f’l 'A MINUTE OF STUDY IS THE TWIG Newspaper of the Students of Meredith College WORTH AN HOUR OF MUSING" Volume XXVI MEREDITH COLLEGE, RALEIGH, N. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 18, 1952 Number 6 Board of Trustees Approves Nine-Year Expansion Program The executive committee of the Meredith Board of Trustees in session on Monday, January 14, approved initial recommen dations for a nine-year expansion program for the college which will involve some $2,250,000. The recommendations, includ ing plans for new buildings, equipment, and general improve ments on the campus, were made by a special committee of ten, with Dr. L. M. Massey of Zebulon as chairman, which was appointed by the board in Sep tember to work out details of the program. Tentative allotments in the program, for 1952 through 1960, specify amounts for building new classroom buildings, a gym nasium and pool, new dormi tories, a new infirmary, and a new student center. Amounts for buying new equipment and making general improvements on the auditorium, the library. New Staff Members Join College Family Miss Mabel Gladin, Mrs. Ken neth Caddell, and Mrs. Helen Barham have joined the Mere dith College faculty and Staff this month. Miss Gladin, former consult ing dietician for the State Board of Health in Raleigh, will serve as head dietician, according to an announcement made on Jan uary 5. A graduate of the State College for Women in Milledge- ville, Georgia, and the Medical College of Virginia in Richmond, Miss Gladin received her Mas ter’s degree in institutional man agement from Cornell Univer- (Continued on page foizr) and the campus are also speci fied, as well as funds for endow ment and scholarships. The expansion program for Meredith is co-incident with the nine-year program adopted by the State Baptist Convention in annual session in November, through which an estimated $1,518,750 will be made avail able through the Co-operative Program for capital needs at Meredith. Chairman of the executive committee which approved the recommendations is W. H. Weatherspoon of Raleigh, pre- .giding officer at Monday night’s session. Members are Mrs. J. W. Bunn of Raleigh, C. T. Council of Durham, Mrs. Foy J. Farmer of Raleigh, Dr. L. M. Massey of Zebulon, Dr. R. Elmore Earp of Selma, Rev. Eph. Whisenhunt of Clayton, and Col. Wm. T. Joyner of Raleigh. SAI SPONSORS FACULTYRECITAL “FIGHT POLIO” CAMPAIGN OPENS CAMPUS DRIVE The 1952 “Fight Polio” cam paign at Meredith will open on January 17. For two years con tributions to tjiis drive have been automatically handled by the unified budget program. How ever, since the unified budget has been discontinued, Mrs. Vera T. Marsh and Miss Patsy Spiers will direct the campaign. The campus will be divided in to the following groups for the drive for four dormitories and the non-resident students with a faculty member sponsoring re ports for each dorm, the mem bers of the faculty, and the col lege administration. Lou Gardner, Betty Allred, and Nancy Jo Wallace will serve as chairmen in Jones dormitory with Miss Phyllis Weyer as re port sponsor. Bobbie Addy, Molly Britt, and Ann Lovell are the Fair cloth dormitory chair men with Miss Phyllis Cunning ham as report sponsor. The chairmen in Vann dormitory are (Continued on page four) The Beta Zeta chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national pro fessional music fraternity for women, will sponsor a modern music recital by the Meredith music faculty in the small audi torium January 23. A major aim of the SAI is that of promoting modern music. (Officers of SAI are president, Jean Miller; vice-president, Bar bara Bone; secretary, Carolyn Brady; treasurer, Jane Slate; chaplain, Shelley Millican; ser geant-at-arms, Joan Neighbors. Students taking a major or minor in music leading to a degree are (Continued on page six) LEO PODOLSKY CONDUCTS THREE DAY PIANO CLINIC AND WORKSHOP Meredith’s music department is sponsoring a piano workshop conducted by Leo Podolsky, noted pianist, teacher, editor, and lecturer. The piano work shop, which began yesterday, will be continued through Satur day morning. Class sessions, private lessons, and private group auditions are included in the piano workshop, in which Meredith music stu dents and teachers with their piano students from Raleigh and surrounding communities are participating. Included in the workshop was an illustrated lecture last night in the auditorium by Dr. Podol sky on “The Musical Atmosphere and Festivals of Europe.” Morning sessions of the work shop are piano clinics for teach ers and advanced students, covering phases of musical, tech nical, and teaching problems, and recent teaching materials. The afternoon sessions are reper toire classes in which students of all grades play for construc tive criticism. Dr. Podolsky, who has con- EXAMINATION SCHEDULE Health Education Jan. 26, 2:30 T Th S 8:30 Jan. 28, 9:00 T Th S 9:30 Jan. 28, 2:00 T Th s H:00 Jan. 29, 9:00 T Th s 12:00 Jan. 29, 2:00 T Th s 2:00 Jan. 30, 9:00 M W F 8:30 Jan. 30, 2:00 M W F 9:30 Jan. 31, 9:00 M w F 11:00 Jan. 31, 2:00 M w F 12:00 Feb. 1, 9:00 M F W 2:00 Feb. 1, 2:00 M W F 3:00 Feb. 2, 9:00 M Th S 3:00 Feb. 2, 2:00 Committees Begin Reiigious Focus Week Preparations Meredith’s annual Religious Focus week, headed by Janet Stallings, general chairman, will be observed February 18-22 with the theme, “the Christian Faith and Our World.” SEE PICTURE ON PAGE THREE Institute of Religion Convenes January 21 at United Church This campus-wide program, which is presented for the pur pose of obtaining a clearer un derstanding of Christian faith and how it operates in daily life, (Continued on page three) “Foreign and Domestic Issues Confronting Our Democracy” will be the theme of the thir teenth annual Institute of Re ligion which will meet for six consecutive Monday nights from January 21 to February 25 at 8:00 p.m. The Institute is a com munity project sponsored by the United Church on Hillsboro and Dawson Streets where the week ly meetings will be held. Speakers and their subjects for the main Institute sessions which will begin at 8:00 p.m. are Dr. William Agar, “The United Nations Today”; Dr. Henry Field, “New Light on the Bible”; Oscar Ross Ewing, “Health Al ternatives Facing the American People”; Colonel Ben C. Link, “Can Asia Be Saved from Com munism?”; Dr. John C. Bennett, “Christian Strategy in the World Conflict”; and Elizabeth Gray Vining, “Young People of New Japan.” Each address will be Leo Podalsky ducted master classes and clinics throughout the country for many years, has been guest teacher representing the United States at the Mozarteum in Salzburg, Austria, for the past three sum mers. His visit to the campus and the details of the workshop have been arranged by Stuart Pratt, head of the college piano department. “Spring for Sure” to be Presented by Carolina Playmakers, Monday, Feb. 11 o- The Meredith Little Theatre and the Student Government council, with the pledged ap proval of the student body, will sponsor the Carolina Play- makers’ touring troup in a pres entation of the musical comedy “Spring for Sure” on Monday, February 11 at 8 p.m. Featuring songs and dances in a plot which concerns the tur moil brought to a group of Ten- nessess mountaineers by New York socialites, the folk play is based on a book by Catherine McDonald, with music by Wilton Mason. “Spring for Sure,” which is directed by John W. Parker with the costumes and settings by the Playmakers group, was first pre sented in the Playmakers Thea tre in Chapel Hill in the spring of 1950. The reception given the folk play by audiences then has brought a revival by popular demand by the forty-fourth tour ing troup of the Playmakers. Student tickets for the per formance are priced at fifty cents each. Adult tickets are seventy- five cents. The box-office will open at 7:15 p.m. for ticket sales. Chairmen appointed by the Meredith Little Theatre for work on the production include Lyn- ette Adcock and Sally Massey, co-chairmen of advertising, and Dott Miller in charge of ticket sales. followed by an open forum. Following a dinner which will be served at 6:00 p.m. each eve ning at the Institute there will be regular class sessions. A choice of three courses will be offered during the class periods: The first, “Judicial Protection of Civil Rights and Political Privi leges,” will deal with the con temporary problems confronted by the courts, and the problems will be considered mainly as they appear to the Supreme Court of the United States. Lead ing the course will be Professor P. W. Edsall, head of the Depart ment of History and Political Science of North Carolina State College. The second course is “Toward an Understanding of Interna tional Relations.” Talks for this course will include the various approaches to the attainment of peace and the barriers which have blocked the way to it. The leader will be Charles F. Blanch ard, a Raleigh attorney. He will be assisted by experts, not yet announced. The third course is “The Re lation of the Church and State in a Modem Democracy.” Such current controversies as the President’s nomination of Gen eral Clark as ambassador to the Vatican City will be discussed, not as religious issues but as is sues involving the whole fabric of democratic society. Among the speakers for this course will be Dr. Lillian Parker Wallace and Dr. Alice Barnwell Keith of Meredith, and Dr. E. M. Poteat, pastor of Pullen Memorial Bap tist Church. The first of the Institute speak ers, Dr. William Agar is known -S a scientist, lecturer and writer. He received both his B.S. and Ph.D. in Geology from Prince ton University and since has held positions with the American Field Service and American Ex- (Continued on page six)