The Junior Clas& Edition
Crimson
Mirror Of Campus Life
EE WHITE ANNOUNCES STUNT NIGHT
••• ••• ••• ••• •••
'rofessor Of History In Maneuvers
Dr. Neal Guest Of
Ramsay In New York
Makes All A’s In
Committees
Are Picked
Smokestack Falls!
Graduate School
rTHE NORTHEASTERN corner
* of Howard's Campus was
the scene of a great disaster Sat¬
urday night when the smoke¬
stack to the central heating sys¬
tem behooved itself to fall.
For blocks around the clatter
was heard. The week-end proved,
as a result, quite cold. Class¬
room radiators refused to give
forth heat. Professors and stu¬
dents found themselves talking
Of sunny and warm things. Not
until nearly noon on Monday
was the tall chimney re -erected.
Students Must Plan Stunts
For Early March
Presentation
Preparations for the best Stunt
Night in a decade are being made
by Chairman Lee White, it is an¬
nounced today. This event, always
one of the biggest of the Spring
semester, is calculated to arouse
each of the four classes to furious
activity. The date is set for Friday
night. March 19.
Class chairmen, announced to¬
day. are as follows:
Senior, Catherine Ham; Junior,
McKinley Gilliland; Sophomore,
Henry Anderton; Freshman, Billy
Burns.
Class chairmen, who will meet
Thursday afternoon at 1:30 in Pro¬
fessor Bohannon's classroom to dis¬
cuss plans, will name committees .
composed of representative class!
members, to plan, direct, and pro¬
duce the stunt.
Rumor has it that the four
classes, who have previously pro¬
duced separate stunts, may unite
to produce four units of Howard
College history. Satire and parody
has always been a favorite of stunt
nights, the present Senior class win¬
ning the cup for two years with
satires on school spirit and the
faculty.
“Whatever the productions of the
four classes," said Chairman White,
"We will attempt to work out the
class stunts fully before the night
of production. It will be remem¬
bered that for Stunt Night last
year, the Freshman prepared their
show at six o'clock, the Juniors
during the afternoon, and the Sen¬
iors and Sophomores the night be¬
fore."
White has named Loqnie Lind¬
sey, c'37, to assist him in supervis¬
ing the four class stunts.
“HHBEWD ANSWER"
The Junior editors had no idea
that the Senior editors were afraid
of the competition they're receiving;
however, box office statistics show
that no six Howard students en¬
tered the Alabama Theater last
ions.
PAUL TARRANT
To Paul Tarrant, C 36. goes high
honors among those now attending
graduate school. Tarrant, an alum¬
nus of Trident and of Chi Alpha
Sigma, is now making an all-A
record at Purdue University where
he is majoring in chemistry.
DR. T. V. NEAL
President T. V. Neal- was the
guest Wednesday evening, February
15, of Erskine Ramsay, well-known
advocate of education, at a ban¬
quet given at the Waldorf-Astoria
Hotel in New York City.
The banquet, one of the many
events of the convention of the
American Institute of Mining and
Metallurgical Engineers, was the
scene of the presentation to Mr.
Ramsay of the William Lawrence
Saunders Gold Medal.
Geshkoff Gives First
Lecture In Series
Dr. Theodore Geshkoff, of the In¬
ternational Relations branch of the
Carnage Institute, gave the first
of a series of six lectures last Tues¬
day at chapel period. These talks
will take place, the Crimson was
informed, every chapel period for
the duration of the series. The title
of Dr. Geshkoffs lecture was “Fun¬
damentals of Diplomacy and Inter
national Relations.”
Dr. Grshkoff, prior to his connec¬
tion with the Camagie Institute,
was attached to the Bulgarian le¬
gation in Washington. D. C. After
havipg been in America for more
than ten years. Dr. Geshkoff says
he "is only about one-half Ameri¬
canized." Dr. Geshkoff was edu¬
cated at Sofia, Bulgaria, and New
York. U. S. A. He received his
A.B. degr<* from Sofia Gymnasium
in Bulgaria, and on coming to
America he attended Columbia
University. From this institution
he has received his
МЛ.
degree,
and is candidate for his Ph.D. in
June, 1937. .
Having been bom at Novachene,
near Sofia, Dr. Geshkoff was given
the opj>ortunity to study diplomacy
Know Your Songs
New • Professor
Guest Speaker
THE JUNIOR EDITORS hereby
* offer two passes to the Empire
Theater to the first person— Fresh¬
man. Sophomore, Junior, or even
Senior, who brings in the correct
song hit titles derived from snatch
phrases inserted throughout this
paper.
There are eight in all. If you
know the songs then it will be easy.
But rememter. the first person or
the early bird will be the prover¬
bial catcher of this worm. Turn an¬
swers in to Irene Self in person.
She is the holder of the bait, only
this is no oait but two perfectly
go<d passes to the show.
This contest is open to everyone
except members of The Crimson
staff and their families.
Kate Duncan Smith, new profes¬
sor in the English Department, was
the guest speaker at the Y. W. C.
A. luncheon held Wednesday at
Smith HSU. " 1
Through the leadership of its
president. Rebecca Daily, interest
in "Y” work has increased. This
is the second of such luncheons
given by the organization, and
proved as successful as the first.
Two Delegates Go
Representing the International
Relations Club in Auburn when it
will hold its two-day cenvention
there, Ed Spencer and Woodrow
Owen will leave Friday morning.
Passible discussions of the con¬
ference will be: Peace Relation¬
ships between Hitlers Germany
and Europe, The Relation of Vari¬
ous Countries to the Spanish Sit¬
uation, and American Neutrality.
Officers of the organization are:
Woodrow Owen, president; Buell
Warren. Vice president; Rosalie
Thornton, secretary; Bill Giddens.
treasurer; Blanch Walls, reporter;
and Ed Spencer, parliamentarian.
early in his life. Sofia is the capi¬
tal of Bulgaria. Dr. Geshkoff re¬
minds us of the fact that American
missionaries were the first to trans¬
late the Bible into the Bulgarian
language, thus creating a perman¬
ent and historical friendship be¬
tween Bulgaria and the United
States.
APPRECIATION
I want to express my sincere ap¬
preciation for the many gifts and
expressions of encouragement dur¬
ing my recent illness.
LONNIE DEE LINDSEY.
ATTENTION!
Attention! Hugh Frank Smith
wishes it known that he had noth¬
ing to do with the insertion of his
picture in last week's Crimson. We
wonder!
Out From Howard With The Four W
one
Keyton was recently appointed a member
of the Board of Trustees of Howard Col¬
lege.
Freshmen! Did you know that Mias
Mabel Willoughby, Miss Annie Boyett,
Mrs. Ora D. Bohannon, Dean Percy P.
Bums, Professor Oscar S. Causey, Dr. L.
O. Dav'son, Dr. J. A. Hendricks, Professor
Maxwell Lancaster, Professor John Rog¬
ers, Coach William H. Bancroft, Dr. Joseph
D. Bancroft, Coach Raymond Davis, Dr.
Fulton Abercrombie, all professors in
Howard; and Dr. T. V. Neal, president,
are graduates of Howard College.
The Alumnus are challenging us; they
are expecting greater men and wnrnf* to
Howard College and of Harvard Law
School, is attomey-at-law in Birmingham.
Mr. John Friar, Jr., of Lee White Col¬
lege is-plannmg to continue his studies at
Oxford University, which will add one
more to our growing list of Oxford gradu-
)ME EIGHT YEARS ago I was walking
on the campus of Howard. College,
ddenly the sky was darkened by a
1ПЛ
of small black birds that came
ate students
Mr. Martin Haggard, M. A. from How¬
ard in 1910, and Sirs. Haggard, fonr »r li¬
brarian of Howard, are in Durant, Okla¬
homa, where Mr. Haggard is teaching in
the Southeastern State Teachers College.
Mr. Robert Ansley, one of the more re¬
cent graduates, is traveling representative
for the National Youth Administration.
He is now on a speaking tour in the
Southwestern States.
Dr. J. E. Keyton Is one of tiie most suc¬
cessful professional men of Southeastern
Alabama. He studied medicine at Tulane
University and later in New York. Dr.