53 I al, 'ill ar te, in- 11(1 of ar- ril 111- ie- vof' ■Is- iib to it ior ra- 3ia 3111 ■ill [lie re- 111- ro ots all )ii- leii i« lig 11(1 OM' ii'd •oil y® 111' llBl ick ie.y lie ta- ;ry llO' ei' •oh r- 111' jii' lod ill* all, ;ei', 111' Ilf BARBARA WHITE STARS ON TV Belles SARA FAIR REIGNS AS MAY QUEEN OF SAINT MARY’S I Vol. XV No. 13 RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA April 24, 1953 Juniors Choose May Dance Theme; A Cruise Down The Mississippi I Emory, Perry, Baker, Nash j Head Committee for Affair I The Junior Class will give the annual Junior-Senior dance on Saturday, May 2. The dance will last from 8 :30-12 :00 P.M., and the theme will be “A Cruise Down the ilississippi.” Irene Emory is chairman of the decoration committee. Other mem- I liers of the committee are Frances Atkins, Mary Grady Burnette, Pat . Cowden, Joanne Curry, Harriet , Cooper, Jean Dessasure, Mary El kins, Carolyn Nelson, and Barbara Smith. Prances Perry is chairman of the Refreshment committee. Mary ' l^indley Dunn, Charlotte Lily, %nda Anderson, and Prances i Spain are the other members of this eommittee. The night of the Junior- Senior, lime punch, cookies, and Peanuts will be served. Kay Baker is chairman of the hgure committee. Assisting her will ee Pat Adams, Pearl Smith, Vir- SRnia Harris, and Janet Taylor. Ihe following girls will be in the %ure: Nell Eley, president of the ^•G.A.; Harriet Harris, secretary the Hall Council; Laura Deane ''latheson, Chairman of Hall Coun- ; Paula Whitaker, president of Senior Class; Becky Gordon, Lce-president of the Senior Class; ^wis Ann Lineberger, secretary of Senior Class; Timmy Tim mons, president of Junior Class; baura Ervin, vice-president of the ' anior Class; Connie Shaner, sec tary of Junior Class; and Itsie ^lasterton, Treasurer of Junior Class. ,.B2 Nash is Chairman of the Rds committee. Other members of ,'ts committee are Mary Jordan, •mn Freeman, and Allan Hardin. The receiving line will be com- Posed of Bishop and Mrs. Penick, and Mrs. Stone, Miss Martha . abney Jones, Miss Davis, Mr. and Rtps. Moore, Paula Whitaker and 'niniv Timmons. All members of Orchesis, Sixty-Seven Southerners Present The OW Mississippi Alumnae Present Sideboard To School The late Sheraton walnut side board placed opposite the dining room doors is a gift of Mrs. James T. Cordon (nee Betsy London), Mrs. Fred Jerome (nee Camelia London), and the families of the late Mrs. John H. Anderson (nee Lucy London) and the late Mrs. J. Henry Fell (nee Sallie London) “in happy appreciation of Saint Mary’s.” Three of the four London sisters, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Armand London of Pittsboro, had daughters or granddaughters who attended Saint Mary’s. The late Mrs. John H. Anderson, of Ra leigh, had a daughter, Mrs. Thomas Wooten (nee Lucy Anderson), and a granddaughter, Mrs. William Byrd Traxler (nee Bettie Wooten), who attended Saint Mary’s. Mrs. Henry Galt Siegrist (nee Bettie Fell) and Mrs. Gordon D. Griffin (nee Sallie Fell), daughters of the late Mrs. J. Henry Fell, of Tren ton, N. J., also were students here. Mrs. James T. Cordon, of Raleigh, had a daughter, Mrs. S. 0. Baesel (nee Betsey Cordon) who attended Saint Mary’s. Mrs. James T. Cordon is a past president of the General Alumnae Association. She owned the side board; Mrs. Jerome and the fami lies of the other two sisters had it refinished. Orchesis and sixty-seven other true southerners of Saint Marys will present The Ole Mississippi at the annual May Day festival on May 2 at 4:00 o’clock. The scenes, honoring the May Court, will be typical of life on the Mississippi. The festival opens with that fab ulous New Orleans carni\al, the Mardi Gras. Members of (he car nival precede the May Queen, Sara Fair, clad in a white dress with a full skirt of accordian pleated tulle trimmed in lace, tucked tulle at the top, and lace sleeves. Following her comes the May Court of beautiful Southern belles, carrying parasols and wearing dresses of net and shantung in two shades of blue, the shantung loo]3ed folds of the skirt caught up with flowers. After the Southern belles have danced a graceful number, they all take their seats before a background of steamboats, carriages, and bales of ^ cotton beneath the grand white columns typical of a Louisiana plantation, where they reign as queens of the Mardi Gras. Here, in the Southern setting of old oaks ami white pillars, Nancy Bowles, maid of honor, will crown Sara Fair Queen of the May Festival. faculty and staff are invited. bulletin Holds Criticism Sessions I ^ , J be Bulletin, school literary niaga- I has begun holding weekly ses- I of criticism and discussion of v'dributions. At each session Miss Ur, li. Jones and members of the ^ ^Sazine staff receive anonymous Ij^Des of all contributions, which ! discuss one by one. This con- active criticism singles out the ! contributions for publication at the same time teaches each bow to-improve her writing. Mus Win Exciting Volleyball Match The Sigma^Mu game on April 13 was the highlight of the volleyball season at Saint Mary’s. The Mus had jireviously won one game and the Sigma’s had won one. With a score of 34-33 in the last game the Mu,’s won the volleyball tournament. The winning team was composed of Glenn Lightsey, captain, Nancy Eversman, Dill Walker, Deedee Davenport, Mary Michal, Allan Hardin, Trissy Holt and Sally Hodges. The losing team was composed of Nancy Mclver, captain, Nell Eley, Donna Bull, Nancy Smith, Timmy Timmons, Susie Nicoll, Sara Fair, Nancy Jones, Alice Bost, Anne Bynum, and Laura Travis. Mrs. Bryant officiated as referee. As You Like It Begins Rehearsals As I ou Like It will be presented by the Saint Mary’s Dramatic Club as its eonimencement play. Rehear sals have already started under Miss Davis’ direction. -Ls 1 on Like It is one of Shake speare’s best comedies. A Duke, banished by his younger brother, re tires to the forest of ^Vrden with some faithful followers. His daugh ter Rosalind remains at court with her cousin Celia. Rosalind falls in love with a young man, Orlando, a son of one of the banished Duke’s friends. Later both Rosalind and Celia are banished from the court. The rest of the play delightfully follows up the love affair of Rosalind and Orlando. Many humorous char acters, such as Touchstone, the phi losopher Jacques, and the faithful Adam, enter into the scene. The play ends happily with the wedding of Orlando and Rosalind and the dukedom restored to the banished Duke. Betty Martin plays the part of Orlando; Myra Thayer the part of Rosalind; Charlotte Cocke the part of Celia; Mary Michal the part of Touchstone; and Ellen Ozon the part of Jacques. The panorama of Mississi2ii3i scenes which follows is in honor of the May Court. First Tom Sawyer, Huckleberry Finn, and Becky I hatcher present a scene tyjiical of their childhood on the banks of the great river. Then comes “Father of the Waters,” a group interpreta tion of the majestic qualities of the Mississippi. There follow a spirited tap dance by two butlers; a waltz quadrille, that stately dance so fa- . miliar in old jilantation gatherings; and a horse-and-buggy dance, where boys and girls go on a' flirtatious afternoon ride. Then the cotton pickers come in, weary from a long days work; when they hear music tliey begin to dance. In an old Louisiana garden magnolias, daffo dils, violets, biittei'flies, and a rose awake in the spring. At last comes the magnificent finale, when all gather to pay final hoinago to the Queen and her court. The Queen of May Day is Sara hair, and her Maid of Honor is Raney Bowles. Memliers of the May Court are Myra Thayer, Eve Hargrave, Gene Overbeck, Laura Deane Mathesoii, Doris Ann Line- berger, Nancy Mclver, Sylvia Ha- mer, Barbara White, Harriet Har ris, Elizabeth Huffman, Anne Bai ley, and Barbara Carter. The music for the festival e.x- presses the gaity, stateliness, and romance which are associated with the Mississippi. It comjirises many selections. Miss Gimeron is director of May I)ay. Gene Overbook is cliairman ot choreography. Laura Deane Mathesoii is chairman of the co.s- tume committee. Louise Brand is ehainnan of the projis committee, and hhzabeth Lynn is chairman of publicity. Syb Hamer designed the sets aiid the Circle is painting them, tieorgia Moore is in charge of iiro- granis The Beacon will sell drinks and other refreshments. Sissie^^ A.llen Wins Salem Scholarship Madeline Allen, of Troy, won a competitive scholastic scholarship to Salem College valued at a thou sand dollars (four hundred for the first year and two hundred dollars foi each of the following years). After taking Scholastic Aptitude and Achievement tests, “Sissie” was interviewed by Miss I. M. Hixson, Dean of Admission. Last Friday, “Sissie” received the telegram stat ing that she had won the seholar- ship. L'i