NEWSPAPBfiOf rHES7UD&47S OF MEpiSDITH COa£OIE' VOLUME LXIII .NUMBER 23 TWIG APntL 15, 1986 THE MEREDITH COLLEQS JUN IOR/SENIOR FORMAL ON APFtiL 20 AT THE RALEJQH INN FEATURING THE WALLER FAMILY. TICKETS ARE $10.00 FOR JUNIORS AND WILL BE ON SALE IN THE CAFETERIA DURING LUNCH AND DINNER. Business Internship students, employers lionored by Dee Christenberry The Business Internship students were honored at an Infonnal seminar held in the Brown Conference Ro(xn of the Shearon Harris Business Building, March 27, 1965 Mr. Robert E. Leal, President of the Research Triarigie Foun dation, was the featured speaker for the event. After Mr. Leak's presentation on the past, present and future of the Research Triangle Park, the Intern students as well as their employer were presented vhith certificates of recognition for their parti* cipatlon In the internship progrsfn. An informal reception gave Intern sponsors and supervisors, faculty members and intern students a chance'to meet each other. The intern students, under the direction of Mrs. Nancy C. Sasnett,. for the 1964-1965 scfKwi year are as fol lows; Beth Andrews, Dee Chrl^nberry, Anne Churchhill, Susan Croom, Mary Fran Dawson. Suzanne Ethridge, Jennifer Qoodson, Tina Grlnstead, Carol Jean Hicks, Lori Jackson, Shepard Kimbrell, Tracy Page. Stevi Poole, Oenise Pope, Becl^ Pyles, Carol Jeanne Rick, Donna Melissa Rodgers, LIndley Stroud, Diane Toney, Tiacy Dianne Whitley. Beta Zeta: New members, officers by Mallnda Britton The Beta Zeta chapter of Sigma Al pha lota inducted two new members, Su san Beck and Susan Suter, in their last meeting. Sigrr« Alpha lota Is w International, professional music fratemity for women. Its purpose Is to uphold the highest Id eals of a musical education, to raise standards of perfonnance and to provide inspiration to its members through a close sisterhood. Members, chosen from music students, are admitted on the t>a- Dialogue on Grief A group of students who have re cently experienced death in their families met to dialogue April 2. They have cho sen to continue the di^ogue times, and will meet Wednesday, April 10 at 2:00 In sis of scholarship, musical ability, and recommendayon_of the music_ faculty.- Officers few’ the 196SS6 year have also been elected. They are; Pres.- Mallnda Britton, V. Pres.-Cindy Davis, Corresponding Sec.-Nancy Shore, Recording Sec.-Jenny West, Treasurer- Kimberly Harris, Chaplain-Mary Dixon, Program Chairman-Sherry Henderson, Fratemity Education Chainran-Chrlstlne Albro. Yeartx)0k Editor-Trlcia Matthews, Social Chairman-Angela Boyd, Sergeant- at-Arms-Donna Metts, Fund Raising Chainnan-Susan Suter. the Chapel Reeding Room. Karen Paul and Marge Shelton will meet with the group. Ifyouhaveexperlencedadeathin your family, you are invited to Join the group. Little Friends Weekend Student Foundation is sponsoring “Little Friends Weekend" on Saturday and Sunday, April 27-28. tf you have a little sister, cousin, niece, or friend be tween the age of 7 and 12 who would en joy spending a weekend at Meredith, in vite her to visit you during this time. Registration will be hekj frcHn 12 noon to 1 p.m. on Saturday aftemoon, and m^y activities will be planned for “Little Friends" including games, meals in the dining room, special enter tainment, Saturday night vespers, and an informal worship sen/ice In the chapel on Sunday morning. E^ “Little Friend" will need about $10.00 to cover meal costs and any pur chases she might want to make in the Supply Store. This is a time to give a special young personinyourlifeaveryspeclattreat. If you are interested, please fill out the registration form available and retum it to Office of Institutional Advance ment on the second floor of Johnson Hall no later than Wednesday, April -17. You will then receive a sheet of infonnatlon with specific details about the weekend. Each “Little Friend" must have a student sponsor In whose room she will spend Saturday night. For more infonnatlon, call Anne Purcell, extension 8392, or ask any mem- t>er of Student Foundation. “Gifts of loy we glw away can add new gladness to eech day." Everyone needs a little friend to love! Let’s share a smile! Kolifeidt speaks to WINGS by Lise L. Clark Who was Lady Gregory? Why was she important? What posesses an Ameri can woman writer to publish a biography on an Irish woman of the nineteenth cen tury? Mary Lou Kohfeidt answered these questions at a joint meeting of the Eng lish Department and WINGS on Monday, April 1st. Ms. Kohfeidt is an American woman writer who recently published a biography entitled Lady Gregory: The woman Behind the /rfsft Rendssance. Ms. Kohfeidt Infomed the froup that l.ady Gregory was an important woman of her time. Lady Gregory was a "working woman” who started f>er writing at the age of fifty. She wrote numerous plays about estate life. Lady Gregory was also one of the founders of the fantKXis Abbey TTteater in Dublin, Ireland. Ms. Kohfeidt explained that Lady Gregory came fn^m a family of thirteen children where she was theonly one who did anything significant with her life. Ms. Kohfeidt also told the group how she became interested in Lady Gre gory. She identified with Lady Gregory’s plays wfien she was studying for an urv dergraduate degree at UN&Chapel Hill. After tw^ve years of research, writing, and re-wrlting, Mary Lou KohfekJt pro duced a biography that was accepted for publishing at Atheneum Press. Ms. Koh feidt received many rejection slips like other beginning writers. She ended her discussion by emphasizing how import ant it is for writers to accept rejection as pacUof writing, She says that “persever ance” Is the key to success. Wlio hid the Crook? Contributed by Kelli Falk and Nancy Shore and taken from old editions of Vw TWIQ. In 1906 Miss Caroline B. Phelps, the teacher of dramatics, gave the Crook to the smior class to increase class spirit. Hidden by the seniors before the opening of school each year, the Crook was the object of many hours of junior searching. When the juniors found It they were al lowed to re-hide the Crook, and then tl^ seniors began to hunt. The class in pos session of the Crook at the end of the school year had “won,*’ and their colors were tied to the Crook and carried on Class Day. If the juniors were in pos session when the time limit expired, the seniors had to carry junior colors, which they topped by a big bigck bow of mouming. Much originality and ingenuity were expended in the hiding of the Crook. It has been tied to a water pipe in the tun nel, suspended from rafters, hidden In the mattress of a faculty member. It has been concealed on a rafter in the (now extinct) old chapel, on the water tower, behind a lab drawer, on the kleges of windows, and on the roofs of buildings. Certain njles were necessary to protect the Crook and aid searchers. The pro posed new njles for the Crook are as fol lows; 1. Some portion of the Crook must be visible at all times. There is, however. no stipulation as to what position one must be in to see the Crook. 2. The Cnx)k must be hidden on Meredith's campus. 3. The Crook may not be hidden un der lock and key. 4. The Cnx)k must be hidden in Its original forni. 5. The Crook must not tie hidden af ter the first hiding. 6. The Crook may not be hidden in trees or on roofs. 7. Only Meredith juniors may hunt the Crook. 8. Tf>e Crook must be displayed in the cafeteria one week before tl^ search ing begins. 9. H found, the Crook must be taken to the Junior Class President and pre sented to the Senior Class President for her official verification before the dead-* line. 0f presidents cannot tie found, then the Crook should be taken to the next ap- pnsprlate class officer.) 10. The juniors have one week in which to find the Cnxik. 11. The search begins the day the first clue is display in the cafeteria. 13. A clue must be presented for each day, and must not be coded. 14. If the juniors find the Crook, It must be carried In Class Day by the Sen ior Class President with a black bow at tached. [Continued on page 3i