Final answer:
The accuracy of the statement regarding the Directorate officers of a sorority cannot be confirmed without specific organizational details. However, the trustee system in Georgia was not advised by a royal governor who lived in Savannah; this statement is false as the trustees were based in England until 1752.
Step-by-step explanation:
The statement that all officers of the Directorate are graduate sorors with the exception of the Second Supreme Anti-Basileus and two Undergraduate Members At-Large appears to be specific to a particular organization, likely a sorority in the context of higher education. Thus, without specific information regarding the constitution or bylaws of the mentioned sorority, an accurate answer cannot be provided. However, usually, sorority directorate positions are held by individuals who have attained certain educational qualifications, but exceptions for particular roles, such as the Second Supreme Anti-Basileus and Undergraduate Members At-Large, might be made to include undergraduate members.
Concerning Exercise 5.4.2, it states that the Trustee system was advised by a royal governor who lived in Savannah. This statement is false. The Trustee system in the colony of Georgia was established by General James Oglethorpe and other philanthropists in England, not by a royal governor. The trustees were responsible for the colony until Georgia became a royal colony in 1752, after which it was overseen by a royal governor. However, the initial trustees did not reside in Savannah as they were in England, directing the colony's affairs from there.