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THE RED AND BLACK
Pape Three
New Rush Rules Are Adopted
By Women’s Sorority Council
Social Calender Is Arranged; GREEKS PLEDGE
101 a'T'rmr
Many lAflairs Will Be Spon
sored Rush Week
In order to provide a more expe
dient system of acquiring neophytes,
new rushing rules and a social events
schedule for rush week, which begins
October 1, were adopted by the Wo
men’s Pan-Hellenic Council at this
year's initial meeting which was held
last Tuesday night at the Alpha
Gamma Delta house.
The rules provide that all after
noon engagements must be held at
sorority houses; all rushing must be
"Dutch;" all rushing closes Satur
day, October 6, at 6 p. m. with the
exception of one dance to be held by
the Alpha Sigma Phi sorority Satur
day night; all bids should go out
Sunday morning. October 7; rushees
must notify the sorority between two
and five, Sunday afternoon, of their
193 STUDENTS;
LIST INCOMPLETE
(Continuqd from page 1)
Pickett Jr., William Chandler, Elston
Johnson, Boyce C. Wilder, Mack
Tucker, William E. Merritt, Luke
Greene, Clete Johnson, Ralph Car
lisle, James Crapps, Polk Land, and
Edwin Carlisle.
Pi Kappa Phi
l*i Kappa Phi: Marion Lucky, John
Jenkins, George Merritt Jr., Paul
Trullock, John Wilson, P. T. Rich,
Winton Wilkin, Charles Brooks, Cal
vin Stovall, Robert Mayers, and Jack
Strickland.
Phi Delta Theta: Ed Byne, John
H. Mullino, Homer L unison, James
G. Davis, Franklin Horne, Neil Stokes
Jr., Joe Heard, Ralph DeLoad, Hugo
Provano, Henley Mathews, Albert B.
Jones, Edwin Blackman, Harold Arn
old, John Hansell, Billy Driver, Ho-
Studentless College Sororities Present
Of 1804 Recalled FashionsExhihition
As Figures Mount
intentions to pledge; and pledge rib-i™ er Harber, Dan A. Yancey. Pratt
bons are to be presented at 8 p. m. Cheek, Griggs Shaiife, and Brown
Sunday. Heavy penalties will be
meted out to any sorority violating
these rules.
The social calendar follows;
Alpha Delta Pi will entertain at
the Georgian hotel on Saturday after
noon, October 6, from 5:30 to 8:30
p. m., with a formal dance.
Chi Omega will be hostess at a
gathering on Thursday, October 4,
from 6:30 to 8:30 p. m.
Alpha Sigma Phi will hold a dance
Saturday night, October 6, from 8:30
to 11:00 p. m.
Alpha Gamma Delta will give a
formal dance at Memorial hall, Mon
day, October 1, from 2:30 to 5:30
p. m.
Phi Mu's tea dance will be held
at the Physical Education building,
Tuesday, October 2, from 6:30 to
8:30 p. m.
Delta Delta Delta will entertain
from 5:30 to 8:30 p. m. at a formal
dance, Wednesday, October 3, at the
Small.
Sigma Chi: L. C. Clark Jr., James
Patterson, W. M. Chandler, Jack M.
Earle, Robert Glenn, Warren Here
ford, L. A. Mallary Jr., Brewster
Wickersham, Albertus E. Wall Jr.,
Harry I. Davis Jr., Douglas Jamison,
Jack Jennings, E. M. Hester, Henry
McKnight, A. D. McGaughey r.,
George C. Hagood, Clayton W. Pea
cock Jr., Ed Everett, J. P. Gholston,
and Bill Grimes.
S. A. E.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon: Worth Yan-
key, Dan Dockstader, Arthur Lucas
III, Lewis Paschall, Willis Jackson,
Harley Landale, Oner Franklin,
Wadsworth McGinty, Tommy Hay-
good, Maynard Smith, James Caitle,
Tom Kennedy, James H. Fort, Ed
win Southerland, and Harry Wilkin
son.
('lii Psl: J. M. Lester, Eugene
Lewis Jr., Gus Frye, Bert K. Car
michael Jr., Roswell McRae, Joe
lty Maurice lternadik
From South Georgia’s pecan pro
ducing plains, from Middle Geor
gia’s sweet smelling peach groves
and from North Georgia”s corn and
cotton fields they come; from the
sea-coastal ports and plains, from
red clay hills and from city pave
ments, they come—more than two
thousand men and women, anxious
to quench their intellectual thirst
at what Pope aptly termed the river
of knowledge, “the Pierian Spring.”
Yet it was not always thus. Back
in 1804, after 16 years of argument
as to where the University was to be
situated, the president of what then
constituted The University of Geor
gia, had no pupils. But, as a Uni
versity existed and even had a pres
ident, it was necessary to find the
pupils; after all, a university with-
versity without pupils must be some
thing like an angel without a harp,
even a moron will admit.
The main building of the Univer
sity at that time was Old College,
then quite new and modernistic in
its accoutrements. Three
To prepare the rushees for the va
rious social functions to be sponsored
by the nine campus sororities, a
fashion show was conducted by the
Women's Pan-Hellenic Council at the
Coordinate College campus on Thurs
day, September 27, at 7 p. m.
The models included two repre
sentatives from each sorority who
were on the Pan-Hellenic Council.
Afernoon and evening apparel were
exhibited in order that the rushees
might be informed of appropriate
clothes to be worn at the many soror
ity teas and dances.
All women students of the Univer
sity were invited.
I*ast June the University of Kan
sas (Emporia) graduated five wo
men who had finished opurses In
Medicine.
Six Greek Houses Move
To Different Addresses
A number of fraternities and soror
ities have moved to different locali
ties since last year.
These are the changes made: Phi
Epsilon Pi, 320 North Milledge; Al
pha Lambda Tau, 4 50 Prince avo-
nue; Alpha Tau Omega, 410 South
Milledge; Alpha Sigma Phi, 146 Carl
ton Terrace; Alpha Delta Pi, 573
stories Hill • and Kappa Delta, 456
Physical Education building, and on Weeks Jr., Claude Felton Jr., Robert
the same day, Sigma Delta Tau will Sewell, Cardelle Lewis, and Marion
present their formal dance at the Tyler.
residence of Mrs. Ernest Michael on Delta Tau Delta: I. Herbert Con-
Milledge avenue. nor, Ralph Brinson, M. A. Claxton,
Kappa Delta will sponsor a dance ' Va *ter Ja c°bs Jr -. Bee Price, Charles
for the rushees fro«n 5:30 to 8:3oi„, ams ’ „ enn Brinstn, Lester R.
p. m. on Friday, October 5, at their ,\ il j Son ' H e rman Coolidge, Richard
new house on MMledge avenue, and " ,, e ™ a J, u V, or i i f^ McCurry.
the newly installed Alpha Omega Pi ,. •'* Ben D an) el, Winston Bur-
sorority will entertain at a luncheon ®*® n . n Wattham, Newell Eden-
on the same day. D ' ck Warren, Lew Cordell,
Walter Revell, Henry Wagnon, Char
lie Treadaway, Cleveland Thompson,
Malcolm Ferguson, Harold Warren,
and B. C. Hill.
Clii l*lii: Jack Spaulding, James
Shepherd, G. A. Nicholson Jr., Roy
Wynne, Dargon Cole, Randolph Nee-
Sigma Nits Give Dance
For Rushees Saturday
The annual rushing dance of the . ...
Mu chapter of Sigma Nu was held E< Jward Broaseau, ..William S.
Saturday night, September 22, at the ly. 8 , 1 } 0 Gra y 80n ' and Hugh
fraternity house. Music was furnish- "
ed by the Bulldogs.
The dates included Mary Helen
Chandler and Marjorie Gould, Atlan
ta: Meta Shaw, Valdosta; Elizabeth
O’Neal, Bainbridge; Sue Rollins, Dal
ton; Jane and Anne McKinnon,
Brunswick;; and Dorothy Kimbrell,
Alberta Bootl^, Agnes Jarnagin, Doug
las Grimes, and Mary Harley, Athens,
and Cele Parker. Mr. and Mrs.
Jenkins, and Mrs. George Napier,
house mother, were the chaperons.
Welcome
Students
TIP-TOP
Sandwich Shop
Opposite University
Barbecue Porl<
Sandwich 10c
Regular Meals Served
Alpha Gumma Itlio: James Lacey.
Kappa Alpha: Albert Menard, John
McPherson Jr., George James, Frank
Little, J. R. Bratton, Blanton Fort-
son, W. A. Slaton, and George Dance.
Phi E|>*il<>n Pi: Stanley Ebner,
Herbert Blum, I. A. Solomon III,
David Morrison, and Melvin H. Nuss-
baum.
Tau Epsilon Pi: Jack Bryan, Mil
high, red bricked, it stood as it
stands today, at the crest of the hill,
overlooking the surrounding coun
tryside.
President Abraham Baldwin, in
charge of two buildings, a chapel
and one instructor, decided that he
ought to round up some students.
So scouring the eight academies scat
tered throughout the state, he man
aged to get together “between 30
and 45 students studying with laud
able ambition and singular Indus
try" the record tell us.
These students, after a period of
preliminary personal instructorshlp
by the president and his staff, were
graded from junior and senior
sophisters (freshmen and sopho
mores, should any one ask), to
juniors and seniors. And they yvent
to work.
During their first two years the
students mastered Latin, Greek and
mathematics; in their second two
years they conquered logic, natural
and moral philosophy, belles lettres
and laws of nations.
Required courses consisted of
astronomy, "determination of geo
graphic longitude and latitude by
observation of eclipses and of the
moon and by use of the celestial
globe,” experimental and natural
philosophy and chemistry; thrown in
for good luck were botany, "Cicero
de Oratore, “Priestly" lectures on
history, “forensic disputations,"
which in our language means de
bate, and composition.
Yes, the University has grown
and the courses und requirements
change, but students keep coming
back for more.
Milledge avenue.
Girls’ Dormitory Gives
Dance Thursday Night
An informal dance was given at
Milledge hall Thursday night from
8:30 to 11 p. m. Each girl in he
dormitory was privileged to ask two
ton Marshall, Jacob Nissenbaum, Soil hoys, one as a date and one as a Btag.
Altman, and Jerry Kabatsky.
Sigma Nu: Edmund Hughes, Gene
Curry, Frank Bickerstaff, Harrison
Gibson, J. Lee Parker, W. M. Page,
Leonder Richards, Neil V. Oldenbut-
tle. Buddy Hasell, William H. An
drews, James Griffin, Robert Jenkins,
Thomas Miller, Albert S. Baldwin,
Music was furnished by the radio.
These committees were appointed:
invitation committee, Harriet Winn,
Claire Gnann and Amelia Turner;
reception committee, Margaret Os
bourne and Ruth Campbell, and
house committee. Mary Tragoni, Zoe
McLean and Helen Smith. Mr. and
Allen F. Davis, W. W. Warren, and Mrs. Kinney and Mrs. Hart, house
Thornton Newsom. mother, were the chaperones.
WELCOME-STUDENTS
Make Durden's your Music Head
quarters while in Athens.
Newest Sheet Music and Records by
your Favorite Orchestras.
DURDEN MUSIC CO INC.
459 E. Clayton Street
Students in all Classifications at
The University of Georgia
Welcome
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Make your headquarters here for
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Etc.
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Moon-Winn Drug Co.
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pick our cool, seclusiveness at our attractive
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refreshments
PERSONAL SERVICE
PHONES 67 and 68
WELCOME STUDENTS
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