Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA)

 - Class of 1933

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Chatham College - Cornerstone Yearbook (Pittsburgh, PA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 164 of the 1933 volume:

ex LIBRIS vΒ£ 9- TT r it h3 O 19 2 t w DEDICATION The Editor and Staff of the ' Pennsylvanian wish to dedicate this book to the Alumnae of Pennsylvania College for Women, in the hope that in doing so the attention of the present student body will be called to the fine achievement, and the high ideals of the great body of graduates who have gone before them. We wish them to feel more deeply than before what a fine heritage in the form of ideals and traditions these women have given them. We want it to be a tribute to each member of the Alumnae Association, but especi- ally to the very fine work done by six individuals. Miss Coolidge and the Alumnae Council selected these women as representatives of the highest honor in the fields of Social Service, Civics, Music, Education and Y. W. C. A. work. They have, after careful study and discussion, chosen Miss Meloy for the Social Service Field, Mrs. John M. Phillips for Civics, Miss Grace McBride for Music, Miss Mary McKee for Education, Miss Edith Stanton for Y. W. C. A. work, and Mrs. Keister as a representative of all the former Presidents of the Association, and as a fine and efficient executive. Our only regret is that we cannot name five or ten more graduates who have made important contributions in some field, for P. C. W. should be proud of the achieve- ment of her alumnae in every phase of work that they are doing. .. Β . MISS MELOY Miss Meloy graduated from P. C. W. in 1887. From 1S8S to 1895 she taught in the College Preparatory School of P. C. W. In 1896 she took a position teaching in the West Newton Academy, where she taught un- til 1902. She then went to New York City, and acted as the Children ' s Agent of the State Charities Aid Association from 1902 to 1907. In 1907 she or- ganized the Department of Social Service at P. C. W., and has been teaching Economics and Sociology here since then. Miss Meloy received her Mas- ters degree from Columbia in 1914. She is a member of the American Association of Uni- versity Women, the American Sociological Society, the Amer- ican Association of Social Workers, the American Asso- ciation of University Profes- sors, Pi Gamma Mu, and she is also a member of the Allegheny Counts 1 Board of Visitation. GRACE McBRIDE Grace McBride graduated from P. C. V. in 1924 with an A.B. degree and a certificate in music. She spent one summer at the Fontainebleau School. Later, she studied under Gott- fried Feist, head of the Vienna Conservatory, and with Karl Doktor, a member of the Busch Quartet. After reading his Die Technik de Violinspieles . Miss McBride decided to study with Professor Julius Winkler, and she has continued her work with him up to the present time. Since 1928 she has been giving concerts in Vienna and other cities. She has just com- pleted the English translation of Die Technik de Violin- spieles . which will be publish- ed in London this winter. Dur- ing the summer months she plans to attend the Orchestral Academy in Sal .burg, and next winter she will go on a concert tour to Germany, Italy, and England. MRS. PHILLIPS Mrs. John M. Phillips (form- erlv Harriet T. Duff) gradu- ated from P. C. W. in 1903. She has held many important positions in Civic and Club work. She founded the Car- rick Mother ' s Club, and also the Brashear Settlement. For four years she has been the Counts ' Chairman of the Wel- fare Fund of Allegheny Coun- ts ' . As to clubs, she is a mem- ber of the Twentieth Century Club, the Pi ttsburgh Chapter of the D. A. R.. of the League of American Penwomen. and is Vice-President of the General Federation of Women ' s Clubs of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Phillips has served on two Hoover com- mittees β€” the Children ' s Con- ference Committee, and the Home Builders and Ownership Committee. Her literary abil- ity is evidenced by the poems and magazine articles she has written, and by the frequent lectures she has delivered in all parts of the state. r. i% I ' j mi k u fw - K. 1 v V 1 c s MRS. KEISTER Mrs. Keister graduated from P. C. Y. in 1914, receiving a Social Service Certificate, and a Music Certificate in addition to her A.B. Degree. In the summer of 1914, went to Cor- nell for work in public school music. From 1914 to 1917 she taught Latin. In 1917 she gave up teaching, and married Albert S. F. Keister. She joined the Monday Music Club of Scott- dale, and in 1919 was made its president. In 1922 she was president of the League of Wo- men Voters in Moundsville, West Virginia. From 1928 to 1930 she served as Vice-Presi- dent of the Alumnae Associa- tion of P. C. W., and was also secretary of the Women ' s City Club of Pittsburgh. She was elected president of the Alum- nae Association in 1930, and is serving at the present time. She is also the Vice-President of the Women ' s City Club this year. We might add, that Mrs. keis- ter is the mother of two lovely daughters, too. EDITH N. STANTON Edith N. Stanton graduated from P. C. W. in l l )()2. From 1908 to 192d she was with the National Board of the Y. W. C, A. in New York City as a mem- ber of the National Personnel Department. During the war she was the assistant director of the United War Work cam- paign in the Central States. From 1926 to 1930, Miss Stan- ton was the director of the Asilomar Conference and Vaca- tion Grounds at Asilomar. California, owned and operated bv the National Board of the Y. W. C. A. Since June, 1930, she has been in Los Angeles as General Secretary of the Y. W., with its Hollywood Branch, its section for colored people, for foreign-born groups, and with its two residences for minimum wage girls, and business girls. She has done a great deal of in- teresting travel in Europe, the Orient, and Mexico. MARY C. McKEE Marv C. McKee graduated from P. C. W in 1907. The following year she was a grad- uate scholar in Chemistry at Bryn Mawr. and in 1908 she received her A.M. from P. C. W. During the next nine years at Gladstone High School, at Mount Holyoke College. North- field Seminary, the University of Chicago, and at the Hollins College, Virginia. In 1918 she was made Assistant Professor of Chemistry at Connecticut College for Women, and she is now the Chairman of the de- partment. She has done a great deal of interesting gradu- ate work at Yale, the Universi- ty of Chicago, and the Univer- sity of Pittsburgh. Miss Mc- Kee is a member of Sigma i. the American Association of University Professors, and the American Society for the Ad- vancement of Science. n l MA r C D U C A T [ O H j The Langhlin Memorial Lib? ary Woodland Hall Dilworth Hail Buhl Hall Administration Faculty Seniors Juniors Underclassmen Dr. Cora Helen Coolidge, A. B., A. M., Litt. D. President of Pennsylvania College for Women A. B.. Smith College. A. M., Washington-Jefferson College for service to education in Western Penna. Litt. D., Pennsylvania College for Women. .Miss .Mary Helen .Marks. A. B.. A. M. Dean ol Pennsylvania College for Women A. P. .. Smith College. A. M.. Pennsylvania College for Women. Board of Trustees Arthur E. Braun ----- _._ President Ralph W. Harbison - - - _β€’_. Vice-President Mrs. Chas. H. Spencer ------- Secretary Peoples-Pittsburgh Trust Co. ----- Treasurer TERM EXPIRES 1931 A. C. Robinson A. V. Mellon F. B. Shipp A. E. Braun W. P. Barker Miss Cora Helen Coclidge Mrs George Wilmer Martin TERM EXPIRES 1932 Rev. W. L. McEvvan, D. D. Ralph V. Harbison Mrs. Charles H. Spencer Kenneth Seaver James E. MacCloskey, Jr. TERM EXPIRES 1033 Mrs. Alexander Murdoch Thos. P. Trimble Mrs. J no. R. McCune W. W. Blackburn- Mrs. Wm. N. Frew VANDA E. KERST Head of Department of Speech Heidelberg University, Ohio. Pupil of S. H. Clark and Miss Bertha Kun . Baker. Curry School of Expression. LUELLA P. MELOV, A. A. M. Head of Department of Sociology and Economics A. B.. Pennsylvania College for Women. A. M., Columbia University. EDITH G. ELY, A. B., A. M. Head of Department of Modern Languages A. B., Smith College. A M.. Pennsylvania College for Women, based on work at University of Berlin. LAURA C. GREEN, A. B.. A. M. Head of Department of Classical Languages A. B.. Wellesley College. A. M., Columbia University. CARLL W. DOXSEE. A. B. A. M-, Ph. D. Head of Department of English A. B., Connecticut Wesleyan. A. M., Connecticut Wesleyan. Ph. D., University of Princeton. J. S. KINDER. A. B.. A M. Head of Department of Education A B., Missouri University. A. M., Columbia University. ALICE M. GOODELL, A. B., Mus. B., A. M. Head of Department of Music A. B., University of Wisconsin. Mus. B.. University of Wisconsin. A. M., University of Wisconsin. Pupil of Dr. C. H. Mills and Cecil Burleigh. University of Wisconsin. STANLEY SCOTT, A. B.. B. D., Ph. D. Ilea. I of Department of Philosophy and Religions Education A. B., Queen ' s University. Rhodes Scholar at Oxford. St. Stephen ' s Theological College. B. D . University of Chicago. Ph. D., Hartford Seminary. Union Theological Seminary. ANNA L. EVANS. A. B.. A. M.. Ph. D. Head of Department of History and Political Science A. B . Oberlin College. A. M.. Smith College. Ph. D.. Columbia University. EARL K. WALLACE, B. S.. A. M . Ph. U. Head of Department of Chemistry and Physic: B. S., Pennsylvania State College. A. M., Columbia University. Ph. D.. Columbia University. ANNA R. WHITING. A. B., Ph. D. Head of Department of Biology A. B., Smith College. Ph. D.. University of Iowa. HELEN CALKINS. A. B., A. M.. Ph. D. Head of Department of Mathematics A. B , Knox College. A. M., Columbia University. Ph. D , Cornell University. MARY MARGARET ROBB. A. B.. A. M. Instructor in Speech A. B., Geneva College. A, .M.. Iowa University. NITA L. BUTLER, A. B.. A. M.. Ph. D. Assistant Professor in Classical Languages A, B.. University of Michigan. A. M., University of Michigan. Ph. D .. University of Michigan. JEANNE R. BUTLER, B. S., A. Bβ€ž A. M. Assistant Professor in French B. S.. Laval. France. A. B., Pennsylvania State College. A M., University of Illinois. Β₯ AGNES L. HERWIG, A. B.. A. M Assistant Professor in Modern Languages A. IS , Pennsylvania State College. A M . Pennsylvania State College. EFFIE LEE WALKER, A IV. A M Instructor in History A B., George Washington University. A. M.. Columbia University. J, HELEN GLADNS ERRETT. A. B. Instructor in Physical Education A. B., Pennsylvania College for Women. RALPH LEWANDO Instructor in Violin Press Critic, Concert Violinist. ELEANORE JEANNE FLYNN, A. B.. A. M. Instructor in Sociology and Economics A. B.. University of Wisconsin. A. M.. University of Wisconsin. MARY INA SHAMBURGER, A. B.. A. M. Assistant Professor in English A. B., Guilford College. A. M., Columbia University. Graduate Student of Bryn Mawr College. LOIS P. HARTMAN Instructor in Corrective Gymnastics Chicago School of Physical Education. HELENE WELKER. A. B. Instructor in Piano A. B., Hunter College. Graduate of Institute of Musical Art, N. V. Master Class of Harold Bauer. Student of Ernest Hutcheson, Lazare, and Levy. LVSBETH BENKERT, B. S.. M. S. Assistant in Biology B. Sβ€ž University of Pittsburgh. M. S., University of Pittsburgh. .5 HELEN KEIL Instructor in Singing Pupil of Dora Topping and Howard Brown of New York City; of Alberta Randegger and Hugh Heinz of London; and member of the Church Choir of Eric de Lamarter. Assistant Conductor of Chicago Symphony Orchestra. ELFREDA HEMKER, B. S.. M. S. Instructor in Physics and Chemistry B S.. Kansas State College. M. S., University of Michigan. LABERTA DYSART, A. B.. A. M. Instructor in History A. B.. University of Nebraska. A. M., Columbia University. ALLAN THLRMAN STANFORTH, B. S.. A. M., Ph. D. I lead of Depart incut of Psychology B. S . Muskingum College. A. M.. New York University. Ph. D., New York University. CHRISTINE GRIGGS, A. B.. B. M. Instructor in Piano and Theory of Music A. B., Pennsylvania College for Women. IV M., University of Wisconsin. MARJORIE I KIMBALL. A. B., A. M. Instructor in Modern Languages A. B., University of Pittsburgh. A. , L. University of Pittsburgh. Bnm KATHRYN GILMORE, B. S., M. S. Instructor in Bacteriology B. S., Iowa Wesleyan. M. S.. Iowa University. GLENN W. GE1L. A. B., M. S. Instructor in Physics A. B.. Phillips University. M. S.. Oklahoma University. Administrative Officers ELEANOR KENDRICK TAYLOR, A. B. A. M. Assistant to the Dean, and Instructor in English A. B.. Rice Institute. A. M., University of Pttshurgh. MARGARET A. STUART Secretary and Assistant Treasurer MARIAN E. JOBSON, A. B. Assistant to the President A. B.. Pennsylvania College for Women. CATHERINE SAVERS, A. B Field Secretary A. B., Pennsylvania College for Women. j Alta Aileen Robinson, A. B., A. M. Assistant Professor in English A. B., University of Iowa A. M., University of Iowa PART TIME INSTRUCTORS Olive Harris. B. S.. Education Anna Belle Craig. Arl OTHER OEEICERS Harriet D. McCartv. A. B-. Librarian Mrs. Maybelle M. Runner. Assistant Librarian Martha L. Borland, Assistant Librarian Mrs. Eva E. Merriman, House Director of Berry Hall Mrs. Mellie C. Woodward. House Director of Woodland Hall Ethel C. Bair, Hostess. Woodland Hall Katherine E. Harrison, R. N.. Resident Xiirsc Mary Kolb, A. B.. Recorder Edith McKelvey, A. B . Alumnae Secretary Oma ' Thompson. Secretary to President and Dean Gladys Howell, Assistant to the Treasurer Anna E. Weigand. Assistant to the Assistant Treasurer Chester C. O ' Neil, Superintendent of Buildings and Grounds .Twenty-seven Senior Officers Sara A. Stevenson -------- President Dorothy Humphrey __-_-- Vice-President Sara Miller ---------- Secretary Dorothy Russell -------- Treasurer BEATRICE ANDREWS Pittsburgh, Pa. ' Bea V. W. C. A. Cab. (3 . Dramatic Club (2. 3. 4). Treas. (3). Sec ' t. (4). Omega (2, 3). I. R. C. (4). Big Sister (3, 4). Cut Com. Behind a demure little face, Bea hides the most fascinating tales of mystery and romance! ALICE W. BAIR Braddock, Pa. Bear Big Sister (3, 41. Den Committee Chairman (41. Versatility, thy name is Alice, for you alone are the one who successfully divides your time between classes, cleaning up the den, and playing tag with Mr. O ' Neil. CAROLYN W. BICKELL Philadelphia, Pa. Bick Ursinus College (I, 2), I. R. C. (3, 4). Arrow Staff (4), liig Sister (4). A true friend β€” the first person who comes in when the whole world has gone out. M S. LOUISE BLANK Pittsburgh, Pa. Weenie Den Com (3). Penn ' ian Staff (4), My Sigma (3. 4). Glee Club (3. 4). A ' pha Phi (3. 4). Big Sister (3. 4l. Hockey (2, 4). Hon- urary Team (2. 4), Basketball (2 . Track (2. 3). Since you do well little things now, so shall great things come to you by and by asking to be done ' LLORLNCL BOL ' I DIN Irwin. Pa. Flo A. A. Board, Sec ' t (3), Pres. (4). Stu. Gov. Board (2), Class Pies. (2). Pac.-Stu. Council (2, 4), Glee Club (I. 2, 3. 4), Pres. (3). Dramatic Club (3. 4). Le Circle Francais (3, 4), Norn Com. (I). Big Sister. Hockey (I, 2. 3, 4). Hon. Team (I. 2, 3, 41, Basketball (1, 2. 3, 4). Hon. Team (1. 2. 3). Flo is charming, Flo is fair, Flo is a girl beyond compare. CAROLINE BRADY Elkins, W. ' Va. Cody Stu. Gov. Board (2. 4), Pres. (41. Co-op. Manager (3), Ch. Junior Prom. (3), Prench Club (2. 3), Dramatic Club (2, 3. 4). Basketball (1, 2. 3), Hon. Team (I. 2. . Hockey (2. 3, 4). Hon. Team (2. 3. 4i. Big Sister (3, 41, Cody we found, can all things propound, Resound, surround, expound. (). β– ;. D. β€” renowned! i MARIAN M. BRINDLE Latrobe, Pa. Brin StU. Gov. Board (3. 4). Mu Sigma (3, -II. House Board (2), Nom. Com. Ch. (4), Big Sister (3, 4). Basketball (1), Hon. Team (1), Fr.-Soph. Dance Ch. (2), Jr. -Sen. Spring Dance Com. (3). Never elated while one man ' s oppressed. Never dejected while another ' s blest. HELEN FAY BROWN Tarentum, Pa. Fay Dramatic Club (1), Mu Sigma (3. 4). Sec.-Treas. (4), House Pres. (2), 1st Vice Pres. House (2nd Sem. of 2). Fr.-Soph. Dance Com. (1). Prom Com. (1). Sub Nom. Com. (I), Big Sister (3. 4). Helen Fay is all agog! ' She found a two-legged pollywog! NANCY CAMPBELL Woodville, Pa. Nance Mu Sigma (3, 4), Dramatic Club (I. 2, 31, Math Club (3, 4), Pres. (4), Stony Corners-Broadview House Board (2), House Dance (2). Basketball (1). Hockey (1. 31. Sing a song of Chemistry, Tomatoes full of lye, Four and twenty acitates, Nance can purify! ELLEN LOUISE CARPI Donora, Pa. Ellen Arrow Stall (I. 4). French Club (2. 3, 4), I. R. C (3. 4). Math Club (4), Kappa Tau Alpha (1, 2). Soph. Member (2). Big Sister (3), Soph. Member Berry Hall House Board (2). Sec ' t. Woodland Hall House Board (3). Ch. Library Com. (4). Sub- Nom. Com. (4). Glee Club (1. 2). Ch. Perm. Nom. Com. of Woodland Hall (4). Forever foremost in the ranks oj fun, The laughing herald of the harmless pun. CATHERINE COCHRAN PlITSBURGH, Pa. Cocky Arrow Staff (I. 2. 3). News Ed. (4). Alpha Phi (2. 3. 4), Pres. (4), Glee Club (I. 2. 3. 4), Bi S Sister (3. 41. Kappa Tau Alpha HI. You ' ve climbed the grammar tree and distinctly know Where noun and verb and participle grow. ISABEL CULLISON Bf.llevle. Pa. Icky Carnegie lech (I). Dramatic Club (2. 3, 4), I. R. C. (3 4). Jr.-Sen, Dance Com I i), A merry heart For all the day. ELIZABETH TOWNSEND DEARBORN Summit, N. J. Betsy Sr. Mem. Stu. Gov. Board (4). Arrow Staff (I. 2. 3), Penn ' ian Staff (3. 4), Glee Club (I. 2. 3). Librarian (1). Dramatic Club (2). Omega (I. 2. 3. 4). V. Prcs. (3), Pres. (4). Big Sister (3. 4). Hockey (4), Ed. Minor Bird (3), Class Play Contest (2). Class Play (4). A thing of impulse and a child of song. MARGARET ELIZABETH EISAMAN Swissvale, Pa. Peg The College of Wooster (I). Alpha Phi (3). Glee Club (4) Arrow Staff (4). Big Sister (4). She has that happy gift of working tirelessly for our Senior Class. It does not matter whether we ask her to .cook dinner for fifty, or to make a Rose Chain β€” Peg ' s always willing. HELEN DOROTHY ENGLISH Pittsburgh, Pa. Helen Dorothy Co-op. (3). I. R. C. (2. 3. 4). Reporter (4). Alpha Phi (2. 3, 4), Treas. (3). Glee Club (1. 2), Class Play (4). B. A., M. A., Ph. D., This is the way she spells history. ELIZABETH EWING Pittsburgh. Pa. Lib Nat. Park Seminary (I). Nom. Com- (2), Ch. Jr.-Nom. Con (3), Alpha Phi (41. Big Sister (4). Sport, that wrinkled Care derides, A nd Laughter holding both his sides. RUTH G. FUGH Pittsburgh. Pa. Ruth 2nd Vice Pre . Stu. Gov. Board (3), Fac.-Stu. Council (3. 4 . Y. VV. C. A. (I, 2. 41. Pres. (4). I. R. C. (2. 4). French Club (2, 3). Glee Club (I. 2. 3, 41, Sect. Treas. (31. Basketball (I) Big Sister (3, 4), Ch. Internat. Fair (21, Pall Dance CO, Spring Dance (3), Curriculum Com. (1. 4). She can be enthusiastic over her Y. W. or house parties at Colgate, practice teaching or fraternity pins, world disarmament or cabbages and kings. ERMADELL GASSER WlLKINSBURG. P. Ermadell Alpha Phi (2. 3. 41. Big Sister (4). Daffadown-dilly has just come to town, In a yellow petticoat and a green gown! RUTH BERTHA GRAFMAN Pittsburgh, Pa. -Ruth University of Pgh., Carnegie Institute of Technology. Oestalizz Proebel Teachers College. Lambda Pi Mu (2 . Our own Jane Adams β€” capable, quiet, and unas suming. and yet delightful with it all. CHARLOTTE GRAHAM Grove City, Pa Charlotte Grove City College (1). Arrow Staff (2. 3, 4). Dramatic Club (2, 3, 4). Kappa Tau Alpha (41. Big Sister (3, 4), House Board (2). In an old fashioned costume or in overalls, pound- ing away at stage sets, Charlotte is equally charming and efficient- MARIE E. HAHN Johnstown, Pa. Halmie Hood College (I),. Jr. Class Tr. (3), Ch. Jr.-f-r. Tea (.?). Arrow Staff (2). I. R, C. (2, 3. 4). Big Sister (3. 4), Prom. Com. (3), Jr. Member House Board (3). She is so happy and exceedingly gay, that we all think She must find a lucky horseshoe at least once a day. JOSEPHINE HERROLD Pittsburgh, Pa. Jo Penn ' ian Staff (4), Glee Cluh (I. , 3, -II. I. R. C. (I, 1. 3. 4). Treas. (3). Pres. (4), Y. V. C. A. Cabinet (3 1. Big Sister (3. 4), Alpha Phi (4). If you see someone who can with equal ease teach biology, work enthusiastically on committees, man- age I. R. C. and still find time for classes β€” that ' s Jo. MARY LOUISE HOCKENSMITI I Irwin, Pa. Hock Vice-Pres. Class (I), Sub-Nom. Com. (I), Pres. Class (3). House Pres. (4), 1st Vice-Pres. Stu. Gov. (4). Mu Sigma (3, 4l Fac.-Stu. Council (3. 4) A lovely lady who has a certain poise whether she is leading our Rose Chain, playing with microbes and mud puppies, managing the Mouse, or just gal- loping around with Brin! JEAN HOUGHTELIN Pittsburgh. Pa. Jean Ohio Weslevan University (I. 1. 31. Omega (41. Wit to persuade and beauty to delight. DOROTHY l-IUMPHERY Crafton, Pa. Dottie V. Pres. Class (4). V. Pres. Y. W. C. A. (3). Pro. Ch. (4), Penn ' ian (2), Arrow Staff (2. 3). Ed. Handbook (4). Dramatic Club (1, 2. 3, 4). Glee Club (I. 2. 3, 4). Bus. Man. (3). Pres. (4). Zeta Kappa Psi (4), Basketball (I). Class Sub-Nom. Com. (3). I ' ll seek a four-leaved shamrock in all the fairy dells, A nd if I find the charmed leave . Oh, how I ' ll weave my spells! LILLIAN HUNTER Verona,- Pa. β– β– nr R. C. (3, 4). Class Play (4). A little fairy she comes at mght, Her eyes are blue, her hair is brown. With silver spots upon her wings, And from the moon she flutters down. ' CORA MAN ' INGHAM Pittsburgh, Pa. Coiy Wells College (I), V. Pres. Class (3). Omega (4). Big Sister (4). Fall Dance Com. (41, A little nonsense now and then Is relished by the wisest men. KATHARINE MOORE LEF. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Katy Handbook Com. (4), Arrow Staff (3). I. R. C. (3. -1). Alpha Phi (2 ?. 4). Glee Club (3. 4). Big Sister (4), Hockey (1. 2. ), 4), Basketball (3 . Katy is nimble. Katy is quick, Katy is handy with a hockey stick! Rl I A LEFTON T : ord City. Pa Rita Kappa Tau Alpha 111. Lambda Pi Mu (2. 3. 4). Pres. (4). Big Sister (31. Basketball (2, 3. 4). Hockey (21, Welfare Com. (4). She can play basketball, reform Soho. and teach Ivanhoe with equal skill and interest. ISABELLE WYNCOOP LINDSAY Butler. Pa. hiy Instrumental Club (I ' . Alpha Phi (1), I. R. C. (41. Omega (4). Ch. Address Book Com. (41. Hockey (I I. Basketball (2). Big Sister (41. hull of fancy, hill oj glee, β€’ ' Β of Inn and jollity! ELIZABETH TAYLOR LUPTON Pittsburgh. Pa. Lup Play Com. Ch. (4), Arrow Staff (1. 4). Penn ' ian Staff (-)). Dra- matic Club (I, 2). I. R. C. (2. 3, 4), Omego (2. 3, 4). Hor.kej (4). Big Sister (31, Class Play (4). Those who know you not no words can paint, And those who know you, know all words are faint. BETTY H. McKEE Greensburg, Pa. Mac Michigan University (1, 2), Spring Dance Com. (3), Ch. Fall Dance (4). Big Sister (4). Perm. Norn. Com. (4). I ' ll put on my furs, I ' ll shorten my clothes, I ' ll wear my galoshes and thick woolen hose ; I ' ll care not a pin for the storm or the flood, I ' ll play lawn-tennis in spite of the mud! GEORGIA EVELYN MEINECKE Mount Vernon, N, Y. George Curriculum Com. (I, 3), Alpha Phi (2. 3, 4). Big Sister (3. 4). Sr. Member House Board (4), Spring Dance Com. (3). Georgia likes to psycho-analyse And check up on our alibis! RUTH MARION MILLER Pittsburgh. Pa. Ruth si C3, 4) Too wise to err, too good to be unkind. Alpha Phi I I. 2. 3, 4). Yice-Pres. (2). Zeta Kapp Sec ' t. (4), 1- R. C. (4), Big Sister (3, 4). SARA MILLER Donora. Pa, Sally Dramatic Club (I, 2. i, 4). Jr. Memb. (!). Yice-Pres. (4). Kappa Tau Alpha (i. 41. Nom. Com. (1). Sr. Play Com. (4), Big Sister O. 4). Class Sec ' t. (4). Class Play (4). Sally, Sally, gesticulate, Sally, Sally, impersonate, Sally. Sally, our little muse, Sally. Sally, blew out a fuse! JEAN MULLER Pittsburgh. Pa. lean Syracuse University (I. 2). Pitt (3), Sr. Dance Com. (4). Alpha Phi (4). Y. W. C. A. Happy am I: from care I ' m free, Why aren ' t they all contented like me? JANET BROWN NEVIN Pittsburgh. Pa. Jane Westminster College (I. 2 1. Alpha Phi (3, -I). She walks in beauty like the night Of cloudless climes and starry skies. ' HARRIET OSSMAN LUNDQUIST Pittsburgh, Pa. Sticks Glee Club (I. _ ' , 3, 4), Big Sister (3. 4), Hockey (2, 3. 4), Hon. Team (2, 3), Zeta Kappa Psi (2. 3. 4), Pres. (4), Alpha Phi (2. 3. 4). Kappa Tau Alpha (2). Class Song Leader (4). Music hath charms β€” MARIE PERRONE WlLMERDING, Pa. Marie Alpha Phi (4). For she has a heart as mellow as an apple over-ripe, And the brightest little twinkle when a funny thing occurred, And the lightest little tinkle of a laugh you ever heard! BHRTHA JANE PHILLIPS Mr. Lebanon, Pa. Birdie Miami University (I. Junior Pi For she is such a smart little craft. Such a neat little, street little craft. Such a bright little, slight little, light little Trim little, slim little craft. MARGARET PRICE East Liverpool. Ohio Peg Library Com. (I. 1. i, 4), Omega (3, 4), I. R. C. (4), House Hoard (4), Sr. Play Com. (4). Minor Bird Staff (3), Big Sister ( )), Arrow Staff (1, 2. 3. 4). Gentle in manner, firm in reality. ELIZABETH JEAN RAMSAi Pittsburgh, Pa. Betty lac. -Slu. Council (4). Dramatic Club (I. 1. J, 4). Omega (3, 41. Hockey (I, 2, 3, 4), Hon. Team (41. Big Sister (1. 41. Arrow Staff . 3, 41, Editor (4). Minor Bird Staff (2) Penn ' ian Staff (3), Le Circle Francais (2), Class Play (41. Her laughing mouth is well inclined To speak aloud her laughing mind ELIZABETH RANKIN WlLKlNSBURG, Pa. Betty Wilson College (I, 2). I. R. C. (3, 41, Alpha Phi (-1). Big Sister (41. Hail to thee, blithe Spirit! DOROTHY M. RUSSELL Edgew ' ood. Pa. Dottie Class. Sec ' t. (3), Treas. (4). Budget Com. (4). Arrow Star! (3), Penn ' ian Staff (41. Alpha Phi (I. 2. 3, 4), Mn Sigma (3, 4|. Big Sister (3. 4), Hockey (1, 2. 3, 4), Capt. (4). Hon. Team (2, 3. 4). Basketball (I. 2. 3. 4). Sugar and spice and everything nice! That ' s what little girls are made of! SARA STEVENSON Pittsburgh. Pa. Sally CI. Sec ' t. (2). Handbook Com. (1), Stu. Gov. (I, 4), Sec ' t. (3), CI. Pres. (4). Fac.-Stu. Council (4), Omega (3, 4). Phi Pi (1, 2. 3, 4). Vice-Pres. (4). Basketball (I. 2. 3, 4), Hockey (I, 2. 4). Hon. Team (I. 4). Capt. (4), Big Sister (3, 41, Arrow Staff (3. 4). Penn ' ian Staff (3. 4). Kappa Tail Alpha (1), Class Plav (4). The Major-Domo of the Senior Class, everybody ' s friend. and still MARIAN ELIZABETH STONE Mount Lebanon, Pa. Stoney Fr. Rep. Stu. Gov. Board (I). Treas. Slu. Gov. (2). Omega (2. J, 4). Sec. Treas. (3). Dramatic Club (I. 2. 3. 4). Pres. (4). Library Com. (I). Basketball (3. 4). Capt. (4). Hon. Team (J). Class Play (4). My natural instinct teaches me (And instinct is important ()). ) ou ' re everything you ought to be. And nothing that you oughtn ' t 01 VIOLA SWENSON Ml in hall, Pa. Vi Perm Nom. Com (3), Mem. A. A. Board (3. 4). Basketball (1. 2. 3). Capt (. ' ). Hon. Team (I, 2. 3). Mu Sigma (2, 3. 4), Pres. (4), Sec-Treas. (3). Beta Chi (4). Bis Sister, Sub. Nom. Com. (4), Hockey (3). She is the kind of girl who will keep house with a test tube in one hand, a lorgnette in the other, and a basketball tucked under her arm. MARY FRANCES TARR Johnstown, Pa. Taney I, I. R. C. (4i. House Maryland College for Women ( I Dance (3 1. Class Play (4). Taney, Taney, we want to know, lion: does your practice teaching go β€” With wiggling boys and all I heir noise And giggling girls all in a row? MEREDITH WELSH Vandercrift, Pa. Meredith House Board. 1st Vice-Pres. (3). I. R. C. (3. 4). A quiet, solemn little girl who always seems to be highly amused at the antics of the Senior class! LILLIAN LAFBLIRY WILLS Pittsburgh, Pa. LU Temp. Norn. Com. (I). Y. V. C. A. Cabinet (3). Ch. Get- Acquainted Party (3), Big Sister (3, 4). Hockey (I. 2, 3), Hon. Team (I. 2), Basketball (I. 2), Glee Club (2. 3). French Club (2, 3, 4), Librarian Glee Club (3). No more wedding bells for me! I ' m as happy as can be! MARY WARD WOOLDRIDGE Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary Ed. Penn ' ian (4), Arrow Staff (2, 3), Bus. Man. (3). Big Sister (3, 4), Y. W. C. A. Cabinet (2), Address Book Com. (1), Hand- book Staff (3), Sr. Play Com. (4), Kappa Tau Alpha (I), Omega (3, 4), Dramatic Club (1, 2, 3, 4). A. A. Board (I). Hockey (1. 2. 3, 4), Capt. (1, 2). Hon. Team (3, 4). Basketball (I, 2, 3, 4). Capt. (3). Class Play (4). A contagious chuckle β€” you are expecting one of the year-book goblins to twinkle at you around the corner? β€” it ' s onlv Mary. Forty-five ELVA A. STUERTZ Pittsburgh, Pa. Elva Dramatic Club (- ' . i, 4), Glee Club (2, i, 4). Kappa Tan Alpha (3. 41. Treas. (4). Big Sister ( i). Elva, with her ever-ready smile and fine acting. has returned to graduate with our class, and we ' re very glad to have her! Junior Officers Ruth Ludebuehl -------- President Ruth Giles -------- Vice-President Sara Allison - - - - - - - - - - Secretary Mary Johnston --------- treasurer EVELYN M. ALIFF ' Evie West Park, Pa. Dramatic Club (I. 2. 3). Kappa Tau Alpha (I. 2, 3). Pres. (3), Intercol. Debater (2), Dramatic Club Play Com. (3). You can always depend on Evelyn ' s being both earnest and enthusiastic in everything she does, whether she ' s talking about Leslie Howard or design- ing a stage set, and happily her enthusiasm and her earnestness are infectious. SARA VERNA ALLISON Sally Dramatic Club (2. 3). Men Omega (3). Arrow Staff (3). Bellevue, Pa. of Board (3). Class Sec ' t. (3), tig Sister (3). In one of her previous incarnations Sara was a Dresden china shepherdess who carried a crook with a blue bow and who looked wistfully across the mantelpiece at a ruddy shepherd boy who played a reed pipe and gazed straight in front of him. Dor DOROTHY BALLANTYNE Edgewood, Pa. Allegheny College Sec ' t.-Tr ' eas. (3). Dorothy should always have half a dozen children to play with, partly for her sake, partly for the glorious time she could give them, and partly for the attractive picture they would make. MARIAN BAUGHMAN ' Baugb ' Jeannette, Pa. Norn. Com. (2), A. A. Board (3). Sec ' t.-Treas. (3). Mu Sigma (3). Basketball (I. 2. 3). Capt. (I). Honorary Team (I. 2, 3). Hockey Team (I. 2. 3). Baseball Team (!. 2). House Board(l). Fr.-Soph. Dance Com. (I. 2). Ch. (2), Prom. Com. (3). Big Sister (3). No matter whether she is heading a receiving line, lilling test-tubes with strange-colored liquids, tossing a basketball or climbing a telegraph pole. Marian does them all with rare poise and sophistication. EVELYN HANNA BITNER Ev Pittsburgh, Pa. 3), eta Kappa Psi (I), Big Glee Club (2, !), Irench Club ( Sister (3). Things Parisian are Evelyn ' s proper background β€” the elegance of the opera, the cool tinkling of Ver- sailles fountains, the piquant charm of outdoor res- taurants, for the gay, fascinating woman that is Paris often twinkles in Evelyn ' s ex ' es. JEAN LOUISE BLAIR lean Clintonville. Pa. Glee Club (I), Hockey Team (3), Capt. (3). Big Sister (3). Hauteur and disarming friendliness, lifted eyebrows and smiling eyes, worldliness tempered with simpli- city β€” that ' s Jean. RUTH BOWLES Ruth Wellsville, Ohio Ohio Wesleyan (1). Dramatic Club (2 , House Board (3). Ruth can always be counted on to defend her ideals, her ideas and her friends loyally and intelli- gently. Pittsburgh, Pa NELLIE BOWMAN Nellie Big Sister (3). The freshness of a br ight summer morning and a prettv girl coming down the road swinging her shiny milk-pail. DOROTHY CAMPBELL Dot Pittsburgh. Pa Sub. -Norn. Com. (I). Vice-Pres. Class (2), Alpha Phi (2. 3). Gleaming blond hair, the sort of smile that puts you at your ease, a soft, musical voice β€” these are Dorothy ' s special lovlinesses. JEAN M. CASE jean ' Jeannette, Pa. Hood College (I), Big Sister (3). The purple blue of a Mediterranean night, the soft lapping of waves against a stont parapet, and the far-off rhvthm of muted violins. HELEN LOUISE CHAMBERS Helen Sewickley, Pa. Carnegie Tech (1. 2). Zeta Kappa Psi (3). The haunting melody of a Chopin prelude, the lyric grace of a Brahms waltz, the quiet strength of :i Beethoven sonata β€” all these remind us of Helen. ELIZABETH B. CL1NE Lib , LibbV East Liverpool, Ohio Libby ' s elegance and grace may well have come from some stately French lady whose salon was world-famous and over whose jewelled hand cour- tiers and philosophers, poets and savants bent to pay humble homage. CLARA MAE CONDRON Ciare Braddock, Pa. Hockev (2. 3). I. R. C. (2. 3). Dramatic Club (1, 2, 3), Big Sister (3).. There is a forcefulness and a vitality activating Clare which will some day carry her to the crest of her wave. MARY L. CRUMAY Crummy Bradford Woods, Pa. Library Com. (3). Arrow Staff (3), Co-Op. Com. (3 ). Omega (3). Mary should try hard to emulate Peter Pan and never grow up. It would he a pity to have that naivete change to cynicism, that delightful chuckle turn into a high-pitched staccato, that directness of thought and word become flattering prevarication. MARGUERITE M. CUNL1EFE Peggy Pittsburgh, Pa. Hockey (I. 2. 3). Hon. Team (I. 2). Arrow (2, 3), V. V. Cab. (3). Big Sister (3). Marguerite, unfortunately, was born a few de- cades too late. She would have been in her element as a suffragist leader, and she would have made a great name for herself and her movement. Still, it ' s not too late: there are many things needing to be set right in this strange old world β€” do your best, Mar- guerite! J GENEVIEVE DAVIS Gen East Liverpool, Ohio Third Vice-Pres. Stu. Gov. (2 1, Fac.Stu. Council (2). Perm. Norn. Com. (3). Jr. Norn. Com. (3). Vice-Pres. I. R. C. (3), Vice-Pres. House Board (3). We wonder if Genevieve studies history in order to find more lovely women to mold herself on. Oth- erwise, how could she have the lure of Trojan Helen, the intelligence of Sappho, the elegance of Pompa- dour, and yet keep her own engaging friendliness? We don ' t know; we ' re asking you. JESSIE ELIZABETH DOUDNA Jessie Washington. Pa. Vice-Pres. V. V. C. A. (3), Phi Pi (I. 2. 3), Sec ' t -Treas. (2). Pres. (3). Kappa Tail Alpha (3), Big Sister (3). Jessie is such a vital person that she can invigorate even dead Romans and Greeks and make interesting figures of them DOROTHY BERGER EDSALL Dot Pittsburgh. Pa. Class Treas. (I), Stu. Gov. Board (2). Treas. (2). Class Ed. Minor Bird (I), Arrow Start (2. 3). Man. Ed. (3), Ed. of Class Issue (2). Penn ' ian Staff (3), Asst. Ed. Handbook (2). Kappa Tau Alpha (I). Dramatic Club (2. 31. Treas. (3). Glee Cluh (I, 2. 3). Mu Sigma (3). Omega (2. 3). Big Sister (3). We beg to differ. Dr. Stanforth, but here is the type of girl you deem impossible: the well-balanced individual who yet retains brilliance in all lines. RUTH L. GILES Cilly Mckeesport, Pa. i, French Club (3), The warm glow of a Talisman rose just beginning to unfold its gleaming petals. BETTY GRAHAM Betty Pittsburgh. Pa. Class Pres. (1), Fac.-Stu. Council (I), Stu. Gov. Board (I, 3), lun. Mem. (3). Y. W. Cab. (2). Curriculum Com. (2), Glee Club (1, 2. 3). Dramatic Club CI, 2), Zeta Kappa Psi (2), Omega (1, 3), Vice-Pres. (3), French Club (3), Penn ' ian Staff (!). Bi s Sister (2. 3). Betty ' s charm is so difficult to analyze. She is such a tantalizing combination of wood-nymph and queen, Columbine and Portia, that you are never quite sure which she is. That, of course, is one of the reasons why she is so delightful. VIRGINIA W. HALL Ginny Pittsburgh, Pa. Alpha Phi (2, 3). Dramatic Club (3), Big Sister (3). In days when knights wore their lady ' s favor on their sleeves of mail, surely many a battle must have been fought over Virginia ' s coveted bit of spangled silk. MARJORIE HOPKINS Mar] , Hopsky Wilkinsburg, Pa. Y. W. Cab. (3), Omega (2. 3). Sec ' t.-Treas. (3). Fren:h Cluh (2. 3). Reporter (3), Arrow Staff (3). Penn ' ian Staff (3). Minor Bird Staff (2). Marjorie must have had a good fairy visit her in her cradle, a fairy who gave her the golden pen she now uses to make us weep and then smile through our tears, and chuckle with a lump in our throats. MARGARET F. HUSBAND Peg , Hubby Mt. Pleasant. Pa. of Stu, Gov. (3), Beta That such a charming person should find allure in the realm of mathematics makes us wonder whether, after all, there may not have been some- thing in algebra and geometry which we missed. CHARLOTTE DORSEY IAMS Charlotte Washington, Pa. Glee Club (2, 31. Big Sister (3). You think her a bit too pensive, a shade too seri- ous? Ah, you have no idea what lovely blue and gold dreams are being manufactured in that snug little brain of hers. β€’J MARY TURNER JOHNSTON Mary Pittsburgh, Pa. Class Treas. (3). Nora. Com. (2), Dramatic Club (2. 3), My Sigma (3). Beta Chi (3). Big Sister (3). Her unreserved sincerity is what makes Mary such a satisfying friend. You can rely on her being steadfast and true though the floods should come and the heavens fall. PHYLLIS LEHEW Phyl Grafton, Pa. Treas. Y. W. (3), Glee Club (I. 2. 3), Big Sister (2, 3). Phyllis is the sort of person you associate with Dickens and may-pole dancing, sleigh-rides and taffy- pulls, everything that is jolly and unaffected and vigorous. GENE AVIS LLEWELLYN Gene Wilkinsburg Pa. Glee Club (I. 2. 3). Zeta Kappa Psi (1. 2, 3). Sec ' t. (2), Vice- Pres. (3), Dramatic Club (2). Big Sister (3). You would think that Gene ' s only mission in life would be to provide an artist ' s inspiration with her ilaming aureole, but she is far more than that β€” she is herself an artist, with all an artist ' s sensitivity and delicacy. 1 NANCY JANE LONGENECKER Nancy Pittsburgh. Pa. Dramatic C lub (2. 3), Hockey (I). Big Sister (3;. We always see Nancy in our mind ' s eye in a me- dieval dress of midnight blue velvet, with a train and a misty white veil, standing at a high turret window, while the mellow sound of a lute rises gently on the night breeze. RUTH LOUISE LUDEBUEHI β– Rutb ' Pittsburgh. Pa, Class Pres. (3). Perm. Norn. Com. (1), Glee Club (I. 2, 31. French Club (2. 3). Dramatic Club (1. 2. 3). Chair, of Soph. Showboat 2l. Bis Sister (31, l : ac.-Stu. Council (3). To be able to create characters by the score, charming, vivid people all of them, and yet to keep intact her own gracious personality is a difficult task for any actress, however gifted, but it is one which Ruth has done extraordinarily well. 1 1)1 111 LUC1LE McBANE β€’Edith ' Dormont. Pa. Arrow Staff (3), Big Edith ' s joys are not the mad. pagan ones of noise and hilarity, her joys come from the familiar bind- ing of a well-loved book, the rich smoothness of vellum pages, the quiet, inward joys of reading great books and being spoken to by the great ones ol the ages. -! ELEANOR JANE McCLIMANS E. J. Pittsburgh, Pa. Fresh. -Soph. Dance Com. (2). Dramatic Club (3), French Club 3), Big Sister (3). E J. is the perfect hostess type. It is not at all hard to picture her at the head of a sparkling dinner table, alert, sophisticated, appreciative, tactful. CLARA GENE McCLURE Clare Pittsburgh, Pa. Den Com. (1). Mu Sigma (3 ), French Club (2, 3 ). Big Sister (3 ). It ' s queer how very wrong can be your precon- ceived notions of people ' s tastes based on their ap- pearance. You can easily visualize Clara reclining in a fluffy negligee on a fluffy couch in a fluffy bou- doir, and looking perfectly adorable. And then she majors in chemistry! Life is like that. helen Mccracken Crackers Woodville, Pa. Basketball (I). Lambda Pi Mu (I. 2. 3). Yice-Pres. (3), Tea Dance Com. (2, 3). Crackers is the embodiment of the college girl you read about, even to the raccoon coat β€” studying, oh yes; dating, oh my yes; having a rare good time, Oh my yes! Fifty-nine HELEN McCREERY β– Helen Pittsburgh, Pa. Vpha Phi (2. i), Sec ' t.-Treas. (3), Big Sister (3). Helen would make a perfect model for a silhouette β€” in an old-fashioned dress, very low on the shoul- ders, holding a tight Colonial bouquet. But then there ' s her hair; vou couldn ' t condemn that to mere black and white It will have to he an oil painting after all. LOUISE B. METZGAR ' Louise ' Edgewood. Pa. Class Sec ' t. (2). Dramatic Club (3), Hockey (I. 2), House Board (2), lun.-Sen. Dance Com. (3), Hand Book Staff (3), I ' enn ' ian Staff (31. Big Sister (2, 3). Wouldn ' t life he altogether satisfying if all maids looked as dainty and fresh as Louise and said. The master is in the library, Madam , in as appealing a voice? RITH ELIZABETH MORGAN ' Ruth Pittsburgh. Pa. :. C. (2. 3), Glee Club (2. 3). Big Sis- W ' hen some clever person invents a means of storing up the sun ' s energy, perhaps he will, as his next task, devise a way of storing Ruth ' s boundless energy and vivacity, so that less fortunate and more lethargic souls may he able to partake of it DOROTHY BLYTHE NEWELL Dot Warren, Pa. Cercle Francais (1, 2, 3. 4). Vke-Pres. (4). Berry Hall House Board (I), Big Sister (3. 4). Color Day Songs (2. 3). Dot goes about everything with a quiet ease that accomplishes much before we realize it. MARGARET ANNE NICHOL Peg Mt. Lebanon, Pa. Mu Sigma (3), Alpha Phi (3). Penn ' ian Staff (3). Big Sister (3). Peg needs no written word to make you remember her. On every page of this book, from the dragon- fly at the front, to the dragon-fly at the back, she has made her own memorial in her impish goblins. BETTY N1ES Betty Pittsburgh, Pa. Stud. Gov. Board (3), Perm. Norn. Com. (1). Library Com. (1), Hockey (1. 2. 3). Capt. (2), Hon. Team (1, 2, 3), Basketball (I, 2, ' 3), Hon. Team (2), French Club (2. 3), Pres. (3). Beta Chi (2. 3). Sec ' t.-Treas. (2). Omega (2, 3), Penn ' ian Staff (2. 3), Big Sister (3). Having known Betty, it is easier to understand the enigma of Lewis Carroll. She must have the same kind of mind β€” to soar one minute on the cold sub- limity of mathematical heights, the next minute to warm your heart with quotations from Pooh or her own Puckish humor. RL III ELEANOR NIRELLA β€’Ruth ' Pittsburgh. Pa. Dramatic Club (1. I. 3). Big Sister (3 1. 3 1. Mem. of Some day when we (personally.) have amassed millions we intend to charter Ruth to come and do nothing but act for us. Then she can do all the roles we ' ve always wanted to see her do β€” Mrs. Mala- prop, and Lady Teazle, and even Lady Macbeth. Wouldn ' t you like t o come and see her too? SARA OCHILTREE -Sally Pittsburgh. Pa. Class Vice-Pres. (I). House Board (2). Y. W. Cab. (3). Dramatic Club (3). Phi Pi (3). Ch. Fresh-Soph. Dance Com. (2), Prom Ch. (3), Penn ' ian Staff (3). If Sally had lived a few hundred or a few thousand years ago. men would have built her a temple and come to worship her as the Goddess of Serenity. BERTHA PEARL O ' NEAL Bert Homestead Park. Pa Dramatic Club (1. 2, 3). Mu Sigma (3), Big Sister (31. Bertha would have made a lovely early-Victorian damsel. Can ' t you see her swooning picturesquely into the conveniently handy arms of a tall, dark young man with long sideburns? ALLISON PEIRCE Al Sewickley, Pa. House Board (1), Kappa Tau Alpha (1), Penn ' ian Staff (3). Some day Munnings will paint Allison in a brown habit on a sleek bay horse with an arched neck. The picture will be hung in the International and we shall all go and admire it. CAROLYN STUART PIERCE β– β– Carolyn Dravosburg, Pa. Sweet Briar College (1, 1). I. R. C. (3). Carolyn would fit admirably into a Gobelin tapes- try, with a high medieval headdress and a heavy bunch of keys dangling from her chatelaine ' s girdle. GERTRUDE ELIZABETH RAY Gertie Wilkinsburg, Pa. A. A. Board (I), Class Song Leader (2, 3). College Song Leader (3), Glee Club (1, 2. 3). Stud. Director (3). Dramatic Club (2. 3). French Club (1, 2), I. R. C. (3), Sec ' t.-Treas. (3). Basketball (1. 2. 3), Capt. (2), Hon. Team (1, 2). Hockev (.1, 2, 3,). Hon. Team (1. 2, 3). Baseball (I. 2). Track (1. 2), Arrow Staff (I. 2. 3). Bus. Mgr. (3). Big Sister (3). Very few people in this world have developed a talent for being open to suggestions. Gertie has, and whether you want to ice-skate or swim, sing the sec- ond verse of the Alma Mater or omit it, go to a picture exhibition or a vaudeville show, she is always ready to do it, and usually ends by being more en- thusiastic about the idea than you were. L FLORENCE RHHD University R. C. (2, Poland. Ohio Suh.-Nom. Florence has such a lovely smile β€” not the sort that seems glued on. nor yet the kind that flickers and then dies at an instant. Her smile begins slowly, at the corners of her mouth, then her eyes crinkle, and her dimples come out in full hloom, and you begin to feel warm about your heart. Watch it some time and enjoy it for yourself. EDITH RIAL tide Greensburg, Pa. Lambda Pi Mu (2. 3), Tea Dance Com. (2), Big Sister (3). Ede has most of the qualities of good champagne β€” the exhilirating bubbles which you can see sparkle before you begin to drink, the pleasant taste, and the delightful headiness afterwards. The only place the comparison breaks down is the complete absence of after-affect. How would it be to prescribe Ede as a sort of tonic? We should all thrive, we ' re sure. ' Ruth RUTH U. ROSS ilkinsburg. Pa. ;. (3). French Club (2. 3). Glee eta Kappa Psi ( I, 2. 3). Club ( 3|. Bis Sister (3). A touch of Saint Cecilia, with more than a hint of Elaine of Astolat, and a great deal of the Fair One with the Golden Locks. HELEN ROWAN D Helen Oakmont, Pa. Fresh. -Soph. Dance Com. (1), House Board (3), Dramatic Club (3), Asst. Ed. of Handbook (3). Big Sister (3). If Helen ever lacks for employment, she might easily get a job as a Sunshine Dispenser. We know scores of misanthropic folks who would be infinitely bettered by the mere sight of her and a half-hour of her airv nonsense. Vi VIOLET E. SEKEV Pittsburgh, Pa. Library Com. (I). Dramatic Club (1. 2. 3). French Ciub (2,3), Sec ' t.-Treas. (3), Glee Club (1, 2. 3), Sec ' t.-Treas. (3). When Violet talks, you ' d like her to go on indefi- nitely; when she dances, you wish you could dance with her forever: when she sings, you pray that she ' ll never stop. JEAN E. SHAW Jean Bridgeville, Pa. 3), Alpha Phi (3), Jean is the sort of person whom it would be heav- enly to meet on a hot day. She would serve you a tinkling drink in a tall frosted glass, and as you sipped it you could rest your eyes on her cool fresh- ness, and within five minutes you would forget that you had ever been hot. GENEVIEVE MARY SHIBLER Gen Pittsburgh, Pa. Address Book Com. (3), Co-op. Com. (3). Big Sister (3). Genevieve is the right person to tell your troubles to. She can smooth your ruffled feathers, soothe your hurt pride, and make you feel that the world isn ' t such a bad place after all. β€’RubV RUBY MARIE SKINNER Kittanning, Pa. If Ruby goes after everything in life with the same energy she uses to wield a hockey stick, the world had better watch out, for she will sweep it off its feet. Hazel HAZEL SNYDER Dormont, Pa. We wouldn ' t even mind if Hazel wrote about all our foibles, for she would do it so cleverly that by the time she had finished, our foibles would all have be- come virtues. IRMA STEINBART Irma Pittsburgh, Pa. Ch. Fresh. -Jr. Tea (3), Advertising Mgr. Arrow (3). Irma should go on the stage. It seems wicked not to let more people revel in that suave audacity, that captivating absurdity that is her own special gift. SARAH RUTLEDGE STEVENSON Sally , Haras Pittsburgh, Pa. Stud. Gov. Board (1. 2), Class Pres. (2), Fac.-Stud. Council (2). A. A. Board (3). Hockev (1, 2. 3). Capt. (1), Hon. Team (1. 2, 3). Basketball (1, 2, 3). Hon. Team (1. 2, 3), Baseball (I, 2). Track (1. 2), Dramatic Club (1. 2. 3). Glee Club (I. 2. 3), Phi Pi (1. 2. 3). Omega (2. 3). Business Mgr. Penn ' ian (3), Big Sister (2, 3). Sally is a revitalizing agent; whatever she under- takes will be alive and worth while. Her friendliness is the best thing she has, and is not the least of all we have to thank her for. MARGARETTA RUTH STEWART Ruth Monongahela, Pa. Phi Pi (1. 2. 3), Dramatic Club (1, 2, 3), Glee Club (I, 2. 3i Big Sister (3). If all students were like Ruth, there would be no need for educational conferences on Facultv-Student Relations. MARTHA STUART Martha Coraopolis. Pa. Class Sec ' t. (1), Phi Pi (I. 2), I. R. C. (2. 3). Mu Sigma (3), Vice-Pres. (3). Martha is one of those rare people who accom- plish things so unobtrusively and so efficiently- that you hardly know any work hail been done until you see it completed. ROSE M. TONER Ros Homestead. Pa. Phi Pi (1, 2, 3), Kappa Taup Alpha (3), Co-Op. Com. (2), Hockey (I, 2. 3), Hon. Team (I. 2, 3). Basketball (2). Big Sister (3). An ideal companion is Rose, because she is always interested in you β€” whether you ' ve just flunked an hour written or made an A on it, whether you ' ve got a Special Delivery letter from Him or a dean card. It ' s an art all to itself, Rose; you should be proud of it. KATHERINE WATSON Kay McKeesport, Pa. Glee Club (I). Co-Op. Com. (3). Kay doesn ' t go in for the usual run of hobbies β€” she strikes out on a new line of her own. In her light moments she dresses dolls, in her lighter mo- ments she writes class songs, and in her very lightest moments she toots a saxophone. β€’i LILLIAN A. WILSON Lil Bucknell University (2). Big Sister Pittsburgh, Pa. (3). We ' re so glad that Lillian came back to us. It ' s always a genuine delight to have someone around whom you are sure is wearing exactly the right thing in exactly the right manner. β– Helena HELENA II. YOUNG Kittanning, Pa Phi Pi (2, 3). Beta Chi (2, 3), (I. 2). Hockey (2, 3). Co-Op. Com. Sec ' t.-Treas. (3). Baseball (2). Big Sister (3). We have a deep and sincere admiration, amounting almost to awe, for anyone who loves her Alma Mater so well that she gladly travels miles and hours daily to reach it. Our hat is off to you, Helena! ' Mim ' MIRIAM LOUISE YOUNG Wilkinsburg, Pa. Jun.-Sr. Dance Com. (3). Zeta Kappa Psi (2. 3). Dramatic Ciub (2, 3). Glee Club (I, 2. 3). I. R. C. (1. 2), Big Sister (3). There are people who sing and people who sing, and then there is Miriam who has her own charming way of making you think that all other singers must be lacking in something or other. Sophomore Officers Jane Mitchell --------- President Betty Coshey -------- ' ice-President Luise Link ---------- Secretary Ruth Edgar --------- Treasurer Sophomore Class Roll Frances Alter Bernice Beamer Ruth Berkey Helen Bixler Eleanor Blanning Virginia Bushnell I Iermine Carr I Iarriet Christy Lea Cline Anna Cowles Betty Coshey Virginia Cox Margaret Donaldson Ruth Edgar Eleanor Ewing Lois Ewing Jane Fisher Mary Anne Garella Edna Geiselhart Marjorie Gibson Margaret Goldberg Leslie Goudie Lucetta Hardesty Margorie I Iardie Sevent -two A Sophomore Class Roll Synnove Haughom Rose Hollingsworth Helen Hopkins Mary Hostler Ruth Anna Husak Amelia Iacovetti Ann Irwin Eleanor Jacobs Josephine Johnson Eleanor Kenworthy Marjorie Larimer Catherine Liley Luise Link Frances Lorimer Jean Ludebuehl Alice Jean McCarthy Ruby Alice McCorkle Anne McCullough Eleanor McEwan Jean McLallen Elizabeth Marsh Harriet Tyler Martin Mary Louise Martin Harriet Virginia Miller Ruth Miller Alice Milligan Jane Mitchell Martha Moninger Bernice Montgomery Charlotte Patterson Virginia Price Irene Rosen Virginia Sanborn Grace San key Grace Sauer Dorothy Schenck Avanelle Schlosser Mary Seaver Eunice Shatzer Marion Starkey Thelma Stocker Helen Walker Mary Leonard Weir Margaret Louise White Dorothy Williamson Jean Worthington Ellen Yeager β–  Mary Jane Young Seventy-three . Freshman Officers Mary Katherine Rodgers ------ President Vida Hurst --------- Vice-President Shirley Gordon --------- Secretary Margaret Eichleay -------- Treasurer Freshman Class Roll S. Louise Aldridge Nancy Gilmore Imogene Ruth Bell Shirley Gordon Helen M. Birmingham Dorothy Grote Mary Blommers Eleanor Harbison Catherine Boyd Jane Harmeir Sara Boyer Caroline Hesse .Marion Estelle Bunns Eloise W. Howard Elizabeth Cober Laura Hughes Jane Conrad Vida Hurst Katherine Dangerfield Sheila Iamsen Elizabeth Dickie Winifred Jeffries Beth Dunbar Louise Jones Helen Jane Douthitt Ruth Jubb Margaret Eichleay Jane Keally Anne Emmerling Laura Kolb Jean Engel Ruth Eleanor Kramer Ruth Erost Stella La ar Sue Gillespie Louise Leadman Seveniy-four A Freshman .Mary Ida McFarland Nancy Jane MacGregor Isabella McQuiston Margaret Meanor Ruth Moorhead Deborah Mountford Galina Mouronseff Sana Mouronseff Mary Catherine Murray Yuki Naito Lillie Pace Betsy Patterson Margaret Peterson Sarah Lyon Pinkerton Dorothy Pontious Mildred V. Porter Florita Ragone Helen Roberts Clark Reid Alice Rosenberger Madeline Ruhe Gertrude Russell Mary E. Russell Velmer Ryan Mary Kath Class Roll Florence Sauer Carolyn Saulpaugh Virginia Schweinsberg Margaret Searles Margaret R. Smith Mary T. Smith Anna Claire Snyder Eleanore M. Splane Dolores Steinecke Anne Stewart Margaret Stockdale Alice Stockton Dorothy Taylor Dorothy Thomas Dorothy Trbovich Gretel Trog Eleanor Walters Virginia Watkins Helen A. Wilson Marie Wolstoncroft Dorothy Wood Dorothy Woodward Charlotte Wright Virginia Wright erine rodgers Seventy-five Under-Class Directory S. Louise Aldridge - - - - 157 Cherry Valley Road. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Frances E. Alter - - - - - - -314S. Dallas Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Bernice Beamer ----- - i]22 DeVictor Place, Pittsburgh. Pa. Imogene Ruth Bell ------- 69 Amanda St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Ruth Anna Berkey ------ ] 3 1 T Westfield St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Helen M. Birmingham - 1339 Squirrel Hill Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Helen Bixler ------- 1 005 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Eleanor Blanning ----- 707 Highland Ave., New Castle. Pa. Mary Blommers - 1449 Greystone Drive, Pittsburgh. Pa. Catherine Boyd - - - - - - - R. F D 2. Coraopolis. Pa. Sara Boyer ------ 900 Lincoln Ave.. Monongahela. Pa. Marion Estelle Bunns - 146 Jamaica Ave.. West View. Pa. Virginia Bushnei.l ------ 1738 Victoria Ave., Arnold. Pa. Hermine Carr ------ 708 Laughlin Ave., Aliquippa. Pa. Harriet Christy ------ 0330 Jackson St., Pittsburgh. Pa. Reid Clark ------ 2919 Chartiers Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Lea Cline ------ 140 ' Fourth St.. East Liverpool. Ohio Elizabeth Cober ------ I4)i) Elm St.. Wilkinsburg. Pa. Anna Cowles ----- 3324 Beechwood Blvd.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Jane Conrad - - - - - - - - R. D. 1, Wilkinsburg. Pa. Betty Coshey - - - - - - 218 N. Penna. Ave., Greensburg. Pa. Virginia Cox - - - 5703 Forbes St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Katherine Dancerfield - - - _ ]424 Bennington Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Elizabeth Dickie ------ 1020 Portland St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Margaret Donaldson - 124 S. Wade Ave.. Washington. Pa. Beth Dunbar ------- Ruskin Apts., Pittsburgh. Pa Helen Jane Douthitt ----- 316 Rochelle St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Ruth Edgar ------- 2022 Hampton St.. Swissvale. Pa. Margaret Eichleay ----- 204 Lytton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Anne Emmerling - - - - - 5713 Kentucky Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Jean Encel - - - - - - - 137 W. 9th Ave., Homestead. Pa. Under-Class Directory Eleanor Anna Ewinc - β€’ - 2500 Perrvsville Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Lois Ewinc ------- 231 Shady Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Jane Fisher ----------- United, Pa. Ruth Frost ------- 200 Market St.. Belle Vernon, Pa. Mary Anne Garella - - - - 18 W. Grant Ave., Duquesne. Pa. Edna G. Geiselhart - 408 Cendar Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Marjorie Gibson ------ 4t4 Teece Ave., Bellevue, Pa. Sue Gillespie ------ 6060 Jackson St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Nancy Gil.mcre _____ [212 Murravhill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Margaret Goldberg - 145 Y. Green St., Waynesburg. Pa. Shirley Gordon - - - - - 2211 Highland Ave.. New Castle, Pa. Leslie Goudie ------- 224 Ingram Ave., Ingram. Pa Dorothy K. Grote - - - - - 1121 Greenfield Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa Eleanor R. Harbison - - Box 7730, Hunt Road. Sharpsburg, Pa. Lucetta Hardesty ----- 1209 Sixth Ave., Beaver Falls, Pa. Marjorie Hardie ----- 5449 Wilkins Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Jane Harmier ------ 0943 Reynolds St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Synnove Hauchom - - 37 Sherman Ave., St. George, Staten Island. N. Y. Caroline Hesse - - - - - - -- - Nemacolin, Pa. Rose Hollingsworth - 210 S. Washington St.. Greensburg, Pa. Helen Hopkins - - - - - - - 226 Alice St.. Knoxville, Pa. Mary Hostler ------ llii Murravhill Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Eloise Winn Howard - 3012 Wellesley Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Laura Hughes ------ 5820 Phillips Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Vida Hurst - - 5731 Bartlett St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Ruth Anna Husak - 1021 Province St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Amelia Iacovetti - - - - - - 5711 Bartlett St., Pittsburgh,. Pa. Sheila Iamsen ---- - 1030 Morrison Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Ann Irwin -_-_- 323 Thompson Ave.. East Liverpool, Ohio Eleanor Jacobs - - - - - 615 Hampton Ave., Wilkinsburg, Pa. Winifred Jeffries ----- 66 Seminole Ave., Washington. Pa. Under-Class Directory Josephine Johnson 68 Dunn St., McKees Rocks. Pa. Louise Jones ---------- Smithton, Pa. Ruth Jubb ----- - 308 Copeland St.. .McKees Rocks. Pa. Jane Really - - - - - - 5101 Ellsworth Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Eleanor Kenworthy ------- 203 Roup Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Laura Kolb -------- 209 Fifth St.. Aspinwall. Pa. Ruth Eleanor Kramer -------- Greensboro, Pa. Marjorie Larimer ------ 419 Braddock Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Stella Lazar ------ 1220 Sheridan Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Louise Leadman - 1041 Fourth St.. Monongahela, Pa. Catherine Liley ------- 901 German St.. Erie. Pa. Luise Link -------- JoS s. Atlantic Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa Frances Lorimer -------- West Alexander. Pa. Jean Ludebuehl ----- 1000 Winterton St-. Pittsburgh, Pa. Alice Jean McCarthy - 1630 Denniston St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Ruby Alice McCorkle ----.- 7021 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Anne McCullouch ------ 843 Chislette St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Eleanor McEwan ----- 906 S. Neglev Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Mary Ida McFarland - I4Β°0 Greenmont Ave., Dormont, Pa. Nancy Jane iMacGregor ------- Monongahela. Pa. Jean McLallen ------- 201 Beech St.. Edgewood, Pa. Isabella Jane McQuiston - 3922 Elwood St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Elizabeth iMarsh - - - - - 1109 Cornell Ave.. Thornburg. Pa. Harriet Tyler Martin ----- loll Aurelius St.. Swissvale, Pa. Mary Louise Martin - 3100 Beechvvood Blvd.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Margaret Meanor ----- 601 West Drive. Edgeworth, Pa. Harriet Virginia Miller - 320 Fordham St.. Brookline, Pa. Ruth Miller ------ noo California Ave., Tarentum, Pa Alice Mili.igan ----- 1012 N. Neglev Ave.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Jane Mitchell ---------- Poland, Ohio Martha Moninger ------ 133 Penn St., Washington, Pa. Under-Class Directory Bernice Montgomery - 1594 Johnson Ave., Kittanning, Pa. Ruth Moorhead ------ 2082 Pioneer Ave., Brookline, Pa. Deborah Mountford - ' - 1207 St. Clair Ave., East Liverpool. Ohio Galina Mouronseff ------ 1312 Elm St., Wilkinsburg, Pa. Sana Mouronseff - - - - - - 1312 Elm St.. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Mary Catherine Murray - 4723 Wallingford Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Yuki Naito ----------- Kyoto, Japan Lillie Pace ------- 5S10 Walnut St.. Pittsburgh. Pa. Betsy Patterson ------ 6019 Grafton St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Charlotte Patterson - - - - - - R. D, No. 5, New Castle, Pa. Margaret Peterson ----- 1 KKi Illinois Ave.. Dormont, Pa. Sarah Lyon Pinkerton -_-.-- 19 Monitor Ave., Ben Avon, Pa. Dorothy Pontious ----- 1027 East End- Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Mildred Virginia Porter --------- Sigol. Pa. Virginia Price ----- 225 W. Swissvale Ave., Edgewood, Pa. Florita Ragone ------ 1764 E. 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Helen Roberts ------ no Card Ave., Wilmerding, Pa. Mary Katherine Rodgers - - - 1 144 Wightman St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Irene Rosen - - - - - - -3518 Raleigh St., Pittsburgh. Pa. Alice Rosenberger ----- 5706 Stanton Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Madeline Ruhe - - - - - - . - - 151 Grant Ave.. Duquesne, Pa Gertrude Russell ----- 102U Devon Road, Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary E. Russell - - - - 1135 Victoria Ave., New Kensington, Pa. Velmer Ryan ------- 3(jo Lincoln Ave., Belles ue. Pa. Virginia Sanborn ----- 1437 Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Grace Sankey ------ 227 N. Second. St., Jeannette, Pa. Grace Sauer ----- 3319 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh.- Pa. Florence Sauer - 3310 Beechwood Blvd., Pittsburgh. Pa. Carolyn Saulpauch ----- 412 W. King St., Smethport, Pa. Dorothy Schenck ------- 5730 Solway St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Avanelle Schlosser - - - - - 271 Dwight St.. Kittanning, Pa. Virginia Schweinsberg ----- 72 Bradford Ave., Crafton, Pa. Under-Class Directory Margaret Searles ------ 5589 Bryant St.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary Seaver ------- Hulton Road, Oakmont, Pa. Eunice Shatzer --------- Elizabeth. Pa. Margaret Ruth Smith ----- 1 328 Penn Ave.. Wilkinsburg, Pa. Mary Taker Smith ----- |?21 Biltmore Ave., Dormont. Pa. Anna Claire Snyder --------- Brookville, Pa. Eleanore M. Splane - - 815 Woodbourne Ave., Brookline. Pittsburgh. Pa. Marion Starkey -------- Clinton Beach. Conn. Dolores Steinecke - - - - 50 E. Marlin Drive. Mt. Lebanon. Pa. Anne Stewart - Stahlman Apts., Marne. Monongahela. Pa. Thelma Stocker - _ _ _ 014 Russellwood Ave., McKees Rocks. Pa. Margaret Stockdale - 304 Overdale Road. Wilkinsburg. Pa. Alice Stockton - 1422 Browning Road. Pittsburgh. Pa. Dorothy Taylor - 1501 Asbury Place. Pittsburgh. Pa. Dorothy Thomas -___-- 1040 Mirror St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Dorothy Trbovich - 2S17 Jane St., S. S.. Pittsburgh, Pa. Gretel Trog ------ no? South Ave., Wilkinsburg. Pa. Helen Walker ----- 1502 Union Bank Bldg., Pittsburgh. Pa. Eleanor Walters - - - - - 1514 Greenmont Ave.. Dormont. Pa. Virginia Watkins - - - - 1120 N. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa. Mary Leonard Weir ------ So? Lincoln Ave., Erie. Pa. Margaret Louise White - - - - 1302 Singer Place, Wilkinsburg, Pa. Dorothy Williamson ----- 1308 Kennedy St.. Duquesne, Pa. Helen A. Wilson ------ Fox Chapel Road, Aspinwall, Pa. Marie Wolstoncroet - 526 Woodward Ave., McKees Rocks. Pa. Dorothy Wood - - 123 Meridan St., Duquesne Heights, Pittsburgh, Pa. Dorothy Woodward - - - - 421 Ridge Ave., New Kensington. Pa. Jean Worthington - 358 S. Highland Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Charlotte Wright ----- 5549 Woodmont St., Pittsburgh, Pa. Virginia Wright ------ 4 18 Catherine St.. Duquesne, Pa. Ellen Yeager ------ 2124 Pittview Ave., Pittsburgh. Pa. Mary Jane Young ----- 02s Summerlea St., Pittsburgh. Pa. Government Clubs Publications Programs Athletics Student Government Board President --------- Caroline Brady First Vice-President - - - Mary Lou Hockensmith Second Vice-President - Margaret Husband Third Vice-President - Marjorie Larimer Secretary ------- Betty Nies Treasurer ------- Mary Seaver Senior Member ------ Marian Brindle Senior Member ------ Betsy Dearborn Junior Member ------ Betty Graham Senior Class President ------ Sara Stevenson Junior Class President ----- Ruth Ludebuehl Sophomore Class President ----- Jane Mitchell Freshman Class President - Mary Kay Rodgers Freshman Member ------ Caroline Hesse Faculty Advisor -------- D R Whiting Eighty-five Woodland Hall House Board President ------ Mary Lou Hockensmith First Vice-President ------ Genevieve Davis Second Vice-President ----- .Margaret Goldberg Secretary-Treasurer ------ Helen Row and Senior Member ------- .Margaret Price Senior Member ------- Georgia Meinecke Junior Member - - - - -. - - Rlth Bowles Sophomore Member ------ Betty Coshey Young Women ' s Christian Association OFFICERS President -------- Ruth Fugh, ' 52 Vice-President - - - - - . - - Jessie Doudna, ' 33 Treasurer -------- Phyllis Lehew. ' 33 Secretary r Virginia Cox, ' 34 CABINET Program ------- Dorothy Humphrey. ' 32 World Fellowship ----- Marjorie Hopkins, ' 33 , . , _ - (Marguerite Cunliffe, ' 33 Chairmen of Lo-Op. β€ž β€ž , ,, (Genevieve Shibler, 55 Social Service ----- Dorothy Ballantyne, ' 33 Publicity --------- Ruth Edgar. ' 34 Social --------- Sara Ochiltree. ' 55 Underclass Representative - Marjorie Larimer, ' 34 Eighty-seven r Glee Club OFFICERS Dorothy Humphrey ------- President Violet Sekey ------ Secretary-Treasurer Helen Walker -------- Librarian MEMBERS Seniors I ouise Clank Margaret Eisaman Katherine Lee Florence Bouldin Ruth Fugh Harriet Lundquist Catherine Cochran Josephine IIerrold Marian Stone Juniors Evelyn Bitner Phyllis Lehew Gertrude Ray Helen Chambers Gene Llewellyn Ruth Ross Dorothy Fdsall Ruth Ludebuehl Sarah Stevenson T etty Graham Ruth Morgan Ruth Stewa rt Charlotte Ia.ms Ruth Nirella Miriam Young Sophomores Ruth Berkey Alice McCorkle Charlotte Patterson Lois Ewing Virginia Miller Grace Sauer Marjorie Hardie Bernice Montgomery Margaret White Frances Lorimer Dorothy Williamson Freshmen Anna Cowles Caroline Hesse Alice Rosenberger Elizabeth Dickie Eloise Howard Alma Stewart Helen Douthitt Amelia Iacovetti Alice Stockton Dorothy Grote Jane McQuiston Sarah Lazar Betsy Patterson Eighty-eight 4 I Glee Club Full many years have the voices of the Glee Club members rung sweetly through our halls, and this year especially have they contributed much to the general pleasure of the college. Under the able direction of Miss Keil, they have given Thanks- giving, Armistice Day, and Christmas programs, as well as a very delightful joint program with the gentlemen from Pitt. Admission to this club is strictly exclusive, so that a high standard of singing may be maintained. However, it is one of the few clubs which Freshmen are allowed and urged to try out for; and a good many do try out, and contribute greatly to the club ' s success. Miss Keil, Miss Goodell, and Miss Welker are honorary members of the club. Dramatic Club OFFICERS Marian Stone -------- President Sara Miller -------- Vice-President Beatrice Andrews -------- Secretary Dorothy Edsall -------- Treasurer MEMBERS Seniors Florence Bouldin Isabel Cullison Betty Ramsay Caroline Brady Charlotte Graham Mary YYooldridge Juniors Evelyn Aliff Nancy J. Longenecker Gertrude Ray Sara Allison Ruth Ludebuehl Helen Rowand Clara Condron Eleanor McClimans Violet Sekey Virginia Mall Ruth Nirella Sarah Stevenson Mary Johnston Sara Ochiltree Ruth Stewart Gene Llewellyn Bertha P. O ' Neal Miriam Young Sophomores. Ruth Edgar Eleanor Kenworthy Louise Metzgar Leslie Goudie Luise Link Ruth Miller Rose Hollingsworth Eleanor McEwan Eunice Schatzer Jean McLallen Freshmen Mary Young Ruth Frost Louise Leadman Louise Aldridge Dorothy Grote Mary McFarland Jean Engel Helen Hopkins Lillie Pace Catherine Boyd Eloise Howard Alice Stockton Helen Douthitt Laura Hughes Dorothy Wood Ruth Iubb Dramatic Club Mr: Pirn may have passed by, but the Dramatic Club re- mains forever β€” or we hope so, for who does not love to act and secretly in her heart of hearts believe she is almost as good as Bernhardt. Organized in 1908, with the membership usually between fifty and sixty, the club has enjoyed a merry and successful career. The first presentation to be given was a Danish lyrical drama, King Renee ' s Daughter , which was followed by the demure Little Women , the fascinating Chinese Lantern , and the stirring Captain Applejack . For two years (1928-29, 1929-30), the presentations magically transferred themselves into one act class contests with the Juniors winning the first year with The Locked Chest , by John Masefield β€” Ruth Lupoid, Junior, being chosen as the best actress, the Freshmen winning the second year with Trifles , by Susan Glaspell β€” Sarah Johnson, Senior, being chosen as the best actress. In 1930-31. the class contests were discarded for a musical comedy to be written, acted, staged, and directed by the members themselves, β€” and that was Alice in Wonderland . Through the meetings of the Dramatic Club, many delightful and rare contacts are made. Surely no one has forgotten the tea for Leslie Howard and Margalo Gilmore last year or- the charm- ing talk given by Lennox Robinson, Manager of the Abbey The- ater in Dublin and author of The White-Headed Boy . The club has also had the honor of entertaining during its historic past Mrs. Fiske, Chauncey Olcott, and Helen Gahegan. HI Omega OFFICERS Betsy Dearborn -------- President Betty Graham ------- ' ice-President Marjorie Hopkins ----- Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Beatrice Andrews Jean FIoughtelin Cora May Ingham Isabella Lindsay Elizabeth Lupton Margaret Price Betty Ramsay Sara Stevenson Marian Stone Mary Wooldridge Sara Allison β€’ Mary Crl.may Dorothy Edsall Betty Nies Sarah Stevenson Hazel Snyder Margaret Goldberg Founded in 1905 by students interested in English literature and composi- tion, Omega is the oldest of P. C. W. clubs. During its career it has done many interesting things β€” among them, sponsoring a short-story contest annually, and rewarding the winner with membership to the club and a club pin. This year Omega has enjoyed a lecture by Doctor Carver of Pitt, and has been studying var- ious modern magazines, particularly The Midland which is edited by John 1 . Frederick, literary advisor to the college. I lonorary Members of Omega are Miss Coolidge and Dr. and Mrs. Doxsee. Phi Pi Jessie Doudna Sara A. Stevenson Jean Ludebuehl OFFICERS - President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Sara A. Stevenson Edith McBane MEMBERS Sara Ochiltree Sarah R. Stevenson Martha Stewart Rose Toner Helena Young Virginia Bushnell Virginia Cox Margaret Donaldson Martha Moninger Avanella Schlosser Marion Starkev Dorothy Williamson Phi Pi, the classical club of P. C. W. was founded in 1916. Its members are students of Latin and Greek who are interested in discussing phases of ancient life that are not taken up in the class room. They have Roman weddings, banquets, songs, and plays, and are also interested in Modern Greece and Rome. The mem- bers prepare papers on various subjects and invite outside speakers to talk to them. At each meeting they are celebrating a Roman festival which takes place in that month. For the lighter part of their entertainment they play at ancient Greek and Roman games, at which sport they enjoy decidedly unclassical good times. Miss Laura Green and Dr. Nita L. Butler are sponsors of the club. Ninety-three Le Cercle Francais OFFICERS Betty Nies --------- President Dorothy Newell ------- ice-President Violet Sekey ------ Secretary-Treasurer Florence Bouldin Sara Allison Evelyn Bitner Ruth Giles Margaret Goldberg Leslie Goudie Caroline Brady MEMBERS Ellen Carpi Betty Graham Marjorie Hopkins Ruth Ludebuehl Eleanor J. McClimans Marjorie Larimer Helen Martin Lillian Wills Clara McCllre Ruth Ross Ruby Skinner Irene Rosen Dorothy Schenck Le Circle Francais has the distinction of being the only club in the college with neither a Greek nor an English name. Besides, it is a live and flourishing club, with a keen interest in the French language (which its members endeavor to the best of their ability to speak at all meetings) and in France itself, both his- torical and modern. In the twelve years that the French Club has graced P. C W., it has provided not only its own members but the whole college with plays, musical programs, and other dear delights β€” not forgetting the French spelling bee this year. Miss Ely, Mrs. Butler, and Mrs. Kimball are honorary members of the club. International Relations Club OFFICERS Josephine Herrold -------- President Genevieve Davis -------- Vice-President Gertrude Ray ------- Secretary-Treasurer HONORARY MEMBERS Miss Coolidge Yuri Naito MEMBERS Seniors Beatrice Andrews Marie Hahn ' Jean Muller Ellen Carpi Josephine Herrold Margaret Price Isabel Cullison β–  Isabella Lindsay Betty Rankin Dorothy English Elizabeth Lupton Mary Frances Tarr Ruth Fugh Ruth Miller Meredith Welsh Jean Miller Juniors Clara Condron Edith McBane Florence Reed Genevieve Davis Ruth Morgan Martha Stuart Ruth Giles Gertrude Ray Catherine Truman Sophomores Hermine Carr Edna Geiselhart Jane Mitchell Amy Davies Marjorie Hardie Grace Sauer Jane Fisher Frances Lorimer Synnove Haughom Mary Louise Martin I. R. C. is one of the truly up to the minute clubs in the college, for its interest lies in the international, current affairs of the day, and its purpose is to acquaint its members with the ideas and conditions existing in foreign countries. This year, the club has extended its influ- ence to the whole college, through the International Relations articles appearing in the Arrow every week, and written by that most capable of members, Elizabeth Lupton. The club itself has had an interesting year, too, with a talk by John Barton, a professor at Elsinore, informal reports by members of the club and the faculty, and with a very successful selling of I. R. C. Christmas cards. Miss Coolidge was welcomed to the club as an honorary member this year, as was also our Japanese student, Yuki Naito. J f I A ' sSfc fl ; i jl 1 VA , 4 V I , - β–  1 F | Ml β–  r - β–  - : . 1 -vf a 5 r H Β«f p Β§ qM Kappa Tau Alpha OFFICERS Evelyn Aliff --------- President Marion Starkey -------- Secretary Winifred Jeffries -------- Treasurer Miss Kerst Charlotte Graham HONORARY MEMBERS MEMBERS Sally Miller Jessie Doudna Miss Robb Rose Toner Speech has always been an expression of man ' s thoughts, but the ability to speak effectively in public must be acquired by practice and training. With this thought in mind, a group of girls five years ago organized the debating club. Kappa Tau Alpha. The general programs of the club consist of talks given by the mem- bers on current events of interest, thus giving the members a chance to exchange ideas as well as to perfect themselves in presentation of topics. This year, in par- ticular, the club has interested itself in great world personalities and in the political and economic situation in Europe. Besides the regular meetings. Kappa Tau Alpha every year prepares a final debate which they hold in connection with another college. In this project, as well as in its whole program the club has valuable assistance from .Miss Robb. A 4 Mu S igma OFFICERS Viola Swenson -------- President Martha Stuart ------- Vice-President Helen Fay Brown ----- Secretary-Treasurer Miss Elfrida Hempker - - - - - Faculty Advisor MEMBERS Louise Blank Marian Brindle Marian Baughman Dorothy Edsall Nancy Campbell Mary Lou Hockensmith Mary Johnston Margaret Nichol Dorothy Russell Clara McClure Bertha Pearl O ' Neal Mu Sigma was founded in 1928 and named in honor of Mary Skinker, head of the Biology Department. The membership includes those majors in Chemistry, Physics , or Biology who have a high standing. Each year many interesting speak- ers are brought to the club, and there is at least one field trip each year, to such vitally interesting places as Mellon Institute, and the Laboratory of Carnegie Museum. Zeta Kappa Psi Harriet Lundquist, Pres. Dorothy Humphrey Ruth Morgan Miriam Young Helen Walker MEMBERS Ruth Berkey Dorothy Taylor Eloise Howard Ruth Miller Gene Llewellyn Ruth Ross Helen Chambers Bernice Beamer Mary Louise Walter Dolores Steinecke Alice McCorkle Zeta Kappa Psi, the music club of P. C. W. is a rather recently organized group, having held their first meeting in 1929. They take up the study of music which is not gone into fully in class work, and give each music student a chance to perform outside of regular class routine. This year they have been studying the great operas, and intend to take up the dance forms of music later in the semester. The club has given several delightful programs, open to the rest of the student body, and has also, this year obtained Mr. Carl T. Whitmer, noted musician and composer, as a speaker at one of their meetings. This year, too, Zeta Kappa Psi has started a scholarship for any outstanding student in the school who can pass certain requirements set down by the club. This scholarship will enable one student each year to continue her studies without worry about finances. Alpha Phi OFFICERS Catherine Cochran ------- President Georgia Meinecke ------ Vice-President Helen McCreery ----- Secretary-Treasurer MEMBERS Senior ' s Louise Blank Josephine Herrold Marie Perrone Ermadell Gasser Jean Muller Dorothy Russell Dorothy English Harriet Lundquist Betty Rankin Juniors Dorothy Campbell Helen Chambers Margaret Nichol Clara Condron Sophomores Bernice Beamer Ruth Berkey MaryAnne Garella Jean Shaw Freshmen Helen Birmingham Yuki Naito Madeleine Rube Louise Leadman Kay Rodgers Gretel Trog Deborah Mountford Virginia Wright Many students have felt that they wanted more opportunity for discussion of religion and current religious problems than the class room can afford. To fill this need the religious discussion club, Alpha Phi, was organized in 1929, and has been growing in membership and in spirit ever since, with Dr. Scott as its advisor. Speakers from outside are often invited to speak to the club, and to discuss topics with its members. This year Dr. Ewers gave a talk on Russia, which he has recently visited, and Dr. Wan, too, brought interesting ideas to one of the meetings. Lambda Pi Mu Rita Lei-ton, President Miss Meloy Helen McCracken Dorothy Pontius MEMBERS Caroline Saulpaugh Dorothy Ballantyne Edith Rial Louise Aldridge Eleanor Jacobs Yuki Naito Jean Shaw One of the most successful of school activities is Lambda Pi Mu. the Social Service Club. This success is reached through the inspiring guidance of its hon- orary members, Miss Meloy, in whose honor the club is named, and Miss Flynn. Organized in 1921, the size of the membership has varied very little as the charter members numbered fifteen, and at present there are eleven active members listed. The requirements for admission to the club are the study and interest in social service work. The club endeavors to make its members better acquainted with all the social agencies and activities of the Pittsburgh district through talks by experienced and trained social workers and discussions of problems by the members themselves. Beta Chi OFFICERS Nancy Campbell -------- President Margaret Husband ------ Vice-President Helena H. Young - Secretary-Treasurer HONORARY MEMBER Dr. Calkins Ellen Carpi Mary T. Johnston MEMBERS Yiola Swenson Bernice Montgomery Betty Nies Beta Chi has no ivy-covered traditions, and its history is a short one. The club held its first meeting in November, 1930, and since then has been received with enthusiasm. Its aim is to develop a wider interest in the advancement of mathematics in the modern world, and to gain knowledge of its progress in the past. This year the programs have consisted of discussions concerning the theory and history of mathematics. The club ' s ambition is to have outside speakers at some of its meetings. Membership consists of those of high standing who are majoring in the department or vastly interested in the subject. The name Beta Chi , has a significant meaning, Beta stands for Miss Bennett, who taught for many years in the department, and Chi honors Dr. Calkins who was instrumental in organizing this club. One hundred one Practice Teachers WESTINGHOUSE Isabel Cullison Spanish Ruth Fugh History Marie Hahn Civics Mary [ ' ranges Tarr English Comp. TAYLOR ALDERDICE Caroline Brady French Lillian Wills French Josephine Herrold Botany Dorothy Humphrey English Beatrice Andrews English Ruth Miller English Harriet Ossman Music Jean Muller History WILKINSBURG JUNIOR HIGH Margaret Eisaman English Katherine Lee English M rii-: Perrone English WILKINSBURG SENIOR HIGH Florence Bouldin French Caroline Bickell English Sara Stevenson Latin PEABODY 1 Ielen Dorothy English History Dorothy Russell Zoology Rita Lefton French Sara Miller Speech Ellen Carpi Algebra ARNOLD SCHOOL Janet Nevin TheoDora Maloney, ' 31 WHITEMAN GRAMMAR SCHOOL Catherine Cochran English Ermadeli Gasser Geography FALK FOUNDATION SCHOOL Lillian 1 Iunter One hinulrcd two Faculty Student Council Dr. Coolidge Dr. Whiting Caroline Brady Sara Stevenson Ruth Fugh Florence Bouldin Marjorie Larimer Miss Marks Miss Butler Miss Robb Mary L. Hockensmith Betty Ramsay Ruth Ludebuehl Jane Mitchell Mary K. Rodgers Margaret Husband One hundred three Committees NOMINATING COMMITTEE Marian Brindle -------- Chairman Betty McKee, Viola Swenson - - Senior Members Genevieve Davis, Phyllis Lehew - junior Members Dorothy Schenck ------- Sophomore Katherine Dangerfield ----- Freshman Member CURRICULUM COMMITTEE Betty Rankin --------- Chairman Ruth Fugh -------- Senior Member Sara Ochiltree ------- Junior Member Luise Link ------- Sophomore Member Elizabeth Splane ------ Freshman Member VOCATIONAL COMMITTEE Louise Blank --------- Chairman Ruth Grafman ------- Senior Member Ruth Bowles -------- Junior Member Dorothy Schenck ------ Sophomore Member Jane Conrad ------- Freshman Member LIBRARY COMMITTEE Ellen Carpi --------- Chairman Margaret Price ------- Senior Member Mary Crumay -------- Junior Member Virginia Bushnell ------ Sophomore Member Charlotte Wright ------ Freshman Member DEN COMMITTEE Alice Bair --------- Chairman Helen Dorothy Engl.sh ----- Senior Member Evelyn Aliff -------- Junior Member Ruth Berkey - - - - - - - Sophomore Member PROM CO.MMITTEEE Sara Ochiltree --------- Chairman Bertha Jane Phillips ------ Senior Member Marian Baughman ------- Junior Member Anne McCullough ----- Sophomore Member Margaret Eichleay ------ Freshman Member One h undred lour One hundred the The Pennsylvanian EDITORIAL STAFF Editor ----------- Mary Wooldridoe, ' 51 , . . c ... [Betty Nies, ' 33 Associate editors ___.._ I Betsy Dearborn. 51 Faculty Advisor - - - - - - - - Miss Shamburger Faculty Fditor Allison Peirce. ' 33 Literary Fditor ------ Beatrice Andrews, ' 51 Government and Publication ----- Betty Graham, ' 33 Clubs --------- Marjorie Hopkins. ' 33 Athletic Fditor -------- Louise Blank. ' 51 {M rie Hahn. ' 32 Louise Metzgar, ' 33 Dorothy Russell. ' 32 Feature Fditor ELIZABETH LUPTON, ' 32 Art Fditor -------- .Margaret Nichol, ' 33 Sara Stevenson, ' 32 Dorothy Edsall, ' 55 Class Editors - - - - - - Jean Ludebuehl. ' 34 llwTHERINE DaNCERMELD. ' 35 Business Manager Business Assistant Advertising Manage BUSINESS STAFF Sarah R. Stevenson. ' 33 Josephine Herrold, ' 51 M riun Stone, ' ' J l ne lunulrej si The Arrow EDITORIAL STAFF Editor-in-Chief -------- Betty Ramsay, ' 32 Managing Editor - -------- Dorothy Edsall, ' 33 News Editor ------- Catherine Cochran, ' 32 Far.ul.tv Advisor - - - - -- - Miss A. A. Robinson REPORTERS Charlotte Graham, ' 32 Marjorie Hopkins, ' 33 Sara Stevenson, ' 33 Rose Hollincsworth, ' 34 Carolyn Bickell, ' 32 Ruth Berkey, ' 34 Margaret Eisaman. ' 32 Ruth Edgar. ' 34 Marguerite Cunliffe, ' 33 Luise Link, ' 34 Mary Crumay. ' 33 Margaret ' Goldberg, ' 34 Bernice Beamer, ' 34 Helen Birmingham, ' 35 Exchange ...... - - Margaret Price, ' 32 Dramatics --------- Sara Allison, 3i Tvnists - - Vida Hurst, ' 35, Margaret White, ' 34, Sheila Ihmsen, ' 35 BUSINESS STAFF Business Manager ----- _ Gertrude Ray, ' 33 Advertising Manager ------ Irjaa Steinbart. ' 33 I Dorothy Williamson. -i4 Circulation Managers - - - - - J Ruby Skinner, ' 33 Bernice Montgomery, ' 34 One hundred se - The Arrow Like The New York Times, The Arrow publishes all the P. C. W. news that is ' lit to print ' . This year saw the inauguration of such columns as the I. R. C. His- torian, Please Park Parallel, The Chatter-Scatterer, and a continuation of Campus Comment by the ever-invisible Owl. The Pennsylvanian What with the Blanket Tax, subscriptions from alumnae, the pro:eeds from Quality Street, and the sale of Klondikes, the Pennsylvanian has high hop s of keeping its head above water. The 1932 yearbook returned to the former system of having both the Senior and Junior classes represented on the staff, thus making the Pennsylvania!! a bi-annual affair. The Minor Bird The Minor Bird has perked out its feathers and is whistling a tune in A Major. for he too is covered by the blanket tax, and can have a real magazine with short stories as well as essays, poems and sketches. Sara Allison, ' 33. is editor-in-chief. while her assistants are: Beatrice Andrews, Senior editor; Marjorie Hopkins. Junior editor; Mary Seaver, Sophomore editor; and Catherine Boyd, Freshman editor. The Hand Book The Hand Book, with its copy of the constitution, is the Student Government Board ' s Bible, and also serves as a text book lor the incoming Freshman class, giving them pointers on how they are to conduct themselves through four years ol college life. Then, too, it is this all-informative little booklet that preserves the words of the Color Day songs and perpetuates our Muni Mater. One hundred eight LS One hundred nine Uances THE FALL DANCES I he Juniors and Seniors held a lovely dance in the chapel early in November. The room was decorated with ferns, comfy-chairs, and pale pink and blue lights that flooded the ceiling and cast grotesque shadows upon the dancers below. The entire dance was a quiet, beautiful affair, with an orchestra toned down to the deli- cate lighting effects, and the long, swirling skirts of the P. C. W. upperclassmen. The Freshmen and Sophomores held forth in December, after patiently wait- ing for the football games and dances to be over and done. The Freshmen, attend- tending their first dance, turned out whole-heartedly, and with the Sophomores, filled the chapel almost to overflowing. The} ' were initiated into going down a P. C. W. receiving line, which always lends a warmer and friendlier glow to our dances. THE PROM The Prom! Just after mid-years, and before we had really begun to get seri- ous with our second semester work, we spent an evening at the Schenlev Hotel, dancing and dancing, chatting and laughing with escorts, stiff in tuxedos. Re- member the broadcast? The handsome announcer who made us all clap and clap, and told the unseen audience that we were a bevv of beautiful maidens : The orchestra which played grand pieces, one after the other, and performed for us especially with a bottle rendition of Sweet Sue ' The way everyone looked in pale blues and pinks, soft whites, clinging velvets, and startling reds and oranges? The flood-lights that sent down such a nice pink glow from the high ceiling? The faculty watching us glide around and around the hall, and smiling at us ' The introductions, and tongue twister names, and dancing with Dot ' s man or Kay ' s boy-friend? Finding out that you knew him when β€” ? Seeing all the alumnae who came in just hoards to this annual Prom of ours- Darting about trying to find Grace, or Mary? Peering anxiously at your newly tinted shoes to see if it did leave a mark? Exclaiming and exclaiming? β€’ Waiting ' till the very, very end. then hustling into your wrap? Breakfast in Woodland Hall, or Gammon ' s, or Roth ' s, or what have you? Saying good-night, I ' ll see you tomorrow at two- thirty? Then the Tea Dance in the Woodland Hall dining room, with just mobs of people looking sleepy, and dreamy? Exchanging dances on the spur of the mo- ment, recognizing people over your man ' s shoulder? Raising your eye-brows, and laughing, and smiling, and greeting Miss Marks, and Miss Coolidge. and Miss Meloy, Watching your tenderly cared-for corsage, guarding it against injury? Saying good-bye once more? Sleeping all Sunday morning? And that was all? One hundred le THE CRADLE SONG β€” PRESENTED IN THE SPRING. 1931 Dramatics Mr. Pirn Passes By Early in the year. Dramatic Club gave us Mr. Pim Passes By , a typical Milne light comedy. Sally Stevenson simply was Mr. Pim, that dear, bungling old man who, with his reminiscing tales, inadvertently ' upsets the family through whose home he passes, but who comes back, blaming himself entirely , to straigh- ten out the facts. Incidentally, Mr. Pim leaves behind him much rejoicing and many freshened viewpoints. Sally Miller and Jean McLallen gave us a lovable pair of undaunted young things, bent on marrying and settling down to paint triangular clouds in bliss. And Stoney as husband and father! β€” we particularly ' admired her hands-in-pockets, I-say, what-have-we-here? way of pacing the floor. Sail} ' Ochiltree as the gracious Olivia soon had us worshipping at her feet, as she had the rest of her family. Altogether, we thought, a delightful thing sin- cerely done. ' Quality Street In March, the Speech Majors presented a finished and spirited performance of Quality Street , one of the most lovable plays of that master of whimsy, J. M. Barrie. An accurate and colorfully old-fashioned atmosphere was obtained by the excellent costuming done by the Play Production class, and with the interest- ing settings worked out with infinite pains and originality. Full of exquisite character bits, one may only mention the splendid work of the three main char- acters, Sally Miller, Ruth Nirella, and Sally Ochiltree, (as Miss Phoebe of the ringlets , her sister, and the dashing captain Valentine Brown ). These Speech Majors may be depended upon to give us outstanding productions. ( ns hundred eleven Music of the Year The beauts ' that lies in music hovers ever in our halls. Before the last sweet memories of one musical have been crowded out of our minds into our hearts, we are given opportuni- ties to add new memories. At the beginning of the school year, each member of our music department very graciously gave a program. Miss Alice Goodell opened the series of musi- cales on Friday. September the twenty-fifth, playing for us a program of organ music. On October the eighth, the members of the Guild of Organists were the guests of the college at a dinner which was given in Woodland Hall. Later in the evening, Miss Goodell opened the recitals of the Organists ' Guild for this year, by presenting a charming organ program in the chapel. On October the twelfth. Miss Helene YVelker, who is head of our piano department, gave a delightful piano program which she accompanied with verbal comments on her selections. Christine Griggs, who came back to P. C. W. this year from the University of Wisconsin where she spent last year working for her B. M. degree, was the next of our faculty to present a recital. On October twenty-sixth an enchanting program in which striking modern harmonies merged with more complacent classical melodies was given by Miss Helen Keil. This completed the series of programs given by the music department at the beginning of the school year. Zeta Kappa Psi presented a musical program at vespers on Sunday, November the nineteenth. Piano, organ, and vocal selections were given by the various members of the club. This year Miss Coolidge gave a course in Browning for the Adult Education Classes. At the conclusion of this course, the music faculty gave a program of Browning music which was composed by George M. Govs ' , who serves in the capacity of Dean of the Music School at Vassar. As Christmas drew near. Miss Goodell favored us with another delightful organ pro- gram in which she portrayed musically the Advent and Birth of Christ. The students contributed their part to the musical life of P. C. W. by presenting after- noon musicales held each month and a formal evening program to be presented at the end of the school year. At the first hour of music, held on Friday, December the eleventh. Dr. Stanforth gave an interesting and helpful talk on the Psychology of Performing . Miss Keil has worked very hard with the Glee- Club this year, and she has also built up quite a large choir. A quartet is a new feature of our musical life, and it has been very active, singing over the radio, and at various church affairs. We have been very fortunate in having Ralph Lewando who is music critic for the Pittsburgh Press, and a well known Pittsburgh musician and composer, with us this year, as teacher of violin. Mr. Lewando has been very gracious in playing for us on many occasions, and he has kindly given us press notices we certainly appreciate. One hundred twelve One hundred thirteen Athletic Association Florence Bouldin ------- ' resident Marian Baughman ----- Secretary-Treasurer Viola Swenson ------ Senior Representative Sarah Stevenson ------ Junior Representative Lea Cline ------ Sophomore Representative Nancy Gilmore ----- Freshman Representative Miss Errett | .. .. _-__._- Faculty Advisors Miss Hartman I One hundred fourtc LI Hockey Seniors Juniors F. Bouldin C. F J. Blair C. Brady R. I R. Skinner b. Lupton R. V H. Chambers L. Blank L.I M. CunlilTe D. Russell L. VV R. Toner S. Stevenson C. H S. Stevenson H. Lundquist R. H B. Nies B. Dearborn L. H M. Baughman B. Ramsay R. F C. Condron K. Lee L. F G. Ray M. Wooldiidge G Helen Young Another hockey season successfully completed β€” for the Freshmen at least. In the first game of the season the Freshmen showed their ability in hockey by defeating the Sophomores, 8-6. The Freshman speed, teamwork and class spirit are worthy of notice. The Seniors then put themselves in the limelight by a vic- tory over the Juniors with a score of 5-2. The championship game between the Freshmen and the Seniors aroused plenty of excitement. The;,e friendly enemies enjoyed every minute of the game in spite of the fact that part of it was played in the rain. At the en d of the first half the score stood 3-2 for the Freshmen. In the second half the Frosh , taking advantage of the loss of the Senior fullbacks, piled up six more goals. One hundred fifteen _ Freshman Hockey Team 1931 Sopho mores Freshme n J. Mitchell C. F C. Boyd L. Cline R.I N. Gilmore M. Martin R. W D. Taylor B. Beamer L. I S. Pinkerton D. Williamson L. W K. Dangerfield R. Edgar C. H A. Stockton M. J. Young R. H E. Splane M. White L. H K. Rodgers D. Schenck R. F J. Engel V. Bushnell L. F A. Rosenberger J. Worthington G C. Wright Last but most important was the annual Army-Navy game. The teams were well balanced and showed team play. At the close of the half both teams had made two goals. In the second half each team did its utmost to gain but the final score stood 4-4. One could find some consolation in such a score. The line-up: Army Navy F. Bouldin C. F J. Mitchell L. Blank R. I C. Brady J. Blair R. W R. Skinner C. Bovd L. I N. Gilmore K. Dangerfield L. W D. Russell B. Nies C. H S. Stevenson (Jr.) Capt. R. Edgar R. PL L. Cline M. Baughman L. H V. Bushnell S. Stevenson (Sr.) Capt R. F G. Ray M. White L. F B. Ramsay C. Wright G M. Wooldridge Substitutes: Army β€” Beamer for Blank. Eichleay for While. Navy β€” Toner lor Bushnell. Martin for Skinner. Goals: Army β€” Bovd 3, Bouldin l. Navyβ€” Mitchell 4. One hundred sixleen Basketball Junion FORWARDS Nies Baughman Young, M. GUARDS Ray Stevenson, Jr. Graham. B. Subs Senior Wool FORWARDS Stone Rankin Bouldin GUARDS Stevenson. Brady Russell Iridge, Lee. Sr. This year the basketball season was a mixture of all kinds and makes of playing. There was fine team work, careless tosses, hard fighting, and good sports- manship. Although the other teams fought nobly, the Juniors carried off the honors, just as they did last year. The first game, later disqualified, was won by the Sophomores, who played a crippled Junior live, instead of the regular six. The Seniors then displayed a fine spirit and good work by beating the Sophomores. The Freshmen entered their first combat with much enthusiasm and defeated the die-hard Seniors. In a fine game with the Juniors, however, they lost, and the Juniors, recovering from their first defeat, won over the Seniors and Sophomores. The audiences at the games were just grand, and the A. A. is all prepared to have to build bleachers for them next year. One hundred seventeen Basketball Freshmen FORWARDS Boyd Moorhead Hesse GUARDS Splane Pinkerton Gilmore Sophomores FORWARDS Husak Williamson Bushnell GUARDS Young, M. J. Mitchell Cline, L. Subs: Dangerfield, Gordon, Wilson, Patterson. The Juniors, not content with the mere championship over their classmates, challenged the faculty to a basketball game. The Arrow, taking advantage of the popularity of the contest, took in nickels at the door, and discovered later, that actually more than one hundred people crowded into our tiny gym! The game was a howling success from beginning to end. From the laundry basket to the faculty dolled out in the Junior uniforms, from the referees to the bewildered players, the game was hilarious. At the end of the game, several scores were in the offing, and no one knows just who won, but it must have been the faculty! One hundred eighteen i Popular People It Pays to Advertise Class Histories Say It With Songs Scribbler ' s Sanctum Our Popular People Following the precedent established by last year ' s Pennsyl- vania!! , the editors this year have prevailed upon the student body to select certain upper-classmen who, because of outstanding qualities of leadership, character, and personality are deemed worthy of special mention in the school year-book. These girls were chosen by a general vote of the students without designation as to their particular claims to distinction. For this reason, the editors have had of necessity, to take upon themselves the esti- mation of the contributions and characteristics of the three Seniors and the three Juniors so selected. One hundred twenty-thn (Caroline Braou Infectious merriment. Gracious charm. The will to rule. One hiiiKli lt t twenty-four %omst Ifncluutsmitli Unaffected insouciance. The beauty of moonlight on still waters. Friendship unswerving in its loyalty. One hundred twenty-five tettenscm Enthusiastic support and participation in all phases of college life. Unselfish and invaluable service to her class. A Good Companion. One luuulicil Iwentv-sis (Uraljam Sparkling humor. Unstudied poise. Carefree loveliness. One hundteJ twenty-seven lttb Dramatic talent. Compelling dignity. Willingness to serve. One hundred twenty-eight Β . tetrensmt Forceful leadership. Unconscious sweetness. Outstanding scholarship. One hundied twen!y-nin Senior Historyβ€” Its Four Salient Periods PERIOD OF TRANSITION Oh, we are Freshmen cra y, And we are Freshmen uild β€” The first class to wear armbands we don ' t know whether to be proud or sorry. We acquire special advisors because the Carnegie Foundation is ' observing ' us. Mountain Day β€” The faculty-student baseball game! V. W. Hobbies β€” Everybody rode their own β€” and how. P. C. W. ' s own Presidential Campaign in the gym β€” Dr. Wallace a candidate! We win all the prizes at the Hallowe ' en party β€” Aren ' t we original? Robert Frost ' s visit leaves us thrilled for days. The Desert Song Alumnae benefit β€” more thrills and heart throbs. The faculty entertain with a burlesque meeting where .Madame slept and .Miss Griggs ate bananas constantly. We all approve the Kellogg Peace Pact and write to Mr. Coolidge about it. Our own ' Jo ' Herrold wins the college and regional Oratorical Contest and is runner-up in the state semi-finals. And were we proud? May 2 l ) β€” Woodland Hall annex begun β€” Hooray, but oh, the noise! Fpperclassmen call us ' game ' in athletics because we challenge them on the least provocation. May Day Pageant! We appear as bewhiskered warriors, poppies, hoop-rollers and even muses. PERIOD OF ASSURANCE In high French heel and sex appeal. Short skirts, long skirts β€” up and down in spurts. We insist on the continuance of ' ye jolly armband custom. ' Mountain Day β€” We treasure hunt all over North County Park. Pittsburgh ' s Light Jubilee and the Pageant that never happened. Honorable Mention in the Song Contest! JOY IS UNCONFINED. Farewell, creaky, chilly Berry Flail rooms β€” we ' re established in the far-flung wings of a glorified Woodland Hall. Birth of the New Den for hungry, sleepy day girls β€” Three Cheers. The faculty make merry In the Southland until their ' dignity ' goes down for the third time. We all Buy a Brick for the Building Campaigners. Jo Herrold repeats her oratorical triumphs in college, region, and state! Y. W. International Fair β€” Balloons, Fortunes, the Cabaret, and, and! We win the Track Meet, no less. No finals! Instead under Carnegie Foundation Observation we take achieve- ment ( ? ) Tests. And so off to Forest Park and the Y. W. Conference. One hundred thirty PERIOD OF ERUDITION Alma Mater, fairest college, We are your own, your guardians, and your daughters β€” Thrills, we have our very own, hand-picked Little Sisters! Dramatic Club ' s modernized Alice in Wonderland with miniature golf ' n everything. Berkeley Square faculty benefit β€” meeting Leslie Howard and Margalo Gil- more ' in the flesh ' afterwards at tea in Woodland Hall. Louise C. Buhl Hall of Science completed β€” all the ' science people ' are crazier than ever! Our very own Junior Prom β€” ooh! Birth of the Cut System β€” Is everybody happy? Dramatic Club wins third place in the Pittsburgh Drama League Contest, the first time they enter. The passing of Alpha (the coop) where we sizzled and froze through History D. and Soc. Ground broken for the Laughlin Library. Illumination Night β€” Rose chain and beauty queens β€” our farewell to the class of ' 31. Shear- jashub! (A remnant shall return!) PERIOD OF COMMENCEMENT As through the leaves the sun comes down, gladdens with golden ray, So, through the years your memory will light a future day. We start the year under the sheltering folds of the first Blanket Tax. Practice teaching begins β€” oh, me β€” oh, my. Miss Coolidge ' s bridge luncheon is our first big party β€” it ' s nice to be seniors. The Alumnae get acquainted by giving us a series of tea ' s β€” it ' s nice to be pros- pective alumnae. Honorable Mention in the Song Contest β€” We knew we had it in us! Laughlin Library completed β€” guess we ' re the ' building-a-year ' class. The Practice Teachers ' Dinner and P. T. over forever and ever β€” Amen! And for the future β€” How can we wait? Weren ' t they grand! Wasn ' t it short ! Mary, Mary Quite Contrary . Class Day. Illumination Night. Baccalaureate. Graduation. One hundred thirty-one It Pays to Advertise Frances Alter β€” This takes trying, but man! It ' s worth it. Bernice Beamer β€” They laughed when I sat down to play. Ruth Berkey β€” The pause that refreshes. Helen Bixler β€” Hasn ' t scratched yet. Eleanor Blanning β€” Good to the last drop. Virginia Bushnell β€” Now you, too, can have naturally wavy hair. H ermine Carr β€” Mothers β€” be on guard! Harriett Christy β€” Poise, performance, and value. Lea Cline β€” Something worth cheering about. Anna Colwes β€” Mild, but she satisfies. Betty Coshey β€” Ask the man who owns one. Virginia Cox β€” Men just can ' t resist ' em! Margaret Donaldson β€” He loves your petal-soft, girlish hands. Ruth Edgar β€” A gift for Him. Eleanor Ewing β€” A new achievement in effortless action. Lois Ewing β€” Kind to everything it touches. Jane Fisher β€” No need to rise at crack of dawn. Mary Garella β€” A cool front at all times. Edna Geiselhart β€” No lost pay days for her. Marjorie Gibson β€” Brings color to fading hair. Margaret Goldberg β€” Where America leads the world in value. Leslie Goudie β€” Making new friends and keeping the old. Lucetta Hardesty β€” The most modern thing in motoring. Marjorie Hardy β€” You name it β€” I ' ll eat it. Synnove Haughom β€” That school-girl complexion. Rose Hollingsworth β€” There is no better. Helen Hopkins β€” Watch him fall for this! Mary Hostler β€” Here ' s floating power and free wheeling. Ruth Husak β€” Let ' s talk about you. Amelia Iacovetti β€” The charm of up-to-dateness. Ann Irwinβ€” Lines sketched in by laughter are etched in by time. Eleanor Jacobs β€” Cool as a draught from a mountain stream. Josephine Johnson β€” Always welcome in every home. Eleanor Kenworthy β€” Wanted β€” men of ability. Marjorie Larimer β€” Protect the beauty of your smile. Catherine Liley β€” Accepted as the standard by America ' s leading authorities. Luise Link β€” No one knows paint like a painter. One IhithIicJ thirlv-nvo It Pays to Advertise Jean Ludebuehl β€” Hopeless β€” we should say- not. Alice McCarthy β€” Million dollar complexions need the same care as yours. Alice McCorkle β€” A big day ahead with a lace that ' s (it. Anne McCullough β€” Keeping kissable. Eleanor McEwan β€” Why not be your own boss? Jean McLallen β€” What ' s right with the world when girls just will be boys ? Elizabeth Marsh β€” Adoration is the tribute men pay to femininity. Harriet Tyler Martin β€” Every l i minutes a new bride. Mary Louise Martin β€” Dependability, too. Virginia Miller β€” Friendly β€” to any color scheme. Ruth Miller β€” Admired everywhere for its smartness and its style. Alice Milligan β€” While you are resting do your double mint exercises. Jane Mitchell β€” One will always stand out. Martha Moninger β€” Still basically unchanged. Bernice Montgomery β€” So surprising. Charlotte Patterson β€” She can stand a closeup. Can you? Virginia Price β€” Those tell-tale eyes. Irene Rosen β€” No guess work here. Virginia Sanborn β€” Sell us your spare time. Grace San key β€” Nine points of superiority. Grace Sauer β€” Freshness you can see. Dorothy Schenck β€” The tradition of reliability. Avanelle Schlosser β€” Attention, Mr. Business Man. This business woman has a tip for you. Mary Seaver β€” Meet the newest member of a distinguished family. Eunice Shatzer β€” Sealed and protected by cellophane. Marion Starkey β€” Success is the result. Thelma Stocker β€” That ' s what mother puts in my lunch box. Helen Walker β€” Cream of the crop. Mary Weir β€” Of course I ' m not too tired to go out, I wore my Enna Jettick shoes today. Margaret White β€” The salesman of the future. Dorothy Williamson β€” The smoothness of an eight, the economy of a four. Jean Worthington β€” Blondes win wedding veils. Ellen Yeager β€” An achievement in specialization. Mary Jane Young β€” The desire to know. One hundred thirty-three J unior Class History Relativity EINSTEIN We metriculate and are fed the proverbial compliment about being the finest- looking Freshman Class that ever entered. Hockey Season β€” One of our number invents a new way to stop the onrushing ball. She sits on it. Post-Holiday Season β€” We move over to Woodland Hall ' s latest appendage: no longer will the mice of Berry Hall nibble at our best pair of stockings. Basket-ball Season β€” We do right nobly, but the Junior onslaught is too much. Dramatic Club β€” One Act Play Contest β€” and much to the surprise of all. we won. Susan Glaspell ' s Trifles was what did it. Betty Nies ' black and white soap dog becomes the official Freshman Mascot β€” of course he ' s christened Trifles. Carnegie Foundation Exams β€” Three days of ' em, but no finals. Ever) ' class except the honored Sophomores, who are delegated to Room A, gather in the chapel. Each person has her name pasted on a chair β€” it is frightfully warm β€” we suffer plenty, but we ' ve one comforting thought β€” the sophomores are feeling worse. ZWE1-STEIN Color Day and Song Contest β€” The judges after much hemming and hawing, which they think particularly clever, award us five pounds of Reymer ' s Very Best. Are we proud! Hockey Season β€” We sigh to ourselves. Maybe next year. Mid-Semesters β€” As usual. Buhl Hall opens for classes β€” There is an immediate influx of Science majors. Basket-ball Season β€” We feel quite smart and go around with a don ' t-touch- me-air, for aren ' t we basket-ball champions? Sophomore Show Boat β€” aaaah! β€” we present Escaped From the Law, a pow- erful ' melodramer ' , directed by Ruth Ludebuehl . . . Dot Denl in checkered suit and derby . . . lather reminding Mother of his Bicycle Built for Two . . . She One hundred thirty-four Was Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage, but she nearly cracked her larynx telling us about it . . . The Floradoras in their borrowed plumes ... 6 ' Baugh on a 3 ' tele- pole . . . I ' ve caught yuh like rraats in a trraap! ( Booooo-ssss-ssss . . . Bertha Pearl making ' quite sure ' before sinking into a lily-white swoon . . . I shall not move an inch! (thundering applause) . . . dashing widow and heroic Middleton . . . thirsting babe (10 yrs. 6 mo.) . . . good-hearted Irish woman in bonnet and shawl . . . red-wigged Pat . . . Bl-looda. Bl-looda. Bl-looda . . . $120.57. Spring β€” Feeling wealthy and altruistic, we give a bridge-luncheon for the de- parting Seniors. DREI-STEIN Song Contest β€” Your Daughters Rise to Sing To You, P-P-P-PCW . . . another five pounds of R. V. B. This semester, ' little white cards ' are signed by ' Eleanor K. Taylor ' instead of ' M. Helen Marks ' . Hockey Season β€” We give up β€” the Freshmen do bully well β€” catch on? Miss Coolidge invites us to tea and Presto Change-o β€” Miss Marks! Post-Holiday Season β€” The second blue portal swings open and we exult over the chaste beauty of the Laughlin Memorial Library. New Semester β€” Miss Marks returns and is duly tea-ed, feted, and lauded. Junior Prom β€” Austin Wiley draws out seductive tunes with the point of his long baton. Faculty Play β€” One long surprise from beginning to end. Pennsylvanian goes to print! THE FOURTH DIMENSION Info the unknown .... One hundred thirtv-live Say It With Songs Louise Aldridge β€” You Didn ' t Know the Music. Imogene Bell β€” And Her Golden Hair Was Hanging Down Her Back. Helen Birmingham β€” Birmingham Ber- tha. Mary Blommers β€” Ho Hum-! Catherine Boyd β€” Take me Out to the Ball Game. Sara Boyer β€” When Hearts are Young. Marion Burns β€” She ' s So Nice. Reid Clark β€” Watcha ' Doin ' ? Elizabeth Cober β€” She ' s So Sweet. Jane Conrad β€” Who ' s Blue? Katherine Dangerfield β€” Out o f Breath. Elizabeth Dickie β€” Breezin ' Along. Helen Jane Douthitt β€” I Blush. Bertha Dunbar β€” You Don ' t Care. Margaret Eichleay β€” St. Louis Blues. Ann Emmerling β€” I ' ll Get By. Jean Engel β€” Good Fellow. Ruth Frost β€” Lovable and Sweet. Sue Gillespie β€” When Sweet Susie Goes Stepping By. Nancy Gilmore β€” Will You Remem- ber? Shirley Gordon β€” Shout. Sister, Shout! Dorothy Grote β€” She ' s Got a Nice Line. Eleanor Harbison β€” Concent ratin ' . Jane Harmeir β€” I ' ll Not Work a .Min- ute Overtime. Caroline Hesse β€” I ' ll See You Through. Eloise Howard β€” Let Me Sing and 1 m Happy. Laura Hughes β€” It All Depends on You : ida Hurs t β€” Congratulations. Sheila Ihmsen β€” What Do You Say? Winifred Jeffries β€” Dainty Miss. Louise Jones β€” Have a Heart. Ruth Jubb β€” Doin ' the Right Thing Now. Jane Really β€” This Is Where You Come In. Laura Kolb β€” Dark Eves. Ruth Kramer β€” So Glad I ' m Here. Stella Lazar β€” Bidin ' My Time. Louise Leadman β€” Glad to Meet You. Mary McFarland β€” Should I r Nancy MacGregor β€” Good For You. Jane McQuiston β€” Calamity Jane. Margaret Meanor β€” It ' s Nice to Get Up in the Morning. Ruth Morehead β€” True Blue. Deborah Mountiord β€” My Ohio Home. Galina Mouronseff β€” So Sympathetic. Sana Mouronseff β€” So Sweet. Catherine Murray β€” Feelin ' Drowsy. One lunulrcil thirty-six Say It With Songs Yuki Naito β€” I Like a Little Girl Like That. Lillie Pace β€” Georgia On My Mind. Betsy Patterson β€” You Rascal, You. Margaret Peterson β€” Slow But Sure. Sally Pinkerton β€” Frivolous Sal. Dorothy Pontious β€” Big Bouquet For You. Mildred Porter β€” Sometimes I ' m Hap- py- Florita Ragone β€” Tie a Little String Around Your Finger. Helen Roberts β€” Ain ' t Misbehavin ' . Mary Kay Rodgers β€” You ' re Respon- sible. Alice Rosenberger β€” What a Girl. Gertrude Russell β€” Hard-to-Get Ger- tie. Mary Russell β€” Satisfied. Velmer Ryan β€” Collegiate. Florence Sauer β€” Keep a Song in Your Soul. Carolyn Saulpaugh β€” Always Do as People Say. Virginia Scheinsberg β€” Pardon Me. Pretty Baby. Margaret Searles β€” You Darlin ' . Margaret Smith β€” Get Happy. Mary Smith β€” Live and Love Today. Anna Claire Snyder β€” Make Me Know It. Eleanore Splane β€” Charming. Dolores Steinecke β€” You Said It. Anne Stewart β€” Sweetness. Margaret Stockdale β€” Little Girl. Alice Stockton β€” Look Before You Leap. Dorothy Taylor β€” Sing, You Sinners. Dorothy Thomas β€” You Wouldn ' t Fool Me, Would You? Dorothy Trbovich β€” Them There Eyes. Gretel Trog β€” Chances Are. Eleanor Walters β€” Doin ' The Racoon. Virginia Watkins β€” Too Late. Helen Wilson β€” Can ' t You See. Marie Wolstoncroft β€” Leave It That Way. Dorothy Wood β€” With All My Heart. Dorothy Woodward β€” Cheerful Little Earful. Charlotte Wright β€” Thanks To You. Virginia Wright Madeline Ruhe j Side By By Side. One hundred thirty-seven Ladies ' Aid Betty Nies An erudite P. C. W.-ite whose name was Kitty Jones, Once slaved till there teas nothing left but Kitty ' s skin and bones. Her fond mama, dissolved in tears, was open to suggestion : Pale cheeks and feverish eyes had she. especially at exam-time. And all her friends and cousinses and grand-mamas and aunts Were frantic, trying to distract her from this studious trance. Her fond mama, dissovled in tears, was open to suggestion: Pray tell β€” how can I save my child from mental indigestion: ' But to our lovely Browsing Room pale Kitty one day strayed. Wherein no studies are allowed, a room for pleasure made: And all the burden of her toil took icings and disappeared Those easy chairs especially made for working girls to sink in. Those quaint old sofas of the time of Louis Quince, I think, and The tid-bits for the curious bound in lovely, gilt-edged books! A different kind of book-worm she. after a few delighted looks. Soon all her friends and cousinses and grand-mamas and aunts Remarked how pink her cheeks had grown, her step almost a dance Her mania ' s worried brow relaxed, her tears at last were stayed. And that is how the Browsing Room became a Ladies ' Aid. One hundred thirtv -eight As Chaucer Would See Itβ€” the Newwe Librarie Tales Marjorie Hopkins II ' ban that Jaiiuarie with his shores sote With newwe travaille had our days y-smote, And with our term-papers our soules a-flayed (Of which vertu engendered is our grade) Whan exames eke with their neare approche Inspired had in every Soph and Frosh A tendre studyinge, and our Misse Markse Had in her Spree her half-cours y-ronne, And Miss Tayloure insted must maken melodye, And slepen all the night with open eye (So priketh him collegiates in hir corages) Than! full rejoyse ye mayds returning sombre, And eke ye profs, who delve-in books sans nombre, To find a Newwe Librarie on hill-sloap yunder. With ground-floor, notte a basement, under! And now with glea from all the campus ende Of college, to semely bright blue dores they wende I herein, midst blisful splendours svelt and slicke. Their thirst for deyntee knowledge for to sicke. One luimlrcil thirty-nine peec h! The Speech 1-2 Exams came, saw. and in must cases conquered. Haughty Seniors and trembling Freshmen and even some giggling Sophomores and a Junior or two struggled for five long minutes to amuse the assembled populace with a poem and a speech. The audience seemed to suffer almost as much agony during those five minutes as the would-be performers did. They stuttered, they stumbled and repeated and repeated as if- they were trying in a vain sort of way to teach the poem to their listeners, too. It was a very serious affair, with .Miss Kerst and Miss Robb taking critical notes on everything from the way they stood to the way they muttered and mumbled their speeches. The chairs in the Speech Laboratory (the Old Library under a new name) squeaked and groaned with pity for the poor frightened performers. Even Miss Kerst ' s chair could not help groaning a little now and then just to show that he did have some sympathy even if his occupant didn ' t. The performers in the exams were unconsciously funny, not in their attitude or behavior, but in the subjects which they chose to speak about. One serious- minded Sophomore, who had to be dragged from the Library to give her Little Bit roared forth in a throat) ' voice the sad tale of La Belle Dame Sans Merci and then suddenly came down from her high horse and told the life history of German police dogs. The audience learned about the Chambered Nautilus and the Wash- ington Bi-Centennial all in one breath. One Ereshman harassed her listeners with a gruesome tale of how four out of five of us are victims of infantile paralysis without being aware of our misfortune. The climax of the afternoon came, though, when those assembled learned that Joyce Kilmer died of a bullet through his heart. A tall and stately ' Freshman told the ins and outs of the life of a Mennonite Maid and then went on in a serious voice to gallop through Had Time. One earnest soul tried to change our views on the censorship of the movies, but most of her hearers had long since fallen asleep. And so the Exams droned on and on until Miss Coolidge came in and made one poor victim forget her lines completely. She stayed and listened a while and then she too gave up and left to go to some happier realm. The exams droned on and on and Miss Robb took voluminous notes in spite of the protest of the empty chairs around her. Finally the exams came to an end and the weary listeners and the still trembling performers dashed out of the door of the speech laboratory, threatening to wreak vengeance on the members of the audience who had dared to come see their performance, not from any sense of duty, but from an unholv desire to laugh at their efforts. One hundred forty The Telephone Belle There was once a famous poet Called Edgar Allan Poe, And he wrote a poem ' bout some bells A long, long time ago. But he quite forgot to mention. (Or perhaps he wouldn ' t tell) Such a very ' porta nt lady called The Telephone Belle. She ' s a student in our college, β€” Oh. you ' ll find her in the den. Or hovering ' round in Woodland Hall. You ' ll see her now and then. She has a way with all the boys, They every one adore her. She even has the operator Pulling wires for her. Each boy, on introduction, plans Just how he ' ll meet her rate ; She gets his number right away, A nd a ring before the date. Oh, there re many charges ' gainst her uamt But none that she will own, Tor just between ourselves, you see, She ' s a boy-cott on the ' phone. One hundred forty-one Fifteen Minutes With Minerva Pennsylvania College . . . Miss Marks? Just a moment, please. Hello there, 1 ain ' t seen you fer a couple a days. . . Yes . . . All right, sir. . . . Bzzzz. Now, why don ' t some of them girls in that den answer the phone. 1 been ringin ' . . . Bzzzz . . . Yes? . . . Pennsylvania College . . . .Mr. O ' Neil? Just a moment . . . Well, if here isn ' t my old friend, and how ' s the world treatin ' you? I wouldn ' t feel so dern bad about that . . . Bzzzz . . . I ' d find a new feller. Not a bit of it . . . Sorry, they don ' t answer . . . Miss Jobson ' Just a minute. . . . That there Miss Jobson sure is a busy woman, what with everyone wantin ' to speak with her. . . . Bzzzz ... So. you think ou ' d like to run one o ' these, huh? . . . Well, it ain ' t hard. . . . Pennsylvania College ... Hi. there, still lookin ' fer that package? . . . Nope, it ain ' t come yet. ... If you see that Marian Baughman tell her there ' s a special waitin ' fer her. . . . Pennsylvania College ... All right) ' . . . Bzzzz. Whatever ' s happened to that little Miller girl? I ain ' t seen her ' round fer a long time. . . . She sure gets the telephone calls . . . Hello, there. What you lookin ' so down in the mouth about? . . . Yes ' . . . Miss Kolb? ... I ' ll git her right away, yes ma ' am. . . . Mind. now. I ain ' t blamin ' the government. No, siree. It ' s just the depression. I couldn ' t do no better myself. Could you? . . . It ' s jest too bad. . . . Bzzzz .... Pennsyl- vania College . . . Hello, there, Miss Robinson. ... 1 ain ' t seen much goin ' into that box of yours. Yes, sir, I ' ll always stand up fer Hoover. Why don ' t some of them dern wealthy bankers loosen up, huh? . . . Pennsylvania College. . . . Nope! it ' s a shame the way them guys are holdin ' out! . . . Well, good-bye. . . . Yep. it ' s al- most time fer the bell . . . No. thank you, most my lunch time. now. . . . Well, now, what are you so mournful-lookin ' for? ... He can ' t come down fer the Prom? . . . Bzzzz . . . Pennsylvania College. . . . Well, now, that is too bad. Ya got yer dress, too, didn ' t you? Pennsylvania College . . . Well, better luck next time. . . . Here you are! 1 knew you couldn ' t let that there special wait long. . . . Well, is he comin ' ? . . . Pennsylvania College. . . . That makes you glad, don ' t it? . . . There goes the bell . . . Pennsylvania College. . . . Bzzzz . . . Nope, 1 don ' t put no stock in them things. Never did! . . . Well, ladies, if you ' ll excuse me. guess I ' ll go fer my lunch. Yep. I won ' t forget if he calls, about three? All righty. One hundred forty-two In the Arrow Office on Tuesdays Well, now that it ' s all cut up, let ' s start pasting it together! How many letters are there in Miss Mark ' s name? Ten, β€” guess you ' d better add the Mary Helen. O. K. Gee, that makes it swell. A perfect fit. Music Department Presents a Group of Students in a Recital! Gee whisi- kers, how ' m I supposed to get that in a headline? Let ' s see, one, two, three, four, space, . . . Nope! I ' ll have to leave out the ' a ' . Oh, look, the Owl just fits into his column. Did you read what he said this week? Boy, there ' s going to be some comment, and how! Darn, that International whoozee just won ' t get in, no how. It ' ll have to be continued. Paste! Where ' s the paste? Here. Say, isn ' t this play write-up darling? Who did it? Oh, you know, what-you-call-it. Her write-ups are usually pretty good. S ' too long! Now, I ask you, what can we cut out? Someone will get mad if we leave that part out, sure as shootin ' . I know, we ' ll put it on the third page. We ' ve got too much first page stuff anyway. There! Wouldn ' t you know that this gink ' s picture would be just too wide? Oh, well, he ' ll have to get in somehow. Shall we leave those ' Adopt Arrow Advertisers ' hickeys on the top still? Sure, it might be doing some good, though I doubt it. It ' s all in the set-up. anyway. This calendar will have to be divided. How about putting it in the center at the top, double column, then put the picture on the right hand side? O lv? Pretty soon, I ' ll get used to this every week. Instead of counting sheep be- fore 1 go to bed, I ' ll just count out headlines, So ' ll I. Well, gimme some paste, and as soon as I get the Alumna news down, we ' re through. Hmmmm, What do you know of love, hmmmm. There. Done. One hundred fortv-thr Woodland Hall β€” St. Valentine ' s Dinner On the night of February 1 1th, St. Valentine, with bow and arrows and arrayed in an extra ribbon for the occasion, flitted hither and thither about the candle- lighted dining-room. Bouquets of tulips, hearts on the walls, pussy-cat place- cards purr-litely suggesting 1 am your Valentine β€” all reminded the jolly fellow that he had not had a day dedicated to him in vain. There was, indeed, much there to attract his eye β€” the sheen of white satins, the softness of blue laces, the richness of red velvets, the sparkle of ear-rings, the flash of bracelets β€” and much to attract a hungry cupid ' s appetite besides. But. oh, the presents were the best of all! As he crunched a celery stalk β€” snatched from Dr. Scott ' s plate β€” , he gazed longingly at numerous chocolate hearts, nodded pleasantlv at the many lovely handkerchiefs, cast an appreciative glance at Miss Dysart ' s necklace, and even took an obliging notice of the sophisticated decks of cards. Yes, everything was proceeding with the peacefulness of the Potomac, when he detected the most becoming of blushes on Mr. Geil ' s cheeks. A-ha. he was reading his Valentine! Peeping slyly over his shoulder, St. Valentine him- self β€” the mischievous boy β€” chuckled at the bold words β€” Break down, big boy, and give me your heart! And when one by one, the cast of the Faculty Play walked hurriedly and nervously between the tables to the door, he clapped as loud as the rest, for was not all this in honor of his special day? Dr. Wallace, however β€” that astute man of science β€” talked his table partners into such an state of coma that he nearly slipped out unobserved. Not quite, though β€” for St. Valentine spied him and began the applause which was merrily caught up from all sides. Yet despite his smiles. St. Valentine ' s brow was knotted with tiny fears. Weren ' t Dr. Doxsee and Mr. Kinder to make their exits, too, for this Play of all Plays? No β€” no β€” . poor Valentine. β€” not this time. And gradually feeling this truth, he sighed deeply as he pictured what a dashing hero Dr. Doxsee would have been, and what a cheerful villian, Mr. Kinder. But, he recovered, being of an irrepressible disposition, and bv-and-bv, selecting the reddest candy heart from a dainty dish, (lapped right over Miss Goodell ' s head and into the night. And β€” not a soul knew he had been there! Day-Girls Valentine Party All afternoon the tall, heavy doors, stern and domineering, kept intruders out of the New Den . There were mysterious comings and goings, and many whisper- ed secrets, and wide eyes, and worried foreheads. The Valentine Dinner was in the making! Then came the magic hour of six-forty-five, and none too soon for sharpened appetites. What delighted smiles! What happy squeals of delight when all was ready and the jealous old doors were opened; for the New Den was transformed from its bleak drabness to its former state of grandeur for the Valentine Dinner: β€” transformed by tall pink and white candles, lighting the tables with glad pointed flames, golden above the fragrant sweet peas, pink and white fragility in the soft light. Pink paper tumblers took on an enticing slimness. the old tables appeared dark and polished. Faces were smilingly happy, exes bright and glistening in the candle light. Blessed Freshmen moved quietly about among the tables, filling empty glasses with twinkling ice water, bringing plates piled high with food, fit for kings, and serving heart-centered ice cream in honor of the Saint himself. Soon song filled the room, laughter overtook it. sounded above it, then disappeared in turn into the contagious gaiety. Candlelight, flowers, laughter, joy, red hearts, warm hearts, St. Valentine ' s Daw happy memorv! One hundred forty-four The Faculty Play After many vague whispers and sly winks, the student body of this august college learned on the night of February the eleventh, that among its faculty were several outstanding stars in the theatrical world. The success of the two plays given that evening was so great that even Harvey Gaul did not dare say a word against them in his column the next day. To the yells of, We want the curtain to go up, the actors to show up, we ' re tired of waiting out here . Miss Goodell made a sensational entry by waltzing up to our grand organ, accustomed to pour forth the strains of Faith of Our Fathers and after many a bow, spread in full view of everyone, the handsome features of Rudy Vallee with the caption Good-Night Sweetheart above his sad smile. How that organ jazzed, and how we all laughed and laughed till we thought we should have to go around in plaster casts the next day! Then Miss Hempker, very gallant in her (?) tuxedo, came ' round, and with an enticing smile, made us give up all our carefully hoarded pennies for a heart that read, Same here , Two Hearts , or 1 love you . Then, suddenly, the lights flickered, and then they flickered again. Finally they gave another flicker, and went out all together. A hush, then the lights were on again. After several more agonizing minutes had passed, out they went, for good, and we waited breathlessly for the curtain to pull apart. Dick, alias Mary Kolb, and Marianne, Miss Robb, our pretty speech corrector, were laughing and weeping over their being cousins. Then a wild and woolly person, under a huge, magnificent red wig, appeared to break up a touching love scene. Oh, the irony of it! Heredity and Eugenics in the person of Aunt Jane (Miss Meloy, imagine!) were propounded and expounded before a very in- dustrious mother, Miss Marks, and finally squelched by a sarcastic, indifferent father in the person of Dr. Wallace. Between the bugs, and Jimmy, and Aunt Jane, and Mother, Dick and Marianne finally did have that last, death-defy- ing clinch that brought the great drama, Romance and Science to a close amid the howls, actually shrieked, from the sympathetic audience who literally rolled in their seats. Ah, but was that all? No. More music to the time ol Lou White, and then two pickaninnies went cloppiting up on the stage and went through all sorts of antics with their taps. Behind all the black we could distinguish the grinning features of Miss Hartman and Miss Errett. Gurtain, lights,, blackness, and then the curtain rolled back once more, showing us a coy but desperately in love col- lege lass (Miss Taylor, none other), who inveigled her collegiate pals, Miss But- ler, Miss Calkins, and the disdainful skaters. Miss Griggs and Miss Howell, into catching her doctor for her. What hopes we had for the doctor! We shrieked and helped break the very respectable cups and saucers in order to bring Miss Taylor and her doctor together. Alas, the doctor was a healer of pianos, perhaps a very excellent one; but, still, a mere piano tuner was Dr. Scott, who hurried in and out with his little black bag. We could rave on and on forever about the plays, and the actors and the incidental music that filled up the gaps. But, let ' s give three big cheers, and a locomotive for the Faculty and the Faculty and still another, for the Faculty! One hundred forty-five Mr. Bell ' s Contribution to P. C. W. YEARβ€” 1928 Scene β€” Berry Hall, fourth floor. There ' s that dam phone again! Why do Freshmen have to be telephone proc- tors? Oh, well, I ' ll let Jane answer it. Her room ' s nearer. What ' d ' ya do on that History written? I flunked it β€” flat. Honestly, that stuff simply gets on my nerves. Why doesn ' t she answer that phone ' I suppose I ' ll have to. (Interval of progress down the hall). Hello, fourth floor. Who? Yes. I ' ll call her. Sally .Miller! Telephone! YEARβ€” 1020 Scene β€” Berry Hall, third floor. There ' s that damn phone again! I never saw anything like the Freshmen this year β€” they never answer it. And when I think of the way we answered it last year β€” ! Wha ' d ' ya do in Soc. today? Have a written? What on ; Oh heck, that stuff ' s all a mess anyway. 1 can ' t make head or tail out of it. ( Voice from distance) β€” Jane Smith! Telephone! Oh, it ' s mother, wanting to know why 1 haven ' t written home. YEARβ€” 1930 Scene β€” Woodland Hall, third floor. There ' s the telephone again! Wonder if it ' s for me this time? Bob said he ' d call as soon as he got to town, and Jim should call tonight and Johnny always does. Oh, someone ' ll answer it. How was Bible this morning? Is he still on the prophets? That course β€” ! (Voice from distance) Jane Smith! You ' re wanted on the telephone! Is it a man? YEAR 1931 Scene β€” Woodland Hall, second floor. There ' s the phone! Out of my way! Johnny said he ' d call at 8:30. Hello! This is Jane! Wait till 1 close the door. But of course, darling! One hundred fortv-six ADVERTISING DIRECTORY One hundred forty-seven ADVERTISING DIRECTORY ATHLETIC CLOTHING George W. Woods Co. 510 State Theatre Building. Fifth Avenue. Atlantic 1630 BANKS City Deposit Bank and Trust Company 6112 Penn Avenue Hiland 5493 Commonwealth Trust Co. 312 Fourth Avenue Court 2006 Fidelity Trust Co. 343 Fourth Avenue Court 0261 Union National Bank Fourth Avenue and Wood Street Court 0541 BEAUTY SHOPS Curci ' s Beauty Salon 205 North Highland Avenue Montrose 31S1 r- H9. BROKERAGE National Brokerage Company Chamber of Commerce Building Atlantic 8741 CATERERS Joyce-McClements Company Penn and Shady Avenues Hiland 0123 Louise M. Packard 4900 Center Avenue Mayflower 8500 CLEANERS Geier ' s Cleaners and Dyers 6959-61 Upland Street Hiland 4560 CONFECTIONERS Joyce-McClements Company Penn and Shady Avenues Hiland 0123 Reymer and Brothers, Inc. 239 Fifth Avenue Grant 4680 and 601S Penn Avenue Emerson 9378 One hiiiHlu ' d forty-eighi ADVERTISING DIRECTORY CONTRACTORS W. T. Grange Construction Company Keenan Building Atlantic 5754 L. O. Maines Construction Co. 5941 Baum Boulevard Montrose 8596 COSTUMES AND THEATRI- CAL SUPPLIES Esser Brothers 322 Liberty Avenue Atlant ic 3277 ELECTRICAL EQUIPMENT Ochiltree Electric Company 505 Liberty Avenue Atlantic 1900 Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Co. 1800 Grant Building Atlantic 8400 ENGRAVING Canton Engraving and Electrotype Company Canton, Ohio FLORISTS Miss E. B. Maxwell Floral Shop 812 Wood Street, Wilkins- burg Churchill 0373 McClements Company, Inc. 535 Wood Street Atlantic 3720 William Penn Flower Shop Lobby of William Penn Hotel Atlantic 7100 FOOD SUPPLIES Simon Brahm ' s Sons 204-206 First Avenue Court 4940 George S. Daugherty Co. 106 Penn Avenue Court 2784 FURNITURE Colonial Art Furniture Co, 3906 Fifth Avenue Mayflower 4635 One hundred forty-nine ADVERTISING DIRECTORY GENERAL INSURANCE J. E. Stone and Co. Investment Building Atlantic 2311 GLOVE REPAIRING AND ANNOUNCEMENT CARDS Thompson Shop (Mabel O. Cowan) 901 May Building Atlantic 7472 HOTELS Schenley Hotel Grant Boulevard Forbes Street Mayflower 6400 JEWELERS AND SILVERSMITHS Grogan Company 541 Wood Street Atlantic 1246 Wattles and Sons Co. 517 Wood Street Atlantic 3633 JOBBING AND MILL SUPPLIES Howard and Collingwood Number 7 Wood Street Court 5440 KITCHEN EQUIPMENT Demmler and Schenck Co. 432 Penn Avenue Atlantic 6640 LIMESTONE Elkins Limestone Company Elkins, West Virginia MATCHES Palmer Match Co. Akron. Ohio MILLINERY Inez Millinery Schenley Apartments Mayflower 4444 MUSIC Wagner-Bund Music Company 207 Hacke Building. Fifth Avenue Atlantic 1698 PAINTING. HARDWARE. AND GLASS Graff Brothers. Inc. 5912 Penn Avenue Hiland 3050 G. W. Lupton Co. 5851 Forbes Street Hazel 0238 One hundred fifty ADVERTISING DIRECTORY PHOTOGRAPHY White Studio 243 West Seventeenth St., New York PRINTING Ziegler Printing Company 235-239 West Cunningham Street, Butler, Pa. RESTAURANTS Roth ' s Grill 5806 Penn Avenue Montrose 9653 SHOES AND HOSIERY Hanan and Son 533 Wood Street Atlantic 3750 P. Ludebuehl and Son Penn and Frankstown Ave- nues Hiland 2850 and Wood near South, Wilkins- burg Churchill 1527 VISUAL AIDS IN SCHOOL INSTRUCTION Denoyer-Geppert Co. 5235-5257 Ravenswood Ave.. Chicago Longbeach 9200 COMPLIMENTS Compliments of a Friend Compliments of a Friend Compliments of a Friend Compliments of WCAE, In- corporated One hundred fills In Appreciation The Editor and her staff this year wish to thank the many, many people who have helped them so much to put out a successful year-book. The alumnae, who have answered our plea for subscriptions, the administration, who have helped us in deciding important questions, Mr. Jochum, the White Studio representative who patiently took our pictures last fall, Mr. Lyon, of the Canton Engraving Company, who has given us very constructive, personal service, Mr. Woner, the genial man- ager of the Ziegler Printing Company, who has assisted us invaluably with his knowledge about year-books, and such, and also to our faculty advisor, who has even read proof for us. But last of all, we wish to thank the advertising staff that Marion Stone headed for their grand contribution of advertisements. We know that sore feet and bruised feelings went along with success in their travels, and we certainly wish to thank them whole-heartedly lor their support. The following girls helped us get our ads: Sally Ochiltree Lillian Lafbury Jean McLallen Dorothy Russell Irma Steinbart Kay Dangerfield Evelyn Bitner Phyllis Lehew Alice McCarthy Dorothy Grote Lltse Link Helen Walker Jean Engel Alice Bair Louise Metzgar Kay Lee Martha Stuart One hundred fifiy-two AutOflVeipIfS -Β£ei= One hundred fifty-three ,Autiuu ctpI)s -feΒ© One hunilrcJ fiftv-four Antngraplis -Hssr EI3 - One hundred (iftv-fiv Anturjraplts --SSI ?ISs- One hunJred fiftv-six


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FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.