Bryn Mawr College - Bryn Mawr Yearbook (Bryn Mawr, PA)
- Class of 1948
Page 1 of 96
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 96 of the 1948 volume:
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E 6 - BR C R ERICH FRANK TO DR. FRANK, who entered Bryn Mawr with us in 1944 and leaves the campus with us now, we dedicate this book in appre- ciation of the lively perception, warm friendliness, and brilliant personal quality of thought which we have valued in his teaching. It has been a delight to learn from him ; and it is a privilege to express to him here our great affection and respect. 810113 AN APPRECIATION of Dorothy MacDonald, Secretary to the President since 1919, who left us this winter to become Mrs. Horace Shelmire; of Mary Louise Terrien, whose resourcefulness in dealing with Library material has been from 1917 until now a campus institution ; and of Eunice Morgan Schenck, Head of the French Depart- ment, Dean of the Graduate School from 1929 to 1942, and during 1916-17 Dean of the College, who retires after 40 years in which her quiet influence consistently furthered the leadership which Bryn Mawr has taken in the higher education of women. .. . ' ■• FINAL EXAMINATION BRYN MAWR 1948 The Dedication.. o An Appreciation 7 Twenty Departments 11 Tivelve Clubs 47 Organizations. Publications. The Big Shows 59 Class Directory. __ 72 TWENT MENTS x BIOLOGY FINAL EXAMINATION IN GENERAL BIOLOGY. MAY. 1948. 1. Silent Prayer. 15 min. 2. Chop an immature zooid into small dis- crete particles, ignoring its hurt expres- sion. 3. Account for the triumph of heredity over environment in the following sad case: A subclass Elasmobranchius, although he came of a long line of parasitic worms with no enteron to speak of, was carefully brought up among simple, wormlike, ter- restrial Arthropods. After graduating third in his class at Annapolis, he took to swimming around with marine worms of doubtful relationships; and repudiating the poor but honest foster-parents, spent the rest of his days a typical triploblastic flatworm. 4. Describe Symbiasis, the mutually benefi- cial relation between a parasite and its host. Could there be a richer, more satis- fying experience in life? 5. Biologists define FOOD as any material which can either yield energy for the ac- tivities of an organism or supply matter for its growth ' . Revise this definition to include lunch in your hall. 6. Give in outline form the arguments for and against the Hepatic portal-to-portal system. 7. You might not chew that pencil if you realized that it is a fibro-vascular bundle containing sieve-tubes. 8. You will be provided with a scalpel, a large glass slab, and a quantity of Kleenex or some relatively undifferentiated tissue. Allot one hour to dissection of the girl on your left. Left-handed students may dis- sect the girl on their right. MARY ANN BRADY ESTHER ESSAYAG BENACERRAF ROSAMOND KANE ECATHERINE FANITA REVICI NELLY JANE KEFFER ANITA MOL FRENCH EXPLICATION DE TEXTE from Spleen et Ideal de Baudelaire: Ciel Brouille On dirait ton regard d ' une vapeur couvert; Ton oeil lnysterieux (est-il bleu, gris, ou vert? ) Alternativement tendre, reveur, cruel, Reflechit Vindolence et la paleur du ciel. Spleen et Ideal: the culminating superrational antithesis of Baudelaire ' s experience. He has de- cided on the origin of the Real. Ciel Brouille: rough translation: broiled sky . Fine translation: broiled sky . Baudelaire syn- thesizes the senses or, as the French would say, senthesize les sinses. The sky looks well done. One could say your regard was of a covered steam : again this continuous, all-pervasive sense of broiling. Your eye mysterious, is he blue, grey, or green? : This question is always bothering Bau- delaire. He was color-blind. Alternately tender, dreamy, cruel : throughout his life Baudelaire was to be captivated by what may be termed the Jeckel-Hyde fype. It takes one to know one. Reflects the indolence and paleness of the sky : We must guard against interpreting this poem as the mere expression of a great Hunger. Au con- traire. Baudelaire means to give the distinct im- pression that he has lost his appetite. The broiled sky, surrounded by slices of lemon and parsley springs, its glassy eye (alternately tender, dreamy, cruel) now pale, is not only indolent but cold. He has waited too long. He feels nothing but Spleen. JANINE GISELE DAUDON ELLEN MARY CASSATT HARE GEOLOGY DORIS HAYNES BLACKMAN FINAL EXAMINATION. TIME: 3 HOURS. 1. Crystallography: Derive the 32 crystal groups. ( 10 minutes) 2. Mineralogy: Give physical, chemical, and op- tical tests for the 30 most common elements. (5 minutes) 3. Paleontology: Trace the evolution of man ' s vestigial tail from pre-Camhrian times to the present. (5 minutes) 4. Run out and map the campus. (1 hour) 5. Coffee will he served in the hasement. (1 hour) 6. Petrology: Of what particular interest is the nearby town of King of Prussia? (20 minutes) 7. We meant geological interest. (5 minutes) 8. Discuss W.A.J. M. Van W. Van der Gracht ' s expose of the Permio-Carhoniferous Orogeny in the South Central United States. What does Truman propose to do about it? (15 minutes) PHYSICS ELECTRICITY — 3 HOURS From the apparatus in front of you select two large dry-cells. Connect in series with Key (or Switch), Rheostat, Ammeter, Voltmeter, Galvan- ometer, Geiger Counter, and a Wheatstone Bridge. Introduce into circuit a torque, a dipole, and the yolks of two ergs. Take Ammeter reading. This should equal the sum of Young ' s Modulus, Planck ' s Constant, Loschmidt ' s Number, and your age last birthday. If Ammeter is not work- ing, take it out of circuit and substitute cigarette lighter. Check wiring with Circuit Diagram. Remove Wheatstone Bridge. Now you have two loose ends of wire. Attach one to Dr. Patterson ' s belt-buckle. Braid the other into Dr. Michael ' s beard. Make sure they are both standing perfectly still. Then step back and throw the switch. FRANCES LOUISE NAFE SUSAN BRIMMER INCHES ELIZABETH W S1UU KN YOUNG ARCHAEOLOGY QUESTIONS ONE THROUGH SEVEN RE- QUIRED. REMAINDER OPTIONAL. IT IS BETTER TO DO A FEW QUESTIONS WELL THAN TO TRY THEM ALL. 1. Trace the archeologieal history of the Medi terranean from 3000 B.C. to the Dark Ages ( 10 min. ) 2. Identify: Amenhotep; Ikhnaton; Hoarus Poms; Set; Sut; Ra!; JHS (22); Louvre III He 35: Cornell 7; Hoarus. Porus, Set-Sut-Ra (5 min.) 3. Describe the process of pottery evolution as developed by Beazley in his Attic Red-figured Vases. ( 10 min. ) 4. Describe the process of pottery evolution as developed by Beazley in his Attic Black- fig- ured Vases. (10 min.) 5. Fill in the accompanying Attic-vase-outline with red and or black figures. (1 hr.) 6. Has your mother any red or black-figured vases in the Attic? (5 min.) 7. The Archeology Department recommended the film Caesar and Cleopatra to all students. Did you go? Wasn ' t Claude Rains good? (20 min. ) 8. Examine the heap of potsherds enclosed in your bluebook and eat them. (1 hr.) Ask monitor for red crayon. GREEK ELIZABETH PATRICIA NEILS ECONOMICS 1. A monopolistic buyer faces a monopsonistic seller. Is this good? 2. Diagram Solomon Fabricant ' s theory of the marginal increment of the residual claimant in an infringement suit, indicating selvage and lapels. 3. Defend any five of the following theses: 1. Penny ivise, pound foolish. — Catchings. 2. A penny saved is a penny earned. — Kuz- nets. 3. Take care of the pence and the pounds ivill take care of themselves. — Adam Smith. 4. Money makes the mare go. — Ragnar Nurkse. 5. Don ' t take any wooden nickels. — Eugen von Bohm-Bawerk. 6. Heads I win, tails you lose. — Keynes. 7. You cant take it with you. — Wassily Leontief. 8. can ' t take it with me I ain ' t going. — Alma Haberler. JANE LEE ETTELSON BARBARA LE MAY EVELYN VAN WESTERBORG CRISTOBEL LOCKE CHEMISTRY ELIZABETH HENDERSON BAGLEY FINAL EXAMINATION, MAY 1948. 1. Give equations for the formation of alizorin in the alkali fusion of Beta-amino-anthraqui- none. 2. Explain the function of the following in rub- ber formation: Isopropoxy dipherylamine, dipherylguanide, dibenzothiazyl disulfide. No erasing allowed. Stretch when tired. 3. hat have you got all over your smock? 4. Fe 2 S 3(Sl + 4H+ = 2Fe++ + 2H 2 S + S (s , Given this equation, work out how the cobalt ion Co++ can be precipitated using CH 3 C e H 2 (N0 2 )3 Watch out. 5. Name the products, if any, you would expect to get by putting a) An ordinary lipoid with a minimal hygro- scopic azide. b ) Di-Methyl Ethyl Methane with Ethel Mer- man. c ) the key to the alcohol closet out in plain sight. d ) your finger in the honey. e) all this behind vou forever. SARAH BERMAN ll a H j f U p 4fl i I f ?► ' ' 1 i ETHELWVN CLARK CONSLELO KLHN 18 ALINA ELIZABETH SURMACKA EDITH ELLEN WOOLEVER POLITICS MARGARET ANN BAISH MARY ANN BRUMBAUGH ELIZABETH CAMERON ELIZABETH BROOKE COLEMAN SYBIL ULLMAN CONN ANNA-STINA LOUISE ERICSON KATHERINEGREGOin FINAL EXAMINATION IN POLITICS, MAY 1948 I Give name in full, date and place of birth, church affiliation, and political preference. The department reserves the right to use this infor- mation against you. II Is Benelux a) a dilemma? b) an enigma? c) a nebulous phenomenon? d) kind to undies? III Opium is the opium of the people. Expand. Exhale. Go out for a cigarette. Inhale. Now — IV On the outline map enclosed in your blue- book indicate the boundaries of a) Bizonia b) Boznia-Herzogovina c) Baden-Baden d) Byelo- Russia e) Lower Slobbovia. Fold map and place in wastebasket as you leave examination room. LUCY ELAINE HOFFMAN NANCY MAY GARTON SHAHIKA SUNA KILI INDRA KIRPALANI CAROL MONTGOMERY M GOVERN LUCILE BRICKER LEWIS RUTH-LEE PERLMAK JEANNE LUTZ ELIZABETH WILCOX SMITH HARRIET MORSE VITKIN SHIRLEY MERRIWETHER WOOD ISET ' n N WOli ' l ' II M OLIVE BAGLEY VAN DYKE JOAN RUTH ZIMMERMAN ::, ENGLISH SALLY TEASDALE ATWOOD GENERAL COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINA- TION IN ENGLISH LITERATURE, MAY 1948. 1. Heoroweard, Swerting, Ecgtheow, Heorot, Hiya-sailor, Grendel ' s Dam, Hrunting, Hear- ban. Which of these is: 1 ) a race horse 2) a hall 3) a beard 4) a sword 5) a swearword (or mother)? 2. Estimate the literary dimensions of the Anglo- Saxon poets by critical evaluation of Lengeth, Widsith, and Heighet. 3. With attention to their graduated importance in English literature, string together the Runic Charms, the Pearl, and the Venerable Bead. 4. At 10:00 o ' clock the monitor will lead the class in a half hour of responsive reading in Middle English. 5. What am I better For all my learning, if I love a dunce, A handsome dunce? To what use serves my reading? John Fletcher, The Wild Goose Chase, Act III, Scene 1—1652 Discuss in relation to changes in thought since the Elizabethan era. CAROLINE NICHOLS BAKER MARY BLABON JOAN BREST 6. Pass lightly over the whole suhject of Ro- mantic Melancholy, omitting Gothic ruins. 7. Identify the following characters: ANNE WILLARD HENRY 8. Report your findings on the Lost Generation. 9. What effect has the English language had on American literature? 10. Allot one hour to detailed discussion of one of the quotations below : a) Ye, hasel-wode! — Chaucer h ) Hewgh ! — Shakespeare c) Out, out Hyaena! — Milton d) Ha, ha, he! — Blake e) Sweet Flower! — Wordsworth f ) Zounds ! — Byron g) Twit twit twit — Eliot ELLEN HARRIMAN WINIFRED CADBURY PRISCILLA TROTH GROSS NANCY KUNHARDT JESSICA LEVY THERESA TRAIL MATHIAS ELEANOR SPEER GYPSY McDANIEL WARFIELD HARRIET WALDEN WARD SYLVIA POTEAT STALLING CLAUDE NATALIE VALABREGLE GERMAN f i bin Amerikanerin . . . Ich bin Stu- dentin in Bryn Mawr College . . . Haben Sie wirklich nie von Bryn Mawr gehort? 3. Klosse NicKt .n dc v a 3 ,„ sp J.,„ 7 V«is de cracker -ons (a. rb Hen putorc riellu corg o. KEM) M.I. HOSMER ANKENY JEAN MYRA BISHOP ELIZABETH OLMSTEAD CUSHING These questions are to be answered intelligently in German: 1. What are the advantages of being a German major? Aber naturlich, JYZ (Junior Year in Zurich) ! 2. And what has this added to the devolpment of your career? Man lernt Zurideutsch, Norwegisch, Japan- isch, Tschechisch, Hungarisch, Spanisch, Italienisch — 3. Fine. How would you order a meal in German? Fraulein! Frau-lein ! Ein Glass Schnapps, bit- te, ein Rumpsteak mit, Nudeln, Strudcln, Pu- deln, und dann Bircher muesli, mit — 4. That ' s enough ! Could you tell us something about customs of the country? Uh . . . ivenn ein Madschen geht tanzen mit einem jungen Mann, sie . . . sie . . . 5. Well, the important thing is, did you learn anything about German literature? Jawohl! Ich habe vielen deutschen Trinklie- der gelernt. 6. Could you say something more specific, for example, about Johann Wolfgang Goethe? Bitte? 7. What would you from your experiences on the Continent consider the high point of Euro- pean culture? A Gelandersprung off Mont Blanc. 8. What was your impression on returning to the German Department of Bryn Mawr? They speak a curious dialect here known as Hochdeutsch, but we don ' t mind. We ' re inter- ested in languages. LOUISE ROBERTS SHELDON BERNICE ROBINSON JOAN HUYSSOON JEANNE REDROW HISTORY GENERAL COMPREHENSIVE EXAMINATION — TIME: 3 HOURS 1. Charlemagne was responsible for the second World ar. Discuss. (1 hour — or until tired) 2. Trace the history of Swiss parliamentary pro- cedure. Quote from Alpine sources such as: Swiss Parliamentary Debates for 1906: Heidi; Little Hans the oodcarver: The Swiss Twins. (45 min.) 3. How long did the Rump Parliament sit? (5 min.) JOAN TOUTANT BEAUREGARD HELEN HARVEY BURCH ELIZABETH COPELAND BARBARA COFFEY NANCY ELLIOTT DWYER 4. a I Battle of Brandywine. b I Cotton Gin. c ) Whiskey Rebellion. d ) Rum. Romanism, and Rebellion. e) Boston Tea Party. f) FiRed Milk Act of 1922. Lace the above liberally together and discuss in relation to the Beveridge Report. Refrain from crying over filled milk. 1 1 hour ) 5. hat is the turning-point in history? (10 min. I JOAN HITCHCOCK MARGARET BRADFORD ENGLISH PVTKICIA HOCHSCHILD JEAN SUMNER FORD LEILA DEAN JACKSON MARGERY HANNA KRUEGER ROTRAUD ANNE-ELSE MEZGER KATH RINE GRIFP i i S LANDS i ELIZABETH ANNE McCLURE BARBARA RUTH NUGENT 32 ROSALIND OATES LUCIA ROGERS Encounters Between- Civilizations NANCY SCHWARZ PHILLIS OGAN RIPLEY GLORIA MILLICENT WHITE AMORET CHAPMAN RISSELL HISTORY OF ART SLIDE IDENTIFICATION. 1. French Academy — somebody on horseback at the battle of something — not Napoleon — too tall 2. Madonna — Italian Primitive? Composition shows strong influence of other Madonnas 3. Landscape — By Cuyp, Kalf, Wouwermans, or de Hooch — if that windmill means anything 4. Torso by Archipenko 5. Fresco by Stucco 6. Carp by Arp 7. Not sure whether this is Aeneas Piccolomini Going to Council of Basle, by Pinturicchio, or Federigo da Urbino in Triumphal Car, by Pietro della Francesca 8. This may be St. Zenobias Restoring a Boy to Life — Ghislandi, or Resuscitation of the King ' s Son — Gbisolfi, or Raising of Lazarus — Ghirlandajo — I give up 9. Picasso ' s Blue Boy 10. Either Kandinskys Impression of Moscow or Audes in the Open Air by Schmidt-Rottluff — I think maybe you ' ve got the slide upside down ANN MARTIN CHASE CAROLYN KING THEKLA PAULINE AVURLITZER ITALIAN Jtkwu -flvtajS J te ex. - foxta  ■-ha rn-oxJ -5vo-£ J e U _ JUdr x - oju -Wi £ jj _ 44 j Today we have seen the films of our winter in Italy. We have seen ourselves standing hy the Fountaino of Cliturno where Carducci wrote his poetry; climbing the roof of the Pantheon in Rome ; or even better sampling the vino for which Orvieto is famous. If only we could complete the series — begin the film at Bryn Mawr and show Miss Lograsso bustling forth to greet us at 8 A.M. — or cooking us a grilled cheese sandwich in her apartment at the Inn. So many things have been left out — the first time we spoke Italian to a store- keeper — the first time someone followed us down the street whispering in our ear: Hokay, Lay- dee, changea monee? We are Italian majors of Bryn Mawr but we have spent the senior year in Italy, the enchant- ed land which we cannot bear to leave . . . ' tB P- ANN APPLETON STORROW MARIA ARLINE STRUMIA LATIN Anna virumque ca.no, Troiae qui primus ab oris Italiam, jato profugus, Laviniaque venit litora. multum ille et terris iactatus et alto vi superum saevae memorem lunonis ab iram; multa quoque et betto passus, dum couderet urbem, iuferretque deos Latio, genus unde Latinum, Albanique patres, at que ultae moenia Romae. Musa, mihi causas memora, quo numine laeso, quidve dolens, regina deum tot volvere casus insignem pietate virum, tot adire labores impulerit. Tantaene animis caelestibus irae? POLLY BRUCH Arm a man and a clog, and whichever first gets to the place in Troy Where the Italian, Fata Profugus, when from Lavinia came A letter, although he felt very ill and was actu- ally terrified of heights, Climbed upon the monument of Juno and jumped. Here many coquettish beauties pass, who show gullible strangers around the city, Especially two ladies whose latitude amounts to genius, And who, abandoned by their parents, still pay their room-rent and other expenses. But instead of musing, I cause myself to re- member him who has less number of legs (What a shame) than the king of dumb ani- mals who trots circles around him. Pity the insignificant man, all tired from his labors, Who implores, Where has the animated collie gone? ELIZABETH MUIR FOCARDI ANNE WOOD SPANISH LINDSAY HARPER HOPE DEBORAH KAUFMANN RUTH DIAMOND SHAPIRO ADA CLAYTON KLEIN JOANN COHEN MATHEMATICS Six young hopefuls trudging through the slush to Dalton, up the three tortuous flights to higher education, mumbling despairingly in mufflered tones, We shoulda stood in bed — these are the Math majors. After four years of commuting between 404 and 405, much systematic labor to integrate the varied factors of our knowledge, and to differentiate the letters of the Greek al- phabet, at last we have come upon a field in which everything does NOT all fall out — the com- prehensive conference. While every other major struggles with her reading- list, Mrs. Wheeler is telling us what the pirates did with the pot of gold, Miss Lehr is showing us how to win at dice, and Mr. Oxtoby is expounding on the more down-to-earth business of banana farming. Admittedly there are those of us to whom pi will never be the sum of an infinite series, to whom the very mention of it in that dark hour between 12:55 and 1 o ' clock brings violent hun- ger pangs. But at least we have learned to associ- ate almost everything and having coordinated our powers to the highest degree WE ARE PRE- PARED (as the motto goes) to emerge into the world as Bryn Mawr ' s most calculating females. PATRICIA ANNE EDWARDS ANN MONTAGUE FIELD Problem: Find the area between the two loops of the limaeon r = 1 + 2 sin B. Time : Three minutes. JANE GERTRUDE HADAS RUTH JANE KEVIN VERA MARIE TOZZER 39 PHILOSOPHY D ELIZABETH BLAU MARGARET ELIZABETH MILLER SHEILA MARGARET PARKER 40 PHINAL EXAMINATION— 3 HOURS. Only seven questions need be answered Allocate your time ! 1) Complete: New York is a large city and 3 = 2 is a true sentence because 2) [A w (x + yzr. xz) V (M)]: :W (s) ] E m (s) : This is a condensation of Toynhee ' s six volume Study of History. Prove the truth or falsity of the second sentence of the third para- graph of chapter three of volume four by means of circles. The Arabic, Greek, Russian, and He- brew alphabets may be used. 3) The actualization of the potentiality is realiz- able through the transcendental synthesis of the negation of the negation with its antithesis. Is this Nahminalism? A frank answer will receive highest credit. air , fire : define in full. 5) I shot an arrow into the air — prove, ac- cording to Zeno ' s paradox, that this is an impossible probability. 6) According to Pythagoras, females are like even numbers: they are infinite and evil. Who else supports this view? 7) Beauty is beauty is beauty is the presuppo- sition of what aesthetic experience? Please read and sign: In answering this examination, I have done so according to the best of my ability. (sign here) ' ' ' Red and black ink available at desk. Kant ' s Ding An Sich Cogito Ergo Sum ALICE WOLFF ELIZABETH CATESin SPEARS JEAN SWITENDICK 41 PSYCHOLOGY My God! FRANCES SORCHAN BINGER CHARLOTTE EDLIX ELIZABETH L VNGDALE HAMILTON ELAINE FRANCE LUCY PAGE HART 12 TIIEO (.1 -i I.ER IIULLWI) MARGARET LOUISE SIII.NEY ALMA IDE SARAH FLEEK SMUCKER CAROL VAN LOAN I ' ITT HILMA I NTERBERGER 43 SOCIOLOGY In a Comprehensive dreary ivhile I pondered iveak and weary over many a sociological i tem of forgotten lore — everything went black. I re- gained consciousness to find myself in the vesti- bule of a high-ceilinged Victorian town house. Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there wondering, fearing — by the flickering gas- light I at length discerned a missing link, coming downstairs on its knuckles, a copy of Hooton clamped in its teeth. Three members in good standing of the Fabian Society followed it with questionnaires. Last came Miss Kraus and Miss DeLaguna, each leading by the hand a delinquent child and singing the Battle Hymn of the Repub- lic. Before they could surround me and forcibly administer fresh air, powdered eggs, and plastic hot water bottles, I jumped into my little grey blotter and scudded through the crack under the door, heedless of the angry cry, ' Marriage and the Family! which echoed in my ears. The ex- periences told here before have left my fevered brain quite sore. Quoth the senior. Nevermore! GISHA LINCHIS BERK.OWITZ BARBARA ZOE COTINS JEAN LORITA MacALLISTER 44 MARY ANN MILLS II YZEL IRENE NELSON ROSALIE BRYANT PARKER BARBARA ZIEGLER TW ' E GffllBS ART CLUI1 Uninhibited Strangers Meeting DANCE CLUB - v Soul of the Machine W hat we can do with a simple walking rhythm CHORUS DEBATE CLUB Anything else you wish to add, Miss Gillespie? It comes of having to listen for hours every clay to the opinions of other people — we compensate with active expressions of our own. Name any college : Bryn Mawr has de- feated its debate club in fair combat, Queens- bury rules. RADIO CLUB WBMC presents everything — original plays, quiz programs, classical musicales. A soundproof broom-closet in Pern East base- ment takes ten of us and a versatile typist who is just about finished with the scripts . Half an hour later we begin a timed rehears- al. The week ' s show materializes. Thursday evening, anything from a ' 48 Packard to a ' 31 Ford with a beaverboard ceiling pulls up in the front of Rock Arch, quickly fills, and roars off to Haverford for the great half-hour in question. Remember — don ' t shout into the mike — okay — we ' re on the air. 51 FRENCH CLUB Working with Haverford. the French Cluh produces plays with emphasis on pantomime, in case some members of the audience may be less than bilingual. Frightened candidates for the Orals find acting is the painless way to work themselves up to the pitch — and of course there are cast parties. We augment our program with visiting lecturers and tea in Wyndham. You can walk into Spanish House any day and find sambas, sombreros, senoritas with roses clenched in their teeth. But that bull- fight! Caramba! We made the Philadelphia papers. In the Spanish Christmas program, like that of the German and French Clubs, slight national differences are carefully ob- served. The French may have their beaux chevaliers, the German their komische Hir- ten, but we ' ve go el toro and the fuerte mata- dor ! When people get that Christmas look in their eyes, and bright-colored knitting in- vades all local situations, the activity of the German Club hits a high point. Haverford takes half interest in the Christmas play. Our theatrical interests, auf deutsch naturlich, resulted in a one-act play with Princeton during second semester. We sponsor lectur- ers who speak, for example, on relief work in Germany. And above all, we sing — from Tarmenbaum on out. GERMAN CLUB SPANISH CLlllt STAGE GUILD They say nothing stops them — we are tempted to try a one-night digest of Lady Windermere ' s Fan, the Ring cycle, and H. M. S. Pinafore. Proceeds could go to the Revolv- ing Stage Fund, and the stage crew to the Infirmary, where they would spend long rest- ful days incorporating new patches into their blue jeans. AS YOU LIKE IT LADIES IN RETIREMENT ARMS AND THE MAN FAMILY PORTRAIT GEORGE WASHINGTON SLEPT HERE THE SKIN OF OUR TEETH SIX CHARACTERS IN SEARCH OF AN AUTHOR THE MALE ANIMAL THE TIME OF YOUR LIFE KING LEAR THE SEA GULL THE MAN WHO CAME TO DINNER DRAMA GUILD Extra-curricular activities, mutters Miss Slavin, as she paints assorted rasping throats during the final week of rehearsals. At Good- hart or at Roberts, Mr. Thon will try any- thing once — and ours not to reason why. King Lear in three weeks nearly killed us all. But it was a theatrical event, they tell us, and so will the Summer Theatre he. The birth of a Bryn Mawr tradition? PH1LS0PHY CLUB The philosophy club, erudite and threatening as it may appear from the outside, is really nothing more than a group of transcendental abstractions finally embodied in the Symbolic classification of extension. It is a propertyless class, having been in debt to its president since she treated a couple of philosophers to dinner on behalf of the club. As a result, specified members of the society have been studying the Repub- lic to find out what can be done about refinancing. (If they find out they ' re going to start a fourth party.) The members, however, do break away from the Platonic pastime of contemplation long enough to throw a few teas and a beer party (off campus, we swear!). It ap- pears that philosophers too find it difficult to decide between the pleasure of the mind and those others. Animated talker SCIENCE CLUB We don ' t know what kind of abstruse tea they brew down in the basement of Park every afternoon, and they ' re not telling — but the Chemistry department supplies liquid refreshment, the Physicists ionize it, and Geology contributes the hardware. Biologists? Make pleasant conversation of course. If, by any chance, you go to the Science Club picnic, take your own hamburgers. One never knows. One lump or two? and a thirteenth club comprising THOSE WHO HAVE LIVEO Ours is a snobbish and exclusive set ; we don ' t even give teas. But at a hypothetical roll-call we would claim not only three Sen- iors (above: Wren Burch in a position of trust ; Sgt. Harrinian of whom no photograph is known to exist but she says she looked like that; Petty Officer 2nd Class Jackson, off duty), but also prominent non-resident Sophomores and a noble percentage of the Faculty, including the Art Department en- tire. Some were enlisted and some were com- missioned, but from Lt. Cmdr. Michaels to Private Bernheimer all are bound in a cer- tain community of sentiment about the Armed Forces. We would agree, for example, on the adjective which best describes Basic Training or Boot Camp, although we can hardly use it here; and below, for the edifica- tion of the uninitiated, we transcribe the Universal, Infallible and Irrefutable Recipe for Chow. Recipe for Chow : Take anything. Anything. Drop it. Pick it up but don ' t dust it off. Cook it too long. Place in deep pan of hot water, garnish with raisins and saltpeter, and serve. Ob yes — if there seems to be too much grease, that ' s fine. If not, grease it. OR PIB TH UNDEHGRAD SELF GOV. Founded in 1892, it ' s almost as old as Bryn Mawr. A liberal organization! Sign-out rules grow looser as the years go by ; but for those of us who habitually study, Self-Gov. will probably be best remembered for the de- fense de fumer everyplace but policy; no bot- tles on campus; and the bulletin board on the second floor in Taylor which darkly bints at the democratically conducted meetings of the Advisory Board. One student was found smoking six inches over the line in forbidden territory and has been eliminated in the cus- tomary way. It wasn ' t until we came to Bryn Mawr that most of us discovered that we could be ipso facto too. Undergrad, the coordinator of the Big 5 on campus, became our official link with the people who spent their time be- hind closed doors in Taylor figuring out our fates. This is all right with us when they get truly epic ideas like morning coffee in Taylor. Undergrad also supervised our BIG weekends, the Friday night movies in the Music Room, Parade Night, Lantern Night, and May Day; but to us its salient feature will always remain The Clean-Up Campaign with the British Accent. THE NEWS Two breaks in McBride . . . ' What ' s an- other word for ' discuss besides ' explain ' and ' analyze ' ? . . . We can ' t fill all that space! . . . Soda fountain ' s open . . . I ' ve lost the Dummy! Gentle confusion reigns in the News Room every Monday and Tuesday night. Strains of Beethoven, Boogie-Woogie and Bach waft down the corridor outside. Cats wander in, galley wanders out, cigarette ad gets lost in the shuffle. There are editorials yet to write — and nothing to write about . But whatever is the state of Bryn Mawr, thirty-six words still make an inch. So — de- spite May Dav extras, and prices, and no- one-to-go-to-the-plant, the News gets to bed — whether we do or not. Three 16 ' s on Schlesinger, and make them make some sense! THE TITLE 3 or four times a year we show the campus in general what is being done by student writers in the way of essays short stories poems or what have you write us an epic we will enlarge the titles format to accommodate ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION Swimming team — Basketball — Tennis — La- crosse — Fencing — Baseball — Badminton — Hockey (good losers, like everyone else, to that British Team) — in the late afternoons we could use a ski tow up from the fields be- yond Park, but otherwise we ' re happy. And if some of us are to be seen doing ten laps around Goodhart in the half-hour before Graduation, to complete our Gym credits, it ' s for our OWN GOOD. i a LEAGUE BLIND SCHOOL HAVERFORD COMMUNITY CENTER HOME FOR INCURABLES HUDSON SHORE LABOR SCHOOL MAIDS BUREAU MAIDS PORTERS PLAY AND DANCE RED CROSS SODA FOUNTAIN SUMMER CAMP VALLEY FORGE ALLIANCE We watched the Alliance take off its khaki and assume a civilian role for political action with hated hreath. But thanks to the vitality and good judgment of its leaders and followers, the hahy organization survived the shocks of reconversion. As well as spon- soring speakers, from Eleanor Roosevelt to the Dean of Harvard Law, the Alliance heads almost every alphabetical organization on campus including CARE, WSSF, IRC, SDA, ISO, plus the Industrial Group and Current Events weekly in the Common Room. UPPER RIGHT: our intrepid cameraman, wear- ing twigs in her helmet, crept near enough for this amazing photograph of the unspeakable and hitherto unexposed bonfire ceremony practiced in Hockeyfield Hollow during the Autumnal Equinox. Nothing is known of its origin or tribal significance. UPPER LEFT: Junior Show! Such good songs — and more bathing beauties than a helicopter could count on the Gym roof in April. That year we were on the crest of the wave. LEFT: Picnic, Junior Prom weekend. Saunders Barn. RELO W : Christmas Carols, Sophomore Carni- val, Step Singing, Class Day — nous nous amusons bien, as one might say on an Oral. Sorry, nothing from Lantern Night. It was as lovely as ever, but they frown on flashbulbs. k ■;yu f M W -Al ARTS NIGHT is three years old and unanimously considered a good idea. Once inside the Goodhart lohby you may find any form of artistic expression that has had its origin on campus. The Art Studio, the playwriting class, the Music Department, the or- chestra, the Dance Club, all contribute. We like Playwrights ' Night, too. Original scripts are per- formed, then discussed by audience, actors, direc- tors, and authors. Premiere Danseuse Nepper among the ani- mated marbles in a Roman garden . . . Mrs. Manning, the Queen Bee, tripping like a ga- zelle as she sang . . . Herr Schloane ' s art lec- ture with Soper manhandling the slides . . . Miss Terrien ' s lisping solo . . . Dr. Bern- heimer playing jazz a la Mozart in a red, white, and blue suit (much too tight) . . . Dr. Chew making passionate love to Miss Gar- diner, looking in that little hat exactly like Oliver Hardy . . . and Dr. Frank relentlessly correcting hluehooks throughout the eve- ning . . . Faculty Show should he required every year by popular demand. rind Dr. Nahm was Queen of the May m Is Big May Dav dead? Last fall all approved methods of artificial respiration were tried once more — mass meetings, hall meetings, even a News Extra. The Faculty was pro, but the students polled con. We carry on with the little ceremony, half a day, and few rehearsals. Weather is usually cloudy and colder with occasional rain. TART ART They said at the time, best Freshman show ever . The Goodhart stage was con- verted into a museum. Souvenir-sellers, jani- tors, museum managers impressively arty in large checked suits, and a heroic marine, dashed back and forth past original copies of Picasso to the refrain: We don ' t under- stand cubism, Dali and his Modernism upsets our metabolism. Take us back to the comic strips. A bust of Cicero teetered on a ped- estal; a mad artist moaned; wbile dowager Mrs. Waulkwell tried to instill culture in her three children. The managers produced a rousing cheer for the gin at seven, bromide at eleven system at that ball of fire, Bryn Mawr . Kick choruses, a modern dance par- ody of freshman week, and an original blues song kept the museum a busy place. ' 48 ' s Animal, lodged in Park and plied with carrot tops, pails of water, pillows, and hay, was kept a secret until the curtain fell. It was the soberest, toughest, and most unmanageable creature that ever crossed Merion Green to make its stage debut — a burro. We preserve our blue songbooks, but the Tart Art posters are gathering dust as fast as relics from the 1930 ' s. It certainly was a long time ago . . . Where are the seniors? They went across the May grass in defiance of whistles, down to Goodhart — they ' re all capped and gowned — and lastly hooded — There they o goodbye! o SENIOR DIRECTORY Kendall H. Ankeny 1510 Mt. Curve, Minneapolis, Minn. Sally Teasdale Atwood 1770 James Ave. S., Minneapolis 5, Minn. Elizabeth Henderson Bagley 17 E. Eager St., Baltimore 2, Md. Margaret Ann Baish 2615 N. Second St., Harrisburg, Pa. Caroline N. Baker Clinton Ave., Westport, Conn. Joan Toutant Beauregard 3318 St., N.W., Washington 7, D. C. Gisha Linchis Berkowitz (Mrs. R. S.) 3321 Powelton Ave., Philadelphia 4, Pa. Sara Berman 1188 Lincoln PL, Brooklyn 13, N. Y. Frances Sorchan Binger 182 E. 75th St., New York City 21 Jean Myra Bishop 115 Foxcroft Rd., West Hartford, Conn. Amoret Chapman Bissell 214 E. 72nd St., New York City Mary S. Blabon Littlefield Farm, Bryn Mawr, Pa. Doris Haynes Blackman 1001 Leighton Ave., Anniston, Ala. Elizabeth Blau 241 Ashbourne Rd., Columbus 9, Ohio Mary Ann Brady 1237 N. Fifth St., Reading, Pa. Joan Brest White Bird Farm, Norfolk, Mass. Pollyanna Bruch 217 W. North St., Bethlehem, Pa. Mary Ann Brumbaugh Cr ooked Mile, Westport, Conn. Helen Harvey Burch 823 W. Gulph Rd., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Winifred Cadbury 7 Buckingham Place, Cambridge 38, Mass. Elizabeth Cameron 80 Cary Ave., Milton, Mass. Ethelwyn Clark 537 W. Aliens Lane, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pa. Barbara Coffey 270 Pennington Ave., Passaic, N. J. Joann Cohen 2912 Commonwealth Ave., Chicago 14, 111. Elizabeth Brooke Coleman Eccleston, Md. Sybil Ullman Conn (Mrs. M. A.) School Lane, Rydal, Pa. Elizabeth Copeland 632 N. Easton Rd., Glenside, Pa. Barbara Cotins 506 Fort Washington Ave., New York City 33 Elizabeth O. Cushing 828 Park Ave., Albany 3, N. Y. Janine G. Daudon 623 Walnut Lane, Haverford, Pa. Nancy Elliott Dwyer 8 Linden Court, Jersey City, N. J. Charlotte Harriet Edlin 115 Fiske St., Waterbury 53, Conn. Patricia Anne Edwards Box 255, Bradford, Pa. Margaret Bradford English 525 Park Ave., New York City 21 Anna-Stina Louise Ericson 4424 Jefferson Ave., Munhall, Pa. Esther Essayag c o Mrs. Elise M. Rogers, 1150 Fifth Ave., New York City Jane Lee Ettelson 7009 Emlen St., Philadelphia 19, Pa. Ann Montague Field 36 Fairmont Ave., Newton 58, Mass. Elizabeth Muir Focardi Delaware City, Del. Jean Sumner Ford 133 E. 80th St., New York City Elaine France 682 Union Ave., Elizabeth 3, N. J. Nancy May Garton 14 Clifford Ave., Pelham 65, N. Y. Katherine Gregory Cedar Gate, Darien, Conn. Priscilla Troth Gross 5006 Broadmoor Rd., Baltimore 12, Md. Jane Gertrude Hadas 340 W. 72nd St., New York City 23 Elizabeth L. Hamilton 147 Blackburne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Ellen Mary Cassalt Hare Berwyn, Pa. Lindsay Harper Box 177, Barrington, 111. Ellen Harriman Woodbury, Conn. Page Hart 201 24th Ave. S, Nashville 5, Tenn. Anne Willard Henry 606 Washington S t., Wellesley 81, Mass. Joan Hitchcock 36 Gramercy Park, New York City 3 Patricia Hochschild 1200 Fifth Ave., New York City 29 Lucy E. Hoffman 3300 St., N.W., Washington, D. C. Theodora C. Holland 4901 Palo Dr., Tarzana, California Joan W. Huyssoon..... 18 Oak Ridge PL. Tuckahoe 7, N. Y. Alma Ide 2635 Netherland Ave., Riverdale 63, N. Y. Susan Brimmer Inches 41 Middlesex Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. Leila Dean Jackson 501 Grand Ave., St. Paul 2, Minn. Rosamond Kane 21 Chedworth Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. Hope D. Kaufman Box 59, Bedford Village, N. Y. Nelly Jane Keffer 5971 Drexel Rd., Overbrook, Philadelphia 31, Pa. Ruth Jane Kevin Theological Seminary, Alexandria, Va. Sahika Suna Kili Yenikoy Kaybase Cad, Istanbul, Turkey Carolyn King 38 Cypress Rd., Wellesley Hills 82, Mass. Indra Kirpalani c o India Government Trade Commissioner, 630 Fifth Ave., New York City 20 Ada Clayton Klein 45 Park PL, Waterbury, Conn. Margery Hanna Krueger 171 Vernon St., St. Paul 5, Minn. Consuelo Houseworth Kuhn 9 Mountain Ave., Princeton, N. J. Nancy Kunhardt Mt. Kemble Ave., Morristown, N. J. AEWAYS BUY CHESTERFIELDS -THEY SATISF1 ffoftf ) CHESTERFIEtD SUPPER CLUB C W ' NBC MON. WED. FRI. NIGHTS SMART SMOKERS SMOKE ' EM flsi aiCTfi lJD CHESTERF jSS 6 . ' •opytight 1947, Liggett Myibs Tobacco Co. Katherine Griffith Landreth 726 St. John Ave., Pasadena 2, Calif. Barbara Le May Camp Massapequa, Saranac Lake, N. Y. Jessica Levy 720 Park Ave., New York City 21 Lucile Bricker Lewis Worcester, Pa. Christobel Locke 14 E. 90th St., New York City 28 Jeanne Lutz 318 N. Lansdowne Ave., Lansdowne, Pa. Jean Lor ita MaeAllister 1 College Rd., Princeton, N. J. Elizabeth Anne McClure ...65 Sixth Ave., Collegeville, Pa. Carol Montgomery McGovern 1412 Judson Ave., Evanston, 111. Theresa T. Mathias Court Square, Frederick. Md. Rotraud Anne-Else Mezger Oak Hill Farm, Henderson Rd., Bridgeport, Pa. Margaret Elizabeth Miller 11 Milmarson Place, N.W., Washington 11, D. C. Mary Ann Mills . Hyanmadison. Pottstown, Pa. Anita Mol Hohokus, N.J. Frances Louise Nafe 5060 N. Meridian St.. Indianapolis 8, Ind. Patricia E. Neils 2815 Burnham Blvd.. Minneapolis 5, Minn. Hazel Irene Nelson . 102 Congress St., Milford, Mass. Barbara Nugent 3 E. 84th St., New York City 28 Rosalind Oates 881 Church Road. Lake Forest, 111. Rosalie Bryant Parker 300 E. 18th St.. Brooklyn 26, N. Y. Sheila M. Parker 903 6th Ave., S.W., Rochester, Minn. Ruth-Lee Perlman 28 Ascot Ridge, Great Neck, L. I., N. Y. Carol Van Loan Pitt 327 Loudon Rd.. Loudonville, N. Y. Jeanne Redrow 1759 Catalina Ave., Cincinnati 29, Ohio Ecatherine Fanita Revici Granada Hotel, Brooklyn 17, N. Y. Phillis Ogan Ripley Troy, N. H. Bernice Robinson 25 E. 86th St., New York City Lucia Rogers 249 Dudley Rd., Newton Center 59, Mass. Nancy Elinor Schwartz 19 E. 72nd St., New York City Ruth Diamond Shapiro 914 Pine St., Philadelphia 7, Pa. Louise Sheldon 63 Prospect St., aterbury, Conn. Margaret Louise Shiney McCracken. Kan. Elizabeth Wilcox Smith 47 Buckingham St.. Waterbury 33, Conn. Sarah Fleek Smucker 474 Hudson Ave., Newark, Ohio a §tft Jf or rabuation THE BEAUTIFUL ZIPPO HIGH POLISHED ENGINE-TURNED, AND TABLE LIGHTERS . . . ZIPPO MANUFACTURING COMPANY BRADFORD, PENNA. For the Best in Portraiture Always from the Camera of edward vantine studios hamilton, new york Nationally Known Portrait Photographers of Colleges. Elizabeth Catesby Spears Stoneleigh Farm, Paris, Ky. Eleanor Rose Speer 825 Montgomery Ave., Bryn Mawr, Pa. Sylvia Stallings Forest Home, Blanch, N. C. Ann Appleton Storrow 224 Marlboro St., Boston 16, Mass. Mary Arline Strumia 857 Bryn Mawr Ave., Penn Valley, Pa. Alina E. Surmacka 69-16 Groton St., Forest Hills, N. Y. Jean M. Switendick 19 Richmond Ave., Batavia, N. Y. Vera Marie Tozzer 6231 Savannah Ave., Cincinnati 24, Ohio Hilma Unterberger 555 Main St., Edwardsville, Pa. Claude Natalie Valabregue 211 The Uplands, Berkeley 5, Calif. Olive Bagley Van Dyke 902 Wells Bldg., Milwaukee, Wis. Evelyn Van Westerborg 114-11 Union Turnpike, Forest Hills, N. Y. Harriet Morse Vitkin Hotel Somerset, 400 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, Mass. Harriet Walden Ward Cornor , Bedford Hills, N. Y. Gipsy McDaniel Warfield Harding Place, Belle Meade, Nashville 5, Tenn. Gloria Millicent White 1620 T St., N.W., Washington 9, D. C. Alice Wolff 2390 Creston Ave., New York City 53 Anne Wood 272 W. Main St., Moorestown, N. J. Shirley Merriwether Wood St. George Apts., Ardmore, Pa. Edith Ellen Woolever, 804 Powder Mill Lane, Penfield Downs, Philadelphia 31, Pa. Betty Anne Wortham 15 Stuyvesant Rd., Biltmore Forest, N. C. Thekla Wurlitzer 1050 Vista Rd., San Mateo, Calif. Elisabeth Washburn Young Maplewoods, Wayzata, Minn. Barbara Jean Ziegler 7427 Boyer St., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia 19, Pa. Joan Ruth Zimmerman Ill Old Gulph Rd., Wynnewood, Pa. June, 1948 Dear Sally: When you think back to Bryn Mawr and those rainy afternoons of knitting scads of argyles like crazy, you ' ll remem- ber the ones that knit up the best and lasted the longest were made of MINERVA yarn. Love, Bette AUTOCAR TRUCKS FOR HEAVY DUTY Superbly engineered and precision-built by Autocar They cost more because they ' re worth more. MANUFACTURED IN ARDMORE, PA. Serviced by Factory Branches and Distributors from Coast to Coast Also Graduating In 1948 Alison Barbour Julia Chittendon Janice Elaine Fernstrom Kathleen Holliday Jensen Mary Jean Mcllvried Althea Robillard Marcia Taff Gloria Jane Waldman Elizabeth R. Jones Worth A Cordial Welcome to the Class of 1948 from The Alumnae Association of Bryn Mawr College THE COUNTRY BOOKSHOP To every graduate we wish a full share of luck, happiness, and a future bright with achievement and success . . . that you are capable of taking the world in your stride Pottstown. One of Pottstown ' s Fine Department Stores 28 Bryn Mawr Ave. Bryn Mawr COMPLIMENTS OF THE GREEKS The Rendezvous of College Girls DINAH FROST ' S Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania Imported and Domestic Yarn Greeting Cards ' Stationery RICHARD STOCKTON Prints Sporting Books Gifts Parisian Dry Cleaners and Dyers SERVING THE COLLEGE Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr Phone: Bryn Mawr 1018 Congratulations to the class of 1948 Bryn Mawr New Photo Center Home of Fine Portraits VENTUR PHILADELPHIA WILLIAM G. CUFF CO. 855 Lancaster Avenue Bryn Mawr Records Appliances MERION CLEANING AGENCY Wholesale Distributor FRUIT and PRODUCE Former Members Of The Class Jean Elizabeth Anderson Lucy Antaramian Judith Bailey Mary Ellin Berlin Sherry Ann Bordorf Luetta Bowman Helen A. Boyajian Barbara Jane Breininger Barbara M. Brown Emanuello Bufalino Amy Lucy Campbell Katherine Biddle Chadwick Frances Chandler Frances Cheston Jane Coddington Sally Chew Dessez Nancy Duble Virginia C. Edwards Rboda Joan Eisenberg Mary Ann Ellingston Jane Lcvan Field Ann Finnerud F. Diane Fowkes W. Anne Furness Marianne Graetzer Helen Graf Barbara Gray Anne Churchill Harrison Cynthia Martin Hartung Cynthia Haynes Norma Patricia Hendren Nena Kate Hill Dorothy P. Hoblitzell Bettina Kluepfel Nancy Krekstein Curtiss Lindsley Low Eleanor MacBride Laura Grinnell Martin Meredith E. Moffitt Virginia E. Moore Anne M. Nystrom Frances Dorothea Parsons Nan Peiker Elizabeth F. Reilly Ellen Robbin Cora Lynne Rossmann Edith Margaret D. Soames Katherine Virden Southerland Sylvia Taylor Nancy Burton Thayer Barbara Lee Thomson Jennifer Wedgwood Joan Woodside Elizabeth E. Zychlinski Success to 1948 BLUE COMET DINER COTTAGE TEA HOUSE 1610 Montgomery Avenue excellent food since 1904 The Symbol of Fine Quality in MILK and ICE CREAM A Wts JINE DAIRY PRODUCTS. ABBOTT ' S DAIRIES, INC. Philadelphia, Pa. SPALDING SADDLES Regulation equipment for the campus . . . . . . And mighty popular with the young ladies for town and country hiking, too. WRIGHT DITSON Compliments Miss Martin ' s Candies Philadelphia Compliments of Smedley and Mehl Coal Company 426 Bcyleston Street Boston, Mass. 83 Staff Of 1948 Yearbook EDITOR Ellen Harriman ASSOCIATE EDITOR Nancy Kunhardt ASSISTANT EDITORS Doris Blackmail Jessica Levy Barbara Coffey Nancy Schwarz Margaret English Louise Sheldon Alice Wolff ART EDITOR PHOTOGRAPHY Bernice Robinson Rosamond Kane BUSINESS MANAGERS Theresa Matbias Catesby Spears ADVERTISING Anna-Stina Ericson Mary Ann Mills Elizabeth Hamilton Sheila Parker Consuelo Kidui Gloria White Engraving by J aim Oilier Engraving Company, Chicago, Illinois Printing by Benton Review Publishing Company, Inc., Fowler, Indiana Senior pictures by Edward Vantine Studios, Hamilton, New York Dr. Frank ' s picture by Fabian Bachrach, Philadelphia, Pa. The J. E. Limeburner Co. Guild Opticians Bryn Mawr Success to THE CLASS OF 1948 Bryn Mawr College Inn Breakfast-Luncheon-Tea OFFICIAL JEWELERS for the Class Rings and Seals of Bryn Mawr College Write for the GIFT BOOK, illustrat- ing many appropriate gifts, including Diamonds, Jewelry, Watches, Ster- ling, China, Crystal, Clocks and Leath- er Goods. 0A ' lEY ,Banks Bid d V ...iprs Silversmiths s.... e |ers Silversmiths S , atj °nets H. Established 1832 1218 Chestnut St. PHILADELPHIA 5, PA. Bryn Mawr 0570 JEANNETT ' S Bryn Mawr Flower Shop Incorporated Floral Ideas for all Occasions 823 Lancaster Ave. Bryn Mawr Compliments of the Haverford Pharmacy SYLVIA BRAND Estate of H. W. Press Success to THE CLASS OF 1948 HAMBURG HEARTH 814 Lancaster Ave. Contribute Painlessly to The College Scholarship Fund By Buying Your Books and Supplies in The COLLEGE BOOKSHOP All Profits go to Scholarships CLASS OF 1949 CLASS OF 1950 CLASS OF 1951 This Book may not be taken from the Library.
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