Barnard College - Mortarboard Yearbook (New York, NY) - Class of 1945 Page 1 of 166
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$8 1 DOROTHY DATTNER £ Alter— in— Csltie-fi Jane Brunstetter yuMiie.i. I fan aaet lu 1945 Mortarboard Barnard College Caelum lid I L (i ivczJ-itij NEW YORK CITY 4h tL Student Body BARNARD COLLEGE ARCHIVES J you tL you To you and you and you and you -Q- (ill lllC J X S V-A to all the yous who make up Barnard To the yous who are the maintenance staff, who man the elevators, who prepare our food, who tend the grounds, who give out towels after the pool, who clean the rooms. To the yous who are the faculty, who teach us to think for ourselves, who are training us to play a role in the creation of a peaceful world. To the yous who are the students, who write in endless bluebooks in your struggles for your B.A. ' s, whose clubs and proms are a part of Barnard. To the yous who do the teaching and the yous who do the learning To the yous who take care of the buildings and grounds To all the yous here at Barnard . . . ' tO ' VC that this record of Barnard in a year of change, a year in I which you said good-bye to many old ways of doing things and welcomed in their place a new education, will serve to point up your memories of college life in 1944. For we believe that today the college is more unified than ever before, that all of you have had a share in the making of A the new Barnard, and that to YOU belongs CPtt = J cJit CCl tlOl I c Ilthough many phases of our college life have had to be adjusted to a world at war, the essence of the traditions that lie behind this symbol of barnard, its flag, have been retained. J- His is Milbank Hall, time-honored classroom headquarters of Barnard College. Like Milbank, there are certain things at Barnard which we hold very dear and which will stand in peace and war. IRGINIA CrOCHERON GlLDERSLEEVE DR. McGUIRE divides reading interests be- tween poetry and detective stories. Before the war sailed a boat in the waters of Connecticut . . . Admits to a continual use of willy-nilly in her conversation. DR. SARGENT went to Germany in 1933 to study propaganda . . . Lectured on the results in Des Moines forums for adult education . . . Was a field supervisor of thirty CCC camps . . . Transferred to Barnard from Chicago in 1940. MADAME MURET, a native of Colorado, calls Fiance her second home . . . Changed from pre-med to historical research after working for the Rockefeller foundation in Paris . . . Lived in Nice during the last war . . . Travelled in southern Europe and North Africa with her author-husband. PROFESSOR WALLER came to Barnard via Penn State College . . . Calls teaching the most pleasant job I know . . . Raises a victory gar- den in New Jersey, but still turns thumbs down on commuting . . . Has authored several text- books. 12 PROFESSOR GREGORY is an accomplished gardener . . . Likes picking flowers best though. Is allergic to horses, but not to driving when she has the gas . . . Comes from Massachusetts where she is a trustee of Mount Holyoke. PROFESSOR LATHAM, at Barnard since 1914, still has traces of her Mississippi drawl. Her unique playwriting course is a Barnard favorite . . . Favors the outdoor life — garden- ing, fishing and riding. PROFESSOR PEARDON hails from British Columbia . . . Has toured Europe . . . Once re- ferred to himself as an Anglomaniac . . . Left Cornell for Barnard in 1923 . . . Claims the big difference between Barnard and Columbia classes is that men talk more and read less. MR. WILLIAMSON, Columbia ' 38, now at work on his Ph.D. thesis . . . Thinks that long shirts worn outside skirts, knitting and the reading of Saturday Review of Literature should be dropped from classes permanently. L3 Freshman day is the gentle process of in- troducing brand-new Freshmen to Barnard and to each other. Dressed in their best, they have lunch, listen to the Dean, say hello to Jake and the Morgue and smile brightly at the girls with whom they ' ll spend their next four years. And then, after they have been properly awed by Opening Exercises and have suc cessfully manipulated their first Barnard teacups, they realize that they have become The Class of ' 47 . Frosh Officers: Elizabeth Brigham, Bonnie Hauser, Alexandra Rice, Ruth Raup, Mary Rudd. 15 The largest Freshman class in q the history of Barnard — as they are quick to remind us — turned up this year. Reaching toward the solid ivory towers of academic tra- dition in a year of uncertainties, these young hopefuls got off to a good start. War or no war, the long, long road to a B.A. began with the highly undignified contrivances known as angel-robes. Clad — more or less — in these clas- sic draperies, each newcomer had everything from her length to her breath duly measured and recorded. Soon enough she began to realize what a lucky thing it is for Barnard that tea hasn ' t been rationed. She went to the Dean ' s teas, Dr. McGuire ' s teas, Wednesday teas and other mis- cellaneous — teas! Barnard ' s own pet systems have presented quite a barrier to less talented groups, but 1947 soon learned what you do if your name is cov- ered with a red slip. And it wasn ' t long before they could all reach into that box in 304 and pull out number 137 just as neatly as you please. Then there were the mathematical mysteries of eligibility and other vital facts presented for the inspection of Freshman — and other consci- entious folk — in a little publication euphemis- tically known as Blue Book. The casual item making each student responsible for all the regulations crammed between its innocent-look- ing cover was one of the more terrifying aspects of early Frosh existence. On the other hand, a ceremony regarded with a lot of friendly curiosity was Meeting My Ju- nior Sister, which — for reasons too deeply rooted to be questioned by mortals — always takes place at twelve on Jake. Over cheese- burgers at the Bookstore, each well-meaning Junior offered the gems of advice she wished she had received two short years before. But 1947 ' s complete and un-freshman like sophis- tication made most of it seem like coals to Newcastle. When it comes to the curriculum, a Fresh- man ' s lot has its own unmistakable earmarks. 16 Life is bound by books and rules Read and followed with adherence. The academic glamour fools The Freshman with its false appearance. She beats her brow in every course; Outside intrusion — she rejects it. She finds the libe a helpful source, And fondly plans to pass the exit. College is an education — Witness Freshman concentration! Six-passes on the lawn and panic over English A themes are inevitable. Efficient little white index cards for that first term paper help to maintain some semblance of academic order during this frenzied phase. Dr. Alsop ' s inimi- table Hygiene A classes improve one shining hour of a Freshman ' s week with highly useful pointers on Vitamin B and good mental adjust- ment. Of Saturday classes — that special Frosh blessing — and the first collision with quiz books, no more need be said. While the year was still young, each Frosh had a date named Arthur, who turned out — as any upperclassman might have warned her — to be a rat. She recorded his unhappy tale in her best manner, under the alert ear of the English department. More often than not she icfused to believe that the queer voice played back to her was the one she ' d been making generous use of for some seventeen years. Every Freshman is automatically a member of the Undergraduate Association and is en- couraged to take up her part in the workings of democracy at Barnard. The class of 1947 went into politics with a bang. Its fervor burned until forty-three candidates for class president had been nominated. Bonnie Hauser was the final winner. Mary Rudd became Vice- President, Alessandra Rice took over the duties of Secretary, and Helen Trevor was chosen to 17 tend the treasury. They saw to it that the Frosh- Soph party thoroughly cemented the class ' for- eign relations. Thus did 1947 become a true part of the Barnard community. There ' s no step quite so long as the one that changes a girl from a Freshman to a Sopho- more. It involves more than merely groaning at notices of Sophomore in- stead of Freshman meetings. Consider the enormously improved position of the Sopho- more coming back to college in September. She discovers how it feels to be expected to win Greek Games, not just to provide a couple of cheers and some minor opposition. She can look about her with educated eyes and say Doesn ' t the new crop of Freshmen look young! She can take a long smoke in the Jungle as though she owned it. She knows how to circumnavigate the line in the cafeteria, how many cuts are safe, what courses are snaps, and where South Hall is. Tilsons, Brooks Hall and the smoking room are synonyms for home. Bridge — the exclusive property of upperclass- men — has become another course in her curric- ulum. The curtain of awe and confusion has been lifted. She starts the college year with the assurance that comes from knowing the rules and the ups and downs that are Barnard. If wise little smiles and swaggering walks have become Sophomore tags, the rest of the school knows there ' s a good reason for it. The matter of completing group require- ments via long labs, obscure poets and listen- Sop ;. Officers: Peggy Cummiskey, Iris Davis, Marjorie Welter, Mary Louise Stewart. ing assignments in Music 1 is no mean feat, with exit-exams to contend with too. When Spring comes, it ' s major-choosing time. Clear-eyed or cautious, each Soph crosses her fingers, takes the plunge, and — in between major ' s meetings — wonders where her decision will carry her in the future. 18 Life is bound by rules and books Bui boundaries are ever shifting. The cocky Sophomore overlooks Such things — and thus begins her drifting. Her brow is bent on sly deception; Outside intrusion — she expects it. Outwitting profs is her perfection, And three times has she flunked the exit. College is one big vacation — Witness Sophomore dissipation! What ' s it like to be a Sophomore at wartime Barnard? The class of 1946 knows. Happily, wartime has not meant war torn, and things- in-Barnard-for-the-Sophs are still among those present. Epidemics of exit-fever and major- picking are as prevalent as they were in a more peaceful world. The Sophs continue to be called the Forgotten Class , while the rest of the college shakes its collective head in sympathy at their proverbial decline into oblivion. No wide-eyed innocence, no Prom, no caps and gowns! A mere vacuum, thinks the misguided three-fourths of the student body who are out- side the inner circle. But the Sophs, not even bothering to put their laughter discreetly up their sleeves, go blithely on their way, wearing the jauntiest grins in Barnard. Let no one deny that they have made sacri- fices — brave and unflinching in the best Sohpo- moric tradition — this historic year. The Soph- omores were the first class since the invention of the zipper to button themselves into their light blue gym suits. But this is war, and they ' ve taken it with stiff upper lips. Exclusive- ness was their next sacrifice, but that turned out to be fun. Chairmanned by Kathy Keith, ' 46, Frosh-Soph hop grew up, changed its name to Winter Ball and posted cordial College In- vited signs. In a gym magically enchanted into a shimmering snowy cavern, dance-rationed Barnard had a lovely time, thank you. When it came to costumes for Greek Games, the Sophs refused to let their wings be clipped by rationing orders which had them using last year ' s clothes. Ingenuity soared, scissors went into action, and 1946 emerged proudly with their games as colorful and inspired as any. The record shows they ' ve been right there shouldering their full share of physics labs, first-aid courses and fingerprinting. The Sopho- mores — They ' re all right. Wet Frosh and Sophs scavenger hunting. Junior Officers: Mary Wilby, Jane Brunstetter, Anne Ross, Sabra Follett. We are the Junior Class. We had hardly drawn our first breath as Barnardites, when we were sub-titled the V- 11 because of a guy named Schickel- Ours were the first Frosh brains to expose themselves to the process of being trained for Uncle Sam. Liberal arts took on the aura of a precious heritage for us to protect. Class grube We polished our armor and read our Chaucer with a new zest. This year, with Molly Wilby as class presi- dent, 1945 settled down to the business of be- ing Juniors. While we waited at twelve on Jake for our Freshman sisters, we realized that we had finally arrived — WE were offering sage ad- vice on the subject of College. And we won- dered what to tell them. Following a year-old precedent, we changed Hewitt to heaven for another Junior Prom on Campus. We shed tears over the wartime sacri- fice of our Junior Show. But with our trained brains in their proper places, we suggest you cross the page and meet us face to face. CHARLOTTE ADLER • Likes Barnard ' s cosmopolitanism . . . wants to go into industrial chemistry, travel, and learn loads of languages . . . has already filled some part of that, visiting many European countries . . . and living exciting moments there . . . people are swell as long as they ' re interesting . . . goes for Latin-American music. MARY AITCHISON • A twentieth century Jane Austen in her at- titude . . . Aitch enjoys chuckle-provoking situations in fiction and real life . . . her un- merciful, coldly analytical social faculties get by because of an underlying vein of good com- mon sense . . . besides, she chuckles just as readily at herself. YE LENA ALBALA • Hopes to help introduce efficient American methods in reconstruction of her country, Yu- goslavia . . . believes in the common man, ad- mires Russia . . . Thinks most men are ego- centrical and show it . . . likes those polite enough to pretend they ' re interested in other things too . . . has penchant for all movies. MARGARET HELEN ALEXANDER • Michigan U. transfer but a New Yorker at heart . . . another admirer of Barnard ' s inter- national atmosphere . . . but also disapproves its reactionary tendencies . . . confesses a burning desire to travel . . . dreams of relax- ing on a beach in Tahiti . . . fond of French movies, foreigners, Mozart . . . and shoes and mystery stories. ELBIS ALLALEMDJIAN • Mainly interested in medicine, but also goes in for traveling and languages . . . came here from England, has been through much of Western Europe . . . American movies and ice cream have their appeal, but she looks forward to going home . . . enthusiastic over Barnard Camp, Camp friendships, skiing, swimming. 22 ADRIENNE APPLEGATE • Touring Europe was enjoyable, but not so the daily commuting from Crestwood . . . Waits till the last minute for everything: didn ' t find out about Student Mail until finishing a month at college . . . French major, spent over a year in convent school in French Switzerland . . . hopes to work in secretarial line. ANNETTE MARIE AULD • Nicknamed Muzz . . . American Studies major and looking forward to WAVES, jour- nalism or government work . . . Anxious to see sites of present fighting . . . nuts about hockey, meaning the Rangers, acorn squash — and Sina- tra . . . thumbs down on Codfish, French, Don Ameche . . . Newman Club vice president, Bul- letin devotee. MARCIA BARISHMAN • Pocket-sized philosopher . . . packs artistic wallop . . . ultra-feminine, despite tendency to omit lipstick unless reminded . . . outside of painting, tastes incline to music, fine conversa- tion, climbing of medium-sized mountains . . . topnotch student, reads omnivorously, dresses in her own sweet idiom. ROBERTA BARR • Tuneful temperament — test tubes and toc- catas ... a Chem major who whistles Bach on Broadway, a musical medic to be . . . hep with the harp and the pulsing piano . . . reads Omar Khayyam, A. A. Milne, and the Medical Dic- tionary . . . revels in red. JACQUELINE BAUMANN • After experience at Ohio State and Cornell, reports that you learn more at Barnard . . . French major, hopes to hold an interpreter ' s job or one in foreign service . . . goes in for the sophistication of Chopin, Debussy — and Elling- ton . . . traveled widely since leaving home in France. 23 MARY BENEDICT • The petite and pretty gal whom everyone greets with a smile . . . active in the social af- fairs side of extra-curric . . . Fine Arts major . . . looks forward to marriage . . . and hopes to write and illustrate children ' s books . . . gay samples of her talent appear in Mortar- board and decorate the hallways on persuasive posters. MARION BERENSON • Smooth transfer from Middlebury ... en- joys being able to go to college and live in the city at the same time . . . likes suits, casual clothes in general ... a Soc major, outside in- terests include good musical comedies and dramas . . . and, like the majority of her class- mates, practically all kinds of music. MIMI LEFF BERGMAN • Graceful, easy-going brunette . . . majors in Eco and dance group . . . has commuted to New Orleans on vacations . . . using one to become a Mrs. . . . raves about her wonderful job in an experimental engineering lab wo rking on radar . . . Mortarboard copy editor . . . chair- man-elect of dance group. HENDRIKA BESTERBREURTJE • Ski and skate expert with many European race trophies . . . would use medical training for reconstruction work abroad . . . has seen Europe, England, Ireland . . . but her home remains Rotterdam . . . regrets losing the chance to enter Olympics . . . but keeps up her devotion to swimming, riding, winter sports, here. NELLY BESTERBREURTJE • Government major, would like to augment her extensive travels in the course of her post- college job . . . enjoys the opportunity for get- ting to know the American girl at Barnard . . . holds stern beliefs on the impossibility of peace unless Germany is completely destroyed . . . sports expert and lover. 24 RUTH BISCHOFF • Calls Hempstead home ... but has traveled from it as far as Salt Lake . . . majoring in Math . . . ambition is to understand Einstein . . . co-chairman of college teas . . . pet peeve, Don ' t say the cup is half empty; say it ' s half full . . . Barnard converted her from swing to the other kind of music . . . wants to help reconstruction in America. ARGENTINE BLACK • Distractingly heterogeneous in talents and charms . . . cosmopolitan with southern grace . . . educated in New Orleans and abroad . . . studies diligently for medicine as Zoo major . . . Mimi loves week-end sprees, steaks, sal- ads, sambas, swains . . . raised dachshunds at home, tadpoles in college. ELIZABETH BOGARDUS • Pre-med transfer from William and Mary . . . busy accelerating . . . spent a week victory farming in Newburgh last summer in a short time out . . . cheerful and effervescent . . . likes Barnard the way it is ... a Brooklynite, she favors the Dodgers, sports clothes, serious movies . . . helped out the Student Aide Corps. BETTY BOOTH • Ambition is to do postwar propaganda on reconstruction . . . reports from experience that Bennington and Barnard are two different worlds . . . has seen a large part of the coun- try . . . and did professional writing for Charm . . . has dipped into CURC and Bulle- tin . . . goes crazy over deadlines as Mortar- hoard associate editor. ANGELA BORNN • Majors in accuracy . . . from her pet field chemistry to her hobby photography . . . com- ing from the Virgin Islands, had her greatest thrill when she first saw snow . . . like s sports: volley ball, tennis, swimming . . . dorm life is tops . . . but getting up in the morning is just as onerous there as elsewhere. 25 EDITH BORNN • Loves life in dorms, where she presides in motherly fashion over merry sessions in her fourth floor Hewitt suite . . . calls Barnard Camp the best place to get away from it all . . . also finds relaxation in reading . . . collects philosophical sayings as a hobby . . . hopes to go to Law School after college. BEVERLY BRENNAN • Has ambitions in the diplomatic field, to take advantage of her Eco and Government training . . . deplores subway trek from Brook- lyn . . . Columbia Extension transfer, thinks most everything about Barnard is tops . . . goes in for perfume, suits, long gla mor bob . . . one of the growing set of young marrieds. ROSALIE BRANOWER • Transfer from the University of North Caro- lina . . . expects to do social work . . . enjoys being amused, like most of us . . . whether by books, movies — or war-restricted clothes . . but conversely, black is her favorite color, be- cause it ' s so morbid . . . Sociology major. PHYLLIS BRAND • Smooth sophisticated New Yorker with am- bitions for personnel work . . . prominent in extra-curric as I.R.C. president, Bulletin ad manager, Mortarboard club editor . . . knows some of the outside business world too . . . Barnard rep at Saks Fifth Avenue College Shop last year . . . visited Germany in ' 35 . . . espe- cially interested in the Marines. DOROTHY BRENNAN • English comp major, with a twin brother and an Irish family . . . famed for mag- nificent Games lyric last year . . . post-college plans, WAVES . . . postwar plans, marriage to dashing army officer . . . accelerating dormer . . . transferred from Ohio Wesleyan . . . Mortar- board faculty editor. 26 AZELLE BROWN • Used to the ups and downs of dorm life . . . by virtue of intermittent experience as Brooks elevator operator . . . majors in math and minors in extra-curric . . . has been Math club president, class Honor Board rep . . . favorite philosophy: Live, don ' t merely exist . . . completed two years of college in fourteen months. MARJORIE BRUDER • Phil major with dramatic background and tastes . . . transfer from Stephens College, Mis- souri, also attended Bennington School of the Arts and the Drama . . . her list of likes includes Shakespeare, Maurice Evans, and Gershwin . . . looks forward to a well-rounded life. JANE BRUNSTETTER • Known for her friendly smile and amazingly long list of extra-curric managing activities . . . as champion Games charioteer, Entrance chairman, junior vice-president, Mortarboard business manager, CURC station manager and Across the Tracks co-director . . . senior presi- dent-elect . . . hopes to combine marriage, farming, and writing. MARGARET BUNCE • Has heart set on social work in Asia, less rushing around after graduation . . . and also confesses to a desire to have ten or twelve dogs some time . . . has lived practically all over the Mid-west, including a year at Depauw . . . shares with her three brothers a love for camp- ing out. ELEANOR BURGE • Well-traveled cosmopolite . . . intends to revisit Switzerland, France, and England . . . summer residence, Cape Cod . . . hometown, Louisville, Kentucky . . . full of vim and vigor, she likes sailing, and rain, wind and sun, but thumbs down on cold weather or jitterbugs . . . hopes to do welfare-aid work. 27 MIRIAM BURSTEIN • Bulletin Editor-elect . . . caustic, with over- tones of literary polish . . . entered Barnard at fifteen . . . frightened by rows of library books she may never get to read . . . insists she loves even midnight stints for Bulletin . . . devel- oped misanthropic attitude trying to get in 225 junior class writeups for Mortarboard. BETTY BURTON • Attractive collegiate from Chicago . . . full of pep and fire . . . insists that clothes be un- usual and bright, music fast and loud . . . Psych major, attended Marymount College and Northwestern . . . presses Psych profs for the practical side of all theory . . . likes Shake- spearean plays, movie comedies, and the Coast Guard. NORMA JEAN BUTLER • Accelerated Government major . . . deep devotion to Greek Games . . . for which she did yeoman service . . . comes from Park Rapids, Minnesota . . . but won ' t have career there if she fulfills ambition to enter foreign service . . . although she ' d settle for any kind of gov- ernment work. PATRICIA CADY • Devoted to the bustle of all the people and life in the dorms . . . has contributed ma- terially to the bustle as frosh Games chairman, junior social chairman in charge of Junior Prom . . . and to dorm life as Residence Halls treasurer . . . Math major eying the WAVES or war work . . . next Residence Halls president. MILDRED CARPENTER • History major and a homemaker at heart . . . U.C.A. social chairman ... is crazy about heavy music, particularly Wagner . . . also Russian writers, English poetry . . . delighted with daring afternoon dresses ... is wonder- ing whether to join WAVES or teach history. 28 RUTH CARSON • Born in Hongkong, lived in China and Phil- ippines thirteen years . . . plans to do religious and reconstruction work in Orient . . . Barn- ard — I love it . . . goes in for plays, music ' ' to suit the mood . . . dances, teas, and meet- ings . . . believes in the essential goodness of people . . . insists she ' s pretty average. A. BERNICE CLARK • Zoo major and Choir girl . . . expects to go to med school at University of Michigan . . . near her home in Battle Creek . . . ha done defense work for two summers past . . . fond of books for their bindings and smell of print . . . but looks inside too sometimes . . . prefers those who can see the humorous aspects of life. MURIEL COMBS • Loves music and hopes to do some kind of work connected with it . . . thinks there ' s something good in every composition if you try to find it . . . prefers living in small town, particularly her home of East Rockaway, N. Y. . . . Inspector in a defense plant last sum- mer . . . works for Community Service Bureau in school. JEAN L. CONHAIM • Has traveled through South and Canada . . . and lived in Chicago, Philadelphia, De- troit . . . Soc major, aims to teach nursery school . . . and is already doing it part-time at Manhattanville Day Nursery . . . thinks sincerity all-important, both towards others and oneself. JEAN JAHR CONN • Likes all people in small doses, few in large . . . with her husband one obvious ex- ception . . . post-college plans include three children, two girls and a boy ... a Government major, has seen Barnard as both a dorm and day student . . . claims to be the domestic type. 29 HELEN ANN CRAN • Transferred from University of Washington . . . where she stopped off on way from her home town of Hilo, Hawaii, in the summer of 1941 . . . likes musical comedies and good music . . . finds people of New York of increas- ing interest . . . after coed school, found it hard to get used to no men. OLGA CRESCIONI • Has thirst for knowledge, particularly in Spanish fields . . . majors in Spanish litera- ture . . . also wants to travel, marry, have at least four kids . . . has already toured An- tilles, U. S., Canada . . . born in Puerto Rico . . . likes to think she ' s a radical, but knows that actually deep inside she ' s a conservative. ALECIA CONNER • Cookie works equally hard at government and history major and student government . . . hopes to go through Law School, have a career, to travel . . . and, finally, to marry . . . dis- tinguished college career as frosh vice-presi- dent, soph president, Undergrad treasurer, vice-president-elect. CHARLOTTE VIRGINIA CONWAY • Dorm student, enthusiastic about New York . . . but it isn ' t home, like Schenectady . . . clerked in war plant, fascinated by scenes be- hind the production lines . . . Botany major, hopes to do post-college research in that field . . . partial, like most of us, to people with a sense of humor . . . shies away from prejudiced ones. MARJORIE CORSON • Chem major from Suffern with checkered career behind her . . . including travels and schooling in Northern Europe and England . . . and experience as Games business chairman, Lutheran treasurer, Silver Bay delegate, Prom committee member . . . has accelerated with an eye to topping it off by joining the WAVES. 30 RUTH CRETAUX • Spent two years in France and four in San Francisco . . . but New York is still her favor- ite home . . . enjoys melodramatic plays, French books, movies, and very grown-up clothes . . . once had a yen to become a French teacher . . . but admits now that her postwar life centers on teaching my navy husband French. PHYLLIS CROSS • Conscientious and capable Zoo major . . . ex-head of Press Board . . . has particular affection for the cat in Zoo 97 lab . . . star discus thrower and horse in Greek Games . . . enjoys spanking out swing on the piano . . . in between accelerating courses, found time to be a victory farmerette. ELIZABETH CROUTER • Majors in American Studies . . . has been vice-president and secretary of Episcopal Club . . . goal — to be a lawyer . . . likes classical entertainment, restrained people . . . has al- ways liked to wear slacks . . . firm for self reliance and laissez faire ... a good mixer . . . also someone you ' d choose for a bridge partner. ELENE DALE • Post-college ambition is to teach English . . . has visited Oslo, Bergen, southern Nor- wegian coast . . . likes dramatic movies and plays ... in literary vein, upholds Du Maurier, Agatha Christie, Rachel Field and Mary Rob- erts Rinehart . . . will waltz to Strauss any- time . . . Tschaikowsky and Schubert also rate her full approval. MARY JANE DALY • A scintillating yet plain-spoken Northwest- ern transfer . . . Admits frankly she would like to be a millionaire above all else . . . Govern- ment class raves, emphasized with large ex- clamation points . . . member of Newman club, I.R.C. . . . She writes for Quarterly and acts for Wigs and Cues . . . Eco-gov major. 31 DOROTHY DATTNER • Sincerity, enthusiasm . . . and a firm ability to be honest with herself and others help her to do everything well . . . from being a Games horse ... to making Dean ' s List . . . and tying together the millions of loose ends in Mortar- board . . . co-directs Barnard CURC program . . . Anthro major, wants a farm and four kids. WINNIEFRED DRACKETT • Misses Louisiana ' s warm friendliness, leisure- ly living . . . praises everything else in Barn- ard . . . proves she was really meant to major in Phil . . . has alternated college with years as stenotype secretary . . . and a stretch at New Orleans Naval Air Station . . . proving south- ern gals have as much spunk as sugah. HELENE DE SANCTIS • Tastes veer from tearful plays to slapstick comedy . . . hates the y in Barnard, required assembly before that quiz . . . thinks Tilson ' s Danny is a morale builder . . . thrilled when she uses her shoe coupon . . . detests affecta- tions . . . English lit major with talent for writing too . . . honestly looks forward to domestic life. GLADYS DAY • Accelerating Chem major from Great Bar- rington, Mass. . . . after graduation in June, will go into nurses ' training . . . and may go from that into medicine . . . worked as volun- teer at Presbyterian Hospital for a year . . . calmly believes in live and let live . . . likes Barnard ' s democratic absence of sororities. HELENE DREIFUSS • One of the first of the crop of International studies majors . . . has lived in France and Switzerland . . . wants to do reconstruction work and then marry . . . I.R.C. and German club member, Music club vice-president . . . dislikes people who ask how are you when they don ' t care . . . admires sincerity and knowledge. 32 JEAN DUKOFF • Winters at Barnard and summers at Cornell . . . turned to knitting in her junior year and is making history (she says it ' s a sweater) . . . Doubles with Bubbles . . . never see one without the other . . . and they ' re even getting to look alike . . . planning on being a nurse ' s aide and hostelling through Mexico. ELIZABETH DURAND • Has worked in Yale Cancer Research Lab . . . majors in Zoo here . . . sings with Chapel Choir . . . first likes at Barnard are summer sessions, natural sciences, fine professors . . . has passion for old authentic jazz records, col- lecting them by the dozen . . . will face post- war world as Mrs. Charles C. Ransom, Jr. MAY EDWARDS • Idealistic-ally hopes to do better than teach- ers she ' s had when she starts teaching English in high school . . . will get her master ' s before that . . . transfer from University of Miami, in Florida . . . likes ballet, authentic plays and movies representing regional life . . . admires Chinese porcelain, from afar so far. NANCY EDWARDS • Likes unconventional people, unusual clothes, the feeling of being on your own . . . a true individualist . . . still affirms the value of having a social consciousness . . . seeks some field of expression in the arts that will not mean a 9 to 5 routine . . . glamorous but hardworking CURC, Bulletin, Wigs and Cues stalwart. M. ALDINE ENGELHARDT • All kinds of music hold her spellbound . . . wrapped up, too, in her Chem major . . . will work in industrial chemistry afterwards . . . upholding her belief that it ' s woman ' s duty to keep her place in industry secure . . . has been craving excitement for the past twenty years. 33 PATRICIA EVERS • Fresh out of the Academy of the Sacred Heart, swung right into the life at Barnard . . . full of fun and charming . . . plans to do radio drama work . . . Navy is one of her hob- bies, as yet just a hobby . . . also likes sophis- ticated women, perfu me with umph and Al- lan Ladd . . . mad about sailing. JOYCE FIELD • Psych major whose future lies in direction of social work . . . has sailed the seven seas and been lost in every European capital . . . prevailing passions at Barnard include U.C.A., Ethel Weiss ( ! ) , Silver Bay . . . upholds classic sport clothes, friendly people, psychoanalytical books and plays. SALLY FERRIS • Has done yeoman service for Greek Games (business manager), A. A. (treasurer), Politi- cal Council (publicity chairman) and Bulletin . . . a job in journalism will satisfy her appe- tite for travel . . . and help her understand the problem of international peace . . . will head National Service next year. MARY FALORSI • Chem major from Waterbury, Connecticut . . . aims to go on to Med School fro m that . . . served as Italian Club publicity director, Ger- man Club vice president . . . lived in Rome for fourteen years before spanning the Atlantic . . . relaxes with phonograph or painting landscapes in watercolor . . . loves all dogs, from poodles lo hot. SHIRLEY FISHER • Will be a government statistician or a re- search historian . . . preparing with a history major . . . Wednesday teas and Navy atmos- phere so definitely Barnard get her applause . . . additional raves are witty people, weepy movies, sea books . . . hates being called Fish . . . goes in mildly for classics. 34 SABRA FOLLETT • Her travels in France, Germany, Switzer- land, and Austria led almost automatically to an International Studies major . . . imposing list of extra-curric positions include frosh vice president. Undergrad secretary, junior treas- urer, German club president . . . Undergrad President-elect. DAISY FORNACCA • A language and lit major, she left Rome in 1941 . . . famous for her delight in calling out questions or answers in class ... a reac- tion from strictness of Italian schools ... as is her love for red nail polish . . . likes the honor system, the faculty, the dean ' s friendly attitude, here . . . but hopes to visit Italy rebuilt. NADINE FOSS • Transferred from Immaculata College in Pennsylvania . . . has lived in Washington, Puerto Rico, Philadelphia . . . Says she has led the typical life of an army officer ' s daugh- ter .. . extremely modest . . . hostess par ex- cellence . . . English major . . . eying journal- ism as possible career . . . but marriage comes first. ZILPHA JANE FRANKLIN • Past includes two summers as a government girl in Washington . . . future will feature mar- riage and family raising, if she has her way . . . also aspires to work in city-planning field . . . specializing in Soc . . . handknit sweaters and tricky earrings are her special weaknesses . . . avid reader of all fiction. PATRICIA FREDA • Another of the legion of New Jersey com- muters . . . interest in CURC and her English comp major ties in with ambitions in the field of radio writing . . . firm believer in sincerity and simplicity, likes the feeling of working toward a definite goal at Barnard . . . dreams of South America as scene of postwar travels. 35 EDNA FREDERICKS • Pet hate: four years spent rushing to don the Barnard Warrior and cavort through the gym . . . the reason for accelerating to make it three years . . . school would be wonderful composed just of summer sessions . . . has her troubles getting papers in barely on time . . . Psych major interested in helping maladjusted people. JULIA FREMON • Her psych major bears out her interest in all kinds of people . . . living in New York an education in itself to this native of St. Louis . . . spent last summer in Greenwich Vil- lage while working . . . works during school term at the Industrial Machine Shop course . . . and as Glee Club librarian, curriculum chairman. RENEE V. FRIEDMAN • The freedom at Barnard appeals after serv- ing four year sentence at a monastic girls ' high school . . . Likes to read — especially Thomas Wolfe — when there is time, which is never . . . Deplores laziness which is always interfering with plans to do what she ought . . . Mortarboard ad manager . . . zoo major. ELSA FUNARO • Ambition is to do reconstruction work in Italy, marry an Italian diplomat and raise children, horses, and cats . . . would like to see more sports and campus here . . . majors in International Studies . . . likes swimming, riding, tragic movies, anything Italian . . . heterogenious group, city advantages at Barn- ard have distinct appeal. GUDNY GJERTSEN • Accelerated Eco and Soc major ... a Brooklynite who ignores the fate of the Dodg- ers . . . L.I.U. transfer . . . partial to simple black dresses and veils . . . adores good piano work, Horowitz and Rachmaninoff . . . gets thrill out of driving a car — fast . . . ardent for G.B.S., Upton Sinclair. 36 MARY GLAD1NG • Wants to travel and write short stories . . . has done the first mostly in Canada . . . the second, mostly as English comp major . . . worked in an army hospital for the wounded last summer . . . but finds more humorous sub- jects for writing in her family . . . likes Hem- ingway ' s books, Hitchcock ' s movies, Hepburn ' s plays. RUTH GLAESEL • ' Interested and successful in farming until the weeds came up ... a Fine Arts major who hopes for nothing more from life than the op- portunity to live it . . . transferred as a soph from Maryland College . . . candid and stub- born, but a wonderful disposition withal . . . Clifton ' s her home, between terms. BARBARA GLIXMAN • Bom in Los Angeles but loves New York deeply . . . wants to investigate the macrocosm before settling down to the raising of four chil- dren ... a Dean ' s Lister Soc major, she ' s re- freshingly frank without sarcasm . . . has a charming giggle . . . likes rousing shower ballads and is engagingly wistful . . . flair for leadership. EDITH GOLDSMITH • Confused but earnest liberal . . . CURC station manager, and Mortarboard photo edi- tor, wants to be a good director at CBS . . . has carefully planned future life, including marriage, life in Westchester, two sons in Harv- ard, and a daughter in Wellesley . . . though she loves everything at Barnard. SALLY GOOD • Devotee of Chapel Choir and other good music . . . ferry commuting from Edgewater is the extent of her travels . . . her chem major will prepare for a career in industrial chemis- try . . . but her natural bent leads too toward a housekeeping life . . . Deutscher Kreis, U.C.A. round out her other school interests. 37 DAHRL GREEN • Hometown, Twin Falls, Idaho . . . formerly a student at Mills College, California, and the Universidad Feminina de Mexico, finds Barnard a happy medium between the two . . . falls for that famed cosmopolitan atmosphere . . . Spanish major with a hairdo and sparkling eye to match. MARJORIE GOODMAN • Enjoys feeling independent in her dorm room overlooking the Hudson . . . posts dog pictures all over her walls and keeps radio on musical programs most of the time . . . Nick- named Napoleon because of her diminutive size . . . positive about just what and whom she likes . . . wants to go into industrial engi- neering. BARBARA GOODRICH • Mainly from New York . . . had two years at Chicago U., including an apartment housing a dog, kittens, spaghetti parties, and a study of life in line with her phil major . . . reads best sellers for relaxation . . . domestic incli- nations even after a taste of being on her own . . . but wants to live in Paris, do reconstruc- tion work. DIANA GORDON • Has lived in a variety of places from Argen- tina to Ogallala, Nebraska . . . the latter once known as the wildest town in the West . . . learned about the professor ' s viewpoint as sec- retary to one last year . . . likes all kinds of people plain or fancy wrapped . . . hopes to continue interest in Pan-Americanism. ANTOINETTE GOUGLIDES • Photography enthusiast . . . enjoys activities cf Camera Club . . . excited too over Barnard . . . where everything is super . . . accelerated science major . . . specializing in Physics . . . intrigued by Morse Code class . . . dorm stu- dent from Hicksville, L. I. . . . wants to be of some good on this earth. 38 IRENE FRANCES GRIFFIN • Rightly called the fox . . . manipulates people around her little finger . . . first loves here, speech and playwrighting . . . would like to direct plays . . . except for that heavenly trip to Bermuda, finds the subway her most exciting travel ... an incredible imagination and fiendish sense of humor . . . thinks best in church. EMILY HALLOCK • Her homemade movies record practically every event on campus . . . quite a popular lass . . . loves singing in Chapel Choir . . . spends half her time in the photography lab . . . and a good part of the rest knitting . . . enjoys the opera, horses, and, strangely, ice cream . . . Camp is wonderful . . . Chem major, will do lab work. HARRIET HANLEY • Transfer from Stephens College . . . felt more at home in New York after two months than she had in Gary, Indiana, after eighteen years . . . her great love is ballet . . . man- aged an ice cream store one summer . . . dipped the frozen stuff at a carnival another . . . great- est ambition to evolve a theory of time and space. JOYCE HARDIN • Marriage and travel south of the border prominent parts of postwar plans . . . has lived in almost all of the 48 states . . . strongly preju- diced toward former school of Alabama U., and the Army Air Corps . . . English lit major, does assigned reading on Connecticut com- muters ' special . . . Mortarboard lit staff. EDYTHE JANE HEARST • Hails from Packer, but now a staunch Bar- r.ardite . . . greatest hope is to see the war over, and foundations laid for everlasting peace . . . likes comedy in its place . . . classical music and aviators fascinate her . . . slightly more in favor of the latter ... an Eco major who wants to teach. 39 ELIZABETH HEATH • Rates flying as one of her most thrilling experiences . . . topping travels in West Indies and through many states . . . hopes for mar- riage and or lab work . . . doctors intrigue her . . . Zoo major who delights in life in general, and fun . . . transfer from University of Louisville. EILEEN HELLAWELL • A Barnardite via Skidmore, likes being part of a great university . . . considering merchan- dising, among other things, for those years after college . . . either all-out for tweeds and brogues, or for black, but never half-way . . . Brooks resident, majoring in English . . . strong believer in unconditional surrender. JOY HELLMAN • Transfer from Cornell . . . has legal aspira- tions in the international field . . . hopes to con- tinue study of international relations after Law School . . . worked for I.R.C. and Bulletin . . . perennially on a diet . . . expects all her friends to be intelligent and have opinions . . . Govern- ment major. FRANCES HIGGINS ® Her favorite people are sailors . . . after college, wants to be a housemother at An- napolis, but she ' d settle for West Point . . . greatest ambition to attend the 1950 Durbah given by the Gaekwan of Barbda . . . has had jobs ranging from dog-walker and cow-tender to grease monkey . . . favorites in literature: Brothers Karamazov, Bobbsey Twins. DOROTHEA HIRSCHLAND • Looks for the little every day actions that make up all of human relationships as more influential than long term planning . . . History major, will work for her master ' s at the New School after graduation . . . traveled through most of Europe, but calls New York home . . . crossword puzzles delight her. 40 MARIAN HOFFSTOT • Transfer from Mt. Vernon Jr. College in Washington . . . has traveled abroad, in South America, throughout United States . . . and loved it . . . likes opportunities offered at Bar- nard, the stress on individuality, its place as a cross roads . . . Eco major, goes for books that provide food for thought. FRANCES HITCH • Transfer from Sweet Briar, Virginia . . . plans to follow up her Psych major as a per- sonnel manager . . . among her preferences are the Navy, good-looking clothes, and operetta music . . . the friendly and exhilarating atmos- phere around Barnard . . . New York girl, joined Bulletin this year. DORIS J. HOLBERT • Barnard favorites include Greek Games, play- writing, experimental Psych, and foreign stu- dents . . . has been newspaper fashion col- umnist . . . political belief — Roosevelt . . . especially dotes on Bette Davis and Hildegarde. tweeds and plaids, Rodgers and Hart, Gilbert and Sullivan . . . will go into newspaper or magazine work. ALICE JACOBSON • An English major . . . prime ambition is to resume being Mrs. Myron Jacobson . . . has set up army wife abodes in many states . . . other ambition is to write . . . that old cosmo- politan atmosphere at Barnard comes in for her approval . . . also Greek plays, G.B.S., and Eugene O ' Neill . . . did her bit for Mortarboard lit staff. RUTH JANIS • Always ready for an excuse not to work, but somehow always gets it done . . . also finds time for volunteer nursery work . . . hopes to continue with that as a post-college profession . . . ten minutes away from school, she never seems able to make a nine o ' clock on time. II GLORIA JOHANSON • The business world beckons, perhaps ad- vertising . . . history specialist, looks back fondly on friends and faculty she met here . . . champions wearing of hats, conservative clothes . . . Bogart and Garson, Reagan and Davis at- tract her in the movies . . . ditto animal pic- tures. ELEANOR KAHLER © Wants to be successful in whatever she un- dertakes . . . and goes at it the right way by a firm belief in where there ' s a will there ' s a way . . . Psych-soc major from upstate New York . . . gives Games an appreciative nod . . . worked on committee and Residence Council . . . and dorm bomb squad. BARBARA PICKHARDT KAHLE • Another chem major desiring to be a medic . . . held a variety of offices, including frosh presidency ... an outdoor girl, likes hunting in Canada, deep-sea fishing in Florida . . . takes people as they come ... a penchant for serious music . . . served on Honor Board . . . and as A. A. badminton chairman. ELAINE JOSE • Her phenomenally large appetite and ability to remain thin withal the envy and amazement of all . . . would be lost without her little black memo book . . . but claims she never has time to do what ' s in it anyhow . . . recommends breaking a leg to get your man — she did . . . but is still taking deficiencies because of it (the leg). HARRIET KAHN • Sole complaint against Barnard is the harry- ing non-synchronization of its clocks . . . still considers her engagement last fall most excit- ing event in her life . . . helps along her social work major and ambitions by duties at Morn- ingside . . . remaining time claimed by theater, Gershwin, drawing pads and modern dance. 42 ROSINE KAHN • Music major, transferred from Rockford College, Illinois . . . hopes to enjoy life as a well-rounded person . . . saw history in the making by dropping in on Quebec at the time of the Roosevelt-Churchill conference there . . . arriving by way of a summer trip up the Sag- uenay River . . . quiet but purposeful. JUNE MARIE KALEY • Taking those Teachers College courses pre- paratory to becoming a high school teacher . . . but also harbors desire to travel . . . hails from Williamsport, Pennsylvania . . . likes classical music, especially Wagner, and everything about Barnard, especially New York . . . history ma- jor and Glee Clubber. CONSTANCE KARL • Tall blonde with a sense of humor which even three years of commuting on the 7:58 and summer selling at Macy ' s have not weakened . . . believes that variety in people makes life interesting . . . Chem major, preparing for some field of medicine ... a Glee Club faithful . . . hard worker for social events. JANET KEMPTON • Has lived in North Carolina and Wisconsin, but at present resides in Richmond Hill . . . likes the friendly girls at college . . . also any people who talk along, classical and popular music, but not jazz . . . went out for the Glee Club . . . North Wisconsin lakes and woods live in her memory since a trip through them in ' 38. AVRA P. KESSLER • Transfer from William and Mary . . . which just doesn ' t compare with Barnard . . . acceler- ated Dean ' s Lister . . . major in International Studies backed up by a five mile excursion into Mexico . . . thinks love is a wonderful institu- tion . . . ditto CURC, where she ' s personnel director, station manager, etc. 43 TANIA KHMEL • From Middlebury College, Vermont . . . fond of working with adolescents . . . and meet- ing people in general . . . befitting her major, Soc . . . has done army camp work and traveled throughout the United States . . . likes the awareness and activity here, particularly in the Community Service Bureau. ANITA KLEIN • Has been generally known as Bubbles but feels ready to outgrow it ... is learning to respond to Anita . . . friendly and warm- hearted . . . works for Mt. Sinai Hospital . . . wants to hostel to Mexico with inseparable buddy Jean . . . greatly enthusiastic about things and stuff especially children. ALTHEA KNICKERBOCKER • Athlete par excellence . . . rode in National Horse Show six years . . . Games athlete here for two . . . has served as class secretary, treas- urer . . . Psych-soc major aiming for social work . . . claim to fame so far: learned to bugle in three weeks . . . maintains Life Can Be Beautiful (despite soap opera). CLARICE KOEHLER • A quiet girl with an odd sense of humor that pops up in unexpected places . . . inter- ested in International Studies, postwar recon- struction work in England . . . has traveled to California via Havana and Panama Canal . . . fond of novel-reading or even studying on the subway . . . stopped off at secretarial school before this. EDWIN A KONRAD • Chem major from Glendale, New York and transfer from Hofstra . . . works part-time in a chemistry research lab . . . will have more of the same after college . . . steady movie-goer, likes opera and swing, books about animals . . . has youth hosteled through California, Canada, New England, and Long Island. 44 BETTY KUHLMAN • Skidmore transfer . . . likes the rapid rate of activity around Barnard and the hustle bustle ' city . . . Zoo major, hopes to work in a hospital lab . . . doing research on peculiar diseases . . . confesses, too, to a liking for the songs of long ago and even the Dentine Gum radio jingle. GLORIA LANDSMAN • Although very small (or perhaps because of it) is always bubbling over with vitality and amusing her friends with expert imita- tions . . . especially of profs . . . greatest in- hibition is not being able to wear sophisticated clothes, which she adores . . . Psych major. RUTHVEN LANE • Just a touch of a southern accent ... a Louisiana belle . . . spent a fascinating sum- mer in Mexico at the National University . . . incurably romantic, confesses a preference for poetry ... a Psych major with an ambition to raise and educate several children of her own . . . never lets things get her down. CAROLINE LAUER • Conservative, smart lass . . . likes Barnard because — she feels she ' s learning something . . . goes to the movies to see Ingrid Bergman or Creer Garson . . . dramas and musical comedies on the stage ... a baseball fan . . . loves to be near the water . . . and collect phonograph records . . . sighs at her procrastination. RUTH HARLAN LEMOINE • Loves dorm life, the Big City . . . faithful theatregoer, can ' t understand her devoted pref- erence for tragedy . . . wants to see the world, write, be able to pare down a philosophy of life to ten words . . . but is starting in with a likes opera and swing, books about animals novel . . . gym isn ' t one of her loves. 45 DONNA LEONARD • Composition major with something to write about . . . experiences covering modeling, theatre, printing, dog walking, ad infinitum . . . proudest of her achievements as a horse- woman . . . connoisseur of rare, choice vintages . . . crazy about dogs — has two — loves music, art, playwriting . . . thinks Prof. Latham and Mme. Muret are tops. FRANCES LIEBESMAN • International Studies major . . . keeps up interest with I.R.C., Spanish club, and strong belief in internationalism . . . politically al- ways on the fence — so far . . . favorite past- time is to retreat to Cape Cod with books, scratch pad . . . and people with a sense of humor to match her red hair. BERNICE LINDENBERG • Five foot two redhead . . . ambition in life is happy marriage, nice children . . . but im- mediate plans include following up Soc major at New York School for Social Work . . . likes Barnard professors and its friendly atmosphere . . . enthusiastic about work at school for neglected children during last summer ' s Soc course. ELIZABETH LITTLE • Barnard a stepping stone on path to her ambition to travel in France, England, and India . . . stop before this was at Hollins Col- lege, Virginia, with side trips to a job in Cali- fornia ... a Fine Arts major, Lisa is partial to Englishmen, cats, French Impressionists . . . and hockey and tennis. MARY LOUISE LUCCHI • One of a bumper crop of accelerated science majors . . . her specialty is Zoo . . . hopes to work as bacteriologist . . . relaxes by reading comedies, attending Deutscher Kreis meetings . . . and daily travel on the 125th Street ferry to home in Ridgefield . . . Barnard is to her one happy family. 46 DOROTHY MacGILLIVRAY • Proud possessor of an Army-Navy award pin acquired while working for Sperry-Gyro- scope last year . . . transferred from Cornell . . . will work at Teachers College in prepara- tion for career as elementary school teacher . . . musical comedies, definitely sports clothes appeal . . . Psych major. LOUISE MASCIOCCHI • Gay and vital . . . would like to see more school spirit at Barnard . . . most noteworthy job was in the chem lab at Columbia . . . throws in her lot with the many other future lab workers in her class . . . likes plays comic, movies with a plot, books deep, clothes sporty or ultra-dressy, people sincere. MEREDITH MAULSBY • Calls most exciting job going to Barnard . . . Spanish major Mike goes for simple clothes, no frills, any music as long as it ' s good . . . hopes to travel and study after com- mencement . . . preferably south of the border . . . almost always talking cleverly . . . has been active in drives at school. ANNE McCABE • Wellesley transfer . . . dodges inevitable question by insisting you can ' t compare a city college to a campus college . . . likes friendly atmosphere presented to transfers . . . agrees with most Barnardites in dislike of registration day routine . . . glad it ' s been done away with . . . majors in Chem. ELAINE McKEAN • Psych major . . . transfer from Packer . . . wistfully wishes it were possible to know all Barnard ' s interesting people . . . favors history books, clothes with a dash . . . likes people to be happy . . . and witty ... a version to getting up of a morning . . . ambitions include posses- sion of a husb and and four children. 47 JEAN McKENZIE • Transfer from Westbrook Junior College in her home state of Maine . . . excited at the chance to meet girls from all over the world . . . fond of foreign style food and any play or movie not tinged with murder . . . ex-ship- yard worker . . . did office work there . . . His- tory major . . . interested in educational ad- ministration. MARION MEDNICK • Auburn hair and an infectious giggle make an unbeatable combination . . . thinks Barnard well worth the daily train ride from Brooklyn . . . pet pastime is horse-back riding . . . Bee- thoven, Brahms are also-rans . . . School ' s fun but vacation is super . . . and doubly appreci- ated ' cause summer school makes them few and far between. ROSANNE MENKE • After travel through Europe, settlement house work, and helping out at a camp for underprivileged children, majors in Psych . . . will keep on with social work with children after training . . . prefers the light-hearted in her movies . . . symphonies at her concerts . . . and clothes sharply tailored. MURIEL MERKER • Hopes to go on to teach or do research work in her major, Zoology . . . but still appreciates things like clam chowder, the Cafe Rouge when Tommy Dorsey ' s there . . . and dorm life, after transferring from Brooklyn College . . . has been counselor at camp, Science club, Me- norah member. INGE KAREN MICHELSON • Traveled extensively through Europe ... a Zoo major, goes one step further than her fel- lows . . . she wants to marry a doctor, too . . . and work by his side in neurology . . . spent first year at Duke but favors Barnard . . . lover of symphonies, especially if they ' re Tschaikowsky or Beethoven. 48 MARIANNE MILLER • Another Mike . . . hopes to do something excitingly different ... by own admission not an introvert . . . likes sophisticated relaxation . . . and looks the part . . . but weeps buckets at tear-jerkers . . . worked in a defense plant, a liberal education in itself . . . being a cowhand in South America would be inter- esting. MAR J OKIE MILLER • Always ready for a good time . . . brought a sparkling spirit to Barnard after a year at Alfred . . . doesn ' t know how she ' d get her work done without that train ride to B ' klyn . . . plans to do social work . . . loves bloody murder movies . . . outstanding knack for clever writing and talking . . . did okay for yearbook lit staff . . . reorganized Co-op. MARGARET MILLIKEN • Times Square is her favorite place in the metropolis . . . but she hates staying in any one place too long . . . has been to Europe, Cali- fornia, Colombia, Venezuela . . . and intends to become a doctor and go back to her home in Balboa. Canal Zone — or anywhere that ' s warm . . . yet prizes her red flannel shirt. ANNA MODIGLIANI • Truly charming . . . lived in Italy until 1939 . . . went skiing in happier days in Swiss Alps . . . wants to get a job where she can use her knowledge of foreign tongues . . . perhaps teaching . . . travel appeals to her ... as does the spirit of comradeship at Barnard . . . stars in Spanish club productions. THELMA MOLESKI • Hopes to use scientific training gained as Chem major to aid war effort ... a native of Pennsylvania . . . attended Trinity Col- lege in Washington . . . appreciates what New York offers: plays, opera, museums . . . ap- proves of sophisticated clothes and sophisticated Gershwin. 49 MARY CHARLOTTE MORGAN • Bacteriology beckons this chem major . . . classical tastes in music, with Beethoven, Mo- zart, and Haydn heading the list . . . would walk a mile for a mystery, whether in play book or movie form . . . but is also willing to accept an occasional historical novel . . . tail- ored suits with long jackets draw an ah! of appreciation. NANCY MORGAN • Government major whose greatest grief is the thought of being a career woman ... a rapturous summer in the Village proved an exciting change from dorm life and home life in Kittauning, Pa. . . . found too that any- where there is always room for one more . . . goes in for casual clothes, sketching. MARGARET NAUMBERG • Known as the girl who wants to run a zoo ... is appropriately majoring in Zoo- logy . . . thinks Barnard girls are wonderful but Barnard vacations too few and far between . . . and Barnard homework rather too much . . . belongs to the unofficial organization of Broadway trolley commuters. JEAN CAMPBELL NEEL • Ambitions are: to be a good painter . . . see every part of the world . . . speak at least ten languages fluently . . . and never to be bored . . . already has experience as model and interpreter . . . after graduation, expects to study painting in South America and Europe . . . calls Huntington, West Virginia, home. ELLIE NICA-SPHAELOS • History major from Adelphi . . . proud of her schoolmates ' response to the Greek War Relief clothing drive . . . weakness for tight long-sleeved wool dresses . . . lives from day to day with the wonderful philosophy that everything turns out for the best . . . wants to travel, there is no better education. 50 MARIA OBREGON • From Barcelona, Spain . . . studied in Switzerland and Marymount College . . . will always remember exciting trip to Spain through France in ' 39 . . . Soc major, plans to spend postwar years in South America . . . approves of friendly American spirit but misses fiery Spanish character . . . likes people gay, Chopin and Bing Crosby. MARTA OBREGON • History major originally from Barcelona . . . but a citizen of Colombia now . . . plans to learn more about her adopted country . . . the feeling of importance and independence rampant at Barnard are swell . . . but Geology field trips and the cafeteria line kind of de- tract from its charms . . . wants to learn more languages than the five she knows already. DOROTHEA OCKERT • Enthusiastic member of volley ball and folk dance committees . . . her interests extend too to the social problems of our time . . . active in settlement house work and young people ' s church clubs . . . Chem major, did a stint as an analytical chemist last summer . . . devotee of classica l music. BONNIE O ' LEARY • Majoring in Speech Correction . . . has had experience in professional acting, soap opera work, and as Stage Door Canteen junior host- ess .. . has followed her father, a colonel in the Marines, to every continent except Africa . . . has written for Mortarboard . . . looks for- ward to work with friends Orson Welles and Margaret Webster. RHODA OXENBERG • Likes term papers believe it or not . . . because you usually learn a lot from them . . . champions USSR, because it ' s going to do things and not just make Utopian plans . . . Government major, transfer from Gouch- er . . . wants understanding treatment of all countries, real equality of living conditions. 51 DOROTHY PASETTI • Gay Barnard booster, is crazy about every- thing in it . . . particularly Coffee Dances and girls, who are all so much fun . . . written papers the only flaw . . . her idea of a good time includes musical comedies and any play with Hayes or Cornell . . . social committee secretary and Rep Assembly delegate . . . will teach history. LOIS PEARLSTEIN • Two most exciting jobs included farm- ing . . . and working as co-partner in the bi- cycle business . . . sophisticated Boston gal . . . aiming for government social work as Soci- ology major . . . has summered at Tufts and Mt. Holyoke where one gets to know more people . . . hangs around CURC. RUTH SHERLOCK PHILPOTTS • Sympathetic, unobtrusive . . . has been sec- retary of Fine Arts club, Games dancer . . . born in Scotland . . . likes the friendly spirit, the freedom, the emphasis on personal respons- ibility she ' s found in Barnard . . . hopes to go into personnel work, either in business or edu- cation . . . after finishing Psych major. HARRIET PINNEY • Glad there are no sororities at Barnard . . . but would like to see the campus a little big- ger . . . really goes in for Math, from club to classroom . . . planned to teach it . . . but has switched to Chem as a major . . . piano and singing are her type of music . . . reading bores her . . . but loves to knit. SIBYLLE POLKE • Always on the verge of a smile . . . charm- ing Eco major ... of Dean ' s List caliber . . . and still one of Tilson ' s best customers . . . music, art, theater are her fortes . . . accelerated, will graduate in June . . . but won ' t commit herself on post-college plans . . . saw practically all of Europe while lights were still on. 52 AUDREY PONEMON • Junior transfer from Chevy Chase . . . Zoo major will be springboard for medical school . . . full of fun . . . and famous for her par- ties . . . favors tailored clothes ... in which she looks sophisticatedly smart . . . demands honesty in people and pays back with sincere friendship . . . dotes on dramatic books. ADELINE POPE • Red - haired anachronism . . . audacious, sagacious, scintillating, and sweet! . . . keeps her friends guessing . . . English comp major with flair for words . . . deadly serious for Journalism but a social whiz . . . incurably truthful, bright-eyed, a skimming skater . . . tantalising tease . . . likes Browning and Winnie the Pooh. MARGARET ANNE POWELL • Sober Government major . . . from Johnson City, Tennessee . . . transferred as a junior from Vanderbilt U. in her home state . . . mania for music . . . and the international flavor of New York . . . opera and ballet special favor- ites . . . people, above all else, interest her . . . candid, honest attitude . . . enjoys variety of contacts here. JEAN CLAIRE PRICE • An individualistic southerner from Rich- mond, Virginia . . . has a blazing ambition to work in India for its liberation and reorgani- zation ... is fascinated by the country . . . wholly against excessive provincialism . . . likes the absence of it at Barnard . . . rebels against any regimentation . . . majors in re- ligion. AURELIA RACITI • Zoo major with tentative ambition for med school . . . enjoyed working last summer in research lab in Maine . . . liked the job and the location . . . and would return after gradu- ation if possible . . . Ray to her friends . . . possesses a ready smile . . . and a calm and speculative nature. 53 JEAN Z. RAMM • Loves fascinating perfume . . . but husband holds his first place on her list of favorites by a wide margin . . . plans to work with him in his field of eye, ear, nose, and throat . . . Camera Club vice president . . . will go on to School of Optometry . . . fascinates gym classes with determined skill and weird eyeglass pro- tector. M. DARE REID • This little southerner hopes to take a five year trip around the world . . . hitch-hiking . . . only slightly troubled by problem of At- lantic . . . majors in American Studies, likes Navy — excluding midshipmen . . . aims to elevate the chocolate soda to its rightful place in the economic system . . . bridge lover, too. DOROTHY REISS • Ambition is to find one . . . gratified by the individualists and independent thinkers abounding at Barnard . . . believes the work you do determines the type of life you live and friends you have . . . sorry that most people don ' t make the right decision that way . . . ad- mires sensitivity and sincerity in art. ANNE ROSS • National prominence including a spread in Life fail to have any effect on her swell char- acter and friendliness . . . travels to diving meets all over the country, winning most. . . A. A. treasurer, junior secretary, and perennial Games star, has found time for loads of other extra-curric . . . and International Studies major. . . new A. A. president. ROSALIE RUDDEN • A specialist in the art of gracious living . . . refuses to let the ugly break her poise . . . sensitive to details of line of color . . . would make an excellent interior decorator . . . amazed everyone by majoring in Geology . . . socially adapted for formals . . . loves to dress for them . . . and invariably attracts orchids. 54 CAROL RLSKIN • Prefers the universal . . . but still likes Til- son ' s cokes . . . adores Russian books but can ' t choose between Tolstoy and Dostoievsky . . . calls her major, History, a reference point for the present . . . editorial assistant, has worked on Bulletin for three years . . . accelerated, plans include Law School. BETTY SACHS • Electric, amusing, always enthusiastic . . . known for contagious laugh . . . and explosive temperament . . . trying for professional option to Law School at the end of the year . . . brightens Bulletin, Mortarboard, with charming belligerency . . . but manages to maintain some sedateness as Menorah president. HELEN SACK • Praises absence of rah-rah, typical college girl spirit at Barnard . . . thinks dreamily of five children, a New York apartment, a home in the country . . . chairman of defunct Junior Show after yeoman Games service . . . works for Mortarboard ' s financial success as circula- tion manager . . . Chem major, horror story fan. ETHEL SALING • That smile ' s authentic . . . and she ' s seldom seen without it (exam time excluded) . . . nine o ' clocks are the bane of her existence . . . has never yet made one on time . . . enjoys sports . . . and excels at chess . . . fanatically Eng- lish . . . famous for fantastic stories that she swears are so true. BARBARA SANDERS • Attractive Soc major who just can ' t make a nine o ' clock class before nine ten . . . major interest has led to volunteer social work . . . paradoxically likes realistic shows and escapist movies, bright colors and black . . . did time victory farming in Connecticut. 55 CAROL SAUMS • And yet one more Chem major . . . like most of the others, worked in Chem lab last sum- mer, doing war work . . . Brooklynite, humor- ously as well as scientifically inclined . . . her friends, she says, call her a calculating woman . . . but won ' t say what she thinks of it . . . Glee Club her favorite activity. ELIZABETH SCHREINER • Enthusiastic about Physical Ed . . . manages junior basketball team after transferring from Wells College ... is enjoying succumbing to New York ' s varied lures . . . wouldn ' t mind seeing every B ' way musical . . . majors in Chem (another one!) . . . and plans to do re- search work after graduation . . . camping in Maine her first love. MIRIAM SCHWARTZ • Came this year from Packer Collegiate In- stitute . . . like countless classmates, would like to end up as an M.D. . . . but unlike anybody else, majors — not in Chem, Zoo or any other science — but in Fine Arts . . . contented with these diversified interests, insists she likes everything. JESSIE EDITH SCOTT • Majors in history . . . and finds diplomatic work appealing . . . Baby likes chocolate chip ice cream, dancing, dates . . . active on Silver Bay executive committee . . . one of its most ardent supporters . . . enjoys scribbling poetry . . . and spending summers close to the Atlantic . . . likes speaking in chapel. HELEN SEIBERT • Psych major, expects a career in personnel work . . . professors, students, Jake, and the Psych department are wonderful . . . has done volunteer work on the Pelham War Coun- cil, in her hometown . . . greatest thrills at Barnard were being presented with a freshman sister and being mistaken for a senior. 56 DAWN SHAW • A dazzling damsel who ' ll never grow old . . . likes water colors, waltzing, and Waller . . . Soc major with a yen for Oriental lore . . . likes research and committee work as enthusi- astically as modern dance, Taoism, and Dane? . . . tangoes, and rhumbas with rhythm . . . sweetheart of Sigma Chi. GENEVIEVE DARCY SHOOK • Transfer from Cornell . . . misses its beau- tiful campus . . . but is happy to find no eight o ' clock classes here . . . admires, too, the in- dividual interest shown each student . . . wants to be just a good wife and mother . . . but may study for interior decorating . . . has great belief in common sense. ADELE SHOPIS • Hometown girl with a vengeance . . . loves Nicholls — even though it has nothing but a fire department, two churches, and a library open two nights a week . . . Barnard, the pleasures afforded by New York — museums, and lovely churches — are okay too . . . but she can ' t help feeling low leaving family each Sunday night. MARJORIE ANN SCHUMAN • Tomboyish, curious . . . undecided whether to become a pathologist or Bio teacher after getting M.A. . . . credits Barnard with the endeavor to make mature individuals . . . has worked in hospital lab, Washington D. C. de- partment store . . . and hitched rides with knife grinders . . . likes friends with fresh- ness in outlook. NATALIE SIEGAL • Musical talent . . . would be a music teacher after ' 45 . . . taking an active interest in war activities, worked for victory in a defense plant last summer ... a vigorous and con- firmed liberal . . . demands sincerity second only to sense of humor in her friends . . . com- edy and tragedy equally okay. 57 HOPE RUTH SIMON • Where there ' s food, there ' s Hope . . . also has appetite for opera, sailing, ballet . . . one of extra-curric ' s driving forces, chairman of China Relief drive, Polit Council secretary and chairman. War Activities chairman . . . also found time for Glee Club . . . Hope ' s to do diplomatic work. MARILYNN SIMON • A transfer from Pine Manor Junior College, she misses Harvard . . . boasts of having traveled 7000 miles in two months (visiting a certain Marine?) ... an Eco major interested in that side of postwar planning ... a gourmet of the first order . . . how she loves Wednes- day afternoon teas . . . and Shakespeare. ELEANORA SIMONE • An America enthusiast . . . can ' t stand people harping on foreign ancestry and for- getting they ' re Americans . . . has praise too for Camp, particularly its fireplace in winter . . . a patient listener and gentle critic . . . thrills to gory plays and comedies, classical music, historical novels . . . will teach English. MIRIAM SKINNER • Perennial Dean ' s Lister and Physics major . . . chairman of Folk Dance committee, mem- ber of Rep Assembly and A.A. Board . . . has seen America from Canada to Virginia but still, after the war, she wants to see America . . . likes Barnard except when the homework buries her . . . music in general intrigues her. ELEANOR STEFFENS • Brooklynite and Dodgerite . . . cheers for Bob Hope, Rusty (her mailchewing English set- ter), War and Peace, any book on aviation, any records by Harry James . . . annoyed by nine o ' clocks, library fines, subway jams . . . but the jungle, camp, and Odd Study help soothe . . . interested in geology, radio propaganda. 58 EVELYN STEPHENSON • A transfer from Simmons College, finds Barnard emphasizes the theoretical . . . firm liberal, expects to combine journalism and government in her career . . . sundry jobs have included work in aircraft factory, on news- papers . . . attended ISS summer institute at Campobello . . . interested too in labor rela- tions. LOIS PATRICIA STEVENS • An accelerated Government and Eco major from Vicksburg, Miss issippi . . . whose heart yearns for work in Foreign Service . . . pre- ceded by study at the University of Mexico . . . and then a short career before marriage . . . speaks French, Spanish, German and is learn- ing Russian in Columbia . . . loves people in general. ALICE LOUISE STUBING • To be a woman and a credit to my sex is her praiseworthy ambition . . . live and let live — well! her firm belief . . . sports clothes, symphonic music, and plain simple everyday people get the nod from her . . . majoring in History . . . Co-op club, CURC at Barnard caught her eye. SHIRLEY SUDOCK • Musician first and last . . . music major, university chorister, and secretary of the Music Club . . . has studied singing under Friedrich Schorr . . . plans to go on to opera and con- cert glory . . . loves Russian novels, dogs, all kinds of people, ' cause they have more fun than anyone. BLANCHE SWEET • Hates to be told she is blessed with an ap- propriate name . . . life ambitions include work in international affairs where her knowledge of French, Spanish, Russian will be needed . . . permanent fixture of Dean ' s List, Co-op club nook, relief drive committees ... all requiring and getting hard work. 59 HELEN ELIZABETH SWIFT • An accelerated transfer from Elmira Col- lege . . . likes Barnard ' s wonderful professors . . . has done defense and newspaper work . . . aims for career in journalism . . . clothes-lover . . . fascinated by many types of New Yorkers . . . likes symphonies and slow impressive music like Stardust and Ave Maria. LILLIAN TASSINI • Interested in merchandizing for lower in- come brackets . . . Lil of the gay smile likes Barnard for its broadening views . . . tries to find a laugh in everything . . . likes slow, smooth songs, all shades of green . . . silver spangles (and lots of ' em) . . . and any kind of whimsy. LJUBICA TCHOK • Wishes above all to return to her country Yugoslavia and practice medicine there . . . loves to travel, especially by ship . . . except wartime flight to America . . . believes life is ' ' as the color of the glass through which you look at it . . . likes people who can talk about more than one subject, realistic French movies. DOROTHY TERRACE • Very earnest about life . . . hopes to be an M.D. . . . majors now in Chem . . . likes people who state their beliefs with conviction . . . whether she agrees with them or not . . . hopes to read more of the classics, to round out diver- sified interests . . . heads I.R.C., won League of Nations essay award in high school. CAROLE TIEDMAN • A Soc major from Matawan, New Jersey . . . married to an Air Corps man . . . transfer from Duke, which isn ' t as delightfully cosmopolitan . . . but has the kind of school spirit she ' d like to see in Barnard . . . wants to be a good mother, wife, and citizen . . . and to have a career in politics and or business. 60 ROBERTA RUST TRILLING • With two poems published in Anthology of College Poetry, hopes to graduate to profes- sional magazines . . . heading for M.D. degree . . . Quarterly editor elect . . . likes the Barnard attitude of responsibility for social progress being concomitant with brain training. EULALIA DOLORES TURNER • Finds Barnard a wonderful place to obtain a pleasant sort of education . . . easy work with theaters and night clubs nearby ... no dull moments in her life . . . just one excite- ment after another . . . after graduation, plans to read and relax, and after the war, to travel around the world . . . has ambition to head Met Opera Guild. FELICE TURTZ • Studying government to make enough sense out of the world to know what to believe . . . has traveled from Canada to Florida and to Missouri . . . plans some day to do some good writing . . . meanwhile will settle for an Emer- son country home, job on a magazine staff, and a helicopter. CAROLYN TYSINGER • South Carolina-born, retains warm Southern friendliness . . . pleasant extroversion . . . likes chicken, perfume, theater . . . ambitions include journalism, particularly work on small, country newspaper . . . wears bright colors, loves to dance . . . pet dislike people who are insincere, hypocritical. JANE VAN HAELEWYN • English comp major who excels in fey, poetic stories . . . will postpone writing plans for concentrated war work . . . jazz enthusiast and unalterably a New Dealer . . . enjoys the variety of contacts afforded by attending a great university . . . sincerity and depth of character her requirements of friends. 61 JANE VAUGHAN • Her ambitions lie in the field of postwar rehabilitation . . . glories in strikingly beauti- ful auburn hair ... a peanut butter fiend . . . would love to wear really high heels all the time . . . violent reformer vs. late labs . . . wishes all classes were history . . . self-honesty is her creed and virtue. CAROL VOUAX • Ambition to go on to med school and become a pediatrician . . . belying her tomboyish ap- pearance . . . chem major, full of youthful gaiety . . . loves sports and slacks and looks well in both . . . had a novel job last summer working for the New York Stock Exchange . . . archery chairman for the A.A. JEAN MILDRED WALDEN • Enthusiastic about Choir and Barnard Camp . . . good movies, trying on hats, and Bach . . . but favorite pastime remains going to the opera . . . Wycliffe club vice president ... an avid reader of historical fiction . . . but likes the non-fictional kind too as a History major . . . loves being with people. JUNE WALS • Tall, dark, and debonair . . . enjoys The New Yorker, Tolstoy- — and calculus ... an old habitue of Bulletin, is now an editorial as- sistant . . . likes athletics in general, but not the compulsion of the gym program . . . would like to go through college getting acquainted with everything in the catalog . . . but concen- trates on math. JANE WALSH • Charmed by Barnard ' s variety of fascinating people . . . Soc major planning to help with the rehabilitation of postwar Europe . . . one of the smart gals who make the Dean ' s List . . . deplores American desire for personal and material success . . . interested in art, psycho- logical novels, riding, dancing. 62 SUZANNE WALSH • Started at Baby Barnard . . . progressed to botany major at Barnard College . . . sun- worshipper, eloquent about sailing at Nantucket . . . admires Chapel Choir, Dali, Prokoviev . . . likes almost everybody . . . especially Canadi- ans and people with original slants on old prob- lems . . . would love to play piano by ear. MARY JANE WALTHER • M J with the drawling voice, much taken with Barnard ' s nonchalant air . . . transfer from Christian College, compares present school to former as a Bengal tiger to a milk-fed baby . . . would like first a job with the diplomatic corps . . . and then some opportunity to do some writing, and make with the clever say- ings. FLORENCE WASELL • Insists that she loves pointless humor . . . more accurately, gets a kick out of any general- ly jolly occasion . . . likes baseball games, singing rousing Australian and South African ballads . . . struggles two nights a week with Polish . . . which she speaks with a Russian accent . . . Gov-history major, aims for di- plomacy. ELEANOR WAX • Known variously as Wacko and Elly . . . spent a year at Alfred . . . finds school work interferes with outside activities . . . can never decide which to do . . . Co-op club, Mor- tarboard and Bulletin worker . . . Sociology major aiming for psychiatric social work . . . likes comedy in her movies and vivacious peo- ple .. . like herself. ELEANOR WEBBER • Worked to overcome obstacles in way of a transfer . . . after spending two very active years at Michigan . . . developed a passion for camp during summer session and now works on the committee . . . traveled twice to Southwest and Mexico, once to work with the Friends ... but a born and bred New Yorker. 63 BEVERLY WEISBERG • Popular Soc major wavering between stage and law career . . . may study latter at Columbia . . . everything about Barnard rates her ap- proval except those long, long reading as- signments . . . known for the confusing com- plications developing from romantic mixups and expression of her radical ideas. ALMA WELLER • Fond of hat fads, Eugene O ' Neill, and phil- osophy, in which she majors . . . from Bingham- ton, New York, by way of University of New Mexico . . . likes meeting girls from different states . . . ambition: professional writing . . . experience: work in Denver employment agency, Binghamton ad office, and an orphan- age. MAUDE RIVES WELLMAN • Likes, among other things, books, the opera, dancing, dogs, dorm life, and the Air Corps . . . has a real freshman sister at Barnard and thinks it great fun . . . including the inevitable confusion ... an Oyster Bay girl, wants to live in the country, own a kennel, and bring up three little boys. JUNE WERNER • Known by her friends as the girl who never goes about without a bottle of hand lotion . . . main ambition is to get married after gradua- tion — she ' s engaged now . . . likes plays, movies, and books in a lighthearted vein . . . and non- aggressive but peppy people. ELIZABETH WHETSEL Transferred from Colorado University after two years . . . learning much that she wants to know at Barnard ... as a Fine Arts major . . . largest and happiest part of her life spent raising her horses in Colorado . . . likes all active sports, modern dance . . . would like most to paint and sculpture horses. 64 JANET WHETSEL • Most of her childhood spent in Mexico . . . plus four years in Europe . . . and two at the University of Colorado . . . hopes to live in Mexico for a few years and paint what she sees and learns there . . . finds Barnard less ac- commodating to the individual, more conven- tional, but also more exciting. PATRICIA WHITING • Secret ambition to join the W. A. A. F. . . . now no longer secret . . . strictly a foe of the sloppy college girl type . . . works hard at being Psych major . . . but why these late labs? . . . enthusiastic about gym classes with Russel Sage grads . . . happy, self-confident nature . . . her heart belongs to the Canadian Navy. MARY WILBY • Charming Cincinnati girl who made good . . . vice-president of the sophomore class, she heads the junior class now . . . Honor Board Head-elect . . . German major, would like to do rehabilitation work with German children . . . enjoys meeting all sorts of people . . . favors most music. ADRIENNE WOLFERT • Looks forward to career in poetry and or peace propaganda . . . English comp major . . . worked in a defense factory night shift one summer . . . University of Connecticut transfer . . . cut junior class meeting one day to get married ... a double cousin to Ira Wolfert . . . enjoys all kinds of people. CRETE WOODS • Transfer from Stephens College, Missouri . . . as a Soc major, plans to work with settle- ments after graduation . . . enjoys movies with Cary Grant, War and Peace, Harry James ' trumpet . . . loves Tabu, rare roast beef, and Fred Waring ' s broadcasts . . . dislikes Frank Sinatra, to be alone, hats. 65 MARGARET WOOLFOLK • One of her ambitions is to fly in Hellcats . . . another more practical one is to be a doc- tor ... a hope undismayed after a summer spent frequenting the morgue and operating room of the hospital where she worked . . . still raves about Skin of Our Teeth . . . loves Hungarian rhapsodies, tailored clothes, popular music. JOAN WRIGHT • Above all else this Chem major is a TEXAN . . . president of Debate Council, Camera Club member . . . and Political Council and late War Board officer . . . will enter medical profession, where, for one thing, she ' ll find countless co- Barnardites . . . favorite sports are fishing and horse back riding and politics. MARJORIE WYSONG • Takes to people who laugh . . . but manages more than a bit of thinking on her own . . . plans a career of painting, in her delicate, de- termined, style . . . best about Barnard is Social Affairs office, for a good chat . . . Port Wash- ington commuter, longtime standby of Episco- pal club. CELINE YOUNG • Disarmingly frank . . . English lit major . . . likes Columbia music library, Barnard ' s per- petual teas and A. A. Milne ' s children ' s stories . . . dislikes classes and men who wear jewelry or bow ties . . . greatest disappointment in life was being born blondish instead of brunet- tish . . . Pelham girl. ELIZABETH ZEIL • Honey-haired, blue-eyed, soft-spoken . . . one tremendous rave is history, all kinds and all periods . . . postwar life will include travel . . . postcollege life, extensive study at Colum- bia, which will culminate in teaching her favor- ite subject . . . musical favorites are Wagner and Beethoven. 66 FAITH ZIMMER • Thoroughly Columbian about her likes . . . chooses Greek Games, smoking room, Columbia men . . . perfectly at home in Shakespeare and Saroyan yet plans to major in social work . . . noted for long sweaters, tailored suits . . . likes Benchley, foreign films, Anatole France, and Ogden Nash. GLORIA ZIRPOLO • An English major who plans to do some radio script writing and live in a suburban dream house ... is thrilled equally by Shakes- peare, Laurence Olivier . . . clothes-mad, she also devours murder mysteries . . . enjoys the diversified atmosphere of Barnard . . . darkly pessimistic over postwar World Democracy plans. GABRIELLE BAPTISTE • Much-traveled psych major . . . primary am- bition marriage and a family . . . also wants to do some real social work . . . help rehabilitate veterans and Re-elect Roosevelt. BARBARA BECKWITH • Quiet unless the conversation turns on one of her favorite topics, such as the theatre . . . danced in the ballet of the San Francisco Opera ... an Eco major, interested in Chapel Choir. PATRICIA BROMLEY • Transfer from the University of Virginia . . . history major, with ambitions for government work . . . worked in office of a defense plant during summer ... an outdoor girl. LIGIA COLL • Spanish major from Puerto Rico and Finch Junior College . . . always manages to find room for one more in her collection of stuffed animals. ELIZABETH PAGE CRAVEN • Wigs and Cues devotee . . . worked in sum- mer stock on Pacific Coast ... a nurse ' s aide . . . transfer from Vassar . . . traveled exten- sively in the Northwest. PATRICIA CAVANAUGH • China-born, has lived in Singapore, Manila, Calcutta, now Brooklyn . . . schooled in Eng- land, Wales . . . former Wellesley student, says Barnard Faculty gains by comparison . . . Soc major, with a dislike of Textbooks. VIRGINIA DWIGHT • Accelerating Government-history major . . . Barnardite via Bennet Junior College . . . con- sidering teaching after her M.A. . . . penchant for play, music of all kinds. BARBARA FOX • Gettysburg transfer . . . post-college ambi- tions include writing, journalism and adver- tising . . . worked in summer stock theaters . . . goes for classical and modern plays, Tschaikov- sky, best sellers. 67 ODETTE GOLDMUNTZ ELEANOR KRUGELIS • Traveled through Europe with guns at my back in 1940 . . . coming from home in Ant- werp . . . schooled in France . . . sticks to her motto of To thine own self be true. • Can identify every summer constellation . . . climbs mountains, reads atlases and travelogues avariciously . . . being alone in the dark makes her laugh. INEZ HORTON • Talented Powers model . . . best described as energetic, friendly, cheerful . . . hopes to enter diplomacy or movies (has MGM contract al- ready) . . . traveled widely as Army brat. MARGARET LA VALLA • History major, will probably go into per- sonnel work . . . ambition, to travel all over the world . . . has worked in a defense plant . . . accepts any kind of music. IRENE JAROSZEWICZ • Plans to be the eternal student . . . and continue studying math and engineering . . . born in Warsaw. . . firm believer in Commun- ism . . . loves academic atmosphere. DEBORAH LEWIS • Came from Chapel Hill, N. C. to major in French here . . . faced first winter in North after transferring . . . wide interest in music in all forms. MADELINE KESSLER • Pride of the Physics department . . . and a whiz at Math too . . . though her five feet minus height makes her look more like a doll than a scientist. SALLY MATHER • French major . . . veteran of twelve years at Spence, two at Vassar . . . and very extensive traveling . . . New York native. 68 HILMA OLLILA • Enthusiastic Spanish major . . . adores her department . . . plans to teach . . . and help the betterment of the world . . . individualist, be- lieves in practicing democracy. HELEN SLATER • Married for over a year, finds keeping house and going to school more than a full time pro- gram . . . detests war movies . . . but likes com- fortable and or sophisticate d clothes. CARLYLE MILLER OTTO • Has a husband in the Coast Artillery . . . and a sister in the Marines . . . will spend post- war years in Europe where her husband will work with AMG . . . English major. RUTH THOMAS Chief ambition is to win chess game from someone on second Hewitt . . . after college hopes for newspaper work . . . History major, likes adventurous people. I.R.C. MARY EDGAR RILEY • One hometown girl who really likes New York . . . Vassar transfer . . . wistfully recalls travels in the Europe of ' 39 . . . asks variety in everything. ISABEL RUSSEL • Blonde, blue-eyed, complexion the envy of the junior class . . . plans for future include marriage to naval lieutenant . . . English major. BEVERLY TURNER • Likes people from Al abama and Texas — especially Texas . . . home is in Houston . . . majors in French but doesn ' t know yet what she ' ll do with it. DOROTHY WHITTIER • Noncommital transfer from Northwestern . . . majors in Eco . . . MEADE SCHACKELFORD • Charming, intelligent transfer from Sweet Briar . . . Eco major, does yeoman service for Bulletin, Press Board . . . and her major de- partment. 69 Spring is the sentimental sea- q son for Seniors. Just about the time that the population of the North lawn begins to in- crease perceptibly, those sad little sighs blos- som forth. The entire class is suddenly aston- ished at how swiftly four years can pass. On the brink of the big cold world they find that everything in Barnard tugs at their heart- strings. Long afternoons of shameless procras- tination at that best of all possible drugstores, Tilson ' s, are a paradise that they are fast losing. Nothing seems more delightful than barely es- caping asphyxiation over a bridge game in the comfort and luxury of the smoking room. And what could possibly be more intriguing than a required assembly? They ' ve been through it all: angel robes, French exits, Greek Games rehearsals, drawing number 149 the day before a quiz, waiting on endless Student Mail lines to be notified that they owe the library a quarter. They ' ve crammed for seven exam periods, and gazed in terror at seven long Registrar ' s lists slicing off points for absenteeism. It ' s taken a year for them to get used to wearing a cap and gown, and studied casualness hasn ' t always disguised their very pardonable pride. It ' s been a long, long trail. They were Fresh- man in the dear, dead days when a date was a boy in a tweed jacket, when a Naval uniform Senior Officers: Janie Clark, Rolande Redon, Charlotte McKenzie, Audrey Brown. in the Den was curiosity, not an admission card. As Sophomores, they began to remember Pearl Harbor. As Juniors, they set a duration precedent by moving their stardust-sprinkled Prom to Hewitt Hall. Their bang-up success Faith, Hope and Hilarity will probably be the last Junior Show for the duration. Now, as Seniors, led by President Charlotte MacKenzie, they can look back on four momentous years. 70 Life is bound, but not by books Or rules; they ' re in a state of coma. It ' s bound to Milbank, Barnard, Brooks, It ' s bound for June and a diploma. For — ' tis written on each Senior ' s brow A wrinkle all too plainly seen; She ' s glad it ' s almost over now, Yet sad to think how short it ' s been. College is of short duration — Witness Senior graduation! The last day of the fourth year of college is a blend of grins, tears and high hopes — as tassels are turned to the left and Seniors become bachelors of art. The weeks before they reach this elysium, however, are spent on post-war planning. Miss Doty ' s office takes over the assorted trained brains and lines up the jobs which are designed to help Uncle Sam, and incidentally to support their trainers. Future Waves contact Profes- sor Lowther and dream of stars, stripes and salutes. The last heated session of cramming and the last anxious peering through the wires in the morgue whiz by. Then comes Senior Ban- quet with evening dresses and Seniors Only in Hewitt. Sophomores bear the trays, provide the laughs and let the Seniors chase them out of the window. Roll call this year will mean a new peak in the answers of Married! and Engaged! No few new AB ' s will tackle the art of cooking for service husbands and having the two and a half children advised by Dr. Alsop. 1944 ' s star has soared high and it is only beginning its rise. When its members leave Bar- nard — whether for factory, fireside, or a place in the brave new world, our very best wishes will go with them. We know they ' ve got what it takes. GREEK GAMES In a year when Greece was facing one of her darkest hours, the glory and beauty that once was hers lived again in Barnard ' s annual presentation of Greek Games. Dedicated to Athena, Goddess of War, the 1943 games had a special significance. Wartime presented a chal- lenge which was not let pass — the unhappy plight of a Greece under Nazi domination made Barnard students all the more determined to make this year ' s games truly representative of Greek culture. The reception given the games showed that Greece has not been forgotten by free peoples and that today she is a living sym- bol of the cause for which they fight. Songs telling of the glory of Athena heralded the approach of the townspeople to the Parthe- non. They had come to pay homage to their patron Goddess in celebration of Panathena, a great religious and national festival held every four years. At the head of the crowd came the peplos bearers, the chosen maids of the city triumphantly carrying the peplos, a festal robe woven by Athenian women and girls. According to an old custom, Athena ' s fight with the giant Enkelados was depicted on the robe. The maid- ens presented the peplos to the priestesses, and the robe was carried into the Temple. There it was draped around the old wooden statue of the Goddess. After the ceremony had been com- pleted, the townspeople sang a hymn of praise to Athena and prepared to hold games in her honor. The challengers stepped forth and suddenly the participants became the classes of 1945 and 1946. For the forty-first successive year — ■ Greek Games were on ! Soft strains of music announced the Fresh- man dance which portrayed a band of hunters who searched for a home where they might live in peace. Led by their chieftain, they finally discovered a suitable resting place. Here they lived the quiet life of tillers of the soil. At the end of a year they celebrated their prosperity and good fortune. In the Temple, they offered prayers of praise and thanks to Athena, their Patron Goddess. Then they went off to find an- other hunting ground. Cries of Nike echoed the exit of the Fresh- men. The audience settled back to watch the Sophomore dancers. They first represented the joy brought into the world when Athena sprang from the head of Zeus. The theme then became reminiscent of the Dullness which once held sway over the earth. Athena vanquished Dull- ness and began her long and happy reign. Next the athletes entered and lined up before the altar, as the head priestess administered their oath. They pledged themselves to uphold the standards of honor and good sportsmanship appropriate to the festival. Contests in discus- throwing, hoop racing, hurdling, a chariot race and a torch race followed the administering of the oath. The competition was keen, but a summation of points at the close of the athletics revealed that the Sophomores had outdistanced the Freshmen in every division. The wild exuberance which greeted this an- nouncement ceased when Athena appeared at the altar to read the winning lyric. With heads bent and tight throats the crowd listened to Athena describe her torment at seeing her peo- ple bowed under an invader ' s yoke and to her prophesy that Since I am Greece, Greece is immortal, too. The always-impressive wreath ceremony fol- lowed this eloquent lyric and after a few mo- ments of silence, during which the deep signifi- cance of the afternoon ' s presentation was felt, the mood changed to one of jubilation and a customary chaotic exit was made by the per- formers. This, then, was Greek Games, 1943. WREATH CEREA40NY ENTRANCE Class of 1945, Jane Brunstetter, chairman DANCE Class of 1945, Florence Butler, chairman COSTUMES: Dance Class of 1945, Helen Sack, chairman Athletes Class of 1946, Gloria Strauss, chairman PROPERTIES Class of 1946, Joanne Kuth, chairman MUSIC Class of 1945, Helen Plocharski, chairman LYRICS Class of 1945, Jane Van Haelewyn, chairman Writer of winning lyric DOROTHY Brennan, 1945 Second place Leora Dana, 1946 Reader of winning lyric Leora Dana, 1946 ATHLETICS Class of 1945, Anne Ross, chairman Discus 1st place Jean McCurdy, 1946 2nd place Eleanor Kahler, 1945 3rd place Edith Ninomiya, 1946 Hurdles 1st place Anne Ross, 1945 2nd place Althea Knickerbocker, 1945 3rd place Sabra Follet, 1945 and Joyce Stewart, 1946 Hoops . . . Class of 1945, Patricia Hayes, Anne Ross, Margaret Woolfolk, Eleanor Kahler, Dorothea Ockert Chariot Class of 1945, Norma Jean Butler, Sabra Follett, Eleanor Steffens, Dorothy Dattner, Jane Brunstetter Torch Race . Class of 1945, Angela Bornn, Althea Knickerbocker, Carol Vovaui, Patricia Hayes, Dorothea Ockert PALLAS ATHENA By Dorothy Brennan, 1945 How long, oh Lord, how long? I hear them cry, tossing in their nightmare-ridden sleep. Their prayers are for a greater God, not me: my hands are bound and I can only weep. Though I might don my armor, take my spear, invaders would not wince before my flame. The Aegean is a stagnant pool of fear; the clean sweet air of Greece is not the same, But heavy with the black smoke of defeat. Athens pines beneath her sacred hill; Her streets, once gay with children ' s reckless feet, are either loud in pain or very still. Oh, cursed be Zeus, from whose grey head 1 sprung! Would that I had died within his, brain ! Tis only hell to be forever young, and know no Greek will turn to me again; To know that they no longer lift those prayers that fashioned robes for my divinity — Now I gaze down Olympia ' s golden stairs, tor- mented by my immortality. I, once so proud, that I could flaunt my power before the massive gates of noble Troy. And play with history in its primal hour, as if it were an inexpensive toy. I was their goddess; for me their poets sung; for me their marble temples were enshrined. Those harps once played for me are now un- strung, the laurel wreaths, the garlands all untwined. I can not help my people in their strife. What weapon do I have that I could lend? For them I can not even give my life — a god- dess ' life can never have an end. There is no rest for me; there is no peace, wail- ing I wander through the Grecian night. Where hate was freed and horror slipped its leash, and the dark olive trees cast shapes of fright. I am a Greek, although a goddess too; I am a woman, I know how to weep, And how to wait till Greece shall live anew. Justice will not always be asleep; But someday soon a mighty voice shall rise pro- claiming freedom — Greeks shall sing again; Newborn cities will tower to the skies. Listen to this, you iron-fisted men: The crystal springs of Greece will not run dry; her mountains will not kneel to honor you, For I am Greece, and this I prophesy: since I am Greece, Greece is immortal too. We say Hello to the Good-Humor man We study on the lawn . You know what this is. In the spring a Barnard ' s girl ' s fancy turns to thoughts of: the boids and the trees and the flars . . . the Good Humor Man doing a landslide business on the corner of Broadway and 116th street . . . sun-bathing on the roof of Barnard Hall . . . the poster on Jake advertising Spring Dance . . . term pa- pers . . . week-ends at Camp without her woolies . . . final lab reports . . . the Colum- bia Band Concert on the lawn in front of Brooks Hall . . . Spring vacation . . . wearing a white dress for Step-Singing . . . her man . . . Spring Fever . . . Greek Games . . . elections for next year ' s powers-that-be . . . rumors and rumblings of exams . . . plans for Senior Week and Senior Banquet . . . the end of the war . . . 78 If you ' re a senior spring has another mean- ing — it ' s your farewell to Barnard. Nostalgia hits you and the whole place looks different — and it isn ' t just the spring lighting effects. All of a sudden you ' ve four term papers hanging over your head — each due within five minutes of the others. As you slave, you feel funny, because you know these are the last ones. Then it ' s time for finals and — if you ' re an Anthro or English major — comprehensives. Yours are the first final marks to be posted; before your name is the little comment Candi- date for Graduation . You begin to feel like an antique. The scholastic hurdles over, you sail into Senior week. There ' s step-singing when all the classes move up one notch and you move out into the non-collegiate world. There ' s Senior Banquet with the class roll call — and you notice that lots of girls are answering married and engaged . The sophomore waitresses put on Spring Serenade by the Columbia Band. their show dedicated to YOUR college career and then dive out the window. You present the class gift. You go to Bacca- laureate and become impressed with your mis- sion in the outside world. And finally — your big moment — Commence- ment! You spend the week before praising Allah that you passed all your courses and praying that it won ' t rain. When the day finally comes — you never thought it would — you slide into your cap and gown, have tea and cookies on the steps of Barnard Hall with your parents and then hie forth to Columbia. So there you are, Spring ' s over, you ' ve turned the tassel on your cap the other way. You ' re no longer a senior, you ' re a Barnard alumna — class of 1944. And live Seniors say good-bye. 79 Ill e ' ve always been proud of our flag and looked to it as a symbol of our heritage. Since December 7, 1941, we ' ve been particularly conscious of how much our lives are intertwined with what it stands for. During the past year, the war has come home to Barnard. It ' s meant faculty in the armed services, new organizations tied in with the ivar effort, old ways of doing things changed to fit the needs of a college at war. Today the American flag is truly part of Barnard. Hi e ' ve got husbands and boy-friends in the Army, the Navy, and the Marines. We address our letters to camps and bases in the States, to A. P.O. numbers in New York and San Francisco. We get Air Mail and V-Mail from ships on the high seas, islands in the Pacific, the front lines in Italy, somewhere in England. — twa — tLtce — crnt We ' re the victims of a manpower shortage. Our dates are fewer than in pre-Pearl Har- bor days and when they come have a military flavor. We read newspapers with a more avid inter- est now, since we all have a personal stake in the battles in the Pacific and on the Italian front. We haunt our mail-boxes for V-Mail let- ters instead of invitations to college week-ends. We ' ve grown accustomed to a new engage- ment ring every week, to No, I didn ' t take that test, I was married the day before, to My husband ' s overseas and I ' m finishing college. We still find it hard to believe that Colum- bia ' s a Navy school now, even though we ' ve been listening to midshipmen singing on their way home from Church Sunday nights for al- most two years. And we aren ' t quite used to meeting V-12 ' s instead of last year ' s tweed- jacket pals at the Bronze Ball. The Navy ' s taken over our coffee dances and A ring on her finger. formals. A civilian is an oddity, a soldier feels lost in the Navy yard. All the influence of a Navy Columbia on wartime Barnard. Like everything else at Barnard, our social life has been different in this year of change. Around these parts you can tell there ' s a war going on because every other girl you meet is chairman of a committee to aid the war effort. This impressive task of coordi- nating this complicated organization has fallen to Diane Howell, chairman of the Undergrad- uate National Service Committee. There ' s a fac- ulty counterpart to the undergraduate commit- tee, under the chairmanship of Professor Pear- don. The whole scheme is combined into the Barnard College National Service Organization. One branch of the college ' s brain-training program, alarmingly titled Emergency Skills Courses, is designed to put your particular tal- ents to work. Want to learn how to make a neat cravat bandage or apply a tourniquet? That ' s what Red Cross First Aid courses are for. Home Nursing instructs you in the fundamentals of invalid care. If you ' re the sort that likes to tinker, Motor Mechanics offers an opportunity to graduate from clock surgery to operations on an automobile engine. You don ' t have to be in the Signal Corps to learn Morse Code; it ' s taught right here at school. Among the more serious tasks performed by N ational Service are those under the jurisdic- tion of the sub-committee of Volunteer Service. This committee handles book orders from Ger- man prison camps for War Prisioners ' aid, fur- nishes liaison between organizations — the Red Cross, the CDVO and the ARP— in need of workers and Barnard girls willing to donate their time, and maintains a workshop in the National Service Office, 401 Barnard. This room leads a double life; every week- day between twelve-thirty and one it is the headquarters of a college-wide fingerprint cam- paign. National Service has been an invaluable tool in coordinating Barnard ' s contribution to the war effort. Florence McClurg, in charge of Student Aide Corps; National Service Heads Diane Howell, Sybil Herzog, Florence McClurge, Julia Fremon; Dorothy Carroll collecting Bundles for America. 1 Utvc =dchvdie£ (committee The War Activities Committee, most important sub-committee of National Service, keeps club activities in tune with the war effort. Check off to the WAC ' s credit such things as the Greek War Relief Clothing Drive, the War Prisoners ' Aid Book Drive, the Salvage Paper Drive, and Forums for Freedom. High point of the committee ' s year ' s activities was the overwhelmingly successful Barnard drive for the National War Fund, climaxed by the assembly at which Commander McAffee of the Waves, Colonel Hobby of the WAC ' s, Colo- nel Streeter of the Marines, and a representa- tive from the Spars, spoke. WACS, WAVES, MARINES, and SPARS at National War Fund Drive Assembly. WAR STAK p War Bonds from little War Stamps grow. Barnard ' s own W AC Ethel Weiss, Marjorie Welter, Hope Simon, Diane Howell. For the first time in its history, Barnard held graduating exercises in Febru- ary this year. In February, 1943 seven accelerating students unofficially kissed their alma mater good-bye. In February, 1944 some forty-four Barnard seniors — almost all of whom had made college in three-and-a-half years and a summer — were given a real graduation, complete with all the traditional ceremonies. Some of this year ' s mid-winter graduates left Barnard for professional school, others for the armed services, the rest for civilian war jobs. But all took with them a common thought — the memory of Barnard in peace and war. Time was when summer meant a chance to loaf for three months. The only work we did was going down to the beach and getting sunburned. It was a nice, soft life — sometimes dull, but always relaxing. dergrads from colleges all over the country — went to Barnard for fourteen weeks, or to Co- lumbia for six. We went out of town and saw how other schools work. Wherever we were, we studied on the lawns, read Shakespeare and Ogg and got sunburns, all at one and the same time. We went out in the country to help the farmer bring in his crops. We lived at work camps or with individual farmers. We mowed hay and picked apples, we milked cows and fed the chickens. We forgot all about school and went rural for anything from two weeks to two months. We had all kinds of jobs. We ran telephone exchanges, we modeled dresses. We worked in advertising agencies and defense plants. We an- swered phones at the Blood Bank, waited on tables and danced with the Army at canteens. We were so busy — working and playing — that we almost forgot it was summer, the time when we used to take it easy. Victory gardening on a big scale. It all seems like a dream now, like some- thing we imagined but never knew. In 1943 summer had an entirely different meaning. We went to school to pick up extra credits. We stayed in New York and — together with un- Accelerating. 89 OIL t... And we miss ' em — men in tweed jackets and convertibles . . . nylon stockings . . . maids in the dorms to make our beds and leave us feeling like ladies of leisure . . . Junior Show . . . thick, juicy steaks ... 28 different flavors of ice cream . . . and chewing gum . . . Columbia fraternity dances and late bites in the Lion ' s Den . . . Senior Ball . . . some of our Favorite Faculty . . . AND WE ' RE GLAD TO SEE THEM GO . . . the Ivory Tower ap- proach to things scholastic . . . or . . . the old attitude I ' m in college to kill time till I ' m married . . . summers when we did noth- ing . . . professional Joe Colleges. Georcianna Remer Basil Rauch Richard Pardee Youtz James H. Oliver George B. Young Elizabeth Reynard Henry A. Boorse Harold C. Bold David Robertson Benjamin Brown 9] V -ducation at Barnard is inseparable from the national war effort. Our classes, our extracurricular activities, our athletics, our fun — they ' re bound up with winning the war. The days when college was an ivory tower are gone and unlamented. Today, education means learning to build a better ivorld. The Barnard and the American flags have been firmly welded together. n tf His has been on eventful year. It has seen the final transforma- tion of Barnard from a college of peacetime pursuits to a college training its students to take part in a wartime world, to build for a sound post-ivar future. Many familiar scenes and activities have taken on neiv significance. a We ' re training our brains, getting ready to take an important part in the American war and post-war effort. We ' re squelching our squeamish feelings and dissecting frogs with a passion. We ' re peering into microscopes, identifying microbes at a ter- rific clip. We ' re attending more math classes than we ever thought existed. We ' re unravelling the mysteries of x divided by y, feeling our way around curves and through a maze of equations. We ' re in the chem labs, taking the world apart and putting it back together, atom by atom. We ' re up to our ears in plans for reconstruct- ing the world. We ' re studying past ages to see to it that history doesn ' t repeat itself. We ' ve dipped into economics, to make laissez faire something besides a phrase in a newspaper. Forums are the battleground for our political ideas and post-war discussions. We ' re learning foreign languages — for use in a post-war, truly international world. We ' re hanging on to literature and the Arts. We ' re reading Chaucer and George Bernard Shaw, admiring the works of Giotto and Orozco. We ' re not building guns and airplanes, but we ' re doing a job that ' s equally important. We ' re getting ready to build a bigger and bet- ter world. 96 Pointing to the government ' s call for healthy civilians to help speed the end of the war and the old peacetime platitude that a happy person is a healthy one as its twin ob- jectives, Barnard ' s physical fitness program is well inspired. The Medical Office is on hand to see to it that no Barnard undergrad falls below par. The Athletic Association ' s in there pitching by spon- soring sports tournaments, and setting up fruit bars on Jake to help us garner our vitamins. Finally there is the Gym department ' s pro- gram extending from tennis, archery, golf, swimming, basketball, badminton, bowling, through physical fitness classes and so on ad infinitum. Each semester is divided into two periods, the indoor season and the outdoor season, both with their own special sports. Would-be WACS, WAVES, SPARS, and MA- RINES and future civilian war workers all rec- ognize that a well-rounded college education means emphasis on physical fitness as well as on brain-training. As good as new. matter where you intend to send the little white ball, or whether you use golf stick or tennis racket to do so, it ' s all fun — and good for you, too. Graceful and clumsy, muscle-bound and anemic, they ' re all members of the Athletic Association. A.A. has a long and varied list of activities — including the Health Committee ' s fruit and milk bars, barbecues at Barnard Camp and Harvest Hop, the dance of the fall semester. Comes autumn, A.A. sponsors tennis and ar- chery tournaments, and week-end trips up to Camp. When cold weather drives sports fans in- doors, interclass rivalry comes to the fore in mid-winter basketball and swimming meets — all under the gentle prodding of A.A. Towards the end of mid-years when all Bar- nard wonders Why live? it ' s A.A. to the rescue with Open House at Camp, skiing and skating galore, and a modicum of mental face- lifting. When the slush finally melts away, sun- happy Barnardites are treated to Spring Carni- val in the pool, tournaments in archery and tennis, to mention a few, week-ends at Camp without their red flannel underwear, and other A.A. special items. Credit the success of all these undertakings A.A. Officers Doris Charlton, Gloria MonaJian Mary Brown, and Gloria Callen. to the efficient functioning of the Athletic Asso- ciation and its subsidiary committees, all under the able direction of president Gloria Monahan. vice-president Doris Charlton, secretary Gloria Callen, and head money man, Mary Brown. a College isn ' t all lectures and extra-cur- ric, in spite of what some people would have you believe. There ' s time and a half for over- time and that covers a multitude of sins. Overtime means endless hours in the library catching up on history and government assign- ments. It ' s standing on the line at 4:10 with number 54, a test the next day, and a prayer that no one else wants THE book. It ' s going into the smoker for a cigarette be- tween chapters, a bridge game between classes. The hands tear madly around the clock, while you sit, inhaling a smoky haze and comparing notes on life in general. Overtime covers Bull Sessions at two in the morning when you start out sleepily settling the state of the world and inevitably wind up on men and sex. Then there ' s cokes at Tilson ' s, cream-cheese sandwiches at Chockful-of-Nuts, long confabs around the statue near Jake. Overtime is all the time you try to recall when you think What was I doing when — , it ' s the Bull Sessions in the dorms and the smoker you ' ll remember long after you ' ve for- gotten the Peace of Westphalia. It ' s what you ' ll be thinking of, when you talk about My Col- lege Days . rime out for talking and tea. ' ' One lump and lemon, please. JU l Uill 1 lL tL Hi- They tell us there ' s a shortage of food, but at Barnard there ' s no shortage of places to get it. We grab carrots and apples at the Health Committee ' s Vitamin Bar. We drink cocoa by a small bonfire out on the lawn. We buy cake and contribute to the National War Fund at the same time. At noon we repair to the cafeteria, seize a tray and sail right in. At the beginning of the year, trays and money were juggled together — in case of an air-raid, but now we ' re back on the pay-as-you-go plan. Four o ' clock means teatime at Barnard. Wednesday ' s we head for the College parlor. On other days the tearoom is our second home. Food will win the war, all right. Ask any Barnard girl — she knows! Soup line. torn representatives of the British and Australian services, and Columbia ' s Navy — all blind dates procured by Pat Cady ' s Prom Commit- Traditionally the most romantic tee.) From ten to three on February 26th, eve- dance of a girl ' s college life, 1945 ' s Junior ning-gowned Juniors took over the lower re- Prom went over with a bang, in spite of war gions of Hewitt Hall. In line with the dance ' s and the shortage of date-power. (Said shortage, Black Magic theme, Hewitt dining-room went incidentally, was relieved by air corps men, oriental with fat houris guarding the entrances. 103 1 BY BEING STUDENT LEADERS We ' re the future leaders of the coun- try. We take our responsibilities seriously, and have organized an Undergraduate Association wherein we see all the complexities and in- trigues of a political regime. Undergrad takes the form of a miniature democracy in which every student has a voice, if not by individual vote, at least by the choice of members of Representative Assembly. Here, in Barnard ' s version of the American Congress, are delegates from every organization and class in the college. Heated discussions and a thor- ough thrashing out of governmental problems — everything from the Budget to Constitutional amendments — are characteristic of Rep Assem- bly ' s two meetings a month. Barnard ' s democracy is of a progressive na- ture, as shown by the Assembly ' s adoption of the devices of initiative and referendum. The executive branch of Barnard ' s under- graduate government is Student Council. Serv- ing as a link between the student body and the faculty, it consists of the five undergrad- uate officers, presidents of the four classes, stu- dent head of the Residence Halls, leader of 3f Rep Assembly Legislates. the Athletic Association and the editor of Bulletin. The Council charters all undergrad- uate organizations and its jurisdiction extends over all affairs sponsored by these groups, whether on or off campus. Student Council: Connor, Carey, Hine, Streichler, McKenzie, Wilby, Stewart, Hauser, Monahan, Jorgenson. Undergrad officers: Blickfelt, McGannoii. Carey, Sirch, Connor. Joan Carey is the president of Undergraduate Association, the organization through which every girl can participate in the government of the college . Barnard ' s judiciary system is unique in that each student is her own judge and is not under the control of an intracollegiate police force. Signers of the Honor Code agree to refrain from any academic dishonesty and pledge them- selves to guard the code against infringement by other students. Violators of the code must face the judg- ment of an Honor Board, composed of a chair- man and two members from each class. After a decision is reached, the case is referred to the faculty which alone exercises the power of penalty. Honor Board ' s chief function is not to punish offenders, but to discover the conditions which prompted the offense and to remedy them. The extra-curricular version of the Honor Code — a set of rulings established by the Un- dergraduate Association — is administered by the Board of Senior Proctors. Five members of this group of forty outstanding seniors consti- tute the Court of Senior Proctors to which all violations of extra-curricular rulings are re- ferred. Six other proctors make up the Board of Elections. Through Honor Board and the Board of Senior Proctors laws made by a student assem- bly are enforced by student judges. No smoking HERET Residence Halls Council: Jorgenson, Cady, Mulchrone, Farrell, Houston, Albert, Hill, Wellman. BY LIVING IN THE DORMS . . . Barnard ' s a school for commuters and resi- dent students, one of the few in the U. S. But this doesn ' t stop the dorms from being one of the most collegiate places in the school. About r From the sublime to the ridiculous. 106 three hundred and fifty girls call Brooks and Hewitt Halls their winter h ome. The huge, land- scaped campus may be among the missing, and doubles rooms to be had on a priority basis, but the collegiate spirit ' s always present. Governing body of the Residence Halls is the Dorm Council headed by Doris Jorgenson. The ten-girl board is in charge of dorm dances and teas, air-raid drills, latenesses and radios. It sees to it that the floor in Brooks Parlor is waxed for the monthly coffee dances, that lights go out pronto when the air-raid sirens wail. Life in the dorms means washing your clothes at two in the morning, playing hostess to the British and American Navies in the beau par- lors, one-thirty permis- sions and no signing out dl k after 10:80. lunch tickets and midnight meals. It kjBJH means living alone in the Big City, but with lots of company and college life in the palm of your hand. t J erewith Brooks Hall — second home to girls from Long Island and Atlanta, Westchester and the Middle West during the months when Barnard classes are going full blast. Living in Brooks — and its corollary, Hewitt Hall — means bull ses- sions and Christmas tea, faculty receptions and the Deans dinner, house meetings and Sunday afternoon coffee dances, Columbia across the street and New York all around. itii The Eligibility System was created to insure an even balance between students ' aca- demic and extra-curricular programs. A com- mittee of nine, chairmanned by Norma Blick- felt, enforces the system. Normal eligibility — consisting of twelve points — carries with it the prerequisites of an academic average of 2.20, a satisfactory gym record and Dr. Alsop ' s approval. Girls with a lower academic rating are allowed extra-cur- ricular activities according to their standing. Eligibility is not an extra-curricular police force. Every student herself is responsible for the number of points she carries. BY JOINING CLUBS . . . Political Association, pivotal point of Barnard ' s political activities, this year has con- centrated on a consideration of American for- eign policy. Across the street, from Columbia, came Professors Commager and Barzun to lead forums on Anglo-American affairs and United States foreign relations in general. In the collegiate vein, Political Council, governing body of the association led by Diane Howell, has held Town Meetings, designed to aid in ironing out Barnard ' s governmental problems. 108 The French Club, headed by Nan- ette Newell, brings its members into close contact with French culture through the medium of plays, lectures, and teas. The club room in the Riverside building is the center for activities. The German Club creates a German social atmosphere for its members. Often, though, the entire college is invited to special events, such as the traditional German Christ- mas Tree Party. Sabra Follet is club presi- dent. Lectures, musicales, and dramatic performances bring the members of the Span- ish Club into close contact with Spanish life and Spanish conversation. Mary Cayot leads the organization. 109 t Choir at St. Paul ' s C Impel. CL it The vocal talents of Barnard and Co- lumbia combine in the Chapel Choir, which sings every noon and at the justly-famed Can- dlelight Service. The Navy, this year, added its lusty voice when the Barnard Glee Club, headed by Frances Philpotts, held its two annual concerts. The Music Club, under th e direction of Maestro Doris Davidson, sponsors programs which cater to musically-minded Barnardites. Glee Club rehearsal. Music Club Conference. 110 Alatlt CU Math is no longer a parlor game but a pay check. The Math Club, recognizing this change, is devoting less time to theory and more to practice, says head math mind, Azelle Brown. There ' s still time to look at the artistic side of life, maintain members of the Fine Arts Club. Led by Mary Pennsyl, they sponsor exhibits which include work by our own em- bryo artists. Aimed at keeping alive an interest in our heritage from past ages is the Classical Club, appropriately enough the oldest one at Barnard. Doris Wrigley is the lady in charge. The Science Club is on a wartime basis — its members as Science majors are directly concerned with the war effort. President Thelma Golub supervises club discussions and field trips. I CURC, the voice of the roaring lion, broadcasts nightly to Barnard and the Navy, features drama and variety shows, Jive with Clive, the Symphonic Hour, lists many Barnardites on its staff, two of them, Brunstetter and Kessler, on the Board of Directors. We don ' t only have bull sessions, we have organized debates, too. A fairly new group, Debate Council, was born in the spring of 1941 and today is an organization of which the col- lege is justly proud. Dorothy Le Count, chief debater, directs members in the planning of intra- mural and intercollegiate contests. c ' The International Relations Club, under the direction of Dor- othy Terrace, encourages the airing of individual opinions on subjects of current polical interest. Barnard delegates to the annual I.R.C. conference are chosen from club members. Chief interest this year has been post-war planning. and ( yii WlGS and Cues, the Barnard student version of Drama and the Theatre, outdid itself this year by turning out the American premiere of Christopher Marlowe ' s Edward 11 . The manpower shortage resulted in an all-girl cast, but aided by Jose Reu- ban, Broadway director, the girls came up with a professional piece of work. Here we see the embryo stage of the production. I c 7 etvue Barnard ' s urban location gives its stu- dents a chance to see the social problems of a large city at first hand. And through the workings of the Community Service Bureau, we can aid in their solution. This year about forty student volunteers de- voted two or more hours a week to working with Negro children at the Morningside Com- munity Center. In nurseries throughout the city Barnard girls aided over-burdened child care directors. The shortage of personnel at St. Luke ' s and Presbyterian hospitals was lessened by the activities of Bureau representatives who worked as clinic aids, x-ray helpers, messengers and library guides. Potential social workers gained practical ex- perience in helping juvenile delinquents. These girls are members of the Big Sister Group, which functions through Catholic, Protestant and Jewish agencies. In helping refugees to adjust themselves to American ways, the Bureau sponsors folk dance parties, language classes, and vocational guid- ance. Besides dealing with these immediate social problems, the Community Service Bureau acts to help prevent future ones from arising. Working with active civic groups, students do practical research in housing, legislation, civil liberties and economics. In this way, the Community Service Bureau makes New York Barnard ' s sociological labora- tory. Community Service Bureau: Alys Halpert, Ruth Bradshaw, Florence Levine, Lily Levitsky. Registering at Morningside Com- munity Center. 114 A last year s text for your this year ' s course. BOOK GO-OP Famed for its reduced rates on text- books and novels, the Co-op Club is a blessing to girls with budgets and microscopic allow- ances. Students with a last-year ' s Spanish dic- tionary or a guide through the wilds of Calculus cluttering up their library shelves find in the Co-op a ready and remunerative market. As much as two-thirds of their original purchase price is offered for cast-off volumes. Co-op ' s activities as a student bookstore form but a small part of its overall program. Behind all its doings is the purpose of fostering the co- operative principle. An educational program of movies, lectu res and discussions is directed toward the realization of this aim. The club has set up headquarters in Milbank basement. Miriam Gore, Gloria Glaston, and Blanche Sweet are president, treasurer and busi- ness manager respectively. Her Barnard activities don ' t cease once an undergraduate achieves her B.A. Through the Alumnae Association she continues her con- tact with the college and her classmates. 1 L5 The raison d ' etre of Interfaith Council is first to stimulate students ' interest in their own religion, and then to provide a common meeting ground for mutual understanding and for Hiscussion of the broader subjects of relig- ious importance. Under the guidance of Ethel Weiss, the Coun- cil began the year by holding an introductory chapel service to explain the aim of the chapel in providing suitable expression for the relig- ious life at Barnard. At an assembly patterned after the daily chapel services, Dr. Felix Morley, president of Haverford College, spoke on the Spiritual Ingredient in a College Education . A discussion of the speech was held at a later date, under the supervision of Chaplain Stephen F. Bayne and the religious counselors. Interfaith ' s program also includes Thursday luncheons at Earl Hall, a series of Sunday af- ternoon broadcasts, and several tea dances given in cooperation with the Earl Hall Society of Columbia. In order to accomplish its aim of creating mutual understanding among the religious groups represented at Barnard, Interfaith Coun- cil has as its members the presidents of the five religious clubs. These students work with the President and the Secretary-treasurer of the Council to coordinate the activities of these clubs. It has not only been successful in pro- viding stimulating speakers, but has found that by familiarizing Barnard students with Chapel services, the attendance at Barnard Day exer- cises has been continually increasing. Interfaith Council: Johnson, Sachs, Beron, Weiss, Taylor, Wysong, Wyatt. WYCLIFFE CLUB Under the guidance of Betty Taylor, the Wy- cliffe Club has stressed service, worship and friendship through lecture-discussions, Thurs- day chapel and luncheons. The important war project for the year has been settlement work at the Morningside Settlement House. MENORAH The Menorah Society, under the presidency of Betty Sachs, holds weekly meetings with a similar group at Columbia to discuss current Jewish problems. Its social activities during the year include several dances and teas at Earl Hall. EPISCOPAL CLUB The Episcopal Club sponsors lectures, social activities and discussions to foster in Episcopa- lian students an awareness of their religion. Fireside chats are held frequently. These dis- cussions — Marge Wysong presiding — are the bases for the Club ' s interfaith activities. LUTHERAN CLUB On the last school day of the year the Lutheran Club holds its annual Hymn Sing, which is the climax of the club ' s program. The club, under the leadership of Margaret Beron, has made Chapel attendance and luncheon afterward a Thursday afternoon custom. NEWMAN CLUB The program of the Newman Club has two primary aims: first, to become acquainted with the organizations and prominent people of ths Catholic Church, second, to study the Catholic religion in relation to interfaith activities. Monica Wyatt is president. 117 Bulletin Big-wig — Eleanor Streichler. Business as usual. r iilletitt Barnard ' s official newspaper, Bulletin, first saw the light of day in 1901. Since then, in its semi-weekly appearances on Mondays and Thursdays, it has been printing college and inter- college news and world affairs as they affect the campus. In the paper ' s traditionally hectic headquarters on the fourth floor of Barnard Hall, Editor-in-Chief Eleanor Streichler wields her blue pencil and oversees the efforts of her staff every Wednesday and Friday afternoons. Staff members are chosen on a competitive basis each term. They start out on the Associate News Board and work their way up through News Board to one of the main editorial posi- tions by their senior year. Business matters, circulation and advertising — are handled by Martha Messier, Business Manager, and her staff. Headlines, deadlines, and somehoiv — Bulletin. teti Quarterly lays claim to the impres- sive sub-title Official Undergraduate Maga- zine , which, as we see it, is understating the issue. For Quarterly, in reality, is the Barnard testing ground for embryo poets, short story writers and essayists. This is a varied literary digest, listing in its contents anything from psychological thrillers to reports on the summer session of the Insti- tute of World Affairs. Nor is Quarterly designed for a limited clique. Its contributors come from all over the college, the only qualification being an ability to string words together well. The 1944 staff has been headed by Gloria Kingsley, Editor-in-Chief, and Joan Marder. Business Manager. Blue Book is the password to extra- curricular life at Barnard. Undergraduate Asso- ciation, Honor Board, National Service and A. A. are presented in all their constitutional glory. The Eligibility System is finally ex- plained. Clubs and coffee dances are surveyed, and words to all the college songs come in handy when Step-singing rolls around. Hosan- nahs go to Jean Vandervoort and Idris Rossell for this year ' s edition. Local girl makes good is the theme song of Press Board, student center of college news distribution. Chairmanned by Dorothy Le Count, Board members send out news releases of undergrad activities to local papers through- out this and other countries. Result — active Barnardites see notice of their extra-curricular and scholastic achievements in school and hometown papers. }L 1945 Managerial Staff DOROTHY DATTNER Editor-in-chief JANE BRUNSTETTER Business Manager Miriam Burstein Associate Editor Betty Booth Associate Editor Edith Goldsmith Photography Editor Helen Sack Circulation Manager Renee Friedman Advertising Manager Assistant Editors MARY BENEDICT Art MIMI LEFF BERGMAN Copy FELICE TURTZ Classes PHYLLIS BRAND Clubs DOROTHY BRENNAN Faculty ALTHEA KNICKERBOCKER Athletics ALDINE ENGELHARDT Activities Assistant Board LITERARY — Annette Auld, Peggy Bunce, Helene DeSanctis, Mary Ditmus, Helene Dreifuss, Mae Edwards, Barbara Glixman, Edith Goldsmith, Florence Grant, Irene Griffin, Joyce Hardin, Ruth Hein, Doris Hoffer, Alice Jacobson, Avra Kessler, Bernice Lindenberg, Joan Leff, Barbara Meyer, Marjorie Miller, Virginia Moore, Joanna O ' Brien, Bonnie O ' Leary, Rosalie Rudden, Leila Ross, Carol Ruskin, Betty Sachs, Eleanora Simone, Dorothy Terrace, Ruth Thomas, Carole Tiedman, Sandra Visconti, June Wals, Eleanor Wax, Betty Warburton, Joan Zeiger. STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER— Marcia Holstein. PHOTOGRAPHY— Antoinette Gouglides, Jean Ramm. CIRCULATION— Ruth Farrell, Elizabeth Green, Katherine Harris, Rosanne Menke, Suzanne Walsh, Margaret Woolfolk. ADVERTISING— Marie Coletta, Jean Dukcff, Helene Frank, Ruth Hurwit, Har- riet Kahn, Anita Klein, Jean Kolburne, Jackie Masciocchi, Thelma Moleska, Sibylle Polke, Carole Tiedman. 7 y hese are girls who made the book, who started way back back in June, 1943, to tell the story of Barnard in a year of change. These are the girls who tore their hair when pictures and captions wouldn ' t fit. when the budget wouldn ' t balance, when everything seemed to be wrong. This is the staff of the 1945 Mortarboard. Mortarboard in the making IN A YEAR OF CHANGE A college that saw the way things were going all over the world and then resolved that this was a time when college must emphasize first the realities — and then the role of the Arts in life. This was a year when we concluded a series of changes, begun when we first realized that peacetime college life must be shelved for the duration, if not forever. This was a year in which we have had to say good-bye to a lot of Barnard traditions that did not fit in with a wartime college. We ' ve set up new organizations that are concerned wholly with Barnard ' s contribution to the war effort. We ' ve re-defined old groups and ac- tivities so that they carry on their original functions, but with a new emphasis. Barnard girls are different, too. There are more of us for one thing — the largest freshman class in the history of the college regis- tered this September — and there are more students with husbands included in their extra-curriculum program. We have become more conscious of the responsibilities of being a college student, with the awareness of the privilege it is to be here at this time. This has been a year of adjustment to world-wide changes. In recognition of the cooperation that helped produce the 1945 Mortarboard Dean Virginia C. Gildersleeve Dr. Virginia D. Harrington Miss Helen Erskine Miss Margaret L. Giddings Miss Elizabeth S. Griffin Miss Martha Maack Mr. John Swan Mrs. Leslie Johns Miss Jean Vandervoort Mr. Peter S. Gurwit of Jahn Oilier Engraving Company Mr. Willard Schilling of Mail and Express Printing Company Mr. Arthur L. Grey of Chidnoff Studio Mr. Manning Solon Candid Photographer 124 7- Lucius H. Beers, Chairman 25 Broadway Mrs. Ocden Reid, Vice-Chairman 15 East 84th Street F. Bayard Rives, Clerk 20 Exchange Place Francis T. P. Plimpton, Treasurer 20 Exchange Place Mrs. Alfred Meyer 1225 Park Avenue Nicholas Murray Butler Columbia University Mrs. Ogden Reid 15 East 48th Street Miss Mabel Choate 770 Park Avenue Lucius H. Beers 25 Broadway Gano Dunn 80 Broad Street Mrs. Alfred F. Hess 875 Park Avenue Pierre Jay 1 Wall Street Harry Emerson Fosdick, D.D 490 Riverside Drive Winthrop W. Aldrich 18 Pine Street Lindsay Bradford 22 William Street Frederic Rhinelander Kinc 32 East 57th Street Mrs. Eucene Meyer 1624 Crescent Place. Washington, D. C. F. Bayard Rives 20 Exchange Place Mrs. William L. Duffy 245 East 72nd Street Francis T. P. Plimpton 20 Exchange Place Duncan H. Read 1 Wall Street Walter D. Fletcher 15 Broad Street Dave Hennen Morris 19 East 70th Street ♦Donald B. Aldrich, D.D 12 West 11th Street Mrs. Arthur Hays Sulzberger 5 East 80th Street John C. Parker, Jr 4 Irving Place Mrs. Adam Leroy Jones (Alumnae Trustee 1939-1943) . 71 South Mountain Avenue, Montclair, N. J. Mrs. Alfred F. Loomis (Alumnae Trustee 1941-1945) 17 East 84th Street Bertha L. Rockwell Librarian Katharine S. Doty, A.M Assistant to the Dean — Occupation Bureau Gulielma F. Alsop, M.D College Physician Mary V. Libbey, A.B Assistant to the Dean — Admissions, Information Helen P. Abbott, A.M Assistant to the Dean — Residence Halls Emily G. Lambert, A.B Bursar Martha M. Young, A.B Assistant Bursar John J. Swan, M.E Comptroller Helen Erskine, A.M Assistant to the Dean— Public Relations Lorna F. McGuire, Ph.D Freshman Adviser Alice B. Rhoads, A.M Assistant to the Dean Vircinia D. Harrington, Ph.D. . . Assistant to the Dean — Student Organizations and Social Affairs Marcaret Giddincs, A.B Registrar Elinore E. Fiero Assistant Registrw Frederick A. Goetze, M.Sc Treasurer of the University Rev. Stephen F. Bayne, Jr., S.T.M Chaplain of the University William H. McCastline, M.D University Medical Officer Absent on war service. 125 a cult ANTHROPOLOGY GLADYS A. REICHARD, Ph.D Associate Professor, Executive Officer RUTH IMBERT, A.B . Assistant BOTANY CORNELIA L. CAREY, Ph.D Assistant Professor, Executive Officer HAROLD C. BOLD, Ph.D Assistant Professor JAMES MERRY, Ph.D Instructor WINONA STONE, A.M Instructor PATRICIA COLLINS, A.B Assistant ANNETTE H. HERVEY, A.M Assistant CHEMISTRY MARIE REIMER, Ph.D Professor, Executive Officer HELEN R. DOWNES, Ph.D. Assistant Professor MARION ARMBRUSTER, Ph.D Instructor EVELYN E. BEHRENS, Ph.D Instructor CAROLYN FROST BAKER, A.B Lecturer LUCIA SMITH FISHER, A.B Lecturer PHYLLIS M. DUNBAR, A.B Assistant ECONOMICS AND SOCIAL SCIENCE ELIZABETH FAULKNER BAKER, Ph.D Associate Professor, Executive Officer WILLARD WALLER, Ph.D Associate Professor RAYMOND J. SAULNIER, Ph.D Assistant Professor MIRRA KOMAROVSKY, Ph.D Instructor DONALD B. MARSH, Ph.D Instructor CLARA ELIOT, Ph.D Lecturer CHARLOTTE MULLER, A.M Lecturer CORA KASSIUS Lecturer EMILY GUNNING, A.B Assistant ENGLISH MINOR W. LATHAM, Ph.D Professor, Executive Officer VIRGINIA C. GILDERSLEEVE, Ph.D Professor WILLIAM HALLER, Ph.D Professor W. CABELL GREET, Ph.D Associate Professor HELEN C. WHITE, Ph.D Visiting Professor CLARE M. HOWARD, Ph.D Assistant Professor ETHEL STURTEVANT, A.M Assistant Professor ELIZABETH REYNARD, B. Litt. (Oxon) Assistant Professor MARY MORRIS SEALS Instructor GEORGIANA C. REMER, A.B. Hons. (Oxon) Instructor 126 Faculty — Continued ♦DAVID A. ROBERTSON, Jr., Ph.D Instructor SARA DeFORD, Ph.D Instructor MARJORIE COOGAN, Ph.D Instructor LORNA F. McGUIRE, Ph.D Associate ANNIS SANDVOS, A.M Lecturer MURIEL BOWDEN Lecturer ANNE C. PEET Lecturer FINE ARTS AND ARCHAEOLOGY MARGARETE BIEBER, Ph.D Associate Professor MARION LAWRENCE, Ph.D Assistant Professor, Executive Officer MARIANNE BYRAM, A.M Instructor JANE GASTON, A.M Lecturer JULIUS HELD, Ph.D Lecturer FRENCH FREDERIC G. HOFFHERR, B.es.L Associate Professor, Executive Officer MARGUERITE MESPOULET, Acrecee de L ' Universite Associate Professor ALMA DeL. LeDUC, Ph.D Assistant Professor ISABELLE de WYZEWA, Ph.D Lecturer WINIFRED STURDEVANT, Ph.D Lecturer HELEN PHELPS BAILEY, A.M Lecturer NDRE MESNARD, A.M Lecturer GEOLOGY AND GEOGRAPHY HENRY S. SHARP, Ph.D. . FLORRIE HOLZWASSER, Ph.D. VT :ANOR J. CROSBY, A.M. Assistant Professor, Executive Officer Assistant Professor Assistant GERMANIC LANGUAGES AND LITTERATURES HUGH WILEY PUCKETT, Ph.D Associate Professor, Executive Officer LOUISE GODE STABENAU, A.M Instructor CLARE BALLUFF, A.M Lecturer GOVERNMENT THOMAS PRESTON PEARDON, Ph.D Associate Professor, Executive Officer RAYMOND MOLEY, Ph.D., LL.D Professor of Public Law JANE PERRY CLARK CAREY, Ph.D Assistant Professor MARINA SALVIN, A.B Assistant GREEK AND LATIN GERTRUDE M. HIRST, Ph.D Professor JOHN P. DAY, Ph.D Assistant Professor, Executive Officer EDITH F. CLAFFLIN, Ph.D Lecturer HELEN SEARLS, A.M Lecturer •Absent on war service. 127 Faculty — Continued HISTORY EUGENE H. BYRNE, Ph.D Professor, Executive Officer JAMES H. OLIVER, Ph.D Assistant Professor VIRGINIA DRAPER HARRINGTON, Ph.D Assistant Professor CHARLOTTE T. MURET, Ph.D . Instructor GEORGE B. YOUNG, Ph.D Instructor FRANK RUSSELL HAMBLIN, Ph.D Lecturer CHILTON WILLIAMSON, A.M Lecturer ITALIAN PETER M. RICCIO. Ph.D Professor, Executive Officer MATHEMATICS GEORGE WALKER MULLINS, Ph.D.. LL.D Professor, Executive Officer EDWARD KASNER, Ph.D Adrain Professor EDGAR R. LORCH, Ph.D Assistant Professor MARY ELIZABETH LADUE, Ph.D Instructor LOUISE COMER, A.M Lecturer MUSIC GENA TENNEY, A.B., A.R.C.M Instructor on the Joline Foundation DOUGLAS MOORE, A.B., Mus.B Professor CAROLYN P. CADY, A.M Instructor, Executive Officer PHYSICAL EDUCATION AGNES R. WAYMAN, Ph.D Associate Professor, Executive Officer MARION STRENG, A.M Assistant Professor LELIA M. FINAN, A.M Instructor MARGARET HOLLAND, A.M Instructor MARJORIE TUZO, A.M Instructor FERN YATES, A.M Instructor ELEANOR JORDAN, B.S Instructor CORNINNE BIZE Instructor PHYSICS HENRY A. BOORSE, Ph.D Associate Professor AGNES TOWNSEND, Ph.D Lecturer, Executive Officer ROBERT B. MORRISSEY, M.S Lecturer PHILOSOPHY WILLIAM P. MONTAGUE, Ph.D Johnsonian Professor, Executive Officer HELEN H. PARKHURST, Ph.D Associate Professor GERTRUDE V. RICH, Ph.D Instructor Absent on war service. Leave of absence, 1943-44. 128 Faculty — Continued PSYCHOLOGY HARRY L. HOLLINGWORTH. Ph.D., LL.D Professor, Executive Officer RICHARD P. YOUTZ, Ph.D Assistant Professor GELOLO McHUGH, A.M Instructor S. STANSFIELD SARGENT, Ph.D Instructor TOM GAYLORD ANDREWS, Ph.D Instructor LOIS ADAMS, Ph.D Lecturer BERNICE WENZEL, A.B Assistant RELIGION HORACE L. FRIESS, Ph.D Associate Professor of Philosophy, Executive Officer URSULA M. NIEBUHR, A.M. (Oxon), S.T.M Lecturer SPANISH AMELIA A. de DEL RIO, A.M Lecturer. Executive Officer ANDRES IDUARTE, Lie. en D Instructor MARGARITA DACAL, A.M Lecturer MARIANO PICON-SALAS, Ph.D Visiting Professor from South America MARIA de LOURDES SA PEREIRA. A.M Lecturer in Portuguese ZOOLOGY LOUISE H. GREGORY, Ph.D Professor, Executive Officer FLORENCE de LOISELLE LOWTHER, Ph.D Associate Professor JOHN A. MOORE, Ph.D Assistant Professor GRACE SPRINGER FORBES, Ph.D Instructor ELIZABETH H. MILLS, A.B Assistant DOROTHY K. DALE, A.M Assistant GEORGIANNA GREVOTT, A.M Assistant STATA NORTON, A.B Assistant Absent on war service. 129 ' 46 ABEEL, HARRIET 293 Lookout Avenue, Hackensack, N. J. Hackensack 2-0246 ' 47 ABEL, ALICE E. 339 Union Avenue. Elizabeth, N. J. ' 47 ABEL, JEAN H. 339 Union Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. ' 46 ACHILLES, FRANCES M. 1040 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-1262 Sp. ADLER, CHARLOTTE E. 474 West 238 Street, Riverdale, New York Kingsbridge 3-5072 ' 46 AGUAYO, MARIA del R. Arturo 133 Villa Obregon D.F. Mexico ' 45 AITCHISON, MARY WINIFRED 170 Beverly Road, Grasmere, New York Gib 7-2556J ' 46 ALADIN, ELLEN 49 Claremont Avenue, New York City ' 46 ALBALA, YELENA 549 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-7924 ' 44 ALBERT, FERN M. 67 Hilton Avenue, Garden City, New York ' 47 ALDRICH, ELIZABETH B. 15 East 78th Street, New York City Rh 4-3885 ' 46 ALDRICH, HARRIETT C. 15 East 78th Street, New York City Rh 4-3885 ' 46 ALDRICH, LUCY T. 15 East 78th Street, New York City Rh 4-3885 Sp. ALEXANDER, HORTENSE Cooper Road, Scarsdale, New York ' 45 ALEXANDER, MARGARET H. 101 Gladwin Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey ' 46 ALIESKY, ELEANOR M. 41-08 158th Street, Flushing, New York Fl 3-3231 Sp. ALLALEMDJIAN, ELBIS 10 North Drive, Great Neck, New York ' 46 ALLEN, CORNELIA W. 1075 Park Avenue, New York City Sa 2-6882 ' 44 ALLUM, MARJORIE 1214 Highland Road, Shar on, Pa. ' 47 ANTHONY, PATRICIA 111 Jolysome Lane, Southampton, N, Y. ' 46 APPLEGATE, ADRIENNE HUNT 129 Crestwood Avenue, Crestwood, New York Tuckahoe 3-6779 46 ARDEN MARIETTE 31 E. Park Street, Long Beach, New York Long Beach 2918 Unc. ARMSTRONG, MAE 229 Pine Street, Middletown, Conn. ' 47 ATTURA, ANNE MARIE 615 Pelham Parkway, Bronx, New York 01 4-1912 ' 46 AULD, ANNETTE MARIE 33-33 160th Street, Flushing, New York Ag 7091 ' 46 BABCOCK, WILLA GERTRUDE 1925 Kenwood Boulevard, Milwaukee, Wis. ' 43 BACH, ELEANOR MAUDE 4637 Grosvenor Avenue, Riverdale, New York ' 44 BAKER, ELIZABETH 104-12 Continental Avenue, Forest Hills, N. Y. Boulevard 8-1900 ' 47 BALDWIN, JANE L. Bellevue, Warrenton, Va. ' 47 BALFOUR, MARCIA C. 136 Waverly Place, New York City ' 46 BAPTISTE, GABRIELLE HELEN 3100 Broadway, New York City Un 4-8185 ' 45 BARISHMAN, MARCIA 1174 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York SI 6-1055 ' 45 BARR, ROBERTA L. 233 Liberty Street, Newburgh, New York ' 47 BARR, WINIFRED S. 415 Central Park West, New York City Ac 2-3584 ' 46 BARRETT, MARY LOUISE 32 Brinkerhoff Terrace, Palisades Park, N. J. Leonia 4-3147R ' 44 BARRETT, RUTH G. 32 Brinkerhoff Terrace, Palisades Park, N. J. Leonia 4-3147R ' 46 BATE, EUGENIA Grace Church Street, Rye, New York Rye 2781 ' 47 BATES, BARBARA Box 593 Easton, Maryland ' 44 BAULCH, MARCIA ELIZABETH 55 Pine Street, Maplewood, New Jersey ' 46 BEAL, NANCY 205 West 54th Street, New York City ' 46 BECK, MARION RITA Hotel Kimberly, 203 West 74th Street, N. Y. C. End 2-3000 ' 44 BECKER, BEATRICE ANN 130 Morningside Drive, New York City Sp. BECKWITH, BARBARA 2728 Henry Hudson Parkway, New York City Trafalgar 7-7811 ' 46 BECKWITH, CHARLOTTE CHRISTINE 2728 Henry Hudson Parkway, New York City Trafalgar 7-7811 ' 47 BEECHLER, F. PHILLIS 310 West 106 Street, New York City Ac 2-6516 ' 47 BELL, NANCY D. 136 Seaview Avenue, Palm Beach, Florida ' 47 BELTRAN, MARIE 30 Silver Spring Road, West Orange, N. J. Unc. BENDHEIM, ELSE 45 West 81th Street, New York City Tr 7-2447 ' 45 BENEDICT, MARY HOLBROOK 120 Riverside Drive, New York City En 2-2604 ' 47 BENEDICT, PATRICIA A. 315 West Main Street. Morristown, New Jersey Morristown 1182 130 Roster — Continued •44 BENEDICT, VIRGINIA 168 West 86th Street, New York City Tr 7-5906 ' 47 BENET, STEPHANIE 1186 Lexington Avenue, New York City Re 7-0151 ' 45 BERENSON, MARION 1150 5th Avenue, New York City Sa 2-5204 ' 47 BERGER, RUTH C. 84-43 150 Street, Jamaica, New York Rep 9-0314 ' 45 BERGLIND, FRIEDA 1872 Hunt Avenue, New York City ' 47 BERGQUIST, JEANNE B. 25 Rippowam Village, Stamford, Conn. ' 46 BERKOWITZ, IRMA RELBA 325 Riverside Drive, New York City ' 46 BERON, MARGARET LYDIA 21-12 Himrod Street, Brooklyn, New York Hegeman 3-7910 ' 47 BERRY, MARGARET 472 Gramatan Avenue, Mt. Vernon, New York Mt. Vernon 7-2823 ' 45 BESTEBREURTJE, HENDRIKA ANTONIA 20 Park Avenue, New York City Bu 8-5861 Sp. BESTEBREURTJE, NELLY 20 Park Avenue, New York City Bu 8-5861 ' 45 BISCHOFF, RUTH HELEN 74 Parsons Drive, Hempstead, New York City ' 46 BLACK, ARGENTINE EMELIA 5 Tokalon Place, Metaive, New Orleans, La. ' 46 BLICKFELT, ANITA L. 530 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-0277 ' 44 BLICKFELT, NORMA LEQUAM 530 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-0277 ' 44 BLOCK, JACQUELINE Hotel Plaza, New York City PI 3-1740 ' 47 BLOCK, PRISCILLA 1046 Avenue I, Brooklyn, New York Na 8-5163 ' 45 BOCKIUS, ENID CLAIRE 111 Crest Road, Ridgewood, New Jersey Ridgewood 6-2771 ' 46 BOEDER, JEAN CAROL 3420 Duncombe Avenue, Bronx, New York 01 2-0638 ' 45 BOGARDUS, ELIZABETH MABEL 537-53rd Street, Brooklyn, New York ' 46 BOHMFALK, ALICE LOVETT McCouns Lane, Glen Head, New York Glen Cove 4158 ' 44 BOND, ELIZABETH OTIS 1149 Ardsley Road, Schenectady, New York ' 47 BONTEMPI, MARIA GLORIA 521 West 111th Street, New York City ' 46 BOOTH, BETTY LEE 130 East 75th Street, New York City Rh 4-0870 ' 45 BORNN, EDITH LUCILLE Charlotte Amalie St. Thomas, Virgin Islands ' 45 BORNN, GLADYS, ANGELA Charlotte Amalie St. Thomas, Virgin Islands ' 47 BOROWIK, JOAN R. 119 West 71st Street, New York City En 2-1487 ' 47 BOSSANYI, EVI M. Fecesterville, Pennsylvania ' 44 BOURNE, LILLIAN H. 1800 North Shore Drive, Petersburg, Fla. ' 47 BOWEN, MILDRED J. 374 Marbledale Road, Tuckahoe, New York Tuckahoe 3-3416W ' 44 BRADSHAW, RUTH IRENE 180 Atlantic Avenue, Lynbrook, New York Lyn 3838 45 BRAND, PHYLLIS 70 East 96th Street, New York City Sa 2-6303 ' 46 BRANDT, DORIS HELEN 6 Polo Road. Great Neck, New York Great Neck 4529 ' 45 BRANOWER, ROSALIE 300 Central Park West, New York City Sc 4-4661 Unc. BRANT, RUTH IRENE 901 Eighth Street South, Fargo. North Dakota ' 45 BRENNAN, BEVERLY JANE 84-89 Street, Brooklyn, New York Shore Road 5-1722 ' 45 BRENNAN, DOROTHY 487 North Village Avenue, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Rockville Centre 7155 ' 47 BRIGHAM, ELIZABETH H. 42 Lafayette Road, Princeton, New Jersey ' 44 BRINK, AMELIA C. 2300 Loring Place, Bronx, New York Fo 4-2949 46 BROFFT, RUTH ALLENE 6658 Montgomery, Cincinnati, Ohio ' 46 BROGAN, MARY ELIZABETH 259 Armstrong Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey Del 3-8163 43 BROMILOW, LUCILLE E. 80 Front Street, Paterson, N. J. ' 45 BROMLEY, PATRICIA JANE 57 Hillside Avenue, Freeport, New York Freeport 7294 ' 47 BROOKS. MILDRED ANNE 268 Van Buren Street, Brooklyn, New York Gl 5-9217 ' 47 BROWN, ANN H. 200 East 19th Street. Brooklyn, New York Bu 2-5830 ' 44 BROWN, AUDREY KATHLEEN 33-76 116 Street, Flushing, New York Flushing 3-4435 ' 44 BROWN, AZELLE 8419 Kent Road, Jamaica, New York Unc. BROWN, DONNA 723 South Phil. Avenue, Sioux Falls, S. Dak. ' 46 BROWN, IRMA REGGIS 98 Weberfield Avenue, Freeport, New York ' 47 BROWN, MARY-LOUISE 915 N. Wayne Street, Arlington. Virginia ' 46 BROWN, MARY MARCELLA 30 Lincoln Avenue, Hastings-on-Hudson, New York Unc. BRUDER, MARJORIE 320 Central Park West, New York City Re 4-1011 L3] Roster — Continued ' 47 BRUECK, ROSALIND 1620 Avenue I, Brooklyn, New York Na 8-8790 ' 45 BRUNSTETTER, JANE 106 Morningside Drive, New York City Mo 2-4800 Ext. 92 ' 47 BUFANO, MARGERY 357 Bleecker Street, New York City ' 46 BUGARA, ESTELLE V. 334 Fountain, Fall River, Mass. ' 46 BUKOWSKA, ANNE VICTORIA 136 Baldwin Street, Bloomfield, New Jersey ' 45 BUNCE, MARGARET, ELEANOR 321 West Post Road, White Plains, New York Gl 3878 ' 45 BURGE, ELEANOR WISNER 2439 Ransdell Road, Louisville, Kentucky ' 44 BURLEIGH, ALICE L. 90 Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn, New York Ne 8-2448 Unc. BURNETTE, EMALINE Leesville, Virginia ' 45 BURSTEIN, MIRIAM ESTHER 46 West 83rd Street, New York City Su 7-2919 ' 45 BURTON, BETTY 161 North Kenilworth Avenue, Oak Park. Illinois ' 45 BUTLER, NORMA JEAN 605 North Main, Park Rapids. Minnesota ' 46 BUTTRON ELSA LOUISE 1258 Emerson Avenue, West Englewood, New Jersey Teaneck 7-8028W ' 46 BUTTS. SHIRLEY J. 38-12 160 Street, Flushing, New York Flushing 9-8787 ' 46 BYER, CHARLOTTE 181 Beechwood Avenue, Staten Island, New York Gilbraltar 7-2906 ' 47 BYRNE, BARBARA 317 South 53rd Street, Omaha, Nebraska ' 47 CABINESS, MARY LUCILLE 1912 Kramenia, Denver, Colorado ' 45 CADY, PATRICIA BROUGHTON 210 Euclid Avenue, Albany, New York ' 46 CAGNASOLA, ANNE LAURA 532 Trinity Place, Westfield, N. J. ' 47 CAHEN, NANCY 504 West Broadway, Cedarhurst, New York Cedarhurst 4652 ' 47 CAHN, HELEN 1150 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-4106 ' 47 CALLEN, GLORIA 59 3rd Avenue, Nyack, New York Nyack 2257 ' 47 CAMERON, NANCY L. 408 Morris Street, Pittsburgh 18, Pa. ' 47 CAMMARANO, GRAYCE A. 219 Third Avenue, Pelham 65, New York ' 44 CAMPBELL, ROBERTINA MURRAY 56 Bayview Avenue, Port Washington, New York Port Washington 239 ' 46 CAMPION, BETTY 119 Kingsley Avenue, Staten Island, New York Gilbraltar 2-0908 ' 47 CANNAN, JUNE ELIZABETH 3550-82 Street, Jackson Heights, New York Ha 6-4718 ' 47 CAREY, JANE E. 137 Halstead Avenue. Mamaroneck. New York ' 44 CAREY, JOAN 21 Whitney St., White Plains, New York White Plains 290J ' 45 CARPENTER, MILDRED DRUMMOND 132 Ocean Avenue, Amityville, New York ' 44 CARROLL, DOROTHY H. 1 River Road, Nyack, New York ' 44 CARROLL, JEAN MARY 468 Riverside Drive, New York City, N. Y. ' 45 CARSON, KATHERINE WHITMAN 750 Alabama Street, Bristol, Tenn. Unc. CARSON, RUTH 464 Riverside Drive., New York City ' 46 CASTELLO, JOSEFINA ELENA 58 Crescent Ave., Melrose, Mass. ' 44 CASTELLS, EDITH ELENA 235 West 108th Street, New York City Unc. CATALANE, MARION 1761 East 21st Street, Brooklyn. New York Ni 4-3966 ' 44 CATTELL, CORYL 27 Washington Square, New York City. N. Y. Gr 7-8512 Unc. CAVANAGH, PATRICIA 27 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, New York Ne 8-5415 ' 44 CESTONE, JO-ELIZABETH 21 Cliff Street, Verona, New Jersey ' 47 CHALMERS, H. LILLIAN 314-79th Street, Brooklyn, New York Shoreroad 5-8138 ' 47 CHAMBERLAIN. MARTHA E. Wilson Point, South Norwalk, Connecticut Norwalk 6-7571 ' 44 CHARLTON, DORIS LILLIAN 33 Purcer Place, Yonkers, New York Yonkers 3-3265 Sp. CHASE, NANCY 509 West 122nd Street, New York City Ca 8-8060 ' 46 CHASIN, MARILYN EILEEN 222 Bedford Park, Bronx, New York Se 3-2931 ' 46 CHEN. EVELYN EWA 2536 Beverly Road, Brooklyn, New York Bu 4-0150 ' 47 CHEVIOUS, MURIEL H. 2709 Tilden Avenue, Brooklyn, New York Bu 4-8097 ' 44 CHOLLAT-NAMY, NANCY 3807 21st Avenue, Long Island City, N. Y. ' 45 CIST, JEAN RENSHAW 77 Cobb Road, Mt. Lakes, N. J. ' 46 CLARK, ANN BERNICE 68 South 30 Street, Battle Creek, Michigan ' 46 CLARK, DORIS JEAN 793 Delafield Avenue, Staten Island, New York Gibraltar 2-3227 132 Roster — Continued ' 46 CLAMENS. MARGARET 51 Hamilton Place, New York City Au 3-7865 ' 44 CLARK, JANIE 55 Iroquois Road, Tuckahoe, New York ' 47 COEN, LL1CIENNE 25 West 68th Street, New York City Tr. 4-2604 ' 46 COKE-JEPHCOTT, EUNICE 412 Cathedral Parkway, New York City Ac 2-8642 ' 44 COLBOURNE, URSULA 210 Davis Ave., W. Brighton, Staten Island, N. Y. Gi 2-4090W ' 44 COLE. SUZANNE 1461 University Avenue, New York City Je 8-8292 ' 46 COLETTA, MARIE CAROLYN 330 Watson Avenue, Plainfield, N. J. Unc. COLL, LEGIA Ponci de Leon, St. Santorce, Puerto Rico Sp. COLLINS, PATRICIA San Jose Boulevard, Jacksonville, Fla. ' 44 COLLYER. MARILYN ARLENE 6 North Malcolm Street, Ossining, New York Ossining 1415 ' 45 COMBS, MURIEL 38 Alexine Avenue, East Rockaway, N. Y. ' 46 CONHAIM, JEAN LOUISE c o Hotel Shoreham, Washington, D. C. ' 46 CONLEY, GRACE EVELYN 28 Station Plaza, Great Neck, New York Great Neck 1502 J ' 47 CONNALLY, JEAN M. Hotel Stanhope, New York City Bu 8-5800 ' 45 CONNER. ALECIA MURIEL 4300 Broadway, New York City Wa 3-0654 ' 47 CONNORS. JEAN J. 424 River Drive, Pasaic, New Jersey ' 47 CONNICK, ROXANNE 87 Fourth Street, Stamford, Conn. Unc. CONWAY, CHARLOTTE Scarborough, New York Ossining 75 ' 45 CONWAY, VIRGINIA HELEN 2865 Guilderland Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. ' 47 COOK, GERTRUDE J. 18 Mason Avenue, Binghamton, N. Y. ' 46 COOK, SYDNEY 10 Fernwood Road, Summit, New Jersey ' 47 COPLAND, MARGARET E. 275 Engle Street, Englewood, N. J. ' 46 CORBETT, JEAN 134 Park Boulevard, Malverne, New York Lynbrook 3-1995 ' 44 CORRIGAN, ELIZABETH DeWITT 325 East 72nd Street, New York City, New York ' 46 CORSENTINO, LUCILLE AIDA 30-10 38th Street, Astoria, Long Island Ra 8-3283 ' 45 CORSON, MARJORIE ANN Suffern. New York Suffern 328R ' 46 COSOR, JOY PEARL Woodhridge, New York 46 COUDERT. CAROLINE CALLERY 142 East 30th Street, New York City. New York Nu 6-5414 ' 47 COUPE, HELEN M. 18 Webster Avenue, Hempstead, New York Hempstead 2932 ' 47 COX, AUDREY L. 289 Sixth Avenue. Brooklyn, New York St 8-2249 46 CRAFT, CHARLENE BETTY 678 Central Avenue, Cedarhurst, New York Cedarhurst 2070 ' 47 CROXTON. ROSETTA H. 314 Crescent Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey Unc. CRAN, HELEN 134 Park Boulevard, Mahone, New York Vynbrook 3199J 46 CRANE. SALLY GRANT 310 Park Street, Hackensack, New Jersey 45 CRAVEN, ELIZABETH PAGE 9 Essex Place, Bronxville, New York Bronxville 2-6508 47 CRENSHAW, ALINE R. 425 West 114 Street, New York City Mo 2-6410 ' 45 CRESCIONI, OLGA MARIA 41 Hoare Street, Santorce, Puerto Rico 45 CRETAUX, RUTH ELISE 133 Castle Ridge Road, Manhasset, New York Manhasset 3-1923 ' 46 CROCKETT, MARGARET JESSIE 278 Stevens Avenue, Portland, Maine 45 CROSS, PHYLLIS JOAN 115 East 92nd Street, New York City Sa 2-4085 45 CROUTER, ELIZABETH BELL 621 Forest Avenue, Larchmont, New York Larchmont 2-2742 44 CRYSTAL, MARJORIE 16 Ridge Drive, Great Neck. New York 47 CUMMINGS, MARION B. 25 Clarendon Road, Hempstead, New York Hempstead 431 46 CUMMISKEY, MARGARET M. 114 West 183rd Street. New York City 46 DAHL. MARJORIE H. 3531 78th Street, Jackson Heights, New York Ha 4-3800 46 DAHM, MARGARET LOUISE Fairmead, Dobbs Ferry, New York ' 45 DALE, ELENE 19 Jefferson Avenue, Hastings-on-the-Hudson. N. Y. ' 46 DALY, JOAN EVELYN 3452 84th Street, Jackson Heights. New York Ha 9-0446 ' 45 DALY, MARY JANE 91-43 Leffert ' s Boulevard, Richmond Hill. N. Y. Va 7-2394 Unc. DANA, DORIS SHEPHERD 315 East 68th Street, New York City, N. Y. ' 46 DANA. LEORA 315 East 68th Street, New York City Rh 4-1458 133 Roster — Continued 46 DANIELS, DEMETRA 75 Prospect Park S. W., Brooklyn, N. Y. South 8-7002 ' 45 DATTNER, DOROTHY ROSE 156 West 86th Street, New York City, New York Tr. 4-3068 ' 44 DAVIDSON, DORIS K. 549 Riverside Drive, New York City, New York Unc DAVIS, EMILY CARL 24 Sturgis Road, Bronxville, New York ' 46 DAVIS, IRIS MURIEL 12 West 72nd Street, New York City, N. Y. En 2-2000 •47 DAVIS, MARJORIE L. 233 Columbus Avenue, Mt. Vernon, New York Mt. Ver 8-9837 ' 44 DAVIS, MARY LOUISE 337 Broad Street, Oneida, New York ' 45 DAY GLADYS 32 Mahaune, Great Barrington, Mass. ' 44 DE ANTONIO, URSULA 917 Sunset Street, Scranton, Pa. ' 46 DECK, JEAN STEARNS 175th Avenue, Pelham, New York Pelham 8-0793 ' 44 DE GEORGE, JOSEPHINE MARIE 85 Battle Avenue. White Plains, N. Y. ' 45 DE LA FRANIER, DORCAS JEANNE 40 Homewood Drive, Manhasset, New York Manhasset 1871R ' 44 DELAVIGNE, JACQUELINE 1220 Park Avenue, New York City Sa 2-5893 ' 47 DE LORENZO, DOROTHY A. 160 Waverly Place, New York City, New York Ch 2-74S2 ' 46 DEMEREST, GEORGIA Wearimus Road, Hohokus, New Jersey ' 47 DENISON, NANCY Great Neck Road, Waterford, Connecticut ' 47 DENZIN, BEATRICE M. 9 Johnson Street, Portermouth, Virginia ' 44 DE PIERNE, CHARLOTTE 2 Reservoir Avenue, Norwalk, Connecticut ' 46 DE SANCTIS, HELENE RITA 78 West 12th Street, New York City Al 4-1040 ' 46 DE SELMS, NELLIE BEA 88th Lake Street, Omaha, Nebraska ' 47 DETTWEILER, VERA 6 Brookside Avenue, Basking Ridge, N. J. ' 47 DE VRIES, HELEN M. 601 West End Avenue, New York City, New York Se 4-7193 ' 44 DEYRUP, ASTRITH JOHNSON 200 North Broadway, Nyack, New York ' 47 DIAZ, CECELIA A. 729 South Elizabeth, New Jersey El 3-4944 47 DIEM, MARGARET 15 Glover Avenue, Yonkers, New York Beverly 7-8550 ' 46 DIETERLE, DORTHY ALICE 119 Hillside Avenue, Cresskill, New Jersey Englewood 3-3871R 134 ' 45 DIKEMAN, DOROTHY EMILY 15 East 255 Street , Bronx, New York Se 3-0588 47 DILL, JOYCE M. 44 Westminster Road, Rockville Centre, N. Y. 47 DITERICHS, MARINA 1481 Neppenhan Avenue, Yonkers, New York Yonkers 5-5645 47 DITMAS, MARY A. 115 East 31st Street, Brooklyn, New York In 2-7115 47 DOBSON, GRACE 215 Princeton Road, Rockville Centre, N. Y. 47 DOHERTY, HELEN 3252 Decatur Avenue, Bronx, New York 01 2-7067 ' 46 DONNA, CHRISTINE ELLEN 67 Henry Avenue, Pittsfield, Mass. 45 DOUBRAVA, GEORGIANA 251-49 Van Zandt Avenue, Little Neck, New York Bayside 9-5692 Unc. DRACKETT, WINIFRED 8001 South Clarboure, New Orleans, La. 45 DREIFUSS, HELENE 35 Manchester Road, Tuckahoe, New York Tuckahoe 3-7252 46 DREW, DOLORES 20 Hemlock Dr., Sleepy Hollow, N. Tarrytown, N. Y. Tarrytown 2162 46 DREYFUS, BRIGITTE 2 East 86th Street, New York City Rh 4-1800 ' 46 DRUDIS, IRENE THERESA 29 West 64th Street, New York City 47 DRUMMOND, PATRICIA R. 220 Place on Oakland Lake, Bayside, L. I. Bayside 9-6760 46 DU BOIS, LOUISE DIXON 135 Cedar Avenue, Hewlett, Long Island Franklin 2012 47 DUBREUIL, YVONNE 36 Dunwoodie Street, Yonkers, New York ' 46 DUFFY, EBBA JOAN 4 Cedar Street, Lynbrook, Long Island Lynbrook 1555R 46 DUKOFF, JEAN 210 West 90th Street, New York City Sc 4-5337 ' 44 DUN, ELEANOR HALE 15 East 56th Street, Kansas City, Missouri Unc. DURAND, ELIZABETH Foote Street, Cheshire, Connecticut ' 46 DWIGHT, VERONICA E. 251 Adams Lane, Hewett, Long Island Franklin 971 Unc. DYER, ALISON 1595 Unionport Road, New York ' 46 DRAUDIN, GLORIA L. 150 Avenue P, Brooklyn 4, New York Es 2-6425 45 EATON, RUTH ALICE 39 Cohawney Road, Scarsdale, New York Scarsdale 3053 47 EBERLING, ARNA 303 Ege Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey Be 3-6661 ' 44 EBERLY, NANCY 131 Riverside Drive, New York City En 2-5691 Roster — ■Continued ' 47 EDGAR, ANNE 171 East 74th Street, New York City Rh 4-3725 ' 46 EDWARDS, MAY 400 West 119th Street, New York City Un 4-0200 ' 45 EDWARDS, NANCY Mendon Road. Pittsford, New York ' 46 EGBERT, CONSTANCE 17 Bellgrove Drive, Upper Montclair, New Jersey ' 47 EICHRODT, MARY 520 West 114th Street, New York City Un 4-6454 ' 47 EIS, ANN 225 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York Sterling 3-0621 ' 46 EISSMAN, LYDIA 1176 Putnam Avenue, Brooklyn, New York ' 47 ELIA, PEARL 1425 Nostrano Street, Brooklyn, New York ' 44 ELY, EDNA 30 North Main Street, East Hampton, Connecticut ' 47 EMERSON, ANN Maple Avenue, Southport, Connecticut ' 46 EMMERICK, JOAN Sugarloaf R.D., Pennsylvania ' 45 ENGELHARDT, ALDINE 17 Hillside Avenue, Naugatuck, Connecticut ' 46 ENGLESON ELAINE 1839 East 28th Street, Brooklyn, New York Es 6-2577 Unc. EVARTS, ELIZABETH 530 Riverside Drive, New York City ' 46 EVERS, PATRICIA 136 Nicks Street, Brooklyn Headquarters Ma 4-6942 ' 47 FABRICAND, MARILYN 806 Hampton Road, Woodmere, Long Island, N. Y. ' 43 FAGAN, DOROTHY 1135 East 31st Street, Brooklyn, New York Na 8-6264 ' 45 FALORSI, MARY St. Margaret ' s School, Waterbury, Connecticut ' 44 FARRELL, MARY 1018 West Warwick. Rhode Island ' 46 FARRELL, RUTH Hudson View Gardens, New York Na 3-7800 ' 46 FASTIGGI, GEMMA 30 Van Wyck, Croton, New York ' 47 FELTON, JUNE 1626 East 28th Street, Brooklyn, New York ' 44 FERGUSON, BARBARA 12 Cameron Avenue, Homell, New York ' 45 FERRIS, SARA Grand View, Nyack, New York Piermont 275J ' 47 FESSENDEN, JOAN Germonds Road, New City, New York ' 46 FEURY, MARGARET 51 Roosevelt Avenue, Jersey City, New Jersey ' 45 FIELD, JOYCE 1 Wykagyl Terrace, New Rochelle, New York New Rochelle 2-8836 ' 46 FINCH, RUTH Island Road, Ramsey, New Jersey Ramsey 404 Unc. FINLAY, ELIZABETH 675 Pelham Road, New Rochelle, New York New Rochelle 2-1837 ' 45 FISCHER, SHIRLEY 102-01 63rd Avenue, Forest Hills. New York Havemeyer 9-5031 ' 46 FISHEL, BABETTE 457-13th Street, Brooklyn 15, New York So 8 5023 ' 45 FISKEN, HARRIET 2395 Francisco Street, San Francisco, Calif. ' 47 FITCH, MARY 600 West 115 Street, New York City, New York Mo 2-1187 ' 46 FITZGERALD, PATRICIA 35-28 163rd Street, Flushing, N. Y. Fl 3-8566 ' 46 FLAGG, FAITH 340 West 57th Street, New York City Ci 7-3513 ' 45 FLINT, KATHERINE 1088 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-6990 ' 46 FLINT, THELMA 504 2nd Street, Palisades Park, New Jersey Leonia 4-2725J ' 46 FLOWER, SHIRLEY 25 East End Avenue, New York City Rh 4-4896 ' 45 FLYNN, ELIZABETH 612 West 112th Street, New York City Mo 2-2813 ' 45 FOLLETT, SABRA 404 West 116 Street, New York City Un 4-5190 ' 47 FONG, AILEEN 222 Mulberry Street, Newark, New Jersey Mi 2-9572 Unc. FOREGGER, ELEANOR Mount Horeb, Wisconsin ' 44 FORNACCA, DAISEY 419 West 119th Street, New York City Un 4-6640 ' 46 FOSS, NADINE 468 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-4059 ' 44 FOSTER, ELINOR 1101 Westover Road, Wilmington, Delaware ' 44 FOUNTAIN, JOYCE Fairmount Avenue, Chatham, New York Ch 4 5528 ' 45 FOX, BARBARA A. 108 Livingston, New Haven. Connecticut ' 46 FOX, BARBARA HELEN 62 Briary Road, Dobbs Ferry. New York ' 46 FRANCIS, ELIZABETH 63 70th Street, Brooklyn, New York Sh 8-9853 ' 44 FRANCKS, OLIVE 120 Vermilyea Avenue, New York City Lo 7-5258 ' 46 FRANK, HELENE 30 East 72nd Street, New York City Bu 8-5854 Unc. FRANKLIN, ZILPHA 3650 Upton Street, Washington, D. C. ' 46 FRASCA, LAURA 540 Bedford Road, Pocantico Hills, New York Tarrytown 930R 135 Roster — Continued ' 47 FRASER, BARBARA 420 Homestead, Mt. Vernon, New York Mo 7-5759 ' 46 FRAZIER, SHIRLEY 7 Clinton Street, Pleasantville, New York Sp. FREDA, PATRICIA 635 5th Avenue, Lyndhurst, New Jersey Ru 2-2099W ' 45 FREDERICKS, EDNA 505 West End Avenue, New York City En 2-2846 ' 46 FREDERIKSEN, JOAN 6th Avenue N.E., Fairbault, Minnesota ' 47 FREEMAN, E. CONDICT Blue Mill Road, Morristown, New Jersey ' 45 FREMON, JULIA Tomahawk, Wisconsin ' 47 FREUND, ELIZABETH 72-24 Ingram Street, Forest Hills, New York ' 45 FRIEDMAN, RENEE 1200 Fifth Avenue, New York City Sa 2-4827 ' 45 FRIEND. LINDA 131 Riverside Drive, New York City En 2-0691 ' 47 FRIPP, ELIZABETH 46 Sturgis Road, Bronxville, New York Br 2-2136 ' 46 FRISCH, RACHEL 140 Riverside Drive, New York City Sc 4-6411 ' 44 FROTHINGHAM, ANNA 784 Park Avenue, New York City ' 47 FUHR, ADELHEID 63 King Street, Haledon, New Jersey ' 45 FUNARA, ELSA J. 662 Greene Street, Cumberland, Maryland ' 44 FUSI, MARIE 50 South Carel Avenue, Babylon, Long Island, N. Y. ' 47 GABIN, MIRIAM 193 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5-1100 ' 47 GALLMAN, MARGUERITE A. 921 Summit Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Journal Sq 2-4348 ' 47 GARRELTS, LOIS 15 Brook Road, Tenafly, New Jersey ' 46 GARRETSON, MARY 84 Carthage Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. Scarsdale 2413 ' 47 GEANEAS, STELLA 60 Quintin Road, Brooklyn, New York Es 2-0507 ' 47 GEISER, MARJORIE 516 Ovington Avenue, Brooklyn, New York Sh 8-9215 ' 46 GETAZ, MADELINE 49 Valley Road, Stamford, Connecticut St 3-1377 Unc. GIANOTTI, MARGUERITE 7435 Bold East, N. Bergen, N. J. ' 44 GIMBERT, JEAN 37 Long Street, Annville, Pennsylvania ' 47 GIROLAMO, RITA 1650 Colden Avenue, New York City ' 45 GJERTSEN, GUDNY 6735 Ridge Boulevard, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sh 5-4820 ' 45 GLADING, MARY 1357 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, New York Pr 4-4274 ' 45 GLASSEL, RUTH 131 Grove Street, Clinton, New Jersey Passaic 3-2357 ' 44 GLASTON, GLORIA 210 Riverside Drive, New York City Ri 9-4969 ' 45 GLIXMAN, BARBARA 82-22 168th Street, Jamaica, Long Island. N. Y. Ja 6-2106 ' 47 GLUCK, MARION 375 Riverside Drive, New York City Ri 9-5069 ' 47 GOALWIN, ALTA T. Quaker Bridge Rd., Croton-on-Hudscn. N. Y. Croton 3752 ' 44 GOLDEN, ODETTE 225 Bennett Avenue, Yonkers. N. Y. Yonkers 3-0263 ' 47 GOLDHORN, MARGARET A. Stanton Street, Northport, N. Y. Npt. 1411 ' 45 GOLDMUNTZ, MARGARET 277 West End Avenue, New York Citv Sc 4-8320 ' 45 GOLDMUNTZ, ODETTE FERNANDA 277 West End Avenue, New York City Sc 4-8320 ' 45 GOLDSMITH, EDITH LOUISE 135 Central Avenue, Lawrence, New York ' 47 GOLDSMITH, KATHERINE L. 1192 Park Avenue, New York City Sa 2-8483 ' 44 GOLUB, THELMA JUDITH 1466 E. 19 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Es 5-1139 Unc. GONSIOR, F. ANNE Highland Avenue, Short Hills, N. J. ' 47 GONZALEZ, BEATRICE T. 328 Undercliffe Avenue, Edgewater, N. J. Cliffside 6-1656 ' 47 GOOD, EVELYN 11 Old Wood Road, Edgewater, N. J. Cliffside 6-3240W ' 45 GOOD, SALLY F. 11 Old Wood Road, Edgewater, N. J. Cliffside 6-3240W ' 44 GOODE, PATRICIA WILHOITE 941 Jerome Avenue, New York City Topping 2-4449 ' 45 GOODMAN, MARJORIE BLISS 679 Longmeadow Street, Longmeadow, Mass. ' 45 GOODRICH, BARBARA NIELSEN 445 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-3015 ' 47 GOODWIN, GEORGIA Y. 6 Hilltop Drive, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 5186 ' 47 GOODWIN, MARA R. 315 Riverside Drive, New York City Ac 2-1118 ' 45 GOUGLIDES, ANTOINETTE Belmont Avenue, Hicksville, N. Y. ' 46 GORDON, DIANA 34-15 94th Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. Newtown 9-9729 136 Roster — Continued ' 44 GORE, MIRIAM 305 W. 52d Street, New York City Ci 6-9799 Unc. GRAHAM, ELINOR 39 Canton Street, Worcester, Mass ' 46 GRAHAM. MARY 1969 Main Street, Stratford, Conn. ' 47 GRANT, FLORENCE P. 21 Jefferson Avenue, Lynchbrook, N. Y. Lynchbrook 7608W ' 44 GRASSLIGHT, MRS. HELEN CAHN 1150 Park Avenue, New York City ' 16 GRAY, MARY LOUISE 1271 Farmington Avenue, W. Hartford, Conn. Je 7-3145 ' 47 GREEN. BETTY A. 427 Franklin Street, Ogdensburg, N. Y. ' 45 GREEN. DAHRL RR No. 1. Twin Falls. Idaho ' 45 GREENE. MARGARET MARY 229 E. 42d Street. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 2-2316 ' 44 GREENBERG. ESTA JOY 3431 72d Street, Jackson Heights. N. Y. Newtown 9-7606 ' 44 GREIDER. MARJORIE LOUISE 226 Fairview Avenue, Moorestown, N. J. ' 45 GRIFFIN, IRENE FRANCES 134 Arlington Avenue, Brooklyn. N. Y. Ap 6-8688 ' 47 GRIFFIN, ISABEL MARIE 408 59th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Wi 9-9749 ' 46 GRIFFIN, PEGGY ANN 404 W. 116th Street. New York City Un 4-5190 ' 46 GROESBECK. PATRICIA 49 Valley View Avenue, Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewo od 6-5661 ' 44 GRUBMAN, GLORIA SHIRLEY 975 Walton Avenue, New York City Je 7-2743 ' 44 GUILHEMPE, BERTHA 935 E. 9th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 47 GUILLEBAUD, PHILOMENA 4107 Pine Street, Philadelphia, Pa. ' 47 GUILLIUM, KATHARINE 505 4th Avenue, Asbury Park, N. J. ' 45 GUTHERIDGE, AILEEN MARIE 434 W. 120th Street, New York City Kingsbridge 6-3267 ' 46 GWATHMEY, MARY STUART 3632 Kimble Road, Baltimore 18. Md. ' 46 HADAS. HEDVA MARTHA 1310 Manheim, Kansas City, Missouri ' 47 HAGGERTY, VIRGINIA I. 518 Carroll Avenue, Mamaroneck, New York ' 45 HALLOCK, EMILY MAY 3311 Parkside Place, Bronx, New York Olenville 2-5356 ' 44 HALPERT, ALYS CAROL 101 Central Park West, New York City En 2-7278 ' 47 HANCE, ELIZABETH O. 5 Washington Avenue, Morris Plains. N. J. ' 47 HANLEY, CHARLOTTE A. 92 St. Nicholas Avenue. New York City ' 47 HANLON, MARY E. 59 Benedict Avenue, White Plains, New York ' 47 HANNIGAN, MARY LOUISE 28 East 17 Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 4-0621 47 HANSEN, ALICE T. 208 Gelston Avenue. Brooklyn. N. Y. ' 44 HANSEN, DIANA CURTIS 111 Grove Street, Tarrytown, New York Unc. HARDIN, JOYCE Woodside Drive, Greenwich. Connecticut Greenwich 1606 ' 47 HARGROVE. ANNE C. 77 Linden Boulevard, Brooklyn N. Y. ' 46 HAROLDSON. JEEN Box 127, Pompton Lakes, N. J. Pnmpton Lakes 648 ' 44 HARPER. HELEN LEOLA 66 Harmon Avenue, Pelham, New York Pelham 8-0418 ' 47 HARRIS. KATHERINE 129 West 4th Street, Greenville, Ohio ' 47 HARRIS. NANCY J. 371 Claremont Avenue, Montclair, New Jersey ' 47 HARRISON, ANNA B. 1756 Seward Avenue, Brooklyn. N. Y. ' 46 HARRY. ELLEN TROVILLE 4130 Arlington Avenue, Fort Wayne. Indiana ' 47 HARVEY, ANNE 2 East 67th Street, New York City Re 7-2524 ' 45 HARVEY, MARY WOODIN 1235 Park Avenue, New York City Le 2-4244 ' 44 HASELL, CONCHITA 445 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-4971 ' 47 HATHAWAY, MARY L. 516 Oakdale Avenue, Chicago, Illinois ' 47 HAUSER, YVONNE L. 80 Macdougal Street, New York City Sp 7-1209 ' 44 HAVILL, PATRICIA 480 Mayhew Court, South Orange, New Jersey ' 47 HAYES, ANNE K. Middletown, New Jersey ' 47 HAYNER, BARBARA J. 25 Birch Street, Mt. Vernon, New York ' 47 HAZARD, HELEN E R. 248 Passaic Street, Hackensack, New Jersey ' 46 HEALY. PATRICIA 261 Seaman Avenue, New York City Lo 7-9627 ' 45 HEARST. EDYTHE JUNE 45 Linden Boulevard. Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 4-4261 ' 46 HEATH, H. ELIZABETH 215-07 102 Avenue, Queens Village, Long Island Hollis 5-4323 137 Roster — Continued ' 44 HECKER, PHYLLIS 235 Fox Meadow Road, Scarsdale, New York ' 44 HEDBLOM, ELEANOR JANE 983 Memorial Drive, Cambridge, Mass. ' 47 HEIDENBLAD, CHARLOTTE B. 25 West Street, Newport, New Hampshire ' 47 HEIN, RUTH E. 195 Main Street, Binghampton, New York ' 45 HELLAWELL, EILEEN ANN 116 Stratford Avenue, Garden City, N. Y. Garden City 8506 ' 46 HELLER, VIRGINIA AGNES 222 Bedford Park Boulevard, New York City Se 3-2931 ' 45 HELLMAN, JOY E. 1950 Andrews Avenue, New York City Fo 4-4581 ' 44 HENRICKSON, EVINDA RIKA 294 Roxbury, Keene, New Hampshire ' 46 HENRY, PATRICIA ANN Stanfordville, New York ' 46 HENZE, RUTH DORIS 38-26 208 Street, Bayside, New York Bayside 9-3017 ' 46 HERING, DORIS ERNA 73 Ellwood Street, New York City ' 47 HERMAN, BEVERLY 364 East 46th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 44 HERZOG, SIBYL 15 West 75th Street, New York City Tr 7-5354 ' 46 HESSEL, MARTHA GLADYS 124 Mamaroneck Road, White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 5770 ' 46 HETT, EUGENIA ROSE 254 Myrtle Avenue, Hawthorne, New York Pleasantville 2138S ' 46 HEYMAN, JULIANE MARION 1180 Sherman Street, Denver, Colorado ' 45 HIGGINS, FRANCES EMMA 26 Brickell Avenue, Westwood, New Jersey Westwood 65 ' 46 HILL, MARGARET 16 Caro Court, Red Bank, New Jersey ' 44 HINE, MARGARET 178 Bennett Avenue, New York City Wa 3-2284 ' 45 HINKSON, ELISE MURIEL 1926 East 1st Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 47 HIRSCH, MARY ANN 1476 Shakespeare Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. 46 HIRSCHHORN, MRS. MARY KUNSTLER 285 Central Park West, New York City Sc 4-6238 ' 45 HIRSCHLEINE, ELLEN DOROTHEA 151 Central Park West, New York City Sc 4-6888 ' 45 HITCH, FRANCES EARLE 616 West 116 Street, New York City Un 4-2850 ' 47 HOAG, MARY ALICE 1509 Walnut Street, Edgewood, Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 44 HODGES, JULIA CHAPIN 182 East 64th Street, New York City Re 7-6357 ' 47 HODGKINS, CAROLYN 42 Elm Street, Auburn, Maine ' 46 HOECKER, PHYLLIS H. 165 88th Street, Bay Ridge, New York Sh 8-6357 ' 47 HOFFERT, RUTH A. 615 West 173rd Street, New York City ' 46 HOFFMAN, EVELYN MARGARET 78-14 Austin Street, Forest Hills, New York Bo 8-6695 ' 45 HOFFSTOT, MARIAN GROSS Harrison City Road, Greensburg, Pa. ' 46 HOGG, IDA LORRAINE 228 Madison, Camden, Arkansas ' 47 HOHLY, MARGARET A. 62 Tanglewylde Avenue, Bronxville, N. Y. ' 46 HOLLAND, LENA GENAREO 322 East 57th Street, New York City El 5-1920 ' 46 HOLLIDAY, BETTY GERTRUDE 10 Gould Street, Great Neck, New York Great Neck 2362 ' 47 HOLLIDAY, M. BLAIR Bedford Hills, New York ' 46 HOLMGREN, FRANCES 50 Mor ningside Drive, New York City Mo 2-2155 ' 47 HOLSTEIN, MARCIA 140 Riverside Drive, New York City Sc 4-6978 ' 46 HONIG, MARJORIE VIVIAN 636 East 21st Street, Brooklyn, New York Bu 4-1212 44 HONOLD, GRACE ANNA 7811 5th Avenue, Brooklyn, New York Shore Road 5-8993 ' 47 HOPFER, DORIS E. 15 Treno Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. ' 46 HORAN, SALLY 400 East 59th Street, New York City El 5-3552 ' 45 HORTON, INEZ STENGEL 6 Warren Place, Montclair, N. J. ' 47 HOUSTON, ELIZABETH J. 411 East Madison, Springfield, Ohio ' 47 HOWARD, JENNIFER 157 East 82nd Street, New York City Bu 8-9449 Unc. HOWARTH, DUSHKA 195 Claremont Avenue, New York City Un 2-5204 Unc. HOWELL, BARBARA Howell Apts., Bryan, Texas ' 44 HOWELL, DIANE 539 East 88th Street, New York City Re 7-3437 ' 46 HUGHES, BERNARDINE M. 8309 Talbot Street, Kew Gardens, New York Virginia 7-4318 ' 45 HULBERT, DORIS GERALDINE 52 Poge Road, Valley Stream, New York Valley Stream 5085 138 Roster — Continued ' 46 HUMMEL, VERONA LOUISE 20 75th Street, North Bergen, New Jersey Union 7-8098 ' 47 HURWIT, RUTH D. 213 West 70th Street, New York City Pr 7-5060 ' 46 HYAK, CHARLOTTE ANNE 4909 217 Street, Bayside, New York ' 44 ILGEN, BARBARA LOUISE 2940 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York Se 3-6311 ' 47 IMPARA. VIRGINIA A. 258 North Fulton Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Sp. JACKSON, ISABEL 8525-1 17th Street. Richmond Hill, Long Island Virginia 9-1350 ' 44 JACOBSON, MRS. ALICE 4238 Tarimore Avenue, Omaha, Nebraska ' 45 JAHR, JEAN 519 East 84th Street, New York City Re 7-1659 Unc. JAMIESON, PEGGY ELIZA 616 West 116th Street, New York City ' 45 JAMS, RUTH ANN 272 West 90th Street, New York City Sc 4-3488 ' 45 JAROSZEWICZ, IRENE 634 West 135th Street, New York City Ed 4-2079 ' 45 JOHANSON. GLORIA DOROTHY 214-34 45th Road, Bayside, New York Ba 9-6896 ' 47 JOHNS, CAROL B. 292 Merrick Road, Amityville, New York ' 44 JOHNSON, COLUMBIA 63 Main Street, Sanford, Maine 47 JOHNSON, DORIS E. 5306 Junction Boulevard, Elmhurst, New York ' 46 JOHNSON, JOYCE LOIS 6-09 First Street, Fairlawn, New Jersey Fairlawn 6-0538M ' 44 JOHNSON, MRS. MARJORIE HOUSEPIAN 600 West 116th Street, New York City ' 47 JOHNSTON, EDITH E. 94 Parkway Read, Bronxville, N. Y. ' 44 JONES, MILDRED BLAUVELT 724 4th Avenue, Watervliet, New York ' 47 JONES, RENEE M. 906 Pennsylvania Avenue, Schenectady, N. Y. Unc. JONSDOTTIR, SELMA c o Johnson, 3208 West 59 Street, Seattle, Wash. ' 46 JORDAN, MRS. MARCIA PERIN 530 West 113th Street, New York City Mo 2-1367 ' 44 JORGENSEN, DORIS MAY 481 South Clinton Street, East Orange, N. J. ' 45 JOSE, ELAINE MADELINE 239 Riverdale Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3-5826 ' 45 KAHLE. BARBARA 911 Park Avenue, New York City Bu 8-5343 ' 45 KAHLER. ELEANOR LOUISE 109 Orchard Street. Horseheads, New York ' 46 KAHN, HARRIET DOROTHY 276 Riverside Drive, New York City Ri 9-1763 Unc. KAHN, ROSINI 601 West End Avenue, New York City Sc 4-5653 ' 45 KALEY, JUNE MARIE 1208 Walnut Street, Williamsport, Pa. ' 47 KANICK, VIRGINIA 3608 Noble Avenue, Richmond, Virginia ' 46 KAPLAN, MARIAN SUE 1100 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-6644 ' 45 KARL, CONSTANCE JOAN 628 James Street, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Pelham 8-0557 ' 44 KATTENBORN. DOROTHY HELEN 161 Tonvue Terrace, Tuckahoe, New York Tuckahoe 3-5520 ' 46 KAYE. VIVIAN SOPHIE 247 Wadsworth Avenue, New York City Wa 3-8433 Unc. KEARNEY. DORIS 99 West Eavannan, Detroit, Michigan ' 46 KEE, MARGARET LAU 11 Mott Street, New York City Worth 2-2790 ' 44 KEELER, BABETTE 2305 University Avenue, Bronx, New York Ra 9-1275 46 KEITH. KATHERINE ALICE 400 Bethlehem Pike, Philadelphia, Pa. ' 44 KELLER, ALICE La Vale. Cumberland, Maine ' 46 KELTZ, BARBARA JENNINGS 609 Spring Street, Latrobe, Pennsylvania •44 KELZ, FRANCOISE 31 Dobbs Terrace, Scarsdale, New York ' 45 KEMPTON, JANET WINIFRED 86-10 109 Street, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Va 7-4796 ' 45 KERR. NANCY 3700 East John Street, Seattle, Wash. ' 44 KESHISHIAN, NELLIE 59 Bayview Avenue, Port Washington, N. Y. Port Washington 115M ' 45 KESSLER, AVRA PHYLLIS 2 Sutton Place South, New York City El 5-4552 ' 45 KESSLER. MADELINE CLARA 14 Adams Street, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mt. Vernon 8-7963 ' 45 KHMEL, TATIANA V. 108 West 227 Street, New York City Mo 7-9772 ' 44 KHOURI. LAU RICE 8309 Fort Hamilton Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 47 KIACHIF, SHAIGAN 435 Riverside Drive, New York City Unc. KIBRIG. JOAN R. 16 Old Mill Road, Great Neck, Long Island Great Neck 593 47 KILLEEN, KATHERINE M. 439 Loevst Street, Mt. Vernon. N. Y. 139 Roster — Continued ' 44 KINGSLEY. GLORIA KATHLEEN 850 7th Avenue, New York City Co 5-0370 ' 46 KLAR, BARBARA 1640 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 45 KLEIN, ANITA 137 Riverside Drive, New York City Tr 4-1129 ' 47 KLEINERT, SUSAN M. Benjamin Franklin Apts., White Plains, N. Y. ' 47 KLEINSCHMIDT, ELAINE F. 360 Park Avenue, Manhasset, New York ' 47 KNAEPEN, MARY A. 185 West Ridgewood Avenue, Ridgewood, N. J. ' 45 KNICKERBOCKER, ALTHEA BARTON 311 Kenmore Road, Douglaston, N. Y. ' 46 KNUTSEN, MARIE KATHRYN 883 Fairmount Place, Box 60 Dayton 3-5562 •44 KOEFOED. THORA 115-11 Union Turnpike, Forest Hills, N. Y. Unc. KOEHLER. CLARICE 5400 Fieldston Road, Riverdale, New York K 9-7291 Unc. KOLBOURNE, JEAN 40 Monroe Street, New York City Unc. KONRAD, EDWINA 7905 Woodhaven Boulevard, Glendale, New York Cleveland 3-6902 ' 47 KORANY, CHARLOTTE M. 363 Riverside Drive, New York City Or 5-3548 ' 46 KOURI, MARY ANN 150 North Division Street, Peekskill, N. Y. ' 46 KRAKEUR, RITA JEAN 63 Hamilton Street, Rockville Centre, N. Y. Rockville Centre 2679 ' 47 KRANICH. JEANNE-MARIE 390 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-3405 ' 47 KRANOWITZ. DENA C. 773 Corbin Avenue, New Britain, Conn. ' 47 KREISCH, GLORIA 2483 University Avenue, New York City Sp. KREMENTZ, LETETIA Blue Mill Road, Morristown, New Jersey ' 44 KRIEGER, LILLI 111-22 77th Avenue, Hackensack, N. J. ' 46 KRUELSKI, RUTH VERONICA 302 Westminster Road, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 4-6482 ' 45 KRUGELIS, ELEANOR EUGENIA 968 Highland Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. Unc. KUHLMANN, BETTE 870 Summit Avenue, River Edge, New Jersey ' 46 KUTH, JOANNE 1250 Gladys Avenue, Lakewood, Ohio ' 47 LACEY, JANE A. 4196 Gleane Street, Elmhurst, New York ' 44 LA FOUNTAIN, MARION ANNE 180 Overlook Avenue, Hackensack, N. J. Unc. LAMBERT, MRS. ELIZABETH BRANDON 114 Morningside Drive, New York City Ca 8-2880 ' 44 LAMOUREE, RENEE Tuxedo Park, New York ' 44 LANCE, JEANNE ISABEL Stanhope, New Jersey ' 44 LANDRE, DORIS ELIZABETH 85-61 152nd Street, Jamaica, N. Y. Re 9-9047 ' 46 LANDSMAN, GLORIA 206 West 104th Street, New York City Ac 2-5765 ' 45 LANE, RUTHVEN 82-01 Britton Avenue, Elmhurst, New York Ha 6-7406 ' 46 LANIER, DIANA 123 East 35th Street, Bernardsville, New Jersey As 4-7252 ' 46 LANTZ, JEAN MERVINE 214 Courtlandt Street, East Stroudsburg, Pa. ' 44 LAPWING, MARY EVELYN 29 Kenwood Road, Tenafly, New Jersey ' 46 LASSANDRO, JENNIE 362 Walnut Street, Yonkers, New York ' 45 LAUER, CAROLYN LOUISE 215-38 Corbett Road, Tenafly, New Jersey Eng 3-4802J ' 45 LA VALLA, MARGARET ADELE 2 Chestnut Street, Bethel, Connecticut ' 44 LAWRENCE, MARCIA 39 5th Avenue, New York Gr 7-2716 ' 47 LAWRENCE, RAYMONDE J. 330 West 72nd Street, New York City En 2-5155 Unc. LEACOCK, MRS. ELEANOR 135 West 10th Street, New York City Ch 2-6243 ' 44 LECOUNT, DOROTHY 608 Warburton Avenue, Yonkers, New York ' 47 LEE, CYNTHIA 563 Park Avenue. New York City Re 4-0536 ' 46 LEE, MARY EMILIE 186 Hickory Avenue, Tenafly, New Jersey ' 46 LEFF, JOAN PAULA 28 West 69th Street, New York City Tr 4-3163 ' 45 LEFF, MIMI 1212 Fifth Avenue, New York City Sa 2-4551 ' 44 LEMOINE, RUTH 535 West 40th Street, Baltimore, Md. ' 47 LENT, JO-ANN 123 West 13th Street, New York City Ch 2-2400 ' 45 LEONARD, DONNA 85-05 249th Street, Bellerose Long Island Fieldstone 3-8818 ' 46 LERNER, MARJORIE ELEANOR 840 Bronx River Road, Bronxville, New York ' 45 LESHOCK, MILDRED 1001 Race, Shamokin, Pa. ' 46 LESSER, SANDRA LLOYD 135 West 79th Street, New York City En 2-9856 140 Roster — Continued ' 44 LEVEEN. ALICE 182-35 Midland Parkway, Jamaica, N. Y. ' 44 LEVI, FLORENCE 164 West 79th Street, New York City En 2-1943 ' 44 LEVIN E. FLORENCE M. 8 Longview Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. ' 47 LEVINE. RHODA 2045 Haring Street, Brooklyn. N. Y. Sh 3-4377 ' 44 LEVITSKY. LILY 340 Riverside Drive, New York City Ac 2-7795 ' 44 LEVY. JACQUELINE 801 West End Avenue, New York City Ri 9-2872 ' 46 LEWIS. DEBORAH TAYLOR 434 West 120th Street. New York City Un 4-5790 ' 44 LEWIS. ELIZABETH 12 Hills Drive, Utica, New York ' 46 LEWIS, JANE CAREY 215 West 88th Street, New York Sc 4-1538 ' 46 LEWIS. MARY ANN 3725 Henry Hudson Parkway, New York Ki 6-0026 •44 LI. MAE-CHING Sigma Place, Riverdale Ma 7-9113 ' 44 LIANG, NAOMI RUTH 521 North Elmira Street, San Antonio, Texas Unc. LIBERA. RENA 32 Tracy Street, Springfield, Mass. ' 46 LIEBESMAN, FRANCES 61 Echo Lane, Larchmont. New York ' 45 LINDENBERG. BERNICE GLORIA 675 Walton Avenue, Bronx, New York Me 5-4234 ' 47 LISSFELT. ANN C. 490 West End Avenue, New York City Tr 7-4635 ' 44 LITTAI ER. JOELYN 1590 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, New York De 9-1776 ' 45 LITTLE. ELIZABETH GORDON 503 Birch Avenue, Westfield, New Jersey ' 46 LOBKE. ELIZABETH 620 West 116th Street, New York City Mo 2-9171 ' 46 LOEFFLER. ELSIE East Windham, New York Windham 54F3 ' 47 LOEWY. MARGOT 32 Ludlow Street, Yonkers, New York ' 45 LONG. SHIRLEY WILLIAMS 414 Walden Street. Harriman, Tennessee Unc. LONGLEY, JOAN 61 Schuyler Avenue, Rockville Centre, New York ' 47 LOWE. DOROTHY R. 16 Colonial Road, Port Washington, N. Y. ' 46 LUCARINI, LOLA MARY 3 Foster Street, Poughkeepsie, New York ' 45 LUCCHI, MARY LOUISE 11 Maple Street, Ridgefield Park, New Jersey Hac 3-2161J ' 47 LUCEY, ADRIENNE H. 2540 Boulevard, Jersey City, New Jersey ' 46 LUDORF, PATRICIA 71 Craigmoor Road, West Hartford, Conn. ' 47 LYONS, RUTH E. Hasbroock Avenue, Emerson, New Jersey ' 44 LYTTLE, RUTH 40 East 88th Street, New York City At 9-4715 ' 47 McADOO. CYNTHIA 222 East 71st Street, New York City Rh 4-4373 ' 46 McBERTY. PHOEBE CROSBY 14 West Delaware Avenue, Newark, Delaware ' 45 McCABE, ANNE McLEONORE 37-11 84th Street. Jackson Heights. New York Ne 9-7118 ' 46 McCAULEY, MARY 36 Sunset Road. Great Neck, New York Great Neck 5675 ' 44 McCLURG. FLORENCE R. 1001 Anderson Avenue. Bronx. New York Je 6-3911 ' 44 McCONVILLE, HELEN Green Avenue, Valley Cottage. New York Congers 395 ' 46 McCURDY, JOAN PORTER 75 Brownell Street, New Haven, Connecticut Unc. Mcdonald, janet 140 Riverside Drive, New York City Tra 7-2152 •44 McFALL, MARGARET Schraalenhurgh Road, Haworth, New Jersey Du 4-0746 J ' 46 McGANNON, DORIS MARGUERITE 285 Alexander Street, Bronx, N. Y. Mott Haven 9-4259 ' 47 McGRAW, BEVERLY A. 407 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pa. ' 47 McGUFFIE, ANN C. 18 Reid Avenue, Passaic, New Jersey ' 46 McINTOSH, BETTY 219 Young Avenue, Pelham. New York Pelham 8-2250 ' 47 McINTYRE, CAROLYN E. 118 Race Street. Edgewood, Pa. ' 45 McKEAN, ELAINE THOMSON 3321 86th Street. Jackson Heights, N. Y. Ne 9-3016 ' 45 McKEAN, JENNY Prides Crossing, Massachusetts ' 44 McKENZIE, CHARLOTTE State Road, Woods Hole, Massachusetts ' 45 McKENZIE, JOAN 87 Granite Street, Portland, Maine ' 47 Mcknight, phyllis 194 Woodland Avenue, Rutherford, N. J. Unc. McLAURY, MARGERY 19 Adams Street, Mt. Vernon. N. Y. ' 47 McLEAN, KATHERINE 34-20 Parsons Boulevard, Flushing. N. Y. ' 47 McMULLAN, CAROLYN 104 Blount Street, Edenton. North Carolina 141 Roster — Continued ' 44 McPOLAN, VIRGINIA 4336 Edmondson, Dallas, Texas ' 46 McWHINNEY, ALICE COPE 635 Vine Street, Denver, Colorado ' 46 MacDONALD, LOIS Glen Gardner, New Jersey ' 47 MacELROY, RUTH E. 4417 Avenue L, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 45 MacGILLIVRAY, DOROTHY RUTH 33-26 166th Street, Flushing, New York Flushing 9-8207 ' 47 MADDOCK, DOROTHY 7 Berkeley Place, Radburn, New Jersey ' 47 MAIER, RUTH 3875 Waldo Avenue, New York City Ki 6-0326 ' 47 MAILLIARD, PATRICIA 9 Little Point, Essex, Connecticut ' 47 MALOUF, ARVELLA 273 Starling Road, Englewood, New Jersey Englewood 3-0973 ' 47 MAMANGAKIS, EMERALD 439 54th Street, Brooklyn, New York ' 44 MANDEVILLE, GLORIA 3422 Giles Place, New York City Ki 3-4708 •44 MANTINBAND, MARION 300 West 109th Street, New York City ' 47 MARCK, CLAUDIA 305 West 98th Street, New York City Ac 4-2400 ' 44 MARCUS, JOYCE Walterboro, South Carolina 44 MARDER, JOAN 140 Reynolds Place, So. Orange, N. J. Sp. MARKMANN, RUTH 88 Haven Avenue, New York City Wa 3-8350 ' 46 MARLER, CLAIRE 454 Riverside Drive, New York City Un 4-4524 Line. MARSHALL, MRS. CLARE 445 West 23rd Street, New York City Chelsea 2-2442 ' 47 MARTIN, MARILYN 1793 Farrest, Memphis, Tennessee ' 45 MASCIOCCHI, LOUISE 316 Park Avenue, Orange, New Jersey ' 45 MATHER, SALLY 1172 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-2567 ' 45 MAULSBY, MEREDITH 425 86th Street, New York City ' 47 MAZUR, BERTHA 1028 11th Street, Ambridge, Pennsylvania ' 45 MEDNICK, MARION 1759 49th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Wi 6-4175 ' 47 MEIGHAN, DORIS 1852 66th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 46 MEIROWITZ, BEATRICE 3235 Grand Concourse Road, New York City Fo 4-1897 ' 45 MENKE, ROSANNE 210 West 70th Street, New York City En 2-5862 ' 46 MENSCHIK, MARILYN 530 Park Avenue, New York City ' 45 MERKER, MURIEL 1317 East 7th Street, Brooklyn, New York CI 8-1230 ' 44 MESSLER, MARTHA 18 Lester Avenue, Westwood, New Jersey Westwood 1354 ' 46 MESSNER, CAROL 1235 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-4611 44 MEYER, BARBARA 38 Lincoln Avenue, Glen Falls, New York ' 45 MICHELSON, INGE KARIN 200 East Main Street, Patchogue, New York Patchogue 1182 ' 46 MIDDLEBROOK, GRACE 268 Robin Road, Englewood, New Jersey Englewood 3-4028 ' 47 MILLARD, MARY 1155 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-2239 ' 46 MILLER, DOREEN 52-15 92nd Street, Elmhurst, New York Ha 4-9483 ' 47 MILLER, ETHEL 3135-77th Street, Jackson Heights, New York Ha 9-6716 ' 45 MILLER, MARIANNE Edgerton Street, Norton Heights, Connecticut Darien 5-0543 ' 45 MILLER, MARJORIE 821 East 22nd Street, Brooklyn, New York Ma 6-7577 ' 47 MILLER, PATRICIA 597 North Avenue, New Rochelle, New York New Rochelle 2-9084 ' 45 MILLIKEN, MARGARET Box 529, Balboa, Canal Zone Sp. MILLS, ELIZABETH 719 York Street, Ottawa, Illinois ' 44 MITCHELL, HELEN 3537 Tryon Avenue, New York City Unc. MITCHELL, JANICE 2130 Dorman Drive, Portsmouth, Ohio ' 44 MITCHELL, JEANNE FRANCES 540 West 122nd Street, New York City Mo 2-2830 46 MITCHELL, LUCY Walpole, New Hampshire ' 45 MODIGLIANI, ANNA MARIA 99 Colonial Parkway, Manhasset, New York Manhasset, 2526 ' 46 MOHR, DORIS 110-41 198th Street, Hollis, Long Island N. Y. Hollis 5-4969 ' 45 MOLESKI, THELMA 821 Chestnut, Kellpont, Pennsylvania ' 47 MOLINELLI, RITA 161 Quaker Ridge Road, Manhasset, New York Manhasset 2506 ' 44 MONAHAN, GLORIA 205 East 78th Street, New York City Rh 4-0691 142 Roster — ( Continued ' 45 MOON, ALICE 3895 Waldo Avenue, Riverdale, New York Ki 3-0907 ' 47 MOORE. CLAIRE 161 Humphrey Avenue, Bayonne. N. J. ' 45 MOORE, ELIZABETH 82-16 Kent Street, Jamaica, New York ' 47 MOORE, VIRGINIA 92-10 Woodhaven Boulevard. Woodhaven, N. Y. Virginia 7-8613 ' 45 MORAN. ELIZABETH 48 Park Avenue, White Plains. New York White Plains 1685J •47 MORESS, JOAN 7 West 96th Street, New York City Ri 9-0485 ' 47 MORFAGEN, VIVIAN R.F.D. No. 2, Boonton. New Jersey Boonton 8-0928M ' 45 MORGAN. MARY CHARLOTTE 812 Elm Avenue. Ridgefield, New Jersey Morsemere 6-4806 46 MORGAN. MARY MARCH 1175 Bushwick Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 45 MORGAN, MARY NEALE 525 North McKean Street. Kittanning, Pa. ' 45 MORRIS, DOROTHY BILLIE 109-14 Ascan Avenue, Forest Hills, New York Sp. MORTIMER, MATHILDE 111 East 56th Street, New York City PI 3-8600 46 MULCHRONE, JOYCE 162 Walnut Street, Waterbury, Connecticut ' 47 MURPHY, MICHAELA 28 Orange Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ma 4-7483 ' 47 MURPHY. RUTH 20 Landers Road, Kenmore, New York ' 47 MURRAY, BEATRICE 1165 Fifth Avenue, New York City At 9-6158 ' 44 MURRAY, ELIZABETH 110-30 71st Road, Forest Hills, New York ' 47 NACHMAN, NANCY 117 Thomas Avenue. Montgomery, Alabama ' 45 NAKATA, SHEZIEKO 323 West 108th Street, New York City ' 45 NAUMBERG, MARGARET 210 West 90th Street, New York City Sc 4-6575 ' 45 NEEL. JEAN 610 South Terrace, Huntington, West Virginia 46 NESTLEN, DOROTHY 33 Goodwin Place, Brooklyn, New York Glenmore 2-2848 ' 44 NESTLER, L. JANE 184 Engle Street, Tenafly, New Jersey Englewood 3-5343 ' 44 NEUMANN, NATANYA 749 West End Avenue, New York City Ac 2-2561 ' 46 NEUMANN, RENA 340 Riverside Drive. New York City Ac 2-1736 ' 45 NEUWIRTH, GLADYS 21 Birch Road, Malverne, New York Lynbrook 3360 ' 47 NEVINS, MEREDITH 122 Park Avenue, Bronxville, New York Br 2-0676 ' 46 NEWELL, NANETTE 540 Madison Avenue, New York Citv PI 3-2091 ' 47 NEWMAN, ELIZABETH 123 Park Avenue, Dumont, New Jersey Dumont 1-1073 ' 45 NICA-SPHAELOS, ELLIE MARIA 159-00 Riverside Drive, New York City Wa 3-7622 ' 45 NICHOLLS, BARBARA Morningside Drive, New York City Mo 2-5643 ' 45 NICHOLSON, DORIS 36-36 215th Street, Bayside, New York Bayside 9-1698 ' 44 NICOLAI, CLARA 2757 Grand Avenue, Niagara Falls, New York ' 46 NINOMIYA, EDITH c o Miss Ann Ormonde, Pelham Manor Gardens, Pelham Manor, New York 47 NOVAK, LOTTE 1212 5th Avenue, New York City Sa 2-4438 ' 44 NUNN. JEAN CAROL 7216 North Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wisconsin Sp. OBREGON, MARIA 995 5th Avenue, New York City Bu 8-5800 Sp. OBREGON, MARTA 995 5th Avenue. New York City Bu 8-5800 ' 46 O ' BRIEN. JOANNA 430 West 116th Street, New York City Un 4-5754 ' 45 OCKERT. DOROTHEA 19 Marble Hill Avenue. New York City Ma 7-8586 ■46 O ' CONNOR, EMILY 109-10 Park Lane South, Richmond Hill, New York Virginia 7-0572 Sp. OERTLY. MRS. ALDA Wolfpit Road, Norwalk, Conn. 47 O ' GORMAN, RUTH 4238 N. Carlisle Street, Philadelphia, Penn. 44 OGURI. CH1YO-KO 579 7th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. So 8-6870 ' 45 O ' LEARY, BONNIE Otro 2202. New River, N. C. ' 46 OLLILA, HELMA 140 West 71st Street, New York City En 2-3649 ' 46 O ' NEILL, CATHERINE 4064 Bronx Boulevard, New York City 01 5-2429 Sp. ONESTI, SYLVIA 740 Pine Street, San Francisco, Cal. ' 47 ORNSTEIN, BETTY 888 Park Avenue, New York City Bu 8-5216 ' 46 ORTH. JEANNE 280 Winthrop Road. W. Englewood, N. J. Teaneck 7-1521 ' 47 OSBORN, JOSEPHINE 207 East 61st Street, New York City 143 Roster — Continued Unc. O ' ROURKE, HONOR 92 Grace Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ma 5-6356 Unc. OSWALD, LILLIAN 9 Hall Avenue, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Tuckahoe 3-1843 Unc. OTTO, CARLYLE Box 156-B, R.R. 10, Cincinnati, Ohio ' 45 OXENBERG, RHODA 226 Henley Road, Woodmere, N. Y. Unc. PAIVA, MARIA Rio Novo, Minas, Brazil ' 47 PAPE. MARY 8458 Hometown Street, Jamaica, N. Y. Republic 9-2857 ' 46 PARKER, CECILE 22 East 47th Street, New York City Wi 2-5700 ' 44 PARKS, VIRGINIA 501 West 103d Street, New York City Un 4-6670 ' 47 PARTRIDGE, MARGARET 425 East 86th Street, New York City Sa 2-6064 ' 45 PASETTI, DOROTHY 109-17 213th Street, Bellaire, N. Y. Hollis 5-9635 ' 47 PATTON, MARY 3332 N. Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio ' 47 PEARL, EDITH 3060 Coddington Avenue, New York City We 7-5996 ' 45 PEARLSTEIN, LOIS 11 Newell Road, Brookline, Mass. ' 46 PELTERSON, JANE 245 East 72d Street, New York City Rh 4-6819 ' 44 PEMBER, DOLORES 83 Malba Drive, Malva, L. I. Flushing 3-6746 ' 44 PENSYL, MARY 67 Hilton Avenue, Garden City, N. Y. G.C. 6345 ' 43 PERLMAN, FRANCES 145 East 92nd Street, New York City At 9-2703 ' 47 PETRONIS, JUNE Nichols Road, Huntington, L. I. Hunt 2460 ' 47 PEYTON, ANNE Princeton, New Jersey Unc. PHILLIPS, JANE 21 Fifth Avenue, New York City Gr. 3-7578 ' 44 PHILPOTTS, FRANCES 114 Morningside Drive, New York City Ca 8-8280 ' 45 PHILPOTTS, RUTH 114 Morningside Drive, New York City Ca 8-8280 ' 47 PIERCE, PATRICIA 47 Claremont Avenue, New York City Un 4-1340 ' 47 PIERCE, PHOEBE 54 Morningside Drive, New York City St 4-0145 ' 45 de PIERNE, CHARLOTTE 22 Resevoir Avenue, Norwalk, Conn. Norwalk 6-0976 ' 47 PIKE, DAPHNE 54 East 92nd Street, New York City At 9-8382 ' 45 PINNEY, HARRIET 2 Elliot Place, Glen Cove, N. Y. ' 44 PITNEY, BARBARA R.F.D. No. 2, Morristown, N. J. ' 47 PITZ, LORNA 2776 Pond Place, N. Y. Fo 4-1404 ' 47 POFF1NBERGER, JOAN 254 Kenilworth Road, Ridgewood, N. J. Ridgewood 6-3479M Unc. POINSETT, JUNE 1189 New York Avenue, Hunt Station, N. Y. Huntington 4066 ' 46 POLK, FRANCES 318 Edgewood Avenue, West Englewood, N. J. Teaneck 7-1612 ' 45 POLKE, SIBYLLE 2130 Broadway, New York City Tr 7-2500 ' 44 POLLARD, LOUISE 75 Clinton Avenue, New Brighton, S. I. St. George 7-3437 Unc. PONEMON, AUDREY 180-24 Grand Central Parkway, Jamaica, N. Y. Re 9-6321 ' 45 POPE, ADELINE 270 Orange Road, Montclair, N. J. ' 47 POPPER, MARION Standish Road, Teaneck, New Jersey Teaneck 6-0548 ' 44 POTTER, MARY 201 Tremont Avenue, Leonia, New Jersey Leonia 4-1016 ' 46 POWELL, A. LORRAINE 67 Stratford Avenue, Garden City, N. Y. Garden City 7733 Unc. POWELL, ANNE 201 East 9th Avenue, Johnson City, Tennessee ' 45 PRATT, BEATRICE 530 Riverside Drive, New York City Un 4-2569 ' 46 PRESTON, PAMELA c o Mrs. G. Goode, R.F.D. No. 1, Mahopac, N. Y. ' 47 PRICE, ANNE 33 Ogden Place, Morristown, N. J. ' 45 PRICE, JEAN 2611 Stuart Avenue, Richmond, Virginia ' 47 PRICE, MARY 635 Riverside Drive,, New York City Au 3-1156 Sp. PRICE, PHYLLIS 225 Trenor Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 2-0424 ' 44 PRICE, URSULA 12 Willow Street, Irvington, New York Irvington 1581 ' 46 PRINS, MARTHA 1109 Washington Avenue, Pelham Manor, N. Y. Pelham 8-1606 Unc. PROPP, EUGENIA 19 East 88th Street, New York City Sa 2-4289 ' 47 PUGH. CHRYSTAL 68-04 Burns Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. ' 46 PUTMAN, ANNE 1155 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-6155 144 Corpus Clftisti CATHOLIC CHURCH WEST 121st STREET (Just off Broadivay) SUNDAY MASSES 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 11:30, 12:30 WEEKDAY MASSES 7, 8, 9 Official Parish for Catholic Students For a Good Meal — Visit MORNINGSIDE TEA ROOM Luncheon, 11 to 2 Dinner, 5 to 8 Delicious Home Cooking A Trial Will Convince You 76 Morningside Drive, Corner 118th Street Tel. MOnument 2-1570 Compliments of Pat Perkins Frocks BORGENICHT SPIRO GIRLS ' DRESSES 1333 BROADWAY NEW YORK CITY THE KING ' S KITCHEN 2888 Broadway High quality baked goods Catering Party Sandwiches Stores at 119th and Amsterdam 110th and Amsterdam COLLEGE DRUG STORE 2939 Broadway (115th Street) Drugs — Soda — Prescriptions MOnument 2-2222 145 Roster — ( -Continued Unc. PUSVASKIS, VITALYA 28 Crescent Street, Ansonia, Conn. ' 45 QUIGG, CONSTANCE 165 East 83rd Street, New York City ' 45 QUINN, REGINA CECILIA Ancor Boulevard, Balboa Heights, Canal Zone ' 45 RACITI, AURELIA 138 Mayflower Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 2-0294W ' 46 RAGSDALE, RAIFORD 3195 Habersham Road, Atlanta, Ga. ' 46 RAMN, JEAN 304 Washington Avenue, Bennington, Vermont ' 47 RASKIN, BARBARA 24 Brinkerhoff Street, Jersey City, N. J. ' 46 RAUP, JOAN ELIOT Pleasantville Road, Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. Briarcliff 2051 ' 47 RAUP, RUTH Pleasantville Road, Briarcliff Manor, N. Y. Briarcliff 2051 ' 47 READ, RUTH 3057 North Murray Avenue, Milwaukee, Wis. Unc. REDE, MAXINE Fox, Alaska ' 44 REDON, ROLANDE 61 Berkeley Street, Valley Stream, N. Y. ' 44 REED. MARY SUE 59 Harrington Drive, Burlington, Vermont ' 46 REED, MILDRED Fairview, Cocoa, Fla. ' 47 REGAN. AUDREY 63-05 82nd Place, Elmhurst, N. Y. ' 44 REICH, EVA 27 West 96th Street, New York City Ri 9-2684 ' 45 REID. DARE 456 Riverside Drive, New York City ' 45 REISS, DOROTHY 68-63 108 Street, Forest Hills, New York Bo 8-1502 ' 47 RETZ, GRACE Grand View on Hudson, Nyack, N. Y. ' 47 REUTHER, DOROTHY 87 Thoma Avenue, Maywood. New Jersey Hackensack 2-4725 ' 47 REYES. CECELIA 420 West 122nd Street, New York City ' 47 REYNOLDS, CAROL 405 Bleaker Street, New York City Watkins 9-1082 ' 47 RICE, ALESSANDRA, 468 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-1924 ' 44 RICHER, JULIANA North Broad Street, Nolwich, N. Y. ' 47 RIDDER, ESTHER 983 Park Avenue, New York City Bu 8-1271 ' 47 RIEGAR, CECELIA 116 Wellington Road, Garden City N. Y. Garden City 8632 ' 47 RIGANO, GLORIA Larchmont Acres Apt., Larchmont, New York Larchmont 2-4623 ' 47 RILEY, ARLEN 315 West 57th Street, New York City ' 45 RILEY, MARY 171 East 71st Street, New York City Bu 8-5771 ' 44 RITTENBAND, CYNTHIA 18 Wildwood Avenue, Waterbury, Conn. •47 ROBBINS, MEGHAM 1561 Madison Avenue, New York City At 9-5787 ' 47 ROBINSON, EVELYN Wingina, Nelson County, Virginia ' 47 ROBINSON, RAE 10 Harding Avenue, White Plains, N. Y. Gladstone 2179 - 44 ROBSON, HOPE Yorktown Heights, New York ' 47 ROGERS, JEANNE 71 Williston Road, Brookline, Mass. ' 44 ROGERS, MARY JANE 35-51 87th Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. Unc. ROGERS, NANCY LEE Parsonage Street, Bennettsville, S. C. 47 ROSENBERG, RUTH 130 Bradley Avenue, Meriden, Conn. ' 45 ROSS, ANNE 56 Mackey Avenue, Port Washington, New York Port Washington 532 ' 47 ROSS, LEILA 627 West 164th Street, New York City Wa 3-0360 ' 44 ROSSELL, IDRIS 3539 88th Street, Jackson Heights, N. Y. ' 47 RUBIN, GEORGIA 30 John Street, Willimantic, Conn. ' 47 RUCKGABER, PHYLLIS 160 Henry Street, Brooklyn, New York ' 46 RUDANSKY, JUDITH 1274 Carroll Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pr 4-5657 ' 47 RUDD, MARY College Hill, Clinton, New York ' 45 RUDDEN, ROSALIE 147-12 Grand Central Parkway, N. Y. Re 9-4654 ' 46 RUEBEL, MARION 4303 Kirby Avenue, Cincinnati Ohio Unc. RUSH, CORNELIA 138-03 78th Drive, Kew Gardens, N. Y. ' 45 RUSKIN, CAROL 32 East 67th Street, New York City Re 4-0448 ' 46 RUSSELL, ISABEL 2 East 70th Street, New York City Rh 4-4620 ' 44 RUSSELL, LOUISE 2 East 70th Street, New York City Rh 4-4620 ' 45 SACHS, BETTY 531 East Lincoln Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mo 8-6333 ' 45 SACK, HELEN 115 South Hamilton Street, Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 146 Compliments of ' 44 Compliments of ' 45 Compliments of ASSOCIATE ALUMNAE of BARNARD COLLEGE Collegiate Coiffures at MADAME SUZANNE 2887 Broadway UN. 4-5500 Complete Beauty Service for Discriminating Women 9-8. Monday and Wednesday to 6:00 Gifts — Jewelry — Silver FANNIE REIFF 251 West 89th Street SChuyler 4-6083 Compliments of ' 47 Compliments of ' 46 147 Roster — Continued ' 44 ST. AMAND LORRAINE 41 Carel Avenue, Babylon, N. Y. ' 47 SAINT LAWRENCE, SHEILA 31 East 79th Street, New York City Bu 8-6303 ' 46 SALING, ETHEL 88 Columbia Avenue, Jersey City Jo 2-6278 ' 47 SALZER, PHYLLIS 1119 Pearl Street, Denver, Colorado ' 45 SANDERS, BARBARA 400 West End Avenue, New York City En 2-3370 ' 47 SANDHOP, CAROL 111-10 Bellaire Place, Bellaire, N. Y. Missouri 7-0737 ' 46 SARAFIANOS, VIRGINIA 1270 Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ma 6-9568 ' 47 SARKO, PATRICIA 633 Washington Street. Peekskill, New York Peekskill 3724-5 ' 47 SARVIS, ISABEL Oskaloosa, Iowa ' 46 SAUM, DOROTHY 131-13 86th Road, Richmond Hill, N. Y. Jamaica 6-3104 ' 45 SAUMS, CAROL 795 East 40th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ma 6-1428 ' 47 SCHEER, DOROTHY 85-30 79th Street, Woodhaven, New York Mi 2-5158 ' 46 SCHETLIN, ISABEL City Home District, Welfare Island, N. Y. PI 3-3150 Unc. SCHMIDLAPP, JEAN 834 5th Avenue, New York City Re 4-0294 ' 46 SCHMIDT, CHARLOTTE 57th Avenue, Rye, New York Park 1188 ' 47 SCHNEIDER, KATHERYN Waterbury Road, Upper Montclair, N. J. ' 47 SCHNIEWIND, LUDOVICA North Street, Greenwich, Connecticut Greenwich 360 ' 44 SCHOCKIN, IRMA 20 Linevick Place, Yonkers, N. Y. Be 7-7830 ' 47 SCHREIBER, CAROL 132 West 169th Street, Bronx, N. Y. Je 6-5240 ' 45 SCHREINER, ELIZABETH 349 East 49th Street, New York City Ma 6-1428 ' 45 SCHULDER, BETTY 25 Lefferts Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 2-0418 ' 47 SCHULTZ. ALICE 1117 Broadway, Hewlitt, L. I., N. Y. Franklin 782 ' 47 SCHUMANN, WILMA 170 Webster Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Journal Square 4-8838 ' 47 SCHWANTES, GLORY 688 Forest Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y. La 2-2294 ' 45 SCHWARTZ, MIRIAM 919 Park Place, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' 47 SCHWARTZ, SUSAN M. 420 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-4695 ' 45 SCOTT. HESSIE EDITH 17 West 74th Street, New York City Sc 4-8934 ' 46 SCOTT, MARIA 25 Claremont Avenue, New York City Mo 2-5172 ' 47 SEBOLD, MARILYN 2140 East Tremont Avenue, New York City ' 45 SEIBERT, HELEN 51 Highbrook Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. Pelham 8-3034W ' 47 SEIDL, JEAN 347 East 73rd Street, New York City Bu 8-4360 ' 44 SEXAUER, SHIRLEY Lake Avenue, Center Moriches, N. Y. ' 47 SEYMOUR, MARY 44 Old Smith Road, Tenafly, N. J. ' 45 SHACKELFORD, M EADE Laird Penefer Park, Midlothian, Virginia ' 45 SHADGEN, JACQUELINE 68-20 Burees Street, Forest Hills, N. Y. Bo 8-0674 ' 44 SHANLEY, YVONNE Castle Village, 200 Gabrini Boulevard, N. Y. Wa 8-2396 ' 45 SHAW, DAWN Sunrise Drive, Hawthorne, N. J. Ha 7-0180M ' 47 SHELDON, BARBARA 301 Nassau Street, Princeton, N. J. ' 44 SHELDON, CAROL 114 Morningside Drive, New York City Ca 8-8280 ' 47 SHEPARD, FLORENCE 203 Linden Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Be 4-4937 ' 45 SHERMAN, THAIS Fallon, Nevada ' 45 SHOOK, GENEVIEVE 240-72 Grosvenor Street, Douglaston, N. Y. Bayside 9-2085 ' 45 SHOPIS, ADELE 85 Shelton Road, Nichols, Conn. ' 47 SHREVE, CYNTHIA 445 West 23rd Street, New York City Ch 3-8889 ' 47 SHUMAN, MARJORIE 12 Fountain, Scarsdale, N. Y. ' 45 SIEGEL, NATALIE 121 Market Street, Perth Amboy, N. J. Perth Amboy 4-0635 ' 46 SIFF, GLORIA 180 Riverside Drive, New York City Sc 4-3742 ' 46 SILVER. IRMA 125 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ne 8-8711 ' 45 SIMON, HOPE RUTH 574 West End Avenue, New York City Sc 4-1542 ' 47 SIMON. KATHERINE 10 West 96th Street, New York City Bu 8-4360 ' 45 SIMON, MARILYN Woodcock Road, Westbury, New York ' 45 SIMONE, ELEANORA 160 West 92nd Street, New York City Sc 4-7403 148 KANE ' S Restaurant Fountain 2880 Broadway • Sandwiches of all kinds L. G. BALFOUR COMPANY Attleboro Massachusetts Official Jewelers to Class of 1944 Barnard College Represented by W. G. Pforr 535 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. MUrray Hill 2-4210 TILSON ' S DRUG STORE High Grade Drugs and Cosmetics Tasty Hot Lunches Louis Sherry Ice Cream Served 2959 Broadway, Corner 116th Street New York, N. Y. UNiversity 4-4444 D. V. BAZINET 1226 Amsterdam Avenue New York, N. Y. • Visit our Sports Department louses — Sweaters Shorts — Slacks Playsuits Dresses We are members of Florists ' Telegraph Delivery Flowers by IFire to All the World A. G. PAPADEM CO., INC. Florists 2953 Broadway New York Tel: MOnument 2-2261, 2-2262 For richer, creamier milk ask for BORDEN ' S GOLDEN CREST Homogenized Vitamin D Parisienne Dressmaker Dresses and Suits to Order Perfect Fitting Alteration and Remodeling MME. RACHELLE, 415 West 118th St. Stationers for Barnard Schiller Stationery Company 2957 broadway NEW YORK, N. Y. THE SUGAR BOWL 1105 AMSTERDAM AVENUE Hot meals served until 7 P.M. I. SCHLEIFFER Jeweler 2883 Broadway, Near 112th Street Expert Watch and Jewelry Repairing CAthedral 8-8231 Established 1911 149 Roster — Continued Una SIMPSON, LOUSIA 110 Market Street, Annapolis, Md. ' 45 SLATER, HELEN 185 Claremont Avenue, New York City Un 4-2995 •44 SIRCH, ANNE 124 N. Columbia Street, Arlington Forest, Virginia ' 45 SKINNER, MIRIAM 114 Morningside Drive, New York City Mo 2-3460 ' 46 SMITH. BARBARA 141 East 19th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 4-6214 ' 47 SMITH. BETTY 557 Garfield Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Bergens 3-6450 ' 46 SMITH. DIANE 514 Bendemere, Interlaken. New Jersey ' 47 SMITH, DOROTHY 104-22 Lefferts Ave.. Richmond Hill. N. Y. Vi 3-3944 ' 47 SMITH. JANET 590 East 21st Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sp. SMITH, PATRICIA 24 Pine Hill Avenue, Glenbrook, Conn. ' 47 SMITH, SUZANNE 60 Park Terrace West, New York ' 47 SNIDER, MARY 134 Elm St., Wheeling, West Virginia ' 46 SNYDER, DOROTHY 35-19 21st Avenue, L. I. City. N. Y. Ra 8-8256 ' 46 SOBEL. ESTELLE 49 West 96th Street, New York City Ac 2-4224 45 SODE, GRADERT 170 Overlook Circle. New Rochelle, N. Y. ' 47 SONENTHAL, CYNTHIA 255 West 84th Street, New York City En 2-0464 ' 46 SPECTOR, HELEN 680 West End Avenue, New York City Ri 9-3959 ' 45 SPICER. BETTY 15 Claremont Avenue, New York City Un 4-4141 ' 44 SPRUNG, EDITH 52 Riverside Drive, New York City Sc 4-7889 ' 44 STARR, BEATRICE 812 Riverside Drive, New York City Wa 8-2417 Sp. STARRING, ELEANOR Irvington. New York ' 45 STEFFENS, ELEANOR 8002 6th Avenue. Brooklvn. N. Y. Be 2-2815 ' 47 STEIN. CLARE Hilltop Drive. Bayville. N. Y. ' 47 STEINER. DOROTHY 137 Park Street. Woodmere. N. Y. Cedarhurst 6019 ' 47 STEINER. GABRIELLE 7 East 85th Street. New York Citv Rh 4-3012 Unc. STEMBRIDGE, POLLY 16 Ellis Avenue, Reading, Mass. ' 45 STEPHENS, BARBARA 132-1201 South Barton Street, Arlington, Virginia ' 45 STEPHENSON, EVELYN 159 Daniel Avenue, Rutherford, New Jersey Ru 2-4631M ' 47 STERN, PEARL Holmdel, New Jersey ' 46 STERNS, DOROTHY IRENE 6 Rose Avenue, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 1238 ' 44 STERMAN, MILDRED 132 Clark Road, Brookline, Mass. ' 47 STETSON, LOLA 117 East 72nd Street, New York City Rh 4-3012 ' 45 STEVENS, LOIS 1223 Forrest, Vicksburg, Mississippi ' 47 STEVENS, NANCY 14 Albion Street, Passaic. New Jersey ' 44 STEVENSON, JANET 293 North Broadway, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5-3155 46 STEWART, JOYCE Metropolitan Oval, New York City Tr 9-0763 ' 46 STEWART, MARY LOUISE 1105 Park Avenue, New York City At 9-6810 47 STONE, ELIZABETH Wayzata. Minnesota ' 44 STONE, GLORIA 59 West 12th Street. New York City Gr 7-3396 Unc. STONE. VALDA 1261 Watauga Street. Kingsport, Tennessee ' 44 STOYELL. MARGARET 16 Elm Street, Cortland. New York ' 46 STRAUSS, GLORIA 310 Pine Street, Waterbury. Conn. ' 44 STREICHLER, ELEANOR 3085 Brighton 13th Street, Brooklyn. N. Y. ' 46 STRINGER, JOAN 85 Larchmont Avenue, Larchmont, New York Larchmont 2-4585 ' 45 STUBBLEF1ELD, SALLY Niles Avenue. St. Joseph. Michigan ' 46 STUBTNG, ALICE 257 South 3rd Avenue. Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Mo 8-5755 ' 45 SI DOCK. SHIRLEY 333 Winthrop Avenue. New Haven. Conn. ' 46 SULLIVAN. ROSEMARY 110 Lee Road. Garden City. N. Y. Garden City 8674 ' 45 SUSEN, MARY 332 Elder Lane. Winnettoa. Illinois 46 SUZUKI. MUTSU MYRTLE 54 Morningside Drive. New York City Un 4-6402 150 CHIDNOFF STUDIO 550 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Official Photographers to the 1945 Mortarboard Roster — Continued ' 47 SWAIN, JESSIE 143 Ridgewood, Glen Ridge, N. J. ' 45 SWEET, BLANCHE 1094 New York Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bu 7-2109 ' 45 SWIFT, HELEN 710 West 2nd Street, Elmira, New York ' 47 SWIKART, HELEN 568 Palmer Road, Yonkers, New York Yonkers 5-3809 ' 46 SYDNOR, ANNE 446 Channing Avenue, Westfield, New Jersey Westfield 4-1095 ' 45 TASSINI, LILLIAN ANNA 365 76th Street, Brooklyn, New York Sh 5-5069 ' 47 TATLER, JULIA E. 33 Elmhurst Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey ' 44 TAYLOR, ALICE KEPHART Box 135, R. D. No. 2, Hollidaysburg, Pennsylvania ' 44 TAYLOR, ELIZABETH M. 249 Roberts Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3-7077M ' 45 TCHOK, LJUBICA 468 Riverside Drive, New York City Un 4-0849 ' 44 TCHOK, MARICA 468 Riverside Drive, New York City Un 4-0849 ' 44 TCHUDNOVSKY, NIGUETTE E. 333 West 86th Street, New York City Tr 7-7218 ' 46 TERRACE, DOROTHY RUTH 651 Linden Boulevard, Brooklyn, N. Y. President 2-2823 ' 47 THOMAS, MADELEINE L. 29 Claremont Avenue, New York City ' 45 THOMAS, RUTH ELIZABETH Factoryville, Pennsylvania ' 45 TIEDEMAN, CAROLE IRENE Olney Road, Mahush, New Jersey Cragmere 3990 ' 44 TOWERS, HARRIET CLEVELAND 404 Riverside Drive, New York City Ca 8-1342 ' 47 TRAERIS, MARGUERITE E. 32-18 Murray Lane, Flushing, New York Flushing 9-5083 ' 46 TREBILCOCK, YVONNE ALISA 1940 East Tremont Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Ta 2-2485 ' 44 TREBLING, KATHERINE F. Bradford Avenue, Harrison, New York Park 3038 ' 47 TREVOR, HELEN S. 140 East 81st Street, New York City Bu 8-7007 ' 45 TRILLING, ROBERTA RUST 647 West 169th Street, New York City Wadsworth 7-7282 ' 46 TRON, REGINIA JOSEPHINE 857 Jefferson Avenue, Brooklyn, New York Gi 5-2451 ' 47 TROUSOFF, NATALIE 119 Caryl Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3-2861 Sp. TRUMBULL, MRS. MARJORIE 75 Central Park West, New York City Tra 7-1122 ' 46 TUGWELL, MARCIA JANE 460 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-2243 ' 45 TURNER, BEVERLY 1505 South Boulevard, Houston, Texas ' 46 TURNER, EULALIE DELOREZ 14 Beacon Hill Road, Port Washington, N. Y Port Washington 2147 ' 44 TURPISH, THERESE E. 145 Forest Avenue, Staten Island, New York Gi 7-4538 ' 45 TURTZ, FELICE 65 Central Park West, New York City En 2-1211 ' 47 TUTWELER, MAY BELLE 440 Riverside Drive, New York City Mo 2-1295 ' 47 TYSINGER, CAROLYN VIRGINIA 738 Myrtle Drive, Rock Hill, S. C. ' 46 UDELL, EDITH 300 Central Park West, New York City Sc 4-3018 ' 47 URQUHART, CHARLOTTE M. 548 Riverside Drive, New York City Un 4-0130 ' 47 VAINIO, AURA V. 220 West 24th Street, New York City ' 44 VANDERVOORT, JEAN MARILYN 350 Cabrini Boulevard, New York City Wa 7-1083 ' 45 VAN HAELEWYN, JANE Wilton, Connecticut Unc. VON PHUL, ANNE 1235 Park Avenue, New York City Sa 2-7015 ' 47 VARS, PATRICIA L. 41 Windsor Road, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck 484 ' 44 VASSEUR, LILIANE 400 West 119th Street, New York City Un 4-0200 ' 45 VAUGHN, JANE COPAS 718 Madison Avenue, New York City Regent 4-3842 ' 44 VERNON, BEVERLY ELISE 8 William Street, Lynbrooke, New York ' 45 VESSA, JOAN 214-11 110 Avenue, Queens Village, New York Hollis 5-9044 ' 46 VIOLETT, ELLEN McCANTER Oyster Bay, New York ' 46 VIPOND, MARY PHYLLIS 151 West 106th Street, New York City ' 47 VISCONTI, SANDRA G. Ill Onslow Place, Kew Gardens, New York Virginia 9-4252 ' 47 VOGEL, ELLEN T. 60 East 96th Street, New York City At 9-5565 ' 46 VOORHIES, SUZANNE BENNETT Dorset Lane, Babylon, New York 152 IS IT GIFTS YOU WANT . . OR BOOKS FOR SCHOOL . . or books to read for just plain fun . . . or school supplies ... or knick-knacks for your room ... or records ... or radios? The Bookstore has everything. It shopping center of the campus. th Then, too, it is ideal for a quick lunch or leisurely afternoon tea. And it remains the meeting place of the entire college community. So come in and visit. You ' ll agree that the Colum- bia University Bookstore is the most ver- satile bookstore in the world! 153 Roster — Continued ' 45 VOUAUX. CAROL MURIEL 115-33 115th Street, Ozone Park, N. Y. ' 46 VON YORK, TANIA 96 Eastern Parkway, Devon, Connecticut ' 47 WAGNER, DELPHINE P. 108-31 68th Avenue, Forest Hills, New York Bo 8-9269 ' 45 WALDEN, JEAN MILDRED 4195 Park Drive, Baton Rouge, Louisiana ' 46 WALKER, MARILYN Porter Hill, Middlebury, Connecticut ' 45 WALS. JUNE RITA 645 West End Avenue, New York City Schuyler 4-6326 ' 45 WALSER, CYNTHIA ALICE 95 Anemore Drive, New Rochelle, New York New Rochelle 2-4724 •47 WALSH, COLLEEN 22 East Oakdere Avenue, Palisades, New Jersey Leonia 4-2737 •45 WALSH, JANE COMPTON School Street, Chatham, Mass. ' 45 WALSH, JEAN CLAIR 63 East 90th Street, New York City ' 44 WALSH, JEANNE VANDERVOORT 46 Pilot Street, City Island, N. Y. ' 45 WALSH. SUZANNE 199 North Broadway, North Tarrytown, New York Tarrytown 2430 ' 47 WALTERS, NANCY L. 106 Seddon Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. ' 45 WALTHER, MARY JANE David Church Road, Dayton, Ohio ' 47 WARBURTON. BETTY W. Haddix Road, Osborn, Ohio ' 45 WARBURTON, MARIE-LOUISE PATRICIA 52 Nysian Street, Ottawa, Canada ' 44 WARD, NANCY LEE 1035 Fifth Avenue, New York City Bu 8-2782 47 WARD. E. WESLEY 14 Pleasant Street, Fitchburg, Mass. ' 47 WARFIELD, VIRGINIA E. St. John ' s Riverside Hospital, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 3-2450 ' 47 WARSHAVSKY, FRANCES Park Centra] Hotel, New York City Circle 7-8000 ' 45 WASELL, FLORENCE FRANCIS 110-17 71st Avenue, Forest Hills, N. Y. Bo 3-0347 ' 46 WASSER, JUDY KAY 49 Claremont Avenue, New York City Sp. WATEROUS. MARY 320 Elm Street, Northampton. Massachusetts Unc. WATSON, CAROLOTTA 530 Audubon Avenue, New York City Wa 3-5873 ' 45 WAX, ELEANOR DORIS 1150 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York Jerome 6-4949 ' 45 WEAVER, LISBET STUMPP 210 Sedgewick Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. ' 46 WEAVER, SUSAN MARY Inwood Avenue, Hartsdale, New York WP 9037 45 WEBBER, ELEANOR JEAN 531 West 122nd Street, New York City ' 46 WEBSTER, LUCIA JEAN 2026 1st Avenue, Jackson, Mississippi ' 47 WECKSTEIN, LUCILLE M. 1183 East 23rd Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Sp. WEDDLE, JEAN 123 Mitchell Street, Bellmore, New York ' 46 WEHNER, AUDREY GAY 1701 Arizona Street, El Paso, Texas ' 47 WEIDLUND, JANE F. 629 West 115th Street, New York City Mo 2-6355 ' 46 WEINBERGER, GLORIA 930 Fifth Avenue, New York City Bu 8-8381 ' 45 WEISBERG, BEVERLY RUTH 910 Grand Concourse, Bronx, N. Y. Je 7-7489 ' 46 WEISMAN, CYNTHIA JOAN 98 Riverside Drive, New York City En 2-2735 ' 44 WEISS, ETHEL VICTORIA 6804 52nd Drive, Queens, New York Ne 9-7378 ' 45 WEISS, SUZANNE MARIE 108-56 70th Avenue, Forest Hills, N. Y. Blvd 8-6655 ' 45 WELLMAN, MAUD RIVES Oyster Bay, New York ' 47 WELLMAN, EVELYN WELLER, ALMA Oyster Bay. New York North Hudson. New York ' 46 WATTER. CARLENE Essex Falls. New Jersey ' 47 WELLS, JOANNA 76 Scenic Drive, Hastings-on-Hudson. N. Y. ' 46 WELTER,, MARJORIE STONE 243 Wardwell Avenue, Staten Island. N. Y. ' 46 WENK, JEAN HARRIET North Main Street, Sayville, N. Y. ' 45 WERNER, GERTRUDE ALBERTA 38 Ravine Avenue, Caldwell, New Jersey Caldwell 6-241 7J ' 45 WERNER, JUNE MILDRED 8751-62 Road, Queens, New York Ha 9-5788 ' 47 WEST. ANN-TRUTH 76 Longview Avenue. White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 9612J 154 155 Roster — Continued ' 46 WESTERMANN, GERTRUDE MARGARET 49 East 96th Street, New York City Sa 2-7287 ' 46 WETMORE, GERALDINE LOIS 208 Capitol Avenue, Williston Park, N. Y. ' 47 WHEELER, ANNE H. 169 Ridgeway Road, Wellesley Farms, Mass. Una WHETSEL, ELIZABETH 774 15th Street, Boulder, Colorado Unc. WHETSEL, JANET 774 15th Street, Boulder, Colorado ' 47 WHITECOTTON, HELEN C. 136 East 64th Street, New York City Re 7-2258 ' 45 WHITTIER, DOROTHY ANN 4 Lombardy Lane, Little Rock, Ark. ' 44 WHITING, JOAN THURSTON 63 Chester Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle 2-6767 Unc. WHITMAN, TANIA Burglingame, California ' 47 WHITMAN, VIVIAN JEAN Caroga Lake, New York ' 46 WICKERSHAM, ROBERTA FLORENCE 1971 Bay Drive, Miami Beach, Fla. ' 45 WILBY, MARY WALLACE 3302 Eastside Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio ' 47 WILDSTEIN, NATALIE J. 368 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. Ne 8-7260 ' 44 WILLIAMS, PHELLIS DUVAL 735 Crest Road, Ridgewood, N. J. Ri 6-0047W ' 47 WILLIAMSON, JOANNE 51 Thomas Road, Westport, Conn. ' 44 WILLIAMSON, B. MARY 45 Tiemann Place, New York City Ca 8-0704 ' 46 WINTER, MARGARET MARIA 210 Hickory Avenue, Tenafly, New Jersey Englewood 3-4904J ' 45 WOLFERT, ADRIENNE MARCELLE R. D. No. 4 Box 121, Bridgeport, Conn. Unc. WOLFRATH, DOROTHY EDITH 172 Highwood Avenue, Leonia, N. J. Leonia 4-1978 Unc. WOODS, CRETE 1130 Washington Boulevard, Oak Park, Illinois ' 45 WOOLFOLK, MARGARET 114 Morsemere Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Yonkers 5-3249 ' 45 WRIGHT, JOAN LOUISE 1514 Mesa Avenue, El Paso, Texas ' 44 WRIGLEY, DORIS ELIZABETH 755 Emerson Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J. ' 44 WYATT, MONICA 133 East 62nd Street, New York City Re 7-1271 ' 45 WYSONG, MARJORIE MacMONNIES 9 Terrace Drive, Port Washington, New York Port Washington 1761 ' 44 YOERG, ELIZABETH ANNE 84 Lexington Avenue, Holyoke, Mass. ' 46 YOKE, MARY CAROLINE 116-31 Union Turnpike, Forest Hills, New York Blvd 8-1644 Unc. YORK, BARBARA 20 East 88th Street, New York City At 9-7532 ' 46 YOUNG, BARBARBA CAMERON 2 Horatio Street, New York City Wa 9-0373 ' 45 YOUNG, CELINE 542 2nd Avenue, Pelham, N. Y. Pelham 8-1934M ' 47 YOUNG, MILDRED 24 Brookside Place, Hillsdale, New Jersey Westwood 1339J ' 46 ZEIGER, JOAN ELLEN 436 Crown Street, Brooklyn, New York Sh 6-2975 ' 45 ZEIL, ELIZABETH THERESA 210 Church Street, White Plains, N. Y. White Plains 1139W ' 45 ZIRPOLO, GLORIA KATHERYN 1255 Dean Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Pr 4-6763 ' 47 ZIL, HE LENE 612 West 144th Street, New York City Au 3-2248 ' 46 ZIMMER, FAITH ESTELLE 41-42 50th Street, Woodside, New York Ne 9-2593 ' 44 ZIMMERMAN, RUTH M. 88-23 74th Street, Glendale, Queens, N. Y. Ha 3-7996 ' 46 ZIMMERMAN, SARAH PRINCE 1530 Edgecombe Road, St. Paul, Minn. ' 47 ZINK, STEFANIE 1483 East 14th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. 156 Mail Express Printing Co. NCORPOR ATED 160 VARICK STREET NEW YORK ( j ) WILLARD H. SCHILLING, Manager COLLEGE ANNUAL DEPARTMENT 157
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