QUEENS BLUES Vol. 23, No. 13 QUEENS COLLEGE, CHARLOTTE, N. C. May 30, 1945 SENIOR ISSUE Class Prophecy 1945 Ladies, and gentlemen, this is your rambling personal reporter, bringing you the latest news from all over the world on this the 24th day of April, in the year 1955. Just to refresh your mem ory a bit, tomorrow will be the 10th Anniversary of the great Uni ted Nations Conference that was held in San Francisco, which gave us a guarantee that we would live in a world of peace. It is very significant that exactly ten years after the opening date of this famous conference, another conference equally as great will be gin here in Raleigh, North Caro lina. The conference will be made up of representatives from coun tries, known and unknown, all over the world. The purpose of this meeting is to draw a plan whereby the future of female in stitutions may be made secure. There have been many proposals coming in to the conference board that such institutions be aban doned in favor of the commonly called “co-ed” institutions. Many alunmus from colleges all over the world are gathering here to de cide the questions “Does the fe male college have a place in this new world of peace and security where men and women have equal rights? Why should males be de prived of the privilege of attend ing these institutions?” One of the chief debaters on the negative side of the question is the outstanding lady known to the public as Prances Marie Duck worth Morrow. She takes such a stand because she believes that female institutions offer no chance whatever for young ladies to meet prospective husbands. Blanche Stevens Long accuses her of being hypocritical, because she knew Tiny attended a secluded girls’ school and has been married four times since she graduated. Upholding the belief that such institutions should be continued we find such famous housewives and mothers as Betty Barrentine Birkner, a star of stage and screen until her John nie returned from foreign fields, and Annelle McCall Wilson, who has had a very rosy married life. All the women brought their hus bands along to the conference with them to take care of their young ones. Of course there will be many arguments both for and against the questions. All walks of American life are represented at this gigantic meet ing, ladies and gentlemen. From Oak Ridge, Tennessee, that well- known metropolis that is the headquarters for the manufactur ing of baby carriages with the automatic dial that may be set to go any distance, in any direction, at any speed, and to give the baby his rattler if he starts cry ing, while mother is attending her political meeting, we have Ruth King Koerner, wife of the presi dent of the corporation. She brought with her wives of other high-ranking officials of the com pany, the former Elsa Turner, Betty Howard, Betty McGill, Shir ley Bowman, and Sue Home. The men were detained at the plant. Anna Fluch and Mary Ramsey are doing intensive research in the main laboratory on a device that will heat the bottle and feed the baby while he is automatically "Commencement Exercises Will Stort Tomorrow Morning At 10:30 Tomorrow, May 31, at 10:30 A.M., Tentative Candidates For A.B. Degrees TO SPEAK TONIGHT—Virginia Nell Smith, Valedictorian, and Marjorie Dabney Sitton, Salutatorian, will give two of the principal Senior Addresses at the Class Night Exercises to be held in the Dell tonight at 7:30. taking a ride through the park. Eva Miller and Mary Lacy Bost, chief . accountants at Oak Ridge, have reported that the leading style carriage or the “best seller” is that designed recently by Carol Kerchner, great designer of the day. Other industrial interests are represented by Marie Sitton Bullard, owner of the South and Central American Banana Cor poration, who brought her devoted husband with her to Raleigh. She was glad to meet her old college friends, Frances Bryan, designer and manufacturer of “Protect Your Hair While You Ride With the Top Down” convertibles: and Polly Foglesong, who is now well-known for her latest machine that is about to disrupt the tobacco in dustry in the South. The ma chine that is used universally in college “Rec Rooms” makes cig arettes from “ducks” that it picks from the floor and uses the old tobacco to re-roll cigarettes and pack them in packages with the exclusive Fogelsong label, designed by Agnes Mason Stanley. During the ten years that Agnes has wait ed for her husband to complete his medical training, she has be come very talented. She began her art training at a college in Vir ginia when she began her married life. She is confident that in five more years, her husband will be ready and fully prepared to enter the medical profession. The field of athletics is rep resented by Claudia Paschall and Maggie Ezell, co-founders of the Association of United American Women Interested in Active Sports. Jane King Turner was the third founder, but she had to sever rela tions to accept a more important role—that of taking care of all the little Lew Turners. On the latest model heliocopter with the exclu sive Joanna Houchins label, ar rived Betty Kenyon Gardner, wife of “Ish,” and Betty Carter Hatch er, wife of Mac. Their Progres sive Kindergarten that caters to youngsters from the ages of 4 to 20 years was founded just five years ago today in Matthews, North Carolina. They stopped by Agnes Scott to pick up Dean Edna Adams. 'They were detained a few minutes there, however, for Dean Adams was teaching her jitter bug class a very complicated step. I might add here that Brown Whitmire, dietitian at the same college wanted desperately to at tend the conference to voice her opinion, but was unable to do so because her latest joke book goes to press in two days and she hasn’t completed the last ten chapters. Great leaders in the United Association of American Public School Teachers will arrive to night. They will include Virginia Rea Waltman, Beverly Murray, Virginia Smith, Betty Welche and Jeanette Wade. These names should be very familiar to all of you in the radio audience, because they have been in headlines for the past year. ’They are still working to uphold their rights— a thirty minute rest-period be tween each forty-five minute class in the New York City Schools. Pause—Messenger. Excuse me a minute, ladies and gentlemen, I’ve just had a report from an old college classmate, Joyce Carpenter Calloway, head of the North Carolina Associated Press, that Scottie Nisbett Fisher and her missionary husband have just arrived from Korea. 'They 1 were accompanied by Mildred commencement exercises will be held for the graduating class of 1945. Bishop Edwin A. Penick will make the address. In this year’s graduating class, which began in 1941 with over two hundred freshmen, forty-nine girls will receive their degrees. Of this number, twenty-three will be given their Bachelor of Arts, and twenty- six their Bachelor of Sciences. The sharp decline in the number of students in this class is synony mous to the rapid world-shaking events in their four years here at Queens. In December of 1941, these bewildered and confused freshmen saw their country thrown into the arms of a terrible war. And this, their last year, 1945, they leave as matured and understanding women who have seen a great deal of sorrow and yet emerged in the true manner of a college graduate, and who have seen the utter defeat of our greatest enemy and yet have realized their positions as the Americans of today. The commencement speaker. Bishop Edwin A. Penick of Raleigh, N. C, is a very prominent leader among Episcopalian churches in the South. He holds A.B., A.M., and D.D. degrees from the University of the South, Harvard University, and the Theological Seminary of Virginia. Bishop Penick is also out standing in the South’s educational system. Smith, Doris Robbins, Alice Longe- necker, and Gloria Sutton, mis sionary physicians who are doing research work In the heart of the jungles of Korea. Another late arriver is Betty Lou Spears Fow ler, the great diamond hunter. She’s still searching the hills of the state of Missouri for a dia mond larger than the one she found ten years ago with the help of a certain captain. That music you hear faintly in the background Is furnished by Conductor Gwyn Shiflet and her all male orches tra. ’Those fancy music stands you see were designed by that fa mous stage-setting director, none other than Emmy Wood. Back to the conference and the great people gathered here for the open ing tomorrow—Representing that Important far-aw'ay island and re public out in the Pacific, the Isle of Nowhere, Betty Claywell ap peared on the scene yesterday morning. That important person, who first went to the island as an ambasador of good will, is now governor-general of the island. Her attorney-general, Betty Schaaff who began her career in the small law office of Wheaton and May in our nation’s capital, accompanied her excellency. The two govern ment heads were brought here by that famed military expert. Gen eral Olin Cook, and his charming wife, the former Margaret Ballard, well-known star of Broadway. ’The two opening speakers of the con ference, Nadeene Darbyshire Ans- ley, and Peggy plonk Anderson have not arrived yet but they are expected any minute. Well, ladies and gentlemen, that little red light is flashing on in the control room, which means I’ll have to say farewell. Tune in tomorrow night at this same time for the latest reports on the celebrities gathered here for this great meeting. BETSY HODGES Edna Alyne Adams Elizabeth Ann Barrentine Shirley Bowman Betty Thompson Carter PVances Marie Duckworth Margaret Cecilia Ezell Pollyann Foglesong Joanna Kathryne Houchins Bettie Gaither Kenyon Jane Downing King Ruth King Marie Elizabeth McGill Beverly Fontaine Murray Margaret Scott Nisbet Claudia Mathilde Paschal Margaret Louise Plonk Charlotte Anne Plumlee Virginia Nell Smith Elizabeth Louise Spears Blanche Tabor Stevens Elsa Mae Turner Lona Jeanette Wade Annye Elizabeth Welch. Tentative Candidates For B.S. Degrees Margaret Lou Ballard Mary Lacy Bost Frances Richardson Bryan Joyce Elayne Carpenter Betty Newland Claywell Elizabeth Nadeene Darbyshire Anna Meredith Fluck Betsy Brown Hodges Kathryn Sue Horne Elizabeth Anne Howard Carol Lois Kerchner Alice Longenecker Annie Ellen McCall Agnes Lorraine Mason Dorothy Nield Mauldin Eva Rebecca Miller Mary Esther Ramsey Doris Kathleen Robbins Helen Elizabeth Schaaff Mary Gwendolyn Shiflet Marie Dabney Sitton Mildred Juanita Smith Gloria Valentine Sutton Virginia Rea Waltman Mary Louise Whitmire Emma Lynn Wood. ) Baccalaureate Service Held Sunday The Baccalaureate Service for the Class of ’45 was held last Sunday, May 27, at Myers Park Methodist Church. Rev. A. W. Dick, D.D., pastor of the First Presbyterian Church of Spartanburg, S. C., preached the impressive sermon. Following the short devotional of prayer and the singing of our Col lege Hymn, Dr. Dick spoke to the Seniors on their position in this world that lies before them. He stressed the possibilities that t he college graduate can obtain, and told them of the importance that God and faith will have in molding their future lives. -7 BUY BONDS /I'JvwiJUvm-