Belles OF ST. IVIARY’S VOL. xxvn, No. 9. RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA March 13, 1964 Circle Walks To[ Honor Two , Walking last night for the first tune this semester, the Order of tfip Cirele inducted two new mein- bpi’s. Cited for membership were •nine DeLoach and Elsie Ives, “oth seniors. Jane, wlio liails from Chatta- l^ooga, Tennessee, has taken an '^^'^tive jiart here at St. Mary’s. As I^ditor of the Handbook, Jane has ''’orked hard to revise and rewrite tfle new Handbook. She is also a 1‘ieniber of tlie Legislative Body, he President of Orehesis, a inem- Pi‘ of Hall Council and a mem- her of the Canterbury Club. Ac- ti'’e in sports, Jane is a member "t the Letter Club. . A Haleigli girl, Elsie works liard jii the capacity of President of the Students. She is also a mem- ee of tlie Legislative Body and Council. A member of Council this year, Elsie works Cn/^^^ Stagecoach and is a Cold ^ As the Cirele symbolizes unity, the purpose of tliis organiza- ^ ’on shall be to promote a spirit of •‘-operation among the students of enltivation of high ideals ‘'Crviee, fellowshiji, citizenship, hi scholarshi]) and to a.ssist new ■ hclents in finding theii* place in h! hiul activities.” Mem- 1, A^hip in the Circle is one of the , f?hest honors bestowed on a St. JJary’s girl. Marion Purcell To Give Voice Recital ^.ihrion Purcell will give a voice ®^tal in St. Marv’s auditorium h March 25 at 8:30 p.m. She is \^hg this recital for the student •' ^ in order to complete St. requirements for a music ^^'Cficate. \^,iJjhriou will begin her recital 'I' three selections by Handel. (In + these selections will be .111 n "’itii Betsy Phifer. Then “I will sing an Italian song, 1 astorella” by Vivaldi, be • ^hunber of French songs will Shg^^'ifhded in Marion’s program. Dr, McLeod To Speak Here Students View Hamlet Film On Thursday evening, March 5, a movie presentation of Shake speare’s well known Hamlet was shown in the St. Mary’s Junior College Auditorium. Members of the junior and sophomore classes were re(iuired to attend, but the movie was open to all the stu dents. The film was secured from a film exchange in Atlanta. Ur. Owens H. Browne, when inter viewed about the film, said that it was very old and in poor condi tion. He worked at least an hour Thursday morning in order to re pair the film, which had been torn and spliced with scotch tape. The movie, on four 40-miuute reels of film, began at 6:45 p.m and lasted until 9 :30 p.m. Most of the "iris seemed to enjoy the movie. Members of the junior class wlio have read and studied the plav Hamlet this year found it verv interesting to compare the movie version with that _ of the plav When asked their opinion of the' movie, the following juniors "‘"ibbv Pollard: “I think it was .rood, but I thought they left out the most important part about Fortiubras. And I didn’t like the relationship between Hamlet and his mother because it made him look weak and small.” Muriel Seager: “I didii t like their leaving out Rosencrantz and Guildensterii. And also, when Ophelia was supposed to have told WILL VISIT ST. MARY’S AS DANFORTH LECTURER The Very Reverend George F. McLeod, Founder and Leader of the Iona Community, will be at St. Mary’s on March 23 and 24 as a Danforth Visiting Lecturer. While here at St. Mary’s, Dr. McLeod will give a public lecture il lustrated with a film in color on “The Iona Community” at 8:30 p.m. on March 24. On March 23 from 10:15-11:15 he will speak on “Holiness Means Wholeness: The New Challenge to the Church;” and on March 24 from 10:15-11:15, “The New Europe.” lier father about Hamlet’s mad ness, it was presented as a solilo quy in tlie movie rather tlian iiav- ing Ophelia tell her father about it as it was done in the play.” Diana Hodges: “1 thought Sir Lawrence did a good job of act ing, but the movie’s presentation of his relationshii:) with his mother made him look weak.” Sally Poindexter: “1 had seen it two times and 1 was about to die to get out.” Several members from the soph omore class had the following commeuts about the movie: Ann Dorsey Daj': “A combina tion of Olivier and Hamlet—that knocks you flat!” Ella Reese Mayer: “I thought it was maguificent! Sir Lawrence Olivier did an excellent job as Hamlet. After seeing the movie, I can’t wait to see the play.” Tricia Renii: “Shakespeare’s plays make better stage plays than movies.” Lela Cowardin: “Although I didn’t think the movie was excep tional, Olivier has shown that Shakespeare can be successLdly brought to the screen.” SCHREIDERS PRESENT FILM “ Helen and Frank Schrei- der have done it again . . •” ^Christian Science Monitor Helen and Frank Schreider did do it again! They won over an- tlier audience with their fim and lecture on “The Ganges, Pulsebeat bv' sing a cycle of fciur songs etiet aria from the written by Mass- ^’cG "'■^‘^Aion, Marion will sing se- Slip English composers. Ha,, 1.1 '"lioseii “Velvet Shoes” by '^Aiompson and three iU(,K "T Benjamin Britten to be I^ai't r If „ Ale program will consist ,’^election from “Carmen.” "fill i Claig and Betsy Phifer join Marion on this selection. of India.” this time, on Thursday, 'AlleAtto people plus ea»«e r-omuaiiion completed m 1959 a rip down the Ganges in their am- ..l.ihias ieep. They became inaug- •a?ed iii this type of travel when ;i!;v took a trip from Alaska to Tie'rra del Fiiego. Since then, they have financed similar trips m In donesia, Africa, and this one in India bv selling their articles and nhoto"raphs to magazines and by l-hinir leeturee suel. oe the oue held at St. Mary’s. It took the Schreiders mne months to complete their tup through India down the Ganges ;.;Ver. During this time however, they became acquainted with the people of India as well as filming beautiful and typical scenes which they saw on their waj'. In describing the “spirit of the Ganges” which represents the spirit of India itself, the lecturers noted the beautiful and sacred ceremony of placing wreaths, lighted in honor of the deceased, to float down the river. They also commented on the hazards pre sented bj' sacred cows and mon- kej’s, as well as the intense re ligiosity found elsewhere. As they passed through villages in India they took film showing the poverty so prevalent there. Rapid development is necessary, but since India is a democrary, this change cannot be forced. It must come through persuasion, but the people are reluctant to ac cept this change. Mr. Schreider explained that time, money, edu cation, and understanding are the basic needs. It is the “time” which is the most difficult to obtain. Dr. McLeod was born in 1895, the second son of Sir John Mc Leod, first baronet. lie was edu cated at Winchester, Oxford (Oriel College), and Edinburgh I'uiyersit.v. He liolds a Doctor of Divinity degree from Glasgow University. In World War 1 he served as captain in the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders in hiauce and the Near East, and n-as awarded the Military ’Cr-oss and the Croix de Guerre. In 1921 he was a Post-Graduate Fellow at Union Seminary, New York, and the next year a missioner in Brit ish Columbia lumber camps. h rom 1926-30, Dr. McLeod was Collegiate Minister of St. Cuth- bert’s Parish Church, Edinburgh, and for the next eight years was Minister of Govan Old Parish (diurch, Glasgow. He is a chaplain to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth. He was Warraek Lecturer on Preaching at Edinburgh and St. Andrews Universities in 1936, Se lect Preacher at Cambridge Uni versity in 1943 and 1963, and Cun- uiiigham Lecturer on Evangelism in 1954. In 1957-58 he was Mod erator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. Since 1960 he has been Convenor of his Church’s Committees on Church Extension and on Central Africa. Since 1938 Dr. McLeod has been Leader of the Iona Community, a Presbyterian brotherhood of min isters and craftsmen which has undertaken the task of restoring the ruined Abbey at Iona, found ed by St. Columba on the West Scottish island in the sixth cen tury, and regarded as the cradle of Scotland’s Christianity. It is nsed for retreats and conferences. The Abbey was taken over by the Benedictines, and twice de stroyed by pirates in its first cen turies. It nevertheless became the center of Scotland’s Christianity, and the burial place of its kings until the Reformation, when the Abbey was pillaged and its com munity dispersed. A burial ground attached to the Abbey contains the graves of fifty Scoftish kings, among them Macbeth, villain of Shakespeare’s tragedy. Many Eu ropean kings are also buried there,