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KEEP THAT
good posture
Belles
Mary’s School Libran
DON’T FORGET
RED CROSS!
OF SAINT MARY’S
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> No. 9
RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA
February 28, 1947
^^ites for Eliot F. Stoughton,
business Manager, Held Mon.
Betsy Evans Chosen Queen
In Posture Contest Thursday
Services at Christ Church;
at Oakwood Cemetery
services for Eliot Frost
business manager and
J'uneral
^‘“>Jghton.
S11IP1 IQ/19
ssis
iiscot
ill
Saint Mary’s
since 1943, were held at If
Ob Feb. 24, at Christ
d'i’l 118^0^’ with the Rev. Mr.
j tt pastor, and the Rev.
Sai Hughes, chaplain of
1 5 at o*^ in charge. Burial was
* ^''ood Cemetery. Among ac-
7aU were Dr. Stone and
/et Guess.
eek ^*°'^Shton, son of the late
org^ ' -Was P Ella J. Frost Stough-
Mii July 01 Charlestown, N. H.,
r aioiit}, n attended Dart-
1- ^ A.p , *®ge, where he received his
5- ' gradiin, 7 ^-C.S. degrees. He was
l9lg 1 1920 in the class of
career having been
the S; service overseas with
Signal Corps for a year.
tid.
ill h
res'**
Cl8?l
cla?
^OUr Vi
worked with
Rafters
iorh.
ear,s With Saint Mary’s
ra
and Webster, whose head-
are in Boston and New
working for the firm,
Seattip Sydney, Nova Scotia;
1930 p* ’ Hichmond, Va.; and
’^•'er , eame to Raleigh as treas-
I^iiy ^ Carolina Coach Com-
V ^^^ster ^'^^^diary of Stone and
ha? i last four years
^Ir Saint Mary’s.
■' - Stoughton
^Jbe forme
• ; two children,
ii2 'j *bd ,Topl ^Jl-ndent at Saint Mary’s,
e-1?‘ feEliot “Jackie,” a studL^
Gbehbuf^^V^ Episcopal School,
0 e F i’ sisters. Misses Caro-
l^bghion “1 Edith F.
||{
tr»^
''de ti^'^'^J^Sbton is survived by his
!'^a.’g °^ffier Miss Marion Ben-
4 JI-
b
Oil' V
« ’ aiirT’ 1*°^^ of Claremont, N.
brothers, Howard
g“> llladison, N. J., and Ly-
lit
ilr
oughton, Claremont, N. H.
O.
On lived with his fam-
/i fn - a Jupii^k ^^ary’s campus. He
P ■ I Vrch. Christ Episcopal
■ef
tit
;0g i
m
1
e"'
Cross Drive
Mary’s
gins Next Week
l*%hted
hy an. intensive
ihAp, »”mb ““‘'f ■
''1 “I™
.'IP
,11
pS""
among
ill begin
William C. Gue.ss,
ha*^ ^aint Mary’s cam-
t.k’."’ \Vo^i,-*^'^'^°bnced. Nancy
p ^h'luat, is general
^.f'gniiijj student drive. Cam-
'’*''^’oiulu(!tpnf,!**^"Ey and staff
'•ba
Of(l
'oted this week.
Dr^GebrgeF.Taylor Six Episcopal
Opens Religious Ministers Hold
Emphasis Week
Gives Series of Lectures
Saint Mary’s Students
to
To coincide with Religion-in-Lite
Week observed simultaneously by
other colleges all over the country,
Dr. George F. Taylor, chaplain and
teacher of philosophy and religion
at Converse College, led Saint
Mary’s in its observance of Reli
gious Emphasis Week, Feb. 23-26,
with a series of lectures.
He discussed the following topics:
Sunday, 11:00 „ . ,
The Four Doors to Successful
Living.
Sunday, 5 :00
lAfe’s Curriculum.
Monday, 9 :00
How to Become Somebody.
Tuesday, 9 :00
Managing Yourself.
AVednesday, 5:15
Managing Your Time
How to Live
Dr. Taylor stated in his Sunday
morning sermon that most colleges
fail to include a much needed course
on “How to Live.” He said that
recent experiments at Yale proved
that a student must have four quali
ties to be able to adjust himself to
life at college: social adjustment,
sensitivity, ability to make deciyoiis,
and the possession of a dominant
purpose. “If you have God as the
dominant purpose in your life. He
will weld your life into a pattern
and will give you the solid founda
tion needed for everyday living. ^
The importance of life’s reqmred
courses were brought out by Dr. Tay
lor ill his Sunday afternoon address.
He explained the value of good Eng
lish ill speaking and in writing,^botli
ill college and in everyday life, ilie
ability to think and commuiiicate
thoughts stands as a basis for liberal
education,” Dr. Taylor pointed out.
Ill addition, he stated, m religion one
must keep his conscience crystal
clear; the person who does is a per-
.soii of integrity.
A Vital Point
“How to Become Somebody,” he
says, depends on a pereoiTs learning
to make his own decisions and not
relyiii on others. The cultivation
of this inner decision is_a vital point
of life for if one contains this culti
vated quality, he is able to respond
to the call of God. _ „
“Braver and fasting are the two
sources "of power which control life,
(See P. 4. Gol. 3),
Lenten Services
Cooper, Darst, Haden, Hobgood,
Holder, Taylor Speak
The Rev. Mr. Clarence E. Hob-
good, Episcopal chaplain at State
College, opened the Wednesday after
noon Lenten services in Saint Mary’s
chapel, Feb. 19. Mr. Hobgood has
spoken here on several jirevious oc
casions this year.
The Rev. Mr. George F. Taylor,
Episcopal chaplain at Converse Col
lege, closed his series of addresses
for Religious Emphasis Week on
Wednesday, Feb. 26.
U. X. C. Cliaiilaln
The Rev. Mr. Bartram Cooper,
Episcopal chaplain at the Univer
sity of North Carolina, will deliver
the third address of the Lenten sea
son Wednesday afternoon, March 5.
The Rev. Mr. Thomas C. Darst
will be present for services on Wed
nesday, March 12. Bishoj) Darst is
retired Bishop of East Carolina and
has addressed the student body sev
eral times in previous years.
The Rev. Mr. Clarence K. Haden,
rector of Saint Philip’s Church,
Durham, will speak March 15.
The Rev. Mr. Ray Holder will
end the series of Lenten services
AVednesday, April 2. Air. Holder is
rector of Christ Church, Raleigh
and was present at several services
in chapel last year.
Martha Upchurch, Betty Ad-
kerson Selected as Second and
Third
New “Posture Queen” of Saint
Mary’s, chosen in assembly yes-
terdaj’ as a climax to a week of
school-wide emphasis on good
posture, is Bets.y Ann Evans, En
field, (Ain), a junior, with Alartha
Upchurch, Raleigh freshman,
(Mil), ill second place, and Betty
Adkerson, Lynchburg, A’^a., senior,
(Sigma), ill third.
In preliminary contests, one
Sigma and one AIii were chosen to
represent each of the classes.
Other contestants were as follows :
Ann Pripp Jones, Summerville,
S. C., AIu, senior; Alary Frances
Dillon, Raleigh, Sigma, junior;
Elizabeth Carter, Pinehurst, Sig
ma, and Alyrtle Alston, Hender
son, AIu, sophomores; Helen Brun-
dage, Tryon, Sigma, freshman;
Lona Reames, Raleigh, AIu, and
Nancy Young, Raleigh, Sigma,
Business students.
Aliss Katharine Alorris, Aliss
Alice Bell, and the Rev. Mr. 1.
Harding Hughes were the judges.
Sylvia Green, Williamstoii, Nancy
O’Keeffe, Bliiefield, W. Va., and
Jeannette Boaz, Winston-Salem,
were assistant judges.
Sara Alell Smith, Birmingham,
Ala., was aimoimcer for the AIu’s;
Alargaret Lee Payne, Roanoke’
AM., for the Sigma’s. Elizabeth
AVetteraii, Birmingham, Ala.,
chairman of Posture Week, was
chairman of the program.
Qifted Pianist
Gives Concert
AA’^hen AVilliam Alasselos, young
concert pianist, played before an en
thusiastic Saint Alary’s audience in
the auditorium Alar. 20, the com
poser who wrote part of the program
especially for the artist was present
to hear him play it for the first
time in public.
Theme and Variations, the special
composition by Johan Franco, was
warmly received bv the school group.
The program included selections
from Scarlatti, Bach, Brahms, Alil-
ler, Bartok, and Ravel and was
divided into three parts.
Alasselos has recently completed a
tour of the Middle AFest.
Civic Association
Presents Graham
Alartha Graham and Dance Com
pany were presented by Civic Music
Association at Alemorial Audito
rium, Friday, Feb. 21. The pro
gram included Appalachian Spring,
Deaths and Entrances, and Punch
and the Judy.
“The undisputed star of our dance
world,” Miss Graham began her
dancing career at the Denishawn
School. Returning there as an in
structor, she became one of the main
lierformers in Ted Shawn’s Aztec
Ballet, “Xochitl.”
After gaining her own dance de
partment at the Eastman School,
she began creating her own dance
movements. From there she has de
veloped into one of the greatest mod
ern dance artists in America.