Newspapers / Meredith College Student Newspaper / Nov. 20, 1959, edition 1 / Page 6
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Page six THE TWIG November 20, 1959 A. A. News By ANNE BRUTON Basketball season began last week with practices on Tuesday and Wednesday at 5:00. A large number of girls came out to practice. Most of them were freshmen. What hap pened to the upperclassmen? This week, class games were held in preparation for the class tournament which is scheduled immediately after Thanksgiving vacation. Breakfast Ride Held On Friday, November 13, eight riding enthusiasts along with Mrs. Mary M. Edwards arose early and went on a breakfast ride. The group left the stables at 6:00 a.m. and arrived back at the hut for a deli cious breakfast about 7:45. Those who went thoroughly enjoyed the outing. FOODS CLASS TOURS MARKET, PLA1%T The sophomore foods class made their annual tour of the Farmers’ Market and a meat-packing plant — this year Swift Company — on November 2. Mr. Jim Graham showed the class where produce was brought in, the rooms in which it was preserved, and how it was dis tributed. In that hour the girls saw California grapes being carried in on the railroad behind the market, an inspector grading the fruit, rooms in which fruit was left to ripen, and the produce stands. Picnic Follows Trip The trip to the meat-packing plant included a tour of the cold storage rooms and a look at steaks being cut. After the tour Miss Brewer took the class to her cabin for a picnic supper. MICHALSON SPEAKS AT WESLEY LECTURES Several Meredith students at tended the Wesley lectures in Chapel Hill on November 6 and 8. Dr. Carl Mtchalson, professor of Systematic Theology, Drew Univer sity, was the speaker. His lecture topic on Friday night was “Injus tice, Neurosis and Unbelief” and on Sunday night "Christianity and the Meaning of History.” Dr. Michalson is the author of such books as 2'he Hinge of History, Christianity and Existentialists, and a translation of Friedrich Gogarten’s The Reality of Faith. Foundation Sponsors Lectures The Wesley Lectures, sponsored by the Wesley Foundation at Chapel Hill, are non-sectarian in purpose and are presented in order to en courage a continuing dialogue be tween Christian faith and contem porary culture. Mrs. J. W. Reid Speaks At; Chapel Program On Tuesday, November 17, Kap pa Nu Sigma Honor Society pre sented its annual fall chapel pro gram with Mrs. James W. Reid, a 1946 graduate of Meredith, as guest speaker. Her topic, “The Continu ing Intellectual Challenge After Col lege,” was in an area with which Mrs. Reid is quite familiar and of which she is quite qualified to speak. She is a member and former presi dent of the Raleigh Junior Woman’s Club, a member of library com mittee for the Longview Garden’s School PT.A., and a volunteer guide at the North Carolina Mu seum of art. Mrs. Reid is a former Mr. Belcher Attends Buyers Meeting Mr. Howard Belcher, Meredith Business Manager, attended on No vember 2 and 3 the regional meet ing of the National Association of Education Buyers. Bob Jones Uni versity in Greenville, S. C., was the host mstitution for the meeting of Association members from North and South Carolina. The purpose of these annual meetings is to ex change ideas, policies, and proce dures for purchasing for colleges and universities. Fail Meeting to Be Here Mr. Belcher will serve as vice- chairman of the organization for the coming year. The meeting next fall will be held on the Meredith cam pus. While in Greenville Mr. Belcher spent several hours on the new cam pus of Furman University, a‘ Bap tist senior college. CONVENTION ELECTS MEREDITH TRUSTEES (Continued from page one) High Point; and Mr. Fred Williams, Greensboro. Mr. C. B. Deane, president of the Board of Trustees of Meredith Col lege, was elected during the meeting to the presidency of the Baptist State Convention. vice-president of the Raleigh Civic Council and serves as a niember of the radio panel “Your Child” series and of the advisory committee to WUNC-TV. The members of Kappa Nu Sigma were hostesses at an after-dinner coffee hour for the faculty and ad ministration in honor of Mrs. Reid, 1960 MAY COURT ATTENDANTS CHOSEN (Continued from page five) • Ann Stallings, from Smithfield, and Donna Cowles, from Charlotte, are representing the junior class. Sophomore attendants are Melinda Barnes, from Charlotte, and Helen Neblett, from Raleigh. Judy Sum merlin, from Goldsboro, and Helen Daniel, from Wilson, arc freshmen representatives. The annual Christmas Cho rus Concert will be given Sun day afternoon, December 13, at 4:00 p.m. The chorus is di rected by Miss Beatrice Don ley and accompanied by Joan Cope. STUDENT NEA MEETS IN RALEIGH (Contnucd from page three) of North Carolina; Miss Marie Haigwood, Supervisor of Elementary Education, State Department of Pub lic Instruction; Miss Lois Lambie, president of the Division of Class room Teachers, NCEA; and E. S. Simpson, Superintendent, Johnston County Schools and NCEA Legisla tive Committee Chairman. For Shoe Repairing at Its Best ■ — Try — HANDY SHOE REPAIR 2414 Hillsboro Street JOHN HANCOCK, Owner At last! A breakfast drink you can keep in your room More vitamin C than orange juice. New instant TANG is the breakfast drink you can keep right on your bookshelf—because TANG keeps any where without refrigeration. Make as much as you want, whenever you want. Just mix with plain cold water — nothing to squeeze, nothing to unfreeze. Drink TANG every morning and get more vitamin C than orange or grapefruit juice gives you. Plus vitamin A. Tastes real good, too. Today's assignment: get TANGI NEW! INSTANT! Juat mix with cold wat«p A produot of Genorel Fooda Kitchen* YOU CAN MAKE TANG IN A WINK THAT’S OK BUT MAKE MiNE IN A GLASS. [y J) WANTED: Situations and khe lines for our two campus characters (above). Musi relate to TANG. Will pay 1S25 for every entry used. Address: TANG College Contest, Dept. GRM, Post Division, Battle Creek, Michigan, (Entries must be postmarked before Dec. 15,1959.) By Larnette White Any wcll-construcled item be gins with a quality founda tion; so a well dressed girl begins with the suitable foundations. For these right beginningSj we have exciting undercover news from Burton’s. 1 know that any girl would love to have the 1‘Scarlet O’Hara” trim waistline,> espec ially when wearing sheath dresses or formals, which would be'just the effect ob* tained with one of Burton’s Hollywood V-elte waist clinch ers that come in black, with red lacing, to make it look like a little antique from the Colonial days. Youthcraft has created a Hip- mold girdle with long legs de* signed to flatter those with heavy thighs or, for the aver age figure, to wear mth slim slacks. For that well-dressed feeling, as well as an immaculate ap* pcarance. Burton’s carrics every color imaginable in the Hollywood V-elte lace trim* med girdles with matching lace brass. I know that every girl doesn’t feel as if she needs a girdle and, to fit the needs of those who simply could use a little figure control in the gacter belt, there is the appealing “Bo Peep” pnnty girdle in “Baa Baa Black Sheep,” “Barnyard Red” or “Snow White,” for the slimmer figure. You can find your individual fit in the proper bra from the Pctcrpan, Sarong, and Hollywood V-elte styles in padded, lacc, or cotton. If you’ve ever been hesitant to buy a low back cocktail dress because you thought that you couldn’t find a bra lo wear with if, Burton’s can remedy your problem now with their flattering lace bra equipped with criss-cross elast ic strips in the back, designed to weai- under a “backless” stunner. By the way, girls, to complete your “Scarlet O’Hara” figure, you might like lo have a shapely cotton Merry Widow padded bra to top your waist clincher. Even though you’ll probably have to end up buying a pair for yourself, the “petty panls” in the old-fashioned panta- loom_ slyle in red and black, green and while, sand dune beige, or lacy white, would make an adorable and un- usuid gift for your roommate or suitemate. Burton’s foundation depart ment will be delighted to in dividually fit you in order to insure your best figure in all your clothes, as well as to advise ihe correct aids for posture and important youth ful development.
Meredith College Student Newspaper
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Nov. 20, 1959, edition 1
6
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