Newspapers / Saint Mary’s School Student … / Sept. 22, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
September 22, 1950 The Belles of Saint Mary’s Saint Sallies ^Velcome, welcome, welcome!!!. . . both the old and the new . . . j'gain -we bring to you the inside 'lie on all the doings at Saint July’s (all of the dirt, that is!!)... oaint Mary’s dehs . . . We all con- gfatulate our new debutantes . . . ^ ftiong the gilds who “came out” '(ere Frances Williams, Evelyn Oet- ihger, Louise MilliJcen, Buttercup •, ^Quirk, Catherine BiJcle, Caro. *ae Cobey, Ann Green, Kit Armis- iad, Pranky Allen, Juliet Ful- Fum, Margaret Dunn, M azi e °}nckland, Becky Wall, and Caro- *ae Bisanar . . . 'dhe things we did last summer ' ■ • Connie Barnes will gladly tell ^®ii all about her night in Mexico ■ • • Laura Chapman taught Japan- to the Alaskans, which she learn- ^ fi'om Sonoko Yamamoto . . . ^Peaking of teaching. Ginger Mow- between times with her Villa- yi’a man, taught swimming at ade Mecum . . . Spooner Harrison *id Grace Gordon were also on the staff . . . Joan McCutcheon .'ll Barbara Dixon had a wonderful Je at the “Hill” . . . Julia Steed j i}e back from summer school with j b’H • . . Kay Daniels is also sport- jjS a pin. SAE, no less . . . Nancy j^aiasoii, taught little ones how to their teeth during the sum- vj! • • . /I. Owens was a lab tech- ‘'"an iu “beautiful, beautiful Wil Oh, A. J., how could you *on” technical ?' ^ ^ding suntan but not fading . . . Lois Ferry is still If about her gay times at Hags • . . Stella Cobbs re,ioicod be cause medical school did not last all summer ... At the Blowing Rock Horse Show were Ann Stew art, Alice Jones, and Sally Dalton . . . Helen Saunders enjoyed many rare parties in Camden, S. C. . . . Lynn Littleton is still reminiscing about that June houseparty . . . Alice May received a long distance telephone call from Clemson on her first night at school . . . Bootie Fen ton enjoyed dating a Citadel man . . . Caroline Colby won’t say where she went, but we know that she didn’t stay in Louisburg . . . Mac MacNair is ready to start a More- head City cluh . . . Aliscellaneous . . . Ann Miles has taken up knitting as a hobby . . . Fat Boesser is happy that S.M.S. and State are in the same town . . . Ann Fatterson and Anna Bedding have already started to disrupt hall meetings . . . Toni Rowe has been getting letter after letter from a certain Sigma Hu from Purdue that she met up Horth this summer . . . Bimbo Farshley is frantic about her poetry . . . Anne Fenton is reported to be crazy about water skiing . . . Barbara Clark has started a new Indian tribe, “Barbara’s Black Feet Braves” . . . Martha DeHart has acquired a new love . . . Great Expectations . . . The Caro lina-State game. We can dream, can’t we? . . . Summer reading tests for Seniors . . . The Old Girl-Hew Girl Party... Chapel Hill weekends . . . Classes . . . Mail . . . Steak din ners in the dining room . . . Thanks giving and Christmas ... So long for now . . . So Easy Moving To SMS Just Pack Your Whole House |)f„ lilies, and more lines were f)]il'"'I'eally all that welcomed the *"’i'ivals and much too confused '^'"iiers to Saint Mary’s on klon- kf\ I’lveryone should have regis- ' but naturally there hh' ® 'vays a few late and frantic V^yls. At 12:45 LaHelle Ed- |(j' ® Was seen madly pleading with ^usser please to register her. Sii’lS) Bouise Brend and liidduX’ strolled in about the h(,ij j® of the afternoon and wond- hopelessly Avhy the registration Wasn’t open. Sllj only were old and new girls kg ^ llie balls, but men were Avork- I '“'S f lo deliver the unend- Itfi '^tboxes, dress bags, and lieaAy to their assigned rooms, '“"kp, ^ and baby sisters were on- kg^, all afternoon while the col- bigli school girls tried to their furniture and put kjfQ .ike much disarranged clothes. kgj.A". West Rock were sadly con- h atiiig the “cubbyholes” labeled and those awful double (I V*’ already that tradition- ■'ds kock spirit was present, kg Smedes were joyously look- kojj, their large and spacious t’kjrg i"'kile the girls from Holt dis- V „ .pleasure at finally being in In dorm. 1 general confusion S V,- Sl''l® went to bed Mon- „!^kt tired and bappy to be i Saint Mary’s. To Eat? Wear? Or Kill Thafs The Question Do .vou know what an aardvaidc is? Welt, don’t feel Ignorant if .A'ou don’t, because not man.v f)eo- ])le do. Just to prove it, here are some of the answers received when the following intelligent Saint Mar.v’s girls Avere asked, “If .vou had an aardvark, Avhat Avonld yon do Avith it ?” Emil.A^ Adams said that she Avonld eat it, and A. J. OAvens claimed she Avonld taetfull.v dis pose of it the Ava.v she nsnall.v dis poses of things. Chris McKim re plied, “I’d just look at it, I guess.” Geriw Dickinson Avonld ])rob- abh" kill it, because it sounds so horrible, Avhile Gloria Gilmore Avould Avear it. Tinim.y Timmons said, “I Avonld give it to Miss Jones,” but Becky Wall said, “1 Avould look into it.” When Spoon er Harrison Avas asked this ridicu lous question she ansAvered, “1 Avould tie it up in a big fancy package and send it to Bill.” Sue Summervill said, “I Avoidd give it to m.A' mother, and she Avould probably hit me Avith it.” Anne Rixey said that she Avould give it aAva.y but quick, and Mazie Strickland suggested that she give it to Jake for a birthday present. Mr. AVebster says that an aard- Give Me Five Minutes More In These Lines And I’ll Drop “Whoever heard of having to stand iu so many lines!” said a freshman to a sophomore. All the neAv and old girls seemed rather uj)- set the first feAV days of school be cause they spent all their time wait ing in line. First of all, everyone had to regis ter in the parlor on arrival, and since most of the girls arrived about the same time, there Avas quite a long line around noon time Monday. As soon as each girl received a little pink registration card and tAvo sheets of directions to guide her through the Aveek, she was told to go to the study hall and find out Avhere she Avas staying. Of course, it Avas exciting to everyone to find out Avhere they Avere staying, but Avhen they entered study hall and saAV hoAV long that line Avas, they began to lose a little of their enthu siasm. Every face looked sad and every voice sounded depressed. Seniors are the girls Avith privi leges, but no senior seemed to con sider it a privilege to go straight from the study hall line to another line in the home economics room and get her schedule made out. There were hours and hours of more waiting. Most of the girls had time to go .hack to their rooms and un pack while somebody saved their place in line. Within the next few day the juniors, sophomores and freshmen Avaited to make out their schedules also. For the time being everybod.y is relieved to think that thc,y Avon’t luiA^e to Avait in any more linos, but the year isn’t over ,yet. There really is a future in having to stand in line, hoAvcA'er, because one certainly has a chance to get to knoAv the j)co- ])le around better. IIoAvever, every bad thing must come to an end-k- even a line! Are You Looking For A Saint Mary’s Girl? Try The Library Being back at school very often means heing back in the library to all old girls. Before long the ncAv girls too Avill realize Avhat a' big j>art the library and its equipment play in the studies at Saint Mary’s. Most of the neAV girls have al- read.y been introduced to Mrs. BroAvn and Mrs. Hauser for their library tours, and they may knoAV more about the library’s ncAv gad gets aiid conveniences than the old girls do. The first thing one sees upon entering is a chart of the ar rangement in the library. Every thing is placed and labeled in just the correct places on the sketch. Underneath is a list Avith the num bers and tyi)es of books in the li brary to correspond Avith the num bers of the shelves on the chart. Certainly this cleA’er chart arrange ment Avill be a hel])ful introduction to the Saint Mary’s library. The next thing of special interest to be noticed on a tour is the “avcI- come to Raleigh” bulletin board. This is attractively arrang(>d on a nui]) of tlie city. Picture postcards shoAV places you Avill Avant to get acquainted Avitli in the proper lo cations on the map. Then too, there Avill be ncAV books in the trough in the central part of the reference room in front of the desk. Mrs. BroAvn is very interested in knoAving Avhat noAV books the girls Avould like to have and is ahvays ready for suggestions. The library is there for the con venience of the girls, and Mrs. BroAvn and Mrs. Hauser are there to help one make use of it. It can be used for studying or just for fun. Love consists in this: that two solitudes protect and touch and greet each other.—R. M. Rilke. vark is an animal that lives in Africa and eats termites as a pas time. Add another very useful Avord to your ever increasing vo cabulary. Welcome All Of You To The SMS We Love Welcome to all tlie ucav girls and Avelcome back to all the old. Put your feet in a bucket of Avater, your head on a i)illoAV and take a rest Avith a box of aspirin in your hand. (Iness everybody’s glad to get her registration over. Witli four lines to stand in, it gets kind of tiresome —but thiidi of all the lines the stu dents at Carolina (RAII) baA-e to stand in. And don’t think you’re the only one to have troubles. Everyone lias to atteni|)t decorat ing her room. Pictures cover the scotch ta])(> and holes, ami lamps Idde the jilaster of Avhieh the Avail is void. The blue rugs that you’ve had hefore don’t go too well with the green Avails, and last year’s cur tains are a little faded, but they just have to do. Of course there’s a little mix-up about room.s — esjiecially in the Rocks. Hocks—just like living in a caA'c. Really, all the Rock girls feel like cave Avomen trying to jiloAv through the obstacles piled in their roonis. Everyone has difiiculty in trying to find somcAvhere to put her clothes and othei' iu:ccssary equii)inent. Hoav take Smedes for instance— Avhy can’t the Rocks have some of their room? It isn’t Fair! But then Third Smedes has three flights of steps to run up and doAvn. (Take advantage of ye old banisters.) Guess there’re lots of other little l)robloms everybody’s running into but have a cheery year. CALEHDAR OF EVEHTS September 2;i a.m. Lunebeon with Big Sisters September 28 p.m. Old Gii'1-Hew Girl Barty (parlor) September 24 ■ Canterbury and YWCA picnic (gym)
Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 22, 1950, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75