ijv, i ‘ ‘k Ia \. ' ■ ! Ih 1 > !iii ii!' i II'iil, o»»* •^0 • ««Q »**o 6. HML PAGE (Continued From Page Three) tended school in Norway, and one of her favorite pasttimes was taking the four-year- old Hohbie boy to the school for ice skating during the morning “sports break”. Prior to her Norwegian expedition, Mrs. Hobble taught English here from 1966 to 1967 and 1968 to 1971. ^“Sgins first came to St. Marys for her job interview, she was sur- pnsed to find Chaplain and Mrs. Hobgood here. They had been high school classmates m Jacksonville, Fla.! Completing eight years work in six years, Ur. Hugg.ns received her B.A., M.A., and ^h.U. degrees in history from' Duke. Special izing in recent American and Urban His- V n ‘I’ree years at CanipbclJ College. She moved to Raleigh this year with her husband, a Methodist minister, and her two cinldren. Im impressed with the caliber of girls at St. Mary’s. They seem so eager and she^ kogL^*^"^ Dr. Dolores I.ado, chairman of the For- Department, is returning to bMJC after a year's Leave of Absence. She had retunied to her native Spain with her family and husband while he completed his F-Jlbnte as a teacher at the University of Santiago de Compostela. Her plans to attend classes at the University were disrupted be- cause Or a two-month teaching strike. Dr. Lado, who has been in the United States since 1958, noticed much change in costume since her last visit to Spain in 1964. She noted that women as well as girls dress m pants and that the car has “taken over.” Music h4s especially been affected by the U. S. influence as “'We Shall Overcome” and Little Bones” have been translated into Spanish protest songs. Work Begins ON Stagecoach By LAURA FANJOY the K V\^ork has already begun for hook. Plans have been m,ade as to ho^ be set up and also the color and Jy I WlOflrnl OiorniVq oh -Wie, IlftiK- somtonc Ur>ou>abouf Call ov d nofi Her undergraduate work was done at the University of Madrid and her graduate rvork at the University of Florida. the cover. The staff has not been . vo selected yet, but many students have teered to help. The staff should be . g soon. Committees for sections or [at have been set up with many ope" VICTORY BEND By CAVA SKARDON With the attention of many being cen tered on the wonderful sport of dating, a few girls have tried their luck at other sports on campus. Surprisingly so, tennis coach. Miss Jones, found many girls capable of making her top tennis ten. In fact so many girls qualified for the team that it has become a twenty-two girl squad. The strong est at this early point seems to be a guess for everyone, but a struggle will exist for anyone holding down the number one po sition. In the way of team siwrts, Sigma-Mu try-outs were also held that week. The art of softball was put to the test. Thirty-two girls received 100%, thus enabling them to make the team. ZARiTA hardy anyone in'erested. The first dcaj ''^ ^ ct>|' tober 23. We will be sending >»' color and design and also the formal pictures to make the dea ),op have b^n no problems as of '-ygly "'•’j that everyone will cooperate inter®*!,, we begin work. If there is gn in being on the staff and love part, let us know • • 'Y® have you I! I leadlin® ^ This week s hint concerns basketball: All you Wilt Chamberlains, Pete Maravichs and Kareem Jabbers get in shape. Basket ball is only a month away! V; Gre-

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