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Page 54 text:
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HSHNH IfVlien you jirsl pu! your uniforms on life sighed as we looked nt you llzere You were one in u million .lnal any Sezon Hillionn Coulil only slunil and stare. . . You wei'en'z ueszlielic Bu! 'very magnetic Tom Brickley, Dorothy Keenan, Clark Shangh- . . ' K' XV l VA ' S Cl Ourfnncies tookacling' messy' It Omg' me un fy Dick Rull and jean Weller-Bunthorne and Lady If gpg ggn fwggdlg g 01- fl bfggglgf Jane bring down the housen with their duet-- ' Sing hey to you, good day to you ' l Sing bah tn you, ha! ha! to you . . fl Why not ri SV. ring? With, apologies io GILBERT AND SULLIVAN WE CROWN OUR QUEEN Queen-Carroll Little crowned by Therese Kelly, president of the junior class Crown bearer-Nlinnie Mannarino Atlendazitsgl-lester Fogg, Marie Kish, Marjorie Welsh, Mary Lee Dinsmore, Mary Long, Anne Bennis, Connie Zoccoli, Ann Mattimore
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Page 53 text:
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VVE PRODUCE Patience The lament of the twenty love-sick maid- 77 ens was certainly a timely plight with all our own 4'Drag0ons,' in the service. However, we soo l U ' ll n ost our doleful train as we started practice with St. Vin Patience, was the first Gilbert and Sullivan d . pro uction we undertook. With the limitless y energy of the Hlittle manf Father Ralph, and and Dlfk Ruff, HS Bl'11fl1f'fnC the constant drilling of Sister A were all 'Kon the balln for all the performances Will you ever forget little Jeanne Weller as massive Lady vlanel' rapturously trailing poor B unthorne . . . or the three dragoon ofhcers t endeavoring to i cent Prep. Our operetta, Anne Bennis, as Patience nn Regina We mpress the ladies with their estheticism . . . and the innocent little milk- i maid, Patience, loving in truth because it was W her Hdutyn? The Dmgoom-Danny Benson, Dino Barontini, Walter Beal, Pat Duiqy, Larry Gerthopher, Ted Roick, Tom Brickley, ohn Addelspurger, Tom Henderson, Jerry VVehrle, Clark Shaughnessy, Bill Mulvaney, Fran Perri, Dick Rull, jum Watson, Dick Clark, Vincent Sundry, Bill Waters, George Caravaggin, Tex Force, George Kukurin, john Gruss, The inaidenrgllflary Ellen Curran, Kay Watson, Annabelle Turney, Anne Bennis, Catherine Woods, jean Weller, Dorothy Keenan, Carroll Little, Mary Jane Hinchey, Adeline Lancast P ' ' Reilly, -Ioa C i ' ' er, eggy Smith, Marybeth Trescher, Bernice nne Jnodman, Alice Evans, Marie Kish, Ellen Frances Rodgers ll Hl Sllllll I
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Page 55 text:
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Rosemary Masley. Mary ,lane Brown, Pat Hurley, Miss Mock Miss Mock directs the girls i'i making utility bags for the Red Cross. This was o ie of the many activities undertaken by the students on the hill. Miss Mock was sponsor for the Red Cross work of the school and she organized her uHomc lfcw class for war work. Mary Anne Conlin, Clare Schildkamp Mary Lee Dinsmore, Louise Henry lHlY HISU SlHVl... After an enthusiastic assembly of the student body early in the fall, Seton's army began to devote itself whole- heartedly to the War effort. The student body formed a War Board consisting of the two highest ollicers in each class. This War Board listed all the girls into units, corresponding to the women,s organizations now in the service. So as WAACS headed by Marian Conway, the WAFS under the leadership of Mary Lee Dinsmore, the .WAVES directed by Peggy Tourtellott, and the WAAMS under Ellamae Keck, the students marched on to the various goals set by the Board for the School at War Program. Save, Serve, ConJer'Ue became the motto for every Setonian. The attractive, showy booth was erected, where, each day, one division tried to out-do the others in purchasing War Stamps. For Uncle Sam's scrap pilev various drives were undertaken. A total of 3809 keys were collected, 75 pounds of old annual engravings, as well as five hundred com- pacts, arid lipstick containers. And so-Seton's army kept in step toward the victory goal. 'A' Martha Loynd, Mary Long, Marybeth Treschcr
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