Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY)
- Class of 1942
Page 1 of 200
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
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Text from Pages 1 - 200 of the 1942 volume:
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Grace Barrett Editor-in-Chief Joan Brown Business Manager BARNARD COLLEGE ARCHIVES 1942 PUBLISHED BY THE JUNIHB ELASS COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK tl icai Lau In the dark years ahead, the coming generation will need courage, perseverance, and industry; but above all they will want an abiding faith in the democratic ideals of political liberty, religious tolerance, social equality, and intellectual freedom. Although the forces of death and destruction have run rampant in the past year, they have not obscured our ideals, distorted our perspective, or diverted us from our goal; rather, they have served to intensify our convictions that the constructive forces of moral and social progress shall continue. To these ideals, and to all those forces striving to preserve them, the Class of 1942 dedicates this yearbook. President Nicholas Murray Butler LL.D. } (Cantab), D.Litt. (Oxon), Hon.D (Paris) Dean Virginia Crocheron Gildersleeve Ph.D., LL.D., Litt.D., L H.D In an effort to answer the request of the Junior Class for a review of the activities at Barnard this year, the 1942 Mortarboard staff has endeavored to make this yearbook an informal story in word and picture of 1940-1941. If the narrative form has served to capture the leading events at college in photographs and copy, and if this annual will be cherished by those it describes, its creators will feel that they have achieved their goal. The Editors FRESHMAN DAY From cities, towns, and states all over the world, those girls who were to be closely associated for four years, entered Barnard ' s gates on Freshman Day. They came, strangers, separate, and un- certain, to be welcomed, introduced, and united as an important part of the college which was, as yet, un- known to them. And their coming was a signal for the year ' s activity to begin. As the Class of 1944 assembled on Sep- tember 21st at a luncheon, they were greeted by Dean Gildersleeve and repre- sentatives of the student body, who im- parted to them a feeling of warm friendliness which dispelled any bar- rier of strangeness. Each Freshman had assigned as friend and mentor a Junior sister who might be con- sulted for information not found in the catalogue. Wandering about the campus on this first day, the Freshmen caught a glimpse in Brooks and Hewitt of the life in the dormitories which some of them were to lead. They learned that a great deal centered about Jake and, anxious to meet him, they were taken to a place and not a person. Barnard ' s post office system, the strategy employed in securing a book via the library line, and the said facts about the morgue were explained. They jour- neyed on and found themselves in a Jungle in the middle of Manhattan; a convenient one close to Milbank, and yet far enough removed to provide a haven for the escapist. Not far from the lordly Hudson on the one side and Broadway on the other, the Jungle was a study in contrasts. Retracing their steps past the tennis courts and the sun-dial, the Freshmen returned to the North Terrace where tea was served, a forecast of future Entertaining the Class of 1944 at Freshman Day . Top: A group being received by hostesses in Brooks Hall. Center: Two freshmen enjoy a first- hand description of the. porch from P. Lamb- din. Bottom: . Kenney escorts some guests to Barnard Hall. Wednesday afternoon teas. In the afternoon excerpts from past Greek Games competitions were presented and the Freshmen were introduced to one of Barnard ' s traditions — the contest in ath- letics, music, and dance held every spring between the Sopho- mores and the Freshmen. As the newly organized group of Fresh- men concluded their day of orien- tation they anticipated events of the coming year of which they were to be a part. MlLBANK The Dorms — Brooks and Hewitt FRESHMEN Assuming its role in college life, the Freshman Class concentrated on choosing its class officers and representatives for Representative Assembly and Honor Board during October and November. The Brit- ish War Relief Drive found the Class of ' 44 eager to contribute its energy toward its success, and Freshmen, traditionally en- grossed in scholastic endeavor, were to be found everywhere knitting and planning parties for the benefit of the Drive. Look- ing forward to pitting their skill against the games-wise Sophomores, plans pro- gressed steadily under the supervision of the class committee for the 1941 Greek Games. The Freshmen at one of the occasions during the fall when ' 44 assembled as a class. In front, left to right are: H. Fisken, Treasurer, A. Sirch, Sec- retary, M. Hayden, President, and J. Mitchell, Vice-President. BARNARD E AMP Climaxing a week of introductions to college this fall, the Freshmen learned about one of the best parts of life at Barnard — Camp . Freshman Picnic was the first Sunday that college opened and that day the new class heard tell of fun had, friends made, and memories shared at Barnard Camp. While eating lunch, they surveyed the colorful country surrounding the camp that is set on a knoll in Westchester hills and which was presented to the college by the Alumnae Association eight years ago. Seniors recounted the joy of walking over DTA trails, horseback riding, or just reading on the couch and of skiing or snowball fights in the winter which preceded warming up before the fire while toasting marshmallows and s ' mores. Only one of the numerous week-ends held at Barnard Camp throughout the year, Freshman Picnic started a series of unforgettable week-ends which ended with Miss Holland ' s Junior Course in the spring. 13 RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS Interfaith Council was formed in the spring of 1940 as an executive group to further co- operation and understanding among the five religious clubs on campus. Composed of the presi- dents of the five clubs under the chairmanship of Dons Prochaska, it was a planning body with no voluntary membership of its own. Teas, lectures and discussions furnished an edu- cational and social program. The Council sponsored a Thanksgiving formal and a Christmas tea dance in cooperation with the Earl Hall society during the first part of the year. In December an interfaith assembly was held with speakers representing the three faiths dis- cussing ' The Place of Religion in a World at War. The Council sponsored a drive for funds for the World Student Service Fund and a series of luncheon discussion meetings. The University Christian Association, headed by Alice Kliemand, was made up of members from the entire university. Its program ranged from devotional study groups on the funda- mentals of Christianity to concrete discussion and action on current problems. Every Thursday afternoon there was open house at Earl Hall where the members gathered to hear speakers and join discussions. This year the three Protestant Clubs, the Episcopal, headed by Jacqueline Wirsching, the Lutheran, with Elinor Schubert as President, and the Wycliffe, under the guidance of Mary Smith, worked in closer cooperation with each other and the Interfaith Council. The clubs sponsored joint monthly meetings at which prominent theologians discussed problems of religion. The Newman Club aimed at acting as a focus of interest for Catholic students. Monthly meetings, presided over by Phyllis Wiegard, were held at which problems were discussed from the Catholic point of view. Menorah, with Elaine Steibel as President, studied the cultural aspects of Judaism and its problems in the world today. One of the fall Interfaith Teas: E. Schubert; D . Prochaska, Interfaith Chairman; University Christian Association Officers: Dr. Christina Grant; M. Smith; E. Steibel, and J. Wirsching enjoying tea and M. Wallace; J. Smith; A. Kliemand, Presi- cookies. dent; E. Pugh; D. Sheffield, and R. Paily. Above: The Newman Club in its entirety. Third row: P. Van Orman, V. Ros, G. Monahan, E. Colgan, C. Pierce, M. Lawrence, H. Kenney, H. O ' Rourke, E. Colgan, M. Hogan, D. Whitaker, C. Carncr, H. Marrarro, M. Haggerty, R. Santoni, M. Milnes, E. Donovan, and F. Wasell. Middle row: F. Depo e, C. Gibltn, D. Charlton, S. Gaus, D. Wilson, P. Wiegard, President, B. Clifford, B. Hein en, I. Sarro and Y. Coutant. First row : F. Murphy, L. Berberich, A. Cuccio, A. Brown, N. Chollat- Nancy, B. F ynn, M. Tul y, J. Gimbert, and J. Carey. At left: Menorah members in the Conference Room. Fourth row : B. Kornfeld, L. Kates, and E- Greenberg. Third row: . Israel, M. Kolodny, F. Fischman, A. Zazjily, P. Hrykm, A. Rosensweig, C. Rittenband, and E. Streichler. Second row: F . Levine, G. Schaffer, and E. Steibel, Presi- dent. First row : B. Kremsdorf, R.Tarr,and H.Gottesman. H. Harmeling, G. Kingsley, B. llgei Miskimen, A. Kama, H. Harper Above: Some of the girls enrolled in the Protestant Clubs at Barnard. Back row: C. Gabo E. Johnson, V. Arndt, D. Prochaska, Chairman of Interfaith Council, B. Baehr, G. Wood, and A. Heene. Middle row : E. Fremus, E. Schubert, President of the Lutheran Club, M. Smith, President of the Wycliffe Club, C. Johnson, F. Wikawa, and J. Wirsching, President of the Episcopal Club. First row: R. Geyer, M. Binder, M. Mol eson, J. Rtnck, M. Leahy, H. Smith, and E. McNeill. Barnard Committee of the British War Belief Society War in Europe, methodical destruction, starvation, pierced Barnard ' s armor of detachment early this year. Answering pleas for assistance, Representative Assembly Collecting publicity circulars in Student Mail which wire sent to every girl at college after the registration day assembly. Above: The BKW Central Committee counts finished garments. Left to right: H. Kandel, M. Livesay, D. Proctor, P. Draper, V. Ros. Seated: Chairman P. Wickenden, behind her F. Fischman, M. Wright, Z. Sachs, and M. Hoyden with ball of yarn in front. formed the Barnard Committee of the British War Relief Society. Students, fac- ulty, and friends worked together to send food, clothing, and medical supplies to devastated areas in England. Contribute More was the ever-repeated theme. Phyllis Wickenden, ' 41, Chairman, opened the drive at the required assembly on the day the men registered for the draft. Robert E. Sherwood, play- wright, spoke at a luncheon; students and faculty were personally contacted; a work- room was dedicated. Teas and dances were given by friends while members of the drama classes wrote and staged origin plays to raise funds. Hundreds of knitted garments and pounds of old and new cloth- ing were contributed. A mobile kitchen was shipped to England the first semester. Competition among the classes in collect- ing money marked the second part of the year, for the goal was to send all help to the victims of war in England. Robert E. Sherwood urging aid to Brila at the luncheon address. Dean Virginia Gilders lee ve addressing the March 16th assembly. L. Sanders answering M. Leahy ' s signal to cut in at a fall Coffee Dance. Barnard Hall Social Committee The tap of a white hand on a silk-clad shoulder — a soft murmur of acquiescence, and we have that unique characteristic of the Barnard Coffee Dance, the gentle art of cutting-in as practiced by the female of the species. This year, the Barnard Hall Social Committee effectively con- summated plans for larger and more elaborate parties, and, for the first time, the scene of one of the Coffee Dances was transferred from Barnard to Earl Hall. The committee also sponsored the purchase of Barnard ' s public address system. Social Committee members planning a dance. Rear row: C. Lawlor, M. Leahy, V . Hughes, Chairman P. Mann, E. Webb, B. Heinzen, A. Connolly, M. Lawrence, and M. Eilers. Front row : A. Vermilyee, M. Hughes, F. Sal man, B. Hanf, and M. Jackson. Vocational Committee Providing a touchstone for the various careers which open out before the Seniors, the Voca- tional Committee with Georgia Sherwood as Chairman has proven to be one of the most popu- lar of organizations, among the upperclassmen. At teas, luncheons, and assemblies during the year, women of prominence were presented who discussed opportunities for graduates in their chosen fields. Chairman A.Shatnin checks books into Book Ex- change with the aid of J. Greenbaum and S. Lans. Book Exchange Based upon a cooperative spirit, the Book Exchange endeavors to provide, within Barnard, desired books at the lowest cost, as well as a ready market for students ' used volumes. Today, with Alia Shainin as Chairman, the present committee has established a permanent home in Milbank as well as continuous service. Vocatior. Conferen. wood, I. a! Committee nmnbers at ?neeting in the e Room: B. Hanf, Chairman G. Sher- Lyons, B. Heinzen, and F. Brett. The receiving line at Harvest Hop. Left to Right: H. Taft, M. Wright, Dr. Christina Grant, R. Taubenhaus, ProfessorWillard Waller, Professor Agnes Way man, and Mrs. Willanl Waller. Harvest Hop With the presidential election three days away, the Athletic Association had a ready-made theme for Harvest Hop, presented on November second. Choir An important part of the noonday service at St. Paul ' s chapel is the choir of Columbia University composed of forty-five members. WIGS AND CUES Hendricks on, H. Dresner, and L. Salet r J. Roberts in his lines during a rehears- al of Berkeley Square. Part of the prop committee — N. Procher, Chairman F. Phelps, P. lllingworth, and Kremsdorf— build a ' ' flat. ' ' Wigs and Cues, with Roberta Hadley as President, concen- trated its main efforts of the season on the production of its fall play. Berkeley Square by John L. Balderston, the story of a twentieth century man ' s re- turn to the eighteenth century, was chosen for production. The staging committee reproduced an eighteenth century drawing room which was decorated with genuine Queen Anne fur- niture by the property chair- man. The costume committee supplied the cast of eight Barnard girls and seven Columbia students with period costumes. Under the direc- tion of Anton Hardt, Berkeley Square played to two large audiences in Brinckerhoff Theater. Several teas were held through- out the year in the clubroom which was redecorated by two mem- bers. A banquet at which club pins were awarded to six members for service to Wigs and Cues concluded the ye ar. a wig for F.. Anderson. Residence Halls The executive body of the Resi- dence Halls, shown above in the Brooks Hall living-room, help to make dorm life the fun which the day girls say they envy. Presid- ing over order in Brooks and Hewitt are F. Fahrenholi, A. Pope, F. Houston, J. Kenney, M. Dam- rose h, S. Riley, and F . Brett, with V. Hughes, and R. Stevenson, President, seated on the couch. As shown below, some of the advan- tages of livin in the dorms in- clude your own individual mail boxes, the regular bull-sessions in one of the parlors, and a chat with him in a beau parlor. 21 F. Brat, J. Su, nd escorts pause to ga%e into the fire during the Christmas Formal in Brooks while M. Malon:y and partner dance by the tinseled tree. RESIDENCE HALLS Let the alarm clock ring! Don ' t bother about the run in that stocking. What if you didn ' t put your hair up last nightr Qualifications for participation in these privileges requires but one thing. Be a dorm girl! The inhabitants of Brooks and Hewitt, Barnard ' s two residence halls, live a gay life unruffled by subway skirmishes or cold dinners. The Residence Halls Students Association presides over the dorms, The Christmas Formal Committee coming down the Brooks Hall steps at the Christmas Dance. From bottom step to top: . Johnson, N. Wagner, Chairman, M. Sirman, M. Rader, H. Sessmghaus, and E. Troop. while appointed Council members sup- ervise quiet hours. An interesting plan just inaugurated is the arrangement of informal gatherings in order that under- classmen may discuss with the majors of various departments details ofapartic- ular course. This, too, was the first year the Executive Committee Chairman, Ruth Stevenson, attended the College Leaders ' Conference. Supper dances, floor parties, Sunday Coffee hours, and faculty teas provided a full and varied social calendar. How- ever, the climax of the year was reached at a Christmas Formal, when the dorms, attired in holiday decoration, presented a gala appearance. The dance, held for the benefit of British War Relief, was opened to the entire college for the first time and the enthusiasm with which this was accepted was manifested by the necessity of opening both dining- rooms for dancing. 22 Deutscher Kreis Christmas Party The annual Christmas party of Deutscher Kreis, held on December 16, featured an enactment of the Nativity by members of the club. A chorus from the Chapel Choir, dressed as angels, and a string quartet from the Columbia Orchestra also took part in the play. Each member of the club was presented with a gift and typical German refreshments were served. Inge Hieber, President of the club, was in charge of the party. Glee Club Rehearsing faithfully twice a week, the sixty- five members of the Glee Club, with Betty Clifford as President, took part in several concerts. Every other Wednesday evening, joint rehearsals with the Columbia Glee Club and the Orchestra were held in preparation for performances throughout the year. In collaboration with the Columbia Glee Club and Orchestra, a concert was given in the Barnard gym- nasium on December 14. Later in the year the club met with the Glee Club of Wesleyan college for a concert in the gymnasium and another took the members up to Wesleyan. A banquet in May in honor of outgoing members brought the season A scene from the Christ mas play given by the Deutscher Kreis in Brooks to a dose. Parlor during December as fart of its annual party to the college. The Glee Club in its usual haunt, 408 Barnard. Back row : E. Grimm, B. Becker, N. B ickft t, C. Virgien, C. Law or, I. Schocken, M. Rinsfoos, and J. Morrell. Third row: D. Howell, A. Rosensweig, T. Scott, B. Lowell, M. Cayot, B. Havill, A. Kltemand, N. Merer, F. Edwards, M. Greider, S. Shreve, D. Whitaker, and R. Whitaker. Second row: C. She ton, A. Sirch, J. Amsden, B. Clifford, President and E. Young. First row: S. Holt, B. Flynn, S. Cole, E. Clark, F. Phtlpotts, M. Hoffer and M. Root. Christmas Assembly Barnard welcomed the Christmas spirit at a traditional assembly held in Barnard Hall on Tuesday, December seventeenth. Over a nation-wide hook-up on station WJZ, the Barnard and Columbia Glee Clubs accompanied by the Columbia University Orchestra presented a pro- gram of Christmas carols. Each participant wore a gay sprig of holly and the auditorium was decorated with garlands of evergreen. The highlight of the half-hour broadcast was the ad- dress by Dean Gildersleeve in which the season ' s greetings were extended to the college and the radio listeners. In her message, the Dean read a passage from the Nativity of St. Luke in the New Testament, and reminded the audience that in our celebration of festivities we should not forget those to whom the words, Peace on earth to men of good-will, is merely an empty phrase. After the broadcast, the entire college joined in a spirited community sing led by Mr. James Giddings, director of the Glee Club. The Christmas Assembly closed a series of celebrations including dances, parties, and teas by the college ' s various clubs and organizations. Anxious to return to their widely scattered homes, the students prepared to set aside academic duties for a round of welcome gaiety. Dean Virginia Gilthnlecrc brMikasting greetings at the Christmas Ammbly. 24 Brooks Porch at Midnight 25 26 Examination Period How to pass your exams ' . Rumored as a simple process, the technique of passing exams begins inevitably with that libraiy line and the colored numbers at 4:10. Above: G. Reylea main- tains order among the daily crowd in the proximity of the Ella Weed Library .Step number two has been described as reading the book (jf you ivere lucky enough to get it) but it is here that there is a great divergence betiveen the methods employed by ' ' day and dorm girls respectively. At right the commuters can be Hen absorbing facts surrounded by walls of books in the libe, while at the bottom left, two dorm students have retired to their room (and fireplace), where in comfort and stocking feet, they jot down the necessary notes. Finally, exams finished (and passed, yes?), students visit the ' ' morgue in the basement, where behind those wire cages they may find the results of their efforts. Blue Book As indispensable to the uninitiated as saddle shoes and the capacity to function on four hours ' sleep is that Encyclopaedia Barnardia, the Blue Book. This little volume, accepted with authoritarian philosophy, provides an infallible guide through- out a sometimes complicated college career. The Blue Book Committee, directed by the Editor, Louise Giventer, meets annually to collect the latest data and pertinent information. Con- tained in the book are the constitution of the Undergraduate Associa- tion, a calendar of the year ' s events, and a complete index of the col- lege ' s clubs, organizations, and activities. The latest edition has been expanded to include various new features, among them the Athletic Association supplement, augmented by photography. Press Board Mobile food unit on way to Britain, — Undergraduate Associa- tion elects officers, — Barnard College holds Election Assembly ; these items constitute news, and Press Board, a student organization, provided a medium through which it may be circulated. During 1940-1941 four hundred releases were sent out in the first semester while coverage included the United States, Mexico, South America, and Shanghai, China. In addition, contact is maintained between each student and her hometown newspaper so that in- formation of her activities may be pub- lished there. In the New York area, col- legiate correspondents, Sue Whitsett and Dorothy Eckley, were attached to The New York Times and The New York Herald Tribune, and Helen Baker pre- sided as Chairman of the Board. Blue Book staff discussing the reorganized man- ual of regulations; in the usual order A. Shaintn, Associate Editor; L. Giventer, Editor-in-Chief; M. Wright, Associate Editor; and J. Green- baum, Business Manager. Seen at left arc Press Board reporters checking names of students in the file. In the back: R. Patterson, B. Naegli, M. Lazarus, K. Hanly, H. Marrarro, S. Whitsett, New York Times correspondent, and D. Eckley, Herald Tribune correspondent. In the front ate: A. Yale, M. Futtner, and Chairman H. Baker. 28 SOPHOMORES When the Class of 1943 re- turned in September that look of faint apprehension was gone, and no longer did they start across Broadway for Fiske Hall or appear on Lenox Avenue at 8:59 A.M. There was a younger class to whom one was helpful while maintaining the dignity of one ' s position! Another opportunity for displaying their newly-acquired savoir faire was afforded the Sophomores on the occasion of their tradi- tional dance in February at Earl Hall. With the spring came feverish preparations for Greek Games in which the Class of ' 43 was able to utilize its previous costly experience, aided by whole-hearted cooperation, genuine enthusiasm, and eager endeavor — characteris- tics of the Class of 1943- The Sophomore Class and President M. Jackson, Vice- President M. Milnet, Treasurer R. Libera, and Secretary G. Mublhan. Student Council about to begin one of its weekly Wednesday meetings. Left to right: the members are M. Hay den, M. Wright, D. Barer, R. Stevenson, D. Williams, P. Hagmoe, R. Taitbenhaus , President, A. Bostelmann, I. Lyons, A. Dri ry, E. Gunning, and M. Jackson. STUDENT COUNCIL Guiding the course of the college ' s extra-curricular activities, Student Council, — an organi- zation composed of Ruth Taubenhaus, President; Adeline Bostelmann, Vice-President; Phyllis Hagmoe, Secretary; Doris Bayer, Treasurer; Doris Williams, Honor Board Chairman; Class Presidents: Alice Drury ' 41, Emily Gunning ' 42, Margaret Jackson ' 43, and Mavis Hayden ' 44; Ruth Stevenson, President of Residence Halls; Meredith Wright, President of the Athletic Association, and Irene Lyons, Editor of Bulletin — steers smoothly and steadily through the sometimes churning waters of student affairs. Before it come questions concerning the pro- grams of clubs, technicalities of administration, delegates to intercollegiate conferences, the social calendar, and other business connected with the management of student activities. This is the highest organization in the college, and final decisions rest with it. The incumbent Council, among other items, discussed the required all-college assembly to launch the Barnard relief drive, and also clarified its position on outside affiliations. Although autonomic, the Council frequently consults the Faculty Committee on Student Affairs and, in this association, confirms the cooperative bond existing between faculty and students. 30 REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY With the convening of the forty-second Representative Assembly this year, Barnard con- tributed another example of the workability of Democracy. Consisting of approximately seventy elected members representing all classes and organizations of the college, the Assembly met bi-weeklv to discuss policies and plans for the college ' s student body. Among the affairs on the agenda of the current year, the British War Relief program required long debate and careful planning. An expanded conference budget enabled delegates to be sent to various national conferences. It was deemed expedient to raise the Student Activity Fee to $3-50. After Trustee and Faculty approval, it was decided that this increase should go into effect in 1941-1942. Students are urged to attend meetings of the Assembly, contribute their thoughts, and express their opinions. 1 ' Point of information, Madam President, ' ' says a Representative Assembly member during one of the bi-weekly meetings of the year. HONOR BOARD Recognition of the fact that college students are intellec- tually adult and capable of responsible conduct enabled Bar- nard College to institute the honor system under the super- vision of the Honor Board. Questions ofmalfeasancecomebefore the Board and, with ample provisions for a fair and impartial statement of the case, a decision is made and suggestions offered in an effort to aid the student in conforming with the college standard. Every member of the Undergraduate Association is requested to sign the Honor Code which is a public acknowl- edgement of responsibility. In this pledge the students resolve to uphold the honor of the college by refraining from every dis- honest action in their academic life and college work and determine to create a spirit of honor and honesty for its own sake. This year, all students, instead of only the Freshmen were asked to re-sign the Code as an indication of their renewal of its precepts. At the opening assembly the chairman of the Honor Board explained the method of investigating infringe- ments and clarified actual situations which comprise dishonest action. Two members from each class composed the Board under the chairmanship of Doris Williams. ' That we shall consider it dishonest 32 Senior Proctors. Rear row: M. Binder, M. Sir man, P. Draper, N. Wagner, A. A big, and A. Long. Middle row: E. Anderson, E. Briggs, J. Ringo, D. Wilson, L. Berbericb, and G. Sherwood. Front row: V. Arndt, P. lllingworth , J. Johnson, M. Lawrence, P. Mann, Chairman of the Court, A. Bostdmann, Chairman, C. Lawlor, and H. Ranney. SENIOR PRDCTDRS Some of the Eligibility Committee calculating yrades and averages. Standing W. Nest er, M. Messier, M. Milnes, C. Gabor, J. Mitchell. Seated at the Wiegard and Chairman M. Leahy. In order that the rules of the college may function smoothly and for the greater benefit of all, Senior Proctors, under the chairmanship of Adeline Bostelmann, endeavored to impress upon undergraduates the realization that their signatures are pledges. To emphasize this it was determined to increase immediate ac- tion following violations of the rules. A twinkle in the stern eye of justice was evidenced by the institution of a ciga- rette cemetery at each end of the Jungle as a reminder of observance of the smoking rules. Eligibility Committee So that each student who attains an office or position of authority may carry out that trust to the best of her ability her capacity for extracurricular activity is determined by the Eligibility Committee. Another and equally im- portant aim of the committee is to open student participation in activities to a greater number by means of limiting the offices one girl may hold. Expanding files necessitating more space, the Eligibility Committee with Marjorie Leahy as Chairman has recently estab- lished its headquarters in the newly decorated Conference Room. 33 MORTARBOARD Attempting to capture the highlights of the year as they appeared, the 1942 Mortar- board has included the major activities of college organiza- tions in the book as they oc- cured from fall to spring. This, it was hoped, would make the yearbook a record of and for those who worked and played at Barnard, both in serious and jovial mood. Several innovations were made with this iss ue of Barnard ' s an- nual. In addition to using the smaller and more modern size book, the staff, under the general supervision of Grace Barrett, Editor-in-Chief, has attempted to carry out the tone of informality even in the junior section. Here the new feature of an individual candid for each Junior was added to show the girl as she attended Barnard every day in addition to the more formal pose. Although the job of securing a shot of each girl was a large task, it was accomplished, and they were grouped together with the formal photograph and placed next to the individual write-up, so that all the data on each Junior could be seen more easily by the reader. With Helen Kandel and Zenia Sachs as Associate Editors in charge of the junior section and general activities, copy was written with an eye to recording both the functional and characteristic aspects of each organization. Series of phrases describing both personality traits and definite mannerisms as well as con- temporary activities or ambitions were composed, instead of complete sentences or short identifications. Color was used on the printed page for the first time. -Chief. Manager Above members of the Mortarboard Literary Staff edit copy. Back row: Members of the Advertising Staff: S. Nurco, E. Weiss, H. M. Collier, C. Bright, J. Vandervoort, and B. Hein%en. Center row: Clark. Seated: E. Meyer, Advertising Manager. G. Barrett, Editor-in-Chief, M. Schubert, Z. Sachs, Associate Editor, D. Carroll, and F. Fischman. In front: G. Tanasso, H. Kandel, Associate Editor, and D. Burstein. As the Mortarboard copy went to press Joan Brown, Business Manager, reported that sub- scription sales had exceeded those of the past seven years. This, it was believed, resulted from the fact that the yearbook layout was designed to accent college rather than Junior functions. As one result of the work on the part of the circulation staff and the advertising board aided by the business manager, the 1942 Mortarboard was solvent and made a substantial profit. Members of the yearbook staff typed hour after hour, day by day and sat down to many a cold dinner throughout the year to produce this volume. By having Sophomores and Fresh- men work along with Juniors and also check production at various stages, an attempt was made to train them as the nucleus of an incoming staff which would form the basis of a con- tinuous board. To them the retiring members leave the one bright curtain over the bookcase, the broken chair, and the small office of 402 Barnard Hall. he Circulation Staff filing subscriptions. Rear row : . Clayton, E. Young, E. Bach, and H. Marram. Middle row : L. Kates, M. bg ' rty, H. Gottesman, A. Zasuly, E. Sachs, G. Fernandez., E. Grimm, and D. Van Brink. Seated in front: C. Cherveme, E. Pugh, Circulation Manager, and Y . Coutant. MORTARBOARD STAFF GRACE BARRETT JOAN BROWN HELEN KANDEL ZENIA SACHS . SYLVIA GAUS ENID PUGH EDITH MEYER Editor-in-Chief Business Manager Associate Editoi Associate Editor Photography Editoi Circulation Manager Advertising Manager Clytia Capraro Helen Cornell Charlotte Gabor Alice Gershon • c °py Activities Junior Pictures Athletics Assistant Editors Classes Emily Gunning Art Mary Jane Heyl Faculty Juliette Kenney . Clubs Frances Murphy Ruth Swid . . . Roster Assistant Board Literary — Doris Bayer, Constance Bright, Deborah Burstein, Dorothy Carroll, Edith Cannon, Marilyn Collier, Edythe Efron, Florence Fischman, Evelyn Gonzales, Barbara Heinzen, Ursula Kraft, Gloria Tanasso, Jean Vandervoort. Photography — Marion Meding, Lucette Sanders, Marcia Van Derveer, Mary Ann Williams. Art — Denise Donegan, Marion Donovan, Bobette Wiener. Advertising — Dorothy Alpern, Shirley Aronow, Helen Bach, Joan Borgenicht, Dorothy Clark, Grace Glass, Evelyn Kelley, Francine Salzman, Ethel Weiss. Roster — Sybil Kotkin, Marjorie Nestler, Gladys Neuwirth, Carmel Prashker. Circulation — Denise Anderson, Eleanor Bach, Caroline Chervenie, June Clayton, Yvonne Coutant, Glafyra Fernandez, Helene Gottesman, Elaine Grimm, Marilyn Haggerty, Judith Hyde, Lillian Kates, Helen Marraro, Jane Morrell, Elaine Sachs, Marjorie Schaefer, Rosemary Short, Marybelle Sloan, Dorothy Van Brink, Elizabeth Young, Amy Zazuly. Awards Mortarboard takes pleasure in announcing the following awards for outstanding work: Grace Barrett and Joan Brown. Sylvia Gaus, Helen Kandel, Edith Meyer, Enid Pugh, and Zenia Sachs. Alice Gershon, Mary Jane Heyl, and Juliette Kenney. Deborah Burstein, Glafyra Fernandez, and Florence Fischman. 36 BULLETIN Irene Lyons — Editor-in-Cbicj . Pa llli, th — Business Manager Where ' s the lead story? Two line head in 24 point Bodoni Bold. Re- write this and cut two inches! Call Western Union! Who has box one? Frantic last minute cutting, type- writers clicking swiftly in 405 Barn- ard Hall, and, suddenly, sighs of re- lief. Bulletin has been dummied in again. Written, managed, and directed by Barnard students, Bulletin presents, twice weekly, the activities and opinions of the college body. Irene Lyons, Editor-in-Chief, comments on the news and generally supervises the staff. Rita Roher and Doris Prochaska al- ternately prepare the paper for publication, while Patricia Ilhngworth, Business Manager, keeps the accounts in order. This year Bulletin has attempted to prevent the second page from appearing stereotyped by substituting polls of student opinion and articles by the faculty for set columns. It has arranged the space to fit the article by changing the make-up where- ever desirable. Adding to the cosmopolitan nature of the editorial page, About Town reviews the plays, movies, and exhibits that appear in New York. Keeping in touch with colleges throughout the country by exchanging news, Bulletin prints the activities that most con- cern Barnard. Its Letters to the Edito- colamn presents an opportunity for students to discuss every phase of college life. In addition, the newspaper seeks information from outside organizations on vocations and other subjects which interest the students. bulletin News Board members below: R. Tarr, D. Donegal!,] . Cop on, F. Fischman, with M. Freeman and D. Burstein at the typewriters. Above: E. Stretchier, D. Prochaska, Man- aging Editor, G. Barrett, and E. Koenig make up the dummy About Town staff members below: M. Margolin, N. Shpetner, E. Hammer, About Town Editor, M. Ryttcnberg, R. Hadley, and K. Hanh. naff. Staff members had the opportunity to add to their knowledge of newspaper tech- niques at a tea in the fall when they heard Maureen McKernan, reporter on the New York Post, recount some of her experiences in gathering news. As is customary, the staff went up to rnard Camp the weekend before the Top — Bulletin Business Staff at left: M. Lawson at telephone with A. Zasuly, M. Messier, M. Haggerty, and L. Kates in back. Seated: . Borgenicht, M. Kolodny, H. Gottesman, and S. Aronow. Above — Some of the Editorial Board and Editorial Assistants of Bulletin. Back row: G. Barrett, Editor I. Lyons, R. Roher, H. Kandel, C. Capraro, and R. Blum- ner. In front: P. Wickenden, J. Goldstein, J. Ackermann, and Z. Sachs. Christmas Holiday, where they enjoyed seventy-two hours of relaxation without typewriters and copy pencils. At the tra- ditional publications tea in the spring, the new editors and the staff, which would be responsible for the production of Bulletin issues next year, were introduced to the members of the faculty. With the office decorated in black crepe paper, the new staff attended the annual funeral given to the senior members in April. Toasts were made to each girl as she re- ceived a present. After receiving instructions from the editorial board throughout the year, the incoming staff then took over its duties to carry on in the place of the former editors. Fitting into the characteristic pattern required to put Bulletin to bed, they in turn cried, Spread that 36 point head! Write a feature! Associate News Board members reading copy: B. Farrell, F. Levine, M. Messier, D. Landre, and B. Naegli, with J. Protas, M. LaFountain, and B. Elwyn around the typewriter. QUARTERLY Rita Koher — Editor-in-Chief Four times a year chairs are pushed back, weary brows mopped, blunted pencils dropped, and — another deadline reached — Quarterly shows signs of making an appearance. In the very first issue it was evident that smiles and a genial outlook on life would replace pre- vious gloom and pathology. Student- authored articles, short stories, poems and book reviews, which in previous years were inclined to stress the unreal, became representative of a gayer college atmosphere. Perhaps, the secret of the magazine ' s fresh and vital tone is the attention given to any timid manuscript. The door to 402 is open and the welcome sign is out for all embryonic masterpieces which care to present themselves. Under the editorship of Rita Roher this year, Quarterly ' s business details were managed by Jane Greenbaum. In addition to a revitalized aspect, more tangible innovations in the magazine included a theme cover, a larger staff with an increase in the percentage of underclassmen, an exchange system with other major colleges, and additional faculty subscriptions. Jane Greenbaum — Business Manager. The Quarterly Literary Staff examining some copy: A. Warburg, L. Peck, D. Weitzner, P. Wrana, L. Khouri, M. Dougherty, P. Highsmith, D. Burstein, B. Wiener. N. Balakian, G. Sherwood are in front with R. Roher, Editor, seated. At left: Some of Quarterly ' s Art Staff : B.Gilmour,K.Flhur- er, M. Turbow, Art Editor, and M. Don- Below, the rd; in back, M. Dickenson, U. Co bourne, A. Kar- na; in front, E. Sachs, L. Kates, L. Sand- en, and C. Wa ser. El Circulo Hispano El Circulo Hispano endeavoured in its monthly meetings to acquaint mem- bers with Spanish and Latin-American culture and to furnish an opportunity In the back row of this group of El Circulo Hispano: M. Blum, R. Santoni, L. Quintero, I. Hetber, E. McNeill, E. Davis, G. McCarthy, K. Lane, and V. Kos; in the middle row, M. Mascato, M. Scully, A. Connolly, President, J. Clayton, E. Bernstein, and V. Cheyne; in front are, F. Depole, E. Mascola, M. Rosser, A. Cuccio, D. Sherman, and R. Young. II Circulo Italiano With the aim of giving its members a better un- derstanding of Italian, II Circulo Italiano, headed by Helen Marraro, met every Wednesday for luncheon this year. Dur- ing the season, the club saw an Italian movie and attended the Barnard benefit opera as a group. A weekend at Camp and a Christmas party were other club events. for conversation in Spanish. In Novem- ber thirty members of the club jour- neyed to Washington where they were entertained at the Pan American Union, and by the legations of several coun- tries. Later in the month, the club joined with the Fine Arts Club in presenting a lecture by Paul Werner on Creative Contributions of Latin America. Fif- teen students spent a weekend at Barnard Camp where they spoke Span- ish, sang Spanish songs, and ate Spanish food. The club at Christmas presented a Spanish allegorical play. According to President Anne Connolly, this was the first time that a play of this kind was presented in the United States. Weekly coffee hours, a trip to a Spanish restaur- ant, and a musical program were other activities of the year. Circulo Italiano members assembled in a corner of Odd Study. In back are: R. Lubrano, E. Mascola, M. Ullman, G. Tanasso, I. Heiber, P. Holden, and R. Santoni. Seated : R. Gangemi, R. Geller, H. Marrarro, and A. DiBenedette. In front: R. Libera, G. Viggiano, and E. Bernstein. La Societe Francais Almost seventy mem- bers of La Societe Francais joined in social, philan- thropic and cultural ac- tivities designed to in- crease interest in France and her language. The most important event of the year was the filming of a French movie with members as the cast. Ac- cording to President Elaine Bernstein, the club was the first language group in any college to make a full one-act movie. Many teas and lectures were given, and evacuated French chil- dren in Britain were aided by a benefit lecture. The French Club pictured in the College Parlor. Back row R. Redon, T. Koefoed, L. Woodward, L. Usmer, M. McConn, U. Colbourne, M. McKesson, H. Frost, j. Leeds, R. Santoni, H. Willis, andG. Starr. Middle row: S. K ton, R. Gangemi, P. Gallo- way, C. Gordon, E. Bernstein, President, D. Sherman, F. Kelz, N. Cho lat-Nancv, K. Lane, and F. Depole. Front row: A. Kama, E. Ely, V . Cheyne, R. Young, and D. Hahn. Deutscher Kreis Combining social with intellectual activities, Deutscher Kreis met once every two weeks throughout the year. At the welcoming party which marked the beginning of the season, members sang German songs to the accompaniment of an accordion. The next meeting fea- tured Truth and Consequence played in German. In November, members of the club attended the German movie, Emil und die Detektive. Just before Christmas, the group, under the supervision of President Inge Hieber, presented a variety program including monologues, German popu- lar songs, and comedy sketches in honor of the Bay Ridge High School German Club. During the second term, the club planned the annual joint hike with the Columbia Yerein. Almost all the meetings featured singing in German to the accompaniment of Dr. Trude Gunther on her accordion. Pictured at left are club members of Deutscher Kreis. Standing: R. Hadley, L. Stumpp, B. Good, B. Baehr, H. Kingman, P. Vans Agnew, and M. Vanaman. Middle row: L. Ross, D. Wormwald, V. Rogers, 1. Heiber, President, E. Schoonov.r, M. Tschernjakov, J. Amberg, and M. Holliat. Front row: D. Burstein, E. Bonier, M. Molleson, I. Schocken, and Physical Science Club The Physical Science Club, which is directed by Betty Isaacs, planned its activities for students interested in chemistry and physics. Professor John R. Dunning, the nuclear physicist, and Professor William M. Malisoff, the philosopher and biochemist, spoke to the group early in the year. In addition to these outside speakers, the members of the club prepared a physics demon- stration for a meeting. Two Held trips were held — one to the laboratories of the Pure Food and Drug Administra- tion, and the other to the low-tempera- ture laboratories of the Columbia Uni- versity Physics Department. Preceding the field trip to Columbia, Professor Henry A. Boorse spoke to the group on the methods of gas liquefaction. The Physical Science Club in its characteristic habitat: E. Steinhardt, R. Stern. G. Schaffer, B. Isaacs, President, L. Ross, R. Wolfson, E. Wolf, and E. Schoonover, with E. Malisoff, B. Fish, and F. Lai ber in front. Social Service Committee The Social Service Com- mittee, headed by Jane Stew- art, in cooperation with so- cial agencies placed girls in volunteer positions as help- ers in hospitals, settlement houses, refugee work, and social research. The commit- tee also endeavored to place current social problems be- fore the college and dele- gates were sent to confer- ences on the Negro problem, and on peace. 42 The Social Service Committee at a meeting in the Conference Room: P. Hyrkin, L. Giventer, E. Foster, M. O ' Connor, J. Stewart, Chairman, and J. Moon with E. Gans and U. De Antonio in front. Committee to Defend America by Ai dinij the Allies Firmly believing that e.ents now oc- curring abroad threaten the security of the United States, a group of thirty girls were chartered late this fall as the Barnard Chapter of the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, and elected Helen Baker, President. Sub- scribing to the policy of the national committee, the group exerted its influ- ence towards making war supplies avail- able to England. Hundreds of petitions signed by Barnard girls and others were promptly forwarded to Congress while buttons were sold to further the aims of the club. Several teas and discussion groups were sponsored during the year. Members of the newly organized Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies in front of original posters used to publicize a college meeting sponsored by them in the fall. Standing are: M. Armstrong, and M. Duncan. Seated are: H. Baker, President, F. Wikawa,]. Brown, and M. Ewald. In front are: F. Levine and M. Hey I. International Relations Club Realizing the need for calm and unhysterical dis- cussion in a war torn world, the International Relations Club renewed its policy of impartial study of world events. The club held month- ly discussions on European affairs and South America under the leadership of Ellen Hammer. Delegates attended the F. P. A. conference on South America in November and the annual conference of I. R. C. clubs at Georgetown in December. 43 . R. C. members appropriately pictured in front of a world map. Rear: D. Carroll, E. Johnson, W. Hessinger, J. Campbell, E. Stone, J. Sloman, and H. Smith. Front: M. Hey I, M. Ryttenberg, E. Hammer, President, A. Gersbon, and D. LaCount. The Barnard part of the University Orchestra: J. Morgan, E. de le Vin, M. Donovan, and A. Rosensweig. Part of the Music Club. Back row: A. Shainin, J. Sloman, E. Taylor, R. Gangtmi, D. Whitaker, M. Ullmu P. Havill, I. Herzfeld, H. Frost, and A. Albig. Seated: A. Maresca, P. Holden, D. Klebanow, Preside, R. Geller, and C. Bright. In front: D. Proctor, M. Busch, and F. Has am. Music Club The production of a movie, starring its own members, replacedfor the first time the usual Music Club operetta. Early in the year, the club, presided over by Diana Klebanow, presented a recital on the Solo Vox, a new instrument, and Bob and Al Sherwin spoke on American Music. Orchestra Barnard is represented in the Columbia University Orchestra by thirteen girls playing several instruments. The main event of the year was the winter concert at which the entire orchestra was assembled. Fine Arts Cluh The Fine Arts Club, com- posed of forty-six members under the presidency of Betty Throop, sponsored monthly exhibits of paintings in Odd Study with the subject, Origins of Modern Art. A group of the Fine Arts Club in Odd Study. Back row: M. Jackson, E. Davis, N. Goodwin, E. McNeill, A. Connolly, E. Colgan, and T. Deck. Seated: D. Wilson, C. Johnson, E. Troop, President, M. Alexander, and F. Kelz.. In front: P. Hyrkin, S. Cole, M. Turbow, and M. Futtner. JUNIORS Three years ago a rumor flashed through Barnard ' s corridors to the effect that in this new Class of 1942 there was a certain formula, a combination which (they said) practically guar- anteed success in any endeavor (and later events seemed to prove it). With the rare achievement of two (yes, two) Greek Games victories behind them, the Juniors felt well fortified to embark upon their third and most active stage of their career. A review of the year disclosed that they had produced a year- book informal as well as informative; a Junior Prom at the Waldorf Astoria which lyrically surpassed their fondest ex- pectations (hmmmmmm); and a Junior Show which achieved the masterly feat of performing two different nights with witty lyrics, catchy music, and amusing scenes in comparing three generations at Barnard. According to their poll, the majority of the Class of 1942 considered their Junior year the best and preferred the beginning courses of Zoology 1-2 and Sociology 1-2 to work in more advanced lecture courses. Harvard College ranked first among men ' s colleges with Columbia University as a third choice; Fren- esi was chosen as the most popular song and The Philadelphia Story was voted their favorite movie. The best liked radio program was Information, Please, and Chesterfields satisfied. As you turn the pages photographs will more accurately describe the scenes at Prom, the hilarities of Show, and the personalities of those who compose the Class of 1942. We give you ... the Junior Class. Junior Class officers: J. McQuiston, Secretary; E. Meyer, Vice-President; E. Gunning, Presi- dent; and G. Fernandez., Treasurer. Below: the Class of ' 42. eanor tllen . . . transferred from Adelphi this year . . . proudly lends her voice to the Chapel Choir ... a Barnard Bernhardt . . . likes the smell of smelly pipes . . . collects mementos . . . takes Shakespeare straight and loves it . . . music by Tschaikovsky . . . advocates speech and dramatic train- ing .. . llizabetli $ffe . . . a sunny disposition . . . and blond hair to go with it . . . the theatre has caught her fancy . . . and she pursues this avoca- tion behind the scenes as well, with Wigs and Cues . . . she ' s an equestrienne, and a swimmer . . . plans to apply her knowledge of psychology to a job . . . f ebecca . . . has an inexhaustible fund of patience and unruffled good spirits . . . loves her daily walks in Riverside Park . . . drama, music, and books are her main interests . . . English her major . . . also likes Greek . . . belongs to the Classical Club . . . plans to teach . . . 46 £)orotliij . . . youngest member of the class . . . has worked for business staffs of both Mortar- board and Quarterly . . . belongs to El Circulo Hispano and Menorah . . . studies English lit . . . reads novels as a hobby . . . has speaking ability . . . was dramatics counselor . . .will teach speech in high school . . . V ... a great one for athletics, all-round . . . earned numerals and letters in volleyball and basketball . . . was baseball manager, V.B. and B.B. captain . . . has won tenikoit tournaments and taken a six-week bicycle Hostel trip . . . writes, loves languages . . . will teach French . . . mdden . . . friendly, attractive . . . psychology major . . . wants to do social service work . . . likes dramatics . . . people ... is secre- tary of Wigs and Cues, publicity manager of Glee Club junior year . . . spent summer as a camp counselor ... a dark blonde . . . with blue eyes . . . famous for a delightful smile . . . 47 erAon . . . majoring in history had nothing to do with her being class historian . . . nor with her grace at dancing . . . renowned for a keen mind . . . which showed in repeated A ' s . . . and she doesn ' t countenance emo- tionalism in discussions of the world situa- tion . . . hopes to make work as a librarian lively . . . erion . . . day student . . . loves free week-ends . . . likes to talk inside and outside school . . . majors in psychology . . . uses it in bridge . . . counts shopping among her hobbies . . . belongs to Episcopal Club . . . cheers for sports . . . plans to do social work after graduation . . . r i£erS . . . church and social service work is the end towards which she is working ... a student of religion . . . she has worked for the Episcopal Club ... on the Silver Bay executive committee and the Intercol- legiate Student Christian movement . . . was counselor for underpriviliged children . . . hobby is music . . . 48 Each . . . nicknamed Lynne . . . known by her pale blond hair . . . mainly interested in Junior Show, Junior Prom, symphonies, and S.A.E. fraternity . . . collects first- editions . . . majors in sociology ... re- markable ability to run dances and social affairs . . . after Barnard plans to work and get married . . . lAJini red Each . . . characterized by a gay laugh and a sunny manner . . . the ballet interests her as does chemistry, her major . . . has un- usual talent for making hats and French sauces . . . Europe has been her traveling- ground, as have also Mexico and Cuba . . . plans to do medico-chemical research after college . . . Earbara (J3aelir ... a charming Continental . . . her wandering over the globe has reached as far as Algiers . . . Barnard ' s her third col- lege . . . majoring in anthropology . . . toots a flute and pings a piano in her spare time . . . has theories on how to re-style stogy people . . . -flu H i I I II ... a soft voice, sparkling eyes . . . gentle- ness and determination merged delight- fully . . . widely traveled, lived in the Orient and England ... a leader in drive to keep America out of war by aiding Britain . . . history major, but has main in- terests in the journalistic field . . . plans to make writing a career . . . ian . . . now book review editor oiQuarterly . . . may see write-ups of her own masterpieces some day . . . holds an English scholarship ... a devotee of the three B ' s, delights in music and piano . . . and believes in art for art ' s sake . . . charmed by French poetry and Saroyan ... is a good arguer and a true pacifist . . . yarned . . . has a flair for the dramatic . . . and finds spice in everything about the theatre . . . including our own Wigs and Cues . . . horses and cats are good friends . . . de- lights in meeting people who speak Spanish or French . . . wishes she could speak ten foreign languages . . . has begun by majoring in French . . . 50 . . . majors in extra-curricular activities . . . devotes equal time and interest to history . . . the backbone of college publications ... a long career on Bulletin and its editor- in-chief for next year . . . Mortarboard Editor . . . headed for journalism . . . main loves: newspapers, the theatre, and large pocketbooks . . . £fhabetli (Sen . . . majoring in German . . . likes the out- doors, horses, writing, books . . . Russian music and Wagner appeal to her . . . swims, plays piano . . . outstanding achievement: making a host of friends at college . . . has very decided opinions on most subjects . . . but has flexible, open mind . . . ... a sweet smile . . . lots of curls ... a lovely figure beautifully dressed . . . de- lightful sense of humor . . . she hates egocentric people, and liver . . . likes roses . . . she ' s one of the smoothest dancers at Barnard . . . psychology her major . . . wants to work with juvenile delin- quents . . . 51 Bettu Be . . . frivolous and serious ... an industrious gadabout ... a psych major who is crazy about English lit and social work . . . loves mah-jong and bridge ... is an avowedly gregarious individual . . . Bishop Berkeley and Zeno among her philosophi- cal problems . . . . . . government holds her attention . . . not as anticipated work only . . . but as charming director of finances, also shone as Greek Games Business Manager . . . has a sympathetic interest in social legislation, young people . . . Honor Board Chairman- elect . . . . . . widely traveled ... no stranger to the mysteries of the Near East . . . Con- stantinople . . . Paris . . . Canada . . . great loves: ballet, music, and theatre . . . day student from Milton-on-Hudson . . . his- tory major . . . wants to work for her Master ' s degree after graduation . . . Undergrad treasurer now . able and 52 ttm . . . romantic type . . . loves exploring old barns . . . loyal to UCLA . . . psych major . . . deep-sea fishes . . . has spent vacations traveling in California, Wisconsin, and New York ... El Circulo Hispano and Deutscher Kreis . . . expects to do work in clinical psychology . . . . . . day student . . . chemistry major . . . likes to study chlorine in the swimming pool . . . saves cartoons . . . specializes in the ancient arts of horticulture and sewing . . . Physical Science and Classical Clubs claim her . . . likes hiking . . . prefers a few very good, sincere friends . . . and has them . . . . . . small, eager, conscientious . . . likes music and playing the piano . . . collects member of the El Circulo Hispano and Hostel booster, nostalgic about a sum- mer ' s bike trip to Quebec . . . majors in economics . . . expects to do economic or statistical work . . . oqqiano phonograph records furiously Deutscher Kreis an American Youth 53 unce Ericjkt ... a calm, poised, and accomplished young lady . . . held a model ' s job last summer . . . sings and plays . . . draws some . . . has more than a superficial knowledge of music . . . adores Xavier Cugat and the Starlight Roof . . . collects anything ... an Anglophile, and ardent worker for British War Relief . . . . . . ethereally slim, dark-haired, fair- skinned . . . Irish right through . . . capti- vates her friends . . . and broke their hearts when she cut her hair . . . for some reason will be a bacteriologist . . . takes her zoology without reservation . . . even cut- ting up specimens on her own, at home . . . . . . petite, pretty, always groomed to per- fection . . . especially adores clothes ... a distinctive charm of unhurriedness and efficiency . . . dislikes procrastination . . . Mortarboard Business Manager ... an A history major, hopes for eventual job in the Department of Justice . . . l oan 54 oLatia i Sf runner . . . Foxy to us ... a grand sport . . . likes men, Lion ' s Den, bull sessions, good fun . . . talented in art work . . . oils, block printing, charcoals . . . majors in fine arts . . . may decide to be a curator in an art museum . . . considers herself a temperamental extremist . . . . . . reserved . . . but states her opinions frankly . . . hates hypocrites . . . spent freshman year at Notre Dame College of Staten Island . . . class treasurer there . . . belongs to La Societe Francaise and New- man Club here . . . hobbies are candid camera photography and book-collecting . . . majoring in English literature . . . may teach English . . . . . . Sally to her friends . . . transferred from Smith this year . . . and is busy in- vestigating the Barnard situation . . . out- side interests consist of reading, theatre- going, and keeping track of her Smith friends . . . pet peeves are red neckties, creamed onions, and grinds . . . English major . . . rund 55 . . . junior-transfer from Smith College . . . went to Kathenne Gibbs Secretarial School for a year between Smith and Barnard . . . history major with athletic hobbies . . . fond of tennis . . . ski week-ends ... in- terested in social work . . . spent a summer working at Children ' s Island in Marble- head . . . «2)ortd (J3urle . . . hails from St. Louis, Missouri . . . quiet, extremely capable . . . loads of friends attest for that ... an excellent sailor, spent the last seven summers sailing in Maine . . . interested in all phases of her government major . . . loves to argue, listen to politicians . . . hopes to be one herself . . . -Jludrey lJ3urnett . . . transferred from St. Lawrence college in Canton, N. Y. . . . likes Barnard very much . . . has the gift of making friends easily . . . and her gay disposition has won many of them for her . . . did some play- writing and newspaper work at St. Lawrence ... is a history major . . . and hopes to take an M.A. . . . 56 . . . majors in jurisprudence ... is inter- ested in international politics, social prob- lems, and law . . . plans to get a law degree . . . likes week-end dates, dancing, and plenty of sleep . . . knitting is her hobby . . . a member of the Deutscher Kreis . . . . . . economics major . . . one of those lucky people who saw Europe as it used to be . . . to the theatre on her day off ... a good game of tennis is her secondary ambition . . . thinks politics is fun . . . . . . another writer . . . perhaps a female Orson Welles in process ... at any rate, claims to be a potential hero-worshiper, annually succumbi ng to her professor ' s charms . . . rues 15 pounds added to her weight . . . active in Wigs and Cues . . . dotes on Hewitt bull sessions . . . intends to teach social studies will go 57 ... a gazelle and a Greek goddess with a political conscience . . . government major engaged to another government major from Columbia . . . dances jitterbug with calm disdain . . . waltzes with maniacal glee . . . cooks with artistic delight . . . reads political theorists, and grows rapt over Brahms quintets . . . (Claudia C a arner . . . likes the outdoor life, skating, biking, long hikes, and camp ... in contrast, is also interested in music and her major, philosophy . . . spends summers biking around New Engla nd and Canada . . . draws and paints during her spare mo- ments . . . plans to attend the Library School at Columbia . . . Jewell dlicii feint ij y ncipmcin . . . horses are her hobby, particularly her own horse, Caribbean . . . and, in related fields, horse shows and fox-hunting add a touch of glamour to her spare-time activity . . . takes sports in the form of archery and tennis . . . psychology major . . . trans- ferred from Wells College . . . (Caroline C lii ervenie . . . loves to talk . . . especially at dis- cussions . . . hates people without a sense of humor . . . music and dancing rate high . . . belongs to Glee Club and Wigs and Cues ... in line with her major, mathe- matics, likes practicability . . . looks for- ward to mathematical or statistical re- search, and matrimony . . . «2)of o tli if C ia rh . . . lovely, blond, curly locks . . . effer- vescent personality . . . gets lots of fun out of life . . . enthusiastic over English major, particularly the drama . . . after graduation has ambitions for theatre work, publicity, staging, or costume designing . . . along with that, marriage and lots of children . . . . . . friendly . . . but reserved . . . commutes from Long Island . . . studied dancing for years ... is a Spanish major . . . may teach either . . . collects miniature glass animals, prize item is a tiny glass skunk ... El Circulo Hispano officer . . . sophomore dance chairman for Greek Games . . . en- joys swimming or reading . . . on . . . witty transfer from University of Kansas City in Missouri . . . calls self an Anglophile . . . collects books, maps, dogs . . . despises beauty parlors and Wagner . . . ambition to travel, graduate from Barnard . . . majoring in history . . . has brown hair, white, white skin . . . . . . fine arts major . . . goes in for mountain climbing in a strenuous way . . . takes a stand against communists and radicals . . . not only designs clothes but makes them too . . . glad Gilbert and Sullivan got to- gether . . . belongs to Newman Club and La Societe Francaise . . . interested in in- teresting people . . . . . . direct descendant of James Fenimore Cooper . . . transfer from Vassar . . . French major . . . wants to study at the Sorbonne . . . fancies dogs, figure-skating, the theatre . . . dreams of being in the diplomatic service, roller-skating in Grand Central Station . . . prime ambition is fashion- designing . . . sweaters loves music, reading, and an 60 . . . candid nature . . . invites confidence . . . flare for drawing, camera art, and busi- ness . . . logically then, Mortarboard ' s assistant art editor, and student at Colum- bia School of Business . . . collects coins . . . likes to swim in icy mountain lakes . . . looks forward to a business career after college . . . . . . has all the exuberance that goes with red hair . . . loves to fix up rare concoctions in the kitchen . . . but hates anything scientific like lab work . . . dashes up to Cornell for house-parties and fun fre- quently . . . wants to do social work after college . . . and is anxious to move far away from New York . . . s$n(jela C uccio . . . Latin-Greek major . . . had ten years schooling in Italy . . . camera fan . . . men are one of her outside interests . . . takes pleasure before business . . . has talent in singing and some ambitions along that line . . . unexcitable nature . . . college has taught her to rely on herself . . . 61 atricia C u 4 it . . . versatile . . . vivacious . . . poised . . . that ' s Pat . . . book chairman of Junior Show . . . her clever wit gave us a produc- tion which was our pride and joy . . . has belonged to Representative Assembly . . . member of Newman Club for three years ... is majoring in sociology which she may teach . . . . . . keen on sailing . . . music, writing, and her English lit major all come in for serious interest . . . already a fluent critic for Bulletin ' s About Town . . . sang in Glee Club . . . freshman class treasurer and on Residence Hall ' s exec committee now . . . will probably combine teaching and writ- ing on the side . . . (jera id in e 2X ... a woman of firm convictions, practi- cality, and charm ... a psychology major who applies her theories to daily life . . . loves to talk politics, listen to music, and think about her far-away fiance . . . has travelled in Central America . . . hates natural sciences . . . gives good advice to the lovelorn . . . 62 accjjiteline 2)« Ul5 . . . her wit belies her mild personality . . . loyalties consist of Republican party, Washington University football team . . . and other varied causes . . . likes the gen- erally cosmopolitan kaleidoscope of Bar- nard and New York . . . after college she expects to harass a lot of newspaper editors . . . Jli elm a lj£)ech . . . unimpressed by causes and campaigns, but an anti-New Dealer just the same . . . fine arts major . . . outside of art galleries, gets aesthetic satisfaction out of running a house efficiently . . . leans toward ping- pong and knitting . . . transfer this year from Bryn Mawr . . . likes Barnard ' s up-and-comingness . . . Jlieima t)e rie3t . . . admits one-third responsibility for all the noise on fourth floor Hewitt . . . loves bull sessions, one aspect of residence halls life . . . and hates fire drills . . . chemistry major who transferred from Skidmore after a year and a half . . . likes anything connected with medicine . . . and prospect of med school . . . 63 cUJorcad edje oLa Premier . . . Wellesley transfer . . . wanted to get to New York and away from sloppy sweaters . . . fond of Barnard but thinks it needs more sentiment ... as pretty as her name . . . always sees the brighter side of life . . . an English major with the determination to become a modern professor . . . . . . has traveled extensively both in Mexico and on the Continent . . . maybe that, with her government studies, has broadened her outlook, for she appreciates liberal minds . . . likes music . . . exhibits a talent for writing, especially short stories, and hopes to make it a career . . . . . . vivacious, fun-loving Latin-American . . . enjoys travel . . . wants to speak many languages . . . majors in French . . . mem- ber of La Societe Francaise and Newman Club . . . was vice-president of El Circulo Hispano last year . . . hobbies are loaf- ing, shopping, the movies . . . spends summers swimming and dancing at home in Puerto Rico . . . ima 64 . . . quiet, winsome . . . with a creative talent that manifests itself in painting and sculpture . . . and a love for the works of all artists, shown by her pleasure in music and reading . . . fine arts her choice as chief study . . . also belongs to Fine Arts Club . . . post-graduate plans tentative . . . . . . transferred from Radcliffe in sophomore year . . . majoring in zoology . . . has a flair for things scientific . . . enjoys sym- phonic music . . . dabbles in art . . . goes in for archery and dogs . . . confesses to an unusual talent for weaving rugs. . . ex- pects to become a laboratory technician . . . ' ranees t epoie . . . speaks Spanish even outside of Mil- bank . . . for that ' s her major and main interest . . . she belongs to El Circulo Hispano, too, as well as La Societe Fran- caise and Newman Club . . . sews in her spare time . . . and as often as possible spends that time at Barnard Camp . . . hopes to teach her favorite language . . . 65 . . . boldly brands herself a hedonist, an introvert, and a little too independent . . . aesthetics and philosophy major corre- lated with a leaning towards art, writing, and dance . . . her forte is singing and mu- sic which she will continue studying in New York after graduation . . . ambition: concert work . . . 4 4 - . . . the tallest junior of them all . . . she carries that distinction well . . . long silky blond hair ... a graceful athlete . . . threw discus in Greek Games both years and placed . . . Honor Board representative since freshman year . . . counselor at Herald-Tribune camp for poor children . . . English lit major . . . (Elaine 2) . . . lost: one sense of shyness . . . she has the enviable ability to get along with peo- ple easily and well . . . pays attention to international and Pan-American relations . . . now specializing in government, plans to enter civil service . . . thinks marriage is a noble institution and intends to prove 66 Iff] a f ion 2) onovan . . . trim, chic transfer from Brooklyn . . . fine arts major who loves drawing, plays the violin, and is a good athlete . . . has been a pillar of the Columbia Orchestra for two years . . . aspires to an M.A. at T. C. and an art-teaching position . . . cheerful disposition and a gypsy nature . . . wants to travel . . . (Elizabeth j£)orman ... a strong feminist . . . her friends value her sound judgment . . . majors in English . . . writing her chief talent . . . has already had a start in her chosen career ... a sum- mer ' s collaboration on a novel . . . char- acter novels are her favorite ... as Mrs. Cosbey she enthusiastically approves of married life . . . ... a charming representative of France . . . her loves, in the aesthetic line, com- prise literature, music, philosophy, writ- ing, dramatics ... in particular, likes to read poetry aloud and play the piano . . . and double-check writing . . . has traveled all over Europe . . . and longs to be able to return . . . 67 . . . two affections has she . . . writing and the theatre . . . what more apt than to combine the two, and become a dramatic critic? . . . admires William Saroyan . . . would like to write like Dorothy Parker ... on the side, plays a fast game of ping- pong . . . collects coins . . . wants to go to Columbia School of Journalism . . . argarel oLJuncan . . . has laughing eyes and loves lots of fun . . . can tell jokes with a straight face . . . her chief interests are her friends . . . vol- leyball ' s not too strenuous for her . . . she captains the team for the A. A. . . . majors in Latin and Greek, belongs to the Classi- cal Club . . . plans an M.A. at Teachers College . . . . . . hates fads and loves independence . . . plays the violin and listens enthralled to classical music . . . also takes part in stamp-collecting, sports, and modern dance . . . has been active in I. R. C. and Physical Science Club . . . majors in chemistry . . . might combine a chemical research career with travel . . . . . . turned up nose . . . eyes that laugh . . . and a dream behind them . . . now she lives to write . . . one day will write to live . . . efficient school reporter for Herald-Tribune . . . loves sandwiches in the Jungle, picnics in the woods . . . her major is English comp though she is specializing in Medi- eval Studies . . . . . . inhibitions unknown ... an insatiable, inquiring mind . . . has a profound love of argument, philosophical and otherwise ... a facility to deal masterfully with any Romance language . . . firmly devoted to string quartets and modern art ... a flair for sarcasm, witticism and criticism . . . . . . long blond hair that gives her a Joan of Arc air . . . says she ' s completely near- sighted, but objects to specs on principle . . . educated in Europe . . . believes in idealism, classicism, and conservatism . . . French major and intellectual who gravi- tates to philosophical talks over cokes at Tilson ' s at ten . . . 69 . . . charmingly loyal to Santo Domingo . . . but she loves America in general and the service in particular . . . for a while was partial to Annapolis, now the Army has won out . . . majoring in sociology . . . worked in the Dominican Building at the World ' s Fair . . . hopes to do her part for Pan-Americanism . . . rrcinceS fahrenholz . . . superabundance of pep and vim . . . likes people, the theatre, Georgetown . . . spent a summer doing stock in Suffern, N. Y. . . . a talent for matching people ' s moods . . . staunch supporter of her beliefs and ideals . . . sociology major . . . headed for career . . . directed Junior Show . . . . . . Mexican archeology and collecting jewelry constitute her favorite pastimes . . . likes modern dance and sociology, her chief subject . . . golf and badminton are the sports that get her out . . . will work for a Master ' s . . . attracts by a quiet, strong manner and an interesting pair of eyes . . . 70 lira Fernandez . . . father Mexican, mother Irish . . she ' s dark-haired, quiet . . . lovable . . . horre rreans New York and Mexico City . . . A. A. badminton manager . . . and cham- pion in that sport, in school and out . . . Junior Class Treasurer . . . majoring in history, she collects current editorials . . . new Undergraduate Vice-President . . . $arbara iili . . . heads class Dean ' s list . . . petite, agile, versatile . . . majors in zoology . . . inter- ested in music, science, politics . . . hates criticizers of science . . . relishes reading, walking, modern dance, making jewelry . . . wants to combine marriage and science; carefully staying out of the ivory tower . . . (J3ellu oue . . . likes fun and friends mixed in with school . . . enjoys dates and dances, espe- cially with Columbia men . . . but claims to be prejudiced in favor of uniforms . . . dislikes sciences . . . wants to do some sort of social work or personnel direction, and should, because she gets along well with everyone . . . 71 azet ZJ-rost . . . her pursuance of the arts includes in- dulging in music and art appreciation, symphonic concerts, stylish clothes . . . adept at tennis and volleyball . . . spent time canoeing in Maine . . . studies history hard . . . keeps up with current events and labor controversies . . . was engaged last January . . . ... a girl who lives intensely . . . very much in earnest . . . fine arts major, she loves her course and painting . . . very fond of the theater . . . sketches in her spare moments . . . keeps an art scrapbook . . . has a great interest in the events of the world today . . . wants some day to travel widely . . . . . . reads a great deal and keeps clippings of many different kinds that take her fancy ... is well-traveled . . . lured particularly by politics and governmental matters, as her economics major shows . . . has lively, intelligent eyes, a moss-rose complexion, and a contagious smile . . . 72 Sylvia, Cji f aus . . . ardent club member . . . socialite too . . . has toured Italy, France, Cuba, and the Bahamas quite thoroughly . . . did her stint, and a hard one, too, supervising all these candid camera shots for Mortar- board . . . eco her major . . . claims the sweetest hobby: collecting sugar lumps . . . . . . modest, a good pianist . . . swimming, basketball and golf, plus spectator foot- ball, are pet sports . . . her feminine avoca- tions are collecting tea-tags and sugar loaves . . . finds pleasure in theater and con- certs . . . and in being lazy . . . music major . . . plans to work after college, only for a year . . . (biuret (jene toS . . . transfer from Larson Junior College . . . goes in for singing . . . Glee Club and Chorus ... in Phi Theta Kappa honorary sorority for two years . . . loves pondering philosophic questions . . . hopes to work in some branch of government ... at present unsure which aspect interests her most . . . 73 . . . wonderful raven hair to toss and coltish vigor to go with it . . . her shortest day has forty-eight hours ... a credit to her field of English comp . . . won the Prince Prize for dramatic composition . . . worked in the League Building at the Fair . . . plans career writing plays . . . . . . her inclination towards politics is vented in topical arguments, which she enjoys immensely . . . and it may lead her, after majoring in history, to law school . . . she blames this devotion on having lived in Washington, D. C. . . . her travels have left her with the desire to return to Honolulu . . . tjCiflian (jodwin . . . full of pep and enthusiasm . . . puts equal energy into everything she does . . . whether it be tennis, riding, or jitter- bugging . . . still, likes to take in a good book . . . was going to spend her life in chem lab but now she ' s a student of psy- chology . . . and would like to do social service work . . . 74 £lvelijn (jonzaied . . . tousled hair gives her the appearance of a Botticelli boy . . . absorbed in writing and in her major, esthetics . . . the dreamer type, especially in the spring and autumn . . . favors Italian, which she studies, and people . . . one notices and approves the ever-present kindliness of her manner . . . (J3arbarci (jooJ. . . . friendly, sociable, always interested . . . goes in for reading, hiking, singing . . . belongs to the Glee Club and Deutscher Kreis . . . her hobbies are photography and collecting all sorts of things . . . majors in sociology and plans social work . . . has a knack for understanding people . . . C liarlotte Cjordon . . . charm and vivacity personified . . . sparkling eyes reflect her enthusiasms . . . a pianist born to play Haydn and Mozart . . . loves symphonic music ... a sociology major, has worked in Henry Street settle- ment . . . would like to have four children and develop the courage of her convic- tions . . . 75 elene Cjotti eiman . . . black-haired, well-poised, popular . . . thoroughly easy-going . . . patronizes Tilson ' s for relaxation . . . shows business side in being Treasurer of Menorah and on business staff of Bulletin . . . majors in eco and hopes to delve into research . . . un- assuming, insists her ambition is to learn to carry a tune . . . . . . dotes on children . . . with whom she gets along very well . . . her psychology studies help . . . was a crafts ' counselor with eight-year-olds . . . she ' d prefer to teach primary grades . . . talents are danc- ing and designing . . . wants to raise a family, gain many real friends, meet life successfully . . . . . . from Texas, and loyal to it . . . but she does like subways . . . was an honor gradu- ate from Hockaday Junior College . . . fan of new dance steps . . . ardent pianist . . . seasoned traveler ... an American history major . . . the Texan in her makes her long to spend life riding a ranch . . . and making up sleep . . . 76 . . . says she ' s cynical . but it ' s in a charming way . . . energies generally di- rected toward having a good time . . . can ' t stand Hubbard squash and cold weather . . . likes to knit . . . manifests well-developed political partialities . . . considers herself completely untalented . . . ... a good companion and conversa- tionalist . . . gets a spurt of ambition and studies furiously . . . her formula for making the Dean ' s list . . . member of Deutscher Kreis and Glee Club . . . major- ing in psychology . . . intends to apply her knowledge and insight to clinical psy- chology after graduate work . . . . . . specs always perched on her forehead . . . Junior Class President . . . responsible for many of the year ' s successful events . . . efficiency, plus that easy congenial air . . . Undergraduate Association President- elect . . . movies her favorite indoor sport . . . majoring in sociology .... aiming for the business world . . . aine 11 . . . lived in France until last summer, when she fled bombing to Portugal . . . spent school years in a Paris lycee and one year at the University of Poitiers . . . traveled in Belgium, Switzerland, Portugal . . . musical, artistic . . . fond of French literature and the classics . . . wants to teach French . . . . . . comes from Wheaton College . . . cares for a garden at her home in Scarsdale . . . avidly adds to her library . . . books are close friends to her . . . she worked one summer in her local public library . . . against all ' isms . . . hopes that she ' ll be able to take graduate work in England . . . . . . loves fun and people and excitement ... is partial to Columbia men and they ' re partial to her ... as social chairman she gave us a never-to-be-forgotten Junior Prom ... is getting practical training modelling and selling at Macy ' s . . . and will enter the merchandizing or fashion field . . . 78 J atlierine Janfu ... a daughter of the far West, Colorado . . . rosy cheeks and an impish smile . . . extra-curricularly active ... as class his- torian, Residence Council member, Secre- tary of British War Relief . . . music critic for Bulletin s About Town . . . writes for Press Board, too . . . headed for journal- ism . . . C on stance JJa re ... is really devoted to song . . . loves choral work . . . has graced several mu- sical organizations including Chapel Chorus, Choir, and the Music Club . . . is partial to snowy winter weather and ski trips to New England . . . Junior Show Chairman . . . would eventually like to direct choral groups . . . d ianclie J artiii . . . goes in for the glamourous . . . Spanish music, costume jewelry, striking clothes . . . outspoken, gay, she sings, dances, and tries the ukelele . . . was a World ' s Fair guide both seasons . . . then sold at Loeser ' s College Shop . . . and lost a desire to go into merchandizing . . . thinks of a radio career . . . 79 . . . musically minded . . . majors in music and belongs to the Music and Glee Clubs . . . has a fine singing voice herself and likes to attend Metropolitan Opera per- formances . . . enjoys swimming and horses . . . considers it fun to travel by auto with congenial friends, as she did last summer to Canada . . . MH 1 H ([Barbara J Jc . . . bubbling Barb . . . gave grand inter- pretation of Mrs. Bennett, in Pride and Prejudice ... an asset to El Circulo Hispano, La Societe Francaise, and New- man Club . . . was head of transfer dinner ... a Macy-ite . . . majors in history . . . and the gift of gab . . . . . . reading and keeping scrapbooks are her absorbing hobbies . . . likes history almost as well as her major, zoology . . . enjoys playing golf . . . has belonged to Deutscher Kreis and Lutheran Club since frosh days . . . Secretary of the latter . . . plans to take a post-graduate hospital laboratory tech- nician course . . . . . . blue-eyed Nordic . . . has visited Germany . . . since then has wanted to teach German . . . circulates between zoo lab, the Met, and the Kreis room . . . sings enthusiastically even though she denies any talent . . . prefers medical books to novels . . . loves horseback-riding in the country . . . . . . committee-member extraordinary and government major . . . links an affection for the theater with three years of Wigs and Cues . . . worked at League of Nations Pavilion at the Fair one summer . . . and with the Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies, another . . . wants to enter government foreign service . . . f- atricia Jdicjliimitli . . . Pat the distinctive . . . Pat the ultra . . . Pat the gal who reads standing up . . . all Barnard shivers to the tune of her smoothly-written Quarterly masterpieces . . . the magazine ' s new Editor . . . woodcarves in her spare time ... is glad that Barnard has made her less ' ivory- towensh . . . 81 War? Mitt . . . transferred after one year at Southern Methodist . . . where she majored mainly in football games and dances . . . thought she ' d like to do some work . . . now does both, and loves it, along with raising Angora kittens at Chappaqua, and design- ing clothes . . . after another degree, may work for young people ' s Christian educa- tion . . . l Ylarie-Cjermaine JJocfan . . . curly brown hair and warm blue eyes . . . she is chiefly interested in fine arts although her major is French . . . especially fond of Picasso . . . attended grammar school in France . . . tries her hand at poetry . . . and is on the literary staff of Quarterly, which she joined last year . . . £ditli J4oi . . . patron of the opera and ballet . . . knitting is her sedentary hobby, golf and swimming her active ones ... an enthusiast for nature . . . has camped out in primitive fashion . . . attracted by all aspects of zoo and chem, her major, especially lab work . . . turns out a good devil ' s food cake . . . 82 . . . has a soft spot for bridge, music, and knitting ... in Connecticut College be- longed to peace group, dramatic club, re- ligious council . . . also held executive positions . . . had a year ' s study in Eng- land . . . majors in botany and is out for a career . . . which her enterprise and ver- satility ought to insure . . . ... is gentle, tactful, and sincere . . . takes a genuine interest in social service work . . . and loves to help others . . . majors in zoology . . . but science is only a beginning for her larger plans ... for she intends to help by doing hospital laboratory work after she has completed sufficient study . . . -can JJugAed . . . blond, blue-eyed, native New Yorker . . . talented artist . . . class poster chair- man . . . her eye-catching posters are re- sponsible for a good part of the attendance at school dances . . . photography and settlement work claim the rest of Pete ' s free time . . . she majors in fine arts . . . might teach a while . . . 83 li . i . . . Judy of the imperturbable good humor . . . tells wonderful stories about her younger brothers and sisters . . . has a knack of getting on with small children . . . the piano and dancing charm her . . . spends summers on a farm . . . studies zoology in hopes of going to medical school . . . and becoming a pediatrician . . . . . . has an infectious smile . . . likes the theatre, athletics, reading ... is gifted artistically . . . her chief interests besides art are social work, which she plans to take up later, and dates, which are not limited to any particular time . . . says college has brought her down to earth . . . . . . talent for painting, designing, and making jewelry . . . has been around the U. S. in a trailer . . . spent one summer fishing in Nova Scotia ... a philosophy major daring to be practical enough to aim for a business career . . . with the avowed purpose of being Jensen ' s keen rival . . . 84 . . . majors in psychology, but still finds time to pursue her interests in dance, mu- sic, and sports ... to be able to play the violin is a secret wish . . . has traveled in Europe . . . the Bennington Dance Festivals have often attracted her . . . plans to teach in nursery school . . . Jut In luuie tfeftreu ... a recent transfer from Adelphi . . . proud of her A in philosophy though she majors in French . . . naming those two subjects her favorites ... is a music lover and an opera-goer . . . combines somehow a fondness for the South with an adherence to the Republican party . . . Allien iroudeh . . . loves concerts, chemistry lab . . . and almost everything non-conforming . . . active in Wigs and Cues, Math, Latin, Science and Social Service Clubs . . . music and geology are her hobbies . . . plans to follow up chemistry major with a Mas- ter ' s . . . her ambition to do something original in her field . . . 85 . . . little Kandel . . . black snapping eyes, dark curly hair . . . interesting combi- nation of bouncing vivacity and cool re- serve . . . Mortarboard Associate Editor . . . loves Gilbert and Sullivan, and panda bears . . . collects animals, recordings and academic honors . . . writes magnificently rJliiiian J(ah . . . likes people in general . . . her extra- curricular activities include Menorah, A. S. U. membership, work on Bulletin, Quarterly, Mortarboard . . . she still finds time to indulge in good music and photog- raphy . . . her great originality: loves to write letters . . . majors in sociology . . . anc J avancKjli . . . quiet, reserved, with a piquant air . . . that humorous glint in her eye, tongue in cheek . . . obvious from her cosmopolitan tastes that she has traveled extensively . . . is devoted to the Deutscher Kreis . . . ma- jors in English literature . . . plans to teach . . . 86 R tl, JUL . . . considers the amount of work she has done in college amazing ... a history- major ... in Wigs and Cues two years . . . collects books, draws as a pastime . . . looks forward to settling in the country and making a sociological study of her own family . . . will make marriage her ca- reer . . . . . . a fascinating, whimsical personality . . . loves to write, especially light verse, and does it cleverly . . . carries on cor- respondence in poetry . . . enjoyed putting her worst puns in Bulletin ads . . . news- paper ' s new Business Manager . . . laughs at herself . . . worries about America ' s future . . . . . . likes school on the social side . . . was class social chairman two years . . . and con- tinues to be a 13. W. O. C. . . . between being seen here and there, she knits socks for a pre-lawyer . . . wants to enter busi- ness . . . should be a success as an execu- tive . . . en tier Juliette J e en net 87 mqman . . . majors in German . . . genuinely inter- ested in music . . . belongs to the Glee Club and, not satisfied with one, is pro- ficient at playing several instruments . . . loves water-sports, swimming, canoeing . . . plans to do graduate work . . . . . . tall, willowy blonde of quiet, self- possessed charm ... a government major, is interested in international events and political theory . . . plays mah jong and bridge whenever she has the opportunity . . . sews and knits very capably . . . was engaged this year . . . left college after first semester to be married . . . . . . believe it or not she drives a truck dur- ing the summer . . . her energy is boundless . . . sophomore athletics chairman of Greek Games ... a psychologist, loves children, sports, dates . . . the shag ' s her specialty . . . but there are times for the waltz! . . . Wi UJCoLL ' it 88 . . . Kubby from Ursula (she-bear) . . . winsome, mischievous . . . lived and studied in Europe . . . fascinated by people ... a sociology major . . . makes animals from fish bones . . . keeps innumerable scrapbooks . . . hates howling cats . . . wants to climb Mt. Everest, marry an ex- plorer, have six children . . . . . . mainly interested in the Army . . . has traveled far on account of it . . . lived in the Philippines, Guam, Panama, Hawaii . . . likes people and long conversations . . . her major is history . . . feels a person ap- preciates college more after being out of school and ent ering late ... as she did . . . basketball, volleyball, her favorites . . . she bore the torch to victory in the 1940 Greek Games . . . has traveled all over U. S. A., Canada, and Alaska . . . collects match books in sedentary moods . . . her major, mathematics . . . llizcibetli .J r j ' cuncr . . . lively, full of fun, athletic tennis, (Caroline oCaidlaw . . . poised, easy-going . . . majors in philosophy . . . interested in the theatre, modern dance, photography, tennis, riding . . . collects books and woodcarvings . . . one glorious summer ' s study at Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-on-Avon . . . wrote a miracle play in verse . . . plans to write . . . (Clementine oCc amouree . . . sweetly shy . . . infinitely artistic . . . especially proud of her beautiful horse Roxie . . . even paints its portrait . . . has commuted for three years (so far) to Barnard four hours every day! . . . intends to study art after graduation . . . J(atk enne cine . . . penchant for interior decorating, cats, Viennese waltzes, and the ballet . . . col- lects foreign dolls, toy animals . . . loves summers in Canada, her French, and her music . . . hopes to travel extensively and teach or use her French major in office work . . . 90 arce lla cjCa wlor . . . quietly jolly . . . finds major interest in fine arts . . . devotes leisure moments to movie-ing and dancing . . . claims as achievement in Barnard being a stage de- vise in the French Club pageant . . . plans a career in the school system . . . lf cinci£ oCenLeitli . . . born in the heart of London . . . schooled in Italy, France . . . after hectic experiences on the Continent arrived at Barnard this year, not at all depressed . . . interested in literature of romance lan- guages . . . belongs to Committee to De- fend America by Aiding the Allies and I. R. C ( lizabetli oC( ewid . . . attractive transfer from Miss Hock- aday ' s School for Girls in Dallas, Texas . . . belonged to dramatic club and hon- orary scholastic society there . . . also was Vice-President of Student Council . . . hobby is riding . . . majors in economics and government because she likes them best . . . owe . . . artistic temperament . . . devoted to the arts, especially sculpture . . . politically strong-minded for the Roosevelt adminis- tration . . . hobbies are horseback-riding and philanthropic organizations . . . will study sculpturing as a career . . . ra.no . . . comes from a Spanish background . . . now makes her home in Florida . . . has Latin interests . . . lived and studied in Spain . . . claims her greatest ambition is to travel to all parts of the world . . . intends to become a pediatrician . . . after Barnard she ' s going to medical school . . . . . . socially minded in more ways than one . . . likes clinical work with occasional doses of the theatre and concerts . . . col- lects records . . . mathematics major . . . admits she is good in mathematics, but will not concede to unusual talent . . . lifework: statistician or actuary . . . 92 t ea n Iff] a c fft)on a id . . . revels in nature study and zoology . . . also Barnard Camp . . . famous for good memory . . . Italian food ' s her favorite . . . spontaneous wit like Ogden Nash ' s . . . plays the piano . . . majors in English literature . . . hopes some day to write or teach . . . Iff] a a ret YY a c £)on a id . . . Mig to the multitude . . . trans- ferred from Utah in time to leap and carry a torch in Greek Games . . . she ' s an a 1 1- ' round sport but tennis is her favorite . . . bridge is her vice at which she ' s a whiz . . . looks super in tweeds and owns quan- tities of them . . . also features a lazy Western drawl . . . lf]f]arjorie ffladden . . . says she ' s interested in anything she doesn ' t know a thing about . . .Presiden of the Residence Halls for next year . . class Treasurer . . . Freshman Day Chair man . . . archery chairman, responsi ble for whimsical innovations . . . will pu aside her knitting for any bridge game . . 93 Ida yjaiiso . . . hates B ' s in courses . . . studied piano for seven years on a scholarship at the Curtis Institute of Music . . . will go in for medicine or concert work after graduation . . . majoring in chemistry . . . likes music best of all outside activities . . . £llenci YK ci5colo . . . indulges in law briefs, good food and gaiety . . . sociological leanings find her on Social Service Committee . . . famous in dorm for inventing nicknames for friends . . . spent valuable summers work- ing in a law office and doing research in Juvenile Court ... a history major . . . 1 i 1 fit • -A JJJen WcCc arron . . . English composition major . . . knit- ting her hobby ... is interested in politics and the drama ... a Dodger fan on the side . . . vivacious . . . large solemn eyes, spends much of her time with the play- writing class . . . has an extensive literary background . . . plans to write advertising copy . . . 94 ... a zealot for woods, lilacs, song, spring- time in Connecticut, dogs and horses . . . yet is thrilled every time she comes to New York . . . transferred from Georgetown Visitation Convent . . . studies psych . . . hopes for a job in radio or social work . . . would love to raise ten children . . . Hi in m L if . b , „ f • 2W. WcQufh . . . likes children and animals . . . camp counselor . . . zoology major . . . writes poetry on the sly . . . snaps shots of ani- mals . . . does choral reading . . . has a keen social conscience . . . wants to move out of the city ... to do social work in a backward rural district . . . also to study medicine . . . s Wan, WeJC eSSon . . . lived in France, which she loves, for twelve years . . . has traveled much in Europe . . . hates war but believes in help- ing those righting for democracy . . . paints interesting water-colors ... a transfer from the University of Paris, plans to teach French here or English in France . . . 95 on . . . she has lived in Egypt . . . knows the Nile in moonlight and the pyramids first hand . . . also traveled in Europe . . . amaz- ingly capable Freshman Class President . . .Junior Class Secretary . . . she likes to write . . . knit . . . Senior Class President- elect . . . her major is history . . plans to teach . . . . . . her ambitions are well defined . . . majoring in psychology, she wants to go in for psychiatric nursing . . . therefore will attend nursing school . . . the attainment of an honor point thrilled her . . . she likes math, reading . . . clear-thinking herself, she dislikes narrow-mindedness . . . . . . loves music, which is her major, above all . . . composes beautifully, her Greek Games music being some of the best heard . . . gardening is her hobby . . . would like to travel and plans to get a Master ' s . . . is characterized by a quiet understanding manner . . . 96 l elen I V far raro . . . President of II Circulo Italiano . . . she also attends Newman and La Societe Francaise . . . collects amusing poems, be- sides writing cleverly herself . . . gathers pictures of dogs . . . interests include theatre, sports, playing the piano . . . wants a job where she ' ll use her French . . . Wane Weatk . . . an interesting addition to our class this year . . . after attending Simmons Col- lege in Boston . . . obtained practical ex- perience in several fields, secretarial, ad- vertising and personnel . . . now appreci- ates what she can get from college in preparation for a future in teaching . . . 1 YJarion YFjeJi, . . . zest for living . . . rolled a hoop in Greek Games . . . sings in Columbia Chapel Chorus . . . likes to read plays and design her own clothes . . . has enjoyed travel abroad . . . admits she ' s an Anglo- phile . . . greatest ambition next to the- atrical work is to get married . . . 97 . . . joie de vivre personified . . . spark- ling blue eyes and an infectious smile . . . terrier, Sporty, her only rival in pep . . . scorns greasy grinds but is a conscientious English major . . . groans over fate of being a commuter . . . likes dancing, reading, knitting . . . . . . friendly, smiling . . . with a deep, sonorous voice . . . loves to sing . . . be- longs to Glee Club . . . likes and majors in English literature . . . ambition to teach . . . wants to have a classroom full of kindergarten children . . . somehow finds time to make her own clothes and attend tea parties . . . . . . transfer from Hunter . . . where she officered the frosh geology club . . . has a good time swimming and dancing . . . church is a big factor in her life . . . she teaches Sunday school ... a classics major, she hopes to delve into archeology, prefer- ably for the Metropolitan Museum of Art . . . 98 JranceA iY u rpli u . . . star athlete and new head of the Athletic Association . . . chairman of that indispensable student resort, Barnard Camp . . . sparkplug of 1942 ' s famous Greek Games . . . cherub-faced . . . but a demon on the courts . . . hopes to round off her zoology studies and go on to medical school . . . If] a ta lie Ifjicli o la US . . . Nicky . . . she of charming disposi- tion and passion for Williams College, horses . . . and Indians . . . spends summers on a rustic Canadian Island among Indian neighbors ... at home, haunts Tuscarora Reservation (Niagara Falls) . . . visits museums avidly, in connection with an- thropology major . . . . . . attended Barnard two years . . . now an honorary member of 1942 . . . versatile describes her . . . took part in Greek Games both victorious years . . . was a camp counselor and member of Spring Dance Committee ... is beginning a suc- cessful career in department store work . . . 99 . . . her interests: reading, writing, riding, ranching . . . her likes: personalities, col- lecting books, a vegetable garden, new experiences . . . her past: three trips to England . . . two short ones to France . . . summers on a cattle ranch out West . . . despises intolerance . . . er5on . . . mixes social activities and sociology, her major . . . works well with people . . . spends summers as counselor at a camp for under privileged children . . . has been a La Societe Francaise officer . . . hobbies are archery and dancing . . . . . . varied interests . . . likes all sports . . . dancing . . . music . . . member of Deutscher Kreis . . . Music . . . and I. R. C. . . . Presi- dent of Math Club . . . worked for League of Nations at Fair . . . now bends efforts toward Committee to Defend America by Aiding the Allies . . . 100 P e m P raU . . . likes club work . . . especially any- thing pertaining to her major, govern- ment . . . bane of her existence is physical ed . . . but never tires of dancing . . . loves gay clothes . . . shows partiality to red . . . would like to do radio work . . . . . . loves camping and crocheting . . . meeting all kinds of people . . . member of good standing in the Music and Social Service Clubs . . . sociology major . . . most enthusiastic about social studies and social work . . . plans to attend graduate school to prepare for social service psy- chiatry . . . t 1 i WaUne rue A 5 . . . pre-med major with scientific interests inside and outside Barnard . . . member of the Physical Science Club and the Uni- versity Christian Association . . . draws for a hobby . . . likes dancing and sports . . . going in for medicine or biochem- istry . . . . . . her piquant accent tells that she ' s lived in England and Wales . . . interested in religion, her major, which she hopes to continue at Union Theological Seminary . . . likes music and the choir . . . her offices include U. C. A. Secretary, Greek Games Music Chairman, Athletic, En- trance Chairman . . . llectnor jf umu . . . tall, gracious . . . has acquired poise in college ... a good pianist . . . Russian ballet and opera appeal to her musical taste . . . folk dancing is fun . . . she collects victrola records . . . studies Russian . . . is enthusiastic about Deutscher Kreis . . . wants to be a zoologist, a wife and a mother . . . . . . Greek and Latin major . . . enthusiastic member of Classical Club . . . has begun a collection of archeological data . . . but also collects stamps and among other more up-to-date interests counts tennis and sail- ing . . . sings well, in Glee Club and Chorus since she transferred here as a soph . . . writes well . . . 102 EeJak IZathff . . . with dark, dark eyes ... a halo of black curls . . . looks like a fascinating gypsy girl . . . she fences . . . knits . . . compiles scrapbooks . . . loves Bohemian dresses with lots of red . . . and has theatrical inclinations which are carried out in playwriting class . . . loathes science and math . . . HYlonica l eynolds . . . main interests: physiological science and international affairs . . . chemistry is her major, and her summers are spent as a camp counselor ... a graduate of the Bouve-Boston School of Physical Educa- tion and of Simmons College, she plans to teach after Barnard . . . . . . relishes detective stories . . . knitting addict . . . fond of all kinds of sports . . . likes zoology . . . master of the fine art of making Welsh rarebit . . . active member of Physical Science and Newman Clubs . . . happy in her chemistry major . . . anxious to do laboratory work after graduation . . . 103 sQnne J icliardc ion . . . transfer this year . . . fine arts major . . . collects records, likes to write, worked as counselor in a camp for blind children . . . active in Christian Association . . . hates any kind of bigotry . . . certainly none of it is found in her . . . spent three months in Fontainbleau . . . ' -ranee 5 LeUti . . . dark-haired Franny from Cincinnati, a philosophy major with unphilosophical extra-curricular interests . . . collects popu- lar records, loves dancing . . . likes to talk politics . . . has dramatic and musical talent . . . remains loyal to Cincinnati Reds and chocolate frosteds . . . oiemaru . . . interested in writing and the field of social science . . . sociology major . . . hopes to do research . . . worked on an economic research project during the sum- mer . . . tennis and crocheting her hobbies . . . hates half-thought-through ideas . . . ambition to write readable theses . . . 104 . . . congenial, happy-go-lucky, enjoys life thoroughly . . . had wonderful experience of nine years ' travel and schooling in Europe . . . wants to visit China and learn to fly . . . majors in chemistry . . . likes dramatics, helping to run an insane asylum, languages . . . IWIcirjorie t ood . . . has a lively interest in things going on . . . not only in dances, dates, and theatre . . . but in foreign affairs and politics . . . as reflected in her choice of a major in government . . . hates not to be doing something . . . her plans include keeping house for her husband, and writing . . . . . . main interest: the foreign situation . . . in school: the social sciences . . . last seen: on the golf links or playing mah jong . . . properties chairman of Greek Games, ' 40 . . . psych major, plans to work for M.A. . . . wants nothing more than to rind out what she ' s best fitted to do and do it . . . 105 csCuciiie m? ,OA5 . . . music in her soul and in her eyes . . . plays violin in orchestra . . . belongs to Music Club . . . and to Physical Science Club as well . . . takes an intensive interest in her major, zoology, and allied fields . . . studied bacteriology at Cornell ... a good photographer . . . will do scientific re- search . . . War of if J£o33cr . . . ambitiously active . . . majors in Spanish . . . wishes she didn ' t have to specialize . . . wants to learn everything . . . collects reading lists from courses she likes . . . pursues them during the summer . . . stood sixth in Freshman Class . . . took singing, dancing . . . wants to own an airplane . . . get married . . . Frances J u55o . . . attracts friends because she likes all sorts of people ... is afraid she ' s a bit reserved . . . transferred from Notre Dame College of Staten Island sophomore year . . . belongs to Newman and I. R. C. Clubs . . . spends summers sailing her Comet . . . seeing plays and dancing . . . ambition: law school . . . 106 oCiflian Jf iithcr ord . . . career girl . . . has her own successful dancing school . . . which along with attending school keeps her busy . . . last year achieved the distinction of being the only college girl to help with the Princeton Triangle Club production . . . hopes later on to be a dance director with her fiance . . . £11 ciin c acli 1 5 . . . smiling . . . sunny . . . loves six-footers, puppies, and dates . . . majors in govern- ment . . . member of the Oh-how-I-hate- to-get-up-in-the-morning club . . . thinks life is a lot of fun . . . wants to combine marriage and a career . . . dreams about world-wide travel and flying . . . . . . part parent of BWRS brain-child . . . devotes most of her life to its care . . . has difficulties in finding time to go to class . . . her academic record belies this, tho . . . responsible for last year ' s Community Chest . . . renowned for cigarette-holders and flying trips to Chicago . . . 107 . . . beaming, jovial, full of fun . . . loves to act ... is a member of Wigs and Cues . . . also interested in Bulletin . . . her hob- bies: riding and learning to play the ukelele . . . majoring in English literature . . . after graduation plans to work for her Master ' s Degree and perhaps teach . . . . . . interested in the major sports and has scrapbooks on them . . . spent the last sum- mer at Middlebury College . . . likes dou- ble features at the theatre and Tommy Dorsey . . . spends time impersonating peo- ple and making puns . . . makes her own clothes in her spare moments . . . . . . vivacious . . . impulsive . . . cam- paigned furiously for Willkie . . . govern- ment is her main course with minors of piano and bridge . . . active member of the University Christian Association . . . cir- culated Mortarboard ... an expert in the gentle art of chit-chat . . . 108 CjertruJe cliaj- er ... a phenomenal capacity for work . . . . . . corresponding academic record . . . great talents among artistic lines, but spends most of her time in physics, chem- istry, or zoology labs . . . achieved rare effects as chairman of sophomore Greek Games costumes . . . plans a career in some field of science . . . £finor Schubert . . . likes fine arts, her major, and the piano . . . her jokes are of the first order and so are her sketches . . . interested in traveling and has done a great deal of it . . . hates people who are always late, but meets them with a remarkable sense of humor . . . works hard on Lutheran student projects . . . yVJabel Schubert . . . loves to play . . . dance . . . read . . . walk . . . talk with friends . . . fool with photography . . . and studies human na- ture . . . keeps busy . . . has been on Resi- dent Council and Greek Games Dance Com- mittee . . . .studies hard in courses she likes, which means English lit . . . read 26 books for frosh term paper . . . 109 ane SchutzendorJ? . . . very, very blonde . . . but not fragile . . . athletic type . . . likes swimming . . . studying — unfortunate but necessary — vies with her social life in occupying her time . . . chemistry is her major . . . she would do research in it . . . considers transferring from Keuka College a feat . . . ere 5 a. . . . strong point, debating . . . dramatics, singing, dancing, sports, and writing all important to this all-round enthusiast . . . holds brief for anything to do with organization and leadership work ... or school religious organizations . . . takes government now, law school after gradua- tion . . . J orotliy Sherman . . . greatest claim to fame being a horse in Greek Games . . . loves sailing her own dinghy on the Hudson . . . and has no trouble getting the right-of-way from the ferry . . . characterized by unfailing punc- tuality . . . infallibly neat ... is a history major . . . and a hard-working one . . . 110 . . . has a soft voice . . . which goes with her slow and pleasing smile . . . she sails . . . does water-colors . . . has the unusual hobby of making shoes . . . her main joy is the theatre . . . and French is admittedly her nemesis . . . she is majoring in phi- losophy . . . and very seriously . . . . . . gay but sensible . . . doesn ' t believe in mixing business with pleasure . . . divides her time between them . . . aim: medical school and pediatrics . . . thinks variety is the spice of life . . . likes sports, the gym department, and children . . . doesn ' t like domestic arts . . . but claims she can make tea . . . Ill . . . has a social conscience . . . strong in- terest in penal institutions . . . dislike of big business men . . . studies sociology with one eye toward social work . . . en- joys Dr. Dean ' s lectures ... a musician in the Columbia Orchestra ... as diversion, weeds her garden . . . breeds cocker spaniels . . . Evelyn Steinliardt . . . collects everything from stamps to insects . . . piano her first love both from playing and composing ends . . . hates smugness and sloth . . . imbued with true scientific spirit as becomes a serious chem- istry major . . . ambition: to be a research chemist ... a friend and good cheerer- upper . . . . . . enthusiastic, affectionate, excitable . . . active in Choir, folk-dancing, Physics Club . . . loves to read, sing, dissect earth worms . . . hosteling and photography her hobbies . . . uses an intellectual approach to baseball and football . . . worked in Woolworth ' s one summer and found it a remarkable experience . . . 112 . . . enthusiastic tap-dancer . . . her main campus interest: the Columbia Symphonic Band . . . has been member of it for two years . . . also belongs to La Societe Francaise . . . collects china dogs . . . hates writing term papers . . . plans to supple- ment her sociology major with social service school . . . CtketSt one . . . loves political discussions, sports, mu- sic, and photography . . . hates inactivity . . . collects symphonic recordings ... a good International Relations clubber . . . an economics major . . . will do marketing research in connection with exporting . . . plans to continue music study on the side . . . oneii . . . transferred from Queen ' s University in Canada . . . maintains she ' s shy, but has acclimated herself quickly here . . . pro- fesses a keen interest in people, all kinds . . . hobbies are writing letters, seeing movies, and dramatics . . . plans to enter business . . . (secret desire to be a fascinat- ing woman at forty!) . . . 113 BMa St, . . . under a mask of calm reserve, S is colorful, enjoyable . . . anthropology major . . . spends summers digging in avail- able deserts . . . has traveled widely . . . possesses well-developed likes and hates . . . wants to marry, and go on archae- ological — anthropological expeditions for the rest of her life . . . ... a definite personality ... is an English major, so plans to take a rest-cure after graduation . . . then seek a radio job, script-writing or acting . . . likes walking in the rain . . . hates cigar-smoking men . . . her proudest accomplishment was learning the subway system from New Rochelle . . . . . . lives and breathes for the theatre . . . as chairman of Greek Games entrance she used her aptitude for staging and directing . . . has definite dramatic talent . . . both Wigs and Cues and summer theatre have given her experience . . . became engaged and left college in the middle of this year to get married . . . m ' araaret t Sl rauA5 114 . . . tall, dimply Swiddy with the per- fect disposition and a beautiful smile . . . . . . spends her summers as a counselor . . . loves the theatre . . . collects handker- chiefs and rings . . . chemistry major and wants to be a dietitian . . . lives in the lab . . . tells jokes with inspiration . . . has a superb baby-talk . . . QL oria JanaSAo . . . her hair is dark . . . her eyes are blue . . . and she is Latin . . . majoring in Italian . . . she likes art, music, and poetry . . . her own poems have been published in ' ' Colum- bia Poetry and Quarterly . . . loves the Hudson River, wide-open busses, the Cloisters . . . hopes someday to wander and study abroad . . . omaS . . . jolly good sport . . . always full of pep . . . knows what she wants and goes after it . . . dislikes German and all varieties of exits . . . loves animals and zoology, her major . . . snakes are her hobby . . . can listen to stories as well as tell them . . . plans to do research . . . 115 I YJarjorie Juifu . . . listed in the medical office as six feet tall, Marjorie confesses to being less than five . . . chief interests in school and out: week-ends, social work, crocheting a table cloth of five hundred squares . . . would like to do work in social service field after graduation . . . £)orotliu Uan (J3rinb . . . patriotic government major ... pet hates revolve around Hitler . . . firmly be- lieves that all work and no play makes Dorothy a dull girl . . . considers college has made her less scatter-brained and more opinionated ... pet hobby: collecting men (she said it — we didn ' t!) . . . Wary PL ullis van Orman . . . government is her major . . . bridge, music, and reading are the pet interests of her life . . . collects stamps . . . also good grades . . . wants to get a job someday dealing with the law . . . likes to travel along the Atlantic coast . . . 116 Jinehe van lAJafjem . . . visitor from Holland, burning with strong national feeling . . . confidence in morale of her people . . . majoring in Greek and Latin . . . speaks four other languages . . . likes studying, movies, dancing . . . played tennis once last sum- mer with bombers overhead . . . wants to enter diplomatic service . . . Way WcJCe Va naman ... a special student from the heart of Pennsylvania . . . loves languages and be- longs to three language clubs . . . studied at the University of Berlin, Poitiers, Rome, Copenhagen, and Florence . . . likes the British, dogs, modern music . . . wants to become a secretary-translator and travel some more . . . . . . enjoys spectator sports and riding on Fifth Avenue busses . . . considers herself a liberal . . . appreciates others who are . . . transfer from Penn State . . . was secretary of Alpha Nu Sorority there . . . traveled in Baltic states . . . English major . . . wants to write a good novel after journalism school . . . 117 rjCoii Uoitter . . . Wheaton transfer, a psychology major, and musician to the nth degree . . . collects classical records, plays the piano . . . de- plores jazzed-up conceptions of really good music . . . aims for M.S. in psychology . . . pet hate — stories that say to be con- tinued on last page . . . J orotliu Uo wonnwaia ... a social-minded scientist, combines a taste for chemistry with artistic leanings . . . studies chem on the subway coming down from Hastings . . . plans to do re- search work, spending her summers in a lab . . . likes the gym department, modern dance, Deutscher Kreis . . . paints and sketches . . . ... is majoring in English lit, but intends to work, commute, and buy a farm after June, ' 42 . . . listening to symphonies and skiing are her hobbies . . . likes to attend night courts, drink tea, read poetry aloud . . . prefers intelligent people . . . eating and talking interest her . . . boors and bores don ' t . . . 118 WaJt . . . chemistry major . . . and is working hard preparing for medical school . . . apart from academic interests she follows baseball ... is an ardent fan of the Brook- lyn Dodgers . . . likes music . . . belongs to Glee Club . . . also a Newman Club mem- ber for three years . . . jf a u fin e lAJadh bi ... a cosmopolitan who has seen much of the world . . . including England, Germany . . . and four trips to France, where she also went to school for a year . . . her recreations are beagling, polo, and ski- jumping . . . her field is history . . . but says current history will determine her use of it . . . . . . spirited, anything but shy . . . talks a lot, and to strangers too, who quickly be- come her friends . . . active, on Social and Eligibility Committees . . . class song leader two years . . . was athletic super- visor of a children ' s playground . . . once received an A on a term paper about Father Divine . . . 119 JUn WeU . . . wants to enter the diplomatic field via law school after Barnard . . . majoring in government here ... is an expert rider, swimmer . . . lives in Havana where yachting is one of her favorite hobbies . . . is gay, blonde and dependable! . . . Pan American Relations Chairman for El Cir- culo Hispano . . . J orotliy lAJ ili aber ... a crack shot with a .22 rifle ... in a milder vein likes music, reading, math, and badminton . . . well-equipped for teaching music . . . but an avowed major interest in marriage . . . ought to make a fine house- wife, for she is fond of cooking, gardening and children . . . £lizabetli lAJliite . . . transferred from Frances Shimer Junior College in Illinois . . . loves New York and its excitement with the musical advantages it has to offer ... is a member of Columbia Chapel Choir . . . enthusiastic about that as she is about everything . . . her major is sociology . . . 120 Wiiiicent While . . . transfer from Columbia Extension . . . an English lit major with main interests in reading and the theater . . . commutes from Brooklyn . . . calls the subway the bane of her existence . . . likes people with interests totally opposite from hers . . . may make use of her major in teaching . . . . . . calls herself an Army brat ' ' and its in- fluence pervades her family life . . . her brother enters West Point in June . . . had most of her schooling in a Connecticut prep school . . . and her freshman college year at Skidmore ... a history major . . . the opera and theater charm her . . . . . . there is something fragile about her fully • • . attended the American School in Tokyo . . . would like to go into the for- eign service and prepares for it by majoring in government . . . cannot tolerate stuffi- ness and is always cheerful . . . . . loves music and plays the piano beauti- 121 y Sinn Williams . . . one of the hardiest commuters . . . hails from Hillside, N.J. . . . thinks commuting has its advantages in the interesting people one meets ... a zoo major with a yen to be a lab technician or maybe a doctor . . . likes reading, music, knitting, golf . . . Elaine Wolf . . . quiet, poised, versatile .... ambitious to combine medicine, music, marriage, and leisure . . . majors in chemistry . . . plans to go to medical school . . . likes books, plays the piano . . . writes poems (three have been published) . . . still finds time for Wigs and Cues, and Physical Science Club . . . enee lAJofJ don ... a lithe, dark-eyed dancer in Greek games . . . adept at sports and swimming as well . . . likes foreign languages but is working toward a future in physics . . . should make a charming bio-physical- chemist . . . expects to land in an Arizona clinic serving humanity . . . 122 . . . passionate over politics and English literature . . . claims that everyone is in- teresting if you look closely enough . . . is continually wrought up about the state of the world . . . promises that if it holds together until graduation she ' ll do some- thing about it in her English major held . . . PLeL W, . . . transferred from Packer Junior College . . . English major . . . interested in publica- tion work . . . immediately became Quarterly staff member . . . belongs to Social Service Committee ... as hobbies, collects swing and classical records . . . may do either magazine work or radio script writing . . . €LaUk y„ founej . . . conscientious, but always ready for a coke at Til son ' s . . . plays the piano ex- pertly . . . mathematics is her major, music her main interest . . . has been officer of the Glee Club for two years . . . likes the theater and distinguished people . . . an- ticipates statistical work and marriage . . . 123 . . . penchant for sports, dancing, Joseph Conrad and Tommy Dorsey . . . likes in- formal class discussions . . . sewing is her pet hobby . . . has special talent along domestic lines . . . majoring in philosophy . . . thinks Barnard ' s physical education department is tops . . . . . . diminutive, dynamic redhead . . . plays tennis like a boy . . . was an effective soph charioteer . . . wants to know more in her field, English, so as to teach or do library work . . . loves Tschaikowsky ' s Piano Concerto in B Flat minor . . . hates sub- ways and wants to drive a car to Cali- fornia . . . . . . psycho-analyzes her friends . . . shines in figure-skating ... in her spare time is true to the muses of music, drama, and writing . . . has a great interest in all mod- ern languages . . . member of Newman Club . . . plans to do post-graduate work in psychology, her seriously-pursued ma- jor .. . 124 amerce - Nancy Baylis Carmen Blumenkron Mary Bucher Shelia Cudahy Marion Heineman Louise Hauser Margery Parker Helen Percas Betsy Ross Barbara White in t Valentine the perfect Vith deNitgtl ns Room at the Waldot escorts were received kthe couples to conti dancers participated h con trotl by Charlie B time two sag g S orcrre frated with Blanche H Wlfen I Catch Sight of You, was written by DM.un . Har while the music to Can Yo was lamposed by Aurelia Maresca with lyrics ]§y A Gershon. As its gufcts, the class invited Dean Virginia C. Gilder- sleeve, Dr. Wiristina Grant, Dr. and Mrs. S. Stansneld argent, Mr ind Mrs. James Stacy Coles, Miss Ruth Taubenhals, Miss Emily Gunning, and Miss Ch; lotte Cassel I-teldJjp twiJwhile silk cords, the bids this year were covered in blue leathlr and stamped with the Barnard seal. According to Belty Hanf, Chairman, and her com- mittee, over one hun red and fifteen couples attended the dance, thereby broking all previous Prom records. After the Gi a March into the Astor Gallery at mid- night the rjuples enjoyed a supper whose menu and deco- i ,m lonsMarried out the Valentine motif with hearts and s arrows. uiiorshow When Grandma Called It College, she had cocoa parties in Fiske Hall, horseless carriages, and Floradora sextettes. Mother attended Barnard during the Flapper period and enjoyed bobbed hair, long waists, and the Charleston. Daughter, in college now, had all of these, and more, in the 1942 Junior Show. Music, lyrics, and dances for Show, which was presented in April, were espe- cially designed to present — in good fun— the social and academic activities of each era. Even the first automobile was in the review to compete with the Barnard horse, perhaps to prove that it was in- accurate to sing Horseless Carriages Aren ' t Here to Stay. The pony ballet dancers quickly changed from the Gibson Girls to Flappers to present the Charleston. They sympathized with Grandma and Mother but appeared to be most at home when they did Daughter ' s swing and listened to When I Catch Sight of You, and Can You Forget Our Dream . Constance Hare, Chairman of the Central Committee, acted as producer while the financial problems of Junior Show were taken care of by Joan Rosenfield. Correla- tion of the dialogue written by Patricia Curtin, Book Chairman, with the dances, designed by Barbara Barnes, was the concern of Frances Fahreholtz, Director. Original lyrics were written by Alice Gershon to Aurelia Maresca ' s music. To make the periods accurate, Stage Manager June Amsden was materially aided by the Costume Committee of Mary Hill and Jean Hughes ' scenery, whileAnneGibbons, Secretary, and Sylvia Gaus, Publicity Chairman, kept Show in the minds of not only the cast but the college. G n i -«jja ; 4 p rec t a t (J3ctrncird The Lawn 133 134 The Jungle — Spring 135 In the Jungle Shade 136 Bear Pin Awar ds Jean Ackermann Marjorie Leahy Mary Scully Alice Kliemand Phyllis Mann Alla Shainin Patricia Lambdin Doris Prochaska Phyllis Snyder Martha Lawrence Jane Stewart Hon Lirary Bear Pin Awards Jane Per ry Clark Elizabeth Reynard Honorable Mention SENIORS JUNIORS SOPHOMORES Vera Arndt Grace Barrett Deborah Burstein Margaret Binder Clytia Capraro Florence Fischman Betty Clifford Glafyra Fernandez Mary Jo Jordan Patricia Draper Barbara Heinzen Rena Libera Jane Greenbaum Helen Kandel Mary Milnes Judith Johnson Juliette Kenney Mary Ellen O ' Connell Marie Mesrobian Marjorie Madden Gretchen Relyea Rita Roher Enid Pugh Georgia Sherwood Zenia Sachs Phyllis Wickenden Phyllis Wiegard Mme. Novotna illustrates make-up technique on P. Lambdtn during an intermission from Manon while W. Bach and M. Madden look on. ALUMNAE AND BARNARD FUND COMMITTEE As Barnard graduates received their diplomas and departed from academic life, their footsteps led inevitably to the Riverside building — not for a farewell to Arthur the Rat, but for an examination of their new headquarters. Providing a communi- cative outlet and clearing house for information and suggestions, the Alumnae Association, through the Alumnae Monthly and the central office, serves over six thousand members. With generous finan- cial and advisory aid to undergraduates, the Asso- ciation maintains year-round indispensable service. Cooperating with the Barnard Fund Committee, the Alumnae sponsored the Metropolitan Opera performance of Massenet ' s Manon in January. This largest single enterprise of the organization netted $1700, of which $825 was contributed to British War Relief, in addition to $875 to its customary benefactor, the Barnard Scholarship Fund. In addition to assisting the opera benefit, the Barnard Fund Committee, with Patricia Lambdin as Chairman, pre- sented, under its own auspices, the annual Spring Dance, last of the year ' s undergraduate dances. At left the Barnard Fund Committee: W. Bach; F. Houston; K. Albro; N. Rovan; and P. Lambdin, Chairman. 138 1 3 4 □ GREEK GAMES A colorful and dramatic pageant produced by the Sophomore and Freshman Classes, Greek Games combined the spirit of cooperation with a desire for excellence in athletic and artistic creative work during 1940. Members of the Classes of ' 42 and ' 41 who wanted to be athletes or dancers in the Games enrolled in special classes early last year. There they learned the ancient sports or specialized in the events they preferred. Dancers were encouraged to express their in- terpretations of the original music written for them because both the story and execution were considered important by the judges. Dedicated to the Goddess Pandora, the 1940 Greek Games opened as Prometheus stole the fire from the heavens to give to the mortals. Zeus, in his anger, sought revenge by sending Pandora to earth. She had been fashioned by Hephastus and was endowed by the Gods with the choicest gifts. She took with her Pandora ' s box which contained all the miseries and evils that inflict the earth. After she married Epimetheus, Prometheus ' brother, Pandora lifted the lid from the box and released the evils. As the mortals were struck down with illness and fear, Hope sprang from the box to give them courage and faith. The festival started with rejoicing and prayer and the challenge was both issued and ac- cepted. Colorful costumes, original choreography and music, told the story of the miseries and evils, the hope, and the moods of the mortals. The fever of competition ran high as the scores of the judges were announced and the athletes took the stage. Form and execution were con- sidered important in athletics while speed was the test in hoop rolling and torch bearing. When the chariots and horses appeared, the classes displayed their humor and gaiety. As they went through their paces, they whinnied, neighed, and became stubborn until they re- ceived sugar. To the winners of the numerous events and to the managers of the games, the priestesses awarded the traditional laurel wreath at the end of the competition. Leading the victory parade, the chariot of the Class of 1942 shared with the Freshman one the honor of bearing those who had worked with them and had led in the competition. Months of hard work, numerous rehearsals, and overwhelming enthusiasm were climaxed when both classes circled the gymnasium, and, amid triumphal cheers, brought the 1940 Greek Games to an end. 140 SCORE — Apri 13. 1940 Entrance 1943 Original Music 8 Attendance 1.5 Total 9.5 Dance Original Music 1 Execution 9 Costumes 6 Total 25-5 Lyrics Winner Lyric 5 Reader of Lyric Total 30.5 Athletics Discus for Form 1st place 2nd place 2 3rd place Hurdling for Form 1st place 2nd place 2 3rd place 1 1943 1942 1942 Hoop Rolling For Speed 5 Chariot 2.5 Execution 4 5 Appearance 2 2 9 Torch Race 8 Winning Team . . 3 6 Costumes 5 3 25.5 Total 46.5 53 5 2 Grand Total 100 1 1943 1942 28. 5 Division of Points According to Events: Entrance 1.5 2.5 Costumes and Properties. . . . 13 11 Dance . 9 8 Music 9 9 Lyrics 5 3 Athletics 9 20 Total 46.5 53-5 141 ATHLETES DISCUS 1943 Mary Milnes, Chairman Alberta Bell HURDLES Alice von Storch, Chairman Betty Elwyn Peggy Ann Naegali Mary Calcott HOOPS Eleanor Suttle, Chairman Bobette Wiener Peggy Ann Naegali Sally Lou Falk Marcia Van Derveer CHARIOT Ruth Geyer, Chairman Gertrude Mulhan Francine Salzman Bobette Wiener CHARIOTEER Frances Donnellon TORCH Marcia Van Derveer, Chairman Betty Elwyn Alice von Storch Mary Calcott Florence Fischman 1942 Jane Devonshire, Chairman Margaret MacDonald Barbara Suter, Chairman Isabella Brogan Patricia Highsmith Elizabeth Krane Enid Pugh, Chairman Barbara Good Margot Fansler Ursula Kraft Doris Noakes Katharine Hanly, Chairman Mildred Kolodny Dorothy Sherman Isabella Brogan Amy Zasuly Elizabeth Krane, Chairman Margaret Smith Margaret Macdonald Barbara Good Nina Thomas 142 DANCE 1943 The Freshman dance portrayed the effect upon mankind of the evil spirits released from Pandora ' s legendary box. Various groups of dancers represented the entire world, joyous and contented, as happiness and peace dominated the lives of the people. DANCERS Marjorie Eilers Elsie Friemus Phyllis Hagmoe Matilda Hoffer Beatrice Kaplan Rena Libera Joy Mahler Muriel Margolin Janet McDonald Music by: Ellen Barnett, Eleanor Hutchings, Martha Livesay, Miriam Silverman, Rose Ruth Tarr 1942 Pandora ' s changing moods: serenity, petulance, passion Shirley Aronow Irene Balaksha Ellen Barnett Jean Borgenicht Mary Louise Bouvier Fanny Brett Datha Clapper Judith Coplon Beryl Monsky Marjorie Oldoerp Anne Pope Grace Quinlan Clochette Roosevelt Norma Shpetner Barbara Singley Miriam Silverman Amelie Anderson Barbara Barnes Claudia Carner June Clayton Betty Crumb Carol Dunlop Frances Fahrenholz Musk by: Aurelia Maresca DANCERS Barbara Fish Charlotte Gordon Rosemary Graff Elaine Grimm Barbara Heinzen Elinore Jacoff Juliette Kenney Jane Morrell Rosemary Riley Mabel Schubert Margaret Strauss Peggy Whitten Renee Wolfson Ruth Young Beth Zimmerschied 143 Central Committees 1942 Frances Murphy .... Chairman Evelyn Gonzales . . . Ex-officio 1943 Gretchen Relyea . . . Chairman Mary Jo Jordan .... Ex-officio Doris Bayer, 1942, Business Manager Business Chairmen: Doris Noakes, Francine Salzman Properties: Clytia Capraro, Jane Conger Costumes: Gertrude Schaffer Brunhilde Glitenkamp Music: Aurelia Maresca, Ellen Barnett Entrance: Nancy Swan, Sally Lou Falk Athletics: Mildred Kolodny, Betty Elwyn Dance: June Clayton, Phyllis Hagmoe Lyrics: Evelyn Gonzales, Jeanne Anderson Judges Chairman . . . Alice Harte Publicity Chairman . Helen Kandel Faculty Supervisor . Miss Marion Streng Instructor in Athletics Miss Lelia Finan Wreath Ceremony Chairman of Music Committee AuRELIA MARESCA Chairman of Dance Committee Phyllis Hagmoe Chairman of Costume Committee Brunhilde Glitenkamp Writer of Winning Lyric . Betty Elwyn First Place in Discus . Katharine Hanly First Place in Hurdling Isabella Brogan Chairman of Torch Team Chairman of Winning Class Frances Murphy Elizabeth Krane Chairman of Hoop Team Enid Pugh Charioteer Amy Zasuly Business Manager Doris Bayer 145 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Working in close conjunction with the Physical Education department, the Athletic Asso- ciation, headed by Meredith Wright, ' 41, sponsors and coordinates extra-curricular activities designed to make Barnard play and dance conscious. A. A. provides the recreation and relaxa- tion that physical education activities can give to students. Chubby, grinning, wooden ponies drawing a small, sparkling cart which was stationed on Jake during the late fall and early winter caused even the coffee addict to drink the ice-cold, plain and chocolate milk the Health Committee of A. A. sold. Fruit wagons and bars offered vitamins on Jake and in the Jungle while during the year the proceeds from these and from the roller skating and folk dance benefits went to the Barnard Committee for British War Relief. Open hours on Friday after- noons in the gymnasium as well as daily noon periods for free play were planned to encourage pleasant and healthful exercise. As always, A. A. fostered friendly and instinctive relationships with other colleges through its I.O.C.A. program and swimming play days. In the spring it was hostess to all of the Northeastern Colleges at a Conference of the Athletic Federation of College Women. At the end of the year, A. A. awarded letters and numerals to the students most proficient in athletic activities. A.A. ' s Officers and Managers — Standing: B. Fish; A. Shainin; M. Jordan, Treasurer; M. Wright, President; D. Taft, Vice- President; and B. LotZ- Seated: M. Milnes, M. Walbridge, R. Benson, C. Pierce, G. Fernandez, and F . Murphy. 146 SPORTS Spring and fall at Barnard during 1940-1941 found the students enjoying outdoor sports, which are an integral part of the athletic program. Tennis ranked as one of the most popular of the open-air activi- ties and the A. A. tournaments gave all the enthu- siasts an opportunity to display the skill in timing, grace, speed, and strategy which they developed during class periods. Devotees of the game were found in the sun at odd hours of the day practicing smashing drives or long, hard serves. Tennikoit was another sport which was pa- tronized during this season and the deck tennis disciples were found on the campus lawn or the Barnard Hall roof engaged in perfecting twisting flips that would have unnerved even a seasoned champion. Those who enjoyed invigorating canters or trots in Central Park signed up for the weekly horseback riding classes. The Riverside Quadrangle was the scene for those who patronized golf and archery. Al- though the regular eighteen hole course was missing, the golfers practiced their drives in the cage. Classes in archery taught the novices to avoid bruised forearms while advanced archers were trained to improve their ac- curacy for the concluding tourna- ments. It was during these pro- fessional-like tournaments that the more skilled archers put into competitive action the basic prin- ciples of true aim, correct pull on the bow string, and proper stance, which had been perfected during the outdoor season. 147 Team play was the keynote of athletics indoors during the winter. The large classes for badminton, basketball, and volleyball indicated that the ath- letes at Barnard liked vigorous games which in- volved cooperative work with another individual in coordination and timing. Noted for the speed, agility, and skill which it requires, badminton calls forth the utmost in precision and grace. Exceedingly popular, the classes and tournaments were always filled, even in the late afternoon meetings, and competition was fostered by unofficial intra-class tournaments. Those who preferred stren ous exercise signed up for basketball. In those classes each girl shifted to different positions on a team until she found the one to which she was best suited and then endeavored to develop techniques required for it. Volleyball provided another example of co- ordination from an entire team and those who par- ticipated in this sport seemed to have lost all self- consciousness and thought more of the group than of any single push over the net. Although bowling has only been open to Barnard students since last year, this sport became well established during 1940 1941 with the three avail- able classes filled to capacity. Using the four alleys in the basement of Riverside Church, the devotees practiced their curve balls as well as straight shots and have been reported to have reached amazingly high scores during interclass compe- tition. Endowed with a long, tiled swimming pool, Barnard ' s swimming program provided all the ad- vantages of an aquatic paradise for water babies throughout the year. Numerous classes were given to teach and perfect the various strokes used in swimming and were particularly valuable because enrollment for each was kept small so that every girl could receive the maximum amount of instruc- tion possible. For those who had passed the average ability tests the Red Cross life saving tests were given and credit was awarded for all open hours. Diving was taught as a part of the program, and here those who could only surface dive had the opportunity to become experts in the swan, while others could improve the dives which they had already learned. The lack of a lake or a river on the campus was not a problem to those who enjoyed water sports. Water polo and other games were played while a course was given in canoeing. Those who desired learned the finer points of a c stroke, culling, or feathering. Having mastered the technique of bow- paddling, the canoers were instructed how to steer from the stern, avoid imaginary rocks, and to black a canoe properly. To climax the season, A. A. sponsored the annual water carnival, where formation swimming and a humourous pageant were performed to the applause and delight of all. Dancing in various forms was taught during the indoor season. For those who enjoyed the relaxation of performing national dances with a partner, there was folk-dancing. To the ac- companiment of gay, sprightly folk tunes, the polka, schottische, gavotte, and waltz were taught. One of the special attractions of the courses were the folk dancing parties sponsored by A. A. in which the participants, dressed in native costumes, performed for the college. Vying with the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes in precision and rhythm, the Barnard tap dancing groups became exceedingly proficient in the shuffle, buffalo, time step, and jig. Working as choruses, the dancers endeavored to learn several routines and short dances before the end of the season. Modern Dance was followed by students who wished to improve upon the elementary Rhythmic Fundamentals required by all Freshmen. In the several classes which were given during the year, muscular control and a feeling for music was developed. The students learned to use their bodies to express a mood or a thought and to create a pattern to harmonize with the musical accompaniment. During the spring an exhibition of dances created throughout the year were demonstrated to a college audience. SENIORS The time has come, the walrus said, To speak of many things, Of homes and jobs and salaries, Of golden wedding rings. To most of the Senior Class their past four years have gone very quickly. During their last month at college before graduation, as the prospect of something new ahead loomed apparent, the realization that they had completed a cycle be- came imminent. Their careers at Barnard dimmed into little more than a pleasant memory. Entering the grown-up realm of college life back in ' 37, they had soon become accustomed to the little things that give the appearance of being on the in. The Class of ' 41 as Freshmen lost Greek Games in the traditional manner and they were determined to win when they became Sophomores. But convention was thrown to the winds and their Freshman rivals won by the close score of 51 to 49- Events moved rapidly after that: Junior Prom at the Waldorf-Astoria, Junior Show featuring quite a Femaelstrom, then a senior year of vocational blanks, employment agencies, engagement rings and fellow- ship applications. Finally came the long-awaited Senior Week, full and exciting, culminating in the impressive ceremony of Columbia University ' s Graduation Exercises. Senior Class Offic Drun; Secretan , rs on Barnard Hall steps: President, A. M. Scully; and Treasurer, E. Anderson. Below : The Senior Class. 151 Senior Week Committee in Front of the College Parlor Fireplace: Third row — M. Smith; V. Arndt; R. Benson; M. Crescendo; E. Anderson. Second row — M. Molleson; J. Ackermann, Chairman; L. Qiiintero; and M. Lawrence. First row — B. Koenig; A. Shainin; J. Johnson; and G. Sherwood. A whirlwind succession of impressive and traditional closing ceremonies brought to an end the four-year life of the Class of 1941. From May twenty-ninth through the fifth of June, the Senior Class alternately disported themselves and were solemnly graduated into the ranks of Life. Events marking the achievement of graduation and the last social associations of the class were duly celebrated under the general supervision of Jean Ackermann. A rollicking undignified Senior Party to the college, planned by Rita Benson, started the festivities on the afternoon of May 29, when the student body enjoyed box lunches, games, and dances. In the evening, Step Singing, under Adeline Bostelmann ' s direction, brought to- gether all four classes for the last time. It was particularly auspicious because of the introduc- tion of a new Barnard song. As each class sang the different verses of You Can Tell, it stepped forward, assumed the steps vacated by the next highest rank, and, clad in white, sang the succeeding verse. The Seniors, having relinquished the top step, received a parting rose from those who took their place. Later in the evening the Senior Reception, planned by E. Winifred Anderson, was held in Brooks Hall. In quick sequence came the resplendent Senior Ball, Baccalaureate Service and Tea, Ivy Ceremony, Senior Picnic, Commencement and Class Day, under the respective directions of Judith Johnson, Alia Shainin, Irene Lyons, Vera Arndt, and Martha Lawrence. Behind the scenes Patricia Draper as Business Manager, saw that the budget maintained a peaceful equili- SENIOR 152 brium. Manlou Crescenzo officiated as Printing Chairman; V. Lucia Quintero as Publicity Chairman. Betty Koenig took charge of the selection of the class gift, and Mary Graham Smith was in charge of patrons while Mary V. Molleson acted as General Secretary. As the week came to a close, an elaborate banquet, planned by Georgia Sherwood, ended the cele- brations. Here the class met for the last time; sophomore waitresses gave skits satirizing various outstanding seniors, and as the climax of the evening, the senior roll was called, while each girl responded wi th married, single, or ' ' engaged. ' ' Intangibly present throu ghout the events of the week was L BMetin EJnor plilllt! the n , y the feeling of comradeship and connection with all the classes of previous years. The Seniors, leaving academic life did not feel they were parting with old affiliations, but rather that they were entering an ever stimulating and enduring association. Completing not only the history of the Class of 1941, but also the calendar of the college ' s activities, Senior Week signified that another year of achievement had drawn to a close. A. Drury, Senior Class President, and M. Lawson, ' 41 Vice-President, leading the graduating class of Barnard to Commencement on June 3, 1941. In appreciation for valuable assistance The 1942 MORTARBOARD thanks Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Dr. Christina P. Grant Miss Anna Meyer Miss Maude Minahan Mrs. Martha Coles Mr. John Swan Miss Jean Ackermann Mr. George I. Heffernan of Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc. Mr. Arthur L. Grey of Chidnoff Studio Mr. Sherman Randa of Catroll-Randa, Photographers 155 TRUSTEES Lucius H. Beers, Chairman . Mrs. Ogden Reid, Vice-Chairman Duncan H. Read, Clerk Francis T. P. Plimpton, Treasurer Mrs. Alfred Meyer Nicholas Murray Butler . Mrs. Ogden Reid Miss Mabel Choate . Lucius H. Beers Mrs. Henry Wise Miller . Gano Dunn Mrs. Alfred F. Hess . Pierre Jay Harry Emerson Fosdick, D.D. WlNTHROP W. ALDRICH Lindsay Bradford Frederic Rhinelander King Mrs. Eugene Meyer . F. Bayard Rives Mrs. William L. Duffy Francis T. P. Plimpton Duncan H. Read Walter D. Fletcher . Dave Hennen Morris Donald B. Aldrich, D.D. . Mrs. Arthur Hays Sulzberger (Alumnae Trustee 1937-1941) Mrs. Adam Leroy Jones (Alumnae Trustee 1939-1943) 71 South Mountain A ' 25 Broadway 15 East 84th Street 1 Wall Street 20 Exchange Place 1225 Park Avenue Columbia University 15 East 84th Street 770 Park Avenue 25 Broadway 450 East 52nd Street 80 Broad Street 875 Park Avenue 1 Wall Street 490 Riverside Drive 18 Pine Street 22 William Street 18 East 48th Street Place, Washington, D. C. 20 Exchange Place 245 East 72nd Street 20 Exchange Place 1 Wall Street . 15 Broad Street 19 East 70th Street 12 West 11th Street 5 East 80th Street iue, Montclair, New Jersey OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION Anna E. H. Meyer, A.B. ............... Registrar Bertha L. Rockwell ............. Librarian of Barnard College Katharine S. Doty, A.M. ......... Assistant to the Dean — Occupation Bureau Gulielma F. Alsop, M.D. ................ College Physician Mary V. Libby, A.B. ........ Assistant to the Dean — Admissions, Information Helen P. Abbott, A.M. .......... Assistant to the Dean — Residence Halls Emily G. Lambert, A.B. . . . . . . . v . Bursar John J. Swan, M.E. ............ Comptroller of Barnard College Helen Erskine, A.M. .......... Assistant to the Dean — Public Relations Christina P. Grant, Ph.D. . .... Assistant to the Dean — Student Organizations and Social Affairs Lorna F. McGuire, Ph.D. ............. Freshman Adviser Alice B. Rhoads, A.M Assistant to the Dean — Public Relations Frederick A. Goetze, M. Sc. . . . . . . . . . Treasurer of the University Rev. Raymond C. Knox, S.T.D Chaplain of the University William H. McCastline, M.D. University Medical Officer 156 THE FACULTY ANTHROPOLOGY GLADYS A. REICHARD, Ph.D. ........ Chairman and Assistant Professor MARIAN W. SMITH, Ph.D . . , . Assistant BOTANY CORNELIA L. CAREY, Ph.D. ......... Chairman and Assistant Professor HAROLD C. BOLD, Ph.D Assistant Professor W. GORDON WHALEY, Ph.D Instructor MARION E. RICHARDS, A.M Lecturer BETTY F. THOMSON, A.M Assistant ELIZABETH D. HOFFMAN, A.B Assistant CHEMISTRY MARIE REIMER, Ph.D Chairman and Professor ELEANOR KELLER, A.M Associate Professor EVELYN E. BEHRENS, Ph.D Instructor HELEN R. DOWNES, Ph.D Instructor LUCIA S. FISHER, A.B Lecturer YOLANDA A. TOTA, A.B Lecturer MARY C. MALONEY, A.B Assistant ENGLISH MINOR W. LATHAM, Ph.D Chairman and Associate Professor WILLIAM T. BREWSTER, A.M., Litt.D Professor WILLIAM HALLER, Ph.D Professor ETHEL M. THORNBURY, Ph.D Visiting Associate Professor W. CABELL GREET, Ph.D. Associate Professor CLARE M. HOWARD, Ph.D Assistant Professor ETHEL STURTEVANT, A.M Assistant Professor ELIZABETH REYNARD, B. Litt. (Oxon.) Assistant Professor LORNA F. McGUIRE, Ph.D Associate MARY MORRIS SEALS Instructor GEORGIANA C. REMER, B.A. Hons. (Oxon.) Instructor DAVID A. ROBERTSON, JR., Ph.D Instructor PETER MONRO JACK, M.A. (Aberdeen) Lecturer ANNIS SANDVOS, A.M Lecturer GERTRUDE LEIGHTON, A.B Lecturer ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE ELIZABETH F. BAKER, Ph.D Chairman and Associate Professor ROBERT M. MacIVER, Ph.D.;Litt.D Libber Professor WILLARD WALLER, Ph.D Associate Professor RAYMOND J. SAULNIER, Ph.D Assistant Professor MIRRA KOMAROVSKY, Ph.D Instructor DONALD MARSH, Ph.D Instructor CLARA ELIOT, Ph.D Lecturer CORA KASIUS Lecturer MARY M. VanBRUNT, A.M Assistant KAbunton have 1940-1941) 157 FINE ARTS AND ARCHEOLOGY MARION LAWRENCE, Ph.D Chairman and Assistant Professor MARGARETE BIEBER, Ph.D Associate Professor MARIANNA BYRAM, A.M Instructor JANE GASTON, A.M Lecturer JULIUS HELD, Ph.D Lecturer FRENCH FREDERIC G. HOFFHERR, B. es L Chairman and Associate Professor MARGUERITE MESPOULET, Agregee de l ' Universite Associate Professor ALMA deL. LeDUC, Ph.D. Assistant Professor ISABELLE de WYZEWA, Ph.D.. Lecturer WINIFRED STURDEVANT, Ph.D ' Lecturer HELEN M. BAILEY, A.M Lecturer ANDRE MESNARD, A.M Lecturer GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY IDA H. OGILVIE, Ph.D . Chairman and Professor FLORRIE HOLZWASSER, Ph.D Assistant Professor ELIZABETH J. ARMSTRONG, A.M Lecturer JANE B. BELL, A.M Assistant GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES WILHELM ALFRED BRAUN, Ph.D ' . . Chairman and Professor HUGH WILEY PUCKETT, Ph.D Associate Professor LOUISE G. STABENAU, A.M Instructor ) ALFRED PUHAN, A.M Lecturer JOHN J. WEISERT, A.M. . , . . . Lecturer GOVERNMENT RAYMOND MOLEY, Ph.D., LL.D Chairman and Professor THOMAS PRESTON PEARDON, Ph.D Assistant Professor JANE P. CLARK, Ph.D . Assistant Professor ELSPETH DAVIES, A.M. ..... Tutorial Adviser in American Studies and Lecturer VERA MICHELES DEAN, Ph.D Lecturer ROSEMARY L. SAVAGE, A.B. . Assistant GREEK AND LATIN GERTRUDE M. HIRST, Ph.D Chairman and Professor NELSON GLENN McCREA, Ph.D., Litt.D Anthon Professor Emeritus JOHN DAY, Ph.D Assistant Professor EDITH F. CLAFLIN, Ph.D Lecturer HISTORY EUGENE H. BYRNE, Ph.D Chairman and Professor MAUDE ALINE HUTTMAN, Ph.D Associate Professor JAMES H. OLIVER, Ph.D Assistant Professor CHRISTINA P. GRANT, Ph.D Associate CHARLOTTE T. MURET, Ph.D Instructor GEORGE B. YOUNG, Ph.D Instructor ITALIAN PETER M. RICCIO, Ph.D. ......... Chairman and Assistant Professor TERESA A. CARBONARA, A.M Instructor QAbsent on leave — Spring Session) {{Absent on leave 1940-1941 ' ) (Winter Session only) 158 GEORGE W. MULLINS, Ph.D. EDWARD KASNER, Ph.D. PAUL A. SMITH, Ph.D. EDGAR R. LORCH, Ph.D. ELLIS R. KOLCHIN, Ph.D. RUTH CRUCET, A.B ' . GENA TENNEY, A.B., A.R.C.M. CAROLYN P. CADY, A.M. MATHEMATICS Chairman and Professor Adrain Professor Associate Professor Instructor Lecturer . Assistant MUSIC Chairman and Instructor on the Joline Foundation Instructor PHILOSOPHY VVM. PEPPERELL MONTAGUE, Ph.D HELEN H. PARKHURST, Ph.D GERTRUDE V. RICH, Ph.D. PHYSICAL EDUCATION AGNES R. WAYMAN, A.M Chairman MARION STRENG, A.M LELIA M. FINAN, A.M. MARGARET HOLLAND, A.M MARJORIE TUZO, A.M. FERN YATES, A.M JANE HARTING, A.M PHYSICS HENRY A. BOORSE, Ph.D Chairman and Assistant Professor AGNES TOWNSEND, Ph.D Lecturer Chairman and Professor Associate Professor Instructor lND Associate Professor Assistant Professor Instructor Instructor Instructor Instructor Instructor LL.D. Cha PSYCHOLOGY HARRY L. HOLLINGWORTH, Ph D RICHARD E. P. YOUTZ, Ph.D. GELOLO McHUGH, A.M.. S. STANFELD SARGENT, Ph.D Instructor TOM GAYLORD ANDREWS, A.M Lecturer VIRGINIA WEISCHER, A.B Assistant .man and Professor Assistant Professor Instructor RELIGION HORACE L. FRIESS, Ph.D. FREDERICK deW. BOLMAN, JR., Ph.D. URSULA M. NIEBUHR, A.M., S.T.M. Associate Professor . Lecturer . Lecturer SPANISH CAROLINA MARCIAL-DORADO, AMELIA A. de del RIO, A.M. ARSENIA ARROYO, A.M. Associate Professor . Lecturer . Lecturer ZOOLOGY HENRY E. CRAMPTON, Ph.D., Sc.D. LOUISE HOYT GREGORY, Ph.D. FLORENCE de LOISELLE LOWTHER, GRACE SPRINGER FORBES, Ph.D. ELIZABETH K. WORLEY, M.S. VIRGINIA B. NIX, A.M. J. EDWERTA MERRILL, A.M. ELIZABETH W. RYAN, A.M. . HARRIET E. TAYLOR, A.B. . rman and Professor . Professor Assistant Professor Instructor Lecturer Lecturer Assistant Assistant Assistant {Absent on leavt (Winter Session -Winte nly) 159 CLUB MEMBERSHIPS LANGUAGE CLUBS French Club President . Vice-President Secretary Treasurer . Publicity . Katherine Albro Aimee Albert Jacqueline Backstrom Nona Balakian Maud Brunel Mary Bucher June Clayton Ursula Colbourne Marjorie Crystal Frances Depole Annette Dreyfus Edna Ely Emmy Lou Epstein Francoise Ernout Marie Errante Mary Ewald Odette Golden Babette Goldman Betty Gormley Esta Greenberg Denise Hahn Eleanor Harley Lorina Havill Maria Heineman Janet Israel Irene Jones Aino Karna Dorothy Kattenhorn Francoise Kelz Sylvia Klion Thora Koefoed Kay Lane Gertrude Leeds Lily Levitsky Antoinette Loezere Joy Mahler Gloria Mandeville Helen Marraro Rowena Matthews Margaret McConn Mary McKesson Marie Mesrobian Lucille Osmfr Louise Peck Beatrice Perez rolande redon Jane Ringo Elaine Bernstein Sherrill Cannold Charlotte Gordon Patricia Galloway Byrd Wise Olive Roberts Jean Rosen Rosalyn Santoni Dorothy Sherman Mavis Standifer Gloria Starr Ruth Tillinghast Maja Tschernjakow Patricia Vans Agnew Jeannette Van Walsem Mary McKee Vanaman Cynthia Walser Marianne Weill Harryet Willis Louise Woodward Flora Wovschein German Club President . Vice-President . Treasurer Publicity Chairman Marjorie Allen Joan Amberg Vera Arndt Winifred Bach Barbara Baehr Elisabeth Barron Pauline Berkstresser Frances Billings Edith Borner Constance Bright Deborah Burstein Margaret Crymble Patricia Galloway Barbara Good Elaine Grimm Roberta Hadley Evelyn Harrison Edna Henze Mary Holiat Grace Honold Eleanor Johnson Justine Jung Jane Kavanagh Hope Kingman Constance Lawson Gertrude Leeds Eleanor Mamel Ruth Millett Mary Molleson Ellen Mueser Johanna Oehring Enid Pugh Eleanor Pumyea Mary Root Lucille Ross Irma Schocken Emily Schoonover Helen Sessinghaus Ruth Stern Anne Stokesberry Ann Stubblefield Inge Hieber Christina Swiniarski Marion Sirotak Virginia Rogers Lisbet Stumpp Verna Tamborellb Elfriede Thiele Ruth Tillinghast Katherine Trebing Maja Tschernjakow Mary Vanaman Patricia Vans Agnbw Alice von Storch Dorothy Vormwald Barbara White Mary Williamson Beth Zimmerschied Italian Club President ............. Helen Mararro Vice-President ............. Ida Sarro Secretary ............. Aida di Benedetto Treasurer ............. Rosemary Gangemi Elaine Bernstein Inge Hieber Elena Mascolo Gloria Tanasso Gloria Casciano Phoebe H olden Mary Pratt Marjorie Ullman Mary Lou Crescenzo Rena Libera Virginia Rogers Gloria Viggiano Adrienne Curtin Rosa Lubrano Roselyn Santoni ' Helen Webster 160 Spanish Club President . Vice-President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer . Publicity Chairman Pan-American Relation. Katherine Albro Vera Arndt Winifred Bach Helen Baker Barbara Barnes Sherrill Cannold Clytia Capraro Edith Castells Mary Cayot Virginia Lee Cheyne Katherine Crean Marjorie Crystal Angela Cuccio Jean Davis Marjorie Davis Ana del Valle President . Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Elizabeth Allen Rebecca Allinson Helen Baker Rosemary Barnsdall Joan Carey Angela Cuccio Barbara Dennen Aida di Benedetto Jean Dodson Elaine Donovan Frances Farrior Ruby Fersten Elizabeth Flynn Evelyn Gonzales Odette Golden Mary J. Graham Angela Guest Berthe Guilhempe Eleanor Harley Adeline Hewitt Hazel Harmeling Inge Hieber Marie-Germaine Hogan CI Kay Lane Peggy Lavender Marion Linn Laura Lluberas Antoinette Loezere Betty Lotz Gail McCarthy Eleanor McNeill Carol Mali Natasha Martchenko Elena Mascolo Marie Mesrobian Marion Moscato Frances Murphy Helena Percas a s s i c a Club Elizabeth Ditterline Margaret Duncan Clara Genetos Marjorie Greenberg Diana Hansen Diana Howell Helen Kandel Dorothy Keith Marguerite King Virginia Meding Louise Morse Marjorie Nettleton Gladys Neuwirth Anne Connolly June Clayton Mary Scully Bettina Boynton Ida Espaillat Lucia Quintero Helen Webster Beatrice Perez Nancy Rogan Marjorie Rood Virginia Ros Marjory Rosser Rosalyn Santoni Dorothy Sherman Mary Sirman Alice Smith Phyllis Snyder Mary McKee Vanaman Harryet Willis Gloria Wood Ruth Young . Cecil Golann Isabel Gaebelein Edna Harriet Smith Evelyn Harrison Ursula Price Janet Quinn Marion Serby Virginia Thompson Katherine Van Walsem Doris Wrigley RELIGIOUS ORGANIZATIONS Interfaith Council Chairman Doris Prochaska President of Episcopal Club ......... Jacqueline Wirsching President of Lutheran Club Elinor Schubert President of Menorah Society .......... Elaine Steibel President of Wyclijfe Club ........... Mary Smith Episcopal Club President ............ Jacqueline Wirsching Vice-President Mary Molleson Secretary ............. Flora Wikawa Treasurer Jane Rinck Publicity Chairman Helen Ayers Jean Ackermann Patricia Goode Gloria Kingsley Alice Peterson Denise Anderson June Haller Eleanor McNeill Rosemary Riley Edna Ely Helen Harper Betty Miskimen Eleanor Dun Harriet Fisken Irene Jones 161 Lutheran Club President ............. Elinor Schubert Secretary Ruth Geyer Treasurer . . . . . . Elsie Friemus Allene Adams Hazel Harmeling Inge Hieder Aino Karna Vera Arndt Edna Henze Barbara Ilgen Doris Prochaska Elizabeth Haithwaite President . Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Publicity . Program Ch. Matie Armstrong Robertina Campbell Beatrice Carson Wy cliff e Club Dorothy Fagan Frances Farrior Charlotte Gabor Anne Heene Eleanor Johnson Marion Linn Mary Smith Marjorie Leahy Alice Kliemand . Peggy Binder Charlotte Johnson Mary Ewald Dorothy Pierce Theresa Scott Cynthia Walser Menorah Society President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer . Publicity Chairn Shirley Aronow Barbara Baker Marguerite Bender Virginia Benedict Elaine Bernstein Joan Borgenicht Deborah Burstein Helen Cahn Ellen Davis Helene Dresner Annette Dreyfus Emmy Lou Epstein Florence Fischman Lee Garten Grace Glass Gloria Glaston Thelma Golub Miriam Gore Esta Greenberg Gloria Grubman Denise Hahn Elizabeth Harris Harriet Hirschfeld Phoebe Hyrken Janet Israel Helen Kandel Elinore Jacoff Lillian Kates Phyllis Kenner Mildred Kolodny Barbara Kornfeld Sybil Kotkin Beatrice Kremsdorf Florence Levine Lily Levitsky Jacqueline Levy Lillian Margolin Elaine Steibel Gertrude Schaffer Rose Ruth Tarr Helene Gottesman Judith Protas Eleanor Pearlman Carmel Prashker Gail Raywid Cynthia Rittenband Ann Rosensweig Lucille Ross Elaine Sachs Jane Selling Edith Sprung Ruth Stern Lois Volter Amy Zasuly Newman Club President . Vice-President . Secretary Treasurer . Publicity Manager June Amsden Mary Aylesworth Marjie Beck Lois Berberich Kay Bruns Eleanora Boggiano Carolyn Calhoun Mary Cayot Claudia Carner Eithne Colgan Carol Collins Anne Connolly Yvonne Coutant Angela Cuccio Patricia Curtin Frances Depole ESTELLE De VlTO Jean Dodson Frances Donnellon Mary Donnellon Elaine Donovan Marion Donovan Greta Eisenmenger Frances Fahrenholz Betty Farrell M. Elizabeth Flynn Sylvia Gaus Phyllis Wiegard Dorothy Wilson Barbara Heinzen Betty Clifford Denise Donegan Jean Gimbert Patricia Girling Marilyn Haggerty Marie-Germaine Hogan Juliette Kenney Hazel Kenny Ren a Libera Mary Lilley Antoinette de Loezere 162 Irene Lyons Marion La Fountain Jean MacNeary Helen Marraro Charlotte McKenzie Peggy McKinney Eleanor McNeill Mary Milnes Gloria Monehan Alice Moon Marion Moscato Frances Murphy Betty Murray Natalie Nicholaus Mary Ellen O ' Connell Bette O ' Connor Honor O ' Rourke Judith Paige Mary Sue Reed Lillian Riblet Catherine Rice Virginia Ros ROSELYN SaNTONI Patricia Shannon Susan Shreve Matilda Sloan Margaret Smith Margaret Stoyell Phyllis Van Orman Joan Vessa Anita Vesta Alethea Woods Monica Wyatt Ruth Zimmerman University Christian Association President ............. Alice Kliemand Vice-President ............ Reinhard Pauly Recording Secretary ........... Dorothea Sheffield Corresponding Secretary ........... Enid Pugh Treasurer ............. Milner Wallance Winifred Anderson Barbara Ilgen Louise Morse Theresa Scott Vera Arndt Mildred Jones Gertrude Muhlhan Anne Sirch Marie Bellerjeau Aino Karna Margery Parker Jane Stewart Mary Katherine Bent Babette Keeler Kathleen Peterson Eleanor M. Smith Norma Blickfelt Doris Landre Frances Philpotts Elfriede Thiele Roberta Bradford Patricia Langwell Peggy Pratt Jean Vandervoort Elaine Briggs Marian Linn Madeline Pruess Jeanette Van Walsei Emma de Le Vin Joelyn Littauer Arlene Randel Cynthia Walser Peggy Dickinson Grace McClure Anne Richardson Doris Williams Harriet Fisken Eleanor McNeill Olive Roberts Flora Wikawa Virginia-Lee Fuldner Joann McQuiston Marjorie Schaefer Millicent White Harriet Hall Betty Miskimen Glee Club President . Business Manager Secretary . Publicity Manager Librarian . Irene Balaksha Ellen Barnett Beatrice Becker Marie Bellerjeau Martha Bennett Norma Blickfelt Tamara Bliss Audry Burnett Margaret Bush Mary Cayot Eleanor Clark Suzanne Cole Kathleen Crandall Frances Edwards Marjorie Eilers Kathleen Fluhrer M. Elizabeth Flynn Ruth Lee Garten Betty Gormley Marjorie Greider Jane Griffiths Elaine Grimm Blanche Hartill Lorina Havill Julia Hodges Matilda Hoffer Shirley Holt Diane Howell Babette Keeler Alice Kliemand Dorothy Knowlan Claire Lawlor Joelyn Littauer Martha Livesay Alice Long Betty Lowell Virginia Meyer Ruth Millet Jane Morrell Eleanor Murdock Helen Rudd Owen Frances Philpotts Mary Rindsfoos Mary Root Anne Rosensweig Betty Clifford Verna Mayberry Elizabeth Young June Amsden Gretchen Relyea Irma Schocken Jane Schutzendorf Theresa Scott Julia Shedlesky Carol Shelton Susan Shreve Anne Sirch Maja Tschernjakow Marjorie Ullman Mary Vanaman Claire Virgien Jeanne Walsh Babette Weiner Dorothy Whitaker Rosemarie Whitaker Orchestra Barnard Representative Alberta Albig Claudia Carner Emma de Le Vin Marion Donovan Betty Farrell Cynthia Laidlaw Jeanne Lance Dorothy Morgan Jane Rinck Eleanor Pearlman Ann Rosensweig Lucille Ross 163 Music Club President ............. Diana Klebanow Vice-President Phoebe Holden Secretary ............. Aurelia Maresca Treasurer ............. Rosalie Geller Publicity Manager ........... Constance Bright Alberta Albig Rosemarie Gangemi Mary Potter Jane Sloman Amelia Brinck Irene Herzfield Dorothy Proctor Elizabeth Taylor Margaret Busch Nancy Hudspeth Theresa Scott Jean Walsh Astrith Deyrup Elinor Hutchings Alla Shainin Dorothy Whitaker Hazel Frost Eleanor Pearlman Wigs And Cues President . Vice-President Secretary . Business Manager Staging Chairman Costume Chairman Properties Chairman Publicity Chairman Social Chairman Make-up Cha Betty Alleva Winifred Anderson Rosemary Barnsdall Elaine Briggs Charlotte Cassell Yvonne Coutant Lorna Drummond Sylvia Gaus Brunhilde Glintenka; Barbara Heinzen Mary Jane Heyl Patricia Illingworth Sybil Kotkin Beatrice Kremsdorf Cynthia Laidlaw Mary Molleson Betty Jane Morgan Satoko Oguri Helen Philips Roberta Hadley Beatrice Belis June Amsden Marguerite Binder Frances Phelps Alice Gershon Betty Lotz Lucia Quintero Merry Andrews Jean Sawyer Marjorie Rosser Louise Salet Rosemary Short Nancy Wagner Helen Webster June Wilson Barnard Chapter Df The Committee To Defend America B y Aiding The Allies President Helen Baker Vice-President .... Joan Brown Mary Ewald Treasurer ..... Margaret Duncan Mary J ane Heyl, Helen Kandel Poster Chairman . Flora Wikawa Joan Aiken Elizabeth Allen Matie Armstrong Nona Balakian Doris Bayer Constance Bright Mrs. Elizabeth Byrnes Doris Charlton Carol Collins Mary Damrosch Mary Davis Dorothy Dikeman Denise Donegan Cecil Golann Alice Gershon Roberta Hadley Mary Holiat Gyda Jensen Ursula Kraft Cynthia Laidlaw Martha Lawrence Nancy Lenkeith Antoinette de Loezere Gloria Monahan Jane Morrell Bette O ' Connor Margery Parker Lucy Pollard Madeline Ryttenberg Clochette Roosevelt Jean Sawyer Janet Stevenson Christine Swiniarski Beverly Vernon Jean Willis Millicent White Frances Whittington Meredith Wright International Relations Club President Ellen Hammer Recording Secretary ........... Louise Giventer Corresponding Secretary ......... Madeline Ryttenberg Treasurer Alice Gershon Librarian • . . Vicki Hughes 164 Vera Arndt Aleine Austin Amelie Anderson Jeanne Alberts Elizabeth Allen Jean Buckingham Rachel Brodie Eleanor Bach Janet Campbell Robertina Campbell Cicely d ' Autremont Marion Davies Ursula De Antonio Gloria Glaston Francoisf Ernout Adele Gillies Anne Gibbons Clara Gene tos Margo Hotchkiss Eleanor Harley Winifred Hessinger Harriet Hirschfield Mary Jane Heyl Marguerite Lockwood Doris Nicholson Lucy Pollard Clochette Roosevelt Frances Russo Monica Reynolds Eleanor H. Smith Eleanor Streichler Ethel Stone Dorothy Le Court Jane Sloman Edith Strick Patricia Vans Agnew Marianne Weill Phy s 1 c a 1 S President . Vice-President Secretary . Treasurer . Publicity Manager Demonstration Ch.iirw.ni Virginia Benedict Nina Diamond Jane Dick Carol Dunlop Ethel Ginsburg Thelma Golub Angela Guest Florence Harwich Marian Heineman Mary Holiat Ellen Jiroudek Claire Lawlor Betty Levy Elizabeth Moore c i e n c e Club Frances Murphy Leonie Nestler Beatrice Perez Laura Pontcorvo Madeline Pruess Monica Reynolds Hope Robson Betty Isaacs Emily Schoonover Eda Malisoff Barbara Fish Gertrude Schaffer Ruth Stern Virginia Ros Evelyn Steinhar dt Edith Strick Rose Ruth Tarr Genevieve Wielunsk Elaine Wolf Renee Wolfson President . Secretary Beatrice Bavkev Virginia Benedict Caroline Chervenie Florence Harwick Mathematics Club Betty Krane Helen Lyttle Dorothy Pierce Lucy Pollard Irma Schucken Shirley Sexauer Alice Smith Eleanor Suttle Beverly Gilmour Marjorie Leahy Phyllis Wiegard Louise Woodward Elizabeth Young Fine Arts Club President . Vice-President Secretary Lana Brunner Suzanne Cole Eleanor Colgan Anne Connolly Patricia Curtin Betty Davis Ursula De Antonic Thelma Deck Janet Dempsey Marion Futtner Patricia Goode Nancy Goodwin Marjorie Greider Evelyn Harrison Diana Hartung Edna Henze Jean Hughes Phoebe Hyrkin Ruth Imbert Margaret Jackson Justine Jung Augusta Kaufmann Francoise Kelz Pritha Kumarappa Marcella Lawlor Eleanor McNeill Martha Messler Margaretha Nestlen Satoko Ogari Judith Paige Anne Richardson Elinor Schubert Christiana Smith Betty Throop Mary Alexander Charlotte Johnson Lois Steffen Lisbet Stumpp Virginia Thompson Marie Turbow Marie Van Orman Dorothy Wilson Byrd Wise Althea Woods Doris Wrigley Jeanette Zang Social Service Committee Chairman of the Committee ........... Jane Stewart Co-Chairman Mary Hill Helen Ayf.rs Eleanor Foster Louise Giventer Mary Ellen O ' Connell Carol Camblon Eleanor Gans Jane Moon Betty Price Ursula De Antonio 165 ACTIVITIES INDEX Acknowledgments 155 Alumnae 138 Athletic Association 146 Barnard Fund Committee 138 Barnard Social Committee 18 Bear Pin Awards 137 Blue Book 28 Book Exchange 18 British War Relief Society (Barnard Chapter) 17 Bulletin 37-38 Camp 14 Campus 10-12, 25-26, 133-136 Candids 130-132 Choir 19 Christmas Assembly 24 Club Memberships 160 Committee To Defend America by Aiding the Allies (Barnard Chapter) 43 Dedication 4-5 Eligibility Committee 33 Episcopal Club 16 Faculty . ' 157-159 Fine Arts Club 44 French Club 41 Freshmen 13 Freshman Day 9-10 Glee Club 23 German Club 41 German Club Christmas Party 23 Graduation 154 Greek Games 139-145 Harvest Hop 19 Honor Board. . 32 Interfaith Council 15 International Relations Club ' 43 166 Italian Club 40 Juniors 45 Junior Prom 126-127 Junior Section 46-124 Junior Show 128-129 Lutheran Club 16 Menorah Society 16 Mortarboard 34-36 Music Club 44 Newman Club 16 Officers of Administration 156 Opening 9 Physical Science Club 42 Preface 8 Press Board 28 Proctors 33 Quarterly 39 Religious Organizations 15-16 Residence Halls 21-22 Representative Assembly 31 Roster 168-190 Seniors 151 Senior Week 152-153 Social Service Committee 42 Sophomores 29 Spanish Club 40 Sports 146-150 Spring Dance 138 Student Council 30 Title Page 2-3 Trustees 156 University Christian Association 15 University Orchestra 44 Vocational Committee 18 Wigs and Cues 20 Wyclifle Club 16 167 ROSTER ' 43 ACKER, DORIS 734 Lotus Ave., Oradell, N. J. ' 41 ACKERMANN, JEAN MARIE 945 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-8992 ' 44 ADAMS, E. ALLENE FLORENCE 62 Princewood Ave., Prince Bay, Staten Island ' 41 AIKEN, JEAN 411 West 114 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-4454 •43 ALBERT, AIMEE FLORENCE 1516 Shakespeare Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Tremont 2-0879 43 ALBERTS, JEANNE 40 Redfteld St., Rye, N. Y. Rye 2255 ' 41 ALBIG, ALBERTA WATERS Third St., West Newton, Pa. ' 42 ALBRO, KATHERINE ELIZABETH 300 Central Ave., Fredonia, N. Y. ' 43 ALESSANDRINI, EILEEN IDA 1351 Crane St., Schenectady, N. Y. Sp. ALEXANDER, INEZ MARIE 55 River St., Stamford, Conn. ' 41 ALEXANDER, MARY ELIZABETH 106 Morningside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-4800 ' 43 ALLEN, MRS. DOROTHY 1148 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-7015 ' 42 ALLEN, ELEANOR MAY 107 Cambridge Ave., Garden Citv, N. Y. Garden City 4728 ' 42 ALLEN, ELIZABETH CLARK 328 Park Ave., Leonia, N.J. Leonia 4-2371-M ' 42 ALLEVA, ELIZABETH HOPE 9129-88 Road, Woodhaven, N. Y. Virginia 7-6940 ' 42 ALLINSON, REBECCA JANE Hampton, Iowa ' 44 ALLUM, MARJORIE Highland Road, Sharon, Pa. ' 42 ALPERN, DOROTHY 2221 Gunther Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Unc. ALTER, EUGENIE Hotel Park Crescent, 150 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-5800 ' 42 AMBERG, JOAN HELEN 160 W. 77 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-0488 •42 AMSDEN, JUNE MARIE 904 Morris St., Ogdensburg, N. Y. ' 42 ANDERSON, AMELIE CLOSEY 17 Oak St., Rehoboth, Del. •42 ANDERSON, DENISE MARIE 436 Ft. Washington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-5923 ' 41 ANDERSON, ELIZABETH WINIFRED 537 W. 121 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-8640 ' 43 ANDERSON, JEANNE DAVIS 537 W. 121 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-8640 ' 41 ANDREWS, MERRY Box 4, Ben. Franklin Station, Washington, D. C. ' 43 ARFMANN, JEAN GLEASON 201 Springfield Ave., Rutherford, N. J. ' 44 ARMSTRONG, MATIE BARNES 23 John St., Roosevelt, N. Y. Freeport 6145 ' 41 ARNDT, VERA AUGUSTE 500 W. 166 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Beekman 3-0322 ' 43 ARONOW, SHIRLEY GLADYS 666 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-3272 ' 44 AUSTIN, ALEINE JOAN 47 E. 88 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-7964 ' 41 d ' AUTREMONT, CICELY HARRIET Southern Arizona Bank, Tucson, Arizona ' 43 AYERS, HELEN ELIZABETH 59 Meetinghouse Hill, Clinton, Conn. ' 43 AYLSWORTH, MARY JANE 89-04 34 Ave., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newton 9-1258 ' 41 BACH, ELEANOR MAUDE 4637 Grosvenor Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Kings bridge 6-1118 ' 42 BACH, HELENE MARIE 97 Park St., New Canaan, Conn. ' 42 BACH, WINIFRED BRANSFORD 4637 Grosvenor Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Kingsbiidge 6-1118 ' 43 BACKSTROM, JACQUELINE JEANNETTE 160 E. 65 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 4-5329 ' 42 BAEHR, BARBARA 1148 Fifth St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-4941 ' 41 BAFF, BEVERLY FLORA 135-05 Boulevard, Rockawav Beach, L. I. ' Belle Harbor 5-3160 ' 44 BAKER, BARBARA MILLICENT 1760 Andrews Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Tremont 8-6542 ' 44 BAKER, ELIZABETH T40-12 Continental Ave., Forest Hills, L. I. 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Kingsbridge 3-0654 ' 42 BASWELL, EVELYN LOUISE 625 Ocean Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Buckminster 2-8755 ' 44 BAULCH, MARCIA ELIZABETH 55 Pine St., Maplewood, N. J. ' 42 BAYER, BETTY 514 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-4017 ' 42 BAYER, DORIS ELIZABETH 8722 95 St., Woodhaven, N. Y. ' 42 BAYLIS, NANCY DENISON 319 Harrison Ave., Westfield, N. J. ' 43 BECK, MARJIE JEAN 580 Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3431-J ' 44 BECKER, BEATRICE ANNE 130 Morningside Dr., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 BECKER, ELIZABETH VIRGINIA 784 Edgewood Lane, Grantwood, N. J. Cliffside 6-0916-M ' 44 BEERS, MARY JANE 1348 Stanford St., Schenectady, N. Y. ' 41 BELIS, BEATRICE 45 Lawton St., Brookline, Mass. ' 44 BELLERJEAU, MARIE LOUISE 1501 68 St., Philadelphia, Pa. ' 41 BEMELMANO, MADELEINE FREUND 26 Grammercy Park, N. Y. C, N. Y. Grammercy 5-6263 ' 43 BENAS, FLORA WANDA 110 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicotr 2-9650 ' 43 BENDER, MARJORIE JANET 235 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Main 2-4265 ' 44 DI BENEDETTO, AIDA JUDITH 81 Robertson Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 8764-W ' 44 BENEDICT, VIRGINIA FLORENCE 110 Riverside Dr., N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-5906 ' 41 BENNETT, MARTHA LOUISE 134-02 Woodhaven Boulevard, Woodhaven, N. Y. ' 41 BENSON, RITA MAY 12 Prospect St., Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 768 ' 44 BENT, MARY KATHERINE Clovelly, Old Mamaroneck Rd., White Plains, N. Y. ' 42 BERBERICH, LOIS ELIZABETH 5 Glen St., Ossining, N. Y. Ossining 3052 Unc. BERKSTRESSER, PAULINE REBECCA 34 Miantonomi Ave., Newport, R. I. ' 41 BERNARD, MARIAN ANDRE 532 W. 114 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 BERNSTEIN, ELAINE BELLE 148-04 85 Drive, Jamaica, N. Y. Unc. BERTSCHE, LOUISE GRAY 125 Hawthorne St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ingersoll 2-7542 Unc. BESHAROV, JUSTINIA LUDVIGORNA Milton-on-Hudson, N. Y. ' 41 BILLINGS, FRANCES CATHERINE Edgewood Park, Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. ' 41 BINDER, MARGUERITE BARBARA 9 64 St., West New York, N.J. Union 7-5413 41 BINGHAM, JUNE R. 27 Sutton Place, South, N. Y. C, N. Y. Plaza 5-2165 ' 41 BISHOP, ELIZABETH ESTELLE 217 W. 133 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-7950 ' 44 BLICKFELT, NORMA LEQUAM 530 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-0277 ' 44 BLISS, TAMARA 311 W. 95 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Riverside 9-9000 ' 41 BLONDET, MARGARITA Calle Sagrado Corazon, Santurce, Puerto Rico ' 42 BLUM, MARION RUTH 175 Hillcrest Ave., Leonia, N.J. Leonia 4-2819 ' 41 BLUMNER, RUTH EVELYN 817 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-0369 ' 42 BOGGIANO, ELEONORA MARIE Box 9, Nanuet, N. Y. Nanuet 974 ' 44 BOHL, ELIZABETH ROSARX 59 Pamona Ave., Fair Lawn, N. J. ' 43 BOHNERT, MRS. LEA MALLISON 309 W. 4 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Watkins 9-7418 ' 44 BOND, ELIZABETH OTIS 1149 Ardsley Road, Schenectady, N. Y. ' 43 BOOTH, BEVERLY HARWOOD 47 Pinebrook Drive, Larchmont, N. Y. ' 43 BORGENICHT, JOAN VIVIAN 285 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-5960 ' 42 BORNER, EDITH JULIA 207 W. 106 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-2996 169 ROSTER-Continued ' 41 BOSTELMANN, ADELINE GLOVER Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. Irvington 1335 •43 BOUVIER, MARIE LOUISE Mountain Road, Irvington, N. Y. Irvington 1-3685 ' 41 BOWEN, MRS. SUSAN HEATH 510 W. 123 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. 41 BOYNTON, BETTINA ADELAIDE 57 Gaynor Ave., Manhasset, L. I. ' 43 BRADFORD, MARY ROBERTA 245 Larch Ave., Bogota, N. J. Hackensack 2-3505 •44 BRADSHAW, RUTH MIRIAM 180 Atlantic Ave., Lynbrook, N. Y. Lynbrook 3838 •44 BRAREN, LENA KATHERINE 7305 Fifth Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Shore Road 8-7633 ' 43 BRATSCHI, EDA MARTHA 278 Old Lake St., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 1237 •43 BRETT, FANNY 24 Church, Northport, N. Y. Ml BRIGGS, EDITH ELAINE 15 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-6542 ' 42 BRIGHT, CONSTANCE EDNA 35 Bryant Road, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5672 ' 44 BRINK, AMELIA CATHERINE 2300 Loring Place, Bronx, N. Y. Fordham 4-2949 ' 43 BRODIE, RACHEL 132 Driveway, Ottawa, Canada ' 43 BROGAN, ISABELLA 5440 Netherland Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Kingsbridge 9-8021 ' 44 BROMILOW, MARION ELEANOR 80 Front St., Paterson, N. J. ' 44 BROWN, AUDREY KATHLEEN 43-12 206 St., Bayside, N. Y. Bavside 9-2522 ' 42 BROWN, JOAN MADELINE 43-12 206 St., Bavside, N. Y. Bayside 9-2522 Unc. BRUNEL, MAUD LILIANE Chevillande 14, Geneva, Switzerland ' 43 BRUNNER, LANA VIRGINIA 60 Chapin, Binghamton, N. Y. ' 42 BRUNS, KATHRYN MARGARET 18 W. 42 St., Bayonne, N.J. ' 42 BUCHER, MARY DOROTHY 100 Pavlin Boulevard, Leonia, N. J. Leonia 4-0815 Unc. BUCK, SARA LOUISE 16 Madison Ave., Madison, N. J. Madison 6-1976-R ' 42 BUCKINGHAM, JEAN MARIE Martha Road, Harrington Park, N. J. Closter 746 ' 44 BUHR, VIRGINIA BELL 1029 Dean Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Westchester 7-1215 ' 44 BURGESS, RUTH PAYNE II 1326 Madison Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-6940 ' 42 BURLEY, DORIS LOUISE 4954 Lindell, St. Louis, Mo. ' 42 BURNETT, AUDREY CATHERINE 130 Bella Vesta St., Tuckahoe, N. Y. ' 41 BURNS, MRS. ELIZABETH PENDRELL 10 Ave. Petain, Shanghai, China ' 43 BURSTEIN, DEBORAH 46 W. 83 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Susquehannah 7-2919 ' 43 BURTON, HELEN STEWART Wilton, Conn. ' 44 BUSCH, MARGARET MARIE 61 The Terrace, Katonah, N. Y. Katonah 109-W ' 44 CAHN, HELEN MARIAN 1150 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-4106 ' 44 CALHOUN, CAROLYN MYRA 472 Gramatan Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 3221-M ' 43 CALLCOTT, MARY VIRGINIA 29 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-4640 ' 42 CAMBLON, CAROL CHARLOTTE 214 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. Triangle 5-9131 ' 44 CAMBRIA, CLAUDIA ELISE 40 W. 67 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-5478 Unc. CAMPBELL, JANET EUPHEMIA 37-16 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-8028 ' 42 CAMPBELL, MABEL ADELAIDE 800 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-7907 ' 44 CAMPBELL, ROBERTINA MURRAY 56 Bayview Ave., Port Washington, N. Y. Port Washington 239 ' 41 CANNOLD, SHERRILL HAZEL 266 Bedford Park Boulevard, N. Y. C, N. Y. Raymond 9-8118 ' 42 CANNON, EDITH ACKLEY • % Stocking, Route No. 1, South Norwalk, Conn. ' 41 CAPRARO, ATHENA IRIS 136-33 62 Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Independence 3-3783 •42 CAPRARO, CLYTIA ANGELA 136-33 62 Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Independence 3-3783 ' 44 CAREY, JOAN 21 Whitney St., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 290-J 170 HDSTER-Continued - 42 CARNER, CLAUDIA LOUISE 154 Munro Boulevard, Valley Stream, N. Y. ' 41 CARRIE, PHYLLIS RUTH 118 Summit Ave., Jersey City, N. J. ' 44 CARROLL, DOROTHY HARRISON 1 River Road, Nvack, N. Y. Nvack 464 ' 44 CARROLL, JEAN MARY 468 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-7686 •42 CARSON, BEATRICE CHARLOTTE 1728 Barnes Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 3-4881 •44 CARSON, JULIA BRACKETT 2834 North Hackett Ave., Milwaukee, Wisconsin ' 43 CASCIANO, GLORIA JEANNETTE 701 Bergen Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Delaware 3-0526 ' 41 CASSELL, CHARLOTTE Park Plaza, Larchmont, N. Y. Larchmont 2552 •44 CASTELLO, EDITH ELENA San Carlos 152, Cienfuegos, Cuba ' 44 CATTELL, CORYL S. 40 Washington Sq., South, N. Y. C, N. Y. Grammercy 7-8512 44 CAYOT, MARY ETHELREDA 8 64 St., West New York, N. J. •42 CHAPMAN, NANCY VIRGINIA Fandon Hall, Westport, Conn. •44 CHARLTON, DORIS LILLIAN 33 Purser Place, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 44 CHENOWETH, MILDRED 199 Lafayette Circle, Cincinnati, Ohio ' 42 CHERVENIE, CAROLINE L. 23 Chapel St., Islip, N. Y. ' 42 CHEYNE, VIRGINIA LEE 380 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-8300 ' 41 CHIARAPPA, RUTH MARIETTA 110 South Main St., South Norvvalk, Conn. •44 CHOLLAT-NAMY, NANCY PIERRETTE 3807 21 St., Long Island City, N. Y. ' 43 CLAPPER, DATHA RUTH 97 Mada Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. Gibralter 2-3636 ' 41 CLARK, DOROTHY ELIZABETH 217 Juniper St., Quakertown, Pa. •42 CLARK, DOROTHY RUTH 132-70 Sanford Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-2417 ' 44 CLARK, ELEANOR MERRELL 144-57 38 Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-1207 ' 42 CLAYTON, JUNE CAMILLE 189 Hempstead Ave., Hempstead, N. Y. Hempstead 675 ' 41 CLIFFORD, BETTY ANN 83-09 Talbot St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Virginia 9-6764 ' 42 CLINTON, MARY ANN 608 East Armour St., Kansas City, Missouri ' 41 CLOHESSY, MARY KENNEDY 100 West Palm Lane, Phoenix, Arizona ' 43 COHN, MRS. JANET R. 2 Sutton Place, South, N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 COLBETH, MARY ETHEL Buzzards Bay, Mass. ' 44 COLBOURNE, URSULA 427 Bard Ave., West Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Port Richmond 7-7792-W •44 COLE, SUZANNE 1455 UnderclifT Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Topping 2-8292 •43 COLGAN, EITHNE ANNE 27 Denton Ave., East Rockaway, N. Y. Lynbrook 5683 ' 43 COLGAN, ELEANOR JOAN 27 Denton Ave., East Rockaway, N. Y. Lynbrook 5683 ' 43 COLLINS, CAROL MARIE 226 E. 30 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Lexington 2-6849 ' 44 COLLYER, MARILYN ARLENE 6 North Malcolm St., Ossining, N. Y. Ossining 1415 ' 44 CONDON, PATRICIA 182 E. 19 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 43 CONGER, JANE VAN NUYSE 428 Tremont Place, Orange, N. J. ' 43 CONKLIN, MARY BADGLEY Schoharie, N. Y. ' 41 CONNOLLY, ANN 611 W. 141 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-8897 ' 42 COOPER, KATHERINE FENIMORE 850 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Butterfield 8-6920 ' 44 COOPER, SUSAN FENIMORE 850 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Butterfield 8-6920 ' 43 COPLON, JUDITH 2506 Avenue S, Brooklyn, N. Y. Dewey 9-3042 ' 43 COPP, GLORIA MARCIA 4 Cornwall Lane, Port Washington, N. Y. ' 41 CORDUKE, ALICE MARGARET 7 Klofferam Road, Old Greenwich, Conn. ' 43 CORNELL, HELEN LAURENCE 17 Campbell Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. ' 44 CORRIGAN, ELIZABETH DEWITT 24 E. 66 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 7-4175 ' 41 COSBEY, GRACE ETHELWYN 144 Boiling Springs Ave., East Rutherford, N.J. ' 42 COUTANT, YVONNE 70 W. 93 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-5423 171 R S T E R-C o n t i n u e d ' 43 COX, ELIZABETH MARGARET 11 Hillcrest Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. ■41 CRANDALL, KATHLEEN HELEN 5417 Reiger, Dallas, Texas ' 41 CREAN, KATHRYN VICTORIA BEATRICE 240 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Main 2-8866 •41 CRESCENZO, MARILOU 2314 Atlantic Ave., Atlantic City, N. J. ' 42 CROSS, ESTELLE NANCY 115 E. 92 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-4085 ' 43 CRYMBLE, MARGARET MARIE 150 Highland Ave., Leonia, N. J. Leonia 4-3774-.J ' 44 CRYSTAL, MARJORIE 16 Ridge Drive East, Great Neck, N. Y. ' 42 CUCCIO, ANGELA 204 W. 108 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. •43 CUDAHY, SHEILA 904 Green Bay Road, Lake Forest, Illinois ' 44 CURTIN, ADRIENNE Cranbury, N. J. Cranbury 688 ' 42 CURTIN, PATRICIA ANN 134-02 101 Ave., Richmond Hill, N. Y. ' 42 DAMROSCH, MARY ELISE State St., Doylestown, Pa. •42 DANZER, GERALDINE 1834 Caton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Buckminster 2-0414 ' 44 DAVIDSON, HELEN ANDREA 151 Selvage Ave., Teaneck, N. J. •44 DA VIES, RUTH TOWNSEND 538 E. 16 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Orchard 4-2645 ' 44 DAVIS, BETTY LEILA 44 Cricklewood, North, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 2921 ' 42 DAVIS, ELLEN M. 371 Beechmont Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 7776 •42 DAVIS, JACQUELINE JANE Hudson House, Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y. ' 43 DAVIS, MARION 644 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-6441 ' 44 DAVIS, MARY LOUISE 337 Broad St., Oneida, N. Y. ' 42 DAVISSON, JOAN 25 E. 69 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-1840 ' 44 DE ANTONIO, URSULA BARBARA 917 Sunset St., Scranton, Pa. ' 43 DECK, THELMA Jacksonville Road, Towaco, N. J. Boonton 8-1740-W ' 44 DE GEORGE, JOSEPHINE MARIE 85 Battle Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 61 ' 43 DE LA FRANIER, DORCAS JEANNE 142-34 32 Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-5488-R ' 44 DE FRIEST, THELMA ANITA 32 Community Road, Bay Shore, N. Y. ' 42 DEMPSEY, JANET Cornwall-on-Hudson, N. Y. ' 42 DE PASQUALE, DONA 530 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-2933 ' 42 DEPOLE, FRANCES ELVERA 86 Buckingham Road, Yonkers, N. Y. Nepperhan 943 ' 42 DERBYSHIRE, JOAN 33 Parkside Court, Utica, N. Y. ' 41 DEUTSCH, ELINOR 50 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-2477 ' 41 DE VITO, ESTELLE ROSE 315 E. 116 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Lehigh 4-3615 42 DEVONSHIRE, JANE WHITNEY 48 Pleasant St., Framingham Centre, Mass. ' 44 DEYRUP, ASTRITH JOHNSON 200 North Broadway, Nyack, N. Y. •43 DIAMOND, NINA 1749 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. Midlon 7-3738 ' 41 DICK, JANE BLAIKIE 1409 North Madison St., Rome, N. Y. ' 44 DICKINSON, MARGARET 34-48 81 St:, Jackson Heights, N. Y. Havemeyer 4-3929 ' 44 DIKEMAN, DOROTHY EMILY 3224 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Sedgewick 3-0588 ' 41 DIRINGER, RENEE 103 Audley St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Virginia 9-1208 ' 44 DODSON, JEAN VIRGINIA 2 Park Lane, Mount Vernon, N. Y. Oakwood 8385 ' 42 DOLTON, DOROTHY MARGARET 41 W. 72 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sp. DOMMENICK, JEAN LOUISE Stanwick Road, Greenwich, Conn. Greenwich 993 ' 43 DONEGAN, DENISE BARBARA 403 W. 115 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-6025 ' 42 DONIGER, RUTH 415 Central Park, Wot, N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-3776 ' 43 DONNELLON, FRANCES ISABEL 16 Verdun Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 8891 ' 41 DONNELLON, MARY REGINA 16 Verdun Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 8891 172 R D S T E R-C o n t i n u e d ' 42 DONOVAN, ELAINE FRANCES 187 Belmont Ave., Jersev City, N. J. Bergen 3-4519 ' 42 DONOVAN, MARION ANN 228 Lincoln Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 43 DORMAN, ELIZABETH PEARL 545 W. Ill St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-7750 Sp. DOUGHERTY, MARY WELSH 12 E. 11 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Grammercy 3-3733 ' 41 DRAPER, PATRICIA 40-11 165 St., Flushing, N. Y. ' 43 DRESNER, HELENE RUTH 321 E. 41 St., Paterson, N.J. Unc. DREYFUS, ANNETTE 2E. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-1800 ' 41 DRUMMOND, LORNA ANN Brooks Hall, Barnard College, N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 DRURY, ALICE NEWTON 14 Winchester Road, Newton, Mass. ' 42 DU MONT, DOROTHY DE ETTE 255 W. 108 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-6217 ' 44 DUN, ELEANOR HALE Belden Hill Road, Wilton, Conn. 42 DUNCAN, MARGARET 3324 Giles Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-4278 ' 42 DUNLOP, CAROL Marlborough, N. Y. ' 44 EARLE, EUGENIA 400 Cotton Ave., Birmingham, Alabama ' 42 ECKLEY, DOROTHY BROSS 7 Clove Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 6710 ' 44 EDGE, KATHERINE BARBARA 107 Division Ave., Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Hasbrouck Heights 8-0473 ' 44 EDWARDS, FRANCES 434 W. 120 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-5790 ' 42 EFRON, EDYTHE CARROLL 8811 Elmhurst Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. Havemeyer 9-5490 ' 42 EGELHOF, JEAN BELLINGTON 84-16 Chevy Chase Road, Jamaica, N. Y. ' 43 EILERS, MARJORIE BURTON Red Hook, N. Y. ' 41 EISENMENGER, GRETA H. 159 Lorraine Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. ' 43 ELWYN, BETTY Mount Airy Road, Croton-on-Hudson, N. Y. ' 44 ELY, EDNA VENON N. Main, E. Hampton, Conn. ' 44 EPSTEIN, EMMY LOU 610 Maury Place, Norfolk, Virginia ' 44 ERICSON, CORAL ELIZABETH Quarters 139 Ft. Totten, Long Island, N. Y. Bayside 9-1900 Unc. ERNOUT, FRANCOISE BENOITE 3634 Sainte Famille, Montreal, Canada ' 42 ERRANTE, MARIE 527 W. 110 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-7296 ' 41 ESHELMAN, BARBARA BARR 25 Fox Meadow, Scarsdale, N. Y. Wickersham 2-4994 ' 42 ESPAILLAT, IDA MARIE 949 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-6679 ' 44 EVANS, MURIEL Montrose, N. Y. ' 41 EWALD, MARY ELIZABETH 32 Purser Place, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 44 FAGAN, DOROTHY NEAL 1135 E. 31 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Navarre 8-6264 ' 42 FAHRE NHOLZ, FRANCES FORBES 94 Fairview Ave., Spring Valley, N. Y. ' 43 FALK, SALLY LOU 262 Central Park West, N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-4220 ' 44 FARRELL, MARY ELIZABETH 1018 Main St., West Warwick, R. I. ' 42 FARRIOR, FRANCES LEY 6307 Selbourne Ave., Tampa, Fla. ' 42 FENTON, ENID 395 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-4073 ■44 FERGUSON, BARBARA SUE 12 Cameron Ave., Hornell, N. Y. ' 42 FERNANDEZ, GLAFYRA RANGIE Ometusco 34, Mexico City, Mexico ' 43 FERRY, FRANCES ISABEL 895 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 4-5224 ' 41 FERSTEN, RUBY 2728 Spuyten Duyvil Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-2758 ' 41 FESSENDEN, WINIFRED HOOD 401 W. 118 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-5810 •41 FILLEY, JOAN DOUGLASS Clapboard Ridge, Greenwich, Conn. ' 42 FIMMEN, FLORENCE 609 W. 114 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-2211 ' 44 FINLETTER, MARGOT DAMROSCH 150 E. 74 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-1390 ' 43 FISCHMAN, FLORENCE 48 Radford St., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 42 FISH, BARBARA 510 W. 110 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-4302 ' 41 FISK, WINIFRED 144-69 Barclay Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-1731 173 R □ S T E R— C □ n t i n u e d ' 44 FISKEN, HARRIET LAYMAN 430 W. 116 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-7756 ' 41 FLUHRER, KATHLEEN VIRGINIA 606 W. 116 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 FLYNN, M. ELIZABETH 2303 Laconia Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Olinville 2-7960 ' 42 FOOTE, KATHERINE ANDREWS Worth St., Washingtonville, N. Y. •44 FOSTER, ELINOR 1101 Westover Road, Wilmington, Delaware ' 43 FOYE, BETTY 233 E. 5 St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 2892 ' 43 FREEMAN, MARCIA S. 68-50 Ingram St., Forest Hills, L. I. Sp. FRIED, MRS. LOUISE 45 E. 85 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-7318 ' 43 FRIEMUS, ELSIE ROSE Hook Mt. Road, Montville, N.J. ' 44 FULDNER, VIRGINIA LEE 440 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-1947 ' 42 FULLER, ELIZABETH HEIDT 1120 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-2738 ' 44 FUSI, MAIA CRISTINA 50 S. Carll Ave., Babylon, N. Y. ' 44 FUTTNER, MARION LORETTA 709 Silver Lane, E. Hartford, Conn. ' 42 GABOR, CHARLOTTE 17 Lawrence Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. ' 41 GABELEIN, ISABEL NANCY 114 Glen Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Sp. GAGARIN, JAMIE PARKER 232 E. 49 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Plaza 8-3093 43 GALLOWAY, PATRICIA KATHLEEN 678 Scotland Road, Orange, N. J. ' 41 GANGEMI, ROSEMARIE ANNA 63 Robertson Ave., White Plains, N. Y. ' 41 GANS, ELEANOR HELEN 31 Wynmor Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 3973 ' 43 GARTEN, RUTH LEONORA 789 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-0798 ' 42 GAUS, SYLVIA J. 175 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-9017 ' 42 GELLER, ROSALIE ELIZABETH 9 Sunnyside Place, Harrison, N. Y. Park 2315 ' 42 GENETOS, CLARA 671 Quinnipiac Ave., New Haven, Conn. ' 42 GEORGE, MARGARET ELGER 922 Washington Ave., Albany, N. Y. ' 42 GERSHON, ALICE JEAN 500 W. Ill St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-8637 ' 43 GEYER, RUTH LILLIAN 59 North 14 St., Newark, N. J. Humboldt 3-4246 ' 42 GIBBONS, ANNE BARBARA 16 W. 77 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 GIBLIN, KATHRYN BROPHY 27 Orchid St., Floral Park, N. Y. Floral Park 1569 ' 41 GILLIES, SUE ADELE Treehaven, New Windsor, Newburgh, N. Y. ' 41 GILMOUR, BEVERLY Germonds Road, New City, N. Y. ' 44 GIMBERT, JEAN LOUISE 305 Lembeck Ave., Jersey City, N.J. ■41 GINSBURG, ETHEL JUNE 65 Myrtle Ave., Plainfield, N. J. ' 43 GIRLING, PATRICIA JANE Railroad Ave., West Haverstraw, N. Y. Haverstraw 2183 •43 GITTINGER, RUTH ERMA 11 Summit Ave., Hackensack, N. J. Hackensack 2-2876-M ' 41 GI VENTER, LOUISE OLGA 1220 49 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. GLASS, GRACE Windsor 6-9380 ' Wayside, Mt. Kisco, N. Y. ' 44 GLASTON, GLORIA HELEN 210 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Riverside 9-4969 ' 41 GLEESON, ROSAMUND ELSBETH Colchester, Conn. ' 43 GLINTENKAMP, BRUNHILDE PARKER 417 W. 121 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 GLYNN, MARY ELLEN Sheraton Hotel, Springfield, Mass. ' 42 GODWIN, LILLIAN HAZEL 2529 Yates Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Olinville 2-5270 41 GOLANN, CECIL PAIGE 425 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-5199 ' 44 GOLDEN, ODETTE 225 Bennett Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 263-J ' 41 GOLDMAN, BABETTE DORIS 1130 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-4516 ' 41 GOLDSTEIN, JANE LOUISE Hotel Bretton Hall, Broadway 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-8000 ' 44 GOLUB, THELMA JUDITH 1466 E. 19 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Esplanade 5-1139 174 RDSTER-Continued ' 42 GONZALES, EVELYN LOUISE 316 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 6048-R 42 GOOD, BARBARA 11 Olwood Road, Edgewater, N. J. ' 44 GOODE, PATRICIA 941 Jerome Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Topping 2-4449 ' 44 GOODSPEED, ELIZABETH 62 Alexander Ave., White Plains, N. Y. ' 41 GOODWIN, IDA JEAN 116-18 89 Ave., Richmond Hill, L. I. Virginia 9-6718 ' 44 GOODWIN, NANCY FRANCES 1200 Queens Road, Charlotte, N. C. •42 GORDON, CHARLOTTE F. 206 W. 104 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-2733 ' 44 GORE, MIRIAM SUSAN 2939 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. Fordham 7-2858 ' 44 GORMLEY, M. BETTYNE 157 Roxbury Road, Garden City, L. I. Garden City 2980 ' 43 GORRIE, HELEN 26 Cornell Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 8048 ' 42 GOTTESMAN, HELENE 480 W. 187 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Washington Heights 7-7168 •44 GOTTSCHALK, EVELYN 785 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 GRAFF, ROSEMARY VIRGINIA 51 Cedar Place, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 42 GRAHAM, MARY JANE 7 Texas Ave., Corpus Christi, Texas Unc. GRANSTROM, MARGARETA ULLA 27 Mercester, Princeton, N.J. ' 42 GRAY, PHYLLIS Wooley ' s Lane, Great Neck, L. I. Great Neck 862 ' 44 GREEN, ELIZABETH FARNUM Sunny Ridge, Harrison, N. Y. ' 41 GREENBAUM, JANE 215 W. 91 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-6694 ' 44 GREENBERG, ESTA JOY 3431 72 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. C, N. Y. Newton 9-7606 ' 44 GREIDER, MARJORIE LOUISE 226 Fairview Ave., Morristown, N. J. ' 44 GRIFFITHS, JANE MARGARET 101 Sutton Manor, New Rochelle, N. Y. ' 41 GRIGGS, BARBARA 4 Marquand Place, Pelham, N. Y. Pelham 1883-R ' 42 GRIMM, ELAINE RUTH 1920 Loring Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. Riverside 9-5729 ' 44 GRUBMAN, GLORIA SHIRLEY 975 Walton Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Jerome 7-2743 Sp. GUEST, ANGELA 15 Christopher St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 GUILHEMPE, BERTHA MARIE 935 E. 9 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Navaire 8-0280 ' 42 GUNNING, EMILY HELEN 356 E. Main St., Circleville, Ohio ' 43 GUNTHER, HILDE GRACE 25 Waukena Ave., Oceanside, N. Y. Rockville Center 4380-W ' 44 GUTHERIDGE, AILEEN MARIE Far Hills, N.J. Peapach 472-J ' 41 HADLEY, ROBERTA DISBROW 51 E. 78 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Butterfield 8-7870 ' 43 HAGGERTY, MARILYN ANNE 39 Ogden Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 4196-W ' 43 HAGMOE, PHYLLIS LEE 1609 N. 46, Seattle, Washington Unc. HAHN, DENISE RACHEL 12 E. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Butterfield 8-6757 •43 HAITHWAITE, ELIZABETH DOROTHY 19 Rumsey Road, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 41 HALL, HARRIET HOLMES 209 N. 4 St., Brainerd, Minn. ' 43 HALLER, JUNE ARCHER 7 Withington Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. ' 44 HALLER, MARIA MALLEVILLE 578 Academy St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 HALLOCK, ELAINE CHARLOTTE 312 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 41 HALSEY, ANN SHERMAN Grey Towers, Irvington, N. Y. Irvington 1313 ' 41 HAMM ER, ELLEN JAY 18 Ludlam Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ingersoll 2-5549 ' 42 HANF, BETTY R. 2265 Sedgewick Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Fordham 7-9404 ' 42 HANLY, KATHERINE MATHER 1545 Ogden, Denver, Colorado ' 44 HANSEN, DIANA CURTIS 111 Grove St., Tarrytown, N. Y. ' 43 HARDING, VIRGINIA ELOISE 29 Washington Sq., N. Y. C, N. Y. Grammercy 5-3711 ' 42 HARE, CONSTANCE 33 Center St., Windsor Locks, Conn. ' 43 HARLY, ELEANOR CLAIRE 21 E. 40 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Caledonia 5-6350 175 ' 43 HARMELING, HAZEL MARGARETE 190-24 110 Road, Hollis, N. Y. Hollis 5-8985 ■44 HARPER, HELEN LEALE 66 Harmon Ave., Pelham, N. Y. ' 41 HARRIS, ELIZABETH REISS 1109 McNeil Ave., Lawrence, N. Y. Cedarhurst 7285 ' 41 HARRISON, EVELYN BYRD 3414 Carolina Ave., Richmond, Va. •44 HART, SARA ELIZABETH Burlington Road, Burlington, Conn. ' 41 HARTER, MARY LOUISE Mercer Island, Washington ' 42 HARTILL, BLANCHE EDNA 8-72 Trvon Road, Jamaica Estates, N. Y. Republic 9-2632 ' 44 HARTING, DIANA SHERLOCK 302 Manofeld, Belvedere, N. J. ' 44 HARVEY, MARY WOODEN 143-13 Beech St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 9-4580 ' 41 HARVILL, ELEANOR 10 Bayley Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. •43 HARWICH, FLORENCE RUTH 1471 Carroll St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Slocum 6-3846 •43 HASLAM, FLORENCE NEWMAN 116 Old Hill Road, Westport, Conn. •42 HASLETT, CORNELIA ELLIOT 180 Cabrini Boulevard, N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-1936 ' 42 HAUSER, LOUISE FREDERICA Scott Ave., Glenshaw, Pa. ' 44 HAVILL, LORINA PATTY 480 Mahew Court, South Orange, N. J. •43 HAWKES, CAROL ANN 33 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-1512 Unc. HAWKINSON, WILMA CAROLYN 2 Sutton Place, South, N. Y. C, N. Y. •44 HAYDEN, MAVISE EILEEN 68 Brooks Ave., Waterville, Conn. •43 HEENE, ANNE LOUISE 1267 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Foxcroft 9-9335 Unc. HEINEMAN, MARIAN HENRIETTA 575 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 4-4820 ' 43 HEINZEN, BARBARA ANN 43 W. 9 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Grammercy 3-6496 ' 44 HENRICKSON, EVINDA RITA 906 Beacon St., Boston, Mass. ' 42 HENZE, EDNA VIRGINIA 3826 208 St., Bayside, N. Y. Bavside 9-3017 ROSTER-Continued ' 44 HERR, DOROTHY 101 Menlo Ave., Glenside, Pa. ' 44 HERZFELD, IRENE 1155 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-1180 ' 41 HESSINGER, WINIFRED R. Callicoon Center, N. Y. •42 HEYGEL, MARTHA HILDEGARD 3 Devonshire Place, Asheville, N. C. ' 42 HEYL, MARY JANE 420 W. 24 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Chelsea 2-4091 ' 41 HIEBER, INGE DORISE 611 W. 148 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-3168 •42 HIGHSMITH, PATRICIA 48 Grove St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Chickering 3-1496 ' 42 HILL, MARY REGINA Seven Bridges, Chappaqua, N. Y. ' 44 HILL, VIRGINIA LOUISE 481 Fort Washington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-3562 ' 43 HIRSCHFELD, HARRIET SELMA 175 W. 93 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-4447 ' 44 HODGES, JULIE CHAPIN 182 E. 64 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 7-4674 ' 43 HOENINGHAUS, DORIS BEARDSLEY Hotel McAlpin, N. Y. C, N. Y. Pennsylvania 5-7000 ■43 HOFFER, MATILDA EMMA 330 South Main, Monroe, N. Y. ' 41 HOFFMAN, ALICE REGINA 40 Barrow St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Chelsea 2-2574 ' 42 HOGAN, MARIE-GERMAINE 452 Fort Washington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 8-4274 •41 HOLDEN, PHEBE Lake St., Pleasantville, N. Y. Pleasantville 1937 ' 43 HOLIAT, MARY 301 Lawrence St., Rome, N. Y. ' 42 HOLLYER, EDITH ANSLEY 840 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. Melrose 5-1195 ' 43 HOLT, SHIRLEY MILLICENT 2 Main St., Gilbertville, Mass. ' 44 HONOLD, GRACE ANNA 7811 5th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Shore Road 5-8993 •41 HORSEY, EDITH ELY Tennis Apts., Forest Hills, N. Y. Butterfield 8-8738 ' 43 HOTCHKISS, MARGO 149-33 Hawthorne Ave., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-0703-J 176 ROSTER-Continued •43 HOUSTON, FANETTE 411 Easr Madison Ave., Springfield, Ohio ' 44 HOWELL, DIANE 539 E. 88 ' St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 7-3437 ' 42 HUBER, GRACE WENONAH 75 Chester Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Windsor 8-0337 ' 43 HUDSPETH, NANCY CAROLYN 4606 South 6, Louisville, Ky. •42 HUGHES, JEAN 171 Paramount Parkway, Kenmore, N. Y. ' 41 HUGHES, MURIEL ANNA 1825 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Lorraine 7-8986 ' 41 HUGHES, VICTORIA Pennev Farms, Florida ' 43 HUSSEY, FRANCES LOUISE 182 North Bridge St., Somerville, N. J. ' 41 HUSSON, MARY ELIZABETH 431 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-6758 Unc. HUTCHINGS, ELEANOR 949 Cherokee Road, Louisville, Ky. Sp. HYAMS, DOREEN 6 Pursecroft, George St., London, England ' 42 HYDE, JUDITH 43 Rossmore Place, Belleville, N. J. Belleville 2-2178 Unc. HYMAN, JANE W. 1050 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-5581 ' 42 HYRKIN, PHOEBE ELEANOR 485 Bedford Ave., Brooklvn, N. Y. ' Stuyvesant 2-8630 ' 44 ILGEN, BARBARA LOUISE 2940 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. Sedgewick 3-6311 ' 41 ILLINGWORTH, PATRICIA M B. 210-42 26 Ave., Bavside, L. I. Bayside 9-5948-M ' 42 IMBERT, RUTH Chappaqua, N. Y. ' 41 ISAACS, BETTY JEANNE 211 W. 106 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-0979 ' 44 ISRAEL, JANET RUTH 10 Wright Place, Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 3664 •43 JACKSON, MARGARET CAMERON FARQUHAR 170 New York Ave., Brooklvn, N. Y. ' President 4-4759 ' 41 JACOBSON, BABETTE ALPERN 131 Park Ave., Englewood, N. J. Englewood 3-0720-J ' 42 JACOFF, ELINORE 1776 Union St., Brooklvn, N. Y. ' 43 JEFFREY, EDYTHE WEST 135 Wallace Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Oakwood 2336 ' 41 JENO, VIVIAN TERESA Grandview Ave., Huntington, N. Y. ' 41 JENSEN, GYDA KATHRINA 16 Maher Ave., Greenwich, Conn. ' 42 JIRONDEK, ELLEN 33 Coddington Ave., Staten Island, N.Y. ' 43 JOFFE, SHIRLEY 18 Echo Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 7492 •41 JOHNSON, CHARLOTTE BUEL 28 Woodbine Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Hamilton 4664-W ' 41 JOHNSON, ELEANOR M. 608 E. 17 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Mansfield 6-6875 ' 41 JOHNSON, JUDITH SLOAT Sloatsburg, N. Y. ' 43 JONES, IRENE PEARL 102 East Hamilton Ave., Englewood, N. J. Englewood 3-3112-M ' 44 JONES, MILDRED BLAUVELT 724 Fourth Ave., Watervliet, N. Y. ' 41 JONES, YVONNE 34-22 81 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. ' 43 JORDAN, MARY JO 530 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-1367 ' 44 JORGENSON, DORIS MAY 481 South Clinton St., East Orange, N.J. ' 44 JUNO, JUSTINE WITHUS lOOakridge Road, Bloomfield, N.J. Bloomfteld 2-7186-W Unc. KAMMERER, ELEANOR 129 E. 10 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 KANDEL, HELEN RAPHAEL 420 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-4174 ' 43 KAPLAN, BEATRICE 145 S. First Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 1318-R Sp. KARELITZ, MRS. RUTH F. 145 E. 92 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sacramento 2-4495 •44 KARNA, AINO CAROLINE 106 Spring St., Port Chester, N. Y. Port Chester 760-W ' 42 KATES, LILLIAN 117 Perth Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 4437 ' 44 KATTENHORN, DOROTHY HELEN 161 Longvue Terrace, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Tuckahoe 5520 ' 43 KATZ, MURIEL ROSE 585 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-7124 ' 43 KATZENSTEIN, EDITH LEAH 885 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-0088 ' 43 KAUFMANN, AUGUSTA KATZ Wightman St., Pittsburgh, Pa. 177 R S T E R-C o n t i n u e d ' 42 KAVANAGH, JANE MUIREAL 425 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-4767 ' 43 KEEDWELL, DIANE GILLETTE Spring Road, Paoli, Pa. •44 KEELER, BABETTE 2336 University Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Raymond 9-1275 ' 43 KELJIK, SUZANNE LORRAINE 596 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-2522 ' 43 KELLEY, EVELYN ELIZABETH 40 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 KELLY, JEANETTE HALSTEAD 184 Columbia Heights, Brooklyn, N. Y. Main 4-5843 ' 42 KELLOGG, RUTH HENINGHAM 304 W. 106 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 KELZ, FRANCOISE ALBERTINE 31 Dobbs Terrace, Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 1942-W ' 42 KENNER, PHYLLIS RITA 400 Third Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Caledonia 5-7516 ' 44 KENNEY, HAZEL MARY 121 Lexington Ave., Red Bank, N.J. ' 42 KENNEY, JULIETTE MARIE 112 North 5 St., Harrison, N. J. ' 44 KHOURI, LAURICE 8309 Ft. Hamilton Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Shore Road 5-3475 Unc. KILLINGSWORTH, BETTY JEAN 607 South Florence, Springfield, Missouri •42 KINGMAN, HOPE 614 South 6 Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. ' 44 KINGSLEY, GLORIA KATHLEEN 850 Seventh Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Columbus 5-5946 •42 KLEBAN, ANN EDITH 310 W. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Susquehanna 7-0689 •41 KLEBANOW, DIANA LEONORA 45 Parade Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ingersoll 2-6324 •43 KLION, SYLVIA 472 Mountain Ave., Westfield, N.J. ' 44 KNOWLAN, DOROTHY FRANCES 252 Springfield Ave., Hasbrouck Heights, N. J. Sp. KOEFOED, THORA ELLINOR MUNCH Ocean Ave., 109-14, Forest Hills, N. Y. ' 41 KOENIG, ELIZABETH DOROTHY 137 E. 94 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-4486 ' 42 KOLODNY, MILDRED 241 Riverdale Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 1249 ' 44 KORNFELD, BARBARA ELAINE 2317 Morris Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Raymond 9-8182 ' 43 KOTKIN, SYBIL 645 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-7757 ' 42 KRAFT, URSULA 3135 83 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newtown 9-7176 ' 42 KRAMER, ELIZABETH Fort Totten, L. I., N. Y. Bayside 9-1900 Ext. 143 ' 42 KRANE, ELIZABETH ELLEN 286 Fort Washington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 7-6543 ' 42 KREIDLER, NAOMI JANE 17 Sherman Ave., East Orange, N. J. Orange 3-6847 Sp. KREMENTZ, LETITIA Blue Mill Road, Morristown, N. J. Morristown 4-3191 ' 43 KREMSDORF, BEATRICE 771 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-5338 ' 41 KUMARAPPA, PRITHA SHIREEH 12 Club Road, Byculla, Bombay, India ' 41 KURTZ, MARJIANN 1378 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Slocum 6-4171 ' 44 LA FOUNTAIN, MARION ANNE 180 Overlook Road, Hackensack, N.J. Hackensack 3-1533 Sp. LAIDLAW, CAROLINE HARRIS 41 Elb Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Algonquin 4-5721 ' 41 LAIDLAW, CYNTHIA 290 Northfield Ave., West Orange, N. J ' 41 LAMBDIN, PATRICIA VIVIAN 280 Prospect St., East Orange, N. J. ' 42 LAMOUREE, CLEMENTINE Tuxedo Park, N. Y ' 44 LAMOUREE, RENEE ADELAIDE Tuxedo Park, N. Y ' 44 LANCE, JEANNE ISABEL 408 Erie St., White Haven, Pa, ' 44 LANDRE, DORIS ELIZABETH 41-18 Benham St., Elmhurst, N. Y. Havemeyer 9-6360 42 LANE, KATHERINE BLAGDEN 12 Concord Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Gladstone 655 ' 43 LANGWELL, PATRICIA ANNE 40-30 219 St., Bavside, N. Y. Bayside 9-6559-M ' 43 LANS, SIMANETTE BOB 23 W. 73 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-3925 ' 41 LATIP, HERAWATI 108 Kramat, Batavia, Java ' 41 LAUBER, FRANCES ULLMAN 225 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Nevins 8-0829 ' 41 LAVENDER, MARGARET ELLIN 88 Morningside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-0200 ' 41 LAWLER, HELEN CLAIRE 336 W. 246 St., Riverdale, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-5116 178 R D S T E R-C o n t i n u e d ' 42 LAWLOR, MARCELLA MARIE 178-07 Edgerton Road, Jamaica Estates, L. I. Jamaica 6-7884 ' 44 LAWRENCE, MARCIA JEANNE 240 Central Park South, N.Y.C., N.Y. Circle 6-7526 ' 41 LAWRENCE, MARTHA FERGUSON Princeton Road, West Englewood, N. J. Teaneck 7-2980-W ' 43 LAWSON, CONSTANCE JACQUELINE 417 E. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 4-4474 ' 41 LAWSON, MARJORIE V. S. 154-50 13 Ave., Beechhurst, L. I. Independence 3-5318 ' 44 LAZARUS, MARGY ELLIN 157-81 Shore Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Shore Road 5-7695 ' 41 LEAHY, MARJORIE 30 Central Parkway, Mount Vernon, N. Y. 44 LE COUNT, DOROTHY AMES 56 Lafavette Drive, Port Chester, N. Y. Port Chester 1826 ' 43 LEE, VIRGINIA 32 Mott St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Worth 2-6280 ' 43 LEEDS, GERTRUDE 1516 Central Ave., Middletown, Ohio ' 41 LEIGH, KIRSTEN 501 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-6670 Unc. LEN KEITH, VIDA NANCY 253 rue Paradis, Marseilles, France ' 44 DE LE VIN, EMMA MARIE 397 Linden St., Wellesley Hill, Mass. ' 44 LEVINE, FLORENCE MARGARET 8 Longview Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 3762-J ' 44 LEVITSKY, LILY 340 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-7795 ' 43 LEVY, BETTY BRATTER 120 Cambrini Boulevard, N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-3651 ' 44 LEVY, JACQUELINE CHARLOTTE 801 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Riverside 9-2872 ' 42 LEWIS, ELIZABETH Box 337, Mount Vernon, Illinois ' 43 LIBERA, RENA THERESA 32 Tracy St., Springfield, Mass. ' 44 LILLEY, MARY JOSEPHINE 3544 Oxford Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-2224 ' 42 DE LIMA, SIGRID 519 W. 121 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-0399 41 LIMBERG, EUGENIE LOUISE 404 East 17 St., Austin, Texas ' 41 LINN, MARIAN DOROTHY 454 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-8055 ' 44 LITTAUER, JOELYN RENEE 1590 E. 19 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 44 LITTLE, ROBIN 53 W. 12 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 4-9637 ' 43 LIVESAY, MARTHA JANE 119 Artillery Post, Ft. Sam Houston, San Antonio, Texas ' 44 LLULURAS, LAURA ELINA La Alhambra, Ponce, Puerto Rico ' 44 LOCK WOOD, MARGUERITE EVELYN 1418 Crompond Road, Peekskill, N. Y. Peekskill 179-W ' 41 LOEZERE, ANTOINETTE de B. P. O. B. 325, Peekskill, N. Y. ' 41 LONG, ALICE LOUISE 173 Main St., Lisbon, New Hampshire ' 43 LOO, OI-YUNG 1316 Pukor St., Honolulu, T. H. ' 41 LORINI, MARGARET AGNES Croton Falls Road, Mahopac, N. Y. ' 41 LOTZ, ELIZABETH 20 Borncliffe Ave., Albany, N. Y. ' 42 LOWE, RUTH LOUISE 180 E. 79 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-4392 ' 43 LOWELL, BETTY JANE 87 Huron Road, Bellerose, N. Y. Fieldstone 3-6967 ' 43 LUBRANO, ROSA 913 West Columbus Drive, Tampa, Fla. Unc. LUTZ, CLAUDINE 115 St. James Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. Beverley 8372 ' 41 LYONS, IRENE MARGARET 80-26 Grenfell Ave., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Cleveland 3-1342 ' 42 LYTTLE, HELEN BARBARA 40 E. 88 St. N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-4715 ' 43 McBRIDE, DORA MARGARET 206 Mortimer Ave., Rutherford, N. J. ' 42 McCARRON, HELEN FRANCES 132 Clinton Ave., Roosevelt, N. Y. Freeport 1939-J •42 McCarthy, gail Hokanum Hill, Westport, Conn. ' 43 McCLURE, GRACE MARGARET 3615 Greystone Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. ' 44 McCLUG, FLORENCE ROSE 1030 Woodycrest Ave., Bronx, N. Y. Jerome 6-3911 ' 43 McCONN, MARGARET 15 E. 10 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Orchard 4-2257 ' 44 McCONVILLE, HELEN MARIE Valley Cottage, N. Y. Congers 395 •43 McCORMICK, GWENDOLYN 247 Wadsworth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 8-2027 179 R D S T E R-C o n t i n u e d •43 Mcdonald, janet 140 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Trafalgar 7-2152 •41 McGINISS, CAROLINE LANDRUM 139 Haven Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 8-4043 ■42 McGUFFEY, DORIS 21 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-4850 Unc. McKEAN, BEATRICE CAROLYN 27 Lewis Place, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Rockville Centre 3846 ' 41 McKEAN, MADELYN LOTZ 69 Tiemann Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-9059 ' 44 McKENZIE, CHARLOTTE RITA Pleasant St., Woods Hole, Mass. Unc. McKESSON, MARY LUCRETIA 720 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Riverside 9-3300 •44 McKINNEY, MARGARET RITA 105 Bruce Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 43 McLAIN, VIRGINIA JEAN 1757 Peach St., Memphis, Tenn. •43 Mclaughlin, jean 499 W. 124 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. •43 McNeill, eleanor williams Lumberton, North Carolina •42 McQUISTON, JOANN WORTH 21 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 MacDONALD, JEAN EVA 725 Palisade Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3556 •43 MacDONALD, MARGARET 2608 169 St., Flushing, L. I. Flushing 9-0697 •44 MacNEARY, JOAN KINGSTON 67 Smull Ave., Caldwell, N.J. ' 42 MADDEN, MARJORIE HELEN 710 Berkeley Ave., Orange, N. J. ' 41 MADLER, IRENE SOPHIE 422 W. 115 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sp. MAHLER, JOY 702 Linden Drive, Beverly Hills, California ' 44 MALI, CAROL 10 E. 93 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 MALISOFF, EDA 51 W. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-1789 ' 42 MAMEL, ELEANORE CATHERINE 9 Park Ave., Park Ridge, N. J. ' 44 MANDEVILLE, GLORIA ESTELLE 3422 Giles Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-4708 ' 41 MANN, PHYLLIS RICHMAN 15 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-6725 ' 41 MARCELLUS ALICE DEAN 136 Union Ave., Manasquan, N. J. ' 44 MARDER, JOAN MARY 140 Reynolds Place, South Orange, N. J. ' 42 MARESCA, AURELIA CATHERINE 132-35 57 St., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-6169 ' 44 MARGOLIN, MURIEL CECILY 160 Cabrini Blvd., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 7-8386 ' 42 MARRARO, HELEN JOAN 8638 78 St., Woodhaven, N. Y. •44 MARTCHENKO, NATASHA SERGEVNA 118 Deuni St., Wilmington, Calif. Sp. MARTIN, MRS. ALLIS BEAUMONT 105 E. 88 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-2745 ' 43 MASCOLO, ELENA VIRGINIA 49 Oak Hall Ave., Waterbury, Conn. ' 44 MASCRET, SUZANNE HARRIET ESTHER 614 W. 114 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-3554 ' 44 MATTHEWS, ROWENA DE PUE 212 E. 48 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Plaza 8-2864 ' 41 MAYBERRY, VERNA RENA Mount Harmon, Mass. ' 43 MAYER, FRANCES MARGARET 1040 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 MEAGHER, WINIFRED 458 Clinton Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Nevins 8-1073 ' 43 MEATHY, M. MARIE 295 Linwood Ave., Bridgeport, Conn. ' 42 MEDING, MARION VIRGINIA 875 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Butterfield 8-8106 •41 MESROBIAN, MARIE ELIZABETH 112-05 70 Ave., Forest Hills, N. Y. Boulevard 8-1515 ' 44 MESSLER, MARTHA ANNE 18 Lester Ave., Westwood, N. J. 1354 Westwood •42 MEYER, EDITH LILLIAN 89-22 188 St., Hollis, N. Y. Vigilant 4-0366 ' 44 MEYER, VIRGINIA ELLEN Princeton St., Closter, N. J. ' 44 MIDULLA, FELICIA ALICE 165 Seaman Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Lorraine 7-3895 ' 43 MILLER, DOAN PITTKIN 117 W. 11 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 MILLER, HELEN MARY 259 Arleigh Road, Douglaston, N. Y. Bay 9-2724 ' 43 MILLET, RUTH AGNES 670 Ten Eyck Ave., Lyndurst, N. J. Rutherford 2-4423 ' 43 MILNES, MARY RITA 420 Oakland Ave., West Brighton, N. Y. Gibraltar 2-0978 ' 42 MISHKIN, ESTHER 334 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. 180 R S T E H— C o n t i n u e d ■44 MISKIMEN, BETTY JANE 65 Walton Ave., White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 5919-J •44 MITCHELL, JEANNE FRANCES 540 W. 122 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-9289 ' 41 MOLLESON, MARY VIRGINIA 314 W. 71 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-8436 •44 MONOHAN, GLORIA ELAINE 401 W. 261 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Kingsbridge 6-8466 ' 43 MONSKY, BERYL 607 Felden Ave., Montgomery, Ala. •44 MOON, ALICE 3875 Waldo Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. •41 MOON, N. JANE 1617 West Magnolia Ave., San Antonio, Texas ' 44 MOORE, ELIZABETH CATHERINE 170-19 Henly Road, Jamaica, N. Y. Jamaica 6-2689 •44 MOOR, MARJORIE DEANE 3550 77 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Havemeyer 4-5995 •43 MORGAN, BETTY JANE 136 Surrey Lane, Tenafly, N. J. Englewood 3-6574 ' 44 MORGAN, DOROTHY MAE 136 Surrey Lane, Tenafly, N. J. Englewood 3-6574 ' 44 MORGAN, JOSEPHINE DART 525 W. McKean, Kittanning, Pa. ' 41 MOROZ, ALICE 320 Cortlandt Sc., Belleville, N. J. ' 42 MORRELL, JANE LYDIA 2186 Loring Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. Fordham 4-5959 •42 MORSE, LOUISE A. 1380 Lexington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-6436 ' 41 MOSCATO, MARION HELEN 20 South Walnut St., Beacon, N. Y. ' 43 MUESER, ELLEN HOPE 3812 Waldo Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. ' 43 MULHAN, GERTRUDE JESSIE 47-50 41 St., Sunnvside, L. I. Talmadge 9-3235 ' 42 MULVEY, RUTH WATT 3100 Broadway, N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 MURDOCK, ELEANOR Tuldennock, Ridgefield, Conn. ' 42 MURPHY, FRANCES GERARD 20 Landers Road, Kenmore, N. Y. ' 44 MURRAY, ELIZABETH CREIGHTON 4801 39 Ave., Sunnvside Gardens, L. I. Newtown 9-6849 ' 41 MURRAY, JEAN 209-39 33 Road, Bavside, L. I. Bavside 9-4616 Sp. MYGATT, ANTOINETTE LAPHAN Newfield Ave., Stamford, Conn. Stamford 4-1020 ' 44 NAEGLI, BEATRICE MARGARET 641 Mavwood Ave., Mavwood, N.J. Hackensack 2-2614-J ' 43 NAEGLI, PEGGY ANN 641 Maywood Ave., Mavwood, N.J. Hackensack 2-2614-J ' 43 NEILL, NATALIE Flanders, N. J. ' 43 NESTLEN, MARGARETHA SELENA 33 Goodwin Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. Glenmore 2-2848 ' 44 NESTLER, LEONIE JANE 184 Engle St., Tenatlv, N. J. Englewood 3-5343 ' 41 NETTLETON, MARJORIE ELIZABETH 50 Blakeman Place, Stratford, Conn. ' 44 NEUMANN, NATANIA 749 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 NEUWIRTH, GLADYS ROSEMARIE 124 W. 79 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-5134 ' 43 NICHOLAUS, NATALIE FELECIA 1622 East Falls, Niagara Falls, N. Y. ' 44 NICHOLSON, DORIS HARTWELL 36-36 217 St., Bavside, L. I. Bavside 9-1698 ' 43 NURCO, SYBIL 35 Lincoln St., New Rochelle, N. Y. ' 44 OAKEY, JOAN SARGENT 322 E. 57 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Eldorado 5-5898 ' 43 O ' CONNELL, MARY ELLEN 1454 Monroe St., N. W., Washington, D. C. ' 43 O ' CONNOR, KATHERINE ELIZABETH 3743 88 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newtown 9-2908 ' 44 OEHRING, JOHANNE 2463 8 St., Coytesville, N. J. ' 44 OGURI, CHIYOKO 579 Seventh St., Brooklyn, N. Y. South 8-6870 ' 43 OLDOERP, MARJORIE RUTH 8406 104 St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. ' 44 O ' MORRISSEY, MARY MARGARET 2210Turnbull Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Talmadge 2-1349 Unc. ORNSTEIN, KATE C.H. 10 E. 40 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Lexington 2-2021 ' 44 OROURKE, EILEEN HONOR 359 97 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Shore Road 5-3029 ' 44 OSBORN, VIRGINIA STURGES Garrison, N. Y ' 41 OS BORNE, ELINOR 17 Park St., Tenaflv, N. 181 ROSTER-Continued ' 43 OSMER, LUCILLE HELEN 78 Woodland Ave., Rockville Centre, N. Y. Rockville Centre 6859-J ■43 OTTE, EILEEN CECILE 2 Hilltop Drive, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 437 ' 41 OTTMAN, VIVIAN A. Church St., Cherry Valley, N. Y. ' 41 OWEN, HELEN RUDD The Cedars, Alderson, West Virginia ' 44 PAIGE, JUDITH ANNE 176 W. 87 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-3193 •42 PARKER, LAURA SCOTT 106 Morningside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-4800 •43 PARKER, MARGERY LOUISE 47 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-1340 ' 41 PATTERSON, REGINA MAY 53 Boone St., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 7237 ' 43 PEARLMAN, ELEANOR 7602 Bay Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bensonhurst 6-0526 ' 42 PECK, LOUISE DAVIS 136 E. 79 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-6525 ' 44 PEMBER, DOLORES SYLVIA 8424 110 St., Richmond Hill, N. Y. Virginia 7-3043 Unc. PERCAS, HELENA Sur 71, Esq Este 8 bis, Conde, Caracas, Venezuela ' 42 PEREZ, BEATRICE GUERTER Norte 4 N 26, Caracas, Venezuela ' 41 PETERSON, ALICE ANNE 5915 Boulevard East, West New York, N. J. Cloverdale 8-3856 •42 PETERSON, KATHLEEN 434 W. 120 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-5790 ' 41 PHELPS, FRANCES R. 523 Park Ave., River Forest, 111. ' 43 PHILLIPS, HELEN MARJORIE 28 Chestnut Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Pelham 1314 ' 44 PHILPOTTS, FRANCES TRUEMAN 527 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-8748 ' 44 PIERRE, CHARLOTTE ANN 44 Prescott Road, White Plains, N. Y. ' 41 PIERCE, DOROTHY A. 1425 Broadway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Foxcroft 9-5272 ' 42 POLLARD, LUCY JANE 75 Clinton Ave., New Brighton, N. Y. St. George 7-3437 ' 43 PONTICORRO, LAURA 241 46 St., Union City, N.J. Palisade 6-4636 ' 43 POPE, ANN MARTIN 730 Haxtun Ave., Orange, N. J. ' 44 PORCHER, NANANNE Cocoa, Florida ' 44 POTTER, MARY PEARL 201 Crescent Ave., Leonia, N. J. ' 44 PRASHKER, CARMEL SYLVIA 505 Argyle Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Buckminster 2-5229 Unc. PRATT, ANNE MUMFORD Forest Ave., Glen Cove, L. I. ' 44 PRATT, BEATRICE FRANCES 530 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-2569 ' 42 PRATT, MARY WINTHROP 41 Fi fth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 PRATT, PEGGY KATHERINE 184 Larchmont Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. ' 41 PRICE, BETTY 113 Oak St., Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood 6-1449-W ' 42 PRICE, ROSABELLE 1155 Sherman St., Denver, Colorado ' 44 PRICE, URSULA EDITH 12 Willow St., Irvington, N. J. Irvington 1581 ' 41 PROCHASKA, DORIS MAE 227 Cypress Ave., Bogota, N. J. Hackensack 2-3785-M ' 41 PROCTOR, DOROTHY JUNE 102-29 Van Wyck Boulevard, Richmond Hill, N. Y. ' 43 PROTAS, JUDITH CRANER 915 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. Buckminster 4-9029 ' 42 PRUESS, MADELINE HELEN 24 Jefferson St., Garden City, N. Y. Floral Park 7634 ' 44 PUDERBAUGH, CORA BELLE 300 E. 201 St., Bronx, N. Y. Sedgewick 3-1922 ' 42 PUGH, ENID SARA 598 W. 191 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-5333 ' 42 PUMYEA, ELEANOR DOROTHY 540 W. 122 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-8867 ' 43 QUINLAN, GRACE WHITE Cooperstown, N. Y. ' 42 QUINN, JANET MAUDE 226-16 139 Ave., Laurelton, N. Y. Laurelton 8-2317 ' 42 QUINTERO, VICTORIA LUCIA 949 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-3024 ' 41 RADER, MARJORIE SWART 410 H. Suffolk Manor, Broad and Clearview Sts., Phila., Pa. ' 44 RANDEL, ARLENE PEARL 425 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-0834 182 ROSTER-Continued ' 41 RANNEY, HELEN MARGARET R. F. D. No. 1, Locke, N. Y. •43 RATLIFF, BEULAH CURTIS 85 Bedford St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 RAYWID, JOY GAIL 309 Grove Road, South Orange, N. J. ' 44 REDDEN, MARTHA EVELYN 34-41 78 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Havemeyer 9-1934 ' 44 REDON, ROLANDE MARIE LOUISE 61 Berkley St., Valley Stream, N. Y. ' 44 REED, MARY SUE 9 E. Willow, Beacon, N. Y. ' 43 RELYEA, GRETCHEN ELIZABETH Hudson, N. Y. ' 43 REUBENS, ELINOR JANE 300 Central Park West, N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-4857 Unc. REYNOLDS, MONICA 104 North Woodland St., Englewood, N.J. •42 RIBLET, LILLIAN ANASTASIA 473 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-2139 •41 RICE, CATHERINE R. 565 Avenue A, Bayonne, N. J. ' 43 RICHARDSON, ANNE PAIGE 99 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-7100 ' 43 RICKETTS, FRANCES LAW POGUE 2535 Ritchie Ave., Cincinnati, Ohio ' 43 RICKERT, GLADYS COFFIN 10 Glenwood Ave., E. Northfield, Mass. ' 42 RILEY, ROSEMARY PALMER 529 W. Ill St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 41 RILEY, SUE MARY 123 Judeana Ave., Mishawaka, Indiana ' 41 RINCK, JANE ELEANOR 15 Appleton Place, Glen Ridge, N. J. ' 44 RINDFOOS, MARY New Preston, Conn. ' 41 RINGO, JANE VAN NORMAN 41 W. 74 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 RITTENBAND, CYNTHIA JANE 18 Wildwood Ave., Waterbury, Conn. Unc. ROBERTS, OLIVE MARION 120 Vermilyea Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Lorraine 7-5258 ' 43 ROBINSON, RHEBA ELMA 209 Coe St., Woonsocket, R.I. ' 44 ROBSON, HOPE HOWETH Yorktown Heights, N. Y. ' 41 ROGAN, NANCY Box 526, Chula Vista, California ' 42 ROGERS, VIRGINIA 345 Edgecombe Road, N. Y. C, N. Y. Audubon 3-9140 ' 44 ROGOFF, NATALIE 1480 E. 22 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 41 ROHER, RITA 1426 James Ave., Redwood City, California ' 41 ROME, CATHERINE LORETTA Draper Lane, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. ' 42 ROOD, MARJORIE ELIZABETH 509 E. 16 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Buckminster 2-3499 ' 43 ROOSEVELT, CLOCHETTE WYCOTT 29 E. 69 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-0390 ' 43 ROOT, MARY ANDREWS 51 North Main St., W. Hartford, Conn. ' 41 ROS, VIRGINIA ELLA 335 Woodland Ave., Nutfield, N.J. ' 43 ROSEN, JEANNE NATALIE 923 Walton Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Jerome 7-3065 ' 42 ROSENFIELD, JOAN HELEN 333 Central Park West, N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-1633 ' 44 ROSENWEIG, ANN 3900 Grevstone Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Kingsbridge 3-4499 ' 43 ROSS, BETSY 29 Fountain St., Clinton, N. Y. ' 42 ROSS, LUCILLE 309 W. 99 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-0778 ' 44 ROSSELL, IDRIS MARY 3449 79 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Havemeyer 4-5391 ' 42 ROSSER, MARJORY RUTH 35-05 87 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Havemeyer 6-5661 ' 41 ROTH, JOAN ANITA 315 W. 106 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 4-1474 ' 44 ROTHENBERG, GLORIA SPELLMAN 44 Larchmont Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. ' 41 ROTHENBERG, HELENE ETHEL 323 St. John ' s Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' Stuyvesant 3-3882 ' 41 RUBIN, ROSALYN 888 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 9-1014 ' 44 RUSSELL, ELEANOR TERRENCE 600 Patterson, San Antonio, Texas ' 44 RUSSELL, LOUISE RIVINGTON 2 E. 70 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-4620 ' 42 RUSSO, FRANCES DOLORES 157 E. 81 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 RUTHERFORD, JEANNE 10 Whitney St., White Plains, N. Y. Gladstone 1124 Unc. RUTHERFORD, LILLIAN MAUDE 10 Whitney St., White Plains, N. Y. Gladstone 1124 183 ROSTER-Continued ' 43 RYAN, PATRICIA ELIZABETH 1115 Fifth Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-6520 ' 41 RYTTENBERG, MADELINE 315 E. 77 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-6238 ' 42 SACHS, ELAINE ESTELLE 80 Lockwood Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Pelham 2445 ' 42 SACHS, ZENIA LOUISE 4950 Chicago Beach Drive, Chicago, 111. ' 44 ST. AMAND, LORRAINE 41 Carll St., Babvlon, N. Y. Babylon 1149 ' 42 SALET, LOUISE MARIE 620 Ft. Washington Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 8-1444 ' 43 SALZMAN, FRANCINE MARIE 145 E. 49 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Plaza 3-1465 ' 43 SANDERS, LUCETTE EDITH 72-72 112 St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Boulevard 8-7754 ' 43 SANTONI, ROSELYN LOUISE 601 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-9102 Unc. SARRO, IDA GERALDINE 122 Clinton Place, E. Rutherford, N. J. ' 43 SAUER, RUTH KATHERINE 85-11 Wareham Road, Jamaica, N. Y. Republic 9-3763 ' 41 SAWYER, JEAN HELEN 7 Blenheim Court, Rockville Center, N. Y. Rockville Center 4094 ' 42 SCHAEFER, MARJORIE HELEN 68-52 Dartmouth St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Boulevard 8-7325 •42 SCHAFFER, GERTRUDE LILLIAN 845 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-5254 •42 SCHARF, DOROTHY FARFAL 93 Southgate Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Hastings 739 ' 41 SCHNEIDER, MARION JANET 140 Dixon St., Bridgeport, Conn. Sp. SCHNETZLER, URSULA ANTONIE 85 Washington St., East Orange, N. J. Orange 5-2119 ' 44 SCHOCKEN, IRMA 20 Linwick Place, Yonkers, N. Y. Beverly 9528-R •41 SCHOONOVER, EMILY LOUISE 520 W. 124 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-7267 ' 42 SCHUBERT, ELINOR MARTHA 221 Langdon Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Oakwood 7784 ' 42 SCHUBERT, MABEL HURST P. O. Box 3691, Miami, Florida ' 42 SCHUTZENDORF, JANE LOUISE 72 Carlton Terrace, Stewart Manor, N. Y. ' 42 SCOTT, THERESA CLARKE 24 Tanglewylde Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Ml SCULLY, MARY JANE 31 Hopke Ave., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. Hastings 1736-M ' 44 SEAMAN, PATRICIA ADAMS The Beeches, Beacon, N. Y. ' 44 SELLING, JANE 607 Wesc End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-7728 ' 41 SELLS, NAOMI 45 Villa St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. ' 41 SEMICH, LYDIA MARIA 140 W. 69 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-4580 ' 42 SERBY, MARION RUTH 48 Parkway Road, Bronxville, N. Y. ' 41 SESSINGHAUS, HELEN GRAVES 1520 Gaylord St., Denver, Colorado ' 41 SETCHEL, DOROTHY 33 South St., Cuba, N. Y. ' 44 SEXAUER, SHIRLEY WANDA Lake Ave., Center Moriches, N. Y. •41 SHAININ, ALLA 1224 St. Nicholas Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 SHANNON, PATRICIA ANN 790 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 3-3684 S P . SHEDLESKY, JULIA MAGDALENE 6557 Devereaux, Detroit, Michigan ' 43 SHEFFIELD, HELEN DOROTHEA 447 Reis Ave., West Englewood, N. J. Teaneck 7-7511-J ' 44 SHELDON, CAROL McCLENTHEN 114 Morningside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Cathedral 8-8280 •42 SHERMAN, DOROTHY LOUISE 243 Woodworth Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 43 SHERMAN, LOUISE GRACE R. F. D. 1, Sandy Hook, Conn. ' 41 SHERWOOD, GEORGIA DOLFIELD 5201 St. Albans Way, Baltimore, Md. ' 41 SHIELDS, MADELINE R. R. 4, Martinsville, Indiana ' 44 SHORT, JOAN SINCLAIR 64-40 99 St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Faculty 2-6045 ' 42 SHORT, ROSEMARY ELLEN 70 Morningside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-5100 ' 43 SHPETNER, NORMA MURIEL 129 Vernon Ave., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 2308-M ' 44 SHREVE, SUSAN K. 30 Second St., Glens Falls, N. Y. 184 ROSTER-Continued ' 42 SIEBRECHT, JEAN ELIZABETH Orchard Ridge, Chappaqua, N. Y. ' 44 SILLIMAN, DOROTHY ELLEN 113 Chestnut St., Garden City, N. Y. •44 SIMPSON, ELIZABETH WALLACE 240 Cabrini Boulevard, N. Y. C, N. Y. Wadsworth 7-7305 ' 43 SINGLEY, BARBARA JEAN 916 Diamond Square, Meadville, Pa. ' 44 SIRCH, ANNE MOULTON 3548 80 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newtown 9-7070 ' 41 SIRMAN, MARY LAURA 216 Morris St., Charleston, West Virginia ' 42 SIROTAK, MARIAN MARCIN 40 Whitman St., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. ' 43 SKOWRONSKI, GERTRUDE THERESA 34 Oak St., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 43 SLOAN, MARGARET MARILDA 95 E. 37 St., Paterson, N. J. ' 44 SLOAN, MARYBELLE CAROLINE 30 E. Fourth St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Unc. SLOANE, EVELYN 48 E. 92 St.,N. Y. C.,N. Y. Atwater 9-8494 Sp. SLOANE, NANCY 48 E. 92 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Atwater 9-8494 ' 41 SLOMAN, JANE FRANCES 88 Broadview Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 8673 ' 44 SMITH, ALICE ARNOLD 309 Jessamine Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Nefferham 6948 ' 42 SMITH, AMELIA M. 156 West 1 St., Brawley, California ' 43 SMITH, CHRISTIANA HOGUE 658 Strong Ave., Elkhart, Indiana ' 44 SMITH, E. HARRIET 11 Cornelia St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Chelsea 2-2372 ' 42 SMITH, ELEANORA HARTLEY 148 Cassidy Street, Staten Island, N. Y. ' 41 SMITH, ELIZABETH FRANCES 515 W. Ill St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-0148 ' 43 SMITH, MARGARET MARY 221 Jewett Ave., Jersey City, N. J. ' 41 SMITH, MARY GRAHAM 980 Troy Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 41 SMITH, VIRGINIA DORIS 52 Mitchell Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3478 ' 44 SNYDER, ELEANOR GERTRUDE 1655 East 21 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Nightingale 4-2584 ' 41 SNYDER, PHYLLIS RUTH 70 Glenwood Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 341 ' 44 SPEAR, BARBARA 1 Riverside Drive, North Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarry town 280 ' 43 SPICER, BETTY MARTIN 15 Claremont Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-4141 ' 44 SPRUNG, EDITH R. 920 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Washington Heights 7-5755 ' 44 STANDIFER, MAVIS RUTH 48 Berkeley Ave., Newark, N. J. Humboldt 3-4140 ' 44 STARR, GLORIA FLORENCE 562 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-2488 ' 43 STEARNS, MURIEL MARY West Lebanon, New Hampshire ' 43 STEFFEN, LOIS EDNA Route No. 1, Elmira, N. Y. ' 41 STEIBEL, ELAINE MANETTE 144 W. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Susquehanna 7-1132 ' 42 STEINHARDT, EVELYN 18 Mildred St., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 44 STERMAN, MILDRED G. 132 Clark Road, Brookline, Mass. ' 42 STERN, RUTH EVELYN 3 Torrence Place, Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 38 ' 44 STEVENSON, JANET McMILLAN 293 North Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Neprehan 3155 ' 41 STEVENSON, RUTH MARGARET 47 So. Washington St., Tarrytown, N. Y. ' 41 STEWART, JANE CHIPPENDALE 295 Broadway, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. ' 42 STICKNEY, BARBARA JOHNSON 403 Rensselaer Ave., Ogdensburg, N. Y. ' 41 STOCK, MARIAN JENNIE Pawling, N. Y. ' 41 STOKESBERG, ANNA MARIE % Ray Brownlee, Pretty Prairie, Kansas •42 STONE, ETHEL CAROL 2046 82 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Beachview 2-0617 ' 42 STONESS, FAYE WILLIAMSON 35-70 162 St., Flushing, N. Y. Flushing 9-3080 ' 43 VON STORCH, ALICE ELIZABETH 34 Fairview St., Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5847 ' 44 STOYELL, MARGARET THERESA 16 Elm St., Cortland, N. Y. ' 42 STRAUSS, BELLA S. Ashbourne Road, Elkins Park, Pa. 185 R □ S T E R-C o n t i n u e d •42 STRAUSS, MARGARET ' 44 THOMAS, NINA GERTRUDE 1 Gramercv Ave, New Rochelle, N. Y. Doodletown, Iona Island, N. Y. New Rochelle 784 3 THOMpsON BARBA RA EVA •44 STREICHLER, ELEANOR 2 Clinton Ave N y ack N ' Y ' 3085 Brighton 13 St., Brooklyn, N. Y. THOMpsoN; VIRGINIA MERLE ' 42 STRICK EDITH REBECCA 2416 Douglass Road, Louisville, Ky. Jenkentown Road, Cheltenham, Pa. , THQNY; MARGIT • aa cTi trrt pptft D ANNE 252 St. and Arlington Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. 44 STUBBLEFIELD ANNE Kingsbndge 6-1231 ... c TI1MP p ttSBET HELENA ' 41 THROOP, ELIZABETH WATKINSON Yonkers 6384-M ' 41 TIBBY, EMILY •41 SUSSMAN SHIRLEY 21 Bethune St., N. Y. C, N. Y. 41 man parkwaV; Mount Vernon, N. Y. Watkins 9-6492 Oak wood 3787 •41 TILLINGHAST, RUTH ' 42 SUTER, BARBARA LONG 103 Highbrook Ave., Pelham, N. Y. __. , kt t? uADiNnA ' 43 TOOKE, FRANCES LEAVENWORTH ' 43 SUTTLE, ELEANOR MARINDA ■Drive N y N y. R. F. D. 2, Unadilla, N. I. Monument 2-1047 •42 SWAN, NANCY JULIA . y £ y TREBING KAXHERINE FOWLER Bradford Ave., Harrison, N. Y. •43 SWEENEY, HELEN M. Park 3038 3428 86 St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newtown 9-6779 .44 TREFZER, ANNETTE ELYZABETH , m , t-tv 1280 Pennington Road, Teaneck, N. J. •42 SWID, RUTH BETTY s Teaneck 7-2994 251 Armstrong Ave., Jersey City, N.J. Bergen 3-5449 gp TRUMBULL, MARJORIE R. S. •42 SWINIARSKI, MILDRED CHRISTINA 75 Central Park West, N. Y. C K NY. 21 Ocean Ave., Salem, Mass. irataigar iizz •43 SZAFIR, MIRIAM EUGENIA Sp. TSCHERNJAKOW, MAJA 595 Fifth, Beaumont, Texas 76-66 Austin St., Forest Hills, N. Y. ' 41 TAFT, HELEN - 44 TUCKER, JOAN 420 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C N. Y. 778 Park Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-8397 Butterfield 8-6474 ' 41 TALLMAN, JESSIE BLAIR TULLY MARIORIE CONSTANCE 171 Park Ave., Mount Vernon, N.J TULLY, MA Brooklyn, ' 43 TAMBORELLE, VERNA HOLLE TTIRBOW MARIE 419 , 6 , m o„ Ave., Te„ec k , N. it « ™RBOW. MAR ' « S hS, N. V. One. TURNER, OOVB UU „_ TARR ROSE RUTH ' 41 ULLMAN, MARJORIE RUTH 43 TARR 42oSveS -Save, N. Y. C, N. Y. 50 Custis Ave., White Plain, N. Y Monument 2-8142 Gladstone 1578 ' 41 TAUBENHAUS, RUTH ' 41 UYEMINAMI, MOLLY MAREKA College Station, Texas No 12 Yamote-echo, Naka Ku, Yokohama, Japan ' 44 TAYLOR, ALICE KEPHART . VALENTINE, BARBARA HOPE Box 135 R. D. No. 2, Holhdaysburg, Pa. • park w N Y . C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-5054 •44 TAYLOR, ELIZABETH MAE 249 Roberts Ave., Yonkers ; N. Y. DEL VALLE, ANA MATILDE ' 43 THIELE ™EDE B THA Sp. VANAMAN, MARY McKEE 226 W108St ' N ' Y ' ' Academy 2-0368 P 239 Franklin St., Butler, Pa. 186 C HI « D IN O IF IF STUDIO 5 5 FIFTH AVE., NEW YORK, N. Y. OfficiJ Pk otoc rcipli 1942 erd HDSTER-Continued ' 42 VAN BRINK, DOROTHY 44 WALSH, JEAN CLAIR 1075 Grand Concourse, N. Y. C, N. Y. 35-49 76 St., Jackson Heights, L. I. Topping 2-0070 Havemeyer 9-4377 ■43 VAN DERVEER, MARCIA M3 WALSH, JOAN 94 Cassiles Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. 4 Hamilton Terrace, N. Y. C, N. Y. 44 VANDERVOORT, JEAN MARILYN Edgecombe 4-8784 2 Magaw Place, N. Y. C, N. Y. -44 WARBURG, ANDREA SWIFT Wadsworth 7-1083 Bydale N Greenwich, Conn. •44 VANDERVOORT, JEANNE 46 Pilot St., Citv Island, N. Y ' 42 WASELL, FELICE MARIE Citv Island 8-1787 83 Berry St., Brooklyn, N. Y Columbus 8-9026 ' 43 VAN ORMAN, MARY PHYLLIS 419 W 119 St NYC NY ' 42 WASHBURN, PAULINE C. 153 E. 82 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Sp. VANS AGNEW, PATRICIA ALEXANDRA Butterfield 8-3760 Hickorv Farm, Lee, Mass. ' 42 WEBB, ELEANOR ' 42 VARDEN, BARBARA 20 Wri ht pl gcarsdale, N. Y. 32 Narbrook Park, Narbeth, Pa. 6 Scarsdale 563-J •43 VERMILYE, ANNE HILLYER RITER .43 WEBSTER HELEN 74 Ascan Ave., Forest Hills N. Y. Calk n esqua ' 8 Amplacion, de Almendares, Marianao, Boulevard 8-8123 ' 44 VERNON, BEVERLY ELISE 8 William St., Lvnbrook, N. Y. ' 43 VESSA, JOAN 214-11 110 Ave., Queens Village, N. Y Havana, Cuba Unc. WEILL, MARIANNE H. 6 Freigutsr, Zurich, Switzerland ' 44 WEINGARTEN, ANN LOUISE Holiis 5-9094 270 Park Ave - ' N - Y - C N ' Y - Wickersham 2-1538 ' 44 VESTA, ANITA JOAN 6804 52 Drive, Maspeth, L. I. ' 44 VIGGIANO, GLORIA ADELAIDE 345 E 146 St. N. Y C , N. Y. ' 43 WEITZNER, DOROTHEA MARILYN Monument 9-4143 250 W. 94 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 44 VIRGIEN, HELEN CLAIRE Rlvemde 9 - 5 ° 7 ° 260 Valentine Lane, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 43 WELSH, MARTHA Yonkers 485 442 Lincoln St., York, Pa. ' 42 VOLTTER, LOIS FRA N NCES c n y GERTRUD£ ALB£RTA ' Susquehanna 7-4249 Bloomfield Ave., Pasppany, N. J M Caldwell 6-0283 ' 42 VORMWALD, DOROTHY MARIE 11 Valley Place, Hastings, N. Y. . ' 43 WHEATON, MABEL ELIZABETH Yonkers 9705 202 Wood St., Rutherford, N. J. ' 43 VOSLER ELIZABETH 42 W HITAKER, DOROTHY ANNE Briarchff Manor, Pleasantville Road N. Y MUe s Rd yonkers, N. Y. Briarchff 1530 n •41 WAGNER, NANCY CLELAND ' 44 WHITAKER, ROSEMARIE MARTHA 34 Forest Road, Delman, N. Y. 325 Mile Sq. Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. •41 WALBRIDGE, MARIE LOUISE ' 42 WHITE, BARBARA JANE Plandome, L. I. Anna Lee Farm, Sweet Home Road, Williamsville, N. Y. R. D. No. 3 ' 41 WALES, AGNES ADAMS 149 E. 40 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 WHITE, ELIZABETH BRISTOL •44 WALKER, AUDREY TOWNSEND 50 E. 72 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Rhinelander 4-8771 110 N. Thomas, Polo, Illinois ' 42 WHITE, MILLICENT RITA 2107 Ave. M, Brooklyn, N. Y. Unc. VAN WALSEN, JEANNETTE CHRISTINE Navarre 8-3989 West Drive 72, Larchmont, N. Y. ' 41 WHITSETT, SUE ' 44 WALSER, CYNTHIA ALICE 259 W. 12 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. 95 Aviemore Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. Chelsea 2-3882 188 4x -fc to the MORTARBOARD Staff OIV A FOUR-STAR A IV IV U A L The members of the BJII college organization would very much like to extend their sincere congratulations for a book of distinctive and distinguished merit. It has been a great pleasure to work with the 194 L 2 staff, to collaborate in the planning and creation of the book, and to go on record as appreciating the fine spirit and splendid co- operation which was so manifest at all stages of the work. For more than forty years, many of America ' s most notable yearbooks have come from the BJH presses. It is a service to college yearbook start ' s that has been augmented in many im- portant ways; an experience of constantly mounting value to those whose classmates entrust them with the challenge of making their book superior to all the fine hooks that have preceded it. And it is because we so keenly relish the opportunity to have a part in the acceptance of that challenge that we look forward to working with future yearbook staffs with the same fervor, the same right hand of assistance, that made the creation of this excellent annual such a mutually gratifying experience. BAKER • JONES • HA11SAUER • INC. O H Hi l 2V .1 T O it S OF MH ST M X CTIV. V Mi .1 It Ml O O K S SMWCE lit UH 101 PARK AVENUE • New York ( ' itv 45 CARROLL STREET • Buffalo, N. Y. R □ S T E R-C o n t i n u e d •43 WHITTINGTON, FRANCES MARIAN 197 Satterthwaite Ave., Nutley, N. J. ' 41 WICKENDEN, PHYLLIS JULIA Quaker Village, Chappaqua, N. Y. •41 WIEGARD, PHYLLIS FRANCES 164-03 89 Ave., Jamaica, N. Y. Republic 9-5277 ' 43 WIELUNSKI, GENEVIEVE VICTORIA 218 Whiton St., Jersey City, N. J. •43 WIENER, BOBETTE ROSE 650 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-5859 ' 42 WIKAWA, FLORA MIYA 601 W. 112 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Monument 2-8046 •42 WILKINSON, JEAN 3215 Netherland Ave., Riverdale, N. Y. Kingsbridge 6-3162 ' 44 WILLARD, SALLY 61 Walworth Ave., Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 1581 ' 43 WILLEY, RUTH HAMBLETON 40 Old Mill Road, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 1819 41 WILLIAMS, DORIS ELINOR 108 Lyan Place, Utica, N. Y. ' 42 WILLIAMS, MARY-ANN 1505 Compton Terrace, Hillside, N. J. Waverly 3-5951 Unc. WILLIS, HARRYET ELIZABETH Mountain House Grounds, Cresson, Pa. ' 41 WILLIS, JEAN LOUISE 185 Montrose Ave., Rutherford, N.J. Rutherford 2-0234 ' 41 WILSON, DOROTHY ELIZABETH 790 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Edgecomb 4-7403 ' 41 WILSON, JUNE 21 Washington St., Hornell, N. Y. Sp. WINKLER, LILLIAN TEYCHENEY 131 E. 66 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 43 WINN, BETTY Regent 7-1115 Clayton, Ala. ' 41 WINTER, MARION RUTH 315 W. 86 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Schuyler 4-3891 ' 41 WIRSCHING, JACQUELINE 391 West End Ave., N. Y. C, N. Y. Endicott 2-2478 ' 43 WISE, BYRD DOUGLAS River Road, Cape Vincent, N. Y. ' 41 WISH, FRANCES HELEN 542 W. 113 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. University 4-7956 ' 42 WOLF, ELAINE 150 Riverside Drive, N. Y. C, N. Y. Susquehanna 7-0171 ' 42 WOLFSON, RENEE BARBARA 211 W. 106 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Academy 2-0127 ' 43 WOOD, GLORIA 8923 186 St., Hollis, N. Y. Vigilant 4-7642 Sp. WOODS, ALETHIA HUNT River Road, Titusville, N. J. ' 43 WOODWARD, LOUISE PARMALEE 204 E. 51 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 WOOLFOLK, LOUISE GARRISON 114 Morsemer Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. ' 43 WOVSCHIN, FLORA RHODA 333 W. 57 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. ' 42 WRANA, PHOEBE 116-18 Park Lane, Kew Gardens, N. Y. Jamaica 6-1232 ' 41 WRIGHT, MEREDITH SMITH D. Webster Hall, Marietta, Ohio ' 44 WRIGLEY, DORIS ELIZABETH 755 Emerson Ave., Elizabeth, N. J. ' 41 WYATT, MARJORIE ROBERTA 9 Harcourt Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. ' 44 WYATT, MONICA 133 E. 72 St., N. Y. C, N. Y. Regent 7-1271 ' 42 WYMAN, JEAN HUNTER 1470 Overlook St., Mount Vernon, N. Y. Hillcrest 1377 ' 44 YALE, ANNE ELIZABETH 408 No. Barry Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. ' 42 YOUNG, ELIZABETH ZANE 462 Center St., Wallingsford, Conn. ' 42 YOUNG, RUTH HELEN 442 Windsor Road, Woodridge, N. J. Rutherford 2-6737-W ' 44 ZANG, JANNETTE ELIZABETH 566 High St., Denvei, Colorado ' 42 ZAZULY, AMY 471 Crown St., Brooklyn, N. Y. President 3-3023 ' 44 ZIMMERMAN, RUTH MARGARET 88-23 74 Ave., Glendale, Queens, N. Y. Faculty 27996 ' 42 ZIMMERSCHIED, BETH Hawthorn Gardens, Mamaroneck, N. Y. 190 You get Elsie ' s very best when you order Golden Crest BORDEN ' S Golden Crest Homogenized Vitamin D Milk GRISTEDE BROS., INC. Superior Food Stores Win the Blue Ribbon for Superior Excellence of Quality Foodstuffs THEODORE LEHMANN INCORPORATED Dressed Poultry, Meats, and Provisions 1291 Amsterdam Avenue New York, N. Y. 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 D. V. BAZINET, INC. 1226 Amsterdam Avenue New York, New York Visit Our Sports Department Blouses — Sweaters Playsuits Shorts — Slacks Dresses Compliments of EVERETT J. HANSON Fine Orthopaedic Shoes Telephone Chickering 4-7279 4 West 43 St. New York City TILSON S DRUG STORE High Grade Drugs and Cosmetics Tasty Hot Lunches Louis Sherry Ice Cream Served 2959 Broadway, Corner 116 St. New York, N. Y. University 4-4444 CIRCLE BICYCLE SHOP We Kent by Hour and Give Instructions 110 St. and 8 Ave. New York City NEW ASIA RESTAURANT 2879 Broadway and 112 St., N. Y. C. American and Chinese Food Open 11 A. M.-1.-30 A. M.-Sat. 11-3 A. M. M. J. CIRLIN 3060 Broadway, Corner 121 St. Grocer and Fruiterer — Meats and Poultry Tels. Monument 2-6300, 6301 191 CORPUS CHRISTI CATHOLIC CHURCH W. 121st Street QJust off Broadway) SUNDAY MASSES 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 11:30, 12:30. WEEKDAY MASSES 7. 8. 9. Official Parish for Catholic Students Complete Secretarial Training or Short Intensive Courses in One or More Commercial Subjects Free Placement Service to All Graduates MERCHANTS ' BANKERS ' BUSINESS SECRETARIAL SCHOOL Directors: Sherman C. Estey Lawrence W. Estey 9 53 Years Training Young People for Business (No Solicitors Employed) Daily News Building 820 E. 42nd Street, New York, N. Y. Mu 2-0986, 0987, 0988 With the Compliments of THE CLASS OF ' 43 With the Compliments of THE CLASS OF ' 44 DIEGES CLUST 17 John Street New York, N. Y. Manufacturers of Jewelry for the Class of 1942 Barnard College SCHILLER Stationers for Barnard SCHILLER STATIONERY CO. 2957 Broadway New York, N. Y.
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