The Belles of Saint Mary’s June 1, 1951 June Numerous Senior, Sophomore Girls Are Eager Candidates For SMS Diplomas Saint Mary’s Glee Club Will Give Annual Rendition Of Stabat Matet Th The following girls are candidates for Saint Mary’s Junior College Di plomas: Mary Frances Allen of Statesville; Katherine iVrmistead, of Kinston; Constance Barnes, of Wil son; Mary Tom Battle, of Eocky Mount; Catherine Bikle, of Ea- leigh; Margaret Ann Brock, of Eichlands; June Bullard, of Ea- leigh; Laura Chapman, of Sitka, Alaska; Betty Cheek, of Wilson._ Barbara Clark, of Eoanoke, Vir ginia ; Caroline Cobey, of Hamlet, Dorothy Crawford, of Goldsboro; Laura Davis, of Beaufort; Geral dine Dickinson, of Beaufort; Bar bara Dixon, of Crewe, Virginia; Margaret Dunn, of Kew Bern, La- Nelle Edwards, of Goldsboro. Elise Feimster, of Columbus, Georgia; Emily Fisher, of Ealeigh; Margaret Gaston, of Belmont, Vir ginia; Virginia Gilliam, of Ealeigh; Grace Gordon, of Spray; Jean Gould, of Gastonia; Virginia Hall, of Elizabeth City; Peggy Hooker, of Martinsville; Jean Lang, of Ee- hoboth, Virginia'; Mimi Lynch, of Winston-Salem; Alice May, of In dianapolis, Indiana; Louise Milli- ken, of Southeni Pines; Eebecca Moose, of Boone. Virginia Mowery, of Ealeigh; Joan McCutcheon, of Lincolnton; Jean McGhee, of Ealeigh; Charlotte McGlaughon, of Winston-Salem; Martha McGuirk, of Morganton; Anne Kicoll, of Charlotte; Evelyn Oettinger, of Kinston; Jean Page, of Fort Bliss, Texas; Dorothy Parshley, of Providence, Ehode Is land ; Margai'et Pearson, of Ea leigh; Jean Poland, of Arlington, Virginia; Edith Eogers, of 'Wil mington; Tonia Eowe, of Burgaw; Anne Eixey, of Korfolk, Virgnia. Margaret Anne Sasser, of Con cord ; Eunice Saunders, of Lumber- ton ; Eosemary Scovil, of Greenville, South Carolina ; Edith Shanklin, of Ealeigh; Mickey Shannon, of Greenville, South Carolina; Sandra Sims, of Lynchburg, Virginia; Ca rol Sledge, of Whiteville; Julia Steed, of Eichlands; Margaret Stewart, of Kew York, Kew York; Patricia Stonham, of Henderson ville ; Mary Strickland, of High Point; Mary Sue Strupe, of Winston-Sa lem; Mary Sutton, of 'Wilmington; Anne IVaddell, of South Boston, Virginia; Carolyn IVelcli, of West Hartford, Connecticut; A 11 e i n 'White, of Chester, South Carolina; Frances Williams, of Fayetteville; Kancy Woodruff, of Nashville; and Sonoko Yamamoto, of Tokyo, Ja pan. SPEAKER Mrs, Guess Resigns As Athletic Head Pictui'ed above is Dr. Clyde Erwin, coniiuenceiuent speaker. Faculty, Students Await Fall Term According to Miss Elizabeth Tucker, 232 students have already enrolled for the year 1951-52. Of these, 121 are returning students. There are at the present time 55 seniors, 79 juniors, 49 sophomores, 32 freshmen, and 17 business stu dents signed. With the exception of Mrs. Wil liam C. Guess, the entire faculty will return. Miss Hilda Liverman will head the Physical Education De partment. Assisting her will be Miss Peggy Jean Cameron of Southern Pines. Miss Cameron will graduate from 'W.C.U.N.C. this spring. The position of alumnae secretary has not yet been filled but will be Mrs. Jane Guess, popular head of the Physical Education Department, has completed her last year of serv ice at Saint Mary’s. Both faculty and students will miss her quiet, effi cient manner, as well as her untiring co-operation. Mrs. Guess came to Saint Mary’s as Jane Cross in the fall of 1938. She filled the position of assistant in the Physical Education Department and teacher of dance. In her first year she began to make May Day a very special event. She gave it a quality which it had heretofore lack ed. Literary societies chose the theme and planned the general as pects of May Day, while the Art Department selected costumes. Some of the music was composed by the Music Department, and the dances were created by the Dance Depart ment under Mrs. Guess’ direction. _ Later as literary societies were dis continued and the war made costume material scarce, Mrs. Guess showed igenuity in working out pageants for which old costumes could be used. In the summer of 1941, Miss Cross married Mr. William C. Guess. In 1942, under Mrs. Guess’ inspiration, Orctiesis was organized and modern dance assumed its important place at Saint Mary’s. Mrs. Guess became head of the de partment with the departure of the former head in 1943. She showed that her abilities wei-e administra tive as well as artistic. In addition to her other activities, she has helped Miss Davis with movements in plays. Mrs. Guess will be greatly missed The Glee Club will present Js annual commencement concert morrow night at 8 :30 in the _au > torium. Mrs. L. S. Winton wil the accompanist. The program will be in tlue® parts, the first being composed o sacred songs in Latin. The selection will be Gloria „ Palestrina. The Glee Club will sing the Stabat Mater by Pergo ® The last song in this group wiU Regina Coeli by Aichinger.^ Miss Peggy Thorpe, a piano c tificate student who graduated D , St. Mary’s High School seyeia_ years ago, will be guest tween the sections of the Glee ^ program. Miss Thorpe will p Sarabande from the suite Piano by Debussy and two m _ mezzos by Brahms in her first il; All pearance The Glee Club will next be hea| ■d the (jlee Uiuo win uexi, uc in the Twenty-Third Fromm. Delton Creech of the ^ School for the Blind will pl^I flute obligato with this number. Next on the program is the Lambs by Nathaniel Dett, a soprano solo sung by lard. A Hymn for the Air o'’ f by Franco will follow this iiuni The arrangement_ of this one written especially for the St. Mary’s Glee Club by the poser. The second program will close with Let he Song by Klemm. Miss Thorpe will return to P' ^ sent Trois Ecossaises by These are three short sepal' pieces by all Saint Mary’s. We are bapP^ that she will still be in Ealeigi ^ know that we can call on bei friend of Saint Mary’s. arj and Hear, tan f new Sain a re- jiad ot first and less birl- tiem 'lay all f, IV Here "'as "'asr "’oul friei good "•eel "■ith tile seroi "lal "ati, "'eel 1‘acl girl,. "•eel tile Soo] ^tio 1 fi'ivi I '"e.s soon. Ambitious Sophomores Will Journey To Various Colleges For Coming Yet' A 'lay 'ieii, aifl’ '^'1. >*0e The following are candidates for High School Diplomas: Emilie Ad ams, of Aho.skie; Nancy Bernhardt, of Lenoir; Joan Billich, of Eio de Janeiro, Brazil; Caroline Bisanar, of Concord; Tresca Bowles, of Dur ham; Louise Brand, of Urbana, Ohio; Mary Ann Clegg, of Mount Holly; Gloria Clemons, of Chatta nooga, Tennessee; Sally Dalton, of Charlotte; Patricia Daniels, of Ea leigh; Deedee Davenport of Tim- monsville. South Carolina; Chris tine Durham, of Columbia, South ■ Carolina; Nell Eley, of Ahoskie; Priscilla Gatling, of Ealeigh; Sally Hagood, of Charlotte; Nancy Haltom, of High Point; Sylvia Hamer, of Le noir; Clairene Harris, of Seaboard; Faith Lassiter, of Ealeigh; Beau fort Law, of Fayetteville; Cathryn LeStourgeon, of Charlotte; Laura Deane Matheson, of Ahos kie ; Isabelle Mebane, of Huntsville, Alabama; Georgia Moore, of VVash- ington, D. C.; Dorothy Morris of Mocksville; Mary Jane McDowell of Tarboro; Jane Nisbet, of Char lotte; Julia Nolan, of Brunswick; Lucile Overton, of Newport News, Virginia; Anna Jane Owens, of Wilson; Marion Page, of Fort Bliss, Texas; Faith Eobinson, of Wash ington, D. C.; Suzanne Eobinson, of Gastonia; Tracques Saunders, of Columbia, South Carolina; Vicki Stedman, of Lumberton; Barbara Stott, of Greensboro; Lula Sturges, of Ea leigh; Jean Summerlin, of Mount Olive; Jean Summers, of Eichmond, Virginia; Florence Swindell, of Ea leigh; Blair Tucker, of Louisburg; Lou Ilrqu'tiart^ of Courtland, Vir ginia; and Cynthia Ward of Eliza beth City. Most of our Saint Mary’s sopho mores, who are graduating from high school on June 4, have great plans for the coming years. How many high school graduating classes can say that every single member is plan ning to attend some college? Our sophomore class is proud to be among that number! Sixteen of our high school gradu ates have chosen Saint Mary’s as their alma mater for the next two years. This fall, under our stately oaks. We will see Cindy Ward, “Izzie” Mebane, Lucille Overton, Deedee Davenport, Sib Hamer, Georgia Moore, Barbara Stott, Jane Maddox, Nell Eley, Laura Deane Matheson, Emily Adams, Becky Gordon, Patsy Daniels, Lulu Sturges and Caroline Bisanar. Mary Ann Clegg, A. J. Owens, Tresca Bowles, Sally Dalton, Vicki Stedman, Kathy LeStourgeon, and Faith Lassiter will be decked in Duke blue next year and for the years to come. About sixty miles west of this crowd, Clairene Harris will be attending Woman’s College in Greensboro. Gloria Clemons will stray even further west, over to Van derbilt, in Nashville. When Honey Page heads westward, she just can’t seem to stop; Honey is goi«S Texas 'Western, in El Paso. A number of our high school uates will be in the State of ' this fall. Susie Eobinson, .,i- 'lui he. IJ.' ^ bit, Jeanne Summers, iSancy hardt, and Lou Urquhart are ing Hollins. Traques SaundersJ'^f be at Sweet Briar, Sally dtct Eandolph-Macon, and Blair at William and Mary. \o Some of the sophomores see be attracted to the sunny s*® ppris Georgia and South Carolina. ]- Durham and Beaufort Law of ing forward to the Univeisi .■ ^jj0 South Carolina this qyof Nolan is entering the UniversiJ Georgia ; Suzanne Eobinson p attend Converse in^ and Dotty Morris ivill be a s at Agnes Scott, in Atlanta. {O This fall Joan Billick plfH journey to our nation’s order to attend Corcoran Art where she can prepare for b® go' career. Mary Jane McDowel ing to Skidmore, which is in Saratoga Springs, New Ynf'o"’ We can’t help but be proud ambitious sojihomores. ^ of Vi, K I ^H( BELLES wishes them the best everything in the years to coine