Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA)

 - Class of 1931

Page 1 of 140

 

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1931 Edition, Cover
Cover



Page 6, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 7, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 6 - 7

Page 10, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 11, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 10 - 11

Page 14, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 15, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 14 - 15

Page 8, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 9, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 8 - 9
Page 12, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 13, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 12 - 13
Page 16, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collectionPage 17, 1931 Edition, Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection
Pages 16 - 17

Text from Pages 1 - 140 of the 1931 volume:

' of .., F .,g.,.imu5:,5.,.!,,,15,4..,.,...Lg4355145.-.:.74?y 1 .pf 'D fb 63503 'EW Q QV'-an Is L14 if ' K7 uh- 'psi hu. Sa fl? f-.F'qfvfPfiE'1 . ' ' 1: I jr AW!! W' 3 my In 3 f bn' ......'i-L 2 is Q: 1011 as Nl Mb? I r if 1 mink 'tr 'b Q QW ,L ,Wi ' my-'m ,. . -, .,, fm 1151 ii M, Mu ff M' PM ff gf ,px it wa Mgixiw fgs' I f f Sam W H Jfgmksli ,I ! ?I,,p1,3Qi?3l-ng! 'IA ta W I r Q L X 3 .146 ff' Nr , 2 Brgfafgg hui. L5 TF' 2 R' M V E W r 0 W il MY, , -, gi AWA. . ix , he lc J 1 lfi g id I:-, fx, , I :L . , . ,K Pi MV :At -f J - A '5 gjqf fin 6311? qi. . i mp Lgg f Q73 j ' 122 1 Q-W. g?f?TfZi5fQfET .Sf .. 'L if - i v A 4 '- ,M V- mx 'ifrff' gb 1- -.x f '- . '5 - ,- ,L wg- Q '12 'F ,.'.-.,.x,fk, g-' f ' , . ' .Fl '. , ii .. . J QM, ' N , ' ,V ff 'ffyj 2 up ' -1 5' , W5 g fi' A Muff v,M2MA?K J, J 351 g X 'Lyn N! 'M' -Li, 2.141 Q f -ff am ff MH ,I . ,qu V, , . , iv 4,mm,l m55'. E'f1 'Z . A 2 Z 1' x + L w:f-.M J, 2 QS.. 5 ,.f LN ,V V 1v':ift'Lg4hL,-1,14 . A h V np, - 4 I . rr ' fl., I n gig: , A , I1 ' j A U-..,h:..v. HF' n 5,0 , Wax -4 . W 1 M m ed .1 Gm M41 31 6 1.1 + IQ, ' ' 1 VA 'f . 35.1 I , I ,Li A Dis Ulla , N' ' , -: ' 54- j -f X23 . 'Z ., gm an- '41 s :im .- 14 ,rm R' w 'lQ..' A W A ' 'f'i fQ, .p.:'1'f4 ,gf ilbzf v iff'- H+ ,M 1 -- 5 , :1:i.,'1'f3lr Hr 'jggji H , Sis' .H+ .' Gig if '11 wa sw , ? PQ Sq-M yy' -mfg .r rv YI, 'I ' iq 1' mild - wifi I rw I, . Iv1SIL5T.L 4- M- 'mmm 'W 6 , jg Q' L 1 MJm',Gn :gina 4. K J : 5 MY ny 19, n WHVfW if5 IW' '!7! 7WF' if '!'E,ffQ5if' 1: , 0 ex -T! -lm X . P K , V. Av J 1 N' X, ' g- 3 ., h 'Q -.Xb u X QQ-5 V '-Vx XX ffx Q a L b kQf4 ,, Wmg ' , , X' Sd' , 'H+ ya ,If L I ZIV ' f Wd h f? ' ff' fi 5 ff' f UW! t - , Mt, ' I U!! . . 'jf 2 H ,WL , J! f , ,L--N'f fl pf' I mf L' Y Xa, I 1 ' , , -y 'J 0 ff jcnjyf, if J , V, V, f I, I, tu! ' N A AX J ' K J A ,JMJA , xv' fj - -in f M f fp jf f f 1 ',Nw , J X jjj llfddxf 1 I 7 I YV, t X MV N K Sl! Ji!! .ff f' P: I K: M N PJ, , L ,ffm ,, 'VY A' 'A 1,1 f',,fV f N V! fri U rf N Dffv WM' L t K J lfflfb ' iq! V6 x' if-f U f l ,lqfv If ' X. ffm!!! X I CJMJ VERITAS 'l- II' .1 23 I gf Qi? MCMXXXI PUBLISHED BY THE ASSOCIATED STUDENTS OF THE DOMINICAN HIGH SCHOOL SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA ln loving memory of MOTHER MARY LOUIS, O. P., wlrmose simplicily, qraciousness ol manner, anol deep religious spiril macle ner an ideal for us all, we declicale Jrliis Year Book. ' L W , l - ,,'9,.f.- ., I ' r W 1 I ,J u' I I A N uf 4 A. -. HQ 1 s 1-1. N51 .. xl: .T vm! s 1 I n - J THE MOON A silver moon, a slcy OT blue, Anol Tiny sTars Twinlnlinq in The silen+ heavens. A paTh OT lighT, a shining lane ThaT leads To The moon in The silenl heavens. Each nighT l climb The sTarliT way ThaT slcirTs o'er The clouds in The silenT heavens. lvly weary hearT Tinds peace up There. And resT in The moon in The silenT heavens. KATI-IARINE PLANT '3I t I l Come, lvlemory, sweeT arTisT, STay wiTh me Today, l-lelp me painT The picTures Thal' I musT Take away. The rusTling leaves on The groTTo, Long lines oT girls in The sun, The Taces oT classmaTes dear To me, To remember in Time To come. l've learned To Think In quieTness, To look up To The hills and slcyg Oh yes, l've Tound The soul in me, l've learned To TrusT and Try. NANCY DAVIS, '31 ,' .3 fa' 'w- S E N I O R S RAE ANIXTER l.e+ genlleness my slrong en- forcemenf be. DIANA BLAKE Grace was in her sfeps. heaven in her eyes. in every ges+ure, dignily and love. REGINA BORBA In her dufy prompl al' every call, she helped and ihoughfp she lenr herself fo all. BETTY BROWN Wor+h, courage, honor, 'rlwese indeed your suslenance and birrlwriglrd' are. ETHEL BUSBEE- GenerosH'y will win favor for anyone especially when accom- panied by l1umilHy. fx f' 'N .9 7 Sfffjfwifff ' wr u Q' RA by P Wi+l'1ou+ +l'1e smile from beauly won, oh whal were man? World wirhoul' a sun. f VIRGINIA CARTWRIGHT Thy spirit Independence, Ie? me sI'1are. ELSIE CHICHESTER No+I'1ing g r e a I' was ever achieved wifhouf en+I1usiasm. WILMA CURRAN Of all our feafures. +I1e eyes express 'Hwe sweefesi' kind of basI'1fuIness. BETH DALRYMPLE Rare compound of oddily, fro- lic, and fun. who relished a folce and rejoiced in a pun. NANCY DAVIS Where more is mean? Than meels lhe ear. 5 JAYNE DUVAL ' lndividuali'ry is everywhere lo be guarded and honored as Jrhe roo+ of all good. 5? VIRGINIA FLANNERY The mos'r manifesf sign of wis- dom is confinued cheerfulnessf' EUGENIA GALLAGHER Quig+, just and unassuming. GERALDINE GRENNVAN Manner. no+ gold, is a woman's besf adornmen'I'. JANE HANLON The only way fo have a friend is 'ro be one. ALICE HANSEN Tru'rh is Jrrufh howe'er if sfrikef' JOAN HARDY I+ isn'+ life +l'1a+ maffers, i+'s ' 'The courage you bring To if. BARBARA HOADLEY Happiness depends, as nafure slwows, less on exferior Things llwan mosf suppose. MARJORIE HUNIUS No+l'1ing is impossible To a will- ing mind. MARY IVANCOVICH Wise men n'er sil' and wail 'their loss, bul' cheerily seek how io redress 'rheir l'1arms. L M S. BLAIR JEFFRIES Free as a dial io 'rhe sun, al fhough if be noi' shined upon.' LORRAINE JOSEPH All Things are ready if our minds be so. MARIE KILKENNEY The siiil small voice of grafi- 'rudef' MARZETTE LAYNE I counl myself in nolhing else so happy. as in a soul remem- bering my good friends. VELMA LAYNE All fhings go well wifh 'Hue luclcy one. ANNE LEE ' Sweel'esl' is +l1e life Jrhal is unfroubled by worry. S in-lu! QSM . m,u,,S1',,',,Q lj' -In ann my Nl-:I-Ll-D Q- K Q.,-an K , A Ko -.2w........, A.,,,,,- ,, Crue JANE LOWERY '12 ' ' A maid wi+h quief dignlilfy, ' if X VW Sweef and amiable is she. , LORRAINE LYNCH ' ' 6enHy +o hear, kindly +0 Vw' judge. 0- . GERTRUDE MAGUIRE An honesi man is 'rlwe noblesi' work of God. 9 f if Wi' MJT , -ax , . N if i BM ,NPN ifjiiiimi r ,J - Xi 'K+ ii Wy my iriii i I fiii i J Fifi mx X , ETQSAJ YN BERNICE MARRIN The glorious privilege of being independent BETS EY McCARTHY ii Never worry, never flurry noihing good is gol by hurry.' HAZEL McKAN NAY Knowledge is 'rhe wing where wilh we fly +0 heaven. I Alerf wu+h smiling eyes an laughing hpsf buf wi+h a trio !fJ,EAN McLOUGHLlN K! ll . H. I F :cb 5 Q 2,1 '31 Vp QMs+jurPIgsef ln' Cx ri. ri- 1 ':'! 4' 'J my jf ,ff ff! ,ffw V df' fy P yy. f' fl ff ,Fu 'SX 7 Q' jf , ! H25 X ,fox J if if ff fi JXSQ-3 J 2 if ff! i WJ ,f , Q .5 ITREA URE MEYER I profess noi ialkingz only +his lei' each man do his bes+. off' 4 f f ,g'f?-' 'Aff xffi-LC,lL. ,i, L. fl bf. MATILDA MOLINA No+ by receiving benefifs, bui' by rendering ihem, do we gain 'Phe friendship of o+her men. l ln slillness Jralenl forms llself, I buf clwaracler is 'rhe greal cur- renl of flue world. l l l l ll l MARJORIE NOCN He who laughs lasl, laughs l best l l l KATHARINE PLANT Le+ ioy be unconfinedf' 1 l l l l l lil CLAIRE MOLENKAMP ' HARRIETE ROTH No 'rwo on earjrlw in all Jrlwlngs can agree. all having some dar- ling singularilyf' MARY JANE SOULE SACRE Hlmaginarion is The air of mind. DOLORES SHOVELIN S+uclen1' Body Presiclenf A fruer, nobler, lrusfier heart more loving, or more loyal, never beal willwin a human breast ,Msg-x YQ' NINI TOBIN Senior Class Presicleni' None more obliging. none more Irue, ask for a favor, sI1e's ready. +oo. I VENICE TODT Modes+y seldom resides in one who is noi enriched WIII1 nobler vir+ues. VIRGINIA WASHINGTON I-Ie +I1a+ respecrs himself is sale from o+I1ers: I'le wears a coa+ of mail +I1a+ none can pierce. 3. EILEEN WILCOCK Peace l'la'rl1 her vicfories no less gbrenowned Jrhan war. ,P LONA WRIGHT Man approves of 'rhe clepfh. noi 'rhe furnulf of 'rhe soul. BETTY ANN YOUNG Rich in saving common sense and as +l1e greafesl only are In her simplicify sublime. We wave farewell To you,ourfdends And Through lhe years Cur hearfs will hold YourspuH dose. WVe wavefareweH To sun and bloom, And happy shade VVhere we have pbyed And learned fo live. We wave farewell fX hfHe sad, Buf lcnowing yef VVe wonhlforgef The fmnh found here. And so farewell We wave fo you In grahfude, O friends so frue, FareweH. JAYNE DUVAL '3I -..Q 29 JUNIOR CLASS SOPHOMORE CLASS -...,gf 30 jgun.- ,fa .xffva . . H x EA FRESHMAN CLASS CLASS OFFICERS HARRIETTE AKIN - JUNIOR LAURA JANE VON KEMPF - JEAN HOFFMAN - DOROTHY O'HARA KAYE SMITH - - FERN MCCUBBIN - SALLY WARD - - JANET MARTIN - MIMIE SOWERS - SOPHOMORE - - PRESIDENT VICE-PRESIDENT - TREASURER - - - - - - - - PRESIDENT FRESHMAN VICE-PRESIDENT - TREASURER -------- --PRESIDENT ---+231 3I E+:- VICE-PRESIDENT - TREASURER Rulhe Asbury - - Fredericlca Barber Maxine Baer - - Chrisline Brown - Belly Bunker - - Bealrrice Cassidy ---- Eleanor Cosrello - l-larriel Damon - - - Florence Dislqin - - - - Nalalie Domergue Alice Duffy - - - Doris Durham - - Eleanor Gianini '- Gerlrude Grennan Mary l-layne - - - - - Adelilra Jones - - Ralpha Kyburz - - Claudine Lahore - Rosalba Layous - - - - l-lelen Leieal - - - - Caroline May - - l-lelen McGonagle Teresa Mendoza - Mary Blanche Munhall - - Marno Prince - - Elizaloelh Reid - - Marlha Scrugham Mary Soares ------ Rulh Sweelland - Helen Wilsey - - THE CLASS OF '30 Dominican College, Freshman Presidenl A+ home San Jose Slale Teachers' College Davis Agriculiure College Dominican College A+ home Sludying harp Dominican College, Freshman V Universilry of Nevada Marin Jr. College Dominican College - Dominican College Marin Jr. College - Dominican College Cours des Champs Elysees, Paris A+ home A+ home - - - Sargenl School, Bosion, Mass. Lima, Peru Dominican College Training a+ S+. Mary's l-lospilal Cours des Champs Elysees, Paris A+ home A+ home Dominican College Dominican College Universily of Nevada A+ home Mills College - Dominican College 32 E+..- ice-Presidenlr 1.. l-lere l've climbed Jrhe heighls lo where I recognize each linile slair, One is courlesy, one is love, Tha? leads me lo 'rhe place above: One is books, and one is smiles To help me over lhe bumpy miles: One is friends, one ideals To help me find whal life conceals: And Jrhe bannislrer by every one, Thal helps me lo my place in lhe sun, ls The closesl way To The heavenly roof, The infinile, shining lighl of Trulh. - JAYNE DUVAL '31 -...,Qf 34 EM.- THE WORDS OF OUR LADY IN REVIEWING The pages oT The Gospel, we seldom come upon words spoken by Our Lady. BUT when we do, we read her words noT once buT many Times. We are charmed by The simpliciTy oT Their beauTy and The Tullness oT Their meaning. T-ler words do noT awe us buT bring us close To her. Mary's words are Those oT one oT The mosT human oT humans-a moTher. And she reveals ThaT she is generous in her moTher- hood and exTends her maTernal aTTecTion To all oT us. The TirsT words oT Mary recorded in The Gospel cenTer abouT The mysTery oT The fXnnunciaTion. On This occasion we mosT love To imagine Mary noT in The picTure painTed by The arTisT buT in Thaf painTed by our- selves. She is a very young maiden dressed in pure whiTe. She is praying, and The immorTal messenger sTands beside her. l-lis appearance is a vague illusion Tor who presumes To describe an angel oT God. Mary in her simpliciTy oT hearT is naTurally Troubled by such an awTul presence and even more so by The saluTaTion: WhaT manner oT saluTaTion This should be. ATTer The announcemenT ThaT she is To bring TorTh a Son called Jesus or Saviour, Mary speaks her TirsT recorded words: T-low shall This be done, because I know noT man? The angel explains The mysTery oT The lncarnaTion. And Mary, who is To crush The head oT The serpenT Through her Seed, Mary, The woman chosen above all oThers, is sTeadTasT in her humiliTy: Behold The handmaid oT The Lord: be iT done To me according To Thy word. T-Ter words here sTrangely resembled Those laTer words oT The Son who is To come-marvelous in submission To The Divine Will: NoT My will, buT Thine be done. ElizabeTh addresses her cousin Mary wiTh The mosT beauTiTul TribuTe ever given To woman: Blessed arT Thou among women. And Mary revealing her ioy in poeTry oT praise pours TorTh: My soul doTh magniTy The Lord. OT all oT Our Lady's words These are The mosT beauTiTul and The mosT Tilled wiTh meaning. They sound The keynoTe oT her Son's mission on earTh-The mission oT T-lim Who was To walk among The lowly: T-le haTh puT down The mighTy Trom Their seaT and haTh exalTed The humble. Mary cradles The Man-God in her arms. The angels sing Glorias inTo her ears buT l-le alone sings inTo her hearT. On This occasion oT The miracle birTh The EvangelisT records no words oT Mary. And no words are necessary as The shepherds coming inTo The place oT The NaTiviTy see The MoTher wiTh The lnTanT and seeing, undersTand The words oT The heavenly hosTs. BuT Mary kepT all These words pondering Them in her hearT. Our Lady is also silenT when The venerable Simeon whose dimmed eyes have Tinally seen The Lord prophesies To her concerning her share in The supreme Tragedy: And Thy own soul a sword shall pierce, ThaT 35 ouT oT many hearTs, ThoughTs may be revealed. l-lere There is no room Tor speech on The parT oT Mary-no room Tor speech in any oT her Seven Sorrows and This is The TirsT. Mary looking aT her Divine Child in The anms oT The paTriarch, visions The Divine Man sTreTched upon The cross. Son, why hasT Thoudone so To us? Behold Thy TaTher and I have soughT Thee sorrowing. The quesTion oT The moTher climaxes The anguish oT The Three day search. No where else is Mary, The MoTher oT God, more human Than in This scene enacTed in The Temple oT The Qld Law. Did you noT know, ThaT I musT be abouT My PaTher's business? No where else does The diviniTy oT Mary's Son more clearly show iTselT. And I-Tis moTher kepT all These words in her hearT. And on The Third day, There was a marriage in Cana oT Galilee: and The moTher oT Jesus was There. And The wine Tailing, The moTher speaks To Jesus: They have no wine. l-ler hearT is Tull oT syrnpaThy and undersTanding, and we wonder if This is noT The place where we admire her mosT. Jesus answers ThaT His Time has noT yeT come. BuT Mary, conTidenT in her Son's desire To TulTill her slighTesT wish, insTrucTs The servanTs: WhaTsoever l-Ie shall say To you, do ye. And Jesus perTorms l-lis TirsT miracle aT The reguesT oT l-lis moTher. Mary sTands silenTly near by and hears The nails driven inTo her Son's hands and TeeT. Perhaps here she remembers The Child she has held in her arms. I-iere again as in The presence oT Simeon, she is silenT. l-ler eyes and ears are Tixed upon The Cross. NeiTher does she speak in The shadow oT The Cross dismanTled OT iTs VicTim. Finally she holds T-lim in her arms as oT old, yeT-l-lis Precious Body is drained oT iTs Precious Blood. This is The mosT sublime oT her sorrows and The mosT impressive oT her unspoken words. l-IAZEL McKANNAY '31 if A wv . 5, 12-1 si .Q .5 cf'-x - 153-Q-.,?..' ' r - . v -, . ' .. fkiaffwqr sl' . A 'lliafffi i-Tlififil.-5Q'l ' ' ' il ,-, grave-3 a iw? 'fall 'i i ifil illflfii' f f hi' ,'j1,fIjl ' --ii! .IiQff3i-.1:j,q'a!,:f-X, e-jx. '1'?Afi5 Ti Pali 7 il '-fsj ,', ,TY ',5i'z'f'1Z'E.siv,.'Z. - fff , A .I-if ' 1 . .-5.lilw.-f..aq1e.'A-x - '- f - -., f .- - .sg .rv 1 T--'fp-,,:..-:,, ..-if ' - 'l -uf' .uzfgc ,jif-jf' i .- 'Z V ?I:tg',,f .Aj ,g,ggjgj',i . -1,2 '- 'iw 7i ' jJ'i'if-' fig' ,gs...5f. in gf 1 A -gziifiq 3, . QQ., J A g,,-1-,,-my G i 1 4 J' i V1:,. I,lT:T1k?-Tj Tvrtgfd 'Jiri , ver I J., I A + If f 91' .1 1 -'ii-1, ' Y - 3 -..sg 36 ge..- THE POET SHAWN OTSRIEN, as he walked slowly Through The dirTy EasT Side sTreeTs, raised his cool grey eyes Trom The dingy, painTless TenemenTs To The cool grey sky. ln This manner aTTer The TacTory whisTle had screeched his release, he soughT To drive The TacTory sooT Trom his lungs, The TacTory smell Trom his nosTrils, and The TacTory noise Trom his ears. The sky eased The dull aching weariness in his bones or aT leasT cleared his muddled ThoughTs. The sky was remoTe To him walking wearily homeward in The dreary shadows oT The TenemenTs-The gro- Tesgue TenemenTs sTruggling upward Toward lighT as a drowning man sTruggles Tor air. STrangely enough, The sky wheTher cool grey, clear blue, or warm copper reminded him oT rich green Tields-also remoTe To him because he could noT recall The Time he had lasT seen rich green Tields. The TacTory worker sTopped undecided beTore The sTreeT mail box. l-lis indecision soon gave way To impulse. l-le hasTily slipped inTo The opening The envelope which he had caressed Tor a momenT in his calloused hand. An onlooker seeing The sheepish expression on Shawn's Tace mighT have ThoughT ThaT The young TacTory worker was mailing his TirsT leTTer To a girl, buT no onlooker on This grim EasT Side sTreeT was so romanTically inclined. Shawn walked TasTer and wiTh less apioarenT weariness aTTer his brieT encounTer wiTh The mail-box. l-lis ThoughTs, muddled by The monoTony oT crashing machines, became clearer. l-le had someThing To Tell his liTTle Mary when he arrived aT block - and climbed The rickeTy sTairs To TenemenT -. l-le had mailed To a magazine his silly verse. lvlaria, or Mary as he called her, would be delighTed Tor she ThoughT his silly verse beauTiTul, and ThoughT iT only righT To share iTs beauTy wiTh The world. Shawn smiled and experienced an elaTion which he could noT explain. l-lis good humor increased as he approached The Tamiliar block. l.iTTle puT Shawn O'Brien upon a pinnacle oT ioy and liTTle caused him To crash Trom ThaT pinnacle. On This evening he even paTTed his meager, weekly salary saTely sTored in his pockeT, wiTh The pride usual To The wage-earner buT unusual To him. ATTer all, ThaT meager sum was a means oT keeping himselT and his adopTed Tamily alive. And liTe was a beauTi- Tul Thing. l-le had Tully realized This since he had seen a Tellow worker crushed To deaTh and since he TirsT realized ThaT his delicaTe Mary mighT die. BuT how much more beauTiTul liTe would be Tor him aT leasT if There were green Tields-rich green Tields! l-lis mood underwenT a slighT change when conTronTed wiTh This old longing. l-le weighed The possibiliTies. IT he should receive a sum Tor 37 3554..- fhaf silly poem, he mighf find a limif fo fhis limifless mefropolis and fhere fhrow himself down in rich green grass and alone resf himself for one Sunday in his life. Buf Shawn was so ashamed of his selfish fhoughf fhaf red showed under his soofy cheeks giving his face a color like fhaf of his red black hair. l-le was selfish. Offen, when immersed in fhe smoke and sweaf of fhe facfory worker, he wanfed fo cry ouf in profesf because he felf his individualify slipping from him and his body growing info a machine. Buf he did nof profesf: he guarded his selfish 'rhoughfs iealously. The facf fhaf fhere was a family fo whom he was indebfed, a family now dependenf on him, served fo sfifle buf did nof obliferafe his desire for freedom and for green fields. l-le was fhe bird wifh clipped wings who wanfed fo fly buf found his feef fighfly bound fo earfh. No. There's Mary. lf fhere should be sufficienf money, l'd fake her wifh me fo fhe rich green fields or never look for fhem af all. And fhen fhere's mofher-she mighf like fo go fo a show-she cannof even go fo a movie since he fell off fhaf building. Buf he silenfly laughed af fhese fhoughfs as he had offen laughed af fhe possibil- ify of an advancemenf af ihe facfory. Why fhey'd never read a facfory worker's poem. On anofher evening fhese fhoughfs wifh fheir fraces of bifferness mighf have crashed Shawn's unsfable pinnacle of ioy. Buf now various forces sfrengfhened his happiness. The nexf day was Sunday-fhe only day of fhe week fhaf meanf release from fhe facfory. Besides he musf hold on fo his good humor for fhe benefif of his fosfer mofher whom he helped wifh her housework on fhis one free day. If he should be unhappy, lvlrs. Garaffi would immediafely sense his unhappiness and be unhappy in her knowledge fhaf she could nof help him. She worshipped her adopfed son buf had long before given up frying fo undersfand him. Then fhere were fhe fhree children fo amuse and love-Benny fhe baby, mischievous four year old Lucia, and mosf of all-Maria or his Mary, Beaufiful as a Raphael madonna buf an invalid! For fhese fhree he chanfed verses-snafches of which he remembered from his red-haired fafher and snafches which he laid awake composing. The younger chil- dren laughed uproariously af his verses. Buf Maria armed by all fhe glorious infelligence of her six years nof only laughed buf applauded by clapping her small hands. Shawn loved fo hear fhe fhree children laugh fogefher for he associafed fhe laughfer of children wifh rich green fields. Then fhere was somefhing else fhaf illusfrafed fo Shawn fhe necessify of propping up fhe pinnacle of joy-fhe necessify of forgeffing himself. As he climbed fhe sfairs of fhe fenemenf, he fhoughf as he seldom failed fo do af fhis poinf of fhe greaf-hearfed Gino Garaifi-his once sfrong fosfer fafher of whom all fhaf appeared leff were fhe dark fragic eyes , -'if 38 sTaring Trom The home-made wheel-chair. Shawn loved his TosTer TaTher who reTurned The aTTecTion in spiTe oT The lack oT undersTanding beTween CelT and l.aTin and who had done his besT beTore The accidenT To give The boy a schooling. Perhaps The hurT look in Gino's eye when he now peered aT young Shawn came Trom his inabiliTy To give his TosTer son a beTTer chance Than he himselT had. BuT Shawn O'Brien's chieT bond To The elder man was The TacT ThaT Gino GaraTTi had known and loved his TaTher-The exile who could make weird music wiTh words. And now when Shawn enTered The room marked by iTs poverTy buT relieved by a conspicuous cleanness and anoccasional biT oT color, he Tound Gino siTTing in The chair as he had picTured. The boy smiled his greeTing: Evening, sir. l-le addressed lvlr. GaraTTi sir because such an applicaTion pleased The lTalian. Gino smiled in reTurn buT The mere movemenT oT his lips did noT change The expression in his eyes ThaT were sadder Than mosT men's can be--sad as a whipped hound's. The usual guesTion in LaTinized English- l-low was The day aT The TacTory'? The usual answer in CelTic English- JusT Tine. Are They laying oTT many men? No, hardly any aT all, Shawn lied Tor The TruTh would have shaken boTh his own and TosTer TaTher's peace oT mind. ln spiTe oT These guesTions and answers ThaT apparenTly showed liTTle sympaThy, There was sTrong sympaThy beTween TosTer TaTher and TosTer fson, and Shawn pressed The heavily worked hand beTore he crossed The room To lvlaria's couch. Maria spenT mosT oT her liTe on This crude couch which also served as her bed. AT The momenT oT Shawn's arrival her small Trail body usually aching and nervous, resTed easily. When her Tall Irish broTher leaned over and whispered The secreT oT The mailed verse. The liTTle girl's eyes shone wiTh The parTicular beauTy ThaT could be hers alone. AT This insTance Mrs. GaraTTi, smiling her greeTing, enTered The room Trom The kiTchen-The second and lasT room oT The TenemenT aparTmenT. Benny gurgled his pleasure in her arms. Lucia loosed her hold on her moTher's skirTs and ran inTo Shawn's arms. ATTer The moTher had Tucked The Three children in Their beds, Shawn saT by Mr. GaraTTi's chair. l-le had begun This habiT long beTore he had disconTinued his course aT.The public high school To look Tor a much needed job. ATTer Shawn had secured The iob and Then Tor a brieT Time aTTended nighT school, Mr. GaraTTi had waiTed in The same chair Tor The boy's reTurn which occurred abouT Ten o'clock in The evening. ln Those Times lvlrs. GaraTTi had saT silenTly near by worrying over The slighTesT delay. Now ThaT Shawn no longer Tound iT possible To aTTend nighT school which he had given up aTTer lvlr. GaraTTi's accidenT, he resumed his seaT by his TosTer TaTher's side because he knew ThaT The 39 dark-eyed man needed him There. The Three people-The chair-ridden man, The dreamy boy, The Tired moTher. The children who slepT so near musT noT be awakened, especially Maria who needed all her sleep. SomeTimes when a parTicularly irksome sound would emerge Trom The sTreeT below, Shawn would rush To The window and his Tace in The semi- darkness would be whiTe wiTh anger ThaT The harsh sound had iarred him ouT oT his dreams and whiTe wiTh anxieTy ThaT his delicaTe Mary would awaken. OTher Times Mr. C5araTTi in his soTT l.aTin speech would Tell sTories oT The red-haired rebel-Shawn's TaTher. A Tollowing Friday, The Toreman oT Shawn's deparTmenT aT The TacTory inTormed The young Irishman ThaT he would noT be needed The nexT day buT should reporT Tor work as usual on Monday. TT was a Time oT depres- sion and many oT The ciTy TacTories were Torced To close down some oT Their deparTmenTs on SaTurday. Shawn reTurned home ThaT evening in a sTaTe oT suppressed agiTaTion which was noT parTicularly The resulT oT SaTurday's Treedom. l-le had been halT-drunk wiTh ecsTasy ever since he had opened an envelope and had read a single line oT moderaTe praise oT his hasTily wriTTen and hasTily mailed verse. IT had noT been unTil aTTerwards ThaT he Touncl a small sum oT money inclosed-a sum To do wiTh as he pleased-a small sum noT To be handed over Tor Tamily expenses as every cenT oT his weekly pay. To celebraTe his ioy over The accepTed poem he was going To spend upon himselT The TirsT exTra sum oT money ThaT ever Tell inTo his hands. And There was only one way To spend such a sum-To buy one TickeT To a counTry place wiTh rich green Tields. l-low TorTunaTe he was Tree Trom The TacTory on This SaTurday! l-le was even selTish in his ioy. ATTer helping Mrs. GaraTTi wiTh The supper dishes, he saT aparT insTead oT assuming his usual role as enTerTainer Tor The children unTil Their bed-Time. l-le had noT Told his Mary This new secreT-ThaT he had received praise and money Tor his poem-ThaT he planned in spending The money on a TickeT To The counTry. l'm going To Take insTead oT giving Tor a change, he argued wiTh any obiecTion in his mind. Perhaps The ThoughT ThaT even The smallesT sum could supply aT leasT one oT The Tamily needs prevenTed him Trom Telling his secreT To Mary alThough he knew ThaT she would be The TirsT To suggesT ThaT he spend The small sum on himselT Tor a change. Shawn O'Brien surprised The railway TickeT seller on SaTurday morning by asking The good man which counTry sTaTion ThaT could be reached wiTh his sum oT money, would supply The richesT green Tielols and all sorTs oT Tlowers. The TickeT seller answered obligingly, Wild Meadow, a sTaTion wiTh hardly a sTore or a house, has plenTy of rich green Tields and loTs oT Tlowers . . . Besides iT isn'T Tar. Shawn, charmed by The name Wild Meadow visioned The place and repeaTed The words plenTy oT rich green Tields and loTs oT Tlowersf' l-Te did noT buy his --.gf 40 Bs..- TiclceT immediaTely, however, buf paced The sTaTion plaTTorm undecided. l-le was Thinlsing how pleased lvlrs. GaraTTi had been when he Told her ThaT he was going To spend The SaTurday ouT. She did noT aslc him where he was going buT spolce oT The maTTer To her husband An ouTing will do The boy good-even iT iT's only aT The beach. l-le needs air aTTer ThaT TacTory and This place here-. lvlaria had smiled when she heard ThaT her lrish broTher was going To spend his holiday away Trom home. And now ThaT Shawn paced The plaTTorm, he ThoughT oT The puzzled look in her eyes when he had said goodbye. l-le sTopped his pacing suddenly. My God! lT's Mary's birThday'and I am leaving her on her birThday! Why didn'T They Tell me? They wanTed me To go oTT and enioy myselT. lT's Tunny l've never TorgoTTen beTore. l-le hur- riedly leT+ The railway Terminal wiTh iTs dream oT approaching green Tields and Tlowers. l-low could he have been so hideously selTish. Shawn O'Brien in giving mosT oT his liTe had noT learned how To Talce. l-le Tound his way To The unTamiliar secTion oT The ciTy where The Tiner shops were. The TacTory worlcer did noT buy a pair oT shoes or sTocl4ings or any pracTical Thing so much needed. Shawn, above all Things, was noT prac- Tical on impulse. l-le wenT To a Tlower shop and spenT his money There. WiTh arms Tilled wiTh red roses chosen Tor his lvlary's l.aTin beauTy, he bursT inTo The TenemenT aparTmenT ioyTully shouTing Surprisel lvlaria Tound herselT in a beauTiTul perTumed robe oT Tlowers. Shawn happily saT down beside The birThday queen and experienced a sTrange sensaTion -he TelT ThaT he had Tound his rich green Tields. The roses soon wiThered in The unfavorable aTmosphere oT The TenemenT room buT neiTher Maria nor Shawn, nor, in TacT, The whole Tamily ever TorgoT The ioy oT ThaT birThday. I-TAZEL IvlcKANNAY '3I TROUBLE Trouble has a way oT coming big end TirsT, Viewed approaching, Then you see iT aT iTs worsT. Once surmounTed, sTraighT iT waxes small, And iT Tapers Till There's noThing leTT aT all. ELIZABETH JANE l-IOTTEL '32 -'--1fif4ll-31-M WATER WaTer is such a changeable Thing, lT ripples, iT bubbles, iT roars, IT rolls in The ocean, And lies sTiII as deaTh In puddles in The black moors. lT's clear and whiTe in Tiny sTreams, , Where iT runs wiTh a gurgling sound. lT comes up in bubbles OT sulphur waTer, From a Tunny, sponge-like mound. IT lies deep and green in smooTh lakes, Small pools reTlecT The sun. A DAY Sunrise, And The day begins, The sky is pale blue-green: Noon, The sky is clear and whiTe, The sun is copper sheen: ATTernoon, Gold, slanTinq rays Shine Through Tall Trees oT green, Evening, Silver sTars illuminaTe The deep blue sky serene. POETS GreaT poeTs lived, and loved, and wroTe BUT I can only read and quoTeg They TelT The inspiraTion keen To make whaT can be TelT, be seen, So l iusT sTand in awe and read And mold Their beauTy in my creed. NoblesT oT ThoughTs are man's alone, GreaT is he who makes Them known. JAYNE DUVAL 3I 42 ANATOMY OF HISTORY Cl-IARIVIED BY The Term anaTomy, l have resolved To wriTe an anaTomy of sorneThing. Since I know nexT To noThing abouT The collec- Tion oT long LaTin names ThaT The docTor and The sculpTor call The anaTomy oT The human body, l choose hisTory as my vicTim. This AnaTomy of I-lisTory is my humble observaTion and if noT aTTer The TradiTion oT Carlyle and lvlacaulay, whaT diTlerence does iT make? l have read Tha+ The genial I-Iilaire Belloc has compiled a compleTe hisTory oT England wiTh one lonely da+e hidden among all his epiTaphs and ThaT daTe an inaccuraTe one. I inTend To Take a sTep TurTher in The cause oT human- iTy, especially Tor The sake oT ThaT rare human specimen-The hisTorical sTudenT, by wriTing my anaTomy wiThouT a single daTe. As a recenT member oT Those rare specimens, I may add ThaT a daTeless hisTory is an endless blessing. I shall TirsT Take The sTand by acTing as counsel To The de'lendanT- hisTory as a TruiTTul subiecT. I begin my plea by saying ThaT noThing impresses a TaTher more or convinces him ThaT he has noT spenT his money in vain Than The sudden, nonchalanT raTTling oTT oT The names of The English kings. And who can do ThaT who has noT survived a year oT English I-lisToryl Even a liTTle sTraTegy in The sTyle oT The miliTary genius' Trom Alexander To Napoleon, recalling The value of adverTising in The diTTerenT campaigns of hisTory, may wheedle Trom The same dear old TaTher an ad Tor The impoverished year book. l willingly suggesT The argumenTs in The laTTer case. IT your TaTher likes To place his nose in Shakespeare aTTer dinner, Thunder ouT wiTh a gesTure worThy of Edwin BooTh himself, I-las noT Julius Caesar Thrice reTused The imperial crown and by so doing so adverTised himself inTo The hearTs oT The Roman people! Or if TaTher is a rabid Republican, say wiTh The air oT The poliTical demagogue, Remember, adverTising elecTed I-looverl Aside Trom iTs impressive advanTages, I-lisTory has given me some- Thing To argue abouT. IT my sisTer and I had noT had hisTory. eiTher currenT or ancienT, ThroughouT our school years, our TrequenT argumenTs would lack The Tlavor ThaT brings a peace-loving moTher To inTervene. l remem- ber TighTing over who has been The greaTesT soldier-Alexander or I-lannibal, and l also recall The same argumenT ending in who has been The greaTesT TighTer-RuTh or l. lVloTher has seTTled The argumenT by sending RuTh To her room and leaving me fingering The ancienT hisTory. In This experience, The reader may discern The sTimulaTing power oT hisTory. I have oTTen wondered iT any ,novelisT has succeeded in wriTing a beTTer advenTure sTory Than The hisTorian Xenophon's March of The Ten Thousand. I-lere is a glorious advenTure lnoT wriTTen by Richard 43 Ea..- I-IalliburTon buT by a Greek warrior who has marched wiTh The Ten Thousandul. Greek hisTory is as beauTiTul as Greek archiTecTure. There are heroic lines here and There ThaT I could never Traverse in a hurry. My Tinger has always resTed on The page oT ancienT hisTory marked Thermopylae and I read over and over again The simple inscripTion, STranger, Tell The Lacedaemonians ThaT we lie here in obedience To Their orders. I may remark ThaT iT ,would be diTTicuIT To Tind a hero oT a posT-war novel more dangerously reckless Than The mad-cap Alcibiades who painTs AThens red beTore sailing away To Syracuse, or a heroine wiTh The inTellecTuaI charm oT Pericles' Aspasia. I-larold Lamb, iT is said, has recenTIy wriTTen a hisTory oT The Crusades, and if iT is so, Richard The Lion-I-IearTed should Till haIT The book. Rich- ard sTands high on The IisT oT TavoriTe kings wriTTen on The back oT English I-IisTory Though he has neiTher been a Charlemagne nor an AITred. This TavoriTism is due perhaps To The TacT ThaT hisTory leaves so many gaps abouT his characTer. In TacT mosT oT hisTory's inTeresT lies in iTs gaps, Tor one loves To specuIaTe, Tor insTance, abouT The legend oT Blondel, The minsTrel. The Black Prince is anoTher one oT The Tew inTeresTing characTers born royal. This young man who aT sixTeen wins his golden spurs aT Crecy is as TascinaTing as dear old Don QuixoTe who so bravely TighTs windmills. And iT I do noT menTion my admiraTion Tor William Wallace in an essay on hisTory, I would Teel ThaT I was slighTing Treedorn as The greaTesT oT all causes. I Tairly gnash my TeeTh in rage when I Think oT The hero's head hanging above London bridge and I Think oT ScoTs wha hae wi' Wallace bled. Then There is Kosciuszko TighTing unTil The lasT and RoberT EmmeTT sTanding on The scaTTold. I need only read beTween The lines and I Tind The dully wriTTen hisTory Throbbing wiTh a IiTe ThaT TascinaTes. I declare iT gorgeous Tun To Tind myselT in The crowd ThaT waTches The handsome, young Sir WaITer drop his blood-red cloak beTore The TeeT oT The red-haired queen. In ThaT same iolly crowd oT Merrie England I may even iosTle againsT MasTer Shakespeare on his merry way To The Mermaid. Then There is always romance To wrangle over- ElizabeTh and Essex or laTer CaTharine and OrIoTT. I spend a bloody hour TabulaTing The Tragedies oT The Tower, The Tragedy oT The Two IiT+Ie princes, ThaT oT The hero Wallace, ThaT oT Essex, ThaT oT Raleigh, ThaT oT Mary, Queen oT ScoTs and so on. I believe ThaT There is no need oT a MiITon or a Tasso To record The sTruggIe of America wesTward. The epic is There already, wriTTen beTween The lines oT dry records. Nor is There need oT a Michelangelo To carve Lincoln's Tace upon a sTone mounTain. The Tace wiTh The characTer behind iT is already as sTeadTasT as a rugged rock. -..if 44 As I conclude my Hfknafomy of I-lisfory, I confess fhaf I love hisfory and find no beffer subiecf fo argue on. So I sfrip fhe anafomy of hisfory as offen as I discover a kindred spirif who also loves fo argue. A good fussle on hisfory now and fhen keeps fhe blood from becoming sluggish. If I did nof indulge in an hisforical argumenf, I should forgef fhaf all my grandfafhers happened fo be Irish and seffle down fo good old Anglo-Saxon sfolidify. So I make a bow before hisfory and leave you wifh a so-called anafomy on fhe subiecf. F-IAZEL McKANNAY'3l FRIENDLINESS THE WORLD wifh all ifs shrieking frains, blackened facfories and financial panics is brisfling wifh friendliness for open hearfs fo gafher. One can gaze abouf on a crowded sfreef and invariably meef fhe glance of a fofal sfranger which seems fo express sympafhefic friendliness. Offen when I seem fo be mosf alone and a Iiffle disfrusfful of fhe people around me, an unexpecfed I beg your pardon, a good morn- ing or iusf a smile from some amicable sfranger seems fo liff my spirifs. Everyone is a friend. The world smiles wifh me. I remember once when I was sailing from pier fiffy-fwo af I-loboken, I had neifher relafive nor acquainfance fo see me aboard or wish me bon voyage. Several minufes before sailing, I sfood by fhe rail and wafched fhe Iasf passenger board, fhe visifors leave, fhe gangplank faken up on fhe deck, and fhe nefs drawn aboard. Crowds of people sfood behind a green pickef fence on fhe dock waving and calling besf wishes and farewells fo fheir friends on fhe ship. Buf no one waved or called fo me. Somehow I felf a bif alone and wished myself af home again. Suddenly a piercing whisfle renf fhe air, fhe wafer swished from prow and sfern. We were leaving fhe dock. I-lundreds of whife hand- kerchiefs fluffered on fhe pier. I-lundreds waved from fhe decks of fhe ship. Goodbye! Goodbye! And fhen I waved foo, franfically, excifedly. Someone in all fhaf crowd musf have been waving fo me. Someone musf have felf fhe same as I. There is foo much benevolence in fhe world, foo much friendliness fo have Ief my enfhusiasm flee un- caughf fo fhe skyline of New York. I-IARRIETTE AKIN '32 45 ABRAHAM LINCOLN I HAVE memories OT grammar school, some indisTincT, oThers vivid. Ivly cIearesT memory is ThaT OT one day in UniTed STaTes I-IisTory class. I can see The girls' flushed Taces as They saT in Their small desks. IT musT have been near February I2, Tor The sickening sweeT odor OT The acacia came To me Through The window and familiar words came To my ears Through The voice OT a pupil monOTonously reciTing, Four- score and seven years ago, our TaThers broughT TorTh on This conTinenT a new naTion conceived in liberTy -. BUT I have noT seen or heard my Tellow pupil on ThaT memorable day. I have seen a Tall, Thin man whose naTuraI kindliness soTTened a homely, careworn Tace and whose nervous hand was Tugging aT a black waisTcoaT. I-Iis words, noT The pupil's, rise and Tall over The immorTally Tragic Tield OT GeTTysburg, noT over The heads OT slighTly bored pupils. Rarely we may Tind an ideal ThaT we deTy The world To desTroy. And I deTy now and will deTy anyone who seeks or will seek To desTroy my picTure OT ThaT homely, kindly man. Now ThaT grammar school days are a memory, I have Tingered his- Tories and my Tinger has always sTopped aT The imprinT OT a cerTain ugly Tace. I have said over and over again To myseIT or aloud- ThaT Tace isn'T ugly. There is all The rugged beauTy OT humaniTy There. Were I a scuIpTor, I would noT resT unTiI I chiseled ouT OT mounTain sTone The rugged beauTy OT ThaT Tace. When I look upon ThaT Tace in hisTory books or on The honored wall OT The home, I am proud To be an American because my counTry has produced The owner OT ThaT Tace whom The poeT has called The TirsT American. The TacT ThaT This man has been an asTuTe poliTician and even a presidenT OT The UniTed STaTes does noT ,parTicularIy inTeresT me, buT The TacT ThaT This man as a leader in The mosT Trying Times remained a humorisT and a poeT as well. CircumsTances, noT an assassin's buIIeT, would have killed Abraham Lincoln iT he had noT possessed his marvelous sense OT humor. IT he had noT been a poeT, he would never have wriTTen The second inaugural address or The inspired leTTer To The mOTher whose Tive sons had given Their lives in The deTence OT The Union. IncidenTaIIy, This man has inspired The mosT beauTiTul elegy in American liTeraTure: For The sweeTesT, wisesT soul OT all my days and lands. IT ChrisTianiTy ever embodied iTseIT in a simple man, iT has embodied iTselT unconsciously in Abraham Lincoln who has uTTered These words To Thunder down The annals OT The world: WiTh malice Toward none, wiTh chariTy Tor all, wiTh Tirmness in The righT as God gives us To see The righT, IeT us sTrive on To Tinish The work we are in, To bind up The 46 naTion's wounds, To care Tor him who shall have borne The baTTle, and Tor his widow and his children-To do all which may achieve and cherish a iusT and lasTing peace among ourselves and wiTh all naTions. I-IAZEL MCKANNAY '3I S K A T I N 6 CELERY IS a sign oT auTumn Tor a modern essayisT, and sore muscles is my way oT Telling winTer is dead and spring is here. All winTer long I behave in a digniTied, womanly manner. l play a liTTle baskeTball in The gymnasium occasionally To keep TiT buT ThaT is The exTenT oT my exercise. WiTh The TirsT lengThening oT The days, when The evening air is cool buT noT cold, when The TragranT odor oT almond blossoms and acacia is prevalenT, when The shrubs are Taking on a new Toliage, and when a Tresh spiriT is inspired by The greenness oT The lawn and Trees, Then I dig ouT my skaTes Trom The very recesses oT my closeT and skaTe and skaTe and skaTe. There is an exciTemenT which comes Trom noT having had This pleasure oT skaTing Tor a year. l Take endless Time To adiusT The skaTes To my brown oxTords Tor They were used To The black ones. I musT make Them a TriTle longer and screw The clamps TighTer. AT lasT They are on, and I sTand up Thrilling Trom head To Toe wiTh The glorious Teeling oT having wheels on my TeeT. The TirsT Tew sTeps are unsTeady, buT in a minuTe or Two The old selT-conTidence hidden Tor so many monThs reTurns, and l am swinging up The courT. STarTing down Trom The incline aT The Tar end, l skaTe wiTh a Tree rhyThmic moTion To The oTher end. I shouT and call To my companions. We cuT Tigure eighTs and double S's wiTh greaT dexTeriTy. The breeze whips my Tull pleaTed skirT abouT my knees. The sTars are beginning To appear and The spring moon comes up above The Trees in all iTs glory. I skaTe on and on. Soon The lighTs are Turned on in The courT and The eighT o'clock' bell rings. I am relucTanT To go inside, buT I am so Tired l Take oTT my skaTes, carry Them up To my room, and graTeTully Tumble inTo my bed as quickly as possible. In The morning l sTarT To bound ouT oT bed, as is my habiT, and I cannoT move. Every muscle in my body is sore, buT I am glad-sore muscles, a sign oT spring. BETTY ANN YOUNG '3l -asf E1-..- PETER PAN A pleasanT children's TanTasy I wenT To see Todayq AT TirsT The sTage was darkened, BUT soon The scene showed gay. PeTer Pan was a merry lad For never old' grew heg l-le lived in a land ThaT Timeless was, A land oT Trees and a golden sea. One day a maiden Tair did come, A liTTle maid was she, lnTo This land where all was Tun, l-ler name was The mild Wendy. AT lasT The liTTle maiden Began To long Tor home. f For she was liTTle, and sweeT, and Tair, And she did noT like To roam. Now poor PeTer alone doTh siT AT The Top oT a green bay Tree, And There aTTended by Tairies gay l-le dreams oT a golden sea. RUTH HART '33 THE POOL . l-lere where The shrubs are overgrown, And The Trogs all croalc in a monoTone, A And The slcy is Tilled wiTh rainbow hues, And The TwilighT Talls on The earTh subdued, l-lere lies a lily pool pale and clear ln a pure green seTTing, a plaTinum Tear, And on iT you'll see Two lilies whiTe Two casTles belonging To an elT and spriTe. NINI TOBIN '3I -.L.,gf 43 LUCY THERE WERE Two liTTle girls in The garden playing house beneaTh a greaT elm. One was a golden-haired, Trail child whose Tace was whiTe excepT where a ray oT sunlighT Touched her Tiny cheek and made The pale skin glow. The oTher was a dark-eyed child Tairly bubbling wiTh liTe and viTaliTy. She looked as Though she would TighT anyThing, or anyone To geT whaT she wanTed. The children played peaceTully Tor some Time, unTil a driTTing leaT Touched and Then resTed on The head oT The golden-haired child giving her pale Tace a sTrange elTin look. In an insTanT her playmaTe called, You can'T look like ThaT, Lucy. You are preTTy, and AunTy Kay said I was The only preTTy one in The Tamily. l won'T have iT. l won'T, l won'Tl May, please don'T be angry. l didn'T mean To be preTTy, Truly l didn'T, May. OT course, you're The only preTTy one in The Tamily. You Torgive me, don'T you? Very well, said liTTle May haughTily, I'II TorgeT iT This Time louT don'T do iT again or you'll be sorry. Ten years passed, quickly iT seemed To Lucy, slowly To lvlay. Lucy was eighTeen, and May was a year older. VisiTors always dismissed Lucy wiTh, Poor child, noT long Tor This world, l Tear. And Then They broke inTo exclamaTions oT May's radianT beauTy. May made her debuT and Then an amazing Thing happened: Lucy reTused To be a del:nuTanTe. She inTormed her parenTs ThaT she wanTed To oo To college, a New England college. l-ler moTher was shocked, May indicinanT. l-Ter TaTher was The only one who did noT obiecT Tor he was really proud oT her, and aT lasT she was enrolled in a New England college. When Lucy compleTed her course, she wenT To sTudy in Europe and Then Toured The world wiTh a Triend. ln l9- Tor The TirsT Time in six years, Lucy came home. She walked slowly up The elm-lined avenue, a slender, well dressed woman. A sweeT smile illuminaTed her Tace as she saw her home wiTh iTs whiTe columns and well kepT lawns. She Tremloled as she knocked on The door, and Then she waiTed Tensely Tor iTs opening. l-ler old nurse sTood beTore her, and Lucy Tlung herselT inTo her old servanT's arms crying: Anne, don'T you know your liTTle Lucy? Where is FaTher, I wanT To see him TirsT. Lucy was wiTh,her TaTher Tor aloouT Two hours, and when she came away Trom him, her eyes were weT. l-ler moTher was waiTing, and she Took Lucy somewhaT coldly in her arms. lvlay was The lasT To greeT her. There was liTTle oT her vivacious beauTy leTT: The Tired lines al3ouT her mouTh showed disconTenT and Lucy realized aT once ThaT May had noT Tound happiness. 49 LaTer ThaT evening during Their conversaTion, Ivlay Turned on The radio. You know Lucy, we lisTen To The well known singer, Kay Keidricks every nighTg she has a beauTiTul voice: so many people Think iT resembles mine. Why whaT's ThaT, she's ill. l'm sorry you canT hear her. Lucy agreed. Then she said goodbye, and wiTh her TaTher drove To The sTaTion. When Lucy arrived in The ciTy she wenT direcTly To an auThors' club, where she called Tor Charles Keidricks. Lucy did noT have To waiT long, and as The Two sTarTed ouT The door, she said, Charles, Take me home now, and Thanks Tor explaining so successTully abouT The singing. And, oh I do wanT To see baby Louise, I'm glad I didn'T name her Ivlay. By The way Dad's coming up on Sunday. RUTI-I I-IART '33 SIXTEEN AS LONG as I can remember sixTeen has seemed To me To be The ideal age Tor a young lady To puT some oT her ideas inTo pracTice and To enioy more Treedom. When I was a naughTy girl and moTher would correcT me, my ThoughTs Turned Toward The day oT my sixTeenTh birThday. Then I ThoughT, I would show Them even if I had To run away Trom home. IT I asked Tor a second helping oT pie and moTher said no because iT would make me sick, I always said To myselT ThaT when I was sixTeen I could eaT a dozen pieces oT pie. On The days ThaT moTher had company, and I was Told To go ouT and play, I conTided To my Toys ThaT when I was sixTeen I could sTay in The room wiTh The guesTs. Now ThaT I am sixTeen my poinT oT view has changed enTirely. I Tind ThaT even now I can'T have all The pie I wish because iT will make me TaT. I can'T go ouT in The evenings unchaperoned because I am Too young, and yeT I am Too old To play wiTh dolls. I musT acT digniTied on The sTreeTs because I am no longer a child. IT I see a black dress ThaT I like, I can'T have iT because iT is Too old Tor me: if I wanT a lace Trimmed organdie iT is Too young. I am noT yeT old enough To drive The Tamily car, s+iII I am Too old To ride a bicycle. When moTher's card club meeTs aT our home, she TacTTully asks me if I don'T wanT To go ouT on The porch and read. Now, I Tind ThaT sixTeen is The leasT Tree oT any age, and I sorrowTully look back on The careTree days when I was Tive. PATRICIA SWEENEY '32 --asf so DOGS I LIKE DOGS, and my liking has grown wifh me from my firsf dog fo my lasf. During fhis fime I have found dogs as inferesfing as human beings wifh fhe same sprinkling of virfues and faulfs. I once read an essay of William I-IazIiff's in which he said fhaf he preferred fo fake his walks alone. I may add fhaf wifh a dog fhere is company wifhouf ifs drawbacks. A dog has never falked me fo deafh. I remember disfincfly fhe day fhaf my mofher promised me my firsf dog on fhe condifion fhaf I would fake some casfor oil and orange iuice wifhouf fhe usual profesfing preliminaries. I am cerfain fhaf I never acfed so qallanfly wifh a dose of The horrible sfuff as on fhaf day. I recall every defail of fhe excifing iourney up fhe hilly road fo The house of fhe Iiffle Scofch lady, fhe proud possessor of a lively family of Scofch collies. The liffle lady has died since buf even foday I can see her wifh a smile of welcome on her wrinkled face. She belongs in a small way fo fhe immorfals of my life because she was fhe firsf owner of my firsf dog. I remember carrying fhe woolly ball fo ifs new home, for he was foo faf and wooll fo walk very far. I laughed when I puf him down for a space fo wafch liim foddle along wifh his pink fongue hanging ouf. I-Ie used fo unfie my shoe laces and fo fear my sfockings buf like all fhings foo young for responsibilify, he reigned as king. Today, when I happen fo see a woolly puppy, I am never safisfied unfil my hands feel fhe soff fur. And fhen, I invariably fhink of Ted during fhose monfhs before he devoured his firsf birfhday cake and gave me fhe greafesf scare of my life by almosf swallowing fhe single burning candle. I have wafched Ted grow info a sfrong, graceful animal wifh sferling human qualifies. I can fesfify fo his pafience. I have seen children hang on his ears and he-gallanf old soldier, would smile on wifh his pink fongue hanging ouf. Ted was a good-nafured dog. I-Ie never made fhe advances in a fighfg he always advanced wifh a wagging fail. Yef when Ted mef dogs belligerenf enough fo fry his pafience, he foughf wifh all fhe fury of a Whife Fang, a ferrible animal, half coyofe and half dog. Then I have seen his doggish friendliness slip away and fhe elemen- fal splendor of fhe wolf shine forfh. Ted had his faulfs. I offen reprimanded him for placing his large, muddy paws on my whife dresses. Buf in wrifing of him now, I wish I mighf feel his paws ruining my newesf gown. I am sure if my firsf dog could have seen his funeral, he would have wagged his fail in pleasure. All of his playmafes assembled abouf his grave fo place red and whife roses upon his six feef of ground. And I, lingering long af fhe small plof shaded by gianf oaks, carved his name upon a sfone- Ted. si SpoT, my lasT dog, was as beauTiTul and nervous as only a seTTer can be. OTTen when I reTurned home in The evening, I Tound him wiTh his TronT paws resTing on The gaTe waiTing Tor my caresses. I-le shivered nervously and showed all his animal beauTy-The whiTeness oT his coaT accenTuaTed by The whiTeness of The moonlighT. I have known him To be perTecTly sTill only when he assumed ThaT TascinaTing aTTiTude oT poinTing which makes his kind so disTincT Trom oTher dogs and so useTul To The hunTer. I am glad ThaT I did noT see him aTTer his Tragic deaTh. I remember him dashing madly across The lawn-elusive, whiTe and beauTiTul againsT The green. ' I have known oTher dogs and have Tound inTeresT in Them Though They have noT belonged To me-Pal, The Airedale wiTh The lrishman's love oT TighTing, Casey, The Alaskan husky and eTernal opponenT of Pal, Jerry, a wire-haired Terrier wiTh The capabiliTy of making everybody love him: Brownie, a hound wiTh sad, beauTiTul eyes, and ScoTTy, anoTher Terrier whom some kind driver killed and did noT Take The Trouble To see if his vicTim lived or died. Then There has been a genTle bulldog whose name I do noT remember and whom anoTher kind human being Ted ground glass. BUT Ted and SpoT are The parTicular Two who have endeared me To dogdom Tor all Time. When I see a poor old dog limping along The sTreeT, I acTually plan Tounding a home Tor homeless dogs To be called The Ted and SpoT ShelTer. I-IAZEL lv1cKANNAY '31 52 TEM- CHINA DOGS EVERYONE I-IAS a hobby and alThough mine may seem useless, I enjoy iT. I like To coIIecT dogs. I do noT mean real dogs buT China dogs. STrange as iT may seem, I do noT care Tor live ones: I am acfually aTraid oT Them. Whenever I enTer a sTore, no maTTer whaT kind or where, I always ask if They have any dogs. By now, I know The besT places in SacramenTo and San Francisco To purchase These peTs. I began This hobby when I enTered Dominican, and The lasT Time I Took census, The ToTal was TorTy-Tive. BUT I do noT inTend To sTop yeT. Whenever There is any giTT-giving occasion and I am asked whaT I would like, I always answer only dogs. By now everyone knows my weakness, and my collecTion has become Tamous. Ivly peTs sTand on The Table by my bed. They are always There To greeT me, no maTTer when I come inTo my room. I almosT consider Them as real people, and each one is my Triend. AT nighT when I am nesTled down deep in my bed, I waTch Them Tor a Tew momenTs and look aT each one individually. Naming The animals aTTords me greaT amusemenT. Every Time I re- ceive a new one, I have a chrisTening. I choose The name oT some greaT person in hisTory, oT a Teacher, or oT any oT my companions. I have large dogs, medium sized dogs, and Tiny dogs: whiTe dogs, black dogs, brown dogs, and green dogs. No Two are alike. Two oT Them are disabled, wiTh broken legs, buT s+iIl They sTand wiTh The oThers -sTurdy and sTaunch. When The Time comes Tor me To graduaTe and To leave school, my dogs will be my greaTesT worry.in packing. I shall be so disappoinTed iT one oT Them is iniured or broken. I have noT decided whaT To do wiTh Them when I arrive home, because I have Two younger broThers who deIighT in Taking, breaking or playing wiTh my privaTe belongings. BuT iusT because oT my broThers' mischievousness, I will noT disconTinue my collecTion. I shall pack Them careTuIIy, Take Them home and manage To Tind some place To keep Them in saTeTy. While I am wriTing now, my Triends are beside me, waiTing To be dusTed, and someone has iusT placed a placard- D. C. Pound on my door. JANE I-IANLON '3l. -'+R-I 53 A KITE A kiTe and a sTring Is The sorT oT a Thing I'd like To be if I could, I would sail everywhere In The bonnie blue air And I'd hunl Tor The man in The moon, I would. OT course, in The sky I mighT sail very high BuT I wouldn'T care if I should, For always l'd know, Wherever I'd go, My moTher would hold The sTring, She would. KAYE COOGAN '33 MUSING Through Tields I wandered one brighT summer's day, When The ground was all covered wiTh Treshly mown hay, The TruiT Trees were laden wiTh blossoms so rare, And noThing suggesTed a worry or care. The robins were Tlying in blue skies above, While oThers were singing Their sweeT songs oT love, A brookleT was Trickling along on iTs way, And iT like all else, was happy and gay. My hearT was much IighTer, as homeward I Trod. And I ThoughT oT The kindness and beauTy oT God, For I-Ie gives us sunshine in skies up above, To show Thaf Tor us I-le has inTiniTe love. KATHERINE DONAHUE '34 -..ff 54 THE SCAR FEODOR SEMINOV had a livid scar upon his cheek which infrigues his fellow sfudenfs. Russians were inferesfing wifhouf any flourishes, buf fhaf scar wifh ifs suggesfion of blood-red revolufion served fo make Feodor fhe mosf affracfive young man who ever had fhe misforfune fo fhink himself an arfisf. And like many legendary and hisforical sfudenfs of fhe finer arfs, he was very poor. He relucfanfly confessed fhaf he could nof do fhe heavy work his counfrymen were offen forced fo do in fheir sfraighfened circumsfances. The observer of fhe whife, fransparenf face accenfuafed by fhe livid scar and black eyes did nof have fhe hearf fo quesfion Feodor's inabilify for hard labor. Forfun- afely he was a scholarship sfudenf. However, his falenf wenf begging oufside of school for he had admiffed more fhan once fhaf nof even fhe mosf eager novelfy-seeking pafron would buy his work. When asked concerning his sales, he always shrugged his fhin shoulders and curled his lips in scorn as if fo suggesf- These people here do nof undersfand real arf-perhaps, someday-il How did Feodor Seminov live? He lived on his fellow sfudenfs' lunch boxes and on precious coins gener- ously given from slim pockefbooks. These sfudenfs knew liffle abouf fhe close-lipped Feodor. Nof one of fhem would have known where fo fake him fo his home. Yef fhey willingly confribufed fo his welfare iusf because he was one of fhem who needed 'rheir aid. Even fhe kindly lady who kepf fhe school cafeferia more for desire fhan profif was nof safisfied unfil she was cerfain .fhaf Feodor would bursf if she forced anofher ounce of mulligan fhrough his pale lips. Feodor was alone, fhaf is he had no relafions and fhose who came in confacf wifh him pified him in his apparenf loneliness. He probably lives by himself in some unhealfhy affic and hasn'f a soul fo fake care of him, sympafhized fhe dark-eyed Marie Gordon fo a red-haired friend as she resfed her brush on fhe easel. Feodor's long, solifary figure was slowly passing down fhe long corridor which bordered fhe pafio where some of fhe sfudenfs painfed and crificised fheir own work. The red-haired girl spoke mysferiously as if revealing a secref, I haven'f found anyone in school or elsewhere who knows anyfhing abouf him-nof even fhe Russians. I was falking fo Alexey fhe ofher day and he said-- And so on down fhe pafio as Feodor passed, brushes were laid down and fheir owners discussed fhe Russian wifh fhe livid scar upon his cheek. Harry Marsfon wiped his brush on a smock fhaf had once been nafure's own green and remarked fo a fall, large-boned sfudenf who had dili- genfly painfed fhe sfrip of bay seen from fhe school, This Feodor -..ii 55 fellow puzzles me. l-le appears a highly educafed person. Why doesn'T he Try his hand aT TuToring afTer school? The large-boned sTudenT shook his fine head wiTh iTs bushy yellow hair and answered in English, excellenf for one used To an enfirely alien language, TuTor's iobs are very scarce. My own iob of unloading nighf Trains may make my hands sTiff for painfing buf iTs beTTer Than sfarving or begging. The speal-:er's smile Told more Than his carefully chosen words. l-larry, casTing a meaning glance aT his friend's canvas, said wiTh sincerify. RoTl Alexey, if Train loading hurTs your painfing, l will Trade iobs wiTh you Tomorrow . . . BuT This counfryman of yours-- And so The commenfs ran on as Seminov passed slowly down The corridor. The small Carol Carson, whose dynamic TalenT somefimes awed her insTrucTors, sTopped her energeTic movemenfs wifh her brush and ex- plained wiTh a grimace, l-leaven's Lou! Doesn'T Thaf Russ look as if he needs a one-way TickeT To ,Arizonal l-le posed in porTraiT The oTher day and l Thoughf l was painfing a ghosf insTead of a human being. Thaf face! Ughl Louise, a large boyish girl defended, O Feodor is noT so bad looking. ln facT, he's raTher handsome. LeT's be decenT and inviTe him To The sTudio for a square meal. Carol nodded her head, All righT-inviTe The poor darling if you'll promise To do The cooking. The Iiffle girl wifh The dynamic TalenT who knew well enough Thaf no one else buf Louise ever did The cooking, re- Turned To' her work as The much discussed Feodor had disappeared around The corner of The building. Feodor Seminov walked inTo The principal's office. l-le advanced a sTep or Two and Then apparenfly losT courage. l-le finally found his Tongue and he spoke even more carefully Than Alexey had done a few minuTes before. l come To see abouf The ArT Associafion Exhibif. Can sTudenTs enTer? The dark, nervous Mr. Wilson sprawled in The high- backed chair smiled Toleranfly. Anyone can enTer who passes The judges, of course. Try your lasT porfraif. IT was fair. The facT ThaT Mr. Wilson Took The Time To Think of The lasT porTraiT was proof enough Thaf he was inTeresTed in Feodor Seminov. I'II do ThaT, sir, announced Feodor loifering near The desk. lvlr. Wilson rose from his chair and Took The young man by The shoulder. Don'T TwiTch your cheek like ThaT. IT makes me nervous. Feodor assumed an expression of resignafion. Mr. Wilson wenT on- WhaT do you do afTer school? AnyThing? l do enough To geT along. ' lf you only could do heavier work, l could help you. 56 raw-- Thank you, sir. I am geTTing along Tine, BUT The melancholy voice belied The words. lvlr. Wilson, who seldom sTayed in The same place Tor Two minuTes aT a Time, wenT over To The window, dragging Feodor by The Tie. WhaT's wrong wiTh your cheek? IT looks inTecTedl Feodor explained, IT geTs ThaT way someTimes. lvIusT have Taken cold in iT, I guess. No, iT's +ha+ piece oT shrapnel. I ThoughT I Told you To come To me iT iT- Feodor's dark eyes showed a sudden Tlash oT inTeresT and immed- iaTely assumed Their indiTTerenT sTare. ThaT's really why I came To you Today, sir, buT I ThoughT Twice and did noT wanT To boTher you. lvlr. Wilson laid a crisp banknoTe in Feodor's hands. WhaT do you say if I give you This-ThaT'lI be a sTarT To remove ThaT inTernal piece oT shrapnel. The young man's Tace Turned The color oT The scar. Don'T misundersTand me. This is only a loan and The oTher Teachers and even The sTudenTs will add To The sum. So Feodor Seminov spenT The nexT week or more in a resTTul hospiTal bed. I-lis Tellow sTudenTs had noT begrudged adding To The principal's donaTion Tor The removal oT The shrapnel. Some of The richer ones may have moaned over The reckless giving oT The enTire monThly allowance buT They moaned in silence. OThers generously gave Tar more Than was discreeT in Their circumsTances. I-larry and Alexey wenT ouT To The park one evening To waTch The animals insTead oT supping in The usual modesT resTauranT. And even The dynamic Carol paused 'in her painTing To inquire if poor, whiTe-Taced Feodor was recuperaTing Trom The re- moval oT The shrapnel. - Louise banging The door' behind her unceremoniously enTered The porTraiT class and beckoned madly,To Carol. Some oT The boys sTreTched on The Tloor lTor iT was resT periodl grinned lazily aT The door slammer, buT Carol was arranging The background oT her painTing. Louise rushed pasT The insTrucTor and Threw herselT in dramaTic Tashion aT Carol's TeeT. And Carol, whose chieT proTecTion was To ignore her Triend's ouTbursTs, could noT ignore This acTion. SomeThing was in The air. Perhaps lvlr. Wilson had Tlown inTo one oT his rare buT unTorgeTabIe passions! Carol laid down her brush. lT's gone-iT's gone, groaned Louise Trying To whisper buT Tailing miserably. WhaT's gone, silly? asked Carol angrily because she had been in- TerrupTed in her work. And he's gone-he's gone, mumbled The breaThless Louise. WhaT ails you, anyway? Carol was growing angrier, Tor curious sTudenTs had begun To encircle Them. 57 1,3..,.- k Iieodor's scar is gone-nor a bil of il Iefr-plaslic surgery, you now. Feodor's scar, is Jrhal all? CaroI's voice resounded indignanlly and she indilllerenlly picked up her brush. Is +ha'r all? I personally did nor give away my means of livelihood Io enrich a plaslic surgeon. I+ was Io remove a piece of shrapnel from a cerfain Russian's face, as I remember. Where is he now? asked Alexey calmly. Only Jrhe narrowing of his black-blue eyes belrayed his inleresl. I-Ie isn'I here . . . In Iacl, il wasnil I who saw him. II was Tom I-Iarris. Feodor, Tom said, was walking down Jrhe srreel as handsome as John Barrymore-and as scarlessf' Where is he now? insisled I-larry wilh a derermined look on his Anglo-Saxon face- I'd like To punch his nose Io see if iI's plaslic-jus? curiosi+y. Bur I haver1'Jr Iold you Jrhe spiciesl pari of Jrhe Iragi-comedy, giggled Lou, half hyslerically. Mrs. CTI-Iara wenr Io Feodor's aparr- meni Io inquire how Jrhe poor boy was. She alone knew where he lived and The landlady Iold herlu Told her wharf? 'rhundered Carol who had laid down her brush. . Told her Thar our impoverished Seminov had Jraken The Irain across Ihe conlrinenlr and was on his merry way Io lhe Monlmarlre . . . We clolhed him, fed him everyday and even made him handsome while he, poor fellow, had money I'o hoard away, sang a musical boy al 'rhe end of lhe room. Parisi mumbled I-larry, who recalled in a name a dream Thai was always fading our of reach. Alexey had al Iasr found Ihe English word Ihal suiled his feelings. Duped-Duped-Dupecllu I-Ie slared above I-Iarry's ruffled head in a manner +ha'r slrrangely resembled Jrhe absenr Feodor's. Carol Carson rose wilh Ihe dignilry of a princess enlighlened by DeIphi's priesless, O, I see ir all now-Feodor had his face remodeled for Those Parisian girls. I-Ie did noi consider or spare us. Weep, Louise. Carol Carson Jrhen relurned Jro her work. I-IAZEL IvIcKANNAY '3 I. -lf-if sa Jia-- SKETCHES THE CHAPEL LINE IT IS EARLY and The convenT seems asleep. The grey sTone courT and The Three porches are deserTed. The silence seems unbreakable. Suddenly a whiTe robed nun comes ouT on The porch, and looking inTo The disTance, rings The summoning bell and Then guieTly reTreaTs, leaving The same silence and greyness abouT her. Slowly gliding across The second, porch, a Tile oT girls, clad in dark blue uniTorms and black veils, moves Toward The chapel door. They are all siIenT, and in Their slow walk, one can read prayer. The lasT girl disappears inTo The chapel, and again The morning is leTT To iTselT, and begins The Task oT changing iTs greyness To brighTness. DIANA BLAKE. R E T R E A T TI-IE MORNING roll is being Taken, buT someThing is wrong, no one is speaking or scarcely moving. Even The Treshmen are siIenT. STill more sTrange The girls Tile siIenTIy inTo The reTecTory. There are no bells: grace is said and The meal is eaTen wiThouT The usual chaTTer. ATTer breakTasT The girls, insTead oT gaThering in The cusTomary groups on The courT, walk alone Through The gardens. The expression on Their Taces is serious. AT nine o'clock The girls go inTo The chapel Tor Their TirsT lecTure. The annual reTreaT is Taking place. BETTY ANN YOUNG. B L O S S O M S TODAY I walked under Those almond Trees ThaT are in blossom. They lined The sides oT The walk and made an enchanTed paTh ThaT signi- Tied spring. A soTT breeze blew in spurTs and shook down The round whiTe peTaIs in a dream-like snow sTorm. They covered The Tloor of The paTh and TIoaTed idly in The pools oT waTer ThaT The recenT rain had Tormed. I sniTFed The vague perfume oT The blossoms. The sky above The inTerlacing branches was cloudy. The whiTe clouds were scarcely whiTer Than The blossoms. They boTh made TransienT paTTerns againsT The blue sky . MORNING IT IS SIX o'cIock oT an early spring morning. The Angelus breaks The sTiIIness and Then leaves The occupanT oT This parTicuIar bed To rise To The occasion. The 'Fresh wind is blowing her curTains, and Through The window she can see The pink clouds sliding across The sky. She reaches ouT one bare arm, closes The window wiTh a bang, and wiggles under -..gf 59 Es..- The covers again. BuT There is no resT Tor The school-girl, and soon she musT search endlessly under The bed Tor one slipper. and begin The ever- Tedious Task oT dressing. THE TEA ROOM THE TEA room is a jolly place Tor gaTherings. The air is cool and sweeT and smells slighTly oT marshmallow and candy. There is a consTanT hum and chaTTer oT young voices around The liTTle square Tables and a TlucTuaTing group oT children in dark pleaTed skirTs and sTriped collars aT The counTer. A smiling grey-haired woman serves Them, and is per- peTually lavishing sauce on ice cream, squirTing coco-cola syrup inTo a glass, or popping Thin slices oT bread inTo a ToasTer. Occasional cries oT, Have you a quarTerf7 or, l've decided To break my dieTl rend The air. The Tea room is always a delighTTul recepTacle Tor sTray change, and is a greaT sponsor Tor cheerTul disposiTions. ' THE STUDY HALL THE GREAT, lighTed room is Tilled wiTh rusTling occupanTs. ln The one hundred and TorTy-Tour desks, one hundred heads are nodding, smiling, or Turning around sociably, and TorTy-Tour are benT over open books. Papers crackle, desks bump, and here and There pens are moving Turiously across smooTh Tolder paper. A sigh or a succession oT whispers lend aTmosphere To The living silence. A small wandering Tigure is quickly rnarTialed back To her seaT, and The big clock Ticks audibly, and very, very slowly, Toward eighT o'clock. SOUP THE GIRLS are crowding around The huge bowl oT soup. They wave whiTe cups ThaT are quickly Tilled wiTh The sTeaming liquid Trom a dipper, and as quickly replaced by more empTy ones. The girls Talk and chaTTer and munch ToasT, discussing French, ChemisTry, English, and The ap- proaching vacaTion. The morning sun ouTlines The dark uniTorms and The blue bound aprons, while The China boy grins and pours soup. JAYNE DUVAL. THE COTTAGE THE PICTURESQUE whiTe house seTTled among The Trees lends an aTmosphere oT quieT and resT. Along The walk come Two girls: one car- ries a large bundle, The oTher looks pale and wan. They are meT aT The door by a grey-haired woman in a large whiTe apron and a proTessional cap. EooTsTeps resound down The corridors. A voice says, Yes, The -..ff 4,0 35.-- same old Thing, buf I will Tix iT. Once more The sound oT TeeT, a loud proTesT ending wiTh. ThaT awTul new-cure. Then all is sTiII, and The picTuresque house gives an aTmosphere oT resT and guieT To The garden. DOLORES Sl-IOVELIN. L I G H T S O U T IN A LONG single Tile The girls climb The sTairs To bed. The nighT sfudies are over. Those who sleep on The Third Tloor bid Their Triends in The dormiTory a fond good nighT and slowly climb The lasT TIighT. Usually everyone is happy: They are Thinking oT The warm bed awaiTing Them or The apple ThaT will TasTe so good wiTh The salT in Their apron pocI4eT. From Tive minuTes aTTer eighT To nine o'cloclc There is a parade oT girls in warm robes and slippers ThaT click on The bare Tloor. Someone says she is hungry and is inTormed ThaT Jane has some coolcies. . Rosary beads are heard in The hall and Those ThaT are visiTing on The courT scurry To Their room in Time To answer The Tamiliar Tap oT SisTer's ring on Their door. l.ighTs ouT. AnoTher day crossed oTT The calendar. VELMA LAYNE. O U R B A R N Our barn in lvlalcawao Town Is nice and cool, The walls are brown: IT once was red buT now The sun I-las Taded IT: The vines have run In purple splendor everywhere, They loolc so Tine. I do noT care To Tear Their gorgeous blossoms down And painT The walls: I Iilce Them brown. KAYE SMITH '33. 61 Ee..- The simple fairh of a lilrle child ls a wondrous rhing ro me, No one else can grasp ir, To a lillle child, iJr's free. l've looked down deep in childish eyes And seen failh shining lhere, The ullrer rrusl and sympalrhy ls radianr, all fair. And now, as l grow older, There's iusl one rhing l'll pray, Oh leave wilrh me Jrhal childish failh, l'll guard if nighl and day. Ea-,.- NANCY DAVIS '3I r SoTTly Through The leaTy Trees Comes sweeT music Trom Pan's pipe, SweeTly mellowecl in The breeze, GenTly waTTec:l Through The leaves Comes sweeT music Trom Pan's pipe: Come, Thou nymphs and iocund elves, LisT unTo his plainTive Tune, QUT, now Trom The glacles and clells, l-larlcen To The Tales Pan Tells: LisT unTo his plainTive Tune. KATI-IARINE PLANT '31 -..gf 64 J-fu-..- VoIume 4 EDITOR ----- ASSOCIATE EDITORS BUSINESS MANAGER ASSISTANT - - - SPORTS EDITORS - ART EDITOR - - - ASSISTANTS - I- PI-IOTOGRAPI-IS - - TYPISTS ---- VERITAS MAY I93I Number STAFF - I-IAZEL MCKANNAY - - JAYNE DUVAL, BETTY ANN YOUNG BETSEY MCCARTI-IY - KATI-IARINE PLANT - LONA WRIGI-IT, BERNICE MARRIN - VELMA LAYNE - MARY JANE SACRE, NINI TOBIN. I-IARRIETE ROTI-I, I-IARRIETTE AKIN - JANE I-IANLON - BETTY BROWN, REGINA BORBA BLAIR JEFFRIES -wif 65 HIM-- SENIORS Wlial are your Jrlwouglfils, Oli Seniors. As you sland so slraiglwl on llwe lawn Wirlw your bouquels of green anol silver, And your faces so while and wan? Are you sorry +l1a'r you are leaving, Thar +omorrow's a clilllerenl day, Thar you're leaving your friends, your comrades Ancl Jrlwal you are going away? Or are you really happy When you Jrliinlc of wl1a+'s going lo be, Oh wlwal are your Jrlwouglrils, Oh Seniors, As you srancl 'nealli llie lwawlliorne Jrrees? NINI TCDBIN '3I. THE PROCTORS 66 .- THE STUDENT BODY SELF-GOVERNMENT is an American ideal lhal is worlh slruggling lor and worlh upholding. Our sludenl body governmenl ol lhis year honored lhe slrenglh ol lhis ideal. Wilh Dolores Shovelin as cam- mander, lhe Sludenl Body soon swung inlo orderly ranks. Dolores showed lhe essenlial qualilies ol a presidenl and a leader-execulive abilily and sincere underslanding. None lhe less able were her caplains, lhe proclors, and none lhe less eager lor righleous praise which Virgil, lhe mosl human ol poels, has glorilied as a virlue, were lhe various groups somelimes working like Aeneas' Troians lo excel. Belly Ann Young wilh her group, heroically mainlained lirsl place lhe lirsl lerm. The usual exclamalion al cards was, Belly Ann Young slill in lhe lead. The second lerm, however, Gerlrude Maguire in lhe role ol l-lippomenes look lhe lead over Belly Ann who had lor so long played lhe role ol lhe invincible Allanla. A secrel is noised aboul-lhe winning group is lo lind a golden apple wailing al lhe end ol lhe course. A special com- plimenl is due lo Bernice Marrin, who, new in lhe school, was nol im- medialely appoinled proclor. Bul lhe proclors soon came lo lhe con- clusion lhal lhey did nol like lhe absence ol Bernice lrom lheir meel- ings. So Bernice became a proclor. The number ol girls who wore lhe while ribbon, lhe slraighl B ban- ner, gave evidence lhal lhe Sludenl Body was scholaslically as well as governmenlally inclined. The proclors besides lhose already menlioned are: Geraldine Grennan, Virginia Flannery, Jayne Duval, Belly Brown, Alice l-lansen, Jane l-lanlon, Lorraine Lynch, Blair Jellries, Belh Dal- rymple, Elsie Chichesler, Jane Lowrey. Peggy Wilcox, Marie Kilkenny, Jean McLoughlin, Marjorie Noon, Kalharine Planl, Claire lvlolenkamp, and l-lazel lVlcKannay. THE STUDENT BODY OFFICERS DOLORES Sl-IOVELIN ----------- PRESIDENT JANE LOWREY - - - - VICE-PRESIDENT BETTY ANN YOUNG - - - - SECRETARY JANE I-TANLON - - - TREASURER 67 CALENDAR OCTOBER Rosary Sunday-Procession To The Grollro. Leclure on Modern l-larmony, by Ernesl Fowles Oxford NOVEMBER Nancy Davis wins The Armislice Day Essay Conlesl The College presenls The Valian'r and The Mouse Trap The Marin Symphony. DECEMBER Organ Recilal-Pielro Yon, organisl of Sl. Palriclq s Calhedral New Yorlc. Feasr of The lmmaculale Conceplion-The Children of Mary receive Jrheir new members. The The The The Chrisrmas Tableaux. The Chrislmas. Chrislmas Carols. The JANUARY The Marin Symphony. Seniors presenl Come Oul of The Kilchen College Freshmen presenl An+igone. Mosl Reverend M. S. Gillei, O.P., Masler General of rhe Domini can Order visils us. Mosl Reverend Archbishop l-lanna visils us lo wish us a l-lappy Musical program in honor of Molher Raymond s Feasl Day FEBRUARY The College Seniors presenl The Yellow Jaclcel l8+h Cenlury Characlerizalions-by Dorolhea Johnson and Berlha Fiske. Falher l-lorgan's leclure on The African Missions MARCH Passion Sunday-a program of Sacred Music The Marin Symphony. APRIL Recilal by Edilh McKnigh+, soprano. Program by lhe Sludenls of The School of Music Falher Daniel Lord S.J., leclures on Cafholic Achon 68 Field Day-Junior Branch of The Nalional Council of Calholic Women. Falher Rochlirf leclures on The AposJrleship of The Sea. The Juniors presenr Lancelol and Elaine. College plays- The l-lour Glass and Yes'rerday. MAY May Day-Crowning of Our Lady Queen of May. Spanish Club Tea and Musical Program. - The Sophomores presenl A Tale of The California Indians. l-ligh School Musical. Choral and Orcheslra: San Francisco Conservalory of Music. Margarel Tilly presenls an l-lislorical Program of Pianolorle Music. May-Fefe and l-lome Coming Day. The Freshmen presenl The Anl and +he Grasshopper. Baccalaureafe Sermon. Senior Brealcfasl. Closing Exercises. THE PRESIDENTS i PV O3 ix ,IV iv X J . Q' l J -, 69 .- i SENIORS aff vo ge: L N DOMINICAN, DAY BY DAY EXTRACTS Trom The Diary oT a Modern Pepys. SepTember 3: School opens. . Up beTimes in greaT conTusion, This being The day ThaT greaT insTiTu- Tion, Dominican ConvenT oT San RaTael, does open iTs doors To some one hundred and TwenTy maids seeking educaTion. I arrived bag and bag- gage and expressed boTh pride and pleasure aT my new corner room. lvly, iT does give me a Tine view oT The porches. The STudenT Body and Cavalier presidenTs are my neighbors, and I know They will be neighborly. The ,baby class are mosT helpTul. One small lass asked me if I was a senior. I assured her I was by my digniTied bearing, and she begged To aid me in unpacking my belongings. WhaT a ioke 'Twould have been if I were a sophomore. WenT To pay my respecTs To SisTer, who did corner me wiTh much Talk oT crediTs and sTudies unTiI my poor head did spin. To bed wiTh aching limbs Trom much climbing oT sTaircases. SepTember 6: The FirsT Picnic. TonighT The new Iassies were honored by a picnic and a rally on our greaT TracT o'er yonder. The goodies served by The Senior class were very palaTable, meThinks. ATTer we had supped, The merry maids gaTh- ered around The greaT Tire and were enTerTained by The TalenTs oT The TalenTed. SooThly, I was noT among Them. The new maids Took parT in The program and became beH-er acquainTed wiTh The older ones. The reperToire oT songs was Tinally exhausTed, and we wended our way homeward, lighT-hearTed and gay. lvleThinks ThaT The new Iassies are mosT desirable and we should have an enjoyable year. SepTember 7-ProcTors: My hearT is Tull oT such gladness I can scarce keep Trom chuckling To myselT and singing a liTTle aT Times. The reason Tor such merrimenT is ThaT I am a procTor. This morn in The gym all The Iassies excepT Those chosen To TulTill The posiTion oT procTorship, did seaT Themselves on The side lines. The procTors sTood in The middle and did regard Them wiTh much curiosiTy. The pasT oT The old girls was reviewed in The mind oT each procTor, and Those whose repuTaTion iT was To be in good Time Tor roll were chosen TirsT. SepTember 9-IniTiaTion: MeThinks The Treshmen are noT so Tresh now. They did spend. The mosT oT This eve on Their knees, as They have been so many, many Times 7I during The lasT week: bowing, pushing a Tumbler, a peanuT, or whaTever The seniors wished pushed. ForsooTh, l saw one lass pushing a baskeT- ball. The Trials oT a Trosh are greaT and The TribulaTions Tew, buT They did Take Their medicine in a manly Tashion and were laTer rewarded wiTh ice cream and sweeTbread. SepTember I3-Welcome Dance: Who ever 'Twas who said number I3 broughT bad luck is, meThinks, very misTaken. Today, The l3Th, did bring Tun and ioy Tor all. This morn The seniors did work like Troians To make The gym aTTracTive Tor The Welcome Dance This eve. EucalypTus Trees were made To grow up ouT oT The Tloor and To cover The raTTers. Tennis racqueTs, hockey sTicks, bows, arrows, balls and dumbbells did in Tine array grace The walls. The orchesTra was composed oT Tive lads whoknew so well The arT oT making The piano, banio, saxophone and drums speak, ThaT The maids could scarce keep Their TeeT on The ground, so lighT and merry were The Tunes. The reTreshmenTs were mosT popular, as one could Tell by The maids abouT The punch bowl, much likened unTo a swarm oT honey bees, meThinks. When 'Twas Time To disconTinue all Trolicking, everyone did seem relucTanT To reTire Trom This iolly scene, and The new maids didsT say ThaT They were compleTely saTisTied wiTh D, C. OcTober 4-Senior Picnic: Up beTimes and gaThered wiTh The oTher seniors To awaiT The com- ing oT The buss which was To convey us To The sea-shore Tor a day OT recreaTion. The seniors did need a ishorT soiourn, Tor They did apply Themselves To Their books like True SparTans Tor The enTire monTh oT SepTember. The bus Tinally arrived and we all piled in. The sighT and smell oT The ocean was welcome. l did don my brand-new baThing suiT, boughT Tor The occasion, and did swim wiTh oThers Tar ouT inTo The ocean. ParTook oT a lunch which has ne'er been equalled. The Time did pass Too quickly and 'ere long 'Twas Time To go. T-Tome in Time Tor cards, very weary, very happy. OcTober 5-Rosary Sunday: Today we did march in The Rosary Procession. The lassies looked very'sweeT in Their whiTe uniTorms. OcTober II-Launch Ride: This Tine day we did yachTing go. The enTire school boarded The good ship, Crowley No. I7, and seT OTT Tor a day oT Trolic. We dined aT Paradise Cove. Every one was in high, good humor, and The SisTers -..gi 72 Eg..- diid surprise and amuse us by preparing and fspreading The dainTies beTore us. 'Twas a jolly day Tor all, and we are, l Trow, so much The beTTer Tor iT. OcTober 20-Hockey Game: Today I am one oT The happiesT lassies alive. The mighTy Cavaliers didsr emerge vicTorious Trom The baTTle oT The hoclcey sTiclcs. 'Twas a mosT exciTing conTesT and The players on boTh sides didsT ouTdo Themselves. OcTober 28-Hallowe'en ParTy: This eve, we didsT all repair To The gymnasium, Therein To aTTend The dance oT All l-lallow's eve. 'Twas given by The sophomores who did ouTdo Themselves cuTTing and pasTing, wiTches, goblins, moons, and oTher novelTies symbolic oT ghosTliness, which puT us in mind oT The diTTy, The goblins will geT you, iT you don'T waTch ouT. Again a lively orchesTra puT us all on our Toes, and we did dance and become so Tired Thar we were glad To seaT ourselves and parTalce oT The delicious punch and sweeT bread ThaT The sophomores served us. To bed wiTh weary TeeT and happy hearTs. November I-Games Carnival: Early To ForesT Meadows To parTalce in The Games Carnival, a greaT day Tor The Roundheads inasmuch as iT decided a poinT Tor Them. IT was a mosT exciTing Time and my limbs do ache wiTh much exhausTion, Tor l did run and hippiTy-slcip wiTh much spiriT and did Teel lilce a Trolicsome lciTTen, so Trislcy was I. The score was very close, and meThinlcs everyone is mighrily pleased wiTh The Tine spiriT The Cavaliers showed. November 4-Fashion Show: This eve Three maidens Trom The WhiTe l-louse came ThiTher To The ConvenT and displayed To us, who dearly love Tine cloThes, many dainTy silks and saTins. l could scarce lceep my seaT so green was l wiTh envy, Tor l Trow, such slimness cannoT be acquired and reTained aT Dominican. Seeing such beauTy oT Torm inspired in us a longing To counT The calories Thar we, Too, mighT appear as Those Three graces. To bed wiThouT my usual piece oT sweeTbread. November 5-Fencing ExhibiTion: ln The gymnasium This eve we lassies wiTnessed a Tine Tencing exhi- biTion. Six genTlemen Tenced wiTh weapons such as were used in The olden days when They dueled Tor Their lives. So quick and alerT were They, we were nervous Trom waTching Them. So Then To Tence wiTh Vir- ginia, buT did sprain my poor Tinger so Thar iT is black and blue. -..sg 73 November I I-PoeTry Hour: TonighT several lassies mounTed The plaTTorm in The assembly wiTh quaking knees. 'Twas poeTry hour, a Time Tor The improvemenT oT one's menTaliTy by becoming acguainTed wiTh The works oT our greaT masTers. IT minds me well oT The Time when I was a Tiny ToT, my dear moTher urged me To reciTe I.iTTle Boy Blue Tor The guesTs. The lassies perTormed as beTiTTed maids Trom Dominican, and much praise is Their due. November I5-Senior Rally: The weaTher all This day was Toul and I did siT and mope Till, by and by, by chance I happened on Consuelo Tobin, our worThy presidenT, who said The seniors would hold a council in The gymnasium This evening. We had a iolly Trolic. We sang, danced, Talked, and devoured hoT dogs, coTTee, and doughnuTs. We grew very merry and TorgoT The rain. November 24-Baseball Game: This day The Roundheads were once more vicTorious, aT The game OT baseball, and The Cavaliers decided ThaT Trom This Time Torward They would noT leT The Roundheads have anoTher poinT. IT causes me To wonder who will win The cup. Tomorrow I shall deparT. IT is, meThinks, a Tine Thing To be a ProcTor. So To bed wiTh hopes ThaT The nighT will Tly. November 26-Thanksgiving VacaTion: The maids ThaT were unable To go home Tor Thanksgiving vacaTion did spend The days aT Long Sands, Bolinas and Trom all reporTs, They had a very pleasing Time. There was swimming and walking and bridge To amuse These bonnie lassies who reTurned To school wiTh many Tales OT a good Thanksgiving vacaTion. December 3-Bazaar: Today The annual bazaar called our aTTenTion. IT was Tor The beneTiT of The orphans, and 'Twas a mosT pIeasanT sighT To see The lassies going Trom booTh To booTh To purchase Those TrinkeTs which caughT Their eye. The seniors did do very well wiTh a Table laden wiTh sweeT IiTTIe novelTies. The iuniors did sell posies which we were proud To pin on our shoulders. The sophomores spread TempTing morsels oT assorTed goodies beTore our eyes, and The Treshmen delighTed us wiTh a pay and Take a grab box which aTTorded us much amusemenT. All in all iT proTiTed us well and we are mosT pleased. 74 13..- December 4-Guzman Hall: Guzman l-Tall was blessed This Tine day. IT was a mosT ceremonious ceremony. The high school lassies wore Their whiTe uniTorms, and The college donned Their caps and gowns. December 6-Organ ReciTal: To The audiTorium This aTTernoon To hear PieTroi Yon give a mosT pleas- ing organ reciTal. Thence To The corner rooms, where we did parTake oT a mighTy Tine TeasT. December 8-Senior Play: The enTire school is bubbling over wiTh muchly deserved praise Tor The Senior Play, Come OuT oT The KiTchen, given This eve in Angelico. 'Twas indeed a marvelous success and, meThinks, one oT The cleveresT plays I have ever seen puT on by high school lassies. Diana Blake as The dainTy Olivia DangerTield well nigh won our hearTs, as well as The hearTs oT BurTon Crane and Randy Weeks, played by Jayne Duval and EThel Bugbee. Anne Lee as a Virginia Mammie was excellenT and amused us greaTly. Nini, Elsie, and Velma were The oTher DangerTield children and did please us wiTh Their selT-sacriTicing spiriT and Their many narrow escapes. BeTsy did seT us in peals oT laughTer as The digniTied aTTorney, and we TelT so sorry Tor poor Rae as l.eggerTs, conTronTing The horrid Mrs. Faulkner, who was Truly our amiable Jerry Sacre, ThaT we almosT wepT. Cora Faulkner was played by Veve CarTrighT very naTurally and eTTecTively. The resulT OT The numerous Senior Play pracTices was mosT pleasing and much crediT should go To The Senior Class. December I5-The MasTer General's VisiT: The grammar school, The high school, The college, and The sisTers were greaTly honored This Tine day by a visiT Trom The lViosT Reverend M. S. 6iIIeT, O. P. MasTer General, OT The Dominican Order, who didsT come To us Trom Tar away Rome. We all did go To The audiTorium and There I-Tis Grace, The Archbishop, inTroduced The lv1asTer General To us, who spoke To us in French and granTed us a holiday Tor which we were glad. January 23-MoTher Raymond's FeasT: On This day Tell lvloTher Raymond's TeasT, a ioyous holiday. ATTer Mass This morn MoTher Raymond came down To our sTudy hall and we did presenT her wiTh a baskeT oT posies. This aTTernoon we conTesTed in baskeTball in The gymnasium. The seniors deTeaTed The iuniors, and The sophomores deTeaTed The Treshmen. BoTh games were close and caused The audience much exciTemenT. 75 February I4-The Weekend: I-Iappy are The Dominican maids This Tine day, Tor we do leave Tor a weekend. ForsooTh, we are all hurrying hiTher and +hi+her To be ready Tor The omnibus which will drive up anon, To Take us To our respecTive homes. February I6-The Mardi Gras: MeThinks The seniors never worked quiTe so hard as we did This day. The o+her classes did please us by helping, Too. We TirsT Tacked in The gymnasium wall a Thousand Tacks on which we hung pieces oT oddly cuT Tin. ForsooTh There was noT a square inch oT bare wallg Tin was every- where. This did give a very pleasing eTTecT and deIighTed us greaTIy. Came evening and we donned dainTy dresses oT chiTTon, organdy, silk, or voile. I Trow I never saw such a sweeT seT oT Iassies. The orches- Tra was kepT busy Trying To answer The requesTs oT The enThusiasTic maids Tor Their TavoriTe Tunes. ReTreshmenTs, consisTing oT a greaT many good Things, were served. and we did go To bed. The lvlardi Gras was a success. February I8-LenT Begins: Early To Mass, This being The day I.enT sTarTs. We all do sTrive To aTTend lvlass every morning, also To make Ii++Ie acTs oT morTiTicaTion, and anon we are The beTTer Tor iT. March 4--Senior PicTures: This day was indeed a red leTTer olay. The seniors posed Tor Their picTures, and This proceeding worried us greaTly. We were well nigh TroughT wiTh Trying To make ourselves as preTTy as we could. I-lair musT be perTecT, Ties Tied alike, in TacT, perTecTion iTselT. When 'Twas over we did sigh wiTh reIieT, buT shorTIy iT came inTo our minds WhaT would The resuITs be? and Trom ThaT Time Torward we were in a sTaTe oT sus- pense. March 5-ReTreaT: This day we didsT go inTo ReTreaT. We do puT aside our books and seek soIiTude Tor ThoughT and siIenT inTrospecTion. These Tew days OT resT beneTiT us well and our lives should be Tuller and happier Tor Them. We do seek To receive a beTTer undersTanding oT ourselves. March I 0-BaskeTbaIl Ga mes: IT Tell very well Today Tor The Roundheads, Tor They didsT emerge Trom The baskeTbaII conTesT vicTorious. 'Twas a mosT exciTing game 76 and we well nigh losT our voices cheering wiTh such spiriT. The score was close, There being Tor a Time a Tie. March I7-College Play: The college amused us well This evening in The gymnasium wiTh a preTTy liTTle play, Alice in Wonderland. This did Take The place oT The annual circus and a much beTTer idea, meThinks. PeanuTs and pop- corn were sold which pleased The audience. March I9-ST. Raphael's EnTerTainmenT: This eve The seniors were mighTily pleased, Tor aTTer supping we did dress in our own cloThes and leave by The omnibus Tor a play in The vil- lage. We were all in high spiriTs Tor The greaT occasion and anTicipaTed a pleasanT evening. The play was, Believe IT or NOT, and mosT amus- ing. ForsooTh, we ThoughT iT very clever. The play being over we climbed inTo The waiTing vehicle and so home and To bed aT an 'hour noT oTTen seen by convenT maids, and This added To our pleasure. March 28-Song ConTesT: ExciTemenT ran high ThroughouT This enTire day, iT being The nighT when The Cavaliers and Roundheads sang in The Song ConTesT. For many weeks we did prepare Tor This evenT. The maids oT boTh clubs diligenTly praTised nighT aTTer nighT and This eve They did reap The beneTiTs. For indeed 'Twas acclaimed a marvelous success by all. The sTunTs were clever and The songs well sung. The Cavaliers were vicTori- ous and, meThinks, I never saw such Tine losers as The Roundheads. April I-EasTer VacaTion: TT Tell This day ThaT The EasTer vacaTion didsT begin. The procTors were horneward bound yesTerday aTTernoon and This morn The oTher lassios leTT in high spiriTs anTicipaTing a mosT pleasanT week. April ll-Dolores' BirThday: Our STudenT Body PresidenT's birThday was celebraTed by The seniors aT a supper in ForesT Meadows. 'Twas, TorsooTh, The mosT delicious sup- per we have ever had in The meadow, There being sTeaks broiled over The Tire: poTaTo salad, coTTee which has ne'er been egualed, and an immense birThday cake. There were giTTs Tor Dolores and we all did enioy This evening To The uTmosT. April I3-Swimming Begins: This happy day marked The opening oT The swimming pool. 'Ere 'Twas compleTely Tull enThusiasTic swimmers were plunging in, and calling To -ag 77 The more Timid ones To come on in, The waTer's Tine. Some lassies have been asking since SepTember when The Tank would be opened and npw Their wish has been TulTilled. There are happy days ahead, me- T inks. April I4-Bridge ParTy: As The Term draws To a close The seniors are honored aT many social evenTs. We were inviTed This eve, To play bridge aT Fanieaux by The college Treshmen. We were received graciously and TorsooTh we did have a pleasanT Time. ReTreshmenTs consisTed oT a good many good Things, and prizes were awarded To Those wiTh high scores. The Time wenT so quickly we were loaTh To leave our charming hosTesses. We walked home in The cool moonlighT and so To bed. April I5-Tennis TournamenT: We wiTnessed This morn The mosT exciTing oT evenTs. BeTsey Mc- CarThy and Nini Tobin, Two oT our TinesT Tennis players, didsT play againsT each oTher, The Tormer being a Cavalier and The laTTer a Roundhead. Such marvelous playing ThaT ever I saw, and iT didsT inspire me wiTh a longing To be like Them. The score was very close, each winning one seT, and Then BeTsey in a Thrilling decisive seT deTeaTed Nini giving The Cavaliers one more poinT Tor The silver cup. April 25-Women's Day: IT Tell upon This day ThaT Dominican College and High School was hosTess To approximaTely one Thousand maids Trom convenT schools in The bay region. 'Twas one oT The biggesT days on The school calendar, There being all manner oT sporTs in The morning aT ForesT Meadows, Tennis, swimming, archery, and baskeTball. Cups and prizes were awarded To The vicTorious maids and we were proud To win The swimming Trophy. ATTer a luncheon aT ForesT Meadows we didsT go To The audi- Torium To hear l-lis Grace Archbishop l-lanna and several disTinguished women, among whom were Maud Fay SymingTon and KaThleen Norris, speak on Careers Tor Women. Then we did wiTness The planTing oT a Tree Trom' The Garden oT GeThsemane and The day was broughT To a close wiTh BenedicTion aT The groTTo. Our guesTs leTT, and alThough very weary, we were enThusiasTic over The success oT The day. April 28-LanceloT and Elaine: The iuniors didsT give a very Tine perTormance in The audiTorium This eve. The play was LanceloT and Elaine, dramaTized by The members oT The Junior class. 'Twas, sooThly, a Tine piece oT work. l-larrieT Akin made a mosT gallanT LanceloT, and Virginia Dibblee was charmingly --'-if 78 Pism- sweeT as Elaine: BeTTy l-loTTel was The proud Queen Guinivere and Florence Murphy The TaulTless King ArThur. OTher speaking parTs were Taken by Shirley Moore, BeTTy T-loTTman, Cecily Cox, BeTTy Thorpe and CaTherine Laing. The resT oT The class lenT a delighTTul aTmosphere as KnighTs and Ladies oT The courT, and we didsT enjoy especially The courT dance. The musical scores were wriTTen by college maids and The num- bers were arranged by EdiTh McKnighT. The juniors didsT do so well we are Tull oT praise Tor Them. May 9-College Tea: The seniors were inviTed To The Tea aT The college This day, and ThiTher we wenT in dainTy summer gowns and large haTs, looking, me- Thinksi like many preTTy posies. Our charming hosTesses received us graciously and we did enjoy ourselves greaTly. May I0-Sophomore Play: The sophomores dids'T give a very Tine play This eve in our open-air TheaTre over in The meadow. 'Twas a delighTTul Indian Love Tale oT early CaliTornia Indians and oT The legend oT MounT Tamalpais. The leading parTs, GenTle Doe, and Marin, The chieT, were cleverly porTrayed by Marie l-Toward and Cherie Meherin. The enTire class Took parT and 'Twas, TorsooTh, good and dids'T please and enTerTain us muchly. May I6-May FeTe: Early To ForesT Meadows To parTake in The May l:esTival. 'Twas in- deed a lovely day and enjoyed muchly, meThinks, by parenTs and Triends. The maids oT The euryThmic class gave a preTTy liTTle dance and in Their pasTel colored cosTumes They did look so sweeT. There were Two pic- Turesque counTry dances. SixTeen maids rode horseback and exhibiTed greaT skill in handling The horses and in playing The games. Our very TinesT players, BeTsey McCarThy and Nini Tobin played a Tennis maTch. Swimming and archery nexT Tollowed and when luncheon was served, we were quiTe ready and enjoyed The delicious Tood. The day was broughT To a close by The maids showing Their parenTs and Triends Dominicanls lovely campus, and so To bed very weary. May 20-Senior-Junior Picnic: The juniors dids'T enTerTain The seniors This day. 'Tis an annual cus- Tom and an inTormal Tarewell To The senior class. We were allowed The uncommon privilege oT sTaying in bed a liTTle laTer Than usual. We arose and Thence To ForesT Meadows where we spenT The day playing inTeresTing games and parTaking oT a delicious luncheon aT noon. Sou- venirs were given To The seniors as a remembrance oT This day, buT me- 79 Thinks no senior will ever forgel ii. 'Twas a liH'le sad when we all did sing Seniors All as we lrudged back To Sl. Thomas l-lall in Jrhe dusk, a lilrlle sad wi'rh lhoughls of leaving school bul sjrill, a happy conlenled sadness. May 27-Senior Breakfash This morn, we are noi so happy for we did parlake ol our lasl break- fasl al Dominican. The juniors served us a delicious breakfasl and The sophomores and freshmen sang +o us bul even so, melhinks il was Jrhe saddesl group Thar ever l saw. 'Twas mosl' hard lo realize l'haJr we would nof ear again in +he refeclory as a sfudeni in Dominican l-Iigh School. This Though? did ser us weeping hearlily for 'lwould be a queer person who wouldn'+ weep. And now, forsoolh, I musl hurry +o be ready +o receive my diploma. 'Twill be sad Jro say good-bye, 'for These days have loeen mosl happy ones. BETTY ANN YOUNG '3l. l THE CAST OF LAUNCELOT AND ELAINE 80 yy..- N I l The Things I Iove Are sweef Io remember: The moon Ihrough whife bIossoms, A pine Iree af dusk, A sunsejr in Seplrember, Deep blue eyes. A fringed whi+e daisy, The sun on a pane of gIass, Fleefing memories Of Jrhinqs I Iove, As I Iie and dream on The grass. -.,.,gf 32 JAYNE DUVAI. '3I V l The game is nol played lo be won or losl, Bul played for a fairness from you: Played for a sporlsmanslwip mol for And nol for a slroke you may rue: ll is played for a goal 'rl'1a+'s l'1igl'1er For a goal Jrrue sporls may allraing a lille, llwan medal, To loe able lo say, Jrlwouglw you've won or you've lost l've played I+ lusl for llwe game. -..ff Eg-.- JAYNE DUVAL '3 I ARCHERY Tl-lE COLORED TargeTs and lighT dresses oT The parTicipanTs againsT The beauTiTul green Tield made archery a very colorTul and graceTul evenT. T On May 8Th, Tour Roundheads and Tour Cavaliers compeTed in The archery conTesT. IT was arranged in Tour TlighTs, each girl having Three arrows per TlighT. In The TirsT round The Roundheads esTablished a sub- sTanTial lead which They mainTained ThroughouT The conTesT. The Rounclheads enTered T-larrieT Akin, Laura Jane Von KernpT, Eleanor Williams and CaTherine Laing, all oT whom showed The resulTs oT TaiThTul pracTice. The Cavaliers enTered Jean,McLoughlin, Peggy Wil- coclc, BeTsey lvlcCarThy and Lona WrighT. Jean shoT consisTenTly and made The highesT Cavalier score. When The lasT arrow was shoT, The Roundheads had won a well- earned vicTory. This made The poinTs Tor The year 5-4 in Tavor oT The Roundheads. -U-'ET 85 T39- HOCKEY Tl-IE MORNING oT The hockey game was marked by a congregaTion oT zealous Cavaliers and Roundheads aT Mass. The weaTher did noT look very promising, buT by The Time The Cavaliers marched on The Tield, led by CapTain Jean, The Two yell leaders, and The Team, The sun was shining brighTly. The Roundheads enTered The Tield under crossed hockey sTicks held by members oT The Team. Then Torming in TronT oT The Cavaliers. They gave a yell Tor Their opponenTs. BoTh Teams lined up, The whisTle blew, and The sTruggle Tor The TirsT poinT oT The year began. For TiTTeen minuTes The ball was driven up and down The Tield-TirsT deep inTo The Cavalier's TerriTory and Then wiThin ThreaTening disTance oT The Roundheads' goal. BoTh Teams were sTrug- gling, buT when The whisTle blew Tor The halT neiTher had scored. The Teams wenT back inTo The game deTermined To break Through The oTher deTense and score. The Cavaliers Tinally succeeded in geTTing The ball down The Tield and Dolores shoT The goal. The RoosTer had TasTed blood and would noT be denied. Twice more beTore The Tinal whisTle, The Cavaliers Torcecl Their way down The Tield, The Roundheads conTesTing every TooT oT The way. The Roundheads, Though Terribly disappoinTed, cheered Tor The win- ners and Took Their deTeaT like True sporTsmen. So The day ended wiTh The TirsT poinT Tor The cup won by The Cavaliers. C T as C C TENNIS TI-IE TENNIS COURTS are always Tiled wiTh happy, sun-Tanned girIs. And when The spring days come, enThusiasm Tor The Tennis TournamenT makes The lure of The courT even greaTer. This year six Roundheacls maTched six Cavaliers, Nini Tobin and BeTsey McCarThy playing The Tinals as was expecTecI. Tennis had been a Roundhead vicTory Tor several years, buT The unexpecTed happened-BeTsey won The maTch, giving The Cav- aliers one more poinT Tor The cup. Jane Cwens ICI cIeTeaTed Jean Coleman IRI 6-4, 5-7, I I-9. N. Tobin IRI deTeaTeoI Jane Owens ICI 6-4, 6-I. Ora BryanT IRI oIeTeaTecI Peggy Wilcock ICI 6-O, 6-O. B. IVIcCarThy ICI deTeaTeoI Ora BryanT IRI, 6-2, 6-I. B. IvIcCarThy ICI deTeaTecI N. Tobin IRI 6-3, 3-6, 6-4. -..QI 87 BASKETBALL BASKETBALL has always been The TavoriTe sporT and This year was no excepTion. The preliminary games consisTed oT inTer-class, inTer-club games. The Cavaliers were vicTorious over all buT The Roundhead Sopho- mores and in The Tinals These meT oIeTeaT by The Senior Cavaliers. Class Teams, irrespecTive oT clubs, were organized, Too. OT These The Seniors proved The sTrongesT. The Big Game was a long anTicipaTed evenT, Tor each side knew The sTrengTh oT The opponenT. The girls Took Their places on The courT and The reTeree blew The whisTIe. The Roundheads made The TirsT goal. They conTinued To hold This advanTage, aIThough in The Third quarTer The Cavaliers ThreaTened To Take The lead. BUT aT The IasT whisTIe The score sTood I4-I I in Tavor oT The Roundheacls. IT was a close and ex- c:iTing conTesT, enioyed by The losers as well as The vioTors. Roundheads The Teams Cavaliers E. CHICI-IESTER lCapTainI D. SI-IOVELIN O. BRYANT - 4 ----- Forwards - - B. MCCARTI-IY R. HART ----- - Taps - - J. MCLOUGI-ILIN R. VAN WINKLE ----- CenTers - - - - C. MOLENKAMP N.ToBiN L. wRieHT ioapmni R. ANIXTER - ' - - - Guards - ---- V. FOOTE JTHE WINNING TEAMS T K g' -.., 88 ..- ,X 64' if ET P SWIMMING OUR TREE-Sl-TADED pool is always a popular reTreaT on warm spring days. April 25Th was an imporTanT daTe on The swimming calendar. The Junior Branch oT The NaTional Council oT CaTholic Women held Their TirsT Women's Day on our campus and The swimming meeT'was a special TeaTure in which all The CaTholic schools oT The bay disTricT compeTed. Our girls won The relay, Took TirsT and Third places in The diving, TirsT and Third places Tor Torm and conseguenTly were awarded The swimming Trophy. The girls represenTing Dominican were: Virginia FooTe, Yvonne Blossom, AugusTa BaTTaglia, ColiTa Kennedy, DoroThy Griswold, Rae Thomas, Cherie lvleherin, and Virginia CarTwrighT. The Cavalier-Roundhead meeT is always an evenT of The lasT week of school, louT during The monTh previous boTh Teams are pracTicing daily. Besides The represenTaTives on Women's Day, The Teams will include Persis Paris, KaTharine PlanT, Florence lvlurphy, CaTherine l-lessel, RuTh Cameron, and lvlarie T-lund. 89 iga..- THE GAMES CARNIVAL TI-IE GAMES CARNIVAL is always a very spiriTed conTesT, due To The TacT ThaT every girl in The school parTicipaTes in some evenT. SaT- urday, November I, was The chosen day This year, and never was There greaTer spiriT on The aThleTic Tield in ForesT Meadows. The evenTs were divided inTo Two parTs, consisTing oT six games and Tive relays. AT The end oT The TirsT halT The Cavaliers were leading by a score oT 4-2. The Roundheads, however, excelled Them in The relays and Tinally won wiTh a score oT 6-5. IT was a hard ToughT poinT, and The Roundheads cerTainly deserved Their vicTory. As Tor The Chevaliers, leT iT suTTice To say ThaT They proved Themselves To be iusT as good losers as winners. The score is even! The Roundheads didn'T like To see The Cavalier RoosTers ahead so near The beginning oT The race, so They wenT inTo The Games Carnival deTermined To puT Polly on an even line, and They did iT. BASEBALL TI-IE ROUND!-IEAD Team played baseball like veTeransg Their baTTery was sTeady, Their Tielding much beTTer Than in The usual high school game, and Their baTTing was consisTenTIy good. Yes, The Roundheads know how To play baseball. BUT did you ever see a Cavalier Team ThaT did noT TighT? In spiTe oT The TacT ThaT They losT They cerTainIy had spiriT. LeT us look in on The game aT The ninTh inning. The score is I I-I in Tavor oT The Roundheads and iT looks hopeless Tor The Cavaliers wiTh only one more chance aT baT. BeTsey, piTching probably The besT ball oT The game, sTrikes ouT Two Roundheads in succession and Torces a Third To hir a Tly, which is easily caughT. AT baT now Tor The lasT Time, ThaT old Cavalier spiriT comes To The Top. Girls who Tailed aT The baT in pracTices come up and hiT ThaT ball mighTily. The score creeps up 4-I I, 5-I I, Two ouTsg 6-I I, 7-I I, Two men on bases-a Tly caughT. The game is over: The Roundheads won. JusT IisTen To Those cheers! Roundheads! Rah! Rah! Cavaliers! The Roundheads won, buT leT us congraTulaTe boTh Teams: They boTh deserve iT. VOLLEYBALL ON MAY 4Th The Cavaliers and Roundheads conTesTed Tor a poinT in volleyball. Three games oT 2I poinTs each were played. The Cava- liers won The TirsT game by a score oT 2I-I7. BoTh players and audience were singularly quieT, waTching The ball as iT was baTTed back and TorTh across The neT. The second game The Roundheads won 2I-9. The Third and deciding game oT The seT meanT much To boTh clubs and The Teams rallied beauTiTully. The Cavaliers won and Thus The score was Tied Tor The Tina! vicToryg each club had Tour poinTs. 90 13.-- RIDING RIDING I-IAS always been a popular sporT aT Dominican. Every aTT- ernoon aTTer school, a large group oT girls ride on our beauTiTul bridle paTh in ForesT Meadows. The annual horse show Toolc place on May I3. IT was an exciTing evenT Tor if The Roundheads won, The cup was Theirs. The TirsT evenT was Tor Torm. From The TourTeen riders, eighT were chosen Tor special review, Tour Roundheads, and Tour Cavaliers. Mary Grace Borel, Adrienne Rowe, EThel Bugbee, and Jean Coleman won TirsT, second, Third, and TourTh places. Following This was polo weaving. Jean Coleman, JaneT MarTin, EThel Bugbee, and Velma Layne were awarded The ribbons Tor This evenT. Jumping was The Tinal evenT and The mosT specTacular. Jean Cole- man, who disTinguished herselT ThroughouT The meeT Tor her excellenT Torm in riding sidesaddle, won The blue ribbon. Mary Grace, EThel Bug- bee, and JaneT MarTin placed second, Third, and TourTh. When The score was counTed, The baTTle Tor The cup was over: The Roundheads had won. 91 isa-- v- .'V1-i,,.:A- . A - : - - . . . . V7 V - ,. , I THF ROUNDHEADS THE CAVALIERS 92 SONG CONTEST Tl-IE PREPARATIONS Tor The song conTesT This year were much more elaboraTe Than ever beTore. The Cavalier sTunT was TirsT. The gym was in darkness and The Cavaliers marched in carrying alTernaTe red and whiTe TlashlighTs. When They were in TormaTion, The lighTs wenT on and disclosed CapTain Jean in a red and whiTe plane againsT a background oT girls in whiTe uniTorms and red Ties. TribuTe was paid To Jean, and Then The plane was hoisTed over The bleachers while The girls marched To Their places singing, Look, Look, Look, The Plane ls Rising. The Roundhead sTunT came nexT, The gym was again in darkness wiTh The excepTion oT one spoTlighT Tocused on The curTain aT The back oT The gym. From behind This curTain came The sTirring sTrains oT The Volga BoaTman, and as The curTain was drawn back, The Roundhead Club ap- peared in a large vari-colored boaT. The boaT moved ouT To The cenTer oT The gym, where The girls pledged allegiance To The Roundhead Tlag and announced a baTTle beTween The Cavalier RoosTer and The Round- head ParroT. AT The end oT The TighT The wounded Cavalier RoosTer was carried away in an AusTin Ambulance. The Roundheads Then marched To Their places and The Song ConTesT proper began. The Cavaliers, under The direcTion oT Mary Jane Sacre, sang TirsT a TribuTe To The Roundheads. The Roundheads Tollowed wiTh a song To The Cavaliers. Every varieTy oT song was rendered-songs To The iudges, To Miss Edgehill, To The capTains, To The clubs, and To The mascoTs. The girls sang gloriously-each song seemed beTTer Than The previous one. The conTesT Tinally closed wiTh The singing oT The Alma MaTer. Then all was silenT1 The Three iudges compared noTes and The phoTograher came TorTh. To be sure boTh picTures show groups oT anxious girls. AT lasT The spokesman oT The iudges sTood, and Jean and Elsie walked To The' cenTer oT The gym. ln a clear voice came The imporTanT words, The winners are-The Cavaliers. A Lv, - ' ' .' .Q fi. f 1 g. his: m'jsAN'McLoueHLlN ELSIE cHlcl-IESTER Cavalier Presiden+ Roundhead President -...,5f 93 19..- 94 yy Goodbye! To all lhe happy hours Spenl here among The flowers. Goodbye! And slill Thy spiril dear We keep, as we have learned il here. Goodbye! And may we leave wilh you The memory of friends Tha! slill are lrue JAYNE DUVAL '3 I. -..gf 95 ADVERTISERS 153 -- K IE COMPLIMENTS OF A FRIEND Q E1 1 4 F51 4 3 98 151 ' ' REI COMPLIMENTS I O F MR. FRANK H.AMES na - i Q -.,.,gf 99 Eau.- E1 ra I l COMPLIMENTS OF MATILDA MOLINA E1 - FEI --Q21 loo lil 'EI COMPLIMENTS ' 0 P MR. FRANK H.AMES Q - fm 99 E9 Lili COMPLIMENTS os MATILDA MOLINA E21 - . LE! --H43-f :oo E1 'El CCDMPLIMENTS os MRS.C.E.GRIGSBY I El -..qgf I Ol Em- E3 - ' El 'COMPLIMENTS OF G. SPALDING BR El AEI -mg 102 E1 -,-. El COMPLIMENTS OF THE TEA RCOM COMPLIMENTS os A FRIEND l05 E1 A A A A AA A lil COMPLIMENTS OF AMERICAN TRUST COMPANY SAN RAFAEL COMPLIMENTS OF BARRETT 84 HILP 1 66 I f --A1- - -A-4- - L-E1 E1 --AA AEE '--J E1 Telephone GArfieId I294 CONVEY 81 SONS ESTABLISHED :svn BUTCHERS AND PACKERS 24 CLAY STREET SAN FRANCISCO Telephone EXbrooIx I336 O'BRIEN, SPOTORNO, MITCHELL COMPAGNO BROS. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL POULTRY AND DAIRY PRODUCE 333 CLAY STREET SAN FRANCISCO T07 I-3+H-- E' Fei COMPLIMENTS OF C. J. SATRUBLE President OK N HA OFCOM E MANHGR EOEO PCBOL SAN RAFAEL FRENCH CLEANING AND DYEING WORKS l350 FOURTH STREET TELEPHONES 1228 AND 14:4 SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. - -M24 los T Ty Z CGMPLIMENTS OF DR. RAFAEL DUFFICY COMPLIMENTS OF DR. T. I. C. BARR DR.ARTHUR BARR SAN RAFAEL --Q24 109 I-51 --ew-H- faI J O S E P H ' S FLORISTS ORIENTAL ARTS 233 GRANT AVENUE SAN FRANCISCO B. M. JOSEPH DOUGLAS 72I0 OL DEST INSURANCE COMPANY IN THE WOR BI1 IFOUNDED IN I7IOJ WriI'ing All Forms of Insurance SUN INSURANCE OFFICE OF LONDON Also Represenfinq in fhe Western sims: Michigan Fire 8: Marine Ins. Co. of De'I'roi'r, Mich. PaI'rioI'ic Insurance Co. of America Knickerbocker Insurance Co. of N. Y. T CARL A. HENRY, General Agenr FRANK E. MURRAY, Manager Mennpoliran oepamnnnr Insurance Cen'Ier BuiIcIing, 206 Sansome S'Iree'I San Francisco, California Phone DAvenpor-I 0703 Franclsco I906 Conflagrafion Losses Paid i -MII I I0 FMT ' Fm nFlI TELEPHON E GARFI ELD 2827 W. 81 J. SLOANE CARPETS - RUGS - LINOLEUMS FURNITURE - UPHOLSTERY LACE CURTAINS I6-228 SUTTER STREET SAN FRANCISCO CGMPLIMENTS OF MARIN MILK CO. SAN RAFAEL,CALIF. I 11 A E IC- 111 .- El - IEI San Rafael French Balcery F. BORDENAVE, Prop. GENUINE FRENCH BREAD OUR SPECIALTY Phone San Rafael 97 I055 FOURTH STREET Phones: S. R. l787g Res., S. R. l624 Andrew Coulls SIMMONS BEDS AND MATTRESSES UPHOLSTERING - DRAPERIES - AWNINGS WINDOW SHADES 5I5 FOURTH ST. San Rafael, Calif. BAY CITY GRILL THE LAND MARK OF S. F. Oyslers, Slealcs, Chops Fish ancl Poullry PRIVATE DINING ROOM FOR LADIES Telephones- PROSPECT IOO49 FRANKLIN 343I 45 TURK ST., SAN FRANCISCO, CALIF. Telephone SUHer 2287 JAMES BYRNE Jobber and Wholesaler Hardware, Brooms, Brushes, Janilor Supplies, Hospilal, Hofel ancl Garage Speciallies 465 PINE STREET Near Monfgomsry SAN FRANCISCO IE - -' E1 1 12 Tlph DA p +2700 Marshall- Newell Supply Co. Spear and Mission S'lree'I's San Francisco Ph S Rfl244 KAPPENMANN'S SWEETS We Serve Only Home-Made Ice Cream FOURTH and C STREETS SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. Complimenls of B. Lafhan C. Kennedy J. Hughes B. Thorpe Complimen'rs of J. C. PENNEY CO sm RAFAEL Clif 113 PHONE l54 PERMANENT WAVING. YOUTHFUL BEAUTY MounIain's Beauly Shop Every Beaufy Shop Service 5I7 FOURTH ST. Phone S. R. I7-J MARIN CANDY FACTORY HOME OF HONEY COME CANDY AND ICE CREAM 826 Fourlh Slreei' San Rafael, Calif. Trainer-Parsons Oplical Co. DISPENSING OPTICIANS 228 Posl Sireef, beiween Granl' Avenue and Sfocldon Sireei SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Telephone GArfield 7l00 Phone San Rafael 338 UPHOLSTERING AND CANVAS GOODS BROWN FURNITURE CO. FOR SAVINGS AND SERVICE 920 Fourlh Slreei San Rafael, Calif. Phone FRankIin 4253 A. Beshlas 81 Co. T H E O W L M A R K E T Dealers in FANCY GROCERIES Fruiis, Vegefables, Delicacies, Cioars and Tobaccos. Meal Markef, Ham, Bacon Lard, and Pouliry. ll0l Bush S+., Cor Jones, San Francisco Phones l260 and I386 Firsl-class Meals Served TAMALPAIS HOTEL Ghiringhelli Br Co., Props. Fourlh Sfreei and Tamalpais Avenue SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. Phone WAlnuI' 7070 LORENZI BROS. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES The Beiier Kind 2 I95 Fillmore Sireei, Cor. Sacramenlo San Francisco, Calif. J. D. B E N N E T T Jewelry and Gifis V FREITAS BUILDING SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. EJ - IEI -N53 114 Ek- 4- CompIimen+s of BLOSSOM SWEET SHOP 632 Fourih Sfreef SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA Complimenfs of WHlTE'S BEAUTY SHOP Telephone WEsI 430l PACIFIC OPTICAL Complimen+s of DR. ROBERT B. LOVELL CCMPANY DENTAL suReeoN L. G, BRICKMAN, Manager X.RAY Telephones- l80I Bush Shed G+ Oddvi-I Office: s. R. fm MASONIC BLDG. SAN Fnmclsco Residence: s. R. uezaw SAN RAFAEL LET us senvs You WEBB 8: ROGERS SAN RAFAEL CALIFORNIA Complimenfs of LA JEUNESSE BEAUTY SHOP Telephone San Rafael 33I 585 Fourfh Sfreef San Rafael San Rafael 849W - Phones - San Rafael 498W GASBERG'S STUDIO PHOTOGRAPHY PICTURE FRAMING - GIFTS We Would Appreciate Your Pafronage 807 Fourfh Sfreel' SAN RAFAEL,CALIF. GLAZING ATTENDED TO S C O T T 81 C O . Dealers In HARDWARE - STOVES PAINTS 81 OILS BUILDING MATERIAL Telephone 326J 835 Four'I'h S'rreeI SAN RAFAEL Q1 . i i.+'::: 111- 'ii IEI asf 115 he-- THE VILLAGE INN 81 TEA ROOM LUNCHEON - TEA - CATERING Sunday Dinner, I2:00 Io 7:30 Dinner Served, 5:30 Io 7:30 Home-made Cakes and Pies Io Order Bridge, Luncheon, Dinner Parlies Arranged Telephone S. R. I080 4l5 A STREET Opposife Couri House Complimenis of DR. N. S. HALSEY SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA Complimenis of MORRIS AND MITCHELL DRUGGISTS San Rafael, California CHARLES C. COHAN A. FIGONE Say II WIII1 Flowers FERRY FLORISTS Floral Designs Our Specialty FERRY BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO Complimenls of Dr.J.0XLEY MOORE, D.D.S. 988 FLOOD BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO Phone DOugIas I262 Complimenls of A I: R I E N D If You Are Noi Satisfied Wifh Your' BUTCHER Phone FlIl.l442 HERBERT J. WEISS Dealer in All Kinds of STALL FED MEATS AND SAUSAGES Delivered fo Any Part of Ihe Ciiy PROMPT SERVICE FILLMORE STREET MEAT MARKET 2195 FILLMORE STREET, S. W. Cor. Sacramenlo Phone San Rafael 5l NEW MARIN BAKERY P. C. PAULS Paul's Beiier Bread and Pasiries Specializing in WEDDING AND BIRTHDAY CAKES 7 I9 Fourfh Slreel' 13 Y A- rEI 116 I El ' 5EI COMPLIMENTS O F A F R I E N D CompIimen+s CompIimen+s of a of Cavalier Room 2I GIFT BOXES OF LAUREL GROVE DAIRY CALIFORNIA FRUITS COMPANY Packed in Fancy Boxes and Baskeis for Easfern Manufacturers of Shipman?-Remember Your Friends af Home BUTTER, ICE CREAM AND COTTAGE CHEESE MILK -- CREAM - EGGS 60 GEARY STREET Telephone ORdway IZ34 407 Fouri-I1 S-I-reef II58 SUTTER STREET San Rafael, California Q I , i i,gf - ' vi- , W' -A 117 jaw- W' IE U IEI Telephone San Rafael 89 V, J, 5, CHEDA CHEDA COMPANY SAND - BRICK - ROCK - GRAVEL HARD WALL CEMENT - LIME V WOOD - COAL - HAY - FEED FUEL 81 STOVE OILS CHANDLER COAL A SPECIALTY OFFICE 535 FOURTH STREET NEXT TO POST OFFICE SAN RAFAEL, CALIF. COMPLIMENTS os ALBERTS, INC. SAN RAFAEL,CALIF. El :EI -- -if 1 18 E3 ,i,,i,.l4,,gi A LT - IE J. P. MQCABE HARRY JOHNSTON W. F. MCCAMISH OWNERS AND PUBLISHERS THE MARIN JOURNAL A Newspaper In 'Ihe Publlcs Service THE VOICE OF MARVELOUS MARIN 738 FOURTH STREET TELEPHONE s. R. 40 SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA DIAMOND WATCHES JEWELRY VAN WORMER 81 RODRIGUES MANUFACTURING JEWELERS Designers of Fine Qualiiy College and School Pins - Medals - Rings - Trophies DANCE PROGRAMS GRADUATION ANNOUNCEMENTS 7 WE MAKE THE DOMINICAN RINGS V IIoI-02 sl-IREVE BUILDING SAN FRANCISCO Ig -E -ee E-A --E .--f E- we Q .. 119 IEW.- FASCINATING FOOTWEAR According io The Lafesi Mode and Correclly Designed for Comforl' Sommer 8: Kaufmann 838 MARKET STREET I I9 GRANT AVENUE San Francisco, Calif. COMPLIMENTS of DAY'S PHARMACY I l I The Pioneer Grocers of Marvelous Marin C. Grosiean 8: Co. DRINK MORE MILK! H O M E D A I R Y GROCERS Tl1a+ Creamy Milk M. T. Frei+as, Presidenf SAN RAFAEL, CALlF. Fairfax Ross San Anselmo Corfe Madera 427 B STREET SAN RAFAEL EI -, 1 ,- TT -. E'-T El -if 120 l?If-II- E' ' M- El COMPLIMENTS x OFTHE DAY SCHOLARS COMPLIMENTS OF MR. W. F. McKANNAY ----154 121 J. C. FLANNERY Afforney and Counsellor af Law Mills Building San Franclsco Complimenls of NORTH BAY ELECTRIC WORKS 48I FOURTH STREET SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA EAT HAAS CANDY Emile Serveau 'Alfred Serveau EMILE SERVEAU FLoIIIsT FLOWERS FOR ALL OCCASIONS Telephones WEsI 0586-0587 2I42 FILLMORE STREET Corner Sacramenfo SAN FRANCISCO Complimenfs of SAUSALITO DRUG CO. Telephhone Sa usaIi'ro I 53 929 WATER STREET SAUSALITO, CALIF. Complimenls of MURPHY 81 CO. INSURANCE 602 CALIFORNIA STREET SAN FRANCISCO I HAYDEN'S MARELLI BROS. ICE CREAM - CANDIES MODERN SHOE MAGAZINES - FILMS REPAIRING DELIVERY SERVICE Telephone San Rafael 752 v Opposile Union Depol' SAN RAFAEL, CALIFORNIA 814 Fourth Sfreel San Rafael E1 ' - .,, ,iii EI -if 122 IBM- 51 -A -masks A--A lil ANDR.ADE STEWART COMPLIMENTS 7 of S P A L D l N G A FRIEND SAN RAFAEL COMPLIMENTS COMPLIMENTS of of M A R K R O T H S. WARD E. WATSON Building Direcfory San Francisco S. GLASGOW T. BUTLER R. THOMAS O. PETERS COMPLIMENTS of CEBALO'S GARAGE PACKARD AGENCY ROBERT M.FURLONG, M.D Eye, Ear, Nose and Throa+ Masonic Building San Rafael 224 Four'fl1 Sfreef - San Rafael of of AMERICAN-HAWAIIAN CA'-'FORNM BAKERY STEAMSHIP CO. San Francisco Specializing in French and Danish Pasfry SAN RAFAEL. CALIF. ra A EEE --. fi -A -if 123 13:-rw 1544 PETERS BROS'. SHOE COMPANY, Inc. GOOD FOOTWEAR Office: I443 BROADWAY Oakland, Calif. WOMEN'S SHOPPE LAkeside 926l MEN'S SHOP l443 Broadway, opposife I5+l'1 GLencour+ 6558 -46 Broadway, opposife lbfh COMPLIMENTS of DRS. NELSON and NELSON OAKLAND, CALIF. A COMPLIMENTS of Hue C. D.'s V COMPLIMENTS of MR. GEORGE RUSSELL V IE1 IE 124 i f , ' T: 0a-dren ff f .JV D .L-iwfgjcfldlfififfl 71.1 CA.Gl'l0L QQJ yafgg mfblf' 117-fenfq fuk: . andshall frzfw yru m are jf-had E Ioan rwydqfufu-Ehafl never :fo-rye! -yw1N7Q,---,cally I Kiln? J fflfwff COMPLIMENTS OF MARIN WHOLESALE AND PRODUCE CO. E1 ,,f-N 1-51 -' 125 Jw fx quwmmm - ' M X X- Km Sfzmm. CL NEfo was NRRL! ' CO! Gai AUTOGRAPAHS Z FE u ,. ' DNN ll XM 1 1 f cf 11 ' Q ,wxv- '?3'gJvmjfTJj'1S 'lfggitgb HQQE' ' 1 X70 ' - W fs 6 Q' IWW A f'jf,KQ My flwwfkw Qf'Qif f'BElk OW5FQ?wQ U f iQ,,! Mqg ff-W' ' ' f OJ Q9 of b Uv f Q M g tq x EQ QW, : QS? , MQ. VHS uhm I co. 5, Q QW B KNOX 'M N. pbMQq15 ' M ' Q, XF fy 115: i'4.,Q Wim? Q 'Q L bk N 'E gm vKKs.r 1W1 ' 'O 7 f Xxx E KLQS-O' C., 1 f :mf vf-xiii, vW f Q as K5 fa 'UNSGWMXMLP mix Q X M, A X OM if W vibi.-W g?QfxAiiM X Ww 5 f, xixx Nm kk ! ' X -A xg Q nf ' X ,X -. . lv ,V xm.J.XL,,QJNi X, I . 2 N x sffvcf- 1 K? 9 U51 ' , ' , Q K, X1 gms 1 ,- I UZQHWWQ r amgIl,vf ' VWGZ-'1 A 5 GHWiM UTOGRAPHS von!! 'bffffcxv ' X gi MJ M5150-lbmvflfffpfa Vi 56543 M MW 1 f V A ' -f . 9 . My - . A 3.04, f , G! ' LOW' to h g 'MMAMQMAQSUAK-mx ,gb f --- - . gm MW? ,M WPWLKUM Wi' 52? My 'W W my mwdffwwigm, 0 W 1 wygwn ,xZ,,Q,7w'vff,4d,, ?,if5ffi 93V QM W ,Q ff M + fm lx lx Nyzigyfw Eff GS -'Zigi QQkQwPwQi'ax5U awxolfa 59? ag Wibw ww? j Q99 ff!!! ,J O8 f iU!A1flff! !f XJ MY ydjjiy - mf XP! X MN!! 9 Jlwxlf f' , V 'n' Q ' - nf!! V!! M 609 pk? fb if JF M df 9 K WX F W X v SJWN M My ' C 4 -' 1 ,W , JM' ,xx Nr 6? 1, x I ff W MN 1 E flsfxfhf I X W 1 C ,L ff' ' jx , MMM fi WC WOWW S f fx Q 0 1,-1 1 imma Zu m 'n i' F7 512-77 ?ifT1li7 'fllw v, w .. ',, ,. w X . w no-' f J L, w ' R Q , , U, w 1 1 Y , v lx . . ' I ,, fl ' , , . -N 22,1 ' 1 JT' ' rf 3' L. , 15:11, .il 5 , six'- , ii ne.. mmf . e rw VV.- iff w , .Ak ? v. ,-L . -x U ,J 'T ' v w :ff- r 4 gf. v .


Suggestions in the Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) collection:

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1950 Edition, Page 1

1950

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1951 Edition, Page 1

1951

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1958 Edition, Page 1

1958

Dominican Convent High School - Veritas Yearbook (San Rafael, CA) online collection, 1959 Edition, Page 1

1959


Searching for more yearbooks in California?
Try looking in the e-Yearbook.com online California yearbook catalog.



1985 Edition online 1970 Edition online 1972 Edition online 1965 Edition online 1983 Edition online 1983 Edition online
FIND FRIENDS AND CLASMATES GENEALOGY ARCHIVE REUNION PLANNING
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today! Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly! Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.