1 I January 18, 1957 Student Teachers Tackle Problems THE TWIG Page three “Miss Joyner, what’s this word?” “Somebody hit me. Miss Joyner.” A certain student teacher of the second grade at Fred Olds School comes wearily home to Meredith each evening with such words still ringing in her ears. “1 know they all have wiggle worms and jump ing beans for breakfast,” she says. “The only way to keep things under control is to read to them or keep them very, very busy.” According to this young teacher, though, de spite the trials and tribulations, it’s a wonderful experience to see the different personalities children have and the ways in which they react to various situations. ^ ir tt Another student teacher over at Broughton High (she doesn’t want her name mentioned on the grounds that it might incriminate her), who teaches plane geometry and busi ness math, says her pupils don’t say “Teacher, somebody hit me.” They just slug back! She keeps a wary eye out for the one who carries a switch blade on his belt and breathes more easily now that the one she thought was taking dope has straightened up. She has several romances going great guns. Adding these characters to the fas cinating gossip of the teachers, she gets a sum total of no dull mo ments. Miss Hiatt, who teaches history at Daniels Junior High, has several interesting reports on her progress. After giving a test which a large proportion of the class failed to pass, she asked them to write why they thought they had “flunked.” One girl wrote, “I thou it was the frish charter.” Interpreted, that reads, “I thought it was the first chapter.” Another of her pupils likes Spanish because she just loves “foreign English.” Also at Broughton, teaching typ ing, is Mrs. Williams, who had her pupils type invitations. One girl made hers an invitation to a bar. “Now,” as Dr. Reveley would say, “what does the teacher do in a case like that?” Miss Herndon is teaching home economics at Broughton and sup plying in the courtship and mar riage class. She says, “In that de partment, I should be learning, not teaching.” She has had her embar rassing moments, too, such as the time the boy asked if she thought student teachers should date stu dents. And so it goes — lots of “downs” but plenty of “ups” to make it all worth while. THEY FIND TEACHING WORTH WHILE: In the top picture, Jackie Little assists her second graders in learning to write. In bottom left, Mary Virginia Broughton offers suggestions while her first graders work on a rocket and a frieze. In the lower right. Iris Faye Sullivan teaches first grade reading. See story at left. Brokenness and Unity Davidson Group Studies the University By GWEN MADDREY 0. T. Binkley Speaks To Home Ec. Club On January 10, 1957, the Home Economics Club met in Wake For est in the newly remodeled Student Union Building of the Southeastern Seminary with Mr. and Mrs. Ken Thornton as host and hostess. The Club had as its speaker Dr. Olin T. Binkley, professor of social ethics, whose subject was “Building a Christian Marriage.” He stressed the characteristics which he felt each mate should possess in order to live successfully with others. There followed a question and an swer period and a social hour. The theme of the U.S.C.C. Con ference was “Our United Witness in the College and University.” Stated more simply it was “our brokenness and unity as Chris tians.” In a study of brokenness on the college campus, we delegates felt that the conference was any thing but broken. The planners had made sure that as we dis cussed racial, social, and intellec tual brokenness on our college and university campuses we would not feel that our present fellowship was disunited, for delegates included Negroes and whites, faculty and students, Baptists and Presbyterians plus many other denominations, college students from denomina tional schools and university stu dents from state-supported in stitutions, North Carolinians and Georgians, as well as many others. This unity of the entire program of the conference made such an im pression on me that I would like to give you my impressions of it. Many camps and conferences you and I have attended have been termed “mountain top” experi ences, where we were never able after we reached home to recap ture the spirit of the conference when we left the camp or confer ence grounds. It was the aim of the Davidson Conference that it be not a mountain top experience that we left at Davidson, but that it be so close to our own campus situa tions that we might take with us back to Meredith or Carolina the spirit of the conference. The con ference was unique in that it was not a series of platform addresses like we hear at our State B.S.U. Conventions; rather we had one platform address per day and then after individual study, wrestled with ideas presented. Therefore the in formation was not just something we heard from Dr. Beach but be- The Club met in December at the home of Mrs. Mary Farrior Baker and her two sisters, the Misses Far rior, alumnae of Meredith. The topic of the meeting was the North Carolina crafts with a demonstra tion of the making of ceramics. Es pecially impressive were the display of Christmas articles and the serv ing of punch and candies from Santa Claus dishes. Also, the home economics girls were asked by the Lions Club of Raleigh to make wardrobes for dolls to be given to underprivileged chil dren. They were on display during the science fair. came ours. There was unity in the whole program of the conference in that each phase of the daily program attempted to show our brokenness and disunity as Christian students. Our individual brokenness from God was surplanted by unity when on New Year’s Eve more than three hundred students knelt in the audi torium of Davidson College and re newed our covenant as Christians with our Maker. Submitting our- Summer Dresses arriving at WERTZ Stop by and see these New Spring and Summer Fashions Students See World in Revolution selves to Him we prayed, “I am no longer my own, but thine, put me to what thou wilt, rank me with whom thou wilt; put me doing, put me to suffering; let me be em ployed for thee or laid aside for thee, exalted for thee or brought low for thee; let me be fuU, let me be empty; let me have all things, let me have nothing; I freely and heartily yield all things to thy pleas ure and disposal.” In Bible study groups we at tempted to discover the broken-- ness and unity of the early Chris tian Church in the New Testament. We looked at the brokenness and unity of the apostles of Christ. Mark points out how the apostles troubled Christ to find out who would have the greatest place in His Kingdom. The brokenness and unity of the Church was shown in the Acts. We see brokenness in the Church when the Jewish Christians rebuked Peter for visiting and eat ing with Cornelius, a gentile. Paul described the brokenness of the Church at Corinth whose members quarrelled over whether the speak ing in tongues was a gift of more or less prestige than other gifts of the spirit. Paul explained that for the health of the whole Body of Christ, the Church, each part and each talent is essential. The broken- nes's and unity found in the early Church we applied to the fellow ship of students who call themselves Christians on the college campus. The platform addresses by Dr. Waldo Beach of Duke Divinity School confronted our disunity. “The Christian Student in a World of Crisis” was the theme of the quadrennial conference of Southern Baptist college students. Culbert Rutenber, well-known theo logian, set the pace in his keynote address. As he interpreted the theme he gave us a picture of the world in revolution. He ably com pared Communism to Christianity, saying that the world is threatened with a malignant growth that could undermine the Christian pattern of living. Throughout the conference the impressive array of speakers elaborated on the responsibility of our generation to confront the ma terialistic threats in our world. The congress inspired the 2,360 students to think through these issues. Besides that, we had fun! Two jam-packed busses bearing the North Carolina delegation roared into Nashville proudly emblazoned with our signature on the sides. We toured the Sunday School building, one of Nashville’s most modern and lovely buildings. Everyone rushed to see the gigantic nativity scene. One Saturday night some of our number slipped away from the meeting to see Nashville’s highlight — the “Grand Ole’ Uproar.” (I went to the meeting. Couldn’t get a ticket.) On the return trip we made a leisurely stop at the Hermit age, home of Andrew Jackson. With the linspiring messages and discus sions and the downright fun of the trip, it was hailed by all as an out standing success. NOTED WRITERS AMONG ALUMNAE Uzzles’ Soda Shop Below Varsity Theater A Good Place To Meet and Eat 2412 Hillsboro St. Phone TE 4-9392 For An Afternoon Walk ARNOLD'S REXALL DRUGS 3025 Hillsboro Street Day Student News By BECKY SURLES Many of the married students went to their parents’ homes for the holidays. Among these were Norma Riffe, who went to West Virginia; Nannette Ryan, to Vir ginia; Bobbie Ann Brown, to Gas tonia, North Carolina; Eunice Leird, to South Carolina; and Lynn Davis, to Sanford, North Carolina. Faye Kipp went to Chicago to visit her future in-laws. From the threshold of Meredith College have come many outstand ing and well-known alumnae. This column is devoted to the recogni tion of a few of the women who have entered the field of writing. Mrs. Harriet Herring, a 1913 gradu ate of Meredith and the aunt of one of this year’s freshmen, Harriet Herring, has been for many years a professor in the department of social science at the University of North Carolina. She has written several studies in the field of soci ology, one of her books being Pass ing of Mill Village. Of national acclaim is Mrs. Ber nice Kelly Harris, also a 1913 gradu ate and aunt of sophomore Alice Kelly. Mrs. Kelly was the first woman in North Carolina to be awarded the Mayflower Award wjiich she received in 1939 for her book Purslane. Other works by this outstanding Meredith alumna are Portulaca, Sage Quarter, and Wild Cherry Tree Road. Dr. Mary Lynch Johnson gradu ated from Meredith in 1907 and began writing books and pamphlets on religious subjects. These have been used extensively for study groups in the Woman’s Mission ary Union. Edith Taylor Earnshaw is another outstanding alumna of Meredith College. Since-'her graduation in 1905, Mrs. Earnshaw has achieved renown in the field of poetry. On looking in the News and Observer, one can often find poems on every day subjects which are examples of her extraordinary expression of thought. SERVE-SELF FOOD MARKET 3828 Hillsboro Street KRAMER'S 'The House of Diamonds" Martin & Salisbury Streets Mrs. Mary O’Kelly Peacock, sister-in-law of Dean Peacock, is a graduate of Meredith in the class of 1926. She writes _ frequent ar ticles for Jack and Jill and com poses music. One of the most recent graduates is Mrs. Dorothy Clarke Koch of the class of 1947, who has written several children’s books. ROY'S When hungry try us ADLER’S of RALEIGH New Spring Fashions Shoes — Sportswear — Dresses Two Stores to Serve You Downtown 113 Fayetteville Street Cameron Village BURNIE BATCHELOR PHOTOGRAPHER / CAMERON VILLAGE, RALEIGH TELEPHONE TE 3-7527