St Annes School - Synopsis Yearbook (Charlottesville, VA)
- Class of 1951
Page 1 of 112
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 112 of the 1951 volume:
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f-v-vp-5-.Aan . mi- ...J - :..'.,A ,,,?.. : N -X, Q U IK TJ. .vF'9T-f-7-:egi-35gfag?g -.Nz-g -Lail-s-h .- ---13533: -fy V it-.X--,:,-:!zgB:'1ffj?' 5-'size-. ,-,- t .f.i.pj55g-q,:Q-,F - V w- '- , ., ,- ' , ff ., ' A. ' K ', 1 A, .-,W ,. , ,Q ..,.,, ,A -'Q '. f---2 ' , 5 J E E. E E rs-I fi 3. :T nz. , fl :I 4, W 5 , .? E i f 3 5 L X X. fix gfx, I 9 l gm M7 2 17557 stAnne5 S'-1599! clsarlohlsviue, wrainin. THEME To Miss ELIZABETH COCHRAN Dobbs Ferry from SUSIE JONES St. Anne's DEAR Miss COCHRAN: I guess that you,re kind of surprised to hear from me, but I was going through some pictures last night and I came across this one of you with the Senior Class taken at the end of last year. We've been hearing about how much you, Miss Dresser, Miss Mitchell, Senorita, and Pungyo like the Master's School at Dobbs Ferry, but I don't suppose you've heard quite as much about our life these past nine months at Saint Anne's, so I thought I'd write and tell you what we've been doing-how wonderful Mrs. Randolph has been, and how grand Miss Coleman is as Dean. Why, just yesterday someone asked for Dean Coleman, and she said, i'Who do you want-Nanqy Cole- man?', Then I guess you know there are some things that just havenit changed, like the coffee and the peculiar deafness about the time room-bell rings. Oh, and, Miss Cochran, we're really getting classy here. Has Miss Coleman told you about her private phone that can be cut off by special buttons? The Junior Dorm is quiet and peaceful, as usual, with absolutely no screaming, or room- visiting. And, Miss Cochran, you ought to listen to some of the love problems that we have this year! But I'll have to tell you about that later. Right now I've gotta rung that inevitable bell just rang again-I'll finish this after sports. ISI N MRS. THOMAS JEFFERSON RANDOLPH, V DEDICATION I just got back from class in time to continue this note, and I have to spare a page to tell you about a wonderful person. She has realbr kept things going down here fond I do mean goingj. If we're in a jam Cwhether Math or menj, she is always 760411 to heM. She understands our problems, which is amazing, considering us. Many a time I've trembled at her look M judg- ment, but the verdict was usually merited. Now that the end cy' the year is near, I'll admit it. And she does have a wonderful sense cy' humor-and a laugh! Why, even M iss Coleman runs a poor second. ' Miss Cochran, I'm going to confide in you. T ou have to promise that you won't tell anyone, though, because thy find out thejfll murder me. We've dedicated our Annual this year to.' Jllrs. 'Kezndohbh -I 7 P FACULTY FIRST and foremost, Miss Cochran, are the teachers, the small majority of Saint Annefs.. There's been little change in this branch, theyfre still saying the same things in the same classes to the same blank expressions. I just told you about what a wonderful headmistress Mrs. Randolph has been. Miss Coleman has been working this year, too. In between giving Muffin baths, she has found time to run Bible classes, sponsor the Saint and Service Council, give or refuse permissions, and be the Senior Dorm ogre. There's little to tell you about Mrs. Boaz since she goes up to Dobbs at intervals and those long telephone calls you two have must have kept you posted and broke all year. Down in the school building, Mrs. Waddell is still teaching history and being rudely inter- rupted . During ,51, shels been having definite troubles as the Senior Class Sponsor, filling in as anything from taxi driver to cook. Mrs. Duke and Mrs. Hankins are still trying to beat 2 + 2 : 4 into very unmathematical minds, and this year they have the added distinction of being among the few teachers in the school with daughters attending. Mrs. Snoddy has added another interest to her many-sided career-that of hamster breeding. Miss Gibson hasn't changed a bit, but she wouldn't be Miss Gibson if she did. Poor Mrs. Kelly has the 5th and 6th grades in the same room, making things rather complicated, while Mrs. del Greco has the seventh grade study hall for the first time. She hadn't seen anything until this! Miss Coltrane is still playing the piano Qand the fieldj with great gusto. In the language department, there's only one old repeater and are we glad she's back! Of course, itls Mrs. Clemons, whose struggles with Latin and Latin students is known to all. This year shels been keeping the school posted on current events through her chapel talks and weekly maps. Last and least Cin sizel among the old', teachers is Mrs. Yoe, the most popular person in the school come mail time. The junior Class will testify that she's got more energy and good ideas in less space than any other teacher they know. Our new history teacher this year, Mrs. Quam, is not only an interesting history teacher but a fashion plate and grand person to boot. Both the French and Spanish departments have received new instructors. Mesdames Parlier and Podtiaguine are driving French into dull and unreceptive heads while Senoritals Let us elaborate can mean anything. Mrs. Henneman's series of posters on the history of art have proved truly stimulating to look at as we wait for our.daily mail. Miss Soubas has taught art to the few Rembrandts of S. A. Sz, while Miss Pritchett has taken care of the actresses. Mrs. Simons, noted for quietness, efficiency, and helpfulness, is Mrs. Randolph's secretary, while Mrs. Powell has the money worries of the school, a job, almost an impossibility, which she does very well. The only male member of the Faculty is Mr. Herbert Donovan, whose endeavors with Senior Bible, though sometimes seemingly futile to him, have inspired them to do better. In the dorm, Mrs. Walker is still worrying over the price of eggs and other assorted articles, and this year stubborn furnaces have been taking quite a bit of her time. On the second floor of the Senior Dorm Mrs. Kennan, the general room inspector, is housed along with Miss King. These two split the fascinating duty of putting us dears to bed at night while Miss King teaches reading. On the third floor our athletic Alabamian, Miss Kimbrough, can be found stewing about the next varsity game or the unspeakable Senior basketball class she had to endure. Over in the junior Dorm, Miss Lonergan and Miss Donelson hold the fort. Miss Lonergan stays calm, cool, and collected through anything from locked doors to pie beds. History takes up a lot of her time, but the junior Dorm takes up more. Then there's Miss Donelson. During the daytime she teaches dancing and looks for her car, while her nights are divided between the Junior Dorm and the U. Va.-what a difference! So you can see, Miss Cochran, that all in all we've got quite a faculty this year! Got to run. Dinner bell just rang and I have a frightening feeling that I smell liver. TSI Yu A Mn. V fl 'W . 4-if Hn. l Udlur ff Mn. Walk!! Hrs- 5 aol! Q ' nfl. linens Mrs. 'r.:4.n..1k 'Pounll Hn. f nm.. mladnc mmf' ,arlin- 'L ' I 2 M rs.'T. J.'RanJolfl-1 ' Healmisinss Mia: Cm-Huzrine. O- Gels rv-an 'Dean ' f fx!!- Wie W W M1 -v mf.. rs.-.. I-can-,on King K ini-ouqh Kenna. lah' 1 ! ' s wi 'Y 1 5 :Q I A ' 5 . if 'ik ' ii - Mrs. 'BQQK Mrs. Glenna a Mi as Clnrsne M rs. lo' 69060 Mia 1001.800 Mr. T-Duns can Via. Tlukc 'Misa 03 bbs Mm G-Haan Miss Hint! ill! ' iw ,gy- 4118 L . 4 'Q . ,ss .1-, 1 .J JE F Hill? M UMW FACULTY DIRECTORY AUGUSTA L. BLUE RANDOLPH QMRS. THOMAS JEFFERSON, VJ Headmislress B.A., Bryn Mawr, M.A. University of Virginia CATHERINE O. COLEMAN Dean, Bible, Director cy' Remedial Reading B.A., Sweet Briar College, M.A., Mills College, Graduate Work, Universities of Iowa, Indiana, Virginia VELMA M. BOAZ CMRS. WILLIAM, English B.A., Randolph-Macon Woman's Collegeg Graduate Work, University of Virginia JEANNIE CLEMONS CMRS. HARRYD Latin Smith College, Nanking Language School DOROTHY COLTRANE Choral Work, Piano B. Music, Cincinnati Conservatory of Music LAURA DEL GRECO fMRS. ARNOLD, Intermediate Department B.S., New York University, University of Virginia DOROTHY DONELSON Piano, Dance B.A., Music, University of North Carolina HERBERT A. DONOVAN QTHE REVERENDD Chaplain B.D., Virginia Theological Seminary g M.A., Liberia College, Temple University, Columbia University fBard Collegej MARY WHITE DUKE fMRS. CAMMANN, Mathematic: B.A., Converse College, Graduate Work, Columbia University, University of Virginia VIvIAN GIBBS Registered .Nurse University of Virginia Hospital JUDITH C. GIBSON Librarian Drexler School of Library Science FRANCES C. HANIcINs CMRS. J. GJ Mathematics B.S., Farmville State Teachers' College ELIZABETH V. HOLMES HENNEMAN CMRS. RIGI-IARD HJ Art Appreciation A.B., College of Charleston ELIZABETH HART KELLEY Art, Intermediate Department Farmville State Teachers' College, Special Work, University of Virginia N VIRGINIA H. KI-:NNAN fMRS. E. VICTOR, Houremother, Senior Dormitory Stanford University, Ph.B. University of Chicago, Graduate Work, University of Virginia ' JUNE KIMEROUGH Physical Education B.A., University of Alabama, M.A., University of Alabama VIRGINIA KING Remedial Reading B.A., University of Rochesterg Graduate Work, State Teachers' College, Courtland, New York, University of Virginia ROSEMARY LONERGAN Hirtoy B.A., Wellesley, M.A., Columbia University GERTRUDE D. PARLIER French B.A., Barnardg Graduate Work, University of Virginia - OLGA PODTIAGUINE fMRS. MICHAEL, French Undergraduate Work, Odessa, Russiag M.A., University of Virginia MARIA J. POMARES Spanish Instituto de Prevision y Reformes Socialesg Graduate Work, University of Virginia NANCY R. POWELL CMRS. R. DJ Bookkeeper B.A., Middlebury College ELIZABETH PRITGHETT Dramatics University of Virginia MARTHA C. QUAM CMRS. LOUISE Hirtogr , B.A., University of Coloradog Graduate Work, University of Colorado A PATRICIA C. SIMONS QMRS. M. A., JRJ Secretary Hollins College, Graduate, Katharine Gibbs School K VIRGINIA C. SNODDY CMRS. LELANDD Science B.S., University of Kentuckyg M.A., University of Californiag Graduate Work, University of Chicago PAULINE SOUBAS Art Jefferson School of Fine and Applied Art MARY G. WADDELL fMRS. J. AJ English, Histogw B.A., Randolph-Macon Woman's Collegeg M.A., University of Virginia ANNE G. WALKER Dormitogv Director FRANCOISE C. YoE CMRS. JOHN HJ Secretayr 'I10lf Senior Class Officers PAT BUSH ................... Presidenl ANDREA WALLACE . . Vice-President Secretary Jovan TSENG ..... ...... T reasurer MRS. -I. A. WADDELI.. . . . .S7mn.mr SENIOR HISTORY IN THE near future a group of girls are going to walk down the aisle to receive their diplomas. These girls will probably be calm, dignified, and refined to the Nlh degree. Now you, if anyone, Miss Cochran, know that this is not their normal appearance. This could range anywhere from two eyes and a nose peering out from the wrong bed in the wrong room at 2 A.M. to a wet flash followed by a glass of water during a particularly strenuous water fight. They have asked you to be their graduation speaker. What can you say to this class whom you have known ever since Gigi first entered your office seven Septembers ago? I'm writing this section of the letter in the small hope of helping you a little. I realize that you, if anyone, would remember their trials and tribulations, but in case you lost your little black book with all their endeavors, here are some characteristics, glorious and otherwise, as I can remember them. The first memorable happening took place in May of '46, that month of flowers, sunshine, and ax work. You told Andy, an efficient seventh grader then, to go down and clean the chapel. An hour later Miss Coleman, found her in the middle of a completely flooded chapel holding a broom and sweeping the water back and forth. Clzaracterz'slz'r No. 7: Dogged determination in the face of great odds. Their Freshman year found them just about like most Freshmen. They weren't the neatest of classes, but what they lacked in room order they made up in their compulsory attempts to clean up the campus. Miss Coleman was their house-mother, and, due to thin walls and loud voices, she quite often heard her name used in vain. This was the group that kept the school supported. What with Miss Coleman's fines for clothes left in the wrong places any time, or the right place too long CMonday,s washing still hanging in the bathroom Fridayj, being outside in the rain without coats or inside in the halls with0ut g lights on in rooms when girls out of same, etc., etc., they were always forking over. Characterzklzk No. 2: Absolute dependability as a continuous source of income for the school. The Freshman-Sophomore dance is the big event of those two years. That year Fishburne was the lucky school, only they didn't look at it that way. Two buses were coming to the dance but only one showed up, the other had bribed the bus driver to take them to the movies. The dance was patterned after the Junior-Senior Open House. Until that year, and since then, the dances have been like the Iunior-Senior Prom. 'Nuf said. i sl 11 I That spring you taught a small group of die-hards what the sign Do Not Walk on the Grassi' meant. After spending one whole Saturday planting grass between the two dorms, they knew. You were right, that Freshman class stuck to the path. This was the year they started having those meetings for which they became quite famous. It has been said that even if things have been going beautifully for years, don't get on a pedestal, some one will come along and knock you off. This class was destined to knock the teachers off theirs. After years of brilliant students they thought they could teach anyone-then came the class of '51. Not that this class wasn,t outstanding. Why, one of them made a 20 in Bible for a six-week period-the lowest grade ever given in St. Anne's. At graduation every year you gave out a medal to the smartest in the class. The sixth grade got a medal, the seventh grade got a medal-every grade got a medal except the Freshman. Thus ended a notorious year. The Sophomore year began with a slight rooming problem but after four votings for fightingsj the class settled down to a friendly '48-'49. You lived under them, but from the noises, you must have often wondered if they were going to remain over your room. A floor is just so strong! Teddy went all out for exercises that year. In fact, she flung herself around so strenuously she knocked down the plaster in Miss Gibson's room. Characteristic No. 3: Great energy in everything they do. Picnics are only held from June to August, but nobody told the Sophomores that. They could be found on the coldest of days sitting around a wastebasket toasting marshmallows. They knew what to do in case of fire, though, as room eight proved one Sunday night when they mistook light bell for a fire drill and, in absolute silence, followed the fire drill regulations while everyone else turned off their lights and went to bed. ' Characteristic No. 4: Unswerving in the face of duty. Suite 8 and 9 had the only shower in the school fthere are tubs in the other roomsj, so it was very much in demand. The shower curtain wasn't always used and the result was a rather wet floor. No one really gave much thought to where the water went until Mrs. Walker decided to clean out the light in the student lounge, just below 8 and 9. When she unscrewed the light covering and tilted it, she got rather wet. That suite had a little meeting, and after you told them that the water had made the electric wires under them a definite fire hazard and that they couldnit be fixed until spring vacation, eight girls were smelling smoke every time they turned around. Characteristic No. 5: High imagination. The two successes of the Sophomore year were the radio program they put on and the Sophomore Skit-breakfast at S. A. S. Both were well done and well acted, but the rehearsals! . . .For this is the class who never had anything ready an hour before they did it, but they could always be counted on to come up with something spectacular. This time they did get a medal at the end of the year. Wisdom seemed to be coming with age. The junior year consisted of hard work and mid-night parties. There was the night a rather plump Junior suite changed with a slimmer suite of Seniors just before light-bell and, in being checked, werenit caught. This offended the Seniors immensely because they thought the teacher could certainly tell between the big bulges the juniors made and their slim little bumps. ' Y Characteristic No. 6: They are not always what they seem. Miss Coleman once told the Junior Bible class that if they tilted their chairs once more they would have to sit on the floor. The next time she had their class, she found all the Juniors on the floor lying on pillows, blankets,xetc. Characteristic No. 7: Anticipation of the future. Their skit wasnit too good that year, but they made up for it when they put on the junior-Senior Prom. Many a person has said it was the best theyid seen in some time-and there's no doubt about it, it was good. A junior saved the day at graduation. When the Seniors were filing out in all dignity the victrola playing Pomp and Circumstancew suddenly quit, but Boots calmly sat down at the piano and played the Seniors out. Everyone agreed that she was better than the record, even if she didnit know all of it. The beginning is the prettiest part anyway. Characteristic No. 8: Cool-headedness in emergencies Cusuallyl. Well, Miss Cochran, that brings me up to this year. Ilve tried to bring back a picture of the class as a whole but, according to plain arithmetic, The whole is the sum of its parts. There are twenty-two parts to this class and each one has something to do with why this particular class is what it is. Some of them have changed this year, some havenlt, but underneath they are still the same girls who planted the grass, toasted marshmallows, or put on the successful Prom. I will try to describe each of these parts as we under- classmen see them, knowing that you will want to know them as they are now as well as they have been. This, Miss Cochran, is the Senior Class. .- rl 12 l' fa J ,pl VI' . I jp,f,fD.1vf.J X, W! -Iii, js E Nff RASKDZ!! . ' If- i , .. Ii ' 'jf fl f L M!! J eMar ason 'Bush ' I ,VV 'I l ' 1 ,l UP U fy !! zz, -I law CASTLEiltDELAWARE 2 l '49 - '51 Jlfary ejlliuor Tiusla Tid New Orleans, Louisiana '49 - '51 Light-bell has just rung, and silence reigns supreme. All of a sudden a door squeaks, and my letter is interrupted as a low whisper is heard throughout the school, Hey, girlie! Yes, it's Tid, that happy-gcrlucky kid who would probably lose her head if it weren't firmly attached to hex shoulders, as Mrs. Boaz probably has told you. She is always forgetting a book or somethingg I havenit lost it, she'll say, I just misplaced it. This absent-mindedness doesn't bother her, though. She is always gay, and if you feel sad, go and see Tid. You'll come out a different person. This year she plays the uke, and she still goes on diets, reads good literature, talks about New Orleans fOh, those heavenly Mardi Gras Ballsll, or day dreams-and does she dream! If friends come to see us, we go get one of Tid's special maps of Charlottesvilleis points of interest. She's got plenty of school spirit and is usually busy with some activity or other, as shown by her active participation in the Glee Club and in the Fashion Show. She not only sold a lot of clothes by her good modelling but for weeks before could be seen wandering around with her head in Seventeen or Glamour, muttering Ufrolicking feminine frills, or smartly styled suitsu. Despite her worries the pro- fessional touch in the dialogue at the Show proved that she knew what she was talking about. Yes, Tid is one swell Senior, and we will never forget her-for how could we? 'l13l I Unpredictable is still the best word for Pat. Thcre's never a dull moment when she's around, as you can't be sure which of the four Pats she's being. You should see her as Madam President, efficiently bringing order to class meetin s and running the Fashion Show with organization plus. ghe doesn't have one black bookg she has two-that is when she can find them both. This executive ability has brought in many an Annual ad these past two years. Then there is Madam Bushtowsky, world famous fortune-teller. If you have any doubt about the tall dark boy in yo ir future or the small blond boy in your past, go to Madam Bushtowsky and learn all. Third, there is Pat, a wonderful hostess, as weive heard from the Seniors who went on that mid-year weekend. Last, we have Pat in her slightly wacky moods, claiming, I'm not really crazy, people just think I am. This fiend with her simian instincts CHI want a banana. J . . .jokes . . . and nickname, Patchy , is a wonder to all who know her. A favorite occupation is teasing poor Teddy with her mimicked A-i-i or 'fOie, Chicaf' With diabolical glee, she collected money for the dramatics club and helped herd the third floor during fire drills. During the knitting fad, she bought a l0c ball of wool to knit a blanket Ccomplcte with air-conditioningl for some poor Korean trooper. Extremely sophisticated when necesslaty demands, Pat has her place at the llcad aw tue heart of 51. t QJJJX Xyiyp S M ta Q9-' AW 6,599-Q QM . LSD SENIORS Virginia Clare Chiles scGigin CROZET, VIRGINIA '44 - '51 Yes, that's mighty po'. Whatever we may have said- from the most brilliant of remarks to the most stupididiotic of sayings-it doesn't make any differenceg that is, not to Gigi, for this is what she invariably answers. Whatever sheis doing, whether it's leading the hockey team to victory, or heading the Glee Club, she does in a way that is all her own-a way that is known for its great tact and under- standing. Her being in the May Court as ajunior proved this. Futhermore these qualities continue to mak very much in demand in all sorts of capacities. S voted Freshman class secretary and you will rec busy she was taking care that all the activities of her ss were kept running smoothly. She has also been A. A. representative of her class, not to mention her participation in varsity hockey. The team would surely have been lost without her. After three years as a faithful boarder, adding laughs as well as talks to many gab sessions, Qwhich usually took place in her room because of the large and varied collection of records and food she accumulatedj, as a Senior, she now adds to the Crozet day student troop. Yes, whether she's directing a lot of the school activities, helping the team win, or figuring out schedules of navy furloughs, it must be admitted that Gigi does it in a special way, a way which shows a versatility all her own. . f , J PM S y , rzson Clarke , C. , H Klsal Y! Q! 'J l 9 I ALEXANDRIA VIRG A J. 1 A ,this a solutel ridiculous! sayingjidy pass s 'udigme t ten ill ically ni' n t ' g fro e ltes lon to l al. T o e s oft Al a ter, hav t ma d to c ge h u orgeybgpe traits. er inc ra le land lov lej lazin s 130139 ne of the ' gs that fter ye ill re ind us of gal Sal. incessa ove rob woul eep h r plenty busy, even if g ish his ry didn upy s ch time. Her 'W sc edule is not ned t ' de ma thletics! They're ving me the big gin 'i h explain, with that arch look ' ou press her for ason. hen will that be? The fact t eis coiff conscio and possesses a so- histica ouch stood her ' g stead this spring, and you sho ld hav? seen her se g in the Fashion Show. Qu excellent c assroom m Icurist, forever fusses with er finger s, Sall ' xcuse is t e is making every , jmom In schoo ount. alto section of the Glee has claime er fo o years, and she has added aughs as ,well as harmony o its midst. That last statement, ina ate as it may lime, might be Sallyis permanent p aph in the memoirs of '51, i14l A 1, 'N i 'iSl,E,NllORS T 5' . , L 7.0114 'Dolores Goggirz Lilla A ' . EL PASO, TEXAS , 5 A A ,48-'51 L , . A slamming door and a Western yell, together with an unconsciously humorous remark, announce Lilla's arrival this year, just as they have for the past two. In those days visitors used to get a water or perfume bath when they entered her room, as you, Miss Cochran, have reason to remember, now they are more likely to meet a quiet student than a rowdy cow-girl. In spite of this she has been an outstanding classmate-witness the financing of the Annual. She has her eye on improvement in anything from English to exercises and everyone who has seen her endeavors will agree that the work she has put in back of her will help her get ahead. As a Senior her natural aggressiveness and bull-dog tactics made Lilla an out- standing business manager for the Annual. She went to all lengths land what lengthslj to get those ads. Last year, as afjunior, the May Court was honored by her graces, and or two years she has added a great deal to the Dra- matics Club. She is certain to pass off anything from a hangnail to her hairls turning out wrong by saying, Sally, it's all your fault. Embarrassment is registered by an Oh, you allf, and sudden fussing with her hair. Itls these occasional moments of frustration, plus a mixture of Inad merriment or hard study, high laughter or low looks, complete unconcern or great efficiency that will make us remember our Lilla for years to come. - . 1 v A Ai' .' if ' 'K aj' xl' rf I ' I 5. . ,M A ee Frederzck I ,D I M A :II-.een ' I ROANOKE, VIRGINIA A ,,' 47-'51 Of course everyone knows our tall Southern belle, Lee Frederick. Noted for her love of boys and energy plus, Lee is one of the liveliest members of the senior class. She has been at St. Anne's since her freshman year and has really climbed the ladder to success, for she is considered today one of the brains of the class. One cannot mention Lee without calling attention to her flair for efficiency. This year she was the president of the Dramatics Club. But despite her orderly mien she believes in being fashion- ably late for anything from teas to tennis. Of course, we'll never forget her manly stride and tall slim figure, which was a natural for this year's Fashion Show. A real man charmer ', Lee uses her Southern drawl and long eyelashes to her best advantage. She has always been a great mixer and perfect hostess at the Open Houses. It is impossible to know Lee without noting her ability in dancing, which, when exercised, gives all her audience reat pleasure and entertainment. Many of us will never gmrget those far from ethereal sounds hi-ya , hotcha , and lands as they are echoed down the hall after the swift passing of a blurred figure which resembles Lee. She will long be remembered by her classmates as a strong individualist. 151' 'J ' 'QKQ , , ' ' ' I , ll- Q7 I- f 'I' A ,J ku x f1tfi,,,,1!v M it 'A ,nh X -, , ff. fsEN1ORs f-Ilfeliggy' 'I' ff, ,flu ,mvff Q r r,..L d.1'sf',, ..1f:.-- I ji! ' ' I - ., , X A Q -,Qi fl F 'f 'A 4' f. if' ' J il' I In it A U L I rf jf? ' I A' i f 'nf fi 4: - ,wir-A-'ff1t..1 f r ' .t f14 Slzf1drllH6Zll . . , f ,X 'LW -ff: ll if ffltfi lr' ' 'f VPU i A --r ',e. -'sandf' lb l?lfl7-9 ill. 1 1, P .1 ' ,- lg Q. JUPITER, FLORIDA v A ' A x i . a lf, I, '47 - '51 W .Jr ' '. A 'J fjsast night Sandy provided an incredulous audience with ' K., another of her imaginative and entertaining tales. As 's f P H ,I f ' .1 -- . 1' 7 - 1 V N Q1 , . ' fl .' fa f x , ,' , f 'Gertrude Neal Horton 4 F I ff f Trudye , P ' CHARLOTTE, NORTH CAROLINA . I ' I '49-,51 W. f l,.' pThings have been hot for Trudye during '51. Bells were ringing for her, but they werenit wedding bells, for to Trudye, as '5l's Fire Captain, fell the job of supervising all the many fire drills. What with real smoke in the Senior Dorm, and suspected smoke in the Junior Dorm, she was kept on the run continually: If you were to go into her room, you'd be pretty sure to hear her latest record played, N N over and over againi' as her suitemates say. If you hear a . I ,I I typewriter clicking away, sheis hard at work editing the Grapevine or working on the Annual. Beware when sheis around, though, because she loves to take pictures, and sometimes one might think she had a flash-bulb for a heart. She could blackmail most of us. Whether sheis wearing red, green, or black, sheis got a pair of glasses to match the dress. Everything in her opinion is uyea highw, in- cluding hamsters, for which she has a distinct liking. A desire to be thinner is accompanied by spurts of mad dieting which are kept and broken with the same whole- heartednessg for everything Trudye does is dorie with all her energy. She doesn't take too many sports, but she's made up for it by lugging Miss Coleman's photo equipment around, a job that takes a strong back and willing heart. But then that's what Trudye has, no matter what the job that's given her, itis always done well and willingly. -fi usual her listeners gazed open-mouthed at the vivacious red-head, then turning around, looked at each other with blinking eyes and nodding heads while making such as- senting noises as yeah , H uh-huhn. Whether she's talking, walking, or playing she is always in perpetual motion. Of course, this energy comes in handy when sheis planning all the A. A. activities or playing on varsity and making All-West in hockey. Her's is far from the lowest voice in the Glee Club, or the dorm for that matter. A definite weakness for good-looking shoes explains the many shoe boxes and racks piled high in her closet, while that laugh heard around here so often can be attributed to a grand sense of the ridiculous in herself and others. We have learned to be wary of her, though, when she is angry, for she possesses a fiery temper conveyed to her friends by the energetic swing of her hips. Whether itis a result of anger or joy, it must be admitted that she possesses a rather interesting wiggle. Another of the important things typical of Sandy is her passion for parties, But who can blame her? After all, every girl should have at least one interesting hobby during her lifetime! If past experience foretells the future, Sandy is one girl who can be counted on to attack all problems with a determination, drive, and energy that will always succeed. 6l I a 1 . , A SENIQRS. . I rf, I P . Jllargaret Jllakepeace tMcKenzie Kenzie PLAINFIELD, New jERsEY ,48 - 551 As the buses arrive on Sunday to take everyone to church, the first person to leap aboard is none other than Kenzie, whose desire to get there early has resulted in much kidding. Her long glamorous mane and classic profile are the envy of all of us. Then therels her amazing competence, which she's shown ever since her arrival, through her active participation in all class activities. Not only has she been an A. A. representative, a member of the Altar Guild, the Glee Club, and the Annual Staff, but also President of the ,Iunior Class and this yearls President of the Service Council. However, her talents are not confined only to matters of this nature. She has been an exceptionally valuable member of varsity hockey and basketball, and was Captain of the Gold Team this year. Despite her quick temper, Kenzie is just as quick to forgive and forget. A Yankee from jersey in the Southland, Margaret, as she is called by the teachers, holds her own with the wild, wild Rebs, and her sophisticated sarcasm has left many a would- be-teaser quite flat. Numbered among the staunch ad- mirers of the needle and yarn, Kenzie can frequently be seen with her knitting, but it just ain't', for Britain. Take all these characteristics, add a dash of temperament, plus carloads of personality, and you have-you guessed it- our Kenzie. .. 'B Sarah Uilllison JWvCari7J21 . .S , ,N t 'TT 'G , afsy . , f., 5.5 . s. -- ' W. T mf JAWDNVILIIB,-ELOQRA 1 .Q ' x, , 5-'48 - '51 X ,Q f,, , '-- 'yx - , -. A- -1. Sassy. stands, of course, 'for two linings: petiteness and 1 v - dalntiness. She can look up at the Ehvrtest wboysrjfh that big brown-eyed stare, Bnd with the ma e-mai 'she 3- party because she loves big crowds, lots of nUl!e, ancfplenty of fun. But being beautiful, witty, and the belle of thhball , aren't her only achievementsihs her list of accom lishmgnts 5 here will prove. During her S homore year, shot only found time to take down all th lass minutes and other, a hard job, I hear-and also led the school in cheering mr teams to victory. She was so good at this that she's doing s X it again this year. Her singing, in and out of the Glee ' Club rehearsals, is considered absolutely tops. That goes ' for her dorm life, too. She never gets into an argument, 1 which is really outstanding. Her Oh, come on, to some person who draws back from a suggested prank which she has decided will be daring but inevitably exciting and successful, has won over many a sceptic. Never a truer statement has been said than, Fun is had by all when Sassy's around. Jacksonville raises the bestf' is Sassy's motto, and she's proof of it. lvl gets, she must do it very effectively. Sh? is the life-of aiiro 4' secretarial jobs, but really did May Court jllmice. ' She kept the class finances straight during the-Iunior year- ' Q '- I7 5' , 2 X7 ,W 71 C2742 . N lj P1 ,CT2 x7 Cfd fifiicff if 'legs Efss A611 s Cp? AT JH-427' 6' ug: W., ' X 1-JY? 7 '77 A! .7- X .f SL-1' gf' ruff Z' Q9 vsyip 5 IZ! C ,. Jllary 'Boots Jllack Boots will -ff ' f U50 f X 1 viva f f 1 54 . 47 fx? -'7 . f I sQ' ff SHORT HILLS, NEW JERSEY '47 '51 X Love 'em and leave 'em, that's what I sayl , you might hear Boots declare with conviction if you should go into her room any time between dawn and dark. Whether she practices what she preaches we couldn't say, but we do know that the day Boots isnit confused over her men will be a new day for us! Somehow, tho', sheis always in com- mand of the situation. Her leadership and executive ability have been recognized since the day she stormed onto the campus as a Freshman. She was elected President of her class in the Sophomore year. She's been a member, off and on, of the Glee Club since she came to her Alma Mater, and the alto section has followed the bang of Boots, foot almost as constantly as it has followed Miss Coltranc's directions. Her musical ability doesn't stop here. For all four years she has slaved daily to master the piano and those of us who have listened to her know that it has not been in vain. She has been everything on varsity from star player to timekeeper to scorer and back again! Every- one in the school flocks to Boots' room some time for she is certainly one of the best liked and most popular personali- ties. Noted also for her curly hair, quantity of pills, and deep laugh, Macksy,' is quite a girl. Ask anyone and they'll tell you, t'From the photogenic face on down, she's wonderful V, 'Bette , uDc,ll,well9osell.l Jllargaret Cabell Jllatthewl-l'Qf6lfXil'C5V'f3 S Margaret CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIAUJQ Glfh I 548 - '51 fp C, U I'vc got things to tell you. What could it be? Ui co you know, Miss Cochran, who the speaker is and what the subject will beg for Margaret is the boarders' daily journal. She isjust as tall and slim as ever. Her good looks definitely influenced the Fashion Show judges, for they made her a model, and what a model she made! She was really among the best, for her regal carriage and great poise went over beautifully, as they would in any case. One of the things you notice about Margaret is her voice. It's low and a little hushed: over the telephone, it sounds positively mysterious and alluring, and her vocabulary is simply out of this world, as Mrs. Boaz can tell you. It's obvious she reads quite a lot Cand by this I mean good literaturell, for she's always raving about some book or another. That's one thing . . . she's cultured! live heard that the Seniors envy her literary powers, for, indeed, Margaret can't be beat when it comes to that. Last year she got the job of Assistant Editor of the Grapevine because of this ability. Praises have usually been her well-merited reward. No description of Margaret would be complete without mentioning the way in which she lets fall subtle remarks slightly tinged with sarcasm. Theyire most effective! Yes, Margaret is one fascinating person who will probably get very far! You donlt have to worry about her. Gsm L-K CELL, LTR 'NNE SKWECQQXQKYLLJ Klcaewsb ksbexen Lpgyemgt, QQ :B M-: .s rl1s'1- YW CSJNCS , gli cj QW-wiki ' will-. -f -1, - A-xXh i Csfiij ,If VI QV! 'fi lull' f I' -' Q' . 4 Q V' I1 l l ' A I ' ' ,Af CL' I' 1 SENIORTSL, Vf,frI f I 5' E rf! I g it s I l g, '- Kc, J' I. A lL' J 1.9 'ii' lr 'll ,i . . .4 'F . 'I' I' 5 'i 1' Tatrzcza Vihme Tayne XJ . ' I' I - y Pat , l BRIDGEPORT, CONNECTICUT L 7' '44 - '51 I V Pat is the tiny girl, with the tiny waist and tiny feet and wavy blond hair. Her blue eyes get a mean sparkle when she is in the midst of planning some deviltry. She loves horses and is never happier than when on one, looking quite trim and making the spectators think that she and the horse-D are one. Heaven knows, she makes the judges think so, too, for we've never seen a girl win as many ribbons and silver dishes. This does not mean, however, that she lives and' breathes only on the four-legged animals. Another of her pet crazes is knitting. She turns out about half a dozen!! argyle socks a day, with a couple of ties if she has a spare most athletic. In addition to basketball, she plays hockey, and the team doesnit know what it would do without herb She dotes on car-racingg or is it the drivers? Oh, yes !-and. she also loves to take pictures, you know, those little candid shots at the most unexpected momentsfthc kind weid all like to forget! It gets to be quite a collection when she adds them up through the years, especially when shc's been here for seven of them! In spite of the brief sojourn in the day department, hers has been the longest stay as a boarder, and it's no wonder that the tiny girl with the tiny waist and U X moment or two. To put it short: Pat without her knitting, V l lS like a fish without a tail. And there's still more: She isx . , E Y. I I !'!. S 6 feet seems almost to be a fixture here. Iwi 7 'WC f V ZJ 9. Q its in Q, Martha Timur Tggfxkt Ri QQ , ,, P wp, SHORT HILLS, NEW JERSEY 3 W 947 - 351 ilvst 3-5-57--70.-45 p.m. As I sit here, Miss Cochran, Miss Qt' Coleman and Pat are busy working on the Annual' I am busy'1oafing. Pat, you know, is Editor of TI-IE SAINT, cli-yzx 4 maxing a brilliant four-year career. A member of Foot- lights Club, Captain of junior Varsity in hockey, class Vice- President her junior year-Pat did each job well although she constantly deprecates herself. Vice-President? Gee, that was a tough job . . . I called one meeting, and once I emptied a waste-basket. The waste-basket was hardest! Many were fooled by this modesty until she wrote thc Sophomore skit Ca mock radio programj. The wool fell from everyone,s eyes. You remember how she hit the nail with that dialogue and brought down the houseg result- it ZX Split: Q 1 STL. Q WISH 4 recruitment to the Annual staff as Assistant Editor last year. Not even she can change our opinion of that Annual And all work and no play? Never! Ask her about the momen- now shc is slaving to make this SAINT surpass that One. But 70 ty - 4 . Ll , tous trip to Annapolis, trips to New York, or her latest lit- erary effort. Aw, that wasn't any good! . . . and she'l1 , . be saying that when her books are best-sellers. Always good for a laugh or some fun, with an occasional cynical remark- f but I could go on for hours, and the proof ofthe pudding? has been the eating. We've worked with her and we k ow! A S fu si MSW SENIORS Jlflaria 'Dresa Sanchez Teddy HAVANA, CUBA '47 - '51 A mass of energy governed by an unpredictable mind, no one-least of all, Teddy herself-ever really knows whether she's coming or going. At 9:15 she starts down the hall determined to get cokes for herself and thirsty roommates, room-bell finds her no further than the next suite-oblivious of time, drinks, or Pat's threats of what will happen if she returns empty-handed. But you know Teddy, Miss Cochran. This forgetfulness isn't always present, as her work on the Annual staff and Grapevine proves. She is not only Secretary of the Glee Club, but Treasurer and V.-P. also. In athletics she is a shining light. For three years she has been a late but important member of both varsities Ceven making All-West as an inner, when she played wingl, was Secretary of the A. A. as a Sophomore and Captain of the White Team in '51, She was a Freshman representative in the May Court, and proved she could still look beautiful in the Fashion Show and in Williams' Show, too. Her far-reaching laugh and often almost naive behavior lay her 'open to many teasers, whom she quiets with, I'm not going to pay any attention to you-you're laughing at me! Both American and Cuban expletives and a stamp of her foot announce anything from intense disgust to her latest brain storm. This is the girl who re- peatedly said from September to june, I'm being more dignified this year. Whether she succeeded or not is a debatable question, but one thing is certain: St. Anne's will miss Teddy, and vice versa. Ella Gordon Smith Goobie GREENWOOD, VIRGINIA '45 - '51 A blue Ford convertible glides around the circle, and under competent, if sometimes uncertain, hands coasts to its habitual spot in the parking lot. Watch! Its owner is alighting, and if you were here this year, Miss Cochran, in a minute you would see one of the fashion plates of the class of '51. But you'd see more than that: You'd see a smooth coifffure which even the most scatter-brained driving can't ruffle. You'd see calm blue eyes, behind which is poorly disguised a quiet humor. If you stayed long enough, you might get a taste of it. Aw, you all! - and, in accom- paniment to the soft voice, one exquisite eyebrow would raise. You'd see a figure long envied even before the Fash- ion Show, when the public was shown St. Anne's at its best. She did so well in her first modeling job that she was asked to be a model at the Greenwood Fashion Show. Who knows, some day she may adorn the cover of Vogue! You'd meet one whose voice has graced the soprano section of the Glee Club for four of the years she has spent within these walls. You would see one whose arrival is often distinguished by the shouts of the boarders to whom she is bringing nourish- ment. This she does very willingly, having past memories of hungry afternoons and nights during her one and a half years as a boarder. You'd see, in short, a girl who is the paragon of fashion, poise and beauty-Goobie Smith. -f20 '48 - '51 SENIORS , , Joyce tMei-Sbiu 'Deng Joyce NEW YORK, NEW YORK '48 - '51 Knit two, purl two . . . Joyce is again at her knitting, which includes anything from socks to sweaters. It's surprising how much she can get done in the short extra time she has, for this girl has little free time. First, she is the proud possessor of a brain, a very scarce commodity in general and something that is much in demand. She not only gets up at anywhere from 3:00 to 6:00 a.m. to do her own home- work, but all during study hall itis, Joyce, this Chemistry problem . . . or, joyce, I can't get the Spanish . . . Once a month, though, it's her time to go around to people, and the happy eiipresdon with which she counts up the money owed the Senior Class is terrifying to behold. Money was the by-word of the Senior Treasurer this year! All winter her afternoons were claimed by varsity basketball. She's got quite a sense of humor. Whenever something strikes her funny, everyone nearby knows it, and it takes very little to send her into gales of laughter. Her one great trouble is a susceptibility to teasing, of which she receives double doses. She never resorts to swearing, though, but passes everything off with, Oh, Twiddlebombln of which the exact meaning is unknown to everyone but her. Chinese lessons, movie magazines, and quiet competence are among some of the other things for which she will be remembered by all of us who have known, admired, and loved Joyce Tseng. Sylvia jane Sturku' Sylvia , Silwa CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Short in stature and strictly on the fun side, Sylvia has proved that being one of the last day students to enter the class isn't any handicap. Two and a half years isn't so long, no matter what the Sophomores may think, but this girl's absolutely unpredictable remarks, uttered in an unmistak- able Lynchburg accent, have made her an important part of the school. Her work as Subscription Mana er of the Grapevine this year added a lot to the paper, whge her ex- cellent modeling technique was important in the Fashion Show. She's known for such remarks as, Cheer, cheer, cheer for Colgate toothpaste! and B-B-B-B-B-But! fol- lowed by her opinion of the problem on hand. Last year she taxied Madame Perrenoud to and from school, and you could usually tell in French class what her driving had been like. This year she lives nearer to school, within walking distance, in fact. During her years here she's come to know the boarders so well that she even spends the night here once in a while and knows what it's like to be a boarder. Sylvia is not a bookworm, far from it, but that doesn't mean that she makes poor grades. She'll make a 98 on a test, making her teacher very happy until she innocently asks what chapter the test was on because she hadn't read it yet. Innocent looks, class witticisms, and a love of fun made Sylvia one of the outstanding girls of nineteen-fifty-one's class. ' 211 SENIORS in Bell? Sarah vlgues Vest Sazshy CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA ,46 - '51 Does that girl ever take anything seriously? We doubt it! But how many of our classes have seemed shorter because of her endless wit, and how much of our free time has been more fun because of her wonderful sense of humor! No one can be upset for long around Sazshy, for her easy-going nature calms even her excitable younger sister, or inter- venes for her. There was a time when Cathy stood in a rather shaky position in your favor, Miss Cochran, and Sazshy came to the rescue. Nothing ever bothers Sazshy, unless she loses her temper-and then, brother! just get out of the way. A long-standing member of the Dramatics Club, who played Mrs. Gardiner in Pride and Prejudice her junior year, Sazshy brings zest and energy into just about everything she does. despite an occasionally languid air. Her work in the Fashion Show made Williams choose her as a model. Shels an ace chauffeur, and many a slowly starving boarder has welcomed the sight of Sazshy's green Chevvy flying around the circle. Leave it to Sazshy to have upto-date slang and the latest by-word. ':Girlie, it's grizzly, I mean! you'l1 no doubt be told if you get into a conversation with her. When she was picked as one of the D. A. R. Fashion Show models, her comment was typical: Ig my face red ! For years Sazshy has made those around her at S. A. S. love her. We wish it could be many more. nodal! t-4-cgso. 111:-.-in 52 DW' Q1 img- fnom QW g . 1.1 A - A-PL ir l ,Qfyld :'pa5fY1?, ,- , ,M 1 ,jeg 1, Z. was g - LN Q9-Q sniffer-'ifs aka.-N4 JI ,L,t,1..t,1.,L,.t..-ef'..- , LA!! v . 43-mm' TYJQ-. WQMMXA- eAndrea Genevieve Wallaee -'D M-'-4-as-5 I T' ,. -'X P l ,-. . do Q WJ-Ai AUdYH 'il' LLM' Vim ' -'-itlw 'fi CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Cc 1 '45 - '51 Every day for the past six years, this member of the school has been arriving on foot from her nearby home. Some- times she's on time for chapel, sometimes she isn't, but no matter when she arrives, you know she's going to be smiling and raring to go. During those years, Andy has really been busy. Taking care of the class funds in her Sophomore year was her particular headache, but they really made money! Then she was a very competent class Secretary as a Senior, even when those class meetings got confusing and feeling ran high, she kept the notes straight. The Glee Club has been her main extra-curricular activity and she has greatly added to the second soprano and alto sections. Her good work on the Annual staff wouldnlt be forgotten either, for she certainly could get those ads! Might be that those good looks, unbelievable complexion and wonderful disposition have something to do with it. They've won over many a person before. Everyone who knows her will admit that she is really a beauty, as the Fashion Show proved. Not only does she have a figure and looks but that certain something that makes clothes look like a million. A little on the silent side perhaps, but cute, and when you get to know Andy, you'll never forget her. l22l' f' .', K . fS'E1N.I'.OtRS' f g?f' V F f I-1' 4 jf ,,f 1 5' ' A I .ff J A K. 'I X , I, , 4 If .- ' X. 'V' f li .' ' 'A' 7 X -V in if -yr K ff . 1 I f 'fff Jllary Jllczrtzn Wzllzamsorz ' ' ' ' 7 . an ff....' . fjMefry.Maz1i11 .ffy. it f ff ,ffvfr ,f .,.. CHARr.'oT?5, NORTIi 'CAROLINA , , 17, K jf L ' I y ,-1,51 .f K 3-I yu' f glw I A not-by-any-means light tread, accompanied by a lusty North Carolina hymn, usually announces the arrival of this strictly Southern belle. Large, sparkling blue eyes, lovely blond hair, and a disarming smile are only a few of this girl's charming qualities. She's graced the Altar Guild and has sung lustily at many a Glee Club rehearsal and concert during these past years. She really showed off those clothes at the Fashion Show, proving that she can maintain that posture when she tries: but, being M. M., she sort of lapses into that Carolina shuffle whenever she feels at ease, which isjust about always. This is the girl who believes in having fun, and in raising the roof if possible, but when facing Miss Coleman the morning afterwards'-oh, those big innocent blue eyes! But Mary Martinis on the work-list anyway, because herjudge knows her too well. After all, whose voice can be heard above all whispers any time from 10:00-ll :OO p.m.? Who can be found in the bathroom during this period knitting away furiously? But on the other hand. who's the girl who keeps the chapel clean? Who has that laugh with the unbelievable carrying quality? Who cheers the loudest at the games, and who keeps the rivalry between Virginia and North Carolina alive throughout the year? Mary Martin'--that gum-cracking, Car ina-crazy Senior! . K ,y ,Ie - 5 N ' x-'Z tt ' 5 3' xi' X , A X55 .K 'xi .5 ,v 5 ff s. .. i g , J P ',, ' . J ,J r 'N . 5 3 9. ,f . 3 AQ is Qvff, , s y V' xg! Y .5 'I x 5 ' K ' ' . , ,' X: 'I X 3-ov5ff3 my 'sb WIJJKJ, 0 jf-gb J' 4' ',,-J 'i K5 if, lg 4,1 1 ary 731-yce Warden . Q an H J, PA! I Y .M v B Y' -' Q, PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA 1 v ' e ,47 -,151 A 'iWell, all rightll' A voice floats down thehall, and from the tone, which can convey anything rom disgust to de- light-and accent, w X h conveys only Pittsburgh-you just know it's B. e he's on thephone, it's,ten to one that the other endfof the onnection is' Humph ies Hall. B does get around! .But t ' taste is not her onl idiosyn- crasy. She loves to talk, and, hether asleep or a ake, her conversation ip' bound to be interesting. She is oted for endless wor 'bn the Grapevine since her -junior yea . No one can find t scoops thati'B', finds, and certainly no one can write th with- her style and subtlety. Her form. has graced eevarsityclasses-both in hockey' Cshe made W I- Statel' nd in basketball-during her Senior year, and h willingness to work has helped the' Annual over many bump since her Sophomore one. A master typist, who ha unselfishly aidedhmany a struggling literary light, B,s',l cheerful '4Yuh-usl' to anyone in difficulty has been much more appreciated than she herself probably realizes. Not only that, her wit and humor have lightened our darkness so often that if you ask anyone, from faculty down to the youngest boarder, the question, 'L What would we do without 'B'?U you would probably get a blank stare, for such is un- thinkable. In fact, what will we do without B ? Jl23l' UNDERCLASSMEN G66 THERE you have 'em, Miss Cochran-this year's Seniors. But varied as this group may be, they, I'rn afraid to say, are the minority. There is, as you know, a larger, more widely scattered and scatter-brained group here known as the Underclassmen. These are the ones who don't have to set the example, and do they know it! From the wild and wooly fifth and sixth grades to the more careful, fand therefore less campusedl Juniors these girls are the backbone of the school, and the recurring inspiration or headache of the teachers. All in all, they're pretty easy to please. They think that sports are fun, parties are wonderful, the Friday night Westerns are exciting, the teachers are swell Cpart of the timej, and the work is designed by the old as a punish- ment for the young. They eat a lot, not always at the dinner table, but they use up any excess energy by always going places at a fast clip and staying up late to read True Love Stories by flashlight. The campus continues to look better because of their efforts and the lower the class the longer the list on the right-hand side of that fatal black book. Yet in spite of this frivolity, the honor rolls do have representation from their midst. So you see, Miss Cochran, they haven't changed at all. They have the same old spirit that is one of the most wonderful things in the school, and I don't think that they,ll ever lose it. l24l WMDW? 'U aim SM EM , iw' 'frify tL rif't if rvwf fs 9- .pr ,P .gy . V ffm i5'1ff:r VV f5b2'QffFifj 'iw 1 . would bring profits into their exchequer. Yet in spite of this financial activity, they 1 A . V ' ' 'op 92135 W ' fm VW 3' Q' ' QP P' fy .,,: 7-V of' by Vv,.f,' Oy, IRST, Miss Cochran, we come to our Juniors. Although at times they can vw N ppear angelic, Mrs. Randolph's chapel talks haven't completely reformed Q ' av 0, org' them. They still manage their share of mysterious midnight parties and can turn f ,ef a handy rake. p fafipf-7 . P ,all Those innumerable dates and knitting sessions seem to occupy the better part of -4-J A their time, but they accomplish an imposing list of undertakings nevertheless. Sf BX Who will forget the successful Junior Bazaar? Everyone left the Theatre Room , overloaded with packages, and broke. But their selling didn't end with the J ' X , azaar. The money-minded Juniors had discovered that the way to girlies' pocket- Y C A ooks was through their stomachs, and for many 'months there was always food DEG-1 555,41 ' o be had. They also sold us Christmas cards, stationery, and anything else that uirfu. .5 ix Noon, U D143 Lg L I 2 seem to find time for those Bible papers, which continue to elicit Junior groans. 'mg is ,J , h 'iLl,JQ.l Q 5 The fruits of all this money grabbing was fully appreciated by the uniors and 'N'-La ' A.g,.q ,Q . 1 Seniors, at the beautiful Senior Prom. The music and soft lights were just whatlu,-,l t Q' ' X- . they should be. Us gc I Then on one fateful day in May, many bewildered juniors could be seen tfmridl - lx? 0-t , Li , yapping dogs and screaming masters, selling tickets, separating dogs, and trying to S:-S, , D run the Dog Show. There were a few bad moments as Rover charged King, off: Q-n.Qdv:i'a H some canine refused to move, but the results were professional. l KSA- L94 K . It lr H They're beautiful, ravishing, talented, stupendous, outstanding, and un- ,L 2 equaled -at least that's what the Juniors say, and where there's smoke t'here's A ' F' e bound to be some fire fexcept when Miss Coleman smells itj. I! ,gif if 'A lr . iff 2 W IV X V 1 ' . -ff fn! jj minfijz f-f' 'f' ff WVU ' it V A fjjllffi' ' ' V ' f x ' s ' ' It l 6 161.01 ,jjjfj U v , W My ANNE WELBORN . . . .lf .2'.JViWsfdent , AD HARRIET ANN DAVIS . . .... z'ce- ' , 1 Q XJ . I 1 g . I ,ly 1 MARY MEAD . . . . . . Spnutdry . I Vid 1 LlzA BALIS ........ ..... T reasurerj jj M Ii f Viv MARY MANN NASH ............ AVA. Representative Q, Muff dj: ITAA MRS. tl. H. Yoi-:MLLML9 V. . Qiiilljgttdlv W My ,' 'fb 9 ,fir .6 y 7 ,f , ' xyi' 1 A f 1 - 'S pl i' Lg klyffl - ll, k M EMM, . ,.. P jj, A I, l f 1 ft ' ' C XM J' fill' v , f . . I , P I My fb L in, i JI' H jfi.f'A f 1 N 1' 'ff ,Rf ff Ml, Q- A 1 ' L Lili- J Virfrjxn, fl IA7., J ycyp X f 1, ! ' 0 - , ' , MW pn' ..fwfVY ' f-'Wg ff-t-t15'El'lVti X, 41144 I X rv ' ' f' 1 1,2 'Q-' l -f , ' ppl, , flfhf flc-E K F1 '-K, p fi' h Ll tj 1' MII' AHKWCI .U iv, I Orlfdh '-r ' 4,4-44 ' 1 h,-fl Ayff .2'l 1 Qi. Ai lv I H it ci r J, . , 141214 f ,, ,, I, I f 151 l'.u'1.c1R, lluslNr:117k. IQIISSICLI., PA'1 l'lcRsoN, BARNES. Bmms In l'1!'l1m1v., SIIICRRHRIU, PAYNR QBJ, Sruum. N'V1n'r1iNAr:K 42241 725 C13 Gmsfw fM.l,Hr1mxs. liAIJI URIl l.1r:n'1' KZ? MRS.SNu1m1n',CI11Al'uAN Bux'1.AN, SANc:1ucx CA-XJ C33 BAR'I'l.li'I I', BURKS, PIKIKIPIUI' BI,ACIKS'I'UNI'1. SMITH 461.5 MJ IX1Ac:CluNm:1111c. KI,lNfihf.'XN NVUUU, SIIIQPPIQRSUN if Sxbgb-5. - 4 A R m 6 S Q' X i i Es. +- C,o..s..s.SNm'Q.L.n,.JC MQ-3-LJH,-c1551 g,?-L..u.5s:.r4,,I , . Qtxxs-LS.. SOPHOMORlEgf'ki'A G60 O CHANGE has been noted in the Sophomore section. Year after year when mousy Freshmen inch their way up to noisy Sophomores, the general opinion of them remains the same-loud, gay, and almost always good-natured. Oh, yes!- and beneficial, too, especially when they gave their Hallow'een party, skit, and Christmas party for the Seniors. Here the unity of their group has shown value, for this is not only our largest class, but one which stands together whether it's for work or pleasure. H Of course, the front of the dorm continues to present cleaning problems for Sopho- more occupants, and those huge closets often contain more than wearing apparel. Miss Gibson, however, doesn't keep her iron hand in a velvet glove when she's giving those night-time raps. Per usual, they've gotten into trouble and out of it periodi- cally, and I'm quite sure rooms one and two have decidedly had their worries about the plaster in the front rooms. But even with their voluble protests about heat, work and manners, next year, like every year before, you won't recognize them as the quiet, poised and trustworthy Juniors they will, we hope, be. iff I ANA SANCHEZ . . . . . President MARILYN CHAPMAN. . . Vice President MARGARET BOYLAN. . . Seeretaga LYNNE SHERRERD . . . . Treasurer BETSY PAYNE . . . ...... A. A. Representative MRS. L. B. SNGQDY ., ...... A . . '. .... Sponsor . 7, 'f .nl ff fa I e o l '. ' J' ' 9 L In-.,,5'., ,ji gif ,wmv If Jig., . li.. vlvylll Q , 15 , . j H-F fl 1 1 I 1 f' L V' A I f I J ', ' ' ,I ' ,,e cl 'aj I K ,D jf' ,, - I. 'fa . 1' x 'i H' ' ' if 1' f J , xl , 1 I ',,, .fl . ig? I 1' . D , Q, I e . '4' rf' fn - '-' 'I . If V7 lf. I, yr . . n. I .1 ,N , .iss , Q ,J Inf? ,le 2 . X ' -' J. .yi -W 9,1 - 5.N',, I , J in x ' , ' ' BX, - , J if - ll '- F Q - -l29l .1 ka, ' .ll rm' 1 X X' XV XY 'X ,f 'X ' 'M', Rei? ,..,, . in f : f ': , x-'L 'Q ik Amar, Eze- -Q Q x wwf K 1 SQ , gg A Q' . , X ,,..., , .2 fc QL: E' 1 . if 1,-4 K if p , . ,gm 1-. Q ,Rgig 1 f ff W-M, ggi M- Xl'L- mm m 5525 Mig M335 gm . mfg? if 2, in ,.. ., fw gg wiv .:,.:,,. 22255, fv 'f ig 5i?1?f5'52?H W fo, 5 N fs 3 ' J. -151555515 E R sfv 5 5 ' 243212: 5 ' A k Y 4- 3. G . N . J Awww lliile N , V 'X I xx ' 'ybca u.UL5Afn Je Jfldw . yt , J ' , if 'Q . K , ,X Q X fx, N Qi v 5COJft.v.a,clL.,, ,BQQQLL YU or K' I ii' is ww- . fs 'I sz ' xo X V ii-Q wf J v YD K Q ' . K '60 rx QQ: xx jle 5 FRESHMEN Jfwgw-ftqglx A Q. ' ' Y V N ' - iifigi' ...se GMX P- V ' . X S v Xi I ' XJ ii-3,6 X' V IT'S HARD to say anything short of a book about the Freshman class. I'd like , J to say something in general about them, but there's no in generaln with them. 5 lt's not that they do not have many assorted talents falthough some are of the o inion that the are extremel well hiddenj, for they do. Some of these ran e from y, P Y Y 8 9- 3 scholastic and athletic ability to more unusual talents, such as the hair-cutting X K technique. . 'A XA As for the Freshmen themselves, the are always ready for fun fand usually for J Y , troublej. I could use up many adjectives before I could say what I mean, but I will ,X , say that their motto might well be, If there's a leaf on the ground, the Freshmen will . . . M N' ii soon be around. we rg if' They probably see more of Mrs. Randolph than Miss Coleman does, and it isn't A 1 xi for their conversational ability. xl X. 'J X Now don't think that they are irresponsible. Aside from taking part in the junior Q V, ' Bazaar, where they had a raffle booth, they really outdid themselves at the carnival, X and, of course, the Freshman-Sophomore dance with its Mardi Gras theme was xf . collossal. . 'v X Ju As I said before, I could talk all day, but unfortunately. I'm not allowed to do X, yi that, so I uess I'll have to sto and study. They may range from the sublime to the ,, S P 3 X, ridiculous fmostly ridiculousj, but you won't find a better Freshman class anywhere. V So, Miss Cochran, you see the the F not only stands for Freshmen but for fun, N. 5' friendship, and probably future fame. ' V . ' .J X, ,,. xi -' xg 5: W N Z1 A' JOANNA GEORGE . . . . . . President K 1 MARGARET GOODMAN . . Vifse-Presidenl e N Il SUE SAUNDERS . . . . . . Secretagr X . 3 HAZEL TSENG . . ..... Treasurer . Q1 Tnmx WINFIELD ..... . . A. A. Reprexentalive Y, Mas. RALPH D. Powau. . . ...... Sponsor Xl 'N . N' I w 5 s 1 ' A3 x X w .I 3 it 21 -I 31 I I QL 3 S k: f 5135 .. 5 X ' go :1:ka5:E'-4 3 iw' Ski Mm My ,am H WW D-WM, aw ...w....... :Qi ag 3 53? L w :sn -Y K .mam ,Q - it 5.1 X , S I E , ,af iii 6 'bd' w .vqN,,. ,,v,,,,.,. My v-wx 6bljfwV 'LV I QW in' J . ' i , ,,. wiv ' ,HV ,Vs if .f,il'x' Jfx luff W uf if xrfff ,WM SEVENTH AND EIGHTH GRADES K C-L60 NOISE . . . a blurred flash whizzes by as we labor up the stairs to classes! Ten to one it's a member of that vibrant group, the seventh and eighth grades, hurrying to get nowhere. They never walk, but are always on the go. Are we wakened on the early Sunday morning by a banging door? Who else could have caused it but a seventh grader? . . . unless itis an eighth grader! They do more than run and make noise, though. The seventh grade laid the audience low with their acting and coy fun poking when, in a skit on the Fashion Show, they took off the Seniors. They won first prize by unanimous consent, and everyone loved it. Water fights and midnight excursions in the junior Dorm afforded much fun, and hardly ruffled Miss Lonergan's impermeable calm. Their campus record, however, proved that she won in the end. , Peeping in on the F reshman-Sophomore Dance, some of them probably wondered if they'd ever reach such heights. They will. Not just thatg when we think of the Seniors who have risen from the seventh and eighth grades, we know that they'll be chic and sophisticated soon. Eighth Grade Seventh Grade JACQUELINE WALKER ....... Prerident LINDA VAUGHN ......... Prexident LEECIE RHINELANDER . . Vice-Pre.v.-Secretary BONNIE PIETSCH . . . . . . Vice-President BEVERLY PARSONS ........ Seeretagf PARTIIIE GIBSON ..... Secretory- Treasurer SANDRA BROWN . . . Athletic Representative VIRGINIA SOMERVILLE . Athletic Representative MRS. Louis QUAM ........ Sponsor MRS. ELIzAEE'rrI KELLEY . .... Sponsor i 33 It FIFTH AND SIXTH GRADES HE seven youngest members of the school are classified under the name Fifth and Sixth graders They are few in number, but this doesn't handicap them in the least. Fun is their byword, whether itls sports, dramatics, school, or pulling the wool over Mrs. lielley's eyes. You'd think that having had so many 'clittle darlingsf' trying to get away with things would make her immune, but somehow, each new class comes up with a new twist. Of course, this isn't their only occupation, there are times when they do pick up a book, and the word 'cstudy is not unknown to them. They are the future leaders of the school, a little too far in the future maybe as far as they are concerned, but they can always say some dayw. Meantime, they're not sitting by. NVhether they're taking part in the junior Bazaar, the Dramatics Club, which I hear they love, or the regular school activities, they can always be counted on to take a big part. So, Miss Cochran, even though it's awfully far in the future, l've got a feeling that when the time comes they'll make a wonderful group of upperelassmcn. WIEBEI. CPJ, MERRIT1', HANKINS, PARKER CSJ, WALLACE QQ, CBTTI fH.j I 341' SX S? 1 Q63 X w THE SAINT C-LGE CC A 0 TEDDY, come on! You said you were going to dictate to me. Well, I'm not inspired. Tell me something to say about the Annual staff. The Annual staff? Let's see, what did they say about them last year? And so another write-up starts out. Modesty forbids letting us enumerate the talents of the Literary staff, depicted above, the brilliant Business staff Ceven if the books don't always balancej, the artistry of the Art staff, the typing proficiency of the Directory staff, or the beautiful picture-taking ability of the Photography staff. If she werenit on the staff, we'd tell you about the long hours of hard work and much-needed assistance Miss Coleman always found time to give us. But since modesty forbids, we leave it up to you. THE SAINT is a . . . staff. Editor: PAT PAGE Business Manager.' LILLA GOGGIN NANCY ST. CLAIR, Assistant Editor JANET MAURY, Assistant Business Manager ' An staff Business staff LIZA BALIS ANNE P. WIEBEL Literary Staff TEDDY SANCHEZ LYNNE SI-IERRERD NANCY COLEMAN BELITJE BANCKER PAT BUSH HARRIE'F ANN DAvIs CINDY PICKENS ANA SANCHEZ ANDREA WALLACE ANNE WELBORN Directogz Staff TRUDYE HORTON Photograpliy Staff Miss CATHERINE O. COLEMAN, Sponsor . SONNY NIELSON SWEETSIE BRILL MARILYN ADDINGTON JOYCE TSENG UH W7 ALTAR GUILD Affwmbfrs: McKENzi1a, STORM, WxL1,1AMsoN, COLEMAN CNJ, WELBORN, .ADDlNGTON, SANCHEZ CAA, BRILI, T'S eight-thirty, and lid write more only I'm late for chapel duty as usual. I swear, Miss Cochran, theyjust don't appreciate us. Every day, through rain, wind, snow, or hail, we beat a path or swim through a labyrinth of pews to fix up the chapel for the morning service. Y'Ve work our fingers to the bone, but do we get any thanks for our untiring devotion? Mostly no. Of course, at Christmas and at Final Vespers people can't help noticing what our hard labor has accomplished. lVell. chapel hell just rang, and I haven't gotten down there yetg maybe people will notice that, but l doubt it. MARII.YN ADDINGTON , . . Head Miss CATHERINE COLEMAN . Syzonsor U81 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Bark Row: PAYNE fB.J, NASH, WINFIELD, PAYNE KPJ, SANCHEZ fT.l, MCKENZIE, SOMERVILLE Front Row: BRILI., Miss KIMBROUGH, HALL, STORM HE A. A. has really been on the ball this year, Miss Cochran, and I think it only fair that I tell you something about them, for they are the means through which we can express a lot of our school spirit. They arranged a lot of games for us which we won-Ywell, part of them-and they fixed up a point system based on honor. They've also kept the friendly rivalry between the two teams going by having quite a lot of basketball and hockey color games. Then too they held their annual picnic at which athletic awards for the year were given. The officers and sponsor have really made it an outstanding association, for their efficiency and excellent leadership have kept it on the go. They have been wonderful this year, Miss Cochran, and I'm very proud to tell you that they have made the A. A. one ofthe most outstanding organizations in the school, ik SANDY HALL. . . President BETTY BRIL1. . . Seerelary SUE STORM . . . ...... Treasurer 'TEDDY SANCHEZ . . . . Ca,bta1'n, White Team MARGARET MCKENZIE . . Captain, Gold Team Miss JUNE KIBIBROUGH . ....... Sponsor lvl FOOTLIGHT'S CLUB C-366 HE graduates of this year's Footlight's Club are more than good actresses. The hilarious pro- duction of NThe Importance of Being Earnest proved their acting ability to everyone's enjoy- ment, but on and offstage they show that there's more to the business of acting thanjust saying lines. If you passed their classroom during any of their meetings you would be more than likely to hear something like: Raise your diaphragm. No, stick that in Qthe exact whereabouts of that is left to your imaginationj. Another day you might hear: uGet your voice lower, or L'You are talking too lowg throw your voice into the far corner. Gr again you might see some poor student in front of the class trying to explain the use of anything from an old shoe to a Daisy Nut-Cracker to a far-from-intelligent class which asks the poor girl anything from, 4'W'ho invented the first nut-cracker?', to 'gW'hat would happen if you get your finger caught in it? Demonstrate. This may not sound as if it has much relation to dramatics, but Miss Pritchett, their patient and long-suffering teacher, says that good acting is only half the fight: you have to have the proper posture, voice and poise. Itis been a tough battle, but sheis turned out a dramatics group who are not only actresses on stage but charming and self-assured young ladies on and iffy it. ii? LEE FREDERICK. . ...,. Preszklml PAT PAGE . . . . . IfUre-Preszkleni-Serretaft' PAT BUSH ....... ...., T rearllrn Miss BETTY PRITCHETT . . . .Sponsor fl40l THE GLEE CLUB C-7,643 O THE tune of '4I'm, sorry lim latel' and it's own slightly off-key hummings, the Glee Club can be found starting their bi-weekly practice. Now, as you know, collecting forty-one assorted voices into one lovely choir is not an easy task. It takes the patience of-Iob QMiss Coleman, please note!j and a grim determination which, luckily, Miss Coltrane has. Sometimes we who listened wondered whether theyld pull through it all, but despite cold rooms and colds in the head they stuck it out. The results were always well worth it. At Thanks- giving and Christmas vespers and their Christmas concerts, they brought tears to many of our eyes. By the time you read this letter, they will have iven eith g er an operetta or a concert. They're planning to give them with some boys' school. For one thing it sounds better, and for another, the social part of it, you know. I think that Miss Coltrane and all singers concerned are to be congratulated on keeping St. Anne's Glee Club, one of the school's most popular activities, and in adding to its outside prestige. GIGI CHILES . . . . President TEDDY SANCHEZ ...., . Treasurer Miss DORKJTHY CIOLTRANE . . . Dirertor Miss DOI,I,Y DoNE1.soN . . flccompanzkl I 4l41l GREENWAY GRAPEVINE C-L66 s unheard of in its long history. Not HIS year's Grapevine has gone places and done thing two weeks-but the news it printed only did it come out every two weeksgwell, almost every always made good reading. The gossip column was the first section turned to by all, and many a trembling girl has seen her deepest secret printed for all to read. How those reporters found out and dug up some of the scoops they did is a mystery to all of us! But the Grapevine isn't all gossipg whether you're reading a write-up of some school activity, the editorial, or the latest literary genius' contributions, you'll read every inch of it and have to admit that this yearis staff really knew what they were doing. a TRUDYE HORTON, Edilorg B. WARDEN, Arristant Editorg SYLVIA STURIUE, Subscription M anagerg ANN BAKER, Assixtant Editor Repnrlerx: EMERSON, SANCHEZ CAA, RAwt.iNos, GOOIJMAN and I.rrERARv STAFF or ANNUAL i42l SERVICE COUNCIL C2663 T IS very easy to say that the Service Council is better than ever this year. What with the new responsibilities it has taken over and the hard work it has put into everything it has done, this year's Service Council has made the grade. The Christmas Party was a huge success. It was given for the people of Fifeville, and every- thing went off beautifully. The Glee Club and Dramatics Club combined to give a pageant which was appreciated and didn't have too many slips . . . even though Mary had to say I hear music three times before there was any. This year the Service Council tried something new: The Senior and junior members took turns holding a study-hall for underclassmen in the dorm. X'Vith the exception of many requests for drinks of water, sharpening pencils, and reference books in another room, the study-hall always seemed quite peaceful. - There were many other projects this year and, of course, the most important of all, the Inas- much Scholarship Fund drive. Kenzie has really worked hard on the project, and the results have been good. YVith the various school drives and outside help, the scholarship fund has been increasing steadily all year. Everyone is interested in the drive and has really been working. As you can see, Miss Cochran, the Service Council had quite a busy and profitable year. ik' MARGARET MCKENZIE . . . . .llmrl Miss CATHERINE O. COLEMAN . . .Sponsor l43l TEAMS ewfa VARSITIES Ilnrkfjw f:IIIl,ES, STORM, WARHRN, MACK, MCKENZIE, BRIIAL, B11.flfPlbr1fl.' MCTKIENZIE, RADFORD, PATTRRSQN, IX1AURY, PAYN1-t QPJ, SANCIHICZ QTJ, SANCHE2 CAD, HALL, PICKENSSANCHEZ Q'l'.7,SANc1Hsz QA.H,Iw1Ac:K. PAYN147 CBJ, DAVIS LH. AJ WELBORN, HALL, BRIIJ. -I UN IOR VARS ITIES 11t7!'1.1f1'.' TAYLOR, KNIGHT, G.ARRIi1'T, LANGHORNE, BAR'rI,m'T, Ba.vl.'ftball.' TSENG HJ, BmzHI.ANu, PAYNE .-Xnmwmxm, BUYLAN, BLACKSTONH, WINFIELD, SIIERRFRD, NASH. CPN PAYNIQ CBJ, STORM, W1NF1E1.u, , .i . Oni III Pzrlzzrv: PAC!-25 WARDEN, NASH, MAURY, KNIGIVI' U41 Sf if ww Q69 R ug CALENDAR ALTHOUGH I didn't get here until the 13th of September, the Seniors arrived bright and early ' on the 12th. Their enthusiastic shouts informed the school in general that they had had a glorious summer and were land here there were many and varied opinionsj glad to be back. Bedlam really started when the rest of us arrived, and it hasnat stopped yet! It was now quite apparent to all who knew the old place that St. Annels had begun. Starting right then I began taking pictures, and I'm enclosing at least one from all the different events, typical and out-of-the- ordinary, that happened this year. There were the usual amount of noisy welcomes from the old members and sad tears from new girls, but at the old girl - new girl baseball game everyone was smiling. The next night the old girls gave the new girls a welcome party. , Dancing, laughing and eating were the main purpose of this affair. As you remember, it is the one of the few times during the year when food is given out free! Oh, how we ate! The first concert was held on October 3rd. The Seniors were the lucky group that went, and theyfleft with usual concert enthusiasmf, By now the old grind had really begun. To break the monotony of classes, on the 30th of September the whole school was sent packing to the beautiful and serene funtil we arrivedj home of Thomas Jefferson, namely, Monticello. It was a worth- while trip. October began quite well with an Open House on the 6th. It was a very successful one, and everyone had a good time, as the opposite picture will show. The next day the garage burned down. The town bus arrived back at school to find the garage going up in flames and absolutely nobody paying any attention to it. While the garage crackled merrily, Mrs. Kennon tried frantically to convince the Charlottesville Fire Department that we really did have a fire, and we promised to pay generously for the privilege of their presence on the bucket brigade. When they did arrive, though, everything was brought under control. It really was amazing that William's house was still standing when the fire was out. The night of October 20th a group went to see Pygmalion,l-an excellent presentation star- ring Miss Pritchett. After the show she took us backstage, and we learned some of the tricks of a fascinating trade. The next day we defeated St. Margaret's in our first hockey game of the season. Both teams played a good game, and, of course, we went wild with glee over the score. On the following Sunday we received an outstanding addition to the student body. Since Pungyo left there has been an empty place in school, and on October 22th, Muffin, a parti-colored cocker Spaniel, came to fill that place. The Hallowe'en uproar was something to behold this year-that is, unless you happened to be the teacher on duty! The Sophomores gave us a wonderful Hallowe'en party the following Saturday night, at which the Seniors, dressed as Your Hit Parade, walked off with the honors. The picture you see is Sassy as Pretty Baby? The night before we had our second Open House-a gala affair which the Sophomores and Freshmen wistfully viewed over the banisters. The big athletic events came next on the agenda. On November 6th both our teams defeated Stuart Hall in a hard-fought game. The second team alone came off victorious on November 10th, when the Fairfax first team downed us in a close and nerve-racking game. On the 14th St. Anne's went Shakespearean and saw the Barter Theatre presentation of The Comedy of Errorsf' It was very well done even if we weren't quite sure who was what or which was who. On the 17th the first team varsity and subs went to Fairfax to play in the Annual Hockey Tournament. I'm proud to say that Mary Mann Nash, Sandy Hall, Betsy Payne, B. Warden and Teddy Sanchez were on the Western State Team and went to Richmond on the 2nd of December. It was here that St. Anne's really triumphed when B. and Betsy both got on All-State. The second l46l ---..i.. 4 Ji 'fin M, gz .gi - 5 'ai 1 .L 5. ff ' N'mwH-M . ...W , N Q E?mf?f 'H ,f :H Ls- mm m L , - wffifwf 0 ' fi if v ' 1 .mug mh.4 f If 'f ' f. T A 0 ig! S K 7 X5 ..:1 gi 6 , .A .YW . ' R 5 A w A ff? ww . qi 54 .A .,A, 5 W ' X fig, w 52' 7:7 xg-xii: , - L . . , .Km he V i igffjfi I ' ,gk VS. X W, ,il WY ri b 2 ' , N ,. fs' 9 .- A , iiiff' 1 - 5 Y V AY 1 '- 1 , xii if J fi-P 5 2 ' f,fig,f P 3 A ' , Q 5 .. 1 ...f,,,,-,., M 4 ,S Q I ' V ' gfwiy,,qg,v A' . - we-N x ' w M, M., , 'A-L'L:. 1. S Q, N v 'QU 1 F R3 Q 9 ...........f...-.L ww? NA. Miyagi 4 . laws Ns? ,QA Q? i ,ff S s ? WX ,1- also brought the Freshman Carnival, a St. Anne's party in the truest sense of the word. The picture on the left shows Miss Lonergan, a loyal attendant at all the student shindigs, throwing a ball at Santa Claus. On the 9th we had the annual Service Council party. This year it was just as successful as ever. B. was the perfect Santa Claus and the pageant was out of this world! I got a picture of both B. and the pageant, they were too good to miss! We got back to school, tired, happy, and sleepy, but who can stay sleepy long when Madame X drawing is in the offing? Certainly not I! Of course, I got the best X-Child possible, and the next week was full of giving and getting many presents. Right in the middle the juniors had their Bazaar. It was a huge success, and everyone spent all their money-the main object according to the juniors-and got lots of Christmas pres- ents-the main object according to the spender. The 15th we made pigs of ourselves at the Banquet and then read our inspiring poems. I had a grand Madame X, too, making the week complete. Then the Seniors sang Christmas Carols. They were wrapped in sheets, and whether they represented angels or the Ku Klux Klan is a de- batable question, but they sang beautifully. The Sophomores gave the cold and hungry Seniors a delicious party afterwards. Then, at last, on December 16th, with many cheers, St. Anneis headed home. With a slight delay Csome three hoursj at the train station, they finally heralded with glee the arrival of the 7:03 at 10:10. This wasn't the only time the railroad has had a strike when St. Anne's left en masse. But it was f'Home, Sweet Home, railroad strike or not! On january 4th, everyone returned on time. Except for an Open House on the 12th, the dark ages had set in. Exams were drawing uncomfortably near, and along with them came the realization that we didn't know anything. At 10:00 when light-bell rang, everyone would retire to bathrooms. Towels, rugs, and many other improvised curtains were hung at windows and shoved under doors to keep the light from escaping, but somehow Miss Coleman always found out. We knew those long uninterrupted nights of sleep would have to end, and we were right. I with my English and my roommate with her history had just settled down for a long night's work when out in the hall there arose such a clatter I knew in a moment what was the matter: We were having a fire drill. Exams got off to a hot start this year. One half hour before our Bible exam we had another fire drill. This time it was the real thing, with fire engines, the volunteer fire department and the whole works. St. Anne's sat out on the hockey field and studied Bible notes Cvery religiousj while the dorm gave the appearance of burning down. The fire engines arrived to be greeted by a bewildered Miss Coleman. She announced, I haven't found the fire yet, but I'm looking. It turned out to be an overstoked furnace that was just smoking, and we filed in just in time for our Bible exams. CThey would have been held as scheduled anyway.J The inevitable followed: One exam after the other and the next just as hard as the last. It was a slightly worn-out group of girls that headed for the big mid year week-end. The trains were striking again. Both ways this time, which wasn't too bad, because many of us got a couple more hours on the right end. We arrived back at S. A. S. on February 4th to discover the old school right in the middle of chicken-pox. The last patient got out just before spring vacation, so you can see how long it lasted. The new term dragged, as you know it always does, for two weeks, during which the Freshmen and Sophomores worked themselves into a fermentation of excitement, for Wood berry had accepted their invitation and plans were being made for a really gala affair. The interminable period was broken by Miss Colemanis birthday party, held in Pat Bushis room fthe big one on the third floor, you remember, where Carol Stabler used to roomj by the whole Senior Dorm Cpreceded by another in the junior Dormjg it was an outstanding event. Our present to her, a Sweet Briar ring to re- place the one she'd lost, brought unprecedented tears to her eyes. The big week-end finally arrived and was a bang-up success with one exception: On Friday the 16th our basketball team was ignominiously defeated by Fairfax. The final score, 44 - 26. l49l l -gf '4- ap gs W 3 V , K wx x ' 11312 f . 1 as X , X, W x , ...-1 5. .::-. wif sg WN V , Q3 Q NEW . X 1 S s - -: : '- 2 '5: : 135: ' 3912 M5 5:1211 f SSM 1 E: -Eg .gr mr 0 Q I 1 ,fy if 4 U tr 37 v H wfhahw W A 4 5511555 1 Q .V-,U A. all The same day Juniors and Seniors, under Mrs. Boaz's guidance, hied themselves off for Wash- ington, where they officially and unofficially had an instructive and riotous time. It must be confessed that the Freshmen and Sophomores did not miss them overmuch, for they were a very self-centered group that week-end. In the dining room, festively decorated as a Mardi Gras, they had a perfectly wonderful evening. The postman has been kept busy between Woodberry and Charlottesville ever since. During this time the juniors and Seniors began to go to Clemons House for Open Houses given by Mrs. fUniversityJ Walker for the first year men at the University. They seemed to have a wonderful time-and it has added just one more thing to which we look forward in being upperclassmen. On February 21st our second team redeemed itself in a victory over Fairfax. Though Fairfax won the first team game, the two point margin made us feel a little more cheerful about the whole deal. Three days later optimism as well as some hard practice was rewarded when we defeated Waynesboro in both teams' games. The Seniors' annual big event, the Fashion Show, came on the last week-end in February, a little early this year. Backstage and beforehand, it resembled an awful nightmare, but the finished product ran smoothly and was a joty to behold. On the 2nd of March, a large group left for the historic town of Williamsburg. They left the school slightly emptier, but quieter, too. The juniors and Seniors had an Open House Friday night, but otherwise spent a quiet week-end studying for College Boards. During the following week, the Annual staff slaved to meet the March 9th deadline, the 9th also brought a return en- gagement with the Waynesboro basketball team. On March 10th, while the underclassmen had a carefree holiday, the juniors and Seniors spent a slaving day on College Boards. After they were over, the atmosphere was much clearer, and we began to look forward to spring vacation. Trees were beginning to get green, the weather was becoming warm, and when we had endured white glove inspection, we knew that the dark ages were over. It was home on the 16th! School was resumed on March 28th, but the outlook was much more cheerful after this vacation than it had been following Christmas. The next few weeks, we knew, would be packed and jammed. We were right-studying, May Day practice, and varsity tennis filled some of them, but soon bigger events began to take place. On April 21st those who had taken riding from Elliwood all year had a chance to show off their equestrian abilities. All of us enjoyed the Horse Show, whether we were among the talented and privileged few or just numbered among the spectators. The renowned Annual Banquet took place on May 4th, There the entire staff, who had worked so assiduously all year, made up for their labors in two hours of mad gorging. When they left the dining room, they were stuffed but satisfied. On May 5th the password was woof!,' as dozens and dozens of our canine friends, to Muffin's dismay, invaded St. Anne's. The Juniors ran around being organized, but we just watched. It was a very professional project, and was most amusing-everyone loves dogs, you know. The next event covered a whole week-end. We watched part of it from the outside, but the first part was for everyone. Of course, I mean May Day week-end. The ceremony itself was traditional and beautiful, and the modern dance theme, Mardi Gras, was very original and well done. That night the Juniors put on a bang-up prom for the Seniors. For days before and weeks afterward they talked of nothing else. I know it was fun to watch, at least. That was last week-end, Miss Cochran. Now we have the best of the whole school year to look forward to. On May 19th the Glee Club Concert, and on May 26th the Dramatics Club presentation of The Importance of Being Earnest . We will struggle through a week of exams- dismal thought-after which we will wonder, with three more days to go, where on earth the year has gone. Class Night, Baccalaureate, Commencement, and tearful good byes-but most of us will be back again next September, and the tears will be dried by thoughts of the glorious summer ahead. 'ISU' ls-fA ya 5 99 A gin ar Q' i-fit? 4 .fff wif, Jil ' 4 2 55 A 1 I f if . a'.f F .Wi ff Q' bfi X '3'w.fH x ,Q ,S .,e ' -fgru .J rf-x x. 3 fi 1-?fff'f ,. 0+ C. .ME fm 1 f 'imm ww sf Q, if - , mf I - kv W pk In f 1 X-, dxf x 1 V ,fl W J .L . A4,'- ' 'wr .-:,, :zl A s g , Q 'ai' 5 , rail? , 5 ? Y, gif vfou.,zv-e.2JLm6 -f-ff fmmf 7' M. zzz-, Aga- m YZ? COMPLIMENTS CDF A FRIEND iff -i I Old Ivy Imz Built in 1816, located on a hill just west of Charlottesville and across the highway from St. Anne's School. European Plan-Accommodates 45 guests Reservations requestedilmelephone 2-4134 NOBLE T. MACFARLANE UNIVERSITY STATION CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ISN Z.,I.:.3.,:.,.3.5.5,3.:.1.5. .:.,.:.5.3.:.3f.:.:.5.,5.:.:.3.,5.g- - '--- . A ---- - - 4- -- ., .... .... Q1 1:2'.1:2-I'f:2:I:IS:- :5E:E:E5E:::E:5:E:5:3:E:E:E:E E:EEE5E5E:3E5E5E:5:Egiggfgiiigig'9 - 1 1 n x xp., ,' ''-'-1-''tltg:5::zg:Z:55::4:V:-1-:-1-:A:-:-:-1-cv:-:k-1-:+:4: iii iiii ::5E2E5E3EaE52521:- I I 'A - '-'- 2 -1-1::1:5:5:i:i2E5E5EZE3E2E5E3iE NAUONM s ,.,., ,,,A, i' ,.,.,,, I ' WSH N' EARL H. VAUGHAN IRON FIREMAN PRODUCTS AUTOMATIC HEATING PLUMBING HCM! that burnfn ik' Charlottesville, Virginia U01 f 1 BM I 5-fs. ,X 24 4:-H . Sf by 4 J, is ka. ,IK Q S 5 2 4 Hi V J kg? V Q we M V 4 X 'I -V-.es1.'.1: x Q 1 K K F I JA- 55, M931-im?.nki,v,s mwah... .V Compliments of CHARLES KING 84 SON WHOLESALE GROCERS Sir Charlottesville, Virginia 7? Compliment! af CHARLOTTESVILLE AUTOMOBILE DEALERS ASSOCIATION 'ik i621 FLGRIDA LAND CLEARING EQUIPMENT CO. Mdllllbfdffllffff of THE FLECO ROCK RAKE, ROOT RAKE, AND DETACHABLE STUMPER 1561 W. Church St. P. O. Box 2317 jacksonville 3, Florida, U. S. A. 75? Cable Addr-e.r.r.' FLECO, Jacksonville, Florida Telephone 4-0661 I I v 'v'v v v v v v I HJHERETHEHEFS , 1 I CIIICH-GULF! 5 THERES HUSPITHLITV Q COIN!! UND!! AUIHOIIIV Ol IMI COC!-Coll COMPANY II CHARLOTTESVILLE COCA-COLA BOTTLING WORKS, INC 1651 Sf? MGNTICELLO DAIRY DIAL 25-123 CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA vi? vi? STE C0. vi? 4641 ANDERSON BROS. BOOK STORE INCORPORATED UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA Stationery - Office Suppliex - Text Books ik Charlottesville Virginia J. STUART HANKEL, Preyident W. F. SOUDER, Secretary and Treasurer FRED L. WATSON, Vice-Prnident HANKEL-CITIZENS INSURANCE CORPORATION GENERAL INSURANCE Corner of Third and Jefferson Streets Charlottesville, Virginia Over Half te Century of Service 977522 CITY LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Sir just Call 2-9136 4651 sy For DEPENDABLE INSURANCE and WORTH-WHILE SAVINGS MINOR-DUKE MUTUAL INSURANCE AGENCY 404 National Bank Building Charlottesville Virginia JAMES F. MINOR ADDIE ALEXANDER, Auociate CAMMANN C. DUKE HAYWOOD NELMS Complimentx 01' SAXTON'S CLEANING AND DYE WORKS Telephone 2-5550 il? RALPH BRITTON UNIVERSITY DRUG STORE Phone 2- G. V. DURRER, President il? 4555 University, Va. Your Friemlb Drug Stare for more than .revenljf-five jean l67l MONTICELLO HOTEL Cbm'latte.r11iZle'.r Finest H. T. VAN NOSTRAND T TOWN AND COUNTRY PROPERTY FOR SAI THE VIRGINIA REAL E STATE CLEARING AND AUCTION' HOUiF 4-OO PAGE QYIJTUKIE WKFWJT BOOK S329 soaeMAINs1nfe1 ----- Pnoufs 917-907-9 T681 BEST WISHES if - from Compliments f ACME VISIBLE RECORDS, INc. o A FRIEND gk II Crozct Virginia 713' But Wixbu From W CITIZENS BANK AND Tnusr Co. Compliment! PEOPLES NATIONAL BANK I ' NATIONAL BANK AND TRUST Co. f o 'fi' BROWN'S CLEANERS A.L.B. CLEARING HOUSE Ass'N 753' ik 69 Compliments of THE CANDY KITCHEN is Always pleezseel to serve THE ST. ANNE'S GIRLS ii? 118 East Main Street EDWARDS 8: BROUGHTON COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1871 if LITHOGRAPHERS AND ENGRAVERS PRINTERS AND PUBLISHERS if Raleigh, N. C. CHARLOTTESVILLE Compliments HARDWARE STORE of ik CHANCELLOR'S DRUG STORE Visit Our 511076 for 737 CHINAWARE GLASSWARE The Best in Town and OTHER GIFTS 70 GILMORE, HAMM GITCI-IELL'S STUDIO 8: SNYDER INCORPORATED Sf? 79? Portrait and Commercial Photographer Furniture for home and office il' ik' 304 East Main Street Charlottesville Virginia CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA Portraits in SAINT HOSINGER 8: BODE INC Made hy Long Lrland Realtorx HOLSINGER'S STUDIO CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. Tfx' if Cameray, Photographic , Long Island City New York .Yupplzcs 'l71l A SYMBOL OF RESEARCH HOWARD jOHNSON'S RESTAURANT and ICE CREAM SHOP Famozef for 28 Ice Cream Flavors A Mark of Dependabilizyf Q? CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ik' Routes 29 and 250 RAY FISHER Landmark for Hungry Amerieanf 71? KELLER 84 GEORGE JARMAN PRINTING COMPANY ik 75? Jewelery 916 Preston Avenue SINCE 1875 CHARLOTTESVILLE - VIRGINIA Si? 7? I72I LEVY'S il' WRAPS . . . GOWNS ' Dial 2-6255 122 East Main Street Complimenta- Charlottcsvillc, Virginia of Sf? S. R. LIGHT Home of FREE-ACTION SLEEVE HABIT-MAKING DRESSES il, AMY LINKER COATS, SUITS, COSTUMES PACKAGED FUEL co. PIEDMONT FROZEN FOODS, INc INCORPORATED if il? Wlnolemle Distributorx ORIGINAL POCAHONTAS COAL Q it if? ' S if 'Zu CROZET, VIRGINIA Phone 2-2441 Dial 2061 74 .Shoe Time and Money Bring Your Laundry to SNOW BRIGHT, INC. LAUNDER-IT AUTOMATIC BENDIX MACHINERY iff OPPOSITE LANE HIGH ScHooL Com plimentr of STEVENS 8: CO. Reoltorx if? Monticello Hotel Building CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA WILEY-TILMAN, INC. Ready-to-Wear - Notiom Piece Goode If? Dial 2-6164 401 E. Main St. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA ROYAL BEAUTY SALON LEWIS P. PARKER, Proprietor A Dirtinctive Beauty .S'eroice FEATURING ' COLD WAVING and HEAT WAVING ' INDIVIDUAL STYLING and CUTTING ' FACIALS For Appointment DIAL 2-4238 Charlottesville 112 Fourth, N.E. Complimente of SONNY and ELEANOR 75 Compliments Complimentx of of A FRIEND DR. E. A. BANCKER Write for Catalog of Country Homef FARMS - or FARMING ESTATES Who Sells It? Connell eg GEORGE H. BARKLEY BROKER ' Phone: 0ffzee.f.' Laok in the 2-9356 Court Square YELLQW CHARLOTTESVILLE l PAGES WASHING TIRES Camphmmn POLISHING ACCESSORIES GREASING of BURGESS BROS. BROWN'S GIFT SHOP AMOCO SERVICE Cor. Main and South Streets Charlottesville, Virginia CAVALIER DELICATESSEN INCORPORATED Complimmfuf 1108 West Main Street of Charlottesville, Virginia . usdndwigbu and Food! CHARLOTTESVILLE LUMBER that are differenf, CQ., INC. TELEVISION TELEPHONE 2-9986 176 CHARLOTTESVILLE THE COUNTRY STORE, INC. WOOLEN MILLS We specialize in SINCE 1868 COUNTRY PRODUCTS Manufacturers of ik A DISTINGUISHED LINE OF 100'Z, VIRGIN WOOL FABRICS Greenwood Virginia DOWNTOWN ik ATHLETIC STORE We Specialize in E D S TEAM EQUIPMENT HOT DOG STAND TQ, AND DRIVE-IN 413 East Main Street f If? . HELEN G. EASTHAM SHOP Compliment: INCORPORATED Q LADIES' READY-TO-WEAR AND gf MILLINERY if A A FRIEND 230 E. Main St. Charlottesville GODWIN-HOLSTEAD , ELECTRIC CO. E I-J 0 5 Charlottesville, Virginia 79? ELECTRICAL CONSTRUCTION LIGHTING FIXTURES At the Comer University, Va. HOTPOINT APPLIANCES - 'l77I' - IES: , X X X f Nix xx Mmwqesf W --wawog Wxrpifiz L HAWKINS' 120 East Main Street CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA Since 1896 The House ofGo0d Values Compliments of HILL and IRVING FUNERAL HOME PHONE 2-6148 Compliments jARMAN'S, INC. gf STATIONER,S EQUIPMENT THE IVY SHOP Si? Si? 1111 West Main Street New Address: 200 East Market Charlottesville, Virginia JAMESONS Compliments COLLEGE BOOK STORE JEFFERSON SCHOOL SUPPLIES UNIVERSITY FOUNTAIN SERVICE LAFAYETTE At the Corner RIDGE DRIVE-IN W. J. KELLER CO. 404 East Main Street The Home of Better Values 'wnuyunww 1 Shoes - Luggage I ST TOWN and COUNTRY SHOES SPALDINGS - OXFORDS - LOAFERS CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA 79 Compliments of ' THE MACK FAMILY Compliments - of - THE WARDEN FAMILY MAY TEXACO SERVICE Complimentf WASHING - VERIFIED LUBRICATION of , , MAYO-BLACKBURN- Cooperatzoe Texaco Serozce CRUTCHFIELD .71fk'. Preston Avenue FURNITURE COMPANY 715-727 West Main Street MAZO-LERCI-I CO., INC. BIRD,S-EYE FROSTED FOOD RUSSELL MOONEY OLDSMOBILE - SALES and SERVICE if if? Washington, D. C. 315 W. Main St. Tel. 2-5052 Complimems A Compliment: of of ' NEW CASTLE MIDWAY MARKET DELAWARE ISO! When you go .... When you fly . . . ,go to TRAVEL DEPT. WILLIAM B. MURPHY Authorized Agent: for AIRLINES - STEAMSI-IIPs - HOTELS Service Without Cort DIAL 2-4157 Offices back of Citizens Bank PACES TAXI, INC. and TRANSFER SERVICE Two-Way Radio for Quick Service Phone 2-8121 YOUR FINEST . Compliments ENTERTAINMENT VALUE of if PURDY 8: HENDERSON CO. T196 ik P AR AMOUN T T H E A TR E A HAVANA CUBA HCORSAGES and CUT FLOWERSH PAGE GREENHOUSES Around the Corner 'iff University, Virginia RADIO REPAIR Phone 2-2938 We Repair ana' Service ' ANY MAKE or RADIO AND VICTROLA ' PICK UP AND DELIVERY ' REASONABLE PRICES 4' ALL WORK GUARANTEED ROBINSON'S RADIO SERVICE South First - just Off Main ,, STANDARD PRODUCE COMPANY, INC. 'A' PHONES: 2-5171 - 2-5172 STOP and SHOP SUPER MARKETS Lowest Pricex - Free Parking THREE STORES LOCATED 500 E. Main St. -1017 W. Main St. 600 Preston Ave. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA 81 THE TIDBIT RESTAURANT Compliments Home of gf WORLD,S BEST HAMBURGERS S. L. THOMAS Specializing in Opfffifm Home Delivery Service if A DIAL 2-9993 CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA Meet Your Friends Complimente at TIMBERLAKE'S of DRUG STORE if J. D. 851. s. TILMAN'S Phone 2-9155 THE TWO-THIRTEEN SHOP 213 Fourth Street, Northeast CHARLOTTESVILLE, VIRGINIA p Sk Gi ffm Decorative Aecerroriex Greeting Cimlx Complimentx of UNIVERSITY BOOK STORE 75? SUPPLIES FOR COLLEGIANS FOR OVER A CENTURY Compliments If? of THE VIRGINIAN PAUL B. VICTORIUS 51? 82 Com plimentr of W A D D E L L ' S 308 East Main Street WESTERLY GUEST HOUSE Ivy Road Also Vixit WESTERLY ANTIQUE SHOP 323 East Main Street Over forty years of real estate Jeroice B. E. WHEELER 8: CO. if . 405 E. Market St. Dial 2-6359 Find the Junior Size Dress just made for you df C. H. WILLIAMS 8: CO. THE CASH FOOD MART Compliments Fang: Groceries Pang' Knicknackr of PHONE 2-6131 PARKING 1107 West Main Street THE YOUNG MEN'S SHOP THE YOWELL'S if? CHARLOTTESVILLE,S Mos'r UNUSUAL DRESS SHOP 108 First Street, North MIDWAY LAUNDRY 401 West Main PHONE 2-6186 iff Complete Launderers 1831 1 Compliments of Complimeuty A Pleaxant Way of ALBEMARLE to Reduce BARBARA ROSSER MAYTAG COSTUMES GO BOWLING . C. F. CASSELL R CO. C0 2P1f 2f'1'-f Complimentx INCORPORATED of Imzextments of CHARLOTTESVILLE It AUTO PARTS BRAITHWAITES, INC. P 2 81 HONE ' 57 CORPORATION Compliment! The Compliments of CRYSTAL of RESTAURANT CROZET DRUG CO. CITY . , aeron from D121 2081 FISH MARKET T HE SOUTHERN STATION CROZET VIRGINIA DAWSON,S CROZET The CABINET SHOP HARDWARE DAILY PRQGRESS 338 10ch Screer, N.W. CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. COMPANY ESTABLISHED 1892 HENRY W. DAWSON Dial: CROZET 3541 Crozet, Virginia Over One-Half Centum Public Serizicev REPRODUCTIONS Phone - 2-2538 Upholxtering - Refinixbing Furniture Repairing 1841 Tbix bum' me Compliment? MARSHALL H' EARL Real Estate Broker more than of Town 8: Country Properties DQLLY MADISON Farm 8: Country Estates . 1021 West Main Street U burn you INN CHARLQTTESVILLE, VA. C I C ll EUGENE ' r mf' m ' mp 'mm BEAUTY SHOP of of CROZET, VIRGINIA SETTLE TIRE ESSEX if SUPPLY CO. CORPORATION Dial: Crozet 2881 H. M. GLEASON 84 CO., INC. M' C' HILL Complimentr FUNERAL HOME INTERNATIONAL TRUCK ' 8: FARM MACHINERY PHONE 2-5444 of Feedr - Fertilizers - 5'eea'J First and Garrett Sts. Ambulance Service at all fimey MARY L. HOLLAND JEFFERSON S N O W , S Complimentx SCHOOL OF COMMERCE F100-fff of Central Virginiak sz, IVY ROAD Leading SERVICE STATION Burineu College CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. 24-Hour Service CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. -ISSI' Complimmtf C om pl imenty C ompl imento of vf of KENZIE, BOOTS and KING 84 ROBERTS LONG-BELL SASSY INC. LUMBER CO. C 2Plimm'-' RADXICITZIEIJQIIIICE Compliments A of EMERSON RADIO AND of MONTICELLO TELEVISION S l nd S ' BEAUTY and BARBER PICK ill-rgND 152135-LERY WORK UARANTEED E. s. LEE, JR. SHOPPE 222 west Main st? , C , . PhOnC25256 HARESWXESS A Compliments Compliments of O,NEILL'S of THE CLEANING AND NEW DOMINION PRESSING . M POLLY P CGAVOCK BQOKSHOP Cmnt, Virginia Rm! E-'mf' Charlottesville, V2. Dial 2711 I Compliments From Compliment: of A of A OMOHUNDRO PIEDMONT ELECTRIC CO. FRIEND CLEANERS H61 i'f Q A51 wmv -.P . Mu K 'gm' ' W v 3 'Q-'Nm t.. , U Compliments Cofnplifnentf A b'SguP i0 of of rn u ance Service PIEDMONT GRAVELY REFRIGERATION CO. WAYNESBORO FRANK B HAYNES 220 W. Market St. COMPANY Phone 2-7546 CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. Waynesboro, Virginia Charlottesville Va RED FRONT Compliment! SKIBO LODGE MARKET MOTOR COURT gf? gf Excellent Rooms CROZET VIMHNIA A 3 Miles north - U.S. 29 Diil 2542 S 84 S FOOD CENTER CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. C Z , Corn pl imentf TAYLOR'S 'WP 'mwff TRANSFER sc of of STORAGE Exclueive Agentr AMERICA,S FINEST I WELDING AND MACHINE CO. ' 'Diitinctive junior LONG DISTANCE MOVING SERVICE Fourth and South Streets Apparel Charlottesville, Va. ROY P. TUEL - - C ' nz Cofnplzfnentf Conzplzenentf Wduhmdzzfgjldfewekr AUTHORIZED REPRESENTATIVE 01' of for M. C. THOMAS FURNITURE CO. TOMLIN 8: KENT KEEPSAKE RINGS BULOVA and ELGIN WATCHES 104 South First Street Q CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA. ISSI Compliments 0f RAPID DIST. CO. RANDY'S S'rEAKs VALLEY VIEW GREENHOUSE INCORPORATED Floral Artists Specializing in VAN FOSSEN MOTOR COMPANY KAISER-FRAzER Sales and Service Phone 3-2127 793 Lovginilgxirg-g5YayS 114 Tenth Street, N.W Cobham Virginia CHARLOTTESVILLE CHARLOTTESVILLE VIRGINIA Compliments Complimmn. PEPSI-COLA of af BOTTLING CO. VIRGINIA INCORPORATED TELEPHONE nnd WATSON S Charlottesville TELEGRAPH co. BEAUTY SALON C0mPlim m' Compliments 1 Compliments of of GENE WOOD'S , of GARAGE WRIGHT S Phone 2-7185 WRECKING YARD FLEA Compliments Compliments 0f of DETTOR, EDWARDS 84 MORRIS GLEASON'S BAKERY 1891 Iii? Complimentf 0f N. W. MARTIN 8: BROS. ik ANN UAL BOOSTERS if SALLY PARRISH SANDRA SHEPPERSON NATALIE KLINGMAN SHEILA MACCONNOCHIE SALLY KNIGHT MELBA CRONENBERG SYLVIA STURKIE GIGI CHILES ELSA WOOD ANN BELFIELD il? MARGARET MATTHEWS PAT PAGE ' MARY MARTIN WILLIAMSON JOYCE TSENG HAZEL TSENG MARGARET GOODMAN IRENE DARDEN BETSY WEEDON TRISSIE WIEBEL BooTs MACK Compliments of THE GIRLIES: CATHIE - GOOBIE SUE - MEMO - LANG SAZSHY - SEMI - LINDA HARRIET ANN Patronizc Our Advcrti.rer.r.' Sf? ELLINGTON'S 234 U01- Ewfrs, qv , gk. V, QM , Y .LK ' - J 4. , I f S Rx fp K .ff 5:1 ,Q NN UAL BOOSTERS! ik TRUDYE HORTON SASSY MCCARTHY MARY MEAD SALLY CLARKE HELEN CETTI MERI WEEDON BETSY HJORTH MARGARET MCKENZIE ANDY WALLACE PAT BUSH B. WARDEN ANN WIEBEL PAT WHITENACK ANN NOKES LUCY NOKES BEV PARSONS KIKI KERR BETTY GARRETT LEECIE RHINELANDER CINDY PICKENS ANA SANCHEZ JEAN BURNS ANNE WELBORN SARAH THOMPSON JOANNA GEORGE LAURA PARKER ANN BAKER JOAN BARRETT MARY TAYLOR BELITJE BANCKER GUARDSMAN SANDY BROWN SUE STORM A FRIEND SARA FRASER BUNNY ADDINGTON DAY GIBSON MARILYN CHAPMAN LIZA BALIS DREW SMITH NINA BOEHLAND BELLE LEE SARA RAWLINGS TAY PARROTT BABE MAYBANK TRINX WINFIELD BUGS BOYHAN LIBBY HOEBS ANN RADFORD LEE PATTERSON NANCY ST. CLAIR 'l92l' Wlell, Miss Cochran, here it is twelve twenty-five, and l guess l'cl better go to bed. lt even looks as il' we'cl make our deadline. I have saved the next two pages so that you can hear a little about the school from a faculty viewpoint. After all, you may have remembered something' about it from that angle yourself. Before closing I want to enclose an airplane view ofthe school so that you will reinember the sehool as a whole. Wle hope that when you see it you'll remember us, and not too badly. With lox e, Sesnz -louus 1931 DEAR EBC: Suzie has left these last pages for a faculty viewpoint, and after great thought I decided you'd rather hear of the past year youive missed than guesses about the future. In addition, I've taken the last few lines away from you and directed them to the Seniors. You see, I still believe in saying as many things to as many people as possible. Listen, Miss Cochran, and you shall hear Of the Senior class of this past year .... 'Twas a day in September, and all through the school Each Senior was saying she'd follow each rule. Their promises glib they intended to keep, But let's see what happened as I tried to sleep. By October, the third floor had made such a clatter That I donned quiet shoes to see what was the matter. Up there I found them-Sassy, Tid, Kenzie, Mary Martin, and Lee-all in a frenzy. A roorn change was in order-so change they did, And down came Kenzie, Lee, Sassy, and Tid. Up went Pat Page, Pat Bush, Joyce, and Teddy, But for light bell at night they seldom were ready- For the third floor they'd heard had places to work If e,er their exams they should happen to shirk. They sat and they studied-Mary Martin and Teddy- And even P. Bush couldn't get them to bed-dy, But then at the door there appeared a strange form . . And the study was ended, leaving the dorm Peaceful and quiet-at least, so it seemed, When, through covered windows, light slivers beamed, And on with the chase went a flashlight so handy- To find B., Pat Payne, Boots, and-oh, yes, 'twas Sandy! They'd found pillows and blankets to make a nice nook, And there they sat, each engrossed in her book. And what was the outcome of all this, you ask? Why, of course, the grounds bloomed as each did her task. And,then there were Sazshy and Goobie with car, Who journeyed wide and who traveled quite far, As they searched for food the boarders to fill. CThe onions they brought should have left each one ill, But there's something about a Senior's digestion Which leaves rules of diet wide open to questionj 1941 These Seniors believe in sharing possessions CParticularly when-as I've heard by confessions- Teddy needs hatting, so we can attempt To keep last strains of hymns from being exemptj Another event which we can now spill-a Concerns those two called Sally and Lilla: On Trudye's birthday, an occasion they thought Required a party, for which cake was soon bought- They forgot candles, though, and looked in the basket, Will waste-paper do? One of them asked it, The other replied it would certainly make A hot celebration out of that cake. Trudye appeared, but e'er she could blow The blaze from the center, the aroma did go Two doors down the hall, where the opinion Of matters like this brought work to each minion. Now, Joyce and Friend Pat hated to dust, And felt Mrs. Kennon was scarcely quite just When she said that the dirt a garden would grow, So the dust did remain, and the two tried to sow Seed of varieties of all types and descriptions, But soon Mrs. K. succumbed to conniptions- And the black-book list grew, and all apples rotten From cottage environs were presently gotten. And what about Gigi, a Chiles of Crozet? She's left the boarders for the ranks of the day, To join, among others, Margaret, Sylvia, and Andy In bringing food when they've a car handy. Yes, these are the Seniors, and you surely see They continue to have their troubles, but we Shall miss them, as another year passes And gone from our midst are twenty-two lasses. What to predict for them? Well, what can I say? So I'll leave it to you on Commencement Day, And on behalf of the faculty wish them god-speed And growth continual in both word and deed, For Commencement's a beginning, and what you begin Decides what you will be and you will have been. Remember, too, that life means growth- May all the Seniors have success in both. 'I95l ' PRODUCERS OI' The 1951 Saifzi 4 r Engravings for the 1951 SAINT Manufactured by Qmivfoyzakiavz ENGRAVING mm' ELECTROTYPE CO., INC Richmond, Virginia 11971 STUDENT DIRECTORY MARILYN F. ADDINGTON . RACHAEL ANN BAKER . . ELIZA BALIS . . . BELITJE BANOKER . SUZANNE E. BARNES JOAN H. BARRETT . HELEN BARTLETT . ANN R. BELEIELD . LINDA H. BLACKFORD . MARGOT BLACKSTONE . CORNELIA B. BOEHLAND . MARGARET BOYLAN . ELIZABETH C. BRILL . SANDRA BROWN . . ELISE BURKS . . . JEAN BURNS .... MARTHA MASON BUSH . . MARY MINOR BUSH . . HELEN CETTI . . SIMONETTA CETTI . MARILYN CHAPMAN . VIRGINIA C. CHILES . SALLY H. CLARKE . NANCY COLEMAN . MELBA CRONENBERG . IRENE S. DARDEN . HARRIET ANN DAVIS . PAT DAVIS .... ELIZABETH DUKE . HARRIET EMERSON . TUCKER EVERETT . LANGHORNE EYSTER . SARA FRASER ...... LEE FREDERICK ..... ELIZABETH BRAXTON GARRETT JOANNA GEORGE ..... MARIELLA GIBSON . . . PARTHENIA R. GIBSON . . LILLA D. GOGGIN . . MARGARET GOODMAN . SANDRA HALL .... MARY COLEMAN HANKINS . MILDRED ANN HICKSON . ELIZABETH B. HJORTH . . ELIZABETH HOBBS . . GERTRUDE N. HORTON . . GAIL HOSINGER . . LOUISA P. HUNT . ROSALIE KERR . . . NATALIE V. KLINGMAN . SALLY KNIGHT . . 066 . . . ,. 309 Caldwell Building, Bristol, Tennessee . . . . . Underhill Farm, Shadwell,'Virginia . 4031 Kiaora Street, Coconut Grove 33, Florida . . 3810 Club Drive, N.E., Atlanta 5, Georgia . . . . . 21 Albany Street, Cazenovia, New York . . 104 South Clermont Avenue, Margate, New Jersey . Hitching-hithe, Doncaster, Easton, Maryland . . . . . . . . . Gordonsville, Virginia . 1403 Hill Top Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . 1925 Delaware Avenue, Wilmington, Delaware . . . 1201 National Avenue, Rockford, Illinois . . B-201 Boylan Apts., Raleigh, North Carolina . Mount Vernon Farm, Locust Hill, Virginia . R.F.D. 3, Kearsarge, Charlottesville, Virginia . 416 Allison Ayenue, S.W., Roanoke, Virginia . 44 Ingleside Drive, Concord, North Carolina . . . . On The Strand, New Castle, Delaware . . . . 1424 Milan Street, New Orleans, Louisiana . Alderman and Minor Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . Alderman and Minor Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . Bellevue Avenue, Rumson, New Jersey . . . . . . . . . . 1. . . . . Crozet,Virginia . . . 13 Vernon Terrace, Belle Haven, Alexandria, Virginia 611 General Scott Apts., No. 1, Scott Circle, Washington, D. C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Box22,Crozet,Virginia . . . Carr's Hill, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . Eaglehurst Farm, Crozet, Virginia . . 1711 Park Avenue, Baltimore 17, Maryland . . Sunny Side, R.F.D. 2, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . Boston Post Road, Wayland, Massachusetts . 1563 Queens Road, West, Charlotte, North Carolina . . . 1705 Gordon Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia . . 612 West Pine Street, Florence, South Carolina . . . 2301 Mount Vernon Road, Roanoke, Virginia . . . 1303 North Jackson Street, Wilmington, Delaware . Box 1013, University Station, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . 4923 Hawthorne Road, Little Rock, Arkansas . . . . . Ramsay,,' Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . 1107 Kerbey Street, El Paso, Texas . . . . . Route 3, Knoxville, Tennessee . . . . . . P. O. Box 79, jupiter, Florida . . 1640 Oxford Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . 12 Outlook Road, Fairmont, West Virginia . . Belton Farms, Carters Bridge, Virginia . .V . Shawnee Hills, Wheeling, West Virginia . 1213 Harding Place, Charlotte, North Carolina . 9 Center Drive, Malba, Long Island, New York . 1839 Edgewood Lane, Charlottesville, Virginia . Montesano, R.F.D. 3, Charlottesville, Virginia . . 108 Bollin gwood Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . . Locust Grangef' Ivy Road, Charlottesville, Virginia 198i ' BARBARA J. KOCH . . SUZANNE D. LANGHORNE ISABEL C. LEE . . . DEBORAH A. LIGHT . . SARAH A. MCCARTHY . MARGARET M. MCKENZIE SHEILA M. MACCONOCHIE MARY BOOTS MACK . CHARLOTTE MARSTON . MARGARET MATTHEWS CONNIE MASSEY . . . JANET A. MAURY . . LAVINIA H. MAYBANK . MARY H. MEAD . . . SARAH B. MERRITT . . MARY MANN NASH . . NANCY NEWCOMBE . BIRGIT NIELSON . ANN NOKES . . LUCY NOKES . MARTHA PAGE . LAURA PARKER . SARAH R. PARKER . SALLY ANN PARRISH . SARAH B. PARROTT . . BEVERLY PARSONS . PAMELA PARSONS . LEE PATTERSON . ELIZABETH PAYNE . PATRICIA A. PAYNE . . LUCINDA W. PICKENS . BEVERLY PICKETT . BONNIE PIETSCH . ANNE RADFORD . . SARAH RAWLINGS . . LEECIE RHINELANDER . ANTOINETTE RUINEN . FRANCES RUSSELL . ELEANOR ST. CLAIR . . NANCY DALTON ST. CLAIR ANA SANCHEZ .... TEDDY SANCI-IEz . . . CATHERINE S. SAUNDERS PHILIPPA SHEPPERSON . LYNNE SHERRERD . . CHRISTINE SMITII . . DREW SMITH .... ELLA GORDON SMITH . VIRGINIA SOMERVILLE . LATANE M. STONEY . . SUZANNE STORM . . SYLVIA STURKIE . MARY TAYLOR . . SARA S. THOMPSON . . NANCY J. TRUSCOTT . . . . . Garth Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . 1403 Hill Top Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . . . Rocky Mount, Virginia . . . Hillsboro Road, Nashville, Tennessee . 1350 Edgewood Avenue, Jacksonville, Florida . . . . 1231 Putnam Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey . . Box 1362, University Station, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . 36 Colonial Way, Short Hills, New Jersey . . . . . . . . . . . Greenwood, Virginia . 510 17th Street, N. W., Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . V. . Kinloch, Keswick, Virginia . . . . . . . . . Box 817, Nassau, Bahamas . . 27 Meeting Street, Charleston, South Carolina . . . Bae Mar Place, Wheeling, West Virginia . . . . Box 138, V. P. I., Blacksburg, Virginia . . . 1409 Hill Top Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . 2817 Belvedere Avenue, Charlotte, North Carolina . . . . Greenley Road, New Canaan, Connecticut . . Box 1578, University P. O., Charlottesville, Virginia . . Box 1578, University P. O., Charlottesville, Virginia . . . 64 White Oak Ridge Road, Short Hills, New Jersey . . . . 24 Highland Drive, Greenville, South Carolina Old Lynchburg Road, Box 264, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . . . . . . Box 23, Hulbert, Michigan . . 3292 Allendale Street, Roanoke, Virginia . 17 University Circle, Charlottesville, Virginia . 17 University Circle, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . . 1020 Spring Street, Atlanta, Georgia . . . . . . cfo Mrs. Edward Lane, Boyce, Virginia c fo J. E. Marvin, 33 Terry Place, Bridgeport, Connecticut . . . . 2000 Beverly Drive, Charlotte, North Carolina . . . . . . . . . . Fairfax, Virginia . . ....... Crozet, Virginia . . . . . . Woodbourne Farm, Forest, Virginia . . . . . . . 1601 Neome Drive, Flint, Michigan . . Box 1386, University Station, Charlottesville, Virginia . . Beethovenweg 11, Willemstad, Curacao, N. W. I. . . 3725 McGirtS Boulevard, Jacksonville, Florida . 400 Cleveland Street, Greenville, South Carolina . 400 Cleveland Street, Greenville, South Carolina . . . . . . . . . Box 66, Havana, Cuba . . . . . . . . Box 66, Havana, Cuba . 1711 Parkland Drive, Lynchburg, Virginia . 808 Cabell Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . . Pinehurst, North Carolina . 2051 15th Avenue, Hickory, North Carolina . . 917 Holt Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina . . . Casa Maria,', Greenwood, Virginia . 1631 Mason Lane, Charlottesville, Virginia . 20 Savage Street, Charleston, South Carolina . . . . . . . . Valhalla, Cecilton, Maryland . . 1960 Lewis Mountain Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . . 101 Colonial Ridge, Moorestown, New Jersey . Rolling Ridge Farm, Cazenovia, New York . . . . . . R.F.D. 3, Box 154 F, Hampton, Virginia 41991 HAzEL TSENG . . JOYCE TSENG . . . LINDA L. VAUGHAN . CATHERINE VEST . . SARAH VEST . . . JACQUELINE T. WALKER' . ANDREA G. WALLACE JUDY WALLACE . . . MARY BRYCE WARDEN . ELIZABETH B. WEEDON . MARY C. WEEDON . . ANNE WELBORN . . COURTNEY WELLS . . PATRICIA WHITENACK CAROL A. WHITNEY . . . 8 Stuyvesant Oval, New York 9, New York . . . 8 Stuyvesant Oval, New York 9, New York . . . . . . R.F.D. 2, Charlottesville, GreencrOft, Old Ivy Road, Charlottesville, GG 65 Virginia Virginia Greencroftj' Old Ivy Road, Charlottesville, Virginia c fo Mrs. H. H. Ficken, 35 Meeting Street, Charleston, South Carolina . . . . Twin Sycamores,' Ivy Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . Twin Sycamores, Ivy Road, Charlottesville, Virginia . 6561 Darlington Road, Pittsburgh 17, Pennsylvania . . . . . Sprigg Road, Charlottesville, . . Sprigg Road, Charlottesville, Virginia Virginia . . . . . . . . Box 534, Trion, Georgia . . .Box 196, Route 3, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . . Quiet Entryj' Alberene, Virginia . 16644 Mark Twain Avenue, Detroit 35, Michigan ANNE PIERCE WIEBEL . . . . . 1446 Rugby Road, Charlottesville, Virginia PATRICIA A. WIEBEL . . . . . . 1446 Rugby Road, Charlottesville, Virginia MARY MARTIN WILLIAMSON . . . 518 Hermitage Road, Charlotte, North Carolina KATRINA WINFIELD . . . . . 1100 Jackson Street, Wilmington, Delaware ELSA WOOD . . . . 2021 Hessian Road, Charlottesville, Virginia ANN E. YOE . ............. Wayside Place, Charlottesville, Virginia FACULTY DIRECTORY MRS. WILLIAM BOAZ ............. 414 Brandon Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia MRS. HARRY CLEMONS .... . Alderman Library, Charlottesville Virginia MISS CATHERINE O. COLEMAN . . . . St. Anne,s School, Charlottesville Virginia MISS DOROTHY J. COLTRANE . . .......... Archdale, North Carolina MRS ARNOLD DEL GRECO . . . . Box 1099, University Station, Charlottesville Virginia MISS DOROTHY DONELSON . . . ...... Holbrook Avenue, Danville Virginia THE REV. HERBERT A. DONOVAN ..... 713 Park Street, Charlottesville, Virginia MRS CAMMANN DUKE .... ...... S unny Side, R.F.D. 2, Charlottesville Virginia MISS VIVIAN GIBBS ..... .... 2 01 Ehringhaus Street, Elizabeth City, North Carolina MISS .JUDITH C. GIBSON . . . 208 West Boscowen Street, Chapin Apt. 3, Winchester Virginia MRS MRS MISS MRS. . JOSEPH G. HANKINS . . R. H. HENNEMAN . . ELIZABETH H. KELLEY . . VIRGINIA HYDE KENNAN . MISS JUNE KIMBROUGH .... MISS MISS VIRGINIA KING . . . ROSEMARY LONERGAN . . MADAME GERTRUDE D. PARLIER MADAME MICHAEI. PODTIAQUINE MISS MARIA POMARES .... MISS ELIZABETH PRITCHETT . . MRS. RALPH D. POWELL . . Mus. LOUIS QUAM . . . MRS. T. J. RANDOLPH . . MRS. M. A. SIMONS, JR. . MRS. LELAND B. SNODDY . MISS PAULINE SOUBAS . . MRS. J. A. WADDELL . . MRS. ANNE G. WALKER . MRS. JOHN H.YOE. . . . . . . 1640 Oxford Road, Charlottesville, . 1507 Greenleaf Terrace, Charlottesville . . . . 526 Valley Road, Charlottesville . . Morrowdale Farm, Route 2, Charlottesville . . . . . . 2719 24th Street, Meridian, Mississippi . . 20 Coleman Avenue, Hudson Falls, New York . . . 158 Rock Street, Easton, Pennsylvania . Preston Courts Apts., Charlottesville, Virginia . . 20 Elliewood Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . Pocito No. Altos Vibora, Havana, Cuba Virginia Virginia Virginia Virginia . . . . . 3 University Circle Charlottesville, Virginia . Huntly Hall, Stribling Avenue, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . Meadowbrook Heights, Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . St. Anneis School Charlottesville, Virginia . Apt. H 7, University Gardens Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . 1102 Rugby Road Charlottesville, Virginia . . 101 West High Street, Charlottesville, Virginia . 20 University Circle, Charlottesville, Virginia . St. Anne's School Charlottesville, Virginia . . . . . Wayside Place Charlottesville, Virginia 11001 V, ,,,..,, ' ...rf L4 I .L fl, ff-' 'Af j.,g'.'4 rf- 1- f533'f.3:.- Q XF 'Nall -, 15.1, - -fa '-2' 3,1 m 1 fu' x li lffl -5- Ali. ,L . 5 r4'm'. ff.,QX A . 25 , ,, K--we TW! U QE. .. f' u X 'K ., , , up .a , I. bf. . ...,,, . ,-Q. ,-. Qi, 4'1..'ff , V, Q x.. , -b , . .., ff 4.44 ,, . - v gf . jug 'K A, ...LJ ,QT 'F 1 - ga. I 1.3, 'z-zz -ZW' ,, My Z, ., N, .M . ,, .. -, U' r .,,. ',,1,,5.... 54, X, . 'f-Qi' , 2 Qt ,:.,, .4. e1'. , , K. . 2 - LJ- vf ' .l 'TA' 3 ,TRW 'if , -fx . - ,.:f.1 '1, Y .,,, 1., ,,. C ,.f: Lv., ' 'f-,-S wif 'Q' W.. 1 r L MS 1 J , , , x-4 S N 7 A ,..,.,, M. Q ,-,f ' Q 5 'fg'f ,.-.- if ., .M aw'-,rv v ', Q 13.5, Qi , I .yt ' 241, ', :Fe .JA T-A , 41, ' ',.?'L . rf . ,J .4-gg. V... aj, 5 g.,' , I L Elma 1-, QQ:-f.'i,1:+ ?' n...,J,'g?g.'f it AQZTF'- V 1 if ,, ,... ,......., r . , ., it-.W 32 'Q -16' , iff' ...K , .., A 4- f :.,.,e -.. , ', .,' - JMU ,,,.'..w V . 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