Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT)

 - Class of 1959

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Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1959 Edition, Cover
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Text from Pages 1 - 194 of the 1959 volume:

Nineteen hundred and fifty-nine CONNECTICUT COLLEGE New London, Connecticu Pausing on the library steps in the late afternoon, our book-strained eyes are startled for a moment by the sudden opening of the world across the Sound. We watch its moods: glistening in the clear autumn sun, gray-streaked with rain in winter, or dappled with shadows of high white clouds. As we walk slowly across the campus, lights blinking on in dormitory windows with oranges on the sills and groups in living rooms around a piano remind us that we share with nine hundred other girls a brief, close comradeship that can never be duplicated. For no one but a Con- necticut girl could quite understand the frantic necessity of finding the sophomore banner or of refusing a date on a warm spring evening to attend Compet Sing. How can we both e a secret santa and do favors for our own secret santa? It's all in the terminologyand the funthat never sounds as clever at the dinner table at home. We coin phrases like the snack and the post, affect emblematic dress racoon coats and velvet headbands, and make pedantic witticisms of lines from Beowulf, Shakespeare, and Kerouac. Friends tell us we talk too much about our work, but what seems a rather dour attitude toward Saturday classes often relaxes in a late- night conversation, when a semester of piece-meal assignments may suddenly take meaningful form. May Day dawns on a strange bright pole flying colored streamers and surrounded with trees with paper bows on their branches, for this day our latent pagan spirit is allowed traditional expression. The chapel bell ends the holiday of spring, and we gather again on the library steps, to sing hymns by Luther and Cal- vin. The ever present wind lifts our voices over the calm green lawns and flowering dogwoods to the Sound. When the hymns are ended we are quiet a moment under the sky and suddenly glad to be a part of this our unique and irreplaceable college. Our campus is a home, a bivouac, and a sanctuary where we may move about in safe contentment, ever aware of widening, beckoning horizonsbefore leaving for the outside world to assume the responsi- bilities and grasp the opportunities of enlightened adulthood. Here then is the campus pictured in a variety of moods and tempers. September 20 Dear Mother, Connecticut College is really beautiful, that is most of it, but . . au.ro P -+ - We spent most of the day trying . . . actually ... you'll never guess who my room- to fit everything in . . . legiate . . . mate is . . . we look rather col- . not to bring up the subject of money . . . P.S. Had my first visit with the dean . . . guess I won't be home this weekend . . . The strength of a student of books is to sit still-two or three hours at a stretcheating the heart out of a subject with pencil and note- book . . . Maybe time will banish Sweat-shirts, dirty jeans; Maybe these will vanish From collegiate scenes . . . Morris Bishop The hardest conviction to get into the mind of a beginner is that the education upon which she is engaged is not a college coursebut a life course for which the work of a few years under teachers is but a preparation. Whether you will falter and fail in the race or whether you will be faithful to the end depends upon the training before the start, and on your staying powers . . . II He's definitely top drawer . .. 12 Where did 1 put my basic black? 12 Now legal consumers of dark ale . . . We settle for the Little Three . . . ELEIL - PR R Wiy 4 HARBATRS ,z;.k.,H? Fhmg e Then some got lost at sea . .. I3 16 What is he but a brute Whose flesh has soul to suit, Whose spirit works lest arms and legs want play? To man, propose this test Thy body, at its best, How far can that project thy soul on its lone way? Robert Browning 17 There is a certain immortality involved in theatre, not created by monuments and books, but through the knowledge the actor keeps in his dying day that on a certain afternoon, in an empty and dusty theatre, he cast a shadow of a being that was not himself but the dis- tillation of all he had ever observed. Arthur Miller 18 Gaite Parisiennes in black and blue So light your bunsen burners boys and I'll react on you... Oh I get so excited I could kiss the quaint parisiens every one . .. 19 The Pajama Game Once More With Feeling 20 Let us never forget that American democracy 0.K., 0.K., but I still say it was out! depends on fair play! 21 And then all of a sudden it came true! 22 23 wofds 8y mngrgfdsumg el SAalLy FOOfE 6t MUSIC WRITTEN BY SHLLY FooT F ARRANGED By SUSAN KIMEERLY I Ti. ET J f i i Is I v I - 1 B i 18 - : 0 AL AR A AT ;rfr; o bl 8 0 2. THE Tlifs w':'ce 4D, E FuN u:rf S fj:wu- EY- ER B fonD A A Y 7 --.ljgg-lf -ialm-LJ;Al':lLk-jj a0 7 e e e S : h ' i he Rt i D aE e 1 l ? 5 - e 1 .' L v y 3'? AT I o mf' THovekTs Witk rb:v r:;r- Let me make a hasty farewell visit To my long-ago days Before I catch up with age. Nothing muchjust milkweed pods And colored glass And yellow arith metic paper. Nothing muchjust hail storms And a two-wheel ed blue bike And Mary Poppins on the ceiling. Nothing muchjust farewell, Diana Bassett 60 24 26 We cannot mention all the names of the people to whom we dedicate the 1959 Koine, for the list would fill more than the space of this whole page. To represent them, the Senior Class has chosen the name and face of Mr. Ralph Hedenburg, whose years of devoted service to the college and warm friendliness to his girls have endeared him to us all. The familiar sight of his spare frame gives a a bright good morning on the rainiest, mail-less Mondays for we can always ex- pect to hear at the door of Hale Labora- tory his wise and cheerful, Nice Day! Throughout every day of circling from classes to library to snack shop, through dormitory halls and dining rooms, we meet at every stopping place, people like Mr. Hedenburg who are responsible for keeping the basic structure of the college efficient and polished. We are dependent on them for the essentials of living, but we receive from them much more. Their loyalty to our campus community, and pride in their work are a calm center for all our restless activity and a living lesson in respect. We regard and thank each one of them. 27 FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATION This volume is the record of events and people who together made up the world of your four years at Connecticut College. These years were the beginning of your higher education and in some fashion all the pages here will be a remembrance of the contribution made to that education by friends, by faculty, and by things like books, and even buildings. All of us who appear as actors here know that we will change as the years go by. We hope that however long this volume may live in your library, it will always awaken a sense of friendship and gratitude for the College of which we all were, in 1959, a part. Our best wishes go with you as you start to build on the foundation for the good life which we hope we have helped you to construct at Connecticut College. Q P 30 MEMBERS OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES: Standing: Mr. Stamm, Mr. Wadleigh, Mr. Chappell, Mrs. Lee, Mrs. Morrisson, President Park, Judge Hand, Mr. Knapp, Mrs. Durham, Mr. Picker. Seated: Miss Maas, Mr. Wilde, Chairman, Miss Strauss, Mrs. Buttenwieser, Mrs. Blanchard, Mrs. Arnold, Dr. Batchelder. BOARD OF TRUSTEES Mrs. John G. Lee Miss Natalie R. Maas Dr. Henry Margenau Mrs. Parker McCollester Dr. Dorothea M. Moore Mrs. Arthur Burkhead Mrs. H. Bradford Arnold Dr. Esther L. Batchelder Mrs. Harold Blanchard The Honorable Allyn L. Brown Mrs. Benjamin Buttenwieser Mr. F. Valentine Chappell Mr. Harlow H. Curtice Mrs. Charles H. Durham The Honorable Chauncey H. Hand Miss Louise C. Howe Mr, Sherman R. Knapp Mr. Bernard Knollenberg Mrs. James W. Morrisson, Secretary Mr. Harvey Picker Mr. Lucius S. Rowe Mr. Earle W. Stamm, Treasurer Miss Anna Lord Strauss Mzr. Frazar B. Wilde, Chairman EX-OFFICIO The President of the College : The Mayor of New London, Anthony J. Impelitter: 31 Miss Alice P. Holcombe, Assistant to Dean Noyes MISS GERTRUDE NOYES, Dean of Women Miss Eastburn, Miss Taylor Miss Warrine E. Eastburn, Assisz- ant to the President and Dean of Ad- ministration 32 Miss Alice Johnson, Dean of Freshmen., J Miss Elizabeth Babbott, Dean of Sophomores. Miss Helen F. Polley, Secretary to the Deans. 33 ADMISSIONS OFFICE: Mrs. Snow, Miss Nelson. Mr. M. Robert Cobbledick, Director of Admissions. OFFICE OF THE BUSINESS MANAGER: Mrs. Howe, Mrs. DeGange. Mr. Allen B. Lambdin, Business Manager. 34 OFFICE OF THE REGISTRAR: Mrs. Mann, Miss Barnard, Registrar, INFORMATION OFFICE: Mrs. Linkletter DUPLICATING OFFICE: Miss O'Sullivan. PUBLICITY OFFICE: Mr. Martin Masters, Direc- tor of Press Relations, Mrs. Carney, Miss Bloomer. 35 Y.l IN MEMORIAM Mrs. Martha B. Youn OFFICE OF THE BURSAR: Mrs. Montogomery, Mrs. Clark, S LR TR ST Miss Flynn, Mrs. K. White, Mrs. Young deceased, Mrs. Denison, Connecticut College Bursar Mts. J. White, Mrs, Cruise. 1943-1959 Miss Mary P. Morris Secretary to the Presi RESIDENCE STAFF: Standing: Miss Wilmot, Miss Desmond, Miss STERy i el rioda Warren, Miss Misterly, Miss Howard. Seated: Mrs. Lawrence, Miss Voorhees, Director, Miss Worcester, Mrs. Rowley, Mrs. Monroe, PERSONNEL BUREAU: Miss Grippin, Mrs. King Miss L. Alice Ramsey Director of the Personnel Bureau 36 LIBRARY STAFF: Standing: Miss Aitner, Mrs. Palmer, Mrs. Morgan, Miss Lester, Mrs, Kain, Miss Geisheimer, Mrs. Sekurski, Miss Gilkes. Seated: Miss Duffy, Mrs. Cranz, Miss Johnson, Librarian, Mrs. Randell, Miss Mackeen. Missing: Mr. Palmer. INFIRMARY STAFF: Standing: Miss Hull, Miss Frazer, Mrs. Hatfield, Mrs. Phillips, Miss Home. Seated: Dr. Lillian Warnshuis, Dr. Virginia Good- rich. ALUMNAE OFFICE: Mrs, Crane, Mrs, Stiles, Mrs. Benjamin. SCHOOL OF THE DANCE: Miss Schlottmann, Miss Bloomer, Mrs. Carney. 37 ART: Assistant Professor Mayhew, Professor Hanson, Professor McCloy, Mr. Lukosius, Instructor. BOTANY: Professor Niering, Mrs. Miller, Instructor, P rofessor Goodwin. 38 CHEMISTRY: Professor Brown, Professor Christiansen, Assistant Professor Johnston, Assistant Pro- fessor McKeon, Mrs. Ursprung, Instructor. CLASSICS: Mrs. Centeno, Part- time assistant, Professor Evans, Chairman. ECONOMICS: Seated: Professor Finney, Professor, Morris, Assistant Professor Snider. Standing: Mrs. Maas, Assistant, part-time, Assistant Professor Barnard, Mr. Mattersdorff, Instructor, Assistant Professor Ely. EDUCATION: Assistant Professor Eastburn, Professor Smith 40 ENGLISH: Seafed: Assistant Professor Ray, Associate Professor Jane Smyser, Assistant Professor Jarrell, Professor Bethurum, Miss Hazelwood, Instructor, Professor Noyes, Miss Johnson, Instructor, Assistant Professor Page. Standing: Mrs. Brady, Instructor, Assistant Professor William Meredith, Professor Hamilton Smyser, Assistant Professor Baird, Mr. Sward, part-time Instructor, Mr. Hollander, Lecturer, Mr. Broderick, Instructor, Dr, Perluck, Instructor, part-time, Pro- fessor Tuve. Professor Marc Chadourne, Mrs. Chadourne, Lecturer. Missing: Associate Professor Monaco, Mr. Leblon, Instructor. FRENCH AND ITALIAN: Professor Jones, Associate Professor Bieber, teaching assistant, Mr. Deguise, I 41 GERMAN: Professor Hafkesbrink, Mrs. Deinbert. GOVERNMENT: Professor Holborn, Associate Professor Lockard, Visiting Professor Curtis. HISTORY: Assistant Professor Mulvey, Mr. Hunt, Assistant Professor Lowitt, Professor Cranz, Assistant Professor Birdsall, Professor Haines, Professor Roach. MATHEMATICS: Professor Bower, Mrs. Quimby, Mr. Draisin. 43 MUSIC: Mrs. Boatwright, Lecturer, Professor Quimby, Mr. Dendy, Instructor, Assistant Professor Dale, Professor Alter. Seated: Assistant Professor Jacynowicz. PHILOSOPHY: Mr. Darlington, Professor Harris, Missing: Professor Langer. 44 PHYSICAL EDUCATION: Standing: Assistant Professor Fer- guson, Miss Gorton, Instructor, Miss Conklin, Mrs. Porter, Assist- ant Professor Thomas. Seated: Pro- fessor Merson, Assistant Professor Brett, Assistant Professor Wood, Assistant Professor Schlottmann. arrett, Mr. Young, Instructor. PHYSICS: Mr. Fenton, Instructor, Professor G 45 PSYCHOLOGY: Assistant Professor Torrey, Mrs. Kent, Professor M. H. Applezweig, Assistant Professor Winterbottom, Assistant Professor Moeller, Mrs. Shore, Instructor. RELIGION: Associate Professor Wiles, Chairman, Mr. Miller, In- structor. RUSSIAN: Mrs. Kasem-beg, Chairman SOCIOLOGY: Assistant Professor Record, Profes- sor Kennedy, Chairman. Missing: Mr. Greenfield, Instructor. 47 SPANISH: Associate Professor Biaggi, Assistant Professor Kolb. Missing: Professor Centeno, Chair- man. ZOOLOGY: Professor Richardson, Chairman, Professor Kent, Miss Jones, Associate Professor Wheeler. Miss Babbott Instructor, Mrs. Jones, Instructor, Associate Professor Hausman, ; 3 48 THE CEASS OF 1959 ELLIOTT ADAMS French The world is a comedy to those that think, a tragedy to those who feel. Horace Walpole MARY HELEN ADAMS ' English .. . beauty is life when life unveils her holy face. But you are life and you are the veil. Beauty is eternity gazing at itself in a mirror. But you are eternity and you are the mirror. Kahlil Gibran FERN ALEXANDER German Und darf nur heimlich 16sen mein Haar Und lassen es flattern im Winde. Annette von Droste-Hulshoff 52 JEAN PRESTON ALEXANDER History Ideals are like stars; you will not succeed in touching them with your hands. But like the seafaring man on the desert of waters, you choose them as your guides, and following them you will reach your destiny. Carl Schurz LUCY CALEF ALLEN Mathematics B Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm. e Ralph Waldo Emerson t POLLY BURBANS ALLING History Let us live then and be glad. Twelfth century Latin song 53 - ELAINE CARLIN ANDERSON English Good-bye, good luck, struck the sun and the moon, To the fisherman lost on the land. He stands alone at the door of his house, With his long-legged heart in his hand. Dylan Thomas HELEN ANGEVINE Government Birds fly over the rainbow; Why, oh then why can't I? Irving Berlin ELIZABETH ALICE ANTHONY Classics What may be taught I learn, what may be found I seek, What may be prayed for I ask of God. Sophocles BARBARA GEORGIANA BAILEY History We always find something to give us the impression we exist. Samuel Becket CAROLYN HELEN BAKER English A day of dappled seaborne clouds. James Joyce NETTA SMITH BARRETT Home Economics What is this life if, full of care, We have no time to stand and stare? William Henry Davies 55 S L C N JUDITH POUSSINEAU BASSIN Art ... green freedom of a cockatoo Wallace Stevens CAROL MAY BAYFIELD Botany Nothing was found to be so efficacious . . . as the power of music. Washington Irving B i CYNTHIA ANNE BEACH Psychology ;He who neglects the present moment throws away all he as. Johann Christoph Friedrich von Schiller 56 DIANE MARGARET BECKWITH Art Thursday come, and the week is gone. George Herbert MARY DONNELL BENEDICT Art There are many pleasures in a woman's life long gossiping talks and leisure, that sweet curse. Euripides EDITH BERKOWITZ Sociology In the midst of winter, I discovered that there was in me an invincible summer. Albert Camus 57 JANET GAIL BLACKWELL Psychology Effective in the quietest way. Anonymous JEANETTE DORIS BREMER History l would think of a thousand things, Lovely and durable, and taste them slowly, One after one, like tasting a sweet food. I have need to busy my heart with quictude. Rupert Brooke SUSAN JANET BRINK Art Time removes all things But love and truth. Anonymous 58 MARGARET HELEN BROWN French Where time is full, true joy prevails. CAROLE CLOSE BROER Art Yet, they, believe me, who await No gifts from chance, have conquer'd Fate. Matthew Arnold Anonymous ANN BURDICK Art For that which is boundless in you abides in the mansion of the sky, whose door is the morning mist, and whose windows are the songs and the silences of night. Kahlil Gibran 59 MARY BARBARA BURROWES Psychology In life you will find meaning just in the living of it. J. Hinsch MARY LOUISE BYRNES English Come then, your ways and airs and looks, locks, maiden gear, gallantry and gaiety and grace, Winning ways, airs innocent, maiden manners, sweet looks, loose locks, long locks, lovelocks, gaygear, going gallant, girlgrace Resign them . .. Gerard Manley Hopkins SUSAN LOUISE CAMPH Sociology . . . Laughter and memories, and a few TCRTCInl Hilaire Belloc BARBARA MARIE CARNEY English Our little systems have their day; They have their day and cease to be. Alfred Lord Tennyson PAMELA CARPENTER French Je suis un voyageur et un grimpeur de montagnes. Je naime pas les plaines, et il me semble que je ne peux pas rester longtemps. Friedrich Nietzsche ANNETTE MARGARET CASAVANT History Happiness depends, as Nature shows, Less on exterior things than most suppose. William Cowper 61 FAYE FRANCES CAULEY English Degged with dew, dappled with dew Are the groins of the braes that the brook treads through. Wiry heath packs, flitches of fern, And the bead bonny ash that sits over the burn. Gerard Manley Hopkins VIRGINIA ANN CHILDS Chemistry We know the truth, not only by the reason, but also by the heart. Blaise Pascal 62 Sociology PATRICIA JOAN CHAMBERS The great duties of life are written with a sunbeam. John Jortin WINONA MARIE CLINTON Zoology And gladly wolde he lerne; and gladly teche. Geoffrey Chaucer ANN CAROLYN COLLVER Sociology The only Gift is a Portion of Thyself. Ralph Waldo Emerson ELIZABETH MARCIA CORBETT Music For in the dew of little things the heart finds its morning and is refreshed. Kahlil Gibran 63 MARJORIE BRASH CRISP Child Development When love beckons to you, follow him, Though the ways are hard and steep. Kahlil Gibran CATHERINE DALE CURTICE Religion If the world's a vale of tears, Smile, and rainbows span it! Lucy Larcom EDWINA HELEN CZAJKOWSKI 5 . Zoology - - . believe that people are really good at heart. Anna Frank THELMA CORDELIA DAHLBERG Sociology Only a life lived for others is a life worth while. Albert Einstein ALICIA ANN DAUCH English Keep your heart in wonder at the daily miracles of your life. Kahlil Gibran JILL DAVIDSON English In quietness and in confidence shall be your strength. Isaiah 30:15 65 DOROTHY ALSTON DAVIS History My soul Smooth'd itself out, like a long-cramp'd scroll Freshening and fluttering in the wind. Robert Browning RUTH FELICE DIXON English ' Suffer the little children to come unto me and forbid them not for of such is the kingdom of heaven. Matthew 19:14 EDITH HUME DONALDSON Mathematics O to be a frog, my lads, and live aloof from care. Theocritus 66 ANNE WETHERBEE EARNSHAW Sociology It ain't never no use putting up your umbrella till it rains. Alice Hegon Rice LOIS SEMRAU ECKERT Chemistry Suddenly a thought came like a full-blown rose . . . John Keats PHYLLIS DOROTHY EHRHARDT English Before, a joy proposed; behind, a dream. William Shakespeare 67 JUDITH LEE EICHELBERGER History For have learned To look on nature, not as in the hour . Of thoughtless youth; but hearing oftentimes The still, and music of humanity. William Wordsworth MARY WILLIAMS ELSBREE Botany Where am I going? I don't quite know. What does it matter where people go? A. A. Milne ANN GERTRUDE KATHRYN ENGLAND English Because I know that time is always time And place is always and only place And what is actual is actual only for one time And only for one place I rejoice that things are as they are . . . i T. S. Eliot 68 ANN BRINTON ENTREKIN Spanish Oh, that it were my chief delight To do the things I ought! Then let me try with all my might To mind what I am taught. Ann Taylor CARLOTTA GEER ESPY History Up! up! my friend, and quit your books: Or surely you'll grow double: Up! up! my friend, and clear your looks; Why all this toil and trouble? William Wordsworth CAROL DOROTHY FILLIGAR Chemistry Die, and endow a college, or a cat. Alexander Pope 69 BARBARA JOAN FISHER Economics On with the dance, let joy be unrestrained. Anonymous SARA ELIZABETH FLANNERY Art All heaven and earth are stillthough not in sleep, But breathless, as we grow when feeling most; And silent, as we stand in thoughts too deep. Byron MARTHA RACHEL FLYNN Child Development Dare to be true. John Elberton 70 KAREN GALE FORT Psychology In character, in manners, in style, in all things, the supreme excellence is simplicity. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow MARCIA RUTH FORTIN French Tt matter not how long we live, but how. Philip James Bailey ff ANN SIMONE FRANKEL English O to make the most jubilant song 122 Walt Whitman 71 CAROLYN LEE FREDERICK Spanish I said in my heart, I am sick of four walls and a ceiling. I have need of the sky. Richard Hovey ANN WINTERS FREEDMAN Chemistry As we grow older The world becomes stranger, the pattern more complicated Of dead and living. T. S. Eliot g MARION FRIEDMAN 5 , History No man is an Iland, intire of itselfe et f John Donne 72 MARGUERITE TORREY GAMAGE Sociology Oh, for a horse with wings! William Shakespeare ANNE-MARIE GERMAN History Without love and laughter there is no joy. Horace ELISABETH HOPE GIBSON History When you make your bed you get a star. : Ruth Krauss L 73 SARA GAIL GLIDDEN Economics A soft answer turneth away wrath: Proverbs 15:1 HARRIETT ANN GOOD Economics Semper Paratus is our guide. USCG motto MARGARET ALAN GOODMAN Child Development think twice before you think E. E. Cummings 74 NANCY JANE GRAHAM Art How heavy The doors of the Great Gate, An evening of spring. BUSON CAROLYN HILLIARD GRAVES Art .. .seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you. Matthew 7:7 OLIVIA LAURENCE HALLOWELL English The most useless day of all is that In which we have not laughed. Sebastien Chamfort 75 CECILY ANN HAMLIN History The supreme happiness of life is the conviction that we are loved. Victor Hugo GRACE ANN HARTNETT Government And shall not loveliness be loved forever? Euripides PHYLLIS THERESA HAUSER 1 : . Zoology Born with the gift of Laughter and a sense that the world was mad . . . Raphael Sabatini 76 GAY ADAIR HELLSTEDT History The secret to success is constancy to purpose. Benjamin Disraeli MARGARET HENDERSON Sociology . .. In friendship, all thoughts, all desires, all expectations are born and shared ... Kahlil Gibran LINDA HESS English We have no . . . right to consume happiness without Pro- ducing it . . . George Bernard Shaw 7ilf JOANNE RAE HISCOX Zoology Happiness is that pleasure which flows from the source of virtue and from the consciousness of right deeds. Henry More EMILY JANE HODGE Child Development Steady my hurried pace with a vision of the eternal reach of time. Give me amidst the confusion of my day, the calm- ness of the ever lasting hills. from Slow Me Down GLENNA HOLLERAN Art I've taken my fun where Ive found it. Rudyard Kipling 78 EDITH ANNA HOLLMANN Art All the genuine, deep delight of life is in showing people the mud-pies you have made; and life is at its best when we confidingly recommend our mud-pies to each other's sym- pathetic consideration. J. M. Thorburn ANNE HUTTON Psychology The better part of valour is discretion. William Shakespeare ROXANDRA VLADIMIROVNA ILLIASCHENKO French Repentance keeps my heart impure. W. B. Yeats 79 LYNN BAYNE JOHNSTON English I am a part of all that I have met; Yet all experience is an arch wherethro Gleans that untravell'd world, whose margin fades For ever and for ever when I move. Alfred Lord Tennyson DOROTHY EDITH JOMO Child Development No matter how hard I try, I can't read between the lines! Charles M. Shulz SUSAN ESTHER JONAS P Home Economics i count myself in nothing else so happy $ As in a soul remembering my good friends . . . L William Shakespeare 80 ELEANOR MERCER JONES English If you can dreamand not make dreams your master; If you can thinkand not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two imposters just the same Rudyard Kipling CAROLYN MARY KEEFE English Everyone excels in something in which another fails. Publilius Syrus SARA KELLOGG History And in the sweetness of friendship let there be laughter, and the sharing of pleasures. Kahlil Gibran 81 JOAN ELISABETH KENNAN English The Road goes ever on and on . . . And I must follow, if T can, Pursuing it with weary feet, Until it joins some larger way, Where many paths and errands meet. And whither then? I cannot say. J. R. R. Tolkien ELLEN THERESA KENNEY Economics the inevitability of gradualness . . . Sydney Webb FRANCES ANNE KERRIGAN Spanish Ah! not now, when . . . the wind calls, and the suns of spring Light-foot dance in the woods, whisper of life, woo me to wayfaring: . . . Now, when dawn in the blood wakes, and the sun laughs up the eastern blue; I'll forget and be glad. Rupert Brooke 82 SARAH JANE KLEIN Economics I'love . . . such society As is quiet, wise, and good. Percy Bysshe Shelley ANNE GRACE KRULEWITCH French Tut tut, my child, said the Duchess. Everything has a moral if only you can find it. Lewis J. Carroll ANNE LAMBORN Physics Enough is something from our hands have power To live, and act, and serve the future hour. William Wordsworth 83 SHIRLEY ANN LEBEJKO Mathematics Patience, virtue of the poor. Richard Fleckno YOUNG SOO LEE Chemistry A peace above all earthly dignities, A still and quiet conscience. William Shakespeare MARNA MATILDA LEERBURGER Art Let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself. Franklin Delano Roosevelt OLGA LEHOVICH French Le coeur a ses raisons que la raison ne connait point. Blaise Pascal ALICE MAE LEISTER Mathematics procrastination is the art of keeping up with yesterday. Don Marquis KATHARINE SPENCER LLOYD-REES Spanish . what we keep we lose, . . . only what we give remains our own. 1 from the Episcopal Prayer Book 85 JEAN CAROL MacCARTHY Mathematics Give me serenity to accept what cannot be changed courage to change what can be changedand wisdom to know the difference. Anonymous JOYCE CLAIRE MACRAE English And Wisdom is a butterfly And not a gloomy bird of prey W. B. Yeats MIRIAM GALLOWAY MATTHEWS Zoology Learn to live, and live to learn. Bayard Taylor 86 ANN McCLURE Sociology If your spirits are low, do something; if you have been doing something, do something different. E. E. HaH JOAN CLAIRE McDUFFEE History , .. cheerfulness keeps up a kind of daylight in the mind . .. Joseph Addison SUSAN LANDON MEYERS Sociology Love is the blossom where there blows Every thing that lives or grows: Giles Fletcher 87 DORYCE DIANE MILLER Government Happiness is difficult. It takes a kind of courage most men are never masters of,the courage just to beto live each moment like the last that ever will be, each like the first that ever was. Anonymous SYDNEY SUTHERLAND MOORE Special student associated with the Class of 1959 Music And this song is considered a perfect gem, And as to the meaning, it's what you please. James Abram Garfield B TR ALICE JEAN MORRIS Sociology We do not belong to ourselves, but to others. Not until we are thus dedicated do we really enter life's front door. Anonymous 88 BERTHA MARY MORSE History If you don't talk happy And you never have a dream Then you'll never have a dream come true, Oscar Hammerstein 1J CARLENE NEWBERG English But at my back I always hear Time's winged chariot hurrying near Andrew Marvell SHEILA KATHLEEN O'NEILL Spanish This above all: to thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day, Thou canst not then be false to any man. William Shakespeare 89 MARTHA ANN PALMER Botany All things come round to him who will but wait. Henry Wadsworth Longfellow ALICE LUCILE PATIENCE Botany A closed hand cannot receive. Anonymous ELIZABETH SELLERS PECK Sociology Wait, thou child of hope, for Time shall teach thee all things. M. F. Tupper 90 SALLIE PERKINS Art Dearer to me than the evening star A Packard car A Hershey bar Or a bride in her rich adorning Dearer than any of these by far Is to lie in bed in the morning. Jean Kerr CYNTHIA JOAN PETERSON Art As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he. Proverbs 23:7 JUDITH BAILEY PETREQUIN Child Development The test of a great love is not what it demands, but what it is prepared to do without. Anonymous 91 LINDA ANN POND English Life is not life at all without delight. C. K. B. Patmore ANN MARY ROSE POTTER English A thing of beauty is a joy forever. John Keats JUDITH ANNETTE PRATT L Home Economics I have been here before, But when or how I cannot tell; Gabriel Rossetti 92 MARY HOLLISTER PRENTICE English Tt takes life to love life. Edgar Lee Masters ELIZABETH ANN PUGHE Psychology Into the highlands of the mind, Into the mountains let me go. Sir William Watson BARBARA LOIS QUINN Economics Good Will is the mightiest practical force in the universe. Charles Fletcher Dole 93 GILDA BONNIE RADIN Zoology I think no innocent species of wit or pleasantry should be suppressed. James Boswell ALICE HELEN RANDALL History The fog comes on little cat feet. Carl Sandburg CORINE GENTILELLA RAYBURN English Discontent is the want of self-reliance. Ralph Waldo Emerson 94 TEY DIANA REBOLLEDO Spanish My thought is like the stream: and flows and follows you on forever. Li Po VIRGINIA KENT REED English Trust the dreams, for in them is hidden the gate to eternity. - Kahlil Gibran . L Y .,NN N .Ff: ; MARGARET ELIZABETH REGAN English ... today well lived Makes every yesterday a dream of happiness And every tomorrow a vision of hope. from the Sanskrit BARBARA MATTESON RICH History In dreams begins responsibility. Old Play NANCY ELIZABETH RICHARDS English All human wisdom is summed up in two words; wait and hope. Alexander Dumas SUSANNE RIKE . Art .. and miles to go before I sleep. o Robert Frost 96 BARBARA ANNE ROBY Sociology Be slow of tongue and quick of eye. Miguel Saavedra Cervantes MARGIT RUTH ROWELL French On ne voit bien qu'avec le coeur I'essentiel est invisible pour les yeux. Saint-Exupery REGINA JOY ROZYCKI Art If the day and the night are such that you greet them with joy, and life emits a fragrance like flowers and sweet-scented herbs . . . that is your success. Henry David Thoreau 97 . NANCY RITA SAVIN Music I hate quotations. Tell me what you know. Ralph Waldo Emerson 2 ROCHELLE SCHILDKRAUT Zoology Columbus too thought he was a flop, probably when they sent him back in chains, which didn't prove there was no America. Saul Bellow MARGARET WELSH SEBRING Art The only way out of today's misery is for people to become worthy of each other's trust. Albert Schweitzer 98 ANN MARGARET SEIDEL Economics To live, to struggle, to be in love with life in love with all life holds, joyful or sorrowful this is fulfillment. Betty Smith LAUREL LEE SEIKEL Religion For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. Matthew 6:21 s MARILYN LUCILLE SHEEHAN Philosophy I want to know if I can live with what I know, and only with that. Albert Camus 99 A JULIA CORA SHIPMAN English The fur that warms a monarch, warmed a bear. Alexander Pope HELAIN ESTHER SHOAG Zoology We are born to inquire after truth; it belongs to a greater power to possess it. Michel de Montaigne CONSTANCE PATRICIA SNELLING History Sweetest the strain when in the song The singer has been lost. Elizabeth Stuart Phelps 100 JULIANE DIANA SOLMSSEN History To everything there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven. Ecclesiastes 3:1 DIANE ELAINE SOROTA English So, you saw yourself as you wished you were, As you might have been, as you cannot be; Robert Browning CONDE HAGER SPAULDING Economics . . . the wily bird had never heard of marginal utility. Hubert Phillips Ifl 101 JANE LAURA STARRETT English Between the idea And the reality Between the motion And the act Falls the Shadow. T. S. Eliot JANE LOUISE TAYLOR English Something will turn up. Benjamin Disrael; 102 Sociology MARTHA BIRD STEGMAIER Good-humor makes all things tolerable. Henry Ward Beecher ANDREA JANE THELIN Zoology Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod, Or Love in a golden bowl? William Blake JOAN TILLMAN History He is great who is what he is from Nature, and who never reminds us of others. Ralph Waldo Emerson DEBORAH NICHOLS TOLMAN Psychology The thoughtful Soul to Solitude retires . . . Omar Khayyam 103 PATRICIA ANNE TURLEY German My heart is warm with the friends I make, And better friends I'll not be knowing; Yet there isn't a train I wouldn't take, No matter where it's going. Edna St. Vincent Millay KATHERINE ANN USHER English The world is so you have something to stand on . , . Ruth Krauss MARTHA LOUISE VEALE Psychology ime - move, With life, with memory, and with love. Time will every grief re Thomas Gray 104 EMILY CECILIA WADE Child Development Live in simple faith . . . Just as this Trusting cherry Flowers, fades, and falls. KATHLEEN ELIZABETH WALSH English His might binds you to the earth, his fragrance lifts you into space, and in his durability, you are deathless. Kahlil Gibran Issa 105 JOAN EILEEN WAGNER Government The only emperor is the emperor of ice cream. Wallace Stevens s o W NANCY KUSHLAN WANGER Sociology Heard melodies are sweet, but those unheard Are sweeter. John Keats ANNE ELIZABETH WARNER Zoology The flowers, the animal, the mountain, reflected the wisdom of his best hour, as much as they had delighted the simplicity of his childhood. Ralph Waldo Emerson LOIS SUSANNE WARNER History It isn't really Anywhere! : . It's somewhere else ; ; Instead! A. A. Milne 106 MAJORY WASSERSTROM Art Persist if thou wouldst reach thine ends, For failures oft are but advising friends. Every failure is a step advanced To him who will consider how it chanced. George Meredith MARGARET ANN WEINANDY Sociology Tis not the mere stage of life, but the part we play thereon that give its value. Johann von Schiller MARGARET WALKER WELLFORD English How pleasant is Saturday night, When I've tried all week to be good, . .. Nancy Dennis Sproat 107 JOELLA BARBARA WERLIN History Giddy Grasshopper Take care . . . Do not leap and crush These pearls of dewdrop. Issa CONSTANCE SUE WHARTON Art The last, but not the least. John Lyly BARBARA ELIZABETH WICKSTROM b Sociology f- . Though we travel the world over to find the beautiful, AT We must carry it with us, or we find it not. : . . Ralph Waldo Emerson 108 KAY ANN WIELAND History We say the sea is lonely, better say Ourselves are lonesome creatures whom the sea Gives neither yes nor no for company. William Meredith DIANE YVONNE WILLIAMS Economics True Wit is Nature to advantage dressed, What oft was thought, but ne'er so well expressed. Alexander Pope SARA GREENLEAF WITHINGTON History They say best men are moulded out of faults And, for the most, become much more the better For being a little bad. William Shakespeare 109 DALE ALDEN WOODRUFF History It is completely unimportant. That is why it is so interest- ing Agatha Christie HOLLY KENT WRAMPELMEIER Sociology Silence is the perfectest herald of joy: I were but little happy, if I could say how much. William Shakespeare PATRICIA ADELE YOUNG Economics I am a part of all that I have met. Yet all experience is an arch where-thru Gleans that untravell'd world . . . Alfred Lord Tennyson 110 EMILY LOUISE ZAHNISER Sociology To be capable of steady friendship and lasting love is the greatest proof, not only of goodness of heart, but of strength of mind. William Hazlitt Each senior selected one of her favorite quotations for use beside her picture. 111 Nancy Desch LeCourt ackie Frost Hinckley LR e ox Elneh 28 Elayne Elashoff Mary Lonacher Terry Percelay Deborah Jenks Babs Daly Gilcrest Gail Dresden Parker Sandy Sidman Larsen Pat Kaffeman Sue Liefter Zuckert Jane Till Danilek Joy Johnson Nevin Celeste Maggiore Dee Fleming King Barbie Wallace, Ellen Rothschild Sandy Goodheim Regan I13 HISTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1959 Historians in general, and class historians in particular, are often accused of misjudgement, bias, or bare- faced lying. Those rare historians whose truthfulness the critics cannot attack are called dull, unselective, and insipid. In the words of Anatole France, All the historical books which contain no lies are extremely pedantic. The forthcoming history of the Class of 1959 is an attempt to disprove Mr. Frances statement: it shall contain no lies; it shall not, it is fervently hoped, be accused of pedantry. The Class of 1959 shall soon become statistics for the personnel bureau and mailing addresses for the Alumnae Association. Its members think of it now and shall remember it as a class of unparalleled studiousness and creativity. But as one who has objectively re-exam- ined the records, finding failures along with success, second places along with sportsmanship, I have found one quality which has been evident since freshman year, and is proven now by the one hundred and seven- ty-five graduates before you. The class of '58 was 141 strong and 57 graduated 163. That quality is fortitude. Our fortitude was first evidenced in freshman year, when, paired off nat according to choice, we were crammed into Knowlton Salon, stepped on by hundreds of newly issued Coast Guard shoes, and sated on ras- berry Kool-Aid punch. That most of us managed to retain enough faith in human nature to accept an oc- casional blind date in our senior year should certainly prove something. As freshmen we survived the Asian flu and Aldo Ray, we bought out curtains at Sears and Roebuck, and we prowled the streets of our quaint New England town looking for the best pizza joints. Fortitude of another kind was shown when the water main broke and we lined up in front of the gym, from which a hose had been stretched to the pond in the arboretum. Freshman year our first attempts at college composition were not too kindly welcomed by the 114 faculty. A typical comment was received by a girl who had written a paper on the illiteration of John Donne; the professor's remark read, Alliteration is the figure of speech; illiteration is what you are. Taking such crit- icism in stride, that year we applauded the faculty in Skits-O-Frenia, and later kicked up our own heels in the one and only Spring Fling. As sophomores we began to think seriously about our majors, and warned of sophomore slump we held long and depressing discussions on how to avoid it. That year, with only a small parcentage of the class knowing what it was really all about, we gaily draped ourselves in Ideal Linen and participated in Mascot Hunt. We liked Ike and admired Grace Kelley; we began to get an inkling of what requirements were for, and what new avenues of thought were going to be opened for us when we could take more advanced courses in our chosen fields. At this point, in case anyone should consider our fortitude to be of a self conscious, shart- sighted or martyred air, let us remind them that the Class of 59 kept fit as well as others, but drew the line at attending gym on the day a vacation started. This eliminated the mad dash to shower and change before catching the 10:48. And as sophomores, for the first time, if only for the first time we were looked up to by-those slightly more inexperienced than we were: assigned freshman sisters, we invited them to dinner and snowed them with our sophisticated knowledge of what was de rigeur Ivy League translation of shoe on college weekends at Yale. Junior year arrived too soon for some, but for most it was greeted with sighs of Upperclassmen at last! We bore with fortitude the $250 raise in tuition, the delay of Rec Hall,' and the strain on our study time : ! ours, and for the third time we underwent what was surely the most demoralizing experience of our college careers. She who has never looked at a completely unretouched full length and near nude posture picture of herself can not know the pain and humiliation of it. But not all our fortitude was wasted upon what are, in the last analysis, the trivia that Miss Park has cautioned us against: Junior year was the year of Little Rock; 1958 brought another jolt to our complacency called Sputnik. We had defended higher education for females before in fatuous conversations at cocktail parties. Now we were forced to evaluate not only our rights as women to this precious education, but our rights to study literature and languages, music and art, in face of the need for technicians trained to make bombs and rockets. Today and tomorrow you will hear better defenses of the place in the world for the liberal arts graduate; I can only remind you that that defense is being questioned now more than ever before. But I am digressing from the class history. Time hallowed customs and traditions continues: midnight fire drills, with the usual mutterings and cursings, were carried out; the perpetual mocha surprise was greeted with the perpetual cheers in the dining room; the invet- erate procrastinators continued to gulp their coffee and dash across campus to Friday morning chapel at eight o'clock. Certainly our fortitude was amply demon- strated by Junior Prom. Termed by the most conserva- tive estimate as strenuous, it resulted in not a single casualty. The fun and success of our Junior Show All Abroad is a point of personal pride and satisfaction to every member of the class. Senior robes ordered, and senior pictures taken, we departed for what would probably be our last care free summer. Most of us returned, proving again the uncommon fortitude of '59. We bore with equanimity the annual news that the incoming freshmen were smarter, pret- tier, and more select than we had been. We donned our academic gowns with nonchalance and marched into assembly proudly, two by two. When our question, Do those little sophomores really respect us?' was answered by a resounding No!, on Senior day, we were undaunted. We forgot our dignity at a tug of war between K.B. and Harkness, we stopped buying as many shetland sweaters, and we dared to assault effec- tively that honored if unpopular custom of Compet Sing. At this writing, we, the Class of '59, have refused 115 to give in to the traditional panic regarding that hob- goblin of our College on the Hill, Comprehensive Examinations. We have also regarded with disdain the customary senior panic, or the last minute making and breaking of engagements. We have been cool; we have been debonair; we have had fortitude. As the time comes to reassess our experiences here, we find that our college years were the years of Elvis Pres- ley and the hula hoop; they were also the years of the revolt of Hungary and the Andrea Doria. If we played Hound Dog in the snack shop, we were deeply moved by the Hungarian crisiswe signed a petition and gave our money toward a scholarship. If we remember the trivia, and it is only natural that we will, we will remem- ber spring at Ocean Beach, dates at the Light House, and furtive attempts to out-fox the milk machine. We will remember the view from the library, Christmas vespers and those marvelous Saturday night movies with the girls. But we will also remember the insistant voices of the facultyMiss Bethurum making Chaucer seem as contemporary as Kerouac; Mr. Haines showing us that sciences as well as art are involved in the changes tak- ing place in our concepts and theories of reality; Mr. McCloy making a preposterous statement such as, It's almost impossible to paint a portrait in the twentieth century. and going on to prove it possible. Gur four years have taught us the social strata of the clubs at Princeton and the fraternities at Yale. We can make a dry martini and drink our whiskey almost straight. But in this age of conformity Miss Tuve has shown us that individuality is possible without Bohemianism or Beatniks. And Mrs. Morris has accomplished the impossible, in that we now read the 7 all Street Journal with interest. In the Outline of History, H. G. Wells has made this remark: Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe. With all due gratitude to Connecticut College we of the class of 1959 have received an admirable head start in that race. The fact that we have been told time and time again that education does not end at college makes the statement no less true: with the beginning that is grad- uation, our learning should not, must not, and surely will not cease. by Jayne TaylorClass Historian HOUSES KNOWLTON: Row 7: Salmon, Stimmel, Hermanson, Wahl, MacPh : et . 2 ahl, Ma erson. Row 2: G 3 2 Moore. Row 3: Bordley, Phillips, Dratler, Goldberg. Row 4 Lehrer, Paull Df::n Cl;'?p,' C;r'tlu, S Gristede, Shaw, Miller, Corey, Anketell. Row 6: Brown, Hopkins, Chubct, Ka 1l;ng Yy : aitv f?ow 50 Lippincott, Hockman. Row 8: Wright, Marden, Haggard, Feldman, l,argc,RWLo, A OI:U 7 i iff, l'x.l'auss, Weller, Strifert, Teaford, Donaldson. 2 + Auchter, MacMichael, 118 KATHERINE BLUNT: Row 7: Warner, Glidden, Sorota, Leerburger, Meyers, Fisher, Eichelberger, Alexander, Lehovich, Brown, Mrs. Griswold. Row 2: Fortin, Regan, Entrekin, Wellford, Seidel, Mat- thews, Zahniser, Rowell, Young, Walsh, Wanger, E. Adams, Burdick, Flannery, Carney, Byrnes, Row 3: Keefe, Randall, Hutton, Petrequin, Gibson, M. Adams, Hodge, Thelin, Hallowell, Snelling, Gamage, Usher, Sheehan, Peck, Brink, Lamborn. R bl KATHERINE BLUNT cont.: Row r: Rozycki, Hollman, Starrett, Bassin, Friedman, Rich, Bremer, Miss Taylor, Graham. Rew 2: Jonas, Clinton, Dixon, Chambers, Dahlberg, Henderson, Kellogg, Espy, German, Kerrigan, MacRae, Davis, Anthony, Wasserstrom. Row 3: Baker, Withington, Broer, Bar. rett, Hamlin, Williams, Miller, Taylor, Hiscox, Dauch, Reed, Davidson. 11g The fair bed-mate of the Battle-Scylfing . . . from Beowulf Then the bold in battle bowed down to her rest, Cheek pressed pillow . . . from Beowiulf FREEMAN: Row 7: Nathan, Otto, Enloe, Crawford, Kurtz, Worth, Broggini Gardener, Matzell Milner. Row 2: Bertelson, McPeck, Schimmel, Sumner, Stratton, Horwitz G'dl',dim:r M 't 3 'E;ZL C, Noble, Wickstrom, Scheller, Hall. Row 3: Earle, Mingolla, Boal, Moyer, Coyne. I 'lr:en a';;n, wers, JAe, Larsen, german, Johnson, Wright, Goodrich, Inkster, Corwin, Adams. 120 FREEMAN: Row r: Short, Avakian, Ammerman, Burger, Harris, Bland, Randolph, Manes. Row 2: Levy, Johnson, Goodwin, Gillmore, Rockefeller, Bjaler, Reeders, Barngrove, Reponen, Whitney, Vail, Kempner. Row 3: Siegel, Chappell, Rem, Travis, Mehls, Hubbell, Roth, McKown, Mapes, Troast, Hoadley, Marshall, Robb, Singletary. At Conn, everybody reads Conncensus . . . Except those that views the news. 121 Bodnar, Lerner, Smith, Rosenberg, Seigel, Robin, McMillan, Ciaffoni, Roberts, Barreca, Conderman, Gunn. NORTH: Row r: Brickley, Lovell, Liecberman, Crandall, Barnett, Ryder, Dooley, Doolard. Rew 2: EMILY ABBEY: Row r: Bailey, Corbett, Von Au, Kaldes, Ch Row 2: Ahearn, Frederick, Swenson, Cauley, Heyden reich, Von Ehren Turner, Harden, Illiaschenko, Hinks, Savin, Widder, Alexander. : amberlain, Clements, Grattan, Kearney. Gorden, Hearn, Row 3: Marshall, 122 THAMES: Row 7: Goodwin, Carter, Lautier, Richards, Brown, Page, Morris. Row 2: Stillman, Cox, Novick, Spatz, Winsor, Margold, Scheider. Row 3: Hall, Wolfe, Wells, Osborn, Rayfield, Stennen. 123 PLANT: Row 7: Pollock, Dey, de Luca, Genet, Parsons, Fulper, Moir. Row 2: Kattenback, Kilmer, Siegel, Berry, Hill, Sackenoff, MacMasters, Hamilton. Row 3: Ingala, Maggin, Peck, Hermann, Robert- son, Tessall, Clarke, Ward, Raymond, Rendall, Dickerson, Berry. Row 4 Weinburg, Biggard, Bogdeski, Weiland, Davis, Katsenstein, Peterson, Martin, Worthington, 124 BRANFORD: Row r: Parker, Jones, Spera, Buchstein, Richmond. Rew 2: Miller, Turner, Sitnek, Gottleib, Watson, Caliendo, Scott, Craw, Habermehl. Row 3: Haugen, Boitel, Risley, Buchanan, Ane- walt, Main, Liston, Siegel, Wieland, Hainline, Vail, Karr. Row 4: Rogers, Melnick, Crocker, Freedman, English, Wardner, Rowe, Brown, Davidson, Hooker, Mullin, Mandel, Katz. BLACKSTONE: Row 7: Finger, Swahn, Wilson, Brazina. Rew 2: Levine, Corrigan, Nims, Freeman, Kaufman, Knowlton, Root, Thacher. Row 3: Flocks, Beigel, Morris, McClain, Vidder, Bell, Cochran, Evans, Stafford, McCrea. Row 4: Klein, Goldstein, Edwin, Berzins, Welsh, Schemaille, Kimball, Platz, Nichols, Galway, Stone, Thompson. 125 LARRABEE: Row r: Whitelaw, Rich, Cahn, Poppe, Dawn, Manzoni, Rosen, Bland, Tallmage. Row 2: Cranage, Thayer, Kelly, Walholm, Piper, Loving, Wanshel, Strickland. Row 3: Eckert, Hart, Goldberg, Rosenthal, Burnet, Forbes, Aswell. LARRABEE cont.: Row 7: Kenney, Strassenmeyer, Dawes, Mossman, I Sherwood, Liebman. Row 2: Burgess, Stilson, C. Bailey, Morgan, Wofford Ch Sugden, Warinner. Row 3: Miss Johnson, Cornelius, Wright, Tracy, Norlin ',EVA L t coverud, Murphy, Flug, amberlain, Reardon, ; ' illiams, LeB s borsky, Watson, Zuraw. Row 4: Price, Knudsen, Stewart, Paust, Hardesty, Straub, Rs;gc:q l;jlr;?:mzcim A Sy 1ck. 126 dive for dreams or a slogan may topple you. e. . CUMInGS 1279 Alls Well That Ends Well The Passionate Pilgrim 128 The Tempest 1959 As You Like It 1929 129 Whan that Aprille with his shoures sote The droghte of Marche hath perced to the rote. Geoffrey Chaucer 130 WINDHAM: Row 7: Bowen, Gilmore, Durkin, Campbell, Stammler, deCholnoky, Snyder, Oppenheimer, Wolk, Van Law. Row 2: Reed, Montgomery, Middlebrook, Herbst, Murray, Linder, Plants, Larson, Stern, Levitan, Dougherty, Clement. Row 3: DiFrancesco, Kendall, Fitzgerald, Hayden, Cunningham, Stanford, Mills, Zahniser, Oliver, Plimmer, Skorupski, Pasint, Ames, Donohue, Eaton. WINDHAM cont.: Row z: Fleischner, Hopkins, Altman, Waplington, Decker, Silverthorne, Clark. Row 2: Thomas, Lane, Baetzner, Potter, Nichols, Lapham, Silver, Saunders, Cotzen, Missimer, Fisher, Ryder, Dick. Row 3: Foster, Ensign, Green, Tripp, Spaulding, Stallman, Silverstein, Berger, Bassett, Simonson, Endres, 131 WINTHROP: Row s: Rosenfeld, Irving, Levene, Blake, Donnington, Field, Cutinille. Row 2: Farinola Efthimion, Cory, Smith, S., Willy, Stewart, Alexander, Lambert. Row 3: Rubin, Sweet, McClenhen, Macoy, Nevitt, Nielsen, Park, Sternfeld, Swift, Ross. Row 4: Pope, Reed, McNaughton, Gmssman, Buris, Kallfa, Benamati, Neris. 3 132 GRACE SMITH: Row r: Grieco, Maas, Fiskio, Drake, Biddle, Morreau, Waddell, Tucker, McKee. Row 2: Silver, Negri, Davis, Dolan, Livingstone, White, Stewart, Vansewall, Schneider, Foster, Haber, Foote, Devitt, Fitz-Randolph, Moss. Row 3: VanNostrand, Manuel, Bald, Switzer, MacLeod, Darling, Froment, Griffiths, Cookson, Golz, Whitman. EAST: Row r: Conforte, Jackes, Moulton, Roman. Row 2: Mansfield, Pings, Yaffe, Seip, McGonigle, Martin, Theilgaard, Novik, Desmarais. Row 3: Wolf, Smith, Hadley, Silverman, Brodshaug, Seigel, Hemenway, Fuller, Ohlson, Thorson, Rothstein, Kondo. Row 4: Frick, Haskall, Hill, Roessler, Helle- bush, Keefe, Kory, Hillman, Houmiel, Marx, Atkinson, Young, Aslanides, Hawkins. 133 1 AN, AL o LR JANE ADDAMS: Row 7: Bullard, Morrissey, Saute, Scranton, Cato, Winicki, Gates, Pope, Smith. Row 2: Coleman, Saunders, Cozier, Taylor, Crampton, Stiles, Brown, Merrill, Heiskell, Swanson, Mc- Gidvra, Dominque. Row 3: Parker, Karslake, Michaelson, Emerson, Shestack, Pearse, Richards, Pom- eroy, Guida, Hargreaves. A sweet disorder in the dress Kindles in clothes a wantonness. A lawn about the shoulders thrown Into a fine distraction . , , Do more bewitch me, than when art Is too precise in every part. Robert Herrick 134 And how the butler found her in the pantry, rinsing her mouth out with champagne . . . T. . Eliot I have measured out my life with coffee spoons . .. T. 8. Eliot JANE ADDAMS cont.: Row 7: Zelby, Loeffler, Geeter, Reale, Miss Torrey, Ferguson, Kaufman, Sharp, E., Sharp, C., Higgins. Row 2: Amport, Moriarty, Megrew, Weinstein, Adee, Cleaveland, Fletcher, Weinandy, Shoag, Hood, McCormick. Row 3: Burrowes, Wagner, Jomo, Shaw, Wertheim, Boitel, Knudsen, Small, James, Hawley, Hobson, 135 MARY HARKNESS: Row 7: Pratt, Freedman, Lee, Morse, Kenney, Patience, Schildkraut, Jones, Bayfield. Row 2: Goodman, Pughe, Kennan, O'Neill, Prentice, Czajkowski, Spaulding, Beach, C., Krulewich, Warner, S., Hess, Good, Baring. Row 3: Morris, Camph, Crisp, Earnshaw, Radin, Richards, Roby, Tolman, Wharton, Perkins, Frankel. MARY HARKNESS cont.: Row 7: McCarthy, Werlin Winterbottom, Cassavant, Wade, Quinn. Row 2: Fort son, Seikel, Alling, Allen, Veale, Peterson, Sebring, nett, England, Hauser, Johnston, Elsbree, Holloran , McDuffee, Wrampelmeier, Curtice, Miss , Moore, Hellstedt, Blackwell, Wickstrom, Donald- McClure. Row 3 Collver, Silviera, Ehrhardt, Hart- s Angevine, Klein. 136 COMMUTERS: Marie Piscatello, withdrawn, Louise Balentine, Joan Popioler, Carol Filligar, Marian Shitsky, Sheila Keating, Gloria Crutchfield. ACTIVITIES Emily Hodge President of Student Government CABINET: Standing: Hood, Burrowes, M., Czajkowski, Snyder, Warner. Seated: Quinn, Brown, Sebring, Hodge, President, Walsh, Secretary, Saunders, Kennan, HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES: Row r: Lautier, Brister, Cory, Smith, Knowlton, Stone. Row 2: Goodwin, McGonigle, Devitt, McMillen Ho. Dickinson. Row 3: Freedman, Hooker, Robin, Paust, Biddle, : Clark, Kenney. Saunders, Speaker of the House, ! dge, Chubert, Adams, Cozier. Row 4 Cauley, Travis, Zahniser, 140 Margaret Brown Chief Justice of Honor Court HONOR COURT: Standing: Foster, Fisher, Gund, Froment, Klein, Collver. Seated: Petrequin, Secretary, Brown, Chief Justice, Hodge. HOUSE JUNIORS: Standing: Van Law, Vail, Harris, Devitt, Gund, Wertheim, Fitz-Randolph, Tracy, Stilson, Murray, McGonigle. Seated: Chase, Reale, Enloe, Mehls, Kurtz, Gardiner. Seated, Row I: Waddell, Marshall, Scheller, Eaton, Drake. 141 OFFICERSCLASS OF 1959: Standing: German, Taylor, Hess, Blackwell, Elsbree. Seared: Snelling, Solmssen, Kushlan, Bayfield, Quinn, President. OFFICERSCLASS OF Kaufman, - 7, 3 H 1962: Watson, Brister, Freedman, President, Hooker, 142 OFFICERSCLASS OF 1960: Standing: Vail, Mehls, Griffiths. Seated: Chase, Robb, Enloe, Hood, President. OFFICERSCLASS OF 1961: Standing: Parker, C. Burrowes, Noble, Michaelson. Seated, Middle Row: Foote, R. Foster, Fisher, Travis, Synder, President. Seated, Bot- tom Row: deCholnoky, Nathan. 143 In 1939 we took what we could get . . . SERVICE LEAGUE: Standing: Megrew, Holleran, Gund. Seated: Merrill, Burrowes, President, Bassin. Seated, Row r: Dunham, Vail, Scranton. In 1959 we took the A train 144 COMMUNITY FUND: Standing: Barngrove, Brodshaug, Young, Hall, Goodman. Center: Co-chairmen Gund and Scranton, Seated: Ryder, Coleman, Flug, Willy. There is a hierachy of lunicy L2l in a college communicy . . . especially around communicy fund time! 145 INTER-CLUB COUNCIL OFFICERS: Standing: Connor, Rebol- ledo, M. Goodman. Seated: Fortin, Keefe, President. SCIENCE CLUB: Standing: Turner. Seated: Lam- born, President, Matthews, Whitney. Sl CHILD DEVELOPMENT: Standing: Wade, Foster, Moyer, Emerson, Jomo, Goodman, Seated: Van Law, Paust, 5. Adams, President, Chappell, Karslake. 146 PSYCHOLOGY CLUB: Standing: Spera, Pughe, Veale, Beach, Fort. Seated: Oppenheimer, Tolman, Blackwell, President, Marzelle, Wolk. POLITICAL FORUM EXECUTIVE COMMIT- TEE: Williams, Hollmann, Heydenreich, President, Withington, MATH CLUB: Top Row: Sumner, Bogdanski, Allen, Ruben- stein, Goekjian. Middle Row: Levitan, Robb, President, Mc- Carthy, Schimmel. Bottom Row: Ammerman, S. Wickstrom, Spera. 147 FOREIGN STUDENTS: Inga-Gun Bjaler Sweden; Eva E. Nortin Sweden; Elizabeth J. Reeders Holland; Elke Baring Germany; Edmea M. DaSilveira Brazil ; Roxandra Illiaschenko New Hamp- shire, Student Adviser, INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS: Standing: Levy, McDuffee, Kaldes. Seated: Werlin, President, Stratton, 148 FRENCH CLUB: llliaschenko, Adams, Fortin, deCholnoky, Rowell, Lehovich, Spera. 149 GERMAN CLUB: Tsp Row: Bogdanski, Folg- mann, Middle Row: Harden, President, Noble. Bot- tom Row: Marty, Schneider. RUSSIAN CLUB: Standing: Barnett, Stratton, Lovell, S. Stewart, Lemay, Morreau, Katzenstein. Seated: Plimmer, Livingston, Robinson, President, Mrs. Kasem-beg, Aslanides, Addison. ITALIAN CLUB: Owers, Hall, Durkin, President, A. Miller. SPANISH CLUB: Standing: Zelby, Hinkes, ingstone. Seated: Frederick, Rebolledo, President, O'Neill, Adee, Mr. Kolb, Berger, Shestack, Liv- 150 MUSIC CLUB: Hoadley, Kaufman, President, Kimberly. RELIGIOUS FELLOWSHIP: Top Row: McGonigle, Chase, Hoad- ley, Kestner, Larson. Middle Row: Mr. Wiles, Purdy, Warner, Pres- ident, Seikel. Bottom Row: Tally, Bowen, Casavant. CHOIR: Mr. Quimby, Bodner, Corbett, President, von Ehren, Lom- bard, Kimberly. 151 ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION: Top Row: Reale, Lapham, Allen, Gilmore, Morris, Nathan. Middle Row: German, Keefe, Czajkowski, President, Lane. Bottom Row: McPeck, P. Peck, deCholnoky, Broggini, Petrequin. OUTING CLUB: Connor, Lapham, Morris, President, Price, Hostek. 152 SABRE AND SPUR: Standing: Altman, Clewitt, Inkster, Sheehan, Mills, Mandell, Hopkins, Seated: Parker, Barngrove, President, Alex- ander. Missing: Berkowitz. SAILING CLUB: Top Row: Whitman, Taylor, Travis, E. Zahn- hiser, Allen, Feldman, Owers, Jordan, Cory. Middle Row: Van Law, Drake, Lloyd-Rees, Thomas, Kimberly. Bottom Row: Nichols, Evans, Swahn. 153 RESIDENCE CHAIRMEN: Standing: Cornelius, Karslake. Sitting: Sebring, Vice-President of Student Government, Hillman, Darling. STUDENT BUILDING FUND COMMITTEE: Stand; . : G i Wertheim, J. Seated: Hutton, Brink, Chairman, Wade. e e 154 GRADUATION COMMITTEE: Standing: Elsbree, Kushlan, Zah- niser, E. Seated: Curtice, Turley, Blackwell, Chairman, Johnston, Seidell. LIBRARY COMMITTEE: Standing: Wrampel- meier, Seated: Gilmore, Freedman, Chairman, Parker. H C BOOK STAFF: Standing: Harris, Thomas, Jomo, Rebolledo. Seated: Wade, Goodman, M. Editor-in-Chief, Jones, E. 155 WIG AND CANDLE: Standing: Richards, Lehovich, Krulewitch, McDuffee, Cook- son. Seated: Chase, Shoag, Kennan, President, Hartnctt, Worth. Seated, Row r: Plim- mer, Pratt, Macarthy, Sebring, Liebman. RADIO CLUB: Standing: Spera, Kendall. Seated: Whitman, Seip, Ahearn. DANCE GROUP: Center: Van Nostrand, President. Circle: Jordan, Bactzner, Her- manson, Krauss, Foote, Van Law, Manes, Aslanides, Martin, Michaelson, Stern, Von- Ehren, Thayer, Chamberlain, Noble. 156 SHWIFFS: Seated: Snyder, Bayfield, Leader, Stewart. Standing, Row 2: Eichelberger, Enloe, Foote, Truebner, Kaufman, Gardiner. Standing, Row 3: Curtice, Griffiths, Taylor, Crampton, Espy, Kellogg, Mapes, Goodspeed, Snelling, Peterson, Bassett, Hess, Adams, Miller, Tangerman. T L T CONN CHORDS: Seated: Rich, Leader, Gamage, Salamy. Standing: Roman, Morgan, deChnlnoky, Murray, Reed, McGilvra, Kendall, Tracy, Zamborsky, Stilson, Wellford, Dahlberg, Cushing, German, McKowan, Boitel, Rowell. 157 Carline Newburg Editor-in-chief of CONNSENSUS CONNSENSUS: Standing: Nathan, Savin, Camph, Anthony, Allen, Hillman, McCarthy, Plants, Ehrhardt, Werlin, Glanville, Wofford. Seated: Tolman, Moss, Fitz-Randolph, Frankel, Bald, Silver, Cleaveland. PRESS BOARD: Silverman, Geetter, Domingue, Cleaveland, President, Potter, Loeffer, Dunham. 158 Editor-in-Chief Associate Editor Art and Layout Editor Literary Editors Photography Editor Business Manager Advertising Manager Circulation Manager Publicity Managers Student Photographer Typists Assistant Art Editor Assistant Advertising Manager Assistant Photographer Advisers 159 Lynn Graves Linda Hess Judy Bassin Carolyn Baker Margaret Wellford Marjory Wasserstrom Martha Flynn Ann Seidel Barbara Roby Jane Silverstein Dorothy Cotzen Diane Beckwith Marion Friedman Dotty Cleaveland Frances Gillmore Harriet Harris Mary Lee Corwin Miss Warrine Eastburn Mr. Roswell Farnham of Wm. J. Keller Inc. Printers DIRECTORY OF THE CLASS OF 1959 ADAMS, ELLIOTT 80 Craftsland Rd., Chestnut Hill 67, Mass. ADAMS, MARY H. Saucon Valley Rd., Rt. 4, Bethlehem, Pa. ALEXANDER, FERN 44 E. Court St., Doylestown, Pa. ALEXANDER, JEAN P. Spring Station, Ky. ALLEN, LUCY C. 2 Crestwood Dr., Maplewood, N, J. ALLING, POLLY 27 Rockledge Dr., Stamford, Conn. ANDERSON, ELAINE C. Ridgedale Rd., R.F.D. 1, Bridgeport, Conn. ANGEVINE, HELEN 95 Prince St., West Newton, Mass, ANTHONY, ELIZABETH A. 67 Forest St., Torrington, Conn, BAILEY, BARBARA G. 896 Ridgewood Rd., Millburn, N. J. BAKER, CAROLYN H. 180 Summit Ave., Summit, N. J. BARRETT, NETTA 510 Jefferson St., Pottsville, Pa. BASSIN, JUDITH P. 98 Millbrook Rd., Hamden, Conn, BAYFIELD, CAROL M. 323 Bent Rd., Wyncote, Pa. BEACH, CYNTHIA A. 147 Ardmore St., Hamden 17, Conn. BECKWITH, DIANE M. 470 Thompson Ave., East Haven, Conn, BENEDICT, MARY D. 3209 W. Coulter St., Philadelphia 29, Pa. BERKOWITZ, EDITH 190 Beach 144 St., Neponsit, N. Y. BLACKWELL, JANET G. 15 E. Beecheroft Rd., Short Hills, N. J. BRASH, MARJORIE 33 Sunset Ter., West Hartford, Conn. BREMER, JEANETTE D. 355 E, 88 St., New York 28, N. Y. BRINK, SUSAN J. 15 LaFarge Lane, Manhasset, N. Y. BROER, CAROLE C. West River Rd., Perrysburg, O. BROWN, MARGARET H, 2744 East Lakeshore Dr., Baton Rouge, La. BURDICK, ANN R.D. 1, Wrightsville, York County, Pa. BURROWES, MARY B. 100 Main St., Keyport, N. J. BYRNES, MARY L. 215 S! Linden Ave., Pittsburgh 8, Pa, CAMPH, SUSAN L. Hunting Ridge Pl., Chappaqua, N. Y. CARNEY, BARBARA M. 121 Colbny St., Fairfield, Conn. CARPENTER, PAMELA Box 23c5, Balboa, Canal Zone CASAVANT, ANNETTE M. 43 Wardrside Lane, West Hartford, Conn. CAULEY, FAYE F. 16 Seymour Ave., West Hartford, Conn. CHAMBERS, PATRICIA J. 11 Westminister Rd., Utica 3, N. Y, CHILDS, VIRGINIA A, 1 Ashley Rd., Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y. CLINTON, WINONA M. Redding Ridge Rd., Redding Ridge, Conn. COLLIVER, ANN C, 110 Augur St., Hamden, Conn. CORBETT, ELIZABETH 4 Stewart Ave., Glens Falls, N. Y, CRISP, MARJORIE B, 33 Sunset Ter., West Hartford, Conn. 160 CURTICE, CATHERINE D. 1810 Overhill Dr., Flint 3, Mich. CZAJKOWSKI, EDWINA H. 5 McKinley Ave., Carteret, N. J. DAHLBERG, T. CORDELLA 5756 Harper Ave., Chicago 37, Il DAUCH, ALICIA A. 6 Niles Park, Hartford, Conn. DAVIDSON, JILL 191 Meadowview Ave., Hewlett, N. Y. DAVIS, DOROTHY 6420 Bradley Blvd., Washington 14, D. C. DIXON, RUTH F. 536 Summit Ave., Maplewood, N. J. DONALDSON, EDITH H. Timber Hill Farm, Cresco, Pa. EARNSHAW, ANNE W. 120 Randolph Rd., Plainfield, N. J. ECKERT, LOIS 485 Church S, Newington 11, Conn, EHRHARDT, PHYLLIS D., 87 Gaynor Ave., Manhasset, N. Y. EICHELBERGER, JUDITH L. Lake Lucerne, Chagrin Falls, O. ELSBREE, MARY W. Avonbrook Rd., Wallingford, Pa. ENGLAND, ANN G. 364 Main St., Manchester, Conn, ENTREKIN, ANN B. Black River Rd., R.D. 4, Bethlehem, Pa. ESPY, CARLOTTA G. 627 E. 44th St., Savannah, Ga. FILLIGAR, CAROL D. R.F.D. 6, Norwich, Conn. FISHER, BARBARA J. 777 Berkeley Ave., Plainfield, N. J. FLANNERY, SARA E. 452 Fox Chapel Rd., Pittsburgh, Pa. FLYNN, MARTHA 95 Hinckley Rd., Milton, Mass. FORT, KAREN G. 307 Lakeside Dr., Ramsey, N. J. FORTIN, MARCIA 160 Cottage St., New Bedford, Mass. FRANKEL, ANN S, 74-12 35th Ave., Jackson Heights, Apt. 207-E, N. Y. FREDERICK, CAROLYN 304 Martinsburg Rd., Mount Vernon, O. FREEDMAN, ANN W. 63 W. Main St., Frechold, N. J. FRIEDMAN, MARION 3275 Grenway Rd., Shaker Heights 22, O. GAMAGE, MARGUERITE TORREY Riverview, Gloucester, Mass. GERMAN, ANN-MARIE Kelsey St., Middletown, Conn. GIBSON, ELISABETH H. 2688 Colchester Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. GLIDDEN, SARA GAIL 21 Putnam St., Beverly, Mass. GOOD, HARRIETT A. 217 W. High St., Womelsdorf, Pa. GOODMAN, MARGARET A. 3505 Shelburne Rd., Baltimore 8, Md. GRAHAM, NANCY J. 33 Riggs Ave., West Hartford, Conn. GRAVES, CAROLYN H. 23 Lincoln Ave., Old Greenwich, Conn. HALLOWELL, OLIVIA L. 113 E. 64th St., New York, N. Y. HAMLIN, CECILY A. The Westchester Apt. 4000 Cathedral Ave. N. W., Washington, D. C. HARTNETT, GRACE 71 Hillerest Rd., Windsor, Conn. HAUSER, PHYLIS T. 22 North Rd., Tivoli, N. Y. HELLSTEDT, GAY 241 East Third St., Hinsdale, TI1. HENDERSON, MARGARET A. ggo Hillside Ave., Plainfield, N. J. HESS, LINDA 10 Paul Revere Rd., Worcester, Mass. HISCOX, JOANNE 2196 S. Overlook Rd., Cleveland Heights, O. HODGE, EMILY J. 2004 S. Belvoir Blvd., Cleveland 21, O. HOLLERAN, GLENNA Deer Park, Greenwich, Conn. HOLLMANN, EDITH A. 15 Linden Lane, Princeton, N. J. HUTTON, ANNE 1g Cushing Rd., Wellesley Hills, Mass. ILLIASCHENKO, ROXANDRA V. 126 East 83rd St., N. Y. 28, N. Y. JOHNSTON, LYNN B. 6 Lothrop Rd., Grosse Pointe Farms, Mich. JOMO, DOROTHY E. 24 Hermann Ave., Carteret, N. J. JONAS, SUSAN E. 4 Summit Ave., East Williston, N. Y. JONES, ELEANOR M. 5 Sunset Rd., Lewistown, Pa. KEEFE, CAROLYN M. 1 Richfield Rd., Arlington 74, Mass. KELLOGG, SARA Crest Rd., Middlebury, Conn. KENNAN, JOAN E. 146 Hodge Rd., Princeton, N. J. KENNEY, ELLEN T. Colebrook, Conn. KERRIGAN, FRANCES A. 2 Fair Oaks Ave., Oak Park, IIl. KLEIN, SARAH J. 5604 Meryton Lane, Cincinnati 24, o KRULEWITCH, ANNE G. 45 Gramercy Park North, New York 10, N. Y KUSHLAN, NANCY J. 655 Whitney Ave., New Haven, Conn. LAMBORN, ANNE 129 Norman Way, Erie, Pa. 161 LEBEJKO, SHIRLEY A. 43 Division St., Groton, Conn. LEE, YOUNG SOO 22-79, Hewha-Dong, Seoul, Korea. LEERBURGER, MARNA M. 3o1 East 66th St., New York, N. Y. LEHOVICH, OLGA 1326 Madison Ave., New York, N. Y. LEISTER, ALICE M. 168 Vauxhall St., New London, Conn. LLOYD-REES, KATHERINE S. Whitehall Farm, Route 1, Scottsville, VA, MacCARTHY, JEAN C. 200 Washington St., Hudson, Mass. MacRAE, JOYCE C. 87 Woodland Rd., Madison, N. J. MATTHEWS, MIRIAM G. 7004 Orkney Parkway, Bethesda, Md. McCLURE, ANN Kaneville Rd., Geneva, Il McDUFFEE, JOAN C. 3 Beverly Rd., Merrick, N. Y. MEYERS, SUSAN L. 203 Clairmont Ter., Orange, N. J. MILLER, DIANE D. 1707 Yardley Rd., Rd., Yardley, Pa. MORRIS, ALICE J. 195 N. Beacon St., Hartford, Conn. MORSE, BERTHA M. 35 Shefford St., Springfield, Mass. NEWBERG, CARLENE 115 Millbrook Rd., Hamden, Conn. O'NEILL, SHEILA K. 4301 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md. PALMER, MARTHA A. 8 Westwood Dr., Worcester, Mass. PATIENCE, ALICE L. 1001 Columbia Ave., Millville, N. J. PECK, ELIZABETH 5. 178 Old Orchard Park, Fairfield, Conn. PERKINS, SALLIE West Hill Dr., Gates Mills, O. PETERSON, CYNTHIA JOAN 2241 Sacramento St., 6, San Francisco, Calif PETREQUIN, JUDITH B. 2950 Attleboro Rd., Shaker Heights 20, O. POND, LINDA A. Hillcrest Park, Stamford, Conn. POTTER, ANN M. 39 Lodge St., Milton 86, Mass. PRATT, JUDITH A. Mendham Rd., Bernardsville, N, J. PRENTICE, MARY H. 4205 Rosemary St., Chevy Chase, Md. PUGHE, ELIZABETH A. Graffenburg Hill, New Hartford, N. Y. QUINN, BARBARA L. 15 Holbrook Rd., West Hartford, Conn. RADIN, GILDA B. 41 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, N. Y. RANDALL, ALICE H. 22 Kenilworth Rd., Wellesley, Mass, RAYBURN, CORINNE G. 405 Mohegan Ave., New London, Conn. REBOLLEDO, TEY DIANA 29 Northmont St., Greensburg, Pa. REED, VIRGINIA K. 43 Colt Rd., Summit, N. J. REGAN, MARGARET ELIZABETH 273 Long Hill Rd., Wallingford, Conn. RICH, BARBARA M. Harbour Island, Bahamas RICHARDS, NANCY E. 850 Worthington Ridge, Berlin, Conn. RIKE, SUSANNE 461 Glenridge Rd., Dayton g, O. ROBY, BARBARA A. 419 Miller Rd., Peoria Heights 4, 11l ROWELL, MARGIT R. 244 W. Lanvale St., Baltimore 17, Md. ROZYCKI, REGINA J. 463 Monmouth St., Jersey City, N. J. SAVIN, NANCY R. 14 Fulton PL, West Hartford 7, Conn. SCHILDKRAUT, ROCHELLE 3099 Brighton 6 St., Brooklyn 35, N. Y. SEBRING, MARGARET W. 257 Broughton Lane, Villa Nova, Pa. SEIDEL, ANN M. 1347 Penningron Rd., West Englewoad, N. J. SEIKEL, LAUREL L. 5 Edward Court, Baldwin, N. Y. SHEEHAN, MARILYN L. 53 Prospect St., Middletown, Conn. SHIPMAN, JULIA C. 50 Barnsdale Rd., Short Hills, N. J. SHOAG, HELAIN E. 321 Margaret St., Jeannette, Pa. SNELLING, CONSTANCE P. 8 Ravenscroft Rd., Winchester, Mass. SOLMSSEN, JULIANE D. Stocker Rd., Essex Fells, N. J. SOROTA, DIANE E. Pearson Farm, Phillips Acad., Andover, Mass SPAULDING, CONDE H. 7 Thorn Tree Lane, Winnetka, Il STARRETT, JANE L. Elkins Park House, Elkins Park 17, Pa. STEGMAIER, MARTHA B. 10 Parkview Dr., Hingham, Mass. TAYLOR, JANE L. 2809 Hughes St., Amarillo, Tex. THELIN, ANDREA J. 308 S. Main St., Thomaston, Conn. TILLMAN, JOAN 716 W. 231 St., Riverdale 63, N. Y. TOLMAN, DEBORAH N. goto Sandringham Dr., Houston 24, Tex. TURLEY, PATRICIA A. Main St., Meredith, N. H. USHER, KATHERINE A, R.F.D. 3, Stafford Springs, Conn. 162 VEALE, MARTHA L. 99 Water St., Stonington, Conn. WADE, EMILY C. Sayre Park, Lehigh Univ., Bethlehem, Pa, WAGNER, JOAN E. 39 Gramercy Park, N, Y,, N. Y. WALSH, KATHLEEN E. 1846 Sunnyside Ave., Burlington, Ia. WARNER, ANNE E. Sycamore Ave., Woodbury, Conn. WARNER, LOIS SUZANNE 4 Hudson Rd., Ardsley-on-Hudson, N. Y, WASSERSTROM, MARJORY 2751 Fair Ave., Columbus g, O. WEINANDY, MARGARET ANN jo1 Buffington Rd., Syracuse 10, N. Y. WELLFORD, MARGARET W. 162 Goodlett St., Memphis, Tenn. WERLIN, JOELLA B. 5403 Burkett St., Houston 4, Tex. WHARTON, CONSTANCE 8. 1 Prospect St., Sommerville, N. J. WICKSTROM, BARBARA E. Bldg. 1008, Apt. I, Vogelweh, Kaiserslautern, Germany. WIELAND, KAY A. 30906 Lake Rd., Bay Village, O. WILLIAMS, DIANE Y. 1055 Woodland Ave., Plainfield, N. J. WITHINGTON, SARA G, Bridge St., Medfield, Mass. WOODRUFF, DALE A. Greens Farms, Conn. WRAMPELMEIER, HOLLY K. 149 Burns Ave., Cincinnati 15, O. YOUNG, PATRICIA A. 178 Boulevard, Mountain Lakes, N. J. ZAHNISER, EMILY L. 109 Englewood Ave., New Castle, Pa. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. PA'TRONS and Mrs. Alexander Bassin and Mrs. Ralph Bayfield and Mrs. E. S. Blackwell and Mrs. J. Gordon Brash and Mrs. Kurt R. Brink and Mrs. Paul Burdick and Mrs. Frank O. Collver and Mrs. Albert Dahlberg and Mrs. George C. Ehrhardt and Mrs. Gerald 1. Flynn Mrs. Philip Fortin The Reverend and Mrs. Raymond E. Fuessle Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs. James A. German and Mrs. H. S. Good and Mrs. Sidney A. Goodman and Mrs. John E. Graham and Mrs. Charles P. Graves and Mrs. Robert G. Hess and Mrs. Raymond G. Hiscox and Mrs. F. J. Holleran and Mrs. Joseph G. Jomo and Mrs. Frank G. Jones and Mrs, Francis Keefe Mrs. Thomas P. Kellogg Mr. Dr. and Mrs. Paul Kerrigan and Mrs. Samuel D. Kushlan Mrs. L. F. MacRae Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. William and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs. and Mrs Mrs. Katheri and Mrs. Wolf Shoag and Mrs. John B. Spaulding Dr. and Mrs. Alvin J. B. Tillman Dr. and Mrs. J. Turley Mrs, Mark Walsh, Jr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. and Mrs and Mrs and Mrs and Mrs and Mrs H. Matthews Leo J. O'Neill M. K. Peck Raymond Peterson Edouard Petrequin William T. Potter Howard Prentice Arthur R. Pughe Pendennis W. Reed William Regan Herbert Rich Edward Roby . K. H. Seidel ne M. Seikel . T. Girard Wharton . Ralph S. Wieland . J. E. Williams . David Young III . George B. Zahniser there is a hierachy of lunacy in a college communicy sociology, biology histology, logicology striped scarves around scruffy necks coffee milk and classroom treks across the squealing desert sands and the longest words trans magnificantanbanuality which means nothing and then some fun. laugh for its fun, fun, fun and nice, nice, nice what price glory on a gory campus? and if you slink along fearing to try your trembling wings you end up worrying about lipsticks, perfume, corns and things which causes you to throw darts at your bulletin board bored, bored roar roar roar through the four years and leave behind all fears and tears and roses of rows of bees and cees and dees and ees and occasional fffs for flunks. oh for a beauty rest mattress with no sags and bags and lags in the middles a griddle of nonsleep which cheerily sometimes beerily sometimes dearily lies supine awaiting the exam and paper exhausted student students study and study's bloody and wishes are pigs with curly tails and manicured nails and study the poems and syllogisms and transcendentalisms and isms isms isms isms unhappy? don't cry just fly away above the breugel treetops above the skim milk and committee meetings and cheery greetings of hiyahowareya and seeyouroundthecampo, jo for looney june will be here soon and the moon will grin and say seeitoldyouso Now werent they really the happiest days of your life? by Nan Krulewitch for MARY HARKNESS 164 BRILLIANT OPPORTUNITY FOR RECENT MALE COLLEGE GRADUATES Authenticated statistics prove that young married men are more stable, reliable, assume more responsibilities, and get ahead faster in business. KOINE offers with the graduating Class of 1959, well-trained and expensive young women who are ready to assume the role of important helpmates in improving your future debts to society! Study the personnel of this book carefully and make your choice. Write for details today! KOINE Opportunity for Women New London, Connecticut Contributed by a Mary Harkness father who has had enuf! kB a He bied... And dhe bird Ll me... 165 EXCLUSIVE MEN'S APPAREL 174 STATE STREET New Londen, Cennecticut Since 1910 FISHER FLORIST CORP. 87!f, BROAD STREET New London, Conn. Gl 2-9456 - 2.9457 Compliments of THE BOSTON CANDY KITCHEN 190 STATE STREET Each College Year Brings Us to BRATERS Where We Find Cards For All Occasions Art Supplies Handbags - Jewelry - Luggage THE UNION BANK and TRUST COMPANY CONNECTICUT'S OLDEST BANK Incorporated 1792 JAMES DRUG CO., Inc. Apothecaries to the medical profession and to the home since 1913 BANK AT PEARL STREET 61 STATE STREET Gl 2-5875 Five Deliveries Daily ; LLEGE BOOKSHOP sy MALLOVE'S JEWELERS ART and POETRY BOOKS Danish Pewter Swedish Glass Peter. Pauper Press Books RECORDS 74 STATE STREET 166 STARR BROS., Inc. Your Rexall Drug Store We can buy everything we need at Starr's - cigarettes, cosmetics, films, anything! Anyday, Anytime We'll cash your checks Free Deliveries to the Dorms Daily PERRY AND STONE JEWELERS SINCE 1865 296 STATE STREET Opposite Mohican Hotel 110 STATE STREET Gl 2-4461 Sue Wells Lin SuE L. LOuise Giselle Vickie Liz Ann E PaM BeTs 5 Winnie Helen Mr. and Mrs. Isadore Savin Sue R. NAncy SuSie H. Marilyn DixiE CindY Suzy S. Sue WOIfe AUdrey KOINE thanks ... Miss Warrine Eastburn, our faculty advisor, for her co-operation and encourage- ment when most needed . . . Mr. Roswell Farnham of Wm. Keller Inc. for his constant patience, assistance and advice . . . Mr. Dacho and Mr. Polytitus of Lincoln Studios official portrait photographers for KOINE for their expressive and colorful photographs . . . The Norwich Bulletin for permission to reprint their photograph of Dave Bru- beck at the Norwich Inn . . . The American Tobacco Co., for sustenance . . . All those who understood the deadliness of deadlines and all those who by doing nothing did everything . . . We've bought this space in the Koine And as a dorm we'd like to say, Since our arrival in September There is so much we must remember: Our late arrivals Sunday nights, Our wild and savage keyboard fights, Our bodies thudding Qur figures new, Our leotards of black and blue. Our slaves who worked for just a sous, Our facultyoh, what a view! Our birthday parties And getting fat, Qur onion soup, and where's my rat? Our buzzing driers, boards that creak, Our boogie, jazz, and Pathetique, Our record swapping, Calypso show, Our quiet hours, so calm, you know. But most of all for spirits roar For noisy fun, for songs galore For Branford House we feel such pride We'll spread our name both far and wide. DISTINCTIVE STYLING for Fashion Minded Collegiates 3 I T 127 STATE STREET DRESSES - SUITS - GOWNS COATS - SPORTSWEAR - LINGERIE JEWELRY New London, Connecticut We appreciate your patronage S. S. KRESGE CO. 118 STATE STREET New London SAVE and BORROW at THE SAVINGS BANK OF NEW LONDON 63 MAIN STREET New London, Conn. Only the informed person is really educated. Make THE DAY a habitevery day 168 NEW LONDON SHOPPING CENTER I just came by to wish all you Seniors Bon Voyage from me and Grace Smith MOHICAN HOTEL Pequot Room and Continental Room o 250 rooms with bath, radio and T.V. ocutlet o Luncheon and dinners served daily in our Pequot Room and newly redecorated din- ing room. o Ample facilities for reunions, weddings and conventions. o Four private dining rooms accommodat- ing from 50 to 300 people. o Ample parking facilities. Telephone: Gl 3-4341 281 STATE STREET New London, Cenn. Est. 1876 Inc. 1901 THE DARROW COMSTOCK COMPANY Distributors Marine and Builders' Hardware Mill Supplies 94-96 BANK STREET New London, Conn. L. LEWIS COMPANY Established 1860 CHINA, GLASS, SILVER AND GIFTS BRIDAL REGISTRY STATE and GREEN STREETS New London, Conn, THE SPORT SHOP DRESSES COCKTAIL FORMALS COATS and SUITS SEPARATES 302 STATE STREET FERRY TAVERN OLD LYME, CONN. Serving Shore Dinners 12 Noon to 10:30 P.M. Open All Year Yours for the Best in GRUB and GROG Connecticut Turnpike Exit 70 Phone GEneral 4-7863 In the years to come . . . CASTLETON air 2 .. . A joy to live with gofclm CASTLETON BEAUTY WINNER FOR 1958 e First award for best new design, 1958. e Selected for Commissioner General's dining room, Brussels World Fair, 1958. Castleton China is proudly featured in the finest stores throughout the country. Castleton Ching, Inc. New Castle, Pa. 169 Compliments of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wellford ROBERTS ELECTRIC SHOP Established 1934 Gl 2-5314 90 BANK STREET RECORDS - PLAYERS HI-FI - TELEVISION for the finest in town Always Try ROBERTS Compliments of THE YELLOW CAB CO. CADILLAC LIMOUSINES FOR ALL OCCASIONS Phone: Gl 3-4321 THE STYLE SHOP 128 STATE STREET COMPLETE SPORTSWEAR DEPARTMENT Featuring Jantzen - Garland Knitwear .+ a distinctive Southeastern Connecticut Restaurant . . . THE MEADOWS Route F1 New London, Conn. Gl 3-9871 Compliments of California Wiping Material Company 127 Spring Street New York 12, New York House Glorg 50 STATE STREET NEW LONDON, CONN. GREETING CARDS for EVERY OCCASION Visit our Party Shop Wedding Invitations Announcements Calling Cards Congratulations to you Battling Ralphy from The Millbrook Athletic Club 170 nouunnjounsonj Landmark for Hungry Americans Where Particular People Congregate With the Crowd or with A Date 929 BANK STREET NEW LONDON, CONNECTICUT Serving From 8 A.M. until Midnight 171 I hes 59 Cloob Luck . l INDHAH ROBERT F. WARNER, INC. Distinguished Hotels and Resorts of the World Offices: New York - Chicago - Washington Boston - Toronto - Dallas - Los Angeles San Francisco - Seattle - London, England If your clothes are NOT becoming to YOU They SHOULD be coming to SHALETT'S THE SHALETT CLEANING AND DYEING CO. 6 MONTAUK AVENUE New London, Connecticut 172 GORRA BROS. WHOLESALE FRUITS and YEGETABLES 165 BANK STREET New London, Conn. Gl 3-4309 Gl 3-2518 Hllbars S COATS - SUITS - DRESSES - RAINWEAR 236 State St. New London, Conn. Best wishes to the Class of 1959 Mr. and Mrs. Julius Berkowitz ROBERT ROLLINS BLAZERS, Inc. 832 BROADWAY NEW YORK 3, N. Y. SPECIALIZED BLAZER SERVICE Schools Sororities Colleges Fraternities Golf Clubs Honor Societies Award Committees TO Classes Bands Athletic Teams Glee Clubs Choral Groups Our past year in Freeman was filled With much fun, and some studying too, And now, all that happened stays with us As memories we all can renew. The dorm was efficient and well run With Trav as our able guide. And remember Gay as Santa In the nightshirt with a pillow inside, And how we all envied B.J. And Max and Jean with their rings, Betsy's surprising announcement, And the many little things, House meetings, Stella's voice, fire drills, And Seventy-Seven Sunset, These things and many more make up A year that well never forget. Daily Delivery to the College hillyer's house of flowers next to the Crocker House 186 State Street Gibson 3-5588 Fred and Bette Hillyer We telegraph flowers Please place orders early 173 Pep's Pizzeria HELEN'S SHOP P k K . S i? AN Millinery and Accessories Seafood Grinders to go All kinds of sandwiches Telephone: Gibson 3-1100 93 STATE STREET Free Delivery New London, Connecticut 710 Bank Street New London, Conn. John Thelma Wilbur OAKDELL MOTEL Hartford Turnpike Conn. Route 85 Woaterford, Conn. Conn. Turnpike Exit 77 Between Turnpike New London Glbson 3-9944 Compliments of MONTGOMERY WARD New Londons only complete downtown department store New London, Connecticut Q.-p . COMPLIMENTS OF CARWINS i PETER-PAUL AGENCY REALTORS INSURANCE AND REAL ESTATE appaaam, 311 STATE STREET Ground Floor I. Mller Phone: Gl 2-4497 174 Telephone Glbson 3-41 58 New .fonclon ligEEMQ Gixture Co. WHOLESALE ELECTRICAL SUFFLIES 86-88 BANK STREET NEW LONDON, CTONN. A SNACK A DAY IS THE C.C. WAY Visit Our SANDWICH SHOP Compliments of . . . BISHOP STUDIO 35 MAIN STREET Gl 3-4015 New Londen NEW LONDON'S OLDEST RECORD DEALER AUTHORIZED WEB.COR SALES and SERVICE Though poetry writing is not our forte On a wonderful dorm we must report. The girls are great, there's fun galore And you'd feel welcome on any floor. The snack shop we have just downstairs Where hot fudge cures our study cares. Since on the door we haven't a name Hospitality's our claim to fame. EAST HOUSE SEIFERT'S BAKERY CAKES and PASTRIES for PARTIES 225 BANK STREET Glbson 3-6808 Shop GENUNG'S A Complete Department Store New London, Connecticut STUDENT ACCIDENT INSURANCE LAURENCE B. McEWEN 302 STATE STREET New London AGENT FOR THE TRAVELERS ao s SHU FIX CO. FOR ALL SHOE REPAIRS SHOES REPAIRED QUICK SERVICE 11 MAIN ST 175 TAKE OUR LITTLE QUIZ: N o AWM FOR WOMEN ONLY What type are you? YES NO MAYBE . Do the wonders of modern science irjtrigue you? . Do spacious expanses of steel and gliass instill in you a sense of awe? . Does your innate sense of orderliness respond favorably to built-in marvels? . Do you like the cool of aqua seas and the warmth of sunlit coral reefs? . Do you enjoy the soft play of splashirlrg fountains? . Do you savor exotic dishes, fancifully prepared? . Does the intellectual stimulation of al heterogeneous group appeal to you? 8. Do you like to be situated within eagy reach of bus and taxi service? If you honestly can answer yes to fivd 5 of the above questions then: You are a bewitching combination of the ROMANTIC and MODERN. You are WOMAN OF DISTINCTION. You think BIG. You LIVE MODERN. Register tomorrow at LARRABEE, THE THINKING WOMAN'S DORMITORY 176 charge accounts Eambli m are welcome ompliments of California Fruit Produce Co. Wholesale and Retail HOME FURNISHINGS kot ;:I;;::ir:;jmbles LOUNGE WEAR Phone: Glbson 3-2411 Chas. Facas, Prop. BRAS, GIRDLES, HOSE NEW LONDON MOTEL FOR LUXURY LIVING - U. S. ROUTE I NEW LONDON, CONN. Reservations: telephone Glbson 2-9573 Every room with air conditioner, free T.V., tile bath and shower, two full-size beds Continental Breakfast, Heated Swimming Pool INSPECTION INVITED AT ANY TIME AA.A.-Approved Motel Recommended by the Congress of Motor Hotels Congratulations to The Class of 1959 Congratulations The A. B. Dick Company of Hartford and 110 Ann Street Best Wishes . , d i Hartford, Conn. Fiee N o o Phone: Jackson 7-3238 i R Photocopy Mimeograph Spirits a pTOUd papa! Offset Folders Paper INK 77 T Compliments i For 3 Sy The Henderson 4 Lewis WRIGI;-,'I;SSEDN'S OWN SNEAKERS $4.25 it Aoy WRIGHT DITSON 462 Boylston St. Boston 16, Mass. CAMPUS PIZZA HOUSE 6tifaez . ZZM9 Qomeroy All kinds of Pizzas Tasty and Delicious REAL ESTATE 27 ROCKLEDGE DRIVE STAMFORD, CONNECTICUT Glbson 3-1933 467 Williams Street DA 4-4938 PDOE AL LINEN SERVICE, INC. A complete Linen Rental Service For Every Type of Business Institution Gl 2-4487 391 Williams Street New London, Conn. 178 GO NORTH YOUNG MANOP Compliments of MODERN NEW ENGLAND ELECTRIC HOTEL SUPPLY CO. 40 Commercial Wharf Qur 43rd Year Boston, Mass. Purveyors of Prime Meats GROTON AND NEW LONDON and Poultry 179 Congratulations and Best Wishes The New London Paper and Supply Company, Incorp. 318 Bank Street We can't sparkle without e lonaaaNe ew London, Conn. youl! Good Luck from J. A. IN TOWN ON CAMPUS THE TASTE THAT TELLS THE FLAVOR THAT SELLS THE FINEST UNDER THE SUN MALOOF'S ICE CREAM CO. 555 BANK STREET NEW LONDON 180 GROTON MOTOR INN Dancing Saturday Evening ROUTE 95, GROTON HI 5-9784 RESTAURANT COCKTAIL LOUNGE BANQUET ROOMS All rooms have air-conditioning, private bath, television and telephones. All rooms beautifully furnished. We make reservations for all Knott Hotels Open Every Day All Year PREFERRED BY STUDENTS FOR FOOD, FUN, AND PRESTIGE Qur space is small but our thoughts are great, . As the year moves swiftly on. PREEERRED BY PARENTS FOR CONVENIENT LOCATION, 52 FINE ROOMS, FAMOUS FOOD, AND CONGENIAL ATMOSPHERE And in our hearts we'll always rate L LIGHTHOUSE INN LOWER BOULEVARD NEW LONDON, conn. Our Winthrop days at Conn. 181 Compliments of FLANNERY AND ASSOCIATES, INC. PITTSBURGH, PENNSYLVANIA 239 State St. Gl 3-7191 N. J. GORRA BRO. THE COLLEGE SHOP A Delightful Place to Shop Browse for the finest in Imported Domestic Sportswear DRESSES SOX COATS SWEATERS SUITS ROBES SKIRTS SHIRTS RAINWEAR BERMUDA SHORTS SLACKS SKI-WEAR New London, Conn. Conneclicut Printers 7 ncorporaled QUALITY WORK FOR FINE SCHOOLS Kellogg Bulkeley, Litbographic Diwision Case, Lockwood Brainard, Letterpress Diwvision HEA R 0D O NS ERCAT I CEUND Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Barrett From Knowlton House the Freshmen crew Now greets you, one and all. With pizza, bridge and friendships new We've really had a ball. Far from the strictly educational And intellectually inspirational, Qur life has been quite gay. On weekends far abroad we stray. The Princeton campus is most attractive, And Yale is sooo divine, That after a few such weekends active, The work won't stay in line! The work is death, we all agree, But somehow we can muster The strength to strive on valiantly, Inspired by weekend luster. Knowlton this year has proved to be The center of much gaity, With dances, partieslots of noise. We've surely had our share of boys! But lest our poem appear prolonged And your aestheticism grossly wronged! We'll bring our ode, then, to an end As toward sophomore year our way we wend. 183 Family hotel at moderate rates. Free parking. N. Wasserstrom Sons, Inc MANUFACTURERS FOOD SERVING AND PREPARATION EQUIPMENT COLUMBUS, OHIO MINER and ALEXANDER LUMBER CO. Compliments of MICHAEL'S DAIRY Compliments of Fiddlers Three Restaurant Dining Dancing Nitely to the EDDIE TURNER TRIO Tel. Gl 3-9117 124 Boston Post Road Waterford Albert Richards Company, Inc. BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS Suppliers to New England Colleges and Schools Fresh Meats, Poultry, Dairy Products, Canned Foods and Frosted Food Products Fresh Meat Provisions Warehouse Frosted Foods Warehouse 23-25 Commercial Street Stanley Avenve Boston, Massachusetts Watertown, Massachusetts 186 HARTFORD NATIONAL BANK and TRUST COMPANY SERVING SOUTHEASTERN CONNECTICUT MYSTIC NEW LONDON NIANTIC STONINGTON OLD SAYBROOK NORWICH RINGS PINS MEDALS CHARMS excellent cups design PLAQUES skilled S craftsmanship superb Condiments quality from a SUGAR DADDY! YOUR CLASS JEWELER DIEGES CLUST 226 PUBLIC ST., PROVIDENCE, R. L BOSTON NEW YORK MANUFACTURING JEWELERS NORWICH INN Jam Sessions and Class Dances are our Specialty Good Food and Reasonable Rooms Dancing Saturday Night to Al Brown's Orchestra Eighteen Hole Golf Course Exit 80 Connecticut Turnpike Norwich-New London Road Route 32 Telephone: Turner 9-1303 187 WE are proud as punch of our new Bennie . . . the Oscar of the printing industry. This award statuette was presented to Wa. J. KeLier Inc. by a jury of professional printers at the annual convention of the PRINTING INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA, meeting in Dallas. The fact that Keller wins occasional prizes is not, how- ever, important. What is important to us is the continuing loyalty of our customers, for whom we keep plugging away with yearbook service, design and artwork . . . plus the really superior printing process of Velvatone. Wm. J. Keller Inc. PUBLISHERS OF FINER YEARBOOKS PENN R. WATSON, PRES. BUFFALO 15, NEW YORK 188


Suggestions in the Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) collection:

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1956 Edition, Page 1

1956

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1960 Edition, Page 1

1960

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1961 Edition, Page 1

1961

Connecticut College - Koine Yearbook (New London, CT) online collection, 1962 Edition, Page 1

1962


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