I NATIONAL UBRAMBINDIRT'. I/ytST SPRINGIUIO lOSt CLEVELAND 'NPIHN6P0US Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation http://www.archive.org/details/agnesscottalumna14agne Alumnae Sooruiag ^tapmsh ffithrartj i November, 193^ -j $# 5#*j $ *j *JmJ* *j *j *$**$*$ *J+J* *J *J*J**J* J**J* *$* *$*J* *j* ^*j* *^^ *j ^*j* *jn$ t$* *j ^njn$* ^n$ *j*^ *$**$* ^ *$* ^^ *$ ^- $ ^^4$^it$-i$ Cfje Blgneg Jcott HHumnae Published in November, January, April and July by the Agnes Scott Alumnae Association Entered as second class matter under the Act of Congress, August, 1912. Vol. XIV NOVEMBER, 193 5 No. 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS Death of Mr. Murphey Candler, Trustee of Agnes Scott Letter to Alumnae .;'. - ;." .';' 1 ,. ,)'',, a \,' *, \ . . . 3 President J. R. .McCain', !'','' "" Annual Reports of the Alumnae Association " . .. '. ,\ '\ ' . V 4 Club News 13 Office News 16 Faculty News 19 Marriages 20 Births 22 Class News 24 <*<*t^**JJ**^4**J , &**- , *>'$ , *J*t**t**J*i>J*t*J&&*J*** ><^<*<<**<**j<*^^*^.>j4.^*^j.>j..^4tj.j*jtI*j.^* Jtt fHemoriam Mr. Charles Murphey Candler, trustee of Agnes Scott since his election to that board in 1889, died at his home in Decatur, Ga., on August 7, 1935. Mr. Candler had been ill for several months, part of which time he had spent in Charlotte, N. C, with his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Milton A. Candler (nee Marion Symmes, special student at Agnes Scott College). Mr. Candler came of distinguished parentage and was closely identified with Decatur affairs all of his life. He was born in Decatur on March 17, 185 8, and was the son of Milton A. Candler and Eliza Murphey Candler. Mr. Candler was educated at the Uni- versity of Georgia, from which he held the degree of LL.D. At the early age of twenty- eight, Mr. Candler began a long and distinguished public career by serving in the legislature. During the active parts of his life, he played a distinguished part in the political and civic life of the state. He served with great ability many terms in both the house and the senate, was chairman of the Georgia State Railroad Commission, the author of a number of important state laws and was recognized as an authority on tax- ation and state railroad ownership. In 1882 Mr. Candler married Miss Mary Scott, the daughter of Colonel and Mrs. George W. Scott, founders of Agnes Scott College. Throughout his life, he served long and faithfully as an elder in the Presbyterian Church, superintendent of the Sunday School, and assisted in organizing Agnes Scott College and served as a member of its Board of Trustees until his death. Mr. Candler was an ardent student of the history and traditions of DeKalb County, and his address delivered on the one hundredth anniver- sary of the founding of the county contains the largest collection of DeKalb historical data in existence. Surviving Mr. Candler are his wife, a daughter, Mrs. L. T. Wilds of Hendersonville (Laura Eliza Candler, Agnes Sccti, 1904), three sons, and three sisters, Mrs. C. A. Cowles of Atlanta, and Mrs. Clauae McKinney (Claude Candler, Institute), and Mrs. Ruth C. Pope (Ruth Candler; 18 95, fiom Institute) of Decatur. Of Mr. Candid - and Mr. Hooper Alexander (recently deceased father of Amelia (Alexander) Greenawalt, '17. and Hallie (Alexander) Turner, '18), the DeKalb New Era editorial of August 8 states: "Mr. Candler and Mr. Alexander both belonged to what might be called the progressive group of Georgia Democrats and they frequently gave their support to new measures which many old-timers regarded as revolutionary. Both were born orators, both had clear and powerful voices and could easily make them- selves heard by every member in the legislative hall. They usually stood together in their support of leading measures. When they took the floor against any measure, its fate, generally speaking, was sealed. Mr. Alexander had a remarkable gift of language, talking indefinitely without the lack of a single suitable word. Being a man of com- manding physique, Mr. Alexander easily gained the attention of any group which he sought to address. He was a man of fine scholarly attainments and was one of the best posted men in the state. With his clear, strong voice, tall lithe appearance, Murphey Candler always readily gained close attention anywhere he wished to be heard. In the legislature, where he served for many years, his associates from all over Georgia held him in the highest respect even though they did not always agree with him. Mr. Candler devoted much time and vast labor to the investigation and study of the state's railroad property and was regarded as the best posted man in the state on the many intricate problems connected with the handling of the W. and A. Road. Mr. Candler was not only a gifted orator and political leader of outstanding ability, but he was a Christian gentleman of the highest type, who, throughout his long life, regarded his home town and county with an ardent devotion. The impress which his life made upon the citizen- ship of Decatur and DeKalb County, will long remain as a blessing to the com- munity which he so ardently loved." With the passing of Mr. Candler, Agnes Scott loses the last member of the original Board of Trustees, selected to regulate the institution which came into existence as The Decatur Female Seminary, in 1889. It is with sincere regret that we note the passing of so great a friend and with deep sympathy to his many relatives among our own Agnes Scott family that we dedicate this page of the Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly. LETTER TO ALUMNAE Dear Friends: This is an informal letter about several matters of common interest rather than an article on any one subject. We would like very much to have the cooperation of all our alumnae and friends in keeping the real name of our College. There is a disposition on the part of some people to shorten the name to "Scott College." Our Board of Trustees by formal reso- lution have requested that this be discontinued. We feel that there is something par- ticularly distinctive in our full name. It designates us at once as a college for women. In addition, it puts us first on practically every important list of institutions in the United States since alphabetically we come right at the top. It is a pleasure to report the successful completion of our Development Fund Cam- paign which adds to the College assets $45 0,000 at this time and which completes the total fund of $1,600,000 for which we have been striving during the years. It was necessary for some of our friends to put up cash to cover our outstanding subscriptions, but we believe that our subscribers will respond loyally and thus keep these friends from any possible loss. After consultation between the Trustees and General Education Board it was deemed wisest by both parties for the extra gift of $100,000 from the Board to be used for endow- ment instead of for a Science Hall at this time. We need very much the Science Building, but the interest rate on investments is dropping so low that it seemed prudent just now to build up our reserve rather than to increase our overhead by the erection of this additional building. All our friends both on the campus and away from it agree that the Library Building is our greatest need just now. Plans for it are already complete, and before the Quarterly comes from the press we expect the building to be in process of erection. We are hoping very much to have it fully completed and ready for use by the opening of College in September. As soon as we have the use of our new Library, we plan to remodel the present Car- negie Hall and to use it for a student activities building. It will furnish a magnificent recreation room with many smaller ones which can be used as headquarters for the vari- ous student organizations, publications, and the like. We feel that it will add very greatly to the social life of the campus. We have spent about $3 5,000 already in putting in new steam tunnels, a new sewer system for the College, new walks and driveways, and additional landscaping for the rear campus. We have also moved West Lawn and the Infirmary, and have greatly improved both of these old, but useful structures. The Presser Foundation has given us recent assurance that they still anticipate paying as soon as possible the $65,000 toward the erection of a music building and auditorium to be erected on the west side of Buttrick Hall, but we cannot be sure just when this money may be available. We are very anxious to get this auditorium because it will furnish improved chapel facilities, and will enable us to use our present chapel room in Rebekah Scott Hall for better dining room facilities. The enrollment for the current session is gratifying, and every space on our campus has been filled. It was necessary to reopen the White House in order to have enough room for the boarding students. Progress is being steadily made on plans for a great "university center" here in At- lanta which would call for closer cooperation between Agnes Scott, Emory University, Georgia School of Technology and possibly other units in the community. This is such a big enterprise that it cannot be rushed. At every step it is important that the inter- ests of Agnes Scott as an independent, separate college be carefully preserved and under- stood. We are not willing to give up any of our important privileges as an independent institution, but by cooperation we feel that we can serve our section of the country much more effectively. We are greatly pleased when the alumnae return to visit your Alma Mater. You are our pride and joy, and we are always glad to see you or hear from you. Cordially, J. R. McCain, President. 3l?0S The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly THE PUBLICITY COMMITTEE The Publicity Committee during the past year has planned and directed fifty-two radio programs, has assisted with the spe- cial publicity work for Alumnae Week End, and has kept a general oversight of Agnes Scott publicity in the newspapers, from time to time giving suggestions and help to the regular student agencies that report college news to the press. Through the courtesy of President Mc- Cain in allowing us to use the material from the Newspaper Clipping Bureau to which the college subscribes, the chairman of this committee has been able to keep a record of Agnes Scott news as it has ap- peared in the papers throughout the year. A survey of these clippings shows that, exclusive of social items, there have been about 225 news articles relative to the col- lege and about 25 pictures. The most important work of the com- mittee has been the planning and directing of the five o'clock radio program every Wednesday afternoon, over WSB. An ac- count of the programs featured last sum- mer was given in the Fall Alumnae Quar- terly. These programs, centered around the theme of some distinguished Georgians, included talks by faculty members, alum- nae, and students on such subjects as Dr. Charles Herty, discoverer of the process for making print paper from "old field" pines; Crawford W. Long, discoverer of ether as an anaesthetic; Augustus Bald- win Longstreet, author of "Georgia Scenes"; Alexander H. Stephens, vice-pres- ident of the Confederacy; and Sequoyah, the Indian who invented the famous Chero- kee alphabet. The summer programs also included two talks by well known Geor- gians as guest speakers, Anderson M. Scruggs, author of "Glory to Earth," who gave a reading of his poems, and Bishop H. J. Mikell, who spoke on "Spiritual Cul- ture"; an enthusiastically received talk bv President J. R. McCain on the FERA plan for giving help to students; and a number of musical programs, song, violin, piano, and harp recitals by Frances (Gilliland) Stukes, Agnes (Adams) Stokes, Kathleen Bowen, Cara Hinman, Willa (Beckham) Lowrance, and others. Among the programs given during the current college session have been a num- ber of talks by members of the faculty, such as those by Professor Alexander on "The Purpose of the Liberal College", Pro- fessor Torrance on "The Ideals of Phi Beta Kappa", Professor Raper on "Why Study Sociology?", Professor Christian on "Pop- ular Astronomy", Professor Christie on "Education, a Trust", Professor Davidson on "Alexander Stephens", and Professor Laney on "Books and Reading." These programs brought a number of apprecia- tive letters from alumnae and others, with requests for copies of the talks. A number of other programs of this year have been presented by student organizations. Among these may be mentioned the informal con- versations on current affairs conducted by the Debating Society, the plays presented by Blackfriars, and the programs given by the College Choir and the Glee Club, such as the Christmas carols and the light op- era, "The Pirates of Penzance". Twice during the year, at the invitation of President McCain, distinguished outside speakers have appeared on the programs, once during the meeting of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, in Atlanta, and again during the meeting of the American Association of Colleges and Universities. During the fall months, in addition to presenting our own weekly programs, Agnes Scott collaborated with Emory University in several Universi- ty Round Table discussions. The chairman of this committee wishes to express her especial appreciation of the assistance of Polly Vaughan, who has an- nounced the radio programs since last fall, and of Martha Skeen and Ruth Moore, who were the announcers during the summer months. In the Fall Alumnae Quarterly a letter from the chairman of this committee to the alumnae at large made an appeal to them to listen to the Agnes Scott programs and write their comments to station WSB, so that the directors of the radio station might be able to measure the audience which our programs were reaching and consequently be able to determine the value to us of the fifteen minute period allowed us without charge. For a year and a half WSB has been generously giving us this weekly period, which could have been sold for $125. The gift was to be renewed for the coming months only if WSB could be convinced that we were reaching an audience and that the weekly broadcast was valuable to the college. Many alum- nae answered this appeal; letters were re- ceived also from strangers in several states; and our programs were continued. The need of keeping WSB aware of public interest in the programs is still urgent. The alumnae are asked to help the cause of publicity in this way. If you write to WSB, send a letter, not a post card; the mail will be forwarded to us, and we, as well as the radio station, may know what your reaction to the programs is and how many people we are reaching. Respectfully submitted, Janef Preston, Chairman. The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly THE COMMITTEE ON PREPARTORY SCHOOLS As ex-officio Chairman of the Committee on Preparatory Schools, the Field Secre- tary of the Agnes Scott College Alumnae Association wishes to make the following report of the work for the year 1934-1935. The three definite phases of the schedule this year have been: (1) contact work in the South among the public schools and a few private schools, travel in the college car entirely, stimulating interest in the col- lege through talks, showing movies, and private conferences; (2) advertising work in the East among the private prepara- tory schools, primarily interviewing the headmistresses and college advisers, travel by train (This new feature started last year by Penelope (Brown) Barnett, our former Field Secretary, was on trial this year and has undoubtedly proved to be an advisable project for the Field Office.); (3) closer work with the Alumnae Office on the campus in order to abolish unnecessary du- plication of activities, involving attendance at the Regional Conference of District III of the American Alumni Council in Atlan- ta, February 1 and 2, 1935, and at the Twenty-first National Annual Convention of the American Alumni Council held in Washington, D. C, April 3-6, 1935. A statistical survey of the field work is as follows. During actual absence from the campus on trips between October 18- May 8 (after March in the new college Plymouth) 84 cities and towns in 10 states were visited. 139 schools (88 in the South, 48 in the East) were contacted. The Field Secretary met 114 principals, made 75 talks to groups of various sizes, showed movies in 68 schools and many times to alumnae and parents. 11 group meetings of the alumnae made it possible to see about 235 alumnae outside of Atlanta and Decatur. Dorothy Hutton, '29, Mildred Hooten, '33, and Alberta Palmour, '35, have rendered invaluable services as traveling compan- ions, likewise Diana Dyer, '32, who han- dled the College Day program in Greens- boro, N. C, at the request of the Field Office. Expenses for traveling totaled $260.46. The Field Secretary is indebted to friends of the College and the 57 alumnae who have made possible the nominal account and to the many alumnae who have made the work pleasant as intermediaries in the schools. The home work of the Field Office to carry on the three phases of work in- volves sending out in September notices of the competitive examinations and letters to schools which have already expressed an interest in them. There were 101 con- testants as a result. Follow-up work oc- cupied the Secretary with letters to the principals of each school visited to ac- knowledge the welcome, with the sending of catalogues, descriptive matter, and an- nuals (15 sent) to schools throughout the year, with personal correspondence with the individual prospects, which correspond- ence was handled by the registrar's office, the Field Office, and Mortar Board as one of its projects. High School Day for the Atlanta high school seniors on March 23, 1935, demanded the cooperation of the Alumnae Office and the Field Office, an activity the secretaries of the two offices hope may be continued. New pictures of campus activities were taken during the year. Prospective students were invited to the campus for eventful week-ends; ac- ceptances came from Chattanooga, Annis- ton, and Cartersville. Respectfully submitted, Elinor Hamilton, Field Secretary. THE CURRICULUM COMMITTEE Since I have been requested to make this brief, the following outline of the year's work of your Curriculum Committee leaves all details to your imagination. Function of the Curriculum Committee: To promote the Alumnae Week-End. Committee: Clara (Whips) Dunn, Chair- man; Banquet, Penelope (Brown) Bar- nett; group of lectures under "Our Chang- ing Standards," Ellen Douglas Leyburn and Miss Florence Smith; group of lectures un- der "Motherhood, a Profession for the Col- lege Woman," Allie (Candler) Guy and Fannie G. (Mayson) Donaldson; Reading lists, Miss Catherine Torrance, Alice Glenn, Elizabeth Flinn; Publicity, Dorothy Hut- ton, Frances (Craighead) Dwyer, Janef Preston; Children's Program, Llewellyn Wilburn, Frances (Gilliland) Stukes, Em- ma Pope (Moss) Dieckmann, Harriette Haynes. How we worked out our plans: Two gen- eral meetings of the committee, one on October 4, the other on February 3, ap- proved all details of general interest. Spe- cific details were worked out by the va- rious sub-committees. Changes made and new features intro- duced this year: 1. Date changed from Thanksgiving week-end to Founder's Day week-end. 2. Double aspect of program two lines of interest followed increasing number of speakers and topics for discus- sion. 3. Reading lists submitted by our speakers and mailed to alumnae. 4. Pro- gram for children of alumnae from four to twelve. How the publicity worked to secure our splendid attendance: 1. Letter to alumnae from chairman in November Quarterly. 2. Article in Agonistic of Nov. 28 sent to alumnae. 3. Complete program and read- The Agnes Sco tt Alumnae Quarterly ing lists in January Quarterly. 4. Com- plete program sent about a week before. 5. Numerous articles in Atlanta papers. 6. Work through class chairmen by telephone. Follow-up: 1. "Thank you" notes to all speakers and everyone who helped from your Alumnae Secretary. 2. In the April Quarterly the complete copy of all the (ex- clusive of Miss Mc Alpine's) lectures given and radio talks made. 3. April Quarterly to all non-members who participated. How many came: The registration al- though incomplete, counted up to over two hundred on Saturday morning, as against 93 in 1933-1934. Some general results: 1. Increase in at- tendance. 2. Unusual interest on part of alumnae. 3. Appreciation from all visitors present. 4. Enthusiasm on the part of all children present. 5. A letter from Cornell requesting April Quarterly. How we might do it better next time: 1. Get out our reading lists earlier. 2. In- clude more social features. 3. Perhaps pro- vide one or more out-of-town speakers as a special privilege. 4. Make more use on the program of our own successful and worth- while alumnae. 5. Make provision for more round-table discussions. 6. Provide in some way for business women among our alum- nae unable to attend our morning sessions. 7. Establish its place in Atlanta educa- tional, literary and social circles as a per- manent event of real importance. Things we could not improve on: 1. The good time Llewellyn Wilburn, Harri- ette Haynes and their helpers gave the children. They will never forget it. 2. Frances Dwyer and her work on the pub- licity. 3. The spirit of cooperation and helpfulness with which the lectures, com- mittee chairmen and all concerned worked to make our week-end a success. Clara (Whips) Dunn, Chairman. THE HOUSE AND TEA ROOM COMMITTEE Since the Tea Room has been leased, the duties of this committee have been con- siderably lightened. The Committee for 1934-1935 have been: Maryellen (Harvey) Newton, Chairman; Imogene Allen, Julia Pratt (Smith) Slack, Hilda (McConnell) Adams, Rosa Miller, boarding student representative; Alice Chamlee, day student representative; and Harriette Haynes, faculty representative. Only two meetings were called during the session, one in November and one in April. The members of the committee met another time in November to do some bad- ly needed mending for the House. The chairman and the office cooperated with the manager in advertising the Tea Room the early part of the year. The stu- dents were appealed to at a regular Chapel time, well attended. This was followed up by articles about the Tea Room in The Agonistic and by the awarding of a $2.50 meal ticket to the student who wrote the best letter on the Tea Room. The Deca- tur and Atlanta Clubs were asked to give support at the time of their joint meeting in November. The management had dis- tributed advertisements among the stu- dents in early September. These were fol- lowed up by letters from the office to the heeds of student organizations. A tea to this last mentioned group was given in the fall. It is suggested that Miss Barnett's ap- plication be considered by the Executive Committee. The following gifts have been given dur- ing the session: 1. A lamp for the down- stairs sitting room from a balance from the Tuscumbia, Sheffield and Florence Ala- bama Club's former gift. 2. Two pairs of bathroom curtains from Imogene Allen. 3. Five dozen cups and saucers and forty tea- spoons by the group of the Atlanta Club under the chairmanship of Cora (Morton) Durrett. 4. Luncheon cloths from the New Orleans Club. 5. Linen hand towels from the Marietta alumnae. 6. $21.00 from the Decatur Club to repaint furniture in two guest bedrooms. 7. Improvements in the College guest room a slip cover for the chair, three genuine Godey prints, drape- ries, a bed-spread, two hand crocheted rugs from the group of the Atlanta Club un- der the chairmanship of Mary (Crenshaw) McCullough. 8. A dinner cloth from Miss Leslie Gaylord. 9. A gift of linens from AUie (Candler) Guy's group of the Atlanta Club a tea cloth, two luncheon sets, two sandwich tray covers, ten sheets. 10. Cup towels from the Knoxville Club. 11. Three hand woven hand towels from Daisy and Cora Strong. Approximately 70 guests have been en- tertained during the session. One guest stayed for the months of March and April. It is suggested that the broken pieces of the private dining room china service be replaced. A price list from Harry F. Dobbs, Inc., is in the office files. This indicated that we would have to order our china out of the country, allowing several months for the order to be filled and the cost will be approximately $7.77. Respectfully submitted, Maryellen (Harvey) Newton, Chairman. The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly THE COMMITTEE ON LOCAL CLUBS The work of the Local Clubs Committee is necessarily carried on almost entirely through the Alumnae Office and the great- er part of the activities reported herein for the year 1934-1935 are to the credit of the General Secretary and the Field Secre- tary, who, with Emily (Spivey) Simmons and Mary N. Barton, form the membership of the Committee. A club bulletin has been sent from time to time to organized groups from the Gen- eral Secretary, and the Committee Chair- man has endeavored to keep in touch with the 26 clubs now in existence by corre- spondence. Early in October an individual long hand letter was sent to each of the Local Club presidents, in the fond hope that the personal touch might produce replies. Apparently, however, the controlling qual- ity of the long hand was not its personal appeal but its illegibility, for only two presidents responded. They wei'e: Helen (Hendricks) Martin of Sheffield, Ala.; and Helen Lane (Comfort) Sanders of New Orleans, La. This was followed by a no- tice in February of the time and station of the Founder's Day broadcast and various letters to different groups were written throughout the year. The Committee met during the Founder's Day reunion on the campus, there being three members present Dorothy Hutton, Elinor Hamilton, and Mary Waller Shep- herd. Frances (Craighead) Dwyer, Presi- dent of the Alumnae Association, and Pe- nelope (Brown) Barnett, the former Field Secretary, met with us. The Committee agreed on the following: To endeavor to found local clubs in every city now lacking an Agnes Scott Club, in which we have twenty-five or more alum- nae and in which there is a possibility for good organization working toward this goal in Tampa, Fla., this year. To urge each club to send in a membership to the Quarterly for its group. This suggestion was made by Penelope (Brown) Barnett. To make a Quarterly club page more com- plete and attractive. To suggest meetings on a schedule comparable to the Quarter- ly's publication. Two new clubs were organized and held their first meetings on Founder's Day. These are: The Chattanooga, Tenn., Club, with Rosemary May as president and a well-'planned! program for work in the schools through a special committee in each of the accredited high schools; The Chicago, 111., Club, with Martha (Eakes) Matthews as president, and a proposed program of three meetings a year. A list of other local clubs meeting on Founder's Day follows: Atlanta, Decatur, Atlanta Business Girls', Hendersonville, N. O, Montgomery, Ala., Charlotte, N. C, Knoxville, Tenn., Mississippi at Jackson, Birmingham, Ala., Baltimore, Md., and New York City. The following local clubs have made gifts: The Atlanta Club donations to the House and Garden, mentioned in other re- ports; the Decatur Club a donation to the House and the sponsoring of the annual Children's Party at Commencement; the Atlanta Business Girls' Group donations of linens and rugs to the day student rooms in Inman Hall; the Knoxville Club dona- tions to the House; and the New Orleans Club donations to the House. The following clubs have been visited by some member of the Committee during the year: Birmingham, Charlotte, Chattanooga, Greeenville, Knoxville, New Orleans, Shef- field, Washington, Winston-Salem. In ad- dition to these, the General Secretary has regularly attended the monthly meetings of the three local groups Atlanta, Busi- ness Girls', and Decatur. Respectfully submitted, Mary Waller Shepherd, Chairman. THE GROUNDS COMMITTEE The Grounds Committee feels that a great deal has been accomplished this year, both by us and for us. In June, 1934, there was a debt of $114.67 to H. G. Hastings Company. The Executive Committee felt that this account should be closed, so the amount was borrowed from the Savings' Account of the Association. During the summer, $39.25 was received from the Charlotte Club, to complete its pledge of $100 to the pergola, $10 from the Atlanta Club, and $5 from Augusta (Skeen) Coo- per, thus reducing the debt to $60.42. In January this was paid, thanks to a most generous gift of $55 from the Atlanta Club and a personal gift of $5 from Cora (Mor- ton) Durrett. During the winter it was decided that, owing to the luxuriant growth of the roses, it was best to complete the pergola even though another debt would be incurred. With the consent of the Executive Commit- tee and the help of Mr. Cunningham, we got estimates from four different con- tractors. Three groups in the Atlanta Club pledged themselves to pay for this work. The lowest bid, $145, was accepted and the pergola was completed in March, adding a great deal to the appearance of the garden. The $145 for the immediate payment for the work was borrowed from Eloise (Gay) Brawley and to date the groups headed by Mary Elizabeth (War- ren) Read, Sara (Berry) West, Louise (Brown) Hastings, and Edythe (Coleman) Paris have reduced this debt to $51.15. It should be stated that $2.17 was paid Eloise 10 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly (Gay) Brawley as interest on the loan and an additional amount of $4.70 for the dedi- cation block placed in the right column. As to the personal work of the commit- tee, we have not left the garden to the disinterested care of the campus workmen, but have spent many hot hours digging, planting and weeding. We have rooted twelve hundred boxwood plants. Of these we set out about eight hundred for borders in the garden and the rest are in reserve in our rooting bed. According to nursery prices, this is over $200 worth of boxwood, so that those of us who did this work are very proud of our contribution to the gar- den. We intend to root more boxwood this year to be used in beautifying other places on the campus and we suggest that future garden committees make this a part of their work, so that in the years to come the Agnes Scott campus may be known for its beautiful boxwood. We are grateful for several donations of plants Mue phlox from Augusta (Skeen) Cooper, chrysanthemums from Mrs. A. S. King, ascension lily bulbs from Annie (Wi- ley) Preston in Korea, memorial daisies from Mrs. William Nichols, candytuft from Mrs. Charles DuVall, iris bulbs from Mary Waller Shepherd, not to mention plants from the private gardens of the members of the committee. The General Association allows the gar- den $25 a year. Of this amount we have spent about $5 for seeds and plants and $2 for extra labor. The rest has gone for fertilizer and peat moss. Although, con- sidering the paying of the debt and the building of the pergola, it may seem that a great deal of money has gone into the garden this year, we have been handi- capped for lack of funds in carrying on the ordinary routine of gardening. There have been plants and shrubs that we needed but didn't have the money to buy. Now that the debt on the building of the garden has been wiped out and the money for the pergola pledged by certain groups in the Atlanta Club we beg for your continued fi- nancial support and interest in this lovely spot for which the students and visitors to the campus never fail to express their appreciation. Respectfully submitted, Frances (Gilliland) Stukes, Chairman. Committee: Eloise (Gay) Brawley, Louise (Brown) Hastings, Mrs. R. B. Holt. THE ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE The Entertainment Committee for the year 1934-1935 begs to make the following report of its activities: As this Committee entered upon its du- ties it was informed that it should be re- sponsible for planning and carrying through all the undertakings of a social nature which the Alumnae Association might sponsor. Fifty dollars were allotted the Committee according to the budget. The Committee was told that certain defi- nite entertainments were scheduled, accord- ing to custom, and that the fifty dollars would have to provide for them. These were as follows: a party for the new stu- dents, one for the Granddaughters' Club, one for the Seniors, one for the alumnae and faculty on Commencement Sunday. In addition to the above responsibilities the Committee was to plan, secure, and arrange the flowers on the tables for the Trustees' Luncheon in Rebekah Scott Hall in May. The Committee feels that it has met each of these obligations and calls atten- tion to the fact that a detailed description of all the parties may be found in the files of the Alumnae Office. It has been the very certain purpose of this Committee to have the greatest possible number of the paid Alumnae Association members to par- ticipate in these affairs. In the way of a summary: A tea for the new students was given on September 14th at 4:30 P. M. in the Alum- nae House and Garden. 250 guests were invited 216 attended. Total expense to the Association, $25.00. A seated tea was given for the Granddaughters on Wednes- day, October 17th, at 4:30 o'clock in the Alumnae House. 61 guests were invited 50 accepted. Total expense to the Associa- tion, $7.50. A flower tea was sponsored by several groups of the Atlanta Club at the home of Mrs. Hastings on Saturday after- noon May 11th, at 4:30 o'clock. For this tea the Alumnae Association provided tick- ets and transportation for the members of the senior class and all alumnae who as- sisted. There were 107 invited guests 75 attended. Total expense to the Association, $17.50. The flowers for the Trustees' Luncheon on Saturday, May 25th, will be procured and placed on the tables by the Entertainment Committee. The Committee had expected to plan a tea to be given on Sunday afternoon for alumnae and faculty, following Vesper Services. At the re- quest of Miss Hutton, however, the Com- mittee has relinquished this pleasure in fa- vor of a newly formed, temporary com- mittee chosen by Miss Hutton. An expla- nation may be found in the detailed report in the Alumnae Office. In addition to the above mentioned inter- The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly 11 ests of the Entertainment Committee those which together completely absorbed the budgeted $50.00 two other small gath- erings have been arranged and given in the name of the Alumnae Association during the year. The expenses totaling $15.30 were met by a fund which Miss Hutton found was unexpectedly available for ex- tra entertaining. They were: An after-luncheon coffee on January 19th in the Alumnae House for American Association of University Women who were in conference at Agnes Scott. There is no accurate record of the number invited or attending. Expenses, $7.05. Afternoon tea was served on Saturday, February 2nd at four o'cock to the Alumnae Secretaries at- tending the Regional meeting being held at Emory University and Agnes Scott. No accurate record of the number invited or present could be kept. Total expense, $8.25. In completing the year's work of the Committee your chairman would like to say that those who were guests or assist- ing at these entertainments must realize that though of a simple nature and little more than merely adequate for their pur- pose, these parties could not have en- joyed even the small success which was theirs unless there had been a sweet and sympathetic spirit of cooperation and gen- erosity among the members of the Enter- tainment Committee, especially, and also those of the Executive Board. Small gifts of flowers, nuts, extra cookies and sand- wiches, place cards and checks were do- nated from time to time as needed. For the interest, unselfishness, and considera- tion which each co-worker has shown her in her efforts to preside over the function- ing of the Entertainment Committee the Chairman is grateful. Respectfully submitted, Augusta (Skeen) Cooper, Chairman. Committee: Margaret (McDow) MacDougall Julia Pratt (Smith) Slack Margaret Phythian Louisa (White) Gosnell Cora (Morton) Durrett. THE STUDENT LOAN COMMITTEE Receipts Balance from June, 1934 $ 50.36 Interest .68 Returned loan and interest 107.59 Interest - .17 11 Returned loans 120.00 Total receipts $278.80 Disbursements 4 Loans $170.00 Balance $108.80 Thirteen letters have been written to girls who borrowed before 1934, requesting that they pay their loans as soon as possi- ble, and to three girls who borrowed money this term, requesting them to return these loans by June 1. Since 1916 there have been about 20 loans for an ag'gregate of $1,665.00 made and collected in full. $13.17 in interest was collected. There were 13 loans made prior to 1934, on which all or part is still due 6 of these partially paid. Aggregate loans made $1,130.00 Amount paid 245.00 Amount due $885.00 The loans made during 1934-1935, due June 1, 1935, are as follows: 1 of $75.00 $40.00 paid. 1 of $15.00 $15.00 paid. 1 of $50.00 nothing repaid. 1 of $30.00 $5.00 paid. Respectfully submitted, Ladie Sue (Wallace) Nolan, Chairman. COMMITTEE ON CONSTITUTION AND BY-LAWS Certain desirable changes in the Consti- tution and By-Laws of the Alumnae Asso- ciation have been brought to the attention of your Committee on Constitution and By-Laws, and after consideration as to the advisability of the same, the Committee begs leave to submit the following report incorporating recommendations for the changes suggested. 1. Article VI, Section 1, of the Constitu- tion entitled Amendment reads as follows: "Amendments to the Constitution shall require two thirds of the votes cast, and may be made at any meeting, provided no- tice of such proposed amendment shall have been sent to each member of the Associa- tion." In view of the fact that experience has demonstrated this proviso to be impracti- cal and useless for the purpose for which it was intended, it is recommended that said section be changed, omitting the pro- viso, so that it will read as follows: Amendments to the Constitution shall require two thirds of the votes cast, and may be made at any meeting when the re- quired quorum is present. Because of the growth of the Association, various administrative alterations have been found necessary and in order to meet the growing needs, the following recom- mendations regarding substitution for some outworn by-laws are made: 2. Article IV of the By-Laws: a. That Article IV, Section 2 of the By- Laws be properly altered so that the Exec- 12 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly utive Committee shall include in its mem- bership as ex-officio members, the local club presidents, to-wit: the presidents of the Atlanta Agnes Scott Club, the Decatur Agnes Scott Club, and the Atlanta Agnes Scott Business Girls' Club, so that the sec- tion will thereafter read thus: Article IV, Section 2, Executive Commit- tee: The Executive Committee shall consist of the standing committees, the officers of the Association, the outgoing president, and the presidents of the local clubs, to-wit: the presidents of the Atanta Agnes Scott Club, the Decatur Agnes Scott Club, and the Atlanta Agnes Scott Business Girls' Club. b. That Article IV, Section 5, d. be amended so as to read as follows: Article IV, Section 5, d. The Executive Committee: This committee shall appoint a general secretary and a tea room manager; the salary of the general secretary shall be fixed by the Executive Committee to whom she shall be responsible; the salary of the tea room manager shall be deter- mined as the Executive Committee shall authorize depending upon the contract en- tered into between the tea room manager and the Association. c. That Article IV, Section 5, n, be amended to read as follows: Article IV, Section 5, n. The Student Loan Committee: No loan shall be made to any student below the junior class ex- cept upon the express recommendation of the President of the College. d. That Article IV, Section 5-1 be amend- ed to read as follows: Article IV, Section 5-1. The House and Tea Room Committee shall have charge of maintaining and operating the Anna Young Alumnae House and the Silhouette Tea Room (except in the matter of redecora- tion, which shall be the specific duty of the House Decorations Committee), subject to the approval of the Executive Commit- tee. e. That Article IV, Section 5 include p., The House Decorations Committee. This committee shall consist of five members, four of whom will be old members and one of whom will be a new member each term. This committee shall be self-sustaining and shall elect from its membership one mem- ber to represent this committee on the Ex- ecutive Board. The specific duty of this committee shall be the selection of furn- ishings for the Anna Young Alumnae House, whenever funds shall be designated for this purpose. The Constitution Committee calls to your attention the following: Since this last created committee cannot function accord- ing to the Constitution until voted on in May of 1936, a motion from the floor is necessary to give legality to its function- ing prior to that date. It is the sincere wish of your committee that the foregoing changes will assist in making the work of the Association more useful as the privileges authorized are utilized by the Association and its mem- bers. Respectfully submitted, Patricia H. Collins, Chairman. The Atlanta Agnes Scott Club's activi- ties may be summed up as follows: An ac- tive membership of about one hundred; an average attendance of fifty; group system used and found very effective, there being nine groups, each of which was responsible for one general meeting during the year and for the raising of whatever money they could raise. The financial report shows that the total of all group monies, together with general treasury funds, amounted to $411.00. This was spent on the Alumnae House and Garden, including lin- ens, silver, refurbishing of the College Guest Room, new furniture for the living room and a quite considerable amount in the Garden. Each meeting consists of a business session, guest speaker and tea hour. Plans for the new year are similar, but we are running wild with enthusiasm. The group system continues, but the club will seek to raise money by concerted ef- fort this year. Fall activities opened on October the twenty-fifth when we began a series of lectures centered on the home and open to the public at a nominal price (50c for individual lectures, $2.00 for the series). The lectures are: October 25, Mr. Harold Bush-Brown on Architecture; Oc- tober 30, Mary Miller on Furniture; No- vember 8, Mary Miller on Furniture; No- vember 13, Mr. S. Y. Tupper on Old Sil- ver; November 22, Mrs. Samuel C. Porter on Porcelain. These are good subjects, we think, and we know that our lecturers are at the "top" of their respective fields. We seek to uphold the high standards of Ag- nes Scott curriculum and at the same time make more money for the Alumnae House. Sarah Belle (Brodnax) Hansell, '23, President. The Decatur Club, during the period of 1933-1934 and 1934-1935, has held sixteen meetings, ten of which were our regular monthly meetings held at the Alumnae House or at the homes of members, with an average attendance of thirty. We were fortunate to have such outstanding speak- ers as Dr. J. R. McCain, Dr. Philip David- son, Mrs. Alma Sydenstricker, Miss Car- rie Scandrett, Dr. Cullen Gosnell of Emory University, Dr. S. M. Christian, and Mrs. Lamar Lipscomb. Six of our meetings con- sisted of special activities in cooperation with the College, or in furthering the ad- vancement of the Club, such as Founder's Day, the Alumnae Week-End, two parties for the children of alumnae, a musical by Mr. Dieckmann, and two benefit luncheons. During these two years, we placed four lovely pairs of rust chintz draperies in the Tea Room and redecorated two suites of bedroom furniture in the Alumnae House, sponsored two parties for the children of alumnae, and co-sponsored a tea in honor of the Agnes Scott Faculty, made a dona- tion to the Garden Committee of the Gen- eral Alumnae Association, and paid a debt incurred by the Decatur Club in former years. We were able to accomplish this through the following ways: two benefit luncheons at Sears Roebuck & Company, a manufacturers' and distributors' dinner, two aluminum demonstration dinners, the sale of floor wax, and dues from member- ship. The above is a brief resume of what the Decatur Club has been doing for the past two years. The Club has made good progress and has accomplished many things. It is my hope and belief that the Club will make, during the next year, a more outstanding record under the leader- ship of the new officers. Susan (Shad- burn) Watkins, '27, President. * * * * The Charlotte Agnes Scott Alumnae Club met last February at a downtown tea room to listen in on the Founder's Day broadcast, and came to certain conclusions in regard to the handling of the local or- ganization which have resulted in an al- most complete reorganization of the club. It happened like this. Pernette (Adams) Carter, '29, had been thinking, and it had occurred to her that no plan of organiza- tion appropriate for a small club, with a membership of twenty or thirty, would be equally appropriate for a large club, with a membership of seventy or eighty; that, therefore, the policies and procedures our club has followed for the last ten years needed careful revision. So, when Pernette was elected at the February meeting to supersede Marion (Symmes) Candler as President of Charlotte Alumnae Club, she 14 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly immediately began to translate her ideas into action by provoking a discussion which led to definite plans for reorganization. The most important changes are concerned with means of securing attendance, with the number and kinds of meetings, and with the financial responsibilities. Mem- bers are divided into seven groups, aver- aging ten or twelve members each, accord- ing to the years during which they were at college; those attending during Insti- tute days, for instance, form one group; those at Agnes Scott from 1914-1919 form another group; those from 1920-1923 a third, and so on. From each group one "key person" is chosen to be responsible for the attendance of the entire group, even to the extent of transporting each one to and from meetings, if desirable. By this method, every one will be invited to the meetings by someone she knows personally and will feel assured that others of her own group will be present. For this year "key people" were appointed by the presi- dent; but, hereafter, each member of the group will assume the leadership in turn, for a year at a time, according to the order in which she is listed in her group. About two weeks before each meeting the "key people" and the president, vice-president, secretary-treasurer and committee chair- men, together forming the Executive Coun- cil, hold a supper meeting for the especial purpose of discussing details of the coming club meeting. The chairman in charge of the next meeting explains her plans en- thusiastically to the Council; the enthusi- asm becomes contagious and is later spread by the "key people" to the members of their groups when the latter are contacted about the attendance at the next meeting. Another improvement has been to change the monthly or sporadic meetings to three carefully planned annual events, the at- tractiveness of which no one can contest. The fall meeting centers about contribut- ing to the upkeep and beautifying of the Alumnae House; the February meeting, about celebrating Founder's Day and in- teresting high school girls in Agnes Scott; the spring meeting, about renewing friend- ships and memories of college days. For handling the three meetings, three differ- ent committees are appointed the spring beforehand, with the sole responsibility of formulating attractive programs. For the time being, at least, all dues have been abolished. The fifty or seventy dollars necessary to support the annual activities of the club is to be raised by one stupen- dous effort on the part of the Project Com- mittee, with the cooperation of all club members, no one being asked to serve on that committee more than once in a life time. This plan is still in the realms of the theoretical, as it is being tried this year for the first time. Whether or not it is practicable remains to be seen. Several interesting devices are arranged for ac- quainting all Charlotte Agnes Scott alum- nae with one another. In the first place, "key people" are asked to call on all mem- bers of their groups once a year. In the second place, a "names contest," with a subscription to the Alumnae Quarterly as the tempting prize, is conducted each year at two of the three meetings. Everybody is asked to name those present as they stand for inspection, or, harder, to put the proper names under nameless pictures of all club members. Incidentally, the admin- istration is determined to obtain four com- plete sets of small pictures of members, one for the scrapbook, one for the secre- tary's book, one for poster display, and one nameless set for use in contests. After the reorganization last February, one meeting was held in April. This was a very lovely tea given at the home of Sen- ator J. A. Bell, uncle of Ethel (Rea) Rone, '19. The Executive Council invited all Char- lotte alumnae to meet Dorothy Hutton, '29, Alumnae Secretary, whom we invited here for the occasion. A purple and white color scheme was followed in the spring flowers, in the dining room decorations, and in most attractive open-faced white sandwiches, bearing purple iris or A. S. C.'s, made, you might know, by Clyde (Mc- Daniel) Jackson, '10. About forty Char- lotte alumnae called. We were especially proud of the attendance of six out-of-town alumnae, Susan Glenn, '32, Isabella Wil- son, '34, Miriam Anderson, '28, Virginia Carrier, '28, Mary An (Phelps) Bridges, ex '30, and Charlotte Hunter, '29. This fall about fifty alumnae are being urged by Charlotte Hunter of Davidson, Chairman of the Out-of-Town Committee, to drive from nearby towns for all three meetings. On October the fourteenth the Alumnae House meeting was held. Frances (Craig- head) Dwyer, '28, President of the Asso- ciation, talked about the general Alumnae Association and the history, development and contributions of the Alumnae House. Also, Alberta Palmour, '35, Field Alumnae Secretary, showed the campus moving pic- tures while in Charlotte to take the pic- tures to the high school. Officers for this year are: President, Pernette (Adams) Carter, '29; Vice-President, Irene Low- rance, '28; Secretary-Treasurer, Ethel (Rea) Rone, '19. "Key People" are: Alice (Cowles) Barringer, Institute; Mabel (Ar- drey) Stewart, Institute; Maude (Shute) Squires, ex '17; Julia (Hagood) Cuthbert- son, '20; Mary (Keesler) Dalton, '25; Mil- dred Greenleaf, '30; Jane McLaughlin, '31. Committee chairmen are: Anne (Kyle) Mc- Laughlin, '17, Alumnae House Chairman; Irene Lowrance, '28, Founder's Day Chair- man; Alice (Quarles) Henderson, ex '32, High School Chairman; Charotte Hunter, The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly 15 '29, Out-of-Town Chairman; Louisa Duls, '26, Publicity Chairman. Louisa Duls, '26, Publicity Chairman. The Chicago Club was formally organ- ized at a luncheon on February the twenty- second, with the following officers elected: Martha (Eakes) Matthews, '24, President; Lillian (Beatty) Schuhman, Academy-'13, Secretary. Fifteen alumnae were present for the luncheon given by Reba Vinnedge, ex '24. It was decided to have at least three meetings a year, one in the fall, one at Founder's Day, and one in the spring. On June the eighth eleven alumnae met for lunch with Charis (Hood) Barwick, '16, Councillor-at-Large for the Association. Charis (Hood) Barwick, '16. The New Orleans Club had two meetings last year, one in the fall (October) and one in the spring, with twelve members present. Violet Weeks, '29, has been elected President for the 1935-1936 year. The Club made a donation of linen table cloths and napkins to the Tea Room. A visit from Frances (Craighead) Dwyer, '28, Associa- tion President, was made in the spring. The Washington Club was entertained at tea by Marguerite Kennedy, ex '34, and Eleanore Williams, ex '35, at Marguerite's home on February the sixteenth. On April the third an informal dinner was given in honor of the Field Alumnae Secretary, Eli- nor Hamilton, '34, in Washington for the National Alumni Council, at Smorgrasbord, with eight alumnae present. The New York Club plans a regular schedule of three meetings a year. A din- ner was given on Founder's Day, with six- teen members present. A tea was given in the spring. Sara (Townsend) Pittman, '30, is President of the group. * * * * The Knoxville Alumnae Club met for a luncheon in April with the newly-elected president, Bess (Grimm) Sisk, ex '21. The club sent tea towels for use in the Tea Room. Jean (Powel) McCroskey, ex '09, as secretary, reported news on all the club members for this issue of the Quarterly. iSeveral of the members entertained at luncheon for Dorothy Hutton, '29, Alumnae Secretary, and Elinor Hamilton, '34, Field Alumnae Secretary, at the time of their visit to Knoxville in March. The Chattanooga Club was organized on Founder's Day, with about forty guests present for an enjoyable tea. The officers elected are as follows: General Chairman, Rosemary May, '33; Secretary, Anne Mc- Callie, '31; Chairman of Student Contacts, Marion Chapman, '30. Marion's committee is composed of one representative from each of the accredited schools: Girls' Pre- paratory School, Anne McCallie, '31; Chat- tanooga High School, Lillian Patton, '20, and Sarah Stansell, '21; Central High School, Sallie Mai King, '15. The President of the group was visited by the General Executive Secretary and by the Field Alumnae Secretary in March. In May the club was instrumental in bringing inter- ested Chattanooga high school seniors to the campus for May Day and Senior Opera. * * * # The Greenville Club entertained the high school seniors of the Greenville schools at tea in April at the home of Dorothy (Keith) Hunter, '25. About ten alumnae and twelve prospective students were pres- ent, with Elinor Hamilton, '34, Field Alum- nae Secretary, as special guest. * # * * The Business Girls' Branch of the At- lanta Club was organized on January 27, 1932, in Rich's Tea Room, following a sug- gestion made by Augusta (Skeen) Cooper, '17, then President of the Atlanta Club, that a distinct organization be made for Agnes Scott graduates in the business world. The objectives as set forth were: to advance the interests of Agnes Scott, to keep in touch with Agnes Scott through the Atlanta Club, and to know each other. There are not many activities that we par- ticipate in, or can, with limited time, but we have lived up to these objectives. The first set of officers included: Sarah Slaugh- ter, '26, President; Almeda Hutcheson, '19, Vice-President; Elizabeth Cole, '28, Sec- retary; Edna Volberg, '28, Treasurer. The second set of officers were: Lucile Daley, ex '15, President; Julia (Napier) North, '28, Vice-President; Jennye (Hall) Lemon, ex '23, Secretary; and Elsie Davis, '28, Treasurer. In October, 1934, the constitu- tion was amended to provide a two year term for officers. It was also decided at that time to have dinner meetings in pref- erence to the luncheon meetings held pre- viously from twelve to two. In the spring of 1935 the following officers and com- mittee chairmen were elected: Lillian Clem- ent, '27, President; Margie Wakefield, '27, Vice-President; Marjorie Tindall, '34, Sec- retary; Elizabeth Johnson, '34, Treasurer; Martha Lou Overton, '28, Telephone Com- mittee; Eunice Ball, '28, Program; and Marie Baker, '30, Publicity. Lillian Clem- ent, '27, President. OFFICE NEWS THE HOPKINS JEWEL AWARD was announced at Commencement as awarded to Frances Espy, '35. Frances is the sev- enth Agnes Scott girl to be accorded this honor, the others being: Helon (Brown) Williams, '29; Elizabeth (Flinn) Eckert, '30; Marguerite Gerard, '31; Andrewena Robinson, '32; Margaret Ridley, '33; Nelle Chamlee, '34. The idea of recognizing the student who most nearly fulfills Miss Hop- kins' ideals was conceived by the class of '22, during the 1928-1929 session. Frances Espy was remarkable in her work with the Poetry Club and the Lecture Association. AMERICAN WOMEN, woman's Who's Who, includes the names of seven faculty members of Agnes Scott College in its first edition issued the early part of the summer. They are Professor Lucile Alex- ander (A. S. C. '11), of the French De- partment; Associate Professor Emily S. Dexter, of the Psychology Department; Professor Edith Muriel Harn, of the Span- ish and German Departments; Dean Nan- nette Hopkins; Professor Mary Stuart MacDougall of the Biology Department; Professor Catherine Torrance, of the Greek Department; and Llewellyn Wilburn, '19, of the Physical Education Department. * * * * THE ENROLLMENT of 484 students for the 1935-1936 session represents the greatest demand for admission that Agnes Scott has had since the system of board- ing students out was discontinued in 1926. This year, with 289 boarding students, it has been necessary to reopen White House. Without White House the dormitory ca- pacity is for 277. 173 of the 484 enrolled are new students, either freshmen, ad- vanced students, or exchange students. ALBERTA PALMOUR, '35, daughter of Mary (Crenshaw) Palmour, Institute, has been selected as Field Alumnae Secretary for the 1935-1936 session. She is qualified in many ways to fill this exacting position, having served as President of the Fresh- man Class, President of the Sophomore Class, President of Student Government, having participated in the Citizenship Club, the Granddaughters' Club, Eta Sigma Phi, the Y. W. C. A., Pi Alpha Phi, been elected to Mortar Board, and been a member of her class baseball, hockey, riding, swimming, water-polo, volley-ball teams and a mem- ber of the hiking squad. Alberta's work took her into North Carolina and South Carolina in October and will take her all over the southwest with Texas as her ob- jective in November. * * * * THE QUENELLE HARROLD FEL- LOWSHIP award for this session was given to Mary Boggs, '35, who is at the graduate school of Radcliffe in Cambridge, Mass. Mary is another of those very out- standing people, with a Phi Beta Kappa Key, a Mortar Board pin as definite evi- dences of her fine leadership and unselfish service. As Editor of the Agonistic in 1935, she put out a paper of real journalistic quality. An all-round person, she was also a member of the German Club, B. 0. Z., the French Club, Blackfriars, and the Poetry Club. * # * * THE LECTURE ASSOCIATION is for- tunate in securing Robert Frost, the poet, for the date of November 7, 1935, and Thornton Wilder, famous novelist, for Feb- ruary 8, 1936. The Agnes Scott Al umnae Quarterly 17 NOTEWORTHY ACHIEVEMENT has been attained by the following alumnae: Emilie Keyes of the class of 1920, now Mrs. Frederick Wilson Edwards of West Palm Beach, Fla., whose remarkable abil- ity as a newspaper interviewer and re- porter was commended by O. 0. Mclntyre in his syndicated feature of January 29, 1935; Rose B. Knox, Institute graduate, in the recent publication by Dodd, Mead and Company of her fifth book of the Deep South, "Patsy's Progress;" Marian (Mc- Camy) Sims, '20, with the syndication for serial release of her novel, "Morning Star"; Leonora (Owsley) Herman, Institute, for a second edition of her book of verse, "Rather Personal," and for her election to the N. L. American Pen Women and the Poetry Society of America; Margaret (Bland) Sewell, '20, as the author of "First at Bethel," a play adapted to high school and little theatre production and to South- ern Memorial Day exercises; Sarah (Gober) Temple, ex-'ll, for compilation of "The First Hundred Years of Cobb Coun- ty," a delightful history of Marietta, Ga., and for feature articles of recent publica- tion in the Atlanta Journal Magazine Sec- tion; Sara Wilson, '33, as a writer of news- paper fiction, her first sale being "June Bride," appearing in the September the fifteenth issue of the Birmingham (Ala.) News-Age Herald; Marian Vaughan, '34, for her fine work as radio announcer of the weekly Agnes Scott broadcasts and for her interesting character portrayals in the Sunday night performances of "Sym- phony of Life" (eight to eight-thirty over WSB); Nell Esslinger, '23, for radio ap- pearances as contralto soloist in the famil- iar Sunday broadcast "The House by the Side of the Road"; Dr. Mamie Shaw, '27, first winner of the Quenelle Harrold grad- uate fellowship, in winning the privilege of a year's clinical study in babies' hos- pitals in Birmingham and London, Eng- land; Charlotte Newton, '21, for publica- tion in the January 1, 1935, Library Jour- nal of a most interesting article, "One Way," the story of the summer of 1934 as spent by herself and sister operating a little library in the mountains of North Georgia. * * * * NEW GRANDDAUGHTERS this session are Martha Fite, daughter of Cassie Verna (Hunter) Fite, Academy; Martha Mar- shall, daughter of Mattie (Hunter) Mar- shall, '10; Susan Goodwyn, daughter of Linda (Simril) Goodwyn, Institute; Jeanne Redwine, daughter of Lucy (Reagan) Red- wine, '10; and Julia Sewell, daughter of Margaret (Bland) Sewell, '20. 1935 REUNIONS brought the following alumnae to their luncheons or dinners: 1934; Frances Adair, Elaine (Heckle) Car- michael, Virginia Fisher, Johnnie Mae York, Nelle Chamlee, Elinor Hamilton, Mardie Friend, Elizabeth Winn, Isabella Wilson, Louise McCain. 1926: Rosalie (Wootten) Deck, Margaret (Whitington) Davis, Hazel (Huff) Monaghan, Florence (Perkins) Ferry, Sarah Slaughter, Mar- garet Tufts, Sterling Johnson, Elizabeth (Moore) Harris, Peggy Whittemore, Louisa Duls, Susan (Shadburn) Watkins. 1927: Ellen Douglas Leyburn, Frances (Rainey) McDaniel, Frances (Chambers) Wing, Lou- ise Davis, Lelia (Joiner) Cooper, Marcia (Horton) Speir, Caroline (McKinney) Hill, Emily (Nelson) Bradley, Margie Wakefield, Nancy Lou (Knight) Narmore, Mildred (Cowan) Wright, Willie May (Coleman) Duncan, Elizabeth Lynn. 1928: Bet Cole, Eu- nice Ball, Martha (Brown) Morrison, Eloise Gaines, Louise Girardeau, Muriel Griffin, Alice (Hunter) Rasnake, Anna (Knight) Daves, Elizabeth McEntire, Julia (Napier) North, Martha Lou Overton, Mary (Say- ward) Rogers, Josephine Walker, Mary Jane (McCoy) Gardner, Mary Bell (McCon- key) Taylor, Grace (Ball) Sanders, Mary Ray Dobyns. 1929: Eugenia Kirk, Per- nette (Adams) Carter, Dorothy Hutton, Lois (Smith) Humphries, Gladys Austin, Helen Ridley, Lillie Bellingrath, Mary El- lis, Alice McDonald, Julia McLendon, Alice Glenn, Elizabeth (Moss) Mitchell, Ray (Knight) Dean, Genevieve Knight, Betty Gash, Charlotte Hunter, Mabel (Marshall) Whitehouse, Edith (McGranahan) SmithT, Mary Eizabeth (Warren) Read, Mary (Ficklen) Barnett, Sara Frances (Ander- son) Ramsay, Katherine Pasco, Sara (Douglass) Thomas, Dorothy (Cheek) Cal- laway. * * * * THE AGONISTIC has organized a new honorary society, the Agonistic Key, mem- bership in which will be awarded annually to eight girls who have done unusual work on the editorial and advertising staffs and who have shown loyalty and devotion to The Agonistic and its purposes. The elec- tion of four of the members will be an- nounced at chapel in December, and the remaining four just before the spring holi- days. A committee made up of the editor, business manager, the instructor in jour- nalism, and one other member of the facul- ty, will elect the members. * * * * THE SENIOR CLASS MASCOT has been elected. He is Henry Robinson, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Henry A. Robinson. Dr. Robinson is Professor of Mathematics at Agnes Scott. 18 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly OFFICERS OF THE GRANDDAUGH- TERS' CLUB for 1935-1936 are Mary Lyon Hull, '36, daughter of Martha (Miller) Hull, ex-'09, President; Barton Jackson, '37, daughter of Clyde (McDaniel) Jackson, '10, Secretary; and Kathleen Daniel, '37, daugh- ter of Kathleen (Kirkpatrick) Daniel, '04, Treasurer. Informal meetings through- out the year and a formal dinner, to which escorts will be invited, are the plans formulated for the session. * * * *i THE ENTERTAINMENT COMMITTEE sponsored a tea for new students on Oc- tober 4, with approximately 170 guests calling during the afternoon. On October 21, 22, 23 teas were given for groups of the sponsors, leaders on the campus who have replaced the former system of new student supervision by grandmothers. * * 5je jj< HONOR ROLL ANNOUNCEMENTS in- cluded 29 names from the classes of '36, 37, and '38. Noteworthy among those honored were: Elizabeth Forman, '36 daughter of Mary (Dortch) Forman, Insti- tute, President of the Senior Class; Isabel McCain, '37, daughter of President and Mrs. J. R. McCain, Y. W. C. A. Treasurer- Lulu Croft, '38, daughter of Lulie (Mor- row) Croft, '05; Anne Thompson, '38, sis- ter of Julia (Thompson) Smith, '31. The class of '37 was outstanding in having 15 of its members represented on the honor roll. * * * * STATISTICS ON 1935 GRADUATES, compiled from the report in this issue, show that 21 have gone into teaching, 4 into leadership of young people, 8 into graduate study, 5 have gotten married, 11 are taking business courses, 1 is a librarian assistant, 2 are in department stores, 7 hold clerical and secretarial po- sitions. * * * * ALUMNAE HOUSE GIFTS include: ten sheets, two linen luncheon sets, two sand- wich tray covers, a linen tea cloth and napkins from Allie (Candler) Guy, '13, Au- gusta (Skeen) Cooper, '17, and their group of the Atlanta Club; three handwoven hand towels from Daisy and Cora Strong, In- stitute; a linen banquet cloth from Miss Leslie Gaylord of the Mathematics Depart- ment at Agnes Scott; six luncheon cloths and two dozen napkins from the New Or- leans Club; cup towels from the Knox- ville Club; one dozen teaspoons from Au- gusta (Skeen) Cooper, '17. * * * * MR. C. W. DIECKMANN, husband of Emma Pope (Moss) Dieckmann, '13, has composed two anthems which have been accepted for publication. "Nearer the Cross" was published in the early sum- mer by Theodore Presser Company of Philadelphia. The dedication is to Mrs. Laurence Mansfield (Helen Gouedy, spe- cial student in voice at Agnes Scott). The choirs of St. Mark's and Druid Hills Methodist Churches have used this anthem in church services. "Jesus, the Very Thought of Tbee" was accepted in Septem- ber for publication by Oliver Ditson Com- pany of Boston. His many alumnae friends will be pleased to learn of his success as a composer. SISTERS OF ALUMNAE now freshmen in Agnes Scott are: Esthere Ogden, '39, sis- ter of Margaret, '30, and Grace Augusta (Ogden) Moore, '26; Emma McMullen, '39, sister of Carrie Lena McMullen, '34; Caro- line Carmichael, '39, sister of Trellis Car- michael, '35; Jeanne Redwine, '39, sister of Margaret Redwine, '35; Kathleen Kennedy, '39, sister of Marguerite Kennedy, ex-'34; and Jane Moore Hamilton, '39, sister of Elinor (Hamilton) Hightower, '34. THE NATIONAL A. A. U. W. CON- VENTION was attended by Louise (Wells) Parsons, '11, when this convened in Los Angeles the week of June the twenty- fourth, as Agnes Scott's official repre- sentative. Louise felt that a great deal was learned through attendance at the splendid reports and the general program. Of particular interest to Agnes Scott, she felt, was the talk by Miss Helen Fisk of the Western Personnel Service. Louise felt that the Alumnae Association would do well to serve as a medium for placement of graduates, working in sections and there learning the specific needs of the commun- ity and recommending our Agnes Scott graduates to fill these positions. * * * * DUES FOR 1935-1936 are most accept- able if paid immediately to the Alumnae Office. Please take this notice personally and check up on yourself to see if this comes to you as a complimentary copy, on the basis of your unpaid membership, or as your privilege as a member of good standing this year. Your cooperation is solicited. FACULTY NEWS Margaret Phythian, '16 French Department Miss Mary Stuart MacDougall was awarded the degree of doctor of science by the University of Montpellier in July and spent the month of August at the Stozone Zoologica in Naples. Mrs. Alma Sydenstricker enjoyed a de- lightful cruise of the Mediterranean dur- ing the summer, touching on many islands and going into the lands of the classics. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Davidson and chil- dren spent most of the summer in Roches- ter, N. Y., where Mr. Davidson taught in the University of Rochester. Mr. David- son, also, did some research work in Chi- cago. Mr. S. M. Christian, professor of phy- sics, spent the summer doing research work at Harvard in Boston. Miss Catherine Torrance made a trip abroad, where she visited Paris and Rome, later making a Mediterranean cruise with Mrs. Alma Sydenstricker around Greece and as far as Asia Minor. Miss Katherine Omwake did statistical work for the Aptitude Test Committee of the Association of American Medical Col- leges for the first part of the summer. Later she motored to California via the national parks. Mr. J. R. McCain devoted all his time to the campaign for the new library and science hall until the first of July. Later he attended the Southern Conference in Montreat, N. C, and visited his mother at her home in Due West, S. C. Miss Nannette Hopkins spent her vaca- tion with her family in Staunton and Hot Springs, Va. Miss Louise McKinney vacationed in At- lantic City and Ocean Grove, N. J., with Dr. Mary F. Sweet. Mr. C. W. Dieckmann did some work in original composition during the summer. Dr. Mary F. Sweet attended the meeting of the American Medical Association in Atlantic City, N. J., during the summer. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Stukes enjoyed a va- cation in North Carolina. Martha Stansfield, '21 Latin Department Mr. James M. Wright, professor of eco- nomics, spent the summer doing research work. Mr. G. P. Hayes spent most of the sum- mer with Mr. Hayes' parents at the latter's home in Pennsylvania. Mr. Hayes, also, taught for six weeks at Hunter College in New York. Mr. Henry A. Robinson spent the sum- mer at his summer home in Henderson- ville, N. C, where he conducted a school for the mountain children. Miss Muriel Harn traveled in Germany during the past summer. Miss Frances K. Gooch visited in Ken- tucky and spent six weeks in Hot Springs, Ark. Miss Emma May Laney spent the sum- mer traveling in England. Miss Louise Hale vacationed in New England. Miss Elizabeth Jackson had a trip to Eu- rope, including Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark, Russia, Germany, Italy, France, and Germany. Miss Emily S. Dexter traveled in Mis- souri, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. Mr. Thomas W. Whitaker, of the biology department, did research work at the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology in Pasa- dena. In addition, he visited the Univer- sity of California in Berkeley and Stanford University in Palo Alto. Miss Leslie J. Gaylord was with her family in New York during the summer. Miss Annie May Christie did some work at the University of Texas in Austin and spent a couple of weeks in Miami, Fla. Miss Harriette Haynes studied dancing under Irma Duncan at Croton-on-Hudson. Miss Florence E. Smith taught for six weeks at Hunter College, City of New York. Miss Melissa A. Cilley did literary re- search work at the University of Wiscon- sin and later spent a few weeks at her home in New Hampshire. MARRIAGE ANNOUNCEMENTS ASKEW-VOGEL: Clara Askew, ex '29, to Mr. Robert Earle Vogel in August. BAKER-MATTHEWS: Catherine Baker, '32, to Mr. Allen Alphonso Matthews on April 8, 1935. BARLOW-MARTIN: Amelia Lee Bar- low, '33, to Mr. John Kell Martin, Jr., in November. BASHINSKI-MILLEDGE: Helen McCall Bashinski, '34, to Mr. Richard Habersham Milledge, II, on January 13, 1935. BATTEY-MARSTON: Mary Battey, In- stitute, to Sir Charles Marston, on April 4, 1935. BELL-DILLARD: Dorothy Lenore Bell, '35, to Mr. Benjamin H. Dillard on July 27, 1935. BELLINGRATH-PRUITT: Lillie Ruth Bellingrath, '29, to Reverend William Hoyt Pruitt, on June 27, 1935. BRADFORD-CRAYTON: Mary Ruth Bradford, '30, to Mr. William Fred Cray- ton on September 19, 1935. BRANCH- JOHNSON: Elisabeth Hert- zog Branch to Mr. Charles Edward John- son, Jr., on June 1, 1935. BROOKS-THARPE: Kathryne Chappell Brooks, Special Student, to Mr. Robert Hollis Tharpe, at an early date, as yet un- announced. BUIST-RIGBY: Ida Angeline Buist, ex '36, to Mr. George Knox Rigby, on June 20 1935 BUIST-BOUKNIGHT: Laura Buist, '34, to Mr. Vernon Bouknight on June 5, 1935. BURFORD-ATKINSON: Florence Cul- pepper Burford, ex '34, to Mr. Alonzo Mor- ris Atkinson in June. BURRESS-LONG: Kittie Burress, Insti- tute, to Mr. Harvey C. Long on February 10, 1935. BUSSELL-HAYES: Ruby Bussell, ex '32, to Mr. James Adger Hayes, Jr., on No- vember 14, 1934. CALHOUN-MURRAY: Marion Calhoun, '35, to Mr. John Girardeau Murray on July 20 1935 CANNADAY-McKENZIE: Katharine Cannaday, ex '26, to Mr. Frederick Oscar McKenzie on October 12, 1935. CHANDLER-NORRIS: Mary Helen Chandler, ex '37, to Mr. Edwin Bateman Norris, Jr., on October 18, 1935. CHESHIRE-LANG AN: Virginia Wilson Cheshire, ex '36, to Mr. Peter Thomas Lan- gan on June 1, 1935. COATES-GEORGE: Catherine Coates, ex '33, to Mr. Graham Wiley George on October 5, 1935. DELL-YODER: Sarah Louise Dell, ex '34, to Mr. Frank Marion Yoder on July 31 1935. DEXTER-BOYD: Mary Folwell Dexter, ex '34, to Mr. Francis Woodrow Boyd, Jr., on September 1, 1934. DORN-OWEN: Edith Josephine Dorn, ex '35, to Mr. Arthur Edward Owen, Jr., on December 21, 1934. ELLIS-PIERCE: Margaret Amelia El- lis, ex '33, to Mr. Edward Everett Pierce on December 22, 1934. ELLIS-FOWLER: Thyrza Askew Ellis, ex '37, to Mr. D. Cartledge Fowler on Oc- tober 18, 1935. FABER-COBE: Regina Faber, ex '32, to Mr. Frank Cobe on December 31, 1934. FLEIDNER-CROWELL: Elizabeth Fleidner, ex '29, to Mr. Charles B. Crowell on January 13, 1934. FLEMING-VIRGIN: Betty Fleming, '33, to Mr. John Edward Virgin on December 26, 1934. FLINN-ECKERT: Elizabeth Flinn, '30, to Mr. Ralph Glenn Eckert on August 29, 1935. GARLAND-SELSER: Mary Garland, ex '37, to Lieutenant James Clyde Selser, Jr., in November, 1935. GAY-HATLEY: Mary Katherine Gay, ex '31, to Mr. William Thomas Hatley in June, 1935. GOINS-WAGNER: Margaret Virginia Goins, '35, to Mr. Edward Christopher Wagner on May 28, 1935. GRAY-PARKER: Christine Gray, ex '32, to Mr. John Lake Parker in January, 1935. GREER-WHITE: Elizabeth Juanita Greer, '26, to Dr. Thomas Sherman White on June 6, 1935. HAMILTON-HIGHTOWER: Elinor Eliz- abeth Hamilton, '34, to Mr. William Har- rison Hightower, Jr., on June 29, 1935. HARKNESS-SHEAR: Hetty Louise Harkness, ex '37, to Mr. Cornelius Barrett Shear on October 12, 1935. HICKS-INGRAM: Reba Elizabeth Hicks, ex '33, to Mr. Elisha Turner In- gram, Jr., on October 9, 1935. HOLLIS-CALLAWAY: Dorothy Melfoa Hollis, ex '34, to Mr. Luke Turner Calla- way on March 30, 1935. HOWARD-PATERSON: Elizabeth Lump- kin Howard, ex '33, to Mr. Harry Thomas Paterson, Jr., on March 2, 1935. HUDDLESTON-PEACOCK: Ruby Lou- ise Huddleston, ex '30, to Mr. James Wil- liam Peacock on May 31, 1935. IVEY-TUTTLE: Lilburne Ivey, '22, tc Mr. George Errington Tuttle on Augusl 17 1935. JOHNSTON-FRYE: Helen Johnston, ex '31, to Mr. John H. Frye, Jr., in Septem- ber, 1935. JONES-RAMEY: Anais Cay Jones, '28, to Mr. John Mason Ramey, on April 13, 1935. KEYES-EVANS: Emilie Keyes, '20, to Mr. Frederick Wilson Evans, on June 28, 1935. KILPATRICK-STUBBLEBINE: Roberta Kilpatrick, '33, to Mr. Charles A. Stubble- bine on August 19, 1935. The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly 21 LAMONT-DICKSON: Isabel Jean La- mont, '29, to Mr. George Graham Dickson on July 6, 1935. LEYBURN-FOSTER: Margaret Kerr Leyburn, '18, to Mr. Alvin Edward Foster on July 17, 1935. LIGGIN-TROTTER: Ruth Liggin, '26, to Mr. Henry Franklin Trotter on June 19, 1935. LOGAN-HENDERSON: Martha Myers Logan, '32, to Reverend John Daniel Hen- derson on February 26, 1935. LOTT-MARBUT: Katharine Lott, '29, to Mr. Terrell Clifford Marbut on August 31, 1935. LUCAS-STOREY: Jean Lucas, ex '34, to Mr. Frederick George Storey, Jr., on No- vember 20, 1935. MARTIN-THAGGARD: Martha Bell Martin, ex '26, to Mr. James Eldridge Thaggard on July 21, 1935. MacINTYRE-ALEXANDER: Marie Mac- Intyre, '12, to Mr. W. A. Alexander in June, 1935. McCALIP-HOLMES: Mildred Louise Mc- Calip, '31, to Mr. Vernon Charles Holmes on February 12, 1935. McDONALD-OTTO: Ruth McDonald, '27, to Mr. George Herman Otto on September 15 1935. McMILLAN-COUSAR: Helen McMillan, '32, to Dr. John B. Cousar on June 12, 1935. MOORE-AMBROSE: Elisabeth Seabrook Moore, ex-'33, to Mr. William Leonard Ambrose, Jr., on May 11, 1935. MORROW-HUGHES: Sadie Morrow, ex '36, to Mr. Clifford Eugene Hughes on De- cember 22, 1934. PERKINSON-FOY: Mary Perkinson, '28, to Mr. James E. Foy, Jr., on December 24, 1934. POWER-SMITH: Mary Elizabeth Power, Special, to Mr. Roswell Earle Smith in May, 1935. PRIM-FOWLER: Mary Susan Prim, '29, to Dr. Clarence Dixon Fowler on April 19, 1935. PRUDEN-LESTER: Margaret Berry Pruden, '17, to Mr. Paul Millar Lester on May 31, 1935. RAYSOR-PRICKETT: Peggy Raysor, ex '37, to Mr. Isaac Prickett on October 23, 1934. RIDDLE-LIST: Gussie Rose Riddle, '34, to Mr. Harold Albert List in June, 1935. ROBERTSON-DUNCAN: LaTrelle Rob- ertson, ex '33, to Lieutenant George Thig- pen Duncan on March 26, 1935. ROGERS-HERREN: Sybil Rogers, ex '35, to Mr. Julius Herren on February 10, 1935. SEELEY-GILMER: Nana Bigelow See- ley, ex '33, to Lieutenant Dan Gilmer on September 14, 1935. SHANKLIN-COPENHAVER: Martha Cooper Shanklin, '30, to Mr. Francis Jo- seph Copenhaver on August 10, 1935. SIMPSON-PORTER: Nancy Levick Simp- son, '30, to Mr. John Russell Porter, Jr., on June 19, 1935. SKELTON-HARRIS: Agnes Skelton, '31, to Mr. Howard Clinton Harris on June 20, 1935. SMITH-CREW: Elizabeth King Smith, ex '31, to Mr. James Bullock Crew on March 14, 1935. SMITH-WEBB: Jo Smith, '30, to Mr. Julian Webb on September 25, 1935. SQUIRES-DOUGHMAN: Mary Eliza- beth Squires, '35, to Mr. Thomas Dough- man on June 8, 1935. STANSELL-FELTS: Sarah Stansell, '21, to Mr. Wilburn Roy Felts on August 28, 1935. STOWE-ABERNETHY: Belle Ward Stowe, '30, to Mr. Robert Sidney Aber- nethy, Jr., on October 17, 1935. STUBBS-JOHNS: Laurie Bell Stubbs, '22, to Mr. A. Elwyn Johns on December 24, 1934. TAYLOR-STUBBS: Cornelia Bowie Tay- lor, '31, to Mr. Trawick Hamilton Stubbs on June 12, 1935. TELFORD-ST. AMANT: Margaret Tel- ford, '33, to Reverend Alfred D. St. Amant, Jr., on April 11, 1935. TOWNSEND-PITTMAN: Sara Bissell Townsend, '30, to Mr. Henry Wooten Pitt- man, Jr., on June 4, 1935. UNDERWOOD-TROWELL: Amy Eu- genia Underwood, '35, to Mr. William Wal- lace Trowell on August 15, 1935. WALKER-PARKER: Josephine Tren- holm Walker, '28, to Mr. Louis Twells Parker on November 16, 1935. WALLACE-NOLAN: Ladie Sue Wallace, '26, to Mr. James Alonzo Nolan on March 2 1935. ' WARD-DYER: Mary Sevmour Ward, ex '35, to Mr. J. Glenn Dyer on April 18, 1935. WHITTEMORE- FLOWERS: Peggy Whittemore, ex '26, to Mr. Clyde Edward Flowers on June 26, 1935. WILHELM-TOUCHSTONE: Dorothy Lu- cille Wilhelm, ex '37, to Mr. Ido Cariego Touchstone, Jr., on January 6, 1935. WILLOUGHBY-WOOD: Pauline Perci- val Willoughby, '30, to Mr. John Batton Wood on June 6, 1935. WIMBISH-SEABORN: Sara Frances Wimbish, '29, to Mr. Richard Seaborn on June 15, 1935. WINSLOW-TAFT: Louise Winslow, '32, to Mr. Joseph M. Taft on June 19, 1935. WOLF-BOND: Amelia Wolf, '33, to Dr. Benjamin Joseph Bond on October 26, 1935. WOODWARD-HARRIS: Marjorie Lucile Woodward, '32, to Mr. Clifton Bud Harris on August 26, 1935. ZACHARIAS-PRAGER: Hortense Zach- arias, ex '20, to Mr. Beirne Morton Prager on February 12, 1935. velous she is lartha Agnes nan. litera- 'ucker, ;orgia, . She ' living North- regis- e high Hamp- Wad- in the Health an at- irray's a, Ga., ' Man- ratory is ses- ner in on the ring it at the isiness looI in ilmour fourth tlanta. art of id two n May eorgia, at the isville, , 1935, y, died m$m - ! v OUR FIFTH ALUMNAE WEEK-END The fifth Alumnae Week-End sponsored by the Alumnae Associa- tion under the direction of the Curriculum Committee, with Clara (Whips) Dunn, '16, as Chairman, has been scheduled for the dates of February 21 and February 22. The January issue of the Alumnae Quarterly will carry detailed information of the program. It seems advisable at this time to outline for you the plans that are under way. The Curriculum Committee plans to offer to alumnae and their friends six outstanding lectures, three on the morning of Friday, Feb- ruary 21, and three on the morning of Saturday, February 22. In con- junction with the Saturday program, a special program for children is being planned. The Friday morning session will be followed by a luncheon in the college dining room, free to all alumnae. The Satur- day morning session will be followed by a luncheon, specially planned for children and their mothers, in the Tea Room. An exhibit of colonial relics will be an interesting feature of the Week-End, these being on display in the Anna Young Alumnae House. Saturday will be the date of the annual radio broadcast in honor of Founder's Day. The Founder's Day program will be carried out in the dinner as planned by the Atlanta Agnes Scott Club for the evening of the twenty-second. The local alumnae will be notified by local committees and news- papers of the advantages of the Week-End. This appeal is to out-of- town alumnae to place a ring around the dates, February 21 and 22, to set this time aside for a return visit to the College. Reservations will be made in the dormitories free of charge, with meals available on the same basis. Or the Alumnae House guest rooms will be reserved for the usual nominal charge of 5 Oc a night for two in a room, with meals available in the Alumnae Tea Room. Meanwhile, as the Committee works toward the completion of these sketchy plans, your criticism and suggestions will be invaluable. Please address these to the Curriculum Chairman or the Alumnae Office. it; 1/ Alumna? Quarterly, 2* *j *5 *J *J *J J *J* *J* *2 $ *$* *J* *J* *J **+ *J* *$* ** *** *5 *J* *J *** *J* *J* ^*^*^*^*^^*^*^^^*^*^'^^*^*^*^*^^*^*^*^*^^*^*^*$**$*^<$'-$*-^-*J ^fje Hgncsi Jkott Hllumnae $<$> * ^^^^^^^*4 , >I , I*M? 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McCain Agnes Scott holds membership in many associations or educational organizations. A problem that frequently arises is whether or not the College should be active in so many groups. There seems to be good reason for affiliation with most such organi- zations. The Association of Georgia Colleges is of no great benefit to Agnes Scott, but it does give the College a chance to cooperate with its close neighbors and to influence helpfully standards of education in the State. Membership in the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools has been important because it gives to the graduates of its member institutions prestige and standing in graduate and professional schools and with various State Boards of Education. Agnes Scott Has always been particularly active in this Association. The College belongs to the Presbyterian Educational Association of the South and also to the Conference of Church-Related Colleges. We do not qualify technically for the first organization since legally Agnes Scott is non-sectarian, but we have always had a sympathetic relationship with the Presbyterian Church, though it has never given us any money. The Association of American Colleges is worthwhile to us as it is the greatest defender in this country of the liberal arts college and as it makes valuable studies in the field of better teaching and better educational ideals. Agnes Scott has always been quite active in this association also. The College is on the approved list of the Association of American Universities, and this gives to its graduates recognition in foreign countries and standing in all parts of the educational world. Our membership in the American Association of University Women enables our graduates to belong to college groups and clubs throughout the country and to be eligible for any other privi- leges that belong to university women in general. Similarly, our membership in the American Council on Education keeps us in touch with nation-wide movements in the field of education, not merely in the realm of college and university affairs but also in matters that concern elementary and secondary education. In view of all these and other contacts which Agnes Scott has, one might well question the wisdom of the organizing of any other association. However, just such action has been recently taken, and Agnes Scott is one of the charter members of the new group which is named The Southern University Conference. In the South, for many years, the quality of college work has been measured by eighteen somewhat arithmetical and mechanical standards, such as the number of units for admission, the number of hours for graduation, the size of the faculty, the salaries paid, the teaching load, size of classes, and the like. Many of the institutions have been very far ahead of these minimum requirements for a number of years. Some have argued that the standards ought to be raised and more severe requirements exacted of all the 4 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly members in the Southern Association. Others of us have felt that this would not be fair to the weaker institutions, but that at the same time some stimulus should be given to better work and higher standards. With this end in view, last April, representatives of thirty-three outstanding univer- sities and colleges in the South met in Atlanta and agreed tentatively to organize The Southern University Conference. At a recent meeting in Louisville, Kentucky, the organization was completed, constitution and by-laws were adopted, and so a new educa- tional association has been launched. The Conference will admit to membership only on invitation. It is expected that the number of institutions belonging to it will be strictly limited and will be composed only of the best institutions. No standards will be provided for membership, but all who come into the Conference will be expected to follow a program much in advance of what the Southern Association has heretofore required. Only institutions that emphasize the liberal arts college work are admitted to the new organization. No professional or technical schools will be invited. Special studies will be made of methods of teaching, of requirements for the Bachelor's degree, of the desirable program for the giving of the MA. degree, and other such questions that con- cern the upper classes of undergraduate work or graduate study. The first annual meeting of the Conference, which was held in Louisville, was regarded as very significant by all who attended. Chancellor J. H. Kirkland, of Van- derbilt, spoke on: "Some Lessons from the Past." President Isaiah Bowman, of Johns Hopkins University, discussed: "Next Steps in American Education." President Trevor Arnett, of the General Education Board, read a paper on: "Progress in Southern Educa- tion as I Have Seen It and Something of the Future." Chancellor H. W. Chase, of New York University, spoke on: "Problems and Prospects in Higher Education." It is hoped that the participation of Agnes Scott in this Conference will be a real contribution to the cause of high standards in the South. 193 6 MORTAR BOARD MEMBERS (See Pane 21) FOUNDER'S DAY AND OUR FIFTH ALUMNAE WEEK-END Clara (Whips) Dunn, '16 "Was the Alumnae Week-End, held on Founder's Day, really any fun last Feb- ruary?" inquired Mrs. Busy-but-Bored Old Grad, who hated all reunions and never went to one. "Fun? Indeed, it was fun!" positively overflowed Mrs. Wide- Awake. "Why you should have seen the crowd! It was huge! Everybody we used to know was there and nobody was in a wild rush as we always are at Commencement. And educated? My dear, I felt positively stuffed with knowledge from all the grand lectures each one so different and every one so splendid! And could I out-talk my husband on current topics when I got home? But he didn't mind. He seemed to like it so well, that he wanted me to plan to go again this year and offered to keep Bob, Jr. all day Saturday for me." But right that minute young Bob had plenty to say himself, "Keep me on Saturday? Not on your life! Why, I go to the Alumnae Week-End, just as Mother does. Last year Miss Wilburn took us all to the Gym and we ran races and played basketball and went to the Biology Museum. Oh, boy! Was it fun? No, sir, he can't keep me! I want to go to Agnes Scott with Mother!" "And, my dear, lots of the girls had never ridden the elevator in Buttrick Hall or seen the swimming pool in the gymnasium or any of the many, many new things on the campus. Only, of course, it's the things we remember that mean most to us Miss Hopkins' friendly greeting and her taking time for a real chat, Main Building, lunch all together in the Alumnae Tea Room. And besides ," Mrs. Wide-Awake continued. "Must hurry along. So glad to have seen you," murmured Mrs. Old Grad, moving away. Was it really fun, she wondered, as she rolled her car out of the parking lot absent-mindedly, dodging three children, a messenger boy, a truck and a stray pup? The program in her morning mail told of lectures on the problems of George Wash- ington's day and our own, of the luncheon in the college dining room, of the exhibit of colonial relics, of the lectures on modern music and art, of the program for children, of the radio broadcast in celebration of Founder's Day, of the luncheon for mothers and children in the Tea Room, of the Founder's Day banquet for alumnae and their husbands or escorts. She mused, holding out a hand and putting on the brake, "Maybe it would be fun." "Agnes Scott," she reflected as the green light came on, "in its workaday clothes with- out all the hustle and bustle of Commencement time!" Any way, it was worth a trial! In the light of the above, the Curriculum Committee takes pleasure in announcing the program as planned for the Fifth Alumnae Week-End. 6 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1936 Present-Day Trends in Music and Art 10:00-10:45 Present-Day Trends in Music, Dr. Malcolm Dewey of Emory Uni- versity. 10:45-11:30 Present-Day Trends in Painting, Mrs. Harold Bush-Brown of Atlanta. 11:30-12:15 Present-Day Trends in Architecture, Mr. Hal Hentz of Atlanta. (This lecture series was arranged through Miss Catherine Torrance, chairman; Miss Louise Lewis; Martha Crowe, '27.) 12:30 Luncheon for Alumnae in Rebekah Scott Dining Room. (Eloise (Gay) Brawley, '16, Chairman of Decorations.) (Florence (Perkins) Ferry, '26, Chairman of Reservations.) 1:30 An Exhibit of Colonial Relics in Buttrick Hall. (Helene (Norwood) Lammers, ex-'22, Chairman.) SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1936 National Problems of Washington's Day and Our Own 10:00-10:45 Social and Economic Conditions, Dr. Arthur Raper of Agnes Scott College. 10:45-11:30 The Constitution, Dr. Haywood J. Pearce, Jr., of Brenau College. 11:30-12:15 Foreign Affairs, Dr. Fletcher M. Green of Emory University. (This lecture series was arranged through Miss Florence Smith, chairman; Carrie Scandrett, '24; Ellen Douglas Leyburn, '27.) 10:00-12:15 Program for Children of Alumnae, presented by Llewellyn Wil- burn, '19. 12:30 Luncheon for Alumnae and Children in The Anna Young Alumnae House. (Louise Girardeau, '28, General Chairman.) (Hilda (McConnell) Adams, '23, Chairman of Reservations.) (Martha Crowe, '27, Chairman of Decorations.) (Sara (Carter) Masee, '29, Chairman of Program.) 1:30 Second Day Exhibit of Colonial Relics in Buttrick Hall. Annual Broadcast of the Founder's Radio Program over WSB. (Janef Preston, '21; Marian Vaughan, '34; Dorothy Hutton, '29, committee.) Annual Founder's Day Dinner for Local Alumnae, Husbands and Escorts. (Sarah Belle (Brodnax) Hansell, '23, President of the Atlanta Club, Chairman.) (Helene (Norwood) Lammers, ex-'22, President of the Decatur Club, Co-Chairman.) Registration is under the direction of Katherine (Woltz) Green, '3 3; Publicity under Nelle Chamlee, '34; Attendance under Frances (Craighead) Dwyer, '28. THE MAXWELL CHORISTERS AN AGNES SCOTT GIRL'S PAYMENT OF A DEBT Edith (Williams) Maxwell (A. S. I. 1897-1899) It may be a far cry from a vocal scholarship that was awarded to an orphan girl by the officials of Agnes Scott College to participating in the picture "It Happened One Night," which received the highest award for 193 5 from the Academy of Motion Pic- ture Arts and Sciences, but that is the history in a nut shell and has really happened. Doubtless Miss Hopkins will recall the song recital I was required to give, after my three years of instruction at Agnes Scott College, to prove my ability. I was dressed in a frock that was given me by the traveling companion of the fake Lord Beresford. But, of course, Miss Hopkins did not know about that! What she did know was that after singing the first few measures of my song, I fainted dead away and was carried off the platform. At the close of the program I returned and sang my numbers and was vociferously applauded by the student body for daring to come back and try again. There followed many years of singing and dramatic study. Then the War came, changing the plans and programs of most of us and I went into Social Welfare Service work, serving in a secretarial capacity with the American Red Cross, Salvation Army and lastly as contact representative for the United States Government, prosecuting claims of ex-service men. You will think, "What has all that got to do with the music school that you have established?" Just this, the privileges Agnes Scott College afforded me in scholarship I held as a trust. I have never been financially able to express my grati- tude by means of a donation to the College, but I knew I could do something for some- one else to lighten the load of living. I witnessed much privation and sorrow through my social service work and was con- vinced that while multitudinous wrongs could not be righted, still much could be alle- viated through the uplift of song. But I had almost forgotten how to sing! The misery and the degradation of continued heartache of all God's children had choked the song in my throat, but the mind and heart said, "Sing!" My husband, who had received his musical education under the leading masters of Europe, and who had been organist and choirmaster for many years in several of the Eastern parishes, felt he had been hindered by the clergy, in that they wanted only the boys and young men of their respective parishes to receive training in traditional church music. Together we resolved: why not give to all, of any creed and no creed at all, the benefits of a musical education so that song could emanate from many throats and thereby the debt I owed to Agnes Scott and the debt my husband owed to his profession would be paid? When I look back, I am aghast at our temerity, because here we were practically s:randed ourselves and thinking of such a colossal undertaking! After several months we secured a sponsor to foster the school. However, when we drew up a sketch of the certificate of scholarship to be awarded to the boys and young men who had served a probationary period and incorporated the slogan "Each for the other and all for God," our sponsor ran a pen through it and said, "That's a lot of rubbish. I don't want any- thing like that on the certificate." From then on he revealed more and more that he had no interest in the school other than to further his own business ends. Suffice it to sav that we soon discovered ourselves with a following of some sixty boys and men and no sponsor and no studio to house them in and no equipment of any sort. We managed to hold them together and they were taught in groups in our little telescopical apartment of parlor-bedroom-kitchen and bath. I organized the mothers into an auxiliary and we formulated plans to carry on the school by promoting social affairs. We gave dances, bridge parties, theatricals in fact, we cajoled the devil on all sides to part with a few shekels in order to "carry on." I 8 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly have told fortunes, posing as a gypsy queen at bazaars, and engineered frolics held in a hall over a mortuary. We managed to get enough money together to rent a store and fit it up as a studio. Then we purchased a library of music and commandeered all the sewing machines the mothers owned and set to work making church vestments and con- cert costumes for our young choristers, who by this time had earned for themselves con- siderable recognition. There was one episode that is quite outstanding in our experiences. We were being pressed for the rent and while the choristers had responded to calls for their services, singing at dedications, hospitals and benefit programs, still no one seemed to think we needed bolstering. We had come down to our last dollar. There had been times, too, when we thought that we had lost and that the big idea we had been fostering was just a fantasy. We had tramped the streets looking for other work and we questioned if we should try to save our sore feet or spend the nickel for a can of pork and beans to save our stomachs. Well, this time it was a lone dollar and the last. I truly grappled for a blessing, just as Joseph and the angel of the Bible story did. I'm not ashamed to tell you I just put the whole proposition up to God. I told Him we had asked Him to consecrate the lives of these young people and that we had subscribed our work to His glory and that if He wanted the praises sung from their throats He was able to keep them. I asked Him to bless that dollar to our needs. Not thirty minutes from that time, we had our first call to MGM studios to take part in a scene with Norma Shearer and Frederick March in "Smilin' Thru." Can you imagine the significance of that title to us and all our efforts! That was three years ago, but we are going steadily forward and more and more is the standard of our work being recognized by all the major studios. Boys and young men, as I have said before, of any creed and no creed at all, are accepted and given an opportunity for this musical education. The groups are taken in classes of three lesson periods a week and they receive instruction in voice placement, ear training, sight reading, theory and the art of singing, free of all cost to those who qualify for such instruction. They are especially trained for the microphone. A per- centage of all the money earned from their programs and moving picture work goes back to the school for its maintenance. The most pretentious piece of work they have done so far is that in the title music of "David Copperfield," when they sang to an ensemble of eighty musicians from the Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra. Sometimes I find it is not all music here at the studio. We have had to solicit cloth- ing and shoes for some of our people. Many nights we have improvised beds on the floor of the studio, when one or two were evicted from their homes because of failure to pay rent. We have had glorious days, too, with the people of the "make-believe" land. Once we spent two days in the famous Busch Gardens at Pasadena, where the filming of the wedding scene of "It Happened One Night" took place. There were over three hundred and fifty extras employed for that occasion, all dressed in fashionable evening clothes. In between "shots" you could find the men's high silk hats roosting anywhere in the branches of the trees and gorgeous fur coats of the ladies strewn around on the ground. Another time during the filming of the picture "Whom the Gods Destroy," one old veteran of stage and screen, gowned in the heavy velvet trappings of a cardinal, sweat- ing and tired after hours under the terrific heat of the kleig lights, said to me, "I'm tired of being a pope." On another occasion, when the choristers sang a vesper service at a fashionable Episcopal Church, with the understanding that the silver offering was for the benefit of our school, the minister kept the silver and gave us a personal check which was as good as nothing because all the banks were closed by order of the President! I could recount many interesting and amusing incidents, but I have tried the patience of you readers too much already and close by saying for a' that and a' that we have come a long pilgrimage. ONE WAY Charlotte Newton, '21 Probably the greatest cause of unhappiness for the unemployed librarian is that feeling of having been put out of the game. We have with effort prepared ourselves to be of service in a profession in which we have faith, and we want to be at work in that profession. Nothing else can satisfy us. We want to be in the game. It was this feeling that led me last summer to undertake the operation of a library in a little mountain town in North Georgia. The idea was mine, but most of the library was my sister's, for I have a sister, a teacher of English, who buys books regard- less of her financial health. We decided to offer our books for rent, and to carry also a small line of gifts for sale. Our summer home is at Mountain City, so our library had to be there too, although Clayton, only three miles below, is the resort town where most summer people stay. Indeed one commercial lending library declined to lend us any of their books regretting to inform us that the location we had selected did not seem favorable. Well, what of it? We would use our own, maybe buy some new ones. We would go ahead. It was a game for us, not a business. Then there was the matter of a location. If we were not going to make any profit, we could not really afford to pay rent. But if we were going to have a library, it had to be where people could find it. We talked to the leading citizen, an apple grower and truck farmer. The railroad station had been abandoned and he had been granted the use of the building for his trucking business. But the room which had been the colored waiting room was not used. It had a separate outside entrance and was small enough for us to fill comfortably. He would lend it to us without charge. Good! If he had that much public spirit, we would be as gallant. We would see if we could borrow books from the state library commission for free circulation among the mountain people. The Georgia Library Commission gave us splendid cooperation. They would lend us a hundred books for three months. We had only to take care of them and pay trans- portation. Lumber for the shelves was donated, and the labor to put them up. Even a lock for the door. After a thorough scrubbing, our room was cozy with fresh curtains at the windows and our packing boxes made into comfortable seats by the use of a little cotton and gay chintz. Our three hundred books filled the shelves comfortably and our pottery and weaving and prints made the room look very inviting. A neighbor supplied us with flowers all summer long, so we had the most attractive place of business in town. "Rabun Bookshelf" opened for business on July the first. Posters in the hotels and stores announced our advent into the world, and attractive souvenir blotters distributed far and wide advertised that we had "good reading for children and for grown-ups". There is a definite social distinction between summer people and mountain people in this little town, but that distinction did not exist in our library. Our little room often presented a strange scene daintily dressed women from the Clayton hotels, a man thumbing through Coulter's College Life in the Old South, a little girl trying very hard to decide between English Fairy Tales and The Irish Twins, a boy having to be sent outside to wash his hands, and a woman with a baby on one hip and a pail of huckleberries in her hand wanting to know if we had any books like Freckles. One day the daughter of the leading citizen offered to bring us some books from her home which we might place on our shelves for others to enjoy. Of course we accepted. The idea was contagious, and others brought what they had. We adopted the policy of offering to lend any rent book free to anyone who brought in a book for free circulation. This must have caused a good deal of rummaging, for we acquired thirty- five volumes, some of them very musty and ragged, and some of them hardly acceptable to a conscientious librarian. 10 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly Of course there were discouragements. People were glad enough to have books, but some were unwilling to pay anything for them. We could only pity the stinginess of a few summer people who made deposits, read free books for three or four weeks, then asked to have their quarters returned when they were ready to go home. What a contrast to the mountain woman who rented eight books from us in two months and left her deposit in our cash box to help pay transportation on books from the library commission! Many summer people were appreciative of our books and crafts. Although there were two lending libraries in Clayton where mystery stories and very recent fiction could be had, some people drove up from there to borrow from our library. We had not limited ourselves to fiction or to very recent books. We had magazines for our readers too some that were not sold in the community. We soon saw that to buy more books would be impossible, if we were to make expenses. We provided ourselves with free pamphlets and did what we could. It was a joy to be able to lend a Metropolitan Life Insurance Company pamphlet on pellagra to a woman who was suffering from the disease, and one on overweight to a woman who weighed over two hundred pounds. We found many interesting people among our hundred and seventy odd borrowers, but the most interesting to us were the children. Every Thursday afternoon we had a story hour to which came summer boys and girls and mountain children alike. There is no better game than watching children make friends with books. We asked that the father or mother of each child under twelve come to the library to register for him before we loaned him a book. All of our readers of children's books were not children, however. One day two mountain women, both recently married, visited the library. We suggested two or three love stories and stories of home life. Then one of them asked, "Have you got any fairy stories?" And these two young brides went away each with a volume of fairy tales! We had hoped that the mountain girl helping us would carry on the little library by securing another loan of books from the commission in the fall. But though she was more than willing to give her time to it she was not ready for this responsibility. Nor could any one else be found to assume it. The teachers in the local school refused. It was a great pity, too, for several of the women had said that if only they could have a library during the long winter, they would have time to read. July and August were busy months, what with gardening and berry-picking and canning. Rabun Bookshelf was a good game for us. We played it with all the energy that was in us and won from it a renewed faith in the power of books to enrich human life. We had the fun of bringing a library into existence and of watching people make friends with books. Of course from a serious-minded professional point of view what we had done was almost negligible. No permanent library of any sort resulted from it. Yet the library idea had been planted in that little mountain town. We unemployed librarians can find no better game than introducing boys and girls and men and women to books, each working out the details of his plan for himself. "I hold every man a debtor to his profession." A vast amount of professional energy lies dormant in unemployment. Is this the way in which we can pay our debt? RANDOM READING Dorothy Hutton, '29 As the title implies, these are facts about Agnes Scott alumnae and their relatives gleaned from our exchange magazines and other publications. They are offered with the explanation that they might have been more comprehensive had more leisure for reading presented itself or had our acquaintance with alumnae and their connections been broader. If your name has been overlooked, although it appears in a conspicuous place in some recent publication, please forgive the omission and call it to our attention for the next issue. In the August Alumni Journal of Davidson College we found a picture of R. S. Abernethy, husband of Belle Ward (Stowe) Abernethy, '30, and brother of Sally Aber- nethy, '28. Mention was made of his appointment as secretary to the reorganized Inde- pendence Trust Company of Charlotte, North Carolina. To the American Alumni Council News of July we are indebted for mention of the campus campaign conducted so successfully at Agnes Scott last spring. The Emory Alumnus of September-October and the same publication of November- December read much as official Agnes Scott publications, when we considered the num- ber of alumnae and alumni we can mutually claim. A perusal of the following items will lead many of us to believe that we have undertaken our plan of proposed coopera- tion seriously already. The September-October issue carried the following items of interest to Agnes Scott readers: In a picture of three National Leaders in Chi Phi we spotted Hugh Dorsey, Jr., fiance of Laura Whitner, '3 5, and Charles T. Winship, husband of Juliet (Crenshaw) Winship, ex-'26. Recorded were the marriages of Catherine Coates, ex-'3 3, to Graham Wiley George; of Ruth Liggin, '26, to Henry Franklin Trotter; of Roberta Kilpatrick, '3 3, to Charles A. Stubblebine; of Clara Lundie Askew, ex-'29, to Robert Earle Vogel. Mentioned were the births of Henry Johnson Miller, Jr., son of Nancy (Kamper) Miller, '33, and Henry Johnson Miller; of T. V. Morrison, Jr., son of Helen (Sisson) Morrison, '29, and Ted Morrison. Attention was called to the reorganization of the law firm of Crenshaw, Hansell, and Gunby of Atlanta, of which Granger Hansell, husband of Sarah Belle (Brodnax) Hansell, '23, is a member. Under personal items we read that Laura Belle Wilder, ex-'3 5, is teaching at Elmodel, Georgia; that Mary Ray Dobyns, '28, is assistant librarian at the Pickwick Landing Dam Library in Tennessee; that Dr. T. E. McGeachy, husband of Frances (Fletcher) McGeachy, ex-'30, took a course in X-ray at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital in Boston in the early summer; that Dr. C. Dixon Fowler, husband of Mary (Prim) Fowler, '29, is interning at Henrietta Egleston Memo- rial Hospital. The November-December issue commented under "Emory Doctors on Top," "Dr. Hamilton G. Ansley, ex-'24, (husband of Dessie (Kuhlke) Ansley, ex-'26; son of Roba (Goss) Ansley, Institute; brother of Mary (Ansley) Howland, ex-'29) Atlanta, has been named president of the Fifth District Medical Society for 1936." Recorded are the marriages of Amelia Wolf, '3 3, and Dr. Benjamin J. Bond; of Nell Warren, Institute, and Dr. W. S. Elkin; of Cornelia Ledbetter, ex-'27, and William Estill Heath; of Gussie Joe Mullis, ex-'3S, and Dr. Clyde Walton Whitworth. Birth announcements included Penelope Hollinshead Barnett, daughter of Penelope (Brown) Barnett, '32, and Craw- ford Barnett; Katherine Fletcher McGeachy, daughter of Frances (Fletcher) McGeachy, ex-'30, and English McGeachy; Robert Lewis Ware, son of Mary (McCallie) Ware, '30, and Bob Ware. The death of Mrs. John S. Candler, step-mother of Allie (Candler) Guy, '13, was reported. We read of the appointment of Wallace Alston, husband of Madelaine (Dunseith) Alston, ex-'28, as director of young people's work for the South- ern Presbyterian Assembly in Richmond, Virginia. Mention was made of Harllee Branch, Jr., husband of Kitty (Hunter) Branch, '29, as an associate in the law firm of Colquitt, MacDougald, Troutman and Arkwright of Atlanta. Library Notes included Floyd Sad- 12 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly ler, '2 5, as cataloguing and classifying Highland Hospital Library; Louise Bansley, '27, as cataloguing the Walker County Library in Jasper, Alabama; Ada Page Foote, special student at Agnes Scott the past two sessions, as assisting in county work in the ERA program of the Mississippi Library Commission. Appointments noted were those of Dr. Robert L. Ware, husband of Mary (McCallie) Ware, '30, to the staff of the U. S. Naval Hospital in Philadelphia; Dr. T. W. Griffin, husband of Helen (Etheredge) Griffin, '33, to the staff of the State Hospital in Chattahoochee, Florida; Reverend Cecil G. Hefner, husband of Jane Bailey (Hall) Hefner, '30, to the pastorate and Bible faculty of Western Carolina Teachers College in Cullowhee, North Carolina. University Facts (September), publication of the University of North Carolina, printed in full a letter from George C. Worth, M.D., father of Ruth Worth, '29. Of Ruth, he wrote, "My daughter is an alumna of Agnes Scott and has her M.A. degree from the University of Virginia and has charge of my hospital laboratory." Ruth accom- panied Dr. Worth to this country for a year's visit with relatives. The frontispiece of the June Duke Alumni Register was entitled "They Will Be Duke Alumni in a Few Years." In the group were Ernest Ralph Paris, Jr., and Edythe Cole- man Paris, son and daughter of Ralph and Edythe (Coleman) Paris, '26. Also featured was an article telling of Ralph's election to the presidency of the Atlanta Rotary Club. Southern Telephone Neil's for December carried two pictures of interest to Agnes Scott readers. In that of the new class at the Atlanta Business Office was Kathryn Maness, '34; and in one of the new class in the Miami Business Office was J. B. Kincaid, husband of Mary Gladys (Steffner) Kincaid, '29. Mention was made in this publication of the promotion of Martha Lou Overton, '27, from service representative to service observer in the Georgia manager's office. Activities of the Georgia Branch of the American Association of University Women were reported in a November Neu's Bulletin, with mention of many Agnes Scott alumnae participating. These included Peg (Debele) Maner, '26, Helen (Burkhalter) Quattle- baum, ex-'22, Grace Straus (former member of the Agnes Scott Mathematics Depart- ment) as representatives from Georgia at the national convention in Los Angeles in June. Miss Straus is Chairman of Program Steering for the state branch and President of the Augusta organization. Helen (Burkhalter) Quattlebaum, ex-'22, tendered an extensive report as Ex-president of the Georgia Branch. She serves this year as Chairman of the Educational Program for the state organization. Augusta (Skeen) Cooper, '17, is Vice- President and Chairman of Membership for the Atlanta Branch. In Augusta, Belle Walker, '2 5, is Treasurer and Lois Eve, '19, Chairman of the Scholarship Committee. In Savannah, Ruth (Blue) Barnes, '14, is President; Sally Williams, '32, Vice-President and Chairman of Membership; Nell Brown, '33, is Publicity Chairman; Betty Peeples, '32, Chairman of Meetings; and Louise Falligant, Institute, Chairman of the Scholar- ship Committee. In Valdosta, Fredeva Ogletree, '2 3, is Secretary, and Margaret (Ander- son) Scott, '15, Chairman of the Social Committee. SNAPPED OFF DUTY (See Page 21) "THEY STAND OUT" Dorothy Hutton, '29 The World With A Fence is the provocative title of the second novel Marian (McCamy) Sims, '20, has written. It will be published early in February by Lippincott Publishers. Morning Star, Marian's first novel, received widespread favorable comment, and was finally syndicated as a serial for a newspaper publication. In the field of magazine writing, many delightful short stories have come to life under the author's facile pen. Particularly enjoyable was a story of several summers past, Woman of Property, in the Saturday Evening Post. Liberty, The Pictorial Review, The Home, and McCall's are other magazines which have accepted Marian's stories. "For Xmas what could be more appropriate to give someone you care for (accom- panied by some adroit remark!) than a book called 'Rather Personal' (Stephen Daye Press) by Leonora Owsley Herman?", questions a clever advertisement of the second edition of this book of verse. Leonora (Owsley) Herman, Institute, has written delight- fully on a number of subjects, reflecting her diversified interests and wide experiences, first as an artist and singer, and more recently as a writer of verse. "Summary of Published Research Studies in the Field of Latin Teaching", appearing in the current November issue of Education, claims Lillian Thomas, '30, as its author. Lillian has studied in the graduate field at Emory University since her graduation and is at present teaching Civics and Latin in Fort Valley, Georgia. Many alumnae will remember "Vergil, the Immortal Bard", presented on May Day, 1930, and written by Lillian Thomas. We note with interest her persistent enthusiasm for the classics. Associate Managing Editor of South-wester, described by itself as "A Journal for Writers, Artists, and Members of Study Groups", is the title claimed by Eleanor (Hyde) White, '23. The November, 193 5, issue proved most entertaining reading. One feels throughout the publication the purpose of the magazine to be reflection of local color (Texas) and encouragement of amateurs in all fields of writing. To Elaine Exton, ex-'31, goes credit for the compilation of "Youth, A Contem- porary Bibliography". As Research Assistant in the Office of Education's Committee on Youth Problems of the United States Department of the Interior, Elaine has worked tirelessly on this publication and another, "Youth, How Can Communities Help?" The Alumnae Office at Agnes Scott is flattered and grateful that advance copies in mimeo- graphed form were sent. The purpose of the last mentioned pamphlet is "to stimulate communities to become more active in the interest of young people who are out of school and out of work". We commend Elaine's efficient participation in this most worthwhile of movements. Editor's Note: Even at pain of proving boring through repetition, we feel con- strained to state that the above is not an all-inclusive summary. It is merely an honest effort to commend alumnae achievement that has recently been called to the attention of the Alumnae Office. IN MEMORIAM Nettie Alline (Calhoun) Smith, Institute (1896-1899), died in November. Clifford Hunter, Institute (1900-1904), died in November. Sympathy is ex- tended to her sister, Eddie (Hunter) Pease, Institute (1906-1908). Ella Louise Landress, ex-'24, died November 18. Sympathy is extended to her sister, Anna Marie (Landress) Cate, '21. LaNelle (Moon) Bradford, ex-'15, died October 19, 1933. Miss Ella Young, Principal of Agnes Scott Academy until 1913, died Novem- ber 21. ALUMNAE STUDY CLASS Dorothy Cassel, '34 Since October 2 8th a study course in current history has been holding weekly meetings at the College every Monday night under the direction of Dr. Philip Davidson. This course is sponsored by the Atlanta Agnes Scott Business Girls' Club and the mem- bers are composed of alumnae who are interested in contemporary problems here and abroad. Dr. Davidson has arranged a series of lectures that begin with a view of pre-war civilization the characteristics and ideals of that era, and how they have effected and produced the problems of today. In connection with this unit of the study Dr. Arthur Raper presented a very interesting discussion on the sociological problems existing today and Dr. Florence Smith gave an instructive picture of the different governments of today and the basic problems underlying them. Both these addresses were very enlightening and prepared us for the big topic of The Solutions of the Major Problems of Today, which include Russian Communism, Italian Fascism, the New Capitalism in England, National Socialism in Germany, and the New Deal in the United States. Upon completing the discussions of domestic problems we shall deal with foreign problems, which Dr. Davidson has divided into two sub-topics: International Organiza- tion and International Relations. The discussion of international organization will include the League of Nations, the World Court, and other agencies of international organization. With International Relations we shall begin with a survey of the inter- national situation in 1920 and look into the Peace Movement of 1920-1929. Then the Economic Crisis in 1929 and the Flight from the League will be studied, which will bring us to the economic situations existing today in the governments throughout the world. Discussions on the rise of Japan, Austria and the problems of central Europe, foreign problems of the United States, and the Ethiopian Crisis will conclude the course. It is a very enthusiastic group that gathers in the Y. W. C. A. room every Monday night to think over and discuss the problems of this great world. We don't try to solve any of them, but some of our members have very fine ideas that both inspire us and open to our minds new channels of thought. INVESTITURE (See Page 7 9) The Atlanta Agnes Scott Club co-spon- sored a tea for the faculty with the De- catur Agnes Scott Club on the afternoon of November the nineteenth. Prior to the so- cial hour a meeting was held in Buttrick Hall, with Miss Rachel Neely of Atlanta as guest speaker. Since the completion of the club project of sponsoring a series of lectures this fall, attention is now being turned to membership. Eloise (Gay) Braw- ley, '16, is chairman of this committee and hopes to build up a large active member- ship from the number of local alumnae eligible. The Atlanta Business Girls' Club con- tinues its monthly dinner meetings with speakers at each. Guest speaker for the October meeting was Emma Wesley, '99, and for the November one Mrs. Alma Sy- denstricker of the Bible faculty at Agnes Scott. The average attendance is around twenty-five, a consistent figure since the founding of the club in 1932. * * * * The Birmingham Agnes Scott Club re- ported a meeting on November the ninth. New officers include Lucile Woodbury, '33, as president; and Katherine Woodbury, ex- '29, as secretary. * * * * The Charlotte Agnes Scott Club has con- tributed eight dollars toward a lamp for the Alumnae House. Plans are being made now for their Founder's Day get-together. The club has been responsible for individ- ual dues memberships and for a club sub- scription. The outstanding feature of the group is a remarkable attendance of out of town alumnae at their meetings. This phase of their club work is under the efficient direction of Charlotte Hunter, '29. tivities. The aims and purposes of the or- ganization were specified as follows: 1. Ac- quaintance with and participation in the growth and development of Agnes Scott College. 2. Acquaintance with and dis- charge of responsibility to the College. 3. Acquaintance with and sharing of oppo- tunities offered by Agnes Scott to the alumnae. 4. Acquaintance with others. The work under the direction of Rosemary May, '33, Anne McCallie, '31, and Marion Chap- man, '30, is most commendable. * * m * The Decatur Agnes Scott Club is enjoy- ing a varied program under the presidency of Helene (Norwood) Lammers, ex-'22. Other officers are: vice-president, Annie (Johnson) Sylvester, '25; secretary and treasurer, Olivia (Fewell) Taylor, Insti- tute. The committees appointed are as fol- lows: advisory, Emma Pope (Moss) Dieck- mann, '13; entertainment, Mrs. J. T. Gil- lespie; finance, Hallie (Smith) Walker, ex- '16, Margaret Phythian, '16; garden, Frances (Gilliland) Stukes, '24, and Mrs. R. B. Holt; publicity, Eva (Towers) Hen- dee,, ex-'lO, and Lucile Alexander, '11; tel- ephone, Leone (Bowers) Hamilton, '26, and Gussie (O'Neal) Johnson, ex-'ll. The ex- ecutive board of this club meets the third Thursday in every month, followed by the regular club meeting on the last Monday. Three projects for raising money will be undertaken during the year, a luncheon, a book tea, and a benefit bridge party. In November the Decatur Club and the At- lanta Club were joint hostesses to the fac- ulty at tea. A regular club meeting pre- ceded the social hour, with Dr. George P. Hayes of the English Department as guest speaker. The Chattanooga Agnes Scott Club sent out an informative letter this fall to pros- pective members, calling attention to the place of alumnae in a community and to possible contributions an organized club can make. This was accompanied by a two- page and very comprehensive questionnaire on the personal history of the alumnae and their possible participation in club ac- The Jacksonville Agnes Scott Club has registered a club membership with the Alumnae Office. A drive for membership was adopted as the most important imme- diate undertaking for the group. A tea for prospective students, the alumnae and the Field Alumnae Secretary is planned for April, Marjorie Simmons, ex-'35, as president, reported. PROMINENT 193 5 MEMBERS (See Page 21) PERTINENT PARAGRAPHS The Meaning of Investiture was the sub- ject of the twenty-seventh Investiture serv- ice of Agnes Scott, held in the Chapel on November the second. Carrie Scandrett, '24, Assistant Dean and Assistant Regis- trar, and faculty adviser for the class of '36, spoke to the one hundred and two sen- iors and their families and friends. Repe- tition of this message over the weekly broadcast on November the sixth brought favorable comment and a request for a copy of the talk. Significant is the fact that this is the largest group in the his- tory of the College to be invested. Extension of Social Privileges to stu- dents has necessitated longer hours for the Dean's Office. The staff now consists of Dean Nannette Hopkins, Assistant Dean Carrie Scandrett, '24, Secretaries to the Dean, Margaret Bell, '33, and Mary Mc- Donald, '34. i]e :f: $ % The Purchase of Property along the site of the South Decatur car line provides Agnes Scott with an additional five acres of land on which a lake and outdoor camp may possibly be developed. The land origi- nally belonged to Colonel George Wash- ington Scott who bought it at the time of the founding of the College to provide for the protection and expansion of Agnes Scott. * * * * Bryn Mawr and Rollins Colleges, cele- brating their fiftieth anniversaries in No- vember, requested the attendance of rep- resentatives from Agnes Scott. Nina Parke, '35, attended the former and Lucile (Smith) Bishop, '21, the latter. * * * * Open House for the College Community was observed by the Physical Education Department on November the first in cele- bration of the tenth anniversary of the building of Bucher Scott Gymnasium. A well-planned program illustrated the diver- sity of sports now offered by this depart- ment. * # * * Mobilization for Peace, adopted as a na- tion-wide faculty-student movement this session, has had its place on the Agnes Scott campus. Chapel on November the twelfth was set asrde for this program which will be followed through in subse- quent programs of the Student Govern- ment Association, the Y. W. C. A., the Current History Forum, Pi Alpha Phi and the Agonistic. * * * * The Silhouette for 1934-1935 was award- ed first-class rating for colleges of five hundred students or less for the fourth consecutive year by the National Scholas- tic Press Association. The editor was Car- oline Long and the business manager Betty Lou Houck. In recognition of these suc- cessive honors, a cup was presented the Silhouette for its permanent possession. Dr. Charles A. Logan, father of Jose- phine (Logan) Hamilton, '23, Mary Nelson (Logan) Brown, '29, and Martha (Logan) Henderson, '32, former member of the Agnes Scott Bible Department, visited on the campus early in November and ad- dressed the student body at that time. * * * * Two Additional Musical Compositions of Professor Christian Dieckmann (husband of Emma Pope (Moss) Dieckmann, '13) have been accepted for publication. Bene- dictus es Domine is to be published by the H. W. Gray Company of New York. This may be used in the Episcopal service in place of the Te Deum. Blest Are the Pure in Heart, an anthem with a soprano solo, will be published by the Theodore Presser Company of Philadelphia. * * * * Mortar Board Recognition Service of November the sixteenth brought to the campus Elinor (Hamilton) Hightower, '34, of Thomasville, Georgia, former Field Alumnae Secretary. Her talk defined the Mortar Board interpretation of service and emphasized its fulfilment through the pro- gram of the Agnes Scott chapter. * * * * The Class of 1936 voted to wear caps and gowns to classes every Saturday. This academic regalia makes the seniors more conspicuous and therefore more easily identified by lower classmen. * * * * Martha Elliott, '34, will represent Agnes Scott College at the annual convention of the Federation d'Alliances Francaises aux Etats-Unis et au Canada in New York City in April. Martha, as the former presi- dent of the Agnes Scott Cercle Francais, is the official representative of this cam- pus group. * :ja $ * Keen Interest in the proposed project of the development in Atlanta of an educa- tional center was expressed by the Gen- eral Education Board, the Carnegie Cor- poration, the Commonwealth Fund and Harkness officials in November when Pres- ident J. R. McCain of Agnes Scott and President Harvey Cox of Emory presented their plan to them in New York. * * * * High School Seniors from North Avenue Presbyterian School, Washington Seminary and Druid Hills High School have been en- 20 The Agnes Scott Alumnae Quarterly tertained on the campus this fall, in an effort to interest them in Agnes Scott. The programs planned included some phase of student activity of peculiar interest to high school students. The Class of '35 Reunion Dinner at the Tavern Tea Room in Atlanta on November the thirtieth was attended by the follow- ing: Elizabeth Alexander, Frances Espy, Katherine Hertzka, Clara Morrison, Ida Lois McDaniel, Virginia Wood, Elizabeth Young, Mary Adams, Vella Marie Behm, Mary Green, Carol Griffin, Elizabeth Heaton, Caroline Long, Marguerite Mor- ris, Martha Redwine, Marie Simpson, Eliz- abeth Thrasher, Amy (Underwood) Trow- ell, Hester Anne Withers, Alsine Shutze. # * * * President McCain and Registrar Stukes attended the fortieth annual meeting of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and the first annual meeting of the Southern University Con- ference in Louisville, Kentucky, in early December. Dr. McCain, as chairman of the committee investigating political control of the state educational institutions of Lou- isiana, made his report at the former meet- ing. The Granddaughters entertained escorts at a formal dinner on December the fifth in the Alumnae House. About thirty-six guests were present for the occasion. Day Students and Their Parents were honor guests at a tea given by the local chapter of Mortar Board on December the seventh in the reception rooms of Main. This social function is part of a program undertaken in recent years to make the lay students feel more of a real part of the College. * * * * Class Secretaries are the backbone of any Alumnae Association. Their work is untir- ing and their pay poor, when you, gentle readers, take to heart the number of times you ignore their frantic appeals for news. On this subject Mr. John R. Burleigh of Dartmouth writes, "Dartmouth has discov- ered that class organization has more emo- tional appeal to alumni than a regional organization. The class secretary and class agent are considered the most important officers in the class after graduation. They must fire the imaginations of their class- mates and make real to them the indubi- table fact that the Dartmouth alumni are the living endowment of the College." For their cooperation and loyalty to the Agnes Scott Alumnae Association the editor feels constrained to invoke the blessing of Tiny Tim, "God bless us every one!" A Fellowship for Women Graduates who show promise of usefulness in the public service was established in May of 1934 by the Women's Organization for National Prohibition Reform. $1,300 is offered for a year of graduate study at an approved college or university in one or more of the related fields of History, Economics, Government, and Social Science. The award is made by the Faculty of Barnard Col- lege, not later than May the first. Quali- fications are that a candidate must: be a citizen of the United States; have re- ceived the Bachelor's degree not earlier than June of 1930; have shown special abil- ity in the field of political science; show promise of future usefulness in the public service; be of good moral character and have suitable personal qualities. For fur- ther details address the Alumnae Office at Agnes Scott or write to Professor Eugene H. Byrne of Barnard, chairman of this committee. * Ha -'.' # The Lecture Association will bring to the campus on February the sixth the well- known author, Thornton Wilder. This is the second of the speakers appearing on the lecture program this session. Robert Frost, probably America's foremost poet today, lectured to the college audience on November the seventh and has more re- cently expressed a desire to return to Ag- nes Scott in March or April for individual conferences and talks with students. * *& * * Former Agnes Scott Professor Joseph McLean has recently been honored by Etude, music magazine. A portrait of him and commendation of his fine work ap- peared in a recent issue. * * * * An Agnes Scott Reunion of Note was that which took place at the time of Belle Ward (Stowe) Abernethy's wedding in Oc- tober. Those present were Callie Nash, '30, Virge Shaffner, '30, Lynn Moore, '30, Marv Cope, '30, Zou (Woolford) Raine, '30, Sara (Townsend) Pittman, '30, Rae Wilson, '30, and Sallie Peake, '30. The latter informed the editor, "I don't hesitate to say that a marvelous time was had by all." It's Not Always the Printer! The boner of reporting Martha Fite, '38, as the daughter of Cassie Verna (Hunter) Fite, Academy, was purely the Alumnae Secre- tary's. We are grateful to Lucy (Johnson) Ozmer, ex-'lO, for calling this to our at- tention. The young lady is the daughter of Ethyl (Flemister) Fite, ex-'06, of Dalton, Georgia. The Agnes Scott A l umnae Quarterly 21 One Way by Charlotte Newton, '21, is printed here through the courtesy of The Library Journal. This is a brief of the original appearing in the January 1, 1935 issue of this publication. We regret that this could not be published in full, for many delightful incidents were omitted, and that it could not be published earlier. However, this story of achievement in the summer of 1934 has a wide appeal for all time, the editor feels. The author has been employed on the staff of the University of Georgia Library since September of 1934. * * * * The Outstanding Work of Edith (Wil- liams) Maxwell and her husband in train- ing boys and young men as choristers was recently called to the attention of the edi- tor through Mrs. Maxwell's letter to Dean Nannette Hopkins. A request for a story for the Quarterly brought the thrilling ac- count in this issue. A list of the motion pictures for which this group has pro- vided the musical background includes the following: "Smilin' Thru," "Tess of the Storm Country," "The Power and the Glory/' "It Happened One Night," "Whom the Gods Destroy," "Peck's Bad Boy," "The President Vanishes," "David Copperfield," "Sylvia Scarlet," 'Kind Lady," "A Tale of Two Cities," "The Bishop Behaves," "Mu- tiny on the Bounty." A note to Mrs. Philip Maxwell, 244 North Western Avenue, Los Angeles, California, expressing the appre- ciation of Quarterly readers, would be most appropriate. * * * H* Members of Mortar Board elected from the class of 1936 are from left to right: Ann Coffee, Frances James, Dean McKoin, Adelaide Stevens, Lulu Ames, Loice Rich- ards, Sarah Spencer, Carrie Phinney Lati- mer, Ruby Hutton, Shirley Christian. Not in the picture is Augusta King. * * * # Snapped Off Duty are Frances Steele, Mary Gillespie, Lucille Cairns (daughter of Lucile Colclough, Institute), and Eloisa Alexander (niece of Lucile Alexander, '11, and Ethel Alexander, '00, sister of Eliza- beth Alexander, '35, and cousin of Eloise Gaines, '28). Mary Gillespie works in the administrative offices of the College, the other three in the Alumnae Office. * * * *i Prominent 1935 Members are Caroline Long, whose marriage to Gaither Sanford is reported this issue; Mary Green, class secretary for 1935; Alberta Palmour (daughter of Mary Crenshaw, Institute), life president for 1935; and Betty Lou Houck with her new husband, Bealy Smith, whose wedding in November is recorded on page 38 of this Quarterly. The Liberal Arts College, as exemplified by Agnes Scott, will be the unified theme of the weekly Agnes Scott College radio broadcasts (WSB each Wednesday from five to five-fifteen, Central Standard Time) for the next five months. The angle seen by the trustees will be dis- cussed in January, that by the College authorities in February, by the faculty in March, by the alumnae in April, and by the students in May. Listen in! Wednesday Nights continue to be formal dinner occasions for the boarders. The matter was discussed at length in early December, when the majority vote was in favor of preservation of this custom which has been established within the last three years. Dinner is followed by after-dinner coffee in the Main Building, with campus organizations acting as hostesses for the occasion. Alberta Palmour, '35, Field Alumnae Secretary, wishes to take this opportunity to express to alumnae her appreciation of their wholehearted cooperation in helping- make contact with high school students. Alberta, accompanied by Jacqueline Wool- folk, '35, traveled extensively through the months of November and December throughout the southwest, with Texas as their ultimate goal. Their visits with alumnae were reported as delightful occa- sions. * * * * An Award of $25 will be made to the Agnes Scott College student who collects between now and May 1, 1936, the most discriminate selection of books. No collec- tion of fewer than fifteen books will be considered; there are no restrictions as to the type. Each collection will be judged by the number and quality of books and by the owner's understanding of their con- tents. This award is known as the Richard du Bury Book Award and is made through a specially selected committee. One Method of determining the value of education is that of measuring the growth of tolerance. If, to any individual, educa- tion has meant merely the acquiring of evidence in support of his own biased ideas and the ignoring of all evidence that might disprove the idea, to that individual educa- tion has been of no value. Rather, it has been harmful . . . for his mind is com- pletely cluttered with preconceived notions that have crystallized into unwarranted dogmas. We quote The Minnesota Daily as reported in the Ginn and Company publi- cation, "What The Colleges Are Doing." LET'S GO ABROAD THIS SUMMER It's time to take that grand vacation which you have deferred, perhaps, for five lean years. Sail with us June 17 on the Berengaria for a two months tour of France, Italy, Switzerland, Ger- many, Belgium, Holland, England, and Scotland with a small group of congenial travelers under the direction of Leslie J. Gaylord and Carrie Scandett. Every detail of the trip has been planned to assure a maximum of comfort, pleas- ure, and profit at a minimum of expense. May we send you a descriptive itinerary and detailed information? Leslie J. Gaylord Carrie Scandrett Agnes Scott College Decatur, Georgia. ALUMNAE HOUSE AND GARDEN AS SEEN FROM INMAN t'3 )TT( ailumnae O^uarterlp April, 133fi j* J *5* *J+J**J *J+ *t* *J* *5**J* *J* ***$**$ *5*J* *5* **** *5* ** ** * *!*** *$* *$* ** *J* $ ** * *** *J* *J* *$* **$ *J* *$J J * $ J J *$J *J**J* *$ *J* J* *$*$ 5 m $ m $ m I* Qltyt Bgneg Jkott Alumnae