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Page 23 text:
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,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
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Page 22 text:
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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
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Page 24 text:
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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
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