SUPPORT “ARSENIC AND OLD LACE” THE TWIG REGISTER AND VOTE Newspaper of the Students of Meredith College Volume XXIX MEREDITH COLLEGE, RALEIGH, N. C., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1955 Playmakers Here February 23 Cast Will Present Arsenic and Old Lace This season the Carolina Play- makers have chosen as their tour ing production one of the most popular plays in the American theatre. Arsenic and Old Lace, by Joseph Kesselring. A hit both on Broadway and in the movies, the show, now being done by com munity and university theatres all over the country, has delighted every audience which has seen it. Some of the most delightful char acters in American comedy appear in Arsenic and Old Lace. The play revolves around two very sweet ok ladies whose only failing is that they like to commit murder — but for charitable reasons. They are aider and abetted in their schemes by their definitely paranoid nephew Teddy Roosevelt Brewster, who throughout the play, persists in charging San Juan Hill (the stairs) and building the Panama Canal in the cellar. Another nephew, Jona than, is Public Enemy Number I and resembles Boris Karloff so much that Karloff played the role on Broadway. His side-kick. Dr. Einstein (originally played by Peter Lorre) is a surgeon whose chief de light is cutting up the wrong people Add to this general mayhem a play writing policeman, a minister, the miniser’s daughter, and a nephew who thinks he is normal despite the fact that he’s a drama critic, anc it’s no wonder that people will go again and again to laugh at Ar senic and Old Lace. Arsenic and Old Lace was first produced by the Carolina Play- makers in 1942.vThe play had so much success in Chapel Hill that this year it was decided to revive it for state-wide tour. The production will come to Raleigh and be pro duced at Meredith College on Feb ruary 23, 1955, at 8:00, in Jones Auditorium. The Tyner Education (Continued on page three) Thirty Seniors Practice Teach Thirty seniors are doing their practice-teaching this semester. Those teaching in grammar schools are the following: At Myrtle Under wood, Jo Bond Brock, grade 2; Jennie Barbour, grade 4; Lou Ann Griffin, grade 4; Lynn Morris, grade 2; Billie Bateman, grade 3; Louise McCall, grade i; at Fred Olds, Susie Rucker, grade 3; Bebe Car- rell, grade 3; at Thompson, Velma Smithwick, grade 2; Nance Doherty, grade 1; at Eliza Poole, Lillian Leary, grade 3; at Frances Lacy, Becky Bamhardt, grade 4; at Bar bee, Jean Sheets, grade 5; at Emma Conn, Jane Collins, grade 1; at Boy- lan Heights, Jane Lancaster, grade 1; Peggy Bennett, grade 2; Mary Frances Colston, grade 4; at White Memorial, Mary Glenn Randall, grade 1; and at Wiley, Myra Doster, grade 6. The following girls are teaching in high schools: at Needham Broughton, Frances Patterson teaching home economics; Annette Caudle, business; Pat Dowell, English; Janette Honeycutt, English; Evelyn Boone, English; Joyce Stevens Endo, English, and Emma Lou Chappell, home economics; at Hugh Morson, Barbara Andrews, English; at Cary, June Thomas, business, and Lois Gerald, home economics; at the Methodist Or phanage, Earline Martin, home economics. CAMPUS-WIDE ELECTIONS TO BE HELD MARCH 3 AND 10 Once again we find the time is drawing near for the selection of new officers at Meredith College. Registration for elections will be held February 23 and 24, and the elections take place March 3 and 10 from 11:00 a.m. to 5:15 p.m. Marion Fitz Simons, Chapel Hill, and Eva Mae Kenzie, Chapel Hill, as Martha and Abby Brewster, the two sweet old ladies who commit murder for charitable reasons in Joseph Kesselring’s hilarious comedy, “Arsenic and Old Lace.” The Carolina Playmakers production of this popular comedy will play for one night only at Meredith College on February 23 at 8:00 p.m. The show is sponsored by the Tyner Education Club. Dean’s List Released For Fall Semester On February 11, 1955, Mrs. Vera Tart Marsh, registrar of the college, released the Dean’s List for this spring, which includes those stu dents registered for at least twelve hours who have completed and passed all courses with a number of quality points equal to twice the number of semester hours taken, plus three. Abernethy, Julia Isadora; Adams, Annie Inez; Allen, Ruth Jeanne; Atkins, Catherine Mercer; Ball, Betty Joan; Bamhardt, Phoebe Jean; Bone, Martha Louise; Brad shaw, Jettie Rea; Bramlett, Martha Ellen; Bright, Mary Kathryn; Bunn, Clara Ray; Cadle, Mary Lois; Cal- oway, Rebecca Anne; Causey, Joyce; Colston, Mary Frances; Cooke, Carol Phillips; Cottrell, Ruth Ernestine; Culberson, Eliza Lee; Current, Molly Lysbeth; Cur tiss, Carolyn Joy; Deans, Barbara Jean; Dempsey,. Miriam Delores; Dobson, Berta Lois. Dowell, Patricia Burnett; English, Margaret Anne; Forehand, Betty Baker; Gerald, Mary Jon; Greene, Betsy Carol; Harton, Aurelia Eliza beth; Hartsell, Pamela Rose; Har vey, Mildred Holland; Hudson, Clara Lucille; James, Molly Marvin; Johnson, Barbara Kay; Jones, Jo Ann; Lane, Betsy Carole; Layne, Bessie Margaret; Lee, Annette; Mc Arthur, Margaret Marsh; Mc Arthur, Marilyn; McCall, Martha Louise; McLean, Beatrice Shirley; Maddrey, Edna Gwendolyn; May nard, Amanda Jane; Meredith, Bar bara Lee; Moore, Mary Dare; Moore, Trudi; Morris, Dolores Diane; Mott, Margaret Gertrude; Newton, Sally Stephana; Nock, Bette Alice; Owens, Wilma Grace. Parr, Anne Channing; Peeler, Bess Lenora; Plowman, Carblyn Wood; Puckett, Jean Elizabeth; Reece, Nancy Carroll; Reep, Mar lene Norrita; Roberson, Sarah Elizabeth; Roberts, Martha Ann; Ruppelt, Nina Frances; Scar borough, Leah Olive; Selley, Jo Ann; Simmons, Geraldine Dare. Slate, Margaret Elizabeth; Smith, Dorothy Elizabeth; Sneeden, Effie Irena; Spoon, Shirley Marie; Thomas, June Carolyn; TTiore, Mar jorie Estella; Vance, Elizabeth Baird; Wallace, Nancy Finch; Wiggs, Hortense; Worth, Ada Lou; Yancey, Peggy Anne; Lee, Helene Zinka; Pinner, Mary Jo. BUILDING PLANS TO BE DISCUSSED The regular semiannual meeting of the Meredith College Board of Trustees will be held at 11:00 a.m. Tuesday, February, 22. At this meeting some plans for next year will be made and financial and other reports will be heard by the group. The main topic of the meeting will be the building plans of Meredith College. The architect will be (Continued on page three) As preparation for elections, guides for voting have been dis tributed among the student body. Sandra Peterson, chairman of the Nominating Committee, will explain the voting procedure in chapel on February 24. Pictures of the candi dates will be posted in Johnson Hall as further aid in voting. olficially posted the next morning. Election officials are as follows: C^hairman of Elections, Patty Mel vin; Registrar, Louise McCall; Judges, Joan Allen and Mish Eng lish; Class Officials; freshman, Mar tha Bramlet; sophomore, Peggy Jo Williams; junior, Jane Lambert; and senior, Kathleen Clemmons. The results will be tabulated by the Nominating Committee and the Judge of Election. The candidates will be notified of the outcome the same night, and the returns will be Piano Recital Given By Mary Dare Moore Mary Dare Moore, a senior from Salisbury, presented her graduation piano recital on Friday, February 11, 1955, in Jones Auditorium. She is a student of Mr. Pratt. Her pro gram included “Prelude and Fugue in G Minor,” Bach; “Rondo,” Op. 11, Hummel; “Intermezzo,” Op. 116, No. 4, Brahms; “Prelude,” Op. 9, No. 1, Scriabine; “Prelude,” Op. 28, No. 12, Chopin; “La Vallee des Cloches,” Ravel; “TTiree Preludes, Kennan; and “Concerto in A Major,” K. V. 488, Mozart, in which she was assisted by Mr. Pratt. Mary Dare had as her marshals Becky Bamhardt, Nancy Doherty, Mrs. Truman Smith, and Hortense Wiggs. The pictures of candidates for election on the first slate will be posted March 1. The candidates will be introduced in chapel on March 1, and brief speeches will be made for those running for presi dents of the A.A., S.G., and B.S.U. Phoebe Darnhardt Gives Recital Phoebe Bamhardt of Concord will be presented in her graduation organ recital tonight in Jones Audi torium. This recital is a partial ful fillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts with a major in organ. Her program in cludes “Toccata and Fugue in D Minor” by Bach, “Fantaisie in A Major” by Franck, Reubke’s “Sonata from the Ninety-fourth Psalm,” and “Fugue in G Minor” by Dupre. Marshals are Becky Cal loway, Ann Cashwell, Joyce Causey, and Peggy Smith. Phoebe is a member of Sigma Alpha Iota music fraternity and Silver Shield and is College Mar shal and May Queen. A Dean’s List student every semester since she en tered Meredith, Phoebe was also recently voted into Who’s Who Among Students in American Uni versities and Colleges. Dr. and Mrs. Campbell Entertain Seniors in Series of Suppers Hortense Wiggs To Give Recital On February 25 Anne Tunstall, Mrs. Campbell, and Janette Honeycutt give Dr. Campbell moral support as he gives his rendition of Dixie and Yankee Doodle for his guests. By ANNE TUNSTALL One of the most pleasant things about being a Senior is being invited for a buffet dinner and a visit in the home of Dr. and Mrs. Campbell. Entertaining the entire Senior Class is a huge task which our presi dent and his wife undertake each spring. The Angels being honored consider these dinners as not only warm gestures of hospitality but as delightful occasions when they have a glimpse of the president “off duty.” Last Sunday evening twenty of us braved the nasty elements and, bedraggled, dripped our way into the Campbell’s home where we found a cheery welcome. Before dinner. Dr. Campbell played us several excellent recordings which his daughter had sent him, We Hortense Wiggs of Smithfield, N. C., will present her graduation recital on Friday evening, Febru ary 25, at 8 o’clock in Jones Audi torium. The program will include compositions by Mozart, Brahms, Chopin, Griffes, and Prokofieff. Hortense is a student of Stuart Pratt, head of the piano department at Meredith. She has been a coun selor, Dean’s List student, a mem ber of the chorus and MacDowell Music Club, and an officer of organ class. This year she is serving as president of Sigma Alph Iota. Marshals for the recital will be Mary Dare Moore, Nancy Doherty, Bebe Correll, Sara Mangum, Rose Dorman, and Gladys Smith. The student body is invited to attend. listened to Robert Frost read his own “Mending Wall,” “Two Tramps in Mud Time,” “Fire and Ice,” etc., and we were later thrilled to hear Judith Anderson read Edna St. Vincent Millay’s “Renascence.” Mrs. Campbell, assisted by Mrs. Marsh and Mary Bland Josey, served us a delicious meal with bountiful “seconds,” dessert, and large quantities of steaming coffee — what more could a college girl wish? Dr. Campbell’s time was largely dedicated to enlightening those of our group who had not been previously exposed to selections from his “high brow” record col lection. Andy Griffith took the spot light with his renditions of “Romeo and Juliet” and “Swan Lake.” The most hilarious moment of the even- (Continued on page four) Spring Fashions Modeled by Phis The Phi Society presented a fashion show of spring styles Satur day afternoon, February 12, in the Meredith auditorium. Ellisberg’s sponsored the showing, which con sisted of sport, casual, dressy, and formal outfits. A Valentine theme was carried out in decorating, with Cupids and hearts scattered over the stage and programs. Models were Becky Calloway Kay White, Joyce Bailey, Libby Wehunt, Barbara Stanley, Barbara Brantley, Jackie Yates, Jean Cooper, Ernestine Cottrell, and Sharon Patterson. L Meredith College Library Raleigh, C.