May - LaGrange College

Transcription

May - LaGrange College
"V
LaGrange College, LaGrange,
VOLUME VII.
May, 1932.
NUMBER VI.
COMMENCEMENT EDITION
THIRTY-SIX SENIORS TO GRADUATE
Miss Elizabeth
Latin Club Honors
1932 Quadrangle DedMay Fete
Miss Sails
Wilkin Gives Recital icated to Dean Bailey
Held Here
On Friday evening, May 20th,
The last meeting of the Latin
Miss Elizabeth Wilkin, head of the
Club for the year 1931-32 was one
Misses Bowles and Moon Crown- of unusual interest. It was devot- voice department, presented the following program:
ed King and Queen
ed to the Lyric muse, Euterpe, the
I
last of the nine to be honored by
Intomo All' idol Mio
Cesti
On May 4, May Day was observ■ the club. The program was in the
Gluck
ed at L. C. with a festival, held on j form of a continued narrative in Odel Mio dolce Ardor
Chi Vuol Compror
Jommelli
the back compus. The fairy-tale,
verse, first invoking the Muse and
"The Sleeping Princess," was used
II
, then introducing a few of the great
Pchumaner
as a motif of the fete, which culmi- ! lyric writers. As each writer was Mondnocht
Aus Meinen Grosseu Schmerzer
nated with the crowning of the
mentioned, a student with a sketch
Franz
Prince and Princess as King and
| about this poet arose and read the
Der Schumuel
Brahms
Queen of the May.
I sketch together with his or her zest
III
The Sleeping Princess
I works. The program next touched
Act I. Scene I. Place—The throne upon the lyric in general and made Stride la Vampa (from "II
Trouvatore)
Verdi
room of the palace.
the transition to the Lyric moveIV
Time—Medieval Period.
ment in the South and elsewhereLullaby
C. Scott
Characters
the program closed with a poetic
Campbell-Tipton
Old King
Mary Johnson tribute to Miss Sails, guest of hon- ! Spirit Flower
Sjagren
Old Queen
Vonice Ritch or, and writer and inspirer of lyric I Seraglioo Garden
' Hills of Home
Fox
Heralds .... Essie Mae Byes9, Martha verse.
The program, which was
Re tribution
Wilkin
Jolly.
read by Rebecca Hart, vice-presiThis is the same program whicli
Fairies .... Pauline Roberts, Emily dent of the club, was as follows:
Miss Wilkin will sing before board
Fisher, Frankie Cole, Leila "Euterpe of the nine the fairest,
of examiners aV the American ConHearn, Frances Fleeth, Dona Strike your lyre, and we shall I:
servatory, Chicago, in August, for
Mathews, Ruth Dempsey.
Listen to the sweetest singers
Courtiers .... Louise Dobbs, Monta That the world has ever cherished. her Master of Music degree. Befo-e
coming to LaGrange, Miss Wilkin
L. Hall, Ruth Dempsey.
Let thy spirit be among U9,
was
instructor of voice at the AmerLadies of the Court .... Sara Whit- Aiding us to sense their beauty.
ican Conservatory, Chicago, and at
aker, Frances Eberhart, T. A- First of all appears before us
Central College, Fayette, Mo. She
Fowler.
David, Hebrew shepherd poet."
had one season in light opera and
Act I. Scene II. Place—The same.
David
Winifred Adams
was contralto soloist in several
Time—Ten years later.
Turn we now to Grecian Lesbas,
Young Princess
Helen Lehmann Where fair Sappho, softly playing, large churches in Columbus, Ohio,
Nurse
Olive Linch Sing sweet songs of gentle sadness. and Chicago. 'She is a national officer in Phi Beta, National music
Playmates of the Princess ... Jean
Sappho
Aline White
Thompson, Julia Howard Tray- Even from Rome, the strong, the and dramatic fraternity.
oOo
lor, Mary Callaway, Mary Nell
mighly,
Bailey, Jimmie Guinn, Fred
Comes a follower of Euterpe.
Howard, Jack Bailey,
Steve
Sweet Catullus softly singing
Ivey.
Of his villa and his brother.
Act II. Place—The Palace.
Catullus
Emmeline Goulsby
Time—Six years later.
(Continued on page G)
Characters
During the four years that Miss
Princess
Ora Mae Bowles
oOo
Lulu
Jones has been Director of
Old Woman Spinner Helen HamilArt at LaGrange College, the standton.
ard of this department has been
Father Time
Lucy Barrett
raised, more credit given and courDJance of the ilHours—Dancers:
ses
offered that are given in few
Aline Boye, Thelma Dunbar,
schools outside of professional ones.
Elizabeth Hall, Rebecca Hart,
LaGrange can now compete with any
Aline White, Gertrude Linn,
"Quality Street," by James W. ; college in the South in the excelNell Cole, Bessie Rutl Burtz,
Charlsie Gober, Lucille Miller, Barrie, has been chosen for the lence of the work done in the Art
Elizabeth Merritt, Louise Pharr Commencement play at LaGrange Studios. Every branch of Art is
Dance of Dreams—Dancers: Sara College. It will be presented by taught, both Fine and Applied, fun_
(Continued on page 4)
Lane, Virgnia Milam, Carolyn the Curtain Raisers on Monday
evening, May 30.
(Continued on page 5)
oOo
The leading roles will be taken
Art Dept. Work
To Be Exhibited In
Studio, Fri. May 27
"Quality Street"
Chosen for Commencement Play
oOo
Three One-Act
Plays Presented
Th Dramatic Club presented three
one_act plays in the college auditorium, April 16, under the direction of Miss Mildred Singer. They
were "Mansions," "Love, Love,
Love," and "Gretna Green."
"Mansions," by Hildegarde Flanner, was presented by the seniors
in expression in the Play Festival
held at Macon and sponsored by
the Georgia Association of Teachers of Speech.
by senior members of the Expression department. The cast is as
follows:
Miss Susan
Aldyne Jordan
Miss Fanny .... Mary Ellen Aycock
Valentine Brown .. Mary T. Moon
Miss Mary Willoughby
Vonice Ritch
Phoebe
Matilee Dunn
Patty
Cai-olyn Chanelle
Sergeant
Frankie Cole
Spicer
Martha T. A. Fowler
Blades
Nell Barrett
Mothers Day Observed at Vespers
Mothers' Day was observed vespers Sunday evening, May 8th, with
a program by the students.
Miss
Katherine Rogers, retiring president
of the Y. W. C. A., and Miss Winifred Adams, newly elected president
had charge of the devotional. They
read passages from the scriptures
illustrating the love of mothers of
the Bible.
oOo
.Miss Aldyne Jordan read a poem,
New conditions create new prob- "Mothers' Day."
Miss Virginia
lems which demand new solutions.— Moseley sang, "0 Little Mother O'
Cass Gilbert.
Mine."
Largest Class In History of College to
Receive Diplomas
The Quadrangle for 1932, a publication of the Senior Class, was
recently issued. Miss Helen Rob- Rev. Wallace Rogers, Rabbi
David Marx are Speakers
ertsson, Bowersville, was Editor-inchief.
On Tuesday, May 31st, LaGrange
The Annual was dedicated to
College
will confer degrees on thirDean E. A. Bailey, with .the follow_
ty-six
seniors.
ing words:
The exercises will be held at 11
"To Dean E. A. Bailey, whose
a.
m. following a meeting of the
gallant spirit of service and loyboard
of trustees at 9 o'clock. Dr.
alty has raised the ideals of our
David
Marx, will deliver the BaccaAlma Mater, we, the students of
LaGrange College, gratefully ded- laureate address, following which
President Thompson will confer the
icate this volume of the
degrees.
QUADRANGLE."
Commencement Sermon
"Following the gleam" of noble
On Sunday, May 29th, the Bacvomanhood was the theme of the
Quadrangle. The quest for the calaureate sermon will be presented
grail was portrayed under the spell by Rev. Wallace Rogers, pastor of
of enchanted Camelot.
This idea the Druid Hills Methodist Episcpal
In the
ivas revealed in the artistic illus- Church South, Atlanta.
evening
at
7
o'clock
vesper
services
tration.
will
be
held,
sponsored
by
the
Y.
The contents consisted of College,
Classes, Activities, and Features. W. C. AThe Class of '32 are distinguishEach of these divisions was appropriately illustrated by a scene from ed in that they are the largest class
j ever to graduate from the college.
the Knights of the Round Table.
The section—College—was rep- That circumstance is an emblem of
resented by a knight kneeling at the growth and progress made by
Arthur's throne. This was follow- the college in recent years. The fol
ed by views of the entrance to the lowing will receive degrees:
A. B. Degree.
Campus, Warren A. Candler CotRuth
Adams,
LaGrange, Ga.; Altage, Front Campus, Quadrangle,
leyn
Boyle,
East
Point, Ga.; Netelle
Academic Building, Back Campus,
a picture of Pres. W. E. Thompson Carley, LaGrange, Ga-; Lucy Barrett, Rockmart, Georgia., Carolyn
and members of the faculty.
Classes were illustrated by a- Channelle, Plains, Ga.; Kathryn
maiden bending over a wounded Cline, LaGrange, Ga-; Nell Cole,
knight.
A fitting quotation was East Point, Ga.; Lorene Daniell,
placed by each seniors' picture. The Villa Rica, Ga.; Matilee Dunn,
class history was written by Miss Warm prings, Ga.; Hixie Gentry,
Katherine Rogers.
Miss Dorothy Dublin, Ga.; Helen Hamilton, McJorton wrote the Class Prophecy in Donough, Ga.; Mabel Henslee, East
Point, Ga.; Phlecia Jenkins, Laverse.
Grange, Ga.; Frances Kimbrough,
(Continued on page 5)
Gabbettville, Ga.; Lena Loyd, LaoOo
Grange, Ga-; Elizabeth Merritt,
Emory University, Ga.; Pauline
Roberts, Winder, Ga.; Mary Clyde
Robinson, LaGrange, Ga.; Katherine
Rogers, Mountville, Ga.; Louise
Taylor, LaGrange, Ga.; Aline White
Villa Rica, Ga.
(Continued on page 6)
On May 4th,' several of the SenoOo
iors rendered a most interesting
program at a dinner given by the
Rotary Club.
Miss Alleyn Boyle, East Point,
Ga., made a talk on "What Citizens
On Sunday evening at 7 o'clock
of LaGrange Have Meant to Me." vespers will be observed at the colMiss Mabel Henslee, also of East lege. The program will be sponsorPoint, played a violin solo, "Ron- ed by the Y. W. C. A. and the ocdino"—theme by Beethoven — by casion will be unique in that it inFritz Kriesler.
troduces a new theme.
Miss Mary T. Moon, LaGrange,
The services are to be dedicated
read "The Scum of the Earth."
to the seniors and though no definite
Miss Virginia Moseley, Daniels- plans have been made, the expresville, sang, "Loves A Merchant," sion of class sentiment promises to
and "If No One Ever Marries Me." be a tribute to the class of '32.
Miss Pauline Bond, Eastman, acoOo
companied Misses Moseley and Henslee.
Social lions at the University of
Arizona
have agreed to wear tuxoOo
•
edoes for all evening dates, even
It is as easy for the mind to think for motion picturesCritics dein stars as in cobblestones.—Helen clared that they will probably be
Keller.
mistaken for ushers.
L. C. Girls Featured
In Rotary Club
Program, May 4
Vespers May 29th Dedicated to Seniors
THE SCROLL
May, 1932.
'THE SCROLL"
Published monthly by the Quill Drivers' Club of LaGrange College.
Entered ■ at Postoffice at LaGrange,
Ga., as second class mail matter,
January 29, 1922, under Act of
March 3, 1879.
Subscription rate, fifty cents a
semester.
EDITORIAL STAFF
Dorothy Morton .... Editor-in-Chief
Helen Barker .... Asst. Ed.-in-Chief
Emeline Goulsby .... Business Mgr.
Elizabeth Hall .... Circulation Mgr.
Elma Cowan
Advertising Mgr.
Ruth Campbell
Ast. Adv. Mgr.
Marion Wilson.. Club & Feature Ed.
Nellie Sue Bailey .... Poetry Editor
Ernestine Woodson .. Exchange Ed.
Katherine Glass
Proof Reader
Sara Lee Payne, Olive Linch,
Carolyn McNeil.
Reporters
Inez Hill, Gertrude Linn, Monta L.
Hall, Sara Whitaker, Lucy Barrett,
Evelyn Varner, Frankie Cole, Vonice
Ritch, Elizabeth Fort, Marian Wilson.
COLLEGE DIRECTORY
Class Presidents.
Senior
Alleyne Boyle
Junior
Mary Johnson
Sophomore
Mary Peavy
Freshmen
Helen Copelan
ORGANIZATIONS
Y. W. C. A
Winifred Adams
Student Govt. Thelma Dunbar
Athletic Ass'n
Sara Lee Payne
Quadrangle
Rebecca Hart
Scroll
Dorothy Morton
Enter the Seniors
"All the world's a stage and all
the men and women merely players.
They have their exits and their entrances. And one man in his time
plays many parts. His acts being
seven ages."
As commencement draws near, a
realization is thrust upon us. The
curtains are about to be drawn upon a great scene in the drama of
student life. Any great scene involves a crisis—an important turning point.
Success or failure lios
close at hand. Past events give
augury of success.
Each player
must make her bow, but for effectiveness in the future acts, each
player must "labor good on good to
fix" and take her cue to high success. A happy denoument will be
assured.
oOo
The Seniors' Farewell
Four years ago we entered the
walls of this grand old institution,
a group of happy laughing girls.
Little dd we dream of the things
that were to take place during one
•3f four years stay here. Now at
the end of that tme we are looking
back over those days, finding in
the recollection of them a joy that
is touched with wistfulness, for now
we realize as never before that they
have passed all too swiftly, and that
soon there will remain only mem•ories. But as we walk these cherished paths for the last time, new
■visions, new ideals, are coming before us, leaving an indelible imipression of the school, and all . it
stands for, on our hearts.
It is useless to try to express for
the group, or for any individual,
the deep appreciation that we feel
towards all those connected with
school. Under the care and guidance of our president and the faculty we -have learned many of life's
lessons.
We thank you for the
kind help and good advice you have
given us, but most of all for the
inspiration to press on, not only in
the academic fields, but toward that
ideal of all that is best that you
have imparted. The facts we may
forget, but never the examples of
right you set for us.
Schoolmates, we have learned to
love you in these days we've spent
together. Carry on the work, profit
by our mistakes, and ever remember that we carry with us fondest
memories of you.
And now how fully do we realize
the meaning of these words, words
that only in a small way express
our feelings as we bid our Alma
Mater farewell.
"There is a word, of grief the
sounding token;
There is a word beguiled with bright
tears,
The saddest word fond lips have
ever spoken;
A little word that breaks the chain
of years;
Its utterance must ever bring
emotion,
The memories it crystals cannot die,
'Tis known in every land, on every
ocean—
'Tis called "Good-bye."
tOo
The Ideal Student
Facing Forward
Parnassus
NELLIE SUE BAILEY,
Poet-Librarian of L.
C. Is Lineal Descendant of Cavalier Poet
By Helen Harriet Sails
Miss Caroline Fall Benson, a native of LaGrange, Georgia, and for
nine years the librarian of LaGrange College, has recently been
informed by a relative in Virginia
that she is a lineal descendant of
the English poet, Richard Lovelace,
the greatest of the famous group of
Cavalier lyricists of the earlier
seventeenth century. Lovelace is
best remembered for his lines, "To
Lucasta On Going to the Wars":
"I could not love thee, dear so much
Loved I not Honor more";
and for his verses "To Alfchea from
Prison":
"Stone walls do not a prison make,
Nor iron bars a cage."
Miss Benson is the only child of
Eustace Conway anl Lucie Fauntieroy (Todd) Benson. Her father
was a native of Montgomery, AlabamaHer maternal great-grandfather, John Hall Todd, was a cousin of Lyman Hall; a grandson of
Captain Harry Todd of the American Revolution; and a descendant
of the Fauntleroys of Virginia,
through whom the line is traced
jack to Richard Lovelace.
Child of the; Chattahoochee coun_
i y, the land of mocking-birds and
sinter-blooming
jonquils,
and
daughter of the City of Elms and
Roses, Carrie Fall Benson early
jegan to chant her rapturous love
of beauty. iHer first poems were
jrinted in newspapers and in The
/oice, a magazine of verse publishd in Cleveland, Ohio. Within the
jast year she has had poems accepted by Dr. W. F. Melton and issued
rom the Banner Press, Emory UniI'ersty; Bozart and Contemporary
/erse, edited by Dr. Thornwell Jacobs, Oglethorpe University; The
Harp, edited by Eunice Wallace
ind published in Larned, Kansas;
Che Blue Moon, edited by Ben M.
Smith and published in Albion,
Michigan; and The Kaleidoscope,
published in Dallas, Texas.
Her
>oem, "Judas Tree", has very recently appeared in the Sidney Lanier Memorial colume of Tree Poetry, edited by Dr. W. F. Melton and
published by the Banner Press. One
if her loveliest sonnets, "To LaoOo
Grange College", was printed in
the Centennial Edition of the LaESTRANGEMENT
Grange News last October
when
aGrange College celebrated its
(From VerseCraft)
This, too, shall pass, this anguish ine-hundredth anniversary.
and this sorrow,
Miss .Benson's lyrics brim with
This stabbing hurt and harrowing beauty. They are like exquisite
regret;
goblets filled with delicate wines.
On some dim, pallid, yet undreamed There are never bitter dregs at the
tomorrow.
bottom; from the very last drop one
I shall forget.
can get sweetness, rarely cloying,
I shall look back, the old resent- but poignant. Often, itoo, one may
ment vanished,
find a pearl within a cup,—a pure
Old scars long healed above the crystallized thought, not dissolved
hidden pain,
in the liquid music,—a chaste and
To just half-glimpse your eyes, luminous jewel to be worn over the
their anger banished,
heart.
Their beauty as of blossoms in
Miss Benson is the author also of
the rain;
And dreaming of you for a moment several delightful plays. Her comedy of mid-nineteenth
century
so,
I'll woned why my heart broke long schoolgirl life, "Decorous Days,"
was received with glee by LaGrange
ago.
Her
Carrie Fall Benson audiences two years ago.
The simple words, "Back of the
flour mill," reiterate that a perfect
structure is built upon a substantial foundation. Therefore, the ideal
student is' the outgrowth of a student who imbibes knowledge and
develops her character nobly.
A
strong, healthy body and a keen,
expanding mind are the essentials
of a scholar. To these add a heart
avid for truth anti beauty.
The
coordination of a vigorous body,
alert mind, and clean heart are necessary to the ideal student.
Indeed, before perfection is realized,
all elements must blend.
What does the term—ideal student—denote.
The ideal student
has, primarily, a resolute plan for
her life. Zealously she labors to
fulfill this purpose. Toward what
does she direct her efforts? Realizmg her imperfections and needs,
she pursues knowledge strenuously.
Moreover, she knows that " unbridled passion mars the beauty of
a life." Accordingly, she severely
disciplines her moral nature by the
daily practice of self-control. Th-i
ideal student comes to college with
a determined purpose; namely, "to
make the most of herself in order
to fill her place happily and usefully."
To paraphrase the words of the
wisest of counsellors—as a student
(Continued on page 6)
LaGrange, Ga.
Editor.
tragedy, "Timbers," and her romantic
drama,
"The Fiddlin'
Feller," were accepted by the Carolina Playmakers when the play_
wright was a member of tnat group
in the summer of 1925. At a meeting last September of the Poetry
Forum of the Atlanta Writers Club,
Miss Benson read several of her
poems, and Mrs. Elmina Wade, of
LaGrange, a graduate in expression
of LaGrange College, read "The
Fiddlin' Feller" to a most responive audience.
A member of the Poetry Society
of Georgia and of the Atlanta Writers' Club, Miss Benson has recently received an invitation to join the
Atlanta Branch of the National
League of American Pen-"Women.
Yet no honor turns the head of
:his gifted descendant of the illustrious
Richard
Lovelace.
Miss
Benson might unearth among her
ancestors a Shakespeare, a Goethe,
ar a Sophocles and she would still
remain to the students and faculty
)f LaGrange College the genial,
modest librarian, never letting her
creative talents interfere with her
daily routine and always keeping
her library up to its standard as
"one of the best administered" in
the state of Georgia.
Lbrarian and poet, Carrie Fall
^enson is first of all a true woman.
Her passionate sympathies,
her
strong, sound nature, her cheery
voice and smile, hearten along life's
plodding way many weary pilgrms,
and help them to lift their eyes to
the bright peaks beyond that soar
into the empyrean where love and
beauty shine like sister-stars.
GARDEN VISIT
PAGEANTRY
(From The Kaleidoscope)
Still they pass along the woodland
ways,
The young king, Arthur, with the
sunlight on his hair;
The glittering knights, the pale lake
ladies, proud
And coldly fair:
Besides the streams the timid
Syrinx flees;
Pan follows her in headlong, hopeless chase:
Narcissus lingers by the forest pools,
Enraptured with the white rose of
his face.
Eternally
the pageant
passes,
bright
Beneath the deep shade of the
greenwood trees;
Plume and panoply, and silver
bugle-notes,
'T is such as these
Our hearts must hold, lest life be
come too gray;
Stand, wide-eyed dreamer in the
wood .... they pass!
No swinging branches rustle in their
train,
And all their marching stirs no
blade of grass.
oOo
DARK FLIGHT
(From The Harp)
The ageless miracle of sprng's returning;
Across the farm had looked on
beauty burning
In every bush and tree, in young
leaves' sheen:
Stormy-hearted, arrogant of mien,
He plowed the fields, insensate
furrows spurning,
Each dull day to a duller morrow
turning,
Brief vistas of relinquished dreams
between.
He would not face the years of
numbing toil,
So one day in the orchard, ringed
about
With beauty of the trees, the sky,
the soil,
Baffled, he took the dark and
blind way out;
He lay, unlovely, on the earth that
bore him . . .
The wind blew, apple blossoms
drifted o'er him.
(From The Blue Moon)
They led her down the garden walks,
Where trellised roses climbed and
I
swayed,
Where peonies bloomed on prideful
stalks,
And where an artful fountain
played:
Smiling, she looked upon it all,
ETCHING
The full flambuoyant beauty spread
Within the high encircling wall,
(From Bozart)
And, "It is beautiful," she said.
The woods were heavy with the latefallen rain
But far down at the garden's edge, That dripped, and dripped again
A blue-bell cool as summer sky
In passionless refrain;
Nodded against the dark green
Light from the western sky
hedge,
Streamed on wet leaves, and high
Light as the wild wind blowing by; Above the broken dripping of the
Seeing her smile of greeting broke.
rain,
Her eyes were rapturous and wide, Birds sang, in mocking, sweet upAs wild heart to wild flower .spok'j . .
lifted strain,
"You lovely, lovely thing!" she died.
As I
With stumbling feet sped by,
My heart hot-seared with pain:
Always, though sunset's flame,
grow dim and die,
SURRENDER
I will remember . . . sky
Of liquid gold, and singing birds,
(From The Harp)
and pain,
I hid away from April
And under all the dripping of the
Because my heart was sore;
rain.
I feared her sudden loveliness,
-oOo——For I could bear no more,
And old griefs have a deeper sting
A recent survey of various college
When April's at the door.
libraries shows that 59 per cent of
library patronage for detective
But I could not flee her lilacs,
stories comes from members of the
Her dirfts of silver rain,
faculty.
Her dagger-thrusts of daffodil:;,
oOo
Her rapture and her pain . . .
Self-control and hard work are
I flung my heart tQ April,
the basis of keeping young.—Billy
Burke.
And let it break again!
I:
May, 1932.
THE SCROLL
L. C. SOCIAL
Pres. and Mrs. W.
Miss Nell Cole
E. Thompson EnterTo Wed in College
tain the Seniors
Parlor, May 31
President and Mrs. W. E. Thompson entertained the Senior Class at
a dinner party Wednesday evening,
May 11th.
The long table was beautifully
decorated in the class colors, gold
and white. The central floral decoration was a large crystal of golden marigolds and smaller bowls of
daisies were placed at intervals on
the table. Tall tapers shed a soft
glow over the scene.
Each guest's place was marked
by a tiny diploma. These diplomas
held prophecies of the activties of
the class members ten years hence.
After curiosity had reached its
height they were opened and read
aloud. Each one painted a rosy
future.
An informal program of stories,
songs, and piano selections was
given, featuring some of the more
talented members of the classThese were followed by an account
of the gossip carried in The Scandaltown Tatler for June, 1933. Some
of this counteracted the effect of
the prophecies, just for a minute,
but only that long.
Covers were placed for Mr. W.
L. Murray, class sponsor; Dean and
Mrs. E. A. Bailey; Misses Alleyn
Boyle, Ruth Adams, Virginia Alsobrook, Mary Ellen Aycock, Lucy
Barrett, Pauline Bond, Ora Mae
Bowles, Netelle Carley, Carolyn
Channelle, Nell Cole, Kathryn Cline
Lorene Daniell, Tommy Dunbar,
Matilee Dunn, Elizabeth Fort, Evelyn Galloway, Hixie Gentry, Mary
T. Moon, Elizabeth Merritt, Virginia Moseley, Pauline Roberts,
Kathryn Gudger, Helen Hamilton,
Mabel Henslee, Phelicia Jenkins,
Aldyne Jordan, Frances Kimbrough,
Lena Loyd, Mary Clyde Robinson,
Louise Traylor, Kathryn Rogers,
Emily Sewell, Aline White, Martha
Wood, Mrs. Elmina' C. Wade, and
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson.
oOo
College Brides
Feted With Shower
Misses Nell Cole and Elizabeth
Merritt, members of the senior class
and brides elect, were entertained
at a handkerchief shower on Saturday afternoon, May 7th, by Miss Aldyne Jordan and Miss Dorothy Morton.
The decorations were baskets and
bowls of larkspur, sweet peas, and
red and white rose9. The handkerchiefs were arranged on a clothesline across the room and attached
to each handkerchief was a small
novelty umbrella bearing the name
of the giver.
Punch was served by Misses Thelma Dunbar and Rebecca Hart and
sandwiches and wafers were served
during the afternoon.
As the honor guests entered the
room Miss Catherine Cline played
the wedding march from Lohengrin
and Miss Moseley sang, "At Dawning."
Another feature of the afternoon
was the writing of good wishes in
small autograph books and on the
clothes pins from the line.
The guests were the members of
the senior class on the hill.
Of cordial interest to a host of
friends is the announcement made
by Mr. and Mrs. Early LaFayette
Cole, of East Point, Ga.; of the engagement of their daughter, Nell
Katherine , to Mr. Euchee Harp
Skinner, of Kansas City, Mo., formerly of Atlanta, the marriage to
be solemnized on May 31 in the
College parlor. The wedding will
follow Miss Cole's graduation and
will be a bright event of the commencement program.
Miss Cole is a charming and popular young lady, and is one of the
most attractive members of the
young social contingent of her native city. She was an honor graduate at Russell High School, and
she won a scholarship to L. C Miss
Cole is very outstanding in student
activities, being a member of the
Delta Phi Delta Sorority, the Atlanta Club, the English Club, the
Spanish Club, the Latin Club, of
which she is president, and the Orchestra Club.
She represents her
sorority in the Inter-Sorority Council." For two years she was treasurer of the Y. W. C. A. Council.
She is a sister of Miss Ophelia
Cole, Miss Rosa Cole, and Mis^ Ellen Cole. Her father is an outstanding attornsy in Atlanta and is
secretary of the Atlanta Film Board
of Trade.
Mr. Skinner is the son of Mr. S.
D. Skinner, of Atlanta, a prominent
contractor, and the late Mrs, Skinner. The bride-groom elect is a
graduate of Georgia Tech, and is
now connected with the engineering
branch of a prominent Western
firm.
The numerous friends of these
young people jon the Scroll in wishing for them many years of happiness and prosperity.
oOo
Art and Latin Club
Honors Dr. Wilson
LaGrange, Ga.
NOTES
BRIDE-ELECT OF MAY
MISS NELL KATHERINE COLE, whose engagement is announced to Mr. Euchee Harp Skinner, of Salina, Kan., the marriage
to be solemnized May 31, at LaGrange College.—Photo by Elliott's
Peachtree Studio.
Latin Club Honors
Miss Cole
The Latin Club presented Miss
Nell Cole with a token of their appreciation of her capable administration of the affairs of the club
during the year as president of the
club at their last meeting. Just
before the refreshments were served, Miss Louise Hawkes, retiring
secretary of the club, appeared in
the costume of Eratok, Muse of
Love Poetry. In the character of
Erato she commended both the
sponsor and the retiring president
for their fidelity to her. They presented Miss Nell Cole, bride-elect
with a pair of sterling silver salt
and pepper shakers and extended
good wishes from all nine muses.
Miss Cole accepted with a delightful
talk.
Delicious refreshments were then
served by the hostesses, Misses Louise Hawkes, Alice Lovern, and Evelyn Varner.
ooo
Weiner Roast
For Art Club
Photo, courtesy of Atlanta Journal.
Thursday afternoon, May 12th,
at 3:30 the members of the Art
Clubs started on a merry jaunt to
Miss Carmel Glass' country home.
When they reached their destination they found a cheery fire burning in a barbecue pit near a bubbling spring. A boat on the lake
was the favorite sport until the cry
"soup's on" was heard.
Roasted
seiners, iced tea, and fruit in
abundance were found placed temptingly on a picnic table.
A leisurely stroll n the wood and
on horseback, then the return home
in the waning twilight.
Those members of the Art Club
enjoying this delightful picnic were:
Emily Sewell, Lucille Miller, Caroline McNiel, Helen Copelan, Tommy
Dunbar, Virginia Moseley, Miss
'Catherine Wilson, and Miss Carmel
Glass, and Natelle Carley and Mildred Goldstein.
oOo
Towel Shower
Guild Entertains for
Given Dr. Wilson
College Girls
Miss Elizabeth Wilkin and Miss
Dixie Reid entertained at a towel
shower in honor of Dr. Katherine
Wilson, bride-elect, on Saturday,
April 23. As the guests entered,
they were each assigned a kitchen
to hem and to embellish with an
original design. A prize w-as offered for the best piece of work.
Considerable originality was manifested by the guests, with the result that some astonishing designs
appeared on the towels. Two bore
Latin mottoes; another, a butterfly;
another a nice, plump kitty; another, a large eighth note; and another unusually original one displayed a gold-tasseled academic cap
obscured by cobwebs.
After the towels had been finished, a beautiful white wedding cake
topped by a bride and groom under
a bell, was brought out, and the
honoree was asked to cut it.
The
cake was served with delicious ice
cream.
A prize in the form of a dainty
tape measure was awarded Miss
Walker, who thereupon presented
it to the honoree. Those present
were: Misses
Wilkin,
Walker,
Stewart, Reid, Singer, Shepard and
Wilson.
The Latin and the Art Clubs entertained at a delightful party in
the College parlors on Monday
evening, April 11, in honor of Dr.
Katherine Wilson, bride-elect.
As the guests entered they were
greeted by the officers of the clubs.
Miss Pauline Bond than sang "All
For You," and "The Sweetest
Story Ever Told." Throughout the
evening wedding music was played
on the piano by Miss Aline White
and Miss Mary Johnson.
The gifts for Dr. Wilson
were
presented by Miss Nell Cole, president of the Latin Club, and Miss
Emily Sewell, president of the Art
Club. The gifts were an urn and
a setter dog door step. Miss Dorothy Morton read a poem that she
had written about the urn, a copy
of the classical amphora found in
Pompeii. Dr. Wilson thanked the
club members in a delightful talk.
The color scheme of pink and
white was carried out in the refreshments, ices and cakes embossed in wedding belb.
Miss Lulu
Jones, instructor in art, was assisted
oOo
in serving by Misses Alice Lovern,
Pauline Bond, Carolyn McNeil, LuPatience and moderation are necWle Miller and Louise Dobbs. The cessary for the political, even more
guests were the members of the than for the economic problems.—
clubs and Mrs. W. E. Thompson. Paul Rainleve.
On Monday evening, May 9th StMark's Guild entertained the church
choir at a buffet supper at the home
>: .Mrs. II. Gordon Smith on Mc_
Lendon avenue, honoring Miss Elizabeth Wilkin, director, and the
young ladies of the college who are
•embers of the choir.
Spring flowers were used for decoration and after supper, games
and contests were enjoyed.
Misses Wilkin, White and Ingram,
loseley, Cole, and Eberhart receiv>d bouquets for winning the contests.
Flowers as gifts from the
guild were also presented to Miss
ftlkin, Miss Mary Head, organist,
and Rev. and Mrs. J. D. C. Wilson.
Members of the choir present from
the Hill were Misses Elizabeth Wilkin, Aline White, Virginia Moseley,
"Helen Hamilton, Elizabeth Finley,
Cole, Ruth Ingram, Frances Eberhart, Nell Barrett, Ruth Campbell.
Vonice Ritch, Alleyn Boyle, Mable
Henslee, Mary Head, Marie Hammond.
HERE AND
THERE
Good music knows no class; it
appeals to all humanity. — Walter
Damrousch.
The twenty-fifth anniversary of
the opening of Yaye in-China at
Changshai was celebrated at Yale
University on November 15. Having steadily grown from its quarters in a rented building, Yale-inChina now has 30 buildings and 42
acres of land.
The University of Oklahoma recently gave wide publicity to the
slogan—"Work First, Earn some
Money—Then Come to School."
The president of the University explained the slogan was adopted because "we feel student who work
cannot get the most out of college
when most of his or her time is taken up out of school."
Harvard's psychology clinis has
issued a request that all dreams
concerning the kidnaping of the
Lindbergh baby be reported to it.
oOo
They only plan to add to the data
Artists are not less self-control- on noctural phenomena.
led than others, but they have much
After all, life is made up of secmore to control.—Osbert Burdett.
ond best thngs.—Davd Lloyd GeoroOo
ge.
The public libraries are like banquet tables for every appetite, every
Until we have looked into darktaste, and the humblest is a wel- ness, we cannot know what a divine
come guest.—Rupert Hughes.
thing vision is—Helen Keller.
May, 1932
THE SCROLL
LaGrange, Ga.
SPECIAL DEPARTMENTS FEATURED
Glee Club Presents
Miss Jordan Presented Miss Aycock Gives
Music Week Is
Finished Program In Expression Recital
Expression Recital Observed On College
Campus May 3-7
(Reprinted from LaG. News)
Miss Mary Ellen Aycock, of
Miss Alyne Jordan, president of
A finshed performance showing
careful and expert training was presented Friday evening, by the college glee club in the college auditorium, directed by Miss Elizabeth Wilkin.
"A'Gorden of Song" was the
name of the performance which was
staged n a setting of rose covered
trelisses with lighting given by colored lanterns overhead. The members of the glee club were costumed
in afternoon dresses of attractve
models in the pastel shades. When
the curtain parted, they were grouped in an informan manner, some
seated and others standing.
The first collecton of numbers included "The Bells of St. Mary's"
"At Twilght," "To You," and "The
World is Waiting for the Sunrise."
The ensemble work of the club was
especially good, as there was close
harmony among the different parts
and a sympathetic understanding.
Particularly lovely were the cadences in several numbers.
• The second group included "Slumber Sea," "The River," and the
familiar "Serenade," of Schubert
which was pleasingly rendered.
The third part of the program
was a piano solo, "Norwegian Bridal
Procession," which was rendered by
Miss Aline White and was enthusiastically received.
Following the brief intermission,
the club presented a scene from the
light opera, "The Mikado," by Gilbert, and Sullivan in which the
three little maids joyously celebratsd the approaching marriage of Yum
Yum to Nank-i-Poo, interrupted by
the arrival of Katisha, a woman of
noble birth, but few looks, who was
looking for her vanished fiancee
who was none other than Nank-iPoo. Miss Virginia Moseley as Yum
Yum, was delightful and Miss Paulne Bond as Katisha, won hearty
applause. The members of the club
were gowned as Japanese girls in
gaily colored kimonas.
The final group of numbers included "My Love Dwelt in a North..
em Land," "Beauteous Morn." z:nd
"The Green Cathedral." An especially attractive number was "The
Bear Song" wheh was given as an
encore.
The officers of the club are :Miss
Aline White, president; Miss Pauline Bond, vice-president; Miss Ruth
Campbell, secretary; Mis Alleyn
Boyle, treasurer. The members are
Misses Nellie and Lucy Barrett;
Frankie Cole, Helen Copelan, Frances Eberhart, Emmeline Goulsby,
Elizabeth Finley, Helen Hamilton,
Marie Hammond, Mable Henslee,
Sue Hutcheson, Ruth Ingram, Frances Morgan, Virginia Moseley, Vonice Hitch, Emily Sewell, Miss Annie
Rosa Bond and Miss Marian Norman are the accompanists for the
club.
3.(11
the Dramatic Club, was presented
in her graduation recital in expression by Miss Mildred Singer, director of expression, Saturday evening, April 29.
Miss Jordan wore a gown of ceil
blue and a corsage of pink rosebuds
and valley lilies.
Miss Jordan
was assisted by Miss Virginia Moseley, soprano, who was gowned :n
blue and wore a corsage of pink
rosebuds and valley lilies.
The stage was decorated with
baskets of pink and white carnations, narcissus, roses, a potted
pink begonia and bowls of pansies.
Ushers for the evening wjre Misses
Emma Cowan,- Evelyn Galloway,
Kathryn Gudger, Elmir.a Wade,
Dorothy Morton, Mary Ellen Aycock. The program follows:
Joint Owners in Spain, Alice Brown
Aldyne Jordan
Love's A Merchant
Carew
Dawn
Curran
Will o' the Wisp
Sproso
Memory
Densmore
Virginia Moseley
I Must Sing .... Carrie Fa'l Benson
There Is No Word but Love,
Helen Harriet Sails
Pansy Faces
Dorothy Morton
As You Like It William Shakspeare
Aldyne Jordan
Habanera from Carmen
Bizet
Virginia Moseley
Humoresque
Fannie Hurst
Aldyne Jordan
Farmington, was presented in a
Senior expression recital at LaGrange College on Tuesday evening, May 10, by Miss Mildred Singer, director of expression.
The auditorium was decorated in
quantities of flowers sent to the
talented young graduate.
Baskets
of gladioli, snapdragons, carnations,
roses, and Madonna liles and quantities of garden flowers decorated
the platform.
,..
Miss Aycock wore a frock of
white net fashioned with a frilled
skirt and sash of blue ribbons.
A
frilled short jacket and applique of
blue and pink taffeta completed the_
costume. After the recital the curtain raisers entertained at a reception honoring Miss Aycock and Miss
Aline White, pianist, who assisted
her.
The following program was rendered:
Trains
Evelyn Emig Mellon
Mary Ellen Aycock
Nachstuck, op. 23, No. 4
Robert Schumann
Valse, op. 69, No. 1
Frederick Chopin
Aline White
A Tale
Robert Browning
The Butterfly
Hans Anderson
Mary Ellen Aycock
Turkish Rondo
W. A. Mozart
Aline White
Patterns
Amy Lowell
Mary Ellen Aycock
0O0
0O0
Miss Moon PresentMiss Dunn Presented In Recital
ed In Recital
Miss Mary Tinsley Moon was
presented in her graduating recital
in expression at the colege auditor,
ium on Saturday evening, May 7th.
Miss Moon wore a lovely evening
dress of shell pink.
She entered
the stage carrying an arm bouquet
of pink larkspur. The ushers for
the evening were, Miss Molly Fort,
Miss Tommy Dunbar, Mrs. Elmina
Wade, Miss Louise Traylor, Miss
Katherne Gudger and Miss Virginia
Moseley.
The stage, banked with palms
was decorated with baskets of flowers.
Miss Moon read the play, "The
Road to Rome," by Robert E. Sherwood. This play, which deals with
the romance and mystery of the an_
cient Hannibal, is couched in quite
modern language, and its wit, satire
and historical significance made it
one of the most outstanding of the
recent Broadway sujeesses.
The "Road to Rome" is an explanaton, tho' fabulous, of why
Hannibal, when he accomplished the
amfcition of a lifetime, reached the
heights of fame for his generation
—reached the walls of Rome, with
the empress city of the world in his
grasp—then turned his back on it
all—for an ideal, and for the glamorous Amytis.
lllllll<!lllillllilllllllllllll!IIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIII|||||l|||1||||U||||||||||||||||||| 1,1111 Ife
COMPLIMENTS OF
=?
=
5, 10, and 25c STORES
Executive and Buying Offices, 114 5th Ave. New York.
LAGRANGE, GA.
JWI11111111111111
lllll'lilllil!llllllliUllllllll!lllllllll!IIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIlllllllll|)l!l!l!|lll
HI !■ Il l'l:I! t II11 Ii 11 li III (II1 l,|]l:i;i;i l.liLl:f II n IJ11111 ^ , ^
Miss Matilee Dunn was presented
in her graduating recital in expression at the college auditorium on
Friday evenng, May 13th.
Miss Dunn was gowned in a ciel
blue crepe dress and wore a corsage
of pink rosebuds.
The ushers for
the evening were, Misses Ruth Demnsey, Louise Dobbs, Peggie Jenkins,
Helen Robertson, Emily Sewell and
"ara Whitaker.
Her program was as follows:
Chicago
^vnlanations of Love
Tazz Fantasia
Earl Sandburg
Macbeth
Willam Shakespeare
Act II, Scene II
Matilee Dunn
T
ntermezzo
Floersheim
Prelude
Prokofieff
Lilla Sutton
*. Literary Nitrhtmare - Mark Twain
Matilee Dunn
"rehule in G Minor .. Rachmaninoff
Lilla Sutton
T!'c> Dreamv Kid
Eueene O'Neil
(Personal Adoption of Play)
Matilee Dunn
oOo
Mi«s Henslee
Prespn+prj Jn
Violin Recital
Miss Gene Farmer, teache- of
'-loin, presented Miss Mable Hens'»» 'n a violin recital in the college
"nditorium, Saturday evening, May
14.
~~~""r
Mi«s Henslee wore a formal gown
of blue crepe with decorations of
nink and blue roses.
Her flowers
were a shoulder soray of pink rose
buds. Miss Henslee was assisted
by Miss Vonice Ritch, reader, who
wore a frock of ceil blue and a
In observance of National Music
week the music department sponsored a number of musical numbers at
the regular chapel period and one
evening.
On Tuesday morning Miss Elizabeth Wilkin rendered a vocal solo
entitled "Death." Tuesday evening
a student recital was given.
The Heavens are Telling .... Haydn
Chorus
Piano—From out of the Past
Johnstone
Mary Nell Bailey
Piano—The Fairy Fair
Lemont
Winifred Milam
Voice—pring's a Lovable Lady
Elliott
If No One Ever Marries Me
Lehman
Marie Hammond
Piano—German Dances, op. posth.
Schubert
Louise Hawks
Voice—The Answer
Terry
The False Prophet - O'Hara
Mabel White
Staccato Etude
Firml
Annie Rosa Bond
Voice—Concerto in A Minor
Accolay
Mabel Henslee
Piano—Papillon
Merkel
Claudia Twiggs
Piano—Sounds from the South
Spindler
Betty Ragsdale
Voice—My Mother Bids Me Bind My
Hair
Haydn
. Pauline Bond
Piano—Contra Dance .... Beethoven
Marion Norman
Voice—Quiet
Sanderson
Sue Hutcheson
Piano—Hungarian Dance .. Brahms
Grover Hunter
Piano—Ecossaises
Beethoven
Mary Johnson
Miss Rosa Muller played a piano
solo, "Soaring" by Schumann, on
Thursday morning.
"When Shadows Come a Creeping
"Bells of St. Mary's
River Stay Away from My Door.
Just Whistle.
Saturday morning the students
sang a series of sacred hymns during the chapel period.
shoulder spray of sweet peas.
Ushers for the eveuni.ir were:
Misses Aleyne Boyle, Frank:e Cole,
Mary Johnson, Frances Eberhart,
Ruth Ingram, Sara Lee Payne.
Pauline Roberts, Aline White.
The auditorium was decorated
with palms and baskets of red gladioli, lilies, snapdragons, larkspu -,
sweet peas and roses. Miss Hens_
lee executed a dificult program
with ability and charm. Tho program follows:
Sonata, A Major
Handel
Mabel Henslee
The Highwayman .... Alfred Noyes
Vonice Ritch
Concerto, A Minor
Accolay
Mabel Henslee
The Ransom of the Red Chief
O'Henry
Vonice Ritch
Londonderry Air
.... Transcribed by Fritz Kreisler
Rondino (on a theme by Beethoven)
Fritz Kreisler
Meditation from Thais .... Massenet
Mabel Henslee
Art Dep't. Work to
Be Exhibited
(Continued from page 2)
damentals being thoroughly mastered and technique most carefully
obsei-ved. No work is left until the
finish of excellent training is exhibited.
One has but to go into the studios and see the unusual enthusiam
and interest displayed by the students there to realize that they are
striving for the highest and best in
every phase of their work.
The exhibit this year will be the
most interesting ever given at the
College. There will be ' splendidly
executed work in charcoal, crayon,
pastel, water colors, oil, and pen
and ink, by the classes in Fine Art,
and excellent work in varous mediums, done by the classes in Applied Art.
The most up-to-date
methods being used in all branches
The display will be shown in the
main studio and its alcoves. This
studio which is well located on the
second floor of the Administration
Building, has been remodeled and
new furnishings added and is now
one of the most attractive an popular places on the campus.
The China Studio has also been
done over and this year the Art
Club has enjoyed a newly furnished
club room.
There is no more wide awake progressive group than the Art Class,
and under the efficient and enthusiastic directorship of Miss Jones the
Art Department has become one of
the most outstanding departments
of LaGrange College.
oOo
Model Disarmament Conferences
are being planned at the University
of Pennsylvania, Buckness College,
Washburn College and at Northwesteim.
Rusty.
&3 what Co-ed
Jocsn't went to !>??
i . 'y, our herein0 plotted
and planned this ..attenng
scene. No more for her tne
role of wall-flower a1 "prom"
dances! So off to Jenney's,
and then back again . . .
ravishingly costumed to the
utter demoralization of the
stag line. And all for only
$16.43! As witness:
Party Dress
$9.90
Slippers
3.98
Chiffon Hose ...
.79
Dainty Undies .. „ .98
Accessories
.98
J. C. PENNEY
Company, Inc.
LaGrange, Ga.
THE SCROLL
May, 1932.
«v»
Y"
Corner
1932 Quadrangle Dedicated to Dean Bailey
May Day Fete Held
CLUB NOTES
English Club
Elects Officers
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
Sue Traylor, Marian Wilson,
Activities was portrayed by two
Emeline
Goulsby,
Katherne
knights in combat. Student governDon't blame the robberies on
Nichols, Josephine Asobrook,
ment, Y. W. C. A., Quadrangle Staff, ' the Juniors, just because they are
Mary Crim.
At a call meeting of the English
Quill Driver's Club, Mathematics trying to make money!
MoneyDance of ithe Cobwebs—Dancers:
;
Club
on
May
the
tenth
the
followclub Curtain Raisers. Phi Beta Chi, making is really a delightful diverSara Lee Payne, Elizabeth FinInternational Relatons Club, A pol- sion when you have the eager co- ing officers of the club were elected
ley,
Matilee Dunn, Kather'ne
lonedeis, Le Circle Francais, Cocie- operation of the student-body and for the year 1932-33:
Gudger,
Sara Bond, Carolyn
President—Inez Hill
tas Minervae, English Club, Philo- faculty in the "Hunky" sales.
Channelle, Ruth Ingram, PaulVice
Pres.—Jane
Prather
mathan Club, El Circulo Espanol,
Juniors, now acquiring some of
ine Roberts.
Art Club, Trunk Brigade, Daughters the Senior dignity and reserve, in Sec. and Scroll Reporter,
Act
III. Place—The same. *
—Sara Whitaker
of Divinity, Glee Club, Orchestra, addition to Senior privileges, may
Time—One hundred years later.
Treasurer—Annie
Rosa
Bond.
Athletics, and Sororities were the be seen strolling around town at
Characters
Having for an example the fine
organizations represented.
all hours, and around the halls even
Prince
Mary T. Moon
cooperative
work
of
the
club
this
For ages men hav» fought to win until evelen o'clock.
Archbishop
Ruth Jinks
year, we are sure that the year
beauty. Before the beauty sections
This recently acquired dignity
Crown-bearer
Jap Denny, Jr.
1932-33
will
be
very
successful.
was a picture of a medevial tourna- was put alide for a few hours on
Crowning of the May Kin'/ and
oOo
ment. The six beauties were: Miss- Wednesday night.
Dressed in the
Queen.
es Virginia Moseley, Emeline Gouls- most haphazard fashion, the juniors
Maypole Dance
by, Carolyn Sue Traylor, Louise entered the gym amid hilarious
Truimphant Chorus—The
Queen
rlawkes, Virginia Milam and Mary cries of laughter and applause. The
Wakes.
Darby.
"tacky party" given by the freshOn Thursday, May 12th, the town (Words by Miss Carrie Fall Benson)
A distinctive feature of the 1932 men for their sister class gave more
Recessonal
Quadrangle was poetry written by fun in two hours than is commonly girls elected officers for the '32-'33
Pianist—Louise Hawks, Annie Rosa
The following students will
lembers of the student body. Po- considered possible.
The most team.
Bond, Marian Norman.
take
office
in
September.
ers were published by Nellie Sue originality in designing a costume
Violinist—Katherine C'.ine.
Bailey, Dorothy Morton, Katherine must be attributed to Mildred John- President—Katharine Glass
Stage Decorator—Mrs. Jap Denny
Faver Glass, Katherine Rogers.
ston, junior, and Polly Ridgeway, Vice Pres-—Helen Barker
Ushers—Alice Lovern, Mary Peavy,
Sec.-Treas.—Sue Traylor.
The competent Quadrangle staff freshman.
Evelyn Warner, Elizabeth Fort,
for '32 was as follows:
oOo
We ask the seniors if they will
Mary Darby, Floy Terry.
Helen Robertson—Editor-in_Chief
not display their rooms to all junStage Hands—Emily Seveil, MilMatilee Dunn—Business Manager
iors seeking a desirable abode for
dred Johnston.
Rebecca Hart—Asst. Editor.
another year.
This must be done
The Thetan Club held a business
Emeline Goulsby—Advertising Mgr. before May 23rdoOo
meeting in the social room on May
Virginia Milam—Asst. Adv. Mgr.
Here's
wishing
everyone
three
When everything is highly spiced,
0O0
i 4th.
The following officers were
Louise Traylor—'Circulation Mgr.
months of the most fun she has ever
nothing after awhile has much flaelected:
Tommy Dunbar—Photographic Ed. known.
vor.—Walter Lippman.
President—Bessie Ruth Burtz.
Sue Mabhison—Feature Editor.
V.-Pres.—Mable Caudle
Frankie Cole—Art Editor
oOo
Secretary—Martha Jolly.
The Land of Palestine was the Dorothy Morton—Literary Editor
There is nothing the matter with
Treasurer—Louise Pharr
topic for discussion at the vesper Miss Dora Shepard—Faculty Advisor
Americans except their ideals.—C.
Reporter—Gertrude Linn.
services during the week of May 9K. Chesterton.
oOo
After the election delicious re14. Miss Mary Johnson, devotional
We progress as we conserve huThe juniors entertained their sis- freshments were served by the hostchairman, arranged the program for
We are not what we think we
the week. Talks were given on the man energy—-as we get more for ter class with a delightful break- esses, Bessie Ruth Burtz and Mar- are, but rather what we appear to
the expenditure of the same effort. fast hike at McClendon's Pond, on tha Jolly.
following subjects:
be in the eyes of others.—Luig Pi—Henry Ford.
Friday morning, May 6th.
The Location—Mary Johnson.
randello.
oOo
The cool morning air banished
Cities and 'Towns—Rebecca Hart
oOo
The People—Dorothy Morton
Patriotism is no excuse for any. every feeling of sleepiness that is
You apprecate play twice as much
The first person to die for AmeriThe Palestinian House
group of' men to assail a neighbor j likely to be present among college can independence in the Revolution- when you have earned it with work
—Monta L. Hall. or to impress a point of view upon girls at six o'clock in the morning. ary War was a negro, Crispus At- —Constance Bennett.
Furnishing the Home,
others by fire and sword.—Albert By the time they arrived everyone tucks, and on the Boston Commons
was wide-awake and ready for a there is a monument erected to his
—Louise Hawkes Einstein.
Today's dreams are tomorrow's
jolly good time.
memory.
[ achievements.—Govanni Martinelli.
A big fire had already been built,
^ '^11uiisiii^rMiiU!iiiiEii:i.i:iLiiiJiji!iii::Li;tiii[i:ti^inri111IILIII111uncdtn-i[!tiii:i):iIiiILI>I(111!;i:itnni[iiiiiikiiiiii-:uiiiiiii!i[iii<iIIII^S
and everything was in readiness for
yillllHIilllllllllllllllllllllllM
the deliious breakfast. It consisted
of cheese and bacon, cooked on the
hot fire, buns, hot chocolate, bananas and apples.
COMPLIMENTS OF
Everyone enjoyed not only the
most appetizng breakfast, but also
the merriment that goes with an
5c to $1.00 STORES
entertainment of that sort.
The Junior Class can't be beat!
Do you ever stop to think what
kind of person you are?
Do you ever stop to think how
you are using your opportunities?
Do you ever stop to think what
you are doing to make the world
better?
Do you ever stop to think that
where there is a human being there
is an opportunity for kindness?
Do you ever stop to think that a
good deed is never lost?
Do you ever remember to thank
God for the gift of life?
Do you ever thing of the sheer
beauty of a sunset?
Do you ever atop to sing a joyful
song?
Do you ever harbor a noble
thought?
Do you ever stop to think that
things turn up for the man who
digs?
Do you ever stop to think that
there are things beyond the gift of
gold?
Do you ever stop to think that it
is never to late to give up your prejudices?
Do you ever stop to think that
it takes two to be glad?
Do you ever stop to think that
your life is what you make it?
In fact do you Ever stop to think?
Junior
Town Girls
Elect Officers
Thetan Notes
Vesper Services
Freshman
McLELLAN STORES CO.
MILAM DRUG CO.
oOo
?dllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllllllll!lllllll 11'I! I i 111 i I i i i I i I i 111 i 11 Mil 111lllllllllllllllllllllllilllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
^llllllillllliniill!!l!lil!!!ll!i!IIIMi:M:i!!l IMJIIil-ililll.lllll'IMIIIIIil.llllllllllhlilllli;
|
Sophomore
i'-
DAVIS PHARMACY
"HOME OF THE COLLEGE GIRLS"
Courtesv and Service.
1
261
Phones
S1111 lil IIU111111IY11 Mill 11111111111111 III 1111II1111111 IIIIIIIIIINIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllllll:
I
Blue Haven Sandwich Shop
The Sophomores are thrilled that s
vacation time is just around the g
corner, but a gloom seems to over- g
shadow their faces when the dread- B
COMPLIMENTS OF
ed monster by the name of Examin- j
ations is mentioned. He must be a J
terrible creature anyway.
AH of the recitals that have been |
given by graduate students have g
been very good, but the Sophomores O
are especially proud of the work =
made manifest by Miss Ritch, when jj
she assisted Miss Henslee in her p iiitiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiniiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiifiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiimuiii iiiimiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiyiiia
violin recital Saturday evening.
!,, iiiiiiiiiiini
iiiiM.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiriiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiniw:!'!
The !Sophomore Class seems to B
have a monopoly on "hunkey sell- |j
ing." If anyone wants the last |
word in the development of "hunky =
sellng" I'm sure that many sopho-'g
mores can give you detailed infor- J
mation.
if
Special Price on Tennis Racquets to College Girls.
The Sophomore Class went to the ||
show last Wednesday evening to see , J
20 Per Cent Off.
"Freaks." None of us left withr 1
the same feeling that we had when (1
the picture began- le was certainly "creepy."
-iI'Mlllllillll'lllllll.llllllllllllllllllllllllliillilllllllllllllllll-l^lllllllMIIIIIIIHIIIIII
LAGRANGE HARDWARE CO.
Come in and Give Yourself a Real Treat—
WE SERVE THE BEST SANDWICHES & LUNCHES
Our Prices are the Most Reasonable.
Illlllis
11 m
LAGRANGE DRY CLEANING CO.
263
3ll!l!lll!lllllllllll!i:H 11111111! 11 i 111! 11111! 1111111; I j!! 11 l!l!lllllili|||||||||il!ll|!lllil!lllll!lll!l!l!lllllllllil!l!lllllllllllH;liliri!llllllllll!l
1
lUllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll 111111111 lililllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll III 1111111111111111 Hill: 111111111111
II || 11111111! 111111111III III 11.111IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIII111
J
Our Service Will Always Please You.
iwil III mill 111 ill Li I III mi i.i 1111111111111111 lil llililillil lillilililil likiiiiiiiiiiiUii I i.iiiJiiiJj H iii;iii:i:i;ii| iiiri'ifl
May, 1932.
The Ideal Student
(Continued from paga 2)
thinketh in her heart, so is she.
The attitude of a student rules
her being. In college there are attitudes toward work, student government, college mates, faculty, and
the activity of the college.
The ideal student comprehends
the importance of the daily performance of cumbersome tasks. Earn_
estly, enthusiastically she masters
her work. Impelled by the responsibility of work, the ideal student
seeks to gain practical and cultural
learning.
The supreme honor of the ideal
student is manifested in cooperation
with student government. She obeys
its laws and precepts; she influences
weaker girls to do the right things;
she whole-heartedly lends her spirit
to its best interests.
Respect and even reverence for
human personality characterizes ths
ideal student. To her college mates
she is 'gracous, sincere, and unselfish; to the faculty she is respectful,
obedient, and considerate. Finally,
love rules her social relationships.
We agree that man is a vassal to
habit. Earnestly the ideal student
practices that which strengthens the
will. She forms the habit of readiness—readiness to cooperate, readiness to serve, readiness to act.
Moreover she is acustomed to persist steadfastly until a given task is
perfectly performed.
Finally, "are not ideals the things
in life most real, for they determine
action?"
The ideal student has.
necessarily, a sublime purpose.
Her purpose is broad and expansive. She strives for a well-rounded
personality.
To her this signifies
the perfection of body, mind, heart,
and soul.
At one time paleness was associated with virtue. Today in a presumably wiser age, we recognize the
body as the "basis of life." Clean
vision, keen insight, and true feeling depend upon conditions of the
body. There must be teamwork between the mind and body. Therefore, the ideal student, conscious
.that bodily weakness maims every
higher function, protects her body.
She is temperate, vigorous, athletic,
and healthy. Thereby she keeps fit
to challenge bravely the romantic
combats of life.
THE SCROLL
Largest Class In His- Latin Club Honors
tory of School to
Miss Sails
Receive Diplomas
(Continued from page 1)
Now among the German woodlands
Heine sings his matchless lyrics
Heine
,
Sponsor
Now the poet of the skylark
And the fleecy clouds of heaven
C'aims his laurels from Euterpe.
Shelly
Evelyn Vamer
Passing now across the ocean
Find we here the New World singers
Chanting songs so strangely mournful
And so full of lyric beauty.
Poe
Marion Wilson
And in many climes and kindreds
Everwyhere we find Euterpe.
Still refreshing weary mortals
With her pearl-like lyric measures.
Drops of precious perfumen chrystalled
From the whole earth's rarest
blossoms.'
Lyric in general Katherine Rogers
Euterpe at LaGrange. (Tribute
to Miss Sails written by sponsor)
Nell Cole
She struck her lyre, whence issued
forth sweet song
To gladden weary hearts along the
way.
She sang of love, of peace, of courage strong;
Of optimistic hope with cheering
way,
Yet not for self alone does this
her lyre
Its music play in Pensive Citadels,
The University of Oklahoma has For lo! an ever-growing, youthful
announced that students objecting
choir
to military drill on religious grounds Of her unfailing inspiration tells.
will be exempt.
And budding souls new beauty see
in trees,
A measure of man is the importance of the thing he is willing to In pansy faces, or in sunset skies,
fight about-—The Minneapolis tar. In each new season with its charms
that please,
(Continued from page 1)
B. S. Degree
Virginia Alsobrook, LaGrange,
Ga., Mary Ellen Aycock, Farmington, Ga.; Ora Mae Bowles, Fairfax,
Ala.; Elizabeth Dunbar, Byron, Ga.;
Eizabeth Fort, Hamilton, Ga-; Evelyn Galloway, Waverly Hall, Ga.;
Kathryn Gudger, Chatsworth, Ga.;
Aldyne Jordan, Royston, Ga.; Virginia Moseley, Danielsville, Ga.;
Helen Robertson, Bowersville, Ga.;
Emily Sewell, Tallapoosa, Ga.; Elmina Wade, LaGrange, Ga.; Martha Wood, LaGrange, Ga.
Diploma in Expression
Mary Ellen Aycock, Farmington,
Ga.; Matilee Dunn, Warm Springs,
Ga.; Aldyne Jordan, Royston, Ga-,
Mary T. Moon, LaGrange, Ga.
Diploma in Art.
Emily Sewell, Tallapoosa, Ga..
Certificate in China Painting
Emily Sewell, Tallapoosa, Ga.
Diploma in Piano.
Pauline Bond, Eastman, Ga.
Kathryn Cline, LaGrange, Ga.
Certificate in Shorthand and
Type-writing.
Lucy Barrett, Rockmart, Ga.;
Evelyn Galloway, Waverly Hall,
Ga.; Mary Clyde Robinson, LaGrange, Ga.; Louise Traylor, LaGrange, Ga.
oOo
Or in the light that shines in baby's
Girls must be chaperoned to ateyes.
tend gym classes in certain South
American countries.
Euterpe of LaGrange! Long live
thy lyre!
LaGrange, Ga.
The Ideal Student
(c"on't. from col. 1; this page)
Varied experiences and increased
knowledge expand the horizon of
the deal. Her heart is attuned to
the beautiful; her spirit transforms
the sordid into the lovely; her will
accords with that of the Creator.
The ideal student has a "unity of
character."
She is active—physically, mentally, morally, spiritually.
Before there is an ideal student,
there is perfection in the inmost
parts.
The ideal student has a ?onse of
proportion. She knows the relative
values of things. The wrong emphasis distorts a beautiful life. The
ideal student perfects every factor,
but puts heart and soul nto the
pristine virtut-s — truth, rlevotion,
sincerity, and purity.
The ideal student is an ideal
111111
daughter, an ideal friend, an ideal
scholar, an ideal Christian.
She
has "enough learning to be humble;
enough friendshp to have a heart
warm and large; enough culture to
learn the art of simplicity; enough
wisdom to keep temperate in wealth
and sweet in poverty."
oOo
Better a dull man I can trust
than a bright man I'm not sure of.
—Joseph Stalin.
Music is the most aristocratic of
all arts, inasmuch as it is the greatest refiner of human emotions
Walter Damrosch.
The ingenuity of the human mind
for finding reasons to postpone or
delay action is the most powerful
factor in modern politics.—Sir Oswald Mosely.
WraillllllMMIIIIIIIIN
ny
DARDEN'S SHOE STORE
|
I
|
The Newest in White Shoes—Kid Combined with Eyelet Cloth,
1
■ |
TIE, PUMP AND STRAP.
Also White Setex Sandal.
ftiiiinniiiiiiiM
yiiftiiiniiiiuiiiin
|
DANIEL LUMBER CO.
j
BUILDING SUPPLIES — GENERAL CONTRACTORS.
Phones 57 - 58.
LAGRANGE, GA.
Jiiwi'iiM i inn mil 11 n iiiiiiiuiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
mi i m:iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiii 11 in in i luiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiii
glllllHIII!lilll!lllllll<l!l!lllllllllllilll!lll!lllllllll!lllllllllllllll^
As thou hast inspired, so may thee
In reply to a questionnaire 90
still inspire.
percent of the students at the Uni=
g
versity of London expressed a disAt the conclusion of the program,
belief in God.
Miss Nell Cole, the retiring presiCOMPLIMENTS OF
dent of the club, introduced the
newly elected officers, who are:
The publication of the University President, Annie Rosa Bond; viceof Utah can run cigarette adver- president, Alice Lovern; secretary,
College is, fundamentally, a place
tisements so long as they do not Olive Linch; Scroll reporter, Marfor the mind. The ideal student,
ion Wilson.
suggest that girls smoke.
seeks erudition, even by sacrifice.
To cultivate her mind is the supreme
object of her study.
In the purttimiH iiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM
suit of knowledge she acquires the
possession of facts; she disciplines
|iiiiiiniiiiiiiii!i!i!iii!iiiii;i:i 11111111111 niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiM
herself to meet the inevitable demands of life; she glories in the
pursuit of truth; and, primarily,
she learns to think.
The heart cannot be divorced
§ Showing the New
from man's mental and moral na1
ture. In college the ideal student
|
DRESSES, COATS, Etc.,
develops a heart abounding in sympathy. She respects the most proFor Spring and Summer.
J
found and sacred emotions of others,
she can commiserate the sad; enCOLLEGE GIRLS ALWAYS WELCOME.
courage the derelict, and strength
the important.
?i 1111 M 11111111 iHiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimimiii 11111111 ii iiniHHHiiiuiiifiiuiiiHiiiiiiriiiiniuiiiiiitiniiuEiiHiuiiuiittiiiiiiiiiniauifiiLiiiiimrf^P
From knowledge she learns to
restrain and to control her emotions.
illinium wujiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiim
; \ ng
From the practice of self-discipline
emerge efforts more wisely drected
and more carefully executed.
Selfmastery gives her sovereignly over
COMPLIMENTS OF
the most incorrigible force —.her
will.
FOSTER PLUMBING CO.
r/-
Valway Pansy
|
CALLAWAY'S DEFT. STORE
|
And'
Suntones Rugs
GUARANTEED NOT TO FADE
Are ideal for your room, at school or home.
Finally, the ideal student has a
soul response to truth and beauty.
Only that which contributes to perfecton does she desire. "To strive,
to seek, to find, and not to yield" is
her aim.
(con't. on col. 4; this page)
Valway Rug Mills
WILLIAM McCLURE GROCERY CO.
LaGrange, Ga.
QUALITY — THE PRICE.
Sill I'M II
llliMMIIIIIIIIIIirilUIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIMIII
11 III!
II
Mil
Mill'