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

 - Class of 1937

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1937 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 102 of the 1937 volume:

1937 KILOCYCLES ' MAWR COLLI .1 .1 ,11 A . w r ! i I en nsy I vania The Class of 1937 dedicates its yearbook to MRS. JAMES CHADWIC COLLINS, Director or 1 uoltcations, May Day Director, 1936, and Director=at=L,ar$e or the L. olleQe L v ory=Kest Oorhn flour Good evening, ladies and gentlemen! This is Station W-O-E broadcasting its nightly Cozy-Rest-Coflin program. Remember our motto: When you die, Friends should buy Cozy-Rest — , — . — It is the best. Don t be old-lashioned and sleep in peace. Sleep in one of our plush-lined, Fisher-body models, ouIl never regret it! Now tonight, ladies and gentlemen, we re going to let you hear a true con- fession. We have right here with us a lady who has experienced such things as you 11 never lorget to your dying day, and she will tell you about them herself. Here she is: Mrs. Manning! % % Alas! alas! where shall I make a beginning and where shall I make an end of all my sorrows? Alas! But come, I must pull myself together. I must take this in my stride. The obvious place to begin (hen, heh) would be at the beginning (heh, heh) and so I do. It was years ago when I was a student at Bryn Mawr College. Like Caesar, I was ambitious. I saw my fellow-students gambolling over the lawns, careless of my will, and I thought, Power! If only I could hold these creatures in my grasp, wield and drive them as I wished, I would be content! I would give my soul for that! Xo sooner had I confessed as much to the ambient air, than there leaped Irom the book I was holding a thin, anemic wraith, which addressed me in quavering tones: can give you power! IOU? I returned with composure and disdain. iou aren t sufficiently well-nourished. ou coulan I haunt a mosquito! 1 hat s just my trouble, he nodded like a fog in a wind. But if you give me Food, I shall give you all you want. With a good, square meal diffused in my insubstantial body, I am a very prince ol air and darkness. Lucifer is my servant, lb- trembles al my name, which is Learning. Unfortunately, I am al present, as you say, quite under-nourished. I leed, you see, upon the brains ol all human creatures who read hooks and remember whal they read. Now there is no one who reads an more, or il there is. surely there is no one who remembers. Know I edge Floats in and oul ol minds before I can seize upon it, and I starve. Heavens and I I. II. how I starve! What, I inquired cautiously, for I did nol wish lo offer mysell to Ins dietary needs, Whal do you n.ml me to do? You need simplj promise thai you will lour all who hill through my influence into oni hands to read, read, read, and remember, remember, remember. I romise that, and in an instanl you will have the powei you desire. I promised. Lightning flashed, thunder resounded in the concave hollows ol the si.ii ks. the earth trembled. When the smoke cleared away, I was silling in an ,,.,! Ion, i bed office. f wo secretaries waited breathless!) Foi m winds. Outside the door stood a dismal line of students, depending upon my whim as to whether they should be condemned to German Reading. Letters from parents imploring my mercy on their offspring poured upon my desk. Power! I had it. 1 arose and walked to my window to inhale the glorious air expansively. I blessed the name of Learning. Remembering, however, that the poor, ghostly fellow was still starving; remem- bering too that as a woman of honor I must keep my word before indulging in selfish pleasure, f turned to making my victims read, read, read, and remember, remember, remember. As soon as they looked well stuffed, I herded them together in a dark corner of Taylor beneath the blank white countenance of propitious Athena. I waved blue books in the air; I muttered the spell of quiz- rules, and such was the power of my words and acts that I conjured up the voracious spirit in the twinkling of an eye. He roared with joy at the sight of so much prey, while 1, a bit wary lest in his excitement he might confuse my identitv with that of an edible morsel, slipped out of the door and left him to his meal. Only after some time, when I was certain he was satiated, did I return to gather up the corpses. Insatiable, however, is spiritual appetite. With the years, the genius of Learning grew fat and full-blooded, but the more his health increased, the more he wanted to devour. I made excuses to him, I avoided meeting him, yet in the end I could not escape. Flashing blue flames, he confronted me and demanded that either I find some way of multiplying his matter of sustenance ten-fold, or he would then and there tear me limb from limb. The choice seemed to be obvious, yet in my nervous haste to assure him that I felt no hesitation whatsoever about ray course ol action, I rashly promised to multiply his fare not ten, but twenty-fold! He vanished in a complacent glow, but I was left to desperate dismay. Twenty-fold! How could 1 do it? And then — surely it was his diabolical spirit inspiring me, not my own invention — the idea came in a flash: Comprehensives. Xo more did I simply stuff my subjects until they were of an appetizing plumpness. No, I stuffed them to bursting, I saturated them, 1 charged and infused them. Working over a longer period of time, I changed their very substance into lood lor Learning. Xo loreign element did I allow to taint or lessen their prime condition. I walled them into their dwellings so that they could not escape I ro m my surveyal. I piled books upon them. 1 buried them in the Library, threat- ening dire punishment if they did not learn every word by heart. There, in the mkht ol dusty tomes and the shadows of infinite shelves, 1 suspect that the monster himsell appeared to them and urged them on. From their worn and pallid faces, I know thai they must have been assaulted by his terrors between the lines ol Milton and the laws l Newton, while he whispered lo them in heart-shaking tones, I. earn, learn, learn! I hey learned, incredibly they learned. ltir lour years, I had my victims reads. Draped in black, wept lor by the Friends the) were leaving, thej Followed me into I aylor where so often before I had summoned up the demon to his least. ol merely with spells and l)lue-books, bul with solemn arums, with Fires made ol all the books and papers ever used to pre p. ir - Foi this hour, with song and ritual dance, the mightj being was invoked and .uric I lied through lli ' - door, Iml I COuId ' Jo nn Farther. rear Iro .e me as I listened to the hortles ol inhuman joy, and the si reams ol too human despair and pain th.it echoed behind me. Foi limns I could not stir, and lor hours it lasted, an etcmih ol agony. Hearing such cries, I could not bul repenl lor whal I had dour; mv mind was seized with remorse as horrible in its niip .is the grip ol the fiend within upon those whom I had delivered up I i losed my eyes in terror and (Conilmiml n Pago 78) WE RAISE OUR DYING VOICES IN LAMENT- Our dear becloistered campus has become the home of the spirit of fellowship and freedom of expression: Look about you — everyone except the ruggedest individualist belongs to a club, union, or associession. Go join the Glee Club if you think you can warble Or hie yourself off to Varsity Dramat if you think you re adorble As a Thespian; for you aesthetes There s the Art Club, or yet the Dance Club, for interpretive aethletes. All you have to do to join the French Club is kick the Iangue around like a native American; and the German Club tries to sprechen and what is worse to singen die Deutsch all of which must be recreative. The super-super intellectual Belongs of course to the Philosophy Club and contemplates the actual and the inectual. The one who is peace-bitten or concerned with what the world is coming to Finds her field of action in the International Relations Club or the A. S. U. The members of which worry about socialism, capitalism, fascism, and the Asiatic and the European debacles And hold learned discussions to impress each other with the importance of sanctions and protocols. Far back in the days of two parties all good Republicans belonged to the Liberty League And there for a while the V. F. W. Auxiliary was a force to contend with although if the real truth be known the Princeton chapter was the source of its intrigue. We should now proceed to talk about the Nucleus But we are getting tired of it all and anyhow our knowledge of cameras is somewhat dubious As is our whole attitude towards the spirit of fellowship and freedom of expression To say nothing of the way we feel about those dear benighted souls who seem doomed to live a worthwhile life belonging to this club, this union, and that associession. Vlusicai Interlude 10 QhtnjL. t% -www , ifc e ? w -« C4A-fcw 7 « vL. 3 c . • -£  5i 4 J 75 C ' r ° ' Co ££ul i - u i . . Ladies and gentlemen, each week the makers of Textbook Cookies ( He Who Reads May Eat ) present for your entertainment one of the world ' s great dramas. Tonight we bring you Loi ' e In A Mist, the dramatic story of a girl who loved, not wisely, but too well. We are lortunate in having with us that famous actor, i I f A John L. Slewis, who will portray the leading I £TCc LTC Ol tf IC vlP role of Jim Smith, fiance of Jane Cadwalader, played by Mabel Traybel. In addition to the leading players, there is a large supporting cast. As the scene opens, the lovers are in Jane s home, and are quarreling hotly. Jane: Darling, I do want to marry you, but 1 cant — im (slowly, emphasizing each word): You ve got to fight for what you want! You ve got to fight for your rights. (At once there is a large uproar in the studio . . . crashes and shouts.) Shouts: We want the Tarzan playJ Dear Brutusl (Sound of feet shuffling and tap-dancing.) Chorus: Were the Sneaks, ha, Ka, From the Greeks, ha, ha. Tranio: Quiet! Quiet! Why the racket out in front? Where do you think you are — borne; ' Linda: Let s have some fun in this house before you leave it! All I want, by way of enter- tainment, is just one good tap-dancer. Julia: Isn t it marvelous? — oh what a New Year! Announcer : Please, please! Quiet! What s wrong! Agi (interrupting): No, your highness. If you will permit me to say so, this is the happiest night of my life. . . . Vega and Capella may be seen to best advantage tonight. Alexandra: What is Vega? Agi: A green star which is a thousand times brighter than the sun. Guiderius: Fear no more the heat o the sun! Simo: The sun is always with us just like death and taxes. Announcer: Please, please . . . True-olue Harold and Little Nell (singing loud- ly): On a Bicycle Built for Two. Messenger: Pentheus lay on the ground utter- ing a thousand groans, for he realized that death was near . . . his mother was the first to begin the sacrifice . . . she seized his right arm, and bracing her feet against his miser- able thigh, pulled off his shoulder . . . and as for his head, the mother seized it. (Continued on Page 82) 12 Highlights in the ears 1 News 933- ' 934 OCTOBER 1Q . . . Parade Night festivities, absent from the campus the previous year, were resumed. The freshman song, to the tune of The Old Grey Mare , was parodied by sopho- mores, one of whom discovered the tune and words by eavesdropping on Wyndham roof. OCTOBER lj . . . Freshmen received Ian- terns from sophomores in the dignified and tra- ditional Lantern Night ceremony in the Cloisters. OCTOBER 16 . . . Jane Addams, in the first of the Anna Howard Shaw Memorial lectures, inaugurated a celebrity-studded lecture season, including such speakers as Vera Micheles Dean, James Stephens, Edna St. Vincent Mil- lay, Alexander WooIIcott, Shane Leslie, Clay- ton Hamilton, Stephen Vincent Benet, Dhan Copal Mul erji and Dr. Arthur H. Compton. OCTOBER 21 ... A reception attended by QOO alumnae was given President-emeritus M. Carey Thomas upon the occasion of the open- ing of the Deanery as an alumnae house. Undergraduates gathered to cheer the retired President as she returned to the campus. OCTOBER 25 . . . Flash! Class of 1937 largest in ten years, had high smoking and sleeping percentage and potentially good pos- ture, statistics showed. OCTOBER 51 . . . The freshmen were given a scavenger hunt by the seniors, and the prize won by the Hardenbergh - Jackson - MuIIer - Seltzer team. Included in the list of articles to be procured were Mrs. James Chadwick-Collins in evening dress and baby bonnet, members of the faculty in red neckties, mousetraps, empty beer bottles and live dogs. NOVEMBER 7 . . . Flash! Plug-in radios lawful. Miss Park announced, causing sighs of reliel among those who had heretofore con- cealed them in fireplaces and large flower vases. DECEMBER 20 . . . Flash! Plan lor a comprehensive examination in the major field proposed by Curriculum Committee. To test the power of the students to use and apply the information which they have gathered from courses and reading, said Mrs. Manning in a News statement. DECEMBER and JANUARY . . . Interest in Katherine Hepburn ran high, what with her successful picture. Little Women, her very bad performance in a worse play, The Lake, and a Screenlana Magazine article referring to Bryn Mawr s soaring eagle. FEBRUARY 24 . . . Those freshmen who passed succesfully through ordeal by bluebook put on a melodram a, Never Darken My Door Again, which was highly praised. Sophomores failed to discover the class animal, a small green turtle. MAY 1 . . . Splendid weather made memor- able the first Little May Day to be enjoyed by the Class of 1957. Hoop-rolling, songs, sau- sage and strawberries had their parts in the tra- ditional festival. MAY 11-12 . . . The Glee Club was ac- corded plaudits for its production of The Gon- doliers, in which many of the Class ol 1937 had minor roles. 14 y our 1 News Commentator 1954- ' 955 iP)R- WELLS and Mrs. Dean gave the Shaw lectures — which was fine, because then everyone knew everything about the Interna- tional Situation. . . . At long last, permission to nave loud-speaker radios was given. . . . Some changes were made in the Summer Camp — now we don ' t know whether it is Bates House at Long Branch or the B. M. Summer Camp at Avalon— but we think it ' s fine for the kid- dies. . . . Gertrude Stein came, came Gertrude Stein— the whole world turned out, motivated by intellectual curiosity, morbid curiosity, idle curiosity, or just curiosity— we learned that poetry is loving the name of anything and prose is the emotional balance of paragraphs the unemotional balance of sentences— we ve been mulling that over and over ever since. . . . Dr. Leary announced that the freshmen smoked very little— wait until they get to be sopho- mores is all we had to say. . . . Varsity Draroat decided to give Cymbelme— we wondered about it vaguely when we saw it— but decided that it was probably meant to be a noble ex periment and who were we to question Shakespeare or Varsity Dramat. . . . Everyone got excited be- cause everyone else had developed a passion for spinach at tea-time— a trend which surely indicated something. . . . Mrs. Slade came to break the news gently about the drive— we thought— nay, we knew— that $l,ooo,000 was a mighty sum— but since they didn ' t ask us for cash, we saw no harm in just signing little paper cards. . . . Along about this time, the college in general became slightly feverish in the cause of Peace— some of us were rabid on the subject, while others were apathetic paci- fists—but we all thought Peace Demonstrations were fine things indeed, and anyhow we got a cut. . . . The Viennese Choir Boys came— we heard and gooed and gurgled about them for days. . . . We covered ourselves with glory by setting a new record for hygiene boners. . . . We learned that Madame Sikilianos was go- ing to produce the Bacchae — which gave us something about which to speculate — nor were we disappointed . . . The News began to thun- der the pros and cons of giving Big May Day —we said yes we would be in it— in fact, we insisted that we be given the chance. . . . We thought Freshman Show was grand— almost as good as ours, in the last analysis. ... A novel note was struck during the winter when agitators agitated about Improving Library Etiquette. . . . W e were only beginning to recover from the nervous strain of falling over Fortune ' s candid cameraman at every step, when Vogue ' s inquiring reporter began to be- leager us at every turn. . . The Faculty pre- sented us with Much Ado but Not for Noth- ing you will recall that 27 of us had to be carried out on stretchers after Mrs. Manning appeared as a Bird in a Gilded Cage. ... A. MacLeish came to lecture— everyone resolved to read Conquistador during the summer. . . . Little May Day was rainy— but in spite of it all the glorious voices of the Sophomore Seren- aders were only the slightest bit flat. . . . Glee Club did Pirates of Penzance in a superlative way. — and the dance which followed was in turn followed by a wild suggestion that in the future we have two staglines— this proposal was received rather coldly. . . . We took any num- ber of final examinations and passed some 01 them. . . . As a fit finale, we did our good deed for the year and, by our indefatigable labors, managed to get our dear Sister Class gradu- ated in fine style. 16 Tho to the greene wood they speeden hem To fetchen home May with their musicall: And home they bringen in a royall throne, Crowned as King; and his queene attone. v ,;,. w Upon the first of May . . . Their legs do never fail, They nimbly Their legs do ply, And bravely try The victory. In honor o th milking pail. Dr ynmawrcn or lime f Tt ' 935- ' 936 This is the Brynmawrch of Time 1 his is the first of November, 1955, late in the afternoon. Paoli Local jammed. Bryn Mawr taxis swamped. Campus over-run with strange, excited women. Bryn Mawr celebrates its fiftieth birthday. Why, Jane! Why, Mary! I didn t dream I ' d find you here! Nor I you! But isn ' t it wonderful to be back? Isn t it? The same old fog and rain — I revel in it; and Taylor tower! Yes, Taylor tower! (Both) Taylor tower! Goodnart Hall ihe same evening. The tri- umph of education is revealed. Cornelia Otis Skinner, dressed like a schoolgirl of the Nine- ties, monologues on the struggle between love and education in her soul. Miss Park shows pictures on the screen of education on the Bryn Mawr campus battling greater odds than love. Taylor when almost nothing else but Taylor was. Merion without any closets. Students who were pioneers and wore a lot of clothes. But again, education wins. And now, lifty years after, it dons its laurels. November eighth. Another birthday makes history. But what birthday it is, is a philo- sophical question: whether it s the birthday before the first or the first itself. Or if it s both, then it s the second, since one and one make two. But the prolundities of the situa- tion are quite proper, since the birthday be- longs to Judith Weiss, whose father can settle it lor her. Today, December nineteenth, a memorial service is held in Ooodhart for President J nomas, who died on December fourth. It is in accordance with her own wishes, just as the interment of her ashes this morning in the cloisters of the Library was her wish. The col- lege is her monument. January sixth it is now. Time marches on. Bryn Mawr Summer School to return to campus, Miss Park announces today. Whether agreement will be permanent, no one can tell, she says, but: It would be a great mistake for Bryn Mawr to lend itself to the disintegrating force in American life which keeps people of differing opinions from working together in a harmoni- ous way. January still, but May is just around the corner, being a Big May Day May. Listen to this: Jane, have you made any flowers today? Oh, Mary, look, we have some yellow paper now! I just couldn t face any more of that pink stuff! Some one tell me quick! What do I do with the wires when I get this far? ' Hurray, I ve made a carnation! Simple! Ruffle the edges and there it is! A thing of beauty and a joy forever. Or hear this discussion of royalty, most ler- tile of themes. I don ' t care. I m all for Marilyn. You have to have some one who can act to be May Queen. ' (Continued on Page So) 20 back = to = roctry I lour ov lea = lime Vlei ody Good-afternoon, my companions of the Tea-Time Hour. We Back-to-Poetry- ites have a marvelous discovery to report to you — a schizophrenic poet. He is going to recite to you today an ode composed in one of his best schizophrenic moods, inspired by the May Day celebration held recently at one of our great eastern institutions of aesthetic culture. Mr. Kettle-Schillev: Whenas green May returns the sun. And morning dew shines clear. Then up. then up when day s begun. The Bryn Mawr girls appear. ith ruff and puff, with silk and say. With plumes and bells and gold. Behind the flowery May pole they Their way with dancing hold. (Beneath the rose cheek, the yellow grease paint Smearing with the warmth, oozing, sweating, Like butter melting on an unwashed dish. Coating the cold spinach and the rotting fish. Mackerel, the dark-fleshed mackerel, The mackerel.) (Two white oxen bothered with crepe paper flowers Sullenly drag the pole, remembering the Clean squareness of their prize stalls in barns Built o( cement and steel in Illinois, or Idaho, Or the trim red Gothic of New Hampshire and Vermont. Remembering too the crowding, shaking, smelly dark. The noisy, swiftly moving dark. Ol the long freight-trains and the trucks and the station in Philadelphia. I here s Marian, whom Robin weds: I here s England s Saint George true; I here Pu k. who fastens asses heads Where asses head-, are due. I hey .ill join in a merry i i 1 1 _ ' . I ley ho. hey nonny-no, 1 1 I i ' i the May Queen they do sing, I ley ho. hey nonny-no, Ma I ).i i .1 pretty . p etty thinr. (Eumenides, the lair Eumenides — My ( rod, why doesn t she answer her cue. The sun wills, the earth spots, the briars scratch. My God, why doesn I she answer her cue. Rolls choke, beards stick, helmets press, Whal would I give lor a cigarette! Cigarette, cigarette, Eumenides, Blasl Eumenides, cigarettel) (Over, il s over. ( live me a bed. Pillows, dark, pillows, ih.ii make me Forget Pebbles in my shoes, dust, heat, sweat, I ull, hoi mobs, Vile orangeade, I ' illows ih. it make me forgel ' ) Ma) I .i i« ,, pretty . pretty thing] ' i Last Vlinute J News Masl asnes 1956- 937 Return of senior class with cries of We ' re guinea pigs, that s what we are, guinea pigs! to a campus apparently holding little promise and much threat . . . lethargic attitude soon dispelled by pre-election flurry stimulated by the News questionnaire (which fared almost as well as the Literary Digest Poll) and bv the political meeting in the Gym . . . culmination of all hysteria in election night mass meeting complete with band, torchlight parade and effigies. . . . Interest in international affairs spurred on by Mr. Fenwick ' s appointment as delegate to the Inter-American Conference for the Maintenance of Peace. . . . James G. Mac- Donald s lecture in the Deanery, throwing everyone in a swivet over the imminence of war. . . . Mrs. Barbara Wootton explaining Social Trends in Contemporary England. The Shan-Kar Ballet, Andres Segovia ' s guitar recital, the Myra Hess concert and Cornelia Otis Skinner s performance, headliners on the entertainment front. . . . Varsity Players ' Holi- day; the Glee Club ' s Mikado; the Latin play, 1 he Little Spook; the French Clubs Ecole des Maris; the fall and spring one-act plays - — all highly successful amusement. Regret for the retirements of Miss Georgi- anna Goddard King, Head of the Department of History of Art, and of Dr. Rufus Jones, President of the Board of Trustees, both of whose names have become inseparably con- nected with Bryn Mawr. ... A fitting successor to Dr. Jones found in Charles J. Rhoads, son ol the first President of the college. earlong excitement over the Spanish war, provoking hitherto unsuspected communist or fascist tendencies . . . the radios blaring forth all the rumors and conjectures about the abdi- cation and then, at last, the event itself . . . the Ohio flood, brought close to home by those whose families were in it. Innovations seen in: the series of eight lec- tures On the Nature of Man, an inter-depart- mental project suggested and carried out by Mr. Helson, Mr. McKinnon and Mr. W ' eiss . . . the new course in stagecraft given by Mr. Wyckoff . . . the Alumnae Weekend . . . the hazardous lessons in ski-ing and social danc- ing in the Gym . . . installation of the com- prehensive system in all departments. Most exciting news of the year: Miss Park s announcement on March 2 of the four-point program for disposition of the Fiftieth Anni- versary Fund . . . the erection of a new science building for geology and chemistry, begun this spring; a new wing of the Library for the Art and Archeology Departments; plans for a new dormitory and increased enrollment; the ap- pointment of Mrs. James Chadwick-Colli ns as Director-at-Large of the college. . . . The atti- tude that We have witnessed great events, seen among the undergraduates following the announcement. Little May Day for the last time, and its accompanying mathematical and scientific problems of: 1) how to divide three hoops among eight people, and 2) how to keep a hoop rolling on the greensward - or anywhere else, for that matter. The last Spring Vacation — turned into a frantic reading period . . . Professor-emeritus Kittredge s brilliant lecture on Shakespeare ' s Villains . . . the final March on Comprehensives . . . the aftermath and a general we-who-have- aheady-died-salute-you feeling rampant . . . June and the senior class listening blissfully to Dr. John Edgar Park and Dr. Abraham Flexner delivering the Baccalaureate and Commencement addresses. 1Q35-1934 CLASS OFFICERS President Smith Vice-President Hardenberch Secretary Brown Song A lis tress Ferrer ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Assistant Secretary Forbes BRYN MAWR LEAGUE Sunday Services Assistant Brown Americanizatioi Thomson i avert ord Community Center Dickey THE COLLEGE NEWS Editorial Board ...Brown, Fisher, Lyle, Marbury, Rose FRENCH CLUB Treasurer HuTCHINGS FRESHMAN SHOW Director Rose Business Manager Jackson THE LANTERN Editorial Board SteINHARDI SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Executive Board Brown, Tom: I INDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION ■ ilii ■ Board I IaRDENBERGH. RoSI Board VARSITY PLAY1 RS Evans, Iackson, Seltzer i r, 1-1935 ( I ss ( )| FI I RS dent Rosi V - Pre ident Brown tary Evans Song Mltlrett I RRi R 23 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Secretary Evans Sophomore Member Wilder BRYN MAWR LEAGUE Religious Meetings Committee Brown An ericanization Thomson Haverforcl Community Center S afford THE COLLEGE NEWS Editorial Board Brown, Fisher, Houck, Lyle, Marbury, Peters, Rose FRENCH CLUB Secretary -Treasurer Hutchincs THE LANTERN Editorial Board Steinhardt SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Treasurer Colbron Executive Board Brown, Tobin UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION Treasurer Hardenberch Sophomore Member Rose UNDERGRADUATE COMMITTEE ON ENTERTAINMENTS Hall Representatives Cluett, Harvey, Jackson, Marbury, Reed mw Board. VARSITY PLAYERS Evans, Jackson, Seltzer CLASS OFFICERS President Hardenberch Vice-President Tobin Secretary Washburn Song Mistress Ferrer ART CLUB President Muller Vice-President Rose Treasurer Dickey 24 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Vice-President Washburn Treasurer Evans BRYN MAVVR LEAGUE Religious Meetings Committee Brown, Cluett Bryn Mawr Camp Assistant Reed Publicity Stone CHOIR M anager .Ma THE COLLEGE NEWS Copy Editor Marbury News Editor Fisher Sports Editors Evans, Kimberly Editorial Board Hutchings, Lyle Business Board Stone FRENCH CLUB President Hutchings GLEE CLUB Secretary and Business Manager Lacy INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS CLUB Secretary -Treasurer Hutchings THE LANTERN Editorial Board Lyle Business Manager Tobin Assistant Colbron SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION Secretary Fultz Executive Board Brooks, Colbron, Tobin Advisory Board KlMBERLI I INDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION Secretary Cluett Advisory Board I Lardenbergh, Wilder In (lunge | Pictures and Exhibitions Lamson I INDERGRADI ' A IF COMMITTEE ON ENTERTAINMENTS I lull Representatives Fisher, Mam. Meyer, Safford, Washbi UN VARSITY PI YI MS President P sl I ' ,,,, ad ....Colbron, Muller, Sei rzER 1936-1957 CLASS OFFICERS President Kimberly V ice-President and Treasurer Washburn Secretary Fultz Song Mistress Ferrer ART CLUB President Muller Vice-President Rose ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION President Evans BRYN MAWR LEAGUE President Brown Bryn Mawr Camp Reed Industrial Group Committee Flanders Summer School Committee Lyle Sunday Chapel Committee Cluett CHOIR Manager Marean THE COLLEGE NEWS Editor-in-Chief Fisher News Editor Simpson Editorial Board Hutchings Business Manager Allinson Assistant Stengel FRENCH CLUB President Hutchings GLEE CLUB President Ferrer Secretary and Business Manager Lacy THE LANTERN Editor-in-Chief Lyle Editorial Board Steinhardt Business Manager Tobin SELF-GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION President Colbron Vice-President Tobin Executive Board Brooks Advisory Board Ham, Huebner, Washburn, Wilder 26 UNDERGRADUATE ASSOCIATION President Hardenbergh Vice-President Brooks Head Usher Livingston In Charge of Pictures and Exhibitions Lamson New Book Room Committee Safeord UNDERGRADUATE COMMITTEE ON ENTERTAINMENTS President of Undergraduate Association.... Hardenbergh Hall Representatives Kimberly. Rose, Smith VARSITY PLAYERS President Rose Board Hemphill. Muller, Seltzer ATHLETICS-VARSITY TEAMS College Blazer— Evans, Jackson, Smith Basketball i KSON I956-ig37 Larned 1933-1935 Smith 1936-1937 Washbi rn 1936-1937 ha key Bright 1933 1934, 1933-1937 Evans 1953-1957 C rRATWK K 1951- 1955 193 I 1937 I ■ ' 1933 1933 Smith 1933 1937 v imming 1936 1937 I 1934 1937 Simpson 1933 1937 Woodw M ' i 1933 1937 i-i,i,, ' ■ ■ ■ iv ii k 1055 iq3 i Iaci ••• 1933 1935 27 ¥ v ■ w I 1 II Ih 1 1 1 vf BLjL r 1 0) ■j a l. ' W 7 ' Acnes Allinson ommy Rose f rii 1 1 m ' Bai dw in. Jr. Elisabeth Sloan Ballard Bets Katherine Elizabeth Barnard Louisa Bright Lou I I 1 w.i ill RoBI Ml BlNGAI Betty Letitia Brown Tish Rachel Worthington Brooks Brooksie 1 1 an Marvine Cluett Clue 1 1 im |(, ( !oi DRON Ween Louise Sherman Colwell Sherm Helen Elizabeth Cotton I I 1 m IH LoUISI I ) is l fl I. nil I ( )l ISI A I III l( II IN I )|( ' M Virginia Dorsey Jinny Janet Virginia Dieiil Mary-Louise Eddy Barbara Campisii.i. IJi m n Bobbie Sylvia Hathaway Evans, Jr. Syb Lucille Fawcett Lucky Helen Frances Fisher M Mill lid Nl ' I I RRI R Ren Amelia Forbes Foroesv Mary Sampson Flanders Lillian Jane Fulton Fufty S k mi Ann I i i 1 I nltzv Marian Elizabeth Gamble Lisa Gratwick I ll I I S I 111 IM ( lit f Madci Nathan I I as !- - Esther Hardenbergh Estie Josephine Bond Ham Jo Elizabeth Holzworth Beltv SoPHll I )oNALDSON I If MPI Dorothy Blake Hood Dot p Iarcaret Hetherincton Houck Peggy Mary Hinckley Hutchings I i in i El 1 VBI Ml Mm BNI K I )uffll If Margaret Gracie Jackson Peggy Selma Inc ber Kathryn Moss Jacoby Kappy .mim Williamson Ioiinson Itilinu v Mary Beirne Jones Virginia Marie Jussen I i i I li i n KlMDI hi i i K i ( low King Margaret Robinson Lacy- Katharine Selden Kniskern Whiskey Virginia Hall Laltz Bunny II N Villi mi in Lamson Lammie Ruth Levi Mary Dewhurst Lewis Lew Mary Livingston MaRGARI I SpRAGI I I IPPINI ii Elizabeth Duncan Lvle Dick Mary Elizabeth Lloyd Beffv Jeanne Macomber Mac Anni I skik Ogli Marburg Merb Lois Marean Alice Frances Martin Mar Meyer Molly ( )l (, Mill IK ( )lgish Charlotte Townsend Peirce Ch.uch.ie Laura Marion Musser Lolly Janet Marie Phelps Mam Idelle Peters Peter Mary Lee Powell M. Lee Mary Elizabeth Reed Betty Anne Legate Roberts I i i II I F ri i V| DINI RlTTER Lu Winifred Bollons S afford Winnie Edith Rose Rosie Emma Zimmerman Scott Scoliy Is Mil III M VRC MM I Si I l l l( Elisabeth Jane Simpson Eleanor Cope Smith El I ' n ii Asm Simmon li A. M i(i. ki I I i ii USE Si ARK Peggy Louise Eugenia Stengel Leigh Davis Steinhardt Iii i I .it St Laura Gamble Thomson Sonnv Eleanore Flora Tobin Toby Elaine Armstrong Vall-Spinosa Spinny Virginia Johnstone Walker Gina I li M ' n 1 1 Varbalow nenchy Flora Sylvia Wernick Elizabeth Washburn Libby Dorothea Fales Wilder Dot w [ v i ill I VRI I WOODW VRD ooclie Amelia Kennard Wright H ' oat Cornelia Ann Wyckoff Nini Vlissing L ersons Keport Frances Waples Andrews Marion Presocia Archbald Juliet Catharine Baldwin Margaret C. Bell Marjorie Allis Bell Jane Stott Blaffer Nora Iasigi Bullitt Jehanne Elliott Burch Dorothy Cole Phyllis Anne Dubsky Anne Bowen Edwards Lucene Marguerite Fergus Jean Rendigs Flach Hope Alva Cimbel Alice Mary Graves Alice Ramsey Hamilt on Helen Brandebury Harvey Mary Reed Harwood Elizabeth Ouellette Hoyt Penelope Engelbert Hunter Anne Elliott Kremer Emma Elizabeth Larned Marjorie Williams Lord Kate Emery Maury MISSING- = fiqqb.wvro Pauline Foster Reed Alethea Stewart Robinson Edith Eileen Sicler Barbara Elizabeth Sims Louise Emily Steinhart Cordelia Stone Jane Watson In Viemoria in ALMA Ol ILL January 29 LM e nly II t934 7.0 yearbook editorial board Editor-in-Chief, Anne Marbury Assistants Elizabeth Duncan Lyle Betty Anne Stainton Business Manager, Alice Gore King Assistants Josephine Bond Ham Lucy Huxley Kimberly Margaret Hetherington Houck Janet Marie Phelps Art Editor, Sophie Donaldson Hemphill We wish to thank Ruth Woodward, ' 37, and Doris Turner, 30, for their help in photography. Editorial acknowledgment to Geraldine E. Rhoads, 33, for her suggestion of the radio theme of this book. THE RECORD SHOP R.C.A. VICTOR — CAPEHART — PHILCO RADIO — PHONOGRAPH SALES AND SERVICE PORTABLE INSTRUMENTS May we have the pleasure of demonstrating these instruments to you at our acoustically treated showrooms. The most sophisticated records in town as well as all standard recordings and many importations. THE RECORD SHOP 247 South 15th Street Philadelphia Jane Tooher Sport Clothes SCHOOL — COLLEGE — CAMP 711 BOYLSTON STREET BOSTON, MASS. Gymnasium Garments Regulation College Blazer (Imported Expressly for Bryn Mawr College) Official Outfitter for Bryn Mawr College MAKERS OF THE OFFICIAL BRYN MAWR COLLEGE RINGS The brochure Gifts mailed upon request — from which may be selected distinctive Wedding, Birthday, Graduation and other Gifts. School Rings, Emblems, Charms and Trophies of the Better Kind BANKS BlDD AP J - i,hs S ' a«„ ne Established 1832 % 1218 Chestnut Street Philadelphia TO THE CLASS OF ' 37: The Sun offers congratulations to those receiving the degrees which a Bryn Mawr president once de- scribed as equal to Phi Beta Kappa membership. The high standard of scholarship long identified with Bryn Mawr and the extensive record of ac- complishments which has distin- guished its alumnae, should add both momentum and incentive as you travel toward future goals. On the way, you will find The Sun — a newspaper for alert, intelli- gent people — helpful and interest- ing. It, too, has a distinguished record of achievements. This common bond makes it par- ticularly appropriate for The Sun to wish happiness and success to Bryn Mawr ' s Class of ' 37. ©be an 77 COZY-REST COFFIN PROGRAM (Continued from Page g) anguish. The fearful noises rose to an un- bearable crescendo. There was a crash as if the earth were shattered in atoms. In the dust I was flung round and round as if caught by a whirlwind. Finally, however, the fragments settled. I was standing alone on what had once been the Bryn Mawr campus, but Taylor, the Library, Pembroke, Merion, all the buildings, were lying in broken heaps on the ground. Scattered bones and mangled bodies lay in the wreckage. I only seemed alive. My mind, of course, was dazed, but never- theless, I forced myself to consider the situ- ation. At once it became evident to me what had occurred. I had not simply satisfied the appetite of the spirit. I had more than satisfied him; I had destroyed him with abundance. He had eaten and burst and was annihilated. No more did he exist; no more did I have power. Alas! alas! I was undone. There is no hope for my restoration, and day and night I remem- ber my guilt for the innocent. Thank you, Mrs. Manning. This is Station VV-O-E. You have just listened to the Cozy- Rest-Coffin program. THE JUNIOR CLASS When I ' m not thank ' d at all, I ' m thank ' d enough; I ' ve done my duty, and I ' ve done no more. Henry Fielding: Tom Thumb the Great — Act I. 78 llll if I r-lOIBBK M fcM , . . William Penn House, Fair-mount Par The founder of a fortune, like the founder of a Commonwealth or of a College, expects his creation to endure. Since 1865, many individ ' uals have utilized Provident trust experience in planning their estate affairs. 7!i ©£ meatsLMqu mbms wti paltry 402-404 N. Second Street Philadelphia BRYN MAWR COLLEGE BOOK SHOP BOOKS STATIONERY LENDING LIBRARY CANDY AND COOKIES Pro its Aid Scholarship Fund Compliments of BRYN MAWR NEWS AGENCY 844 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. Bryn Mawr 1056 Margaret J. Smith Cosmetician Phone Bryn Mawr 809 Bryn Mawr Marinello Salon NATIONAL BANK BUILDING BRYN MAWR, PA. Permanent Waving Beauty Craft in All Its Branches BRYNMAWRCH OF TIME (Continued from Page 2oj Well, so can Clementine act. And think of her blond hairl Yards long, I swear. Not to say anything of her nose, which is just perfect. ' Whoever will notice her nose? By the time she has that silly crown of apple blossoms on . . . Silly? Blasphemy! Don t you know the Bryn Mawr creed? All that is of or pertaineth to May Day, Big or Little, is sacred. February and March. Time marches on again. Mr. I. A. Richards delivers the six Flexner lectures on the Theory of Rhetoric. Phrases which dismay the English majors re- sound in Goodhart: Words interinanimate each other. Meaning is delegated efficacy. Thought is metaphor. Life itself is meta- phor. ' April. Here s something more popular than theories of rhetoric. Home Fire Division ol Veterans of Future Wars founded on campus. Princeton division visits supporters here. There ' s a torch light procession. Bands, baby carriages, banners. Here they come! Lay-ette before the people! ' Women, it is your duty to knit the noble socks of patriotism! =fc £ Si May at last. Little May Day. Big News. Leigh Steinhardt wins the Hinchman Memor- ial Scholarship. Big May Day. No bigger news, but crowds, delirium, and one reverberating, universal cry: To the May Pole let us on! %. i£ ss % Time marches on indeed. Graduation comes, the seniors leave, and the juniors are seniors. And Time still marches on SO HI ABBOTTS The Standard of fine Quality in ICE CREAM Founded 1865 Seventy-Third Year BUSINESS TRAINING Courses offer thor- ough preparation for the young woman who intends to make business her career. Summer session of six weeks be- gins July 6. Fall ter i, Sept. 7. For information address Registrar PEIRCE SCHOOL 14 4 Pine Street Phila., Pa. CHARTERED BUSES FOR ALL OCCASIONS GREYHOUND AGENT Arommink Transportation Co. Bryn Mawr 1280 Boulevard 3100 BRYN MAWR COLLEGE INN AND TEA ROOM Service 8:00 A.M.-7:30 P.M. Daily and Sunday Student Charge Accounts THE PRINTING MACHINERY CO. Manufacturers of Printers Plate Mounting Bases CINCINNATI, OHIO THEATRE OF THE AIR (Continued from Page 12 (Enter Guiaerius with Cloton s head.) Guiderius: This Cloton was a fool, an empty purse. Blues Singer: There ain t no good in men . . . (There is a sudden silence, then:) Announcer: As a result or unforeseen circum- stances arising from the sabotage of radio performers striking for the right to collective bargaining in the choice of plays, the I ext- book Cookie hour has been cancelled for the present. 82 Compliments of THE CLASS OF 1939 It is more blessed to give than to receive. ACTS XX: 35 83 When you go to town . . . For a flying trip or a week-end, you ' ll like staying at Allerton. It ' s a good address, con- venient to the shopping district and the bright lights . . . and you ' ll enjoy the gay, con- genial atmosphere, the many interesting things always going on. Game rooms. Music rooms. Com- fortable lounges. An inviting restau- rant. And facilities for entertaining your friends. Your own pleasant liv- ing-bedroom, with phone and maid service, can be had for as little as $2 a day. Write for booklet B which tells the whole Allerton story in pictures. Miss Grace B. Drake, Manager ALLERTON HOUSE FOR WOMEN 57th Street at Lexington Avenue New York, N. Y. SCHOOL OF NURSING OF YALE UNIVERSITY A PROFESSION FOR THE COLLEGE WOMAN The thirty months ' course, providing an intensive and varied experience through the case study method, leads to the degree of MASTER OF NURSING A Bachelor ' s degree in arts, science or philosophy from a college of approved standing is required for admission. A few scholarships available for students with advanced qualifications. For Catalogue and Information Address THE DEAN, YALE SCHOOL OF NURSING NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT KAY ' S GOWN SHOP Clothes for the Discriminating Miss and Matron ANTHONY WAYNE THEATRE BUILDING Wayne 1677 WAYNE, PA. Bryn Mawr 570 JEANNETT ' S BRYN MAWR FLOWER SHOP INC. 823 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr Flora! Ideas for All Occasions -THE GREEKS (Bryn Mawr Confectionery) Will welcome its new college friends and serve them as it has the class that passes on. Congratulations to 19 3 7 COMPLIMENTS OF The Haverford Pharmacy Haverford, Pa. A la sante de la classe de dix-neuf-cent-trente-sept. LE CERCLE FRANCAIS 84 FOR SMART DINNER AND SUPPER PARTIES - in New York it ' s the (oom 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 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 48lh A9ih Sis, 6:30 until 3 A. M. nightly -except Sundays . Dinner Entertainment 8:30 Stipper Entertainment 12:15 RESERVATIONS -CIRCLE 6-1400 , ROCKEFELLER CENTER ROOF 85 dp:lar studio ROCKEFELLER CENTER OFFICIAL PHOTOGRAPHER FOR BRYN MAWR COLLEGE YEAR BOOK S6 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 cob 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 it 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 DO VOL ' REMEMBER- Current Even I - ' I In- jov of getting a cut? Slewfool Aphrodite? Freshman Snow and animal consciousness? Snap i ourses ? Feminine stag lim- ? v i |)v singing Fire drills? 1 1. is ei lorrl dam es ' I is ing to ' ope ss ii b the lib ' ( last meetings ' . Deciding to slud) next week? Special permission? Comp!inie?its 0 A FRIEND Compliments of THE CHAMPION FIBER PAPER COMPANY 87 Arthur Murray School of Dancing New York, N. Y. Private, Group and Class Instruction in the Waltz, Fox-trot, Tango and Rhumba Chalfonte-Haddon Hall Branch Atlantic City, N. J. Herbert Ware Director Sj KITTY MciaftN fe sroft jweai KITTY MS-LEAN Correct Sport Clothes Bryn Mawr, Pa. PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS PAINTING ' SCULPTURE -ILLUSTRATION SUMMER SCHOOL Every opportunity for hard work and play out of doors in ideal environment. CH ESTER SPRI NGS, PA. CATALOG FROM JOSEPH B. FRASER, CURATOR WOULDN ' T YOU LIKE TO FORGET. Staying up all night? May Pole dancing? Being called to the Dean ' s office? Trying to find a nickel? Paying fines? Being campused? The day after vacation? Lab? Pay Day? Required courses? Condition exams? The busts in Taylor? Orals? Comprehensive reading? ..A NEW DREAM DRESS or May Day or Play Day I his is a dress to dance in on a Summer night ... a dress to wear to May Days or Class Days, gar- den parties or your best lriend s wedding. It has EVERYTHING! Bouitant charm and sublime flat- tery . . . Paris ideas and more than a hint ol sophistication. In sheer organza over taneta with veiled bows and tiny flowers — you have it in petal piiih (il yon re a brunette) or pale turquoise ( lor blondes). Sizes II lo 17. $19.95. Mimi Skop — rirsl r loo] Juniper. 1 Reg. I V I ' - ' l. Oil- IMIII A III I I ' lll 38 MOORE ' S PHARMACY Our name is guarantee of quality ' 810 Lincoln Highway 26 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania HOBSON OWENS Furniture ' Rugs - Lamps y ovehies of All Kinds 1017 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. FRANCES O ' CONNELL Dresses for All Graduation Festivities $7.95 to $29.50 831 Lancaster Avenue BRYN MAWR, PA. RICHARD STOCKTON BRYN MAWR PENNSYLVANIA Prints Sporting Books Gifts Phone: Bryn Mawr 252 CONNELLYS THE MAIN. LIN£ FLORISTS 1226 Lancaster Avenue ROSEMONT, PA. When you come to BRYN MAWR A Warm Welcome awaits you at MONTGOMERY INN on Montgomery Ave., 5 minutes from the College and P.R.R. Station A HOME AWAY FROM HOME and fine food, too Choice accommodations for transient a nd permanent guests Rates begin $2.50 MIMEOGRAPHING For prompt and accurate service phone HART HALL, INC. 825 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa Bryn Mawr 452 PARISIAN DRY CLEANERS We clean it or dye 869 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Bryn Mawr 1018 Compliments of one who has nothing to advertise. 90 ill TO GIVE THE CLASS OF 1937 A BOOK OF WHICH TO BE PROUD THE MERION PRESS Philip Atlee Livingston and Associates acted as General Publishers and Consultants in the preparation and printing of Kilocycles Printers also of THE COLLEGE NEWS THE FRESHMAN HANDBOOK THE LANTERN THE SONG BOOK Narberth 4 1 00 Cynwyd 8 1 1 LYON ARMOR, Incorporated Recognised Leaders in the Year Book Field were chosen by Mr. Livingston to execute the typography and printing 147 N. Tenth Street Philadelphia, Pa. Jahn Oilier Engraving Company Makers of Fine Printing Plates made the halftones which bring out the full value of the excellent Delar photography 817 West Washington Boulevard Chicago, 111. THE LIVINGSTON ORGANIZATION SPECIALIZES IN SCHOLASTIC PRINTING 92 i Names and Addresses or Olass Allinson, Acnes Town s End, West Chester, Pa. Baldwin, Rose Gillespy, Jr 2842 St. Johns Ave., Jacksonville, Fla. Ballard, Elisabeth Sloan 6 Keirf Rd., Hubbard Woods, 111. Barnard. Katherine Elizabeth 600 Columbia St., Pasadena, Calif. Bingay, Elizabeth Roberta Perrysville, Pa. Bright, Louisa Cedar Hill Farm, Reading, Pa. Brooks, Rachel Worthincton Centre St., Milton, Mass. Brown. Letitia ' Witch Hill, Topsfield, Mass. Cllett, Jean Marvine Pinewoods Ave., Troy, N. Y. Colbron, Barbara New Canaan, Conn. Colwell, Louise Sherman 510 Cynwyd Rd., Cynwyd, Pa. Cotton. Helen Elizabeth 16 Alveston St., Jamaica Plain, Mass. Davis, Elizabeth Louise 2828 Military Rd., Port Huron, Mich. Dickey, Louise Atherton Runnymede Orchards, Oxford, Pa. Diehl. Janet Virginia 211 Lambert Rd., Guilford. Baltimore. Md. Dorsey, Virginia 5014 Schuyler St., Germanlown, Philadelphia, Pa. Duncan. Barbara Campbell 353 JV. Parkview Ave., Bexley, Columbus. Ohio Eddy. Mary-Louise 80 Putnam St., Wesl Newton, Mass. Evans, Sylvia Hathaway, Jr Awbury, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. Fawcett, Lucille il8o Union St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Ferrer, Marie Irene 10 E. 66th St., New York City Fisher, Helen Frances 36 N. Wafcotf St., Salt Lake City, Utah Flanders, Mary Sampson 1 W. 2cl St., New York City Forbes. Amelia Hillside St.. Milton, Mass. Fulton, Lillian Jane 6 )i Jackson St., E. E., Pittsburgh, Pa. I 1 ltz, Sarah Ann 44 S. Wyoming Ave., Ardmore, Pa. Gamble, Marian Elizabeth 32 S. 58th St., West Philadelphia, Pa. Gratwick, Lisa 22 Cleveland Ave., Buffalo, N. Y. ( Iray, Helen Louise 372 Highland Ave., Ridgewood, N. J. Haas, Madgi atiian Ml. Kisco. N. Y. Ham. Josephine Bond Hilaire Rd.. St. Davids, Pa. HaRDENBERGH, Esther 66 Groveland Terrace. Minneapolis, Minn. Hemphill, Sophii Donaldson Lawyer ' s Hill, Elk Ridge, Md. Holzworth, Elizabeth 333 Westchester Ave.. Port Chester, N. Y. Hood, Dorothy Blaki 1 158 Marly n Rd., Overbrook, Pa. I l ' K. MaRCAREI HeTHERINGTON 9 Adams Ra., Schenectady. N. Y. Huebner, I. miii Elizabeth 3 6 S. . . 1 St., Philadelphia, Pa. II ' rcHiNcs, Mary Hinckley Packet Mail. Barnstable, Mass. InGBER, SeLMA 2231 N. r ,lsl St.. Philadelphia. Pa. l rhsos. MaRCAREI GrACII I )oi er. Mass. Iacoby, Kathryn Moss 63 :. g6th St., New York City Iohnson, I aim 1 Williamson c o Commander Johnson, U. S. S., Relief, San Pedro, Calif Jones, Mary Beirne Chanute Field, Rantoul, 11. Jussen, Virginia Marie 6945 Sheldon Close, Mariemont, Ciiu innati, Ohio Kimberly, Lucy Huxley 3 2 Overhdl Re ., Roland Park, Baltimore, Ma, King, Alice Gore 31 W. nth St., New York City Kniskern, Katharine Selden 1630 Berkeley Ave., Petersburg, Va. Lacy, Margaret Robinson 1640 Main St., Dubuque, Iowa Lamson, Jean Atherton 940 Sheridan Rd., Hubbard Woods, III. Lautz, Virginia Hall 427 Greenwood Blvd., Evanston, III. Levi, Ruth 174 Soldiers Place, Buffalo, N. Y. Lewis, Mary Dewhurst 1158 Hamptondale Rd., Hubbard Woods, III. Lippincott, Margaret Sprague io8 W. Wayne Ave., Wayne, Pa. Livingston, Mary 2iot Connecticut Ave., Washington, D. C. Lloyd, Mary Elizabeth 43 IV. James St., Hazleton, Pa. Lyle, Elizabeth Duncan Curtis Hotel, Lenox, Mass. Macomber, Jeanne 66 Crabtree Rd., Squantum, Mais. Marbury, Anne Tasker Ogle Laurel, Md. Marean, Lois 46 Brewster St., Cambridge, Mass. Martin, Alice Frances P. O. Box 17, Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Meyer, Mary Huntington, L. I., N. Y. Muller, Olga Tennis Place Apts., Forest Hills, N. Y. Musser, Laura Marion 380 S. Portage Path, Akron. Ohio Peirce, Charlotte Townsend Canterbury Farms, Warrenton, Va. Peters, Mary Idelle 12Q YWheeling Hill, Lancaster, Ohio Phelps, Janet Marie The Mermont Apts., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Powell, Mary Lee 83 Sparks St., Cambridge, Mass. Reed, Mary Elizabeth Far Country, R. D. 3, Norwich, Conn. Ritter, Lucille Geraldine 7 Kenmore Rd., Upper Darby, Pa. Roberts, Anne Legate ' 025 Humboldt St., Denver, Colo. Rose, Edith 24 Paseo de la Reforma, Mexico City, Mexico Safford, WWfred Bollons 303 Lowett Blvd., Houston, Tex. Scott, Emma Zimmerman 125 W. Ridge St., Lansford, Pa. Seltzer, Isabelle Margaret 5 f W. Tulpehocken St., Germantown, Phila., Pa. Simpson, Elisabeth Jane f2 Beechwood Place, Elizabeth, N. J. Smith, Eleanor Cope 423 Berkley Rd., Haverford, Pa. Stainton, Betty Anne 409 W. Lancaster Ave., Haverford, Pa. Stark, Margaret Louise 3(4 Pembroke Rd., Bala-Cynwyd, Pa. Steinhardt, Leigh Davis 33 E. 70th St., New York City Stengel, Louise Eugenia 3t23 Cleveland Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. Stern, Jill Lit 88 Central Park West, New York City Thomson, Laura Gamble 2620 Handasyde Ave., Hyde Park, Cincinnati, Ohio Tobin, Eleanore Flora 4907 Greenwood Ave., Chicago, III. Vall-Spinosa, Elaine Armstrong 1333 Market St., Parkersburg, W. Va. Varbalow, Henrietta 2602 Baird Blvd., Camden, N. J. Walker, Virginia Johnstone 2517 West End Ave., Nashville, Tenn. Washburn, Elizabeth 133 E. 82J St., New York City Wernick, Flora Sylvia 273 S. 6jd St., Philadelphia, Pa. Wilder, Dorothea Fales 124 E. 73a 1 St., New York City Woodward, Ruth Earle 491 High St., Fall River, Mass. Wright, Amelia Kennard Easton, Md. Wyckoff, Cornelia Ann 332 E. 87th St., New York City 94 finis


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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, 1935 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1936 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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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

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