Newspapers / Saint Mary’s School Student … / May 11, 1962, edition 1 / Page 2
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BELLES OP ST. MARY’S May 11, 1962 THE BELLES OF ST. MARY’S Published every two weeks during the school year by the student body of St. Mary’s Junior College. Entered as 2nd Class matter Dec. 7, 1944, at Post Office, Raleigh, N. C., under Act of March 3, 1879. Subscrip tion .$1.00 per year. BELLES STAFF Editor-iit-Chief Sally Stevens Ansistant Editor Elizabeth Lackey \cws Editor Flo Pitts Feature Editor Cornelia Fitzgerald Social Editor Sarah Rand Alumnae Editor Susan Hathaway I'hotoyrapher Judy Randolph Ejcchangc Editor Sue Battle Copy Reader Frances PegueS Head Typist Ann Farmer Circulation Manager Nancy Baum Business Manager Carol Turner NEWS STAFF Carol Ashley, Susan Becton, Alice Calhoun, Phyllis Cannon, Diane Croon- enberghs, Aiexa Draxler, Joy Farlow, Joanna Houston, Kim Marsden, Mar guerite McKee, Ixiuise Thornton, Mar tha Van Noppen, Carolina Walker, .lean Winborne. FEATURE STAFF Laurie Burbank, Ann Burwell, Gigi Canada, Barbara Eichelberger, Mary Emerson, Beth Grady, Vara Henson, Mary Stella Leak, Judy Merritt, Georgia O’Cain, Wylly Robb, Robbin Pleasants, Rebecca Timberlake. Gretchen Bullard, Kit Eichhorn Mary Larsen, Martha Ann Martin, Leah Osgood, Elsie Otto. TYPISTS Gretchen Bullard, Kit Eichhorn, Mary Larsen, Martha Ann Martin Leah Osgood, Elsie Otto, Robbin Pleas ants, Becky Timberlake. REVIEW STAFF Toi Mackethan, Louise Thornton. SOCIAL Weldon Cabell, Anne Moore, Linda Parker, Nelson Pemberton. CARTOONISTS Susan Ehringhaus, Nancy Gouger, Prances McLanahan, Betsy Switzer. CIRCULATION Jody Blackwell, Sarah Carpenter, Cornelia Hines, Dianne Littlefield, Alary Lindsay Smith, Amelia Wilson, Martha Wright. AIAKE-UP Mary Daniell, Katherine Duncan. BEACH OR BOOKS? A recurrent problem in small colleges is the integration or separation of the academic and social lives of students. Academic regulations and social privileges are set up for the benefit of the majority of students, but there the influence of administration and faculty ends. Then the responsi bility passes to the individual student. At St. Mary’s the policy of making social privileges dependent upon academic accomplishment has been abandoned, and St. Mary’s girls are placed on a mature and responsible level. They should be allowed by the faculty and administration to use their own discretion in making decisions concerning academic and social obligations. However, they should at the same time use good judgment and justify the responsible position in which they are placed. EDITOR’S NOTE — WE WISH TO COMMEND ANN NIEMEYER AND HER STAFF FOR THEIR OUT STANDING WORK FOR “THE BELLES’’ AND FOR ST. MARY’S. S. S. The Counselor System ♦. . With the appointment of the new counselors for 1962-63 it is well to evaluate the counselor system at St. Mary’s — one of the most important departments of student government. Hall counselors are expected to main tain discipline on the hall, help with duties all over the school, be free to counsel individually girls on their hall with problems both academic and personal — and keep up with their own work and lead a normal social life. Of course, counselors make mistakes and sometimes feel that they have not earned the respect of the girls on their hall or achieved the goals set up at the beginning of the year. But the wonderful thing is that with all the work involved, hall counselors usually love their jobs and feel re warded. Our hall counselors have proved and will continue to prove them selves an integral and valuable part of student government at St. Mary’s Publication heads for 1902-63 will be Nannie Hussey, editor of t*'® STAGECOACH and Sally Stevens, editor of the BELLES. i POETRY FOR JUNIORS ta ppin g toe hip ll^ot aihus Back teel-ly lugu- bri ous eyes LOOPTHELOOP As fathandsbangrag E. E. Cummings, Reprinted Poems 1923-1954, Harcourt, 3*’^^ and Company. COFFEE GROUNDS We are very fortunate to nearby in Raleigh, Durhaui, ^ Chapel Hill many attraction®^^^^ complement schoolwork or to vide interest for leisure tiio®- May 11-12, “Little Women’ will be of evil things than which nothing is swifter; it flourishes by it very activity and gains new strength by its movements; small at first through fear, it soon raises itself aloft and sweeps onward along the the Little Theater will earth. Yet its head reaches the clouds. May 11 until the end of schoo > A huge and horrid monster covered with many feathers; and for Harold Click, father of ou'" every plume a sharp eye, for every pinion a biting tongue. Everywhere its voices sound, to everything its ears are open. — Virgil’s Aeneid presented by the Raleigh Child* j Theater at the Wiley Schoo , enfc IMajority of One,” May aft wil’ RUMOR-THE UGLY MONSTER teacher Mrs. Ben F. WiH'**'”^’ present an exhibition of oi ® watercolors at the Carolina ^ Sales gallery at Efird’s. j-e- well worth looking into a® gp freshing change from exain-t** fort.
Saint Mary’s School Student Newspaper
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May 11, 1962, edition 1
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