Newspaper Page Text
Six
( ,\MITH organizations
START DEBATING TODAY
(Continued from Page 1)
well and Nelle Clegg.
For the Women's Glee Club: Vir
ginia Poindexter, Virginia Shoffelt,
Dorothy Watson, Martha (Jladd,
and Jean Winn.
For Phi Sigma Alpha: Pledger
Carmichael, Lewis Reese, Owen
Malcolm, Evelyn Hallard, and Geor
gia Vincent.
For Mu Zeta Alpha: Opal Cowart,
Phillip Jones, J. G. Robertson and
William Donnehoo.
For the 4-11 Club: Dorothy I)os
ter, Andy Floyd, Pauline Pullen,
and Josephine Rogers.
For Alpha Psi: Mildred Simms,
Marge Bowen, Doris Owings, and
Mary KatO Fitts.
A tt' ' *'"••' •• • ; ■ ’ : |;V'' ;;i
(^)ffon a hew cruise
more pleasure to more people At three o’clock that afternoon the
"CHESTERFIELDS JUST ARRIVED.
From Wake Island 5000 miles out in FAST WORK
the Pacific Ocean, Pan American Airways PANAIR WAKE. "
flashed this radio: When smokers find out the good
"RUSH TEN THOUSAND CHESTERFIELDS things Chesterfields give them ...
today’s china clipper." nothing else will ho
Copyright 1937, Liggett & Myb*s Tobacco Cos,
For the Chieftain staff: Mozelle
Taylor and O. N. Todd.
For the French Club: Katherine
Gaines, Fred Hansard, and Rosa
lind Hayes.
For the Voluntary Religious As
sociation: Ralph Westbrooks, War
ner Morgan, Lois Whitner, Ruth
Stelnhimmer, and Georgia Castle,
berry.
The only two campus organiza
tions not participating in the de
bate are the West Georgian staff
and the W Club.
CONTEMPORARY GEORGIA
COURSE UPSETS SOPHS
(Continued from Page 1)
quite anxious to do something a
bout these existing conditions.
Since 99 per cent of the course
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JAN. 19, 1907
is made up of figures and statistic s,
the students do not dare a word
Dr. Bryan has written; but what
does disgust them was the mistake
made by high-school teachers who
told them that Georgia was literal
ly the stuff; and the failure of
newspapers to tell the man of the
street and the housewife what is
what.
"But,” as one journalist-to-be put
it, "if Georgians can’t take it
through the newspapers and edi
torials as Mark Etheridge once
tried to tell them down in Macon,
then the first thing they’ve got
to learn is, not Georgia’s conditions
—but to forget the fine old state
pride, Uncle Jim’s death at Manas
sas in the 1860’s, learn to cooperate
with those willing to help, and
then make a study of what is what
and what is to bo done.”
But the course has yet some ton
or more weeks to cover, and by
the end of that time perhaps the
students will rightfully wonder if
Georgia is the lovely state they
have been taught it was.
COLLEGE LIBRARY LISTS
PURCHASE NEW VOLUMES
(Continued from Page 1)
tion is sending some ten copies
of Bulletin 191 on “Georgia Land
Compliments of
W. S. CAMPBELL ,
Plumbing and Sheet Metal Work
Use Problems” to the library.
In a letter to Mr. Ingram, Dr.
Stuckey explains that his supply
of these special bulletins was not
large enough for each student to
have one.
Miss Weaver said that she ex
pects these copies to arrive soon,
and will be kept on file in the re
serve department.
A1 Richstone: Marriage is a won
derful institution; no family slv jl
be without it.