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7%e (cUo€uucui Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy" *//i '***, VOLUME XXXIII Z531 WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. GREENSBORO. N. C. MAY 16. 1952 ^''^ M'MRER 24 Students Declare Ike Their Presidential Ch 'OurTown'Gains Audience Fri.-Sat. Nights in Aycock The curtain rises tonight on the Originally produced on Broad- Anal production of the Playlikers way in 1939. the setting is laid In for 1951-52. Thornton Wilder', Grover's Corners, New Hampshire OUR TOWN, should give every Through a philosophising narrator playgoer an exciting evening Na- billed as the stage thaniel " duction White directs the pro- Burnsville Program Includes Expansion Of Dance Classes Three leading exponents In the field of the dance will join the staff of the Burnsville School of Fine Arts this summer to teach advanced students Conducted by Woman', College, the Burnsville schools six-wccks session. July 9-August 19. covers art. dance, drama, music, writing, and education. The dance, like several other fields, is being extensively ex-panded on the summer program. Merce Cunningham, choreogra-pher and dancer, and John Cage, composer, who will work closely with the dance classes and the, music department, will be asso-ciated with Virginia Moomaw, associate professor of dance at, Woman's College and dance chair-man for the state of North Caro-manager. the audience becomes acquainted with the inhabitants of Grover's Cor-nel l among them, the town doc-tor, the editor of the local paper, their wives and children, their neighbors, the village gossips. The entire play is being done without KCDI ry or many props. Mr W. C. Burton, who is a great favorite with play-liker audiences is taking the par! of II"' Stage Manager Bette Barks-dale gives a heart-warming por-trayal as the shy daughter of the town's newspaper editor Bette has taken leads in The Heiress and "The Importance of Being Ernest " Bob Utley will be seen as the town doctor, and Hardy Hunt will portray the editor; Joan Light-dale and Harriet Hall will appear as their respective wive,. In OUR TOWN you will look in on choir practice at the Con-gregational Church, listen to the women gossiping about the tip-pling choirmaster as they return to their homes, sit In at breakfast in the kitchens of two of the town's representative families, and attend the wedding of the town's best ball player and the brightest girl In school. oice Kefauver Earns Second Place in Mock Contests as Students Poll 1108 Votes Students at Woman's College! ballot,, one more than the num-volced a resounding vote of ap- ber cast for Stevenson, a write-in proval for Gen Dwlght D. Eisen-|on the ballot Warren, with nine hower Tuesday, to the tune of 5881 vote,. Harriman with six. Paul votes. In a Callfornia-SDA spon-1 Douglas with five, W O Douglass sored campus election to express ' with four, and Truman and Stassen |the WC obotes of President of the with two each, took the remainder United stale, I Of the votes, except for a few mls- From a grand total of 1.10R votes ce"»neous ones cast for Franklin cast, Kefauver was nexi highest D Roosevelt. Jr. Drlscoll, and in campus favor with 328 vote,. I °'her». Fourteen vote, had to be Senator Russell came through' discounted because of a double with H7. while Taft. contrary to *>i\\ot all predictions, captured only 29 j Kefauver Musicians Present Program; Twentieth Century Works Voters give choice for next President of United States and Russell for the j Democrats, Taft and Eisenhower for the GOP , were the two major candidates for each party named Ion the ballot; the remainder of the candidates were writtcn-in by HM students SIM members operated the polls In the port i office Tuesday from 8 AM to 6 PM; A pre election rally In the A program of twentieth century quadrangle Monday night intro-n. us,, will foa,llr,. Mr. George duced the candidates and the.r Dickleson. and Miss Susan Deyton. supporters to the student body ■ EriekHon. ■„,,„ brief campaign speeches. Suzanne Kemp Evaluates Year Abroad, Comments on Hospitality, Friendliness violinists. Miss Louise MCIIISI and Miss Elizabeth Cow-ling, violoncellist. Wednesday, May 21. at 8:00 p.m.. in the Music Building Recital Hall. The program consists of the First Siring Quartet. Opus o, Lento. Una Cage has written musical works Thc normal, natural happenings for leading choreographers. He in ,ne llvos °' ,he '<•"» who 8"* is the Inventor of the "prepared up """Tied and lived and died piano," a regular piano which ln Grover's Corners half a cen-produces totally new sounds when ,ury **°—,ne5e «re ,he materials By Suzanne Kemp . situation, the flow of students from It Last fall more than 30,000 fore- abroad ls still holding on transplanting of a person from one ign students invaded the United '• »» • representative of a | hemisphere to another is quite an songs, and skits by student im-personators and supporters The campus-wide election was planned for a dual purpose: that of revealing the currents of stu-dent opinion on presidential poll- Allcgrctto, and AUeijru Vivace, by ,,„. anrt ... . .h„ M..—..I. ..-.- '"' »nd ,nM of abusing interest In the national party conventions States' campuses, encouraging and European nation, was one of those experiment. It involves many and s quite apparent that the 'he "i un'"'ri'<n contemporary M Bartuk. and the Second String iQuartrf, Modcrato. Presto, dilute, and Allegro Molto by ,t.i the heartening all those interested in the promotion ol world co-opera- i of. to live bits of metal, wood, rubber, or of 0UR TOWN which, according lion and understanding through also a title that might have seemed way, and it requires patience and n;'1 onl>' m»ke clever arrangements leather are placed at particular lo one New York Critic "captures the international exchange of peo- to be designed to keep me an arm's breaking down of barriers between the mind and the spirit of this country as few plays of our time have " tary difficulties and atlon of thc critical the continu-international places between the strings. Cage won an award from the National Academy of Arts and Letters in 1949. and a Guggenheim Fellow-ship in 1949-50. Cunningham for several years was a soloist in the Martha Graham Dance group and in his own com-pany. He has taught at various colleges and universities He ha* been commissioned to choreo- Six Woman's College students Liberal and a Conservative party, graph the Brandeis University journeyed to Chapel Hill Tuesday After over an hour of lively debate. Arts Festival to be held in June night to watch the Phi Assembly, the bill was defeated by a plurality Miss Moomaw taught at Univer. more formally known as the Phil- of two votes sity of Iowa and University ofjanthropic Literary Society, in After the debate pie. showing that despite mone- length away from all of you. How- people of different nationalities WCStudentsObservePhi j Assembly Operate at HiU^ .. the group re- Illinois before coming to Woman's actual session. The visit was made ,.,.ssed and discussed I he organi- College. She is chairman of the under the sponsorship of the local !za,ioni ils history „s purpose. and American Association for Health. NSA chapter and the Phi itself, Physical Education and Recrea- who hope to establish a sister so- Uon. |clety on this campus next fall. This year the Burnsville school j NSA Cna|rman Ruth ,„„, M„. can , ,,„. l0 show tne slu. has been extensively reorganized ,ha Lohr Be(sy Ue Rosa|,e Ke. dcnts here ,he ac|ua| working of with Mr Gregory Ivy. head of the z(ah Sa„y Beaver and Janp FuM(.r th(, Assemblv college Art Department, as dlrec- were ,„„ wc Kjr|s wno wa|che(| . Phi members conduct a parliamen-debate showed me the much-adver- American democracy in ac-campus and took me to your homes. It was there especial-ly that 1 experienced that In- Europe-known-so-well "American way of living " "UNOFFICIAL AMBASSADOR" I came from a foreign count ry to study in the United States, to its functions Tentative plans were study yes, but not just lo settle proposed for a regular meeting down and stick to the books of of the Phi on the Woman's College one particular subject in one, invaders I had the title of "fore- inevitable complications and often Jew'"h ™n"M J'S"; h™st Bl°ch Ign student." . title to be proud misapprehensions to many of u.. L Bar'"* and »'«"• b°»" famous up to Yes. but It I.'This Is true ln the beginning, any-/0 of a few folk songs; so permeated were ihey by (he spirit of their people's music that characteristic features are almost fUbcOBeWtoutvly woven into the lexluie of their M'lHI'V The reeital is open to tWyOM and is of particular interest to those who actively participate in all phases of the arts. ever. I should have not worried; and cultures to arrive at thc point you showed me the friendliness where understanding can be which I came to realize charac- reached and Ideas exchanged, terizes most American students Many are the things that confront You took me into your community 'he foreign student in adjusting and accepted me as one of you; herself to the new life on campus 'iiiuvd ON Poor Three i DTH Editor Speaks . . ■ Foreign Femmes Surpass Spoiled American Sisters tary debate on the topic of the Free Chesterfields (7o'P"ssible reorganization of political To WC Purchasers Wednesday is slated as '•Chesterfield Day" In the Soda Shop. To each of the first ten girls purchasing a carton of Chesterfields there on that day. a free bonus pack will be presented. parties in this country. The Bill provided for the dissolution of the present Democratic and Republi- Deadline Arrives For Registration Tomorrow marks the final ;can organizations, on the grounds for registration to vote 'that the two parties have each North Carolina primary elections, caused by the poor movies, which ; r),.ar W(1 specific department I dare say I was sent here just as much as an unofficial ambassador from my country lo promote a better under-standing of Ihe country I re pre-[ sented and to receive from you what thc United States really is Thereby, on my return home, later, I should be able lo clear day 'he many misconceptions of the the V. S and the American people! Editor', note: The following is reprinted from Harry Far ber'l "Personally" coin inn. May II issue ol the Daily Tar Heel Mr. Farber, who is the • dttor of our brother jmblica-fion, can speak With some authority on this subject, hnu-iny become well acquainted With a number ul foreign itudenti throu»h his unirk with .v.S'A atid his recent jour 10 Yugoslavia and South America. split into several factions and have lost their separate Identities To replace the old parties, the bill advised the establishment of a which are slated for May 31. i too many times European coun- Students who are over 21 years ,rlcs are P*«»M>ted with and which, of age on election day. have lived s"PPoscdly, are to represent true" in North Carolina one year by llft' ln Amerlca. election day. and have lived in their own precincts for four CAROLINIAN Eef/UeStS months, are urged to consult their Student Evaluation newspaper for precinct maps, polling places, and lists of regis-trars. Joan Lightdale, Harriet Hall and in Thornton Wilders OUR TOWN No one can vote on May 31. from 6 30 AM to 6 30 I'M DJtll she is registered in a party. Thc primary scheduled for that date Is for the purpose of nominating the eandidates who will run in the general election In the general election, citizens may vote for the candidate of any party In the May 31 primary for candidates for state office, Re-publican voters will select as candi-date for lieutenant - governor either U.uieri II I'ntehard or William C Lehew, the only Repub-lican candidates entered In the state race In the Democratic North Carolinians •rill eleet as governor Hubert E. Olive. William B. Umstead. or Hep Anderson, appear Ifanley R Dunaway. Their candi- Continued on Page Tl ■ A poll of student evaluation of The Carolinian appears on page two of this issue in the form of a questionnaire, which WC students are urged lo fill out and mall to the Carolinian office as soon as possible. The questionnaires are be-ing presented to the adminis-tration, faculty, and student body for the purpose of dis-covering campus opinions, suggestions, and ideas for next year's Carolinian. The blanks need nut be signed, but per-sons sending them in, either by local mail or to the ( .ir\ office, are requested to state whether they are members of the administration, faculty, or student body All questionnaires should be in the Carolinian office l>> the end of next week. men of America, I love you. Just the same I think you ought to be spanked and sent to bed without supper because you're the most pamper-ed spoiled, arrogant—and yet. beautiful women in the world. Mother Nature and the Nine-teenth Amendment have given you so much power you've managed jto lock | strangle-hold on the American male. Science has given in oily grease for dry hair, dry 'grease for oily hair, and BOUI ■owns lor hfinr glen figures The billion-dollar cosmetic industry keeps you constantly bathed In a radiant aurora of incandescent glamour Armed with everything from foundation garments to chlorophyll you brazenly trap young men into a life of marital ! blitz with odds at four to one the ■hip ol matrimon) Will run aground on the sands ol Henn Why? You're the best fed, best clothed, the wealthiest, and the luckiest woman on earth—but you're no match for your European when it come, to the ancient art of making a home scheduled for this summer. Similar elections have been conducted this spring in schools and colleges throughout the nation, with vary-ing results reported. At Salem Col-lege, a presidential preference poll In chapel climaxing a panel discussion brought Eisenhower through to an easy victory, with Russell in second place, Taft and Kefauver tying for third, and Gov. Earl Warren trailing Kefauver and Eisenhower won another decisive victory in the first presidential primary to be held at High Point Clllege, with Taft and Stassen tying for second honors in the GOP. camp, and Russell coming through in second place for the Democrats. At State College, "General Ike" scooped up a landslide vote win-ning nearly half of all the votes cast. Kefauver and Russell came in second and third, respectively, In the Raleigh campus race, with Warren fourth, and Taft pulling slowly in behind them. Stassen and MacArthur trailed. Tuesday night Oak Ridge an-inlroduce you t.o .In.gr.ld.. a typ..ical iI nouncejd t.whe el,ect.ion of, K. - ef.-auver as the campus favorite, a note-worthy fact in that Oak Ridge is a military academy and might have been expected to support the military candidate, Eisen-hower. You may think you lead a fright-fully rough life getting up at the crack of noon and sweating over a hot bridge table all day Let me Norwegian coed; blond hair, blue eyas, and so tall she's snowcapped. Rouge and lipstick aren't exactly included in the Marshall Plan and the only nylon she's ever seen was in the ripeordj Of war-surplus parachutes. Ingrld spends fourteen hours out of the twenty four im-proving her academic status and preparing for the glorious career of motherhood. For vacations she strings barbed wire along the Russian border. And never let anybody tell you our boys go for Scandinavian women because they're "easy pickups " Before you American beauties had broken your first finger-nails. Ingrld had stabbed three over-anxious Ger-man officers In the gizzard with the *''"'' 's sP<,ns'»re<1 annually under business end ol ■ Norwegian pitch-""" aireeUon <>' D' I B Hurley. fork. Events of the Week The faculty of the English De-partment will entertain at dessert and coffee in the Virginia Dare room of the Alumnae House at 7 PM Monday evening. Seniors, juniors, and rising junior English majors are cordial-ly Invited to attend the affair. Her lack of poise and "social WOUld cauSS Ingrid to be frowned upon in sorority circles Yet she had a knack of giving me her undivided attention whenever I spoke and when I finally broke down and bought her a dried her-ring head to chew on. her eyes ■Darkled like the midnight sun and she could not have been any happier had I given her a diamond necklace the sixe of Grant's Tomb. Her warm smile radiates a spun which hypocrisy and the dollar bill have all but swept from our North American continent So. girls, that's why the frau-leins and mademoiselles give you snmethini! more than just a refuel- so mucn competition. They give ing depot. | 'Continued on Paoe Four) head of the department, and Mrs. Kathleen S Painter, chairman of the social committee. The 195'J PINE NEEDLES comes off the press and will be distrib-uted Monday evening at 7:30 from the bark windows of the CARO-LINIAN and PINK NEEDLES rooms at Alumnae House. Editor Jackie Jernigan has an-nounced that the usual system of forming lines in alphabetical or-der will be used by Ihe students in collecting their annuals. • I '(lit MIDI TOMORROW The first efforts of the new COBAOOl staff will be distributed in the residence balls tomorrow, according to Editor-in-Chief Gwen
Object Description
Title | The Carolinian [May 16, 1952] |
Date | 1952-05-16 |
Editor/creator | Beaver, Sally |
Subject headings |
University of North Carolina at Greensboro--Newspapers College student newspapers and periodicals-- North Carolina--Greensboro Student publications--North Carolina--Greensboro Student activities--North Carolina--History |
Place | Greensboro (N.C.) |
Description | The May 16, 1952, issue of The Carolinian, the student newspaper of the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina (now The University of North Carolina at Greensboro). |
Type | Text |
Original format | Newspapers |
Original publisher | Greensboro, N.C. : Woman's College of the University of North Carolina |
Language | eng |
Contributing institution | Martha Blakeney Hodges Special Collections and University Archives, UNCG University Libraries |
Publication | The Carolinian |
Rights statement | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Additional rights information | NO COPYRIGHT - UNITED STATES. This item has been determined to be free of copyright restrictions in the United States. The user is responsible for determining actual copyright status for any reuse of the material. |
Object ID | 1952-05-16-carolinian |
Date digitized | 2011 |
Digital publisher | The University of North Carolina at Greensboro, University Libraries |
Digitized by | Creekside Digital |
Sponsor | Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation |
OCLC number | 871558170 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text |
7%e (cUo€uucui
Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy"
*//i
'***,
VOLUME XXXIII Z531
WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. GREENSBORO. N. C. MAY 16. 1952
^''^
M'MRER 24
Students Declare Ike Their Presidential Ch
'OurTown'Gains Audience
Fri.-Sat. Nights in Aycock
The curtain rises tonight on the Originally produced on Broad-
Anal production of the Playlikers way in 1939. the setting is laid In
for 1951-52. Thornton Wilder', Grover's Corners, New Hampshire
OUR TOWN, should give every Through a philosophising narrator
playgoer an exciting evening Na- billed as the stage
thaniel "
duction
White directs the pro-
Burnsville Program
Includes Expansion
Of Dance Classes
Three leading exponents In the
field of the dance will join the
staff of the Burnsville School of
Fine Arts this summer to teach
advanced students
Conducted by Woman', College,
the Burnsville schools six-wccks
session. July 9-August 19. covers
art. dance, drama, music, writing,
and education.
The dance, like several other
fields, is being extensively ex-panded
on the summer program.
Merce Cunningham, choreogra-pher
and dancer, and John Cage,
composer, who will work closely
with the dance classes and the,
music department, will be asso-ciated
with Virginia Moomaw,
associate professor of dance at,
Woman's College and dance chair-man
for the state of North Caro-manager.
the
audience becomes acquainted with
the inhabitants of Grover's Cor-nel
l among them, the town doc-tor,
the editor of the local paper,
their wives and children, their
neighbors, the village gossips. The
entire play is being done without
KCDI ry or many props.
Mr W. C. Burton, who is a
great favorite with play-liker
audiences is taking the par! of
II"' Stage Manager Bette Barks-dale
gives a heart-warming por-trayal
as the shy daughter of the
town's newspaper editor Bette
has taken leads in The Heiress and
"The Importance of Being Ernest "
Bob Utley will be seen as the
town doctor, and Hardy Hunt will
portray the editor; Joan Light-dale
and Harriet Hall will appear
as their respective wive,.
In OUR TOWN you will look
in on choir practice at the Con-gregational
Church, listen to the
women gossiping about the tip-pling
choirmaster as they return
to their homes, sit In at breakfast
in the kitchens of two of the
town's representative families, and
attend the wedding of the town's
best ball player and the brightest
girl In school.
oice
Kefauver Earns Second
Place in Mock Contests as
Students Poll 1108 Votes
Students at Woman's College! ballot,, one more than the num-volced
a resounding vote of ap- ber cast for Stevenson, a write-in
proval for Gen Dwlght D. Eisen-|on the ballot Warren, with nine
hower Tuesday, to the tune of 5881 vote,. Harriman with six. Paul
votes. In a Callfornia-SDA spon-1 Douglas with five, W O Douglass
sored campus election to express ' with four, and Truman and Stassen
|the WC obotes of President of the with two each, took the remainder
United stale, I Of the votes, except for a few mls-
From a grand total of 1.10R votes ce"»neous ones cast for Franklin
cast, Kefauver was nexi highest D Roosevelt. Jr. Drlscoll, and
in campus favor with 328 vote,. I °'her». Fourteen vote, had to be
Senator Russell came through' discounted because of a double
with H7. while Taft. contrary to *>i\\ot
all predictions, captured only 29 j Kefauver
Musicians Present
Program; Twentieth
Century Works
Voters give choice for next President of United States
and Russell for the
j Democrats, Taft and Eisenhower
for the GOP , were the two major
candidates for each party named
Ion the ballot; the remainder of
the candidates were writtcn-in by
HM students SIM members
operated the polls In the port
i office Tuesday from 8 AM to 6 PM;
A pre election rally In the
A program of twentieth century quadrangle Monday night intro-n.
us,, will foa,llr,. Mr. George duced the candidates and the.r
Dickleson. and Miss Susan Deyton. supporters to the student body
■ EriekHon. ■„,,„ brief campaign speeches.
Suzanne Kemp Evaluates Year Abroad,
Comments on Hospitality, Friendliness
violinists. Miss Louise
MCIIISI and Miss Elizabeth Cow-ling,
violoncellist. Wednesday, May
21. at 8:00 p.m.. in the Music
Building Recital Hall.
The program consists of the First
Siring Quartet. Opus o, Lento.
Una
Cage has written musical works Thc normal, natural happenings
for leading choreographers. He in ,ne llvos °' ,he '<•"» who 8"*
is the Inventor of the "prepared up """Tied and lived and died
piano," a regular piano which ln Grover's Corners half a cen-produces
totally new sounds when ,ury **°—,ne5e «re ,he materials
By Suzanne Kemp . situation, the flow of students from It
Last fall more than 30,000 fore- abroad ls still holding on transplanting of a person from one
ign students invaded the United '• »» • representative of a | hemisphere to another is quite an
songs, and skits by student im-personators
and supporters
The campus-wide election was
planned for a dual purpose: that
of revealing the currents of stu-dent
opinion on presidential poll-
Allcgrctto, and AUeijru Vivace, by ,,„. anrt ... .
.h„ M..—..I. ..-.- '"' »nd ,nM of abusing interest
In the national party conventions
States' campuses, encouraging and European nation, was one of those experiment. It involves many and
s quite apparent that the 'he "i
un'"'ri' |