r I 1 21, d * ori s’tc/OL. XXIX, NO. 7. he, ^«de»ts, Tates To 23, Travel To N. Y. A.f Easter \ ^is Susan Crabtree Stt, Tate, Mrs. Tate, three Tate gfhudren and many jubilant spring- ,pa3^PPy St. Mary’s girls will jet to ,^Aew York this Easter via chartered j being an English teach- ’-irtn actor (specialty—Oth- , [1 and friend to all, Mr. Tate be- oines a chaperone every spring va- to students from all four ! want to go to New York. 1 he group will stay at the Hilton ^P^cial student rates from April irit - Id. After arrival Thursday night aii'nd a good rest, everyone is free to hteit entertainment spots from the ,pe»allet to the MAD preview. Plays ; pp see include two three-year favo- fpCites—Barefoot in the Park, and is Wednesday (a story about a to who meets his mistress on his ;S, ptodnesday afternoons off). Sweet Parity, and Phaedra. Recommended escy Mr. Tate, Radio City will be a (-jiust on the agenda for most of the iris. Because there are so many ^lays to see and stores to shop, Mr. ate lets the girls schedule the en- jj.re week for themselves. Especially ^ opular this year is a ballet produc- ,on of Midsummer Night’s Dream ^ornplete with Puck and all the lines. A list of plays which will / is given out, and one can 1 ^ tickets to as many or as 'W as she wants. Some of the girls will frequent the r^ell-known night spots in “the City,” ppust about anything New York has ’*■, including Greenwich Village eunll be offered to the St. Mary’s tor a whole wonderful week, e) n the lighter side—Mr. Tate rec- i^mends the MAD previews which lilT shown in the afternoons or at itours of the night. A ticket v> thus event insures one of a table Jp a penthouse restaurant and a (Continued on Page 2) Belles OF ST. MARY’S RALEIGH, NORTH CAROLINA Contestants in tlie Glamour Contest in their party dresses are left to right, Susan Crabtree, Sue Gelston, Lisa Gilland, Sally King, Marcia Separk, ami IjJiura Whitley. USA GILLAND LLECTKD SMJC GLAMOUR REPRESENTATIVE A comely brunette from Charles ton, S. C., Miss Lisa Gilland, has been elected by a vote of the student body to represent St. Mary’s in the Glamour magazine fashion contest. Lisa was selected from a field of six girls, that included Susan Crab tree, Sue Gelston, Sally King, Mar cia Separk, and Laura Whitley. These girls were introduced to the student body in a fashion show, sponsored by The Belles, on Febru ary 3. For her on-campus outfit, Lisa dis played a light brown turtle-neck jer sey with a dark brown skirt and tex tured above-the-knee socks. Her daytime off-campus outfit was a green mohair suit with a bright print blouse, complimenting her fair complexion. A long red velvet skirt, topped by a white lace over-blouse was Lisa’s selection for her party dress. Lisa will be photographed in each of these outfits and the pictures will then be sent to the national contest headquarters in New York. To help defray the cost of these pictures, voting was conducted by contributing a dime for the girl of one’s choice. A total of $21 was col lected in this manner. Lisa, a senior, is a member of the May Court this year and was also on the court as a junior. Beacon Inducts Two New Girls On the thirteenth of January, the Beacon inducted two new members, Molly Grady and Bettie Kellogg. Mollv comes from Paraguay, S. A. She is president of the sophomore class and a member of the Young Democrats Club. Molly is in the National Llonor Society, National Spanish Honor Society and a Merit semi-finalist. She was Santa Claus at the Orphanage Christmas Party. '4 •irs. fi in ?A d in ilina. February 11, 1966 St. Mary’s Grad At Hollins Studies Abroad f Miss Ann Dorsey Day, a 1964 graduate of St. Mary’s High School is one of 50 Hollins College sopho mores now en route to Europe for a year of study and travel as members of the Hollins Abroad program. Ann is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nere E. Day, Jr., of 1019 South Bay Shore Drive, Virginia Beach. Hollins has conducted a foreign study program for 11 years. This year’s Hollins Abroad group sailed (Feb. 4) from New York City “Dr- aboard the S.S. Queen Anna Maria. dat- The ship will call at Tangier and the students will have a one-day stop in jj^sonal Lisbon, Portugal, before arriving at i® LeHavre, France. : Luate. Paris is the headquarters of the Hollins Abroad program. While ,4'e«Uy there, Ann will reside with a French Ntut ■ I family and will study at the Sor- ..^each- bonne. The program is under the di- ;jy en- rection of a member of the Hollins A St. faculty in Paris. Ann will leave Paris this summer for a three-month educational tour of some dozen countries arranged through the Council on Student S Travel (Paris). The tour is designed to give the students a survey of the Ifly cultural history of Europe as well as an insight into some of its current problems. The students will resume their I for classes at the Sorbonne in the fall. iction They will return to the Hollins cam- t St. pus for the start of the second se- o be mester in February, 1967, as mem- tther- bers of the junior class. 'odtic- ^ Bettie — “Cornflake” — hails from inu- Manteo, North Carolina. She is a shing member of the YWCA, the Young • love Democrats Club, and the Letter 920’s, Club. Bettie is also president of the i and Sigmas and has been on every all- star team tbis year in Sigma-Mu. In ad ig addition, she represents the sopho- ftray, more class in the Leg. Body. Rose ^ — I c.. > Glamour (’ontestants from left to right include Lisa Gilland, the winner; Susan O Oabtree, Sue Gelston, Sally King, Jlareia Separk and liaiira Whitley.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view