Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) - Class of 1939 Page 1 of 168
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BARNARD COLLEGE ARCHIVES fit nUH n n □ U h n U OF NINETEEN THIRTY -NINE PRESENTED R Y THE STUDENTS OF R A R N A R D COLLEGE. NEW YORK CITY COPYRIGHT 1938 Emily Turk . . . Editor -in-Chief Anne Milman . Business Manager LOUISA IIOYT GREGORY The steering committee of one, who, from our first moment at Barnard until we leave, diplomas in hand, helps us choose the subject best suited to our needs. Because she knows each one of us, perhaps better than we know ourselves, we dedicate this book to her. PREMHNI NICHOLAS MURRAY HITLER A.B., Columbia University; A.M., Columbia University; Ph.D., Columbia University; honorary degrees from: Yale, Harvard, Princeton, Johns Hopkins, University of Chicago, Toronto, St. Andrews, Manchester, Oxford, Cambridge, Glasgow, Paris, Strass- burg, Nancy, Louvain, Rome, Prague, Breslau, Budapest, Szeged, Edinburgh, Syracuse, University of Pennsylvania, Williams, Dart- mouth, Brown, Amherst, University of California, University of State of New York, University of Kings College. VIIM.IM Y 4 JC4M III ICON GILDERSLEEVE A.B., Barnard College; A.M., Columbia University; Ph.D., Columbia University: LL.D., Rutgers College; Litt.D.. Phi Beta Kappa: Kappa Gamma. TRUSTEES Nicholas Murray Butler 60 Morningside Drive Mrs. Alfred Meyer 1225 Park Avenue Mrs. Ogden Reid 15 East 84th Street Miss Mabel Choate 770 Park Avenue James R. Sheffield 45 East 67th Street Lucius H. Beers 131 East 62nd Street Mrs. Henry Wise Miller 450 East 52nd Street Gano Dunn 80 Broad Street Mrs. Alfred Hess 875 Park Avenue Pierre Jay 236 East 68th Street Harry Emerson Fosdick 606 West 122nd Street Winthrop W. Aldrich 15 East 78th Street F. Bayard Rives 1021 Park Avenue Frederick Rhinelander King 52 East 92nd Street Mrs. Eugene Meyer 1624 Crescent Place, Washington, D. C. Lindsay Bradford 800 Park Avenue Francis Plimpton 1165 Fifth Avenue Duncan H. Read 320 East 72nd Street Mrs. William Duffy 443 West 162nd Street Walter D. Fletcher 520 East 86th Street Dave Hennen Morris 19 East 70th Street Miss Mabel Parsons 230 Central Park West Mrs. Arthur Hays Sulzberger 5 East 80th Street ADMINISTRATION Mabel F. Weeks Assistant to the Dean — Social Affairs Mary McBride Assistant to the Dean — Social Affairs Mary V. Libby. . Assistant to the Dean — Admissions, Information Helen P. Abbott Assistant to the Dean — Residence Halls Katharine S. Doty Assistant to the Dean — Occupation Bureau Helen Erskine Assistant to the Dean — Outside Contacts Helen K. Stevens Assistant to the Dean Anna E. H. Meyer Registrar Emily G. Lambert Bursar John J. Swan Comptroller Gulielma F. Alsop College Physician Bertha L. Rockwell Librarian Frederick A. Goetze Treasurer of the University Raymond C. Knox Chaplain of the University William C. McCastline University Medical Officer EMI LIE J. HUTCHINSON On Wednesday, January 12, 1938, at half past one in the morning. Professor Emilie J. Hutchinson suddenly succumbed, leaving family, and friends stunned by shock and grief. She had worked in her office, as frequently she did. until past eleven o ' clock. Now that she is gone, it is Professor Hutchin- son herself who helps us carry on without her. She had long set the example of meeting life and its emergencies with spirit and courage. Problems which appeared insurmountable she faced with integrity and imagination, always with warmth and magnanimity toward those in- volved. These are the qualities which fortify and stimulate us in the attempt to make them live, after her, in the College and the depart- ment to which she gave nearly half of her life. Miss Hutchinson was born in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. October 3, 1877. As a girl, she lived for several years in an English boarding school. Her high school education began in the North- field Seminary in Massachusetts, which she left in the middle of the course. After three years she decided to follow her mother ' s profession, teaching. With this resolution she visited Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn, request- ing to be admitted without examinations. Her ability being recognized, formalities were waived, and she was permitted to enter on her own terms. Professor Robert von Nardroff and Dr. Herbert Lowe, directed her to a liberal arts college instead of a teachers ' training school, recognizing her potentialities. This timely guid- ance revealed to her how important a teacher is to his students. When the year was up Miss Hutchinson not only was graduated, but also received the title of Brooklyn Scholar under the award of a competitive scholarship which she held throughout her course at Barnard College. As a student at Barnard, Miss Hutchinson soon became a leader. She was elected president of her Sophomore class, editor-in-chief of Mortar- board, and president of the Undergraduate As- sociation. Graduating with Phi Beta Kappa honors, she became an instructor at Mount Hol- yoke and at Wellesley for five years, both insti- tutions offering her permanent posts. Then her Alma Mater invited her to return to fill the first position ever offered to a woman in the Eco- nomics Department. Here she was active and full of plans up to the last hour of her life. While teaching, Professor Hutchinson took her doctorate at Columbia University, writing her dissertation on Women ' s Wages. She sat on the important administrative committees of Bar- nard College, and was Chairman of the Adminis- trative Board of the Barnard Summer School for Women Workers in Industry. For six years she was Chairman of the Committee on Fellowship Awards of the American Association of Uni- versity Women. In 1917 she received a year ' s leave of absence to become Manager of the Inter- collegiate Bureau of Occupations, investigating under their auspices the education and profes- sional experience of more than one thousand women who had received the Ph.D. degree from American universities since 1877. This work was published in 1929 by the Institute of Women ' s Professional Relations. In 1921 Miss Hutchinson received the Alice Freeman Palmer Memorial Fellowship for a year ' s study abroad. In recent years her professional interests cen- tered upon problems of the consumer in modern society and she was engaged in writing a book on this subject. At a meeting of the Faculty on January 24th, Dean Gildersleeve read from the Minutes as follows: The Faculty of Barnard College records its profound sorrow at the loss of Emilie J. Hutch- inson, a graduate of Barnard in the Class of 1905, Associate Professor of Economics, Chair- man of the Department of Economics and Social Science, for twenty-five years a member of the teaching staff of the College. While she was an undergraduate, Miss Hutchinson ' s clear intelligence, sound judgment, strength of character, and power of leadership were already manifest in her direction of our student government. During her long service as an officer of the college she was an excellent teacher, and a competent scholar in her field of work, a wise counsellor and friend of her stu- dents, and a sound and influential leader of opinion in faculty deliberations, an able and farsighted administrator of an important department. But above all she is remembered for the perfect scholarly integrity of her mind and character, for her unselfish devotion to her work, and for the warm humanity of her spirit. These traits won for her the deep respect and affection of her colleagues. After the reading of this tribute, President Butler rose and the faculty stood with him for a moment ' of silence. Elizabeth Faulkner Baker. ANTHROPOLOGY Gladys Reichard Assistant Professor Kate S. Peck Assistant BOTANY Edmund W. Sinnott Professor Tracy Elliot Hazen Associate Professor Cornelia L. Carey Assistant Professor Elizabeth Jacobs Assistant Vivian V. Trombetta Assistant Elizabeth A. Bindlass Assistant Marion E. Richards Lecturer CELTIC John Lawrence Geric Professor CHEMISTRY Marie Reimer Professor Eleanor Keller Associate Professor Evelyn E. Behrens Instructor Helen R. Downes Instructor Lucia S. Fisher Lecturer Anne Litzinger Lecturer ECONOMICS Robert E. Chaddock Professor Emilie J. Hutchinson Associate Professor Elizabeth Faulkner Baker Assistant Professor Arthur D. Gayer Assistant Professor Clara Eliot Lecturer Katherine Finney Assistant ENGLISH William Haller Professor William Tenney Brewster Professor George Sherburn Professor Hoxie N. Fairchild Associate Professor Minor W. Latham Associate Professor Clare M. Howard Assistant Professor W. Cabell Greet Assistant Professor Elizabeth Reynard Assistant Professor Ethel Sturtevant Assistant Professor Mabel Foote Weeks Associate Jane Dorsey Zimmerman Associate Roderick Dhu Marshall Instructor Lorn a F. McGuire Instructor Louise M. Rosenblatt Instructor Mary Morris Seals Instructor Peter Monro Jack Lecturer Constance E. Smith Assistant FINE ARTS AND ARCHEOLOGY Margarete Bieber Associate Professor Marion Lawrence Assistant Professor Marian N a Byram Instructor Julius Held Instructor Jane Gaston Lecturer FACULTY FRENCH Henri F. Muller Professor Frederic G. Hoffherr Associate Professor Marguerite Mespoulet Associate Professor Alma deL. LeDuc Assistant Professor Helen M. B ailey Lecturer Isabelle Wyzewa Lecturer Jeanne V. Varney Lecturer Winifred Sturdevant Lecturer GEOLOGY Ida H. Ocilvie Professor Florrie Holzwasser Assistant Professor Delia W. Marble Curator Dorothy A. Brauneck Assistant GERMAN Wilhelm Alfred Braun Professor Hi gh Wiley Puckett Associate Professor Louise G. Stabenau Instructor Kurt Von Forstmeyer Lecturer GOVERNMENT Raymond Moley Professor Thomas Preston Peardon Assistant Professor Jane P. Clark Assistant Professor GREEK AND LATIN Edward Delavan Perry Jay Professor Emeritus Nelson Glenn McCrea Anthon Professor Emeritus Gertrude M. Hirst Professor Katherine C. Reiley Associate John Day Instructor Moses Hadas Instructor Edith F. Claflin Lecturer HISTORY Eucene H. Byrne Professor David Saville Muzzey Professor James T. Shotwell Professor Edward Mead Earle Associate Professor Maude Aline Huttman Assistant Professor James H. Oliver Assistant. Professor Charlotte T. Muret Instructor J. Emilie Young Instructor ITALIAN Peter M. Riccio Assistant Professor Teresa A. Carbon ara Instructor MATHEMATICS Edward Kasner Professor Georce Walker Mullins Professor Paul A. Smith Assistant Professor Edgar R. Lorch Instructor Mary E. Ladue Assistant MUSIC Daniel Grecory Mason MacDowell Professor Douglas Moore Associate Professor Seth Bingham Associate Professor Herbert Dittler Assistant Professor William J. Mitchell Instructor Gena Tenney Instructor PHILOSOPHY William P. Montaci E Professor Wendell T. Bush Professor Horace L. Friess Associate Professor Helen H. Parkhurst Associate Professor Gertrude V. Rich Instructor PHYSICAL EDUCATION Acnes R. Wayman Associate Professor Marion Streng Instructor Lelia M. Finan Instructor Margaret Holland Instructor Gertrude V. Rich Instructor Marjorie Tuzo Instructor Fern Yates Instructor PHYSICS Henry A. Boorse Assistant Professor Agnes Townsend Lecturer PSYCHOLOGY Harry L. Hollingworth Professor Anne Anastasi Instructor Georgene H. Seward Instructor Ray H. Simpson Instructor Richard E. P. Youtz Instructor Donald MacMurray Assistant RELIGION Horace L. Friess Associate Professor Mary Ely Lyman Associate sociology- Robert M. MacIver Lieber Professor Willard Waller Associate Professor Norman H. Hinton Lecturer Cora Kasuis Lecturer Mirra Komarovsky Lecturer SPANISH Carolina Marcial-Dorado Assistant Professor Amelia A. De Del Rio Lecturer Magda Arce Assistant ZOOLOGY Henry E. Crampton Professor Louise Hoyt Grecory Professor Florence De Loiselle Lowther Assistant Professor Grace Springer Forbes Instructor Elizabeth K. Worley Lecturer Virginia C. Brooks Assistant Helen B. Hornor Assistant J. Edwerta Merrill Assistant Ruth E. Snyder Assistant From the outset, the class of 1938 modestly admits that it has been a record-breaker. When, on Freshman Day, four years ago, it made its debut, a dismal September rain rendered it im- possible to hold the traditional tea on the North Terrace. An unhappy begin- ning, surely, but it was one that set a precedent for the precedent-breaking that was to become the keynote in the career of the class. Beginning with a minor change in tradition, that of being the first fresh- man class to be allowed to hold an off- campus dance, 1938 climaxed its record- breaking in its junior year by turning out a Mortarboard whose accounts ac- tually showed a profit, and a Junior SENIORS Show which needed no red ink with which to write its losses. (There weren ' t any! ) For the former phenomenon Editor Helen Raebeck and Manager Edna Holtzman deserve credit; for the latter, Judy Lenert and her committee. But even this remarkable class was not able to do anything about the Greek Games tradition. That the freshmen lose and the sophomores win has be- come more than a tradition; it is an axiom. How- ever, as freshmen, 1938 allowed the sophomores a none too easily won victory, and a year later emerged triumphant over the class of 1939. As soon as its freshman year, with its too- frequent D ' s was past history, 1938 adopted the usual sophomore attitude, Why take life too seri- ously? You ' ll never get out of it alive. This Audrey Snyder Treasurer 18 was the spirit which pervaded at the sophomore class luncheon, at which Professor Peardon was guest of honor, and Elspeth Davies, class historian, made the occasion a source of much merriment. Junior Show, too, demonstrated that 1938 did not take life too seriously. Parodies on Eugene O ' Neill, Warner Brothers, Lewis Carroll, and Wil- liam Randolph Hearst, humorously proved that It Doesn ' t Happen Here. What did happen here, though, was the stu- pendous, colossal Junior Prom. Held in the grand ballroom of the Hotel Pierre with Art Paulson ' s perfectly-smooth-my-dear orchestra, the affair was just about perfect, due to the work of Ruth Inscho and her co-workers. Of a class which had broken records, it was to be expected that its senior year would be epoch- making. Senior Week plans, formulated early in the term by Chairman Adi-Kent Thomas, aroused expectations of another great event in the life of the class of 1938. Brains were wracked, classes cut, and lunches forgotten in the attempt to render this year ' s Senior Week different. And it was. Senior Week with its All-College Party in the gym preceding Step-Singing, and its Senior Reception in Brooks Hall will not be forgotten. Looking back on its entrance in Barnard, when it had been given a dousing rather than a rousing welcome, 1938 fell to wondering if it would rain on Commencement Day, and if gloomy skies then would really be a good omen as on Freshman Day four years ago. 19 JUNIORS its career what need is there for self- praise? Freshmen think they own not only the college, but the universe. The Sophomores, however, vigorously dispute this claim. As for the Seniors — every one realizes their greatness. This is the hour of triumph. Now they rule their little world, but next year they may be unheard of in the vaster world. Then, perhaps, no one will consider them; now they are the cynosures of all eyes. But the Juniors, the happy Juniors, have be- come so great that it i s in truth unneces- sary for them to praise themselves. All Jane Bell Vice-President A brief excursion into the past by means of an afternoon spent in perusing the Barnard Annual of 1894, the original issue of Mortarboard, revealed the following summary of its college career by the Junior Class. Perhaps it was the atmosphere of the Gay-Nineties that inspired the tone of self-confi- dence or perhaps this optimism is a characteristic feature of every Junior class. Whether it be due to one or the other of these causes, we, of the Fiftieth Class, accept the spirit of the first Junior Class History and append a few words in descrip- tion of our own. Three years of mingled sweetness and bitterness we have passed within the loved halls of Barnard College. What hard-won wisdom and experience have been gained in that time. The days of abject despair are over. Gone are the hours when the work was beyond our ability and dread instructors frightened away the few ideas left us when we reached the classroom. Now, no work is too hard — now, no longer can an instructor inspire us with awe. When a class has arrived at such a state in the world sees that they are the one and only class with both a glorious past and a glorious future. The Class of 1939 is indeed a class with a glorious past and a glorious future. It began its distinguished career with an appearance in angel-robes, a costume which would have amazed the Ninety- Fivers. After a winter of teas — how much our predecessors missed with just one tea a year to promote social intercourse! — and an initiation into Barnard mid-years, the class made its formal debut in Febru- ary, at the Freshman Dance in the Casa Italiana. The other important event of that same Spring was Greek Games in which the joy of participating in the Games was mingled with the disappointment of losing them. A certain two weeks in May revealed to a Freshman just how unhappy life can be, but this was soon forgotten in the gaiety and fellowship of the class luncheon. The class discovered that its second year was much the same as its first, although this time it managed the Soph-Fresh Party and won Greek Games and added to its achievements by its par- ticipation in the Building Fund Fair. The Junior year, however, justified the prophecy of a glorious future. Eighteen-Ninety-Fivers would have viewed the Thirty Nine Steps with consterna- tion, but perhaps they, too, would have liked to join the new charm classes with their course in Im- proper technique in getting a husband. As Seniors, the Class of ' 39 will continue its glorious future, and in the words of the first Junior historian, When a class has arrived at such a state in its career, what need is there for self-praise? 23 29 35 39 41 Mary Evelyn Rickey Mathematics Hedwig Ridder Zoology Barbara Ridgway Geology Virginia Rockwell Helen Rome Mathematics Psychology Antonia Rossi Philosophy Mildred Rubinstein English Bernice Seybold Jane Seymour Ruth Shaw Psychology Economics French Rosalie Sheffield Barbara Shloss Chemistry Mathematics Shirley Simon Marie Singer Chemistry Chemistry 46 47 SVETLANA NACHEVA CAROLYN SwAYNE Government Zoology Beatrice Tenney Virginia Thomas Zoology Zoology Margit Thony Elizabeth Tibbals Margaret Trask French Chemistry French 49 50 51 52 53 Barbara Yacubovsky Janet Younker Zoology Philosophy Irma Zimmer Botany Sallie Zimmerhackel Dorothy Zirn Geology Chemistry 54 55 SOPHOMORES The class of 1940, having survived its initial year and entered on that strange interlude of obscurity known as sophomore year, deserves some kindly obituary and enconium for services ren- dered. Just why the hectic excitement of one ' s freshman days should be succeeded by this period of retirement from the public eye, we do not know; but the fact can scarcely be denied. The other three classes are constantly reveling in the pleasant light of publicity. Freshmen are continually regaled with teas, banquets, and jollifications, lest they grow homesick, neglect their studies, and be- come ineligible. In the midst of this fulsome feting, the bright young things are perpetually at- tended by a chorus of praise for having come to Barnard. Seniors, on the other hand, are con- tinually praised for their perseverance in having stayed in Barnard for three years. They also wear caps and gowns on an inordinate number of occa- sions, and some of them even have the audacity — and the power — to tap you on the shoulder and tell you that you can ' t light that cigarette here. Juniors, as every one knows, lead a life of daz- zling gayety, diverting themselves with stately ele- gance at The Prom, frolicking, in less stately and more inelegant fashion, in The Show, and putting out, in their more serious moments, The Year Book. But lo, the poor sophomore, who for no crime of her own is doomed to dismal oblivion! Search though we may through catalogue and blue book, we can find no dazzling program for sophomore year comparable to that laid out for the other classes. Sophomores do, in truth, choose their majors. This affords a pleasant sense of journey ' s end for those fortunate ones who have felt the call to be English majors ever since they read Hamlet and The Idylls of the King, in special high school editions. Those who have not the gift of certainty are at least able to relish the solemnity of the occasion, feeling a momentous kinship with Caesar crossing the Rubicon, Balboa sighting the Pacific, or a coed choosing a sorority. But the glamour soon fades. Friendly professors, once solicitous for converts to their departments, are likely to de- cide that even the one lost sheep, now safely cor- ralled, is not such a big fish after all, and must take as many required courses as any one else. Hence the Sophomore is back where she started: there is really nothing for the poor girl to do with her time, beyond sitting in libraries and studying. The fate of the class of 1940 has been sealed; it has last been heard of, at this writing, as a partici- pant in the Sophomore-Freshman party (a mere temporary basking in reflected glory, of course) ; February twenty-sixth it emerged for the Sopho- more Dance; it did not return to prominence again until April third, when it miraculously arose from its ashes to win — the gods of Hellas being favorable — Greek Games. Where it spent the interim, no one knows. We have sometimes doubt- ed its actual presence on the campus during this time, but the pictures on the opposite page seem to indicate its unobtrusive existence. If you, charit- able reader, chance to meet a sophomore, do not be alarmed, rather speak kindly to her, tell her that her eclipse will not continue forever, and that if she is a good girl, and studies her lessons, she may one day grow up to be a junior. 56 FKESHMEN At the present moment the history of ' 41 is neither deep nor dark — we are those unfortunate young things without a past. We have patiently undergone all those operations which make one a full-fledged undergraduate of Barnard, and so we hope to have gained the rather serious expression greatly needed by a frosh in the presence of those; — oh, so scornful — sophomores. The Class of ' 41 sprang into being one sultry day last June at which moment we were weighed to see if our scholastic aptitude was heavy enough. Later we underwent various medical examinations in the garments we had so recently brought with us from heaven. Came the day of our christening — Freshman Day. We were dressed in our finest robes and were proudly exhibited by our big sisters. And what a lot of nice godparents we were to have! We shall never forget the welcome we received that day though we grow to be old and gray like our venerable friends, the seniors. Tuesday of opening week we registered at Barnard ' s city hall. For hours we sat in our perambulators waiting in a long line in front of those sacred portals. Wednesday and Friday at four o ' clock we took our first solid food at teas and met many of our charming godparents again. Later we uttered our first words in speech class and took our first steps at the Coffee Hour dance. It is a wonder that those of us from Brooks and Hewitt nurseries survived entrance into so exciting an existence! No sooner did we arrive than our big sisters whisked us away to see the big city — a fairyland of big building blocks and colored stars twinkling everywhere — blinking on and off. We were royally entertained one night by the Sophomores who bent down from their heights temporarily to make our orientation more delightful than it had been. One night the Dean visited us and told us how Barnard had been when she entered it. It seems there were only a few infants at that time, and they didn ' t go to school in a building with a circle in the floor called Jake. Still another night, instead of going to the refectory for supper we stayed on our various floors, met other girls who lived there, and thoroughly enjoyed the floor parties. We went to Greek Games full of hope and returned still full of hope but with less exuberance. And we have learned how to handle a tea cup with just the right amount of bravado and nonchalance. All of us, day and dorm alike, are growing rapidly. We toddle about with great determination — if not grace. Soon we shall find ourselves turned sophomores with a glorious childhood behind us — a past as well as a future. 58 59 ASSOCIATE ALUMNAE OF It A It X A It 1) A STORY OF BEGINNINGS It is hard to believe that such Barnard fixtures as the Physical Education Department and the Dormitories once had to get a start in life, but start they did and the story is interesting. Here it is, with additions. Just a year after the Alumnae Association was founded in February, 1895, it was voted to make fittings for a gymnasium the object of money- raising. The object was later changed to the new building fund (the college then being housed in 343 ), but the alumnae continued to interest them- selves in student athletics. In 1905, after an inves- tigation of the health of Barnard students, the alumnae conferred with the Trustees as to the possibility of securing definite gymnasium instruc- tion for Freshmen, and supplied the amount of the instructor ' s fee. This resulted in two hours a week instruction in the Teachers College gym, substitution of some other form of exercise being permitted for one of the required hours. Not until 1917 did Barnard have a gymnasium and a full- fledged Physical Ed of its own. The Ella Weed Memorial Reading Room was another early project of the Associate Alumnae. They raised money for decorations, furniture, and books. It became the official College Library. Now it serves as Faculty Room in Milbank, the books having been moved in 1917 to Barnard Hall. In 1905, Fiske Hall, which had been used as a dormitory, had to be made available to the science departments. The Alumnae Association met the emergency by administering a temporary dormitory on 122nd Street for a year. Meanwhile, the Trus- tees raised the money for a new building and in the fall of 1907 Brooks Hall was opened. Again in 1916, the alumnae took up the residence prob- lem and organized a cooperative dormitory at 99 Claremont Avenue. This demonstration of the need led to the erection of Hewitt Hall. For many years the alumnae as volunteers con- ducted an employment bureau, before it became a College function under Miss Doty. Interestingly enough, it was the writer, Alice Duer Miller, who was finding jobs for young alumnae in those early days. Way back in 1898, an alumnae committee was appointed which has raised and distributed money for student loans ever since. The alumnae ' s dream of a Barnard camp first arose in 1916. Camps were rented for a number of years, but in 1933 the dream became reality when the alumnae proudly presented the College with a Camp of its own. In these and many other ways, the history of Barnard is interwoven with that of its alumnae organization. Countless other activities — the Ad- visory Vocational meetings for students, the Give and Take Thrift Shop for scholarships, the Alumnae Monthly, the Alumnae Fund, the Alumnae Tuesday Nights, to mention a few — keep the Alumnae Office and over a hundred volunteers very busy for Barnard. The alumnae officers, listed below, welcome sug- gestions from the future alumnae as to how the Association can best serve the student body. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS FOR 1937-38 President Elizabeth Wright Hubbard, ' 17 First Vice-President Anna I. Von Sholly, ' 98 Second Vice-President . . . . Katherine S. Brehme, ' 30 Secretary Helen Newbold Black, ' 09 Treasurer Isobel Strang Cooper, ' 22 Alumnae Council Chairman, Ellinor Reiley Endicott, ' 00 Alumnae Trustee Mabel Parsons, ' 95 Alumnae Trustee Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger, ' 14 Edyth M. Ahrens, ' 21 Clairette P. Armstrong, ' 08 Edith Rosenblatt Barnett, ' 13 Mary Nammack Boyle, ' 10 Marion Townsend Carver, ' 19 Elizabeth Roberts Compton, ' 01 Edith M. Deacon, ' 12 Mary Park Eggleston, ' 04 Florrie Holzwasser, ' 14 Lily Murray Jones, ' 05 Margaret Gristede MacBain, ' 34 Alice Burbank Rhoads, ' 23 Alumnae Secretary Evelyn Orne Young, ' 22 Assistant Secretary Page Johnston, ' 37 60 THE BARNARD COLLEGE CLUB OF NEW YORK THE BARBIZON 140 EAST 63rd STREET OFFICERS Mrs. James J. Walsh President Mrs. Clifford Hale Vice-President Miss Annette C. Decker Secretary Mrs. Walter G. Thomas Treasurer The Club extends to Barnard undergraduates a cordial invitation to visit the Clubrooms at any time. 61 fl CI If I I UNDER GRADUATE ASSOCIATION The student activities fee of three dollars which is paid each semester really m ight be considered the dues of the Undergradu- ate Association. Each matriculated student automatically becomes a member of the organization on payment of the fee, and is thereupon eligible for participation in student government. The officers of the Undergraduate Association are Elspeth Davies, president; Ruth Inscho, vice-presi- dent; Jean Allison, treasurer; and Deborah Allen, secretary. These officers are also members of Student Council, of which the undergraduate president is ex-officio chair- man. The legislative body of the Undergradu- ate Association is Representative Assem- bly. It is composed of Student Council, the club and publication heads, student council appointees, class representatives, and members from the college at large. Due to the size of this body, the transaction of important business was difficult, so this year in Representative Assembly the Con- stitution of the Undergraduate Association was revised by a committee of two, Ruth Inscho and Alene Freudenheim. While this reduced the number of members in the body, the basis of representation was left unchanged. Several student council ap- pointees were dropped from Representative Assembly to reduce the total number. The only addition was the making of Jean Lib- man, the Barnard A. Y. C. delegate, a member. The Student Fellowship drive this year suffered at first through general apathy on the part of the school. At Representative Assembly it was voted to have a meeting of the Undergraduate Association in the gymnasium to discuss three choices — the continuance of the fellowship, the abolish- ment of the fellowship, or the establish- ment of an American fellowship. The stu- dent body voted for the continuing of the foreign student fellowship, and thus pledg- ed its support. Being a member of the Undergraduate Association entitles the student to be a member of a class, any club she wishes, of the Athletic Association (automatically), and permits her to receive the Barnard Bulletin and Quarterly. Under the provi- sions of the Honor Code and the Board of Senior Proctors, the honor system is prac- ticed at Barnard. Various student com- mittees help enrich student life at Barnard, all under the combined supervision of the faculty and Undergraduate Association. 64 BEAR PINS Senior Pins Blue: Gold: Bronze: Gertrude Boyd Alene Freudenheim Edna Holtzman Elspeth Davies Ruth Landesman Margaret King Ruth Inscho Alice Krbecek Evelyn Lichtenberg Edna Jones Elizabeth Pratt Helen Raebeck Margery Reese Winifred Rundlett Sofia Simmonds Kathryn Smul Elizabeth Swinton Honorable Mention Juniors : Jean Allison Jane Bell Ninetta di Benedetto Anne Milman Dorothy Smith Emily Turk Sophomores: Deborah Allen Caroline Duncombe Shirley Ellenbogan Evelyn Hagmoe Nanette Hodgman PHI BETA KAPPA Frances Bailey Sally Beaman Charlotte Bentley Dorothy Colodny Elspeth Davies Jacqueline Dawson Patricia Emery Alene Freudenheim Carol Gluck Harriet Harlin Marjorie Harwich Helen Hirsch Edna Holtzman Sarah Ives Jean Libman. Frances Meyer Maxine Meyer Doris Milman Leonore Schanhaus Marion Shaycoft Kathryn Smul Miriam Spencer 65 STUDENT COUNCIL The executive body of the Undergraduate Association is Student Council, which is com- posed of twelve members; four of whom are officers of the Association, four are class presi- dents, the editor of Bulletin, the president of the Athletic Association, the Dormitory president, and the chairman of Honor Board. At weekly meetings Student Council discusses issues con- cerning the student body, its relations with out- side organizations, and its policies in the college. It has the power to charter clubs, control their finances, and to supervise their social programs. Elspeth Davies President The members of Student Council are elected in February and March and are installed the following month. They continue in office until the following April. The entire student body is represented by the officers of the Undergraduate Association, the chairman of Honor Board, the president of the Athletic Association, and the editor of Bulletin. Again, each classified student is represented by her class president, and dormitory residents have further representation by their president. Since Student Council is really the executive body, Representative Assembly being the legislative, this representation is adequate. The main rea- son for the efficiency of Student Council is its limited size. President ELSPETH DAVIES Honor Board Chairman SOFIA SIMMONDS Senior President EDNA JONES Junior President JANE BELL Sophomore President EVELYN HAGMOE Freshman President PRISCILLA BURGE Vice-President RUTH INSCHO Treasurer JEAN ALLISON Secretary DEBORAH ALLEN Bulletin Editor HELEN RAEBECK President of Athletic Association GERTRUDE BOYD Dormitory President MARGERY REESE 66 REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY Representative Assembly, the legislative body of the Undergraduate Association, is made up of about seventy-five students. In order to make the Assembly a more workable, representative body, a number of changes were made this year in accordance with the suggestions of Alene Freudenheim and Ruth Inscho, who had been appointed to revise the constitution. The num- ber of members will remain the same, but the constituency of the Assembly has been changed. No student council appointees excepting Eligibility, Press Board, and Curriculum Chair- men, will have seats in Representative Assembly. The three who will retain their seats will be elected by the Assembly from a slate of not more than three candidates submitted by Student Council. From the publications, only the editors of Bulletin, Mortarboard, and Quarterly will re- tain their seats. A number of other changes were made for the purpose of increasing representation from the College at large, and decreasing the appointees. Aside from the problem of constitutional revi- sion, the Assembly has, on the suggestion of Student Council, modified the program of Tues- day assemblies so that club participation may be furthered. In future years, a good portion of the Assemblies will be managed directly by individual clubs. In addition to these changes. Representative Assembly has carried on such more or less routine business as choosing delegates to go to conventions, calling all-college meetings relative to the Student Fellowship Drive, and helping to work out a comprehensive program of anti-war work for the college. HOXO II BOARD The belief that Barnard students are sufficiently adult to comprehend the meaning of personal integ- rity forms the basis of our honor system. Upon entering college, each freshman automatically comes under its jurisdiction, but she is requested to accept the Honor Code by signature. Any objec- tions to the system as a whole or in part may be noted so that there can be no excuse for failure to accept the Code. The Honor Code, adopted in 1922 and amended in 1925 and 1933, formulates the ideals of college honor. Any irregular actions, such as the giving or receiving of information in examinations, the unauthorized use of books or papers, and the pres- entation of any work not strictly personal, are dis- honest; and as evidence of dishonesty, they are reprehendable. It is the duty of Honor Board to investigate violations of the Honor Code. Anyone suspected of malfeasance is informed of her position. If the suspect is guilty, the power of penalty rests with the Faculty. The Board, however, may recom- mend punishment. The successful operation of the Code depends upon the willingness of the students to cooperate. Therefore, the witness is urged to report an overt act to the Board. She may, if she prefers, speak to the offender herself. The Honor Board, how- ever, should be informed of such infringements so that steps may be taken to set the offender on the right track. Sofia Simmonds Chairman Evelyn Hoole Ruth Landesman Doris Milman Elaine Wendt Amy Krbecek Eleanor Levison Kathleen Richardson Doris Williams 68 RESIDENCE HALLS Hewitt and Brooks Halls, the Barnard College dormitories, can be considered residence clubs. They are not merely boarding houses, bu t homes for those out-of-town students where they can be together. Dances, both formal supper dances and ' ' coffee hours are held at regular intervals to re- lieve the pangs of those afflicted with homesickness. Exec is the governing body of the Residence Halls. It has charge of all social functions, fire drills, rules concerning quiet hours, latenesses, radios, and many other matters that arise in the administration of the dormitories. Required meet- ings are held monthly. At the February meeting the constitution, revised by a committee headed by Anne Milman, was voted upon and accepted. This year a Beaux Arts ball was held in Brooks Hall, which was open to day students as well as residents. Another successful novelty was the in- formal dance in the Hewitt Hall dining room, which was open to those who had attended Junior Show, held earlier in the evening. Dormitory life, in general, is uneventful. Between bridge, quiet hours, cafeteria breakfasts and lunches, served dinners, and coffee hours, time marches on. Homework is done some time — no one knows exactly when. Sometimes someone gets up for Sunday breakfast. Really, the dormitories are so well managed and smoothly run that the average day student doesn ' t know they exist. But they do — obviously — and are an important part of student life at Barnard. The presence of two real dormi- tories somehow makes Barnard seem like a real college. Margery Reese President Charlotte Hall Vice-President of Brooks Elizabeth Suppes Vice-President of Hewitt Dorothy Stockwell Secretary Ruth Stibbs Treasurer Elizabeth Jordan Brooks House Member Jacqueline Hicks Hewitt House Member Margaret Gant Brooks Fire Captain Doris Myers Hewitt Fire Captain Mary Rhodin Social Chairman 69 SENIOR PROCTORS All social groups have some kinds of rules and regulations, and a body of supervisors to see that these laws are kept. In Barnard there are few restrictions and a minimum of policing. The Board of Senior Proctors aims not to pun- ish those who break the rules of the college, but rather to emphasize the importance of these rules to the offenders. The duties of the board are explanatory, not vindictive. The Board is chosen from the senior class by student council. About thirty Seniors are se- lected because of their conscientiousness and ability to command attention and respect. The Vice-President of the Undergraduate Association automatically becomes chairman of the Board. The vice-chairman is head of the Court of Senior Proctors, a small group of proctors who consider important infractions of rules. The duties of the Proctors have been some- what reduced this year, when the Board was relieved of the responsibility of keeping the library line in order. The Senior Proctors see that the smoking rules of the College are obeyed, and that quiet is maintained during examinations and registration periods. They also control the taking and checking of attendance at required college assemblies and manage all-college elections. All in all, the Board of Senior Proctors has proved itself to be a quiet efficient organization this year. Realizing that the object of the body was to make the wheels of Barnard run smooth- ly, the College has shown excellent cooperation. Ruth Inscho Chairman Miriam Spencer V ice-Chairman 70 CONFERENCE The Silver Bay Conference, a theological ex- periment managed by the Y. M. C. A. and at- tended by representatives from some of the largest colleges in the East, was held in June, 1937, for the second time. Meeting at beautiful Lake George, in upper New York State, partici- pants in the convention found that their stay was definitely enjoyable as well as educational. The aim of the conference is to exploit reli- gion for living values — or in other words, to encourage the attitude that religion is a part of everyday life, rather than a thing apart. This year ' s discussions were concerned with the stimu- lation of religious activity throughout the coun- try, the infusion of religion into marriage and the home, and the contemplation of methods through which religion might be used to remedy social problems. Barnard ' s thirteen delegates were justifiably proud to have one of their number, Elspeth Davies, chosen as Senior Chairman of the Con- ference. Delegates were chosen by the student body from a list made up by trustees of the College and by Miss Weeks in conjunction with the class presidents. Those attending in June were Jane Bell, Deborah Allen, Edna Jones, Louise Preusch, Elspeth Davies, Sophia Sim- monds, June Williams, Margaret Pardie, Ann Meding, Helen Geer, Doris Milman, Helen Knapp, and Helen Jefferson. 72 MODEL LEAGUE Barnard carried on the precedent this year of participating in the sessions of the Model League of Nations. Using the Geneva Congress of Powers as a pattern, the colleges from the Middle Atlantic states meet each year to discuss problems of international interest and signifi- cance. To make the conference more realistic, the students from each college represent a spe- cific country. In all discussions each delegation is expected to present that nation ' s policies faith- fully, just as they would be presented in the authentic League. This year the Model League of Nations met at Rutgers University, in April. AMERICAN YOUTH The American Youth Congress is a permanent federation of national and local youth organi- zations of which Representative Assembly is a member. Unlike other youth organizations, membership in the Congress is not limited to schools and colleges, but is open to any youth group, be it trade union, religious organization, settlement house, or academic body. The Youth Congress acts as a national clear- ing house for youth organizations interested in discussing mutual problems and working out joint solutions. In accordance with this pro- gram, a Model Congress of the United States was held in Milwaukee last July, and a Model Legislature of New York State was conducted and the Barnard delegation represented the poli- cies of New Zealand. Delegates to the Model League were headed by Kathryn Smul, and were chosen by a newly established system. Faculty members from both the History and Government departments recom- mended students for the League on the basis of their interest in, and knowledge of, international relations. Ability to discuss foreign policies ef- fectively and intelligently was another criterion for suggesting students to the Model League committee. The committee later selected the final delegates from the numerous recommenda- tions that had been received. CONGRESS in New York City in January. Next July, the American Youth Congress intends to organize a Model Community of Youth as an experiment for young people in community planning. A vital part of the Youth Congress program is the yearly pilgrimage to Washington. This vear delegates from almost every state petitioned their congressmen for the expansion of the National Youth Administration and the passing of the American Youth Act. The delegates at- tended sessions of the Senate, observed the inner workings of the government, and paraded down Constitution Avenue with the slogan, Jobs, Health, and Education for the Youth of the Nation. LAND AND BUILDING FUND This year the undergraduate commit- tee of the Land and Building Fund de- cided to give three events, one in the fall, winter, and spring. In October, the Campus Carnival was held on the lawn between the Jungle and Barnard Hall. It was a brisk day but not too cold for Barnardites to eat heartily and play enthusiastically. The campus was decorated with balloons, corn stalks, autumn leaves, and pump- kins. The climax of the Carnival was the folk dancing held in the gymnasium under the direction of Mr. Arthur Leon Moore, head of the Folk Dancing Coun- cil. The Carnival was planned and managed by June Williams with the assistance of Jane Bell. In January a photography contest was held. It was open to undergraduates, alumnae, and faculty members of Bar- nard. The regulations of the contest were few, requiring only the size of the exhibit and mount, and the classifica- tions of Still Life, Landscape, and Por- trait. The winners were: in the first group, Anita Este; the second, Margaret Pardee and Ruth Lewis; and in the third, Marguerite Ver Kruzen. The judges were three men prominent in three different fields of art: Mr. C. E. Chambers, well known painter and illus- trator; Mr. Wendell MacRae, commer- cial photographer; and Professor George Eggers, head of the Department of Fine Arts at City College. The prizes were donated by many prominent concerns. The grand prize, a portable typewriter donated by the Underwood Elliott Fisher Company, was won by Frances Krasnow, an alumna. The last of the three events was the Spring Dance, managed by Barbara Ridgway and assisted by Marion Cowles. It was one of the largest dances ever given at the college. As a novelty, the parlors and studies in Barnard Hall were thrown open for use by the guests. 74 Adi Kent Thomas Virginia Shaw Barbara Ridgway Valma Nylund Chairman Business Manager Publicity Manager Marion Cowles 75 ASSEMBLIES College assemblies are held at Barnard on Tuesdays at 1:10 o ' clock. Each year there are at least three required meetings, and many voluntary assemblies. Freshmen were initiated into assemblies for the first time in October when Dean Gildersleeve spoke to them on the ideals of college in her annual orientation lecture. Your Attitude Towards the World Situ- ation was her subject at the first all- college required assembly this year. A majority of the student body at the second required assembly voted that the Interna- tional Student Fellowship be continued. Dean Gildersleeve ' s annual Christmas Message to students was broadcast, as usual, at the Christmas assembly. The Barnard and Columbia Glee Clubs and the Barnard String Ensemble were featured on the program. The Kyrie from the sixteenth century mass, Puer Natus, was sung for the first time in America. At other assemblies speakers were heard on various subjects. Joseph McGoldrick and John Sullivan made addresses just before the city elections. In February, President Butler made his annual address. A new idea in assemblies at Barnard was introduced the second semester. Barnard clubs were invited to participate in the assemblies. The Music and Aesthetics clubs presented Bastien and Bastienne, a marionette operetta by Mozart. Other programs were planned by Wigs and Cues, Glee, and Debate Clubs. Louise Preusch Ch TEAS Every Wednesday at four o ' clock is College Tea time. We polish up the han- dle on the big tea pot, gather all our friends from the library line, modulate our voices, and finally take part in this pleas- ant social event. Books and worries are left outside the college parlor. Day and dormitory students, faculty members and special guests mingle in the friendly atmos- phere, enjoying this afternoon recess. In fact, there are few social activities at col- lege where such a representative group of students is present. Unlike the Mad Hat- ter ' s tea party, there is always room for more, tea and cookies for all, and some- times sandwiches besides. Most of the teas are given by the Under- graduate Association. Others are held by special organizations or classes in the college, or by the Asso- ciate Alumnae. At some teas a speaker is presented to the guests. At others members of the student body, usually candi- dates for an office, are introduced. Caroline Duncombe | Elizabeth Harpel f Co-ch cnairmen COFFEE DANCES The Cafeteria Coffee dances take place in October, November, December, February, March, and April. Couples and about sixty stags sign up for the dance, paying a nominal sum. The Social Committee invites approximately one hundred men from Columbia and elsewhere, as special guests. Rustic costumes which are usually seen around the campus are discarded. Silks and satins ap- pear in their stead, because the one ruling that the Social Committee has made does not permit sweaters and skirts to be worn at the dances. Barnard students who do not come to the dance escorted have ample chance to meet anyone at the affair. A girl has only to cut in on any couple that is dancing, and the man belongs to her — until the next girl taps her on the shoulder. Over coffee cups and cookies there is more op- portunity to become acquainted. Gertrude Boyd was the chairman of the coffee dances and her committee included members of the three upper classes. They were, from the Senior class: Ruth Inscho, Ruth Landesman, Margaret King, Dorothy Benedict; from the Junior class: Jean Allison, Jane Bell, Dorothy Stockwell, Elizabeth Jackson and Shirley Simon; from the Sophomore class: Betsy Harpel, Frances Dinsmoor, Caroline Duncombe, Anne Meding and Janet Gowen. SOCIAL COMMITTEE Gertrude Boyd Chairman Jean Allison Jane Bell Dorothy Benedict Frances Dinsmoor Caroline Duncombe Janet Gowen Elizabeth Harpel Ruth Inscho Elizabeth Jackson Margaret King Ruth Landesman Anne Meding Shirley Simon Dorothy Stockwell 78 BULLETIN Barnard Bulletin, under the leadership of Helen Raebeck, continued this year in its efforts to publish material covering all phases of stu- dent life, and to perfect the form of the paper which had been established the year before. Supplementing the routine articles and notices, two new columns appeared in alternate issues, Through the Din, and Once-Overs. About Town was enlarged and placed in a new posi- tion on the editorial page. Under the direction of Shirl Rothenberg, this column of criticism included as a special feature Places to Go in New York. Early in the year an Assistant News Board was formed. In February, after the cubs had received sufficient experience, promotions were made to the News Board. The Assistant Edi- Helen Raebeck Anne Baranovsky torial Board, introduced last year, was continued. In addition, the beat system was main- tained. By this method, each reporter is as- signed to a special field of activity in the uni- versity and is responsible for the reporting of all events in that field. In order to maintain contact with student groups throughout the country, delegates from Bulletin were sent to the National American Stu- dent Union Convention held at Vassar College during the Christmas holidays and to the Amer- ican Youth Congress Pilgrimage to Washington in March. In cooperation with student newspapers throughout New York City. Bulletin published several joint editorials on peace, and on the anti-syphilis drive. Editor Business Manager QUARTERLY Quarterly will represent not only students who specialize in the short story or poetry, but also those who have interests in other fields. We hope to have articles on current literary trends, on music, on art, and on the world about us. We want to include as much art work as pos- sible. In short we want to represent all student interests that can be expressed in word or line, declared Miss Evelyn Lichtenberg, editor of Quarterly. It is indeed evident that with her characteristic efficiency Miss Lichtenberg has carried out all of her plans. Instead of appearing eight times as was the policy last year, Quarterly reverted to former traditions, again having but four issues. Each article that appeared in the magazine was discussed with much care by all members of the staff, as well as by contributors who were in- vited to join laboratory sessions held at intervals specifically for this purpose. In these meetings much critical insight was exercised both in the selection of material and the subsequent judg- ment of its literary merit. Although a literary magazine, Quarterly did not hesitate to present articles on current social problems, such as Collective Security and Polish Youth ; nor did it neglect the faculty. Each issue contained a vivid biographical sketch of a favorite professor. The books reviewed were chosen because it was felt that they would be of particular interest to readers of Quarterly. In addition to widening the scope of material presented, the magazine has been written especial- ly for the enjoyment of the entire student body. Evelyn Lichtenberg Editor Ruth Halle Business Manager 80 PRESS BOA It D Although a comparatively new organization — having been established only five years ago — the Press Board has carried on an extensive pro- gram this past year. The group has retained for its main activity the writing of news released for local papers on the subject of undergraduate par- ticipation in extra-curricular work. These re- leases have a two-fold function; they give the members practical experience in the newspaper world and also serve as a means of distributing college news. This year the Press Board continued the prac- tice of giving teas in honor of well-known writers on magazines and newspapers. Among those who in the past were guests of the group are Miss Emma Bugbee, the press correspondent for Mrs. Roosevelt, and Miss Helen Wonder of the New York World Telegram. The Press Board keeps in contact with news- papers from cities and towns throughout the United States and sends out news releases to the more important papers of the country. Each of its members thus has direct contact with profes- sional journalism — contacts which often have the practical value of securing her a position on newspapers already acquainted with her work on Press Board. Although the membership of Press Board is limited in order to secure an efficient working group, all students interested in journalism are eligible to try out for it at the beginning of the year and, once admitted, to take an active part in this student organization. Sheila Baker Chairman Alice Warne ' . . Secretary-Treasurer 81 © H Pfi e S 1 ! There are styles in year books just as there are styles in clothes, food, houses, and even in dogs. Several years ago a newer, informal annual made its appearance on college campuses. The first candid year book at Barnard was the 1937 Mortarboard, edited by Frances Henderson. For the first time in Mortarboard history themes were discarded and informality was made the keynote. Helen Raebeck, editor of the 1938 Mortarboard, continued in this tradition. The size of the book was changed from the dimensions of the mortarboard worn with the academic gown to a larger and rectangular book, thus making room for more pictures and better layouts. The 1939 Mortarboard has tried to present a complete picture of campus activities, and not to limit its content to the doings of the junior class. The profusion of candid camera shots which distinguished the 1937 and 1938 annuals from their predecessors were made a major part of the 1939 book, thus presenting an all- around picture of college life. One of the new features instituted this year was the section dedicated to the freshmen. The editors felt that inasmuch as 1941 and 1939 are sister classes, their connection should be apparent in a more permanent way than mere teas and luncheons. As for pictures. The photographer haunted the campus for the major part of the year in order to get trick shots of the buildings and grounds; his knack of snapping a picture so as to make the Barnard campus appear to cover half of Manhattan was truly miraculous; and the delightful view of the lone vine on Barnard Hall certainly arouses a feeling of cloistered security. Mortarboard endorsed wholeheartedly the ruling established by Representative Assembly that the editor and business manager be elected by the college at large from a slate drawn up by the former editor and business manager with the approval of the Assembly, the former staff having had a good opportunity to judge the quali- fications of possible candidates for these positions and how well each candidate can fulfill the requirements of the offices. However, since Mortarboard is an all- college year book, the whole college, rather than just the junior class, should partici- pate in the final selection of the editor and business manager. It is traditional that the book feature the junior class, but it cannot be successful unless it is supported by the whole college. The only way to do this is to make Mortarboard representa- tive of the college and to give each student some part in the selection of its manage- ment. These have been the fundamental aims of the 1939 Mortarboard, and it is with great pride that this year ' s staff looks back upon its work, knowing that it has done its best to make the 1939 Mortarboard a lit- erary, pictorial and financial success. MORTARBOARD STAFF MORTARBOARD STAFF Emily Turk Editor-in-Chief Anne Milman Business Manager Paula Kassell Associate Editor Dorothy Preis Associate Editor Ruth Cummings Circulation Manager Charlotte Hall Publicity Manager Barbara Ridgway Advertising Manager ASSISTANT EDITORS Ninetta di Benedetto Photography Cornelia Elliott Administration Dorothy Bramson Features Ruth Halle Activities Barbara Deneen, Student Administration Jean Johnston Art Helen Dollinger Greek Games Joan Raisbeck Classes Jane Seymour Athletics LITERARY STAFF Lenore Altschule Elizabeth Isaacs Ruth Taubenhaus Marie Boyle Joy Lattman Miriam Weber Maxine Bradt Peggy Monroe Elaine Wendt Constance Coughlan Ara Ponchelet Jane Williams Marjorie Davis Louise Preusch Elizabeth Wise Anne Grauer Geraldine Sax Sally Zimmerhackel Dorothy Slavin TYPISTS Estelle Cross Jane Greenbaum Helene Jaffin BUSINESS STAFF Ruth-Elaine Blum Helene Jaffin Kathleen Richardson Marjorie Davidow Peggy Monroe Alia Shainin Virginia Wodke CIRCULATION STAFF Roslyn Aaron Marjorie Davis Helene Jaffin Lenore Altschule Rose Debitetto Elizabeth Jackson Genevieve Arnspiger Helen Dollinger Gertrude Jordan Helen Best Phyllis Dunbar Esther Larash Margaret Boyle Edwina Dusenbery Joy Lattman Marie Boyle Alice Drury June Krauth Carolyn Brackenridge Gertrude Eisenbud Peggy Monroe Virginia Brash Margaret Eitelbach Jean Morris Bernice Breitbart Helen Fabricant Mary-Charlotte McClung Millicent Bridegroom Marion Fenton Dorothy Neecham Elizabeth Brupbacher Anne Grauer Louise Preusch Constance Burt Jane Greenbaum Joan Raisbeck Josephine Castagna Rose Grillo Emma Louise Smith Marcelle Christe Evelyn Hoole Jessie Tallman Marjorie Davidow Elizabeth Isaacs Edna Wich 84 C ubs i ,nth . 111 Bow the Mortarboard 1 ,a  s Reveal iEdit dedication Still Undecided TO USE SNAPSHOTS OFFICIAL UNDERGRADUATE MAGAZINE OF BARNARD COLLEGE, NEW YORK CITY Fellowship New Quarter To Stress A E Jh Tale,,. « 4 lSSt3H When Ponchelet Freemen And Sop o«n Main Part Of N w Staff By Ara intervie ! next year ' s fi ' Jtnan ' .59, ortarboard - subscription ' ' ' We aiV ' c,,, 1 , nt Plan and WP Bulletin Begins Discussion and On st Announce ' :e pt deposits. e n asked about sch ei Series On U. S. Aid To Spain Lan j£ i t 1 l ead Players 1„ j Comedy 85 ;lee club In addition to the usual programs at Barnard this year, the Glee Club has had many outside performances. With the Columbia Glee Club, the Barnard club gave a joint concert at the Plaza Hotel in November. The singing was fol- lowed by dancing to the Dartmouth Barbary Coast Orchestra. The two college glee clubs combined again in the traditional Christmas Assembly. Christmas activities were not limited to col- lege however, but included carolling in the wards of Saint Luke ' s Hospital. The Glee Club also sang at one of the Christmas programs at John Wanamaker ' s. As a new activity this year, the Glee Club spent a week-end at the Barnard camp. The Columbia and Barnard Glee Clubs sang together again at a benefit concert at the Saint George Hotel. The proceeds were given to the Brooklyn Institute for the Blind. Because of the excellent performance at this concert, the two glee clubs have been asked to sing at the opening of the New York 1939 World ' s Fair, May first. Other activities of the year included two col- lege assemblies; the first featuring songs by the Glee Club and community singing, and the sec- ond in conjunction with the Dance Group under the direction of Miss Streng. Willard Rhodes was conductor and Gena Ten- ney assistant conductor. Edwina Dusenbery President Mary Elizabeth Wright ... Business Manager Esther Anderson Secretary Marie Boyle Librarian Susan Kobbe Publicity 86 WIGS AND CITES Wigs and Cues, rubbing its eyes after twenty years like Rip Van Winkle, realized this season that the activities of the club must include more than a mere two productions a year in order to keep the members enthusiastically interested. Branching out into various fields allied with ama- teur dramatics, the officers of the club arranged a series of talks by persons able to both enter- tain and instruct the aspiring actresses and stage- hands. A make-up demonstration which wrought amazing changes in the model, a lesson in how the well-poised actress will walk, a brief address by Miss Cecilia Zung on the costumes and ges- tures of the Chinese Theatre, and a talk on T. S. Eliot ' s Murder in the Cathedral by Ashley Dukes were a few of the topics included in the semi-monthly meetings. Brinckerhoff Theatre blossomed into a tropical island, palm trees and all, for two nights this fall when, with unusual staging by Gertrude and Constance Smith, the club presented Barrie s four-act comedy, The Admirable Crichton, directed by Miss Anne Morgan, formerly of the Theatre Guild. Following the play on Friday evening Wigs and Cues reverted to an old custom and held a dance in the theatre thus giving the costumers. scenery-shifters, and property-gather- ers an opportunity to receive their due compli- ments. A bill of three one-act, student-directed plays was presented in the spring, rounding out an eventful season. Elizabeth Pratt President Gertrude Smith . Vice-President Janice Van de Water Secretary CLASSICAL CLUB One of Barnard ' s oldest clubs is the Classical Club, which exists for the purpose of encourag- ing interest in the life, literature, and art of Ancient Greece and Rome, and enabling students in this field to become better acquainted with their professors. The first of this year ' s activities was a tea given by Miss Gertrude Hirst, adviser of the club. During the fall semester, the club enjoyed two talks by distinguished visitors. The first, by Professor Frank Gardner Moore who has recently retired from his position in Columbia, was on Rome. Later in the term, Mr. Gilbert Jacqueline Dawson President Elaine Hildebrand Vice-President A. Hyatt, formerly of Oxford, spoke on the topic, The Greek Playwright and His Audi- ence. One of the highlights of the spring semester ' s activities was a lecture by Professor and Mrs. Young, whose talks on the botany of the islands of Asia Minor had been so popular in former years. This year ' s continuation of this general topic proved to be as interesting as ever. The climax of a successful year was a talk by Dr. John Day on the Greek alphabet and its origin. Louise Johns Secretary Barbara Denneen Treasurer 88 LA MM I IT i: FRA CAISE Many and varied have been the activities of La Societe Francaise this year. The social calen- dar began with a tea in honor of the new French instructor, Monsieur Mesnard. Next came the biggest event of the first semester, the plays L ' Ete de la Saint-Martin and JTnvite le Col- onel. These were given to augment the fellow- ship fund. One of the most important aims of the French Club is to send a student to France each summer, financed by this fellowship. The award enables the girl to perfect her accent and to view at close hand the life about which she has been studying. Such a trip, the members feel, is an invaluable opportunity. Later in the term the group enjoyed lectures by Professor J. A. Bede of Columbia, the French Consul General, Monsieur Charles de Ferry, and Monsieur Henri Morin, manager of the French Line. A tea, Spring Formal, and another lecture completed the program. One of the main reasons for this most suc- cessful year was the advice and help of Madame arney of the French department. Anna Waldron Elizabeth Miller President Vice-President June Carpenter Marguerite Donna Ninetta di Benedetto Publicity Secretary Treasurer DEUTSCHER KREIS Deutscher Kreis opened the year ' s activities with a broadcast over the NBC short wave sta- tion, WRAX. Short talks by Professor Braun and Mr. von Forstmeyer, interviews with several club members, and songs by the entire club were features of the broadcast. On November 24, club members attended a Bavarian festival and dance given by Deutscher Verein, the Columbia German Club. The next outstanding event of the year was the traditional Christmas party, given in the Brooks Hall parlor. As is customary, a Nativity play with an Angel Chorus formed the main feature of the party, while the huge Christmas tree lent a very festive air to the occasion. Parts of the Nativity play, given at this time, were later broadcast. In the spring the members enjoyed a week-end at Barnard Camp. A Bavarian Dance, held by the club, also featured in the spring activities. At the regular bi-weekly meetings of Deutscher Kreis, the club enjoyed many fine programs. At one of these meetings, Use Wiegand, German exchange student, was guest of honor and spoke about her life as a student in Germany. At other meetings, the members watched movies of Germany and listened to a short wave broadcast from Germany. Mildred Bartels President Marianne Bernstein Vice-President Marguerita Kutschera Secretary Mary Fleming Treasurer June Carpenter Social Chairman Elizabeth Brupbacker Publicity 90 IL CIRCULO ITALIANO One of the unique features of the Circulo Italiano with regard to its membership is that one does not have to be an Italian student to be admitted. Any girl interested in things Italian may join, since the club was established to stimulate a desire to learn about all phases of Italian life, and not just to promote the language. During the first semester of its 1937-38 year, the Circulo headed by Claire Murray included several social events among its activities. The first of these was a tea given in honor of the exchange student from Venice, Carolina Fessia. Miss Fessia is at Barnard to study those courses which will help to prepare her for a degree in philology. Another affair on the social calendar was a tea held for Emilio Cecchi, an Italian author and art critic. Following was one of the biggest events of the year, the presentation on December 13 at the Casa Italiana of a Lauda by Jaco- pone da Todi. It depicted the simple, lyrical effusions on a religious subject which were pre- sented in ancient times before cathedrals or in the town squares. Claire Murray President Agnes Cassidy Vice-President Barbara Yacubovsky Marjorie Ashworth Margaret Gabriel Publicity Treasurer Secretary EL CIRCULO HISPANO El Circulo Hispano offers to its members an opportunity to attend lectures, teas, musicales. and dramatic performances, which, aside from providing relaxation, presents Spanish culture in its various aspects. This year the Spanish Club presented motion pictures of Mexico, slides of Miss Marcial- Dorado ' s trip in Spain, and a lecture on Span- ish architecture as well as the regular teas held monthly, which feature musical and recitative programs. The principal event of the scholastic year was the Christmas play. Everyone worked enthusiastically for its success. The play, The Egloga del Nacimiento de Nuestro Senor, by Juan della Encina, was first presented in 1498, at the palace of the Duke and Duchess of Alba. Jacqueline Goodier President Betty Rice Vice-President Virginia Woods Secretary Each year in the Spring, the club arranges a trip to visit the places of interest in New York of Spanish character, having luncheon at a typ- ically Spanish restaurant. It is generally agreed that the high spot of this trip is the viewing of Sorolla ' s murals in the Hispanic Museum. They are large paintings in extremely vivid colors of the different regions in Spain, depicting the character of the life and the people. A new activity of the Spanish Club is the Coro Dramatico, directed by Miss Sofia Novoa. This group sings Spanish songs which reflect the spirit of Spain in its many manifestations. The student activities of the club are under the direction of Mrs. Del Rio, and the club is grateful for the loyal support and guidance of Miss Marcial-Dorado. Adele Rosenbaum . . Corresponding Secretary Mary Hayes Treasurer Kathleen Nicolaysen Chairman of Publicity 92 MUSIC CLUB Continuing with its traditional teas and meet- ings, the Music Club has concentrated on extend- ing its field of interest to newer, more unique projects. Under the leadership of the president and with the cooperation of the Aesthetics Club, a marionette show was presented. Bastien et Bastienne, written by Mozart while a boy, was presented to the alumnae on February twelfth, and later to the college. The vocalists were Lillian Nesbitt, Agnes Cassidy, and Norma Ray- mond, assisted by an orchestra under the direc- tion of Mr. Willard Rhodes. At the first of the meetings of the Music Club, Lee Pattison. well known pianist and director of Vera Rieker President Norma Raymond Vice-President Marion Hellman the WPA music division, spoke on music as an avocation. This meeting was followed by a tea at which old stringed instruments were played by Professor Moore. The college was also in- vited to a talk by Mr. Rudolph Thomas on Richard Strauss ' s Der Rosenkavalier. Besides these meetings, the Music Club ar- ranged for student concerts. In the future these recitals may become joint entertainments with music groups of other colleges. Plans have also been started for organizing concert and opera parties which will be preceded by studies of the music to be played. Ruth Halle Business Manager Betsy Rich Secretary Publicity AESTHETICS CLUB The Aesthetics Club broke away from the tra- dition of Barnard clubs of utilizing the lecture method in their meetings and substituted instead combination discussion-teas on definite prob- lems of the arts. The club, which was organized only last year, consists of students with some philosophy or aesthetic background. Thus the members are interested in one or more of the arts and further the relationships that exist between them. This year the club cooperated with the Music Club in presenting the operetta, Bastien et Bastienne, composed by Mozart while a boy, to the college. In addition, the members have at- tempted to take advantage,- as far as possible, of such cultural opportunities as art galleries, concerts, and exhibitions of various kinds offered in New York. The club also had the privilege of seeing a collection of rare Chinese porcelain and another of first editions. An excursion to the Institute of Light to view a light concert was another feature of the year. Anne Mott-Smith President Claire Rouse Secretary Anne Landau Treasurer PATRIOTS Although it is an old adage that the leopard cannot change its spots, this does not necessarily apply to college political clubs. Admittedly, the Patriots started off as the Barnard Liberty League, and fast became known as the arch-conservative group of the campus. As the fame of the original Liberty League spread, the members of the Barnard organization had a busy time parrying thrusts of fascism and tools of Wall Street. The object of the club was (and is) to uphold and defend the fundamental principles on which the American government was founded, as they are enumerated in the Constitution of the United States. How- ever, due to past politics, the members of the club realized that the name, regardless of its Barnard connotation, was alienating many potential mem- bers. Some of the more far-seeing members of the club, sensing a future national political realign- ment of the old parties into Conservatives and Labor, saw an opportunity to appeal to those for- merly disinterested in governmental problems. Ac- cordingly, last year, the club was reorganized as the Patriots. Its membership is open to all those who subscribe to its aims, regardless of their political faith. The activities of the club consist of luncheons, meetings with speakers on pertinent political questions, and round table discussions on subjects of which the recent court reorganization plan and federal hous- ing are typical. Alice Krbecek President Mary Jacoby Vice-President Ruth Inscho Secretary Claire Murray Treasurer 94 SOCIAL SCIENCE UNION The American Student Union, formerly the Social Science Union, made a decided change in its organization this year. Committees were dissolved, the club meeting as a whole at forums held every three weeks, instead. At these meetings, informal discussions by the students were held. In order to give these forums a wider scope of interest, the subjects for discussion were chosen by the members of the club before the meeting. In this way each person had ample time to read about the special topic, in order to contribute to the discussions. If the majority felt that an outside speaker would help clarify ideas, a lecturer was invited to a meeting. The emphasis of this year ' s club, however, as opposed to that of previous years, was not on lecturing, but on giving the students the opportunity to participate in the meetings. Beside the forums, the A. S. U. held two teas this year. The club cooperated with the Peace Council of Columbia University and also sponsored a spe- cial peace week at Barnard in December. Another feature was a fashion show of lisle stockings. For the benefit of the Chinese Student Fund an informal dance was held in Brinkerboff Theater. During the second semester, outstanding A. S. U. events included speeches by Corliss Lamont, Pro- fessor George Counts of Teachers College, and Lewis Munford, a meeting with the Patriots, and participation in the April peace strike. Ruth Frankfurter Florence Dubroff President Vice-President Miriam Weber Miriam Wechsler Jane Martinson Publicity Secretary- Treasurer PSYCHOLOGY CLUB The aims of the Psychology Club are two- fold: the application of psychological theories to daily life, and the linking up of the study of psychology with practical work. The activities of the Psychology Club were planned around the attainment of these goals. Several field trips were made to the Vocational Adjustment Bureau for Girls, the Ward ' s Island Clinic, the Riverside Nursery, the Columbia laboratories, and to Juvenile Court. Other highlights of the fall semester were a week-end at Barnard Camp, an innovation for the Psychology Club, and a tea at which vocational opportunities were dis- cussed. In addition, there were meetings with the Graduate Psychology Club of Columbia Uni- versity. Ryen Holmsen President Marguerite Kutschera Vice-President Audrey Snyder Secretary Helen Revellese Treasurer Valma Nylund Publicity debate ri.rn The Debate Club has carried out an ambitious program this year in line with its twofold aim of building up a better knowledge of public speaking in Barnard and of presenting discus- sion of interest to the student body as a whole. To further its first aim, the club heard several members of the faculty speak on various phases of debating. Dr. Gayer addressed the club early in the year, telling of the Oxford Union of Public Speaking in England; Dr. Peardon spoke about drawing up briefs; and Mrs. Seals dealt with the technical side of speaking. In order to give more members an opportunity to practice debating, the club held two debates each semester in addition to presenting one big debate a year, as has been the custom in the past. The subjects of the debates the first term were as follows: Resolved: That Roosevelt run for a third term, and Resolved: That women are not generally equipped to engage in business. Topics of a similar nature were chosen for the debates of the second semester. The club also carried on plans for arranging talk-fests at which members would practice the art of extemporaneous speaking. Despite its non-participation in intercollegiate activities, the members of the Debate Club feel that it is a valuable factor in Barnard cultural life as well as a source of instruction in public- speaking. Kathryn Smul President Anne Landau . Secretary-Treasurer pre -law rrre In the w inter of 1934, a group of girls inter- ested in going to law school formed the Pre- Law Club. The organization remained inde- pendent until the spring of 1936, when it joined the Social Science Union. It resigned from that group in the fall of 1936, and since then has been unaffiliated with any other group. This year the club held monthly meetings, luncheons, teas, and field trips to courts and other places of interest to prospective lawyers. At the October luncheon, Albert Jacobs, pro- fessor of family law at the Columbia School of Law, lectured on the selective system of admis- sion to Columbia Law School and opportunities for women in the field of law. At the November tea, Dorothy Kenyon, Deputy Commissioner of Dorothy Schubert President Miriam Margolies Licenses and a prominent lawyer, was guest speaker. Throughout the year, distinguished figures in the field of law were invited to speak. In the past, the girls have heard such promi- nent speakers as Dean James Gifford, Professor Pearl Llewellyn, and Harold Medina of the Columbia School of Law, Magistrate Anne Kros, Judge Jonah Goldstein, Judge James Watson, Judge Agnes Craig, and Congresswoman Doris Byrne. The membership is not limited solely to girls who plan to study law, although the majority of the members are aiming for that goal. The program of activities is planned to follow the interests of all whose ambitions lie within fields concerned with law or public relations. Jean Hollander . Secretary Treasurer 97 INTEH NATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB The International Relations Club was formed to give further opportunities for study to all those interested in problems of world-wide scope. The club time is devoted to general discussions and studies of special problems by small groups. The club maintains, as far as possible, a non- partisan attitude. The members try to investi- gate issues from all aspects without personal prejudice entering into the interpretation of facts. To keep in contact with actual events, the club is addressed several times each year by prominent lecturers on various subjects of cur- rent interest of an international type. The Carnegie Endowment Fund provides addi- tional possibilities for research with its dona- tions of books, pamphlets, and other reading ma- terial for the use of the club members. Each year delegates from the group attend a conference of all International Relations Clubs of the Colleges of the Middle Atlantic States. This convention, held at various leading Eastern Universities in the past, aims chiefly at the pro- motion of better understanding among all na- tions of the world today. Elaine Glaston President MATHEMATICS CLUB The newly-formed Mathematics Club was or- ganized for the purpose of enabling those stu- dents interested in mathematics, whether major- ing in that field or not, to convene to discuss problems of mutual interest and to hear lectures by prominent mathematicians. It was fitting, therefore, that Professor Kasner of the Barnard Mathematics and Columbia Physics Departments should be the first guest speaker of the Mathematics Club. Professor Kasner had as his subject Fourth Dimensional Figures. Since it is Barnard ' s newest club, the Mathe- matics Club has no history — so to speak. Aside from Professor Kasner ' s lecture and several meetings for the purpose of organization, there have been no other events. However, the large number of charter members and the size of the audience at the lecture seems to indicate that the Mathematics Club will be one of Barnard ' s most successful organizations. The staff of the 1939 Mortarboard wishes to take this opportunity to wish the Mathematics Club a prosperous and useful future. Louise Comer President Joan Raisbeck Vice-President Mary Evelyn Rickey Secretary Virginia Shaw Treasurer 98 SOCIAL SERVICE COMMITTEE Acting as a go-between for Barnard and sev- eral charitable institutions, the Social Service Committee has arranged positions for many vol- unteer workers. The committee is in no way similar to other Barnard clubs and organizations, having no meetings or activities for its own bene- fit. It is a placement board for those girls desir- ing to do either clinical or settlement work, according to the requests of the various organi- zations for workers. This year the committee found suitable volun- teer work for about forty applicants in four hospitals and six settlement houses. The work covered a wide range of interests, according to the needs of the institution. Practical and cleri- cal work was performed in the clinics, and as- sistance given at the juvenile delinquency courts. Volunteers did housing work in the settlements and led group activities. WHAT DO YOU DO IN YOUR SPAKE TIME? EPISCOPAL, WYCLIFFE AND LUTHERAN CLUBS EPISCOPAL CLUB Several new and interesting plans, have been incorporated in the program of the Episcopal Club this year, in accordance with its desire to bring together the Episcopal students of Barnard in their religious, social, and educational inter- ests. The meetings of the group are most fre- quent, coming on the first Friday of every month. Every Thursday the members of the club go to chapel and then return to Barnard to have lunch together in the alcove of the cafe- teria. Informal discussion of social problems, such as the advisability of marriage and a career, are held in the chapel crypt on the fourth Friday of every month. At these gatherings members of the Wycliffe and Lutheran groups are also present. Like all good Barnard clubs the Episcopal organization has sponsored several teas this year. Mrs. Ladd, the chaplain ' s assistant, spoke on her recent trip to Denmark at one of these meetings. On November 5, a tea was held at which Miss A. Mildred Balmain described her work at St. Barnabus House, a temporary lodging for home- less women and children. The Episcopal Club has cooperated this year with the Columbia Student Christian Council. It has attended some of the dinners presented by the University group. Susan Guy President Janet Frazer Vice-President Marie-Louise Sayre Louise Barr Treasurer Janet Gowan Publicity Program Chairman 102 LUTHERAN CLUB This year the Lutheran Club advanced its activities beyond all-college teas and meetings and participated in several university religious movements. The program of the Lutheran Club was broadened in this way to further well- rounded activities and to make the religion of its members an essential part of their educa- tional life. Besides the regular luncheon meetings with the other religious clubs of Barnard, the group attended lunches held at John Jay Hall and at the Union Theological Seminary in honor of special chapel speakers. During October, the Barnard Lutheran Club joined with the students of Columbia College to select delegates to the Columbia Lutheran Stu- dent Council. Cooperating with other religious groups of Columbia, the Lutheran Club was rep- resented at the dinner of the Christian Council of Columbia University. The Lutheran Club was also represented by delegates at the seventh annual Conference of the Lutheran Student Association held in New York City. The subject of the conference was Lutheran Youth in Action. Dr. Conrad Hof- man was the speaker. Bepresentatives of the Lutheran Club also at- tended a regional convention of the National Lutheran Student Association which took place in the spring at Wagner College on Staten Island. Frances Adams Millicent Bridegroom President • . Vice-President WlLMA WALACH Marguerite Kutschera Ethel Mainzer Publicity Secretary Treasurer WYCLIFFE CLUB The Wycliffe Club was formed several years ago to meet the need of a club for Protestant religious denominations whose members at Bar- nard are not numerous enough to warrant the formation of separate organizations. The club has as one of its primary aims the sponsoring of a program which will lead to an active reli- gion on the part of its members and. in general, to a more complete and satisfying academic life. Every Tuesday this year the club attended noonday services at the university chapel, after which the members ate together in the Barnard cafeteria. The second Friday of each month was the club ' s regular meeting date. The open- ing activity was the tea to freshmen and trans- fers, at which Mrs. Ladd, assistant to Chaplain Knox, spoke about her trip to Denmark. In November the Beverend Bobert Andrus, coun- sellor to Protestant students of Columbia Uni- versity, told of h is experiences at the Oxford Conference of Churches. Miss Edith Welker, director of youth education for the New York area of Methodist Episcopal churches, spoke to the club at the December meeting. Miss Wel- ker ' s talk on The Home was appropriate, since informal discussion groups on the home and marriage were held in the chapel the last Friday of each month, the three Protestant clubs par- ticipating. Other events were the fall dinner and the Christmas dance of the Columbia Chris- tian Student Council. Winifred Bundlett President Emma Louise Smith Vice-President Dorothea Johnston Marguerite Pennell Secretary Marianna Norris Treasurer Publicity 103 MENOIIAH The Menorah Society was established in an attempt to foster the study of Jewish culture in modern life, to promote the welfare of Jewish students in Barnard College, and to facilitate social relationship among the Jewish students of the whole of Columbia University. To introduce the new students to the Society and its activities, Menorah held an opening tea in September. The Society sponsored several social events in cooperation with the Columbia Jewish Students Society and the Columbia Graduate Society. The first of these was a tea- dance, on October 14. A formal dance was held during the Christmas vacation with the Columbia Jewish Students ' Society. To celebrate the Purim festival in the Spring, there was another tea- dance at the Theological Seminary. Its meetings this year were devoted to a series of lectures concerning phases of Jewish culture. At the opening meeting in October, Dr. Leo Jung discussed The Social Society from the view- point of Jewish ethics and law. A Modern Approach to the Bible was the subject of the November meeting to which the Columbia stu- dents were invited. At subsequent meetings, lec- tures on drama, and on cultural patterns in Palestine were heard, and at the final meeting with Columbia, Dr. Milton Steinberg summar- ized the previous addresses in a discussion of the enrichment of American life by the application of these culture patterns. Frances Meyer Edna Holtzman President Ruth Bitensky Secretary Vice-President Marjorie Weiss Treasurer Mildred Rubinstein Publicity 104 NEWMAN CLUB The Newman Club of Barnard College exists for a three-fold purpose; spiritual, intellectual, and social. The club aims to make its members con- scious of the significant relationship of the Catholic faith with the world today. This year, with the help of Father Ford, Catholic adviser to Barnard and Columbia students, the members made a study of Catholic dogma and thought, and heard speakers on pertinent subjects of the day connected with problems of moral and religious importance, with an open forum discus- sion afterward. The first social event was a tea for incoming Catholic students, with Mme. Charlotte Muret and Miss Theresa Carbonara presiding. At another meeting Dr. Frederick Rice discussed the Catholic attitude toward birth control. Every third Sunday of the month, there was a coffee hour in the Corpus Christi Church auditorium, with a speaker of note, or a musicale, followed by dancing. The climax of the activities of the group was the Province week-end in February. Members from all the Newman clubs in the East gathered in New York to attend the discussion groups, the tea dance, and the formal dance at the Waldorf- Astoria Hotel. All members attended Mass and Communion Sunday morning. Ruth McElveney Margaret Boyle President Eileen O ' Meara . . Secretary Vice-President Claire Murray Treasurer 105 JUNIOR PROM One hundred juniors and their escorts attended the most important social event of their college careers, Junior Prom. The dance was held on February eighteenth in the Jade and Basildon rooms of the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel to the tune of Dick Messner ' s orchestra. Under the capable leadership of Elizabeth Jack- son, the committee planned a dance which every prom-trotter agreed was a huge success. The class supported enthusiastically the excellent arrange- ments made by the committee. Stunning white leather bids engraved in gold took the place of favors. A delicious midnight supper, which did credit to Oscar, was served in the adjoining Astor Gallery. Dancing continued until three o ' clock. The consensus of opinion was that it was a grand prom. Elizabeth Jackson Chair Jane Bell Ruth Cummings Helen Dollinger Margaret Grant Gertrude Jordan Jean Morris Ruth Stibbs 106 JUNIOR SHOW ' 39 Steps, the Junior Show of the class of 1939, was presented on March 11 and 12 in Brinckerhoff Theatre. It concerned itself with the efforts of the Juniors to inaugurate charm classes at Barnard. They made an arrangement with the faculty where- by, if charm classes were given, the Juniors prom- ised to raise money for the new building by pre- senting a show. This plan appealed to the entire faculty (who didn ' t like the idea of raising all that money themselves ) with the exception of Anna Lysis, beautiful but cold Science Adviser, who dis- approved of Love. Although alone in her disap- proval, she almost spoiled the entire plan by raising the familiar spectre of eligibility. Fortunately, at the crucial moment, Professor Elizabeth Arden Dorothy Alberta Smith Chairman transformed Anna Lysis unofficial assistant, the Grind, from Death Takes a Holiday into Life Goes to a Party. When the Grind reappeared beautified, Anna Lysis saw, to her horror, that the extremely impressionable Professor of Romantic Languages, Bachelor D A-rtes, until then her own distant admirer, seemed interested. Hastily she reconsidered, with the result that Love triumphed over all, eligibility was maintained, and the charm classes were saved, as 39 Steps ended. Work on 39 Steps started early in November, continuing up until the last moment. Although the show took a lot of work, everyone concerned felt fully recompensed by the generous reception ac- corded it by the college. Charlotte Phillipson Director 107 U [ E K HI ATHLETES Contestants Audrey Caruso Beatrice Tenney June Williams Phyllis Dunbar Esther Larash Virginia Rockwel Mary Walrath Edwina Dusenbery Virginia Rockwell Veronica Ruzicka Jean Allison Ruth-Elaine Blum Audrey Caruso Elizabeth Muller Elinor Stiefel Jean Ellison Margaret Grant Gertrude Smith Elinor Stiefel Beatrice Tenney 1939 Substitutes DISCUS June Kuffler Esther Larash Janet Younker Virginia Brash Elizabeth Muller Veronica Ruzicka Barbara Spraker CHARIOT Esther Anderson Virginia Brash Mary Walrath CHARIOTEER Elinor Stiefel TORCH Phyllis Dunbar Esther Larash Veronica Ruzicka Beatrice Tenney Barbara Watson Ruth-Elaine Blu Virginia Brash Phyllis Dunbar Elizabeth Mullet June Williams Jane Costello Ethel Mainzer Charlotte Wigand Benita Blair Dorothy Needham Nansi Pugh Harriet Tillman Eleanor Bowman Muriel Doyle Amy Krbecek Anne Meding Helen Best Benita Blair Evelyn Healy Nanette Hodgman Dorothy Needham Dorothy Coy Jean Gainfort Nanette Hodgman Nansi Pugh Charlotte Wigand 1940 Substitutes DISCUS Evelyn Healy . Amy Krbecek Irma Zwergel HURDLES Helen Best Barbara Eshleman Jean Gainfort Nanette Hodgman CHARIOT Muriel Doyle Lorraine Kitenplon Miriam Weber CHARIOTEER Alice Willis TORCH Eleanor Bowman Lorraine Kitenplon Anne Meding Nansi Pugh Harriet Tillmar HOOPS Helen Best Benita Blair Alice Hoffman Amy Krbecek Adeline Weierich 110 DANCERS 1 939 The dance of Peace. Unrest. War, and Peace Lenore Altschule Jane Bell Louise Comer Ruth Gumming? Gertrude Eisenbui Janet Fraser Flora Ginsburs Rose Grill.. Marie Henke Elaine Hildenbrand Evelyn Hoole Jean Johnston Marjorie Kane Helen Long Leslie Marsh Ida Padgett Ara Ponchelet Doris Renz Mildred Rubinstei Shirley Simon Ida Padgett Cha Music by Norma Raymond Emily Turk Else Wang 1940 The dance oj Work, Storm. Ritual, and Celebration Louise Barr Dorothy Boyle Carolyn Brackenridge Kathryn Caragol Frances Dinsmoor Florence DubrofT Isabel Gleasing Janet Gowen Julia Gray Evelyn Hagmoe Barbara Hornbeck Helene Jaffin Emilie Kallman Florence Kotzian Ann Landau Emma Langer Ethel Lilling Virginia Mull Annette O ' Brien Mary Maloney Charlotte Patiky Elaine Schumann Louise Salzman Catherine Steckel Catalina Villamin Maude Vance Evf.lyn Hagmok Chairman Music by Dorothy Bo Nansi Pugl 111 SCORE - April 17, 1937 ENTRANCE 1940 Original music 3 Attendance 4 Total 7 DANCE Original music 6 Idea 1 Execution 7 Cost umes 7.5 Total 21.5 LYRICS Poem to Athena 7 Reader of lyric Total 7 ATHLETICS Discus for form: 1st place 2nd place 3rd place 1939 3 4.5 19.5 Hurdling for form: 1st place 2nd place 3rd place 1 Hoop rolling: For speed Chariot: Execution 4 Appearance 2 Torch race: Winning team Costumes 4 Total 11 DIVISION OF POINTS BY EVENTS Entrance 4 Costumes and Properties 11.5 Dance 8 Music 9 Lyrics 7 Athletics 7 Total 46.5 30 8.5 9 9 1 26 53.5 112 WREATH CEREMONY Awarding of the Wreaths to the Winners of the Various Events Joy Lattman Chairman, 1940 Costume Committee Dorothy Boyle Chairman, 1940 Music Committee Emily Turk Chairman, 1939 Music Committee Ann Strobridge Writer of Winning Lyric, 1940 Janet Younker 1939, First Place. Discus Virginia Rockwell 1939, First Place, Hurdles Gertrude Smith Chairman, 1939 Hoop Team Elizabeth Muller Chairman, 1939 Torch Team Elinor Stiefel 1939 Charioteer Ed win a Dusenbery Chairman, 1939 Chariot Dorothy Alberta Smith 1939 Greek Games Chairman Deborah Allen 1940 Greek Games Chairman Josephine Shepherd Greek Games Business Manager Marion Streng, Faculty Adviser 113 n i n I [ i u ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION BOARD OFFICERS Gertrude Boyd President Jane Bell Vice-President Marie Boyle Secretary Anne Grauer Treasurer MANAGERS Ninetta di Benedetto Volleyball Harriet Benedict Swimming Ruth-Elaine Blum Tennis Catherine Donna Games Henrietta Gerken Camp Helen Lange Dance Norma Raymond Baseball Winifred Rundlett Health Mary Walrath Basketball Meredith Wright Freshman Activities 116 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ACTIVITIES Each member of the Undergraduate Association of Barnard College auto- matically belongs to the Athletic Association. The Athletic Association Board, assisted by the Physical Education Department, plans and directs certain events throughout the year. The purpose of the Athletic Association is to stimulate interest in sports among the students of Barnard, and to provide ample opportunities for recreation both on the campus and at the Barnard camp in Westchester. In some of the classes in physical education numerals and awards are given by the Athletic Association. Sports Week was the first activity this year. Tags were distributed to be worn around school by patriotic students. Freshman Day, which opened Sports Week, featured intersectional games and a faculty-student badminton exhibition. On Tuesday Professors Reichard and Greet downed the student tenniquoit team 37-33. In tennis Riccio and Caruso tied Youtz and Este. Wednesday The Culprits, or faculty volleyball team, won four consecutive games. The main event Thursday was an archery tournament, followed by the Hallowe ' en Hop Friday night, bringing Sports Week to a close. Hallowe ' en Hop, formerly Harvest Hop, was held in the gymnasium, which was transformed into an old barn. A most welcome innovation was the serving of cider and doughnuts on Jake during the dance. Jane Bell, vice-president of the Athletic Association, directed Hallowe ' en Hop, assisted by Betty Armstrong, Dorothea Eggers. Charlotte Hall, Mary Hagan, Elizabeth Jackson, and Barbara Ridgway. Eating on Jake or in the Jungle is encouraged at Barnard . . . that is ... if it is an apple from the Italian fruit cart, or milk or tomato juice from the bar. These were sponsored by the health committee of the Athletic Association, and, for the benefit of a few skeptics, heartily endorsed by Doctor Alsop. The Athletic Association banquet was held last May to install the new officers. According to tradition, prominent freshmen served as waitresses, being loads of fun for all concerned. At this time awards were made in swimming, basketball, and volleyball. After dinner, excerpts from Junior Show and Faculty Follies were presented. Laura Miles was chairman of the banquet, and her assistants were Charlotte Hall, Audrey Caruso, Margaret Strobel, Margo Kuhlman. and Elizabeth Harpel. 117 DANCING What does the word dancing mean at Barnard? The exact definition would be gym- nasium classes in which folkdancing, clogging, or rhythmic fundamentals are taught. However, there is more to dancing than just this. Believ- ing that modern dancing is essential for poise and an excellent form of recreation, the Physical Education department organized an advanced dance group under the guidance of Miss Marion Streng. Not only were rhythmic fundamentals learned and stressed, but the members of the group composed original dances and performed in public. With the assistance of the Glee club, the dance group gave a program at one of the Tuesday assemblies and again in McMillin Theater. All-college folkdancing festivals were held twice this year; once at the Campus Carnival for the benefit of the Land and Building Fund, and again this spring. Folkdancing is one of the oldest known forms of recreation, but is kept alive and growing by the constant addition of new dances in every country. This year, Amer- ican mountain dances were taught in class and were performed at the folkdancing festivals. Clogging is self-explanatory. Who knows — Barnard may have a future Ruby Keeler or Eleanor Powell in one of the present clogging classes? Rhythmic activities are felt to be so impor- tant at Barnard that they rank equally with team sports, individual sports, and swimming, and a student must have either average ability or mini- mum standard in dancing if she is to get senior exemption in physical education. Whether one takes dancing with both eyes on exemption, or just to take gym at that hour, she will enjoy it thoroughly and will find herself signing up for it again the following season. 118 BASKETBALL While Barnard does not have varsity teams, there is no lack of competition in games between ad- vanced classes, odds and evens, and in faculty- student and alumnae-student games. The two-court game was introduced at Barnard several years ago, replacing the old three-court game. The new rul- ing makes a faster and more exciting game possible, thus increasing interest in the sport. In class periods plays and maneuvers are taught to the students by the coach, and in the intra- mural and faculty-student games these plays are put into practice. Each girl in the class periods is tried at different positions to find out where she plays best, and her errors are corrected and her game generally improved. Official rules are taught and student officials are trained. It is felt that individual achievement and not group competition should be the aims of the basketball classes of Barnard College. SWIMMING Barnard experiences hardly a moment of inertia produced by the transition from summer to winter, thanks to the swimming pool. Classes and open hours are offered all year ' round to novice and expert alike, and a Red Cross life saving course is conducted each year. A spectacular and somewhat hilarious water carnival featured demonstrations of aquatic skill, amusing skits, and breath-taking stunts. This year the water carnival portrayed Naval Maneuvers in Hawaii. Second, first class, and expert awards are given in swimming, not for competitive or team partici- pation as in other sports, but for individual prog- ress. Thus, there is no limit to the number of girls receiving awards each year, the only require- ment being the fulfillment of the necessary number of tests for each award. 119 TENUIS The tennis season nearly overlapped the ice-skating season this year, since the addi- tion of the Riverside Courts increased our facilities. They have proven to be a haven for those not wishing to be seen playing all day, as well as for the none-too-confi- dent novice. With the rapid development of raw material and the increased interest in this sport, we may be faced with the possibility of a tennis exit. Tourna- ments were greeted enthusiastically, and the quality of our game has so improved that dubs can ' t get a chance at the courts. Twelve inches of snow in April threatened to delay the rolling of the tennis courts. To everyone ' s relief, however, tennis began on time. ARCHERY Archery classes, which are given during the outdoor seasons, are open to any stu- dent, regardless of her health grade. Not a strenuous sport, it is invaluable, how- ever, in training the eye in marksmanship and in coordination of the muscles. Each semester an archery tournament is conduct- ed by the Athletic Association to test the skill of the Barnard Dianas and Robin Hoods. The winner, thanks to Miss Mar- jorie Tuzo, instructor, could compete and easily hold her own with the best Marine Corps sharpshooter. It is indeed a wel- come sight to those interested in archery to see in the Jungle the sign, Danger, archery classes in session. TOURNAMENTS Under the auspices of the Athletic Asso- ciation, tournaments are conducted in ten- nis, both singles and doubles, badminton, tenniquoit, archery, and ping-pong. These are not limited to the members of those classes but are open to the college at large. The interclass and faculty-student games, with the exception of baseball, are limited to the students of those classes. Because baseball was not taught at Barnard this year, the participants in the faculty-student games were chosen from those who signed up. Faculty-student games and tourna- ments are always a source of great enjoy- ment both to the participants, and to the many spectators. YOI I I VItALL Since volleyball attained its status as a major sport, it has been actively and enthusiastically supported. Sectional tournaments and interclass games serve to encourage participation at Barnard. As it is played indoors, volleyball is the one year-round team sport, as popular in the spring and fall seasons as it is in the winter. In the first semester, a faculty-student tournament was held as a feature of Sports Week. A formal interclass round robin tournament was the high- light of the second semester indoor season. The best players of the various teams were selected to play on an all-star team against the faculty during Play Day, which concluded the season. There was a game with New College, and on Alumnae Day the All-Stars plaved a team composed of old grads. ItMMM. This year is the first time that riding has been conducted by one of the members of the Physical Education department as a class for credit. Miss Lelia Finan has had charge of it and has made it a very successful venture. Thirty-five girls participated in the sport. They rode every Friday and twice during the noon hour. When the weather was nice, the girls went through Central Park. Otherwise the riding was inside the rings down at 66th Street. Every other week there was an evening class conducted indoors with riding to music. In April, four extra classes were held besides the weekly ones. The regular schedule was continued at the same time because of its previous success. BADMINTON Badminton is a perennial favorite, both with faculty and students. At every noon hour or class period, the com firmed addicts may be seen chasing the elusive shuttlecock I bird to you ) and showing energy and enthusiasm at every step. The extraordinary popularity of this sport is shown by the large number of students at the tournaments, both as active participants and as spectators. The goal of the physical education program is to pro- vide the opportunity for every student to acquire proficiency at some sport which she may enjoy outside of college. Badminton is recommended as possessing the necessary re- quirements for such a sport, and the classes are immediately filled to capacity when the students register for gym. CAMP Probably the most appreciated and most used gift of the Associate Alumnae to the students of Barnard is Camp. Situated in the Hudson River Valley a few miles outside of Ossining, New York, it is the week-end retreat pleasure spot for dorm and day students alike. Camp is directed by a student committee under the supervision of the Physical Education department. Each weekend is led by a member of the committee, who buys the food and makes all arrangements, and a faculty member or alumna chaperons. Each semester each class and the alumnae have a week-end; others are given over to barbecues and to clubs and groups of students who wish to be together. Between the fall and spring semesters there is open house for those who wish to recuperate from examinations, and also intercollegiate week-end. As a member of the Dirt Trails Association, guests at Camp may use any of the beautiful trails maintained by this organization. Several kind neighbors allow the use of their large lakes and picnic groves. Nearby is the Croton reservoir with its colossal spillway. Camp activities are varied, mostly according to the season of the year. In the winter there is skiing, skating, and sledding, and most superior snow. In the fall and spring there is hiking, outdoor sports, archery, and at Christmas an open week- end features turkey, a tree and presents. The Barbecue week-ends are most popular, probably because of the smoke-flavored lamb or chicken cooked outdoors and served right from the spits. Every June a campcraft course lasting two weeks is conducted by Miss Margaret Holland of the Physical Education department. This course is for the purpose of training leaders for the coming scholastic year, and its participants are selected by Miss Holland upon application to her. The knowledge and experience gained from this course is exceedingly useful to anyone interested in camps and camp life. Barnard Camp, as you can judge from the pictures on the opposite page is a place where one can live simply; yet not have to rough it. It is a low, rustic building with a wide porch for sunbaths and general airings. Inside there is a big fireplace and living room, with sleeping quarters nearby. The grounds are spacious, and the location private. Each Wednesday there is a meeting of all who are going to Camp the following week-end. A dollar deposit is made then and there so the leader can buy food in advance, and menus are planned. Friday the girls leave for camp, via car or train. A K.P. list is planned for each meal by the leader, so no one girl or girls will have to do all the work, although it is really fun. The basis of camp, as is expressed on the folder, is goodwill and cooperation; and the results of camp are friendships and good times, thanks to the camp committee, the faculty supervisors, and the alumnae who gave such an enjoyable present to Barnard College. CAMP COMMITTEE Henrietta Gerken Louise Brenner Edwina Dusenbery Shirley Ellenbogen Alene Freudenheim Viola Peterson Betty Pratt Mary Evelyn Richey Virginia Rockwell Maude Vance 122 123 f [ A I I 126 THE M ETAMORPHOSIS OF A FRESHMAN For two years we looked forward to having Freshman sisters. We were not so eager when we were Freshmen because we were fussed over and everybody took care of us, told us what to eat, and when to sleep, and how to tackle professors and where everything was and how to do our work, and especially took us to teas. This was nice because we felt somewhat lost and because we were gentle creatures and liked to be led by the nose. But after some time we became tired of the cotton wool. It was then that we began to look forward to smother- ing some other fortunate person with tenderness and care. This was not because we were vindicative or in any way ungrateful. We merely wanted to return twofold to someone else all the kindnesses we had received. The yearning for Freshman sisters was, however, more or less, latent until we became Sophomores. It was at that stage that the desire overcame us and made us realize how empty our lives were and that we needed, as it were, the patter of childish feet. It was a transitional period from the time when we wished to be sheltered to the time when we wished to shelter others. As Sophomores we were left com- pletely out in the cold. Nobody loved us. Nobody took care of us. We were not even taken to teas. When we finally got the courage to go to a tea under our own steam, nobody saw that we were fed. And as a matter of fact, we were not. The Freshmen had been given all the cookies. Even if the cookies were not all gone, the guardian of the cookies swept them by us, to give them with coos and smiles to some Freshmen. This clarified everything for us. We wanted something over which to coo and smile, too. It was most exciting that summer to get a card with the names of our very own Freshmen sisters. We immediately wrote eager letters overflowing with the desire to be helpful. In answer we received the most courteous little notes imaginable. In the fall we dashed back to school for we knew that we now had something to give meaning to life. We were told that the Freshmen this year were very young and bright, infant prodigies, in fact. We liked that. We thought that infant prodigies were shy, inarticulate creatures who needed guidance and comforting, protection from the cruel world. And even if they were not, their youth made us feel quite super ior with wonderfully mature qualities like emotional stability and integrated personalities. We certainly looked forward to meeting our Freshmen sisters. We promptly met our sisters on Jake and took them out to lunch. During lunch we told them all about Barnard traditions. We held forth on what they should and should not do. We warned them of 127 all the pitfalls. We particularly stressed the diffi- culties of changing programs because we had just gone through an especially hectic session about that. Everything had been beautiful but at that point one of the Freshmen said she could not understand the necessity of changing our program. After all, you knew what you wanted to do. You had made up your mind the term previously about the courses best suited for this. This shifting of subjects was sheer light-mindedness. This silenced us for the time and our guests began to talk. In their conversation it appeared that they knew far better than we all that we had been orating about. Moreover they knew exactly what they wanted to do and how to go about doing it. We were not even able to think, Ah, the assurance of youth, alas! For they were very cool and wise. We were distinctly nonplussed and left the restaurant in a thoughtful mood. We decided to investigate the problem several weeks later because we had suffered a crushing blow in the realization that we had been thinking that all the Freshmen we met were upperclassmen and that they had been thinking we were Freshmen. They were very nice about it and told us that it was prob- ably the young way we dressed our hair. Now we do not dress our hair. We let it grow on our heads, as anyone can see. The Freshmen were being tact- ful. So, all in all, we were suffering from a drastic deflation of the ego. It was this that decided us. We were going to find out what was happening to one of Barnard ' s most cherished traditions. Why were not these Freshmen the young and dewy-eyed beings we were? And since, obviously, they were not the delightfully naive persons we had dreamed of, what were they? Moreover, what could we do about it? We set about observing Freshmen carefully, making notes in our little notebooks, fully prepared to define our terms and defend our conclusions. Freshmen, it appeared, got up bright and early in the morning, unlike us who got up at ten minutes before we had to leave for classes. This gave us more of an inferiority complex than ever. We thought of all the things we had heard about doing your best work when the mind is fresh. We felt thoroughly unhappy. We felt all better when we found that they got up early not to study but to eat a big breakfast. It made our awe of them seem a bit silly. The more we thought about it, the more dis- tinctly happy we became. One morning we decided that we too should eat a huge breakfast. It was a miserable failure. The sight of the food was horri- ble when all we could do was hold our heads up and drink some black coffee. Our spirits became low again. How could those girls eat fruit and cereal and bacon and eggs and coffee and toast after five hours sleep ( our usual average ) ? We marveled at the constitution of the young. However, on inquiry we found that Freshmen do not sleep five hours. They sleep nine. They go to bed nice and early after a warm bath and after setting their hair. When they set their alarm clocks it is not because they could not possibly get up otherwise. For them it is 128 merely a little rite. They usually are awake to turn off the alarm before it blares out. This made us feel bitter. It made us ask crossly if the faculty were weak- ening under their charm and forgetting that even Freshmen have to work. Certainly not, they virtu- ously replied. In fact, they were positive that they worked much more than we did. They kindly ex- plained for our benefit that they did their work from day to day and did not have to stay up till ungodly hours of the night. They did not have to cram for quizes. They got along beautifully. Breathlessly we asked about writing papers. They even had time for revisions after letting it rest for a couple of days. We did not ask any more ques- tions. That was the end of our investigations. It was too much to ask of mortals to continue any longer. But at least we knew the answer to one question, why the college was no longer what it used to be. It was that for the first time there was a class in Barnard that was what college students should be, not what they are. These girls had plenty of sleep to keep them little paragons. They got proper meals at proper hours. They had time to care for their hair and nails and eyebrows. They got their work done in plenty of time and got it done well. They were the pride and joy of all who knew them except us. We were just sour. Saddest of all we knew only too well that there was nothing we could do about it. They were incor- ruptible. We found that out when we tried to cor- rupt them. You could no more persuade them to let their work slide till the next day and go to the movies than you could persuade them to cut their classes. We retired from the field. Nay we were routed from the field. We were forced to slink into our shells and avoid the bright eyes of our Freshmen sisters. But we are happy to tell you that we did not have to continue so for very long. Towards the end of the year we noticed that gradually the Freshmen had taken to missing classes. We saw that when we greeted them cheerfully in the early morning they either barked or growled. Indeed our most cheerful efforts only made them growl the more. From the slightly bleary eyes of our younger colleagues we judged that somehow those nine hours of sleep were dimin- ishing. And the most joyous sight of all, we saw a Freshman flying across the campus at nine minutes after two, proof-reading her manuscript. We gath- ered it had just been torn from the typewriter. Her hair was a mess, too. The burden that had been lying upon us almost a year was lifted. Our Freshmen sisters, adamant to all our influence, had in some way lost their good habits. They had become human beings! But all this impressed us with its deeper significance. It made us realize more clearly than ever before the strength of a college education. The quiet atmos- phere, the serene halls, the associations with scholars and with great books, no matter how you resist them, they cannot help but affect you. You can build no barrier strong enough to withstand the effect of their quiet wisdom. Four college years must leave their mark. After them, you are never the same unthink- ing being you were before. 129 - t t IS BVILDING •? IS ' THE GIFT OF v ACCB H SGHIFF .V _ _ to , - ; % feAJRJVARD COLLEGE ? TO PROMOTE THE WELFAKE, OF WOMEN STVDENTS OP COLVM BI A VNI VEHSIt Y v FOTO- ACKNOWLEDGMENTS DEAN VIRGINIA C. GILDERSLEEVE MISS HELEN ERSKINE MISS MARY McBRIDE MISS ANNA MEYER MISS MAUDE MINAHAN MRS. DONALD READ MRS. HELEN KENNEDY STEVENS MR. JOHN SWAN MISS MABEL FOOTE WEEKS MRS. EVELYN ORNE YOUNG MISS ELSPETH DAVIES MISS HELEN RAEBECK MISS EDNA HOLTZMAN MISS FRANCES HENDERSON MR. PHILIP BONDY MR. HARRY HORTON of the Apeda Studio MR. EUGENE DURKIN of the Phototype Engraving Company MR. ORVILLE STAMBAUGH of the Lyon and Armor Press 133 ROSTER A 1939 AARON. ROSLYN FLORENCE Dickens 2-4420 1468 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York 1938 AARONSON, CELENTHA EVELYN Dewey 9-6346 1614 East Fourth Street. Brooklyn, New York 1941 ACKERMANN, JEAN MARIE Endicott 2-4428 229 West 78th Street, New York City 1938 ADAMS, FRANCES VILETTA Tottenville 8-1474 62 Princewood Avenue, Princes Bay, Staten Island, N. Y. 1939 ADAMS, HARRIET HILLHOUSE Butterfield 8-2911 129 East 74th Street, New York City 1939 AGAN, LUCIA MARGARET South 8-3156 510 Third Street. Brooklyn, New York 1941 ALBIG, ALBERTA WATERS North Third Street, West Newton, Pennsylvania 1939 ALBIGESE, MURIEL REGINA Pompton Lakes 668 Mountain Avenue, Pompton Lakes, New Jersey 1938 ALEXANDER, INEZ MARIE The Roger Smith, Stamford, Connecticut 1939 ALHO, KAARINA Raymond 9-4760 65 West 192nd Street, New York City 1939 ALLEN, VIRGINIA SMALL Port Chester 1895W 5 Monroe Place, Port Chester, New York 1940 ALLEN. DEBORAH DELANO Pleasantville 557W Tarrytown Road, Pleasantville, New York unc ALLEN, DOROTHY (Mrs.) Butterfield 8-7691 39 East 79th Street, New York City 1941 ALLEN. ELIZABETH CLARK Leonia 4-2371M 328 Park Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey 1939 ALLISON, JEAN MARION Neperhan 1637 14 Campion Place, Yonkers, New York 1939 ALTSCHULE, LENORE HELEN Cathedral 8-0340 425 Riverside Drive, New York City 1941 ANDERSON, ELIZABETH WINIFRED 503 West 121st Street, New York City 1939 ANDERSON, ESTHER JANE University 4-5665 90 Morningside Drive, New York City 1939 ANDERSON, JEAN RUTH Pine Bush, New York 1938 ANDREWS, CLAIRE ROBIN 315 Park Street, Hackensack, New Jersey 1941 ANDREWS, MERRY Box 4, Benjamin Franklin Station, Washington. D. C. 1940 ANKENEY, MARTHA LEAMAN 106 South Munn Avenue. East Orange, New Jersey unc ARCHAMBAULT, ORLEANS Riverside 9-7696 243 Riverside Drive, New York City 1938 ARMSTRONG, ELIZABETH MAY Monument 2-9823 456 Riverside Drive, New York City 1941 ARNDT, VERA AUGUSTE Wadsworth 3-9238 350 Northern Avenue, New York City 1939 ARNSPIGER, FAY GENEVIEVE Yonkers 1414 217 Van Cortlandt Park Avenue, Yonkers, New York 1939 ARONSON, RUTH AILEEN Scarsdale 672 16 Chesterfield Road, Scarsdale, New York 1938 ASHWORTH, MARJORIE MAY Summerfield. Florida 1939 AUCHINCLOSS, PRISCILLA DIXON Rhinelander 4-2298 66 East 79th Street, New York City unc AUERBACH, JANE Trafalgar 7-0913 Elm Road, Briarcliff Manor, New York 1938 AUERBACH, PAULINE DOROTHY Yonkers 6447 472 South Broadway, Yonkers, New York unc AYMAR. MARGARET KEEN Parkridge 355 Woodcliff Lake. New Jersey B 1938 BABCOCK, CAROLINE 298 Piermont Avenue, Nyack, New York 1938 BACHRACK. BERNICE Rhinelander 4-0170 829 Park Avenue, New York City 1938 BACON. MARCIA 147 West 55th Street, New York City unc BAER, ELIZABETH MAYER (Mrs.) Atwater 9-6607 1160 Park Avenue, New York City 1941 BAFF, BEVERLY FLORA Belle Harbor 5-3160 135-05 Boulevard, Belle Harbor, Long Island, New York unc BAHLINGER, OLGA ROSE 60 Fairmount Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey 1938 BAILEY, HARRIET FRANCES Cathedral 8-7650 508 West 114th Street, New York City unc BAILLY, MARGARET MACOVAN Rhinelander 4-0662 1 East 92nd Street, New York City unc BAKER, SHEILA MURPHY Monument 2-3159 160 Claremont Avenue, New York City unc BALLANCE. EDNA VIOLET Prospect 9-6272 1478 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 1941 BANNISTER, EFFIE HENNEN Peekskill 668 413 Nelson Avenue, Peekskill, New York 1938 BARANOVSKY, ANNE Yonkers 2244 340 Ashburton Avenue, Yonkers, New York 1939 BARASCH. JACQUELINE ISABEL Nevins 8-4483 436 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York 1940 BARNOLA, MARGUERITE Flushing 9-6366 134-17 33rd Avenue, Flushing, New York 1941 BARON, BETTY JANE Trafalgar 7-5239 15 West 81st Street, New York City 1940 BARR, LOUISE Tuckahoe 6372 79 Verona Avenue, Tuckahoe, New York 1941 BARR, MARJORIE Tuckahoe 6372 79 Verona Avenue, Tuckahoe, New York 1938 BARTELS, MILDRED CLARA Ravenswood 8-1666 32-69 33rd Street, Long Island City, New York unc BEAMAN, SALLIE LOUISE 1315 Westover Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia 1938 BEAN, ALICE DOUGLAS 25 Belknap Road, West Hartford, Connecticut 1938 BECKER, MARILEE Eldorado 5-2422 375 Park Avenue, New York City 1941 BEKAERT, MARIETTE MARGUERITE 419 West 121st Street, New York City 1939 BELL, JANE BAKER 104 East Fillmore Street, Petersburg, Virginia unc BENDER. SHIRLEY South 8-2823 94 Prospect Park Southwest, Brooklyn, New York 134 Registered by The N. Y. State Board of Regents PRIVATE SECRETARIAL AND COMMERCIAL TRAINING SHORTHAND, TYPEWRITING, FILING, OFFICE PRACTICE, BOOK- KEEPING, COMPTOMETRY, ETC. DAY AND EVENING SESSIONS The experience gained by training thousands for business employment during the past forty years gives us a superior place among schools EMPLOYMENT SERVICE— ESTABLISHED 1894— FREE CATALOGUE SPECIAL SUMMER COURSE Special intensive courses in Stenography and Typewriting during June, July and August for Teachers, College Students and Graduates UPTOWN SCHOOL— 2875 Broadway (Cor. 112th St.) CAthedral 8-7600 MIDTOWN SCHOOL— 50 E. 42d St. (Cor. Mad. Ave.) MU. Hill 2-4850 DOWNTOWN SCHOOL— 270 Broadway (Opp. City Hall) BArclay 7-2131 SCHILLER STATIONERY CO. 2957 BROADWAY COLLEGE SUPPLIES GREETING CARDS CIRCULATING LIBRARY We are Members of Florists ' Telegraph Delivery Flowers by Wire to All the World Tel. MOnument 2-2261, 2-2262 A. G. PAPADEM CO., Inc. FLORISTS 2953 BROADWAY NEW YORK Monument 2-7191, 2-7192, 2-7193 THEODORE LEHMANN, INC. WHOLESALE MEATS AND POULTRY 1291 AMSTERDAM AVENUE NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK A REAL CAREER AWAITS YOU Window Display offers today ' s BIG oppor- tunity. Proven practical individualized train- ing — all phases. Day and Evening. Special Summer rates. Unusual placement assistance. Booklet R on request. ACADEMY OF • DISPLAY . St. N. Y. C. Lexington 2-0588 1939 1938 1938 1941 1941 1938 1941 1940 1941 1938 1940 BENEDETTO. NINETTA 81 Robertson Avenue, White Plai BENEDICT, DOROTHY KING 120 Riverside Drive, New York City BENEDICT, HARRIET AUSFAHL 50 West 106th Street, New York City , New York Endicott 2-2604 BENNETT, MARTHA LOUISE 134 02 Woodhaven Boulevard, Wc BENSON, RITA MAY Michigan 2-2056 tdhaven, New York Great Neck 768 12 Prospect Street, Great Neck, New York Stuyvesant 9-7483 Ossining 3052 Beverly 9593 unc 1938 1939 1940 1941 1938 unc 1938 1940 1939 1941 1939 1940 1941 BENTLEY, CHARLOTTE FERRIS 25 Fifth Avenue, New York City BERBERICH, LOIS 5 Glen Street, Ossining, New York BERGOLD, ANNETTE WILMA 30 Leonard Place, Yonkers, New York BERNSTEIN, ELAINE BELLE 148-04 85th Drive, Jamaica, New York BERNSTEIN, MARIANNE ELIZABETH Murray Hill 4-0235 325 East 41st Street, New York City BEST, HELEN ANNE 126 Princeton Avenue, Dover, New Jersey BINDER, MARGUERITE BARBARA 9 20th Street, West New York, New Jersey BITENSKY, RUTH 1241 Oak Street, Far Rockaway, New York BLAGDEN, SARAH SAMPSON Lloyd Harbor, Huntington, New York BLAIR, AUDREY FLORENCE 140 Briggs Avenue, Yonkers, New York BLAKELY, KATURAH DAVIS Kent Road, Wynnewood, Pennsylvania BLEIBLER, HELEN ADELE 5219 Ross Avenue, Dallas, Texas BLOCK, JANE Susquehanna 7-1613 498 West End Avenue, New York City BLUM, RUTH ELAINE Rhinelander 4-6203 138 East 78th Street, New York City BLUMERS, CHARLOTTE MARIE Beverly 9109R 2 Halstead Avenue, Yonkers, New York BLUMNER, RUTH EVELYN Academy 4-0369 817 West End Avenue, New York City BLUN, MARGARET 225 East 44th Street, Savannah, Georgia B JARDMAN, CHRISTINA Butterfield 8-8326 57 East 80th Street, New York City BOEHM, FRANCES RUTH 15 Boehm Street, New Dorp, Staten Island, New York BJ ' SSEVAIN, CAROLINE BLEECKER Short Hills, New Jersey BOOTH, DOROTHY EVELYN Floral Park 3-9975 ' )1 Cedar Place, Floral Park, New York E 1KMEYER, BEATRICE LOUISE Cumberland 6-4470 95 Hicks Street, Brooklyn, New York BORG, MURIEL JUANITA Englewood 3-7516 2 Hillside Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey Z RGENICHT, RUTH LUCILLE Academy 2-5960 2 15 Riverside Drive, New York City FOSTELMAN, ADELINE GLOVER Monument 2-4866 ' 68 Riverside Drive, New York City 1938 1941 1939 1940 1938 1940 1940 1938 1940 1941 1940 1940 1941 1939 1940 1939 1939 unc 1939 1939 1938 1941 1939 1941 unc 1940 1941 unc 1941 1941 BOTHAM, BETTY MARIE University 4-6262 435 West 119th Street, New York City BOUYEA, BEULAH ELIZABETH 55 Sailly Avenue, Plattsburgh, New York BOWEN, MARY JANE 1338 High Street, Denver, Colorado BOWMAN, ELEANOR Yonkers 4686R 180 Briggs Avenue, Yonkers, New York BOYD, GERTRUDE BELL Endicott 2-0891 1 West 72nd Street, New York City BOYLE, DOROTHY SYBEL Pelham 0412 119 Reed Avenue, Pelham Manor. New York BOYLE, MARIE 27 South Oxford Street, Brooklyn, New York BOYLE, HELEN NAMMACK Faraway Hills. Newton, Connecticut BOYLE. MARGARET NEVILLE Faraway Hills, Newton, Connecticut BOYNTON, BETTINA ADELAIDE 57 Gaynor Avenue, Manhasset, Long Island, New York BRACKENRIDGE, JANET CAROLINE 1465 Market Street, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania BRADT, MAXINE ELLA Sherburn, Minnesota BRAENDLE, HELEN CATHERINE 33-19 170th Street, Flushing, New York BRAMSON, DOROTHY MEADOW 550 East 29th Street, Paterson, New Jersey BRAND, RUTH 34th Avenue, Jackson Heights, New York BRANDT, DORIS ISABEL Trafalgar 7-4873 211 Central Park West, New York City BRASH, VIRGINIA DUNHAM University 4-5665 90 Morningside Drive, New York City BREED, FRANCES Cornwall, New York BREITBART, EERNICE SHIRLEY 200 West 90th Street, New York City BRENNAN, DOROTHY LOIS 1956 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, New York BRENNER, LOUISE FREEHOF 141 Stratford Road, Brooklyn, New York BREWSTER, THELMA LOUISE Huguenot, New York BRIDEGROOM, MILLICENT MARGARET 1628 Mansfield Place, Brooklyn, New York BRIGGS, EDYTHE ELAINE 889 James Street, Pelham Manor, New York BROCHE, SIMONNE 8 Rue de Tournon, Paris, France Schuyler 4-1551 Dewey 9-0752 BROWN, BETTY 69-40 Continental Avenue, Forest Hi Boulevard 8-9275M s, New York BROWN, BEVERLY 40 Crescent Avenue, New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. BROWN, FAITH KINGSLEY University 4-5790 434 West 120th Street, New York City BROWN, JEAN Westchester County Penitentiary, BROWNE, MIMI NICHOLSON 405 Park Avenue, New York City Eastview, New York Eldorado 5-7374 CORPUS CHRISTI CATHOLIC CHURCH WEST 121 ST STREET (Just Off Broadway) OFFICIAL PARISH FOR CATHOLIC STUDENTS TILSON DRUGS LUNCHEONETTE COSMETICS LOUIS SHERRY ICE CREAM Broadway at 116th Street Phone: Univ. 4-4444 THE STAFF of THE 1939 MORTARBOARD wishes to thank the representatives of APEDA STUDIO lor their generous assist- ance and cooperation in the compiling of this book Best wishes — and remember that Wherever you may be after graduation Your inquiries for information or orders for books and supplies will be given our careful attention Write, call or telephone at any time Columbia University Book Store 2960 BROADWAY Univ. 4-3425 NEW YORK Supposing . . . The family decide to move to town and want a quiet apartment OR Aunt Arabelle descends on you for three months and you ' ve no place to put her . . . Why not let BUTLER HALL (Apartment Hotel) solve all your problems? 88 MORNINGSIDE DRIVE Cor. 119th Street UNiv. 4-0200 MRS. DOROTHY COOK . . . DIRECTRESS unc 1938 1941 1941 unc 1940 unc 1940 1940 1933 1941 1939 1940 1941 1940 1939 1940 1941 1940 1941 1938 1939 1940 1940 1941 1941 1940 1941 BRUPBACHER, ELIZABETH MARIE 442 Anderson Avenue. Cliffside, New Jersey BUEDINGEN. GRETA WRIGHT Monument 2-0228 390 Riverside Drive. New York City BULLOWA, JEAN 62 West 87th Street, New York City BURGE, PRISCILLA LOCKWOOD 2439 Ransdell Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky BURT, MARY CONSTANCE 424 Caroline Street, Ogdensburj Schuyler 4-8123 BYE. JANE ELIZABETH 40 Fairfield Street, Montcl. irg, New York Montclair 2-1971R New Jersey BYER, MURIEL ADELE 111 California Avenue. Watertown. New York CANNOLD. SHERRILL HAZEL Raymond 9-8118 266 Bedford Park Boulevard, New York City CANTOR, DOROTHY FREDKIN 1404 West 5th Street, Sedalia, Missour CARAGOL, KATHRYN DELIA 39 Forest Avenue, Caldwell. New Jersey CARLEY, NANCY Nautilus Beach Club, At tic Beach Club. New York CARPENTER. HELEN JUNE 376 Main Street, Athol. Massachusetts CARSON, BEATRICE CHARLOTTE 1728 Barnes Avenue, New York City University 3-4881 CARUSO, AUDREY Sacramento 2-7639 1327 Lexington Avenue, New York City CASEY, AMELIA JUNE Electra Court, 81st Street. Jackson Heights, New York CASSELL, CHARLOTTE Hills Apartments. Larchmont York Sacramento 2-6951 CASSIDY, AGNES CECILIA 413 East 86th Street, New York City CASTAGNA, JOSEPHINE CHARLOTTE Gramercy 5-3609 234 East 19th Street, New York City CHASTENEY, ELEANOR JOSEPHINE Pleasantville 93 141 Beechwood Road. Summit. New Jersey CHOATE, ANNE HYDE Pleasantville, New York CHOMCHAK, OLGA EMILY 367 East 184th Street, New York City CHRISTENSEN, HELEN Congers Avenue, Congers, New York CHRISTENSEN, JULIA CAROLINE 34 Church Street, Chath am, New York CHRISTY, MARCELLE DALL 2067 Anthony Avenue, New York City CIMAGLIA, PHYLLIS RITA 934 Commonwealth Avenue, Newton, Massachusetts CLARK. DOROTHY ELIZABETH 217 Juniper Street, Quakertown, Pennsylvania CLIFFORD. BETTY ANN Wadsworth 3-4273 590 Fort Washington Avenue, New York City CLOHESSY, MARY KENNEDY 100 West Palm Lane, Phoenix, Arizona COBB, JEAN CANDLER Round Hill Road. Greenwich, Connecticut COFFIN, ELIZABETH SHEPHERD 96 Dayan Street. Lowville, New York Congers 26W Tremoni 2-20% 1938 1941 1939 1941 1940 1938 unc 1939 1940 1941 1941 1941 1941 1940 unc 1938 1941 1939 unc 1941 1941 COHEN. EDITH Oakwood 6517 25 Beekman Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York COLBETH, MARY ETHEL Washington Avenue, Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts COLEMAN, FREADA AUGUSTA 239 Saint Paul ' s Avenue, Stapleton, Staten Island, N. Y. COLEMAN. SHIRLEY MOREY 85 South Street, Middletown, New York COLLIER, VIVIEN MARY 1525 Bernard Street. Montreal, Canada COLODNY, DOROTHY LORRAINE 425 Riverside Drive, New York City COLSON, MARGARET LOUISE 180 Riverside Drive, New York City COMER, LOUISE MARION 320 Housatonic Avenue, Str Monument 2-3783 tford, Connecticut unc 1941 1940 1940 1940 COMMANDER. HELEN ROSE 558 78th Street, Brooklyn, New York CONNOLLY, ANNE ELIZABETH Edgecombe 4-8897 611 West 141st Street, New York City CORNWALL, ELIZABETH ALBRO Butterfield 8-5850 55 East 76th Street, New York City CORONA, AMELIA ELENA 138 East Noyes Boulevard, Sherrill, New York CORRIGAN, FAITH TURNBULL 1212 Fifth Avenue, New York City COSTELLO, JANE 640 Riverside Drive, New York City COTILLO, JEAN 1010 Kingsland Lane, Atwater 9-1606 Edgecombe 4-8486 isade, New Jersey COTTRELL, ANN 3105 West Grace Street, Richmond, Virginia COUGHLAN, CONSTANCE Pelham 1258 1071 Clay Avenue, Pelham, New York COULTER, EMMA Hawksworth. Greensburg, Pennsylvania COWELL, LEANORE HELLER (Mrs.) Wilson Point, South Norwalk, Connecticut COWLES, MARIAN TOMKINS Regent 4-0287 129 East 69th Street, New York City COX, ELBERTA MARSHALL 3553 Resor Place, Cincinnati, Ohio COX, MARGARET HELEN 73 Summit Road, Port Washington, New York unc COY, DOROTHY Monument 2-3402 110 Morningside Drive, New York City CRACHI, TERESA VICTORIA 233 Rockaway Avenue, Brooklyn, New York CRAIN, ELIZABETH 312 Nesha Road, Lexington, Kentucky CRAVENS, BETTY WENDOVER (Mrs.) 1307 West French Place, San Antonio, Texas CRAWFORD. EUGENIA ELISE 114 Pershing Avenue, Valley Stream, New York CRESCENZO, MARILOU 2407 Atlantic Avenue, Atlantic City, New Jersey CRESPO, LUTZ Wadsworth 7-8827 15 Fort Washington Avenue, New York City CREWS. MARJORIE ANNE Newton 9-7289 3753 87th Street, Jackson Heights, New York CROLLY. JUNE OBROCK 43 Barker Avenue. White Plains, New York 138 Maiden Form ' s NEW 0, Smart moderns are de- manding subtle pointed roundness of bosom. With customary Maiden Form genius, Chansonette at- tains this lovelier new sil- houette, in all possible beauty. This exquisite new brassiere also gives beau- tiful uplift and definite separation between the breasts. Made in various lovely fabrics — $1.00 and S1.50 There is a Maiden Form for Every Type of Figure! LJiitmj Mignmw style SOLD AT ALL LEADING STORES Reg. U. S. Pat. Off. K A S S I E (V. E S ' OMCt-OVIK tor free Foundation Booklet BM: Maiden Form Brassiere Co., Inc., New York, N. Y. Compliments of 1938 1940 1941 F R E E T E S T ENTER THE FIELD ARE YOU INTERESTED IN COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY? MODELLING? WE CAN HELP YOU s H O T Please arrange for an appointment ROXANE STUDIOS Photographers Society — Commercial 3 East 48th Street NEW YORK COVERS BINDING for the 1 93 9 MORTARBOARD Manufactured by NATIONAL PUBLISHING CO. Philadelphia, Pa. Manufacturers of De Luxe Superfinished Covers and Loose Leaf Products Clover-sweet and country fresh — the dis- tinctive flavor of this great milk has made it one of summer ' s favorite drinks. Try some today. You never tasted milk so good! Borden ' s Golden Crest TRY IT— WATCH ITS FLAVOR GET YOU! 1940 1941 1938 unc 1939 1939 1938 1938 1939 unc 1939 1938 unc 1939 1941 1940 1938 1941 1939 1940 1940 1940 unc 1938 unc 1939 1938 1940 CROPSEY, REGINA WINIFRED Congers 408R Congers, New York CROSS, ESTELLE NANCY Sacramento 2-4085 115 East 89th Street, New York City CRYSTAL, ISABEL MARY Plattsburg Barracks. Plattsburg, New York CUBBAGE, BETTY JEAN 1125 36th Street, Des Moines, Iowa CUMMINGS, BETTY ALICE 9 Edgar Street, East Orange, New Jersey CUMMINGS, RUTH MAE 43 Columbia Place, Mount Vernon, Ne Hillcrest 1494W t York CURTIN, HARRIET LOUISE Manhasset 712 202 Bayview Avenue, Manhasset, Long Island, New York CURTS, ELIZABETH HUTTON 634 East 27th Street, Paterson, New Jersey CUSTER, CATHARINE EGOLF 1021 West Main Street, Norristown, Pennsylvania DALTON, HONORA PATRICIA 34 West Main Street, Warren, Massachusetts DATTNER, SHIRLEY Trafalgar 4-3068 40 West 77th Street, New York City DAVENPORT, DOROTHY BLANCHE 247 East Main Street, Plymouth, Pennsylvania DAVIDOW. MARJORIE ANNE 40 Ridgeview Avenue, White Plains, New York DAVIES, ELSPETH VAUGHAN University 4-0131 39 Claremont Avenue, New York City DAVIS, FRANCES BIGELOW Bass River, Massachusetts DAVIS, JANET RUTH 574 West End Avenue, New York City DAVIS, MARGARET ELIZABETH 241 East King Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania DAVIS, MARJORIE SONYA Schuyler 4-4895 574 West End Avenue, New York City DAWSON. JACQUELINE 136 Audley Street. Kew Gardens, Long Island, New York DEAKMAN, ADA ELIZABETH 35-69 165th Street, Flushing, New York De BITETTO, ROSE MARY 23 East Oakley Avenue, White Plains, New York De BOEY, HELENA JOHANNA 2640 Victory Parkway, Cincinnati, Ohio DEGNAN, ALICE MARIE Westchester 7-7010 3261 Parsifal Place, New York Ci ty DELVY, GERTRUDE Manursing Lodge, Rye, New York DENCE, MARY LOUISE 917 West Seneca Turnpike, Onondaga Hill, New York DENGLER, ERNA EUGENIA 122 Essex Avenue, Montclair, New Jersey DENISH MILDRED TAYLOR (Mrs.) 254 Midwood Street, Brooklyn, New York DENNEEN, BARBARA ANNE Oak Neck Road, Babylon, New York DESHLER, JOSEPHINE VIRGINIA 13 Cooper Road, Scarsdale, New York 1941 1938 1938 1940 1941 1940 1941 1941 unc 1939 1940 1938 1941 1939 1940 1941 1941 1941 1941 1940 DEVEREUX MIGNON 419 East 57th Street, New York City Wisconsin 2-0021 unc 1939 1939 unc 1940 1941 1938 De VITO, ESTELLE ROSE Lehigh 4-3615 315 East 116th Street, New York City DEWIS, DORIS SEEN 293 Hamilton Avenue, Paterson, New Jersey DEYRUP, FELICIA JOHNSON 200 North Broadway, Nyack, New York DEYRUP, INGRITH JOHNSON 200 North Broadway, Nyack, New York DICK. JANE BLAIKIE 1409 North Madison Street, Rome, New York Rhinelander 4-4252 DINSMOOR. FRANCES ATHENAIS 9 East 77th Street, New York City DIRINGER, RENEE 103 Audley Street, Kew Gardens, Long Island, New York DJENEEF, TATIANA IVANOVNA Cathedral 5-3613 133 East 38th Street, New York City DODD, BETTY GOESCHEL Brooks Manor. Pleasantville, New York DOLLINGER, HELEN RUTH 1040 Park Place, Brooklyn, New York DONNA, CATHERINE ELIZABETH 67 Henry Avenue. Pittsfield, Massachusetts DONNA, MARGUERITE ANNE 67 Henry Avenue, Pittsfield, Massachusetts DOSH, EVELYN 11 South Lawn Avenue, Elmsford, New York DOWD, SHIRLEY CATHERINE 3431 71st Street, Jackson Heights, New York DOYLE, MURIEL PATRICIA 203 Cathedral Avenue, Hempstead, New York DRAPER, PATRICIA 40-11 165th Street, Flushing, New York DRIGGS, JEAN AUGUSTA 3325 Perry Avenue, New York City DRUMMOND, LORNA ANNE 110 Morningside Drive, New York City DRURY, ALICE NEWTON 14 Winchester Road, Newton, Massachusetts DUBROFF, FLORENCE 8344 Lefferts Boulevard, Kew Gardens, Long Island, N. Y. DUFFEY, VIRGINIA 353 West 57th Street, New York City DUNBAR, PHYLLIS MARGUERITE 215 Pennsylvania Avenue, Crestwood, New York DUNCOMBE, CAROLINE LOCKWOOD Pine Road. Briarcliff Manor, New York DUNHAM, SHIRLEY 82-16 34th Avenue, Jackson Height Columbus 5-6100 New York DUSENBERY. EDWINA De WITT 44 Morningside Drive, New York City DYKES, MARGARET VIVIAN Wadsworth 7-0069 920 Riverside Drive, New York City ECKERSON, HOPE BEATTY 280 Montross Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey ECKHOFF, ELEANOR KATHERINE Audubon 3-3951 603 West 140th Street, New York City EGERTON, ELEANORE AUGUSTA Fordham 4-1851 20 East 190th Street, New York City EGGERS, DOROTHEA CORNELIA 450 Riverside Drive, New York City Monument 2-4321 POT LUCK Printing today is a far cry from the days when it was just a matter of Pot Luck. Through the years, craftsmen have always striven to achieve better printing. Although the day of fine, but laborious, hand printing is over, the spirit of the craftsmen does not die. If, with the increasing demand for speed, fine books can no longer be printed by hand, it does not mean that fine printing will stop. It means, rather, that artisans and craftsmen will find another way to maintain the standards of their guild. The solution does not lie solely in machines that can cast more lines of type per hour, nor in presses that can print more pages per minute. The solution lies in machines in combination with skilled workers. LYON 147 PHILADEL Lyon and Armor were among the first to recognize this fact. And Lyon and Armor have supplied their personnel, all of them weaned on printer ' s ink, with the latest, most efficient, printing equipment. The result is printing of the finer sort ... at a speed in tempo with present day production. ARMOR, Inc. NORTH TENTH STREET PHI A PENNSYLVANIA 1940 EHRSAM. FLORA HELEN 513 Fifth Street, Mamaroneck, New York 1939 EIDE. CHRISTINE HELENE 42-11 208th Street, Bayside, Long Island, New York 1939 EISENBUD, GERTRUDE Monument 2-7210 445 Riverside Drive, New York City 1940 EISENMENGER, GRETA 159 Lorraine Avenue, Mount Vernon. New York 1940 EITELBACH, MARGARET DOROTHY 562 Winterhurn Grove, Grantwood, New Jersey 1940 EITINGON, ROSE Circle 6-2738 340 West 57th Street, New York City 1941 EKLUND, MARGARET MARY (Mrs.) University 4-4025 449 West 123rd Street, New York City 1938 ELDREDGE, ELIZABETH 17 Orchard Street, Auburn, New York 1940 ELLENBOGEN, SHIRLEY KAY Edgecombe 4-3105 615 West 148th Street, New York City unc ELLENSTEIN, MIRIAM 501 Highland Avenue, Newark, New Jersey 1939 ELLENSTEIN, RUTH 583 Parker Street, Newark, New Jersey 1938 ELLIOTT, CATHERINE MACPHERSON 2910 East Kenwood Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wisconsin 1939 ELLIOTT. CORNELIA THOMAS Watkins 5-2226 42 Commerce Street, New York City 1940 ELMES. PEGGY MARY ELIZABETH Stuyvesant 9-3554 1067 Fifth Avenue, New York City unc EMERY. PATRICIA COLBETH 112 Livingston Street, New Haven, Connecticut 1939 ENOS, MARY JANE 140-11 Ash Avenue, Flushing, New York unc ESHLEMAN, BARBARA BARR 25 Fox Meadow Road, Scarsdale, New York 1939 ESTE, ANITA Bayside 9-3137 302 Park Lane, Douglaston, New York 1941 EWALD, MAY ELIZABETH 38 Alder Street, Yonkers, New York F 1940 FABR1CANT. HELEN ANNE Academy 2-0137 230 West 105th Street, New York City unc FARJEON, GRACE MERN Stuyvesant 9-3038 1185 Park Avenue, New York City 1941 FARRIOR, FRANCES LEY 316 West 136th Street, New York City 1941 FAYE. EUNICE JOAN Endicott 2-8 ' :67 470 West End Avenue, New York City 1941 FENANDER, ELEANOR SUSAN 244 Bronxville Road, Bronxville, New York unc FENTON, MARION YATES 14 Judson Street, Larchmont, New York 1938 FERRER, ELVIRA MARIA Box 275, San Juan, Porto Rico 1941 FERRITTI, GRACE ROSAMOND 102 Tourraine Avenue, Port Chester, New York 1941 FERSTEN, RUBY Halifax 5-2758 2728 Sputen Duyvil Parkway, New York City unc FESSIA, CAROLINE 2 Fra ' Mario, Venezia, Italy 1939 FINIZIE. ROMA 53 Maplewood Avenue, Bridgeport, Connecticut unc FISHBAUGH, ERNESTINE LOUISE 324 South Rimpau Boulevard, Los Angeles, California 1940 FISKE, NATALIE PAGE Monument 2-4420 39 Claremont Avenue, New York City 1939 FLEMING, MARY LOUISE Stuyvesant 9-5869 Number 1 Lexington Avenue, New York City 1941 FLEMING, PAULINE ANGELA Cumberland 6-0796 141 Joralemon Street, Brooklyn, New York 1940 FLICKINGER, JANE ALFREDA 54 Garden Court, Eggertsville, New York 1940 FLORO, CONSTANCE 107 Park Street, Glens Falls, New York 1941 FLUHRER, KATHLEEN VIRGINIA Fordham 4-2078 2267 Andrews Avenue, New York City unc FLYNN, VERA EILEEN 37-54 75th Street, Jackson Heights, New York 1941 FOOTE, KATHERINE ANDREWS Washingtonsville, New York unc De FOREST, JUDITH 88 Appleton Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 1939 FRANK, NATALIE 512 West 162nd Street, New York City 1938 FRANKFURTER, RUTH LOUISE Cathedral 8-6339 425 Riverside Drive, New York City 1939 FRAZER, JANET ROGERS 481 Bedford Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 1940 FREAR, ELIZABETH BATES Plaza 8-2136 34 West 53rd Street, New York City unc FREEDMAN, FRANCES KATE Butterfield 8-6140 138 East 78th Street, New York City 1938 FREUDENHEIM, ALENE ELLA Academy 2-5973 290 Riverside Drive, New York City unc FRICK, MARTHA HOWARD Rosylyn, Long Island, New York G 1938 GABRIEL, MARGARET MARY 655 Tyler Place, West New York, New Jersey 1941 GABELEIN, ISABEL NANCY 114 Glen Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York 1940 GAINFORT, JEAN ENID 8527 104th Street, Richmond Hill, New York 1941 GANGEMI, ROSEMARIE ANNA 28 Davis Avenue, White Plains, New York 1941 CANS, ELEANOR HELEN Scarsdale 3973 31 Wynmor Road, Scarsdale, New York 1939 GARFINKEL, VIVIEN DOROTHY 706 Eastern Parkway. Brooklyn. New York unc GARSIDE, HELEN JOHNSON Sacramento 2-4565 1148 Fifth Avenue, New York City 1940 GARVIN. GEORGENA KINNE Wickersham 2-2588 300 Park Avenue, New York City 1940 GEER. HELEN HARTLEY Butterfield 8-8740 110 East 76th Street, New York City unc GEER, MARION FIRTH Atwater 9-7898 24 East 95th Street, New York City 1941 GERDTS, DOROTHY R. D. 2, Box 94, Kingston, New York 1941 GERDTS, EDNA MILLICENT R. D. 2, Box 94, Kingston, New York 1939 GERKEN, HENRIETTA RUTH Flushing 9-8892 3518 169th Street, Flushing, New York 1941 1941 1941 1939 1938 unc 1941 1938 1940 unc 1938 unc 1941 1940 1938 1941 1938 1940 1938 1939 1940 1939 1938 1940 1939 1940 1940 1938 1940 1941 GILLIES, SUE ADELE M. D. 14, Newburgh, New York GILMOUR, BEVERLEY Germonds Road, New Ci New York GINSBURG. ETHEL JUNE 65 Myrtle Avenue, North Plainfield, New Jersey GINSBURG, FLORA Furnace Deck Road, Peekskill York University 4-7660 GIRARDI, RUTH DOROTHY 191 Claremont Avenue, New York City De GIVE. MARY LEWIS Wieusa Road, Atlanta, Georgia GI VENTER, LOUISE OLGA 1220 49th Street, Brooklyn, New York GLADSTON, ELAINE PEARL 210 Riverside Drive. New York Ci GLEESING, ISABEL 117-04 85th Avenue. Richmond Hill, New York GLEESON, ROSAMUND ELSBETH Colchester, Connecticut Riverside 9-4969 GLUCK, CAROL WARNER 18 West 88th Street, New York City GODWIN, ENID LUCIE 801 5th Avenue Northwes Schuyler 4-2801 Manden, North Dakota Cathedral 8-5199 Sacramento 2-4516 7-3259 GOLANN, CECIL PAIGE 425 Riverside Drive, New York City GOLDMAN, BABETTE DAVIS 1155 Park Avenue, New York City GOLDMUNTZ, DORIS Susquehan 325 West End Avenue, New York City GOLDSTEIN, JANE LOUISE Endicott 2-8000 Hotel Bretton Hall, 86th Street and Broadway, New York City GOLDSTEIN, JEAN COSETTE 19 Avenue P, Brooklyn, New York GONSKI, HELEN CATHRYN 274 Broad Street, New Britain, Connecticut GOODRICH, JACQUELINE DOLORES University 4-2339 521 West 112;h Street, New York City GOODRICH, VIRGINIA SCOTT 1217 North Greenway Drive, Coral Gables, Florida GORDON, HELEN KATHERINE 618 76th Street, Brooklyn, New York GOTTLIEB, GRACE 25 East 86th Street, New York City GOTTLIEB, MILDRED MYRA 1865 University Avenue, New York City GOWEN, JANET WALLACE Woodland Avenue, Tarrytown, New York GRANT, MARGARET ADAMS Afton, New York GRAUER, ANNE de FOREST 34 West Lane, Bay Shore, New York At water 9-4893 Ludlow 7-0584 Tarrytown 2544 GRAVER, LUCIE JANE 111 Glen Avenue, Glen Rock, New Jersey Ridgewood 6-3063 ORA EH. RUTH ENGLEI5 111 Glen Avenue, Glen Rock, New Jersey Ridgewood 6-3063 GRAY, JULIA 67 Riverside Drive, New York City GRAY, LOUISE COPELAND 67 Riverside Drive, New York City Endicott 2-1726 Endicott 2-1726 unc GREEN, LOIS ELAINE 23 Rosewood Place, Elizabeth, New Jersey 1941 GREEN, OLGA SHIRLEY 2005 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Massachusetts 1941 GREENBAUM, JANE Schuyler 4-6694 215 West 91st Street, New York City 1940 GREENBERG, MARJORIE ELLENER Riverside 9-1228 60 West 96th Street, New York City 1940 GREENE, SHIRLEY ELSA Trafalgar 7-3329 321 West 78th Street, New York City unc GREGORY, RUTH ELIZABETH Weatherly, Pennsylvania 1940 GREVATT, GEORGIANNA SUTHERLAND 18 Christopher Street, Montclair, New Jersey 1940 GREVATT, MARGARETTA ELEANOR 18 Christopher Street, Montclair, New Jersey 1939 GRILLO, ROSE ANNA Newtown 9-8984 3213 79th Street, Jackson Heights, New York 1938 GRUSHLAW, BARBARA Schuyler 4-1648 271 Central Park West, New York City 1939 GUY, SUSAN PRESTON 71 2nd Street, Weehawken, New Jersey lisade 6-3283 1938 1938 1940 1939 1941 1941 1939 1938 1939 unc 1938 1939 1941 1941 HADDEN, CHARLOTTE LESLIE Cold Spring Harbor, New York HADLEY, ROBERTA AISBROW 1078 Madison Avenue, New York City HADRA, PHYLLIS EIKEL 4319 Glenwood Street, Dallas, Texas Sutterfield 8-3121 5utterfield 8-7870 Atwater 5-7283 HAGAN, MARY FRANCES 89 87th Street, Brooklyn, New York HAGEMAN, SHIRLEY CAMIER Hackensack 2-3076J 244 Oakwood Avenue, Bogota, New Jersey HAGMOE, EVELYN DEAN 4431 Wallingford Avenue, Seattle, Washington HALL, CHARLOTTE BATES Lakeville, Connecticut HALL, HARRIET HOLMES 209 North Fourth Street, Saint Brainerd, Minnesota HALL, VIRGINIA 3 Morris Street, Freehold. Nev Jersey HALLE, RUTH 225 West 86th Street, New York City HALLER, ANNALOUISE 143 New Haven Avenue, Milford, Connecticut Trafalgar 7-0831 HALLIGAN, WINIFRED VIRGINIA Navarre 8-9817 2705 Avenue K, Brooklyn, New York HALLOCK, HARRIET LOUISE 160 Park Street, Montclair, New Jersey HALPER, VERA LILLIAN Far Rockaway 7-6426 2382 Bayswater Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York HALPERT, MARION ELLEN Endicott 2-7278 530 West End Avenue, New York City HALSTEAD, JEANETTE LOUISE Manhattan 4-5843 184 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, New York HAMMER, ELLEN JAY 18 Ludlam Place, Brooklyn, New York HANNAN, FRANCES MARGARET 109 Ashland Avenue, Buffalo. New York Intervale 2-5549 Over Thirty Years of Superior Quality and Service APEDA STUDIO, Inc. Apeda Building, 212-216 W. 48th St. New York City Circle 6-0790 APEDA SERVES MORE SCHOOLS IN NEW JERSEY AND RENEWS A HIGHER PERCENTAGE OF CON- TRACTS ANNUALLY THAN ANY OTHER STUDIO. OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHERS TO 1938 SCARLET LETTER 1940 1938 1940 1940 1941 1938 1941 1941 1941 unc unt- une 1938 1938 1940 1939 1941 1938 1940 1938 1938 1938 1938 1939 1940 unc 1939 1941 1939 unc HARDING, SONJA INGEBORG 24 Summit Street, East Orange, New Jersey HARLIN, HARRIET EMILY 413 18th Street, West New York. New Jersey HAROUTUNIAN, MARITM Teaneck 7-4877M 50 Amsterdam Avenue, West Englewood, New Jersey HARPEL, ELIZABETH MARIE 1645 Garfield Street, Denver. Colorado HARRIS. ELIZABETH REISS Cedarhurst 7285 1109 McNeil Avenue, Lawrence, Long Island, New York HARRIS. JANE ELIZABETH 214 Walter Avenue, Hasbrook Heights. New Jersey HARRISON, EVELYN BYRD 3414 Carolina Avenue, Richmond, Virginia HARVILL, ELEANOR KOROTKY 58 Caroline Avenue, Yonkers, New York Intervale 9-1496 Monument 2-7100 HARWICH, MARJORIE DIANE 1221 Hoe Avenue, New York City HASKELL, HELEN MAY 99 Claremont Avenue, New York City HAWKE. JANET ANDERSON 3240 Rochester Street, Detroit. Michigan HAYDOCK, ANN VAN EPS Butterfield 8-4560 194 East End Avenue, New York City HAYES, MARY BEATRICE Humboldt 3-3603 60 Tiffany Boulevard, Newark, New Jersey HAYES, VIRGINIA ELLEN Union 7-9450 644 Boulevard East, Weehawken. New Jersey HEALY, EVELYN MAY Yonkers 8320 35 Wendover Road, Yonkers. New York HEALY. MARJORIE ROBERTSON Oradel 18-1371 860 Bogert Road, River Edge, New Jersey HEATLEY. DORIS RUTH Hackensack 2-4303W 446 Larck Avenue, Bagota, New Jersey HEIDE, ELEANOR MARIE Kingsbridge 2035 Indian Road, Fieldston, New York City HEIMANN, SUSANNE Halifax 5-0996 3536 Cambridge Avenue, New York City HEIMROD, CLAIRE LOUISE Great Neck 3918 26 Nirvana Avenue, Great Neck, Long Island, New York HEINEMAN, HARRIET PEARL Oakwood 0991 55 Stuyvesant Plaza, Mount Vernon, New York HE1TZMANN, MARGARET MAY 417 Riverside Drive, New York City HELLMAN, MARION 49 Merrall Road, Far Rockaway, New York HENKE, MARIE AUGUSTA Academy 4-4262 306 West 98th Street, New York City HENLE, FAY EVELYN Endicott 2 -5226 239 Central Park West, New York City HENRICH, DORIS ADELAIDE Susquehanna 7-8640 151 West 74th Street, New York City HERSHFIELD, RUTH 8559 151st Street, Jamaica, New York HESSINGER, WINIFRED RUTH Callicoon Center, New York HEUSER, MARY LAURA Endicott 4-2699 526 West 150th Street, New York City HICKS, JACQUELINE PENDELTON 637 Tremont Street, Westfield, New Jersey 1938 1941 1939 1941 1938 unc 1940 1940 unc 1940 1941 1939 1938 1938 1939 1940 unc 1941 1940 unc unc 1939 1939 unc 1941 1939 Marble 7-0609 Endicott 4-3168 Academy 4-1983 HICKS, MARJORIE ROSE 121 West 227th Street, New York City HIEBER. INGE DORIS 611 West 148th Street, New York City HILDENBRAND, ELAINE Kingsbridge 6-6757 3820 Waldo Avenue, Riverdale, New York City HILL. MARIORIE BEARDSLEY Wadsworth 3-3562 540 Fort Washington Avenue, New York City HIRSCH. HELEN BABETTE 241 Central Park West, New York City HITCHCOCK. CATHARINE MINOR 310 East 44th Street, New York City HITZTE, CANDIS HAI L 4 East 94th Street, New York City HOBSON, GLADYS MURIEL 707 Yonkers Avenue, Yonkers, New York HOCHBERG, ANNETTE 500 West End Avenue, New York City HODGMAN. NANETTE 137 East 55th Street, New York City HOERR. JANICE LOUISE 49 Claremont Avenue, New York City HOFFMAN, ALICE REGINA 246 West Side Avenue, Hagerstown, Maryland HOLDEN, PHEBE 17 Midland Avenue, White Plains, New York HOLLANDER, JEAN 38 Crestmont Avenue, Yonkers, New York HOLMSEN, RYEN CLARA Union 7-0055J 311 38th Street, Union City. New Jersey Atwater 9 6183 Yonkers 5975 Endicott 2-8172 Wickersham 2-4793 Monument 2-2476 IIOLTZMAN, EDNA LEE Tremont 2-5108 1692 Grand Avenue, Bronx, New York HOOLE. EVELYN MARY Bronxville 1088 107 Cassilis Avenue, Bronxville, New York HORNBECK. BARBARA CAMERON 567 North Liberty Street, Newburgh, New York HORSLEY, KATHERINE MAYDELL 2821 Carter Street, Fort Worth, Texas HOUGHTALING, CHARLOTTE STIMPSON Irving Avenue, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey HOUK, MABEL HOOD R. No. 1, Concord, Tennessee HOVELL, MYRTLE BELLE Old Greenwich 7-0302 406 Sound Beach Avenue, Old Greenwich, Connecticut HOYT, JANE MARIE Washington Heights 7-4042 23 Haven Avenue, New York City HOYT, ROSALIE CHASE Regent 7-4143 222 East 61st Street, New York City HUBBARD, EVELYN WILLIS Monument 2-0618 49 Claremont Avenue, New York City HUDSON, ELEANOR LOUISE 440 Riverside Drive, New York City HUEBNER, ANITA KATHRYN 857 Paulding Street, Peekskill, New York HUGHES, FLORENCE 2400 North Washington Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania HULL, MARGARET CALLENDER Manhattan 4-2995 257 Hicks Street, Brooklyn. New York HURST, CAROLYN De WITT 611 Cedar Lane, Teaneck, New Jersey Teaneck 6-3231 1939 HUSTED, MARGARET 1920 Loring Place, New York City 1941 ILLINEWORTH, PATRICIA MARY Bayside 9-5948M 210-42 26th Avenue, Bayside, New York 1938 INSCHO, RUTH ELAINE Academy 2-5563 240 West 98th Street, New York City 1941 ISAACS, BETTY JEANNE Academy 4-1700 310 Riverside Drive, New York City 1941 IVES, PRISCILLA 11 Fairview Avenue, Danbury, Connecticut 1938 IVES, SARAH BURTON 11 Fairview Avenue, Danbury. Connecticut 1939 1940 1941 1938 1940 1938 1938 1941 1941 1941 1941 1940 1940 1939 1938 unc 1938 1939 JACKSON. ELIZABETH ANN President 4-4759 952 Saint Marks Avenue, Brooklyn, New York JACKSON, WILVIE Washington Heights 3-4253 660 West 180th Street, New York City JACOBSON. BABETTE ALPERN Englewood 3-0720J 131 Park Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey JACOBY. MARY SCULL Wisconsin 2-4100 299 Park Avenue, New York City JAFFIN. HELENE BEATRICE Delaware 3-3637 41 Emory Street, Jersey City, New Jersey JAMESON, MARGARET MANSFIELD Nevins 8-3469 37 South Portland Avenue, Brooklyn, New York JEFFERSON. HELEN 1000 Glendon Avenue, Easton, Pennsylvania JENSEN, GYDA KATHRINE 16 Maker Avenue, Greenwich. Connecticut JOHNS. LOUISE 3956 48th Street, Long Island City, Stillwell 4-1055 New York JOHNSON, CALISTA ANN 550 West 153rd Street, New York City JOHNSON, CHARLOTTE BUEL Hamilton 4664W 28 Woodbine Avenue, New Rochelle, New York JOHNSON, ELEANOR Mansfield 6-6875 608 East 17th Street, Brooklyn, New York JOHNSON. JUDITH SLOAT Sloatsburg, New York JOHNSTON. DOROTHEA MARION Glenmore 2-7325 266 Covert Street, Brooklyn, New York JOHNSTON, JEAN LUCILLE 1325 Pacific Street, Brooklyn, New York JOHNSTON. ROSALIND 616 East Lincoln Avenue, Moun Nevins 8-3327 t Vernon, New York York Closter 825W JONES, EDNA MAE 42 Boone Street, Yonkers, New JONES, ELIZABETH Love Lane, Closter, New Jersey JORDAN, ELIZABETH LAURA 6657 Limekiln Pike, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania JORDAN, GERTRUDE Bergen 3-3267R 270 Harrison Avenue. Jersey City, New Jersey KANDER, CAROL 123 Wyoming Avenue, South Orange, New Jersey KAPHAN, DORIS JEANNE Far Rockaway 7-1742 2454 Collier Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York 1939 1941 1939 1940 KEITH. DOROTHY MARIE K ASS ELL. PAULA SALLY 128 Lawton Street, Yonkers Yonker- 9260 York 1941 KALLMAN. EMILIE 815 Park Avenue, New York City -lander 1-3835 unc 1938 1933 1940 1938 1938 1940 1938 1941 1940 unc 1941 1940 1938 1938 1941 1939 1938 1938 1940 1941 unc 1940 1941 1941 1938 45 Saint Johns Place, Westport, Connecticut Ontar Westport 3092 KEITH. KATHLEEN BEVERLY 101 Wells Hill Avenue, Toront KELLEY. JEANNE OLIVER 27 East 67th Street, New York City KENNEDY, HARRIET ELIZABETH 15 Colonial Circle, Buffalo, New York Canada Regent 4-8461 KENT, ANN JOYCE 125 Riverside Drive, New York City KING. ADELAIDE JOSEPHINE 502 Park Avenue. New York City Susquehanna 7-4678 KING, AGNES 10 Church Street. Jradford, Rb Lynb KING. JANE SMITH 97 Birley Heath, Lynbrook, New York KING, MARGARET TRACY Flushing 9-2649W 40-37 157th Street, Flushing, New York KING, MARGUERITE NELSON Buckminster 4-3837 37 Rutland Road, Brooklyn. New York KING, SYBIL LEWIS Irvington-on-Hudson, New York KINPORTS. ELIZABETH VAIL 422 Monmouth Avenue, Spring Lake. New Jersey K1RWAN, DOROTHY MARIE Fairbanks 4-2942 4435 Murdock Avenue, New York City KITENPLON, LORRAINE MAE 303 Lawndale Avenue, Aurora, Illinois KLEEMAN, ELIZABETH MORRIS Monument 2-5957 600 West 116th Street, New York City KLEEMAN, FRANCES ALICE Monument 2-5957 600 West 116th Street, New York City KLIEMAND, ALICE VIRGINIA Washington 3-6506 452 Fort Washington Avenue, New York City KLINE, MARJORIE SHIRLEY 400 Douglas Avenue, Elgin. Illinois KNAPP, HELEN LOUISE - R. D. 1. Afton, New York KNEELAND, CATHARINE SILSBY Richmond Hill 2-4888 118-17 Saint Anne ' s Avenue, Kew Gardens, New York KOBBE, SUSAN METCALFE Monument 2-0487 411 West 114th Street, New York City KOENIG, ELIZABETH DOROTHY Atwater 9-4486 137 East 94th Street, New York City KORN. MARJORIE RUTH Trafalgar 7-0623 101 Central Park West, New York City KOTZIAN, FLORENCE EVELYN 17 Calhoun Avenue. New Rochelle. New York KRANZ, JEAN Dobbs Ferry 138W 36 Shady Lane, Dobbs Ferry, New York KRAUTH, ADORA JUNE 71 Winding W ay, West Orange, New Jersey KRBECEK. ALICE BARBARA Rhinelander 4-3554 219 East 72nd Street, New York City 1940 1940 1940 1938 UI1C 1941 1939 1938 KRBECEK, AMY LOUISE Rhinelander 4-3554 219 East 72nd Street, New York City KREBS, LUCILLE MABEL Virginia 7-5786W 8553 88th Street. Woodhaven. New York KREHBIEL. MARTHA Dobbs Ferry 1800, Ext. 19 1 Pryer Place, New Rochelle, New York KREMER, ANNE ELLIOTT 286 Collins Street, Hartford. Connecticut Academy 2-4994 1941 1941 1940 1938 1938 1939 1940 1941 1938 1941 1941 1939 1939 1941 1939 unc 1941 1938 1940 KREMER. TOUSSTA 610 West 110th Street, New York City KRIEGER. EVELYN 509 West 121st Street, New York City KUFFLER. JUNE Riverside 9-4205 350 Central Park West. New York City KUTSCHERA, MARGUERITE Shore Road 8-8255 7617 6th Avenue. Brooklyn, New York LABOVISSE. ELIZABETH CLARK Regent 4-4746 246 East 68th Street, New York City LAIDLAW, CYNTHIA 209 Northheld Avenue, West Orange, New Jersey LAMBDIN, PATRICIA VIVIAN 58 De Forest Avenue. Summit, New Jersey LANDAU. ANN ESTELLE Wadsworth 3-3389 565 West 169th Street. New York City LANDESMAN, RUTH HELEN Academy 2-8988 885 West End Avenue, New York City LANGE. HELEN BONSTELLE 157 Harrington Street, Bergenfield, New Jersey LARASH, ESTHER CHRISTINE 408 Union Avenue, Westhaven, Connecticut LARNED, LESLIE FULLER 135 East 94th Street, New York City LATTMAN, JOY AUGUSTA 1225 Park Avenue, New York City Atwater 9-1331 Atwater 9-6143 LAWLER, HELEN CLAIRE 336 West 246th Street, Riverda Kingsbridge 6-6872 New York LAWLOR, MARY ELIZABETH Foxcroft 9-1309 726 Halsey Street, Brooklyn, New York LAWRENCE. MARTHA FERGUSON Teaneck 7-2980W 1357 Princeton Road, West Englewood, New Jersey LAWSON, MARJORIE VIOLETTE Independence 3-5318 154-50 13th Avenue, Beechhurst, New York LAZARE, DIANE Susquehanna 7-4864 211 Central Park West, New York City LEAHY, MARY ELIZABETH 446 Second Avenue, Albany, New York LEAHY, MARJORIE Oakwood 6829 30 Central Parkway, Mount Vernon, New York LEARY, ETHEL WHITAKER 133 68th Street, Brooklyn, New York LEEBRICK, HARRIET CHARLENE 142 Argonne Street, Long Beach, California LEFFLER, ADELA 3444 Knox Place, New York City LENERT, JUDITH 101 West 80th Street, New York City LETSKY, NAOMI MIRRIAM Morris, Connecticut Olinville 2-1036 Endicott 2-3678 1938 1939 1939 1938 1939 1938 1938 unc 1940 1941 1941 1938 1938 1939 1938 1941 1939 unc 1940 1938 LEVINE. ETHEL 272 West 90th Street, New York City LEVISON. ELEANOR JEANNE 50 East 77th Street, New York City LEVITTAN, SHIRLEY RUTH 2724 Avenue I, Brooklyn, New York LEVY, SYBYL HERSHFIELD 1120 Park Avenue, New York City LEWIS, RUTH ADELAIDE Schuyler 4-2459 Rhinelander 4-7125 Esplanade 7-4068 Atwater 9-8956 Orange 5-7416 67 Glenwood Avenue, East Orange, New Jersey LIBMAN, JEAN Riverside 9-1238 43 West 93rd Street, New York City LICHTENBERG, EVELYN SPEYER Academy 2-5986 905 West End Avenue, New York City Rhinelander 4-3356 LIEBMAN. MARGARET HARRIET 907 Fifth Avenue, New York City LILLING. ETHEL President 3-2994 377 Montgomery Street, Brooklyn, New York Columbus 5-6100 LIMBERG. EUGENIE LOUISE 404 East 17th Street, Austin, Texas LIMBERG. KATHRYN 395 Allaire Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey LINN, MARION DOROTHY Monument 2-4800 106 Morningside Drive, New York City LIPPINCOTT, MARION ANDREE Shrub Oak, New York LIVINGSTON, ALIDA SCHUYLER Atwater 9-3892 1435 Lexington Avenue, New York City LOGAN. MARGUERITE LUEZ Eldorado 5-1883 423 East 52nd Street, New York City LOMB, CONSTANCE ELIZABETH Rhinelander 4-4358 133 East 80th Street, New York City LOMB, EMILY CAROLYN Rhinelander 4-4358 133 East 80th Street, New York City LONG, ALICE LOUISE 173 Main Street, Lisbon, New Hampshire LONG, HELEN LAURA 173 Main Street, Lisbon, New Hampshire LONGSTRETH, BARBARA ANNE Dove Mill House, Haverford, Pennsylvania LOOPUIT, EILEEN FLORENCE Franklin 729 41 Neptune Avenue, Woodmere, Long Island LUTTON, DORIS 34-49 79th Street, Jackson Heights, Long Island, N. Y. McCANN, BARBARA EVELYN 111-31 Devon Place, Forest Hills Boulevard 8-8076 New York unc McCANN, HELEN MARY 1631 Oneida Street, Utica. New York unc McCLUNG, MARY CHARLOTTE 618 East Walnut Street, Springfield, Missouri unc McDOUGALD, WINIFRED ALICE Ellerslie. Wallington, Surrey, England 1938 McELVENEY, RUTH MARIE 2965 Marion Avenue, New York City 1938 McGLEUGHLIN, JEAN 16 Burbury Lane, Great Neck, New York 1941 McGOVERN, MARION FRANCES White Plains 1643J 98 Alexander Avenue, White Plains, New York 1940 1940 1939 1938 unc 1941 1938 unc 1939 1938 1940 1941 1938 1940 1933 1940 1941 1938 1940 1941 unc 1940 1940 1940 1939 1938 1938 1941 McGUINESS, KATHARINE HUGHES Bergen 3-9536 134 Clendenny Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey Mcknight, margaret stayer 7410 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn, New York McLAIN, NANCY 58 East 79th Street, New York City McMENAMIN, ELISABETH JENNINGS 725 Quincy Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania McPOLAN. CATHERINE 4336 Edmondson, Dallas, Texas MAACK, LOUISE MARGUERITE 40 Durrell Street, Verona, New Jersey MacEACHERN. VIRGINIA LOUISE Boulevard 8-3424 6942 Harrow Street, Forest Hills. New York MacFADDEN, BEVERLY Sacramento 2-8476 406 Linden Avenue, Englewood, New Jersey MACKIE, FLORENCE ADELINE 7807 19th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York MACOMBER, JOSEPHINE MARY South Orange 2-5948 116 Turrell Avenue, South Orange, New Jersey MADDEN, PEGGIE ANNE 45 Eton Street, Springfield. Massachusetts MADLER, IRENE SOPHIE 47 Baldwin Place, Belleville, New Jersey MAGARGAL. MARIAN FLORENCE Spring House. Pennsylvania MAINZER, ETHEL MARIE 3429 80th Street. Jackson Heights, New York MALLEY. ELSIE LOUISE 128 Hudson Avenue, Haverstraw. Haverstraw 2016 New York MALONEY, MARY COOPER 177 Summit Avenue, Phillipsburg, New Jersey MANN. PHYLLIS RICHMAN Monument 2-6725 160 Claremont Avenue, New York City MANSFIELD, RUTH STANTON 78 Briggs Avenue, Yonkers, New York MANTELL, JANE RUTH 780 West End Avenue, New York City MARCELLUS, ALICE DEAN 136 Union Avenue, Manasquan, New Jer: MARCY, MILDRED K ESTER (Mrs.) 540 West 123rd Street. New York City MARESCA. GRACE MARIE 132-37 57th Avenue, Flushing, New York MARGOLIES, MIRIAM ANNE 1915 Walton Avenue, Bronx, New York MARGULIES, PHYLLIS HOPE Susquehan 473 West End Avenue, New York City MARSH, LESLIE GRANT Hunterhrook Road, Peekskill, New York MARSHALL. CHARLOTTE CAROLINE 43 Orchard Street, Norwalk. Connecticut MARTINSON, JANE ELIZABETH 429 North Avenue 54, Los Angeles, California Academy 2-0535 Flushing 9-6169 Tremont 2-4136 7-5874 dk 2584 MARVIN. DIANA VAUGHAN 40 East 76th Street, New York Cin MASSAM. DORIS W1LLETTE 158 Central Avenue. Baldwin, New York Butterfield 8-33 33 MAYBERRY, VERNA RENA .Mount Hermon, Massachusett 1940 1939 1940 1941 1939 unc 1938 1940 1938 1939 1940 1938 1931 1938 1940 1939 1939 1938 1941 1938 1938 unc 1941 1940 1933 1940 1939 Butterfield 8-8106 MEDING, ANNE DOUGLAS 875 Park Avenue, New York City MEEKER. MARCHIA LOIS Box 1390, Santa Fe. New Mexico MEENAN, CATHARINE MARIE Larchmont 1497 83 North Chatsworth Avenue, Larchmont, New York MEHRTENS, MARJORIE AUGUSTA 514 Koscinsko Street, Brooklyn. New York MEIXEL, MARIE THERESA 40-47 Ithaca Street, Elmhurst, New York MENDELSON, ANN Schuyler 4-1096 123 West 87th Street. New York City MERRILL. JANE MARGARET Navarre 8-4692 1061 East 32nd Street, Brooklyn, New York MESIER, MARY TELEKI 1319 Belleview Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey MEYER. FRANCES ELIZABETH 128 Saint Andrews Lane, Glen Cove, New York MEYER, JEAN CECILE Shandaken, New York MEYER. SARA MAXINE Sterling 3-3161 250 Underhill Avenue, Brooklyn, New York MIDONICK. VIVIAN 333 West 86th Street, Nev York City MIESSE, MARIE LUCILLE Buckmin 1809 Beverley Road. Brooklyn. New York Schuyler 4-5380 4-1913 MILES. LAURA NEWELL 46 Wootton Road, Essex Falls, Ne Caldwel Jersey 6-1812 MILLAR. V IRGINIA HOLLINGWORTH Sacramento 2-6651 1100 Park Avenue. New York Citv .MILLER. CLAIRE GLADYS 139 Parker Avenue, Easton, Pennsylvani MILLER. ELIZABETH LI FBERRY I niversity 4-6670 501 West 113th Street, New York City MILLER, GLADYS SYLVIA 111 Morris Street, Yonkers, Ne MILLER, SARA JANET 304 Green Street. Connellsville, PennsvK MH MAN, ANNE 126 Westminster Road. Brooklyn, Ne Buckmi w York Ml I. MAN. DORIS Buckmi 126 Westminster Road. Brooklyn. New York M ' NTZ RHOD v LUCILLE ' 115 Central Park West, New York City M ' TCHELL. JANET 140 Pine Street. Aurora. New York MOELLER, ESTHER LOUISE 8 Allport Place, New Hartford. New York MOLLESON. JANET 3447 80th Street, Jacks er 2-6472 er 2-6472 Trafalgar 7-3543 Heights, Long Island Endic. MOLLESON. MARY VIRGINIA 314 West 71st Street. New York City MONROE. PEGGY 2115 D ' tmas Avenue. Brooklyn. New York MOORHEAD, JEAN GRAHAM 125 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, New York MORGAN, DOROTHY ANN 35 Henry Street. Palisades Park. New Jersey N. Y. t 2-8436 MORLEY, GRACE CLARK 2787 Boulevard, Jersey City, Journal Square 2-2358 Jersey 1941 1939 1941 1941 1938 1940 1940 1941 1939 unc 1938 1938 1940 unc 1940 1940 unc 1940 unc 1939 1941 unc 1939 1940 1939 1938 1940 1938 MOROZ, ALICE 320 Corlandt Street. Belleville, New Jersey MORRIS, JEAN ANN Hollis 5-7204 9215 218th Place, Queens Village. New York MORROW, KATHERINE 56 Sherman Avenue, Glen Ridge, New Jersey MOSCATO. MARION HELEN Wadsworth 7-0122 20 South Walnut Street, Beacon, New York MOTT-SMITH. ANNE Box 395, Honolulu, He MOUNTFORD. DOROTHY BARTLETT 212-04 38th Avenue, Bayside, Long Island, New York MLIESER, MARIAN RUTH Halifax 5-1429 3800 Cannon Place, Bronx, New York MULL, VIRGINIA 2300 Broadway, Great Bend, Kansas MULLER, ELIZABETH MARIE University 4-1430 450 Riverside Drive, New York City MUNROE, GRETEL ZINSSER Stuyvesant 9-7843 One Lexington Avenue, New York City MURPHY, ADELAIDE EDITH 776 East 34th Street, Brooklyn, New York MURRAY, CLAIRE WINIFRED 3004 Atlantic Avenue. Atlantic City, New Jersey MYERS. DORIS URWIN 638 Luzerne Street, Johnstown, Pennsylvani NACHEVA, SVETLANA BOYANOVA 142 Rakovska Street, Sofia, Bulgaria NAGEL, ELVIRA EMILY 220 Fulton Terrace, Cliffside, New Jersey NAGEL, MARIE 425 Riverside Drive, New York City NANKIVEL. MARY 433 Broad Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey NEEDHAM, DOROTHY TAYLOR 2610 94th Street, Jackson Heights, New York NELSEN, LORRAINE ANNE 73 Huron Road, Tuckahoe, New York Tuckahoe 6123 Regent 7-3603 NESBITT. LILLIAN EMMA 520 East 86th Street, New York City NETTLETON, MARJORIE ELIZABETH 58 Blakeman Place, Stratford, Connecticut NEWKOM, ELIZABETH HOPE Main 4-1144 200 Clinton Street, Brooklyn, New York NEWMAN. MARJORIE ANNE 3282 Hull Avenue, Bronx, New York City NICHOLS, VIRGINIA FRANKLYN Lynbrook 3462 390 Union Avenue, Hewlett, Long Island, New York NICHOLAYSEN, KATHLEEN AUGUSTA 114 South Washington Avenue, Dunellen, New Jersey NOETHEN, MERLE JOSEPHINE 2788 Morris Avenue, New York City NORRIS, MARIANNA ELISE 225 West 232nd Street, New York City NYLUND, VALMA JULIA 840 Grand Concourse, New York City Halifax 5-1205 1940 1939 1938 1938 1940 1941 1941 1940 1941 1933 1939 1939 sp 1939 1938 unc 1941 1941 1940 1941 O ' BRIEN. ANNETTE EMMA Rutherford 2-6378 27 Walnut Street, Rutherford, New Jersey OLDOERP, DOROTHEA HELENE Rich Hill 2-8244W 8406 104th Street, Rich Hill, Long Island, New York OLIVER, ELMA ISABELLE Troy Hills, Boonton, New Jersey O ' MEARA. EILEEN MARION Stillwell 4-5688 3952 47th Street, Long Island City, New York ORTMAN, VITA 315 Central Park West, New York City OSBORNE, ELINOR Englewood 3-2958 17 Park Street, Tenafly, New Jersey Academy 4-4338 OSCARD, FIFI 782 West End Avenue, New York City OSTROMISLENSKY, TATIANA IVANOVNA Audubon 3-7856 605 West 141st Street. New York City OSTRUK. LIBUSE Nepperhan 1377 1178 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New York OTTMAN, VIVIAN Church Street, Cherry Valley, New York OWEN, HELEN RUDD Trafalgar 4-3138 7 West 81st Street, New York City PAGE, MARJORIE PARNELIA 34 West 38th Street, New York City PANGALOS, DORYYA MICHEL 114 West 61st Street, New York City 1940 PARDEE, MARGARET SCHISFFELIN Rhinelander 4-7363 133 East 80th Street, New York City PARK, ELIZABETH DELAMATER Ingersol 2-1262 303 Fenimore Street, Brooklyn, New York PARUTA, VIVIAN 51 Market Street, Paterson, New Jersey Sherwood 2-2628 PAUL. JEANNE 1792 West 11th Street, Beachview 2-0995 aklyn, New York PAUL, SARA JEAN Mamaroneck 3630 1419 Sigsbee Street, Grand Rapids, Michigan PAULEY, HARRIET RUTH 1003 North Burlington, Hastings, Nebraska PELL, ANNE De WITT Regent 4-6279 140 East 62nd Street, New York City PELLETIER, HELEN GRANT 1601 Jay Street, Ogdensburg, New York PENDOLA, CATHERINE Cumberland 6-9616 332 Union Street, Brooklyn, New York PENNELL, MARGUERITE South Branch 2-1064 111 Oakview Avenue, Maplewood, New Jersey PEPPER. EUGENIA KENDALL Eng lewood 3-5225M 265 Starling Road, Englewood, New Jersey PETERSON, ALICE ANNE Cloverdale 8-3856 3102 Avenue I, Brooklyn, New York PETERSON, VIOLA ELEANOR Saint George 7-3305 90 Fingerboard Road. Rosebank, Staten Island, N. Y. PETTEY, MARY ELIZABETH Edgewater 4-9881 336 Mansion Avenue, Audubon, New Jersey uric 1939 1939 une 1941 unc 1941 1939 1941 1940 unc 1938 1940 1941 1938 1939 1940 1941 1941 1939 1941 1939 1940 PETTUS, IRENE 23 Braeburn Drive, Saint Louis, Missouri PFIFFERLING. LUCILLE JAY Virginia 7-7361 107 Onslow Place, Kew Gardens, New York PHILLIPSON, CHARLOTTE BRAINERD 440 Riverside Drive, New York City PIERCE, BEVERLY Pelham 3412 4579 Boston Post Road, Pelham Manor, New York Foxcroft 9-5272 PIERCE, DOROTHY ALMA 1425 Broadway. Brooklyn, New York PILENCO, MARIANNE ANTONIA 4 Place de La Porte de Baguolet, Paris, France POLAN, JOSEPHINE 910 13th Avenue. Huntington, Virginia PONCHELET, ARA JEANNE Audubon 3-1844 570 West 156th Street. New York City PORTER, MARY CAROLYN Nightingale 4-3577 1682 Kenmore Place, Brooklyn, New York PORTER, REEVA BARBARA 54 Stearns Road, Brookline, Massachusetts POTTER, HARMONA ROMEYN 150 Scarborough Street. Hartford, Connecticut PRATT, ELIZABETH ANNE Monument 2-2868 507 West 113th Street, New York City PRATT, MARION SPENCER Nevins 8-5878 126 McDonough Street, Brooklyn, New York PRATT, MARY WINTHROP 620 West 116th Street. New York City PREEN, EMILIE MARGARET 9 Commonwealth Avenue, Newark, New Jersey PREIS, DOROTHY JEANETTE 110 Roosevelt Place, Atlantic City, New Jersey PREUSCH, LOUISE CATHRINE 53-20 94th Street, Elmhurst, New York PRICE, ELIZABETH Ridgewood 6-1774W 135 Washington Place, Ridgewood, New Jersey PRIEST, DOLORES ALITHEA 40 East Pearl Street, Nashua, New Hampshire PRINGLE, ISABEL VALERE Wadsworth 3-2058 125 Northern Avenue, New York City PROCHASKA. DORIS MAE 227 Cypress Avenue, Bogota, New Jersey PROSSER, MARY ELIZABETH Buckminster 2-4430 250 Lincoln Road, Brooklyn. New York Wadsworth 3-5333 1938 1940 PUGH, NANSI MARY 598 West 191st Street, New York City QUINN, DOROTHY ANN Fordham 4-5383 2312 Loring Place, New York City RAEBECK, HELEN President 4-6423 711 Saint Marks Avenue, Brooklyn, New York RAGNO, MARY THERESA 2545 Cruger Avenue, New York City 1939 1941 1939 unc 1939 1939 1941 1938 1939 1938 1939 1938 1938 1939 1941 1938 1938 1940 1940 RAISBECK, JOAN MARCELLE Academy 4-1198 817 West End Avenue, New York City RANNEY, HELEN R. F. D. No. 1, Locke, New York RAPPAPORT, PHYLLIS 232 132nd Street, Belle Harbor, New York RATEL. EUGENIE JANINE 116 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, New York RAYMOND. NORMA MAY 326 Seneca Avenue, Mount Vt Hillcrest 1355M i, New York 1940 1941 1939 1938 1940 1941 READE. BARBARA BLISS Audubon 3-7771 680 Riverside Drive. New York City REDAELLI, MADELINE 187 Green Grove Road, Asbury Park, New Jersey REESE, MARGERY R. D. 1, Newburgh, New York REIFF, JUNE ELIZABETH Hackensack 2-8815 368 Parker Avenue, Hackensack, New Jersey REIGOTTI, ELIZABETH ANNE Norwalk 1764J 16% West Main Street, Norwalk, Connecticut RENZ, DORIS AGNES 61 Intervale Place, Rye, New York REVELLESE, HELEN THERESA 30 Cowles Avenue, Yonkers, New York RHODIN, MARY MARGARET 266 Palisade Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey RIBETT, DORIS LILLIAN Richmond Hill 2-7106 8734 95th Street, Woodhaven, New York RICE, CATHERINE ROSEMAR1E 565 Avenue A, Bayonne, New Jersey RICE, ELIZABETH MARIA Kingsbridge 9-8649 5442 Post Road, Riverdale, New York RICH, BETSEY ROSS Port Washington 2090 97 Ivy Way, Port Washington, New York RICH, JOAN 42 Milburn Street, Bronxville, New York RICHARD, ANNE LOUISE Manhasset 1376 133 Eakins Road, Manhasset, New York RICHARDSON, HETTY LAWRENCE 1359 Brush Hill Road, Milton, Massachusetts RICHARDSON. KATHLEEN MARY White Plains 2730W 25 Robertson Avenue, White Plains, New York RICHEY, MARY EVELYN 11 Locust Street, Carteret, New Jersey RIDDER, HEDWIG Old Courthouse Road, New Hyde Park, New York RIDGE, ELINORE MARGARET 141 East 26th Street, New York City Monument 2-1883 RIDGWAY, BARBARA 440 Riverside Drive, New York City RIECKER, VERA CAROLYN 5 Grace Court North, Great Neck, New York RILEY, MARIAN LEE Cathedral 8-8821 130 Morningside Drive, New York City RINCK. JANE ELEANOR 26 Forest Street, Glen Ridge, New Jersey 1941 1938 1940 1938 1939 1941 1940 1939 1941 1941 1938 1938 1939 1941 1941 1938 1938 1938 sp 1941 1939 1938 1938 1939 1939 1941 RINGO, JANE VAN NORMAN 41 West 74th Street, New York City RIORDAN, EDNA 110 Greenwich Avenue, StE Stamford 3-1694 lford, Connecticut ROBINS. VERA DEANNA Oakwood 6045 96 Grandview Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York ROBINSON, RUTH OLIVE Westchester 7-9660 1722 Melville Street, New York City ROCKWELL, HELEN VIRGINIA 101 Oak Street, Northport, New York ROHER, RITA 605 West 170th Street, New York City ROME, CATHERINE LORETTA Draper Lane, Dobbs Ferry, New York ROME. HELEN EWART 610 West 110th Street, New York City ROS, ELLA MATHILDE 270 Riverside Drive, Ne- York City Wadsworth 3-0723 Academy 2-4799 Academy 4-3504 Academy 4 3504 ROS, VIRGINIA ELLA 270 Riverside Drive, New York City ROSENBAUM, ADELE RUTH Far Rockaway 7-2131 1331 Central Avenue, Far Rockaway, New York ROSENTHAL. BEATRICE MARION Susquehanna 7-3031 115 Central Park West, New York City ROSSI. ANTONIA 818 Broad Street, Utica, Nt ROTH, JOAN ANITA 258 Riverside Drive, New York City ROTHENBERG, HELENE Main 2-7676 323 Saint Johns Place, Brooklyn, New York ROTHENBERG, SHIRL GORDON 425 Riverside Drive, New York City ROTHSCHILD, CARYL 241 West 97th Street, New York City HOI SE. CLAIRE 1 1 ! G I I A University 4-0862 Academy 2-9067 Stamford 3-1212 70 Hubbard Avenue, Stamford, Connecticut ROUSSEAU, MARTA DOLORES 43 Avenue Foch, Paris, France RUBIN, ROSALYN Ludlow 7-2928 1560 Grand Concourse, New York City RUBENSTEIN, MILDRED 1142 Oak Street, Far Rockaway, New York RUBSAM, PAULINE TALCOTT Havermeyer 4-3034 3721 84th Street. Jackson Heights, New York RUNDLETT. WINIFRED MARGARET Havermeyer 4-3907 3447 87th Street. Jackson Heights, New York RIZICKA, VERONICA Dobbs Ferry 484 44 Sherman Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, New York RYAN. MARY 181-17 Tudor Road, Jamaica, New York , New York Republic 9-2122 RYTTENBERG, MADELINE 4 Quarropas Street, White 1940 1941 unc 1940 1940 1939 1939 unc 1940 1938 1940 1938 1939 1941 1940 1938 1940 1940 1938 1941 1938 unc SAFREN, NORMA MIRIAM 36 Kenilworth Place, Brooklyn, New York SALLEY, NATALIE GRACE Bergen 3-4344 72 Tonnele Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey SALVAGE, MAGDELAIN RICHMOND Brookville 777 Glen Head, New York University 4-4263 SALVIN, MARINA 527 West 110th Street, New York City SALZMAN. LOUISE FRANCES Plaza 3-1465 145 East 49th Street, New York City SALZMANN. HELENE ELIZABETH Kingsbridge 9-8552 5627 Delafield Avenue, New York City SAMPSON. NATALIE FERRIS Chappaqua 354 Chappaqua. New York SANDERS, IDENE 2745 Pike Avenue, Birmingham, Alabama SANDERS. MURIEL GERTRUDE Endicott 2-3370 400 West End Avenue, New York City SANDLER. DOROTHY LOUISE 40 West 77th Street, New York City Trafalgar 7-7536 Trafalgar 7-0434 SAPHIR, LOIS 321 West 73th Street, New York City SAPINSLEY, BARBARA CHARLOTTE New Rochelle 9253 111 Trenor Drive. New Rochelle, New York SARGENT, BETTY Galdstone 3022 49 Ralph Avenue, White Plains. New York SARGENT, BETTY, II Butterfield 2-7699 505 East 35th Street, Brooklyn, New York SAUER. JEAN HELEN Rockville Centre 4094 7 Blenheim Court, Rockville Centre, New York SAX. GERALDINE RITA 68 Ridge Road, Yonkers, New York SAYEN. JANE MELLON Hamilton Square, New Jersey SAYRE. MARIE LOUISE 12 Linden Place, Warwick, New York Schuyler 4-5566 SCHAFFER, LAURA MAY 161 West 86th Street, New York City SCHANHOUS. LEONORE 218 Beach 123rd Street, Rockaway Park. Nt SCHARF, DOROTHY FAIRFAX 93 Southgate Avenue, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York SCHARF, PATRICIA LEE SCHARFF, CLARE 414 West Webster Avenue, Pittsburgh, Kansas 1938 SACHS, LOIS VIRGINIA 49 Evergreen Avenue, Westport, Connecticut 1940 SCHEINER, OLGA Oakwood 0565 134 North Fulton Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York unc SCHELBERG. HELEN MAY 24 Prescott Avenue. Bronxville, New York unc SCHELHAMMER, FRANCES DOROTHY Flushing 9-4674 14-29 159th Street. Beechhurst, New York 1938 SCHILLER, FLORENCE ELIZABETH President 4-5800 107 Brooklyn Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 1938 SCHILLER. MARY JANE Yonkers 4852 225 Park Hill Avenue, Yonkers, New York 1940 SCHLESSINGER, EDITH Schuyler 4-2897 215 West 91st Street, New York City SCHNEIDER, MARION JANET 140 Dixon Street, Bridgeport, Cor SCHRENK. ILSE DIANA Hoboken 3-8629 909 Castle Point Terrace, Hoboken, New Jersey SCHUBERT. DOROTHY JULIETTE 4108 47th Street, Sunnyside, New York SCHUMANN, ELAINE KATHARINE Sacramento 2-8741 1229 Madison Avenue, New York City 1938 SCHWABACH, ELAINE 285 Central Park West. New York City Schuyler 4-8586 SCHWARTZ, CHARLOTTE HILDUR Havermeyer 4-1 41-08 90th Street, Elmhurst, New York 1939 SCOTT. BETTY Jerome 6-609 1 950 Woodycrest Avenue. New York City 1939 1941 1939 1941 1940 1941 SCOTT. JACQUELINE MARTHE University 4-6262 435 West 119th Street. New York City SCULLY, MARY JANE Hastings 1736M 31 Hopke Avenue, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York SEIDL, GRACE BETTY Park Ridge Summit Avenue, Woodcliff Lake, New Jersey SELLS, NAOMI 45 Villa Street, Mount Vernon, New York SENGSTACK, JOAN 31 Henley Road, Overbrook Hi delphia, Penna. SERBY. MARION RUTH 10 Bryn Mawr Place, Yonkers, New York unc SHEFFIELD. ROSALIE GENEVIEVE Cathedral 8-8640 537 West 121st Street, New York City 1939 SHLOSS. BARBARA FRANCES Susquehanna 7-1729 530 West End Avenue, New York City 1941 SHOONG, BETTY 385 Bellevue Avenue, Oakland, California 1941 SILVERMAN. MICHELLE PAEFF 21 School Street, Hanover, New Hampshire 1938 SIMMONDS, SOFIA Academy 2 6843 510 West 110th Street, New York City 1939 SIMON, SHIRLEY JUNE Oakwood 1109 322 North Columbus Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York 1941 SIMONS, NORMA REBECC A Susquehanna 7-5064 1 West 81st Street. New York City 1939 SINGER, MARIE JOSEPHINE 753 State Street, North Bergen, New Jersey 1940 SISKE, DORIS GERALDYN 24 Franklin Street. Thompsonville. Connecticut unc SLATTERY. MARY HELEN 270 Wilder Street, Lowell. Massachusetts 1940 SLAVIN, DOROTHY GERTRUDE Intervale 3-7195 154-18 35th Avenue. Flushing, New York 1938 SLINER. GERTRUDE MARIA 232 Union Street, Schenectady, New York Schuyler 4-2311 1938 SLOSS, SUZANNE BELLE 175 Riverside Drive, New York City 1939 SMITH. DOROTHY ALBERTA 202 Prospect Avenue, New Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. 1941 1941 1939 1939 1940 1941 1941 1938 1939 1938 unc SESSINGHAUS. HELEN GRAVES 1520 Gaylord Street, Denver, Colorado SETCHEL, DOROTHY 33 Sooth Street, Cuba. New York SEYBOLD, BERNICE MARY Firestone Plantation, Monrovia, Liberia, Africa SEYMOUR, JANE ELLERY 3441 79th Street. Jackson Heights, New York SCHACKLETON, MARGARET 4723 South Parkway, Louisville. Kentucky SHAININ, ALLA 610 Riverside Drive. New York City SHARLEY. DOROTHY MAE 14 Forest Place, Pittsfield, Massachusetts SHARLOT, RHODA SARA Long Beach 2598 418 West Walnut Street. Lorn Beach, New York SHAW. RUTH JANET 40 West 86th Street, New York City SHAW. VIRGINIA FRANCES 78 Chestnut Avenue. Pelham, New York Endicott 2-0103 Pelham 2105W SHAYCOFT. MARION FLORENCE South 8-5753 16 Prospect Park. Southwest. Brooklyn, New York SHEER AN. KATHRYN HELEN Stillwell 4-0946 43-05 47th Street, Long Island City. New York 1939 SMITH, AUDREY Halifax 5-1938 3039 Heath Avenue, Kingsbridge, New York 1940 SMITH, EDITH BAKER Independence 3-1715 33-55 161st Street, Flushing, New York 1939 SMITH, EMMA-LOUISE Jefferson 3-2661 338 Bainbridge Street, Brooklyn, New York unc SMITH. EVA JEANETTE 448 Riverside Drive. New York C Monument 2-8155 1941 SMITH. FRANCES ELIZABETH 122 Grapanche Street, Yonkers, New York 1939 SMITH. GERTRUDE Eureka, New York 1938 SMITH. GRACE 104-58 88th Avenue. Richmond Hill, New York 1939 SMITH, HELEN ELIZABETH Great Neck Road, Copiaque. New York 1941 SMITH. MARY GRAHAM 972 Troy Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 1939 SMITH MARGERY ELIZABETH 4877 Broadway, New York City 1941 SMITH, VIRGINIA DORIS 36 Lee Avenue, Yonkers, Nt 1938 SMUL. KATHRYN 222 West 77th Street, New York City- Lorraine 7-7041 Yonkers 3478 Trafalgar 4-3359 1941 1940 1941 1938 SNYDER. AUDREY ETHEL Fordham 5-0753 2600 Creston Avenue, New York City SNYDER, MARJORIE LUCILE 124 Young Avenue, Croton-on-Huds Croton 8251 York SNYDER, PHYLLIS RUTH Yonkers 341 70 Glenwood Avenue. Yonkers, New York SPEAKE, DOROTHY LORRAINE Ingersoll 2-2270 134 Linden Boulevard, Brooklyn, New York SPEER, MURIEL MASK 239 West 71st Street. New York City SPENCER. MIRIAM SCOTT Cornwall, New York Endicott 2-5459 1940 STROBRIDGE, ANN 3007 Fairfield Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio 1938 SUPPES, ELIZABETH ROBINETTE 90 Valley Pike, Johnstown, Pennsylvania 1941 SUSSMAN, SHIRLEY Oakwood 6986 255 Pennsylvania Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York 1939 SWAYNE, CAROLYN HOPE George School, Pennsylvania 1938 SWINTON, ELIZABETH 345 South Stiles Street, Linden, New Jersey 1941 1939 1940 1940 1941 1941 1939 1939 1939 1941 1941 19.39 1939 1941 1939 1939 1939 SPEYER. DARTHEA 5639 Bartlett Street, Pittshurgh. Pennsylvania SPICER. BETTY MARTIN Fairbanks 4-1796 360 East 234th Street, New York City SPOLLEN. ELIZABETH PATRICIA Esplanade 7-8729 1581 East 34th Street, Brooklyn, New York STAPLETON, MARGARET BURKE 78 Pine Street, Rockville Centre, New York STARK, PEGGY ELIZABETH 80 Smith Avenue, South Nyack, New York Nyack 99 STASIUK, OLGA 72-28 Juno Street, Forest Hi New York STECKEL, CATHERINE RODNEY Newtown 9-5354 33-40 81st Street, Jackson Heights, New York STEIBEL, ELAINE MANETTE Susquehanna 7-1132 144 West 86th Street, New York City STEINBUGLER. ANNE MARIE Mansfield 6-5340 945 East 37th Street, Brooklyn. New York STENGEL, ELIZABETH ANNE Bergen 3-7070 375 Bergen Avenue. Jersey City, New Jersey STERN, CLAIRE MILLER 36 River Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvani. STEVENS, ELIZABETH WEMPLE 87 East Pettebone Street, Forty Fort, Pennsylvania STEVENSON, RUTH MARGARET 47 South Washington Street, Tarrytown, New York STEWART, JANE CHIPPENDALE 295 Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, New York STIBBS, RUTH MARION 22 Lincoln Road. Wethersfield. Connectici Trafalgar 7-6543 STIEFEL, ELINOR 290 West End Avenue, New York City STOCK, MARIAN JENNIE Pawling, New York STOCKWELL, DOROTHY 74 Waterman Street, Lockport, New York STOKES, JEANETTE GRAY 252 South Pleasant Avenue, Ridgewood, New Jersey STRAUS. BELLA ERNA 1111 Park Avenue, New York City Sacramento 2-4499 1941 1939 1941 1941 1941 1939 1938 1941 1939 1941 1941 1939 1941 1939 1940 unc 1938 1940 1941 1938 TAFT, HELEN BLAKE Monument 2-8397 420 Riverside Drive, New York Citv TAGGART, FRANCES BYRON 341 Washington Street, Watertown, New York TALLMAN, JESSIE BLAIR 171 Park Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York TAPLIN, BARBARA RATCLIFFE 196 Keewatin Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada TAUBENHAUS, RUTH 250 Clark Street, College Station, Texas TENNEY, BEATRICE BRANSCOMBE 611 West 114th Street, New York City THOMAS, ADI-KENT 26 East 91st Street, New York City Atwater 9-4979 THOMAS, MARJORIE 320 Saint Clair Avenue, Spring Lake, New Jersey THOMAS, VIRGINIA 320 Saint Clair Avenue, Spring Lake, New Jersey THOMPSON, ANN MARIE 6 Chestnut Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts THONET, JOAN MARIE 182-40 Avon Road, Jamaica, New York THONY, MARGIT 166 High Street, Winchendon, Massachusetts THORNER, ROSALINDE GLORIA Columbus 5-8909 152 West 57th Street, New York City TIBBALS, ADDIE ELIZABETH Armour Road, Mahwah, New Jersey TILLMAN, HARRIET LOUISE West Center Street, Medina, New York TODD, ELEANOR SCHLEY Wickersham 2-1963 1 Beekman Place, New York City TRABAND, VIRGINIA GREEN Chappaqua 312 King Street, Chappaqua, New York TRACY, REINE MARIE 275 Weyman Avenue, New Rochelle, New York TRASK. MARGARET CRAWFORD 509 West 101st Street, New York City TREAT, MARGARET 51 Belden Avenue, Dobbs Ferry, New York 154 unc TRESSELT. MARGARET ELIZABETH Plainfield 6-8192R 33 Sandford Avenue, Plainfield, New Jersey 1939 TROSTLER, JOSEPHINE FEONIE President 4 0195 229 McDonough Street, Brooklyn. New York unc TRUMBELL. MARJORIE Trafalgar 7-8100 75 Central Park West, New York City 1941 TURBOW. MARIE VERA Endicott 2-3866 161 West 75th Street, New York City 1939 TURK, EMILY VIRGINIA University 4-3361 600 West 116th Street, New York City u 1940 UEBEL, MURIEL LOUISE 110-29 Occident Street, Forest Hills, New York 1941 ULLMAN, MARJORIE RUTH Gladstone 1578 50 Custis Avenue. White Plains. New York 1939 URELES, GERTRUDE Endicott 2-5362 473 West End Avenue. New York City 1939 UTECH, COZETTE Lorraine 7-4157 1825 Riverside Drive, New York City V 1940 VAN BAALEN, LOUISE Schuyler 41382 580 West End Avenue. New York City 1940 VANCE, MAUDE VANDERLIP Monument 2-5147 468 Riverside Drive, New York City 1938 VAN de WATER, JANICE OAKLEY Esplanade 7-8664 1324 East 23rd Street. Brooklyn, New York 1939 VAUGHN. ANTOINETTE KATHERINE Olinville 2-3719 753 East 223rd Street. New York City unc VAZQUEZ, ROSARIO ALAMO Box 70. San Juan, Porto Rico 1939 VER KRUZEN, MARGUERITE LOUISE Mamaroneck 589 443 North Barry Avenue, Mamaroneck, New York 1939 VIDA1R, VERA JOAN Trafalgar 7-7432 50 Riverside Drive, New York City 1939 VIERLING, HELEN OVERTON Silver Spring, Maryland 1939 VILLAMENA, JOY Fairbanks 4-5420 4374 Martha Avenue, New York City 1939 VILLANYI. CHARLOTTE HELEN Bayside 9-2731 3834 216th Street, Bayside, New York 1940 VINCENT, JULIA GILBERT Croton 3365 10 Palmar Avenue, Croton-on-Hudson, New York unc VOGEL, MRS. MILDRED TIM Atwater 9-0676 1050 Park Avenue, New York City 1939 VOGELREUTER, MARIALUISE EMILIE 4590 Spuyten Duyvil Parkway, New York City 1941 VOLCKER, LOUISE BERTHA Teaneck 7-1749 1301 Longfellow Avenue. West Englewood, New Jersey w 1941 WAGNER, NANCY CLELAND 34 Forest Road, Delmar, New York 1939 WALACH, WILMA JUDITH R. F. D. No. 3, Little Falls, New York 1941 WALBRIDGE, MARIE LOUISE Eldorado 5-0782 350 Park Avenue, New York City 1938 WALDRON, ANNA PATRICIA Richmond Hill Road, New Canaan, Connecticut 1940 WALL. ANGELA MARY 28 Pearl Street, Torrington, Connecticut 1939 WALRATH, MARY ELIZABETH 50 Otsogo Street, Canajoharie, New York unc WALTON, EMILY ANN Walker 5-9521 75% Bedford Street, New York City 1939 WANG, ELSIE Cedar Ridge. Irvington-on-Hudson, New York unc WANTY, VIRGINIA PRIMROSE 976 Cambridge Boulevard East, Grand Rapids, Michigan 1938 WARNE, ALICE ELIZABETH 696 Roff Avenue, Ridgefield, New Jersey 1940 WARREN, ANN ISILMAN 27 Maple Park, Newton Center, Massachusetts 1940 WASSERMAN. FRANCES President 3-4088 1470 Saint John Place, Brooklyn, New York 1941 WATERS, PAULINE EVANS 238 South Main Street, Pittston, Pennsylvania 1939 WATSON, BARBARA MAE Cathedral 8-8024 117 West 120th Street, New York City 1939 WEBER, JOAN 29 Dobbs Terrace. Scarsdale. New York unc WEBER, MARION EVELYN 2710 East Newton Avenue, Milwaukee. Wisconsin 1940 WEBER. MIRIAM WOLF Hillside 2005W 327 Claremont Avenue, Mount Vernon, New York 1939 WECHSLER. MIRIAM LOUISE Butterfield 8-2456 45 East 85th Street, New York City 1941 WEHNCKE, ELIZABETH 21 Elston Road, Upper Montclair, New Jersey 1940 WEIERICH, ADELINE MARIE Sedgwick 3-8632 2665 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York City 1941 WEIGLE, ELIZABETH MATILDA Fairbanks 4-5867 430 South Third Avenue. Mount Vernon, New York 1940 WEINBERG. HARRIET 10 Chatham Road, Atlanta, Georgia 1939 WEINBERG, HELEN RUTH Academy 2-3690 885 West End Avenue, New York City 1939 WEIR, ANNE MAY 157 Forest Street, Belleville, New Jersey 1940 WEISS, MARJORIE Evergreen 7-1482 163 Penn Street, Brooklyn, New York 1940 WENDT, ELAINE WILHELMINA 82-04 Austin Street, Kew Gardens, New York 155 WENNEIS. NORMA MILL1CENT Rutherford 2-6605 22 Charter Oak Street, Woodridge, New Jersey WILSON, JUNE 21 Washington Street, Hornell, New York 1938 WESTON, ELAINE 214 Pearsall Place, Inwood, Long Island, New York WILSON. LOIS MARGARET Loomis Road, Liberty, New York 1940 WESTPHAL. MARJORIE RHODES Sacramento 2-6469 447 East 89th Street, New York City WILSON, SUSANNA PERKINS Sacramento 2-5168 1239 Madison Avenue, New York City 1938 WHAREN. BETTY DAVENPORT 1941 496 South Franklin Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania 1941 WHITE, CLYDE 1941 5316 Second Street, North. Birmingham, Alabama 1939 WHITE , JEAN VIRGINIA Navarre 8-2885 1939 2121 Avenue 0, Brooklyn, New York 1940 WHITNEY, ELIZABETH ANNE 1940 54 Morningside Drive, New York City WINTNER, NANCY Academy 2-9215 325 Riverside Drive, New York City WIRSCHING, JACQUELINE Endicott 2-7478 390 West End Avenue, New York City WISE, ELIZABETH MAY Rhinelander 4-3600 646 Park Avenue, New York City WODTKE, VIRGINIA JANE Rosalind Gardens, Dobbs Ferry, New York WHITNEY, MARTHA PHYLLIS Butterfield 8-2224 120 East 80th Street, New York City WOLF, DORIS JANE Endicott 7-0171 12 West 72nd Street, New York City 1941 1939 1940 unc 1941 1938 1940 WHITSETT, SUE 12 Hewitt Avenue, Bronxville, New York WICH. EDNA ANTOINETTE 63 Cortland Place, Cliffside Park, New Jersey WICKENDEN, PHYLLIS JULIA 32 Wilton Road, Pleasantville, New Jersey W1EGAND. ILSE ANITA Doetmund, Germany WIEGARD, PHYLLIS FRANCES 164-03 89th Avenue, Jamaica, New York WIEMANN, ELLEN Larchmont 571 24 Lincoln Street, Larchmont, New York WIEMANN. RUTH FALLS Larchmont 571 24 Lincoln Street, Larchmont, New York 1938 WOODS, VIRGINIA MILDRED Hill 1693J 25 South 8th Avenue. Mount Vernon, New York 1938 WORMSER, JANICE Trafalgar 4-3347 441 West End Avenue, New York City 1938 WRIGHT. ELIZABETH ORILLA 420 Marlborough Road, Yonkers, New York 1939 WRIGHT, MARY ELIZABETH Trenton 229 Chestnut Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey 1941 WRIGHT, MEREDITH SMITH 1529 East Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio WYLAND, MOLLY GRIFFITH South 323 8th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York WYNNE, VIRGINIA MARIE Boulevard 8-1427 11 Slocum Crescent, Forest Hills. New York 1939 WIESELTHIER, EDITH SARAH Slocum 6-7494 1322 Union Street, Brooklyn, New York 1940 WIGAND, CHARLOTTE MARIE Toppin? 2-8912 1939 940 Grand Concourse, New York City 1940 WILE, RENEE Trafalgar 7-8083 1938 490 West End Avenue, New York City 1940 WILLEY, JEAN Great Neck 1819 1939 40 Old Mill Road, Great Neck, New York YACUBOVSKY, BARBARA MIHAELOVNA 1376 Fourth Avenue, Arnold, Pennsylvania YETMAN, EVELYN MAE Plainfield 6-4736 625 East Third Street, Plainfield, New Jersey YOUNKER, JANET Elmsford, New York 1938 WILLIAMS, AUGUSTA CECILIA Yonkers 8733J 287 Jessamine Avenue, Yonkers, New York 1941 WILLIAMS, DORIS ELINOR 108 Lyon Place, Utica, New York 1939 WILLIAMS, JANE STAFFORD 1505 Compton Terrace, Hillside, New Jersey ZENKE, MARION STAUSFIELD 154 Watchong Avenue. Upper Montclair, New Jersey 1940 ZIMMER. IRMA ELISABETH 135 Ogden Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvani 1939 WILLIAMS, MARIE JUNE Yonkers 8733J 237 Jessamine Avenue, Yonkers, New York 1941 ZLMMERHACKEL, SALLIE LOU 630 Gilpin Street, Denver. Colorado 1910 WILLIS, ALICE 464 Siwanoy Place, Pelh Pelham 1990 Manor, New York 1939 ZIRN, DOROTHY MARY Tuckahoe 1900 43 Highview Avenue, Tuckahoe, New York WILLIS, JEAN LOUISE Rutherford 2-0732 185 Montross Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey ZUNG. CECILIA SIEU-LING 45 Route Boissezon, Shanghai, China WILSON, DOROTHY ELIZABETH Edgecombe 4-7403 289 Convent Avenue, New York City ZWERGEL, IRMA 8749 86th Street, Woodhaven, New York
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