Colonnade January 24, 1933

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Colonnade January 24, 1933 Georgia College Knowledge Box Colonnade Special Collections 1-24-1933 Colonnade January 24, 1933 Colonnade Follow this and additional works at: https://kb.gcsu.edu/colonnade Part of the Higher Education Commons, and the Mass Communication Commons Recommended Citation Colonnade, "Colonnade January 24, 1933" (1933). Colonnade. 95. https://kb.gcsu.edu/colonnade/95 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Special Collections at Knowledge Box. It has been accepted for inclusion in Colonnade by an authorized administrator of Knowledge Box. (Mmmmt Volume VIII. Georgia State College for Women, Milledgeville, G-a., Tuesday, January 24, 1933. Number 15. ===== p= Music Will Be Important Part Many Attend Big Spring Term /if G. S. C. W. On Bi-Centennial Program Educational Meet Will Begin Friday Morning PROBLEMS O P . F U T U R E Y E A R S Doctors' Academy Music Department at G. Former Member of Thursday of This Week DISCUSSED BY ,'' LEADING Meeting Is Held S.C. W.Will Feature In Faculty At Chapel EDUCATORS O F T H E SOUTH Will Be Last Day of Elaborate Event Mrs. Nan Blacksdale Miller, of The Milledgeville Doctors' Acad- First Semester ATLANTA, Ga. — Assembling Dresden, Ohio, a former student emy met Wednesday evening, Jan- The old semester will end Janu- The celebration of Georgia's Bi- and member of the faculty of G. 200 students and faculty members uary IS, at the home of Dean and ary 26. With it, will end the tur- S. C. W. was' a visitor at the centennial will draw heavily on from both white and negro col- Mrs. W. T. Wynn. Dr. Francis moil of examinations, notebooks, the members of the music depart- chapel exercises Friday morning. leges from all parts of the South, the main concern of faculty and Mrs. Miller stated that she saw Daniels presided and appointed ment, for orchestral music, chorus the Southern Student-Faculty Con- and term papers that have been work, quartettes, duets, and solos; the corner stone laid for the fhvst committees for the coming year. ference met in Atlanta recently. students since last week. And G. piano, organ; and other instru- building on the campus. In her Dr. Sally, speaker of the eve- S. C. W. will bid good bye to a ments will play a part. Probably opinion this college has done much This marked the first occasion ning, read a paper on "Nineteenth number of her students who are at no time before have so many for Georgia and Georgia educa- when white and colored students Century Treatment of 'La Judia finishing in January. Others are songs about Georgia or for Geor- tion. planned and conducted such a de Toleda' Theme." Ho followed leaving to come back later and In her talk she urged that the gia been given before a Milledge- meeting for the consideration of briefly the history of this old complete their work. ville audience, in one performance, South made use of her \f tural re- Spanish legand about Alfonso mutual problems of both local and . >As usual there will be a new as will be given that night. Miss sources and develop them to such VIII and his love for a beautiful supply of students entering in the Leonora Tucker, head of the mu- an extent that they will be even international import, the theme Jewess, from its chronicle days lip mid-year. A large number of ap- sic department of the college, has more valuable. She told of find- being, "The Responsibility of the to its form in the nineteenth cen- plicants have already enrolled for general charge of the music for ing a pottery plant in Ohio that Forces of Religion in Building the tury, when Eusebio Asquierna spring term. Some of these girls used ninety per cent of Georgia the evening, and will coach the South of Tomorrow." dramatized it in a form consider- are newcomers; others are former singing. Three Georgia songs— clay in its work. Another inter- ably changed from the original Opening the conference with a students of the college. To all Harrolson's "Cherokee Rose," N. esting fact was that a town in plot. the college extends a hearty wel- K. Smith's "The Red Old Hills of this same state purchased all its critique of the present situation in After this interesting talk, the come. Georgia," and Perry's and Spald- nuts from Georgia producers. the South, Dr. W. A. Smart, of meeting was thrown open for dis- There are resolutions to study ing's "Blest is the Land Fair In conclusion Mrs. Miller told Emory University,, called attention cussion and the members of the harder and more thoroughly go- Georgia"—will be sung by a quar- the students that there would al- to the process of rapid change in Academy indulged in reminiscen- ing around the campus. The fu- tette composed of Mrs. L. P. Lon- ways be problems for them to which the South now finds itself. ces. ture will tell how many of these gmo, Mr,.,, iilagar Long, Mr. Sid- meet. She urged that they pre- "The southern part of our coun- preparations for better study will ney Stembridge, and Mr. Olan pare themselves to meet these try is decidedly the most section- Milledgeville To Be be kept. Or perhaps truthful re- Banks. Two large choruses will problems eiuuoiuU./. ally minded—possibly because we solves will be a better source of sing "Dixie" and Lollie Belle Wy- all love the South so dearly," said P.ctured In Big information. he's "Georgia," the state official Dr. Smart. We still think of New York Daily The past semester has marked song adopted by the General As- Unique Musical Southern culture in terms of civ- the erecting of the library and the sembly in 1922. ilization before the Civil War. We Pictures of old and new Mil- changing of various rules of the De Koven's "Oh Phomise Me" are still too inclined to think of ledgeville have been recently sent college. It has seen many a dis- will be sung by Mrs. Long with Program Planned any divergence from our grand- to the New York Times by Mrs. tinguished visitor upon the cam- the organ accompaniment; and parents' ways as a colossal crime J. L. Beeson. The Times is to pus and many a welcome speaker Edmund Vittum's (words) "Sunlit VOICE A N D V A R I O U S I N S T R U - We have a hostility towart' have a sixty page section in cele- at chapel. The spring semester Georgia" will be sung by Mrs. MENTS TO BE HEARD IN Wall Street. We are hostile tc bration of Georgia's Bi-centennial. must aim high if it is to equal the Longino with violin accompani- JANUARY £0 P A G E A N T change. We have a blind worship Besides pictures of historic inter- fall term of 1932-1933. ment played by Miss Horsbrugh. of a fixed static social condi- est, the paper will contain a com- Macarthy's "The Bonnie Blue "A Trip Around the World in tion," he continued. prehensive history of the history Extension Offers Mag" will be sung by four voice Music" is planned by the music "Another serious ailment of the of the state of Georgia. students—Hilda Hamlett, Ruth department as the theme of a mu- South is her tremendous loss of Among the group pictures sent Number of Courses Wilson, Emily Cowart, and Mar- sical pageant to be given by the leadership in the last two genera- were: The Mansion, the Ina Dil- garet Wenzeli—in Act III, which students of that department in tions. Our tendency today to wor- lard Russell Library, the old capi- Students In Many Sections of features the secession convention. the Richard B. Russell auditorium, ship a past civilization has tol building, a picture showing the Country Taking Advantage of "A Frog lie Would A-Wooing Go," Monday evening, January 30, at held us down and kept us from burning of the old penetiary, Al* Growing Department. an old English folk song, is to be 8 o'clock. having, leadership that we should len's Invalid home, Thalian Hall sung by Sue Mansfield and Mar- The program will include the have had." of old Oglethorpe University, and During the less than a year many others. since its organization in July, garet Wenzeli in the wild life most important countries of the Dr. Malcolm H. Bryan, asso- scene, in which Miss Theresa Pyle, world with representative music 1932, the Extension Department ciate professor of economics at of G. S. C. W. has grown until impersonating the Birds of the of each, presented in pageant the University of Georgia, ad- Unusual Feature Forest, will whistle a solo. Snatch- form, including voice, piano, vio- it now offers over a hundred cour- dressed the conference on the sec-) In Corinthian ses. The extension students range es of "Georgia Land," composed lin, organ and orchestra. The at- end day. Referring frequently to and written by NelLe Womack from Washington, D. C, on the mosphere of each country will bo the recent findings of the techno- The second issue of this year's Mines, will be sung by the Mad created with colorful costume.:,. east to New Mexico on the west, crats, Dr. Bryan stated that if the Corinthian will come from the and are found in nearly all of the Genius, the main cnaracter of the flags, and dances given by some present capitalistic system is to drama, who is a musician as well of the girls from the physical edu- press the latter part of this week.
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