Newspapers / Saint Mary’s School Student … / July 24, 1941, edition 1 / Page 2
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The Belles of Saint Mary’s July 24, 1941 The Belles OF SAINT MARY’S Published every two weeks by the stu dent body of Saint Mary’s School. Editor Mary-Gene Kelly Exchange Editor . Olivia Axne Smith Faculty Adviser . . C. A. P. Moore STAFF (for this issue) Sue Harwood Ann Castleman Ann Seeley Kathryn Norman Martha Newell Ida Quintard Elizabeth Toepleman Alice Bell 1939 Member 1940 Plssocided CoUe6ialG Press N. C. Collegiate Press Association HEE HUEDEEDTH YEAE Ottawa, Kansas—This announce ment appeared in the June, 1941, number of Forth: “Saint Mary’s School and Junior College, Korth Carolina, and Saint James’ School, Maryland, tvill complete their first century next year.” One hundred consecutive years of successful education is a record of which Saint Mary’s is justly proud. One hundred years! For a whole century, graduates have loved Saint Mary’s and been proud of her prog ress. Every year has brought im provements and privileges without losing any of the valuable traditions which belong to any old school. This is Saint Mary’s Centennial Year. Students, former students, and future students, let’s join with our president and faculty in making “her hundi-edth year” her most memorable one. M.-G. K. FAITH IN THE EIGHT Little Switzerland, N. C.—The trend for years among our teachers, our books, and other influences has been to laugh at the old idea of fight ing for what one believes right; to state without re.servation that wars never did any good. Armistice Day orators have often told us how many schools and hospitals could have been built with the money spent during the World War. Now, as the United States stands on the brink of an other war, we see a coinjilete re versal of opinion. We speak of the “embattled de mocracies.” We promise “all out aid” for Britain. We knit and buy pins from various war relief socie ties. Convoys, strikes in defense in dustries, London air raids, and the draft have become vital parts of our life. It would be well to examine care fully what we are arming to defend. The American Way of Life, as it has been called, is curious, comic in ways, tragic in others, yet we believe that it is the best way today. We know that it is wrong in places, yet we prefer to change it in our own way. For years we have taken for granted our liberty to speak as we please, to read what we please, to attend schools of our choice. Now, forcibly, unpleasantly, our way of life is threatened and we are made to realize that all privileges carry responsibilities, and that we will have to defend what we believe is right. The struggle against totalitarian ism will be a long one, but if we have the faith that we are right and are fighting for what is good and beautiful, we will win. I. Q. THE BELLES OF 1941-42 By Olivia Anne Smith Eowland, N. C.—Here they are I One hundred and eighty-six Belles will be on hand for the nine months’ “get-together” which begins in Sep tember. Old Students, Session 1941-42 Elizabeth Hyman Adkins, Esther Suydam Bair, Ellis Barnard, Mary Elizabeth Bassett, Martha Ann Bat tle, Peggy Lilner Beale, Alice Peoples Bell, Hannah Townsend Bell, Paul ine Bernhardt, Margaret Bethune, Euth Waters Bond, Barnett Bran son, Grace Elaine Butler, Mildred Caison, Dorothy Campbell, Alice (Betsy) Casteen, Carolyn Cauble, Minkie Clarke, Jean Marie Clen- denin, Eva Carolyn Cobb, Olive Cranston, Elouise Mayrant Cuth- bert, Cecelia Covington Dicks, Betty Anne Drysdale, Anne Westcott Dunn, Anna Meredith Fluck, Anne Coffield Fowden, Mary Virginia Freeman, Jean Fulton, Cordelia Wills Gant, Marion Gray Glenn, Eena Micks 'Graham, Eue Wilson Guthrie. Betty Van Dyke Hess, Anne Hob son, Martha Page Hogg, Mary Wright Holland, Almeria Lykes Holmes, Nancy Travis Hunt, Edna Jane Hurt, Vi Johnson, Meredith Johnston, Elizabeth Ann Jones, Elizabeth Smedes Jones, Janet Mc Neil Kelly, Mary-Gene Kelly, Mil dred Borden Lee, Pauline Lindsay, Cora Cox Lucas, Jean Lyon, Eosa Moore Macaulay, Charlotte Ann Mahan, Elise Maidin Marshall, Jean AtkiiLson Motter, Dolores Elizabeth Mullett, Marion Kirk McLeod, Vir ginia Lee McEae, Perry MacFar- land Neblett, Mary Lucille North- cutt, Eose lYhitehead Osborne, Nancy Peters Peete, Mary Ann Pet tigrew, f’arolyn Eldred Peurifoy, Ellen .Montgomery Phlegar, Ida Jones Quintard, Elizabeth Eaborg, Mary Sophia Eedwood, Mary Cath arine Eoper, .\urelia Huger Euther- foord, Anita B. Sabiston, Suzanne Schmidt, Eleanor Winn Shelton, Olivia Anne Smith, Foy Ward Stephenson, Martha Elizabeth Strib- ling, Mary Elizabeth Swain. May French Taylor, Virginia Louise Taylor, Eleanor Eandolph Thomas, Marion Moore Thomas, Elizabeth Kabler Thomson, Eliza beth Eugenia Thorne, Sara Eliza beth Thornton, Emily Jane Thuston, Sarah Frances Tucker, Mary Eliza beth Walters, Eebecca Hilliard Ward, Carolyn Hoke West, Lucile Chandler White, Elizabeth Winslow Willcox, Alice Walton Yount. New Students, Session 1941-42 Laura Ann Abernethy, Lincoln- ton, N. C.; Elsie Palmer Adams, Charlotte, N. C.; Julia Bethell Al- friend, Tallahassee, Fla.; Mary Christiana Allen, Wrightsville Beach, N. C.; Gloria McMullan Avent, Elizabeth City, N. C.; Jean Smith Barnes, Wilson, N. C.; Vir ginia Barton, Suffolk, Va.; Jane Durham Bell, Eed Springs, N. C.; Nancy Biggs, Williamston, N. C.; Betsy Blount, Washington, N. C.; Meredith Boaze, Lexington, N. C.; Laura June Bourne, Tarboro, N. C.; Betty Lou Britt, Mount Airy, N. C.; Polly Brittingham, Fort Bragg, N. C. ; Mary Powers Broocks, Durham, N. C.; Jean Brooks, Kinston, N. C.; Beverley Clay Broun, Charleston, W. Va.; Barbara Dashill Bruff, Knoxville, Tenn.; Ann C. Brundage, Tryon, N. C.; Catherine Marston Bunn, Henderson, N. C.; Mary de- Eossett Burns, Fayetteville, N. C.; Olive Camp, Franklin, Va.; Lillian Staten Cannon, Charlotte, N. C.; Marion Gail Castellow, Windsor, N. C.; Julia Wright Clark, Greens boro, N. C.; Sarah Burgess Clark son, Charlotte, N. C.; Patricia Louise Coder, Louisville, Ky.; Mary Ann Cooper, Henderson, N. C.; Nancy MacEae Correll, Penns Grove, N. J.; Jane Cole Council, Wananish, N. C.; Mary Ann Crook, Baltimore, Md. Sarah Nelson Dawson, Cramerton, N. C.; Dorothy Jean DeVore, Jack sonville, Fla.; Caroline Banks Dial, Columbia, S. C.; Mary Gresham Dickey, Oxford, Pa.; Anne Talbott Dickson, Virginia Beach, Va.; Alice Walker Dillard, Greensboro, N. C.; Mary Ann Dixon, San Juan, P. E., and Ealeigh, N. C.; Dilys G. Ed munds, Greensboro, N. C.; Louise Freeman Eggleston, Norfolk, Va.; Essie Bryce Evans, Forksville, Va.; Jane Carlton Evans, Washington, D. C.; Josephine Flanagan, Green ville, N. C.; Ann Temple Garnett, Eichmond, Va.; Mary Charles God win, Williamston, N. C.; Louise Toler Gower, Eocky IMouiit, N. C.; Evelyn Lucile Grant, Knoxville, Tenn. Elizabeth Hackney, Wilson, N. C.; Eveleth Hale, Tampa, Fla.; Lucy Landis Hancock, Oxford, N. C.; Mary Virginia Hart, Chatham, Va.; -Vnn Thurmond Helfenstein, Fred erick, Md.; ilarv Branch Hender son, Williamsburg, Va.; Josejihinc E. Henrv, Eockinghani, N. C.; .M aide Osgood DcLand Hodges, Sumter, S. (^.; Lillian Vaughan Jenkins, Goldsboro, N. C.; Louise Hunter Jones, Norfolk, Va.; Shields Daughtridge Jones, Eocky Mount. N. C.; ilarguerit(> Ilarvcy La- Eogue, Kinston, N. C.; IMargaret Andrews Linton, Charlottesville, Va.; Caroline Moncure Long, Garys- biirg, N. C.; Laurie Fleming Lucas, Greensboro, N. C.; Shirley Lytle, IVeirsdale, Fla.; Anne Wingate MacEae, Bel Aii’, Md.; Virginia Brooks Manry, Courtland, Va.; Mai'y Curtis Martin, Clearwater, Fla.; Eacliel Massey, Angler, N. C.; Constance Grace Maer, Neivark, Dela.; Gloria Gray Medlin, Aber deen, N. C.; Elizabeth Lewis Mi- chaux, Goldsboro, N. C.; Priscilla Lee Mitchell, Greensboro, N. C.; Jane G. Moore, Southern Pines, N. C.; Caroline Legare Morrison, Lancaster, S. C. Caroline Myers, Charlotte, N. C.; Frances Field McDavid, Columbia, S. C.; Ann Elizabeth McKay, Fay etteville, N. C.; Sarah Louise Mc Kinley, Birmingham, Ala.; Pauline Hethorn McNeny, Henderson, N. C.; Gone Vance Neff, Abingdon, Va.; Nancy Eeed Norton, Wilmington, N. C.; Eobena Ellen Oast, Ports mouth, Va.; Valeria Virginia Olive, Lexington, N. C.; Margaret An drews Osborn, Welch, W. Va.; Pa tricia Farr Pagen, New York, N. Y.; Elizabeth Jordan Pender, Norfolk, Va.; Mary Brooks Popkins, Lees burg, Va.; Betty Pott, Petersburg, Va.; Anne Elizabeth Pridgen, Gainesville, Fla.; Antoinette Lyman Quincy, Sumter, S. C.; Daphne Eichardson, Fayetteville, N. C.; Helen Cruikshank Eiley, Fort Bliss, Texas; Muriel Craven Eobinson, Eichmond, Va.; Ceevah Miriam Eosenthal, Lynchburg, Va.; Pattie Joaline Eoss, Clinton, N. C.; Nelle Eousseau, North Wilkesboro, N. C.; Elizabeth Waddell Eoyall, Golds boro, N. C.; Katherine Baker Bus sell, Jacksonville, Fla. Sally Sanborn, Goldsboro, N. C.; Jessie Dale Sayler, Washington, D. C.; Euth Vail Selby, Edenton, N. C.; Margaret Spencer Shackel ford, Martinsville, Va.; Shirley Shepherd, Spartanburg, S. C.; Valadon Cowling Shepherd, Char lottesville, Va.; Jane Elliot Sloan, Charlotte, N. C.; Lydia Lewis Smith, Eichmond, Va.; Joan Blount Stell, Washington, N. C.; Frances Lee Stevens, Eocky Mount, N. C.; Virginia Della Stockard, Graham, N. C.; Margaret Andrews Stone, Greensboro, N. C.; Anne Barrus Stough, Kinston, N. C.; Arolyn Elizabeth Sugg, Greenville, N. C.; Euth BoAvman Suthon, Baton Eouge, La.; Jane Allensworth Taj' lor. South Boston, Va.; Mary Lucile Thomas, Wilson, N. C.; Mary Louise Thomson; Phyllis Sherlock Thorp, Pelham Manor, N. Y.; Mary Arden Tucker, Warrenton, N. C. Chariot Waller, Morganfield, Kyd Lillian Manoah West, Kinston, N. C.; Nei'a Bidgood Whitaker, Kinston, N. C.; Jane Dickson Wide- man, Washington, D. C.; Margaret Williams, Asheville, N. C.; Flora H u n t e r Williamson, Memphis, Tcnn.; Betty Winslow, Hertford, N. C.; Dora Winters, Washington, D. C.; Erin Tuttle Woodall, War renton, N. C.; Mary Virginia Wood ard. Eocky Dlount, N. C.; Margaret Ervin Yount, Hickory, N. C.; Meta Baldwin Young, Albany, Ga.; Sarah Anderson Zimmerman, Siiartanburg, S. C. New Girls, Attention! Just ® slight hint as to ivhat you’ll need most in your new life at Sainl Mary’s, I’ll mention the three most important items: (1) skirts and SAveaters, (2) saddle shoes, and (3) skirts and SAveaters. NE-WS NOTE The engagement of Miss Evelyt* Burbank (Honey) Peck to Edgar Vaughn BoatAvright, Jr., son . Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Vaughn Boat' Avright, of Eeidsville, is announced by her mother, Mrs. E. Vose Pecki of Thomasville, Ga. Miss Peck at' | tended Saint Mary’s Junior Cot' lege and Sweet Briar College. Boatwright is associated Avitli tlE E. V. Webb Tobacco CompanV’ Kinston.
Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper
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July 24, 1941, edition 1
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