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Page 167 text:
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X ' E ,l Z Z ,fo ,-f Af! 1 3 NJ Q -...ff , i11ig Q,,' . ' . fx! if' 5 :L 5 L fi. Z 5 K la , K ...xl ,.: -x, 1,233 ' 'fi K' ffa,ll7'l .-- Ziyi. 3. i' I .311-1-p'. 1 1 ,.: ,1.3:lg:ii,:.'. 1' F Q 5 - ,g2:xw1iil::. . 3 1 , ,:. '.1sif3Q:7l'1,'fH1 2' g z 1 32E?:EliQ1255l L ' -:E f3?g ji'-l .sl 'lj s l A , 'I EMI x 'Y' ' ' .i . r 1 A al ' ri 1 I ' l D- ll l I .1 X fx.. fy? Cllllll'l'lllli itor-in-Chief . ssociate Editors iterary Editor . -xrt Editor . hotographer . . Patricia Bremer Adele Bullock Doris Rush Cecily Swabb Bette Jean Pickett LITERARY STAFF . . . MARY REBECCA ROELKEY I U SJOAN WEINACHT 1 KATHLEEN J. MOONEY . GERRY MINTURN . PEGGY MCCARTY . ROSEMARY DUNN Dorothea Scheuermann Helen Hetherington Bebe McCrane Joan Farley Mary Ann Dempsey Beverley Richey BUSINESS STAFF usiness Manager ..,. MARY JOSEPHINE TROY Frances Clancy Pauline Marcoux Flora San Antonio Peggy Cleary Anne Wilcox Patricia Bray Mary Troy and herstaff have ably managed the correspondence and financial problems ofthe Courtier. MARY REBECCA ROELKEY Editor-in-Chief l59 MARY JOSEPHINE TROY Business Manager of the Courfier
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Page 166 text:
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ff ll' COU RTIER LITERARY STAFF Changing layouts, proof-reading and marking pictures kept the literary staff busy from September until June. UPON completion of the l9-49 Courtier there is much to be said in appreciation to those who made this book possible. To you, Sister Mary Joan, the senior class and particularly the Courtier staff wish to acknowledge their debt of gratitude for your untiring efforts to make our book one of which we are proud. There was much, work to be done and you, Sister, as our moderator, in- spired us with your constant enthusiasm and interest. All forty-seven of us say Thank you , two compact words enveloping deep ad- miration and respect for you. The Courtier staff also conveys appreciation to the faculty, parents, advertisers, photogra- phers and publisher who gave their generous attention, cooperation and support to us at all times. Tllll 1949 We endeavored to create' a book which would capture and make indelible remem- brances of college life. ln our theme we omitted one entrance that could not be photo- graphed, but rather one that we can open from within. May we open this entrance and see Georgian Court not only with our eyes but also with our hearts. We must never latch the gate to memories, yet passing time tends to make those memories vague and distant. lf the Courtier can lift the veil of the past and make it clear and vivid to us again it has accom- plished the goal for which it was intended. The i949 Courtier staff and moderator take this opportunity to extend to the i948 Courtier staff and moderator sincere congratu- lations for achieving the coveted All American award from the National Scholastic Press Association.
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Page 168 text:
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'llllll UUURT PAGE DID you see my name in the Courier? l wonder how they found out about that? When you hear conversations like that you know that the Court Page has just been distri- buted. lt also means that the entire staff from Bette Jean Pickett to the freshman staff mem- bers are starting to gather news for the next issue. The function of a newspaper is to keep an accurate history of events as they happen and this is what the Page tries to do, both aca- demically and socially. The Court Page is a four page monthly newspaper put out entirely by the journalism students under the direction of Mr. Clifford Laube, instructor in journalism and telegraph editor of the New York Times. No advertisement is carried and the4Page is financed entirely by subscription, with the added boast of the funds raised by the Holly Hop. This Christmas week dance under the chairmanship of Elmeda Capoferri, business manager, was voted by all one of the best dances ever held on campus. The Court Page acquires its writers from the freshman journalism classes and trains them through four years in news, feature, and edi- torial writing. All editing and actual make-up are done in the miniature office in the Man- sion. The business staff handles all corres- pondence and circulation. Again this year the Court Page was printed by the Ocean County Leader in Point Pleasant and there were many hurried calls to Mr. Sayre and many frenzied trips to see about that para- graph that would not fit at the last minute. The Court Page is a member of the Catholic Press Association. Last year it was awarded the First Class rating by the Associated Collegiate Press. Mr. Clifford Laube advises Bette Jean Pickett on her monthly editorial, while the rest of the staff check the page proof for any last minute corrections.
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