^>4^ Belles I OF ST. MARY’S XXXI, No. 7 BELLES OF ST. MARY’S February 7, 1969 LEGISLATIVE BODY PASSES STUDENT PETITIONS Dr. Morrison and Dr. Harry Kelly. * xT Par east study ends with ■’hip^ |-"’o-week study of Japan ^ Tvi™^speak and show ® I’ar E^ist. riiar\ 1'- , of Japan February 3, Dr- y-iU°be a lecdure on Jai^nese liF 0 « ure .iven by Dr. D o n a d at St. Mary’s, be- fig ^ *^eries of loi'tn VPS hv sneak- xt ...;n int„ Die ‘o "no IS Head ot ttie ms- ....ture given o\ ^ " , Partment at St. Mary’s, be- ^ gj^g February 19 at 8:30 P.M- series of lectures by speak- gpeak on a Die history of Japan and . j ^^g the distinction of be „ 1? ii-r A?i.u,y^_ reeeiy^.he^^N0bel History ot Japan ana . j ^^g the aisunonuxx .. Vobcl ^ the Japanese. Dr. Harry '.f ^sian to receiye the Nobe la presently cbairniaii - pr. Keene ^ , U. S. delegation to the U. S.- P^niepartnieiit of Eastern Asian committee of Scientific Co- «nd Cultures at Co- 1 SDoVri ill •icjL'nTvilil\r Wpf^l- ‘iuiiiee ot ttcienTino , - spoke in assembly Wed- I *, the United States’ re- •P with Japanese scholars. '* .February U the Departnieni Co- Laiiguages present he is lyriting a boo he non-Japanese to re- P with Japanese scholars. Japanese literatu^^p^^^^^^ I^cbruary 12, Mrs. Alisawa, was tl^ “ . prize, and he ** a Japanese student at cene i eonsuinniate is notpcl should be lots of fnn ' aiie this year, since it has DAY PLANS announced too ever Uaif iiiese student at cene eonsuinniate t„if"""'^nia State Uniyersity, is iia ^ „ on what life in Japan is erudition. ^ Freshmen Auctioned •t two weeks will fiuJ freshiiien busily obeying many f ggphomores, juniors, the wishes 0 op ,pj^yj.g^ay night, and seniors. g f^gshniaii class February gh„mii Auction, sponsored a r j .^^.g^.g a‘,„l I,e Mghest bidder until 10.15 P3I. from PDo F- • Ogiaves” proni- in the gjm- . piasters’ wishes ised to obe.t ^he follow- for two They were pur- ^J‘’to"do such eiciting tasks ehased to do s ^^j^gj. as cleaning, jay students unpleasant Job Tim d with their ^ gt Mary’s stu- qiiiekly, and man to ride while ■'7^':„s;:erc5%T^ V. foi- - , Pate a,,, *'d)re peojile to jiartici- |haa jji a less tragic theme w de ,m P‘^l?®ants,” eniphatical- ?*'Csi(ipV c d Laura Ilalloway, DayJ'D of Orchesis. The May Doiial 196!) are unconyen- a trU liroduction will siigi, Die alumnae and, will be an attempt to iV +l -^V- tX,lL €l l-LV Jl*2' eam^ Die present of Th ?.P^i*^- “iftht will be the first ^ciig'b H Die second, al- f "gh fl W, lllC SI ni‘’^aiicn Dn-mal matinee per- ^^ce D)r fijuests will take h On ^ A t^ULSTS win mrvv >1 bee,, ^'"’Day. The plans haye ^omp ; Ditally structured yet. of f the possible ‘h-er-.n’"'*^'' ^Diy Queens and V*^'lv nt i^kow being: a skirted i'V.5'-«u„i,.i„. (../“C tiIpU' I'"'"'- ak*Poiip„. Dself is not the yital somp*^ P»K«‘“'D- **'■ as i^^'^tei',1 ^ Die famed dances Die ly 'Dte the Charleston Dfatp, *1^ -^pple, will be dem- 'H'sidp the Frun or other s„,pens ;';„eu,io.. »f «l“ Klemeiital lu Bailey, 1969 May Q^^gjjggis. and Laura -Ij'-"'"'',,.'' ,„d nebbie lIort»“. respectivel.'. Times are changing at St. Mary’s. Many new rules will be introduced second semester, since seyeral petitions haye been pass ed and are now in effect. 1. The sophomores are to be al lowed to single date second semes ter until 7:25 P.M. on Friday nights. 2. The sophomores are to be giyen one more extended Satur day night which can be taken either first or second semester. This will bring the quota of oyer- nights for the sophomores to two weekends, two extended oyer- nights, and two short oyernights. 3. The apartment rule has been changed. This rule will affect only the seniors. P r o y i s i o n s of the apartment rule are as follows: a. Students will be required to haye blanket parental permission coyering yacations and weekends spent off campus, h. If outside Ra leigh, a student must leaye the apartment by 1:30 A.M. e. In or der to enter an apartment, one couple (not necessarily from St. Mary’s) must be present, d. When signing out for a Raleigh apart ment, a student must fill out the full apartment address on her date slip. 4. The penalty for a late hostess or parental permission has been changed to one point for eyery day late. The penalty was preyi- ously two points for eyery day that the permission was late. 5. The quota of chapel absences to be taken by seniors has been changed for the second semester. Seniors will now haye eight chapel absences instead of fiye. 6. All students will be allowed to wear pant suits on dates. 7. Date slips will not be requir ed to be filed until 8:30 P.M. In the preyious rule, slips had to be filed by 8:00 P.M. 8. Students will be able to leaye school until 9:30 P.M. After this time, special permission must be obtained in order to leaye school. The preyious rule stated that girls could not leaye campus at all after 9:00 P.M. 9. Freshmen may date until 11:15 P.M. on Saturday nights second semester. Howeyer, fresh men will still be required to dou ble date. 10. The length of time that a petition is required to stand be fore becoming effectiye after it has been passed has been chang ed from two months to ten days. In order to submit a petition, three signatures are necessary on the petition. It must then be hand ed in to Pridie Clark, or to Kath ryn Heath. The petition then goes to the petitions committee where the irreleyant ones are weeded ovrt. From the petitions committee the petition goes on to the Legis- latiye Body. Here after being fully discussed, it is passed or rejected. If it is passed by the Legislative Body, Pridie and Miss Richardson submit the petition to Dr. Stone for approval. If accepted by Dr. Stone, the petition, according to the new rule, will become effec tive in ten days. One more change has been put into effect at St. Mary’s for the second semester. The faculty have approved a change in the rule pertaining to the making up of English tests missed while in the infirmary or on sick leave. Pre viously a student could only be given credit for a grade of eighty- five no matter what she actually made. The rule now states that a student will be given credit for whatever grade she makes. WRAL HONORS STUDENTS Recently Raleigh’s AVRAL tele vision station has been saluting the outstanding young people in the Raleigh area. Five St. Mary’s girls were chosen to be honored. They were Mary Morrison Pennington, Mar ty Eskridge, Sweetie Seifart, Bon nie Jones, and Ruth Shuping. Flich-s of the ftttttre Colony — Three In the Attic Cardinal — Yellow Submarine Ambassador — Tlie Stalking Moon Varsity — I>r. Zhivago Village — The Fixer State — Tile Cliarge of the Light Brigade (Continued from Col. 2 this Page) doing their errands during the next two weeks. Jo Ann Peacock was the over all chairman for the auction. Sally Dillard served as decoration chair man, Angela Buckley served as publicity chairman, and Holly Foss served as raffle chairman. Mr. Roberts, as the auctioner, moved the sale quickly with his business-like methods and wry humor. Mimeographed sheets advertis ing the auction, cake raffle, and food sale were placed in mailboxes on Thursday morning. THOUGHT FOR THE WEEK: HARUMBI (means: Let’s pull together) TTU« eir com- a affairs, both in k and in Carolina, 's. It. Mary’s nted Dn- past dat- personal ty job is graduate, fne.” “I really ^ but I up teach- lughly en- ! of St. lans ' Play I, II ucted for I production I )n at St. ' 59. To be )f Father- ill produc- m’s “The ■htful mu- finishing their love the 1920’s, music and i le lead ig i p portray- I aren Rose I ress of the i Dubonnet. p” schooL ; by Lena ■acters m, Dgh , Bryaa.J net DavisJ I Boyfrier ’ t also 1 Jeca aleigh the chor, lirected ith el Buiie ihe Di . vice end)/ Bitty » eecreli Cathe urer.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view