Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA)

 - Class of 1941

Page 13 of 184

 

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 13 of 184
Page 13 of 184



Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 12
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Page 13 text:

So many things that count. When the rest of the school had arrived and finished embracing each other joyfully in the halls, we all settled down to meet , appraise, and get acquainted with the new girls. The upper- classmen seemed to like these young invaders very well, and when the new class got really under way after rat week, the whole school marveled at their spirit. When we look back on the past school years, there ' s a little nostalgic feeling that creeps over us. When we look ahead, some of us at more school years, some of us at years out in this mixed-up world, we feel sad- ness because school is so soon over. Perhaps that is what they call the Farmville spirit. In any ease, dorm life is a funny thin, different ingredients go together to make a well-rounded school existence . . . long, chatty walks in the brisk fall air . . . short, quick walks across the campus un- der the stars . . . sitting in Shannon ' s conducting an involved discussion over cokes, despite the milling multitude . . . studying frantically in the small hours for a French test . . . talking to Maggie Wright about Winnie-the-Pooh . . . trying not to care too much becaiTse Box 452 collects dust and no mail . . . watch- ing Sadie, dressed like something out of the dark ages, frightening people into iits in the middle of the night . . . worrying a lot because exams are in less than a week, and not doing much about it . . . feeling the tingle of excitement that runs over the whole school when a dance week-end conies around . . . smelling grease paint, and knowing the Left to right: Peery, German, ilcGuire. Gresh- aui. West, Graft: Saunders, Allen. Harman. I ft to right: McFall, Xelson, Avers, Renfro, Campljell. jo • of working long hours to present a play or a class production . . . playing hard at hockey and basket- ball . . . being glad because of small victories, and shrugging off small defeats . . . laughter . . . tears . . . friendships . . . dorm life is funny. It has a wa ' of STOwing on its. Left picture, left to right: Duer, Parks, Williams, Worsham, Whitlock. ilr. Shannon. Ed. Dodson. Brown. Middle picture, left to right: Winstead, Wlielchel, Parks, Conner, Gooden. Right picture, left to right: Rosebro, Parks, Cottrell, Hnrt. Dodson.

Page 12 text:

ee Ti4.it T ET ' S not talk about just the first days of school — ■ ' — ' those lovely clays of meeting and greeting, of un- packing and decorating, those carefree days when we had no classes and very few heavy responsibilities. We ' d like to remember it all, by fleeting glimpses of another happy year in retrospect. From the first minute we walked into the Kotunda, in that momentous fall of 1940, we saw changes. They piled up on us during those opening weeks, and we realized that school life was only reflecting the trend of the modern world change. It seemed that we had every minute detail do STi to an exact science, and although we fussed and fumed at first, it ' s plain to all of us that the year and the school are the better for it. Student Standards began the new era with a great plan about the C average, and after thinking the matter over, Ave realize that we ' re none the worse for a bit of added efl ' ort, a few more hours of con- centrated study, a harder struggle to get out of bed in time for an 8:15 class. The freshmen came early this year and had two days in which to get acquainted and learn their way about. All of us thought this a splendid idea, and incidentally, it meant three hundred and fifty less people to storm the post office for boxes. It ' s the little



Page 14 text:

We re ver p fond of the Faculty • PHE Home Office was a refuge between classes ... a • ■ place where we betook oiirselves at all lioiivs of the (lay ... a jDlace to leave our books while we went to Shannon ' s for breakfast, to meet and greet people, to make important local and long distance calls. Re- member the cheerful fire on winter mornings . . . im- portant little slips on the mantel . . . the clutter of telearams on Valentine ' s Dav . . . excitinjj, ' fiower S. L. Graham Business Manager ' IRGILIA I. BUGG Registrar boxes stacked in there for the luckier of us . . . Mrs. McCoy ' s wonderful kindness to us? Just ddwn the hall is Miss Mary ' s office. We learned to know well the permission file and the weariness of standing in line minute after minute, and the inevitable dread of Have you taken your cuts before Miss Marv, gracious Head of the Home, presided at the desk, patiently reviewing our permissions, and, with her usual insight, guiding our pleasures and our labors. Rachael Eoyall, vivid and attractive, came this year to be iliss Mary ' s secretary in the place of Jane Royall. She also became ad- viser to the Junior Class ; tactful and kind, she has been a g aiide and an inspiration to us all this year. f Hli Miss Mary White Cox [lead of the Home IvACHKi. Royall B. s. iSeerctiiry to Head of Home IXME V. HlXER Treasurer Maud K. Taxiajferro Postmistress

Suggestions in the Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) collection:

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

1938

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Longwood College - Virginian Yearbook (Farmville, VA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944


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