Newspapers / Saint Mary’s School Student … / Oct. 4, 1940, edition 1 / Page 1
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iviai?y ibUiiiKJi Liui'y i i( SIGMA-MU PARTY OCTOBER 12 Belles OF SAINT MARY’S CAROLINA-T. C. U. GAME OCTOBER 12 Vol. IV, No. 2 RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA October 4, 1940 Mary Pride Cruikshank To Be Married In School Chapel the late Mr. Cruikshank, and -M.r - , Franklin St. Clair Clark, son of -Irs. Franklin Clark, of Fayetteville, be married in the Saint Mary^ ue marnea in tne oaint; ivia ^apel at eight-thirty o’clock Saturday evening, October 5. s on ^ •’Uikshank will be given in mar by lier brother, Mr. Ernest C '•■uikshank, Jr. Wedding reception given by Mrs. and Mr. Herbert Bird, vio ‘^nist - will play for the occasion. ■Approved Football Schedule For 1940-41 Session ^—Furman at W. Forest 0 cober 12—Carolina-T. C. U. Oet r ^ 19—Carolina at State Oot°i 26—Duke at Wake Forest ° 26—Tulane at Carolina member 2—Ga. Tech at Duke ®Riber 2—Furman at State ^ovemi. Game) ^ov 9—Davidson at Duke 1 9—W. Forest at State 16—Duke at Carolina Jlo ®Jnber 23—State at Duke ®mber 30—Pitt at Duke ^l^^tudents ?4ibe g^Kies with parents. For the may go to any of the 'b '*es m Raleigh, students may go n^j, otu'aciii-io & )v, ’hP® of ten with a school chap- ^cIiqqi out-of-Raleigh games, the tWejjj "'^11 arrange y Or more girls sign up. for buses if Adkins, O’Herron, Hurt Lead Classes; Raleigh Music Series Remaining Honor Conncil Members Chosen ^ill Become Bride of Franklin Clark On October 6 Kirby Elected President Day- Students Lamb and Hood Senior Repre sentatives Miss Mary Pride Cruikshank, ^soghter of Mrs. Ernest Cruikshank j, The Right Reverend Edwin A. ®nick and the Reverend Henry clix Kloman will officiate. Miss ive Cruikshank, sister of the bride, be maid of honor, and Mrs. , i-iiest Cruikshank, Jr., matron of oiior. Hiss Cruikshank has chosen following as bridesmaids: the _isses Kate Spruill; Annie Tucker, p Washington, D. C.; Dorothy of Fayetteville, sister of the -®groom; and Mrs. James Queen, Waynesville. Duncan DeVane g ^ serve as best man for Mr. Clark, g^'t^fke following as ushers: Mr. Dameron, Mr. George London, ■ *'• William Marsh, Mr. Joe Pem- j®Ron, Hr. William Lon on, Mr. 8ni ^ Reynolds, Mr. Welch Jordan, ^ d Hr. Herbert Willingham. Miss Cruikshank in the Saint parlor for the bridal party Members of the Junior, Sopho more, and Freshman classes chose their student leaders in the most important elections of the fall, held this week at Saint Mary s. The Junior class unanimously elected Elizabeth Adkins, of Richmond Vir ginia, as President. Nancy O Her ron, of Charlotte, N. C., will head the Sophomore class, and Jane Hurt, Scottsboro, Alabama, will serve as Freshman President. In a meeting earlier in the week Katherine Fleming, of Wilson, N. C., was elected Vice-President ot the Senior class and Janice Fitz gerald, of Smithfield, N. C., Secre tary-Treasurer. , , -r> Katherine Kirby -wull lead the Day Students in the coming year. She has announced as her main elec tive the development of more school spirit among the Day Students. Adkins, O’Herron, and Hurt have been at Saint Mary’s for two years and have constantly taken part in school activities. With past expe rience and proven ability these Presidents should successfully guide their classes. , Fitzgerald and Fleming, Senior officers, have both served as Hall Presidents. Fitzgerald is a certih- cate student in piano. Both girls are outstanding in scholarship. Newly elected Honor Council members to represent the Junior class are Olivia Ann Smith, of Row land, N. C., and Betty Willcox, of Norfolk, Va. Mary Love, of Bur lington, N. C., will be the only underclassman representative. Gale Lamb, of Pasadena, Calif., and Helen Ford, of Martinsville, Va., will serve as Senior Honor Council members for the coming year. Smith and Willcox, both newcom ers to Saint Mary’s, have readily proved their popularity among the students and have already made a place for themselves in the life of the school. Betty Willcox in Nor folk had an outstanding reputation as President of her High School stu dent body. Both girls have had past experience in student govern ment work and should prove capable representatives for their classes. Gale Lamb, Helen Ford, and Mary Love are all second-year stu dents at Saint Mary’s, and were out standing in campus activities last year. As members of the Honor Coun cil, these girls have undertaken highly responsible positions, for the Honor Council representatives have general supervision of the workings of the Student Government Associa tion. guests will immediately follow pj®^?®remony. Mr. Donald Peery, THE “PINKIES” MAKE THEIR BOW The music faculty will give you one if you so much as play chop sticks, but in order really to deserve it you must not only play chopsticks but you must also be able to add, divide, figure dates, and sign your name. So you see, to possess a prac tice slip is quite an achievement, io hand one in adequately and honestly filled out is a milestone in your ca reer, a victory over the temptations of “little-storing” when you should be counting “ta-dum” W the music building, a triumph over the fiendisU little voice that begs you to count forty-five minutes as a hour. Indeed, a practice slip is a char acter-builder as well as a nuisance. And if you don’t think it has a per sonality all its own, watch the ec static gleam in the haggard eye of a “certificate” student as she tenderly adds up seven hundred and twenty- five minutes and discovers that it totals twelve hours and With a defiant stride she dashes to the music building, smiling warm y on all her fellow musicians, and giv ing a “so there, too!” shake of her head, she deposits “Pinkie in Mr. Music-Lovers of State to Hear Pine Music Through the efforts of the Raleigh Civic Music Association and the Raleigh AVoman’s Club, two concert series will present the finest group of artists ever to appear in the South. The Civic Music Association Con certs, which will be attended by the entire student body of Saint Mary’s, feature as the outstanding event of the year the appearance of Lily Pons, diminutive coloratura soprano of the Metropolitan. The Cleveland Symphony Orchestra under the able direction of Artur Rodzinski will be presented in a varied program of symphonic selections. Other artists of this series will be : Artur Rubensteiii, one of the world’s greatest pianist, and Jan Kiepura. The concluding presentation will be the spectacular new program of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. Broughton’s gleaming brass slot, marked, of all things, “mail.” And Mr. Broughton, on the other side of the door, sits watching the little pink slips fall as leaves in an autumn wind. Will he have time on his hands! ?! The concerts to be presented under the auspices of the Raleigh Woman’s Club feature an equally varied group of artists, including Alexander Kip- nis, renowned Metropolitan Opera Company basso, and Hilda Regianni, supported by an all-star cast, in “The Barber of Seville,” and Allan Jones. Rosalyn Tureck, brilliant young American pianist, will appear on the same program with the Strad- ivarius Quartette. The Rochester Philharmonic Orchestra, under the direction of Jose Iturbi, will be the final program of this series. But back to Cecilia Certificate Student. The moral support of that extra five minutes carries her home on winged feet. But oh, the strange ness of her room! Something is missing. The rugs are straight, the beds in place; her Eleven British Writers is still pressing the chrysan themum she got at the game. With a feeling of strangeness she turns to the mirror—that’s the trouble. The mirror has lost its artistic appear ance. Dear “Pinkie” has gone to Mr. Broughton, and the mirror is cold and undecorated. She must needs reconcile herself to the lonely company of her roommate until next music lesson when she will acquire “Pinkie, Jr.” In one short week the practice slip has become a Saint Mary’s institu tion. Margaret Kitchin Is New President of Y. P. S. L. The Y. P. S. L. Council unani mously elected Margaret Kitchin as president of the Young People’s Service League of Saint Mary’s on September 19. Margaret will fill the vacancy left by Marie Watters, who did not return to school this year. Another recently elected officer of the Y. P. S. L. is Martha Battle, vice-president. Marjorie Stenhouse, secretary of the League, was elected last spring. Other members of the Y. P. S. L. Council include: Page Marshall, Gray Woodard, Helen Ford, Adelaide Curtis, Aurelia Ruth erford, Langhorne Alexander, and Anne Hobson. Every Saint Mary’s student is a member of the League itself.
Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper
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Oct. 4, 1940, edition 1
1
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