Features COEDS.pdf
Media
Part of The Gold Ore
- extracted text
- i iat u ir COEDS COEDS—that’s what makes a college alive and pulsating... No one can avoid looking at that young lady over there, pen sively browsing over her assets and liabilities. . .but what an asset she is! Radiant and beamly” ocompish figure (Charing to more intimate ones, of course) was formerly of the Sta. Theresa’s College; Manila. Miss Ro sario Gonzales (strictly speaking) goer, in for excitement and animals (men ex cepted tho’ . . . tsk . . tsk . . ) We can dream . . . can’t we? Too personal. “If eyes were only made for seeing, then beauty is its own excuse for being” . . . that’s Edna de los Santos to any body. Just proper for a Hollywood role . . . just proper. Good at singing, bet ter at painting, best at the piano and ex cellent at dancing. Taking up Foreign Service, she is majoring in English. Camo from the Sta. Scholastica College, Manila. Just looking at her . . .we can only hope and say . . . this is the time that try men’s souls ...” Our first day in college was dry. Second day proved even worse-arid. Third day we met Irene Carino . . . with the dulcet eyes, svelte figure, and a basketball of dreams. (The days arc bright and gay again.) Very reserved in tongue and thought, but gracious anel gay when the need arises. Hopes to be a school mom someday. We are at ú loss to toll you ... if only . . . if . . . You haven’t seen anything yet. Something entirely different. And when we say different, it’s different. That’s Mildred Picart in any language. Very amusing, good-naturedly complaisant, the embodiment of “Bobby Sox” finesse and smartness. Graduate of the Holy Family College, she’s now taking up Foreign Service. Looks like Foreign Service is a good course, doesn’t it? To us; it is very inviting indeed! What “it” ? Miss Lourdes Mitra really can cut a figure all her own. Proof: she has been elected re presentative to the student counAnd a new-comer at that. T^ll brilliant, she wears a very expres sive face fittingly framed by a high pom padour. That’s for personality, eh Luly? Another product of the Sta. Theresa’s College, Manila, she goes in for the nobler profession—medicine . . . how many hearts can you cure, Luly? Undoubtedly, this day has carried you too far. Presently, you arc smiling again, smiling at someone . . .oh, oh, she is returning your smile. You smile again (those smiles have to stop some where!) Why, it’s Sally—rosy cheeks, dancing eyes, and doll-like face. An aiumna of the Baguio City High School. Very amiable. She is now enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts. “I like Baguio Colleges—that’s why I’m here” . That’s Carmen de la Rosa’s quotation. Mameng (of course you met her at the Acquaintance Party) hopes to be a Portia someday; adores dancing and loves novels. A sub-Secretary of the student council, she is a balm for the weary mind (we know or don’t we . . ?) We are indeed fortunate for having* with us Miss Fortunata Lozarraga. (the F.E.U. is at the other end of the rope) . Demure, sedate and simple, charming in a beautiful way, accentuated by serene ness. Her Spanish complexion betrays her Spanish ancestry. She is majoring Page 16 THE GOLD ORE