1 6amt Mary^s School Library ))> HALLOWEEN TAKE ‘FLU’ party tonight IDCIICS Ml-" ^ A ■ 1^1 nr RA A O XT' 9 O VACCINATION! ^Ol. X, No. 3 RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA November 1, 1946 ^I'aham Scott Band To Play for Dance Given by Yearbook Stage Coach Semi-Formal Af fair to be Nov. 9 in Gymnasium , semi-formal dance sponsored “y the STAGE COACH will liigli- ^§ht Saturday, Nov. 9, from 8:30 ,?til_ 11:50 p.m. Graham Scott and is eight-piece orchestra, of the Uni- ^ersity of North Carolina, will fur- ish the music in Saint Mary’s gym- nasiuni. ^ids have arrived and will be on ® by Gene Rose, the members of ® dance committee, and the dance , ^I'shals. Each girl may invite one ^te and two stags. 3 ^be first dance to be sponsored by „ ^aint Mary’s yearbook, proceeds the event will finance the 1947 ^^HVGE coach. Because of its Us annual is costing more than since a great deal of the i money has been spent on s^oyements, the STAGE COACH tjje® ts itself attempting to raise Q ^oney for the annual, explained ij® Rose, Henderson, editor. Mtb be a card dance if 7^. ten no-breaks and three extras, ^jtime pern t officiate. TVi ® following dance committee dg serve: Betsy Evans, Enfield, C °*'^tions; Martha Best Yorke,' er lead-out; Betty Ann Coop- Uip, g ®eiisboro, orchestra arrange- f »'ts; Edith Allison, Statesville, li„^®®bmeuts: Sylvia Green, Wil- bidL the lead-out will be the mem- Jlvn ^be dance committee: Betsy blartha Best Yorke, Betty >13 p ooper, Edith Allison, and Syl- tip„ t^^oon; Adelaide Linehan, busi-‘ the ®^fnager of STAGE COACH; •.time permits. Dance marshals fleti publications’ editors; tha STAGE COACH; Mar- Edenton, BULLETIN; 8 n ?i’ipp Jones, Summerville, ■ Belles. Prevent ^Flu^ , |ufluei32a vaccinations, to (ig b'l'ard off possible “flu” epi- .1®^ this winter, will be iva 'f^ble to those students who *'e.sn ^bem, Mrs. L. B. Naylor, eg,J:®iit nurse, announced re- Ett parents will be sent toi'ms which give permis- bat ^ students to be vacci- to All students are urged ,/ike it as soon as possible, oijj. *^®iitiiig an immunity in 90 bgg *^t 100 cases, the vaccine has " btety used and hailed as It^ty successful by the Army. tiop% a negligible toxic reac- \’a„ ^iiy at all, on the person '^'^'bated. PUY DAY SOON TO BE SPONSORED IN RAIEIGH Saint Mary’s and Meredith to Be Joint Hostesses to Visitors Saint Mary’s an'd Meredith col leges will be joint hostesses to girls from colleges all over the state at a state-wide inter-collegiate play day Saturday, Nov. 16, from 2 to 5 p. in. This is the first time the event has been held in Raleigh. The scheduled contests-include tennis, swimming, volleyball, and possibly badminton to be held on Saint Mary’s campus, and hockey, archery, and badminton at Mere dith. Registration will be at Mere dith. At 4 ;30 a reception will honor all visiting teams. Jean Gritli, president of the Meredith Athletic Association, is general chairman. Miss Peter son, head of the Physical Educa tion Department at Meredith, and Mrs. W. C. Guess, Saint Mary’s, are faculty advisors. The following committees have been appointed to help with the arrangements: Steering Committee: Sylvia Green, Williamston, chairman, and Betty Anne Cooper, Greens boro, from Saint Mary’s; Gloria Mayer and Martha Davidson, from Meredith. Invitations and Program Com mittee: Jean Strickland, AYilson, and Mary Nelson Smitliwick, Louisburg, from Saint Mary’s. Einance Committee: Virginia Smith, Ridlej' Park, Pa., and Mary Lou Pratt, Sumter, S. C., from Saint Mary’s. (See P. 3, Col. 4) Juniors To Entertain School At Halloween Party Tonight Yehudi Menuhin Will Open Civic Concert Nov* 4 Coming Season Program for Announced Yehudi Menuhin, one of the world’s foremost violinists, will open the 1946-1947 season of Civic Music concerts with a performance at Ra leigh Memorial xYuditorium, Mon day, Nov. 4. Doors will be opened at 7:00 p.m. and the concert will begin at 8 :00 ]).m. The program of civic concerts for the coming season has been an nounced as follows: AYednesday, Nov. 20, Jean Dicken son, often referred to as “the night ingale of the airways,” and Jan Peerce, one of the leading tenors of the Metropolitan Opera, in a joint recital. Tuesday, Jan. 14, William Kapell, pianist. Tuesday, Jan. 28, Blanch Thebom, mezzo-soprano. Tuesday, Mar. 11, Martha Graham, acknowledged as one of the great est modern dancers. Monday, Mar. 31, Ezio Pinza, Metropolitan opera star, basso. Thursday, Apr. 17, the New York Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Leopold Stokowski. Missionary Entertains Students She is gray-haired and very charming, with a wonderful sense of humor. Her name ? Elizabeth Estes Turner, one of the most inter esting assembly speakers Saint Mary’s has ever heard. M'iss Turner, a missionary, after working in China for twelve years is now with the Student Volunteer Movement in this country. She chuckled, “I just switch around from place to place, visiting college cam puses all over the country.” Miss Turner’s home in the United States is St. Albans, W. Va.; her home in China is Hwaiyuan. She attended West Virginia University, the Biblical Seminary in New York, and the Yenching College of Chinese Studies. After studying Chinese for a year in Peking, kfiss Turner took up her work as a rural evange list. She is very anxious to return to this work because, as she says, “I love the Chinese, and I’m quite an expert now in the use of chopsticks!” When we asked Miss Turner how she liked teaching the Chinese stu dents, she replied, “I enjoy it very much because the Chinese are eager to learn, and are crazy for anything American. Then, too, they don’t have much opportunity to see beauty and enjoy it when it is shown to them.” Miss Turner told us gaily that her hobby is people, but her pet peeve is indifference in people. Her favor ite sport is, oddly enough, riding the Staten Island ferry in New York, and her favorite person (who, she says, is “going around the world” with the missionaries) is the main character of the current broadway play, Harvey—a large white rab bit! She summed up beautifully her life’s ambitions by saying, “If you do not value a thing yourself, do not share it with others. If Christianity is of no value to us, we need not share it, but if it means anything in our lives, we must share it.” Jitterbug Contest Will Be Fea ture of Evening A Halloween parly, given by the junior class tonight from 8 until 9:45 p. irr. in the gymnasium, will entertain the faculty and stu dents of Saint Mary’s. Fortune- telling and apple-bobbing will be traditional entertainments and a jitterbug contest will be a high light of the evening. -\aney Hannah, Greenville, and Sally Ann Borthwick, Win.ston- Salem, will sing; Joan Hassler, Thoniasville, will entertain with imitations. Jean Strickland, Wil son, and Elizabeth Myatt, Golds boro, have irrepared an original .skit. Y arious booths will be set up in the gymnasium for amusement. Their particular thrills are still secret, but the entertainment com mittee promises a surprise in each. A prize will be given for the most original costume. There will be refreshments—in abundance, Josephine Hojd, Washington, and Anita Buck, Jacksonville Beach, Fla., chairmen of the refreshment committee, announced. (See P. 4, Col. 2) Logan Vaught To Edit Handbook For Coming Year Logan Y^aught, YVinston-Salem, was elected handbook editor in the annual election Oct. 23. Nomi nations were announced in as sembly Oct. 22. Other nominees were; Margaret Moore, Roanoke, YLi.; Lila Spilman, Statesville; Laura Lee Stickley, Lynchburg, Va. This is Logan’s third year at Saint Mary’s. She is a junior and a Sigma. Logan is also vice-presi dent of the Dramatics club and a member of the Sigma Lambda lit erary society, all three publica tions’ staffs, and the Granddaugh ters’ cRrb. Mrs. O. K. Joyner Joins Faculty To Replace Mrs. Wilder To replace Mrs. Lynn YVilder, who has resigned from the faculty of Saint Mary’s to join her hus band in New Y’^ork city, Mrs. O. K. Joyner, former dramatics teacher at Needham Broughton high school, Raleigh, has joined the staff of Saint Mary’s English department. She will teach junior and senior English courses. (See P. 3, Col. 4)