St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY)

 - Class of 1936

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 168 of the 1936 volume:

Footprints 1936 Jlicjld Merorcncl iTLo.nns C ). llUloy. ill Cll cJfy ' isliol) of cJ vooKiyn FOOTPRINTS 19 3 6 Published by the Senior Class ST. JOSEPH ' S COLLEGE FOR WOMEN Brooklyn, N. Y. vr DECAUSE our four years at St, Joseph ' s has been in effect a pilgrimage, we have turned to the Canterbury Tales for the theme of our book and to Geoffrey Chaucer for our inspiration With the facile skill of the artist, Chaucer has drawn for us in his tales portraits of people from every rank and class of society. It was in a common cause that they were met, however, at the Tabard Inn at Southwark, Together they rode to their goal, the shrine of the Saint of Canterbury. We as individuals have been different in many ways but as a class we have also been bound together in a common cause We have at last reached our long awaited goal as, a compaignye Of sondry folk, by aventure yfolle In felaweship. Dedication To MARY DALY whose gentle spirit will ever penetrate the memory of our college years Contents FOREWORD FACULTY VIEWS SENIORS SENIOR CLASS HISTORY SENIOR CLASS WILL SENIOR CLASS PROPHECY VALEDICTORY CLASSES ACTIVITIES LITERATURE DIRECTORY ADVERTISING Footprints Staff MARY LAV IN EVELYN McCAUSLAND RUTH ANN NEUMANN ROSE MARIE O ' REILLY KATHLEEN HOLLAND SISTER FLORENCE JOSEPHINE FRANCIS P- KILCOYNE Editor-in-Chief Art Editor Photographic Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Faculty Advisers ASSISTANTS Eileen Daly Sally Dennen Dorothy Irving Katherine Shea Dolores Pyne Janet Morris Virginia Norton Frances Bennett REGINA MEANY Advertising Manager ASSISTANTS Elizabeth Langan Dorothy Delay Rita Morris Miriam Crofton The Tabard Inn But natheless, whil I have tyme ana space, Er that I ferther in this tale pace, Me thynketh it acordaunt to resoun To telle yow al the condicioun Of ech of hem, so as it semed me. And whiche they weren, and of what degree. And eke in what array that they were inne, LOURDES ' LANE THE CHAPEL ' J Hl w 1 ■W ' ' ' , ' (■■[ ' ' Hl «r ' HiSlliir 1 H ' F™ ' , £ i il KH [ HJ i k THE CONVENT FONTBONNE HALL THE MAIN BUILDING llililt ma kj THE LIBRARY ■ Hi lU 1 I I ■ THE NEW BUILDING THE ALUMNAE ROOM Sownynge in moral vertu was his speche, And gladly wolde he lerne, and gladly teche. FACULTY Faculty Reverend William T Dillon, J D, Dean Reverend Joseph P. Wiest, MA, Sacred Scripture Religion Reverend Francis X. Fitzgibbon, MA Philosophy Reverend William G Ryan, STB, J.C B. History Reverend Charles E Diviney, M.A. Religion Sister M Ethelreda, B.A. Treasurer Sister M, Charitina, MA Executive Secretary of Nursery School Sister M. Carmela, MA. Chemistry Sister M Natalie, Ph D. English Sister Francis Xcvier, Ph.D. Mathematics Sister M. Gerardus, Ph D. History Sister Francis Antonio, MA. Biology Sister M. Lucide, MA. English Sister M Reginc Cecilia, M.A. Classical Language Sister Maureen, M.A. Biology Sister Florence Josephine, MA. English Sister M Lucina Assistant Librarian 4 8h ERNEST THEROUX, MA Physics FRANCIS P. KILCOYNE, MA Sociology MARY HUSCHLE, J D Law CECILIA TRUNZ, Ph a Germon MARGUERITE MICHAUD, MA. French MARIE OLIVA, MA. Spanish TERESA TUSA, B A. Secondary Enghsh (Methods) EDWARD B VAN ORMER, Ph D Psychology «( 19jf MARY G. CLOSE, B.S. Physical Education MARY E. FLANIGAN, MA. English HARRY J. CARMAN, Ph.D. History LEO J. AUCOIN, MA, French DANIEL J. SHEA, M.A. Education ANTHONY BOVE, B.A. Modern Language Methods ROSEMARY KENNELLY, MA. Chemistry MARGARET M. GARDINER, B.S Psychology 20 h THOMAS S, CUSACK, M D Dynamic Psychiatry MARY V. O ' BRIEN, M.A. Speech Education LORETTA A, DOHERTY, B.A History Methods ELIZABETH W, SCANLON, Ph.D. Secondary Education HENRY W, TAPLEY, MA Art LORETTA A. CURRAN, MA. Speech Education ALFRED J. SELLERS, J S.D. History ARTHUR G. MULLIGAN, MA Speech Education - 21 ) . FRANCES McGUIRE, B.A. Registrar MARY KEYES, B.A, Librarian 4 22 A knyght ther was, and that a worthy man, That fro the tyme that he first bigan To riden out, he loved chivolrie, Trouthe and honour, fredom and curteisie. SENIORS : 23 ] ROSE BAIOCCHI His gentyle hert is of a gret humblesse ' ' Treasurer, French Club 3 Class Basketball 1, 3, 4 Social Service 3, 4 VIRGINIA BEATTY She had so stedfaste countenaunce So noble porte, and meyntenaunce Junior Prom Committee 3 Dean ' s Staff, Alum-a? Week 3 Glee Club Show 3 - 24 1 . ELIZABETH BENDER This worthy man ful wel his wit bisette Glee Club 2, 3, 4 Athletic Association 1, 3, 4 Committee for Glee Club Concert 4 MARION BILLIES Wel me liketh youre womanly counte- naunce Youre fresshe fetures and youre comli- nesse Chairman, Hood Committee 4 Religion Committee 1 , 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2, 3 4 25 y MIRIAM BRAITHWAITE My wit IS greet, though that I bourde and pleye Chairman, Fall Dance 4 Loria, Art Editor 4 Class Basketball 1, 2, 3, 4 CLAIRE BRENNAN She was so charitable, and so pitcus She wolde wepe, if that she sough a mou . Kaught in a trappe Chairman, Junior Week 3 Loria, Literary Staff 4 Parents ' Day Committee 1, 2, 4 . . - ( 26 ) ■ GRACE BUCKLEY A fair persone, and strong, and yong of age And ful of honour and of curteisye Registrar, Alumnae Week 3 Trust Fund Bridge 2 Fall Dance Committee 2 ROSEMARY BURKE And I was yong and ful of rogerye And joly as a pye Class Basketball 1, 2, 3 Class Volleyball 3 Social Service 4 4 27 MARY CAMPBELL Curteys she was, discreet and Athletic Association 1, 3 Social Service 4 Serenade rs 2 RITA CAMPBELL For trewely ye have as myrie a stevene As any aungel hath that is in hevene Religion Committee 1, 2, 3, 4 Varsity Basketball 3, 4 Senior Prom Committee 4 - [ 28 h ETHEL CHAMBERS As in this world right riow ne knowe I non So worthy to ben loved Dramatic Society 4 Social Service 3 Glee Club 1,2 MADELINE CLARK Ys fairer, clerer, and hath more lyghte Than any other planete in hevene Junior Prom Committee 3 Varsity Basketball 1, 2 Social Service 2, 3 •«(29| GRACE COOK This noble ensample to his sheep he yaf That first he wroghte, and afterward he taughte Dramatics 2 Social Service 3 Serenaders 2, 3 MIRIAM CROFTON Therewith she ben so mery and so locunde Point System Committee 4 Ring Committee 3 Footprints, Advertising Staff 4 -([30}!- DOROTHY DELAY Fair was this mayde in excellent beautee Aboven every wight that man may see Chairman, Reception to High School Sen- iors 4 Fall Dance Committee 3 Class Basketball 2, 3, 4 ANNE DOHERTY She was so diligent withouten slouthe That alle hir loven that looketh on hir face Benefit Bridge and Dance Committee 4 Committee for Senior Sophomore Recep- tion 4 Glee Club 2, 3, 4 • 31 BEATRICE DORNEY And though that he were worthy, he was wys Senior Prom Committee 4 Benefit Bridge Committee 4 Alumnae Week Committee 3 JULIA DORSEY He woulde thresh, and thereto dike and delve For Christe ' s sake, for every poor wight Withouten hire, if it Icy in his myght President, Social Service 4 Glee Club Production 2 Dramatics 1 • ! 32 j- ALICE ENRIGHT A prudent man, and that is eyn ful seelde President, Debaters ' Club 4 Chairman of Checking Committee, Alum- nae Week 3 Social Service 1, 2, 3 MARY FAMULARI She is honoured overal ther she gooth ' ' Committee, Senior Prom 4 Committee, Junior Prom 3 Glee Club 1, 3 :33) KATHLEEN FANNING He semsth elvyssh by his countenaunce But unto no wight dooth he daliaunce Chairman Door Committee, Alumnae Week 3 Alumnae Committee for Benefit Bridge 4 Dramatic Society 2 CATHERINE FARLEY On bokes for to rede, I me delyte Junior Prom Committee 3 Hostess Alumnae Week 3 Parents ' Day Committee 3 «i{34] ISABEL FARRELL But half so wel biloved a man as he Ne was ther nevere in court, of his degree Committee on Examinations 4 Senior Prom Committee 4 Junior Prom Committee 3 RITA FAVOR He was a verray, parfit, gentil knyght President Undergraduate Association 4 Class President 1, 2 Secretary U- A 3 135] HARRIET FAY Benygne he was, and wonder diliaent And in adversitee ful pacient A. A. 1, 2, 3, 4 Cheer Leader 3 Class Basketball 3 DOROTHY FERRICK Discreet he was, and of great reverence He semed swich, hise wordes weren so wise ' ' Glee Club 1, 2, 3, 4 Basketball 1 Dramatics 3 • (36js- MARY FILAN Wei koude he rede a lessoun or a storie President, German Club 4 Chairman, G A, Programs 4 Dramatic Society Production 2, 3 JOSEPHINE FITZSIMMONS With lokkes crulle, as they were leyd presse President, History Club 4 Student Examination Committee 4 Junior Prom Committee 3 4 37 1 MARIE GERACI Humblesse hath slayn in hir al tirannye Junior Prom Committee 3 Bridge Club 4 Social Service 3 EILEEN GILROY Wei koude I daunce to an harpe smale Chairman, Dance Club 3 Class Basketball 1, 2, 3 Senior Prom Committee 4 E 38 | VERONICA GING In hir ne lakked no condicioun That IS to preyse, as by discrecioun President, Dramatic Society 4 Secretary, Dramatic Society 3 Junior Prom Committee 3 MARGARET GRACE And sikerly, she was of greet desport And ful plesaunt, and amyoble of port Chairman, Trust Fund Bridge 3 Varsity Basketball Captain 3 Chairman, Alumnae Week Dance 3 -;( 39 h DOROTHY GROGAN A knyght. . . . Fulfild of honour and of worthynesse And strong of freendes Chairman, Field Day 2, 3 Religion Committee 4 Varsity Basketball 1, 2, 3 ALICE HAGAN . . . that fairer was to sene Than is the lylie upon his staike grene, And fressher than the May with floures newe Committee for Bridge and Tea 4 Athletic Association 1, 2, 3, 4 Alumnae Day Committee 3 ■ f(40i EVELYN HAGAN The wisdom of an heep of lerned men Dramatic Society 4 Social Service 3 Glee Club 1, 2 KATHLEEN HOLLAND But Christes lore and his apostles twelve He taughte, but first he folwed it hym- selve Chairman, Religion Committee 4 President Mercier Circle 4 Class Councilor 3, 4 4 4 LOUISE HUBERT And Frenssh she spak, ful faire and fetisly After the scole of Stratford-atte-Bowe President, French Club 4 Junior Prom Committee 3 Committee, Benefit Bridge and Dance 4 CATHERINE HUMANN Koude so the peples herte embrace. That ech hir lovede, that loked on hir face President, Athletic Association 4 Varsity Basketball 2, 3 Chairman, Junior Prom 3 t[42] MARIE HUMPHREYS Rhyght as the fresche rede rose newe Yn the somyr sunne colored is Dramatic Society 3, 4 Glee Club 2 Junior Prom Committee 3 VIRGINIA HUMPHREYS In hir IS heigh beautee, withoute pride, Yowthe, withoute grenehede or folye President, Freshman Class 1 Treasurer, U. A. 2 Dean ' s Staff, Alumnae Week 3 «t{43 ] • VICTORIAN JACOB Wei koude he synge, and pleyn on a rote Rifle 1, 2, 3 Social Service 3 Committee, Freshman Sophomore Party 1 ANN JONES Trewe of his work, sobre, pitous, and fre Chairman, Attendance Committee 4 Alumnae Day Committee 3 Glee Club 1,2, 3 -«[ 44 ji- MARGARET KENNEDY For as the crystall glorious ye shyne And lyke ruby ben your chekys rounde President, Spanish Club 4 Business Manager, Lone 4 Dramatic Society 1, 2 DOROTHY KENNY His eyen twynkled in his heed aryght As doon the sterres in the frosty nyght Chairman, Senior Prom 4 Dramatics 1, 2 Social Service 3 -i(45} RITA KIERNAN For he is croppe and roote of gentylesse Senior Prom Committee 4 Junior Prom Committee 3 Ring Committee 3 ELIZABETH LANGAN Forsothe, he was a worthy man with-alle Chairman, Door Committee, Benefit Bridge 4 Glee Club 1,2,3 Advertising Staff, Footprints 4 46; MADELINE LARKIN Thereto he koude endite and make a thyng, Ther koude no wight pynche at his writ- yng Dramatic Society 3, 4 Basketball 1,2 Social Service 3 THERESA LATORRACA Of studie took he moost cure and moost heede Vice-President, French Club 3, 4 Alumnae Week Committee 3 Social Service 2, 3, 4 4 47 }!• MARY LAV IN For hym was levere have at his beddes heed Twenty bookes, clad in blak or reed . . . Than robes riche, or fithele, or gay sau- trie Editor-in-Chief, Footprints 4 Editor-in-Chief, Loria 4 Treasurer, Dramatics 2 LORETTA LOPEZ Singynge he was, or floytynge al the day Chairman, Senior Week 4 Chairman, Christmas Party 4 Chairman, Entertainment, Alumnae Week 3 RITA MAC KAY She is mirour of alle curteisyie Serenaders 2, 3 Ring Committee 3 Bridge Club 4 REGINA MAHONEY In hym is bountee, wysdom, and gouver- naunce Weel more thanne any mannes wit ken gesse Chairman, Fontbonne Hall 4 Senior Prom Committee 4 Committee, Benefit Bridge and Dance 4 THERESA MANGIARDI His longe heer was . . . As any ravenes fethere it shoon for-blak Vice-President, Senior Class 4 Chairman, Senior-Junior Theatre Party 4 Chairman, Decorations Committee for Benefit Bridge 4 MARGARET McCAFFERY Fayrer was she than any other creature President, Glee Club 4 Religion Committee 4 Chairman, Class Day 2, 3 : 50 ANITA McANIFF To alle hir werkes vertu is hir gyde Secretary, Bridge Club 4 Committee for Parents ' Day 4 Committee for Christmas Party 2 ELIZABETH McGRATH Myn wit is sharp, I love no toryinge Senior Basketball Team 4 Committee, Junior-Senior Luncheon 4 Committee, Alumnae Week 3 4 51 h MURIEL McMAHON A bettre envyed man was nowher noon ' ' Glee Club Show 3 Class Day Committee 2, 3 Bridge Club 3, 4 MARY McMANUS In feloweshipe wel koude she laugh and carpe Glee Club 2, 3, 4 Social Service 2, 3 Dramatics 1 :52) RUTH McQUILLEN For with the rose coulor stroof her hewe, I noot which was the fairer of hem too Junior Prom Committee 3 Fall Dance Committee 2 Basketball 2, 3 HELEN MEADE Ful is myn herte of revel and solas President, Senior Class 4 Secretary, Point System 3 Chairman, Alumnae Day 3 53 ]v REGINA MEANY His voys was murier than the murie organ On messedayes, that in the chirche gon Valedictorian 4 President, Public Speaking 4 Advertising Manager, Footprints 4 RITA MELVIN Ys sweter than the May with laurer crowned Senior Prom Committee 4 Basketball 1,2 Social Service 3 4 54 h VESTA MOORE Justice he was ful often in assise By patente, and by pleyn commission Dean, Alumnae Week 3 Secretary, Glee Club 3 Religion Committee 4 j j ' KATHERINE MORGAN Noght of word spak lie moore than was neede And that was said in forme and reverence Dramatics 1 Rifle 2, 3 -A y RITA MORRIS All was fee symple to hym in effect Assistant Registrar, Alumnae Week 3 Advertising Committee, Footprints 4 Rifle Club 2, 3 KATHRYN NELSON Honour honourethe him for his noblesse Chairman, Benefit Bridge and Donee 4 Class Treasurer 4 Chairman Sophomore Farewell to Seniors 2 • [ 56 1 . RUTH NEUMANN And eek he was of swich discrecioun That ther was no man in no regioun, That hym in song or wisedom myghte posse Vice-President, Dramatic Society 4 Photographic Editor, Footprints 4 President, Bridge Club 4 VIRGINIA NORTON A trouve swynker and c good was he Lyvynge in pees and parfit charitee U. A. Councilor 1, 2 Secretary, Public Speaking 3, 4 Committee, Junior Class Day 3 57]( DOROTHEA O ' NEILL Pryvee and apert, and moost entendeth ay To do the gentil dedes that he kan Junior Week Committee 4 Fall Donee Committee 3 Class Day Committee 2, 3 ROSE MARIE O ' REILLY No countrefeted termes ha dde she To seme wys, but otter hir degree She spak Vice-President, U A. 4 Business Manager, Loria and Footprints 4 Varsity Manager 3 GILDA PANSINI To lerne bookes was al hir likyng French Club 2, 3, 4 Social Service 4 Dramatics 2 MERCY PEPPARD Compassion, and felawship, and trist Glee Club 4 Rifle Club 3 Bridge Club 3, 4 59 | MARY PINTER Ful swift and bisy evere in good werk- ynge Bridge Club 4 Dance Club 3 German Club 3, 4 AGNES PLUNKETT That as of lyght the somer sonne shene Passeth the sterre, right so over mesure She fayrer was than any creature Assistant Dean, Alumnae Week 3 Junior Prom Committee 3 Junior-Senior Luncheon Committee 3 4 60 ] MADELINE PORPORA In alle the ordres foure is noon that kan So muchel of daliaunce and fair langage Treasurer, Cercle Moliere 4 Fall Dance Committee 3 Dramatic Society 1, 2 DOLORES PYNE . . . lady swete That was so fair so fresh so fre Varsity Manager 4 Vice-President Sophomore Class 2 Cheer Leader 2 ' i 61 ] • WINIFRED QUINN So good, that men may wel se Of ol goodnesse she had no mete ' Social Service 3, 4 Basketball 1, 2 Glee Club 1,2 ' • - rmaM M GRACE RUSSO And evere honoured for his worthynesse Glee Club 1,3 French Club 1,3 Spanish Club 1, 3 62 ]: FRANCES SCUDDER Ensample of goode and wise werkes alle Dramatics 1 Rifle Club 3 Bridge Club 4 MARGARET SHEEHY What nedeth it hise fetures to discryve For in this world was noon so fair on lyve Fall Dance Committee 1 Glee Club 1, 2, 3 Social Service 3 ' i h DOROTHEA SOMMER Hir yelow heer was broyded in a tresse Bihynde hir bak, a yerde long, I gesse Committee, Senior-Junior Reception to Freshmen 4 Committee, Benefit Bridge 4 Committee, Alumnae Week 3 VERONICA SOYKA He was therwith fulfild of gentillesse, Of honour, end of parfit worthynesse Committee, French Play 4 Rifle Club 2, 3 Dramatics 1 •iS ' h i GILDA TEDESCO That ys so good, so faire, so debonayre I prey to God, that ever falls hire faire Social Service 2, 3 Junior Prom Committee 3 Rifle Club 3 AUDREY TRIMBLE . . . al hir wytte was set, by the rode Withoute malyce, upon gladnesse Varsity Basketball 4 Dramatic Production 3 Committee, Junior Prom 3 t 65) - MARY URQUHART So womanly, so benigne, That in this world thogh that men wolde seke, Half of hire beaute shulde men not fynde Chairman, Parents ' Day 3 Secretary, History Club 4 Junior Prom Committee 3 FRANCES VAUGHAN She was encressed in swich excellence And so discreet and fair of eloquence Chairman, Junior-Senior Luncheon 3 Parents ' Day Committee 3 Junior Prom Committee 3 66 ] KATHRYN WATERS Therwith she loved so wel ryght She wronge do wolde to no wyght Glee Club Show 3 Alumnae Day Committee 3 Committee, Senior-Sophomore Reception 2 •«f67 History o£ the Senior Class Four years seem short and fleeting when you are living them but when you stop for a moment to review the changes in fortune that have been wrought by their passing, it seems inconceivable that so much should have been accomplished in such a short span of time. As Freshmen we entered with heads held high. Weren ' t we to be initiated into that sanctum sanctorum of the literati, the college whirl. We were initiated but gradually our heads sank lower and lower until we were getting dents in cur chests from the pressure of our chins. We who had been the prides of our high schools as Seniors became the most insignificant of all human beings — Freshmen, This lowering of our pride was brought about by a group of heartless persecutors and conspirators, the Sophomore Hazing Committee. We were advised that the proper Freshman attire was middy, skirt, and beret. Away with the new fall clothes with which we hoped to impress all who would behold us. From then on, torture began. We recited poems with gestures, established the fact of the 57 varieties of Heinz (consult our research expert Dorothy Duffy for further dotal, explained why the window hod a pane or pain and recited our hard learned lessons from the handbook. We hod our hour, however, when the time came for Investiture, All eyes were turned on the Freshmen (you couldn ' t avoid us no matter how hard you tried). It was a solemn occasion and what a splendid group we were! Midterm exams come upon us when we were just realizing where we were. Following these we had our first of a long series of conferences with the Dean. They were compulsory for Freshmen for more than one reason we reckon. The Freshmen, true to all traditions captured the basketball intermural cham- pionship, and followed this up by winning enough points at field day to walk away with the cup Spring became summer, summer became fall and we became Sophomores. The indignities we had suffered would be passed on to a new class. But orders from on high decreed that there would be no more hazing. Ah, the pity of it. We who had been browbeaten into education would have to educate in a less forceful manner. Was there no justice! ' There was. These newcomers would never know the spirit of kinship which arises when united you face a common foe. Anyway, we hove always been opposed to the modern practice of sugar-coating education. In our Sophomore year we felt two blows from the hand of death. We Ipst our classmate, Mary Daly. We also lost Sister Lorenzo whom we knew as a friend rather than as a teacher. Their places can never be filled in the hearts of those who belong to the class of ' 36. Sophomore year is vague in memory, for we had found ourselves but we hod not yet learned to frolic Junior year, the most glamorous of all college years from a social standpoint, brought promises of much reveling and cavorting. But we hit a snag. That famous subject with its lofty name and its intellectual content. Junior Philosophy, almost disheartened us at first. Had it not been for the patience of Father Fitzgibbon who explained and re-explained we would have probably given it up as a bad job and decided that maybe Home Economics was more in our line We juggled scholasticism 4 68 ]■ ' - so thoroughly I cm afraid that we almost emerged with c system of our own. How- ever, St. Thomas must have been wa tching over us for we emerged victorious Our long awaited Junior Promenade finally arrived. How proud we felt prome- nading before the assembled guests in our sartorial splendor. Our gowns may not have been created by Molyneux or Patou, but we felt that we were creations in them. Junior week was one round of gaiety. We dined at the London Terrace and were absolutely fascinated by the bobbies who opened the doors. The Alumnae treated us to a gay revue, Thumbs Up ' and a few nights later the Seniors invited us to see The Great Waltz. Then back to work and life went on as it had before. In the spring came the U. A. elections. Who was to be our next President? Did we quibble? ' Did we hesitate? There was no need for doing either. Rita Favor was unani- mously elected President for the year 1935-1936 amid the cheers of the whole student body. With Helen Meade as Class President we entered upon the last lap of our journey. We were Seniors with poise, dignity and rank. Imagine the consternation of one Senior who was mistaken for a Freshman. Imagine the deflated pride of another who was asked, while pupil teaching in a high school, if she were one of the new entrants. Nobody looked up to us with awe. No one thought we were superior. It just goes to show you what the elimination of hazing has done to the Freshmen. They treat Seniors as their equals and what is more they do it condescendingly! Our Senior Promenade was awaited with the greatest of expectation. We selected the Hotel St. Regis and there we danced in the Christmas season. The music went round and round and we came out on top, with Dot Kenny and her committee chiefly responsible for the grand time. Junior Philosophy may have staggered our equilibrium but Senior Ethics made us lose it entirely. Ten books to be reported on before the first of March! With nights of toil, worry, and little sleep, we payed the price of procrastination. Weak-kneed and weak-brained we entered the office which seems to take on a formidable appear- ance for occasions such as this. After giving until we could give no more, we retreated to home and bed. Then came the sleepless nights when we thought of the most brilliant criticisms we should have said and didn ' t. March first came, and life went on as before. Thoughts of the gowns to be worn class day, the theses, and the comprehensives loomed equally large on our minds. In our history the class of ' 36 has progressed slowly but surely towards its goal. We have gained a liberal education aided by teachers and books, by social contacts and spiritual guidance All these things lie behind us. As to the future we can only say with Keats — And as in sparkling majesty, a star Gilds the bright summit of some gloomy cloud: Brightening the half veil ' d face of heaven afar. So, when dark thoughts my boding spirit shroud. Sweet Hope, celestial influence round me shed. Waving thy silver pinions o ' er my head. Audrey Trimble 4 69 jv Last Will and Testament We, the members of the Class of 1936 of St. Joseph ' s College of Brooklyn, New York, being of sane and proper mind, do hereby make, publish, and declare this to be our lost Will and Testament. We do give, devise, and bequeath: — First — To Thirty-Seven, the exclusive use of our front rows in G, A, and the right as Seniors, to wear their tassels in the accepted Oxford style. Second — To Thirty-Eight, our Sister Class, we pledge our continued interest in their careers, and we also leave them all the traditions of Junior Week, including the Junior Prom. Third — To Thirty-Nine, our hope that they may use their dignified position of Sophomores to the good advantage of instructing the new Freshmen to be all that St. Joseph ' s girls should be. Fourth — To Nineteen-Forty, the Red and Black of ' 36 — may it prove as glorious a banner to you as it did to us. Fifth — To Father Dillon, the right to use all profits he may collect from our per- formances on the Jello program. Sixth — To Father Fitzgibbon, the everlasting gratitude of ' 36 that he was able to eradicate all our fears of philosophy, and make it one of our most interesting subjects. Seventh — To Father Wiest, the knowledge that we will never forget the Church History text — at least its size. Eighth — To Father Ryan, an automatic bookcase that will carry all his books around for him. Ninth — To Father Diviney, a parish in Brooklyn over which he may become pastor before the expiration of ten or fifteen years. Tenth — To Sister Francis Xovier, a Math class in which the girls will not always associate such terms as Delta and Pi with a Sorority chapter. Eleventh — To Sister Gerardus, a student who can accurately condense the happenings of two or three decades into two or three sentences. Twelfth — To Sister Choritina, our sincere thanks for all the helpful hints we hove received at the Nursery School. We ' re sure they ' ll prove valuable in years to come. Thirteenth — To Sister Francis Antonio, an extra-sized swatter to kill all the flies who survived our etherizing process. Fourteenth — To Sister Lucide, the satisfaction of knowing that we still remember Wordsworth ' s perfect line. Fifteenth — To Sister Florence Josephine, a model Loria staff who will always have their contributions in on time. Sixteenth — To Sister Carmela, a class of Chemistry students who will really have the scientific attitude Seventeenth — To Sister Natalie, an invisible detective to check up on all girls who forget to pay for their calls made through the office. 4 70 ]■ • Eighteenth — To Sister Lucina and Miss Keyes, a book shelf at the entrance door so that all late students may deposit their library books before rushing to nine o ' clock classes. Nineteenth — To Miss Huschle, our deepest gratitude for teaching us that cases are something more than boxes for shipping fruits or canned vegetables. Twentieth — To Miss Close, our first week ' s salary, to provide a laundress to keep the middies clean, and a bootblack to keep the sneakers white. Twenty-First — To Miss Flanigan, a little wooden box so that she may safely preserve all the index cards from the Novel course. Twenty-Second — To Miss Michaud and Mr. Aucoin, a thriving share in the play- producing business, as a result of their outstanding successes in the French plays. Twenty-Third — To Dr Von Ormer, a scientifically minded baby who will be suffi- ciently intelligent at birth to tell us its impressions of the world. Twenty-Fourth — To Miss Trunz, a class of girls who will be so interested in German that they will not only learn the words, but also the tunes of their German songs. Twenty-Fifth — To Mr Kilcoyne, our sincere promise to continue reading the America and listening to Fr, Coughlin for the rest of our lives. Twenty-Sixth — To Mr. Shea, a class of Logic students who will be logical Twenty-Seventh — To Miss McGuire, a complete set of programs that will have no conflicts, and that will be effective the very first time they ore used Twenty-Eighth — To Miss Agnes, our appreciation of her daily trips to the bulletin board to post the conference hours for the Dean ' s book reports. Twenty-Ninth — To all our other long suffering professors, who have never spared themselves in our behalf, we leave our hearts brimful of love and gratitude. Thirtieth — To the Dramatic Society, a broom and dustpan to be used in the property room during the Spring term of every year. Thirty-First — To the Glee Club, a private radio station, to be called Station W S J.C , over which they may render their programs more frequently. Thirty-Second — To the Nursery School, the completely equipped new playground which will be one of the main attractions of our enlarged campus Thirty-Third — To the Athletic Association, a bus to convey them from place to place when the Varsity plays basketball. Thirty-Fourth — To the Social Service Group, an extra supply of needles so that girls who misplace the first one will not have to forego their sewing that week. Thirty-Fifth — To the History and Language Clubs, bigger and better seminars. Whatever remains, we bequeath to the pound, to be sold to anyone who feels she can spare the quarter. In Witness Whereof, we hereunto set our hand and seal this second day of June, in the year of Our Lord, one thousand nine hundred and thirty-six. (Signed) CLASS OF 1936. Claire C. Brennon, Testator 4 71 ] • Class Prophecy Madame Chairman: In accepting your kind invitation to the alumnae reunion, allow me to express our deep appreciation of your interest in us and our sincere wishes for the success of your plan. We old timers do like to be remembered. Those of us who are in town will be most pleased to attend, but tempus having fugited apace, many of us have scattered. Grace Cook seems to bs the chief link. She and Bee Dorney find out all for their chat columns. They have a hectic office. The girl with the curlers to the right as you enter is Gilda Tedesco. The other one rushing about is Kay Waters. She comes late daily to add a ' .mosphere. The typist in the corner is Evelyn Hogan. She and Alice took jobs together just to get the boss twisted It used to be such fun in college! Mercy Peppard and Katherine Morgan were in to see them yesterday and came back with the latest tidbit. It seems Terry Mangiardi has been asking Regina Meany to say a poem about spinach on her Kiddie Hour, but Regina is afraid it is a bit too subtle. She ought to have Betty Pyne substitute with the Mooley Cow. They tell another story about Rita Mackay who has been trying to find a rhyme for onomatopoeia. When Dorothea Sommer suggested Johnny-saw-a-bee-a, Rita acted very strangely. We have great trouble with our artists. Mary Lavin is living her latest role, The Whither of Whence — or is it the widow? Audrey Trimble is with G stock company out west. Ruth Neumann prompts until she starts to giggle. Then they sit her out front with Veronica Ging, the other lough decoy. Once when business was bad Miriam Crofton was invited to sing, Is I in love, I is. Her manager. Marge McCaffery, claims it was a hit. There ' s your operatic talent for you, Betty Bender. We have also heard that Louise Hubert is afflicted with rheumatism after years of carrying French films back to New York and that Dorothy Delay has recently changed her name to Smith. One punster too many we Infer. Then there is the story of Madeline Porporo who married the wealthy coffee merchant from Venezuela. They now live in Peru. Could it be the spelling? ' Ethel Chambers claims it couldn ' t be but she can ' t get Mary Campbell to agree. Alice Enright and Claire Brennan should be able to come, Virginia Norton and Rita Morris are meeting them at a scientific round table discussion tomorrow. Marion Billies will get in touch with them there. She is the eminent child psychologist, you know. Grace Buckley and Madeline Clark are her two calm- ' em-downers in chief. Dot Grogan started in with her bui she and Peggy Grace now collaborate on their own child problems or vice versa. Marie Geraci will make a good third if she ever moves into the neighborhood and as for Julia Dorsey ' Remember when she was going to devote her life to social serv- ice? She and Ann Jones and Mary Pinter often meet at the annual Soltaire Bridge of which Madeline Larkin is chairman. Miriam Braithwaite and Kitty Humann, home from that long-planned tour tell of finding Kay Fanning hiding out in the hills of Ireland, |ust a Sinn-Feiner at heart. Loretta Lopez is with her singing Irish ballads. The whole story is written up in Rita 412 y loernan ' s interview in Dot Kenny ' s society page. She and Rita Melvin have mode quite success of the column. From the same sources we hear of the latest Olympic bound group, Fran Young, Agnes Plunkett and Ruth McQuillen. We wonder whether the sports clothes or the sports IS the greater drawing card. They are to meet Tory Jacobs and Marge Sheehy in Paris. Kathryn Nelson is secretary and interpreter for those two successful buyers. Rose Biocchi and Gilda Pansini are there also on sabbatical and Rita Campbell has promised to go with Rosemary Burke, induced perhaps by the prospect of computing the altitude of the Eiffel Tower. Rita Favor may not be able to come Rose Mane O ' Reilly, Freshman Supervisor at Universe College for Women, hears from her now and then but an ambassador ' s life IS no cinch. Did you know that Helen Meade is over with her? Oh yes, — Mercury rises! Teresa Latorraca has gone along as interpreter Jo Fitzsimmons used to take an active part in diplomatic conferences before her marriage. So glad ail her figuring of six children on forty dollars a week did not go to waste. A false rumor places Kay Holland at the University of Louvain but she and Isabel Farell are both married and still live on the Island, Talking about ambassadors, I hear that Grace Russo and Mary Famulari have high secretarial posts in the consulate. Harriet Fay was to sail with them last week but she forgot her passport. You should have seen Regina Mahoney ' s face when she and Elizabeth Langan heard about it. You would think she had lighted on a surprise Ethics quiz. Anita McAniff tells us there was a lovely fashion show on board just before sailing time. Several prominent alumnae social leaders attended. Vesta Moore was hostess and Virginia Beatty of the married set modelled. Have you gotten in touch with Frances Scudder yet? She has transacted several important deals with the firm in which Mary Urquhart is a much-valued secretary. Possibly she would know the whereabouts of Marge Kennedy. Since she left for South America it is hard to reach her. That accounts for almost everybody and perhaps has helped give an idea of who might come. Mary McManus and Muriel McMahon tell me that Elizabeth McGrath may be playing here that week. Catherine Farley is writing music for her next show. Her success as a comedienne was a surprise but we should have known that merry twinkle meant something. Eileen Gilroy is very busy with her dancing classes but will probably manage to come and perhaps Dot O ' Neil will be able to spare a little time from her researches on agnates, cognates and cousins one and a half times removed. Mary Filan will be there if Mane Humphreys ' new hair rejuvenat- ing process is a success. Rumor has it that she went awfully gray writing a class prophecy years ago. Strange how ways have parted and years fled. They seem to have been busy, happy ones for most of us. The reunion you are planning should be a most interesting and happy one. We wish you every success with it. To you and our other more recent sisters we owe whatever of success we have achieved and whatever of happiness we have experienced. Mary F;!an Valedictory It would seem to us now that our tour years at St. Joseph ' s have been but a prelude to this good-bye. As we studied, and laughed, and prayed, and drank deep of the quickening waters of wisdom, like the sadness of a distant melody the thought remained that all of this would have to end. But this should not make us sad. We have learned by now that everything in life that we have cherished must eventually be separated from us The scent of pine after a summer rain, the changing of an autumn moon from scarlet to a cold whiteness, and the afterglow of a perfect sunset are perhaps the most transient of the things we love, and yet it is they that are so precious. These are, of course, only symbols of the beautiful thoughts that come to us and fade so quickly as we become conscious of them. These are only instants as compared with the things that we have seen and loved at Saint Joseph ' s. They are mere ephemerals when compared with the friendships we have made, and the love we have known, and the God we hove discovered. If the thought of parting with these things makes us sad, the College has failed us. We should hove learned by now that in saying good-bye, we can transplant these things to the life for which we have been prepared. To have a feeling of finality now, is inconsistent. These four years have been but a preparation for a glorious beginning. There was a time when, rapt in the dreams of every-day, with our eyes toward the future and its attractiveness, that we painted for ourselves a beautiful tapestry, more beautiful perhaps for its originality and freedom, than for its conformity to any set pattern. Upon it was woven, thread by thread, our young ideas of what a life should bring, of the |oy of accomplishment after a long preparation. In the course of our weaving, the inevitable snags appeared. Discouragement had to creep in because it was by conquering it that we grew. There are dull spots, now, and bright spots on this tapestry, left by the vivid impressions of those rare but lasting moments of elation, which had to be balanced by the long conservative design which hard work would weave. Only three of the corners are finished, now. The fourth has a few threads free that have yet to be bound. One is a continuation of the blue pattern that runs along beside the scarlet. The blue and the scarlet have been intertwined in places, so that they cannot at times be distinguished. The blue is the knowledge we have gained of religion and philosophy. The scarlet is the Faith we have nurtured and cherished. These two will have to be carried over into a new design. The other thread that escapes is the one that has run through the tapestry since it began. This is the one that has to be cut It is for our Good-bye to finish it. The future now is full of uncertainties, but it is not depressing. Like the pale glow that precedes the dawn, like the silence of a benediction there comes with our contemplation of tomorrow, an intangible fear that for the moment veils our delight in its beauty. It is this fear that should unite us It is this that checks the casual good-bye, and puts in its place the prayer from which our good-bye originated May God be with you Regina J, Meany. Nowher so bisy a man as he ther nos ' And yet he semed bisier than he was. UNDERGRADUATES 75 p ' Junior Class GENEVIEVE WRIGHT YVONNE AUDION LILLIAN KEENAN ANNETTE ROBINSON MARY MEEHAN President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Councilor This September we acquired classification as Juniors which elevated us to a new and much coveted state — that of being upperclassmen. We have been happy in our new status because more has been expected of us as Juniors and we have found our places and lived up to them to the best of our ability The responsibility for managing many social end other extra-curricula affairs rests to a large extent in the Juniors end it has been our happy privilege to have participated in almost everything of importance during the school year. When we arrived in college in the fell of 1933 we were gratified by the kindness of our sister class. This year as Juniors we remembered what we had experienced as Freshmen, a sense of bewilderment end then the encouraging help of our Junior sister. In November the French Club presented L ' Avare ; Marguerite Mulrenan filled - { 76 k- us with admiration for her interpretation of the role of Harpagon. Doris Devlin was charming in the lovely costumes of the period. Our biggest event was, of course, the Junior Prom. Isobelle Anderson, our much photographed chairman, made a big effort to make it a success and it was, hier committee had a great deal of fun decorating the Auditorium and planning for the big event. It was most enjoyable to hear the upper and lower classmen admire the results. We began a week of revelry with the Prom. The following Monday, Jo Hogue and her committee arranged a wonderful Class Day dinner for us at the American Woman ' s Club. Wednesday night the Alumnae were our hostesses at the play I Want a Policeman. We had many solutions for the mystery. We shall also remember the musical play May Wine to which we were invited by the Seniors. The production of Icebound presented Madeline Noonan in one of the leading roles, that of Ben Jordan. She gave a very intelligent performance. Fran Bennett end Peg Young were also very fine in their respective parts. The committee for Alumnae Day chosen by the Chairman, Kay Haigney, was very efficient and the success of the occasion is due to their hard work. Madeline Noonan was Co-Chairman for the Easter week bridge and dance. Edythe Bruce is very active in the Rifle Club and is a fine marksman also. In our Junior year, our interest doubled itself intellectually and at the same time we became more social minded. Each year that you spend in St. Joseph ' s seems to increase the ties that bind you to it. It will be difficult to say goodbye next year. Lillian Keenan. ■4 11 h H ' , Z J Bttfc MM l-H i ' g m ■r ., InEF E H V K « B| ' ' ' ■ - i-t s ' ' ' ' w . „ w.v ' ■ ' SE as A iSi Sophomore Class CELESTE HUGHES BETTY CARTER WINIFRED MEADE FRANCES McLOUGHLIN ALICE KENNEDY President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Councilor With the coming of the Foil term, almost every Freshman looked forward to the time when she would become a full-fledged Sophomore. We have now reached that lofty height and on looking back we all feel that our Sophomore year was one well spent. Most of our success is due to the able leadership of the officers chosen early in the term. Upon returning in September, we oil felt deeply the loss of one of our best loved classmates, Kathleen Riordan, who died this summer. Kathleen ' s cheery disposition and readiness to help will be remembered by all. Class meetings were called early in October and business was assumed imme- diately. We feel very honored at the number of girls chosen to represent the Sopho- more class on different committees. Cecilia Greegan, Katherine Shea, and Miriam Mannix were chosen for the Committee on Student Administration of Examinations. 78];- Betty Nicholaus and Ann Kane represented the cloii un the Point System Committee. The Attendance Committee completed its ranks by choosing Helen Higgins end Ruth Whitbread, The Sophomores are continuing their good standing in the field of sports. Mar|orie and Dorothea Allen, Margaret Fay and Josephine O ' Connell were chosen for the Varsity and proved very valuable players throughout the season. The Sopho- more class Basketball team defeated the Seniors and are preparing to do the some to the Freshmen. The rest of the class is trying very hard to amass points for Field Day by competing in all the tournaments which ore now under way. The most outstanding event of the year, however, was our Class Day. The entire class attended the eight o ' clock Mass in the Chapel, dressed in their academic cap and gown; afterwards breakfast was served in the Recreation Room. Classes con- tinued as usual during the day, but at night we went in a body to see Lady Precious Stream, a charming and delightful production. The chairman for the day, Betty Nicholaus, IS to be complimented for the wonderful success she planned. In a few more weeks we will be changing our tassels again. Sophomore year is passing very rapidly and it is hard to realize that soon half our college course will be over Although the year has not been completed as yet, the success of the past certainly insures the success of the future All this has bound the Sophomores to- gether with a unity which will surely last through college years. Winifred Meade 4 79 ] H. f™ r ' Hrnn 1 RRt prSJ 1 ' 0 ' i ' ' ' HIWT ' F Mr . BVV13 r C BIPI E RS B h H ' ' w ' - K f mS FXW 1 w MRo m HftH P- ' P v r , H I P , g,J ,C k 2 Freshman MARGARET BERKERY ALDA GIARDINIERI GERALDINE DONNELLY KATHRYN CROSS ANNE LOGAN CI ass President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Councilor Fresli from our high school pampering, we started our college life at St, Joe ' s with a know it all attitude. When our professors launched us on the thinking process, we quickly shed our haughty airs at the realization of our uninformed minds. Our days of blissful ignorance were over. About this same time, the beloved Sophomores began to haze us. Hopeless looking middies and skirts and bibs with our names inscribed on them, constituted our smart attire during this period. To be certain we learned the handbook, a meeting was held every day for three weeks. At the close of these humiliating trials, the Sophomores entertained us at a party. Everyone had such a good time that the sophs and the freshies have been great pals ever since During our first trying days at the college, our Junior sisters were especially helpful and kind Under their capable guidance, we learned to use the four bulletin boards, to know the hopeless condition of the locker numbers, to spend our time profitably in the rec room (?), and to criticize various profs. To insure us of the friendly attitude around St. Joseph ' s, the Seniors and the Sophomores welcomed us hospitably at a supper. By this time we were well acquainted with quizzes, book reports, and term papers; but we have never and will never become accustomed to these horrors. In the fall of ' 35, the most memorable occasion for us was that day on which we were solemnly invested. We certainly felt proud and scholarly in our new caps and gowns. During the year we have joined and enthusiastically supported several of the clubs about the school. We hope some of our girls will be leaders of the activities in the future. The first assembly sponsored by the Freshmen class during the new term was outstanding in importance to us. Frances Carrol, Mary Kane, Frances Coffey, Helen Doyle end Geraldine Donnelly, under the direction of Margaret Berkery, presented the entertainment. Another momentous occasion was our first Class Day. We had looked forward to this with eagerness. Hazel O ' Connell, as chairman, capably planned the events of the day. From Mass in the morning to the theatre party in the evening, we all enjoyed ourselves to the utmost. Through these new, bewildering and enjoyable experiences occurring during the past year, the Freshmen have become united and now anticipate three years of even greater friendship at this, our college — St. Joseph ' s. Geraldine Donnelly Hill-side Kinsman There is a tree I visit When he has lost his leaves. I have passed him In the cold, grey down, Ere other men were there. Then he stood black Against the pale sky. I have seen him dancing In the sun at noon, ' When the sky was bright blue, With white cheeks. I have admired him In the rain. When his strong arms glistened. But I love him When he stands still Amidst a purple night With stars like lewels On his fingers. Angeline Leibinger •iBiy Wei koude he sitte on hors, and faire ryde, He koude songes make, and wel endite, Juste, and eek daunce, and weel purtreye and write. ACTIVITIES - SB] ' The Undergraduate Association RITA FAVOR ROSE MARIE O ' REILLY BETTY HUMANN NORMA STRAUS President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Summer: June brought with it the end of another successful school year. The undergraduates are happy but not completely satisfied. They pause awhile — vaca- tion — before beginning a brand new year with greater victories under the direction of newly elected officers, Rita Favor, the college president for 1935-1936, spends July studying Parliamentary Procedure and planning for St. Joseph ' s. Her reign shall be glorious one. Rose Marie O ' Reilly deliberates the whole of August; she finally reaches a solution as to the best guidance a vice-president may offer a freshman striving for a higher education. Betty Humann, secretary, devotes September to developing an art in minute taking. Norma Straus, the treasurer, spends ceaseless hours on Advanced Math. She will have to maintain a balanced ledger for the college. Autumn: Summer is over and the undergraduates don cap and gown prepared to co-operate wholeheartedly with their capable officers for a red letter year. Mingled with their enthusiasm is a homesickness for General Assembly. Mary Filan, chairman of entertainment, is sure to provide exciting and interesting programs. Miss Favor formally announces an embryonic summer idea. The active members of the Undergraduate Association may become subscribers to college functions. Through the purchase of subscription cards, the students could attend all social events held at the school at reduced rates. This suggestion received the full support of the girls. A 84 } Investiture was solemnized on October eighteenth. This occasion acts as the formal reception of freshmen into collegiate life. The impressive ceremony was held in the auditorium with the chapel doors open. Flowers decorated the altar and the hall was softly lighted The Freshmen, carrying lighted candles, mounted the stage and received their cops from Father Wiest who then appealed to the class of ' 40 to carry on the high ideals associated with their Alma Mater. As a concluding gesture, Miss Favor awarded the newly-elected members of the Student Council their gold tassels. The Parents ' Day Reception was the first U. A. affair. Mary Urquhart ' 36 cordially extended a hearty invitation to all parents to attend this day set aside in their honor. Every Dad and Mother inspected the college building from the nursery to the Chem lab, praised the achievements of their daughters in Glee and Dramatic presentations, enjoyed a carefully menued supper and left satisfied with the knowledge that St. Joseph ' s was everything they desired for their daughters. Thank you Mary for your very kind attention to our parents. Winter: The undergraduates were greatly honored when Santa Clous personally visited the college, December twenty-third, to extend Yuletide greetings. Loretta Lopez ' 36, chairman of the Christmas Party, as a special privilege invited the Seniors to meet the Jolly Gentleman and receive their gifts from him. Santa then learned of St. Joseph ' s Christmas Cheer Baskets The students had volunteered to supply twelve needy families, selected from the files of Catholic Charities, with food, cloth- ing and gifts in order to assure a happy holiday season to these poor parents and anxious children. Each class was responsible for three families. They would supply their charges with everything from soup to nuts. Miss Regina Mohoney ' 35 petitioned for a radio for Fontbonne Hall. The new equipment was soon installed for student recreation. Just before the winter season closed, the Council tended a tea and reception to the February freshmen. Members of the Council acted as guides through the building and gave helpful hints to worried frosh. Benediction brought the tea to a close and the Freshmen left with a pleasing taste of college routine. Spring: 1936 gave the Undergraduate Association an opportunity to sponsor a Leap Year Party in conjunction with the Fathers ' Club. Mr. Mulvaney acted as Master of Ceremonies while the Council and Religion Committee served as a committee of arrangements. On March fifteenth, the Alumnae were entertained at a Tea and Musicale under the direction of Kathleen Haigney ' 37. Father Bracken ' s Choir graciously consented to sing and after the concert the grads were invited to take tea in the gayly decorated gym. Kathryn Nelson ' 36 was appointed to take charge of the Bridge and Dance for the benefit of the new building fund. Madeline Noonan ' 37 acted as co-chairman. The U A wished to raise a fund sufficient to aid in the furnishing of the new college addition. This spring comes to a close and brings with it the final school activity. Dorothy Delay has been delegated to see that the High School Seniors become fully acquainted with the advantages of St, Joe ' s, They were requested to visit the college May tenth. The Glee Club, the Dramatic Society and the Athletic Association furnished the entertainment. Then on June third the student body assembled at the Academy of Music to say its last goodbye to ' 36, The newly elected president gave the signal to turn the tassels. Undergraduates, one class nearer the goal, paused — it was summer — they were happy but not satisfied. Next year under new leaders, they would welcome new freshmen, ond strive for greater glories to bear out St. Joseph ' s ideals. Betty Humann •«! 85 - Religion Committee KATHLEEN HOLLAND MARY E, DELANEY HELEN F. HIGGINS Chairman Secretary Treasurer Between the nominal Catholic and the real Catholic lies a wide gap which must be bridged securely and effectively if religion :s to have the slightest influence on our lives. To secure this influence, our religion must be felt It must be a vital force which indirectly affects our every action, a force which is with us every moment of our lives. The Religion Committee of the College has that ultimate aim in view, namely, to vitalize religion in the life of every student. This end cannot be accom- plished abruptly, but must be a step by step process. The best way to learn to love a person is by being with that person often, thinking about him, making him an essential part of your life. Learning to love God follows this well known rule exactly. The path to real love of God is not an easy one; at times we are discouraged and feel we have made no progress Yet it is in these moments that we can make the greatest advance, simply by making a new resolution to try If we can do this, we have won a victory. At St. Joseph ' s, our opportunities for vitalizing our religious life are innumerable. Exercises are conducted under the supervision of the Religion Committee. These are aimed to include every type of religious activity which can possibly appeal to the students. It is to be especially noted that compulsory attendance is not required, for if the appeal is not derived by the person from the exercise itself, no amount of force will develop it. Each morning at eight forty-five, prayers are said on the gymnasium balcony, then at noon the nature of the exercise varies. During the past term, we have had Benediction at noon on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, during the after- noon on Wednesdays, and during General Assembly on Fridays, Just recently the Stations of the Cross have been added to the Wednesday schedule; they are said at twelve forty-five. To conclude our weekly religious exercises, confessions are heard by the priests of the faculty every afternoon at a specified time which is posted on the mom bulletin board. The First Friday of every month brings us Exposition from noon until eight o ' clock at night, during which time the students may visit the Blessed Sacrament and act as Honor Guard. Then, that evening, they may come to Evenings with Christ, to hear lectures on various topics of interest and a sermon and to attend the appropriate closing. Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. During the past term, the lectures included a discussion of the Sacraments, a series of lectures on the religious life of the child which was open to the Alumnae only, a survey of Catholic Literature and the discussion of the Catholic Literary Revival. At the suggestion of some of the students, a Christmas Novena was conducted from the sixteenth to the twenty-fourth of December. The exercises held after Mass in the morning and at noontime were well attended and those who made the novena felt as if they really had accomplished something in their religious development as well as giving a beautiful gift to the Christ Child. Our next opportunity for religious development came with our annual retreat in January, given by Father Caufield, a Vincentian. It is required of all Catholic students at the College to attend the Retreat, but it is hoped that they attend because of genuine interest rather than out of compulsion. Ash Wednesday and the inauguration of the Lenten season came with its daily Mass in the Chapel at eight o ' clock. Breakfast is served in the College refectory if the number of students attending warrant it. Aside from purely religious functions, a number of activities are conducted which indirectly have a religious aim. The Missal Club is such a group in which informal discussion of the method of using the Missal serves to augment our appreciation of the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass. Then, there is the Fall Dance which is generally held on Hallowe ' en, part of the proceeds of which go to the Missions and the Society of the Propagation of the Faith, The students of St. Joseph ' s thus have ample opportunity for religious develop- ment. They may choose between making their religion a lifeless affair or a cog so essential to their life ' s machinery that it would be ml without it. What they make it depends entirely upon themselves. Mary E. Delaney -[87: Athletic Association CATHERINE HUMANN FRANCES YOUNG HELEN DOLAN President Secretary Treasurer The warning whistle blew, and on expectant hush fell over the crowded gymna- sim. Order emerged from chaos, and the Annual Athletic Association Pageant of St. Joseph ' s College was begun. The Pageant was formally opened as the General Chair- man, Miss Catherine Humann, stepped forward and introduced her committee. At one side of the gym stood the various managers, while about them milled those students whose athletic tendencies and efficiency had prepared them for the role each was to portray in the coming pageant. As Miss Humann raised her whistle to her lips the members of the various activities arranged themselves behind their managers, and as the shill blast pierced the silence, the athletes moved into formation. In solemn tones, all repeated after Miss Humann the pledge of the Athletic Association. I promise 1. To engage in all activities with a spirit of fair play, moderation, and good sportsmanship, 2. To do all in my power to bring honor to the college; 3. To follow implicitly the directions of my leaders as regards competitive and non-competitive activities; 4. To readily participate, if chosen, in intra-mural and inter-mural com- petitions. The last words died away, another whistle dispersed the ranks, and the floor was cleared for the first scene. Miss Humann announced Miss Betty Pyne as Mana- ger of Varsity Basketball. While Miss Pyne saw that her equipment was in order, Miss Peggy English, Captain, gave her team final instructions. When all was in readiness, the entire Varsity squad went through a demonstration game in which the lack of finality was supplemented by a spirit of thoroughness. As the period ended, the girls left the floor to the accompaniment of the deafening applause of the spec- tators, who realized and appreciated the effort these girls had made all season to bring honor to the college. The reason for their success was not hard to understand. The next event on the program was a show of marksmanship by the members of the Rifle Club under the capable management of Miss Edythe Bruce. Their un- erring aim in this short exhibition was ample backing for their showing in the match with Brooklyn Edison, in which they trailed by only a few points. Miss Annette Robinson, as manager, directed a brief period of field hockey and her girls showed by their proficiency that this sport has an enthusiastic following. As tennis manager Miss Robinson then conducted a doubles match which was re- ceived with great enthusiasm. These contestants left the floor. Miss Humann announced that Miss Helen Reilly, tenniquoit manager, would give evidence of her team ' s expertness. As this got under way. Miss Marjorie Allen at another court, supervised a volley ball tourna- ment. When their time was up, neither team had rightly won, so both events were called a draw. Miss Dorothy Allen then used the court to show her team ' s skill in that new game which has swept the country — badminton. At this point, the gym became a kaleidoscope of shifting scenes. Eager hands took down the tennis nets, rolled the standards out of the way, set up the ping-pong table and got ready the equipment for shuffleboard and baseball. Miss Peggy English had her teams give convincing proof of their mastery of America ' s favorite sport, while Miss Reilly directed tournaments, miniatures of those which had taken place during the year. The main spectacle of the Pageant was a replica of Field Day. The entire student body participated, and the climax was reached when awards were presented to winners of individual and class events. The pageant closed amid enthusiastic applause, with a promise of even greater achievements in the future. Frances Young «[89jf Dramatic Society 1935-1936 VERONICA GING RUTH ANN NEUMANN MARGARET YOUNG RUTH PETERSEN President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer The house lights come up as the footlights fade out, and the curtain descends on another St. Joseph ' s College Revue of 1936, sponsored by the Dramatic Society. And now the story must be prepared for press. Perhaps a word about the cast would be wise at this point. The leading role was played by Miss Veronica Ging, as President, who turned in a noteworthy per- formance and handled her part very well. We will long remember Veronica almost tearing her hair out when she lost her leading man two weeks before the big opening. Although an understudy was not really necessary, Miss Ruth Ann Neumann capably filled that role as Vice-President. She did most of her work behind scenes but in many instances gave the leading lady valuable advice — particularly in the line of prompting. Unfortunately, we lost a member of our cast — Miss Margaret Main did not return in September; but another girl was found to fill the role of Secretary — Miss Margaret Young. And for our Treasurer we chose Miss Ruth Petersen who has now learned to make out checks with a flourish. But it is time we discussed the play for we all know the play ' s the thing. It is in two acts and five scenes. ACT I September 1935 to February Scene I TIME: Parents ' Day. November, 1935. PLACE; At the College. 4 90 ] 936 The Uplifting of Sadie was presented by the group, Sadie, as played by Ursula Reilly, succeeded not only in lifting herself culturally, but also gave the society its first lift of the year. We successfully launched our revue. Scene 1 1 TIME: December, 1935, Fathers ' Club, PLACE: At the College, The Florist Shop was presented and was well received by the fathers of the girls. Scene 1 1 1 TIME: December, 1935. Friday. PLACE: General Assembly at the College. Trifles by Susan Glaspell, was presented for the entertainment of the under- graduate body. It was greatly enjoyed by the girls, particularly because of the character work. Thus, our first act closed but not for long. We eagerly awaited the second act which opened in February, 1936 and continued until May, 1936. Two scenes com- prise this act. ACT II Scene I When the curtains opened, the stage was set in a typical New England manner — cold, uninviting and lacking any kind of beauty. It was the presentation of the play Icebound by Owen Davis — a Pulitzer prize winner of a few years back — under the capable and skilful direction of Robert Gilbert Cass. It is the story of the Jordan family with its shams and each character was realistically portrayed by a capable cast. The redemption of Ben Jordan, the black sheep of the family, through the efforts of Jane Crosby, the Jordan ' s maid of all work, is the general theme of the play. Madeline Noonan as Ben and Alice Kennedy as Jane gave convincing per- formances and added lustre to our revue. Celeste Hughes as Henry Jordan, Frances Bennett as Emma Jordan, Marita Egan as Sadie, and Peggy Young as Ella sustained their characterizations and made one feel the greed and malice of the Jordan family. The seriousness of the play was relieved by Hannah, played by Marion Kinsley, and Marie Gough as Orin, the ten year old brat, both of whom drew many laughs from the audience. Mary Filan as the Judge gave a praiseworthy performance as did Ellen O ' Toole in the role of the village sheriff. The happy times we experienced at rehearsals were not soon forgotten. On March third, the Dramatic Society gave a dinner in the Recreation Room in honor of the cast and the chairman of co-operating committees. Our guests of honor for the evening were Mr Cass, our director, and Rev. Joseph P. Wiest. Both Mr. Cass and Father Wiest gave interesting little talks after the dinner; Father Wiest made us feel proud that the Society in a small way was helping to further good Catholic drama. This delightful affair was thoroughly enjoyed and appreciated by all who attended. Scene 1 1 TIME: March, 1936. PLACE: General Assembly at the College. The Valiant — the tragically beautiful one-act play — was presented This scene of our revue was again directed by Mr, Cass. This, quite auspiciously we think, ends our revue. This semester, two new groups were formed. One is the poetry and dramatic interpretation group which has as its primary purpose to develop technique in oral reading. The other group hopes to foster any latent talent which a girl may have for play writing Furthermore the girls attend lectures on technique and other phases of dramatic art given by Mr. Cass. The revue is over but the society looks forward to greater successes in the future. Margaret E Young -«(91 h Glee Club MARGARET McCAFFERY MARY TWIGG MARIE CAVAGNARO President Secretary-Treasurer Librarian Call in sweet music. I have heard soft airs Can charm our senses and expel our cares. In these two famous lines of Sir J. Denham is well expressed the fundamental aim of the Glee Club. It purposes to satiate the aesthetic longings which exist in every individual no matter how deeply rooted they may be. It adds immensely to the cultural development of the student which is being so sadly neglected today. Our immediate aim this year was to strive to attain greater success than we had achieved in previous years. However, the Glee Club was fated for a supreme loss by the death during the summer of our Librarian, Kathleen Riordon. May we again express our sympathy to her family and many friends Once again, we sallied forth under the able direction of Professor Carl Schlegel, His untiring work and patience have won for him our wholehearted respect and grati- tude. His efforts have been augmented by the efficiency and talent of our pianist, Jean O ' Reilly, and our officers. The special choir of the Glee Club, which was instituted last year, has been greatly extended not only in membership but also in activity. The Choiristers sing at 4 92 h Benediction in General Assembly every Friday and chant Mass every First Friday, At our annual retreat they also inspired us with a specially planned program of spiritual music. So far, the Glee Club has had a very busy season Our formal debut of the season was made at the Bridge for the benefit of the parish of Our Lady Star of the Sea, Saltaire. On this our initial appearance we were somewhat nervous, for we knew our reputation depended on the outcome of our concert that evening. However, we were well received and this gave us confidence with which to continue our work. About a month later, we had rather a novel experience, a radio broadcast. The program was sponsored by station WLWL and was called Through College Win- dows Every one seemed to enjoy it. From all reports our radio audience was quite surprised by our ability. At Parents ' Day, which was next on our calendar, the Trio consisting of Margaret Hirsch, Eileen Maher, and Frances Young entertained with the selections Sweetheart and My Little Gypsy Sweetheart. The Christmas program of the Glee Club under the artistic direct ion of Virginia Humphreys was the most spectacular event of the year. The Choir sang many famous old English carols. Shortly after the carollers finished, the entire society dressed as altar boys wearing large red bows and Eton collars, and carrying lighted candles, walked two by two through the Auditorium. They advanced to the stage where a tableau of the Nativity was set and here, forming a semicircle sang many of the well known Christmas hymns. The effect was very startling and will not soon be forgotten by the members of the Faculty and Undergraduates who were present. Our next recital was at a bridge in the St. Joan of Arc parish, Jackson Heights. Margaret Hirsch ' s singing of My Hero from The Chocolate Soldier was the hit of the evening The same groups song at the February meeting of the Fathers ' Club. Later in the season we started rehearsals for the vocal parts in the production of The Two Marys, a passion play for the benefit of St. Louis parish which was given at the Academy of Music on March thirtieth. Our grand finale for the season was a new departure for us — a concert. For- merly we wound up the year with an operetta or a musical comedy. Our only hope is that our success this year has been a forecast of our success in the future. Mary Twigg •4 93 Loria Board MARY LAV IN Genevieve Wright Angeline Leibinger Alice Kennedy Ruth Petersen Art Staff Marjorie Parker Miriam Braithwaite Claire Ruane Evelyn McCausland Literary Staff Katherine Shea Editor-in-Chief Claire Brennan Frances McLoughlm Dorothy Duffy Helen Regan Business Staff Rose Mane O ' Reilly Margaret Kennedy Genevieve Sullivan Marguerite Mulrennan Actu labores jucundi — . Finished labors are indeed pleasant to those who have labored and seen their efforts bear fruit. The Loria Board has made a serious effort this year to inspire a more whole hearted interest by making the appeal of the magazine more universal. In the last few months wa have used a system which we hope will prove the key to further success ■i 94 ]i- In the first issue of the season we went to work with o will on our program of rehabilitation end presently our brain child returned from the press in all its black and silver glory — our modern number. Dressed in an austere cover that masked its ultra modern small type printing, its appearance caused c mild furore. Mar|orie Parker ' s black and white etching The Descent of a Gull made a particularly suit- able frontispiece, while an essay on the Oxford movement and our poetry drew forth admiring comment from some of our exchange editors. Then, our ever popular book review section made its bow for the season. Every one seemed to approve our first venture. With the coming of the Christmas season we went to press again An article on Christmas dinners, a short story The Bells, and some winter poems helped to contribute to the seasonal effect of the issue, but it was left to our Editor to steal the show wheri under the guise of the Voice of Experience she gave sage advice on that subject of vital interest, blind dates. It is always a )oy to discover unlooked- for talent. Our gossip column Town Topics was favorably received although some were embarrassed at recognizing the humorous incidents which pertained to them- selves. With the beginning of the new term we experienced a feeling of dissatisfaction. It seemed to be brought more forcibly to our attention that Loria had never been as representative as it should be. After due deliberation we determined to make an appeal to the student body to encourage more general contributions on their part. Our red box occupied a conspicuous place in the locker room and into this was placed all the material of those who aspired to fame without fortune Our efforts were not in vain and into our Spring issue we infused the new blood of which Loria was much in need. The graduating members of the board have the pleasure of a year ' s work that was finished more auspiciously than it was begun. The success of the last few months is sweet to them, and to us too, whose responsibility it is to carry on to its ultimate the success whose beginnings they have sponsored. Helen Regan. 4 95 i Social Service JULIA DORSEY AMALIA MORABITO MARGARET KEENAN President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer The Social Service Club is a rather new club, but it has been very successful in fostering co-operation and mutual good will among the students, while carrying out its purpose of doing service for the unfortunate- but worthy members of society. The members are not, of course, trained social workers, but their work has been so fine that they have justified the existence of the club. The great popularity of the club, evidenced by a membership of over twenty-five per cent of the student body, is largely due to the great variety of activities in which the members may participate. We have enjoyed a very successful year, expanding and adding to our activities. During the summer months, many members of the club worked as supervisors in Catholic playgrounds, while others were busy investigating and sending children away to camps. A large number of girls continued visiting children at Mercy Orphanage, taking them on short outings and writing to them With the beginning of the new term, many girls resumed teaching catechism in parishes where there are no Catholic schools. Many others worked in Saint Mary ' s Hospital Clinic, typing, filing, interviewing patients, and taking case histories. The girls enjoy this work very much, and the staff at the clinic has expressed its appre- ciation of their services. 4 96 Many other girls, at the invitation of Catholic Charities, wrote up social case histories, directed recreational centers, acted as hostesses to the Girls ' Club, and did follow-up work on Court cases. Other girls worked at Dr. White Memorial Settlement, helping in the kindergarten, directing the Library, and teaching Catechism. The rest of the girls did inside work in school one hour a week. Several small groups, under the capable direction of Marjorie Laux and the officers of the club, made children ' s scrapbooks and sewed babies ' clothes. At Christmas time, the Social Service Club co-operated with the Undergraduate Association in collecting food, clothing, and toys for needy families. The club also held its annual Christmas exhibition, displaying its own handiwork and gifts, gener- ously contributed by the girls. Brightly colored scrapbooks, dainty china dolls and gayly dressed rag dolls, boxes of candy made by the members, children ' s books that would delight any little girl or boy, lines of bright red trucks and toy engines, and the neatly arranged pink, white, and blue layettes all proclaimed the usefulness of St. Joseph ' s Social Service Club. Early in January, a group of our girls acted as salesgirls in a country store conducted by Father Herbert for the benefit of St. Louis ' s Church. They were so successful in the enterprise, and Father Herbert felt such confidence in St. Joseph ' s girls that he appealed to the College for the girls to take part in his Lenten play, The Two Marys. He also asked for members of the Social Service Club to serve as ushers when the play was presented. We have enjoyed assisting Father Herbert in whatever way we have been able. At the beginning of the Spring term, we divided the girls working in school into two large groups, under the direction of our Vice-President and Secretary-Treasurer. We continued making layettes and scrapbooks, and added to our repertoire the making of rosaries for foreign missions. The girls brought in old beads, end Lillian Watt taught them how to string the rosaries. Everyone showed immediate interest in the work. The Social Service Club owes its success to the fine spirit of co-operation and interest evidenced by its members. Each new suggestion by the officers has been quickly token up by the girls, and carried out with gratifying results. Instead of being just another girls ' club. Saint Joseph ' s Social Service Club is performing useful services for society. Its fame has spread among other social service organizations. The club has received many acknowledgments of its services. We wish to take this opportunity of acknowledging the capable work and kind co-operation and loyalty of the entire student body. Margaret Keenan 97 ! . Le Cercle Moliere LOUISE HUBERT THERESA LATORRACA JANET P. MORRIS MADELINE PORPORA President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer The aim of the Cercle Moliere is twofold in trying to give a deeper and more intelligent understanding of France ' s cultural backgrounds to those advanced stu- dents of French and in trying to promote a more genuine and a more enthusiastic feeling for these backgrounds even in those who are not so well acquainted with the language All programs are conducted in French, with the exception of a short business meeting. The club tries to arrange programs which will be suitable and enjoyable to all tastes. During the Fall semester, the group in French Civilization visited the Metro- politan Museum of Art to view the exhibition of eighteenth century French paintings. All members of the club who were interested in art were invited to attend. Such an opportunity will be offered to the club in the near future. An added interest in art has been supported by Mr. Aucoin whose speech on contemporary French art pro- moted a great penchant in the club towards the ideal in art. The appreciation of music has been fostered by the club ' s offerings, such as the rendition of selections from such composers as Saint-Saens, Gounod, Debussy, Bizet and Massenet. These compositions are played not only on the phonograph but are sometimes interpreted by our own members who are musically inclined. Last Fall, the Misses Doris Devlin and Kathleen Fanning entertained the club with a very delightful concert of compositions from French musicians. The members have also come to know and love the French folk-songs and Christmas carols and hove enjoyed them- selves singing under the direction of Mr, Aucoin. Those of us who felt they had a fancy for writing have contributed lectures, discussing the lives or works of famous men in literature, art or music. We have also tried to encourage an interest in travel by showing films of the countries, cities and scenic wonders of France, and to foster Franco-American interest by lectures on touring in the old provinces of French Canada. The club was also invited to visit the liner Normandie to see an example of French travel methods. The night of the twenty-second of November, our dramatic production of the year, L ' Avare, was offered to the public. We are sure that if our play was a success it may be attributed to its capable director, Mr. Aucoin, whose tireless efforts brought to you the genius of Moliere, L ' anglais tel qu ' on le porle de Tristran Bernard was chosen as our play for presentation in General Assembly the thirteenth of March. It was chosen because being written in both French and English it would offer enjoyment to students of French in addition to those who had but a slight knowledge of the language. This year the tenth anniversary of the club was celebrated at St. Francis Col- lege where a reception was given to the members in honor of this occasion Le Cercle Moliere has completed a very successful year in that it has grown in number and in function These activities have been recognized by the Courier des Etats-Unis in receiving a two-column writeup in their paper, which is the best current journal of French population in America The Seniors have been invited to a farewell reception which can in no way measure the valuable work they have completed in the club this year. Without their support and co-operation the Cercle Moliere could never have enjoyed the cultural expansion and social activity which came to it this year. The members hove decided that those girls who have completed one semester ' s attendance in the club will be permitted to purchase the pin of the society. This we feel IS a fitting and proper conclusion of the year nineteen thirty-five to nineteen thirty-six for our Cercle Moliere. Janet P. Morris «t(99| History Club JOSEPHINE FITZSIMMONS President MARY URQUHART Secretary History, in order to be really interesting and enjoyable, must leave the realm of text-books and become a port of the student ' s life. The History Club attempts to do this, by providing an outlet where the girls may discuss their problems and acquire additional information through the interchange of ideas and opinions The motto of the club is Service to the college and the group attempts to achieve this ideal in several ways. The history bulletin board keeps before the minds of all the students the vital points at issue in world affairs. The girls are made familiar with the foremost events of the day. Digests of important articles from the various historical and economic reviews are posted in the hope that the salient features of these articles will prove of interest and of value to those who read them. In addition to this, the History Club sponsors several pamphlet and periodical displays throughout the year for the benefit of the entire college. Nor are the activities of the History Club confined within the borders of the college alone. The members, at the invitation of the other colleges, have attended meetings and lectures which have proven of particular benefit. In addition to this, it has sponsored visits to the New York Stock Exchange, museums and other places of historic interest and economic value. The History Club has its social side as well. Every year it presents a play in General Assembly, depicting some historical incident, for the entertainment and enjoyment of the undergraduates and their friends. This year, The Rising of the Moon by Lady Gregory was selected as the annual production. Likewise, all current Broadway dramas pertinent to the subject are included in the year ' s program Those who attended the most recent theatre party of the club were impressed by hielen Hayes ' splendid performance in Victoria Regina In the hope and zeal to live up to its motto of Service to the college the History Club has now inaugurated a reference library composed of theses, maps, newspapers and magazines to which all students may go for every kind of informa- tion and material which they need. Mary Urquhart Bridge Club RUTH NEUMANN Chairman ANITA McANIFF Secretary While the Bridge Club is one of the youngest organizations on campus, having been formed only in February 1935, it has grown swiftly to become one of the most popular of the college clubs. It started with a membership of about twenty and at that time had its weekly meetings in the old auditorium. In the Fall semester of 1935, -i( 100 j! elections were held and Miss Neumann was unanimously re-elected chairman and Miss McAniff was chosen to fill the newly created office of secretary. By this time the membership had so increased that it was found necessary to divide the club into three sections in order that the members might become better acquainted. Instead of the weekly meetings which had earlier been the custom, the Fall of 1935 found the club meeting three times each week. In September an appropriation was granted the club by the Undergraduate Association and was used for the pur- chase of playing cards. We had among the group many who were eager to be initiated into the mysteries of Contract, and the Misses Beatty, Aubry, Deegan, and McCausland offered their services as tutors. By the Spring semester of 1936, our membership numbered 54 in all, with our largest representation from the Junior and Senior classes. The atmosphere of the Bridge Club meetings is designedly informal, for our purpose is to bring about a wider acquaintanceship among the members of the various classes. Meetings in the old Aud are characterized by animated discussions of the respective merits of the Culbertson and Jacoby systems, of bidding and hands. The climax of the year ' s activities is the tournament held in the Spring, at which the progress of the players is evidenced in keen competition for the rich prizes offered by the club. Anita McAniff German Club MARY F I LAN President MARY PINTER Secretary The year 1935-1936 has been one of sturm and drang for the Fernsemer Verein, the German club of the college. Struggling along with only a few members, we have seen many of our plans fall through. Not all, however, for the visit to the radio broadcast and to the motion picture Der alte und der junge Koenig made as part of our general program of discovering as many things German as possible in and around the city, stand out as high points in our year. Der alte und der junge Koenig was an excellent portrayal of the well-known story of the beloved Frederick the Great and his equally famed father who was King of Prussia before him. Nor are we likely to forget the good times we had arranging and rehearsing our program about the Rhine. As for the ideas we have been unable to carry out, we leave them to those who still remain. Our plans for a scrap book, a cultural historic map of Germany, and an occasional Loria article on the truly great in German literature past and present — all these we pass along to next year ' s group. May they complete what we have begun and share in the good times we have had end will always remember. Mary Filan ( 101 Nursery School The nursery school, begun in October 1934, has become on integral port of the college. This little world and the larger college world move along side by side — each has its own path, each occasionally is intertwined with the other to the mutual benefit of both. The nursery school was established and exists to guide the development of young children in a way which will be beneficial to their growth. The school started for the children and exists primarily for them A trained staff is in charge of the little domain, a staff thoroughly versed in the principles of psychology and child welfare. The day begins with a visit by each child to the nurse. After the youngster has been examined, he goes into the playroom where he finds many things waiting for him. He may paint at the easel, work with crayons, enjoy paste and scissors play, model in clay or engage in one of many other activities. Later, he knows there will be time out of doors, and plenty of exercise on wagons, slides, swings, ladders, and all the other things, which to him mean only fun, but to the adults mean that he is developing muscle end balance, initiative and self-reliance. The day, perhaps, will include construction with blocks, music, stories and games of various kinds. The program is flexible to a great extent; only a few activities are unvarying. Every day there is rest in the middle of the morning, and again, just before dinner; all the children take naps in the afternoon. Tomato )uice is served in the morning, lunch at -;I 102 h noon, crackers and milk after the nap. At about three o ' clock, the nursery school day ends To the child, it has been a day of enjoyment, but, in reality, each activity has a deeper value. .He plays and learns under expert supervision with children of his own age. He engages in suitable activities with suitable equipment. Every attempt is made to give individual as well as group guidance. The school, however, does other work which is an equally important port of its program Parents are encouraged to visit the school, observe their children in the group, have conferences with the staff. Written reports are sent to them regularly. In connection with the nursery school, the college offers such courses as: Child Psychology Habit Formation in the Pre-School Years Educational Activities for Young Children Thus the students have the invaluable opportunity of correlating study with actual observation and work in the nursery school. In two courses, this assistance, under careful supervision, is a recognized part of the course. Here students may discover whether they have ability and interest enough to do work with small children. After the pre-school courses, they will be qualified for positions as assistants in nursery schools, kindergartens and day nurseries. A year ' s graduate work will entitle them to teach in these fields. The nursery school is a comparatively new, but rapidly growing movement Inter- relating It with colleges is even less widespread as yet, but it is in this way that the usefulness of the work is extended. The child is still the primary consideration, the program being arranged with him in mind. The parent is given the opportunity to obtain all the scientific and practical advice that can be given. But also, the student derives benefits. These may include preparation for the teaching vocation, increased understanding of fundamentals of psychology and a more intelligent understanding of children. In any event, the nursery school is a progressive, fascinating part of our college, a distinct addition to its activities. Frances Bennett •i 103 h An Answer I found the soul of beauty At nightfall, on a windy hill. The earth about me quivered With a mystic fear; The moon in silent meditation Crept through the clouds. Breathless I prayed — clone. Ah, I knew then the why Of those dim stars, Of every trembling tree and falling leaf The beauty of secret things May ever pierce my heart With a dolorous pain — That memory will cloak it In a joyous quietude Mary Lavine -«; 104 is- The firste finder of our fair langage LITERATURE • ! 105 : Summer Recalling In summertime you went away, The summer went with you; The warming flush of summer air, A racy breeze, a summer ' s blue In sky and sea and rainbow strips, The breath of all my saucy ships — These went away with you. So calmly did you steal away, I did not feel the pain. Till laughing at the sea one day, I heard the wind sigh over me And salt was in the spray. In summertime you went away And autumn followed soon. But thorns were on the russet hills. And clouds conceoted the autumn moon; As embers damped in summer rain Are never kindled new again, I felt the want of you. Then winter snows lay on my heart. Scarce melting in its frost. And spring to thaw the outer part Recalls a spring and you — again I feel the bitter dart. In summertime you went away. Now summer comes again. But still the chill, the void, the pain That once I felt in summer rain Stay on; while on your pallid lips. And pressed between your finger-tips. The warmth, the sun, the summer ' s dew, All, all these went away with you. Maureen Riordan 106 | This Que er World Playing with paradoxes is a fascinating amusement, but it becomes a serious pastime once the hair-line that separates it from real contradiction has been crossed. The present age is characterized by contradiction rather than paradox. From the standpoint of pure material comfort and material scientific achievement, present conditions should be overwhelmingly favorable to the development of a Utopian state. Plato and Bacon and Thomas More would probably concede that point. Air, earth, fire and water have been harnessed and enslaved in the service of man. Submarines and airplanes, dreamt of and prophesied by Roger Bacon, are no longer dreams but stark realities. Out of the hands and brains of genius a network of communications has been drawn close about the globe. When a president speaks from Washington, a king from London, a pope from the Vatican, that network of invisible lines and visible terminals brings him close to people at all points on the globe; the wastes of the Antarctic, the warm, spiced air of the tropics, and the mellow atmosphere of old Italy vibrate with every inflection of his voice. Personalities have conquered space, and even time, that precious but indefinite thing which modern society is intent on saving. There does not seem to be very much lacking in the way of saving time and energy mechanically. A slight pressure on an electric button will produce anything from an elevator car to a lighted cigarette. Even the romantic light of the stars does its share; light from Arcturus opened a world ' s fair. To all appearances the physical factors requisite to a new and more glorious golden age are now at hand. By some freakish twist of circumstance, however, a golden age is about the last term one would choose to describe the condition of the world today. That would be carrying the touch of irony too far in view of the striking anomalies that present themselves. Turning to a field in which there has undoubtedly been progress, one notes with wonder that while medical science works indefatigably to eradicate disease and saves thousands of lives yearly, gang killings and automobile fatalities surrender the hard-won prize. Gases that work miracles in obliterating pain are challenged by deadly gases that obliterate life; so the balance is once more even. If there is one thing which interests modern research it is psychology, that fascinating instrument for probing the labyrinthine depths of human conduct and motives. The psychologist knows all about the causes that make people queer and unreasonable; yet strangely enough, our insane asylums and our penitentiaries are overcrowded. They are filled, not with the old and physically decrepit, but with the young. It is shocking, to say the least, that so many young boys and girls are classed as delinquent, and this in spite of increasingly high educational minimums. Perhaps we have raised the general educational average, but to what point and what purpose? With all the educational and psychological experimentation that has taken place within the lost twenty years, with all the prattle of method and curricula, this fact must be faced, that the world is still waiting for tangible proof in the persons of the subjects. Every year, our printing presses disgorge an enormous amount of so-called literature on every imaginable subject. The book market is swamped with best sellers that for the most part never live to see the light of the next decade, to say - [ 107 !- nothing of centuries. The finest thing of its kind in years, the masterpiece of truth and beauty, and the splendid achievement look rather pitiful after the dust has begun to thicken on their artistic paper jackets A few geniuses are enough for any age; it is a bit disquieting to find so many. Over-production in the real sense is undeniably one of the outstanding causes of present problems, and herein lies tragedy. Our private and public resources are taxed to the utmost to save thousands from sheer starvation, while we burn grain and slaughter live stock. Presumably, such articles are not for consumption, else how explain away the irony of it? Poverty and plenty have been boon companions for too long to arouse any considerable comment when they appear hand in hand; but at the same time, destruction is hardly a desirable way out of a difficulty. Once more we have given the lie to the theories of Malthus, who was short-sighted too, in a different way. A few years ago, a certain group advised us to scrap the machines in which social and economic problems were rooted. They were laughed down, yet where we have refused to destroy that man-made thing, we have acquiesced in the destruction of a rich earth ' s gifts. Since its appearance on the economic horizon, the machine has proved an enfant terrible. While it was barely a reality, men prophesied the happiness it would bring as well as the wonders it would work, now that it is a reality, they admit the wonders, but question the addition to happiness. Granted that the use of machinery has meant more and ' better products and more leisure time. It has become the task of the machine to provide means for spending that leisure time. Moving pictures, radios and automobiles are all familiar enough, but the battle wages hot and strong over their social and cultural value. One thing is certain, our forms of recreation are mechanical and artificial rather than creative in nature. This limitation on personal, direct participation is one of the trends which sociologists assign to movements of decay. The problem of the machine remains to be solved. Turning to another aspect of modern existence, one wonders again to note that a world which is magnificently bound together by man-controlled, invisible energies is torn apart by the very same men who help make that connection possible. It is quite possible, and most probable that the actual inventors of the telegraph, tele- phone and radio had no inkling of the diabolical uses to which their achievements would be put. Things which might have been instruments of unions have twisted and disrupted the sympathetic bonds which are at the basis of all real unity. Political boundaries visible on a map are simple and few compared to the infinity of unseen social, cultural and economic barriers that resist any sporadic attempts to eradicate them. Never before, perhaps, have labor and capital quarreled so fiercely, and never, since the World War, have national and social prejudices been whipped to such emotional tension. German, Jew, Russian and Oriental, white man and negro make war on each other, while the ubiquitous Communist wars on the world at large. Experts may be correct in insisting that the world is a unit, particularly an economic unit, but it took an international crisis to point out that unity after it had been broken up into little pieces. There is quite obviously a lesson to be learned, but we have no particular reason to suppose that human nature has made an about face and abandoned its familiar habits. ■4 108 h In the reaction which followed four horrible years of war, there seemed to be more than just a revulsion of feeling against the atrocities of modern warfare There even existed a general, passionate conviction that such a thing could never possibly occur again. Treaties were signed, committees appointed, conferences called, while talk of disarmament filled the air. But the advocates of disarmament and ratios had to have a final fling. Like drug addicts, they needed a powerful last dose before quitting the habit altogether; so more destroyers were built, more cruisers christened by the diplomats ' wives and daughters, more airplanes sent aloft to ram lead and more guns primed for firing. One searches perplexedly for some sign of correlation between the end and the means. For a time, there might have been real order in human activities. Medieval civilization has been criticized, both justly and unjustly, but it at least had the merit of achieving a real fundamental unity which welded all classes together by a common bond of culture and religion, by a common outlook. Unfortunately, that organization, skilful though it was, was the breeding ground for forces that were to bring about its destruction in the Protestant revolt of the sixteenth century. These forces had their roots back in the two or three preceding centuries which witnessed the growth of towns and cities and the appearance of the monster, capitalism. Confronted with widening physical horizons and internal abuses, medieval life needed only a sudden shock to tear a great hole in its carefully worked out plan. The shock came with the Reformation, which was much more than a purely religious affair. Economic and social forces were also at work. The German princes, jealously clinging to what remained of the old feudal rights, and the restive, growing bourgeoisie welcomed the opportunity to come to blows. The upheaval which followed succeeded in twisting the skein of human affairs into a knot that has still to be unravelled Unscrupulous methods of diplomacy are not a recent invention Cicero knew them all, and Ulysses or Machiavelli have passed on many a ruse. Such methods existed in medieval life, of course, but now the problem is more difficult since we have no b asis for checking them. From being immoral, most of our guiding political principles have metamorphosed into being simply unmoral. Without morality for a starting point, there can be no sense to any discussion of world problems. How can we logically demand rights without recognizing duties! ' It is easy enough to offer quock panaceas for a sick world ' s ills, but it is at the same time a fool ' s pastime, for no amount of energy expended on changing old mechanisms or creating new ones con succeed in establishing order. Artificiality bears the seeds of its own downfall. A return to old ways is hardly the answer to the problem. The material which has to be worked on is not so amenable to change as that. Human nature defies well-meant attempts to alter it by purely natural means; but until this stubborn, stiff-necked race can be mode to control itself, there must always remain this bewildering contradiction between apparent progress and real stagnation or even retrogression. Men and institutions alike must yield to change for the soke of correction. The chief difficulty will always be that while plans are in the making, facts become more complex and confusing. Genevieve Wright -■■{ 109 1 . A Song For Loverno Between the silver ribbon ot morning and the green, glittering ribbon of the sea, the boat touched Loverno and let loose a swarm of folk like flies, among whom the man we shall follow is by no means conspicuous — nor wished to be. If we stand here in the shadow of a waterfront fishing shack, where the pale, pink-grey light of early morning envelops us in its haze, we can see him better, and he will remain oblivious of our observation. He speaks to a deck hand, throwing him a silver coin. It glints whitely, catching a beam of the rising sun as it turns over in the air. The old Italian grabs at it avidly and hurries off the dock into the maze of narrow wind- ing streets. A few moments later, as though out of nowhere, the old man returns leading an antiquated horse and hock up to the inconspicuous passenger who enters it quickly. We notice the young man as he stands in the midst of the wharf ' s activity. His clothing is dark and well-cut, a little English, a little American, a little Italian. It is exactly that sort of thing which an unsubtle but ingenious person would have chosen in an effort to remain inconspicuous while travelling. The one black leather bag he carries is small and fine, and entirely innocent of identifying marks. The wide- brimmed Leghorn hat, such as wealthy Italian wine-makers wear when they walk in their purple vineyards, is pulled far down over his eyes. As he leans over to give directions to the driver, we recognize him again, just as last night we recognized him when, silently, abruptly, in the black velvet Mediterranean night we met him on the boat deck, a few hours out of Nice. For a suspended moment he had stared into our eyes, then, seeing we were Americans, he had glanced away sharply, and pulling his hat brim a little lower, he walked on. We knew who he was and we wondered. At Monaco we had read of this man. We had read things that were glamorous and thrilling — that the season was at its height since he was there, that Royalty and newly-rich alike vied for his attention, that the world of beauty and gayety had been revitalized since his arrival there. More than that, we had read in those papers of the great ball that was to be given tonight in his honor by the Duchess of Clermont — tonight when he would have to be in Loverno. Everyone had been talking about it for weeks. The women chatted about it over their tea cups; the men discussed it as they loaded and unloaded their boats along the wharf. Even the children were excited and went about their play with an air of delighted anticipation. And then the fact that the Duchess of Clermont was giving a ball in his honor seemed to add an air of glamour to the whole affair. The Duchess rarely entertained but when she did it provided the foremost topic of conversation for months before and after the event. However, the young man on whom all these preparations were centered appeared distrustful of any company. All he seemed to wish as he sat there in the antiquated hack waiting for the driver to arouse his horse, was to be left alone. He rides off, and, suddenly turning into a side street, he is out of sight That fa- mous profile, the heroic head, the arrogance of his bearing are familiar to half the civi- lized world. We are intensely curious about his presence in this little seacoast town. For his being there means insulting one of the most powerful women on the continent; it means jeopardizing even his career, it means mystery and danger and a hint of dark intrigue. We must follow him. Calling the old man who had procured his hock, with the aid of a substantial bribe we are able to learn the address he had given the driver. He must be a visitor here, the old man said. The place he went to is a tourist pension but no one except the old woman who runs it is there now. We decide to make this pension our home while in Loverno, so with the aid of another coin, we obtain a carriage and drive off through the streets of the slowly awakening town. Its murmurs and little restless noises suggest a fretful child coming out of a light and troublous sleep. We come up the main street when the Italian sun is beginning to turn a warm yellow. There are people walking about here, and some of the shopkeepers have already pulled up their blinds. Outside the Opera House, Loverno ' s most important and inspiring building, a crowd of women, laden with red and yellow and startlingly white flowers are standing. Some are weaving the beautiful blossoms into garlands, some arranging them in gorgeous profusion along the fagade The driver ventures an explanation as we pass by. Tonight, he soys, is the greatest evening ever known for the opera of Loverno. Tonight, the great singer, Ferrara, is to sing for them. The driver goes on to tell of the singer ' s birthplace in the Loverniai hills, of his unofficial debut in the little theatre that the women even now were decorating in the morning sun, of his popularity in the town, of the pride and elation his native townspeople had felt when, his years of study completed, they began to hear reports of his successive triumphs all over the world They hod ex- pected him to return to sing for them but he never had suggested it. In the posi- tion of wealth and fame and popularity he then held, they dared not request the honor themselves. For ten years Ferrara ' s wonderful voice continued to be the greatest tenor voice in all opera Then the detrimental change set in. From private billing to top line, from top line to mention in the cast, from mention in the cast to oblivion — in this way the magnificent career that had been his, was hurtled into nothingness. This was five years ago. Then, quite unexpectedly, Ferrara again broke into print, this time as the teacher of a young man he had discovered in a Chicago circus. The young American was said to have a voice equalled only by Ferrara ' s own as it hod been in his earlier days It was a voice that Ferrara believed in, had worked with, had coached, and finally had shaped into the most perfect of operatic tenors. The young singer ' s first appearance, and those that followed bore out Ferrara ' s belief. The voice was beautiful and exquisitely trained. Ferrara was famous once again, but rather shamefully so after his earlier triumph. At least that is the way Loverno saw it. Playing second fiddle, they called it, and were glad it was so. There had always been a resentment against Ferrara, with his wealth and glory that the Lovernians had never been asked to share. But now that he was famous once more, it was appropriate for them to ask him to sing. That he was old now, and his voice was but the relic of its former beauty, they also considered. Tonight, when he would sing Traviata, if his voice should falter they would seem a little surprised at first, then a little patronizing. Soon it would fail so greatly, that they could openly mock and insult him. Thus was the twenty-year-old revenge of the entire town to be worked upon Ferrara. The singer himself knew of this feeling and realized the ordeal he was to face. Pride and a certain brand of self-respect had rnade him accept the malicious invitation. We are driving through the town as the driver tells us these things. Soon we pass through the city ' s wall and turn into a private road. The carriage stops at an iron grilled gate and we alight. Walking through it and across an overgrown garden, heavy and verdant and dusky in the sunlight, we look around, ostensibly for the landlady, really for the passenger of the boat. The house is of two stories, with a wide low look to it, and wide windows stretching across the front. Someone inside is play- ing a piano softly, and with great feeling. Suddenly, the lovely mellow tones of a rich tenor voice are heard issuing from the second floor. We look up quickly to see a middle-aged man, whose face is inexpressibly happy in expression as he listens to the perfect voice of the young man who is standing beside him. The singer looks down into the garden and sees us approaching the door. We look steadily at each other. He knows we recognize him. He knows too, that we know why he is there. He wonders what we are going to do about it. Fearful, earnest, almost desperate, his eyes beg us not to expose him. For a moment, the glorious voice seems about to falter. An anxious, tragic look comes into the older man ' s face. We nod to the singer with a meaning that he understands. So quickly that it was almost imperceptible he regains the difficult note. The practice of La Traviata continues. We walk out of the garden end through the iron grilled gate. As we walk along the road to home we hear the clear, mellow tones of a tenor voice singing with an inspired fervor. The words seem to follow us — Libiamo, libiamo, ne ' lieti calici, Che lobellezzo infiora; E la fugevol, fugevol ora S ' innebrit a volutta Libiam ne ' doici fremiti Che suscita I ' amore. Poiche quell ' acchio al core Omoipotente va Libiamo, amore, amor fro i calici Piu caldi boci avra. Evelyn McCausland -K 112!s- Thoughts On Beauty ' ' A thing of beauty is a joy forever. Keats was the poet of the beautiful; he regarded it from a romantic viewpoint which was necessarily subjective. This first verse of Endymion is very beautiful poetry, expressing a profound and at the same time a captivating thought. Although it is treading on dangerous ground to disagree with the best ideas of a great poet, I would like to offer my thoughts on the subject. It must be kept in mind, however, that I am struggling in the first stages of my own poor philosophy and am presenting this more as a mental gymnastic than as a refutation of a master. In the first place, Beauty is, by its very nature, momentary. For a fleeting instant we are granted the vision of the mystics, and see directly with the soul rather than with the eyes. Beauty thus perceived shakes the core of being, and leaves the senses reeling. To experience this ecstasy for any length of time would be like staring into a dazzling white light. We c ould not endure it. Beauty of this sort would never keep a bower quiet for us. Sometimes we frequently moke the mistake of calling beautiful something which was merely pretty, or pleasant, or awe-inspiring. Recently, I discovered that Beauty IS not a superlative for any of these terms. Keats says, Its loveliness increases. But beauty is objectively real, and as such can have no gradations, any more than can absolute truth. It is a unique factor in man ' s experience because he can know nothing that remotely approaches it. We cannot analyse it, or synthesize probable elements to produce its effect. There is nothing intellectual about beauty — the mind seeks to grasp it, and is eluded. Reason searches for its cause, and in examining the part, loses sight of the whole which contains its essence Beauty, in relation to everyday life and language, has no meaning, because it cannot be defined or even descr ibed. I believe that while common knowledge is gained through sense experience, beauty is reached by the intuition, which lacks a terminology of its own. Terms of ordinary fact do not express it because it is without parallel. A friend of mine was reciting a German poem to me the other evening; when I asked for a translation, he tried a few phrases, and then remarked, shrugging his shoulders, It ' s no use. The words don ' t mean the same thing in English. The analogy is almost perfect. There is no sense in even discussing the Medi- tation from Thais, a perfect rose, or the ocean. We might say, quietly, Yes, it is beautiful, and finish there. If the person to whom we speak has never experienced beauty, then no words of ours will teach him. Only the poets may trespass on the forbidden ground. Right now I can recall vividly only one occasion when 1 believ ed I saw beauty. One morning, at the end of last summer, we got up at five o ' clock to go swimming by sunrise. For a while we were afraid that we had surrendered our worm beds in vain; the sky was clouded and sullen, the air filled with a chilly motionlessness that was almost tangible. And then, surprisingly, the sun moved with slow majesty into a rift in the eastern clouds — a dull red ball, faintly barred with tatters of mist from the sea. We stood waist-deep in the cold, opalescent water and watched it. Then we • ( 113 14- looked at each other, and dared not speak. The moment of beauty was almost sacred; none of us ever mentioned it. The fact that, in no matter what beauty may be found to inhere, it always produces the same sensation, is a proof of its objectivity. My reaction is rather original. I usually cry. I cry at sunrises and sunsets, at stars, at the wonder of the music that Wagner dedicated to one of them, at a perfect sweep of mountains. Tears somehow seem to do as fitting an homage to beauty as kneeling in the worship of God. Somehow, I think that because beauty may be found in such a variety of things, it is inherent in all reality. Our eyes are mercifully not yet open to it. The ultimate revelation will come perhaps, only when we see God. Yet, so closely are the ideas of deity, truth, goodness and beauty related in the philosophy of value, that Keats was not far wrong in saying Beauty is truth — truth beauty. And is there not truth in reality ' ' I know that beauty, as I have tried to conceive it, exists. I am sure that as long as I live I shall search for it. Even though it appears to me but seldom, it is here in the outside world. My own blind stupidity and preoccupation deprive me of the vision, yet I hope that when a moment of ultimate beauty does come my way, I shall be prepared. I do set my bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a covenant between me and the earth. Perhaps Noah, after the Lord had spoken, beheld the shining arch in the heavens, gloried in its lovely color, and knew indeed in his heart that God would never again destroy mankind. And if after all we must find a function for it, beauty could have no higher one than this; that in its manifestation we realize for an instant that God IS omniscient and all merciful, and that the earth is a good place in which to live. This covenant is what makes existence and death itself tolerable, for if man in a world so full cannot experience beauty of spirit and sense, he never shall The beauty of the flower, the song, and the star is within the grasp of everyone, but it is for that other higher beauty that we must watch and wait. The preparation should be rather like that of a novice for orders — self-discipline, humility, and a constant striving. Our eyes must be trained to see clearly, unhampered by preoccupa- tion or familiarity, our ears to hear delicate overtones which we fancy lost in the noise about us, and our minds to think whatever seems highest and noblest. And for the seeing eyes, the ear attuned, and the mind seeking perfection, beauty supplies a priceless reward. Doris Devlin 4114; An American Idyll You only have taught me that I have a heart, — you only have thrown a light, deep downward and upward into my soul. You only have revealed me to myself. Thus was Nathaniel Hawthorne ' s life changed by his meeting with Sophia Peabody in 1838. It IS not at all strange that Hawthorne had to be taught the presence of his own heart. Brought up, as he was, the only boy in a family of neurotic and over- sensitive women, we may well be surprised that he was capable of discovering his heart at all. For eight years he lived practically the life of an anchorite, seeing no one, pondering over the effects of sin on the individual and perfecting a literary technique. This period, valuable as it was to him in his literary work, hampered him socially and tended to make him shyer and more reserved. It was then that he met Sophia Peabody. After the publication of his Tangle- wood Tales, Sophia ' s sister, Elizabeth, realized that the author had been their playmate when they were children. She determined to know him and made use of his sister for that purpose. Sophia was twenty-six at the time of their meeting, a semi-invalid. Hawthorne was attracted to her, perhaps because she was so different from the women who had so abounded in his life. Sophia was gay and very much alive. Like Hawthorne she was interested in all things literary; exciting people from the world of books came to her studio-room where life was always pleasant. Hawthorne, now in his late thirties, could not help falling in love with her. Nor was his love an unimaginative, passion- less, middle-aged search for security. George Woodberry, his biographer, says, Love hod come to him not in his youth but after the years of solitude had ripened both heart and imagination, — a men ' s love A position with the Boston Customs House made smooth the way for their engage- ment in 1839. He did not hold this position long, after he lost it he returned to Salem where he became one of the Transcendento lists who congregated in the back room of the Peabody ' s bookshop. Undoubtedly, the companionship proved stimulating, for 1841 saw three of Nathaniel Hawthorne ' s books on the market. The following year, he celebrated his success by marrying Sophia and moving to the lovely Old Manse in Concord. There, with Sophia, he lived the most peaceful part of his life. He expanded in an atmosphere of charm and happiness and, almost we might soy, of normalcy such as he had never known before. Throughout their entire married life, Hawthorne remained devoted to his wife. When there was little money, he would not let her worry nor assume greater house- hold responsibilities. When they could not afford a servant, he, not Sophia, took on the extra duties. Later, in 1857, when a fair amount of prosperity had come their way, he took her all the way to Italy for her health, |ust as Robert Browning was to take his invalid wife some years later. Hawthorne believed that we are but shadows till the heart be touched. That touch creates us, — then we begin to be, — thereby we are beings of reality and inheritors of eternity. To Sophia Peabody, who discovered and touched for him his heart, he owes his creation, his beginning, his reality and whatever immortality may be his. To her, then, we owe a great port of his genius. Kotherine Shea My Odyssey Ever since I was a child, I have wanted to travel — to wander over the world and visit interesting places. Not cold cathedrals and barren ruins, nor battlefields of wars long past, pointed out to you by a mercenary guide. No, I want to visit places that are alive, that are dramatic, that have within their walls the secret of a life well lived. When I first became acquainted with Homer ' s Odyssey, I decided that I would plan a little journey of my own. I wanted to follow Ulysses ' example and say: Come, my friends, ' Tis not too late to seek a newer world. To sail beyond the sunset . . . ' till I die. To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. This glorious vagabond, Ulysses, had a full, rich and enviable life, spending his days in meeting new experiences and feeling every thrill and danger the world had to offer. I would like to tell you of a few of the places I hope to see someday. On my way around the world, i want to go to Abydos, as I have always been deeply moved by the story of Leander and Hero. Hero, priestess of a Temple, was sentenced to a loveless life. However on the occasion ' of the.Sestos Temple festival, her eyes caught the glance of a sturdy youth; her vows were now quite forgotten. They spoke, and then they planned to meet by night in the temple garden. And so they met in secret night after night. All went well until one of the temple guards saw them and be- trayed them to his superior. Hero was taken by the head priest and imprisoned in a tower on the edge of the Hellespont. But still they were not to be separated, for each night Leander swam the Hellespont guided by the light in Hero ' s tower window. Tearing the cover of her couch into strips, she made a rope by which he pulled himself up- to her apartment. But soon winter seized the land and the Hellespont became a wild and furious sea. And then one night the usual hour of Leander ' s arrival came and went. Dawn rose — and there on the rocks below Hero saw the body of Leander. With his name on her lips, she plunged from the windows into the waters below. The next stop on my itinerary would be India — a land of breath-taking beauty — for in this country Is my favorite building, the Taj Mahal. The Taj has been immortalized in my mind ever since I heard its story and sow an ivory replica of the tomb Emperor Shah Jehan built this memorial for Arjemand, favorite among a thousand wives. Upon her death, the grief stricken emperor commanded Ustad Isa, his greatest architect, To moke a memorial as beautiful as she was beautiful, as delicate, as graceful. Make it the image and the soul of her beauty. And in a dream Ustad Isa visioned a finished tomb that was as lovely but still retained the nobleness of the beautiful empress. Though some two hundred odd years have passed since this dream has been realized, the Taj appears to have been built but yesterday. Besides being a symbol of matchless feminine beauty, it is an expression of the adoration the Shah felt for his chosen favorite in the palace. He spent upon it not 4 116K only his treasures but his grief and his tears For her shrine he squandered the wealth of an empire, until his subjects, led by his own son, revolted and imprisoned the king in his own palace on the banks of the Jumna. During the long seven years of his disgrace he had only the memory of his lovely Arjemand to comfort him. At last, when he felt the end drawing near, the old man, broken in spirit, pleaded to be carried at dawn to the Jasmine Tower where his dying eyes might rest upon the minarets of the mausoleum. There his heart already was, there he knew his body soon would be, beside her for whom he had created the one perfect thing, Through fading eyes he saw the domes — and soon the Taj passed from view. Thus it has come to pass that the memorial has a soul, which, so Indian legends tell, manifests itself on summer evenings in the image of the queen emerging in radiance from her tomb, and then dissolving into the misty moonbeams. Continuing north in India, I would go to the Vale of Kashmir, high up, amid the Himalayas, Srinagar, the capital, must be a fascinating place; it is just like an Asiatic Venice for it has no streets, |ust a network of canals. It must be lovely to glide along the water and see the majestic snowy peaks glittering in the sun. In the art shops, one con find exquisitely carved ivories, rare oriental rugs and Kashmir shawls. Here we find the famous garden of Shalimor. This garden must be a veri- table paradise with its lovely fountains, its marble work and lotus covered pools from which a heavy perfume arises. The East has a strange hold for most of us, its name brings up visions of beauty and mystery as well. And in China all the flavor of the East seems to be embodied. My first stop would be Canton in South China, for if you are a jade lover you will know why. They have a Jade Street where you can buy delicately carved jewelry from the palest of white jade through the varying shades of green to the darkest. Jade has more color and life than any other stone; it has intriguing depths which always remind me of Chinese stories where dragons appear and disappear with lovely almond-eyed maidens. It is truly remarkable when you see some of the intricate work done by the Chinese in jade. Then on to Shanghai. I first became acquainted with this city from Chinese travel books and novels and loved it from the start. I vvould like to wander down its narrow streets and feel the romance of this ancient city — symbolic of a civilization superior in many ways to ours. And if I see only these few places, I will proudly say: die content. All times I hove enjoyed Greatly, have suffered greatly, both with those That loved me, and alone, , , . For always roaming with a hungry heart Much have I seen and known; cities of men And manners, climates, councils, governments. Ruth Ann Neumann -!| 117 A Second Hand Library In our freshman year we got some good advice from an unimpeachable author- ity. The advice was to seek in the second-hand book stores when our libraries needed augmentations and additions: presumably on the theory that worthwhile books are the ones that the public does not want, and therefore discards. I hope we all made good use of the advice; at any rate, I did. Heaven only knows how many pairs of light gloves I ' ve ruined poking about on dusty shelves, exploring musty alcoves, turn- ing over piles of rusty antiquities. It ' s a fascinating pastime and productive of inter- esting and delightful results, of which more anon. As I say, I took the advice, and to such good purpose that about sixty percent of the present contents of my a II- too-crowded shelves hails from the source recom- mended. The other forty percent consists mainly of reprints series. (1 would be more specific, but my editor would call it advertising.) These are often quite decorative and of various colors; nevertheless there is little of either gilt or genuine leather Is the desire for these snobbish? I don ' t think so. And neither do people whose opinion weighs more. The poet finds not amiss — Some little luxury there! Of red morocco ' s gilded gleam And vellum rich as country cream. If the poet does not, why should we? ' The result of my sporadic buying is that the shelves have a delightfully varie- gated aspect, picturesque, indeed, but at times a little trying; for to persuade this heterogeneous community to dwell together in peace and harmony calls for consider- able diplomacy. If books only differed in color and decoration, there would be no problem. But they are of all different sizes. Yet 1 don ' t want them all one size. And yet I do want them classified according to subject: fiction all together, drama all together, poetry, reminiscences. So what am I to do with the creatures? Of course, there is always the possibility of having the shelves custom-tailored to fit the books, and if I had more space, I might do that. But I haven ' t more space; I have very little space; and much as I love my library, 1 am not going to sleep under the dining room table so it can expand at its ease. Besides, my family would object. They object already. Here I am with more space for books than anyone else in the family, and yet I cast covetous eyes on other people ' s bookcases. One person suggests as a remedy that I stop buying books; but I notice that whenever I bring one home she steals in as soon as my back is turned, and borrows it before it has a chance to accumulate any dust. If I took her advice I fear this lady would be in a bad way. Again, there is the possibility of giving them away to some worthy institution. Well, I ' ve tried that too. I ' ve strewn an unprecedented collection of Edgar Wallaces about among three institutions, and none of them proved worthy. Instead of putting them out on the shelves where the public could get at them, and whence their former owner could procure them again at will, they hid them away in places to which the public had not access, and left them there ' 1 hope those people read this and blush ' 4 118 1 ' - If all the shelves were of the same size and strength, even, there would be some hope. But they are not. The two real shelves that turn the corner above my desk are capacious and sturdy affairs to which anything can be trusted. The tall narrow book- case within reach of my hand is also good, but alas! its two upper shelves are given up to a choice collection of dictionaries and grammars in more languages than I ever hope to speak, and the two lower hold a not-so-choice collection of Ouidos and paper-covered Oppenheims, and a few old pulp magazines that some of my friends would recognize with disapproval, Jones and Cassell ' s must be readily available with- out standing up, or I ' d never look in either; and the two lower shelves are below the level of the desk, so no one ever sees them. For other accommodation, there are two hanging bookcases, and it is in these that care is required. Not only do they refuse to take books above a certain height, but they must not be overloaded. For instance, my tall and beautiful Faust in red- and-gold will not fit into place beside Schiller end Lessing, and must go on one of the shelves. On the other hand, the latter are not allowed to accompany Faust because they are small and light and will go nicely in the hanging bookcase, and therefore cannot be permitted to crowd out other books that won ' t. So my German drama is irretrievably divided. Whenever I look at Faust, standing alone of its kind on an alien shelf, I wish Mephistopheles would step out and do something about it. Poetry also is a house divided against itself. All the anthologies (except the Persian one — but one doesn ' t expect logic in poets) are on a shelf, and with them ore the biggish individual poets. In the one tiny hanging shelf are the thin poets. This arrangement pains me, but what can I do about it? It ' s bad enough to have thin poets depending by one nail above my head, but a giant would be infinitely worse, I tried to shift the philosophy section to this position, but they wobbled — physically, I mean — so the poets returned. Even the so-called thin poets can be rather sturdy — Noyes is an inch thick, and Tasso is thicker. There are other phases to the difficulty besides the purely spatial one. Memoirs, for instance. How does one arrange themr ' Where is the line drawn between auto- biography and mere mooning over past events and places! ' Is Henry Ryecroft really fiction after all? And I wish someone would tell me whether Three Men in a Boat is a travel narrative, a humorous book, or a philosophical essay. The same questions apply to Travels with a Donkey. What light hath Destiny to guide her little children stumbling in the dork? And, A blind Understanding, Heaven replied It might be more useful to adopt the public library ' s cataloguing system That, however, would call for a card index, and I have one card index taking up the room already 1 don ' t want another. Whenever I think of the time Sandy and his startled- faun act scattered index cards all over the room for me to pick up I turn pale. Aside from this, if there was a catalogue, it would be my duty to use it. I cannot imagine anything less soul-inspiring than to have to hunt through a catalogue system for a quarry which might be hiding under history or philosophy. And then think of your dismay when you suddenly discover that the required tome is not third from the left on the top shelf, but is probably quietly reposing on the desk of the aforesaid lady, I 4 n9 1 tremble to think of the state of my shelves if I mode hunting for books more easy. My prize possession, a collection of magnificent recipes collected over seven or eight years would be the first to disappear. As it stands now I always have to hunt around to reclaim it every time my cunts throw a party. it ' s all great sport, though. Hunting books, buying them, bringing them home on your arm in all the triumph of possession, erasing price marks and other people ' s names, finally writing in your own, and placing them on the shelves. Sometimes they cannot be taken home immediately, and you cart them around with you for a while. This may seem silly but it ' s done. I remember the time I placed four books on the windowsill to get them out of my way during a class. I kept turning around to give them a look — so did a few other people. Even the professor noticed them, so since that day I keep my new acquisitions a little under cover. But I think I had a right to be proud. The Culprit Fay, Cranford, Byron, and some inconsequent bit of fiction — all for two bits, if I may introduce the sordid commercial aspect. And after Cranford had its face washed in soap and water, it looked like a new village. From the same benevolent and indispensible institution came Jerusalem Delivered, all twenty cantos of it, The Pride of Jennico, Gertrude Bell ' s Persian Pictures, a book on Holman Hunt with colored reproductions, and various others of varying importance and value — to me. The price was uniformly within my reach. Some gentleman, who has chosen to remain anonymous, and therefore beyond my thanks, has called books reality, history, and power. It may not be a definition according to genus and specific difference, but it has the merit of truth and fitness. The most prolific sources of these benefits for me have been the second-hand book shops on my way home from school, and I ' m lucky that they existed. New books, even the so-called cheap editions, are a great strain on the pocketbook and budget. If second-hand books were not to be had, I should have very few indeed, and would have missed much pleasure and edification. On the other hand, I shouldn ' t have needed any bookshelves. Dorothy Duffy •i 120 ! • Walt Whitman, Vagabond Poet Whether your criterion of a poet be that he walk with his head in the clouds or his feet in cloy, you will find its fulfillment in Walt Whitman It would be im- possible to give more than a superficial analysis of a personality so vital and all-including as his within the limited scope of an essay. The poet himself has said, I am large; I contain multitudes. Therefore, we will attempt to interpret only that side of his character which is a portion of the America that dreams and sings. It is that part of the poet which thrills to the robust and courageous side of life. Like all true vagabonds Whitman was earthly, not worldly All that is best in his philosophy finds root in that source The broad expanse of the highway, the pungent odor of the forest, the brief solitude of a hilltop stirred the depths of his soul. Speak- ing of the highway he has said: I think heroic deeds were all conceiv ' d in the open air, and all free poems also, I think I could stop here myself and do miracles — In order to better express himself he discarded the shackles of conventional poetry. That is why those who approach him from a literary standpoint are often disappointed Contrary to most poets it is his personality rather than his artistry which compels your admiration. However mockingly you may laugh at his barbaric yawp while reeding the Leaves of Grass, you will know after finishing it that he was right when he said; Who touches this book, touches a man. No one who has read the Leaves of Grass can deny the truth of that line. You may damn Whitman or you may deify him but you cannot neglect him No other poet has been the target for such violent criticism When Rossetti first read Whitman ' s poems, he said, I have never been so happy in loathing anything. Another critic has called him, the herald and forerunner of that ultra-violet literature, in prose and verse which sprawls its eccentric typography and linguistic barbarism over the pages. Still another critic has hailed him as the father of the Higher Illiteracy. Yet Emerson, the great American poet and philosopher was so deeply moved by the breadth and sincerity of the poet ' s message that he wrote to him, I greet you at the begin- ning of a great career. The fact that Whitman has been the center of such heated discussions proves in a sense his greatness. Every adjective from simple to inexplicable has been applied to him. It would probably be wiser, however, to keep in mind Whit- man ' s own admonition to Horace Traubel. Do not attempt to explain me, I cannot explain myself. More than any other poet he was interested in living, in being a part of the cosmic and elemental forces of life. Everything in man ' s experience, even pain, had the power to inspire and uplift him. Have you heard that it was good to gain the day? I also say it is good to fall, battles are lost in the same spirit in which they are won. Like his contemporary, Emerson, Whitman knew that the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune could build a whole man. Failure, translated into self-reliance, •«f 121 ] ► takes on a new significance. Through self-reliance the poet hoped to project into democracy a man, more noble, more copious, more universal than we had ever been used to What is known he strips away, I launch all men and women forward with me into the unknown, It is this indomitable seeking after truth, this fearless acceptance of everything which will give meaning and understanding to existence, that makes the courageous man. There are those who may say that the poet ' s creed is too all-including in its scope but they cannot deny that in it are found truths of epic proportions. All ages have gone to make him what he is and he holds the key to the future I am the acme of things accomplished, I am the encloser of things to be, This is true in a sense of each one of us but it is particularly true of Whitman with regard to his mission as a poet. He wanted to express the whole man, to indicate the path between reality and the soul of man. Although Whitman stressed the importance of the individual man he compre- hended fully the need for an integrated society. In his own time he realized that the material opulence of industry was not sufficient to enrich the spirit of men and women. The seeds of his gigantic creed fell on barren ground. Men were loath to shake off their bourgeois sensibilities. His conception of democracy bears scant like- ness to the materialistic formula into which it has evolved. He had more than a humane belief in the brotherhood of man. His conception of society, and of the relation that men and women bear to each other is perhaps best expressed in these lines: I see the universe itself as a road, as many roads as roads for travelling souls. Along this road he asks you to walk with him — Wonderful cities and free notions we shall fetch as we go. If you tire give me both burdens, and rest the chuff of your hand on my hip. And in due time you shall repay the same service to me. For after we start we never lie by again. There is no doub t but that his vision was impaired by an emotional dispropor- tion. However, in an age saturated with the narrow superficiality of Philistinism, his soul penetrated the surface of life to find the secret of the making of the best persons. It IS to grow in the open air, and to eat and sleep with the earth Mary Lovin 4 122 } Twenty Years Old The best anniversary tribute that can be paid our Undergraduate Association is the mere recollection of what that score of years of experimenting and organiza- tion has meant Each year has contributed a certain something to augment the significance of all our tradition. What we 400 are enjoying now is sufficient evi- dence that St Joseph ' s History has been an ever active one. Those famous twelve apostles who reported for the opening of the college on October 2, 1916 were led by Marie Uhlinger. She alone has the distinction of being the very first of the first of our students. It was only for a year that they attended classes at 286 Washington Avenue and the following fall, when twenty-seven students reported to Clinton Avenue, the World War had become a meaningful situation pertinent to each and every one. For soldiers ' benefits there were various dramatic presentations in the Queen of All Saints auditorium, among them being The Reader and The Two Little Rebels In addition there were various drives which netted $720 and the small group managed to sell $400 worth of Liberty Loan Bonds. Our Basketball Varsity, the first to set out for Undergraduate Laurels, played its first interscholastic game in 1917 with Adelphi and lost, as it did also in its second game with Manhattanville But in the same year, Mt. St. Mary ' s of Plainfield, N. J., suffered defeat at our hands Our first victory ' This same group of energetic athletes began the annual Spring meet in St Francis Xavier Lyceum and thereafter it was held in similar places until a few years later when the activities were con- ducted in a zoned area on Waverly Avenue, In these same early years much attention was focused upon the literary efforts of the students. Such eminent people as Agnes Repplier, the famous essayist, Maurice Francis Egan, American Ambassador to Denmark, and author of Recollections of a Happy Life and Theodore Maynard, English poet, offered stimulation and encour- agement. As guests of the then existing Literary Society these representatives of our cultural world created a broader outlook in our educational endeavors. A feeling for a necessary organization was so strong that a committee of the four class presidents drew up a constitution, embodying the various student sugges- tions. The instrument was passed unanimously and the first undergraduate president to take office was Constance Doyle, ' 20. In the same year, the first commencement marked the close of the initial epoch of our history. It concluded four years of work, the realization of a goal which served as a lasting impetus for future progress. Those first graduates left behind them many clubs, institutions and precedents, among which was the dinner to the faculty tendered by the Senior Class. When they looked back they recalled the for- mation of the Stella Maris Mission Circle and the Guard of Honor of the Sacred Heart, The newness began to wear off and affairs seemed to run very smoothly. It was in this same banner year that the Honor System was formed, to say nothing of our outstanding social events — the first Dance ever to be held outside the college, the Junior Prom at the Hotel St. George! A 123 1 From 1923 to 1929 the effects of good initial organization were felt and because of increasing numbers the present new building was opened. The comparative luxury of the new building afforded a recreation sanctum for each class. That some year witnessed the standardizing of our college rings, adaptation of our Coat of Arms, with our motto Esse Non Videri and the State ' s granting the college its permanent charter. The Undergraduate Council, which had been inaugurated in on advisory capacity, gradually, with the growth of the student body, incorporated those affairs which now comprise our social tradition. Parents ' Day, Christmas Party, Alumnae Day and the Reception to High School Seniors are outstanding events of our Social Calendar. Each one has brought with it a greater realization that College Life is a meaningful term. A great deal more did we realize the wealth of our tradition, when at the close of the Spring Semester in 1934, Alumnae Week, under the auspices of the Junior Class, was revived. Again in 1935, the student Dean and Registrar made the arrangement a worth-while opportunity for Alums and Undergrads to get together. About this some time, with Collette Burke as the first chairman, the Religion Committee was organized. Its chief objective was the organization of religious activities, but with continued growth it has come to be one of the most vital of our committees. In conjunction with it, the first meeting of the Fathers ' Club was held in November 1929, one of the greatest sources of aid for student problems. It was during this past year that an idea of long standing became feasible. The age-old thought of a Brothers ' Club was fused with a Fathers ' Club Social and on March 8, all who came had a most charming and interesting evening. It proved to be a workable and worthwhile experiment and no doubt set a precedent in the way of similar future events However it was not until 1932 that attendance at General Assembly and regular monthly class meetings was mode compulsory. In the line with student order. Council discipline was begun in the library, presidents of Glee Club, Athletic Association and Dramatic Society were admitted to the Council and the advisory faculty committee on Extra-Curricula Activities was formed. Later, the Honor System was amended to become the present Student Admin- istration of Examinations System. The some year, 1934, saw the opening of the Nursery School, a great educational experiment. We are familiar enough with the changes that have occurred within the last two years, and the changes, still going on, herald a glorious future. The acquiring of the new building is the most concrete proof that our Undergraduate Association is ever growing, and its success will be assured, as was the success of the Benefit Bridge and Dance held here in April, on the committee of which the Misses Noonan and Nelson acted as Co-chairmen. But OS our vision retraces this score of years it becomes so evident to us that as we increased in number so also did the aids with which we made our student govern- ment a practicable thing. Each club and committee has contributed its share in making college life a very vital and personal affair. Our progressive association will continue to build not only anew, but on those foundations laid in the past. Rita Ravor -!{ 124 ) • Now lakketh us no tales mo than oon, Fulfilled is my sentence and my decree; I trowe that we han herd of ech degree. DIRECTORY ■i 125 ,V Student Directory Alban, Eileen Allen, Dorothea Alien, Marjorie Amar, Dolores Ama r, Renee Andersen, Arleen Andersen, Isabelle Antonades, Bertha Appel, Mary Arnone, Lillian Astarita, Angelina Atkinson, Winifred Aubry, Jeanne Audioun, Yvonne Bagnosco, Frances Baiocchi, Rose Barry, Margaret Bartiey, Eleonora Beotty, Virginia Beetar, Genevieve Bell, Jane Bender, Elizabeth Bennet, Ruth Bennett, Frances Berkery, Margaret Bertrand, Jeanne Biechele, Florence Billies, Marianne Billington, Emily Bloom, Audrey Bolton, Margaret Brady, Ann Braithwaite, Kathryn Braithvi ' aite, Miriam Brennan, Claire Brennan, Eileen Brennan, Grace Brennan, Martha Bressi, Elisabeth Brown, Gertrude Brown, Helen Bruce, Edythe Buckley, Grace Burke, Rosemary Burns, Frances Burns, Marjorie Byrne, hielen Campbell, Eileen Campbell, Mary Campbell, Rita Campion, Muriel 112-06 204th Street, Mollis, N. Y. 142-1 1 Newport Avenue, Neponsit, N, Y. 142- 1 1 Newport Avenue, Neponsit, N, Y. 1343 77th Street 1343 77th Street 435 76th Street 435 76th Street 1385 Union Street 8634 106th Street, Richmond Hill, N, Y. 1229 57th Street 114 72nd Street 524 East 35th Street 431 36th Street, Belle Harbor, N. Y. 139-48 228th Street, Laurelton, N. Y. 2370 24th Street, Long Island City 203 Hunterdon Street, Newark, N. J. 1 692 Nostrand Avenue 547 59th Street 49 Sterling Street 116 Prospect Park West 972 79th Street 9977 211th Place, Bellaire, N. Y. 1070 East 5th Street 853 East 18th Street 268-A East 31st Street 99-59 21 1th Place, Bellaire, N. Y. 1072 East 10th Street 1665 East 9th Street Irish Lane, East Islip, N. Y. 1975 53rd Street 86 Prospect Park West 718 Carroll Street 109 Dean Street 109 Dean Street 1022 East 38th Street 478 Prospect Place 225 Parkside Avenue 1 532 Bedford Avenue 1447 78th Street 35 Richmond Street 1431 Sterling Place 1 1 East 1 8th Street 521 East 9th Street 101-10 159th Avenue, Howard Beach, N. Y. 463 1 4th Street 1759 West 10th Street 3702 Farragut Road 104-42 93rd Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 104-42 93rd Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 104-42 93rd Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 1953 82nd Street 126 !: Carlin, Dorothy Carroll, Frances Carter, Betty Cavognaro, Marie Cavagnoro, Pauline Chambers, Ethel Cimino, Marie Cizmowski, Mary Clancy, Marie Clark, Helen Clark, Madeline Coakley, Geraldine Coates, Eleanor Coffey, Anne Coffey, Catherine Coffey, Frances Concannon, Mary Connellan, Margaret Constantine, Catherine Cook, Grace Corrigan, Ann Coscia, Grace Crimmins, Marion Crofton, Miriam Cross, Kathryn Cunningham, Eileen Daly, Eileen Deegan, Helen DeFilippis, Florence deJongh, Maria Delaney, Mary Delay, Dorothy DeMorrais, Mary Denelfo, Carol Dennen, Sally A. Devlin, Doris Dias, Aurora Doherty, Anne B. Dolan, Ann Dolan, Helen W, Donnelly, Geraldine M, Donner, Bertha Donohue, Helen F. Donovan, Rita M. Dorney, Abigail Dorney, Beatrice Dorsey, Julia Dowling, Mary Doyle, Helen Duffy, Dorothy V, Duhig, Rita Easop, Lillian J. Egan, Doris Egan, Marita 47 Marine Avenue 151 Wi I loughby Avenue 294 DeKalb Avenue 8529 109th St., Richmond Hill, N, Y. 8529 109th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 104-48 37th Drive, Corona, N, Y. 5986 Grand Avenue, Maspeth, N. Y. 8611 162nd Street, Jamaica, N. Y. 6344 Bunnecke Court, Ridgewood, N. Y. 137-35 Thurston Street, Springfield Gardens, N. Y. 1808 Avenue 220 78th Street 98 Dean Street 327 79th Street 86 North Henry Street 5305 7th Avenue 209 Lenox Road High Street, Closter, N. J. 90 Terrace Place 3553 91st Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. 936 74th Street 91 02 4th Avenue 1786 East 21 St Street 830 East Chester Street, Long Beach, N, Y. 6831 Ridge Boulevard 871 Union Street 4821 91st Street, Elmhurst, N. Y. 32 Rutland Road 445 Rodney Street 1 724 West 1 0th Street 10475 1 10th St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. 34 Raymond St., Rockville Centre, N, Y. 105 Patchen Avenue 9032 214th Place, Queens Village, N. Y. 525 East 21st Street 1 83 Midwood Street 793 St. John ' s Place 10476 112th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y, 8516 88th Street, Woodhaven, N. Y. 130 East Lincoln Avenue, Valley Stream, N, Y. 631 Park Place 1072 Decatur Street 571 Bedford Avenue 1867 West 4th Street 139 78th Street 1 39 78th Street 129 Clinton Avenue 856 Lincoln Place 75 Vanderbilt Avenue 135 Prospect Park West 1633 72nd Street 426 Sterling Place 1347 East 64th Street 286 Lefferts Avenue •i 127 1! English, Florence English, Margaret Enright, Alice M. Famulari, Mary Fanelle, Eleanor Fanning, Kathleen Farley, Catherine Farley, Marie Farrell, Isabel Farrington, Mary Favor, Rita Fay, Harriet Fay, Margaret Fay, Mane T, Feely, Jean Ferrick, Dorothy Filan, Mary Fity, Roseanna Fitzsimmons, Josephine Foley, Katharine E. Geoghan, Frances George, Patricia Geraci, Marie Giampietri, Concetto Giordineri, Alda Gibson, Margaret Gillen, Margaret Gillespie, Jean Gilroy, Eileen Ging, Veronica Giorgio, Ruth Giuffre, Marie Gorman, Jeanne Gough, Marie Grace, Margaret Grady, Eileen Greegan, Cecilia Green, Agnes Grieco, Catherine Griffin, Catherine Griffin, Marguerite Griffin, Miriam Grogan, Dorothy Guiney, Mary FHagan, Alice hfagon, Evelyn FJagan, Mildred hiagon, Virginia Hoigney, Kathleen Hamilton, Dorothy Harold, Helen Harrington, Marion Heffernan, Kathryne 106-15 Sutter Avenue, Ozone Park, N, Y 860 East 1 7th Street 1125 Park Place 1334 69th Street 1350 76th Street 654 79th Street 7 Pulaski Street 109-29 115th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 139 North Centre Avenue, Rockville Centre, N. Y. 262 East 34th Street 523 72nd Street 120 East 122nd Street, N. Y. C. 927 East 38th Street 429 Hudson Boulevard, Long Beach, N. Y. 109-80 201st Street, Hollis, N, Y. 51-01 44th Street, Woodside, N, Y 147B West End Avenue 417 73rd Street 104-75 128th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 55 Grant Avenue 108-08 217th Place, Queens Village, N. Y, 680 84th Street 245 Quentin Road 2060 West 8th Street 133 West 13th Street, N. Y. C. 1 464 West 5th Street 806 Hicks Street 40 Wisconsin Street, Long Beach, N. Y. 7025 Perry Terrace 581 Ocean Avenue 9005 188th Street, Hollis, N. Y. 8804 3rd Avenue 303 Marlboro Road 1 84 East 32nd Street 11602 91st Avenue, Richmond Hill, N Y. 263 Dover Street, Manhattan Beach, N. Y. 5177 Union Street 37-18 Bowne Street, Flushing, N. Y. 4720 Fort Hamilton Parkway 148-15 87th Road, Jamaica, N, Y. 296 Windsor Place 8415 Fort Hamilton Parkway 425 Avenue P 79 Saratoga Avenue 25 Smith Avenue, Bay Shore, N. Y. 99 Joralemon Street 99 Joralemon Street 26 Smith Avenue, Boy Shore, N. Y. 9402 Ridge Boulevard 799 Willoughby Avenue 1087 Gipson Street, Far Rockawoy, N. Y. 106-19 Boulevard, Rockawoy Beach, N, Y 8537 109th Street, Richmond Hill, N, Y 4 128 } • Helfrich, Margaret 3111 Tilden Avenue Hession, Isobelle 211 Lefferts Avenue Higgins, Helen F. 982 Bedford Avenue Hines, Alice 1 1 Church Street, Great Neck, N. Y. Hirsch, Margaret 1 425 54th Street Hoey, Margaret 1304 Ditmas Avenue Hoffmann, Loretta 341 1 1 th Street Hague, Josephine 7522 Narrows Avenue, Bay Ridge Holland, Kathleen 191-21 1 14th Avenue, St. Albans, N. Y. Holmberg, Kathryn 79 Chester Avenue Hubert, Louise • 213 East 65th Street, N. Y. C. Hughes, Celeste 1145 Lincoln Place Hughes, Elizabeth 231 9th Street Humann, Catherine 106 Reid Avenue Humann, Elizabeth 106 Reid Avenue Humphreys, Mane Brentwood, N. Y. Humphreys, Virginia 275 Clinton Avenue Hundley, Laura . 77 Truxton Street Hunkele, Beatrice 227 93rd Street Hussy, Mane 654 77th Street Huth, Evelyn 27-23 27th Street, Astoria, N, Y. laconis, Cathenne 103-14 130th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Irving, Dorothy P. 118 Milton Street Jacob, Victorian 563 72nd Street Johnson, Bernadette 459 5th Street Johnstone, Edna 351 1 Avenue D Jones, Ann 134-04 Springfield Boulevard, Springfield Gardens, N. Y. Kane, Anna 318 Hemlock Street Kane, Dorothy 160 73rd Street Kane, Mary 678 78th Street Kane, Regino 738 Dean Street Kearney, Jane 226 McDonough Street Keenan, Lillian 591 5th Street Keenan, Margaret 649 78th Street Kennedy, Alice 1 140 Bergen Street Kennedy, Florence 143-07 243rd Street, Rosedale, N. Y. Kennedy, Margaret 36 Green Avenue Kenny, Ann 462 Beach 133rd Street, Belle Harbor, N. Y. Kenny, Dorothy 9263 215th Place, Queens Village, N. Y. Kiernan, Mary 1 61 5 Avenue T Kiernan, Rita 2050 Bay Ridge Parkway Kilboy, Eunice 311 Bainbridge Street Kinsley, Marian 404 Monroe Street Kopp, Frances 120-17 97th Avenue, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Kowalski, Leonora 88-27 146th Street, Jamaica, N. Y. Lacey, Helen M. 774 East 35th Street Lally, Miriam 137-09 Ocean Avenue, Rosedale, N, Y. Langan, Elizabeth 513 16th Street Larkin, Madeline 333 74th Street Latorraca, Theresa 2336 Second Avenue, N. Y. C. Laux, Margaret 13 Howard Place Lovin, Mary 159-18 89th Avenue, Jamaica, N. Y. LeBerthon, Clare 2737 Elmore Place 4 129] Leibinger, Angeline Lennon, Dorothea Lewis, Janet Lilliy, Edith B, Linardos, Anastasia Logan, Anne Logan, Dorothy Lopez, Loretta Losquadro, Agothc Lynam, Kathleen MacGillavry, Margaret Mackay, Rita Magee, Margaret Magee, Marion Magenheimer, Ruth Maher, Eileen Mahoney, Regina Maltese, Lucille Manfredonia, Rosalyn Mangiardi, Theresa Manning, Elizabeth Mannix, Miriam Market, Louise Marshall, Mary Masheck, Ethyl Masterson, Margaret Meade, Helen Meade, Winifred Meany, Alice Meany, Regina Meehan, Mary Melvin, Rita Metzendorf, Mar|orie Meybert, Anna Michel, Mary Milde, Ruth Miller, Rose Mitchell, Florence Monahan, Gertrude Moore, Dorothy Moore, Vesta Morabito, Amalia Morgan, Katherine Morrell, Mary Morris, Janet Morris, Janet Noel Morris, Rita Muller, Patricia Mulligan, Marion Mulrenan, Marguerite Mulvaney, Anne Murray, Catherine McAniff, Anita McBreen, Florence McCabe, Mary 176-06 Linden Boulevard, St. Albans, N. Y. 396 Park Place 116-02 218th Street, St, Albans, N. Y. 624 Bay Ridge Parkway 225 Parkside Avenue 91 27 84th Street, Woodhaven, N. Y. 91 27 84th Street, Woodhaven, N. Y. 535 East 28th Street 1671 Utica Avenue 2173 65th Street 130-13 116th Street, Richmond Hill, N, Y 8502 104th Street, Richmond Hill, N, Y. 66-64 Booth Street, Forest Hills, N Y. 488 Nostrand Avenue 1 1 1 36 200th Street, Hoi lis, N. Y. 656 Ovington Avenue 1332 Park Place 7110 Juno Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. 107 Brooklyn Avenue 10325 123rd Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 7624 1 1 th Avenue 90-36 55th Avenue, Elmhurst, N, Y. 6136 Palmetto Street, Ridgewood, N. Y. 928 77th Street 21 -48 46th Street, Astoria, N Y 8 Beech Court, College Point, N. Y 2937 Far Rockaway Boulevard, For Rockaway, N, Y, 2937 Far Rockaway Boulevard, Rar Rockaway, N. Y, 3204 Farragut Road 3204 Farragut Road 58 91st Street 139-35 228th Street, Laurelton, N. Y. 70 Hewes Street 502 Jefferson Avenue 225 Lincoln Place 328 Sterling Place 193 East 32nd Street 1378 Madison Street 218-47 140th Avenue, Springfield Gardens, N. Y. 514 Hancock Street 540 76th Street 5019 Avenue I 8604 89th Avenue, Woodhaven, N. Y. 271 Stuyvesant Avenue 600 East 21 st Street 9 Van Siclen Court 600 East 21st Street 734 Franklin Avenue 44 Wilson Street, Lynbrook, N, Y. 439A Monroe Street 10944 117th Street, Richmond Hill, N Y. 9022 195th Place, Hollis, N Y, 930 St. Nicholas Avenue, N. Y. C. 454 134th Street, Belle Harbor, N. Y. 9104 Ridge Boulevard 130i McCaffrey, Kathryn McCaffery, Margaret McCann, Martha McCorroll, Elizabeth McCausland, Evelyn McCrimlisk, Mary McCue, Mary McDonald, Irene McDonald, Mary McGovern, Rita McGroth, Elizabeth McGrath, Mary McGuire, Nonne McKeough, Mar|orie McLoughlin, Adelaide McLoughlin, Frances McMahon, Mary McMahon, Margaret McMahon, Muriel McManus, Mary McManus, Ruth McNamara, Agnes McNamara, Loretta McQuillen, Ruth McVey, Kathryn Nolly, Mary Nopoli, Cormela Nelson, Kathryn Neufeld, Gertrude Neumann, Ruth Nicolaus, Elizabeth Nolan, Eileen Noonon, Madeleine Norton, Eleanor V. O ' Connell, Hazel O ' Connell, Josephine O ' Connor, Catherine O ' Halloran, Elizabeth O ' Keeffe, Elizabeth Oliveri, Frances Olmstead, Rita O ' Mohoney, Frances O ' Neil, Claire O ' Neill, Dorothea O ' Regan, Mane O ' Reilly, Jean O ' Reilly, Rose Marie O ' Rourke, Dorothea Ostermann, Marie O ' Toole, Ellen Palermo, Antoinette Pampinella, Rose Pansini, Gilda Paone, Lucille 7416 87th Road, Woodhaven, N. Y. 441 43rd Street 6307 61st Avenue, Maspeth, N, Y. 345 73rd Street 462 13th Street 1583 East 12th Street 7561 Kessel Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. 172-12 90th Avenue, Jamaica, N. Y. 1003 Franklin Avenue 1 060 New York Avenue 241 86th Street 825 Foster Avenue 82 Prospect Park South West 4823 92nd Street, Elmhurst, N, Y. 848 President Street 404 4th Street 3201 Avenue J 32 Gifford Avenue, Jersey City, N, J. 20 Revere Place 588 Morgan Avenue 1170 Brooklyn Avenue 260 Washington Avenue 8319 116th Street, Kew Gardens, N Y. 174 80th Street 30 Clinton Avenue 775 Macon Street 2237 East 7th Street 203 8th Avenue 5308 90th Street, Elmhurst, N. Y. 8745 86th Street, Woodhaven, N. Y. 6925 Fleet Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. 1 151 Brooklyn Avenue 8205 Grenfell Avenue, Kew Gardens, N. Y, 20 Sterling Place 1318 Union Street 6 Alice Court 71-13 69th Place, Glendale, N. Y. 420 Clinton Avenue 97-12 131st Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 201 Allen Street, N. Y. C. 4706 49th Street, Woodside, N. Y. 1 26 82nd Street 1718 East 14th Street 3602 Avenue M 46 Wilson Street, Lynbrook, N. Y. 104 Roosevelt Street, Garden City, N. Y. 8634 105th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 2122 East 19th Street 329 Fulton Street, Westbury, N. Y. 50-1 1 94th Street, Elmhurst, N, Y. R. F. 1376 Jefferson Avenue 312 Sheridan Avenue D. No. 1, Wantagh, N. Y. 354 Tenth Street •i 131 h Parker, Mar|orie Pellegrino, Helen Peppard, Mercy Petersen, Ruth Phillips, Margery Pinter, Mary Plunket, Agnes Policano, Claudia Pollock, Margaret Porpora, Madeline Pyne, Dolores Quinn, Helen Quinn, Winifred Rawlins, Helen Regan, Helen Reilly, Helen Reilly, Ursula Relihan, Marion Riordan, Maureen Robinson, Annette Rogers, Marion E, Roth, Vera Ruane, Cecilia Ruane, Claire Russo, Grace Sangunitto, Vera Scannell, Margaret Schultheis, Mary Scudder, Frances Secco, Kathryn Seims, Grace Sexton, Maureen Shea, Katherine Sheerin, Eunice Smith, Rita Sommer, Dorothea Soyka, Veronica Staiger, Rita Straus, Norma Stroppel, Helen Sullivan, Genevieve Sullivan, Margaret Sullivan, Nora Sullivan, Rita Sylvester, Margherita Taggart, Elizabeth Tedesco, Gilda Tehan, Rose Tiernan, Jane Trefcer, Catherine Trimble, Audrey Trimble, Marjorie 77 New York Avenue 9006 7 th Avenue 1110 East 38th Street 1 567 East 1 5th Street 1619 Hendrickson Street 197 South Broadway, Lindenhurst, N. Y. 12 Martense Street 186 Van Sicklen Street 6483 83rd Street, Rego Park, N Y. 918 75th Street 335 East 32nd Street 800 East 35th Street 100-14 202nd Street, Hollis, N. Y. 1 544 Madison Avenue 481 Amity Street, Flushing, N. Y. 8544 54th Avenue, Elmhurst, N. Y. 42-58 159th Street, Flushing, N Y. 541 8th Street 547 West 147th Street, N Y. C. 197-06 89th Avenue, Hollis, N. Y. 137-47 South Gate Street, Springfield, N. Y. 793 Wiiloughby Avenue 9140 112th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 9140 112th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 1226 73rd Street 2817 West First Street 544 9th Street 46 Ingram Street, Forest Hills, N, Y. Springfield Boulevard, Queens Village, N. Y. 121 Martense Street 162-28 73rd Avenue, Flushing, N. Y. 298 Windsor Place 30-71 29th Street, Astoria, N, Y 9320 Ridge Boulevard 442 82nd Street 1 1 1 Harmon Street 184 Huron Street 8831 88th Street, Woodhaven, N Y, 1 850 60th Street 304 Glen Street, Glen Cove, N. Y. 196 Clinton Avenue 426 Sterling Place 528 92nd Street 92 Oakland Street 118 East Hth Street 361 95th Street 1 80 72nd Street 71-56 Ingram Street, Forest Hills, N, Y. 527 59th Street 261 Avenue S 1811 East 22nd Street 19 Kingston Avenue ' ♦I132J . Tully, Violet Twigg, Mary Tyler, Eugenia Tymamn, Vera Urquhart, Mary Vaughn, Frances Van Wagner, Eleanor Venezia, Joanna Visconti, Dorothea Walsh, Anna Warganz, Madeline Waters, Kathryn Webb, Estelle Welstead, Rosemary Whitbread, Ruth White, Catherine White, Dorothy Williams, Margaret Wood, Rita Wright, Genevieve Young, Frances Young, Helen Young, Margaret 1014 East 40th Street 1330 Union Street 998 Sterling Place 66-15 51st Avenue, Winfield, N, Y. 159-11 98th Street, Howard Beach, N. Y. 1470 East 10th Street 2818 Avenue N 189 Wilson Avenue 6204 1 7th Avenue 808 Eighth Avenue 240-37 Edgewood Street, Rosedale, N. Y. 5129 35th Street, Long Island City N. Y. 1 1 5 Ocean Avenue 9903 Herrick Avenue 715 West Penn Street, Long Beach, N. Y. 81 Clinton Avenue 1025 St. Johns Place 8306 1 0th Avenue 101-14 222nd Street, Queens Village, N Y. 8640 Somerset Road 1 50 68th Street 20 West Park Street, Long Beach, N. Y. 4178 Forley Street, Elmhurst, N Y. ' Alumnae Directory Adams, Alice Allen, Catherine Allen, Helen Aloisio, Vita Ansbro, Dolores Ansbro, Kathryn Anthony, Collette Archipoli, Genevieve (Mrs, Bertram Kelly) 115 Willow Street 351 Maple Street 46 Haven Esplanade, New Brighton, S. I. 839 Hart Street 254 85th Street 254 85th Street 13 Chestnut Street 319 Fenimore Street Aubert, Marion (Mrs. Thomas McDonald), 182-18 Grand Central P ' k ' y , Jamaica, L I. Bachert, Catherine Baiocchi, Mane Baltes, Marion Bannon, Margaret Barrett, Eleanor Earthen, Helen 1 ' Barton, Christine Barton, Mabel (Mrs, E. T. O ' Shea) Becker, Catherine Bennett, Helen Bergen, Emma Bernard, Mary Berry, Gertrude (Mrs, Thomas Sherman 8050 89th Avenue, Woodhaven, L, I, 203 Hunterdon Street, Newark, N, J. 405 Nassau Avenue, Inwood, L. I. 154 Underbill Avenue 350 85th Street South Kingman Rood, South Orange, N, J. 161 Garfield Place 38 Mansfield Road, Babylon, L, I. 168 Amity Street 622 61 St Street 3872 Bedford Avenue 283 Winthrop Street 7119 Shore Road 133 k. Bett, Catherine (Mrs Joseph Daly) 854 52nd Street Bier, Margaret ' 8548 88th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Bird, Dorothy 3437 80th Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. Bird, Mary 3437 80th Street, Jackson Heights, L, I. Bird, Vivian 272 West Lena Avenue, Freeport, L, I. Bishop, Kathleen (Mrs. Gilbert McGilfarry) 452 43rd Street Blaber, Mane 472 50th Street Bogan, Mildred 4714 Avenue Bolton, Mary 50 Orange Street Bonnet, Amy 388 Park Place Bopp, Rita 8624 1 10th Street, Richmond Hill, L, I. Boston, Genevieve (Mrs. James 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, Edna 190 East 31st Street Brennan, Laura 2471 Ocean Avenue Brennan, Marion 190 East 31st Street Brennan, Rita (Mrs Peter O ' Rourke) 4814 Beverly Road Brown, Agnes 681 East 46th Street Brown, Rose 207 East 87th Street, N. Y. C. Browne, Helen 1326 East 16th Street Burgen, Dorothy 1286 Carroll Street Burns, Anne 21 Grenfell Avenue, Kew Gardens, L. I. Byrne, Grace (Mrs. Harry Hill) 895 St. Marks Avenue Caggiano, Amelia 1 072 49th Street Cahill, Kathleen 386 Decatur Street Call, Sarina (Mrs. Pietro Rocca) 507 East 5th Street Callahan, Helen (Mrs. John Brink) 2287 University Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Callahan, Margaret 614 10th Street Campbell, Helen 3000 Connecticut Avenue, Washington, D. C. Campion, Anna (Mrs. Edward Semple) 1953 82nd Street Canning, Adaline 212 8th Avenue Cardow, Janet 79 Woods Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. Carrington, Catherine 263 East 32nd Street Carroll, Catherine 624 76th Street Carter, Genevieve 1755 West 10th Street Cassidy, Cecile 2322 82nd Street Castellano, Concepta Sorrento, Naples, Italy Canfield, Helen 939 Sterling Place Cavaliere, Carmel 28 Coles Street Cherry, Mary (Mrs. Robert Newbegin) 69 Midwood Street Clancy, Eleanor 1743 Norman Street Clark, Marion (Mrs John McMonus) 1597 East 43rd Street Clarke, Margaret 257 127th Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. Cleory, Miriano 221 East 17th Street, N. Y. C. Coddington, Josephine (Mrs Howard Hamilton) Locust Valley, N. Y. Coffey, Blanche 123 St. Marks Avenue Cogan, Regina 521 Bedford Avenue Colborne, Loretta 536 East 29th Street Comerford, Agnes 1 35 East 35th Street Connelly, Anne 471 8th Street Connolly, Agnes (Mrs. George Monoghan) 119-14 198th Street, St Albans, L. I. Conran, Virginia 196 Midwood Street Conway, Margaret 367 Grant Avenue -t[ 134 h Cooke Catherine 1053 79th Street Cooke, Mane 1024 83rd Street Cooke, Ursula Box 104, Kansas City Drive, Las Feria, Texas Cooney, Margaret 470 East 29th Street Corcoran, Caroline 3204 Avenue L Corey, Josephne 211 Bard Avenue, Livingston, S. I. Cormier, Eugenie (Mrs. Fred Ahdiers) Valley Cottage, N. Y. Corrigan, Elizabeth 103 2nd Place Corry, Agnes 167 Quincy Street Corsigho, Sylvia 282 President Street Cosgrove, Margaret 315 Lincoln Place Costarino, Irene 238 Highland Boulevard Coughlan, Agnes (Mrs. Joseph Dirguardi) 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I. Coughlan, Catherine 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I. Coughlan Helen 9 Walnut Road, Glen Cove, L. I, Coughlan, Geraldine 659 59th Street Cowley Mary 241 Denton Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. Cox, Eileen ' 570 East 23rd Street Coyne, Dorothy 1295 Sterling Place Creegan, Geraldine Box 203, Centerport, L. 1. Cronin Edna 1430 East 24th Street Cronin, Mary 1 430 East 24th Street Crowley, Margaret ' 26 862 Lafayette Avenue Crowley, Margaret ' 30 45 South 23rd Street, Flushing, L. I. Crowley, Sarah 1 1 86 Troy Avenue Cullen, Mary Brentwood, L. I. Culligan, Rose 1 10-06 95th Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. Cunningham, Elizabeth 237 Baltic Street Cunningham, Marie (Mrs. Lawrence Savarese) 916 Lincoln Place Cunningham, Mary 3530 93rd Street, Jackson Heights, L. I. Curran, Helen 67 Morton Street, N. Y. C. D ' Albora, Genevieve 52 94th Street D ' Albora, Dr. Helen 52 94th Street Dalton, Mary (Mrs. Aloysius Oberle) 398 4th Street Daly, Agnes (Mrs. Henry Manifold) 3520 150th Street, Flushing, L. . Dannerhoffer, Mae (Mrs. Edmund Bigall) 8820 Crestwood Avenue, Hollis, L, 1. Datri, Gildo 182 Bay 13th Street David, Katherine 92 Mackay Place Dowkins, Edna 7508 Colonial Road Deegan, Angela 1532 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, Charlotte 6596 58th Avenue, Maspeth, L. I. Dermody, Helen 631 Sterling Place Dermody, Marie 6596 58th Avenue, Maspeth, L. 1. De Sanctis, Rose 1 17 West 1 1 th Street, N Y. C. Desjordino, Nora Forestport, N. Y. Dittling, Irene 253 Hooper Street Devereaux, Dorothy 2 Islington Place, Jamaica, L. I. Devlin, Elizabeth 183 Midwood Street De Voe, Theresa (Mrs. John Creem) 770 Ocean Avenue 4 135 ] Dieckert, Frances 8942 208th Street, Bellaire Park, L. I. Dilworth, Gertrude (Mrs. John Rossworn) 1 Sandy Hollow Road, Port Washington, L. I. Doherty, Rita 70 Van Siclen Avenue Dolcn, Ann Marie (Mrs. James J. McBride) 5 Westminster Road Dolan, Bernadette 580 7th Street Dolon, Cecilia (Mrs, John Sullivan) 8583 88th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Dolan, Eleanor (Mrs. Cyril Reardon) 221 Linden Boulevard Dolan, Mary 130 East Lincoln Avenue, Valley Stream, L. I. Dolan, M, Therese (Mrs. Howard Janton) 1 12 Beach Street, Westwood, N. J. Donaldson, Angela 582 4th Street Donelon, Dorothy (Mrs Ernest Feller) 4000 Cathedral Ave., N, W., Washington, D. C. Donohue, Isabelle 319 Webster Avenue Donohue, Mildred 120 East 19th Street Dooley, Agnes 726 Jefferson Avenue Dorney, Margaretta 139 78th Street Dotzler, Evelyn (Mrs Joseph Felber) c, o Infantry School, Box 1830, Fort Bennington, Go. Downes, Dorothy 5th Avenue, Mineolo, L I. Doyle, Constance 647 Macon Street Doyle, Katherine 85 Hawthorne Street Doyle, Margaret (Mrs. Walter Dunderman) 1059 East 2nd Street Doyle, Marguerite (Mrs. Benedict Tycho) 75 Vanderbilt Avenue Doyle, Mary 1 553 72nd Street Doyle, Virgile 468 82nd Street Driscoll, Kathryn 353 68th Street Duffy, Agnita (Mrs, Clarence O ' Connor) 2558 Marion Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Duffy, Grace Duffy, Marie 172 Schenectady Avenue Dugcn, Kathlee.i 122 Bay 22nd Street Dunn, Vivian 225 Beach 136th Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. Dunnegon, Anna 1 107 Carroll Street Dwyer, Katherine 629 Eastern Parkway Easson, Dorothy Eckhoff, Elizabeth Eckles, Barbara Elberfield, Marion Eldridge, Marion Engel, Virginia Eppig, Catherine Eppig, Josephine Fadrowsky, Lydia Fallon, Louise Farrell, Helen Farrell, Jeanette Farrell, Violet (Mrs. Patrick Carty) Farrington, Helen Fearon, Rita (Mrs. George Bryan) Fellitti, Theresa Ferry, Margaret Finn, Cecilia Finn, Genevieve Fisher, Kathryn (Mrs. James Tracy) Fitzgerald, Margaret Fitzsimmons, Ethel 79 Surrey Commons, Lynbrook, L. I. 726 St. Marks Avenue 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 221 Baltic Street 3923 Avenue I 262 East 34th Street Brentwood Road, Brentwood, L. I. 405 East 114th Street, N. Y. C. 65 Midwood Street 191 East 17th Street 688 East 4th Street 366 East 35th Street 3321 Avenue M 192 Wierfield Street .1135 Iv Flannery, Mary Flannigan, Mane (Mrs Thomas J, O ' Shea) Fleming, Rosemary Flynn, Kathleen Fogarty, Mary Alice Foley, Eleanor (Mrs. Jerome Halloran) Foley, Mane Foppiani, Evelyn Ford, Josephine Ford, Kathleen Foster, Myrtle (Mrs, Harry White) Fournier, Catherine Fournier, Laura (Mrs. Francis Flanagan) Fox, Virginia (Mrs Robert Coughlin) Fraas, Amy Frentzel, Eleanor Frey, Katharine Frisse, Allene (Mrs Horace Newins) Gaffney, Mary Gallagher, Alice Gannon, Sara Garvey, Bernadette Gavin, Edna Gebelein, Catherine Gegan, Elizabeth George, Virginia Gerety, Gertrude Ghiold, Theresa Giambalvo, Joan 515 85th Street 27 Brownell Street, Stapleton, S. I. 5316 92nd Street, Elmhurst, L. I ' . Church Street, Kings Park, L. I. 200 Bard Avenue, New Brighton, S. I. 1000 President Street 270 Marcy Avenue 4228 South 68th Street, Wmfield, L. I. 1001 Sterling Place 9352 205th Street, Hollis, L I. 1 384 Troy Avenue 24 Remsen Street 9031 Fort Hamilton Parkway 8437 118th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 373 Wierfield Street 187 Jefferson Street 390 Bay Avenue, Patchogue, L. I. 405 8th Street 904 Lincoln Place Westbury, L. I. 809 East 17th Street 195-05 113th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 21 17 Amory Court 1448 East 8th Street 110 Bay 13th Street 957 East 37th Street 605 7th Street 102 Moffatt Street Gibson, Christine (Mrs Louis Dougherty), 27 Westminster Road, Rockvi lie Centre, L. I. Giery, Rita 1914 East 38th Street Gillespie, Elvera 40 Wisconsin Street, Long Beach, L. Gilloon, Catherine Giorgio, Filomena Glasson, Mane iMrs John Bourn) Gleason, Ethel iMrs. Melville Skinner) Goerlitz, Sylvia Golden, Mary Gorman, Jane Grady, Margaret Grainger, Alice ' Mrs William Heaphy) Graves, Elaine Greenbaum, Beatrice (Mrs. Edward ( Greene, Mary Griesmer, Clara Griffin, Jeanette Griffith, Rita Griffiths, Helen Gubitosi, Julia Haegie, Ruth Hagan, Ruth (Mrs Stephen Carney) Hall, Isabel (Mrs. Francis Perry) Hallahan, Dorothy Hollohan, Mary 215 Ocean Avenue 3 88th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 1 927 New York Avenue 141 Sunnyside Avenue Foxhurst Rood, Oceonside, L. 1. 16 Polhemus Place 1284 Dean Street 2315 Avenue M 522 Ocean Avenue 7506 Colonial Road ummings) 1436 Bushwick Avenue 195-03 Hillside Avenue, Hollis, L I, 1258 Madison Street 3218 86th Street, Jackson Heights, L. L 7918 11th Avenue 61 1 Argyle Road 491 18th Street 8722 90th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 1273 Park Place 5335 Delmar Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. 52 Purcell Street, West Brighton, S. I 223 Manhattan Avenue, Jersey City, N. J 4 137 i Halloran, Alice Hamilton, Marie Hanagan, Dorothy Hand, Dorothy Hannon, Catherine (Mrs Arthur Mines) Hannan, Jeanette Hannon, Veronica Hanrahan, Florence (Mrs James Cullen Harnett, Margaret (Mrs, James Driscoll Harold, Dorothy Harper, Elsa (Mrs. James McEvry) Harrigan, Alice (Mrs. Albert Bihl) Harrigan, Anne Harrington, Margaret Harris, Evelyn Harrison, Dorothy Harrison, Helen (Mrs H. Apt) Harron, Mary Hart, Grace Haverlin, Catherine Hawkins, Zita (Mrs. Andrew Stoddart) Hayes, Mildred (Mrs. Vincent Donohue) Hearne, Elizabeth 61 Tompkins Street, Tompkinsville, S. I. 218-15 137th Road, Springfield Gardens, L. I. 54 Shepherd Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I Cutchogue, L. I. 1 134 Woodbine Lane, Far Rockoway, L. I. 2717 Avenue M 1 01 -57 1 II th Street, Richmond Hill, L I. 178 Charles Street, Malverne, L. I. 665 East 1 9th Street 1087 Gipson Street, For Rockaway, L. I. 44 Waldorf Court Plymouth Gardens, Atlantic Ave , Lynbrook, L. I. 243 Rutland Road 122 Hendrix Street 122 Ashford Street 410 Pulaski Street 223 Lenox Road 305 Lafayette Avenue 311 16th Street 75 78th Street 464 Clinton Avenue 164 Locust Street, Valley Stream, L. I. 461 7th Street Hearns, Agnes (Mrs. Charles Began) Hearns, Viola (Mrs. Arleigh Bell) Hebron, Elizabeth Hemingway, Elizabeth Hennessy, Anna Hennessy, Blanche Hennessy, Eleanor Hennessy, Helene Hennessy, Mary Hertel, Marjorie Herzog, Rita (Mrs. Frederick W. Sturm) Hickey, Marion Hilt, Mane Hines, Mildred Hodgins, Mary Hoffman, Teresa Hogan, Kathleen Hogan, Regina (Mrs. Andrew J. Walsh) Holien, Sarah Holland, Emma (Mrs. Kenneth Daley) Hopkins, Mary Hottenroth, Muriel Howard, Eleanor (Mrs. Arthur O ' Leary) Howard, Margaret Hughes, Bernadette Hughes, Gretta Hundemann, Grace Hunt, Mary Hurley, Mary Huschle, Mary Hynes, Serena Impellizzeri, Margaret 1639 Madison Place 201 Hancock Street 3439 32nd Street, Astoria, L. I. 1332 Union Street 362 85th Street 2707 Newkirk Avenue 165 Prospect Park West 2707 Newkirk Avenue 162 Elderts Lane 190-12 State Avenue, Flushing, L. . 359 Hawthorne Street 426 85th Street 807 East 8th Street - 8916 187th Street, Mollis, L . 102-18 85th Street, Richmond Hill, L I. 8576 87th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 135 Eastern Parkway 855 Ocean Avenue 142 Academy Street, Astoria, L. I. 58 Westminster Road 356 5th Street 1215 East 22nd Street 21 Rugby Road 210 Rugby Road 2600 Ocean Avenue 184 Maple Street 590 Henderso n Avenue, West Brighton, S. I. 1872 East 51st Street 59 Berkeley Place 148-53 Hillside Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. 1 1 93 East 46th Street 250 Melrose Street ■i 138 ) • Impellizzeri, Mary Intondi, Modesto Irwin, Catherine Ivers, Eleanor Jacobson, Grace Jacobson, Lucille (Mrs. Herbert Augenstein) Johnston, Margaret (Mrs. Julian Jova) Johnstone, Marie (Mrs, Edward V. Russ) Jones, Gertrude Jones, Margaret Judge, Elizabeth (Mrs. William Hartley) Judice, Lucy 250 Melrose Street 94 Quincy Street 394 East 1 8th Street 150-27 19th Avenue, Whitestone, L. I. 7901 4th Avenue 444 55th Street 35 Tennis Court 351 1 Avenue D 147 Columbia Heights 41 6 2nd Street 61 Prospect Place 2778 West 1 5th Street Kaicher, Mary 751 Bushwick Avenue Kast, Corinne 87-19 Union Turnpike, Glendale, L. 1. Kavanagh, Christine 128 Hancock Street Keane, Teresa 57 Van Buren Street Kearney, Kathleen 28 West 97th Street, N. Y. C. Keating, Anne 1 072 74th Street Keegan, Mane 30 Vanderbilt Avenue, Floral Pork, L. 1. Keegan, Rose 30 Vanderbi It Avenue, Floral Park, L 1. Keely, Catherine 1979 East 19th Street Keenan, Catherine 438 Clermont Avenue Keenan, Margaret Mrs William Moyles) 2319 Avenue M Kellam, Ethel iMrs Robert Griebe) 420 Marlboro Road Keller, Mary ' Mrs John _awler i Valley Cottage, N, Y. Kelley, Mane (Mrs Thomas Smith, Jr.) 1519 Union Street Kelliher, Helen 1 98 Lenox Road Kelly, Agnes (Mrs John Bryan) 724 East 27th Street Kelly, Dorothy 312 Sycamore Avenue, Merrick, L. 1. Kelly, Genevieve 312 Sycamore Avenue, Merrick, L. 1. Kelly, Kathenne 1 19 Clinton Avenue Kelly, Lillian 1051 Ocean Avenue Kelly, Mary (Mrs, J oseph Hoermann) 8638 241st Street Bellerose, L. 1. Kelly, Norma 224-28 Chestnut Street, Queens Village, L. 1. Kelly, Ruth 823 Jefferson Avenue Kelly, Vivienne 8538 168th Place, Jamaica, L 1. Kemp, Florence 1 89 8th Avenue Kemp, Mary 1 89 8th Avenue Kendall, Madeline 3414 72nd Street, Jackson Heights, L. 1. Kennedy, Eleanore 504 7th Street Kennelly, Rosemary 564 Park Place Kenny, Agnes (Mrs Johr Neugent) 283 Washington Avenue Kinny, Anne 203 Madison Street Kinny, Helen 35 Wilson Avenue, Lynbrook L 1. Kinny, Margaret 52-60 68th Street, Mospeth, L. 1. Kidd, Marie 77 West 104th Street, N. Y. C. Kiernan, Helen 224 Locust Street, Valley Stream, L, 1. Kiernan, Muriel 2050 Bay Ridge Parkway Kilboy, Margaret 595 East 7th Street Kilcoin, Dorothy 938 St. Nicholas Avenue, N. Y. C. Kilgallen, Helen 664 59th Street Kilgallen, Kathenne (Mrs. Joseph Rooney) 441 43rd Street King, Rita 685 Sterling Place Kirgon, Anne 1 635 East 46th Street 4 139] Klipp, Jeanette Kramer, Ruth Kraus, Lillian Krebs, Katherine Kreischer, Florence Kuhn, Mildred 356 Hollywood Avenue, Douglas Manor, L. I. 624 6th Street 52 Magnolia Avenue, Dumont, N, J. 142 Highland Place 229 Mam Street, Hempstead, L. I. 2520 Mac lay Avenue, Westchester, N. Y. Logana, Eleanor (Mrs Michael Giovannetti) Lagatutta, Eleanor Langan, Margaret Latorroca, Gina Laudry, Virginia Lavelle, Catherine Lavery, Catherine Lavery, Margaret Lavin, Eileen Lavin, Irene Lavin, Ruth Lawson, Eulalio Leahy, Margaret Leavy, Doris Lennon, Margaret (Mrs. Raymond Martin) Lent, Irene Lewis, Grace Lilly, Mane Livellara, Helen Loftus, Catherine Loftus, Mary Ludder, Alita (Mrs E Martz) Lynch, Catherine (Mrs Earl Kelly) Lynch, Margaret (Mrs. Arthur O ' Toole) Lynch, Mary (Mrs. J, Delameter) Mackinnon, Beatrice Madden, Ethel Magnor, Rhoda (Mrs Ray Fitzpatrick) Magrath, May Maguire, Dorothy Maguire, Lucy Manniolio, Emma Manning, Mary Manning, Theresa Manno, Mane Marino, Mary Martin, Mildred Martin, Suzanne Mauceri, Joan May, Catherine Mazzoli, Angelina McBarron, Florence McCaffrey, Helen (Mrs. Francis McGivney) McCaffrey, Rita McCarthy, Muriel (Mrs. Meredith Jones) McCauley, Margaret McConnell, Mane McCormack, Anne -4 140];- 272 Sackett Street 349 Cornelia Street 513 16th Street 672 59th Street 266 Washington Avenue 1 845 Hobart Street 616 East 19th Street 43 Waldorf Court 148-20 88th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I, 148-20 88th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. 148-20 88th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Harrington Park, N. J. 79 Downing Street 456 40th Street Cannondole, Conn, 9435 118th Street, Richmond Hill, L I. 171-33 105th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. 624 Bay Ridge Parkway 177 Patchen Avenue 516 61st Street 516 61st Street 4 Spruce Street, Great Neck, L. I, 88 Terrace Place 247 New York Avenue 448 8th Street 302 Clinton Avenue 513 Lexington Avenue 1322 Dean Street 8932 118th Street, Richmond Hill, L I. 1941 East 13th Street 8023 Ridge Boulevard 9725 80th Street, Ozone Park, L. I. 565 Lonmer Street 222 Troutman Street 207 St. James Place 402 4th Street 131 Irving Avenue 1 067 70th Street 1421 148th Street, Whitestone, L. I. 76 Wilson Street 1 Plaza Street 581 Carlton Avenue 135 Prospect Park West 528 58th Street 925 Putnam Avenue 54 Clarkson Avenue McCormack, Ruth (Mrs. Harry Schneider) 103 Lefferts Avenue McCormick, Edna (Mrs. E. L. Hirst) The Outwood, Mt. Pocono, Pa. McCormick, Marjorie 8 Stephens Court McCort, Annabelle 91 Moffatt Street McDermott, Rosemary (Mrs. John Meyers) McDonald, Anna (Mrs. Edward Donnemiller) 264 Lincoln Road McDonald, Anna (Mrs. Joseph Costa) 55 Highlawn Avenue McDonald, Eleanor 8701 Shore Road McDonnell, Julia 8565 1 1 1 th Street, Richmond Hill, L I. McDonnell, Mary 8565 1 1 1 th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. McGinnis, Mary 434 74th Street McGough, Louise 229 Hudson Street, N. Y. C. McGovern, Frances 3734 60th Street, Woodside, L. I. McGrane, Alice 326 Bainbridge Street McGrane, Eleanor (Mrs. William H. Wardi 1439 University Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. McGrath, Mane 87 Monitor Street McGrevy, Hortense 43 Roanoke Avenue, Far Rockaway, L. I. McGuire, Anne 148 Midwood Street McGuire, Frances 152 Hewes Street Mcllduff, Margaret 563 East 4th Street McKenna, Catherine 400 Clinton Avenue McKenna, Marion (Mrs. Palmer Doyle. ' 57 Albermarle Avenue, Hempstead, L. I. McKeon, Josephine 499 8th Street McKeon, Julia 1379 East 19th Street McLernon, Mary 8638 90th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. McLoughlin, Cecilia 1485 East 12th Street McLoughhn, Eileen 1485 East 12th Street McLoughlin, Eileen (Mrs. Donald McGilligan) 36 Plaza Street McLoughhn, Eleanor 404 4th Street McLoughlin, Jane 404 4th Street McLoughlin, Mary Elizabeth 404 4th Street McMahon, (oeroldine 445 Eastern Parkway McMahon, Irene 308 St. James Place McMahon, Winifred 445 Eastern Parkway McMullen, Juliana 200 Prospect Place McMurray, Marie 3069 Villa Avenue, Fordham, N. Y. McNally, Veronica 8902 215th Street, Queens Village, L. I. McNamara, Eileen 1278 East 35th Street McNeely, Catherine 215 Prospect Place McNulty, Margaret 126 Herkimer Street McNulty, Mildred 266 Washington Avenue McPartland, Doris 1569 East 34th Street McShane, Agnes 687 Madison Street McShane, Catherine 687 Madison Street Meany, Mary 8381 Shore Road Meara, Edith 1 12 Lafayette Avenue Meehan, Margaret (Mrs George Copeland) 925 Union Street Middlecamp, Mary Box 542, Westbury, L. I. Miner, Mary (Mrs. William O ' Halloran) 4422 Avenue M Mirabel la, Mary 242 Carroll Street Molesphinie, Rosalina (Mrs. Roger Schenone) 150 Prospect Park West Monaghan, Ellen (Mrs. A. McGowan) 3069 Villa Avenue, Fordham, N. Y. Moore, Mae (Mrs. Christopher Waldorf) 4313 Carpenter Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Moron, Dorothy 446 Beechwood Place, Westfield, N. J. Moron, Muriel 209 Maple Street -i 14) jv Moroney, Bernadette Mulligan, Eucharia Mulligan, Mane Mulraney, Irene Mulrooney, Kathleen Munz, Regino (Mrs. Francis J. Meyer) 176- Murphy, Catherine Murphy, Dorothea Murphy, Gertrude Murphy, Margaret (Mrs. Alfred P. Johnson) Murphy, Mane Murphy, Marjorie Murray, Eileen Murray, Mary Murtha, Mary Musante, Marion 136 Senator Street 72 77th Street 236 84th Street 477 13th Street 602 78th Street •1 1 Henley Road, Jamaica Estates, N. Y. 194 Norman Avenue 8531 120th Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. 7401 Ridge Boulevard 62 Montague Street 145 Columbia Heights 5 Dana Street, Cambridge, Mass. 882 Park Place 882 Park Place 722 Avenue S 899 New York Avenue Myers, Marion 163 Forest Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. Naughton, Genevieve Naylon, Sadie Nealis, Dorothy Newman, Florence Newman, Helen (Mrs. Donald Connors) Nolan, Charlotte (Mrs. E. R. Manning! Nolan, Florence (Mrs. William Plant) Nolan, Marie (Mrs. Edward Reynolds) Nolan, Mar)orie (Mrs. William J. Hi gins) ■ Noonan, Agnes 1 Normile, Catherine (Mrs. Charles Mylod) Normile, Margaret (Mrs. Edward J. McLoughlin Norton, Mane 220-1 714 46th Street 237 94th Street 62 Delamere Place 758 East 17th Street 1290 Ocean Avenue 225 Parkside Avenue 188-20 122nd Avenue, St Albans, L. I. 125 Oak Street 600 East 21st Street 101 Lynbrook Avenue, Lynbrook, L. I. 150 Prospect Park West ) 75 Prospect Park West 7 92nd Avenue, Queens Village L. I. O ' Brien, Grace (Mrs. Michael Martin) O ' Brien, Rose O ' Connell, Mary O ' Connor, Agnes O ' Connor, Claire O ' Connor, Helen O ' Connor, Ida (Mrs, Norbert Smith) O ' Connor, Mane O ' Connor, Mary O ' Donnell, Helen O ' Donnell, Margaret O ' Donnell, Mary O ' Dwyer, Irene O ' Hale, Catherine O ' Leary, Ethne Olive, Honora (Mrs W. Rehearser) Oliver, Genevieve Oliver, Margaret Oliver, Marie Oliver, Mary O ' Meara, Mary (Mrs S. McNeil) O ' Reilly, Alice O ' Reilly, Marion Ormonde, Margaret 1758 East 14th Street 23 Stuyvesant Avenue 1 849 Troy Avenue 176 Beach 123rd Street, Belle Harbor, L. I. 474 82nd Street 533 9th Street 982 Sterling Place 292 Ryerson Street 80 Norman Avenue 104 Adelphi Street 514 10th Street 514 10th Street 420 Clinton Avenue 416 86th Street 567 East 22nd Street 120-27 142nd Street, Ozone Park, L. I. 27 Clifton Place 27 Clifton Place 27 Clifton Place 96 Decatur Street 8634 105th Street Richmond Hill, L I. 642 2nd Street 522 East 24th Street i 142 ]y O ' Shea, Mane 571 Madison Street Owens, Barbara 140-70 Burden Crescent, Jamaica, L. I. Packert, Marion (Mrs. Edward Buckley) 525 Dorchester Road Parker Irene 77 New York Avenue Parks, Elinor 338 7th Street Passaretti, Mary 1 150 Belmont Avenue Pottison, Agnes 80 78th Street Peppard, Regina (Mrs, John Fitzpatrick) 468A 16th Street Perkins, Ethel 81 Delaware Avenue, Long Beach, L I. Phillips, ' Agnes (Mrs George E, McGrath, Jr.) 129 South Oxford Street Piggott, Margaret 7201 Ridge Boulevard Pisani, Josephine 2 Oliver Street, N. Y. C. Pleines, Claire 1403 Lorraine Avenue Pleines Emily 1403 Lorraine Avenue Pollack Rita 959 Bedford Avenue Powell, Margaret 1724 East 24th Street Prendergast, Janet 224 Fenimore Street Pyne, Dorothy . 4S6 16th Street Quigley, Adele 248 Garfield Place Quinn, Catherine (Mrs. William Shell) 356 Ovington Avenue Quinn, Mary 27 Weberfield Avenue, Freeport, L. I. Quinn ' Virginia (Mrs. Stanford Waite) 68 Montagu Street Quinotte, Marthe 431 West 121st Street, N, Y. C. Rafferty, Agnes 205-18 11th Road, Mollis, L. 1. Rafferty, Mary 94 hiamilton Avenue, New Brighton, S, I. Raymond, Florence 2132 West 5th Street Reardon Ethel 43 86th Street Reardon, Frances 1 29 89th Street Reardon, Gladys (Mrs. Joseph Hughes) 37 Linden Street, Hackensack, N J. Reilly, Grace 132-20 82nd Street, Ozone Pork, L I. Reilly, Katherine 30 Apollo Street Reilly, Madeline 120-06 133rd Avenue, Richmond Hill, L. I. Reilly, Margaret 41 1 Ocean Avenue Renda, Rose 1 661 Benson Avenue Reynolds, Constance (Mrs. Ralph Furey) 49 Wellington Court Reynolds, Gertrude ' 2525 Delamere Place Reynolds, Grace 2303 Newkirk Avenue Reynolds, Helen 2302 Newkirk Avenue Reynolds, Rita 2525 Delamere Place Rick, Beatrice 755 Monroe Street Rick, Constance (Mrs. Leon Reyna) 755 Monroe Street Rickerby, Mane (Mrs. James Blake) 73 East Market Street, Long Beach, L. I. Rieper, Wilhelmina 174 Montrose Avenue Riordon, Catherine (Mrs. J. Brown) 12 St. Charles Place Roberts, Gertrude (Mrs. Lee Delworth) 6744 Ridge Boulevard Robertson, Isabelle 1271 East 23rd Street Roche, Lillian 1210 John Street, Far Rockawoy, L. I. Roche, Margaret 8725 1 14th Street, Richmond Hill, L. 1. Rockefeller, Elva (Mrs. James Ryan) 131 East 21st Street Rockefeller, Marietta (Mrs. Harold Ryan) 7410 Ridge Boulevard Roeser, Dorothy 1029 82nd Street Roland, Agnes (Mrs. Charles Loughran) Romano, Catherine 8005 12th Avenue 4 143 k Roth, Irene 793 Willoughby Avenue Rowan, Eulalia 114-70 177th Street, St. Albans, L. I. Rowland, Louise (Mrs. William Schrouth) 191-11 Woodhill Avenue, Hollis, L. I. Sobbatino, Catherine 420 Ocean Parkway Sabbotino, Marie (Mrs. Frank Barrera) 9949 Shore Road Salsano, Catherine 3825 56th Street, Woodside, L I. Savino, Catherine (Mrs. Howard Fieri) 525 Avenue J Savino, Mane (Mrs. James Donohue) 875 Ocean Parkway Sawyer, Helen 62 Monroe Street Scarpati, Rachel 7101 Narrows Avenue Schaeffer, Elizabeth 436 Bainbridge Street Schlegel, Gobrielle 428 Greene Avenue Schluter, Marie 903 Bushwick Avenue Schneider, Anna 2016 Himrod Street Schelly, Miriam 198 Maple Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. Schroge, Anne Schreiber, Teresa 148-50 57th Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. Schwartz, Helen . 6910 7th Avenue Scibilia, Annunciate 8302 4th Avenue Scully, Ada 256 Gates Avenue Seitz, Anne 293 Fenimore Street Sexton, Germaine 298 Windsor Place Shannon, Catherine 135 Madison Street Sharpe, Vivia (Mrs. George Cassidy) 8417 Penelope Avenue, Elmhurst, L. I. Sheehan, Kathleen 130 93rd Street Sheehan, Mane 51 Colonial Road, Forest Hills, L. I. Schecey, Mary 17 Foxall Street Sheerin, Genevieve 472A 16th Street Sheerin, Muriel 9320 Ridge Boulevard Sheridan, Genevieve (Mrs. William Magee) 2115 Avenue I Sheridan, Mary 442 8th Street Sheridan, Rosemary 229 Macon Street Sherne, Ethel (Mrs. Nicholas Baxter) 29 Norwood Avenue, Clifton, S. !. Shevlin, Rita 9209 51st Avenue, Elmhurst, L, I. Shinnick, Mary 7607 Colonial Road Simonetti, Dr. Amalia 9525 143rd Street, Jamaica, L. I. Simpson, Muriel (Mrs Charles Schott) 557 77th Street Siniscalchi, Madeline 439 Union Avenue, Westbury, L. 1. Smith, Claire 942 President 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 iMrs. Thomas O ' Loughlin) 626 East 43rd 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 2101 Beekmon Place Stewart, Margaret 1371 Union Street St. John, Mary (Mrs. Gilbert P. Murphy) 1847 Madison Place Stokes, Anne 101-33 112th Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. Straub, Helen (Mrs. Everett Hil lman) Camp Hilltop, Hancock, N. Y. Struglia, Maria 1231 68th Street Stuart, Rose (Mrs. Thomas Doron) New Dorp Road, Brighton, S. I. -i 144 h Sullivan, Dorothea Sullivan, Ethel Sullivan, Helen Sullivan, Kothryn Sullivan, Margaret (Mrs Alexander Mezey) Sullivan, Rosalie Surpless, Eleanor (Mrs. William O ' Rourke) Swanton, Susan (Mrs. Edward T. Welsh) Teaken, Marion Thompson, Dorothy (Mrs. Raymond Purcell) Thompson, Kathleen Tiernan, Sophie Tierney, Anne Tobin, Dorothy Todd, Sarah Toner, Agnes Toshack, Marion Townsend, Phyllis Tracy, Catherine Traun, Teresa Trimborn, Elvie Trunz, Cecilia Twyford, Grace Uhlinger, Marie Unser, Gertrude Voughon, Kathleen Venezia, Mary Victory, Florence Vitaie, Mildred Wahl, Madeline Wallace, Margaret (Mrs. Thomas Craig) Walsh, Genevieve Welsh, Geraldine (Mrs Francis Shea) Walsh, Katherine Walsh, Mary Walsh, Mary ' 35 Walsh, Virginia Walters, Miriam I Mrs James McLoughlon) Ward, Grace Ward, Lydia Ward, Mane Waters, Kathryn Weglein, Grace (Mrs. Arthur Mandell) Weiden, Helen (Mrs. William McCarthy) Weiden, Josephi.ie (Mrs. Joseph Barth) Weinfurt, Ellen 1 Wenk, Evelyn Wheeler, Catherine (Mrs. Horry Smith) Whelan, Mary White, Anne White, Margaret (Mrs. Aloysius Lynch) White, Mary Wiest, Mary 167-12 Highland Avenue, Jamaica, L. I. 73 89th Street 570 Pacific Street 94-40 55th Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 9302 Ridge Boulevard 48-22 92nd Street, Elmhurst, L. I. 1 50 Crown Street 491 Vanderbilt Avenue, Stapleton, S. I. 8904 Shore Court 604 Walnut Avenue, Syracuse, N Y. 356 94th Street 5 Schoen Place, Baldwin, L. I. 225 Parkside Avenue 402 Sterling Place 768 Hancock Street 8615 79th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 8758 95th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. Forestport, N. Y. 73 Wyckoff Avenue 9944 211th Place, Bellaire Park, L. I. 283 Highland Boulevard 239 Bainbridge Street 8524 Forest Parkway, Woodhaven, L. I. 349 Evergreen Avenue 114 East 28th Street 189 Wilson Avenue 9604 92nd Avenue, Woodhaven, L. I. 697 East 37th Street 21st Street, Richmond Hill, L. I. 11 9-02 91 St Avenue, Richmond Hill, L. I. 388 New York Avenue 8006 Fort Hamilton Parkway 8006 Fort Hamilton Parkway 530 61 St Street 800 Riverside Drive, N Y. C. 1432 East 10th Street 209 Lincoln Road 532 Garfield Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 532 Garfield Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. 357 5th Street 959 St. Johns Place 755 Eastern Parkway 156 Sunnyside Avenue 114-73 176th Street, St. Albans, L I. 5 Mount Avenue, Rockville Centre, L. I. 8908 98th Street, Woodhaven, L. I. 318 Decatur Street 131 89th Street 81 Clinton Avenue 48 Westside Avenue, Haverstraw, N. Y. 81 Clinton Avenue 1737 West 10th Street 145 1 Williams, Helen 7609 6th Avenue Willmann, Dorothy 3742 West Pine Boulevard, St. Louis, Mo. Willmann, Marie 258 Ovington Avenue Willmott, Marion 208 Wierfield Street Wills, Catherine 708 Ocean Avenue Wilson, Katherine (Mrs. Frank Murphy) 423 Clermont Avenue Wilson, Margaret (Mrs. Stanley Hemlin) 423 Clermont Avenue Winheim, Margaret 51 Christobal Street, Lynbrook, L. I. Winkler, Frances Hotel Commodore, 825 Sutter Street, San Francisco, Cal. Woods, Elinor 46 Rutland Road Worthley, Gladys (Mrs. Hans Stephenson) 321 Park Place Young, Geraldine 4178 Farley Street, Elmhurst, L. I. Zangle, Elizabeth 1529 Brooklyn Avenue Zegers, Margaret 458 16th Street Sister Ann Loyola (Mary Dwyer) Mount St. Clair, Wappinger Falls, N. Y. Sister Baptista of the Holy Family (Emily O ' Mara) Carmelite Convent, Schenectady, N Y Sister Claire Imelda (Helen Ruane) Brentwood, L I Sister Consuela Mane (Mildred Duffy), St. Francis de Sales Convent, Rock Castle, Va Sister Dolores Mane (Margaret Kelly) Brentwood, L. I Sister Isabel (Isabel Tylerl Carmelite Convent, St Johns Place Sister Mane Therese (Rosamond Thompson) Brentwood, L. I Sister Mary (Mary Dirig) Benedictine Order of Perpetual Adoration, Clyde, Mo Sister Mary Anthony (Theresa Wehman) Nursing Sisters of the Sick Poor, Hempstead, L. I Sister Mary Clotilde (Catherine Falvey) Catholic University, Washington, D. C Sister Mary Geraldine (Agnes Byrne) D ' Youville College, Buffalo, N. Y Sister Mary Germaine (Marie Brennan) Convent of Visitation, 2002 Bayard Avenue, Wilmington, Del. Sister Mary Germaine (Grace Finlay) St Brendan ' s Convent, East 12th Street and Avenue Mother .Mary Godfrey (Ruth Willmann) Franciscan Missionaries of Mary, 399 Fruit Hill, Providence, R. I. Sister Mary Ignatius (Anna Meany) St. Francis Xavier Academy, Brooklyn Sister Mary Madeline (Ellen Manning) Our Lady of Mercy Academy, Syosset, L. I. Sister Mary of St. Francis of Assisi (Eva Flynn) Convent du Bon Pasteur, 910 Avenue Retain, Shanghai, China Sister Mary Robertina (Rosolyn Weiden) St. Joseph ' s College High School, Emmetsburg, Md , Sister Theresa Marie (Kathryn Farrell) Brentwood, L I. ■i 146 ! • ST. ANGELA HALL ACADEMY 282-294 Washington Avenue Brooklyn, New York A Private School for Girls and Small Bo s Conducted b - the Sisters of St. Joseph. Affiliated with the State l ' ni ersity ELEMENTARY AND HIGH SCHOOL COURSES Curses in MUSIC— PIANO— VIOLIN— THEORY— HARMONY Spfiiiil Attintiou I (J Bii innrrs Art Courses — Elementary Design and Representation Mechanical, Commercial, Comprehensive Art Course PHYSICAL TRAINING AND DANCING Kinderfiarten Course for Children from Fcur to Six ears Bus Scrviif — For Particulars Jilitress the DIRECTRESS PHONE PROSPECT 9-1551 Lewis and Willoughby Avenues TEACHERS COLLEGE AND GRADUATE SCHOOL COURSES LEADING TO THE B.A. ; THE B.S. in Laboratory Science. Social Science, Education, Nursinj;; the M.A. and the Ph.D. SUBJECTS LEADING TO PROFESSIONAL CERTIFICATES for Teachers. COURSES ARE OPEN TO MEN AND WOMEN. LECTURE AND LABORATORY PERIODS from 4 to 6 and from 7 to 9 P.M. Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. F ' lr Cataldt uf ami further iiiforitiatlun mlilress Registrar of Graduate School, 75 Lewis Avenue Telephone FO 9-1100 ACADEMY OF SAINT JOSEPH ' ni-the-Pines Brentwood, Long Island, New York Boarding and Day Schools for Girls and Young Ladies (Preparatory Collegiate) Affiliated with the State University Complete Courses in Art, Vocal and Instrumental Music Extensive Grounds, Large Campus, Athletics, Horseback Riding Address: Mother Superior Printed and Bound at the COUNTRY LIFE PRESS ' ' m fSy- j Atrial view ofCounto Life Press showing plant, power house. R. R. facilities and restaurants. The true University of these days is a collection of books, ' ' said Carlyle . . . and as printers for the publishers of books, magazines, annuals and catalogues, we are proud to have a part in the making of The Lucky Bag for The United States Naval Academy, The Howitzer for The United States Military Academy, The Aegis for Dartmouth College, and annuals for many other leading colleges and schools. Many of the best-known books of the last thirty years have been printed under the sign of the Anchor and Dolphin. DOUBLEDAY, DORAN COMPANY, INC., GARDEN CITY, N. Y. CHIDNOFF STUDIO 469 Fifth Avenue New York (T fO OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER FOR THE 1936 FOOTPRINTS All Fhoio( rnp is Made Personally By IRVING CHIDNOFF 150 1 I ' UNCH BOWLS, CARD PARTIES AND TABI,KS AND CAMP WEDDINGS OUR CHAIRS TO HIRE SPECIALTY SODA : : CANDY : : LUNCH HERMAN SCHWEDE 471 Myrtle Avenue Brooklyn, N. V. Telephone: Sterling 3-8375 Phone Triangle 5-5860 CLINTON FLORIST D. HALIKIAS, Prop. FRESH CUT FLOWERS ALWAYS ON HAND Wedding and Floral Desijrns Promptly Attended to 406 MYRTLE AVE. Bet. Clinton Vanderbilt Aves. BROOKLYN, N. Y. Sterling 3-9020, 8705, 9890 MICHEL ' S Established 1910 A Restaurant serving those who appreciate good food Private Rooms for all dinner occasions Cocktail Lounge 346-352 Flatbush Avenue Brooklyn, N. Y. ■i 151 h THE BOSSERT Brooklyn Heights Tran ient and Residential Reasonable Prices Montague and Hicks Streets In Summer The Marine Roof Kate Ma to October Dinner and Supper Dances witii cooling Hree es from the Harbor In Winter The Grill From October to late May Dinner and Supper Dances BANQUET DEPARTMENT I ' RIVATE ROOMS 8 TO 4OO PERSONS for DINNERi — LUN ' CHEONS DANCES TEAS — WEDDINGS Call Mr. Nicholas Catering Manager Main 4-8100 TRianjjle 5-4279 ESTABLISHED 1890 WOOLSEY WOOLSEY Designers -Engravers -Medallists 146 LAWRENCE STREET BROOKLYN, N. Y. GREETING CARDS COMMENCEMENT INVITATIONS DIPLOMAS RINGS KEYS PINS DANCE ORDERS AND FAVORS COATS OF ARMS STATIONERY MEDALS CUPS TROPHIES TELEPHONE MARKET 3-2296 NEWARK, NEW JERSEY LOREN, MURCHISON CO. INCORPORATED JEWELERS and STATIONERS OFFICIAL JEWELERS FOR THE ST. JOSEPH ' S COLLEGE CLASS RINGS Club and Fraternit) Pins, Medals and Trophies Pldtiiiuni iiiul Fine Jeu ' elry Dance Favors «;[152! ' Phone STerling 3-9221 Goetz ' s Confectionery and Luncheonette ' Meet me at Goetz ' s Now Serving BREAKFAST LUNCHEON DINNER (from 5 to 8 p. m.) Homemade Ice Cream and Candies Visit our new collegiate rendezvous! •i 153 ) • PACE INSTITUTE ( ' (mrscs( f intrnsi -(_ ' cliaractcr, preparing MT various occupations in business and for the professions of accountancy and shorthand reporting, and including both technical and cultural subjects, are given at Pace Institute for men and women in daytime ami e ' cninff classes. The courses include the following: Accountancy for C.P.A. Practice Summary (C.P.A.) Accountancy Accountancy and Business Administration Secretarial Practice Shorthand Reporting Shorthand Speed Classes Advertising and Marketing Selling and Marketing Credit Science Bulletin, interesting vocational booklets, and class dates are available upon re- quest. Inquire of the Registrar by per- sonal call, by letter, or by telephone, n.Vrclay 7-8200. ' isiturs arc Avelcome. PACE INSTITUTE ?,I Y °R°KfK:v: SECRETARIAL TRAINING FOR COLLEGE WOMEN Stenography in All Languages Interboro Institute 152 West 42nd Street New York, N. Y. Foidham University Fordham Road adjoining Bronx Park New ' ork City FOUNDED IN i8 i Conducted by the JESUITS Fordham Col.ege School of Law College of Pharmac Downtown College School of Social Serv CJraduate School Teacher ' s College School of Business Summer School Fordham Pieparatoi Additional Facilities If ' iile for Bulletin- Fordha.-n Road Woolworth Building also Fordnam Road y Fordham Road Woolworth Building ice Woolworth Bldg. Woo:worth Building also Fordham Road Woolworth Building also Fordham Road Woolworth Building Fordham Road ■V School Fontham Road for Resident Students -Specify Department So. 8-6697 HARRY ARNOLD and his orchestra Progress Planning • Individualized methods of inslructton in Bookkeeping, Shorlhand, Typewnling, Calculaling and Business Machines SecrelaiiBl Finishing Course . Fast Evening Diclalion Classes • Sludenls pro- gress as rapidly as their ability permits Williamsburgh Savings Bank Building ONE HANSON PLACE, BROOKLYN Brooklyn Secretarial School • Secretarial Business Machines Brush-up Courses • Special 7 Weeks Summer Course 202 LIVINGSTON STREET Brooklyn, N. Y. (Opp. A. S.) MRS. M. C. BAIRD, I ' n ii ipal I ' Rianijle 5-85 Si piicRim inunoRV rflnnJarJ cJince iSQ Brooklyn, N. Y. - SOulh 8-4S67 Card«n City, L. I. - Garden City 8881 BUSINESS TRAINING In Secretarial Subjects intensely presented by the Individual Promotion Plan. Aca- demically trained students assureil of rapid advancement by this method of in- struction. All studies are conducteti in a refined environment by a faculty of well- known university professors and univer- sity trained teachers. Moderate Tuition Rates Placement Service for Ciraduates Day and Evening Glasses Registered by the Board of Regents, University of the State of New York A Catalog Will Be Sent Upon Request Irving Edgar Chase, Diredor United States Secretarial School Thirty-fifth Yi-iir 527 Fifth Avenue at 44th Street The Bankers Trust Building New York, N. Y. Telephone: VAnderbilt 3-2474 • i55: Phone NEvins 8-7567 Thf lloiisr of (Jiiality PHILIP ' S RESTAURANT Every Meal a Pli-iisiirc HOME CX:)OKIN(;— ALSO A LA CARTE 242 DE KALB AVENUE Near Vanderbilt Avenue BROOKLYN, N. Y. THE HOUSE TjJaT SPORT BUILT 22 CAST 42nd ST. NEW YORK, N. V. The Paulist Press printers and publishers 401 WEST 59th STREET NEW YORK, N. V. • { 156i Autographs A 157}!- Autographs 158 I • ' 5 ;; ;- - Srr ' lm c ■


Suggestions in the St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) collection:

St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1937 Edition, Page 1

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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St Josephs College - Footprints Yearbook (Brooklyn, NY) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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