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7%e QAO€UIUUI Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy" VOLUME XXXIV ZS11 WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. GREENSBORO. N. C, MAV ». 1S5J j£7 NUMBER 11 Forthcoming Books To Join Lengthening Roll of W.C. Works Emily Butner takes oath of office from mass meeting Wednesday night. With the forthcoming publication of their new books, two English professors. Mrs. Lettle Rogers and Mr. George P. Wilson, will add to the already long list of works by W. C. faculty members. Miss Roger's Landscape Of The Heart will be released locally on May 18 and nationally on June 17, as a Random House publication. The story involves a young girl who loser her memory and finds h'-rseii avain in a luxurious, pri-vately owned hospital for the mentally ill. II relates her ex-retiring SGA President Trilby Boerner at the final lasrtenees of recovery and examines, sophomores interested in being the effect of modern psychiatric j members of Daisy Chain may sign practices. j up on sheets now in Ihe posl office Mr Wilson, one of the country's A pply for Student A id To Swanson, Hawkins Student. Interested In dlnlng-hall work during the summer school session are requested to leave their aames with Mas Swanson at her office la the dining. halls. Those who desire other self-help positions should leare their names with Mrs Kath-leen Hawkins, Student Aid Of-fice. Applications may be submit-ted any time up until the open-ing of the summer school session. Fledgling Veep Presides at Meeting of New Legislature Daisy Chain Head Posts Sign-Up Sheet Fuller's Statistics Procure "Senior Lydia Moody Passage of Annual Fee Bill Becomes Everlasling Prexy of 53 Class "If I look green. Its not because I'm wearing my class Jacket," stated Kay Neelands In opening the first meeting of the newly elected legislature on May 8. "I am green," she continued, "and so are you all, but that doesn't mean that we can't carry the ball like the legislature before us." In a meeting Immediately follow-ing the last mas smeeting of the school year and the installment of new Student Government officers, the new legislature did start the ball rolling by appointing and Hiding new members to legisla-ture committees go that the work of these groups can be set into motion now. FACULTY ADVISERS Ml | Shirley Italian, Miss Eliza-beth Poteat, and Dr Richard Bar- From ttMM liftl filly to sixty' dolph were fleeted to serve as ■ acuity advisers to legislature. Miss Mahan served as Honor Chairman in 1950. and was I hi' The traditional last Mass Mget-1 Activities fee was presented to I ing of Woman'! College, climaxed.,hl" student body by Marlon Sif-by the official departure of the 'ord' Edi,or "f pin'' N"dl«- Jani' , ,. . . . Fuller, presented argument- for seniors from the student body, re- , t,.he passage of..t.he resol.ut.i,on She suited in the passage of a resolu-1 pointed out the 87'; of the Student lion to include the cost of Pine i Body at present purchases an an- Needles in the Student Activities fee. Unamimously passed by Legisla-ture, the resolution to include the cost of Pine Needles In the Student Meeting Moved from !student» JVC to Chapel Hill nual. our annual costs less than present over half of the cost of that of most schools, and that at the annual is paid indirectly by all the students. The motion was passed by a great majority of the Lydia Moody became Kverla President of the Class of 1953 al the class' last meeting Wednesday .foremost authorities on dialect, students will be chosen by lot by collaborating with Mr Vance Ran- Alice Joyner. head of the arrange-dolph. has completed Down In The menls for the Chain. Holler: A Gallery Of Oxark Folk! Those chosen will father theIyear adviser to the Social Counsel. Speech, it was released for pub-' daisies and weave them into chains she Is the Counselor of Kirkland llcation by the University of Okla- Friday, May 29. Graduating seniors »||.,ll Miss I'oteat Counselor of homa Press on April 30. will walk belween two rows of Mary Faust Hall, is a teacher in The book reflects a two-fold their sister class members, who | the Art* I)e|iai tincnt. and this year purpose: to show thai folk speech is will bear the finisfied chains, on : sponsored the Sophomore Danes I survival of early English and Class Day and Commencement Day Dr. Bardolph, Professor of History, The annual meeting of the Consolidated University Board of Trustees, previously sched-uled to take place on the Worn- 1 an'a College campus May 11, have been moved to Chapel HUI. The location has been changed, according to an an-nouncement this week, in order that members of the board may conveniently attend the dedication of new build-ings of the school of Business Administration at Chapel Hill. W. C. Writers Strive For Putnam Honors Four Woman's College students are turning oul words by mass pro-duction this month in an effort to meet the Putnam Prise emit, a| (leadline. Jarrad Denhard. a sophomore, Diuis Waugh Melts, former WC stu-dent; Bill Kerr. graduate student In Fine Arts, and Jackson Bui graduate assistant in English, are vying for the $1,000 prize offered by the Putnam Publishing Co., for manuscript! of novels or short, rtorj collections. Contestants are required t" tub Bidding farewell to the student body, the retiring president and vice president of Student Govern-ment. Trilby Boerner and Marlon Sifford. expressed their pain upon leaving Woman's College in a fare-well song. Amid rising acclama-tion from the students. Trilby and Marion retired from the Woman's College rostrum for the last time Emily Butner, new president of Student Government Association; Kay Neelands. new vice president, and Geraldinc Fish, Woman's Col-lege's first judicial chairman, ad-dressed the students with words 1 of appreciation for the work of the retiring officers, and hope for Ihe work of the coming year Marching from Aycock in step with the sister sing as sung by the remainder of the student body, the Seniors of Woman's College left Mass Meeting for the last time Between boisterous rejoicing in, to demonstrate the wit and humor j Past and present class officers Ihe Alumnae House, significantly! of the Ozark people. are automatically members of enough, the class selected as other j A copy of Down In The Holler! Daisy Chain, as are class commit-everlastlng orflcers girts whom' may be found in the library, and tee chairmen and sisters of seniors, they considered to have dlsting-! Landscape Of The Heart will be j Roommates of seniors or those re on sale at Straughan's Book Shop • lated to seniors may Indicate these after May 18. facts on the sign up sheets. Congressional Probe Inhibits uished themselves by four-year ca-reers of unselfish service to their class and college Marion Sifford Is alumnae repre-sentative: Trilby Boerner, vice-1 president; Sally Beaver, secretary; I _ ~ Political Expression On Campus What overall effect are the in-' cusslons, that healthy campus or-vestigatlons having on the nation's j ganlzattons are being abandoned colleges and universities? TIME, j to the radicals. Another dean states The Weekly Newsmagazine, sent' that the student out after a Job nine News Bureaus and nineteen \ may have new considerations for "Employers ask searching ques-tions, not about ability, resource-will relurn to the W. C. campus next fall after a years study at Harvard University The executive appointments of were approved by legislature. New members of this board will be seniors Sally Harrison, Anoush Harutunlan, Anne Livingstone, Mike Auskern. and Grace BlacK-more; juniors Norma Cofer and Marty Cope; and sophomore Becky Shiver The appointment of Betty Jean Hagan as a member of the Con-solidated University Student Coun-cil was also approved. COMMITTEES ELECTED Elected to serve on the Points Committee were Margie Prelsinger, a rising scniod; and Peggy Harris, Lillian Harding, and Joyce Hayes, rising juniors. Mary Herring and Pat Mi-111.111) were elected to serve (in Finance Board. Pat Crabtree and Ruth Brown were re-elected as members of the Student-Faculty Reviewing Com-mittee new members on this com-mittee will be Lynda Simmons and Mary Owens Bell. Barbara Mitchell. Boots Farrah. Sara Henkel. Nancy Gilbert, and Katherlne Dora, appointees to the Elections Board, were approved by legislature. Barbara Mitchell will act as chairman ot this board. At its next meeting, legislature will consider a recommendation from Service League to abolish the Volunteer Work Chairman and to create a Campus Purse Chairman members to the Judicial Board and a Blood Donor Chairman. and Pat Markas, cheerleader. After free cokes, the seniors set-tled down to dispose of several items of business. Their gift to the college will be a plaque identi-fying the Woman's College Campus, with historical information about the college. The class flower Is the rose. Making the seniors more acutely conscious that they will soon be students no longer, Miss Ellen Griffin spoke about the Alumnae after having been excused by Pics- ahlp in which the seniors will toon ident Emily Butner. The W. C be eligible. Commercial class followed with To express their gratitude lo similar ceremony, the two claaaei those who have guided them (Continued on r.i.„ n,, i tinned on P Trilby Trips; Sifford Sinks Carolyn Cries; Fish Flops correspondents across the country after the answer. Few educators denied the right I fulness, reliability, Industry or In of Congress to Investigate any- ] tcgrity, as In the past, but als thing it pleases. No one was in a (Continued on Pope Fivel state of panic. "And yet," says I TIME, "the climate of the cam- Fund and extended the perennial J puses has already begun to change." invitation for contributions. Mrs The impact seems to have pene- .lester, Alumnae secretary, ac- trated deeper than public opinion EIIJAH Hall riiltllTliliPP qualnted the prospective alumnae of the teaching profession; it has UIIWll I VUII with their Association President dug at the professors' confidence Lydia Moody told of the function in iheir own profession and the1 of Ihe American Association of students' confidence in their role University Women, for member- as students Students Register for The Elliott Hall Council urges students to visit the Activities I all all day Monday and Tuesday. May II and 12. in Ihe game room. "CAUTION" THE NEW |n booths decked out m fesUvi WATCHWORD attire. Council members will sign "On campus after campus, the up interested students to work danger flags are out. At Michigan wilh the various committees which Slate, department heads have for j will plan activities next year the first time been asking Iheir -,.,„..,,. ,,,.ml|^ „,,„.,, p|m|(|(, , deans bow far they should go in h;ivi(. fram,.work ,„r „„. ,„ expressing their own political opinions At the University of Pennsylvania a young physics in-structor admitted thai the only tlontlon of Elliott Hall "doings," provide OUtletS for the special lll-terestl of almost any student on campus. The committees are en-reason he would not join the lib- „„.,„„„,.,„. „„„ a,is. poster, pub-by Ebba Freund depths of the Kidney Pool "RE-: oral, non-Communist American A good time was had by all VENGE." Civil Liberties Union was that 'I nut a 40.000-word beginning of; Monday night as Ihe members of And revenge she got. for Fish'do"' want A C. L. U. on my rcc-and an outline for the Judy Board dunked Trilby. Marion, was holding on to Marlon's ankles "id ' When a large Texas campus real by June 1. The winner will receive $1,000 cash prize and a Uclty, faculty-student, discussion and special events The committees, which will in- Senior Recital Culminates College Musical Careers Mary Ann Dudley, pianist, and Ravel. The "Sonatine" movements Helen Joy llowcll. soprano, will are marked Modere. Movement de Hi their graduating recital, menuet. and Anime. Friday. May IS. at R 00 p m. In Helen's first group Includes songs Hie Recital Hall of Ihe Music by Faure. a French composer: Building Helen's accompanist is "Unc Saints on son Sureole" and "La Lune blanche hut dans les bois;" and two Italian songs, and Carolyn in the Kidney Pool j so hard that when Sifford went, so on the Eliott Hall terrace. A fourth went Fish with a shriek that died $1,000 advance on the publication and unofficial dunkee was Gerald- away into a watery "GLUB " of the complete work. Putnam will l„e Fish. iDue to the high, unfrivo- CaroIyn clambered „„, „, ,„, lous standards of this publication. pno, now moaning a moan of a I am forced to delete the obvious different color. "I smell like fish." Trilby, otherwise referred to as have first rights on the book. Putnam is sponsoring the compe-tition to unearth promising young writers in North Carolina, and only-students in the Consolidated L'ni-veralty may enter. wanted to fire an Incompetent teacher who happened to be a rabid anti-Communist, a professor warned the president that the firing would look like fellow-traveling to outsiders." Says TIME, "the academic motto Emily Gregg McLeea Mary Ann. the daughter of Mrs O. C. Dudley of Canton. North "Scherzo" and "Quando nascerte Carolina, Is a piano major sludv- vo1" bV ° Respighl She will then corporale many miscellaneous ^ w,(h phm|p Mor(,an „, lhe present the recitative and aria. P01"? on. c*?w"' .If"?.wo*.1? I P*M*O faculty. She was president "Pova sons" from LeNotte di of lhe College Choir and vice- ^Mtaro by Mozart The next group president of the Adelphian Society I °' songs consists of Brahms' this year, and a member of the Leider: "Narhtigall." "Sappische Young Composers Club and the!Ode." "Immer leiser a wird mein Seniors Initiate Plans For Formal Dance Plans for the Senior Ball began this week under the chairmanship of Jennie Lee Pruitt. The ball will be held In Elliott Hall at 8:30 May 30. Committee Chairmen appointed are decorations, Lois Nelson; Pro-gram. Mary Lou Howie; invitations. Barbara Hunt; publicity. Kay Ros-ier; wraps. Martha Harris; refresh-ments, Peggy Jernigan; figure, Katherlne Oliver; reception, Hilda Bullard; orchestra. Mary Lib Samp-son; circulation, Mildred White; and Post-Arrangements, Jane How-ard. Miss Cunningham will be the dance sponsor. ilinci conjunction with the Elliott Hall Planning Council, of which Pat Boesser is chairman. Through them, an attempt will be made to unify the organization of social affairs on campus, and to offer a Judy Board gleefully shoved the Miss Pollyanna, sat In the water |'°r 1953 is »•»» becoming: 'Don't ^^ opp|)r|unl tQ studenU (0 mortar-boarded trio toward the and ratinalized. "I wanted to go | W- d°"' write; don t go work In fields which interest them pond which glittered so Invitingly. | in anyway. I've ALWAYS wanted' STUDENTS AFFECTED ALSO 1 But for reasons of their own. the j to go swimming here." And then I The teachers are not alone ln| three seniors declined the invi- like Little Jack Homer, she pulled 'heir attitude of caution One d, an (i III', f -instead I II(IIII C tation. Marlon shrieked in vain j out a plum, only this plum was an! reports that students are now re- J'Q ^ tIt'll(1 Exercises that she was wearing her only wool ash tray. 'Ophelia' Sifford climbed skirt; Trilby yelped. "I'm too young out of the pool, wrung out her to die!" Haden merely groaned skirt, placed a posy in her motar softly and tried to think of a few board, and marched off. Destlna-cholce last words. tmn unknown. Fish, utilizing When the Knights of the Green | knowledge gained in Elementary Steedshoe reached the edge of the Swimming, did a few laps of the pool with their protesting victims, backstroke and emerged from the they courteously prepared their pond with a few leaves clinging charges for the plunge by removing to her nylon slip, glasses, mortar boards and other Then the four drips went home perishables Then with a heave. When asked for statements they in went Trilby, who by this time said: had assumed a stoic attitude and Trilby I enjoyed the swim Even! who expect to take work here this was repeating through clinched if I was totally unprepared | summer should indicate i teeth, "I refuse to fight " In went Marion: My skirt. rl, sued al the earliest convenient Carolyn with a last. low. feeble.! Haden It was quite refreshing tune W C students will be given OOOHHHHH" The last to go was fish: All 1 got out of it was a preference for curs,, which they Sifford. "Revenge." she shouted cleaner's bill and a waterlogged desire to take, if the information as she plunged to the watery i pencil. is received In time luctant to take part in liberal dls-1 Summer School Office Requests Applications Charles E Prall, director of the W. C. summer session, announces that applications for summer school coursese are now being received at tbe Summer School Office In Curry School. Students of the Woman's College Governor William B. Urn-stead sent a letter to the chan-cellor this week declining with regret an Invitation to take part In the Woman's College commencement exercises June 1. The letter, which came from the Governor's secretary. stated that Gov. Umstead "deeply regrets that he cannot attend, and wishes you every success with your exercises." The Governor suffered a heart attack Immediately fol-lowing his inauguration in Jan-uary, and has only recently resumed public appearances on a limited schedule. Music Education Club. Helen, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Glenn A. Howell, also of Canton, Is a voice student of Mrs Bonnie-Jean Kimball Wold. A choir Schlummer," and "Wie Melodien Zieht es mlr " Her last group com-posed of American songs will con-sist of the following selections, "Love in the Dictionary." C. soloist for two years, she is vice- i Dougherty. "Little Elegy." "The president of the College Choir a " member of the Music Education Club. For two years Helen has been the soprano soloist and di-rector of the junior choir of the Presbyterian Church of the Cove-nant here in Greensboro. ,, „ _ Vogue Magazine announces Its Emily, the daughter of Mr. and nineteenth annual Prix De Paris Mrs. F. C McClees of Anderson. I for rlslng conege seniors. Went A-Riding" by F. Bridge. Vogue Offers Staff Job To Prix de Paris Winner South Carolina. Is a junior piano major with Miss Allelne Minor, head of the piano department. She is a choir accompanist. Mary Ann will open her program by playing "Capriccio on the De-parture of His Beloved Brother" by J. S. Bach. Other selections to | be played by Mary Ann are "Im-promptu, Opus 51, No. 3." by Chopin, "B Minor Rhapsody, Opus 79, No. I," Brahms, "Sonatine" by First prize Is a year's job on Vogue with six months of the year in its Paris office. A second prize of six months on the Vogue staff will be awarded, along with ten honorable mentions of $25 and top consideration for jobs on The Conde Nast Publications. Prospec-tive contestant! may write for fur-ther details to Prix De Paris Di-rector. Vogue. 420 Lexington Ave., N. Y. 17, N. Y.
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | The Carolinian [May 8, 1953] |
Date | 1953-05-08 |
Editor/creator | Thomas, Pat |
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 8, 1953, 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 | 1953-05-08-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 | 871557727 |
Page/Item Description
Title | Page 1 |
Full text | 7%e QAO€UIUUI Woman's College—"Distinguished for Its Democracy" VOLUME XXXIV ZS11 WOMAN'S COLLEGE OF THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA. GREENSBORO. N. C, MAV ». 1S5J j£7 NUMBER 11 Forthcoming Books To Join Lengthening Roll of W.C. Works Emily Butner takes oath of office from mass meeting Wednesday night. With the forthcoming publication of their new books, two English professors. Mrs. Lettle Rogers and Mr. George P. Wilson, will add to the already long list of works by W. C. faculty members. Miss Roger's Landscape Of The Heart will be released locally on May 18 and nationally on June 17, as a Random House publication. The story involves a young girl who loser her memory and finds h'-rseii avain in a luxurious, pri-vately owned hospital for the mentally ill. II relates her ex-retiring SGA President Trilby Boerner at the final lasrtenees of recovery and examines, sophomores interested in being the effect of modern psychiatric j members of Daisy Chain may sign practices. j up on sheets now in Ihe posl office Mr Wilson, one of the country's A pply for Student A id To Swanson, Hawkins Student. Interested In dlnlng-hall work during the summer school session are requested to leave their aames with Mas Swanson at her office la the dining. halls. Those who desire other self-help positions should leare their names with Mrs Kath-leen Hawkins, Student Aid Of-fice. Applications may be submit-ted any time up until the open-ing of the summer school session. Fledgling Veep Presides at Meeting of New Legislature Daisy Chain Head Posts Sign-Up Sheet Fuller's Statistics Procure "Senior Lydia Moody Passage of Annual Fee Bill Becomes Everlasling Prexy of 53 Class "If I look green. Its not because I'm wearing my class Jacket," stated Kay Neelands In opening the first meeting of the newly elected legislature on May 8. "I am green," she continued, "and so are you all, but that doesn't mean that we can't carry the ball like the legislature before us." In a meeting Immediately follow-ing the last mas smeeting of the school year and the installment of new Student Government officers, the new legislature did start the ball rolling by appointing and Hiding new members to legisla-ture committees go that the work of these groups can be set into motion now. FACULTY ADVISERS Ml | Shirley Italian, Miss Eliza-beth Poteat, and Dr Richard Bar- From ttMM liftl filly to sixty' dolph were fleeted to serve as ■ acuity advisers to legislature. Miss Mahan served as Honor Chairman in 1950. and was I hi' The traditional last Mass Mget-1 Activities fee was presented to I ing of Woman'! College, climaxed.,hl" student body by Marlon Sif-by the official departure of the 'ord' Edi,or "f pin'' N"dl«- Jani' , ,. . . . Fuller, presented argument- for seniors from the student body, re- , t,.he passage of..t.he resol.ut.i,on She suited in the passage of a resolu-1 pointed out the 87'; of the Student lion to include the cost of Pine i Body at present purchases an an- Needles in the Student Activities fee. Unamimously passed by Legisla-ture, the resolution to include the cost of Pine Needles In the Student Meeting Moved from !student» JVC to Chapel Hill nual. our annual costs less than present over half of the cost of that of most schools, and that at the annual is paid indirectly by all the students. The motion was passed by a great majority of the Lydia Moody became Kverla President of the Class of 1953 al the class' last meeting Wednesday .foremost authorities on dialect, students will be chosen by lot by collaborating with Mr Vance Ran- Alice Joyner. head of the arrange-dolph. has completed Down In The menls for the Chain. Holler: A Gallery Of Oxark Folk! Those chosen will father theIyear adviser to the Social Counsel. Speech, it was released for pub-' daisies and weave them into chains she Is the Counselor of Kirkland llcation by the University of Okla- Friday, May 29. Graduating seniors »||.,ll Miss I'oteat Counselor of homa Press on April 30. will walk belween two rows of Mary Faust Hall, is a teacher in The book reflects a two-fold their sister class members, who | the Art* I)e|iai tincnt. and this year purpose: to show thai folk speech is will bear the finisfied chains, on : sponsored the Sophomore Danes I survival of early English and Class Day and Commencement Day Dr. Bardolph, Professor of History, The annual meeting of the Consolidated University Board of Trustees, previously sched-uled to take place on the Worn- 1 an'a College campus May 11, have been moved to Chapel HUI. The location has been changed, according to an an-nouncement this week, in order that members of the board may conveniently attend the dedication of new build-ings of the school of Business Administration at Chapel Hill. W. C. Writers Strive For Putnam Honors Four Woman's College students are turning oul words by mass pro-duction this month in an effort to meet the Putnam Prise emit, a| (leadline. Jarrad Denhard. a sophomore, Diuis Waugh Melts, former WC stu-dent; Bill Kerr. graduate student In Fine Arts, and Jackson Bui graduate assistant in English, are vying for the $1,000 prize offered by the Putnam Publishing Co., for manuscript! of novels or short, rtorj collections. Contestants are required t" tub Bidding farewell to the student body, the retiring president and vice president of Student Govern-ment. Trilby Boerner and Marlon Sifford. expressed their pain upon leaving Woman's College in a fare-well song. Amid rising acclama-tion from the students. Trilby and Marion retired from the Woman's College rostrum for the last time Emily Butner, new president of Student Government Association; Kay Neelands. new vice president, and Geraldinc Fish, Woman's Col-lege's first judicial chairman, ad-dressed the students with words 1 of appreciation for the work of the retiring officers, and hope for Ihe work of the coming year Marching from Aycock in step with the sister sing as sung by the remainder of the student body, the Seniors of Woman's College left Mass Meeting for the last time Between boisterous rejoicing in, to demonstrate the wit and humor j Past and present class officers Ihe Alumnae House, significantly! of the Ozark people. are automatically members of enough, the class selected as other j A copy of Down In The Holler! Daisy Chain, as are class commit-everlastlng orflcers girts whom' may be found in the library, and tee chairmen and sisters of seniors, they considered to have dlsting-! Landscape Of The Heart will be j Roommates of seniors or those re on sale at Straughan's Book Shop • lated to seniors may Indicate these after May 18. facts on the sign up sheets. Congressional Probe Inhibits uished themselves by four-year ca-reers of unselfish service to their class and college Marion Sifford Is alumnae repre-sentative: Trilby Boerner, vice-1 president; Sally Beaver, secretary; I _ ~ Political Expression On Campus What overall effect are the in-' cusslons, that healthy campus or-vestigatlons having on the nation's j ganlzattons are being abandoned colleges and universities? TIME, j to the radicals. Another dean states The Weekly Newsmagazine, sent' that the student out after a Job nine News Bureaus and nineteen \ may have new considerations for "Employers ask searching ques-tions, not about ability, resource-will relurn to the W. C. campus next fall after a years study at Harvard University The executive appointments of were approved by legislature. New members of this board will be seniors Sally Harrison, Anoush Harutunlan, Anne Livingstone, Mike Auskern. and Grace BlacK-more; juniors Norma Cofer and Marty Cope; and sophomore Becky Shiver The appointment of Betty Jean Hagan as a member of the Con-solidated University Student Coun-cil was also approved. COMMITTEES ELECTED Elected to serve on the Points Committee were Margie Prelsinger, a rising scniod; and Peggy Harris, Lillian Harding, and Joyce Hayes, rising juniors. Mary Herring and Pat Mi-111.111) were elected to serve (in Finance Board. Pat Crabtree and Ruth Brown were re-elected as members of the Student-Faculty Reviewing Com-mittee new members on this com-mittee will be Lynda Simmons and Mary Owens Bell. Barbara Mitchell. Boots Farrah. Sara Henkel. Nancy Gilbert, and Katherlne Dora, appointees to the Elections Board, were approved by legislature. Barbara Mitchell will act as chairman ot this board. At its next meeting, legislature will consider a recommendation from Service League to abolish the Volunteer Work Chairman and to create a Campus Purse Chairman members to the Judicial Board and a Blood Donor Chairman. and Pat Markas, cheerleader. After free cokes, the seniors set-tled down to dispose of several items of business. Their gift to the college will be a plaque identi-fying the Woman's College Campus, with historical information about the college. The class flower Is the rose. Making the seniors more acutely conscious that they will soon be students no longer, Miss Ellen Griffin spoke about the Alumnae after having been excused by Pics- ahlp in which the seniors will toon ident Emily Butner. The W. C be eligible. Commercial class followed with To express their gratitude lo similar ceremony, the two claaaei those who have guided them (Continued on r.i.„ n,, i tinned on P Trilby Trips; Sifford Sinks Carolyn Cries; Fish Flops correspondents across the country after the answer. Few educators denied the right I fulness, reliability, Industry or In of Congress to Investigate any- ] tcgrity, as In the past, but als thing it pleases. No one was in a (Continued on Pope Fivel state of panic. "And yet," says I TIME, "the climate of the cam- Fund and extended the perennial J puses has already begun to change." invitation for contributions. Mrs The impact seems to have pene- .lester, Alumnae secretary, ac- trated deeper than public opinion EIIJAH Hall riiltllTliliPP qualnted the prospective alumnae of the teaching profession; it has UIIWll I VUII with their Association President dug at the professors' confidence Lydia Moody told of the function in iheir own profession and the1 of Ihe American Association of students' confidence in their role University Women, for member- as students Students Register for The Elliott Hall Council urges students to visit the Activities I all all day Monday and Tuesday. May II and 12. in Ihe game room. "CAUTION" THE NEW |n booths decked out m fesUvi WATCHWORD attire. Council members will sign "On campus after campus, the up interested students to work danger flags are out. At Michigan wilh the various committees which Slate, department heads have for j will plan activities next year the first time been asking Iheir -,.,„..,,. ,,,.ml|^ „,,„.,, p|m|(|(, , deans bow far they should go in h;ivi(. fram,.work ,„r „„. ,„ expressing their own political opinions At the University of Pennsylvania a young physics in-structor admitted thai the only tlontlon of Elliott Hall "doings," provide OUtletS for the special lll-terestl of almost any student on campus. The committees are en-reason he would not join the lib- „„.,„„„,.,„. „„„ a,is. poster, pub-by Ebba Freund depths of the Kidney Pool "RE-: oral, non-Communist American A good time was had by all VENGE." Civil Liberties Union was that 'I nut a 40.000-word beginning of; Monday night as Ihe members of And revenge she got. for Fish'do"' want A C. L. U. on my rcc-and an outline for the Judy Board dunked Trilby. Marion, was holding on to Marlon's ankles "id ' When a large Texas campus real by June 1. The winner will receive $1,000 cash prize and a Uclty, faculty-student, discussion and special events The committees, which will in- Senior Recital Culminates College Musical Careers Mary Ann Dudley, pianist, and Ravel. The "Sonatine" movements Helen Joy llowcll. soprano, will are marked Modere. Movement de Hi their graduating recital, menuet. and Anime. Friday. May IS. at R 00 p m. In Helen's first group Includes songs Hie Recital Hall of Ihe Music by Faure. a French composer: Building Helen's accompanist is "Unc Saints on son Sureole" and "La Lune blanche hut dans les bois;" and two Italian songs, and Carolyn in the Kidney Pool j so hard that when Sifford went, so on the Eliott Hall terrace. A fourth went Fish with a shriek that died $1,000 advance on the publication and unofficial dunkee was Gerald- away into a watery "GLUB " of the complete work. Putnam will l„e Fish. iDue to the high, unfrivo- CaroIyn clambered „„, „, ,„, lous standards of this publication. pno, now moaning a moan of a I am forced to delete the obvious different color. "I smell like fish." Trilby, otherwise referred to as have first rights on the book. Putnam is sponsoring the compe-tition to unearth promising young writers in North Carolina, and only-students in the Consolidated L'ni-veralty may enter. wanted to fire an Incompetent teacher who happened to be a rabid anti-Communist, a professor warned the president that the firing would look like fellow-traveling to outsiders." Says TIME, "the academic motto Emily Gregg McLeea Mary Ann. the daughter of Mrs O. C. Dudley of Canton. North "Scherzo" and "Quando nascerte Carolina, Is a piano major sludv- vo1" bV ° Respighl She will then corporale many miscellaneous ^ w,(h phm|p Mor(,an „, lhe present the recitative and aria. P01"? on. c*?w"' .If"?.wo*.1? I P*M*O faculty. She was president "Pova sons" from LeNotte di of lhe College Choir and vice- ^Mtaro by Mozart The next group president of the Adelphian Society I °' songs consists of Brahms' this year, and a member of the Leider: "Narhtigall." "Sappische Young Composers Club and the!Ode." "Immer leiser a wird mein Seniors Initiate Plans For Formal Dance Plans for the Senior Ball began this week under the chairmanship of Jennie Lee Pruitt. The ball will be held In Elliott Hall at 8:30 May 30. Committee Chairmen appointed are decorations, Lois Nelson; Pro-gram. Mary Lou Howie; invitations. Barbara Hunt; publicity. Kay Ros-ier; wraps. Martha Harris; refresh-ments, Peggy Jernigan; figure, Katherlne Oliver; reception, Hilda Bullard; orchestra. Mary Lib Samp-son; circulation, Mildred White; and Post-Arrangements, Jane How-ard. Miss Cunningham will be the dance sponsor. ilinci conjunction with the Elliott Hall Planning Council, of which Pat Boesser is chairman. Through them, an attempt will be made to unify the organization of social affairs on campus, and to offer a Judy Board gleefully shoved the Miss Pollyanna, sat In the water |'°r 1953 is »•»» becoming: 'Don't ^^ opp|)r|unl tQ studenU (0 mortar-boarded trio toward the and ratinalized. "I wanted to go | W- d°"' write; don t go work In fields which interest them pond which glittered so Invitingly. | in anyway. I've ALWAYS wanted' STUDENTS AFFECTED ALSO 1 But for reasons of their own. the j to go swimming here." And then I The teachers are not alone ln| three seniors declined the invi- like Little Jack Homer, she pulled 'heir attitude of caution One d, an (i III', f -instead I II(IIII C tation. Marlon shrieked in vain j out a plum, only this plum was an! reports that students are now re- J'Q ^ tIt'll(1 Exercises that she was wearing her only wool ash tray. 'Ophelia' Sifford climbed skirt; Trilby yelped. "I'm too young out of the pool, wrung out her to die!" Haden merely groaned skirt, placed a posy in her motar softly and tried to think of a few board, and marched off. Destlna-cholce last words. tmn unknown. Fish, utilizing When the Knights of the Green | knowledge gained in Elementary Steedshoe reached the edge of the Swimming, did a few laps of the pool with their protesting victims, backstroke and emerged from the they courteously prepared their pond with a few leaves clinging charges for the plunge by removing to her nylon slip, glasses, mortar boards and other Then the four drips went home perishables Then with a heave. When asked for statements they in went Trilby, who by this time said: had assumed a stoic attitude and Trilby I enjoyed the swim Even! who expect to take work here this was repeating through clinched if I was totally unprepared | summer should indicate i teeth, "I refuse to fight " In went Marion: My skirt. rl, sued al the earliest convenient Carolyn with a last. low. feeble.! Haden It was quite refreshing tune W C students will be given OOOHHHHH" The last to go was fish: All 1 got out of it was a preference for curs,, which they Sifford. "Revenge." she shouted cleaner's bill and a waterlogged desire to take, if the information as she plunged to the watery i pencil. is received In time luctant to take part in liberal dls-1 Summer School Office Requests Applications Charles E Prall, director of the W. C. summer session, announces that applications for summer school coursese are now being received at tbe Summer School Office In Curry School. Students of the Woman's College Governor William B. Urn-stead sent a letter to the chan-cellor this week declining with regret an Invitation to take part In the Woman's College commencement exercises June 1. The letter, which came from the Governor's secretary. stated that Gov. Umstead "deeply regrets that he cannot attend, and wishes you every success with your exercises." The Governor suffered a heart attack Immediately fol-lowing his inauguration in Jan-uary, and has only recently resumed public appearances on a limited schedule. Music Education Club. Helen, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Glenn A. Howell, also of Canton, Is a voice student of Mrs Bonnie-Jean Kimball Wold. A choir Schlummer," and "Wie Melodien Zieht es mlr " Her last group com-posed of American songs will con-sist of the following selections, "Love in the Dictionary." C. soloist for two years, she is vice- i Dougherty. "Little Elegy." "The president of the College Choir a " member of the Music Education Club. For two years Helen has been the soprano soloist and di-rector of the junior choir of the Presbyterian Church of the Cove-nant here in Greensboro. ,, „ _ Vogue Magazine announces Its Emily, the daughter of Mr. and nineteenth annual Prix De Paris Mrs. F. C McClees of Anderson. I for rlslng conege seniors. Went A-Riding" by F. Bridge. Vogue Offers Staff Job To Prix de Paris Winner South Carolina. Is a junior piano major with Miss Allelne Minor, head of the piano department. She is a choir accompanist. Mary Ann will open her program by playing "Capriccio on the De-parture of His Beloved Brother" by J. S. Bach. Other selections to | be played by Mary Ann are "Im-promptu, Opus 51, No. 3." by Chopin, "B Minor Rhapsody, Opus 79, No. I," Brahms, "Sonatine" by First prize Is a year's job on Vogue with six months of the year in its Paris office. A second prize of six months on the Vogue staff will be awarded, along with ten honorable mentions of $25 and top consideration for jobs on The Conde Nast Publications. Prospec-tive contestant! may write for fur-ther details to Prix De Paris Di-rector. Vogue. 420 Lexington Ave., N. Y. 17, N. Y. |
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