College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN)

 - Class of 1951

Page 1 of 120

 

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1951 Edition, Cover
Cover



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Text from Pages 1 - 120 of the 1951 volume:

Humbled in spirit and contrite of heart, may we find favour with thee, Lord, and may our sacrifice be so offered in thy sight this day that it may please thee, Lord our God. Prayer, Offertory of the Mass , P v f I N- 'F A CCNC A l95 l Published by The Junior Class The College of St. Catherine St. Paul, Minnesota 6223 51. sv . ,rsh 'ivy J A , 5, m f N., 'Q Xt- KK WWA JA5,r,,.T.. NA.,A. . W t f I Vw Y, . I K1 A . A1 fgq f wifi Y 2 B K , ' ,i ,QL ww lskck 5 2. V31 4 ,,.4.,......u.M. ,..,-,-. .,.,,,, W. ,AWAW, W,,,W..,. .,,A.VM, ,W..,w., ,, , L .m....W. ' - V A A 7 Q ,F 'A' Q ff?-- ?wf f' may A - ,L K 2 '. ff:'1 .M .. O , fy I ff . A P- FW H W'- x-,, . V Q, ,f ' 1 'Z Nfl' u.,.:.f M2 ffiwf-'Z'i-Lf fz.,::1FB'1'H 'W W 4,5-wg-QSM ' ' M ,,.. 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To Them we re- spedfully oiedicoTe This book loecouse we reolize TholT vviTh The help of Their ChrisT-Tiiled Teoching ond living we hove grown Tovvorol soncTiTy. 1 ! 4 4 Foreword This yeor oT ST. CoTherine's-whoT loughTer ond hord work Those words imply! So mczny Things: The hecTic rush of The TirsT Tew doys, Trosh orienToTion, The wormTh of new ond re- newed Triendships, The Dew Drop glisTening wiTh reTlecTions, ond The swish of dry leoves on o brighT Toll doly, The cor pool chonTing o Roscury on Those TwenTy-below winTer mornings, WinTer Cornivol ond oll ThoT snow, The chopel crowded wiTh l2eTreoTonTs, Moy FeTe ond The VorsiTy Show, closses, lobs, ond books, books, books. All These Things-whoi we ore, whoT we hove been, whoT we hove done-ore recorded in LA CONC!-IA. Our book is on porT of The loughTer ond hord work of The posT yeor-o yeor we hove ofTered To God in iTs enTirely. Our giTT To Him ond Through Him is This yeor oT ST. CoTherine's. Administration PresidenT .r,... .... SisTer AnTonine, MA. Oxon. Deon ...,. ....,,...... ..... S i sTer Cecelio, MA. RegisTror ...... ........ S isTer l-lelen MorgoreT, Ph. D. Blessed be the Lord who schools me. Page S Gladlg have I seen all that are here assembled. Page 40 Let the whole world keep holiday. Page 48 The blessings God has granted thee can never fail. Page 64 Praise the Lord who is so gracious to us. Page 90 Blessed be the Lord who schools me, al- ways l can keep God within sight, always he is at my right hand, to make me stand firm. Offertory, Fifth Sunday after Pentecost - NI .- 0' I J' I . , 1 J' f S a JXXX W! xf' ,f X 5 J,- ax Ng 'X ' 1 Previous to this year, the college had only prepared teachers for Kindergarten ond the Primory grades. With the expansion of teacher-education curriculum, and the acquisi- tion of the new building, St. Catherine's now offers a tour- year course in Elementary Education leading to a B.S. degree. ELEMENTARY EDUCATION BUILDING 240 Summit Avenue Page nine '1 K' s WHITBY HALL FONTBONNE HALL Page Ten CAECILIAN HALL MENDEL HALL 5-fx Page elev Page twelve I I Humamtle SISTER ANNA, Piano and Organ B.S., Columbia University. Ph,D., The Chicago Musical College. Studied under Rudolph Ganz, Percy Grainger, Xavier Schwarenka, Edward Col- lins, Felix Borowski, Carl Busch, Clarence Edcly, and in Europe, organ under Dupre, Paris, and piano under Cortot, Paris. SISTER CECELIA, Music M.A., Columbia University. Piano study under Cortot, Paris, and Theoretical work under Dupre, Paris. Foreign travel, Europe and the British Isles. ANN CONDON COLLOPY, French Language and Literature M.A., The University of Minnesota, Diploma de l'EcoIe de Professeurs de Francais a I'Etranger. SISTER ELEANORE, Spanish Language and Literature M.A., The University of Minnesota. Ph.D., the University of Chicago, Foreign travel and study, Centro de Estudios Historicos, Madrid, Spain, Reggia Universita di Firenze, Florence, Italy, Institut Catholique, Paris. ROBERT CARL ERICKSON, Music M.A., Hamline University. Further study, Amer- ican Conservatory of Music, Chicago, The Univer- sity of California. SISTER FIDES, English Language and Literature M.A., The University of Minnesota. Further study, The University of Notre Dame. ROBERT FORSYTHE, Speech B.A., St. Olaf College, Northhelcl, Minnesota. Further study, The University of Notre Dame. MABEL M. FREY, Speech .and Drama M.A., University of Minnesota. Further study, The University of California. Foreign study, The Uni- versity of Heidelberg, Germany, La Escuela Inter- americana de Verano, Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico. SISTER HELEN MARGARET, Philosophy English Language and Literature A.M., The University of Chicago, Ph.D., The University of Chicago. Further study, Harvard University. SISTER IMMACULATA, English Language and Literature M.A., The University of Minnesota, Ph.D., The University of Minnesota. Research work, British Museum, London, l935. Further study, University of Notre Dame. SISTER JUDITH, Art M.F.A., California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland. Further study, The University of Chi- cago, Studio San Damiano, Milwaukee, Wis- consin, Studio Angelica, Adrian, Michigan. Study under The Reverend E. M. Catich, AGNES E. KEENAN, English Language and Literature M.A., The Catholic University of America. Re- search work, British Museum, London. SISTER LEON, Art B.A., The College of St. Catherine. Further study, the Minneapolis Art Institute, The Art Institute of Chicago, The New York School of Fine and Applied Art, Broadmoor Art Academy, Colorado Springs, Colorado, Columbia University. SISTER LUCINA, Violin B.A., The College of St. Catherine. Further study, The Chicago Musical College. PETER JOHN LUPORI, Art B.F.A., Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pitts- burgh, Pennsylvania. M.E., The University of Minnesota. HELEN MADIGAN, Spanish Language and Literature M.A., The University of Chicago. Further study, Laval University. SISTER MARIE DAVID, Art English Language and Literature B.A., The College of St. Catherine. Further stucly, The Bread Loaf School of English, Bread Loaf, Vermont, The University of Minnesota. Study under Mario Bacchelli of the Memphis Art Insti- TUIS. SISTER MARIE PHILIP, French language and Literature Baccalaureat, Academie cle Paris. M.A., The University of Minnesota, Ph.D., The University of Minnesota. Graduate study, The University of Chicago, Universite Laval. Foreign travel and study. SISTER MARIS STELLA, English Language and Literature M,A., Oxford University, England, Further study, The University of Chicago and The University of Notre Dame. SISTER MARY DAVIDA, Music M.A., Columbia University. Further study, The Pius X Institute of Liturgical Music, The Eastman School of Music. SISTER MARY VIRGINIA, English Language and Literature B.A., The College of St. Catherine. Further study, The University of Notre Dame. SISTER MARY WILLIAM, English Language and Literature M.A., The University of Minnesota. Ph.D., The University of Chicago. SISTER MONA, Classical Languages and Literature A,M., The University of Chicago. Further study, The University of Chicago and The University of Michigan. SISTER ROSALIE, English Language and Literature M.A., The Catholic University of America. Leave of absence for further graduate study, T950-5l. MARGARET SHERIDAN, Voice M.A., The University of Buffalo. B.S. in voice, The Juilliard School of Music. DONALD STUBBS, Speech and Drama B.A., The University of Minnesota. WALTER J. TARG, Orchestra and Choral B.M., The New England Conservatory of Music. Graduate study, The New England Conservatory ot Music, and Harvard University. Studied with Boris Goldovsky and Robert Shaw. First violinist with The Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra. FRIEDERIKE GRETHER UHLE, Art A.B., The California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland. Certificate from State Teacher's Col- lege, Basel, Switzerland. Further study, The Institute for Foreigners, Perugia, ltaly, The College Lucie Berger, Strasbourg, France, The Rudolph Schaeffer School of Design, San Fran- cisco, California, and The University of Min- nesota. Miss Keenan behind th ll The first day of Christmas, my true love gave to me a parteridge in a pear tree! This perennial favorite and other carols were the English club's contribu- tion to the boarder Christmas party. The members' dramatic talents were dis- played ealier than their musical ones, as they presented a medieval interlude, St. Nicholas, at the Advent party. Aspiring writers were given an in on what their work might be when Mrs. Anne Cawley Boardman told of the trials and tribulations attendant upon the publication of her new book, Such Love ls Seldom. At a later date they turned to T. S. Eliot at a record session of his Cocktail Party. The activities of the English department are to a great extent responsible for the Hquotable quotes heard on campus-quotes which become more and more meaningful as studies proceed. Fleet-footed Achilles . . . Of man's first disobedience and the fruit of that forbidden tree , . . . , . the Holy Ghost over the bent world broods with warm breast and with ah! bright wings. We came, we saw, and we snapped e Nurseries of heaven sign, and a cleared desk. ature to advantage dressed . . . Jeannine Legler, president of the English Club, straightens a candle on the Advent wreath as Helen Kelley, vice-president, watches critically, and Jocelyn Curtis, secretary-treasurer, watches the birdie. The Latin class is supervised by Augustus Caesar - or is he auditing? The translators are Eugenie Weingart, Bonnie Torbert, Jeanne Dummer, Mary Gen Olinger and Marge Mikesh. From many lands and many peoples Learning to read and speak fluently in the language of another country is not an easy task, as the average student of Latin, French, German or Spanish can readily testify. The activities and projects of the language clubs make the work more enjoyable, Alliance Frangaise, sesion del club espanol, German club Christmas party-these are familiar notices to linguistic Katies. The satisfaction of grasping the thought, culture and customs of another land and vvay of life is worth the drill on verbs and the long lists of vocabulary to learn. Miss Madigan and Ana Maria Paz from Guatemala show Mexican serapes and sombreros to Spanish Club members. LLeft to rightgl Janet Pabst, Miss Madigan, Ana Maria, Sheila Green, Doris Gerritts and Peggy Gray, German Club officers Naomi Lininger ancl Rosalie Curtis devise an interesting bul- letin board for the German classroom. Besides the annual Christmas Party, an outstanding event sponsored by the club was Sister Agnes Rita's talk on Therese Neumann in March. French Club secretary-treasurer June Ann Coghill lrightl holds up a doll to be acl- mired by lleft to rightl vice-president Judy O'MaIley, Germaine Collet, and president Mary Louise Bennett, Germaine is a spe- :iaI student from Paris, and vouches tor the authenticity of the dolI's costume. Mrs. Collopy of the French Department presents The Three Bears to a beginning French class. Goldilocks has become Jeannette, but she still eats porridge and breaks chairs. 1 f They all seem to agree but Mary Louise Moy, who seems ci bit skeptical about the whole thing. Nancy Adams, Mary Lou Falyey, Barbara Seng, Rosemary Manion, Lael Dudley, Mr. Forsythe, and Helen Shi- mota watch Virginia Binet make a point. Kathleen Borden is on the air, with Mr. Stubbs, Kathleen Gill, Ann Hackett, and Mary Joan Ryan as fascinated observers. lf the speech and drama department is not the busiest group on campus, it is not the fault of Miss Mabel Frey, Mr. Donald Stubbs, Mr. Robert Forsythe, and the dozens of girls who gave their hearts and souls to forensics and to the six major plays and numerous smaller productions presented this year. Out ot their blood, sweat and tears came the debate team and the productions for which the college is noted-everything from Jack and the Beanstalk to Gertrude von le Fort's Song at the Scaffold and Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors. Not all the activity, however, is on stage, behind the scenes stage crews, make-up crews, sound effects, lights and house crews collide with one another in carrying out the millions of iOlOS Wl'iiCh make G play O SUCCSSS. The atmosphere of calm perfection of which those out front pOi'tC1l4e would have been completely Shattered hGd they stepped behind the scenes of The Little Design, the Tercentenary pageant, to see harried girls wrestling with nuns' habits and a bishop pinning up her hair before putting on her mitre-Nor Life With Mother to gee the four Dgy gong Gnd fgther brushing red powder Out of their hair. BUT Those Of the theater d0n't think it Strange, They love their work with Q vengegnqe feven if the work is only that of a prompter. One of the big moments in the life of any prospective actress is her initiation into the Players club. Candlelight, roses, and formal gowns help to make this beautiful ceremony a memorable one-this year the unforgetable took place in March. Page sixteen From rostrum . . . from stage Left: Father almost meeis his march wilh Bessie Fuller, usd coyly played by Nancy Thompson, Players club presi- dent, in Life with Moiher. Lower left: Claire Sfuder does a quick pinning job cn Catherine Sfehly's casiume, and Mary Pai Leadon adjusis her scapular for the first scene of Song at Qhe Scaffold. Lower right: Peggy Farr and Koihleen Gill rehearse their part in one of lhe iableau-scenes in The Little Design, ihe pageant given in honor of The Tercen- ienary of the founding of The Sisters of St, Joseph. n x Something about a workman's overalls is interesting Joanne Hammes and Pat Seidl. Or could it be that Mrs. Uhle's comments are the cause of the pleased expressions? Mr. Lupori's exhibit in December was a big success. Besides his wood sculpture Down Low, shown here with the artist, the show included ceramic sculpture, etchings and paintings. .ff X V... .- 1. . . Right order in things to be made Second floor Mendel has drawn St. Catherine's students in ever-increasing crowds this year. It has been the scene of gallery talks and exhibits, Easter-egg dying, knitting lessons, and poster- making sprees. This activity is the result ot the complete reno- vation ot the Art club, under president Barbara Methven, into the guild system. The Angelica Guild sponsored proiects which made good art available to the entire student body, the Gabriel Guild was at least partly responsible tor the improved quantity and quality ot campus posters this year, the Mary Guild concentrated on the womanly arts lthe knitting was an examplel, the Martha Guild gave every student the opportunity to give artistic expression to the liturgy in every- day situations-note the Easter eggs. ' we Qnfggsf 1 A E L1V1Nif mow, The first important exhibit this year was that of Art in the Christian Home, on display last tall. The various kinds of created art which could be made or used in any home were shown. Mr. Lupori's exhibit and the display ot Japanese prints were outstanding during the rest ot the year, as was the Music-Arts Tea on May 13. 1950-51 has been a particularly rewarding year for the Art club and the department it repre- sents, tor good art has been brought close to the whole ot the student body. Helen Bauers and Alice Richards get busy with their chisels and rasps in Wood Sculp- ture. lt takes a pile of sawdust to produce something which may go on exhibit at the Music-Arts Tea. of paint or wood or clay Mechtilde Mueller, Mary Ann Bieter and Art club president Barbara Methven helped to arrange the Art in the Christian Home exhibit on our campus last fall. Art Club oFHcers, Beverly Mariana and Edwina Ryan, are shown selling the club's Christmas cards, made by the silk-screen process. Those are the sample cards on the easel. fi M5365 .5 ' ,c if ll ::::14mwA4w1w4.-:.. .. .. 1:1g: fAll Oh, Spirit of Love, art thou! Collaborating on a composition are The Music Club ofticers: Mary Sands, president, Margaret Vashro, secre- tary-Treasurer, and Pat Strain, vice-president. Practicing or performing, composing or conducting, the musical Katie has led a busy lite this year. The Music-Arts Tea and Benjamin Britten's Let's Make an Opera opened a week-long Music Festiyal in May, especially unforgettable were the taculty recital, Mr. Ericl4son's convocation, and the announcement ot the Music club's composition contest winners. The long-awaited senior recitals and the Silly Symphony presented by the instrumental techniques class com- pleted the musical year with a cadenza and a tiourish i?i ot trumpets. how quick and fresh Upper right, CHORAL CLUB: First row P. Bachman, Y. Stehly, J. Boorman, B Bowe, R. Countryman, M. J. Meagher, P Barthelemy, M. McCloud, L. Schmidt, M Bailey, M. Young, D, Dufresne, M. A Stafta. Second row: E. Dodge, M. Mar- tireau, J. Shukay, M. ForreTT, R. Baumann P. Anderson, P. Morris, M. Mushilc, T Krick, C. Anderson, J. Oberhauser, P Houlihan. Third row: R. Walter, M. Vashro, J. Bednar, A. Derus, J. Koenig, M. Domke, J. Hohinger, M. lnce, G. Lehmann, F Murphy, M. McAnders, M. E. Kenny, J Wolff. Center right: ll. to r.D Mr. Erickson, M. J. Hovorka, K. Koch and M. McCarthy prac- tice tor Instrumental Techniques, Mrs Sheridan. Lower right: The LITURGICAL CHOIR: First row: R. Gully, M. Dundon, E. Furth, M. Bailey, J. Hammes. Second row: K. Tice, P. Barthelemy, M. Fesenmaier, S. O'Toole, M. Bussard, M. A. Kieffer, J. Landry. Third POW: N. Ripley, M. H. Williams, Y. Sonnens, F. Casper, P. O'Connell, M. Velz, M. A, Lenz, L. Abbanat, P. Robinson, E. Tung, C. Benitez. Fourth row: D. Redmond M. Keefe, J. Chester, J. Koenig, A. De-Marce, J. Branley, H. Murphy, C. Studer, D. Welbes, L. Lynch. Mr. Walter Targ, the choral director, appeared with The Flor Quartet at a' convocation of chamber music this year. Shown ironing out a- last-minute wrinkle are Messrs. Samuel Flor, Targ, William Bagwall, and Jess Meltzer. 1 Community Service SISTER AGNES LEON, R.N., Director of the Department of Nursing M.S., in N.Ed., The Catholic University ot America. SISTER ANGELA THERESE, Home Economics M.S., The University of Minnesota. SISTER ANN, Director of Pre-School and Kindergarten Education M.A., Columbia University. Further study, The Uni- versity ot Chicago. SISTER BARBARA ANN, Secretarial Studies M.A., Columbia University. FREDERIC BATTELL, Instructor in Special Libraries M.A., The University of Iowa. EVELYN BETTENDORF, Physical Education B.A., Iowa State Teachers' College. Graduate study, Columbia University. SISTER CATHERINE ANN, Secondary Education M.A., The University of Minnesota. SISTER CHRISTINA, Reference Librarian M.A., The University of Chicago. THE REVEREND R. J. CONNOLE, Elementary Educa- tion M.A., The Catholic University ot America. Ph.D., The Catholic University of America. MARY HARTY, Physical Education M.Ed., The University ot Minnesota. SISTER JAMES AGNES, Home Economics M.S., The University of Minnesota. Graduate study, Columbia University, The University of Minnesota, Ohio State University, The University of Chicago. SISTER JEANNE MARIE, Occupational Therapy M.A., The University of Minnesota, Ph.D., The University of Louvain. Further study, The Univer- sity of Chicago, Columbia University. Diploma from Boston School of Occupational Therapy. FRANCIS M. KLUNE, Library Assistant B.A.,The University of Wisconsin, Library Certihi- cate, The University ot Wisconsin Library School. JUNE KORAB, Physical Education B.S., The University of Iowa. Page twenty-two BERNICE KUZMA, Library Assistant B.S., The College of St. Catherine. SISTER MARIE CECELIA, Library Science, Director of Library School A B., The Clege of St. Catherine, B.L.S., New York State Library School, Albany, New York. Graduate study, The University of Chicago Grad- uate Library School. SISTER MARIE INEZ, Library Science M.S., Columbia University, School ot Library Service. ALICE MARTING, Physical Education M.A., New York University. Further study, Western College, Cincinnati College ot Music, Ohio State University. SISTER MARY CHARLES, R.N., Assistant in College Health Service Graduate Nurse, St. Joseph's Hospital School ot Nursing, St, Paul, Minnesota. MARVEL MEE, Physical Education M,S., The University ot Minnesota. Graduate study, The University of Wisconsin, The Univer' sity of Southern Calitarnia, The University ot Iowa. SISTER ST. ROSE, Reference Librarian B.S., The College of St. Catherine. MARIE SAURO, Secretarial Studies B.A., College at St. Catherine. Further study, Columbia University. THE REVEREND THOMAS J. SHANAHAN, Library Science A.M.L.S,, The University of Michigan. Graduate study, The Catholic University of America, The University of Minnesota. SISTER STELLA MARIE, Foods .and Nutrition M.A., Columbia University. BERNICE THORESON, Director of College Health Service M,D., The University ot Minnesota. SISTER URSULA, Reference Librarian B.S., The College of St. Catherine. SARAH L. WALLACE, Library Science B.A., The College ot St. Catherine. B.S. in Library Science, the College ot St. Catherine. Kate be nimble, Kate be quick... Athletics are a vital part ot the college curriculum and extra curricular sports this year were coordinated by the Women's Athletic Association under President Terry Culligan. The newly formed Outing club, iunior organization ot VVAA, provided a varied schedule of activities. Its aim was to sponsor active recreational opportunities of the outdoor type for everyone. Suggestions tor events included cookouts, canoeing, hiking, riding, and biking. First officers ot the club were Jean Sausen, Audrey Pull, Mary Kosec, and Millie Haviland. Wearing black leotards and skirts, mem- bers ot Orchesis gave a convocation which featured modern techniques and dance studies. Dolphins, under the leadership ot Mary Timbers, splashed and practiced kips and ballet-legs all year in preparation tor the annual water pageant, which was built around the theme Over the Rainbow. The Dolphin club bought a new phono- graph for the pool which included a loud speaker and equipment to play any size record. Upper: Studying? Yes, indeed! These future physical education teachers are checking gym suit samples. Physical Education majors and minors are Alice Richards, Joan Bernard, Betsy Murnan, Mary Kosec, Madeline Englerth, and Rita Keith. Audrey Lackner is sitting, Center: Members ot the Physical Education faculty talk over the advantages ot the depart- ment: Miss Harty, Miss Dienhart, Miss Marting, Miss Mee, Miss Korab, and Mrs. Bettendorf. Lower: WAA board members line up and SMILE-Mary Kosec, Molly Coffey, Mary Tim- bers, Donna Kaess, Catherine Heinz, Barbara Steichen, Mary Groos, Jean Evans, Audrey Lackner, Madeline Englerth, Terry Culligan, Muriel Murphy, and Frances Montagna. Right: Student nurses Mary Losinski, Jooyne KieFFer, Donna Wilcox, and Alice Campion load up their books at the beginning of the year-and what o load it is! If there are too many more to come, this four- some will end up as patients. Three-year nurses Barbara Williams and Rose Mae Johnson peer through their micro- scopes. lPlease note the professional one- eye-shut technique employed by Miss Wil- liams.J Lower left: The Nurses' Club officers pitch in and help decorate for their annual formal. Roseann Hoffman, secretary, Mary Groos, president, Pat Ross, treasurer. Thot's Jack and Jill and the pail in the middle. To learn of muscles and microbes bones and bandages... Syringes and staphlococci, hypos and hos- pitals, pills and patients-these are tamiliars in the day of a nurse. What with traveling to and from St. Joseph's and St. Mary's hospitals, and carrying a high stack of books llet alone learning their contentsll, the three- and four- year nurses on campus wouldn't seem to have time for much social life. But the annual Nurses' club formal in January, and the teas for student nurses testify to the contrary. Although four-year nurses were capped last summer, capping exercises for the three-year nurses were held on April Hrst in Our Lady of Victory Chapel. This most important of all ceremonies for a student nurse was followed by a tea in Mendel Commons, where cups of coftee were outnumbered by congratulations. Center right: O.T. otticerselviickey McCarthy, Kate Dempsey and Rita Heinz-discuss future plans, president .lean Fisher was not on hand tor the picture. Lower left: Dr. McCain and Charlie might be holding a palm- reading session, were there not O. T. students present to indicate a class is under way. Connie Le Beau, Miss Farley, Kay Daniewicz and Nancy Koehler learn their digitals. Lower right: Mickey McCarthy, Rita Gully and Kay Doniewicz tie themselves in knots while attempting to tie the O. T. loom. The comparatively new Held ot occupational therapy is not unknown to the St. Catherines student, thanks to the open house held each year by the Occupational Therapy club. Visie tors are invited to work under the capable direction ot student O.T.'s with the materials used by the department. Leather tooling, knitting, printing and weaving aren't iust play tor the O.T.'s however, they are a definite part ot the pro- gram to motivate patients to help themselves. Not only do students learn the methods on campus, but they put them into practice by working with patients in hospitals in the Twin Cities, and by aFhliating in various hospitals throughout the country, Mary Louise Bennett, Kathleen Kaercher, Marnie Wilbert, and Catherine Hoch play pattyecalce with nursery-school kiddies. Sacrifice is a by-word in the teaching protes- sion. And the St. Catherine's education students may have felt that they were already learning to sacrifice a great deal when they spent their twilight hours in class, while their car-pool drove away, or their boarder friends listened to the radio and played cards. The hours during tall quarter spent on the street car, going to and from schools where they did practice teaching were a sacrifice too-but all the way around, the fun and the value ot the experience counted tor more than the giving up. Primary education and kindergarten maiors worked in the nursery school with alumnae's children, and the new elementary education courses had some Katies headed down to the new building on Summit Avenue. Teaching maketh a busy Katie With plenty of dignity and outward confidence Miss Curtis, Miss Kranz Miss Mullins, Miss Timbers, Miss Friberg, and Miss Lcickner set ot? for their practice teaching. ln books and notebooks BOOKS are the primary interest of the student of library science. The Dewey decimal system and Library of Congress classification, cataloging and checking out periodicals-the future librarians are old hands at these. But not all their time is spent among the stacks, The Ambrosian Round Table has seen to that. What with the annual picnic out by the grate, card parties, rattles, and booths at the Mardi Gras and at May Fete, the campus bookworms were a pretty social land sociablel crewl NOTEBOOKS filled with shorthand and typewriter fingering charts are the trademarks of the Katie whose mind is on the world of business. The dictaphone plays an important part in the life of a secretary, at St. Catherine's the studying of the morals and ethics which should be practiced in the world of the almighty comptometer supplements learning to use the dictaphone and the other paraphernalia of an office. The Business club, under Isabel Galob, provided opportunities for student stenographers to get together and discuss the problems which may face them as white-collar Christians. Upper left: A familiar tlgure in the library school is Father Shanahan. Upper right: A happy lot is that of the librarian, say Ambrosian Round Table offi- cers Elsa Lundgren, Gerry Mahoney, and June Coghill. Center left: Miss Vxlallace gives her advice in library public relations, Lower left: Special libraries are the special- ty of Mr. Battell. Lower right: Mary Riordan, Ana Maria Paz and Eileen Cooke don't seem to notice, but Mary Kay Bettendorf seems to be struck with spring fever. Anyhow, she doesn't seem very eager to track down her book. Miss Sauro keeps a cheerful, but watchful eye on future secretaries Maureen Beckman and Doris Edwards. Home economics, once a simple tield, has branched out-and with it the home economics department at St. Catherine's. Special interests in the tield are encouraged and devel- oped, whether they be making an intricately tailored suit or balancing hospital diets. Other students enioyed the talents ot the capable members ot the Home Economics club. For example, during the winter quarter, a dinner tor six was rattled att. Members ot the club planned The meal, Ordered The food, The Advanced Sewing class gets to work on suits-the A I big protect of the year. Learning about tailor's tacks and Gnd prepared the entire dinner. Pro- bound buiionhoies me Helen Bauers, een Gourmet, viding refreshments for many School Ellen Hall, Betty Rafferty, and Blk: Tong. affairs, as well as sponsoring bake- sales and candy sales, has kept the club's budget sheet well in the black. Much at their fund-raising has been tor the Building Fund. Ulterior mo- tives? Could be, tor new home eco- nomics rooms are in the blueprints! Home Economics Club otaticers Lois Cavanagh, secretary, Peggy Louden, vice-president, Kathy Deuvel, president, Darlene Dalton, treasurer, and Pat Patton, NFCCS representative, admire some of the department's new china. Page twenty-eig ht The culinary activities of the Experimental Cooking class center on baking This morning. Mary Ann Maho- wald cmd Margie Dundon preview a cake, while Mary Kosec frosis cupcakes, and Donna Hover and Dorothy Redmond put finishing Touches on the meringue of their pie. Stitching and stewing Put the salt down and let's start on the JELLO! Barbara Kieinman, Elizabeth Bod- mann, Beverly Friesz, Margaret Rahiily and Bonnie McCoy Take inventory for Cafeteria Management. Page twenty-nine Active clubbers Joan Mcl-lale, Mary Ann Farisy, Marie Altman, and Joan Mullins check books in and out at Mendel Forum Bookstore, in the basement of Mendel Hall. Page thirty atural Sciences EMIL J. BERGER, Mathematics M.A., Colorado State College of Education. JEROME BURTLE, Chemistry Ph.D., The University of lllinois. CHARLOTTE DIENHART, Biological Science M.S., The University of Iowa. RACHEL FRALICK, R.N., Biological Science M.S., Fordham University. SISTER HELEN JOSEPH, Biological Science M.A., The University of Minnesota. study, Marquette University. SISTER MARIE JAMES, Chemistry M.A., Columbia University. Ph.D., University. Graduate Columbia SISTER PAUL, Chemistry B.S., The College of St. Catherine SISTER ST. MARK, Biological Science M.S., The University of Minnesota. Further study, The Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, Massachusetts, The University of Minnesota, The Catholic University of America. ERAINE STE. MARIE, Chemistry B.A., The College of St. Catherine SISTER SERAPH IM, Mathematics M.A., The University of Minnesota. Ph.D., The University of Minnesota. SISTER TERESITA, Biological Science M.A., The University of Minnesota. Ph.D., The University of Minnesota. As alvvays, Mendel Hall has been this year the scene ot dissection and distillation. Willie the Hamster, formaldehyde, sulphur dioxide and carbon compounds-all are well known to aspiring chemists and biologists. But these vveren't neces- sarily the topics of conversation at the quarterly mixers held with St. Thomas, nor at the snack parties given by Mendel S Forum, the science students' club. With an eye toward the type ot work they may be doing after graduation, Forum members toured hospital and Naval Ordinance laboratories at the University ot Minnesota in December. The Book Ex- change sponsored by the club has done a booming business this year, profits will be used to improve the facilities ot the department. Miss Fralick and Miss Dienhart have a heart to heart talk in the biology lab. Compound microscopes ancl complex molecules Below: Miss Ste. Marie lends a bit ot chemical advice to some ot her students. Right: Helen Lammers apprehensively watches Dr. Burtle check over the paper at Mary Alice Reckers. Page thirty-one ,- ------ - Upper right: Dr. Feldmeier grins clown at his physics book. mmm Center right: Mrs. Dolan looks up from one of her many math classes. Lower right: Another math teacher is Mr. Berger. Mr. Dolan takes a minute from his physics lab for the photogra- pher. Dry cells are commonplace-shocks not quite so ordinary. Math, matter, and motion lt is understandable why other students shake their heads in amazement when a math or physics maior appears on the scene. Long division seems like kid stuff when the mathema- tician begins to dissertate on the second degree of abstraction -the binomial theorem, permutations, biquodratic equations. The beginning physicist may startle us with her quantum theory, nuclear disintegration and cosmic rays, but the physics lab still remains intact, and any home-brewed atom bombs are campus secrets. Pag e thirty-two Chem lab at St. Catherine's is a far cry from ancient alchemy, as these science majors can testify. These hard-working seniors are Mary Ann Forisy, .loan McHale, Muggs Rahilly, and Barbara Kleinman. Social Sciences SISTER ANGELE, History A.M., The University of Chicago. Graduate study, The University of Chicago, The Catholic University of America. THOMAS E. DAVY, Geography M.A., Kent State University. Further study, The University of Minnesota. JULIUS S. GASSNER, Political Science M.A., Fordham Unixersity. SISTER LAURENT, History M.A,, The University ot Minnesota. Further study, The Catholic University of America, Marquette University, Fordham University. PHYLLIS MACALLISTER, Economics M.A., The University of Minnesota SISTER MARY EDWARD, Sociology MA., The Catholic University of America. Ph.D., The Catholic University of America. Further study, The University of Chicago, The University ot Minnesota. FLORENCE OSBORNE, Sociology B.A., Trinity College, Washington, D.C. Certificate in social work, The University of Minnesota. SISTER TERESA, History M.A., The University of Minnesota. Ph,D., The Unie versity of Minnesota. Further study, Universite Laval. Page thirty-th ree Mr. Gassner makes his point- but makes it gently. Center left: Miss McAllister and one of her economics classes are enioying something mightily. ls it a postponed test, or iust the photographer? Lower left: Officers of the League of Women Voters-Joan Koslosky, Dottie Tammen, and Maureen Ryan -are evidently pleased about the sale of tickets to the formal dance their club sponsored. Page thirty-four Politics and public finance The democratic distribution ot wealth and goods and the various schools of political thought are interpreted at St. Catherine's through the papal encyclicals anal applied Christian principles. In the courses of economics and political science, we have seen that the utilization ot utilities and the soap- box orator have their places in the scheme ot things. Theory is put into practice at the all-school elec- tions ot maior oltices, and, through weekly commentaries on current events by members ot the faculty, the League of Women Voters kept other Katies informed about what goes on in the push and pull of the political world. People ancl their past From the cavemen to the canni- bal -St. Catherine's girls have studied them all. Toynbee's History of Civilization is a never-forgotten milestone, .the social encyclicals are another. The International Re- lations club has pointed up the stu- dent's role in the world-wide so- ciety ot today. Pi Gamma Mu meetings have been frequent. Lec- tures and panels on controversial subjects have made it possible for the organization to receive recog- nition of its program ot activities during the past two years. Upper right: After a Pi Gamma Mu meeting, Millie Haviland, Janet Miller, Adrienne Lahay and Marie Bushey conduct their own discussion group. That's Pat Coughlin looking serious in the background. Center right: These two might be contacting almost any place, for they're the International Relations club otticers, and are dead onto their iob. President Kay Brodle checks while secretary-treasurer Carol Copeland phones. Lower left: Miss Osborne manages to see the lighter side of social case work. Her expression would indicate that real charity is all the fun that it's cracked up to be. Page thirty-Eve Philosophy, Psychology and Religion THE REVEREND JOSEPH ANGERS, O.P,, Religion and Philosophy S.T.I.., The College of St. Thomas Aquinas, River Forest, Illinois. Ph.D,, The Pontitical Institute, The College ot St. Thomas Aquinas, River Forest Illinois. SISTER ANNETTE, Psychology Ph.D., The University ot Minnesota. Graduate Study, The University of Chicago, The Catholic University ot America. THE REVEREND RICHARD T. DOHERTY, Religion ond Philosophy S.T.D., Collegium Pontiticum Angelicurn, Rome. THE REVEREND DAVID J. DOOLEY, Chaplain AB., St. Louis University. THE REVEREND EDWARD P. EMMANS, O.P., Religion S.T.L,, Dominican House of Studies, The Catholic University ot America. S.L. Prol., Pontltical Biblical Commission, Rome. Study at Eco'e Biblique et Archiolcgique Francaise de Jerusalem. Page thirty six SISTER KEVIN, Philosophy MA., The Catholic University of America. THE REVEREND JAMES M. LAVIN, Religion B.A,, The College of St. Thomas, St. Paul, Minre sota. Graduate study, The University ot Minnesota THE REVEREND WALTER Le BEAU, Religion B.A., The College of St. Thomas. S.T.B., The Cath- olic University oi America. Graduate study, The University at Minnesota. THE REVEREND WILLIAM B. MURPHY, O.P., Religion and Philosophy S,T.L., Dominican House of Studies. The Catholic University of America. EMMI SZORENY, Psychology Ph.D., The University of Builapest, Hungary. M.S., The University ot Indiana. The subject matter ot phychology Imustl be properly conceived as manehis nature, and its povvers, habits and acts. When the province ot psychology is thus conceived, the philosopher makes his contribution by defining the essence ot man, set- ting forth the essential distinction ot his povvers, analyzing the nature underlying his habits and acts, the scientist makes his contribution by investigating the phenomenal correlations among human opera- tions, and discovering thereby the material and acci- dental determinants ot his habits and powers. Mortimer J. Adler Dr. Emmi Szorenyi is familiar to sopho- mores taking introduction to psychology. Science discovering the seven capital sins Helen Shimota and Jeanne Geyer wait breothlessly for words of wisdom as Helen watches Jeanne administer a test to her subiect. wwf ' 1 . At St. Catherines psychology is both the philosophy man. With tests and dividual personality perception and soc ana science of measures of in- traits, sensory ial relationships, we investigate man's consciousness. We delve into the unconscious, and discover drives, motives, habits and the why ot behavior. By helping man to understand himselt, psycholo- gy provides a real basis for humility, by being applicable in social, educa- tional, and counseling situations, psy- chology also provides us with oppor- tunities to practice that virtue, Page thirty-seven Page thirty-eig ht With Cod at Philosophy: The square ot opposition, Aristotle, Aquinas, lvlar- itain, the hylomorphic theory and being precisely as being are not a world apart from student lite. Under the guidance of our Dominicans we have sought the abstract and tound the practical, appli- cable' to every area ot culture and imparting to everything we do, the signitlcance ot a more rea- sonable act, since we understand more perfectly its nature. Thomistic philosophy is practical tor us since it is the embodiment ot right thinking and a proved training tor the ability to think tor ourselves in a correct, obiective manner. We are grateful to our instructors tor sharing with us their profound understanding ot the transcendental beauty ot Thomistic thought. Theology: Because we are creatures able to use our lives tor a purpose, theology is a body ot indispensable knowledge. Theology, the highest ot sciences, is like Dante's all-encompassing tenth circle ot Paradise- a circle ot light, illuminating our entire lives through a study ot God and things pertaining to Him. Theol- ogy is ot utmost importance to us who are living in an era ot confused and shallow and materialistic thinking. We are ignorant creatures unless we recog- nize the meaningtulness ot human lite, that is intelli- gible only in the terms ot God our Creator, and God is intelligible only in terms ot Himself-this we study in theology. Upper left: Father Lavin does his part toward getting the fresh- men ott to a good theological start. Center left: Father Doherty takes a class of sophomore theology. Lower left: Father Dooley is familiar to St. Catherine's students throught his work as college chaplain. our right hand . . . carefully distinguishing reason from Faith, as is right, and yet joining them together in a harmony of friendship, he so guarded the right of each, and so watched over the dignity of each, that, as far as man is concerned, reason can now hardly rise higher than she rose, borne up in the flight of Thomas, and Faith can hardly gain more helps and greater helps from reason than those which Thomas gave her. Pope Leo Xlll Upper right: Every senior knows Father LeBeau, Christian marriage instructor. Center right: Father Murphy and Father Emmons enjoy a breather before their theology and philosophy classes, lower right: Father Angers lectures to one of his freshman theology classes. With honesty of intent l have made all these offerings gladly, and gladly have l seen all that are here assembled. God of lsrael, keep this will of theirs unchange- able. Offertory, Mass for the Dedication of a Church The College Association N :MER Mu WEN M vaesx0ENx ' vncepnesnoswr . . GEN smoMME secaemzv . . FLORENCE LENIHAN TREASURER . JOANNE HAAG . The ' Executive Board Executive Board members stop after a meeting to admire the new parlor furniture in Whitby. Above: M. Sands, G. Mahoney, J. Miller, I. Galob, M. Burke, B. Methven, C. Duevol, G. Sfromme, J. Legler, and J. Haag. Below: C. Legarda, C. Toomey, H. Kennedy, D. Redmond, M. H. Williams, F. Lenihan, K. Brodle, M. E. Ahern, M. Dooley, M. Groos, J. Chesler, J. Fisher, D. Tammen, M. A. Lawson. Page foriy-lwo N. S. A. and N. F.C.C.S. M'--ww This has been the Hrst year that St. Catherine's has been a member ot both the National Federation ot Catholic Col- lege Students and the National Students Association. This year the college again held the NFCCS Spiritual Lite Commis- sion ot the Minnesota region. Functioning through the Sodality, notice of our pro- jects has been sent to the other colleges ot the region in the monthly newsletter. NSA procured the student discount serv- ice for Katies, and our senior represent- ative, Mary Lou May, was elected re- gional treasurer-quite a record for our tirst year in the association. And come this summer, St. Paul will be the scene ot the national conventions of both organizations. St. Catherine's stu- dents who can attend will hnd that the regional congress of NSA and NFCCS which took place during the school year have prepared them for the intricacies ot parliamentary procedure and the con- troversial issues which will arise. Junior ancl senior delegates take time out for jokes during business sessions. NSA delegates Lael Dudley and Mary Louise May lupperi, pause before send- ing an important letter, and Mary Hill Williams and Helen Kennedy meet ci laugh in their plans for the NFCCS regional congress. Page forty-three The life of ci Sodalify Prefect is noT always per- CABOS members Helen Lemmers, June Coghill, lecTly serious, as The balloon and clown behind Ann Friis, and Liz Furth breciihlessly waTch The DoroTl'iy Redmond can Tesiify. monThly neWsleTTer go To press. FaTher Dooley, The college chaplain, received new sodalisfs in Our Lady of VicTory chapel on December 4, This recepTion was preceded by insTrucTion periods and an admiTTance TesT. The enTire school parTicipaTed in The SodaliTy-spon-sorecl CoronaTion of Our l.ady's sTaTuTes on cam- pus in May. AT The Traclifional All-Hallovvs Eve parTy of The sodaliTy of The Blessed Virgin, sodalisTs discussed The year's program over Their cups of cocoa. This year, ST. CaTherine's girls have given of Their Time To work aT ST. Joseph's Orphanage, The Cancer Home, and GiIeTTe hospital. They have sorTed mail aT PeTer Clover, waxed floors and served meals Tor The LiTTle SisTers of The Poor, and TaughT The caTechism To children oT Our Lady of Guadalupe parish. This work was organized and carried ouT under various comimssions on campus. BookleTs and exhibiTs on ExTreme UncTion, The Holy EucharisT, ST. Joseph, and The MaroniTe rite Mass were puT ouT This year, and CABOS members were responsible Tor many of The Things on campus which oTTen go unnoTiced, and whichmade iT easier To live The liTurgy, Such Things were The placing of The medals in The chapel pews Tor TeasTs of The Blessed Virgin and on TirsT SaTurdays, The posTing oT cards bearing The name of The sainT of The day ouTside The chapel, and The lisTing of suggesTions Tor l.enTen morTiTTcaTion and LenTen reading. Page forty-four ssl, Phyllis Gleason expounds on publicity problem To other members of The NFCCS committee Marie Bushey, Doroihy Redmond, PaT PaTTon Helen Lommers, Mary Riordan, and Karleen ScoTT ouR LADY or PEACE CABOS and Sodalit ACT OF CONSECRATION OF ST. JOHN BERCHMANS Holy Mary, Virgin Mother of God, I choose thee this day to be my Queen, my Patroness, cmd my Advocate, and I firmly purpose never to desert thee, and never to say or do anything against thee, and never permit others to do anything against thy honor. Receive me then, I pray thee, for thy servant forever, aid me in my every action, and desert me not at the hour ot my death. Amen. Shoulder to shoulder, CABOS members smile right back at the cameraman: Mary Ellen Ahern, Rosemary Ryan, Helen Stone, Helen Lemmers, Ann Friis, Anita Favero, Helen Vashro, Kay Benson, Kay Banda, Kitty Koch, Mary Joan Ryan, Joan Koslosky, Helen Kennedy, Lorraine Daigle, Sheila Green, Kathleen Rafter, Mary Groos, Dorothy Redmond, June Coghill, Liz Furth, and Mary Riordan. Page forty five Deadlines and printer's inlc Page forty-six A typical ARISTON meetingvsome are hard at work already, some are dreaming up plots, and the rest wait lor inspirations. They are Jocelyn Curtis, Jean Hedeen, .loan Chester, Mary Williams, Doris Poeschl Pat Kranz Jean Sausen, Catherine Heinz, Barbara Methven, Joanne Haag, Phyllis Gleason, Mary Ellen Ahern and Gen Strornme. ARISTON co-editors Katie Heinz and Pat Kranz not only selected student poetry, short stories, articles, appreciations and book-reviews to be published-they even found time to write tor the students' literary magazine they edit. Katie's humorous articles and F'at's light verse have been supple- mented by contributions from the creative writing classes, and by linoleum cuts from student artists. The nevv vvoodcuts for the covers were done by Barbara Methven, who also de- signed the modern Madonna based on the Byzantine theory ot art featured in the Spring issue. The ARISTON came out only twice this year, due to the increased cost of printing. Only the best of campus writing has appeared in this magazine, our superlative O O 9 Staffers rally 'round for an obiective look at the WHEEL-Helen Shimota, Joan Shukay, Jean Sausen, Eileen Gavin, Dodie Wilkinson, Phyllis Gleason, Mary Williams, Nadine Chamberlain, Rosemary Walsh, Mary Owens, Mary K. Holland, Jane Dowd, Rita Sweeney, Mary St. Anthony, Mary Dooley, Mary Ann Lawson, and Gen Stromme. LA CONCHA deadlines Land editor Joan Chesteri kept the juniors scurrying for a long time. But now, as in B. LA C. days, we smile and relax. Once we were up to our elbows in rubber cement and cutlines, action snapshots and type styles, tip-in pages and copy, copy, copy -it seemed like too much to do. Assignments and term-papers were often tossed aside as the call of the engraver or printer became even more urgent than that of our teachers. We blocked and erased and scribbled away, and wondered if it would ever get done. It did. The long table in Whitby Hall 5 is cleared of dummy pages and proofs. The yearbook went to press. WHEEL staffers, under editors Mary Ann Lawson and Mary Dooley, were concerned as always with beats and cuts, layouts, ems and points-and meeting the deadline. Every other Monday night found the WHEEL office in Whitby base- ment overflowing with clacking typewriters and anxious re- porters, make-up on Tuesdays- iust as hectic! And in between, just plain gab sessions kept the room buzzing, and the editors filled the blackboard with notes about the next issue. Front page news, editorials with a purpose, Within the Gates, Spoke, interviews and personality sketches made up St. Catherine's voice of the student body, together with cuts and photography-these gave us a clear idea of exactly what has gone on around the campus during this past school year. Cuts and copy get a careful look by LA CONCHA workers-Dorothy Redmond, Jean Sausen, Jeanne Geyer, Eileen Cooke, Judy O'Malley, Joan Chester, Mary Barb Koppel, Bev Mariana, Rita Gully, Doris Poeschl, Jeannine Landry, Helen Shimota, and Catherine Hoch. Page forty-seven Let the whole world keep holiday in God's presence, sing praise to his names come and listen, all you who worship God, while l tell you of the great mercies the Lord has shown me, alleluia. Offertory, Fourth Sunday after Easter 1 and here we are Wearing rattle tags and trying to look wise, freshmen were caught in the midst of registration lines and noisy upper classmen reunions on registration day. Matriculation week also included ibesides testsl a welcoming tea in Font- bonne for freshmen and parents, a style show and talent show, the Preside-nt's reception, and a pow-wow. During the first week of classes, Big Sisters entertained informally in Font- bonne. The Lighthouse Keeper's Daughter and the enthusiastic singing of state songs warded oft homesickness as Katies, new and old, laughed together. Witches and black cats haunted the freshmen at a mixer given by the seniors on October 20. Even high heels did not hinder the interval of square dancing. Next, Big and Little Sisters alike put on their best for the annual luncheon held at the Curtis Hotel. Freshmen who had failed to wear their rattles supplied much of the entertainment and were capably confused by emcee's .loan Chester and Katie Heinz. Left: At the freshman welcoming tea, Mary Groos serves tea to Janet Whiting, while Sally Norell and her little sister wait their turns. Below: Real little sisters enioy their punish- ments from Katie Heinz at the Big-Little Sister Luncheon. They are: ifront rowl Mary Lenihan, Agnes Altman, Rita Heinz, Pat Barthelemy, Ann McHale, iback rowt Marianne Walter, Agnes Kolar, and Eileen Costello. Else Weber, Claire Studer, Joan Chester, and Lotti Meran present their version of the Kuk-kuk song ia German talk tunefl at the Big-Little Sister pow-wow in Fontbonne. 4' How ll all began V V Janet Reutinger and Joy Johnson and an unidentifi- Sheila Flaherty and her escort get punch from masked able freshman who happened to be looking the and costumed Rita Keith and Gen Gauthier at the wrong way at the wrong time enioy the music at the Freshman Mixer. dance. Page titty-one Caecilian-ites set a new fashion pace in the basketball tourney with their caps and the ever-present Panda. Evidently rejoicing over a recent victory are Ann Richmond, Jan Richardson, Mary Ellen Kenny, Mary Anne Barrett, Rosario Matute, Yvonne Sonnen, Panda, Helen Lemmers, and Sally Johnson. When Ro alt rei ned YY8 Coronation ot Queen Mary Timbers amidst royalty and honor guards started the annual Winter Carnival activities. Queen Mary reigned over enthusiastic followers through a tense basketball game between St. Paul and Caecilian to the final awarding ot the coveted wooden Wheel. Her attendants were Helen Kelly, Kathy Kelsch, Marianne Porter, and Mary Lenihan. An all-school supper and song-test preceeded the evening ot skits, which ranged from a search tor The Thing and a Day-Hop's Lament to the Freezing ot the Milky Way, Points were awarded for volleyball, swimming, snow sculpture, basketball, and skits. The name ot St. Paul was placed on the traditional wooden Wheel at the close ot the festivities - the first time a city team had taken the honor, Two little flower girls tried to steal the show from Queen Mary Timbers at the Winter Carnival convocation, and they came danger- ously close to succeeding. Winter Carnival royalty pauses for a portrait. Queen Mary Timbers is surrounded by her princesses-Kathie Kelsch, Mary Lenihan, Marianne Porter, and Helen Kelley. Uust for general information, the smudges on the noses of iesters Shelagh Toomey and Barbara Kleinmari are make-upli f As wa, sr From top to bottom: With Germaine Callet and Louise Gradstein, Dr. Carleton Sprague Smith parle en francais, iust one of his many languages. Mary Groos thanks Mrs. Franz Mueller for her talk to the Nurses' club. Mrs. Mueller spoke on Christian death. Mectilde Mueller talks tor a moment to Mr, Frank O'Malley after his Winter Quar- ter convocation lecture. After the student music convo, Joan Shu- kay and Janet Whiting celebrate a good performance with a duo-rendition ot Chopsticks. Left: Consuelo Benitez and Ana Maria Paz perform the Mexican Hat Dance at the :innual freshman convocation. Ten-thirt Wednesday Ten-thirty Wednesday-remember the variety ot speakers, enter- tainers, and meetings? Mother Antonine, welcoming newcomers . . . Father Julius Haun's colored slides ot Rome and Italy . . . the solid principles for evaluating current literature given by Father Harold Gardiner, S.J .... Msgr. Luigi Ligutti's challenging statements about Communism's fertile soil' ',.. the mellow Silvertones . . . John K. Thorp's authoritative lecture on Kenya Colony , . . Phi Beta Kappa's presentation of Sister lmmaculata, who shared with us her knowledge and deep appreciation ot Francis Thompson . . . Miss McNamara's dramatic dialogues . . . Miss Marting's talk and the interpretative dance by members ot Orchesis . . . the meaningtul comments on the liturgy ot Lent by Father Godfrey Dieckman, O.S.B. . . . the entertaining Freshman talent assembly . . . Walter Brecken- ridge's local natural history with a camera . . . Frank O'Malley's cult in culture' '... The Christian view of education given by Father Martin D'Arcy, S.J ..., the laugh-provoking Sophomore Skit on May Fete day . . . the many cultural benefits gained trom the lectures and stay ot Dr. Carleton Sprague Smith -these celebrities, their messages and the entertainment we will long remember. Your lady's sport and pleasure Upper right: Pos? ond present meet os The Modern Donce club bows in ox l7Th century Tombourin- Nocline Chamberlain, Jocin Guggemos, leon Dum- mer, ond Marilyn Schneider. Cenier right Tension is high ot The Winter Corni- vol gome between ST. Pmul ond Coecilion. Lower right: Dolphins Toke Cx breoiher of The side of The pool during cz strenuous reheorsol for Their wofer pogeonr. Below: Noi s1epping on The foul line, ond wiih nice wrist oction, Donna Koess releoses bowling boil lwe didn'T corch his nome!i Bundled in sweatshirts, Tall held hockey enthusiasts aimed at The goal and swung wildly. Forced inside by The weather, vol leyball Teams practiced Tor The Winter Carnival Tournament, and we invited girls Trom Macalester College over to Carnival acrivitiesfa swimming meet, But winter sports, as usual, centered around The Tavorite basketball Tournament, with St. Paul and Caecilian Tipping baskets in The championship game. Although spring arrived a little behind schedule, with The Hrst green grass Tennis rockets, golf clubs, and bats were Taken out ot storage. A softball, badminton, and Tele- graphic archery Tournament Tound en- thusiastic supporters. Upper: Extension course in modern dance! Or are we stretching the point? Center: Who told The Outing club officers To go fly a kite? They are Audrey Pull, Millie Haviland Jean Sousen, and Mary Kosec. Lower: Members of St. Paul's swimming team beam alier their Winter' Carnival victory-Terry Culligan Katie Heinz, Mary Mooslorugger, Joan Dolan and Geri Willwerscheid. Surrounded thus with Upper: One of the most important sports on cam- pus tor the boarders is visited precisely at 9:30 and 3. Early birds this time are Kay Fleming, Cynthia Nelton and Mary Jean Foye. Center: Day students relax for a while in Whitby lounge. Donna Thomas is fascinated either by the pair of empty shoes, or by the relaxed atti- tudes of Cynthia Walter, Mary Ann Kirby, Ruth Finley, and Connie Vogler. iwer: Gene Winters, Mary Gauer, Jane Freed, Rita Sifterle, and Mary Ellen Kenny take an early morning hike over to Caecilian for on 8:30 class. friends of every sort These beaming big-little sister teams are Gerry and Pat Barthelemy and Rita and Katie Heinz. Upper: Liz Furth, Pat Kadlecek, and Sally O'Toole find their recreation in music, playing interlude music for Jock and the Beanstalk. Center: Day students study their world literature and higher algebra over cups of cottee and salt shakers in the Tea Room. Some of the daily patrons are Joan Shukay, Mary MCC-wrath, Virginia Binet, Betty Hurley itronti, Beatrice Gerstner, Molly Coltey loops, a boarderlt and Karleen Scott. Lower: Mary Maieres, Liz Matson, Eileen Costello, Rita Baumann, and Priscilla Haines smile and smile while they use the reference hooks, ...mi 54 V, ,X ss., Upper left: Marcia Sweetman shows the finer tech- niques of ping-pong to a visiting orphan. Upper right: Peggy Rutter and three more orphan youngsters lfrom St. J0seph's Orphanagei mark in that final strilce on the bowler's scoreboard in Font- bonne. Lower left: Kathy Karp and a small patient at Gil- lette hospital seem more engrossed in each other than in the story they've been reading. Lower center: Some of the masterminds behind Red Cross activities on campus: Jean Peschel, Louise Wolf, and Joan McHale. The helping hand Charity on a practical basis was demonstrated by a large number of students this year. Under the Sodality proiects, activities ranged from service to the community to service to the individual. Cooperating with the campus Red Cross chapter, under the leadership of Louise Walt, the entire student body took advantage of the mobile X-ray unit to check their health. When a local emergency occurred, volunteers for blood donations were numerous. Benefit card parties and dances tor the veterans at Fort Snelling, and an all-school drive for funds completed Red Cross activities for the year. ,few H W? Florence England and Charlotte Dienhart check another completed task off their list of alumnae reunion plans. Cnce a Katie, always... First ot its kind in the history of the College, an all-Alumnae reunion on campus in June will attract former stu- dents, many of whom may register for their old rooms in College Hall. Char- lotte Dienhart '45 and Florence England '45 are chairmen of the reunion, which is to be held to celebrate the centenary of the arrival at the Sisters of St. Joseph in St, Paul. Continuing the building fund drive begun two years ago, the Alumnae As- sociation under President Lois Gruen- telder '43 and Executive Secretary Doris Cline Hathaway '45 planned a full year of activities. Alumnae printed another attractive engagement calendar pictur- ing student activities around the campus, continued the magazine subscription pro- iect and held a special Christmas party -a luncheon smorgesbord-at the Dyck- man Hotel on December 30. Spiritual activities of the year began with the Alumnae Memorial Mass for de- ceased members on October 29, and concluded with the annual day of prayer in the Spring. Especially to entertain the seniors, a formal dance and a senior party were held in May. Current Katies Eleanor and Kay Benson and Theresa and Kathleen Alton quiz alumnae secretary Dorry Cline Hathaway for tales of their mothers, Kates of the past. Page fifty-nine An olmosT Cinderello-like chonge Took ploce more Thcxn once This yeor when slcirTs ond sweoTers were cdsT oside ond KoiTies emerged in long gowns Tor The big evenTs-The college Tormols. The College Associmion sponsored The TirsT formcil oT The yeor- de-corgTions provided o hshy underwoTer seTTing. AT The sTorT of winTer quorTer, sTreeTside coges, sTriped dwnings, goy music ond or Porision oTmosphere odded To An Evening in Porisf' on informol dence given by The Lecigue of Women VoTers ond VVAA. A LiTTle Boy Blue peeked ground his hoysTgcl4 CTT The couples oTTending The Nurses' clgb Tormgl on Jcnuory 19. The Theme? RhyThm ond Rhyme. The onnuol lvlordi Gros Tormol broughT To FonTbonne l-ldll oi biT of New Orlecmns wiTh eye moslc bids ond goily crepe-popered cornivdl booThs, Ccimpus club members beguiled couples To Their booThs wiTh Their Tiowers. bolloons, gomes, Tood and TorTune-Telling. Moy li wgs The long-owc1iTed doy oT The Junior- Senior prom. SlcirTs swished dnd beous bowed ogc1insT The deep SouTh boclcground oT old New Orleons, The seTTing oT This Troditionol Torewell donce Tor The seniors, Upper lefT1 Pot EerThe!emy and her clcne geT Their balloons Trorn lsczbel Golob cincl Norie DCIUIT cn The Morcli Gros. Cenier left: This lormolled KoTie Tries o new kind of chcipecxu on her escort, while JeonneTTe Koenig cmd Mary Ann Lenz giggle. Lower leTT: The Mordi Gros was 0 greoT evening, for boTh dancers ond shop-keepers. Lower righf: A clown declores open secxson on Tish UT The Music club boofh caT The Mardi Gros. Mary Timbers ond Therese Heck ond Their escorTs prepare To Try Their luck. The decoration committee for the J,S. have a gay old time pinning Japanese lanterns all over the wishing well. lHey! Dan't they know that isn't the theme'?lJ Committee chairmen are Beverly Mariana, Marilyn Elvin, Jeannine Landry, Mary Ellen Welsh, and general chairman Teresa May Alton. Right: Mariella VVeber, Kay Brodle, Florence Lenihan and their escorts get their first glimpse of New Orleans. Basin Street was the setting of this year's J,S,-the smiles on the faces ot these arrivals seem To indicate they feel right at home. Below: After the ball was over . . . Iudging from the animated discussions going on, nobody was in a great hurry to leave. Q, W 3 1 f fi it I an A i WM 5 2353 We Giving lrivolity its due we , Thy lips overflow with gracious utter- ance: the blessings God has granted thee can never fail as long as time lasts. Cffertory, First Mass of a Holy Woman N 111. ' ,K 'XX N hx! Seniors SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS: Mary Ann Farisy, secretary, Mary Timbers, vice-president, Mary Kay Bettendorf, treasurer, Rosemary Manion, president. The big year-the last year-has found seniors leading the student body in the activities ot the College Association and campus clubs. Education students have been practice teach- ing, library science maiors have been doing their field work, all has an air ot finality about it-the Hnal polishing. Busy as this last year has been, the most hectic time by tar was spring quarter. Seniors were caught up in a rush of shortening and lengthening academic gown, bowing to an imaginary Bishop, Varsity Show rehearsals with last minute script-changes, and preparing for the S..l. dinner. All was leading to that almost unbelievable day-the day of gradua- tion. Page sixty-three Page sixty-tour MARY ELLEN AHERN Albert Lea, Minnesota Speech, English, Education MARIE ANN ALTMAN Minneapolis, Minnesota Library Science, History, Mathematics ANASTASIA ARVANITIS St. Paul, Minnesota French, Kindergarten, Primary Education GERRY BARTHELEMY Alexandria, Minnesota Occupational Therapy, Speech ,Ig AGNES BELAIR St. Paul, Minnesota Nursing, Biology JOAN BERNARD Correctionville, lowa Physical Education, Sociology MARY KAY BETTENDORF Minneapolis, Minnesota Library Science JEANNINE BOULAY Minneapolis, Minnesota Art, English DONNA JEAN BEST St. Paul, Minnesota JOANN BRADLE Library Science, Psychology Sl' Paul' Mlnnesola Kindergarten, Primary Education, Sociology Page sixty-five if KATHLEEN BRODLE LOIS CAVANAGH St. Paul, Minnesota Robbinsdale, Minnesota Music, Sociology Home Economics, Education MARY ALICE CAVANAUGH AUDREY ANN CECKA CAROL COPELAND Minneapolis, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota Occupational Therapy, Sociology, Library Primary Education, Speech Primary Education Science, Speech Page sixty-six GERTRUDE COSTELLO ANNE COUNTRYMAN THERESE CULLIGAN St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota English, Library Science Sociology, Psychology Biology, Physical Education, Education JOCELYN CURTIS DARLINE DALTON Minneapolis, Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota English, 5PC1niSl1, Education Home Economics, Education if f it ,Ja l Page sixty-Seve MARJORIE DOLAN Winclom, Minnesota Speech, Primary Education MARIE DAUN St. Peter, Minnesota Sociology, Secretarial Studies VIRGINIA DES LAURIERS St. Paul, Minnesota Kindergarten, Primary Education Sociology Page sixty-eight F' JOAN DOLAN DOROTHY DUBUQUE ST- Paul, MIHFISSOTG Grand Forks, North Dakota Art, Political Science Library Science, Sociology CATHERINE DUEVEL Robbinsclale, Minnesota Home Economics, Education ROSEMARY FALLON St. Paul, Minnesota Nursing, Biology W . MARY ANN FARISY Franklin Minnesota Chemistry, Biology JEAN EVANS JEAN FISHER Mitchell, South Dakota Cleveland, Ohio 'T Occupational Therapy, Biology Occupational Therapy, Speech Page sixty-ni ,lf , 9' i ff ' A f ww MARGARET FITZPATRICK JO ANN FRIBERG St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota Sociology, Psychology English, Mathematics, Education MARY JANE FRID ISABEL GALOB GENEVIEVE GAUTHIER St. Paul, Minnesota Hibbing, Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota Business, French Economics, Secretarial Studies Home Economics, Education seventy ,tm ,, ff , f MARY CATHERINE GOODRICH JANET GROSS St. Paul, Minnesota DONNA GEPHART Lakeville, Minnesota Primary Education, Nursing, Biology Home Economics JOANNE EDITH HAAG LA VONNE HAGER St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota English, French, Music Nursing, Biology Minneapolis, Minnesota French, English, Education Page seventy-one ,iff Page seventy-Two CATHERINE ANN HEINZ St. Paul, Minnesota English, Primary Education, Speech PRISCILLA HAINES Minneapolis, Minnesota Sociology, Library Science PATRICIA HAYES Ridge, Montana Economics, Mathematics A f' THERESE HECK ELLEN HQLL Sf- PCIUI, Minnesota Forest Lake, Minnesota P lmC'fY Education: Sociology Home Economics, Education KATHLEEN KAERCHER Fort Snelling, Minnesota Primary Education, Sociology RITA KEITH St. Paul, Minnesota Physical Education, Education HELEN KELLEY St. Paul, Minnesota Sociology, English nf 1- ' CONSTANCE KEEFE MARY LOUISE KELLY St. Paul, Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota English, Primary Education English, Secretarial Studies Page seventy-three BARBARA KENNEDY Minneapolis, Minnesota HELEN MARIE KENNEDY St. Paul, Minnesota Library Science, English Psychology, Sociology, Primary Education BARBARA ANN KLEINMAN BARBARA KNOBLAUCH JOAN KOSLOSKY St. Paul, Minnesoia Minneapolis, Minnesota Little Falls, Minnesota Foods and nutrition, English, Speech Psychology, Sociology Chemistry, Biology Page seventy-four PATRICIA MARY KRANZ AUDREY LACKNER JEANNE LEADON St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota English, Biology, Education English, Physical Education, Speech, English, Education Education JEANNINE LEGLER FLORENCE MARGARET LENIHAN Minneapolis, Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota English, Chemistry, Biology Music, French, Education gf, YW--v Page seventy-tiv MARGARET LOUDEN Minneapolis, Minnesota Home Economics, Education HELEN MCCABE Cutbank, Montana Business, Political Science E ,.., Page seventy-six ANN LOULAN Hibbmg, Minnesota Primary Education, Sociology ELSA LUNDGREN St. Paul, Minnesota Library Science, English, Biology ij. I fs DOROTHY MCCONNELL Vesta, Minnesota Home Economics, Education KATHLEEN MCENTEE New England, North Dakota English, History LOIS MACK St. Paul, Minnesota Primary Education, English GERALDINE MARY MAHONEY St. Paul Park, Minnesota Psychology, Library Science JOAN McHALE ROSEMARY MANION Waverly, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota Chemistry, Biology Speech, English, Education Y. ki,-..,,,.,.......J Page seventy-seven VIRGINIA MARTIN LORETTA MATT Minneapolis, Minnesota St. PauI, Minnesota Library Science, EngIish French, Art, Education JOY DION MAUGANS MARY JEAN MEAGHER BARBARA METHVEN St. Croix FaIIs, Wisconsin Park River, North Dakota MinneapoIis, Minnesota Nursing, Sociology Home Economics, Art, English Sociology, Education Page seventyreight JANET MILLER BURNAE MITCHELL .IO AN MARY MULLINS Indianapolis, Indiana Minneapolis, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota Psychol09Y, Sociology Primary Education, English Speech, English, Education VIRGINIA MURPHY TOINETTE NOBLE Lloycl, Montana Minneapolis, Minnesota Nursing, Biology English, Primary Education 19, 43 ' E my 'Q- 'FfF,' Page seventy-nine t Page eighty MARY ANN NOLAN Minneapolis, Minnesota English, Library Science JEANNE NOVAK Mmnea polls, Minnesota Occupational Therapy, Art MARY FRANCES O'GRADY MUSIC, Education St. Paul, Minnesota Nursing, Biology INGJERD OMDAHL Stavanger, Norway Library Science, English RUTH OMODT St. Paul, Minnesota DOROTHY PATTERSON Minneapolis, Minnesota Spanish, English JEAN PESC HEL MARILYN PAULSON Anoka, Minnesota Library Science, English Minneapolis, Minnesota English, History, Education LOIS JANE PIASKOWSKI Detroit, Michigan Art, Education KATHLEEN PULL St. Cloud, Minnesota Nursing, Biology ...Mani Ds. Page eighty-one PATRICIA QUINN BETTY RAFFERTY Bancroft, Iowa Howard, South Dakota Nursing, Biology Home Economics, Music MARGARET RAHILLY MARILYN RECK MARION REGNIER Newberry, Michigan Jamestown, North Dakota LaCrosse, Wisconsin Foods and nutrition, English, Library Science Art, English, French, Education Chemistry, Biology Page eighty-two CATHERINE RIHM MARY RIORDAN MARY SHIRLEY ROCHE St. Paul, Minnesota Oak Park, Illinois St. Paul, Minnesota Home Economics Library Science, Mathematics English, Business EDWINA RYAN St. Paul, Minnesota Art, Speech, English MARY K. SANDS Minneapolis, Minnesota Psychology, Music, Spanish Page eighty-three DOROTHY A. SCHNEIDER Hastings, Minnesota Nursing, Art Page eighty-four MARIANNE SCHAAF Minneapolis, Minnesota Biology, Spanish, Chemistry, History CAROL SCHIEFELBEIN Durand, Wisconsin English, French, Education SALLY SCHLICK MARY JO SCHWOB St. Paul, Minnesota LeSueur, Minnesota French, Speech, Education Occupational Therapyf Psychology KARLEEN SCOTT St. Paul, Minnesota Economics, Library Science, Mathematics PATRICIA SHEA St Paul Minnesota Kindergarten Primary Education Sociology YVONNE STEHLY St. Paul, Minnesota Speech English Education PATRICIA SEIDL BARBARA STEICHEN ST- Paul, Minnesota Minneapolis, Minnesota Art: English Englishg mmm Page eightyrfive GENEVIEVE ANNE STROMME JOY St. Paul, Minnesota English, Library Science SWEENEY Spring Valley, Wisconsin Primary Education, Sociology 'MARIAN TAINTOR DOROTHY TAMMEN NANCY THOMPSON Minneapolis, Minnesota Clara City, Minnesota Robbunsdale Minnesota English, Secretarial Studies Psychology, Sociology Speech English Education i r i l l 1 i i i l l, P age eighty-six J' MARY TIMBERS SHELAGH TOOMEY GOODWIN ULLRICH St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota St. Paul, Minnesota Physical Education, French, Music, Education Nursing, Sociology Biology, Eduaction CATHERINE WERNER ESTELLA WHITTAKER Woodlake, Minnesota Mound, Minnesota English, Library Science Nursing, Biology Page eighty-seven Page eighty-eight LILAMAE WICK Minneapolis, Minnesota Art, Home Economics, Education MARILYN WILFONG Minneapolis, Minnesota Nursing, Biology LOUISE WOLF Hibbing, Minnesota Sociology, Psychology Juniors,Sophomores, and Freshmen Junior Class Officers: Mariello Weber, secretary, Pat Patton, treasurer, Cynthia Toomey, president, Mickey McCarthy, vice- president. The opening days of school found sophomores busy with plans for their Snowflake dance. And once the snow had subsided, they invited freshmen to an outing and colaborated with them in giving the freshman-sophomore formal. Their biggest proiect of the year was, perhaps, the traditional sophomore contribution to May Fete day-the Sophomore skit. It didn't take the freshmen long, learning the ropes has been no problem for them. Before classes had even settled down to normal, they were entertaining the college at Freshman convocation. And by Christmas time they had estab- lished something of a reputation when, in their Christmas Charities collection, they topped last year's record by a good forty dollars. Busy iuniors spent the year with one eye on the J.S. and the other on the La Concha. All was not work, however. In January they relaxed with their fathers at the Father-Daughter party, when they challenged them to volley-ball, toured the campus, presented a skit and served lunch. The gaps in their busy social schedule were filled in with all-class pow-wows. Sophomore Class Officers: lupperl Carmen Legarda, president, Marianne Porter, treasurer, Pat Kelly, vice-president, Pat Costello, secretary. Freshman Class Officers: ilowerl Barbara Brown, vice-president, Mary McEnciney, secretory, Margie Burke, president, Toni Krick, treasurer. .swan Page eightysnine Praise the Lord, the Lord who is so gra- cious to us: praise to his name, he who is well-loved: in heaven and on earth he accomplishes his will. Alleluia. Offeratory, Votive Mass for Peace I f ALLELU IA SUB TUUM PRAESIDIUM . . . We fly to thy patronage, O holy Mother ot God. Despise not our petitions in our necessities, but deliver us from all dangers, O ever-glorious and blessed Virgin. Page ninety-one You may our ends from our beginnings know Lite at the Colege of St. Catherine is God-centered. At daily Mass, the entire congregation participated in the Missa Recitata, and on Sunday and special feasts throughout the year sang the Ordinary ot the Mass, while the Liturgical Choir sang the Proper. During Lent, a special lvlass was said every Weekday morning for the benefit ot the day-students. The divine ottice was offered daily on campus by members ot the League ot the Divine Office, and Compline was prayed in chapel every evening by the boarders. Floor Rosaries were said every night, and the Reparation League met in chapel on Tuesday noons to say a Rosary. it is not only at the special times set aside tor prayer that we at St. Catherine's have learned of our Creator. Everything we have done is ottered to God, and with the help ot our teachers, we began to realize the meaning ot this gitteancl to remem- ber to make it more consciously. of the college year. Opening Mass. Left: Bishop Byrne delivers the sermon of the Opening Mass Below: Nurses from the class of '5l-Agnes Belair Kathleen Pull, Estella Whittaker, nnd Mary Frances O'Grcudy attend Opening Mass in Cur Lady of Victory Chapel Reioice we dll in The Lord, os We keep holidoy in honour of The blessed Virgin Mory, whose feosT mokes Ongels ioyful ond seTs Them proising The Son of God. Joyful ore The ThoughTs ThciT well up from my hec1rT, o King's honour Tor my Theme. Glory be To The FgTher, ond To The Son, ond To The Holy Ghost As iT wos in The beginning, is now, ond ever shclll be, world wiThouT end. Amen. InTroiT, Moss oT The Most Holy Rosory Opening Moss This yeor was on Odober second, The Fec1sT of The most Holy Rosory of The Virgin Mory. ST. CoTherine's sTudenTs Hled ouT The big TronT doors of Whifby, ond song Their woy inTo Chopel, where The officiol TirsT Moss of The school yeor wos ofllered by The MosT Reverend Jomes J. Byrne, ouxiliory bishop of ST. Poul. Poge nineiy-Three After leaving Our Lody of Vicfory chapel, The Euchorislic Doy procession halts of The Hrsf altar of Fonibonne Holl. The Derhorn Hull students are in The foreground. Page ninety-foul' Eucharistic Day Lord, all creaTures raise Their eyes To Thee, and Thou granTesT Them, in due Time, their nourishmenT. Thou arT ready To open Thy hand and fill wifh Thy blessings all ThaT lives. The gradual of The FeasT of Corpus ChrisTi comains The spiriT oT EucharisTic Day aT The college, held This year on Corpus ChrisTi, May 24. ATTer Mass and conferences in The morning, a procession, sTarTing in Our Lady of VicTory Chapel, moved To Three ouTdoor alTars on The campus. Prayers and liTurgical TexTs were read aT The alTars aT FonTbone Hall and The sTaTue of The Sacred Hearf, and BenedicTion was given aT Caecilian Hall. The Hnol BenedicTion was given in The chopel, and The day seT aside Tor special veneraTion of The Blessed SacramenT Then closed with The singing oT The Te Deum. The procession has moved on To The olTar by The south door of Coecilian. Here The MosT Reverend James J. Byrne prepares To give Benedlcfion, Page nineTy-hve J 31. 1,5 5 .. s, 93335 TES M we -Sie F J, 3 f I iw? W A,2Q uf' 29:5 X5 - ::::-es:-..' :1'1-2, 1f'::z'::i ' -h ..':3'T'4I X ? 1 x .,'SviA9': :'f1:.,. gfi? 'f V WL .35 .,,, 1. , , Qg.f.- . ' ' y Wx f Q .2513 Q' ffI':Qf'i5:g,.,. -,iQ',:f5 ':'f-.': ,, QE? '-4,12-11f:+',f ,f j 5.-1-:a.5:5iQ'j,:. A . Q. -- . , 4. fm, ' I+ WW' L 77 ' Fi. . al OUR LADY OF VICTORY CHAPEL Page nineiyhseven Abbanat, Lois Ann, '54 403-10 St. So. Virginia, Minn. Adams, Nancy Ruth, '54 1808 Portland St. Paul 5, Minn. Ahern, Mary Ellen, '51 1016 W. Clark St. Albert Lea, Minn. Akey, Evelyn Adelaide, '54 1237-8th Ave. Havre, Montana Albert, Asuncion, Montemayor, 255 Dapitan Manila, Philippines Altman, Agnes Mary, '54 416 N.E. 7th Ave. Minneapolis 13, Minn. Altman, Marie Ann, '51 416 N.E. 7th Ave. Minneapolis 13, Minn. Alton, Kathleen Marie, '53 95 N. Cretin St. Paul 5, Minn. Alton, Theresa Mae, '52 95 N. Cretin St. Paul, Minn. Anderson, Collette, 4953 Emerson Minneapolis 12, Minn. Anderson, Patricia, '54 Kenyon, Minn. Angell, Mary, '54 1280 Grand St. Paul 5. Minn. Anthony, Carol, '54 1971 E. Arlington St. Paul 6, Minn. Arth, Shirley, '54 1083 Osceola Ave. St. Paul 5, Minn. Arvanitis, Anastasia, '51 1245 Watson St. Paul 5, Minn. Auer, Mary Helen, '54 1999 Goodrich St. Paul 5, Minn. Auger, Betty Ann, '54 126-5th Ave. E. St. Paul, Minn. Bachman, Patricia, '54 321-9th St. Cloud, Minn. Bacigalupo, Patricia, '53 1474 Edmund St. Paul 4, Minn. Bailey, Marilyn, '53 209 Charles Ave. Marshall, Minn. Baldwin, Therese, '54 5108 Zenith Minneapolis 10, Minn. Bambenek, Betty, '53 578 E. 5th St. Winona, Minn. Boril, Joan, '54 1272 Jefferson St. Paul 5, Minn. Baron, Marilyn, '54 4247 N. Russell Minneapolis 12, Minn. Barr, Mary Catherine, '52 1204 Hague Ave. St. Paul 4, Minn. Barrett, Catherine, '54 1047 West Seventh St. Paul 2, Minn. Page ninety-eight '53 Directory Barrett, Maryanne, '53 2023-3rd Ave. E. Hibbing, Minn. Barthelemy, Gerry, '51 701V2 Bdwy. Alexandria, Minn. Barthelemy, Patricia, '54 701V2 Bdwy. Alexandria, Minn. Batholomew, Jean, '53 225 North Tracy, Minn. Bartoletti, Joyce, '53 316-3rd Ave. N. Virginia, Minn. Bauers, Helen, '52 4600 Golf Terrace Minneapolis 10, Minn. Baumann, Rita, '54 Fairfax, Minn. Becker, Mary Jean, '53 1025-7th Ave. N. St. Cloud, Minn. Beckman, Maureen, '53 Jordan, Minn. Bednar, Joan, '54 971 Eleanor Ave. St. Paul 2, Minn. Belair, Agnes, '51 855 York St. Paul 6, Minn. Benda, Catherine, '53 Alpha, Minn. Benitez, Consuelo, '54 Mexico City, Mexico Bennett, Mary Louise, '52 104 Groveland Terrace Minneapolis 5, Minn. Benson, Catherine, '53 1101 Reeves Grand Forks, N. Dakota Benson, Eleanor, '52 1101 Reeves Grand Forks, N. Dakota Bergen, Marguerite, '54 1086 James Albert Lea, Minn. Bergeron, Josephine, '52 433 Prairie Elmhurst, Ill. Bergeron, Margaret, '54 Brooks, Minn. Bernard, Margaret, '51 Correctionville, Iowa Berres, Margaret, '54 4207 Lyndale So. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Best, Donna, '51 1262 Raymond St. Paul 8, Minn. Betlach, Suzanne, '54 Blooming Paririe, Minn. Bettendorf, Mary, '51 617 So. Cedar Lk. Rd. Minneapolis 5, Minn. Bieter, Ursula, '54 2015 Dayton St. Paul 4, Minn. Bieter, Mary, '52 2015 Dayton St. Paul 4, Minn. Bigelow, Mary Louise, '53 5528 Lyndale So. Minneapolis 19, Minn. Binet, Virginia, '54 660 Sue Place St. Paul 5, Minn. Birdsall, Judith, '52 919 Columbus Rapid City, S. Dak. Blake, Barbara, '52 919 St. Paul Ave. Apt St. Paul, Minn. Bodmann, Elizabeth, '52 1735 Marshall Ave. St. Paul 4, Minn. Bonemeyer. Monica, '54 Gackle, N. Dak. Bonner, Therese, '53 1813 Juliet St. Paul 5, Minn. Boorman, Jane, '54 311-3rd St. Lemmon, So. Dak. Eorden, Kathleen, '52 2012 lglehart Aye. St. Paul 4, Minn. Bossenmaier, Lois, '53 299 Oneida St Paul 2, Minn. Boulay, Jeannine, '51 4607 Drexel Minneapolis 10, Minn. Bourdelais, Simone, '54 4703 Lyndale So. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Bowe, Beverly, '54 Hinckley, Minn. Bradle, JoAnn, '51 391 Selby Ave. St. Paul 2, Minn. Brady, Rose, Post-graduate 7239 Northmoor Dr. St. Louis 5, Mo. Branley, Judy, '53 4702 White Oaks Rd. Minneapolis 10, Minn. Brecht, Gretchen, '54 133 Lake Aye. Worthington, Minn. Breen, Rita, '53 Hillsboro, No. Dak. Breimhurst, Rita, '53 124 Amherst St. Paul 5, Minn. Broclle, Kathleen, '54 1764 Laurel St. Paul 4, Mfnn. Broderick, Janice, '54 571 Saratoga St. Paul 5, Minn. Brown, Barbara, '54 1802 Hartford St. Paul 4, Minn. Brown, Patricia, '52 1180 Lincoln St. Paul 5, Minn. Bruckwick, Radiann, '53 4410 N. Frederick Milwaukee, Wis. Buczynski, Jeanette, '53 2356 Randolph, N.E. Minneapolis 18, Minn. Bunting, Mary Louise, '53 852 Ashland St. Paul 5, Minn. Burke, Margaret, '54 724 W. 6th St. Winona, Minn. Bursey, Beverly, '53 841 So. Concord So. St. Paul, Minn. Butler, Judith, '54 419 Princeton Grand Forks, No. Dak. Bushey, Marie, '52 711 East-61h Newton, Kansas Busma, Cora Belle, 516 St. Peter St. St. Paul, Minn. 2 Bussard, Mary, '52 506 W. Redwood Marshall, Minn. Callahan, Catherine, '54 541 Lowry Bldg. St. Paul, Minn. Callahan, Kathryn, '54 215 Melbourne Ave. Minneapolis 14, Minn. Callander, LaVerne, '52 2430-13 Aye. So. Minneapolis 4, Minn. Callet, Germaine, 53 Cours Franklin Roosevelt Lyons, France Carlin, Lucia, 5220 So. Humboldt Minneapolis 9, Minn. Cash, Frances, '54 Holly Hills Carmel, Indiana Casper, Faye, '54 Cleveland, Minn. Casper, Patricia, '53 2308 N. 81st St. Milwaukee 10, Wis. Cavanagh, Lois, '51 4152 Quail Aye. Robbinsdale 22, Minn. Caxanaugh, Mary, '51 4219 Grancl Ave. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Cecka, Audrey, '51 1896 Ames Ave. St. Paul 6, Minn. Chamberlain, Alice, '53 Clontart, Minn. Chester, Joan, '52 329 No. Linden Highland Fark, III. Cincoski, Barbara, '54 1901 Hyacinth St. Paul 6, Minn. Clemens, Joyce, '54 1098 Livingston W. St. Paul 7, Minn. Cochran, Patricia, '53 2035 Berkeley St. Paul 5, Minn. Coffey, Agnes, '52 505 N. Walts Sioux Falls, S. Dak. Ccghill, June, '52 4983 ltaska St. St. Louis 9, Minn. Colucci, Antoinette, '53 467 Superior St. Paul 2, Minn. Connole, Ruth, 512 St. Peter St. St. Paul, Minn. Cooke, Eileen, '52 502 E. 26th St. Minneapolis 4, Minn. Copeland, Marcia Carol, '51 245 So. Snelling St. Paul 5, Minn. Corey, Marlene, '54 Baker, Montana Costello, Eileen, '54 1940 James St. Paul 5, Minn. Costello, Gertrude, '51 1940 James St. Paul 5, Minn. Costello, Patricia, '53 1027 Conway St. St. Faul 6, Minn. Coughlin, Anne, '54 128-6th Ave. N.W. Faribault, Minn. Coughlin, Patricia, '52 910 N. Miller Wenatchee, Washington Countryman, Anne, '51 819 St. Clair St. Paul, 5, Minn. Countryman, Mary, '54 819 St. Clair St. Paul 5, Minn. Cronk, Joan, '54 112 N. Owen Stillwater, Minn. Crosson, Nancy, '53 R. 1 Savage, Minn. Culligan, Francis, '54 Mendota Road St. Paul 7, Minn. Culligan, Therese, '51 Mendota Road St. Paul 7, Minn. Cummins, Dell, '52 R:seacres R. 2 Missoula, Montana Cunnift, Kathleen, '52 Nurse Rosemont, Minn. Curtis, Jocelyn, '51 4455-36th Axe. S. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Curtis, Rosalie, '52 4455-36th Ave. S. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Cysewski, Mariorie, '54 301-7th Ave. N,E. Jamestown, N. Dakota Doggett, Bette, '53 2143 Highland St. Paul 5, Minn. Daigle, Lorraine, '54 Waverly, Minn. Dalton, Darline, '51 5140 S. Lyndale Minneapolis 9, Minn. Dandois, Joanne, '52 338 S. Van Buren Green Bay, Wis. Danielson, Dardinell, '54 Ivanhoe, Minn. Daniewicz, Catherine, '53 604 Jefferson St. Minneapolis, 13, Minn. Daun, Marie, '51 R. 1 St. Peter, Minn. Davidson, Nancy, '53 918-2nd St. International Falls, Minn. Davis, Frankie, Special Student 4640-31 Ave. So. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Day, Barbara, '52 Nurse 1506 W. California St. Paul 4, Minn. de Douville-Maillefeu, Claude, 27bis rue Greuze Paris, 16c, France Delaney, Mary, '54 1117 Portland St. Paul 5, Minn. DeLisi, Rosalie, '54 75 Mt. Airy St. St. Paul 1, Minn. De Marce, Ann, '54 702-12th St. So. Benson, Minn. Dempsey, Katherine, '53 1704 Pinehurst St. Paul 5, Minn. Derus, Andree, '52 192 Montrose Place St. Paul 4, Minn. Des Lauriers, Virginia, '51 2423 Summer St. Paul 8, Minn. Diepholder, Donna, '52 Willow City, Dillon, Doris, 853 Lincoln N. Daliot St. Paul 5, Minn. Dindorf, Mary, '54 4940 Vincent So. Minneapolis Dion, Mary, '54 902 N. 1st 10, Minn. Waterville, Minn. Ditter, Elizabeth, '54 4843 Dupont N. Minneapolis Dodge, Eloise, '53 12, Minn. 955 Livingston St. Paul, Minn. Dodge, Jean, '52 cfo Broadus Stage Miles City, Montana Dolan, Grace, '54 88 No. Lex. St. Paul 4, Minn. Dolan, Joan, '51 1863 Selby St. Paul 4, Minn. Dolan, Marjorie, '51 1234-2nd Ave. Windcrn, Minn. Domke, Marg ret, '54 1592 Berkeley St. Paul 5, Minn. Donovan, Dolores, 7195 Lafoncl '54 St. Paul 4, Minn. Dooley, Mary, '53 C1 402 Feashway So. Bend 171, Indiana Dorle, Jcan, '53 2160 Iglehart St. Paul 4, Minn. Dougherty, Catherine, '54 5350 Grand Minneapolis Dowd, Jane, '53 243-4th Ave. So. St. Faul, Doyle, Mary, '54 1886 James 19, Minn. No. Minn. Ave. St, Paul 5, Minn. Doyle, Mary, '53 89 So. Western St. Paul 2, Minn. Drewelow, Nary, 807 S. Main Milbank, S. Driscoll, Alice, 52 300 S. Main '53 Dakota Nurse Park Rapids, Minn. Dubuque, Dorothy, '51 R.2 Grand Forks, N. Dakota Dudley, Lael, '53 1832 Stanford St. Paul 5, Minn. Duevel, Catherine, '51 4532 Douglas Dr. Robbinsdale 22, Minn. DuFresne, Darlene, '53 1245 E. 7th St. Paul 6, Minn. Dummer, Jean, '54 Sykeston, N. Dakota Dundon, Margaret, '52 616 Woodward Ave. Iron Mountain, Mich. Dwyer, Kathleen, '54 4243-32 Ave. So. Minneapolis, Minn. Eckart, Mary Lee, '53 545 Oakdale Glencoe, Ill. Edwards, Doris, '52 5145 Vincent So. Minneapolis 10, Minn. Egan, Elizabeth, '54 1304 Juno St. Paul 5, Minn. Egan, Mary, '52 1304 Juno St. Paul 5, Minn. Elvin, Marilyn, '52 5879 Portland Minneapolis 7, Minn, Englerth, Madeline, '52 2030 Palace St. Paul 5, Minn. Evans, Betty, '53 Mitchell 8, S. Dakota Evans, Jean, '51 Mitchell 8, S. Dakota Evans, Marian, '54 5302 Grand Ave. Minneapolis 19, Minn. Fallon, Rosemary, '51 Nurse 1779 Randolph St. Paul 5, Minn. Falvey, Mary Lou, '53 2177 Stanford Ave. St. Paul, Minn. Farisy, Mary, '51 Franklin, Minn. Farley, Edna, '51 Alcester, S. Dakota Farr, Mary, '52 4904 Thomas Minneapolis 10, Minn. Favero, Anita. '52 5320-41st Ave. So. Minneapolis 17, Minn. Feldman, Katherine, '53 Prior Lake, Minn. Felker, Marguerite, '53 903 W. 6th St. Marshheld, Wisconsin Fessenmaier, Mary, '53 518 No. Jelterson New Ulm, Minnesota Filben, Delores, '52 Nurse 1365 Summit ,St. Paul 5, Minn. Finley, Ruth, '53 2052 Selby Ave. St. Paul 4, Minn. Fisher, Jean, '51 10109 Rosehill Rd. Cleveland 4, Ohio Fisher, Ruth, '54 Avon, Minn. Fitch, Marilyn, '54 5320-15th Ave. So. Minneapolis 17, Minn. Fitzpatrick, Catherine, '54 365 W. Central St. Paul 3. Minn. Fitzpatrirk, Margaret, '51 365 W. Central St. Paul 3, Minn. Flaherty, Shelia, '54 3701 Jackson Sioux City 18, Iowa Fleming, Jane, '54 3421 Dupont Ave. So. Minneapolis 8, Minn. Fleming, Katherine, '54 513 W. Geyser Livingston, Montana Fleming, Rosemary, '53 365 W. Sidney St. Paul 7, Minn. Flynn, Virginia, '54 485-Qnd Ave. So. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Ford, Margaret, '52 600 N. Redwood St. Marshall, Minn. Forrette, Marilyn, '53 1316 N. Dakota Ave. Sioux Falls, S. Dakota Forster, Donna, '54 410 N. Franklin New Ulm. Minn. Fortney, Constance, '53 1122 So. 9th St. Fargo, No. Dakota Foster, Rita, '54 4028 Garfield Minneapolis 8, Minn. Fostor, Sally, '54 25-3rd Ave. E. Dickenson, N. Dakota Foye, Mary Jean, '54 829 St. Cloud Rapid City, S. Dakota Franta, Joan, '54 Wabasso, Minn. Freed, Jane, '54 1101 N. 1st Aberdeen, S. Dakota Frescoln, Joanne, '54 201 E. 6th St. Winner, S. Dakota Friberg, JoAnn, '51 Highwood Park St. Paul 6, Minn. Frid, Mary, '51 519 S. Cretin St. Paul 5, Minn. Friesz, Beverly, '52 610 E. Main Mandan, N. Dakota Friis, Ann, '53 520 W. 12th Sioux Falls, S. Dakota Furth, Elizabeth, '54 104 S. Broadway New Ulm, Minn. Gabler, Barbara, '54 4355 Lake Drive Robbinsdale 22, Minn. Gaertner, Kathleen, '54 2166 James St. Paul 5, Minn. Gallagher, Ann, '54 5217 Woodland Blvd. Minneapolis 17, Minn. Gallagher, Virginia, '54 500 N. State St. Waseca, Minn. Gallogly, Cecilia, '54 2232 Dayton St. Paul, Minn. Galob, Isabel, '51 419-23rd St. E. Hibbing, Minn. Galvin, Shelia, '54 104 S, Fairview St. Paul 5, Minn. Gardner, Elizabeth, '54 2240 Sargent St. Paul 5, Minn. Page ninety nine Garvey, Donna, '54 217-15th St. S. Fargo, N. Dakota Gauer, Mary, '54 410-6th Ave. N. W. Mandan, N. Dakota Gauthier, Genevieve, '51 1701f2nd St. N. E. Minneapolis 13, Minn. Gavin, Eileen, '53 2344 Chilcombe St. Paul 8, Minn. Geary, Mary, '54 340 Linden Fond Du Lac, Wis. Gehan, Mary, '54 1640 Ashland St. Paul 5, Minn. Gelinas, Jeanne, '54 3345-40th Ave. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Gephart, Donna, '51 Lakeville, Minn. Gerritts, Doris, '54 I36HNI. Main St. Kimberly, Wis. Gerstner, Beatrice, '54 2258 St. Clair St. Paul 5, Minn. Geyer, Jeanne, '52 Route 2, Box 365 Hopkins, Minn, Gibbons, Eileen, '53 204-7th Ave. Hurley, Wis. Gibbons, Maxine, '54 Comfrey, Minn. Gibbs, Jere, '52 312 Grand Ave. Wayzata, Minn. Gideon, Anna, '52 Nurse Route 1 Northfield, Minn, Gill, Kathleen, '52 4611 Browndale Minneapolis 10, Minn. Gleason, Phyllis, '53 2307 N. Freemont Minneapolis 11, Minn. Gogins, Patricia, '51 388 Woodlawn St. Paul 5, Minn, Goodrich, Mary, '51 Nui-Se 168 Summit St. Paul 2, Minn, Gormley, Kathleen, '52 5708 Blaisdell Minneapolis 19, Minn, Grams, Mary, '52 121 S. 13th La Crosse, Wis. Grathwol, Willis, '54 44 Center St. Excelsior, Minn, Gray, Margret, '54 402-16th St. Hibbing, Minn, Green, Mary, '52 305 S. Washington New Ulm, Minn. Green, Shelia, '54 1681 Portland Ave. St. Paul 5, Minn. Griftin, Margaret, '54 136 Western St. Paul 2, Minn. Gioeller, Patricia, '53 533 W. Jessamine St. Paul 3, Minn. Groos, Mary, '53 1015-Ist Ave. S. Escanoba, Michigan Page one hundred Gross, Janet, '51 4521 Colfax So. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Guggemos, Joan, '53 Winsted, Minn. Gully, Rita, '52 Cambridge, Minn. Haag, Joanne, '51 1911 Summit Ave. St, Paul 5, Minn. Hablas, Catherine, '54 1018-10th St. S. Fargo, N. Dakota Hackett, Ann, '53 Box 1388 Rapid City, S. Dakota Hadlick, Mary, '53 1214 W. M'haha Pkwy. Minneapolis 19, Minn. Hadrath, Nancy, '53 411 S. 6th St. Stillwater, Minn. Hager, LaVonne, '51 1940 Carroll St. Paul 4, Minn. Haines, Priscilla, '51 120 Pratt St. Minneapolis 19, Minn. Hammes, Joanne, '54 Park Rapids, Minn. Hanft, Mary, '52 194 W. Congress St. Paul 7, Minn. Hanlon, Ann, '54 Aitkin, Minn. Hanlon, Patricia, '54 5288 E. 14th Des Moines, Iowa Iianrahan, Peggy, '53 1421 Hewitt St. Paul 4, Minn. Harrigan, Margaret, '54 1701 Wellesley Ave. St. Paul 5, Minn. Hart, Dorothy, '54 1560 Laurel Ave. St. Paul 4, Minn, Hauenstein, Carol, '52 1068 Lombard St. Paul 5, Minn. Hauge, Margaret, '53 383-C Sheridan St. Fort Snelling, Minn. Haviland, Mildred, '52 648 Rosewood Grand Rapias 6, Mich Hayes, Patricia, '51 Ridge, Montana Heck, Therese, '51 556 S. River Bend St. Paul 5, Minn. Hedeen, Joan, '52 1216 Rose Ave. St. Paul 6, Minn. Heerey, Mary, '54 924 E. LaSalle Barron, Wis. I-leftelfinger, Gloria, '54 No. Mendelssohn Rd. Minneapolis 22, Minn. Heggerston, Mary, '54 5721-10th Ave. So. Minneapolis, Minn. Heider, Margret, '54 1006-13th Ave. S. W. Minneapolis 14, Minn. Heimel, Anna, '53 673 S. Robert St. Paul 7, Minnesota igan Heimel, Betty Ann, '53 673 S. Robert St. Paul 7, Minn. Heimel, Francis, '54 673 S. Robert St. Paul 7, Minn. Heinz, Catherine, '51 999 Lincoln St. Paul 5, Minn. Heinz, Rita, '54 999 Lincoln St. Paul 5, Minn. Hennessy, Lois, '54 3901-45th Ave. S. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Hennessy, Mary, '54 Jefferson Highway St. Paul 7, Minn. Hertz, Gloria, '54 511-2nd Ave. N. W. Mandan, N. Dakota Hickey, Patricia, 4949 Chicago Ave. S. Minneapolis 17, Minn. Hoagland, Clemence, '54 210 Redwood St, Marshall, Minn. Hoch, Catherine, '52 4100 Aldrich S. Minneapolis 9, Minn. Hoffman, Rosann, '53 2056 Selby Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Holcombe, Lorraine, '54 1801 Stanford St. Paul 5, Minn. Holl, T. Ellen, '51 Forest Lake, Minn. Holl, Marguerite, '54 Forest Lake, Minn. Holland, Mary Kathryn, '53 633 First Avenue, South Glasgow, Montana Hoodecheck, Joan, '54 520 Strait Avenue Worthington, Minn. Hoolihan, Patricia, '53 2158 Ann Arbor St. Paul 4, Minn. Hopkins, Mary, '54 873 Ottawa Avenue St. Paul 7, Minn. Horner, Jacqueline, '54 1815 Jefterson Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Hornick, Audrey, '53 Sanborn, Minn. Hottinger, Josephine, '54 1685 Wellesley Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Hovelson, Jeanne, '52 1546 Englewood Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Hovorka, Mary Jane, '52 1263 Osceola Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Hovet, Donna, '53 Hillsboro 3, North Dakota Hovet, Thelma, '54 Hillsboro, N. Dakota Howard, Gail R. R. 7 St. Paul 9, Minn. Howard, Marcia, '54 601 Baker Mankato, Minn. Hoy, Sr. Margaret Clare, St. Mary's Hospital Minneapolis 6, Minn. Hughes, Gayle, '54 4948 Abbott South Minneapolis 10, Minn. Hughes, Jacqueline, '52 116 E. 5th Street Northtield, Minnesota Hughes, Katherine, '54 Langdon 3, North Dakota Hunn, Maryann, '53 1271 Kennard St. St. Paul 6, Minnesota Hurley, Betty, '53 1875 North Snelling St. Paul 8, Minn. Hurley, Mary, '54 91 Crocus Place St. Paul 2, Minn. Ince, Mary, '54 Belle Plaine, Minn. Jansen, Rosemary, '54 2915 Jennings Sioux City, Iowa Jensen, Rosemary, '54 1936 Wellesley Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Jensen, Virginia, '53 1000 Hayes Avenue Oak Park, Illinois Johnson, Joy, '54 1501 Grant Marinette, Wisconsin Johnson, Sara, '54 528 East Seventh Red Wing, Minn. Kadlecek, Patricia, '54 459 Montana Huron, South Dakota Kaess, Donna, '53 501 Sherburne St. Paul 3, Minn. Kaercher, Kathleen, 51 158 Taylor Fort Snelling, Minn. Kane, Margaret, '53 4916 34th Avenue South Minneapolis 17, Minn. Kappel, Mary, '52 230 E. Willow Detroit Lakes, Minn. Karp, Katherine, '53 Bird Island, Minn. Keefe, Constance, '51 400 Marshall St. Paul 2, Minnesota Keefe, Mary, '53 Morton, Minn. Keefe, Patricia, '53 2028 Dayton St. Paul 4, Minn. Keith, Rita, '51 325 Dayton Avenue St. Paul 2, Minn. Kelley, Helen, '51 2162 Dayton Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Kelly, Mary, '51 9 W. Rustic Lodge Minneapolis 9, Minn. Kelly, Sr. Mary Michaelyn, St. Francis Convent Little Falls, Minn. Kelsch, Mary Kathleen, '52 301-5th Avenue N. W. Mandan 4, North Dakota Kenefick, Nancy, '54 1964 Goodrich Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Kennedy, Barbara, '51 4631 Bruce Minneapolis 10, Minn. Kennedy, Geraldine, '52 306 Main Street Hutchinson, Minn. Kennedy, Helen, '51 500 So. Mississippi River Blvc St. Paul 5, Minn. Kennedy, Marie, '52 312 University Avenue NE, Minneapolis 13, Minn. Kennelly, Estelle, '52 825-4th St. Bismarck, North Dakota Kennelly, Mary Ann, Special Studel 309-4th St. Bismarck, North Dakota Kenny, Mary, '54 217 W. Juneau Tomah, Wisconsin Kesteloot, Doreen, '54 Minneota, Minn. Kieffer, Mary Ann, '54 Olivia, Minn. Kielty, Gretchen, '54 2219 Beniamin N.E. Minneapolis 18, Minn. Kielty, Joan, '53 515 Fourth St. Bismarck, North Dakota Kileen, Mary, '53 2435 Hammond Superior, Wisconsin Kirby, Mary Ann, '54 6635 Logan Minneapolis 19, Minn. Kivel, Patricia, '54 1879 lglehart St. Paul 4, Minn. Kleinman, Barbara, '51 161 Cambridge Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn, Koch, Constance, '54 1939 Sargent St. Paul 5, Minn. Koch, lrmaieanne, '54 1011-12th St. Bismarck, North Dakota Koch, Kitty, '52 1011-12th St. Bismarck, North Dakota Koehler, Nancy, '52 1109 Xerxes Minneapolis 5, Minn. Koenig, Jeannette, '53 Swanville, Minn. Kolar, Margaret, '52 197 W. Congress St. Paul 7, Minn. Kolar, Mary Agnes, '54 197 W. Congress St. Paul 7, Minn. Kolar, Mary Lou, '52 1972 Wellesley St. Paul 5, Minn. Koller, Lucille, 232 W. Rose St. Paul 3, Minn. Kolliner, Susan, '53 512 South 6th Sf. Stillwater, Minn. Kopriva, Charlene, '53 455 N. Division Powell, Wyoming Kosec, Mary, '52 Red Wing, Minn. Knololauch, Barbara, '51 4031 Sheridan Avenue North Minneapolis, Minn. Koslosky, Joan, '51 400-lst St. S.E. Little Falls, Minn. Kostelnik, Elizabeth, '54 1908 Vermillion Hastings, Minn. Kovach, Maxine, '53 1326 E. White St. Ely, Minn. Kraft, Sr. Margaret Alice, College of St. Catherine St. Paul 1, Minn. Kramer, Lorraine, '52 Vesta, Minn. Kranz, Patricia, '51 1799 Sargent Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Krebsbach, Kathleen, '52 Sidney, Montana Kreher, Sally, '54 886 Dayton St, Paul 4, Minn. Kreuzer, Joan, '54 New Richland, Minn. Krick, Antoinette, '54 929 Laurel St. Paul 4, Minn. Krueger, Charlotte, '54 319 Longview Terrace Minneapolis 9, Minn. La Beau, Connie, '53 1757 Wellesley St. Paul 5, Minn. Lackner, Audrey, '51 952 Edmund St. Paul 4, Minn. La Fontaine, Agnes, '54 715 So. Phillips Sioux Falls, South Dakota Lahay, Adrienne, '52 1025-5th Avenue South Virginia, Minn. Lammers, Helen, '52 Somerset, Wisconsin Lampert, Maureen, '53 2250 W. Lake of the ls Minneapolis 5, Minn. Lambertz, Marlys, '54 218-7th Avenue North Wahpeton, North Dakota Lamphere, Carol, '54 112-10th Avenue North South St. Paul, Minn. Landergan, Barbara, '52 1123 Grand Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Landry, Jeannine, '52 Cadott, Wisconsin Langan, Patricia, '54 Danvers, Minn. Lanpher, Mary Cynthia, '54 1749 Princeton St. Paul 5, Minn. Larkin, Ellen, '53 200 W. Winifred St. Paul 7, Minn, Larkin, Shelagh, '54 5031 Fremont South Minneapolis 19, Minn. Lawson, Mary Ann, '53 1320 Nevada Avenue Benson, Minn. Leadon, Jeanne, '51 2037 Jefferson St. Paul 5, Minn. Leadon, Mary, '54 2037 Jefferson St. Paul 5, Minn. Legler, Jeannine, '51 2715 South Humboldt Minneapolis 8, Minn. les Lees, Janet, '54 1118 Quincy Rapid City, South Dakota Legarda, Carmen, '53 1011 R. Hidalgo Manila, Philippines Lehman, Helen, '54 213-3rd Avenue Enderlin, North Dakota Lemme, Janet, '53 2501 Girard South Minneapolis 5, Minn. Lemmer, Helen, '54 P. O. Box 661 Ironwood, Michigan Lenihan, Mary, '54 4232 Fremont South Minneapolis 9, Minn. Lenihan, Florence, '51 4232 Fremonth South Minneapolis 9, Minn. Lenz, Mary Ann, '53 Conde, South Dakota Leski, Rosemary, '52 1020 Magnolia St. Paul 6, Minn. Lessard, Patricia, '52 1944 Asbury St. Paul 8, Minn. Leu, Lorna, '54 709 H'ghland Avenue Marshfield, Wisconsin Liffrig, Rose, '54 Mazeppa, Minn. Lincoln, Margaret, '54 4950 Queen South Minneapolis 10, Minn. Lininger, Naomi, '52 622 East 16th St. Minneapolis 4, Minn. Linn, Nancy, '54 310-4th Avenue South St. Cloud, Minn. Loosbrock, Kathryn, '52 103 W. Kelly Charles City, Iowa Louden, Margaret, '51 1630 Orchard Spring Minneapolis 20, Minn. Loulan, Marcella, '51 2015-10th Avenue Hibbing, Minn. Lucke, Donna, '54 973 W. Nebraska St. Paul 3, Minn. Lund, Joan, '54 1622-3rd St. N.E. Minneapolis 13, Minn Lundgren, Elsa, '51 1690 E. Minnehaha St. Paul 6, Minn. Lynch, Luanne, '53 Gordon, Wisconsin McCabe, Helen, '51 405-1st St. S.E. Cut Bank, Montana McCarthy, Jeanne, '54 83 Otis St. Paul 4, Minn. McCarthy, Margaret, '52 167 Montrose Place St. Paul 4, Minn. McConnell, Dorothy, '51 Vesta, Minn. McConnon, Patricia, '53 745 Hague St., St. Paul 4, Minn. McCoy, Bonne, '52 Montezuma, Iowa Road McDowell, Joann, '54 2344 Buford St. Paul 8, Minn. McEnaney, Mary, '54 521 Agnes Avenue Owatonna, Minn. McEntee, Kathleen, '51 New England, North Dakota McFarlane, Donna, '54 3015-19th Avenue South Minneapolis 7, Minn. McGill, Joan, '52 4253 Brookside St. Louis Park 16, Minn. McGill, Mary Catherine, '53 Wayzata, Minn. McGivern, Margaret, '54 410 Sixth St. Staples, Minn. McGrath, Mary, '54 2163 Marshall Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. McGraw, Joan, '54 R.F.D. 2 Hutchinson, Minn. McHale, Ann, '54 Waverly, Minn. McHale, Joan, '51 Waverly, Minn. McHardy, Elizabeth, '53 1006 Howard Hibbing, Minn. McLaughlin, Jacqueline, '53 4820 Garfield Avenue South Minneapolis 9, Minn. McLeer, Helen, '53 3044 Pleasant Avenue Minneapolis 8, Minn. McLeod, Myrna, '54 1937 Palace St. Paul 5, Minn. McMahon, Betty, '53 Green lsle, Minn. Mack, Lois,, '51 1631 Englewood Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. MacKenzie, Mary, '54 424-2nd Avenue N.E. Jamestown, North Dakota Madigan, Mary, '53 2017 Marshall St. Paul 4, Minn. Mahoney, Elizabeth, '53 1850 Pinehurst Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Mahoney, Geraldine, '51 St. Paul Park, Minn. Mahowald, Mary Ann, '54 104 Fenton Avenue Grand Forks, North Dakota Maierus, Mary, '53 913 North Brady Wa.ertown, South Dakota Maloney, Marlene, '54 56 W. Magnolia St. Paul 3, Minn. Mandery, Jean, '54 4324 Grimes Minneapolis 16, Minn. Mangan, Patricia, '54 1832 Jefferson St. Paul 5, Minn. Manion, Rosemary, '51 2091 Berkeley Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Mariana, Beverly, '52 594-4th Avenue North Bayport, Minn. Marko, Joyce, '54 1727 Juliet St. Paul 5, Minn. Page one hundred one Marr, Joan, '53 1131 Main St. Osage, Iowa Marrs, Patricia, '52 3954-29th Avenue Minneapolis 6, Minn. Martin, Virginia, '51 4028 So. Lyndale Minneapolis 8, Minn. Martineau, Madeleine, '53 223 So. Avon St. Paul 5, Minn. Marzolf, Geraldine, '52 1037 Lincoln Ave. St. Paul 5, Minn. Matias, Cerila, '54 Barrigada, Guam Matson, Elizabeth, '54 383-3rd St. Huron, So. Dakota Matt, Loretta, '51 1943 Palace Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Matuseski, Maragret, '54 Moose Lake, Minn. Matute, Rosario, '54 163 San Rafael Manila, Philippines May, Marion, '52 1660 Fauquier St. Paul 6, Minn. Mazza, Marie, '53 666 Hague St. Paul 4, Minn. Maugans, Joy, '51 St. Croix Falls, Wisconsin. Meagher, Mary Jean, '51 Park River, North Dakota Menefee, Virginia, 239 Summit Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Meran, Charlotte, 7 Staiut, Austria Methven, Barbara, '51 2794 Dean Blvd. Minneapolis 5, Minn. Meyer, Roberta, '53 Turtle Lake, Wisconsin Mikesh, Mariorie, '54 3721 Blaisdell Minneapolis 9, Minn. Miller, Janet, '51 4326 Broadway Indianapolis 5, Indiana Miller, Margaret, '52 1291 Bohland Place St. Paul 5, Minn. Milnar, Norma, '52 709 W. 7th St. St. Paul 2, Minn. Mirocha, Geraldine, '53 1602 California St. N.E. Minneapolis 13, Minn. Mitch, Anna, '54 1021 E. Broadway Missoula, Montana Mitchell, Burnae, '51 5625 Pleasant Minneapolis 19, Minn. Mlekoday, Mary Ann, '54 1612 Union Avenue N Minneapolis 13, Minn. Montagna, Frances, '53 159 Union St. Springfield 5, Mass, Moosbrugger, Mary, '53 1491 Edgcumbe Road St. Paul 5, Minn. Moran, Mary, '54 2655 E. Lake ot the Isles Minneapolis, Minn. .E. Page one hundred two Morris, Pauline, '54 303-4th Avenue S.W. Jamestown, North Dakota Mortl, Veronica, '54 3552-44th Avenue South Minneapolis 6, Minn. Moudry, Anne, '54 530 So. Fairview St. Paul 5, Minn. Moulton, Jeanne, '54 R. 2 Stillwater, Minn. Moyle, Lorita, '52 212 W. Howard Hibbing, Minn. Mueller, Mechtilde, '54 2110 Wellesley Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Mullins, Joan, '51 38 W, Winona St. Paul 7, Minn. Munroe, Mary, '53 917 E. Howard St. Hibbing, Minn. Murn, Patricia, '54 Delano, Minn. Murnan, Elizabeth, '52 Fairfax, Minn. Murphy, Anne, '52 602 Sheridan Square Evanston, Illinois Murphy, Harriet, '53 Wood Lake, Minn. Murphy, Kathleen, '54 8A Hayes Court Superior, Wisconsin Murphy, Marcia, '54 1125 E. Rusholme Davenport, Iowa Murphy, Muriel, '52 222 Exeter Place St. Paul, Minn. Murphy, Virginia, '51 Lloyd, Montana Murtaugh, Agnes, '53 1521 E. 25th St. Minneapolis 4, Minn. Murtz, Patricia, '54 2048 Berkeley St. Paul 5, Minn. Mustonen, Patricia, '53 1212 Grand Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Mushik, Marilynn, '54 217-6th Avenue S.W. Mandan, North Dakota Nagel, Claire, '54 2724 Harriet Avenue Minneapolis 9, Minn. Neft, Sr. Mary Aquinas, St. Francis Convent Little Falls, Minn. Nelton, Cynthia, '54 Balsam Lake, Wisconsin Neurauter, Sr. St. Albert, '53 College of St. Catherine St. Paul 1, Minn. Newburg, Marion, '52 229 South 20th La Crosse, Wisconsin Newman, Ellen, '54 415 North Third Clear Lake, Iowa Niklas, Betty, '53 301 North Jordan Miles City, Montana Noble, Toinette, '51 4453 Vincent Minneapolis 10, Minn. Nolan, Mary, '51 5344-11th Avenue South Minneapolis 17, Minn. Norell, Sally, '53 4226 Hiawatha Minneapolis 6, Minn. Nosbush, Sr. Mary Bertha, Good Counsel Hill Mankato, Minn. Nosbush, Sr. Lorraine, 205 W. Ninth St. St. Paul 2, Minn. Novak, Jeanne, '51 1700 Russell Avenue North Minneapolis 11, Minn. Novotny, Dorothy, '53 307 Oak Avenue E. Montgomery, Minn. Oberhauser, Jeanne, '53 Belmond, Iowa O'Brien, Kathleen, '54 Melrose, Minn. O'Brien, Mary Alice, '54 4133 Garfield Minneapolis 9, Minn. O'Brien, Mary E., '54 Maple Lake, Minn. O'Brien, Sally, '52 2131 Wellesley St. Paul 5, Minn. O'Connell, Patricia, '52 500 W. Marshall St. Marshall, Minn. O'Connor, Helen, '54 Culbertson, Montana O'Connor, Mary, '54 932 Laurel Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Oesterle, Jean Thomas, Post-graduc 2026 Laurel St. Paul 4, Minn. Ofstedahl, Lucille, '54 5719 Portland Minneapolis 14, Minn. O'Grady, Mary Frances, '51 299 South Cleveland St. Paul 5, Minn. Ohnsorg, Betty, '53 216 East 3rd Chaska, Minn. Olin, Mary, '54 Millville, Minn. Olinger, Mary, '54 1850 E. Nevada St. Paul 6, Minn. O'Malley, Judith, '52 404 Avenue C. Bismarck, North Dakota Omdahl, lngerd, '51 2215 Doswell St. Paul 8, Minn. Omodt, Carol, '53 1259 Blair St. Paul 4, Minn. Omodt, Ruth, '51 1259 Blair St. Paul 4, Minn. O'Neill, Angela, '52 Nurse Williston, North Dakota Orchard, Anita, '54 422 West 7th St. Hastings, Minn. Oros, Sr. M. Wenceslaus, 261 Summit Avenue St. Paul 2, Minn. Orthel, Catherine, '54 Titonka, Iowa O'Toole, Sally, '54 313 Sheridan Plentywood, Montana Owens, Mary, '53 4512 Casco Minneapolis 10, Minn. Pabst, Janet, '54 1094 E. Orange Avenue St. Paul 6, Minn. Parlin, Patricia, '52 1834 Juliet St. Paul 5, Minn. Patterson, Dorothy, '51 2825 E. Lake St. Minneapolis 6, Minn. Patton, Patricia, '52 1531 Ashland St. Paul 5, Minn. Paulson, Jeanne, '53 613-11th St. South Benson, Minn. Paulson, Marilyn, '51 1526-2nd Avenue South Anoka, Minn. Paz, Ana, 2fa Calle y 5fa Avenue Pamplona, Guatemala Peltier, Delores, '52 3307 Taylor St. Minneapolis 18, Minn. Perry, Elizabeth, '54 1023-20th Avenue S.E. Minneapolis 14, Minn. Peschel, Jean, '51 3829 Pleasant Avenue So Minneapolis, Minn. Peterson, Jo Ann, '53 2143 Berkeley St. Paul 5, Minn. Petry, Geraldine, '54 505 State St. Paul 7, Minn. Pteiter, Sr. Mary Caroline, 26 East Exchange St. Paul 7, Minn. Piaskowski, Lois, '51 4745 Glendale Detroit 4, Michigan Pietsch, Jo Ann, '53 1609 Lafond Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Pilla, Virginia, '54 St. Paul 6, Minn. Poeschl, Doris, '52 723 Blair St. Paul 4, Minn. Poferl, Joan, '54 867 Lakeview St. Paul 3, Minn. Pagreba, Marilyn, '53 Waseca Hotel Waseca, Minn. Porter, Marianne, '53 5009 Yvonne Terrace Edina, Minn. Prenevost, Jeanne, '53 5508 Columbus Minneapolis 17, Minn. Pull, Audrey, '53 1130 Riverside Drive S.E. St. Cloud, Minn. Pull, Kathleen, '51 1130 Riverside Drive S.E. St. Cloud, Minn. Quinn, Patricia, '51 Bancroft, Iowa Quiroz, Helen, '54 908 Mound St. St. Paul 6, Minn. uth Rader, Sr. Rosemary, St. Paul Priory St. Paul, Minn. Rafferty, Betty, '51 Howard, South Dakota Rafter, Kathleen, '54 1060 Portland St. Paul 5, Minn. Rahilly, Margaret, '51 219 W. Avenue A. Newberry, Michigan Reber, Jacqueline, '53 1440 Latond Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Reck, Marilyn, '51 530-4th St. S.E. Jamestown, North Dakota Reckers, Lois, '54 3820 Pillsbury Minneapolis 9, Minn. Reckers, Mary Alyce, '52 3820 Pillsbury Minneapolis 9, Minn. Reding, Patricia, '53 Algona, Iowa Redmond, Dorothy, '52 Plentywood, Montana Regnier, Marion, '51 2307 State LaCrosse, Wisconsin Regnier, Mary, '53 4248 Dupont Avenue South Minneapolis, Minn. Reichert, Alice Jean, '54 404-lst Avenue N.W. Mandan, North Dakota Reichert, Ann, '54 4233 Linden Hills Blvd Minneapolis 10, Minn. Reichert, Joan, '53 Flasher, North Dakota Reiter, Helen, '54 1336 Schetter St. Paul 5, Minn. Rengel, Dorothy, '54 4241-44th Avenue South Minneapolis 6, Minn. Renner, Alana, '54 Gaylord, Minn. Renolds, Virginia, '53 Princeton, Minn. Rhode, Bernadine, '52 2302 Girard North Minneapolis 11, Minn. Rice, Marguerite, 2022 Dayton Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Richards, Alice, '52 Forest Lake, Minn. Richardson, Janet, '53 413-lst Avenue E. Grand Rapids, Minn. Richmond, Virginia, '54 Riceville, Iowa Richter, Margaret, '52 146 W. Rustic Lodge Minneapolis 9, Minn. Rieschl, Barbara, '54 144 Union Avenue Clifton, New Jersey Rihm, Catherine, '51 2043 James St. Paul 5, Minn. Riordan, Mary, '51 121 S. Humphrey Oak Park, Illinois Ripka, Lenore, '54 519 E. Channing Fergus Falls, Minn. Ripley, Norma, '52 15 S, Strevelle Miles City, Montana Robinson, Ann, '54 1932 S. James Minneapolis 5, Minn. Robinson, Patricia, '54 300-9th St. S.E. Minot, North Dakota Roche, Shirley, '51 1459 Sherburne St. Paul 4, Minn. Rogers, Betty, '54 961 Laurel St. Paul 4, Minn. Rohwer, Kathryn, '53 2721 Jackson Sioux City 18, Iowa Romansky, Ruth, '52 1058 Arcade St. Paul 6, Minn. Rommen, Monika, '52 1744 Laurel Avenue St. Paul 4, Minn. Ross, Patricia, '53 736 Euclid St. Paul 6, Minn. Rossini, Sr. Joseph, 26 East Exchange St. Paul, Minn. Rouen, C. Arlene, '52 5637 So. Pillsbury Minneapolis 19, Minn. Rourke, Sr. Marietta, Presentation Academy Aberdeen, South Dakota Rudolph, Joan, '52 89 North Cretin St. Paul 5, Minn. Rudolph, Valerie, '52 Nurse 684 L'Orient St. Paul 1, Minn. Ruediger, Janet, '54 4012 W. 24th St. Minneapolis 5, Minn. Ruediger, Marilyn, '53 4012 W. 24th St. Minneapolis 5, Minn. Ruftenach, Carolyn, '54 4120-40th Avenue Robbinsdale 22, Minn. Rutter, Peggy, '53 Hinsdale, Montana Ryan, Edwina, '51 2153 lglehart St. Paul 4, Minn. Ryan, Marcia, '53 47 Billings Drive Superior, Wisconsin Ryan, Mary, '51 5025 Zenith Minneapolis 10, Minn. Ryan, Mary Joan, '52 1661 Laurel St. Paul 4, Minn. Ryan, Mary Margaret, '52 3651-2nd Avenue South Minneapolis 9, Minn. Ryan, Maureen, '52 584 South Brimhall St. Paul 5, Minn. Ryan, Patricia, '52 5100 Garfield Avenue S Minneapolis 9, Minn. Ryan, Rosemary, '53 965 Fremont St. St. Paul 6, Minn. Sailer, Jacqueline, '54 Route 4 St. Paul 6, Minn. outh St. Anthony, Mary, '53 4120 Harriet Minneapolis 9, Minn. St. Dennis, Dorothy, '54 2303-30th Avenue South Minneapolis 6, Minn. Sammon, Ann, '54 2615-23rd A enue North Minneapolis 11, Minn. Sands, Mary, '51 5321-2nd Avenue South Minneapolis 19, Minn. Sankovitz, Elizabeth, '54 1238 Bayard St. Paul 5, Minn. Sauer, Carolyn, '54 Sarona, Wisconsin Saumweber, Sr. M. Valine, ' 500 Hall Avenue St. Paul, Minn. Sausen, Jean, '52 1728 Berkeley Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Savageau, Jean, '54 1007-8th St. South Fargo, North Dakota Schaaf, Marianne, '51 4744 Upton Minneapolis 10, Minn. Schietelbein, Carol, '51 Durand, Wisconsin Schindler, Katherine, '54 4003 Blaisdell Minneapolis 9, Minn. Schlick, Sally, '51 825 Goodrich St. Paul 5, Minn. Schlundt, Joan, '54 995 E. 3rd St. Paul 6, Minn. Schmidt, Jeannine, '54 1270 South Robert West St. Paul 7, Minn. Schmitt, G. Lois, '54 338 Lewis Shakopee, Minn. Schmitt, Suzanne, '53 2190 Stanford Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Schneider, Dorothy, '51 Route 3 Hastings, Minn. Schneider, Marilyn, '53 Comtrey, Minn. Schoenbauer, Cleo, Route 2 Jordan, Minnesota Schoenecker, LaVerne, New Prague, Minn. Schoenecker, Nancy, '54 953 Baylus St. Paul 4, Minnesota Schueller, Dorinda, '54 Route 1 Dawson, Minnesota Schuler, Barbara, '54 5116 Harriet Minneapolis 9, Minn. Schuler, Joanne, '54 5116 Harriet Minneapolis 9, Minn. Schulte, Janice, '52 Nurse Meire Grove Melrose, Minnesota Schultz, Jacqueline, '54 Apt. 6, Elmo Park Hopkins, Minn. Schwartz, Mariorie, '54 4420 Dupont So. Minneapolis 10, Minnesota Schweizer, Andrea, '54 2236 So. Shore Blvd. White Bear Lake, 10, Minn. Schweizer, Genevieve, '52 Nurse 1906 Juliet St. Paul 5, Minn. Schwob, Mary Jo, '51 116 So. 4th St. Le Sueur, Minnesota Scott, Karleen, '51 1026 Portland Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn. Scott, Suzanne, '54 2132 Iglehart St. Paul 4, Minn. Scovill, Carol, '54 1616 University Avenue N.E Minneapolis 13, Minn. Scoville, Jeanne, '52 Nurse 1616 University Avenue N.E Minneapolis 13, Minn. Seibel, Mary Diane, '51 6735 Lynwood Minneapolis 19, Minn. Seibel, Nancy, '52 6735 Lynwood Minneapolis 19, Minn. Seidl, Patricia, '51 2427 Burma Lane So. St. Paul, Minn. Seiter, Alice, '52 2113 Portland Avenue Minneapolis 4, Minn. Seng, Barbara, '54 1691 Stanford Si. Paul 5, Minn, Shannon, Margaret, '53 Winnebago, Minn. Shaules, Deiane, '54 885 Tuscarora St. Paul 2, Minn, Shea, Patricia, '51 1593 Portland Avenue St. Paul 5, Minn, Shiio, Yaeko, '53 1942 Merriam Lane St. Paul 4, Minn, Shimota, Helen, '52 273 W. Winifred St. Paul 7, Minn, Shukay, Joan, '53 796 Charles St. Paul 4, Minn. Sifterle, Rita, '54 5809-10th Avenue So. Minneapolis 17, Minn. Simons, Mary, '53 207 West 2nd St. Chcska, Minn. Sisterman, Joan, 1293 Edmund St. Paul 4, Minn. Slater, Patricia, '53 1896 Jefferson St. Paul 5, Minn. Slitzke, Dorothy, '52 411-2nd Avenue S.E. Watertown, South Dak Smisek, Janet, '53 827 Grand St. Paul 5, Minn. Smith, Catherine, '52 1718 Taylor St, Paul 4, Minn. Smith, Jeannette, '54 174 W. Front St. St. Paul 3, Minn. Snook, Patricia, '52 Cannon Falls, Minn. Solem, Marilynn, '53 125 Froser Chisholm, Minn. O10 Page one hundred three


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College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

1946

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1964 Edition, Page 1

1964

College of St Catherine - La Concha Yearbook (St Paul, MN) online collection, 1979 Edition, Page 1

1979


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