Senior Exams May 15-20 TWIG Regular Exams May 20-26 Volume XII MEREDITH STUDENT TO HEAD SOCIAL WORKERS' GROUP MEREDITH COLLEGE, RALEIGH, N. C., MAY 13, 1933 Conference of Stote Students Division Held Recently ot Greensboro At the North Carolina Social Service Conference held April twenty-third, twenty-fourth, and twenty-fifth at G r e e n s b o r o, N. C., Eliza Briggs, a member of the Junior Class was elected president o f the Student Division o f Social Workers for the coming year. Miss Nettie Herndon of the Mere dith faculty and the follow ing students attended the con ference: Eliza Briggs, Bill Harrelson, Grace Sale, Helen Bennett, Majel Kelly, and Martha Wallace. The theme of the entire con vention was the effect of the present depression upon social work. Among the speakers of ihe conference were: Frank Bane, of Chicago; H. W. Odum, of the University of Noi*th Caro lina; Howard E. Jensen, of Duke University, and Miss Bertha McCall of Washington, D. C. Miss Mary Tillery Wins Cup for Oil Pointing Miss Mary Tillery, of tlie Mereditli Art Department, won the J. Westley White loving cup for the best landscape painting in oil at the exhibition of the work of North Carolina artists, which was sponsored by the art department of the North Caro lina Federation of Women’s Clubs at their annual convention held at the Hotel Sir Walter, May 3-5. Number 10 Receives Honor Elisa Briggs, of Raleigh, who was recently elected head of the Student's Division of Social Service Conference. W. F. Morsholl Addresses the Colton English Club Friday night, May 5, Mr. W. F. Marshall addressed the Colton English Club on the sub ject of John Charles McNeill and liis works. Mr. Marshall pointed out the background out of which the genius of McNeill arose; cer tain reminiscences that throw sidelights upon the personality and methods of the writer (his associates, environment, and liis individual characteristics) ; cer tain criticisms, their validity or non-validity; and lastly, a phase or two illustrating some of the traits of McNeill’s mind. All tliese points Mr. Marshall specifically illustrated either by answos at wliicli he had arrived after his study on the subject or from the actual poems of Mc Neill. Mr. Marshall concluded by saying that the keynote of McNeill’s entire life and works might be summed up in the words “Night vast with her star,” for it was at night wben McNeill would get the inspiration for the (Please turn to page four) The election of officers for next year and a debate to decide the respective values of Latin and Greek were the features of the Classical Club meeting on Friday, May 5. Peggy Tilgh- man, program chairman this year, was elected president of the Club. Other officers are: Vice president, Isabel Morgan; secretary-treasurer, Inez Poe; reporter, Norma Rose; program chairman, Katy Sams. The debate, the.query of which was: Resolved that Latin is. more valuable than Greek, was won by the affirmative debaters, Anne Bradsher and Mary Laura Vaughan, because, as the judges announced, they had at least three more laughs than their op ponents, Inez Poe and Carolyn Wray. Some very amusing argu ments were offered by each side, one of the chief points of argu ment being whether a knowledge (Please turn to page two) Hunting for Crook Proves To Be New Fad On Campus No! It hasn’t become quite the thing for “crooks” to bang around Meredith; but one cer tainly made its appearance in a rather unusual way Sunday nightj Somehow or other, it became a usual occurrence to see people stealing around (I don’t mean literally, either) in tlie darkness of the night with a flashlight liere and there. Bushes and trees seemed. to serve as good habitations, for it wasn’t un usual at all to sec girls climbing up and down. In other words—tlie crook (what it means no one knows) had been hid since last fall and those proverbial juniors were seeking diligently for it. Luck must’ve been playing around on the red letter night for a junior and freshman brought out the crook from its lengthy hiding place (almost seemed like the ground hog, wasn’t it?) Much whooping and hollering took place on the part of every body when the long black grue some shepherd’s crook- headed (Please turn to page two) Classical Club Officers Elected for Next Year Mary A.-Treadwell Wins Prize at Textile Show Mary Alice Treadwell of Myrtle Beach, S. C., member of the freshman class, won the grand prize for the most attrac tive costume in the sixth annual style show of the State College Student Textile Exposition held at State College Thursday, April 27. This makes the sixth succes sive time Meredith has been the winner of the honor of grand prize. The individual Meredith hon ors were won by the following girls; Bee Cotner, Raleigh, first; Helen F. Parker, Woodland,' second; Henrietta .Castlebury, Raleigh, third; Elizabeth Ja cobs, Scottsboro, Ala., fourth; and Lillian Ulier, New York City, fifth. Announcements Made For Commencement FRIDAY 4:00 iMH.—Senior Art Exhibit, SATURDAY 9:00 a.ni.—Societies—Open House. 10:00«.ni,~Alumnae Association Meeting. 1:00 —Alumnae Lnnekeon for Seniors at Woman’s Clab. 4:00 p.m.—Class Day Exercises. 6:80 pan.—Step Sln^ng:. 8:lop.ni.—Awarding of Medals. 8:80 p.m.—Annual Concert. SUNDAY 11 tOO a.m.—Baccalaureate Sermon by Dr. J. Clyde Turner, Pastor First Baptist Cbnrch, Greensboro. 4:00 p.m.—General Art Exhibit. 8:00 p.m.—Missionary Sermon by Dr. Turner. MONDAY 0:00a.ni.—Meeting of Kappa Nn Sigma Society. I0:30a.m.^—Commencement Exercises. Lit«rary Address, Dr. A. W. Beaven, President Colgate • R«> Chester Dhinlty School, Ro Chester, N. T. Conferring of degrees. Presents Fete Mrs. Gertrude Royster Sorrell, physical di rector of Meredith, who directed the annual May Dcey Fete Pauline Barnes Gives Groduoting Recital Friday evening, May 6, at 8:30 o’clock, Miss May Craw ford presented Henrietta Pauline Barnes in her piano graduation recital in the college auditorium. The following enjoyable pro gram was rendered: Concertstiick, Schumann, In troduction and Allegro Appas- sionata (Orchestral accompani ment on a second piano by Miss Crawford). Nocturne, Op. 15, No. 1, Chopin; Waltz, Op. 70, No. 1, Chopin. Sonata, Op. 22, Beethoven, Allegro con brio, Adagio, Rondo. Aus dem Carneval, Grieg; Ich liebe dich, Grieg; Momento Ca- priccioso, Weber. Following the recital, a de lightful reception was held in the college parlors. Mai'shals for the recital were: Annette Donavant, Eleanor Lamm, Nancy McDaniel, Beu lah Whitbeck, Nancy Blanton, Lois Hartness. MRS. SORRELL PRESENTS ANNUAL MAY DAY FETE Morgoret Briggs of Raleigh Crowned Queen of Moy Yuesdoy, Moy 2 With the theme of the four sea sons being carried out in the dances, Meredith’s annual May Day, presented by the Physical Education department under the direction of Mrs. Gertrude Roy ster Sorrell, was held Tuesday afternoon, ]Way 2. The proces sion, led by the heralds, Helen Bennett and Speck Harris, was composed of Nancy McDaniel, prologue; Alma Kee, crown bear er; Rufus Hunter, Jr., train bearer; Margaret Briggs, May Queen; Jessie Martin and Mary C. Shearin, Maids of Honor; and Kate Allison, Alyne Reich, Kath erine Davis, Zellah Washburn, Cornelia Atkins, Sara Harrill, Elizabeth Davidson, and Edna Taylor, attendants from the four classes. The program opened with a solo dance by Lib Barker who, in a costume of brown, orange, and yellow, represented the spii-it (Please turn to page two) Virginia Garnett To Be Secretary of the N.C.F.S. The North Carolina Federa tion of Students, which met at Chapel Hill April 5 and 6, elected Virginia Garnett, as their secretar3'. Other N. C. F. S. officers elected for the next year are Wendell Horne, of Duke, president; Margaret Plonk, of W. C. U. N. C., vice-president; Howard Phillips, of Wake Forest, treasurer. Fifteen schools in the state are members of the N. C. F. S. Tlie delegates from Meredith were Virginia Garnett and Elizabeth Lee. Meredith Students Attend Collegiate Press Association Two Meredith publications, The Twig and the Acorn were represented at the Spring con vention of the N. C. C. P. A. in Winston-Salem, May 5 and 6 by Cornelia Atkins, incoming busi ness manager of The Twig, and Grace Lawrence, incoming editor of the Acorn. Registration of press repre sentatives began at 11:00 o’clock at Salem College. At 2:30 o’clock a general meeting was held, at which the group was welcomed to Salem by Miss Josephine Court ney. Dr. Rondthaler was the principal speaker of the after noon. At 3:00 o’clock group meetings M'ere held. “You are coming out of col lege at an opportune time to ren der the world a great service,” L. B. Weathers, editor and pub lisher of the Cleveland Star, of Slielby, told members of the Press Association at the banquet Fri day night at the Woman’s Club. He Pressed the fact tliat the life of a newspaper man or woman is not one which always leads to wealth, but one which is filled wit)i service, education, and ad venture, and an opportunity for (Please turn to page two)