College of New Rochelle - Annales Yearbook (New Rochelle, NY)
- Class of 1936
Page 1 of 320
Cover
Pages 6 - 7
Pages 10 - 11
Pages 14 - 15
Pages 8 - 9
Pages 12 - 13
Pages 16 - 17
Text from Pages 1 - 320 of the 1936 volume:
“
- Mm ii § shM mm ' . :. ■ ' ' ' ; A ' 1 1 J ft ■ ' ! !_. -„ ! ' ' -L 1 - ■ i A. , ,v.. ‘£ ’ , • I-;- ' ;.-; ' , iMa ' . . LVtL£ his, the 1936 volume of the Annales of College of New Rochelle, has been produced by Baker, Jones, Hausauer, Inc. of Buffalo, under the direction of the Editor-in-Chief, Marie Reisert, and the Business Manager, Elizabeth Mary Otis, in an edition limited to 400 copies of which this is Number.. .. 6 . ' The 193 6 ANNALES PUBLISHED BY THE CLASS OF College of New Rochelle NEW ROCHELLE • NEW YORK MARIE REISERT .... Editor-in-Chief ELIZABETH MARY OTIS Business Manager r O THE RIGHT REVEREND MON- SIGNOR CORNELIUS CROWLEY, at the inception of his career as president of our college, we respectfully dedicate this 1936 Annales. Blessed with a gentle, unfailing humor and a tolerant wisdom born of daily contact with human nature, our beloved Mon- signor has proved his exceptional ability and deep interest in New Rochelle. It is our earnest wish that he may find in his new work a satisfaction and an appreciation which will increase with each succeeding year. FO REWORD Each college year demands a record — and this is ours. For the seniors it should be a book of memories, the final vol- ume of the set. For the rest of the student body, we hope that it may help them to remember the class of 1936. We offer our sincere appreciation to Mother Ignatius who has supervised all our efforts. To Anne Donahue, we are grate- ful for her generosity. Without the criticism and encour- agement of Sterling J. Hiles and Frank Powers we would never have produced the book. To these, to all the classes, and our advertisers, we wish to express our gratitude for their enthusiastic support. CONTENTS VIEWS FACULTY . CLASSES . Seniors . Juniors . Sophomores . Freshmen Snapshots ORGANIZATIONS The Arts The Sciences SPORTS . FEATURES . 13 . 21 . 35 . 37 . 185 . 191 . 197 . 201 . 215 . 223 . 243 . 253 . 267 IN MEM he spirit of Mother Irene will ever permeate New Rochelle. Gentle, kind, and strong of will, she saw her ambitions realized, and became, in the realization, an ideal. We who proudly call ourselves her children will always look to her for guidance and will try to emulate the beautiful character she possessed. God was kind to give us such a gracious mother and glorious foundress. May her soul rest in peace! There is no more lovely sight than the campus in the spring, unless it be the stately buildings gleaming with the perfection of new snow. !1BW!W3 ■ i; . g sn i u -TBsg gp | p:v ‘ Jff MlI Ilf sBKy; ' i 1 4 0 - alt ill H Tfe ga jRri f H ] ■ SU US SPORTS BUILDING th jwb? .v THE CHAPEL BRESCIA HALL Wisdom and intelligent guidance make a fine professor. With truth and loyalty combined, our faculty has given us much more than we or even they realize — an ideal of knowledge. OFFICERS OF ADMINISTRATION RIGHT REVEREND MONSIGNOR CORNELIUS F. CROWLEY, LL.D. President MOTHER M. IGNATIUS, A.M Dean MOTHER M. LOYOLA Assistant Dean MOTHER M. XAVIER, A.M Registrar MOTHER M. AMBROSE Treasurer BOARD OF TRUSTEES JOHN GREENE President WALTER H. BENNETT Vice-President JOHN B. McGUIRE Secretary RIGHT REVEREND MONSIGNOR CORNELIUS F. CROWLEY, LL.D. Martin Conboy James A. O ' Gorman James A. Foley George Gillespie Raymond Carleton J. H. Hayes Frank Sinnott Mary F. Higgins Luke D. Stapleton, Jr. William E. Iselin Myles J. Tierney, M.D. Percy King James J. Walsh, M.D. Martin T. Manton Grover A. Whalen M. Irene Wightwick 22 F A HENRI MARTIN BARZUN Professor of French B-es-L, University of Paris, 1909; Graduate Student, Uni- versity of Paris, 1909-1914; Lehigh University, 1920-1923; A.M., Lehigh University, 1923; Fordham University, 1924- 1926; Ph.D., 1926. F. COLWELL CONKLIN Choral Music B.S., New York University, 1913; Under Dr. Carl E. Dufft, 1916-1919; Arthur D. Woodruff, 1920; Institute of Music Pedagogy, 1920-1923; Faculty, Institute of Music Pedagogy, 1924 - 1928; In- structor, Skidmore School of Music, 1929; A.M., Columbia, 1930. U L T Y MARIA FLORES BECERRA Professor of Spanish Manuela Canizaries, S.A., 1912-1916; Columbia Uni- versity, 1921-1924; A.M., 1924; Graduate Student, Co- lumbia, 1924-1927. MARGARET VICTORIA COSSE Professor of Journalism College of New Rochelle, 1923-1925; Columbia Uni- versity School of Journalism, 1925-1927; B.Litt., 1927; M.S., Columbia University, 1928; Graduate work, Columbia University, 1929-1935. IRVING CHEYETTE Wind Instruments B.S., Columbia University, 1920; A.M., 1922; Faculty, Columbia University, 1926- 1930. KATHRYN M. CURRAN Instructor in Home Economics B.S., New York State College of Home Economics, Cornell University, 1926; Dietitian, Lafayette General Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y., Boston City Hospital, 1927 - 1930; Grad- uate Student, Cornell Uni- versity, 1933 - 1935; M.A., 1935; Instructor in Nutrition, School of Nursing, Lafayette General Hospital, Buffalo, N. Y., and Boston City Hospi- tal, 1927-1930; Instructor in Cookery, Miss Farmer ' s School of Cookery, Boston, 1930-1932; Assistant in Foods and Nutrition, State School of Home Economics, Cornell University, 1934-1935. B. F A WILLIAM A. S. DOLLARD Associate Professor of English B.A., Columbia University, 1924; A.M., Columbia Uni- versity, 1926; Magdalene Col- lege, Cambridge University, 1930-1932; Honors, B. A., 1932; Harvard University, 1933- 1935; Phi Beta Kappa; Delta Sigma Rho. PASTORIZA FLORES Associate Professor of Spanish A.B., Hunter College, 1919; A.M., Columbia University, 1920; Ph.D., Columbia Uni- versity, 1921; Associate Pro- fessor of Spanish, Goucher College, 1922-1924; Associate Professor of Spanish, New York University, 1924-1928. U FRANCES MARY DUFFY Professor of Botany B.S. in Education, University of Illinois, 1928; M.S. in Botany, University of Illinois, 1929; Summer session Uni- versity of Illinois, 1930, 1931, 1932, 1933, 1935; Columbia University Extension, 1931, 1932; Graduate School, Co- lumbia University, 1934-1935, 1935-1936. MARIE LOUISE FORASTE Instructor in French A.B., Hunter College, 1934; Columbia University, 1934- 1935; A.M., 1935. T Y IOHN T. FARRELL Associate Professor of History B.A., Yale University, 1932; Ph.D., Yale University, 1935. FRANCES CLAIRE GALLECIEZ Professor of Home Economics B.S., Teacher ' s College, Co- lumbia University, 1924; Graduate work, Columbia University, 1929-1934, A.M., 1934. 24 F A ARTHUR B. HUSSEY Le cturer in Physics A.B., Bates College, 1914 A.M., Brown University, 1915 Wesleyan University, 1917 Columbia University, 1920. THOMAS FRANCIS MC MANUS Professor of Economics University of Cincinnati, 1921- 1923; Northwestern Univer- sity, 1923-1925; B.S., Com- merce, 1925; Fellow, Univer- sity of Illinois, 1925-1926; State University of Iowa, 1932- 1934; A.M., 1933; Ph.D.,1934. MICHAEL J. MAC CAFFREY Lecturer in History A.B., St. John ' s College, 1918; Graduate work, City College, Adelphi College. MARY J. MITCHELL Lecturer on Public Speaking A. B., College of New Rochelle, 1928; Columbia University, 1934-1935. T Y JAMES J. MC BRIDE Professor of Chemistry A.B., Columbia University, 1923; Columbia University, 1923-1925; A.M., 1925; Ph.D., Columbia University, 1929. REVEREND JOSEPH N. MOODY Lecturer in Religion Cathedral College; A.B., St. Joseph ' s Seminary, 1929; A.M. Fordham University, 1930; Ph.D., Fordham University, 1934. 25 F A KATHARINE E. O ' BRIEN Professor of Mathematics B.A., Bates College, 1922; Smith College, 1922-1923; A.M., Cornell • University, 1924; Columbia University, 1926-1928; Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi. EDNA MEYER OSTERTAG Instructor in Physical Training Savage School of Physical Education, City of New York, 1916-1918; New York Univer- sity, 1919-1922; Westoff-Sero- va School, 1920. C U L T Y FRANK O ' CALLAGHAN Professor of Physics B.S., University of Liverpool, 1898; University of Liverpool, 1898-1900; M.S., 1900; Skerry University College, London, 1902-1906; Rockville College, 1906-1910; Tantah College, Egypt, 1910-1912; University of Dublin, 1914-1917; Columbia University, 1933-1934. JOHN J. O ' HARE Associate Professor of Philosophy A.B., Canisius College, 1922; Canisius College, 1923-1925; A.M., 1925; LL.B., Fordham University, 1928. SOPHIE A. PRAY Lecturer on Phonetics New York School of Expres- sion, 1901-1907; Bell School of Speech, 1907-1909; Stern ' s School of Languages, 1908- 1914; Marburg, Germany, 1911; College of the City of New York, 1912-1918; Cornell University, 1914; New York University, 1915-1918; Colum- bia University, 1918-1924; Speech Improvement Depart- ment, New York Public Ele- mentary Schools, 1911-1931; Lecturer on Phonetics, Hunter College, 1922-1931; Chief As- sistant to Professor William Tilly, 1920-1934; Councillor of the International Phonetic Association. CHARLES W. RAUBICHECK Lecturer in English S.B., New York University, 1912; Graduate Student, New York University and Columbia University, 1913-1918. 26 F A ROCCO RESCIGNO String Instruments B.S., Columbia University, (Music) . ELISE I. RUFFINI Lecturer in Art B.S., Columbia, 1920; A.M., 1922; Student, Paris, 1926- 1927. U MARK ROBINSON Instructor in Art Graduate, Massachusetts School of Art, 1929; Yale School of Fine Arts, 1929- 1930. CATHERINE RYAN A. B., College of New Rochelle, 1929; New York Post-Grad- uate Medical School, 1929- 1930, 1931. T Y MARY DORA ROGICK Professor of Biology University of Omaha, 1925- 1927; University of Nebraska, 1927-1930; A.B., 1929; A.M., 1930; Ohio State University, 1930-1934; Ph.D., 1934; As- sisting in Zoology, Ohio State University, 1930-1934. CONRAD SAPHIER Lecturer in Business Adminis- tration and Secretarial Train- ing B.C.S., New York University, 1917; M.C.S., New York Uni- versity, 1919. 27 F A OTTO F. SCHMITZ Professor of German Gymnasium, Nordhausen, 1880; Tubingen, Lausanne, Berlin, Munster, 1880-1885; Ph.D., University of Munster, 1885; University of Kell; University of Amsterdam. ANNA T. SHEEDY Professor of History A.B., Smith College, 1922; A.M., Columbia University, 1923; Columbia University, 1923-1930; Travel in Eastern and Central Europe, 1928; Fordham University, 1930- 1932; LL.B., 1932; Columbia University, 1935-1936. C U L T Y JOHN SCHULER Lecturer in Church History A.B., German Wallace, 1891; Johns Hopkins University, 1901-1904; Columbia Univer- sity, 1907-1908; Ph.D., 1908. JOSEPH G. SCULLY Associate Professor cf Philosophy A.B., Fordham University, 1919; Graduate Student, Ford- ham University, 1927-1931; A.M., 1931; Fordham Univer- sity, 1931-1935. MIRIAM L. SIMONS Professor of Speech F.F. Mackay, National Con- servatory of Dramatic Art, 1906; Paris under Paul Ray- mond, 1910; Travel in Africa, Spain, Italy, France, England, Switzerland, 1912-1914; Co- lumbia University, 1920-1922. EARNEST THORNE THOMPSON Professor of Art Diploma, Massachusetts School of Art, Boston, 1920; School of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 1920-1921; In- dependent European study, 1926; Supervisor of Art in Public Schools of Lincoln, Massachusetts, 1920-1922; Professor of Art and Director of School of Fine Arts, Uni- versity of Notre Dame, 1922- 1929. 28 FACULTY FLORENCE M. THOMPSON Instructor in Design Diploma, Massachusetts School of Art, Boston, 1920; Graduate Student in Design, Massachusetts School of Art, 1920-1921; Supervisor of Art in Public Schools, Newport, N. H., 1921-1922; Instructor in Design, University of Notre Dame, 1923-1928; Designer and Illustrator. JOSEPHINE VALLERIE Instructor in French A. B., College of New Rochelle, 1927; Columbia University, 1927-1929; A.M., 1929; the Sorbonne, 1930; Fellowship for study in France, 1931-1932; Universite de Grenoble, 1931- 1932; Universite de Nancy, 1932; Universite de Toulouse, 1933; Universite de Stras- bourg, 1934; Travel and re- search in France, 1935; Co- lumbia University, 1934-1936. WILLIS THOMSON Lecturer in Education A.B., University of Minne- sota, 1922; Columbia Univer- sity, 1924-1928; A.M., 1928. ALLYS DWYER VERGARA Lecturer in Speech A. B., College of New Rochelle, 1924; Columbia University, 1934-1935. HELAN MAREE TOOLE Professor of Sociology A.B., Rosary College, 1926; Yale University, 1926-1927; Loyola University, 1930-1931; A.M., 1931; University of Chicago, 1931-1934. MAXMILIAN VON DER PORTEN Lecturer in Romance Languages Berlin, Lausanne, Heidelberg, 1897-1902; Ph.D., University of Heidelberg, 1902; Romance Languages andPhilology, Uni- versity of Paris, 1902-1905; Oriental Languages and Lit- erature, Vienna arid Buda- pest, 1906-1907. 29 F A C T Y JAMES J. WALSH Lecturer in Sociology K.C. St. G., M.D., Ph.D., Sc.D., Litt.D., Fellow A.M.A., A.A.A.S., Physician and Lec- turer. U L REVEREND JOHN FRANCIS WHITE Professor of Philosophy Cathedral College, 1909-1915; St. Joseph Seminary, 1915- 1921; A.B., 1921; Fordham University, 1933. M. IRENE WIGHTWICK Personnel A. B., College of New Rochelle, 1918; Columbia University, 1926, New York University, 1928. Personnel Director, Union Carbide and Carbon Corporation, 1925-1929; Di- rector, Carroll Club, 1929- 1932; Columbia University, 1932-1934; A.M., 1934. REVEREND DENNIS P. COLEMAN Lecturer in Religion St. John ' s College; Fordham University, 1921; A.B., 1921; St. Jose ph ' s Seminary, 1926; Manhattan College, 1931; A.M., 1931. REVEREND GEORGE ERHARDT Lecturer in Religion Cathedral College, 1916; A.B., 1916. JOHN LANE Coach of Debating Fordham College, 1931; Fordham School of Law, LL.B., 1934. MARY CONKLIN SHARPE Lecturer in Speech (Part Time) MARY A. SHEEDY Instructor in History Smith College, 1924; A.B., 1924; University of Paris, France, 1925; Columbia University, 1926; A.M., 1926. 30 FACULTY WILLIAM WILKINS Lecturer in Education Columbia College; Loyola University, A.B. and A.M., 1933-1934; Northwestern University, 1934- 1936; Columbia University, 1936. SISTERS ON THE FACULTY MOTHER THOMAS AQUINAS Professor of English A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1913; Columbia University, 1920; Fordham University, 1921-1925; Ph.D., 1925; Oxford University, 1926; Cambridge University, 1935. MOTHER M. BERENICE Instructor in Education A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1924; Fordham University, 1928-1932, A.M., 1932; Catholic Uni- versity, 1932-1934. MOTHER M. CLOTILDE Director of Music Studied under: A. K. Virgil, Frances Perley, Carrie Louise Dunning, William Shaw, Harry Fellows, Andrew T. Webster; College of New Rochelle, 1925-1929; Mus.B., 1929; Guilmant Organ School, 1933. MOTHER M. DOROTHEA Instructor in Education A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1919; Fordham University, 1929-1934; A.M., 1934; Catholic Uni- versity, 1935. MOTHER M. FIDELIS Professor of Education A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1915; Ph.D., Fordham University, 1925; University of Notre Dame, 1932, 1933. 31 FACULTY MOTHER JOAN OF ARC Professor of French A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1920; Residence Beaugency, France, 1921-1923; Sorbonne, 1923; Columbia University, 1926-1928; A.M., 1928; Fordham University, 1930-1931; Catholic University, 1932; Residence, Italy, and France, 1934-1935. MOTHER M. GRACE Associate Professor of English A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1913; Columbia University, 1920; Fordham University, 1922-1926; Ph.D., 1926; Oxford University, 1926; University of Notre Dame, 1933; Cambridge University, 1935. MOTHER M. JOSEPH Instructor in Classical Civilization and Latin A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1925; Columbia University, 1928-1929; A.M., 1929; Fordham Uni- versity, 1930-1931; Catholic University, 1932, 1934. MOTHER M. LOYOLA Instructor in Latin A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1908; Columbia University, 1908; Research in Rome, Italy, 1927. MOTHER M. MARGARET Instructor in English A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1922; Graduate work, Fordham University, 1930-1934; A.M., 1934. MOTHER M. PAULA Instructor in Stenography and Typewriting B.S., College of New Rochelle, 1924; Fcrdham University, 1930-1934; A.M., 1934; Columbia Uni- versity, 1935. MOTHER M. REGIS Professor of Latin A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1919; Columbia University, 1925-1926; A.M.,. 1926; Columbia University, 1927-1929. 32 FACULTY HEALTH SERVICE JOHN REARDON, M.D College Physician ELIZABETH GERTRUDE SULLIVAN, R.N Supervisor of College Infirmary LIBRARY ELEANOR E. HAWKINS Librarian School of Library Science, Pratt Institute, 1906-1907; University of Chicago, 1914-1917; Ph.B., 1917; Buffalo Public Library, 1896-1904, 1907-1911; Kansas City Public Library, 1911-1914; Chicago Historical Society, 1918-1920; Editor, Cumulative Book Index, H. Wilson Company, 1920-1924; State Library, Albany, 1925-1926. MOTHER M. GERTRUDE Assistant Librarian A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1916; Fordham University, 1917-1920; A.M., 1920; Columbia Uni- versity, 1926. MOTHER M. BERNADETTE Loan Desk Assistant A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1922. ELEANOR B. WOODWARD Loan Desk Assistant A.B., College of New Rochelle, 1927; Columbia University, 1927-1928. STANDING COMMITTEES OF THE FACULTY Committee on Instruction: Mother Thomas Aguinas, Sefiora Becerra, Dr. McBride, Miss O ' Brien, Dr. Schmitz, Miss Duffy, Mr. Thompson, Miss Vallerie, Miss Toole, Miss Galleciez and Mother Xavier. Committee on Admission : Mother Ignatius, Dean; Mother Xavier and Mother Thomas Aquinas. Committee on Honors: Dr. Flores, Mr. Thompson, Miss O ' Brien, Dr. McBride, Anna T. Sheedy, Chairman. Committee on Student Organizations : Mother Ignatius, Mother Loyola, and faculty members concerned. Faculty Members on Student Advisory Board : Mother Ignatius and Mother Loyola. 33 Seniors, regretful that the end cf college life has come; juniors, a bit bewildered by the amazing fact that they have but one more year; sophomores happy in the dignity of becoming upperclassmen; fresh- men pleased to grow out of the category ' ' verdant ' ' — this is the June vista. HELEN LOUISE McDONOUGH President of the Student Body SENIORS i U r I m f T jVjL. . } i 1936 CLASS OFFICERS 1932 - 1933 HELEN BRENNAN President ELIZABETH FITZPATRICK Vice-President GERTRUDE SWEENEY Secretary HELEN McDONOUGH Treasurer 1933 - 1934 HELEN McDONOUGH President HELEN BRENNAN Vice-President MERCEDES ORMSTON Secretary PRISCILLA FENNER Treasurer 1934 - 1935 PRISCILLA FENNER President HELEN BRENNAN Vice-President MARIE FITZSIMONS Secretary FRANCES LEAMY Treasurer 1935 - 1936 PRISCILLA FENNER President FRANCES BOSSUET Vice-President WINIFRED WALSH Secretary HELEN BRENNAN Treasurer 39 LILLIAN MARION A L A I M O Bachelor of Arts 43 Whitworth Street, Thompsonville, Conn. • A girl of a retiring nature, but one who possesses all those characteristics that are ever admirable, is Lillian. By her very re- serve, she reveals to her friends the true depth of her personality. A steadfast in- terest in science, combined with her un- wavering perseverance, should bring to Lillian the success that she richly deserves in her chosen work. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1-2-3-4), President (4); Circolo Dante (2-3-4), Vice-President (4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); French Club (2-3); Long Enfield High School, Thompsonville, Conn. Distance Club (1-2-3); Pre-Medical Club (2-3); Riding Group (3-4); Sacred Heart League (4); Science Club (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). 40 R O S A N N E A L L I G E R Bachelor of Arts 2 Grace Court, Brooklyn, N. Y. Erasmus Hall, Brooklyn, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-3-4); Circolo Dante (3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Reapers (1-2-3- 4); Riding Group (1-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3- • The euphony which makes Rcsanne Alliger ' s name such a delight to the ear is paralleled by the harmony of gualities which makes the girl behind the name such a pleasure to know. Tall, blonde and gracious, Rosanne has engraved an artistic impression on the college, and in her four years here she has proven her merit as a valuable friend. 4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (3-4); Golf Group (3-4); Tennis Group (1-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 41 RITA AGNES ARMSTRONG • Rita ' s is a changing self whose every mood has something which cannot be encom- passed in words. A keen mind and a clever tongue rank her high in debating; a humor all her own, a candid, friendly independ- ence, make her prominent in the campus activities. No one talent, virtue, or fault, but all, blend together to make her so essentially Rita. Art Club (1-2-3); Athletic Association (1-2-3); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4), President (4); Current Events (2- 3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3), Vice-President (3); Hiking Group (1-2-3); Inter- collegiate Debating Sguad (3-4); Junior Prom Corn- Bachelor of Arts 77 West 36th Street Bayonne, N. J. Academy of St. Aloysius, Jersey City, N. J. mittee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Pre-Medical Club (3); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3- 4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3); Tennis Group (1- 2); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4), Vice- President (4). 42 ISABEL A . B A S A N T A Bachelor of Arts 248 Centre Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. Newtown High School, Elmhurst, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (1-2); Athletic Association (3-4); Biology Club (1-2); Class Honors (1-3); Class Play (2-3); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4); Golf Group (4); Intercollegiate Debating Squad (2-3); Lecture • The adjective versatile most aptly describes Isabel — she golfs, swims, plays tennis, drives a car, and, as well we know, debates, acts, and lectures. And, with re- gard to studies, Isabel has been an honor student, majoring in the social sciences. She possesses a lovely grace which, combined with her intellectual power, should give her a successful career as a lawyer. Group (3); Props and Paint (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club (3-4); Sodality (1-2- 3-4); Spanish Club (1-2); Tennis Group (3-4). 43 VIRGINIA MARY B A S T I A N • Virginia is usually calmly reserved but it is not hard to discover her disposition. She is a companion of great value, for she is ever willing and delighted to take part in - any prank or fancy. Her guiet demeanor has not prevented the forming of many friendships and we who know her can wish her nothing but the greatest of happiness. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Current Events (4); Long Distance Club (1-2- 3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Golf Bachelor of Arts 364 South Main Street, Manchester, N. H. Manchester High School (Central), Manchester, N. H. Group (1); Sociology Club (4); Doctor ' s Daughters Club (1-2-3-4), President (4); Northern New England Under- graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4), Vice-President (4). 44 ELENA ROSE B I A N C H I Bachelor of Science 111 First Street, Wood-Ridge, N. J. Mt. Saint Dominic Academy, Caldwell, N. J. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1); Biology Club (1-3); Circolo Dante (1-2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Home Economics (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League • Because neatness is one of the first requisites of a good cook, we can guarantee that Elena will be a credit to the Home Economics department. Her work, her dress, everything bespeaks a fastidious, methodic nature which pays careful attention to those all-important little details and so builds up a well-ordered pleasing personality upon a firm reliable foundation. (1-2-3-4); Science Club (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Coun- cillor (4); Golf Group (1); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (4). 45 NANCY E . BIRRITTELLA Bachelor of Arts 13 Oak Place, Yonkers, N. Y. • Nancy is the only name this girl could possibly have; diminutive itself, it suits the Lilliputian grace which, plus her red hair, gives her a winsome appearance. She has, moreover, many abilities compressed within her. Nancy likes Spanish well enough to want to teach it, and finds in playing the piano a recreation aesthetically big enough to please. Yonkers High School, Yonkers, N. Y. Biology Club (1); Italian Club (3-4); Sacred Heart 3-4), Assistant Treasurer (4). League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2- 46 MARIE TERESA BOHAN Bachelor of Arts 1545 Vyse Avenue, New York, N. Y. Academy of the Sacred Heart of Mary, New York, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-4); Biology Club (1); Council of Debate (1); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Golf Group (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); • Attractive Marie has won our love and our respect. She was one of the more popular day-hops” and by her own pur- suits and accomplishments has figured in the activities of campus. Her sense of humor has lent fun to many a serious and down- hearted group. You have made a grand beginning, Marie. We wish you the same good luck in whatever life you may follow. Sociology Club (2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2-3). 47 CLAIRE LEE BOLAND Bachelor o£ Arts 130 Sagamore Road, Tuckahoe, N. Y. • Smile, individual; clothes, enviable; charm, decided; philosophy, cheerful. That ' s a vignette of Claire Boland, the girl who is always exactly where you would never expect to find her, but where you are always glad to see her. She has moved happily through college, accumulating credits and friends almost effortlessly, leaving a wake of good impressions, and promising an ex- cellent future. Academy of Mount Saint Ursula, New York, N.Y. Athletic Association (3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3); 4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); French Club (2-3-4); Golf Group (4); Riding Group (3- Sodality (1-2-3-4). 48 FRANCES P. B O S S U E T Bachelor of Arts 398 Willow Street, Bridgeport, Conn. Warren Harding High School, Bridgeport, Conn. Advisory Board (4), Recording Secretary (4); ”An- nales (4); Art Club (3); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (4); Biology Club (1); Class Play (2-3); Daisy Chain (3); Hiking Group (2); Hockey Group (2); Junior Prom Committee (3), Chairman (3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (2-3-4); • It is an understatement to say merely that Fran has attained an astonishing degree of popularity among her classmates. We need not enlarge on her good gualities, for these have long obviated themselves. We must be content to pay tribute to her throughout her college career. Let us hope that she may be repaid many times over in the years ahead. Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (2-3); Tennis Group (1-2 -3-4); Chairman of Investiture (3); Chairman of Mission Day (3); Chairman of Sodality Tea Dance (4); Bridgeport Undergraduate Chapter (4); Class Vice- President (4) . 49 DOROTHY MARGARET BRENNAN • Friendly, genial, and pleasantly dignified (except when her penetrating chuckle spreads through classroom or corridor) , Dot is well-liked and admired as a staunch supporter of all interests at New Rochelle. And with Dot in charge, the entire program is sure to come off with flying colors. We sincerely hope that her happy disposition will conguer any vicissitudes she may chance to meet. Annales (4), Subscription Manager (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4); Current Events (3-4), President (4); Der Deutsche Verein (2); Lecture Group (2); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4), Promoter (1-2-3-4), Bachelor of Arts 15 Burling Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. Ursuline School for Girls, New Rochelle, N. Y. Vice-President (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Day Student President (1), Councillor (4); Tatler (1-2-3), Photo- graphic Editor (3); Tennis Group (2-3); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 50 HELEN E . BRENNAN Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 185 Meadow Street, Naugatuck, Conn. • Most of us strive to be as calm and placidly Naugatuck High School, Naugatuck, Conn. Advisory Board (1); Annales (4); Athletic Associa- tion (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (1); Biology Club (1); Daisy Chain (3-4), Chairman (3); Junior Prom Com- mittee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2- unruffled as Helen, but we seldom achieve it. Very admirably was she at the helm of our untried and bewildered Freshman class. She is ever an undemanding and unselfish supporter of college activities, whatever they may be. To know her is to love her and what more can be said? 3-4); Spanish Club (1); Swimming Team (1); Tennis Group (1); Class Day Chairman (2); Waterbury Under- graduate Chapter (4), Vice-President (4); Class President (1), Vice-President (2-3), Treasurer (4). 51 ELVIRA B R I A Bachelor of Arts 110 South Sixth Avenue, Mt. Vernon, N. Y. • Determination and self sacrifice have done much to make the world a success. Elvira, with these traits, has silently but efficiently toiled for that which she has now attained. Devoid of all affectation, she has appreciated college life. Having a knowl- edge of merited victory, she will go into the world enriched beyond words, and assured of the good wishes of her classmates. Stamford High School, Stamford, Conn. Circolo Dante (3); French Club (2-3-4); Mission Club 3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3); Sodality (1-2- 52 NATALIE M. BRIGGS Bachelor of Arts 613 Macon Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. • Nat ' s versatility can only be outweighed St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (2-3- 4), Secretary (2), President (3), Custodian (4), College Letter (3); Basketball Group (1-2-3-4), Basketball Team (1-2-3-4), Basketball Varsity (2-3-4); Biology Club (3-4); Class Honors (2-3); Current Events (3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2); Golf Group by the nonchalant air with which she accomplishes her tasks. As a student, A ' s seem to be second-nature; as a basketball player, opponents find her a stone wall; as an A. A. executive, she has kept the organi- zation smooth running and progressive; as a friend, she possesses the virtues of. the ideal . (4); Hiking Group (1-2-3); Long Distance Club (2-3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Pre-Medical Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (1-2-3-4), Swim- ming Team (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3), Sports Editor (3); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4). 53 MARIE CHRISTINE BURKE Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 20 Pershing Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Marie, possessing a personality carefree, unaffected, attractive, and efficient, enjoys favorable prominence in the class of 1936. Her likeableness is rivalled only by her beauty. Marie is equally at home driving her roadster, being elected to the May Court, or deftly pounding typewriter keys. As a much sought companion and a good sport, she will go far in the world. Athletic Association (1-4); Biology Club (2); Golf Group (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Ursuline Academy, New Rochelle, N. Y. Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (4); Tennis Group (2-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 54 LUCILLE MARY BYRNE Bachelor of Arts 244 Harrison Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. Mount St. Dominic Academy, Caldwell, N. J. University ot Grenoble, Grenoble, France (3); Sor- bonne University, Paris, France (3); Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (1-2); Baseball Group (1-2); Biology Club (1); Choir (2); Class Honors (2-3); Glee • The tinge of red in her hair adds a spar- kling zest to the evenness and happiness of Lucille ' s temperament. Serenely and com- petently, she has gone through college, with French as her forte and the making of friends, her hobby. With that cosmopolitan air gleaned from her continental sojourn, Lucille can take her place as a poised and cultured member of society. Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2); Mission Club (1-2- 3-4); Reapers (1-2-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-4); Sodality (1-2-4); French Club (2-4), President (4); Group Golf (1); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (4). 55 MARY LOUISE BYRNES • Mary Louise ' s loyalties and friendships are deep rooted beneath the placid calm of her exterior. She is loved by all her friends for her sunny disposition. In cookery and designing class, Mary shows the efficient side of her nature. Looking back, after school days, we shall think this of Mary: How much better we are for having known her! Biology Club (3); Home Economics (1-2-3-4); Long Distance Club (1-2-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality Bachelor of Science 27 Pollack Avenue, Pittsfield, Mass. St. Joseph’s High School, Pittsfield, Mass. (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2); Hiking Group (1); Tennis Group (1-4); Berkshire Undergraduate Chapter, President (4). 56 J A N E K . CALL A G HAN Bachelor of Arts 95 Clay Avenue, Rochester, N. Y. Nazareth Academy, Rochester, N. Y. Advisory Board (3-4), Treasurer (3-4); Annales” (4), Publication Manager (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3- 4), Honorary Member (1-2); Baseball Group (1-2), Baseball Team (1-2); Basketball Team (2-3); Biology Club (1); Daisy Chain (3); Golf Group (1-2-3-4), Head • To be a good athlete is one degree of success; to be a good winner but a better loser, and all around good sport, is the epitome. In Jane we find a generous helping of this ideal sportsmanship, a predominance of efficiency and intelligence, rare depend- ability and resourcefulness, and enough guick-witted humor to season and temper the delightful whole. of Golf (2); Long Distance Club (1-2 -3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), President (2); Tennis Group (1-2-3- 4); Rochester Undergraduate Chapter (3-4), Secretary (3). 57 MILDRED RUTH C A R L I E R • Millie ' s gift is the silver one of speech, and, what ' s more, something to speak about. Hardly a place on campus has not echoed with her voice, excitedly recounting the latest bit of news. New Jersey College sent Millie to us, three years ago. Lost time in- deed, was even one year without her. May the ' ' cruel world ' ' reserve its kindest glances for our merry, laughing Mildred. New Jersey State College (1); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Long Distance Club (2-3); Music Club (4); Riding Group Bachelor o£ Arts 168 Fairview Avenue, New York, N. Y. Notre Dame, Grymes Hill, Staten Island, N. Y. (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (4); Sodality (2-3-4); French Club (2-3-4); Brooklyn- Long Island Under- graduate Chapter (4). 58 ROSE ELVIRA CELESTINO Bachelor of Arts 2 Parkview Place, Tuckahoe, N. Y. • Rose ' s personality is just what one would expect. Petite and brown-eyed, with dark curly hair, her flashing smile bestows friendship and understanding on all. A good student and a pleasant comrade, one whose sense of humor rarely flags and never bores, Rose would be an asset to any college. She has won the admiration and Eastchester High School, Tuckahoe, N. Y. respect of her classmates. Athletic Association (1); Biology Club (1); Circolo Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4) . Dante (1-2-3-4), President (4); Current Events (3-4); 59 MARGARET CHRISTOPH Bachelor of Science 483 Prospect Street, Maplewood, N. J. • Margy embodies the true meaning of the word, friend. She will give you anything — from her best hat, to the loan of her room, with some good advice gratis. Margy has chosen science for her lifework. We wonder whether her ability and her gift of gentle understanding will belong to a great institution, or only to a husband and children! Columbia High School, Maplewood, N. J. Biology Club (2); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Home Sodality (1-2-3-4); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter Economics (2-3-4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); (1-2-3-4). Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); 60 DOROTHY I. C L I F F O R Bachelor of Science 14 Edgewood Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y. Mamaroneck High School, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Athletic Association (2-3-4), Honorary Member (3-4); French Club (2); Golf Group (2); Hockey Group (2-3); • Somehow we remember Dot alone in the middle of the crowded but quiet gym, winning the Personal Performance contest in Freshman year. It takes poise and con- centration to do that, and these two qualities have been evidenced in all Dot ' s activities. With her abundance of energy and her supreme nonchalance, she will easily attain the good secretaryship which is her goal. Riding Group (2-3-4); Tennis Group (3-4). 61 VERONICA FRANCES COLEMAN • It is characteristic of ' ' Bunny ' ' that she disclaims any credit for the remarkable things she has accomplished; and her avoidance of the spotlight has won her an astonishing number of friends, who have recognized her talents. • There are not many people whom no one dislikes, but we believe it true of Bunny. ' ' To know her is to know the reason for it. Trinity College, Washington, D. C. (1-2); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (3-4); Biology Club (4); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Home Economics Club (3-4); Bachelor of Arts 112 Gifford Avenue, lersey City, N. J. Saint Aloysius Academy, Jersey City, N. J. Riding Group (3-4); Science Club (3-4), President (4); Tennis Group (3-4). 62 MARION JOSEPHINE CONNOR Bachelor o£ Arts 3127 Kingsbridge Terrace, Bronx, N. Y. • A rare combination of aloof sophistication and refreshing naivete, Marion is a con- genial colleague for anyone. An indulgent interest in the social sciences has brought her to the upper ranks of the class. With her guips and smiles, flavored by a unique gift of spicy and often evasive repartee, she gives a lot of competition to the all American Ursuline Academy, New York, N. Y. girl. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Der (4);S panish Club (2); Golf Group (4); Tennis Group Deutsche Verein (4); Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred (3 4). Heart League (2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club 63 MARGARET RILEY CRAP Bachelor of Arts 7 Trinity Street, Claremont, N. H. • The real Peggie cannot be characterized at a glance. Outwardly she is reserved; actually she is spirit itself with oceans of pep tucked in every corner. Her friendship is everlasting; her kindness, boundless; and her brilliance will carry her far towards the pinnacle of success. An understanding nature has endeared Peggie to the hearts of all of us. Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2- 3-4); Mission Club (2); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club Stevens High School, Claremont, N. H. (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); French Club (2-3-4); Hiking Group (1-2-3); Tatler (2-3); New Hampshire Under- graduate Chapter (4). 64 LILIAN CAROL CURRAN Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 38 Walnut Street, Holyoke, Mass. St. Jerome’s High School, Holyoke, Mass. Annales (4); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1- 2-3-4); Basketball Group (1); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group • Lil is the girl with the heart of gold. In play or in the class-room, she is the guin- tessence of conscientiousness; and it is this very salient characteristic that has made Lil ' s college career such a complete suc- cess. Her pleasing personality plus her ardent ability to do the job well form a union that attracts us to her strongly. (3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sodality Cross Group (4); Spanish Club (1); Hiking Group (1-2); Western Massa- chusetts Undergraduate Chapter, President (4). 65 KATHRYN MARIE DALY Bachelor of Arts 25 Shorthill Road, Forest Hills, N. Y. • Katie ' s special brand of attractiveness has been a part of her since we have known her. It has followed her in sports, in the pursuit of things mathematical, and in her wander- ings nearly to the ends of this much- travelled earth. • Her sense of fair play, level headedness, and way of keeping friends, cannot help but make her future real and living. St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, N. Y. Art Club (3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (2-3); Baseball Group (1), Baseball Team (1); Basketball Group (1-2-3), Basketball Team (2-3); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Long Distance Club (3); Golf Group (1-2-3-4), Head (3); Math Club (2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2); Ring Committee Chairman (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (1-2), Swim- ming Team (1-2); Tatler (1-2); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3- 4), President (4). 66 EDNA LOUISE DAVIS Bachelor of Science 657 49th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bishop McDonnell Memorial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Base- ball Group (3), Baseball Team (3), Manager (3); Hiking Group (1-2-3-4); Home Economics Club (1-2-3- 4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3- • A genial sociability and an ever-ready spirit has gained for Edna friends both on and off campus, and an engagement calendar that is seldom blank. Not in the least shy, Edna is frank, candid, and courageous in upholding her very definite convictions. Generous and even tempered, she is the first to offer sympathy and the last to hurt a friend. 4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (3-4); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 67 • If one could conceive of a social worker under a Dutch girl aspect, it would be Peggy a few years hence. Her zeal for sociology has not prevented her from giving ample time to extra-curricular affairs how- ever, for she has effected an enviable balance between the two. We of New Rochelle will always remember the guaint- ness of this miss from Connecticut. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology- Club (1); Long Distance Club (2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club MARGARET JEROME DELANEY Bachelor of Arts 133 Rockwell Street, Norwich, Conn. Norwich Free Academy, Norwich, Conn. (3-4), Treasurer (3), Corresponding Secretary (4); Tennis Group (3); Hartford Undergraduate Chapter (3-4). 68 GRACE ELIZABETH DIETZ Bachelor of Arts 109 Old Mamaroneck Road, White Plains, N. Y. Academy of Mt. St. Vincent, New York, N. Y. Skidmore (1); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Ann ales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3); Class Play (2-3); Daisy Chain (3); Long Distance Club (2-3); Mission Club • The perfect executive, combining ability, personality and perseverance is the ideal personified in Grace. Having won campus renown by outstanding work in collegiate dramatics, she has a poise and assurance of which any one would be proud. Interesting and vital opinions have made her the kind of person that we are happy to know and have for a friend. (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint, Publicity Manager (3), Secretary (4); Riding Group (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (2). 69 JANE R . DODGE Bachelor of Arts 180 Riverside Drive, New York, N. Y. • Eyes that have read as much as Jane ' s cannot help but reflect something broader, deeper, wiser than the average. She has completed three majors — in English, Science and Sociology, besides a minor in French. Jane has become known at college as the sort of person who doesn ' t make acguaint- ances — if you know her at all, you are her friend. New Rochelle Senior High, New Rochelle, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Swim- Tennis Group (3). ming Group (2), Swimming Team (2); Tatler (2-3-4); 70 ELVIRA DOWELL Bachelor of Arts 952 Ogden Avenue, New York, N. Y. • L is the nickname of this likeable, laughing lady known for her loyalty, loguacity, lucidity, lateness, liveliness, and all that is laudable. Lest we libel the lissom lass, we leap lithely aloft, and by lab orious lexiconning, wish her all luck, luxury and long life. Then, lapsing into a lather, we mispronounce her name and predict that George Washington High School, New York, N.Y. ' ' L ' ' -vira should surely Do-well. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality French Club (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (l-2 r 3-4); Tennis Group (1-2). 71 EILEEN D U G L I S S Bachelor of Arts 99 Clove Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Refreshing naturalness is characteristic of Eileen. Eileen and literary achievement are so synonymous that her work is a clue to her personality. Her Quarterly articles reveal a scholarly mind and depth of understand- ing balanced by an individual philosophy and a knack of clever expression. As editor of Tatler, her journalistic spirit has de- veloped a newspaper of which New Rochelle may be proud. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Basketball Group (4); Biology Club (1); Daisy Chain (3); Quarterly (2-3- New Rochelle High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. 4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (2-4); Swimming Team (2); Tatler (1-2-3-4), Editor (3-4); Tennis Group (2-3). 72 ELIZABETH DONOVAN D U N N I G A N Bachelor o£ Science (Sec.) 60 Orchard Street, Greenfield, Mass. • This remarkable young person of not very much over five feet tall has enough zip and determination inside of her to shame com- pletely the indecisions and uncertainties of her classmates. • Red is her favorite color, duck,” her pet way of addressing her friends, and a career in the business world her particular aim. It isn ' t necessary to wish success for her who has shown that she has all happiness. League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Western Massa- chusetts Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4); Treasurer (3); Vice-President (4). Greenfield High School, Greenfield, Mass. Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (2); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (4); French Club (2-3-4); Glee Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2- 3-4); Mission Club (2); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart 73 JOSEPHINE ROSAIRE DUTTO Bachelor o£ Arts 42 Pine Grove Avenue, Kingston, N. Y. • Being something of a genius in her own right, Jo is endowed with an unusually per- ceptive nature which has caused her to be keenly aware of the impressions created by an outside world. • There is something unspoiled in Jo, some- thing that we know and love, that, coupled with her artistic talent, will win recognition from a world grown weary of cynicism. Annales (4); Art Editor; Art Club (1-2-3-4), Treasurer (2), Vice-President (3), President (4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Glee Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2); Mission Club (2); Quarterly (3-4), Art Editor (3-4); Kingston High School, Kingston, N. Y. Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Mid-Hudson Undergraduate Chapter (2-3-4), Treasurer (2), Secre- tary (3), President (4). 74 JEANNETTE EDWARDS Bachelor of Arts 84 Monroe Street, Pelham Manor, N. Y. • Jeanette ' s reticent nature has kept many of us from becoming very intimate with her, and knowing her depths. But to all of us, her easy manner has been the delight of campus and classroom for three years. Beyond this imperturbable manner is a determination which none of us can deny. Trinity gave her to us and to Trinity we say Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Thank You! ' ' Trinity College (1); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Mission Club (3-4); Sodality (2-3-4). Club (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (2-3-4); Sociology 75 DOROTHY VIRGINIA ENSIGN Bachelor of Arts 246 Centre. Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Dorothy, in addition to being dignity per- sonified, has the happy faculty of applying herself energetically whenever she chooses, with the result that she is a remarkable honor student. Her concentration has not been limited to scholastic endeavors how- ever, for her numerous friends testify to her value as a companion. Eguipped thus, Dorothy can do much as an alumna of C. N. R. New Rochelle High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Class Honors (3); Spanish Club (2-3-4). 76 PRISCILLA MARGARET FENNER Bachelor of Arts 70 Howe Street, New Haven, Conn. • For four years Peggy has captivated us with her delectable sense of the comical. Bronxville High School, Bronxville, N. Y. Advisory Board (2-3-4), Recording Secretary (3), Vice-President (4); Athletic Association (1); Biology Club (1); Cheer Leader (1); Choir (2); Daisy Chain (3); French Club (2-3); Long Distance Club (3-4); Mission 77 She finds delight in whatever she under- takes. But besides this bantering side of her nature, there are ideals and tenets which won her the class-presidency for the last two years. It is knowing such people as you, Peg, that makes college worth while. We wish you luck! Day Chairman (1-2); Music Club (2); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (2-3-4); Sociology Club (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Councillor (1); Treasurer of Class (2); President of Class (3-4). MERCEDES FERRER • Merce has endeared herself to the hearts of New Rochelle. Her boundless devotion to her friends, her remarkable ability in having passed all her courses although using a foreign language, her deeply spiritual nature combined with a fun loving curiosity in life, have made for Mercedes a praiseworthy reputation that should follow her all the way to her native land. Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (4); Biology Club (1-2); Hiking Group (2-3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League Bachelor of Arts 3 Dr. Basora, Mayaguez, Puerto Rico. Academy of the Immaculate Conception Mayaguez, Puerto Rico. (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1-2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2-3-4). 78 GERTRUDE LORETTA FINNEGAN Bachelor of Arts 520 Van Cortland Park Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Charles E. Gorton High School, Yonkers, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Annales” (4); Biology Club (1-2); Class Honors (1-2-3); Class Play (2-3); Council of De- bate (1 -2-3-4), Chairman of Contest Committee (3), Vice-President (4); French Club (2): Intercollegiate • Resolved: that Gert be placed on 36 ' s list of outstanding members, for, • Gert is pretty, bright, a debater, even with Oxford, an actress, a business woman, and a ready companion in fun and social affairs. • In her list of activities is found the specific evidence. • After four years, we, the class, unanimous- ly award the decision to the affirmative. Debating Squad (2-3); Lecture Group (2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 79 MARY THERESA FITZSIMONS Bachelor of Arts 1360 Nelson Avenue, New York, N. Y. • Mary has a restrained exuberance but a laugh that it is impossible to curb. To think of Mary is to think of Alys, for their friend- ship has won the respect of all who have watched it grow. Mary ' s interest is in Tatler ' scholarship and current events. Her vivaciousness, too, radiates in social life; guick wit and pleasant repartee are foremost characteristics. Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (4); Current Events (3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3-4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Mission Club (1- 2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3- Evander Childs High School, New York, N. Y. 4); Sodality (1 -2-3-4); French Club (2-3); Tatler (2-3-4), Exchange Editor (4); Class Secretary (3); Greater New York Undergraduate Chapter. 80 MARY ELIZABETH FOLEY Bachelor of Arts 80 Atlantic Avenue, Fitchburg, Mass. • Our junior year brought us Mary, a girl of unusual versatility; her musical, literary, and dramatic talents being surpassed only by her unassuming knowledge in the class- room. Talent, an effervescent sense of humor, a fine appreciation of the beautiful, that ' s the picture of Mary. In this typical New Englander we perceive a relaxation from frivolity of purpose — her constant St. Bernard’s High School, Fitchburg, Mass. disposition proves itself sterling. College of Our Lady of the Elms (1-2); Alpha Alpha (4); Club (3); Long Distance Club (3); Mid-Year Play (3); Alpha Nu Omicron (4), Vice-President (4); Art Club Props and Paint (3-4); Riding Group (3); Scribblers (4); (4); Athletic Association (3-4); Class Play (3); Golf Sodality (3-4); Worcester Undergraduate Chapter (3-4). 81 JULIA M . FOODY Bachelor of Arts 35 Ridge Street, Port Chester, N. Y. • To think of Judy is to think of excitement, an even temper, and accomplishments all together. The child in Judy is generally loved, becomes involved in minor scrapes, is witty and has an infectious giggle. The lady in Judy gives lectures, debates, writes, edits and looks the part — tall, poised and pretty! It is this combination of personalities that makes Judy — our Judy. Port Chester High School, Port Chester, N. Y. Advisory Board (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales Lecture Group (3-4); Quarterly (4); Riding Group (4); (4); Athletic Association (2-4); Council of Debate (3-4), Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sodality Pen Group (3); Tatler Intercollegiate Debating Sguad (4); Current Events (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (4). (3-4); French Club (2-3-4); Junior Prom Committee (3); 82 ELEANOR GRACE F R A W L E Y Bachelor of Arts 1515 Macombs Road, New York, N. Y. • Eleanor ' s knack of wearing clothes is enviable, and while clothes may not make a lady, they are a composite of her. Indeed, she is so deft with them that one immediately recognizes that they are as much of her as are her amiability and grace. Her future success seems to be assured, for the com- Evander Childs High School, New York, N. Y. pany of one of her talent is always desired. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein Swimming Group (2-3), Swimming Team (2-3); (4); Mission Club (1-2-3 -4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2). Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); 83 Athletic Association (3); Biology Club (1); French Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (4) . Club (2-3); Hiking Group (3); Sociology Club (3-4); FLORENCE FRIEDMAN Bachelor of Arts 26 Post Road, Yonkers, N. Y. • Up from the rolling hills of Yonkers, petite, blue-eyed, Titian-haired Flo, faith- fully journeyed every morning to be on time for class. Her reserve and unobtrusive attitude guickly won her a place in our esteem. Her smile, genial and friendly, made profs forget about her tardiness. Her guiet and unassuming manner have made her collegiate career a success. Yonkers High School, Yonkers, N. Y, 84 MARY ELIZABETH GALVIN Bachelor of Arts 27 Waters Terrace, Lowville, N. Y. Lowville Academy, Lowville, N. Y. Biology Club (1); Class Play (2-3); Council of Debate (2-3-4), Vice-President (3); Intercollegiate Debating Sguad (2); Lecture Group (2-3); Glee Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props • Mary is truly a lady. Of gentle breeding, her poise and graciousness will never be found wanting in the most unexpected situation. Although her tastes lean to literature and the arts, she maintains an active interest in the work-a-day world about her. We admire Mary, and we like her; she has chosen for her seif a lovely design for living. and Paint (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4), Secretary and Treasurer (3), Vice- President (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Treasurer (4). 85 MARY ROSE GANNON Bachelor of Arts 30 Pershing Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • M-Merry, magnanimous, modest. A-Ami- able, active, artless. R-Refined, reticent, reliable. Y-Yielding, youthful. Thus, in her guiet way, has Mary, the loyal friend and willing comrade, left an indelible imprint on the happiest moments of our college years. Softly etched in our Books of Memory, under the picture of her with the lovely blue eyes, are those four letters MARY. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Ann ales” (4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Club (2); Current Events (3-4), Secretary (4); Hiking Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). Group (3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart 86 A D E L E M . G E I L S Bachelor of Arts 174 Locust Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Adele arrived in New Rochelle her junior year, and her never failing good sportsmanship has made her most welcome. Her keen appreciation of the sciences is noteworthy while her achievements as a social success are just as outstanding. Judging, then, from her record as a student, her determination and her pleasing per- New Rochelle High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. sonality, Adele is bound for good fortune. New College, Columbia University (1-2); Art Club (4); Heart League (3-4); Science Club (4); Sodality (3-4). Biology Club (3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Sacred 87 CATHERINE M. GILLEN • When endeavoring to discover a typical New Rochelle girl, one inevitably names our beloved Kay. Possessed with a decided literary talent, a lovely singing voice, a keen interest in participation in all kinds of sports, and a remarkable depth of character which manifests itself in those friendships which she so zealously upholds, Kay enhances every circle in which she moves. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4), Associate Literary Editor of Annales (4); Choir (2-3-4), President (4); Class Honors (2); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long Dis- tance Club (1-2-3-4); Quarterly (4), Editor-in-Chief (4); Bachelor o£ Arts P. O. Box 8, Brentwood, N. Y. Academy of St. Joseph, Brentwood, N. Y. Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1 -2-3-4), President (1); Tennis Group (1); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 88 LAURETTA THERESE G L E E S O N Bachelor of Arts 633 Monroe Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, N. Y. Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (2-3); Basketball Group (1-2); Basketball Team (1-2); Biology Club (1); Golf Group (1-2-3-4); Hockey Group (2); Long Distance • With a propensity for delving into the artistic, Lauretta has been successful in producing not a few brainchildren. Yet she has not allowed her aesthetic sense to warp her altogether delightful and humor- ous way of looking at life. We shall miss her, yet we rejoice in the fact that not too many years hence we may utter, ' We knew her when. Club (3); Mission Club (2); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming (1-2); Tatler (2-3); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter. 89 • Jeanne is the epitome of the well-known adage laugh and the world laughs with you. Her contagious chuckle and sunny disposition have ruined the pseudo-dignity of many a complacent acguaintance. We feel positive that this sense of lightness and happiness will help her overcome any un- pleasant thing which might obstruct the road to joy which she has chosen. Athletic Association (1-4); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); JEANNE L . GRIFFIN Bachelor of Arts 89 Hanover Street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. St. Ann’s Academy, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); North Eastern Pennsylvania Undergraduate Chapter. 90 MARIE L . HARVEY Bachelor of Arts 3412 Giles Place, Bronx, N. Ursuline Academy, New York, N. Y. • Marie presents a true picture of modern youth — intensely active, and vibrantly in- terested in what life has to offer. Marie has her serious moments too, for she can be independent in her ideas and decidedly ambitious in her undertakings. One may be totally unaware of her presence; but once she is discovered, her spontaneous laughter and vitality add much to any activity. Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (2-3-4); Tennis Group (3-4). (1); Riding Group (2-3-4); Science Club (4); Sodality 91 ADEL CAROLYN H A U S T E I N Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 447 East 164th Street, Bronx, N. Y. • Although representing, as she does, the epitome of fashion, Adel ' s ability to ac- complish things in the scholastic field is just as noteworthy. She has made staunch friends who admire her for her amiable disposition and determined mind. Adel will be valued for these gualities in the world: for sophistication and correctness, as sin- cerity and intelligence, are always priceless assets. Walton High School, Bronx, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (1-2); Athletic Association Spanish Club (1-2-3-4); New York Undergraduate (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Riding Group (2-3); Chapter. 92 M A D E L I N E S . H E D E N BERG Bachelor of Arts 219 Cook Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. • A music and French student is Madeline, and withal, she finds plenty of time to tease and laugh and be a jolly good companion. She has a rare love of fun, which never ex- ceeds bounds. If time and place demand it, Madeline can be serious. We know that she will bring good cheer and happiness to Roosevelt High School, Yonkers, N. Y. everyone on her way through life. Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology Club (1-2); Der Orchestra (3); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter Deutsche Verein (3-4); French Club (3-4); Glee Club (1-2-3-4). (1-3-4); Hiking Group (3); Music Club (1-2-3-4); 93 FLORENCE A. H E I B E R Bachelor of Arts 34 Grosvenor Road, Rochester, N. Y. • Florence is another slow, easy-going type of individual. She has never, during the entire four years she has spent at New Rochelle, been seen to hurry. Yet, her mind is ever on the alert. Her scholastic record will well prove the scope of her intellectual ability. It is with fond memories that we say au revoir to her. Athletic Association (4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart Lea gue Nazareth Academy, Rochester, N. Y. (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Rochester Undergraduate Chapter, Vice-President (4). 94 CATHERINE CECILIA HILLY Bachelor of Arts 601 West 110th Street, New York, N. Y. • Kay carries her sophistication like an umbrella — for use as defense or shield, but very often forgotten somewhere. She is a member of that species rara avis ' a Latin major. But for a reason: she wants to be a lawyer. Frank and smiling, Kay has roamed through college as unamazed as the Statue St. Lawrence Academy, New York, N. Y. of Liberty and almost as well-known. Council of Debate (1); Lecture Group (2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). 95 DOROTHY HOGAN Bachelor o£ Science (Sec.) 647 South 6th Avenue, Mount Vernon, N. Y. • Dot lives in an aura of activity. She is always expending energy without losing an atom of it. The stage has been her chief interest, both as a playgoer and as Props and Paint member. Photography of unusual angles and sports of any kind are her hobbies, an executive secretarial position her ambition, and a good time her greatest love. Mount Vernon High School, MountVernon, N.Y. Annales” (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Glee Club (1); Hiking Group (2-3); Tennis Group Club (1); Junior Class Play (3); Props and Paint (1-2-3- (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2). 4); Sacred Heart League (2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); 96 MARGARET M. H O R G A N Bachelor of Arts 571 76th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. • Slender and dark-haired is this lovely lass from Brooklyn. All history holds fascination for Marg, and her knowledge of it is deep. But her study of past ages does not over- shadow her intense modern femininity — in dress, in speech, in thought, she is vibrantly up-to-date. Marg ' s influence on those about St. Saviour Academy, Brooklyn, N. Y. her will be that of a dignified, fine woman. Athletic Association (1-4); Biology Club (1); Class Play 4); Science Club (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long Distance Club (1); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter. (3-4); Riding Group (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3- 97 • Take a good amount of common sense and dependability; mix well with a high grade of friendship and the sure sense that she will never go back on you. Add a strong dash of the romantic and a drop of idealism of the best brand to give the zest and joy to living. Top with a sophisticated nonchalance, and you have Kay. Art Club (1-2-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Base- ball Group (2-3), Baseball Team (2-3); Biology Club (1); Council of Debate (3-4); Current Events (3-4), Secretary-Treasurer (3), Vice-President (4); Hiking Group (1-2-3-4); Home Economics (1-2-3-4); Long K A T H R Y N C K E A R N E Y Bachelor of Science 14 Broadman Parkway, Jersey City, N. J. St. Aloysius Academy, Jersey City, N. J. Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1-2 -3-4); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 98 ELIZABETH KELLY Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 8 McDonald Avenue, Binghamton, N. Y. Binghamton Central High School, Binghamton, N. Y. Annales (4), Stenographic Editor (4); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2 -3-4), Honorary Member (4); Biology Club (1); Hiking Group (1); Junior Prom Com- mittee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2- • Should Betty ' s name be mentioned a few years hence, immediately our mind ' s eye will travel back along an avenue of spring riding exhibits, and daring leaps over the hurdles. Then, . something just as pertinent, but less tangible, perhaps, we will remember the piquancy and charm one never failed to note on meeting her. Good luck, and good riding to you, Betty! 3-4); Riding Group (3-4), Chairman of Horse Show (3), Head (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4), Promoter (1-2-3-4), Secretary (2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3); Tennis Group (1). 99 ROSEMARY KENEDY Bachelor of Arts 25 Maple Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • She would give you her last — except that we never found Rosemary without a little more to give away, whether of time or energy. Best of all, it is with cheerfulness that attempts distraction of esteem; impul- siveness, accompanied by an extraordinary thoroughness — witness her hobbies. Success will be simple with these. In proportion as one gives . . . and Rosemary gives much. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (1-2-3-4); Baseball Group (1-2-3-4), Team (1-2-3-4); Basketball Group (4), Team (4); College Letter (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Hiking Group (1-2-3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Junior Class Day Chairman; Long Distance Club (3); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Convent of the Sacred Heart, Noroton-on-the-Sound, Conn. Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (1-2-3-4), Team (1-2-3), Team Manager (2), Team Captain (3); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 100 MARGARET ROSE KENNEDY Bachelor of Arts 156 77th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Academy of St. Francis Xavier, Brooklyn, N. Y. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1-2-3); Choir (3-4); Glee Club (1-2-3-4); Golf Group (2-3-4); Hiking Group (2-3); Junior Prom Com- mittee (3); Little Flower Society (4), President (4); Long Distance Club (2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); • Ever with a happy smile upon her lips, ever ready to find the funny side, Marge ' s gay presence is welcomed wherever she goes. Her acguaintances may only perceive her ready wit, but her friends recognize her intrinsic fidelity. A girl who continually endeavors to make life more pleasant de- serves all the praise and recognition that New Rochelle can offer her. Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2 -3 -4); Sociology Club (3-4), Recording Secretary (4); Spanish Club (1-2-3); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter. 1Q1 • Possessing a poetic soul, Dorothy has a visionary outlook on life. Always natural, Dorra, nevertheless, by her very gentleness reflects an occupied mind. Her poetry, clever and fine, leaves an impression of beauty and thought. In addition to being able to write inspiring verse, Dorothy is a good sport, and an interesting companion. Having these gualities how can she help but suc- ceed? Athletic Association (3); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3-4), Vice-President (4); Mission Club (2-3); DOROTHY ANNE KENNY Bachelor o£ Arts 2063 Turnbull Avenue, New York, N. Y. Academy of Mt. St. Ursula, New York, N. Y. Riding Group (3); Sacred Heart League (2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Quarterly Associates (4). 102 MARGARET W. KENNY Bachelor of Science 139 S. West Street, Geneva, N. Y. • Peg came to New Rochelle a whole year late and though we wish that she might have been with us for the entire college career, we must admit the old adage better late than never. Generous and loyal, she proved herself truly genuine. Peg ' s favorite pastime was German. Her work in this field leaves us but one thing to say: Auf Wieder- De Sales High School, Geneva, N. Y. sehen, Peg. Mercyhurst College, Erie, Pa. (1); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Science Club (4); Sodality (2-3-4); Rochester (2-3-4); Home Economics (3-4); Long Distance Club Undergraduate Chapter (2-3-4), Vice-President (3), (2-3-4); Mission Club (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League President (4) . 103 MARIAN KERIN • Take a cheery smile, a clear-voiced greet- ing, an energetic, purposeful walk — mix well and stir — and you have Marian! She manages to cram a great deal of ability and activity into her small self. As she has made her way into the hearts of her classmates, so will she do with others — with that winning smile, and the personality underneath it. Athletic Association (1-2); Baseball Group (1); Base- ball Team (1); Biology Club (2-3); Home Economics (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League Bachelor of Science Sherbrooke Park, Scarsdale, N. Y. Mount Saint Mary-on-the-Hudson, Newburgh, N. Y. (1-2-3-4); Sociology (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 104 E . T H E O R A K N O O P Bachelor of Arts 162 Mohawk Street, Cohoes, N. Academy of the Holy Names, Albany, N. Y. Advisory Board (4); Art Club (1-2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Golf Group (1-2-3); Hiking Group (1); Long Distance Club (1-2-3); Math Club (2-3-4); • Theora can work or play with an equal amount of ease and grace. Whether at home or in her room at Maura, one can always find a hearty welcome from Theora. As a math student she excels; as a golfer she is the sportswoman; as the leader of Sodality she has won victory after victory with ingenuity. She is the cultured American girl. Mission Club (1); Riding Group (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4), President (4); Tennis Group (1-2); Capital District Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 105 RUTH MARGARET KOHL • Of Ruth, the words a perfect lady are an adequate though brief description. In the daily turmoil of our life at college, Ruth brought a soothing voice and a calm phi- losophy. In our moments of exultation, she, too, was tremendously excited. Dependable, industrious, and alert, she was always will- ing to listen to us, work with us, and play with us ever graciously. Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (2); Biology Club (3); Home Economics (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Bachelor of Science 175 Lyncroft Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Club (3-4), Secretary (3) , Treasurer (4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1 -2-3-4). 106 DOROTHEA L. K O P I N S Bachelor o£ Science (Sec.) 23 Hillside Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. Ursuline Academy, New Rochelle, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-2-4); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (1-3); French Club (1); Golf Group (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (4); Sacred • To the rest of the students, Dorothea is another Ursuline girl. To the class of ' 36, she is an integral part of school life — ever willing and ready to cooperate: but, to her friends, she is the embodiment of two rare attributes — loyalty and sincerity. Her friend- ship is imbued with these two qualities, making of it a lovely living thing. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-3-4); Westchester Under- graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 107 MARY FRANCES KRUSSMAN Bachelor of Arts 97 Rose Hill Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. • When in quest of a charming girl in the truest sense of the word, one naturally calls to mind Mary Frances as the student who epitomizes in her every action this elusive type of individual. With her artistic nature, her delightful voice and her innate friendli- ness, Mimi makes an indelible impression on those fortunate ones who are her friends. Art Club (1-2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. (1-2-3-4), Promoter (1 -2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2); Westchester Under- graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4).. 108 A N N E T T E L A N G L O I S Bachelor of Arts 21 Bank Street, Lebanon, N. H. St. Ann’s Academy, Marlboro, Mass. • The coming of Nettie was the coming of an appealing personality. An active energetic worker, she has been affiliated with many of the business activities of Tatler. Her ready wit and boundless energy never fail to enliven her immediate environment. We have but one regret: that we were unable to enjoy the pleasure of her company for four years. University of New Hampshire (1); ' ' Annales ' ' (4), Ad- vertising Manager (4); Art Club (2); Athletic Associa- tion (2-4); Class Play (2-3); French Club (3-4); Golf Group (2); Long Distance Club (2-3-4); Mid-Year Play (2-3); Mission Club (2-3-4); Props and Paint (2-3); Riding Group (2-4); Sacred Heart League (2-3-4); Sodality (2-3-4); Tatler (2-3-4); Tennis Group (2); New Hampshire Undergraduate Chapter President (4). 109 • A person full of vivaciousness and song, who has won renown on campus by her excellent tap dancing, and who possesses a fine singing voice that has freguently been heard in delightful harmony, is Kathie. A friendly manner, an attentive interest in all events happening on campus, have carved for Kathie her own particular niche in the hearts of her college mates. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Basketball Group (3); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (2); Golf Group (4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3- 4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3); Science Club (1); KATHLEEN MARIE L A R E S S Y Bachelor of Arts 22 Crampton Avenue, Great Neck, N. Y. Great Neck High School, Great Neck, N. Y. Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club (3-4), Secretary (4); Spanish Club (1-2); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn- Long Island Undergraduate Chapter. 110 ELIZABETH MARGARET L A WLOR Bachelor of Arts 13 Helen Street, Johnson City, N. Y. St. Patrick Academy, Binghamton, N. Y. University of Grenoble, Grenoble, France (3); Sor- bonne University, Paris, France (3); Athletic Associa- tion (1-2); French Club (1-2-4); Hiking Group (1-2); • Possessing a delightful air of aloofness, this redheaded daughter of Erin belies the fiery temperament of her race. After an exciting year in France, living a new mode of life, she returned with the savoir-faire of that nation, a thorough understanding of their mode of living, and a complete com- mand of their language. As the French put it, she is chic. Long Distance Club (1-2-4); Mission Club (1-2-4); Reapers (1-2-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-4), Pro- moter (2-4); Sodality (1-2-4). Ill EVELYN M . LEAHY Bachelor of Arts 161 79th Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. • An outstanding sportswoman with basket- ball as her particular forte, Evelyn maintains a prominent position in the class. Combined with her ability in sports, are her avid interest in science, on behalf of which she has labored so many hours; and her helpful- ness in any matter brought to her attention. With these characteristics, success should Bishop McDonnell Memorial High School, certainly come to her. Brooklyn, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (1-2- 3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League 3-4); Baseball Group (1), Team (1); Basketball Group (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1-2-3-4), President (3); (1-2-3), Team (1-2-3), Varsity (3), Manager (3); Der Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group Deutsche Verein (3); Hiking Group (1); Hockey Group (1-2); Team (1-2); Tennis Group (1-2); Brooklyn-Long (1-2); Long Distance Club (1-2-3); Mission Club (1-2- Island Undergraduate Chapter (4). 112 FRANCES L E A M Y Bachelor of Arts 16 Grand Street, Oneonta, N. Y. Oneonta High School, Oneonta, N. Y. Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Honorary Member (1-2-4); Base- ball Group (1-3-4), Baseball Team (1-3-4); Basketball Group (1-2-3-4), Basketball Team (1-2-3-4), Captain (1-2), Manager (3), Varsity (3-4); Biology Club (1); Hockey Group (1); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long • Nonchalantly riding along on the crest of an ever-increasing popularity wave that had its beginning ' way back in Freshman year, Frannie, in the business of making friends, in her scholastic endeavors, and in her extremely successful seasons with the bas- ketball varsity, has won the acclaim and sincere approval of every one of her ad- miring classmates. We like Frannie! Distance Club (1-2-3); Quarterly (3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (1), Swimming Team (1); Tatler (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (2); Albany Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4); Class Treasurer (3); Chairman Sophomore Tea Dance (2). 113 ANNE ALICE LENNON Bachelor of Arts 3130 Bainbridge Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. • Anne is equally at home in the face of both work and laughter. For besides dis- playing skill on the basketball court, she is past master in the fine art of punning. We of ' 36 know that, lacking the twinkle of Anne ' s blue eyes, and the tread of her hurrying feet, the halls of N. R. C. would never hold quite such happy memories. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Honorary Member (2); Baseball Group (1), Team (1); Basketball Group (1-2-3), Basketball Team (4); Biology Club (1); Cheer Leader (2); Choir (3-4); Council of Debate (4); Glee Club (2-3-4), Treasurer (3), President (4); Der Deutsche Academy of St. Joseph, Brentwood, N. Y. Verein (1-2-4); Hiking Group (1); Hockey Group (1); Lecture Group (4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4), Committee (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4). 114 L U C E Y H . LEONARD Bachelor o£ Arts 1659 Lenox Road, Schenectady, N. Y. • An actress whose characterizations will Nott Terrace High School, Schenectady, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-2-3); Class Play (2-3); Council of Debate (2-3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (2); Lecture Group (2-3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mid-Year Play (2-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint long remain in memory; a true friend, an intrepid worker at any task — all these make a composite of Lucey. When, having added to this an unfailing good humor, and a nature that refuses to be ruffled in the slightest, one can easily discover how Lucey has followed the even tenor of her college days. (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); French Club (4); Golf Group (2-3); Capitol District Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 115 CATHERINE VERONICA LEONNARD • The prototype of the true lady, Catherine exemplifies intelligence, and graciousness. She has lived all these gualities and those of us who have been fortunate enough to know her, feel that we have met a wonderful character. Keep these attributes always, Catherine, for by them you will be respected everywhere, while yours will be the life of a truly great person. French Club (2); Math Club (3-4); Mission Club (1-2- 3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Bachelor of Arts 42-18 76th Street, Elmhurst, L. I., N. Y. Newtown High School, Elmhurst, N. Y. Sodality (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Under- graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 116 ANNE LYNN Bachelor of Arts 241 Sixth Avenue, Newark, N. J. Barringer High School, Newark, N. J. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4), Associate Literary Editor (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Choir (3-4); Class Play (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Glee Club (1-2); Golf Group (1); Hockey • At times quiet and unassuming, and again overflowing with wit and good humor is this extraordinary young woman from New Jersey. Anne knows what she wants and gets it in a quiet way that makes success seem a mere matter of routine. Her sincere manner has acquired for her a host of friends. We have little hope of finding another such as Anne. Group (1); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (2-3); New Jersey Under- graduate Chapter. 117 M. DOROTHY M A H A N E Y Bachelor of Arts 3 Carleor Avenue, Larchmont, N. Y. • The singularly carefree Dot possesses an astounding fund of information. Her talent is such that she can transform bare facts into exciting fancies. Wit mingles itself sur- prisingly and delightfully with Dot ' s sayings. Her refreshing vitality cloaked by placid ways makes Dot stand out from the crowd. Assuredly and with perfect calm will Dot fill her own special niche in life. Mamaroneck High School, Mamaroneck, N. Y. Sodality (1-2-3-4). 118 CONSTANCE M A R K E Y Bachelor of Arts 98 First Street, Pelham, N. Y. • Swimming and basketball have been Connie ' s fortes and in these she has per- formed nobly. We recognize her as a truly capable manager, and an impartial captain. But far more than these, we have known her as Connie, a real and ideal friend. The last, but far from the least of the famous Markeys, Pelham Memorial High School, New York, N.Y. we wish yOU luck! Art Club (2); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (3-4); Basketball Group (1-2-3-4), Head (3-4), Manager (2), Captain (3); Biology Club (1); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (2-3); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Group (1-2-3-4), Swim- ming Team (1-2-3); Tennis Group (4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 119 MILDRED L . MATHEWS Bachelor of Arts 54 Ridge Street, Tuckahoe, N. Y. • Tall, slender, graceful — with a flair for conversation — that is Millie. Animation might almost be her middle name, for her face is never still — ever swiftly changing with the current of her thoughts. It naturally follows that she is an interesting and much sought after companion. That she keep always her frank friendliness is ' 36 ' s wish for Mildred. Eastchester High School, Tuckahoe, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-4); Biology Club (1); Long Dis- League (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Under- tance Club (3-4); Riding Group (1); Sacred Heart graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 120 RITA CLARE McAULIFFE Bachelor of Science (Home Econ.) 95 Highland Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. • Rita is the tiny girl with the large capacity for friendliness and the most contagious laughter. She is imbued with all the social graces and is equally at home presiding at a tea table or efficiently handling the rush of work which goes with managing the Mission Day tea-room. Her ' s is the gift of being Academy of St. Aloysius, Jersey City, N. J. pleasant without effort. Art Club (2-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Directors (3), President (4); Sacred Heart League Club (1-3); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Golf Group (2); (1-2-3-4); Science Club (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). Home Economics Club (1-2-3-4), Member of Board of 121 HELEN LOUISE MCDONOUGH Bachelor of Arts 185 Millville Avenue, Naugatuck, Conn. • It is with regret that we bid adieu to Mac. For four years she has excelled in all branches of scholastic, and social endeavor. Her character epitomizes all that is sought in a New Rochelle graduate. An understanding college president, and a good friend leaves with our best wishes, a woman we ' ll be proud to greet as a friend. Advisory Board (2-3-4), President (4); Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (4); Basketball Group (2-3); Biology Club (1); Class Play (2-3); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2); Golf Group (2-3-4); Intercollegiate Debating Sguad (2-3); Junior Prom Committee (3); Lecture Group (2-3); Long Distance Naugatuck High School, Naugatuck, Conn. Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (1-2-3-4); Quarterly (3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1-2); Scribblers (2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1); Tennis Group (1-2); Waterbury Undergraduate Chapter (1-2- 3-4); Class Treasurer (1); Chairman Class Day (1); Class President (2); College President (4). 122 VIRGINIA M . MCDONOUGH Bachelor of Arts 16 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, N. Y. St. Angela Hall, Brooklyn, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-3-4); Biology Club (1-4); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Riding Group (1-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis • Virginia ' s disposition is as glistening as her attractive appearance. With a cameo beauty she walks in loveliness, always wending her way guietly into the hearts of friends. It is there that she leaves an ever- lasting and firm imprint of her calmly fascinating charm. In this, her own inimita- ble manner, Virginia will choose the lovely path which will indubitably lead her to success. Group (1); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2 -3-4). 123 MARGUERITE C. M C G R A I L • Her very vital personality has stood Marguerite in good stead in the four years that she has been with us at New Rochelle. • Consistent in her friendships, frank, and possessed of other qualities that enable her to laugh or to remain serious with equal intensity, Marguerite has carved for herself a very definite niche in the history of the class of ' 36. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2-4); Biology Club (1-2-3); Current Events (4); Hiking Group (1-2-3- 4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (2-3); Riding Group (2-3); Bachelor of Arts 685 East Street, New Britain, Conn. New Britain Senior High School, New Britain, Conn. Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4), Promoter (2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (3-4); Hartford Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 124 RITA M . MCGRATH Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 320 President Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bishop McDonnell Memorial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. ' ' Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart • In Rita ' s company conversation, sooner or later, will inevitably lead to her favorite sport, horseback-riding, for she is a real equestrian enthusiast. Add to this pleasant disposition a bit of pleasantry, and a stead- fast loyalty, forming an excellent portrait of Rita. New Rochelle is proud to have had within her portals the type of girl for which Rita stands. League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 125 GERTRUDE AGNES MCGUIRE Bachelor of Arts 117 Lockwood Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Gertrude has set up a goal, the attainment of which is her whole ambition. All her undertakings are greatly influenced by this philosophy of life. Hers is a poetic soul and her intense and serious maxims find an out- let in beautiful poetry. With a personality compounded of the really fine things, imagination, and determination, Gertrude ' s life should be dynamically interesting. St. Gabriel High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Annales” (4); Athletic Association Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), (1-2-3-4); Class Honors (1); Der Deutsche Yerein (3-4); Councillor (4). French Club (2-3-4), Secretary (4); Math Club (2); 126 MARY COLETTA MCGUIRE Bachelor of Arts, 651 Broad Street, Elyria, Ohio Elyria High School, Elyria, Ohio Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Basketball Group (1-3- 4); Biology Club (1); Class Play (1-2-3); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4), Secretary-Treasurer (3), President (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4), President (4); Props and Paint (1-2 3-4), Assistant Business Manager (2), Treasurer • A recognized leader, Mary has gained for herself as fine a reputation as anyone could desire. With diversified interests ranging from sociology to the drama, marked capability, and steadfast friendliness Mary immediately takes her place as one of New Rochelle ' s noted daughters and one who should attain for herself as admirable a place in the world as she has achieved here. (3), Vice-President (4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3); Science Club (1-2); Scribblers (2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club (3-4), President (4); Cleveland Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 127 IRENE MCHUGH Bachelor of Arts Westchester Country Club, Rye, N. Y. • Intent upon striving for the best that life can offer, Irene has industriously applied herself to her many ambitions. By confidence in her ability, and the fervency of her endeavors, she has succeeded in all she would attain. Irene will be remembered always for her delightful column in Tatler, her scholarly works in Quarterly, and her zeal in Catholic Action. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4); Athletic Association (3-4); Choir (4); Class Honors (1); Council of Debate (1-3-4); Current Events (3); Lecture Group (3-4); Long Distance Club (4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Music Club (1); Orchestra (1); Quarter- Rye High School, Rye, N. Y. ly (3-4); Riding Group (3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2 -3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3-4), Exchange Editor (3), Sodality Editor (4); Glee Club (3-4); Repre- sentative Intercollegiate Literary Conference (3-4). 128 MARIE M . MCLAUGHLIN Bachelor of Arts 2613 Grand Avenue, New York, N. Y. • Marie is about five feet two of happiness, topped by curls as sunny as her disposition. Prominent among ex-day hops, she was often seen driving weary boarders to the gym. For this, and for her aid to stranded day-students we give her our heartiest thanks. We shall always remember Marie ' s generous spirit, and that happy faculty of Ursuline Academy, New York, N. Y. brightening up dark days. Art Club (1-2-3-4); Athletic Association (1); Biology Club (1); Sacred Heart League (1). 129 KATHERINE MARY MCLOUGHLIN Bachelor of Arts 54 Liberty Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Effervescent, gay, and petite, Kay danced her way through four years. Her sprightly steps often change tempo, becoming stately measures. Then, laughing eyes are serious, and, an efficient and a capable manager, Kay again leads us in a successful class endeavor. May life play a steady crescendo of love and happiness, pianissimo in time of sorrow, and fortissimo in her happy hours. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3); Biology Club (1); Cheer Leader (1-2); Current Events (4); Der Deut- sche Verein (1); Hiking Group (1-2); Riding Group Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3- 4); Tennis Group (1-2); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4); Secretary of Class (2). 130 MAUREEN F. MCMANUS Bachelor of Arts 112 East 90th Street, New York, N. Ursuline Academy, New York, N. Y. • Maureen ' s soft voice has charmed us all. To only a few is it given to know the real Maureen — a dependable and serene per- son. Yet, in her own dignified way, she has left her glowing mark upon our college days. We take leave of Maureen with regret, knowing that we shall never again meet one whose calmjpoise will egual hers. Art Club (1-4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Greater Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Mission Club (1-2- New York Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (2-3-4); Sacred 131 HELEN R . M C N A B B Bachelor of Arts 291 East 201st Street, New York, N. Y. • By some kind act of Providence, there never seems to come of age a class without a musician. And Helen is ours. With her kindly graciousness she fits into the memory pictures of the class of ' 36, on many oc- casions. At all the concerts, at student recitals, in the orchestra, in all musical activities she was the outstanding figure. Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Class Honors (1); French Club (2); Glee Club (1-2-3-4), Vice-President (4); Music Club (1-2-3-4), Secretary- Academy of Mt. St. Ursula, New York, N. Y. Treasurer (3); Orchestra (1-2-3); Riding Group (3); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1 -2-3-4), President of Day-Student Sodality (2). 132 CLARE PATRICIA MCNAMARA Bachelor of Arts 41-14 Elbertson Street, Elmhurst, N. Y. Academy of St. Joseph, Brentwood, N. Y. Athletic Association (2); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); Glee Club (2-3-4), Secretary (3); Long Distance Club (2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Music • Need any help? is Clare ' s constant query. Her unselfishness has taught us to love her. As a consoler she is much in demand. Paradoxically enough, Clare ' s sense of mischief is well-developed. She needs no prompting when a prank is planned. Merry and tender-hearted Clare, may she always be appreciated and cher- ished by others as she is by her classmates. Club (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4), President (4); Science Club (1); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Councillor (1-2- 3-4); Tennis Group (2). 133 FLORENCE MARIE M E D O N • Flo is an actress of no mean standing and her portrayal of Mercutio will long be remembered by those who witnessed it. Full of eagerness and energy, she seems able to carry any situation. Her appealing laugh and sparkling good humor has been one of the greatest joys of college. She will come out ahead in the world. So long, Flo! Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honor- ary Member (1-3); Baseball Group (2-4), Baseball Team (2-4); Basketball Group (1-2-3-4), Basketball Team (1-2-3-4), Basketball Varsity (2); Class Play (2-3); Bachelor of Arts 133 Morningside Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. Charles E. Gorton High School, Yonkers, N. Y. Junior Prom Committee (3); Mid-Year Play (1-3-4); Props and Paint (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3- 4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2-3-4), Secretary (4). 134 THERESA RITA MILLER Bachelor o£ Arts 355 East 163rd Street, New York, N. Y. • There is more to be remembered about this name than just the lovely face that accompanies it. Terry golfs; she won a silver cup for a championship in 1934. Terry paints; she majored successfully in art. Terry smiles, and her smile is etched on your memory. Terry will travel all the world, sometimes golfing, sometimes painting, and Walton High School, New York, N. Y. always being remembered. Art Club (1-2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Group (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality Biology Club (1-2); Junior Prom Committee (3); Riding (1-2-3-4). 13.5 FLORENCE L. MORRISSEY • It is Flossie ' s ever-present good nature which fashions her the good fellow that she is . . . candid and unbiased opinions can at all times be counted upon for their true value. Her blondest and curliest of hair and her sparkling blue eyes do not prepare one for the shyness that is Flossie ' s; yet this very shyness is what makes her so utterly lovable. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Hiking Group (1-2); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2 -3- 4); Mission Club (2); Bachelor o£ Arts 43 Third Street, Haverstraw, N. Y. Haverstraw High School, Haverstraw, N. Y. Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1); Hudson Valley Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 136 HELEN TERESE MORTON Bachelor of Arts Fillow Street, Norwalk, Conn. • Helen is to be found with her dark head bent over a book, or excitedly bobbing up and down in conversation with a friend . Gentle and helpful in disposition, Helen has made friends without any effort. It is never too much trouble for her to be cheery and courteous. New Rochelle is losing in Helen a dependable and a loyal student. Sacred Heart League (2); Science Club (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). Norwalk Senior High School, Norwalk, Conn. Athletic Association (4); Biology Club (4); Current Events (4); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Riding Group (4); 137 . ALICE BOLTON MUNDORFF • A girl always busy, principally with lecture group and sodality, but who never- theless manages to find time to give you her undivided attention is Alice. With multi- tudinous duties, she enjoys life to the utmost and has an aptitude for detecting humor in even the most mediocre trifle. A worth-while place in the world, with abundant happi- ness, is inevitably her lot. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3); Biology Club (1); Council of Debate (2-3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1); Glee Club (2); Lecture Group (2-3-4), Chairman (3-4); Long Bachelor of Arts 216-16 Hollis Avenue, Queens Village, L. I., N. Y. Academy of St. Joseph, Brentwood, L. I. Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (4); Sociology Club (4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Councillor (3), President (4). 138 ANNA CATHERINE MURRAY Bachelor of Arts 5 Circle Hill Road, Pelham Manor, N. Y. William Penn Senior High School, York, Pa. College of Notre Dame of Maryland (1); Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); French Club (3-4); Golf Group (3); Sacred • Young felines have a lovable charm; older ones are distinguished for beauty and wisdom. Kitty is in-between enough to possess the charm her name implies and to give evidence, in philosophy class especial- ly, of a sageness beyond her years. She has not been at New Rochelle her full four years, but while here she has gone about guietly making innumerable friends. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (3-4). 139 ANNETTE BETTY NATHAN Bachelor of Arts 5 Circuit Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Her scholarly manner intrigued us after we had recovered from reverent awe at her French, her main concern. Her linguistic ability lightened Herr Doktor ' s classes, as well. When a person is so immersed in a people and a civilization as to hold them as a vocation and hobby surely that one can interpret an alien tongue and culture accurately. James Madison High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3); French Club (2-3-4); Science Club (2). 140 ' Y T . ‘ T O N Bachelor of Arts M A N O 44 Gautier Avenue, Jersey City, N. Academy of St. Aloysius, Jersey City, N. J. Alpha Alpha (4); Annales, Art Staff (4); Art Club (1-2-3-4), Secretary (2-3), Vice-President (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (3-4), Vice- President (3), Treasurer (4); Baseball Group (1-2-3-4), Baseball Team (1-2-3-4), Captain (2-3); Basketball Group (3-4), Basketball Team (3-4), Sub-Varsity (3); 141 ■ • The artist in Mary ever seeks the beautiful and, doing so, she does her bit to bring about beauty. Characteristic of Mary is her abundant energy; her wide-spread interests; and ready wit, keen but never barbed. She is the joy of chairmen; and the wealth of posters and dance tunes contributed, testify to her unselfishness with her talents. Biology Club (1); Choir (2-3-4); Current Events (3-4); Hiking Grcup (1-2-3-4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Grcup (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-4); Sodality (1-2- 3-4); Tatler (2-3), Art Editor (3); Tennis Group (1-2- 3-4); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). • Her heart is as gay as the songs she sings; and her smile as sweet as the voice which has delighted us. Elsie herself seems always in harmony with life about her; her calm way and cheery cordiality makes others feel more in tune. Skilled musician, ex- cellent tennis player, staunch supporter of New Rochelle — we wish Elsie the happiness so deserved. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Baseball Group (3), Baseball Team (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3-4); Doctors Daughters (1-2-3-4); Glee Club (2-3-4); Music ELSIE G . O B E R L E Bachelor of Arts 1786 Bathgate Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Club (1-2-3-4); Orchestra (3); Spanish Club (3-4) President (4); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4). 142 ELIZABETH MARY OTIS Bachelor of Arts 11 West 5th Street, Oswego, N. Y. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4), Treasurer (4); Annales (4), Business Manager (4); Athletic Associa- tion (1-2-3); Class Honors (1-2-3); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4); Current Events (3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (2); Hiking Group (3); Lecture Group (2); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2- • Everyone knows Liz Mary ' s smile and friendly greeting; her friends best realize the sincerity from which they rise. She has worked with the best; she has created the best. In her accomplishments she has led her companions. Efficiency is her chief characteristic and with it is combined an indefinable something which has made her a figure of conseguence on campus. 3-4), Promoter (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2- 3-4); Tatler (1-2-3), Editor of Sophomore Issue (2), Managing Editor (3); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2), Northern New York Undergraduate Chapter (3-4). 143 • Often we wondered in admiration at those absolutely correct answers to which Muriel gave utterance in the really scholastic manner. With all her intellectual value, Muriel is the soul of hospitality and the embodiment of true friendship. When college is but a memory, the cordial welcome and happy moments sure to be found at Muriel ' s will long be remembered. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Art Club (3); Athletic Association (3-4); Biology Club (2-3-4); Class Honors (1-3); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Hiking Group (3); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Quarterly (4); Sacred MURIEL M . PAIGE Bachelor of Arts 94 Pintard Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. St. Aloysius Academy, Jersey City, N. J. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (1-2-3- 4); Sodality (3); Tatler (2-3-4), Associate Editor (4); Tennis Group (3). 144 ADELE ANNE P E R U G I N I Bachelor of Arts 45 French Ridge, New Rochelle, N. Y. • When we think of Adele, we shall cer- tainly remember above all else her irre- pressible wit which strikes at all but never cuts. It is easy enough to make us laugh at others, but there are few who can make us laugh at ourselves and appreciate the joke. May she never lose her ability to meet every Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. situation with a smile, and a guip. Athletic Association (1-2); Glee Club (2-4); Home (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club (2-3-4). Economics (1); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality 145 • Bubbling laughter plus good sense com- bine to form the grand girl that we know Lillian to be. She has the far-reaching power of being able to enjoy life while at the same time keenly understanding and meeting all its intricacies. Conscientious in her every duty, strong of mind and of soul, willing to lend a helping hand is Lillian. Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Circolo Dante (1-2-3-4); Class Play (3); Coun- cil of Debate (3-4); Der Deutsche Yerein (3-4); Golf Group (4); Junior Prom Committee (3); Lecture Group (3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Props and Paint (3-4); LILLIAN A . POLO Bachelor of Arts 19 Stuyvesant Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bishop McDonnell Memorial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Councillor (2); Tatler (3-4), Circulation Manager (4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3- 4), Secretary -Treasurer (2); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4). 146 A I L E E N PRICE Bachelor of Arts 1218 Kemble Street, Utica, N. Y. Utica Free Academy, Utica, N. Y. Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (3-4); Base- ball Group (1-2-3-4), Baseball Team (1-2-3-4); Basket- ball Group (2-3-4), Basketball Team (3-4); Current Events (3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Hiking Group (1-2-3); • Pricey to those who know her best, Aileen is so quietly unassuming that a casual observer would not dream of the executive ability and capacity for sound judgment she possesses. Gifted also with delightful humor, she is found even more lovable and good for us. It is our heartfelt wish, Aileen, that you attain your noble goal. Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3), Editor (3). 147 MARION ELIZABETH QUINN Bachelor of Arts 23 Amackassin Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. • Life to Quinnie is the very epic bowl of cherries. Complacently she copes with its every situation. Joie de vivre is Quinnie ' s greatest possession. In her happy-go-lucky manner she has gathered around her a host of life-long friends who will never forget her perpetual pun, and her gently smiling manner: life should be kind and generous to Quinnie. Blessed Sacrament Academy, Yonkers, N. Y. Art Club (1-2 -3-4), Treasurer (3-4); Athletic Associa- Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter tion (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Junior Prom Committee (1-2-3-4). (3); Long Distance Club (3); Riding Group (1-2); 148 EDNA MAY REGAL Bachelor of Arts 26 Ferdinand Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Edna follows two arts — interior decoration and enjoying life. She shakes all worries with three nonchalant shrugs and a guip. Her serious interludes are devoted to the New Rochelle Senior High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. study of design; the rest of her time is spent in fashioning a life completely sans souci. Laughing, carefree Edna — may she find a life without the worries which beset the common man. Art Club (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); French Club (1); League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). Glee Club (1-2); Home Economics (1); Sacred Heart 149 annamarie REILLY Bachelor of Arts 64 Sherwood Avenue, Yonkers, N. Y. • Our contact with Annamarie was a friend- ly, pleasant association with an intellectual girl whose daily travels took her far on her way to learning, and striving for beauty. With an undisturbed eguanimity, sure to be an asset, coupled with an enchanting demeanor, may she in the years to come impress others along the way as advan- tageously to herself as she has us. Athletic Association (2-3-4); Biology Club (3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (2); Riding Group (3); Sacred Heart Roosevelt High School, Yonkers, N. Y. League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 150 MARIE R E I S E R T Bachelor of Arts 223 Rockaway Parkway, Valley Stream, N. Academy of St. Joseph, Brentwood, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4), President (4); Annales (4), Editor-in-Chief (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3); Choir (4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3-4); Hockey Group (1); Long Distance Club (1 -2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Quarterly (4); 1S1 • To us, Marie ' s charm is a pair of twinkling brown eyes — the key to the real Marie. In the twinkles are humor and an excellent facility for punning; their depth attests to the brilliancy and versatility which have made her editor of Annales ; for their loveliness, amiability and friendship we nominate Marie to the Hall of Fame — of love and remembrance in her classmates ' hearts. Riding Group (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2); Golf Group (1-2-3); Tatler (1-2-3), News Editor (3), Editor of Freshman Tatler; Tennis Group (1-2-3); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4) . FLORENCE L. ROBINSON Bachelor of Arts 44 Fountain Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Put her in any situation; before you can say Florence Robinson she has it in com- mand. Florence doesn ' t like to wait for things, but meets her opportunities while they are still embryonic. A poised person, she is never upset by trifles, and has progressed steadily through college, emerg- ing with many friends and an enviable reputation for accomplishments in French. New Rochelle High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (3); Biology French Club (2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Club (1); Class Honors (1); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3); Chapter (1-2-3-4). 152 JANET R O G A N Bachelor of Arts 22 Kimball Road, Fitchburg, Mass. St. Bernard’s High School, Fitchburg, Mass. College of Our Lady of the Elms (1-2); Art Club (4); Athletic Association (3-4); Long Distance Club (3-4); Props and Paint (4); Reapers (3-4); Riding Group (3-4); • With a broad a, a yen for sociology, and a noticeable lack of the fiery temperament usually ascribed to those of her coloring, this redhead from Massachusetts came to us. Whether she adheres to her original idea of being somebody ' s secretary or changes it to include baking a pie or two, the many friends she has made are concerned only with the happy things that should be hers. Sacred Heart League (3-4); Scribblers (4); Sodality (3-4); Sociology Club (3-4); Worcester Undergraduate Chapter (3-4). 153 JOSEPHINE MARIE ROGERS Bachelor of Arts 27 Neptune Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Jo is vibrant with life and the sparkling joy that she finds in it; she seems always to be able to laugh away her worries. If her mind and will were not as they are, her stature and nature would tend to make her an ardent follower of Peter Pan. It seems a little sad that some people must grow up. Annales” (4); Athletic Association (2-3-4); Council of Debate (1-2); Current Events (3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2); Hockey Group (3); Christinas Baskets (2); Math Club (1-2-3-4), President (3-4), Secretary (1-2); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Pre-Medical Club (3); Sacred Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1 -2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4), Day Student President (4); Swim- ming Group (1-2-3-4); Swimming Team (1-2-3-4); Tatler (4); Tennis Group (1-2-4); Westchester Under- graduate Chapter. 154 EDITH RYAN Bachelor of Arts 323 Curtis Street, Meriden, Conn. • Edith is a quiet person who knows much and who says little. Her excellent scholar- ship is proof enough of her high intellectu- ality. Her ability to grasp and retain knowl- edge, coupled with her ready understand- ing present a girl quite out of the usual category. With her serene manner and much gentle sympathy, Edith ' s friendship is a valued possession. Club (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Hartford Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). Meriden High School, Meriden, Conn. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Long Distance Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sociology 155 • Mary is another of those New Rochellians who has made her presence felt in nearly every work that the class of ' 36 has spon- sored. A girl who has forged ahead into many extra-curricular activities, she de- serves much credit for her tireless effort. Supplied with an abundant amount of endurance, there is little she need fear in the battle of life. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (1-4); Biol ogy Club (1-2-4); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3-4), President (4); Hiking Group (1); Music Club (4); Pre-Medical (2-3); MARY FRANCES RYLE Bachelor of Arts 38 Hope Street, Stamford, Conn. Stamford High School, Stamford, Conn. Riding Group (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (3-4); Tennis Group (1); Stamford Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 156 MARIE ELIZABETH SALVATORE Bachelor of Arts 62 Sound View Street, Port Chester, N. Y. Port Chester High School, Port Chester, N. Y. Athletic Association (4); Biology Club (1); Circolo Dante (1-2-3-4), Treasurer; Der Deutsche Verein (4); French Club (2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); • Vivaciously pert, Marie has made for herself a place in the college world. Ever attuned to the call of comradeship, her ' s is a character that has been trained along the highest ideals. Her personality is brilliantly one in its constellation — naive, beautiful and frank. She will go through life fasci- nating everyone with this optimism and delighting everyone with her infectious happiness. Science Club (1); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (3- 4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 157 ISABEL CARMEN S A U R I Bachelor of Science P. O. Box 1947, Ponce, Puerto Rico • One can almost hear the rattle of castanets and the swish of mantillas in the atmosphere surrounding Isabel, a daughter of Puerto Rico. She is tall and wears her stunning clothes with a grace that is truly Castilian. How she manages to provoke so much laughter, preserving a certain twinkling gravity herself, is a mystery. Isabel typifies the dignity that is Spanish, and the wit that is American. Basketball Group (1); Biology Club (1-2-3-4), Treasurer (4); Der Deutsche Verein (1); Long Distance Club (1- 2-3); Pre-Medical Club (1-2-3-4); Science Club (2-3-4); Liceo Ponceno High School, Ponce, Puerto Rico Sodality (1 -2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2-3-4), Secretary (3-4), Treasurer (4). 158 ALYS CONRADINE SAVAGE Bachelor of Arts 484 East 141st Street, New York, N. Y. Walton High School, New York, N. Y. Athletic Association (4); Current Events (3-4); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (4); Sacred • Alys Savage — it seems that name belongs to the process of association. We can ' t think of her without her pal, Mary. Splendid Tatler work culminated in the Exchange — but note, the signature was Savage and Fitzsimons. Yet her interest in current affairs, her e nthusiastic support of Catholic Action in its various phases, in a phrase — her well balanced individuality, have been admired and appreciated. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (2-3- 4), Exchange Editor (4); Greater New York Under- graduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 159 • We will always remember Blanche for the hospitality she extended to us over a period of years, for her wandering corridor friends, and for the various and sundry verbal tussles inspired chiefly by the study of one William Shakespeare. But especially are we grateful for the witticisms she could let fall about her with such exceedingly sober mien. Art Club (3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-4); Biology Club (2); Der Deutsche Verein (4); Golf Group (4); Hockey Group (2); Junior Prom Committee (3); Riding BLANCHE D. S C H I L G E N Bachelor of Arts 140 83rd Street, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bay Ridge High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Group (4); Science Club (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Spanish Club (1-2); Tennis Group (2-4); Brooklyn- Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 160 FRANCES MILDRED SCHLOSSER Bachelor of Arts 2718 Morris Avenue, Bronx, N. Y. • Light-hearted laughter first attracted us to this brown-eyed historian. Full of exuber- ance for everything whether it promises amusement or arduous work, Fran is an especially gratifying friend. She is the sum and substance of collegiate sport fashion, wearing her clothes with casual, yet correct air. Her unpretending liberality and pun- gent criticisms combine what it takes for a Stamford High School, Stamford, Conn. proficient existence. Alpha Alpha (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); League (2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2- Biology Club (1); Current Events (3-4); Der Deutsche 3-4). Verein (1 -2-3-4); Riding Group (3-4); Sacred Heart 161 MARI JANE SCHRATWIESER Bachelor o£ Arts 15 First Street, Lynbrook, L. I., N. Y. • Two years is a short time — and short is the time that Mary has been with us, for she joined our ranks in the fall of 1934. Unob- trusively she made her way into our midst and ultimately into our hearts. She required but little time to become well acquainted and in saying good-bye, we have but one regret— that we didn ' t meet her sooner. st Saviour Academy , Brooklyn, N. Y. St. Joseph ' s College (1-2); Athletic Association (3-4); (3-4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter French Club (4); Long Distance Club (3-4); Riding (3-4). Group (3-4); Sacred Heart League (3-4); Sodality 162 HELEN ROSE S H A R Y Bachelor of Science 306 East 207th Street, New York, N. Y. • Helen is admittedly the leader of her group. Since she strictly adhered to this coterie, she was not as well known as her capacities demanded. But those of us who are fortunate enough to be acguainted with Helen, appreciate not only her humor and graciousness, but also her scholastic en- deavor. It is a combination of joviality and seriousness that insures Helen ' s future Academy of Mt. St. Ursula, New York, N. Y. happiness. Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Hiking Group (2-3); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2-3-4); Greater Music Club (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); New York Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 163 MARIE J . SISK • Vivacity and Marie are ever close com- panions. Blessed with a deep sense of the droll, this tiny lass bubbles and sparkles with boundless enthusiasms. Her glorious chuckle is all out of proportion to her size; her kindliness and generosity have won for her lasting friendships. We cannot help but feel that her overflowing jocularity will lighten life ' s burdens for her. Athletic Association (1-2-3); Biology Club (1); Golf Group (3); Mission Club (1-2-3); Riding Group (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (1-2); Bachelor of Arts 95 Highland Avenue, Jersey City, N. J. St. Aloysius Academy, Jersey City, N. J. Sodality (1-2-3-4); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4), Secretary (3), President (4). 164 GENEVIEVE M. S P I L L A N E Bachelor of Arts 59 Locust Avenue, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Unobstrusively, Gen joined us, and, throughout our years at New Rochelle, has quietly worked and played, sorrowed and rejoiced with us. She accomplishes much in a placid manner, but is never reluctant when an opportunity for fun presents itself. Under a calm exterior is concealed a bubbling vein of humor and levity which is a constant source of delight to her friends. (1-2-3-4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2- 3-4). St. Brendan’s School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Athletic Association (1-2-3); Biology Club (2); Glee Club (1); Hiking Group (2); Riding Group (3); Sodality 165 H . CLAIRE STOPFORD Bachelor of Arts 1871 Walton Avenue, New York, N. Y. • Claire is the scientist. Her success in the Chemistry and Physics labs foreshadows a fine medical career. But, beyond this, Claire has mastered the elements and compounds which go to make up a fine balanced life. She knows well the formula of friendship; she is always ready with any- thing that is desired and has the generous heart which gives with a smile. Alpha Alpha (4); Annales” (4); Art Club (3-4); Athletic Association (2-3-4), Honorary Member (3-4); Baseball Team (2-3-4); Biology Club (2-3-4); Class Honors (1-2-3); Class Play (2); Council of Debate (1-2-3-4); Current Events (3-4); Der Deutsche Verein (1-2-3); Hiking Group (2-3-4), Head (3); Junior Prom Ursuline Academy, New York, N. Y. Committee (3); Lecture Group (2-3-4); Long Distance Club (1-2-3); Math Club (1-2); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Pre-Medical Club (2-3-4); Props and Paint (1-2); Riding Group (2-3); Sacred Heart League (1 -2-3-4); Science Club (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swimming Team (2-3-4); Tatler (2-3); Tennis Group (2-3). 166 JANE A S H T O N S T R E T C H Bachelor of Arts 25 Beechtree Drive, Larchmont, N. Y. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Annales (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4), Honorary Member (1-2-4); Baseball Group (2); Baseball Team (2); Council of Debate (1); Daisy Chain (3), Riding • That undefinable something which is the secret of Jane ' s popularity, can best be explained as an aptitude for putting the other person immediately at ease. Jane ' s capabilities range all the way from things literary down to the aguatic arts. • If all that you have attained at school but presage the things that will come, the very best will be yours, Jane. Group (1-2-3-4); Scribblers (3-4), President (4); Swim- ming Group (1-2-3-4), Head (2); Swimming Team (1-2- 3), Captain (1), Manager (3); Tennis Group (1-2 -3-4). 167 . MARIE LOUISE S Y M S Bachelor of Arts 10 Bowne Avenue, Flushing, N. Y. • Marie Louise is a girl with ambitions — toward scholastic excellence, and perfection in singing. These ideals do not prevent her enjoying a reputation as a humorous and witty member of 1936. Indeed, ' ' Syms ' ' has very often made us see the funny side of our troubles. We feel that fortune will smile on her. Her cheery manner and her determina- tion will see her through. Lincoln School, New York, N. Y. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (4); Choir (1-2-3); ming Team (4); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Council of Debate (3-4); French Club (3-4); Glee Club Chapter (1-2-3-4). (1); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Swim- 168 FAY D . TACCONELLI Bachelor of Arts 24 Walnut Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. New Rochelle Senior High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Biology Club (1-2-3-4); Circolo Dante (1-2-3-4); Glee Club (1); Pre-Medical Club (2-3-4), Assistant Secretary • The scientist is paramount in Fay. She considers the world with systematic method and easily distinguishes the worthwhile. She is generous to a fault, always prodigal of her knowledge for the benefit of those not as fortunate as she in understanding the more abstract student interests. May Fay find the science of living as simple for her as college has been. (4); Sacred Heart League (1-2 -3-4); Science Club (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4). 169 RUTH ELEANOR THOMSON Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 20 William Street, Mount Vernon, N . Y. • Ruth is capability personified, with neat- ness and added intellectual integrity. Noth- ing is too hard tor Ruth to attempt, and nothing too difficult for her to attain. She is a grand friend, exacting little and giving much to all those so happy to have her acguaintance. With a deep knowledge of the inner worth, Ruth will have a life which merits praise. Barnard School for Girls, New York, N. Y. Mary Baldwin College (1); Athletic Association (2-3); Basketball Group (3). 170 ALICE LOUISE T O U H E Y Bachelor of Arts 16 Terrace Avenue, Albany, N. Y. Albany Academy for Girls, Albany, N. Y. Advisory Board (2-3-4); Alpha Alpha (4); Alpha Nu Omicron (4); Annales (4); Art Club (2-3); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1-3); Class Honors (1-3); Daisy Chain (3); Der Deutsche Verein (3-4); French Club (3-4); Golf Group (3); Hiking Group (1); Junior Prom Committee (3); Long Distance Club (1-2- • The dashing Alice from Albany, so ex- ceedingly lovely to look at, and already with more friends and admirers than most of us can hope to gain in a lifetime, fur- nishes the best example of how to appreciate one ' s four years at New Rochelle. Besides being scholastically impeccable, she has scored minor triumphs in many and varying lines of extra-curricular activity. 3-4); Mid-Year Play (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (2); Props and Paint (1-2-3-4), President (4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Riding Group (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3); Albany Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4), Secretary (2), Vice-President (3). MM I 171 VIRGINIA TAYLOR TUCKER • Virginia is the one g irl who doesn ' t take herself or the world around her too seriously, but meets everything with a smile and a happy how-do-you-do. Whether it be her studies, her successful business career, on campus, or her endless intricate knitting, she has the inimitable capacity of seeing into the very core of it all. Annales (4), Co-Manager of Advertising (4); Athletic Association (1-2-3), Honorary Member (2-3); Baseball Group (1-2-3), Baseball Team (1-2-3); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Verein (1); Golf Group (1-2-3); Hockey Bachelor of Arts 7 Lyon Place, White Plains, N. Y. Convent of the Sacred Heart, New York, N. Y. Group (1); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Reapers (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Tatler (1-2-3), Ad- vertising Manager (2), Business Manager (4); West- chester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2 -3-4). 172 Athletic Association (2); Biology Club (1-2); French (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Hartford Undergraduate Club (2-3-4), Treasurer (3-4); Long Distance Club Chapter (1-2-3-4), Treasurer (3), President (4). 173 FRANCES U T T I N G Bachelor of Arts 5 Sylvan Place, New Rochelle, N. Y. • Amid the confusion and turbulence of a bustling world, it is a consolation and satis- faction to meet one of Fran ' s character. Her consistency and promptness reveal in her a dependable person with a certain stability of purpose which we feel sure will aid her in overcoming the obstacles which are to confront her on the road to the future. Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-4); German Club (1-4); Quarterly (1-2 -3-4); Riding New Rochelle High School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Group (1-4); Swimming Group (1), Swimming Team (1); Tatler (2); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter. 174 M . SHIRLEY VAN HOFF Bachelor of Arts 20 Glenside Road, South Orange, N. J. Columbia High School, South Orange, N. J. Alpha Alpha (4); Art Club (4); Biology Club (1); Choir (2 3-4); Class Honors (3); Long Distance Club (1-2); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); • Shirley possesses a certain quiet and wistful manner that spells individuality. She is counted upon to liven all discussions. To Shirley knowledge is of foremost importance for she is a good student who has great powers of evaluation— she is fundamentally a reserved person whose retiring grace and ease lend to the charming denouement of any situation — -a lovely lady. Spanish Club (1-2-3-4); New Jersey Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 175 • A dark haired attractive student is Dot. Her attributes are as varied as her friends, and she herself is capable of changing from a strain of meaningless chatter to a philo- sophic discussion in a twinkling. Suggest a mode of action, and Dot is there ready to help, with all the gualities at her fingertips — perseverance, originality and genuine cheer. Athletic Association (3-4); German Club (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (1); Sacred Heart DOROTHY VAN WAGNER Bachelor of Science (Sec.) 150 Trenor Drive, New Rochelle, N. Y. Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. League (1-2-3-4); Commercial Club (4); Tennis Group (3); Westchester Undergraduate Club (1-2-3-4). 176 M . I R E N E V A U G H A N Bachelor of Arts 780 St. Marks Avenue, Brooklyn, N. Y. Bishop McDonnell Memorial High School, Brooklyn, N. Y. Annales (4); Art Club (2-3-4); Athletic Association (1-2-3-4); Biology Club (2); Der Deutsche Verein (3); Golf Group (3); May Queen (2); Riding Group (2-3-4); • Renee” is an exotic mixture of the far- away princess and the charming moderne. Lovely to look at” — carefree, gay, and interestingly subtle is this young lady whose every movement is executed with a certain savoir-faire. One never really knows what Renee is thinking; one only awaits with enthusiasm her guick-witted replies — she loves to make life a guessing game. Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tatler (2-3); Brooklyn-Long Island Undergraduate Chapter (1-2 -3 -4). 177 WINIFRED ISABELLE WALSH Bachelor of Science 16 Darling Avenue, Mount Vernon, N. Y. • A mirror of loveliness is Winnie. A New Rochelle beauty with dark eyes, a striking color, and an ever-pleasant smile, she possesses an appeal that is fascinating, and really her own. Her election as day-student A. B., an office which she held during her junior year, betokens the executive ability and sterling character, which have garnered for her so many friends. Advisory Board (3); ' ' Annales ' ' (4); Athletic Associa- tion (1-2); Biology Club (3); Daisy Chain (3); Home Economics Club (1-2-3-4); Mission Club (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sodality Pen Group (3); Student Sodality Council (3); Tennis Group (1-2); Class Secretary (4); Westchester Undergraduate Chapter (1-2-3-4). 178 ISABELLE M. W E L C K E Bachelor of Arts Marion Road, Westport, Conn. • Isabelle accomplishes a great deal with- out letting anyone know it. She might well be characterized by three words: sensible, sincere and studious; with all her common sense, yet she constantly worries over the smallest of trivialities. Her worries over, she gives joy and happiness to all about her. Faithful and candid, she will overcome all obstacles to win her goal of truth. Heart League (1-2-3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Glee Club ( 1 - 2 ). Norwalk High School, Norwalk, Conn. Art Club (4); Athletic Association (4); Home Economics (4); Long Distance Club (4); Riding Group (4); Sacred 179 CATHERINE TERESA WELSH Bachelor o£ Arts 1770 Andrews Avenue, New York, N. Y. • Kay ' s unaffected sense of humor has en- deared her to all of us. There are few New Rochellians who have not, at some time or other, rocked with laughter at one of her witty remarks. Besides this delightful sense of humor, she has the reputation of having the smallest hands in the senior class. Yet we ' re sure she ' ll accomplish great things. Academy o£ Mount Ursula, New York, N. Y. Athletic Association (4); Biology Club (1); Der Deut- League (1-2-3-4); Science Club (3); Sociology Club sche Verein (3-4); Golf Group (4); Sacred Heart (3-4); Sodality (1-2-3-4). 180 HELEN ISABEL WERNER Bachelor of Arts 45 Grace Church St., Rye, N. Y. • Helen is the proverbial blonde, with the contagious giggle and sweet manner that have been associated with the golden- haired since time immemorial. We thank Helen for her appreciation of our hard- wrung witticisms and for her easy evalua- tion of our speech. Fate must have marvel- ous things in store for this girl with her serene outlook on life and cool appreciation Ursuline School, New Rochelle, N. Y. of it. Athletic Association (1); Biology Club (1); Der Deutsche Sacred Heart League (1-2 -3-4); Science Club (1-2-3); Verein (1 -2-3-4); French Club (1-2); Glee Club (1-2); Sodality (1-2-3-4); Tennis Group (1-2-3). 181 MARION NORMA WHITE Bachelor of Arts 1 Betts Place, Norwalk, Conn. • Marion has made a friend of practically every acquaintance. Her easy going dis- position and good nature fail to betray her multitude of abilities. Let her carry the ideals of prudence, inculcated in the halls of New Rochelle, and there can be little doubt that the future will witness Marion pinnacled on the very heights of triumph and glory. Sacred Heart Academy, Stamford, Conn. Alpha Alpha (4); Biology Club (2); Der Deutsche (1-2-3-4); Sacred Heart League (1-2-3-4), Promoter (1); Verein (3); Home Economics Club (1); Mission Club Sodality (1-2-3-4); Sociology Club (4). 182 E X - 1 9 3 6 Archer, May Austin, Jane Bache, Evelyn Bast, Mary Alice Bauer, Gwendolyn Bianchi, Mafalda Brucoli, Mary Buttery, Alice Carley, Vera Connolly, Mary T. Cook, Josephine Cotter, Katherine Cotter, Mary K. Cutler, Ruth D ' Alton, Helen Damn, Rose Davis, Helen De Hautrephe, Nadine Dion, Margery Dochelli, Dorothy Driscoll, Mary Eileen Elchisak, Anastasia Fitzpatrick, Elizabeth Fitzpatrick, Frances Fitzgerald, Mary Galligan, Rose Gannon, Mary E. Gerety, Lillian Goldman, Miriam Hellestern, Marie Hirsch, Catherine Holmes, Edna Johansen, May Jordan, Jayne Jourdan, Regina Joyce, Muriel Kennard, Eleanor Kennedy, Helen Kurtz, Josephine Lally, Jeanne Leopold, Florence Le Veness, Anna Lewiston, Eujeanne Luzzi, Marguerite Lyons, Margaret McCloskey, Madelyn McCormick, Margaret McDonagh, Lucille McLaughlin, Mary Messuri, Ester Mifflin, Peggy Murphy, Lois Nassif, Anna O ' Brien, Eileen O ' Connell, Mildred O ' Connell, Regina O ' Meara, Dorothy Ormston, Mercedes Phillips, Rita Reardon, Irma Reeves, Grace Reilly, Annmarie Rescigno, Marie Robertson, Jane Sayers, Catherine Schmulling, Georgina Smith, Anamae Stetter, Eve Sweeney, Gertrude Swift, Ruth Volk, Vivian Wangler, Jane Ward, Myrtle Waterman, Irene Weldon, Catherine Williams, Dorothy 183 THE LAST LOOK • Campus never seemed so secure before. Tranquillity shines from the green of it, sends laughter across it, ripples through Maura ' s ivy. The Castle tower beams rotundly heavenward, and before it the Campus Cross points a quiet connection between classrooms and Chapel. • Four autumns we ' ve begun here, made four hibernations, dreamed four springs, faced four other Junes. And although changes on campus have been momentarily startling, and our private evolutions have seemed tremendous, there has always been the serene fact of college, settled and certain. This has given us the pleasantest of liberties — freedom from responsibility. For although we may have realized duty, known small importances, felt the pressure of ambi- tion, we have never had to be completely self-reliant until now. • Certainly we have heard enough about the unstable world we are officially entering, the world which will daily test our ideals and abilities. No matter how we walk in that world, we welcome this daily test as a chance to substantiate our self-confidence. We are glad to take at last responsibility, purpose and maturity. • Our last look at campus is a smiling one, although it may be nostalgic and it must have some sorrow in it for each of us. We stop to take one last breath of New Rochelle ' s deep-rooted calm before we begin. We review a swift im- pression of the last four years. • Happiest days of our life? Yes, so far. — Eileen Dugliss, ' 36 184 JUNIORS .h m r:- t ; i ? ■ ' 4 uJ-ktitl ii Mn , . , , ,-j , , , . , r, , ; i , ,j ASS CATHERINE DUNNE President KATHLEEN COPP Vice-President MARY DEE Secretary PHYLLIS STEVENS Treasurer • Thirty cents for the first three minutes? All right, Operator. . . . • Hello, hello, is that you? Oh, Anne, hello ! So glad you ' re back. Tell me all about yourself, how the trip was and everything. • Another thirty cents, Operator? . . . • Now it ' s my turn, Anne: We ' ve had the grandest year. With Kay Dunne as President, and new profs, and different courses, and a tea-room on campus we got off to a flying start. Of course, the first few weeks we could be found down- town consorting with our sisters, who, naturally, are the nicest Freshmen ever to have entered C. N. R. We were anxious to have them become full-fledged inmates of the institution, so everyone rushed madly about, preparing for In- vestiture. . . . Did you ask about the songs? . . . Wel l, I ' d be glad to tell you, but I can ' t sit here coining money for Mr. Bell all night. And besides, the spirit of the thing was more important. Candles, and caps and gowns, and the campus under 187 THE JUNIOR PROMENADE stars . . . but Anne, why is it that, when we receive our Freshmen into our College, our flat, sophomore witticisms are silenced, and everyone is a little quiet and more than a little wistful? Excepting the heart-breaking moments we live through when tassels are turned, I think Investiture brings us more really together than any other ceremony. • Anyhoo — when that was over we started talking Prom, Prom, and more Prom . . . but only to discover when we slushed Sports Building- wards on the night of December twentieth that everything we had said was gross understatement. Of course, each girl was sure her escort was the catch of the evening, but in their heart of hearts they had to grant me that distinction. . . . Now Anne, don ' t get me off the track; I ' m only giving you this in outline form. . . . Though Mary Dee has long held the unquestioned title of Best Manager of the Most Successful Affairs, that night was her supreme triumph. The decorations and lights were achieve- ments in themselves, and the music — well, it was our Prom orchestra, and even now, when we hear Tommy Dorsey over the radio, we get a far-away look in our eyes. • Operator, I’ll be delighted to have a discussion with you when I’m finished with this one. I’ll signal when through. • Exams caught us on the rebound, but those of us who remained under the tutorage of our Logic professor were heard remarking in hushed voices: Every day in every way Mr. O ' Hare is getting better and better. ' ' • That was the period of the Great Snow, but Spring surprised us once more by being the loveliest in all our lives. With it came the great C. N. R. tradition, Mission Day — and I ' ll tell you of our part in that when I see you. • Finals, however, came just as certainly as did Mission Day. Our marks are not out yet, but . . . • Yes, Operator. • Oh, Anne, I ' ve got to go, but try to grasp this momentous thought: In a few months we ' ll be in our Senior year! • Operator, are you sure you timed that correctly? We couldn’t have talked that long! — Kaye M. Chambers, ' 37 189 DUSK H O U R The darkening time from sunset to the night Is like the peace I thought I could not know. I lock up hard at one place in the sky That is no different from the rest, and then A star is there. I look up from the ground And everything is sky, calm and subdued In color to give advantage to the stars Who have only the night to hold. This one more hour Between the light and dark is a great kindness; Stars were born with so much snow and ice And silver to give that night is not enough. There is no place for my suspicious mind, And there is nothing it would want to ask. Only an answer is needed and my heart Is always ready to give that. I ' ve heard That death is of all the most quiet things The quietest. But death is life when put Beside the hour of dusk. And it is strange To me that life can give such peace and still Be life where men still hate, but stranger yet That peace can come out of a star, a light Half-known and half-concealed, when the sharp mind Standing apart and even the heart knew well That peace comes only once and only then With something less than life and more than dusk. — Elda Tanasso, ' 37 190 SOPHOMORES r ‘ THE CLASS OF 1938 SOPHOMORE CLASS EVELYN WERNER President KATHRYN MAHONEY Vice-President CLARE BARRETT Secretary MARY TRACY Treasurer August 15, 1936 Dearest Marge: • Do you know what I have been doing all day? Of course, I ' ve been eating, sleeping and lolling around as usual, but this morning I got real industrious and decided to put my scrap-book in order. Well, you can imagine what a job that was. I hadn ' t realized what a busy year, and what a happy one, we had last year at school. • Do you remember when we returned in the Fall, what a hubbub there was greeting everybody, how strange it was to see so many new faces in the Fresh- man class and how embarrassed, not to mention disgusted, we used to get with ourselves when we ' d tell someone we were Freshmen, then catch ourselves and say, I mean a Sophomore. It was new, this business of being a Sophomore, but it w as nice. • The new tea-room thrilled us, and our class took to haunting it whole-hearted- ly. It was loads of fun on Wednesday nights last Fall and Winter to collect over 193 there and sing and play bridge. The tournaments we used to have took up most of our week-day evenings from six-thirty to seven-thirty, and I ' ll always think of the time we serenaded the moon from the tea-room steps as being among the silliest, yet most pleasant, few minutes of my life. • Then the first Logic class. I was petrified because of all the weird tales I had heard about the course. But it turned out to be not half bad, didn ' t it — until Mid-years rolled around! • About the first thing we did as a class last year was to give a party to the new Freshmen in Maura living-room. Betty O ' Day was chairman, and it still amuses me to think of how confused we were, running around, attempting to keep the Freshmen happy, at the same time serving refreshments and wondering how under the sun we could save enough for our friends. • The biggest event was the Sophomore Tea-Dance. Mil Viscount was chairman, remember? But how could you do anything else! The class certainly clicked well on that affair. Everybody cooperated wonderfully, whether it was by selling bids, making black-eyed susans, planning refreshments, or decorating the gym. It was worth all the work, tho ' . I think half the college was at Mary Renton ' s party after the dance, and of course, we ' re not forgetting the wonderful evening we had — not in a hurry, anyhow! It was a nice little sum we were able to give to the Library Fund, and we were right proud of our Tea-Dance. • Christmas rolled around f aster than ever last year. We decorated baskets for the poor families and were impressed as much as Freshman year by the lovely Dinner Party and the Tableaux. I could hardly believe it when I came back after vacation and exams were on top of us. They weren ' t much fun, those exams last lanuary, if I remember correctly, but Mother always said that it took sour things to make you appreciate the sweet — or something. • Anyhow, there was a celebration when the Logic exam was over. • There seemed to be a lot doing after exams. The Mid-year Play had been put on just before, and the class was well representated by Vi Laemmle and Eileen Boyle. The Long Distance Club ' s Valentine Tea-Dance and the Mardi Gras came along, and then it was Lent. Pretty Edna Morris was developing plans for Mission Day, and we were hustling around getting votes here and there for the May Queen, arranging the May -Pole dance and doing a hundred and one other things. • We had another Class Luncheon which was as enjoyable as the one Freshman year, and it seemed no time before we were packing up to go home again for another summer. 194 • We certainly had a good time last year. It ' s funny, too, because we had been told by no end of people that Sophomore year was the dullest of them all. I didn ' t find it dull, did you? There were too many afternoons in the tea-room when we chatted hour on end, too many afternoons at the movies or just spent whiling away time in the ville, too many perfect week-ends, too many Saturdays in the city, too many letters to write, and too much work to do to find school dull. Too many little amusing things happened — incidents that won ' t go down in the records of achievements for the Class of ' 38, but which tended, nevertheless, to make Sophomore year unforgettable. For instance, there will always be the little episode of a certain ' 38-er ' s dress falling in a tub full of water before the Tea-Dance to make us chuckle. And we ' ll always think of every Psych, class as being formally opened by a rendition of Chop-Sticks on the piano in Science Lecture and by shouting hello at the top of our lungs to everyone as she came in. Remember singing Pals before going to the Logic exam? They ' re silly things to look back on now, but they were fun, weren ' t they? I ' ll never see Lu Kirby again without visualizing her running around with a flat-iron wrapped in a gorgeous red bandana, as she did for several weeks last winter. She carried it to straighten out that elbow she dislocated skiing — if I have my stories straight. • There were so many things we were proud of, too, like our successful Tea- Dance, the Sophomore issue of Tatler with Kay Fox as editor, and our class president, Evie Werner. • All this, and much more, came back to me today when I was arranging the scrap-book. There are so many things that a scrap-book doesn ' t tell you, but one thing leads to another until your brain is fairly buzzing with memories, and I just couldn ' t resist writing you and getting some of them cleared away — not cleared away exactly, because I ' ll never forget them but I had to write and remind you of them, too. • I wonder if you ' re looking forward to next year as much as I am. To guote Marge Ely, Now I ' m not suggesting, I ' m merely mentioning, and hoping sincerely that lunior year will be as much fun as Sophomore. • ' Till I see you around all of a sudden. . . . Loads of love, Peg. — Kathryn O. Mahoney, ' 38 195 SONNET There is a day when sorrow ' s ruthless knife Flashes and gleams and thrusts into our hearts. There is an hour when peace fades from our life When happiness with downcast look departs. There is a time when anguish comes, and pain Swells in an angry rush of pitiless sea Roaring and tearing, ravaging again The very atoms of humanity. But broken hearts are buried. New hearts spring Out of our souls, from an unknown beyond All human touch. Until, scarce whispering Springtime is come, all silent as a pond Enfolded in some quiet woodland place. This is awakening, by a good God ' s grace. — Katherine Houghton, ' 38 196 FRESHMEN FRESHMAN CLASS KATHRYN MacDONAGH President ELIZABETH LYNN Vice-President VIRGINIA REILLY Secretary GRACE MASTERSON Treasurer • It was a beautiful afternoon. We Freshmen, however, had no time to appreciate it for this was our first day at college. Oh, we were tired, skeptical and overawed. • The luniors, in order to alleviate some of our confusion, gave us many de- lightful parties, whose informality helped us to orient ourselves more guickly than is characteristic of Freshmen. In speaking of characteristics there is no doubt that the Freshmen ' s ingenuity in concocting excuses is unsurpassed. We had the determined young lady who on the very first morning just would not exercise her diaphragm in the speech class because of a split lip. • Elections which always seem to impress new students were carried off with an aplomb worthy of Seniors. Kay MacDonagh as president, and Betty Lynn as vice-president were acclaimed the future leaders by a practically unanimous vote. 199 • Investiture gave us a new symbol of independence in the form of caps and gowns which we received quite proudly. As we hurried breathlessly through the months the traditions of New Rochelle kept pace with us. Two of the most charming were the wedding, which joined irrevocably Kay Dunne, president and representative of the Junior class to Kay MacDonagh, our president and representative; and the Christmas dinner with its conviviality suddenly subdued so that the quaint toasts might be paid to outstanding students even as the slim green, red flames swayed in graceful tribute to all the girls. • Indeed after such events as these, we concluded that college was a new, exciting and not too difficult world to live in. Oh — but when the period for mid-year examination came, we hastily corrected ourselves — that everlasting two weeks when we had to cram, pray, scribble and almost fail, called for a drastic revision of opinion. Isn ' t it strange the conclusions one will reach under stress of exams? Some Freshmen were convinced that jejune signified drip, that the basic language of English was the king ' s English, and if not that then Latin, German, French, Anglo-Saxon, then again the declaration that words not in reputable use were swearing — at least we thirty-niners had ideas. • Contemporary with the crocuses and hyacinths, Freshmen blossomed forth as custodians of multi-color booths on Mission Day. Some were privileged to be in the ' Court of the May Queen, a procession which would enchant even the most prosaic mind. • Suddenly the time had come to turn our tassels ever so little to the right. To cover a rather dewy, reminiscent thought we all sang lustily where oh where are the verdant Freshmen ; if we could not be found, at least we could be heard. • Last of all we have the eulogy of the Freshman class to their alma mater sum- marized in the words of an excited young lady Isn ' t college . . . Isn ' t college? Yes, isn ' t it, agreed her companion. — Marie de Wolfe, ' 39 200 SNAPSHOTS 202 CHRISTMAS DINNER What a line Coverall Cast no reilections Beginners ' Swim i Mil | if! i i Hi 1 ■ ■ iM | DAISY CHAIN — JUNE 1935 204 Popularity nize Marge? Mail chorus I idMsk- its ■ ' gr IjhjjydflE. J Serenity in Day Hops Dignity in the Seniors Disapproval H 1 1 rv. . ■ f i ■ ,a Louann and a Flettto Sun Worshipper Girlish Charm Country Club. Popular Man Stealthily but by day 1 ; Social Trends Brand New Three Little Maids Pepsodent When All Is Sled and Fun {our grateful thanks to the genius who contributed this) Father White vs. Photographer ■ i P 1 | f t: ¥%M ■ 1 r W Shark! Shark! Christmas Tree Cried the Duchess Unhappy -One L- : Twffij W • i 1 ♦ gr 1 T L ; i |iM| i • V Complementing and extending the search for knowledge in books is the work of student organizations. Debating, philo- sophical, literary and religious discussions arouse intellectual curiosity and broaden the view. ADVISORY BOARD helen McDonough, ' 3s PRISCILLA FENNER, ' 35 . FRANCES BOSSUET, ' 35 . KATHLEEN COPP, ' 37 . . JANE CALLAGHAN, ' 36 . President . Vice-President Recording Secretary Corresponding Secretary Treasurer Theora Knoop 1936 Julia Foody Alice Touhey Katherine Dunne Marjorie McNeil 1937 Kathleen Copp Grace Houlihan Evelyn Werner 1938 Iris Bohan Kathryn Mahoney 1939 Kathryn MacDonagh Elizabeth Lynn 216 GERTRUDE FiNNEGAN President ISABEL BASANTA FLORENCE MEDON ANNETTE NATHAN CATHERINE GILLEN Committee on Programs Committee on Programs Committee on Programs Moderator ELIZABETH MARY OTIS MURIEL M. PAIGE THE REV. JOHN F. WHITE Natalie Briggs Lucille Byrne Dorothy Clifford Eileen Dugliss Dorothy Ensign Mercedes Ferrer Mary Fitzsimons Mary Foley Adel Haustein Rosemary Kenedy Ruth Kohl Anne Lynn Helen McDonough Gertrude McGuire Irene McHugh Helen McNabb Florence Morrissey Alice Mundorff Kitty Murray Mary Norton Elsie Oberle Marie Reisert Florence Robinson Frances Schlosser Claire Stopford Alice Touhey Shirley Van Hoff Marion White fi 1 flhf 1 iJl.Ly f| i ii f h ' n RESIDENT STUDENTS’ SODALITY THEORA KNOOP, ' 36 . . MARY GALVIN, ' 36 . . MOTHER M. PAULINE . . ALICE MUNDORFF . . . CLARE McNAMARA . ELENA BIANCHI . . . BETTY MOORE . . . . MARY L. QUILTER . . . KATHERINE DUNNE . . CATHERINE MORALLER . LOUANN PERRY . . . EVELYN WERNER . . . LOUISE FOX . . . . MARGARET O ' CONNELL . ARACELI RIERA . . . President of College Sodality Treasurer of College Sodality Moderator 1936 President Councillor Councillor 1937 President Councillor Councillor 1938 President Councillor Councillor 1939 President Councillor Councillor 218 DAY STUDENTS’ SODALITY MOTHER M. MARGARET Moderator 1936 JOSEPHINE ROGERS President GERTRUDE McGUIRE Councillor DOROTHY BRENNAN Councillor 1937 MARGARET WILSON President GEORGINE McGUIRE Councillor JANE DUFFY Councillor 1938 ETTA LOUGHRAN President RUTH SCHMIDT Councillor MILLICENT VISCOUNT Councillor 1939 GERTRUDE CULLEN President EDITH BERNHOLTZ Councillor MARCELLA TYRRELL Councillor 219 COMBINED MISSION CLUBS l., ..r ) HI MARY C. McGUIRE, ' 36 . . President MARGE KENNEDY, ' 36 . . . Vice-President VIRGINIA B ASTI AN, ' 36 . . Secretary and Treasurer MOTHER M. PAULA . . . 1936 Moderator Isabel Basanta lulia Foody Mercedes Ferrer Anne Lennon Mary Foley Muriel Paige Claire McNamara 1937 Bernadette Barrett Evelyn Pelettier lanice Hughes Elizabeth Sasseen Mary Louise Quilter 1938 Anne Ahern Etta Loughran Claire Barrett lean O ' Grady Mary Birmingham Edwina Sanford Marge Cahill 1939 Madelyn Smith Marion Borowetz Frances Loughman Elizabeth Breton Margaret Rabbott Katherine Cavanaugh Ruth Tully Gertrude Cullen Ila Wry m - w r % • w J§ LEAGUE OF THE SACRED HEART CLAIRE McNAMARA, ' 36 IRENE McLOUGHLIN, ' 37 LOUANN PERRY, ' 38 . MOTHER M. DOROTHEA President Vice-President Secretary Moderator PROMOTERS 1936 Dorothy Brennan Elizabeth Kelly Gertrude Finnegan Mary Frances Krussman Mary Gannon Elizabeth Lawlor Elizabeth Mary Otis Bernadette Barrett 1937 Minerva LaSala Bernadette Campbell Marguerite Letellier Ellen Donovan Eileen Lyons Margaret Donnelly Elizabeth Moore Helen D ' Euphemia Frances O ' Connell Alice Grattan Helene Pecheux Grace Griffiths Dorothy Porcelli Rita Keen Margaret Sullivan Margaret Bohmert 1938 Louann Perry Moya Clarke Madeline Raiti Kathryn Kenney Eleanor Towey Mae Walsh Margaret Halligan 1939 Rhoda Powers Helen Leddy Anne Rogerson 221 LONG DISTANCE CLUB MARY C. McGUIRE, ' 36 President MARY LOUISE QUILTER, ' 37 Vice-President EILEEN McENERY, ' 37 Secretary and Treasurer MOTHER JOAN OF ARC Moderator COMMITTEE 1936 Kathleen Laressy Anne Lennon Lucy Leonard 1937 Katherine Copp Grace Houlihan 1938 Margaret Ely Josephine Lenahan Kathryn Mahoney Louann Perry Margaret O ' Brien Jean O ' Grady Lillian Pender 222 PROPS AND PAINT ALICE LOUISE TOUHEY, ' 36 President MARY McGUIRE, ' 36 Vice-President GRACE DIETZ, ' 36 Secretary GRACE MARIE HOULIHAN, ' 37 Treasurer MARY ELIZABETH FOLEY, ' 36 Mistress of Make-Up ANITA LA LANCETTE, ' 37 Mistress of Wardrobe MARGARET DONNELLY, ' 37 Mistress of Properties LILLIAN POLO, ' 36 Music Directress MARY GALVIN, ' 36 Librarian ANNE LYNN, ' 36 Publicity Manager MOTHER M. LOYOLA Moderator 224 PROPS AND PAINT “ANNIE LAURIE” • Flaunting her dramatic skirts in the face of a Shakespearean tradition that demanded a yearly presentation of one of the plays of that worthy Bard, the dramatic society, Props and Paint, for the first time (at least to the knowledge of this reviewer) in her highly successful career, presented in January of this year, Annie Laurie, the work of a contemporary playwright. • To use theatre parlance: all box-office records for previous performances were broken. In their best bibs and tuckers, a highly receptive audience (which, incidentally, occupied every available bit of space in Chidwick auditorium) showed their appreciation of Wall Spens ' little drama most enthusiastically. • The play, deriving its theme from the ballad of the same name, is one of Scottish feudal strife, of lovers separated by war and family hatred, and of their final union, together with the reconciliation of clan enemies. • It is not the function, nor indeed would it be possible for this particular critic to cite any special performance as outstanding. There were too many excellent portrayals, giving evidence of complete sympathy with the part in guestion, to warrant that. • Not the least portion of the acclaim for this splendid presentation, is due Miss Miriam Little Simons, instructor in speech, and dramatic coach at the college, whose zealous efforts have enab led her to chalk up another mark for herself on the credit side of the histrionic ledger. • It is our hope that henceforth Mr. Shakespeare will not be completely over- looked. We feel this rest was due him; and that by the sometime-presentation of the plays of more recent authors, a sincerer appreciation of his works will be fostered in an ever-increasing theatre audience. CAST Sir Robert Laurie Annie Laurie, his daughter Jeanie MacLaren, his niece Lord Ferguson Lady Carlyle, his sister Eleanor Lockwood Marguerite Letellier . Mary E. Foley Lucey Leonard Margaret Donnelley Hp ft tTW flfra M - njjr B Jl - B F- t ■■ li 1 } u £ • fill ' ll PROPS AND PAINT Sir William Douglas Lord Donald Gregory Lady Jane Scott Lord Bruce Lady Bruce . Reverend Wallace Mither Mackintosh Ramsey .... Meg .... Sandy .... . Alice Touhey Viola Laemmle Florence Medon Betty Shiels Helen McDonough Anita LaLancette Susan Kelly Phyllis Stevens Eileen Boyle Virginia Boland Isabel Basanta 1936 Dorothy Hogan Frances Bossuet Lucey Leonard Gertrude Finnegan Helen McDonough Mary Galvin Florence Medon Kathleen Chambers Janet Rogan 1937 Mildred Murphy Eileen Collins Marcella Newcomb Mary Dee Elizabeth Sheils Anita Gougelman Phyllis Stevens Marguerite Letellier Elda Tanasso Clare Barrett 1938 Anne La Hines Margaret Bisconti Etta Loughran Iris Bohan Edith McLoughlin Margaret Bohmert Marie Mulle Eileen Boyle Elizabeth O ' Dea Moya Clarke Muriel Ruppert Patricia Doyle Faith Sabella Kathryn Foley Frances Sanchez Geraldine Foster Ruth Schmitt Viola Laemmle Virginia Smith Catherine Archer 1939 Grace Leech Virginia Boland Marie Louise Leibell Lucille Davidson Eleanor Lockwood Marie De Wolfe Helen Malley Susan Kelly Margaret O ' Connell Araceli Riera 226 CHOIR CATHERINE GILLEN, ' 36 President MARGUERITE LETELLIER, ' 37 Vice-President ANNE LYNN, ' 36 Publicity Committee MARY LOUISE QUILTER, ' 37 Publicity Committee 1936 Anne Lennon Mercedes Ormston Shirley Van Hoff 1937 Margaret Donnelly 1938 Mary Conaty Helen Kieffer Helen Elmendorf Lilian Pendor 1939 227 Virginia Boland Catherine Cannon Louise Fox Betty Lynn Marian Moffett Mary Williams GLEE CLUB ANNE LENNON, ' 36 .... President HELEN McNABB, ' 36 . First Vice-President MARGARET SULLIVAN, ' 37 ... . EVELYN PELLETIER, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer CLARE McNAMARA, ' 36 ... . Chairman Membership Committee MOTHER M. CLOTHILDE. . . Moderator 1936 Madeline Hedenberg Madelyn Cassidy Doris Georg Margaret Berger Mary Bermingham Iris Bohan Doris Brown Mary Conaty Virginia Ahearn Evelyn Anderson Mary Bannon Grace Barber Mary Biggs Marion Borowetz Madeline Bushel Mary Alice Cahill Katherine Cannon Mary T. Connolly Second Vice-President Irene McHugh Edith Mullen Ellen Donovan Catherine Funke Frances Healy Helen Keiffer Marie Mulle Loretta Conway Marie Cotter Agnes Crotty Gertrude Cullen Lucille Davidson Lucille Donovan Charlotte Durham Patricia Fennell Louise Fox Betty Frailey Elsie Oberle 1937 Evelyn Pelletier 1938 Margaret O ' Donnell Louann Perry Edwina Sandford Anne Schneider Anne St. Pierre 1939 Rosemary Gerard Flora Griffin Gloria Gunther Willette Halleran Veronica Harding Margaret Hogan Catherine Hynds Rosemary Jarcynski Agnes P. Mahoney Anna Louise McClosky Adele Perugini Anita Schwalji Margaret Sullivan Dolores Trosset Marie Vermylen Millicent Viscount Helen White Elizabeth McLaughlin Mary McManus Marion Moffett Rita Murphy Margaret O ' Connell Rhoda Powers Virginia Reilly Margaret Roach Margaret Roeser Ruth Segerson 228 ALPHA NU OMICRON MARIE REISERT, ' 36 President MARY FOLEY, ' 36 Vice-President ELIZABETH MARY OTIS, ' 36 Treasurer Grace Dietz Eileen Dugliss Mary Foley Julia Foody Catherine Gillen Frances Leamy Anne Lynn Irene McHugh Muriel Paige Aileen Price Alice Touhey 229 ANNALES STAFF MARIE REISERT, ' 36 Editor-in-Chief ELIZABETH MARY OTIS, ' 36 Business Manager CATHERINE GILLEN, ' 36 Literary Editor ANNE LYNN, ' 36 Associate Literary Editor JANE CALLAGHAN, ' 36 Publication Manager LITERARY STAFF Grace Dietz Julia Foody Muriel Paige Eileen Dugliss Frances Leamy Aileen Price Mary Foley Irene McHugh Alice Touhey ART STAFF JOSEPHINE DUTTO Art Editor Mary Norton Frances Utting PHOTOGRAPHIC STAFF CLAIRE STOPFORD Snapshot Manager Natalie Briggs Gertrude McGuire Josephine Rogers STENOGRAPHIC STAFF ELIZABETH KELLY Stenographic Manager Helen Brennan Betty Dunnigan Dorothy Hogan Lilian Curran Rita McGrath ADVERTISING STAFF VIRGINIA TUCKER Advertising Manager ANNETTE LANGLOIS Associate Manager Margaret Crap Rosemary Kenedy Lillian Polo Laurette Gleeson Irene Vaughan SUBSCRIPTION STAFF DOROTHY M. BRENNAN Subscription Manager Frances Bossuet Gertrude Finnegan Mary Gannon Priscilla Fenner Mary Galvin Winifred Walsh 230 THE QUARTERLY CATHERINE M. GILLEN, ' 36 HELENE PECHEUX, ' 37 . . KAYE M. CHAMBERS, ' 37 . IOSEPHINE DUTTO, ' 36 . . MARY DALY, ' 37 ... . RUTH CARROLL, ' 37 . . . ELIZABETH SASSEEN, ' 37 . MOTHER THOMAS AQUINAS Editor-in-Chief . Associate Editor . Exchange Editor Art Editor Business Manager Circulation Manager Advertising Manager . Moderator 1936 Eileen Dugliss Julia Foody Helen McDonough Frances Utting 1937 El da Tanasso 1938 Katherine Houghton Kathryn Mahoney Irene McHugh Muriel Paige Marie Reisert Jean McEvoy Alice Russell 231 MEMBERS OF SCRIBBLERS JANE STRETCH, ' 36 President KAYE M. CHAMBERS, ' 37 Secretary and Treasurer MOTHER FRANCIS D ' ASSISI Moderator 1936 Eileen Dugliss Mary Foley Mary Galvin Ruth Kohl Evelyn Leahy Janet Rogan 1937 Elizabeth Burbank Ruth Carroll Kathleen Copp Ann McEvoy Ruth Young Anne Lennon Anne Lynn Alice Mundorff Elizabeth Mary Otis Muriel Paige Mary Ann Mullaney Helene Pecheux Mary Louise Quilter Miriam Treffeisen 232 TATLER STAFF EILEEN DUGLISS, ' 36 Editor-in-Chi ef HELENE PECHEUX, ' 37 Associate Editor ANNE McEVOY, ' 37 Associate Editor MIRIAM TREFFEISEN, ' 37 Associate Editor JANE DODGE, ' 36 Copy Editor RUTH YOUNG, ' 37 News Editor MOTHER M. GRACE Moderator DEPARTMENTAL EDITORS MARY FITZSIMONS, ' 36 Exchange Editor ALYS SAVAGE, ' 36 Exchange Editor JULIA FOODY, ' 36 Society Editor MADELYN AHERN, ' 37 Society Editor IRENE McHUGH, ' 36 Sodality Editor ELIZABETH DIMOND, ' 37 Sports Editor NEWS BOARD Kathleen Curtin, ' 37 Frances O ' Connell, ' 37 Etta Loughran, ' 38 Mary Daly, ' 37 Mary Louise Quilter, ' 37 Rita Marshuetz, ' 38 Evelyn Daunais, ' 37 Margaret Wilson, ' 37 Jeanne Martenis, ' 38 Alice Mitchell, ' 37 Catherine Fox, ' 38 Doris Nevins, ' 38 Edith Mullen, ' 37 Mary Lavelle, ' 38 Alice Russell, ' 38 BUSINESS BOARD ELIZABETH SHEILS, ' 37 Business Manager JOSEPHINE ROGERS, ' 36 Staff Photographer LILLIAN POLO, ' 36 Circulation Manager Dorothy Norton, ' 37 Nancy Lamey, ' 38 Mary Maher, ' 38 Mary Byrnes, ' 38 Ann Schultz, 38 233 COUNCIL OF DEBATE RITA ARMSTRONG, ' 36 . . . President MARY LOUISE QUILTER, ' 37 . . . GERTRUDE FINNEGAN, ' 36 Vice-President Chairman of Contest Committee MARGARET WILSON, ' 37 . . . Secretary MOTHER JOAN OF ARC . . Moderator MADELINE WELDON, ' 37 . . . Treasurer MR. JOHN LANE . Coach 1936 Isabel Basanta Kathryn Kearney Helen McDonough Elizabeth Otis Dorothy Brennan Anne Lennon Irene McHugh Lillian Polo Julia Foody Lucey Leonard Alice Mundorff Claire Stopford Mary Galvin 1937 Mary Louise Syms Madeline Ahern Rita Frey Frances Moran Marion Price Ruth Carroll Dorothy Hickey Mary Anne Mullaney Ruth O ' Brien Kaye M. Chambers Evelyn Kuntz Marcella Newcomb Mary Ryan Kathleen Copp Anita La Lancette Georgia Nobis Margaret Sullivan Mary Daly Minerva LaSala Helene Pecheux Peggy Woods Mary Dee Eileen McEnery Evelyn Pelletier Anne Zabawski 1938 Bernice Boeker Betty Fitzgerald Mary Lavelle Madelyn Rauner Eileen Boyle Geraldine Foster Margaret Lawlor Jane Roberts Mary Byrnes Catherine Fox Jeanne Lewis Margaret Roeser Moya Clarke Frances Healy Bernice MacNeil Alice Russell Catherine Coen Kathryn Kenny Edith McLaughlin Frances Sanchez Marie Coneys Mary Kilcullen Margaret Mihalik Anne Schultz Eleanor Dempsey Anne LaHines Margaret Mary O ' Brien Virginia Smith Mary Endrich Nancy Lamey Josephine Purcell Helen White Helen Felitto 1939 Catherine Archer Helen Malley Elizabeth Quilter Eileen Welch Edith Bernholz Katherine MacDonagh Araceli Riera Marie Yanarella Betty Lynn Marie Pinto Ruth Segerson 234 ALICE MUNDORFF, ' 36 Chairman IRENE McHUGH, ' 36 ANNE LENNON, ' 36 Assistant Secretary MOTHER JOAN OF ARC Moderator Gertrude Finnegan Lillian Polo Ruth Carroll Kaye Chambers Rita Frey Mary Ann Mullaney Marcella Newcomb Georgia Nobis Ruth O ' Brien Helene Pecheux Marian Price Mary Ryan Margaret Sullivan Margaret Wilson Eileen Boyle Mary Endrich Helen Felitto Anne La Hines Jeanne Lewis Berenice MacNeil Marie Mule Alice Russell ART CLUB JOSEPHINE DUTTO, ' 36 . . . President MARION QUINN, ' 36 . . . . Treasurer MARY NORTON, ' 36 . . Vice-President KATHLEEN CLARKE, ' 37 . . Secretary Virginia Bastian Elena Bianchi Frances Bossuet Mildred Carlier Veronica Coleman Margaret Crap Lillian Curran Kathryn Daly Edna Davis Madelyn Ahern Bernadette Barrett Kathleen Clarke Henrietta Conlon Helen Dugan Mary Allen Eileen Boyle Eleanor Dempsey Catherine Fodemaier Catherine Funke Betie Coyle Agnes Crotty Nancy Dougherty 1936 Margaret Delaney Elizabeth Dunnigan Josephine Dutto Mary Foley Loretta Gleeson Marie Harvey Katherine Kearney Rosemary Kennedy Theora Knoop Rita McAuliffe Marie McLaughlin Marie McManus Theresa Miller Florence Morrissey Mary Norton Marion Quinn Edna Regal Janet Rogan Helen D ' Eufemia Jane Duffy Helen Faissole Catherine Flannagan Eleanor O ' Connell 1937 Jean O ' Connell Rita McAuley Rosemary McEvoy Elizabeth Moore Rose Marie Mortocci Ann Kergaravat Rosemary La Londe Marie McNulty Mildred Mueck 1938 Ann Elsa Morales Dorothy Norton Peg O ' Shea Rita Perna 1939 Tullia Foscati Grace Master son Eileen Kavanagh Jane Roberts Edith Ryan Blanche Schilgen H. Claire Stopford Mary Louise Syms Alice Touhey Frances Utting Irene Vaughn Shirley Van Hoff Isabelle Welke Agnes Murphy Dorothy Porcelli Georgette Stienberg Margaret Wilson Alice Russell Edwina Sanford Madeline Smith Virginia Marie Smith Anne St. Pierre Mary K. Sullivan Alice Wintrick 236 H I S P A N O EL CENTRO ELSIE OBERLE, ' 36 . . . President NANCY BIRRITTELLA, ' 36 . . Treasurer NOEMI GARCIA, ' 37 . Vice-President ISABEL SAURI, ' 36 . . Treasurer FLORENCE MEDON, ' 36 . Secretary SENORA BECERRA . . Moderator 1936 Rosanne Alliger Priscilla Fenner Marie Harvey Florence Mcrrissey Isabel Basanta Mary Fitzsimcns Adel Hauste in Kitty Murray Frances Bossuet Eleanor Frawley Madeline Hedenburg Mary Ryle Edna Davis Jeanne Griffin Mary Frances Krussman Alys Savage Dorothy Ensign 1937 Shirley Van Hoff Bernadette L. Campbell Mary Hughes Irene McLoughlin Dorothy Porcelli Rita Dugan Dorothy Hyde Mary McManus Ruth White Claire Egan Eleanor Lynch Marie Nolan 1938 Doris Brown Helen Kieffer Alice Norton Margaret Sullivan Jane Butler Viola Laemmle Cecilia Pfeifer Eleanor Towey Winifred Carroll Jeanne Lewis Mary Piantarosa Mary Tracy Betty Donahue Kathryn Mahoney Anne Ryle Mary Victory Helen Elmendorf Dorothy Murray Frances Sanchez Evelyn Werner Kathryn Foley 1939 Muriel Joan Boesch Marie Louise Duma Agnes Marr Anne Ryle Virginia Boland Patricia Fennell Rita Murphy Jeanne Sarg Catherine Braddin Bette Frailey Helen McCormick Florence Sexton Louanna Breitschadel Ethel Hall Natalie O ' Brien Ruth Tally Marjorie Cohn Audrey Keener Marion J. O ' Keefe Marcella Tyrrell Gertrude Cooke Carmen Kennedy Rhoda Powers Dorothy Walsh Virginia Cox Agnes Mahoney Elsie Jean Quigley Helen Wasson Lenora Driver Grace Master son Margaret Rabbott Dorothy Zedler Marie Duffin 237 C H C L U B F R E N LUCILE BYRNE, ' 36 . . FRANCES KIRBY, ' 37 . . GERTRUDE McGUIRE, ' 36 JOSEPHINE URBAN, ' 36 . MISS JOSEPHINE VALLERIE President Vice-President Secretary Treasurer Moderator Claire Boland Elvira Bria Mildred Carlier Margaret Crap Elvira Dowell Betty Dunnigan Madeleine Hedenberg Annette Langlois Alice Mary Daly Evelyn Daunais Aurora Del Valle Marie L. Dumas Anita La Lancette Marguerite Letellier 1936 Betty Lawlor Catherine Leonnard Kitty Murray Annette Nathan Florence Robinson Marie Salvatore Mari jane Schratweiser Marie Louise Syms Louise Touhey 1937 Evelyn Pelletier Marion Price Marie Riccio Rose Valente Angelina Vitali Mary Riether 238 C I R C O L O DANTE ROSE CELESTINO, ' 36 . . President LILLIAN ALAIMO, ' 36 . . Vice-President MARIE SALVATORE, ' 36 . . Treasurer RITA PERNA, ' 38 . . . . Corresponding Secretary FLORENCE MILANO, ' 37 . Recording Secretary MOTHER CLOTHILDE ANGELA .... 1936 Moderator Elena Bianchi Lillian Polo Nancy Birrettella 1937 Fay Tacconelli Bernadette Campbell Rose Martocci Helen D ' Eufemia Edith Mullen Grace Griffith Dorothy Porcelli Minerva LaSalle Marie Riccio Mafalda Luciano Rose Valente 1938 Sophie Russo Louise Beccaris Elizabeth Celestino Margaret Bisconti Gertrude Dochelli Dorothy Bria Anna DiLeo Evelyn Brocia Marie Pisciotta 1939 Mildred Mueck Mercedes Bisordi Teresa Crachi Catherine Brady Cornelia De Rosa Virginia Carnevale Mary Di Leo Ida Cornelia Adele Grilli 239 Denise Postorino DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN MARY FRANCES RYLE, ' 36 . President DOROTHY KENNY, ' 36 . Vice-President GEORGIA NOBIS, ' 37 . . Treasurer RUTH FRANCES SCHMITT, ' 38 . Secretary EVELYN KUNTZ, ' 37 . . Recording Secretary DR. OTTO SCHMITZ . . . Moderator 1936 Lillian Alaimo Dorothy Kenny Marie Reisert Rita Armstrong Margaret Kenny Florence Robinson Virginia Bastian Theora Knoop Josephine Rogers Mildred Carlier Mary Frances Krussman Mary Frances Ryle Marion Conner Anne Lennon Marie Salvatore Madeline Delamarre Katherine Leonard Isabelle Sauri Elvira Dowell Anne Lynn Alys Savage Elizabeth Dunnigan Constance Markey Frances Schlosser Josephine Dutto Gertrude McGuire Mary Schratweiser Jeannette Edwards Irene McHugh Claire Stopford Mary Fitzsimons Helen McNabb Alice Touhey Eleanor Frawley Helen Morton Frances Utting Adele Geils Kitty Murray Dorothy Van Wagner Catherine Gillen Mary Norton Irene Vaughn Madeline Hedenberg Elsie Oberle Winifred Walsh Florence Heiber Lillian Polo Catherine Welsh DER DEUTSCHE Madelyn Ahern Rita Bader Madge Cassidy Margaret Corcoran Elizabeth Dimond Eleanor Dooley Catherine Dunne Elsie Frost Regina Ganly Mary Hughes Eileen Jaeger Mary Allen Margaret Banger Bernice Baruden Margaret Berger Doris Brown Bernadette Campbell Catherine Cleary Peggy Degnan Anne DiLeo Catherine Louise Donnelly Mary Endrick Muriel Everett Cathryn Fodermaier Helen Grogan Barbara Hahn Mary Hanrahan Aline Baldwin Marion Beecher Catherine Brady Mary DiLeo Loretta Dost Noama Falk Eileen Gallagher Mildred Guilfoyle 1937 Frances Kinley Evelyn Kuntz Marian Loonan Eileen Lyons Mary McManus Muriel Meeks Edith Mullen Alice Murphy Marian Newmann Georgia Nobis 1938 Katherine Houghton Katherine Kenny Mary L. Kilcullan Lucy Kirby Margaret Kuhn Etta Loughran Betty Lutz Jean MacEvoy Janet Magness Jeanne Martenis Mildred Mueck Dorothy Murray Marion O ' Reilley Cecelia Pfeifer Lucille Phillips 1939 Virginia Lee Helen Leonard Elizabeth McLoughlin Therese Mewenhous Helen Mohr Anne Murphy Margaret O ' Connell V E R E I N Elizabeth O ' Connell Mary Louise Quilter Mary Reither Florence Ryan Edna Schmitt Rita Sheridan Virginia Steinbugler Margaret Sullivan Ruth Young Madeline Weldon Mary Wickam Josephine Purcell Jeanne Quinlan Madeline Rauner Irene Reardon Alice Russell Anne Ryle Faith Sabella Edwina Sanford Rose Santanillo Mary Schmitz Ruth Frances Schmitt Virginia Marie Smith Anne St. Pierre Margaret E. Sullivan Eleanor Twoey Millicent Viscount Rhoda Powers Elizabeth Quilter Edith Schiff Erna Stengle Mary Sullivan Elizabeth Szotkowski Belinda Taylor Helen Wasson 241 DOCTORS’ DAUGHTERS VIRGINIA BASTIAN, ' 36 President LOUISE O ' DONNELL, ' 38 Treasurer MOTHER M. PAULA Moderator Mary Louise Byrnes 1936 Elsie Oberle Elizabeth Kelly Frances Utting Eileen Collins 1937 Mary Loftus Margaret Letellier Evelyn Pelletier Kathryn Coen 1938 Marjorie Kelly Gertrude Dochelli Mary Lavelle Geraldine Foster Leonora Rozan Helen Grogan Faith Sabella Margaret Cotter Mary Tracy 1939 Agnes Ma honey Tina Totero 242 THE SCIENCES BIOLOGY CLUB LILLIAN ALAIMO, ' 36 President FRANCES HEALY, ' 38 Secretary ISABEL SAURI, ' 36 Treasurer MISS FRANCES DUFFY Moderator Natalie Briggs Adele Geils Rosemary Kenedy Bernadette Campbell Gertrude Cook Aurora del Valle Elizabeth Dimond Mary Allen Claire Barrett Bernice Barudin 1936 Virginia McDonough Helen Morton Muriel M. Paige Ann Reilly 1937 Elsie Frost Noemi Garcia Grace Griffith Anita Gougelman Mary Hughes 1938 Marjorie Kelly Mary Kilcullen Elaine Lawrence Mary Ryle Claire Stopford Fay Taconelli Mary McManus Mildred Murphy Marion Price Angelina Vitale Cecile Pfeifer Lucille Philips Beatrice Picone 244 BIOL Mary Birmingham Margaret Bohmert Eleanor Byrne Mary Byrnes Carmen del Valle Gertrude Dochelle Muriel Everett Veronica Harding Anne Hergaravat Sally Herrold Margaret Adrian Virginia Ahern Evelyn Anderson Mary Babic Mercedes Bannon Grace Barber Edith Bernholz Mary Biggs Marie Blossey Virginia Boland Marion Borowitz Kathryn Braddin Amanda Breihtshadel Elizabeth Breton Catherine Brody Rita Buckley Margaret Canning Catherine Cannon Antoinette Carlucci Catherine Cavanaugh Maria Luisa Cisneros Marjorie Cohn Mary F. Connolly Loretta Conway Virginia Cox Elizabeth Coyle Theresa Crachi Agnes Crotty Lucy Cuomo Agnes Dalton Margaret Dermody O G Y 1938 — Continued Mary Lee Jeanne Lewis Elizabeth Lutz Oralyn Macatee Rita Marshuetz Ruth McHugh Ellen Morissey Claire Murray Mildred Mueck Doris Nevins Lillian Pender 1939 Cornelia De Rosa Patricia Fennell Elizabeth Fitzpatrick Muriel Flaherty Elizabeth Flood Marion Flood Louise Fox Eileen Gallagher Elsie Gallant Rosemary Gerard Ruth Gilmartin Marie Glynn Adela Grilli Eleanor Halacy Ethel Hall Willette Halleran Mary Halligan Kathleen Harding Marie Harrison Marie Holland Margarina King Margaret Kirk Margaret Knight Virginia Lee Molly Leibell Eleanor Lockwood Anne McAheam Kathryn MacDonagh Mary McManus Ellen McNabb CLUB Jean Quinlan Elizabeth Quirk Ann Schneider Janet Sheehan Jane Shiehan Madeline Smith Virginia Smith Delores Trosset Mary Walsh Helen White Alice McNamara Agnes McIntyre Marie McNulty Agnes Mahoney Norma Masucci Anne Murphy Marie Murphy Rita Murphy Theresa Niewenhaus Margaret O ' Connell Gertrude Paisley Marie Pinto Catherine Quinlan Margaret Rabbott Mary Randall Virginia Reilly Araceli Riera Carmella Robustella Margaret Ryan Marian Roeser Audrey Schaeffer Georgeann Shakel Kathryn Smith Ruth Smith Mary Sullivan Genevieve Sutherland Julia Treacy Marcella Tyrrell Dorothy Walsh Claire Whitmore Mary Williams 245 HOME E CON O M I C S RITA McAULIFFE, ' 36 . . President DOROTHY NORTON, ' 37 Secretary-Treasurer MISS CATHERINE CURRAN . 1936 Moderator Elena Bianchi Edna Davis Ruth Kohl Mary Louise Byrnes Katherine Kearney Rita McAuliffe Margaret Christoph Margaret Kenny Winifred Walsh Veronica Coleman Marian Kerin Isabelle Welcke 1937 Catherine Dunne Dorothy Norton Georgette Steenberg Rosemary McEvoy Anita Schwalje Virginia Steinbugler 1938 Mary Bermingham Elaine Lawrence Anne Schneider Mary Patricia Byrnes Oralyn Macatee Madeleine Smith Mary Louise Connelly Janet Magness Clara Louise Taylor Elizabeth Donahue Eileen O ' Connel Marie Vermylen Virginia Karl Marion O ' Reilly Louanne Perry May Walsh 1939 Margaret Dowling Alyce McNamara Gertrude Raymond Doris Geiser Elizabeth Morse Barbara Schall Rosemary Heiber Elizabeth Murphy Elizabeth Ann Young 246 VERONICA COLEMAN, ' 36 RUTH KOHL, ' 36 . . . DR. JAMES J. McBRIDE Secretary-Treasurer Moderator Josephine Rogers Isabel Sauri Claire Stopford Margaret Kenny Evelyn Leahy Rita McAuliffe Helen Morton Lillian Alaimo Elena Bianchi Adele Geils 1937 Rita McAuley Ruth O ' Brien Anita Schwalje Georgette Steenberg Virginia Steinbugler Elsie Frost Noemi Garcia Marie Anita Gougleman Virginia Smith Carmen del Valle Mary Kilcullen Ruth Quinn Mary Saunders Margaret Bohmert Katherine Kenny Catherine Hynds Helen Leddy Catherine Leo Elizabeth Lynn Helen Mohr Joan Quinn Ruth Segerson Erna Stengel Gertrude Straub Belinda Taylor Judith Toole Aline Baldwin Mary Boulle Catherine Brady Madeline Bushel Eileen Gallagher Rita Gilhooly CURRENT EVENTS CLUB DOROTHY M. BRENNAN, ' 36 KATHRYN KEARNEY, ' 36 MARY GANNON, ' 36 . . . AILEEN PRICE, ' 36 . . , MISS MARGARET V. COSSE . President Vice-President Secretary-Treasurer Librarian Moderator 1936 Rita Armstrong Natalie Briggs Mary Fitzsimons Julia Foody Katherine McLoughlin Claire Stopford Mary Norton Elizabeth Mary Otis Josephine Rogers Alys Savage Frances Schlosser 1937 Margaret Mary Corcoran Katherine Fagan Eleanor Dooley Eileen McEnery Miriam Treiffeisen 248 MATH CLUB JOSEPHINE ROGERS, ' 36 President GEORGINE McGUIRE, ' 37 Vice-President MARY RYAN, ' 37 Secretary MADILINE RAITI, ' 38 Treasurer 1937 Madeleine Cassidy Claire Egan Patricia Hilvert Mary Ryan 1938 Ann Ahearn Katherine Alferano Kay Cleary Mary Daly Rita Donnelly Peggy Ducey Mary Hanrahan 1939 Kay Leonard Natalie O ' Brien E. Szotkowski Georgia Nobis Santa Ponticello Mary Riether Barbara Hohn Margaret Kuhn Jean Martinus Dorothy Murray Jean O ' Grady Eleanore Towey Millicent Viscount Florence Sentos Margaret Sullivan 249 SOCIOLOGY CLUB MARY McGUIRE, ' 36 MARGE KENNEDY, ' 36 . MARGARET DELANEY, ' 36 KATHLEEN LARESSY, ' 36 Isabel Basanta Virginia Bastian Marie Bohan Dorothy Clifford Margaret Delaney Eleanor Dooly Alice Grattan Marion Hickey Eileen Collins Dorothy Haneran 1936 lane Dodge Eileen Dugliss Peggy Fenner Florence Friedman Margaret Kennedy Kathleen Laressy 1937 Grace Houlihan Eleanor Lynch Elizabeth Moore Edith Mullen 1938 Viola Laemmle Doris Nevins Louise Masse President Corresponding Secretary Recording Secretary Treasurer Mary McGuire Alice Mundorff Janet Rogan Edith Ryan Katherine Welsh Evelyn Pelettier Genevieve Quinn Margaret Sullivan Mary McNabb Evelyn Werner 250 CAMPUS CLUBS OF THE FUTURE • As we bid farewell to the campus clubs of today and to their members, we look forward and muse on those of tomorrow, the tomorrow of twenty or twenty- five years from now, the tomorrow, possibly, when our daughters will be en- rolled in those future college clubs. • Will they have improved and changed so that we will fail to recognize them? Will they so impress us with their ultra-modern and futuristic wonders that we will wish to change places with the next generation? Or, rather, will they amuse us and recall to mind the social activities of grandmother ' s or even great grand- mother ' s day? • We hear on all sides that this civilization is doomed and that men will eventually revert to barbarous ways. Should the change come gradually rather than with a cataclysmic crash, we of thirty-six might indeed find our daughters ' amusements old-fashioned or mid- Victorian, and not at all exciting. • The reign of the knitting needle has already begun and we fear that the embroidery needle comes fast upon its heels. Perhaps the genteel ' ' occupa- tions of knitting and sewing will be incorporated into an organized extra-curri- cular activity similar to the Ladies Aid Societies of the mauve decade. A campus club for bigger and better knitters and sewers would indeed be novel. • And were time to turn back more quickly, think what we might find! A colonial or puritanical spirit might produce a Colonial Cap-Setters Club, a society dedicated to the fine art of procuring a husband in a demure and subtle way opposed to the knock-down-drag- ' em-out tactics of this glorious leap-year of thirty-six. And what a picture of a club of the Restoration Period can be conjured up. Imagine a club of Languishing Lovers with try-outs designed to test one ' s ability to languish becomingly and to faint enchantingly! • Of course, if men should return to the stcne-age within the next quarter of a century, there would be little hope for campus clubs of any type. They would lapse into the past along with automobiles and radios, steam-heat and electric light. Were such a thing to happen, the campus, and even the college itself, would have to go. We feel that such a condition would be deplorable for our children, for we are grown wiser and sadder by pondering the momentous question, What will life be away from college and our campus clubs? — Grace E. Dietz, ' 36 251 Not the least of collegiate activities are athletics. An architecturally beautiful Sports Building providing a pool, basket- ball courts, sun room, and restful lounge is the center of a program carried on by an enthusiastic Athletic Association. EXECUTIVE BOARD OF A. A. NATALIE BRIGGS, ' 36 . . BETTY BURBANK ' 37 KATHLEEN COPP, ' 37 . . MARY PATRICIA BYRNES, ' 38 MARY NORTON, ' 36 . . . CONSTANCE MARKEY, ' 36 . ROSEMARY MURPHY, ' 37 ELIZABETH KELLY, ' 36 . . IANICE HUGHES, ' 37 . . MADELYN CASSIDY, ' 37 EILEEN COLLINS, ' 37 . . MRS. PAUL OSTERTAG . . MOTHER M. JOSEPH . . . Custodian . President Vice-President . Secretary . Treasurer Head of Basketball Head of Baseball . Head of Riding Head of Swimming Head of Tennis Head of Golf Physical Directress Moderator 254 SENIOR BASKETBALL TEAM CONSTANCE MARKEY, Captain Natalie Briggs Rosemary Kenedy Frances Leamy AILEEN PRICE, Manager Anne Lennon Mary Norton Claire Stopford JUNIOR BASKETBALL TEAM KATHERINE AHEARN, Captain Betty Burbank Madelyn Cassidy Helen Clark RITA FREY, Manager Eileen Collins Elizabeth Dimond Rosemary Murphy Angelina Yitali SOPHOMORE BASKETBALL TEAM MARY BYRNES, Captain Jane Butler Cecelia Fodermaier Lorraine Loustalot EVELYN WERNER, Manager Mary Maher Louise Masse Frances Sanchez Madeleine Smith FRESHMAN BASKETBALL TEAM EVELYN NORTHRUP, Captain Catherine Bradin Mary Clancy Marion Dunkley MARGARET KIRK, Manager Rita Gilhooley Eleanor Lockwood Mary McHugh Marion O ' Keefe 255 BASKETBALL HISTORY OF 1936 • Back in Freshman year, with the announcement of basketball tryouts, a crowd of excited, hopeful aspirants turned out. Interest was high; competition keen and eagerly we awaited the selection of the lucky cream of the crop. The decision was made and 1936 started off its court career represented by a team captained by Frances Leamy, managed by Winifred Walsh and having as its members: Natalie Briggs, Laurette Gleason, Evelyn Leahy, Constance Markey, Florence Medon, Mercedes Ormston, Grace Reeves and Vivian Volk. • As Helen Brennan, class president, unfurled our new class banner at the first game, the Freshman team went into action against their Junior sisters. They emerged victorious and hopefully looked forward to their meeting with the Seniors. In this next contest, ' 36 put up a stiff battle but the combination of Florence Walsh and Irene Broderick backed by their hard-fighting team proved too much and the Freshmen went down in defeat. Then came the Sophomore game, also unsuccessful. For this year the Freshmen were out of the running and the Meet found Seniors and Sophomores competing, with Seniors having the winning score. • Sophomore year rolled around and the opening game found the same team taking the floor with the exception of Jane Callaghan and Kathryn Daly who replaced Vivian Volk and Mercedes Ormston. This year also saw two of our classmates given positions on the varsity — Natalie Briggs, as guard, and Florence Medon, forward. The Sophomores were out to win and their first two opponents, the Juniors and the Freshmen, found that 1936 meant business. Not only did they win, but they won by indisputable majority. • This gave ' 36 a chance in the Meet and decked out in green and white middies, they met the Juniors in a fight-to-the-finish battle and finally carried off the honors by the very close score of 16-15. Leamy and McCallester were high scorers of the evening. 256 • Junior year changed the basketball personnel but slightly. Mary Norton and Aileen Price were given the positions left vacant by Grace Reeves and Laurette Gleeson. With the past year ' s record to encourage them, ' 36 set the Meet as their goal. The season started successfully with a defeat of the Freshmen. The Junior-Sophomore game followed with the Juniors still on the winning end. Then came the Junior-Senior game and ' 35, out for their last opportunity for revenge, made good their threat and beat the Juniors in the last few minutes of play by the narrow margin of 18-16. But 1936 was once more entered in the Meet. This time we faced our Sister class and for the first time in ten years, a Freshman team came through to win the Meet. It was a keen, close battle and in the opinion of Mrs. Ostertag the outstanding game she has seen played on the New Ro- chelle court. • Senior year bought radical changes in the line-up. Of the original team only Briggs, Leamy and Markey remained. Norton and Price still retained their positions and Claire Stopford, Rosemary Kenedy and Anne Lennon were selected to complete the team. • In the first game, ' 36 met the Freshmen and the final score was a tie. Then, once more, our sister class proved stronger and the Sophomore-Senior game ended in victory for the former. The next clash was with the undefeated team of ' 37. The Seniors went into the game determined to make this, their last appear- ance, a victorious one. Though 1936 played hard, the final whistle blew with the Juniors far in the lead. Having ended a career, whose record was one of which to be proud, ' 36 withdrew from the court leaving the Junior and Freshman teams to fight it out for the Meet championship. — Aileen Price, ' 36 257 RIDING GROUP ELIZABETH KELLY, ' 36, Head Lillian Alaimo Rosanne Alliger Virginia Bastian Frances Bossuet Natalie Briggs Mildred Carlier Dorothy Clifford Veronica Coleman Marion Connor Lillian Curran Kathryn Daly Margaret Delaney Elvira Dowell Mary Fitzsimons Katherine Ahearn Madeline Ahern Bernadette Barrett Alice Burrows Ruth Carroll 1936 Mary Foley Julia Foody Eleanor Frawley Laurette Gleeson Marie Harvey Adel Haustein Margaret Horgan Elizabeth Kelly Rosemary Kenedy Mary Frances Krussman Evelyn Leahy Anne Lynn Constance Markey Florence Morrissey Rita McGrath 1937 Katherine Dunne Rita Hamm Mary King Rose Martocci Margaret Donnelly Mary McGuire Katherine McLoughlin Mary Norton Lillian Polo Mary Ryle Janet Rogan Alys Savage Blanche Schilgen Frances Schlosser Mari jane Schratweiser Jane Stretch Alice Touhey Frances Utting Isabel Welcke Alice Mitchell Alice Murphy Georgene McGuire Anne McEvoy Marjorie McNeil 258 1937 — Continued Helen Clark Katherine Clarke Eileen Collins Henrietta Conlon Margaret Corcoran Laura DeCain Aurora del Valle Elizabeth Dimond Louise Dowling Clare Barrett Muriel Becker Margaret Berger Margaret Bisconti Bernice Boeker Marie Bodenmiller Iris Bohan Rosemary Bugg Jane Butler Kathryn Coen Marie Coneys Carmen del Valle Margaret Ducey Helen Felitto Catherine Funke Elizabeth Fitzgerald Helen Goodrich Marguerite Adrian Mary Bannon Margaret Carroll Mary Cisneros Marie Clancy Mary Clark Marjorie Cohn Mary Teresa Connelly Marie De Wolfe Lucille Donovan Marion Dunkley Elizabeth Fagan Marion Flood Ellen Donovan Lenora Driver Jane Duffy Catherine Fagan Claire Egan Marguerite Hayden Eileen Jaeger Evelyn Kuntz Arline Lippe Muriel Meeks 1938 Barbara Hahn Adrienne Hann Veronica Harding Frances Healy Marjorie Kelly Nancy Lamey Mary Lavelle Mary Lee Etta Loughran Elizabeth Lutz Mary Maher Marie Mulle Edith McLaughlin Marie McManus Doris Nevins Regina O ' Grady Eileen O ' Connell 1939 Ruth Gilmartin Ethel Hall Willette Halleran Babs Harrison Eileen Kavanaugh Mary Louise Leibell Eleanor Lockwood Elizabeth Lynn Norma Masucci Grace Masterson Ellen McNabb Mary McHugh Theresa Nieuenhaus Marie Nolan Dorothy Norton Jean O ' Connell Dorothy Porcelli Marion Price Mary Louise Quilter Mary Riether Mary Ryan Florence Ryan Margaret O ' Donnell Margaret O ' Shea Rita Perna Dorothy Perrone Cecelia Pfeifer Josephine Purcell Ruth Quinn Jeanne Quinlan Alice Russell Anne Ryle Frances Sanchez Anne Schneider Faith Sabella Ruth Schmidt Milicent Viscount Ruth McHugh Florence O ' Donovan Gertrude Pasley Virginia Reilly Margaret Roach Audrey Schaefer Gertrude Straub Ruth Smith Mary Sullivan Tina Totero Katherine Walters Elizabeth Young Ruth Tully Eileen Welch 259 TENNIS GROUP MADELYN CASSIDY, ' 37, Head Isabel Basanta Natalie Briggs Jane Callaghan Veronica Coleman Katherine Ahearn Helen Clark Kathleen Copp Kathleen Curtin Mary Doyle 1936 Marion Connors Kathryn Daly Catherine Gillen Rosemary Kenedy Constance Markey Elsie Oberle Aileen Price Josephine Rogers Frances Schlosser Jane Stretch 1937 Katherine Dunne Catherine Fagan Anita Gougelman Eileen McEnery Edith Mullen Alice Murphy Dorothy Norton Ruth O ' Brien Evelyn Pelletier Dorothy Porcelli Elizabeth Sasseen Edna Schmidt Margaret Sullivan Angelina Vitali Marie Bodenmiller Iris Bohan Margaret Bohmert Mary Byrnes Marjorie Cahill Catherine Cleary 1938 Kathryn Coen Marie Coneys Carmen del Valle Gertrude Dochelli Helen Felitto Nancy Lamey Margaret Lawler Lorraine Loustalot Marie McManus Lucille Phillips Jane Roberts Alice Russell Frances Sanchez Ruth Schmitt Anne Schneider Marion Siller Eleanor Towey Milicent Viscount Marguerite Adrian Evelyn Anderson Edith Bernholz Marion Bicher Mary Biggs Amanda Breitschadel Jean Buckley Madeline Bushel Mary Alice Cahill Katherine Cavanaugh Jane Clancy Mary Theresa Connellv 1939 Lucille Donovan Loretta Dost Patricia Fennell Elizabeth Frailey Rita Gilhooly Adele Grilli Kathleen Harding Catherine Hynds Ruth Jarcynski Susan Kelly Margarina King Helen Leddy Grace Leech Eleanor Lockwood Anna McElhearn Mary McManus Ellen McNabb Margaret Madden Agnes Mahoney Rita Marra Agnes Murphy Marie Murphy Evelyn Northrup Margaret O ' Connell Marion O ' Keefe Elizab eth Quilter Catherine Quinlan Edith Schiff Kathryn Smith Mary Sullivan Isabelle Sweeney Alice Wintrich Elizabeth White Dorothy Zeller 260 GROUP GOLF EILEEN COLLINS, ' 37, Head 1936 Isabel Basanta Rosemary Kenedy Lillian Polo Natalie Briggs Kathleen Laressy 1937 Mary Ryle Katherine Ahearn Jane Duffy Arline Lippe Bernadette Barrett Katherine Flannigan Elizabeth Moore Florence Chamoice Marguerite Hayden Edith Mullen Helen Clark Grace Houlihan Ruth O ' Brien Ellen Donovan 1938 Frances O ' Connell Marie Bodenmiller Patricia Doyle Lillian Pender Clare Barrett Elizabeth Fitzgerald Rita Perna Doris Brown Nancy Lamey Jane Roberts Jane Butler Mary Lee Kathryn Mahoney 1939 Anne Schneider Marie Blossy Elizabeth Lynn Margaret Roach Madeline Bushel Agnes Mahoney Margaret Rabbott Patricia Fennell Agnes Murphy Ruth Segerson Helen Leddy Joan Quinn Kathryn Smith Catherine Leo Mary Randall Eileen Welch 261 HOCKEY GROUP LORRAINE LAUSTOLOT, Head 1937 Betty Burbank Betty Dimond Rita Frey 1938 Ida Cornelio Louise Masse Catherine Anne Moraller Rose Santanello 1939 Virginia Boland Mary McHugh Adela Grilli Helen Mohr Belinda Taylor Margaret O ' Brien Alice Russell Faith Sabella Ruth O ' Brien Santa Ponticelli Angelina M. Vitali Betty Lynn 262 DOWN THE ATHLETIC YEARS WITH ’36 CHAPTER 1 • It was the fall of ' 32 and the class of ' 36 was experiencing its first October at New Rochelle. Excitement prevailed everywhere. And down in the Sports Building the same state of confusion reigned. Mrs. Ostertag had called for try- outs for the Freshman basketball team. Many tried out and somehow all managed to weather the fatiguing hour of scrimmage through which they were put. Athletics were in full stride for the Frosh. Leahy, Reeves, Markey, Briggs, Glee- son, Medon, Ormston and Leamy were chosen to represent their class on the court. Leamy was elected to captain the mob and Winnie Walsh to manage them, a rather impossible job. She succeeded very well at it, however, and the initial game went to ' 36 when they defeated their sister class 22-19. Lowerclass Sports Day was the next event on the calendar and its arrival found supporters of the four classes trekking to the gym. It was a closely-fought battle with ' 36 bowing to the more superior Sophs at the end of the day. The high scorers for the events were Jane Stretch, Evelyn Leahy, Mary McGuire and Helen Brennan, the latter winning a first place for her class in personal performance. In the second basketball game, the Frosh bowed to the Seniors 29-21. Briggs, Leahy, and Leamy were outstanding but were unable to surpass the shooting ability of Florence Walsh, ' 33. The swimming team to represent the green and white was made up of Rogers, Markey, Reeves, Leahy, Kennedy, Nehrbras, Stretch, .Utting, Daly, Griffin, Brennan, Briggs, Volk and Leamy. Stretch captained the outfit and they won third place in the Meet, with Markey and Stretch leading. Field Day soon rolled around and resulted rather drastically for ' 36 for they were unable to place in the events for the day. The annual tennis tournament was won in the Freshman class by Elsie Oberle. One chapter of the athletic history of ' 36 was over but before the records were entirely closed upon it, the A. A. banguet was held in the Sports Building. Officers for the coming year were installed and Natalie Briggs was sworn in as the new secretary. Freshman year was over and the ' 36-ers retired from the restful haunts of the gym, taking with them their numerous sore muscles and stiff joints, and happy in the thought that there would be a few months respite from these various activities. CHAPTER 2 • Another October rolled around. The class of ' 36, Sophomores now, fit after a summer of swimming, tennis and golf returned again to the friendly atmosphere of the gym. The swimming team for ' 33- ' 34 was chosen and M. O ' Connell, C. Stopford and J. Dodge were added to the original team. They practised hard and carried off third place in the Meet. Fran Leamy and Connie Markey were elected to captain and manage the basketball outfit. In the initial game of the year, 263 the team defeated the Juniors 32-8. Two Sophs, N. Briggs and F. Medon, made the Varsity. Once again, activities started for the lowerclass Sports Night. Many practises were held by both teams but from the initial event of the night the Frosh were doomed to defeat by the resolute ' 36. The final score found the latter leading 95-70, having captured five out of six events, an overwhelming victory. Dot Clifford gained first place for her class in personal performance. Basketball, baseball, handball and volleyball were also won by the Sophs. The high scorers for the events were Tucker, Briggs, Daly, McGuire, Clifford, Norton, Byrne, Markey and Leamy. The final meet game in basketball finally arrived. It was a bitter, closely-fought game throughout. The score wavered from one side to the other and it was anybody ' s basketball victory until the final whistle blew. The Sophs shut out their opponents by one point, the final score showing 16-15. The entire team played brilliantly, no one girl was outstanding, but all worked together as a perfect machine. In the annual swimming meet, second place went to the Sophs after some beautiful swimming and diving on the part of Stretch and Kennedy of the green and white. These indoor sports were at an end with the approach of spring and the months of April and May found the devotees of the gym pursuing their activities outside. Field Day came around and with it the overwhelming defeat of the Sophs by the Frosh. The year, now ended, had been even more successful than the initial one. Balls, bats, and gym suits were again confined to the moth balls for the summer months. Last echoes were heard around the gym, and then — all was silent. Summer had come. CHAPTER 3 • Natalie Briggs, our new president, presided at the first meeting of A. A. in October and soon thereafter sports began again. Mary Norton was added to the basketball team of ' 36, and Edna Davis found a place on the baseball nine. Connie Markey was elected to captain the former and Mary Norton the latter. In the initial game of the year, Markey led her team to a victorious game over the new Frosh. The shooting of Callaghan and Leamy was consistent and ac- curate. In the second interclass basketball game of the year, the green and white was again victorious, defeating the Sophs, 37-31. That year also found three members of ' 36 on the Varsity: Leahy, Briggs and Leamy. In the third basketball encounter, the Seniors snapped the two-year string of Junior victories when they defeated the latter team in a terrific battle that ended 18-16. This defeat didn ' t effect the chances of the Juniors playing in the Meet, however, and this game found them opposing the Sophs. The accurate shooting of the Soph forward outdid anything put forward by the Junior shooting section and led her team to victory with the final score 16-11. Basketball was over for another year. Attention turned to the Swim Meet in which the Juniors received only a third place, Stretch again being high scorer. At the annual A. A. banguet, N. Briggs was sworn in 264 as custodian of the organization for the year ' 35- ' 36. College letter sweaters were awarded to six Juniors: Briggs, Daly, Kennedy, Leahy, Norton and Leamy. It had been a grand year; it had its ups and downs as any year. Now it was over and judging from the tears which Mrs. Ostertag ' s banguet address evoked, everyone was just a bit sorry. CHAPTER 4 • October of 1935! The last chapter of the athletic history of ' 36 was about to be completed. The initial basketball game found the green and white, Seniors at last, opposing the Frosh. A lot was expected of this new team but ' 36 wasn ' t too worried. The Senior team, as it trotted out upon the floor for this game, led by Captain Markey, was marked by the loss of Leahy and Daly, veteran centers, and Callaghan and Medon, forwards of the first three years. Rosemary Kenedy, Claire Stopford and Anne Lennon were new material, however, so the team had high hopes. These hopes soon vanished when a few minutes play brought home the realization that this Freshman outfit wasn ' t any team with which to fool. The tired, lagging steps of ' 36 guickened a bit and their pride was saved when the score ended in a tie. In the double-header game in January, things began to take on a hopeless aspect when the hard-fighting Sophs defeated the Seniors 13-8. The spirit and old-time habit of clicking together seemed to be lacking on the Senior team. Age seemed beginning to tell on them! They no longer whipped around the court, and their faces began to take on a placid, resigned aspect. The general Sports Night, to replace the Upperclass Day, brought back a lot of the old-time fervor of the classes. Through the efforts of Dot Clifford, ' 36 received a first place in personal performance. Dot was superb in the event winning it by the deliberate, smooth pace which she maintained throughout. The Seniors also placed second in the Mascot, and third in Games and Committee work but these placements weren ' t sufficient to carry them through and they emerged 11 points behind the winning Junior team. There was but one more basketball game left for ' 36 to play, and that with the team that boasted the shooting of Madge Cassidy, Angela Vitale and Rita Frey. What more need be said? The Seniors were conguered after a game fight and the athletic history of ' 36 came to a close. A knowledge of successful swimming meets and victorious interclass games remains to buoy up the spirits of those who have taken an active participation in these events; but more than that, outside of these extraneous thoughts of games well-played or meets well-swum — aside from these will remain a sense of good sportsmanship and fair play, which could have been imbued only by four years close contact with athletics and Mrs. Ostertag. It is with this thought that they bid adieu to the familiar sights of the Sports Building and to her who has made it a place of such delightful memories, and turn their steps away, a bit falteringly perhaps, but with heads held high. — Frances R. Leamy, ' 36 265 Feature that, if you can. We tried it and it didn ' t work, so with many humble bows to the right and to the left we offer to our public, sitting with bated breath, a direc- tory of school life, and more — yea, a prophet sees our students twenty years from now. ENCYCLOPAEDIA NEW ROCHELL-ICA ADVISORY BOARD — A group of ferrets or aspirant detectives. ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION— You can ' t play if you don ' t belong. ALPHA ALPHA — Honorary Society of Super- human Beings. ALARM CLOCK — An insidious instrument of torture. A mechanism designed to counter- act the ecstacies of those temporarily de- prived of consciousness. ALPHA NU OMICRON— Our literary select. ALUMNAE — A group of women who regard the present inhabitants of college as childish interlopers. AMBITION — That indefinable something, most rampant in the Freshman class. ANN ALES — You guess. APPETITE — Common characteristic of col- legians. Cause: wish we knew; Effect: frantic dieting. ARMSTRONG, RITA — A nightmare for invad- ing debaters. ART CLUB — Very social. Its meetings bring out the Bohemian in one. ASSEMBLY (COLLEGE) — 6:50 Tuesday morn- ing, or see Helen McDonough. BIOLOGY CLUB — An organization composed of bug addicts and students of vest pocket surgery. BACCALAUREATE — Good-bye, Seniors. BASKETBALL — A game which leaves players and spectators voiceless and raglike. BED — A daily objective. The main ambition of the Alarm Clock League. BELL — A small instrument with a great responsi- bility. BLIND (date of course) — Ah! me, the stories that could be woven around this one. BRIDGE — A form of mild hysteria, especially peculiar to New Rochelle. CAP AND GOWN — A billowing drapery, generally worn as an early morning dis- guise. CHAPEL — The Center of campus. CHAPLAIN — Father White, beloved of all the students. CHECK — See splurge. CLASSES — Something we have to sit through to graduate . . . the one we really like, though, is Ethics, taught by our favorite professor, Father White. COFFEE — A reviver for rudely roused resi- dents. CONDITION — Bestowed by merciless teachers on well-meaning students who really thought they knew the answer. CRAM — -Verb meaning to sit up the night before an exam. DAISY CHAIN — -The main ambition of every Junior. DAY HOPS — Those who cannot understand how a Freshman can be homesick. DEBATE (COUNCIL OF)— One of the more important clubs on campus, most typically represented — in the opinion of the Seniors — by Rita Armstrong. DICKIE — A stiff (?) white collar. A modern, or more civilized, descendant of the ancient hair shirt. DIGNITY — Most graciously personified in Theora Knoop. DIP (LIGHTS) — A nightly ceremony employed primarily as a nerve test. DIPLOMA — Wheeeeeeeeeeeeeeee! ! DISAPPOINTMENT — A sinking feeling ex- perienced at one time or another by all New Rochellites on looking into an empty mail-box. (See also Blind-Date.) DONAHUE (ANNE) — Through whose ability and ingenuity the photographic beauty of this book has been made possible. DRUG — A foggy memory from the past. EFFICIENCY — Frannie Bossuet has it most of all. EXAMS — The final blow to self-respect. FAVORITES — The Seniors have them in a big way — here are a few: Author, John Galsworthy Poem, Elizabeth Barrett Browning ' s Son- nets from the Portuguese Actor, Leslie Howard Actress, Helen Hayes Play, Pride and Prejudice FIELD-TRIPS — These have variously included visits to the dog-pound, the campus fish pond, county lunatic asylums, the zoo, and so on. FINE — An imposition. FIRE CHIEF — Ann Lennon will furnish details. FISH POND — A fish bowl with the silvan touch. FLUNK — - Of all sad words of tongue or pen The saddest are these, ' I ' ve flunked again ' . ' ' FRESHMAN — A bit of green which brightens up the campus every Fall. FRIENDSHIP — Nothing to jest about . . . those we ' ve made we want to keep. GLEEPS — An expression of suppressed dismay. (See zwurp.) GLEN ISLAND — The automatic termination of an afternoon ' s walk. (The Tea Dances held there have tender memories for many of us.) 268 Tiffany Co. Jewelers Silversmiths Stationers Quality-Through Generations Mail Inquiries Receive Prompt Attention Fifth Avenue 37 TJ! Street NewYork Telephone New Rochelle 7043 ♦ M. BARTNETT SONS Builders ♦ 33 Division Street, South New Rochelle, N. Y. ENCYCLOPAEDIA NEW ROCHELL-IC A — Continued GRADUATION — We don ' t like to think about it. GYM — To some— a torture chamber. To others, like Fran Leamy, the gilt edge on college life. HISTORY — For the sake of Freshmen, we ' ll omit anything except mention of this. HOME-SICKNESS — Common Freshman malady. HONORS — A title imposed, at graduation, upon those whose most vivid memories will be of the library and classrooms. HOPE — A Senior ' s only stimulant. HYSTERICS — A roommate ' s defensive. INFIRMARY — A haven of the weary. A harbor for exam-ridden derelicts. INVESTITURE — The ceremony which leaves a lasting memory of our Freshman year. We really felt as though we belonged after that. JOB — A strict silence should be maintained while the Seniors concentrate on this one. JUNIOR — One who knows a little more than a Sophomore, but not guite as much as a Senior. KNITTING — An incurable habit peculiar to members of the Knit- Wit Clubbe. LECTURE — A class in correspondence. LETTERS — If you ' re a good answerer, you ' ll get them. LIBRARY — Favorite haunt of book- worms. LIGHTS— (See 10 o ' clock). LITTLE AUDREY— New Rochelle ' s favorite topic of conversation. LOGIC — Wasn ' t that something about Genus and Species and Syllogisms that brightened up Sophomore year? MAJOR (not a military title) — Selected in Freshman year, studied enthusiastically in Sophomore year, changed in Junior year, and accepted resignedly in Senior year. MAN — A rare kind of animal who (our scouts have reported) has been seen at the very best New Rochelle functions, but whose presence on ordinary occasions creates a mild furor among otherwise sedate young ladies of the same institution. MAY-QUEEN — Sweetness and Light”: New Rochelle version. MENAGERIE— Gold-fish and cats. MINOR — We struggle almost as much with this as with our major. MISSION DAY — By setting aside this day every year, New Rochelle “tops all contributions to the mission-funds. 270 ENCYCLOPAEDIA NEW ROCHELL-IC A — Continued MOVIES — A college girl ' s only view of the out- side world between week-ends. MUSIC GOES ' ROUND AND ' ROUND — The extent of the roommate ' s repertoire. NAIVETE — Now that we know Mary Galvin, we wouldn ' t mind in the least being called naive. NEW ROCHELLE — Three guesses, the first two don ' t count. NOTEBOOK — A large book containing the ramblings of a student ' s subconscious mind. ORIGINALITY — Annales owed it to the capa- ble editorship of Marie Reiser t. PAGEANT — A memorable one was held to celebrate the four hundredth anniversary of the founding of the Ursuline Order. PHILOSOPHY — Something to look forward to after completing a course in Logic. PHOOEY — Password to the Biology Lab. POOL — Wherein we drown our sorrows and attain a new outlook on life. POST-OFFICE — It could tell the story of one ' s life. PREFERENCES — ' 36 shows it most decidedly in acclaiming: Alice Touhey as best-dressed Kay Gillen as most literary Marie Bohan as most attractive Elizabeth as most intellectual . . . and Gertrude Finnegan as most likely to succeed. PRESIDENT — Helen McDonough, New Ro- chelle ' s choice. Elected the most popular girl on campus. PRIVILEGE — An indefinable something en- joyed by that highest form of campus life, the Senior. PROFESSOR — It seems that we have to have them when we go to college. PROM — The social event of about four hours ' duration, which furnishes the main topic of conversation for Junior year. PROPS AND PAINT — The try-outs are gruelling, but Florence Medon proves that it has a distinction guite unlike any other campus organization. PUNS — Peggy Fenner has no use for them, but we think her rare good-humor is exceeded only by her helpfulness. QUARTERLY — (a) The intellectual publication for those with literary lean- ings. (b) Where pennies become cal- ories. All books printed in English Your Correspondence is invited ♦ P. J. KENEDY SONS ♦ 12 Barclay Street, New York Great great grandmothers of the Class of 1936, used our coal. That our fuel has become a family tradition in many N. R. homes, is attributable to our standard of guality. New Rochelle Coal Lumber Co. Since 1861 22 Pelham Road N. R. 1000 Compliments of Wallace, Burton Davis Co 376-378 Greenwich Street New York, N. Y. 271 ENCYCLOPAEDIA NEW ROCHELL-IC A — Continued QUIZZ — A field day for professors. RATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY— Only a Senior is qualified to discourse adequately on this. RECEPTION (Freshman-Senior) — At which the Freshmen, who are very scared, are made to realize the insignificance of their posi- tion by the Seniors, who (whisper it) are also very scared. RETREAT — A quiet period, lasting about four days, broken only by the click of knitting- needles. ROOMMATE — The other occupant of the room, whose duty it is to close the window each morning. RULE — Something which it is just as well not to break — except maybe, once in a while. SCIENCE LECTURE HALL— Campus fish bowl. SENIOR — Those whose enviable positions are about to terminate. SISTER — (a) Big: we might have left Freshman year, but for her. (b) Little: a new responsibility we as- sume in Junior year. SOPHISTICATION — Virginia McDonough per- sonifies it in a way all her own. SOPHOMORE — A Freshman grown up. SPRING — A college girl ' s excuse to act her age. SPLURGE — That short period of time in which life again becomes worth living. COLLEGE SENIORS presently will be seeking positions. Many are considering a career in certain fields in which employers, generally, demand definite skill in shorthand and typewriting. An Intensive Secretarial Course for College Women is available at The Packard School (Registered by the Regents of the University of the State of New York). SIX WEEKS ' SUMMER SESSION JUNE 29 to AUGUST 7 for which the tuition is $39. Packard Method of Indi- vidual Advancement and Attention affords College Women an opportunity to enter any Monday during June. THE PACKARD SCHOOL (Founded 1858) 253 Lexington Ave. at 35th Street New York City When a dealer displays a sign reading CARPENTERS’ ICE CREAM You know it ' s pure, and delicious and costs no more than ordinary. 200 Westchester Ave., White Plains, N. Y. Telephone: White Plains 672 STAIRS (Senior) — One of New Rochelle ' s dearest traditions — that none but Seniors may sit on them. STUDIOUS— Paige Muriel. TATLER — Journalism for New Rochelle ' s masses. TEA-DANCE — Recipe for romance: blind-date plus a dash of loveliness. TEA-ROOM — Gets first place in the list of favorite haunts. TEN O ' CLOCK— Lights out. TROLLEY — 15-cent ride to the city. TURNING OF TASSELS— We defy you not to cry. VACATION — You look forward to it for months, but greased lightning couldn ' t go any faster. VERSATILITY — Another star beside Fran Leamy ' s name. VILLE — Where friends meet friends for a cup of tea and a trip to Wool worth ' s. WEEK-END — When the ugly duckling becomes a sophisticated smoothie, and New Ro- chelle ' s daughters pack their bags and take off for new whirls to conquer. XTASY — Undefinable moments. YOUTH — Even after four years, we still accent it. YOW — A verbal expression upon seeing exam schedule for the first time. ZERO — The hole in the doughnut. ZWURP — See Gleeps. Open All Year! Enter Now — Individual Instruction Accounting, Stenographic, Secretarial Courses WESTCHESTER COMMERCIAL SCHOOL Day Session: 8:30 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. Night Session: Monday and Thursday 7:30 P.M. to 9:45 P.M. 529 Main Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. Telephone: New Rochelle 2744 John Farrell Charles V. Jarvis FARRELL AND JARVIS CORPORATION Electrical Construction 16 Lawton Street, New Rochelle, N. Y. Telephone: New Rochelle 1006 272 The House of Better Printing Spotless Odorless Non-Shrinkable THE KATHRYN HAYES Incorporated LITTLE PRINT Cleaning, Dyeing, Pressing and Repairing 236 Huguenot Street 33 Division Street New Rochelle 2353-6560 Phone: New Rochelle 7809 - . « 1 BOSTON SPA Esso Heat — The Oil Fuel Candy Place Beyond Compare” Call New Rochelle 5600 or 5601 Oakwood 4205 or 4206 or 4207 SYLVESTRE OIL COMPANY, INC. 563 Main Street New Rochelle, New York JOHN ADAMS HENRY FORD Sales and Service Incorporated Distributors of ORANGE MOTOR CO., INC. Tree Ripened ORANGES AND GRAPEFRUIT 430 Central Ave. Direct to the home Albany, N. Y. Direct Factory Representatives of GENERAL FOODS Chas. H. Touhey, President CORPORATION PRODUCTS Telephone 2-3361 58 Harrison St., New York, N. Y. Tel: Walker 5-5552 ■ ■- — CHARLES J. TULLY When in need of GOWNS 1 Maiden Lane HOODS New York, N. Y. CAPS Manufacturer of for any American degree write to COLLEGE AND EMBLEM COTRELL AND LEONARD JEWELRY Est. 1832 Inc. 1935 Designs Submitted Albany, N. Y. 273 PROP PLACE: University of New Rochelle campus TIME: June 4, 1956 OCCASION: Reunion of the Class of 1936 In Foundress Hall, the class has assembled under the chairmanship of Mrs. Stanislaus Smith (Peg Fenner) and the members are clamoring for the surprise that has been promised to them. Peg gives Marie Reisert, LL.D., the floor, an- nouncing that Marie has recently edited a Who ' s Who of the Class of 1936. When she raises the volume, there are murmurs of ad- miration as the audience views a green and white bound volume, resembling the never-to- be-forgotten Annales. Helen McDonough Jones, chosen to read the masterpiece, proceeds: LILLIAN ALAIMO: Awarded the Pulitzer Prize of 1946 for scientific research; also dis- covered the ultra green and white ray. ROSANNE ALLIGER: Author of fifty volume treatise on the Value of Esthetic Teaching of History in our schools. RITA ARMSTRONG: Member of the United States Senate in 1948; nominee of forth- coming governmental election in New Jersey. ISABEL BASANTA: Foundress of the Economic Library of the United States and President of the national economic society, Omega Kappa Gamma Pi Beta. VIRGINIA B ASTI AN: Official hostess of the class and author of syndicated articles on interior decoration. ELENA BIANCHI: Editor of Good Housekeeping Magazine. NANCY BIRRITELLA: Famous model for George (Titian painter) Armalissimo. MARIE BOHAN: Inventor of M. B. cosmetics and designer of raccoon scarves. CLAIRE BOLAND: Exponent of the Sl-ch-s-db stitch in knitting. FRANCES BOSSUET: Chairman of the Inter- national Chairmen ' s Organization of North and South America, Europe and Australia. DOROTHY M. BRENNAN: Foundress of a Nur- sery School for the children of her busy classmates. HELEN BRENNAN: First secretary of the Na- tional Philosophic Society. ELVIRA BRIA: Member of the French Academy. NATALIE BRIGGS: Retainer of forty-four Olympic records in swimming. MARIE BURKE: President of the Giants ' Society of America. MARIE LOUISE BYRNES: Radio entertainer on the Chatty Hour. JANE CALLAGHAN: Professor of Ethics at Goucher and holder of Amateur Golf Championship of America for twenty years. MARGARET CHRISTOPH: Dietitian at the Uni- versity of New Rochelle. H E C Y DOROTHY CLIFFORD: University lecturer on Philosophy in these — our times. ' ' VERONICA COLEMAN: Member of the supreme council of the Housewives of America. MARY T. CONNOLLY: President of Meta- physical Poets Society. MARION CONNOR: Mother of the M. C. Base- ball team, all of whom graduated from Notre Dame. MARGARET CRAP: Greatest shareholder in Mademoiselle Pegee ' s Chapeaus. LILLIAN CURRAN: Inventor of the Curran Curlicue Chirography. KATHRYN DALY: Foremost Horsewoman in the country. EDNA DAVIS: Head of the language department at the University of Seville. MARGARET DELANEY: Speaker of the House of Representatives. JANE DODGE: Copy Editor of the Times and author of It Did Happen Here. GRACE DIETZ: America ' s favorite radio an- nouncer and histrionic star. ELVIRA DOWELL: Head of the History Depart- ment of U. N. R. EILEEN DUGLISS: Editor of the Times and protagonist of women ' s rights in Mesopo- tamia. ELIZABETH DUNNIGAN: Alice Touhey ' s press agent and Lil Curran ' s collaborator. JOSEPHINE DUTTO: Renowned oil painter and honorary member of the Bulgarian Royal Arts Society. JEANNETTE EDWARDS: President of the Pan- American Society. DOROTHY ENSIGN: Head Statistical expert of the law firm of Thomson and Utting. MERCEDES FERRER: Governor of Porto Rico; former head of History in the University of Jayteef. PRISCILLA FENNER: Head of the Sociology Commission which effected the law pro- hibiting the giving of exams on the second Thursday. GERTRUDE FINNEGAN: President of Phi Beta Kappa and superintendent of the LOCO Institution at which many of her friends board. MARY FITZSIMONS: Editor of the Catholic Worker and dramatic critic on the Times. MARY FOLEY: Editor of the New Yorker. JULIA FOODY: Foundress of the Historical Museum of New Haven. ELEANOR FRAWLEY: Society matron, whose endorsement sells our cold creams and cosmetics. FLORENCE FRIEDMAN: Girl whose lovely hair started the rage for Natural Titians. MARY E. GALVIN: Official hostess at the White House and mother of the Attorney General. MARY GANNON: Professor of Philosophy at Mount St. Vincent. 274 With the Best Wishes of Compliments of Huguenot Coal Wood Company 83 Harrison Street New Rochelle BUSINESS TRAINING in Secretarial Subjects intensively presented by the In- dividual Promotion Plan. Rapid advancement assured by this method of instruction. All studies conducted in a refined environ- ment by nationally known professors and teachers. Moderate Tuition Rates Placement Service for Graduates Day and Evening Classes Registered by the Board of Re- gents, University of the State of New York. United States Secretarial School Thirty-fifth Year 527 Fifth Avenue at 44th Street Bankers Trust Building, NewYork, N. Y. Telephone: Vanderbilt 3-2474 Colleges and Schools 551 Fifth Avenue New York 275 P R O P H E C Y — Continued ADELE GEILS: Only living authority on Ich- thyology and owner of the only ichthyo- saurus in captivity. CATHERINE GILLEN: Famed poetess, whose works are reminiscent of Algernon Charles Swinburne. LAURETTE GLEESON: Foundress of the L. G. School for Commercial Artists. IEANNE GRIFFIN: Mayor of Wilkes-Barre. MARIE LOUISE HARVEY: Lexicographer of Modern Collegiate Slang. ADEL HAUSTEIN: Originator of the Adel Style House of Paris. MADELINE HEDENBERG: Composer of the im- mortal Sonata in A, B and C sharp.” FLORENCE HEIBER: The only individual in the United States possessed of a photographic mind. DOROTHY HOGAN: Instrumental in installing When to Laugh” courses in our colleges and universities. CATHERINE HILLY: Assistant D. A. and cam- paign manager of the Republican party. MARGARET HORGAN: Author of The Easiest Way to Pass an Exam.” ELIZABETH KELLY: Binghamton ' s only woman repre sentative in the National Organiza- tion of Superior Secretaries. ROSEMARY KENEDY: Mother of the Olympic diving team, four boys and two girls, whose achievement cannot be approximated. MARGARET KENNEDY: II Giuseppe ' s only lead- ing lady and star of Rigoletto” and Aida. DOROTHY KENNY: Female advocate of the Peaceful and Serene Life” movement. MARGARET KENNY: President of the Kenny Kalorie Korporation. MARION KERIN: Whose fudge and pastries prove serious rivals of Mrs. Wagner ' s pies. THEORA KNOOP: Wife of the Governor of New York State and famous for her charm and poise. RUTH KOHL: Corporation Counsel for Sunshine Biscuit Company. DOROTHY KOPINS: Author of How to Dis- tract Professors.” MIMI KRUSSMAN: Head of the History Depart- ment in the University of Seville and recognized authority on South America. ANNETTE LANGLOIS: Professional model for commercial artist ' s — about whom it is said — Ladies — Acquire that Langlois air!” KATHLEEN LARESSY: The Girl who tapped her way to Stardom and Fred Astaire in six kaleidoscopic months. EVELYN LEAHY: Leader of the expedition for the purpose of unearthing the remains of Lawrence of Arabia. FRANCES LEAMY: Member of the House, who pushed through the Bill” abolishing the teaching of mathematics. ANNE LENNON: The idol of Brentwood as its radio songster. LUCY LEONARD: George Bernard Shaw ' s favorite actress in his Other woman parts.” CATHERINE LEONNARD: Winner of theF. O. C. medal for the only understandable explana- tion of the fourth dimension and the relativity theory. ANNE LYNN: Emily Post ' s successor and author of When to suppress that irrepressible laugh.” MILDRED MATHEWS: Dr. Walsh ' s biographer and the reason for his tremendous pos- thumous fame. RITA MC AULIFFE: The only girl in the class who refused to enter public life and thereby acquired fame as The Perfect Wife.” HELEN MC DONOUGH: Whose picture is con- tinually in the newspapers, recounting her legal success in her Ambassadorship to Tierra del Fuego. VIRGINIA MC DONOUGH: Sophisticated Lady,” who set a new high in the conduct of the ones who love life. MARGUERITE MC GRAIL: New Britain ' s famous example of the perfect home town lover, ever ready to volunteer for the benefit of the place. RITA MC GRATH: First lieutenant under Evelyn Leahy and official chronicler of the expedition. GERTRUDE MC GUIRE: Inventor of a simplified French phonetics dictionary. MARY MC GUIRE: President of the International Corporation of Women ' s Clubs and America ' s supreme boast of the busiest woman in the nation.” IRENE MC HUGH: Head of the Catholic Action League of America. MARIE MCLAUGHLIN: Petite blonde, who danced her way into the Supreme Court Council. KATHERINE MCLOUGHLIN: Who married Eddie and who discovered a way to keep husbands from forgetting St. Valentine ' s day. MAUREEN MC MANUS: Foundress of the Bird Colony of Brightensville and ardent lover of bird life. CLAIRE MCNAMARA: Whose irrepressible quality of helpfulness found an outlet in her becoming the International President of the Red Cross. HELEN MC NABB: Whose writing ability and musical knowledge combined to give us the McNabb Encyclopedia of Music. DOROTHY MAH ANEY : Short story writer, who has been hailed as a second O. Henry. CONSTANCE MARKEY: Chairman of the Com- mittee of Friendly Relations in regard to Olympic contests. FLORENCE MEDON: Broadway ' s famous character star. 276 OH-H-H-H, DOCTOR! IT ' S WONDERFUL! • The yearbook disease (publicandum annualis) is a periodic affliction in all of our best schools. • Early symptoms: a flurry of activity, shortened breath, contracts before the eyes, a shaky signature with an empty feeling in the pit of the stomach after signing. • First stage: staff assignments, liberal prom- ises of assistance, accompanied by a feeling of security. (Look out for this false peace — ever hear of the lull before the storm?) • Second stage: feverish activity, sleepless nights, muttering under the breath, eyes gleaming wildly, hair on end. • Third or virulent stage: utter frenzy, accompanied by froth- ing at the mouth and tearing the hair. Approach with caution, as patient is in no mood to be trifled with. At this point patient may be heard retorting to critics : I hope all your children will be yearbook editors! ' ' • Ol ' Doc B.J.H. has never isolated the germ of yearbook disease, but he ' s known all over the coun- try for his wonderful bedside manner. His ol d homely prescription ( let me do all the doctorin ' ) always prevents the last and deadliest stage: editorial insan- ity, aggravated by separate printer and engraver. He laughs at specialists: A feller told me one time, he sez ' A specialist is a kind of a man that knows more and more about less and less, ' ' n ' durned if he ain ' t right. • Two of the doc ' s best patients this year are Marie Reisert and Elizabeth Mary Otis. The ANN ALES is finished, and they ' re not only alive but in the best of health. • Verbum sapientae satis est — which, freely translated, means Let that be a lesson to you. BAKER, JONES, HAUSAUER, INC. (fihe (-Distinctive School (Deserves a Distinguished (B.J.H.) _ Annual 45-51 CARROLL STREET, BUFFALO, NEW YORK P R O P H E C Y — Continued THERESA MILLER: Whose lovely eyes and pretty features adorn the covers of our better magazines. FLORENCE MORRISSEY: Superintendent of the school system in Haverstraw. HELEN MORTON: Famous as the deviser of a New Blue Book — with fifty pages to enable pupils to complete comprehensive exams. ALICE MUNDORFF: Personnel Director at U. N. R. and moderator of Sodality. ANNA MURRAY: Hailed as the only woman who can speak forty-four languages. ANNETTE NATHAN: Criminal lawyer noted for her ability to win a case in the face of over- whelming odds. MARY NORTON: Mary ' s talented fingers won her continuous performances at Town Hall and exhibitions in our best museums. ELSIE OBERLE: Author of the record breaking musical comedy La Senorita. ' ' ELIZABETH OTIS: Newest translator of the Summa Theologica and founder of the Otizian School of Thought. MURIEL PAIGE: National Director of Education and the author, with her mother, of six volumes of poetry. AILEEN PRICE: Librarian of the National Cur- rent Events Club and the only woman whose knowledge of current affairs is unanimously accepted. ADELE PERUGINI: Author of extensive work on the Chukchi reindeer. LILLIAN POLO: Author of A Gentle Thing in Woman and the criterion by which the cultured speak. MARION QUINN: Whose lovely home on Glen Island, built to recapture happy memories, is the envy of home owners everywhere. EDNA REGAL: Famous as the National Con- servator of Nickles and opposer of five cent chances. ANNAMARIE REILLY: Governor-general of Hawaii and official lei thrower when her classmates visit her. MARIE REISERT — Magistrate of the College Annuals court, into which recalcitrant business managers are thrown. FLORENCE ROBINSON: Honorary member of the faculty at the Sorbonne. JANET ROGAN: Writer of syndicated articles — The best jokes and how not to get them. JOSEPHINE ROGERS: Professor of the Exact Dimensions of an Effective Bomb, in Ethiopia. EDITH RYAN: Member of the Hospitality Com- mittee of the House of Representatives. MARY RYLE: Famous aviatrix who circled the globe ten times in an endurance flight. MARIE SALVATORE: Peg Kenny ' s main adviser in the Department of How to eat a lot and still remain slender.” ISABEL SAURI: Author of Treatise on the philo- sophic relationship of a twig to life. ALYS SAVAGE: Mary ' s main stay and support on the Catholic Worker and the goddess of the Exchange Cult. BLANCHE SCHILGIN: College girls ' adviser in the matter of choosing roommates and the manner in which to live with them. FRANCES SCHLOSSER: Designer of new and different coiffures for women and the means of keeping them that way. MARIJANE SCHRATWEISER: Foremost horti- culturist in the land. HELEN SHARY: Dot Hogan ' s living example of How to enjoy life. MARIE SISK: Whose Just a minute, girls rec- ords are used throughout the land in the national endeavor to teach people how to say a lot in a few minutes. GENEVIEVE SPILLANE: The only person who ever survived the removal of an appendix which contained a violin. JANE STRETCH: A gracious hostess, whose dinner parties are the talk and envy of the nation. CLAIRE STOPFORD: Author of the bill, forcing every person in the United States to learn to swim. MARIE LOUISE SYMS: Foundress of Carry- your-troubles-to-me ' ' National Agencies. FAY TACCONELLI: Owner of the second largest zoo in the world. ALICE TOUHEY: The darling of Broadway and Leslie Howman ' s only leading lady. VIRGINIA TUCKER: Originator of the Banish all care and yoa ' 11 live longer, theory. JOSEPHINE URBAN: United States Minister to France, who induced the French to adopt Hollywood styles. FRANCES UTTING: Famous lawyer in defense of those whose minds have been weakened by continuous attendance at the movies. SHIRLEY VAN HOFF: Inventor of the Chargui — the latest Spanish dance to take the country by storm. IRENE VAUGHAN: Official Hostess of the U. N. R. DOROTHY VAN WAGNER: Inventor of an automatic mimeograph machine. WINIFRED WALSH: Author of I Am Not Irish,” which caused an Irish revolution. ISOBEL WELCKE: Chairman of the Spread the Sunshine movement. CATHERINE WELSH: Co-author of Good Speech and its Benefits, and illustrator of the various tongue and lip exercises. HELEN WERNER: Mother of the six Republicans who have made themselves Governors of Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Montana and Utah. MARION WHITE: America ' s Good-Will Am- bassador to all recalcitrant countries. When Helen finished the book, there were raving cheers for the class of 1936, as the familiar green and white banner was elevated. To the strains of It ' s the dearest college, the assembly broke up in chattering groups — just like in the days of 1932-1936. — Elizabeth Mary Otis, ' 36 278 HISTORICAL FACT September 1932 to June 1936 • We intended to say Down the years with ' 36 but we found that our fine little athletic writer-upper had already used the expression, so we dropped the idea (courtesy Southern Pacific Railway. No ad) . • ' Way back in September, 1932 there arrived at our sacred portals of learning (hear! hear!) a class unprecedented in wisdom, beauty, virtue and all that is good. To these were given the holy trust: to carry on the glorious old traditions of the blue and white — and the green and white bestowed upon us by an un- wary class of ' 32, a class which didn ' t realize the heights to which these modest ' 36ers would rise. • A few weeks convinced us — and the college, too. Helen Brennan, ably as- sisted by Betty Fitzpatrick (since migrated to other parts), might be seen at any hour of the day or. night resignedly extricating foolish frosh from any number of minor adventures. But the true depth of the Freshman mind was revealed when a stately banner appeared in the Sports Building. ' Twas a shield of honor against a background of green (signifying the verdant guality) . To add to the glory of Freshman year, there was always the girl who tossed glasses of water about. Came June and we wept. • Came September and we laughed ' cause we knew we weren ' t Freshmen any more. It was a great tax on the minds of the Sophomores to assume true sopho- moric dignity, and hard as we tried, we didn ' t seem to succeed, for people invariably took us for Freshmen anyway. Helen McDonough managed to rule the unruly, but we could always depend upon Peggy Fenner to cause an un- heaval with one of her inimitable puns (she repudiates them now) . Sophomore year was just one of those things. • Then, behold! we were Juniors and upperclassmen with Freshman sisters about whom to worry. At least we hoped we ' d worry, but they never fell into the pits which had beset our paths. Ah, Freshmen have changed since we first started wide-eyed and innocent about the campus. And such lovely words of advice were wasted! Peggy must have given them a very informative and in- structive little talk when she welcomed them for us. Of course, we could always think Junior Prom which might be summarized in the words: • Weeks of worry, ten dollars spent. • To prance in the gym to your heart ' s content. • You hope. That was the year Eileen Dugliss and Aileen Price edited our incomparable weekly purveyor of news — ye Tatler. Tatler, mind you, seeks not nor does it publish scandal. • September, 1935 saw the class of ' 36 rise to its full grandeur. Helen Mc- Donough became college president, to lead us through the three-times daily ritual. Peggy Fenner was also capable of expediting matters. Theora Knoop conducted Sodality. Eileen Dugliss retained her hold upon the journalistic life and wielded the power of the press to the great advantage of the unintelligent masses. Kay Gillen (alias Carlotta Swinburne) edited Quarterly, that elite of literary elites. Marie Reisert turned to historical fact and record — result: the Annales. Natalie Briggs did handstands trying to supervise A. A. • It was a great shock to have a Freshman hold a door for us. Our undying gratitude to that Maura Freshman who seemed to make opening doors for Seniors her life-work. • Just as we were becoming acclimated to the rarified air which Seniors breathe, we find ourselves awakening with a rude jolt — and we stand, diplomas in hand, facing a disinterested and cynical world. — Marie Reisert 279 CLASS WILL College of New Rochelle New Rochelle, New York June 3, 1936 • We, the class of 1936, having happily graduated from the College of New Rochelle and being, to all outward appearances, of sane mind and healthy body, do on this third day of June, nineteen hundred and thirty-six begueath to our esteemed friends and successors the following: • To Monsignor Crowley — our sincere admiration of all that he has done for the college. • To Mother Ignatius — our love and gratitude and the hope that we may ever live up to the principles and ideals which her efforts have instilled in us. • To Mother Loyola- — our appreciation and love for her untiring endeavors in our behalf. • To Father White — we say thank you” for giving us Ethics classes that were an enjoyment. • To the faculty in general — our amazement at the patience and perseverance which you have shown. • To the next inhabitant of Room 7, Maura, we begueath Helen McDonough ' s poise, popularity and sincerity. • To the next Senior president, we leave Peg Fenner ' s inimitable wit, con- geniality and habit of closing windows in the morning. • To the class of 1937, we begueath the legendary Senior stairs. • To the class of 1938, those incoming little sisters and our best wishes for a bigger and better Junior Prom. • To the class of 1939, a year of true Sophomoric bliss with its habitual laughter and gaiety. • To the class of 1940- — those Freshmen whom we will never know — the hope that their four years at New Rochelle will be as worthwhile and happy as ours have been. • To the student body in general, we leave a petition for shorter exams, later hours and a ride in Father While ' s car. • To Geraldine Foster, we bequeath Virginia McDonough ' s sophistication. • To Marge Ely, with the hope that she will burn it forever, Marie Reisert ' s obnoxious brown hat with a bit of her originality topping” it off. • To Lucy Kirby, a bit of Theora Knoop ' s dignity. • To Eileen Quinn, Kay Laressy ' s troublesome history exams. • To Helene Pecheux, Fran Bossuet ' s infectious giggle. • To Elaine Lawrence, Alice Touhey ' s niche in the Hall of Fame, as the best- dressed Senior. • To Alice Fitzgerald, Fran Leamy ' s athletic ability with those well-known orange socks thrown in. • To Kay MacDonagh, we leave Muriel Paige ' s serious nature and the hope that she will carry on the MacDonagh name. • And last, but far from least, to Anne, we leave our love and gratitude for her attention and service during our college years. (Signed) The Class of 1936 — Frances Rose Leamy 280 IN THE GOOD OLD DAYS Time: 2036 A.D. Place: University of New Rochelle campus. • Itchy, so help me, I ' ve never heard a worse exam! They just get more horrible ... • Oh, stop it, Goo! Suppose you were living a hundred years ago when times were really bad! At least, we can lie in bed in the morning and take our exams by remote control. Those poor people actually had to walk into an exam room — which reminds me — the ' 36 Museum is open this afternoon. Suppose we stop in? • The girls approach a green and white brick building, lettered 1936, on which a plaque sets forth the following: • ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO, THERE GRADUATED FROM OUR YOUNG INSTITUTION A CLASS OF ONE HUNDRED AND FORTY-THREE GIRLS WHO NOT ONLY LIVED AND KNEW HISTORY, BUT ACTUALLY MADE IT. • IT IS TO THEM IN RECOGNITION OF THE LIFE, SPIRIT, AND LOVE WITH WHICH THEY ENDOWED NEW ROCHELLE THAT THIS MUSEUM HAS BEEN ERECTED. MAY THEIR MEMORY LONG REMAIN AS ONE OF THE FINEST TREASURES OF NEW ROCHELLE. • In the vestibule, a portly guard, who answers to the name of Gus the Third, points out photographic representations of the big moments of the class of 1936. On one side, the girls view the laurels of the 1934 Meet; the lunior Prom and the Daisy Chain; Irene Vaughan as May Queen; Gertrude Finnegan and Rita Armstrong in a victorious forensic duel with Cambridge University; Eileen Dugliss ' s article in America, and numerous others. • The walls of the central room are hung with photographs of girls, under which each girl ' s activities before and after graduation are recounted. Overshadowing the room is a bright green and white banner, announcing 1936 as part of the Blue and White family of C. N. R. • As the girls step into the room, a feeling of strangeness possesses them, and, gazing starry-eyed, they sense one hundred years slipping away. Animation fills the air. • Itchy and Goo watch a tall laughing man, with Roman collar and cassock, surrounded by a group. Suddenly, a voice sounds, But Father, when I am forty- five, I intend to be fascinating. And she was voted the most naive member of 1936. • A roar rents the place. A group of girls sitting in the tea room ask, Do you suppose she has any mirrors in her house? How can she kid herself into thinking that she ' s beautiful? The quick enjoinder, Now, girls, please cast no re- flections, uttered with the accompaniment of twinkling eyes, again convulses the group. (Itchy murmurs, She ' s the wittiest. ) • Fun and camaraderie pervade the room as the girls congregate in small parties. In one, a tall serious individual is demanding the answer to a question about impeachment which evokes the bright retort, The Senate declared the Supreme Court unconstitutional, Dr. Farrell. However, the rest perceive the marks of age and worry on the face of the girl, and shake their heads, Well, she ' s the editor of the yearbook. • Likewise, another girl takes the center of the floor. Please, Rosie, do that imitation again. She does and it is unforgettable. 281 • Now, girls, from a tall gentleman (with an obviously new brief case — a present from his mother for the feast of Thomas Aquinas) you will admit that the soul permeates the whole body. Well, what happens to the soul in your arm, when your arm ' s cut off? It goes to heaven and waits for the rest, from the aforesaid imitator. • The same gentleman is holding a session in Ontology, with the class, and startles one member by the query, How do angels know? How do you know? Quickly, he is answered, I don ' t know. I ' m No Angel. • The scene changes to Maura Dining Room. At a table, healthy young appetites are taking their toll of Marge Kennedy ' s favorite dessert, ice cream. • Now, the most polished of Oxonian accents reminds the assemblage — Things are not quite out of the first drawer. • Another tall, laughing man, with Roman collar, is deeply interested in Com- munism, Socialism and Hitler. Remember, girls, you can count the Communists by their noses — remarks like this, echoed by a hearty chuckle make classes really enjoyable. • In the Sports Building, the class of 1936 stands breathless, for victory in the Swimming Meet is at stake. Nat Briggs, the last word in things athletic, valiantly essays a backstroke which seems to strike her helpless. Even her classmates have to laugh at Nat ' s floundering in the pool. But she still remains a swell sport. • In Tatler office, a dark curly head and a blonde one are bent over pages of copy. It is no time for the printer to arrive, and, of course, he does. Flashing brown eyes meet twinkling blue ones as they demand GAUTY HAND TOOLED TYPE in the next issue. Now, GAUTY HAND TOOLED TYPE is rare — but rarer still — the printer never heard about it. Score up for Eileen and Aileen! • Annales elections have just taken place. The excited Business Manager is whisked away by friends for a little sustenance. In a Bronxville Tea Room, the waitress asks, What did you get? Business Manager, is the reply. • From another group of girls, Itchy and Goo hear disjointed phrases about wrestling bouts, writing on the board, Philosophy and strong men contests. • Afraid to break the spell, they cannot ask the girls to be more explicit and they turn away from the bubbling laughter. Wandering into a room captioned: SOMETHING TO REMEMBER US BY — our modern students view an avenue of glass cases. Hastily glancing at their contents, they approach the key card, which describes these same contents: 1 . Peg Fenner ' s tonsils 2. Dorothy Brennan ' s measles 3. Marion White ' s measles 4. Nettie Langlois ' s measles 5. Helen Brennan ' s appendix 6. Elizabeth Mary Otis ' s appendix (7 inches long) and her pink eye 7. Mary Gannon ' s pink eye 8. Jane Callaghan ' s cold 9. Marie Reisert ' s mythical appendix 10. Dorra Kenny ' s sprained ankle 1 1 . Marge McGrail ' s knee 12. Isobel Welcke ' s ankle 282 13. Gert McGuire ' s broken arm 14. Mimi Krussman ' s ankle 15. Isabel Basanta ' s broken finger 16. A small jar containing a brain — the composite of the class. Apparently provoked by the Phi- losophy Prof ' s guest for a brain. • Itchy and Goo, overcome by the physical obstacles that the class had had to face, enter the last room in the Museum, proclaiming in green and white letters: THE LITTLE THINGS OF LIFE. • Again they seek the key card and wander about enjoying what to them spells the real ' 36. Thus, they scream at — 1 . A much withered orange petunia 2. A woebegone cat (belonging to Mr. Gavigan) who ate the petunia 3. A bath brush (a little concession to Kay Gillen ' s inherent sadism) 4. A much dilapidated brief case (you guess) 5. Marge Horgan ' s feet (for various reasons) 6. Marge Kennedy ' s knitting 7. Mr. W. A. S. Dollard ' s green bag 8. Exam paper plentifully sprinkled with TSK ' S (page Dr. Farrell) 9. Marie Reisert ' s brown hat (Marge Ely didn ' t get it!) 10. Mary Galvin ' s hair ribbons 1 1. Mercedes Ferrer ' s pen sketches of the faculty 12. Muriel Paige ' s dress with the buttons which made so much noise in the Library (that sanctum of QUIET) 13. Recent Social Trends text ( AT which even Itchy and Goo shudder) 14. Jane Callaghan ' s Itchy -goo 15. Anne Reilly ' s Greek classic 16. Edith Ryan ' s bottle of ink 17. Marie Sisk ' s laugh (make her laugh some day) 18. E. M. O. ' S Locker. • When Itchy and Goo return to the central room, they find nobody there and the age of a century again settled upon the building. Looking at the happy faces on the wall, they are seized with a feeling of love and envy. As Gus (the Third) ushers them out Itchy inguires, What did you say about times being bad a hundred years ago? • To which Goo answers, Forget it. They were a swell class, loved everything and never forgot how to laugh. In them, we find the secret of success to which they aspired and attained. Don ' t you wish we lived in the good old days? — Elizabeth Mary Otis, ' 36 283 FOR THAT AFTER-COLLEGE FEELING Enjoy the long, quiet years of After-College life in our new 1936 model Rocka- bout with footstool to match. Only $96.49 F.O.B. Little Rock. 1. Bin for Newspapers, 7. Butterfly Net 13. Reading Lamp Books, etc. 8. Fly Swatter 14. Pencil 2. Drawer for Pens, etc. 9. Gong 15. Umbrella 3. Lunch Box 10. Hammer for Gong 16. Touch of Sentiment 4. Thermos Bottle 1 1 . Water Glass 17. Foot Shade 5. Fire Extinguisher 12. Reading Desk 18. Further Sentiment 6. Palm-leaf Fan Tax included — Mercedes Ormston, Ex- ' 36 284 COMPLIMENTS OF CAMPUS CLUBS BIOLOGY CLUB CIRCOLO DANTE DAY STUDENTS ' SODALITY DER DEUTSCHE VEREIN EL CENTRO HISPANO HOME ECONOMICS CLUB LE CIRCLE FRANCAIS PHI DELTA PROPS AND PAINT QUARTERLY RESIDENTS ' SODALITY SCRIBBLERS TATLER PATRONS Maria Luisa Arcelay Mr. and Mrs. John Armstrong Dr. and Mrs. George L. Bastian Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bianchi Mrs. E. C. Boeker Mr. Charles T. Bohan Mr. and Mrs. John F. Boland Mr. and Mrs. John W. Callaghan Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Carlier Mr. and Mrs. Otto Christoph Mrs. Kathryn Riley Crap Mr. and Mrs. John J. Dietz Mr. and Mrs. David J. Dowell Mr. and Mrs. Bruce S. Dugliss Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Ensign Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Fenner Mrs. B. Regina Finnegan Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Foley Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Foody Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert B. J. Frawley Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Gillen Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. Gleeson Mr. and Mrs. Frederick E. Greene Mr. and Mrs. William G. Heiber Mr. and Mrs. James J. Kearney Dr. John D. Kelly Mr. and Mrs. Thomas F. Kerin Mr. L. R. Knoop H. C. Koehler Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kohl Stephen Kovac Mr. and Mrs. Leo Krussman Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Leahy Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Leamy Mr. and Mrs. Vincent L. Leibell Lorelei Stores, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. John J. Lynn Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. McAuliffe Mr. and Mrs. F. J. McDonough Mr. and Mrs. John F. McDonough Mr. and Mrs. John F. McGrail Mr. Charles B. McLaughlin Mr. and Mrs. Thomas P. McLoughlin Mr. and Mrs. James F. McNamara Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mathews Mr. and Mrs. George A. Medon Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Mullaney Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Mundorff Mr. and Mrs. James T. O ' Connell Mercedes M. Ormston Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. Otis Mrs. Mary Paige Mr. and Mrs. Andrea Polo Elsie Jean Quigley Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Quinlan Mr. and Mrs. Harry F. Regal Mr. and Mrs. William Reisert Mrs. Thomas T. Rogan Mr. and Mrs. John M. Ryle Mr. and Mrs. Rafael Sauri Mrs. J. J. Schratwieser Mr. and Mrs. James J. Sisk Town and Country Motors, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. William D. Tucker John I. Welsh 286 CLASS O F 19 3 6 ALLIGER, ROSANNE . ALAIMO, LILLIAN ARMSTRONG, RITA . BASANTA, ISABEL . BASTIAN, VIRGINIA . BIANCHI, ELENA . . BIRRITTELLA, NANCY . BOHAN, MARIE . . BOLAND, CLAIRE . . BOSSUET, FRANCES . BRENNAN, DOROTHY BRENNAN, HELEN . . BRIA, ELVIRA . . . BRIGGS, NATALIE . BURKE, MARIE . . . BYRNE, LUCILE . . BYRNES, MARY LOUISE CALLAGHAN, JANE . CARLIER, MILDRED . CELESTINO, ROSE . CHRISTOPH, MARGARET COLEMAN, VERONICA F. CONNOLLY, MARY T. CONNOR, MARION . CLIFFORD, DOROTHY CRAP, MARGARET . CURRAN, LILIAN . . DALY, KATHRYN M. . DAVIS, EDNA . . . DEEGAN, HELEN . . DELANEY, M. J. . . . DIETZ, GRACE . . . DODGE, JANE . . . DOWELL, ELVIRA . . DUGLISS, EILEEN . . DUNNIGAN, ELIZABETH DUTTO, JOSEPHINE . EDWARDS, JEANNETTE ENSIGN, DOROTHY . FENNER, PRISCILLA . FERRER, MERCEDES . FINNEGAN, GERTRUDE 2 Grace Court, Brooklyn, N. Y. . 43 Whitworth St., Thompson ville, Conn. . 77 West 36th St., Bayonne, N. J. 248 Centre Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 364 South Main St., Manchester, N. H. Ill First St., Wood-Ridge, N. J. 13 Oak Place, Yonkers, N. Y. 1545 Vyse Ave., New York City 130 Sagamore Rd., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 398 Willow St., Bridgeport, Conn. . 15 Burling Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. 185 Meadow St., Naugatuck, Conn. . 110 South Sixth Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 613 Macon St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 20 Pershing Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 244 Harrison Ave., Jersey City, N. J. . 27 Pollack Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. 95 Clay Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 168 Fairview Ave., Staten Island, N. Y. . 2 Parkview Place, Tuckahoe, N. Y. 483 Prospect St., Maplewood, N. J. 112 Gifford Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 386 E. 5th St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 3127 Kingsbridge Terrace, New York City . 14 Edgewood Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 7 Trinity St., Claremont, N. H. 38 Walnut St., Holyoke, Mass. 25 Shorthill Rd., Forest Hills, N. Y. 657 49th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 5001 Iselin Ave., New York City . 133 Rockwell St., Norwich, Conn. 109 Old Mamaroneck Rd., White Plains, N. Y. 180 Riverside Drive, New York City 952 Ogden Ave., New York City 99 Clove Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 60 Orchard St., Greenfield, Mass. . 42 Pine Grove Ave., Kingston, N. Y. 84 Monroe St., Pelham, N. Y. 246 Centre Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 70 Howe St., New Haven, Conn. . P. O. Box 25 Marina Sta., Mayaguez, P. R. 520 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 287 FITZSIMONS, MARY . . . FOLEY, MARY FOODY, JULIA FRAWLEY, ELEANOR . . . FRIEDMAN, FLORENCE . . 1360 Nelson Ave., New York City 80 Atlantic Ave., Fitchburg, Mass. . 35 Ridge St., Port Chester, N. Y. 1515 Macombs Rd., New York City 26 Post St., Yonkers, N. Y. GALVIN, MARY .... GANNON, MARIE .... GANNON, MARY .... GEILS, MAY ADELE . . . GILLEN, CATHERINE . . . GLEESON, LAURETTA . . GRIFFIN, JEANNE .... 27 Waters Terrace, Lowville, N. Y. 251 Loring Ave., Pelham, N. Y. 30 Pershing Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 174 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . P. O. Box 8, Brentwood, L. I. 633 Monroe St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 89 Hanover St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. HARVEY, MARIE .... HAUSTEIN, ADEL .... HEDENBERG, MADELINE . . HEIBER, FLORENCE . . . HILLY, CATHERINE . . . HOGAN, DOROTHY . . . HORGAN, MARGARET . . . 3412 Giles Place, New York City 449 E. 164th St., New York City 219 Cook Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 34 Grosvenor Rd., Rochester, N. Y. 601 West 110th St., New York City 647 South 6th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 571 76th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. KEARNEY, KATHRYN . . . KELLY, ELIZABETH . . . KENEDY, ROSEMARY . . . KENNEDY, MARGARET . . KENNY, DOROTHY . . . KENNY, MARGARET . . . KERIN, MARIAN .... KNOOP, THEORA .... KOHL, RUTH KOPINS, DOROTHEA . . . KRUSSMAN, MARY . . . 14 Broadman Parkway, Jersey City, N. J. . 8 McDonald Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. . 25 Maple Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 156 77th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 2063 Turnbull Ave., New York City 139 S. West St., Geneva, N. Y. Dunham Road, Scarsdale, N. Y. 162 Mohawk St., Cohoes, N. Y. . 175 Lyncroft Road, New Rochelle, N. Y. . 23 Hillside Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 97 Rose Hill Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. LANGLOIS, MARIE ANNETTE LARESSY, KATHLEEN . . . LAWLOR, ELIZABETH . . LEAHY, EVELYN .... LEAMY, FRANCES .... LENNON, ANNE .... LEONARD, CATHERINE . . LEONARD, LUCEY . . . LYNN, ANNE 21 Bank St., Lebanon, N. H. .22 Crampton Ave., Great Neck, N. Y. . 13 Helen St., Johnson City, N. Y. 161 79th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 16 Grand St., Oneonta, N. Y. 3130 Bainbridge Ave., Bronx, N. Y. 42-18 76th St., Elmhurst, L. I. . 1659 Lenox Rd., Schenectady, N. Y. 241 Sixth Ave., Newark, N. J. McAULIFFE, RITA .... McDonough, helen . . McDonough, Virginia McGRAIL, MARGUERITE . . McGrath, rita .... . 95 Highland Ave., Jersey City, N. J. . 185 Millville Ave., Naugatuck, Conn. 16 Prospect Park West, Brooklyn, N. Y. . 685 East St., New Britain, Conn. . 320 President St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 288 McGuire, Gertrude . . McGuire, mary . . . . McHUGH, MARY . . . . McHUGH, IRENE . . . . McLOUGHLIN, KATHERINE . McLOUGHLIN, MARIE . . McMANUS, MAUREEN . . McNABB, HELEN . . . . McNAMARA, CLARE . . . MAHANEY, DOROTHY . . MARKEY, CONSTANCE . . MATHEWS, MILDRED . . . MEDON, FLORENCE . . . MILLER, THERESA . . . . MORTON, HELEN . . . . MORRISSEY, FLORENCE . . MUNDORFF, ALICE . . . MURRAY, KITTY . . . . 117 Lockwood Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 651 Broad St., Elyria, Ohio Westchester Country Club, Rye, N. Y. . 32 Ormond PL, Rye, N. Y. . 54 Liberty Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 2613 Grand Ave., New York City . 112 East 90th St., New York City 291 E. 201st St., New York City 41-14 Elbertson St., Elmhurst, N. Y. . 3 Carleon Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. . 98 First St., Pelham, N. Y. . 54 Ridge St., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 133 Morningside Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. . . 355 E. 163rd St., New York City Fillow St., Norwalk, Conn. 43 Third St., Haverstraw, N. Y. 216-16 Hollis Ave., Queens Village, N. Y. . . 5 Circle Hill Rd., Pelham, N. Y. NATHAN, ANNETTE 5 Circuit Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. NORTON, MARY 44 Gautier Ave., Jersey City, N. J. OBERLE, ELSIE 1786 Bathgate Ave., Bronx, N. Y. OTIS, ELIZABETH 11 West 5th St., Oswego, N. Y. PAIGE, MURIEL 94 Pintard Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. PERRUGINI, ADELE 45 French Ridge, New Rochelle, N. Y. POLO, LILLIAN 19 Stuyvesant Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. PRICE, AILEEN 1218 Kemble St., Utica, N. Y. QUINN, MARION 23 Amackassin Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. REGAL, EDNA 26 Ferdinand PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. REILLY, ANNAMARIE 64 Sherwood Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. REISERT, MARIE .... 223 Rockaway Parkway, Valley Stream, N. Y. ROBINSON, FLORENCE 44 Fountain PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. ROGAN, JANET 22 Kimball Rd., Fitchburg, Mass. ROGERS, JOSEPHINE 29 Neptune Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. RYAN, EDITH 323 Cartis St., Meriden, Conn. RYLE, MARY 38 Hope St., Stamford, Conn. SALVATORE, MARIE . . SAURI, ISABEL . . . SAVAGE, ALYS . . . SCHILGEN, BLANCHE . SCHRATWEISER, MARIJANE SCHLOSSER, FRANCES . SHARY, HELEN . . . SISK, MARIE .... 62 Sound View St., Port Chester, N. Y. P. O. Box 194, Ponce, P. R. . 484 East 141st St., New York City . 140 83rd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 15 First St., Lynbrook, N. Y. . 2718 Morris Ave., New York City 306 East 207th St., New York City . 95 Highland Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 289 SPILLANE, GENEVIEVE . . STOPFORD, CLAIRE . . . STRETCH, IANE .... SYMS, MARIE 59 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 1871 Walton Ave., New York City 25 Beechtree Dr., Larchmont, N. Y. 10 Bowne Ave., Flushing, L. I. TACCONELLI, FAY . . . THOMSON, RUTH . . TOUHEY, ALICE . . . TUCKER, VIRGINIA . 24 Walnut St., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 20 William St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 16 Terrace Ave., Albany, N. Y. 7 Lyon PL, White Plains, N. Y. URBAN, IOSEPHINE . . . UTTING, FRANCES . . . . E. Robbins Ave., New Britain, Conn. 5 Sylvan PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. VAN HOFF, SHIRLEY . . . VAN WAGNER, DOROTHY . VAUGHN, IRENE .... . 123-129 W. 44th St., New York City 150 Trenor Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. 780 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. WALSH, WINIFRED . . . WELCKE, ISABELLE . . . WELSH, CATHERINE . . . WERNER, HELEN .... WHITE, MARION .... 16 Darling Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Marion Road, Westport, Conn. 1770 Andrews Ave., New York City . 45 Grace Church St., Rye, N. Y. 1 Betts PL, East Norwalk, Conn. 290 CLASS O F 19 3 7 AHEARN, KATHERINE M. . . AHERN, MADELYN . . . BADER, RITA BARRETT, BERNADETTE . . BRENNAN, ANNE .... BURBANK, BETTY .... BURROWS, ALICE . . . CALLAHAN, MAURIE . . . CAMPBELL, BERNADETTE L. CARROLL, RUTH .... CASSIDY, MADELYN . . . CAULEY, MIRIAM . . . CHAMBERS, KAYE M. . . CHAMOISE, FLORENCE . . CLARK, ESTELLE .... CLARK, HELEN .... CLARKE, KATHLEEN . . . COLLINS, EILEEN .... CONLAN, HENRIETTA . . COOKE, GERTRUDE . . . COPP, KATHLEEN . . . CORCORAN, MARGARET MARY CURTIN, KATHLEEN . . . DALY, MARY DAUNAIS, EVELYN M. . . DE CAIN, LAURA .... DEE, MARY B DEL VALLE, AURORA . . D ' EUFEMIA, HELEN . . . DIMOND, BETTY .... DONNELLY, MARGARET . . DONOVAN, ELLEN E. . . DOOLEY, ELEANOR . . . DOUGHERTY, MARGARET . DOWLING, LOUISE . . . DOYLE, MARY M DRIVER, LEONORA . . . DUFFY, IANE V DUGAN, RITA DUMAS, MARIE LOUISE . . DUNNE, CATHERINE . . . EGAN, CLAIRE .... ... 590 78th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 10 Prospect St., Nashua, N. H. Washington, Conn. 2990 Perry Ave., New York, N. Y. . 35 Fenimore Rd., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 31 Mayhew Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 10705 223rd St., Queens Village, L. I. . 645 Washington St., Abington, Mass. . 1300 Decatur St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1249 Clay Ave., New York, N. Y. . . . 321 29th St., Woodcliffe, N. J. 24 Orchard St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. Manhasset, L. I. 70 Pershing Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Tompkins Cove, N. Y. 245 Cove Rd., Stamford, Conn. 48 Kelvin St., Forest Hills, N. Y. 360 Warren St., Hudson, N. Y. . 64 Sycamore Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 1279 North Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 416 Burns St., Forest Hills, N. Y. . . 248 E. 207th St., New York, N. Y. . 50 Liberty PL, Weehawken, N. J. 5 Lafayette St., Stamford, Conn. . 66 North St., North Adams, Mass. 356 Claremont Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 16 Banker PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. Calle Nueva 1, Porto Rico . 2 Hartley Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 150 Bon Air Park, New Rochelle, N. Y. 140 East 63rd St., New York, N. Y. 134 Woodland St., Bristol, Conn. . 17 Younglove Ave., Cohoes, N. Y. 43 W. Fourth St., Dunkirk, N. Y. . 96 Franklin Ave., Harrison, N. Y. 1053 Lexington Ave., Schenectady, N. Y. 16 Richardson PL, Tuckahoe, N. Y. 18 East 199th St., New York, N. Y. 198 Hollywood Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. 561 White Plains Rd., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 486 Pawling Ave., Troy, N. Y. 25 Whitfield Ter., New Rochelle, N. Y. 291 FAGAN, CATHERINE . . . FAISSOLE, HELEN . . . FLANAGAN, CATHERINE FREY, RITA FROST, ELSIE 2204 Burdette Ave., Troy, N. Y. . 308 Speer Aye., Englewood, N. J. . 175 Ellsworth St., Bridgeport, Conn. . 438 124th St., Belle Harbor, L. I. 3 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. GARCIA, NOEMIA . . . GAULEY, M. REGINA . . . GEORG, DORIS C. . . . GOLDBRIGHT, DOROTHY . GOUGELMAN, MARIE . . GRATTAN, ALICE .... GRIFFITH, GRACE . . . Box 446, Mayaguez, Porto Rico 1445 Doris St., New York, N. Y. 1134 Court St., Utica, N. Y. 35 Easton Ave., White Plains, N. Y. . Weaver St., New Rochelle, N. Y. Southold, L. I. . 155 Park Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. HAMM, RITA HARVEY, MARGARET . . HAYDEN, MARGUERITE . . HICKEY, DOROTHY . . . HIGGINS, REGINA . . . HILVERT, PATRICIA . . . HOMA, ROSALYN B. . . . HOULIHAN, GRACE . . . HUGHES, IANICE .... HUGHES, MARY .... HYDE, DOROTHY .... . . . 7357 Austen St., Forest Hills, L. I. . 2940 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. 36 Center St., Lee, Mass. . 6 Monroe PL, Port Chester, N. Y. . . . . 32-35 150th PL, Flushing, L. I. . 106 E. Country Club Dr., Phoenix, Ariz. 354 Prescott St., Yonkers, N. Y. 146 West St., Worcester, Mass. 2208 Gunther Ave., New York, N. Y. Green Meadow Country Club, Rye, N. Y. 221 Depew St., Rochester, N. Y. JAEGER, EILEEN .... 5 Pine Ave., Pelham, N. Y. KAAG, RITA KEEN, RITA KEERY, ANNABELLE . . . KENNEDY, HELEN .... KING, MARY GLORIA . . KIRBY, FRANCES .... KUNTZ, EVELYN .... 56 Marian Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. 1511 Main St., Housdale, Pa. 22 Burton St., Walton, N. Y. 79 Carhart Ave., White Plains, N. Y. . 220-28 94th Rd., Queens Village, N. Y. .57 Washington Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 254 Main St., New Rochelle, N. Y. LA LANCETTE, ANITA . . LA SALA, MINERVA . . . LETELLIER, MARGUERITE . LIPPE, ARLINE LLOYD, MARY LOFTUS, MARY .... LOUPRETTE, MARGARET LUCIANO, MAFALDA . . LYNCH, ELEANOR . . . LYONS, EILEEN .... 21 Pierce St., Greenfield, Mass. Pryer Lane, Larchmont, N. Y. 145 Fall St., Seneca Falls, N. Y. . 45 Kingman Rd., South Orange, N. J. 27 North Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 15 N. Church St., Carbondale, Pa. . . . 1383 E. 28th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 76 Lake Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 34 Orville St., Glens Falls, N. Y. 12 College View Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y MAC EVOY, ROSEMARY . . McAULEY, RITA .... . 197 S. Washington Ave., Bergenfield, N. J. . 90-17 53rd Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. 292 McENERY, EILEEN . . McEVOY, ANNE . . McGuire, georgene McKenzie, Dorothea M cLOUGHLIN, IRENE McMANUS, MARY . . McNIELL, MARJORIE . McSHANE, MARY . . MARTOCCI, ROSE-MARIE MEEKS, MURIEL . . MILANO, FLORENCE . MITCHELL, ALICE A. MOORE, BETTY . . MORAN, FRANCES MOTZ, CATHERINE MULLEN, EDITH J. MULLANEY, MARYANN MULLIGAN, DEANE-REID MURPHY, ALICE . . MURPHY, MILDRED . MURPHY, ROSEMARY 142 Forest St., New Canaan, Conn. 524 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. 97 Clove Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 45-12 149th St., Flushing, N. Y. 74 Valentine St., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 282 Weyman Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 569 Mountain Ave., Bound Brook, N. J. Salina St., Pulaski, N. Y. 2 Holly Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. 7725 6th Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 24 Wallace St., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 1209 Leeds St., Utica, N. Y. 54 Broadway, Rockville Centre, L. I. . 3420 Clarendon Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 3 Bayard St., Larchmont, N. Y. 514 East 234th St., New York, N. Y. 4132 Benham St., Elmhurst, L. I. Hotel Biltmore, New York, N. Y. . 360 East 234th St., New York, N. Y. 27 William St., New York, N. Y. . 27 Edge wood Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. NEWCOMB, MARCELLA NEWMANN, MARION . NOBIS, GEORGIA NOLAN, MARIE . . NORTON, DOROTHY . 100 Runsey Rd., Yonkers, N. Y. 4452 Richardson Ave., New York, N. Y. 3433 Tibbett Ave., New York, N. Y. 16 University Ave., Providence, R. I. 44 Gautier Ave., Jersey City, N. J. O ' BRIEN, HELEN . . . O ' CONNELL, ELEANOR . O ' CONNELL, FRANCES . O ' CONNELL, JEAN MARIE PARRILL, ANTOINETTE H. PECHEUX, HELENE . . PELLETIER, EVELYN . . PONTICELLO, SANTA. . PORCELLI, DOROTHY PRICE, MARION . . . . The Crogswald, Scarsdale, N. Y. 2977 Valentine Ave., New York, N. Y. 309 Olivia St., Derby, Conn. 95 Lefferts Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 1379 St. Marks Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 47 Beacon St., Newburgh, N. Y. . 46 Maple St., Winchendon, Mass. Canastota, N. Y. 36 Woodlawn Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 57 Garfield PL, Lynbrook, N. Y. QUILTER, MARY L 10 Saint John Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. QUINN, GENEVIEVE 91 Main St., Norwich, Conn. REARDON, IRENE 1938 Ellis Ave., New York, N. Y. RUSSO, SOPHIE 216 River Rd., Cos Cob, Conn. RYAN, FLORENCE Chateaugay, N. Y. RYAN, MARY 71 Quintard Ter., Stamford, Conn. SASSEEN, ELIZABETH 192 Beechmont Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. SCHMITT, EDNA . . . SCHWALJE, ANITA . . SHEILS, BETTY . . . SHERIDAN, RITA . . . STANTON, AGNES . . STEENBERG, GEORGETTE STEINBUGLER, VIRGINIA STEVENS, PHYLLIS . . SULLIVAN, MARGARET A. TANASSO, ELDA . . . THOMPSON, EILEEN . . TOBIN, MARY I. . . . TREFFEISEN, MIRIAM . . TROMBETTA, MARGARET VALENTE, ROSE . . . VITALI, ANGELINA M. . WELDON, MADELINE WHITE, RUTH .... WICKHAM, MARY ANN . WILSON, MARGARET . WOODS, PEGGY . . . YOUNG, RUTH M. . . ZABAWSKI, ANNE E. . . 7 Alston Court, Red Bank, N. J. 69 East Hudson St., Long Beach, L. I. 153 Meadow Lane, New Rochelle, N. Y. 4389 Martha Ave., New York, N. Y. 3260 Perry Ave., New York, N. Y. 1450 Delamere PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1255 East 32nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 39 Castle PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 70 Quintard Terrace, Stamford, Conn. . 8 Sterling Rd., Harrison, N. Y. . 119 Church St., New Rochelle, N. Y. 9 Lake View Park, Rochester, N. Y. 10 Sycamore Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 2300 Laconia Ave., New York, N. Y. . 2317 First Ave., New York, N. Y. 35 Sixth St., Derby, Conn. 175 Hamilton Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 9 Fairview Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 50-45 96th St., Elmhurst, L. I. . 3086 Decatur Ave., New York, N. Y. 96 Lake Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. Maple Hill, Stockbridge, Mass. 58 Hawthorne Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 294 CLASS O F 19 3 8 AHERN, ANNE 23 Rutherford St., Binghamton, N. Y. ALFARANO, CATHERINE M. . 1853 Harrison Ave., New York, N. Y. ALLEN, MARY G 336 Claremont Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. BARRETT, CLARE . . BARUDIN, BERNICE . BECCARIS, LOUISE . BECKER, MURIEL . . BERGER, MARGARET . BERMINGHAM, MARY BISCONTI, MARGARET BODENMILLER, MARIE A BOEKER, E. BERNICE . BOHEN, IRIS CLAIRE . BOHMERT, MARGARET BOYLE, EILEEN . . BRIA, DOROTHY . . BROCIA, EVELYN . . BROWN, DORIS . . BUGG, ROSEMARY BUTLER, JANE . . . BYRNE, ELEANOR M. . BYRNES, MARY P. . . 2990 Perry Ave., New York, N. Y. 47 Hillcrest Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 33-15 89th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. 51 Villa Rd., Larchmont, N. Y. 215 East 164th St., New York, N. Y. 34 Circuit Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 2726 Wallace Ave., New York, N. Y. Wilton, Conn. 2911 Dorothy PL, Astoria, N. Y. 179 Gramercy PL, Glen Rock, N. J. . 326 Carroll Ave., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 811 East 38th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 110 South 6th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 53 Beechmont Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. 412 East 140th St., New York, N. Y. 87 Hickory Dr., Larchmont, N. Y. Washington Ave., Dumont, N. J. . 244 Harrison Ave., Jersey City, N. J. . 324 Westminster Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. CAHILL, MARGERY A. . CARROLL, WINIFRED . . CELESTINO, ELIZABETH . CHADBOURNE, CAROLYN CLEARY, CATHERINE . . COEN, KATHRYN J. . . CONATY, MARY . . . CONEYS, MARIE T. . . CONNOLLY, MARY LOUISE CORNELIO, IDA M. . . CUCCHI, FRANCES . . 26 Oakwood Ave., Troy, N. Y. . 3264 Decatur Ave., New York, N. Y. 22 Maynard St., Tuckahoe, N. Y. . 616 East Lincoln Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 124 Coligni Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 88 Washington Ave., Clifton, N. J. 1411 5th Ave., Huntington, W. Va. Durie Ave., Closter, N. J. Clifton Springs, N. Y. . 139 N. Main St., Winsted, Conn. 21 Belden Ave., Norwalk, Conn. DALY, DOROTHY . . . DAVIS, JEANNE . . . DEGNAN, MARGARET DEL VALLE, CARMEN L. . DEMPSEY, ELEANOR . . DI LEO, ANNA .... DOCHELLI, GERTRUDE . DONAHUE, ELIZABETH A. DONNELLY, RITA . . . DOYLE, C. PATRICIA . . 135 East 22nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 5 Burling Ave., White Plains, N. Y. . 470 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1 Nueva St., Santurci, Puerto Rico 22 Montgomery PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. 55 Sound View St., Port Chester, N. Y. 9 Field Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 110 Kensington Ave., Jersey City, N. J. Saranac Lake, N. Y. Stottville, N. Y. 295 DUCEY, MARGARET E. DUNLAP, ALMA . . . 1 Prospect St. ; Haverstraw, N. Y. 50 East Main St., New Rochelle, N. Y. ELMENDORF, HELEN .... ELY, MARGARET R ENDRICH, MARY EVERETT, MURIEL D 145 West 58th St., New York, N. Y. 19620 Edgecliff Blvd., Cleveland, Ohio Box 146, Westbrook, Conn. 36 Kilmer Rd., Larchmont, N. Y. FEAN, MARY FELITTO, HELEN I FITZGERALD, E FODERMAIER, CATHERINE . . FOLEY, KATHRYN FOSTER, GERALDINE .... FOX, CATHERINE FUNKE, CATHERINE .... 801 West Clinton St., Elmira, N. Y. . 1570 Seymour Ave., Utica, N. Y. . 52 Lafayette Dr., Port Chester, N. Y. . Dover Plains, N. Y. 9 Orville St., Glens Falls, N. Y. . 75 S. Washington St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. 28 Hudson Rd., Bellerose, N. Y. . 43-19 21st Ave., Long Island City, N. Y. GALLAGHER, GENEVIEVE . . GOODRICH, HELEN .... GROGAN, HELEN . 356 Christian St., Wallingford, Conn. 72 Bane St., Montpelier, Vt. 158 Russell Ave., Watertown, Mass. HAHN, BARBARA HANLON, JOSEPHINE . . . HANN, ADRIENNE HANRAHAN, MARY .... HARDING, VERONICA . . . HEALY, FRANCES HEALY, MARY HEROLD, SARAH F HOTALING, FRANCES . . . HOUGHTON, KATHERINE . . 35 Clark St., Saco, Maine . 46 May St., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 87 Palmer Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 12 Madison St., Rutland, Vt. 311 East 238th St., New York, N. Y. . . 260 West 113th St., New York, N. Y. . 540 West 143rd St., New York, N. Y. . 26 St. Paul ' s PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 25 Ridge St., Greenwich, Conn. 1 Nelson Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. KARL, VIRGINIA A KELLY, EUNICE KELLY, MARIE KELLY, MARJORIE KENNEY, KATHERINE .... KERGARAVAT, MARIE ANNE KIEFFER, HELEN KILCULLEN, MARY .... KIRBY, LUCY KUHN, MARGARET .... . 628 James St., Pelham Manor, N. Y. . 2989 Marion Ave., New York, N. Y. 14 Birch Rd., Park Hill, Yonkers, N. Y. 8 McDonald Ave., Binghamton, N. Y. 130 Liberty Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Shipton Court, Lenox, Mass. 2106 Ottilia St., Utica, N. Y. 805 So. Valley Ave., Olyphant, Pa. 578 Ridge St., Newark, N. J. . 2520 Maclay Ave., New York, N. Y. LA HINES, ANNE LAEMMLE, VIOLA .... LA LONDE, ROSEMARY . . . LAMEY, NANCY LAVELLE, MARY M LAWLOR, MARGARET . . . 139 Broadway, Rockville Center, N. Y. . 55 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. Ridgeview Apt., Evanston, 111. . 268 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 30-52 Cresent St., Astoria, N. Y. 144 Pearl St., Port Chester, N. Y. 296 LAWRENCE, ELAINE . LEE, MARY .... LENAHAN, JOSEPHINE LEWIS, JEANNE , . LOUGHRAN, ETTA . LOUSTALOT, LORRAINE LUTZ, ELIZABETH . . 228 Lincoln Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 115 Chestnut St., Binghamton, N. Y. . 645 Hayle St., Wilkes-Barre, Pa. . Hotel Washington, Cristobal, C. Z. 1940 Andrews Ave., New York, N. Y. 314 West 56th St., New York, N. Y. 266 East 19th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. McEVOY, JEAN . . McGRAW, ROSALIE . McHUGH, RUTH . . McIntyre, agnes . McLaughlin, edith M cMANUS, MARIE McNABB, MARY . . MacNEIL, BERENICE MACATEE, ORALYNN MAGNUS, JANET . . MAHER, MARY . . . MAHONEY, KATHRYN MARSHUETZ, RITA MARTENIS, JEANNE . MASSE, LOUISE . . MIHALIK, MARGARET MORALLER, CATHERINE MORRIS, EDNA . . MORRISSEY, ELLEN . MOYNA, MARIE . . MUECK, MILDRED MULLE, MARIE . . MULLER, CHARLOTTE MURRAY, CLARA . . MURRAY, DOROTHY . 524 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. 7 Prospect St., Lancaster, N. H. 1329 Purdy St., New York, N. Y. 330 Hancock St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 2613 Grand Ave., New York, N. Y. 2528 Grand Ave., New York, N. Y. 1200 Lake Drive, Grand Rapids, Mich. . 201 West 105th St., New York, N. Y. Wykagyl Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. . 3224 Ellershie Ave., Baltimore, Md. 410 Greene Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 11 Woodleigh Ave., Greenfield, Mass. 315 W. 98th St., New York, N. Y. 51 Glenorchy Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 89 Jefferson St., Yonkers, N. Y. 17 Mulberry St., Yonkers, N. Y. . . 947 W. 6th St., Plainfield, N. J. 72 Briston Rd., Garden City, N. Y. 4 Hudson Ave., Haverstraw, N. Y. 2292 Loring PL, New York, N. Y. 209 Watchung Rd., Bound Brooks, N. Y. 112 Babylon Turnpike, Merrick, N. Y. 323 East Maine St., Patchogue, N. Y. 1604 N. Main St., Honesdale, Pa. 5 Circle Hill Rd., Pelham Manor, N. Y. NELSON, LILLIAN . NEVINS, DORIS. . NORTON, ALICE . . 82 Church St., Forestville, Conn. 351 Lookout Ave., Hackensack, N. J. 333 Fairmount Ave., Jersey City, N. J. O ' BRIEN, MARGARET O ' CONNELL, EILEEN . O ' DEA, BETTY . . . O ' DONNELL, LOUISE O ' DONNELL, MARGARET O ' GRADY, JEAN . . O ' REILLY, MARION O ' SHEA, MARGARET 1507 W. 14th St., Wilmington, Del. 9 Powel Ave., Newport, R. I. 210 Albemarle Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 189 Mason St., Greenwich, Conn. 132 Proctor Blvd., Utica, N. Y. 19 Fishkill Ave., Beacon, N. Y. Sasgua Hills, East Norwalk, Conn. 262 Pleasant St., Laconia, N. Y. PENDER, LILLIAN . 14 Charles St., Pittsfield, Mass. 297 PERNA, RITA A PERRONE, DOROTHY . . . PERRY, LOUANN .... PFEIFER, CE CILIA .... PHELAN, KATHERINE . . . PHILLIPS, LUCILLE . . . PIANTAROSA, MARY . . . PICONE, BEATRICE . . . PISCIOTTA, MARIE . . . PURCELL, IOSEPHINE . . PUTNAM, BEATRICE . . . QUINLAN, JEANNE . . . QUINN, RUTH QUIRK, ELIZABETH . . . RAITI, MADELINE . . . . RAUNER, MADELYN . . . REILLY, GENEVIEVE . . . RENTON, MARY . . . . RIESER, HELEN C ROBERTS, JANE . . . . ROZAN, LEONORA . . . RUPPERT, MURIEL . . . . RUSSELL, ALICE . . . . RYLE, ANNE SABELLA, FAITH . . . . SANCHEZ, FRANCES . . . SANFORD, EDWINA . . . SANTANELLO, ROSE . . SAUNDERS, MARY FRANCES SCHMITT, RUTH F. . . SCHNEIDER, ANNE . . SCHULTZ, ANNE . . . SCHULZ, MARY . . . SHEEH AN, JANE . . . SHEEHAN, JANET . . . SHINE, HELEN .... SILLER, MARIAN R. . . ST. PIERRE, ANNE . . . SMITH, MADELEINE . . SMITH, VIRGINIA MARIE STRONG, AGATHA . . SULLIVAN, MARGARET . TAYLOR, CLARA LOUISE TOWEY, ELEANOR . . 1795 Riverside Dr., New York, N. Y. . 67 Ridge Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. R. F. D. No. 2, Bangor, Maine Monticello, N. Y. 54 Lexington Ave., Waterbury, Conn. 157 Mt. Joy PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 122 Elm Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 968 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 3011 Barnes Ave., New York, N. Y. 10 Hooker Ave., Poughkeepsie, N. Y. Wykagyl Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. . 124 Caroline St., Canastota, N. Y. 15 James St., Walden, N. Y. 70 Wak St., Harrison, N. Y. 5 Henry St., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 76 Franklin Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . Hotel Westlake, Cleveland, Ohio . 495 Portage Rd., Niagara Falls, N. Y. . 366 Fifth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. . 15 Franklin Ave., Lynbrook, N. Y. . 38 Hope St., Stamford, Conn. 2252 University Ave., New York, N. Y. . 73 Greenfield Ave., Stapleton, N. Y. . 595 Central Ave., Albany, N. Y. . 19 Cross St., Westport, Conn. 42 Vances St., New Britain, Conn. 636 East 231st St., New York, N. Y. 2331 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. 18 Bonnett Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 144 South 2nd Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . Larchmont Gables, Larchmont, N. Y. . Larchmont Gables, Larchmont, N. Y. 11 Central Parkway, Mount Vernon, N. Y. . 435 Dunham Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 511 Central St., Winchendon, Mass. 124 East 94th St., New York, N. Y. 4 West 101st St., New York, N. Y. 487 Lincoln PL, Brooklyn, N. Y. 1250 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. 144 East 24th St., New York, N. Y. 52 Rosedale Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 10 Bettswood Rd., Norwalk, Conn. 2691 Marion Ave., New York, N. Y. . 710 River St., Mamaroneck, N. Y. 298 TRACY, MARY 427 Union St., Springfield, Mass. TROSSET, DOLORES . .... 1 Carlisle Ave., Utica, N. Y. VERMYLEN, MARIE 185 Stratford Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. VICTORY, H. MARY 24 Flower Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. VISCOUNT, MILLICENT Pelham Manor Gardens, Pelham Manor, N. Y. WADE, MARGARET 24 Grant St., Potsdam, N. Y. WALSH, MARGARET M 130 Morningside Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. WALSH, MAY 16 Darling Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. WERNER, EVELYN Putnam Ave., Port Chester, N. Y. WHITE, HELEN 1432 Shakespeare, New York, N. Y. WRY, ILA MARY 62 Smith St., St. Albano, Vt. 299 CLASS O F 19 3 9 ADRIAN, MARGUERITE AHEARN, VIRGINIA . ANDERSON, EVELYN . ARCHER, CATHERINE 122 East 76th St., New York, N. Y. 153 Nesbit St., Weehawken, N. J. 24 Clove Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 174 Hollywood Ave., Crestwood, N. Y. BABIC, MARY A. . . . BALDWIN, ALINE . . . BANNAN, MARY . . . BANNAN, MERCEDES . . BARBER, GRACE . . . BERNHOLZ, EDITH . . BICHER, MARIAN . . . BIGGS, MARY .... BISORDI, MERCEDES . . BLOSSY, MARIE . . . BOESCH, MURIEL . . . BOLAND, VIRGINIA . . BOROWETZ, MARION BOULLE, MARY . . . BRADDIN, CATHERINE BRADY, CATHERINE . . BREITSCHADEL, AMANDA BRETON, BETTY . . . BRYAN, ELIZABETH . . BUCKLEY, JEAN . . . BUCKLEY, RITA . . . BURKE, EILEEN . . . BURNS, JUSTINE . . . BUSHEL, MADELINE . . CAHILL, MARY ALICE CAMPBELL, VIRGINIA CANNING, MARGARET CANNON, KATHERINE CARLUCCI, ANTOINETTE CARNEVALE, VIRGINIA CARROLL, MARGARET CAVANAUGH, KATHERINE CINIGLIA, FLORA CISNEROS, MARIA LUISA CLANCY, CATHERINE CLANCY, MARIE . CLARK, MARGARET COFFRIE, RITA COHN, MARJORIE CONNOLLY, MARY 58 Mill St., Unionville, Conn. 2364 Tiebout Ave., New York, N. Y. 30 Lyman St., Waltham, Mass. 206 Montgomery St., Newburgh, N. Y. 53 Park Lane, Rockville Center, N. Y. 265 E. 200th St., New York, N. Y. 264 Moore St., Hackensack, N. J. . 122 West Chemung PL, Elmira, N. Y. 221 S. 6th Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 60 Kane Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 1565 Vyse Ave., New York, N. Y. 9101 Colonial Rd., Brooklyn, N. Y. 8 Parkview Dr., Bronxville, N. Y. 3 Colonial PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 4394 Martha Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 311 E. 143rd St., New York, N. Y. 1220 Broad St., Newark, N. J. 51 Pershing Ave., Seymour, Conn. 60 French Ridge, New Rochelle, N. Y. 12 Davis St., Binghamton, N. Y. Cedar Lane, Westwood, N. J. . 2821 DeWitt Place, New York, N. Y. . 101 Meadow St., Garden City, N. Y. 15 LeGrand Ave., Tarrytown, N. Y. . 65 E. Tremont Ave., New York, N. Y. 22 Fraser St., New Rochelle, N. Y. 42 Broad St., Port Henry, N. Y. 44 Hamilton PL, Tarrytown, N. Y. 22 Hinckley Ave., Stamford, Conn. 166 Archer Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 102 Holland PL, Hartsdale, N. Y. 44 Congress Ave., Holyoke, Mass. 118 Halstead Ave., Harrison, N. Y. 5526 Northumberland St., Pittsburgh, Pa. 158 Hubbell PL, Devon, Conn. . 46 Thompson St., West Haven, Conn. 465 Parker St., Newark, N. J. 508 River Ave., Pelham, N. Y. Calton Court Apts., New Rochelle, N. Y. 2790 Morris Ave., New York, N. Y. 300 CONWAY, LORETTA CORCORAN, CAROL COTTER, MARIE . COTTER, MARGARET COX, VIRGINIA COYLE, BETTE . . COYLE, ELEANOR CRACHI, TERESA . CROTTY, AGNES . CULLEN, GERTRUDE CUOMO, LUCY . 1749 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. 144-35 Northern Blvd., Flushing, N. Y. Box A, Brentwood, N. Y. . 306 Prospect Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. . 10 N. Fulton Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 71 E. Quackenbush Ave., Dumont, N. J. . Evergreen Ave., Westport, Conn. . 233 Rockaway Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 38 Crotty Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. . 24 Locust Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. . 2018 Paulding Ave., New York, N. Y. DALTON, AGNES . . DAVIDSON, LUCILE . DERMODY, MARGARET DE ROSA, CORNELIA DE WOLFE, MARIE DILEO, MARY DONOVAN, LUCILLE DOST, LORETTA C. DOUGHERTY, NANCY DOWLING, MARGARET ANNE . DUFFIN, MARIE DUFFY, VIRGINIA M DUNKLY, MARION . . . . DURHAM, CHARLOTTE . . . 118 Bay Ridge Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 30 Eastchester Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 127 South St., Oyster Bay, N. Y. 42 Hilltop Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 2323 Davidson Ave., New York, N. Y. 55 Sound View St., Port Chester, N. Y. 235 W. 75th St., New York, N. Y. 6065 Palmetto St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 8 Fern Rd., Larchmont, N. Y. 18 Wellington Ave., Rochester, N. Y. 417 E. Beech St., Long Beach, N. Y. 21-24 28th St., Astoria, N. Y. 22 Sagamore Rd., Bronxville, N. Y. 15657 Wyatt Rd., Cleveland, Ohio FAGAN, MARY E 3288 Perry Ave., New York, N. Y. FAGAN, BETTY ANN . Norwich, N. Y. FALK, NORMA 131 Poningo St., Port Chester, N. Y. FENNELL, M. PATRICIA 3 W. Hyatt Ave., Mt. Kisco, N. Y. FITCH, LOIS 142 N. Columbus Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. FITZGERALD, ALICE . . 2224 St. James Parkway, Cleveland Heights, Ohio FITZPATRICK, ELIZABETH N Gramatan Hotel, Bronxville, N. Y. FLAHERTY, MURIEL 10 Prospect Ave., Norwalk, Conn. FLOOD, BETTY 231 Main St., Portland, Conn. FLOOD, MARION East Main St., Portland, Conn. FOSSATI, JULLIA 275 Marbledale Rd., Tuckahoe, N. Y. FOX, LOUISE MARIAN . . 2100 Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D. C. FRAILEY, BETTE 113 S. Marshall St., Lancaster, Pa. GALLAGHER, EILEEN GALLANT, ELSIE . . GAREISS, DOROTHY . GEISER, DORIS LEILA GERARD, ROSEMARY V GILHOOLY, RITA . . GILLESPIE, ELIZABETH 1003 Southern Blvd., New York, N. Y. 30 Alexandria Ave., Ticonderoga, N. Y. . 754 Prospect Ave., New York, N. Y. 20-62 43rd St., Long Island City, N. Y. 34 Davis Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 2305 University Ave., New York, N. Y. 66 Pinehurst Ave., New York, N. Y. 301 GLYNN, MARIE . . GRIFFIN, FLORA . . GRILLI, ADELA. . . GUILFOYLE, MILDRED GUNTHER, GLORIA . GUSHUE, MURIEL Craryville, N. Y. 1 Ivy Colse, Long Island, N. Y. 209 New Boston St., Canastota, N. Y. 2538 Grand Ave., New York, N. Y. 205 Greenway, Long Island, N. Y. 138 Mt. loy PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. HALACY, ELEANOR ANN HALBRITTER, MARION HALL, ETHEL . . . HALLERAN, WILLETTE HALLIGAN, MARY ROSE HARDING, KATHLEEN HARRAHILL, ALICE M. HARRISON, MARIE HARVEY, O. IRENE HIRSCHBERG, IRENE . HOGAN, MARGARET A. HOLLAND, MAUREEN HOLMES, MARY-MARGAR HYLAND, EILEEN . HYNDS, CATHERINE ET 30- 14 Winfield St., East Norwalk, Conn. . 523 Grant Ave., Auburn, N. Y. Dannemora, N. Y. 30 Parsons Blvd., Flushing, L. I., N. Y. 1169 Hue Ave., New York, N. Y. 371 Catherine St., Bridgeport, Conn. 115 W. 84th St., New York, N. Y. Penn-Stroud Hotel, Stroudsburg, Pa. East Road, Adams, Mass. 332 Beach 142nd St., Rockaway, N. Y. 123 Louden Ave., Amity ville, N. Y. 47 Loring Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 3450 80th St., Jackson Heights, N. Y. 616 E. Lincoln Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 211 Goodwin St., Bristol, Conn. IANNELLE, IDA . . JARCYNSKI, ROSEMARY 86 Webster Ave., Harrison, N. Y. 76 E. 121st St., New York, N. Y. KAVANAGH, EILEEN KEENER, AUDREY . KELLY, SUSAN JOAN KELLY, CLAIRE . KENNEDY, CARMEN KENNEDY, JEAN . KIDNEY, MARY T. . KING, MARGARINA KIRK, MARGARET . KNIGHT, MARGARET KRIEG, ANNA-MARIE Bayport, N. Y. Roscoe, N. Y. . 435 Lafayette St., Bridgeport, Conn. 372 E. 235th St., New York, N. Y. . 637 Francis St., Pelham Manor, N. Y. . 56 Oakridge St., Greenwich, Conn. 229 Onota St., Pittsfield, Mass. . 348 Anderson St., Hackensack, N. J. 116 Ashuelot St., Dalton, Mass. 95 Commonwealth Ave., Pittsfield, Mass. . 91 Marguand Ave., Bronxville, N. Y. LEDDY, HELEN M. LEE, VIRGINIA L. . . LEECH, GRACE . . LEIBELL, MARIE L. . LEO, CATHERINE . . LEONARD, HELEN . . LOCKWOOD, ELEANOR LOUGHMAN . . . LUCIANO, ELLEN . . LYNN, BETTY . . . Briar View Manor, White Plains, N. Y. 57 Strawberry Hill Court, Stamford, Conn. . . 331 East 188th St., New York, N. Y. . 1000 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. . 168 East Genesee St., Auburn, N. Y. 6 Grandview Ave., Norwalk, Conn. 379 Washington Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 201 Center Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 76 Lake Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 241 Sixth Ave., Newark, N. J. 302 McCLOSKEY, ANNA LOUISE McCORMICK, HELEN . . . McCORMICK, MARION . . MacDONAGH, KATHRYN McDonald, Kathleen . . McELHEARN, ANNE . . . McGOWAN, MARY ELIZABETH McLaughlin, Elizabeth . McMANUS, MARY .... McNABB, ELLEN .... McNAMARA, ALYCE . . . McNULTY, MARIE B. . . . MADDEN, MARGARET FRANCES MAHONEY, AGNES P. . . MALLEY, HELEN .... MARR, AGNES VIRGINIA MARRA, RITA M MASTERSON, H. G. . . . MASUCCI, NORMA L. . . MOFFETT, MARIAN C. . . MORRISSEY, MARY T. . . MORRISON, FLORENCE AGNES MORALES, ANA ELSA . . MORH, HELEN MORAN, ORDYS .... MORSE, ELIZABETH IRENE . MURPHY, AGNES .... MURPHY, ANNE MARIE . . MURPHY, ELIZABETH BERTHA MURPHY, RITA E MURPHY, MARIE .... 1392 Manor Circle, Pelham Manor, N. Y. 100 Pelham Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 806 Fairmount PL, New York, N. Y. 525 Fourth St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 142-12 Myrtle Ave., Flushing, N. Y. 2403 41st Ave., Long Island City, N. Y. 2 Stonelea PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 336 Tecumseh Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. 92 Johnston Ave., Kingston, N. Y. 1200 Lake Drive, Grand Rapids, Mich. . 552 Garfield Ave., Jersey City, N. J. 1925 New York Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. 27 Amackassin Terrace, Yonkers, N. Y. 4 Washington Ave., Winthrop, Mass. Box 20, Route 2, Bethel, Mass. 34 Summer St., Adams, Mass. 4 Laurel St., Holyoke, Mass. 57 East Church St., Bergenfield, N. J. 3235 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. 3109 Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y. ... 11E. 87th St., New York, N. Y. 18 Pierpont Ave., Malone, N. Y. 12 De Diego Ave., Santurce, Porto Rico 673 Union Ave., New York, N. Y. Wykagyl Gardens, New Rochelle, N. Y. . 321 West 35th St., Wilmington, Del. 193 Lakeview Ave., Rockville Center, N. Y. 108 Richmond Hill Ave., Stamford, Conn. . . 95 West Main St., Malone, N. Y. 64 Highland Ave., Tuckahoe, N. Y. 193 Lakeview Ave., Rockville Center, N. Y. NEWBRAND, LORRAINE 32 N. Trenchard St., Yonkers, N. Y. NIEIVENHOUS, THERESE .... 24 Poplar PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. NOLEN, HELEN M. . 529 E. Mt. Pleasant Ave., Mt. Airy, Philadelphia, Pa. NORTHROP, EVELYN 891 E. 175th St., New York, N. Y. O ' BRIEN, NATALIE . . O ' CONNELL, MARGARET O ' DONOVAN, FLORENCE O ' KEEFE, MARION J. . . PASLEY, GERTRUDE A. . PAULMANN, DORIS . . PEYRONIN, CLEMENCE . PICONE, JOSEPHINE . . PINTO, MARIE .... POSTORINO, DENSIE . . 1507 W. 14th St., Wilmington, Del. 415 Winona Blvd., Rochester, N. Y. . . . . 15 W. 11th St., New York, N. Y. 71 Front St., Winsted, Conn. 456 Richmond Ave., Maplewood, N. J. 147 Madison Rd., Scarsdale, N. Y. . . 321 W. 24th St., New York, N. Y. . 968 Ocean Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. 505 Van Cortlandt Park Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 140 Bridge St., Westport, Conn. 303 POWERS, RHODA . 4526 Boston Post Rd., Pelham, N. Y. QUILTER, ELIZABETH QUINLAN, CATHERINE QUINN, EILEEN . . QUINN, JOAN . . . 10 St. John Ave., Binghamton, N. Y 2 Soundview Circle, White Plains, N. Y 576 Sumner Ave., Springfield, Mass. 1551 Williamsbridge Rd., New York, N. Y. RABBOTT, MARGARET RANDALL, MARY . . RAUH, DAWN . . REILLY, VIRGINIA . . RIERA, ARACELI . . ROACH, MARGARET . ROBUSTELLI, CARMELLA ROESER, MARGARET ROETTGER, CAROLINE , ROGERSON, ANN . . RYAN, MARION . . 4 Culver St., Naugatuck, Conn. 275 Grand Ave., Leonia, N. J. 191 Boston Post Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 99 East 235th St., New York, N. Y. 40 Water St., New York, N. Y. 64 String Hill Ave., West New Brighton, N. Y. 117 Myrtle Ave., Stamford, Conn. 39 Chauncey Ave., New Rochelle, N. Y. 6138 Tyndall Ave., New York, N. Y. 61 West 87th St., New York, N. Y. . 15 Waterville St., Waterbury, Conn. SCHAEFER, AUDREY . . SCHIFF, EDITH . . . SCHRALL, BARBARA . . SEGERSON, RUTH . . SEXTON, FLORENCE . . SKAKEL, GEORGEANN . SMITH, RUTH .... SMITH, KATHRYN MARY SMITH, PEGGY ALICE . SMITH, RITA .... SORG, JEANNE . . . STENGLE, ERNA . . . STRAUB, GERTRUDE . . SUTHERLAND, G. C. . . SWEENY, ISABELLE . . SWEENEY, MARGARET . SZOTKOWSKI, ELIZABETH . 485 Pelham Rd., New Rochelle, N. Y. 3216 Mickle Ave., New York, N. Y. 116 Briggs Ave., Yonkers, N. Y. 19 Fort Amherst Rd., Glens Falls, N. Y. 229 Beechmont Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. 85 Larchmont Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. 941 State St., Schenectady, N. Y. 8916 Whitney Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. 64 Babylon Turnpike, So. Merrick, N. Y. 772 82nd St., Brooklyn, N. Y. 100 E. Mosholn Parkway, New York, N. Y. . 832 Edison Ave., New York, N. Y. 2 Bank St., New York, N. Y. Parksville, N. Y. . 89 Edgewood Ave., Larchmont, N. Y. Brookside Rd., Darien, Conn. 83-08 Britton Ave., Elmhurst, N. Y. TAYLOR, BELINDA TOOLE, JUDITH . . TOTERO, TINA . . TREACY, JULIA. . . TULLY, RUTH CLAIRE TYRRELL, MARCELLA 1936 McGraw Ave., New York, N. Y. 300 Jefferson Ave., Niagara Falls, N. Y. 1021 Park Ave., New York, N. Y. 3279 Hull Ave., New York, N. Y. 15 Arch St., Norwalk, Conn. 30 Pelhamside Dr., New Rochelle, N. Y. VALENTINE, MIRIAM . 1650 68th St., Brooklyn, N. Y. WALSH, MARY 364 E. 198th St., New York, N. Y. WALSHl DOROTHY 16 Darling Ave., Mt. Vernon, N. Y. WALTERS, KATHLEEN 2870 Marion Ave., New York, N. Y. 304 WASSON, HELEN WELCH, EILEEN .... WELCH, JANE EILEEN . . WHITE, BETTA RUTH . . WHITMORE, CLARA . . . WILLIAMS, MARY .... WINTRICH, ALICE MARGARET WOBBEKIND, ALICE . . . YANARELLA, MARIE . . . YOUNG, BETTY ANN . . . ZELLER, DOROTHY . . . . 54 Smith St., Port Chester, N. Y. 940 St. Nicholas Ave., New York, N. Y. 114 South Main St., Albany, N. Y. 851 James St., Pelham Manor, N. Y. 1 Penbroke St., New Rochelle, N. Y. 2922 Grand Concourse, New York, N. Y. . 216 East 201st St., New York, N. Y. 1710 Fillmore St., New York, N. Y. 96 Oak St., Yonkers, N. Y. 927 Perry St., Helena, Ark. 15 Bailey PL, New Rochelle, N. Y. 305 306 Compliments of 1937 307 31 , . . r pump v ■ |s |MK| ilrffMB ' ' -. .,;■- , $0$, Mi l Sg Miaigi iis • .. . - ■•_’ Jul ■• •’ SW ;: •• sMfcWIW-:. • .. • l . ' . : ' £ mm ®|li|| •■ ■ iiiill Ww Lti IMM hgj Jf! • ■• ' ■ ' uS’H y ,iv..i-: - : aaa S pi i : EH inKMl - ■: pSSpSiSI KMMMNd IpSsI ■ s Wk ■ - :. : :■ ' Si ' '
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.