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Page 55 text:
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CONFRATERNITY OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE 4B-Marie Ann Kelly Eleanor White Mae O'Brien Joneth Tracy Antoinette Dioguardi Mary McGann 4A-Peggy Moran Adelaide Griflin 3B--Marilyn Merlct Margaret Hayes Louise Grace Dorothea Fogella Margaret Vigilant 3A-Elizabeth Quaritius Marie Mulvey Dorothea Glamltowslti Elizabeth Callahan Eleanor Boykin 2B-Ann Bennett .loan Regan ZA-.loan Boylan .lean Driscoll Ifulllralerliily uf Uhrislian Dutlrinl' RESENTATION Parish Hall might well have been mistaken for St. Angela Hall on each Tuesday and Thursday during April and May when the Angelites pictured above become teachers for the afternoon in the Religion classes conducted for the public school children under the auspices of the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine. What do you do there? asked the new teachers of the few girls who go every Sunday. Don't worry about it, was the reply of the veteran teachers. Upon their arrival on the Hrst Tuesday in April, each one took her place importantly at the head of a class of six pupils, and from then on their worries ceased. I wish I were going to Presentation today, is often heard in the locker rooms now that the classes have stopped. But of course there will be a next year. All the work seemed worth while when on Trinity Sunday the First Communicants returned from the altar singing as only they could, You have come to my heart, dearest Jesus? The mite-box pennies, the Catholic magazines, the old clothes, the needles, thread, and white linen are the instruments by which the Rosa Mystica Unit carries on its work from the Crusade Castle. Letters from missionaries throughout the south and west and from St. Roseis Cancer Hospital prove this side of the work worth while. MARY MCGANN.
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Page 54 text:
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First row: Marjorie Woisard, Peggy McGuire, Captain Grace de Stefano, Kathryn Driscoll. Second row: Manager Mary McGann, Joan Dillon, Marie Ann Kelly, Mascot Mary Ann Hayes, Annette Road, Audrey Cahill. Third row: Joan Regan, Clare Coclrerill, Joneth Tracy, Ann Bennett, Mary Ann Murphy, Betty Murphy, Dorothy Dunn, Cheer Leaders Helen McLaughln and June Berin. Last row: Consance Bicks, Miriam Dietrigg Florence Buonagura, Wilma Grassman. lnsers: Jeanne Duffy, Faith Boylan, Captain Marie Mandry, Marie Calvacca, Manager Eileen Toohill. Fortified by a strong defense and a fast, versatile offense, rrrc a excellent at both long and 45 0 angle shots, the team took ff? rire the next five games. With a record of six Wins and five ' ',. ,1,' ,,,, V . iteygvefcbl ,trsy f defeats at the end of the season, the Varsity of 1941-42 l,,r f,-f f will long be remembered for its fine spirit and the ability to come from behind and Win. But basketball was not over. The Varsity gave Way to the intramural games with each 'fyy class vying for the cham- pionship of the school. T he climax to the rivalry Came when the 41295, Cham pions of the upper floor, met the 1B's who had eliminat ed all contenders. So fast and furious a game had n ever been seen in the Hall. lt culminated with the triumph of the 1B's over the unbelieving Seniors. The score Was 11-10. For the first time in history the Freshmen had gained the intramural , Hag l t.t GRACE DE STEFANO.
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Page 56 text:
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Urattirieal juniest Wfnners ARY LOUISE MASSA of the 2B delighted her classmates and the entire school on April 27 when a board of distinguished judges Voted her the girl winner for Zone Four in the Bishop's Public Speaking Contest held at Bishop Loughlin High School. Mary Louise answered with logical hre the question, Docs the Church Hamper Human Liberty? In the school contest held on March 25, the second honors went to Marguerite Stevens, 3B, for her speech entitled, Is the Church I12tolcra11tP The speeches of the other six winners in class contests were as follows: Marie Ann May, IA, Is a Catholic Education a Good Inuestme11t?g Mary Jane Cogan, IB, Is the Church an Erzemy of Pr0grcss?5 Jean Driscoll, ZA, Qsubstitute for Anita Pariscondolaj, Can a Catholic Advocate Marcy Killi11g?7' Dorothea Glamkowski, 3A, Can Religion Cou- trihute to the Cause of Pr'acc?g Anne Dannerniller, 4A, Docs the Church Live Up to Her Title of Church Milita11t?g and Jeanne Alvino, 4B, Does the Church Over-Emlbhasize the Missions? Helen McLaughlin, President of the Student Council, acted as chairman. The judges were Reverend Brother Cornelius Cyril, F.S.C., Moderator of the La Salle Forensic Society, La Salle Academy, New York, Mrs. James McCormick Coker, President of the Speakers' Bureau of the St. Joseph's College Alumnae, and james J. Kelly, Jr., Attorney, Instructor in Labor Law in the St. Thomas Aquinas Labor School.
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