The Campus mirror. (Atlanta, Georgia) 1924-19??, February 15, 1928, Image 1
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Published by the Students of Spelman College, Atlanta, Georgia
During the College Year
Vol. IV February 15, 1928 Number 5
SPELMAN COLLEGE GLEE CLUB
THE SPELMAN COLLEGE
GLEE CLUB
Bottom row, from left to right : Naomi
Smith, Lois Davenport, Ernestine Morrow,
Irene James, Mabel Dockett, Margaret Ben
nett. Myrtle Balasco, Inez Dumas, Edna Wil
son. Second row : Phyllis Kimbrough, Ber
nice Starling, Frankve Clark, Katie Walker,
Frances Collier, Justine Wilkinson, Thelma
Brown, Daisy Hulin. Third row: Lillie
Brown, Myrtle Clark, Kddye Mae Money,
Margaret Johnson, Lillian Peck, Irene Dobbs,
the pianist, Annie Kelly, Samantha Howard.
Last row: Beatrice Hammond, Elizabeth
Jones, Florence Jones, Mary Dunn, Nannie
Gadson, and Lorcna Warner.
The Spelman College Glee Club Concert
will be given March 9, 1928, in Howe Me
morial Chapel. Friends of the school and
the public are invited.
RABBI WISE AT SPELMAN
February 7, 1928, was just another high and
happy day for Spelman when her teachers
and students, together with distinguished vis
itors and presidents, teachers, and students
of other Negro colleges of the city, assem
bled in Sisters Chapel to see and hear Rabbi
Wise. To see Sisters Chapel filled almost
to its large capacity with such an audience,
and its platform graced with the presence
of President Adams, President Hope, Presi
dent Read and Rabbi Wise was indeed a
charming picture.
Judging from the deep feeling with which
the appreciative audience sang the opening
song, the Negro National Anthem, every
one seemed to have been either imbued with
the spirit of National Negro Week or elec
trified and uplifted by the strong personali
ties of the platform and the speaker of the
hour.
As usual with much grace and gratitude,
President Read in her introductory remarks
of the speaker made some very interesting
statements concerning his work, achievements
and character as an outstanding figure among
men.
After picking up the audience with a few-
timely jokes, Rabbi Wise with seriousness
and great force, spoke his mind in a way
that was very pleasing to hear. The words
and thoughts of his most gripping lecture
went straight to the hearts of his spell
bound listeners. Said he: "I have only a
shred of a voice left for this evening, but I
feel that I must talk to you a few minutes
about two little books or rather pamphlets.
‘‘The Thing By Which Men Live" is the
title of one which was written by Tolstoy,
and "What Men Live By" is the title of
the other one which was written by Cabot.
The speaker told something of the lives and
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