VOL. 17, NO. 3 MONTREAT COLLEGE, MONTREAT, NORTH CAROLINA NOVEMBER, 1951 C* I Betty Marshall, Popular Student, Mb. craSS'/dams To Be Montreafs Queen of May Mrs. Crosby Adams On November 9 at 2:30 p. m., Mrs. Crosby Adams, a beloved friend and musician of all Montreaters, passed away after being in declining health for five months. Her passing has brought much sorrow to her many friends and acquaint ances. Juliette Aurelia Graves was born in Niagara Falls, N. Y., March 25, 1858. Be fore she was 7 years old, she was teach ing piano and playing the organ in her home town. At 21, she began teaching at Ingham University in Le Roy, N. Y., leaving the university in 1883, when she married Crosby Adams, a choral con ductor and musical educator. The year 1913 was an historical date for the Adamses. It was then that they moved to the Blue Ridge Mountains and selected Montreat, N. C. as their home. They have helped make it one of the musical centers of the South. Here they both continued their musical careers. Mrs. Adams created music for children, among which are: “Spring,” selected by the National League of American Pen —Turn to Page 3 The halls were abuzz’ with scurrying, laughing, and welcoming by students as the Alumnae began to arrive Wednesday evening, Nov. 21, to the annual Thanks giving Homecoming. We are sorry that so many of the Alumnae could not come, but I’m sure they were thinking about Montreat as we were thinking of them. PAT HARLEY, who is teaching in Columbia, Ky., says, “It’s great to be back,” and adds, “I’m not very original.” FLORENCE YOUNG is teaching at Jacksonville, Fla. Flossie says, “It is really great to be back and I find that Montreat is still the same friendly place.” “It has taken me four days to think up something original for this,” says ALICE WARDLAW, “but now I know it can be summed up thus: My happiest days are the days I have spent in Mon treat.” Alice is teaching in Powder Springs, Ga. BETTY ATTWOOD, graduate of ’50, is serving on the Board of Woman’s Work in Atlanta, Ga. “As I’ve come back this year,” says Betty, “I’ve found the girls are wonderful and truly full of the real Montreat Spirit.” Also present were JUANITA CONNELL, who is a Bible teacher in Newberry, S. C.; FRANKIE HALL, now Mrs. Robins of Portsmouth, Va.; BETTY GIBBS, now Mrs. Robert Hawks; AGNES GODERT, who is a Bible teacher in White Sulphur Springs, West. Va.; EDIE MACMULLEN, KATHERYN HANNA, and TERRY KANE. We would also like to take this op portunity to tell the other friends and visitors of Montreat over the Thanks giving holidays that we were glad to have them, especially two seniors of Pat Harley’s—Betty Jo Sleet and Arva Good in. We hope you will join our Montreat family in the fall, girls! Betty Humming “She comes, she comes, our Radiant Queen,” the student body as sembled Saturday, November 10, to elect Betty Marshall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lacy S. Marshall of Williamsville, Va., to reign as this year’s Queen of the May. Betty, with her dark beauty and warm smile, will lead the court with dignity and will be fair competition for the lawn’s flowering dogwood or fiery azaleas. Betty is queenly in more than beauty. She is an outstanding senior, proving her leadership as editor-in-chief of the S.P.S. She has been a K.P.B. member for two years, and is active as a member of the touring choir. She is as popular as out standing among her fellow students and her traits of sincerity and understanding, along with a keen sense of humor, re main a constant inspiration to her friends. Betty will receive in May her B.S. de gree with a double major in Business Education and Bible. She says her im mediate future plans are indefinite, but we know that with her personality, ability, and ambition, she’ll take her place among the best. —Turn to Page 3