Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA)

 - Class of 1933

Page 1 of 108

 

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 108 of the 1933 volume:

— All Aboard 733 y Year Book of the Senior Class The Baldwin School Bryn Mawr Pennsylvania To Miss Beckwith We pride ourselves on our perception and recognition of genuine and incomparable values. With that in mind we dedicate this book to Miss Beckwith: because of her under- standing and sympathetic qualities, because of her savoir faire, which is revealed to us at her table and at Sunday afternoon tea, because of her entire eligibility to be classed as a Good Sport —and lastly, because we think she has a grand sense of humor. Miss Minnie A. Beckwith In Memoriam Sue lived happily with an unaffected dignity and as a friend contributed to friendship with all her personality and sensitive understanding. The memory of her, as a loyal and enthusiastic member of our class, quietly makes known to u$ those strong, yet unassuming ideals which were so much a part of her. Susan Fosdick All Aboard, '33 With this as our title, the power of suggestion rather overwhelms us. We imagine ourselves with our passports in hand, in the form of diplomas, allowing us to embark on our own particular journeys: where to, we do not just know, but still we are decidedly conscious of an incentive towards shoving off. The personal experiences which we have undergone to acquire our passports are significant to each one of us. Yet in spite of the varied interests and personalities which have gone to constitute us a whole class, we have worked together with a surprising excess of harmony and pleasure. Now we are leaving in all directions. Ah, there's the rub. However, we have the tremendous satisfaction of knowing that we have lived up to our class song, so proud to have been a sharer in its great congeniality. Our trains are waiting, and our passports obtained. Who our conductors will be is up to ourselves. Whether the Wanderlust catches us up. or we board a tedious local rests in our hands alone. We have all been taught to discriminate in the years that we have been here. Now is the opportunity for us to apply our hard-earned knowledge. All Aboard—‘33. 7 Message Of the class of 1933 I should like to ask, Has the year of hard times been happier than some of the earlier years of good times? I confidently believe that many could answer Yes ; that others who might hesitate to make an affirmative answer to the word happier would say, Assuredly more interesting. My parting wish then to the class of 1933 is one of success, first in defining, second in solving, the new problems of the world today— intellectual power that can define them, courage and independence that will solve them in a spirit of magnanimity that will contribute to the new world which we must have. Perhaps you know better than any group of young Americans has known for fifty years, that you must earn your right to enjoy and to use America. Perhaps your adult lives will be lived fully in the sunlight of a world-wide friendliness with a basic philosophy that the justification of one's life lies in the contribution that one is able to make to other lives. Your school will follow you with confidence and affection as you move on to meet these major challenges. Elizabeth Forrest Johnson. Photo by Ida W. Prifciion Elizabeth Forrest Johnson 9 SENIOR CLASS President..................................JUSTINE LEWIS Vice-President ....................................MARIAN TAYLOR Secretary-Treasurer JEAN BODMAN 10 SENIORS 11 PHYLLIS WICK ABDULLAH NEW YORK. NEW YORK I have a heart with room for every joy. 1931- 32 Basketball Squad. Lacrosse Squad, Color Basketball Team, Color Hockey Team, Baseball Squad, Glee Club, Debating Club, Walking Club. 1932- 33 Hockey Squad, Color Hockey Team, Basketball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Glee Club, De- bating Club, Walking Club, French Club, Orchestra, Riding Club, Science Club. HELEN ALEXANDER WAYNE. PENNSYLVANIA Of such affection and unbroken faith As temper life's worst bitterness. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 Glee Club. French Club. 1932- 33 Glee Club. French Club, Hockey Squad, Commissioner. ISOBEL ROSS ARNOLD KITTANNING. PENNSYLVANIA Come, sit down, every mother's son, and rehearse your parts. 1930- 31 Chairman of Ring Com- mittee, Chairman of Garden Party, Science Club. Commissioner,Coun- cillor. 1931- 32 Dramatic Club. Dramatic Club Play, Debating Club. Science Club, Blazer Committee. 1932- 33 President of Dramatic Club, President of Art Club, De- bating Club, Science Club, Social Committee, Annual Board, Orches- tra, Archery Squad, Cotillion Com- mittee. MARGARET ANNE BALDWIN DULUTH. MINNESOTA We are growing serious, and let me tell you, that's the very next step to being dull. 1931- 32 Glee Club, Choir, Walk- ing Club, Archery Squad, Cum Laude. 1932- 33 Glee Club, Choir, French Club Play, Debating Club, Arch- ery Squad, Walking Club. Com- missioner, Councillor, Annual Board n MARY LOUISE BASS WILTON. MAINE Which not even critics criticize. 1932-33 Hockey Squad. Glee Club. Walking Club. Basketball Squad, Hut Committee, Swimming Team. ALICE BAZLEY POTTSVILLE. PENNSYLVANIA All nature wears one universal grin. 1932 Basketball Squad, First Bas- ketball Team, Baseball Squad, Tennis Squad. Archery Squad. 1932-33 Junior Hockey Squad, La- crosse Squad. Basketball Squad, Captain of First Team Basketball, Archery Squad, Riding Club, Walk- ing Club, French Club, Swimming Team. Senior Show. Science Club. DORIS DAVEY BENSON WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Think you a little can daunt mine ears? Have I not heard the lions roar? 1931- 32 Councillor. 1932- 33 Science Club. MARJORIE BUNN ARDMORE. PENNSYLVANIA A merry heart maketh a cheerful countenance. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 French Club, Baseball Squad. 1932- 33 French Club, French Club Play, Glee Club, Hockey Squad, Milestone Board, Annual Board, Art Club. JEAN BODMAN WAYNE. PENNSYLVANIA As merry as the day is long. 1930- 31 Walking Club, Hockey Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Tennis Squad. 1931- 32 Glee Club, Vice-President of the Walking Club, Secretary- Treasurer of Class, Advisory Board, Glee Club Committee, Hockey Squad, Science Club, Baseball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Eleventh Class Play. 1932- 33 Dramatic Club. Walking Club, Glee Club, Advisory Board, President of AA, Senior Show Committee. Secretary-Treasurer of Class. Basketball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Hockey Squad, Art Club, Glee Club Committee. ELEANOR BURNHAM WAYNE. PENNSYLVANIA Winged Words. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 French Club, Glee Club. 1932- 33 French Club, Glee Club. 16 ANNE GREELEY CARPENTER ST. LOUIS. MISSOURI She that was ever fair and never proud, Had tongue at will, and yet was never loud. 1930- 31 Councillor, Hockey Team. Basketball Squad. Lacrosse Squad. Tennis Squad, Color Hockey Team. 1931- 32 Hockey Team, Color Hockey Team, Basketball Squad, Color Basketball Team, Archery Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Science Club, Blazer Committee. 1932- 33 Councillor, Commissioner, Walking Club, Science Club, Head of Archery, Hockey Team, Color Hockey Team, Basketball Team, Lacrosse Squad. LYLE CHAMBERLIN MONTEVALLO. ALABAMA She pleases all the world, but can- not please herself. 1930- 31 Walking Club. 1931- 32 French Club. 1932- 33 Choir, Glee Club. Sci- ence Club. Art Club, First Vice- Chairman. 7 FLORENCE MITCHELL CHANCE WYNNEWOOD, PENNSYLVANIA Her stature tall—I hate a dumpy woman. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 Glee Club, French Club. Hockey Squad. 1932- 33 Glee Club. French Club. Hockey Squad, Commissioner. RUTH WHITING COOK YONKERS. NEW YORK I am sure care's an enemy to life. 1930- 31 Orchestra. Color Hockey Team. 1931- 32 Science Club. 1932- 33 Orchestra, Archery Squad, French Club, Annual Board, Color Hockey Team. 1 HARRIET MORGAN COTTRELL WESTERLY. RHODE ISLAND Oh, the heart is a free and a fet- terless thing, A wave of the ocean, a bird on the wing. 1930- 31 Debating Club. Walking Club, Lacrosse Squad, Councillor, Color Hockey Team. 1931- 32 Secretary - Treasurer of Debating Club. Walking Club, La- crosse Squad, Tennis Squad. Color Hockey Team. 1932- 33 President of the Debating Club, Cotillion Committee, Service Committee, Lacrosse Squad. Ten- nis Squad. ELIZABETH LOUISE DAVIS PORT HURON. MICHIGAN Unaware of sun or moon, Indifferent to bane or boon. 1931- 32 Dramatic Club, Dramatic Club Play, French Club, Riding Club, Lacrosse Squad, Archery Squad. 1932- 33 Treasurer of French Club, French Club Play, Chairman of Hut Committee, Riding Club,Writ- ing Club, Archery Squad. 9 KATHERINE BIRGE DIMELOW NEW BRIGHTON. NEW YORK I look on solemnity as a disease. 1932-33 Gray Hockey Team. La- crosse Squad, Hockey Squad, Lit- erary Club. CATHERINE MACPHERSON ELLIOTT DES MOINES. IOWA Now while life is raw and new Drink it clear, drink it deep. 1932 Prophecy. 1932-33 French Club, French Club Play, Secretary of Literary Club, Milestone Board. DAISY HEATH EVANS WASHINGTON. D. C. I would rather be right than be President. 1930- 31 Color Hockey Team, Walking Club. 1931- 32 Archery Squad, Science Club. Dramatic Club, Color Hockey Team. 1932- 33 Archery Team, Color Hockey Team. DOROTHY WINIFRED FAGG JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA Call her not wicked; that word's touch consumes her like a curse. 1932-33 Literary Club. Choir. Glee Club, French Club, French Club Play, Debating Club.Walking Club. JEAN FERGUSON FUNK HAVERFORD, PENNSYLVANIA From earliest youth she aspired to please. 1930- 31 French Club, cum laude. 1931- 32 French Club, Orchestra, Councillor, cum laude. 1932- 33 French Club, Orchestra. ISABEL PATTERSON GRAFF WORTHINGTON. PENNSYLVANIA Clever women know it's wise To give the heart good exercise. 1930- 31 Glee Club, Choir. 1931- 32 Choir, Glee Club, Debat- ing Club, Eleventh Class Play, Song Committee. 1932- 33 Manager of Choir. Glee Club. Debating Club, French Club, Senior Sitting Room Committee. Senior Song Committee. VIRGINIA HORR SIDNEY, OHIO My own thoughts are my own companions. 1932-33 Councillor, Science Club, Basketball Squad, Annual Board. LOUISE JANET HANNAHS SOUTH ORANGE. NEW JERSEY His nature's a glass of champagne with the foam on't. 1931- 32 Glee Club, French Club, Basketball Squad, Councillor, Hill Committee. 1932- 33 Glee Club, Choir, French Club, Debating Club, Hockey Squad. Senior Basketball Squad, Senior Show, Annual Board. 23 MAY DAY HOWSON WAYNE. PENNSYLVANIA Thy modesty's a candle to thy merit. 1930- 31 President of Class. Ad- visory Board, President of AA. Hockey Squad. Basketball Squad, Baseball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Walking Club. 1931- 32 Advisory Board, Second Vice-Chairman, Captain of Gray Team. Hockey Squad. Basketball Squad, Baseball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Walking Club, Science Club. 1932- 33 Advisory Board, Second Vice-Chairman, Captain Hockey Team, Basketball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Swimming Team, Head of Hockey, Vice-President of Walk- ing Club, Science Club. PRISCILLA MURIEL HOWES GLEN RIDGE, NEW JERSEY Who mixed reason with pleasure and wisdom with mirth. If she had any faults, she has left us in doubt. 1932-33 French Club, Glee Club, Choir, Science Club, Councillor. JANE KAUFMAN HIGHLAND PARK. ILLINOIS Be thine own palace, or the world's thy jail. 1931- 32 Science Club, French Club 1932- 33 French Club, Literary Club. ELLEN VIRGINIA HUNTER PHILADELPHIA. PENNSYLVANIA Sober, steadfast, and demure. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 French Club. 1932- 33 French Club. Glee Club. 25 = MARJORIE KENYON GREAT NECK. LONG ISLAND It is not true that woman was made from man's rib. She was really made from his funny bone. 1930- 31 Commissioner. Service Committee, Glee Club, French Club. 1931- 32 Glee Club, French Club, Song Committee, Science Club, Eleventh Class Play. 1932- 33 Choir. Glee Club. Cotil- lion Committee. French Club, De- bating Club, Literary Club, Mile- stone Board, Song Committee, Ed- itor-in-Chief of Annual. ROSE MARIE MAXWELL KOTHNY STRAFFORD. PENNSYLVANIA Thought is deeper than all speech. 1931- 32 Glee Club. 1932- 33 Glee Club, Science Club. French Club, Literary Club. DORIS MEAD SWARTHMORE, PENNSYLVANIA She in beauty, education, blood, Holds hands with any princess of the world. 1932-33 Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad, Dramatic Club, Glee Club, Walking Club. JUSTINE FRANCES LEWIS YORK. PENNSYLVANIA Whate'er he did was done with so much ease, In him alone 'twas natural to please. 1930- 31 Councillor, Commissioner, Glee Club, Glee Club Committee, Dramatic Club Play, Walking Club, Long Hike, Science Club, French Club. 1931- 32 Vice-President of Class, French Club, Glee Club, Glee Club Committee, Walking Club, Long Hike, Debating Club, Choir, Eleventh Class Play, Service Com- mittee, Drawing Award, Cum Laude. 1932- 33 Head of Glee Club, French Club, Art Club, Secretary- Treasurer of Debating Club, Swim- ming Team, Choir, Walking Club, Hill Committee, Color Hockey Team, Honorary Chairman of Annual Board, Advisory Board, President of Senior Class. LINA ELLA MELVIN BRADFORD PENNSYLVANIA Of me you may write in the blackest of ink, I say what I mean and I know what I think. 1930- 31 Glee Club, Lacrosse Squad, Class Hockey Team. 1931- 32 Glee Club, Orchestra, Councillor, Science Club. Walking Club, Lacrosse Squad, Color Hockey Team, Class Song Leader, Song Committee, Chairman of Prophecy Committee. 1932- 33 Glee Club, Glee Club Committee, Head of Orchestra, Choir, Councillor, Science Club, Walking Club, Class Song Leader, Song Committee. MARGARET VIRGINIA MURTA MERION, PENNSYLVANIA The glory of a firm, capacious mind. 1930- 31 French Club, Cum Laude. 1931- 32 French Club, Science Club, Scholarship. Cum Laude. 1932- 33 French Club, Literary Club, Color Hockey Team, Fourth Basketball Team, Assistant Business Manager of Annual, Business Man- ager of Milestone. Z 28 LULA CLIFFORD PACE JACKSONVILLE. FLORIDA And good and bad are woven in a crazy plaid. 1930- 31 French Club, Glee Club, Cum Laude. 1931- 32 Glee Club, Choir, Glee Club Committee, French Club, Secretary of The Council, Corridor Leader, Art Club. Commissioner. ANNE PALMER WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Honour maintaining, Meanness disdaining, Still entertaining, Engaging, and new. 1931- 32 Glee Club. 1932- 33 Glee Club, Choir, Debat- ing Club, Science Club, Councillor, Hut Committee, Swimming Team. 29 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 French Club. 1932- 33 French Club, Glee Club. DOROTHY POWELL VILLA NOVA, PENNSYLVANIA I lay me down to sleep With little thought or care Whether my waking find Me here or there. 1931- 32 Tennis Squad, Science Club. 1932- 33 Tennis Squad. 30 VIRGINIA ROGERS WINTER HAVEN. FLORIDA Soft as her clime, and sunny as her skies. 1931- 32 French Club. Glee Club, Choir. 1932- 33 French Club, Glee Club, Choir. ANNE LOUISE ROOT SOUTHAMPTON, LONG ISLAND Worth, courage, honor, these three Your sustenance and birthright are. 1930- 31 Riding Club. 1931- 32 Riding Club, Head of Swimming, Walking Club, French Club, Councillor. 1932- 33 President of Riding Club, Head of Swimming, Secretary- Treasurer of Service Committee. Walking Club, Literary Club, French Club. BARBARA SAUL MOYLAN, PENNSYLVANIA Travel, trouble, music, art. 1932-33 Secretary French Club, Dramatic Club. Art Club, Senior Show Committee. Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad. JEANNE SCHOONMAKER ASHBURNHAM. MASSACHUSETTS Smooth runs the water where the brook is deep. 1930- 31 Councillor. 1931- 32 Eleventh Class Play. 1932- 33 Song Committee. Annual Board, Senior Show, Debating Club, French Club, Chairman of Literary Club, Senior Sitting Room Committee. 32 AUGUSTA SHIFFERSTINE COALDALE. PENNSYLVANIA As good be out of the world as out of the fashion. 1931- 32 French Club, Eleventh Class Play, Archery Team. 1932- 33 French Club, French Club Play, Archery Team, Councillor. MARY ERETY SHOEMAKER BRIDGETON, NEW JERSEY All her hours were yellow sands Blown in foolish whorls and tassels. 1930- 31 Dramatic Club, Dramatic Club Play, Choir, Glee Club, Cum Laude. 1931- 32 President of French Club, Dramatic Club, Choir, Glee Club. Glee Club Committee, Eleventh Class Play. 1932- 33 President of French Club. Dramatic Club Business Manager, Choir, Glee Club, Glee Club Committee, French Club Play, Orchestra, Councillor. MARGARET LOUISE STARK CYNWYD, PENNSYLVANIA In her is the end of breeding Her boredom is exquisite and excessive. 1931- 32 Dramatic Club. 1932- 33 Literary Club, French Club. Milestone Board. HARRIET STONE WAYNE. PENNSYLVANIA Where be bonds to bind the free? All the world was meant for me. 1930- 31 Orchestra, Walking Club. Second Hockey Team, Baseball Team, Commissioner, Second Color Team, (Baseball, Hockey). 1931- 32 Orchestra, Walking Club, Second Hockey Team, Tennis Squad, Long Hike, First Color Team, (Baseball, Hockey). 1932- 33 Orchestra, President of Walking Club, First Hockey Team, Captain of Second Hockey Team, First Color Hockey Team. ELEANOR CRANE STULL MOYLAN. PENNSYLVANIA Laugh at your friends, and if your friends are sore, So much the better, you may laugh the more. 1930- 31 French Club. 1931- 32 French Club, Glee Club, Science Club, Commissioner. 1932- 33 French Club, Art Club. Her air, her manners, All who saw admired. 1930- 31 French Club, Walking Club, Science Club. 1931- 32 French Club, Walking Club, Archery Squad, Eleventh Class Play. 1932- 33 French Club, Debating Club. Literary Club, Archery Squad, Milestone Board, Annual Board. Lacrosse Squad, Cotillion Committee, Councillor. LOIS TAGGART SCARSDALE. NEW YORK MARION TAYLOR PORTSMOUTH. NEW HAMPSHIRE Men who undertake considerable things, Even in a regular way, ought to give us ground to presume ability. 1930- 31 Walking Club, Tennis Team, Cum Laude. 1931- 32 President of Class, Head of Tennis, Commissioner, Debating Club, Walking Club. Tennis Team, Eleventh Class Play, Science Club, Advisory Board, Cum Laude. 1932- 33 Vice-President of Class. Secretary-Treasurer of School, Advisory Board, Milestone Board, French Club, Vice-President of Debating Club. Head of Tennis, Captain of Second Basketball Team. ELIZABETH ANNE TAYLOR LANSDOWNE, PENNSYLVANIA She is pretty to walk with And witty to talk with And pleasant, too, to think on. 1930- 31 Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad, Tennis Squad, Commis- sioner. 1931- 32 Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad. Tennis Squad, Commis- sioner. 1932- 33 Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad, Tennis Squad, Commis- sioner, Walking Club. ELEANORE TOBIN CHICAGO. ILLINOIS He is truly great that is little in himself, and m a k e t h no account of any height of honors. 1931- 32 Prophecy Committee, Commissioner, H,o c k e y Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Baseball Squad. 1932- 33 Chairman of the School, Chairman of the Senior Show Committee, Hockey Squad, Bas- ketball Squad, Lacrosse Squad, Walking Club. DOROTHY OLCOTT TUMBRIDGE BROOKLYN, NEW YORK Shallow brooks murmur most deep. Silent slide away. 1931 Glee Club, Tennis Squad. 1931- 32 Glee Club, French Club, Orchestra, Walking Club, Color Basketball Team. 1932- 33 Chairman of Service Committee, Choir. Glee Club. Orchestra, French Club, Walking Club, Science Club, Senior Sitting Room Committee, Senior Show, Color Hockey Team. ALVERTA VAN DUSEN OVERBROOK. PENNSYLVANIA My heart is true as steel. 1930- 31 Hockey Squad, Baseball Squad, Advisory Board, Commis- sioner, Walking Club. 1931- 32 Vice-President of Class, Hockey Squad, Basketball Squad, Baseball Squad, Head of Baseball. Lacrosse Squad. 1932- 33 Hockey Team, Basketball Squad. Secretary-Treasurer of AA , Senior Show Committee. Swimming Team, Head of Grey Team. DOROTHY BARBER VICKERS CHESTERTOWN, MARYLAND I always thought a tinge of blue improved a charming woman's stocking. 1931- 32 Science Club. 1932- 33 Debating Club, Art Club, French Club, Councillor. DOROTHEA WALKER GERMANTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA Buxom, blithe and debonair. 1930-31 Cum Laude. 1932-33 Literary Club, French Club, Science Club. SARAH VIRGINIA WATT NORRISTOWN. PENNSYLVANIA Of all the girls that are so smart, There's none like pretty Sally. 1930- 31 Hockey Squad, Baseball Squad, French Club. Walking Club, Commissioner, Vice-Presi- dent of Class, Cum Laude. 1931- 32 Hockey Squad, Baseball Squad, French Club, Walking Club, Commissioner. 1932- 33 Hockey Squad, French Club, Walking Club, Business Manager of Annual, Assistant Business Manager of Milestone, Secretary of Commission. 39 JANE COOPER WINEGAR GROSSE POINTE. MICHIGAN But now I know the things I know, And do the things I do. 1931- 32 Glee Club, French Club, Archery Squad. Eleventh Class Play, Councillor, Cum Laude, Scholarship. 1932- 33 Glee Club. French Club, Debating Club, Literary Club. Archery Squad, Senior Show, Editor-in-Chief of Milestone. The Perfect Senior HAIR . . Louise Hannahs EYEBROWS . . Harriet Cottrell EYES E. A. Taylor NOSE Lyle Chamberlin MOUTH Catherine Elliott SMILE . . Anne Carpenter COMPLEXION Justine Lewis VOICE Barbara Saul FIGURE Peggy Baldwin HANDS Isobel Arnold LEGS Helen Alexander FEET Lulu Pace Senior Statistics As We See Ourselves MOST VERSATILE ............Mary Shoemaker........ MOST DEPENDABLE............Eleanore Tobin........ MOST CONSCIENTIOUS.........Eleanore Tobin........ BIGGEST BLUFFER............Marjorie Kenyon....... MOST MUSICAL...............Mary Shoemaker........ MOST ATHLETIC .............May Howson ......... MOST ARTISTIC .............Lula Pace........... MOST SOPHISTICATED ........Jeanne Schoonmaker . MOST LIKELY TO SUCCEED. .. .Eleanore Tobin..... MOST POISED ...............Lois Taggart.......... BEST DRESSED ..............Sally Watt ......... CLEVEREST .................Jeanne Schoonmaker . . BEST ACTRESS ON STAGE ... Isobel Arnold........ BEST ACTRESS OFF STAGE Isobel Arnold........... MOST DIGNIFIED ............Lyle Chamberlin .... MOST PERSONALITY...........Louise Hannahs........ PRETTIEST .................Anne Carpenter ..... MOST STRIKING..............Lois Taggart........ BIGGEST LINE ..............Catherine Elliott .. MOST MARRIAGEABLE..........Isabel Graff.......... MOST CAPABLE ..............Marian Taylor ...... MOST BRILLIANT ............Peggy Murta ........ MOST INDEPENDENT...........Mary Shoemaker.... BEST SENSE OF HUMOR........Ruth Cook.......... MOST ORIGINAL .............Mary Shoemaker.... MOST ENERGETIC ............Alice Bazley....... MOST BLASE ................Augusta Shifferstine . . . MOST NAIVE ................Virginia Hunter....... MOST CHARMING ............ Barbara Saul ....... BEST MIXER.................Jean Bodman......... MOST POPULAR...............Justine Lewis....... MOST HAPPY-GO-LUCKY .... Ruth Cook ............ CUTEST ....................E. A. Taylor........ MOST TALENTED .............Mary Shoemaker ..... MOST INDIFFERENT ..........Augusta Shifferstine . . DONE MOST FOR CLASS........Howson and Lewis...... BEST ALL-AROUND-GIRL ......May Howson ......... MOST TACTFUL ..............Eleanore Tobin........ WITTIEST ..................Marjorie Kenyon....... EASIEST TO GET ALONG WITH .Jean Bodman......... As Others See Us .Justine Lewis . Eleanore Tobin . Eleanore Tobin . Marjorie Kenyon .Mary Shoemaker .May Howson Lula Pace Jeanne Schoonmaker Marian Taylor . Lyle Chamberlin .Anne Carpenter .Jeanne Schoonmaker Mary Shoemaker Isobel Arnold Justine Lewis Louise Hannahs Anne Carpenter Justine Lewis Catherine Elliott Helen Alexander Marian Taylor Murta and Winegar Mary Shoemaker Marjorie Kenyon Mary Shoemaker Harriet Cottrell Augusta Shifferstine Alice Bazley Barbara Saul Jean Bodman Justine Lewis Ruth Cook E. A. Taylor Mary Shoemaker Mary Shoemaker Justine Lewis Marian Taylor Lula Pace Virginia Horr Jean Bodman mpressions PHYLLIS ABDULLAH Both towels, rubber bolls, brogues HELEN ALEXANDER Blue velvet, silk stockings, petit-point ISOBEL ARNOLD Noil polish, gloss, comeos PEGGY BALDWIN Puppies, merry-go-rounds, sun flowers MARY LOUISE BASS Sou'westers, schooners, moccosins ALICE BAZLEY Hockey sticks, cherry lollipops, pine trees DORIS BENSON Bears, log cobins, Hershey ba-s MARJORIE BUNN Nosegays, pink organdy, quill pens JEAN BODMAN Horse races, chris-crafts, santa claus ELEANOR BURNHAM Victrola records, cadets, polo coots ANNE CARPENTER Giggles, Peck Peck, curlers LYLE CHAMBERLIN Peanut brittle, Vogue, mint juleps FLORENCE CHANCE Hurdy-gurdies, sloops, riding boots RUTH COOK HARRIET COTTRELL Brooks, letters, naps BETTY LOU DAVIS Raymond Massey, dreams, kites KATHERINE DIMELOW. . . Jin-rickshaws, block beads, saucers KATHERINE ELLIOTT Tiger lilies, sing-sing, my sin HEATH EVANS West Point, signet rings, thimbles DOROTHY FAGG Nosegays, pique, polo ponies JEAN FUNK ISOBEL GRAFF Valentines, thrushes, poke bonnets LOUISE HANNAHS Tinsel, bunny wraps, French dolls VIRGINIA HORR Typewriters, scotties, silver cups PRISCILLA HOWES Sunshine, shamrocks, corn MAY HOWSON Emblems, torches, violets VIRGINIA HUNTER Gingham, shade, books JANE KAUFMAN Apples, ebony, poems Impressions MARJORIE KENYON..........................................Jesters, ginger snaps, jazz ROSE KOTHNY ..........................Pink pin cushions, covered wagons, libraries JUSTINE LEWIS...................................................Lettuce, ivory, mosaics DORIS MEAD....................................Packards, fringed gentians, packets LINA MELVIN..............................................Prayers, tin pans, bonfires PEGGY MURTA.....................................Berets, chipmunks, colonial houses LULA PACE....................................Roadsters, pop corn, beach pajamas ANNE PALMER...........................................Walnuts, Cape Cod. brownies FRANCES PETER...................................Dresden china, mist, sweater suits DOROTHY POWELL.................................Rattles, chocolate creams, dimples VIRGINIA ROGERS................................Bunnies, pogo-sticks, hoop skirts ANN ROOT......................................Riding crops, diving boards, pencils BARBARA SAUL.................................Russian wolf hounds, rain, airplanes JEAN SCHOONMAKER...................Taffeta bows, brown-eyed Susans, Chesterfields AUGUSTA SHIFFERSTINE.................................Hair-nets, eyebrows, brooms MARY SHOEMAKER..............................................Sonatas, swans, devils PEGGY STARK......................................Beauty salons, parchment, jade HARRIET STONE...............................................Horses, horses, horses ELEANOR STULL...............................Sofa cushions, circuses, raccoon coats LOIS TAGGART.................................Crystal earrings, black satin, cherubs E. A. TAYLOR......................................Teddy bears, country clubs, plaid MARIAN TAYLOR.......................Tennis racquets. Brooks' sweaters, New England ELEANORE TOBIN.....................................Golf bags, birch trees, sapphires DOROTHY TUMBRIDGE...................................Calendars, milk bottles, change ALVERTA VAN DUSEN..............................Poplars, Ivory soap, hockey camps DOROTHY VICKERS..........................................Pussy willows, rulers, lapis DOROTHEA WALKER.............................................Chips, Bon Ami, yarn SALLY WATT.......................................Rumble seats, berets, Ella Cinders JANE WINEGAR.......................................Wash boards, carrots, Kleenex Faculty Who’s Who MISS JOHNSON.....................FRANKLIN DELANO ROOSEVELT MISS H. D. JONES..............................GEORGE ARLISS MISS BECKWITH........................................MICKEY MOUSE MISS STEELE .........................................MOTHER GOOSE MISS GREENLEAF................................ROBERT E. LEE MISS BARKER.... FLOYD GIBBONS MISS BARROWS.........................................AMELIA EARHART MISS BOYER ZAZU PITTS MISS MEYER ......................................HANNIBAL MISS STROHM ................................LOUISE DRESSLER MISS BRINSMADE ......................................PORTIA MISS HALL ......................................DOROTHY DIX MISS NICHOLS.........................................CICERO MISS STEARNS..............................JOAN CRAWFORD MISS SPRING..........................LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY MISS BEDINGER CAESAR MLLE. REY.................................LYNNE FONTANNE MISS ALLEN .....................................BABE ALLEN MLLE. AVIZOU................................. GRACIE ALLEN MME. LAGOGUE.........................................PIERRE MISS ALBERT...................................KING HENRY II MISS HAMILTON .........................................JUNO MISS TOWLE FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE MISS WYCKOFF ....................................LILY PONS MISS HARDING .............................ETHEL BARRYMORE MISS GREGORY.......................................LUCREZIA BORI MISS PADDOCK..........................................JANET GAYNOR MISS ROBINSON..........................................BING CROSBY MISS CHAPPELL ......................................OPHELIA MRS. COMLY ...........................................ATHOS MISS FRY ...........................................PORTHOS MISS MUTCH ..........................................ARAMIS MISS BUSTARD ............................PROFESSOR PICCARD MRS. LEWIS.............................................MARY BOLAN MISS WECKERLY ............................WALTER WINCHELL MRS. WHEELER.........................O. SOGLOWS LITTLE KING MISS M. JONES BARBARA FRIETCHIE ; We’ve Got Your Number Ambition Favorite Pastime Type of Beauty College PHIL ABDULLAH Coast to Coast Hike Eating. Writing and 'Ritmetic Rugged Bryn Mowr HEL ALEXANDER Kcop up with Cora Having a good time Modern Smith IZZY ARNOLD Be an Actress Pulling pencils out of her curls Variable Bennington PEGGY BALDWIN Keep the Class Figure Smiling Snuggly Smith BASS BASS Help Einstein Walking Now Englond Wellesley GICK BAZLEY All American Girl Gym office Energetic Wellesley BENNY BENSON Live in Florida Getting Sunburned Tropical Bryn Mawr BLINNY BLINN Be an Authoress Wait for Chancey Impish Vossar JEAN 80DMAN Sculpteress President of 8.A.A. Buoyant Vosser BURNY BURNHAM More Stickers Talking about them Queenly Vassar ANNIE CARPENTER Sleep without Curlers Eating Tomato sondwiches Pretty Vassar LYLE CHAMBERLIN Second Lanvin Reading Harpers' 8azoor Stately Smith CHANCEY CHANCE To be a Skipper Apologizing Healthy Vassar COOKIE COOK To hove o Nephew Jig Saw Puzzles Chubby Wellesley HATTIE COTTRELL To put tho right letter in the Napping Pert Wellesley right envelope LOULOU DAVIS To be unusual Sleeping Cleon Cut Bryn Mawr KAY DIMELOW Live in Japon Talking about Japan Dim Vassar DANDELINE ELLIOTT To be an old rouc6 Being moody Amazing Vassar SISSY EVANS Make West Point Being misunderstood Possive Wellesley DOTTIE FAGG To find herself Mingling Elfish Wellesley JEANNIE FUNK Philharmonic Getting Good Marks Pleasonf Vassar PATSY GRAFF To make up her mind about Getting mail Dwight Wistful Vassar HANNAHS Love ‘cm ond leave 'em Taking week-ends Sparkling Smith JINNY HORR Typewrite bigger end better A nniiJMC Stringing Neat Vassar PAT HOWES rvinuoij To boot Culbertson Playing bridge Tition Vassar MAY HOWSON B.B.S.P.E. Gym Winsome B.B.S.P.E. GINNY HUNTER JANE KAUFMAN MARGE KENYON ROSE KOTHNY DINGLE LEWIS DORIE MEAD LINA MELVIN PEGGY MURTA COOPER PACE ANNIE PALMER PETE PETER DOTTIE POWELL GINGER ROGERS ANNIE ROOT BABS SAUL JEANNE SCHOONMAKER GUSSIE SHIFFERSTINE BOOTS SHOEMAKER PEGGY STARK HARRIET STONE STULL STULL LOIE TAGGART 8ETTY TAYLOR SUGIE TAYLOR TOBE TOBIN DOTTIE TUM8RIDGE ALLY VAN DUSEN DOTTIE VICKERS DOTTIE WALKER SALLY WATT JANE WINEGAR Ambition Keep us all guessing To be a poetess Got rid of her hoy fever Metropolitan Opera A tennis conquest Broadway Aimee McPherson Fill up Cum Laude Boards Tony Sorg Warm Springs Mrs. Franklin Keep owoke Byron Georgio Colomon Paris Edgar Guest To lift the other eyebrow Phi Beta Kappa Every hair in place No homework Keep her hair up Graduate Tom. Dick or Harry Helen Wills Glen no Collett Dietetics All American Eostern Shore Ph.D. Princeton Hill Favorite Pastime Type of Beauty College Kothny and Walker Demure Bryn Mawr Helping other people Brilliant U. of Chicago Dishing it out Toilored Vassar Hunter and Walker Domestic Bryn Mawr Redding up after Hattie Smooth Vassar Going without uniforms Delicate Wellesley Reforming Fiery Phila. School of Oc- cupational Therapy Collecting money Refined Vossar Painting scenery Southern Vassar Hut and Social Meetings Thoroughbred Vassar Being inconspicuous Fragile Vassar Giving the boorders o brook Languid Mt. Holyoke Corresponding Snappy Fla. State College for Women Service Committee Store Capable Vassar Making Outlines Aesthetic Smith Writing Closs Songs Striking Vassor Giving Demerits The Goy Ninoties’Vassar Hop. skip and a jump Whimsical Raddiffe Being bored Permanent Bryn Mowr Hunting Rugged Smith Writing short stories Good notured Barnard Writing on her Western Trip Golden Mt. Holyoke Talking in Study Ha!l Cute Smith Discussing Westerly Enthusiastic Wollosley Studying Fine Bryn Mawr Calling meetings Somnolent Pratt Institute Gym Alert Smith Eoting Dried Fruit Aristocratic Smith Hunter and Kothny Gretel Mt. Holyoke Wearing cute clothes Dashing Smith Yowning Hecubin Vassor 4 Concerning the Gym Department (With Apologies to the Iowa State Tests) In each of the following lists of four words there are three words which suggest one idea. The remaining word has no connection with any of the other three words. Underline that word. Howson, Bush, Bazley, Bodman. Comly, Fry, Mutch, Boltz. West, Garner, Collins, Yarnall. Milk-bottles, Noble, Laird, Phinizy. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday. Jig-saw puzzles, Mrs. Lewis, Radio, Green slips. Miss Fry, Frenchy, Prayers, Dido. Kay Elliott, Betty Lewis, Miss Mutch, May Howson. Emblems, Franky, Banners, Cups. Sportsmanship, Comly, enthusiasm, idleness. Concerning the Arts Tuno: Oh, Whon the Baldwin Toam Comes Down the Line Oh, when the Baldwin Glee Club goes to Hill Be sure to sing your best, or better still. Know all your words and watch Miss Robinson, Don't lose your breath until the final song is done. Then have some fun. Go date and dance and dine, Break right through that Hill School line, Use your Baldwin charm and grace. MAKE A HIT! Conversation in Plaster of Paris SCENE: The Studio. TIME: An early spring morning, before school has begun for the day. CHARACTERS: The ever-present statues and busts. Dante: Won't their commencement ever come? They certainly talk about it enough. I'm sick of having silly girls squint at me, calling me Danty . Hermes: Your face is enough to make anybody squint. It's a wonder they don't shudder when they draw that scowl of yours. Athlete: Watch out, conceited. You aren’t as handsome as you think you are, even though Praxiteles did do you. The girl who drew you cross-eyed yesterday wasn't far from wrong. She's a senior. They aren't such a bad lot, especially the tall one with the southern accent. Bambino: Yesterday in History of Art Class I heard Miss Morrison tell her that there aren't any girl Angels or ooy Angels in the artistic heaven. Why is that? Marietta Strozzi: I don't know, dear. ... Do you know the senior with the very straight hair started a picture of me in October and is still trying to finish it. You can't beat the Dutcn. Aratus (the Roman): I'd like to beat some people, especially the new girls when they call me Julius Caesar. Humph. My family's a lot better than that upstart's. Nubian Woman: You needn't complain. That real tall girl with the chuckle is doing a grand model of you. Faun: You're right. Say, Miss Davis surely does satilite in that little dark haired girl who jumps around all the time. Bound Slave: Sh— here comes Miss Morrison. If those who sit up in the choir To lead the school in hymns, And hit A sharp or even higher, Would hide their facial whims, And from their bird's-eye-view not wink Or laugh and grin down at a friend Then all the rest of us would think The World was coming to an end. Concerning the English Department IMPOSSIBLE INTERVIEWS I Hamlet and Medea Soft you now, the fair Medea. Hamlet, I am come to show my face, lest ye despise me. Get thee to a nunnery, go. Aye, mock me: Thou hast where to lay thine head, but I go naked into exile. It is but foolery: but it is such a kind of gain-giving as would perhaps trouble a woman. But thou wouldst not think how ill all's here about my heart. O, that this too, too solid flesh would melt, thaw and resolve itself into dust. What would I with thy pains? I have my own. Frailty, thy name is woman. There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. There moves, I warn thee well, no bloodier spirit between heaven and hell. I prithee take thy fingers from my throat. I have something in me dangerous. How now, a rat? Dead, for a ducat, dead. Wretched queen, adieu, and yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust? HAMLET: MEDEA: HAMLET: MEDEA: HAMLET: MEDEA: HAMLET: MEDEA: HAMLET: WITH APOLOGIES TO KEATS When I have fears that I may flunk exams Because I find I have an empty brain, From those high-piled books, like other crams, I cannot gather the full-ripened grain. When I behold upon my book a race, A well drawn symbol of a high romance, Then I forget my work and time and place And slipping, fall into a filmy trance. And when I think, that for a cursed hour, I wrack and turn my poor old mind in two I give up hopes of any mental power. No longer over books I'll sit and stew. And then I do not even try to think, But deeper into day dreams sink and sink. Ill Miss Brinsmade, Miss Hall and Miss Stearns Are kind ladies from whom one learns. Miss Brinsmade is sweet and as nice as can be Miss Stearns is neat and a pleasure to see And Miss Hall guides our queer youthful turns. French Class as Seen by Us T HE scene is laid in Mile Rey’s Fourth Period Senior French Class. The characters are as follows: Priscilla Howes and Lula Pace, who find each other's conversation very interesting. This is also true of Marian Taylor and Justine Lewis. Betty Lou Davis, Barbara Saul, and Jeanne Schoonmaker seem in a constant state of coma. Lois Taggart seldom takes her eyes off Mam'selle, probably from fear (to put it figura- tively) of being snuk up on from behind. Jean Funk and Jane Kaufman are con- spicuous by their silence and good behavior, and Barbara Whitman by her constant speaking when not called upon, because of her unfathomable store of knowledge. The action is punctuated by frequent and—to put it mildly—audible yawns from Jane Winegar accompanied by side-long and quizzical glances from Mile. Rey when they are least expected or desired. Mile. Rey is the only one who seems to know what it's all about, but after all we expect that of those who lead us in the paths of learning. Well to proceed—people straggle in slowly. Action commences with the entrance of Mile. Rey. MLLE. REY: Bon jour mes enfants. Est-ce que vous avez vu quelquechose de nouveau dans la classe? J’ai quelquechose a vous rendre. Voila votre Pasteur, Jane Kaufman, mais vous avez une 6criture tellement horrible que je ne peux pas la lire. Et Justine Lewis, ou est votre conte de Noel?—et votre Voltaire? Hum! Hum! JUSTINE: (One can see from her expression that this is going to be good.) J'expli- querai. J'ai . . . MLLE. REY: Nous n'avons pas le temps pour tout ga. Alors Saul et Taggart, avez- vous bien prepare votre grammaire? SAUL AND TAGGART: Mais oui, Mam'zelle. (Marian takes a note from Justine under the watchful eye of Mile. Rey: Yes, Charlie is coming to the May Dance! MLLE. REY: Qu'est-ce que j'entends Id-bas? MARIAN (meekly): I was just . . . MLLE. REY (in magnificent wrath): lei on parle frangais, Mademoiselle! La petite Pace et Howes qui parient toujours ensemble. Parlez-vous frangais? PACE AND HOWES: Mais oui, Mile. MLLE. REY: Alors vous avez etudi6 une tempete pour aujourd'hui, n'est-ce pas, Barbara Saul? Betty Lou, donnez des synonymes d'une tempete. BETTY LOU (starting up): What? What did you say? MLLE. REY: La pauvre enfant. Ella a le mal de mer. Et la petite Schoonmaker qui est partie dans ses reves l£-bas. SCHOONMAKER: Je suis tout h fait ici, Mam'zeile. MLLE. REY: Ah. Jean Funk qui ne parle jamais! Donnez us synonyme d’une tempete. (Jean Funk hesitates. This silence is enlivened by a yawn from J. Winegar. Then in unison— WINEGAR AND WHITMAN: Je sais, je sais. (The scene closes with them both trying to get out first.) Reflections on the History Department We realize that our social status Is dependent on our knowledge Of the history of our paters For we were always told When we go out to dine 'Tis not at all unlikely To suddenly bump into One of the prominent Insular Cases And too we sometimes wonder why, They deem inconsistent in debate. Stephen Arnold Douglas But such as Cookie surely see In lack of knowledge such as this A breach of social etiquette. But things occasionally seem to some Just a trifle blurred. For Hester really did become Decidedly embarrassed When questioned what was ended by The treaty of 1763 After much confusion did reply The War of 1812. We think that Hattie must believe In justice for the poets Else why the Democrats did conceive In the year of ninety-six, Of Byron for our President Is more than we can see. And Smarty has made evident Her geometric inclination For when she was asked to please explain The tangle in West Florida Oh—the triangle Or perhaps, was it a rectangle, Was her answer—perfectly plain. And though we're not so quick at things Like naming backwards all the kings And though we might be rather in a mess If asked to trace a bill through Congress. And the Six Supreme Court Cases And all the Irish Home Rule Bills The causes, battles, and results The treaties and the dates of wars Are just a little cloudy yet, But there's one thing that I’ll never forget—Reciprocity. I tickle you and you tickle me. Concerning the Math Department THAT PROBLEM (1) As it really is:— I have 3 hours at my disposal. How far can I drive into the country at the rate of 12 miles per hour and walk back at the rate of 4 miles per hour? (2) Maybe if we had a snappy modernized version, the students might take a bit more interest. So— Bill came at nine and had to leave by twelve. It was too late for the movies and we didn’t know what to do. Finally we decided to take a ride in his new car. We drove into the country at the (average) rate of 12 miles per hour and I walked back at the rate of 4 miles per hour. How far did we drive? (3) And if you prefer a problem with lengthy details and complicating elements (with about as much sense as any of them seem to have), here it is:— A, B, and C start out to take a walk. The sun is shining and it is a lovely day. A walks one mile per hour faster than B, and C walks half again as fast as A. C comes to a well by the road and spends three minutes getting a drink. He then goes on, greatly refreshed, at a pace q mile per hour faster than before. A arrives next and, after drinking for 2l 2 minutes, follows C at his uniform rate of speed. B comes to the well, and, it being hot, sits down and pulls out a dixie cup of ice cream, slightly melted, and eats it. This occupies 11.5876 minutes. He starts on again, taking a short cut (which A and C didn't know about), and comes out on the main road 125 feet behind C and I 5 7 miles ahead of A. It then starts to rain so they start to run at double time. What time did they all get home? The End (finally) FAMILIAR REMARKS OF THE MATH DEPARTMENT Have YOU Heard Them? Children! The second bell has rung. This is the dumbest class I've ever had. No more talking, please. Well, now, girls— Tsk. I cannot understand why you don't know this. You're too frivolous! The assignment for tomorrow— Concerning the Latin Department Miss Spring says she knows a new language. She says, It is thrice picturesque As either or both its components. But when asked for its name, cries, Dunt esk! This tongue is confined to the schoolroom, And uttered by those who can't leap The awesome abyss between Latin And English, so they fall to the deep. Midway between either fell language, Articulate in their despair, These helpless ones cry out their jargon That heartless Miss Spring thinks so rare. Ergo, as a name for this mixture Of Latin and English, diffused Through the depths where the unfortunate languish, Let Linguish hereafter be used. L was for Lingua Latina, As accompanied by concertina. The language of Lallust Is still shifting its ballast. Now it's Italian, not Lingua Latina. 5 56 Last Will and Testament We hereby do solemnly bequeath the following possessions to those mentioned below: Ruth Cook’s jig-saw puzzles to the Gym Department, Anne Carpenter's curlers to Betty Anne Underwood, Louise Hannahs' technique to Kitty Lankford, Marion Taylor's enthusiasm to Betty Larsen, Eleanore Tobin's golf sticks to Mary Lou Laird, Mary Shoemaker's sneakers to Ginny Whitely, May Howson's emblems to Suzie Lewis, Jeanne Schoonmaker's sophistication to Jean and Jill, Jinny Horr's typewriter to Anne Noble, Jane Kaufman's coloring to Anne Martin, Jean Funk's 'cello to Pat Kreider, Justine Lewis’ handwriting to Miss Greenleaf, Cooper Pace's shoes to Julian, Lois' and Marjorie's doorknob to Miss Weckerley and the locksmith, Louise Hannahs’ mice to Mary Ellen Garrison. Signed, THE SENIOR CLASS. Class XI President . ALICE WILSON Vice-President PEGGY WEST Secretary-Treasurer . . . BETTY NEESE Elizabeth Atwater Elinor Holton Betty Pettit Polly Baker Emeline Howe D. Redwood Ann Barlow Harriet Howes Frances Robbins Frances Bezdek Margaret Howson Frances Robinson Kate Bingham Mary Hutton Frances Schaeffer Alma Burns Louise Jacobs E. Schierenbeck Betty Bush Anita Jones Lois Schultz Helen Case M. E. Kister Florence Scott Sue Collins Barbara Lander Betty Smart Louise Dallas Betty Larsen Louise Stern B. Dunsford M. Larzelere Florence Stinson Grace Fales Suzanne Lewis E. Thresher Barbara Fellows Betty Little B. A. Underwood Terry Fox B. McLaughlin Marybelle Wallin Sue Garner 1. Markell Barbara Welch M. E. Garrison Marjorie Merrow Barbara Whitman Jeanne Gibson M. L. Morris Hester Yarnall Barbara Henneberger Christy Murphy Innes Stewart Mary Payne Anne Noble Virginia Whitely President Vice-President Secretary . . . Class X ......SUE SENTER FRANCES PHINIZY NANCY METCALF E. Aiken E. Howes M. Alsted G. Irish M. C. Anderson P. Jameson M. Ankeney 1. Jessen D. Baker A. Martin N. Beck B. Robinson B. Brewer L. Schultz P. Comfort F. Smith K. Dohan P. Spencer M. Focht L. Stahr E. Hoffer V. Van Buskirk A. Howe J. Weller S. E. Howell L. Wolcott Class IX President............................................................B. HOGG Vice-President......................................B. CHAMBERLAIN Secretary-Treasurer .................................................C. NIXON J. Allinson J. Hill J. Mason L. Balough M. Hippie T. Miles M. J. Bodley B. Hogg C. Nixon B. Chamberlain B. Karcher N. Ramsey C. Clarke J. Keiser A. Rehr C. Collins J. Kellock J. Rittenhouse B. Corey F. Kercher D. Sheaffer M. Dickson B. Kerr H. Souders M. Green C. Kreider D. Stewart J. Halford M. L. Laird N. Stinson M. Haviland C. Lankford R. Swartz 1. Hessenbruch P. Lawson M. Tyson C. Heyser B. Lewis A. Weisenbach F. McNally 60 Class VI President..................................................E. PATTON Vice-President........................................E. A. EDWARDS Secretary-Treasurer ...........................................K. KIRK H. Bazett V. Colfelt E. Dickerman B. Diez P. Duncan S. Foard J. French S. Jameson J. Johnston V. Lander M. Marsh J. Mather C. Mehl J. Metcalf A. Moorehouse E. Reeves M. Rehr J. Santamarie M. Twadell R. Van Dusen E. Leiser K. Watson J. Markell S. Whitsett C. Ziesing 62 ORGANIZATIONS Advisory Board Chairman................ First Vice-Chairman..... Secretary-T reasurer.... Head of Lower School President of Senior Class Senior Representative. President of XI Class XI Class Representative President X Class....... X Class Representative ELEANORE TOBIN LYLE CHAMBERLIN MAY HOWSON BETSY HOGG JUSTINE LEWIS JEAN BODMAN ALICE WILSON BARBARA FELLOWS ......SUE SENTER MARTHA ANKENEY 6 Annual Board Editor-in-Chief Honorary Chairman Business Manager Assistant Business Manager Photographic Editors....... Art Editor................. Faculty Advisor............ MARJORIE KENYON ..........JUSTINE LEWIS ............SALLY WATT PEGGY MURTA ( LOUISE HANNAHS | RUTH COOK ........ISOBEL ARNOLD ........MISS BRINSMADE MARJORIE BUNN VIRGINIA HORR JEANNE SCHOONMAKER ’ MARY SHOEMAKER LOIS TAGGART PEGGY BALDWIN Literary Editors Art Club President ISOBEL ARNOLD Business and Studio Manager EMELINE HOWE Isobel Arnold Marjorie Blinn Jean Bodman Lyle Chamberlin Marjorie Dickson Emeline Howe Justine Lewis Mary Louise Morris Lula Pace Barbara Saul Associate Members: Kate Bingham Eleanor Stull Mary Shoemaker Dorothy Vickers Barbara Welch Choir Manager . . ISABEL GRAFF Peggy Baldwin Eleanor Holton Elizabeth Balough Marjorie Kenyon Frances Bezdek Justine Lewis Betty Bush Lina Melvin Lyle Chamberlin Betty Neese Betty Dunsford Lula Pace Dorothy Fagg Anne Palmer Terry Fox Virginia Rogers Louse Hannahs Mary Shoemaker Priscilla Howes Dorothy Tumbridge Barbara Henneberger Eleanor Thresher Debating Club President HARRIET COTTRELL Vice-President MARIAN TAYLOR Secretary-Treasurer. . . . JUSTINE LEWIS Phyllis Abdullah Marjorie Kenyon Isobel Arnold Mary Louise Morris Frances Bezdek Anne Palmer Pegqy Baldwin Jeanne Schoonmaker Kate Bingham Betty Smart Dorothy Fagg Lois Taggart Grace Fales Dorothy Vickers Isabel Graff Betty Anne Underwood Louise Hannahs Jane Winegar 6! Dramatic Club BALDWIN MASKERS President..........................ISOBEL ARNOLD Business Manager MARY SHOEMAKER Isobel Arnold Doris Mead Elizabeth Balough Frances Phinizy Frances Bezdek Barbara Saul Jean Bodman Mary Shoemaker Barbara Henneberger Betty Ann Underwood Elizabeth Larsen Peggy West Associate Members: Alma Burns Terry Fox Junior Dramatic Club MASQUERETTES President................... Vice-President.............. Treasurer................... May Marsh E. A. Edwards Doris Shaeffer Jane Rittenhouse Jane .......IDA HESSENBRUCH BETTY KARCHER .........JEAN ALLINSON Joan Loewe Betty Frazier Barbara Beardsley Jane French Kellock Associate Members: 70 Caroline Snyder Betty Chamberlin French Club President . MARY SHOEMAKER Vice-President . . . . BARBARA WELCH Secretary BARBARA SAUL Treasurer . . . BETTY LOU DAVIS Phyllis Abdullah Jean Funk Christie Murphy Jeanne Allinson Terry Fox Peggy Murta Helen Alexander Isabel Graff Lula Pace Martha Ankeny Louise Hannahs Frances Peter Elizabeth Atwater Barbara Henneberger Jane Rittenhosue Dorothy Baker Emeline Howe Virginia Rogers Peggy Baldwin Harriet Howes Ann Root Alice Bazley Priscilla Howes Barbara Saul Nanette Beck Betsy Hogg Mary Shoemaker Marjorie Blinn Virginia Hunter Jeanne Schoonmaker Kate Bingham Gene Irish Florence Scott Eleanor Burnham Louise Jacobs Augusta Shifferstine Helen Case Anita Jones Peggy Stark Betty Chamberlin Jane Kaufman Florence Stinson Florence Chance Jane Kellock Eleanor Stull Priscilla Comfort Marjorie Kenyon Lois Taggart Ruth Cook Mary E. Kister Marian Taylor Betty Lou Davis Rose Kothny Dorothy Tumbridge Marjorie Dickson Suzanne Lewis Betty Ann Underwood Kathryn Dohan Justine Lewis Dorothy Vickers Catherine Elliott Betty Little Dorothea Walker Dorothy Fagg Betty McLaughlin Marybelle Wallen Grace Fales Marjorie Merrow Sally Watt Glee Club Head—JUSTINE LEWIS Librarian—JEAN BODMAN Assistant Librarian—FRANCES BEZDEK Committee—ALMA BURNS, LULA PACE, LINA MELVIN. MARY SHOEMAKER Phyllis Abdullah Isabel Graff Nancy Metcalf Helen Alexander Louise Hannahs Betty Neese Peggy Baldwin Barbara Henneberger Lula Pace Elizabeth Balough Carolyn Heyser Anne Palmer Anne Barlow Eleanor Holton Frances Peters Mary Louise Bass Priscilla Howes Dorothy Redwood Frances Bezdek Virginia Hunter Frances Robinson Kate Bingham Mary Hutton Virginia Rogers Marjorie Blinn Anita Jones Jeanette Rothensies Jean Bodman Marjorie Kenyon Mary Shoemaker Eleanor Burnham Mary E. Kister Florence Smith Alma Burns Rose Kothny Louise Stahr Lyle Chamberlin Mary Louise Laird Daphne Stewart Florence Chance Mary Larzelere Innes Stewart Carol Collins Justine Lewis Florence Stinson Elizabeth Dunsford Suzanne Lewis Eleanor Thresher Dorothy Fagg Rosemary McMillen Dorothy Tumbridge Grace Fales Doris Mead Betty Anne Underwood Terry Fox Lina Melvin Alice Wilson Mary Ellen Garrison Marjorie Merrow Jane Winegar 7 Hut and Social Committees HUT COMMITTEE Isobel Arnold Lula Pace Alma Burns Betty Ann Underwood SOCIAL COMMITTEE Mary Louise Bass Emeline Howe Betty Lou Davis Anne Palmer Milestone Board Editor-in-chief ................... Business Manager................... Assistant Business Manager......... Art Editor......................... Athletic Editor.................... Exchange Editor............... Alumnae Editor..................... LITERARY Marjorie Blinn Catherine Elliott Grace Fales Marjorie Kenyon ..........JANE WINEGAR ...........PEGGY MURTA ..............SALLY WATT ...........KATE BINGHAM ...........HESTER YARNALL ...........MARIAN TAYLOR MARGARET JAMESON. '28 EDITORS Peggy Stark Lois Taggart Betty Anne Underwood Barbara Welch Orchestra LINA MELVIN E. THRESHER M. HUTTON and RUTH COOK A. Barlow L. Stahr P. Abdullah }• B. Little H. Stone J. Funk ..................... I. Arnold .................. D. Tumbridge M. Shoemaker................ P. Focht ................... J. Rothensies Manager (Xylophone) Leader (Violin) Piano Violin ’Cello Bells Xylophone Saxophone Tambourine Drums Service Committee Chairman........... Treasurer........... Frances Bezdek Alma Burns Harriet Cottrell DOROTHY TUMBRIDGE ...........ANN ROOT Frances Robbins Mary Shoemaker Betty Anne Underwood MIDDLE SCHOOL REPRESENTATIVES VIII CLASS...................................Marjorie Dickson IX CLASS Mary Twadell 7 Literary Club Chairman JEANNE SCHOONMAKER Secretary................CATHERINE ELLIOTT SENIOR GROUP Betty Lou Davis Katherine Dimelow Dorothy Fagg Jane Kaufman Marjorie Kenyon Rose Kothny JUNIOR Elizabeth Atwater Frances Bezdek Grace Fales Barbara Henneberger Rosemary McMillan Peggy Murta Ann Root Peggy Stark Lois Taggart Dorothea Walker Jane Winegar GROUP Betty McLaughlin Jeannette Rothensies Betty Ann Underwood Barbara Welch Anita Jones Basketball Squad Head of Basketball..... Alice Bazley Marian Taylor Hester Yarnall Alverta Van Dusen Ann Carpenter Jean Bodman Eleanor Tobin Ann Martin E. A. Taylor Mildred Hippie ALICE WILSON Jane Kellock Frances Schaeffer Doris Mead Sue Senter May Howson Virginia Horr Barbara Saul Louise Hannahs Alma Burns Betty Brewer 1 Hockey Head of Hockey....... Helen Alexander M. L. Bass Marjorie Blinn Jean Bodman Betty Brewer Ann Carpenter Florence Chance Sue Collins K. Dohan Marg. Howson Anita Jones B. Karcher A. Wilson Squad MAY HOWSON Jane Kellock M. E. Kister M. Larzelere R. McMillan Doris Meade Sue Senter Barbara Saul Harriet Stone E. A. Taylor Eleanore Tobin A. Van Dusen S. Watt H. Yarnall Lacrosse Squad Head of Lacrosse...... Phyllis Abdullah Alice Bazley Nannette Beck Jean Bodman Ann Carpenter H. Cottrell K. Dimelow B. Fellows Peggy Focht Alice Howe May Howson Marg. Howson B. Kerr B. Lewis L. Melvin INNES STEWART B. Pettit Virginia Rogers F. Schaeffer D. Stewart I. Stewart R. Schwartz L. Taggart E. Tobin E. Thresher A. Van Dusen B. Welch Alice Wilson Carol Wilson B. Whitman H. Yarnall Riding Club Head of Riding...................ANN ROOT Alice Bazley Nancy Metcalf Fay Corl Constance Nixon B. L. Davis Sue Senter B. Fellows Louise Stern Peggy Focht Daphne Stewart Alice Howe Innes Stewart Betty Little Eleanor Thresher Carol Wilson ASSOCIATE MEMBERS Phyllis Abdullah Frances Schaeffer Harriet Stone —I--------- Swimming Team Head of Swimming.......... M. L. Bass A. Bazley L. Chamberlin I. Hessenbruch E. Howe May Howson A. Van ...............ANN ROOT B. Lewis J. Lewis B. Little A. Palmer P. Spencer L. Stahr Dusen 8‘ Tennis Head of Tennis........ Alice Bazley Harriet Cottrell Louise Dallas Mary Lou Laird Squad .....MARIAN TAYLOR Betty Little Dorothy Powell Harriet Stone E. A. Taylor Walking Club President.............................................HARRIET STONE Vice-President........................................MAY HOWSON P. Abdullah Marg. Howson M. Ankeney Jessen E. Atwater J. Lewis D. Baker D. Little Baldwin McMillan M. L. Bass Mead A. Bazley Melvin K. Bingham Payne J. Bodman Root Burns Spencer Von Guskirk Stern Carpenter Tobin Fagg Ige Focht ... Dusen Holton Watt A. Howe A. Wilson E. Howe Whitman Yarnall JUNIOR WALKING CLUB Mary Allison Beatty Barbara Beardsley Sheila Clark Ida Hessenbruch Caroline Heyser Betty Karcher Kathleen Kirk Catherine Kreider Peggy Lawson Elizabeth Leiser Betty Lewis (President) Jane Lewis May March Jane Walters Jean Metcalf Connie Nixon Naomi Ramsey Mary Robinson Daphne Stewart Nancy Stinson Mary Twaddell (Sec'y-Treas.) Katherine Watson Patronize Oir Ad vertisers 7 Compliments o f CLASS XI i Telephone: Bryn Mawr 1526 Mrs. John Kendrick Bangs 566 Montgomery Avenue HAVERFORD. PENNA. GOWNS A Bit of a Shop Luncheon and Afternoon Tea Salads, Sandwiches and Cakes Made to Order Inexpensive Novelties end Gifts 720 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. Bryn Mawr 2379 pjieSfSS pt Q, One Hundred Years Continuously on Chestnut Street 1218-22 CHESTNUT STREET PHILADELPHIA Scarab Bracelets Copied from Scarabs found in Egypt. The Scarab Bracelet may be had in 3, 5, 7 and 10 stones, and various colors. Rings, Bracelets, Necklaces Brooches in large assortment Photographs, complete description and prices of any article will be sent upon request. MOORE’S PHARMACY Expert Prescriptionist Drugs, Stationery School Supplies Candies TWO STORES: 26 BRYN MAWR AVENUE 810 LANCASTER AVENUE BRYN MAWR Compliments o f CLASS X JANE TOOHER SPORT CLOTHES School ' College ' Camp 711 BOYLSTON STREET Boston, Massachusetts Gymnasium Garments OFFICIAL OUTFITTER FOR THE BALDWIN SCHOOL (CL cyieirloom of the Future Copper from time immemorial, lias been preferred by chefs the world over. Revere now offers perfected copper utensils with chromium linings for use in the home. Revere Copperware possesses both utilitarian and aesthetic values. From the standpoint of efficiency, food cooks better and faster in Revere Copperware because copper transfers heat more rapidly and more evenly than other metals. Less fuel is used too. Add to this, the beauty of copper, its charm and warmth, the trim lines of Revere utensils, with their gleaming chromium interiors—then remember cop- per’s enduring qualities, and you will understand why Revere Copperware is referred to as the “Heir- loom of the Future.” ROME MANUFACTURING CO. Division of Revere Copper ami Brass I incorporated ROME, N. Y. Phono, 570 10 Ardmore Arcado Flowers for Graduation School and Camp Outfitters JEANNETT’S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP, Inc. Mrs. Richard Patton’s Shop ARDMORE, PA. 823 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. Children’s Apparel Mrs. N. S. T. Grammer Ard. 1725 Compl iments of CLASS IX The Baldwin School Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania A COUNTRY SCHOOL FOR GIRLS ELIZABETH FORREST JOHNSON, A. B. Head of the School Compl iments o f CLASS VIII DREKA FINE STATIONERS SMART INVITATIONS for the DEBUTANTE Garden Parties, Teas and Dances The Prestige of over half a century fur- nishing Invitations for the leading Social Events in Philadelphia is still maintained and appre- ciated The Dreka Debutante List of young ladies to be presented to Society is recog- nized as the official list 1121 Chestnut Street PHILADELPHIA St. Mary’s Laundry, Inc ARDMORE, PA. Official Launderers and Zoric Dry Cleaners for the School Compliments of HANNIBAL A New taste thrill at breakfast Compliments Flavor you’ve never tasted before. New, unequaled crispness. of A FRIEND y OU'VE tried corn cereals. You’ve tried wheat. Now Quaker Crackels brings you the best there is in both corn and wheat. Crackels look like little pil- lows. They crunch like fresh toast. They taste so delicious people eat them right out of the box. Try Crackels for breakfast tomorrow. There’re different Quaker Crackels THE PHOTOGRAPHS IN THIS BOOK Are the Work of MRS. W. BURDEN STAGE 740 MADISON AVENUE NEW YORK CITY Prices from $20 to $100 the dozen SPECIAL PRICES for School Work Jewelry of the Better Sort Since 1893 J. F. Apple Company, Inc. Manufacturing Jewelers LANCASTER, PENNA. Manufacturers of the 1933 Class Rings Quality Sorvico Satisfaction Telephone. Bryn Mawr 1185 Phone, Bryn Mawr 758 Ye Olde Tea House (Formerly the Chatter-on) Henry B. Wallace 918 Old Lancaster Road Tea Room BRYN MAWR, PA. AFTERNOON TEA—25 and 30 CENTS LUNCHES—40 and 50 CENTS Luncheon, Afternoon Tea, Dinner DINNERS—75 and 80 CENTS Closed on Mondays 22 BRYN MAWR AVENUE Special Parties Can Be Arranged BRYN MAWR, PA. BON VOYAGE! Richard Stockton BRYN MAWR Books Gifts QUALITY in materials, in style of composition, and in fineness of presswork. Each step in the building of your annual is planned and executed to result in a fine work of quality printing. SERVICE of the personal kind that makes for better understanding and co-operation between the printer, the editors and the advisor of the year book. PRICE that is not always the lowest, less often the highest, but always a fair price that represents true value. The proper relation of these three points to each other has always been our guide in building a great commercial and school annual business over a period of half a century. LYON P hi I a d c 1 and A R M OR Inc. P ranters p In' a Pennsylvania SOUND managerial policies and long, successful experience have provided q us with sufficient equipment, adequate personnel, and ample resources to render k dependable service as artists and makers ol fine printing plates. That you will be secure from chance, is our first promise. JAHN OLLIER ENGRAVING CO. 817 West Washington Blvd., • Chicago, Illinois In the foreground - Ft. Dearborn re-erected in Grant Park on Chicago's lake front Illustration by Jahn (r Ollier Art Studios.


Suggestions in the Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) collection:

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 1

1922

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

Baldwin School - Prism Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954


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