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

 - Class of 1944

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1944 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 86 of the 1944 volume:

BRYN MAWR COLLEGE LIBRARY THIS BOOK IS THE GIFT OF THE CLASS OF 1344 f run v 1 awr 1944 • • • i 2 r Oo. ' Mi J J drws de c La aauna [■ rofeiior of f kiloiopki Page two ■4 1998(14 Page three HHHHHH oads ds Spell it with an A! It ' s a well-iced cake to some, hospital to others; one lover of antiques actually moved out. But Rhoads ' scholars love its bea- tific brightness, curves, angles, contours, pastel prettiness; dote on Rebecca, buzzers, mailboxes, elegant terrace, dining-room dances, basement smoker ' s plaid wall. (Sub-Freshmen escorts, please call this the ground floor. ) Proud possessors of a men ' s powder room, ping-pong table, heated floor in the smoker, we love watching the faculty wardens arrive in various stages of undress at Post K-12 during midnight drills. 44 ' s fads in Rhoads include bangs, fires, roof-slumber parties, watering the ivy, reports on those who have left. Our only tradition: we have no traditions! We ' ll be back to sit in the show-cases at last, read the john-door poems, scrape our knuckles on the screens opening windows, whiff that newly-polished-floor smell, and eat off the red china! Page six Page seven Jjorotnu Meatn i5c cm y jo an J ord (JSusch mann l hifllis f utk L ateS djarbara Arnn oe Page eight J arak =JLiuinqston JJ)auis am Mnne Jjonnallu L, i (L-ileen £5iodciett _- ' V .nciii Page nine Mnne J inQ J 4evii icj ra f da net =JLou,i$e J roopeS v- arbara -_vVm Ljrace Jjole J okief Page ten ijuett on i que cJ-anerei Q, orat ana £5armore fl? laciaii (L-ilen @- awara If t ' chou Jon yvlice r obie Page eleven jocelun l louak rrene J5ftieqeib, France 5 f utli Kt einer ' pieaetbera Page twelve cyLliiai r4oiviand J ivift ye 5 si e «_)£ one r4onora jrirmadqe -Jh ae J noma son Page thirteen Nearly everybody in Rockefeller reads the Inquirer — they also serve. Dr. Herben uses our signing-out book, and if you ' re good you can sit at the min- ister ' s table. Christmas pageants and Sophomore teas at Mid-years; Hymn to the Sun and wisteria in the spring; off-beats, polkas, and the piano all the time. You can always tell a Sophomore, but the whole hall moves the fur- niture down for the dances. We have owls in our arches and creeps in our catacombs and an invisible admirer who writes each morning to Rock-a-bye- Baby . Page fourteen It™. % 4 Hr r k MMl B jbori. Wa e Be ] ori$ rl lae v- amett jean rvlarie OSninn iKiith . Mlice JJi aua (L,lizabetk J)tockton C cimunds Page sixteen iKutk J eaal dinkel C tnelda vJladit one Melen J )onia (joidt man J rance5 (L-lizabeth yoli nson Page seventeen anon _y irk I rfeanelte f artha cU.epika UJorothi4 Mn nn I V I oilman. Page eighteen yvnn J raue S ti ' ClUM (J-jMu S zold C- tiza be in oi a w i i a ill zinJ — Annabel { [ en nvein Page nineteen JJenbiak Life in Denbigh may be a headache, but it never is a bore. Everlasting song prevails: dining-room music is boisterous, but the hall steps call for harmony — Shall I Wasting and Mavourneen and the rest. Center of all other social activities is the smoking room, a thing of beauty only before breakfast. Meal- time and mail-time bring Denbigh-dwellers from the Quiet, the Mezzanine, the Rabbit-hutch, the Chicken-coop, the Crow ' s Nest. They squabble over Terry and the Pirates, they theorize on religion, politics, matrimony, and, in the interests of the latter, follow their servicemen over land and sea on the world map above the mantel. When the men are actually on hand they are coerced into tunics and gaily paraded to the arena of the sport in season. Denbighites live as whimiscally as possible, ruled by work, appetite, and the daily horoscope. Page twenty ill Kyi, p cwt- . % eP Pajre twenty-one ULrqinia t raham JJorr aru jrranklin Ljrakam am (L.iizaoetk [■ Ickerina fwetnphi Wiminia f eed J (o, r$ T, er Page twenty-two (Ldith f koa as Mnne L ustis f- eter l atricia J aint cJ c awrence Page twenty-three r ancu vJ rown S crib, ner Arnn. Muckincloii -J i: l eneiope J 4oibrook J )initli praa ue Page twenty -four I liebe JenvSroeck _j , evens i nam Jaieiinlk J atlierine [ [Jamurst Jc appen Tl Page twenty-five j embwke l l edt Freshman Christmas banquet, and Show us the way to go home . . . Squirts of well-shaken cokes and a blizzard of soap-flakes; an irate Miss Ward descending at the appearance of dainty unmentionables in the window and Hallelujah! . . . Pern West ' s string has left the post. We ' re tired and we want to go to bed . . . but fake fire drills, birthday parties, and black nightgowns conspire to keep us awake. Then there ' s tea for Denbigh after the hockey classic, with the century ' s incomparable cheering section . . . We ' ve worked four years in vain To cultivate our brain We ' re full of education And feminine frustration . . . and the mail shortage doesn ' t help, new mailboxes notwithstanding . . . Venus isn ' t even calling ' 44 to the ' phone any more . . . but, despite traditional pooh-poohing, WE are glad we went to the Haverford Square Dance Fresh- man year. Incidentally, Why are the scrambled eggs at lunch always better . . . Page twenty-six I , Page twenty-seven am Chilis i5a rbara Denise Cy umbel cLuicia f u6ieii Meda • - ■■■ ? oLoui5e van Uaihenburak Monvood Page twenty-eight J-Jiana Daniel oLl ucas anain JWeiielman iieln (Elaine Jouin mm i e lacnenzie hi. Page twenty-nine = Loma sranet rr oHei V file S t4 in e ii4 r feu ton i osa tun cwitch Page thirty zm r v araaret Uolat t Uen L iendenin Ulitick l rlsciUa f iarce { villi tains Page thirty-one I ewibwke t a$ i 1944 AND ALL THAT Due to the Dining Room, Individual Responsibility, Other Causes, etc., Pembroke East is not Pembroke West. The daze of Pembroke East were very memorable, and there were many Causes: 1 . Great agitation was caused by Someone who forgot to wipe her feet before walking across the ceiling. (a) This was a Good Thing because it helped us to keep our feet on the ground. 2. The hall was made less crowded (naturally) by moving all beds into the corridors. The maids all said this was a Very Bad Thing. 3. A Senior handed in a paper two years late. This was a Good Thing, as it showed that Pembroke East was clearly Most Original Hall. Thus History came to a ? TEST: 1. What hall has the highest Inn bills? 2. Or people capable of staying there through three meals? 3. If Pembroke is East and Pembroke is West, is the twain on the twack going t o the University of Pennsylvania? (Answer without writing on either side of the paper.) Page thirty-two Deborah v«« L-aSiidiA i$ eth K-jamSon V- eS5le Ljrakam 4obion Page thirty-four Arudrcu 1 1 e ten J ir, mi jane i hvnlis J )mitk jane l emheAon Juneu Lsiadud f- enn l Unitridae Page thirty-five enon Rank hath its privileges, and as the oldest hall on campus we claim them: we shelter the oldest reuning class (1889!) ; and, although we Seniors are only 6 among 62, we claim our privileges: the Freshmen light our cigarettes and bring us after-dinner coffee (not forced labor, but cheerful loving de- ference to our Golden Age.) We must say we think we have the most dis- tinguished showcase on campus, complete with wallpaper. At times we re- gret our depleted condition, but it does make for an atmosphere of greater informality. We suspect Merion of being the most dissonant of halls, musi- cally speaking, and even the Freshman harmony can ' t drown out our rendi- tions. But then, we have our porter Al to sing Ave Maria at Christmas dinner. Merion is ideally situated, being in close proximity to the sun-bath- ing facilities of the Gym, as well as to the academic resources of Taylor. And, to date, only in Merion can the Bryn Mawr Radio Club ' s broadcasts be heard. Page thirty-six jean Afc cjneJ IDium Ljenrude d5ennett L c J atricia [ aul OSt fovun aeSar Page thirty-eight a via n J a u u.i ta brook j nicilla f icn Page thirty-nine V I on- Residents Early rising, a daily run: Paoli Local, where ' s the sun? Familiar faces on the train, Familiar scenes again, again. Our well-worn room in disarray: New Yorker covers on display, Milk bottles, cards, a cluttered floor, Announcements, lunches, by the score. Window exits when it ' s fair; Search for mail that isn ' t there. Christmas parties, dances, teas. We come and go just as we please. Evening trudge back to the train — Paoli Local, home again. Page forty nna j- ines VSn.sk in l utlt r aomi C-t oopei ' I ildred J eelef sfonath an Page forty-one jane cLoviiie oLt erlar oLila cJLabovuitz J atemt ein (L,ditn Warren, J ckmid Page forty-two • 4.. y«M f -. ' ?lC - -. 3 jrrench Arc md£ C es£ la vie qui va toujours — Vive la vie! Vive I ' amour. Thus the cabaret spirit of the French House asserts itself daily at 8:00 A. M. Our prestige was enhanced this year by Monsieur Peyre, innumerable French-Belgian artists hanging from the walls, and Nicky, our maid, who mastered the menu in French. A garden, billets- doux, magnolias, French bread, no hot water after 1 1 but all the esprit in the world — this is Wynd- ham par e xcellence, and if we ' ve forgotten any- thing it ' s only ourselves. artofi la Kooert-s Mlexander Virqinla J udleu J rmdronff Harriet Afiidreth J-J unn Page forty-four orvuin enqer J j rancei Mnn f arnSn C iniui J )noivden Mallain Juck Page forty-five fc T m0tti V . fc- vjerman J rc omse The £ awz verruckt rise up from slummery to the Aeolic chords of Pene- lope, with Schmucklein in the smoking room, inmates on the rug, idioms on the wall, Bach on both vies, and chocolate in the pot. Sudden disguise signi- fies Open White House and celebrities are bowed in with a blithe So schoen sie zu sehn. Birthday cakes and liverwurst sandwiches reward the valiant faculty who come to haul their German out of the dim past. Pre-dawn physical jerks counter- act the effects of a too- accessible icebox. And the leit motif of German House? . . . Warum soil eine Frau . . . CEN- SORED. Ilgllri l ar, ¥ J tuart i5lal?el(j am Suzanne L kadivich L atlierine vSmion Towler ■ipoii Page forty-seven tkarine cJLatta branch Viminla - auune Ljt race sfean, Aroopei Page forty-eight % ranpoide v argue file - l even u. PL L aro aget S)kaqt arqa ret (LSeehman J l ' )( in i r Page forty-nine panisk N ' c P ouise finds pioneering can be comic. Buck the gale from the smoking-room chim- ney, and it ' s look before you dash through the main hall in your Pjs. Twelve straight-backed chairs await replacement — oh, when will those comfy chairs come? Radio-vie features anything from Ta-ra-ra-boom-te-ay to Borrachita (antiphonal effects by courtesy of upstairs musicians.) Prim- itive methods prevail that first awful week: pointing gets the biscuits pass- ed and laughter is an international language. Squeaking floor and sur- realistic sheet-set immortalize the Christmas play. Fox furs at dinner mean it ' s spree time in Spanish house, and a pilgrimage to town is the signal that picture hunting season ' s on. Page fifty wim ' mia cU.ee f ixon anon cyLouise if feastadt Dolores _Jresinan S liueriL ein Page fifty-one am frmitrona (L-uitis I a - ' ncta i v lurnaa ' 7 kan jackson cce legated l irginia j- aqe =Louell V (els son Page fifty-two ■v.. «Cs -■ i -x - ' tt, %- - £ S -MMM h Page fifty-th ree Page fifty-four  tI 2 %r. ' • ' . ' ' tSZ- W I ... . ' ' .,... J The Coronation One if by land, two if by sea, And eighteen in the cloister pool will be. Page fifty-seven A lion among ladies is a most dreadful thing. Let up and light up Something is rotten in the state of Dalton. Life was so peaceful in the laundry Letters to Lucerne Page fifty-eight 4 J ,, I JM -- We have met the enemy, and they are ours. Woodman, spare that tree! ,v ' iV Xf I. - 3C have had a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was. Barmaids are diviner than mer- maids. The inner man. Page sixty Our Freshman show was The night has a thousand eyes Change of Emphasis Seen at Bryn Mawr During First Months of World War II U. S. WAR DECLAR l«V V cV c la S L sbeean n i ed for Cos L N ext prop 08 ot Vote Vet° et Gym is Redecorated Along Modern lines Holds Open House to Celebrate Us Rebnth « « FrencA Sai ors taA Gim «s, « , Greg ' s e Find Jitterbugs, Sunday Studying Strange .« OS V 3 x3° Program from WHAV Confirms Hopes for Future Mass Meeting Inaugurates the Alliance; Elects Executive Board, Outlines Plans TION STIRS CAMPUS Christina Grant Named as Dean of College; Taylor is Appointed Graduate School Dean ' ' Stage Door Given By Varsity Players And Harerford Club Fire in Dalton Attracts Crowd And Fire Brigades r Immediate War Is Opposed in Pol] lr A Slight Majority sse Mbl Bryn Mavvr Joins National Civilian Defense Efforts ■IBS Demand for College Graduates Stressed hvJMissJMcRruk. Spring, the sweet spring, is the year ' s pleasant king; My bonny lass she smileth Sing we and chant it MMm 4 { ' The Hired Help Miss Ward and friend Smilin ' through Stack-wacky Blessed are they that learn, for they shall be comforted. Us i K ■ AH fli 1 Placetne, domina? We are born to inquire after truth. N-J ClS K ft )K SM %} %. N k •Mf 1 a • lA Ltd (Lnd Speaking the unspoken words of parting, we thus say fond farewell to the untiring ivy. Heart finds heart as it never did in the smoking room bridge game and at last our cigarette ashes have turned to dust on Merion Green. Silver hairs can return to gold now that the brawl is over. We take with us our only recommendation — we are the perfect S. A., Lan- tern, and Garden Party Girl rolled into one. It all started Freshman year when we learned that Akoue meant Have a coke, stranger . Silently we filed out of the cloister chanting T. S. Eliot at sight. By February we had driven Haverford to glamor girls and booze because we were only biologically in- clined in a most specific way. Since then we have come to realize that Non- Being is, even on Wednesdays at ten-thirty when we are not sure whether we should go to the class to which we have just been. By pounding the side- walks for two semesters, we at last learned that science buildings are not the shortest distance between two halls. After four years the net result is a girl who automatcially says goodnight at two o ' clock and grabs a towel and coat when a bell rings. Come lasses and lads, take leave of your dads and all traditions that begin at five in the morning. Lives there a girl with soul so dead who after Parade Night to herself hasn ' t said, This is my own, my native head. Oh, to pet a dog again without wondering if he ' s the Freshman animal. Day is done, the race is run, we found a chair for garden party. Untwine your legs from metal poles, oh my soul. Cease all fight for credit in Joe ' s course in Gaelic. Lift up your hamburger from the Greeks, there is work to be done. Keep in mind the motto of the Inn: they also serve who only stand and wait on other tables. Douse your torches, but remember, the lantern man is right behind you. E. L. W. Page sixty-nine l jeawook S taW EDITOR Mary Franklin Graham PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR Marion Kirk EDITORIAL COMMITTEE Virginia Grace, Chairman jean Blum Patricia Brown Jean Brunn Joan Buschmann Ruth Alice Davis Hildreth Dunn Lucia Hedge, Assistant Chairman Ruth Segal Finkel Beth Garrison Mary Hemphill Virginia Reed Klopfer Penelope Smith Betty Szold BUSINESS MANAGER Janet Hoopes Barbara Nicholson, Business Assistant ADVERTISING MANAGER Louise Horwood CIRCULATION MANAGER Mary Ellis CIRCULATION COMMITTEE Marjorie Alexander Joan Buschmann Deborah Cassidy Mary Suzanne Chadwick Mary Anne Donnally Eckert Ruth Segal Finkel Virginia Reed Klopfer Virginia Nixon Priscilla Rich Lucia Hedge IN CHARGE OF SENIOR PICTURES Diana Lucas REPRESENTATIVES FROM 1945 Ellen Ustick Jeanne-Marie Lee Jean Alice Potter Harsimran Malik Alison Merrill Ex-officio Mary Suzanne Chadwick Page seventy J ormer l l lemh embers of the iaS5 Abell, Alice Sand Spring Road, Morristown, N. j. Armstrong, Cregor 45 E. 65th St., N. Y. C. Baker, Diana Old House, Frenchay (near Bristol) , England Barney, Gertrude Old Lyme, Conn. Benedict, Dora Atlantic Ave., Cohasset, Mass. Blattner, Ruth 5410 Wilkins Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Block, Jacqueline The Plaza, N. Y. C. Bolton, Gisela (Mrs. Daniel Hogan) S. Main St., Andover, Mass. Brown, Frances 25 E. Division St., Chicago, III. Browne, Dorothy (Mrs. Lloyd Shaffer) c o Mrs. Browne, Netherland House, Riverdale, N. Y. Burch, Katharine 6426 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Pa. Caner, Anne (Mrs. Paul K. Newhall) 8203 St. Martin ' s Lane, Chestnut Hill, Penna Chesnutt, Marnette 2412 Central Ave., Hot Springs, Ark Coulson, Ann (Mrs. Tucker Dean) 120 E. End Ave., N. Y. C Cowan, Elise (Mrs. John S. Roberts) . . 44 Kimberley Place, Asheville, N. C Cutting, Grace 1 5 E. 88th St., N. Y. C Eagan, Anna 902 Oakdale Rd., Atlanta, Ga Emmet, Helena Belle Valley Farm, R. F. D. 4, Erie, Pa Erickson, Gloria 1317 Garfield Ave., Aurora, III Ervin, Miriam (Mrs. Frederick Clark) Bala Cynwyd, Pa Exton, Therese 89 E. 76th St., N. Y. C Faus, Katharine (Mrs. Burton Andrus) . c o Dr. Faus, 395 Young Hotel Bldg. Honolulu, T H Frazer, Isabel 8015 Navajo St., Chestnut Hill, Pa French, Chloe 115 Ocean Ave., Woodmere, L. I., N. Y Garsoian, Nina 240 E. 79th St., N. Y. C Glossbrenner, Mary Ellen (Mrs. Roger Putnam Batchelor) R. R. 12 Box 261, Indianapolis, Ind Goodin, Joan (Mrs. Robert Day) Raggedgarden, Blowing Rock, N. C Guthrie, Anne 172 E. Mercer St., Princeton, N. J Hahn, June (Mrs. Robert Whitehill) 1200 Squirrel Hill Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa Hale, Eunice 900 Mt. Pleasant St., Winnetka, III Hickman, Jane (Mrs. David Acheson) .... 331 67th St., Miami Beach, Fla Hovey, Tamara 364 Camden Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif Hunter, Margaret 106 Short Hills Ave., Short Hills, N. J Hutcheson, Margaret 1812 Park Ave., Richmond, Va Imbrie, Frances (Mrs. S. Grey Dayton) ... 20 Hibben Rd., Princeton, N. J Johnson, Ann Davis 745 Sheridan Rd., Winnetka, III Kauffman, Jessie (Mrs. Harry Hoskinson) 2442 Belmont Rd. Washington, D. C Kurtz, Mary (Mrs. John T. Hough) 906 S. George St., York, Pa Page seventy-one J ormer r v lewik embers of trie K ta55 Laing, Alice The Manse, Colinton, Edinburgh, Scotland Lazo, Constance (Mrs. Roy Manny) . . . Old Church Rd., Greenwich, Conn. Leyendecker, Marie (Mrs. William Cashel ) 1073 Grant Ave., Pelham Manor, N. Y. Logan, Marian, (Mrs. John P. Wendell) .... 500 Third Ave., Warren, Pa. Mason, Lois 857 Ash St., Winnetka, III. Maynard, Sylvia South Crossway, Old Greenwich, Conn Mitchell, Nannie Poultney (Mrs. John Koppelman) 4001 Greenway, Baltimore, Md. Newcombe, Patricia Far Hills, N. J. Porter, Margery (Mrs. William Phillip) Elba, N. Y. Rodgers, Dorothy 35 N. Lehman St., York, Pa. Shipway, Anne Lee .... c o U. S. Steel Co., Koppers Bldg. , Pittsburgh, Pa. Shulman, Roslyn 620 Walk Hill St., Mattapan, Mass. Shutts, Mary Katharine 705 Broad St., Lake Charles, La. Stern, Priscilla 1110 Isabella Ave., Coronado, Calif. Sumner, Elizabeth 1215 Madison Ave., N. Y. C. Torney, Jacqueline 94 4th St., Garden City, L. I., N. Y. Tuckerman, Margaret (Mrs. Draper Kauffman) .... 5415 Edgemoor Lane, Bethesda, Md. Villa, Francesca (Mrs. Hugo Rutherford) 1 8 E. 82nd St., N. Y. C. Wagner, Jean 4303 Underwood Rd., Guilford, Baltimore, Md. Wickham, Edna Mary (Mrs. Charles Shock) c o Wickham, Blossom Cove Road, Red Bank, N. J. Wilson, Lucille 1111 Park Ave., N. Y. C. Woodward, Sydney Elizabeth . . 6885 Balsam St., Vancouver, B. C, Canada Wright, Rosalind 5744 Blackstone Ave., Chicago, III. Page seventy-two S enior cJjirect Alexander 73 E. Elm St., Chicago, III. Armstrong, V. D Abbeville, R. D. 2, Lancaster, Pa. Barnett 542 Hansel Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. Berry 6389 Chew Ave., Phila., Pa. Blakely 16 Stratford Place, Binghamton, N. Y. Blum 4651 Leiper St., Phila., Pa. Briskin, I. Pines (Mrs. Arthur) 49 Parkway E., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Brown County Line Rd., Villanova, Pa. Brunn 8309 Talbot St., Kew Gardens, N. Y. Buschmann 5102 Washington Blvd., Indianapolis, Ind. Caesar 390 Tremont Place, Orange, N. |. Cassidy 139-67 35th Ave., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. Cates 418 N. 12th St., Independence, Kans. Chadwick 25 Parkview Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. Coe 3119 Keswick Rd., Shaker Heights, O. Cooper 453 Highland Ave., Merion, Pa. Davis, R. A 1626 Shadyside Rd., Northwood, Baltimore, Md. Davis, S. L c o Trust Dept., Colorado Nat ' l. Bank, Denver, Col. Dor 1 8 S. Vista St., Los Angeles, Calif. Dunn 1706 18th St., Washington, D. C. Eckert, M. A. Donnally (Mrs. Philip) 1810 Plymouth St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Edmunds 21 Woodstock Apt., Lynchburg, Va. Ellis 146 Hyslop Rd., Brookline, Mass. Erwin Upton St. Linnean Ave., N. W., Washington, D. C. Estabrook 79 Shornecliffe Rd., Newton, Mass. Eustis, M. Armstrong (Mrs. W. E. C.) 2728 Ordway St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Finkel, R. Segal (Mrs. Stanley M.) .2750 Brandywine St., Washington, D. C. Fowler 497 E. Thornapple St., Chevy Chase, Md. Franck New Hope, Pa. Garrison Box 164, Crystal Lake, III. Gladstone 2501 Watkins Rd., Birmingham, Ala. Goldman 1052 35th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Grace c o Col. Jos. j. Grace, 540 Baltimore Trust Bldg., Baltimore, Md. Graham Burnswark Farm, Downingtown, Pa. Gumbel 4422 Greenwich Pkwy., N. W., Washington, D. C. Hedge 371 Marlborough St., Boston, Mass Hemphill Elkridge, Baltimore, Md. Heyniger Darrow School, New Lebanon, N. Y. Hobson 172 Williams St., Alexandria, Va. Hoopes, Janet 11 E. Greenwood Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Hoopes, Jean 435 W. Upsal St., Phila,, Pa. Horwood 37 Westbourne Ave., Newton Centre, Mass. Hull Waverly, Pa. Jackson, P. Murnaghan (Mrs. John Jay) .6202 Sycamore Rd., Baltimore, Md. Johnson 3 Inness Place, Glen Ridge, N. J. Jonathan 5710 Broomall Ave., Phila., Pa. Kirk 319 S. Chester Rd., Swarthmore, Pa. Klopfer, V Reed (Mrs. John R.) .c o Reed, 6410 Beacon St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Kohler, G. Dole (Mrs. Paul E.) 716 W. 231st St., N. Y. C. Kreiselman 3000 39th St., N. W., Washington, D. C. Laneres 351 Clinton Rd., Brookline, Mass. Leflar 301 E. Cliveden St., Phila., Pa. Page seventy-three J enior Jji xrecior. U J Lepska 50 Maitland Place, Garfield, N. J. Lucas Watsrtovvn Rd., Middlebury, Conn. Macdonald 9021 1 12th St., Edmonton, Alberta, Canada Mackenzie 1 67 E. 94th St., N. Y. C. Maclay 1 6 E. 84th St., N. Y. C. Morley 1 College Circle, Haverford, Pa. Mosiman 9263 Fauntleroy Ave., Seattle, Wash. Nelson, V. Lovell (Mrs. John M., Ill) c o Lovell, Garrison, Md. Neustadt 1476 26th Ave., San Francisco, Calif. Newton, N. Rumely (Mrs. Michael) . . . c o Rumely, 2 E. 86th St., N. Y. C. Nicholson 118 York Ave., West Pittston, Pa. Nixon Hillcrest Homes, Wichita, Kans Noble New Canaan, Conn. Parrish 206 W. Slate St., Vandalia, Mo. Peter Content Farms, Cambridge, N. Y. Pleven c o Gary Co., 21 E. 40th St., N. Y. C. Plough Parkview Hotel, Memphis, Tenn. Ravitch 15 W. 81st St., N. Y. C Reiner 714 Lawson Ave., Steubenville, O. Rhoads 1 105 N. Franklin St., Wilmington, Del. Rich Longview, Warren Ave., Plymouth, Mass. St. Lawrence 31 E. 79th St., N. Y. C. Satenstein, L. LaGowitz (Mrs. Harvey) .830 Lancaster Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Schmid 5367 Thomas Ave., Phila., Pa. Scribner 812 Ash St., Winnetka, III. Senger 1 548 Liberty St., Allentown, Pa. Shugg 73 Claremont Ave., Maplewood, N. J. Silverstein, D. Oresman (Mrs. Irwin A. ) . 1 55 Everett Ave., Providence, R. I. Sims Green Hollow Farm, Monroe, N. Y. Smith, J. P 35 Bartlett Ave., Arlington, Mass. Smith, P. H 10 Orchard Circle, Princeton, N. J. Spencer 24 W. 1 0th St., N. Y. C. Spiegelberg Apt. 14-A, 1 University Place, N. Y. C. Sprague 333 E. 68th St., N. Y. C. Stevens Woodland Ave., South Plainfield, N. J. Stone 1039 Wyoming Ave., Phila., Pa. Strauss 2961 N. Park Blvd., Cleveland Heights, O. Swift 148 Harrison St., Princeton, N. J. Szold 334 Pelhamdale Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Taleisnik 435 Crown St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Tappen 227 Nutley Ave., Nutley, N. J. Thompson 2014 Klingle Rd., N. W., Washington, D. C. Tuck Perrywood, Upper Marlboro, Md. Turley 1 1 33 Market St. Parkersburg, W. Va. Ustick 12 Dunstable Rd., Cambridge, Mass. Van Nest 2006 Preston Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. Voigt 1401 N. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Watkins 7040 Hamden Lane, Bethesda, Md Wehrwein 1809 Summit Ave., Madison, Wis. Whitridge 1 2 St. Martin ' s Rd., Baltimore, Md. Williams 18 Newton St., Brockton, Mass. Page seventy-four Contribute Painlessly to the College Scholarship Fund By Buying Your Books and Supplies in the COLLEGE BOOKSHOP All Profits go to Scholarships MAKERS OF THE OFFICIAL RINGS FOR BRYN MAWR COLLEGE ONE IN A THOUSAND . . . The one Jeweled Ring which most appropriately expresses your sentiments, can definitely be found here in one of the most superb collections of Dia- mond Rings in America . . . numbering more than a thousand designs. ..tfBANKS BlDhi Established 1832 1218 Chestnut Street Philadelphia 5 COMPLIMENTS OF THE GREEKS The Rendez-Vous of the College Girls DINAH FROST ' S Bryn Mawr, Penna. IMPORTED AND DOMESTIC YARN Greeting Cards Lending Library A Cordial Welcome To The CLASS OF 1944 from The Alumnae Association Of Bryn Mawr College SARONYJn Official Photographers for the 1944 Yearbook 362 Fifth Avenue NEW YORK CITY Page seventy-five Printed By BENTON REVIEW PUB. CO., Incorporated Fowler, Ind. Success to THE CLASS OF 1944 Bryn Mawr College Inn Breakfast - Luncheon - Tea RICHARD STOCKTON Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania • PRINTS • SPORTING BOOKS • GIFTS THE COUNTRY BOOKSHOP 28 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr J. E. Limeburner Co. Guildcraft Opticians 827 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr 1923 Chestnut St. 535 Cooper St. Philadelphia Camden 431 Old York Rd. 45 East Main St. Jenkintown Norristown 51 W. Chelten Ave. 6913 Market St. Germantown Upper Darby Bryn Mawr 0570 JEANNETT ' S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop Incorporated Floral Ideas for All Occasions 823 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Page seventy-six CLASS OF 1946 CLASS OF 1947 Page seventy-seven C LASS OF 1945 Page seventy-eight Page seventy-vine ibis book may raoi Is© ,i from fibs mm,


Suggestions in the Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) collection:

Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

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