Brown University Womens College - Brun Mael Yearbook (Providence, RI)
- Class of 1923
Page 1 of 119
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 119 of the 1923 volume:
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W LS W X I W O WN W F PE W W M W W O W W E W W W W W W W H W W W W T W W W I M AEL M BRUN M A W W X W W I L f W I f E I W ,A W W E M W W E W X W X W R W M FH N W 4 O 'U W W S T S R W W S Y I B W W NSTH W W AMN-IE W W ECEEH W W W T T I W W W DE-IMF W momo W E NEN W W FAD W MNEOD w W R E W M W X W HBRSC W W T E D U U W BNOB W M U M U W W REHMP M f M UMNAH W W O ENT W W, EF-UN W W HT E W W TE E W W N T W W I R W W N W W U W M O M W I I I W W W D U BRUN MAEL E W!HVf45MffffvfWfff'97W9 f ofiff70fXWVWWMWfWVMWX 0lf!6'77W7fW XXMQWWXWWWXXMVM fcWV!M l 1 U U Y . S S S 1 S S S S S :S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S SS S iS S S S S S S S- X S S S S: X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S: S S S S S S S S S l S S W S S 1 S S S S S S S S 1 S S S S S S S S S S S S To S S S S LIDA SHAW KING S S S S Dean of the Women's College S S S S 1905 - 1922 S S . . S S In loyal apprecxatlon of her S S years of falthful servnce S S X S S S S S S SS SQ Cl lj UE BRUN MAEL S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S - S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S To S S S SS ANNE CROSBY EMERY ALLINSON S S S S Dean of the Women's College S S S S 1900 - 1905 S S S S V Acting Dean 1920 - 1921, 1922 - Feb. 1923 S S , , S S In gratitude for her fnendship S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S UN MAEL A S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S ' S S S S S S S S ' S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S SS S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S SE S S S S S S. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 7, ,, rw. S S , S S. S S S S S S To S S S S MARGARET SHOVE MORRISS S S S S and the good years to come S S S S we entrust our high hopes S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S CONTENTS Advertisements ............... All-College Social Committee ,.... Athletic Association ........... Brownies .........,.. Brun Mael Board .... Calendar ............,. Christian Association .... Classes ............. Dedication ........,. Faculty ............... Former Students 1923 .... Freshmen ........... Glee Club .... Jokes ......,... Juniors ......... Komian Board ..... Komian Play .... Organizations .... Phi Beta Kappa. . . Question Club. . . Record ....... Seniors ........ Sepiad Board .... Silver Bay Club .... Sigma Xi ....... Sophomores ..................,, Special Students .................. Students Government Association .... BRUN MAEL ffWfff MMWZW 6,47 M A' ll It . 4' -. I' Y .. .:-,7:gsiVgff j,,- ,ll V I ' 5 1 f ' ,f ' ' . .:e ! , X' ' ' f , 'A . ' ,, ' vi-5,-A77,,, I, 1 H 5 ff 70.5 -. 7 t .. - ..7,i:1'767ff y f b , - 4, -- fP'ifuf . .ff . M .1 fy1,1771,,,7'2xf',.,,,40f-,,.,N ' ' D - - Sluts Jung.. -:vous -nu, .q,,, V' x 'ITTMIIN FHEUUY BRUN MAEL Y Y N N S . . N 5 Ellie iiixerutlue lbffuzers . 5 X x S WILLIAM HERBERT PERRY FAUNCE, D. D., L.L. D. E E President. S X X S MARGARET SHOVE MORRISS, PH. D. E S Dean of the Women's College S S and Associate Professor of American History S x S EMMA BRADFORD STANTON, A. M. SN E Registrar of the Women's College. S N N S Ellie Zliacultg S 3 EDMUND BURKE DELABARRE, PH. D. E E Professor of Psychology. E N v N S WALTER COCHRANE BRONSON, A. M.. LITT. D. S S Professor of English. S N N S ASA CLINTON CROWELL, PH. D. S S Associate Professor of the Germanic Languages and Literatures S S S S FRANCIS GREENLEAF ALLINSON, PH. D., LITT. D. S S David Benedict Professor of Greek Literature and History S N N S JAMES QUAYLE DEALEY, PH. D. S E Professor of Social and Political Science S N S S WALTER BALLOU JACOBS, A. M. E S ' Professor of Educationg Director of University Extension. S N N 2 ALBERT DAVIS MEAD, PH. D., SC. D. S E Professor of Biology. E N N S ALBERT KNIGHT POTTER, A. M. S . N S Pr f fE l h x o essor o ng is . S, 2 ALBERT BUSHNELL JOHNSON, A. M. Q E Associate Professor of Romance Languages S N N S FREDERIC POOLE GORHAM, A. M. S S Professor of Bacteriology. S x x S N N JOHN FRANCIS GREENE, A. M. Q S Associate Professor of Romance Literature and History. S S N S HENRY THATCHER FOWLER, PH. D. S S Professor of Biblical Literature and History. S X x E GEORGE WYLLYS BENEDICT, PH. D. E E Associate Professor of English. S x x S THOMAS CROSBY, Jr., A. M. E is Associate Professor of English and Public Speaking E x x is HENRY BARRETT HUNTINGTON, A. B. E S Associate Professor of English. S W W ? Z 4 Z I 4 f i I f I f 7 7 7 i X i 7 i f X Z , P-4 NJ UN MAEL Q ' Cl N CHARLES WILSON BROWN, A. M. 5 S Associate Professor of Geology. S N ' N S HERBERT EUGENE WALTER, PH. D. 3 SN Associate Professor of Biology. S N N S ROLAND GEORGE DWIGHT RICHARDSON, PH. D. S S Professor of Pure Mathematics. S N S CHARLES HERMAN HUNKINS, Dr. Univ. Paris S S Associate Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. E N N S RAYMOND CLARE ARCHIBALD, PH. D. S S Associate Professor of Pure Mathematics. S N N S THEODORE COLLIER, PH. D. S S Professor of European History. S N N E WILLIAM THOMSON HASTINGS, A. M. S N Assistant Professor of English. N N N S TJOHN CORLISS DUNNING, PH. D. E S Assistant Professor of Political Science. S N N S ALFRED HARRISON JONES, PH. D. E S Associate Professor of Logic. S N ' N S ROBERT McBURNEY MITCHELL, PH. D. S S Assistant Professor of Germanic Languages and Literatures. S N N S KENDALL KERFOOT SMITH, PH. D. XS E Assistant Professor of Greek Literature and History. S N N N CLINTON HARVEY CURRIER, A. M. N S Assistant Professor of Mathematics. S N N E HAROLD STEPHEN BUCKLIN, PH. D. S S Assistant Professor of Social Science. S N N S HERBERT FRANKLIN DAVISON, A. M. E S Assistant Professor of Chemistry. N N ' N S JOHN SHAPLEY, PH. D. N S Assistant Professor of Art: Director of Museum of Fine Arts. S N - N E ROBERT WILBUR BURGESS, PH. D. S S Assistant Professor of Mathematics. E N N S RAY EDWIN GILMAN, PH. D. S S Assistant Professor of Mathematics. S N N S EDOUARD R. MASSEY, B. es LETTRES, A. M. S E Assistant Professor of Romance Languages. S N N S WALTER HENRY SNELL, PH. D. S E Assistant Professor of Botany. S N N if A Wi On leave of absence during Academic year 1922-23. S N N N El lj ?f E lj 1 UN MAEL lj lj S VERNER WINSLOW CRANE, PH. D. S Assistant Professor of American History on the S S George L. Littlefield Foundation. S N x S GAETANO CAVICCHIA. A. B. S S Assistant Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures. S X N S JAMES PICKWELL ADAMS, A. M. E S Assistant Professor of Economics. E N N S BENJAMIN CROCKER CLOUGH, PH. D. S N A ' n u P f fE 1' h N S ssis an ro essor o ng is . S N x S KENNETH OLIVER MASON, A. M. S S Instructor in English S N ' S S MARION EMMETT BRATCHER, PH. D. E E Instructor in Biblical Literature. E N N S ALBERT EDWARD RAND, PH. D. S E Instructor in French. S N N S cLAUs EMANUEL ECKSTROM, A. M. S S Instructor in Education. S N N S EVERETT CLAIR BANCROFT, A. B. S S Instructor in Economics. 2 x S JAY BARRETT BOTSFORD, A. M. E E Instructor in History. S N N S ANTONIO JESUS RUBIO, D. V. M. S S Instructor in Spanish. E N N S ARTHUR OWEN HICKSON, A. B. S E Instructor in Mathematics. S N N is JAMES HAMPTON FITHIAN, A. B. E E Instructor in Mathematics. S N N S LELAND MATTHEW GOODRICH, A. M. S 5 Instructor in Political and Social Science S S ' N N N S ROLLIN DONALD MOORE, A. M. S S Instructor in English. is MAGEL CRAIG WILDER, A. M. S Instructor in Biology S N ' N N MARJORIE BROWN S Acting Director of Hygiene and Physical Education. x N N S 3 ADELE MADELEINE WILDES, A. M. Instructor in Latin. S S Y MARC DEKUNGER, Lic. es L. Instructor in Romance Languages and Literature El CI ClD iIICl CU FU Cl' Z 3 bt F1 l Q Q Q Q 'Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q 'Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q fm C1 Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q lecturers aah Assistants Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q GENE WILDER WARE, A. B. Q Q Lecturer in Music. Q Q Q Q BLANCHE NATHALIE DAVIS Q Q Director of Chapel Music. Q Q Q Q soPH1E REITER GORDON, A. B. Q Q Assistant in Biology. ' Q Q Q Q EVELYN PRESCOTT WIGGIN, A. B. Q Q Assistant in Mathematics. Q Q Q Q ROBERT LEE GUTHRIE, A. M. Q Q Assistant in Social and Political Science. Q Q X Q KATHERINE ELIZABETH COLTON, A. B. Q Q Assistant in Hygiene and Physical Education. Q Q Q Q RUTH AGAR Q Q Assistant in Hygiene and Physical Education. Q Q Q Q EDITH MARIE LINNEA CARLBORG, A. M. Q Q Supervising Librarian. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q H Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q UU? Y Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q 'Q 'RQ Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q 'X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q BRUN MAEL W M W W f X W W W I W W W W W W W W I W W W W W I W W I W M I W W I I W W I I W W W X M W G I I M W 5 K N W W, W t C I W W B O D O W I .L B I I I i DL D. i 6 W W E I Ol 9 S I W Dm Gum Kw Nw' W W m A H C0 O W W PM r YH T W W 2 8 We 9 V! W Rc I Et ND. I W U t on S Ir W W H Em NM Nh vm W I S f W w M f Ef AS W M 1 AM E0 T0 NM W B Td Sd N M I .I Sm Ta Ea d W W hm YS Om Cm Am W W m LH L N H W W D W M A W W A R W W W W W W V I W W W W W W W I X W W W W W f W W W X W W W W W W ,M X M W W I X W W U E m E BRUN MAEL 9 xx, K 'Q X 1 'mvw N939 BRUN MAEL E1 CI S S S S S S S S N Q X S S S X fi 5 S X S S X S X S N S Class Officers S S E ELEANORE WOODWARD PARMELLEE. . . ....,. President E S NELLIE CLAYTON STOKES ......,..... . . Vice-President S S DOROTHY THAYER MOWRY ........, ..... S ecrelary S S ELIZABETH THATCHER STAFFORD. . , . . . Treasurer S Q S S Social Committee S S DOROTHY FRINK PATTON, ChlliT'77lf17l 2 S ELSIE MARIE CARLEN MARY CATHERINE HOGAN E S RUTH ELIZABETH PARSONS EDYTHE FLORENCE REEVES S S JOAN MONICA SHEA BERNICE GRACE SMITH S 5 SARAH ELEANOR WELLS 5 S S S S S S S Q S X N X S X N x X N X N S S s S 5 X s S S S Q BRUN MAEL I3 U Z:Z Wi WW MW:W1,I!9hfW?ZAWlWAJ D El E Cl Y Y S S E ' ' t S 572111015 M15 nrg s - s illreahman ear S Weren't those first getting-acquainted days fun when the E S ff f 7 ' S S college password was What s your name. Where did you come S E from? and we got all lame from bowling and quite breathless S from all the parties and everything. And we elected Evelyn S S Lochman chairman'and were all ready to start. S S Remember that first day in Chapel and how we clapped and S Q clapped and made the Seniors sing Mary Was a Butterfiy and S S Percy was a Grind over again. Then there was the Baby Party 2 S where everyone was quite young and undignified and you decided S S then and there that you were glad you came even if home were so S S far away. Remember the Freshman Army in Metcalf so named S S because it ate so much, and the thrill of our first Komian play and S S of wearing our new evening dress to the first all-college. S S Then we actually lived through examsi and then we won the 2 S Brownie Stunt and K fainted and Sal ie tottered down the S S aisle clutching her rose bathrobe in one hand and waving the cup 2 2 in the other and next day in Biology 1 Miss Whiting brought out S S the skeleton decorated with our class ribbons. E 12 We had a gorgeous banquet at the Far East and invited S S Miss Bussell and Miss Whiting and then we had a picnic in Lincoln S S Woods only some of us got lost and didn't get any of it. May Day S S we all gave our Seniors May Baskets and thought of when we'd S S be Seniors and felt all nice and glowy inside. We danced 2 S around the Maypole and only got tangled up once. On May Q Q Day, too, we discovered our dramatic stars. Remember Lem as Q the willainess and that thrilling final line Damn men. And 2 then before we knew it exams overwhelmed us and we all said Q 2 good-bye and promised to write and everything. E S X S S lj El WXWZZWWXWWWW7MW!W!lW!!! WWW ij El 20 UN MAEL II Q El Y Y S S S S is S R Q S S S S X s S S S S S X S S Sm nmnre ear s IJ s s S N N X . . . . N is Wasn't it great to come back with that belonging feeling. E S We had grown up an awful lot and of course we never, really never, Q 2 could have been as young as these Freshmen were. We started S S right in and captured the hike record when Pat and Jo S S Maguire wlked twenty-one miles and we renewed our acquaint- E 2 ance with Lincoln Woods and the Ten Mile. Our actresses started S Q helping out Komians and we all upheld the Operetta and were S Q gypsies. K was the booful lady and did all the singing 3 S and Dorothea danced and Joan was the husky football hero and S S Sally looked funny. Everybody was awf'ly glad we were back. is S Then all our best friends started joining fraternities. We S S began to be afraid it was catching and wondered if we ought to be S 3 vaccinated or something, but we had other worries, too. We S S decided not to win the Brownie Stunt this time, but wasn't S ig Fran wonderful the way she stepped in on half an hour's S S notice and was the funniest thing in it with her interpretation of S S aesthetic dancing. S S And then our Masque! Well, we don't have to recall that. S S Can we ever forget it? Even if it was postponed twice it was S S worth waiting for and it was a good thing we didn't have it the S S first day because it developed later that Pat thought Fran S X . S was getting the class flowers and Fran thought Pat was S S doing it and we wouldn't have had any at all. That was the S S - S Q year, too, that so many of us went to Silver Bay and Evelyn and Q Q H ,, . . . . Q S Bee were seasick groing around Point Judith. Q N S S N N N S S S Q S S N N S S S S S Q X 1 N X X N X S S S S S S 22 BRUN MAEL E E1 4zf7 E E1 s Q El S S 12581115 nfteillllaz ue S S S S 3 The little princess is unhappy. In vain her father plans great S S su rises for her, orders costly meals, buys beautiful clothes. She S s rp . . . s S never smiles. Today, again, the king has arranged a line enter- S E tainment, perhaps today she will laugh. A page bears in a great S X - - X S book. The tales of Bo Peep, Goldllocks, Robin Hood, and Peter lg S Pan enthrall the princess for a time, but she soon becomes tired, S E and throws the book pettishly on the ground. .Then step forward S S the court musicians. Ably they fiddle, but neither they, nor the S S King's sweetest singer please. The court dancers come tripping S E in - the princess smiles not. All are dismayed, except the little S E page who has fallen fast asleep. A frown twists the King's S S forehead.' ' . I u l E Q Outside shrills the voices of village children. Perhaps their S S unrestrained gayety may please the little girl. They are called S S in, and in careless abandon merrily play their simple games. A S S troupe of tumblers sets them rapturously clapping, a balloon man S S distributes his gaudy baubles. 5 X X S Then through the hilarious children a bent old man feebly S S pushes his way, he tottersg he falls. No one moves. All are S S quiet, all gaze at the princess. She rises, she bends pityingly Q S over the crippled figure. For a moment the crowd surges in then 5 S stumbles back ln amazement. The old man has gone. There is S S nothing before them but his dusty coat lying dark on the ground Q S - golden flowers gleam upon it. Slowly the princess gathers up S S the blossoms. A new gentleness softens her face, a smile flashes S Q over her lips. At last she knows how to find happiness. ' S S Forgetfulness of selfand love for others lead the way. S 2 The golden flowers he smiling in her hands. A S S S S THE CAST S S S S Princess S S A. Campbell S X X S King S 3 E. Parmellee S X S Retinue S if G. Bauer, M. Fairweather, E. Hagstrom, H. Hoff, M. Hogan, M. Nagle, S 5 c. Smith, o. Wildes. A 3 S S S Bo Peep S S s. Wells S X S Three Bears S E D. Hotchkiss, N. Stokes, E. Swanson. S N N ll-lEl l:ll:l BRUN MAEL E Wl M7WWfWM MMAWM Wffff7MM22W217!i47hLZZ, lj E .I , - Cl lj X.. Q . S Goldilocks S E M. Cheetham S is Robin Hood and band S S R. Burt, T. Chew, A. Desmond, E. Reeves, D. Sherman, E. Stafford, S S M. Wishart, A. Wright. ' E S Peter Pan S x , x Q D. Smith Q N N S Court Musicians xg N . S R. Bateman, G. Craig, H. MacNaught, C. Wlnsper. E N N S Court Singer E N - N Q K. Fanning 'Q S Q E Spirit of Dance S 5 D. Smith E N N 2 Scarf Dancers S S S. Appel, M. Bailey, E. Carlin, M. Hassinger, R. Lothrop, J. Shea, E. S S Sheehan, D. Simpson. 2 x x Q Grotesque Dancers Q x x S M. Appel, L. Brindle, M. Cummings, M. Dick, R. King, F. Moulton, S XE D. Mowry, M. Tierny S S Page S N N S D. Patton S X N S Tumblers S S J. Heller, J. Maguire, G. Mowry, F. Wright S S S S Balloon Man S S E. Ewart S is N S Balloon Dancers S x x S M. Andrews, R. Hanchet, M. Holland, E. Lochman, I. Long, R. Marvel, S N . . . . N S H. Mauran, E. Ostigny, R. Parsons, B. Richard, G. Shem, B. Smith, W. S A - x 5. Winters. Q 12 N E Skipping Rope Dancers S S H. Avery, M. Barton, E. Beers, R. Bugbee, D. Carr, A. Coggeshall, A. Cole, J. Flumere, S. Jacobson, D. Kushelevitch, B. Rubenstein, I Rubenstein, S M. Schroeder. S x S Old Man E E. Robison S X . S Coach S MISS NELLIE E. BUSSELL N I S The Committee S x x S DOROTHY PATTON, chairman E S ELSIE CARLEN BERNICE SMITH Q S KATHERINE FANNING - SALLIE WELLS S Q S S E El lj Q VA !WAZ il UN MAEL II El Q S S s s s S X S S S S S S S S N S S Q S S N X S S S ' ' S ilumnr Hear: X N X . . . X S We began to feel our responslbillty and age. We had a most E S thrilling banquet at the Wannamoisett with Miss Bussell to make S . . . X S a speech and everythlng to label it the very best class banquet 1n S S college history. We became very athletic and captured the gym S S contest but how could we help it with June Heller and Elsie Carlen S E and Peggy and Fran and all the rest of our athletic class. Q E Our first team in basketball won every game, too. S E Of course the big event of our lives was the Junior Prom at S S Churchill House. It was just a glorious blur of music and black S S coated men and rose and blue and yellow and dancing on and on 3 E and on. It was wonderful and of course Patsy did all the S S managing in her usual efficient manner. 2 X S How the days flew! And then came more exams and Ivy S X - . S Nlghtand thoughts of next year. We took one last opportunity E S to be frivolous and youthful and had a nice sun-burny cruise 2 S d t P d I 1 d 11 ll ff ' ' d h d s S own o ru ence san w ere We a wen in swimming an a 3 S a wonderful time even if some of the bathing suits were . X S borrowed and not perfect fits. On the way back in the sunset S S everybody sang all the funny old songs and Ruth Hanchett S Q taught us Joshua sitting on the Temple of Gideon in the ap- S S proved Southern manner and the Junior year was over. S S S X S S S S S S s N N S S X Q N N X X S S X S S N N S S S S S S 26 UN MAEL U E S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S ' S Sveninr Bear S S S S S A S S . . S S People everywhere taking snapshots of us ln our new caps S S and gowns, frantlc practices at the Preston's, Senior Sing with tiny S S ll h dk h' f ' ' ' S S ye ow an erc 16 s pmned on with huge safety pins and the S S Senior ear st t d S S Y al' 6 . S X - . . . . X S .First we got together at a p1cn1c in Lincoln woods where S S wading. shared honors with marshmallows and hot dogs for S S entertainment and then off for the last giddy whirl of college S S activities. We gave the Freshmen a unique party by way of a S S Senior-Freshman night at the Bonstelle Company. We gave S S ourselves a Christmas banquet with Mrs. Murdock to tell us of S S the Women s College. We had presents with marvellous and S S remarkable rhymes attached, and there was much laughter and S S many Christmas carols. S X ' a 1 S .We found ourselves extremely busy with organlzatlons, and S S parties and teas but we attended chapel assiduously and collected S S many valuable bits of advice - N ever say 'always' in a quarrel S J! ' . , , S with your husband. and the timely warning on nlcotlne, for S S example. i . S S In February we united with the rest of the college to Welcome S S Dean Morrlss. We elected Mrs. Murdock our honorary member. S S And now ln Just a short time we'll be having our last prom, our S S last Ivy Night and our one and only Commencement. All the S S good times just memories but there is one consolation. We will S S always be members of '23 and there never, no never, could be S S another class quite like '23 - Skiddoo ! S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 27 BRUN MAEL U lj 7WW7W7WW7! lj lj U III S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S Sv B S ptmg ag S S S S S S S S S S S S S SS Speakers S S S In Chapel S S S S S S DEAN MORRISS DR. WALTERS S S S S S S S S S S On the Campus S S S - S S SALLIE WELLS, '23: Presentatlon of the Mascot to 1923. S S S S S S S S S S - - S S Sprmg Day Commlttee S S S S DOROTHY PATTON S S S E LOTTIE BRINDLE CATHERINE WINSPER S S S S S S ' . S S Mascot Commxttee S S S SX SALLIE WELLS S S S SS F. JOSEPHINE MAGUIRE DOROTHY PATTON S S S S JOAN SHEA S S S S ' S S S S 'S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 'S S S S S S S S S S S S :S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S UN MAEL U CI S w S S S S 31 E S UQ Hg S S Efuenhag, Zlune Nineteenth S A S S 10:30 A. M. S S S S Address by Senior President, ELEANOR WOODWARD PARMELEE S S S E Address by PRESIDENT FAUNCE. E S Q S Address by DEAN MORRISS. 3 S S E Address to Undergraduates - GRACE MILDRED ANDREWS. S S S S Presentation of the Trowel to the Class of 1924, S S ELEANOR WOODWARD PARMELEE S S S A S S Acceptance of the Trowel, S S ELIZABETH LEE YOUNG S S x E Presentation of the Gift E E 8:30 P. M. S N N S S S S S Senior Reception in Sayles Gymnasium S S . x S S X: x S? Ivy Morning Committee g S ELSIE MARIE CARLEN, chairman Q E JOAN MONICA SHEA MARGARET MARY CUMMINGS QE S N S Ivy Night Committee Q N S E ELSIE MARIE CARLEN MARY CATHERINE HOGAN ix E RUTH ELIZABETH PARSONS EDYTHE FLORENCE REEVES S S JOAN MONICA SHEA BERNICE GRACE SMITH S S SARAH ELEANOR WELLS S S S S S S S S S 29 Q Q Q Q X Q X Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Quo Quo Q Q2 Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X X Q Q Q Mm Q GRACE MILDRED ANDREWS Q . Q Q 540 Maln St., Brockton, Mass. Q Q Q Q Sepiad ill, 123, CBJ, Editor-in-Chief C453 Question Club Q QU. Q Q . . . Q Q Tall, willowy, and sarcastic. Started college believing Q it was better to antagonize people than to let them be Q Q bored. Stirred up hatreds and some interests. Claimed Q first two years of college drabbed her. Came out senior Q Q Q year with faint renewal of. color. Affected tastes, orange Q pad paper to write the d-ime novel on and virlle words, Q Q pewk, stink, and swill. Claims she got nothing out of Q Q college except from Misters Clough and Benedict. Q Q She did this write-up herself. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q . Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Am- Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q MARY CALDER APPEL Q Q , ,. Q Q 300 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. Q Q Q Q Q Q Metcalf House President Ml. Q Q Let Mary pile her hair high and put on those satin slippers Q Q that are no more than slivers and you will have to call her Q Q Q Q Mary Calder Appel, President of Metcalf Hall, Sister Q Q Superior and Master of Mathematics. But just let her Q Q Q. Q take her long hair down and you may call her Tiny, Q Q reader of wild detective stories and Tlie Lancaster News Q Q and writer of pointed verses and letters in extravagant Q Q code to the brothers. She has opinions that girl, but she Q Q Q Q keeps them private except when she thinks you need one. Q Q Then you get it hot. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q N Q Q Q Q Q Q ' ' Q Q r RUTH PHYLLIS APPEL Q Q . . Q Q 23 Waterman St., Providence, R. I. Q X Assistant Art Editor of Brun Mael 445. Q Q Phyllis is a young romantic with the face of a butler for Q Q she wears a neutral expression like livery. You have to Q Q hand her your card with a lot written on it before she lets Q Q you in. If you are lucky she may drop the butler pose and Q Q show her bright interest in odds and ends of books, brasses, Q Q pictures and ideas. She may even give you some of her Q Q opinionsg they always come wrong side to, adverse ones Q Q first, favorable ones last. All too often in this manner has Q Q she compared us to that place she came from, that other Q Q college. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q - - Q Q Q X X Q Q 31 BRUN MAEL lj U MW W7W!ff77HJZ7ZW4Z7'1ffW MZ , .J lj Cl Y Y S S s V S 3 s x, 'Q 5 SUSAN BURTON APPEL s s S 305 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. S S S S All College Social Committee fill, Chairman Ml. S S Susan dot-sn't see jokes, so this is in our most serious is S manner. You know her as a well-made girl with listening S S eyes which she uses to look as if she were interested. As S n matter of fact she is probably thinking of her family and Q Q the rest of Lancaster, for Susan got most of her ideas before Q S she left home. fShe still quotes daddy to usl. She has a S 7W E. : A c - :- rn -1 0 2 :s sv E' E an :r F' Q FJ 5 1 Z :- U 53' 5 :D x: Cl 57 FC I' Z in Q. 'D :1 E x7 S and arguing you into keeping the old ideas. Everyone S S would be a conservative if it could always he done as S charmingly as Susan has done it. s S S S . . HELEN BROWN AVERY S 75 Plenty St., Providence, R. I. gi X it S Chairman Social Service Committee C. A. 423, Vice- S President C. A. csu. S We are rather proud of Helen, Above all, we are proud S S of the transformation that has been wrought in her by the 2 few short years at college in our association, from a giggling SY schoolgirl to a learned scientist. The anatomy ofthe pig S Q and the deeper mysteries of zoology hold no terrors for her: S and we confidently expect her to walk ofl' with all the scien- S tific honors available. But lest you might suppose from all S S this that she is dignined and aloof, we hasten ot assure you S that increased brain matter has not changed her tempcra- S S ment. She is just the same fun-loving, smiling, friendly Si Helen, with an eager interest in everything going on in S S college. We regret that Arnold Lab sees more of Helen's S S smiles than we do, but we suspect that certain persons over Q S , - there call our loss their gain. S S LLL- . - S S S S Q S i MILDRED RUSSELL BAILEY Y S 197 Elmgrove Ave., Providence, R. I. S Glee Club Treasurer 133, Secretary-Treasurer 14 l. S Tall, svelte, dark-eyed. and dark-haired, Mildred is a Q rather fascinating looking person, and when she smiles, why S then you quite lose your heart. We don't wonder at all S Q that persistent storming has at last won over her own Rx S heart. Add to this, that she is artistic and musical, and S you will see what an irresistible combination she is. For S S the past year she has been second potentate over the S it allairs of the Glee Club, and great has been the mail S received by her ostensibly in this connection: and she always S Y finds time to act in Komian plays. Sympathetic and 5 x S friendly toward all. Mildred is one of the most charming Q members of our class. Q S S ifml III I- i i WMMW W7MA4Wf4W!VWff4 WW WW WZ5WW MW 7 Lil 32 X ' . Q S N S 5 N X S S X S MARGARET DOVER BARTON is N . x S 306 So. Beacon St., Fall River, Mass. S S X S Be brave, Peg. Break the news to Dot. There is no S S Santa Claus. S S Peg intends to teach. Perhaps she will, but we feel sure S S that whether it be a class in History, French, Spanish, or a N S N Q brood of her own that she teaches that she will mother S X them with the same care and tenderness that she has X S . . . s Q lavlshed on Dot during college. Here is the best of good S is wishes to you, Peggy. is N x 5 X S S S S K X S S S ' S S S N X 3 S S S S RUTH BATEMAN S N ' ' . . X S 125 W. C113 St., Somerville, N. J. S X X Q X S ClassBasketball CID, 1233 Class Tennis Cl J, f2l, 133, 145, S S Capt. up, 421, csygcapn. class Baseball un, 125, en, 43, Q K N 5 Varsity Baseball 423, C353 Class Social Committee 125: C. X 5 5 S A. Secretary 125: A. A. Secretary 425: S. G. A. Board S S member Ml: President of A. A. MJ: Question Club MJ. S S As everyone in College knows, Batey is one of our S SE Alma Mater's storngest supporters. If there is a com- S Q mittee meeting, a basketball tournament, or H. song re- 5 s S S hearsal, she is sure to be there and on time! Remember Q S Batey's A. A. picnic from which the tired picknickers S SX arrived home at dark, well fed with each uthr-r's names, if SX but not with the A. A. frankforts? Defying all precedent, S S Ruth did not grouch because of the lost food - lest through Q someone's else mistake - but jubilantly declared that she S S had a wonderful time meeting all the Freshmen, and they S S: were the best Freshies ever! All of which shows that Q S ' 'W' Batey is a loyal, courageous, and efficient daughter of S E Brown. E X x s 1- s S X S S S N A - X S X g GLADYS MARGARET BAUER 5 x, X S Locust St., Attleboro, Mass. S X X N X S When the train pulls in late from Attleboro, it would S S make any ordinary being furious, for chapel cuts have a way S S of piling up. But not so with Gladys. She may be furious S S - inside but you'll never know it, and that is one reason why S S everybody likes her so well - she never fusses about S S things. Gladys has an interest in laboratories and spends S S much of her time in finding out how small pigs grow, and S: S seeing how many chemicals she can mix together and still S SN be here to tell about it. Gladys is very faithful in support- S S ing class affairs and has an unwavering ioyalty to Brown S S and '23, S S S S N X S S - as N N S S S W ij ij WWWZ El Ci UN MAEL E E Z7MWZW!lMZWWWM!WA E1 D X X X - - X X X X X S ELSIE MARIE CARLEN S X . X S 75 Raymond St., Providence, R. I. S X X S Class Social Committee C23, f33, 643: Masque Committee S S 1239 Vice-President Brownies 1435 Class Fistball 123, C33, S S 143: Class Baseball qal, Class Basketball q4l. S X Elsie promised to murder the whole Brun Mael Board if X X X S anything were said about dances and phone calls and The S Q Man and since Elsie is a lady of her word all remarks will be S Q confined to purely academic specialization. She goes in for S S athletics and accounting and Brownie stunts and - but S X why go on? Her frankness, pep, and enthusiasm are in X X constant demand so there is only one thing to prophec X X ' . . . y X Xx for her future as a rising young business woman and X S that is success. S X X X X X X X X X X X X X X S . . DOROTHY MARGARET CARR S X ' X S 26 Wells Street South Manchester, Conn. S is It is hard for us to see in the dignified Miss Carr of today E S the roly-poly cherub of our Freshman days. Then a tele- S S phone call brought forth much hurry and scurry, much Q S yelling, and much disturbance in the ranks of the Freshman S X Army. Now:- X X S Scene - A serious young lady working on a history S S seminar paper. S S l Maid enters - Telephone, Miss Carr. S S Interim of at least two seconds before Dot descends to S S talk to Jack or Fred as the case may he. S S Yes, times have changed since we were Freshmen. But S is there is one respect in which Dot has not changed. The S S friendship with Peg, resumed the first evening of their life S S at Metcalf, has grown stronger during the last four years, S Q and Tweedledum and Tweedledee may be seen together at S S all times. S X ' ' X X X X X s -Ms X X X X X X X X l X X MARGARET ELIZABETH CHEETHAM X X X S 43 E. George St., Providence, R. I. S X X X X X X S To look at this small person, you would never guess her S X to be a Senior, but when you talk with her, it is n different X S matter, for she is sophisticated enough for u P. G. Peggy S S is always willing to help anyone in any sort ofa fix. Nothing S Q is too big for her to bring as a Komian property, and when X S it comes to a new idea, Peggy's right on the job. She has S Q millions and can always tell you what to do to make some- S SX thing out of nothing, or where to go for something unusually S Q hard to find. People who go to her with tickets for any X S sort of a dance have less to sell when they leave her. Peggy S X could tell you quite a bit about the Lambda Chi house if X X X Q you could get hold of her long enough, but the trouble is, S X you can't X X ' X X X X A - s X X X X X X BRUN MAEL El E Z.'2iXW?Z'z',fiWf,f!WZ.fjJ7222W 2 E U lil lj sf NS S JANET CHEW S S 374 Anawan St., Fall River, Mass. E X X E Some people we see a lot of but wish we didn't. Others, E S that we see little of, we wish we could see more often and S S know better. Janet is of the latter class. Why must she S S spend all her time in the laboratories and then rush to S S the station for the 5:15 train? What we saw of her at S Silver Bay and what we see of her for a few minutes before S S chapel in the Senior Room, makes us want more of the good S S thing. Maybe certain people in Fall River enjoy her S S good-nature and sense of humor, but we want some for S S ourselves. Some day we are going to arrange a College S Q course with the definite purpose that everyone shall know Q S - .. - .. .. N everyone else. Then we ll re.i.ly know that elusive lab S S devotee as well as her more easy-going sisters! S S - - S S S S S S S S ANNA GARDNER COGGESHALL S S 117 Constitution St., Bristol, R. I. S N N E Class Bowling Team KU, 123, Capt. LBJ: Capt. Varsity SE S Bowling Team MD. S S Anna is our representative from Bristol. In former S S years she trailed up the hill in the wake of a formidable S S upper class contingency. This year she is the formidable S S one, and trails her own wake of underlings. We hope S S Anna improves this shining opportunity to bring up the S S little ones in the way that they should go. She is certainly S S quite capable of it. She may at a distance appear to be S S just a quaint and quiet little mouse, but don't you fool S S yourself. It is our private opinion that the senorial S E gignity isAperfectly safe in the hands of our little star S X ow er. nna's a spunky one. X N N N e S S ' s E l AGNES COLE S E Three Rivers, Mass. E S S E Class Bowling Team C113 Class Basketball 113: Class 5 S Baseball Gil, MJ. S Q Why, my dear, haven't you heard? and Agnes retails Q Q the latest hit of scandal for the alert ears of the Miller S S Hall-ites. For gossip, for fudge, for the latest dance step, S S we invariably drop in at Agnes' room on the second floor. E S Good companion always, ready to play for a dance or an S S orchestra rehearsal at a moment's notice, Agnes fills a large is S place in our fun-loving life. A little twinkle in Ag's eye S S has often put us in the best of spirits after a busy day. S Q Which reminds us, is it that same twinkle that has made S S certain professors her life-long friends? Not to mention the S S names of many Brown men not quite so prominent, perhaps. S S - S Q X is S CI Cl ij EI S S S S S X S S X S S S X S S S S S S S X S S S S SUS SFU S S SQ SZ 1, S S3 S sbs S111 S S S S X S S X S S X S S S S X S S S lil CI S A X Z A , MARGARET MARY CUMMINGS S X Z 77 Taber Ave., Providence, R. I. S X X Z Class Firovreomeg Basketball 115, 125: Tennis 115, 125, S Z 135, 145: Bowling 115, 125: Apparatus 115, 125: Fistball S Z 125, 145: Baseball 115, 125, 135, 145: Varsity Teams: S Z Basketball 125, 135: Tennis 115, 125, 135, 145: Apparatus is Z 115, 125: Fistball 125: Baseball 115, 125, 135, 145: Sepiad S Z Assistant Business Manager 115, 125 S Z A. A. Board 145: Social Committee 115, 125: Vice-President S Z S. G. A. 135: Class President 135: Junior Prom Social S Z Committee 135: s. G. A. Board 115, 125, 145. S Z There's only one difficulty with Peg - she has such a S Z list of offices and first teams strung after her name that S Z there isn't any room for all the other things one might say S Z about her. But then, that shows what kind of a girl she S Z : is and the interest she has taken in college activities, Ss Z , particularly athletics. In addition we might add she has S Z . . an enviable grin, a car, and a willingness to work. S Z S Z S Z S Z S Z S Z S Z ' ALICE ESTELLE DESMOND S Z 22 Overhill Road Providence, R. 1. S X Z Alice excells - especially in youth and height. She has S Z a certain air of diffidence about her, acquired, perhaps, from S Z long association with her elders, but perhaps it is just part S Z of her natural considerate-ness for other persons and their S Z opinions. Alice is certainly as considerate and friendly and S Z obliging as any little sister ought to be. But she holds her S Z own with the best of us. She has common sense and good S Z sound sensible opinions for every occasion. She has also SX Z a philosophical way of looking at life, its trials and educa- S Z tion courses, which keeps her good-natured disposition in S Z Fine trim. S Z S Z . . S Z S Z S Z S Z S Z S Z ' ' S f X Z MIRIAM SCHICK DICK S Z 160 W. Winsor St., Reading, Pa. S Z S Z S. G. A. Board 115. Si Z 1 Neat, efficient, sympathetic, friendly, and dignified, E Z l Miriam has loyally done her part in dormitory and College S Z life. In Miller Hull stunts she exerted her ingenuity and S Z dramatic ability. Class functions find her a ready and Ss Z dependable supporter, and she has been a member of the S Z Choir for all her four years. Now we hear that Miriam's S Z life-work will be home-making! Having known her all S Z this time, we have no doubt but that she will make him S, Z very happy indeed. To Miriam, our sincere good wishes: S Z to him, our hearty congratulations! S Z S f X 4 S DES S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S DEW CD OO UN MAEL D E 0 f4m'kV'!ZWZM l D U X X X X X ' X X X X X X X X ELIZABETH EWART X X X X 35 Larch St., Pawtucket, R. I. X X X X X S Seriously speaking, we all know Elizabeth Ewart. There S X is no one else with such a talent for getting along with X S people, and knowing who everyone is. She swept aside S S many difficulties when she came to College, and has had X X troubles to deal with since, but in spite of it all her large X X heart is ready to sympathize with the rest of us. Indeed, X S 'tis said she even offers consolation to bachelor professors, S S and lessens the boredom of their solitary existence! A S X ready wit and loads of common-sense besides, make Eliza- X S beth a decidedly desirable member of 1923! S X X X I X X I X X - . X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X - - X X X X. X X MARION LILIAS FAIRWEATHER X X . X X 83 Fourth Street Providence, R. I. X X X X . . . . X SQ We like Marion for her dependability and for her good S common sense. Refusing to be swept into the fever of X extraselass activities, she views the rest of us with a coolly S S dispussionate eye, and goes calmly on her way preparing S XS perfect recitations. We know that she delights in writing S XX papers for Education 21, but of her other joys we can not X XS tell, since she reserves the recital of them for Florence only. S X We suspect that they have many dark secrets in common, it S for they are always conversing as earnestly together. Yet X X she is always willing to listen to our jokes, and her ready X S smile is payment enough. Good luck to you, Marion, S S whatever you do. X X . X X I X X - - X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X - . X X X X X X X X X X KATHARINE THERESA FANNING X X . X X 22 Hart St., Providence, R. I. X X X X X S Kay started attending dances when she was thirteen X and she has been going ever since. She is noted for her S SX hair which is always in curious and perfect order, for her S XX clothes which at least two laps ahead of anyone else's, and X S her voice. She is always bustling busily about, exclaiming S rapturously over a. new philosophy course or a darling X X haf. She is a rare combination of opinions and pm-p. S X X X X X X X X X X X X X X lil g lj E lj WZZ4ZfWMWZMM f MWWKWMZ'X?4'fW4WJ:l5Z4h,4J v Mi WWPXWZM 39 BRUN MAEL U lj MZMWf',fZMZZZ2IWZZZ ZZ M! Zv2MfZf W lj EI Il lil Z Q Z S Z - V Z s Z S Z JOSEPHINE MARY FULMERE Q f , x Z 29 Loker St., Framingham, Mass. S Z X X X Z Secretary-Treasurer Salon Francais 127, 133, President S Z MJ: President of East House fill: S. G. A. Board fill. Z What 9. jolly, round, chubby person Joe is! When you Q Z see her, don't you always feel like smiling? And then you S Z feel good all over, all-of'-a-sudden! Even if it was Friday S Z the thirteenth and raining like everything outside, you'd Q Z feel great when you saw Joe, now wouldn't you? My, S Z doesn't she make you sit up when she talks French! She's Q Z pretty good at Argumentation too. I pretty nearly flunked S Z that, but she pulled me through the course with a D! I Q f . . . s Z wish I were fat and Jolly and smart like Joe! Z s Z X Z X Z . X Z S X X Z S Z S Z . . S X X Z X Z S Z 5 Z ALICE HANNAH GLAESER 5 Z . X Z 663 Bernon St., Woonsocket, R. I. S f X Z N Z Alice is one of those rare things, u new senior. But this S Z . . h, . , s Z isn t t L only unusual thing, about her. Not only was she Q Z born in u strange far-distant land, but she has also visited S Z many different countries as well as a good part of this one. E Z She came here from a. college in the far west. She also SX Z speaks many languages and we rather imagine she could S Z say decidedly interesting things in any one of them - if S Z one could only understand. We feel that we have missed a S Z good deal because she did not find Providence four years EQ Z ago instead of one. S Z S Z S Z ' ' S Z X Z S Z S Z S Z S X - ' X Z ESTHER LOUISE HAGSTROM S f . Z 185 Oak Hill Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. S Z N X X Z Esther is a commuter from Pawtucket, but didn't discover S Z till the end of her junior year that there was frequent con- S Z nection with the great city even quite late in the evening. S Z For almost three years her one idea after classes was Home, S Z Motorman. But now she has quite reformed and takes S Z in almost everything from dangerous junior cruises down, S Z and even deserts the Pawtucket Public Library occasionally S Z for the reserved seats in the John Hay. Esther is one of S Z those persons who always keep up with their work and S Z know everything they should, and - what's more to the S: Z point - she's always glad to help you get there, too. 2 f X Z S f X Z S Z ' A S Z X Z X El ij Z AZ'W,7'Z7,ZZZZWff El Ci 40 BRUN MAEL Cl Cl Y Y 3 S Q RUTH HANCHETT S N - X S 120 Congdon St., Providence, R. I. S S S S Sepiud GU, CID: Brun Mael 135. QU: Class Social Com- is S mittee Mi. is S We wish Ruth were writing this. She could do it so S is much better than we are doing it. Ruth loves to write. S Q Did you know that? It's so all right. She helped 1923 S S win a Scpiad contest one time. Uh-huh. She wrote lots S S ofthe songs we sang in our Senior Sing this year. Weren't S S they clever? She's written poems and stories for Szrpiad S S heaps of times and I don't know what Brufz M1571 would S S do without her! And let me tell you, some day you'll be Q S reading her stories in the big magazines, and then you'll S S swell out your chest and say, Ruth Hanchett? She's a Q 5 - v .. - lf' 5 Q good pal of mme. I was a classmate of hers at College. S X X S S - ' S N ' N S A-------M S N 5 N N S S S . S N ' N S S N X X X 3 MARION GLAZE HASSINGER S s , . . N S 6.34 N. Flfth St., Reading, Pa. S X X S N S Clothes do not make the man. That is what Marion S S says when we bore her by telling her she is the hest-dressed S S girl in college. Especially fascinating is her hairdress. She S Q has a new coifT for every occasion, always unique and S S successful. There is more of Marion beneath the hair, 11 Q S Marion who sometime will marry for a sunken hath-tub SX S if not for love. Providence men have not been eligible. S S Great announcements should come from her next year in S S Reading. fAnd Reading is better than Lancaster, Marion, S S we agrc-e.j SN Q N S S S N X S S S S S S s S 5 S S l N 5 I l HELEN ANDERSON HOFF 5 N . . S Neshamc Statlon, N. J. S S S S S. G. A. Board C353 C. A. Cabinet Gil, C. A. President S S 143: House President Miller Hall itll: Question Club Q S . , . X K on 449 S S Helen riz to fame quite early in her career and lent the S S spice of life to the '22 Question Club picture by her cap and S S gownless appearance therein. And as if once wasn't enough, S S behold her - properly attired - featuring again this S S year. Welcoming Freshmen and introducing C. A. speakers S SX doesn't take all Helen's time, however. She also leads the S SX warblings of Miller Hall, holds forth A generally in trousers S S -in Komian plays, gives the choir a boost, trips the light S S, fantastic toe at all-colleges and fraternity affairs, makes Q S h ll bl d h 1 A' ' b t t' N X erself genera y agrees e, an au s s in e ween lmes. Q 5 S O 4 . s S S S UN MAEL II D X X X X X ' X S MARY CATHERINE HOGAN S X X S 17 Beech St., Pawtucket, R. I. S X X X X S Class Baseball OJ, 123, C3JgClass Fistball 625, f3J, C433 SX S Varsity Baseball 415: Class Social Committee 143. S S Mary is blest with a mind of her own, and she seems to S S know it pretty well too, and so what can be the idea in S S taking advanced psychology this year, we can't say. One S X would think that educational psychology was quite enough X s . . . s Q to spoil anyone's disposition. But nothing ever rufiies Q SX Mary very much. We never yet saw her reach the point S S where she couldn't come up cheerfully and slap you on the S S back in that blessed Hail-fellow-well-met spirit of hers. S S She may rave on about things in general, but, mark this, S S she always ends with a good-looking grin. S X X X X X X X . . X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X S MARY ELIZABETH HOLLAND S X X S 486 Fourth St., Fall River, Mass. X X X S Mary went to the first all-college dance of her freshman S year and she hasn't missed one since. She attends them as S is regularly as classes when she is on C. D. All college dances S S take one evening a month, and a dozen other dances and S S dinners and so forth take up the rest. Mary fills in her S it mornings with such courses as Art and Genetics, studies as S S much as she has time for, and gets away with it. What's S Q that? -f a dandy good sport? Well, I guess! E X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X I X X ' ' X X X X X X X X - X X X X - - X X X X X S MARION SIEVERTS HOLLAND S X X S Saunderstown, R. I. S X X X X S Marion came to Brown with '23, but she couldn't decide Q S whether she wanted to be one of us or not. She see-sawed S Q between '23 and '24, but finally decided that '23 was the S S better class, and this year she is a full-Hedged Senior. We Ss S are mighty glad that she did for we feel that Marion is one S S of the girls who is going to do something that will really S S count. Her great interest is Biology. Just mention S S surgical nursing, and watch her brown eyes glisten. If any S S of you are in New York next year you might stop at the S S Presbyterian Hospital and call on Marion. I know she'd S be delighted to see you. S X X X X X X X . X X ' X X X D i Cl X X X X X X X DOROTHY BERYL HOTCHKISS X . . X X 130 Mineral Spring Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. X X X X X X In her freshman year, Dorothy took biology along with X X - X X almost every other Freshman. Every year since then, she X X has increased the number of her studies in that field, until X X now she spends nearly all her time in the biology lab putting X X in any extra moments in Chem. But from what she says, X X X X lab is not as dull as some people would have us think, for X X she is always telling us some wild tale of what happened X X over there yesterday. She stays in Pembroke only long X X enough to tell us these stories and eat, and then she's off X X again to see how the bacteria are getting along. Fortu- X X . X X nately, Dot got well acquainted with her class before this, X X or we should never have known her. X X X X X X . X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X ' X X SARAH JACOBSON X X X X 751 S. Water St., New Bedford, Mass. X X x X X X Really, as a matter of vital importance to our peace of X X mind, we should like to know how Sarah does it. Dues X X what, you ask? Why, specialize in English and yet take X X X X courses in Math! If it taxes our poor brains to even think X X of such a thing, what must it do to hers? And yet we X X know that Sarah does all her required reading and goes X X ' X X out almost every night in the week. In between times she X X looks after her little brother on the Hill and is a big sister X X to her Freshman here at Pembroke. Weren't some X X people born lucky! ' X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X - X X X X X X DESSIE KUSHELEVITCH X X X X X X 87 Elm St., Woonsocket, R. I. X X X X X X The most obvious thing to say about Dessie is that she is X X a mighty good kid. She is one of those persons who are X X always in a rush and yet can always find time to stop if they X X can please anyone thereby. She is also invariably in a good X X humor f- more than that, she is always jolly. She can X X joke from morning till night and always manages to put X X an original touch into her repartee somewhere. Judging X X by the number ol' notes that come down the line in educa- X XX tion, Dessie is fond of writing, and'judging by those directed X X to the present writer, she is incapable of expressing herself X X in a commonplace way. X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X rX WX X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X U Elma W ' MAEL Cl lj X ' X X X S EVELYN BOWKER LOCHMAN S X , X X 232 Bay State Road, Boston, Mass. X X X X . . X S Class President KID, 123: Forum Committee C413 S. G. S X A. Board Member om Class Baseball oi, 421, can, seem- X X tary s. G. A. 1:13. X X And then the beautiful Lady Evelyn came toward us, X X - X 'Q leaning on the arm of her gallant. A flood of color came S S into her face and her eye lashes curled in a halo around her S S eyes as she looked up at him. Graciously and charmingly S S she greeted us with words meaningless but beautiful. She XS S was eager and pleased to see us, but in a moment more she S X was moving toward Lady C. again looking eager and X X X Q pleased. S X X X l X X . . X X X X X X X X X X X X X X . . X X X X X X X S IRENE MAGDALEN LONG S X X X 67 Summer St., Woonsocket, R. I. X X X X X S If one were going to be trite one could say something S S about good things come in small packages and, if one S S were facetious, there would be a remark about being short S XS and Long at the same time for Shorty Long could well S S be the subject of either. Don't let her size deceive you, S XE however. You have here a very serious young lady - S X sometimes -- when she is holding forth on her pet subject S X f h 1 ' b b' M ' I ' fr 1 X X o sc oo marmmg, a sor ing usic, or iemg excee mgy Q S dignified in cap and gown. S X X X X X X X X s - - X X X X X X X X X X X X . . X Xi RUTH ALMIRA LOTHROP X X X XX 9 Frances Ave., Auburn, R. I. S X X X X S Assistant Business Manager Sepiad 433, Business S S Manager 145. S S When Ruth appeared - a Junior -- in the line that fronts Q S the chapel platform once a year to receive the symbol of its S S dignity, you may have exclaimed, Why, the kid's clever, S XX which does not imply, as it sounds. that she doesn't look Q S bright, but that you hadn't associated the Phi Beta Kappa Q S key with a girl that looks and acts like her. But if she is X studies one night she goes to a dance the next, besides S S spending a good amount of her time keeping Sepiad above S Q water financially. She has an abiding affection for places S S off the Atlantic Coast, whether it be ten miles off, as the S S Isles of Shoals, or several thousand, as France. Next year, Q Q you'll find her several thousand miles off, completing her Q S I U French training in France where it is made. S X X X X X X 44 UN MAEL U ll S S x ' - x S x S S S S X X S HELEN CUNYES MacNAUGHT S S S S Woods .Hole, Mass. S X X S Helen came here four years ago looking like an escaped S S angel so she was immediately christened Nuughtie. For- S S tunatoly for us there were lots of parties that first year so S S we had a chance to know her sweet seriousness, sample her S S fudge and listen to her theories on life. Since then there S S ' X S has always been a fraternity pin hovering near und the only S S time one can get even her divided attention is at meal time S S or in some Sociology class. S S S S S S S S S S S - S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S X S S S S ' S S S S S S S X S S S S FLORENCE JOSEPHINE MAGUIRE S S . X S 96 Lexlngton St., East Boston, Mass. S S S S x S Do is adorably tiny but she is invariably the person S S to whom lonesome freshmen come when they get weepy S S and all the others when they have troubles. She has been S S noted for her non-man proclivities but the miracle has S S happened and she has fell. Even as an d S- S woman though she still foes on makin' friendsertilgil S S 1 1 U -. 1 L - L 1 H S S hlkes with and without, and spending much time in the S S Biology lub,not to mention working steadily for Vicious, S S and enlivening the dorm. S S S S S X X S . S S ee' S S E S x S S S S S X X S S S - - S S S X X S S S RUTH WILMARTH MARVEL S S S S Rehoboth, Mass. S S S S Ruth is one of the more brilliant members of our class ns S S we know from our own experience, not that we ever heard S S her toot her horn to that effect. Despite her very good S S soprano voice, she never has been known to sing her own SS S praises. In fact she does just the opposite. But she S S always obligingly sings for us nt class banquets and thus S S we can't help finding that out, despite her renicence. Ruth S S comes from Rehoboth. If this is what living in the country S S . S S does for one, we should recommend it to all students who S S want to make u name in college. S X x S S S S S S X X X S S 45 UN MAEL E E WZWW!W!WW77 E E U El S S S S S ' ' S S S X l X S w S S S S S S r HELEN AGNES MAURAN S X X E 83 John St., Newport, R. I. S S S X X S Helen is the sort of girl who conceals from an unsuspecting S S world all bursts of temperament so that at dorm Christmas S S e' ll th fi ' h ' ' S Q par ies a ey can nd to slam IS er unfading devotion as S to 'tCricket. They have a vague idea that she is artistic S S because her room is always charming and that SS S she would he interesting if only one were fortunate S S enough to know her. A dark past will always out, however. S S Helen learned to play bridge during the Christmas vacation S S and she'll never be the same again. S S S S S X X S S S - - S S S S S S S S S S S S S X ' X S S S FLORENCE GOFF MOULTON S x . S S 126 Pine St., Pawtucket, R. I. S S S S S is Among '23's many accomplishments not the least is its S S ability to come out first in the bowling contest. Its ability S S along this line has been due to a few people who have found S S time among the many other things that claim our attention S S to rush over to the gym, at least eight times a month, and S S bowl. Florence has been on 23's first team ever since S E freshman year, and this year she is a member of the Varsity S S Bowling Team. As for other things, we respect Florence S S for her good scholarship and love her for her general good S S nature and willingness to help whenever 1923 needs her. S X X S S S S S S S ' ' S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S - - S S S S S S DOROTHY THAYER MOWRY S X , , S S 22 Pond St., Natick, Mass. S S S X X S Class Secretary 125, 131, C433 Cap and Gown Com- S mittee CBJ. S S S Dorothy first won fame among us because her older sister S came to Brown. It did not take Dot long, however, to S be known on her own account, and now we esteem her as a S friend and supporter of '23 and Brown. Spanish and Prof. Johnson are Dot's special delights. Just mention them to I!! hor and her face will light up with new interest. Dot likes S to go to the movies often and see Thomas Meighan, who has her admiration. We hear, though, that a young man S in Boston has her heart! S S S S S S S ' ' S S S S S 46 BRUN MAEL lil lil S S S S S MIRIAM NAGLE S S 20 Poplar St., Providence, R. I. E S 1 S S If on your way upstairs to an exam you have forgotten S S Cromwell's dates, or the eighteenth century poets in chrono- S S logical order, or the principal parts of an irregular verb - XSS S any little thing like that - the best thing you can do is to S S ask Miriam about it. If she's had it she'll know it and if S S she knows it she'll tell you for she is the most obliging person S S ever. Miriam was never known to forget assignments or S S to do anything that would prevent her helping out pro- S S crastinating classmates. But if you think she's just a grind S S you miss your guess. Senior picnics, junior cruises, and S S such like figure in her diary, too. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S ' S S EILEEN ISABELLE OSTIGUY S S 98 Hall si., Springfield, Mass. S S S S Cries of A dish of ice cream, please, and A piece of 2 S chocolate pie assail Eileen's ears so many times each day S S that we often wonder how she ever lives through those S S hours in the lunch-room. For Eileen pays the price of her gs Q good nature and generosity 1manil'ested in larger portions S S than the others give3 by being worked very hard indeed. S S But her popularity extends to the dormitory girls as well, S S for none of them can withstand the charm of her smile and SSX S good-fellowship. At present her hobby is the Bonstelle S E Co., and every Thursday she is there without fail to see the S S object of her admiration. In all she does Eileen is such a SX S good fellow that we prophesy great success for her in S S that business world into which she is going next year. S S A S S S S S S S S S S S S S S ELEANOR WOODWARD PARMELEE S S 82 Taber Ave., Providence, R. I. S ' S S Sepiad 113, 123, 133: Class Basketball 113, 123, 133, S Captain 1435 Class Fistball 1235 Class Baseball 123, 133, SS S Varsity Basketball 123, 133, 143: Class Vice-President 133: S S A. A. Vice-President 1335 Art Editor Bru'n Mael 133, 1433 SN Ivy Day Marshal 133: S. G. A. Board 1435 Class President S 143: Question Club 143. S Eleanor was rightly elected the most representative S girl ol' 1923 at the class banquet. Intensely interested in S S the class, she has worked hard as class president to instill a S sense of friendly comradeship into the girls. She has the S best of natures, happy and tactful, an astounding capacity S S for work whether it be laboratory experimentation or the S S creation of a class song, and an acute delight in all athletic S S games. Besides all of which she is very artistic. S S . S S S S S ' 47 UN MAEL U lil - ff - x x tw S RUTH ELIZABETH PARSONS 5 N - N S 110 Hlghland St., Woonsocket, R. I. is X N X X S Class Basketball C233 Class Social Committee out vice- S Q President French Club C43. S Q Parsy's marcel is not the only natural thing about her. S S Her enthusiasm for basketball and the work of the Christian S S Association are just as natural and un marred by artiticiality. Q S Parsy has the fighting spirit that does not let go until she is S S the winner, and with this spirit she has contributed loyalty S S and co-operation to the service of our Alma Mater. With S S all the steadfastness and vim that is hers, we know that Q S Parsy is going to give this old world of ours a push in the S S A right direction when she begins her career next fall. S X X S S X . N Q ' S S S N X N N N N N 5 X X S DOROTHY FRINK PATTON Q x , x S . 26 Valley Road Mllton 86, Mass. X X X S Class Basketball C33, C433 Class Tennis C13, i2l. 133: S Varsity C433 Clnss Baseball 423: Class Social Committee Q Q 113, 423, Chairman 133, C433 Chairman Sophomore Q S Masque Committee C235 Komian Board C235 Sepiad 123, is S 433: Editor-in-Chief The Record C432 Question Club 143. S S Pat has college spirits, the plural is used advisedly. Q S She has more than the breath of life: she has whole draughts S S of it. She is like a North wind: she goes after everything S S that is ahead of her. Honors, she secs 'em, she wants 'em, S S she gets 'emg finals and Phi Beta Kappa. One bright Q Senior said Pat was Vesuvius, a mountain of energy always S erupting. Sometimes she merely pounds on the table S S and sometimes she throws oil' great things: those class meals S W called banquets, and novels,and those numerous Records 2 Isn't she wonderful? Q ' ' S x S S Q S S Q S x 5 X S S S S l RUTH HOWARD PRESTON S s - - s X 7 Cushlng St., Providence, R. I. s X Q X X S As member of 1922, Class Chairman Cl 3, Class President S S C233 Vice-President S. G. A. C335 Class Social Committee S S Chairman 433: Bran lvlael 133: Varsity Basketball KI3, 123, S S 133. C47- S S In 1923, President s. G. A.: Question Club. S X . . . . . . N Q Ruth IS an athletic lndlvldual and wlelds the S. G. A. -sz S gavel with an energetic hand. But then she had practice S S in her Sophomore year, long before '23 expected to fall heir S to another full-fledged celebrity. Ruth s the sort of person S S who makes public opinion. She has her own decided ideas S S and a forceful way of getting them across. She doesn't S S like occupying a conspicuous front sent on Honor Day, but S Q if she will be clever enough to make Phi Beta Kappa her Q S junior year, what can she expect! Q S S A S 48 Egg BRUN MAEL E U MM ZWM2 lj IJ II U S S Y S ' ' S S S S EVA RABINOVITZ S X X S 427 Park Ave., Woonsocket, R. I. S S S S S S Eva is one of those people whose outstanding charac- S S . . . . . S S teristic is their good nature. She is always ready to play S S jazz for our dancing, always laughing and singing feven S S when such things as quiet hours are supposed to existj, and S S even joking about her innumerable attempts at the fine art S S of reducing. The only fault we find is that she spends so S S . . S S much time on her chosen social service work that we rarely S S . S see her around: and when we do, she has sometimes ex- S SS hausted her supply of laughs and noise on worth-while S X X S - . - . ' S Q widows and orphans. By the way , we wonder if her motive S S for going to the Hill for German is that she is furthering S S her social work thereby? S S S S . , N S S S S S ss S S S X X S S S S MILDRED MAE REED S S S 11 Stransbur St. Providence, R. I. S S S S S Mildred is one of our heirlooms, so to speak, from 1922. S Q The word heirlooms you are to lmderstand connotes S S something valuable. That's Mildred. Do you remember S S long, long ago last year, before the New and Improved, S Only Genuine Pembroke Lunch Room had eomeinto being S S that someone saved our starved physical beings from col- S S S S lapse, and taught our pocket-books adequate reducing ex- S S erciscs by supplying the basement hull with delicious, S S S S home-made candy? Well, the person who started that ball S S rolling was Mildred. You might know it to look at her. S Q She is the resourceful, go-ahead-and-do-it type. As soon S S as one sees her coming, one knows that she means busi- S S ness-even if the business happens to be just play. S S S X X S S N X S S S S X X S . - S S S X X S S S S X X S EDYTHE FLORENCE REEVES S S - S 3 81 Eldridge sn. Auburn, R. I. S S S S SS Cheerful and friendly at all times, and with a ready S S . . - . S S sympathy and willingness to help, Edythc has gained a S S . S Q place for herself in our hearts. In her Freshman year she S S helped win the tournament by cxcelling in bowling, but S S since that time, with the increase in wisdom and with the S S multiplication of her duties elsewhere, she has reserved S Sf her moments of brilliance for the class room where we can S S S all bear testimony to her keen brain and to her scholarly S S work. A good friend and a fine student. S S S S S S S S Cl Il V 'iil BRUN MAEL S S S - - S S 1 BEATRICE MAY RICHARDS S S r S S 41 Prospect St., Auburn, R. I. S S S S S S Class Social Committee CBJ: Chairman Forum C455 Ques- S S tion Club C45: C. A. Cabinet mp. S S Bee started in to be one of the best loved members of S S our class and she has kept right on, until now she has S S found hcr way into everybody's heart. Did you ever see S S the time when Bcc wasn't busy? Even when she eats, she S S . . S S is planning some new way to raise money for Thanksgiving S S dinners, or is telling us some interesting experience of the S S social service work that she has been doing for a long time S S and plans to continue after college. The same character- S S . . . . S S istics that make her a success in social service have made S S her a success with us - sympathy, understanding, and a S S sincere enthusiasm for things that interest you. S S S S I S S - I S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S - - S S S S MARIE ADELLA ROWE S S S S . . . . , S S 203 Pme St., Big Rapids, Mich. S S S S S S During the four tumultuous years ol its college life 1923 S S S S has been remarkably discerning. One ol' the most brilliant S S things it did was to welcome Marie into its ranks at the S S . . . . S S beginning of its junior year. Marie is a most retiring S S person, and she does not let us know a great deal about what S S S S she really thinks. However, we harbour two strong sus- S S . S S picions: the first is that she spends most of her spare time S S in doing oheisance before the throne of Baby Jean: the S S second that if we knew more about her we should find her S S most awfully clever - how else explain passing that course S S S S in Anglo-Saxon which the other three members of the class S S flunked. We are very glad you joined us, Marie: and we're S S S S wishing you the best of luck in thc coming years. S S S S S S S S - ' S S S S S S S S S S JAH., S S S S S S S S S S - - S S S S S S BELLA RUBINSTEIN S S . S S 89 Orms St., Providence, R. I. S S S S S S Ladies and gentlemen, we ask you to gaze ut the accom- S S panying picture and marvel, for was it not to Bella that S S Professor Dealey spoke these never-to-be-forgotten words, S S . . . S S You have a good head, Miss Rubinstein, and has kept S S her blushing ever since? Comte, Ward, Spencer,are her S S best friends, for Sociology is her hobby. And after all, why S S S S not study behaviorism and the like? Give your husband, S S let us say, a certain stimulus, and under certain conditions S S you'll be able to foretell exactly how he'll react, Bella says, S S S S and we add iunless he fools youi. But whatever work S S Bella goes into we know she'll boost it to the top, for per- S S severance is one of her greatest virtues. S S I S S i S S - S S S U ij 4 WWW?5!5f4f 7 Zi WA MlM ij D BRUN MAEL E U WW WWWf7fZWZf.WW72Zf lff4W4Z 'W'7Zff,',,'1Mf,'f,':'?f D E Cl lil S Q S x S S s - - s S S S x S S S S X X S IDA RUBINSTEIN S X . X S 89 Orms St., Providence, R. I. S S X N S S Have you done your education? I haven't and I'll never S S get it done. And that Spanish - it's just awful! Three S S hours preparation for one lesson. Can you imagine that! S S Don't interrupt Ida, for she must finish talking about what S S seems to be her never ending work: but it isn't as terrible S S as it sounds, really, for she still has time to take a walk S S occasionally, which is more than we can say for ourselves. S S We prophecy an energetic sehoolma'm in Ida and if she S S doesn't make a good one we miss our guess. S X S N S S s N S S s s -A - s S S X S S X N X S Q S 's S MARY ELMIRA SCHROEDER S S . . S S 543 McKnight St., Reading, Pa. S S S X X S Mary is like a pale angel at the carnival, his heart S S aflame, his voice always flute-like in its tenderness and S S warning. She watches and understands a great many S S pieces of life. Much of hcr understanding comes from a S S great amount of reading for she has probably read more S S than any other girl in college: she sleeps with one eye on S S a book, I have heard. She remembers all the purple S S patches which make her companionable. She is an appreci- S S ative little lady with not yet enough self-confidence to S S create the sort of thing she sees and feels. S S S l S X X S S S S is S S S s . s S S S JOAN MONICA SHEA S x S S 23 Mulberry St., Brockton, Mass. S S S X X S Class Basketball 135, 145: Class Baseball 123, 137: Class S S Fistball 140: Song Leader 113, 123: All-College Cheer S S Leader 143: Brownie Board 137, President 143: Class S S Social Committee 133, 1433 Question Club 143. S S Joan is Irish. That accounts for her tip-tilted nose, her S S irrepressible grin, and her brown, brown eyes. That's S S why she isn't the recipient of stray and violent books when S S she goes singing through the corridors even in quiet hours. S S That's why she is in demand on any and all occasions,from S S being one good reason for a skating party, to managing a S S Brownie Stunt and concentrating in the History Sem. S S Room. At least Joan would say that's why, but we know S S . - - S S better. It s just because she is - Joan. S x l x S W BRUN MAEL lj E MW A E U U Cl X X - - GRACE DAUER SHEIN X X . X X 109 State St., , Providence, R. I. X X i X X . X E i Brownie Stunt Committee 113: Business Manager X X Komians 143. X X . . . X X This year when Kommns bestxrred itself and looked X X around for a business manager, it said, Where can we E X find a girl who is interested in dramatics, who knows X X what's what in Komians and in business managing, who is X X original, clear-headed, and conscientious? The answer X S was - Grace. This looked to Grace like a rather large S X order but she undertook it and from the very start has X X , proved to everybody that she was the person for the job. X X No one but herself knows how hard she has worked to X make Komians a financial success. Never was there such X S an untiring worker, not only in business managing, but XX X anywhere that her advice is sought. Many honors came X X to Grace before Phi Bet and many more are coming after. S X - - X X X X X X .A . ,C . X X X X X X X X X X ' DOROTHY SIMPSON X X X X Howard, R. I. X X X E Leader of Glee Club 143. SX X If you ever get caught in a tight fix and need someone to X X X X . . . X X help you out, if you have to have something done in record X X . X X time and done well - whatever you need from the use of ii XX il car to n peppy stunt: tell Dot and it's as good as done. X X That's why she is All-College Song Leader which involve! S X keeping the Glee Club going and swelling the fund for an X X X X operetta. I?ot sings, dances divinely .1if -she took the X X advice thats been given, she'd he starring in Don't Do X X It, Dot among the Roaring Forties by now3, sports X X in athletic teams, tumbles with the tumbling squad, and X X studies - now and then. Life iii ii whirlwind with her, X X but perhaps it's not life but Dot that does the whirling. X X X X X X X X X X X X . . X X X X X X BERNICE GRACE SMITH X X . . . X X 46 W. Friendship St., Providence, R. I. X X X X X X Class Social Committee 113, 143: Sepiad 123, 133: X X Masque Committee 123: Brownie Board 143: Secretary 123, X X Treasurer 133: Business Manager of Record 143. X X Bernice is a willing worker and when one calls upon her S X . - . X XX to do anything one knows that it will be done. She has XX S an inordinate college spirit and has dabbled her Fingers X X . 4 u Q X into practically every organization She is the living X X proof that commuting and working one's way through S X college do not necessitate a lack of interest in college life X X X S nor yet keep one from participation in its activities and X X frivolities, while Sepiad and Record would feel lost without X S her to write poems and stories and business manage. S X X X X X X X X VIEW C X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X DEW BRUN MAEL .J 1 W X X X X X X X X X X CAROLYN REBECCA SMITH X X . . X X 935 N. Fifth St., Reading, Pa. X X X X In an absolutely quiet and unostentatious manner X X Carolyn does an immense amount of thinking. Anyone X X . X who knows her is always ready to tell you how clever she X X is and they, too, are the only ones who even suspect her X X wild schemes for the future, such as going to Honolulu, X X X X Oklahoma, or -- but don't worry too much about her X going so far away. She'll have any number of new plans X X before the time really comes. X X X X X X X X X X X A ' X X X X X X X X X X X DOROTHEA ALICE SMITH X X . . X X 32 Ro al Ave., Commicut, R. I. X X X X X X Apparatus C13, f23, 133: C. A. cabinet 443. X X Dorothea and her dancing are inseparable. At the X X mention of Dorothea's name, all Brown girls have a vision X X of a dainty creature tripping into the room on her toes, X X X X gracefully impersonating the Toy Doll or the Spirit of X X Spring. Not only has Dottie danced her way through X X College with great success, but she has captured men's X X hearts with quite as much skill. A little bird told us there X X is a Fairy Prince not far in the distance. We wonder X X . X X whether he will get wames or the Dance to Dawn for X X breakfast! We prophesy that it will be both! X X X X . . X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X f , X X , X X ' ELIZABETH THATCHER STAFFORD' X X . X X 43 Arch St., Providence, R. I X X X X . X X C. A. Cabinet Q43: Assistant Business Manager Sepiad X X C335 College Auditor M33 Assistant Business Manager X X Bruim Mael C439 Class Treasurer C33, 143. X X Any one who can spend four years collecting our money X X and continue to collect our hearty good-will right along, X X must be a pretty good sort. Elizabeth is chieHy notable X X for Math courses and friendliness - which of course explains X X . X X the above state of affairs. She may, during classes, move in X X a realm of four dimensions unknown to the ordinary mortal, X X but when there is anything to be done either for or with X X . X X '23, Elizabeth is right there on the spot with the common X X X X sense and the helping hand and the goods fsausages or X X sense, you understand, as the case may be.3 X X A ' X X X X X ij il-.i MW 2 ij Ci 53 UN MAEL U III S S S f - NELLIE CLAYTON STOKES Q S X . ' X S 217 Slater Ave., Providence, R.. I. S S S S S E Class Vice-President C4 jg Business Manager Brlfn S S Mzfel 447. ' S S ' Did you know that Nellie stayed at home a year after E S Prep School so that she could come to College with 1923? S S We think that is just characteristic of Nellie - to show such S Q, good judgment at that early age! Now, with four years of S S College to her credit, we look to Nellie to keep us from get- S S ting too flighty, for a more level-headed girl could not be S S found. She makes us dizzy with wonder at the ease with S S which she wins Math honors and A's, and then brings us S S back to earth with her reliable good sense. Nellie is loads S S of fun, too, and always in the best of spirits. Some day S S she is going to hold a contest, and challenge all comers to S S giggle longer or harder than she can. Our money is on S S . . Nellie! S S S S S S S S ee -eee 4 S S S S S S S S S S - . S S S S S S ELSIE PAULINE SWANSON S X - X S Crompton, R. I. S X X S S S Do you remember our Sophomore Masque and how S S darling Elsie was as the Tiny Little Bear? Wasn't she S S the dearest thing when she piped up Somebody's eaten Q S my soup all up! We adored Elsie then and we have adored S S her ever since. We even voted her the cutest girl in the S S class at our class banquet. Elsie just hates to be teased S S about being cute , so don't you dare tell her we wrotenthis! S S We just can't help kidding her about it, because when she S S gets mad , she is cuter than she was before! Try it S S yourse an see 1 yo on in 0 oo. X S lf d 'f u d 't th' k s t ' S S S X X S S S S S S S - S S S X X S S S S S -A-.W S S S S S S S X S BELMIRA EVELINA TAVARES E N . X S 147 Stewart St., Fall River, Mass. S S S S S S Who would ever guess that Belmira's quiet smile hides a S S deep devotion to music? And yet we find that Belmira is S S choir-director and organist of her church in Fall River, and S S spends many hours a week preparing music for the Sunday S S services. While the rest of us unhesitatingly take cuts for gy S movies and marcels she must save them in case a weddin X S . s, S S or possibly a funeral, demands her services as organist. S S The gym, too, sees her often, for she is enthusiastic about S S apparatus and basketball. In everything she does we find S S the same serene, quiet enthusiasm which we feel sure she S S will carry over into her work next year, whatever that S S may be. XS S S S S S ' ' S X X BRUN MAEL Cl S ' ' S S S S S S S S MURIEL THERESA TIERNEY S S . S S 37 Hanover St., Providence, R. I. S S S S S S The noticeable thing about Muriel is that she is so very S S pleasant. One can't imagine her cherishing malice towards S S anyone - it just isn't in her. She is so in the habit of S S having sympathetic and kindly feelings that we feel she S S does violence to her nature when it is necessary to complain S S even of impossible and unpleasant courses. Muriel is S S good fun and she is always responsive to the attempts of S S others to be entertaining which we consider the height of S S good manners. We have an idea that Muriel will be quite S S as much amused as any of the youngsters when the pro- S S verbial bad boy tries to get funny in class. S S S S , S X - X S S S S S S S S S S S S S - S S SARAH ELEANOR WELLS S S . S S Harwlch, Mass. S S S S Sophomore Masque Committee 125: Komians 425, 135, S S 145, Komian pin C455 Class Social Committee K-15: Bruin S S Ma5l Board 425, 4:45, Editor-in-chief Brufi Main 445: S S S S Question Club 145. S S S S Little Sallie can twist her slim figure into more effective S S poses than anybody else. She can likewise twist her agile S S mind into more quaint and clever notions than about S S anybody else. Sallie is refreshingly different and displays S S the artistic temperament in some of its most fascinating S S aspects. She can act and she can draw and she can dance S S and she can make costumes of a handkerchief and a safety S S pin, and all these gifts she dispenses freely for the benefit S S of us mere mortals, her college mates. But - oh chiefest S S 1 V Y Y of all - she can evolve from the inner consciousness of her S S being perfectly brand new and immensely desirable ideas. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S ' ' S S S S S S RUTH MARIETTA WHITE S S X S Greene, R. I. S S X S S S Soon after Ruth joined us at the beginning of our junior S S year we realized that 1923 had gained a valuable member, S S and this opinion has been strengthened during the last S S S S two years. S S Witness: She came to our first Junior class meeting with- S S out being urged. S S Witness: She upheld the dignity of 1923 by singing in the S S choir, and by serving on the Sepiad and Record boards. S S Witness: She was elected to the Phi Beta Kappa. S S We're glad you came to Brown, Ruth, and more than S S glad you came into 1923. S S S S S S S S - 4 S S S S S S S .4 4 E lj L VlW AW4WW imWW lj El II X X X X XS OLIVE GREENE WILDES X X X S 25 Waterman Ave., Eden Park, R. I. X X X X X S Ever since Olive took history in her sophomore year, she S X has had a predilection for it. Now she hopes to instill this S S enthusiasm into countless struggling sub-freshman heads, XXX S and so she is studying education and other prerequisites of S S a full-hedged teacher. She and Edythe help to uphold the Q S tall end of the line in gym, for here also are they inseparable S S companions whom not even gym can part. Olive does not X Ss stay around college long, but at noon, you can generally S X find her in the lunch room, entertaining a table and S X brightening it with her Eveready smile and laugh, true to X X h ' ' ii X Q t e tradition of t at name. S X X X X X X X X X ' l X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X CATHERINE VERONICA WINSPER S X X X So. Dartmouth, Mass. S X X S Vice President French Club C33 S S When we think of Trinka we always want to sing a S S light-hearted song with many tra-la's at the end of each S S line. That seems to express her kind of good nature S S exactly. She keeps her friends in the best of spirits and if S S she is not relating jokes of her own, with her ready laughter S S she is inspiring others to tell some. Trinka can do many S S things. She plays the cello beautifully, can talk French S S and Spanish, and can keep her room in the dorm clean! S X With these accomplishments and her Brown de 'ree Cather- X x , g , . X S ine is going to make the world and the rest of us sit up and S X take notice. Which is just what we expect of all Brown X, S women! S X X X X X X .L X X . . X X X X X X X X MAUDE ELLA WISHART E X . X X 770 Broadway Fall River, Mass. TX X X X X S We admire Maude very much, and may as well admit it S S right here. Who else can spend hours in the Chemistry Ss X Lab and come out smiling? Who but Maude can never - S really never - study for a test, and get an A or B? When S X . . X Q someone in Miller Hall wants a dress hung or planned, X XS would anyone else ever produce such satisfactory results? S S And lastly -- here's where we admire her most - who else S S has charmsso subtle as to lure a handsome Brunonisn from S S his manly haunts on the Hill, to the spinster-like atmosphere X S of Miller Hall's reception-room! S X X X X X X X X X X X - - X X X X X X X X X I-. Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q X Q Q X Q Q X Q Q Q X Qw Qvu Q Q3 Q Qi-' X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q lj all Q Q Q ALICE MONTGOMERY WRIGHT Q . Q Q 176 Armington St., Edgewood, R. I. Q Q Q Of course most girls come to College with a PURPOSE S and never allow a mere man to divert their minds in the Q least! Once in a while a girl stays and graduates who has Q been known to change her mind as to the nature ol' said S PURPOSE. Alice can speak with authority as to the W so n. S. W rs E1 5 '4 e -Q. 'E Q :r' n G o 5. m YD 5 I: Q. S. :1 vs m 1:1 sn -1 Sf E m -1 Z Q example oi the class MAN in all his varying moods and S whims is, to her mind, far more absorbing than studying S Q dry Mathematics and dead languages. And sometmes, S Q when we have passed a particularly tedious afternoon in S S the Lab, we are inclined to agree with her! Q Q Q Q Q Q X X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q S - FRANCES MAY WRIGHT S Q 1017 N. Main St., Palmer, Mass- Q Q Q X X S Class Basketball CI3, f23, C43, Captain C335 Class S S Bowling U31 Class Fistball C13, C23, C33, C435 Varsity S S Basketball C33, Captain C435 Class Tennis CII35 Class xg S Baseball C13, C23, C33, C435 Treasurer S. G. A. C335 Brun gs S Mael Board C23, C33, C435 President Miller Hall C435 S Q Question Club Chairman C43. Q S It is a wonder to some of us that we ever see more of Fran S S than a cloud of dust, considering the fact that she is on S Q every possible committee and every possible team and Q S every possible board. takes in all entertainments, all Math S S courses on the Hill, runs Miller Hall, and corrects youthful QQ Q trig papers by the yard. But really, we ask you, did you Q Q - 1 t of Y th L F Q 't th mu h'n x Q X Lver go 0 any mg a ran watn ere, g 1 g more X Q or yelling louder Cas the case may be3 than anybody else, S S or did you ever try to run anything that Fran wasn't on xg S A deck to boost things along? ? ? As a good old sport she Q Q V takes the palm. Q Q Q Q 5 Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q X Q EMILIA ELEANORE ROBISON Q X X Q 695 Albany St., Schenectady, N. Y. Q Q Q Qs Class Basketball C23, C335 Komians C43, Vice-President XS S C335 Komian Pin C43. S S Lem has gone through four geological ages. The first Q S stratum was formed during the reign ol' one of the Georges. S S It was a collegiate age of banners, loud yeas, and spreads Q Q . . from her stores of food. The next two strata were transi- S Q tional. They showed her uphlding Komians by her S Q acting. The fourth was a Rennaissance of learning. It Q S was a lit'ry minded age and Lem became a small lit'ry S Q public, a constant stimulus for rising young authors. Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Ei ij ij lj 57 UN MAEL lj U Y S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S Zlimsmer members nf 1923 S S S S S S GLADYS LOUISE BAKER S S AMY AMANDA CAMPBELL S S SARAH COOPERSTEIN S S MARION FLORENCE COPP S S GLADYs MARIE CRAIG S S KATHARINE MAKEPIECE CURTIS S S S S FLORENCE HELEN DEVINE S S GRACE GENEVIEVE GAVIGAN S S RUTH GUP S S JUNE HELLER S S RUTH ELIZABETH KING S S ALICE KATHERINE LYNCH S S MARY LILLIAN MCCORMICK S S GLADYS MAY MOWRY S S S S HELEN ELIZABETH RAMSBOTTOM S S CORA GWENDOLYN REDDING S S EVELYN RAY SHEEHAN S S DORA SHERMAN S S MILDRED ALBERTA STEVENS S S DORIS ETHEL WATTS S S WINNIFRED DALE WINTER S S DOROTHY WOOD S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X lf! El S . S Semur Srnnga S S X S Q Q s .si s X N S X N S N N S N Q S X X Ss SENIORS E N . S E Now that we are Seniors and have reached the top at last, S S We find that there are lots of things to do. is E We'll tell you just a few of them if you will lend an ear, S S Then perhaps you'll wish you all were Seniors too. S S x N S x x S Well, first of all, we have to wear these somber caps and gowns. E S Of course that doesn't give us any pride. S S And then we have to work to practise up the Senior Sing. S S You'll never know what that means till you've tried. S N N N N x x S We have to lead from chapel and that means to hustle out S S For fear of holding up the rest of you. S S We have to dash for doorways when we'd much prefer to poke, S S Because some Freshman's waiting to go thru. S X N K S N . N S We have to act as models lest you take up with our faults, S E And never, never talk on chapel stairs. S N We have to be the presidents of all our colle e clubs 5 N g N S And do the honors at our big affairs. S x x X X N N E We have to lecture all of you and see that you behave E S And be shocked at all the naughty things you do, S S And in June we have to leave you and go brave the big cold world. S S Now don't you wish you all were Seniors too? S x x X N S S X Q S S X N S S S Q x S S S S N N S YALLER S X Q N X S X S When we were Fresh - 2 5 men long years past, S S . s S We might have told Q S you if you'd asked, E S X S . N Q That we felt like - 5 S yaller doggies. Ng S 'Cause we got picked S S on just like these. S S But Seniors now, S S we've reached that stage S X - S XS Where we feel Just S 5 yaller with age. Q R S S S 59 UC! FU C21 Z 3 :Jax l'1'l l ' Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q N Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X fm am Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q THE BULLETIN BOARD Q Q Q Q . . Q Q Mary had a letter that she muchly wished to hide, Q Q But, alas, she found she'd lost her locker key. Q Q She hadn't any pocket in her dainty little dress, Q Q And her notebook was as crammed as it could be. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q She cast about and cast about to think if she could put Q Q at precious 1tt e etter anyw ere Q Q Th ' 1' 1 1 11 Q Q That it wouldn't be discovered but she hadn't any luck Q Q And she almost had to give up in despair. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q But at last she thought of some place where it never would be found Q Q Unless she advertised a big reward. Q Q Of course you couldn't guess it, yet its very simple, too. Q Q She stuck it on the Bulletin Board. Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q TWEN'Y-FREE Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q , Q Q Twen'y-free, youse a-growm' old, Q Q Mos' come time fo' to gid along wid you. Q Q Now what cha reckon dem numbers done sugges' Q Q Dey put me'n min' o' twen'y-free - skidoo ! Q Q Q Q Q Q . Q Q -Twen'y-free, youse a Senior now. Q Q ' 1 Q Q Better min your every P and Q, Q Q Gotta set de sample for de udder folks up here, Q Q . . . , - 1 . I Q Q Till It come t1me for twen y free skldoo . Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Twen'y-free, youse a-gwlne fas', Q Q 1 - , . Q Q Jes dis one year, den you ll all be fro , Q Q But don't y'al1 forgit yer ole Brown mammy at de en Q Q Jes' case she's bleeged to tell you, twen'y-free - skidoo ! Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q THYW N939 BRUN MAEL III L lj S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S 1924 S S S S S S Class Officers S S S S S S - S S GLENNA WILMAN DAY. . . ..... Preszden! S S CHARLOTTE FERGUSON ...... ,.Vwe-Presrderlt S S HELEN WOODDELL FENNER. . ..... Secrelarzz S S DORIS ANTHONY., .... ....... . --Treasurer S S S S S S S S S S S S S S Soclal Commlttee S S S S . S S DOROTHY HENDERSON GRAY, Chazrman S S ORINA WINNIFRED KIDD ANNE HARTMAN S S CHARLOTTE FERGUSON JANE COLLINS LUCE S MARJORIE LILLIA RICH S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 62 'N MAEL Il lj S Q Q X X N s X S N 3 1 - 5 I he Jumura S S S S X X Q When we were Freshmen S S We were so young S X S And green S Q And, oh, everything like that. S X a S Then we could wrlte S S About the gym contest E Q N S Song Contest S S And everything we ought to have won. S S And didn't. S S Th s h X Q en we were op omores. S S We were so wise Q s - X N N E Our masque, S S It was the best ever given. S Q Then we could write S S About the Brownie Stunt and Q S Song Contest S Q We really did win. S S It was great ! S S When we are Seniors S . . . X Q We will be dlgnlfied S 3 Wear caps S S . . S 2 And, oh, everything like that. S N - x 5 But we are Juniors. Q X S We aren't so young Q Q So wise ' S S Or even dignified. S X E It's awful! S 3 But what a Prom S X . S At the Biltmore S S - X S With men S X - . S And, oh, everything llke that S X E You know! S S S is S S S S S S S S N 'S S S S S UN MAEL D t S S S N N N Qllaae nf 1924 N S S S S S S DORIS ANTHONY 17 Eighth St., East Providence, R. I. S S ELIZABETH APOLLONIO 61 Myrtle St., Boston, Mass S S CAROL BERNICE BOGMAN R. F. D. Box 46, Apponaug, R. I S S MARION JOSEPHINE BOWER 7 Oakland Ave., Methuen, Mass S S DOROTHEA LUCY BROOKS 57 Maplewood Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Q 5 RUTH MIRIAM BROWN Harmony, R. I Q S DOROTHY ANGELL BUNDY No. Woodstock, Conn S S ELOISE FRYE BURT 266 Pontiac Ave., Auburn, R. I Q S LOIS CAMPBELL 235 Doyle Ave., Providence, R. I E S MARJORIE DENT CANDEE 10 Arch St., Norwalk, Conn S S IRENE DOROTHY CARLIN 41 Grove St., Pawtucket, R. I S S HAZEL MIRIAM CHAPMAN Central Village, Conn Q RUTH MARION CLIFFORD 82 Wyman St., Brockton, Mass Q S ALICE MABEL COLLINS 122 Center St., East Providence, R. I S S GOLDIE CORASH 721 Pleasant St., Worcester, Mass 3 S MARY LOUISE DARMEDY 29 Cottage St., Mansfield, Mass S S GLENNA WILMAN DAY 138 Newbury St., Brockton, Mass E S KATHRYN MARION DENNENY 154 Prairie Ave., Pawtucket, R. I S E ALICE TAYLOR DODGE 229 Liberty St., Bloomfield, N. J S S HELEN WOODDELL FENNER 147 Woodbine St., Auburn, R. I S CHARLOTTE FERGUSON 25 Harris St., Marblehead, Mass S S THELMA ALVERNA GARLAND 225 W. Canton St., Boston, Mass S S KATHARINE AGNES GILBERT 17 Kent St., Montpelier, Vt S S DEBORAH SAMPSON GIROUX 8 Oak Grove Ave., Springfield, Mass S S DOROTHY HENDERSON GRAY Bo.c 131, Warwick, R. I S S REGINA GREIFINGER 180 Ferry St., Newark, N. J S S GRETCHEN ELIZABETH GUGEL 25 Jackson St., Long Branch, N. J E S AMELIA MAY HARRIS 1 Bay Ave., Edgewood Station, Providence, R. I S N ANNE HARTMAN 11 Locust Ave., Red Bank, N. J N S ESTHER ALICE HASKARD 35 Dexter St., Woonsocket, R. I S S CATHERINE VIRGINIA HEBERT Arctic, R. I S S MYRTLE PAGE HODGKINS 88 Alger Ave., Providence, R. I Q S HILDA MARION HOFFMAN Lyndonville, Vt S E GRACE ARLINE HOPKINS 184 Winthrop St., Taunton, Mass S S ANNABEL HOWARTH 161 Woodward Road, N. Providence, R. I S S ANNE MARIE IANNACCIO 417 Magnolia Ave., Elizabeth, N. J S S HOPE JILLSON 137 Camp St., Providence, R. I S S RUTH DOROTHEA JOHNSON 224 Massachusetts Ave., Providence, R. I E LAURA UDELL KEILTY 73 Cypress St., Providence, R. I S S MAY BAGGOTT KELLY 75 Williams St., Norwich, Conn E S ORINA WINIFRED KIDD 127 Winter St., Fall River, Mass S xg KATHERINE LEACH 534 Post Road, Fairfield, Conn S S CECILIA MARION LENNON 329 West Ave., Pawtucket, R. I E N x YWWiZWW!WZlW7X lj lj II C1 lj III S S S ETHEL ESTHER LIPPMAN 31 Creighton St., Providence, R. I . S S JANE COLLINS LUCE Edgewater Beach Hotel, Chicago, zzz. S S DOROTHY BEATRICE MscORMICK 107 Taber Ave., Providence, R. 1. S S VERNA RUTH McELROY 115 Main St., Woodbridge, Conn. S S CECILE LOUISE McINNIS 228 Forest Ave., Bveeleavvv, Mess. S S DOROTHY CARROLL MAGUIRE 181 Pleasant st., Providence, R. 1. S S FLORENCE MAY 22 Sockanosset, Providence, R. I . S CAROLINE HELEN MUCHA 123 Fulton St., Elizabeth, N. J. S S LOIS ELIZABETH MUNROE 71 Oak Ave., Rvvevsvde, R. 1. S 5 MILDRED MACLAREN MURRAY 1051 Stafford Road, Fall River, Mass. S E DOROTHY OBORNE 178 Bartlett Ave., Elzgleiwooidkgi. I. E S LUCILE GERTRUDE PETTIBONE New ifor , onn. S S MIRIAM AVIS PRICE 184 Waverly st., Providence, R. 1. S S MARJORIE LILLIA RICH 207 Indiana Ave., Providence, R. I. SQ S ROSE NORA AGNES SISCA sae Bedford St., Fall River, Mass. S E RUTH ADAMS SMALL 31 So. Union St., Pawtucket, R. I. S S VERA IRENE SMITH 66 S. East St., Amherst, Mass. S S PHYLLIS STANLEY 641 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. S S FLORENCE ELIZABETH SWEENEY 1222 S. Broad st., Tvevvtevv, N. J. S S MARJORIE TUCKER 6 Reedsdale Road, Milton, 86, M ass. S S RUTH LOUISE VINTON 220 E. Fifth Ave., Roselle, N. J. S S NELLE THOMPSON WAGGENER La Belle, Missouri S S GRACE WAMSLEY s Bennet St., Charleston, S. C. S S CHARLOTTE CECILIA WEST 921, M st., N. W., Washington, D. C. S S ANNABEL MERRILL WHEATON 138 E. seth St., New York, N. Y. S S MABEL WILLISTON 23 Linden St., Providence, R. I . S S ELIZABETH LEE YOUNG 348 Smith St., Providence, R. 1. S S S S S S . S S S S S S S S S S S U E1 'IEIVIAT NIIHEI B 4 , L II I CI S N S N N ' S N - N N S S .4 S S x . 1 S S - S S 'lb L I S S -'IY4 'J S S . 1 -' N N S S S S j . S S ff 4 N S S I S S 1925 S X X E Class OfEcers 3 N N 5 ELLEN ELLERY APPEL ........... ....... P resident S if DOROTHY ELEANOR PALMER ..., . . .Vice-Presidenl S S FAITH LILLBURN ROGERS ............ ...... S ecretary S S CATHERINE FRANCES FITZGERALD. . . . .Treasurer S S . . x S Soclal Comm1ttee S S S N S E MARGARET EISENWINTER, Chairman S S KATHERINE MARGARETTA SANSON S S CATHERINE FRANCES FITZGERALD S S S S N S S S S E Masque Committee S S S xg KATHERINE MARGARETTA SANSON, Chairman S 3 ELIZABETH SIMPSON 5 5 GRACE LORAH SNAVELY 3 S CATHERINE FRANCIS FITZGERALD S S S S DORIS ETHEL WATTS Q 5 MARY ELINOR JONES Q S S S S S S S N S S S S UN MAEL D lj W U EI II Ifl if Lucy received C+ in freshman themes and had to take S S English 2 this year. Her first theme was called Reminiscences. E s E iKBI11I11I5lZ211EBE 3 I returned to college this fall with a heavy heart and a heavy 2 S suitcase for I had spent the greater part of the summer in the S S Great Out of Doors and knew that my college days were to be speant S S ln the stuffy classroom amid the maddmg crowds. Mysultcase S was heavy because I had a lot of food and clothes in it, or as E S mama says board and loging, which I didn't minld because they S S were all knew. You can amagine how my heart lightened up S 2 when I saw Nelly Appel on the front steps smoking a Dutchman's S S pipe and giving a hearty hand to all the dear members of the S E class. She told me all about Lancaster and how many sand- S S wiches we were going to need for the freshman tea, I told her S S to have plenty so we could eat what was left over. E S I found a new tennis court being built. I was sure the future S S classes would use it after I was graduated and it was finished. S S That first weak back I had some serious thots with myself and Q the other girls, we decided that college was a serious place and we Q Q were going to work hard and get soom good marks. You can see S S the fruit of this in our mid-year examinations. We set a good S S example to the other classes too by filling almost all the parts S S in the Komian play and the basket-ball tournament. They S S were well filled too, we won the basket-ball tournament. We Q E also gave half a dance to raise money for the masque. The Juniors S S gave the other half. The masque is unique and quite flowery S 2 but I didn't intend to give away the secret. Anyhow I am sure it E S will be enjoyed by all. E X Lucy Lyon - 1925. Q S s s S s X S S S S S S S S S S N S S Would advise you to tutor in punctuation and spelling. S Q Cannot give you a satisfactory grade as they now stand. Your S S sentences lack unity, coherence, and emphasis and the ideas are S S quite threadbare. Your suitcase is amusing. I laughed at it Q S twice, once as I read the theme and once when I remembered it. S S A. B. C. S BRUN MAEL I S S S Gllanz nf 1925 S S S S S MARGARET ELIZABETH ADAMS Wickford, R. I. E S MARY IRENE ADAMS Corner Veazie and Houghton Sts., Providence,R.I. S S LAURA ELEANOR ALLEN 85 Central Ave., Dalton, Mass. S Q GRACE WATERMAN ALLSOP 81 Ayrault St., Providence, R. I Q S GERTRUDE LOUISE ANNAN 27 Larch St., Providence, R. I . S S ELLEN ELLERY APPEL 305 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa S S DOROTHY ISABELLE ARNOLD 103 Arnold Ave., Providence, R. I . S S MURIEL FRANCES AUSTIN Norwood, R. I. S S HOPE MINERVA BAKER 58 Newman Ave., Seekonk, Mass S S MARGARET MARY BANIGAN 752 Beech St., Manchester, N. H S S FRANCES AUGUSTA BENNETT 195 Laurel St., Manchester, N. H E S CATHERINE HURLEY BLACK 207 Broadway, Providence, R. I. Q S DOROTHY MILLER BOHN 715 Washington St., Reading, Pa S S ANNE JEAN BORDEN 240 Plain St., Providence, R. I X S ALICE ELIZABETH BOURNE 141 Bourne Ave., Phillipsdale, R. I S S HARRIET MARTHA BOYD 1 Mary St., Central Falls, R. I S S MILDRED LOUISE COBB 242 Park St., Attleboro, Mass. S Q BEATRICE ELIZABETH COLEMAN 77 Olney St., Providence, R. I . S S MARGARET FRANCES COX 1244 Pleasant St., Fall River, Mass. S S HELEN CECILIA DARLY Riverpoint, R. I S S RUTH DAVIDSON ws Beaufort si., Providence, R. 1 S S PEARL EDWINNA DEWSNAP 1282 Globe St., Fall River, Mass. S S MILDRED DOLLOFF 1313 Washington St., Bath, Me. S E HOPE DORMAN 15 Church St., Belfast, Me. S Q ADRIANNA ALIDA DYKSTRA Wakefield, R. I S S DORIS IRVA ECCLESTON 9 Jenny Lind St., New Bedford, Mass S S ELIZABETH ANNA ECKLES 24 Mt. Hope Ave., Providence, R. I. S N N S MARGARET EISENWINTER 414 Farmington Ave., Waterbury, Conn. S S MARGARET WINIFRED ENSLIN 14 Charles St., Bristol, R. I S S CELIA ERNSTOF 572 Public St., Providence, R. I. S S SARAH WILSON EYRE R. F. D. No. 1, Cumberland, Md. S S ADELAIDE EMILY FARIS 269 Gano St., Providence, R. I . S N N S FLORENCE AMY FERGUSON 50 Belair Ave., Providence, R. I . S Q CATHERINE FRANCES FITZGERALD 213 Garden St., Pawtucket, R. I . S S LYDIA METCALF FLETCHER 181 Angell St., Providence, R. I. S S ROSE MARY FOGARTY 8 Dawson St., Providence, R. I . S S IVY REECE FRICKER 226 Eastwood Ave., Providence, R. I . Q S EVELYN RITA GINSTI 273 Mineral Spring Ave., Providence,R.I. E S ELINOR GERTRUDE HALL Dudley, Mass. S S GRACE ELEANOR HANSON 53 Haskins St., Providence, R. I . E S ALICE GERTRUDE HATHAWAY 86 Messer St., Providence, R. I . Q S ETHEL MARION HAVEN 85 Farragut Ave., Providence, R. I . S S KATHERINE HEADY 15 Churchill St., Springfield, Mass. S S MARY CATHERINE HINCHEY 155 State Ave., Palmer, Mass. S WESESTEEISFESYLE 53Zo'i5 'Z'l. 3fe o5 1 'c2eZ' Z' 5' A asi ., oonsoc e, . . X S AMY HULL 59 Pitman si., Providence, R. I. S S ALICE ROCKWELL HUMPHREY 85 Adelaide Ave., Providence, R. I . S S LUELLA RITA JEFFREY Sea Bright, N. J. S 3 MARY ELINOR JONES Norway, Mo. S S X S S S S S S S N N N N N Q. NCCI N SFU NZ S S S N X Sr' X N X N N N X N N N N N N N N N X . U E A A S NANCY CHRISTINE JUDKINS 119 Ellery St., Providence, R. I. Q S HAZEL BRANDON LAWRENCE Falmouth, Mass. S S HELEN LUCILLE LEARY - ' 99 Pleasant St., Franklin, Mass. S S BEULAH WINIFRED LEATHERS 24 Angell Ave., Oaklawn, R. I. S S HELEN BUCKMINSTER LEAVITT 24 Park Ave., Natick, Mass. S S MARGUERITE JACKSON LINGHAM 83 Wadsworth St., Providence,R.I. S S MARY ANNUNCIATA LOMAX 54 Gunnell St., Fall River, Mass. S S BARBARA PHILIPPA McCARTHY 30 Armington Ave., Providence, R. I . S S MARY AGNES McKEE 112 Dexter St., Valley Falls, R. I. S 5 HELEN BELL MaQUEsTON Hadley, Maas. 3 S DOROTHY W. MARTIN 119 E. 29th St., New York, N. Y. S S HELEN LOUISE MARTIN 305 Wellington Ave., Auburn, R. I. S S KATHARINE MAYOR 196 Camp St., Providence, R. I. S E HELEN MARIE MOWBRAY 183 Magnolia St., Auburn, R. I. S S ELVA LUCILE MUNROE 24 Langham Road, Providence, R. I . S S ELIZABETH MARION NEWTON se Laura st., Praaiaeaee, R. I- Q is ALICE MARIE ODDIE The Chesston, Brockton, Mass. S SN DOROTHY ELEANOR PALMER 139 Newton St., Brookline, Mass. S S BERTHA DEXTER PEACOCK 237 Washington St., Providence, R. I. 3 N CHARLOTTE TEMPEST PERRY Greene, R. I. N S HANNAH SCOTT PICKELS 5 Warren St., Lawrence, Mass. 3 S GURDA ESTELLA PRITCHARD 2594 N. Main St., Fall River, Mass. S 2 DOROTHY PUTNAM 48 McKinley St., Providence, R. I. 3 N MARY ELIZABETH RALSTON 2421 W. Mission, Spokane, Wash, Q S ANNA JULIA REDINGER 56 Beaufort sn., Praataeaae, R. 1. S E MARJORIE CLARISSA ROACH 23 Kenwood Park, Springfield, Mass. S N FAITH LILLBURN ROGERS Phenix, R. I. N S LYLA ELOISE ROGERS 120 Azaermaa St., Springfield, Mass. S S ELIZABETH RUBIN 480 Elm St., Brockton, Mass. S S ELIZABETH SANFORD 1222 Hope St., Bristol, R. I. S S KATHARINE MARGARETTA SANSON 330 Lincoln Ave., Eau Claire,Wis. S S ELIZABETH SIMPSON Howard, R. I. gs S ELIZABETH WEBSTER SMART Tilton, N. H. S S DORIS VIRGINIA SMITH 141 Cypress St., Providence, R. I. S S ELINOR VAN DORN SMITH Hadley, Mass. S S GRACE LORAH SNAVELY 163 Douglas St., Reading, Pa. S S AMY LEE SPENCER 411 Wellington St., Providence, R. I. S S DOROTHEA SALOME SPRAGUE 214 Highland St., Milton, Mass. S S AIVA ALZAD STONE 75 Wayland Ave., Cranston, R. I . S S EDITH MAY SUMMERSCALES 276 Lonsdale Ave., Pawtucket, R. I. S S GLADYS TAYLOR f 277 Martin St., Providence, R. -I. S S RUTH FRANCES THOMSON Amherst, Mass. S S MILDRED MYRTLE THORBURN Woodstock, Vt. S 5 HOPE THORNTON se Fan Ave., Pawtucket, R. 1. Q Q ELLEN TOURTELLOT 85 Adelaide Ave., Providence, R. I. S S MARJORIE HELEN WALKER 378 Greenwood Ave., Rurrtford, R. I. S S VIOLET BEATRICE WARFIELD 1901 11th St., N. W. Wash., D. C. E S DORIS ETHEL WATTS 33 Arch St., Springfield, Mass. S S ROSE, ALICE WHELAN 91 N. Leyden St., Brockton, Mass. S S MARION ANNA WOODS 120 High st., Westerly, R. 1. 5 S MARY REBECCA WRIGHT 47 Linden St., Rochester, N. H. E N S S S 70' 'myw Ngua BRUN MAEL lj Q W I 4 MZ?!,Z E lj X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X XT: X X X X X X X X X X X 1926 X X X X X X Class Officers X MARGARET BURROWS ........ . .... President X X ELIZABETH LINCOLN FISKE, . . . .Vice-President X X THETA CAROLYN HOLMES. . . .... Secretary X X JEAN VINCENT SWAN .... . . . .Treasurer X X X X X X - - X X Socxal Cornmlttee X X X X . X X DOROTHY MAY STAFFORD, chammm X X X X DOROTHY MARY RUSSELL ELIZABETH JANE LINSZ X X LOIS KLEIN ELLA MORSE ROCKWOOD X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X 1 X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X X lj CI U lj W4Mf l,', ,':ZZ lj lj 72 BRUN MAEL Cl D S S X X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 1925 S S S S S S S S Chem. I -W: Prepared by the Freshmen - One Good Repu- S S tation. S X , X S Formula: B1R9O2W6N,,. S S . . . . S S Hzstorzcal: First dlscovered by Pembroke, September 27th, S S 1922, much subsequent investigation by Seniors, Juniors and S S Sophomores. S S . . . S S Preparatzon: Suddenl throw 100 lrls from different arts S S . . . . S S of the t t the bl f P ll e R t t ll b S S coun ry 1n o crucl e o Jo e . e u a lon W1 e S S S S found to form after first semester. S S . . . . S S Propertzes cmd Conduct: Good reputation IS a solid, very S S colorful and extremely active. Unites with apparatus squad ,to S . . . ' ' . f X S form prize-winning team, the first result from the reagents, being S X 1 . ' S Roberts, unites wlth basket-ball to form a ood Freshman team S S . . . . ' S S and, at higher temperatures, a good varsity. Unites with atoms S S of itself to form a success to Freshman vaudeville, the only S S . . . . . . S thing of 1tS kind, also to form a corkmg Brownie Stunt. United S - . . . - . X S with studles to form a brilliant class, with only one mld-year flunk. S S And lastly united with Brown to form All Colleges, Union S S Dances and Proms. Reduces all other clasess to env reen in S S . y g -' S S solut1on.j S S . S S Usesf Much used to bolster up reputation of other classes. S . . . . . X S Also to put College activities across successfully, to be brilliant S S and athletic, and to brighten up the Women's College in Brown S S University. S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S UW CIW S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S ESS S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S UN MAEL I1 U Gllami nf 1925 X S 3 CONSTANCE WARREN ARNOLD 320 Eliot St., Milton, Mass. E S FRANCES DOROTHY BENE 830 Hope St., Providence, R. I S S ANNA MARLOW BLOSSOM Fairhaven, Mass. S S ELEANOR BOHLMAN Lakeville, cevv. S 2 NETTAE BORETZ Colchester, oven. S 3 ZORELDAH TODD BOYD 15 St. James Place, Bufalo, N. Y. 3 E GLADYS PEGRONHI BOZYAN 80 Washington St., Newport, R. I. E E MARION MARY ELIZABETH BROADBENT 671 Maple St., Fall River 3 S MARION NADINE BROOKS 279 Morris Ave., Providence, R. I. S S MARGARET M. BURROWS 351 Thayer St., Providence, R. I. S S DEBORAH MINER BURTON 148 Sufolk St., Providence, R. I. E E HELEN JANE CHADWICK 159 Prospect St., Providence, R. I. S E ELEANOR ELIZABETH CLARKE Wickford, R. I. S REBECCA PEARL COONEN 6 Tahanto Road, Worcester, Mass. 2 S MABEL EILEEN COONEY 21, Fairglade Ave., Providence, R. I. S Q LENA MAE DAILY . Neaele, R. 1. S S MARTHA ALICE INGHAM DICKIE 121 Wayland Ave., Providence, R.I. S 2 NELLIE HARLAN DIXON 108 Atlantic Ave., Providence, R. I. 3 S GERTRUDE MAY DOYLE 8.4 Brandon Road, Worcester, Mass. S E HOPE HILLS ELMER Hamilton, N. Y. 2 S MARTHA PACKARD FARWELL -326 Moraine St., Brockton, Mass. S S IMOGEN MARION FENNER 11,6 Bridgham St., Providence, R. I. S :Qi ETHEL MILDRED FISH 1365 Broad St., Providence, R. I. E 2 DORIS WILFRED FISHER 28 Market St., Campello, Mass. S Q ELIZABETH LINCOLN FISKE Billings St., Sharon, Mass. Q E PRUDENCE DAVIS FLAGG 160 Potter Ave., Providence, R. I. 2 E AGNES JULIA FLAHERTY 28 John St., Valley Falls, R. I. S Q CAROLYN FLANDERS 40 Hayes St., Meshantient Park, R. I . S SE YVETTE WINIFRED FRANK tl, Hidden St., Providence, R. I. S S ELIZABETH HICKS FULLER 157 Irving Ave., Providence, R. 1. S S HOPE VICTORIA GILBERT 68 Doane St., West Arlington, R. I. S S MARJORIE ANN GOFF Warwick, R. 1. S S EDNA MAY GOGGIN 250 South Main St., Warren, R. I. S S CAROLYN GRIFFITH 871 Hope St., Providence, R. I. E S SARAH GROSSMAN 81 Staniford St., Providence, R. I. S xg HATTIE LOUISE HARRIS 1 Bay Ave., Edgewood Sta., Providence, R. I. S S ELIZABETH HINDLEY or Grove sz., Levseeze, R. 1. S S DOROTHY ETHEL HOFFMAN 72 Minor St., Stratford, Conn. E S GLADYS ELIZABETH HOLMES 361 Elmwood Ave., Providence, R. I. S S JEANETTE HUNTER 331, South 8th St., Reading, Pa. S S MARJORIE ELBERTA JENNISON 132 Webster Ave., Providence, R. I. S xg RUTH MAGNHILD JOHNGREN 156 Belair St., Brockton, Mass. E III ' U UN MAEL U E1 3 EEXLII3ZJ1:IiIE3'EIN.LOgINSON 31 HamlZtlAve.g Wrgznsocket, R. I . ig S 75 win t., ranston, R. I . N E ETHEL MIRIAM KEARNS 107 Pearl St., Providence, R. I. E S MARY V. KENNY 107 Harrison St., Fall River, Mass. S S LOIS KLEIN 2440 Euclid Boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio S S MARION LOUISE KNEELAND 51 Hollywood St., Worcester, Mass. S S VIRGINIA GLAZE KNERR 555 North 5th St., Reading, Pa. S SN DOROTHY JANE KOM Theological Seminary, Lancaster, Pa. S S RUTH RHOADES LEPPER 521 Washington St., Norwood, Mass. S S ELIZABETH JANE LINSZ 2224 Chapline St., Wheeling, W. Va. E S KATHERINE FRANCIS E. LOMAX 54 Grinnell St., Fall River, Mass. it S CATHARINE MARIE LONG 437 College Ave., Lancaster, Pa. S S EDITHA LOVEJOY Pascoag, R. 1. S S HELEN MURIEL McCARTHY 11 Hopedale Road, Providence, R. I . S S MARGARET MARY McGRATH 10 Manning St., Hudson, Mass. S S SARAH ELIZABETH MacINTYRE 122 Jenkins St., Providence, R. I . E E MARGARET MacLEOD Bellows Falls, Vermnot S S SPAJDIE VIRGINIA McMICHAEL St. Pauls St., Blackstone, Mass. E Q ORENCE URSULA MAHONEY 951 Rodman St., Fall River, Mass. S xg CECELIA CLOGHER MARY MAHONEY 83 Governor St., Providence, R. I. 3 S MARGARET MATHESON 52 Collins St., Bristol, R. I. S SX NORMA MATHEWSON 71 Burton St., Bristol, R. I. S S MARGARET ELIZABETH MEIKLEJOHN 21 Nickerson St., Paw't, R. I. S S BARBARA DYER MITCHELL 464 Laurel Hill Ave., Providence, R. I. S S ELIZABETH MORSE 4 Summit St., Pawtucket, R. I. S S MARY ANNE MURPHY 15 Mill St., Newport, R. I. S S PAULINE NARDELLE 13 Opper St., Providence, R. I. XE S DOROTHY NAOMI NELSON 48 Oldham St., Providence, R. I . S S MARGUERITE DOROTHEA NOLON 19 Lexington St., Providence, R. I . S S PAULINE KATHERINE O'CONNOR 567 Spring St., Newport, R. I. E E MARION PECKHAM PAULL 649 Hope St., Bristol, R. I. E S MARGARET FRANCES PHELAN 64 Rosenthal Ave., Newport, R. I . S S DOROTHY BAURNES PHELPS East St., Sujield, Conn. S S WINNIFRED FRANCIS PINE 63 Laura St., Providence, R. I . 3 S DOROTHY ISABEL PRATT 45 Howard St., Brockton, Mass. S E ESTHER BERRY QUACKENBOSS Canaan, New York S S RITH ELIZABETH REES 56 Woodbine St., Providence, R. I. S S DOROTHY REEVE 238 Emerson St., Melrose, Mass. S S EDITH SUMMONS REMINGTON 166 Adelaide Ave., Providence, R. I. S E ELLA MORSE ROCKWOOD North Franklin, Conn. S E DOROTHY MARY RUSSELL 10 Doyle Ave., Providence, R. I. E S LUCY GENEVIEVE RUSSELL 9 White St., Pawtucket, R. I . S S VIRGINIA SANBORN 46 Baker St., Providence, R. I . Xi S MARY LIGHT SCHAEFFER 203 South Queen St., Lancaster, Pa. E 3 EUNICE ELIZABETH SHARP 66 Grove St., Plainville, Mass. E 75 UN MAEL III E1 ELIZABETH M. SMITH 262 Second Aoe., Woonsocket, R. I. N MILDRED SMITH 198 JewettSt.,Pro1ridence, R. I. BELINDA E. SNOW Raynham ceoief, Mass. EDITH ISATES SNOW 13 Pleasant St., Spencer, Mass. S DOROTHY MARY STAFFORD, 7 Gerard Place, M aplewood, N. J. S DOLLY WARREN STILES 39 Primrose Ave., M l. Vernon, N. Y. ELIZABETH LONGSTREET STILLWELL so N. Bridge St.,Somerville, N.J. MINNIE AVIS SUGDEN evo Lowell Aoe., Providence, R. 1. JEAN VINCENT SWAN 1138 smiiii Si., Providence, R. 1. BULAH ELIZABETH TODD North Attleboro, Moss. S HELEN J OSLIN TRUE 96 Evergreen St., Providence, R. I . N CLAUDINE CAROLYN WALFORD 15 Malvern Ave., Edgewood, R. I. N S PEARL PHOEBE WEINBERG 60 Sumter St., Providence, R. I . S N REBECCA WIGGIN A Spencer, Mooo. N FLORENCE ELIZABETH WILLIAMS ers College Ave., Kingston, Po. N N MARGARET LOVE WILLIAMSON 381 Plain si., Campello, Mass. N N HAZEL MARIE WOODMANSEE 71 Sumier Si., Providence, R. 1. N N RUTH LILLIAN WOOLF 321 Hope Si., Providence, R. 1. N N IFIE F. WYATT Rudyard, Michigan N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N X X N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N N BRUN MAEL S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S , S S Smeual Stuhenta S S S S S S MILDRED EDITH BLISS S S MILDRED ELEANOR CARLEN S S DOROTHY NEEDHAM CASEY S S MARY IRENE CATALDO S S MARTHA HIBBERT EQUI S S THETA CAROLYN HOLMES S S MURIEL MITCHELL DODGE S S MALVINA MARY GRIEVES S S MARY EMMA HUME S S ANNA CATHERINE KERNS S S DOROTHEA MACKENZIE S S MABEL FLORENCE OLSON S S ANNA MILDRED OLSON S S ALDYTHE JANE ROBERTS S S MILDRED TABER S S MILDRED LOUISE THORNTON S S ELLEN TOURTELLOT S S MARY ELIZABETH WHOLEY S S S S S S S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S BRUN MAEL URBAN IZAHUI15 78 A MAEL E1 If W7MW MWWA 7WXMOWf0W lj Q L.J E EQ S S S S X X R S R S S E S S S N N S S S Q S N , X if S N ' - x Svtuhent Qinuernment Ananczatznn N N S Odicers S S S S RUTH HOWARD PRESTON, '23 ...... ......, P resident 2 3 HOPE JILLSON, '24 .......,.44..,..A.. A... V ice-Preszdmz S S ELIZABETH LEE YOUNG, '24 ......... ....... S ecrelary S S DOROTHY HENDERSON GRAY, '24 .... , , . ..... Treasurer S N N E Senior Members E S RUTH BATEMAN EVELYN BOWKER LOCKMAN S Q MARGARET MARY OUMMINGS 3 N . S E Sophomore Members S X S SARAH WILSON EYRE DOROTHY ELEANOR PALMER S S S E Freshman Members S X X 3 ELIZABETH FISKE MARTHA DIOKIE S S S S Ex-omcio Members S X X S ELEANOR WOODWARD PARMELEE ...,,... ...pmidenf of1923 S 3 GLENNA WILMAN DAY ..,.....,..Y... ...President 0f192L S 5 ELLEN ELLERY APPEL .... ...P12sIden1o,f1925 S Q MARGARET BURROWS ......,.,,......... ..,President 0f1926 5 S S 2 House Presidents S 3 MARY CALDER APPEL ,.....,..,.,..,,... ..,. M etcalf Hall 5 Q FRANCES MAY WRIGHT. ..,........ ..... M mer Hall Q S ANNABELLE MERRILL WHEATON .... ...,. E asa House 5 S VERA SMITH ...........,...,..1.... .,.. S 11111112 House S X X I1 QI 79 BRUN MAEL S S S S N x S S S S X S S S S S N N S S S S ' rr S S t A t S 5 U15 1311 EEIIIZIH IU11 S N S E Cmcers S N S HELEN ANDERSON HOFF, '23, .. .....,... President S S RUTH LOUISE VINTON, '24 E..... .... V fee-Presiderez 5 S FAITH LILLBURN ROGERS, '25 .... ....... S eerefery S S MARJORIE LILLIA RICH, '24 ..... ...Treasurer E S S S N S S S S S Chairman of Committees S S S N E ELIZABETH THATCHER STAFFORD, '23 ...... ..... M embership S S MARJORIE LILLIA RICH, '24 ............. ....... F inance 2 Q NORMA MATHEWSON, '26 ......... ..,.. F reshmerr S S DOROTHEA ALICE SMITH, '23 ,.... ..... H ereezbeek Q 3 RUTH ELIZABETH PARSONS, '23 .... .... P rogram 5 5 MARJORIE CLARISSA ROACH, '25 .... ...., R ed Cross S S RUTH MIRIAM BROWN, '24 ......... ...,...... S ocial S R N S REATRICE MAY RICHARDS, '23 ..... ...... S ocial Service S S N S RUTH LOUISE VINTON, '24 ...... .... W orld Fellowship S S ADELAIDE EMILY FARIS, '25 .... ......... P ublicity S 80 BRUN MAEL U II A A ff: M 4' N N Q S N N S S S S S S S S S S F Ls X if X S S -K . L nmxami Q x E Omcers E X X S ELEANOR BEERS, '23 ..,..,.. ,, ,4...... Presidenz S S HOPE JILLSON, '24 .,............,.. . . .Vice-President S S GERTRUDE LOUISE ANNAN, '25, . . . . ,,... Secretary S E HELEN WOODDELL FENNER, '24, . . . .Treasurer S S N S S Board Members S N x S EMILIA ROBISON ..,....A..,,.,.,,,.,,... . . .Senior Member Q 5 SARAH ELEANOR WELLS ....,A A.... S enior Member S S MARGARET MARY BANIGAN. , . . . .Sophomore Member S RUTH UPTON BURT .....,... .... S trlge Manager E N R S S S Chairman of Committees E X x S GRACE DAUER SHEIN, '23 ..., ...,.......,..,.. B usiness E E DOROTHY SIMPSON, '23 ......,.. . . .Assistant Slage Manager S S ELIZABETH APPOLLONIO, '24. . . .... ,........... C ostume S S CHARLOTTE FERGUSON, '24. A ...Property 3 5 ELIZABETH LINSZ, '26 ...... ....... M aka-up Q S MARY LIGHT SCHAEFFER. , . . , .Scene Painting S S - S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S N N U lj Ll U W2AM i WVXOZW6 E lj 81 A , LMI C1 ZW7Z7 iZMf4Zf4ffWZ4?7Mf E U ., 1 A N EI U X XX S S S S S S S S X X X X N S X K X X S S S S N X N S S s N S N N S S Q S S K X X N N N - X S S X S Q X Q MONSIEUR BEAUCAIRE S S S E dramatized from the novel of E x x S Booth Tarkington S X X S by Ethel Hale Freeman S Q S S Presented December Sth and 9th S S S X N X N S Cast E X x S M. Beaucaire ,..... . . .Gertrude Annan, '25 S X . . . X Q Duke of Wmterset. , . , .Elizabeth Simpson, '25 S S Mr. Molyneux .... ...... H elen Bingham, '25 S S Harry Rackell. , . , . .Gretchen Eisenwinter, '25 S S Capt. Badger. . . ..... Mildred Bailey, '23 S 5 Beau Nash .,... . , . , .orina Kidd, '21, 3 Q Lord Townbrake. . . . . . Hope Jillson, 'ei S S . N Q Mr. Bantlson .,..,.. ...... S allie Wells, '23 S Q sir Hugh Guilford. 4 , , . .Lydia Fletcher, '25 5 S Henri de Beaujolais . . . ,Alice Oddie, '25 S S3 . . . . N Q Marquis de MIFEDOIS. . . . .Phyllis Appel, '23 S S Francois ..........,.. . . .Adelaide Faris, '25 S S Victor .,.........,,..... . . .Dorothy Palmer, '25 E 'N X xg Servant to Beau Nash l r l I Madame Candee, .24 S S Wlnton S S Lady Mary Carlysle. . . .... Dorothy Reeve, '25 S Lady Malbourne, . . ...,. Eleanor Beers, '23 E S Lady Clarise ..,.... ...... E milia Robison, '23 S Lady Rellerton .,,..,. . . .Margaret Banigan, '25 S Lady Baring-Gould. . , , ..... Helen Fenner, '21, S IQ Estelle ,........... . . . ,Amy Spencer, '25 S Marie . , ......, Celia Ernstojf, '25 S Elizabeth Appollonio, '24 S is . Amey Hull, '25 S S Servants to Beaucalre. . . - Doris Watts, ,25 E Hope Dorman, '25 S Director, . . .... Sarah Minchin Barker S Il U 82 BRUN MAEL Wl4 f ff:7! W Cl ll lj Il S S S . S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S - U DQR Il E13 IIIIIIIII B2 S S All ll 52 ' l 'tt S S S S S S S S - . S S SUSAN BURTON APPEL ..... . . , ......,. Chazrman S S MARION GLAZE HASSINGER. . . . . . .Senior Member S S VERNA RUTH McELROY ..... ...... J uniorMembe1' S S KATHARINE SANSON. . . . . .So homore Member S S 7' S S V S S A - S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S umm S S S S S . , S BEATRICE MAY RICHARDS ...... .... . Chazrman S S EVELYN BOWKER LOCHMAN. . . ....... Assistant S S GLENNA WILMAN DAY ...... . . ...... Junior Member S S MARJORIE CLARISSA ROACH. . .... Sophomore Member S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S BRIJN MAEL ! Eirnmnien JOAN MONICA SHEA, '23 .... ELSIE 'MARIE CARLEN, '23, . . JANE COLLINS LUCE, '24 ,... MARY ELINOR JONES, '25. . . BERNICE GRACE SMITH ....... DOROTHY HENDERSON GRAY. . . !!Zf!i II 84 , ,... President . Vice-President . . . . . Treasurer . . . . . . .Secretary Senior Member Junior Member S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S X X S S S S S S S S S S X S S X X S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S X S X S S S S X S X S S S S X S S X S S S S S S X S X S S S S S S S S S S X S S S X S S X S S S X S X S S S S X S S S S S BRUN MAEL 85 UN MAEL nj EI ZZWWfWX A D E lj lj S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S I S X ' - ' S x ' f - 'wx 'vu X S nv f r S ilirtnn mast S S S Board of Editors S S S S Editor-in-Chief S S SARAH ELEANOR WELLS, '23 S S S S Compiling Editor S S RUTH HANCHETT, '23 S S S S Art Editor S S ELEANOR WOODWARD PARMELEE, '23 V S S S S Assistant Art Editor S S RUTH PHYLLIS AFPEL, '23 S S ' S S Associate Editors S S FRANCES MAY WRIGHT, '23 RUTH UPTON BURT, '23 S S MARJORIE DENT CANDEE, '24 MARJORIE LILLIA RICH, '24 S S ELIZABETH LEE YOUNG, '24 ELIZABETH SIMPSON, '25 S S BARBARA PHILLIPPA MCCARTHY, '25 S S S S Business Manager S S NELLIE CLAYTON STOKES, '23 S S S S Assistants S S ELIZABETH THATCHER STAFFORD, '23 S , X S NANCY CHRISTINE JUDKINS, 25 S S S S S S S S S S S Cl ' III UN MAEL E I: MWZ2Mf!4WWdW f WV M E D X III lj A S S ---- A R R S S S S S S R S S S S S x S S 5 S S S S S I S X Saemah S S X S E Board of Editors 3 R R R x S Editor-in-Chief S X S GRACE MILDRED ANDREWS, '23 S A S E Associate Editors E S MARY BROWN, '23 MILDRED MURRAY, '24 S S RUTH HANCHETT, '23 ELIZABETH LEE YOUNG, '24 5 S MILDRED ANDERSON, '24 DOROTHY PALMER, '25 S DORIS WATTS, '25 Q A S S Exchange Editor S S NELLY APPEL '25 E S ' A N X xg Alumnae Editors S 2 DOROTHY O. ALLAN, '18 .....,.....,..... .......... A zumnae Editor S S ELSIE S. BRONSON, '04 ..., . . .Assislant Alumnae Editor S S MARJORIE STONE, -10. .. ,... ...Assistant Alumnae Editor Q R R E Business Managers S X S RUTH LOTHROP, '23 3 S Assist t S Q an s S E JANE LUCE, '24 MARJORIE RICH, '24 S S AVIS PRICE, '24 CHARLOTTE PERRY, '25 S R N S Alumnae Business Manager E S PAULINE A. BARROWS, '21 S 87 UN MAEL D D lj E E S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S Jliernrh S S S S E Board of Editors S S S S Editor-in-chief S X 3 DOROTHY FRINK PATTON, '23 S S S 3 ' Associate Editors S S S S BERNICE GRACE SMITH, '23 RUTH MARIETTA WHITE, '23 S S MARJORIE DENT CANDEE, '24 MAY BAGGOTT KELLY, '24 S S ORINA WINIFRED KIDD, '24 MARGARET EISENWINTER, '25 S S MARY CATHERINE HINCHEY,'24 ELIZABETH SIMPSON, '25 S S ELIZABETH LINSZ, '26 PAULINE O'CONNOR, '26 E S S S Business Managers S S S S FLORENCE AMY FERGUSON, '25 .......... . . .Business Manager S S CAROLYN FLANDERS, '26 .............. ......,... A ssistant S S S S ' ' Circulation Editors S X X S DORIS ANTHONY, '24 ...................... .... C muzamm Editor S S WINNIFRED PINE, '26 .,.. ........ A ssiseam S S S S S S S S S S S BRUN MAEL LET , , lj lj ZffWW!MflW!lWWW!WWZMWZM Q U U E S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S X X Athletu: Zhmnnzatxnn S S S Officers S S S S RUTH BATEMAN, '23, . .,..... President S S RUTH BROWN, '24 .,., Hviee-Preeiderer S S RUTH VINTON, '24 ,..... ,,.,, S ecretary S S DOROTHY MARTIN, '25, . . . .Treasurer S X X S S S Varsity Captains S X X S FRANCES WRIGHT, '23 .,.. ...eesleerbezz S S DOROTHY SIMPSON, '23. . . ...Baseball S S ANNA COGGESHALL, '23, .. ...Bowling S S CATHERINE HEBERT, '24, .. ...Fesrbezz S MARJORIE CANDEE, '24, .. ...Terms S S S S S S Class Board Members S X MARGARET CUMMINGS .....,...,..,.......,. .,.... S enior Member S ELIZABETH SIMPSON. . . ..,. Sophomore Member S MARTHA DIOKIE ..... ...Freshmen Member S S S S S S Advisory Members S X S MISS MORRISS MISS BROWN S S S S S S S S S X X S S 90 U Cl S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 1 S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 1 S S S S S S S S S S S S S S VARSITY BASEBALL 419223 S S Team S X X S LUCILE ROGERS, '22 AMEY STEERE, '25 S S MARGARET CUMMINGS, '23 GLADYS MOWRY, '23, qcapwy S S DOROTHY SIMPSON, '23 RUTH BROWN, '24 S S DOROTHY MARTIN, '25 MARJORIE ROACH, '25 S S ELIZABETH SIMPSON, '25 ELINOR SMITH, '25 S S S S S S subs S N S S CATHERINE HEBERT, '24 RUTH VINTON, '24 S S ELIZABETH WHOLEY, '25 S S S S S S Inter-class Tournament S S S S First place - 1925 S S Second place - 1924 S S Third place - 1922 S S Tie - 1923 S S Varsity 32, Lincoln 18 S X 91 BRIJN MAEL E E E U 'El ' E X Y S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S VARSITY BASKETBALL S S S S Team S S S S ELEANORE PARMELEE, '23 RUTH PRESTON, '23 S S FRANCES WRIGHT, '23, QCap't.J RUTH BROWN, '24 S S LUCILE PETTIBONE, '24 GRACE WAMSLEY, '24 S S DOROTHY ARNOLD, '25 DOROTHY MARTIN, '25 S S ELIZABETH SIMPSON, '25 ZORELDAH BOYD, '26 S S LOIS KLEIN '26 S S f S S S S S S Varsity Games S S S S March 10, 1923 Varsity 28, Jackson 42 S S March 17, 1923 Varsity 50, Jackson 27 S :S S Inter-class Tournament S S S S First place 1925 Third place 1926 S S Second place 1923 Fourth place 1924 S S S S S S Freshmen Games S S S S January 20, 1923 1926 29, Lincoln 7 S S March 10, 1923 1926 first team 21, Lincoln first team 21 S S March 10, 1923 1926 second team 18, Lincoln second team 18 S S S E E Uwjgaf OVQZ wo 2: 05553, avian mZr'O ,410 O wig '15 cigars E HQJZQ F 'Mais Q EMM, ca. S5705 - Glffr' 2' use ar F3 w --- a- and PI, N' 3, Q' -5.20517 Q, UNZCQIS 4 lx! n-1 QQ C N Q v-101 br Zp gnnprp rv- ,A , .. Z- nfbo- 'J' N W 3,0 919- 0 I U' 3 ua ' I-1 :r '- '-' su W ..g 0 11- U 11. QQ Z..: 5' E rf Q '4 4., QQ, n-r-4v-u- T 4 W w Q O cocomoco Q Z B pg wwzow -- O mi rs-Deny: sv Q 5 mb' afafsfzr- 3 , O P6 4444 U :UH1 E '-I V' ...., 3'-5532 O - OgbC1l Z PO :awww -5 ,qO .., aqrnmcn C-' N FU gg C7 I6 H comma: E 934mm N144 w 3 3996354 ' mr 52 N momma v-Qomg Z .':2 23,2 fo- Pj mg r'?4Oo fn-Ze: I0 E?-S . ,po 16 Z G, . Q . S S S S S S S X S X S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S S :QS cog S S S X S S S S S S S S S X S X S S S S BRUN MAEL S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S . S S S S 1 S S l S S l S S l . S S 1 S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S VARSITY FISTBALL S S S S S S Team S S A S S MARY HOGAN, '23 DOROTHY SIMPSON, '23 S S RUTH BROWN, '24 CATHERINE HEBERT, '24 S S RUTH JOHNSON, '24 ROSE s1sOA, '24 S S RUTH VINTON, '24 DOROTHY MARTIN, '25 S S ELIZABETH SIMPSON, '25 ELINOR SMITH, '25 S S ROSE FOGARTY, '26 S S S S S S S S S Inter-class Tournament S S S S I S S Flrst place. . . . . .1924 S Second place. . . . . .1923 S S Tie Second place. . . . . .1925 S S Fourth place. . . . . .1926 S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S , MAEL S 'S S S S S S S S' S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S I S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S I S S 1 S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 1 S S S X S S S S S S S S S -S S S S S S VARSITY TENNIS S S S S S E' Team E S S S S S S S MARGARET CUMMINGS, '23 DOROTHY PATTON, '23 S S DOROTHY SIMPSON, '23 MARJORIE CANDEE, '24, fCap't.J S S RUTH JOHNSON, '24 RUTH VINTON, '24 S S ELLEN APPELg '25 DOROTHY MARTIN, '25 S S MARTHA DICKIE, '26 S S S S S S , S S Fxrst Inter-class Tournament S S S S 1923 vs 1924 - winner 1924 S S 1925 vs 1926 - winner 1925 S S S X S S S . . . S S Wlnner Freshman Champlonshlp S S S S MARTHA DICKIE S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S .4 9 O UN MAEL E lj I lj D Cl U S S S X X S S S S S S X X S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S A S S S X S S S S, S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S X S S S S S S - SSS S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S X X X X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X X S CLASS BASKETBALL TEAMS S EI CI W W WW l U EI 96 BRUN MAEL 'Y' 97 BRUN MAEL DEW Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q X Q X Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q UU CD CXJ E Z MW M W 4Zf cf2QWZZMWZZ: U E Q Q X X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X X Q Q X X Q Q Q Q X X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q I Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q - Q Q Q Q fL9ueRt1un Olluh Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q . Q Q FRANCESIMAY WRIGHT. . . . . .Chazrman Q Q MARY CALDER APPEL. . . .Asemfafy Q Q Q Q Q Q GRACE MILDRED ANDREWS Q Q SUSAN BURTON APPEL Q X Q RUTH BATEMAN Q Q ELEANOR BEERS Q Q Q Q HELEN ANDERSON HOFF Q Q DOROTHY FRINK PATTON Q Q RUTH HOWARD PRESTON Q Q BEATRICE MAY RICHARDS Q Q JOAN MONICA SHEA Q Q DOROTHY SIMPSON Q X Q SARAH ELEANOR WELLS Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X' X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q QQ BRUN MAEL' U lj 7X7fVWXZXWXXXWWWZYWWlWWWMZWW!W!WW7! EI E ' SZ S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S N S S S S S X S S S S S X S S S S S S S W S S ' S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S N S S . S 1 ner ag u S S7 l IB I h S S S S S S . S S FLORENCE JOSEPHINE MAGUIRE . . . ....,... . .Preszdent S S S S EDYTHE FLORENCE REEVES. . . . . . . .Secreta -Treasurer S S S S S S ' S S S S S S S S S S S S Ui S EEVV S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S l I ll S C5 ee u S X S S S S S S S S S DOROTHY SIMPSON '2a. . A ........... Leader S S ' S S MILDRED BAILEY, '23, . . . . .Secretary-Treasurer S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S DEW S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S X S S S S X S CDS WS S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S UN MAEL W if S S S S S S S S S S S S S S H S S S S S S S X. S S, S S S S S-, X S S S S S III U S S S S S 5 I S S S S ui -Ar: S A-wx S S S S S QD E3 K X D X S ROWN S x - ' S S .1 S S S S A S S , S S fs S S 1 S S X S S S I S S I S X S 55, PHI BETA KAPPA S S ' S S Elected in 1922 S S S HOPE ELIZABETH BURGESS, '22 U J S S MARION ELIZABETH CRAIG, '22 , S 2ff151'ZIiffgf1BZI1EESff513I0212E' '22 S , ' S S MARY SULLY BROWN, '23 S S RUTH ALMIRA LOTHROP, '23 S S RUTH HOWARD PRESTON, '23 S S GRACE BAUER SHEIN, '23 S S ELIZABETH THATCHER STAFFORD, '23 S S S S E1 I d ' 1923 S S CC C ln S S MILDRED RUSSELL BAILEY, '23 S S ELEANOR BEERS, '23 S S SARAH JACOBSON, '23 S RUTH WILMARTH MARVEL, '23 S DOROTHY FRINK PATTON, '23 S S MARY ELMIRA SHROEDER, '23 S S CAROLYN REBECCA SMITH, '23 S S RUTH MARIETTA WHITE, 23, S S - FRANCES MAY WRIGHT, '28 S S S S ELOISE FRYE BURT, '24 S S MILDRED MACLAREN MURRAY, '24 S S X S S U U W W W W W W W W 1 W I W M Q W W W M M X , X Z M, gm X 3 ,md X W Z Mu 2 B aww ,M W M If I 9 2 9 Y T W Y K A I I X 1 1 R f f Y OH W M , RE C W W A n N n TG W W i I i EHSIR W W M d NE d VC RO W W G 0 , T 6 ATNWN W W X qv Aw tm Nmmvlm W W Z I EL I WTYAL W M f E GK E O A E W W if C HLM W W R R an W UN BTCSD W W BH WEEE W W NAICR W W EE EZLND W W PS LILAL W W OO ELERI W W HR HENFM M W W W W W W W W W W W W W W I W W W BRUN MAEL 103 BRUN MAEL Cl Cl S W' ' S S . .. . ,S ...1 S S if ' - 11 frm. '-Fizf' W-' S S 7 A S x 6 e ' S ,,. L. 0 ,, 'asain x i sl' .. . x S I 'N 1:43 'i' ' A il S S iw- ,, ,. a-. . NA S S 1 !v,',4J,-Y! 'S J S S 1 .US - -'N f S S TKQIL- .HIS J L-1 J S S ' '- . --- S S 'A - S S D S S 1 S I B 1 S S S S I S S S S S S 4 S S ' S S S S S X X S S S S S S S S S S X S .W S S SUGGESTIONS. S S . . . S S A prlvate phone for B1ll1e. S S An addition to Metcalf Hall rece tion room e ui ed with screens. S S - l S S A glass case for Fran Wright s honors. S S A few more cuts from professors. S S - - S S A blind chapel monitor. S S - S S S X X S S S HEART THROBS S S S S S S , S S Vacations are surely a pest S S When following after a test S S For anticipating S - X S A very low rating S S Will give one a week of unrest S S ' ' S S Have you heard of that Do-do Maquire S S Who loves water and slimy green mire? S X X S When out on a tramp S S That mischievous scam S S Her attire for no hire keeps entire. S X X S S S S S S S S S S S S lil E f?Mfff '7A' VWWMWMWZV !MMA?WWAmWWWA4 W MWKW!fWfWMMZ07ffM7W lil UN MAEL E D X f S 5 S 5 S 5 X X Ss DEFINITIONS 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S . . . 5 Prof.- a skllled worker ln lVOI'y. 5 S 5 S 5 S . . 5 S MOHltOY - one who can cut cha el wlthout C. D. 5 S P 5 S C. D.- a degree conferred upon the pursuers of Rest. 5 I . I S Studl Gov.- the cam us co s club. 5 S 5 S . . . . . f S Reports -- a page of mnsglvmgs whose recelpt IS generally followed 5 S by an echo from home. Z X f S 5 S . . . . . . 5 S Flunk - a dlfference m omt of vlew wlth the rof. on some mlnor 5 S - 5 S detall. Z S f S Phl Bate - recl lent of honors b fate or otherwise. 5 S 5 X . . I S Dorm - femlnlne, plural. 5 S . 5 S Hash - a game of chance played most frequently m the dorm. 5 S . . 5 S Comp. Anat.- a course ln meat cuttmg. 5 S 5 S , , 5 S Frat - Incorrect. Say fraternlty. 5 S . . . . 5 S Kmckers - public assertlon of equal rlghts. 5 S I 5 S 5 S Crush - result of a hard fall. For further Information lntervlew 5 S the class of '26. 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 S 5 105 ' BRUN MAEL Q CI El Y Q Q Q Q Q I Q Q in ' S X 7 X Q l Q Q X Q Q fy Q X X Q x Q FO Frwfm-D . , - 4 A Q ,Q 'Q MAPK H -1-5 a WF 2, W-3 ' NW Q Q Q Q i i ff l Q Q GY M if C C C C , Q Q C C' - C, Q Q LA55. ' I Q' Q Q Q Q .Q , N Q There was a young miss we call Patsy . . X Q Who wore puffs rather big and qulte ratsy. MW! When she sported in gym In attempts to get thin. Q They fell out and so aided her rapsy. Q Q Q Q coNsoLAT1oN S Names Q Q Are the source Q Of great sorrow Q But think Q Q If your parents ' . u Q S Had been biologically inclined Q Q And you now Q Q Rejoiced Q Q Under the appellation of Q Ependyma, Q Epithelium, Q - Q Q Dlencephalon, Q Basesphenold, . Q Omphalomesenterlc, 3 Cheilognathoprosoposchisis! EW Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q EQ GQ Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q X Q X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q 5 N N X Q Std N X Qz X Q S3 K 5:9 Sm N Qi- Q X Q Q N X Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q Q fm ,111 Q OUR PROFESSORS Q is Some professors give out lessons Q S Over holidays. S S Others make us feel embarrassed S 2 In a thousand ways Q S Some may even wax sarcastic, S S - Others may prove quite gymnastic, E S Others still may be bombastic, Q E With peculiar ways, 2 S But to make up for the queer ones S E Others are quite fine. E 5 Even ueer ones have their 'oll da s. Q Q q J Y y Q S Those at whom you laugh the loudest E S May be those who'll make you proudest S 3 After college days. E Q Q Q Q S SUGGESTIONS TO FRESHMEN S X X S Try these out at your next All-College. 3 E TOPICS OF CONVERSATION , 3 Q Q E GROUP I The Weather, this includes yesterday, today and E S tomorrow, with variations. A reliable stand-by for S E all occasions and shows an interest in Nature. E E You are immediately set apart by your wholesome, S S out-of-door attitude. E S GROUP II Him g this should be accompanied by judicious 3 S and pertinent questions as to what.his class is, his E S fraternity IS, his home town, his courses, his S E favorite color, perfume, and especially his taste ln S Q cigarettes Cmake a mental note for future refer- S E ence.J This shows a commendable and flattering E E interest in him personally and will be generously S S rewarded and long remembered. S N X 3 GROUP III The Gym, explain carefully the uses of the various E S pieces of apparatus. Don't be in the least dis- S S couraged if you don't know - he doesn't either S E and if he did he would appreciate your originality S S in invention. Don't forget to comment on the S S crowd the fioor and the music. This shows a S Q ' . .' . . Q E sang froid nothing less than impressive. E iQ X 11:26 11:27 11:28 11:35 11:40 11:45 11:48 11:50 11:58 12:02 12:05 12:10 12:15 BRUN MAEL DIARY OF A STUDENT TAKING A TEST Enters hurriedly, smiles engratiatingly at the prof. and explains at length that her watch was slow. Receives paper. Reads questions. Hope gradually descends to despair. Starts first question. Makes a sketch of the professor's bald spot. Shades it carefully and wonders if his wife selected his tie. Decides to leave the first question until later and starts the second. Reviews last night's dance and conversation. Considers the possibilities of a date that evening. Takes a mental inventory of lunch. Second question abandoned in favor of the third. Hesitates in consideration of the relative merits of blue or brown for an afternoon dress. Hastily scribbles not enough time over every available space as the papers are called in. Count your calories while you may, Hoping you'l1 be thin some day. 108 S S S X S S S S S X S S S X S S S S S S S S X S X S A Cl lil cn S S S S S S S S S X S S S S S X S S X S S S S X S X S UN MAEL EI EI S S S , , S S Where are you going my pretty maid? S X - . . . S To Public Speaking, slr, she said. S S May I go with you, maid? said he X . . . X S Guests are forbidden, s1r, said she. S it l I I ' l! X S Then I can t hear you, my pretty maid? S Q 4 IY ' 77 ' X S ou always were lucky, slr, she said. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S X S S S 'J 49 S S of S S ' r S S Q, .. fl S S 5 nf' ,, S f ff' J S S I - I S S A M5 express S S ,qw S S CS!-3 - .. S - - A S.. , - Si 4 S S S .FA Q , S S ' S S S S X S PRES. THE SECRETARY WILL NOMJ READ S S S S S X THE REPORTS or THE LAST S S S - S THIRIEEN EXECUTIVE BOARD S . S S 1 S S Vt E ET I NGS. S S S S S S S S S 109 Cl El S S S The room faded. S S The voice became dull S S Duller and duller S S Until S S S S I was alone S S S S Above the class S S A voice became clear S S Clear and clearer S S Until S S I was enthralled S S There he stood S S His smile was sweet S S Sweeter and sweeter S S - S S Until S S ' S S It was a grin. S S . S S His arms stretched near S S Nearer and nearer S S - S S Until - S N . . . S S Ye Gods, why does Dealey persist in making the class laugh S S ' d' ll S S peno xca y. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S - S S S S IF WE FULFILLED EXPECTATION S S S S S S S S S He and one of us. S S He: Awful hill. . n . S S O. o. u.g Assuredly a most precipitous slope which neces- S S sitates extraordinar exertion to circumvent. S S u n S S He 5 Rotten show. S S O. o. u.g I must admit that to a person of discrimination it was S X . . Q - - S scarcely a production to merit uncondltlonal pra1se. S S - S S Silence S S . . . S S O. o. u.g Don't you consider the evening delightfully clear S S and charmin l be'eweled with the delicate radiance of its m 'ads S Q !7 S S of stars. S S S S He 5 -er - yes. S X . . S O. o. u.g Really lt is so remarkable to find one who shows S such perspicacity in so understanding one's complexes. S S He in des eration Let's e t S P ' a - S O. o. u.g And then we can really talk. S S . S S Complete collapse S 110 UN MAEL Cl III S S S S S S S S S S S THEN AND NOW S S S S S S S S S S THEN:-- S S , S S There weren't any l1 hts on the cam us, S S - , - S S The evening s fa1r charms to destroy: S S The lunch room was not a temptation, S X o n S And eight o'clocks d1d not annoy. S S There weren't an informal dances S S S S And flappers would not be called coy. S X . . S While skirts couldn't et an shorter S S . . . S S And Eskimo pies were a Joy. S S S S S S S X X S NOW 1- S S . S S The 're numerous l1 hts on the cam us, S S g S S They're larger and larger each day. S S , - S S The lunch room s a snare and a pitfall S S For thither allowances stray. S X - S Each class runs a dance to raise money S S And flappers are really passee S . - . X S While skirts simply can't become longer. S S There's cause for the groans of dismay. S S S S S S S S S S S S S X X S , , S S His breath came ln labored gasps. He leaned forward and S S his grasp on her arm tightened. She, too, swayed with e es half S S - S S closed. He could see the throbbln ulse of her throat and hear S S . . . . . S S above the painful silence her quick hurried breathing. The S S seconds lengthened. It seemed as if he could stand no more S S . S S until at last - Thank heavens, that's over he gasped as they S S - ' S S reached the top of the hlll. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 111 BRUN MAEL E CHLETININ FR . ':--:-':lL-- V x , l 4 ., .. ni IlllllllllllllmnIH -1.u'-lIflr 1 mulIlllllllllllllllll'mm llll lil I lil W , ,., lllll1111ln 1 Sept Sept Sept Sept Oct. Sept. Sept. Oct. 4. 25. At Senior Song Rehearsal after a blurred rendering of Oh don't you wish you all were Seniors, too? Ruth Preston: How do you like the Senior Stew? 26. Two freshmen dancing in Metcalf: 71l lst F. Are you leading. 2nd F. I don't think so. 27. Senior Sing in Chapel. Yellow Handkerchiefs. 28. Aileen Ostiguy, after numerous inquiries as to Prof. Adams's appearance approaches a stern looking individual in Ec. building. She: I want to talk to you about Ee. 17. He: Certainly, but whom do you wish to see? She: Professor Adams. He: I want to see him about the same course. 29. Six illustrious members of the class of '25 tell two Frosh about the wonderful swimming pool opposite Hope St. High School. Frosh embark to find it, bathing suits under arms. C. A. Reception in the gym. Freshmen presented with bibs. 30. Mr. Botsford to Misses Shea, Carlen, and Wells, looking for a class in U. H.: I don't think any of you are safe over here. 1. Kiddie plays the hymns at Metcalf chapel without jazzing them. Oct. 2. Ruth Vinton: I'm developing a Venus-like form. May Kelley: I guess you're developing the negative. Oct. 3. Billie Wamsley gives an original speech in Public Speaking class entitled I Have Nothing To Say. Prof. Fowler: In 4921 the Egyptians formed a calendar they deducted their information from the planet M urphyf' Senior Picnic. 112 D UCI UCI Y S s S S S S S S S S S S S s S s S S s Q s x S S 5 S s S s S S S S X S S S S S S S s S S S S S S X S S s s R BRUN MAEL El El X Y S Oct 5. Freshman rushing into Grace Hopkins room at eleven P. M. S S Are you awake? is S Grace: I am now! 4 S N X S Oct 6. Freshman, after reading notice that Prof. Allinson would see S S . . S S freshmen at his home: Oh, IS he the man who sees about vac- S S cination? S S S S Oct 7. Pembroker at Brown-Colby football game: Oh dear, it's beginning S E to rain, and I forgot to ask for a rain check! QS S S S Oct 9 Mr. Denkinger Cnew French instructorl, Ships aren't feminine S S in French neither are cats S S Oct 10 Mildred Murray in Public Speaking class: Could you please tell S S me what the Recessional is, and where can I find it? S S S Oct 11 Mr. Guthrie, Poly Sci instructor, calling roll: S Miss Shee. S S Joan: Pardon, Miss Shea. S S Mr. Guthrie: Why don't you spell it Shay? S S Lem Robison Cunder her breathl, Why don't you change it S S yourself? S S S S Oct 12 Fergie: I'll have to borrow a bathing suit so I can go swimming at S S the Y. wx, S E Appie: Whose suit will you borrow? S S Fergie: Jane Luce's, I think. S S Appie: Oh, you'd swim in it. S x S S Oct 13 Juniors give Freshmen a Hollywood party - keen movie atmos- S S phere. Palpitating posters. S X i H ' ny S S Oct 14 26: Does your fountain pen always leak? S S '25: Oh dear no! Only when there's ink in it. S S S S Oct 16 Metcalfites blossom forth with a charming new coiffure - hair S S parted in the middle, and a demure coil around each ear. S x 2 Oct 17 Bob, '25: Cas they cross the campusj: I really don't suppose we S S ought to walk on the grass. S S Fitzie, '25: Why? It isn't wet! S S S S Oct 18 Public Speaking Class: after Kiddie's talk on Freshmen, Jillie S S begins telling of a freshman's idea of Brown men. They think S E that to be popular they have to - oh you know-, confidentially S S to Tommy Crosby. S S S S Oct 19 Brown Freshman C masculinej, explaining psych. tests: We had to S S define words like data, you know, plural of date. S S E Oct 20 A. A. Informal Dance. Freshmen throng to it. 2 S S S Oct 21 Sophs entertain '26 at tea. S S S S Oct 23 Prof. Collier: Charles X was not popular, the people didn't cry S S for him. He was not a national castoriaf' S S S . . N S Oct 24 He, '23, pointing to a temporary tool house on the back campus, S S I see they've moved Sayles Gymnasium over. S E She, '26: Really? I thought it was a new fraternity house. E S S 113 BRUN MAEL A S Oct. 25. Prof. Benedict reading to a sleepy class: This next sentence always E seems to me especially applicable to lecture courses: 'To sit as S a passive bucket and be pumped into whether you will or not, S S can in the end be exhilirating to none.' S X E Oct. 26. Metcalf serenades Miller Hall, Jo Shea leading the singing. S S S S Oct. 27. Honor Day. Phi Betes and prize students on exhibition. S E Miss Ruth Hall reads poems in Miller Hall. S S E Oct. 28. Faith, '25. Why do you always go down Waterman Street instead S of Angell? S Lib '25: Oh I don't know - it's nearer. S Q 1 9 Qt S Faith: Nearer the men? S S S Oct. 30. Batey, entering class late, I'm here. 3 S Tommy Crosby 'AI haven't marked you absent S X y - x E Batey, That's all right. E Tommy, Thank you. S 1 S Oct. 31. Bob McCarthy iexcitedlyjz But if you don't take Greek I'll S be the only one in the course! S Grace Allsop: Well, that's all right. You'll be sure of being the S S . S S smartest ln the class, won't you? S S S S x S Nov. 1 Juniors give a Bridge in Miller Hall for the benefit of their Prom- S S to-be S X . fx S Brownie Cabaret Party - real orchestra, and 5 clever vaudeville S S ts S , X E ac E S Nov. 2 Prof. Crosby dines at Metcalf's public speaking table and sympa- S thetically listens to Lois explain how she used to double for S S . . S S Kiddie in Art class. S S S S . . S S Nov. 3 Sallie, '23: Where're you going? S S Joan '23: I've been. S S ' S S S S Nov. 5 Mary Hogan explains that she hadn't time to commute her score. S S Yes she's from Pawtucket. S S ' S S Nov 6 '24: Who is that cunning little Freshman? S S '23: That's Miss Agar, the gym instructor. S ' S S Nov. 8 Gene Ware in Music Class, Crapturouslyjz Have you ever gone E S for a walk in the woods in the springtime, and you find a babbling Q S brook, and you rid yourself of your clothes, and you plunge into S S the sparkling water, and become a fish among the fishes! S S S X X is Nov. 9 First All-College Dance. Scarecrows Cnot wallflowersj used as SN decorations. S S Nov. 10 Candee, overhearing the word torso thinks they're trying to E talk backward, and inquires if they mean sore toe. S S S X X is Nov. 11 Armistice Day. Classes NOT dismissed. E S S S Nov. 13 Seniors originate a new kind of Freshman party by taking the S SN infants to the Providence Opera House. S A S lil lj Jf2i WW Cl l:l 114 S X S S a Q a S Q s X S S S a S S S S sw s gk! X X S s sis S gba SP1 sr' S S S s S Q S S S s S S S S X s S S X S S lj MU W S N S Nov. 14. Appie: He isn't particular about his speech, like his family. S S . . . a S B1ll1e: You mean his grammar? S S Appie: No, his mother and father. S S S x S Nov. 15. Senior, serving at Miller Hall breakfast: What will you have to S S drink? S S Freshman, absent-mindedly, Shredded Wheat. S N N S Nov. 16. Freshman, noticing Dot Oborne's frat pin: Oh say, would you S S mind telling me how you go about getting one of those? Where S S do you send in your application? S N N S Nov 20 Bonfire Celebration for Harvard Victory. Prexy, while making S S his speech, gets a few sparks from a torch upon his head, and has S x - x 5 to wlthdraw. S X N E Nov 22 At Komian Rehearsal: And girls, take dainty little steps. S S Sallie, impersonating a man, Do you want me to walk like that? S N . . Q S Mrs. Barker: If you want him to be that kind of a man. X2 X x x x S Nov 23 Juniors and Sophomores combine and have a dance, for the benefit is S . Q S of Prom and Masque. Headlights on campus featured. S S s Q Nov. 25 At Sepiad meeting, CG. Mildredlz- What's the use of their having S S such a big advertisement for Rumford baking powder. I never S s ear o any o er in u um or . s S I d f th k' d b t R f d S S Mary Brown: Oh yes, there's Royal baking powder. I was riz S x on a . X S S E Nov. 27 Prof. Ekstrom to Patsy: Do I understand your statement cor- S QE rectly? Q S Patsy: Yes, I believe you interpret me aright. S X N S - - X Q Nov 30 Thanksgiving. No classes! Q S S S Dec. 1. Nellie Appel: 'Tm going to get engaged in the spring and fool 'em S S by making it permanent S S . ' S S Dec. 4. Dean Allinson, in chapel, gently but firmly criticizes the play The sg 5 Man Who Came Back, which she had seen at the Providence 3 x x S Opera House. S S Dec. 6. First Interclass Basketball Tournament. Sophs make the best S S showing. E N N S Dec. 7. After much discussion Cheated and otherwisel, the Sepiad Supple- 2 ment changes its name to The Record. Fa X Q Dec. 8-9. Komian Big Play, Monsieur Beaucaire. No one trips over the S swords. a 5 S Dec. 11. Naughtie, explaining her pet fudge recipe: You boil it till it forms Q a soft ball in hard water. s S x Q Dec. 13. Metcalf House Dance. Kewpies, decorations, silver spoons, etc., N . . S S missing the next day. X N S Dec. 16. Miller Hall Psnce. Sharpe House inmates invited. N X S Dec. 18. Senior Banquet. Ex be C1 E 115 . BRUN MAEL S S S S S S S X S X S S X S S S S S S X S S S S X S U all S . . . . S Dec. 19. Mr. Goodrich discovers to h1s amazement that four from his class S S of five have been voted celebrities in class of '23. S S S S . . S S Dec. 20. Candee becomes much erturbed when Goldie azes accusm ly at S S . . g S S her flapping goloshes, and says: D1dn't you hear what Ruth S S Preston said in chapel this morning? S S S S . . S S Dec. 22. Christmas Recess begins. S S S S . S S Jan. 3. 1923. Rah! for classes a am. S S S S . . S S Jan. 4. Overheard for the fifteenth time: I learned to play bridge Xmas S S vacation S S ' S S S S Jan. 5. Joan reporting the J unior-Freshman snow fight: The Freshmen say S S they won. The Juniors say it was a tie, so I guess the Freshmen S S won. S S S S . . . . . S S Jan. 7. G. Mildred, after reading her blolo outline sheet, patiently peers S S . . . S S through the microscope in search of namely on her slide! S S . . . . . S S Jan. 9. Evel n Lochman holds a dlscusslon in Pol Sci on what is Com- S S Y S S merce. S S She: It's the exchange of goods and ideas. S S Goodrich: What is a person? S S She: An idea. S S S S . . S S Jan. 10. The dorms come down with Br1dge. S S ' S S S S Jan. 11. A bad case develops. S S S S . . . . S S Jan. 12. Patsy: We're going on a sleigh ride tonight! S S Appie: Are you going in a sleigh? S S S S X S Jan. 13. In the course of a game: One Heart. S S One Spade. S S One Minute. S S . . . S S Jan. 15. Fergie Cexcitedly relating how she almost mlssed a tramj I stood S S on my tin ear from the North Station to the South. S S Helen Fenner: Couldn't you get a seat? S S S S . S S Jan. 20. Physics Prof: What forces soda up a straw? S S Freshman: Capillary action. S S S S . . S S Jan. 22. Brown Freshman anxiously scanning Exam schedule: S S Good Lord! I have three of my exams in Pembroke! S S S Q q . Q . S S Jan 24-Feb 2 Exams S S S Jan. 25, 26, 27. Sallie Wells, Dorothy Patton, Mary Schaeffer, on res ective S S . . . . S nights all wear the famous Wells hat with the horizontal 17 inch S S feather on it. CN. B. All go with the same man ! ! S S S S S S Feb. 7. We start the new semester with good resolutions and a new Dean. S S S S . . S S Feb. 8. On the board ln Room 1. Eve, the mother of mankind, knew S S . . , . ,, S S nothing of unctuation and her dau hters don t either. S S S ll lj Cl III 116 BRUN MAEL El III S Feb. 9. In that relic of exams Don't shake ink on the gym floor , someone E at the informal dance erased the ink. E Q X 2 Feb. 10. Mr. Goodrich gives Evelyn permanent permission to leave early SS S Saturdays to catch the 12:25 train to Boston. S X N S Feb. 12. Mr. Ware, seating his Music class says reproachfully, Miss S S Wheaton, you've stolen a chair. S s S E Feb. 13. Sign on Metcalf reception room door, Open for business. S X N 2 Feb. 14. Dot and Peg have a new slogan - Cheese it, here comes Pimento. S Q S S Feb. 15. Do Maguire at the telephone: E S She: Hello! E S He: Hello! That you Angell? S S she: Wham v' Q S He: Oh excuse me, I was thinking of the telephone exchange. S S is S Feb. 16. Prof. Crosby giving directions to the public speaking class - And is S please make your speeches in English. S S N S Feb. 17. Edith Snow, after deep thought: This is going to be a good wise E S crack if it ever comes. is X X X X S Feb. 19. An impassioned speech ending, and every year we're getting closer S E to the Hill. S S S S Feb. 20. Mr. Goodrich, despairingly, Women have the right to vote and S S become citizens on the same basis with the men. What next? E S s S Feb. 21. Sallie, I liked 'Seventeen' heaps the first time I saw it. S S Joan indulgently, It's all right for babies. S S S S Feb. 22. Don't Education courses give that? S E I don't know. I'm not educated. S s S x S Feb. 23. After a speech entitled Why we should take Economics courses, E S Prof. Crosby remarks, Someone ought to speak now on why you S S should take English. S S S E Feb. 24. '24: He's an awful fool. S S Ditto: Yes, he tried to kiss me the first time I met him. S S v24, UH r - f 1 u X Q . e s Just oo enough to. S S s E Feb. 26. She, '23 - enthusiastically: She has the most adorable voice - S S all 'cooey'. S S He, 26: Oh, a day by day one, eh. S S S S Feb. 27. She explaining what appears to be a cold sore - That's a burn. S if Helen Mauran: That's what you get for playing with fire. S s S S Feb. 28. Jo: Did you go to chapel? S S Vint: No, but I know what happened. S s Jo: Wham S S Vint: Nothing. S N N S Mar. 2. Mr. Ware inquires how old Beethoven was when he was born. S Q S S S El Cl 117 BRUN MAEL S S S Mar. 5. Billie: I walloped him so before we were engaged that now he S jumps every time I start to kiss him. S S S S S S Mar. 8. Embryol Lab :- S S Deedie: Does anyone need any help? S Johnnie: I need hel to the car. S Q ' KK ' l ' ' ll S Deedie: That ISD t ln my lme. S S S S . . . . . . S S Mar. 9. The Shlek of College Hill HIS a big hlt at the Freshman vaudevllle. S S S S . . . . . . S XS Mar. 10. Mildred explaining Anna Christie, She came from St. Louis. S S Pat, Oh, a convent. S S S . K . S S Mar. 12. Sign on Dora's door, No parking over half an hour. S S S S . . S S Mar. 14. Brownie Stunt Contest won by the Juniors. S S S . S S Mar. 16. The record heads the list of new engagements. S S Signs of Spring. S S ' S S . . . S S Mar. 12. Bate IVCS careful dlrectlons to lace the B. U.'s on the front le . S S S S Gym contest won by Sophomores. S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S 7? 4 X'E' TV S S 65 q '53 0 S S ,Q 'S f f S -... S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S S lil El BRUN lj lj f W PLWWM W 'fMd65?' U IZZZQZZWYMWQZZZYQJMZIZIMZ,152414222 QZZMAZYJWZ: JW, WMWWWM 7Z?Z,L,,J7WZW ,7 'Q ,' YZZZWMQCM, , PKMM i .W SE -925' ., - 11-G: N Graduation Cifts JEWELRY WATCHES LEATHER GOODS STATIONERY Quality-R eliability Tilclen-Thurber VACATIO ! You'll neecl new things to wear and NEW wearables are our specialty SWEATERS KNICKERS DRESSES SPORT COATS and everything else that's MAEL VWWZVMKZKMWMWW4W7f,KW!7G7 7W 5Z7f47fW'VM EI mwzjlarfasen Shoes y and Hosiery WESTMINSTER and DORRANCE STS.. PROVIDENCE, R. l. COLLEGE WOMEN N YOUR future professional or home life, you will find the Trust Company a willing, useful ' assistant in all hnancial transactions Ancl in estate matters-the larger affairs that have vital bearing upon your personal comfort and happiness --you will fincl the Trust Company a vigilant protecter and friend at every step. Our officers are always glad to ex- plain how you may make the most profitable personal use of the Trust Company. . Rhode Island y correct style p Hospital Trust Compan ISWESTMINSTER ST. ZI6 MAIN ST PROVIDENCE PAWTUCKET The Oldest Trusl Company Cherry 8E Webb Co. . .. New g.,,1...,1 lj WxYWWXWWMWXZW!fW7!W!!! WW lj X WZff4WfMZ WZW7 .'WfZ fZf i ',iW2fif7Z7WfJf7M!, f MZJLQL 'IZQZAZZWZWWM lil lil 119 BRUN MAEL Il I El N 9 - l x 2 People s Savlngs Bank T The C. K. GROUSE N N Q 1 N S INCORPORATED les: S 5 S . N 3 27 Market Square, Provrclence n Mmfmum, of N N E HIGH SCHOOL, COLLEGE and x N S Money deposlled on or before lbc E i-5111 lzffsznfl monlh drama inleresl N, rom e rs . x 5 EMBLEM PINS 5 X X 2 AND RINGS S 5 ii- X 5 3 S S 2 Manufacturers of the S 3 . S 3 Banking Hours. 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. E X X 2 Saturdays, 9 A. M. to I2 M. 2 X X Ex Wednesday Evening 5 to 8.30 o'cloclc S N X S North Attleboro - Mass. S S S S S N , N X i ?.- .-,l , A .. - .. - i X N S S N N N S MQKQWI' 2 S S S WALK OVER STORES S S S E all over the world, in New York, Lonclon R d S S and Paris, catch the first whisper of fashion P 8C S S Q --and you get the new styles here the min- S S ute Fifth Avenue does. C S N N 5 ompany S 5 , N S W'OEN'X HOSIERY Booksellers and Statroners S E 280 WESTMINSTER STREET E N E., N Y A A s X 3 S Complimenis of S X S , 98 WESTMINSTER STREET S 3 Malne Creamery Co. PROVIDENCE R I 5 S , . . X S 5 S One of the largest and most modern ice ix N S cream plants in New England S N N 2 Telephone, Union 4232 E S 395 Promenade Street xg N N E Providence - R. I. lj D lj E1 lj III 120 A BRUN MAEL lj lj . . . Q Q Whatever the functIon for whIch you would be Impeccably clad- S x I . 3 Qladc11ng's can best Interpret the mode of the moment to the needs of 2 X . X S the occasIon. S X X N ' Q GLADDING S S R Q S 5 S X S S 5 3 Established over 100 years E x x 3 Makes 3 x ' x S ll' C 3 Eastly ll IVHII Ompany E N ' X Q Dlgested Q S ' ' S S Foods F me Shoes and HOSICYY Q S S 5 for Men and Women S X X s UIVIF ORD s S S X N N N S The Wholesome Iso wEsTIvIINsTER STREET S S Bdklflg Pvwdff PROVIDENCE. R. I. S N N S ,,-,,I.- ,t,, , E I , We ws , -W , I I E sw- S X . J . X Q GIIJSOH S Flowers of Quallty S x S Chocolates Fresh Flowers combined by prompt courteous E S cl service has made this the leading Flower Shoppe Q S an of Rhode lsland. S N . X BOD BOM colonial Flower Shoppe, Inc. 3 Providence-Made--Fresh Daily LEADING FLORISTS Q E NINE STORES 3 I Westminster Street E N X X -M-f' 'f 'fff'---'fm --- -- '-H -A W f -H A f- - eee - 5 3 Compllmenl-' of Class Photographer 3 JOHN CURRAN S 'Dress Goods Silks, W oolena, Linens QP, W' S E ARCADE . PROVIDENCE, R. I. 1922 1923 S E All aroupl in this book taken by V Q S X x X S EUGENE ALLEN TULLY f xg Q 489 Westminster Street 5 X X 2 Pbowefaphef H. T. KOSHIBA S X A., N- , , .,. ,Wi V wir Y 4M NAA A X S HANTDKERCHIEFS S S X S C0mPIimCnl3 of Attractive and new sport handkerchiefs are here E E in pretlily embroidered corner pattenrs. Priced S Q moderately to induce you to purchase here, you Q E A' at will find them exceptionally good value. E X 5 ONES'S S 37 W eybosset Slreel 'I S S A - R R rcade Provrdeuce Q s at El lj 121 BRUN MAEL Design i pg llCT0llCl'lll1g' Half Tones.Color Plates HOWARD WESSON GJ. WORCESTER MASS The College Engnavers f New England Conveniently Locaged W1th Years of EXDQYIGHCQ in Producug College Annuels. Ready to GIVE You omplete Sel-v1ce Busines's Managers and Editors Appreciate ou1- Constructwe Help. 'Male fbi- our Liberal Contiacb V' . L NAM Fil EEF Fi E gpg EEE FF ASEE Flo pp IFF 'Um Finest Engraving' Shop in New hnglgmd IM lflonn Printers ldg 122
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