St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)
- Class of 1935
Page 1 of 188
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 188 of the 1935 volume:
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FOOTPRINTS 1935 Right Reverend Thomas E. Molloy, D. D. Bishop of Brooklyn FOOTPRINTS 1935 PUBLISHED BY THE SENIOR CLASS SAINT JOSEPH ' S COLLEGE FOR WOMEN BROOKLYN, NEW YORK FOREWORD Because like the good Aeneas we have journeyed in thought and in fact toward a dim and watched for goal, we have chosen the Aeueid to crystallize our wanderings. Vergil in his two thousand year old verses mirrors for us the development of events in the rise of a people. In this book we have tried to mir- ror a tangible part of Saint Joseph ' s College. Some day we shall be glad to remember. Forsan ct haec olim meminisse invabit. TO OUR PARENTS Ipse subibo umcris, nee me labor iste gravabit: Quo res cumquc cadent, unum et commune periclum Una salus ambobus erit. STAFF Editor-in-Chief Assistant Editor KATHLEEN SHEEHAN ANNE TIERNEY Business Managers EDNA BRENNAN ELIZABETH DEVLIN Photography Subscriptions Directory — Undergraduate Graduate Cover Design Faculty Adviser LYDIA WARD HELEN FARRINGTON ELIZABETH ZANGLE GENEVIEVE D ' ALBORA MARY McLOUGHLIN F. P. KILCOYNE CONTENTS VIEW 9 VALEDICTORY SENIORS 3 CLASSES io 3 ACTIVITIES J l r LITERARY SECTION 1 2 8 NURSERY SCHOOL i45 DIRECTORY 47 ADVERTISEMENTS 169 The Entrance Fontbonne Hall VALEDICTORY MARY WALSH It is difficult to say good-bye. To say good-bye to you, our college, means we realize at last that we are no longer a part of you. The thought of separation is not new. It has come to us frequently in recent months but it has always been little more than a hazy notion to be passed over lightly, to be dealt with in the future. Now it comes clad in the armor of reality and we cannot escape. Our reluctance at parting, our hesitation in severing the bonds that join us so closely is understandable in the light of all that you have meant to us. We came to you learned in our ignorance, strong in our weakness, sure in our timidity. You led us fearlessly yet not without understanding along the paths of true wisdom and of true goodness. It would be pleasant to remain always, happy in the sur- roundings you have provided for us. We should be merely play- ing at life, however, were we to attempt to prolong any part of it; to substitute for life itself what is a perfect preparation, but only a preparation for it. We realize that our days here have been completed, that we have received our share of encourage- ment, of sympathy and of friendship from you as under- graduates. There are new responsibilities for us to accept, new duties to assume, a new world to enter. Shall we find this new world as livable as that brave new world of college? We hesi- tate to enter: it is a world unknown, and we proceed now unassisted. We cannot take you with us. We must relinquish you to others that they too may obtain what you have bestowed upon us. But we do carry within our hearts the intangible elements of your guidance. With this, we find courage to travel a new road, alone. 12 s E N I O R S E C T I O N f O wcii neque enim ignari sumus ante malorum. 13 CATHERINE ALLEN Activities: President of Dramatic Society, 1935 Assistant Dean, Alumnae Week, 1934 Junior Promenade Committee 14 VITA ALOISIO Activities: Rifle Squad Social Service Senior-Freihman Party Committee r S VIVIAN BIRD Activities: Secretary, History Club, 1934- ' } 5 Senior Basketball Team Christmas Party Committee, 1934 16 MARIE BLABER Activities: Vice President, Junior Class Chairman, Fall Dance, 1934 Chairman, Alumnae Day, 1934 17 EDNA BRENNAN Activities: Chairman, Religion Committee, 1934— ' 35 Business Manager, Loria and Footprints Registrar, Alumnae Week, 1934 18 HELEN BROWNE Activities: Chairman, Parents ' Day, 1934 President, History Club, 1934— ' 35 Librarian, Alumnae Week, 1934 19 AMELIA CAGGIANO Activities: Chairman, Senior-Freshman Party Rifle Squad Social Service 20 CATHLEEN CAHILL Activities: Senior Promenade Committee Food Committee, Alumnae Week, 1934 Rifle Squad 21 MARGARET CALLAHAN Ac til it it ' s: Captain, Varsity Basketball, 1 934—3 5 Secretary, Athletic Association, 1 934—3 5 Senior Promenade Committee 22 JANET CARDOW Ac tiii ties: Art Staff, Loria Social Service Art Club 23 CARMEL CAVALIERE Activities: Rifle Squad Secretary, Cercle Moliere Parents ' Day Committee, 1933 24 BLANCHE COFFEY Activities: Junior Week Committee Chairman, Waitresses, Alumnae Week Rifle Squad S VIRGINIA CONRAN Activities: Glee Club Librarian, 1932— ' 33 Glee Club Dramatic Society 26 MARIE COOKE Activities. Junior Promenade Committee Senior Week Committee Glee Club Show, 1935 27 CATHERINE CRONIN Activities: Glee Club Show, 1935 Athletic Association Senior Week Committee 28 EDNA CRONIN Activities: Undergraduate Association Treasurer, 1932 Undergraduate Association Secretary, 1933 Chairman, Freshman Class Day 29 GILDA DATRI Activities: Serenaders Glee Club Dramatics 30 CHARLOTTE DERMODY Activities: Librarian, Glee Club, 1933— ' 34 Glee Club Show, 1935 Sophomore-Senior Party Committee 3i HELEN DERMODY Activities: Class Treasurer, 1933, 1934, 1935 Committee, Administration of Examinations Athlet ' c Association 32 ELIZABETH DEVLIN Activities: Dean, Alumnae Week, 1934 Chairman, Junior Promenade Vice-President, Undergraduate Association 33 AGNES DOOLEY Activities: Chairman, Administration of Examinations Religion Committee President, German Club — Fernsemer Verein 34 KATHERINE DOYLE Activities: Basketball Glee Club Rifle 35 VIVIAN DUNN Activities: Rifle Squad Dramatic Association Dancing Club 3 DOROTHY EASSON Activities: Pianist, Glee Club Chairman, Attendance, Alumnae Week Rifle Squad 37 ELIZABETH ECKHOFF Activities: Captain, Rifle Team Photography Committee Footprints Senior-Junior Theatre Party Committee 38 HELEN FARRINGTON Activities: Undergraduate Association Councillor Manager, Footprints Circulation Fall Dance Committee 39 CECELIA FINN Activities: President, Undergraduate Association Religion Committee Class President, 1933— ' 34 40 ETHEL FITZSIMONS Activities: Chairman, Senior Promenade Attendance Committee Cultural Committee 41 GRACE FLANNERY Activities: Chairman, Senior Reception to Freshmen Senior Promenade Committee Senior Week Committee 42 EDNA GAVIN Activities: Circulation Staff, Footprints Class Basketball Team, 1934 History Club Play, 1934 43 VIRGINIA GEORGE Activities: Senior-Freshman Party Committee Check Room Committee, Alumnae Week Social Service 44 SYLVIA GOERLITZ Activities: Class Treasurer, 1934— ' 35 Captain, Class Basketball Team, 1935 Junior Promenade Committee 45 ELAINE GRAVES Activities: Cheer Leader, 1935 Freshman Class Day Committee Social Service 46 JEANETTE GRIFFIN Activities: Glee Club Dramatics Rifle Squad 47 RUTH HAEGELE Activities: Circulation Staff, Footprints Rifle Team Hood Committee 48 ELIZABETH HEARNE Act hi ties: Rifle Team Glee Club Sophomore-Senior Party Committee 49 ANNA HENNESSY Activities: Social Service Chairman, Fontbonne Hall, 1933, 1934 Dramatics Show, 1933 50 HELENE HENNESSY Activities: Glee Club Show, 1933 Social Service Rifle Team 51 ELEANOR IVERS Activities: Class Secretary, 193 1, ' 32, ' 33 General Assembly Cartographer Glee Club 52 CORINNE KAST Activities: Social Service Rifle Squad Parents ' Day Committee, ' 32 53 ROSE KEEGAN Activities: Loria Board Writers ' Club Art Club 54 GENEVIEVE KELLY Activities. Glee Club Social Service Dramatics SS RUTH KELLY Activities,: Glee Club Show, 1935 Glee Club Pianist, Dancing Club 56 FLORENCE KEMP Activities: Chairman, Senior Week Chairman, Christmas Party, 1934 Class Treasurer, 193 1— ' 32 57 ELEANORE KENNEDY Activities: Senior Week Committee Social Service Mock Class Committee CATHERINE LOFTUS Activities: Chairman, Point System Committee Secretary, Point System, I933 - 34 Dramatics 59 wP% ■■£ s 4 DOROTHY MAGUIRE Activities: Class Secretary, 1934, ' 35 Junior Week Committee Dramatic Society 60 CATHERINE MAY Activities: President, Mercier Circle Alumnae Week Committee, 1934 Athletic Association 61 ANNE McGUIRE Activities: Dramatic Society Attendance Committee, 193 i, ' 32 Glee Club 6z MARGARET MclLDUFF Activities: Basketball Rifle Social Service 3 RpP - M • 6S? v 4 B ?W ' j i ■■' .:■, ' ft 1 ' •■flPr •Mt JANE McLOUGHLIN Class Secretary, 1935 Committee, Administration of Examinations Class Basketball, 1934, ' 35 64 MARY McLOUGHLIN Activities: Loria Art Staff Athletic Association Class Basketball, 1935 5 DORIS McPARTLAND Activities: Rifle Squad Glee Club Dramatic Society 66 BERNADETTE MORONEY Actii ities: Senior Week Committee Junior Week Committee Glee Club Show, 1934 67 MARION MUSANTE Activities: Glee Club French Club Social Service 68 GENEVIEVE NAUGHTON Activities: Basketball Rifle Glee Club 6 9 MARY O ' CONNELL Activities: Rifle Squad Social Service Chairman, Junior-Freshman Party 70 HELEN O ' CONNOR Activities: President, Glee Club Secretary-Treasurer, Glee Club, 1933, ' 34 Vice-President, i932- ' 3 3 71 MARIE OLIVER Activities: Dramatics Athletic Association Social Service 7 MARY PASSARETTI Activities: Rifle Squad Glee Club Dramatics 73 AGNES RAFFERTY Activities: Rifle Team Ring Committee Hood Committee 74 RITA REYNOLDS Activities: Glee Club Dramatic Society History Club 75 WILHELMINA RIEPE Activities: Basketball German Club — Fernsemer Verein Rifle Squad 7 ISABELLE ROBERTSON Activities: Athletic Association Parents ' Day Committee, 1934 Class Basketball, 1933, 1935 77 HELEN SAWYER Activities: Athletic Association Glee Club Social Service 78 RACHEL SCARPATI Activities: Cultural Committee Senior Promenade Committee Junior Week Committee 79 HELEN SCHWARZ Activities: President, Junior Class Vice-President, Freshman Class Rifle Squad 80 ANNE SEITZ Activities: Chairman, Cultural Committee President, Public Speakers ' Society- Chairman, Junior Week 81 KATHLEEN SHEEHAN Activities: Editor, Loria, 193 3— ' 34, 193 4— ' 3 5 Editor, Footprints, 1935 Class President, 193 1— ' 32 82 GENEVIEVE SHEERIN Activities: Glee Club Show, 1932 Social Service Spanish Club 83 It i ? V M ' -; ir L ' ■hpIP Sj ;. ' .;-■. ' • ' 1 mm RITA SHEVLIN Activities: Spanish Club Dramatic Society Glee Club 84 ROSALIE SULLIVAN Activities: Glee Club Parents ' Day Committee, 1932 Rifle 85 ANNE TIERNEY Activities: Loria Literary Staff Glee Club Show, 1935 Assistant Editor, Footprints, 1935 86 DOROTHY TOBIN Activities: President Athletic Association Religion Committee Point System Committee 87 ■-v 4 %■i iF ' wSS . f |E 3r ' 5Bk . g ft - 1 ELVIE TRIMBORN Activities ' . Glee Club Show, 1935 Dramatic Society Fall Dance Committee, 1934 88 ISABEL TYLER Activities: Social Service Parents ' Day Committee, 1934 Dramatic Society 89 GENEVIEVE WALSH Activities: Chairman, Hood Committee Senior Promenade Committee Social Service 90 MARY WALSH Activities: Chairman, Attendance Committee Valedictorian Vice-President, Senior Class 91 LYDIA WARD Activities: Chairman, Photography Committee President, Spanish Club Committee, Administration of Examinations 9 MARY WIEST Activities: Undergraduate Association Treasurer, 1933 Chairman, Reception to High School Seniors Religion Committee 93 CATHERINE WILLS Activities: President, Social Service Society Junior Week Committee Rifle Squad 94 ELIZABETH ZANGLE Activities: President, Senior Class Loria Literary Staff Religion Committee 95 A GLANCE BACKWARD HELEN BROWNE .Tacts, uninteresting, dry as dust — that is the general con- cept of history. We, as a class have a history, but having one, can never subscribe to this empty, barren notion of history. We have found our own intensely interesting. Th e facts did not fall inevitably into place through the years; we lived them, eager, satisfied, sometimes rebellious. Those first weeks at Saint Joseph ' s we lived a jumble of emotions. Lingering traces of our lofty Senior air conflicted sharply with the realization of our un- worthiness as Freshmen, forcibly impressed upon us by the Sophomore hazing committee. The encouragement of our Junior sisters sustained us during those dark and humiliating hours; at length, our ruffled spirits were soothed and enchanted by the ceremony of Investiture. Throughout the rest of the year we experienced the difficulties of the empirical method, laboriously composing essays on My First Ambition, blowing up over mid-terms, reluctantly and tremulously interviewing the Dean, awaking to the cold daylight of overcuts, rejoicing deliriously over winning the Field Day Cup. Some of us passed our courses; some of us went to summer school; but in the fall most of us arrived. Rolling up our sleeves, we plunged into the delightful task of educating the Freshmen. Far be it from us to let these waifs tread the rocky road to learning without our admittedly invaluable assistance. We took a more dignified pleasure in electing one of our class- mates to the post of U. A. treasurer. But here, also were we faced with a problem requiring mature deliberation: The life of every man is a sort of warfare, a long one and full of divers chances. What major? what minor? And sadly we figured and figured. The emotional inflation acquired in our Sophomore year 96 was pricked like a bubble upon our introduction to Philosophy. But we were quickly captivated by the fascination of climbing up into the rarefied atmosphere of abstractions and antinomies. Many of us found the Junior year the most agreeable; college life was rolling along fairly smoothly now. And so we indulged in the innocent joys of exulting in our college rings and dancing at the Junior Prom. The directing of Alumnae Week found us scurrying about busily, wearing executive frowns, and gradually coming to a fuller appreciation of the true significance of responsibility. With great seriousness we entered the ranks of the Seniors, but inwardly a feeling of excitement gripped us at the antici- pation of finally approaching our goal. This thought lent an added color and richness to our every act. We knew that on the last mile there was no going back, no repetition. In a whirl of pupil-teaching, book reports and budget making we have lived these last few months, gathering together the last straggling threads of college activities. We lived these years strenuously; we were part of a small, closely knit community, with an existence peculiarly isolated. We were told that this was a life of prepara- tion for the days to come. But we know now that the more thoroughly we have lived in the present, the more completely are we equipped for the future. Conscious life is being, more than becoming. But that part of our life that proceeds only dimly perceived by us, the forces that weld and fuse us into different persons from one year to the next, the forces that are the real motivators of our thought, that part is rather an un- folding, a slow and secret florescence. Delicate and intangible, this cannot be affected directly by any act of ours. In the prac- ticality of everyday lives, these abstractions will still carry over. We hope that here we have learned to Live In pulses stirred to generosity, In deeds of daily rectitude, In thoughts sublime that pierce the night like stars, And with their mild persistence urge man ' s search To vaster issues. 97 aONC BEFORE SCYLLA 98 AND CHARYBDIS 99 CLASS PROPHECY ANNE SEITZ X es, sir, right this way, sir. The guard who ushered the pro- fessor and the group of girls into the psychopathic ward of the sanitarium had just discovered that the feminine visitors were of the class of 1945 from St. Joseph ' s College. They had come to take the case histories of the class of ' 35. Funny, he thought, how it was always the smart people who went crazy. Here we are, sir. In this first cell are Catherine Allen and Elizabeth Devlin. They went balmy when they ran out of Little Audrey jokes. The tall girl strutting around in the cell next to them is Cecilia Finn. She thinks she ' s a Rear Admiral. Down in this end we have a sound proof cell. Dorothy Easson is rushed there whenever she starts composing lullabies on the musical triangle. When we left her on the loose, Gilda Datri nearly strangled her with a G-string. Bernadette Moroney yodels opera and tries to stop Virginia Conran from tap dancing. Charlotte Dermody sings at the top of her lungs incessantly. Every so often Rita Reynolds hits high C with a bang. That girl in the corner with the hopeless expression is Helen O ' Connor with a nest of robins in her hair. Ruth Kelly, Elvie Trimborn and Rosalie Sullivan are trying to coax Marie Cooke to join their quartette, but she insists on singing a solo. ' Lookie, lookie, lookie, here comes Cookie! ' That ' s Blanche Coffey in the strait jacket. She argues with herself for days and days. Listen to that: ' No, Father, I didn ' t mean that. I meant . . . ' Catherine Cronin is one of our most entertaining cases with her monologues on wool for suits and voidable marriages. She has figured out four ways of slipping off the ball and chain. That poor girl next to her must have had a wretched life. She talks and talks about nothing but thirty dollars a week and six children and no telephone. Helen Der- 100 mody is muttering about fourscore and seven years ago there weren ' t seven articles in the Constitution. Just last night Jane McLoughlin, Margaret Callahan and Sylvia Goerlitz escaped. They must have been on the track team — they outran all of our attendants. We allow Helen Browne to wander around loose gathering case histories by the thousands. She ' s compiling a new T. in T. list. This girl on the soap box is Dorothy Tobin; she ' s an old case — always making announcements while Eliza- beth Eckhoff and Eleanor Ken nedy take pot shots at her with water pistols. Look what happens to French majors — that Gaston and Alphonse over there is Ethel Fitzsimons and Cathleen Cahill. The international club, Agnes Dooley, Rachel Scarpati, Wil- helmina Riepe, Virginia George, Vita Aloisio and Carmel Cav- aliere keep us guessing. We had a guard who understands French, but when they mix Spanish with German! I can ' t show you Dorothy McGuire and Marie Oliver because their psychology courses gave them an inferiority complex, and they hide when- ever we have visitors, but Marion Musante and Ruth Haegele insist on overwhelming everyone with ' Pomp and Circum- stance ' on tissue paper and a comb. In this same row you can hear Catherine May mumbling to herself, T can ' t be Kant, I can ' t, ' while Isabel Tyler and Genevieve Walsh conduct heated debates on free will. See where it got them! Florence Kemp never stops asking for ' Toasted cheese a nd coffee, ' and will eat nothing else. Grace Flannery moons around on pianos crooning about ' that man of mine, ' but he never comes to see her. The most expensive group we have contains Marie Blaber, Agnes Rafferty, Elizabeth Hearne and Margaret Mcllduff. Be careful — watch out for flying glass. They ' re smashing test tubes most of the time. This next cell looks like a library, but those books are only fancy bindings. Mary Wiest, Vivian Bird, Edna Gavin, Anne McGuire and Rita Shevlin are the girls you see hunting for the book that will prove their thesis, which, they tell us, is ' absolutely new and original and revolutionary and contrary to all past history. ' Amelia Caggiano has been getting Napoleonic for quite a while now, and Edna Cronin and Gene- vieve Sheerin use that microscope to search for an inspiration. IOI This next cell presents a most interesting mathematical problem: Isabelle Robertson insists she is x and Mary Walsh repre- sents herself as y, but in this case, neither of them can make x equal to y. That ' s Lydia Ward rushing around clapping her hands in the air. She ' s catching Jersey mosquitoes. Eleanor Ivers is surrounded by seating plans. At the end of every day, she has either girls or chairs left over. Edna Brennan is what we might term a chronic patient. She is all right till someone calls her ' Buster. ' Janet Cardow and Mary McLoughlin get around a good deal. They decorate the walls of their cells with pictures, and we have to keep moving them along to supply them with fresh material. Catherine Wills and Genevieve Kelly can ' t decide whether to cut up Corinne Kast or Elaine Graves, to make one of them into a scrap book for their Social Service Group. The most industrious group in the ward is in this next cell. They rush around typing on invisible machines and dodging invisible trucks and rewriting a twelve volume set of the World ' s Masterpieces. Who? Oh yes, that ' s Kathleen Sheehan — the one with fire in her eye and a red pencil in her hand. She ' s asking Anne Tierney for a rhyme for spinach. Rose Keegan is still look- ing for THE IDEA, as she sits and chews the end of a paint- brush. Helen Farrington is busy with index cards. Don ' t pay any attention to that ' Money for Footprints ' of hers. That scandal blew over and they got the editor out of jail. Betty Zangle has worn down dozens of mallets banging on the table. Catherine Loftus and Helen Schwarz print notices of meet- ings all day and tack them up on that board. They are our most contented inmates. Doris McPartland can ' t seem to get ad- justed. She paces up and down muttering, ' Will I ever get out of this place? ' In the next cell Jeanette Griffin, Mary Passer- etti, Mary O ' Connell and Katherine Doyle dole out their riches and sign blank checks with a great flourish. Genevieve Naugh- ton, Helen Sawyer and Anne Hennessy run up and down their cells all the time shouting to each other, ' How many bells? ' This last cell was once occupied by Anne Seitz. I ' ve heard that she ' s wandering around the country telling fortunes. If the police don ' t nab her, she ought to be back here soon. c L A S S E S Daedalus . . . Praepetibus pciiuis ausus se credere caelo. 103 JUNIOR CLASS rf . . . Relocate animos maestumque timorem mitt ' ite. ' With the current school year drawing steadily to a close, each member of the Junior Class eagerly awaits the coming of her Senior year. Three years are almost completed, three years of college life soon to be a memory. With eagerness and enthusiasm, the class set out last fall to make their Junior year memorable. The officers of the class are: President Helen Schwarz Vice President Regina Meany Secretary Dorothy Maguire Treasurer Helen Dermody Councillor Kathleen Holland U. A. Secretary Rita Favor One of the first things that engaged the attention of the class was preparations for the Junior Promenade, the mos: color- ful social function of the college season. The success of this 104 year ' s prom can be attributed to the splendid work of Chairman Catherine Humann and her committee and the loyal support she received from her classmates. While this was unquestionably the most enjoyable incident of Junior Week, the entire program of the week under the direction of Claire Brennen deserves no less commendation. The memory of those events — the class banquet at Pierre ' s London Terrace, and the two theatre parties to The Great Waltz and Thumbs Up — will not easily be forgotten. A brief survey, however, of prominent activities at Saint Joseph ' s reveals the part played by Juniors in the extra-curricular fields. Foremost among these is the Varsity basketball team which includes Juniors, all outstanding players and veterans of several seasons: Rita Campbell, Margaret Grace, Dorothy Grogan, Catherine Humann, and Rose Marie O ' Reilly. The class team also rose to prominence. Spurred on by the memory of the famous cup won on Field Day when the class of ' 36 was mere Freshmen, the Junior basketball team won the class champion- ship, an almost unheard of feat for upperclassmen. In like man- ner, the other classes also fell before the daring onslaught of the Junior volley ball team. In both the Dramatic Society and the Glee Club, numerous Juniors distinguished themselves in the current productions while Veronica Ging and Vesta Moore respectively were elected as officers in the societies. Another activity which is slowly but surely finding its way into the list of major activities may be credited in some way to the work of the Juniors. This is the Public Speaking Club, the work of Rita Favor, Regina Meany, Virginia Norton, and others. rr Loria also has on its staff two Junior members. The Annual Trust Fund Bridge was under the direction of Margaret Grace, and the success of both Alumnae Day and the Reception to High School Seniors can be attributed to their Junior Chairmen. However, it was not all play and no work for the class. For three years they have persevered and an intellectual curiosity still draws them on. Dorothy Maguire ' 36 105 SOPHOMORE CLASS Portus ab accessu ventorum immotus et in gem Ipse: scd horrificis i txta tonat Aetna minis. 1 hrough the kindness of the Class of Nineteen Thirty-Six, the Freshmen learned that the College woman referred to in the title Saint Joseph ' s College for Women is merely the high school girl who can meet the new situation squarely. The Sophomores went to all the trouble of coming early in the morning to deliver learned lectures and to teach us the Handbook, that they might eradicate our former impression of the College woman. We started the Sophomore year right under able leadership. Our class officers for 1934-35 were: President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Councillor Genevieve Wright Mary Twigg Lillian Keenan Annette Robinson Betty Humann 106 One of our best liked classmates and promising students was Mary Hundley. Her death was a great loss to the class. The class became organized and integrated when we started to conduct our class meetings. After the Religion Committee had made its selection, it was agreed that it could not have made a better choice than Elizabeth Humann and Mary Delaney. We elected Margaret English and Isabelle Andersen to the Attend- ance Committee, while Josephine Hogue became a member of the Point System. We were proud of Katherine Griffin ' s per- formance in Quality Street. As Freshmen our basketball team was highly successful, bowing only to the Varsity. In no time at all we were changing our tassels to the second quarter of our caps. While we were still very much amazed at our sudden debut as an upper class, our Sophomore President, Genevieve Wright, announced that the business on hand was the education of the Freshmen. Although we were just recover- ing from our rise from the state of lowly Freshmen, we hid all this from the Frosh and proceeded to act as if there were not a thing in the world we did not know. We think that Mary De- laney and her committee conducted the hazing very well and almost painlessly. The foremost event of our second year in college was Sophomore Class Day. Jean Aubrey ' s novel ideas on decoration were much admired. The chairman of Class Day, Marjorie McCaffrey is to be complimented for the success of the event. We were much amused and entertained at the play given by several members of the class. Elizabeth O ' Halloran and Elizabeth McMahon distinguished themselves here. From Mass and break- fast in the morning until our party that night, Class Day united the Sophomores. We are very proud that the Varsity found so ma,ny of our classmates essential to its success. Margaret English, Elizabeth Humann, Abigail Dorney, Elizabeth O ' Halloran, Frances Young and Annette Robinson are to receive Varsity awards this year. Sophomore Year has gone more quickly than we might have wished, but we think it has been a successful one because the Sophomores are better friends. Lillian Keenan ' }j 107 FRESHMAN CLASS . . . Ignari hominumque lociunque Erranius, vento hue et vastis fluctibus acti. J_ ong before the thought of college entered our heads, we were taught the Arabic numerals in what we had, up until this time, thought to be correct consecutive order. It was on our first day at college that our calculations were rudely upset, when we endeavored to find our lockers. It was startling and bewildering to find number 65 next to number 91, and a row beginning with 103 having the numbers 1, 2, 3 and 4 down at the other end. Perhaps this was merely a clever device to put Freshmen in the proper frame of mind in order to start the thinking process. And of course once the thinking process was started we were able to elect our class officers: President Vice President Treasurer Secretary Councillor Celeste Hughes Alice Kennedy Frances McLoughlin Betty Carter Norma Straus 108 In these first days, we Freshmen felt as though we were lost in a desert, where the only oasis was a Junior Sister — one who had a long time ago gone through this same empty feeling. After the first week, just when we were finding everyone agreeable and sympathetic, we fell prey to the Sophomores. It was tantalizing to have our lunch hour taken over for classes in handbook lore. It was humiliating to have to conform to the indignities of blouses, skirts and outlandish hair ribbons. This was indeed a let-down for the most pompous and favored high school gradu- ates. When the Sophomore invasion had subsided, an end to hazing being called at the interclass party, we realized that the Sophs weren ' t as bad as we had previously painted them. By the time the Seniors gave their supper party, we were quite enthusiastic about all our compatriots. By now, we were hopefully looking forward to the Christ- mas holidays, wherein we expected to rest up and recover from the onslaughts of our professors (most cruel creatures). The festive spirit gripped us however, and we were greatly impressed bv the Christmastide tableau presented in General Assembly. Blissfully unaware of lessons, we made merry during the Christ- mas vacation. Returning after New Year ' s, we saw to our deep apprehension that finals were looming up. They overtook us and swamped us with a wave of industry such as had not been expe- rienced since the midterms. Needless to say, a general sigh of relief was uttered when this ordeal had passed. But registration day came and was uniquely confusing with trying to get certain cards into certain wire baskets. But again with the ever-helping hand of our Junior Sisters, we finally got straight- ened out. We don ' t like to leave things hanging in mid-air like this, but the remaining part of our Freshman year is clothed in the darkness of the future. We feel though, that our past experience has ably fitted us for coming skirmishes, however great. And we feel too, that our initiation has done a great deal for us. We can say now that we belong. This is our college. Betty Carter ' 3 8 Frances McLoughlin ' 3 8 109 IN THE ELYSIAN FIELDS gji . . : Quique pedum cnrsu valet, et qui i iribus audax, Sen crude fid it pugnam commit fere caestu, Cuncti adsint meritaeque cxspecteiif praemia palmae. A C T I V I T I E S in THE UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION rr . . . Noici mi fades inopinave surgit; Omnia praecepi atqne animo mcciim ante peregi. 1 he Undergraduate Association accomplished many things during the year ' 34— ' 3 5 . September saw a great change in the condition of Fontbonne Hall. The floor was refinished and through the efforts of Rose Marie O ' Reilly, Chairman of the Committee, two new rugs were purchased. In the spring of 1934 the U. A. had selected as its officers: President Vice President Secretary Treasurer Cecilia Finn Elizabeth Devlin Rita Favor Virginia Humphreys The first activity of the U. A. was Parents ' Day. It was quite successful. Indeed, who can forget the grand scarecrow and the haystacks that adorned the gym as a welcome to our mothers and fathers? Helen Browne ' 35 was chairman of the event — and 112 we thank her for her splendid work. The Christmas party was another banner event of the U. A. Florence Kemp ' 35 was chairman. And a secret may now be told: Lydia Ward made an excellent Santa Claus! The Honor System has been changed, and now Student Administration of Examination System is in effect — with no proctor in any examination room. The telephone problem was finally solved in the second semester when the U. A. purchased a telephone booth which has made many a heart happy. Perhaps one of the most outstanding events in the way of a social aid was the creation of the Students ' Cooperative Com- mittee, which is composed of two girls from each class with Betty Zangle, Senior class president, as its adviser. The purpose of the committee is to arouse student spirit for all U. A. affairs and to make the social path a smooth one. The first big thing to be done was the organization of the Brothers Club to meet in conjunction with the Fathers Club. No longer can that old worn-out excuse but I haven ' t an escort be used as a legitimate reason for not attending St. Joseph ' s dances. The Cooperative Committee will take care of that now with several hundred eager young men on its hands waiting for distribution. With the coming of spring came a series of Alumnae activi- ties sponsored by the U. A. Alumnae Day — April 28, was a huge success for old grads and under-grads. We all enjoyed Father Brachen ' s concert on January 17. Helen Meade was chair- man. Vesta Moore has been chosen Dean of Alumnae Week — beginning on Baccalaureate Night — and Rita Morris will be the Registrar. It is hoped that the Alumnae will have a grand time being so carefully guided and directed by such charming school officials. Having remembered those who have left these portals, the U. A. cannot neglect those who will enter. The reception to high school Seniors will be held in May, and Mary Wiest is chairman. No longer will there be a conflict for the Juniors who are graduating because at a meeting the status of graduating Juniors, with all their privileges and obligations, was forever settled. Kit a Favor ' 6 3 % 4  THE RELIGION COMMITTEE Largior hie campos aether et In mine rest it Purpurea, solemque siuini, sua sidera iioriuif. iiLTHOUGH it might seem to some that a Religion Committee is rather superfluous in a Catholic college, where the atmosphere, attitudes and outlook are so completely permeated with the spirit of Catholicity, nevertheless the Religion Committee of Saint Joseph ' s College has definite ends and purposes. The ulti- mate aim of this committee is to give the students the oppor- tunity to make of their faith the vital practical force it should be in their lives. The officers for 1934—35 were: Chairman Edna Brennan Secretary Kathleen Holland Treasurer Betty Humann Besides conducting the various religious exercises in the college, the Religion Committee sponsors such affairs as the Mission Dance, the proceeds of which are donated to the Society 114 for the Propagation of the Faith, and the annual bridge, the purpose of which is to augment the Trust Fund of the college. Among the religious practices conducted by the Religion Committee are the prayers which are said on the gymnasium balcony every morning at 8:45, and the short prayers said in the corridors at the end of each period. On Tuesdays and Thursdays Benediction of the Most Blessed Sacrament is offered in the auditorium at 12:40. The priests on the faculty have given up part of their time in order to hear confessions through- out the week. Mass is celebrated at the college every First Friday at 8 o ' clock. At this Mass, the members of the Glee Club sing the Gregorian Chant, adding immeasurably to the impressiveness of the rite. Besides this, we are privileged to have Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament on First Friday from 12 o ' clock until 6:45, during which time the students maintain an Honor Guard. Then too, the Religion Committee conducts special de- votions appropriate to the holy season of Lent. The Sacrifice of the A4ass is celebrated in the chapel every morning at 8 o ' clock, and Stations of the Cross are said every Monday and Wednesday at 12:35. During the month of October, the Religion Commit- tee endeavors to aid us in turning our thoughts to the contempla- tion of the purity and sanctity of our Blessed Mother. The Rosary and the Litany are recited aloud every day at 12:30. The Evenings with Christ supply the perfect ending for First Friday. These programs, although instituted in the first place for the benefit of the Alumnae, are open to all under- graduates who wish to attend. They consist of two lectures and a sermon, and are terminated by Benediction. These lectures are of great benefit to us, for they aid us to understand and ap- preciate our religion. Topics of the day connected with our religion are discussed frankly and lead us to a knowledge of our position as Catholics in the modern world. Here we are free to ask any relative question for we receive sympathetic advice and answers. Kathleen Holland ' 36 115 m m W jm wm  . W I ■■' is k m ' ' | .All Ur vl LnlLL iL m , II if UtfHill IJ i K II j I ' if ; 1 ll 3 IMm ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Purs in gramineis exercent membra palaestris, Contend nut l ulo et fulva luctantur arena. V Jne of the benefits of physical training is the fact that long and patient practice is required. The Athletic Association of Saint Joseph ' s College was founded to develop healthy bodies for healthy minds and to promote good sportsmanship. Under the leadership of Miss Close, an exceptionally good coach, this organization has advanced far in the last year. 1934— 1935 officers are: President Dorothy Tobin Secretary Catherine Humann Treasurer Lily Cahill Cheer Leaders Harriet Fay and Elaine Graves The basketball activities were under the management of Rose Marie O ' Reilly. After the games refreshments were served and an enjoyable time was passed. Margaret Callahan, as Cap- tain of Basketball, did much in fo stering a successful season. 116 This year a great deal of new equipment was added to the gymnasium. A man is only as great as his tool although he must be able to make good use of it. Four new baskets, stands for the basketball nets, shuffleboard equipment, and ping-pong tables were added. The students have used these to good ad- vantage, and many spend their free hours in playing in the gymnasium. Interesting tournaments in tennis, quoits, shuffle- board, and ping-pong were introduced. These tournaments lend a spirit of friendly competition that is very inspiring. The Inter-class games this year were popular and amusing. The Juniors won in volley ball and in basketball. (This was the first time in years that the Freshmen had been beaten). The Freshmen won baseball and the Sophomores won deck tennis. The Athletic Association also embraces other activities in order to provide for varying tastes and aptitudes. Sylvia Goerlitz is Chairman of Volley Ball; Margaret Callahan is manager of hockey-tennis; Elizabeth Eckhoff is manager of rifle. Although attendance at rifle is limited, those who are members are greatly interested. Every year the entire college takes some part in Field Day either as participants or spectators. This year Dorothy Grogan is Chairman, and the following events will take place: basket- ball throw, running broad jump, standing broad jump, and high jump. The physical training classes, as is customary, will give demonstrations, their particular field of specialty. This year Alumnae Play Night was instituted to provide the graduates with an opportunity to revisit the scenes of past triumphs. With Mary McLoughlin as Chairman, the Alumnae enjoyed exercises and games. Attendance was not very large, but those who were able to come thoroughly enjoyed themselves. Athletics comes from the Greek verb meaning to contend for a prize. And we still carry over the idea of the ancient Greeks in that each contestant, striving his best, seeks to achieve the desired goal. The goal in this particular case is one of a feel- ing of satisfaction derived from time well spent in physical activity and in fair dealing with our fellows. Dorothy Tobin ' 35 Ir 7 DRAMATIC SOCIETY Pars pedibus plandunt choreas et carmina dicunt. 1 he aim of all the extra-curricular activities of Saint Joseph ' s College is the socialization of the student body. The Dramatic Society desires to accomplish this aim by encouraging self- expression in promoting a high standard of college dramatics in acting and producing and by giving experience in the dramatic arts. The Society hopes also, to instill in its members a love of fine drama because drama is closely related with human nature and human nature is man ' s most interesting study. The 1934-193 5 officers are: President Catherine Allen Vice President Helen Collins Secretary Veronica Ging Treasurer Mary Monahan Since dramatic art is dexterity acquired by experience, study, and observation in performing certain dramatic actions, these episodes must be presented by characters in surroundings 118 that will not put them beyond the possibilities of reality. These characters must be portrayed by living individuals meeting as far as possible the author ' s concept of the original fictitious char- acters. For this reason the Dramatic Club has a play reading and acting group. In this group the girls read and select plays which have potentialities for their group. They prepare the plays for their society or for the various social events at the college. Conscious of the importance of the physical theatre and its exigencies, the society has formed a committee to care for scenery, illumination, and stage management. This group makes the scenery which is used in the plays, studies the importance of variously colored lights as used on the scenery, the use of special lights to bring out the theme or spirit of the play, and the effect of the lighting on the make-up of the characters. The choice of furniture and other decorations is also the work of this committee. Then there is another group, artistically important in the production of a costume play. This is the Costumers group, a committee which studies period gowns, fits and drafts patterns and makes the suits, dresses, cloaks and bonnets required in the play, and also cares for personal accessories such as parasols, wigs, fans. This brings us to the Puppeteers, a group which gives a dramatic production of its own. In this group the girls make entire puppets. It might be interesting to investigate their method. They first model the faces out of clay and then cover them with a papier-mache and plaster of paris mixture. After this has hardened the clay is removed and the result is a fine little head and face. When the annual production of the Dramatic Society is given all the groups join forces; two more committees are then formed to manage tickets and advertising. This year, the Dra- matic Society presented The Torchbearers, by George Kelly, on December fourteenth, under the direction of Lyman Brown. For next year, the Dramatic Club is contemplating a com- petition among the Catholic Colleges in the greater New York area, for the writing and presentation of one-act plays. Veronica Ging ' jj 119 GLEE CLUB Nee non Threicius onga cum veste sacerdos Obloquitur numeris septem discrimina vocum. 1 he Glee Club started its fifteenth season with great en- thusiasm and hopes for a successful season. Mr. Carl Schlegel was engaged as director of the Glee Club. He is director of Saint Patrick ' s Cathedral choir. Throughout the fall the Glee Club studied several classical selections under the competent direction of Mr. Schlegel. At the request of the sisters Mr. Schlegel selected a choir and taught them a Gregorian chant which the choir sang at mass on First Fridays. The officers of the club were elected as follows: President Secretary Librarian Helen O ' Connor Vesta Moore Margery McCaffery In November the Glee Club voted to present its annual production, an original musical comedy by Kathleen Sheehan, who although not a member of the Glee Club kindly offered 120 her services and wrote a delightful comedy of life in a coeduca- tional college, entitled While Horner Nods. The musical numbers for the show were arranged and composed by Virginia Conran, Ruth Kelly, Kathleen Sheehan, Helen O ' Connor and Elvie Trimborn. The dances were arranged by Virginia Conran. Rehearsals continued as rehearsals do and the show was presented the evenings of February eighth and ninth. While Homer Nods was a tremendous financial success. The orchestra of Lou Lang provided music after the show for dancing. The Glee Club was invited to present the show in Father Fitzgibbon ' s parish. After the show the cast was entertained at supper. When the regular meetings of the Glee Club were resumed in the second semester, work was begun on a classical and Latin program. The club also studied a program which is to be pre- sented at the Father ' s Club meeting May Fifth. The program contains such popular selections as Luxembourg Garden, Trees, Big Broun Bear, Morning, and our Alma Mater. Piano solos will be given by Geraldine McNevin and Dorothy Easson. (As the book goes to press, the editors wish the Glee Club every success in this venture). The Glee Club this season did much to foster the social atmosphere of Saint Joseph ' s and to produce greater understand- ing and mutual good feeling among its members. The members developed and cultivated a genuine interest in music and a love of the aesthetic under the able coaching of Mr. Schlegel. Many girls left the Glee Club to join other activities with the result that those remaining in the club were those who loved music greatly and were striving to make the most of their opportunity to study it and gain a more intimate acquaintance with the masters and their compositions. Two part selections were in- augurated with great success. They proved to be more effective and easier for the majority. And so the Glee Club of Saint Joseph ' s College draws to the close of another season. Its mem- bers are filled with regret at its close but also with a feeling of appreciation for having tasted the joys of musical study. The Glee Club was born in that ideal of Plato which states that music brings harmony to the soul and is the soul ' s reverberations. Vesta Moore ' 36 121 SOCIAL SERVICE rf Non ignari malt miseris succurrere disco. 1 he Social Service Club is interested, as its name implies, in doing service for society, that is, that part of society which is not fortunate enough to get along by itself, often through no fault of its own. It needs help. That is where we come in. We are not fitted nor have we the time to do any of the big things that the regular social worker does, but we are training to be social workers. The officers are: President Vice-President Secretary -Treasurer Catherine Wills Julia Dorsey Margaret Main Social work is not limited to any one field; rather, it em- braces many. In adding to our activities this year, membership increased from three percent to twenty-five percent of the student body. We now look over what has been a most success- ful year. Last year our society consisted of a very small group of which all the members taught catechism and did sewing. On 122 returning to school in the fall we added hospital work, besides increasing the times and places where catechism could be taught. At monthly meetings we sewed sets of babies ' clothes. Having been supplied with large packages of envelopes bearing cancelled stamps, we sorted and cut these for the Jesuit missions. Around Christmas time we made scrapbooks for children in hospitals, collected toys from the girls for the poor for Christmas distribu- tion and dressed with the aid of the student body two dozen dolls for the poor. At the beginning of the spring term we began something new. We started inside work. The girls meet in school one hour a week and do such work as sewing baby clothes and mak- ing scrapbooks. This work has been very successful under the secretaries of the four groups which meet each week — Ruth Kelly, Elaine Graves, Virginia Norton and Lillian Watts. Since many of the girls were interested, we also began orphanage work. This work consists of acting as big sisters to fourth and fifth grade children of the Mercy Orphanage. In September we were affiliated with Saint Mary ' s Hospital Clinic. The girls have proved themselves capable in many fields here, and find the work most interesting. The staff at the Clinic has often claimed that our girls are invaluable to them; and we are grateful to Saint Mary ' s for allowing us to work for them at our own time. At the Clinic the girls do typing, filing, checking up on patients ' attendance, visiting patients in the wards, tak- ing case histories and interviewing patients. Beginning in May we shall be busy throughout the summer investigating and send- ing children away to camps. The last addition to our activities was our connection with Mercy Orphanage. A large number of girls became active in this line. They visit the children at the Orphanage, write to them, take them out to see places, to go shopping and often bring them to their own homes in order to relieve their loneliness. This work is going along splendidly under the capable direction of our Vice-President. We feel that much has been accomplished, but only through the kind cooperation of the entire student body. Catherine Wills 6 123 LOR I A rr Niuic animis opus, Aenea, nunc pectore firmo. 1 T is a happy task to write a history which records a progress. There is something definitely satisfying and stimulating in reach- ing a new level of achievement that will have to be lived up to in the future. Such a level of achievement did Loria reach during the past year. The 1934— 1935 Loria staff consisted of: Editor-in-Chief: Kathleen Sheehan Literary Staff Art Staff Dorothy V. Duffy J anet Cardow T , Mary McLoughlin Rose Keegan _ . „ , „. Business Staff Mary Lavin Edna Mennan Anne Tierney Elizabeth Devlin Elizabeth Zangle Margaret Kennedy In the fall the first issue of the new season appeared, be- decked in a cover the color of brown autumn leaves. For the first time illustrations were used throughout the magazine which 124 created a particularly pleasing and decorative effect. The whole spirit of the richness and abundance of nature in the glowing autumn season was beautifully portrayed in the frontispiece, From This Clay, drawn by Virginia Holland. Some of the articles were wistfully reminiscent of a happy summer that had fled and others, notably the Grape Gatherers had about them all the smack and tang that is characteristic of this part of the year. We also went very literary and introduced book reviews as an added supplement. The approach of winter brought with it this time some- thing more than snow and Santa Claus. In December the Christmas issue appeared, truly an epoch making edition. The illustrations this time were even more abundant, and Mary Mc- Loughlin ' s frontispiece, a silver and black winter ' s night, was very effective. However, it is t he consensus of opinion that this issue bases its chief claim to immortality on the fact that it in- troduced us to Lulu, luscious Lulu, with the mouth of a pome- granate and the eyes of Concord grapes. Her heart-rending story and the affecting illustrations which accompanied it per- formed a great service in lifting the morale of the college women after mid-terms. We are also proud of this issue because it marked the first appearance of our play review section. Every press agent in town was besieged by two of the more indomitable members of the staff who waved an official looking document written by the editor before each of them. Needless to say they came back glowing with the success of the chase and as a result our play review section bids fair to becoming a permanent and entertaining fixture. With the coming of spring the Easter issue appeared, and the quiet dignity of its appearance belied the excitement with which it was hurried to press. Its advent marks the completion of our cycle. There is an old superstition in the world of journal- ism that once you have had printer ' s ink on your fingers you can never get it off. The graduating members of the staff will testify to its truthfulness. However, theirs is the satisfaction of leaving a job well done. Mary Lai in ' 36 12? ON BEING A SENIOR ANNE SEITZ l r first I was very much disappointed and even chagrined to discover that I had not that superior attitude and beautiful poise which I supposed to be our birthright. Life went on as before; the magic word Senior did not allow me to talk as loudly as I wished in the library, nor did it pass me in all my quizzes. After adjusting myself to these petty difficulties, I decided to investigate the sentiments of my classmates. Most of them felt that June could not come quickly enough, but by introspection I discovered suddenly that I could not agree with them. I did not want June to come. I was afraid of what life held for me. I lacked the courageous optimism and marvelous fearlessness of one who has discovered his place in the scheme of things, one happy and secure in his work. And I knew that these coming years were troubled with threats of war, strange new philoso- phies that would puzzle me and perhaps hurt my own ideals that have been nurtured in calm, in quiet study. How should I find again the happiness I knew in living with people with whom I grew and shared ideals, when I too leave my college to take my place in a world where man wars against man to promulgate his individual philosophy? I only hope that the friendships that have made these happy times complete will continue forever. Here at college I found most of my real friends. The last few months of college flew swiftly and I wanted the time to drag so that I could enjoy to the utmost the finishing months of the happiest years of my life. I should have been looking forward to life but I was not. Tomorrow I shall be looking back at June J935- 126 Hoc opus, hie labor est. Panci, quos acquits amaiit Juppiter, ant ardens evexit ad acthera virtus, Dis geniti potuere. L I T E R A R y S E C T I O N 127 THE DUCKS WERE NEARER ANNE TIERNEY J ohn came to look at the swans, but they were on the other side of the lake. The ducks were nearer; and the ducks were always more interesting. The stuffed duck they had once given him was white with a yellow bill, but these were brown. Their olive green bills looked like painted wood. Some of them had brilliant iridescent green and purple on the back of their necks, others were a plain speckled brown. But what fascinated him most was the secret, hidden spot of color under their wings. As the first duck swam off, it lifted the tips of its wings a little bit, revealing a swift glimpse of warm violet blue. It was gone in a flash, but John gazed transfixed at the miracle. When more ducks swam around looking for food, he prayed fervently that they would lift their wings just for a minute; but few of them did. For a long time he stood there, glowing with an incredibly physical pleasure. The magic of the revelation faded slowly, leav- ing an absorbed interest in the ducks. He now shared their sensations. His fingers and toes tingled as he watched the ducks glide smoothly, motionless in every part save the orange feet which were busily paddling in the rear. They looked like little steamboats. The image was shattered when one duck suddenly rose on its feet in the water and flapped its wings wildly. There did not seem to be any sense to that unless it wanted to fly. Some other ducks were digging industriously in the muddy bottom of the lake. Most of them bent down, but a few stood perpendicularly, with their heads against the mud and their feet sticking straight up. The bottoms of these ducks were perfectly round and smooth and solid, as if they were stuffed. Turkeys looked like that. But turkeys could not dive. John fell into a profound state of reflection on ducks and turkeys. Things that lived on 128 land were almost chained. It was only in the water that you could be really and completely free. ' Even he had found that true. In the summer when he went swimming he could relax every inch of his body, lie flat on his back, let his fingers trail and his legs sag, and the water held him securely on its surface. He could dash headlong into the waves without hurting him- self; on land his high spirits brought nothing but bruised knees and painful lumps on his head. John wondered if he really wanted to be a creature in the ocean. He could never talk there, and he loved to talk. Sometimes his mother did not understand what he was talking about, but she always patted his head and said, Of course, dear. He reme mbered one time when he was lying on his back looking up at the ceiling. The ceiling looked like a box cover but it was too small for the top of the room. Once when he was very sick he was too tired to look at the picture books they brought him, so he had to stare at the ceiling all day. He was worried that it might fall all the way down like a collapsable tin drinking cup. As he looked it came lower and lower, but it never slide all the way down. And often he loved to bury his face in the damp morning grass. A tiny blade of grass that he could step on was as high as a house when it was touch- ing his face. When he told his mother she smiled. It was the same smile he saw on her face when he told her about the lake. The lake was always surrounded by shores. He asked her why it had never burst through the park and escaped to the sea. But the lake was not free. It lapped the shores as resignedly as a dog watching a high fence with watery melancholy eyes. His father knew, though. Sometimes when John said something half ob- scure even to himself, his father would look at him quickly and narrow his eyes in the way John liked him best. A man and a girl passed, radiant and young. The man spoke, half laughing. The words dropped clear and sharp into John ' s thoughts; he turned quickly from the ducks, which were now chasing each other around in circles. His father would know what those words meant: I think if I leave you alone, you ' ll finally tell me all the things I want to tell you. 129 ON HEARING KIRSTEN FLAGSTED _) sound forever fathomless and dark, O rise and fall of life how high you lined My soul ' s acropolis. You struck the spark That flamed from primal chaos in my mind; And mighty winds went rushing with a roar Through ancient forests, while behind my eyes Myriad stars were bursting on a shore Where seas eternal meet eternal skies. Foredoomed Isolde, in a deathless death You live immortal music. Now your love Is made triumphant. In this pulsing breath Of sound, through ages you forever move With Helen and with those of Dido ' s race Mounting defiant and proud through measureless space. Kathleen She chart 130 MASTER IMPRESSIONISTS ANNE TIERNEY In 1874, the future impressionists Pissaro, Renoir, Sisley, Manet, Degas and Cezanne exhibited at Nadar ' s, in a joint stock association of painters, sculptors and engravers. Claude Monet exhibited several pictures, among which was one entitled Sun- rise, an Impression. This brought down all the ridicule and wrath of the critics and the public. Every one of the exhibitors was thereafter nicknamed Impressionist, and the epithet has stuck. The Impressionists reacted against the dry, meaning- less adherence to classical methods and subjects and went to the other extreme, the snapshot view of the world. Degas invented the phrase which gives the essence of Impressionism: a view of nature through a peep-hole. This style was very much influenced by both photography and the growing science of optics. They laid stress on the innocence of the eye — the eye that registers nature impartially like the lens of a camera, and is not hampered by the action of critical and inquiring mind. A knowledge of the science of optics gave them the novel idea that the eye plays a great part in the quality of the color viewed. This is especially true of the Pointillists, the greatest of whom was Seurat. He selected subjects which he knew intimately, plebeian life, in order to preserve the essentially French characteristics, but lost all vitality and rhythm and accent by his technique. There is not a line or a curve in his paintings. Every mark on the canvas is a dot or an assemblage of dots. The most he can convey in this way is light; his figures are eternally and flawlessly frozen in space. Claude Monet was one of the first to stake all on the attempt to paint light. His originality lay in the fact that he chose to express air, light, the thrill and motion of change, the endless transformations of atomic life. If he had discussed his philosophy it would most probably have been atomistic. Monet 131 was haunted all his life by a passion for the visible world of nature, air, water, flowers and sky. In the expression of this theme he sought deeper meanings, cultivated the inward vision. His wealth of feeling and thought was patiently accumulated by intelligent and acute observation, and given form and significance by meditation. In his paintings of Cathedrals, his in- tention was to display color changes of the atmosphere wrought by the procession of hours on the local color of the stone; to paint, not the fagade of a cathedral, but the layers of air be- tween it and the observer, to show that nothing has a fixed color, but that everything is dependent on the all-enveloping atmosphere. Inevitably the idea of a procession of hours brings to mind the corresponding idea of a sonnet sequence — for Monet can certainly be called poetic. The objective element, the cathedral, is the constant factor of this poem in color, the form that binds the whole together. As in a sonnet sequence, each picture contains a complete and isolated aspect of the subject, yet is related to the rest in matter and form. Adoring nature, he fashioned the means that seemed best suited to painting it. In love with the pulsing solitude of the tremulous life about him, a rapt pantheist, all his work is a splendid pantheistic poem. Like Monet, Renoir found his greatest delight in the created world, but unlike him, sought there no deeper meanings, no pro- found significance, no solution to life ' s perplexities. Discovering the school of Watteau and Boucher, he developed a love of feminine beauty and the brilliant qualities of human flesh. Renoir always lived on the most excellent terms with life, and communicated this happiness in living by his art. His bathers stand as the highest symbols of his delight in living, his satisfac- tion in God ' s handiwork. His complete acceptance of nature and single desire to render the sensuous aspects of the world resulted in the expression of innocent animalism. We find in him no trace of preoccupation with the tragedy of man, no deep philoso- phy, no thought of destiny. He is absolutely unconcerned with sin and remorse, passions or morality. The Bathers are not individuals; he does not idealize any woman, but paints symbols, images of beautiful woman in general. Renoir is not a realist; he selects from reality what he wants of subject and materials. 132 The serenity of these graceful figures , the atmospheric quality, the curious phosphorescence of the skin tones, creating a pleas- ant and cool effect, drew from Royal Cortissoz this statement: He is preeminently the painter of the joie de vivre, the sole inspired singer of proud hosannas of the flesh that, by the same token, are never fleshly. He takes the glory of the senses and makes it the guiding principle of his art, mirrors the splendour of life in the beauty of light and air and colour. Cezanne must be mentioned as the man who set the world of art on fire by his painstaking efforts to forge the tools of his craft, to establish satisfactory methods adapted to the needs of the art of that time. His one idea was to make out of Im- pressionism something as solid and durable as the paintings of the museums, and, though awkward and imperfect in his work, and painfully lacking in quickness and alertness of intellect, he arrived at a method that influences, to some extent, even present day painters. From his experiments with geometrical formation and cubic structure arose all this talk about planes and cones and cubes, abstract painting in general, which he decidedly did not anticipate. His ideal was to represent things as the y are by injecting into them his own experiences and perceptions. Cezanne grew more and more inclined to shrink from actual contact with life, and poured all his energy and aspirations into the painting of still life. He is to be admired for the courage with which he launched forth into the monumental task of starting a counter reformation in art. Vincent van Gogh suffered from the pathetic and tragic affliction of being fanatically single minded in all he did, all his life. The unkindest blow of fortune was that this lover of humanity, this fisher of men, possessed an appearance so grotesque and ugly that it repelled all mankind. His brother Theo was the only human being who could love and care for him, despite this barrier. Up and down the paths and byways of life, Vincent searched for the answer to his eternal and un- answerable query, To what end can I be put? What purpose can I serve? Two unhappy love affairs convinced him that love would not solve his problem, and he started to study theology. After fighting for his life for a year and a half in a tumultuous 133 sea of dogmas, syllogisms, subtleties, he nearly lost his mind, and turned to missionary work among the miners in the Borinage. Tormented by the misery and suffering of those people, he turned to art, feeling that in that was the bond of universal love uniting all mankind. At the age of twenty-seven, completely ignorant of the simplest principles of painting and drawing, Vincent put forth heart-breaking exertions in the effort to learn method. He literally burst into paint. It is amaz- ing that, in spite of his tremendous handicaps, he succeeded in accomplishing work of such lucidity. Out of Impressionism he forged a technique suited to his ends by setting in motion all the static procedure of the early Impressionists. His first char- acteristic picture was the Potato Eaters, a group of peasants at their evening meal. It smelled, as he said himself, of dirty potatoes. This marked the beginning of his remarkable style, which was to develop into a riot of brilliant, vibrating color, paint laid on the canvas in thick gobs so that it stands out roughly from the surface in irregular streaks, writhing and bulging trees, turgid, volcanic earth. The simplest things in life, old shoes, sunflowers, a peasant bending over his work, aroused in him a fanatical ecstasy. By his electrical, tempestuous force, he achieved a unity of form that conveyed with the utmost clarity the psychological state induced in him by his contact with nature. He passed from art for the sake of mankind to art for the sole purpose of expressing himself. In his last note to his brother, he expressed in simple words the leitmotif of his life- long struggle: I have risked my life for my works; for it I have lost my reason. To perfect his technique, Cezanne labored with rational and static tools; but with dynamic and instinctive force Van Gogh communicated part of the intensity of his soul to the world. Impressionism, whatever its shortcomings, was successful in breaking up the ice bound river of classic art. At first tur- bulent, even destructive, it swept away all meaningless tradi- tions and fetiches. Having found itself, however, it carried into the modern world an art that draws its inspiration from the ideas and ideals of contemporary life. 134 ON POETRY AND REPEAL MARGHERITA SYLVESTER JVLr. A. E. Housman, poet upon occasion, has given us this unpretentious recipe of his own poetry: Having drunk a pint of beer at luncheon — beer is a sedative to the brain and my own afternoons are the least intellectual portion of my life — I would go for a walk of two or three hours. As I went along, thinking of nothing in particular, only looking at things around me and following the progress of the seasons, there would flow into my mind with sudden and unaccountable emotion, sometimes a line or two of verse, sometimes a whole stanza at once, accompanied, not preceded, by a vague notion of the poem they were destined to form part of. — But sometimes the poem had to be taken in hand and completed by the brain, which was apt to be a matter of trouble and anxiety. The relation between poetry and beer is not, we suppose, an inevitable one. Yet (without wishing a series of mere coinci- dences to bear the burden of a proof) we think that reinforced as the idea is by the urgent, if somewhat insidious, suggestions of the Rubaiyat by the fact that Chaucer was given a pension of wine and by numerous other historic implications, les liqueurs do present a condition under which poetry can and does occur. And it is, therefore, not too extravagant to seek a clue to what is amiss with modern American poetry in the co- incidence of the era of Prohibition with the era of what has been called the New Poetry made and reaching its peak between 1914 and 1930. We purposely use the word made in reference to the New Poetry, instead of the proper form of occur or create, because we think the difference between the words explains a real and fundamental difference between American analytic poetry whose greatest fault lies in its being too much controlled 135 by the brain and too little by the heart, and the older, conven- tional poetry which could afford to be so careless of the intel- lectual niceties. In finding fault with the overdone rationality of the New Poetry we have in mind, of course, this idea of what poetry is fundamentally: to transfuse emotion — not to trans- mit thought but to set up in the reader ' s sense a vibration cor- responding to what was felt by the writer — is the peculiar function of poetry. Poetry is not a thing said but a way of saying it. Poetry indeed seems to be more physical than in- tellectual. Judged by this standard the makers of the New Poetry have departed at times so far from the ways of their art that only in a very loose sense can they be called poets at all. We have in mind particularly such exponents of the New Poetry as Carl Sandburg, Edgar Lee Masters, Ezra Pound, Hart Crane, with their scientific and critical attitude toward life and a spectacular sanity in their poetry. In the Spoon River Anthology, a master- piece of its kind, we nevertheless have the coldly dissecting atti- tude of the clinical physician. It is a notebook of mental pathology. We simply cannot imagine these men ever having entertained the preliminary poetic carelessness of A. E. Hous- man; possibly because the particular sine qua non of Housman poetry was legally unavailable to the writers of the New Poetry. At any rate there is an inescapable self-consciousness about the analytic poets which is a dangerous thing because it tends to destroy spontaneity and lyricism. When the new poets do be- come spontaneous their poetic effects rise as gracefully and as pleasingly as the smoke from a Pittsburgh steel factory. Con- sider: Lay me on an anvil, God Beat me and hammer me into a crow bar. All this is not meant to deny a real greatness about the New Poetry. For there is a greatness about the best of it, and even a perfection of a kind which always arises when the judg- ment of a talented artist is exactly fulfilled by his work. And when the analytic poet has genius to stimulate, as Carl Sand- burg occasionally has, he can do so all the more powerfully 136 because of the intensity and vigor of his new medium. At its worst the New Poetry has produced such things as William Carlos William ' s verse, complete in four lines, about a red wheelbarrow and white chickens. At its best it has known such a poet as Archibald Macleish who can, when he wants to, suc- cessfully resist the super-intellectuality of the new school to write: And here face down beneath the sun And here upon earth ' s noonward height To feel the always coming on The always rising of the night — To feel creep up the curving east The earthy chill of dusk and slow Upon those underlands the vast And ever climbing shadow grow. We are told, incidentally, that the poem from which this is taken was written in the South of France, that vicinity of vine- yards and hopvines. A more steady example of the new school of poetry than either of these might be Vachel Lindsay who was never so suc- cessfully described as when one critic said of him that as often as Lindsay began to soar on wings of an eagle, he would descend at the first pulpit to preach. Without wishing to insist needlessly on any cause — effect relationship between Prohibition and the era of the New Poetry, we would point out how Vachel Lindsay could usually be found on the roster of some local contingent of the Anti-Saloon League. We should hesitate (at least) to reduce the production of poetry to a formula, even if we could be sure that the formula promised to work: what might be the alexin for the literary intellectuals might, on the other hand, beget a group of literary dregs. Yet since the whole theme resists the direct experimenta- tion necessary to establish a formula, we may feel fairly secure from this danger. We can still interpret significantly the fact that Edna St. Vincent Millay, discussed and quoted, until she has become that rarity, a living literary cliche, has waited until after Repeal to give us what is possibly one of the best collec- tions of modern verse, called Wine From These Grapes. 137 THE WEALTH OF THE INDIES Afternoons with E. S. K. KATHLEEN SHEEHAN Wind and candle flame and sea Ever these were dear to me . . . A tall pale girl stood among us and her voice came quietly and vibrantly from out the stillness of the room. When she stopped speaking a blunt boy of peasant features stumbled to his feet and awkwardly waved his arms in an endeavor to convey the turmoil within him to us who listened. In rasping staccato tones he described the spiral plunge of an airplane in its inevitable return to earth. We saw the earth a black garment, its lakes a silver ribbon about it. And then as if in a footnote he told us how his poetry had lacked rhythm until he began to drive an airplane; then each poem took on the individual beat of the motor of the plane in which he rode. Did we believe everything? Well, perhaps not. But we were young, we were poets, and we loved fancy. And nowhere was fancy bred so tenderly as in the quietude of this room. Whenever we entered here, we left behind the chill and noise of New York streets for the warmth of a friendly place. From its one low wide window we looked far across the silver Hudson toward the new Washington Bridge rising like a dream from either shore. Within the apartment were gathered treasures from many corners of the world. Beside the window was a brown mahogany settee cushioned in rich gold brocade. Over it hung the Jungfrau piercing its white loveliness into eternal blue. The walls were flanked by tall, deep-set bookcases containing uniformly bound volumes, an endless delight to one who loved the smell and feel of fine leather. Of treasures such as these Prospero said, . . . volumes I prize above my duke- dom. Here, Voltaire, leaned toward Shakespeare; Plato, Vergil, Dante and Darwin were enthroned majestically, attesting for all time that beauty is truth, truth beauty. A small side table 138 held an exquisite lamp, the base fashioned from a white jade statue of Buddha. Its light rippled across the room in a little pool, the edges lapping softly into the shadowy corners. On the floor was a worn Persian rug telling the legend of Omar the tentmaker, and the lamp brought out feeble lights in its fading surface. Here, on a little island in the midst of the tempestuous sea of our raving, we paused and found quiet inspiration. Our hostess was a small woman with greyed hair; her young blue eyes mocked her obvious claim to years. In the grand English fashion she served quietly and saw that everyone had a full share of tea and buttered Scotch scones. A brilliant conversationalist, she skipped from a discussion of the latest editorial in the morn- ing Times to a consideration of the aesthetic value of Picasso ' s abstractions. She told us of her travels, of the ethereal beauty of the spires of Milan, the sense of infinity in the ruins of Athens, and the matchless blue of the Mediterranean smiling under an Italian sky. She loved the old world, all of it, but above all she loved that little portion of it called Stratford-on-Avon. There was the essence of the English countryside, low cottages encased by gardens of mignonette and honeysuckle. England ' s majestic bard was imbued with its quiet dignity for amidst this natural beauty, he conceived and wove his ageless poems of human emotion. Our guide was the dying splendour of the old world deftly suffused with the vitalizing spirit of the new. Possessing a pro- found, sincere appreciation of all true beauty, she was the flame at which we lighted torches of wonder to explore her world. What was nurtured by her gentle ministrations can never die. We shall always count as golden those hours spent with her. And whenever I think of quiet dignity and of friendship that like love is warm, I seem to hear from the depths of the brown settee, My friends, if you would take from the Indies the wealth of the Indies, you must bring to the Indies the wealth of the Indies. 139 MASTER OF THE JOYOUS CRAFT ROSE KEEGAN Oplendid living, good fortune, adventure were the aims in life and the themes in song of this langue (VOc poet, Peire Vidal. He was the ideal lover, adventurer, singer and song maker and even in his own day was recognized as the greatest of all the troubadours. His fine lyrical gifts, his magnificent singing voice, his grace, his courtliness, made him known in every city and court from Toulouse to Cyprus. His clever assurance, his poise, and noble independence educated the Italian nobility to a keen appreciation of artistic talent and intellectual personality. He was born, humbly enough, the son of a furrier at Toulouse in 1165. He was educated in law at Montpeslier, but because he spent more time composing and singing love songs to the village wenches than studying, in 1185 his father saw fit to drive him from his home. With little difficulty he found his way to the Castle Bagarde, where, for the sake of his gifts he was allowed to re- main for two years, receiving training in the finer forms of gallantry and in the rudiments of jousting. At the end of this time Peire Vidal distinguished himself in a poetical contest and earned fame throughout all Provence. The lady of Bagarde, wife of Vidal ' s patron, the Good Count Raimon, held a Court of Love. To this court, troubadours, jongleurs, and their aud tarts, came from the sur- rounding countryside to plead or argue their cases and have judgment passed by the court. Some of the greatest minstrels of the time participated. Such singers as Gaucelm Faidit, Folquet of Marseilles, later Bishop Fulk of Toulouse, the Monk of Montauban and many more came armed with their lyres, harpes, mandores, psalteries, tabors and viols. Peire Vidal had never before been in the company of such artists. In the middle 140 of a song aimed at a lovely lady by a jongleur, Peyrols, Vidal broke in challenging the singer to a tenson, a debate or duel in song. This was probably the most difficult form of singing, for it was necessary that each contestant maintain certain eccen- tricities of metre, rhythm, and rhyme. A fragment of the argu- ment follows: Peire Vidal: She gave, I doubt not, plenty — her presence, Her beauty, and radiant graciousness! Peyrols: Those are cheaply had, says my master, And need not be purchased so dearly! Peire Vidal: Then I swear, on my faith as a lover, Your troubadour loves like a trader Who measures his cloth on a counter. Which clever turn of a phrase made Peire Vidal the victor in the judgment of the court. While the court was yet in session, however, the newly recognized troubadour left Toulouse. It is not easy to guess his reasons for so doing but whatever they were he arrived later at Cabaretz, accompanied by an audiart, Aimeric de Peguilha. Here in the Court of Countess Louve de Penaultier he heard for the first time of Adelaise des Baux, whose honour he had un- knowingly defended so artfully in his tenson with Peyrols. Eager to see his Lady he set out for Les Baux and arrived there feverishly chattering of his vision of Venus and declaring himself to be the Emperor Vidal. This is the first real evidence of the madness which was to touch him hectically throughout his life until at last it possessed him utterly. Adelaise must have fulfilled his expectations with her beauty and graciousness for he became her slave of love until her death. His name for her in his songs is Na Vierna, and of her he says: 141 By her favor I confess Openly my secret mission Which I know is nothing less Than perpetual submission To her will; A short time later he inherited, from his father, a manor at Belgueil. Another of his mad seizures having come upon him, he devised a shield bearing a sable wolf rampant. With this and clad in the skin of a black wolf he set out, as Monsenher Loba of Belgueil, to make love to the Countess Loba de Penaultier. To his crazed mind there was something appropriate in the wooing of Lady Wolf by Sir Wolf. On the way he was attacked by a pack of hounds and arrived at his lady ' s home wounded and bleeding in the furry robe. This adventure seems somehow to have dampened his ardor, for though the lady Loba was ap- parently gracious and yielding, the songs which Vidal wrote at this period are empty and lacking in feeling. It is connotative of his change of heart, also, that he was knighted by the Good Count Raimon, some time later, his arms were azure, two viols saltire-wise, the dexter over the sinister, between four saltires argent. No where in his armorial bearings was there a hint of a wolf. Then, too, he does not seem to have been dismayed at leaving Cabaretz when summoned by King Richard, called the Lion. On leaving he wrote a sirvente to the Countess: I must go, my lady; To God, the Creator, I entrust your fair body. He accompanied King Richard on his Crusade against Salah- ed-Din al Malec an-Nasr Abu ' l Modaffer Yussuf. What actual fighting he did is not very definite, but he composed several Crusade songs. The following one, written at Sicily must have fired the hearts of many men: Only a fool will seek to hoard His years, and not die gloriously for the Lord! But the hardships of the Crusade were not without their effects upon the troubadour. He became more and more insane, imagin- ing himself a doughty warrior whom the Saracens feared, mightily. He sang: 142 My enemies tremble at my name, Like the quail before the hawk At Constantinople, or New Rome, he met a young Greek girl, named Xene, whom he married at Cyprus. He became convinced that she was the daughter of Andronicus, the lately assassinated emperor and that her life was in danger. He fled with her to his beloved Provence. At his manor, Belgueil, he settled down with his wife and their baby son, Andronicus. For a time his fame was obscured. New troubadours came forward, more intri- cate patterns were originated, dextrous, difficult, unlike the direct, amiable, simple verses of the old masters. Love, too, had changed. It was no longer the most popular subject for song. Troubadours up and down Provence were singing for or against the Albigensian heresy. If Peire Vidal composed or sang any melodies during this time it was in private for he visited no courts and no true troubadour sang to his own wife. His friend and feudal lord, the Good Count Raimon died and the new count, on pretext of devotion to Holy Mother Church con- fiscated Belgueil and exiled Vidal from Toulouse, on the grounds of his marriage to a heretic. Xene was taken to Bagarde to be converted. Vidal and his young son went to Biolh to live with the Lady Rambauda of Beziers, whom he had met on the Crusade. After two or three years, Peire Vidal was reinstated at his home and reunited with his family. Apparently he gained new life and spirit. He became once more a troubadour and was welcomed at the courts of Hungary, Castile, Aragon and the rest. Now, the idea of his son ' s right to the throne of New Rome seems to have possessed him. After the death of his lady, Adelaise, Peire Vidal began to wear the arms of the emperor Andronicus. As Emperor Vidal it is said that he went to Rome to sing to Pope Innocent III. Then, with some idea of placing his son on the throne at Constantinople, he joined the Crusade of Fulk of Neuilly, bringing his family with him. On this Crusade he made many enemies and was preserved from death doubtlessly only because of his obvious insanity. He composed and sang a song aimed at the elderly doge of Venice. 143 Insults were scattered throughout the verses and though veiled, they were evident to all who heard: Since the whole world is of a piece, Gain its motive, gold its token. Vidal was arrested but later rescued by a friend. Although he was destitute, he and his family managed to get to New Rome where for a while they lived in peace. At a Feast to Aphrodite, however, Peire Vidal moved a mob with his singing and they cried: Emperor! Emperor Vidal! Once more, the troubadour was put in jail. Being acquitted at his trial he went in search of Xene and his son. He found them both dead. Whether they died from the exigencies of their existences or, as Vidal believed they were murdered, it would be difficult to say. Peire Vidal next appeared as the mad poet at Aries in a Feast of Fools revelry. He was taken by Count Blacatz, pro- tector of troubadours, and nursed to better health. He again disappeared from the records to appear once more as a jongleur. In his own song composed years before he seems to have foretold his misery: Once, within a royal hall Roundly was I praised, Then from that height I plunged and all My glory vanished in the fall. His last days were spent in utter madness under the tender care of his friend Rambauda who rescued him from a sentence of death as a heretic. He died at her castle in Biolh. A writer of his own times, speaking of the troubadours he had known in his youth, wrote this of Vidal: He sang better than any man in this world but he was one of the most foolish men that ever lived, for he believed that all things that pleased him, or that he wished, were true. 144 NURSERY SCHOOL At puer Ascanius mediis in vallibus aevi Gaudct cquo: iainquc hos cursu, iam practcrit illos, Spumantemque dart pecora inter inertia votis Optat aprum, aut fuliuin descendere monte leonem. In response to an evident need for the intelligent use of psychology in the public and private lives of individuals, Saint Joseph ' s College Nursery School was begun in September, nineteen thirty-four. At the same time and to fulfill the same need the College incorporated into its curriculum a minor in psychology correlated with observation and practice teaching in the Nursery School. The purpose of this movement is two- fold: to develop self-reliant children, emotionally and socially J 45 adaptable to new situations and to give the student a valuable opportunity to learn first hand in a practical way, the psychology of the small child. The Nursery School endeavors to train the normal pre- school child, from the ages of three to five years, in the forma- tion of desirable habits and social adjustments resulting in a well-integrated personality. A thorough cooperation between the school and the parents is at all times encouraged for the better guidance of the child. Psychological examinations and studies of the children are made under the supervision of the Professor of Psychology. Along with the opportunities presented in Educational Psychology and Child Psychology the student is offered courses in Play Activities and Preschool Child Guid- ance, these latter courses including both observing and actual assisting with the Nursery School work. Such a programme is of great value to the college woman not only because of its intrinsic worth but also because of its correlation with other fields. Psychology is a science still in its infancy and very much alive. The opportunities for pioneer research in this field are legion, especially since it deals with a variable factor: human life, and its results, as yet, defy predic- tion. A minor in psychology is definitely allied to a major in any branch since the actual presentation of any subject to other individuals can best be accomplished if the tenets of Psychology are followed. They are of obvious value to the advertiser, the teacher, the doctor, the lawyer and the business man. The worth of this programme shows itself also, in the training the student receives in caring for the pre-school child. This training will indicate to the interested student whether or not she has the ability for nursery school and kindergarten work. It will partially qualify her for such work. It can open fields in Social Service work and without graduate study, positions as assistants in Kindergartens and day nurseries will be open, as well as the possibility of positions as governess for small children in private homes. Finally, a college education is a failure, if, in addition to the study of fine arts, it does not fit its women for intelligent motherhood. Rose Keegan, ' 3 5 146 STUDENT DIRECTORY Allen, Catherine Allen, Dorothea Allen, Jane Allen, Marjorie Aloisio, Vita Amar, Renee Anderson, Isabelle Appel, Mary Astarita, Angelina Aubry, Jean i Audioun, Yvonne 351 Maple Street 295 Ocean Parkway Harland Avenue, Haworth, N. J. 29 s Ocean Parkway 839 Hart Street 1343 77th Street 435 76th Street 8634 106th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 60 Bay Ridge Avenue 431 Beach 136th Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. 139-48 228th Street, Laurelton, L. I. 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I. 535 East 28th Street 1 67 1 Utica Avenue 2173 65th Street MacGillivray, Margaret Mackay, Rita Magee, Margaret Magenheimer, Ruth Maguire, Dorothy Mahoney, Regina Main, Anne 61- Main, Margaret 61 Maltese, Lucille Manfredonia, Rosai y Manning, Elizabeth Manntx, Miriam Markett, Louise Marshall, Mary Masterson, Margaret May, Catherine McAniff, Anita McBreen, Florence McCaffrey, Margaret McCausland, Evelyn McCarroll, Elizabeth McDonald, Mary McGovern, Rita McGrath, Elizabeth McGuire, Anne McGuire, Norine McIlduff, Margaret McKeough, Marjorie 130-13 1 1 6th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 8502 104th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 66-64 Booth Street, Forest Hills, L. I. 1 1 1-36 200th Street, Hollis, L. I. 8932 1 1 8th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 1 3 Park Place 47 Wetherole Street, Rego Park, Elmhurst, L. I. -47 Wetherole Street, Rego Park, Elmhurst, L. I. 71 10 Juno Street, Forest Hills, L. I. 107 Brooklyn Avenue 7624 1 ith Avenue 90-36 55th Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. 6136 Palmetto Street, Ridgewood, L. I. 928 77th Street 8 Beach Court, College Point, L. I. 1067 70th Street 930 St. Nicholas Avenue, N. Y. C. 454 134th Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. 441 43 rd Street 462 13th Street 345 73rd Street 1008 Franklin Avenue •1060 New York Avenue 241 86th Street 148 Mid wood Street 82 Prospect Park Southwest 563 East 4th Street 58-11 92nd Street, Elmhurst, L. I. MI McLoughlin, Adelaide McLoughlin, Frances McLoughlin, Jane McLoughlin, Mary McMahon, Elizabeth McMahon, Muriel McManus, Ruth McNamara, Agnes McNevin, Geraldine McPartland, Doris McQuillan, Ruth Meade, Helen Meade, Winifred Meany, Regina Meehan, Mary Melvin, Rita Michel, Mary Miller, Rose Monahan, Mary Monohan, Gertrude Moore, Dorothy Moore, Vesta Morgan, Katherine Moroney, Bernadette Morris, Janet Morris, Rita Muller, Patricia Mulrenan, Marguerite Mulvaney, Anne Murray, Ann Murray, Catherine Musante, Marion 848 President Street 404 Fourth Street 404 Fourth Street 404 Fourth Street 32 Gifford Avenue, Jersey City 20 Revere Place 1 170 Brooklyn Avenue 260 Washington Avenue 537 East 17th Street 1569 East 34th Street 174 80th Street 2937 Far Rockaway Boulevard, Far Rockaway, L. I. 2937 Far Rockaway Boulevard, Far Rockaway, L. I. 3204 Farragut Road 58 91st Street 139-35 228th Street, Laurelton, L. I. 314 East 26th Street 193 East 32nd Street 24 Woods Place, Rockville Centre, L. I. 216-47 140th Avenue, Springfield Gardens, L. I. 514 Hancock Street Wyndham, Greene County, N. Y. 8604 89th Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. 136 Senator Street 600 East 2 1 st Street 600 East 21st Street 734 Franklin Avenue 439A Monroe Street 109-44 111th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 2061 East 28th Street 9022 195th Place, Hollis, L. I. 899 New York Avenue Nally, Mary Naughton, Genevieve Nelson, Kathryn Neufeld, Gertrude Neumann, Ruth Nicolaus, Elizabeth Noonan, Madeline Norton, Virginia 77 Macon Street 714 46th Street 374 New York Avenue 5308 90th Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 8745 86th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 6925 Fleet Street, Forest Hills, L. I. 8205 Grenfel Avenue, Kew Gardens, L. I. 20 Sterling Place O ' Connell, Hazel O ' Connell, Josephine O ' Connell, Mary O ' Connor, Helen O ' Halloran, Elizabeth Oliver, Marie Oliveri, Frances O ' Neill, Dorothea 1 3 1 8 Union Street 6 Alice Court 1849 Troy Avenue 533 9th Street 420 Clinton Avenue 87 Clifton Place 201 Allen Street 750 Ocean Avenue I O ' Regan, Marie O ' Reilly, Rose Marie Ortner, Carolyn O ' Toole, Ellen Palermo, Antoinette Pansini, Gilda Parker, Marjorie Passaretti, Mary Peppard, Mercy Petersen, Ruth Pinter, Mary Plunkett, Agnes Popper, Mildred Porpora, Madeline Pyne, Dolores Quinn, Helen Rafferty, Agnes Reardon, Kathleen Reilly, Helen Reilly, Marjorie Reilly, Ursula Reynolds, Rita Riepe, Wilhelmina Riordan, Maureen Robertson, Isabelle Robinson, Annette Rogers, Marion Roth, Vera Ruane, Claire Russo, Grace 46 Wilson Street, Lynbrook, L. I. 8634 105th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 644 77th Street 501 1 94th Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 1376 Jefferson Avenue R. F. D. 1, Wantagh, L. I. 77 New York Avenue 1150 Belmont Avenue 1 1 10 East 38th Street 1567 East 15 th Street 197 South Broadway, Lindenhurst, L. E z )S St. Johns Place 9615 Baldwin Avenue, Forest Hills, L. E 9 1 8 Bay Ridge Parkway 33 5 East 32nd Street 800 East 35th Street 205-18 111th Road, Hollis, L. E 600 East 1 1 6th Street, N. Y. C. 8544 54th Avenue, Elmhurst, L. E 1 1 Western Boulevard, Baldwin, L. E 42-38 159th Street, Flushing, L. E 2525 Delamere Place 174 Montrose Avenue 601 West 135th Street, N. Y. C. 1271 East 23rd Street 197-06 89th Avenue, Hollis, L. E 137-47 South Gate Street, Springfield Gardens, L. E 793 Willoughby Avenue 9140 1 1 2th Street, Richmond Hill, L. E 1226 73rd Street Sawyer, Helen Scannell, Margaret Scarpati, Rachel Schumann, Barbara Schwarz, Helen Scudder, Frances Seims, Grace Seitz, Anne Sexton, Eileen Sexton, Maureen Shea, Katherine Sheehan, Kathleen Sheehy, Margaret Sheerin, Eunice Sheerin, Genevieve Shevlin, Rita 62 Monroe Street 544 9th Street 7101 Narrows Avenue 572 4th Street 6910 7th Avenue 9408 Springfield Boulevard, Queens Village, L. E 16-228 73rd Avenue, Flushing, L. E 293 Fenimore Street 339 2nd Ave, N. Y. C. 298 Windsor Place 30-71 29th Street, Astoria, L. E 130 93rd Street 17 Foxhall Street 9320 Ridge Boulevard 472 A 1 6th Street 9209 51st Avenue, Elmhurst, L. E 153 Sommer, Dorothea Soyka, Veronica Staiger, Rita Straus, Norma Stroppel, Helen Sullivan, Genevieve Sullivan, Margaret Sullivan, Nora Sullivan, Rosalie Sylvester, Margherita Tedesco, Gilda Thornton, Eileen Tierney, Anne Tobin, Dorothy Trimble, Audrey Trimborn, Elvie Tully, Violet Twigg, Mary Tyler, Isabel Urquhart, Mary Van Wagner, Eleanor Vaughn, Frances Venezia, Jennie Veneziani, Mary Visconti, Dorothea Walsh, Anna Walsh, Genevieve Walsh, Mary Ward, Lydia Waters, Kathryn Watt, Lillian Welstead, Rosemary Whitbread, Ruth White, Catherine Wiest, Mary Wills, Catherine Wilson, Margaret Wood, Rita Wright, Genevieve Wylk, Mae Young, Frances Young, Helen Young, Margaret Zangle, Elizabeth 154 1 1 1 Harmon Street 184 Huron Street 8831 88th Street 1850 60th Street 304 Glenn Street, Glen Cove, L. I. 196 Clinton Avenue 426 Sterling Place 528 92nd Street 48-22 92nd Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 1 1 18 East 14th Street 180 72nd Street 8916 8 8th Avenue 5 Schoen Place, Baldwin, L. I. 225 Parkside Avenue 181 1 East 22nd Street 9944 211th Place, Bellaire Park, L. I. 1 014 East 40th Street 1330 Union Street 998 Sterling Place 1 59-1 1 98th Street, Howard Beach, L. I. 2818 Avenue W 1470 East 10th Street 189 Wilson Avenue 3588 91st Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. 6204 17th Avenue 808 8th Avenue 388 New York Avenue 800 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C. 532 Garfield Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 5129 35th Street, Long Island City 126-11 144th Street, South Ozone Park, L. I. 9903 Herrick Avenue, Forest Hills, L. I. 71 j West Penn Street, Long Beach, L. I. 8 1 Clinton Avenue 1737 West 10th Street 708 Ocean Avenue 1030 East 40th Street 101-14 222nd Street, Queens Village, L. I. 8540 Somerset Road, Jamaica Estates, L. I. 80 Maple Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. 1 50 60th Street 20 West Park Street, Long Beach, L. I. 4178 Farley Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 1529 Brooklyn Avenue ALUMNAE DIRECTORY Adams, Alice i 6 i 8 Jefferson Avenue Allen, Helen 46 Haven Esplanade, New Brighton, S. I. Ansbro, Dolores 254 85th Street Ansbro, Kathryn 254 85th Street Anthony, Collette 13 Chestnut Street Archipoli, Genevieve (Mrs. Bertram Kelly) 319 Fenimore Street Aubert, Marion (Mrs. Thomas McDonald) 148-25 88th Avenue, Jamaica Bachert, Catherine 8050 89th Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. Baiocchi, Marie 203 Hunterdon Street, Newark, N. J. Baltes, Marion 405 Nassau Avenue, Inwood, L. I. Bannon, Margaret 154 Underhill Avenue Barkett, Eleanor 350 85th Street Barthen, Helen 149 South Kingman Road, South Orange, N. J. Barton, Christine 161 Garfield Place Barton, Mabel (Mrs. E. T. O ' Shea) 38 Mansfield Road, Babylon, L. I. Becker, Catherine 168 Amity Street Bennett, Helen 622 61st Street Bergen, Emma 3872 Bedford Avenue Bernard, Mary 283 Winthrop Street Berry, Gertrude (Mrs. Thomas Sherman) 71 19 Shore Road Bett, Catherine 854 52nd Street BreR, Margaret 8548 8 8th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Bird, Dorothy 704 Cathedral Street, Baltimore, Md. Bird, Mary 3437 80th Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. Bishop, Kathleen (Mrs. Gilbert McGilfarry) 452 43rd Street Bogan, Agnes 1639 Madison PL, Brooklyn Bogan, Mildred 4714 Avenue O Bolton, Mary 2 Willow Street Bonnett, Amy 388 Park Place Bopp, Rita 8624 110th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Boston, Genevieve (Mrs. G. Slavin) 65 Hillcrest Road, West Caldwell, N. J. Bourke, Collette 667 Park Place Bourke, Katherine 667 Park Place Bradley, Helen Kings Park, L. I. Brennan, Laura 2471 Ocean Avenue Brennan, Marion 190 East 31st Street Brennan, Rita (Mrs. Peter O ' Rourke) 1725 Dorchester Road Brown, Agnes H. 681 East 46th Street Brown, Rose 207 East 87th Street, N. Y. C. Burgen, Dorothy 1286 Carroll Street Burns, Anne 21 Grenfel Ave., Kew Gardens, L. I. Byrne, Grace (Mrs. Harry Hill) 105 Lincoln Road Cali, Sarina (Mrs. Pietro Rocca) 507 East 5th Street 55 Callahan, Helen (Mrs. John Brink) 317 West 95th Street, N. Y. C. Campbell, Helen 3000 Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Campion, Anna (Mrs. Edward Semple) Canning, Adaline B. Carrington, Catherine Carroll, Catherine Carter, Genevieve Cassidy, Cecile Castellano, Concepta Caulfield, Helen Cherry, Mary (Mrs. Robert Newbegin) Clancy, Eleanor Clark, Marion (Mrs. John McManus) Clarke, Margaret Cleary, Miriam 1953 82nd Street 212 8th Avenue 263 East 32nd Street 624 76th Street 1755 West 10th Street 2322 82nd Street Sorrento, Napoli, Italy 939 Sterling Place 216 St. James Place 1743 Norman Street 1597 East 43rd Street 257 127th Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. 221 East 17th Street, N. Y. C. Coddington, Josephine (Mrs. Howard Hamilton) Cogan, Regina colborne, loretta comerford, agnes Connelly, Anne Connolly, Agnes (Mrs. George Monaghan) Conway, Margaret Cooke, Catherine Cooke, Ursula Cooney, Margaret Corcoran, Caroline Corey, Josephine Cormier, Eugenia (Mrs. Fred Ahders) Corrigan, Elizabeth Corry, Agnes Corsiglia, Sylvia Cosgrove, Margaret Costarino, Irene Coughlan, Agnes (Mrs. Jos. Diogaurdi) 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I. Locust Valley, L. I. 521 Bedford Avenue 536 East 29th Street 135 East 35th Street 471 8th Street 1 19-14 198th Street, St. Albans, L. I. 367 Grant Avenue I0 5 3 79 tn Street Box 104, Kansas City Drive, La Feria, Texas 470 East 29th Street 3204 Avenue I 2 1 1 Bard Avenue, Livingston, S. I. Valley Cottage, N. Y. 103 2nd Place 167 Quincy Street 282 President Street 3 1 5 Lincoln Place [38 Highland Boulevard Coughlan, Catherine Coughlan, Helen coughlin, geraldine Cox, Eileen Coyne, Dorothy Creegan, Geraldine Cronin, Mary Crowley, Margaret ( ' 26) Crowley, Margaret ( ' 30) Crowley, Sarah Cullen, Mary Culligan, Rose Cunningham, Elizabeth 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I. 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I. 650 59th Street 132 Midwood Street 1295 Sterling Place Box 203 Centerport, L. I. 1430 Mansfield Place 862 Lafayette Avenue 45 South 23rd Street, Flushing, L. I. 1 1 86 Troy Avenue 1066 48th Street 110-06 95 th Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. 237 Baltic Street Cunningham, Marie (Mrs. Lawrence Saverese) 8414 Beverly Road Cunningham, Mary 3 $-30 93rd Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. Curran, Helen 67 Morton Street 156 D ' Albora, Genevieve 52 94th Street D ' Albora, Dr. Helen , 52 94th Street Dalton, Mary (Mrs. Aloysi Oberle) 348 4th Street Daly, Agnes (Mrs. Henry Manifold) 3520 150th Street, Flushing, L. I. Dannerhoffer, Mae (Mrs. Edmund Bigall) 8820 Crestwood Avenue, Hollis, L. I. David, Kathleen 92 Mackay Place Daw kins, Edna 8215 Fort Hamilton Parkway Deegan, Angela x 5 3 2 Union Street Dehler, Mary (Mrs. Thomas Murphy) Old Farmingdale Road, Babylon, L. I. Delaney, Helen 842 Park Place Dempsey, Dorothy 228 122nd Street, Rockaway Park, L. I. Dempsey, Dorothy (Mrs. Ambrose Crowley) 425 Argyle Road Dempsey, Loretta 327 Eastern Parkway Dennen, Rita 82 Clermont Avenue Dermody, Marie 65-96 58th Avenue, Maspeth, L. I. De Sanctis, Rose 117 West nth Street, N. Y. C. Desjardins, Nora Forestport, N. Y. Dettling, Irene 253 Hooper Street Devereaux, Dorothy 2 Islington Place, Jamaica, L. I. De Voe, Therese (Mrs. John Creem) 440 East 22nd Street Dieckert, Frances 8942 208th Street, Bellaire Park, L. I. Dilworth, Gertrude (Mrs. John Rossworn) 7720 Austin Street, Forest Hills, L. I. Dirig, Mary Hancock, N. Y. Doherty, Rita 70 Van Siclen Avenue Dolan, Ann Marie 580 7th Street Dolan, Bernadette 5 8 0 7th Street Dolan, Cecelia (Mrs. J. Sullivan) 8405 8 8th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Dolan, Eleanor (Mrs. Cyril Reardon) 221 Linden Boulevard Dolan, Mary 130 East Lincoln Avenue, Valley Stream, L. I. Dolan, M. Theresa (Mrs. Howard Janton) Donaldson, Angela Donelon, Dorothy (Mrs. Ernest Feller) donohue, isabelle Donohue, Mildred dorney, margaretta Dotzler, Evelyn (Mrs. Joseph Felber) Downes, Dorothy Doyle, Constance Doyle, Margaret (Mrs. Walter Dunderman) Doyle, Marguerite Doyle, Mary Doyle, Virgile Driscoll, Kathryn Dugan, Kathleen 1 12 Beach Street, West wood, N. J. 528 4th Street 4000 Cathedral Avenue, Washington, D. C. 319 Webster Avenue 120 East 19th Street 139 78th Street c o Infantry School Box 1832 Fort Bennington, Ga. 5 th Avenue, Mineola, L. I. 647 Macon Street 1059 East 2nd Street 75 Vanderbilt Avenue 1553 72nd Street 468 82nd Street 464 54th Street 122 Bay 22nd Street 157 Duffy, Agnita (Mrs. Clarence O ' Connor) Duffy, Marie Dunnigan, Anna DwYER, KATHERINE 2558 Marion Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. 72 Schenectady Avenue 177 Rogers Avenue 629 Eastern Parkway Eckles, Barbara Elberfeld, Marion Eldridge, Marion Engel, Virginia Eppig, Catherine Eppig, Josephine 167-01 Highland Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. 260 Morris Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. 214 89th Street 38 Ormond Street, Rockville Centre, L. I. Babylon, L. I. Babylon, L. I. 29 Valentine Street, Glen Cove, L. I. 534 Mansfield Place 291 Hart Street 22 1 Baltic Street 3923 Avenue I Brentwood Road, Brentwood, L. I. 405 East 114th Street, N. Y. C. 65 Midwood Street 688 East 4th Street 165 Academy Street, South Orange, N. J. 3321 Avenue M ij Brownell Street, Stapleton, S. I. 1 1 3 Toledo Street, Elmhurst, L. I. Church Street, Kings Park, L. I. 686 Richmond Terrace, New Brighton, S. I. Fadrowsky, Lydia Fallon, Louise Farrell, Helen Farrell, Jeanette Farrell, Violet (Mrs. Patrick Carty) Fearon, Rita (Mrs. George Bryan) Felitti, Theresa Ferry, Margaret Finn, Genevieve Fisher, Kathryn (Mrs. James Tracy) Fitzgerald, Margaret Flannigan, Marie Fleming, Rosemary Flynn, Kathleen Fogarty, Mary Alice Foley, Eleanor (Mrs. Jerome Halloran) 1000 President Street Foley, Marie 270 Marcy Avenue Foppiani, Evelyn 4228 South 68th Street, Winfield, L. . Ford, Josephine iooi Sterling Place Ford, Kathleen A. 93-52 205th Street, Hollis, L. I. Foster, Myrtle (Mrs. Harry White) 1470 Glenwood Road Fournier, Catherine x 3 84 Troy Avenue Fournier, Laura (Mrs. Francis Flanagan) 124 Remsen Street Fox, Virginia (Mrs. Robt. Coughlin) 8615 Fort Hamilton Parkway Fraas, Amy 8437 11 8th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Frentzel, Eleanor Frey, Katherine Frisse, Allene (Mrs. Horace Nevins) 373 Weirfield Street 187 Jefferson Street 390 Bay Avenue, Patchogue, L. I. Gaffney, Mary Gallagher, Alice Gannon, Sara Garvey, Bernadette Gebelein, Catherine Gegan, Elizabeth Gerety, Gertrude Ghiold, Theresa M. 405 8th Street 904 Lincoln Place Westbury, L. . 287 East 1 8th Street 2 1 17 Armory Court 1448 East 8th Street 957 East 37th Street 605 7th Street 158 Giambalvo, Joan 102 Moffet Street Gibson, Christine (Mrs. Louis Dougherty) 27 Westminster Road, Rockville Centre, L. I. Giery, Rita 1914 East 38th Street Gillespie, Elvera 40 Wisconsin Street, Long Beach, L. I. Gilloon, Catherine 12 15 Ocean Avenue Giorgio, Filomena 8913 8 8th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Glasson, Marie (Mrs. John Baum) 1927 New York Avenue Gleason, Ethel (Mrs. Melville Skinner) 141 Sunnyside Avenue Golden, Mary 16 Polhemus Place Gorman, Jane B. 1284 Dean Street Grady, Margaret 2 3 x 5 Avenue M Grainger, Alice (Mrs. William Heaphy) sn Ocean Avenue Greenbaum, Beatrice 1436 Bushwick Avenue Greene, Mary 195-03 Hillside Avenue, Hollis, L. I. Griesmer, Clara 1258 Madison Street Griffith, Rita 79 i 8 nth Avenue Griffiths, Helen 611 Argyle Road Gubitosi, Julia 491 18th Street Hagen, Ruth (Mrs. Stephen Carney) x -73 Park Place Hall, Isabel (Mrs. Francis Perry) 5335 Delmar Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. Hallahan, Dorothy 52 Purcell Street, West Brighton, S. I. Hallahan, Mary 223 Manhattan Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Halloran, Alice 61 Tompkins Street, Tompkinsville, S. I. Hamilton, Marie 218-15 I 37 tn Road, Springfield Gardens, L. I. Hanagan, Dorothy 54 Shepherd Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. Hand, Dorothy Cutchogue, L. I. Hannan, Catherine (Mrs. Arthur Hines) 34 Woodbine Lane, Far Rockaway, L. I. Hannan, Jeanette 717 Avenue N Hannon, Veronica 101-57 111th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Hanrahan, Florence 891 i 182nd Street, Jamaica, L. I. Harnett, Margaret (Mrs. James Driscoll) 665 East 19th Street Harold, Dorothy 1087 Gipson Street, Far Rockaway, L. I. Harper, Elsa (Mrs. James McEvoy) 44 Waldorf Court Harrigan, Alice (Mrs. A. Behl) Plymouth Gardens, Atlantic Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. Harrigan, Anna 243 Rutland Road Harrington, Margaret 122 Hendrix Street Harris, Evelyn Pompton Plains, N. J. Harrison, Dorothy 410 Pulaski Street Harrison, Helen 422 East 17th Street Harron, Mary 305 Lafayette Avenue Hart, Grace 311 16th Street Haverlin, Catherine 75 78th Street Hawkins, Zita (Mrs. Andrew Stoddart) 464 Clinton Avenue Hayes, Mildred (Mrs. Vincent Donohue) 164 Locust Street, Valley Stream, L. I. Hearns, Agnes (Mrs. Charles Bogan) 18 Stratford Road Hearns, Viola (Mrs. Arleigh Bell) 201 Hancock Street 159 Hebron, Elizabeth Hemingway, Elizabeth Hennessy, Blanche Hennessy, Elinor Hennessy, Mary Hertel, Marjorie Herzog, Rita Hickey, Marion Hilt, Marie Hines, Mildred Hodgins, Mary Hoffman, Teresa hogan, kathli i n hogan, regina Holien, Sarah hottenroth, muriel Howard, Eleanor (Mrs. Howard, Margaret Hughes, Bernadette Hughes, Gretta Hundemann, Grace Hunt, Mary Hurley, Mary Huschle, Mary 3439 32nd Street, Astoria, L. I. 1332 Union Street 2707 Newkirk Avenue 165 Prospect Park West 162 Elderts Lane 190-12 Stater Avenue, Flushing, L. I. 359 Hawthorne Street 426 85th Street 807 East 8th Street 8916 187th Street, Hollis, L. I. 102-18 85th Drive, Richmond Hill, L. I. 8576 87th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 135 Eastern Parkway 135 Eastern Parkway 142 Academy Street, Astoria, L. I. 1215 East 22nd Street Arthur O ' Leary) 210 Rugby Road 210 Rugby Road 2600 Ocean Avenue 184 Maple Street 590 Henderson Avenue, West Brighton, S. I. 1872 East 51st Street 59 Berkeley Place 148-53 Hillside Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Impellizzeri, Margaret Impellizzeri, Mary Intondi, Modesta Irwin, Catherine 250 Melrose Street 250 Melrose Street 94 Quincy Street 394 East 1 8th Street Jacobson, Grace (Mrs. Herbert Augenstein) Jacobson, Lucille Johnston, Margaret (Mrs. Julian Jova) Johnstone, Marie Jones, Gertrude Jones, Margaret Judge, Elizabeth (Mrs. William Hartley) Judice, Lucy Kaicher, Mary Kavanagh, Christine Keane, Teresa Kearney, Kathleen 28 Keating, Anne Keegan, Marie 30 Vanderb Keely, Catherine Keenan, Catherine Keenan, Margaret (Mrs. William Moyles) Kellam, Ethel (Mrs. Robert Griebe) Keller, Mary (Mrs. John Lawlor) Kelley, Marie (Mrs. Thos. Smith, Jr.) 7901 Fourth Avenue 444 55 th Street 1660 Beverly Road 3 5 1 1 Avenue D 147 Columbia Heights 416 2nd Street 6 1 Prospect Place 2778 West 15 th Street 751 Bushwick Avenue 128 Hancock Street 57 Van Buren Street West 97th Street, N. Y. C. 1072 74th Street It Avenue, Floral Park, L. I. 1979 East 19th Street 438 Clermont Avenue 2319 Avenue M 420 Marlboro Road Valley Cottage, N. Y. 1 5 19 Union Street 160 Kelliher, Helen 198 Lenox Road Kelly, Agnes (Mrs. John Bryan) 724 East 27th Street Kelly, Dorothy 3 1 2 Sycamore Avenue, Merrick, L. I. Kelly, Katherine 244 Washington Avenue Kelly, Lillian 105 i Ocean Avenue Kelly, Mary (Mrs. Joseph Hoermann) 2442 24th Street, Astoria, L. I. Kelly, Norma 224-28 Chestnut Street, Queens Village, L. I. Kelly, Vivienne 8538 168th Place, Jamaica, L. I. Kemp, Mary 189 8th Avenue Kendall, Madeliene 3414 72nd Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. Kennelly, Rosemary 564 Park Place Kenny, Agnes R. (Mrs. John Neugent) 283 Washington Avenue Kenny, Anne 203 Madison Street Kenny, Helen i 5 Wilson Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. Kenny, Margaret 52-60 68th Street, Maspeth, L. I. Kidd, Marie 77 West 104th Street, N. Y. C. Kiernan, Helen 224 Locust Street, Valley Stream, L. I. Kiernan, Muriel 20 jo Bay Ridge Parkway Kilboy, Margaret 595 East 7th Street Kilcoin, Dorothy 938 St. Nicholas Avenue, N. Y. C. Kilgallen, Helen 664 59th Street Kilgallen, Katherine (Mrs. Joseph Rooney) 441 43rd Street King, Rita 685 Sterling Place Kirgan, Anne 1635 East 46th Street Klipp, Jeanette 356 Hollywood Avenue, Douglas Manor, L. I. Kramer, Ruth 624 6th Street Kraus, Lillian 52 Magnolia Avenue, Dumont, N. J. Krebs, Katherine 142 Highland Place Kreischer, Florence 229 Main St., Hempstead, L. I. Kuhn, Mildred 2520 Maclay Avenue, Westchester, N. Y. Langan, Margaret 513 16th Street Lagana, Eleanor 265 Warren Street Lagatutta, Eleanor 349 Cornelia Street Latorraca, Gina 672 59th Street Laudry, Virginia 299 Washington Avenue Lavelle, Catherine 2422 Lyvere St., Bronx, N. Y. Lavery, Catherine 616 East 19th Street Lavery, Margaret 616 East 19th Street Lavin, Eileen 148-20 88th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Lavin, Irene 148-20 8 8th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Lavin, Ruth 148-20 88th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Larson, Eulalia Harrington Park, N. J. Leahy, Margaret 79 Downing Street Leavy, Doris 456 40th Street I 1 wox, Margaret (Mrs. Raymond Martin) 60 Gramercy Park North, N. Y. C. Lent, Irene 105-17 103rd Drive, Ozone Park, L. I. Lewis, Grace 171-33 105th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Lilly, Marie 624 Bay Ridge Parkway Livellara, Helen 177 Patchen Avenue Loftus, Maki 516 61st Street Loughlin, Gertrude 86 Broadway, Amityville, L. I. Ludder, Alita (Mrs. E. Martz) 8650 77th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Lynch, Catherine (Mrs. Earl Kelly) 404 Foster Avenue Lynch, Margaret (Mrs. Arthur O ' Toole) 247 New York Avenue Lyn h, Mary (Mrs. J. Delameter) 448 8th Street Lynch, Margaret White 48 Westside Avenue, Brooklyn Mackinnon, Beatrice Madden, Ethel Magnor, Rhoda (Mrs. Ray Fitzpatrick) Magrath, May Maguire, Lucy Manniello, Emma Manning, Maio 302 Clinton Avenue -, 1 3 Lexington Avenue 7201 4th Avenue 1322 Dean Street 135 East 30th Street, N. Y. C. 1 94 1 East 13th Street 8023 Ridge Boulevard 1421 Manning, Theresa Manno, Marie Marino, Mary Martin, Mildred Martin, Suzanne Martz, A. Luddi r Mauceri, Joan Mazzoli, Angelina McBarron, Florence McCaffrey, Helen (Mrs. Frank McGivney) McCaffrey, Rita McCarthy, Muriel (Mrs. Meredith Jones) McCaully, Margaret McConnell, Marie McCormack, Anne McCormack, Ruth (Mrs. Harry Schneider McCormick, Edna (Mrs. E. L. Hirst) McCormick, Marjorie McCort, Annabelle McDermott, Rosemary (Mrs. John Meyers) McDonald, Anna (Mrs. Edward Dannemiller McDonald, Anna (Mrs. Joseph Costa) McDonald, Eleanor McDonnell, Julia McDonnell, Mary McGinnis, Mary McGough, Louise McGovern, Frances McGrane, Alice 9725 80th Street, Ozone Park, L. I. 565 Lorimer Street 226 Troutman Street 330 Lafayette Avenue 402 4th Street 4 Spruce Street, Great Neck, L. I. 1 3 i Irving Avenue 48th St., Whitestone, L. I. j6 Wilson Street 1 Plaza Street 581 Carlton Avenue 1 3 s Prospect Park West 528 58th Street 925 Putnam Avenue S4 Clarkson Avenue ) 736 East 23rd Street The Ontwood, Mt. Pocono, Pa. 8 Stephens Court 91 Moffat Street 302 West 86th Street, N. Y. C. 264 Lincoln Road 55 Highlawn Avenue 8701 Shore Road 8565 111th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 8565 tilth Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 434 74th Street 229 Hudson Street, N. Y. C. 3734 60th Street, Woodside, L. I. 326 Bainbridge Street McGrane, Eleanor (Mrs. W. H. Ward) McGrath, Marii McGrevey, Horn m McGuire, Frances McKenna, Catherine 14 9 University Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. 87 Monitor Street 43 Roanoke Avenue, Far Rockaway, L. I. 1 s 2 Hewes Street 400 Clinton Avenue 162 McKenna, Marion (Mrs. Palmer Doyle) McKeon, Josephine McKeon, Julia McLernon, Mary McLoughlin, Cecelia McLoughlin, Eileen McLoughlin, Eileen J McLoughlin, Eleanor McMahon, Geraldine McMahon, Irene McMahon, Winifred McMullan, Juliana McMurray, Marie McNally, Veronica McNamara, Eileen McNeely, Catherine McNulty, Margaret McNulty, Mildred McShane, Agnes McShane, Catherine Meany, Mary Meara, Edith Meehan, Margaret (Mrs. George Copeland) Middlecamp, Mary Miner, Mary (Mrs. W. O ' Halloran) Mirabella, Mary Molesphini, Rosalind (Mrs. Roger Schenone) Monaghan, Ellen (Mrs. A. McGowan) Moore, Mae (Mrs. Christopher Waldorf) Moran, Dorothy Moran, Muriel Mulligan, Eucharia Mulligan, Marie Mulraney, Irene Mulrooney, Kathleen 57 Albermarle Avenue, Hempstead, L. I. 499 8th Street 1379 East 19th Street 8638 90th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 1485 East 1 2th Street 1485 East 1 2th Street 361 1st Street 404 4th Street 445 Eastern Parkway 308 St. James Place 445 Eastern Parkway 200 Park Place 3069 Vill a Avenue, Fordham, N. Y. 8902 215th Street, Queens Village, L. I. 1278 East 35th Street 21 5 Prospect Place 126 Herkimer Street 476 Clinton Avenue 687 Madison Street 687 Madison Street 8381 Shore Road 112 Lafayette Avenue 925 Union Street Box 542, Westbury, L. I. 50 East 1 8th Street 247 Carroll Street 150 Prospect Park West 3069 Villa Avenue, Fordham, N. Y. 4313 Carpenter Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. 446 Beechwood PL, Westfield, N. J. 209 Maple Street 72 77th Street 236 84th Street 477 13th Street 602 78th Street Munz, Regina (Mrs. Frank J. Meyer) Murphy, Catherine Murphy, Dorothea Murphy, Gertrude Murphy, Margaret Murphy, Marie Murphy, Marjorie Murray, Eileen Murray, Mary Myers, Marion 1 76- 1 1 Henley Road, Jamaica Estates, L. I. 194 Norman Avenue 8531 1 20th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 7401 Ridge Boulevard 52 Garden Street, Boston, Mass. 145 Columbia Heights 829 East Knapp Street, Milwaukee, Wis. 882 Park Place 882 Park Place 163 Forest Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. Naylon, Sadie 237 94th Street 16-3 Nealis, Dorothy Newman, Florence Newman, Helen (Mrs. Donald Connors) Nolan, Charlotte (Mrs. E. R. Manning) Nolan, Florence (Mrs. William Plant) 627 Delamere Place 758 East 17th Street 1290 Ocean Avenue 225 Parkside Avenue S8-20 122nd Avenue, St. Albans, L. I. 125 Oak Street 600 East 21st Street Nolan, Marie Nolan, Marjorie (Mrs. W. J. Higgins) Noonan, Agnes ioi Lynbrook Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. Normile, Catherine (Mrs. Charles Mylod) 150 Prospect Park West Normile, Margaret (Mrs. E. J. McLoughlin) 75 Prospect Park West Norton, Marii: 220-17 92nd Avenue, Queens Village, L. I. O ' Brien, Grace (Mrs. O ' Brien, Rose O ' Connor, Agnes O ' Connor, Claire O ' Connor, Ida (Mrs. O ' Connor, Marie O ' Connor, Mary O ' Donnell, Helen O ' Donnell, Margari O ' Donnell, Mary O ' Dwyer, Irene O ' Hale, Catherine O ' Leary, Ethne Olive, Honora (Mrs. Oliver, Genevieve Oliver, Margaret Oliver, Mary O ' Meara, Mary (Mrs. O ' Reilly, Alice O ' Reilly, Marion Ormonde, Margaret O ' Shea, Marie Owens, Barbara Michael Martin) 1758 East 14th Street 23 Stuyvesant Avenue 176 Beach 123rd Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. 474 82nd Street Norbert Smith) 982 Sterling Place 288 Ryerson Street 80 Norman Avenue 104 Adelphi Street r 514 10th Street 5 14 10th Street 470 Clinton Avenue 416 8 1 st Street 1732 East 19th Street W. Rehearser) 120-27 142nd Street, South Ozone Park, L. I. ij Clifton Place zy Clifton Place 106 Oakwood Avenue, Staten Island S. McNeil) 96 Decatur Street 8634 105th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 642 2nd Street 522 East 24th Street 571 Madison Street 140-70 Burden Crescent, Jamaica, L. I. Packert, Marion (Mrs. Edward Buckley) Parker, Irene Parks, Elinor Pattison, Agnes Peppard, Regina Perkins, Ethel Phillips, Agnes Piggott, Margaret Pisani, Josephine Pleines, Claire Pleines, Emily Pollack, Rita Powell, Margaret 580 East 22nd Street jy New York Avenue 338 7th Street 7507 6th Avenue 468 1 6th Street Tudor Towers, Long Beach, L. I. 129 South Oxford Street 390 Parkside Avenue 2 Oliver Street, N. Y. C. 1403 Lorraine Avenue 1403 Lorraine Avenue 959 Bedford Avenue 1724 East 24th Street 164 Prendergast, Janet Pyne, Dorothy 226 Fenimore Street 466 1 6th Street Quigley, Adele 248 Garfield Place Quinn, Catherine (Mrs. William Shell) 356 Ovington Avenue QuiNN, Mary 17 Weberfield Avenue, Freeport, L. I. Quinn, Virginia (Mrs. Stanford Waite) 53 Clark Street Quinotte, Marthe 43 1 West 121st St., N. Y. C. Rafferty, Mary 94 Hamilton Avenue, New Brighton, S. I. Raymond, Florence 2132 West 5th Street Reardon, Ethel 129 89th Street Reardon, Frances 129 89th Street Reardon, Gladys (Mrs. Joseph Hughes) 656 Martin Street, Teaneck, N. J. Reilly, Grace 132-20 82nd Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Reilly, Katherine 30 Apollo Street Reilly, Madeline 120-06 133rd Avenue, Richmond Hill, L. I. 3 1 1 Ocean Avenue 1 66 1 Benson Avenue 49 Wellington Court 2525 Delamere Place 2303 Newkirk Avenue 2303 Newkirk Avenue 755 Monroe Street 755 Monroe Street Reilly, Margaret Renda, Rose Reynolds, Constance (Mrs. Ralph Furey) Reynolds, Gertrude Reynolds, Grace Reynolds, Helen Rick, Beatrice Rick, Constance (Mrs. Leon Reyna) Rickerby, Marie (Mrs. James Blake) 73 East Market Street, Long Beach, L. I. Riordon, Catherine 12 St. Charles Place Roberts, Gertrude (Mrs. Lee Delworth) 6744 Ridge Boulevard Roche, Lillian 12 10 John Street, Far Rockaway, L. I. Roche, Margaret 8725 114th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Rockefeller, Elva (Mrs. James Ryan) 131 East 21st Street Rockefeller, Marietta (Mrs. Harold Ryan) 7401 Ridge Boulevard Roeser, Dorothy 1029 82nd Street Romano, Catherine 8005 12th Avenue Roth, Irene 793 Willoughby Avenue Rowan, Eulalia 114-70 177th Street, St. Albans, L. I. Rowland, Louise (Mrs. William Schrauth) 191-11 Woodhill Avenue, Hollis, L. I. Ruane, Helen 9 l 4° 112th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Sabbatino, Catherine Sabbatino, Marie (Mrs. Frank Barrera) Salsano, Catherine 38 1 Savino, Catherine (Mrs. Howard Fieri) Savino, Marie (Mrs. James Donohue) Schaeffer, Elizabeth schlegel, gabrielle Schluter, Marie Schneider, Anna Scholly, Miriam 198 Maple 420 Ocean Parkway 9949 Shore Road f 56th Street, Woodside, L. I. 330 Union Street 875 Ocean Parkway 463 Bainbridge Street 428 Greene Avenue 903 Bushwick Avenue 2024 Hemrod Street Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. x6s Schrage, Anne 8532 178th Street, Jamaica, L. 1. Schreiber, Teresa 147-50 87th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Scibilia, Annunciata 8302 4th Avenue Scully, Ada 256 Gates Avenue Sexton, Germaine 298 Windsor Place Shannon, Catherine 135 Madison Street Sharpe, Vivia (Mrs. George Cassidy) 8417 Penelope Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. Sheehan, Marie 51 Colonial Road, Forest Hills, L. I. Sheehy, Mary 17 Foxall Street Sheeran, Muriel 93 20 Ridge Boulevard Sheridan, Genevieve (Mrs. William Magee) 44 Butler Place Sheridan, Mary 442 8th Street Sheridan, Rosemary 229 Macon Street Sherrie, Ethel (Mrs. Nicholas Baxter) i Norwood Avenue, Clifton, S. I. Shinnick, Mary 7607 Colonial Road Simonetti, Dr. Amalia 95M 143rd Street, Jamaica, L. I. Simpson, Muriel (Mrs. Charles Schorf) 555 77th Street Siniscalchi, Madeliene 439 Union Avenue, Westbury, L. I. Smith, Claire 551 4th Street Smith, Ethel 517 84th Street Smith, Frances 749 Hancock Street Snow, Dorothy 417 45th Street Spies, Josephine 163 Egbert Avenue, West Brighton, S. I. Stack, Mary 1736 East 28th Street Stack, Virginia (Mrs. Thomas O ' Loughlin) 55 Winthrop Street Stanley, Edith 1401 West 6th Street Stanton, Clare 223 Lenox Road Steinbrecher, Muriel c o Nurses Home, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. Stewart, Helen M. 2101 Beekman Place Stewart, Margaret 1371 Union Street St. John, Mary (Mrs. Gilbert P. Murphy) ' 847 Madison Place Stokes, Anne 101-33 112th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Straub, Helen (Mrs. Everett Hillman) Camp Hilltop, Hancock, N. Y. Struglia, Maria 123 i 68th Street Stuart, Rose New Dorp Road, S. I. Sullivan, Dorothea 167-12 Highland Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Sullivan, Ethel 73 89th Street Sullivan, Helen 570 Pacific Street Sullivan, Kathryn 90-40 55th Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. Sullivan, Margaret (Mrs. Alexander Mezey) 9302 Ridge Boulevard Surpless, Eleanor 290 Lincoln Road Swanton, Susan 491 Vanderbilt Avenue, Stapleton, S. I. Teaken, Marion 8904 Shore Court Thompson, Dorothy (Mrs. Raymond Purcell) 604 Walnut Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y. Thompson, Kathleen 507 East th Street Tiernan, Sophia 356 94th Street Todd, Sarah 402 Sterling Place Toner, Agnes 768 Hancock Street 166 Toschack, Marion Townsend, Phyllis Tracy, Catherine Traun, Teresa Trunz, Cecelia Twyford, Grace Uhlixger, Marie Unser, Gertrude Vaughan, Kathleen Venezia, Mary Victory, Florence Vitale, Mildred Wahl, Madeliene Wallace, Margaret Walsh, Geraldine Walsh, Xatherine Walsh, Mary Walsh, Virginia 109-72 209th Place, Bellaire, L. I. 107-08 86th Avenue, Richmond, L. I. Forestport, N. Y. 73 Wyckoff Avenue 283 Highland Boulevard 239 Bainbridge Street 8524 Forest Parkway, Woodhaven, L. I. 349 Evergreen Avenue 1470 East 10th Street 189 Wilson Avenue 9604 92nd Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. 697 East 37th Street 8602 121st Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 8763 115th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 8006 Fort Hamilton Parkway 8006 Fort Hamilton Parkway 530 61st Street 1432 East 10th Street Walters, Miriam (Mrs. James McLoughlan) 200 Lincoln Road Ward, Grace 553 Garfield Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Ward, Marie 357 5th Street Waters, Kathryn 959 St. Johns Place Weglein, Grace (Mrs. Arthur Mandell) 755 Eastern Parkway Wehman, Teresa 101-28 113th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Weiden, Helen (Mrs. William McCarthy) 156 Sunnyside Avenue Weiden, Josephine (Mrs. Joseph Barth) 114-73 176th Street, St. Albans, L. I. Weinfurt, Ellen 15 Mount Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. Wenk, Evelyn 8909 98th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Wheeler, Catherine 9 Poplar Street Whalen, Mary j6 8 8th Street White, Anne 8 1 Clinton Avenue White, Margaret (Mrs. Aloysius Lynch) 181 5 Beverly Road White, Mary 8 1 Clinton Avenue Williams, Helen 7609 6th Avenue Willman, Dorothy 3762 West Pine Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. Willman, Marie 258 Ovington Avenue Willmott, Marion 208 Weirfield Street Wilson, Katherine 423 Clermont Avenue Wilson, Margaret 423 Clermont Avenue Winheim, Margaret 5 1 Christobal Street, Lynbrook, L. I. Winkler, Frances ioi Wanona Street, San Francisco, Cal. Woods, Elinor 46 Rutland Road Worthley, Gladys 321 Park Place Young, Geraldine Zegers, Margaret 4178 Forley Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 458 1 6th Street 167 Sister Marie (Marie Brennan) Convent of Visitation, 2002 Bayard Avenue, Wilmington, Del. Sister M. Geraldine (Agnes Byrne) D ' Youville College, Buffalo, N. Y. Sister Consuela Marie (Mildred Duffy) St. Frances de Sales Convent, Rockcastle, Va. Sister Ann Loyola (Mary Patricia Dwyer) Mount St. Clair, Wappinger Falls, N. Y. Sister Mary Germaine (Grace Finlay) St. Brendan ' s Convent Sister Teresa Marie (Kathryn Farrell) Brentwood, L. I. Sister Dolores Marie (Margaret Kelly) Brentwood, L. I. Sister Mary Madeleine (Ellen Manning) Our Lady of Mercy Academy, Syosset, L. I. Sister Baptista oe the Holy Family (Emily O ' Mara) Carmelite Convent, Schenectady, N. Y. Sister Marie Therese (Rosamond Thompson) Brentwood, L. I. Sister M. Robertine (Roselyn Weiden) St. Joseph ' s College High School, Emmetsburg, Md. Sister Mary 01 St. Francis of Assisi (Eva Flinn) House of Good Shepherd, Hopkinson Avenue Mother Mary Godfrey (Ruth Willmann) Franciscan Missionaries of Mary 399 Fruit Hill Avenue, Providence, R. I. Sister Mary Clotilde Catholic University, Washington, D. C. Sister Mary Ignatius (Anna Meany) Catholic University, Washington, D. C. 168 A D V E R T I S E M E N T S r Fciiiia . . . Mod Hit ate Viget Vircsque Acquirit Eundo 169 Phone STerling 3-9221 Goetz ' s Confectionery and Luncheonette Now at 245 DE KALB AVENUE BROOKLYN, N. Y. T Now Serving BREAKFAST LUNCHEON DINNER (from 5 to 8 p. m.) Homemade Ice Cream Visit our new collegiate and Candies rendezvous! 170 BUSINESS TRAINING in Secretarial Subjects intensely pre- sented by the Individual Promotion Plan. Academically trained students assured of rapid advancement by this method of instruction. All stud es are conducted in a refined environment by a faculty of well-known university pro- fessors and university trained teachers. MODERATE TUITION RATES Placement Service for Graduates DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Registered by the Board of Regents, University of the State of New York. A catalog will be sent upon request. Irving Edgar Chase, Director United States Secretarial School Th irty-fo u rl h Yea r 527 FIFTH AVENUE AT 44TH ST. NEW YORK, N. Y. Telephone: Vanderbilt 3-2474 50,000 People Can ' t Be Wrong We Serve Them With Satisfaction EVERY YEAR GASAU b KAMP, Inc. CATERERS OF DISTINCTION 1 13-05 Jamaica Ave. Richmond Hill, L. I. Telephone: Richmond Hill 2-2530 Qtex THE HOUSE T(fcPAT SPORT BUILT 22 CAST 42nd ST. NEW YORK, N Y. I 7 I Club Ryerson ST. JOSEPHS EATING PLACE St 7 the Same Home Cooking Corner Ryerson Street and Willoughby Avenue Phone NEvins 8-7567 THE HOUSE OF QUALITY Philips ' Restaurant EVERY MEAL A PLEASURE LUNCHEON, 25c and 35c DINNER, 50c and 60c We serve a la carte Fresh Vegetables in Season Home Cooking Dinner Parties Accommodated Meals Sent Out 242 DE KALB AVENUE Near Vanderbilr Avenue BROOKLYN, N. Y. Open Sundays 1 2 Compliments of THE PAULIST PRESS TRY PILGRIM CLEANING . . . the new and modern improvement on old-fashioned dry-cleaning methods. The fluid is absolutely unique, odor- less and non-inflammable. Leaves no oily film. Clothes look better, stay clean longer. Send anything from heavy overcoats to delicate, dainty chiffons. Reasonable Prices .... Prompt Pick-Up Quick delivery on a hanger in a sanitary bag. THE PILGRIM LAUNDRY Inc. CLEANING DEPARTMENT Prospect Eleventh Avenues, Brooklyn Telephone HUguenot 4-2800 The name of STAIGER has been associated with the Manufacturing of Jewelry for over sixty years. Specializing in Engagement Rings Diamond Jewelry Diamonds Pearls Precious Stones STAIGER b SONS 527 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK CITY Designs and Estimates for Remounting See you at Ratiger s SODA LUNCHEONETTE CANDY Quick and Cheerful Service DE KALB AVE. near RYERSON ST. 173 hm Telephone PRospect 9-4187 PACE INSTITUTE A School of Business Technology Courses of intensive character, preparing i i i ii i upal ions in business, are given at Pace Institute in daytime and in evening classes. These courses include among others the following Accountancy and Business Admin is i ration Summary (C.P.A.) Accountancy Si c R! i riai. Pr u rn I Shorthand Reporting Shorthand Sim i d Classes Advertising and Marki riNG Selling and Marketing Credit Sen mi Bulletins, interesting vocational booklets, and class dates are available upon request. Inquire of the Registrar by personal call, by letter, or by telephone, Barclay 7-8200 i itoi are welcome. PACE INSTITUTE SS.TV Coll ege Dru 2 ST. JAMES PLACE BROOKLYN, N. Y. (tJ tTT) LUNCH SERVICE Heffley School ALL COMMERCIAL SUBJECTS (PvHJ) WILLIAMSBURG BANK BUILDING 1 HANSON PLACE BROOKLYN, N. Y. STerling 3-5210 174 Meet me at Miller ' s Pharmacy q friendly drug store DRUGS— LUNCHEONETTE— COSMETICS DE KALB AVENUE AND RYERSON STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. brooklyn becretarial bchool A SECRETARIAL SCHOOL FOR GIRLS Specialized Secretarial Course STENOGRAPHIC COURSE CIVIL SERVICE 200 LIVINGSTON STREET Opposite Abraham Straus At Hoyt Street Mrs. M. C. Baird TRiangle 5-8551 J 75 WITTNAUER WATCH For Sale by Leading Jewelers 17 Jewels 14 k Gold Filled $50.00 17 Jewels 14 k Solid Gold 65.00 SEND FOR FOLDER A. WITTNAUER CO. Est. 1866 402-4 Fifth Avenue New York Phone TRiangle 5-5860 Clinton Florist D. HALIKIAS, Prop. FRESH CUT FLOWERS Always on Hand WEDDING AND FLORAL DESIGNS Promptly Attended To 406 MYRTLE AVE. Between Clinton and Vanderbilt Avenues BROOKLYN, N. Y. TRiangle 5-4279 ESTABLISHED 1890 Woolsey Woolsey Designers — Engravers — Medallists 146 LAWRENCE STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. CHRISTMAS CARDS COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS DIPLOMAS RINGS— KEYS— PINS DANCE ORDERS AND FAVORS COATS OF ARMS— STATIONERY MEDALS— CUPS— TROPHIES Phone: NEvins 8-2941 Catalogue on Request B rowne s Busin ess College All Commercial Courses. Ad- vanced methods of instruction Latest office machines. Special courses for college students Day and evening sessions. 7 LAFAYETTE AVENUE BROOKLYN, N. Y. 176 St. Angela Hall Academy 282-294 WASHINGTON AVENUE BROOKLYN, NEW YORK A Private School for Girls and Small Boys Conducted by the Sisters of St. Joseph. Affiliated w ' .th the State University. Elementary and High School Courses Courses in MUSIC— PIANO— VIOLIN— THEORY— HARMONY Special Attention to Beginners ART COURSES— ELEMENTARY DESIGN AND REPRESENTATION MECHANICAL, COMMERCIAL, COMPREHENSIVE ART COURSE PHYSICAL TRAINING AND DANCING KINDERGARTEN COURSE FOR CHILDREN FROM FOUR TO SIX YEARS Bus Service — for Particulars Address the DIRECTRESS ' Phone Prospect 9-1551 ACADEMY OF ST. JOSEPH IN-THE-PINES Brentwood, Long Island, New York Boarding School for Young Ladies (Preparatory Collegiate ' Affiliated with the State University Complete Courses in Art, Vocal and Instrumental Music EXTENSIVE GROUNDS, LARGE CAMPUS, HORSEBACK RIDING, ATHLETICS ADDRESS: MOTHER SUPERIOR i77 Telephone MAin 2-5040 Coghlan Shuttleworth, Inc. CATERERS Quality and Service Representative will call upon request and give full information on menus, etc. Estimates Furnished for Weddings, Receptions, Banquets, Teas, Club Suppers, etc. 448 NOSTRAND AVENUE BROOKLYN, N. Y. With best wishes to the class of 1935 FRIENDS FOR THE COLLEGE GIRL Professional Work which is in keeping with the status of a college education is the best and, certainly, the most protitable field of endeavor for the college girl. From the following courses; namely, Medi- cal Assistant, Social Service, Law Assistant, Technical Assistant, Journalism, Commer- cial and Fine Art, Executive Secretarial, General Business, Accounting, Business Or- ganization and Management, the college girl may select the field for which she is best fitted. The Paine School is highly commended as an institution in which the college girl may maintain the educational station to which she has been accustomed. The Executive Director may be consulted on the fitness of a candidate for any of the foregoing courses without obligating the applicant in any way. Arrange an ap- pointment at your earliest convenience. BRyant 9-9650 is the number. THE PAINE SCHOOL 147 WEST 42nd STREET NEW YORK, N. Y. For 86 Years the School of Professional Standards WE SUGGEST EARLY APPOINTMENTS PHOTOGRAPHS OF DISTINCTION Studio for Women and Children 683 FIFTH AVE. Wisconsin 2-4517 Studio for Men 507 FIFTH AVE. VAnderbilt 3-7400 I 7 8 PRINTED AND BOUND AT THE Country Life Pres. t ik The true University of these days is a collection of books, said Carlylc . . . and as printers for the publishers of books, maga- zines, annuals and catalogues, we are proud to have a part in the making of many of the best-known book productions of the last thirty years! . . . all printed under the sign of the Anchor and Dolphin. DOUBLEDAY, DORAN COMPANY, INC. GARDEN CITY, NEW YORK - 179
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