l,-r
The Belles of Saint Mary’s
May 18, 19®^
Saint Mary’s Dramatic Club
Will Give 'Merchant Of Venice'
Sophomores Plan
Class Day Program
Saint Mary’s Dramatic Club, di
rected by Miss Florence C. Davis,
will present The Merchant of Ven
ice as the commencement play June
1 at 8:15 p.m.
The cast is as follows: the Duke
of Venice played by Mary Ann
Eaddy; Suitors to Portia and the
Prince of Morocco, Emilie Adams;
the Prince of xVrragon, Vicki Sted-
man; a Merchant of Venice, An
tonio, Elizabeth Eooe; Antonio’s
friend, Bassanio, suitor to Portia,
Juliet Fulghum; friends of Antonio
and Bassanio are Salanio, Nancy
Haltom; Salarino, Pat Tankard;
Gratiano, Nancy Dawson.
Suzanne Eobinson will play Lo
renzo, Jessica’s lover ; Helen Setzer
will play Shylock, a rich Jew; AI. A.
Hodges, a Jewish friend of Shylock;
Mary Alichal, servant to Shylock,
and the clown Launcelot Gobbo;
Sally Hackney, father of Launcelot
or old Gobbo; Edith Cross and Jane
Maddrey will play Balthaser and
Stephano, respectively.
A rich heiress, Portia, Katherine
Armistead; her waiting maid, Neris-
sa, Jean Summerlin; daughter to
Shylock, court of Justice, Virginia
Gilliam; Clerk, Florence Swindell.
The scenes are Venice and Bel
mont. The time is the fifteenth cen-
Denham Speaks To
Canterbury Club
Saint Alary’s Canterbury Club
met Alay 13 in the hut for a picnic
supper. John Denham, of the Uni
versity of North Carolina, was the
speaker. Air. Denham spoke on the
Kegional Canterbury Commission
and its plans for the future. He
also talked about the leadership con
ference and the annual Canterbury
retreat. Assisting him was Frances
Drane, a former Saint Mary’s stu
dent.
Saint Alary’s Canterbury Club
will meet in the hut Alay 20 with
the Ealeigh Canterbury Club, com
posed of the clubs from State, Peace,
and Meredith. Mr. John Carter,
from the Church of the Good Shep
herd, will accompany the Ealeigh
Canterbury Club to Saint Alary’s.
The Eev. Peter Katt, rector of Saint
Saviour’s Episcopal Church, will
speak on church work in the sum
mer.
The sophomore class will present
its annual class day activities in the
auditorium Saturday morning, June
2, at ten-thirty.
The program will begin with the
welcome by Sally Dalton, president
. of the class. After the Alma Mater
is sung, Laura Alatheson, secretary
of the class, will call the roll. After
Beaufoi’t Law reads the class prayer,
and Clairene Harris reads the class
poem, the class history, the class
prophecy, and the last will and testa
ment will be read. Sally Dalton
will then present Dr. Stone a gift
from the sophomores. Florence
Swindell will announce the superla
tives, and Dr. Stone will award the
scholastic prize to the sophomore
with the highest average. The Eev,
Mr. Hughes will dismiss the group
with the benediction.
Writers of the class history are
Nancy Haltom, Nancy Bernhardt,
and Sally Hagood. Those writing
the class prophecy are Faith Eobin
son, Alary Jane McDowell, Julie
Nolan, and Chris Durham. Nell
Eley, Emilie Adams, Barbara Stott,
and A. J. Owens are writing the
last will and testament.
The Letter Club is planning t'l*
Athletic Banquet for May 23. 11 ’
organization will also sponsor a so
ball tournament between the halls-
Vol.
Saint Mary’s Swimming Club >
working on a pageant to be preseii e
at the half of the forthcoming swim
ming meet. The pageant will
of swimming formations and dn'Hg
exhibitions.
Se
Fi
tury.
AVomen over thirty should not dye
their hair—only the very young dye
good.—Baeb.a.ka Stanwyck.
AVhen the girls begin packing to
go home, the club is planning to
sponsor a clothing drive.
The charter application has gone
to the Eegional Canterbury Com
mission to be approved. From there
it will go to the National Canter
bury Association for final approval.
The club expects to receive its char
ter by June 1.
EXAMINATION SCHEDULE
SATURDAY, >IAY 20
Afternoon Examinations
2:00-4:00 p.ni.
English 22 (all sections)
English 32 (all sections)
English 6 (both sections)
English 8 (both sections)
English 16 (Business)
AIONDAY, AIAY 28
Biology 24 (both sections) History 8 _
Chemistry 8 History 22 (both sections)
Chemistry 28 (both sections) History 32 (both sections)
Shorthand History of Art 30
TUESDAY, AIAY 29
Bookkeeping German 22
French 8 (both sections) German 24
Frenyh 22 Spanish 6
French 24 (all sections) Spanish 24
French 6 Spanish 32
Theory 22
AVEDNESDAY, AIAY 30
Bible 21 (both sections)
Bible 32 (both sections)
Geometry 6 (Aliss Lineberry’s)
Harmony 32
Hygiene 21 (both sections)
Typing (Beginning)
American Government 30
American Literature 28
Home Economics 10
Latin 6
Psychology 32
Typing (Advanced)
THUESDAY, AIAY 31
Algebra 4 (both sections)
Geometry 6 (Airs. Broughton’s)
Home Ec. 8
Home Ec. 22
Math 22 (both sections)
■ The YWCA elected officers
next year, Alay 3, 1951. ^ Jeanie ®
terson is the new president; ,,
erine Alorrison, vice - presU 6 ’
Laura Deane Alatheson, secieta*.
treasurer. _
Jeanie, of Concord, is presi^®\
elect of the Doctors’ Daughters
She is a Sigma.
Sa
(loip
reive
11
tile f
Katherine, of Gastonia, was
honor attendant to the queen ot
Freshman-Sophomore dance. oU
a member of the Beacon and ® _
Laura Deane, of Ahoskie, is
tary of the sophomore class, ' ,
]iresident-elect of the L>oc
Daughters Club, and a member
the Beacon. She is a Sigma.
tlie
Cl
Sup,
tioii
tvill
II
tiac;
sic j.
II
I're:
se'
The great secret of successful
marriage is to treat all disasters as
incidents and none of the incidents
as disasters.—H. Nicolson.
Saint Alary’s Sigmas yl
lected Evelyn Oettinger as
team captain as the Mu s
named Glenn Lightsey
Evelyn, of Kinston, is
A wife is a person who can look
in the top drawer of a dresser and
find a man’s handkerchief that isn’t
there.—Lorimorian.
of the Sigma's, a vice-counsel j
Oi UiU kj vy ifttv o, V v-'-' Q]
sembly chairnlan, and a mem -j.
the Athletic Council, Drai»»,.
"•ill
Sell
File
ll.I
of ^
tile
dia
Club, Swimming Club, and the F
ter Club. ^
Glenn, of Columbia, South
llila, lo- a Vi-
LEISURE: WHAT IS IT? Club, the BELLES Circ
Shakespeare 26
French 30
History of Music 30
Latin 4
Sociology 34
Spanish 8
FEIDxVY, JUNE 1
Math 32 • Economics 32
Bible 6, Bible 8, and all Speech classes will be scheduled in regular class
periods the week preceding examination week. The examination in Bible 12
(for Commercial Students) will be scheduled at the regular class period
May 22.
It’s not something that’s found at
Saint Alary’s, and that’s for sure.
That’s for dang sure! (That’s the
answer your roaming reporter re
ceived.) Of course there are those
few who make an attempt at pre
tended leisure every once in a while,
like those seniors who dawdle over a
second cup of coffee and a piece of
toast in the morning after everyone
else leaves the dining room. They
know that they will have to let pull
ing up the covers do for bedmaking
and a hit or miss lipstick job do for
make-up before they dash to an
eight-thirty class. Then there are '
the times when somebody down the
hall yells “fourth” and another an
swers with “count me in,” knowing
full well that the bridge game will
only mean a late light.
Frankly, though, I’ve never heard
anybody at Saint Alary’s complain
about “no leisure time.” They never
get that far! All they want is
“eno.ugh time,” enough time to do
all that they are supposed to do,
plus—well, let’s face it—all that they
want to do.
VTieUll, VI „,„a'
lina, is- a member of the .joh
Club, the BELLES Circulat^,,^
staff, the Advertising staff
Aci
F}’
Sal
Ad
Stage Coach, the Canterbury
and the Beacon.
V,
Saint Alary’s Letter Club is ®1 j[,f
soring volleyball games
halls. The teams of fii’®*
Wing, with Sibby Calaway as
tain, and first AVest
Alary Dorsett as captain, "'ill 1
for the championship.
According to Decdee
manager, the game will be P
this week.
(If-
Aliss Alartha Dabney
livered a talk at a Saint f ‘ in
Alumnae Association meetu g
Goldsboro Alay 11.
Betsy Clarke entertained
day, Alay 12, at an annoui^j^(,fO-
party at her home in G° jik'
Several Saint Alary’s studeu
Aliss AI. D. Jones attended-
11!'“
The Chemistry classes ha'
I guess there isn’t anyone who can
enjoy being idle for long. We all
like to have something to do, and
we’re all happier when we’re doing
something. Thus is leisure time
counted out as being idle time. _ I
supy)ose the leisure days at Saint
Mary’s are those in which every min
ute is not occupied with a -“must.”
Being constantly on the run can be
pretty wearing, but be honest, you-
all, isn’t being busy fun ?!
several interesting field trjP jjjiif
year. They have visited t'. Jjd
State Creamery, Eex Hospi^ ’
Bakery, Borden’s CreameiJ’
Watson’s Photography Studi -
Ilf’
Miss Bason’s cooking
visited several interesting
field trips also. They ha"" gtf*^
the State Fair, the ,
Creamery, the Eoyal BakeiJ’ gjjt ■
ster’s, the Textile Building ^ po
College, Swift’s, and Taylor”
Center. !