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FAREWELL, SENIORS
Commencement Exer-
cises This Morning
Bishop Mouzon Will Speak
Today the seniors will receive their
long-looked-for sheepskins toward
which they have been striving for four
long years. The commencement ex-
e'rcises are eagerly anticipated. This
year the graduating class is fortunate
in having Bishop Edwin Mouzon of
the Methodist Episcopal Church,
South, to deliver the final address.
Jhe college welcomes the many friends
■and parents who are present for the
final closing. The program :
Mr. McAlister Carson, president of
the Board of Trustees, presiding.
Processional.
Doxology.
Invocation—Rev. C. W. Durden, D.D.
Address—Bishop Mouzon.
Songs—A Birthday by Huntington
V.'oodman. Will ’O the Wisp by Spross
■-Iris Bryson.
Delivery of Diplomas—Mr. Carson.
Announcements and Final Word—
President Frazer.
PROGRAM
Saturday, May 28
1 :00 p. m.—Alumnae Luncheon.
5:00-6:00 p. m.—^Tea given by Mrs.
Cameron Morrison.
8:00 p. m.—Joint Literary Society
meeting.
Sunday, May 30
8:00 p. m.—Baccalaureate Sermon
by Rev. John M. Wells.
Monday, May 30
3:00-6:00 p. ni.—Fine and Practical
Arts Exhibits.
4:30 p. m.—Class Day Exercises.
8:30 p. m.—Annual Concert.
Tuesday, May 31
10:30 a. m.—Commencement Ad
dress by Bishop Edwin D.
Mouzon.
—Conferring of Degrees.
Annual Music Concert
Is Great Success
Much Talent Is Shown
Students Enter
Prohibition Contest
Seniors Hold Last
Class Meeting
The seniors held their last class
meeting on Monday nig'ht. Although
the occasion was one of joy, it was
^Iso filled with sad, sad tears of part-
mg. Looking backward over the past
years the seniors began to realize what
wonderful times they have enjoyed
working and playing together. How
ever, there were many glances toward
the future to be filled with old-maid
isachership and matrimonial expecta
tions. Words and good-bye songs,
laughs and sobs brought knots into the
throats of the underclassmen, who
were listening from distant windows.
Miriam Dameron, president of the
class, brightened the alTair by present
ing to her classmates parting gifts,
lovely varigated lolypops of red, green,
orange and yellow hues. The two
class songs, college songs and the Alma
Mater were sung, and the members
of the senior class gave a last fond
farewell.
Three Prizes To Be Awarded
The annual prohibition contest spon
sored by the Woman’s Christian Tem
perance Union of North Carolina had
as its subject for the essays this year:
“Modern Science’s Contribution to
Understanding the Prohibition Ques
tion.” The entries for Queens-Chicora
were as follows: Edith Storm, Mar
garet Blankenship, Janet Robinson,
Sara Elizabeth Motte, Lois Primm,
Florence Moffiett, Edna Rowell, and
Rebekah Hassell. The other colleges
of the state have the same subject.
Mrs. Cameron Morrison is the donor
of three prizes for Queens-Chicora Col
lege. The prizes are as follows: First,
fifteen dollars; second, ten dollars;
third, five dollars. These prizes will
be awarded as usual at the graduation
exercises. The highest paper will then
be entered in the state inter-collegiate
contest. The paper winning for the
state will subsequently be sent in to
the national prohibition contest.
The Annual Music Concert of May
30 was unusually successful this year.
The girls taking part in the program
have given recitals or have shown
their talent in the glee club and in other
forms of entertainment. The perform
ance represented the culmination of
the vigorous work and preparation
which have taken place in the music
department during the past year. The
well-rendered selections displayed a
remarkable amount of talent. Those
students who performed were: Evelyn
Woodside, Margaret Lillard, Elizabeth
Hoyle, Martha Frazer, Caroline Lil
lard, Evelyn Ervin, Helen Fishburne,
Iris Bryson, Virginia Parsons and
Helen Wall. The ushers were Buena
Winecofif, Elizabeth Mason, June
Tweed and Margery Isenhour
Many Present at Class
Day Exercises
Class Day Exercises took place Mon
day afternoon at 4:30. Many people,
consisting of parents and those inter
ested in the graduating class, filled the
campus. The scene was made up of
gay juniors dressed in white carrying
the daisy chain. Following were the
seniors who marched in file. After the
speeches and addresses the juniors re-
.ceived the caps and gowns of the upper
classmen. The program:
Processional Alma Mater
Salutatory Nina Norris
Class History Mary Louise Thomas
Class Prophecy Margaret Johanson
Class Song Mary Ruth MIcQueen
Iris Bryson
Class Poem Frances Johanson
Class Gift Catherine Jones
Class Song Virginia Knee
Margaret Lillard
Last Will and Testament
—Dorothy Edmonson
Valedictory Frances Johanson
Recessional
—Our Mother and Our Queen
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