MARCH 12!!! ^>4*Belles OF SAINT MARY’S Vol. IV, No. 11 RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA March 11, 1941 MAHAN ELECTED TO LEAD STUDENT BODY; STRIBLING IS NEW HALL COUNCIL HEAD —Courtesy of News and Observer. Wiiirlotto Mahan, of Charlottesville. Va., newly eleeted President of the Student liody for the 1941-42 session. erse Modern Drama '^ins In Competition Of Workshop Plays Audience Sees Stu- In Series of Contrasted Plays direction and the the g Miss Florence Davis Ptespn+*j ®xpfe.ssion students play ^ group of four workshop ®torv’ a modern drama, a ttiodn. Chinatown, and two comedies. fpifl'hreciative audience watched Paces ®th(lents go through their Pathnv ranging from the ttieQf tfagedy of 77m Sweet- ’ItatH'i 1^*0 more modern The I'nft Cenhiry LuUahy. er deservedly won first jirize t --ontinued on pag(' 4) Poor Posture Dealt Death-Sealing Blow By Posture Contest Minkie ClarkT^orious Leader In Campaign for Better Posture Saint Marv’s spent an uncom^rt- ,Ue four days as posture "V*. rnary 24-28 ouco aga.u slouch/’ and any other position m- eonipatible with the spirit of good nostiire With the faculty as judges individual winners of the pgn»^e week contest were Minkie Clar , first; Anna Wood, second; and Jm- iiette Hood, third. r i Sponsors of f^e campaign for bet ter posture were the Sigma aiM Mu Vthletic Associations. Each girl (Continued on page i) Tallulah Bankhead Acts Powerful Role In The Little Foxes Portrays Money-mad Woman In Lillian Heilman’s Attack On Predatory Greed Once again a Broadway hit came to Raleigh. On March 5 Lillian Heilman’s ruthless attack on preda tory greed was given a flaming per formance by Tallulah Bankhead. Her vibrant personality, “her smoul dering strength,” as John Mason once called it, is her greatest asset and her greatest liability as an ac tress. Miss Bankhead has had a ten dency to take it easy, to rely too much on the ‘divine spark,’ in spite of the English people’s belief that she will become the Bernhardt of the twentieth century. She had an instinctive sense of the theatre and of stage technique; there was in spired success in all her portrayals; but the Bankhead portraits lacked the stroke to give them rounded sub stance. She, however, was always a good show in herself. But now in “The Little Foxes” she has succeeded in getting to the root of a characteri zation; as Brooks Atkinson puts it, this was ‘a superb example of ma ture acting fully under control.’ After years of bad luck, bad parts, and, on occasion, bad playing. Miss Bankhead seems at last to have found herself. The play is a story in which the bad characters of a Southern family work out their dog-eat-dog plans of aggrandizement, for all to see; the good members reveal to themselves and the audience the depth of evil in these actions. As the evil female, Miss Bankhead holds the play around her. It is amazing how low her voice can go into the baritone register. She radiates ruthlessness; she is seductive and dangerous. When in the last act, she sits mo tionless and menacing while her hus band dies in front of her eyes, you are convinced that the woman Miss Bankhead has built up would have done just that. As a malicious and money-mad beauty, she elaborates each detail of her role with insight and defense. The play is most unpleasant, but Miss Bankhead’s acting is magnifi cent. She becomes the meanest woman in the world; when the cur tain goes down you have the utmost contempt for her as Regina and a great deal of admiration for her as an actress. Mahan Wins 104 to 91 In Run Off Election Held On March 5 Stribling Elected Chairman of the Hall Council on First Ballot Last Friday In the first major elections for next year student voters chose Char lotte Mahan as President of the Stu dent Body for the 1941-42 session and Elizabeth Stribling as Chairman of the Hall Council. Other candi dates for President of the Student Body were Elizabeth Adkins, Betty Willcox, Anne Dunn, and Elizabeth Stribling. The first vote was so close that it necessitated a run-off election between Mahan and Strib- ling. In the final ballot, taken on March 5, Mahan won by the close margin of 91-104. Other nominees for Chairman of the Hall Council were Anne Dunn and Kathryn Kel son. Stribling won on the first bal lot, taken on March 7. Charlotte Mahan is from Char lottesville, Virginia. This is her first year at Saint Mary’s, but not her first experience as a leader, for she served as president of her class in both her senior and junior year in high school. Charlotte’s quiet, re served nature is deceiving, for be neath it all she has a natural gift for organization and much driving force. She has already begun work on the suggested revision of student regulations, and she is sure that it “is bound to work.” She expressed her hope that the students will real ize the importance of this new plan and will individually take the re sponsibility for its success. In temperament “Bunny” Strib ling, of Atlanta, Georgia, is almost the exact opposite of Charlotte, but she is no less qualified to make an outstanding student leader. As Chairman of the Hall Council, she will have under her authority all the hall presidents and vice-presidents. Her position carries a great deal of responsibility and endless detailed work. Since the Hall Council is still comparatively new, “Bunny” will have the added responsibility of further adjusting its procedure tu the needs of the students. Bunny’s originality, insight, and vitality give her an excellent background for this work.