958
October 17, 1958
BELLES OF ST. MARY’S
SENIOR SAINTS
Saint’s Sallies
DAXA BORDEN
ie Goldsboro, N. C.
j Hair: Blonde.
Eyes: Green.
s. ■^*'vays Seen: Tap dancing on the
seventh floor.
y ^^ways Heard: ARRGGH!
1- Peeve: Ashes in my pin tray.
Pavorite Frat: DKE.
^wibition: Litter bug.
u obby: Summer reading.
*^opia: River Styx.
BETSY BRODIE
Town: Scotland Neck, N. C.
Hair: Brown.
Eyes: Brown.
Always Seen: Eating.
Always Heard: What did you say?
Pet Peeve: No phone calls.
Favorite Frat: All of them.
Ambition: ?
Hobby: Sacking.
Utopia: U.N.C.
MARGARET BOMTEN
^own: Raleigh, N. C.
Hair: Brown.
yes: Two black sockets.
•^I'W'ays Seen: Talking.
• bvay.s Heard: “How do you spell?"
avorite Frat: Don’t know.
Peeve: Giggling.
^bition: To get to New York
Thanksgiving.
Hobby: Studying (?) (?)
*-opia: Spelling Bee.
SALLY BRUCE
Town: Greensboro, N. C.
Hair: Streaky Blonde.
Eyes: Faded blue.
Always Seen: With a coke.
Alv/ays Heard: Oh, great!
Pet Peeve: A Squelch.
Favorite Frat: KA
Ambition : To go to Duke
Hobby: Bowling??
Utopia: A little white cottage with a
picket fence.
ELISE BRICE
^"Wn: Spartanburg, S. 0.
air: Brown,
yes: Red-rimmed.
^’^ays Seen: At Duke.
'yays Heard: Mary Jane, we’ve got
to clean up this room tonight.
®t Peeve: Silly people and sweet
Potatoes.
avorite Prat: ATO.
•Pbition: Duke over U.N.C.
Hobby: Sewing?!?
topia: My Blue Heaven.
ELEANOR BULLUCK
Town: Rocky Mount, N. C.
Hair: Stringy.
Eyes: Closed.
Pet Peeve: Her roommate.
Favorite Frat: M.P.A.
Always Seen: Arabesquing around the
campus.
Always Heard: Who’s got the phiso-
hex.
Ambition: To be a regular member of
the choir.
Hobby: Collecting cigarette butts.
Utopia: University of Kernersville.
Sigma? - Mu?
an your mother, sister, aunt, or
a lu H'ond of yours was a Sigma or
Wo y°'^' to be what they
h^oase tell us and then maybe
can be one too.”
ti over here. None of my rela-
j, or close friends came here. I’m
1 onusual, I’m lost. Anyhow,
^ ad no preference—of course, Hu
. hs easier to spell. But I said noth-
alf meeting. I only care
iun^v Soing to bed by the time hall
*cctuig is held. The teams are sup-
’’^od to have tied for the last two
years anyhow, so it’s probably all
It’s about a week or two after
that meeting now. I still don’t care
much about athletics. Our coun
selors told us that everyone comes
!and wakes us up about 12:3() at
night anyhow, and I have no inten
tion of being awakened at that hour
for anything. I have 8:30 classes
every day. I’ll just neuter.
Here it is almost 9:30, and all
I’ve done all night is talk ^^d write
letters. I’ll just put my Do Aot
up and study after study hall. I
don’t have much to do anyhow
not very much. Good Mght! \Jhat
is that noise? Some people just have
Blue skies, tinted leaves, and
cool weather—^these are the signs
of autumn. With the arrival of
autumn come football games, Ger
mans, and Homecoming weekends
at various colleges.
In Chapel Hill for the North
Carolina-South Carolina game and
fraternity parties over the week
end of October 10, 11, and 12 wmre
many Saint Mary’s girls. Watching
the two teams battle w’ere Becky
Roberson, Joyce Batchelor, Bettie
Ann Whitehurst, Barbara Clarke,
Sally Blackmon, Lois Lynch, Sara
Jane Griffin, Lucretia do Loach,
Alartha Ellen Miller, Sara McAIil-
lan, Dana Borden, Georgia Cobb,
Alary Richard Chambers, Jane
Bracewell, Susan Poe, Edith Keller-
man, Connie Fisher, and Alebane
Dowd. Seen afterwards at the many
Fraternity Houses were Gayle
Clark, Eleanor How'ard, Julia Ann
Hunt, Debby Parrott, Jackie Polk,
Diane Blanton, Betty Copeland,
Octavia Phillips, Catherine Saw’yer,
Memrie IMosier, Corty Creech, Jane
Wright, Emmy Davis, Aladge
Gregory, Alargaret Ruffin, and
Carol Ann Tadlock. Everyone
agreed the wmek-end w'as a real
blast!
Hampton-Sydney claimed its
share of Saint Mary’s Belles the
same week-end. Attending Home
coming festivities were Anne Bost-
wick, Dorothy Ewdng, and Martha
Taylor.
Among those traveling by chart
ered bus to Winston Salem for the
Wake Forest-State game were Pat
Villas and Penny Dunn.
In nearby Durham for the Duke-
Baylor game and Homecoming were
Marty Young, Eleanor Bulluck,
Eleanor Ramsey, Jeanie Glover,
Beverly Bunn, Elise Brice, and Kit
AIcLeod.
This week-end, October 17, 18,
and 19 will have Carolina Home
coming on its agenda. The football
game between Carolina and Alary-
land will be the highlight of the
week-end, but fraternity parties
no consideration for anyone. All
this rot about being quiet at certain
times—sounds like a riot. It’s prob
ably seniors and not a one of them
will be campused.
It sounds as if we’re being raided.
I’ve had enough of this. I’m hiding
in the closet. Nobody’s going to
find me. They’re here and every
one’s screaming. Must be carrying
everyone off. I’m not budging from
this closet. Alan—nobody’s going
to get me. Some of them are sing
ing “When the Saints Go Alarching
In.” They don’t sound much like
Saints. They’re tramping.
Well, it’s quieted down some now
—think I’ll invesitigate. Hey! Where
is everybody? Hey—isn’t anyone
here? Goodness. I better go down
stairs. Sounds as if there’s some
mob outside. Hey—who are you?
What’s happened? Sigmas and AIus.
Go where? But I don’t know what
I am. All right. I’ll pull for the AIu
side. I’m not about to wear some
silly hat to breakfast. If the Mus
lose I’ll be a Sigma. There are some
advantages to hiding- Who me?
Scared? Ha.
,will take their accustomed place on
the agenda also. A wonderful time
is expected by all!
Memrie Moiser, Corty Creech,
Jane Wright, Emmy Davis, Nancy
Sjostrom, Gayle Clark, Debby Par
rott, Betty Copeland, Octavia Phil
lips, Becky Roberson, Pat Exum,
Harriett Huston, Alary Richard
Chambers, Susan Keel, Martha El
len Aliller, Sara AIcAIillan, Patricia
Perkins, Agnes Lawler, Linda Vick,
and Joan Williams are among the
many Saint Alary’s girls at the
game.
At the V. P. I. for Fall Formals
were Jo Sinith and Jackie Baublitz,
while visiting in Norfolk, Virginia,
for the Navy-Tulane game was
Eleanor Howard. Georgia Cobb
and Jane Gray made the long jour
ney to Washington & Lee for the
week-end, and not far from them
at Virginia Episcopal School was
Charlotte Thorn.
Everyone is eagerly looking
forward to the rest of the football
season, but remember studying
come before pleasure, girls! “Good
luck.”
r
It Was Profitable !
Summertime proved to be profit
able for many St. Alary’s alumnae.
Sally Bames (’58) is now working
for “Fortune” Magazine in New
York. Chee Davis (’58) who is also
in New York, has secured a theatri
cal position. She is training with a
dance troupe that plans to tour
Europe entertaining the U.S. Armed
F orces.
Alarriage-niinded Belles were
many. Caroline Cobb (’58) married
Thomas Whitehead on August 6 in
Goldsboro. Helen Baker, Com.
( 58), and Robert Wallace were
married in Smithfield on June 28
Harriet McDaniel (ex. ’59) married
Robert Wright in Atlanta on Alav
31. “Babs” Mace, com. (’58), ami
Byron Campbell were married Aug
ust 16, in Jacksonville, Fla.
Among the 184 girls who pledged
sororities at U.N.C. on October 1
were 33 St. Alary’s alumnae.
Alpha Delta Pi: Peggy Costner,
Carol Crumpler, Florence AIcGow-
an, Margie Reid, Janice Sutton.
Alpha Gamixia Delta: Alargaret
Ciowson, Catherine Rakestraw.
Chi Omega: Jessie Allen, Jane
Brady, Annie Gray Calhoun, Betty
Covington, Lou Johnson, Dickie
Robinson, Anno Rountree.
Delta Delta Delta: Nancy At
kinson, Alarie Page Barnes, Peppy
Currie, Emeline Elmore, Anne Tay-
loe, Bard Gatling, Becky Walters.
Kappa Delta: Peggy Hamme,
Sybil Mathis, Julia Scott.
Kappa Kappa Gamma: Mary
Hannah Finch, Charlotte Hunt,
Anne Shepard, Alarianna Sink, Kit
Tiederman, Betty Van Wagoner.
Pi Beta Phi: Alary Bailey.
Two St. Alarians received their
rings. Sarah Ellen White met John
Dykers at Camp Alorehead where
they were both counselors this sum
mer. They are to be married Dec
ember 22, in Kinston. Doris Price
became engaged to Hayden Hurley
soon after graduation last year.