Newspapers / Saint Mary’s School Student … / April 30, 1954, edition 1 / Page 3
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April 30, 1954 The Belles of St. Mary’s ►01) AX ,CE ;EE nv :rx OK 'ES eek )KE er, rt- Jo tty tie sli, icy y£- 1111, ro- ‘at- icy oli- ilc- ilc- Belles of Saint Mary’s PAT PERRY Town; Winston-Salem. Age; 18. Hair: Asli blond. Eyes: Green. Pet Peeve: Vanilla mushrooms. Favorite Song: Thai’s For Me. Favorite Food: Chocolate mush rooms. Hobby: Voodoo. Always Heard: Laughing. Always Seen: Raising an eyebrow. Looking Forward To: Having twins. Ambition: To beat Miss Rattray in the Jet Race. Offices and Clubs: Doctors’ Daugh ters Club, Canterbury Club, Figma Pi Alpha, Mu. Vir ginia men Ambition: To learn to cut grape fruit. Offices and Clubs: BELLES staff, iMage Coach staff, Canterbury Club, Mu. tin aiti %in 'est gjil m ten 10 b ,td' liii' leS' the ,rk' 00 00 ,rld :te£ rlic ill' je»' aP» 3 P toO 111' aS all'' iui® Choose Your College I Dates With Descretion Girls, use discretion in choosing your dates. . . . ISTever date biology students; they enjoy cutting up too *liUch. The football hero is all right; he ’ '^’dl tackle anything. . The tennis filayer is harmless; he iUst enjoys a racket. Watch out for the baseball ffiokie; he hits and runs. Re careful of dramatic students; ’hey usually have several good lines. Always let band members talk ?hoiit themselves; they enjxay toot- ’'1? their horns. Keep away from track men; they too fast. , Rew'are of math students; they 'tow figures. (“The Procroniaii”) JANET RATTRAY Town: “Beautiful” Wilson. Age: 19. Hair: Brown. Eyes: Brown. Pet Peeve: Incessant noise. Favorite Song: Aly Desire. Favorite Food: Turkey dressing. Hobby: Scheming. Always Seen: Tearing up paper. Always Heard: “Hot this Cat!” Looking Forward To : Living it up 1 Ambition: To beat Miss Perry in the “next” Jet Race. Offices and Clubs: Canterbury Club, Alter Guild, All-Star Softball. ALICE ANN WINFIELD Town: Chocowinity. 3lge: 19. Hair: Brown. Eyes: B rowii. Pet Peeve: Summer reading. Favorite Song: In a Grove. What else! I'avorite Food: Shrimp cocktails. Hobby : Mr. Moore’s English. Always Heard: “Gigi.” Always Seen: At the Flick House. Looking Forward To: Wealthy ’Twas Midday ’Twas the hour before lunch And out on the porch Lay thirty dead bodies Receiving a scorch. The clothes were discarded All over the floor. While Joanne tried vainly To reach the front door. We lay in a row In our tar-stained places While delightful black grits Blew around our wee faces. The grease on our arms. Applied with great toil, Would make thirty bodies Be soon boiled in oil. But hark! there’s a sound And everyone reaches For some love funny books. Blankets, and breeches. A mad camera fiend Her instrument brings To take pictures of us In unmentionable things. While below in the \vay With elbow and fist Girls fight to put their names Humber thirty on list. How some beauties sleep while Receiving their tan Til revived by cold water By dear Laura Ann. How cover up, bathers, I know all the tricks; Those planes don’t fly low just To look at the bricks. But when you have burned each Side, turned to fry on. You’ll wish tonight you’d saved A side you can lie on. SMS Girls Plan Future Education; College Campuses Provide Variety About this time of year as St. Mary’s girls, especially sophomores and seniors, begin to plan where they will continue their education. One begins to hear a lot about vari ous colleges and universities. There are any number of fantastic places from which a student may choose. Besides the Hill where there are ten boys for every girl on campus and no studying—well, almost none, there are some'fascinating institu tions farther afield. One hears of colleges that insist that a girl be in her dormitory by two o’clock a. m. or else get a room in town for the night. Another only requires that all dates be out of the parlor by six-thirty n. m. It is rumored tlia't one university is planning to require that all students sign on a special sheet if they plan to come in before twelve on week nights or before two-thirty a. m. on weekends. They want to know which dorms to send coffee and cake to; they send only coffee after these hours. Your Own Phone As living quarters go, the super college is a grand affair with suites of rooms and private baths. White leather upiholstery and maids to clean rooms and do personal laun dry are a real inducement for an other institution. But the one that beats them all is one that not only has a private phone for each stu dent, but has tJiones and a directory in the parlor so that a visitor can simply call the room of the student he wants to see and talk to her. However, all these places have classes that must be attended at least occasionally. Hevertheless, if one investigates, she may find that these aren’t so very bad either if one just picks the right college. In addition to unlimited cuts, one college has reclining desks. If the tuition fee doesn’t matter, one may even have a private secretary to take class notes in shorthand and type them. The only thing that isn’t available is learning while you sleep. The first school that offered tape re cordings of all required material to be played until it is absorbed un consciously while students sleep was stampeded and utterly demolished. They are rebuilding now and pla)i to call out the national guard when they attempt to reopen in the fall of 1964. Fashion Flashes Another fashion ticket proves that long gloves are strictly passe. Those being showm with most of the fashions are short, short gloves. I remember going to a fiajiper party this summer and wearing mother’s long beads that I knotted. I thought them a scream. Well, here’s the latest: they are wearing long rope beads with most of the summer clothes. \ ou can wear them tucked in your belt, draped sideways over your shoulders, or in any way that hajipens to suit your fancy. A ^uiai t outfit this summer will match completely. Shoes, hats, gloves, and even ro2ie beads will mateh your dress. Also your fashion crystal ball sees not sun spots, but iiolka dots! SMS Personal Hit Parade You’ll Never Walk Alone—Claudia Peeler. I ll Be True to T ou—Shirley Deese. Dear John—Betty Dry. Write Me a Letter—Frances Oajie- hart and Ruth Watkins. Someone to Watch Over You—Miss M. D. Jones. I’m the J wry and You’re On Trial— Alice Bost. Oh, Johnny, Oh, Johnny—Sumner Parham and Allene Wellons. There Is Nothing Like a Alan—the student body. Pools Rush In—Dates. C est si Bon—Madame Smith. Just Plain Bill — Frances Perry, Bunny Gee, and Margaret Rose. Don’t Fence Me in—Study Hall. Charlie, My lioi/—Lucy’ Helig and Pat McQueen. 0 Happy Day—^Gail AIcGutcheon. At Last—May 31. Always Late—Peggy Smitlideal. 1 Love Paris Sara Cobb, Mary Lee LaFar, Alice Bost, Sally Mc- Mullan. I'm a Plain Ole Country Girl— Athey AIcKenzie. Hark, the Sound—Cowbell?? Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen—Ann Himocks. God Save the Queen—Anne Grcg- ory. by Mela Rojml I must admit that I usually rate little if any consideration '''hatsoev er. Most j>eople seem to ^ke me for granted. But those who like me really do make me feel Worthwhile. For instance, there is ^.family in France in wdiich I tra- ytionally go to the head of the 'OUsehold, and everyone else covets In that household I represent Power. Anyone who has a great appreciation for French bread will jOderstand why this French family the crusty pieces on either end the baquette go to tlie bread ''’inner. In other homes I may not repre- ®nt anything so grand, but I can Staff of Life Bewails Numerous Nicknames, Pleads for Help '»\r€i1 t.All t.llA ATHt.iAfll nKcofTrov* onwn J j* . . tell the critical observer something about the people in almost any household. Let’s consider Mrs. Chary. She keeps the first and last pieces taken from a sliced loaf of bread in waxed paper in the re frigerator until she needs bread crumbs to prepare some recipe. Because she is a very thrifty meal- planner, she often uses left overs in her cooking, and many dishes pre pared from leftovers call for bread crumbs. If too much bread should accumulate, Mrs. Chary dices the oldest pieces and mixes them with any stale cereal or crackers she might have on hand and uses, them to fill her bird feeding station. Now let’s clear up a point once and for all. I don’t object to being called the “heel” as long as It is done respectfully. Millions of people call me that. Even most dictionaries note that I go by that name. I’ll admit that it doesn’t show much imagination or sympa thy on the part of the person who uses this generally accepted name. I once knew a girl who called one end of a loaf the “heel” and the other the “toe,” but although her intentions were good, she so often called the beginning piece the ending piece the toe that it became rather irri tating to me. Some people evasively call either piece the “end piece.” You know. they rather remind me of the scien tists of a century ago who thought of infinity as a loaf of bread. The way they had this infinity figured was that you entered time and space from the end first, no matter what. And those who call me the nose are just as much at fault. You see what people fail to realize is that I am an inseparable part of a unit, just as any given place or period of time is an inseparable part of in- finity. But just try to define me in abstract terms and you’ll discover that words just won’t do it. Won’t ^u help ^ me with my campaign ? Do you fail to catch the significance? Well, what did you expect to hear from a crusty old piece of bread ?
Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper
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April 30, 1954, edition 1
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