Stuart Hall School - Inlook Yearbook (Staunton, VA)
- Class of 1948
Page 1 of 144
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 144 of the 1948 volume:
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Zin iHHPHIU1'iEll11 lDlQ.XX'Il.l.l.VXM'l',IIUlJ1iliS ROC-fRHf'lf lE HDMIMSQATION gpm, Wggfpyq xg M ,I -A i , ST-HTISTXGS UN OERQLHSSME N HCTIVITIES HTH 1.51105 Summa RY N I' MRS. WILLIAM T. HODGIQS Principal gm w1J.L: '-I Ax 'w Q-ul my mm' .Ji 7af,'Z'u4 -TU 'U '!'...! C2 i' I Xtl l IX XXIJSIAXVI4' Miss fuv Mlss Quuk Nliw Chili-11 Kllss lm'1l1ggIm1 Miss Qifilllk Xllw. lzlllull Xlrs. lfuulis '. Gibbs iss iiZlI'llSiM'I'QL'l4 rs, iii'I'I'iIlgllIIl Nliss llucllslmssm-1' 'Xliss llmw rs. King' ACL'I.TY AND STAFF Mis Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss Miss 5 Mzicl Ji:11'1i Ncvill SIJZIITUXY SICl'l'CIl 'll-iiiplctmi X ilu-11 XYZIQIIUI' FXOGRFQFXVXE W H STA: :amos UNDERCl.Pl55Mt:N QQHUVUES HTHLEHC3 UT'7P'7FHPH 'lllIIIIIIII, l'IIIIIIIIII', 5 x' QS. ll.I1,I lll .S'pm1.vm' Senior Class Qfiiicers I' KANQ lub HRK DXX N ..... ....... IXYI' l'f Nl l'Ifl'RY Vim 4. .X , .D,X .XNXl', MVXIQSI .......... .... . lxA I Ill'.RlfXl', MRA-XIDIDN .... .... NRS. lfUL'l.lS ...... . l'n'.x'frfv11l P7't'.X'll!It'IIf .Sl'4'r1'lr11'y 'l'm'11,vl1r4'r ..S4jw11.w1 SENIORS MARY LOUISA AIJSIT fFour Yearsi Usurikz MARY CR1-31-:D llfxvis Take a loping walk and flashing blue eyes and you'll have our attractive NVICICSIE. Typical New York sophistication and plenty of pure unaffected humor, which brings on her explosive laugh, are the cause of her popularity with both sexes. VVe can be sure of seeing NVEESIE, of the unlimited ability, high in the literary world very soon, in spite of her incurable case of P'aulsy . ANNAISIQLLIC AYICRS QFour Yearsj Usuieiz: JIQANNI4: HAHNER The name ANNAHICLLIQ will always re- call to our minds a pair of large, soulful eyes and a head of beautiful hair swinging back as she practices the latest dance steps. Her perseverance and unquestioned leader- ship in the right direction have been recog- nized and appreciated for four years and will undoubtedly mark her for a successful career in nursing. Wfhat patient could fail to respond to her tranquil air, her friendli- ness, and her completely unpredictable re- marks? SENIORS I.lill.A AMANDA IEUUTII f'l'hree Yearsj Usniskz NANM' DAY Um' blonde beauty hails from Roanoke which seems to have as high a place in its heart for her as we have in ours. Her happy-go-lucky air is a mere hoax intenclecl to distract our attention from her scholastic geniusg and her bright smile ancl subtle wit combined with an air of sophistication make her a winner in anybocly's languaget W'e expect to see l.lCll-A many times in the future, featnrerl as the leacling lady in to- mlay's societyn. IJORUTIIY IJUUGLAS IZOXLIQY ' fTwo Yearsj USIIICRZ lvlfxiw liLi,i-:N lvlll'l'lilll'RS'l' lJ.l7.'S pixie smile anrl sweet manner seem to have alifecterl us as well as her numerous aclmirers of the opposite sex. NVQ sit fascinatecl at her tales of impossible weekends ancl are green with envy of her life far from the maclcling crowd . Rumor has it that lJ.lJ.'S has a decided leaning towarcls a certain university. lf references are neeclerl, we'll give her the best. uf ,ff ,if 1:6-X' ' of o , V QA! X51 fb avi! Q-'Y -1 W4 .KA .-'qw Aww, 1 CDM -i 'WF SENIORS BETTY RIIJLICY IEOZARTII QTWO Yearsj Usulciaz NASH' Iicmzixiwli 1-EICTTY 101' BOZ1 li to her more intimate friendsj has won our friendship with her unfailing graeiousness, her poise, :md her lovable manner. The 111211111 expression she eultivates is El masterpiece, and the combina- tion of Z1 smooth pagehoy and an appealing smile makes us realize that in her we have 21 really terrilic girl. FRANCICS XN'1iS'I' HROVVN QTWU Yearsj Usliak: ANN S'l'oc'K1c'1 1' FRAN5 delightful 1:lIlQ5SC2l11C1 diplomacy in haiidliug any situation m21de her our Choice to lead our class. Greek goddess features, an alluring smile, and an easy- going manner are our idea of what makes El winner. FRAN seems to he destined for success, and we shall always remember her as an outstaiiding girl and El president of whom we were justly proud. M. .3 .4 ht-F :1 fascinating companion :incl :L l101l-l'21I1li- SENIORS -ll'Nli FRANCICS I3URl.INtiAMli flwo Yvzirsj LISIIICRZ lXlARY -lo Fickczrsox .IUNITS quizzicztl look prcparcs one for hor antics. llc-1' roztring humor and great scnsv ot' slapstick will ncvci' go unnoticed noi' fail to win hor many fricncls. This 1-nviulmlc scnsc of fun, togctlivr with her shining lmlonrl hziir :incl big lmluc cycs, lcavcs no clouht in our inincls that some clay in the future 'IUNITS nzunc will bc in noon lights as thc lt-zuliiug lzuly in IT llAl'I'liNlil7 IN til-It BRGIETI JXVN. X l .. -nt .l.. A ii i 0 rv.'-, wk-qc.-. x.lk. Yllit QINIA RANIJUl.l'll CARTICR' ilhsk, fwl' 'AUX' t I wo X cztrsj L , 3,1-.f-,C4 yr-x-,t..,-, Lex., Lslnclt: tnxxv LAi'D11.t. -6 ' lfg. Q., MILS-4 MIN hounclcrl into Olcl Main and into our Alia-arts last yC1lI'. llci' striking looks :incl in- xiloinpzirznlmlt- st-nsc of tht- ridiculous nmkc ' ing conicrlit-nnc. Take ont' part purc cn! thusizun, ont- part liztrnionizing to any song, . L, ' ' 'tlircv parts lzxuglitcr, and you'll liztvc 21 con- coction guzmtntct-rl to hc :L knockout-CIN. X ,-5, li K gk' L'eC f ' X , .5 fruit, D l a'x.l L, max . 1 LL L '-2...Q,,,.L,J its-4 '-4'-x 04' i931o..L,Utt ., CRJ-.Ax vain, Q, cgi fl-LK -5 LN N io WLQ k-fL.QlL! C ,X-7 X FX 3 LJ--lint o.t5 fd 1 GA H- 4 'N' K V-YN X' K' 'Lg I 'X ' ' , . ,x,,k. Ls if .v l I 0 0 SENIORS MILDRIQIJ SHRIQVVSIEURY CASH fFive Yearsl Usnickz MARY ANN NIICAD Having come to Stuart Hall way back in the eigth grade, M I IJCIC has been here long- er than most of the rest of us. She has come along the path of high grades and honors, not the least of them being the lead- ership of the lf. L. A. Her ability to be tactful and to persevere through thick and thin have won her our love and admiration. XVe don't think that our capable MIIJGIC, of the lopsided grin, will soon be forgotten. JULIA HALL CHICSSICR CThree Yearsj LTSIIERZ I,l'1iLiY CIIICSSICR X'Ye have long taken .IUlJY'S tllled mail- box and numerous admirers in our stride because her charming looks and rare per- sonality are enough to captivate even the coldest heart. Wfe never fail to be enter- tained by her inimitable stories, heightened by her wonderful sense of the ridiculous. There is no doubt that she will long be re- ntembered as one of our favorites. SENiIORS lJUlQO'I'HYROlEIiR'I'SCJ'NliIl.1, COIN! 1 'Iqi1l't'L' years fb Vsn 1-zu: AN Nic lllcx'icRc'm1 li ITIH CCJIEIVS czuirlifl scnsc uf humor and skcpticzil cxprcssirm have hccn :ln ilitcgrzil pziri uf mn' sn-nim' class. H1-r unrufflcrl dis- position cw-ii when collccliiig chu-s fun 2101 that has goin' on sincc her arrivzilj and hor willingnc-ss :incl rciizlhilily hzivc nizulc her il vzilncnl inn-inhci' uf thc class. Nothing over sm-cnis lu fum' CHRI! . . . wa-ll, hardly L-vcr. Shv talks inccsszinlly :incl intcrcstinglyg in fact sho has talked In-rsvlf riglil into our hearts. NANCY IQSTICS CUIKIZ C'l'wo XYUIIVSD Usnickz Sl'li iXlA'I l'IIliXYS Hn-r hu-gniling sinilc :incl shining cycs have won l.l'l'Tl.lf COIN! lllllllj' fans lmth hcrc zinil in thc I't'INlVV1ll'Ci CzXRUl.INA!! Ai- wnys full of vivzicity and cxcitcincnt, whcther on the lmckcy field or gn-lting 11-:icly for :1 clzincv, CCJBIZIIC has niaclc hcrsclf pnpulzn' with all of us. NYC prvrlict an cx- citing fntnrn- fm' hcr, and thc sky'S thc liinit ! SENIORS WINIFRED CQLLINS Clwo Yearsj Usmixz lVlARY lVlA'I l'lIliXYS FREDDIITS friendly freckles and irre- pressible giggle have made us say many times that she can't be equalled when it comes to wit. A slight touch of cynicism a- long with a lot of pure sweetness will make FRIQDDIIE stand out in our minds for a long time. XYe haven't any doubt that what- ever she aspires to do, whether it he writing or catching her 'ldream man , will he a success. CONSTANCE ANN CONE CFour Yearsj Usni-ne: Fmxcms l,AwR14:Nc'i3 Our CONNIE is famous for her incom- parable remarlis and amazing announce- ments in study hall. Always seen rushing or blushing, she is a constant source of merri- ment with her antics. This love of fun com- bined with true leadership and wonderful talent for designing has made CUNNIE one of our most indispensable seniors, and one that we will have a hard time forgetting. ,-1 ' '-V755 ' - '-frkfl 4 uv- Xiav She' ,ya R000-A NJ 'flu-xi 'CU 3X1xxq.J3Q L N. i f . ' 0 136.95 ws R 'l4Q.YN'3k Nutt' .QWUTC Xfhmux ONS NIO 'S uvovx ul T. T kxxghgsj-4. Qgwx SL q,Q,i,fn.0 AT?-.sir Tuxfi 0-.cot 5 Qouf,-7 Lx t'h.,:LuA,ulx M.:-X-'un , . i 3 lllirltllilli 1m,x1i'1f51tA1fT, MM X on W'-Y -' go. ' 2,9-1-.q,5T vt.: J- Cxvvd ffuci S0 -5? hills t .Jgiqcu www veg 5:5 gg t Lsni-.k. blrxixltl lxARlXl'.lI my mira , Qe UU,,.nx-X. Xue A hluse Ill1lIlllL'l' :intl unfziiling call 1' wait Il minute will always bring to mincl IZRUOKIIQ of the sweet personality :incl Cllilflllllltf looks, Always tlressetl in the lzttest style tztltltougli we zuhnit it takes El while for the tinishetl protluctj, she is the senior fashion plate. XYe can see her in the future as the woi'ltl's foremost aclvocute of the silly hat, :intl say, She wore them then . M,-XRI,-NN IQUGIQRS ICMMICTT ttJne Yezlrl Llsni-ik: L'ARo1.YN llmcimz MAIQIAN is one of our clelinite assets, in spite of the fziet that this is hcl' first year. ller sweet smile ztncl faseinztting tales about her renownetl Clifton Forge are only at part of her personality which has won so many frientls. Llntlei' that quiet exterior lies il spznrlc ot nnsehiet which will long he re- inemlmeretl with :L chuckle. A xksc V151 xrxks qc s.1-L., Swank LJ-ik., nfx 'Vsfs-:ova .ea SENIORS CARYL PHYLLIS ENTXVISTLE fTwo Yearsj USHER: CHARLOTTE ENSLOVV This was CARYL'S flrst year as a boarder, and many is the time we have said with a sigh, If we had only known . An a propos remark for every occasion Qeven if it is on the cynical sidej gives us the im- pression that there are few other wits to compare with hers. We expect great things from that clever mind and will doubtless hear of her as Argentina's leading columnist and critic. KATHERINE AMELIA FAUCETTE fTwo Yearsj USHER: DALE HUTTER Our Winsome blonde with the angelic voice can only be KITTY. Her lovable ways and wonderful understanding have made her one of our favorite people, and a charmer of the opposite sexg witness her mailbox packed with fan mail. KITTY will undoubtedly sing her way into the hearts of millions in the near futureg and we can say. :'We knew her thenf' SENIORS PRISCILLA FIELDS Q'l'wo Yearsj LlSllliRZ MARY TAYLOR I'RIS'S engaging personality and unsur- passalmle smile have won her numerous friends both here and in the great metro- polis of Nanticolte. Her quiet capability and the case with which she gets things done are sufficient proof that she is destined for a successful future in whatever she under- talces. With such perseverance as she has shown, PRIS is hound for great things. ANITA FRENCH fTwo Yearsj l.lSHl-IRI ANNE JAMr:s lfndless tallc aluout Cuba, the only place worth living in, can only come from our own ANITA, Titian hair with wind-blown hangs are her claim to fame, and we never fail to be fascinated by her execution of South American dances. Her tendency to be taken in and her complete understanding make her one of our most charming and lovable seniors. Speaking of good neigh- hors, we give you the best-ANlTA. fyr ? .Dm f N U' VY' QW 6, ve NT V fn? of my eyxxg f . f 'X 91N-X! S E N I O R S JGAN EULALIE GARNIQR f'llwo Yearsj LlSHliRI ANNE VV. Coolii-1 -IOAN can be described only in super- latives-especially when it comes to her unlimited store of imagination. Her tall stories come thick and fast, and are in- comparable, even by James' Stevens. Her very attractive looks and true ability and leadership can be an omen for only thing- success. She has made herself a place in many hearts. . .we give you GARNERY ANNE GARST CTwo Years D if USIlliRZ Sus BVRRI-iss. GARST seems always to be doing things by one and by two, especially when it comes to her famous stories about the Hgooliishf' VVe never fail to be amazed at the way she can produce the right answer from under that confused expression. Hill- billy songs, replete with gesticulations, are her specially. It won't be soon that her friendly smile will be forgotten. SENIORS KATIIICRINIQ l.liXX'lS CIRAIJIJY Qlwo Yczirsj Usiiiexz l11':'rsv KIAVRY Sn':1igln AE . . .wl1o??? tilt,-XIJIDY, of course. llt-1' gt-nius and hor spccml on thc hocky tivltl liztvv won GRAIJIJY recogni- tion tlirougliout thc school, to sity nothing of hui' lczulwsliip :mil clcvt-rncss in tossing off tlicincs. A st-nsc of wit comlminctl with ll st-nsc of lmusint-ss will cloulmtlcss make hcl' Z1 favorite of long ST,-XNrling. MARY Al.lCli tiL l'lllllli tlwo YL-ztrsj Llsn lik: lxlARIAN S'1'iu-:D tiLl'l'llRll'f, :ts wt-ll as for being so wiclc- ly tmvelccl, is also much :uhnirccl for being so UUl5lZlIllllI1g' an uthlctc. Many times has she tzxlccn top honors, both in incloor and outclooi' sports. This, conibinccl with hcl' czinclitl rcniurks, ht-r fricntlly disposition, :intl hcl' talcnt at the piano, have xnzult' her one of our most inclispcnsztble scniors. :mf 'I if fi' gf ff VWMV . 1, : V ' M I L' 1 , .Q 'Vflflf and pranks, carried off superbly be- X l .Wy 0 V J! sux- YQ- LD A953 Rxyciiytv- O03 Q 05503 N f,QQ9,,Oxl Xaggyyoybew fxfl o K Q .Je GK sz 395, O5 203W XO O 'Z f'X J, of l 'N X . J 30' fu? J Q dd va f X QSM 'Y Three earsj su 'R: jx T BROMAN PATTY is known for her impish person- cause of her envied innocent expression. To add to this her enthusiasm for and ability in sports, and her clear, bell-like voice, is to arrive at the sum total of quite a versatile girl. She has trod the beaten path for three years, and our guess is that she will keep 55115 yifbw L, .XO W Z iff? i,00yQO5XOX LUCIE ANN HARRIS QTWO Yea rs J USHPIR : PAT BERRY Our true southern belle, complete with that South Carolinian drawl and flocks of admire, is LUCIE. Her blithe simply marvelous, combined with more of her un- equaled remarks, have made her a charmer to many, Qnote her numerous invitations to the Naval Academyj. For LUCIE, we can predict only the brightest of futures. SENIORS lil.liANt JR tit-XlXllll.li 'l,'XlXlliS t'l'ln'ee Yearsj Uslli-ik: lXlARt:o'r XYAl.KliR lil,l.lli'S :turn of sophistication and olnvious zilmility have gained her many honors during the past three years, including the lnresideney of the tiermzm Club. VVlio can question her popularity when confronted by her ztttruetive looks :ind ella-rveseent person- ality? lC'l.l.llQ is one of our favorites, and she will doulltless have the sznne effect on everyone she meets. tlRAL'li l'llll.l.ll'S .IUIINSON Q'l'wo Yeztrsl L'slll-ik: YIRGINIA Sl'U'l l' L'AR'1'l-:R tiliAL'Ii'S engaging sweetness and sop- histication keep us amazed that she is the lmlmy ot' the class. ller good looks and lrenutiful clothes niztke her the envy of us ull, :md under that placid exterior is an ample amount of gray matter, used to the best advantztge. Wk- don't think that there can he any dissenters on GRACli'S popus lztrity poll. 'D 13-1' Linus ob: Hx I RU, G- fyfh, fi-'la C1qQS2 '1 rmmlqooclemn k LJ6u'u.b ,e.oma.ea-.z.m.z, .'l-U-1-1 fXo f' ,J ' xv Q e Z 'x f'N Vw Gv F 0- 1 Ni My ' . S IORS ALIN Sl L FFIICLD lilfl' lk I Jyqrfhree Years Usni-:az .lAM,?.ASKl'2Y' in as x ' e as snow and hair as black as at ' tly describes ALINIC. Her tall, stat ew e beauty completes the picture as fingers linger over the piano keys. She has been the able accompanist for many of our class parties, and without her we would have been lost. A decided asset, ALINE will rank high in our memories. ' 13. if :SV ofxkp 9' ' 1 's sw 'XQPCQ' .gxvfoxx e 02 . fe-- '.,M+ F. MYRA LONG QTwo Yearsil Uslllckz 1-t'ev Kr:l.l.oca: XX'hen MYRA made her appearance in the middle of last year, and we were iirst confronted with that graciousness combined with a cock-eyed grin, we knew we had a welcome addition to the class of '48. XYell known for those mad chemical experiments, radical reforms, unbelievably gay weekends, and her reserved booth in lJodd's, MYRA has entered our hearts as well as our memories. Web! GW SENIORS lil.liANf DR NliX'll.l.l2 Mclbf JXX'lil.l. I lwo X varsb L'slnf:k: .loxux Vlonxsox fi0IllllSW'll1ZlllS NliYll.l.lf. XXI- Sit cn- tlirallccl wliilc sho fools off all thc right answcrs, putting us to shame. Amlcl to this more gn-nius in art, anfl cu-n a touch in act- ing fri,-for to Senior Party, Novvinlmcr 19473, and you can sec why wc can't gn-t a- long without hor. ln parting wc say, Good luck, NlCX'll.l,lCg ytllllft' going places. ll1XlQlilli'I' KA'l'lllCRlNlC MQINTUSII fliwo Ycarsl l'SlIIiRI lQUSAl.ll'1 fltiIl.YlI'I KA'l'lli'S raclical thcorics on rcforni ancl lu-1' aniazing ability to explain tliingsffcvcn what sho clot-sn't unflerstancl, arc only two of lu-1' talm-nts. llur CIlll1llSl11SlN anrl unclcr- standing have niaflt- hor ont- of our most valut-rl sm-niors. 'l'alw a cancliml personality ancl an incoinparalmlc touch on thc piano, anel yon liaw ong of thi' lx-stffKA'l'lli. ' A X w l tttliitl' lt'll'l9MlA fftw A . mt it Xflaml lf ly KX , , .,.. ttf X. l 'Q-M' -X U t lv tx Q, .X QQ gif V it I 2 . X ' l ii Ji' ' .J ll In Q, wr, I xbvlfli ft XX. A tqxxlv K-aft. N I, K , . . -1 -' ' . ' s . xx, X, . o t t Mtn-- T SENIORS MARIE COVINGTON MAGICIL CTvvo Years J J LTSIIERI KING BAsiu4:Rv1LLr3 MARllf'S typical Southern charm, heightened by her slow drawl, have made her one of our most attractive girls. XYC like her for her lifted eyebrow and slightly satirical tone of voice which are neutralized by her sheepish grin. NVQ' expect to hear of her high in Southern Society very soon. BRUCE MOFFETT tThree Yearsj Usmak: MARY lfLlZABE'l'll Iimroxosoiv BRUCES subtle humor and sophistica- tion, combined with wild tales of VVashing- ton and its people, have made her fabulous in our minds. We can't help being amazed at her fascinating hairdos and her famous black dress. BRUCE is destined to go places-so we say, 'iGood luck-we'll see you in Wl'10'.v VVh0. 'L' 'ilu- bl ' im? . SE O S UXQVE QD. hAw Qw lil.l.liN, NICY NEFF 'lo CLSU- , 5 . ,, ' .. .. g E Q LxL1 CL llliRZ llli'l l'Y Tllllll l'lllliRllAR'l' IJAISNICY is famed at Stuart Hall for, among other things, her exhilarating smile :intl unsuppressecl giggle. Her merry eyes, which light up when she tells a story, en- title her to follow in her Poor cousin's foot- steps. We have no cloulmt that she is our leacling hearthrealter, and we expect to hear of her charming ways long after she's gone. SARAH lil,lZAlllC'l'll Ol'll'1 CSeven Yearsj Usnicitr Sri-1 Mfxsoiw lX'll'lN'l'YRli The Little General is our nick-name for SAl.l.Y. VVQ have proof of her popu- larity just because we have a place in our hearts for her lithe beauty ancl winning smile. She is the leaclinf man in our plays 2lIltl Llf hea ts. , O M e pl N h , fu f ' J 1 fy Ji 4 X. J i J- I J' 'JJ Wu SENIORS CYNTHIA KATHERINE OVICRICSCIAI fTwo Yearsl Usm-:kg I.oL'1sic RIILLER KAY has wcncled her way through Stuart Hall for two years, leaving behind the re- cord of good work and the memory of a wonderful girl. Her ability to handle a hockey stick and a knitting needle equally well is proof of her versatilityg and her completely incongruous personality will be remembered with many a guffaw. JANE MAUJER POLLOCK fTwo Yearsj LISIIERZ NANcY QTRAXEY .IANIE and New York will always be linked together. She has the true style and sophistication of her city, and the charm and modesty of the old South. Take these assets and add a pair of bright eyes and whimsical personality, and we are sure that you will agree that JANITC has quite a future before her. .j 5- igfrs 7' t, iff Jeff Lil Lf. SKIN ! G,-A Nysbrgiffgfks J 1 f wwf J' I Ntyici Rus Poms fi' aa U pq wo Yearsj D, f 'Sl cz wlsr: SoMr:Rvi1.l.ic yr 5 us GG, of the famed Lf : 'ent, :mc 'e inlysliewr ally chose Z1 win- , er G91 has ie ility to put over a story w' h such Conn .ete alzanclon that she can't J! he the life of the party. She has DJ lm mlerl through two years here and into 4' r hearisg and we are sure that for her, the sliy's the limit! FRANCES STIEPIIANIIC PORTER tThree Yearsj Usiiick: Iha'r'rv Lot' Ilkowxmu l RAN'S zllrility to talk herself out of :anything and her enthusiasm for forgotten Causes Seems to have brought her many zi- mazing ziclventures. Our striking towhead with the ininiitalmle personality will undoubt- emlly lie almle to make herself a place in the rlrzurzitic worlcl as well as in the hearts of many. -1 SENIORS JANE HARMAN PRESTON Q Two Years J Usuisuz MARY Lou ST. CLAIR JINNIE has the lovable air that so few have. Her innocent big blue eyes and shin- ing blond hair come direct from a story- book. She has beguiled us since the begin- ning with her sweet and quiet friendliness, and we suspect that she will have the same effect on many others. ELLEN NORRIS PRICE CTWO Yearsj ' UsHr:R: BETTY ROLLER ' Charleston sent us another exponent last year in the form of a very capable and inde- pendent person-ELLEN. She has become one of our most necessary seniors because of her friendliness and wiliingness to help in any situation. She has won and will win success, we are sureg and our fondest thoughts go with her. SENIORS MARY ANNE LANCSI 11 JRN111 RUIDLSICRS 1'1'111'1.'L' Y1'111's1 1111141111 KA'1'1111YN 1X1l'1,Al'1i11l.1N l111i1' 1i11c 1111111111-s i11 Il 31111111-11 Villlllgl' 1'1111g11t aptly 111-scrilmcs MARY ANNIFS 1:111mw11i11g g1111'y. XXI , 111111 11111111'1'11us of thc 11pp1msi11- S1-x, 1111v1- 11111111- Z1 1JCl'l1TiI.llL'1l1 1111111- 111 Ulll' 111-111'ts f111' 111'1' l'k'1ll1j' 1Z1llg.f11 111111 C1111- stzmt 51111111 spirits, 111111 we S1-1111 111-ruff with 11 1111111 111' 111v1- 111111 111-st wislws. QI oe? ' 9 5' 0' id' K 9 .I1 ili C1 OLYY :RRY X Q ' x J-gf 1361143111 11l'RRliS s U11 1 1 1 li ' 1111 ffilf 1' I1 3' 11 big 11111 s. 111' I i'1i.1Z 11 1111 s 1 1 c.o 1-S Ar 11111y '11 of 111111-11 f111'. 11 1' 11111 f 1 1 1 11- 111l'l'2l1'y 1ifc is 1' 11, 111 p1'11v1-11 by 11QVOL'2l1Jll111I'y, 111111 we 1'111'1-15' Svc 111'1' w111-11 S1111 is11't 1m11111J1i11g with things 111 1111 111111 S2152 XYit11 such 1-1111111si11s111, C1111 1111y- 11111' miss il successful future? SENIORS RUTH IQLLICN SCHELLHAMMER tThree Yearsj LVSHERZ MARY Sem-:1,LnAMMr:R CAL's1.AND Our redhead with the cute figure is SHELLY. She seems to have quite a num- ber of admirers of the opposite sex Cplease note the collection of jewelryj. VVe think it must be that skeptical wit that has made her such a favorite. There is no doubt that she will jitterbug right out of Robertson sitting room into a heyday of a future! JANE HERNDON SHOBER fThree Yearsj l,lSlll-IRI jovcis X'YA1.kicR SHOHO is our nomination for one of the best gals our class has seen. New Orleans belle and Stuart Hall friend to all is our jANl2. Her ridiculous remarks which call forth her ready store of guifaws are good things to hear along the arcade. She's a natural for our applause, and as for the boys-need we say more? SENIORS SALLY ANN SINtil.li'I'ON tlfive Yearsj USIIICRZ Lois VVIELCII SINGH warclrohe of good-looking clothes numhers more than any movie star's, we clo believe. Anal as for frientls, we can say the same. 'l'he length of her stay here causes her to be numbered among the veterans, antl she has made herself a place along side the best of them. XYe know you'll have a happy future, SAl.LY4all we have to tlo is ask -Iulianl t'ARtJLYN liA'l'ON STIQIN f'l'hree Yearsj L'su1cR: l,A'l' ST:-:IN Listen for an infectious laugh and a corny joke and you'll lincl CAROLYN. Our gal with the nose for news is one of the hest because of her wonclerful friendli- ness antl complete abandon. WW: saw her in athletics her first year, and knew she was destined to heatl this year's A. A. Board. just as we knew that, we know CAROLYN will never lack friencls wherever she goes. SENIORS ANNIC MORRIS STUART fThree Yearsj U5lll+2RI fililifil-Ili lVlA'l'llliVl'SON ANNE Cor STUART to the elitej has the droll humor which is so hard to find. ln fact, she isyso droll that at times she is in- clined to be misunderstood. Her gracious- ness and poise are her trademarks, and her love o'f things literary has gainecl and will gain her the recognition she so well deserves. DOROTHY OI.lVlA THTQURFR Qlfour Yearsj LlSlllCRZ Lufv S'1'AN1.i:v Capability plus-this can only be DOLLY -our attractive, grey-eyed president of the Student Council. Possessing the coveted American Look and a quiet good humor, interspersed with cryptic remarks, lJOl.l.Y will leave behind a bright train of honors and good grades. She is one of our favorites, and we predict that her dignity and leadership will bring her to the top wherever she goes. r lx -7-l . y .. L , . . 5 0 In f i 0 0285 IU R K. 0947 Xb! x '19 ' ' I 5 - ,J Q ,P M' UIQL, '. T C NT 'V , Q7 ' ft-9!Yearsl - J ' O mile: 'l'lAR'l' HAND y ! l Q r e pact ge from Text ' Q in the for f a cuteckiolzing etlfervescent vit ' nd irre ' - ml el as fro 'ck tl-goug ' uart I 69 all . e hope Qkes t 1 f her yo li ' h equal enthusiasm and good nature. can see her now, taking honors as Miss '- Atom llomln for l95U. lllEl.liN LOUISE TURNER QTwo Yearsj LlSllI-IRI MARY Bol.I.lNt: lJAvls I.OUlSli'S ingenuogisness and satirical personality are only one side of this versatile gal. WH' acclaim her for her liusiness-like activity and natural lient for the literary. Her trade-marks are a plume in the hand and a knitting needle behind the earg we'll miss her friendly smile more than a little next year. SENIORS CARTICR TURNER VIQNAHLIQ Q'l'hree Yearsj UsllER: ANNE CAMPBELL CARTER'S tranquil voice in times of stress is one of the reasons she is so nice to have around. Her slight leaning toward the sacred cult of black sheep betrays that her quietness is a mere farce. XVe know and will remember this gal with the smooth pageboy as one of the real additions to our list of friends. Jjbjr -'I 0 Y ' 1-4 io ' YNY. Pj! f' x r . 'l , L 77-st-'M A sv I Q Q 4: ith 9 -r-jf' J' 'I' X 'Y.vr,' ft: 'Y-P, 5' 2 ' Q SKI 1 I ' D 4- i7 O O J' fs? IEIIONA ivflmizfryi 4wg:1g,J5TesoN, , J , t L P avg 5' v I 'rg 3-I -r I' ' 1. WJ' .V .17 .0 1 :X N7 ,Q , C9416 QI? , Q 1 3' af' S' Jz Ez't.1cN BELL if 5 JZ True poise and dignity set off lfDNA'S sweet smile and friendliness to the best ad- vantage. Her beautiful clothes and multi- tude of earrings are looked upon with envy by all of us. EDNAF leaning is toward music, and her lovely voice will be heard with much pleasure over many networks be- fore very long, we are sure. .-.-- Q- r-l SENIORS FRANZ nouns w1LsoN Q- . 5' fTwo Yearsj USHER: AS1'I'FON GALLAGHER Y-xc means last in our recognition and acclaim Her gullibility and blithe air have been mak ing her our pal since she came last yeai This gal with beautiful hair has a love for horses which is a legend in Robertsong she will undoubtedly own the Kentucky Derby winner in 1950. t FRANZ brings up the rear, but is by no ' i- C THE LIGHT OF HOPE The wearied soul looks not upon today But out across the wide expanse'of tears To clutch, with outstretched hand, th' inevitable tomorrow. The cares and pains of both today and yesterday Become engulfed and lost in our dreams Of what the next day's dawning, bright and clear, may bring. It matters not how many times we stumble in the dark If, through the gloom, we keep in view I The light of hope. -FRANCES S. PORTER This poem was printed in the 1948 edition of THE NATIONAL ANTHOLOGY OF HIGH SCHOOL POETRY s vs-Xu-D 'I -Q-TN wk . Neue. :Dx .ST N-LJ-C. L. .wal J Pmmft, 'Nw SNBBSNQ six-Hu ww if Q. -4 I 1 ,,. U , U 40 3 x. 'wt' FQSQQ 'wk WRU- ' , :nk GRACE NOTES USUALLY CALLED USUALLY SEEN Louisa Adsit Annabelle Ayers Leila Booth Dorothy Boxley Betty Bozarth Frances Brown .Iune Burlingame Virginia Carter Mildred Cash Julia Chesser Dorothy Cobb Nancy Cobb Winifred Collins Constance Cone Brookie Craft Marian Emmett Caryl Entwistle Katherine Faucette Priscilla Fields Anita French Ioan Garner Anne Garst Katherine Graddy Mary Guthrie Patricia Hale Lucie Harris Eleanor james Grace Johnson Aline Kerr Myra Long Marie Magee Neville McDowell Harriet McIntosh Bruce Moffett Dabney Neff Sally Opie Cynthia Overesch Jane Pollock Anne Pope Frances Porter lane Preston Ellen Price Mary A. Rodgers lane Roseberry Ruth Shellhammer ,lane Shober K Sally Singleton Carolyn Stein Anne Stuart Dorothy Theurer Iacqueline Thornton Louise Turner Carter Venable Edna Wilkerson Franz Wilson VK'eesie Boo lJ.lJ. Bozie Fran Junior Gin Midge Judy Big Cobb Little Cobb Freddy Connie Kitty Pris ,Ioanie Patty Ellie Al Katie Ann Kay ,lanie 122 Fran ,linnie Kitchie Shelly Sliobo Sing Stu Dolly lackie Lou Fritz in staff room proctoring writing at U. Va. in Robertson in the office near the infirmary discombobulated selling extra specials playing R'son vic knitting behind a red flag listening to Latin sewing five minutes late writing letters being witty doing geometry in a hurry by too few doing Nothing in main building on the farm behind a hockey stick singing in the tub perusing Annapolis drag harmonizing well dressed at a piano in Dodd's with lifted eyebrow telling fortunes pounding the keys filing her nails with men in the Dixie eating forbidden fruit as Overesch's accomplice sleeping M. C. of a party in a cloud on the stage taking a weekend moving searching her mailbox running somewhere dancing playing goalie working zealously on Upper Music everywhere under green glasses shyly smiling in music studio in the art room record s book USUALLY UTTERS Good show Shhhhhh ! about Princeton Oh, how sweet uyeahn U u senior meeting after dinner Can I have the tub ? 'Tm so mad l my roommate my cow a dead pan duhh praises for Carolina book reports about Bobs Wait a minute, 'yalli' Be cheerful ironically with a song about sextet meetings en espanol about S. M. A. fylerryj nothing Please pay your dues in spurts about the choir inane remarks Isn't that wonderfull the right thing very little Guess what l annoyedly right answers Well now, uh Well, I think Guess who called Pass the bread Where's Pollock ? May I borrow irrelevant thoughts What a stab! with an innocent stare caustically incessantly apropos remarks Well, I just won't write him Sewaneee er, somethin' like that laughinfrlv wellll anyways Come on, Igg What a riot! Hey, wait a minute sweet notes Horses! u at then R O G R H f lf lE FmrvN15Trem1oN hovzvm E5 ATHLETICS SUMMARY T' 41 2 ,W 4 ,Q x -'f f'5e 5 Z MISS STUART HALL IJCJIQKJTIIY Oi.lX'I,X 'l'IIliL'Rll MOST PQPULAR I I XXUIL' S'I'lfl'IlAXXllQ Pill ll I MOS I VHQSXX T ! LE I XXI1 LXIQK PIXX R4 PSlfl1lV,lQIQN C MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED Mxlqx' l,Ul'IS.X ,wsw MQSW ATHLETIC L XRCJLYN ICLYIYDX STICIX ROGRHFIFIE QDMHUEWRWNPM 5ENwOr2b UN C NM it UN T HTHLETm5 SUMMARY Junior Class GECQFS DAIJC HL l l'IiR. .. .. 1,I'4'.VIlf1'IIl I..-XURA INGIIAIXI .,... .... l 'if l'z'v.x'idv11! A N N CR ICNSI IAXY. .. Sm'n'lr11jx SVIC 1X'lA'I'THliW'S .,.. .... 7 'rvrmzmz MISS BRYAN .... Yfwllxm JUNIORS I 1111' .'X1l:1ms livltv XI 11- .NIIQ11 l1111'l Il:1r111-Il l1tX'L'l'll'V Hunktl' lfllc-11 Allll linker K1-nt licll K 111112111111- , 1 fwllS2ll1 HIITTCSS X Il 11111111 1':1111lill f10I'I11IliIll' lillrkw X11111- l.llll1IlIlf'H rv i'm1111-llv l'.l17:1l11'1l1 Cwllms .X11111- XY:1sl1i11g't1n1 Clmkc .xllll c'FL'llShIlNV HI111' 5 h 0 . , b- - - . , .., vs I- .,, Y- 0 u 5 r ' K 4. V fs . M 1 ' s . s' ' 'Q--- in - w if g 0 ' ' N C ' V r--.4 - JuJg+okrs-V , u . 'N ' -.. '7 x ' ' 1 0 ku 5 A., , .., X -'--. , ' v . l M:1rx'f,m1 Curry ' . ' ,, 1- , f-fRV.UIll1fXl'l' xr - K , - . X . o 1 .ki ' Mary Ilulllmg Ilavxs . - Q , -m Nm- sm ik gs Q V A - Aw V 'A-4 0 , - ' ' . N. , U' 9 5 ,Ar 1 X Q . vx - 'X SRF V - , -f r . ' r ,. C 1 Isp P T H-..- . g- xv' Q Klurv L'1'QcclIJi1x'is ' f v 9 N ' 5 1 xx Q wx, D X, --, 'D N. n 33 , ' llrwulhy Ilcmiug , '-', x Q. nr, . b W F' 990.4 Betty Todd lilmrlmzlrt ,J 'ff ., -C' 5 , r . 5-.fx y , , vs' Ag Y I amf, Nw. - ' ' J D 1 1 -'-.1 n , 5. H.-L .,,.. .ra A ' r XV 1. , oh 'W A . i . . E. Krall fxrmgvltrxccl ...,, 'l'1,v ' li HL. '11Ni'X x Churluttc lfusluw ' -. D .ov -4 ' . 4 ,Ns .N ,.,-s X Nillfiilll lfcrgrrsml ' 'I . 1- rj . A , 5 '- . n . .Lu Q .- Y h. Iri'vAv ' ., ., ,, u , 1 o , 1,4 ',,,' .QV fu. xi. N .. 'J , , . -.., N. Xjr D iff . .rw-. 4 J' .'.,f J 1 I lQL1'hci1f.Ptt11Qr,' 'lf' , ' fb A ' . . 'V f ' ' . , V .V, ,MlYl3Il Fry I I K ' - , 1432hl'1lI'1llHt'I' 1, nf P Aslmm Gallagher KIZIIQQKJI CrlZlSi0l' Iivelvu Graham S u+q .g,Q,f V Q rf I 5- 1 f t- . . -w'-r - , - 1 'rl ILSAJIL v.,Jp, C-'s.x,,':'-,, B V5 ' - m - A , 3 ,. Q, ,K ' 34 artsy.-i x .icy '+ y.Jg4Y5 M., ' .5 . ' s ' 5 y '. 55 X Wk 4 ' -if 1-1-- 'F'f1J-I rg? ,- X 9, '- mmf 1.2 U- tg- Qf .,. .1., Q ly Q July Ions llqf P ,e 1 . 1.4.-was-v' 'Tl Hu - l-- -- J ll l fl bv. H..-.' 4' ' A., ' 'S -tu' -t ',s:x'Stunrl Humly g'v. 'N'. 4 ' ss ,..-' l Lk 9.9,-. g bi I 'zz' Carolyn Hurclig 'S . L 1' O 1 I H Alice Hallett I ,lili Hwgf 11. , lj -,wijnxle Hutter v RJ r -J lf! 4. Q? l K l.aur:c. Carol, ,J X' V ,xv V A ,fr wx' lnghznn lilczumr lvey Marian lavrma -X Leoualrcl I ' fharlultv Mason - N ' sp x xx lvv N WK Q Marv Skeen Nlutthcws Sue Klatlhcws Betsy Maury 1 4 V . N 1 v- . -13 I t . 1:1112 621+ gwfwz- f-1 - N 'I -f-4' 41 ..f4ff.,, . x ,, A ,-,W 5.4. H I Kg L 1:J'?':4l Y v I' J'?l+'4- 'GM ' - 4Q,. gf V WJUNIOQRSB .w J, .,,.,.. '. . N45 I Q 'QQ ' 'L , I , 'J ,L 1 ,. 'I fry, 1 ll il 3,4 h '1 3 1 .. ' -v 1 - F- 32 J .1..-,Jus . f ...P A- I 1' V.- 'if .J ffl' L ,M '1 9 x ll , 5 1'- .Q 'Q'- 3 , .Q '13 xml! ' 5 A Y 236 if 1,1 22 11 Q' 1Q1'x .M X . L, , 1? V' 1 ' 4' ' . f' I Kzllhryn KlCLIlllglllill Mary Ann Mezul IUVCQIV11 Klorsm Mmm Lee Uverdurf Zoe Parker Surah Lee Sharp :Dau gash: J . X 'iuwun 1-104 C' 1-'H X iYhQLxQ kg' f'.'P fi 'TIT Ylfxso YY Kzmtharine Rash 5,1 -- f-xqgki hlik.-9 .kqeg-get Iilizalreth 141,111-1 ' F- ALM T1 s. Emma Lg: Sinclair K3 ,QL ' y 1 ,jo X v xfl , Q1 1 -Y. rl :J 5 , - ,fb I 1,51 Q 'S' 1, be 'Y I. . , I 4 A 2' f, ' ' ' yu 4 , lf 'I L 1 IP J T I -' ' 1 f' 1 ' f X- Y- Q51 1 ,C ffl fx? 'TJ ' MJ' ' fs' M J A . 9' 'loagy Srhnervillg. . f Q . A V ' 5 ics, WAN.. 'V ?. -E 1 f I' . W ' .- f ,I 31 ,Q W' lxcy btzmlef f I' 1,1 ' , ' f 4 ' u ' Q 'l 1 ' fy .L .., 1. Q 5 . ' ' . 'l'!a1'3fj1'nyIoL V ' 'J in ' - g if ' ' I U, 4 , , 4 1 A I .' . , . - , li -A ' ' . J ' I b . - 0 V X95 Q. I. . ' , -V N t. 5 1 il - 1 K 1 A' .Allll Turner Iovcc VV:1lker Kalh:1ri11c XYz1ller ,Ieanne VVarner JUNIORS Martha White Marv Ellen VVhitehurs: R. Gai 2 LIFE What is life? The age old question Pervades my mind as I sit Musing. Yes, what is life? What but the ecstacy and agony Of love-more wonderful, Yet more terrible than any other Human emotion? What but the beauty of innocent love, Inspiring mortals to high ideals, Nerving tl.em to the high endeavor To leave a perfect world As the heritage of their children? What but the anticipation of love fulfilled And the promised glimpse of heaven's glory For the lovers? U Yet, what is life? kk! 8.3 +5 GYYOLU wc' CQ o Yvxovt YOLAJCV -lg-o ug . Avwcvs . lylarrfj EM z vw 5 What but the heartless damning of the innocents, The cruel slander proclaiming them to he partakers Of forbidden fruit? What but the destruction of precious ideals And sweet anticipation? What but the stinging words Of jealous mortals, spoken only For idle revenge, inciting Bitter tears of disillusionment Instead of joy? VVhat is life? The heritage of a people The bane of whose existence is Musing. M. LoU1sA ADSIT .glam Smmhh , PW, ,H .,.A-f '.' fsfx' Nfl' ff SOPHOMORE CLASS I','X'I'IQ ICIA IIIQRRY. , . .... ....... I Jr1'.v1'1Ivl1I I IQCJSALIIC OGI'I.YlIC ...... ..... I f'i1'1'-Pr1x1i41'1'11t 'lily 9111111 ill! 1f1Q1zcsLisoN .... ...... . s'1w1-fm I ' v U ,JYIQV Jw,I ll.'XNCIiS I.AXYRIiNL'Ii .... ..... Y 'r1'11.f1m'r A , . 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Q FRESHMAN CLASS IfI,I.IiX IZIAZICIIIQUUIQ .... ..... l 'rrxidvxzl N N XIAIQ1 LXIQITI' AN I JICRSC JN ..... ....., I ''im'-1'amviflrfll Q If I.-XX VIQQXN K I ,I X .... ..... . S'm'2'I'l112'-x'-T1'm1.s'1zn'2' NI ISS U JSTICN .... .... ...... . S wf'UIl.I'U7' 5 lj Q fs J I .?' ,E 3 L 6g,i11II:1 Umlc Lucy Kellogg R - , I ' 'e . xl s I ' 1 4' 5 : . M A F' V ' IfIizz1I1n'iI1 I 1'11m'm 1 IQZIIIICVIIIL' IXI:mfIn-s ' f .J fl X5 Y ' J 4 4 O MQ! J ff I J? SIIEIYIIII Iilly Suu IXI:Is:n1 IXIL'I1IIj'l't' '42 'D Jn I I. N gf W3 XE Q 0 .5 . Y .eflllyll Alulmsmm SAII5 Iiuml Iluzwlx 5 S :QI Q2 J 1' J. Iwnmm' Yfillws j I 5 Y' ' H f 5 2175 f ' ' 0' 0 - 7 'if , as ' Cf C! J jj Q-I ff ,fx 7 . ' L opf' we I A j o Q J . J KJ? 1 Q - ff If 'f' gr . 5 - SN' L- ' ' o l J ' Q,9..Q,ru.A9Nb WSDL! QXulr,Q bdi?i5VQdum XKQLMMOLWKRI YINVXQ-' D. 0N'TQ-fdif-YMQJ ,Q9.w:i5i6L WWA- wm-wwwW.?PMgD5KWw WW WL blw QS.,-wil XX.Q4,Cb.MXUogFus1, -HAP-2-5' l 19w,,,.Li'0 140' Rocaanmmz UDCL1 HDMINISTRHT H SEN lor-15 QTATJSTIQS I OL.. gfvw 31 oxwwd' . -55'u.. RNWA QED XmSuMM33vS,VN ov- 'XD .Sb 'L I ezgxy-435' Q avi- 0- ' ' 5 og cZ.Ef5fwV 'jvk' Cfkkg, Nha. UTA QDJX LL -'ales in L iii, 9 if 9 fe Saga 1 .E:-. E f , ., ., in . I I KIILIJRILIJ C.,-XSH ....... ANNAIEELLE AYERS.. ,IANI-1 RCLSEIHSRRY ..... Louisai .Xclsit Frances lirnwn lit-rniziinc I3urkcS Cuiistziiicc Com- Xlary Bolling Davis Iictty Todd lilmcrhzirl rf' he 4 0 1 E. L. A. F Juan Garner V ' Katherine Gracldyiu Dale Huttcr Eleanor james Betsy Maury 6 1- 0 I' .. . . .1'rr.vid1'11l .,,,,,,,. . Vin'-l'rr.ride11t . . . . .,Yr'rNl11ry-Trmxizrvr Carolyn Stein Mary Taylor Dorothy Theurer Margot Walkt-r Katherine NYallc1' Martha White MMM ffffiv WH 3 r tg ff' D4.QJv-.9-41 N111 ,Six WGA sg.,-LJ., UQ Y:LN?ovo.nQx N-,iw-... H0- L-EEL - koJo-L vw 3,11 uftt. ,, - YN W. ,na umuealw. av- -U-aan JD ml .me M QQLQD ' Q d,,oJv.!a-I1 294' 'Xen Ag, o.Au-N' ll! -an.. 5o.,.u3 -:asm qm- 1Lxr: UJLNI LINE- uILSl.Lh T63 Sami - H UQIIL, uki 91-If lL1lll9'CL.sHLl:J Lxufff itfta an .ftooff ,f1.r,UyLIi5JM - V, Gm- - - In i I N ., gg ,,.. : Z i GERNIAN CLUB l'.l.l',4XNOR -l.'XNH'.5 ........................................... ....... I 'rvxidmrl VIOAZN mlm 14,14 ......... Nl ANY VRIQICIJ IM LI-.Il..X 11001 H ........, MRS. KING ............ .....,.................... ..,........... ,lam-t lizxrucll llcwrly Iluukux' lfrzmccs Brown Nancy lhlmlr .. . .Viu'-l,r4'.vi11'4'nI . . . . .,S'vrr4'tury , , , .,,,,, ,,4,,, , , .,,,,. ..... ' l'n'r1.v1lrvr ......S'pm1.wr .Xmw xYZlSllillgItllI Ccmkc llama' 5hm,lwer Sue Klutthcws Alun- Stuart lictsy Maury lmrmhy 'INIICUYCI jam- Pollock M zzrgut Wnlkcr wi 5 1 'Q in . ,,., I! l DELTA PI EPSILON ,XNNIC S'I'L'AR'II .... ....,...........,.......................,.. ....-.. I ' ?'1'.Yl6If.'l1! LOUISA :XIJSIT ........ .... I 'zu'-l'rf'.x'i:If'11l I-NNE ROSEBERRY ,.,... .. ....... ,S'vrrrl4IVy K.-XTI I IQRIN Ii GRA I JI JY .... ....,..,-'.... 7 WITH-Vl!7't'?' LOUISE TURNICR ....... .... I 'rugranl fvlltlffllltlll M ISS 'I'liKII'l-li'1'ON .... ... ..........,.. ................. , S1f70II.VfH' .lmmnn I3r:lIwsc1n Ilumthy Deming Neville Mclhzwell Ilcvcrlcy Iinokcx' Iiutly 'I'mIfI IiI1cl'ha1'1 I.n1'i11cI:'. Xlzlck XIITQIIIIZI. fzlricr Q11ll'j'I Ifntwistlc Ilrucc Kluifctt VYiniIrcrI Collins .Ioan Garner Franccs I'urtcr Mary Lou Curry Anne Garst ,lime Shulmel' STUDENT COUNCIL lXJRU'l'IlY 'l'lllCL'RIiR .... ...... l 'r 1'.x ' ifh QMAINIC IRUIQKICS .... ...... I 'i a'f'- Pr 4'.x ' M1111 Nl Xlilif YI' XX'Al.KlilQ .... .... , S' 4'1' 1'vff:.r-x'-'l'ru41.v1m1 lfrzmccs liruwlm I'1'iscillz1 lficlcls CUIISIHIXCC Emu- Iflizzlln-111 I:l'2lIlCk'S2l Mary linlling Davis Annu 'lzmu-s Qlllflblyll Stn-in SERVICE LEAGUE CUNSTANQQIQ CUNIC. .. PM Sllitl CQRALQIQ .IOIINFON ..... ..... 1 jltc IJVLSIKILIIIA FRANCES l.AXK'RliNClQ, . .. .,S'v01'cz'a1 X Lum MISS YIKICN. .. SIWLIIIJUI .Xdsit 1':l1T1T1Cft Mclntosh Avcrfz Engclfricd Pope Uurkcs Entwistlc Price Hurlingamu Fry Roller folvls, ll. Fuller Rusclmcrrv C'mm0llv Garret Stuart Kash flrzulrlv Theurer fifllft Halc VVz1lker Currv Hutlcr NY'hitc lleming Kerr XYilkc-riorl lfurnman MCI JOWCII VVilsm1 SENICDR SEXTETTE I IJUISII .Mlsil Vzliricizl H1111- I 11will:1 lfiulsls l'1lk'1lllHl' 'lzum-s wrim- l:Ill1k'4'11l' ulzuw KUSl'l1t'I'I'3 A0cu111p:111ist: H2lI'I'iL'l Mclmoslm 1: I Q J S 'bbbgr 5 'P x 41,1 9 f Ma 9 V J J I .J 0 U J J ,S u u V 9 , 1 , c U U 2 G 9 J A J U w -, J . 3 9 x Ik-ll I'gL1I'1'CSS Cllllllill CITIISIIZIXX Uuming I'jlJL'I'llIl1't 1 L'l'g'USOl1 FUHCI' JUNIOR CHOIR Hutlcr Iwy Nczul IX I :wry Pzlrkcr Rash YYHIIQ1' XYhi1cl1urst Accompanist: Sharp CHCDIR l'Xl'lQll4I,Xll.Xl.l. ....... lnxi1'1l1f lx X l'l l ICKINI1 XN'.Xl,l.l1lQ. .. ..,... l 'iu' l'n'vid1 Nl XR Y 'l'.XX lf JR ................. .... . 3'm'2'1'l1II,x'-lnuxzzn1 if 1'l'IlY CC Jllll, XC llf IUXKKIQIQ. .. .,,. l.NU'4lI'I'tII1N X v5 XX'.Xl:Xl.R ........,........ 'vflul .MMM l'1l'k'llL'll lQllLlj.1k'l'S .XX'1'l'w ll1lI'Ilk'l' IQ1xsn'l11'I'I'X' ILIWINYII llllltvr Slllrlwl' l:lll'I'1'N'- lzunvs, X. SiIlQIl'tIlIl k':u'lrr lzum-S, lf. Sm-:ul f4lH'SM'I' I.zm'1'c1mcc Stuart fum- x'l'llllIlSll Stn-ill lim-ming Xlcxul 'l'lIt'llI'k'l' I :lllL'k'llk Ugilx ic 'I'1ll'Ilk'1' Isitlllw l,l1H4rl'lx iIkL'l'SuIl M lf- , WK? DRAMATIC CLUB I IXANCIQS PORTER. .. , .. Pl' Xltfallf I RUCIQ NIUFFIQTT. . . .... V246 Pl' sltfcllf X IRGINIA CAUDILI. .... Sttftfllfl UU ISE SUM ENV ILLIQ. .. 1 NUM!! L V 'XIIS9 CRANK. .. Sfonem :Xil1l.ll1S I,1lYiS, KI Lcmmrcl llrowxl lfmmett M1121-c Bunker linslmv Matthew Burlingame Fntwistlc Opin Czxmplvell Fetncr Ove-rclurl' Cash Fflillklhl Vricc QQUIIQCI' Ga'l:1ghc1' Rash Cook Garst Smith lllmtzler In,qha.n1 Yenalulc Davis, XI. I Kerr XVur11c1' qjhww :D Y IANIC ROSICIEICIQRY .... .... f rm 4 If RC PSALI li UGILYI lf. .. ..... V111 Pm Xltlltllf l'KlSL'll.l..-X lfIlil.lD5 ......................... ...5'U1'2'Uf112'X Tfctlvltfcl MARY ANNE MEAD, IQUNA XX'Il.KIiRSC DN .... . .... flflrclfflallx M ISS XYAUNICR. .. S ml 1 .Xxlsil Fzmccllu Vurkvr gXwrs l'1l'C!lCl1 Roller H011 cQlll'l1Cl' Slmlncl' Nllrrcss Hula: Singlctml Clwsscr Huttcr Stein Cblfln Lawrence Stuart Q unc Mclmush 'l'hc-urcr Craft Pollock '1'lH'llCI' IJl'I11ill,Q XY:1ller . , N .. -'I . , A V-f A yy . A . X , ,f .f fr V j,7 J! M' V' ' . V, nf 'X My ART CLUB I TTTY TOUD ICDICRHART. .. .. PM s dn If IXATHERINIQ BLUE. .. ..... Vim Prmldcllf IANET HARNETT ....... . . .Sevrvfarx Twaaurer RUSS NIARY CANIPHELL .... . SPOIIJOV Anderson Ferglmsfmn Rodgers Baker Guthrie Snead Core Iuhnfzou, S. Spinncy CI'L'llShZU1V Xl Cl Jowcll NN'hitehurst lingelfricd Mclntyrv VVilsmm NATURE CLUB XIXKY lfll' Q'l'KRY... l,ItHf Xl XlQ'l'lI,X XX'lll'I'l-1 .... c lnxlr S NRM! l,lili SH.-Xlil ... . . ..Sl'r2'1lr11x lnculmr 55 lfUYlNH'l'UN.., 3 II I liufxlrlll Hull l'upu l:lll'kL'i llzuulv Killlliill lhllius Iuxzum Sinclxkil lfrx' Xlzmm, lf Sl1lllIl'V lilllSik'I Klasun, T. 'l':1x'lm' llflllllllll Xlnltlu-wa 'lih1l!'IlIHIl Nh-l.:u1gI1lin SWIMMING CLUB KAY QVlfRESCl'l .... . . . . . ..... PM Yllh 111 DAHNEY NEFF. . . . . .Vive-President-Tnasunr lVllSS HUCHSTRASSIQR. .. .. SINIHNOJ' Arxnitage Ferguson Kellogg lluilev Fuller Klzmrlcfz Bcrrv Gay Mack llooth Uluzellruok Maury liralmsou Gracldy Morse Carter Harclig' Preston Culmb, N. Huge Roach Cole Harris Strecl Collins Horslcy Street Connolly Hallett Schcllhammer liarman lvey Trice Forslmerg' lamcs, A. NYalker, T. l:l'2illC6Sll. lames, VValker, Xl. lolmson, G. CREATIVE WRITING CI UB M ISS T1iMl'I.liTON ...... .... S fonsar Aflsit Johnson Hoxlcy McDowell Czlrlcr Mclntosh Cobb Morse Collins Rodgers Ifntwistlc Rosclmerry Grzuldy 'Turner XVHIIQCI' GRANDDAUGHTERS' CLUB LC JUISIC 'I'L'RNIiR. .. ........... l'm'.fff1'v11f AXNIC STUART .......,......... . . ..S1'w'C!f1r'.x'4T1'vr1.vzn'vr MRS. KING, M155 SPARRONN' .... .....,... .S 'j'0115c1r.v blanc Adams Ilctly Bozzxrth llottcc IJC'11lillg Bctty Todd 1iI1Cl'hZll'l Elczmm' Ivey Lucy Kcllogg Marie Magvc Sally Opic Ifllen Price Qlridvl Smmw-CS...N' 'H -I-FANXMQ xQma2vxOSeZ.:7Sassn A xg rmslm. menu 1519535 - M -rib - -Mlm WU N if u.fsXX - O91-FWMEL-Mm xsm-.. m . f .g5v.gI1vwxyLxnwA!9nLnvX.?CXd 1,,,J ENMSQQQIQ .Xxcwmq ,Tw Q X323 1. 1 . l c3:S:lg,QrQQ!?T. G.: .1 Z X02 . R .6NaM Mkm rn X l m? ca.. '.-ffl kg mul .A w - Q X X. ' so,x U SUMQSRKFJ s 92 599265 ' E. . '9 Jil? vt 12 . Sasywqt if A W KW Q N01 X x K, ATHLETIC BOARD CAROLYN STILIN .... MARY TAYLOR .... ANNE 'IAM ES ..................,..... MISS HOCHSTRASSER, Annabelle Ayers Constance Cone Anne XV2ISl1lllglO11 C Katherine Graddy Mary Guthrie .. . . .... Prcxfdclzi .. . . . .Viva-Prc.virlc11t , , ,.Sl'n'vi41ry-Trvasurer M ISS IIUXYIQ .... .......... .S 'folzsors ookc Dale Ilulter lileanor Jznncs Anne Pope Anne Stuart Margot VValkc1' VARSITY HOCKEY TEAM X Y N li XX',XSlllNl1'l'UX Q-C Pi JK li .............,.............,..... Q rlflrllll Xlllln' f.Zl1l11llM'H Iillllivfilll' firzulrlx' llzlrul l.k'Il112lI'Kl Xmu- l'u1w NI uw' K.I'l'1'4l Iluxis Nlzlrx' QTITIIIVVTL' llmzxlin' Clgilvic Nlnrv 'llwlm' NI lrgrrt lTl2lNil'l' Xlzxrgul XX':1lkv1' h.4q-. : JUNICDR VARSITY HOCKEY TEAM I XT ll.Xl,l'f ............................................,........ cillffllill Xmmlwlll- .Xu-xx Xlzlry'I1mml7i11glJ:nis Xmu- lzmws Kzllln-rim' Rush lnltx' l3un:u'1ln Vriscillzx lfichls Klzxrx' .Xmmc Nlvaul 'ENN' Rusclucr1'v umm' lkrlvlv i:11'41Ix'l1 Su-in gkgggsgff fl .i.W.W 'fwg Pr',J , fl uf QQ, !i Q X, lrqlr , H ROGRHNNE ADMIN ISTRH nonr CEN I ORS ST'AT:5Tfc,5 UNQEQQLASS M EN ACTw1'1'1E5 X- ,f Surf ARY 50 X may fx THINGS Things, things, things-always things! Things to do, things to see, things to hear, things to learn, things to say-each following the other in such close succession that leisure time for thought becomes extinct. What then will this life become? A series of details without meaning, without consequence? After being iarred into consciousness by the harsh electric bell yesterday morning, I immediately bounded out of bed. No time to glory in the luxury of the warm soft comfort of the bedclothes, to gaze lazily out at the young day, and to thrill at the magnificence of God's creation-the fresh earth, the brightening sky, the scarlet sun. While dressing, I outlined the full day so that no valuable fraction of it would be wasted. While brushing my hair, I conjugated irregular French verbs. An excellent way, girls, to fix them thoroughly in your minds. Faire, avoir .... I loved to brush my hair, to feel it tingle vigorously right down to the roots, to brush until the electricity popped. But no time for that now. Fais, fais, fait .... nine more minutes .... just time to clean the room. Then I would be able to finish my chemistryproblems after breakfast, if there were no delays. But there were delays-stamps to buy, a package to wait for, a teacher to see, laundry to get upg and so it went all day, always just a little behind. With the tea room at three-fifteen and a meeting at nine, I should have exactly ten minutes to write to my mother. How long had it been since my last letter to her? One final mad dash to finish in the bathroom before the bell, and then-lights out! Now, I could think-think about home. XVhy did I love it so? Because there I felt life, there had time to savour it with delight. It sank in slowly with the lazy summer sun as I lay on the quiet dock on the muddy old Kentucky river. I felt it intensely with the rush of the biting November air in my face as I galloped down a hill and then up again so strangely free, so wildly happy. I felt it deeply as I lay before an open fire with a good book. Home .... how I loved it! .... A sudden recollection brought me out of my drowsy meditation. Methodically I named the steps in the formation of the Constitution. I am told that the reason we go to school and learn so much utterly useless material, which we soon forget, is that this education is good training for the mind. Is it good training to become the slave of time, to become completely submerged in an ocean of details-THINGS-until we forget how wonderful it is to breathe, to live. As Thoreau put it, The surest way to have an empty life is to fill it with things. -KATHERINE GRADDY. HUMANITY The cool underground tunnel Leading from sidewalks, teeming with mankind To Long Island Sound, dotted with mothy sailboats And to cool green lawns and Sunday afternoon talk NVith crossword puzzles and ham sandwiches at four- And the Philharmonic on the radio .... The crowded train, stuffy and silent, Except for the rattling of newspapers And an occasional cough . . . A yowling baby in the next coach, And another child loudly interrogating his mother And making others look up from their papers In consternation . . . A lazily buzzing fly Lighting upon the bald pate just ahead . . . The couple a few seats back . Holding hands and gazing into each other's eyes .... Heads thrown back As the train jerks forwardg Tiny lights Hicker as they pass intermittently . . . Faster, faster, as the surging engine Speeds through the black holeg Heads sway with its movement As we rush out into the sticky, hot twilight Of Harlem and the East Side .... The East River-and small boys, white and black, Diving from the coal barge docked on the other side Into murky water . . . Grimy men in shirt sleeves Coming through a factory door as we speed by. Saturday night and the city bursting its seams p After the work and heat and sweat of the past week . . Laughing children playing in paper-littered streets And frisking around an open hydrant . . . Couples starting out at dusk To seek pleasure and release from a work-weary world Excitement in the air, and heat, too- Oppressive, suffocating heat .... Harlem-and countless tenementsg Bare light blubs shining with stark glare Through dirty panes . . . Unmade beds And sinks stacked high with dishes Forgotten in the stupor of the heat . . . Two tiny darkies in patched pajamas Peering at the rushing train . . . A man sitting on a roof with his dog And an empty beer bottle beside him, Forgetful of all except the muggy heat . . . A massive Negress resting on a fire escape, Fanning with a handkerchiefg A blurry red geranium sitting in a window, Drooping . . . jazz blaring from a dance hall And frenzied couples contorting themselves With new jitterbug steps, Unmindful of the stinking heat .... This is New York on a hot Saturday night . . . This is the mass-the little people- This is humanity. This is my fascinating city- Seven million people striving to find some respite From their daily toil On a Saturday night. -M. LOUISA ADSIT UP-BEAT Today is joy! Today is jubilation! Joy rushes through my veins Instead of blood 5 Joy supports my flesh Instead of boneg ' Joy nourishes my being Instead of food. Today is mine! The world is mine! --FRANCES W. BROWN AS TIME GOES BY We, the senior class of 1948, with minds both sound and to some degree more intelligent than on entrance-as a result of our faithful scholastic attempts during our sojourn at Stuart Hall-do hereby leave the following: to Mrs. Hodges and the faculty, our sincere gratitude for their patient endeavors in our behalfg to the underclassmen, a word of encouragement-it's worth it, to the juniors, our beloved Cochran and Robertson, our senior privileges, and our B averages with a few college worries and term papers thrown ing to our sponsor Mrs. Foulis-we, fifty-five strong, join in one THANK YOU-more would be mere words. And severally and individually we do hereby dispose of our worldly goods as follows: I, Weesie Adsit, do will and bequeath to Creed, my usher, this box of para- phernaliag to Boots, Suzie, since she is practically hers anyway, to Somerville, the embryos in memory of biology, and to Campbell, Bismark plus my long- willed Tesroe to be willed to another black sheep next year. ' I, Annabelle Ayers, leave to my sub-usher, Zoe Parker, Smoky, my temp- tation breaker, and the responsibility to be on time to breakfast which was willed to me by Josie Lawrence and Jeanne Hahnerg to Betty Todd, I leave B, B. the White Team mascot, and to Dale Hutter, my beloved Fire Horse. I, Leila Booth, do will to Betsy Maury my much prized Bo-Bo, Con- fusion, and jo-Jo which must stick together with their memories attached, to Sue Burress, a bus ticket to our mutual Roanoke, and to Anne James, all Ellie's and my memories of Holton, cousin Freddy, and Army-Navy games. I, Dorothy Boxley, bequeath my ability for grade-making to Mary White- hurst with the hope that she will do better. I leave to Charlotte Enslow an open field at A. M. A. To Katherine Blue and Betty Eberhart goes my ability to talk during art. To Pop, I leave my opposite, sweet Ann Turner. I, Betty Bozarth, do hereby will and bequeath to Sarah Lee Sharp my much- loved bed animal, Poochie, plus a one way ticket to VVest Pointg to Lucy Stanley, my treasured William and Mary catalog, to Lizzy Collins, my pre- shrunk gym suitg to Martha White and Gerry Burkes, one foodbox. E As I, Frances Brown, check out, the rush for my left-behinds should not be great, for the values are low. To Boly, I sumbmit Pokey Qorginally Louise Miller'sj who is to dwell permanently at S. H., and to Sue Matthews, I bequeath Playmate of Pokey who may go out into the world. I, Ann Moffett, will to Suzie johnson my memories of the St. Alban's football field. ' Together we, Moffett and Frances, leave to Ellanor Fetner l'junk left us by the Byron addicts, and to Mrs. Foulis, our mink coats and orchids, because we love her. I, june Burlingame, do questionably will the following: to Mary Jo, my usher, my lamp, in hopes that she won't use it as I have, to Ginny-baby, Oogy and my Derby glass complete with memories, to Cren, my bottle of H2025 to Lucie and Boogie-my love for A. M. A. I, Gin Carter, will Anonymous to my usher, Ginny Caudill, hoping she will give him a lasting name, to Lucy Stanley, I leave my blue monkey cap for obvious reasons, to Anne Campbell, I leave a mauled study lamp to help her out of a crisis. I, Mildred Cash, will to my usher, Mary Anne Mead, my bookends, 'fSnow White and Dopeyf' To Ellen Bell, I will Tfoogie my worry-bird. To Gerry Burkes, I will this box of stuff. There may be something in it she will want. Big Cobb sadly Wills the following: to Joan Conger, my sub-usher, Hoiman to Boots Taylor goes my '6Big League, to Zoe Parker, my co-worker, goes my choir hat, to Dale Hutter, my choir shoes willed to me by M. P. Swift. Cash and Cobb will this bag of bones, namely Ole Paint to Dale Huiter and Boots Taylor. I, Judy Chesser, will to my sub-usher, Hazel Leonard, my cedar chest and my English Literature book, to Lucy Stanley, my gym suits, pillows, and Wilbur the cat, and last but not least to Susie Johnson and Gay Dantzler, my desk lamp, George I, Nancy Cobb, will to niy usher, Sue Matthews, Rabies and Rabbit, willed to me by Kitty Nottingham . . . also prospects of many A. M. A. dances without a S. H. chaperone. To Creed, my ex-roommate, goes my faithful clock, Wilbur. To Street and I-Iazlett go sincere hopes that they make the Duke-Carolina week- end someday. I, Freddy Collins, will to Mary Matthews my baby pillow, hoping that she sleeps better on it than I did. IeIere's to her and Florida! To Liza fDown with Spanishj Hoge goes the admired little cat with a known provision, the pin. May she, like me, be always unconfused. I, Connie Cone, will to Frances Lawrence, Grandpa and Bob, my niost beloved possessions, to Mary Anne Mead, my men, choir shoes and hat, to Sharon Gay, my walking hats, to Joan Franklin, our Greenbrier, to Dale Hutter and Boots Taylor, my wonderful luck, and to anyone claiming it, my ability to sew. ' Since I can't use over fifty words, this will have to be shortg but I, Brookie Craft, will to my usher my most beloved possession, It, My curtains, minus one tieback, go to Kat, and I entrust Duke, a bequest from a fellow North Carolinian, to Anne Street even though she is a Carolina fan. I, Marian Rogers Emmett, do hereby will my picture frames to my room- mate and usher, Carolyn Hardigg to Mary Anne Mead, my grass headg to Frances Lawrence, my dresser scarfs and gym suit. In closing, I want Elizabeth Collins to have my dresser ornaments. Being of denioniac impulses and slightly demented mind, I, Caryl Entwistle, do bequeath to my usher, Charlotte Enslow, my speckled lamb, Artemus, and accumulated memories of two years, to Ellen Whitehurst, my badly misused gym suit in hopes of its being washed, and to Jeanie Conger, my tattered picture of Bimbo Griswall. I, Kitty Faucette, will to my usher, Dale Hutter, Madalyn, the cat, to Hazel goes Scotch and Soda, to Boots and Dale, Gwendolyn the lampg to Anne Street, that strong desire to get home for a Carolina game, and to Ginny Caudill, I will those wonderful memories of Picadilly. To my usher, Boots Taylor, I, Pris Fields, will Soot Qleft to me by a Marylanderj so that he may always keep us Marylanders on the straight and narrow path. I will to Miss Bergin my ability to give shots Uintradermally into the forearm hoping that the special technique may always be used. I, Anita French, will my ever faithful date man to Ann james in hopes that he will provide her with an abundant supply of cadets, my beauty-rest baby pillow to Overton Sneadg and my choir skirt to Boots Taylor on the condition that she promises not to stretch it any more than I have. I, joan Garner, do will my borrowed and battered clock to Washie, my usher, with the hope that it will tick off some rare moments for her, too! To I-Iazel, my sub-usher, I will my ability to stand on my head and stack bee-bees in a high wind! To Creed, I will my interest in Yale! Eli! I, Garst, do reluctantly leave the following: Raggedy Jimmy to Burress, mah lil' usher, Raggedy Anne to another Anne-Crenshaw twarning! keep well separatedjg my jockey shirt to Kentucky Caudillg to Mary Jo-all the money I owe her, to Lucy, Boogie, Kay, Hazel, Dale, and everybody else-my love. Y I, Katherine Graddy, will my usher, Betsy Maury, Teddy, firmly believing that she understands my two'-fold attachment to him. To my sub-usher, Margot Walker, I leave a picture of one of her Kentucky acquaintances, and to the re- maining Kentuckians-road maps so they'll always find their way back to the Bluegrass. I, Mary Guthrie, will and bequeath to my usher, Marion Stred, my food can and mail box so that they will have a prosperous year for once. To Katherine Blue, I leave the memory of our Spanish class of '47, hoping that the relaxation Qmentalj did her as much good as it did me. I, Pat Hale, will: to Ann Street, my sub-usher, the ancient blue book-ends which have long enclosed knowledge for No. 21 Robertson's occupants, to Kitty Waller, my red and white choir beanie which is to keep her warm as it has me, and to Boots Taylor, my gorgeous Qsniffj Red Team hat. I, Lucie Harris, finding it most suitable, leave Billy, my lamb, to Frances Brown although I don't intend to leave her behind. To Pat Berry, my usher, I leave Bob, my teddybear, a favorite past memory, to Carolyn Hardig, my Navy anchor, in hopes she will always be Navy true. I, Ellie james, will to my usher, Margot Walker, my lamp hoping that it may burn better for her than it did for me. To Boots Taylor and Liz Collins, not to mention my sister Anne, I leave my ardent love for that state of states, Maryland. h I, Grace johnson, do will to Mary Matthews, a fellow New-Castler, Bileric who, I am sure, holds many memories for us both. To joya, my sister, I will Gertrude, the girl with the alarming personality. To jane Adams, my sub- usher, I leave Aphrodesia for her to guard safely. In this my last will and testament, I, Aline Kerr, do hereby will my dearly beloved possessions thusly: to Overton Snead, I leave 'tFerdinand, my car, to janie Core, I leave the 3:55 train to Pennsylvania, and to Ellen Bell, I leave some choice literature on the Barter Theater to prove a point we don't agree on. I, Myra Long, do will and bequeath to all present and future day students, two tubes of lipstick so that when I'm gone, they'll have some. To Lucy Kellogg, my usher, the beat-up suitcase I call my pocket-bookg and to Jane Adams, all my COMMERCIAL-APPEALS and Memphis memories. I, Neville McDowell, do will to Mary Matthews, all the S. H. writing paper I have left in june, seeing that I'll have no futher use for it-unless . . . ! To Ioya johnson, my usher, I will my gym suits fa perfect lit.j I, Harriet Katherine McIntosh, will and bequeath to Rosalie Ogilvie, a choice specialty, to joanie Conger, a picture of jimmy, and to joya johnson, an extra coffee cup. Connie and I will to the future No. 10's our prized lamp, and to those who desire it, I will musical luck and love. I, Marie Magee, still claiming to be alive, do hereby will and bequeath to Bev Booker the memory of our last year's pilgrimages to Thornrose. To Pudge Waller, I leave the one and only blackface doll, Little Marie, and I submit to Amine Forsburg my prized pictures of our mutual love, Virginia Beach! I, Dabney Neff, strong-willed, distraught, and otherwise beset with mental coniiict, leave to my usher, B. T., Curfew which came to me last year from my Poor cousin, and to Betty Mae Allen, I bequeath my Teddy bear, Pub, long nearest and dearest to my heart. , I, Sally Opie, being of one soul and body, do bequeath to Mona Lee Over- dorf, Pink Champagne, willed from Nancy Leaf, to Prue Poor, to me. To Sue McIntyre, I leave my treasured makings of a red sweater, and to Lucy Stanley and Stuart Handy, roller skates to insure their passage back from A. M. A. I, Kay Overesch, will to my sub-usher, Kat Waller, my teddy bear, jerry, and a ticket to Michigan, and to Bev Booker, I leave a Michigan pennant and a picture of Kip. I, jane Pollock, will to my sub-usher, Bev Booker, Sam jr. and a one way ticket to New York, to Katharine Waller, George jr. , and to Creed Davis, my S. P. S. banner- Long may it wave. - I, Igg Pope, do reluctantly will to my usher and fellow Mississippian, Louise Somerville, my seat on the Birmingham Special and a box of stationery with hopes of getting some mail. To Betsy Maury, my sub-usher, I leave my beloved Algebra and Geometry books in remembrance of the remarkable talent we displayed in those classes. I, Frances Porter, will to my sub-usher, Mary Lou Curry, the donkey. To Mary Lou and Emma Lee, I leave my much cherished picture of Weston to be placed on their dresser, facing the wall. To Campbell, with many a bitter smirk, I leave one small, green string bean. I, Ellen Norris Price, will to my usher, Betty Roller my tennis balls, dresser scarf, and Lucifer, to Stuart Handy, my gym equipment and food box, to Marian Stred, my plant, and last, but not least, to the future occupant of room number nineteen in Robertson, my light and curtains. I, Jinnie Preston, do hereby bequeath to Amine Forsburg my will-power in dieting, to Anne Street, my devoted panda Ironsides, hoping she treats him with as much respect as I have, and last but not least to Anne Campbell, go memories of our crazy times at St. Mag's and Stuart Hall. I, Mary Ann Langhorn Rodgers, do hereby will to my friends of Stuart Hall the property that I have acquired in the three years of living here, together with some properties owned jointly by myself and my roommate, Neville Mc- Dowell. 1, Kitchie, will to my favorite usher, Gerry Burkes, Bo-Bo and Aunt Lou, on condition that they never leave a Stuart Hall bed. To Betsy Maury, I leave my dearest possession, L, L., which she has coveted and admired so long. To Campbell and Creed, I leave Algernon, the Light that Failed. I, Ruth Schellhammer, with tears of regret, do will to Mary Matthews, my previous white sailor hat labeled Jones -my greatest treasure. To Martha White, I leave my G. M. S. cross guns which I've promised to her for three years. I, Shobo, leave to my usher, Joyce VValker, my beloved bathrobe, a familiar sight around these ivy-covered walls. To Campbell, I leave my hockey stick hoping that it continues to plow up S. H. field. For Dale, I sadly part with She Loves Me l Lastly, I leave, Heaven permitting! I, Sally Singleton, bequeath to my sub-usher, Emma Lee Sinclair, julian fmy cat, of coursegj to Mary Lou, the happy memories of S. M. A., also to Boots, my luck for next year, to Sarah Lee, one of my tickets to grand ole Ohio, hope you can use it this summer. I, Carolyn Stein, do will and bequeath my poor old battered sock-doll to Anne James, my sub-usher, and I leave to Boots Taylor, my notoriously dirty sailor hat. I, Anne Stuart, do will to my sub-usher, Washie, my most cherished bed animal, Herman, with the understanding that she care for him through the coming year. To Bev Booker, I will my interest in U. Va. and to Creed and Campbell I will Gee Gee's 'fleffy Boy. I, Dolly Theurer, bestow upon my usher, Lucy Stanley, the wish for wonder- ful years to come, plus the remains of our mutual friends, Emogene and Gismoe Elephant. To next year's student council president, I bequeath gently the traditional Worrybird. To Miss Maury, I leave tearfully Clem, who might be a Medloe's horse. I, jackie Thornton, do hereby bestow upon Stuart Handy, my beloved Bunny with instructions that she will it to her usher. To Hazel, with a gasp, I leave my ink eradicator, but if you do, you don't. To Somerville goes the hope that she'll always remember our hilarious so- journs to the Griddle. I, Louise Turner, will: to Boly, Four-Bill -who now becomes Five-Bill , to Somerville, my worn and experienced Sunday-night church hat-keep smilin! to Bev Booker, memories of glorious U. Va. and also my title star athlete -Keep those paths well trodden! I, Carter Venable, will to my usher, Anne Campbell, a box of odds and ends collected throughout my three-year term. To Boots Taylor, I will SO-SO, who was started by Dinnie Ball, and willed down through the ages. To Ellen Bell, my usher, I, Edna Wilkerson, will and bequeath one of my most treasured possessions, that being a pair of ear rings. I also leave to her my address as a token of friendship. I leave to Katherine Waller a music book in hopes she will enjoy it as I have. I, Franz Wilson, will: to F rances, Lawrence, a fellow horse-lover, the horse willed to me last year in hopes that he will always remain at Stuart Hall with future horse-lovers. To Ashtcn Gallagher goes the beloved horse pictures in memory of our cherished conversations on the subject. LOSS Happiness, Cupped like water In the hands of a gleeful child- Lost by a sudden gesture, And dripping Quickly away from the sad one, Is, too late, just a memory. -M. LOUISA ADSI'l' This poem 'was printed in the 1948 edition of THE NATIONAL ANTHOLOGY OF HIGH SCHOOL POETRY RECITATIVE LOUISA ADSIT: Student Council '46, President Freshman Class '45, E.L.A. '47, '48, Delta Pi Epsilon '47, '48, Vice Presi- dent Delta Pi '48, Glee Club '45, '46, '47, '48, Librarian Glee Club '46, Service League '45, '46, '47, '48, Alpha '45, '46, Creative Writing Club '48, Latin Club '45, '46, '47, Librarian Latin Club '46, Spanish Club '46, '47, Double Sextette '45, Senior junior Choir '47, Choir '45, Sextette '48, '46, '47, '48, Librarian Choir '47 , Proctor '46, '47, '48, Head Usher '47, Music Hall Proctor '46, Sophomore Sextette, Editor- in-Chief INLooK '48, INLOOK Staff '47. ANNABELLE AYERS: E.L.A. '46, '47, '48, Vice-President E.L.A. '48, Athletic Board '46, '47, '48, Secretary-treasurer Athletic Board '46, Swimming Club '45, '46, Glee Club '47, '48, Service League '47, '48, Fire Chief '47, '48, Latin Club '45,'46, French Club '47, Choir '48, Proc- tor '46, '47, '48, Alpha '45, '46. LEILA BOOTH: German Club '46, '47, '48, Treasurer German Club '48, May Court '47, Hiking Club '46, Swimming Club '47, '48, Latin Club '46, Spanish Club '47, Proctor '46, Red Team Cheerleader '46, '47. DOROTHY BOXLEY: Swimming Club '47 '48. BETTY BOZARTH: Glee Club '47, Na- ture Club '48, ,Granddaughters' Club '47, '48, French Club '47. FRANCES BROWN: Student Council '48, President Senior Class '48, Dramatic Club '47, '48, Latin Club '47, Vice-Presi- dent Latin Club '47, Choir '47, '48, E.L.A. '48, German Club '48. v. JUNE BURLINGAME: Dramatic Club '46, '48, Latin Club '46, Service League '48. VIRGINIA CARTER: Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Swimming Club '47, '48, Creative Writing Club '48, French Club '47, Choir '47, '48, Junior Choir '47, Cheerleader '48, Proctor '47. MILDRED CASH: E.L.A. '46, '47, '48, Secretary-Treasurer E.L.A. '47, President E.L.A. '48, President Sophomore Class '46, Service League '46, '47, '48, Dramatic Club '46, '47, '48, Treasurer Dramatic Club '47, Art Club '45, Latin Club '46, Proctor '44, '45, Secretary Junior Social Service League '44, Faithful Masqueraders '44. JUDY CHESSER: Vice-President Fresh- man Class '46, Glee Club '46, 48, Service League '46, '47 , Latin Club '46, '47, Jun- ior Choir '47, Choir '46, '47, '48, Music Hall Proctor '48, Class Cheerleader '46, '47. DOROTHY COBB: Service League '46, '47, 48, Treasurer junior Class '47, Cre- ative Writing Club '48, Hiking Club '46, Glee Club '47, '48, French Club '47, Music Club '46, Choir '46, '47, '48, Librarian Choir '48, Alpha '46, Proctor '48. NANCY COBB: German Club '48, Swimming Club '47, '48, Service League '47 , junior Choir '47. WINIFRED' COLLINS: Dramatic Club '47, Swimming Club '48, Delta Pi Epsilon '48, French Club '47. CONSTANCE CONE: Student Council '48, E.L.A. '48, Athletic Board '48, Art Club '45, Dramatic Club '46, Glee Club '47, '48, Service League '46, '47, '48, Sec- mtary Service League '47, President Ser- vice League '48, Latin Club '45, '46, Span- ish Club '47 , Secretary-Treasurer Spanish Club 47, Junior Choir '47 , Choir '46, '47, '48 , Proctor '46, '47 , Proud Keeper '47, '48. MARIAN EMMETT: Dramatic Club '48, Service League '48. CARYL ENTWISTLE: Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Dramatic Club '47, '48, French Club '47 , Service League '48, Annual Staif '48. KITTY FAUCETTE: Glee Club '47, '48, Service League '47, Junior Choir '47, Sen- ior Sextette '48, Choir '47, '48, Class Cheer- leader '47 , Red Team Cheerleader '47, '48, Cheerleader '47, 48, Head Cheerleader '48. PRISCILLA FIELDS: Student Council '48, Glee Club '47, '48, Librarian Glee Club '47, Secretary-Treasurer Glee Club '48, Service League '47, Senior Sextette '48 , Choir '47, 48, Proctor '47. ANITA FRENCH: Dramatic Club '47, Glee Club '48, Spanish Club '47, Choir '47, 48. JOAN GARNER: E. L. A. '48, German Club '47, '48, Vice-President German Club '48, Glee Club '47, '48, Service League '47, Choir '48, Delta Pi Epsilon '48. ANNE GARST: Delta' Pi Epsilon '48, Secretary Senior Class '48, Swimming Club '47, Dramatic Club '48, Latin Club '47, Service League '48, Class Cheerleader '47, Red Team Cheerleader '48, Cheerleader '47, '48. KATHERINE GRADDY: Treasurer Sen- ior Class '48, E.L.A. '48, Delta Pi Epsilon '47, '48, Treasurer Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Athletic Board '48, Swimming Club '47, '48, Service League '48, Creative Writing Club '48 , French Club '47 , Secretary-Trea- surer French Club '47, Proctor '47 , Asso- ciate Editor of the Annual '48. MARY GUTHRIE: Athletic Board '48, Art Club '47, '48. PAT HALE : Red Team Captain '48, Ath- letic Board '47, '48, Glee Club '46, '47, '48, Service League '46, '47, '48, French Club '46, '47, Vice-President French Club '47, Sophomore Sextette '46, Junior Choir '47, Senior Sextette '48, Choir '46, '47, '48, President Choir '48. LUCIE HARRIS: Swimming Club '47, '48, Service League '47. ELEANOR JAMES: E.L.A. '47, '48, Ger- man Club '47, '48, President German Club '48, Athletic Board '48, May Court '47, Swimming Club '46, '48, Glee Club '47, French Club '47, Sophomore Sextette '46, Junior Choir '47, Senior Sextette '48,'Choir '46, '47, '48, Proctor '47. GRACE JOHNSON: Secretary Junior Class '47 , Service League '47, '48 , Vice- President Service League '48 , Creative Writing Club '48, Swimming Club.'46, '48, Nature Club '47, Alpha '46, Latin Club '46, '47, Spanish Club '47. ALINE KERR: Service League '47, '48, Art Club '46, '47 , Secretary-Treasurer Art Club '47, Dramatic Club '48, Music Club '46, Latin Club '46, French Club '47. MYRA LONG: Swimming Club '48. NEVILLE McDOWELL: Delta Pi Epsi- lon '48, Service League '48, Dramatic Club '47, Art Club '48, Spanish Club '47, INLooK Staff '48. MARIE MAGEE: Swimming Club '47, Dramatic Club '48, Latin Club '47, Grand- daughters' Club '47, '48. HARRIET McINTOSH: Service League '47, '48, Creative Writing Club '48, Junior Choir '47, Senior Sextctte Accompanist '48, Choir '47, '48, BRUCE MOFFETT: Dramatic Club '46, '48, Vice-President Dramatic Club '48, Swimming Club '47, Spanish Club '47, Delta Pi Epsilon '48. DABNEY NEFF: Swimming Club '45, '46, '48, Vice-President 81 Treasurer Swim- ming Club '48, Dramatic Club '47, Latin Club '46, '47. SALLY OPIE: Dramatic Club '47, '48, Swimming Club '46, Red Team Cheerleader '46, Granddaughters' Club '41, '42, '43, '44, '45, '46, '47, '48. KAY OVERESCH: Swimming Club '47, '48, President Swimming Club '48. JANE POLLQCK: German Club '48, Glee Club '47, '48, Spanish Club '47, Choir '48. ANN POPE: Athletic Board '48, Swim- ming Club '47, Nature Club '48, Service League '47, '48, Spanish Club '47. FRANCES PORTER: Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Service League '47, Swimming Club '46, Dramatic Club '47, '48, President Dira- nfatic Club '48, Latin Club '46, '47. JANE PRESTON: Swimming Club '47, '48, French Club '47. ELLEN PRICE: Service League '47, '48, Dramatic Club '47, '48 , Granddaughters' Club '47, '48. MARY ANNE RODGERS: Swimming Club '46, Art Club '47, '48, Choir '47, '48, Alpha '46, Fire Chief '48, JANE CAROLYN ROSEBERRY: Vice- President Senior Class '48, President Jun- ior Class '47, Secretary-Treasurer Sopho- more Class '46, E.L.A. '47, '48, Secretary- Treasurer E.L.A. '48, Delta Pi Epsilon '47, '48, Secretary Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Ser- vice League '46, '47, '48, Glee Club '46, '47, '48, Latin Club '47, French Club '47, Sophomore Sextette '46, Junior Choir '47, '48, Senior Sextette '48, Choir '46, '47, '48, Librarian Choir '46 , Alpha '46 , Business Manager INLOOK '48, INLooK Staff '47. RUTH SCHELLHAMMER: Hiking Club '46, Glee Club '47, Swimming '48, Spanish Club '47. SALLY SINGLETON: Service League '46, Dramatic Club '44, '45, Glee Club '46, '47, '48, Latin Club '45, '46, Spanish Club '46, '47, Sophomore Sextette '46, Junior Choir '47, Choir '44, '45, '46, '47, '48, Proctor '46, '47 , White Team Cheer- leader '44. JANE SHOBER: Vice President Sopho- more Class '46, German Club '48, Glee Club '46, '47, '48, Sophomore Sextette '46, Junior Choir '47, Choir '46, '47, '48, Vice- Presidcnt Choir '47, Alpha '46, Delta Pi Epsilon '48. CAROLYN STEIN: Student Council '47, '48, Athletic Board '47, '48, Vice-President Athletic Board '47 , President Athletic Board '48, Service League '46, '47, Glee Club '47, '48, Hiking Club '46, President Hiking Club '46, Choir '46, '48, Latin Club '46, Spanish Club '47, Music Club '46, Alpha '46, E.L.A. '48. ANNE STUART: Delta Pi Epsilon '47, '48 , President Delta Pi Epsilon '48, Service League '46, '47, '48, Treasurer Service League '47 , Athletic Board '47, '48, Swim- ming Club '46, Glee Club '47, '48, Latin Club '46, French Club '47, Choir '47, '48, Proctor '47, '48, Alpha '46, Grand- daughters' Club '47, '48, Treasurer Grand- daughters' Club '47 , German Club '48. DOLLY THEURER: President Student Council '48, Vice-President Student Council '47 , Secretary-Treasurer Student Council '46, Vice-President Freshman Class '45, E. L.A. '47, '48, German Club '47, '48, Service League '46, '47, '48, Art Club '47, Presi- dent Art Club '47, Swimming Club '45, '46, Glee Club '48, Latin Club '46, Secretary- Treasurer Latin Club '46, Spanish Club '47, Junior Choir '47, Choir '48, Alpha '45, '46, Program Chairman Alpha '46. JACQUELINE THORNTON: Service League '47, '48, Nature Club '48, Swim- ming Club '47, LOUISE TURNER: Vice-President Junior Class '47, Delta Pi Epsilon '47, '48, Service League '47, Glee Club '47, '48, Creative Writing Club '48, Choir '48, Granddaughters' Club '47, '48 , President Granddaughters' Club '47, '48, INLOOK Staff '48. CARTER VENABLE: Service League '47 , Dramatic Club '47, '48, Swimming Club '46, Latin Club '46, Spanish Club '47, Alpha '46. p EDNA WILKERSON2 Glee Club '48, Choir '48. - FRANZ WILSON: Swimming Club '47, Art Club '48, Service League '48. BROOKIE CRAFT: Service League '47, '48, Glee Club '47, '48, Junior Choir '47, White Team Cheerleader '47, '48. THE DEAD OF NIGHT The toning bell strikes midnight- The dead of night- To me, the dead of heart. The whisper of frost-lilled air Brings back the memory of you, fYour dark head-your knowing eyesj. You, the epitome of all my dreams, Return and burn my heart Until my breath is tight--then not at all. Oh, leave me, Sorrow! Grief is your partner And death is mine. Listen. . ,I hear her call. BY BRUCE Morrizrr PQSTLUDE p Was it possible that these ten years had flown by this rapidly, and that the '48 reunion was actually over? This was the thought that pervaded the mind of Mrs. Foulis, sponsor of the class of '48, as she sat amid a crowd of passengers on the Hudson train as it rushed up the valley, leaving only alblur of farms, fences, highways, and fields. In a sense, this trip was a duplication of one she had made a brief decade before-she was on the same train, traveling to the same desti- nation, and thinking about the same girls. There was one difference, however, in that ten years previously she had been wondering what these girls would do with their lives, would they be successful in their individual fortes, would they be happy? Now in the year 1958, Mrs. Foulis had the answers to these many queries, for she was returning home from the class reunion. As the countryside slipped quickly by, so her thoughts swiftly recaptured certain snatches of the event today which had brought this feeling of satisfaction to her. Louisa Adsit came first into her mind, because Weesie had been one of her most frequent visitors to the den of iniquity back in Cochran. Weesie certainly had burst forward with that writing ability-being editor of Vogue as well as a well known poet . . . Thinking about successes in the literary field naturally brought Katherine Graddy and Caryl Entwistle into her mind also. Graddy, through her frequent expositions on Life on a Kentucky Farm which appear in the Atlantic Monthly , has already increased the population of the hillbilly state ten per cent. And Entwistle, as a result of those fierce and fiery essays on What's Wrong in the U. S. Today , is running against Fran Porter on the Radical ticket for the presidential nomination. The calendar turned back effortlessly when Ann Pope and jackie Thornton arrived on the scene together. Jackie had encountered Ann in the Mississippi lowlands, and had persuaded her to leave her cherished igg farm for a couple of weeks. It has never been definitely decided whether it was the elaborate Rolls- Royce which the girls drove or the drivers themselves that disheveled the South, leavirg it in a state of panic worse than that caused by Sherman. Marie Magee and Jane Preston arrived, miraculously enough, on time. Both are still as beauti- ful and charming as they were the summer they led the Virginia debs. They say that their social success is a natural result of all the time and patience spent on grooming and personal care at Stuart Hall. Gur too-cheerful cherubs, Betty Bozarth and Marian Emmett, arrived on the scene with that perpetual aura of well being, fortified by their frequent admoni- tions to each other- buck up and be cheerful . On their heels came Neville McDowell who wasn't recognized immediately behind her heavy horn rimmed glasses, but, as Neville herself said, being Professor of Philosophy and Presi- dent of Harvard necessitates keeping one's dignity. Despite the differences in their personalities and occupations, Neville and Mary Anne??? still remain the closest of friends-so much so that the prodigy makes her home with the house- wife and her family. Lucie Harris and Grace Johnson caused much ado when they' entered, as they have tied for first place as America's Best Dressed Woman. Lucie created quite a sensation by wearing the newest in footwear-leopard skin spats-N. C. leopard, that is! Grace was displaying the. latest in a rust ensemble appropriately trimmed with vertical and horizontal ermine stripes. Dorothy Cobb was right behind them, knitting as usual! It wasn't long before she had provided everyone with a copy of her renowned book, Argyles In Ten Easy Lessons . ' Katie McIntosh and Aline Kerr arrived rather late because of having diffi- culties in cancelling their afternoon performance. They have become America's No. 1 duo-pianists and are in constant demand at Carnegie Hall. With them they brought news of Midge Cash and Gin Carter who, because of being so engrossed in research on the new drug, penniradar, recently presented to the public by Dr. Carolyn Stein, were unable to attend. The medical field seemed to have interested several of the girls as Annabelle Ayers and Ellen Price will testify. They have be- ccme nurses at Johns Hopkins, and enjoy their work, even when it entails the caring for crotchety old gentlemen with more wealth than health. Others absent for professional reasons were Kay Overesch and Carter Venable who were un- able to leave their exacting work at Oxford. They are laboring for their, Ph. D.'s -Overesch in history and Carter in science. Afte a brief re-cataloguing of past events, the group sat down to an elaborate luncheon, planned and prepared by none other than Sally Opie, gourmet of the Ritz. Between courses, Pat Hale and Edna Wilkerson joined in renditions of old S. H. favorites which brought tears to many an eye. These two girls have obtained fame in diverse fields of vocal accomplishment. While Pat is stealing scenes in the opera Carmen, Edna is stealing hearts in Grenwich village. i Freddy Collins, having just 'surfed' up from Florida in search of the new top- notch Latin orchestra for her night-club in DeLand, was able to give us welcome information concerning Dabney Neff and D. D. Boxley. In an effort to escape the strenuous demands of Staunton social life and to satiate their intellectual desires, they are stili enrolled in Rollins where they have completed every course offered. The '59 catalogue introduces two new features: Japanese flower arrange- ment andadvanced basket-weaving. And what was it that Anne Garst said about june Burlingame and Franz Wilson? Oh, yes, Franz's ship had finally reached port, bringing with it her long anticipated horse-farm. She has taken up breeding and raising race horses which she sends to her favorite jockey, Burlingame. In- deed june found her profession the night she first displayed her remarkable horse- manship in Tish . Garst had participated in the play, too, but had transferred her talent to radio. What a grand M. C. she makes on Queen For A Day! Our two blonde-blue-eyed beauties, namely Leila Booth and Janie Pollock, have smiled and posed on every magazine cover both here and on the continent. It is rumored that the Moffett Film Co. is going to offer them contracts. Ann acquired this priceless possession during her season as hockey pro. It seems she so completely mastered the sport that the Olympics, fearing Mary Guthrie's down- fall and defeat, propositioned her with the industry for her withdrawal. The world sincerely hopes movies' gain will not cause the decline of hockey. The after-dinner toasts to various ones of the absentees were begun by 'Ioan Garner. Joan had carried out her plans to major in Spanish at Wellesley and has recently been appointed American Ambassador to Cuba. Her toast was to Anita French, Cuba's inimitable rumba 'perfectuoso'. Next, Judy Chesser gave a toast to Carolina's all time sweetheart, Kitty Faucette. Kitty's intentions to discontinue limiting her golden throat to purely classical music in order to introduce the works of the People's choice-Louise New Mexico Turner-were made known. The first of this type will be a sequel to HI Only VVant A Buddy Not A Sweetheart en- titled Says Who ! judy's own interests are solely in her sardine-canning factory. She can now get 56 of the creatures in one can. This feat is the result of the 'tjammingu she did in preparation for vacations from school. No one had to tell us of Jane Roseberry's successful career in advertising. All one needs to do is drive down any Kentucky highway to see the outdoor advertisements displaying the notorious El Ropo cigar, made from the finest tobacco leaves. Of course Kitchie gives much credit to the tantalizing titian-Shelly-whose glamorous appearance accompanies the product on every billboard. Dolly Theurer, after completing her education at Syracuse U , drifted back to Cleveland where she is zealously engaged in setting the world at peace. Dolly's Mrs, Anthony personality has already solved countless problems which pre- sented themselves before the U. N. Along these same lines, but on a smaller and slightly different scale, Myra Long is overthrowing political corruption in the city 'V' . of Memphis. Anne Stuart, also promoting state welfare, undertook some years ago the task of improving state highways. We must realize, of course,' that this generosity was quite beneficial to Stu' because she could make the trip between U. Va. and Hampden-Sidney in- record time. Thinking of the University also centered the spotlight on Nancy Cobb. Little Cobb, unbelievable as it may seem, foresook Carolina for the Wahoos! ' Mrs. Foulis hadn't altogether understood what had been said about Eleanor james and jane Shober. lt was something about their settling 'down Sewanee way'. Ellie had bought an inn fTuck-a-wayj whereas Shobo is just loafing. One can always find her at Clara's pouring dimes into the jukeboxes. Another thing Mrs. Foulis couldn't quite conceive was how Sally Singleton had managed to leave Julian just for the class reunion. Sing had a message from fran Brown which gave her regrets and stated that she was unable to come since she has several small troubles at Front Royal. Pris Fields, having skyrocketed to fame as current replacement for one of the Andrew sisters, gave the farewell toast. just before the crowd had dispersed ,a messenger delivered the telegram which was now in her hand. It was from Connie Cone and Brookie Craft and read: Grand opening of dress and hat shop yesterday. Huge success. Wish we could join you. Mrs. Foulis sat there with the telegram in her hand, and thought of her girls-not only Connie and Brookie, but of all the girls she had taught a short ten years ago. Most of them had attained, in some measure, what they had wanted. Long-forgotten reveries in which these girls had played important roles, again flitted through her mind, as she compared her own hope for them with what she had learned today. Mrs. Foulis replaced the telegram in her purse and took a quick glance out of the window. How rapidly the time had sped! It seemed that only a few minutes before she had boarded the train, and now she was almost at her journey's end. Time will slip by, whether it is an hour or a decade. CALENDAR OF EVENTS 1947-1948 SEPTEMBER 16th-Arrival of new students 17th-Arrival of old students 18th-Old girls' party for new girls 20th-Concert-Richard Tetley-Kardos, pianist Zlst- Supper on the Heights 27th-Red and White Installation OCTOBER llth-Athletic Rally 13th-Concert-Eleanor Steber, soprano 20th-Trip to Natural Bridge and Lexington Founder's Day luncheon for Alumnae 25th-Lecture-Dr. Michael Dorizas 27th-Halloween Party NOVEMBER 3rd-Lecture-Edwin A. Rowlands Sth-Hockey Game with St. Anne's School at Charlottesville 10th-Lecture-John Temple Graves 15th-German Club Dance 22nd -Hockey Game with St. Anne's School at Stuart Hall Moving picture in evening 27th-Thanksgiving Day Service at Emmanuel Church Final Red-White Hockey Game Formal Thanksgiving Dinner Faculty Recital and Reception 29th-Lecture-Dr. Robert Oliver 6tl. DECEMBER Play by Dramatic Club Sth-Concert-James Pease, baritone 13th-Student Recital 14th 17th- A-Choral Vesper Service at Emmanuel Church --Christmas Candlelight Service at the school 18th-Christmas Vacation begins 1948 JANUARY 6th-School reopens after vacation 9th-Lecture-Dr. Walter Judd 10th-Athletic evening llth-Feast of Lights Service at Emmanuel Church 24th-Moving Picture 31st- Lecture-Bruce Thomas FEBRUARY 2nd-Concert-Vronsky and Babin, duo-pianists 7th--Faculty party for Seniors llth-Ash Wednesday Service at Emmanuel Church 14th-Valentine Party 21st- George Washington Party 27th-National Symphony Orchestra at Mary Baldwi MARCH 13th-Student Recital 19th-Spring vacation begins 30th-Spring vacation ends APRIL 2nd -E.L.A. Tea 5th-Junior Party on Heights 10th-Lecture-Philip Noble 17th-Mono-dramatist, Dorothy Crawford 19th-Operetta-Chimes of Normandy MAY 8th-German Club Dance 10th-Red-White Tennis Finals 15th-Strawberry Festival, sponsored by the E.L.A. 22nd -junior-Senior Banquet 30th-Special Vesper Service at Emmanuel Church JUNE 4th-Student Recital Sth-Alumnae Meeting Class Day Exercises Art Exhibit Garden Party for Seniors 6th-Baccalaureate Service Out of door vespers Loving Cup Service 7th-Final Exercises n College X J y ff miwygw CQJIAKQAQ C1433 jdlfflfi S7 Lofg J' CFJGQDDZ Jfodefaffg EN u,v,sJ,q5 J ,M D w A Jw K , fffmfszz - X. 'jjj XV ' of' '- A X5 ' Z ln ID.:z:n'c2SX Legg -Q :X i iuoonx ffm Kem ou 'noun sgoem ww uxuuo g. up as qgu who RYYYO QM Zkp2Yxc?,rwcLe 11. s'1aQc2-'fioux dem 5, 4, sun ubvcvi x:. Kwninv, 0,r4,-,ern L- LK 1 LJ AVG. KK A ,O M JLJX 508 ne. L13 L60 DV Q Q 4 4 M XD xM'i3ffEEl'E'W UD ' uxwdecqxx robin-save 5, c:.ouXo,s-ever Yuma aaa K-Y. 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K S-gig!!-2, ivu Lkvn.- Q -...L X ,x..L.k..,'ss. is 2. 'V QQ. Gig, Q-gpavsn.-A-'tk..L.e.x kggxbks gggggi... gig-5,5 Q15 V5...e.a.-rs-n- X-4..v.,X Wtsssg. 1.3.4 ,!H,,::,.SELEQT... Bah- NIJ-1.9-X'Xx.n.p.g,v , Qtauntonw' -2-mv V-NRCS' s 'bidiKBX1:a.--CA-L5-L We Axh- N-5-LDS' . NQ,.b-.,,.,.u.. 1 ltarykx N fi-0-L1-viz:-'4e.v..::. can-nh.. ks-omg, van' T49-LL . . . SP5 g-5-Ll Kcaaemy 'N ns' u'XQ'u-5'XN-L Qgkigxflliuyi-L kmx u xx-..1-Xcxu.-w R-.-.-uugxfg Q,-,Awww ' Q-LsZQ.Lo.u. mask . I Tha..-capmgbsxsb -0455.5 ass, 2l.L.XB- Q.s..s.5.h.Ci M-XLS casa. u..v.as-L5 -- , 5 L COMPLIMENTS UIAA 0 T H E ' I EQL1 A. gene-I-'H' x.. uyae. ' uggghmd rx,s?e-I.9.I.4.15l09 G, F,Mu,.4uu dom. nJf-aux bow- edifur 71 L.. YS wed4Jwo4L.51Q 71iHn- 'iwlfu'- '-'-9 L,,,,cK uJ,1-h,.,4.u9cN Wu.J..-a 'burnnuv uo7fL9-U V mmgm Nil?-EHCAT sinus TlAJu,m...4J ' r WKLL4 BLUE-10.1.1 Cu-Gd auf about ef-xg Zu' u.s..2a.. WW ,j,,ffJIS,elta PITPQOH J 9.1.1.1 4-QUG-I L 'Je-1.5. 59 gt C I' SM T24 in-I J 5 l4'.l1-I-K7-S-'TfM K5ox, 5 f sv QQH44 wv-w-- wk:-4 1 ep an I u...s.n...4 son,-.cn Iasswsw Ou-1-JI 4 J4 JQQ J dd CT-:QW-'-I-1 ua-an CLF!! M ul- wh.: fecepl on 'oem kmmoeu o Lu, 'Ku oufb-nd.: umvsdll I pw... N-u..'C v-WHQPKK '40 'N'- 4 SMU Mm Q4 ww beffcltif '5o'xx 'Nz' QQHIP -59.21214 3 da QU' :Lf 4, :,'E'f:oMPLlMENTs1-fu bmw-I 'PCLUJ M-K1 '5 '9rWb.aD?7fX 'e n rn -Lad d fiE6fCu-wt 4 qdhq LIiDK::v.. H4324 yu-.sf Rafe W QV ram L y . . D' lk' in? 2,22g,'2uz1L':s..S.3'11JeK,.. ZF . uar-N fo Qlmrhvrw CU-IJ '-U 'l' 'N'-'lo Q 4, wwf- Lw.4.wsfo.....4!! nh 'RYA , gl v - a ei 'Le r. ' ? 3' . . ,, - , ., 1 L. . t r . ,, o . ' 2 - r IIC H u an , 1 ' a I 5 . n 1 Y . . I et' ,, o Qfllnt - ' - Y : . ... , , gr f of I Q Q D . J! - f V ,A .2 -- ' au' , . I., ,iff-. ,Z . 1 , 11 g n ' I an . -' , I 1 I L -7 -K wx o ' . ' ' 'Y ' . b . Bio - , Q 5 Ll! .. ' O 6 , U Q o I O Y ' 5 .. M, , Q ' s n Q. - C 0 . . 5 'I I 0 m ' H n 0. . 0 kg., oC'knxwIoo-vqQ.o.u.h.n Q,, A-o ' 4,4 ' I V047 och , I fkazft-'J - is YC! X,8i2f65K X - ,fo'x di asgpbaaab Xl. X UN e ff 9 V3 QQUCQUTHEFE T OPXFEUCK OVX yfxcl' fb jfwov xy 'QQ xxy .dp XO fx HE BEST OF CL s lynx '0 VRYKQA 65- VX ,MROM6 0 QP JU,-2 7 ,J ,Q A xl ax'NO dj The Juniors K 4- MW' ,fx CONGRATULATIONS 'I I FROM I I The German Club I I ...BEST wlsHEs... I TO THE CLASS OF '48 I FROM The Dramatic Club .A' 1 inn! , , , F I :fill-4, fltaoa-lo I OOMPLIMENTS -11-04 -6l ' XVARNER BROS. Jo OF ,l.44a..,A.uAz,l,4-gal, DIXIE AND STRAND THE .fa-a-4 THEATRES I FRESHMAN CLASS Uv E q f GQ mf oOo 03. 4-a BE GOOD , Lai 'AND 9322, OOMPLIMENTS HAVE FUN ' OF FROM? THE ART CLUB ...STUART... ff io Q 9,x, q Z g : oOo BEST WISHES AND GOOD LUCK TO OUR SISTER CLASS OOO THE GLEE CLUB WIS HE S YOU ALL THE BEST GOODBYE AND GOOD LUCK TO THE SENIORS FROM THE s oPHoMoREs COMPLIMENTS OF ROBERTSON'S SALVATION ARMY nf , 'K l ' V .51A..,. .-.. An.- Tk. 'V ' - Q. ,,,bVM,,4Nv,4 ,,5g..,LL,J,v. Xb-- Wwe0L4WwL JM ww JM -M HM w..5ff,L,m'w,aafcWM.w Pwwfff SIiAS?wOx?oi0.9'gfvNNQ , l I' ED N as Ki 0 '! ff,i3M?f:fWf Af W W? wi1..k1i. by-api 5 tt Mick 'UW Q I Magts rgembers begler l 9 , ,, 4a,,gM,1 , Qgpfqahuuv' dqlyg at gQAL 1 I 1 on-9 W-LLL gnfwr.u,bAi.,trw9sa65.a1f,1.4,N MN W1 ' . 0LlN,aQ9Hiwu.,4.QL.4.f-sf-Q.,,1a, x ' !91MZ5,J..,.7' - s 1-0 MAA. 'K -9 as '5fi4'0YN+'i' GW- 'W'fQkK 'FRIEND J .W M 4 ' wfn '- 'k t . 1 EU a-we-L, TY COMPLIMENTS OF Mc I NTOSH BROTHERS 3 I o FLORENCE, ALABAMA O THE TRIANGLE TEA ROOM 'WELCOMES STUART HALL O JONES TAXI SERVICE PHONE 730 ooo 5 and 7 passenger closed cars Insured service-day and night ooo 16 North New Street Staunton . . Virginia COMPLIMENTS O F THE COLE NURSERIES O BLUEEIELD, WEST VIRGINIA '5,.9flQ.54 ' rwwfg, a -ftt H15 C-0---'rr 020.3-lf,-f has Cm-. QL, qYf'uxMY3'kLklYqgah'1fWYlu5pQg1, atywz ' Parkway Chevroletflv-U Grad Mm INCORPORATED I if-fj ' 'ALL G QRS-I'f' ooOoo cfx S ...SALES-ssRvlcE...wQf!'ff'ff'?1Q can FRONT ROYAL .......... VIROINIAKEJT-gxliii-,QQY -Q Oo l SQ 3, . TELEPHONE 53 CAQLL4 Chl, hir' X1 , ix -- la g H1 COMPLIMENTS OF . Staunton White Way Laundry Corporation COMPLIMENTS I OF Vames' Sweet Shoppe I ooOoo Staunto . . Virginia fb A. M. ARNOLD'S TAXI OOO 5 and 7 Passenger Cars 24 Hour Service 18 North New Street Phone 138 Staunton Virginia BROWN 6' MacDIARMID ooo OFFICE SUPPLY COMPANY ooo STATIONERY ScHooL SUPPLIES ooo Authorized Remington Rand Agency ooo Telephone 850 ooo 13-15 N. Augusta Street Staunton .... Virginia BRAEMAR AND PRINGLE SWEATERS COSTUME JEWELRY Gifts of Every Kind THE CUPBOARD 12 East Frederick Street Staunton .... Virginia WILLSON BROS. will greet and serve you cordially O Willson Bros., Druggists STAUNTON VIRGINIA The Huger Davidson Sale Co 11 f '- Q42 1' Igqff ...WHOLESALE GROCERIES... STAUNTON, VIRGINIA AND LEXINGTON. VIRGINIA DISTRIBUTORS OF PLEE-ZING MERCHANDISE EX muy. ,Q42L.u:.'A1ow2g I Q-GJ' R 1 x 7? Y ' O LJQXC , I fl, Q. f . Rlfm, S vicdi- swkwsmgxz, Qbrafx- Yxx , . 'Wm bxqmi guy . W e. , e A -!5n ,h 1 .. . em , i ' Ziff LAXEQQ n Q,peomQ.-RQ' S-QA. X 'Cf it, mm' 31: wxsmvx- XfNQ1QMsQLlN 5.QxF'5UXGx,.,,Q4 - . ,xC,Qi5s- NKNQQ- QQ LBXQLN S MQ .xx-52m - QQQN: N? E ' my LSQZIQI9 V XX R W XHXYXQ - 3 gms? Um3Q'uQ 'Wag QQ Q-, Som glkguzi QM.. 1mmiXQ..XmQy3Q,xfNDii QL ' 'N qos Nkwe- 9113! Qnskl kQPQ,3,i 1 . ,Qui hm wx Quark '+lXlWfi1iSfd3'5iS52feifzs.Qm'QX .U 5, - X fs u5fL'YLQ.'?.iSiS9YNk:Q'i9QQiawNwb, QNLNQQ gb, ' QKQ-,Q -+XwxQ.- Rv vxoggapua x'fQA'+Y5 +C, KNXVLJ.. l SQCSFL URCQLLR , Q C CQCUSXN QQQ, NVP-Q, 2,0 Q.KxkfQPSX. QLJQQ NRE UQ ? tX.QPY ,liijfsw Bo QKMSOFLQQ, x1.L5...Cs1tQi-X ' mil- WTNQR L0UwN'T.E, k1Amcs did NG- Q 95 St?ukfif-N6n reamggfnmgf Wk Y Q- Trim Ncboklwq Qcvvwsawsidfo N' - f-gew. . wggeghmuiwi sim 5U.Mc1muxw 'qh+- ficbq dxgmx N5hQ.i?mQMQ+aQ'11Q qw 'Pr hpwex Lge, EYNO uJf1IYEXQ.I1'WRUeQfc CBXQ QQ CSLA- Alek-SXk9r'e,m-f SL-QQMX-P vm, 3 in EQ:-QFQNQ. H XQQ PNCK Wig GQEQAALQ. za YWQQQISWQ ls, 3u,mme2fk. NQ5x+ ubmvz - IAQOUR, UJAKAS. f ,Z'L, Z'ZQii.lj1j ESM' i M140 4 W-feflf f,,,,,,- JAM Seeueufe 71-Af uf g ff A A wwf' ff- 'ff-we Q51 game' 'Q C' if if T1 I ' rf-A-MJ 216'- . . . EXCLUSIVE PHOTOGRAPHS . . . A The IN THIS ANNUAL BY Beverley Studio WPHOTOGRAPHY OF DISTINCTIONM 3 West Beverley Street . . Staunton, Virginia I TO THE CLASS OF 1948 I WITH OUR BEST WISHES Pro-Weld Company JACKSON, MICHIGAN L, Phone 915 RAN DOL TAXI AND TRANSFER SERVICE ooo SPECIAL PRICES ON SCHOOL TRADE ooo C. 81 O. Baggage Transfer ooo 21 North New Street Staunton . . . Virginia WOODFORD SPEARS AND SONS KENTUCKY BLUE GRASS SEED OOO PARIS, KENTUCKY Best of Luck to Studentsg May your life be a bed of roses oOo FLOWERS As You Like Them Fon ALL OCCASIONS RASK FLORIST PHONE 1700 Staunton . . . . . Virginia AST HARDWARE CO., Inc O WHOLESALE AND RETAIL O Staunton .... Virginia 'Ti Augusta. Dairies, Inc. 00000 STAUNTON, VIRGINIA 00000 PAsTEumzEo GRADE A DAIRY Pnooucrs 00000 Sm LL11 tlhrl 3 s Most Mode r'rl Dairy 00e00 Telephone . . 2181 C 0 M P L I M E N T S e I Snyder's Jewel Box 00e00 ...JEwELERs... oOOOo 18 West Beverley Street Staunton, Virginia Phone 941 eoooe EXPERT WATCH REPAIRING c o M P L I M E N T s OF Timberlake Dry Goods Company .. . sTAuNToN's aPEATEsT sToPE . . . 00000 7 East B ever ley Stree t... . . Swum .,11 ,Virginia F arley's Dry Cleaning Service ... PoP PEOPLE wHo CARE . .. OOOOO PHONE 2246 oOOOo Staunton . . Virginia Augusta National Bank of Staunton oOOOo Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ooOoo Staunton ............. Virginia IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN A PLEASURE T0 SERVE THE STUDENT BODY OF STUART HALL OOO THE CHECKERBOARD Gift and Candy Shop COMPLIMENTS OF T H E BARKER-JENNINGS HARDWARE CORP. oO LYNCIIBURG VIRGINIA oOo ooo 12 North Augusta INSTITUTIONAL SUPPLIES AT Phone 2393 WHOLESALE ONLY THE CUMPLIMENTS MILLER LUMBER 0 F COMPANY, B E A R B O O K INC. A N D Oo GIFT SHOP LUMBER BUILDING MATERIALS O MILLWORK FOR O00 GIFTS SO WELL REMEMBEREDT STAUNTON VIRGINIA R. L. SOUDER 5 CO. oOo Ready-to-Wear and Accessories OOO YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR Carol King Dorsa Trudy Hall JUNIOR DRESSES OOO 13 East Beverley Street Staunton .... Virginia COMPLIMENTS 0 F LEGGETT'S DEPARTMENT STORE STAUNTON VIRGINIA THE CAMERA SHOP E VERYTHING PHOTUCRAPHIC OOO Drawer 450 oO Staunton ..... Virginia WHITE STAR MILLS OOO MANUFACTURERS OF HIGH GRADE FLOURS oOo STAUNTON VIRGINIA KVQW ff I 1 QV 1' W ' fm Hciff, Mfifw lfypufjffvqyf' he -,J if 'aunton Paint and Wallpaper Co Incorporated Phones: 463, 2384 .L ff, 120 South Lewis Street Staunton ....... Virginia xg Q37 1 77,7 Imperial Wallpaper A N D DuPont Paints Palais Royal The House of Fashion oOOOo WHERE SMART PEOPLE LOVE TO SHOP oOOOo ...CLOTHES FOR EVERY OCCASION... ooOOo East Beverley fUpposite City Hallj Staunton H. L. Lang 8: Company, Inc oOOOo JEWELERS AND OPTICIANS Since 1890 oOOOo THE VALLEY'S FINEST JEWELRY STORE oOOOo asonio Temple . . . . Staunton., Virgin COMPLIMENTS OF Stonewall Jackson Hotel ST AUN TON .......... VIRGINIA , gesezued pow- mvmv: ff' .,t',.750,.f.,cL4f jig , ,Q v.','9g o, Ni9Q '4v9-vS-- C.-L!f...L, M ag , M , ,.---- - ,E M-, ,,.. 9.0.4 E, . Qrr-ad-v..v-7, .Q4q,, ' J-an.: .91 1 Java. ' Ai ' ,M , if My M-cf Y . few-e6Mfi'cf,a'r.yr1Avf-'ffi-4 f a:A g J 9461 . -7-'f-n-u.4.4,f,4rf , 6 lc'. '64-'!'0 ',!' A Q . k U 4 4- -Q43-J ' ' -5944, Lada, , A-v1-0'- f54'-4- --'ff4-5,l-gC,,4r,.1.4,,4x,,- fi, - ' ' f New Yofli Dress Shop,-Q-94 5 4.1.4. ' F4-4-QLAMH ag I I . , WLC UGC - Q I I A! cu..g'o4 Lnrl ,,,.,,c4 LJGAA ., WM-Q HJ X O9- M-14-+1 Jnyunww -4M....., H, ,E Ji! ff 'init-inlvgj , 1 137 J aouu fa.. Scftfl- ?4a.4.u,a,4,b . -Ly .wwe La-e..f. FIFTH AVENUE sTYLEs'g,oda fm -4:-. .u '! ZDLLZ-I.. 64.1-w.T:ec.l.:.cL,,,74 'c'o 44'. 4-f-1-cQ,La79G+vU7segQQy,4Q4.,,,na,714L:V6E I . - 974-1 Cua-I, , EQECIQLIZING W7 6afw1J,.5leju fdffmq a 'q4f ' 4'9-Y-?'m-peg E. 0-7' lui Cf ' Cuff! S -, Mk Wff- CLOTHES Fox THE JUNIOR Mlss Mbev' 46,4 5961. l.4-w..g,.y- a4LqQ761.Q.5 Sauzzdqnr Qgfffg SA.nM 60' 7'a::.:r,5 WE dad'-4-144'-1 4-4 'ak-g. 'ZUJI' !,.!fRNTg1!I!5. fit. 'f ..... VIRGINIA ,7 ifls 7 v4-6:4-f.LfZ'JQ5 gg, ,268 4.81-g Sl-LM? Jugs! Jai-4 xy .aa 6 I -7771 El 4 . I : ll Int! ,f4LfM,caJ.,-L, 5-41 'v p 4.71-,Q ,wid dwagy A- .l,lg,4,of-QL fy-ff!-E14-'-JECQfQ.. 4'. M f y0 ?'5-Z'-ik.: ri -- XJLEI-5,7,u-7'f,b4.4-fn4wv.-UIQ V Jada' v. p-. - .1 . xi f .TJSK U' Y -7 'f 0 , ?f' - sk! . '.uf llyyk X ' 41' VV .J -QV . lx T Lf fx ' N 5 K f 5 1' gs. C? Gs. flip' Ks Cd! t:gQ':,pL! Raya' ff EQYQJVQ ,S 47 J cf f , N ' ADING CUT-RATE DRUG STORE -fn L1 M O . C , 237 oo Oo f A -LN ALITY DRUGS AT THE LOWEST PRICES vii. f? ff, oOOOo Thos. Hogshead, Inc. COMPLIMENTS OF Schwarzschild' s ooOoo I ONE OF VIRGINIA'S FINE STORES I oOOOo STAUNTON . VIRGINIA l ww' H fa ,M PU' 1. E LM ,fWf'Z3fiw'i 6 at , ff M 1 Busy... ' A I ooo ,- J' , V , I ,f ,Af . SANITARY PLUMBIN , . V J . I J ' p r v 7 oOo VAPOR, STEAM AND HoT WATER HEATING ooo PHONE 163 ooo 109 South Lewis Street Staunton .... Virginia COMPLIMENTS OF DODD'S DRUG STORE O STAUNTON VIRGINIA COMPLIMENTS OF BAlLEY'S Professional Pharmacy oOo 38 North Central Avenue Staunton ..... Virginia BEVERLY BOOK CO., INC BOOKS STATIONERY FOUNTAIN PENS GREETING CARDS OFFICE SUPPLIES oO 9 West Beverley Street Staunton .... Virginia V ,D . .-j , 5 0 '1 P a 118E Bev 'y -- POT IYH L COMPLIMENTS 0 F eaturiiyigghe tawtgiml Ht! C O L O N Y 0 e n t , o ia deg, oPTlcAL 4 M. . . R , R ' C O M P A N Y Q0 P ula lassig -String D I Staunt .... Virginia HE s P F S AUNTON SPORT SHOP ooo O I HESTER PROP ooo THE OLDEST EXCLUSIVE VALLEY SPORT STORE OOO West Frederick Street Staunton . . . Virginia COMPLIMENTS OF DR. DONALD E. CALLAR OOO Staunton Virginia STUART HALL WELCOME ooOOo The Sportsman The VallPy,s Finestn Nationally Advertised Sporting Goods 00000 27 N. Central Ave. Phone 2401 Staunton, Virglnla The Carroll House Staunton's Newest Three Floor, Air Conditioned Storev STREET FLOOR LING ERI E SECOND FLOOR YOUNG CIRCLE': THIRD FLOOR HOMEMAKER SHOP Hoslsnv DRESSES so-IEE-rs FASHION COATS LINENS ACCESSORIES SUITS TOWELS SPORTSWEAR CURTAINS BLousEs FUR COATS ' DRAPERIES '-co1'ToN SHOP' G'R'-'S- CHILDRENS BLANKETS HousEDREssEs AND INFANTS coMFoRTERs Rosas APPAREL BEDSPREADS THE CARROLL HOUSE-STAUNTON, VIRGINIA Hamrick8cCo ...FLoRIsTs... oc-ooo FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS OOOOO . . . We Telegraph Flowers . . ooOoo 18 W. Frederick St. Phone 710 Staunton, Virglma S. E. TROTT, INC. 19 East Beverley Street Staunton .... Virginia THE MEN'S STORE OOO MEN'S GIFTS A Specialty ooo NATIONALLY ADVERTISED LINES OF FINE SWEATERS, TIES, ETC oOo 27 East Beverley Street Staunton .... Virginia COMPLIMENTS OF SMITH FUEL COMPANY Staunton Virginia , G. C. STANLEY Cr SON EGG S POULTRY MEATS Oo PHONE 1998W . Oo Route 5 Staunton, Va. , xx ' ' 5521025 Q03 R 01-sl. 1 103'-tai tiki I ' U XL.-u., xiNx1.fY..po wg'-f,e..ns -Nut. .hapuuw -qu-L .QNX Ag., -gsm, 'YSLCE .qua Sammi. JF!-SAN -msgid?-RWM 545531. ' was fx 1 vis Y .1 'Q ,WM X 46341-.5 xv eZ' A www my .,,Bg, Q,,,.,,L s.M4.-5,44-4wa.4.-r.k -exvox. '-Nh-VJ'-L M, iksagnnkb !l5n1.XLu-f-n.I3s...9s.im ...em +93-2-du.-an-1 RTQBM fu-'1 Ms, ,eu.-ulzdu. -A-w-1'::T J.,-Wm' ,AMA 03 ,Lb JL., ,,,,.f.,., Sru.s.m.-rvx.,o..v-A. lv'-A-'-AVN 'JN-1A. ' -' 'X N Qgwv HM M Mwammqlamf M ,Q .,,yrm.cJ.Q -. u5.L9.:i5Acqw1bugHhU.11wx2 3'bJ S 5' -- Jw+.J.d9wmJC.td-kt-Abwww.Lp-Ln -A-v-,ua . , . ,G ng, TILL MEETHAG km . Lmmq M4 9 -'elm-..X,q, Lp Mui. - -QU.: . . , GUYSINIR' -:AnAlu,dtoZau.rL-A3-'31-30 -' A i 3.11.5-L10 , ui tug gm N A.u..x1-vw-QA. Ani 33b0rx-z, b 3 uaKXX Bra-aM..X.Q A-if-kai' ..o.dLJ5.su.'iJrmhA I ' mio 5. Ati- -'-tv-H -M-'UN-X Af-.am -oh-nu 'O M-A 1-55-N5 QMS' The Senior Class J-cfm' 4 6' ff' N ,W m ,.u.,.-.,,.9.:1,,QWxa.A- www J Mer-XX. slung. JNQA Il ,H UBS,-,fufs..s-s..x.!1. Q-NN - 3,132 . 'Gam 6asm.Qsu'T-?-l::9-A- J 1? 4493 Q 'Gm 'v.l.5'X.1l'Nl-I1'x-'-'AWG X ' ' 4199, .BRL-54 - 'X 5,333 3:5 MM,M MW Mfg M. My, MM MM +0-qu ,Q-,QQG-M-ulxwib-HQ-N3 ' f t 3 .1 fLM.QKtf??J3.f'xi X361-a3?TM?of-iv e 5 WM Pcfum-ss.. sxvnvif- M499 AJR' V Mmm swmhnwmqb fz,n1,44.u..e,f...fQ0.. .n.-nm., 405' - -o ut -'W' QM -P N -N-Jmm...J+ ' J' Q41-AA:-ATX. WHS 1- UAMMMAMJ P4:..fJ ' NYJ - , ' A . , A Nfv'Jw,fjile:K1oK-Sf' ! U 'i I X59 A I- 0550 lxlgltvgw In . 1 K - - ' COMPLIMENTS OF The Helen G. Eastham Shop oOOOo lf it's new and correct-you will find it first at THE HELEN G. EASTHAM SHOP. 00000 PHONE 717 oOOOo 29 East Beverley Street . . Staunton, Virginia Sometimes it is the nature of a 5 craft to create an unbreakable tie be- tween itself and the worker in that field, a heart attachment equal to life- time devotion. One familiar example is PRINTING. Once editor, once compositor, or pressman catches the spirit of the shop, the spell is seldom broken. Like the odor of a camp tire, or a whiff of salt air, tlIe be- loved tang of printer's ink, symboli- cal of a great profession, gets into your heart and soul. School Annuals, Magazines, Newspapers and Special Printing, all smack of it. It is an invisible link that binds all intelli- gence together. It is the stimulus for creation in business or romance. This craftsmanship, this devotion to service and alertness to business needs, lIas nourished and developed ts. i 1-3' enormous industrial vitality and whichevei way the course of the future runs, the prmtei will always find himself able to adapt his helpfulness to new opportunity. YEARS OF EXPERIENCE HAVE TAlJL5t-T-TJS! PRINTING PAYS US ONLY WHEN IT PAYS YOU' NICCI.U1a14: P1uN'1'1NG ClJXlI'fXNX' THE RUNNELS PRESS COLLEGE ANNUALS AND CATALOGS ....... FINE ADVERTISING PRINTING 19 NVest Ftederxck St PHONE 605 Staunton, Virgmn Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories Sorry, this page is unavailable. Turn to the next one and you'll find more memories 2? W QQ Q 5 5 my Q W5 11 gg QE? QMQQ
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