1962 Tk n will iting) ,ining a the i the r Fry JeaB e one a, so- is the n to f the 1 ball f the I on itical II be ang' adn' will ance laine MrS' real' Ral; and alay^ ;ver- loyfi r as the luer- the ,Iisb : lOOl? inel' ogef itate l)ua> 1 be 'atOf iity. OlB' tive in- , the leth ^ tire ^ inn> Jess the . es’s I Ca; ded ne}' pi' ope ?dy j- OF ST. MARY’S Vol. XXV, No. 3,3'4- BALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA May 25, 1962 SENIORS AND SOPHOMORES GRADUATE Ann McKinney and Tricia Armstrong await Gradnation baccalaureate Speaker The Baccalaureate speaker at St. ry’s on Sunday, May 27, will be the Venerable David R. Thorn- Archdeacon of the Episcopal I 'ocese of Southern Ohio. He was ^orn in Rawlins, Wyoming, and brought up in Laramie, Wyoming, 'here his father was the Dean of St. 'd^Phew’s Cathedral. He attend ed the i)ublic high school in Lara- d}'®; the University of Wyoming; ^®nyon College, Gambler, Ohio; fT^ley Hall, the Divinity School of ee^nyon College; and graduated toin the Episcopal Theological nhool in Cambridge, Mass. His first position in the Church as Curate of Christ Church in (^x.^ybon, Ohio, Diocese of Southern ioV°’ H136 to 1940. In May of p do he became Rector of Grace e^burch in College Hill, Cincinnati, 1‘dtil the end of 1952 at which time ,assumed his present position as ^'6 Archdeacon of the Diocese of •-outhern Ohio. ^t the General Convention in ' biaini Beach, 1958, he was elected ° the National Council and serves several committees, such as: De- bartruent of Promotion, the General ^^’ision of Research and Field ^Hidy, the Finance Committee, and Standing Committee. Recently Was elected to serve on the "oard of Trustees of Kenyon Col- and on the Board of IManagers the Overseas Alissionary Society. Friday, May 25 8-15 PM. “RING ROUND THE jMOON”, presented by the St. Mary’s Dra matics Club, Auditori um Saturday, iMay 26 10:30 A.M. Sophomore Class Day Exercises 4:00 P.M- Senior Class Day Exercises 8-30 P.M. Concert by Glee Club Sunday, iMay 27 7-50 A..M. Celebration of Holy Communion in the Chapel 11-00 AM. Morning Prayer and Baccalaureate Sermon by The Venerable David R. Thornberry, D.D., Archdeacon, Diocese of Southern Ohio. 4.-30-6-00 P.M. President’s Tea for Parents and Gradu ating Classes. Presi dent’s Home 6-00 PM. Step Singing, Smedes Halls yionday. May 28 10-30 AM. Graduating Exercises in the Auditorium. Speaker, Harriet D. Hudson, Ph.D., LL.D., Dean of Randolph- Macon Woman’s Col lege. Graduation Speaker The graduation speaker this year will be a woman admired and re spected as a leader in her field. Dr. Harriet D. Hudson, dean of Ran- dolph-Macon Woman’s College and professor of economics, served on the staffs of Blackburn College and Harvard University and the facul ties of Pine Manor, Mount Holy oke, and the University of Illinois before coming to R-MWC in 1953. She had been at R-MWC only four years when the senior class of 1957 chose as its gift to the college a fund for faculty research. They named it the “Harriet D. Hudson Fund for Faculty Study.” This student respect for her is shared by the nation’s top educa tors and is evidenced by the follow ing facts: She was the only woman on the executive committee of the Association for Higher Education from 1958 to 1961. She was that group’s representative to the 1958 Belgian conference of the Inter national Association of University Professors and Lecturers. She is a member of the Selection of Region V of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowships Foundation; the Com mittee on College Teaching of the American Council of Education; and at the Special Joint Screening Committee of the Committee on Standards and Reports of the Com mission on Colleges and Universi ties of the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. She has served on Visiting Com mittees of the Southern Association. She is also a member of the Ameri can Economic Association, the In dustrial Relations Research Associ ation, and the National Education Association. Vitally concerned with scholar ship programs. Dr. Hudson is a regional director of the Tuition Ex change Program, which is made up of more than 200 colleges and uni versities; the only woman on the Advisory Committee on National Student Financial Aid Programs of the College Scholarship Service; and chairman of the Scholarship ' and Aids Committee at R-MWC. A specialist in labor economics, she is the author of Progressive Mine Workers of America: A Study in Rival Unions and of several arti cles and book reviews. In the spring of 1961, she was one of three nominees for the office of president of the Association for Higher Education for 1961-1962. The Association is composed of more than 15,000 faculty members and administrators from 1,500 col leges and universities in 50 states and 24 countries. Dean Hudson was the only woman to be nominated for the presidency. MUS WIN LETTER CLUB PLAQUE AGAIN! COUNSELORS FOR 62-63 CHOSEN One of the highest honors a ris ing senior can receive is that of be ing asked to be a Hall Counselor. The counselors perform such an im portant work that their selection is carefully screened. From the Junior Class the counselor committee se lects thirty-eight girls with at least a C- average or who exemplify the St. Mary’s spirit of friendliness, helpfulness and cooperation. These girls must then be approved by Miss R. and Dr. Stone. The thirty-eight girls who have been selected are: Gee Canada, Ann Farmer, Cydne Wright, Weldon Cabell, Verna Gillam, Reide Wat son, Frances McLanahan, Susan Goode, Mary Parham, Alice Grib- bin, Nannie Hussey, Ann Smith, Cornelia Johnson, Mickey Single tary, Haynes Walker, Barbara Martin, Nelson Pemberton, Sarah Rand, Caroline Walker, Phyllis Cannon, Lynette Smith, Sally Stev ens, Nancy Baum, Parks Freeze, Becky Brown, Nell Bailey, Karen Herndon, Lib Rawlings, Shirley Keedwell, Mary Roper, Pat VIc- Nulty, Kathi Ligon, Stewart Howie, Lea Lea Hall, Jen Barber, Mar garet Allen, Matilda Gholson, and Alary Stella Leak. Attending weekly Hall Council meetings is the least of the hall counselors’ duties. These girls set an example for their hall members to follow, create an impression of the school for new girls, and main tain discipline on the halls. Per haps more important, the counselors must be willing to advise any girls who need help. The job entails work and time; hoWever, the girls who have been chosen are well qualified to serve as hall counselors.