April 10, 1963 THE TWIG Page Three Miss Raleigh Pageant To Be Held May 11; Four Meredith Girls Chosen To Compete By JANE WORRELL On the basis of (heir adributes and lalents recently displayed in a preliminary audition, four Meredith girk» Ginger Brown, Dawn Holden, Elizabeth Holland, and Marion Welch, have been selected as par* ticipants in the Miss Raleigh Pageant to be held May 11. Sponsored by the Raleigh Junior Chamber of Commerce, the pageant involves many activities and details un> known to the public in general. To be a contender for the Miss Raleigh title, a girl must be eighteen years of age by the first of September and a resident of Raleigh or a college Mudent attending school in the city. Following the preliminary audi tion, in which the girls are inter viewed, ten are sclccled on the basis oF their qualiOcation!> and poise, to participate in the pageant. During the interval, which succeeds the pre liminary and precedes the actual contest, the ten contestants attend a rehearsal oncc every week. The purpose of these rehearsals is to enable the girls ta perfect their tal ent and lo overcome any flaws in presentation. They are given in structions in the arts of walking, smiling, and maintaining stage poise. Helpful hints such as learn ing to apply vaseline to the teeth in order to counteract mouth-dry ing effects produced by stage lights are given at this time. On the night preceding the pageant, the girls at tend a full dress rehearsal. Schedule of Activities The contestants’ schedule of ac tivities during the week of the con test includes two important func tions. At the Jaycee dinner, the girls are introduced individually and are asked general questions so that the judges may become acquainted with each one. During the judges’ luncheon, they elect a “Miss Con geniality” whose name is an nounced at the pageant. The actual contest includes three judging divi sions — evening gown, swim suit, and talent with the latter division counting 50 per cent in choosing the winner. The winner of the Miss Raleigh Contest is presented a five hundred dollar scholarship and is automatically a contender for the Miss North Carolina crown. Four Winners in Five Years It is significant that Meredith has supplied four Miss Raleigh’s in the past five years. The 1962 title was won by a Meredith senior, Berma Jean Davenport. Raraelle Watlerson Morrison, Janice Capps Patterson, and Gail Newton Martin won the title while at Meredith. Berma Jean was also the winner in the talent di vision of the Miss North Carolina pageant, singing an aria from Gianni Schicchi plus “The Lusty Month of May” from Camelot. Among her appcaranccs during the past year, she recalls a lecture on etiquette, given to a N. C. State fraternity, as being most unusual. As the reigning Miss Raleigh, she will assist in the rehearsals and will be presented at the pageant and will crown the new queen. Girls Have Had Music Training Each of the Meredith girls par ticipating in the pageant received ■■■■'■‘I prior to entering Meredith, several years of formal music instruction. Ginger Brown, a sophomore trans fer student, plans to sing a medley of songs in the talent division of the pageant. Dawn Holden will pre sent a comic piano routine of a “take-off” on Victor Borgc. A voice and church music major, Elizabeth Holland plans to sing an aria writ* ten lor the opera Carmen by Bizet. Marion Wclch will play the piano or present a dramatic reading. Each of the contestants knows that being a participant is good experience in gaining poise. The girls also feel that the experience will be invaluable as far as enabling them to develop their individual talents. Berma Jean Davenport stated that participat ing in such an activity is “beneficial to all ten, regardless of who wins.” Elizabeth Holland prepares her fulcnt for (lie Miss Raleigh competition. U«rnia Jean Davenport (right), Miss Rakigh »f 1962, dcmonstrutes to Gincer Brown the corrcct way to walk down stairs. DEFINITION OF LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE EXPLORED Marion Welch admires dress that contestant Dawn Holden (right) will wear in evening dress competition. Meredith is to be represented at Play Day at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill, April 26, 1963. At least four girls, Bookie Ellis, Donna Cullen, Nicky Childrey, and Eva Foxworth, of which all except the latter are from Mrs. Jay Massey’s advanced tennis class, are expected to attend. The girls will participate in girls’ tennis tournaments, which will be a mixture of both singles and doubles. As yet, it is undecided as to which girls will play each type, but Nicky Childrey has predicted that Bookie Ellis and Donna Cullen will play doubles and that she and Eva Foxworth will play singles. She added that this is only a conjecture. The girls are expected to arrive at U. N. C. at 10:15 a.m., and will continue to play until they arc eUminated. Spectators are invited. New York, N. Y. (l.P.) — The new dean of Columbia College re cently described the role of the private liberal arts collegc in the transmission of culture to a new gen eration as "an enterprise surpassing in importance any other in the edu cational world.” Country’s Commitment “This country, consciously but with little concern for implications,” declared Dean David B, Truman, ‘has in effect committed itself to school attendance tor everyone for from two to four years beyond high school. I deliberately do not refer to this commitment as ‘a college education for everyone' because the crucial question is whether such attendance achieves education, whether such institutions are col leges in anything but name.” First Function Dean Truman explained the first major function of the private libera! arts college in the current rush to ward mass enrollments: “That is to assert firmly that transmitting to at least a faction of the next genera tion a genuine understanding of the culture that constitutes their princi pal heritage is an enterprise surpass ing in importance any other in the educational world.” Free of the compulsion to be all things to all men, the privately sup ported liberal arts college, if it is strong, can insist on this function, he stated. It (he insistance is equalled in practice, he added, it will invite, if not compel, institu tions functioning in a politically in fluenced setting to follow the lead at least in part. Experimentation Experimentation, said, Dean Tru man. is the second great area in which the private college can more than compensate for its mi nority position in the educational structure. “With its comparative flexibility and its freedom from ex traneous restrictions, the strong col-^ lege that is not dependent upon gov ernmental support can take the lead in developing means of deal ing with problems common to all institutions of higher education. “Experimentation should not be confined narrowly to programs of study. For example, the character of a curriculum and the quality of the college community — a very special kind of social grouping — are related in subtle but highly significant ways. An institution legitimately can be charged with abdicating its responsibilities if it confines its concerns for the college community to such essentially nega tive functions as compelling attend ance at classes or examinations or imposing punishments for infringe ments of the moral code.” Norms Arc Complex “Tlie causes of the non-educa- tional norms of many American stu dent communities are complex, and few of them are subject to college control. In a student population where active engagement is delib erately encouraged by the design of the curriculum, the likelihood that undergraduate norms will subvert the institution’s educational goals will be greatly reduced if not wholly eliminated.” Reserve Space, Suggests Dean Grinnell, la. (I.P.) — Propos ing that “we reserve perhaps fifty places in each freshman class for students who do not fully meas ure up to our quantitative stand ards of acadcmic aptitude but show signs of excellence in other dimen sions,” Dr. Howard R. Bowen, president of Grinnell College, points out that “the aspects of personality we value most highly, and which the world needs desperately, are not easily measured. Bowen’s Suggestions “I suggest that when these stu dents are admitted their progress be carefully studied so that we may learn over a period of years how to select worthy students who are not top performers on multiple choice tests. If we wait until the selection process can be reduced lo a me chanical method based on quanti tative measures, we will all be dead before the first such students are admitted. “I propose that objective exami nations should be sparingly used in a collcge like Grinnell. The basic assumption in testing a student in any course should be that he is a young apprentice scholar in the field, and tliat the test is to ascer tain his scholarly proficiency. The scholar’s work requires knowledge of sources and constant access to them: it requires painstaking thought, and it requires exact for mulation of ideas. It is a far cry from the usual examination which imposes a rigid time limit and requires rapid re call, split sccond judgments and hastily composed answers. I sug gest that in most courses there should be only one examination, namely, a final examination. The present multiplicity of examinations focuses the student’s attention suc cessively on little fragments of the subjects under study. Deadlines Problems "These deadlines are as likely to prevent an orderly sequence of work as to promote it. The student is denied the opportunity to learn how to be responsible for scheduling his own time. He is seldom con fronted with the larger and the more scholarly aspects of a liberal edu cation. “I suggest that in the evaluation of students the relative weight of course grades be rcduced and the relative weight of comprehensive examinations be increased, to heighten the motivation of the stu dent toward mastery of a major field and to reduce his preoccupa tion with the bits and pieces. Final Recommendation “My final recommendation is that cach student be required to keep a personal diary during his four years at Grinnell in which (Continued on page S)