. The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega. , the nights were usually cool,and blankets were frequently essentialto a comfortable nights sleep. Almost two and one half months afterentering Africa at Tanga, the party ar-rived at Nairobi. This is the capital ofall big-game hunting expeditions and itis here that the greatest variety of hunt-ing equipment and supplies in the worldcan be found. From there a prosaic rail-road train took the party to Mombasa onthe coast where they boarded a liner andreturned to Naples and thence back tothe U. S. A. After such an adventure, con-cluded Dr. Metz, one appreciates his


. The Palm of Alpha Tau Omega. , the nights were usually cool,and blankets were frequently essentialto a comfortable nights sleep. Almost two and one half months afterentering Africa at Tanga, the party ar-rived at Nairobi. This is the capital ofall big-game hunting expeditions and itis here that the greatest variety of hunt-ing equipment and supplies in the worldcan be found. From there a prosaic rail-road train took the party to Mombasa onthe coast where they boarded a liner andreturned to Naples and thence back tothe U. S. A. After such an adventure, con-cluded Dr. Metz, one appreciates hisown country and home surroundingsmore than ever. AMBASSADOR BINGHAM HONORED BY BRITISH MASONS Bobert Worth Bing-ham, U. S. Ambassadorto England, was honoredwith a high Masonic de-gree June 30 at a specialmeeting of the UnitedGrand Lodge of the same meeting KingGeorge was also Bingham wasmade Past Grand SeniorWarden while the Kingwas invested with the col-lar and jewel of the rankof Past Grand The Fraternity Awards By Albert K. HeckelEducational Adviser SINCE the year 1900 tlie number ofcollege students in the United Stateshas increased 900 per cent. This isa striking evidence of growth in the de-mand for education. But is there not aparadox in the fact that interest ineducation is by no means the same asinterest in scholarship ? We are told thatcampus opinion is even hostile to schol-arship. Maybe this is true. But I amconfident that all persons who attend-ed the Congress at Breezy Point wereproud of the results of scholastic en-deavor manifest in the two young menwho were winners of the National Thom-as Arkle Clark Award. The low academ-ic records of some individual membersand of some chapters in the fraternityAvere almost forgotten for the moment,in the impressive showing of these twooutstanding Alpha Taus. They did notconform to a type. In physical make-upthey were most unlike. One, a son ofthe South, won our admiration by hispoise, his ch


Size: 1372px × 1822px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthoralphatauomega, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, booksub