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Kept Two
THE BED AND BLACK
I vo Fraternities
And One Sorority
At \e* Location
lis-itH 1 HU Alpha I HU
OuiV^H**. Hud Alpha Gain ►
Hovt-
Two fralerni'l*n the Delta Tau
Delta's and Alpha Tati On-«*»'« and
on* sorority. the Alpha Gamma D* i-
t.a. have moved Into now hemes for
the year lUSl-H*
Tb» Delta Tau Deltas hare moved
UiLo their ii»'V home at 21*7 Wood-
la wi avenue, a abort dlMtance from
Milled*" avenue They have a spa
cious ten room houae and a lame
sleeping ijorrli. The house la prac
tically new and la made of brick and
atu<:<<> TttWte are a number of pto-
fea .or» In the neighborhood. Doctor
A b Edwards. Dr K P htepheni.
and other*
The A T O's have returned to
their old home at 4 ii l Hill afreet,
which they vacated a year ago They
were tor tb> pna' year at IJV6 Prtuce
uv>wiue They have at present ten
root’ ► and three sleeping porches
The house ha« heeu rodecorated both
maid* and out
The Alpha Oatntna Delta nororlty
has moved to 1V4 5 Frif* avenue
from North MHledge avenue They
new c*<upy the old Hegli Guidon
l.eine, »neh waa vacated September
J, by Mr Leroy Mhhaei and hi*
family They have ten room* und
two rleeplny porches
RU88HJNG ENDS A8 'Ml
ACCEPT BORITY BIDS
if'ontinued from page It
bee park Mary Skelton. Hartwell.
Sarah de Kardelnben far* du Ifijc
non Toe. ..a , J^nu 1 *. Holst, futhhert,
JeanuU Dully. Sylvester, Ethlyn
Goodwin Greensboro Margaret hla
Ion Clara Slaton, Washington. Sara
Marlin, Farmington Mary Wllllutns,
Forsyth
hap|M* I hit a
Klgtna I'lil of Kappa l>ellu an
nounces the pledytt k of Kleanor
Glover (ialni-vlll. Carolyn Walati.
liirlUtf, Connie Way, Diunswpk.
Marguerite Powell, Griffin; Mary '
■ f Sy Moure; Lucille Taylor, Allan
la: flyrtp ' e Purcell Cochran .or
• phlniv Well*, Kavuuuali: Claire
Heltily Savannah; Katherine High
lower, <i dartow)i; Marlon Ham
tnotid. Savannah Prances Ferguson,
Spartanlrurif, H C.; N'vlJ Johnson
Athena hllraheMi Klee, Pi 1 herton ,
Margaret spanner, Savannah, laaltal
Mi Kae Savannah and Mary l.otilae
Smith. Audersoo. s c
\lpliu lisNiiiia Delta
Gamma Alpha of Alpha Gamma
l*e|ta pledged Nell Cornett, Athens,
Helen Williams, Athens, Alice Hale,
Fitzgerald Eleanor Kit* liens, Au
gusta. Ruth Rogers, DanltDvUie
Natalyh Pike, LaG range I.avlna
May hard. Athens Kvelyn Kpps. Ath
ens Sara Kohsoti. Alliens. Mildred
Htreater, Atlanta, Lu*ille Drown, u
•arils; Kathryn MacMillan A'lanta;
Kran.c* Denton. Jefferson; Peggy
Swan Atlanta, Kara Dawson. Cal
houn Mary Will Mona. Calhoun;
Jean Armstrong. Crawford; Dob
Johnson, Jefferson and Claudia
Orwesf, Ta< . on
4Ipliu algttu llil
Alpha Sigma Phi anuouu*es the
following pledges Rosalie Moore.
Carrollton Aline Peldmsn f i.aflere
Ion, H l Annette Harris, (y.llls;
llella Kstroff, I .on Is vl lie Mlnnh t'ut
ler, Alhns and Ethel Lund, Ath
ens
Gunn Addresses
Froth V Club
"ft Isn't the gale, but the set of
the nail," was the theme of Robert
K Guiiii * tala before the regular
mewling of the Kreshnian I M C
A Tuesday evening
Mr Ounn Is an alumnus of the
I'ulverMPy of Georgia and •hi* year's
"G" hook, annual publication of the
Y . was dedicated to him
With i i.uiufice to living a life and
nailing a boat. Mr. Gunn said
throughout hla address 'hat the
Christian life Is the only profitable
one In the end
Clayton Bowers, Koyston. co-
chairman of freshman work presid
ed at the meeting R, B McGarlty,
Jersey, hud charge of the music, and
Ja< k Harris, Athena, led the devo-
• lonal
All Ole** Players
Must (Qualify Soon
The third meeting of the Vnlver-
kty Chess club was held Thursday
night, Oct 1, In the City Y M C A
reading rooms
The qualifying of members will
i cun tin im through Oct k Students
must qualify at a meeting prior to
’lo tournament on Oct 15.
The next meeting will be held at
the Commerce Journalism building
Oct k Here, the players will have
u quiet place with suitable chairs
< slid tables.
According to Adolph Rosenberg.
I one of the members, a successful
tournament was held last year and
uu even better la expected Ibis year
l>a*t year twenty-five students and
'acuity members participated.
Tbe following students have quali-
' tied for the coming tourney Lewi*
Is* tig Calhoun; Nathan Klfklnson
1 Naw York. Adolph Rosenberg. Al
bany; Harvey Taylor, Athens; Louis
LublJnor. New York; and W D
K tig Othera expected to fiarflcl-
pate are Kugene Hoppenstein. Toc-
• oa. Phillips Fisher. Albany; J H
Harris. Athena; HDl Taylor, Athens:
Fred Dtrchaiore, Athens; C c Stell-
ing. Augusta; and Ralph Koaenweig,
Savannah
Dr. Weatherford
Speak* in Chapel
On Life in College
Accuse* Student* of Being
Conformist* and Giving
Public W rong Impreweion
"Student* are far better on the
nslde than ot! the outride," said Dr
W D Weatherford international
secretary of the T. M C A. and
founder of tbe Blue Ridge Confer
ence. in an address to a gathering
of students and faculty members in
the chape! Monday morning
Dr Weatherford. Introduced by
Chancellor Charles ,V Spelling as a
"broad-minded Christian gentleman."
gave a critical analysis of the stu
dent body ot present-day colleges
and universities Assembly day was
observed oh Monday and classes were
suspended for an hour in order that
the students might attend the lec
ture
“The present-day college man tries
to make people thtnk he's worse than
he Is but deep down in his heart
he has a desire for that which is
highest and best," Dr Weatherford
stated in explaining that students
were not as frivolous and supercili
ous as outward appearances Indi
cated
The address was begun with ex
cerpts from books written recently,
criticising college life adversely or
favorably Quotations were read
from Percy Marks. Ludwig Lewisohn.
Woodrow Wilson. Upton Sinclair, and
others who criticised the college It
self as "a corporation," the purpose
of the students In search of an edu
cation as aimless, the teachers and
professors "as more or loss compe
tent, but not at all enthusiastic about
their work.” end. finally, the stu
dents themselves as ‘‘miserable con
formists.”
Expanding on the criticisms by
the author* he read concerning the
students, tbe speaker said that "we
are playing for popularity" and do
thing* toward this objective whether
they are right or wrong.”
‘‘We are miserable conformists,”
be continued “We are not our
selves, but are playing a part, which,
once established, becomes hard to
break away from. Our wills ape
paralysed, but the accusation that
MWBIGW
A '* /.
Bts/tUAG-OUX#
(ahp
V V4V.W TO
PRlNyU)
AT lO-Q & 4 O'CLOCK
Hugh Hodgson Has
Recital in Chapel
For Music Group
An organ recital Thuraday night
by Hugh L Hodgson director of mu
sic of the university, was the bill for
the second of this year's musical ap
preciation (.lasses, which will he held
each week In the t'niverslty chapel.
This class was begun several years
ago with a nucleus of students en
rolled in the course. Since that
time i: has become an institution at
the university, and is attended reg
ularly by a large body of students,
faculty members, and Athens people,
In addition to the regular members
of the class
The program given by Mr. Hodg-
Bon ths week was as follows:
Sonata Guilmant
Gothic Suite Barllmann
Chorale
Priere a Notre Dame
Toccatta
Violin. Piano, Organ
Ave Maria Bach-Gounod
Stanton Forbes. Luclle
Kimble. Mr. Hodgson
we are not interested in anything
*erious is wrong.” be continued.
"If it is not good form to study
late, we never study If it is not
good form to show any intellectual
glimmerings then we call all that
cort of thing high-brow If it is not
good form to go to debates, we
freeie our debaters out with empty
benches ”
Organ
Commu«lon — Batiste
Evening Star Wagner
Pilgrim's Chorus Wagner
Canxonetta Armstrong
Piano:
Prelude in C sharp
minor Rachmaninoff
Liebestraum Lisxt
Waltz Moszkowsky
Piano, Organ:
Consolation — — Liszt
Elizabeth Orr. Mr. Hodgsonm
Elizabeth Orr
Mr. Hodgson
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