid " TimesDemocrat." One night the rain was coming down
in sheets and slabs, and as I left the post-office,
the idea occurred to me, that as it was such a wet
night a larger crowd than usual would be hanging
about Seta & Nimrod's place, and perhaps I might
pick up an item or so of news. Accordingly I
stepped into the shop, drank a ginger pop and
sat down to see what was going on. I had
made several notes of local interest, such as elec­
tric lights being installed into the town, the con­
tract for elevators being let, Jabet Balba was sport­
ing a new automobile, etc., when in stepped my old
friend Ham, his raglan dripping with wet.
. " Rainin' purty hard outside, ain't it? " asked one
of the loafers, as he sent a stream of tobacco juice
against the stove and leaned back inquiringly in
his soap-box chair and whittling a piece of soft pine.
" You fellers ain't never seen no rain. This ain't
no mor'n a straw in er whirlwin' side de one I wuz
in onct—me an' the ole man an 'the boys," sarcas­
tically responded Ham, as he drew up an empty
cracker case and sat down upon it.
I guessed what was coming—a story which the
" Babel Howler " had often tried to draw from him,
and many were the copecks that had been spent in
treating to Milwaukee's famous in so doing, but all
in vain. He wouldn't draw.
Now if I could get this exclusive and run it in
the morning paper, the " Times-Democrat " would
score the beat of the century.
In a jiffy I had out my pencil and upon the re­
verse side of a tomato-can wrapper, I wrote in
shorthand the story of the flood, just as old Ham
told it.
After borrowing a slab of natural-leaf, biting off
the major portion thereof and handing back the
smaller piece to the lender, he contributed to the
beauty of the stove, and continued talking in a
peculiar mixture of coon dialect and sorry whitefolks gab—he being once a white man, and now a
negro.
" That ain't no lie—y 'all don't know rain when
yer see it. Whut 's mo' y 'all ain't never goin' to see
190
sich rain ez that wuz. Hit wuz the onliest one—a
sorter one p'formance act. Hit sorter soun's fishy,
I acknowledge, but hit's de gospel truf jes de same.
Well, hit wuz lak dis. Ev'ybody wuz gettin' so
tarnal mean that it wuz er shame to let um live
The men went out at night, and hung erbout s'loone
shootin' craps, playin' poker an' drinkin' liker wussen enny booze comedians you ever seen. They
never onct thought how wicked they wuz, but jes
kep' on keepin' dives open all night an' Sunday,
buyin' votes an' pullin' wires in polyticks, bettin' on
bisickle races an' prize fights. Sich prize fights
ez they wuz! Sharkey an' Jeffries wuzzen in it wid
dem.
" Well, the ^uss thing you know, my ole man—
he wuz powerful good, Noah wuz—he got a tip
straight, as to how they wuz goin' to be a flood
an' drown ev'ybody 'ceptin' him an' his fambly.
Then he tuk an built the owdashustest boat you
ever seen, three storis high and three hundred cubicks long. It could give hearts and spades to them
Atlantic liners an' then beat um out by a lap when
it com ter size. When it wuz finished, he went out
in de woods an' gethered in de crackerjackest lot of
animals, birds an' snakes which ever come down de
pike. I wuz allus erfraid of wil' animals, but I
clum er tree and watched um sloak in. Yer kin
talk erbout yer ' great an' only show,' yer Bamum's
circus, yer sag-in-back trained animals, but if de
flood had'n kilt all de foks I could a took jis one
half ob dem dat wuz in de ark, an got er hiperdrum
tent an' made jes money ter thro' at de birds.
' Ham's Cucus—the Bigges' and Onliest.'
" After dey wuz all in, de ole man called me, an'
I come shinnin down outen de tree an' started fer
de ark, but befo' I could walk fo' cubicks de rain,
hit started. An' sich er rain! I took er jump an'
reached de do' jest in time ter git in befo' de ole
man shet me out.
" I looked outen de winder and hit wuz sho rainin'. Draps wuz comin' down ez big ez er pig-skin
football. Well, hit rained, an' rained an' rained.
Hit did'n stop for forty days an' nights, but erlong
befo' dat we wuz er floatin' erbout in hot style. Hit
wuz fine fer erwhile fer none uv us had never rid
on a big bo't befo; but purty soon hit begin ter
git sorter tiresome and I started ter huntin' up
sump'n to 'muse myse'f wid. I wuz rummagin' er­
bout in de ole man's briches pockets which wuz
hangin' on a stob on de wall when, bless yer soul, I
found two dices—er set uv bones! De gov'ner
didn' wanter lose de breed so he foch erlong er
pair uv dice same as de rest of de animals. I slipped
um out whilst he wuzzen lookin' an' went lookin'
fer Shem and Japheth—' Phet' I called him fer
short—who wuz tryin' some new flies which dey
had sunt oft'n through de mail an' had jes got befo'
de flood come. De flies wuzzen no good an' dey
had only coched fo' minnus. Dat comes from
blevin' everything dey read in dese cheap trashy
papus.
" Purty soon dey quit fishin' an' we got up er
crap game which would make er Georgia nigger's
eyes bulge, an' 't want long befo' I had Shem an'
Phet on de pig. I wuz white den but I wuz goin'
191
ter be black and dare ain't no white man whut kin
shoot craps wid er nigger. We shot em fer a jit er
roll an fo' long I had way down in my jeans, evy
copeck them boys had. Dey wuz easy money. I
thought I 'd give Shem er chanct ter win some back
an' shelled out fo' bits an' told him I 'd roll high fer
his pants. His briches didn't cost but ninety-nine
copecks at a fire sale so he thought hit wuz er good
deal an' begin ter roll. De fust time he roll lebben,
de next he roll ten and den ten agin. Lordy, but
dat wuz er good role. I was skered my fo' bits wuz
gone, but I spit on one, made a cross mark on de
flo', blowed on my hands an' rolled lebben lak he
done de fus time. Come agin! an' I rolled seven.
Go down! an' I throwed ernuther an' won Shem's
pants. He had ter go ter bed an' have his vituls
sunt ter him 'till his ole woman could make him
ernother pair out No. XXX flour sacks.
tumblin' down de ladder hollerin' murder-fireperlice jes ez loud ez I could holler. The ole man
come er runnin' an' took de bulldog loose from
me an sunt her back to her pups where I had
trodded on one. I had ter eat offen de mantel­
piece an' sleep on mer face fer a mont'.
" At las' de ark set down ergin on de mountin'
an' de water went down. De govner built an orchid
an' a vin'yard an' begin ter farm proper. He planted
grapes lak he thought he had ter stock er big
market wid wine, when he wuz the only one ter
drink hit ez we wuz only erbout er hundred years
ole an' too young ter drink it with him he said.
But dat wine wuz most sholy good. De ole man
got ter be er regular booze grafter, an' one day
when I wuz tryin' ter squeeze sum wine outer de
bung hole of er keg whut uster have beer in it, I
hered the curiousest fuss you ever seen, er comin'
out de ole gent's libry. I keps er lissenin' an' purty
soon I hered 'im er tryin' ter sing one uv them
ragtime coon songs which wuz so poplar them days.
The ole man wuz erbout three sheets on de toot an'
havin 'er high rollin' time. We won't go home til
mornin', he hollered onct an' den he got patrotic
an' sung sumthin erbout the ' stars an' stripes.' He
wuz purty drunk den. Fo' long, he quit makin'
any noises an' I knovved he wuz teetotally fessed,
so I slipped easy lak into de room and sich a sight
you never seen. De ole man's silk dicer wuz on de
flo' squshed up lak he 'd set on it; his shoes wuz
hung on de gas jet an' he wuz on de flo' sleepin'
lak a log wid his feet on de sofa, an' a ceptin' one
" Well sech ez dis went on fer nigh onto sebben
mont, when de ole man ast me ter go up in de
lof an' let out er crow ter see if it could fin' any lan'.
" I wuz skeered ter go up amongst all them wil'
animals so I mumbled out as ter how bad my bed
wuz akin.
" Shem heard me an' hollered out ' col' feet.' I
could'n stan' dat, so I said I 'd go anyways, an' up
I went. I foun' de crow an' sunt him out an' had
started back ergin when I put my foot on sumthin
soft an' hered de offulest sound uv my life an' at
de same time sumthin coch me frum behin' on de
bottom ob my briches lak nail tongs 'til I come
192
sock, an' a collar an' a red necktie, he wuz ez
necked ez er jaybird in huckerbery time.
done the real thing by me, I declined with thanks.
I afterwards became editor and sole owner of
the greatest daily ever published in that grand but
doomed city of Sodom. We ran six automatic
self-feeding and cutting Hoe, triple deck presses and
our Sunday editions were crackajacks with three
hundred and forty pages, besides a sixty-page sup­
plement in fourteen colors, mostly shades in yellow.
Thoughtless, pessimistic people called it a " yellow
journal" and attributed the destruction of Sodom,
in a large measure to its presence. The presses
were burnt up though and I came near crying when
I saw Lot's wife turn to a pillar of salt and didn't
have a paper in which to write it up. She was a
society woman, you know, and the article would
have scored a big hit among the upper ten.
" Shem an Thet found out 'bout the gov'ner's
stunnin' jag an' crawfished in backered an put er
comfort over him—an' me—coz I did'n do ez they
done I wuz turned ez black ez the blackest nigger
in the State of Georgia."
Old Ham quit talking and spat at the unoffend­
ing stove as if it had been the cause of his downfall.
I saw he wasn't going to talk any more so I
shinned up-stairs, and in a few minutes by the
watch, I handed the astonished night editor the
biggest beat the Times-Democrat ever scored. The
next day the management of the Hou'ler offered me
two hundred copecks per—but as my own boss had
193
Then and Now.
18O1— 19O1.
L
ET us inquire into the condition of the Univer­
sity of Georgia in 1801—a new-born babe with
a glorious career awaiting her. Let us glance
at the matron and mother, as she is to-day—the
fountain-head of education, in the Empire State of
the South, with a past rich and blessed with mem­
ories of great men who have passed through her
portals—with a future as rich and promising in the
hopes of great men who will receive her blessings
and call her mother. " The roll-call of her alumni
and the noble status of her centennial year crowns
the grand old University with the laurel of perpetual
usefulness."
the election of Josiah Meigs, of Yale, as President,
The University of Georgia chartered in 1785 was
with a salary of $1,000 per annum. The senatus,
the second oldest State institution of its kind in
dissatisfied with their first action whereby Greens­
this country, antedated by Pennsylvania only. The
boro was selected as the site of the University, upon
senatus or governing body of the newly created
reconsideration decided to locate the University in
University decided upon Greensboro in Greene
County which embraced within its limits
Jackson
County as a suitable site for the buildings to be
county of Clarke. To quote the tablet
present
the
erected. The trustees had property in their charge,
" The site of this building was
College:
Old
on
many acres of new and virgin land in Northeast
of July, 1801 in the XXVI
day
VI
the
on
chosen
Georgia, bestowed upon the University by the
of the United States of
independence
the
of
year
Legislature. Accordingly, in 1801, with the money
Abraham Baldwin,
Walton,
George
by
America,
accruing from the sale of a portion of these lands,
and Hugh Law, a
Quiggs,
John
Milledge,
John
the machinery of education was set in motion by
194
committee from the Senatus Academicus of the
University of Georgia," and for the benefit of the
institution the adjacent land was on that day given
by John Milledge.
It will not be out of place here for a remark
relative to this gift of John Milledge. Far-seeing
enough to realize that higher educational facilities
would be of incalculable benefit to the State, he was
at the same time sufficiently patriotic and public
spirited to donate several hundred acres for the site
of the new University.
This gift was of invaluable aid to the struggling
institution, and fairly paved the way to whatever
prosperity she^has had. I do not think that the
University pays the respect to the memory of John
Milledge which his services for the infant institution
merited. He is not honored as he should be. I do
not think that it would be at all out of place were
there annually a celebration commemorating his
services, or perhaps it would be well were the new
dormitory to bear his name. I will venture to assert
that at present fully seventy-five per cent, of the men
who attend the University, leave, never hearing of
John Milledge, never knowing who he was or what
deeds he performed. It should be made apparent
to them, they should realize, that the present
position of the University is largely due to his work
in her behalf, not only his generous gift, but his
efficient service on the board of trustees.
Contrast the simple and primitive state of affairs
existing in 1801 with the complex workings of the
University to-day. The University was then the
proud possessor of one instructor and he the Presi­
dent ; to-day she employs twenty in Franklin Col­
lege and the State School of Mechanics alone.
Thirty students in comparison with more than three
thousand! Wonderful change! Miraculous trans­
formation! But remember that one hundred years
has intervened and the nineteenth century has ac­
complished marvels.
The trustees authorized and directed Meigs to
travel over the State and select such students as
were worthy of a collegiate education. This was
done and about thirty efficient students were
secured. Were the present methods the same?—but
the University is far more conservative to-day.
However that was all very good in its time as a
prosperous start was necessary.
Only the A. B. course was given in 1801, first as
a six-year course but soon shortened to four years.
The other degrees now offered, B. S., C. E., and
B. Ag. are the results of later years. The University
has advanced with the progress of science and art
until to-day she is on a par with any University in
the South. In some departments she has out­
stripped the others. A few months ago the new
department of electro-chemistry—a department of
which few of her sister institutions can boast—was
created.
In 1801, Franklin College alone existed. But the
turning of a hundred years has truly wrought
marvels, worked wonders. To-day in addition to
the University proper situated in Athens there are
as many as eight branch colleges, all integral parts
195
of the State University, all engaged in higher edu­
cation in and for the State of Georgia.
This leads us to the question of the support which
the Legislature has given and gives the University.
It is noted that in 1801 the trustees asked and the
Legislature gave. In 1901, again they asked and
again they were given unto. Let us not look at the
intervening years, of neglect, of pecuniary struggles
and hardships but have eyes for only the first and
last years of the University's existence when the
Legislature indeed realized their trust, the Univer­
sity's worth and the grand mission on which she
is bound.
In 1801, a few log huts were employed to teach
and inspire the few aspiring students. In 1901,
large, commodious and handsome buildings grace
the campus. Truly, a beautiful sight—the pictur­
esque buildings, the graded walks shaded by long
vistas of widespreading oaks, the beautiful lawns,
the symmetry everywhere.
The University was founded in a virgin wilder­
ness. Athens was unknown. The frontier of the
Cherokee country was distant only twelve miles;
nothing seemed conducive to the rise of an educa­
tional center. The forest was early cleared. Athens
is the result of the axe and hammer. Athens! Its
intonation carries a classical idea and meaning.
Can Athens live up to this idea? Athens indeed is
a cultured community, perhaps the center of culture
in the State. The students are surrounded on all
sides by beneficial and upraising influences calcu­
lated to make them stronger, truer, better citizens.
FRANK H. BARRETT.
196
Verses.
" A fig for care, and a fig for woe.
If I can't pay, why, I can owe."
UNIVERSITY'S SONS.
" With just enough learning to misquote."
— BENNETT, Law '01.
*
*
" The rose that all are praising,
Is not the rose for me."— WALDEN, Law '01.
" Midnight shouts and revelry,
Tipsy dance and jollity."
—ADAMS and* MCWHORTER at the Charity Ball.
*
*
" Pride in their port,
Defiance in their eyes."—IRISH CLUB.
" My mind to me a kingdom is." — FRESHMAN.
*
" You write with ease to show your breeding,
But easy writing is cussed hard reading."
*
" My mind to me an empire is."— SOPHOMORE.
*
*
" He giveth his beloved sleep."
— DR. BENEDICT lecturing to Lawyers.
— HEWLETTE, '01.
*
*
" For the rain, it raineth every day."
—ATHENS CLIMATE.
*
*
" To be wroth with one we love,
Doth work like madness on the brain."
*SMITH (the jilted lover).
" He wears the face of youth upon him."
—BLACKWELL.
197
Roasts.
BESCH.—" A babe in the house is a well-spring of
pleasure."
HEWLETTE.—" How much in love with himself
and that without a rival."
CLAY.—" A social success."
ELDER.—
" Great wit is sure to madness near allied,
And their partitions do their bonds divide."
FORTSON.—" Fair insect that with thread-like
legs spread out."
McCuRRY.—" And laughter holding both his
sides."
DONALSON.—" A lion among ladies is a most
dreadful thing."
BRAND.—" What a spendthrift is he of his
tongue."
GATINS.—" How doth the little busy bee im­
prove each shinyig hour."
SAM JOHNSON.—" A politician, one that would
circumvent the gods."
COOGLER.—" A simple child that lightly draws
his breath."
CLIFF GREENE.—" Often the cockloft is empty
in those whom nature hath built many stories high."
ADAMS.—" Can a man with such angelic face, so
many sins within him hide? "
CARSON.—" White, so very white."
DORSEY.—" He found the blessedness of being
little."
DAVIS.—W. M.—" I have seen better faces in my
time."
McWnoRTER.—" Lord! Lord!! how this world
is given to lying."
RUCKER.——
" Beautiful in form and features
Lovely as the day,
Can there be so fair a creature
Formed of common clay."
BOOTH.—" He draweth out the thread of ver­
bosity finer than the staple of his argument."
STRICKLAND.—" A Mellins Food Baby."
SIMEON MORTON TURNER.—
" There may have been greater men than I, but
I don't believe it."
MADDOX.—" And still the wonder grows, how
one small head can carry all his nose."
199
WEATHERLY.—
BILLY HOOPER.—
" By outward show let's not be cheated ;
An ass should like an ass be treated."
" Swans sing before they die.
'T were no bad thing
Did certain people die before they sing."
PRATT WILLIAMS.—
CALHOUN E. NOBLE.—" He left a name at which
the world grew pale."
" For by geometric scale
Could take the size of pots of ale."
HUMPHRIES.—" Ma, gimme a cent ; I want to
be tough."
" DAVVY."—" The very hairs of your head are
numbered."
THE CHANCELLOR.—
ERCOM.—
" Narrow in form but broad in mind,
One who knows more were hard to find."
" The down upon his lip,
Lay like the shadow of a lingering kiss."
PHIL SNELLING.—
RICKETSON.—
" Placed on his chair he seems a very god
While under-classmen tremble at his nod
As all around sit wrapt in speechless gloom,
His voice in thunder shakes the sounding dome
Denouncing dire reproach to luckless fools
Unskilled to plod in mathematics' rules."
" Be wise with speed,
A fool at forty is a fool indeed."
" I am too handsome a man;
I ought to have been a woman."
BANKS.—
McCUTCHEN.—
McMlLLAN.——
" He is given to sport, to wildness and much
company."
" When a woman's in the case
You know all other things give place."
LUSTRAT.—" Did nothing in particular and did
it very well."
HOYT.—" I was not so fond of his company at
first, but I am sick of it now."
CHARLEY STRAHAN.—" Those legs ; oh, those
legs."
TISON.—" His equal lives not; thank heaven for
that."
200
SYLVIE.—" His gags as stale a lot ever man did
hear."
THRELKELD.—" Where gotst thou that goose
look?"
HORACE JOHNSON.—" A fly sat on the axle of a
chariot-wheel and said, ' Whew! what a dust I
raise.'"
MITCHELL KING.—" He gives his tongue no
moments rest."
JENKINS.—" No Hercules could have knocked
out his brains for he had none."
OXFORD.—" 'T was for the good of my country
that I should be abroad."
BLACKSHEAR.—" My only books were woman's
looks and folly all they taught me."
THE FRESHMAN CLASS.—" Chattering nonsense
all the day long."
JIM SIBLEY.—" No little scribbler is of wit so
bare."
JACK BOWER.—" I met a fool in the forest, a
motley fool." %
NOEL PARK.—" It's fun to see him strut about
and try to be a man."
BILLY HOYT.—" A harmless necessary cat."
2OI
Wanted.
Men who can dispense half as much conceit as
Matt, Sam Johnson and Hunt.
Something as dry as our lectures on Medical
Jurisprudence, moot parliaments, or as " Cutting "
as the lectures on Roman Law.
A man who has been boot-licked more than
" Silvy."
Men as important as Calkins, Quincy and Calloway.
'
A Freshman, fresher than Hunnicutt.
A lad who can talk more than Herbert Clay.
A man with a " focus " on his mug like Quincy,
when Sam Hewlett allows him to preside over Law
Class.
A kid who loves " Lucy" more than Bobby
Schirm.
202
Farewell Oration.
BY CROSS, LAW, '01.
Friends and Fellow Citizens, Ladies and Gentle­
men, Fellow Students, Mr. Chancellor, and
Professors of All Departments, Fellow
Countrymen, Boys and Girls, Colored Folks
and Poodle Dogs:
Before I go away with my departure, I am in­
spired with an oration which I should like to leave
with you. 'T is nine months since I first came to
your city, but 1*remember it as distinctly, as had it
been but yesterday, for the hackman who took my
trunk up from the depot came near keeping it be­
cause I didn't have twenty-five cents to pay him for
his kindness. Then, too, as I peeped out of my
window from Hotel Yahoo to behold this city, I
saw a young lady who smiled upon me and threw
a kiss at me. I ventured over to get it, but her
father threw an iron poker at me; then I hastened
away! away!
But, as I was about to say, before I said that, you
have all been kind to me, and have noticed me
as I promenaded your streets with Ben Parks's
walking-cane in my hand, and my hands gloved
with my black gloves, and my cuffs reaching to
the ends of my fingers. Upon my head I wore
my high silk beaver, while my long Prince Albert
coat almost trailed the ground. Upon my feet
were my tan shoes of larger size than any I know,
and by my side was John Clifton Elder, who was
dressed as nearly like me as could be. Thus we
walked, with eager pride, with high collars about
our snowy throats; so much so till our faces were
almost turned heavenward.
I guess, yes, I even know, that all who came in
contact with us during our perambulation stopped
in admiration and utter surprise to meet such gal­
lant sirs. And wonder " who they be? " Envy
doubtless got the best of the sports of this " burg "
when they did us see, and for a season they had
flutteration of the heart. And their minds were
bewildered and bumbled about with exceeding
muchness. But it's no use a-kickin', because " just
like it is, 't is." But now I am soon to pass from
you—and indeed much sooner than I expected, for
these contributions are spoiling this historic Prince
Albert, which is indeed greater than I can bear.
Adieu! Adieu!
203
Answers Requested.
JACK TISON.—" Yes; I think the Faculty will get
you to write a book on parliamentary law; also,
have you teach it."
for " Bosco." Also, a few you " ate alive." More­
over, you are personally acquainted with Grover
Cleveland, and Lieutenant-Colonel Julian B. McCurry.
GAY—" Yes; we all knew you. You could tell
something of the same nature but more of a mystery
than anything we could tell. Also, you could
" cuss " louder and more than any man we knew.
"DINKY" DALLAS—"Who don't know you?
Hugh Scott saw you wearing your short coat and
thought it to be a vest with sleeves in it."
BACON—" Yes; your bright smile haunts us still.
We remember that you spoke in the House of Par­
liament, and that you told Silvy of a friend who sold
pecans at fifteen dollars a pound.
BRAND (applying for scholarship at University of
Chicago): " I hear one of the Professors of the Uni­
versity of Chicago is here; shall I see him person­
ally?"
PROFESSOR PARK : " For God's sake, No! Get
out of the way. Don't let him see you. Talk to him
over the 'phone."
BEN PARKS—" Certainly, everybody knew you.
You took a prominent part in the Carnival, spelling
Things to be Noticed.
Adams—standing on his head at the Charity Ball.
Booth—under the influence of coffee.
Sam Johnson—the kidnapped.
Turner—and his golf balls.
McCurry—and his fancy hat.
McWhorter's—creditors.
Calhoun—amending by injection.
Odom—singing bass.
Cross's—gloves and tan shoes.
Jenkins—The parliamentarian.
Will Davis's—mustache.
Silvy—sweating under the collar.
Belaval—and his white vest in mid-winter.
Drechsel—and his pistol going through the key­
hole.
Shannon—reciting all the lesson.
Four " Freshies "—on Sunday outing.
Faculty—shooting Poole.
Banks—the poet.
Hines—in tights.
Ben Parks's and Billy Smith's appetites (at the
Beanery).
204
Majority Rule; or, the Story of the 1901 "Mute" Parliament.
A COMEDY IN TWO ACTS.
ACT I.—"Getting Started."
" Comrades, mine hour is now come. Hark! The
great day is at hand. Horace said, ' Carpe diem!'
Let us now hasten to organize! Business—yes,
business indeed—much business—great business
must needs come before the House. Prepare ye
now to meet thy Water-loo, for politico-publico . . . ."
TIME : 11 =30 a. m., Mon- PLACE : Upper story of
day, February, 1901.
the " Ivy Building."
(College bell sounds in the chapel tower; great
excitement; lawyers seen gathered in small groups
discussing the great event near at hand; soft music
from afar.)
JOHN MELL, CHIEF (starting up and rapping
twice with Jenkins' famous " rapper;" quiet reigns.)
CARNEY (sotto voce): "What ' Lou' is that?"
(Hunnicutt sees the joke and inwardly roars with
suppressed merriment.)
207
JOHN MELL, CHIEF (forging ahead): "... is
the glory of sic semper tyrannis. Whom will ye
have to rule over ye? Now 's the appointed day.
Choose whom ye will while I stand near yon stove."
(The merry crackle of peanuts is overheard, and
Walden snores.)
CHEROKEE CROSS (unfolding himself on the in­
stallment plan) : " Mr. Ch—ch—chairman, I have
got up t—t—to . . . . "
FIRST VOICE : " It's time to come down! "
SECOND VOICE : " Take off your hat!! "
THIRD VOICE : " Whisper, and we can hear
you! ! ! "
FOURTH VOICE : " Unwrap your legs! ! ! ! "
(McDonald embraces Quincy; and Hunnicutt
sees the joke.)
CROSS (continues fiercely): " I want t—t—to
nominate a m—m—man for p—p—p—president of
this sh—sh—shebang! "
COOLEY : " I second the motion! "
ODOM : " I move we adjourn! "
BOOTH : " I move we all stop and take a drink! "
TISON : " I nominate Jenkins! "
VOICES : " Jenkins! Jenkins! ! Jenkins! ! ! "
CROSS : " Shut up, you d—d—durned fools. I 'm
goin' to n- -n— n—nominate him myself. I nomi­
nate Mr. Jenkins. All in favor say ' Aye!' "
VOICES: "Aye!" "Aye!"
PRESIDENT JENKINS (rapping like thunder): " If
you all can't keep still, I 'm going to leave the
room."
MOORE : " You 'd better take the room with
you." (Hunnicutt sees the joke and Walden
snores.)
BACON : " I move we have an election! "
SHANNON : " I move we have a collection! "
ODOM : "I move we adjourn! " (Billy Hosch
grows amused and falls off the bench.)
ERWIN : " I move that infants, idiots, lunatics,
drunkards, persons under duress, and married
women be excluded from membership."
COOLEY : " I second the motion! "
BURTZ: "Aw—aw—aw—what's the question?"
DRECHSEL (to Burtz): " If you say that again,
I '11 fight you, I '11 fight you! "
RICKETSON : " I move we all put down where we
are from."
TISON : " I call for the previous question! "
CROSS (looking vile): " I am up to nominate a
m—m—man for t—t—t—temporary ch—ch—chair­
man . . . . "
CALHOUN (eagerly): " Gents, fearing lest some
mully-duggin chap of a politician should bust the
airy bubble of my much-hugged ambition, I now
most cordially nominate myself for Doorkeeper and
my smiling little friend, Remer, (pats Remer's head;
Remer automatically smiles) yes, Remer, the news­
paper man, for my assistant."
CROSS (stamping with rage and one of his " No
Tens "): " Shut up till I git through!" (Calhoun
trembles; Cooley draws forth his butcher knife and
frightens George Hosmer Harris, the scribe.)
208
PRESIDENT JENKINS (continues to rap): " Gentle­
men, the motion have been made and seconded."
HUNNICUTT : " I move we put everybody under
the table who makes a motion after this."
CALHOUN : " Everybody remember to vote for
me and Remer."
CROSS (rising with difficulty): " I n—n—nomi­
nate Mr. B—B—Belaval! "
BELAVAL (pulling at Cross's coat-flap): " I re­
fuge ! I refuge! "
BOWEN : " It seems like I hear the curfew."
ODOM : " I move we adjourn! "
PRESIDENT JENKINS (much confused and still
rapping): " All who want to be president, stand
up! " (Hunnicutt laughs.)
PRESIDENT JENKINS (shaking the gavel at Hun­
nicutt) : " You think that is funny; but it ain't."
CALHOUN : " I move you all let me talk!"
COOLEY : " I second the motion! "
PRESIDENT JENKINS : " Mr. Burtz, what was your
motion? "
BURTZ : " I aw—aw—aw haven't moved."
PRESIDENT JENKINS : " Will somebody please call
the roll? "
CALHOUN : " I will, if you '11 all vote for me and
Remer." (Quincy embraces McDonald.)
CALLAWAY : " Let's all vote! "
BENNETT : " Yes, that's it; let's vote! "
VOICES : " Vote! Vote! ! Vote! ! ! "
PRESIDENT JENKINS (shaking the gavel wildly):
" If anybody else speaks or says a word, I '11 send
for the police! " (Much laughter and stamping of
feet.)
PRESIDENT JENKINS (grows frantic) : " Police!
Police! !"
(In the midst of the confusion, a tremendous ex­
plosion on top of the stove fills the room with smoke
and sends the Chief bounding towards the stage.
The two Adamses and several others mount desks
and several take refuge under benches and in the
skeleton room. " Ghosts," " anarchists," and " ven­
triloquists " are in turn shouted on all sides, and at
the height of the bedlam the curtain closes on the
smoke bedimmed convention, revealing in the dis­
tance, as it goes down, the valorous Chief and the
still more valorous Jenkins engaged in mortal com­
bat over the gavel.)
ACT II.—" Getting Stopped."
TIME : 11:30 a. m., Thurs­
day, February, 1901.
PLACE : The same.
(President Dinsmore in the chair; Peter Riketson
rises to call the roll; stern looks on the faces of all;
McWhorter and McCurry, the two politicians, are
heard confabbing in subdued tones; Sanford wipes
his glasses and laconically smiles; Shannon, Calhoun, Tison, and Hunnicutt writhe in agony, for
each has his mouth covered with sticking plaster;
the house is resolved to have order at whatever
cost.)
209
PETER R.: " Now everybody tell what county
they come from while I call the roll." (Calls roll.)
" Adams, A. P." " Just outside."
" Adams, J. W." " Nowhere at all."
" Moore." "The land of the Boers."
" Elder." " My law office up-town."
" Smith." " Lucy Cobb."
" Bennett." " Okeefinokee."
" Walden." " The land of Nod."
" Bacon." " Down in South Georgia."
" Carney." " The Green Hills."
" DeHart." " The Streets of Cairo."
"Mott." "China."
HUNNICUTT (makes a start to rise, but McCuen
secures the floor first, and then silently resumes his
place.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (standing on one foot):
" All who want to get through electing officers, say
' Aye!' "
CALLAWAY : " Aye! "
PRESIDENT DINSMORE: "Opposed, 'No!'"
(No response; motion declared lost.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE : " All who want to learn
parliamentary law, say ' Aye!' "
WILLIAMS and LOGAN : " Aye! "
PRESIDENT DINSMORE : " All who don't, say
'No!'"
" Booth." " The Solar System."
" Grubbs." " Mother Earth."
" Williams." " State at Large."
" Roop." " The Islands of the East."
" Calhoun." " Palatka, Florida, sir! "
" Belaval." " Cooling Room."
" Herring." " The deep, deep sea! "
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (rising): " What business
comes before the house to-day? "
TURNER : " I move we do over again what we
did yesterday." (President Dinsmore puts the mo­
tion ; no response; he turns red and puts it again;
again no response. He declares motion lost.)
TISON (rises, groans through the plaster on his
mouth, is recognized, and takes his seat.)
CALHOUN (rises, groans, waves his arms, is recog­
nized, and also takes his seat.)
COOLEY and ODOM : " No! "
VOICES : " Division! Division! ! " (President
Dinsmore puts question again with same result;
and then declares motion lost.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (reading*from Tison &
Mell's Articles of Confederation): " All who are
in favor of Section One, say ' Aye!'" (No re­
sponse ; motion lost.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (red in the face): "All
who are in favor of Section Two, say ' Aye!' " (No
response; motion lost.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (red from collar to
crown): " All who are in favor of Section Three,
say ' Aye!' " (No response; motion lost.)
PRESIDENT DINSMORE (desperately): " All who
are in favor of Section Four, say ' Aye!' " (No re­
sponse ; again the motion was lost.)
210
HUNT (coming to the rescue): " I move we all
put ten cents fine on each other."
VOICES : " Put him out! Put him out! ! "
President Dinsmore instructs the Doorkeeper,
McCurry, to eject the boisterous person who made
that motion, but instead Mac conceals him in the
skeleton room, where Hunt continues his cry, " Ten
cents! ten cents! just ten cents apiece! "
WILLIAMS : " I move we don't go home till
morning!"
(Booth's brother, a visitor, laughs at something
or other, and is fined for disorder; McCurry resigns
as Doorkeeper; and great confusion ensues; Belaval, Rucker, |nd Harris escape through the door.)
RUCKER : " I move we dispense with the crit­
ic's report to-day."
JOHN MELL (springing on a chair): " Mine hour
is at length at an end. Adios. Mes bons amis,
adios! Well have ye wrought! Much parlia­
mentary law have ye crammed into your receptive
and capacious caputs, and now a long and tender
' adios.' In parting now, while our distinguished
frater and compeer, Brother Cross, leads the
famous ' Cherokee Cantata with Variations,' we will
all join hands, chime in the song, and march round
the room three hundred and forty-six times with
out any applause."
(Quincy and McDonald embrace each other;
Walden snores; and Hunnicutt inwardly roars with
merriment.)
(Quick Curtain.)
211
I
In Memoriam.
JOHN B. GORDON JONE.S,
Class 1900.
Died July 26th, 1900,
Age, Twenty-one Years.
J
212
In Memoriam.
ALVIN ALFRE.D HAINE.S,
Class of 1904.
Died December 20th, 1900,
Age, Nineteen Years.
J
213
Valedictory.
By Jay Clifton.
Farewell, Athens, city of learning,
Forth from your gates I sadly am turning
Into a world of turmoil and strife.
Years loom behind me, brimming with pleasure,
Sprinkled with bitterness, sparse though, its measure ;
Full of their labors, mingled with leisure,
Now they are past, like dreams of my life.
Farewell, now, thou grand University,
Dear Alma Mater, shield from adversity,
No more I '11 walk in the shade of thy walls.
Farewell, professors—I must be moving—
Farewell, Chancellor, firm, yet so loving,
Now are my tears my heart's anguish proving,
As I depart from yon college halls.
Fare ye well, now, kind people of Athens,
Out from your homes forever I 'm passing,
Homes that lavished their comforts on me.
You have given me friendship and gladness,
Sweetly consoled me when borne down with sadness,
Kindly reproved me when wrong, without madness,
Now to life's sterner battles I flee.
Farewell, all, for now I must leave you,
Never again, perhaps, shall I see you ;
Never more hear that old chapel bell.
I must be off for the future's to-morrow,
No more from grief her burdens must borrow,
Yet is my voice now choking with sorrow,
All I can say is the one word, Farewell.
214
THANKS.
The Editors of PANDORA desire to tender their most sincere thanks, and deepest
appreciation, first to Professor Park, without whose aid this volume could never have
been issued; next to Mr. Hirsch, who has been of invaluable assistance to the busi­
ness management; and almost equally with these to the following friends:
Miss LUCY WOODALL
Miss LAURA BLACKSHEAR
MR. PHINIZY CALHOUN
MR. MACMILLAN
MR. J. SIBLEY
MR. STEPHENS
MR. ANDREW CALHOUN
MR. HARRIS
MR. HARDY
MR. PARKS
MR. SIMMS
MR. BARRETT
MR. BOOTH
MR. HUNNICUT
Miss GARLAND SMITH
Miss FANNIE MELDRIM
MR. Boccs
215
MR. RUSSELL
MR. ELDER
|ND now the time to say good-bye has come, and the
PANDORA editors leave their work with you.
hope that you have been pleased •with it.
We
Laboring
under many difficulties, we have done our best.
If
the merits of our booh have pleased you and ita
faults have not wearied you too much, we are satis*
fied.
Our hearty thanks are due to the many friends who have*
aided in the production of this volume, and it is with kindest
thoughts of these that we say farewell.
THE EDITORS.
216
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