The Red and Black (Athens, Ga.) 1893-current, March 24, 1894, Image 1

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(/C c "f THE RED AND BLACK. VOL UNIVERSITY OF (JEORdlA, ATHENS, (i.\ M MARCH 24,1894. NO. 13. TIIK THAI.IANS. LAW SCHOOL. l’KKSIDKNT KLIOT AND INTKIM Ol. LKOI ATK SPOUTS. On nextY'ridav evening will ap- La "‘ Sat " r ' l »y the first civil case pear the Dramatic Club before the of lhe n,oot uo,,rt w “ s oall « d> foot lights at the New Opera House.! Tl,e u48e w " one wh ‘ cl ' ooc,,rrcJ This is the third performance of the * ome - vei,r * >K° 1,Br » 1,1 C, » rke clubs, ami promises to eclipse any- oou,,t y> which cause,1 no thing yet pres >nted in the New l«Ule agitation to .he legal fratern, Opera House. The club embraces ** of lhe Alhen * Ur - The case for only the very best of talent, amI the trial was one of peddling without extravagant extent. He suggested success of its former efforts is enough President Kliot, of Harvard, in a recent report,recommended that ath letic training and sports be materi ally curtailed, on the ground thnt they are now being carried to an to insure a good performance an 1 a large crowd on Friday night. The University Orchestra Club, composed of Messrs, Barnwell, Brooks, Beckett, Boland and Os borne, will discourse sweet music during the interludes. license. It went to three juries tie- three changes to eliminate fresh- fore a verdict of guilty was found, contests; to let no man the lirst trial having resulted in a non-concurrence of the jury. In the moot court, Daly and Bush represented the prosecution while Mobley and Stafford were employed by the defendant. Thu moat elo ■ piunt picas made were entirely I be comedy which will be pre- irrelevant to the question at issue, settled is Second Floor, Spoopen- The speeches were limited to ten lyke, one of the best on the list. leg each, but a majority of the perform in oouIpnU more than one year; to mu kr eon teals biennial in nteu<l of annual. It in not yet known wliethci theNc* eliangCH will he made, or thin department be ullowed to pro^reHg an at prevent. It is hardly likely that so great an in- ntitution as Harvard would take Niieh a radical step and cant a shade of ditmpprovul upon that which has When the lusty March winds 'round the Iumihc corners whistle. Ami the ghost* ride the Masts like the dow n of the thintle, And the cat, m ath my window doth how l and doth bristle, Then often I think as l sit hy my hearth, Of a maiden I loved once—a maiden whose worth Was greater than Vanderbuilt’s, taken times o'er; Hut her fare was her fortune, the world held her poor. I remeiuher my feelings on thnt sweet, halmy night, When, with “nin” safe up slaint, I turned down the light; llo\v we sat in the dimness, 'twas unite out of sight; How | asked for a kiss, and she said that I might. Hut. hoys, she kkked tun—with such keen-toed shoes, That, when offered a seat, I am forced to refuse. Several of the young ladies of tlic oratorg „uuceeded in making their contributed so abundantly toward city and the best talent among the | lear#rg „,„ re or s UHg tried ere their bringing the college* constantly lie file mis, |(n malilch, the fairest you've college boys will make up the cast or characters. Among the specialties, though, will be lliw minstrel feature, the clog dances, the comic songs, local bits ami jokes of a general nature, which will prove the most interest itig part of the performance mid bring down the house. Billy Arm strong, with his high tenor voice, Lyndon, Beckett and Morion will reproduce some of the best musical products of the day. Many of the happiest features of the Midway Plaisanee will also be reproduced by the famous burnt cork artists. Armstrong, Barrow, 3rd, Lyndon and Daly. These performances are given under the auspices of the University Athletic Association, and so every >' udent should take a pride in at tending the show, thereby encour aging the members of the dramatic club and rendering a needed con irihulion to the Atliletio Associa lime was up. The jury were unable to agree upon a verdict, consequently the case was continued. It would be well for the leaders in future trials t make better propiralion and ask ">«*"» of improvement, f. r more time, nslen minutes not President Eliot says: “ilisclear siillirienl. | that extravagant training in nth- — leties is not compatible with the John Holder, an honor man of III, conditions for the best intellectual and one of the best politicians in work." A writer in Harper’s Weekly college during his stay here, came | gives this excellent answer: “V down from Jefferson yesterday. Col. Sheffield lias very ably ad ministered the military department of the University, and battalion drills will soon be the order of the day. Yancey, of ’!I7, is now sporting a Delta Tail Delli badge. fore the eyes of the public. How seen, ever, there arc many abuses in alh ,,r ’ " J" ,u think tier, that lias leties, as in everything else, which should be corrected. It is after all a question of the most desirable ever been, II ik, Ity her bright smile, stole away your affection, Take care lest her toe and your love make eonneetlnu, l ike ear lest politely site ask you to "i;ii to — M And yon Him! that »’.,’s keen not in toe, but “in toto." i that is clear, of course, as it also is that extravagant mental training 1 does not produce the best intellect mil work. Extravagant training of j any sort should be restricted. But in the restriction it should always [ be remembered that what is one man's poison may be another mail's Many Alumni came ove. from infcal ’ und lbal tb '' “thlotic training Atlanta to be at the joint debate on ' vl,iul ' w,,uld ■ b,orb onu »•* yesterday. voiis energies to the detriment of .... . , . .. ... . his intellectual side may be merely I he coming of springtime, with its ... , 1 . 1 , ■ , . „ sufficient to arouse the facu lies of pretty (lowers, anotner mail, Ins intellectual faoul the rest. If warm sunshine ami , . , ... . reminds the averagu college boy of lion, in which every one is interested ® 1 tu-s , . iiti. commencement vacation at home, tud wants to see provided with all I , . . ' of pic-uic festivities and some fair lame, the thoughts of whom occupy In order *li it some of the students, who so desired, might hear the speeches of the guheinational can didates, several of the professors after doubling the lessons for nvxl recitation, excused their classes yes terday. As the time approaches for the hoys to contest for speaker's places, they are growing more am! more enthusiastic on the subject. At al most every hour in the night the walls of some room ill the “Yahoo" is ringing with eloquence, which would rival that of Demosthenes. to see provided with all the funds necucssary to meet the de mauds that must be made upon it. So let every college boy go. The town people will patronize the per formance very liberally. among tbe rest. If a man's It is almost impossible to say why mind is acute and active and work i \ that rabbit took its (light across the him hard, just enough exercise to ball ground from under New College l’rincelon and University of IVnn sylvania will not meet iu baseball this season, owing to the refusal of the I’rincetoii management to agree to Pennsylvania's demand for three games. The granddaughter of Nathaniel Hawthorne, llildegarde Hawthorne, is about to publish her lirst book. It is to he called ‘‘The Fairest of the Fair," and is to contain a record his leisure hours. Mr. T. Daniel, '9b, left college -l Wednesday. lie will, after spending a few days with home j folks, go to Poughkeepsie, N. Y., where he indemls to lake a business keep him iu condition may be all that he needs. But if his mind is sluggish and his physical man op presses him, a course of thorough athletic training may stir every fac ulty he has into fuller ami more eager life. If by limiting a man's physical labor one could be sure to Mr. A. <•. Greenfield, 94, after suf-1 divert all the energy thus saved into fering much from weak eyes, was intellectual force, the problem of forced to retire from college this college athletics would be much week. An toon ah hi* eye* permit, more simple than it i» would he ah The joint debate developed nev he also anticipate* taking a bussi- simple, indeed, as some of tbe critics eral politicians among the boys. of inter-collegiate sports seem to re building, while the lawyers were practicing, last Thursday evening. The oidv explanation is that itgot a glimps. those “little blue pants" on third. Koht. L. Avery, now a lawyer of Atlanta, but who graduated from the Law school here a year or two ago, <. over yesterday with the Atlanta delegation. ness course at Poughkeepsie. Frank Pearing, ex-D6, is now a I gard it.’’ Ex. clerk al the K. A D. depot. ,, m Hon. Charlie Hill, of Atlanta, J D. Uockfeller has given The statue of Benjamin Franklin which stood in front of the Electric f50,- Building at the World’s Fair has of her experiences in Chicago last came over yesterday to be at the 000 to the University of Chicago' been presented to the University of joint i lebate. for a library. Pennsylvania.