Volume V. Lagrange, Ga. April, 1926 Number 8 Johns Hopkins

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Volume V. Lagrange, Ga. April, 1926 Number 8 Johns Hopkins I S^Sj^jshol Mon-Uil/ By 'Qull Driers'Club' Of Ld£>range College TME VOLUME V. LAGRANGE, GA. APRIL, 1926 NUMBER 8 JOHNS HOPKINS NOW GRAD- EL CIRCULO HOLDS INTER- QUOTATIONS A LA BRIEF GRADUATION RECITAL Y. W. C. A. CORNER UATE SCHOOL ESTING MEETING So long as you aspire, others On Monday, April 5£h, Miss The election for Y. W. officers- No More A. B. Degrees Will Be El Circulo-Espanol met March will conspire; so long as you try, Lena Terrell, voice, and Miss was held April 7, 1926. The fol- Given—University Work To 16, 1926. A very attractive pro- others will vie. Thelma Chunn, piano, gave lowing are the elected officers: Begin With Junior Year gram was given. La Senorita Noah floated the first corpora- their graduation recital in the Josephine Glenn, president; (New Student Service) Hughes gave an interesting ac- tion while the rest of the world college auditorium at eight-fif- Frances Matthews, vice-presi- On February 22, 1876, Johns count oi the Poet Lope de VeSa- was in liquidation. teen o'clock in the evening. This dent; Katherine-Wheeler, secre- Hopkins opened its doors to: Jf Senorita Embry discussed If it was left to some folks it recital was looked forward to by tary; Louise Morton, treasurer, American youth with a startling he "fe °r Cuderon, a Spanish would be a crime to smile. every one on the hill as a very The chairmen of committees new educational program. Fifty novelist. La Senorita Gardner The first thing a modern girl enjoyable occasion. are: Devotional committee chair- years later, February 22, 1926, discussed the writer Arvantes. secures for her hope chest is a Misses Terrell and Chunn, man, Lucile Cassels; social another radical change was an- La Senorita Malone spoke about good revolver. who are gifted young women, service, Hattie McDougald; tea "Don Quixote," one of Cervant's were surely at their best on this room, Lura Lifsey; recreation, nounced at the Baltimore uni- "Innocence abroad"—the sweet versity. best works. evening. They were charmingly Martha McLendon; world fel- Before 1876 there had been no After the program delightful Siri.: wl™ m»«S'jdl"essed and the stage was artis-, lowship, Clara Arwood; publici- Charleston garters were meant tically decorated in and' ty, Mary Teasley; music, Ruth American institution devoted refreshments were served. for holding up her hose. ferns solely to intensive scientific re- El Circulo Espanal is wide lilies. Strain. " - You can wander in the United : The following program was The installation service for search Prominent Americans, awake. Every member is inter-[states, "but you must go "to Italy from Edward Everett on, travel- ested and has a broad view of to Rome I rendered: the new officers was held Sun- ed to German universities for the importance of Spanish. In Caromio Ben—Giordaine; Cher- day, April 18, at six o'clock, in Some boy's idea of broadcast- thorough....— —„.. discipline—, ...in advanced—— thenic lioiLiiwesieinNorthwestern Universityuniversity ' ;no. :« rnilrino- tha ohl at n t ry Ripe—Horn.xwfc—"uiu. MissHUBS Terrell,ICIICII. the»•*»• prayerr««-j-.. hall.uuu. Thei"^ officers,^mvcio, courses offered nowhere on this three thousand students kept a "^ walk Pastorale— Scarlatti — Tausig;old and new, dressed in white, continent. Johns Hopkins, la record of how the time was spent and walk. To the Sea—MacDowell. Miss!led by Miss Maidee Smith, the beginning, transplanted this j that university for one week, You can never tell about wo- Chunn. marched down to the prayer hall n men, and even if you car■, you scholarly research to the United Yale, Harvard, and other big Nymphs and Fauns—Bembera. while "Follow the Gleam" was States, gathered to her faculty universities are anxiously wait- shouldn't. played. They took their seats The favorite perfume of syn- Miss Terrell. men later to become famous— jng to see what the results are. , Melody in G flat—Moszkowiski; and the installation then took Gildersleeve, Remsen, Woolwich, Everywhere the students are °Tuflt^T^a^Ttn i place. Miss Newton, the old lde the pi z e Sa Love Dream Nocturne No.3— Martin. realizing the value of time. The L.?™ * °* , , . P " Liszt. Miss Chunn. president, presiding. "Follow Later Johns Hopkins entered member! in El Circulo-Espanol S^ffi JS?? *,? T™ v , , . „ , _ the Gleam was sung, and then the race for material expansion, think that much of the time fus,e $?$? ££\tiS, JTL Yesterday and Today—Sprossi; Misg Maidee Smjth g a 6y; ust Smi1 The undergraduate school wax- couid profitably be devoted to .Affil£™ It ?«♦ n ~K' w"^ 'i i „ " inspiring talk, which strengthen- ed larger and larger. Football, h. So El Circulo-Espanol ™y%£s that 1S "0t totally °b" ing—Wells. Miss Terrell. , ., , . ,, " Spanis noxious. 5 extra-curricular distractions, the ajms to study and understand First Movement from Concerto £ S^S" ? *** v H? The Prince of Wales still pre- P 8 R. O. T. C, all boomed. All the more thoroughly the Spanish in G Minor (with second pia-^ best" ^ of the^ incoming year ?lor symptoms of gigantism appear- ple, their customs and lan- fers the bridle and halter to the no)—Mendelssohn. Miss pe0 bride and altar. the Y. W. C. A., and made all ed. guage. Chunn. And now, fifty years after its In America the almighty dol- see the benefits of the best co- opening, the New Plan, which is ATLANTA RECEPTION lar is the jack of all trades.— THE S. I. A. S. G. CONFER- operation in this organization. little more than a return to the Hornet. ENCE AT WESLEYAN COL-1 Misses Josephine Glenn and earlier traditions, is officially an- "Be ready to leave for Atlanta Nurse (announcing happy LEGE. Frances Matthews attended a Y. nounced (New Student, Feb. 28, by eleven o'clock," were the as- event)—"It's a boy, professor."! training camp at Camp Wilkins, 1925.) The New Plan will en- tonishing orders Mr. Thompson Prof_ (absent-mindedly) "Ask The annual conference of the on University of Georgia "cam- a to tantail scrapping methe A. r>.B. aegree,degree, r£ ™, , six ,,amazed , ,,girls , , who , ■ him what he wants ?"—Hornet. Southern Inter-collegiate Asso- pus April 2-4. The purpose of the undergraduate school. Uni- h£d beer, suddenly called to his ciation of Student Governments the conference was to train Y. offlce When v0ice could be FIELD DAY versity work will be commenced ; voice was held at Wesleyan College officers who were entering upon found, dozens of questions were 1 with what is now the junior Friday dawned bright and AP '" lf-17. Every phase of stu- these Mw dutieg and ivi] . year. tol A bunch f h ff^L"Jl^ ° ^ »™ and^^^vernment^wastoken^up Much benefit ^ ^^ ^ although very sore, girls rose discussed. The ideal rela- the exchange "It is certainly true," says giving a reception at the home tlons of of different col- President Goodnow, "that ad- with—no, not the sun; but a student government so- ... of Mrs. Warren Candler for the warning cry that the breakfast aally, religiously, and political- lege Y s ideas, and the ectur es vanced work cannot be most ad-Ivors' of "all the "high' school bell was "fixin°-" to rine '^ to the individual student, to .given by interesting speakers, as vantageously done in an atmos- jn Atlanta interested in coiiege. phere which is dominated by vo- hour At last eighMMrty came. The the student body, to the college, George Collins, G. W. Berg- At the a inted S* tennis tournament was held at to ,the umvel'sity, to the state, tholrt. cational aims and1 byrthe pres- thrm d ^ vh Myrtlei;^^'"^ and to the nations and how ence of a large body of students CannQn Nan Smith Gertrude this houi. doubles were Each year a mission study played off fast. The players these ideals can be brought course is held by the Y. W. C. who are instructed in a mass and stl.ain, Mary Powell, Georgia were CasseIs and about in the separate student; A. and previous to this year m predominately elementary K ' W Adelaide Ti'oner were Doughman vs. subjects." Knox, and Adelaide Hgnei, weie Hi]11 and Foster.Foster. Then thethe sin-sin-.~ government. associations of the there have been groups into ready to leave. Mr Thompson , h ]d DoUghman vs. South. The delegates were able which the Y. W. C. A. was di- MAGNIFICENT ATLANTA and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dunson Cassels.5. ° to getret much practicalnract ca helphe n from vided._-J.J _ ButT>..± this./ . the,, lan, took them in their cars. SHOWS FAITH IN At three in the afternoon the the conference, but even greater was changed, and Mrs. Hazen EMORY They arrived in Atlanta about field events began. Every one than the practical value gained Smith . mission two-thirty and went immediate- thought that the biggest contest was the inspiration, the spirit of ,k ? *.» " Ea Magnificent Atlanta has again ]y to Mrs. Candler's. There was would be between the Freshmen *.»"• ph representative re- h , f , >interesting We feel ceived a shown a living and inspiring rather large crowd of Seniors and Sophomores. ^sion of student gov- £ ,„ ^^SSJJ LZZT a ernment in its biggest, broadest, thf|Hf w\o areovo exceedingly fortu- faith in her greatest educational fr0m both the public and private The events ended with the and highest sensl nate JJ hav'"f Ml's' Smith to asset, Emory University, by re- high schools in Atlanta. The cross-country relav, which was . ,, , „ give these talks. sponding with her full quota of LaGrange girls stood in the re- captured easily by the Juniors.
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