Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA)

 - Class of 1936

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1936 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 100 of the 1936 volume:

BRYN M AWR COLLEGE BRYN MAWR, PA. To Dr. Marion Parris Smith and Dr. William Roy Smith PROEM A Word, kind friends, ere you begin To give this book your minute scrutiny; We have a bit of explanation Which should precede your examination In order that you find not sin Between these covers, — or even mutiny: This Class of 1936 Has never applauded itself with pride On its serious way of conducting affairs: We have rarely if ever been dignified. Somehow or other at every event That called for our dancing or singing a song We began in traditional calmness until Inevitably, invariably something went wrong, And all of us ended by laughing instead. In this way our college course has been run; Not as expected or planned on but still Turning out right with us all having fun. Now, it ' s not to be thought of that suddenly we Could turn in our tracks and reform on the spot. It wouldn ' t be us if we became solemn And gravely appeared here, — decidedly not! Thus this book isn ' t all that at first sight it seems. It is not a memorial of budding careers, It doesn ' t contain many trustworthy facts Or preach a philosophy of four learned years. There aren ' t any tributes or hails and farewells. But rather, a frivolous spirit prevailed When the editors took to compiling this book And the serious Muses sat by and wailed; For we ' re no more in earnest than ever we ' ve been. If you ' ve opened these covers in reverence to see The testament solemn of a Bryn Mawr class And expect to find sense from A unto Z, Pause to consider the class to be seen. In any case, Readers, we beg you to halt While apologetically we warn you, please, To take all you find here with a large grain of salt! Pembroke Arch: The view through the arch gives one of the first impressions of the campus. Merion Hall: The first hall of residence to be opened. It was completed in 1885. The Library Cloister: This encloses three sides of a quadrangle of which the main building forms the fourth. Wyndham, sometimes used as a Hall of Residence for Freshmen: It was purchased by the Trustees in 1926, and stands in its own grounds directly opposite Pembroke West. EDITH GOULD ANDERSON EDIE MARCIA LEE ANDERSON MART MARY EMMET ASKINS PEONY RUTH ROBINSON ATKISS ESTHER BASSOE ALETHEA BURROUGHS AVERY LEA ELIZABETH MAUNSELL BATES BETSEY FREDERICA EVA BELLAMY FREDDIE ROSANNE DUNLAP BENNETT ROSIE MARJORIE LOUISE BERGSTEIN BERGY ELIZABETH MARY BINGHAM BING BETTY BOCK SARAH GILPIN BRIGHT SALLY MARION LOUISE BRIDGMAN MARNIE ANTOINETTE CHAPPEL BROWN TONY CAROLINE CADBURY BROWN CAKIE MADELYN BROWN JOE E DOREEN DAMARIS CANADAY DO MARIAN CLAIRE CHAPMAN CHAPPIE BARBARA LLOYD CARY BAR ALICE HAGEDORN COHEN MARY JEANNETTE COLEGROVE KATHRYN SWAIN DOCKER ■K ROSE GODDARD DAVIS ROSIE ELEANOR BROOKS FABYAN FABE EDITH HANSEN FA1RCHILD DEEDIE MARJORIE GOLDWASSER MARJ MILDRED VIVIAN GOLDM -M MILLY AGNES DURANT HALSEY AGGIE BEATRICE GREENWALD BEA MARGARET HALSTEAD PUDDLE EVELYN EGEE HANSELL ELIZABETH HARRINGTON BETSEY JOSEPHINE ROYSTON HEISKELL DEANIE BERTHA HUTZLER HOLLANDER BERT MARY ELIZABETH HEMSATH BET MARGARET CECILIA HONOUR HON JEAN HOLZWORTH JANET COURTNEY HORSBURGH AUNTIE SOPHIE LEE HUNT MARGARET SLOAN KIDDER KIDDER HELEN STEWART KELLOGG HEL PAULINE FRANCES HOWARD MANSHIP JANE SHERRERD MATTESON SHERRY MARYALLIS MORGAN MER BARBARA MERCHANT BOBBIE ESTHER HEALY MORLEY ESTIE HELEN OTT OTTO SARA BEVAN PARK SALLY FRANCES CALLOWAY PORCHER PORCH ANNE ELIZABETH REESE DICKY CE RUSSELL RAYNOR ICY VIRGINIA HARPER SALE GINNY LILLIE EDNA RICE ELLEN MORRIS SCATTERGOOD SCAT PAULINE GERTRUDE SCHWABLE POLLY EURETTA ANDREWS SIMONS TEDDY ELIZABETH CLAIRE SHOVL1N BUNNY ELIZABETH SMEDLEY LUCILLE SPAFFORD BABS ELLEN BALCH STONE ALICIA BELGRANO STEWART MARIE FITZGERALD SWIFT SWIFTY JOSEPHINE BROWN TAGGART JOSIE ELIZABETH MAHN TERRY TERRY SARA HENRY TILLINGHAST TILLY MARGARET DeWITT VEEDER PEGGY SARAH HELEN TODD SALLIE ANNE FRANCES WHITING ' ANNIE DOROTHY DREXEL WALSH DOT ELIZABETH HOPE WICKERSHAM JEANNE WINTERNITZ SNITZ VIRGINIA WOODWARD GINGIE ANNE WOODWARD WOODY ANN BLOSE WRIGHT ELIZABETH PORTER WYCKOFF BETSY MARGARET CAROLYN WYLIE MARGIE FOUND AND LOST Dorothy Lincoln Arnzen Barbara Stokes Baxter Honora Bruere Ethel White Clement Ruth Henry Clewell Emily Kearny Cowenhoven Anna Crawford Crenshaw Margaret Jane Culbertson Jane Austin Fields Lee Adams Garthwaite Mary Stewart Gilbertson Barbara Gray Susan Fitzgerald Halcomb Margaret Josephine Helmers Grace Hirschberg Rosalie Chase Hoyt Jean Inglis Elizabeth Kassebaum Mildred Montague Kimball Nancy Buckingham Knapp Isabella Macomb Lefferts Elizabeth Hammond Mansell Cuyler Nicoll Ruth Hilda Osborn Emily Wainwright Perkins Elizabeth Eldridge Pillsbury Emma Louise Plaut Elizabeth Duncan Putnam Charlotte Irby Robinson Henrietta Scott Bertha Mary Skeats Jean Stern Ruth Konover Stokes Anne Sands Van Vechten And if thou wilt, remember, And if thou wilt, forget. Dear Miss Park: Sb C © Flung Defenseless of vicissitudes. we have since It all happened because we didn ' t have any Freshman Week. You see, infantile paralysis was sweeping the country and the opening of college was postponed, so that we were flung defenseless into the midst of trunks, suitcases and upperclassmen falling on each other ' s necks. We sallied forth for our interviews, determined to keep smiling in the face This was the origin of the courageous spirit for which become famous. Lantern Night was distinguished for its sus- picious lack of wax dripped on our gowns, an ominous forecast which we have been trying ever since to live down, whether successfully or not, the Dean ' s Office alone knows at this moment. After we had timidly rendered our new class song under the arch, we saw anxious looks on the faces of our elders — those who could not escape being our audience on the singing occasions of college years to come. They are young, perhaps they will improve, muttered the optimistic; and they were encour- aged by our oral singing. Mid-Years and Scarlet Fever descended upon the college next, but we emerged undaunted to tackle the biggest event in our lives, Freshman Show. We were hopeful, then desperate, then saved at the last minute, then elaborate and very confused. Genius sprang, fully-armed, from our ranks, and triumphantly we read in the cynical College News that Heavenly Bodies set a new high standard for Freshman Shows; gleefully we heard that our performance had awakened memories of Gilbert and Sullivan. One fly, or rather worm, appeared in our ointment: this was the great Jumping Bean Controversy. Wouldn ' t you admit that a Mexican Jumping Bean was an animal? That ' s what we thought, but jealousy over the failure of their under-bed tactics to reveal our mascot drove the Sophomores to belittling the Bean. It took the entire Biology department to convince the skep- tics that the Animal and not the Vegetable Kingdom claims the Jumping Bean. Again, our courage saved us from a lapse into insignificance. We soon sank from our dramatic heights into the slough of Long English Papers, and you know how that is! Perhaps it accounts for the meagre contribution of our voices on Little May Day, which took most of us by surprise. It was the Great Wind and Rain which revived us, we think, and we are grateful to it even though it did blow the chimney off Merion, uproot several class trees and endanger the boxwood in Wyndham. It gave us a good chance to run wild in outlandish costumes, and give vent to animal (cf. Jumping Bean) spirits, so that we were in prime condition to strike back at the Sophomores on Freshman night. We think, confidentially of course, that they were afraid of us, for they would not give fight on Taylor steps, and pretended to scorn the blue balloons we tied to the much abused bushes before the Library, and the effigy on the Library steps. If, instead, we Belittling the Bean had stored our energies, we might have been more prepared to withstand the Great Heat which ushered in Finals, and sat with us during our time of trial till we finally escaped, gasping, into the middle of June. You might think that wasn ' t so bad for a Freshman class. Well, we were encour- aged as we thought it over in the summer, and began more auspiciously the next fall by ferreting out the Parade night song and showing the Freshmen that we knew how to parody even if we couldn ' t sing on our own very well. It really wasn ' t the fault of our singing on Lantern Night that caused numbers of Freshmen to faint and a famous college official to fall down the stairs; we thought we did our part pretty well, but we were underrated again; and we are afraid that it was only the conspicuous pre- dominance of ' 36 in the cast of The Knight of the Burning Pestle, that reinstated us. We tried to prove what we were worth by dogging the trail of the Freshmen as they prepared their show, (which of course we knew could not compare to _ „ X ours), but after nearly coming to blows among  ? € £ _r ourselves as to whether the animal was an ape IX Dogging the Trail or a blue eagle, atter stealing a package ot harmless books, and spending cramped hours under things, we saw an unsuspected turtle creep upon the stage; then we began to fear the Freshmen. We attempted to overcome this feeling with the traditional Party to which however very few of them, (or of us) came, and those who did, enjoyed a skit most of the parts of which were forgotten by the actresses, not that it made any dif- ference. We had made the gesture anyhow. We forgot all animosity when Spring and the Scavenger hunt came along, and we felt so gay that we determined to make Little May Day a memorable occasion what with us playing such a prominent part. Well, we did. But could we help it if an extra Senior turned up at the zero hour, demanding a basket and a poem, and if the inhabitants of Pern West thought our waking song went to the tune of The Road to Mandalay, and sang it thus while the rest of us went through the halls at six yawning another tune, or if our May Pole simply wouldn ' t wind properly? After spending the day and night before picking flowers and writing verses, and after rising at five A. M. to make coffee, who could expect us to sound like the Viennese Choir Boys, and yet they ridiculed our May Day. On Fresh- man night you will admit we illustrated that our spirit was unbroken. This was our chance to show the Freshmen that youth is not everything, and we made a wild play for Taylor steps where we found the youngsters lodged. Even a hose took some time to upset them, and we must confess to a glorious grovel, fight, bite and scratch in the mud, which was ended as a draw, we claim, by the Janitor turning off the water supply. To us that was the end of the Freshmen; after that they became Sophomores, which is another thing entirely. Some people might have objected to our impolite methods of asserting ourselves, but it can not be denied that we were very courteous to the Seniors when we gave them a picnic. Why, we even sang them a farewell song which holds the record for being the only one of our songs to receive the request for an encore! The only thing that went wrong with that party was the shortage of food, but if our guests had been patient they would have been fed to satiety on ice cream; but Seniors hate to wait, and we do like ice cream ourselves, so that was really all right. We made it up to them by carrying chair after bowl of flowers after chair from one end of Senior Row to the other, and there were no complaints till we sang that night in front of Taylor, but by that time no one expected anything more of us. And we tried to do better as we entered our Junior year, because we realized that now other people ought to begin to think we were important, and there was a whole bonny new class who had never heard us sing officially. We chose them a parade night tune and all seemed to be going well till we discovered to our horror that the village band had never heard the ' Had Never Heard the Tune tune, and this one brief hour before they were scheduled to play. We had visions of no parade night, or a tuneless one, and ourselves as a lesson and a byeword, but our Prima Donna and our Presi- dent saved the honor of the class by missing dinner and teaching the tune to the band as it marched on the college. We don ' tthink anyone knows this and we wouldn ' t disclose it now except that we want you to see what heros we can muster in an emergency — we are rather good at that as a matter of fact. You can imagine that our singing was getting to be a college tradition, and we were not really proud of it, and thought we could remedy it by providing song books, but unfortunately the oral singing came before the books so, though they were very good books, the tradition went on. Like the rest of the college we were taken in by Gertrude Stein, and took in Cymbeline, (Pax Vobis- cum) and even got around to having a Banner Night, though there were some of us who seemed too lazy to cope with old Bryn Mawr customs. In fact this struggle between the Sentimentalists and the Weary went on all year now that we had reached the position where we did things instead of having them done to us, and we guess it was this dissension in the ranks which accounted for the ragged reception we gave the Curtain Song of the Freshman Show, although we were very glad indeed to have the show dedicated to us, because we did not have to snoop under anything! We were really very docile in allowing ourselves to be swept along in the Million Dollar Drive, and we ate cakes, scavenged, applauded everything in Good- hart, with special emphasis on Much Ado But Not For Nothing, and contributed a certain amount to the Bacchae, and we were well on the way to becom- ing a self-respecting college class — we had Swept Along ' even passed off Little May Day without much criticism because it was raining and nobody else was very well organized either — when we came up against ' Hfik The Ordeal the problem of giving a supper to the Seniors. We finally agreed to feed them, but we refused to sing to them, which was just as well. As a matter of fact there was a supper, and everyone was feasted royally when we learned that the college was in the habit of provisioning such meals, and that all we had to do was act as hostesses, which we had no trouble at all in doing. It was too bad that talcing possession of Taylor steps was not as easy, but it was unfair of them to call on us for so many songs and then walk off and leave us to guess when and how to turn ourselves into Seniors, don ' t you think so? Then suddenly we were Seniors, and did you ever guess what a difficult time we have had trying to appear dignified? We were foiled almost all the time as usual beginning with the undignified procedure of inspection for T. B. and the ordeal of those X-rays. Then the excitement of the Fiftieth Anniversary, in which all under-graduates, Seniors included, were made to feel like very small pebbles on an inspiring beach, robbed us of the chance to appear imposing before the new Freshmen, so that for months some of them thought some of us only Sophomores, and we were trying, really! Of course we did our share in the Messiah very well, but so did a great many other people. Then came May Day, before which all else pales and all ranks are leveled, so what good does it do you to be a Senior? We haven ' t actually disgraced ourselves as Seniors, Q| 7 | we w ' srl y ou f° understand, but we have never j,j f _ __ had a chance to see if we could conduct our- aii Ranks Are Leveled selves with decorum. Yes, we are confident that our career here has been under a cloud. Fate has mocked us, and all because our Freshman year began a week late. Oh, but please don ' t believe that we have not had fun, or wish we had gone to Smith. Oh, no! We have enjoyed it all thoroughly, and we want to thank you so much for having us; and we hope that if ever you are in the Wide-Wide-World, you will come and pay us a visit. Diplomatically yours, THE BEAN PICKERS. SOME STARTLING STATISTICS In the front of this book we have presented ourselves one by one, so perhaps it is now time to exhibit 1936 as a whole. What are we like collectively and where do we stand in relation to the rest of the world? Here are compiled some amazing statistics which reveal all and without which no year book is complete. In case we ever become famous or in case we want to boast about ourselves in the future these facts may be useful — you never can tell with statistics. To begin with, we are seventy-seven at the present moment and this in itself is a very interesting fact because seven is generally considered a lucky number and seventy-seven is just eleven times as lucky, and especially so because eleven is also a number of good omen. Thus collectively we are as potent as rabbits ' feet and four- leaf clovers. We are 1616 years old, which is exactly 32.32 times as old as Bryn Mawr College; or 5 and 1 323 times as old as the first collected edition of Shakespeare ' s works. We might have lived from the birth of Christ to the death of Shakespeare, 35.9 times as long as Elizabeth was Queen of England, or 1590 years longer than John Keats. But the city of Rome is 1073 years older than we are: however we are still 1456 years the senior of the Declaration of Independence, 645 years older than Methuselah and 895 years the senior of Magna Carta, while Queen Victoria was not quite a twentieth as old as we are. We seem to be 450 feet tall, which means that if we were 42 feet taller we would be I 2 as tall as the Eiffel Tower. Mount Everest is only 28,852 feet higher than the class of ' 36, and if we reclined on the floor of St. Peter ' s in Rome there would be only 186 feet between our feet and the other wall. We are 1 3 as long as the distance from college to the Bryn Mawr Trust Building, and 9 443,520 as long as the Missis- sippi River. We are also 9 25 as tall as the Empire State building, but it is rather useless to compare us to the length of the equator or the distance to the moon. As for weight, we weigh 9495 pounds, or approximately 4% short tons or 4 6 25 long tons. If we were solid gold we would make 7.9125 cubic feet of the metal, or in coal we would make a normal supply for one month. We do not intend to be reduced entirely to comparative figures, however, and so we submit something more emotional about ourselves, i. e. how we feel about certain things. We are wildly enthusiastic about: Mrs. Collins Otto ' s haircut The Veterans of Future Wars Advanced Experimental Psychology The Conductor with the waxed moustache on the Paoli Local Pauline ' s muse Miss Terrien Molly Gardiner Venus of Pern West Toots Dyer Dr. Anderson ' s exquisite analyti- cal thinking Joe Graham Massachusetts Miss Robbins Asians Fenny Mr. and Mrs. Greek Judith Weiss Aggie Halsey Miss Glen Mrs. Manning ' s dogs The Paoli Local The lantern man Ernst Diez Charlie Chaplin Dr. David The Max Diezes Pauline But we feel rather cool towards: Tosh Dr. Veltman ' s white shoes Father Coughlin at 4 P. M. Sundays The Lantern Pauline ' s cape Pennsylvania Hearst Hitler The music goes round and round The Theory of Continental Drift Fire Captains People who won ' t answer questionnaires Mussolini The Liberty League Assaulters on Merion green The American Legion FAC JLTY WHO WAS WHAT 1932-1933 Class Officers President Raynor Vice-President, Treasurer Bridgman Secretary Stone Song Mistress Morgan p Undergraduate Association Freshman member Canaday Self Government Association • i Freshman member Fabyan Athletic Association Freshman representative Reese 1933-1934 Class Officers President Canaday Vice-President, Treasurer Cary Secretary Matteson Song Mistress Kellogg Undergraduate Association Treasurer Bridgman Advisory Board Porcher Self Government Association Treasurer Bassoe Executive Board Park Athletic Association Secretary Porcher Sophomore Representative Bridgman Bryn Mawr League Chairman Blind School Goldwasser Chairman Haverford Community Center Park Chairman Summer School Fabyan WHO WAS WHAT Varsity Dramatics Board Members Bruere, Kidder College News Assistant Business Manager Canaday Editorial Staff Porcher The Lantern Assistant Business Manager Schwable Editorial Staff Kidder, Wyckoff 1934-1935 Class Officers President Fabyan Vice-President, Treasurer Stone Secretary Reese Song Mistress Morgan Undergraduate Association Secretary Porcher Advisory Board Fabyan, Halsey Self Government Association Secretary Merchant Executive Board Bridgman, Canaday, Raynor Athletic Association Vice-President Canaday Treasurer Bridgman Bryn Mawr League Chairman Blind School Goldwasser, Bingham Summer School Committee . .Fabyan, Halsey, A. Woodward % WHO WAS WHAT Varsity Dramatics Board President Kidder Members Putnam, Stone mk Hpfe College News : , j - rV Assistant Business Managers .Canaday, Stern Assistant Sports Editor Cary Glee Club Secretary Canaday e 2 Art Club President Stone 1935-1936 Class Officers President Matteson Vice-President, Treasurer A. Brown Secretary Scattergood Song Mistress Morgan Undergraduate Association President Fabyan Vice-President Canaday Self Government Association President Bridgman Vice-President Hunt Advisory Board Stone Athletic Association President Porcher Bryn Mawr League President Park Secretary-Treasurer Bingham Chairman Bryn Mawr Camp Docker Chairman Maids ' Classes Colegrove Summer School Committee Honour WHO WAS WHAT College News Editor-in-Chief Cary Editorial Staff C. C. Brown Business Manager Canaday Subscription Manager Cohen The Lantern Editor-in-Chief Wyckoff Editorial Staff Kidder, Merchant, Park Glee Club President Morgan In Athletics on Varsity Teams: Hockey C. C. Brown. Taggart Bridgman . . Cary 1932-1936 1932-1936 . 1933-1936 .1934-1936 Basket Ball Bridgman 1932-1936 Swimming Porcher 1932-1935 Stokes 1932-1934 VanVechten 1932-1934 Whiting 1932-1935 Wylie 1932-1935 Bassoe 1933-1935 Cohen 1933-1935 Morley 1934-1935 Tenni Fabyan Canaday 1932-1935 1934-1935 EXPERIMENTING IN COMPREHENSIVES Do Seniors know more useful things after four years at college than Freshmen? This is a question which calls for research which we have endeavoured to conduct through that method which is ever increasing in popularity, the comprehensive exami- nation. Two Seniors and two Freshmen, picked at random, kindly lent themselves for anonymous examination in a quiz attempting to cover both the utilitarian and deco- rative fields of information, and after a gruelling hour they produced the answers which follow. The editors spent a much more gruelling hour trying to grade these papers to see if they proved anything at all, and achieved these results: 50% being a perfect score, Senior A rated 40%, Freshman A 36%, Senior B 34%, and Freshman B 25%. Furthermore the Seniors knew as much about the Practical Arts as the Fresh- men and not unproportionally more about the Liberal Arts. Thus if anything is to be concluded it must be that four years at Bryn Mawr are a good thing. Perhaps we have judged partially, and so to be fair we are publishing our Comprehensive Exami- nation in Intelligence (and Cleverness) with some of the answers, in case anyone would like to form other opinions or even take the test. We would like to print all the answers but limited space makes us draw the line somewhere. Part I— The Practical Arts Section I: HOME ECONOMICS (1) In papering a house, name three places where the paste should go and three places where it should not go. (Don ' t be bashful.) Ans. On back of wall paper, on wall, on brush; on front of wallpaper, on floor, on me (S). (2) If your house were suddenly immersed in darkness at 8 P. M. what would you do? Ans. Play murder (F) Go to bed candlelesstinely (Clandestinely) (S). (3) Define or explain the following: (a) housemaid ' s knee (b) termites (c) Pyrex (d) Bon Ami (e) Spring house cleaning (f) evaporated milk (g) silver service. Ans. (a) The result of scrubbing white marble steps in Baltimore (F) (b) Unwel- come creatures that reside in the beams of houses and eventually cause their decay (F) or This termite be used to describe a species of isoptera (S) (c) Rob- bers on the sea, such as Capt. Kidd (F) (d) It ' s never scratched yet (F) (e) Occu- pation of Mole at the beginning of The Wind in the Willows (F) or Not as the name implies confined only to seasonal activities but takes place when one becomes thoroughly disgusted at not being able to find something for which one has been looking (S) (f) Condensed, canned, sweetened, and ruined (F) (g) In France they call it pourboire but in America we say, less picturesquely, silver service (S). (4) Who do you do for moths? (Be merciful) Ans. Live and let live (S). (5) How do you cope with (a) the contents of a vacuum cleaner, (b) burnt matches (c) the grease from frying pans? (Be calm) Ans. (a) this calls for a clean sweep (S) (b) put them back in the box and when some one tries to strike them you will have fun (F) (c) Keep it for use on elbows (S). Section II: KITCHENCRAFT (1) How do you separate two eggs? Ans. Eat one, leave the other. This ought to be final (F) or Unyoke them (S). (2) Identify: (a) Fanny Farmer (b) Dripolator (c) the Iceman (d) Rolling Pin. Ans. (a) the gastronomic Emily Post (F) (b) An instrument that somehow pro- duces excellent coffee if you know where to put the water and where the coffee (S) (c) Source of humor in low magazines (F) (g) In fiction, an instrument used to induce and maintain domestic discipline (S). (3) Describe briefly; folding, creaming, whipping, icing, basting. Ans. A drastic way of mixing cake dough (S) process of trying to make various substances resemble cream (F) inflicted upon eggs and cream and involving a vigorous circular motion of the hand (S) process without which no self- respecting cake is complete (S) the last thing you do before putting whatever it is in the oven (S). (4) What is so important about Hollandaise sauce? Ans. Its ability to conceal in taste and appearance that which lies beneath (F). (5) In lighting the oven, which comes first the gas, the lighted match, or the explosion? (You may reminisce a little but don ' t be frivolous.) Ans. I ' ve always tried to find out but the excitement of the inevitable explosion drives all chronology from my mind (S). (6) Answer one of the following: (a) Have you ever been in a Strawberry Jam? (b) Would you ever have occasion to serve hair dressing? Ans. (a) Yes but Mother was always annoyed (F). (b) I probably will hair long (S). Section III: NEEDLEWORK (1) Do you approach your needle to the thread or your thread to the needle, and where do you wear your thimble? Ans. You approach the thread to the needle until your first swear word, then vice-versa. The middle of the right hand (F). (2) If a stitch in time saves nine, how many stitches will you save in hemming a skirt four feet around if you can sew five stitches to the inch? (Hurry up.) Ans. You can save 214 stitches if you want to but it is easier not to bother to hem it at all (F). (3) Do you know how to spin, and what do you think of the other domestic habits of the spider? Ans. I can spin a yarn and I can spin a top, but as for domestic habits, I ' m at a dead stop (S). (4) Distinguish between hemming and hawing; tatting and tattling; crocheting and croqueting; purling and pearling; darning and damming. Ans. Hemming holds better but hawing is quicker (F). Tatting keeps young ladies out of mischief, tattling gets them in it (S). For one you can use an instrument 3 inches long, the other is played on a lawn with hedgehogs (F). Pearling and purling are practically identical as the final result of both is round and bumpy (F). The former is more ladylike (S). (5) Are you awfully mad when your wool comes in skeins instead of in balls and how do you control yourself? Ans. I am livid but control myself by putting the skein on my hands and getting someone to wind it, thus I am restrained till calm (F) or No, I always enjoy a long yarn (S). (6) Describe Fabyan tactics in knitting. Ans. Almost as violent as Canaday tactics but much more colorful and hap-hazard (S). Section IV: FINANCE (1) Taxicab fare is 25 cents for the first two and a quarter miles, and 5 cents for each additional quarter mile. A man has a dollar bill. It is raining and he has just had his shoes shined, so he calls a taxi and rides home. After paying the fare he has 1 2 °f the original sum. He tips the driver 1 5 of this amount. How far did he ride? Ans. 3 ' 2 miles (IS and IF. The others got it wrong!) (2) Decide quickly whether to buy a dress for $19.30 or one priced at $20 and reduced 3l 2 %. Ans. I ' d buy both if I had $38.60 (S). (3) How do you (a) forge a check (b) dodge bill collectors (c) abscond with the funds? Ans. (a) carefully (b) with difficulty (c) never (S) or (a) Take the check to the blacksmith (b) don ' t start charge accounts (d) I ' m too innocent to even think about such a thing (F). (4) Distinguish between: discount, account, Count, no-account, county, and the count of ten. Ans. If you discount what you have in your account you may be a wealthy count, but more likely you are of no-account in your county and someday you will be out on the count of ten (S). (5) Can you think of anything useful about square roots? Ans. The square root tables (F). (6) In one word give your opinion of budgets. Ans. Unbudgable (F) or unbalanced (S). Section V: CURRENT EVENTS (1) Are you really interested in the Dionne Quintuplets? (Give reasons) Ans. Yes for History may repeat itself (F). (2) What are your reactions to the name of William Randolph Hearst? Ans. It is so painful to me it hearsts (a S and a F both had this). (3) Where is Col. Lindburgh now? Ans. At home abroad (F). (4) What colors shirts do they wear in Italy? Germany? Russia? Ethiopia? Ans. Black, brown, dirty and none (F). (5) What is always going on in Geneva anyway? Ans. Conferences (S) or When the bise isn ' t blowing it rains (F). Part II— The Liberal Arts Section I: UNAPPLIED SCIENCE (I) What do you know after you have studied (a) paleontology (b) cytology (c) apology (d) minerology (e) astrology (f) doxology? Ans. (a) fossils, living and dead (S) (b) (no one knew) (c) Socrates (S) (d) all about rocks (S) (e) destiny (S) (f) nothing much (S). (2) What makes a leaf green, a piece of litmus paper blue, a gardenia yellow and a Russian red? Ans. Spring, a rainy day, time, and Vodka (F) or Greenness, acid, un-colorness, and capitalists (S). (3) If 4 cc of HOH are poured into a glass containing water and NaCl do you expect anything to happen and are you disappointed? Ans. I take this with a grain of salt and am never disappointed (S). (4) Mark the following true or false: You can determine the age of the earth by counting the number of wrinkles on its crust. A light year is longer than a dark year. There is something familiar between a long forgotten egg and hUS. The dog fish is a most provoking reptile. I have never seen a purple cow. People laugh because one of their bones is humerus. The higher the fewer. (Answered correctly by all.) (5) What is the greatest attraction about magnets? Ans. I don ' t know but a Pole might (S). Section II: HISTORY (1) In 1066 who was killed by what where and under what simply maddening circumstances? Ans. King Harold by an arrow at Hastings and it gave him a maddening pain in the neck (S). (2) Comment briefly on the Diet of Worms or Leap across the Great Schism. Ans. (a) This was due to the low standards of living that prevailed during the Middle Ages (F). (3) What was the difference between Pippin the Short and Peter the Great; the Black Prince and Eric the Red; Sarajevo and Sarah Bernhardt? Ans. (a) a paltry 10 centuries (S) (b) The Black Prince was in better taste (F) (c) One was the roast the other the toast of many countries (S). (4) What would happen if the sun ever set on the British Empire? Ans. The King would make a speech to his unfortunate subjects (S). (5) Do you know anything about (a) Cecil Roads (b) futilism (c) the disillusion of the monasteries (d) the bouillon theory? Ans. (a) Bumpy roads generally causing Cecickness (F) (b) a collection of mediaeval slang expressions such as fief, tithe, vassal (S) (c) People such as Bocaccio believed that the monasteries were never under any illusions anyway (S) (d) Theoretically it may be all right but sometimes it is just grease and water (F) (6) Would it have made any difference to you if Frederick the Great had not known how to play the flute? Ans. No, he probably would have fiddled his time away instead (S). Section III: LITERATURE (1) Did James I write the Bible and if not what on earth did he write? Ans. No, but the Divine Write of Kings is often attributed to him (S). (2) Identify the following quotations: (a) Onion sauce, onion sauce. (b) The lamp of true learning and the light of pure religion. (c) Facilis est descensus Avernus. (d) Three white leopards sat under a juniper tree. Ans. (a) Mole to the rabbits in the Wind in the Willows (F) (b) Heard in Chapel (S) (c) the Eneid (S) (d) Ash Wednesday (S both but no Fs!) (3) Is there any excuse for Dr. Samuel Johnson? Ans. Boswell (S). (4) Who wrote the following: (a) Gray ' s Elegy. (b) The Idylls of the King. (c) Graduated Exercises in Articulation. (d) Tales From Shakespeare. (e) Thou Gracious Inspiration. Ans. (a) a man by that name (b) Tennyson in his idle moments (c) S. A. King (d) the little Lambs (e) Alma Mater (S). (5) How do you account for Edgar A. Guest? Ans. The New Deal (F) or the whimsy of nature (S). Section IV: MUSIC AND ART (1) How is music like a fish? Ans. In Finlandia (S). (2) Wouldn ' t it have been fun to have known Michael Angelo? Ans. No. It would have been too strenuous (S). (3) Could you whistle the sextette from Lucia in a crowded subway car on Saturday afternoon? or Criticize the background of the Sistine Madonna. Ans. No, only a sixth of it (S). (4) What is meant by (a) perfect pitch (b) dominant seventh (c) Cab Calloway (d) Beethoven ' s tenth Symphony? Ans. (a) a good baseball player (S) or a physical defect making it painful to listen to pianos which are out of tune (F) (b) the last and greatest cardinal sin (S) or another way of saying seventh heaven (F) (c) the newest New York taxi service, call a Cab Calloway (F) (d) Brahm ' s first (S). (5) How would you characterize the music of Richard Wagner to a deaf person? (Gesture permitted.) Ans. Pound on his ear with a hammer (S) or use physical violence (F). (6) If there had been no Renaissance what would fill up all the art galleries in Europe? Ans. Tourists (S). SONNET FROM THE WEARY When we consider how four years were spent Going and coming, Winter, Spring and Fall Between our rooms, the Lib. and Taylor Hall, Our feet scuffling the paths where others went; Or how we often made the sheer ascent Up from the hockey fields, or from a call Along the royal Row; or count up all The many times our steps were Villwards bent,- When we have reckoned up the miles by score We must have walked in broadening the mind, We wonder how the thoughtful any more A sedentary life in college find, And if in irony the Calendar conspired To state two years of exercise required . NOW WE WERE ' 36 (The scene is any room in Bryn Mawr College, thirty years hence, miscellaneously furnished and not too neat, for human nature seldom changes. The time is between May and June. Noises of female voices singing songs they have not sung for many years come floating through the open windows. A member of the class of 1966 is opening the door to the matronly figure of one who enters eagerly despite the fact that her hair is noticably grey. She seems friendly and prepared to talk a great deal, though we are sure that at home she is always circumspect in her conversation.) THE GUEST: I hope I wasn ' t interrupting you but I did so want to see this room. Have you been in it long, or are you just a Freshman? 1966: NO: I mean, yes; I ' m a Senior. THE GUEST (delighted): Well can you imagine that! You ' re in the class of ' 66. It sounds perfectly unbelievable. Now we were ' 36. I suppose it is hard for you to believe that, but, you know, thirty years doesn ' t seem like any time at all when I come back; college is always the same I find . . . (She has been looking around as she talks and now scents something strange as the not-in-my-day expression on her face indicates) . . . Oh, this room looks entirely different. They ' ve done something to the window seat, or is it that built-in bookcase? You don ' t mind if I look around do you? ( ' 66 would like to answer politely but there is no time for more than an unprintable murmur. ' 36 has begun to reminisce!) I used to live right here in this room, or perhaps it was the one down the hall, and Biffy lived here . . . No this is right, because I remember it was so convenient to the fire buckets in the middle of the night and I never had to get out of bed till . . . but there aren ' t any buckets now! 1966 (at last): Oh we don ' t have Fire Drills any more the way you used to. 1936 (who really does know all about B. M. C. for she keeps up with things): Oh of course, I remember reading in the News that some one had invented a way of making the halls fireproof but I never thought they ' d get around to doing any- thing about it. I remember the buckets, though, the last time I was here and that was in . . . well now, just when was it? (It is deep reminiscence now. ' 66 looks hopefully at a chair, but ' 36 is off again.) IT wasn ' t our fifth reunion I know, and the next time Tommy was having the measles so I couldn ' t make it. It must have been when they were laying the cornerstone for the new Science Building. That was almost as impressive as the Fiftieth Anniversary. 1966 (seizing a moment which has been left open for How-Time-Flies business): Won ' t you sit down here on the window seat (almost apologetically). It has a new cushion. 1936 (sitting but not stopping): You can ' t imagine how it used to be with all the Sciences in one building, Dalton Hall. It used to be over there where that flat sort of building is now. I miss it, though we used to make dreadful fun of it. What is that new thing? 1966: Well it isn ' t very new; at least it was here when I came. That is the Model Theatre for the Play Construction Course. It ' s a lot 1936 (this is her reunion, don ' t forget): In my day we used to give all our plays in Goodhart and had to take turns with the visiting lecturers at that. I can ' t get used to all these new buildings. Do you know, they uprooted our class tree to make room for a new wing to the Library! I ' m afraid they don ' t respect the old traditions as much as we did. Yet it does look attractive, especially with those two new dormitories across the street. (Her gaze is caught by something out of the window.) Heavens, look at those girls, with next to nothing on! I hope they don ' t always dress like that. In my time we were considered revolutionary when we wore socks all winter and occasionally appeared in shorts; but this is posi- tively freakish. 1966 (being kind, and lighting a cigarette to pass the time): We don ' t do it all the time but we like to be comfortable. 1936: What are you doing? Don ' t tell me they let you smoke in your rooms now! ( ' 66 nods.) Well I never thought that would happen. That wasn ' t the way when I was here. (As ' 66 can ' t help smiling pityingly, ' 36 rises to the defense.) I sup- pose you think we never had any fun at all. It may not have been on the same scale as yours, but let me tell you about the time Biffy and Miggles and Tippy and I . . . (Now she has really launched herself and it is evidently going to be a long session, but fortunately we can say — Curtain). OWED TO THE WEST WIND I ' ve had the same room all four years while I have been at College. It ' s been, I ' m sure, inspiration pure in my pursuit of knowledge. It faces west all afternoon, the sun is warm and dancing, And twilight glow through my window is beauty most entrancing. Of course the wind blows on that side as well as any other, And stormy rains beat on my panes, which is a beastly bother; For lack of weather-stripping I ' ve to dodge the drafts quite nimbly, And northern gales do chase their tales both up and down my chimbly. So when I rise at break of day, braving my arctic frozure, While others lie so comfortably in warm eastern exposure, I often think it might have been a little more transcending — To have my sun when day ' s begun, rather than when it ' s ending! THE 1936 YEAR BOOK STAFF Editor-in-Chief ANNE REESE Assistant Editor Business Manager ANNE WHITING SOPHIE HUNT Photographic Editor and Advertising Manager Assistant Advertising Manager MADELYN BROWN PAULINE SCHWABLE Staff Photographer EURETTA SIMONS We wish to acknowledge with gratitude the kindness of Miss Ida M. Prichett in allowing us to reproduce on pages 7, 8, 9, and 10 the gravure studies of the campus which she had made. We are also grateful to Doris Turner, ' 39 for the excellent snapshots she contributed to this book, and to the mem- bers of the Faculty and the undergraduates who were good enough to pose for our photographers. FOR SMART DINNER AND SUPPER PARTIES - in New York it ' s the (omft Courtesy of DELAR STUDIO RAY NOBLE genial host, charming master of ceremonies, gifted composer and conductor, inspired arranger of symphonic jazz . . . with his famous dance orchestra featuring AL BOWLLY vocalist Superb entertainment by outstanding stars No couvert for dinner guests, except on Saturdays and Holidays after 10:30 P.M. FORMAL Use Rockefeller Center Parking Space, Entrance 48th 49th Sts. 6:30 until 3 . . M. nightly- except Sundays Dinner Entertainment 830 Supper Entertainment 12:15 MESERVAnQNS-CIRCLE 6-1400 ROCKEFELLER CENTER ROOF MODERN SWEDISH DECORATIVE ARTS GLASSWARE - CHINA POTTERY - NOVELTIES for a gift of quality — a Swedish gift — an unusual gift visit SWEDEN HOUSE - INC. ROCKEFELLER CENTER 6 WEST 51st STREET - NEW YORK CITY ARE YOU A LIBERAL? Bryn Mawr girls enjoy talking about their liberal attitude. They claim to be open minded and progressive. But there is a surprising tendency to base such claims upon information gleaned from America ' s most conservative newspapers. Philadelphia boasts America ' s leading liberal newspaper, the Philadelphia Record. Its editorial page is the most quoted in the country. Four great wire services, Associ- ated Press, United Press, Universal News Service and Agence Havas feed the Record a complete story of world events. The Record stands first in America in number of ranking daily and Sunday col- umnists. Among these are Heywood Broun, O. O. Mclntyre, Robert Allen and Drew Pearson, Herschel Brickell and Leon- ard Lyons. If you are a dyed-in-the-wool conserva- tive, if you believe that all ' s well in the world, if you oppose any change . . . then the Philadelphia Record will not interest you. But if you are young, liberal and pro- gressive, if you believe that America can be made a better place in which to live and want to take part in such work . . . Then you owe it to yourself to read Amer- ica ' s leading liberal newspaper — THE PHILADELPHIA RECORD SARA RETTEW, 720 LANCASTER AVENUE, BRYN MAWR, PENNSYLVANIA : Dance FrocV-, ■ Plain and Printod Sill , Imported Cottons • Bermuda Iw I GOOD LUCK TO 1936 MAISON ADOLPHE COIFFEUR FRANCAIS 876 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr 2025 JANE TOOHER SPORT CLOTHES SCHOOL - COLLEGE — CAMP 71 I BOYLSTON STREET, BOSTON, MASS. • Gymnasium Garments Regulation College Blazer (Imported expressly for Bryn Mawr College) Official Outfitter for Bryn Mawr College SO YOU ' RE NOT GOING TO BE MARRIED ! R AT least, if you ' ve decided to give the artistic or business life a whirl first, let us tell you about Allerton House. In the first place, we ' re gay and comfortable and attractive . . . with lounges and game rooms all over the place. Your own living-bedroom is charming and there are facilities for entertaining. We ' re in a pleasant and convenient part of town . . . which does no harm to the prestige of a young woman just starting out on her own! Your room and all the advantages, including phone and maid service, can be had for as little as $10 a week. ALLERTON HOUSE, for Women, Lexington Ave. at 57th Street. ALLERTON HOUSE, for Men and Women, 143 East 39th Street. MIDSTON HOUSE, for Men and Women, Madison Avenue at 38th Street. Write to us for detailed booklet or reservations ALLERTON CLUB RESIDENCES NEW YORK NETHERLAND CAFE BAR AT LUNCHEON ...Have you tried Chef Theophile ' s new and popular innovation — a Special Hors d ' Oeuvres Luncheon — with delecta b le and interesting dishes, dessert and coffee, Tout Complet ... ONE DOLLAR. AT COCKTAIL HOUR ...cocktails by Victor; bright music by MEYER DAVIS ' Orchestra. AT DINNER ... New Yorkers and visitors from out of town, who know food and wines and wish to enjoy the best at reason- able prices. AFTER THE THEATRE ...cheerful atmosphere, entertaining music and simple and delicious snacks, prepared as you watch. CALL MANETTI — VOLUNTEER 5-2800 Me Sherry- Net he rl an a Fifth Avenue at 59th New York C tetnal vtLnatime J I HE gay profusion of a flower vendor ' s cart heaped with fresh, bright nosegays is LENTH ERIC ' S gift to you of eternal springtime. ILLt- J_ ' dac — country lanes fragrant with lilac bloom remem- bered again! dewy charm of this shy sylvan flower newly revived to popularity. ;• ja mii ' i n — the fragrance that hangs with heavy sweetness on the soft Southern air. J- c. c — deep, sun-warmed richness of June roses. llltlltcl daintiness and delicacy of lilies of the valley along garden walls. Also CHYPRE and FOUGERE at the same prices $ 1 .00 to $ I 1 .00 h Lentheric fevy f- tH w 1 -5 p •-• B ■■■; I ' :: ' ■ Silk Sport Dress, $7.95 Knox Panama, $5.00 KITTY McLEAN, BRYN MAWR, PENNA. ALEXANDER EISEMANN AND COMPANY 42 BROADWAY, NEW YORK MEMBERS NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE NEW YORK COTTON EXCHANGE CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE COMMODITY EXCHANGE, INC. ASSOCIATE MEMBERS NEW YORK CURB EXCHANGE SCHOOL OF NURSING OF YALE UNIVERSITY A PROFESSION FOR THE COLLEGE WOMAN The thirty months ' course, providing an in- tensive and varied experience through the case study method, leads to the degree of MASTER OF NURSING A Bachelor ' s degree in arts, science or phil- osophy from a college of approved stand- ing is reguired for admission. A few scholarships available for students with ad- vanced gualifications. FOR CATALOGUE AND INFORMATION ADDRESS: THE DEAN, YALE SCHOOL OF NURSING NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT A supreme hairdressing service in an ex- quisite establishment by operators of unfail- ing courtesy and exceptional ability. f I R DR. £JT£Q VOIunteer 5-1831 I East 53rd Street New York City Any time of the year — It ' s always time for ABBOTTS The Standard of Fine Quality in ICE CREAM GEO. L. WELLS, INC. Wholesale Meats, Provisions and Poultry of Quality 402-404 North Second Street PHILADELPHIA LLEWELLYN ' S Dependable prescription and drug store service since 1857 Call us any time from 8 A. M. until midnight 7 days a week for speedy free delivery 9 East Lancaster Avenue Ardmore 1688 47 Anderson Avenue Ardmore 2442 Montgomery and Bala Avenue, Cynwyd -;I79 ' «■■ ■ ' ! t,l¥ BRYN MAWR 252 {Member of Telegraph Delivery Service) CONNELLYS The Main Line Florists Delivery Made Promptly to College 1226 LANCASTER AVENUE ROSEMONT. PA. RICHARD STOCKTON THE GREEKS ( Bryn Mawr Confectionery) Will welcome its new college friends and serve them as it has the class that passes on. Congratulations to 1936 METH ' S BRYN MAWR Pastries, Confections, Home Made Ice Cream, Luncheon, Dinners WE DELIVER BRYN MAWR 1385 Compliments of Bryn Mawr News Agency 844 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr, Pa. BRYN MAWR 1056 BRYN MAWR 570 JEANNETT ' S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP, Inc. 823 LANCASTER AVENUE, BRYN MAWR Floral Ideas for All Occasions FRANCES O ' CONNELL (FORMERLY TOGGERY SHOP) Featuring Smart Dresses for All Occasions $7.95 to $29.50 831 LANCASTER AVENUE, BRYN MAWR, PA. THE PEACOCK BEAUTE SALON ON LEFT ENTERING SEVILLE ARCADE serving the College and the Main Line for NINE YEARS SKIN AND SCALP SPECIALISTS LICENSED ZOTOS PERMANENT WAVING COMPLETE LINE CONTOURE COSMETICS AND REVLON MANICURE PRODUCTS PHONE BRYN MAWR 475 HENRY B. WALLACE Caterer and Confectioner Dining-Room 22 BRYN MAWR AVENUE, BRYN MAWR, PA. DESIGNERS AND MAKERS OF THE OFFICIAL BRYN MAWR COLLEGE CLASS RING AND CHARM The brochure Gifts mailed upon request — illustrates and prices moderate — price Sift suggestions. Established 1832 1218 CHESTNUT STREET Philadelphia BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN AND TEA ROOM Service 8:00 A. M.— 7:30 P. M. Daily and Sunday Student Charge Accounts Compliments of The Haver-ford Pharmacy HAVERFORD, PA. WE STICK TO OUR KNITTING The name Beck is not, and never has been, tied up to any one process of color photography. Wz are engravers — practical interpreters of color — nor solicitors of camera c olor work. This means that you can rely upon us to make the finest reproductions from any kind of copy. Personal apti = tude for engraving in color is the first need of every process, and that is what we have to sell — and that only, fhercfore, we shall continue to look upon the entire field of color photography as dis= tinctly separate from ours. The engraver s joh is to get color to press with plates that satisfy all con= cerned — the advertiser, the agency, the artist photographer who made the original, and the printer. 5ome orc er — and quite enough to guarantee our concentration on engraving. The value of this policy to you is that it has developed an expertness on our part which fears no lack of effectiveness in the final engraving. All we ask is the chance to make it. The Beck Engraving Company . . . Philadelphia, 7th and Sansom Streets . . . New York, i05 host 45lh Street . . . Springfield, Mass , JO owi wiiy. DELAR STUDIO ROCKEFELLER CENTER OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER FOR BRYN MAWR COLLEGE YEAR BOOK NAMES AND ADDRESSES OF CLASS Anderson, Edith Gould 32 Eighth Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Anderson, Marcia Lee 2404 Club Boulevard, Durham, N. C. Askins, Mary Emmet Easton, Md. Atkiss, Ruth Robinson 375 Dawson Street, Wissahickon, Philadelphia, Pa. Avery, Alethea Burroughs Swarthmore, Pa. Bassoe, Esther 103 I Michigan Avenue, Evanston, III. Bates, Elizabeth Maunsell 9 Fernwood Road, Summit, N.J. Bellamy, Frederica Eva I I 74 Race Street, Denver, Colo. Bennett, Rosanne Dunlap 180 S. River Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Bergstein, Marjorie Louise 7 I 7 S. Crescent Avenue, Cincinnati, Ohio Bingham, Elizabeth Mary .■ Cloverly Lane, Rydal, Pa. Bock, Betty 21 Clarendon Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Bridgman, Marion Louise New Canaan, Conn. Bright, Sarah Gilpin Cedar Hill Farm, Reading, Pa. Brown, Antoinette Chappell 806 Rosewood Avenue, Hubbard Woods, III. Brown, Caroline Cadbury Westtown School, Westtown, Pa. Brown, Madelyn 1 4 E. 75th Street, New York City Canaday, Doreen Damaris Ottawa Hills, Toledo, Ohio Cary, Barbara Lloyd. Ellet Lane and Wissahickon Avenue, Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. Chapman, Marian Claire Aurora, Ohio Cohen, Alice Hagedorn 5516 Northumberland Street, Pittsburgh, Pa. Colegrove, Mary Jeannette 331 Euclid Street, Corry, Pa. Davis, Rose Goddard Cheshire, Conn. Docker, Kathryn Swain. . . . 26 E. Tulpehocken Street, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Fabyan, Eleanor Brooks 379 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, Mass. Fairchild, Edith Hansen 2242 N. Lake Drive, Milwaukee, Wis. Goldman, Mildred Vivian Senate Hotel, Harrisburg, Pa. Goldwasser, Marjorie A 465 W. End Avenue, New York City Greenwald, Beatrice 499 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Halsey, Agnes Durant 803 Fifth Avenue, New York City Halstead, Margaret Goshen, N. Y. Hansell, Evelyn Egee 929 Montgomery Avenue, Narberth, Pa. Harrington, Elizabeth Whitemarsh, Pa. Heiskell, Josephine Royston . . . 1000 W. Second Street, Little Rock, Ark. Hemsath, Mary Elizabeth 6671 Germantown Avenue, Philadelphia, Pa. Hollander, Bertha Hutzler 1802 Eutaw Place, Baltimore, Md. Holzworth, Jean 353 Westchester Avenue, Port Chester, N. Y. Honour, Margaret Cecilia 328 Springdale Avenue, East Orange, N. J. Horsburgh, Janet Courtney 15410 Edgewater Drive, Lakewood, Ohio Hunt, Sophie Lee 2501 Palisade Avenue, Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y. Kellogg, Helen Stewart Northgate, Union College, Schenectady, N. Y. Kidder, Margaret Sloan 31 W. I 2th Street, New York City Manship, Pauline Frances Howard 319 E. 72nd Street, New York City Matteson, Jane Sherrerd 50 Barnes Street, Providence, R. I. Merchant, Barbara 3 Bellevue Avenue, Gloucester, Mass. Morgan, Maryallis Wyncote, Pa. Morley, Esther Healy 10819 Magnolia Drive, Cleveland, Ohio Ott, Helen 1408 Madison Avenue, New York City Park, Sara Bevan Rodgers Forge, Towson, Md. Porcher, Frances Calloway Cocoa, Fla. Raynor, Alice Russell 558 Palisade Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Reese, Anne Elizabeth 405 Bretton Place, Baltimore, Md. Rice, Lillie Edna 27 I 7 N. I 2th Street, Philadelphia, Pa. Sale, Virginia Harper. . . . c o Sale Lithograph Co., 208 Washington St., Buffalo, N. Y. Scattergood, Ellen Morris Dundale, Villanova, Pa. Schwable, Pauline Gertrude 2 Walworth Avenue, Scarsdale, N. Y. Shovlin, Elizabeth Claire 6020 Columbia Avenue, Overbrook, Pa. Simons, Euretta Andrews 1239 Remington Road, Wynnewood, Pa. Smedley, Elizabeth l04 ' 2 Forest Avenue, Narberth, Pa. Spafford, Lucille 14 E. 63rd Street, New York City Stern, Jill Lit 344 E. Main Street, Haddonfield, N. J. Stewart, Alicia Belgrano 1900 S Street N. W., Washington, D. C. Stone, Ellen Balch Woodland Road, Jamaica Plain, Mass. Swift, Marie Fitzgerald 1551 Astor Street, Chicago, III. Taggart, Josephine Brown Watertown, N. Y. Terry, Elizabeth Mahn 1423 Beaver Road, Sewickley, Pa. Tillinghast, Sara Henry 260 Angell Street, Providence, R. I. Todd, Sarah Helen New Bethlehem, Pa. Veeder, Margaret de Witt 755 Park Avenue, New York City Walsh, Dorothy Drexel -. Bluemont, Va. Whiting, Anne Frances 632 Washington Street, Cumberland, Md. Wickersham, Elizabeth Hope 5007 Ventnor Avenue, Ventnor, N. J. Williams, Ellen Parsons • Mt. Salem Lane, Wilmington, Del. Winternitz, Jeanne 320 Summit Avenue, Wayne, Pa. Woodward, Anne 608 Oakland Avenue, Council Bluffs, Iowa Woodward, Virginia 78 Water Street, Toms River, N. J. Wright, Ann Blose Ill Arleigh Road, Douglaston, Long Island, N. Y. Wyckoff, Elizabeth Porter 532 E. 87th Street, Ne w York City Wylie, Margaret Carolyn 556 Washington Street, Dorchester, Mass. fr ' i 1 ;


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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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